1600 protest Pick AwardBy Jaan Eliaswith Bruce Lewensteinand the Maroon staffTwenty-five people, including 17University students, were arrestedby Chicago Police Tuesday nightduring a sit-in on University Ave.All were charged with disorderlyconduct at a demonstration, andone students was also charged withsimple battery.The arrests came after nine-and-a-half hours of peaceful activitiesprotesting the selection of RobertMcNamara as the recipient of thefirst Albert Pick Jr. Award for In¬ternational Understanding.All the arrests occurred after theofficial demonstration was ad¬journed. A contingent of demon¬strators moved from the site of theoriginal rally at 57th St. and Uni¬versity Ave. to the side entrance ofthe Reynolds Club where the ar¬rests were made.Steven Stein, a second-year stu¬dent in the College, was identifiedas the student arrested for battery.His arrest came after he alledged-ly hit Chicago Police Deputy Chiefof Patrol,Thomas Lyons in the facewith a strawberry cheese cake.The cheesecake was thrownafter several hundred demonstra¬tors went into the street on Univer¬sity after a rumor was spread thatMcNamara was about to leavethrough the Reynolds Club door.Once on the street, they wereurged by Ron Kovic, a Vietnam vet¬eran and a speaker at the rallyheld earlier in the evening to sitdown in the street, which many ofthem did.President Hanna Gray in a state¬ment issued Wednesday said that President Gray and Robert McNamara left the dinner surrounded by police.the University had not preferredcharges against any of those ar¬rested, and that there would be nodisciplinary action in connectionwith the events of May 22.All those arrested, except forStein, were later released on theirown recognizance. Stein was re¬leased after $100 bond was postedby Assistant Dean of Students Richard Royse.Noon picnicThe day began peacefully as ap¬proximately 1000 students, facultyand staff members participated ina protest picnic on the main Quad¬rangle. 'Rebecca Lillian, a member ofthe May 22 steering committee,served as the master of ceremo¬ nies for the event which featuredspeeches by comedian Del Close,anti-war activist David Dellinger,and paralyzed Vietnam veteranand author Ron Kovic interspersedwith folk music and chants.Dellinger, the keynote speaker ofthe picnic, told the crowd, “Youare the University of Chicago/’He criticized the Pick selectionGuests heckled entering dinnerBy Bruce LewensteinMore than 150 guests attendedthe dinner honoring RobertMcNamara Tuesday evening,after passing through the jeering,taunting crowd outside. Althoughmany appeared nervous bothentering and leaving ReynoldsClub, no guests reported not enjoy¬ing the evening.“The ‘shame on you’ chanting(as guests left the dinner around9:30 p.m.) didn’t bother me,” saidAlan Altheimer, a board memberof the Albert Pick, Jr., Fund.“There were a few unnecessarybut not vicious gestures as wecame in.”Some light moments occurred,as when one tuxedo-clad guestresponded to a request for hisname with “not McNamara!”Several people reported thatchanting could be heard insideHutchinson Commons during thedinner, but only faintly. “If youconcentrated on what was going oninside, you lost contact with whatwas going on outside,” said AlbertPick III, son of the man for whomthe award vras named.“The presentation was outstan¬ding,” said Pick. “I have no quar¬rel with the award. McNamara hasa brilliant mind. He did an outstan¬ ding job as president of the WorldBank, for which the award wasgiven.”McNamara’s speech was “ex¬cellent,” said Sidney Davidson, Ar¬thur Young Professor in theGraduate School of Business. “Iwas very favorably impressed.”McNamara said in his speechthat “excessive military spendingcan erode security rather thanenhance it.” He warned of the“dangers and disproportionatecosts that extravagant militaryspending imposes on humanwelfare and social progress.”Calling for “realism,”McNamara said “the realisticmind should be a restlesslycreative mind., full of practicalalternatives.” A “partnership”must be created between themoney and skills of the developedworld and the “developing world’sdetermination both to increasetheir rate of economic growth, andto channel more of the benefits ofthat growth to the absolute poor,”he said.There are over a billion peoplewhose incomes in 1975 were only$150 per year, said McNamara.Both developing and developednations must share the blame forprevious policies, McNamara said.But “whatever degree of neglectthe governments of the poor coun¬ tries have been repsonsible for, ithas been more than matched bythe failure of the developed nationsto assist them adequately in thedevelopment task.”Germany, Japan, and the UnitedStates are “particularly defi¬cient,” said McNamara.“The fundamental case fordevelopment assistance is themoral one,” he said. “The whole ofhuman history has recognized theprinciple that the rich and power¬ful have a moral obligation toassist the poor and the weak...it isnot a question of the rich nationsdiminishing their presentwealth...only a question of their be¬ing willing to share a tiny percen¬tage of their income.”McNamara’s speech “presentedanother side,” said Nadine VanSant, executive director of the PickFund and a long time employee ofthe Pick family. “I understandhow the young people feel, and Icouldn’t protest their protest. Butthere’s another side. I was glad tobe there.”Other guests reported that thespeech was inoffensive and, ac¬cording to some, boring. Many saidthey wanted to study the text of thespeech before commenting.The dinner and presentationwere praised by many of theguests. “It weas a beautiful af¬ fair...very distinguished.” saidAltheimer. “The Pick people werepleased with it.”Guests at the dinner werelaughing and joking, said amember of the Quartet Afianti,which performed during the din¬ner. Others said the candlelit meal,which included wine, rack of lamb,and snow peas, was “good.”Dessert was fruit and chocolatemints.There was some tension after thepresentation among the guests, asthey hesitated before entering thecrowd outside. President HannaGray and McNamara left pro¬tected by a phalanx of Chicagopolicemen, who escorted them to awaiting limousine.Other guests wandered about theinside of Reynolds club, seekingthe best way out. “It certainly isn’tvery pleasant walking through thatbusiness out there,” one womansaid. Many had nervous smiles asthey walked out to the street, and afew waved at the shouting crowdas they walked by.None of the guests contactedWednesday knew about the arrestson University Ave. until readingabout them in the papersCommenting about the prearrestdemonstration, Altheimer said it“gave the young people a chance toexpress their feelings.” committee, which, he said, prac¬ticed “bad politics, bad morality,and bad history” by choosingMcNamara. McNamara, he said,was a “war criminal.”The turnout at the demonstra¬tion. Dellinger said, was proof thatstudent apathy did not exist. The“me” generation was only a periodof adjustment following the 1960’sand the 1980’s were going to be atime of new political involvementhe said.Kovic gave an impassionedspeech on the horrors of Vietnamand the possibility of future war.Kovic described McNamara as“the man who put me in this wheel¬chair...the man who will help incitethe next war.” Kovic called on thecrowd “to stop McNamara to¬night.”After he finished speaking, Kovicreceived a standing ovation fromthe people at the picnic and thenled the chant “hell no. we won’tgo.” Lillian gave both Dellingerand Kovic a bunch of white carna¬tions which she called “prizes oflife.”The folk music at the picnic wasprovided by a host of singers fromthe University community, as wellas popular Chicago folk singerFred Holstein. Most of the songswere from the 1960’s and someoriginal compositions were alsosung.The atmosphere at the picnicprompted one graduate studentwho had participated in the studentprotest of the 1960’s to remark thatshe had a feeling of deja vu.Another graduate said, “it waseasier 10 years ago. People wereinvolved — it built up momentum.This is the most incredible thing Iever saw. I’m surprised at howmany people are here ”Teach-in highlightsFollowing the picnic, people at¬tended a number of teach-ins or¬ganized by the May 22 Commit¬tee.Quantrell Auditorium was filledto capacity for the first teach-in.Five panel members addressed therole of the United States in theVietnam War and the role of anti¬war movements within the UnitedStates.John Coatsworth, an associateprofessor of history, said McNa¬mara committed the three basic, types of actions defined by theallies after the World War II asgeneral war crimes: crimesagainst peace, crimes against hu¬manity, and specific war crimesConsequently, Coatsworth de¬clared McNamara a war crimi¬nal.Dellinger spoke about the experi¬ences of the anti-war movementand the harrasment of antiwargroups by the government. He saidthat despite the stated goals ofsome of the demonstrations in the1960's, the real goal of any demon¬stration as to get people involved.According to Dellinger, peoplebecame disillusioned with the an¬tiwar movement when they sawthat the immediate goals of theprotests were not being accom¬plished. He also talked about theways in which the FBI was system¬atically destroying all organizedresistence to the war . 01600 protest Pick Award to McNamarafrom 1Last minute schedule shuffling necessitat¬ed combining the World Bank teach-in andthe teach-in dealing with the University as asocial and political institution. As the com¬bined teach-in progressed, the size of thecrowd became too large to be accommodat¬ed in Kent 107. Another teach-in, held nextdoor in Kent 103, was forced.Author, radio commentator, and Univer¬sity alumnus Studs Turkel spoke at bothteach-in sessions. He said the award was“horrendous and exciting” at the sametime, since the protest which developed inreaction to the award dispelled the notion ofstudent apathy.Terkel compared the situation here to KenKesey’s novel One Flew Over the Cuckoo’sNest. He said the people at the protest wereall McMurphy’s and that the University isNurse Ratched trying to suppress them.Anthropology professor Marshall Sahlinstold listeners that the University adminis¬tration was the subversive element and thatthe protesters were the ones who wereupholding the ideals of the University. Hesuggested that demonstrators emphasizethis by singing “Wave the Flag for Old Chi¬cago” at the rally later that night.“A post 1968 perspective is a pathologicalperspective,” Eqbal Ahmad of the centerfor Policy Studies told iisteners at the sameteach-in. He suggested that the next awardbe given to the committee which choseMcNamara since no other choice would beappropriate.Ahmad said McNamara was a man wholacked the ability for introspection. McNa¬mara is, said Ahmad, the ultimate cor¬porate manager.At the other teach-in, John MacAloon, in¬structor in the college, gave a personal per¬spective on the war. He described his workas a draft counselor and said that the issueof the Vietnam War was not as straight for¬ward as it appears to us now, 10 years later.He talked of the problems of individualchoice and of trying to relate to society, toyour family and to the people who fought inVietnam after their return.Michael Schudson speaking at the sameteach-in said that he felt “anger and sor¬row” and “joy and pride” at the day’sevents.Schudson quoted an article in the currentissue of Change Magazine by Notre DameUniversity president the Rev. TheodoreHesburgh:“The greatest gift a president cangive his students is the example of hislife. One could say the same of facul¬ty, but the president is highly visible.He must be a kind of superprofessor toall the students. Young adults,whether they admit it or not, are look¬ing for public models to emulate. Thepresident cannot avoid transmittingto them the fact that he does or doesnot care deeply about the kinds of per¬sons they are becoming, the interestsand attitudes they presently portray,the concerns that bite deeply into their youthful hopes.”Rally1600 people, the largest crowd of the day,gathered at the corner of University Ave.and 57th St. at 6:30 pm for a demonstrationwhich was scheduled to be the climax of theday’s events.Speakers standing on a flatbed truck on57th St. addressed crowds which lined bothsides of the street. 30 to 40 picketers carriedsigns on the north side of 57th St.All four major Chicago television ne¬tworks stations and both city dailies hadcamera crews and reporters on the scene.Also represented were radio stations, othermajor newspapers and the news weeklies.As couples arrived dressed in formal at¬tire the crowd booed and shouted “Forshame, for shame”. Chicago Policemenstood in front of the door to Reynolds Cluband did not allow anyone except invitedguests into the building. Reynolds Club wasclosed to the public at 5 pm.Though most of the focus of the crowd wasat the front door a small crowd which in¬cluded professors heckled those guests thatwent in through the side door.McNamara and Gray were not seen enter¬ing the building.At the beginning of the demonstation, abanner reading “McNamara, we will notforget” was unfurled from the windows ofMitchell Tower.Two effigies of McNamara were dis¬played. One hung from a tree by Bartlettgym and the other on a lamppost by the en¬trance of the Reynolds Club.The effigy which hung on the lamppostwas set on fire during the demonstration. Asdemonstration marshalls cleared the area,policemen stamped out the flames.In all, 75 marshalls organized by the May22 Committee controlled the crowd. Vice-president of Community Affairs JonathanKleinbard said Wednesday, “I thought themarshalls for the May 22nd Committee wereeffective.”Thomas Lyons, deputy chief of patrol forthe Chicago Police, said “I thought the de¬monstration was run like a good demonstra¬tion ought to be run.”Sidney Lens, the editor of the ProgressiveMagazine and a speaker at the demonstra¬tion, tried to get into the building while thedinner was going on. He reportedly said, “Iwant to eat dinner with a murderer.” Therequest was refused.Later Ron Kovic demanded that he be al¬lowed to debate with McNamara. He askedRoyse to deliver his challenge to McNa¬mara. Royse went inside the building whereaccording to a source he stood discussingthe issue with Kleinbard.Royse said later that night “I deliveredthe message.” Asked to whom he deliveredthe message he repeated “I delivered themessage.”The demonstration officially ended ap¬proximately at 9:15 pm. A contingent of peo¬ple went to the side door where it was ru¬mored McNamara would be leaving from. Itwas then that the pie throwing incident andthe arrests for disorderly conduct oc¬ curred.Lyons said later that the arrests were or¬dered before the pie throwing incident. Hesaid he repeatedly told the demonstators todisperse, and that he had read the riot act.“What had been a well-run demonstrationdegenerated into a mob,” Lyons said.After the arrests, McNamara and Grayflanked by six Chicago Police emerged outof the front door of the Reynolds Club andhurried to a waiting limousine.Also, after the arrests, the steering com¬mittee of the May 22 Committee met andcollected funds for bail money and arrangedhelp for those wno were arrested.At 9:45, a contingent of approximately 60people walked to the president’s house atUniversity Ave. and 59th St. They demandedto be able to see Gray and called for a de¬ monstration the next day. Whoever couldget to the megaphone was allowed to speak.Ten Chicago policemen watched the eventfrom the sidewalk opposite the president’shouse.At 10 pm Chicago Police told remainingdemonstrators that only administratorswere left in the Reynolds Club.At 11 pm the crowd in front of the presi¬dent’s house dispersed.Gray’s only comment immediately follow¬ing the demonstration and arrests cameafter midnight, on the street outside herhouse where she bid goodnight to Dean ofStudents Charles O’Connell, Kleinbard, As¬sociate Dean of Students Edward Turking-ton, and Assistant Dean of Students PaulAusick. “I think,” she said, “it’s time for allof us to go to sleep.”A group of concerned students, staff and others meetingon May 23 has called a general meeting of all students.faculty and stafffor Tuesday, May 298:00 p.m. Ida Noyes Hallto discuss:1) The events of May 22 and their consequences2) The building of a new political movement at UCTo facilitiate discussion, the (democratically elected)chairpersons would appreciate receiving written state¬ments and proposals in advance.Plppqo Po||Julie Trowbridget at 667-2441 .CONCERTThe Music Department of the University of Chicago presents:The University Choruswith orchestra and soloists,James Mack, ConductorMozart. Coronation MassThompson. The Peaceable KingdomSunday, June 3,1979,3:30 p.m.Mandel Hall, 57th and UniversityFREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBUC2 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 25, 1979Twenty five arrested at University Ave. sit-inBy Abbe FletmanAt approximately 9:10 pm, after the offi¬cial demonstration ended, a Sara Lee straw¬berry cheesecake landed in the face of Dep¬uty Chief of Patrol Thomas Lyons. Thesecond-year College student who hadheaved the pie was immediately arrested.His arrest was quickly followed by 24 others.By 6 am, they had all been released and acourt date had been set.At approximately 8:45 pm, Vietnam vet¬eran and author Ron Kovic approached Uni¬versity administrators blocking the Rey¬nolds Club entrance and asked to speak toRobert McNamara, World Bank presidentand Secretary of Defense under the Kennedyand Johnson administrations. McNamarawas at the University to receive the first Al¬bert Pick Jr. Award for International Un¬derstanding.Assistant Dean of Students Richard Roysetold Kovic he “had no business speaking toMcNamara,’’ an invited guest of PresidentHanna Gray. Kovic, who is paralyzed fromthe chest down, replied that McNamara had“put me in a wheelchair.’’ Royse said hewould “see what I can do.’’ He returned tothe inside of the Reynolds Club and did notreturn.The crowd and Kovic then moved from the57th St. entrance to the Reynolds Club toUniversity Ave. Sensing the mood of thecrowd, Kovic askqfi them to sit and saidthere would be a teach-in. Then the pie waslaunched.After Stevens was arrested, there was amomentary lull in the crowd’s excitementduring which Kovic again asked the demon¬strators to take seats.Some observers said that Lyons, still withpie on his face, announced that if the streetswere not cleared within five minutes, hewould begin making arrests. Lyons said heshouted this warning and read the Riot Actbefore making arrests.Others said he was inaudible and somewondered if Lyons had given the warning atall.Lyons approached Kovic and said, “Sir,you are under arrest.” When Kovic said“What?” Lyons repeated into a bullhorn,slowly and evenly, “You are under arrest.”The crowd booed.Kovic was wheeled toward a police truckwhile two College students, Victor Sloan andMaroon associate editor Andrew Patner,were arrested.Kovic’s aide, Loretta Smith, also held ontothe chair. But she was not informed of herarrest until she reached the police station,when she was put in a cell with the otherwomen.“I followed Ron Into the wagon. I was sim¬ply looking out for his welfare,” she saidWednesday. “The cops figured that if I wasin the wagon, I should be arrested. So I wasbusted.”Twenty others, most of whom had beensitting around Kovic on University Ave.,were seized. Seventeen of 25 arrested wereregistered students.The eight women arrested were: Kath¬erine Borland, Gretta Hogan, Sophie Mir-viss, Katherine Mostkoff, Sharon Pollack,Sarah Schulman, Loretta Smith, and KathyThomas. All but Smith and Thomas are stu¬dents.The 17 men were: Curtis Black, BenDavis, Victor Doria, Philip Grew, EdwardHasbrouck, Andrew Howard, Bob Jorgen¬sen, Clark Kissinger, Ron Kovic, Michael Leibman, Scott Mannakee, Andrew Patner,Seth Rosen, Loren Santon, Victor Sloan, Ste¬ven Stein, and Bob Van Meter. All are stu¬dents except Kovic, Santon, Grew, Kissinger,and Van Meter, the last three of whom areUniversity alumni.Clark Kissinger, former National Secre¬tary of Students for a Democratic Societyand a College alumnus, began trying to rockthe police wagon and, according to a fellowprisoner, “began spouting Maoist doc¬trine.”“We told him to shut up,” she said.The 25 were taken to the offices of the 21stPolice District at 29th St. and Prairie Ave.about 9:45 pm, and the men were placed infour or five cells. The eight women wereplaced in a single cell.About half an hour later, the prisonersfilled out arrest forms. The men were thenallowed to make telephone calls. But thewomen were not permitted to use the tele¬phone or the women’s room, according toSchulman.Royse and a University lawyer, RaymondKuby, arrived at the police station at ap¬proximately 10:30 pm. It is a Universitypractice to bail out registered students whenthey are arrested.Although policemen had told the prisonersthat they would be notified if someone cameto post bond, they were not told of Royse’spresence, Sloan said. He said it was not until1:15 am, after they had been fingerprintedand searched, before they knew Royse waspresent. They also were not told that about20 friends plus members of the press were outside waiting for their release.Meanwhile, at about 12:30 am, the womenwere moved to Police Headquarters at 1221State St. because there are no facilities to“process” women at the 21st District. Whenthe women entered the police wagon for thesecond time, they were singing militantsongs and seemed jovial. But Wednesday,Schulman said she and her companionswere frightened and apprehensive.The women were searched three times, according to Schulman, and although noneof the three were strip searches, two wereextensive, she said.“No one read us our rights, and untilRoyse came we didn’t know what we werecharged with,” she said.Whey Royse spoke to the prisoners, hetold them the charges for the 24 had been re¬duced from mob action to disorderly con¬duct. Two prisoners said Royse implied thatthe University had intervened to have thecharges reduced.The prisoners were released individuallyon personal recognizance between 4 and 6am. except for Stein, who was released on$100 bond. The court date for the prisoners isJune 5.Outside the police station, while waitingfor the remaining prisoners to be processed,one of the people waiting told Kovic that hisrequest for people to sit in would hurt the po¬sition of the demonstrators at the Universi¬ty. Kovic said, “I disagree. I think you aretwice as strong now as you were before.Someone threw a pie and the police over¬reacted.’’In an interview Wednesday, Schulmansaid, “I’m very angry and I’m very tired butI want to tell you my perceptions of whathappened.“During the whole demonstration, excite¬ment was encouraged. There was a sense ofimportance, an energy generated, which bythe end of the demonstration had no place togo.'“At the end of the demonstration, whenTerry Turner said he was going ‘to checkout’ what was happening across the street,that was a legitimization of it.“After the pie incident, the police gottense. People were calling for violence. Iand a group of people who are politically ac¬tive saw violence was going to happen. Weencouraged people to sit down.“Our goal was to avoid violence. So whogets arrested? Us.“I saw my friends being dragged away. Icould have gotten up and run away. But Icouldn’t leave them.“I have three major feelings: I couldn’tleave my friends; I was horrified that theUniversity allowed the police with guns oncampus; and I was disappointed at the peo¬ple who ran away.“I stayed because I didn’t want violenceto occur. I would do it again. I knew we wereright.”Press barred from dinner;Gray: not a media eventMay 22 group disbandsThe May 22nd Committee, which organ¬ized the activities to protest the presentationof the Albert Pick Jr. Award to RobertMcNamara, voted Wednesday night to dis¬band itself. At a general meeting followingthe disbanding, over 80 people voted to forma support committee for those arrestedafter the organized protest Tuesday night.They also voted to call a general meetingto evaluate the events of May 22 and to buildan organization to further discussion of theissues raised by the demonstration. Thatmeeting will occur Tuesday, May 29, at 8p.m. in Ida Noyes Hall.At the request of the defendants, the sup¬ port committee will not meet until afterthose arrested have had a chance to meetwith lawyers. 16 defendants presented astatement declaring that until they havespoken with lawyers, they will speak and actonly as individuals.A Spartacus Youth League proposal tohold a demonstration centered on the slogan“Drop the charges — no Administration re¬prisals’’ was defeated.Many of the defendants, speaking separa¬tely, said they hoped they would not be usedas “political footballs” by groups seeking tofurther particular political positions. Theysaid the most important thing was for thecharges against them to be dropped The reception and dinner honoring Rob¬ert McNamara was an “internal affair”and therefore “not a media event,” saidPresident Hanna Gray early Wednesdaymorning in response to questions about theUniversity’s refusal to allow press cover¬age of the Albert Pick Jr. award presenta¬tion.Gray said the decision not to allow presscoverage was made late last week or overthe weekend, in the “right and naturalcourse of things.”Had one reporter been let in. Gray said,then television, radio, and all other report¬ers would also have had to be let in. Thiswas contrary to the concept of an internalaffair, she said.When asked why no single reportor wasallowed in to serve as a “pool” reporter(one who shares his notes with reportersfrom all media), she said the idea hadnever come up. The decision was neverspecifically reconfirmed, said Gray — atleast “not that I recall.There was some confusion among themedia about the decision. Maroon asso¬ciate editor Andrew Patner said he wastold on Sunday by Vice-President for Pub¬lic Affairs D. J R. Bruckner that Brucknercould see no reason why (the Maroon)couldn’t come” to the presentation.When this reporter tried to enter duringthe reception for McNamara. Brucknerdenied having said a reporter would be al¬lowed in.“I told (Patner) that the decision wouldbe made Monday morning by Mrs. Gray.” said Bruckner. “When I talked with her,she said that no press would be allowedinto the dinner.” “You understand — if Ilet you in, I’d have to let everyone in.”Bruckner said he was surprised the issueof press coverage hand not come up earli¬er. “I was expecting The Maroon to raisethe issue at the Monday press conferencewith Mrs. Gray or to call me later. Theynever did,” he said.“Of course we never did,” said Patnerlater. “After what he told us on Sunday, wethough we could go ”Television and radio reporters who triedto enter Tuesday were given differentstories. A television crew was told byBruckner that the dinner was by candle¬light, and that “TV’ lights would interferewith the aura.”A radio reporter was told that accordingto tradition the media are not usually letinto private dinners.~BL.PublicationnoteBecause our typesetting shop is closedMonday for Memorial Day. The Maroon isunable to print a Tuesday issue We regretMemorial Day had to fall at this inauspi¬cious time.We will resume publication next Fridaywith the final news issue and the last GreyCity Journal of the academic year. Have apleasant Memorial Day.The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 25, 1979 — 3«’ t i." <C*.V <1 hb. - - (VvW*\ i'll •' ~ fEditorialA sad dayon the South SideTuesday, May 22 was a sad day for students,faculty and staff members, alumni, and even ad¬ministrators at the University. Not only was oneof the largest prizes for international understanding awarded to Robert McNamara, but aday of activities protesting the event, which hadbeen overwhelmingly successful, was turnedsour by a single individual and a group of oppor¬tunistic agitators.The May 22 Committee that organized the pic¬nic, teach-in, and demonstration are to be con¬gratulated. They held together a fragile coalitionand, in the space of a week, assembled an im¬pressive educational program. Although theymight have thought more about how to end thedemonstration and what would happen with theenergy and momentum generated by the speak¬ers and the crowd, it cannot be said that they didnot fulfill their responsibility to keep the night’sscheduled activities peaceful.As for Steven Stein, the second year Collegestudent who threw the strawberry pie at Assis¬tant Deputy of Patrol Thomas Lyons, the kindestremark we can muster is that he was not con¬scious of the consequences his action mighthave. We have no kind of words for Clark Kis¬singer, former National Secretary of Studentsfor a Democratic Society, or his group, the Revo¬lutionary Communist Party, which tried to in¬cite an excited crowd to violent action againstarmed policemen.But rather than dwelling on Tuesday’s nega¬tive aspects, we should emphasize the positive.Attendance at the picnic, teach-in, and demon¬stration showed that cliches about the apathetic1970’s have no place on this campus. For nine-and-a-half hours, until the strawberry missile hitits mark, we could almost believe that studentsand faculty and staff members might work as aunited front to convince the administration thatcuriosity, questioning and demands of consis¬tency do not end in classrooms and libraries.Tuesday’s events reveal more than a remem¬brance of the Vietnam War, a concern for the ad¬ministrative process at this university, and aquestion about McNamara’s role at the WorldBank. The organized activities reveal a dissatis¬faction with the institution. The violent act andthe civil disobedience expose hostility directedagainst the institution that runs deeper than wehad ever imagined.Those who supported the choice of RobertMcNamara as the recipient of the first AlbertPick Jr. Award of International Understandinghave undermined the primary goal of this insti¬tution — to educate. But education can be dan¬gerous: the danger is that scholars will use themethods they have learned to examine the veryinstitutions that introduced them to those meth¬ods.We hope the unchanneled energy released atTuesday’s events will be directed toward makingcertain that the University fulfills its mission toeducate. And the goal of education must be notonly to teach us how to think, but how to live.Editor: Abbe FletmanFeatures editor: Claudia MagatPhotography editor: Carol StudenmundSports editor: R. W. RohdeAssociate editors: Andrew Patner, Jacob Levine, DavidGlocknerContributing editors: Nancy Cleveland, Jaan EliasCopy Editor: Doug ThomsonBusiness Manager: Suzanne FarrandAd manager: Wanda JonesOffice manager: Leslie WickLayout and graphics: Chris PersansProduction: David Miller, Peter Adels Letters to the EditorEnd of May 22committeeTo the Editor:The 22nd of May Committee, hav¬ing successfully organized a picnic,teach-in, and demonstration withinthe non-disruptive guidelines adopt¬ed by the general meeting Tuesdaynight, May 15, wishes to thank allmembers of the community for theirparticipation.We cordially invite all members ofthe community to a criticism andevaluation meeting to be held Tues¬day, May 29, at 8 pm in Ida NoyesHall. Also, we remind those whowould like to contribute or are stillowed money by the Committee tocontact Tom Walker. With the ex¬ception of these two activities, theCommittee has voted to dissolveitself.The University community, as dis¬tinct from the small committees thatunaccountably selected McNamara,overwhelmingly manifested its op¬position to the award. The eventshave spoken for themselves.22nd of May CommitteeMisunderstandingTo the Editor:The continued defense by the Pro¬fessors Rudolph of Mr. McNamara’sselection for the Pick Award illus¬trates all that is wrong in the natureof the award itself and the proce¬dures by which the selection wasmade. Their defense demonstrates amisunderstanding of history and ofthe nature of this University, a mis¬understanding which is the essenceof the whole affair. The VietnamWar and America’s foreign policy,including its definitions of economicdevelopment, which are the basis ofthe policies of the World Bank, grewduring a period when the Kennedyadministration committed itself tothe use of Americanmilitary and eco¬nomic power to further a particularconstruction of our national inter¬ests and a belief about what wasgood and bad in the world then. TheKennedy administration was conge¬nial to and encouraged academicsand intellectuals to believe that a lib¬eral agenda underlay this particularconstruction of the world. Some aca¬demics and intellectuals believedthat, by participation in the adminis¬tration, they could influence policiesand implement theories which hadgrown out of the social sciences. In asignificant fashion the Vietnam Warwas a social scientists’ war and onerun by modern managerial methods.Members of faculties from Harvard,M.I.T., Michigan State University,and the University of Southern Illi¬nois participated in the training ofSouth Vietnamese police and intelli¬gence services, the development ofcounter insurgency plans and opera¬tions, and the creation and imple¬mentation of indices of the successand failure of military operations.AID funds nominally appropriatedfor economic development haddirect military and political uses.The World Bank, although differentfrom and divorced from directAmerican influence, continues to ex¬press the economic and politicalagenda of the sixties in its concernwith a capitalist future for the ThirdWorld and a commitment to its con¬ception of political stability.I had thought that we had learnedmuch in the past 15 years about thenature of American power and influ¬ence and the role of intellectuals andacademics in relation to the exerciseof this power; that our political pro¬ cesses should be open: that authori¬ty, academic and political, should beconstantly scrutinized; and that aca¬demics, when they participate in go¬vernmental activities as advisors orfunctionaires, cease to be free tocarry out their academicallyderived responsibilities, as govern¬mental activities; are not open tothe criticism and scrutiny of theirpeers and the standards by which wenormally assess academic contribu¬tions no longer apply.It is reasonable and proper thatsome academics choose to partici¬pate in governmental affairs, but theUniversity as an entity should notcommit itself to the evaluation, ap¬proval, or support of particular re¬gimes or individuals and their poli¬cies, which are by their naturepolitical. The Rudolphs’ defense ofMr. McNamara is based on an as¬sumption that they are able to judgeand reward Mr. McNamara on “ob¬jective” grounds. They ifpiere thesignificance of what Mr. McNamarahas done and is doing. They believehis career is made up of discreetsegments which can be assessed se¬parately and to which good and badpoints can be assigned. By attempt¬ing to do this they ignore the mean¬ing of his actions and deny signifi¬cance to history and social science.By approving of the award and theintent of the establishment of a prizefor “International Understanding,”they commit the University to allthat McNamara has done and to say¬ing that not only his actions but themeaning and consequence of thoseactions, past and present, are oneswhich our University believes areright and proper. I deny this con¬struction.Bernard S. CohnProfessor of Anthropologyand HistoryThe mediaas steamrollerTo the Editor:After participating in an effectiveand constructive teach-in yesterday(May 22, 1979), I was particularlyupset but not surprised at the selec¬tively incomplete press and T.V.coverage of the events by the Chica¬go newspapers and television sta¬tions. Not only did they fail to men-’ tion the wide-spread faculty andstudent opposition against givingMr. Robert S. McNamara the Pickaward, but they also concentratedalmost entirely on the incident be¬tween the police and a limitednumber of students at the very endof the rally, about 9:30 p.m.What little coverage of the teach-in there was in the press and on T V.silently steamrolled the actual pre¬sentations — not the demonstrationrally. An uninformed T.V. viewercould easily construe the wholeevent as a 1960’s revival among anti¬war protestors. He would not havethe slightest inkling of the issues:condemnation of the U. S. corporateimage of the world, opposition to thecollective and carefully orchestrat¬ed attempt to reshape and pervertour understanding and experience ofthe Viet Nam War, condemnation ofan attempt to resurrect the draftsystem, and investigation of theWorld Bank as an institution whichserves as the spearhead of capitalistsecurity efforts in the post-viet Namera.For those of us who did partici¬pate, who do feel outrage, who dostrongly oppose President Gray’sglib way of sidestepping seriousissues, we were once again taughtexactly how the commercial press and T.V. manipulate and fragmentreality, how they treat any question¬ing of and opposition to the estab¬lished order as tantamount to aserious security threat led by dis¬turbed individuals. But we shouldnot begrudge these lessons. Theydemonstrate to us the distortion oftruth which so often passes as sim¬ply news.James C. Stephens, Jr.Graduate student in Latin, American History andAnthropology.Objectivity!Neutrality!To the Editor:It would seem that the Maroon hasviolated the cardinal rules of respon¬sible journalism: objectivity andneutrality.The editorial page exists to voicethe opinions of the newspaper and itsreadership. The remaining sectionsshould be left for objective report¬ing.Evidently under the leadership ofAndrew Patner, whose two “arti¬cles” covered the front page, the 5-22issue more closely resembled adver¬tisement for the May 22 Committee,rather than any recognizable formof neutral reporting.No matter what one’s position con¬cerning the Pick Award may be, weshould all be disappointed with, andsaddened by, the Maroon’s inabilityand/or unwillingness to perform asa responsible journal.Clayton RoseSo much for tactTo the Editor:In the Maroon of Tuesday, May 15,the director of the Smart Gallery,Edward Maser, was quoted as say¬ing that University of Michigan offi¬cials who organized readings by Jo¬seph Brodsky and AlexanderSolzhenitsyn in conjunction with aSoviet exhibit on Russian culturewere “tactless”. Maser went on tocompare the involvement of Solz¬henitsyn and Brodsky in the pro¬gram to “having Angela Davis readat an American exhibit in Moscow.”The comparison is very poor.Whether Davis was a political pris¬oner is at least questionable, more¬over, she made use of the court sys¬tem in this country to gain back herfreedoms and her teaching positiontwo years after she was arrested.Brodsky and Solzhenitsyn areexiles from a regime which routine¬ly sent and continues to send politi¬cal dissidents to Siberia and to psy¬chiatric hospitals, and routinelyrefuses its citizens the right to emi¬grate. Thus the Soviets make lifequite difficult for Jews who requestpermission to leave. All of these ac¬tivities of the Soviets are well knownand well documented.The Soviet Committee on Institu¬tional Cooperation and the Ministryof Culture which sponsors the exhib¬it is representative of the policespracticed by the Soviet government,and these policies leave little roomfor tact. Our profound objections to aThe Maroon is the student news¬paper of the University of Chicago.We publish twice a week, Tuesdaysand Fridays during the academic-year. We encourage letters to theeditor. They must be typed triplespace. Our offices are on the thirdfloor of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59thSt. Phone: 753-3263.4 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 25, 1979government’s denial of basic human rightsshould not go unstated in the name of “cul¬tural awareness.” University of Michiganadministrators made a statement aboutthe ideals and values of that institutionwhen they left open the invitations to Solz¬henitsyn and Brodsky at the cost of losingthe exhibit on that campus.Miriam Shuchman“We must cool down’To the Editor:The award to Robert McNamara shouldcreate a dilemma for a man of good con¬science. On the one hand, the University isin the wrong. It permitted a procedure toselect the award which was callous in itslack of regard for the students and facultyin whose name the award was to be given.Secrecy shrouded the establishment of theaward, the formation of the selection com¬mittee. and the choice of the recipient. Asa result, this faculty-run institution sud¬denly found itself presented with a fait ac¬compli and with no say as to whether suchan award should be given in its name,whether the committee that would pick therecipient was worthy to represent the Uni¬versity, or whether the recipient was de¬serving. Were it no more than a privatefoundation giving the award in its ownname, none of this would have been neces¬sary. Since the award was given in thename of the University, however, the Uni¬versity had a right to more of a role in itsdisposal.Worse was the selection of McNamaraas the recipient. Whatever the motiva¬tions, his role in the Vietnam war did notfurther international understanding andhe must bear responsibility for it. Further,it is very much open to question whetherhis management of the World Bank hasfurthered international understanding.The choice was not a thoughtful one. Forpermitting these things, the University hasshamed itself.On the other hand, opposition to thisaward has been made difficult by the na¬ture of the May 22 Committee. First, thereis the party line expounded, and never con¬tested, at the demonstrations. This lineheld that the war was the product of an in¬ternational business class (of which theUniversity is a member) working for prof¬its and against justice, freedom, democra¬cy and all else that is right. As one of theevil leaders (or lackeys) of this class,McNamara is a murderer. In fact, accord¬ing to Ron Kovic, he ranks as “one of theworst war criminals in the history of theworld.” (This select company should in¬clude Hitler, Eichmann, Bormann andHoss, leaders among those who master-minded the extermination of six millionEuropean Jews, although their nameswere not mentioned.) Another speakerrecommended the convening of a Nurem¬berg tribunal to condemn McNamara todeath. Still another speaker implied,through her description of the rape andprostitution rampant during the Vietnam(and, in fact, any) war, that McNamarawas a rapist and a pimp. In contrast, theheroes of the struggle were such revolu¬tionaries as Mao Tse-tung, Ho Chi Minh,Che Guevara, and, by implication, theirCambodian comrade, Pol Pot. These ex¬cesses give opposition to the award a badname.While the above views are debatable, theattack on President Gray for not holdingthem is indefensible. There was no con¬cern for potentially different views of theissue nor for the powers which the Univer¬sity vests in its officers, Trustees, and fac¬ulty to deal with situations of this kind.Rather than search for a legal way to stopthe award or, more realistically by thistime, to prevent future occurrences of thiskind, demonstrators branded Mrs. Gray asvirtually a criminal for failure to imple¬ment the party line. Such intolerance doesnot speak will of the opposition.More of the nature of this movement wasrevealed in one of the Phil Ochs songssung. This song complained how hard it isto “read through the rising smoke of thebooks you’d like to burn.” The word“you’d” is revealing; the assumption isthat the listener must hold this view. Thatthe offending books must be burnt is morerevealing; they are wrong, therefore, there is nothing that can be learned fromthem. (To think that Common Core wassuch a waste.) In the refrain, “I havesomething to say, man, and I’m gonna sayit now,” there is more intolerance. It is tosay, “I won’t wait my turn, I won’t listen toyou, give me my hearing because Im notgonna give you yours.” There is no reasonto listen to other points of view since weare smarter than those who hold them. (Iwonder what we pay tuition for.) Kovicclaimed that “the ‘me generation’ becamethe ‘us generation’” in these demonstra¬tions, but the selfishness remains. Theroots of the “me generation” go back atleast to this song and its spirit was verymuch alive in last Tuesday’s effort to res¬urrect the fun of the sixties. .Most disturbing, however, is the view ofhistory expressed. The demonstrators did #not seem to recognize that there were good %intentions driving the Kennedy and John- £son administrations into Vietnam. The aVietnam escalation was impelled by an cearnest desire to help the Vietnamese peo- gpie and a determination to profit by the“lessons of Munich.” These misguided ef¬forts became a national tragedy. The de¬monstrators, in their zeal to condemn, ref¬use to respect or even to try to understandthese motivations and efforts and, as a re¬sult, can never fully understand the trage¬dy of Vietnam. This lack of understandingfor American policy makers and their mis¬takes parallels the lack of understandingthat characterized these policy makers’ ef¬forts in Vietnam. This must result in a fail¬ure to learn the lessons of Vietnam. It mayone day lead to a failure to apply these les¬sons which will be very much like the fail¬ure to properly apply the lessons of Munichto Vietnam. So, my brethren who burn inrighteous indignation at the atrocities ofour fathers, we must cool down lest we fol¬low with atrocities of our own.Michael ElzufonTwo typesof convictionTo the Editor ;The Committee was wrong to vote theaward to McNamara, and the Universitywas stupid not to rescind it when the senseof its community became known. But theaward was made, and the response of theuniversity community is instructive.First, there was the series of articles inthe Maroon by Andrew' Patner, who is to bepraised for presenting more than one sideof the question fairly — something that isnone too common in this newspaper. Sec¬ond, there were the rally and the teach-ins— sometimes entertaining, often interesti¬ng, and frequently informative: a remark¬able job of organization on very short no¬tice.But then there was the demonstrationand the dinner. CBS radio at one pointclaimed there were 1500 demonstrators(the Sun-Times says 2500),^though a lot ofthe crowd w’as just standing around watch¬ing: the marchers seemed to be a typicallyanonymous SYL core (is it out of coward¬ice that they never sign their letters?) withsome marvellously irrelevant signs (myfavorite was “Stop Carter’s Anti-SovietHuman Rights Campaign”; but then how-can you take seriously a group that tries torally support around a . slogan like “NoAward to Imperialist Butcher!”?). Andsitting down in the streets seems particu¬larly silly — how does keeping sundryneighborhood residents from going homehelp express outrage? Did Mr. Kovic wantto bring his arrests to a lucky thirteen?This sort of action, which served a pur¬pose over the last decade, must only havediminished him in the eyes of those who in¬vited him to Chicago, who seem to havebegun to appreciate his contributions andto hear his message.A number of people chose to attend thedinner. Some perhaps went because theyactually approved of McNanmara’s con¬duct of the war. or because they believed,with Professor Rudolph (letter. Tuesday’sMaroon), that he worked against others'war plans within the administration. Morelikely, considering this institution's pointof view on economics, some people wentbecause they approve of McNamara’sWorld Bank policies. Some may have gone because they place the University higherthan personal conviction — though the ad¬ministration made a bad decision, it stillcommands loyalty (Watergate remindedus of the slogan “a government of laws, notof men”). Whatever the reason, those peo¬ple who entered by the front door to boosand taunts of “go home” and left to cries of“shame” (as opposed to those who slunk inby the side door) — including Provost D.Gale Johnson, whose economic policiesmay indeed have been as damaging as oneteacher-in claimed — are to be admiredfor their demonstration of the courage oftheir convictions.Peter T. DanielsLinguisticsFree RadioFree IllinoisTo the Editor:Why wasn’t Radio Free Illinois, a rock-and-roll band, allowed to play in Hutchin¬son Court on a Tuesday, w'hen there arevery few, if any, classes in Eckhart andRyerson, but the Fota Circus, completewith brass band, was allowed to occur on aMonday, when there are many classes inthe two aforementioned buildings, in addi¬tion to the physics test underway in Eck¬hart at the time? Makes you wonder abouta double standard, doesn’t it? I personallywould have rather heard Jackstraw than76 Trombones. Please don’t get me a replyfrom Paul “Rock and Roll” Ausick ei¬ther.Howard SulsHow sincerewere you? and trustees exiting tne dinner into un¬friendly crowds showed more convictionthan some students in the sit-down. Howmany of us know about Vietnam and theWorld Bank? How many of us can ade¬quately judge McNamara? How many ofus sincerely care to condemn him?Mason Wilburn CoxI screamfor ice creamTo the Editor:In regards to the people who were look¬ing for a cause to protest this past Tuesdayevening, I was surprised that “We screamfor ice cream” was not among their gamutof chants. Perhaps they did not realize thatthe C-Shop was closed.Bill StewartContact: Uncle Sam,c/o AmericaTo the Editor :The following is an entry blank, muchlike the entry blanks you find on boxtops ofWheaties and other things with nationwidecirculation. It is an entry blank for a con¬test for which no ending date has been de¬cided. Fill out the entry blank and mail itno sooner than Aug. 22, 1979. to:Uncle Samc/o AmericaI have filled in the lines below with thefacts concerning my protest activity for athree month period, with specific refer¬ences to how I helped revive the Time-Tested American Ideals of Peace. Brother¬hood. Fair Dealing and Honesty, alongwith Time-Tested Slogans of the 1960’s(Vol. I & II). I understand that I will re¬ceive the books listed below upon thejudge’s acceptance of my activities, and Ialso understand that I will be disqualifiedif I read these books in the interveningperiod.Vietnam Is Somebody’s FaultThird World People Try HarderWhat America Was Like Before It BecameImperialistic51 Countries That Accept American DraftResisters:The People. The Climate and The Types ofRestaurantsTom CorcoranTwo more awardsTo the Editor :I went to see the rally against the PickAward Dinner. I got to it shortly after thesit-down on 57th St. began. I was curious tosee how deeply students felt about McNa¬mara. Vietnam and the World Bank.These matters never directly touchedmy life, and I have no intense feelingsabout them. I was surprised to see stu¬dents participate in the sit-down. Thechanting and haranguing made me feel Iwas extraordinarily indifferent about bla¬tant injustices. When the arrests began. Iwondered if I was a coward for not activelyparticipating in the protest. It took convic¬tion and guts to bear the rough manhan¬dling of the police.However, as the arrests proceeded. Irealized I was not alone in my lack of con¬viction I was disturbed to see students sit¬ting in the street slowly edge their way tothe curb They avoided arrest by surrepti¬tiously taking a place at the curb. Did theydecide arrest was not worth it? Did theyhave any deep feelings about McNamara smerit? they feigned conviction and yield¬ed when the going got rough. They con¬demned McNamara on the basis of popu¬lar impressions and not personal feelings.Thev had classes the next day.I have admiration only for the arrestedand some of the dinner guests. The faculty To the Editor:As spokesman for THE MUNICHFRONT FOR AGRESSORS’ RIGHTS Iwant to express the FRONT'S heartiestsupport for those who have over the lastfew days so vociferously attacked McNa¬mara and condemned U.S. policy duringthe Vietnam War. And to assure that theirefforts receive their due recognition. Iwish to announce bestowal of these theFRONT'S highest awards, as follows:First, to the organizers of the Anti-McNamara protests, for their advocacy ofpolicies which have produced maximal so¬cial leveling and general population reduc¬tion in Southeast Asia, the Pol Pot Awardfor Human Rights.And to the Vietnam Veterans Against theWar. for their enthusiastic support of theNorth Vietnamese and their program forinternational understanding through popu¬lation redistribution, a unit citation. TheOrder of the Sinking Sampan. First Class,with Drowning Refugee Clusters.Please accept these awards, ladies andgentlemen, in the spirit with which theyare offered, and with all the pride you canmuster; you deserve them.Sieg Heil. Ho Chi Minh!Raymond D. TindelThe Chicago Maroon Friday. May 25, 1979 5>i’' ’ -•r ** ViewpointSpringtime forBy Steven E. LandsburgSpring came to the University of Chica¬go in the eighth week of classes. In theeighth week of classes, the quarter is oldenough for the collective restlessness ofthe students to be palpable, and youngenough for that restlessness to be indulgedwithout interfering with anyone’s prepara¬tion for his final exams. This and the niceweather spurred the search for a Cause,and the fact that Robert McNamara was toreceive an award on campus for his con¬tributions to “international understand¬ing’’ filled the bill. A half-dozen otherCauses would have done at least as well —after all, most of those who embraced thisone were too young to remember McNa¬mara’s policies as Secretary of Defenseand/or too ignorant to be aware of his poli¬cies as head of the World Bank. (This wasneatly underscored when The Maroon rana series of educational pieces explainingjust who this Robert McNamara was andwhy he merited derision.) But a Cause hadbeen selected, and a combined Demonstra-tion/Picnic in the middle of the quad atlunch hour on a beautiful day drew an un¬surprisingly large crowd.Watching briefly from the sidelines, Ifelt the requisite sense of deja-vu. therewere peace signs, folk singers, chants of“Hell no, we won’t go,” even outside agita¬tors. In the space of fifteen minutes, adozen members of this highly creative andoriginal academic community indepen¬dently informed me that this was “just likethe sixties.” But it wasn’t just like the six¬ties.In some ways, it was a good approxima¬tion. The children milling about were, byand large, as vapid as their older brothersand sisters had been ten years earlier, andthe ridiculous middle-aged professors whojoined them managed to recreate theirown ridiculous youths as accurately as theadvancing years would allow. In otherways, it was a good approximation, if notto the sixties, then to our collective revi¬sionist memories — wasn’t it alwaysspring in 1968? And weren’t finals always acomfortable number of weeks away?But it wasn’t just like the sixties. Some¬thing very important was missing, and ittook me a while to figure out just what itwas. The immediacy of the draft was miss¬ing, and that made a huge difference, butsomething more tangible was missing too.I suddenly remembered: tear gas. Itwasn’t 1968 without tear gas.Having recognized this omission, Ibegan to mourn it. For reasons I couldn’tquite put my finger on, I would have en¬joyed seeing the rabble forcibly cleared from the quadrangles. This is not to saythat I would have advocated such action —just th it I would have enjoyed it immense¬ly. My reaction to this whole affair hadgone from amusement to sadness to — notanger — but to a deep feeling of discomfortwhich I couldn’t express or understand. Ispent a lot of effort trying to do both.What aspect of all this had caused me somuch distress? It was certainly not that Ihold any special brief for Robert McNa¬mara. Nor was it entirely the sensation ofbeing surrounded by cretins — though Ihave no doubt that I was so surrounded. Iwas moved not so much by the idiocy itselfas by the willfulness of the idiocy. Thesepeople did not care to be informed; theydid not care to be intelligent; they did notcare to be consistent. A few examples:(1)One of the strongest points which theleaders of the “Movement” had made dur¬ing the weeks preceding the main eventwas that the University of Chicago is anacademic institution and ought not to be in the business of making awards for non-ac¬ademic accomplishments, or even of judg¬ing the merits of such accomplishments —such judgements being outside the area ofits expertise. The emphasis of this pointwas one of the stated purposes of the rally,whose organizers invited no less an expertthan Jane Fonda to address them on thesubject of her personal assessment ofMcNamara’s merits.(2) McNamara came under heavy firefor his pursuit of what is now viewed as afutile war policy. No recognition was givento the fact that David Dellinger (who ad¬dressed the rally and was warmly re¬ceived) had labored hard throughout thehallowed sixties to make that policy unpro¬ductive.(3) The intellectual precursors of thepeople of the Quadrangles were outragedby the obviously inflated casualty figureswhich issued forth from the administrationof which McNamara was a part. Thosesame casualty figures, trotted out in sup¬the Universityport of the charge (or, more accurately,the epithet) that McNamara was a“butcher,” are now accepted as gospel,and the leaflets are full of authoritative in¬formation as to the number of millions ofdeaths for which he is personally respons¬ible.I come away from all of this with thesame unpleasant feeling that I alwayshave after conversing with a women’s lib¬ber, and it is occasioned by the samething: among all of the statistics, and all ofthe slogans, and all of the parroted argu¬ments, there is never any desire to ascer¬tain what is true. There are fairly objec¬tive (and fairly technical) methodsavailable for measuring the level of dis¬crimination against women in variousmarkets; the “feminists” of my acquaint¬ance are not familiar with these methodsand will not become familiar with thesemethods. They wil not do so because theyreally don’t care to what extent (if at all)there has been discrimination; they willfight it anyway. The battle matters, andthe slogans matter, and the truth doesn’tmatter at all.None of this is a digression. It says a lot— though not all — about the sources of mychagrin on Demonstration Day. Theremay be more personal reasons for thischagrin as well. I marched on Washingtonin 1968, and I wish that I hadn’t. The failureof others to learn from my mistakes is asource of frustration. But that is a minorpoint, and there is also a major point:these people will not learn from their ownmistakes, (indeed, many of them werethere in 1968 and did not learn from theirown mistakes). They will not learn fromtheir own mistakes, and they will not learnfrom anything, because they do not want tolearn, and they do not want to think, andthey do not want to know. It is distressingto find this attitude prevalent among thegeneral population; it is almost devastat¬ing to find it at the University of Chicago.This campus has been the home of overforty Nobel laureates; today the quadran¬gles echo with cries of “No award to impe¬rialist butcher!”There are moments when I think that Itake all of this too seriously; after all, a lotof those people were out there for the sunand nothing more (one “protestor” car¬ried a sign that said, “Hi, Mom”). Butthese people, and people like them, willdemonstrate, and will vote, and willchange the course of history, and will do itwith utter contempt for truth and for all ofthe principles for which this Uniersitystands. It is pure anti-intellectualism inone of its least pleasant forms, and it isrampant.TENTH ANNUALHITCHCOCK MEMORIAL DAYwen*!SUNDAY MAY 27m Koc*/ ~ syBARBECUE » 6<M~-5<KDANCE - 8 30 — UNITYCHICAGO T-SHIRTSALSO OH SALEWITH HELP PROM S.G.: COR SO ACTIVITIES COMMITTEE The Department of Music presents TheCONTEMPORARYCHAMBER PLAYERSof The University of ChicagoRALPH SHAPEY, Music DirectorElsa ChaHston, sopranoWorks by , -5K- '■ " - ..v'-.. - .v/,-'uLuigi Dallapiccola • Alan Stout * Betsy JolosJohn Hoiss • Robert HaH LewisFRIDAY, MAY 25, 1979 • 8:30 P.M.MANDEL HALL, 57th & University AvenueFree and open to the public6 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 25, 1979ViewpointWe were on our way to jail’Andrew Patner is an associate editorsnd editor-elect of The Maroon. He was ar¬rested for disorderly conduct at a demon¬stration while covering the Pick Awarddinner on Tuesday night. This is the firstpart of his story. The concluding part willappear next Friday.By Andrew PatnerThings began to get hot at about aquarter to nine when the situation changedfrom demonstration to confrontation. Agroup of us — policemen, staff, demonstra¬tors, observers, reporters — had beenstanding at the door to Mandel Hall sincebefore 6:30 watching the guests go in andtrying, unsuccessfully for the most part, tomake out what the speakers at the demon¬stration were saying.While the mood was still more calm, Ihad been trying to get reactions from thoseworking at the front door. Vice-Presidentfor Community Affairs Jonathan Klein-bard was running between the building,the police, and his own security men. “Ifyou have any questions, come see me atmy office afterwards,” he told me. Threestaff members were assisting guests intothe building and keeping those who did notbelong out. Assistant Dean of StudentsRichard Royse was playing the most ac¬tive role and told me that “I always volun¬teer for everything” when I asked him ifhe was working that evening because hehad been asked or because he wanted to.Larry Greenfield, dean of students in theDivinity School told me, “I think it’s im¬portant that these people (the guests) aremet by someone, not someone in uniform,don’t you?” I told him that I thought thatsounded good; the demonstrator’s pre¬sence was definitely felt by those arriv¬ing.Assistant Dean of Students Paul Ausicktold me that he felt he had a “responsibili¬ty” to be there. I told him that I thought“responsibility” was a good word. Andthen I felt terrible. I knew that Paul did notwant to be there, and I was sure that Royseand Greenfield did not either. I asked my¬self why I was trying to make these menfeel uncomfortable, and I answered myselfthat I had not told any of these people to behere and my job was to ask questions. Itwas not the best answer, but it was the onlyone I thought I would believe.I asked the guests for comment as theycame in. Some smiled, some lookedstraight ahead, some glared. Only RobertReneker, chairman of the Board of Trust¬ees, would say anything to me and helaughed ana said, “It’s pretty exciting!” Icalled Phillip Jackson by name and helooked at me disbelieving. For a moment itseemed that he wished he could just leave,or say to somebody, “Excuse me, I forgotsomething at home” and go away. But hedidn’t. He just kept looking at me, and thenhe went in.Each time an expensive car drove up wecould hear the speaker shout “Here theycome,” and the shouting and jeering wouldbegin. One of the staff members, or Klein-bard himself, would rush to meet the coup¬le, who were often tanned and more oftennervous. Paul Wheatly broke the moodsomewhat when he walked up in a largered velvet tuxedo and joked with some ofthe crowd. He waved to the crowd as hewalked into the dinner.Two policemen alternated positions atthe entrance and as they would trade off,so would the policy as to whether the presscould stand outside the yellow sawhorses.The one with the mustache remained themost friendly and let me walk around. Theother officer seemed more grim and atfirst said, “Look, I’ll just stand here, andyou stand behind me.”Later on we began to talk and I ex¬plained to him that these were not Commu¬nists holding the rally. He told me that herecognized a lot of the protesters from theMarquette Park rally that the Communistshad had. “Are you saying that there are noCommunists here?” he asked. No, I said. just that they were staying pretty much tothemselves and were not a part of the offi¬cial demonstration.Once he was reassured, I was able towalk around again. The guests had prettymuch arrived so I decided to walk aroundthe building and see who was there. I sawEd Turkington at the side door on Univer¬sity where McNamara had come in atabout 6. He told me that he had been askedto work, that he had not been asked to eat,and that he had nothing else to say.I came back to the front, and askedO’Leary, Director of Security, whether heanticipated any problems from the crowd.“Who me? I never think about problems,”he said. I wondered where to punctuatethat sentence. Until Chief Lyons showed upO’Leary and his two assistants were themost comic looking characters. He in hiscrew cut (“The guy with no hair,” as hewas referred to by the two police officers)and the three of them in their blue blazersand grey flannel pants. I was once told thatthey wore this outfit so they would notseem out of place on the campus.I went across the street to watch thepicketers and to see what the buildinglooked like to them. I could see the bannerhanging from WHPK with a peace sign onit and I smiled. It was the first time I hadseen one in a very long time and the onlyone on campus that day, as far as Iknew.I went back to the front of the buildingand waited for something to happen. SidLens came to the door with a student andRoyse asked him where he was going. “In¬side,” said Lens, smiling. I’m sorry, hewas told. You need an invitation. “But Ijust wanted to go in and'get an award,”Lens said. “McNamara was trying to killpeople and I was trying to stop him and Iwon in the end.” I’m sorry, Royse told himagain. Still smiling, Lens and friend turnedaround and went back across the street.It started to get darker and a freshmantried to run into the building. Two new poli¬cemen grabbed him. “Hey,” somebody inthe crowd shouted. “He’s only a kid, leavehim alone.” The policemen looked aroundand did just that. It was then I realizedthere was a restlessness out there. And itwas then too that I started to see more andmore policemen.We had counted 15 at 6:30. But now theykept coming in. I asked a sergeant howmany policemen there were. He told methat he was there with eight of his men andthat there might be eight other sergeants.We all get our instructions in secret,” hejoked “And then we swallow ’em.” Wejoked with each other, but he did tell meseriously that the orders were comingfrom “downtown” and that he did notknow how many policeman were there.They were coming, he told me, “from a lotof different places. I just wanna knowwhen we’re gonna eat.” Some of the police¬man had been working since 7:30 in themorning. He laughed and I laughed and Ithanked him.The tension was beginning to build. Thecrowd had been told all day that McNa¬mara was a murderer, a misguided tech¬nocrat, a bad economist. Now they wantedto meet him and the day’s organizers hadmade no specific plans to end the demon¬stration. Now they had 1500 people —peaceful, but angry.At about 8.30 or 8:45, I don’t know theexact time, I lost my notes as you will readlater, Ron Kovic came over in his wheel¬chair. Kovic was accompanied by his aideand by two or three students who had beenhelping him throughout the day. He start¬ed to go in and Richard Royse blocked hisentry.“I’m going in,” Kovic said. I’m sorry,Royse told him, that won’t be possible. “1want to see McNamara, I want to talk withhim.” Sir, this is a private dinner. I want tosee him, I want to see the man who put mein this wheelchair. Will you go inside andtell him tnat Ron Kovic is here That I wantto debate him. here and now.” No sir, I won’t. “Would you go in and talk to one ofyour superiors and tell them what is goingon out here. Tell them that there are onethousand people out here and, I’ll bringthem all in with me.” No sir, I won’t.At this moment, one of the students wentback to the crowd and told them over themike what Kovic was doing. Theycheered.“Are you a vet?” Kovic asked Royse. Nosir, I’m not, Royse said “Well look, I’m avet. I lost three-quarters of my body inVietnam. Now I don’t want any of your lip.You go in there and you tell them that I amcoming in.” Kovic was shouting by thistime.“Now don’t give me any of your lip,”Royse said. But I think that he could seethis was something a little bigger than hemight want to take responsibility for. Icould not believe that he had taken the re¬sponsibility for so long. Royse went insideand left Kovic with Paul Ausick. Paul hadbeen staring downward the whole time,and continued to stare down.Kovic asked me what was going on and Itold him that I could not see inside. One ofour reporters ran back and forth and welearned there was a caucus going on withRoyse, Chuck O’Connell, Kleinbard,Bruckner, Marie Wester and others, withany group of them at any given time. Kovicaskea me “How am I doing?” And I toldhim that I thought he was doing fine; I toldhim that the decision makers were inside,that Royse meant well, I was sure of that,but I could not figure out why he was put¬ting himself on the line when his boss,O’Connell, was staying inside.Kovic asked me about Ausick and I toldhim that I thought Paul had been a CO dur¬ing the war, that he was terribly troubledby the whole day. Maybe I shouldn’t havetold him that. Maybe I should have toldhim more — told him to leave Paul alone,to leave the whole goddamned thing alone.But I was just asking and answering ques¬tions, of and to anybody — demonstrators,staff, police. Things were getting hot.Kovic told Ausick to go in and see whatwas happening. Paul told Kovic he wasn’tsure what he could do. Royse had been in¬side for more then 10 minutes. Kovic saidhe thought Royse wasn’t going to comeout. I told him that I thought that he waswrong — that Royse might not be doing theright thing, but that he would do what hesaid and he said he would come out. I waswrong. He never came out.Kovic told Ausick “You’ve got two min¬utes,” and it was here that everything be¬comes split second that there was no wayto tell what was happening because somuch was happening. The crowd was mov¬ing fast, very fast, to University Avenue.Somebody had told them McNamara wascoming out. I didn’t believe it. I didn’tthink that he would come out the side dooror that he would come out at all until thecrowd had been controlled by the police Itwas my turn to be right, but this time itdidn’t matter. The crowd was gone.Kovic sensed this immediately eventhough he could not see it from where hewas. He could sense the mood of the crowdat any given time. “Come on we’re gettingout of here,” he said. His aide and the stu¬dents who were helping him got him out ofthere right away. I followed closely and wewent to the intersection of 57th and Univer¬sity. There was a woman and her baby atthe corner and I saw that she knew Ron.She was a relative or a close friend andRon called her over right away. “Thecrowd could move over here at any minuteand they could do that in no time. You guysget out of here. Get behind that car.” Thewoman didn’t move and Ron screamed“Get behind that car now!” They weregone and we were moving into the crowd.We moved down University until wewere past the crowd. Ron paused for a mo¬ment and said “We’re going in.” Hewheeled himself into the crowd “Can younear me?” he shouted. The police were ev¬erywhere — on the sidewalk, on the street, in the crowd. The television crews rushedover. The reporters came in. Clark Kis¬singer in his group came over and set uptheir megaphone.“Everybody sit down, sit down,” Ronsaid. People started to sit down, and thenmore and more people. A man in a lightblue blazer appeared with a bullhorn. Wecouldn’t hear his name, or what he wassaying because the crowd shouted himdown. Kissinger was screaming into themicrophone “You see what I was saying,you can’t be peaceful. They’ve got theircops on you now.” But nobody wanted tohear him either. Nobody wanted violenceand to them both men with bullhorns re¬presented the same approach.By now we had heard that the man in thelight blue blazer was with the police andwe saw him charge toward us. I saw thathe had blood on his face and I said Oh myGod. But as he came closer I saw that itdidn’t look like blood and I thought it wasthe old police trick where policemen putsome blood on their face to make it appearthat they had been injured.We saw a man in a suit squirming whilebeing carried by at least four policemen.And somebody said something about a pieand I realized that this policeman had beenhit by a pie. The television lights werebright and we could only see our immedi¬ate area. Kovic called Kissinger over andasked him for the bullhorn. Kissingerseemed reluctant and after saying some¬thing about a teach-in, Kovic took the mike.“Can everybody hear me?” he askedagain. “This is Ron.” Everything wasquiet. “Now we’re all just going to sit downhere and talk and be peaceful, we’re goingto have the sort of teach-in we should havehad today.”The policeman with the pie on his facecame over to us “You are under arrest,”he said to Ron “What did you say?” Ronasked handing him the microphone."You,” he said over the mike,” are underarrest.All hell broke loose where we were. Thepolice moved in and started grabbing atus. I asked the arresting officer “What isyour name, sir?” (We had never been ableto hear his name.) I got no response andthe police kept grabbing. I assumed I hadnot been arrested and I kept asking ques¬tions. At this point, I could see two police¬men grabbing Ron by his legs, and rea¬lized that the police were out of control. Itried to throw myself across the wheel¬chair and pushed back at the blue-blazeredpoliceman and got my coat covered withthe syrup that was on him.The police kept pulling on Ron. I kepttrying to keep my hands on the chair try¬ing to keep the police away from Ron’sbody. Two policemen grabbed me and onestarted to choke me with his arm I let goof Ron’s chair and somebody shouted “Ar¬rest this clown!” Then I heard “Clown,you’re under arrest!”I could hardly breathe. My chest andstomach were being held tightly and onepoliceman still had his arm around myneck. As soon as I could talk 1 said “1 am areporter, please let go of me.” The police¬man told me to shut up and threw meagainst a red car. The policeman slappedboth of my wrists, forcing me to drop mynotes and my pen.I asked them for my notes and one of thepolicemen said, “put the cuffs on thisguy.” My arms were grabbed at the bicepsand 1 was handcuffed. Then I was grabbedand shoved towards the paddy wagon. Isaid. “I’ll cooperate, let me do my ownwalking.” They stayed with me but let mewalk over to the paddy wagon and thenpushed me in. Ron wras in there in his chairand his aide was with him. Then anotheryoung man came in and three women, twoof whom I knew. The third was crying hys¬terically.We assured each other that everythingwould be all right. The door was slammedand latched.We were on our way to jail.The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 25, 1979 — 7Robert McNamaraAlternatives to the international arms raceThe following is the text of Robert McNa¬mara 's speech delivered at the Albert PickJr. Award dinner.President Gray, Dr. Harris, Mrs. Pick,and Ladies and Gentlemen:I am deeply honored and grateful for thisaward — for the sculpture which accompan¬ies it, and for the generous cash prize of$25,000, which I will contribute to an appro-praite development-oriented activity.It seems to me that what the Directors ofthe Albert Pick, Jr. Fund, and this great uni¬versity l\ad in mind in establishing thisaward honoring international understand¬ing was to point out that we need to think more profoundly about the new kind ofworld that is emerging around us.The old order is certainly passing. Per¬haps the beginning of its breakdown can bedated from that cold December day in 1942when a few hundred yards from where weare now sitting the first nuclear chain reac¬tion began. The consequences of that eventwere to transform our whole concept of in¬ternational security because now Man hadthe capacity not merely to wage war, but todestroy civilization itself.If I may on this occasion speak quite per¬sonally, I had of courst to wrestle with theproblem of the fundamental nature of inter¬ national security during my tenure as U. S.Secretary of Defense, and in 1966 I spokepublicly about it in a speech to the AmericanSociety of Newspaper Editors meeting inMontreal.My central point was that the concept ofsecurity itself had' become dangerouslyoversimplified, there had long been an al¬most universal tendency to think of the secu¬rity problem as being exclusively a militaryproblem, and to think of the military prob¬lem as being primarily a weapons-system orhardware problem.“We still tend to conceive of national secu¬rity,” I noted, “Almost solely as a state ofOfficial Pick Award dinner guest listThe following is a copy of the official guestlist to Tuesday night’s award dinner forRobert McNamara winner of the firstAlbert Pick Jr. Award for InternationalUnderstanding. According to a source,about 12 people on the list did not attend thedinner. Where known, we have indicatedthose who did not attend. Time hasprevented us from checking the list, so un¬fortunately, some of those who appear maynot have been at the dinner.Taole No. 1Hanna GrayCharles GrayRobert McNamaraMrs. Robert McNamaraMrs. Albert Pick, Jr.Chauncy HarrisAlan AltheimerMrs. Alan AltheimerTable No. 2Albert Pick IIIRobert RenekerMrs. Robert RenekerMr. D. Gale JohnsonMrs. D. Gale JohnsonMiss Janet PickMr. William McNeillMrs. William McNeillTable No. 3Mrs. Gertrude Pick LesmanMr. John WilsonMrs. John WilsonMr. John Rielly Ms. Henrietta PonsMr. Hermon D. SmithCatherine Anne RiellyMr. Jock WeintraubTable No. 4Mr. Edward LeviMrs. Edward LeviMr. William ClarkMrs. John Paul WellingMr. Akira IriyeMrs. Akira IriyeDr. C. Phillip MillerMrs. C. Phillip MillerTable No. 5Mr. Lloyd RudolphMrs. Lloyd RudolphMr. Virginio FerrariMr. George RanneyMrs. George RanneyMr. Jonathan FantonMadine Van Sant Table No. 6Kenneth DamMrs. Kenneth DamSusan FalkDr. Reynaldo ScarpettiRonald DeckerMrs. Ronald DeckerArnold HarbergerTable No. 7Mr. BrucknerMr. John MerriamMrs. John MerriamMr. George WatkinsMr. richard GuggenheimMrs. Richard GuggenheimTable No. 8Mr. Henry MeersMrs. Henry MeersMr. Robert UretzMrs. Daggett HarveyMr. Frank LivingstonMrs. Frank LivingstonMr. Sidney DavidsonMrs. Sidney DavidsonTable No. 9Mrs. J. Harris WardMr. J.A.B. Van BuitenenMr. Allison DunhamMrs. Allison DunhamMr. Frederick Livingston, Jr.Mrs. Frederick Livingston, JrTabJe No. 10Mr. J. Howard WoodMrs. J. Howard WoodMr. Edward RosenheimMrs. Edwrad RosenheimMs. Jenny GuggenheimMrs. Donald Lach Mr. Arthur CyrDonald LachThere is NO Table No. 11Table No. 12Mr. Sydney Stein, Jr.Mr. John JeuckMr. Gregory CampbellMrs. Gregory CampbellMr. William GrantMrs. William GrantMr. Fred EgganMrs. Fred EgganTable No. 13Mr. James DownsMrs. James DownsMr. Phillip JacksonMrs. Phillip JacksonMr. Paul GuggenheimMr. Robert AshenhurstMr. Morrison WaudMrs. Morrison WaudTable No. 14Mr. Donald GilliesMrs. Donald GilliesMr. Walter BlumMrs. Walter BlumMr Robert AliberMrs. Robert AliberMr. Harold BellMrs. Harold Bell-Table No. 15Mr. Ferdinand KramerMrs. Ferdinand KramerMr. Cedric ChernickMrs. Cedric ChernickMr. Albert Wohlstetter Mrs. Albert WohlstetterMr. James ColemanMrs. James ColemanTable No. 16Ms. Sonya GuttmanMr. Joseph KitagawaMrs. Joseph KitagawaDr. Burton GrossmanMr. Bruce GrahamMrs. Bruce GrahamMr. Edmund KitchMs. Alison LauterTable No. 17Mr. Charles O'ConnellMrs. Charles O'ConnellMr. Len O'ConnerMrs. Len O'ConnerMr. Harrison SteansMr. Bennett ArchambaultMrs. Bennett ArchambaultTable No. 18Mr. Arthur RasmussenMrs. Arthur RasmussenMr. Richard RosettMrs. Richard RosettMr. Robert StuartMr. James CostakisMr. Morris RossinMrs. Morris RossinTable No. 19Mr. George TolleyDr. Leon JacobsonMrs. Leon JacobsonMr. Robert McNeillMr. C. Arnold AndersonMs. Mary Jean BowmanMr. Harold MilnerMrs. Harold MilnerTable No. 20Ann GordonMrs. Joan KleinbardDr. Albert DorfmanMrs. Albert DorfmanMr. Howard ArveyMrs. Howard ArveyMr. Bertrand Goldberg Mrs. Bertrand GoldbergTable No. 21Mr. Ping ti HoMrs. Ping-ti HoMr. Louis Freidheim, Jr.Mrs. Louis Freidheim, Jr.Mr. John CarswellMrs. John CarswellMr. Edward NeisserMrs. Edward NeisserTable No. 22Mr. Wiliiam KruskalMrs. William KruskalMr. Halil InalcikMrs. Halil InalcikMr. Clyde WatkinsMrs. Clyde WatkinsMr. David RossoMrs. David RossoTable No. 23Mr. Norton GinsburgMrs. Norton GinsburgDr. Ronald SingerMrs. Ronald SingerMrs. James CroninMr. Nick AronsonMr. Even Collinsworth, Jr.Mrs. Even Collinsworth, Jr.Table No. 24Mr. Philip HauserMrs. Philip HauserMrs. Emory WilliamsMrs. Emory WilliamsMr. Jed SnyderMr. Ralph LewyMrs. Ralph LewyJonathan KleinbardTable No. 25Mr. Barry KarlMr. David Folkerts LandauMrs. David Folkerts-LandauMr. John GreenebaumMrs. John GreenebaumMr. Paul WheatleyMrs. Paul WheatleyMrs. Leonard BiriderHanna GrayIssues to be debated armed readiness: a vast, awesome arsenalof weaponry.”But, I pointed out, if one reflects on theproblem more deeply it is clear that forcealone does not guarantee security, and thata nation can reach a point at which it doesnot guarantee security for itself simply bybuying more military hardware.That was my view then. It remains myview now.Let me be precise about this point.No nation can avoid the responsibility ofproviding an appropriate and reasonablelevel of defense for its society. In an imper¬fect world that is necessary But what is justas necessary is to understand that the con¬cept of security encompasses far moer thanmerely military force, and that a societycan reach a point at which additional mili¬tary expenditure no longer provides addi¬tional security.Indeed, to the extent that such expendi¬ture severely reduces the resources avail¬able for other essential sectors and socialservices — and fuels a futile and reactivearms race — excessive military spendingcan erode security rather than enhance it.Many societies today are facing that situ¬ation. Certainly the world as a whole is. Andany sensible way out of the problem mustbegin with the realization of the dangers anddisproportionate costs that extravagant mil¬itary spending imposes on human warfareand social progress.Global defense expenditures have grownso large that it is difficult to grasp their fulldimensions.The overall total is now in excess of $400billion a year.An estimated 36 million men are underarms in the world’s active regular and para¬military forces, with another 25 million inthe reserves, and some 30 million civiliansin military-related occupations.Public expenditures on weapons researchand development now approach $30 billion ayear, and mobilize the talents of half a mil¬lion scientists and engineers throughout theworld. That is a greater research effort thanis devoted to any other activity on earth, andit consumes more public research moneythan is spent on the problems of energy,health, education and food combined.The United States and the Soviet Union to¬gether account for more than half of theworld’s total defense bill, and for some two-thirds of the world’s arms trade.And yet it is not in the industrialized na¬tions, but in the developing countries thatto 15Majority wouldn’t sway GrayThe following is a statement from Presi¬dent Hanna Gray prepared on May 23:I should like to make some brief observa¬tions on the events of May 22, surroundingthe presentation of the Albert Pick, Jr.Award. Let me first repeat here the centralpoint of my message of May 14 to the Uni¬versity Senate (which was printed in TheMaroon on May 15) — namely, that out ofthe controversy engendered by the an¬nouncement of the award there haveemerged a series of important questionsthat are being widely debated within theUniversity. They will be specifically ad¬dressed by a faculty advisory committeewhich will consider the range of Universitymedals, prizes and awards, as well as thepolicies and criteria pertaining to them andthe procedures used in awarding them. Thatcommittee, created in consultation with theCommittee of the Council, will be namedsoon and it will be asked to report in the au¬tumn.The Pick Award was presented to RobertMcNamara Tuesday evening following adinner in Hutchinson Commons, and Mr.McNamara made an address which wassent in advance to the media. There was nodisruption of the dinner or the award cere¬mony. ,As aft of you know, throughout the daythere had been a number of demonstrationsand teach-ins on campus. Again, these werenot disruptive events and they were not in¬terfered with. At the time of the award ceremony there was a very large demonstrationat 57th St. and University Ave. which lasted8 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 25, throughout the ceremony.I have seen the reports in the media, andhave had a number of conversations withdeans of students and others on the Univer¬sity staff who were present, about the arrestof 25 persons by Chicago police in connec¬tion with an occurrence on a city street fol¬lowing the evening’s planned demonstra¬tion. Of these 25 persons, 17 are registeredstudents. The police charged 16 of these withdisorderly conduct and one with disorderlyconduct and simple battery. After they werearrested, two deans of students and one ofthe University’s legal counsel helped to ne¬gotiate their release, and the deans obtainedtransportation for them from the police sta¬tions back to the campus.I do want to express my personal regreatthat the situation reached a point where ar¬rests were made. I would emphasize thatthe University has not preferred anycharges against any of those arrested, andwe have no intention of pressing any. At thesame time I should emphasize that there areno disciplinary actions of any kind plannedin connection with the day’s events.The staff of the University conducted it¬self properly throughout these events. TheMay 22 Committee, which organized theprotests, was, I am told, entirely forthrightabout its intentions and plans. And I am as¬sured that the police communicated responsibly and openly with everyone involved in planning the day’s events.Responsible dissent and discussion are es¬sential to the University’s task. The facultycommittee on awards will shortly begin theorderly process of consideration and debatewhich I trust will be deliberate and candid.Hanna H. Gray1979 Even if a majority of the faculty hadsigned petitions dissociating themselvesfrom the giving of the first Albert Pick Jr.Award for International Understanding toRobert McNamara, President Hanna Graywould not have changed her mind aboutgoing through with the presentation of theaward, she said Monday at the last pressconference of the academic year.“the award of an individual is not an en¬dorsement of the person’s views,” shesaid.“The procedures of the award wereproper,” she said. “We are going ahead withour plans with the understanding thatpeaceful dissent is part of the tradition ofthis place.”Gray stressed the importance of the com¬mittee she will appoint to review aw-ard pro¬cedures. The review “would have to deter¬mine what it is a university was wellequipped to judge in conformity with its ownspecial characteristics.”Gray said that going ahead with theaward was a “positive decision.” The badpublicity generated by the presentation ofthe award does not concern her, she said.“This is not an honorary degree, which weaward only to scholars,” she said. “Thereare other accomplishments out there.“An honorary degree doesn’t necessarilyendorse the views of the scholar. I think adistinction exists. It is possible to recognizewithout endorsement.” Gray said she does not view the PickAward as part of a movement towards aUniversity role as an actor in public poli¬cy.“I do not see it in those terms. I do notthink we should more corporately in that di¬rection. It is important to have actors fromthat stage accessible; it is quite anotherthing for the University to be an actor onthat stage.“The (Pick Selection) Committee empha¬sized the role of the World Bank and the im¬portance of development. There is a largerhistory. It is a very difficult question. I be¬lieve this debate will not be easily resolved.It raises fundamental questions about theburden and lessons of history.“It also raises questions about the natureof an individual’s life and if renewal and re¬direction can be thought of as a major andhonorable thing.“There was the feeling.that a process thatwas a proper one had taken place.“It was a political act in the sense that togo against it would have been political.There was a reasonable basis for not chang¬ing that.“This is not an individual case but onewhere we will review policies and proce¬dures.”Gray said that members of the facultycommittee to review award procedures willbe appointed before the end of the academicyear. — Abbe Fletman9 /5>A/t — nOOTFM 9d IStuds TerkelThe young are not antihistoricalThe following is an edited transcript ofStuds Terkel’s comments at Tuesday after¬noon’s teach-in:There is an issue, and the young — you,my colleagues — are sore about it, and in¬dignant about it. And rightfully so, you’rehere. So this is a turnout overwhelming;there is another turnout overwhelming, andthe one over in the other hall, and thepicnic . . .This to me is exciting because what we’redoing is fighting something called antihis¬tory. We’re always taught the young — thatyou, your generation — is antihistorical,knew nothing of the past. And yet the com¬mittee that includes William McNeill, dis¬tinguished historian, is telling us, in thewords of Henry Ford 60 years ago, ‘historyis bunk’ — that’s a phrase Henry Ford onceused.Incidently — not accidently — McNamaradid work before. And I maintain he still is.Somehow, in its arrogance, this committeeand this administration — it’s been such, Ithink ever since Robert Maynard Hutchinsleft — in their arrogance, they have com¬pletely underrated your intelligence, yoursense of indignation, your very human-hood. ✓I think there’s an absolute contempt forthe student body, a contempt for the facultymembers who protest, a contempt for thecommunity and, might I add, a contempt forsome of the alumni.However, I’m starting to think about his¬tory, what is history. We say he’s a differentman. We now know thanks to Mr. Stevens,and you’ll hear from Eqbal Ahmad soon,and others who will talk about the WorldBank, that he is the same person. The dif¬ference is the carrot and the stick.There was a stick, if I can use a eupha-mism to describe the Vietnam War, thestick that McNamara and his colleagueswielded that resulted in so many needlessdeaths and so much destruction. And there’sa carrot, now used by the World Bank, but itamounts to the same thing — it’s the sameman.I mention Robert Morse Lovett. He was 73years old, it was 1937 and something hap¬pened not too far away from here, on theSouth Side. The CIO was being organized,and there was a picnic, justlike the picnictoday, on Memorial Day, 1937. RepublicSteel, which employed guys like McNa¬mara, his prototypes then, were out to breakthe strike, and the Chicago Police werethere and ten strikers were shot in the backand killed.Robert Morse Lovett, who was chairmanof the protest rally the following day or twodays later at the Civic Opera House said‘Captain Mooney is a killer’. I still hear hisvoice — Captain Mooney was the police cap¬tain of the district responsible for the shoot¬ing — ‘go ahead and fire away’. ‘CaptainMooney is a killer’, said a member of thisfaculty, and a very distinguished one. ButCaptain Mooney was simply a Chicago cop,doing what he felt was his work for RepublicSteel.I’m not saying McNamara’s a killer. Thatisn’t the word; there is no word. You can useall the euphamisms you want, but what isthe difference between Robert McNamaraand Captain Mooney, who Robert Morse Lo¬vett called a killer? One was a Chicago copwho became brutalized by the very natureof his job, the nature of his work. The otherwas a smooth, efficient financial wizard, weare told, who operates efficiently, robot-likeand automaton-like. And he is the one beingawarded the same thing, really. Only thescale of magnitude is so much greater in thecase of McNamara.Now I could never see an award forhuman understanding being given to Cap¬tain Mooney. I don’t think the Universitycould have done that; it’s too cruel. And hewas a blue collar guy to begin with. But, togive it to someone whose crime was so muchmore monumental because he representsthe very things that the committee who chose him represents. And they representthe very ones who were outside this particu¬lar ivy league wall.But you represent something else. Yourepresent the word, the idea, of student. Youknow, the late sainted Mayor of ChicagoRichard J. Daley, whenever he heard thatword student he’d go crazy, ever since 1968,and because the word student representsquestioning, a seeking for truth, a seekingfor justice. Name all the words you’veheard, but it really means that; that’s whatthe word student means. The student con¬nects that which is taught here with theworld outside. It is not the book alone; it isthe book and the experience. So you canhave a guy quoting Aristotle and quotingAquinas; it means nothing, you see.You can have the physics equation downpat We have scientists working for the gov¬ernment today, in the making of napalm orwhatever it is. We know what they’re doingis technically right. I’m not good at chemis¬try or physics, I don’t know what it’s allabout, but I do know, these guys know theyknow that this particular thing leads to thatthing, and they’re so good at it. And the endresult is something like napalm. Or an anti¬personnel bomb.To me it’s irresponsible of someone whocould quote Aquinas, who could quote Aris¬totle, who can understand a physics equa¬tion o»* a chemical formula without knowingor who doesn’t care how its applied outside,or for a historian on the committee to sayMcNamara is not the man he once was, thathe’s someone entirely different. It is likesaying there’s two McNamaras — whenthere’s only one. And it’s also like saying,look, we are a University, what this mandoes has nothing to do with what we’reteaching. That is obscene. That is a fake.That is not what Robert Morse Lovetttaught. That is not what Thorsten Veblentaught. There are scores of others, and ofcoursewe have Terry Turner. And we haveMr. Stevens. And we have the younger ones -I’m sure older ones — who are protesting.They to me are teachers — and MarshallSahlins of course, and Eqbal Ahmad. Nowthey are teachers because they connectwhat you learn with what you live. And thisis what it’s about.We’re told so often we are a land of zom¬bies and automata. That’s precisely whatthis committee that chose McNamara wouldwant us to be. That’s precisely what the ad¬ministration wants us to be. But we’re not —that’s why you’re here. That’s why you’rereacting the way you do, because you areflesh and blood and alive and you’re protest¬ing an attempt at a lobotomy.We are all MacMurphy. You have all seenOne Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, haven’tyou? We are all MacMurphy, but we will notallow a lobotomy to be performed on us bythe Nurse Ratchets out there.They would have us believe there is no his¬tory, history is bunk, there is no past. Butthere weren’t different men. Now we knowthanks to Stevens and Eqbal Ahmad that hiswork at the World Bank was a continuation. i■D>ZQStuds TerkelWe know that when Allende was electedpresident of Chile — democratically — theWorld Bank cut off funding. And when theKissingerian parade destabilized Chile andimmediately after the fascist movementtook over, they resumed funding. If that’snot a continuation of the Vietnam War, what is?I’m here to say that I’m ashamed of theadministration. I’m ashamed of the com¬mittee that chose McNamara, but I’m proudof the faculty that protests, I’m proud of thecommunity that protests, and, most of all.I’m proud of youMay 22 Committee‘Anger and the spirit of resistance’The following is a statement by the May 22Committee issued May-23:The presentation of the Albert Pick Jr.Award to Robert S. McNamara by the Uni¬versity of Chicago has aroused anger and aspirit of resistance in all segments of theUniversity community. The picnic, teach-in,and demonstration organized by the 22nd ofMay Committee to give expression to thesefeelings were overwhelmingly successful.Over 2,000 people took part in these activi¬ties and rigorously observed the policy ofpeaceful and legal discussion and demon¬stration decided upon by the Committee andenforced by its marshalls. After our demonstration was adjourned,some people called upon McNamara to de¬bate them in an open discussion of the issuesraised by the award. Following his refusalto appear, some of them engaged in civil dis¬obedience by sitting down on University Av¬enue outside the door of Reynolds Clubwnere uiey were arrested by the ChicagoPolice.The individuals who sat down on Universi¬ty Avenue did so in the midst of a confusedsituation in an attempt to avert violenceThe Committee condemns the cowardice ofMcNamara in refusing an open debate andsympathizes with the feelings of those who engaged in civil disobedience as a way of ex¬pressing their outrage. We condemn the ad¬ministration for its provocative action ingoing through with the presentation of thisoutrageous award to McNamara in defianceof the united protests of the faculty, staff,and students of this university. We furthercondemn the administration for encourag¬ing the Chicago Police to arrest the non-vio¬lent demonstrators engaged in passive civildisobedience. We demand that all chargesagainst those arrested be dropped and thatno disciplinary action against them be un¬dertaken by the University.The 22nd of May Committee— Friday, May 25, 1979 — 9The Chicago MaroonREPAIRSPECIALISTSon IBM, SCM,Olympia, etc.FREE repairestimates; repairsby factory-trainedtechnician.RENTALSavailable withU. of C.I.D. New andRebuiltTypewriters,Calculators,Dictators,AddersU of ChicagoBookstore5750 S. Ellis Ave« Typewriter Dept2nd Floor753-3303marian realty, inc.CBREALTORStudio and 1 BedroomApartments Available-Students Welcome-On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-5400Eye 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,Student Government MeetingWednesday Night May 30 7:30 p.m.Ida Noyes library All Welcome10 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 25, 1979HMNMMMWiHHIMMMMMPMMHMB— Marshall SahlinsHistory repeats: first tragedy, now farceThe following is a transcript of MarshallSahhn’s comments at Tuesday afternoon’steach-in:Vietnam. Teach-In. McNamara. We allhave a sad feeling of deja vu about today’sevents. It surely is one case of nostalgia notbeing what it used to be. History truly is re¬peating itself: and if the first time it reallywas tragedy, this time it really is farce.But our present sense of outrage and re¬gret can only in part be blamed on the Uni¬versity. If the University of Chicago haschosen to bestow the Albert Pick award for“international understanding” on RobertMcNamara then part of the blame must beon ourselves. In some important measure,what was done in the 1960’s and the early1970’s to protest the Vietnam war was a fail¬ure. We have to reflect on the reasons forthat failure. For the conditions now are toomuch like they were then, and if we do notact effectively we too will be condemned torepeat our history.The great problem of the protest, then andnow, it seems to me, is the insupportable po¬litical contradiction that is laid upon us inrelation to so-called legitimate authority.The fact is that, then and now, it is not wewho subvert the system: it is those in au¬thority who betray the ideas and traditionsthey were entrusted to uphold. The first rev¬olutionary act is not the work of the peoplewho revolt. The authors of the decisive revo¬lutionary acts are the Johnsons, and theNixons and the McNamaras, who use theirpower not merely to deceive, but to under¬mine the better values in which we had be¬lieved. Who after all subverted the ideals ofour society in the 1960’s? Who committedthe outrageous acts against the Constitu¬tion, the institutions and common decency.Who was 1/nAmerican? It was not us. Wewere trying to preserve what was good inourselves and in our society. They were kill¬ing it.1979, and the University of Chicago de¬cides to reward Mr. McNamara for this be¬trayal with 25,000 shekels of silver (If theywant to give McNamara a statue also, we would happily give him the one with thefinger in the air standing in front of HarperLibrary). My esteemed colleagues of thefaculty selection committee, two of themhistorians, chose to ignore history anddoomed the University to this repetition ofit. Likewise, the University Establishment— Mr. Wilson, Mr. Gale Johnson, Mrs. Gray— seem to have learned nothing and forgot¬ten nothing. So once again, it is not we who,in protesting, are attacking the Universityof Chicago. We are the University of Chica¬go.The administration of Hanna Gray hasbeen a great disappointment. It’s not onlyMcNamara, or South Africa, or the relationsto Hyde Park or the Dick Cavett show. All ofthese seem to me symptomatic of a moregeneral and dangerous attitude. Money isshort, and the Administration feels itselfvulnerable to the average common conser¬vative opinions of the large corporatedonors who endow the University. The Uni¬versity establishment therefore incorpo¬rates these opinions as its own. It tries tothink the way these people think. The policyis to keep the lid on, politically and intellec¬tually. Mrs. Gray has not given us, the facul¬ty and students, a single sign that she standsfor educational leadership and innovationfor which this University was once famous.Faculty and students, we define our exis¬tence here in these terms; we are here be¬cause we believe in the intellectual life andtraditions of the University of Chicago.(Why else would we be here? The U of C is anice place to teach, but one wouldn’t want tolive there.) Mrs. Gray and her administra¬tion have not, by word or deed, come out andsaid to would-be donors: “Look, this is whatwe are; this is what we stand for. We aredevoted to using our minds in the best andmost decent way we can, however uncon¬ventional the ideas we come up with mayseem to you, and however unconventionalthe methods we might devise. We believethis makes some contribution to a good soci¬ety. If you believe that, we welcome yourhelp. But if you think helping the University of Chicago is a way of promoting your inter¬national hotel chain, or your publishingbusiness, or any business of your own inter¬ested ends or opinions, then send yourmoney somewhere else — maybe Harvard. ”Instead, Mrs. Gray seems to be acting onthe mistaken idea that preserving the Uni¬versity is the same thing as preserving theidea of the University. Events are provingotherwise. The University cannot be boththe mistress of the big bourgeoisie and theconscience of a human and humane soci¬ety.I mentioned before the contradictions thatbeset a movement of protest, in the 1960’sand again today, and the dilemmas of politi¬cal action that are put upon us. Since it is infact the powers-that-be who are undermin¬ing the institutions, it is we, ostensibly with¬out power, who must protect them. Butsince it is they who hold the legitimate au¬thority, it is our action that is deemed illegit¬imate. Our leaders subvert the system, andwe are called subversive. They destroy theeducational and democratic values and we,defending these, are called destructive. Forthey can claim all the due processes, theduly appointed committees, acting by con¬stitutionally valid rules; so that what we dobecomes “unruly” — and, regrettably dis¬tasteful to many of those who believe as wedo.I think that was one of the many reasonsof our failure in the 1960’s and the reason toothat we have to fight the same old battlestoday. Although in the 1960’s we were pro¬tecting the traditional rights, and the tradi¬tions of what was right, we lost all the sym¬bols. Since they took the American flag, wecould think of nothing better than to burn it.They took the country, even the workingclasses they were sending to die in Vietnam,and left the peace movement isolated andincreasingly desperate. The movementgrew progressively smaller, its leadersmore and more hallucinatory, its ideologyincreasingly foreign to its ideals and its ac¬tions more and more outrageous, purpo¬seless and self destructive. We should not now, here, at the Universityof Chicago, repeat all this as farce. At leasttwo important things will have to be done toavoid it. The first is that liberals will have tostick it out. In the 1960’s, caught in the con¬tradiction between legitimate authority andtraditional morality, the liberals were atfirst neutralized and then, as the movementheaded toward its left wing disorder, tne lib¬erals were alienated. Their old enchantmentwith the system took over — the HubertHumphrey syndrome: better, they thought,to work inside, to try to advise and human¬ize the established political machinery. Thisdesertion of the cause by social democratsdoomed it. And one must now ask, was it re¬ally more effective to try to humanize thebureaucrats who were dismantling thecountry than the so-called subversives whohad essentially begun by believing in it. Bet¬ter to stay on the right side and to contendthere over the means for doing good then tothink you can offer good means for pervert¬ed ends.The second important thing, it seems tome, is to stay fast to the issue, and to theideology, and not to allow ourselves to be de-legitimized. The issue here, in this affairMcNamara, is the idea of the University, ofwhat it stands for. It is not we who are em¬barrassing the university, it is we, the Uni¬versity, who have been embarrassed. Themotto of the University of Chicago is ours:creseat scientia, vita excolatur — “Mayknowledge increase, my life flourish.” Mycolleagues on the faculty committee and theadministration violate every word of it.True, we no longer cheer that banner, sinceas earlier administration saw fit to takeaway football on the grounds that this is anintellectual place. But since the present ad¬ministration now threatens to take away ourintellectual place, perhaps we ought not toburn the flag but to revive its faded memo¬ry. Perhaps we should march to the demon¬stration tonight under the honored banner ofcrescat scientia, singing, as is our right,Wave the flag for old ChicagoShow them were we stand...Michael SchudsonUniversity linked to social institutionsThe following summarizes main points ofa talk delivered Tuesday by Michael Schud¬son, assistant professor of sociology, thatwas not fully written out. It is not a verbatimaccount of the remarks delivered.The University is not nor can it ever be de¬tached from politics. It may be semi-de¬tached or semi-autonomous. But it is closelylinked to other social institutions, particu¬larly business and government.I won’t belabor the point. But if you thinkof the University as set apart from the restof society, think, nonetheless, of those pointsof contact where it touches the rest of soci¬ety. Think of the University as a separatecell within society, if you wish, but thenthink about the semipermeable membranethrough which it is nourished. Think of allthe points of contact, these, for instance:1. A University is situated in a local com¬munity. What is its role, for instance, inreleasing crime statistics about thatcommunity?2. The curriculum itself is a point of con¬tact with the rest of society.3. The University endowment is anotherpoint of contact as Donald Woods, SouthAfrican journalist now in exile pointedout in protesting Harvard’s investmentsin South Africa: “A University,” hewrote, “is more than a knowledge shop,especially a famous university like Har¬vard, and it cannot escape importantmoral obligations by turning in upon itsmore limited mandate.”4. Admissions is a point of contact.5. Job placement is a point of contact. Lookat the weekly calendar of guest speakersat the Business School or the list of firmsthat interview at the business school orthe law school. Students come here hop¬ ing to be educated for good jobs. Tomaintain its position as an institutionwhich provides a good education forgood jobs, the University provides tech¬nical training, it provides a wider educa¬tion, it provides contacts with people inbusiness and government and otherswho can offer good jobs, and — crucially— it creates a culture which promotes instudents a well-formed sense of what a“good job” is. A job at a community col¬lege teaching the children of blue-collarworkers is looked on with contemptwhile a job at a large research universi¬ty is much more highly regarded. Givencertain assumptions widely shared inour society about the good life — aboutincome, a chance for promotion, pres¬tige, security, and so forth — this is allquite sensible. But it is a set of values, aset of moral and political choices.6. The University itself is a political educa¬tor in providing a certain model of acommunity. Businesses exist in whichlabor turnover is low in part becauseworkers feel well rewarded and well re¬spected. What kind of a model does aUniversity provide which fights unionsor fails to comply with affirmative ac¬tion?7. And, finally, there is the matter ofawards granted by what have beencalled, our “secular cathedrals.” I donot know if the University should giveawards to non-academics. But I dis¬agree with those of my colleagues whothink the main mistake in the PickAward was deciding to give it at all.Their implication is that the Universitycan and should be pure. I think that isfolly. The University honors non-aca¬demics regularly. To be a trustee of this University is an honor. To be on a visit¬ing committee is an honor. To be invitedto lecture on campus is an honor. In¬deed, it is conferring an honor when thePresident of this University accompan¬ies the mayor of this city to a footballgame. I think it is fine that PresidentGray is beginning a review of awardspolicies. That is worthwhile, but itmisses the point of the current situation.The point is that the award this year is togo to Robert McNamara, and that is ahorrifying decision.I would like now to say a few words about“responsibility,” and I would like to quotefrom Martin Buber:Each of us is encased in an armourwhose task is to ward off signs. Signshappen to us without respite, livingmeans being addressed, we wouldneed only to present ourselves and toperceive. But the risk is too dangerousfor us, the soundless thunderingsseem to threaten us with annihilation,and from generation to generation weperfect the defense apparatus. All ourknowledge assures us, Be calm, ev¬erything happens as it must happen,but nothing is directed at you ....Each of us is encased in an armourwhich we soon, out of familiarity, nolonger notice. There are only mo¬ments which penetrate it and stir thesoul to sensibility.Genuine responsibility exists onlywhere there is real responding.Responding to what?To what happens to one, to what isto be seen and heard and felt. Eachconcrete hour allotted to the person.• with its content drawn from the world and from destiny, is speech for theman who is attentive. Attentive, for nomore than that is needed in order tomake a beginning with the reading ofthe signs that are given to you. Forthat very reason ... the whole appara¬tus of our civilization is necessary topreserve men from this attentivenessand its consequences. For the atten¬tive man would no longer, as his cus¬tom is, ‘master’ the situation the verymoment after it stepped up to him; itwould be laid upon him to go up to andinto it.It would be impossible to be always atten¬tive, always responsible. But knowing thatwe are not and cannot be constantly atten¬tive to subversions of humane values at theUniversity or elsewhere does not mean weshould abdicate our capacity for moral out¬rage. A friend of mine, recently convassingher neighbors about nuclear power in a su¬burb near the power plant at Zion, foundmany people who did not object to her viewsbut said. “Let’s not get hysterical aboutthis.” It seemed likely that there was nocause on which they would not say that.They would always refuse involvement be¬cause they did not want to get hysterical.Their armor is complete. No signs are to betaken as speech. Let's not let that happenhere.I feel very mixed at this moment. I feelanger and sorrow at what the University hasdone. And I feel pride and joy at the re¬sponse — at the true responsibility so manyhave shown. I feel enormous gratitude to raycolleagues and my students and others whohave helped me. helped all of us breakthrough our armor, recognize the signs, andspeak back to them.The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 25. 1979 — 11REPAIRSPECIALISTSon IBM, SCM,Olympia, etc.FREE repairestimates; repairsby factory-trainedtechnician.RENTALSavailable withU. of C. I.D. New andRebuiltTypewriters,Calculators,Dictators,AddersU of ChicagoBookstore5750 S. Ellis AveM Typewriter Dept.2nd Floor753-3303marian realty, inc.□3REALTORStudio and 1 BedroomApartments Available-Students Welcome-On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-5400Eye 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.Student Government MeetingWednesday Night May 30 7:30 p.m.Ida Noyes Library All Welcome10 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 25, 1979— Marshall SahlinsHistory repeats: first tragedy, now farceThe following is a transcript of MarshallSahlin’s comments at Tuesday afternoon’steach-in:Vietnam. Teach-In. McNamara. We allhave a sad feeling of deja vu about today’sevents. It surely is one case of nostalgia notbeing what it used to be. History truly is re¬peating itself : and if the first time it reallywas tragedy, this time it really is farce.But our present sense of outrage and re¬gret can only in part be blamed on the Uni¬versity. If the University of Chicago haschosen to bestow the Albert Pick award for“international understanding” on RobertMcNamara then part of the blame must beon ourselves. In some important measure,what was done in the 1960’s and the early1970’s to protest the Vietnam war was a fail¬ure. We have to reflect on the reasons forthat failure. For the conditions now are toomuch like they were then, and if we do notact effectively we too will be condemned torepeat our history.The great problem of the protest, then andnow, it seems to me, is the insupportable po¬litical contradiction that is laid upon us inrelation to so-called legitimate authority.The fact is that, then and now, it is not wewho subvert the system: it is those in au¬thority who betray the ideas and traditionsthey were entrusted to uphold. The first rev¬olutionary act is not the work of the peoplewho revolt. The authors of the decisive revo¬lutionary acts are the Johnsons, and theNixons and the McNamaras, who use theirpower not merely to deceive, but to under¬mine the better values in which we had be¬lieved. Who after all subverted the ideals ofour society in the 1960’s? Who committedthe outrageous acts against the Constitu¬tion, the institutions and common decency.Who was 1/nAmerican? It was not us. Wewere trying to preserve what was good inourselves and in our society. They were kill¬ing it.1979, and the University of Chicago de¬cides to reward Mr. McNamara for this be¬trayal with 25,000 shekels of silver (If theywant to give McNamara a statue also, we would happily give him the one with thefinger in the air standing in front of HarperLibrary). My esteemed colleagues of thefaculty selection committee, two of themhistorians, chose to ignore history anddoomed the University to this repetition ofit. Likewise, the University Establishment— Mr. Wilson, Mr. Gale Johnson, Mrs. Gray— seem to have learned nothing and forgot¬ten nothing. So once again, it is not we who,in protesting, are attacking the Universityof Chicago. We are the University of Chica¬go.The administration of Hanna Gray hasbeen a great disappointment. It’s not onlyMcNamara, or South Africa, or the relationsto Hyde Park or the Dick Cavett show. All ofthese seem to me symptomatic of a moregeneral and dangerous attitude. Money isshort, and the Administration feels itselfvulnerable to the average common conser¬vative opinions of the large corporatedonors who endow the University. The Uni¬versity establishment therefore incorpo¬rates these opinions as its own. It tries tothink the way these people think. The policyis to keep the lid on, politically and intellec¬tually. Mrs. Gray has not given us, the facul¬ty and students, a single sign that she standsfor educational leadership and innovationfor which this University was once famous.Faculty and students, we define our exis¬tence here in these terms; we are here be¬cause we believe in the intellectual life andtraditions of the University of Chicago.(Why else would we be here? The U of C is anice place to teach, but one wouldn’t want tolive there.) Mrs. Gray and her administra¬tion have not, by word or deed, come out andsaid to would-be donors: “Look, this is whatwe are; this is what we stand for. We aredevoted to using our minds in the best andmost decent way we can, however uncon¬ventional the ideas we come up with mayseem to you, and however unconventionalthe methods we might devise. We believethis makes some contribution to a good soci¬ety. If you believe that, we welcome yourhelp. But if you think helping the University of Chicago is a way of promoting your inter¬national hotel chain, or your publishingbusiness, or any business of your own inter¬ested ends or opinions, then send yourmoney somewhere else — maybe Harvard.”Instead, Mrs. Gray seems to be acting onthe mistaken idea that preserving the Uni¬versity is the same thing as preserving theidea of the University. Events are provingotherwise. The University cannot be boththe mistress of the big bourgeoisie and theconscience of a human and humane soci¬ety.I mentioned before the contradictions thatbeset a movement of protest, in the 1960’sand again today, and the dilemmas of politi¬cal action that are put upon us. Since it is infact the powers-that-be who are undermin¬ing the institutions, it is we, ostensibly with¬out power, who must protect them. Butsince it is they who hold the legitimate au¬thority, it is our action that is deemed illegit¬imate. Our leaders subvert the system, andwe are called subversive. They destroy theeducational and democratic values and we,defending these, are called destructive. Forthey can claim all the due processes, theduly appointed committees, acting by con¬stitutionally valid rules; so that what we dobecomes “unruly” — and, regrettably dis¬tasteful to many of those who believe as wedo.I think that was one of the many reasonsof our failure in the 1960’s and the reason toothat we have to fight the same old battlestoday. Although in the 1960’s we were pro¬tecting the traditional rights, and the tradi¬tions of what was right, we lost all the sym¬bols. Since they took the American flag, wecould think of nothing better than to burn it.They took the country, even the workingclasses they were sending to die in Vietnam,and left the peace movement isolated andincreasingly desperate. The movementgrew progressively smaller, its leadersmore and more hallucinatory, its ideologyincreasingly foreign to its ideals and its ac¬tions more and more outrageous, purpo¬seless and self destructive. We should not now, here, at the Universityof Chicago, repeat all this as farce. At leasttwo important things will have to be done toavoid it. The first is that liberals will have tostick it out. In the 1960’s, caught in the con¬tradiction between legitimate authority andtraditional morality, the liberals were atfirst neutralized and then, as the movementheaded toward its left wing disorder, tne lib¬erals were alienated. Their old enchantmentwith the system took over — the HubertHumphrey syndrome: better, they thought,to work inside, to try to advise and human¬ize the established political machinery. Thisdesertion of the cause by social democratsdoomed it. And one must now ask, was it re¬ally more effective to try to humanize thebureaucrats who were dismantling thecountry than the so-called subversives whohad essentially begun by believing in it. Bet¬ter to stay on the right side and to contendthere over the means for doing good then tothink you can offer good means for pervert¬ed ends.The second important thing, it seems tome. is to stay fast to the issue, and to theideology, and not to allow ourselves to be de-legitimized. The issue here, in this affairMcNamara, is the idea of the University, ofwhat it stands for. It is not we who are em¬barrassing the university, it is we, the Uni¬versity, who have been embarrassed. Themotto of the University of Chicago is ours:creseat scientia, vita excolatur — “Mayknowledge increase, my life flourish.” Mycolleagues on the faculty committee and theadministration violate every word of it.True, we no longer cheer that banner, sinceas earlier administration saw fit to takeaway football on the grounds that this is anintellectual place. But since the present ad¬ministration now threatens to take away ourintellectual place, perhaps we ought not toburn the flag but to revive its faded memo¬ry. Perhaps we should march to the demon¬stration tonight under the honored banner ofcrescat scientia, singing, as is our right.Wave the flag for old ChicagoShow them were we stand...Michael SchudsonUniversity linked to social institutionsThe following summarizes main points ofa talk delivered Tuesday by Michael Schud¬son, assistant professor of sociology, thatwas not fully written out. It is not a verbatimaccount of the remarks delivered.The University is not nor can it ever be de¬tached from politics. It may be semi-de¬tached or semi-autonomous. But it is closelylinked to other social institutions, particu¬larly business and government.I won’t belabor the point. But if you thinkof the University as set apart from the restof society, think, nonetheless, of those pointsof contact where it touches the rest of soci¬ety. Think of the University as a separatecell within society, if you wish, but thenthink about the semipermeable membranethrough which it is nourished. Think of allthe points of contact, these, for instance:1. A University is situated in a local com¬munity. What is its role, for instance, inreleasing crime statistics about thatcommunity?2. The curriculum itself is a point of con¬tact with the rest of society.3. The University endowment is anotherpoint of contact as Donald Woods, South •African journalist now in exile pointedout in protesting Harvard’s investmentsin South Africa: “A University,” hewrote, “is more than a knowledge shop,especially a famous university like Har¬vard, and it cannot escape importantmoral obligations by turning in upon itsmore limited mandate.”4. Admissions is a point of cfintact.5. Job placement is a point of contact. Lookat the weekly calendar of guest speakersat the Business School or the list of firmsthat interview at the business school orthe law school. Students come here hop¬ ing to be educated for good jobs. Tomaintain its position as an institutionwhich provides a good education forgood jobs, the University provides tech¬nical training, it provides a wider educa¬tion, it provides contacts with people inbusiness and government and otherswho can offer good jobs, and — crucially-- it creates a culture which promotes instudents a well-formed sense of what a“good job” is. A job at a community col¬lege teaching the children of blue-collarworkers is looked on with contemptwhile a job at a large research universi¬ty is much more highly regarded. Givencertain assumptions widely shared inour society about the good life — aboutincome, a chance for promotion, pres¬tige, security, and so forth — this is allquite sensible. But it is a set of values, aset of moral and political choices.6. The University itself is a political educa¬tor in providing a certain model of acommunity. Businesses exist in whichlabor turnover is low in part becauseworkers feel well rewarded and well re¬spected. What kind of a model does aUniversity provide which fights unionsor fails to comply with affirmative ac¬tion?7. And, finally, there is the matter ofawards granted by what have beencalled, our “secular cathedrals.” I donot know if the University should giveawards to non-academics. But I dis¬agree with those of my colleagues whothink the main mistake in the PickAward was deciding to give it at all.Their implication is that the Universitycan and should be pure. I think that isfolly. The University honors non-aca¬demics regularly. To be a trustee of this University is an honor. To be on a visit¬ing committee is an honor. To be invitedto lecture on campus is an honor. In¬deed. it is conferring an honor when thePresident of this University accompan¬ies the mayor of this city to a footballgame. I think it is fine that PresidentGray is beginning a review of awardspolicies. That is worthwhile, but itmisses the point of the current situation.The point is that the award this year is togo to Robert McNamara, and that is ahorrifying decision.I would like now to say a few words about“responsibility,” and I would like to quotefrom Martin Buber:Each of us is encased in an armourwhose task is to ward off signs. Signshappen to us without respite, livingmeans being addressed, we wouldneed only to present ourselves and toperceive. But the risk is too dangerousfor us, the soundless thunderingsseem to threaten us with annihilation,and from generation to generation weperfect the defense apparatus. All ourknowledge assures us. Be calm, ev¬erything happens as it must happen,but nothing is directed at you ....Each of us is encased in an armourwhich we soon, out of familiarity, nolonger notice. There are only mo¬ments which penetrate it and stir thesoul to sensibility.Qenuine responsibility exists onlywhere there is real responding.Responding to what?To what happens to one. to what isto be seen and heard and felt. Eachconcrete hour allotted to the person.• with its content drawn from the worldThe ( and from destiny, is speech for theman who is attentive. Attentive, for nomore than that is needed in order tomake a beginning with the reading ofthe signs that are given to you Forthat very reason ... the whole appara¬tus of our civilization is necessary topreserve men from this attentivenessand its consequences. For the atten¬tive man would no longer, as his cus¬tom is, ’master’ the situation the verymoment after it stepped up to him; itwould be laid upon him to go up to andinto it.It would be impossible to be always atten¬tive, always responsible. But knowing thatwe are not and cannot be constantly atten¬tive to subversions of humane values at theUniversity or elsewhere does not mean weshould abdicate our capacity for moral out¬rage. A friend of mine, recently convassingher neighbors about nuclear power in a su¬burb near the power plant at Zion, foundmany people who did not object to her viewsbut said. “Let's not get hysterical aboutthis.” It seemed likely that there was nocause on which they would not say that.They would always refuse involvement be¬cause they did not want to get hysterical.Their armor is complete. No signs are to betaken as speech. Let’s not let that happenhere.I feel very mixed at this moment. I feelanger and sorrow at what the University hasdone. And I feel pride and joy at the re¬sponse — at the true responsibility so manyhave shown. I feel enormous gratitude to mycolleagues and my students and others whohave helped me. helped all of us breakthrough our armor, recognize the signs, andspeak back to them.ticago Maroon — Friday, May 25, 1*79 — 11GiniSorrentiniPhilBorgnes Studs Terkel in Kent 103.Dinner demonstrators listen to Studs.Ben Davis, heckling a dinner guest.Demonstrators at the dinner. Picnic crowd apfGuests entering the award dinner.12 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 25, 1979P? -r~*Guests take notice, attract notice.U. C. Demonstrates!iauds Dellinger and Kovic. f'Yi'i** •* 'Ron Kovic speaking at the picnic.Audience of combined ‘World Bank’ and ‘University* Teach-ins. The start of the trip to 29th and PrairieThe Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 25, 1979 — 13GO FOR PINE IN MAYOUR LARGE SELECTION OF PINE NOW ON SALEDESKS, DRESSERS, BOOKCASES, CHESTS & MUCH MORE10% to 15% OFFREADY TO FINISHCOMPLETE INSTRUCTIONSNEW TOWN • 2631 N. CLARK • CHICAGO • 248-0540HYDE PARK *1365 E. 53rd • CHICAGO • 288-6200OAK PARK • 1036 W. LAKE • VILLAGE MALL • 386-5200OPEN 7 DAYS • DELIVERY AVAILABLEWHPK benefitdance partyTHIS SATURDAYMAY 26s150 UC ID, $2 OthersBE A ROCK & ROLL FANTASYCOME AS YOUR FAVORITE STARBEST COSTUME WINS A PRIZETONS OF ALBUMS GIVEN AWAYROCK BLUES FOLK JAZZ DISCOCLOISTER CLUB, IDA NOYES 8 pm -1 am It's for you. . .if you're looking for on interesting campus job,starting now and continuing through the summer.The University needs your help to reach thousandsof Chicago alumni by phone, and we re willing to pay$4 an hour for your time — a few weekday eveningseach week with possibilities for additional workhours.If you're a senior, graduate or professional student,you are among those most eligible.If you are mature, reliable and can talk about theUniversity and its needs, we ll train you to be aneffective Alumni Telefund Associate.Call the Alumni Telefund right now at 753-0888.Or stop and see Gregory Volk at Classics 36 for anapplication.The University of ChicagoAlumni TelefundtheFrenchKitchen3437 West 63rd776-6715Open for Dinner5 P.M. Daily3 P.M. SundayClosed MondayModeralelv Priced Chicago Guide:"Katin % at thr Frrnrhk itch rn in likr (liningwith Julia C.hihL"14 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday. May 25. 1f7fV VfcAii « t LIMcNamarafrom 8military budgets are rising the fastest.On average around the world, one tax dol¬lar in six is devoted to military expenditure,and that means that at the present levels ofspending the average taxpayer can expectover his lifetime to give up three or fouryears’ of his income to the arms race.And what will he have bought with that?Greater security?No. At these exaggerated levels, onlygreater risk, greater danger, and greaterdelay in getting on with life’s real pur¬poses.It is imperative that we understand thisissue clearly.The point is not that a nation’s security isrelatively less important than other consi¬derations. Security is fundamental.The point is simply that excessive mili¬tary spending can reduce ecurity ratherthan strengthen it.In the matter of military force — as inmany other matters in life — more is notnecessarily better. Beyond a prudent limit,more can turn out to be very much worse.And if we examine defense expendituresaround the world today — and measurethem realitically against the full spectrumof actions that tend to promote order andstability within and among nations — it isobvious that thee is a very irrational misal-location of resources.Is there any way, then, to moderat themad momentum of a global arms race?No very easy way, given the degree of sus¬picion and distrust involved.But as one who participated in the initialnuclear test ban arrangements, and otherarms limitation discussions, I am absolutelyconvinced that sound workable agreementsare attainable.These matters clearly call for realism.But realism in not a hardened, inflexible,unimaginative attitude. On the contrary, therealistic mind should be a restlessly cre¬ative mind — free of naive delusions, but fullof practical alternatives.There are many alternatives available toan arms race. There are many far betterways of contributing to global security. 1suggested a number of those ways in my ad¬dress in Montreal in 1966, pointing out theimportance of accelerating economic andsocial progress in the developing countries.When, two years later, I left the Pentagonfor the W’orld Bank this was an aspect ofworld order with which I was particularlyconcerned.Eleven years in that institution, combinedwith visits to some 100 of the developingcountries,s have contributed immeasurablyto my international understanding. Theyhave permitted me to explore the whole newworld that has come to political indepen¬dence — in large part over the past quartercentury.I have met the leaders of this new world —their Jeffersons and Washingtons andFranklins — and have sensed their prideand their peoples’ pride in their new nation¬al independence, and their frustrations attheir economic dependence.I have shared their sense of achievementat the remarkable rate of economic growthwhich many of them attained, largely bytheir own efforts. But I have been appalledby the desperate plight of those who did not share in this growth, and whose numbersrose relentlessly with the great tide of popu¬lation expansion.There are today more than one billionhuman beings in the devleoping countrieswhose incomes per head have nearly stag¬nated over the past decade. In statisticalterms, and in constant prices, they haverisen only about two dollars a year: from$130 in 1965 to $150 in 1979.But what is beyond the power of any set ofstatistics to illustrate is the inhuman degra¬dation the vast majority of these individualsare condemned to because of poverty.Malnutrition saps their energy, stuntstheir bodies, and shortens their lives. Illiter¬acy darkens their minds, and foreclosestheir fut ires. Preventable diseases maimand kill 1 neir children. Squalor and ugli.iesspollute a id poison their surroundings.The m raculous gift of life itself, and all itsintrinsic potential so promising and reward¬ing for u — is eroded and reduced for themto a desperate effort to survive.The self-perpetuating plight of the abso¬lute poor tends to cut them off from the eco¬nomic progress that takes place elsewherein their own societies. They remain largelyoutside the entire development effort, nei¬ther able to contribute much to it, nor ben¬efit fairly from it.And when we reflect on this profile of po¬verty in the developing world we have to re¬mind ourselves that we are not talking aboutmerely a tiny minority of unfortunates — kamiscellaneous collection of the losers in alife — a regrettable but insignificant excep¬tion to the rule. On the contrary, we are talk¬ing about hundreds of millions of humanbeings — 40 percent of the total population ofover 100 countries.Is the problem of absolute poverty in thesenations solvable at all?It is. And unless there is visible progresstowards a solution we shall not have apeaceful world. We .cannot build a secureworld upon a foundation of human misery.Now how can we help lift this burden ofabsolute poverty from off the backs of a bil¬lion people? We cannot build a secure worldupon a foundation of human misery.Now how can we help lift this burden ofabsolute poverty from off the backs of a bil¬lion people? That is a problem we have beendealing with at the World Bank intensivelyfor the past six or seven years.It is clea- that we in the richer countriescannot do it by our own efforts. Nor canthey, the masses in the poorest countries, doit by their own efforts alone. There must bea partnership between a comparativelysmall contribution in money and skills fromthe developed world, and the developingworld’s determination both to increase theirrate of economic growth, and to channelmore of the benefits of that growth to the ab¬solute poor.Most of me effort must come from the de¬veloping countries own governments. Byand large they are making that effort.In the past decade, the poor nations havefinanced overf 80 percent of their develop¬ment investments out of their own meagerincomes. But it is true they must make evengreater efforts. They have invested too littlein agriculture, too little in population plan¬ning, and too little in essential public ser¬vices. And too much of what they have in¬vested has benefitted only a privilegedfew.That calls for policy reforms, and that is,Spokesmen Bicycle Shop8301 Hyde Park Blvd.Selling Quality ImportedBikes.Raliegh, Peugeot, Fuii,Motobecane, WindsorAnd a full inventoryof MOPEDSOpen 10-7 M-F, 10-5 Sat.11-4 Sun Rollerskates for684-3737 sale or Rent. of course, always politically difficult. Butwhen the distribution of land, income, andopportunity becomes distorted to the pointof desperation, political leaders must weighthe risk of social reform against social re¬bellion. “Too little too late” is history’s uni¬versal epitaph for political regimes thathave lost their mandate to the demands oflandless, jobless, disenfranchised, and des¬perate men.In any event, whatever the degree of ne¬glect the governments in the poor countrieshave been responsible for, it has been morethan matched by the failure of the developednations to assist them adequately in the de¬velopment task.Today, Germany, Japan, and the UnitedStates are particularly deficient in the levelof their assistance.The case of the United States is illustrative. It enjoys the largest gross nationalproduct in the world. And yet it is currentlyone of the poorest performers in the matterof Official Development Assistance. Amongthe developed natipns, Sweden, the Nether¬lands, Norway, Australia, France, Belgium,Denmark, Canada, New Zealand, and even— w ith all its economic problem — the Unit¬ed Kingdom: all of these nations devote agreater percentage of their GNP to OfficialDevelopment Assistance than does the U.S.In 1949, at the beginning of the MarshallPlan, U.S. Official Development Assistanceamounted to 2.79 percent of GNP. Today, itis less than one-tenth of that: .22 percent ofGNP. And this after a quarter-century dur¬ing which the income of the average Ameri¬can, adjusted for inflation, has more thandoubled.There are, of course, many sound reasonsfor development assistance.But the fundamental case is. I believe, themoral one. The w-hole of human hishtory hasrecognized the principle that the rich andpow-erful have a moral obligation to assistthe poor and the weak. That is what the enseof community is all about — any communi¬ty: the community of the family, the com¬munity of the nation, the community of na¬tions itself.Moral principles, if they are realy sound— and this one clearly is — are also practi¬cal ways to proceed. Social justice is notsimply an abstract ideal. It is a sensible wayof making life more livable for everyone.Now it is true that the moral argumentdoes not persuade everyone.Very well. For those who prefer argu¬ments that appeal to self-interest, there aresome very strong ones.Exports provide one out of every eightjobs in U. S. manufacturing, and they takethe output of one out of every three acres ofU. S. farm land — and roughly one third ofthese exports are now going to the develop¬ing countries.Indeed, the U. S. now exports more to thedeveloping countries than it does to WesternEurope, Eastern Europe, China, the SovietUnion,and Japan combined.Further, the U.S. now gets increasingquantities of its raw materials the develop¬ing world — more than 50 percent of its tin,rubber, and manganese plus very’ substan¬tial amounts of tungsten and cobalt, to saynothing of its oil.The U. S. economy, then, increasingly de¬pends on the ability of the developing na¬tions both to purchase its exports, and tosupply it with important raw materials.And the same sort of relationship of mutu¬ al interdependence exists between the otherindustrialized countries — the CommonMarket, and Japan — and the developingworld.Thus, for the developed nations to do moreto assist the developing countries is notmerely the right thing to do, it is also in¬creasingly the economically advantageousthing to do.W hat will it cost the United States and theother industrialized countries to do more?Far less than most of us imagine.The truth is that the developed nationswould not have to reduce their already im¬mensely high standardof living in the slight¬est, but only devotes a minuscule proportionof the additional per capita income they willearn over the coming decade.It is not a question of the rich nations di¬minishing their present wealth in order tohelp the poor nations. It is only a question oftheir being willing to share a tiny percent¬age — perhaps three percent — of their in¬cremental income.It is true that the developed nations, un¬derstandably preoccupied with controllinginflation, and searching for structural solu¬tions to their own economic imbalances,may be tempted to conclude that until theseproblems are solved, aid considerationsmust simply be put aside.But aid is not a luxury — something desir¬able when times are easy, and superfluouswhen times become temporarily trouble¬some.It is precisely the opposite Aid is a contin¬uing social and moral responsibility, and itsneed now is greater than ever.Will we live up to that responsibility?As I look back over my own generation —a generation that in its university yearsthought of itself as liberal — I am astonishedat the insensitivity that all of us had duringthose years to the injustice of racial dis¬crimination in our own society.Will it now take another 50 yearslDeforewe fully recognize the injustice of massivepoverty in the international community?We cannot let that happen.Nor will it happen— if we but turn ourminds seriously to the fundamental issuesinvolved.Increasingly the old priorities and the oldvalue judgments are being reexamined inthe light of the increasing degree of interde¬pendence that is developing among nations— and it is right that they should be.Once they are thought through, it will beevident that international development isone of the most important movements un¬derway in this century.It may ultimately turn out to be the mostimportant.It may ultimately turn out to be the mostimportant.Our task, then, is to explore — to explore aturbulent world that is shifting uneasily be¬neath our feet even as we try to understandit. And to explore our own values and beliefsabout what kind of world we really want it tobecome.It was T. S. Eliot, in one of his most pen¬sive moods, who wrote:“We shall not cease from explorationAnd the end of all our exploringWill be to arrive where we startedAnd know the place for the firsttime.”Thank you, and good evening.JEWISH ACTION CORPSNEEDS VOLUNTEERS THISSUMMER. CAN YOU GIVE\N HOUR A WEEK TO WORKWITH SENIOR ADULTS ORRUSSIAN IMMIGRANTS?PLEASE CALL JILL AT346-<>700, Ext. 375 Young Designs byELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DlSlGNfRS1620 E. 53rd St.288 2900Watch forposters withdetailsffssTnik39jab103-8800M60E 53rd STThe Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 25, 1979 — 15Looking for anApartment ora tenant?List with the StudentGovernment HousingService(revised weekly)Phone: 753-3273Hours: M, W, F, I - 4T, Th, lO • 1Ida Noyes Hall 306 University of ChicagoDepartment of Slavic Languages and LiteraturesSlavic ForumDivision of HumanitiespresentThe Meyer Kestnbaum Lectureon Russian LiteratureWALLS AND WIREThe Prison Theme in Russian LiteraturebyProfessor Hugh McLeanUniversity of California, BerkeleyFriday, May 25,1979 — 5:00 PM.Quantrell Auditorium — Cobb Hall — 5811-27 S. EllisAdmission free. A reception will follow the lecture.SLAVIC FORUM FILMS SCHEDULED FOR SATURDAY. MAY 26.CANCELLED UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE!"Here in Illinois the legislators have what they call 'fetcher' bills which they introduce in Spring-field ... The machine system here is perfect, and what these 7etchers' will do is great. Let's sayyou want some campaign cash from, oh, the AMA. You introduce a bill which would abolishcounty medical societies and integrate them into State Health. The AMA panics, and hits youwith some green to dump the bill." - an Illinois reform legislatorWayne Hays called us ‘Common Curse’ during our fights against the SpecialInterests that lined his pockets and those of others in the Congress - and we’vebeen called worse.Who are we? We are the Peoples’ Lobby, working in Illinois and across thecountry, in Springfield, in Washington, D.C., and here in Chicago to expose cor¬ruption, reduce bureaucratic waste and protect the Public Interest.'33 SSQS’0"/ HWWi d IWe helped bring the vote to eighteen year olds.We were a major lobbying force against the Vietnam War in the early seven¬ties, and the lobbying force behind public financing of Federal elections, sunsetregulations, and lobbyist disclosure. We have been instrumental in the Move¬ment pressuring for ERA, and the D.C. Voting Rights Amendment.Join us for a planning session this Saturday, 26 May 1979 at2:30 p.m., 5050 South Lake Shore Drive, Apt. 2917 (South Tow¬er of Regents Park).We are reaching out to you, and invite all those interested ingood government and fair play to come and participate. Foradditional information, call:CAMPUS CONTACT: BOB SWAIN, 814 B-J,3-2261Common Cause/IIlinois: 67 E. Madison St.,Chicago 60603 - 263-200716 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 25, 1979Tenants protest funds useBy Paul BrennanThe Fourth Corner Tenants Associationheld a press conference in front of a buildingat 54th St. and Woodlawn Ave. last Sundayto protest what they termed unfair manage¬ment and to demand certain remedies. Thecomplaints contained in a press statementdelivered by Sophia Mirviss concerned theuse of city funds to convert the building to acondominium and the violation of buildingcode regulations.The City of Chicago awarded a $75,000grant to the building’s owners, NicholasPritzker Jr., Marvin Green, and JerryUlrich, and architect Robert Gordon lastyear to renovate the building. The grant, given under the city’s Multi-UnitDemonstration Program (the “50-50” pro¬gram), was intended to renovate thebuilding as a rental property. On March 20,however, the eve of the Condo-Moratorium,the building’s management, ParkerHolsman, served notice that the property isto be converted to a condominium.The tenants of the building at 54th andWoodlawn have expressed outrage over theconversion for several reasons. Tenants hadreceived repeated assurances from themanagement that the property would not beconverted to a condominium for at least fiveyears. Prospective tenants were given thissame assurance.The $75,000 which the city gave to theSUMMER JOBSInteresting, challenging jobs for college students and teachers withany office experience are available this summer. You can work thedays of your choice in the loop or your neighborhood. Top wages. Write,call or go in to register as soon as possible at the office most convenientto you.CHICAGO ELAINE REVELL, INC.Loop 230 N. Michigan Avenue 782-2325Northside 2316 W. Lawrence Avenue 561-4508Hyde Park 1525 E. 53rd Street 684-7000OAK PARK 944 Lake Street 287-6888DES PLAINES 2510 Dempster Street 296-5515LOMBARD 477 E. Butterfield RoadThe Prestige Temporary Office Service 960-2511 owners has become an interest free loan andthe supposed renovation was actuallypreparation for conversion. Another majorsource of irritation is the fact that therenovation, according to Mirviss, “createdmore building code violations than it cor¬rected”. A city inspection three weeks agowhich tenants had requested revealed manyviolations in the building condition. Tenantscomplain of falling plaster, broken win¬dows, water seepage, and vermin infesta¬tion.The funds that the city granted to thebuildings owners were provided for the ex¬plicit purpose of improving the building as arental property and the money will even¬tually have to be returned but there will beno interest on this “loan”. The FederalGovernment, which gave Housing and Ur¬ban Development money for this and otherrenovation projects, has criticized the Cityof Chicago for its administration of the 50-50program in similar instances.The Fourth Corner Tenants Association does not intend to take legal action againstthe owners or management of the buildingat 54th and Woodlawn but remain concernedwith what they consider the misuse of cityand federal funds and feel that ParkerHolsman have been secretive andmisleading in their managing of the proper¬ty. One tenant has been evicted for his in¬volvement in the tenants association.Most of the residents of the 24-unitbuilding will be forced to move by the con¬version.Bulletin: EastHyde Park fireA building at 1601-1607 E. 55th St. burnedcompletely early Thursday morning. Thefire damaged the Sun Dial, University Lock& Key, Morry’s Deli, and the Jackson Inn.No one was injured.One slain in BillingsAn employee of Billings Hospital wasstabbed to death Wednesday in the hospitalcafeteria. Charles MacArthur, a 33-year oldcafeteria worker, died from stab woundsand was pronounced dead by Dr. CharlesJohnston upon arrival in the Billings emer¬gency room shortly after 1 p.m.According to the Chicago Police, Ma¬cArthur was approached by a woman whodemanded to be repaid for a $20 gamblingdebt. When he refused, the woman grabbedfor his wrist watch. A scuffle followed in which MacArthur was stabbed in the chest.The murder weapon has been identified as asix-inch butcher knife. There were two wit¬nesses to the incident, both of whom are Bill¬ings employees.MacArthur’s assailant escaped before po¬lice arrived but later Wednesday eveningNadder Edwards, a co-worker of MacArth¬ur, turned herself in to Chicago Police. Sheis being held under arrest for the crimepending arraignment.—Paul BrennanLaw School Films Mike Nichol’sThe Graduate Friday, May 26with Dustin Hoffman and Katherine RossLaw School Auditorium 7:00/9:30 $1.50model camera Spring Sale!0$''//iw* Nikon EM• Motorized Film Drive^ • Fully automatic exposure• Fool proofflashi 0»Canon OLYMPUS <§Sfl0©Revolutionary OFF-THE-FILM (OTF)light measurement systemUses complete line ofOlympuslenses andaccessoriesi ipncie m it? cmnpusbody onlyAutomatic simplicity and Canoneconomy — you set the aper¬ture and the AV-1 selectsthe speed! Canon ZLThe State of the Artsix mode automaticsystems camera!body only bodyonlymodel camera1342 East 55th St. 493-6700The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 25, 1979 — 17UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOCenter for Middle Eastern StudiesEleventhMarshall G. S. Hodgson Memorial LectureANNEMARIE SCHIMMELNear Eastern Languages and CivilizationsHarvard UniversityThe Interpretation of Islamin the Indo-PakistaniSub-ContinentFRIDAY, MAY 25, 19793:3° P-m-SOCIAL SCIENCE RESEARCH BUILDINGRoom 122 • 1126 East 59th Street UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGODean of Students in the Collegecordially invites you to the 'TWENTY- THIRD ANNUALHONORS A WARDS ASSEMBL YThursday* May 3/, 1979Cloister ClubIda Noyes Hall4:00 PMIMPORTANT NOTICEWE ARE PLEASED TO ANNOUNCETHAT EFFECTIVE FRIDAY, MAY 25, 1979THE LOAN COUNSELOR’S OFFICEANDTHE STUDENT LOAN CENTERWILL BE LOCATEDON THE FOURTH FLOOROF THE BOOKSTORElllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll18 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 25, 1979 llllllllllllllllllilll»c£ v&V noci jiV ■'Vi,* j.\TThis Weekweekdays. 753-4137. Free. in the ArtsThe Art of Russia: 1800-1850: An exhibit ofart from the Hermitage and other museums inthe Soviet Union. None of the paintings,drawings, and prints on display have everbeen seen in this country. Closes July 5.Smart Gallery, 5550 S. Greenwood. Tuesdays,through Saturdays, 10 am to 4 pm; Sundays,noon to 4 pm. Free.The Floating World: “One Hundred andFifty Years of the Japanese Urban Scene.”Watercolors and woodcuts by recentJapanese artists. Intended to document,through the eyes of artists, the evolution ofthe Japanese city. Part of the national JapanToday program. Closes May 27. BergmanGallery, fourth floor Cobb Hall. 9 am to 5 pm The Berlin Collection: An exhibit of booksand manuscripts purchased in Berlin in 1891for the newly founded University of Chicago.Closes in October. Special Collections Cor¬ridor of Regenstein Library.Visionary Images: Works by eleven con¬temporary New York artists. Through June16. Rennaissance Gallery, Goodspell Hall.Mondays through Saturdays, 11 am to 4 pm.753-2886. Free.MusicUC Chamber Music: Vocal chamber per¬formances of Schumann’s “SpanischesLiederspiel, Op. 74” and “Minnespiel, Op.101” and Schubert’s “Der Hirt auf dem Felsen, Op. 129.” Tomorrow, May 26. IdaNoyes Library. 8:30 pm. Free.Contemporary Chamber Players: RalphShapey, music director; Elsa Charlston,soprano. Works by Luigi Dallapiccola, AlanStout, Betsy Jolas, John Heiss, and RobertHall Lewis. Tonight, May 25. Mandel Hall.8:30 pm. Free.Etcetera: An outdoor concert of folk androck music by a number of local groups:Bandersnatch, Radio Free Illinois, Arron,Nick Filippo and Mark Daniels, TroubleBoys, and The Inductors. This Sunday, May27. Hutch Court. 12:30 to 6:30 pm. Free.Susan Hammerman and Company: A stringquartet concert. Part of the Music Depart¬ ment and FOTA’s Noon Chamber Musicseries — bring your lunch. This Thursday,May 31. Cloister Club, Ida Noyes Hall. 12:15pm. Free.John Prine: The bulwark of the Chicagofolk music scene. Tomorrow, May 26, MandelHall. 8:30 pm. $7, 86; $4, S3 M AB fee payers.TheatreMembers of Court Theater’s Little Mary Sunshine castLittle Mary Sunshine: By Rick Besoyan;directed by Michael Hildebrand. Originallyproduced on Broadway in the fifties, billed asa Musical about an old operatta. Closes June3. A Court Theater production in theReynolds Club Theater, third floor ReynoldsClub. Thursdays through Saturdays at 8:30pm; Sundays at 7:30 pm. 753-3581. $3.50 -S2.50.The Village Wooing: A staged reading ofGeorge Bernard Shaw’s one-act comedy.Directed by Abbie Katz; starring MaureenGallagher and Harvey Goldman. Thisweekend only. New Theater, first floor ofReynolds Club. Tonight and tomorrow at 7pm; Sunday at 3 pm. 753-3581. $1.LectureMEN! WOMEN!JOBS!t Itl lSK SIUFS.KHKK.IITKHSNo experience. Highpay! See Europe, Ha¬waii, Australia, So.America. Winter, Sum¬mer!*Send $2.75 toSEA WORLDBOX 61035Sacramento, CA 95825POOL MANAGERCABANA CLUB -FLAMINGOWonderful opportunityfor a sharp person seek¬ing summer employ¬ment. Must have excel¬lent people skills. Kind¬ly call:GAIL SCHOEN BECK248-8300 Midnight Cowboy (DOC) Directed by JohnSchlesinger. The first, and undoubtedly thelast, X-rated Oscar-winning film leaves onenauseated rather than moved by its depiction ofseamy urban life. That’s undoubtedly the direc¬tor’s purpose, but it doesn’t make me want to sitthrough the movie again. Jon Voight plays ahick from Texas who comes to the Big City tomake his fortune as a stud for hire — “Ah maynot be a fur-real cowboy, but Ah sure am onehelluva stud!’’ His antics and his accent aremore embarrassing than engrossing, until hemeets Dustin Hoffman, whose Ratso Rizzo(“Rico! It’s Rico!’’) is an amusing portrait of adecaying derelict. This movie accomplished twothings: it brought a small measure of fame toFred Neil, who wrote the marvelous theme song“Everybody’s Talkin’,” and it demonstratedbeyond cavil the foolishness and censorious im¬pact of the movie rating system. Friday at 7:15pm and midnight in Cobb Hall. FilmBy Ethan EdwardsThe Graduate (LSF) Directed by MikeNichols, who won the Best Director Oscar forthis timely 1967 comedy about the generationgap, alienated rich kids, and the urge to screwyour mother (or your mother’s best friend,which is the next best thing). Dustin Hoffmanmade his film debut as the recent collegegraduate with no direction in his life (remember“Plastics”?) who is seduced by Anne Bancroft,then romances her daughter, the well-scrubbed,dewy-eyed and gorgeous Katherine Ross, whoI’m still in love with even though she doesn’tanswer my letters. The sociological point of thefilm is no longer sharp, Nichols’ direction is amishmash of borrowed styles and the Simonand Garfunkel soundtrack doesn’t sound freshanymore; but Hoffman is charming as thebefuddled hero who finally rescues his belovedfrom a fate worse than death: marriage to a fratrat. Lots of fun. Saturday at 7 and 9:30 pm in theLaw School Auditorium.Thesis, Disert, Manu¬scripts, Incl. Foreignlong, latest IBM Cor¬rective Sel II Type¬writer. Rates based onVol. & Conditions ofdraft. Best EminenceBond Furn. Mrs. Ross,239-5982 bet. I lam& 5 pm.TAl-SAM-YMlCHINESE AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing InCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A.M. TO 8:30 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 8:30 P.M.Orders to Toko Out1318 Ea«t 63rd MU 4-1062 Klute (DOC) Directed by Alan Pakula.Donald Sutherland is the title character, asmall-town cop investigating the disappearanceof his best friend in New York City. Jane Fonda,won the Best Actress Oscar for her revealingportrait of a call girl whc wants to be an actress,sort of. The film is designed to be a classicsuspense film — Sutherland as the strong,silent, Alan Ladd type, Fonda as the whore-with-a-heart-of-gold. Along the way Pakulaturns the conventional plot into a compellingpsychological study of Fonda’s hookercharacter, who is revealed through her interac¬tions with the perverted inhabitants of the ur¬ban moneyed classes. Klute is not perfect byany stretch of the imagination — there’s an un¬convincing wrap-up, a few cheap revelationswith Fonda and her psychiatrist, and besides,the movie’s got the wrong name — but the ten¬sion is undeniable, the pace is excellent, andFonda is convincing in her best part. Friday at9:30 pm in Cobb Hall. The Shooting (NAM) Directed by MonteHeilman. A low-budget Western, with JackNicholson, Warren Oates, and Will Hutchins,the underrated actor of TV’s “Sugarfoot”. Thiscrudely made film has achieved a cult follow¬ing, not despite Heilman’s uncompromising ex¬istentialism, but because of it. Millie Perkinsstars as a woman seeking revenge with the helpof Nicholson. The finale is astounding,something to rank with Duel in the Sun.Monday at 7:30 and 9:30 pm in Cobb Hall.The Brothers and Sisters of the Toda Family(DOC) Directed by Yasujiro Ozu. In its view ofchildren who are too preoccupied with their ownaffairs to provide for family members in need,Brothers and Sisters is very Japanese, in anOriental sort of way. Unseen by this reviewer.Sunday at 7:15 and 9:30 pm in cobb Hall. The Prison Theme in Russian Literature:“Walls and Wire.” A Meyer KastenbaumLecture on Russian Literature, given by Pro¬fessor Hugh McLean. Today, May 25.Cochrane-Woods 157. Free.City ArtStatements After An Arrest Under the Im¬mortality Act: Also, Scenes from Soweto. ByAnthony Fugard and Steve Wilmer, respec¬tively. Two powerful, disturbing plays aboutracism in South Africa, in a sensitive produc¬tion. Directeod by James D. O'Reilly. ClosesJune 10. Body Politic Theater, 2261 N. Lin¬coln. Wednesdays through Fridays,’ 8 pm;Saturdays at 7 pm and 10 pm; Sundays at 2:30pm and 7 pm. 871-3000. $6.50 - $5.Lakeside Promenade Concert: A per¬formance of Handel’s secular masterpiece,“Water Music." Dieter Kober conducts theChicago Chamber Orchestra. This Sunday,May 27. Museum of Science and Industry.South Terrace facing the Jackson ParkLagoon. 3:30 pm. 922-5570. Free.Calendar compiled by Karen Hornick.PERSON-WOLINSKYC.P.A./C.M.A. REVIEWCOURSESour survey indicates2/3 Passing RateWait for our mid-August start w...in less time ...at less total costDon’t let other courses “panic" you into starting now Ourcandidates’ success proves it’s just not necessary Why weardown and start forgetting information long before the examtakes place?With other courses you may leave your best efforts in theclassroom We teach you how to bring them into the examroom Our Program teaches you to passIt builds confidence through understanding It doesn’t wastetime having you redo things you already know. No textbooksare used Special study summaries show the way—key con¬cepts. memory aids, answering approaches and more1Unlimited review sessions are provided These are available atthe candidate’s convenience And they are available right upto the exam dateIt all works! Ask any one of our thousands of successful alumniror more information call(3 •2)481-7389or write to745 Rose Laiie Matteson. IL 60443 Special Deskand Chair SetSingle Pedestal Metal Deskwith Walnut Plastic Topwith Matching Steno Chair —Specially priced at$95.00Irlnf your own traitorI4tumr co.•600 Commercial Av«.Often Men.-fri. fcSO-SOOEar the Month of April, wo are openSaturdays 4*90-4:00RE 4-2111 HEAR AGAIN STEREOSells guaranteed name brand usedand demo stereo components at 40%to 70% off regular prices.SPECIAL SPRING CLEARANCE SALESTOREWIDE SAVINGS INCLUDINGEQUIPMENT LIKE:TX TEAC 3300 S $375.00MARANTZ 30 175.00PIONEER SA 7500-2 119.00SANSUI AU 6600 149.00YAMAHA CR 600 239.00DYNACO PAT-5 169.00JBL L65 1.00ADS 700 Ea. 99!o0PIONEER QL 600 75.00BICFl Ea. 39.00Complete systems from $75 to $750.60 day trade back privilege. Namebrand components for limited bud¬gets. PLUS MUCH, MUCH MORE.HEAR AGAIN STEREO7002 N. California 338-7737The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 25, 1979 — 19TOPIIST:SUMMERSELF-STORAGESPACEat 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.DOWNTOWNLOCK BOX 922-06061333 S. WABASH AVE.Chicago', IL. 60605HYDE PRRK PIPE RNO TOBACCO 5H0P1552 E. 53rd - Under IC tracksStudents under 30 get 10% offask for “Big Jim,:Mon. - Sat. 9-8; Sun. 12-5PipesPipe Tobaccos, Imported Cigarettes Cigars.FLEA nflRKETSaturday, June 2 10:00 a.m‘ Ida Noyes Parking Ix>t20 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 25, 1979 i Ruby's Merit ChevroletSPECIALDISCOUNT PRICESfor all STUDENTS andFACULTY MEMBERSJust present your University ofChicago Identification Card.As Students or Faculty Membersof the University of Chicago you areentitled to special money-savingDISCOUNTS on Chevrolet Parts,Accessories and any new or usedChevrolet you buy from Merit Chev¬rolet Inc. iGM QUALITYJs'l SERVICE PARTS ’ Ace/) That (trnir611 Minn ^uithGENERAL MOTORS FARTS DIVISION 61 \ l I \ E61//WwmMER •3CHEVROLI ET72nd & Stony Island 684-0400| Open Doily 9-9, Sot. 9-5 Parts open Sot. 'til NoonI ■ M -72nd & Stony Island 684-0400 ^Noon• ••«Open Daily 9-9, Sot. 9-5 Fart* open Sot. 'til Noon Roundtrip($211.50 one way)No restrictions.DO 10 service-New York to Luxembourg.* Prices valid on travel between June 1 - Aug. 31, 1979 and subject to change.See your travel agent or contact the Puffin nearest you. Or wnteDept. # , Icelandic Airlines, P.O. Box 105, WestHempstead, NY 11552. Or call: in metropolitan New York, 757-8585;in New York State, toll free 800-442-5910; elsewhere, 800-223-5080.Please send me: □ A timetable of Icelandic’s flights from New York,Chicago and Baltimore/Washington. □ Your brochure on EuropeanFly/Drive and Fly/Rail tours.NAMEADDRESSCITY STATE.ICELANDICWide-body DC-10 service at bargain prices. ICELANDAIRIcelandic’swide-body toEurope.BARGAIN DAYSEverything grows in May except pricesat THE FRET SHOP20% off Takamine guitars20% off selected Kung recorders20% off Hohner harmonicas10% off Dulcimer kitsAlso many used, reconditionedinstruments - 5-string banjos,viola, Gemeinhardt flute, Selmerclarinet, Conn saxophones,trumpets, 3/4 violins, Gibsonmandolin, and more.Hurry while present stocklasts - sale ends May 31.5210 Harper, Harper Court667-1060 Hrs. 11-6 Mon-Satprimitive art african sculpturesand textilestues.-sun. 2-6gallery b1645 e. 53rdCarolStudemundMaroons fall to fourth at conferenceBy Whitney Young“Have you ever been to a Holiday Inn?”Last Friday and Saturday the varsity men’strack team journeyed to one such magic-fin¬gered paradise in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, onlyto have their vacation somewhat dampenedby Coe, Carleton, and Grinnell colleges, allof which outscored Chicago in the MAC out¬door track and field championships.The meet was hosted by Coe College andheld at the University of Iowa track. HostCoe won the meet for the eighth consecutiveyear, scoring 147 points. Carleton was theonly other team offering serious contention,finishing second with 128 points. Grinnelland Chicago battled for third and fourthplace honors, scoring 54 and 53 points re¬spectively.Despite a number of mishaps and person¬al “bad days,” 17 of the 25 Maroons whomade the trip placed in at least one event.Chicago placed in 10 of 12 running events butin only one of seven field events. Ironically,28 of Grinnell’s points were scored by a sin¬gle man, who won both the Discus and theJavelin and placed second in the Shot Put,events in which the Maroons were shut out.Chicago’s only points in the field came fromPete Wendel, who placed fourth in the LongJump with a leap of 22’6”.The only two running events in which Chi¬cago failed to place were the 440 and 880,both of which the Maroons had won in theirsecond place finish at the 1979 Indoor cham¬pionships.The Maroons’ only victory came in theMile run. Dave Green, leading the race fromthe start, set a slow-starting but graduallyaccelerating pace, running away from twoCarleton rivals on the final lap. Green wastimed in 4:20.2.Chicago was well represented in the dis¬tance events, dominated primarily by Car¬leton. Dave Taylor ran a personal best of31:45 to take fourth in the six-mile. Fresh¬man Mike Axinn overcame both mental ane¬mia and gastrointestinal alienation to place5th. Axinn doubled back to run a tough 14:45three-mile, taking third place honors. In a Athletic awardsspecial exhibition running of the 3000m.Steeplechase which began Saturday’sfinals, Dan Welsh and Nick Dunningsplashed to third and fifth places respective¬ly-Chicago also did fairly well in the sprintsand relays. Tim Lorello, still recoveringfrom an early season injury, placed fourthin the 220. Rich Gordon finished sixth in theclosely contested 100-yd. dash. Chicago’s440-relay team of John Kahle, Frank Ta-mura, Chip Pfaller, and Rich Gordon washampered by being placed in the slow heatof their race, but still managed to finish in afourth place tie with Beloit in a time of 44.8.The Mile-relay team of Steve Janachowski,Ed Derse, Marshall Schmitt, and DaveGreen had a less than average day, yet took second place honors behind a speedy Coeteam timed in 3:22.9.Chicago’s Jim Jacobson and Jim Readfinished fourth and fifth in the 120-yd. HighHurdles, won by Coe’s nationally rankedSilas Hudson. Read, last year’s defendingchampion in the 440-yd. hurdles, suffered se¬vere leg cramps while leading this year’sfinals into the last hurdle and fell across theline in sixth place. Maroon Tom Goodrichtook fourth with a time of 57.1Overall, a surprising number of mishaps ^contributed to Chicago’s somewhat disap- |pointing Conference finish. The Maroons $did, however, score well relative to most of ]>the MCAC schools and the meet ended an *undefeated season of dual meet competi- 2tion. 5Johnson, Harvilla recieve top honorsawards are based on skill and character onand off the court.Janet Torrey was named most valuableplayer in both Volleyball and basketball, theonly athlete to receive two awards. Torrey,a junior is taking a year’s leave of absenceto study language in Germany.Other MVP’s were Rosemary Safranek intennis, Anne Begin de Molgue in field hock¬ey, Ellen Moratti in swimming, Elise Bloomin track, and Kim Curran in softballJay Alley received the Joseph M. Stampfaward for excellence on and off the basket¬ball court, while Bret Schaeffer was namedMr. Defense. Both Alley and Schaeffer areseniors.Senior Pete Wendel earned the William B.Bond medal given to the varsity track ath¬lete who scores the greatest number of teampoints during the year. Wendel, who wasalso a standout football and soccer player,excelled in the triple jump, and long jumpThe highlight of either banquet was thepresence of Mabel Lee at the WAA banquet.The 92-year-old Lee has been one of the fore¬most women in athletics. Lee spoke aboutthe University, which she is well acquaintedwith by virtue of friendships with AmosAlonzo Stagg and Gertrude Dudley begin¬ning when she was on the Beloit faculty. Leewas also Physical Education Director MaryJane Mulvaney’s first teacher. Mulvaneywas a student under Lee in the late 40's atthe University of Nebraska at Lincoln. Thetwo were later on the faculty together for ashort time.By RW RohdeSeniors Kim Johnson and Ann Harvilla re¬ceived top honors at the annual athleticaward dinners held last week at the Quad¬rangle club. Johnson was given the Amos Alonzo Stagg Medal at the 74th annual Orderof the “C” banquet on Tuesday while Har¬villa was awarded the Gertrude DudleyMedal at the 75th annual Woman’s AthleticAssociation banquet on Thursday. BothFootball seriesdelayedDue to this week’s expanded news cover¬age, parts IV and V of the series on Maroonfootball will be compacted into one articlewhich will appear in next Friday’sMaroon. The conference track article willalso appear at that time.New coachesand other notesLeo Kocher, presently an assistant wres¬tling coach at Northwestern University,has been named the new head wrestlingcoach for the Maroons. Kocher will also bean assistant to new football coach TomKurucz.tom Schweer has resigned as swimmingcoach to take a job at Homewood-Floss-moor high school.Also please note that Teresa Friend is ajunior and not a senior as previously re¬ported, and thus has one more year of eli¬gibility. Intramural top 10points1. Leading Indicators (4) 492. Breckinbridge (1) 493. Divinity 394. Hitchcock 365. Your Mother 306. Summary Judgement 257. The Wacks Go To College (Fear andLoating on the Softball Trail) 208. Upper Rickert 149. Tufts 810. Henderson 4Votes: Rockford Files. Lower RickertFishbein. Sammy Walker, Laughlin 4, Diamondhead. Nads of Coulter. IM ReportUpsets markBy Howard SulsPsi U was knocked off by Upper Rickert7-4 in this year’s biggest upset to date.Hitchcock must now face Upper Rickert toremain in the winner’s bracket. The loserwill face Psi U. most likely for the right toface the winner.Another big upset came in the indepen¬dent league when Rockford Files edgedSammy Walker 6-5 under circumstancesdispleasing to Sammy Walker. Also in theIndependent bracket buck’s Don't Suck for¬feited to The Wacks Go To College.Running down the top ten. there are a few-new entries. Leading Indicators remained#1 by virtue of a 17-12 victory over Laughlin4. Sultans of Swing dropped out by forfeitingto South Side Hitmen while Breckenridge,although inactive, moved up to #2. and Di¬vinity Dogmatics jumped up to *3. christen¬ing Dead Popes 21-3 and Dire Straits 15-9.Hitchcock sprang up to *4, whippingDodd/Mead 12-2. Your Mother. #5, won byforfeit over Harper Hall. ?6 Summary Jud¬gement was inactive, *9 Tufts was also inac¬tive. and rounding out the top ten was Hen¬derson, whomping Bradbury 20-2In open Rec Medici rolled over ABA BarStolls 19-11, the Penguins trimmed Nads II14-10, Drink Like Fish crunched MidwayMeshuggas 22-7, and See Your Food digest- softball played the Megabyters 30-2.Volleyball concluded last week, with Hen¬derson capturing the undergraduate title byvirtue of a 15-11, 10-15, 15-9 triumph overShorey. Beats (or Breasts) of Gore beatHenderson in straight games 15-6.15-6 forthe All-U title.The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 25, 1979 — 21FRIDAYPerspectives: Topic: “The Birthrate and ImprovedEconomic Conditions Among Minorities’’ guests JamesS. Fuerst, Ms. Sammie Dortch, and Dennis Hogan, 6:30am, channel 7.A Week of Russian Culture: Conference - “TheApocalypse in Russian Literature” 9:30-11:00 am, “Rus¬sian Literary Theory I” 11:00-12:30 pm, “Russian Artand Music” 2:00-3:30 pm, “The Silver Age of RussianLiterature” 4:00-5:00 pm, Cochrane-Woods Art Center,room 156.Crossroads: Free English classes for foreign women,10:00 am-noon.Midway Studios: Exhibit- by Jeff Slotnick from May 23-May 27.Depts of Biochemistry and Pediatrics: Seminar- “Sac¬charide Traffic Signals in Receptor Mediated Uptake andTransport of Lysozomal Enzymes” speaker William Sly,2:30 pm, Abbott 101.Humanities Collegiate Division Student AdvisoryCommittee: Meeting at 3:30 pm Gates-Blake 117.Women’s Union: Meets 5:00 pm in Ida Noyes above theFrog and Peach.Hillel: Adat Shalom Dinner, 7:00 pm, Hillel.SATURDAYCompton Lectures: “Quantum Chromodynamics: TheQuark Rainbow” 11:00 am. Eckhart 133.U C Rugby Club: UC vs. Lincoln Park RFC, 1:00 pm,Stagg Field.Crossroads: Sign up for a Memorial Day picnic at thePoint. Call 684-6060.WHPK: Success Without College: Comedic Humor, 4:00-5:00 pm Fine Women and Song: “Music a Woman CanIdentify With” 5:00-6:00 pm.Law School Films: “East of Eden” 7:00 and 9:30 pm.Law School Auditorium.U of C Chamber Program: vocal chamber works bySchumann and Schubert: 8:30 pm at Ida Noyes Library.Admission free.SUNDAYRockefeller Chapel: University Religious Service, Ber¬nard O. Brown, Sermon: “Remembering War”, 11:00 am.Hillel: Lox and Bagel Brunch, 11:00 am, Hillel.Crossroads: Bridge, 3:00 pm, beginners and expertswelcome.Hyde Park Junior Strings: Are playing at InternationalHouse, 3:00 pm. Free. Hillel: Hillel Bayit Cook out at the 55th St. Point by theLake, 5:00 pm.Hitchcock Memorial Day Party: Barbecue 6:30/dinner50®. Free drink. Music by UNITY at 8:30 pm. HitchcockQuad/Ida Noyes if rain.Tai Chi Club: Meets 7:30 pm, 4945 S. Dorchester (enteron 50th St).International House Films: “College”, 8:00 pm, I-House. Free.MONDAYPerspectives: Topic: “Better Balanced Families andMinority Mothers”, guests James Fuerst, SammieDortch, and Dennis Hogan, 6:30 am. channel 7.WHPK: Folk Music, 4:30-6:00 pm. Classical Music, 6:00-9:30 pm. Jazz, 9:30pm-3:00 am.Baptist Student Union: Meets 7:37 pm 2nd floor EastLounge of Ida Noyes.Crossroads: Free English classes for foreign women,10:00am-noon.Chicago City Colleges: Sponsors English as a SecondLanguage classes, 4:30-6:30 pm, Rickett’s Lab. Free.Karate Club: Practices 7:00-9:00 pm, in the dance roomof Ida Noyes.Women’s Rap Group: Meets 7:30 pm, in the BlueGargoyle, the Women’s Center, 3rd floor. Info call 752-5655 or 752-5072.NAM Films: “The Shooting” 7:30 and 9:30 pm, Cobb.TUESDAYPerspectives: Topic: “Age Discrimination” guests Ber¬nice Neugarten, Robert Havighurst, and Patricia Fauser,6:30 am, chanel 7.Comm, on Developmental Biology: “Induction ofGlutamine Synthetase in Embryonic Retina: Study onControl of Gene Expression, 12:00 pm, Abbot 133.Speaker Dr. Byung-Moo Soh.Rockefeller Chapel: University Organist EdwardMondello will give a lecture-demonstration and recital,12:15 pm.Resource Analysis Seminar: “How OPEC Works: AnAnalysis Employing a Markov Chaim Model,” speakerRichard Kosobud and Houston Stokes, 1:30-3:00 pm,Wieboldt 301.Kundalini Yoga Society: Meets 5:00 pm, East Lounge ofIda Noyes.Archery Club: Practices 5:30-7:00 pm, Ida Noyes Gym.New members welcome.Amnesty International: Special meeting, 7:30 pm, at5621 S. Blackstone.Hillel: Israeli folkdancing, 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes thirdfloor. Primavera: presents a poetry reading at 7:30 pm,Reynolds Club lounge. A donation is required. Info call752-5655.Sexuality Rap Group: Sponsored by the UC Gay andLesbian Alliance, 8L00 pm, Ida Noyes 3rd floor. Info call753-3274 Sun-Thurs 8-10.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Film-“Archeologtand Jewish History In Israel” 4:00 pm, Breasted Hall,Oriental Institute.WEDNESDAYPerspectives: Topic: “Quality of Life for Older personsguests Bernice Neugarten, Robert Havighurst, andPatricia Fauser, 6:30 am, channel 7.WHPK: Wake up and stay awake with WHPK Rock,6:30am-4:00 pm.Commuter Co-op: Get-together in Commuter Lounge inbasement of Gates-Blake, 12:00 noon.Rockefeller Chapel: University Carillonneur RobertLodine will give a recital 12:15 pm. Persons wishing atour should be in the Chapel Office by 12:10.Crossroads: Free English classes for foreign women,2:00 pm.Art Department: Lecture-“Collecting Chinese Art”speaker Jan Fontein, 4:00 pm, CWAC 157.Chicago City Colleges: Sponsors English as a SecondLanguage classes, 4:30-6:30 pm, Ricketts Lab. Free.Country Dancers: British folkdancing. All dancestaught. Morris, 7:30 pm, Dancing, 8:00 pm. Refreshments10:00 pm. Ida Noyes Cloister Club.THURSDAYPerspectives: Topic: “The Lengthening Life Span andthe Future” guests Gary Becker, Elizabeth Landes, andFred Strodtbeck, 6:30 am, channel 7.WHPK: Wake up and stay awake with WHPK Hock,67:30am-4:00 pm.Noontime Concert: String Quartet Concert, 12:15 pm,Reynolds Club Lounge.Nuclear Overkill Moratorium: Meets 3:00 pm, Ida Noyes2nd floor East Lounge.Ki-Aikido: Practices 6:00-7:30 pm, Field House balcony.Table Tennis Club: Practices 6:30-11:00 pm, Ida Noyes3rd floor.NAM Films: “Rules of the Game” 7:30 and 9:30 pm,Cobb.Women and Revolution: Class series- “The RussianRevolution and Working Women” 7:30 pm, Ida NoyesMemorial Room.Hillel: Tikkun 1 ’El Shavuot all night Torah Study Ses¬sions and continuing until sunrise, 10:00 pm, Hillel.OUTDOORCONCERTfeaturingThe InductorsThe Trouble BoysNick Filippo & Mark DanielsBandersnatchArsonRadio Free IllinoisSunday, May 27- 12:30 - 6:30 -Hutch Court•ree: a blanket and a lunch\Sponsored by Student ActivitiespppppppppUfmMamiiHlifKKggili DOC FILMSFriday May 25John Schlesinger‘sMIDNIGHT COWBOY7:15 and midnightAlan J. Pakula’sKLUTESunday 9:30 May 27Yasujiro Ozu’sBROTHERS AND SISTERSOF THE TODA FAMILY7:15 & 9:30All Films $1.50 Cobb HallROCKEFELLER .MEMORIALCHAPELAssociate Dean of the ChapelBERNARDO. BROWN“REMEMBERING WAR”University Religious ServiceSUNDAY • MAY 27 • 11 A.M. REWARRIVALSAnderson: CONFES¬SIONS OF AMUCKRAKERCarew: CAREWLeonard: PRIVATELIVES IN THEIMPERIAL CITYMills: SIX YEARSWITH GODSpare: TERRITORIALRIGHTSHarper Library’sPopular ReadingCollection22 ~ Jhe Chicago Meroon TiFri<^,j^§Y ZS-J’ZSgj1 — j'yf iW — UCOo,;(A t c fc>'r'_ s>t' fCLASSIFIED ADSSPACECONDOMINIUMS IN KENWOOD.Grand old renovated bldg. Fireplaces,sunporches, new kitchens.3 BR, 2 BATHS FROM SS3.000I BR, FROM$32,000.Model Open 1-3 Sat. and Sun. 4720Greenwood. Sales 2489-6400.6 bdrm. house, congenial occupantsseeks 2 pers. for fall + 1 mid June.Safe, 2blks. from Reg. P. 241-6171.Female S. S. A. student seeks ownroom in 2-3 bdrm. apt. or house oncampus for fall. Considerate and funloving. Please call collect or drop ashort note w/your address and phone.Joanne Haas 313-665-9169, 522 Monroe#1, Ann Arbor Mi. 48104.Person wanted to sublet apt. for sum¬mer (through Sept.). Share with malegrad, student. $123/mo and utilities.546th and Kimbark. 947-8851 (even-ings).2 Bedrooms; Furnished; On campusand city bus routes; Easy access tostores, 1C, Lake, campus. $250 permonth; call 684-1855. Ask for Zelda.Luxury 1 bdrm. apt. furnished, A/C,dshwshr, w/carpet, laundry, groc. str.in bldg., indr. pool sauna. Spectacularlake vw. Eve/day cps. bus rts. Avail.Sept. 548-1992 eves.Female grad student wanted to sharesunn^ 2 bedroom apt. Non-smoker.Available June 1st or Jater. Call324-5669 day or evenings before 10pm.Sublet for Summer, 1 bedroom in 2bedroom apt. $120/month, 52nd andKenwood, 324-2441.Female rommate, June 1 Luxury apt.,2 bedrm, 2 bath. A/C, expensive butworth it. 643-8975.Roomate to share 2 br. in UniversityPk. Private AC, bath, security. Nowthru Sept. $190/mo. nonsmoker pref.Mike 753-8798 (day, some eves),684-1984 (eve).Sublet w/option for fall; 2 bdrm- 2bath, A/C, fully carpeted. Avail. mid-June; $410. 684-5969.Roommate to share large 3 bdrm apt.5140 Kimbark. Summer sublet w/falloption. Available 6/15. $120/mo. Call643-6330 eves.For rent deluxe A/C 1 bdrm fully furnapt with individual indr. pkg. space in¬ch 375/mos. In Univ Pk. apt on 55thwithin block of bank, co-op, 1C, bus, 10min. walk campus, avail July 1; callColleen K days D03-6700, eve wknds667-1191.Want furn one bedroom or eff. start6-15 year lease or sublet call Alan955-4170 Hyde Park.Take over my lease. Vi rm. studio inmdn. A/C bldg on Cornell. Linda D.876-0909 Eve. 848-0178.Woman grad student or employed per¬son sought to share spacious (3 br) aptwith one other. Couple possible. Rent$125/mo. Call Morjorie, 288-6026 even¬ings. AvailableMay or June.Clean, sunny Hyde Park I'/j roomstudio. Fully carpeted, some fur¬nishings. Call 752-4592.Do you love children and need roomand board next year? I need part-timehelp with my 2 boys, ages 4 and 6. Carunnecessary, near U of C. Possiblesalary. For further information writeJeanne Kerr, 1709 Red Barn Rd., En¬cinitas, Ca. 92024 or call 714-753-6062after 8 pm.Sublet; 2 rms. in 5 bedroom apt.$88/month close to campus. 684-2336.Large, sunny summer sublet, 55th andWoodlawn, share w°2 females, 1 male.Washer/dryer, huge yard, porch.$90/mo. 955-1177 Summer Sublet. Female roommatewanted to share large 2-bedrm. apt.w/balcony. 53rd and Harper. Nonsmoker. Must like dogs. $140(negotiable) Fran 241-7736.Furnished 2 bedroom near campusavailable June to December. $322 in¬cludes utilities and parking. Call667-7529, 753-4517.SUMMER SUBLET: OPTION FORFALL 2’/j rm. studio, 53rd and Dor-chester. $l75/mo. Call 684-4564.Condo for sale Newport bid 1 bdr lakeview dw swpl. Call 268-5046.Roommates or couple wanted to sharehuge 5 bdrm 3 bath apt. Avail. June 1.Well-fmaintained bldg. 1 block fromlake. Parking. Mark 947-1873, 288-5799.For rent 2 bdrm. 10th fl. view S.University Gardens 1450 E. 55th St.Call evenings 266-2858.Wanted: Roommate to share modern 2bdrm. apt. near lake. Nonsmkr. Rentscaled to income. Near "D” bus,publictranst. Call 373-4357 or 984-6590, Karen.1 Rm. in Large 2 bdrm. Apt. 24thFloor, Lake View, A/C, 24 hour guardservice, near 1C stop and minibus.538-8480.Responsible student would like tosublet room in house or an affordablestudio apt., June 15 Sept. 15. LocationSouth of S4th St. peter, 955-2721 BARGAIN HUNTERSSummer sublet for 2-3 people: 6 room,2 bedroom apartment, includingsolarium with view of Lake. Excel’ertlocation. We are taking a loss at $275per month. Call Mark: 667-1487.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 95860.JOBS! LAKE TAHOE, CALIF! Fan-tastic tips! $l,700-$4,000 summer!Thousands still needed. Casinos,Restaurants, Ranches, Cruises. Send$3.95 for APPLICATION/INFO toLAKEWORLD, Box 60129, Sacramen-to, CA 95860.Outgoing, sincere individuals areneeded by Citizens for a Better Environment, 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 opportunity for advancement intomanagement. For interview, call:CBE, 59 E. Van Buren, Chicago312-939-1985.Rap group for women. Mondays at7:30 p.m. in the women's Center, 3rdfloor Blue Gargoyle.Subjects wanted for psycholinguisticsexperiments. Will be paid. To registercall 753-4718.Teacher wanted part and full time atthe Parent Co-op Preschool, Ex¬perienced required. 684-6363.RIGHTHANDED MEN; Did youknow that the two halves of your brainare different? Come and see how in asimple perception experiment,$2.50/hr. 753-4735.Expanding wholesale firm is seekingpermanent sales personnel forprestige product. For appointmentcall 332-4056.Needed female student or spouse ofstudent to supervise 3 girls, 10, 7, and 2and do It. cooking. No hswrk. June 3-June 16. Will pay $170.944-2691.2 Bdrm. on Lake nice view 363-0579after4p.m. avail. Jul. 1.SUMMER SUBLET 1 bdrm. avail.furn. grm. apt. near campus 684-0979. MODEL CAMERA 1344 E. 55th St.493-6700NEW Komura 7-element Tele-■ extenders in stock. Absolutely betterthan any other tele-extenders in theworld! Stop in and try them. MODELCAMERA 1342 E. 55th St. 493-6700.NEW Olympus OM-10 in Stock! ModelCamera, 1342 E. 55th St. 493-6700.New Canon AV-1 In stock! ModelCamera. 1342 E. S5th St. 493-6700.TOWNHOUSE 'A blk. N. of 55th andBlackstone, 3 BR, 1 bath, pnld FR,priv parking, patio to enclosedpark/playgrnd. Low $70's. Chris at947-1919 (day), 667 8968.65 VW Beetle. Needs brake work $200.Crib $25. 493-0935.2 women's Raleigh 3 spd., bedroom setwith double bed and 2 matchingdressers single bed, 2 chrs.. 3 rm.dividers, two bookshelves, call538-5130. Try nite and day.Great Books of the Western World (54vol.) Great ideas (10 vol.) Never used.Best offer. 621-4729 or 955-0707.Air conditioning like new, $90. Guitarhardly ever used, "Aria" model 6810$150. Panasonic Radio cassetterecorder one year old $70. 752-2390please call in the evening.Apartment sale: we're moving! Fri¬day June 1, 5500 South Shore Dr. Apt.1505. Sofa, armchair, plants, diningset, coffee table, etc.6 piece pecan bedroom set, excellentquality, value well over $2000 asking$525.947-0430.1975 Dasher, good condition, 35,000cert, miles, new exhaust, new tires,rear defogger, AM/FM radio, ignitioncut off switch-$2500 firm. Cali EvelynPope, 3-4371,9-5.4 sale. Cheap-lg desk (5'x3') w/filingdrawer. Chair, Playpen, 684-2291 by6/8.Hospital Bed, manually operated. Call493-4260.71 Datsun Wagon, Automatic, A/C,FM Stereo, 67,000 miles. Rust. $700.Call 667-3372.6-10 p.m. and wknd.78 Mustang II, standard transmission,10,000 mi, excellent condition, reartefogger, snow tires, radio, rust-sroofed, drk green, $3700 or offers,tom 955-9093 after 6 or weekends.PEOPLE FOR SALEARTWORK of all kinds-drawingcalligraphy, illustration, hand- addressing of invitations etc. NoeYovovich. 493-2399.Typing 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.Excellent, Accurate typist with col¬lege degree will type themes, termpapers, and theses as well as letters,resumes or whatever your typingneeds. Work done quickly and neatlyon IBM selectric at very reasonablerates. Call Wanda at 684-7414 eves.Spanish-hetp in papers. Learn conver¬sation, with native. Call Jaqueline,493-2377 10 pm.Experienced dissertation and thesistyping. Nancy Cohen 378-5774.HUMANISTIC ASTROLOGER Chartreadings, transit calendars, classes.Ann Weiser. 324-8733.Editing, Transcription of cassettetapes, typing. IBM Correcting Selec¬tric, Pica/Elite. Ex-Eng. teacher,medical secy. Exp. Man of style, Turabian, APA, med. journals. Can supplyrefs. Hyde Pk. 288 8883FLEAMARKETStudent Activities Office sponsors itsannual Spring Flea Market Sat., June2, 10 a m. - 1 p.m. Call 753-3592 toreserve a space. No books or clothes,please. CASHWe have a unique summer job for agraduate student or a senior majoringin industrial engineering. You will beable to apply your educationalbackground to a practical problem ofassisting us in evaluating our growingdistribution systems and operatingprocedures. You will work closely withour whse, mgr. and staff so that youWO ROOMMATES WANTED for 3 have a good exposure to our presentdrm. apt. in Regents Park, stalling methods. Come and see for yourself.lid-June. A°C, dishwshr, lakeview Call 446-9300. Crate and Barrel, Nor-150/mo. call Charles 324-2853. thfield, III.CHILDCARE: Experienced, reliable A/■» uTII kl Iperson needed to care for 6 mo. old in- G ft I UNw.fant in my home- Mon Fri 7:30-4:30.Must have references. 667-8230 after5:00p.m. SUMMER DISCOSign up now at Ida Noyes 210 for sum¬mer disco classes, Tuesday evenings.$8.00 for 5 sessions (TVi hrs.)2 Bedroom 2 Bath Apt 4800 ChicagoBeach Dr. Lake View Available July1st. Call3 43-3852 AfterS.Available for rent Aug l unfurn new 2level luxury penthouse elevator apt3rd and 4th floors of the Hedgerow 54thand Hyde Park Blvd 3 bdrm; 2 bath;fireplace; parking incl. $700 mo.,phone 643-3632.3-8 p.m.Furnished room - kitchen privilegesavailable July 1st or before 955-7083.Good location.summer Sublet 1 space in 3 bdcrm.apt, $80 Call Katie 288-6193.1 bedroom sublet, July-August 57thand Kenwood furnished, porch, next topark, $250 + utilities. Renee 753-2492,288-0630SUMMER SUBLET: 1 bdrm. of 2.furn., close to UC and Mr. G’s. $125mo. Keith 667 5914.Roommate to share large 3 bdrm apt.Will have own room w°pr1vate bath.5335 Dorchester. $140/mo. Avail 6/18.753-0186._____Sublet furnished studio near HarperCourt, carpeted, sunny. Avail. Junethru Sept S180/mo. Call Marjle955-2371 or 288 5075. FOR SALE RECYCLE TRASH INTO CASH at theStudent Activities Office Spring FLEAMARKET. June 2 lOam-lpm. CallX3592 to reserve a spacePOETRY READINGPrimavera #5 Poetry Reading Toes.,May 29, at 7:30 p.m. in the ReynoldsClub Lounge. $1 donation.Refreshments.PERSONALSPregnancy test on blood or first morn¬ing urine, better than 99% accuracyeven a week before a missed period.Same day results. Cost: $10. Call Bill¬ings Hospital 947-5550 or come to roomM 171 10a.m.-4p.m.Monday-Friday.Pregnant? Troubled? call 233-0305 forhelp. Free test referral.J.G. Funny thing, isn't it, the way thatit's so damn easy to begin loving so¬meone (how long is it now?). Well,what to do, what to do? Me and some ofthe boys were sitting around last nightdiscussing the issue and decided tospeak our collective mind. Happywhatever (for whichever and whose-ever reasons.) Love always-Wilbert,Floyd, Lloyd and Me.I heard a lot of noise outside Tuesdaynight, and I think it's fantastic that2000 turned out to protest thatoutrageous award. Um, ah, why notgive it to me? Why the amount of inter¬national understanding that goes on inmy coffee shop is enormous! Reg.COOKOUTATTHE POINTSunday, May 27, 5:00 p.m. Cost: $2.00:Hamburbers, hotdogs, and all the sidedishes you can eat and drink(vegetarian food available, but pleasecall ahead). Sign up at Hillel, or callthe BAYIT; 752-2159. In case of inclement weather, come to the BAYIT,5458 S. Everett.SCHUMANNANDSCHUBERTThe University of Chicago ChamberMusic Program presents a recital ofvocal chamber works by Schumannand Schubert, including Der Hirt aufdem Felsen, on Saturday May 26, 8:30p.m. at Ida Noyes Library. Admissionfree.OLD ELEGANCEIn lovely bldg, in S. Shore on Drive, 1-4bedrm. apts., carved oak stairway,fireplaces, carpeted, some beamed orsculptured ceilings, clean secure andquiet, by lake 1C and bus, Idry., htd.,$210 to $475. 1 to 2'/i baths. 221 6606 annual Indigenous Hyde Perk Art FairSat. and Sun. June 2 and 3. 10-4 at theArtisans 21 gallery 57th andWoodlawn.WOMEN'SMAGAZINEPrimavera, the women's literarymagazine, needs new staff membersFor info call 752 5655. The magazine ison sale in most Hyde Park bookstores.SCENESPASSPORT PHOTOS While-U Walt. LEARN GERMAN THIS SUMMER!Take April Wilson's original five weekcrash course and highpass thelanguage exam. 3 sections: M-F10:30-12; 1-2:30; 6:30-8 pm. Toregister, call: 66 7 3038,VERSAILLES5254 S. Dor eh esterWELL MAINTAINEDBUILDINGAttractive IV* and21/* Room StudiosFurnUh«4 or l nfurnUhrd$189 - $287Based on AvailabilityAll Utilities includedAt Campus Bus Stop324-0200 Mrs. Groak WRITINGTUTORS UNIVERSITYSYMPHONYORCHESTRAWriting Tutors needed to work withCollege students 1979-80. 8-10 hoursweek. S500/quarter. Apply at Harper209. Spring Concert, featuring Mozart'sOonGiovanni Overture, Elgar'sEnigma Variations, and Brahm'sFirst Symphony. Saturday, June 2 at8:30 p.m. in Mangel Hall. Free!RESEARCHSUBJECTSWANTED INTENSIVEGERMANFEarn up to $165 as a research subjectin Psychotropic drug studies in theDepartment of Psychiatry. Studieswill begin immediately. Minimal timerequired. Must be 21-35 and in goodhealth. Call Karl on Tues., Thurs., Fri¬day. 10:00-ll:00a.m.947-1795.TEACHERSWANTEDJewish Sunday school needs ex¬perienced teachers for grades K-3. Jobbegins October '79. Call 752-5655 or324-0352.LOX AND BAGELBRUNCHLAST BRUNCH OF THE QUARTERAll lox, cream cheese, bagel eatersCOME TO HILLEL SUNDAY May 27,5715 Woodlawn Ave. High pass the German Exam! Studywith Karin Carmer, native German,PhD, using the comparative structuraltranslation method. Mon-Fri. 10-12,4:30 6:30 493-8127.HEYMARILYN!Fred the Frog, Bret, Larry, Rick, Johnand all your other friends from thePub wish you a very speedy healingafter your Fall See you behind the barthis summer, when you can teach usall how to dance. Luv, the Pub.SCHOEN 1ST DASFESTDESLENZESCelebrate Spring with a recital ofvocal chamber works by Schubert andSchumann, including Minnespiel, Op.101. Saturday, May 26, 8:30 p.m. at IdaNoyes Library. Admission Free.RIDESHOUSINGSERVICE RIDER WANTED: Share driving andexpenses to Oregon or intermediatepoints (Utah, Idaho). Leave June 11.Call 955-2706.Looking for apt. or tenant? come to SGHousing Service. Weekly Listavailable Rm. 306 Ida Noyes Hall.Open MWF 1:00 4:00 Tu Thur10:00-1:00. JOBWANTEDPOETRYA Poetry Magazine (2/art) 47, featur¬ing Neil Alers NOW ON SALE atReynolds Club, Cobb Hall and localbookstores.SNHNOOKIE—WHERE ARE YOU?LaVerne: Okay, okay, I know it's notthe Sixties, but you have to accept mefor what I am. NO, don't you call me ajailbird again. Contact: Schnooks. 29thand Prairie. PHYSICS MAJOR 1 yr. undergradneeds job starting summer, prefer labwork, knows Fortran, call Mike 3-2261rm 122.TOALLTHETIREDPEOPLETo the staff: We really pulled togetheron this one. All of you who are catchingup on a quarter's worth of sleep, open¬ing books for the first time, and sayinghello to friends you left months ago,thank you for the coffee and CokesBut remember, we have two moreissues.Thank you, thank you, thank you-fromone who knowsDR. MORTON R. MASLOV OPTOMETRISTSContact lensesand Supplies• Eye Examinations Hyde Park• Contact Lenses Shopping Center(Soft & Hard) 1510 E. 55th• Prescriptions Filled 363-6363SUMMER IN THE CITY FUN forchildren 6, 7, 8 years old as well aspreschoolers. 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.do you sometimes feel like dancing?Are you tired of disco or just ready totry something new for a change?Maybe FOLK DANCING is for youBring a friend or 2 and check it out.Mon. night at 8.00 (special beginner'ssession) or Sun. at 8 30 at Ida NoyesTeaching both nights. For more infocall 643-9654.LOST AND FOUNDLOST-Keys with leather tag. Lost May4. Call 752 8125.SOUR GRAPESSOIREESupport your local artist at the first COURT ThCATRCMajor Court Studio Production 'LITTLE MARY SUNSHINEby Rick BesoyanDirected by Michael HildebrandMay 17-June 3 Thurs.-Sun8:30 pm 7:30 on Sundayson June 2 - a 2 pm matinee onlyReynolds Club, 57th & University753-3581$3.00 Thurs. & Sun. & matinee$3.50 Fri. &Sat. $1 discount for studentsSNOWED UNDERDue to Tvping Delays0RELAX!Avoid the Rush and Leave the Typing to Us.We Do:Manuscripts / Theses / DissertationsResumes / Reports / Transcriptions24 Hour Telephone Dictation ServiceEM A KW IK SECRETARIAL SERVICE18ii West Washington 236-0110Weekends & Evenings 726-3572 Court Studio Theatre presentsa staged reading ofShaw’s one act playTHE VILLAGEWOOINGDirected by Abbie KatzFeaturing Maureen Gallagher andHarvey GoldmanMay 25, 26 at 7 p.m. May 27 3 p.m.New Theatre57th & University$1 at the door 753-3581The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 25, 1979 — 23 A-/TICKETS STILL AVAILABLEJOHN PRINEthis Saturday.8:30 p.m.Mandel Hailtickets: $3, $4 w/fee$6, $7 generalon sale at Reynolds Club BoxofficeCOMING JUNE 1Chicago’s favorite sonSTEVE GOODMANone show only -tickets on sale starting Tuesdayf ,t r * r i i * t i 1