130 call for mobilizationfor a ‘progressive’ unionStage set for summer Court TheaterMeeting next weekCourt plans in doubtBy Chris IsidoreThe Court Theatre staff probablywill end the season the same waythey began it — uncertain, bothabout plans for a new theatre andthe future of the 25 year-old com¬pany.At a meeting last Thursday inwhich the final decision on the newtheatre was supposed to have beenmade, new alternatives were of¬fered to a $5 million constructionplan that had proved too expen¬sive. The final decision on thetheatre already has been postpon¬ed several times this year. But thenew alternatives have encouragedCourt Director Nicholas Rudalland his staff.“We are all somewhat morehopeful than we were three weeksago,” said Ruddall earlier thisweek. “No one is talking of resign¬ing at this time.”Talk of resignation began lastsummer when the staff of the pro¬fessional, campus-based theatrecompany told University officialsthat unless definite plans weremade for the construction of a newtheatre, they would leave at theend of the season.In July, the University had $2.5million in funds and pledges inhand.Since last summer, the Universi¬ty has considered — and rejected— several proposals to ac¬commodate the award-winningcompany. Proposals calling for theconstruction of a new building orthe purchase and renovation of aHyde Park church were rejectedbecause of the prohibitive cost,while a proposal to house the com¬pany in the Shoreland Hotelballroom was shot down becauseCourt staff members found thespace inadequate.The alternative presently beingconsidered is the construction of asimple theatre building that wouldhold 250 people, a scene shop, anddressing rooms.“This would be a very, very,very toned-down building, quitesimple and quite plain.” Ruddallsaid.Court and University staffmembers are presently working onproposals specifying the design,cost, and location of the newtheatre building, which will be presented to President HannaGray next Friday.If a proposal move specifyingconstruction in excess of the fundsin hand is approved by Gray andthe Trustees, new fundraisingcampaign will begin.Development Director ClydeWatkins said that reports of a $1.5million fund-raising campaign areinaccurate. Watkins said that thefundraising decision will be basedon the plan chosen next week forthe theatre.Court Theatre recently capturedthree Jefferson citations, city-wideawards for non-equity productions.Two were for direction and onewas for a quarter century of ex¬cellence and service. By AbbeFletmanIn the third hour of a four-hourmeeting Tuesday night, a group of130 students, faculty and staffmembers, alumni community resi¬dents, ana others voted to form a“mobilization” committee to dis¬cuss the formation of a “progres¬sive” union next fall.The proposal, introduced by ClayMartin, a member of the nowdissolved Committee of May 22 anda member of the New AmericanMovement (NAM), stated: . .there is a dire need for a Pro¬gressive Union to fight for all thethings against which RobertMcNamara fought and continuesto fight, and in denial of which anaward was given to him by theUniversity. In short, we know thatthere is a need for an organizationto fight for democracy and a fun¬damental transformation of the.social order.”Martin’s proposal, one of eightintroduced earlier Tuesday even¬ing. was the product of a group thatmet several times in Martin’shome.The group that gathered Tues¬day night established basic prin¬ciples for the mobilization commit¬tee, including the support ofmovements of oppressed peoples,the working class, racialminorities, women, and gays. Themobilization committee is chargedto “fight for an improved quality oflife at this University and forresidents of this community.”The mandate of the mobilizationcommittee runs through the begin¬ ning of autumn quarter, 1979. Ageneral meeting will be called atthat time to present the commit¬tee’s conclusions and proposals fora progressive union.The mobilization committee,which will hold its first meetingTuesday at 8 pm in Ida Noyes Hall,was also charged to plan a picnic“to celebrate the victory of May 22and express our hope for a new stu¬dent movement” to be held beforethe end of the academic year.Membership on the mobilizationcommittee is open to all.Last Tuesday’s meeting wasoriginally planned as a self-criticism session by the steeringcommittee of the Committee ofMay 22. which planned the ac¬tivities protesting the presentationTuesday, May 22 of the first AlbertPick Jr. Award for InternationalUnderstanding to RobertMcNamara, president of the WorldBank and Secretary of Defense inthe Kennedy and Johnson ad¬ministrations. The Committee ofMay 22, however, dissolved on May23, and few members of the steer¬ing committee spoke at themeeting.Tuesday’s meeting consisted of ageneral discussion during whichresolutions were introduced, arecess during which certain pro¬posals were merged, threespeeches offering differentperspectives on Students for aDemocratic Society (a leftist stu¬dent group that was powerful in themid-1960’s). and sequential discus¬sion of the resolutions offered inthe first part of the the meeting. Some proposals introduced atthe meeting include those callingfor:• disclosure by President HannaGray, a member of the board ofMorgan Guaranty Trust, of anyties between Morgan and theWorld Bank:• a debate among leftist campusorganizations;• those who attend convocationceremonies to wear white arm-bands;• the formulation of an ad hoccommittee for the repudiation ofthe Pick Award to McNamara;• the formation of a student laborcaucus; and• Gray s resignation.The eighth proposal, offered byIndira Satyendra, a third-year'Col-lege student, called for a broad-based student union to deal withissues such as the draft, nuclearenergy, and condominium conver¬sions in Hyde Park. Satyendrawithdrew her proposal after Mar¬tin's, the first to be discussed, wasoverwhelmingly approved. Satyen¬dra said that her proposals couldbe discussed at the first mobiliza¬tion committee meeting.Martin accepted several friendlyamendments to his proposal, butrejected amendments supportingcivil disobedience and calling for aleftist debate.Amendments and proposals notconsidered at Tuesday's meetingbecause of time constraints will bebrought up with the mobilizationcommittee.to 10Condo market artificial, study saysBy Jaan EliasDevelopers in Hyde Park arecreating an artificial demand forcondominiums according to areport by Peter Adels, a fourthyear geography student in the Col¬lege.Nearly 90 percent of those con¬tacted by Adels who bought con¬dominiums in the last five yearssaid that they did not want to buy acondominium, but felt they had nochoice if they w anted to continue tolive in Hyde Park or in the unitthey had rented.“If there were no such thing ascondominium developers, and theonly time a building was convertedinto condominiums was whenresidents wanted them, therewould be few condominiums inHyde Park,” Adels said.Adels compiled a list of all con¬dominiums in Hyde Park, whichrevealed that 15 percent of allhousing units in Hyde Park arecondominiums.Adels’ survey of tenants ofbuildings that were converted intocondominiums showed that duringthe 1975-79 period 55 percent of thetenants bought their units to avoidbeing displaced.“The actual amount of displace¬ment and conversion was surpris¬ingly low,” Adels said. Most University Parkprevious estimates have placed thenumber of condominiums in HydePark from 30 to 70 percent of thehousing market.The pace of conversion has shotup dramatically in the last twoyears. 52 percent of all con¬dominium units in Hyde Park wereconverted since 1978, but the paceat which buildings are converted condominiumshas decreased, according to thereport.Adels said that the people mosttypically displaced by con¬dominium conversions werecouples from 25-35 years old in the$15,000 - $20,000 annual incomecategory.Students have a high rate ofdisplacement, but some students have been able to find housing incondominiums which were boughtfor investment purposes.Elderly people. Adels said, had asurprisingly low rate of displace¬ment. Although the elderly havelow incomes, they are often able todip into accumulated wealth to buytheir units. Others have had to relyon relatives to buy their units,Adels said.One of the highest rates ofdisplacement was found within thecategory of those who earnedabove $50,000 a year People in thiscategory told Adels that if theywere going to buy a condominiumthey would much rather live in amore prestigious neighborhoodthan Hyde Parkto 10PublicationscheduleThis is the final news issue ofthe academic year. Next Friday.The Maroon will publish an issueof photographs documenting theyear. The Maroon will resumepublication on June 29. Have apleasant summer.Apathy, theft, FCC confront WHPK bossBy David GlocknerWidespread theft, low morale, and anFCC ruling that threatens to throw WHPKoff the air by 1982 head the list of problemstwo second-year students will face whenthey assume leadership of the campus radiostation this summer.Reflecting the apathy that has hamperedthe station’s operations this year, only 30 ofWHPK’s more than 80 staff members turnedout for a May 23 meeting to select the stationmanager and program director for the com¬ing year.Those who attended the meeting choseBrette Manale, a first-year College student,as station manager. Manale will be respons¬ible for the administration of the station.Bart Lazar, another first-year College stu¬dent, was ratified as program director. Theprogram director determines the contentand schedule of the station’s broadcasts.Lazar’s name was submitted to the stationstaff for approval by the members ofWHPK’s student-faculty governing board.Although Lazar won the governingboard’s nomination, he received the votes ofonly three members of the seven-memberboard according to Curtis Black, a memberof the governing board at the time of theelection. The four other members of theboard abstained. Shawn Hawk, anotherfirst-year College student and Lazar’s onlyopponent, did not receive any votes. Blacksaid.Lazar said his three quarters of experi¬ence at WHPK is sufficient to allow him to bean effective program director. Riley Davis,director of student activities, agreed thatManale’s and Lazar's inexperience is not asimportant as “the time and the dedication”they may give to the station.Lazar said that he did not plan to makeany major changes in the station’s pro¬gramming, but hopes to make the station“more professional” and to increase the or¬ganization of the WHPK staff.Organization has been a problem forWHPK this year. “People at WHPK operatein a vacuum,” said news director JaanElias. Poor communication between discjockeys and the station’s managementleaves many disc jockeys with little interestin the station beyond their shows, said one5400 updateSixth court WHPK, the campus radio station Tim Bakerdisc jockey. “People don’t care; they feellike they’re alone,” Elias said.TheftsDuring recent months, WHPK has beenplagued by thefts of records and equipment.The equipment losses in the past year haveamounted to $700, estimated Doug Braun,date set the station’s chiet engineer.The major item which disappeared re¬cently was a Teac mixer, valued at severalhundred dollars. (One disc jockey said thata former staff member “borrowed it onenight and split for New York the next day.”)Microphones, cables, and “various andsundry pieces of equipment” have also beenstolen, said outgoing station managerJames Hyman.A rash of thefts of rhythm and blues re¬cords prompted the station’s officers to voteto close the station from 4 pm Saturday until1 am Sunday in a last-ditch effort to stop thethefts. Hyman said that the station’s of¬ ficers had tried less drastic measures toprevent thefts, but finally decided to closethe station during the times the recordswere disappearing.Although the Saturday Night closing wasscheduled to take effect last weekend, RileyDavis overruled the station’s officers andforbade the closing. Davis said that the of¬ficers were “reacting and not thinking aboutthe situation.” Tighter security in the re¬cord storage room would be a fairer way tostop the thefts, he said. “Any student radiostation is going to have problems” with se¬curity because of the large number of peoplewith access to the station, Davis added.FCC rulingDavis called the thefts a minor problemcompared to difficulties posed by a FederalCommunications Commission (FCC) regu¬lation issued last summer. The regulationwill probably require that WHPK leave theair unless it increases its signal strengthfrom 10 to 100 watts before its license is re¬newed in 1982.The only way WHPK will be able to contin¬ue operating with 10 watts of power is if acomplicated plan proposed by a group ofChicago’s small educational radio stationsis approved by the FCC.Under this plan, WHPK would operateunder the protection of an ‘umbrella sta¬tion’; a station broadcasting on a similarfrequency whose signal is strong enough tobe protected under the new FCC rules, buttoo weak to interfere with reception signalsfrom nearby 10-watt stations.If the ‘umbrella station’ proposal fallsthrough, Davis estimates that WHPK hasonly a “50-50” chance of staying on the airafter 1982. Because five stations might suf¬fer interference if WHPK boosts its signalstrength to 100 watts, the FCC may*not allowthe increase.And even if WHPK does receive FCC per¬mission to raise its power output, the stationmay not be able to come up with the $5,000 to$10,000 that the conversion would cost. BothUniversity and student government officialsdiscuss WHPK’s financial future with uncer¬tainty.Hyman believes the problems Lazar andManale will face “are the same every othermanager has had to deal with,” but hewarned that running the station properly re¬quires a sacrifice.Older students are not willing to serve asWHPK officers because “the people whohave been here longer are too smart,”Hyman said. They know the amount of worknecessary to run the station, he added.“Knowing what I know now, I would neverhave taken the job. It’s too frustrating.”Rape suspect arrestedBy Eric Von der PortenMembers of the 5400 South HarperTenants Association were in housing courtfor the fifth time Wednesday. They heardJudge Willie Whiting set a sixth court datefor the case against Marvin Lustbader &Co., the owner of the 49-unit apartmentbuilding.City building inspectors testified incriminal housing court that nine of the 64building code violations filed againstLustbader & Co. have been corrected. Butreports on the majority of the violationswere not available because the electrical in¬spector was not present at the hearing, andother inspectors had difficulty gaining ac¬cess to apartments when they reinspectedthe building Tuesday.An inspection was set for July 10. At¬torneys for the Tenants Association, the Ci¬ty, and the defense agreed to cooperate toensure that inspectors are present and havefull access to the building that day. The nextCorrectionIt was reported in the last issue of TheMaroon that Steve Stein, arrested oncharges of battery in the May 22demonstration, was released on $100 bond.He was actually released on his ownrecognizance. The Maroon regrets the er¬ror. hearing on the qase will be July 11.Matthew Walsh, attorney for Lustbader &Co., denied 51 of the allegations but saidwork is progressing to correct problems inthe building. He produced receipts showingthat repairs on windows and plumbing areunderway.Walsh requested a continuance on the 12electrical code violation charges to allow forprivate inspections of the system to be com¬pleted. He said bids have been solicited forrepairs on the system; and work will beginas soon as the bids have been completed andcan be reviewed.The July 11 date was set to allowLustbader & Co. to continue work on thebuilding and to permit the City CorporationCounsel to complete the list of violationsthat have not yet been filed.A representative of the CorporationCounsel’s office said the final amendmentsto the complaint will be filed July 11. He saidat least “15 to 20” additional violations willbe added to the case.Ed Voci, attorney for the Tenants Associa¬tion, said some tenants are still withholdingMay rent and may withhold June rent aswell. He said no eviction proceedings havebeen initiated against tenants participatingin the rent action.But he said Lustbader & Co. and DaltonManagement Co. have ignored requestsfrom the Tenants Association for a meetingabout problems in the building. “We’ve beentold, ‘we won’t talk to you because we don’thave to,”’ he said. Police captured a 31 year-old black manTuesday morning and charged him withcommitting two rapes and three armed rob¬beries in Hyde Park this spring. On Wednes¬day a grand jury set bail at $80,000 for thesuspect, Calvin Hayden, of S. State St.Hayden was arrested after two police of¬ficers, Earl Pickett and Marvann Pier-chalski, spotted him in front of 5427 S.Harper Tuesday, at 11 am. The police of¬ficers recognized Hayden from the descrip¬tions given to them by the crime victims. Hayden was taken to Area 1 police head¬quarters at 51st St. and Wentworth Ave.where he was identified in a line-up by thethree women he allegedly attacked.Hayden is‘ charged with rapes that oc-cured in April and May. Both victims werealso robbed, as was the third woman inMarch.Police refused to disclose whether Haydenhad a previous criminal record.— Nancy ClevelandThe Maroon is lookingfor a new AdvertisingManager for SummerQuarter and New YearCall 753-3263for details2—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, June 1, 1979‘Bring backrugs, please’Because of rug theft, the floors oftwo Ida Noyes Hall rooms are bare.Last weekend, thiefs snuck awaywith a 6’6” x 18’8” Oriental rug fromthe Memorial Room. On May 5, tworugs from the East Lounge were sto¬len. The rugs measured 6’8” x 10’8”and 10’3” x 13’10”. All three rugswere part of the original furnishingsof the building.A fourth rug from the MemorialRoom has been placed in storage toavoid theft.Student Activities Office officialssaid the floors will remain thereuntil the rugs are returned. The car¬pets were insured for fire, but nottheft.The University will not prosecutethe carpet bandits if the rugs are re¬turned within the next week, saidStudent Activities sources.Group finaleThe committee on the study ofwomen will hold its final meeting ofthe academic year on Wednesday,June 6 at 5 pm in the Ida Noyes SunParlor on the 3rd floor. All interest¬ed persons are invited to attendWednesday’s meeting. The group iscurrently working to integrate thestudy of women into the curriculumof the University. The faculty-student group will continue its workduring the summer. News BriefsWhile we were goneSussman newlegal counselHanna Gray announced the ap¬pointment of Arthur Sussman lastmonth as General Counsel and VicePresident of the University. Suss¬man will serve to coordinate govern¬ment relations for the University, inaddition to his duties as chief legalofficer.Sussman, currently UniversityLegal Counsel of Southern IllinoisUniversity in Carbondale, practicedlaw in Chicago and New York aftergraduating from Harvard LawSchool in 1966. Sussman also servedfor several years in various legal po¬sitions in the Army. In 1976, he wasappointed executive director of thespecial commission charged with in¬vestigating the West Point cheatingscandal.Sussman replaces Allison Dun¬ham, who is retiring as GeneralCounsel and Secretary of the Boardof Trustees at the end of June.Gray also announced the appoint¬ment of F.- Gregory Campbell, cur¬rently Special Assistant to the Presi¬dent, as Secretary of the Board afterDunham’s retirement. Campbellwill continue to serve as Gray’s as- While The Maroon was busy cov¬ering the Albert Pick Jr. Award, theUniversity filled three administra¬tive posts:Clyde P. Watkins was named As¬sociate Vice-President for AcademicResources and Instituational Plan¬ning. Watkins, now the University’sDirector of Development, will retainhis present position until a successoris selected.Peter Kountz will become Execu¬tive Director of Alumni Affairs onJuly 1. Kountz who was also named aLecturer in the Humanities Colle¬giate Division, is presently ActingDirector of Alumni Affairs and As¬sistant Director of the Center forPolicy Study.Shorelandbus may costResidents of the Shoreland nextyear may find themselves paying forthe shuttle bus which carried themto and from campus free of chargeduring recent years.According to Paul Thiboutot, as¬sistant director of student housing,the University’s budget crunch mayforce the housing system to chargefor the shuttle. Students who appliedfor housing at the Shoreland nextyear were told by housing officialsthat the fare was a “possibility.”“We really don’t want a change,” headded. Norman Bradburn has beennamed Director of the NationalOpinion Research Center, effectiveJuly 1. Bradburn is the Tiffany andMargaret Blake Distinguished Ser¬vice Professor and Chairman of theDepartment of Behavorial Sciences,Professor in the Graduate School ofBusiness, the College, and amember of the Committee on PublicPolicy Studies.Faculty electCouncilSeventeen persons have beenelected to the Council of the Univer¬sity Senate for for three-year termsending June 30, 1982.Those elected were Dr. MortonArnsdorf, Robert A. Butler, SidneyDavidson, Peter F. Dembowski, JimDouglas, Jr., Dr. Godfrey S. Getz,Dr. Leon I. Goldberg, Dr. Erwin L.Kaplan, Martin E. Marty, NorvalMorris, Jane M. Mueller, Paul Pe¬terson, Nancy Schwartz. Melvyn J.Scochet, Patricia Spear, and HaroldWechsler.Two men were elected to serveone-year terms on the Council. Theyare Eli I. Rosenberg and Romand L.Weil.Five other faculty members werechosen as alternates in the order list¬ed. They are Dr. Andrew J. Aronson,Dr. Chase P. Kimball, John R.Schuerman, Mihaly Csikszentmiha-lyi, and Donald F. Steiner.NOTICEAnyone present at the vicinity of57th and University fromapproximately 9 pm on May 22,we need your help.Please pick up witness forms atIda Noyes cloakroom.Ask for the Defense Committeeor The Women’s Union.Your info, is neededfor the defense of those arrested.Thank you. We really appreciate it.The Defense Committee Acting Public Guardian Patrick MurphyResearch guidelines hitActing Cook County Public Guardian Pa¬trick Murphy has filed suit in U.S. DistrictCourt to halt all drug experimentation onmental patients done without consent givenby independent third parties.Murphy filed the class action suit lastweek requesting the court to strike downfederal experimental drug guidelines as un¬constitutional because they violate therights of mental patients. Three residents ofthe Clinical Investigations Unit (CIU) atManteno State Hospital are named as plain¬tiffs. The CIU is supervised by doctors fromthe University.A suit filed in April by Murphy in CookCount Circuit Court also charges that the ad¬ministration of experimental drugs to men¬tal paitents violates the patient’s rights. Thesuit names the University as co-defendantwith the Illinois Department of MentalHealth (IDMH). The case has been contin¬ued until June.Research done in IDMH institutions iscurrently evaluated by four committees forresearch value and conformity with patientrights. Murphy has said he does not believethat these committees uphold the rights ofmental patients.The suits are a result of visits to Mantenoby Murphy, during which he said he learned that patients were being used as subjects inexperiments. In April, Murphy filed hisoriginal suit against the University and theIDMH. charging that andrenalectomies hadbeen performed on Manteno patients at Bill¬ings Hospital without proper consent.Murphy charged that as many as 25 to 100andrenalectomies may have been per¬formed on Manteno patients. The Universityhas said that only six such operations tookplace at Billings and that proper consentswere obtained.Attorneys for the University and theIDHM have sought to have the suit dis¬missed. They charge that Murphy lacksproper standing as Public Guardian be¬cause his appointment has not been approved by the State Senate. The attorneyshave also argued that Murphy’s suit doesnot contain examples of testing currently-being performed or indicate that the situa¬tion is an emergency.Murphy has asked both courts to halt anydrug research currently being done on men¬tal patients without specific court approval.He said he has not been asked for consent onbehalf of his wards to allow them to partici¬pate in drug experiments, even though hehas been named legal guardian. The testingis still going on. he says.EditorialFour strikes, she’s outIt’s a good thing that Hanna Gray runs a uni¬versity and not a baseball club. Because in base¬ball, after three strikes, you’re out.Last week President Gray added the fourthstrike to her score. She began swinging and missing late last fall when she alienated staffmembers by sending out an eleventh hour plea tovote against a union which has since become thecollective bargaining agent for University cleri¬cal employees. Next she alienated students bytaking lessons on South African investment rhet¬oric from John Wilson and Allison Dunham. Shelost faculty support because of a State of the Uni¬versity address that said nothing. And now, afterlast week’s arrests, she has returned to the dug-out amidst the cry, “Ed Levi would never havelet the police on campus.”In baseball, there is always a second time up atbat, and fans forget quickly when the least valu¬able player on the team hits a home run. Stu¬dents and staff and faculty members have longermemories, but Gray too will have a secondchance at bat. Tough decisions — on the theater,on the size of enrollments, on the College curricu¬lum — will have to be made, and Gray will havethe opportunity to improve her average.This “faculty-run” institution is desperate fora leader who will act on the recommendations ofthe faculty, not one who tells them which way torun. It also needs a leader who recognizes that abalanced budget means nothing if the standardof education is compromised.View from the topIt is a tradition that after a year of being self¬consciously unselfconscious, The Maroon take afew paragraphs to reflect on its performance thisyear and its relationship with the Universitycommunity.David Halberstam recently said that a news¬paper should strive to strike a balance betweengiving readers what they want and what it be¬lieves they should have, something The Maroonhas tried to do this year. We have been criticizedfor covering the administration too much and thestudents too little, but as the only organ at theUniversity free to examine and criticize the ad¬ministration, we believe we would have violatedour trust if we had covered them less.We thank all who helped us throughout theyear by providing news tips and constructivecriticism, but we are perplexed that althoughmany feel strongly about The Maroon, few haveapproached us with scorn or praise, story ideasor feature suggestions. In this community,where intellectual curiosity is supposed tothrive, we are surprised that so few are at allcurious about the institution of which they are apart, the community that surrounds it, or thenewspaper that reports about both.Nonetheless, we have enjoyed watching theUniversity and Hyde Park from the third floor ofIda Noyes Hall, and we hope next year’s staffwill enjoy the view.Editor: Abbe FletmanFeatures editor: Claudia MagatPhotography editor: Carol StudenmundSports Editor:Ft. W. RohdeAssociate editors: Andrew Patner, Jacob Levine, DavidGlocknerContributing editors: Nancy Cleveland, Jaan EliasCopy editor: Doug ThomsonBusiness Manager: Suzanne FarrandAd manager: Wanda JonesOffice manager: Leslie WickStaff: Tim Baker, Curtis Black, Paul Brennan, David Bur¬ton, Lee Chait, Kendall Christiansen, Jackie Hardy. Chris Isi¬dore, Richard Kaye, Carol Klammer, Bob Larson, BruceLewenstein, Donald Link, Dan Loube, Greg Mizera, GeoffPotter, Andy Rothman, Sue Sartain, Margot Slauson, How¬ard Suls, Calvin Thrilling, Eric V^n der Porten, Mark Wal-lach, John Wright. Letters to the EditorBartender’s suffrage Court TheatreTo the Editor:We, bartenders at the WoodlawnTap, are in total agreement withJack Snapper’s sentiments(Maroon letters; May 18) thatunion decisions should be made bythe workers, not “outside musclepressure; ” that the workers shouldhave all the say in the matter.However, we cannot say that thiswas, indeed, the case with the re¬cent union election at theWoodlawn Tap. Nor can we agreewith Jack Snapper’s assertion thatthe outcome of that electionrepresents a clear statement ofnon-union sentiment from thebartenders at the Woodlawn Tap.In the nine months preceding theApril 18 election, no less than ninebartenders requested in writingthat Local 42 petition to becometheir representative in collectivebargaining with Jimmy Wilson.Only four of these people wereallowed to vote on April 18. Of theothers, one was fired previous tothe vote (for unrelated reasons).One was forced to quit for medicalreasons. The other three were stillemployed, but not allowed to vote.Additionally, the union receivedone unsolicited vote and one otherpresently employed bartender of¬fered his support. Our efforts to in¬clude him on the voting list failed.This, we feel, represents quite a bitof union sentiment among workersat the Woodlawn Tap.As to the election itself, the out¬come (be it 7-5 or 10-5) was a defeatfor the union. What we and theother union backers wanted was afair election involving all peopleworking regularly scheduled hourswith the exclusion, of course, ofowners and management person¬nel. Our objection is that the issuewas not decided by all the workers.On the contrary, we feel that “out¬side muscle pressure” and a ’’bias¬ed voting list” were partly respon¬sible for the union defeat.As was correctly reported in theMaroon (May 11), two votingeligibility lists were submitted tothe N.L.R.B. by Jimnry Wilson.The first of these would haveresulted in a union victory. With the aid of university lawyers(previously employed in trying tobreak the clerical workers union)new eligibility requirements werepushed through. Only employeesworking a scheduled 8 hours aweek or more were to have a vote.Resultingly, the second list exclud¬ed two people (pro-union) while itincluded seven other people(presumably pro-Wilson). Of thepeople added, two worked ascheduled 8 hours per week, twoworked nine hours per week. Onehad no scheduled hours.As Snapper stated, the electionwas marred by a lot of votechallenging. One vote waschallenged because that personwas not a current employee. Threevotes were challenged on amanagement personnel basis. Thiswas not “silly”; it was just. It wasalso not enough. There will be nounion in the Woodlawn Tap thisyear.We too regret the bad feelingsgenerated over this issue. Weregret more the fact that our onlysource of income is now in jeopar¬dy. However, we still feel that, inour attempts to bargain with Jim¬my Wilson privately and through aunion, our requests were simpleand fair. The five people who votedfor the union were the onlybartenders that did not have otherjobs, no benefits of any kind. Thatour jobs are now in danger becausewe dared to ask for pay raises, jobsecurity, health benefits...Rick ScanlonThomas Walker To the Editor:I would like to thank the nearly 800students and faculty who signed thefollowing petition. These signatureswere collected in only one day ofsolicitation, which to me is a signifi¬cant indication of the recognitionCourt Theatre has earned as a vitalpart of this University. Its future,however, remains undecided.Although Court is a professionaltheatre company, it is not closed tostudent participation, in factstudents are welcome. It needs help,though, and the more support that itgets from within the University, thebetter chance it will have of a tomor¬row. To those who signed the peti¬tion: thank you once again.Catherine A. W'ileyThe petition:We the undersigned members ofthe University community do herebyurge the reconsideration of the allot¬ment of funds to Court Theatre. Werealize the theatre’s desperate needfor a facility other than their presentquarters at Reynolds Club and feelthat it should be given important ad¬ministrative financial priority. Thedissolution of a company as highlyprofessional as Court Theatre woulddismay and anger us all. We deemtheatre a necessity here and do notwant to see the integrity of theUniversity suffer through the loss ofits professional theatre, somethingwhich touches and must continue totouch all of our lives.For a song...To the Editor:Incredibly, Michael Elzufon(Maroon letters of May 25) seems tobelieve that Phil Ochs’ song, “If I’vegot something to say, sir. . is ad¬dressed to students who would like toburn books. In fact the “you” whomthe song nominally addresses isobviously a university ad¬ministrator, or by extension one ofthe other, more powerful, rulers ofour society. If Elzufon comprehendshistorical facts as accurately assong lyrics then this might explainhow he concluded that “good inten¬tions” drove Kennedy and Johnsonto send troops to Southeast Asia...Rafael SorkinEnrico Fermi InstituteDemonstrators blast media misrepresentationsTo the Editor:This letter is intended as aresponse to the misrepresentationsevident in the media coverage of theMay 22 Anti-McNamara Demonstra¬tion, especially the climactic sit-inand arrests. We feel that severalpoints in particular requireclarification. We the undersigned, asdefendants, wish to declare that weacted as individuals, broughttogether by our concern that the pro¬test against McNamara and thepolicies he represents be continuedaccording to the tenets advancedduring the Tuesday demonstration.Those of us who were arrested,like the participants from which wewere dragged, are a politicallydiverse group. Each participantmade a conscious and deliberatedecision to act based on diverse per¬sonal and political motivations. Weunderstood then, and do now unders¬tand, the consequences of our actionand are determined to uphold its cor¬rectness.The events show that we actednon-violently from principal or fromtactical considerations, in a poten¬tially violent situation. If there were“provacatuers” they were the Ad¬ministration of the University ofChicago; if there were “outside agitators” they were the police whoserved the same interests as thatAdministration. We do not approveof the position the University heldthroughout the demonstration andafter the arrests. The Universityallowed police on campus, butdisavowed any responsibility for thearrests. After the fact, they espous¬ed concern for the jailed students.Concern on the part of the Universi¬ty administration would have beenfar more apparent and real had itcome before the arrests were made.A response to the University com¬munity’s demand to rescind theAward would have shown genuineconcern.The University offered assistanceout of their concern to extricatethemselves from an embarrassingsituation. The University did notpost bond for any one of the ar¬rested. The media failed to mentionthe real emotional and monetarysupport offered by the many in¬dividuals who raised money on ourbehalf, donated the service of theircars, and waited all night outside thejails for our release. We cannot ex¬press our thanks too heartily to ourfellow protestors who, in their realconcern upheld the spirit of thedemonstration and teach-in so ad¬ mirably.We support the mobilization of anorganization whose purpose is to ad¬dress problems and contradictionslike those so blatantly evident in thegiving of an award for internationalunderstanding to a man such asMcNamara. Finally, we reassertthat the action taken by all thosewho protested and by those who sup¬ported the protest was right. We con¬tinue our demands to drop thecharges.Kathi ThomasSeth RosenBob Van MeterVictor Doria'Clark KissingerLoren SantowAndy HowardMarghretta HoganKatherine BorlandSharon PollackSteven SteinKate MostkoffMichael ReibmanPhilip GrewSophia MirvissCurtis BlackEdward HasbrookBen DavisScott MannakeeSarah Schulman4—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, June L 1979Economic nonsenseTo the Editor:As a student of the University of Chicagoand a student of development problems, Iwould like to speak out in response to the“Viewpoint” of Messrs. Black and Hinojo¬sa in the May 22 Maroon entitled “RobertMcNamara and the Green Revolution.”Since interest in this issue seems to havearisen out of the recent Pick Award, let mefirst state that I was opposed to the awardto McNamara not only because of his in¬volvement in Viet Nam but also because inmy opinion he has not performed remark¬ably well at the Bank. My aim is not to de¬fend or praise the activities of the WorldBank; rather, I feel a responsibility topoint out the blatant bias and economicnonsense contained in their “Viewpoint”which was written with the pretense of au¬thority on a subject about which theyclearly know little.The tirst disturbing impression Blackand Hinojosa attempt to convey is that allmodernization of production, especially inagriculture, will do nothing but harm thepoor, and moreover that any policy relatedto this must be nothing more than the per¬nicious spread of “capitalist agriculture”financed by the World Bank. Repeated ref¬erences are made to :he use of Bank fundsto finance investments in infrastructuresuch as roads, power, and irrigation, withthe implication that these resources shouldall go into a “direct attack on povertythroughout the developing world.”All serious students of development havenow come to realize that the only way forthe poor countries to attain economic andpolitical independence is for them to raisethe productivity of their own people to thelevel at which they can survive without thedeveloped world feeding them. Indeed, itwas understood over a decade ago that thiscould be done only by investing in educa¬tion, new technology, and infrastructure.This, of course, is just w hat Black and Hin¬ojosa would like to do away with. (Theyeven state that investments in roads,power stations, and irrigation are nonpro¬ductive. This is sheer nonsense.) Suchchanges are just as necessary for suc¬cessful development in “socialist” as in“capitalist” agricultures, a far fromminor detail that Black and Hinojosa seemto ignore.The only important or correct fact thatthey do point out has to do with the seriouspolitical problems that are closely con¬nected to development problems in somecountries. It is certainly unfair to themany concerned people who work at theBank to imply that all Bank resources goto propping up facist regimes and financ¬ing “capitalist exploitation.” Anyone fa-Feminist process in action LettersMore letters on p. 23miliar with the research in agriculture de¬velopment done at the Bank knows thatmany people there are working very hardto help the individual small farmers of thedeveloping world. The fact that there arestill poor, starving, and suffering people inthe developing world today is due more tothe sheer magnitude, complexity, and di¬versity of the problems involved than toanything else. I dare say that the situationwould be much worse if the simplisticideas implied by Messrs. Black and Hino¬josa were followed by the World Bank andthe other international organizations thatare trying to help ameliorate these condi¬tions.John M. AntleGraduate student,Dept, of EconomicsCurtis Black and Raul Hinojosa reply:Obviously development is necessary inpoor countries. But the development im¬posed by the World Bank ignores the histo¬ry and causes of poverty, and is itself anextension of those causes.As James C. Stevens pointed out, in hisMay 22 teach-in, after examining WorldBank projects in Bangladesh, Papuan NewGuinea, and Columbia, “their projectsseem to increase dependency, reinforceoppressive social relations, fragment andatomize social relations, and concentrateeven more power and wealth in the handsof those who already have it.” He conclud¬ed, “the World Bank actually aids precise¬ly those who least need assistance, andconsequently undercuts those it is sup¬posed to aid.”It was McNamara himself who called for“a direct attack on poverty,” beyond in¬frastructure projects, which merelycreate a base for productive enterprises.The rural poor of the Third World needinexpensive technology which does notsuck them into dependency on larger mar¬kets in the form of multinational corpora¬tions and large national debts, freedomfrom landlords and creditors, and consoli¬dation of their efforts for their commonbenefit — not the World Bank’s “develop¬ment,” which delivers their land and laborto exploitative agribusiness.The New International Economic Orderendorsed by the United Nations GeneralAssembly calls for development under thesovereign control of each nation, and “theequal participation of all nations in the so¬lutions to alleviate world developmentproblems, “which would seem to imply de¬mocratization of the World Bank.To the Editor:Steven Landsburg’s ignorant criticismsof feminism, as well as the May 22 activi¬ties, did serve one useful function. They’vegiven me an excuse to explain how I thinkfeminism relates to an issue like the PickAward, and to political activism in gener¬al.Sarah Schulman, as chairwoman of sev¬eral Committee of May 22 meetings, point¬ed out that she believes in feministprocess, which includes making an effortto call on people who haven’t spoken be¬fore. Her action caused me to wonder whatwould have occured had feminist processbeen adhered to by the University, and myconclusion was astounding: McNamarawould never have received the PickAward!Feminist process is based on the as¬sumption that the individual is important.All political organization must be non-hier-archical, and group decisions are arrivedat by consensus. A single person or organi¬zation is never allowed to dominate meet¬ings or actions.Of course, the keys to feminist processdon’t belong exclusively to women. I mustadmit, though, that I've only seen it prac¬ticed successfully and consistently bywomen’s groups.But imagine if the University used fe¬minist process in decision making. Then,the signatures of about 800 faculty staff,and alumni, the active protests of twicethat many students; and the eloquence and support of the “unrecognized” speakers atthe picnic/teach-in/demonstration wouldhave affected the University’s decision. Itwould have been recognized that elitism isdestructive, the we are the University.Rebecca LillianBar boycott 1 bdrm lk vwTo the Editor :Student Housing has suddenly announc¬ed that the Resident Heads in TheShoreland each will be deprived of a muchneeded bedroom in their apartments star¬ting the 1979-80 school year. This decisionunfairly punishes hard-working membersof The Shoreland community while elitistResident Masters, whose only function isto operate a short order greasy spoon on anoccasional Sunday night, receive a custombuilt cathedral living room, a private en¬trance with garden, a kitchen larger than adouble, and much wasted space. Adding tofurther glorification of the bureaucracy, ifspace is short why does the childless Assis¬tant Director of Housing require a twobedroom apartment while not par¬ticipating in the student life at TheShoreland? In fact, why aren’t newstudents just put in the numerous existingvacancies which Student Housing lamentsso loudly. Is this just another Turk-up°Give us a break. Ed.John M. Perkins All purpose agitatorsTo the Editor:The university community missed itschance to publicly discredit the Pickaward and the selection committee Tues¬day night. We could have followed the leadof the faculty by repudiating the award,leaving a few impotent administratorshollowly claiming to represent the univer¬sity.Instead we allowed a couple of general-purpose activists to dilute our messagewith all sorts of other issues. Most damag¬ing was the anti-draft issue. We lookedmore like a bunch of kids trying to avoidthe army than a university outraged over aperversion of history in our name.Next time the administration tries topull a quick one on us, let’s hear more fromour own scholars and less from those in¬terested in other issues seeking a forum.Michael A. PeshkinSpirited poisonTo the Editor:Dr. Steven Landsburg’s puerile tantrumin Friday’s Maroon was many things: ar¬rogant. insubstantial, solipsistic. Aboveall, it was mean spirited; the same meanspiritedness which pervaded and poisonedthe Vietnam era.Bart TaubIntellectual pursuit for truthTo the Editor:We. the undersigned, have been regularpatrons of the Woodlawn Tap. However,we do not believe the recent union electionwas conducted in a democratic manner;therefore, we have decided to boycott thisestablishment. As Michael Mulhollandstated in his Viewpoint, (Maroon, May 11)Jimmy Wilson has employed classic unionbusting tactics. Although we do not wish topressure the employees of the WoodlawnTap into either accepting or rejecting aunion, we cannot condone Wilson’s behav¬ior. We encourage everyone who sharesthese views to take their business to one ofHyde Park’s other taverns.Gene F. PaquetteSusan GriffinHenry SheehanPaul HughesLeora AvivKeith WeissmanRobert M. StarrDan NugentDavid WaldmanSean M.Judd To the Editor:In the last issue of The Maroon Steven E.Landsburg has taken the larger part of apage to detail his impassioned concern fortruth. It is a truth, one gathers, that isbased on empirical “and fairly technical"data. Mr. Landsburg’s concern might beadmirable did not most of his article trum¬pet silly and elitist prejudices against theMay 22nd demonstrators.The protest, we are privileged to learn,was caused by nothing more than late-quarter restlessness and nice weather (Isuppose there hasn’t been any of eithersince the war in Viet Nam ended). McNa¬mara and his award were rather arbitrari¬ly chosen as targets: “A half-dozen otherCauses would have done at least as well.”After their banal beginning. Mr. L. is both¬ered that the demonstrations weren't “justlike the sixties.” He will grant, no doubtbasing his conclusions on years of pains¬taking research, that the students in thecrowd (he calls them “children”) were“as vapid as their older brothers and sis¬ters had been ten years earlier.” while“the ridiculous middle-aged professorswho joined them managed to recreatetheir own ridiculous youths as accuratelyas the advancing years would allow.”These amazing observations should giveall of us pause; and then, after this insanepretention has had time to filter throughour heads, we ought to thank Mr. L. for sogenerously sharing his comprehensive ex¬perience with us. The flatulence of his re¬marks is matched by their gratuity. Only abrilliant, possibly an omniscient, mindwould be able to judge, by appearances,the intellectual and moral qualities of ev¬eryone who participated in the PeaceMovement during the Vietnamese Warand in last week’s protest. Since he is sure¬ly the only person on earth suitably em¬powered by Truth to make such judgments(pace William F. Buckley), I am sorrythat the McNamara protests denied himthe pressures of the draft (I hope the omis¬sion didn’t interfere with his toilet habits)and the lustrations of tear gas. Without ad¬vocating such an action. Mr. L. “wouldhave enjoyed seeing the rabble forciblycleared from the quadrangles.” Althoughit is disheartening that this pleasure wasnot permitted him, I suspect that in somesmall measure the recent airplane disas¬ter more than compensated for the terrorsdenied.Because Mr. L. obviously values logic, itis too bad that his own has all the consis¬tency of jello. A few examples: (1) JaneFonda, a woman of courage and a greatactress, was not invited to eliver a defini¬tive historical assessment of Mr McNa¬ mara. nor as her invitation in any mean¬ingful way similar to the invitationaccorded him. Ms. Fonda, guided bymoral criteria, is capable of making a de¬cision against her own financial self-inter¬est. This ability, so rare in banking and af¬filiated educational institutions, led somepeople to think that she would be worthhearing.(2) McNamara was not being criticizedbecause his policies were unproductive orfutile but because they were ghastly,treacherous, and inhumane on a vastscale.(3) It is not inflated casualitv figuresthat lead people in anguish and dismay tocall Mr. McNamara a “butcher.” Thelowest plausible figures will merit himthat title.After stunning us with his logic, Mr. L.interjects some telling remarks aboutWomen’s Liberation. He has “the same un¬pleasant feeling.” as elsewhere he has “adeep feeling of discomfort.” “so much dis¬tress.” when feminists do not want to hear“what is true" from him. based on fairlytechnical “methods available for measur¬ing the level of discrimination againstwomen in various markets.” Discountingthose who don't listen to a twit simply be¬cause. when he is distressed, he develops“the sensation of being surrounded by cre¬tins,” perhaps Mr. L. ought to learn thatthere is a time for formal and technicalanalysis and a time to express outrage,and the means for each are rarely thesame. People who have experienced a life¬time of discrimination probably will notneed exact statistical measurement oftheir disadvantages until plans of redresshave advanced rather far.Basically Mr. Landsburg seems unableto recognize that all social protest cannotbe conducted under the rules of formal de¬bate. Those forty Noble laureates associat¬ed with this university surely did not spendthe entirety of their lives in catatonic cere¬bration or Olympian discourse: and if Mr.L. is bothered by what a very dignifiedpoet once called “the essential gaudinessof life.” he ought to remove himself to avery high mountain from which he canlook down at all the rabble whom the restof us are content to call the human race.Mr. Landsburg complains about a "pureanti-intellectualism” rampant on thiscampus. His own remarks, so spurious andso hypocritically devoted to truth, fit thatcategory exactiy. Whatever Mr. Lands-burg's duties here. I hope for his and allour sakes that they have nothing to do withserious intellectual pursuit.John JiambalvoDoctoral CandidateDepartment of EnglishThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, June 1, 1979—5TED BERRIGANandRON PADGETTONL Y CHICAGO A PPEA RA NCEFRIDAY, JUNE 1— 8PM —The Poetry Center at the Museumof Contemporary Art • 237 EastOntario Street • $3.00 admission$2.00 for Students — MCAMembersPrograms partially supported by a grant from TheIllinois Arts Council NOW PLAYING AT A THEATRENEAR YOUEOPHONIWALTDISNEYSNowteghiucolor.w euuu VIST. DIST1IBUTI0N CO- l«C © »•» (J *•9400 SKOKIE BLVD674-5300Figure Drawing andPainting WorkshopAll levels and individual attentionsStarts June 13 for 10 weeks,Wednesdays, Morning and EveningClasses (3 hours) $65 enrollmentClasses taught by qualified instructor in her studioB.F.A./M.F.A.546 W. WashingtonCall for information 930-9317/446-7183Spend an exciting summer vacation on white sand beaches in theOUT ISLANDSAt the Sand Dollar Beach Club and Resort you can meet new friendsor bring your own. The Sand Dollar Hotel, on Little Exuma Island, sits50 yards from water so clear that sea life is visible over 60 feet down—and all rooms face the water. Activities are endless — from picnicingon a deserted island for a glorious afternoon, basqueing daily in thetropical sun (bathing suits are optional), snorkeling in water rich withcoral formations and dancing to native music at the hotel and nearbyGeorgetown.SUMMER SPECIALAll for $750. ... 4 Weeks$400. ... 2 WeeksPrice includes all food, room and activities mentioned above. Availablefor a nominal fee are water skiing, deep sea fishing, scuba diving andtennis at two courts in Georgetown.For immediate confirmed reservations callToll Free 800-327-0787Direct to the hotel 809-336-2522or writeSand Dollar Beach Club and ResortP.O. Box 87Little Exuma, BahamasRoom availability it limited. English and Italian Music for"Voices uViofsTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO COLLEGIUM MUSICUMFRIDAY l JUNE 1979 BOND CHAPEL 8:30PMHYDE PARK PIPE RND TQBRCCO SHOP1552 E. 53rd - Under IC tracksStudents under 30 get 10% offask for “Big Jim’Mon. - Sat. 9 - 8; Sun. 12-5PipesPipe Tobaccos. Imported Cigarettes Cigars6—The Chicago Maroon—Friday,-dupe 1, 1979ViewpointSpending the night in jailBy Andrew PatnerAndrew Patner is associate editor smdeditor-elect of The Maroon. He was ar¬rested on charges of disorderly conductwhile covering the events of May 22. Thisis the concluding part of his two-part story.The seven of us sat in the paddy wagon.We could see some lights outside, but wecould not see anything clearly, nor couldwe really hear anything. I suggested thatwe write down what was happening andexplained that I could not because I hadlost my pen and paper and, of course,because I was handcuffed. I saw that I was'the only one in the wagon with cuffs on.Ron Kovic asked me if I had ever beenhandcuffed before and I told him that Ihad not. He looked at my wrists and toldme to keep them relaxed. My right wristwas hurting and I looked at it and saw thatit was bleeding. The handcuffs seemedclean, though, so I didn’t worry too muchabout the cut.We exchanged arrest stories and thewomen told how they had been dragged in¬to the wagon by the police. The one whowas sobbing said she hadn’t been doinganything, that the police had just grabbedher. The other two said they had been sit¬ting in the street. The man opposite mewas more worried about his cigarettelighter. The police had frisked him and hadtaken a few of his possessions from him.Kovic’s aide said that she had not been ar¬rested, that she had asked to come into thewagon to look after Ron and the police hadsaid okay.The man opposite me wondered aloudabout how many had been arrested. Hesaid he had seen others being taken intoanother wagon and he speculated thatthere were six or seven wagons. We allwondered what we had been arrested forand where we would be taken. We talkedabout what we would do once we were inthe lockup and the man opposite me saidhe had been to jail in Chicago before andthat the first thing that would happen wrasthat the men and women would beseparated from each other. He said thatonce we were inside we should each take acoin or a piece of metal and bang it on thebench in our cell. “That’s what everybodydoes.” he said. He said he thought wewould be in jail for at least five or six hoursand that, yes, we would all get one phonecall. We talked about who we would calland we gave Ron’s aide a list of numbers,because we thought she would wait for usat the lockup and not be jailed herself. Wedecided to call some lawyers, our room¬mates. and the newspapers.We had been arrested at 9:15 pm, tenminutes later we left University Ave. At9:35 we arrived at the 21st District lockupat 29th and Prairie. The man who had beenin jail before told us that we were luckybecause this was “one of the nicer lockupsin the city.” We sat in the wagon andwaited. We decided that the police werewaiting for the others arrested to arrivebefore they let us out. After a few minutes,our wagon turned and backed up to thepolice station. The door opened. We toldeach other to be strong. The officer said‘‘Allright, single file.” And we walked outof the paddy wagon and into the station.Policemen and lockup employees(‘‘detention servicemen”) lined our wayWe went into the building and turned a corner. Five women who had been arrestedwere standing there and they cheeredwhen they saw us. We were told to continuewalking past the women but Kovic’s aidetried to follow him. The policemen told herthat she could not come in to the process¬ing room and she told them that she hadnot been arrested The policeman told hernot to worry, that ‘‘things would be takencare of.” The gate to the processing roomwas locked The three of us were told to sit on a benchat the end of the room and we did. Kovictold one of the detention servicemen (whoare usually referred to as ‘‘turnkeys”)that his leg had been twisted by the ar¬resting policemen and he might requiremedical attention. ‘‘You’ll have plenty oftime for that,” the turnkey said. I asked ifI could get my handcuffs taken off. ‘‘Youwere handcuffed?” the turnkey said. I saidyes, weren't the others? “No,” he said.‘‘You’re the only one.” He took the left oneoff but the key stuck on the right one. “Itwon’t come off,” he said. Great, I said.What are you going to do? “Saw it off,” hesaid. But he tried another set of handcuffkeys and the saw wasn’t necessary.We were taken into the cellbloek and intoa large detention cell. There were 14 othermen in there and they too cheered when weentered. We went into the cell and each ofus introduced ourselves. We decided thatthere were no others coming and we talkedabout what might have gone on after wewere taken away.A white-haired policeman walked pastthe cell and Kovic again asked for medicalattention. When the policeman ignoredhim, Kovic said “Could you tell them that Iam a paraplegic?” “Well,” said thepoliceman. I am a captain.” I asked thecaptain what his name was. “Hinchy,” hesaid pointing to his nameplate. “H-I-N-C-H-Y. What’s your name young man.” I toldhim my name. “It’s a shame,” he said.Yes, I told him, it was a real shame.At 10:20 a turnkey came and asked forten of us to come out to be processed. Wewent out into the processing room and theturnkeys and some new police officers ask¬ed us questions for the arrest forms theywere filling out. A policeman wearing aBullwinkle watch processed Kovic. “How-tall are you?” he asked Ron. Well. I don’treally have a height. “When you get out ofyour wheelchair how tall are you?” I can’tget out of my chair. “If someone stood youup how tall would you be?” Look. I used tobe 5’ 9”. The policeman wrote down 5’9”.He also wrote down eye and skin color,complexion, and identifying marks.Nowhere did he indicate that Kovic was ina wheelchair.The policeman was good-naturedthough, and when Kovic told him that helived in Hollywood the officer said that hehad a house in Belair. They talked aboutthe gas shortage in California. The rest ofus answered the questions and they beganto fingerprint us. We each made our phonecalls while we waited. The turnkey finger¬printing us told us that we had been charg¬ed with “mob action.” We wondered whatmob action was and he told us that hedidn't really know but that it was an “all-encompassing” charge and that nopoliceman would have to identify us in¬dividually. He also told us that bail hadbeen set at $100 for each of us.My turn came to be fingerprinted. I sign¬ed three forms and gave the turnkey myright hand. “Just relax your hand and letme do it,” he said. He stamped my hand onthe ink strip and printed it on the greenform. Then he rolled each of my fingersback and forth on the ink strip and theother forms. A couple of times he missed afinger or put a print in the wrong box.“Don't worry about it,” he said. Iwondered where we were going to get $2500to get bailed out. One of the men had to callthe Eagle because none of his friends wereat home and his roommate was in thewomen's cell.We couldn't see the women so we calledout to them, and they called back. Theywere about five feet away from the pro¬cessing room but there were two sets ofbars in between us. Captain Hinchy pop¬ped in several times and told the turnkeysto keep us from talking to the women. One of the policemen outside of the room calledme over twice and asked me my name.When I asked him why he kept calling mehe said “You're the best looking guy in thebunch.”I recognized one of the policeman whowas processing us as the one who had ar¬rested my roommate for driving througn astop sign. We had to go down to the lockupthen too because he had an out of statedrivers liscense and no money. I asked theofficer if this large an arrest was unusual.“Nothing is unusual at the police depart¬ment,” he said.One of the turnkeys said that on his firstday, “We had 61 down here.'' I asked himwhat they were arrested for. “Gambling.”he said. We took turns washing off thefingerprint ink with a powdered orangesoap. It came right off. I looked around theprocessing room and saw that there werestill a lot of policemen standing outsidewatching us. There was a locker againstone of the walls with a pair of gymshoeswrapped in an American flag on top of it.One of the drunks in the lockup startedshouting and the man who appeared to bethe chief turnkey said “One drunk alwayscauses the trouble.”A policeman came in and looked at someof the forms. When he saw Kovic he toldhim that he had read his book. Born on theFourth of July, and that he had met himonce. He told him how much he had en¬joyed the book and Kovic told him that hewas in Chicago to speak at Mayor Byrne'sMemorial Day picnic in Grant Park andthat the following Wednesday he and hisfather, a liquor store cashier in Florida,would be President Carter’s guests at theWhite House.At 11:10, Chief Lyons came in witn mepie still on his face and had himselfphotographed from the front and the rightside. He asked the photographer if he coulddevelop the photos right away and thephotographer told him that it would take awhile. I asked the photographer if hewanted to take a picture of the cut on mywrist and he didn’t answer me.At 11:14 they took us back to the lockupThere were four of us in our cell and wetalked about what had happened and howsilly our arrest seemed. Two of mvcellmates told us how they had been ar¬rested for smoking pot in their early teens.We laughed.1 looked around at the cell. It waspainted gray. The cage at the front of thecell had 432 bars and each of the "beds” (two sheets of metal on the side wallsabout a quarter of an inch thick and aboutsix feet by two feet) had 120 1-inch holes inthem. The back wall had a toilet and asink. The toilet had no seat and the sinkhad only cold water. Both were operatedby pushbutton in the wall. There was notoilet paper nor any place for it.At 12:30 am boredom was setting in andwe started to sing songs. We sang We ShallNot Be Moved. Union Maid. The PeopleUnited (in both Spanish and English), andWhich Side Are You On. At 1 am. everyonein the cellbloek started to chant for food.At 2:15 am we sang “This Land is YourLand. One of the two Communists that hadbeen arrested with us started to shoutabout how “this land is the capitalists’land.” Somebody told him to shut up andhe did.The turnkey came by and told us that thewomen were being sent to 11th and Statewhere they would be processed. He saidthat they did not have “the facilities to pro¬cess women here.” Another turnkey cameinto the cellbloek with Richard Royse.Royse told us that the charges had beenreduced to disorderly conduct and that wewould “probably be released on our per¬sonal recognizance ” He left and we talkedabout his visit. We all appreciated his com¬ing. but it seemed that the University wasattempting to cover all its bases by firsthaving us arrested and then trying to bailus out.Shortly after Royse left another turnkeytold us that we would have to be searchedbecause they had discovered writing onthe walls of the detention cell. “You allcould be arrested for damage to city pro¬perty.” he said. We went back out to theprocess room and we were lightly frisked.Our pens, paper, books, and combs weretaken away from us. We kept our beltsthough.One of my cellmates asked a turnkey ifwe were going to get any food since wewere spending the night. “Look.” said theturnkey. “This. . . is jail.” Everybodylaughed.We were taken back to our cells. Roysehad told us that we would be getting out inabout an hour We waited for an hour andnothing happened. A young man wasbrought into the lockup on a drug chargeand he proceeded to entertain us withmonologues and songs. At 4 am theystarted to release us. We wondered whowould be the last to be released and whowould be outside when we got out By 4:45they had released two of my cellmates andthey took me and the other one to anothercell to wait a little longer. At 5:10 theycame for me and five minutes later theyreleased the last of us. We were taken outto the front office, which we had not seenbefore; and we signed recognizance bondforms. One of the policeman said “Write anice story about us " and I told him that Iwould try.We went outside and Royse and PaulAusick were out there. Paul was leaningagainst the building with the samedowncast look he had had two hoursbefore. He looked exhausted and he justkept staring at the ground. Kovic and hisaide needed a ride to the North Side andAusick volunteered. It looked like it wouldbe a long ride.Several of the women had come backfrom the womens' lockup and tworeporters from The Maroon were theretoo. We started to get into the differentcars. We all hugged each other and ex¬changed promises: "See you in Court.”Somebody had unwrapped the gymshoes and at about 5:30 a policeman raisedthe flag.Richard Royse drove me homeThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, June 1, 1979—7FeatureSeymour Hersh is still fightingBy Jon Meyersohna Jon Meyersohn - 1979Seymour Hersh put his head in his handsand stared down at his battered desk. “Ican’t believe I lost them,” he said.Hersh was sitting in a paper-strewn of¬fice in Washington’s National Press Build¬ing. “I moved from New York and cleanedout the basement,” Hersh recounted, look¬ing horrified. “I just went through my stuffat home and none of it was there.” Hershhas just realized that much of the work ofhis past — his stories for the wire services,for the City News Bureau in Chicago, forThe New York Times, plus the manu¬scripts for three books — have disap¬peared. Seymour Hersh, top investigativejournalist, Pulitzer Prize winner, and in¬stant celebrity for uncovering the massa¬cre at My Lai, sits with his head in betweenhis palms.Suddenly, Hersh is not worried. His headjolts up and he begins to talk about thework that lies ahead. Hersh is writing a bi¬ography of Henry Kissinger, and it is al¬ready being called “the” book on Kis¬singer, the one that will expose all the dirtysecrets. Hersh’s publisher, Summit Pub¬lishing, must believe Hersh has those se¬crets; they gave him a reported $200,000advance without seeing an outline.Hersh is excited about the project, andabout the work — the 300 face-to-face inter¬views, the documents, the cross-checking,the many other Kissinger biographies hehopes to surpass. Now he leans back in hischair; his feet go up on the desk, his handsto the back of his head. At 42, Sy Hersh is atthe top of his field. But something is both¬ering him: the nagging memory of HenryKissinger.“I guess you could say I see Kissinger asa villain.” Hersh pauses. “I see him asmore than that, I see him as somebodywho is not tolerable in this society, hismethods of operating. You can’t believehow much secret, pernicious stuff wasbeing done.”But haven’t most of Kissinger’s plotsbeen exposed: What about the buggingsand secret bombings, Chile and the CIA?“There’s some astonishing stuff that wedon’t know about,” says Hersh. “It hasn’tbeen fully exposed, and it hasn’t beenthought about.”What bothers Hersh most is the attentionand respect paid Kissinger. When all theother “villains” of the Nixon era have beendeposed, Kissinger is the one figure, per¬haps the most important figure, who re¬mains unscathed. Hersh is rankled by the'praise Kissinger receives for his “murder¬ous” policies and by the intellectualprowess he is assumed to possess. “I’m notin awe of him intellectually,” Hersh says.“He just looked good compared to Nixon.Here you have a president going totally toshit in front of us, being totally corrupted,and meanwhile Kissinger is pulling out ofhis hat — one day he’s pulling China, thenext day he’s pulling SALT, then he’s backin the secret talks and the press is totallyin love with him. He’s funny and he’s verybright. But there’s a tremendous dif¬ference between being bright and being anintellectual. He’s a dogmatist.”But to Hersh, Kissinger is more than adogmatist. He’s the creator of thiscountry’s inhuman politics in South EastAsia, South America, and at home. He’s “aman who thought he could bring the NorthVietnamese to their knees with bombs.”Now Hersh wants to bring Kissinger to hisknees, figuratively, with words. The U.S.— and Hersh says this sounds “terrible” —cannot afford to have Kissingers. When therest of us go to sleep at night — I’ve saidthis before — we count sheep. I think thatman has to count little burnt Cambodianand Vietnamese babies. And I think he hasto be brought to justice.”Hersh has something on Kissinger, buthe hedges on the details. That’s why there8—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, June 1, 1979 is going to be a book. Not just another bookon Kissinger; Hersh claims he has “two A-plus stories,” two banner headlines. Andhe’s not worried about deadlines: thestories are his, he says, untouchable.No deadlines; that pleases Hersh. “It’sgood to be using my brains again, to be areal reporter again.” He says the internalpolitics were tense during his six and a halfyears at the Times. Hersh quit recently;he says he “got bored there, too. Newspa¬per journalists have to compromise them¬selves a great deal. You’d practically haveto sell your soul to be an editor at theTimes,”There are reports Hersh had asked for aleave of absence to write his book, but theTimes managing editor Abe Rosenthaldidn’t like the idea of a reporter takingtime off for another project. So Hersh tooka permanent leave. Also, New York Maga¬zine reports Hersh was unhappy with his At Chicago he lived a little more dan¬gerously. Hersh was a member of the PhiKappa Psi fraternity at 56th and Wood-lawn. “There was a whole lot of craziness,like something out of Animal House.” In¬cidents seem to jump into his head. “Wehad one guy pull a gun at a party. He laterwas shot to death in a bar. We once went tocrash another party and urinated in thehalls.”Hersh insists “this isn’t braggadocio,”that he’s just reporting what happened.But he obviously enjoys describing thosedays, particularly the parties. “We used toget grain alcohol and we’d make ‘littlegirl’s punch.’ Every young man’s dreamwas to get his date drunk, but then they’djust starting throwing up, wretching on thefloor, passing out. Nothing very romanticabout that.”Could this post-adolescent excess haveprepared Hersh for a life as a journalist?editor at the Times. Fellow Times report¬ers, in turn, may have resented Hersh’sstar status.But Sy Hersh’s greatest battle in life isnot with the newspaper establishment, oreven with Henry Kissinger; it’s with bore¬dom. “I spend my time fighting off ennui,”he says. Ennui, pronounced with a slightChicago accent, like inooey, creeps up onHersh and keeps him moving. He neverstops talking, moving around his office,pulling papers out of his desk, jumping toanswer the phone.The University of Chicago was the per¬fect school for Hersh’s hyperactivity. It lethim do what he wanted: be independent.He didn’t study too hard, and his constantenergy had plenty of outlets. But as an un¬dergraduate in the 1950’s, most of it didn’tgo into school work.“I wish I could tell you that collegechanged my life, but it didn’t.” Hersh reada great deal as a teenager growing up inthe South Side of Chicago. He calls himselfa typical ’50’s adolescent who sleptthrough the era politically and was inter¬ested mostly in golf and crazy bridgegames. “Every hand was played at six,”he says. “You bid every hand at the top.” He didn’t participate in student govern¬ment and he wrote only essays and examsuntil he was 23. But, says Hersh, “I think itprepared me verbally in a lot of ways — Icertainly matched wits with people equal¬ly as bright and equally as verbal as, I as¬sure you, Henry Kissinger or any of thepeople I dealt with in government.And Chicago supplied training for morethan that, Hersh believes. He says ittaught him to cope with “war criminals,sociopaths and pyschopaths” in govern¬ment, since “one ran across so many psy-chotics and sociopaths at the Univerity ofChicago.”After a disastrous year at the Universi¬ty’s law school — Hersh insists he got“what must be the lowest average in itshistory” — he bummed around for a while,worked in a bar, and, through ROTC atChicago, put in six months as a public in¬formation officer at Fort Riley, Kansas.When he returned to Chicago, uncertainabout what he wanted to do, journalismwas not yet a consideration.“I got into journalism totally by serendi¬pity,” says Hersh. It was through two pas¬sions of his post-college life — drinking anddating — that he applied for a job at theCity News Bureau. Hersh recalls: “I wasdating a woman from the University and we went to a party. Now these were thedays we really drank; we drank ourselvesinto oblivion. Rum and Coke, I remember... anyway, my girl ended up with some¬body else, a reporter for the City NewsBureau. And I got into journalism becausea few nights later we were drinking atJimmy’s and we ran into this guy. He hadjust come from work and he told us what agreat place it was. He said I should goapply and I did. A year later I was doingsomething else and they called me and Igot a job.” Hersh smiles broadly; heenjoys recounting that accident. “I had noidea what I wanted to do and had neverwritten a non-academic word in my life.”What prevented Hersh from becomingsimply another wire service reporter, be¬sides luck and a fear of boredom, was a tal¬ent for writing catchy features, and agradual interest in politics. In 1962, UPIsent Hersh to Pierre, South Dakota; therehe began to read Schlesinger on Rooseveltand other works about the New Deal. “Iwas doing a lot of reading I never did incollege,” he says. “I ended up doing a longseries on tax reform in the South Dakotalegislature, on my own.”Then it was back to Chicago, whereHersh walked into a job with the Associat¬ed Press. He was kept busy writing crimeand accident stories. After 10 months,Hersh got a break — a switch to the nightrewrite desk — and his real career as awriter began. Hersh found he could writecatchy features in very little time. And theeditors in New York liked what the newwriter in Chicago was producing — storiesabout bizarre people and crazy events thatthe wire services just devour. Hersh toldRolling Stone in a 1975 interview, “I wrotewith a good catchy lead ... I was a featurewriter, Lord knows. I wrote every crazystory I could write. I did a St. Patrick’s daystory about Mayor Daley dyeing the rivergreen.”The AP moved Hersh to Washington in1965, the year after he married Universityof Chicago graduate Elizabeth Klein.Hersh became the AP Pentagon corre¬spondent, and there he first broke from thepack. According to Richard Lee of theWashington Post, Hersh is remembered atthe Pentagon as “one who broke every rulefor bureaucratic journalism.” He didthings like shock a group of status-con¬scious admirals by sitting down with themat lunch, and he started to ask direct anddiscomforting questions of Pentagon offi¬cials.Hersh also began to dislike the way in¬formation was gathered by other Pentagonreporters: at daily press briefings. Hershwrote articles that criticized the reportersand the Pentagon. His most critical andmost influential work was a series onchemical and biological warfare for TheNew Republic, from which came Hersh’sfirst book, Chemical and Biological War¬fare: America’s Hidden Arsenal, pub¬lished in mid-1968 by Bobbs-Merrill. Al¬though the book, says Hersh, had littleimmediate impact, much of his informa¬tion was used in a Congressional inquiry.The production of biological weapons waslater halted by the Nixon administration.Seymour Hersh is an insistent man. Ithas been said he uses a telephone like aweapon, and he certainly has proved hecan get a story out of anyone. Histriumphs, his Pulitzer Prize, his GeorgePolk Awards (two), his Sigma Delti ChiDistinguished Service Award, his WorthBingham Award, his two books on My Lai— My Lai 4 (Random House, 1970) andCover Up (Random House, 1972), plus theuncovering of stories like the UnitedStates’ secret bombing of Cambodia, thebugging by Secretary of State Kissinger ofhis own aides, CIA domestic spying andthe role of that agency in the overthrow ofChilean president Salvadore Allende —these achievements attest to the insistenceof Seymour Hersh. His very manner is in¬vestigative. He moves with a sense of ur¬gency, answering the phone with a quickthrust, like a tennis volley ... “Hersh here... yes, yes, I’ll be there Monday. Goodbye.Goodbye.” And down again with the re¬ceiver. His ancient black glasses almostcover his eyebrows, which furrow as heasks the interviewer questions. His mouthappears to be moving constantly, either tosmile or talk. He is a dynamo, a brilliantreporter; he never gives up.For example: My Lai. Hersh would notbe diverted. One day in the fall of 1969 hegot a call from a lawyer-acquaintance whosaid he had heard that some kid was goingto be court martialled for the murder of 75Vietnamese civilians. That kid. Lt. Wil¬liam Calley, Jr., was in fact being held atFt. Benning, Georgia, for the murder of109 Vietnamese. Hersh wanted to followthe story, but had no money. He calledsomeone at the Fund for Investigative Re¬porting and managed to convince them thestory was worth a $1,000 investment. Withthe money and a portable typewriter,Hersh set out on what would be a 30.000-mile odyssey.Ft. Benning is a massive military out¬post. It took Hersh ten hours and all hiswits to find Calley. Late in the eveningwhen Hersh was outside talking to a neigh¬bor of Calley’s, the neighbor called out to ayoung man, “Rusty, come over here andmeet this guy.” Hersh was tired and impa¬tient. He started to leave, but the neighborstopped him. “Wait a second,” he said.“That’s Calley.”Here is how Hersh describes their meet¬ing:Calley was apprehensive. All hewanted in life was to stay in the Armyand be a good soldier. He reminded meof an earnest freshman one might findat an agricultural college, anxiousabout making a fraternity. We went to aparty at a friend’s apartment and hadsome drinks. I wanted to leave. Calleywanted me to stay. He knew what wascoming and he knew 1 was the last re¬porter to whom he would talk, and drinkwith, for many months. He told me, thatevening, a little bit about the operation;he also told me how many people he hadbeen accused of killing. (My Lai 4, Ran¬dom House, 1970, p. 134)When Calley finished telling his story,Hersh said goodbye and went off to writethe story that would win him the PulitzerPrize.At first, however, Hersh could not sellthe story. Life and Look magazinesweren’t interested, and the AP wanted himto “balance” it; that is, put in a denial bythe Army. Hersh finally went to a Wash¬ington neighbor, 23-year-old David Obst,who owned the small Dispatch News Ser¬vice. They distributed the story to 50 news¬ papers, 36 of which ran it, quite a largenumber. When the national papers startedto follow the My Lai story on their won,Hersh managed to stay one step ahead.The story really took off after Hershfound Paul Meadlo, of New Goshen, In¬diana. Meadlo calmly told Hersh how Cal¬ley had ordered him to fire four or fiverounds into a group of Vietnamese civil¬ians. Meadlo estimated he had killed about70 Vietnamese in the first round. The dayafter the interview, Hersh and Meadlo flewto New York, where CBS News had offeredto put Meadlo on with Walter Cronkite. AsHersh told Rolling Stone: “I went on fromthere to fame, fortune, prizes and glory.Period.”I’m not really interested in the peanutfarm,” sighs Hersh. “It’s not going to im¬peach the president.” The complaint is atthe heart of Seymour Hersh’s search, thesearch for the Big Story. He’s done Viet¬nam and Watergate and the CIA. What’sleft?“I tried to write about what I thoughtwas important after Watergate,” Hershsays. “I tried to say some things about themores of business and multi-national cor¬porations.” What happened? “Nobodygave a goddamn.”While at the Times, he wrote a series onGulf & Western that hardly tore up thenewspaper world the way My Lai had. ButHersh defends the Gulf & Western stories,saying they were as good as anything he'sdone, but that the issue isn’t “sexy”enough to attract readers. After the stories. Hersh got a letter from John Ken¬neth Galbraith. Hersh showed me the let¬ter; he had to pull out half the papers in hisdesk to find it.“Galbraith writes funny letters,” saysHersh. “It’s like, Hersh — ‘now you know7the big secret. It’s ten times harder to re¬port on corporations than it is on the CIA.Too bad no one else knows it.’ Well, it is.”Hersh thinks there are Big Stories today,particularly in business, but that the presshas to work a little harder to find them.The press, says Hersh, asks tougher ques¬tions than it did ten years ago. but stillprints basically what is handed out atbland briefings.Hersh believes the other major problemfacing the press is that the star statusawarded top reporters like Hersh and afew others makes the journalist becometoo noticeable and feel too important. “Ihope it goes back to where reporters are nolonger stars themselves,” says Hersh.“We should tell a story.”The story of Sy Hersh has been happy, iffrenetic. He doesn't seem completely set¬tled: probably he never will. Now it is Kis¬singer that nags him; after that, perhapssomething else. As for his personal life, hesays, sounding almost surprised, "mar¬riage has worked. It’s so funny; there’ssuch a battle about whose work is more im¬portant, who has more rights. But it sworked out.” Hersh lives in a Washingtonsuburb with his wife, who will graduatefrom NYU medical school in June, andtheir two children. To supplement the al¬most constant work on the Kissinger bookare friends and tennis games And the search for “the truth.” Hersh believesthere is a “truth” in any story, but that ithas become more elusive.For instance, the first place the Timessent Hersh, right after hiring him in 1972,was Hanoi to do North Vietnam. Two daysafter he returned, he was off to Paris, to dothe peace talks. Hersh says the stories areharder to do. “The truth,” he says, “is nowon a level so unobtainable...” Hersh lowershis voice; not all “truth.” he continues, butthe truth about multi-national corpora¬tions and the shady practices that includediversification, the juggling of funds be¬tween U S. firms and foreign subsidiaries,and tax avoidance.Hersh thinks that is the biggest storyaround, but there are others. He believesthe CIA will resume covert operations in acouple of years. And then, of course,there's Henry Kissinger.Now Hersh speaks of the Kissineer of theCIA-Chile connection. “We haven’t doneall of Chile.” Hersh says. "I’m going to dothat in my book. I'm going to do Chileright. 1 mean, not right, but there’s an¬other level of stuff that went on that eitherI can prove or I can't. Stuff no one knowsabout.”For the first time during the interview,Hersh is at rest. He blinks a few times.There is a feeling of loneliness, evendanger, in the bare room. “Well,” he says,“whether it's a crusade or not. I’m doingit.”Jon Meyersohn was editor of TheMaroon last year and is now a broadcastassociate for CBS morning news in NewYork.FeatureSmall pleasures: notes of a baseball watcherby Steven FeldmanWrigley Field, mid-May. Few places canbe more beautiful. The ivy on the ancientbrick outfield wall has begun to blossom;the sun washes the green, open field withlight; a warm breeze is blowing across thepark. In the grandstand behind first base,an older couple is taking in the spectacleThey seem to be visiting from Ames, Iowa:weatherbeaten, craggy faces, unmistakablyAmerican. What better sight to see in the bigcity than a ball game? After all, that's onething you can’t get back in Iowa. Thegentleman fills out his scorecard carefully,marking down the visitor’s lineup (Cincin¬nati), then the Cubs. His wife chatters hap¬pily, knowledgeable about the game. Look,there’s George Foster, he hit 52 home runsthe other year, didn’t he? Yes. he did. Theman is using his scorecard as an historical record. He marks down the date and theplace, “warm, cloudy, 80’s. Game will bediscontinued at 4:30 to allow teams to catchplane. Will be completed in July.” Early inthe game. Cincinnati’s Johnny Bench is atthe plate. He fouls off a pitch that cracks hisbat and walks towards the dugout to get anew one. A typical baseball scene, and atotally inconsequential one. The old mannotes on his scorecard next to Bench’sname. “Broke bat. 1st inning.”The New York Yankees, the team that'sso easy to despise, are in town against theWhite Sox. When the Yankees visit, it looksgood for the beer business. Despite cool,early-April weather, the beer vendorsscurry to keep up with demand. On hot sum¬ mer nights in Comiskey Park White Soxfans drink beer to cool off. On chilly springdays they drink beer to warm up. But onevendor is unhurried. A rotund, slow-movingfigure, he is selling souvenirs, pennants,miniature bats A potential customer a fewrows up asks how much they're going for.The vendor shouts back his reply, ratherthan negotiate the distance between them.The fan decides to hold onto his money andthe vendor slouches off. One of his beer¬selling comrades catches up to him. andwhile popping a few cans of Strohs, says.“Hey, when are you getting your Masters?”“Couple more years.” “Couple more years?Why so long?” “I can only take nightclasses.”Hey, I bought a condo in Palatine,” saysthe rotund one. “Paid 36 for it, now it’s goingfor 42.” “Wow, great.” says the other. “See va,” and hurries off to a pair of newcustomers.Wrigley Field again. An errant pitch getspast the catcher and skips back to thescreen, where it lodges itself like a hard-hittennis ball along a court fence. An usher,whose job it is to sit just in front of thescreen and gather up foul balls, rise andambles toward the ball. At the same time, avery old fan in the second row gets up andheads slowly for the ball. The two get therenearly simultaneously, with the old manreaching out and grabbing the ball justbefore the usher can get it. The usher shrugsand smiles as if to say, “OK, it’s yours.” Theold man returns to his seat just as slowly ashe left it. and the people sitting near him ap¬plaud.The Chicago Maroon—Friday, June 1, 1979—9MAB can’t afford top names; alternativeprofessional promoters bring ‘package deals’By Greg MizeraSkyrocketing performers' fees and ad¬ministrative restrictions have hamperedthe attempts of the Major Activities Board(MAB) to bring entertainment to campusand caused some observers to considerchanges in the Board’s operation.MAB is responsible for most of the largerconcerts and events that take place oncampus, but few students know how the or¬ganization works. The Board is composed ofseven students who are selected by a jointstudent-administration committee. Oncechosen, the Board members elect a directorfrom among themselves. The director hasno special powers except to act as spokes¬man for the group.Assistant Dean of Students Paul Ausick,has been an unofficial advisor to MAB sinceits beginning. He noted that large profes¬sional promotion agencies have come todominate all aspects of the live music busi¬ness in recent years, driving amateurs andsemi-professionals out of competition. Somecolleges have given in and turned over theirauditoriums to these agencies. Ausick saidthat this results in “package deals” in whichstudents lose a large measure of controlover which acts go on stage:Other colleges have met the problem bycharging students more in activity fees. AtNotre Dame, for example, the fee is over $40per semester.The MAB Board is thus quite limited fin¬ancially compared to its competitors. It re¬ceives $12 in mandatory annual fees fromeach undergraduate plus optional fees paidby a handful of graduate students. In 1977-78this gave MAB a budget of $29,520 to spendon campus entertainment. An exact figurefor this year is not available because all thefees have not been collected yet, but IreneConley, the official advisor to MAB. said thetotal will be “within a few hundred dollars”of last year's sum.Ticket sales rarely make up for concertcosts and the Board never expects a profit.Last autumn's Stanley Turrentine-RichieHavens concert, for instance, cost $8589 toproduce while only $2650 worth of ticketswere sold, leaving a loss of $5939. This was a“relatively expensive” show, according toConley. When Leo Kottke appeared at Man-del Hall in March, ticket sales totalled $4018.just $705 less than concert expenses.Some students criticized the Board whenit paid Chuck Berry $10,000 for two quickshows several weeks ago. Libby Morse, thisyear’s director, justified this unusuallylarge expenditure by pointing out that MABhad not spent all of the approximately$20,000 it had allocated for the past twoquarters. She said, the surplus funds wouldbe used on spring quarter activities includ¬ing Berry, the John Prine concert on May 26and possibly another, as yet unspecified,event on June 1. Any money still remainingat the end of the academic year is creditedto next year’s budget.But even with surplus funds, many of theacts students want to see are beyond MAB’sresources. Typical is the attempt made bythe Board this year to bring the BluesBrothers to Mandel Hall. The Brothers, DanAckroyd and John Belushl of “SaturdayNight Live” fame, wanted $15,000 for oneconcert. This was to be divided among thetwo alone and did not include the cost oftheir back-up band.“There’s just no way we can afford tobring the really big name rock acts here,”said Morse. “Sometimes we’ll contact a per¬former and when we tell them our hall onlyholds a thousand people, its ‘so long. ”Another MAB problem involves advertis¬ing events off campus. Records of ticketsales reveal that 20 to 25 percent of the audi¬ence at an average MAB concert comesfrom outside the University community.This outside money goes a long way towardsoffsetting losses, especially since tickets area few dollars more expensive for anyonewithout MAB members. Morse and Conleysaid they would welcome the chance to at¬tract more outside money to campus eventsbut an administrative restriction preventsMAB from doing so. Once MAB spends money to advertise aconcert off-campus, it is no longer officiallypromoting a University event. In that caseMAB would have to pay prohibitively highrental fees for Mandel Han just like any out¬side group that wanted to use the auditori¬um. The Board is only allowed to take ad-,vantage of free concert listings on localradio stations and in newspapers such asThe Reader.Ausick defended the restriction, saying“The whole point of the Major ActivitiesBoard is to serve students. . .It’s not sup¬posed to be another Park West, it’s supposedto bring students from all over campus to¬gether.”Few condofrom 1Adels’ report concludes that con¬dominium conversion is making Hyde Parkinto a more homogeneously middle and up¬per middle class neighborhood by drivingyoung couples and high income people out ofthe housing market.The typical condominium buyer is a cou¬ple with few children with at least one wageearner well-established professionally,Adels said.Adels found that condominiums often at¬tracted buyers from outside Hyde Park.During the five years following the firstHyde Park condominium conversion in 1965.Adels found that condominiums often at¬tracted buyers from outside Hyde Park dur¬ing the five years following the first HydePark condominium conversion in 1965.Since the early 1970’s when displacementrates were at their highest, more and morepeople have bought their own apartments.“Condominium conversion causes move¬ment with Hyde Park now,” Adels said,said.During the 15 years of condominium con¬version in Hyde Park, the nature of theapartments converted has also changed.“Condominiums were previously the largestand the highest quality apartments, but theconversion process is now engulfing moremodest apartments as well. This is going toaffect more low-income tenants in thefuture.” Adels said. Until recently, publicity costs were oftenpaid by recording companies, which con¬sider concerts an opportunity to promote re¬cord sales. MAB concerts could then be ad¬vertised anywhere in the vicinity whileretaining their “University event” status.But many record companies are beginningto doubt the promotion value of concerts,especially small ones. Not since WarnerBrothers paid the publicity expenses forBonnie Raitt’s appearance in 1977 has alabel offered similar services to MAB.These developments have placed a tre¬mendous strain on amateur groups likeMAB. But the Board has tried to adapt todifficulties as they arise. Over the yearsApartments that undergo conversion fromrental units to condominiums receive onlycosmetic changes, according to many ofAdels respondents.Even though high numbers of people arebuying apartments, most are not happyabout being forced into making a decision.“They feel as if their lives are being con¬trolled by someone else and a decision ofsuch magnitude should be a free choice,”Adels said.Condos are still a very emotional issue,from 1The night’s most controversial issue in¬volved membership in the mobilizationcommittee. Group members seeking to ex¬clude outside groups, particularly theRevolutionary Communist Party (RCP), in¬troduced a motion limiting membership tothose affiliated with the University. Twoalternatives — open membership andmembership limited to residents of HydePark contiguous neighborhoods — were pro¬posed after group members voted to con¬sider the membership question separatelyfrom that of general approval of the pro¬posal.A proposal to thank The Maroon for com- MAB volunteers have developed technicalskills to help defray the costs of large con¬certs. The stage crew for the John Prineshow will be made up partly of volunteersand will cost MAB around $600. Conley es¬timates that if Prine had to bring an entirestage crew, the cost would be close to$1500.The Board has also attempted to promotesmaller concerts by less expensive perform¬ers. Last year it instituted a 300-seat nightclub in Ida Noyes Hall. Students paid asmall cover charge to hear relatively un-kown artists in an intimate setting. But theclub failed to draw much attention and wasquickly scrapped.Still, the idea of smaller events is notdead. Avant-garde saxophonist AnthonyBraxton’s autumn appearance in Hutchin¬son Commons was quite successful and, ac¬cording to Morse, satisfied a segment of thecampus population which does not care formainstream music. She said small concertswill probably be an important part of MAB’sprogram in the future.There has been no talk of disbanding theBoard in favor of a professional agency, butmany students said they would not'mindpaying a little more in activity fees if theycould see well-known acts on campus. A stu¬dent referendum would have to be called inorder to raise MAB fees, since it was by thisprocedure that the $12 fee was originally es¬tablished. No such referendum has beenproposed yet.Despite its difficulties, the Board seems tohave won considerable, though qualified,approval from students. “I think they’redoing a lot better than in previous years.They’re finally getting people I want tosee.” said one third-year College student. Acommon evaluation of MAB’s performanceis: “It’s good, but when are they going toget. . .?” Among the acts mentioned are theRolling Stones. Led Zeppelin, and other im-possible-to-book performers.More realistic observers comment on thelack of non-musical events. Morse said shehopes next year's Board will be able toschedule such events but pointed out thatmusic, especially of the folk-rock type. in¬variably the most popular entertainment oncampus. She said that concert promotionwill probably always be MAB’s main busi¬ness.Progressives mobilizeAdels reports. A few respondents broke intotears when surveyed about their ex¬periences with condominiums, he said.Chicago is the largest condominium con¬version market without a law regulatingcondominium conversions, Adels added.Adels compiled his listing of con¬dominiums in Hyde Park by consulting tractbooks at the Cook County Recorder ofDeeds. He contacted 172 people chosen fromlists of people whose buildings were convert¬ed in the last 15 years.plete and “sympathetic” coverage of theevents - of May 22 was shot down afterMaroon editor Abbe Fletman said TheMaroon had tried to cover the event objec¬tively. Speakers against the motion criticiz¬ed last Friday’s editorial which blamed“outside agitators” for the unscheduleddemonstration, while proponents of the mo¬tion compared The Maroon’s coveragefavorably with that of The Tribune and TheSun-Times.The final motion before adjournment at11:50 pm called for the faculty Senate to de¬mand the resignation of Dean of StudentsCharles O’Connell who the motioner claim¬ed allowed Chicago police on campus. Themotion was tabled.Carol StudemundAnthony Braxton at Hutch last fall.buyers wanted to buy10—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, June 1, 1979™eGrey City™The arts and criticism supplement to The Chicago Maroon Summer reading: p. 13Chuck Stone photographs: p. 15Essays; Drawings: pp. 16-17New Wave; Court’s Jeff Awards; Jazz: p. 19A look at Chicago art exhibits and museums: 1978-79by Karen HornickPhotos, clockwise from upper left: .Danny Lyon’s “Track in the Desert, Yuma Colorado”. (From the Art Institute'sCollection.)Martin Ryerson and Claude Monet in the latter’s Giverney garden. Who isleading whom through whose garden? (Collection of the Art Institute)Claire Zeisler’s bright red “Floor Slinky”, a work made of polyester threadswrapped around slinkies. (lent by the Hadler/Rodriguez Galleries. New York andHuston, (photo courtesy of the Art Institute).Marc Chagall’s “The Green Violinist” (1917) Part of the Spertus Museum's exhibitof Chagall paintings, drawings and graphics from public and private collections inthe Chicago area. The Spertus annually mounts a major show of work by a contem¬porary Jewish artist, (photo courtesy of the Spertus Museum) Chicago, it has been said, runs on sheer will. By extension, it may be said thatthe Chicago art world runs on wills — the legacies of our now departed Chicago ty¬coons and philanthropists. The Art Institute owes its recent centennial almost sole¬ly to the largesse of the Fields, the Pecks, the Hutchinsons. and others. Ap¬propriately. the lead article in the Art Institute's recent Tribune supplement, “ACentury of Greatness.” was headlined “Esthetic Delights and the Captains ofCommerce - No history of the Art Institute would be complete without a nod to thebig barons of Chicago business who became benefactors.” The article featured apicture of the Impressionist standing in his garden — accompanied by the dapperChicago timber baron. Martin A. Ryerson.Still, it is true: we would miss the Art Institute’s Rembrandts, van Goghs, andcontinued on page 13:r; -v; .//12 rhe Grey City Journal — Friday, June 1, 1979V ;•■■'. >?SSi .. 8KKH| . . . $ .gap ■ ■ ,CIAL SCIENCE GRADUATE STUDENTSLooking for an alternative to an academic career?John Morton Company208 S. LaSalle, Suite 410Chicago, Ill. 00604_ , „ _ , „ 726-2010.John Morton Company, a growing marketing con¬sulting firm located in Chicago’s loop, is looking foran enthusiastic individual to fill an importanttechnical position. 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TO 8:30 PM.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 8:30 P M.Orders to Take Out1318 East 63rd MU 4-1062My summer vacation... Books recommended by friends, faculty and editorsJanet Heller, an editor of Primavera:ChrysalisBloodrootNo w and in Other Days, Yehudah Amichai“He’s one of the best modern Hebrew poets.”Terri Bellaimey, fourth year student in theCollegeSimple Justice by Richard Kluger“About Brown vs. Board of Education — agood book to celebrate the anniversary of thecase.”The Longest War by Tavris Offrir“Interesting, funny, well-balanced bookabout the differences between men andwomen.”The Innocents Abroad by Mark Twain‘‘Terrific book about a tour of Europe and theMediterranean. A good thing to consoleyourself with if you aren’t going to Europethis season.”Stephen Schwartz, professor of biology:The Medusa and the Snail, Lewis ThomasSurvivors, Bruno BettelheimBroca's Brain, Carl Sagan“Entertaining and light, but with a lot ofscientific content.”Andrew Patner, Maroon Editor-electOrigins of Totalitarinism by Hannah ArendtBerlin Stories by Christopher IsherwoodHue and Cry by James Allan Mac Pherson“The best book of modern short stories I’veever read.”The Powers that Be by David HalberstamAbbe Fletman, Maroon Editor,The Kingdom and the Power, Gay Talese“I’m reading it for the first time now and amenjoying it more than The Powers That Bewhich I put down after getting part-waythrough the section on Bill Paley. While I findmost of the literature on the media devoid ofpersonality, I found The Powers That Be to betoo gossipy. The Kingdom and the Power isgood writing and an interesting view of theNew York Times. ”The Woman in White by Wilkie Uollins.“This mystery novel contains my favoritecharacter, the wonderful and terrible CountFosco. The Moonstone, also by Collins,makes wonderful summer reading as well.”Lannie Abrams, intellectual at large and gradstudent in sociologyMommie Dearest, Christine Crawford“It’s the kind of book that would makeanyone’s mother look good.”Hollywood Babylon, Kenneth Anger“Excellent character studies of Hollywoodluminaries and other greats.”MandingoJaan Elias, Estonian-at-largeThe Stories of John CheeverBirdy, William McFanhonComing into the Country, John McPheeArt Melinda Corey, Managing editor, the GreyCity JournalMoby-Dick by Herman MelvilleSigns and Meaning in the Cinema, by PeterWollenLewis Hine and the American Conscience byJudith Mara Gutman“Also be sure to get hold of any back copies ofthe Grey City Journal.”Bruce Shapiro, second year dilletante in theCollegeThe Education of a Christian Prince,Disederius ErasmusAmerican Small Sailing Craft, Howard Chap¬pellPlays, prefaces, anything else, Bernard ShawThe First Shoe BookThe I. F. Stone’s Weekly Reader, I. F. Stone David Keys, graduate student inmathematics:Surreal Numbers, Donald E. Knuth“Very entertaining. Two people discover anancient tablet and try to figure out its inscrip¬tions.”Howard the Duck comic books“They illustrate the existential condition ofmodern man.”The Origin of Consciousness and theBreakdown of the Bicameral Mind, JulianJaynes.Martha Koenig, second-year German major inthe College:Watership Down, Richard Adams“It gave me a sense of accomplishment toread something that long. And I like animalstories.”Lannie Abrams: ‘It’s too f—ing hot to read anywayRichard Stern, professor of English:Airships, Barry HannahThe House of All Nations, Christina SteadCome the Sweet By and By, Eleanor LermanConfessions of An Octogenarian, IppolitoNievo“A sprightly, wonderful story of an old manlooking back. It takes place during the fall ofVenice under Napoleon.”Janel Mueller, associate professor of Englishand chairman, Committee on General Studiesin the Humanities:War and Peace, Leo Tolstoy“I associate summer reading with very longnovels.”The Dream of the Red Chamber, Cao Xueqin“A huge, panoramic study of 18th centuryChinese society, focussing on an unhappylove affair. Really wonderful psychologicalinterplay.” Steve Brock, fourth year student in the Col¬legeSeven Storey Mountain, Thomas MertonThe Everlasting Man, G. K. ChestertonDavid Miller, longtime Hyde Park residentSanctuary by William Faulkner“Almost pure evil.”What Maisie Knew“Almost pure good.”Basic Electrical Wiring“For fun.”Stephen Kobasa, student and bookseller atthe Seminary Co-op:Da Vinci's Bicycle, Guy DavenportA Backward Look, Daniel LangThe Time of Gifts, Patrick L. FermorSilence, Shushaku Endo“They’ve been little recognized, and deservemore attention.” Nancy Crilly, editor, Grey City JournalAll the Kings Men by Robert Penn WarrenFirst and Last - photographs by WalkerEvansThe Pursuit of Love by Nancy MitfordA Death in the Family — “and this is the lastyear I recommend James Agee because no onepays a damned bit of attention.”Mitchell Shames, fourth year College studentin EnglishMoby Dick by Herman Melville“For the serious seeker of truth, pay close at¬tention to the anatomy sections.”Catcher in the Rye by J. D. SalingerKaren Hornick, This Week in the Arts Editor,Grey City JournalI, Claudius by Robert GravesThe Collected Poems of Wallace Stevens (if Ican find a copy)The Red and the Black by StendahlRobert Ferguson, associate chairman of theEnglish department:Inventing America, Gary WillsGood as Gold, Joseph HellerThe Magic Mountain, Thomas Mann“It bears re-reading."Jake LevineFielders’ Choice, Jerome HoltzmanTalking to Myself, Studs TurkelMary Lynne Kukouski, 4th year Economicsstudent in the CollegeEmile by Jean-Jacques RousseauEquality and Efficiency: The Big Tradeoff byArthur K. OkunKatie Nash, adviser in the College:The Last Convertible, Anton Myrer“Marvelous escapism reading — about atwenty-fifth reunion at Harvard.”Fred Brooks, director of College admissions:The Acts of King Arthur and His NobleKnights, John SteinbeckThe Last Temptation of Christ, NikosKazantzakisSouls on Fire, Elie Wiesel“One of my favorite modern authors.”Grassroots, George McGovernAn American Journey, George McGovern“He has really been overlooked.”Tom Main, managing editor of The ChicagoReview:The Recognitions, William GaddisThe Concept of Mind, Gilbert RyleMyron Davis, fourth-year student in the Col¬lege and former Life photographer:A River Runs Through It and Other Stories,Norman MacleanCreative Spirit, Come!, Paul GoodmanAn Age of Enormity, Isaac Rosenfeld“I believe this summer is a good time toremember that some of the best people con¬nected with the University of Chicago havebeen very aware of the relation of knowledgeto ethics."continued from page 11Cezannes if the money to bring them here hadn’t been given at the right time. Theright time may have passed. Although many of the Art Institute’s exhibits of thelast year did seem worthwhile — the photography shows in general and the recentClaire Zeisler retrospective in particular — there have been more exhibits of the“Arthur Rubloff Paperweight Collection” ilk.•Perhaps it is impolite to bite the hands that feed us. We need this art — and ourappetite is booming. Attendance figures at the Art Institute, Museum of Contem¬porary Art, and smaller galleries are multiplying. Apparently, the Chicago au¬dience is being given what it wants. If this is true, are “major exhibitions” like theostentacious Art Institute’s “Pompeii A.D. 79,” and “minor exhibits” like the ArtInstitute’s esoteric “Sculpture of Carl Andre,” really what we want?•Traveling exhibits we read about in The New York Times and elsewhere thatseem important inexplicably pass us by, in spite of all our money. No one is quitesure why Chicago's major museums bring us what they do.Speaking for the Museum of Contemporary Art, acting director Arlene Valkanassaid, “We attempt to present the kind of work Chicago should see.” What shouldChicago see? “What Chicago should see is what anyone interested in what is hap¬pening now in art would want to see. Our exhibits are based on our personaldiscriminations and decisions made deliberately and conscientiously.•What is outstanding, in thinking about the past year of Chicago art, is not any truly successful presentation at a museum or gallery, but what has happened to themuseums and galleries themselves.The Art Institute’s centennial, for example, received a lot of publicity. This wasovershadowed, however, by the Christmastime theft of three invaluable paintingsby Cezanne. Recovery of the works last week almost completely blotted out presscoverage of the Institute’s “birthday party” last Thursday.The Museum of Contemporary Art’s remodeling and expansion was also bignews this year. The “new” museum has attracted large numbers of people, but thefirst works displayed have left an almost equal number of people gaping inbewilderment. The renovation was a success — “We have windows in what wasformerly a shoe box,” said Valkanas — but the Museum has yet to use its newfoundspace to its fullest potential: it deserves a good show.Smaller museums and galleries have had better years. The Spertus Museum’scurrent “Chagall in Chicago” exhibit, for example, has been brought off with morerespect than hoopla. Ontario Street galleries brought popular shows of such artistsas Louise Nevelson and Robert Rauschenburg and photographers such ^s RichardAvedon and Ansel Adams. On campus, the Smart Gallery's “Decorative Designsof Frank Lloyd Wright,” "Jackson Pollock: Early Work,” and current “RussianPainting, 1800 — 1850” were all traveling shows that Chicago deserved. TheRenaissance Society’s “Nine Young Painters,” “Dan Ramirez,” and current “Vi¬sionary Images” were also successful: they were well suited to their space, theywere not boring, and they had few pretensions.Neither the Renaissance Society nor the Spertus Museum have much money, butthey do have better exhibits. Perhaps they have something to teach Chicago’sbetter-endowed institutions.The Grey City Journal — Friday, June 1,1979 — 13!?>'■-model cameraTrade-In1^1///n\N Nikon EM• Motorized Film Drive• Fully automatic exposure• Fool proofflashbody with50mm 1.8 lensImr^4^ OLYMPUS (QiRevolutionary OFF-THE-FILM (OTF)light measurement systemuses completeline of Olympuslenses andaccessoriesbody with50mm 1.8 lensCanonAutomatic simplicity and CanonEconomy — you set theaperture and theAV-1 selectsthe Speed! kiAiiwbody with50mm 1.8 lens|t^| Minolta XG-1The versatility of automatic •and manual exposurein a lightweight compactSLR!body with50mm 1.7 lens* We reserve the right to refuse any camera in trade — AHprices reflect trade-in values of an SLR with normal lens.model camera1342 East 55th St. 493-6700 NOTICENeeded: Money for the defenseof those arrested on May 22nd.Please send contributions toEd Hasbrook, 5824 S. Kimbark,753-2249 ext. 3302.Thank you. We appreciate it.The Defense CommitteeIt's for you. . .if you're looking for an 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 Telefund- '. '' •TheGreyCityJournal—Friday,June1,1979 —15DarkPicturesDowntownAsIwaitedatthecornerofWabashandRandolphonacloudlessafternoon,Idecidedtoenteradarkphase. ThepeculiarkindofdarknessIconcentrateduponwasdarknessinbroaddaylight.Itenabledmetomakeverysimplepicturesthatwouldotherwisebemuddled.Insteadofphotographingfire hydrantsandgarbagecans,admittedlyboringpicturesthatwerenonethelessverysimple,Icould nowtakepicturesofeverydaythingsthatcouldatleastpretendtohavehumaninterest. Ifthebackgroundistoocomplicated,Imerelyprintitblack.Andiftherearetoomanypeopleinthepicture,Iprintthemblackaswell.Althoughthismaynotbetremendouslyflatteringforthose lostintheshadows,itsimplifiesthingsagreatdeal.CharlesStoneLthe Impotence of Educationby Melinda CoreyAn English professor once told me that most people not associatedwith the University of Chicago consider the school a “strange andrare bird.” I’ve been here for four years, and I still haven’t lost that‘outsider’s’ belief. But instead of clinging to the inflated AdmissionsOffice platitudes, I’ve come to realize that the University’s ‘rare’quality extends to its own peculiar, rare problems. Thanks to a friendwho coined the phrase and demonstrated the problem to me, I nowcall one of these afflictions the impotence of education.Many here have felt the impotence of education, a helplessnesscaused by a consistent dependence on academics as the only way tomeasure self-worth. The University quickly displaces us from thequestionable heights we had attained in high school, but not throughcompetition with each other, the way most other colleges might do.At Chicago, we are repeatedly told to immerse ourselves only in theworks of the greatest minds. As a result, some people not only try toemulate these writers, but actually feel deficent when they do notmeasure up to them.This may be noble, but it poses problems. One of the most im¬mediate problems is procrastination. Although much procrastinationstems from sheer laziness, I think that at least some students heredelay writing papers because they believe that they cannot possiblyhave anything to say. This has happened to me more than once. Inmy first year, I learned that I didn’t have the background to write; insecond year, I realized that if I read only a translation of the work,I’d never fully understand it; in third year, I felt that critics hadalready expressed my ideas; now, in fourth year, I have decided thatthe work doesn’t mean anything anyway. For whatever reason, Iwaited until the night before the paper due to scratch out a thesis,when, due to fatigue and nervousness I undoubtedly turned out an in¬ferior product. Thus, I prove my inherent academic deficiencies.There is a more extensive paralysis in writing papers. Creativity issacrificed. Some students have an overwhelming desire to please theprofessor, but many others are just so afraid of not finding the ‘cor¬ rect’ reading of a work that they dismiss original ideas. They write‘safe’ papers. And ‘safety’ is always limiting. Explaining aparagraph of A Portrait of The Artist may be useful to understandingthe work, but when students rely on a professor’s views or literarycriticism to make their own reading ‘correct’, papers become littlemore than exercises.Cautiousness about papers extends into a general lack of creativi¬ty. Although the University Symphony and Court Theater areflourishing, there are never enough people to perform at Universitycoffee houses, Blackfriars has not produced its original springmusical in two years, and The Maroon and Grey City Journal aresorely in need of good writers.There are two reasons for this lack of participation. People seem tobe afraid of inability. When one student I know stopped playing twomusical instruments after he came here because he didn’t have tenhours a day to practice, it seems clear that some students here for¬sake art as an avocation for the same reason that they procrastinateabout papers: they don’t think they can be good enough. Others ig¬nore campus activities for just the opposite reason. Whenanother friend said he rarely read the Grey City Journal because“you know, it’s not Homer”, I realized that some students are so im¬mersed in the Great Books that they will not look at current, howeverflawed attempts at creativity.The disdain for amateur art seems to be just another sign of the im¬potence of education. It represents an arrogance that begins the firstyear of college. After a couple of quarters of unexpectedly mediocregrades, some first-year students shield themselves from judgementof their mediocrity with an arrogant indifference to it. This is the at¬titude that cripples student activities.But after graduating, arrogance takes a different turn. Because noother school could possibly have caused the trauma’s that theUniversity does, no other school can possibly provide the kind ofeducation that Chicago does. We acquire some sort of cockeyedrespect for the place we have criticized for four years, so that whenwe finally leave, the inferiority complex has become a superioritycomplex.16 — The Grey City Journal — Friday, June 1,1979 Mary Millai1Goodbye to All Thisby Nancy CrillyFour years ago, I saw a movie featuring Harold Rosenberg andSusan Sontag sitting in Wing chairs in front of red drapes. Their eyesraced across cue-cards as they reminisced, with all the credibility ofamnesiacs, about the University of Chicago. This less-than-featurelength film from the backlots of the University public relations officewas an impressive collection of alumni with fond, if suspect,memories. These were, all of them, Very Special Persons.Later that evening, I sat in Jimmy’s with a fourth year student, oneof those gaunt young men who can pour drinks and almostsimultaneously smoke without inhaling. It still makes me cringe tothink about it, but I asked him with a Henry Aldrich earnestness ifthe people at this university were indeed “Very Special Persons”.When everyone at the surrounding tables stopped laughing, he said:“Send out 150 job resumes without one reply, or wait a week for a 15minute appointment with an advisor who can’t remember whatyou’re majoring in, and see how goddamned special you feel.” Ichortled along with him and the eavesdroppers, and generally forgotwhat he said. It would be four years before I learned the peculiarmoral of that story.I was lured here by the promise of infinite academic difficulty andthe idea that it would be an immensely egalitarian gesture to attendcollege in the midwest. And I recall, not without a great deal of em-barassment, but with a clarity that makes my hands reach for mythroat, times — especially when I was on a train platform, or walkingover to Harper library in the early evening — when I felt I was star¬ring in a movie about a young woman starting life in Chicago. Butduring my first two years, it was never clear whether our heroinewould endure, never mind prevail.Almost everything that ever came to mean anything to me had lit¬tle to do with the University proper, or even with the city. In fact, whatever I will remember not only had nothing to do with the Univer¬sity, but almost always obliterated it.I liked certain nights here. And I am not talking about insomnia, orsomnabulism, or one of those nights when the conversation starts ata party and ends up in a car to Indiana and a hangover before dawn,or the all night seige before an exam or paper due when every hourand page passes with the hatchet embedded just a little bit deeper in¬to the back of the skull. What I am talking about is staying up allnight for the sheer aloneness of it, with the recognition that the traf¬fic outside the window is a little quieter, the instincts better. Therewere nights here that took on a geographical quality, where stayingup was like traveling west across the country, I wandered through thehalls of the apartment, listening through the doors to my roommatestalking in their sleep, and working with a concentration that was im¬possible in the daytime,* the University was further away, and it wasno longer important to remember that I was in this particular city.The two-day snowfalls had the same effect: they obscured theuniversity and the city, made the circumstances irrelevant, dulledthe threat.I worked on the newspaper because I liked the writing and theediting and the particular rhythm of the work, but I especially ap¬preciated the vast distance between the third floor of Ida Noyes Halland the University. I suspect the feeling was mutual.Why I wanted this obscuration and distance, has to do with the“peculiar moral” that I mentioned earlier. Somewhere along the lineI began to believe that Harold Rosenberg would have been a renown¬ed art critic even if he had studied at Yale. I learned slowly, but it is acertain knowledge, now, that one of the most demented ideas putforth by this university is that you can define yourself in terms ofwhere you went to school, even if it is this college. I don’t think itpossible, and I certainly think that it would be pointless, to continuethrough this University without an unfailing belief in the existence of“very special persons”, and “very special places” elsewhere.These drawings are a sampling of thework done in this quarter’s Figure Draw¬ing class (Art/Des 214), taught by RobertPeters. The drawings range from 10-secondin-class sketches to time-consuming at-home exercises. In all cases, the primaryobjectives were to capture the shape of thehuman body and to understand its relationto other objects on the paper as part of awell-composed drawing. Mary MillardThe Grey City Journal — Friday. 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Something new atthe AgoraGyros PizzaIt is a different meal — Pizza,Salad and Beverage $2.50During Special Student Hours7 p.m. to 10 p.m. DailyStarting Monday, June 4THEA<X>RA1335 E. 57th947-830918 — The Grey City Journal — Friday, Jane 1,1979New wave and the punkby Renee Marie SavackiIn October 1978, The University began classes andyoung freshmen were running around trying tobecome oriented. I know of at least one first-year stu¬dent whose primary concern was how to obtaintickets for the upcoming Neil Young concert. It is theend of Spring Quarter and the same first-year studentis now trying to find some false identification to getinto the Park West to see Lou Reed. And instead ofcramming at Regenstein at the end of 10th week, Ishall be at the Patti Smith concert and the RockAgainst Racism benefit featuring Tom Robinson atLincoln Park.The last year has seen the arrival of new studentsto The University and of Punk rock to Gaspars onBelmont. For at least one student in The Universitythe latter was more important. This essay is an at¬tempt to organize my disheveled mind and put forthwhat I believe are pertinent questions concerningrock ‘n’ roll in general, and Punk rock, in particular.Yes, I loved the Sex Pistols and the Damned and yes,I still love the Clash and Costello but what is impor¬tant here is not the fact that I love Punk rock but whyI love the New Wave and why with several notewor¬thy exceptions I have written off mainstream rock ‘n’roll.Two years ago I saw many stadium concerts in¬cluding Emerson, Lake and Palmer, Utopia, BlueOyster Cult and Genesis. Well after Genesis I wasthoroughly disillusioned and vowed never to seeanother rock ‘n’ roll concert. It was at this time that Ibecame disgusted with the sexism and pseudo-artpretensions of both heavy-metal and progressiverock. Yes simply bored me with their endless syn¬thesizer drivel and I thought that if I heardRoundabout one more time on the “Progressive” FMdial, I’d trash my stereo.Not only were groups likeForeigner with their macho-misogynistic lyrics offen¬sive, they were above all, boring.Right about the time of my disillusionment withmainstream rock I saw Elvis Costello in concert. Itwas quite by accident that I saw him as I had alwavs Joey Ramone: “All the girls are in love with me/I'm ateenage lobotomy. ”been skeptical about the New Wave, and negativefeelings abounded in my opinion of Punk. After see¬ing Elvis with Mink DeVille and Nick Lowe, I wasvery pleasantly surprised and almost even stood upand danced, something I had earlier in my life vowednever to do at a rock concert as it was “uncool”.From Costello to The Dead Boys (whom I saw atthe end of summer) I was transformed from a skep¬tical follower of rock ‘n’ roll to a die-hard punk rockfan. This past school year has seen me at 20 concerts,Thomas at the Blue Gargoyleby Curtis BlackJulie Less has worked hard to bring creative musicto the Blue Gargoyle this year. She has also workedwith the Liturgical Dance Choir of UniversityElaine Cohen and Julie Less in Thomas.Church, as well as continuing her graduate researchinto texts of the early church. These three lines ofpursuit, combined with the energies of artists fromChicago, New York and San Francisco, bear fruit thisweekend in a ritual drama at the Blue Gargoyle calledThomas, co-written by Julie Less and Elaine Cohen,with music by Joseph Jarman.Thomas takes the story of the death and resurrec¬tion of Christ, from Apocryphal scriptures of Thomasand of Mary, from popular religious traditions sup¬pressed by the Church. Seeing the subject from afeminist perspective, the work deals with it im¬aginatively. Religion is alive for Less and her co¬ workers.The issue of faith and unbelief is confronted by themain character, doubting Thomas, the apostle,played by David Rogers, a powerful and evocative ac¬tor who has worked with the Education ThroughTheatre Association at the Gargoyle. Thomas haslost touch with his religion since Christ’s deaththrough his rational, scientific approach to religion.All the men in the drama exemplify this approach,though Thomas is more human and down to earththan Peter, James or John, the church fathers.It is the women who initiate the transformationswhich are central to the drama. This is a reversal oftraditional church roles, where men are mediators ofthe message, according to Less. The women are led byMary Magdalene, who was looked up to by earlyGnostics because she was the first to speak to theresurrected Christ. Played by Celestine Heard of theGoodman Theatre (Bessie in Native Son) andLaMama Theatre and other off-Broadway produc¬tions in New York, Magdalene leads the women fromtheir immediate emotional response of mourningthrough affirmations involving the woman’s mysteryand fertility — resurrection as birth — to a dancenear the end where the women are physically enticingthe men to spiritual enlightenment. According toLess, the strains of belief suppressed by the Church,which opposed any female perspective, represented areligion of the people.Jarman’s music is not a presence so much as axundercurrent flowing beneath the performance, likethe voices of Thomas’s conflicting thoughts which areheard in one scene. Jarman’s music is based inrhythm; he is conscious of the vibrations of a tone, aswell as the punctuations of a speech or dance. Hismusical scope is international, and he brings anunderstanding of Eastern and America Indianreligious music to his work. His studies of Gregorianchants inform the modernistic plainsong which is theprelude. sensibility15 of which are New Wave oriented.Perhaps the best thing punk rock can do for itself isto explode and disintegrate ala Sid Vicious, its mostfamous casualty. As a certain friend of mine neverfails to remind me, “Punk is dead, give it up.” Theseare words that hound me daily. However, if punk isdead, then it must have been resurrected since itspremature death;or how else can one explain groupslike the Clash and the Ramones making some of thebest rock ‘n’ roll today.Blondie has a platinum album, a disco hit and radioairplay, without sacrificing their integrity. PattiSmith had a top twenty single last year with herrecording of Because the Night. Punk is at the stagenow where it is just beginning to make a dent on themasses of kids who listen to the radio. Granted, w'hileone still doesn’t hear much of The Clash or The SexPistols on any radio station (with the exception ofcampus stations), one does hear Patti Smith, DavidJohansen, Graham Parker, Elvis Costello, Dave Ed¬munds and many more artists who if not fully punkare definitely New Wave. These artists are nowreceiving some well-deserved recognition and canperhaps now pave the way for punk groups.The Clash are beginning another tour and all I cansay is, if you want to see rock :n’ roll at its purest andmost exciting you'd do well to see this group. LesterBangs, whom I consider the best rock ‘n’ roll critic inthe country, wrote about The Clash, that Give EmEnough Rope, the band’s second album, “containsmore evidence that the Clash are the greatest rock ‘n’roll band left standing.” And even Robert Christgauwrote in his review of the Clash’s New York Debut atThe Palladium, “No one has ever made rock ‘n’ rollas intense as the Clash is making it now.” FromRobert Christgau, who is not often given to makingsuch definitive statements on rock ‘n’ roll, this state¬ment came as a minor shock to me. Even that ultra-laid back, anti-punk symbol of the 60’s, Rolling Stonehad nothing but effusive praise for the Clash.Lest this essay should become a tribute to theClash, I shall now turn to Punk rock, m general.Punk rock is not safety pins in peoples tongues andpurple and orange spiked hair. It is young kids(alienated and frustrated) finding a new outlet fortheir rage: their rage over how their lives are turningout and over mainstream rock’s refusal to identifyand help these kids. Most of all, Punk rock is dress¬ing wild, going to a small preferably dumpy club, andhearing incompetent, yes incompetent but energetickids like us giving everything for rock ‘n’ roll. Punkrock is fun!Soon the year will be over and I will see a free RockAgainst Racism benefit in Lincoln Park with TomRobinson and if God decides to bless me, The Clash.And then I will go home, hop on a train to New Yorkand see the Clash at The Palladium once more. Rockand roll is here to stay.Court’s Jeff sCourt Theatre honored: The directors of two CourtTheatre productions have received Jeffrey Citationsfor their outstanding work: Nicholas Rudall for SheStoops to Conquer (left, Maureen Gallagher andRichard Hill), and Rudall and Peter Syvertsen forThe Birthday Party (right. Bradley Mott and Rudall).Court also received a special Jeff for “excellence anddedication in its presentation of theater classics, pro¬viding a much needed resource for Chicago artistsand audiences.” Jeff Citations are awarded annuallyfor excellence and achievement in non-Equity pro¬ductions^The Grey City Journal - Friday. June ,1979 - 19 1CampusArtThe Art of Russia: 1800-1860: An exhibit of art fromthe Hermitage and other museums in the SovietUnion. None of the paintings, drawings, and printson display have ever been seen in this country.Closes July 5. Smart Gallery, 5550 S. Greenwood,Tuesdays, through Saturdays, 10 am to 4 pm; Sun¬days, noon to 4 pm. Free.The Berlin Collection: An exhibit of books andmanuscripts purchased in Berlin in 1891 for the newlyfounded University of Chicago. Closes in October.Special Collections Corridor of Regenstein Library.Free.Visionary Images: Works by eleven contemporaryNew York artists. Through June 16. RenaissanceGallery, Goodspell Hall. Mondays through Satur¬days, 11 am to 4 pm. 753-2886. Free.This weekend is the 32nd annual Hyde Park ArtFair emanating from the corner of 57th and Kimbarkfrom noon til dark both Saturday and Sunday andcovering the whole Ray School block.Go to the Art Fair for food, fun, music, and people.For art, go to the Sour Grapes Soiree at the Artisans21 gallery in the First Unitarian Church, 57th andWoodlawn. It will run from 10 to 4 Saturday and Sun¬day. Artisans 21 is a cooperative of talented local ar¬tists whose work is usually excluded from the ArtFair.The best of another home for local artists, the HydePark Art Center, will be featured at a free wine andcheese party at Hyde Park Federal Savings, 53rd andLake Park, tonight from 8 to 10. Paintings,photography, drawings, and sculpture may be viewedto the sounds of the Erwin Heifer Jazz Trio. — A.P.MusicUniversity Symphony Orchestra: Conducted byBarbara Schubert. Program: Mozart’s “Overture toDon Giovanni;” Elgar’s “Enigama Variath(Michael Jimbo, guest conductor); Brahms’s “fphony No. 1 in C Minor.” Tomorrow, June 2. Mt 1Hall. 8:30 pm. Free.Voices and Viols: A performance of English andItalian music by the UC Collegium Musicuum. To¬day, June 1. Bond Chapel. 8:30 pm. Free.Steve Goodman: The true bulwark of the Chicagofolk music scene. Composer of City of New Orleans,Lincoln Park Pirates and other well-known tunes.Also appearing is Jethro Burns Tonight, June 1.Mandell Hall. 8:30 pm. $3, $2 MAB fee payers; $6, $5others.A Concert of Experimental Music: Works by alarge number of “avant garde” and “experimental”composers, roughly half of whom are UC students.Music by UC composers Mark Baranchik, DavidFencl, Daniel Galay, Paul Goldstein, PatrickHoagan, and Margaret Mudge. Also, works by JohnCage, La Mente Young, and others. This Sunday,June 3. International House Auditorium, 1414 E. 59thSt. 7:30 pm.UC Chorus: With orchestra and solists, directed byJames Mack. This Sunday, June 3. Mandel Hall. 3:30pm. Free.Mark Daniels and Nick Philippo: Folk andcountry-western style music. Tomorrow, June 2. ThePub, basement of Ida Noyes Hall. You must be 21years or older or else ya don’ get in. Period.Opera Arias and Duets: The last of the MusicThe Grey City JournalThe arts and criticism supplement to The MaroonEditor: Nancy CrillyManaging editor: Melinda CoreyTheater editor: Bruce ShapiroAssociate editor: Richard KayeThis Week in the Arts editor: Karen HornickProduction: David Miller Department and FOTA’s “Classically Yours” seriesof chamber music concerts. Bring your lunch. ThisThursday, June 7. Cloister Club in Ida Noyes Hall.12:15 pm. Free.TheaterThomas: A “ritual drama” taken from the gospel ofJohn. Written by Julie Less and Elaine Cohen withDavid Rogers. Music by A.A.C.M. member JosephJarman. Tonight and tomorrow night, June 1 and 2.University Church, E. 57th and University. 8 p.m.$3.50.PoetryIn 1963, Ted Berrigan smoked a cigarette. Then hemet Ron Padgett on a hill in Tulsa. Ted has a beard.Ron has had many beards. Jesus Christ! exlaimedRon, looking at Ted’s new book, The Sonnets, You’vestolen my lines! Meanwhile, Padgett was working onthe “White Dove Review”, a pioneer in modernpoetry. While Berrigan edited “C” magazine in NewYork. Padgett was studying in Paris on a Fulbrightgrant. Together, they composed their opus, bible forlower Manhattan and scattered parts of Afrika, BeanSpasms. While Berrigan has taught at U. ofMichigan, U. of Essex (England) and has been poet-in-residence at Northeastern Illinois U., Padgett hasworked with the Teachers and Writers’ Collaborativeand Poets in Schools Programs. Padgett’s books in¬clude Great Balls of Fire, and Toujours L’Amour, aswell as translations of French poets. Berrigan’sbooks include In the Early Morning Rain, RedWagon, and Nothing For You. Both Berrigan andPadgett live and work in New York City, wherePadgett is head of the St. Mark’s Church Poetry Pro¬ject. Berrigan teaches in the summers at the JackKerouac School of Disembodied Poetics, in Colorado.These two sparkplugs of the modern poetry scene willbe reading from new work at 8 pm, Saturday June2nd, in the East Lounge (2nd Floor) of Ida NoyesHall. Free. Don’t miss it!! — Vincent Katz, NilolaiKatz and Morgan Russell.LectureGeorg Brandes, Emile Zola, and the Terrain ofNaturalistic Esthetics: Presented by WalterBaumgarten, a visiting professor in ScandinavianLiterature. Today, June 1. Classics 21. 4 pm. Free,FilmBy Ethan EdwardsThe Man With The X-ray Eyes (Doc) Directed by RogerCorman. Ray Milland plays a scientist driven mad by whathe sees after his experiments on himself give him x-ray eyes.Although this 1963 low-budget film has its moments, there issomething unpleasantly slimy about it that goes beyond theplot. Perhaps it is the presence of that most repulsive of ac¬tors - Don Rickies. If you’re going to see several of the Fri¬day night horror movies, you might skip this one. Friday at6:15 pm in Cobb Hall.Vampyr (Doc) Directed by Carl Theodor Dreyer. This 1931classic has sparse dialogue and evokes very little actual ter¬ror, but has some of the most haunting visuals on film. Thestory involves a man (Baron Nicholas de Gunzburg) stayingat a country inn who is handed a package from an old manwith the instructions that it be opened in the event of the oldman’s death. When the inevitable happens, Gunzburg opensthe package to find a book on vampires. With ellipticaldream sequences and the old castles, we enter a film worldnot unlike Murnau’s Nosferatu. Recommended, but ifing to the Horror Festival for kicks, you will find this artfilm much too solemn. Why not start the evening with TheThing. Friday at 7:55 pm in Cobb Hall.The Thing (Doc) Directed by Christian Nyby with ap¬parent help from producer Howard Hawks. James Arnessplays a giant vegetable from outer space who menaces scien¬tists in the frozen arctic. It sounds terrible, but I canremember sleeping with the light on after seeing it on thetube when I was 7 years old. Higtfly Recommended. Fridayat 9:10 pm in Cobb Hall.The 5,000 Fingers of Eh-. T (Doc) Directed by RoyRowland. An unjustly obscure 1953 fantasy written by Dr.Suess. A little boy dreams of being held captive along with500 other boys by his hated piano teacher (Hans Conreid) ina castle with a mammoth piano. A joy for everyone whobelieves that practicing is torture. Recommended. Friday at10:40 pm in Cobb Hall.The Black Cat (Doc) Directed by Edgar G. Ulmer. Ulmer, This Weekthe King of the B-Movies, fashioned this bizarre 1934 horrormovie with more than its share of delightful scenes from thedays when devil worship was fun. With Boris Karloff as anarchitect and Bela Lugosi as a doctor looking to avenge hiswife’s death. Recommended. Friday at 12:15 pm in CobbHall.Them! (Doc) Directed by Gordon Douglas. Giant ants ap¬pear near the Mohave Desert and set out to devourHollywood, and incidentally, Los Angeles. If you want toknow what the Harrisburg area will look like in a couple ofyears, see this fun flick starring James Whitmore, EdmundGwenn and James Arness. Recommended. Friday at 1:30 pmin Cobb Hall.The Navigator (NAM) Directed by Buster Keaton andDonald Crisp. Keaton’s fascination with machinery infusesthis 1924 silent comedy with a sense of contrived orderlinessthat carries over to the acting and direction. Keaton ismillionaire Rollo Treadway who drifts aimlessly in an emp¬ty ocean liner with a neighbor who had recently refused hisproposal of marriage. Keaton develops some wonderfully in¬genious sight gags, including an extended chase within theconfines of the ship. The Navigator is one of Keaton’smasterpieces, beautifully photographed, directed and acted.Don’t miss it. Highly Recommended. Plus one of hisKeaton’s best shorts, Cops. Saturday at 7:30 and 9:30 pm inCobb Hall.Coup de Grace (Doc) Directed by Volker Schlondorff. Astory of anguished intimacy among a young officer recentlyreturned from World War I and two boyhood friends by oneof West Germany’s hottest directors. Unseen by hisreviewer. Sunday at 7:15 and 9:30 pm in Cobb Hall.Bunny Lake Is Missing (Doc) Directed by Otto Preminger.Carol Lynley’s child is kidnapped on her first day in schoolin a new town. When Lynley can’t produce anyone whoremembers the little dumpling police inspector LaurenceOlivier begins to doubt that there ever was a child. Lynleyand her brother Kier Dullea become increasingly frantic intheir search for clues. Bunny Lake is a first-rate Premingerthriller that carefully leads the audience through the twistsof plot. With stylish acting by the principals. Highly Recom¬mended. Tuesday at 7:15 pm in Cobb Hall.In Harm’s Way (Doc) Directed by Otto Preminger. Anoverlong but interesting war film about a Navy commander(John Wayne) making a comeback directing a strategicallyvital campaign in the South Pacific. Preminger has beencriticized for allowing the story line of the film to be over¬shadowed by side plots, but such criticisms fail to recognizethat those side lots constitute the heart of Preminger’s an¬tiwar critique. Preminger mercilessly and accuratelydepicts military politics and their cost in human lives. Withpolished performances from an impressive supporting cast,including Kirk Douglas, Patricia Neal, Bradford Dillmanand Brandon DeWilde. Recommended. Tuesday at 9:15 pmin Cobb Hall.Too Late For Tears (Doc) Directed by Byron Haskin.Master photographer Haskin directed this sturdy 1949melodrama about gangsters, murder and big money. Starr¬ing that old mix of ice maiden and cat, Lizabeth Scott.Wednesday at 7:15 pm in Cobb Hall.Ten Seconds To Hell (Doc) Directed by Robert Aldrich.Although Aldrich started out as an assistant director forsuch directors as Jean Renoir and Charles Chaplin, when heset out on his own he fashioned hard-hitting melodramasand noirs using a very American film language. Here, JeffChandler and Jack Palance play Germans fighting overManine Carol, while still finding time to defuse bombs.Wednesday at 9 pm in Cobb Hall.A Modern Hero (Doc) Directed by G. W. Pabst. RichardBarthelmess stars in the story of the rise and fall of a circusperformer. Unseen by this reviewer. Thursday at 7:15 pm inCobb Hall.The Joyless Street (Doc) Directed by C. W. Pabst. This1925 German silent brought Greta Garbo to the world. Asthe daughter of an unemployed bureaucrat Greta considersprostitution to secure money for food. Other neighbors on“the joyless street" in post-World War I Vienna encounterproblems with inflation, poverty and sexual exploitation.Pabst uses some stunning expressionist sets to evoke thebizarre and difficult life in central Europe at that time. Un¬fortunately, the film plays a bit slow and, more importantly,the resolution of the characters’ problems in is unsatisfying.Thursday at 8:30 pm in Cobb Hall.Easy Rider (Doc) Directed by Dennis Hopper. Peter Fon¬da and Dennis Hopper star as two motorcycle freaks insearch of America. What they find is an unnecessarily grimfate, but they have a lot of fun on the road to nowhere.Nicholson co-stars as a burnt-out case turned on by Hopperand Fonda to the joys of smoking dope. The direction is atbest casual, but the attractiveness of the performers isFriday, June 1 6:30/10:00 P.M.The GodfatherReviewed in 0This Week in the Arts v 1.5020 — The Grey City Journal — Friday, June 1.1979in the Artsundeniable. Friday, June 8 at 8 pm and midnight in CobbHall.Drive, He Said (Doc| Directed by Jack Nicholson. Ahighly personal study of escapees from the rigid environ¬ment of an athlete-oriented college. Unseen by this reviewer.Friday, June 8 at 10 pm in Cobb Hall.Bedazzled (Doc) Directed by Stanley Donen. Universityof Chicago Regulation 2.6(b) requires that “each studentshall view in its entirety the motion picture filmBedazzled.” We should all be grateful that Doc Filmsfacilitates the fulfillment of this prerequisite to graduationwith its annual spring showing of the film. Required andHighly Recommended. Saturday, June 9 at 7:15 and 9:30 inCobb Hall.To Be Or Not To Be (LSF) Directed by Ernst Lubitsch.From the opening few minutes of absurd drama and narra¬tion to Jack Benny's final performance of Hamlet, Lubitschgives the audience much more than it could possibly hopefor. Carole Lombard and Benny give their best per¬formances, with Lombard effectively combining herscrewball style of the 1930’s with her dramatic performancesof the early 1940’s, and Benny evoking laughter as a terribleHamlet and Lombard’s jealous husband. Wartime au¬diences found its humorous approach to the occupation ofPoland in bad taste, but today the film looks incrediblyclear-headed, funny and heroic. A comedy masterpiece thatis not to be missed. Highly Recommended. Wednesday,June 13 at 8:30 pm in the Law School Auditorium.Holiday (LSF) Directed by George Cukor. Holiday isoften considered Cukor’s best film, though I can’t see whyanyone would reasonably prefer it to Adam’s Rib or ThePhiladelphia Story. Perhaps its warmth and simplicity isappreciated more than the wit and drive of those other twofilms. No matter how you slice it, Holiday is literate enter¬tainment with superb performances by Cary Grant as ayoung financial wizard who only wants to make enoughmoney to take an extended holiday and Katherine Hepburnas the fun-loving sister of Grant’s establishment fiance.Highly Recommended. Friday, June 15 at 7 and 9:30 pm inthe Law School Auditorium.Free filmFar Eastern Films: Geinin and The Ondekoza inSado. As with vaudeville in the U.S. small theatertroupes that once travelled Japan providing enter¬tainment in small towns have mostly disappeared.The French-made Geinin (50 minutes) chronicles oneof ttye few remaining “tabiyakusha,” a form oftheater similar to Kabuki. The two have the sameorigin, but whereas Kabuki has become an institu¬tion, tabiyakusha has remained permanentlyitinerant. The Ondekoza in Sado (60 minutes) mea^s‘‘The Demon Drum Corps,” and refers to an unusualgroup founded a few years ago by some earnest youngmusicians to preserve Japanese folk music tradi¬tions. The Spartan life centers on strenuous physicaltraining and long hours of musical practice — all forthe love of making music. Renowned directorMashiro Shinoda documented the group’s activitiesat their Sado Island compound. Both films arereputed to be excellent and will be shown in succes¬sion on Thursday, June 7 at 7:30 pm. Cobb 102. Free.- B.T.City listings begin hereArtPhotographs from the Julian Levy Collection: Re¬cent gifts from a collection Mr. Levy began in the late20s and 30s. Closes September 9. Art Institute,Michigan and Adams. Monday-Wednesday. Friday10:30-4:30; Thursday 10:30-8:00; Saturday 10:00-5:00;Sunday noon-5:00. 443-3500. $2; $1.50 students.Ed Ruscha: Major new conceptual works includingwords on various media. Closes mid-June, DesonGallery, 226 E. Ontario. Tuesday-Friday 10:00-5:30;Saturday 11:00-5:00. 787-0005. Free.73rd American Exhibition: Painting, Sculpture,and other media exemplifying recent directions inAmerican art. Works by Asher, Graham, and Stellaamong others. June 9-August 5. Art Institute; forhours, see Levy Collection entry, above.City Impressions: Art by Chicago kids. Continu¬ing. Art Institute; for hours, see Levy Collection en¬try, above.Hungarian Art Nouveau: Over two hundred pain¬tings and objects d'art representative of the Hungarybranch of the short-lived, but illustrious. ArtNouveau movement. Closes June 10. Lucy ArmourGallery of the Art Institute, Adams and Michigan,for hours, see Levy Collection entry, above.Whistler: Prints and Paintings: Works by theAmerican master from the Art Institute's permanentexhibit. Through August. Art Institute. Adams andMichigan’ for hours, see Levy Collection entry, above.Contemporary American Photography Works:From the period between 1974 and 1977, works inblack and white and color. Fifteen photographerswhose works fall into three categories: ‘‘social land¬scapes,” ‘‘new topographies,” and ‘‘manipulated orgenerational imagery” — which have to be seen to beunderstood. Closes August 5. Museum of Contem¬porary Art, 237 E. Ontario. Tuesdays through Satur¬days, 10 am to 5 pm; Sundays, noon to 5 pm. WH 3-7755. Admission charge.Claire Zeisler: Bright color, intricate structure,delightful texture — the fiber art of Claire Zeisler. A75-year-old Chicagoan, Zeisler and her work havelong been recognized — yet this is her first one-woman show. Closes June 10. The Art Institute,Adams and Michigan; for hours, see Levy Collectionentry, above.Marc Chagall: A surprisingly large amount ofChagall’s best work can be found in private collec¬tions around this city — this exhibit brings sixtysuch works together; many have never been publiclySunnyland Slim, ‘Mr. Blues Piano’ appears Satur¬days at the Cornell Lounge.exhibited. Closes July 1, Maurice Spertus Museum ofJudaica, 618 S. Michigan. Mondays throughThursdays, 10 am to 5 pm; Sundays, 10 am to 4 pm.922-9012.The Art of Being Huichol: A major traveling ex¬hibit of art from the Huichol Indians of the SierraMadres, Mexico: 150 yard paintings and ceremonialobjects. Closes September 3. Field Museum ofNatural History. Roosevelt at Lake Shore Drive.Mondays through Thursdays, 9 am to 4 pm; Fridays.9 am to 9 pm; weekends, 9 am to 5 pm. 922-9410. $1.50:Fridays free.Lucas Samaras: Brightly striped constructionworks and Polaroid SX-70 photographs by this well-known American artist. Closes June 7. Richard GrayGallery, 620 N. Michigan. Tuesdays through Satur¬days, 10 am to 5:30 pm. 642-8877. Free.MusicJazz Matazz: If you missed the A.A.C.M.s festivalat the Museum of Contemporary Art, and now have asecond major opportunity to see and hear ChicagoJazz this spring. The Chicago Public LibraryCultural Center is hosting a nine-week seriescelebrating Chicago's contributions to what manyauthorities consider to be ‘‘the sole truly Americanmusical art form” (Jane Byrne). — Jazz. The series,now in its second week, covers the development ofJazz from 1870 to 1979 by presenting Saturday lec¬tures followed by Sunday concerts exmvbiting theJazz topic considered in the previous day s lecture.This Saturday, June 2, Dick Wang (U. of I., Circle)will lecture on “The Big Band: The Role of Com¬posers and Arrangers,” and on Sunday, June 3, TheCircle Campus Jazz Band will perform Big Bandcompositions from the late 20s. Get the idea? Lec¬tures and performances of the following threeweekends are: “Small Band Swing” (Linda Prince.June 9) and The Franz Jackson Band (June 10); “Birdand Bebop” (Joe Segal, June 16) and the Stu KatzQuintet (June 17); and “Post Bebop from Miles to CityTrane” (J. B. Figi, June 23) and The Art HoyleQuintet (June 24). Later events will be listed in ourfirst Summer issue, June 29. Additionally,workshops, films, and a continuing two-part exhibit(Jazz “Seen”) are offered. A full schedule is availableat the Cultural Center, Washington and Randolph.269-2837. All events are free and open to the public.Songs of Love and Spring: the “Colla Voce” com¬pany conducted by Catherine Hall. Works by Purcell,Monteverdi, Le Jeune, Barber, and Britten. Tomor¬row, June 2. Augustana Lutheran Church, 5500 S.Woodlawn. 8 pm. 288-8729. $2.50.Chicago Children’s Choir Gala Concerts: Childrenfrom all over the city, singing a variety of composi¬tions by, among others, Vivaldi, Bach, E. E. Cumm¬ings (lyrics), Copland, and Schubert. Two concerts;the first, Saturday, June 9, 8:00 pm; the second, Sun¬day, June 10, 3:00 pm. Lutheran School of TheologyAuditorium, 55th and University. 324-8300. $4; $2students and old folks.TheaterThe Gin Game: Directed by Mike Nichols. D. L.Coburn’s Pulitzer Prize winning play about a restinghome couple who antagonize and love each otherthrough card playing. See it while Hume Cronyn andJessica Tandy, the original Broadway stars, are stillin Chicago. Closes June 10. Blackstone Theater, 60 E.Balbo. Call for times — they vary. 977-1700. $15 to$10.Lone Canoe: David Mamet's first full-scalemusical. SubtiJed “The Explorer” billed as “TheStory of John Fairfax;” loosely concerns theAmerican frontier. Music by Alaric Jans. ClosesJune 24. Goodman Mainstage, 200 S. Columbus. Callfor times — they vary. 443-3800, $10, $8.50.Mummenschanz: Three critically acclaimed mimesfrom Switzerland via Broadway. As different fromMarcel Marceau as platinum from silver. Extendedthrough June 3. Studebaker Theater. 418 S.Michigan. Performances all days but Monday: callfor times. 435-0700. $15 - $8.50.Total Eclipse: The English playwright ChristopherHampton’s play based on the relationship of PaulVerlaine and Arthur Rimbaud. Open closing date.Old World Theater Company. Theater Building. 1225W. Belmont. Thursdays through Sundays, 8 pm; Sun¬day matinee, 3 pm. $4.50 - $4.The Glass Menagerie: Directed by H. E. Bacchus.A new production of Tennessee William's wistfuldrama. The most poetic of Williams's works, andperhaps the most likely to endure. Closes June 24.Steppehwolf Theater Company, 770 Deerfield inHighland Park. Thursdays at 8 pm; Fridays andSaturdays at 8:30 pm; Sundays at 7 pm. 433-5080. $6 -$5.Statements After An Arrest Under the ImmortalityAct: Also, Scenes from Soweto. By Athol Fugardand Steve Wilmer, respectively. Two powerful,distrubing plays about racism in South Africa, in asensitive production. Directed by James D. O'Reilly.Closes June 10. Body Politic Theater. 2261 N. Lin¬coln. Wednesdays through Fridays.' 8 pm; Saturdaysat 7 pm and 10 pm; Sundays at 2:30 pm and 7 pm. 871 -3000. $6.50 - $5.FilmThe Davis Theatre, 4614 N. Lincoln, is in the midstof a six-week salute to 20th Century Fox. This week:Friday and Saturday. The Hustler with PaulNewman and George C. Scott, and Joshua Logan'sfilm ut Bus Stop, with Marilyn Monroe: Sundav-Tuesday, two by Joseph Mankiewicz, the classicsteamer All About Eve (see what Bette Davis can dowith a stick of celery) and A Letter to Three Wives;and Wednesday and Thursday two films noir from1947, Henry Hathway’s Kiss of Death (with VictorMature and Richard Widmark) and EdmundGoulding's Nightmare Alley. The Fox retrospectivecontinues through June 28. and each program also in¬cludes an episode of Fox Movietone News. Futurehighlights: Delmar Daves' Broken Arrow June 13-14.Hitchcock's Lifeboat and Fritz Lang's Manhunt June15-16. Preminger's Laura June 22-23. and HowardHawks' I Was a Male War Bride June 24-26. Call theDavis for details: 561-3410. — B.S.The Godfather (1972) International House, directedby Francis Ford Coppola. Friday night, 6:30, and10:00.: TT.- :Listings compiled by Karen Hornick.TheGrey City Journal — Friday, June 1,1979 — 21The following Alumni, Faculty Members and Staff have added theirnames to those which appeared in the Maroon on Friday May 18.1 We members of the University of Chicago Community dissociate ourselves from the award of a prize toI Roberts. McNamara for "outstanding contributions to international understanding”. j1 JOHN ANDERSON MARILYN LISTVAN, M S. 1977 THEODORE R. MARMOR BOOI FOSTERt EDWARD ASNER LOIS LUBIN, B.A. 1970, M A T. 1971 Associate Professor, School of Social Service MATTHEW FOSTERl KENT BAILEY BRUCE A. MAHON, 1952, 1954, 1955 Administration and Member, Committee on MICHELLE FOX] EDITH BAKER WALTER MARKER Public Policy Studies R. GADKE? MARGARET W. BATES, 1944 BRUCE MATORS FAROUK MUSTAFA RONALD T. GAGNORr JEFFREY BEDRICK, M.A. 1975 C. MAYER, 1973 Assistant Professor, Department of Near DORRIS E. GARTH1 BRIAN BERG D.L. McCULLOND, 1964 Eastern Languages and Civilization FRANK GOEBELSDEBORAH M. BERMAN, B.A. 1969 ALLAN C. McCUTCIIEON, M.A. 1977 MARY JO ONDRECHEN DENA GOODMANHARRY BERMAN, B.A. 1969 JOHN McLEES, 1970 Research Associate in Chemistry NANNETTE C. GOVEREllen J. Bernstein CATHERINE MEADOWS, B.A. 1975 E. SPENCER PARSONS SUSAN GRABSTEINE.F. BEYER BERNIE MEMBER Dean, Rockefeller Memorial Chapel and TOM GRANATIRFREDRICK BLUM JACK MERRING Associate Professor, Divinity School EILEEN GRAYJEAN KATSUKO BLUM JOHN J. MICKEVICE JUDY SCHAVRIEN DAVID B. GREENBARUCH BOXER, Ph.D. 1961 FREDERICK H. MILLER, JR. B.A. 1976, M.A., Harper Fellow, Humanities STEVEN LYLE GREYJOSEPH BRINLEY, B.A. 1978 1977 DAVID TRACY SUSAN M. GRIFFINJUANITA BROWN, B.S. 1969 MASAO MIYOSHI Professor, Divinity School BARBARA S. GROSSMANI JULIAN E. BROWN, M.A. 1978 JOHN WEHLEN MORRISON JOHN GROSSMAN1 NORVAL I. BROWN, 1976 JANE A. MULLINS, 1928 STAFF OF LAB. SCHOOL THOMAS GROSSMANMARGOT BROWNING HECTOR HERNANDEZ NIETO RON COHEN JEFFREY D. HACKETTMARION H. CHAPIN LUIS P. NIETO, JR., B.A. 1977 BETTY SCHNEIDER LAUREN M. HACKETTJAMES R. CHAPMAN, B.A. 1978 EDWARD K. OFFENBACHER, M.A. 1976, STAFF MICHAEL HAEDERLESUSAN CHARKES, A.B. 1979 PhD. 1979 JERRY ABBOT FLORENCE HAMMETA.D. CLARK TAKAYUKI OKAMOTO D.L. ADAMS LAWRENCE HAMPTON? PAUL E. COLLINS KEITH OLIVE, M S. 1978 JOHN AIKEN JOSEPH ROBERT HANCLOUIS CRANE HOWARD S. OLSON T. AITKEN ANNETTE R. HANSENt JOHN T. CROFTS, M.A. 1938 DAVID G.OSTROW JAMES ALEXANDER ROBERT HARDEEMARY-BLANCE CROFTS, M.A. 1934 DOUGLAS PETERSEN DONALD ALLISON ANNE HARLAN1 EUGENE CRUZ-URIBE, B.A. 1975, M.A. 197 EDITH D. RICH ROSALINDA L. ANDAL MARJORIE HASSENi D.A. CULLEN, 1970 FRANK RICHARDS, 1955 ANITA J. ANDESON ELIZABETH HA WEJOYCE I. DABBOUSEH, 1960 GWENDOLYN RITCHIE, B.A. 1949 JULITA AQUINO PATRICIA J. HAZELTONTHOMAS E. DECHNIK IRWIN ROSEN, Ph.D., 1938 LARRY ARBEITER JANET RUTH HELLERLEON M. DESPRES MARY K. ROSEN, Ph D., 1935 JOSEPH ASHENBRUCKER CHARLES HELZERMARIAN A. DESPRES, Ph D. 1936 JAY SCHMIDT, 1944 C. BAILEY LAURENCE W. HERRONA. DiLEONARDE JAMES SCRIER STEVEN BAILEY JOHN O. HODGESSTEVEN C. DUBIN, M.A. 1976 MARTIN B. SELZER LUCINDA BAKER KATHRYN A. HOFFMANNDENNIS L. DWORKIN, Ph D. 1981 HOWARD SLOAN, B.A. 1940, M.A. 1941 MARGARET BALDWIN ERIC HOLTENINA ROESSLER EDWARDS, 1923 STEVEN R. SMITH, B.A. 1975 MIRIAN BAZELL GABRIELLE HOODCRAIG EIDSON MICHAEL SORKIN, B.A. 1969 ANNE E. BEIDLER PATRICIA L. HOPKINSMARY ALICE ERICSON ROSALINE B. STONE, B.A. 1949 JACK BERGMAN ANDREW HUDDLESONVICTORIA ESKRIDGE, B.S. 1969 C. BRUCE STEPHENSON, M.A. 1975 HOWARD BERMAN CRAIG HUFFMANMARTHA JANE FIELDS WILLIAM H. STERNER WILLIAM BERRY BONNIE L. HUMPHREYDAVID FRIED, B.A. 1956, J.D. 1959 H. GLADYS SWOPE PETER B. BILLINGS RAMESH JHAASTRID FULLER, 1961 KATHRYN SUTER ELIZABETH BITOY MONICA L. JONESELEANOR P. GODFREY, B.A. 1944 ELLEN B. TABOR, B.A. 1978 J. BOSSOM CHARLES HELZERPENNY S. GOLD STUDS TERKEL Janet L. Buecker LAURENCE W. HERRONPAUL GOLDSTEIN, M.A. 1977 THEODORE B. TERPSTRA JUDITH BURG JOHN O. HODGESCHRISTOPHER M. GOMEZ. B.A. 1977 CLINTON THOMPSON, Ph D. 1974 DAVID CARPENTER KATHRYN A. HOFFMANNDENA GOODMAN, M.A. 1978 STEVEN WAYNE THOMPSON. 1978 GERALD L. CLARK ERIC HOLTELEO GORDON, B.A. 1969 STEVEN VIKTORA, 1969 EVE CLEMMER GABRIELLE HOODWALTER R. GORSKI MARVIN H. WATKINS, M.A. 1978 MARY A. COCANIG PATRICIA L. HOPKINSHELEN B. GRAHAM, 1949 VIVIAN M. WEIL, B.A. 1949, M.A. 1953 KATHERINE COLLINGE ANDREW HUDDLESONIRA E. GRAHAM, M B A. 1974 CHRISTINA WEST WELLS, B.A. 1973 SIDNEY COLTON CRAIG HUFFMANRICHARD S. GREEN JEANNETTE WHITESIDE, M.S.T. 1975 RUSSELL COREY BONNIE L. HUMPHREYLINDA GREENBERG, M.A. 1978 HUGH WILSON, M.A. 1972 VADIS COTHRAN RAMESH JHAEDWARD HAMMOND, J.D. 1981 RAE S. WINOKUR RICHARD CRAIG MONICA L. JONESCHARLES HARVEY, B.A. 1977 LeROY WOLINS GAYLE C. CUMING DONALDJUDSONLISA HEISERMAN, M.A. 1977 VYTOLD C. YASUS, 1944 GERALDINE M. CUNNINGHAM ANDREA JUNGKUNTZMARIE HILLMAN MERRILL YOH DANG BARBARA KAHNRALPH B. HIRSCH BRIAN ZAKEM, 1973 KRISTIN DAY VERTELL KANYAMASTEPHEN R. HOLZMAN, 1966 J. RANDALL DEMPSEY CAROL A. KASPERBRUCE J. IDE, 1973 FACULTY REBECCA DICKENSON LAURENCE KASTSTANLEY G. IRVINE, 1962 JAMES PETER BURKHOLDER MAGGIE DITTEMORE LAWRENCE C. KATZELLEN D. JACOBS, 1951 Lecturer in Music in the College KRISTOPHER M. DODD C.S. KAZMERWILLIAM H. JACOBS, 1954 RONALD M. COHEN WENDY J. DORIA JEFFREY J. KEENANCHRISTIAN WELLS JACOBSEN, M.A. 1976 Assistant Professor, Committee on Art and LARRY DUNN LINDA KEYLOIS R. JORDAN, 1944 Design NICHOLAS P. DUNNING DONALD KINGSLEYIVAN KANE, B.A. 1978, J.D. 1981 MONROE COOPER, JR. BARBARA ECTON LYNN KLEINRACHEL KARLIN, B.A. 1969 Lecturer in Music in the College MICHAEL EDWARDS SHERYL KLINGABBIE H. KATZ, B.A. 1977 THOMAS CROW PATRICIA ENGELMANN ROBERT KOSINROBIN KAUFMAN, B.A. 1965 Assistant Professor, Department of Art and STEPHEN P. ENGSTROM LEE KUMPMARY ELLEN KAZIMER, M.A. 1979 the College DENA J. EPSTEIN ESTHER L. LACEYROBERTA LYNN KELLER, M.A. 1976 DARYL GELLER JANET E. ESSENEY ERIC LADENHEIMPATRICIA KENT, 1973 L.E. Dickson Instructor, Department and OCTAVIA FALL WELL KEVIN LANGSTONB. KITCHING, 1938 Mathematics and the College MARIAN FELGENHAUER VACLAV LASKAPAUL KLEIN MAN EUGENE GENDLIN CHERYL FEUER ARLIN LASSONG.I. KLEMM Associate Professor of Behavorial Science JUDITH L. FINK EDWARD W. LAVESMICHAEL KOCH-WESER in the College CLARK FLINT PAUL LAWRENCEANN E. LARIMORE, 1958 WILLIAM H. HUSEMAN NANCE J. FLYNN MARYE LEASALPHILD LARSON, M.A. 1961 Lee. Dept. Romance Lang. .. Lit. ' SIOBHAN S. FLYNN DANIEL I. LEIFERFRANCES LAUREN VERA ELEMENT VALERIE FOGEL HANSH. LENNEBERGJOHN J. LEACH Assistant Professor Lect. Committee Art and JEROME FORCHIA ALAN LEOPOLDGEORGIA LIND Design ^ CAROL J. FORSTER BARBARA J. LEWERT22 — The Grey City Journal — Friday, June 1, 1979LettersLearning lessonsTo the Editor:The words of one of the songs sung atTuesday’s noon rally were familiar:“Children, learn your lessons well.” Whatare some of the lessons to be learned fromMr. McNamara’s “coming home” toreceive $25,000 from the U. of Chicago forhis contributions to better understandingin the world?1. Lamentably, intelligence cannot beequated with moral sensitivity and respon¬sibility. The decisions of both Mr.McNamara and those Ph.D.’s who chosehim for this award should serve to makethe point.2. Those of us who are pro-feminist can¬not help but note the sex of President Han¬na Gray and Political Science DepartmentChair person Susanne Hoeber Rudolph,both of whom made key decisions alongthe way. even to the moment the awardwas given. I am disappointed and am onlypartially consoled by the comment of afemale friend: “Women have the right tofail also.” Of course, she is right to the ex¬tent one must acknowledge that the ma¬jority of persons deciding the Albert PickAward were men.3. The thrust of remarks made bySusanne Rudolph, Mr. Aliber of the Graduate School of Business, and othersseems to be theological. That is, Mr.McNamara should be forgiven his pasttrespasses during the time he wasSecretary of Defense and welcomed intothe fold of humanity on the basis of his con¬version as President of the World Bank.Besides the fact that I believe responsiblepersons from the Third World would wantto dispute the idea that he has done muchmore than lead them into long-termeconomic indebtedness, the term thatseems to be missing in the theologicalequation is “repentance.” Have we everheard a word from Mr. McNamara that heregretted even one of the decisions hemade during his tenure as the Pentag< n’swhiz kid? Some may want to put hin. onthe church rolls as a member of the humanrace, but that does not require that the U.of Chicago elevate him to the College ofCardinals!4. During the course of the Vietnam warit frequently seemd that teenagers and col¬lege students were much more perceptiveabout what really was going on in terms ofthe conduct of the war than were those whowere older. It still seems that way to me.For those who remain unconvinced of the above, perhaps an analogy will offeranother lesson. Suppose the Israelis whofound Adolf Eichmann hiding out in Argen¬tina had not tried him for war crimes. Im¬agine, instead, that they had discoveredhim to be nonaggressive and living apeaceable life in Argentina. So, they decid¬ed to fly him to New York City to the head¬quarters of the Anti-Defamation Leaguewhereupon he was awarded the equivalentof the Man-of-the-Year Award.Lesson: amnesia distorts one’s perspec¬tive on the past. Willful forgetfulness orsophistry does not serve justice.(Rev.) Steve BrownEmployee, GraduateSchool of BusinessBrouhahaTo the Editor :The present Brouhaha aboutMcNamara’s being given the Pck Awardfor his work in the World Bank because ofhis involvement in the Viet Nam war sug¬gests to me that perhaps we ought to bor¬row something from the early 1950’s.Before anyone is deemed eligible for anaward, or perhaps acceptable answers tothe following questions:1) Do you now support, or have you eversupported, the involvement of the UnitedStates in Viet Nam?2) If you have ever supported such in¬volvement, what have you done since thatmay be construed as adequate penance foryour earlier support?Tim RolfeMac award to MaroonTo the Editor :The recent Maroon editorial on the dis¬turbing events of May 22 will certainly godown in the annals as a major editorialachievement, and without doubt deservesthis, the First Annual Robert S. McNa¬mara Award for the Promotion of Respon¬sible Dissent.As Hannah Gray herself put it. “Respon¬sible dissent and discussion are essentialto the University's task." but when the de¬monstration on Tuesday went over to irre¬sponsible action, or “turned sour” as theMaroon so aptly described it. the wholeday was ruined. Indeed, it became, as theMaroon editorial was entitled. “A Sad Day-on the Southside.”It’s true that some people question cer¬tain aspects of Mr. McNamara's leader¬ship efforts regarding the Vietnam conflict(napaiming of North Vietnamese cities,bombing hospitals and dikes, “search-and-destroy" mission in “free-fire" zonesagainst women, children, and anythingthat moved). And Mr. McNamara's activi¬ties as president of the World Bank havecome under fire from some who attack thebank for stunting and distorting the econ¬omies of underdeveloped countries. Butsurely the actions by the students the nightof May 22 in protesting in the street makeVietnam excesses and World Bank indis¬cretions pale by comparison.Who can deny that it was totally irre¬sponsible and disrespectful for hundreds ofdemonstrators, after taking part in a dayof peaceful seminars and assemblies, toobstinately refuse to go home after the offi¬cial demonstration ended at 9 D.m. Thevacted in complete violation of the right ofthe black-tie diners to return to their limoswithout acid indigestion.Certainly the Maroon hit the nail on thehead when describing the youthful pie-thrower as mentally incapable of even tak¬ing responsibility for his crime. What anoutrage that a high-ranking police officershould be subjected to the humiliating ex¬perience of having a Sara Lee StrawberryCheesecake thrown in his face. Th officerwas only trying to protect a much-maligned but distinguished guest of theUniversity who the administration andother highly-respected policy makers weretrying to award for service to humanity.The student's irresponsible and childishaction was truly a provocation, even forthe experienced and sensitive Chicago po¬lice personnelAs for Clark Kissinger and such groups By defaultTo the Editor:On Wednesday’s meeting of the May 22committee it became obvious at one pointthat I was the only conservative in theroom. This is with the possible exception ofsome of the demonstrators who were ob¬viously concerned about being used asideological symbols. Frankly I am shock¬ed and disappointed that the Libertariansand other conservatives of conscience didnot participate, if we abandon the moralhigh ground people will be forced to turn tothe leftists for leadership by default. Also Iw'ould like to thank the members of thecampus left for making me welcome andlistening to my concerns respectfully.Their conduct was in general impressiveand I would enjoy working with them in thefuture.RossP. WeinerDecency...The Maroon has received a copy of this let¬ter to President Gray.Dear Mrs. Gray.“Have you no sense of decency. . . atlong last? Have you left no sense of decen¬cy.”*Victor Sloan* Joseph Welch, to Sen. Joseph R. McCar¬thy (R., Wise.), in the New York Times, 10June. 1954. p. 15.as the Revolutionary Communist Party,the Vietnam Veterans Against the War.the Revolutionary Youth Brigade andothers — words fail us. as they do the Edi¬tors of the Maroon. These people preyedupon and incited innocent U.C. students —whom the University in its great foresightrealized were young, inexperienced, andincapable of making up their own minds —into rash confrontational activities. Anopen airing of views could have resolvedthe disagreement. Frankly, it reminds usof the 60 s. when outside agitators from theNorth came down and fomented protestactivity among the Negroes of the South,disturbing the tranquility of these quietagrarian folk and prejudicing themagainst the Law. Even more to the point,we recall the hideous events which fol¬lowed when North Vietnamese infilatra-tors stirred a previously happy people intoa hopeless war of annihilation against U S.B-52'sIn presenting this award to the Maroonfor their Editorial stand, we must also givehonorable mention to their cooly objectivereporting in the front page story summingup that frightful evening. In fact, we makethe suggestion to the Administration righthere to award the Maroon with a doublingof its budget so that they may be betterable to get to the heart of the news as itbreaks, not only on the campus, but world¬wide. What a contribution they could makeif they were able, for instance, to send areportor to Iran to investigate whether theIranian people had obtained a permit tooverthrow the Shah!The devastating effect of the May 22 de¬monstration should not be underestimat¬ed. The First Pick Aw ard was largely dis¬credited before millions. And more thanthis, the outside agitators and many fromthe demonstration exposed what lay be¬hind granting this award to McNamara. Ifthis kind of irresponsible activity spreads,how will we be able to restore faith inAmerica's policy-makers from the lastwar’’ How will we be able to heal thewounds from the Vietnam era and carry¬out the essential preparations for the com¬ing world war between the U S. and ourimperialist rivals the Soviet Union fordomination of the world? If this weaponswe need. We have no kind words for thosewho would interefere with these goals, sovital to the preservation of the American isystem.This modest proposal courtesy of the Re-voluntionary Communist Youth Brigade.The followingAlumni, Faculty Members and Staffhave added their names to those whichappeared in the Maroon on Friday May 18.We members of the University of Chicago Community dissociateourselves from the award of a prize to Robert S. McNamara for"outstanding contributions to international understanding”.KARLA E. MacBRIDEBARBARA J. McCLELLANANTHONY C. McCLINTONROBERTA MacGOWANSTEVEN McGUIREMICHAEL McMULLENMARY MacNEILEVA MADDOXBILL BAHONYCHERYL MALMBORGRHONDA R. MARSFA1EZ MASSADJUNE P. MATTICKPETER MEEHANBILLY MESSENGERSTANLEY M. METCALFMICHELLE MILLERD C. MITCHELLCHARLOTTE MOOREANN MORRISJANE MOSESWEDAD MOSSADCHRISTINE MUSTIFULKATIE NASHMARY ANN NASHMARK NICKELSONERNANOVACICHCAROLS. OKAMURATHEODORE A. O’NEILLMARILYN SUE ORMUZPAUL PACCIONEJUDITH PANOZZCANDREW PARKERDONALD PARKERFRANCES PAULSILVIA PEDRAZ ADOROTHY PESCHTIMOTHY PHALANESTELA PLANTERPATRICIA B. PLAYNESTANLEY A. PLONAARLE POLINSKY W.J. PUGHFRANCIS E. QUINND.H. RADCLIFFEMARGARET K.K. RADCLIFFES. REDDYJUDY REDELJONATHAN A. REICHESTELLA REIDMARTHA REILLYKAREN REINHARDTJ. LEE RICCARDIKAREN RICHARDSGWENDOLYN C. ROBERTSMARGARET ROBERTSSANDRA ROSCOECHARLOTTE ZION ROSENJILL ROTHFELDMICHAEL RUDYLEAH RUTCHICKSUNIL K. SAHUWILLIAM SANDERSROBERT B. SAUTEMICHAEL B. SCANLONLARRY SCHILNEISTERJEAN SCHILTKATY SCHLEGELFAMELA SCHMIDTCAROL G. SCHNEIDERVICKI SCHWARTZALISON M. SCOTTK. SOCTTROBERT B. SCOTTMICHAELSEADLEPHILLIP H. SHAWELIZABETH A. SHERWOODMAX SINCLAIRJAMES SILKM. JOAN SIMMONSL.A. SIMONSANDRA SLCZAKSHARON SLOUGHTISGAIL RENEE SMITH MARK SMITHMARSHA M. SMITHMARY CECILIA SMITHROBERT F. SMITHETHEL SORFOTLYTHOMAS SPEAREPAUL SPRACHMANJOHN STAMPS IIIMEREDITH M. STEADMARTHA L. STIGALLSCOTT STIRTONVERAG. STOEHRSEM C. SUTTERMARTHA SUTTONJAMES M. SWANSONPATRICIA A. SWINDLEPATRICIA A. SWINTONPAUL THIBOUTOTLILLIAN THOMASJOHN TRYNESKICLAIRE A. TUCKERMANMICHAEL UNDERHILLJOAN A. VAN DEG RIFTSHALINI VENTURELLISTAN VERNONVERONICA C. WALDB. WALKENKRIS WARMOTHROSE WATSONKATHLEEN WELLMANJAMES A WHITEW.R. WHITER.M WHITINGJEFFREYS. WIEANDJENNIFER WILLARDROBERT P. WISEERIK WOGSTADJACK WOLOWICKPAUL WOOFRANK E. ZABALYCAROL ZINGALEALICE ZINOt The Chicago rv\aroon—Friday, June 1, 1979—23i Ruby's M*rit 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'I SERVICE PARTSGENERAL MOTORS PASTS DIVISION G£W/UG \l huhkt'c/) I hut (iff atG W hWltntiutth Vmimm.MER 3CHEVROLI ET72nd & Stony Island 684-0400Open Daily 9-9, Sot. 9-5 Parts open Sat. 'til Noon * I1 ,’sm VOLKSWAGEN^ SOUTH SHORE r72nd & Stony Island 684-0400Open Daily 9-9, Sot. 9-5 Ports open Sat. 'til Noon *********************************♦*♦******* Learn to SailU of C Sailing Club{ Offers Summer Lessons:Two sessions of six weeklyJ meetings each. Beginning JuneJ 30th and August 11th.* Register NowJ Secure your place by comingJ to Ida Noyes June 6th at 7:30 p.m.*J Come Sail With Us*** 4*******************************************if**if********++*Noon # ^ J s-/*r? COURT TllCATRCMajor Court Studio ProductionLITTLE MARY SUNSHINEby Rick BesoyanDirected bv Michael HildebrandMay 17-June 3 Thurs.-Sun.8:30 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 studentsThe CTA Culture BusneedsVolunteer Guidesfor the Hyde Parkportion of the route,Sundaysthrough the summer.Call 753-3015primitive art african sculpturesand +ex+'iestues. - sun. 2-6gallery b1645 e. 53rdShapiro Paintings Due Backby Thursday, June 7Return to Ida Noyes 210 (9:00-4:30 — Monday - Friday)PERSON-WOLINSKYC.P.A./C.M.A. REVIEWCOURSESour survey indicates2/3 Passing RateWait for our mid-August start **...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 prQgram 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 alumnifor more information callf312)481-7389_, „ , or write to .,745 Rose Lane Matteson. IL 6Q44v324—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, June 1, 1979 HEAR AGAIN STEREOSells guaranteed name brand usedand demo stereo components at 40%to 70% off regular prices.SPECIAL SPRING CLEARANCE SALESTOREWIDE SAVINGS INCLUDINGEQUIPMENT LIKE:TXTEACA-400 $175.00ONKYO A7022 159.00HARMON KARDON 430 159.00TECHNICS SL 1950 135.00ADVENT LARGE WALNUT ...Ea. 79.00SANSUI 551 i... 119.00PIONEER SX 424 89.95SANSUI AU 6600 149.00CIRWIN VEGA 29P Ea. 79.95ADS 700 Ea. 109.00Complete 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 338-7737 nsaEszBESEaggacsg 1 beSpring Cleaning?Sell Some Books!CASH FOR BOOKS«All BooksWanted:Hardbacks,Textbooks andPaperbacksPowell’s Bookstore Powell’s Bookstore1501 E. 57th St. Warehouse955-77809 a.m. -11 p.m,Evervdav 1020S. Wabash, 8th floor341-07481*1.jm v.iinrc£—,f ynul noo'ibM opejuVO odT/Football ConclusionThe Modern Era: from Lombardi to KuruczBy Mark WallachFrom the PressboxBy R. W. Rohde“When I was little, my dad used to stressto us kids that the person who really won agame was the one who h ad the most fun. Iremember a lot of post-game argumentswith my siblings about who had had themost fun. ’’—Lincoln Rewrite.A recent article in Sports Illustratedfeatured Tom Warren, winner (in 11:15:56)of the Ironman competition, an exhaustingtriathlon that starts with 2.4 miles of swim¬ming, is followed by 112 miles of bicycling,and finishes with a standard 26-f milemarathon. Warren’s attitude was in¬teresting:“With all the entrants. Warren shares thelove for competition, but suprisingly, hehates gambling. ‘The gratification of winn¬ing money isn 't as high as the discomfort oflosing, therefore the odds are bad,’ hesays.In economics we call this behaviour beingrisk averse. One tends not to take an evenbet, especially at high stakes, becausethough the nominal value is the same, itsreal value is greater when you lose becauseit is a higher proportion of your new income.The poorer you get, the greater the value, ofsay $25, becomes. (This is the theory behindincome redistribution).Thus, for the gambler, gambling itselfmust have an inherently good value thatoutweighs the average lost value.Competition would seem to work the sameway. There is always something to be lost orwon, that being the game and whatever ad¬ditional stakes one chooses on it, be itmoney, ego, or whatever. Many athletes willtell you that the pain of losing has a greaterabsolute value than the satisfaction of winn¬ing. Because there is a loser for every win¬ner, competition would seem to have anegative value for society as a whole. And if‘winning is the only thing’ so that beingworld champion is all that matters, then thesuccess rate is a lot smaller.A lot of people have come up with solu¬tions to this apparent problem. Not too longago, somebody, perhaps a Californian,came up with an idea called new games. Thegames were more co-operative than com¬petitive so that everybody ends up on thewinning side (like Red Rover), things likehow-long-can-we-keep-a-balloon-up-in-the-air or team lightbulb replacing.Other people choose not to compete at all,although they still have to face the“supreme game of life.’’ The answer to thatis to limit one’s stakes in the game (suicideis the ultimate form), by quitting whenthings are going bad (there are a lot of highmoral grounds that make good excuses forcopping out), and by cheating whennecessary. Perhaps that is how we earnedthe various titles of the “me-generation”and got such fine books as Looking Out ForNumber One. Since the Chicago Maroons last had a win¬ning football season, eight United Statespresidents have taken office, the U.S. hasbeen involved in three wars, and men havewalked on the moon. In fact, it was a halfcentury ago (1929) when Amos Alonzo Staggcoached the Maroons to their last winningseason.Ah, winning! That is the goal of sport butwhat a remarkable variety of ways to pur¬sue that aim. From the marathoner strivingnot toward victory but completing the raceto Vince Lombardi’s win-at-any-cost philos-But these tactics only tend to demean theinherently good value competition has. InTim Gallwey’s Inner Tennis, Gallwey talkedabout how important competitive gameswere as learning situations, “a form ofcooperation in which each side benefits bymaking an effort to oppose the other. Theanalogies to Adam Smith and Chicagoeconomics are obvious.But even if competition has an intrinsical¬ly good value, there are going to be peoplewho lose so much that the value will benegated.Perhaps then it is time to realize that los¬ing has a value that may be greater than los¬ing. There is alot to be said for losing. Ifyou’re altruistic, think of the pleasureyou’re providing your opponent. Continualwinning gets as boring as continual losingand only brings a dangerously false sense ofsecurity. Losing humbles one, and, as one ofPressbox to 27Foot ball: Part IV“The absence of intercollegiate football atUC is an important symbol of the uniquecharacter and spirit of the University, asymbol of one of the things that makes this agreat University.’’ Tom Heagy, guest edito¬rial.Chicago Maroon, October 4th, 1963.In the fall of 1973, several issues werebeing protested by the student body. Chiefamong those were the poor quality of dormfood, the raise in annual tuition to $1,445(and you thought you had it bad), and thereappearance of intercollegiate football oncampus.While football had been dropped as a var¬sity sport in 1939, it was revived on a scrim¬mage level in 1956 after several students ex¬pressed interest in the sport to Walter Hass,athletic director and ex-Carleton coach.Just to make sure football didn’t attain ahigher level, the 1956 faculty senate passeda resolution against football ever returningon an intercollegiate level.The football scrimmages continued, andnot long after football ‘club’ was formed. Inthe early 60’s, a football ‘class’ was offered.It featured occasional games against juniorvarsity teams from other schools. This didnot go unopposed.1963 was not a good year for football onStagg Field. A brilliant idea of renting thefield out for local highschool games wasquickly discarded when an early contest re¬sulted in a riot.For that matter, 1963 was not a good yearfor football at Chicago. Heagy 's piece in the ophy, there are many grays in-between. AtChicago, Bob Lombardi, the outgoing coachand Tom Kurucz, the newcomer, are in thatgray area. Lombardf tried to reach towardperfection, toward becoming a Division IIIpowerhouse. Kurucz feels that athletics —and winning — is a “slice of the pie,” alongwith all the other aspects of the althlete’slife.Much of the optimism about the new sea¬son stems from the ebullient and energeticspirtis of the new coach, Tom Kurucz (pro¬nounced Ka-RUSE). Since being named ascoach earlier this quarter, Kurucz has writ¬ten a letter to every player on the team, metwith each player individually, and held twoteam meetings. “We talked a lot about eachguy reaching his potential,” he said. In talk¬ing to Kurucz, perhaps the word that cameup most was “positive.” Since 1979 will bethe last year that the Maroons will be in theweaker half of the Midwest Conference (andthus playing a weaker schedule than in sub-Maroon fired the first salvo of a debate onthe merits of football at Chicago that wouldresult in a full-scale protest.Heagy’s article, which, besides notingthat Chicago and Reed College were uniqueamong high-quality institutions because ofthe absence of football, pointed out the evilsof football including the semi-athletic Staggscholarship and the fact that first-year stu¬dents were being called (oh my God) fresh¬men by the football team.Heagy was immediately answered byGerald Kodish in a guest editorial pointingout that “...the University stopped colle¬giate football because of the corruption thatexisted in the sport, not to mention that ourteam had been going down to defeat regular¬ly for years.”The issue continued to be hotly debated. AMaroon editorial took a middle ground butchastised the University for going out of itsway to advertise the resurgence of football.A front-page article two and a half weekslater covered 21-0 victory over the Universi¬ty of Illinois JV.Meanwhile, student government was notstanding on the sidelines. A group of stu¬dents known as GNOSIS had run for SG of¬fices on a platform that contained a lengthyresolution urging a limit on the stature offootball at Chicago. Beside the story of thevictory over Illinois was an article detailingthe passage of said resolution by SG, an actthen-Dean Warner Wick called “insulting.”Things came to a head the following week¬end. Chicago was scheduled to play NorthCentral’s JV team at North Central. CBSwanted to film portions of the game for the sequent years), the team may come to feel aspecial urgency about breaking the longdrought of winning seasons.The groundwork for the present highhones was laid during the last three years byCoach Bob Lombardi under whom theMaroons evolved from ragamuffins to re¬spected. As the team entered its first seasonunder Lombardi, they had gone six yearswithout a single victory against an inter¬collegiate foe and had managed only onevictory against a club-level opponent. Dur¬ing that first year, the team split eightgames, including three victories againstclub opponents. Encouraged, the teamdropped its club foes and tried playing aschedule exclusively against Division IIIteams. The result was disastrous. The out-manned Maroons won two games but suf¬fered a number of one-sided and cripplinglosses. By season’s end, the team had only19 healthy players and Lombardi wonderedif the team would be forced to disband. DaleFriar, the Maroon’s star running back andthe nucleus of the Lombardi-era teams,commented, “The University’s attitudewas, ‘Just go out and have fun, guys;’ butit’s hard to have fun when you get your buttkicked 46-0.”All that changed during the past season.The Maroons were placed in the weaker halfof the Mid-West Conference, an unexpected-nightly news, but they found North Central’sfacilities to be inadequate and asked thatthe game be moved to Chicago. The agree¬ment of the administration set off a chain ofevents similar to the recent Pick/McNa¬mara protest.“The Maroon presents below a somewhatextensive account of last Friday’s events onStagg Field in an attempt to clear up a greatdeal of confusion resulting from grossly dis¬torted coverage by news media in Chicagoand other parts of the country.—Chicago Maroon, November 12, 1979The objections to football were many.There was a prevalent fear that if it was re¬surrected, it would go big time at the ex¬pense of the academic reputation of theschool. Students thought football was anti-Hutchins (the president in 1939), that it wasan administration attempt to subvert theireducation. People were afraid of the imageit would give off.There’s nothing like creating your ownnews, w hich is more or less w hat happened,however unintentional. According to Hass,“Some boy found out CBS was going to bethere and thought the game was going to betelevised ”The idea of national coverage of footballat Chicago was seen to be an unbearablemisrepresentation of the aims of the school,and a protest was quickly organizedThe November 12th Maroon reported thefollowing events:—A half hour before the game, 1,000 peo¬ple had shown up. and 600 marched.Revival to 29Rewrite: Learning to LoseKurucz to 27Revival: The Return of Chicago FootballBy R. W. RohdeThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, June 1, 1979—25mmrwmI tMallory’sBarRestaurantTenth Floor1525 East 53rd StreetHyde ParkChicago. Illinois 60615312 241 5600 Recycling Made Easy:The Resource Center now offers an expanded selection ofpick-up points to make recycling easier for you. Join in! Helpmaintain a valuable community service while conserving re¬sources and saving energy. Just follow these easy steps.t) Place recyclables inplain sight'by 8:00 am.2) Bundle, bag or box allnewspapers, cans andbottles.3) Crush cans, and re¬move all metal or plasticfrom bottles.4) Mark containers of re¬cyclables with a large“RC”THE RESOURCE CENTER6100 S. Blackstone493-1466TAKE OUR SHORT-TERM HOSPITAL PLANFOR INSTANT RELIEF:Lord and Rogers has a hospital insurance plan that is theperfect remedy for people who thought they couldn’t getreasonable health insurance because they were caught bet¬ween jobs or between school and a job. All you do is selectthe kind of coverage you want, from 60-100 days and pay amodest premium.This plan is especially beneficial for those who are recentgraduates and for those who are between college terms.For details callLORD AND ROGERS INSURANCE AGENCY205 West Wacker DriveChicago, 60606372-3590ROCKEFELLERMEMORIAL CHAPELSUNDAY, JUNE 3• 11A.M.*University Religious ServiceE. SPENCER PARSONSDean of the Chapel“THE FIRE ANDTHE GLORY”* ■* ST- . i • Eye Examinations• Contact Lenses(Soft & Hard)• Prescriptions FilledDR. MORTON R.MASLOVOPTOMETRISTSContact lensesand SuppliesHyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th363-636326—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, June 1, 1979Kurucz Takes Over Footballfrom 25ly large turn-out, including key upperclass¬men, arrived for fall practice, and theMaroons, despite playing squads that weresometimes twice as numerous as their own,were competitive in every game. They lostfive games by a total of 13 points but gen¬erated an enthusiasm for football, amongthemselves and their audience, that hadbeen unseen at Chicago since Big Ten days.“We have guys that cry after losses,” Friarhad said during the season. The homecom¬ing game attracted 2,500 people, and be¬cause of homecoming festivities directed byMary Bartholemew, the team attracted na¬tional publicity. The Tribune publishedthree articles on the team, an AssociatedPress article about homecoming circulatedaround the country, and the Sun-Times ar¬ticle appeared on page 5 — surrounded bystories of the new Pope, John Paul II. Lom¬bardi summarized the accomplishments ofhis tenure: “During the first year we had asmall group that came in mockery to seewhat hee-haws they could get; during thelast year people came hoping to see Chicagosucceed.”Immediately after the season, Lombardiwas proud of his team’s successes, but intime, he returned to one of his favoritethemes — the University’s lack of commit¬ment to the football program. As a coach atHomewood-Flossmoor High, Lombardi wasused to success, having turned a perennialloser into a four-time state champion Frus¬trated by what he feels to be the Universi¬ty’s indifferent attitude toward sports, Lom¬bardi is leaving to try to work his magic atRich East High where once again he will at¬tempt to rejuvenate a losing team. In a re¬cent interview, Lombardi delivered someparting shots toward the University:I saw that all we had scraped foran(j struggled to build wouldn’t be al¬lowed to be sustained. I was trying torun the program on a shoestring. Itseemed like a fruitless effort.The frustration I felt for the kidsdoing their darndest against consider¬able odds, outmanned by opponents. ..1 didn’t see anyone who was trying toequalize the odds a little bit. The foot-By Howard SulsAs intramurals come to a close things arestill up in the air. Softball leagues are stillmostly undecided, but some teams areheaded to the playoffs. Breckinridge, facesLower Rickeert, Henderson is the favoriteover Phi Gam, Psi U beat Upper Rickert toforce a sudden death playoff, Ttifts facesFishbein.In the graduate leagues, Leading Indica¬tors should defeat the Winner of Dot II- Som-fitily, Your Mother won the grad orange di¬vision, and in the Independent League,Revenge of White Punks on Dope facesSammy Walker, who defeated the Wacks inthe losers bracket finals.In Open Rec coed Penguins are favoredover Arnie’s Army and Dodd/Mead playsBishop. Open Rec men’s Hit’em Where TheyAin’ts faces Sid’s Kids, Jimmy’s meets SeeYour Food, Messer’s Memorial againstDrink Like Fish. In coed grad maroon it’sBall Squad versus the Knockers, Social Car¬nivores and Primates and B.S. Hitters,Breckinridge versus Tufts, and Lower Flintagainst Upper Rickert/Lower Wallace -Shorey victor.Gruenbaum and Cho captured Coed TableTennis, Blair Ewing of Thompson Northtook the undergrad residence table tennisand must face Wilson Bryan if he beats theIndependent winner.My apologies to all people who deservedrecognition and were somehow overlookedor who we just ran out of space. ThankYou.Upper Flint 14Nads of Coulter 42Diamondhead 23Tufts 8Social Carnivores 8Laughlin 4 8Somfitily 22 ball coaching staff is insufficient (fourpeople, two part time). Almost the en¬tire male coaching staff has turnedover in the last two or three years.The people that care about winningare leaving. Sooner or later, someoneat the University is going to have totake inventory.If you’re going to build a program,you should try to build the best pro¬gram you can. If they’re looking for aclub sponsor or an intramural pro¬gram — that’s not my personality,thank God. It’s like telling the directorof the Law School or the Physics De¬partment that it’s okay not to try toohard. The height of the University’sgoal in athletics is mediocrity andthat’s giving them the benefit of thedoubt.Far from Lombardi’s frustration at Mil-lersville State College (Pa.) is Tom Kurucz,where he is an assistant football coach andis finishing his master’s degree in counsel¬ing. It seems appropriate that he may leadthe Maroons to their first winning seasonsince Stagg coached here because his philos¬ophy is similar to that of Stagg: the viewthat coaching is a noble profession:A professor may see a student foronly a couple of hours a week; a coachplays an integral part in a youngman’s life. He is a coach, organizer,father to some, big brother to others,listener, advisor. . .A student-athlete has a lot of thingsgoing. Football is just a slice of thepie. A student also has an academiclife, a personal life, and a spirituallife. Winning is important but it’s notthe most important thing. . .A coachcan assist his players in their otherendeavors. He can help establish feel¬ings of positiveness — about the team,about his personal life, about his aca¬demic life. I think having a man do hisbest, that’s important.Kurucz said his greatest satisfaction is inhelping his players to improve their lives.He recalls helping a young man, Sam Camp¬bell, when Kurucz was an assistant coach atthe University of Tennessee at ChatanoogaChamberlin 13Ball Squad 18B.S. Hitters 21Leading Indicators 16Eight is Not Enough 9Psi U 13Breckinridge 20Breckinridge 10Salisbury 6Gilberts 3Cunning Stunts 22LR/UW 6Spam 5Bup Over Goov 3And Eggs 6Lower Foint 11Knockers 17Cubs 2Dot II 4Diamondhead 8Hitchcock 1Tufts Women 3Lower Rickeet 6 and the University of Kentucky.) The youngman weighed 275 pounds and wouldn’t — orcouldn’t — lose any weight. Kurucz gotCampbell to exercise restraint at the dinnertable and to work with weights. He calledCampbell several times a week and the twobecame close friends Campbell reported toFall football practice at 240 pounds and wonhimself a starting job.At Chicago, Kurucz said he would considerstarting a Fellowship of Christian athletes“if there’s interest.” He added. “I wouldmake it available and possibly encouragethe players (to develop their spirituality) inwhatever way, shape, or form (theychose).”The players seem to have greetedKurucz’s selection with enthusiasm. Co-cap¬ tain Nick Fillipo said that a group of playerssat in when the candidates were being inter¬viewed and that Kurucz was their numberone choice. “He works well with people, hecan listen, he’s concerned about the pro¬gram, he’s honest. I’m totally thrilled.”With Lombardi a lame-duck coach andKurucz finishing up at Millersville, Fillipoand his fellow captain Mark Meier havetaken over recruiting responsibilities, en¬listing people from both on and off campus.Fillipo said that if everybody fulfills theircommitment, the Maroons will have 42 re¬turning students and at least seven qualityfreshman. Inevitably, that number di-mishes somewhat because of the sacrificesthat football demands. The players must re¬turn to school a month early and often thatmeans giving up a job. “A lot of guys havetrouble getting back early,” Fillipo said,“but a lot also realize that it’s probably theirlast chance to play (organized) football andthat somehow they’ll make ends meet.”(Much of the Maroons’ success also dependsupon whether Dale Friar returns for his se¬nior year. Currently, he is at a chiropractorschool in South Carolina. Kurucz reported a“positive” communication with him. >Playing half the schedule by the end of thefirst week of classes is another disadvan¬tage in that the team plays half its gamesbefore students are really aware of its pre¬sence. But the early schedule can also be anadvantage: it provides the team a chance tocomplete the most strenuous practices with¬out the pressures of school imposing. Moreimportantly, it allows the team to live to¬gether for a month in the fraternity housesbefore everyone else arrives. The team hasa chance to go to Jimmy’s together, orthrow the ball around, or simply enjoy themusical talents of Fillipo and teammateMark Daniels. Tom Kurucz, with his com¬mitment to the total person, should be rightat home in such a setting. “I guess I’m a lit¬tle bit of an idealist,” he reflected. “If youcan help someone along the way — that’swhat it’s all about.IntramuralTop Tenpoints1. Leading Indicators (4) 492. Breckinridge (1) 453. Nads of Coulter 404. Your Mother 345. Psi U 306. Upper Rickert 247. Revenge of White Punks on Dope 198. Eight is Not Enough 159. Somfitily 1010. Sammy Walker 2Votes: Tufts. The Wacks Go To College,Hitchcock. Henderson.From thePressboxfrom 25_my friends said, the more you have to gothrough to get something the better it feelswhen you get it.More seriously, as Line’s dad noted, youlearn more from losing than from winningbecause no matter what excuses you make,the person you lose to has something morethan you that they can teach you.I’m not saying that one should try to lose,for the benefit in competition comes wheneach side makes maximum constructive ef¬fort to oppose each other. Winning is a goalto be strived for, but winning and losing assuch should have as little positive andnegative connotations as possible. These two things are at somewhat cross-purposes,and their lies the challenge of enjoying com¬petition, and, if one accepts the analogy,life. This is the inner game, and whateverprogress one makes towards” . . winninghis own inner game is a direct contributionto the peace and freedom that mankinditself must find.”With this issue. R.W. Rohde ends a two-year stint as Sports Editor of the MAROON.Rohde is a fourth-year student in the collegetrying desperately not to become a fifth-year student.IMReporlSoftball Rolls OnwardThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, June 1, 1979—27&ea/ (^lYa/e- ^Oy.312 / 493-0666NORTHWEST HYDE PARK. NEW! Completely reconstructed six condos.Four already sold! New furnace, wiring, roof, kichen, baths, windows, etc. Sixrooms, two baths. $48,000.5000 EAST END. Co-op. Personal view of Sears Tower, Hancock, etc. 5 rms.,2 baths. All nicely decorated. $30,000.59th NEAR HARPER. Nice building, nice people. 5 rms., 2 baths. In the $40’s.Kathy.SIX FLAT. Owners apt. Especially lovely, 6 rooms, 2 baths. 69th Paxton.$85,000.INVESTORS ATTENTION. Seven flat nr. 54th Cornell. $225,000.LUXURY HI-RISE CONDO. Narragansett at 50th & Chicago Beach. Traditionalbeauty. Apt. has own formal reception hall with beautiful beamed ceilings.Views are spectacular from high floor in all directions. Cozy woodburning fire¬place. In truly excellent condition. Priced in $70’s. Charlotte.YOU DESERVE THE BEST. Why not live the way you like. Priced under$70,000. Luxurious Narragansett spacious five room, super condition! A kit¬chen “Provencal” (beamed ceilings enlarged, etc.). Call Charlotte.ON THE LAKEFRONT. This building has coveted “national registry of historicplaces" status near 73rd South Shore Drive. A handsome seven room, 3 bathCOOPERATIVE (all cash). Greenery and scenery the entire length. $30,000.Charlotte.NEAR REGENSTEIN LIBRARY OF THE U. OF C. Spacious 6 rm. Lovely backyard. $72,500. Kathy.Ask about our other houses, apartment and Investment properties for sale.We tell it like it is ... where it is ... how much it is.CALL YOUR PERSONAL BROKER.Charlotte VikstromorSales Associate. Kathy Ballard493-0666 theFrenchKitchen3437 West 63rd776-6715Open for Dinner5 P.M. Daily3 P.M. SundayClosed MondayModerately Prieed Chicago Guide:"Eating at the FrenchKitchen is like diningwith Julia (JiiltlrSTANLEY H. KAPLANFor Over 40 Years The Standard ofExcellence In lest Preparation ][ MCAT- DAT* LSATl1 8RE • GRE PSYCH • GRE BIO • 6MAT >PCAT • OCAT • VAT • MAT • SAT !NATIONAL MEDKAl BOARDS-VQE'ECFMC 1FLEX -NATT DENTAL BOARDSPODIATRY BOARDS • NURSING BOARDSFtoxibl* Programs and HoursKAPLANEBautwaai Cwtar5,45 Madison An• M.r 10023 (nr. MOL) Visit Any Cooler And So ForYoarsdlt Why Wi Makt The Differencetist preparationSPECIALISTS SINCE 1D3SCraters i* Mayor US C»ttts Fuff to 8«oToronto Canada I iufarc S*'Uariand IlIIIIIIIIIIOUTSIDE N.Y. STATE CALL TOLL FFtEE: 60^22^1782CHICAGO CENTER6216 N. CLARKCHICAGO, ILLINOIS60660(312)76*4-5151S. W. SUBURBAN19 S. LACHANCE HD.SUITE 201LACHANCE, ILLINOIS60525(312)352-56*40For iHormation About Ott\#r Contort SPRING, SUMMERFALL INTEMSIVESCOURSES STARTINGTHIS MONTH:SUMMER MCATSUMMER SATNEXT MONTH:SUMMER GRS---LSAT*4 VK/DAT MCATMors Thar AC Maior uS C Moa A AbroadTOLL iMajied Secretarial Service2545 East 75th Street, Chicago, Illinois 60649Phone: 721-9207 or 734-6185* Business Letters * Resumes*Term Papers * Reports*Manuscripts *Dissertations*Notary Public *Financial Statements“"Cassette Tape Transcription*Proposals•Dictation by Phone AvailableMedical • General • Legal Special Deskand Chair SotSingle Pedestal Metal Deskwith Walnut Plastic Topwith Matching Steno Chair —Specially priced at$95.00Bring your own trailerBRAND iIQUIPMENI&SUPPLY CO.8600 Commercial Ave.Open Mon.-Fri. 1:30-5:00For the Month of April, we are openSaturdeys 8:30-4:00RE 4-2111Dr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometristEye ExaminationsFashion Eye WearIntelligent people know the differ¬ence between advertised cheapglasses or contact lenses and com¬petent professional service.Our reputation is your guaranteeof satisfaction.(53 Kimbark Plaza)1200 E. 53rd St.493-8372 Announcing the first meetingof theMobilization Committee ForA Progressive Unionto begin our activities aiming towarda permanent organization in the fall.We encourage everyone to bring ideasand proposals.Tuesday, June 5, 8:00 PM,Ida Noyes HallPicnic planning meeting, 7:00For further information Call Clay Martin. 684-5291.or Sheila Brady. 684-5498GOLD CITY INNgiven * * * *by the MAROON5228 Harper 493-2559(neer Hmrpmr Court)Eat more for less.(Try our convenient take-out orders.)A Gold Mine Ov Good Food”Student Discount:10% for table service5% for take homeHyde Park's Best Cantonese Food28—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, June 1, 1979Revival from 25—The demonstrators began chanting“Hutchins is our leader” and “No more foot¬ball”. Counter-demonstrations shouted“We like football.”—An attempt to start the game wasthwarted when one demonstrator grabbedthe football as it was about to be kickedoff.—50 people sat down on the 50-yard lineand were soon joined by 150 more. Thosewho organized the protest later denied thatit was a plan action, but had been “...startedspontaneously by people not connected withthe planned protest.”—Hass was besieged on one side by hisplayers asking permission to drag the pro¬testors away, while on the other side theNorth Central coach was complaining aboutthe reception his team was receiving. “Wejust came here to play football.” He sug¬gested the game by called. Chicago had been constantly improvingon the club level during the pre-varsityyears. While earlier teams had only a few‘qualified’ football players, that number hadgrown close to a dozen by the end of the de¬cade. One of thosem twelve was TimMcGree, an all-conference Minnesota full¬back in high school who entered with a classthat he says was markedly talented in ath¬letics. “Whether by design or accident, itappeared that with the class of 70 the Uni¬versity had received a large number of ath¬letes in all sports. The trend seemed to fol¬low after that.”McGree sees the opposition that arose tointercollegiate athletics as coming on twolevels. One was the lack of an Ivy league,forcing the University to play teams whoare academic inferiors. The other was thefear that, as in academics, if the Universitywas going to do something it had to excel init. “Football was the focal point for thesereservations because it was the first inter-—Hass told his players, “We must act dig¬nified.”—Several administrators, led by Wick andformer Dean James E. Newman, convincedall but 30 of the demonstrators to leave.—While Newman was telling the protes¬tors they would not be removed forceably,Wick called in the police to have them dis¬persed. Wick said in a later interview, “Iguess I just have a shorter temper than he(Newman) does.”—Police clear the field and arrest threestudents in the process. A fourth is later ar¬rested obstructing the paddy wagon. Thestudents are later released and Wick has allcharges dropped.—The game is played, shortened from 60to 44 minutes.—Robert Hutchins declines to commenton the controversy, saying, “My mind is onhigher things.”Media coverage was extensive, includingover six pages in the Maroon. Further de¬bate of the issue was stifled somewhat bythe overshadowing assisination of John F.Kennedy.“Now men, this is the line of scrimmage. ”“Ah...excuse me coach, but that’s a line seg¬ment.”-Second City satire on Maroon footballOpposition to football waned in the follow¬ing years. How much it was due to a realiza¬tion that the sport wasn’t such a great evilanti how much it was due to a preoccupationwith ‘higher things’ is debatable. But it wasduring the year of greatest student protestat the University that football returned as avarsity sport. colleiate sport to be dropped.” (The Univer¬sity remained in the Big-10 until 1946)Whatever opposition remained in 1969 wasinsignificant. The support was overwhelm¬ing. The petition to reinstate football, circu¬lated by Gary Leland and Judson Hixson ’63. “Even members of the SDS supportedus.”“The club was really funny. We’d play JVteams expecting a bunch of washouts. Atsome positions we were, at some weweren’t/ We had a divinity student, LowellCalahan, who had been a starting guard atUnion College, a tremendous football power.He was only 5’8”, but when he was in shapehe weighed 230 and had a 31 inch waist. Guyswould come up to the line expecting a push¬over and get blown out.”-Tim McGreeWhen football went varsity in 1969. theteam lost a significant amount of graduatetalent that has competed on the club level.Still, on October 18th the Maroons, led byMVP McGree, beat Marquette 14-0 for theirfirst varsity win in exactly 29 years, 11months. Students carrying textbooks toredown the goalposts. CBS news ran anotherstory.In the following years, Hass was patientwith a team that ‘won nine games total overa four or five year period’ while trying tobuild up the schedule. “Wally was what wasneeded at the time” McGree said, “Extre¬mely tolerant, good natured. Some of us felthe wasn’t pushing us hard enough, but if hehad pushed us as hard as we wanted hewould have been left with about 15 players.He was a good coach intellectually, he knew Perhaps Chicago accelerated their levelof opposition too fast. Perhaps Hass was nolonger ‘what was needed’. In 1973, the teamdidn’t win any of their eight games. In 1974,the team went winless again. Demoraliza¬tion set in. A graduate of that year said alotof the players started dogging it midwaythrough the season, covering for each other.among others, collected 1,500 signatures inthree days. It later passed the faculty sen¬ate, the president, and the board of trustees.Leland noted that the cause was greatlyaided by the perception of the movement ascoming from the student body, thus remov¬ing anti-administraion feelings that arose in everything there is to know about thegame.” Another player who was a freshman thatyear complained about the general condi¬tion and attitude of the team and thecoaches. “The whole experience left a badtaste in my mouth.”Hass announced his retirement effectivethe end of the 75 season The team lost theirfirst seven games. Then, in an ending thatwould please Howard Cosell, the team beatMarquette 41-20, for their first win after 29games, and set 16 modern era records. Hassgot his 100th career victory. The goalpostsfell, the beer flowed, and the players put“the coach who brought back football” ontheir shoulders and carried him off thefield.Women’s crew to be innational championshipsWhile the typical Chicago student will beup to their ears in final exams, women'screw team members will have completedtheir academic work in advance and be pre¬paring for an equally stiff challenge: theWomen’s National Rowing Championshipsin Detroit, Michigan June 14-17.The team will race an eight-oared shell atthe Nationals for their first time this year,entering the “senior” or intermediate eightcategory. Although they will be doing well toget past the heats and into the finals with the8. the proximity of the regatta is expected tohave its highest payoff in their four-oaredentries.“This year,” said club president SusanUrbas, “for the first time we can arrive re¬latively rested and enough in advance of the regatta to get in some hard training right onthe race course. That will give us a consider¬able psychological and physical advantageover at least some of the competition.”UCWC’s best performances are expectedto come in the midweight (130 lb. boataverage' and lightweight (125 lb boataverage' fours.Competition will be very stiff, for not onlythe best American teams will be there, butalso elite teams from Australia. Mexico,and Canada. The Detroit regatta will endthe spring racing season, but the team willcontinue to row with members who w-ill be inChicago over the summer As Urbas put it,“it just never ends.”The Chicago Maroon—Friday, June 1, 1979—29CalendarFRIDAYHillel: Upstairs Minyan Services for Shavuot, 5:30 am,Hillel.Perspectives: Topic: “Factors Determining a RisingRate of Divorce” guests Gary Becker, Elizabeth Landes,and Fred Strodtbeck, 6:30 am, Channel 7.Hillel: Yavneh Services for Shavuot, 9:15 am, Hillel.Crossroads: Free English classes for foreign women,10:00am-noon.Workshop in Economics and Econometrics: “StockReturns and Expected Inflation: A Disaggregated View”speaker Tom Kutzen, Stu 216, 10:30am-noon.Undergraduate Physics Journal Club: "The SurveyorMission: History and Implications” speaker RichardGaughan, 12:30 pm, Eckhart208. Free pizza.Geophysical Sciences Colloquium: “Plate Tectonics andClimate Modeling” speaker Christopher Harrison, 1:30pm, Henry Hinds Lab Auditorium.Economics History Workshop: “Charity and theWelfare State in Britain 1900 to the Present:Substitutes?” speakers Alan Hergert and Luis Locay,3:30 pm, SS 106.Woman’s Union: Meets 5:00 pm, in Ida Noyes above theFrog and Peach.Karate Club: Practices 7:00-9:00 pm in the dance room ofIda Noyes.U of c Christian Fellowship: International CurrentEvents with Bill Hanawalt, 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes EastLounge.SATURDAYHillel: Yavneh Services for Shavuot, 9:15 pm, Hillel.Hillel: Upstairs Minyan Services for Shauvuot, 9:30 pm,Hillel.Table Tennis Club: Practices 10:00am-l:00 pm, IdaNoyes Hall 3rd floor.Compton Lectures: “More Quarks and Leptons (Cur¬rent Research at Fermilab, SLAC and CERN)”, 11:00am, Eckhart 133.Rugby Club: UC Rugby Club vs. Lakes RFC, 1:00 pm,Stagg Field.WHPK: Success Without College: Comedic Humor”4:00-5:00 pm. Fine Women and Song: Music a WomanCan Identify With, 5:00-6:00 pm.NAM Films: “The Navigator” and “Cops” 7:30 pm,Cobb.Poetry Reading: Ted Berrigan anf Ron Pagdett read 8:00pm, Ida Noyes East Lounge 2nd fl.University Symphony Orchestra: Mozart, Elgar, andBrahms, 8:30 pm, Mandel Hall. Free.Pub Live Music: Nick Filippo and Mark Daniels. Foldand Country and Western. 9:30-12:30 pm. You must be 21yrs old (or older). SUNDAYWHPK: Finest in Rhythm and Blues, 6:00 am-midnight.Rockefeller hapel: University Religious Service-E.Spencer gparsons, Sermon: “The Fire and The Glory”11:00 am.Crossroads: Bridge, 3:00 pm. Beginners and expertswelcome.Nomor Coffee House: 4:00 pm in Ida Noyes. Fred Cam-pau, Mike McDougal and U of C talents.A Concert of Experimental Music: A large number of“experimental” works, half of which will be products ofU of C composers. 7:30 pm. International HouseAuditorium.Tai Chi Club: Practices s:30 pm, 4945 S. Dorchester(enter on 50th).Folkdancers: General level with teaching, 8:30-11:30 pm,Ida Noyes Cloister Club.MONDAyPerspectives: Topic: “Economic Analysis of Marital In¬stability” guests Gary Becker Elizabeth Landes, andFred Strodtbeck, 6:30 am, Channel 7.WHPK: Wake up and stay awake with WHPK Rock,6:30am-4:00 pm.Crossroads: Free English Classes for foreign women,10:00am-noon.Chicago City Colleges: English as a Second Languageclasses, 4:30-6:30 pm, Rickett’s Lab. Free.Karate Club: Practices 7:00-9:00 pm, in the dance roomof Ida Noyes Hall.Amnesty International: Meeting 7:00 pm, at Crossroads,5621 S. Blackstone. All are urged to attend.Chess Club: Meets 7:00 pm, Ida Noyes Memorial Room.Women’s Rap Group: Meets 7:30 pm, Blue GargoyleWomen’s Center, 3rd floor. Info call 752-5655 or 752-5072.Baptist Student Union: Meets 7:37 pm in the 2nd floorEast Lounge of Ida Noyes.Folkdancers: Beginning level with teaching, 8:00-11:30pm, Ida Noyes Cloister Club.Danforth Meeting: Topic: “The Graduate Experience:Ruminations and Ruinations”, 8:00 pm, 6019 S. In-gleside, apt 501.TUESDAYPerspectives: Topic: “Recent Poetry and Politics SinceWorld War II” guests Michael Anania, Gerald Graff, andRobert von Hallberg, 6:30 am, Channel 7.WHPK: Wake up and stay awake with WHPK Rock, 6:30am-4:00 pm.Comm, on Develd, pmentalBiology: “Immunofluorescent Localization of hnRNABinding Proteins” speaker Carol Okamura, 12:00-1:00 pm, Abbott 133.Rockefeller Chapel: University Organist EdwardMondello will give a lecture-demonstration and recital at12:15 pm.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Films- “Israel-ASearch for Faith” and “Israel, Past and Present” 4:00pm. Breasted Hall, Oriental Institute.WHPK: Folk Music, 4:30-6:00 pmClassical Music, 6:00 -9:30 pm. Jazz, 9:30pm-3:00 am.Ki-Aikido: Practices 4:30-6:00 pm, Bartlett, next to thesquash courts.Hellenic Civilization Lecture: "Morals and Mental Il¬lness in Antiquity” speaker Anthony Preus, 4:30 pm,Harper 130.Kundalini Yoga Society: Meets 5:00 pm, Ida Noyes EastLounge.Archery Club: Practices 5:30-7:00 pm, Ida Noyes gym.Sexuality Rap Group: Sponsored by the UC Gay andLesbian Alliance, meets 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes 3rd floor. In¬fo call 753-3274 Sun-Thur 8-10 pm.WEDNESDAYPerspectives: Topic: “Politics for CH&rles Olson and theBlack Mountain Poets” guests Michael Anania, GeraldGraff, and Robert von Hallberg, 6:30 am, hansel 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 pm.Crossroads: Free English classes for foreign women,2:00 pm.Committee on Methodology: “Looking for Rationality inInterpersonal Conflict: Experimenta Tests of the Theoryof Games" speaker Barry O’Neill 4:00 pm, Beecher 102.WHPK: Folk Music, 4:30-6:00 pm. Classical Music, 6:00-9:30 pm. Jazz 9:30pm-3:00 am.Chicago City Colleges: Sponsors English as a SecondLanguage classes, 4:30-6:30 pm, Ricketts Lab. Free.Committee on the Study of Women: will meet at 5:00 pmin Ida Noyes in the 3rd floor sun parlor.University Duplicate Bridge: Meets 7:00 pm, Ida Noyes.New players welcome.Country Dancers: British folkdancing, all dancestaught. Morris, 7:30 pm. Dancing, 8:00. Refreshments,10:00 pm. Ida Noyes Cloister Club.Tai Chi Club: Practices 7:30 pm, Blue Gargoyle.Badminton Club: Practices 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes gym.Science Fiction Club: Meets 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes.Everyone Welcome.THURSDAYDOC FILMSFriday/^ 9^ Sctettcc *?6cti9K, June 1'pcutfaUf &Roger Corman’sX — THE MAN WITHTHE X-RAY EYES6:15Carl Dreyer’sVAMPY R7:55Christian Nyby’sTHE THING9:10Roy Rowland’sTHE 5000 FINGERS OF DR. T.10:40Edgar G. Ulmer’sTHE BLACK CAT12:15Gordon Douglas’THEM!1:30and on Sunday June 3'Volker Schlondorf’sCOUP DE GRACE7:15 & 9:30All Films $1.50 s " Cobb Hall SPACEGarage for rent. 55th and Cornell.Avail. 6/12 Sept. Call 684 7414. eves.SUMMERSOFTBALLBack by popular demand, applicationsare now available in Ida Noyes 203 orBartlett 10. For more information callGary Heck at 753-4693 (between noonand 1 pm) or 753 8342 (evenings).NEED MAY 22PHOTOSPhotos, tapes, etc of May 22 eventsneeded as references for paperRebecca 752-2159. Perspectives: Topic. “The Place of the Avant-Garde inContemporary Culture” guests Michael Anania, GeraldGraff, and Robert von Hallberg, 6:30 am, channel 7.WHPK: Wake up and stay awake with WHPK Rock,6:30am-4:00 pm.Noontime Concert Series: Opera Arias and Duets, 12:15pm, Reynolds Club Lounge.Nuclear Overkill Moratorium: Meets 3:00 pm, Ida Noyes2nd floor East Lounge.WHPK: Folk Music, 4:30-6:00 pm. Classical Music, 6:00-9:30 pm. Jazz, 9:30pm-3:00 am.Ki-Aikido: Practices 6:00-7:30 pm, P’ield House Balcony.Table Tennis Club: Practices 6:30-11:00 pm, Ida Noyes3rd floor.Debate Society: Meets 7:00 pm to practice, 8:00 debate.Ida Noyes East Lounge.Women and Revolution classes: “Marzism VersusFeminism in the Trade Unions” 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes. Infocall 427-0003.Outreach: Films-“Geinin” (50 min) and “The Ondekozain Sado” (60 min) 7:30 pm, Cobb 102. Free.Actiuon Committee on S. Africa: Final meeting, 7:30 pm,Ida Noyes.SNOWED UNDERDue to Tvping Delavs9RELAX!Avoid the Rush and Leave the Typing to Us.We Do:Manuscripts / Theses / DissertationsResumes / Reports / Transcriptions24 Hour Telephone Dictation ServiceEM A KW IK SECRETARIAL SERVICE1H(» West Washington 236-0110Weekends & Evenings 726-3572 VERSAILLES5254 S. DorchesterWll MAINTAINEDBUILDINGAttractive 1V2 and2 V* Room StudiosFurnished or Unfurnished$189 - $287Based on AvailabilityAll Utilities includedAt Campus Bus Stop324-0200 Mrs. GroakTHE CENTER FORLATIN AMERICAN STUDIESPRESENTSJORGE BUSTAMANTEOFEL COLEGIO DE MEXICOSPEAKING ON“HISPANIC MIGRANTS TO THE UNITEDSTATES: THE VIEW NORTH FROMMEXICO AND CENTRAL AMERICA”THURSDAY JUNE 73:30 P.M.PICK LOUNGE MYSTERIESBurke: KELLY AMONGTHE NIGHTINGALESCreasev: A SHARPRISE IN CRIMEGoodrum: CARNAGEOF THE REALMKnox: LIVE BAITWilcox: POWER PLAYSHarper library’sPopular ReadingCollection30—The Chicago Maroon—Friday. June 1. 1979CLASSIFIED ADSSPACECONDOMINIUMS IN KENWOODGrand old renovated bldg. Fireplaces,sunporches, new kitchens.3 BR, 2 BATHS FROM *53,000I BR, FROM *32,000Model Open 13 Sat. and Sun. 4720Greenwood. Sales 2489 6400Female 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 MonroeII, Ann Arbor Ml. 48104Person wanted to sublet apt. for summer (through Sept.). Share with malegracfjludent. *123/mo and utilities.-546TTTand Kimbark. 947 8851 (even-ings).Luxury 1 bdrm. apt. furnished, A/C,dshjyshr-, 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 sharesunny 2 bedroom apt. Non-smoker.Available June 1st or later. Call324-5669 day or evenings before 10 pm.Sublet for Summer, 1 bedroom in 2bedroom apt. *120/month, 52nd andKenwood, 324-2441.Roommate to share large 3 bdrm apt.5140 Kimbark. Summer sublet w/falloption. Available 6/15. *120/mo. Call643-6330 eves. tFor rent deluxe A/C 1 bdrm fully turnapt with individual indr. pkg. space in-cl. 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 turn one bedroom or eft. start6-15 year lease or sublet call Alan955-4170 Hyde Park.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. Available May or June.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. 955-11772 Bedroom 2 Bath Apt. 4800 ChicagoBeach Dr. Lake View Available July1st. Call3 43-3852 After 5.Summer Sublet 1 space in 3 bdrm.apt. *80 Call Katie 288-6193.SUMMER SUBLET: 1 bdrm. of 2,turn., close to UC and Mr. G's, *125mo. Keith 667-5914.Roommate to share large 3 bdrm. apt.Will have own room w/private bath.5335 Dorchester. *140/mo. Avail. 6/18.753-0186.Summer Sublet. Female roommatewanted to share large 2-bedrm. apt.w/balcony. 53rd and Harper. Non-smoker. 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.Condo for sale Newport bid 1 bdr lakeview dw swpl. Call 268-5046.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 373-4357or 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.SUMMER SUBLET 1 bdrm. avail,turn. grm. apt. near campus. 684-0979.Furnished room-kitchen privilegesavailable July 1st or before 955-7083.Good location.1 bedroom sublet, July-August 57thand Kenwood furnished porch next topark *250 plus utilities. Renee 753-2492.288-0630.SUMMER ROOMMATE wanted fortwo bdrm apt at 51st and Blackstone.Rent is a mere *125/month. Greatbackporch for Summer. BBQ's. CallGene at 924-1922.Sunny 1 bdrm apt avail 7/1. *215 mo.288-2729.COTTAGE rental, near IndianaDunes, 3 br furunished, availableweekly basis; eves 493 4387; weekends>19-879-6930.Summer Sublet-2 BR in 3 BR apt. Fur¬nished. Excellent location 57th andBlackstone *135/mo. Call Marge324-1820or Barb955 7292 10-12pm. Hyde Pk nr UC studio and 2 1/2 rm.apt. Reasonable BU 8-0718.Summer Sublet-Female roomatewanted for 1-bdrm in furnsihed 2 bdrmcoachhouse apt. Kenwood, avail. MidJune *187 mo, Incl. util. Call 548-4106.SUMMER SUBLET: One bedroom infour bedroom apartment. Secondbedroom opening August 1. Possiblefall option. 955-4463.Summer: Own rm, furnished inspacious sunny apt. share with 3 con¬genial people and cat. Call Jim955-0481. *100/mo.5405 Woodlawn: 3 rms for one person643 2760 or 667-5746 Ms. Green.Summer subletters wanted. Spaciouusroom apt. 52nd and Kimbark. Call753 2249 room 2414 or 3129.Summer Sublet w/fall option-2 1/2bdrm coachhouse apt. KenwoodAvail. mid-June, *475/mo. incl. util.Call 548 4106.WANTED: Reasonable priced twobedroom apartment for June or Oc¬tober. 955-4463.I need furnished one bedroom apt.6/20-8/31. Call 753-0494,Summer sblt 1 bdrm in 2 bdrm apt.$145/mo 1 blk frm Co-op 955-1592.SUMMER SUBLET 54th and Green¬wood 3rm plus kitch/bath. Mostly fur¬nished; large enough for two. *210 permonth. Call 955-8185.SUMMER SUBLET, large furnishedstudio, util. inc. secure bldg. B bus rt.190/mo. Call 353-6283.Available Aug 1; unfurn; new twolevel luxury. Penthouse elevator apton the 3rd and 4th floors of theHedgerow 54th and Hyde Park Blvd. 3bdrm; 2 bath; fireplace, parking incl.Phone 643-3632 3-8 pm.One to three female roommates toshare an apartment at 55th andEverett. Kosher kitchen-vegetarianswelcome. Call Miriam at 752-2159 or752-2467.Xtra large l bdrm. Hyde Pk. apt. Closeto bus, 1C, Lake. Parking avail. July 1.288-8751 eves.Room available in cooperative houseat 54th and Dorchester. Share cookingdinners, clean-up. Woman grad stu¬dent or working person preferred. Call493-5419 and ask for Miriam or Noel.Furnished ONE BEDROOM APT.available. Nice kitchen, secure well-maintained bldg. Sell manager officehours. Blackstone Villa, 5514 S.Blackstone (ignore "No Vacancy"sign).SUMMER SUBLET AIR CONDI¬TIONED FURNISHED Irg prvt rm insafe, mdrn 3 bdrm apt. *106/mo 6/159/30. Scott 924-2744 4800 Lk. Pk.3 bedroom apt. w lake front view. Keepour furniture, its yours. Air condition-e ddirectly on campus "B" bus route.Fall option available. Approx*150/person with 3 persons renting -call 752-2848 between 8:00-9:00 am orstop by at No. 1814 Regents Park.*25.00 Reward for Garage. Locationbetween Lake Park and Kenwood, 55thand 58th. Call evenings 241-6305 or947-8480.Would you like to add another memberto your household? Considerate andcooperative female student seekshome away from home. Willing to ex¬change family and/or householdresponsibilities for room and board.Can move in next fall or this summer.Very flexible. Call Karen 753-3751. Callleave message.Female wanted to share large furnish¬ed 2 bedroom apt from mid-June toMid-Sept. On C bus route, 54th andCornell. *120/month 752-0738 eveningsand weekends.Sunny bdrm 2 blocks fr library A/Cavailable June 16 call 288 3091.Private room w/bath. Use of kitchen,living room. In faculty member's con¬dominium in Kenwood. Available tosingle male (non-smoking) graduatestudent starting summer quarter. Call753-3912 (d) or 241-5320 (n),F roommate to share 2 bdrm apt. 57thand Kenwood *175/mo Susan 947-6256day, 684 1436 nite.Sublet July/Aug 1 bdrm apt. (can be2), 56th and Kmbrk. *275 947 9604Summer Sublet w/fall option; 2 bdrm 2bath, A/C fully carpeted, dishwasher;51st and Hyde Park; available midJune*4i0/mo (negotiable); 684-5969.U of.-' ^udent needs summer subletfrom june 15-Aug 31 near campus callcollect 217-351 5082 RobSUMMER SUBLET 5 rm expertlyfurhisned 54th pi and Harper avail. Ju-ly 1. Call 955-2470.Two female students looking for 2bedroom furnished or semi-furnishedapartment near campus. 752-4479.Summer sublet *100/mo plus util.Newly renovated, 57 and Drexel, A/C:Call Kathy 241 5049 or Carole 753 2249(rm 120B). PLICATION and direct referrals toOCEANWORLD, Box 60 1 29,Sacramento, CA 95860.JOBS! LAKE TAHOE, CALIF! Fa~tastic tips! *1,700 *4,000 summer!Thousands still needed. Casinos,Restaurants, Ranches, Cruises. Send*3.95 (or APPLICATION/INFO toLAKEWORLD, Box 60129, Sacramen-to, CA 95860Rap 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.RIGHT-HANDED 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.ARABIC TRANSLATOR ANDTYPIST. Part time employment forone or two Mid-East students. ContactFarag El Kamel, Community andFamily Study Center, 753-2518.The Center for Far Eastern Studiesneeds a full-time secretary. Respon¬sibilities include programming, coor¬dination of conferences, seminars,symposiums, etc. An interesting andchallenging job. 753-2632.Notre Dame School, 1338 W. Flournoy,Chicago, is sponsoring an Interna¬tional Festival and Art Fair on June 9,1979. We are seeking artists and craft¬smen to participate in this event.There will also be a chicken dinner pic¬nic with advanced tickets available forthis dinner. For registration and ticketinformation, call 421-3113 or 226-2296after 6:00 p.m.Teacher on vacation organizing a PlayGroup for 2 to 5 year olds. BeginningMid-June. Call evenings 324-2962.FRENCH TRANSLATOR ANDTYPIST.Part-time employment forperson whose first language is French.Contact Jay Teachman, Communityand Family Study Center, 753-2518.Day care director sought by preschoolages 2-6 teaching experience plusdegree send resume and letters of rec-comendation to: Parent Co-op for Ear¬ly Learning, 5300 S. Shore Dr.,Chicago, III. 60615.PART-TIME OFFICE WORK: Startnow. Hours flexible. Call Dr. GendlinDept, of Behavioral Sci. Call 753-2085.afternoons.FOR SALEPASSPORT PHOTOS While-U Wait.MODEL CAMERA 1344 E. 55th St.493-6700.NEW Komura 7-element Tele¬extenders in stock. Absolutely betterthan any other tele-extenders in theworld! Stop in and try them. MODELCAMERA - 1342 E. 55th St. 493-6700.NEW Olympus OM-10 in Stock! ModelCamera, 1342 E. 55th St. 493-6700.New Canon AV-1 in stock! ModelCamera. 1342 E. 55th St. 493-6700.Great Books of the Western World (54vol.) Great ideas (10 vol.) Never used.Best offer. 621-4729 or 956-0707,6 piece pecan bedroom set, excellentquality, value well over *2000 asking*525.947-0430.4 sale: Cheap-lg desk (5'x3') w/filingdrawer. Chair, Playpen, 684-2291 by6/8.WASHER 8i DRYER: Whirlpool;apartment size (28"x29"); fullyautomatic; 2 years old; *350/pair.947-8353.Bedroom ser with double bed and 2matching dressers, single bed 2 chrs 3room dividers, two bookshelves, call538-5-1T v nite and day.Antique rocker and chair, shakertype; mirror, fancy mahog frame;blue leaded glass chandelier, handmade. Pvt 363-2519.RUGS; 9x12 rust *85, 7x9 green oval*45. Large wood/uphol. Rocker *100.HOUSEPLANTS 50 cents-*5.00BOOKCASE *20. Other things all in excel cond. 324-1442.BACKYARD SALE. 9 families dumpfurniture, beds, cameras, toys, sptequip, radios appliances, MUCHMORE. 6/2 10-4 Rain date 6/3. Cash only 5525 Hyde Park.Twin bed box spring and mattressGood shape asking *50 tel. 752-5535.Juliette am/fm stereo, VG cond *60955 9093 after 6 or wk/ends.Ford LTD '75 low mielage-One Driver.Best Offer 241-5993.Piano-Lyon and Healy Uprgt 49". Gd.Cond. Bl Finish *400 or best offer. Call363 8318 Bet 6-10 pm.70 Plymouth Fury III In Good Condi¬tion Guaran Trans. 65,000. *1000 orbest 667 2907 Chris.Sublet furnished 4 bdrm housespacious 1 block to Regenstein StagFields or Billings July and August363 0321.55th near lake 4 room apt *245 June 30486-4557 Call before l p.m. PEOPLE WANTEDSUMMER JOBS NOW! WorldCruises! Pleasure Yachts! No ex¬perience! Good pay! Caribbean,Hawaii World! Send *3 95 for AP SALE: typewriters, couch, binocularsand opera glasses, alarm clocks, filecabinet, rosting apn, chalk board,traveling bag, swim fins. Call FA4 2371. » jThe New EM is the simplest Nikon ever! Come in and see It! ModelCamera, 1342 E. 55th St. 493-6700.PEOPLE FOR SALEARTWORK of all kinds-drawingcalligraphy, illustration, hand ad¬dressing of invitations etc. NoelYovovich, 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.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 8883.ACHTUNG!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: 667-3038.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.Andrew, I bequeath to you 20,000 can¬dy bars and the complete Works ofRobert McNamara; Sometime I getreally mad; those Time Pasages; myeternal admiration; and the ProchnowAward for Tolernance of Stupidheads.JUNE is a good month to: Changeyour tune; Harvest your locker;Dismantle Gary; Move Harper threefeet eas*; Buy Hanna an ice creamcone; Graduate; Get married; Notnecessarily in that order. Reg.Abbecadabra: Disco Jogger, Where'sMy Check? . finally see what you'resaying! Still time to ditch journalismand become a professional toothfairy... Everything is a iong time ago,i fyou cate. / drift. Well, so what. Ohyes, I care, I forget that I care. It wasa very good year. Loads of love, aflower child.POLITICALPERSONALIt's not cliche to repeat the wisdom ofmy sisters: the personal is quitepolitical, and vice-versa. You bet Ising love songs. The Good Witch.WOMEN'SMAGAZINEPrimavera, the women's literarymagazine, needs new staff members.For info call 752-5655. The magazine ison sale in most Hyde Park bookstores.SCENESSUMMER 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 you.Bring a friend or 2 and check it out.Mon. night at 8:00 (special beginner'ssession) or Sun. at 8.30 at Ida Noyes.Teaching both nights. For more infocall 643-9654.SEND UC WOMEN'S CREW to theNATIONALS! Benefit car wash. SatJune 2 10 am-2 pm. Regensteinlibrary Parking lot. 56th and Ellis*2.00 Donation.LOSTAND FOUNDYellow legal pad process recordingFound in Regenstein parking lot. call955 7481.WRITINGTUTORSWriting Tutors needed to work withCollege students 1979-80 . 8-10 hoursweek *500/quarter Apply at Harper209.TEACHERSWANTEDJewish Sunday school needs ex¬perienced teachers for grades K 3. Jobbegins October '79 Call 752 5655 or324 0352UNIVERSITYSYMPHONY ORCHESTRASpring Concert, featuring Mozart'sDonGiovanni Overture, Elgar'sEnigma Variations, and Brahm'sFirst Symphony. Saturday, June 2 at8:30 p.m. in Mangel Hall. Free!INTENSIVEGERMANHigh pass the German Exam! Studywith Karin Carmer, native German,PhD, using the comparative structuraltranslation method. Mon.-Fri. 10-12,4:30-6:30493 8127.RIDESRIDER WANTED: Share driving andexpenses to Oregon or intermediatepoints (Utah, Idaho). Leave June 11.Call 955-2706.Need ride to DC 6/28-9 to tow UHaultrailer. Will pay for U-Haul, sharespace in it, driving expenses. Or, splitU-Haul truck to DC, same dates.643-5680Ride Wanted: To N Y. approx 6/17.Will share driving expenses. 947-9604.Judy.PULMONARYFUNCTIONTECHNICIANP.T. (20 hrs wlO until Aug then F.T.for indefinite period. Potential forpc • for individual with B.S degreeor a.R.R.T. registry. Will operatePulm. Lab inc. P.F. tests, calibrationv* Maint. of computerized equipmanagement arterial, bloodgases and record keeping. Someresearch. Hosp exp. helpful. Salary to*6.00/hr. Call or send resumeLaRab'da Children's Hospital andResearch Center, Personnel Coor¬dinator. East 65th St. at LakeMichigan, Chicago, II 60649 363-6700ext. 233.TO THE TWOSNELLREJECTSHere's to all the cigarette butts, thegin and tonics, the Sundaytelephone calls. I hope one of yougraduates and the other sur¬vives a year discussing trivial pro¬blems that are so IMPORTANT.TOTHE PEOPLEWHO OCCUPYTHEOTHEROFFICEHope you realize that I know I couldn'thave done it without you.TOTHE JAILBIRD,THE SOX FAN,THE ROLLINGASTON IAN,ANDOTHERSYou're in for a hell of a year.Remember, in the Meyersohn-Cohn tradition, the importance of con-sistency. And rememberin the Fletman tradition the im¬portance of getting your numbersright. -One who knowsTOTHEPHOTOGRAPHERGive me an hour-- I'll give you theassignments.TOTHEREVOLUTIONARIESThanks for the rideTOTHE SYMBOLICGRADUATEYou ARE a wonderful personTOTHE FRATRATYou still look like Hunter Thompson tous.TOTHE JAILBIRDGood luck. There's really nothing elseto say.BICYCLE STOLENBetween 10:00 and 11:30 am ThursdayMay 31 from rack on quad side of SSbuilding white frame red trim."Stella" if you have any informationplease call Roger at 955-4158 thanks.CHEAP THRILLSSum ner softball entries are due June15. Applications ire available in IdaNoyes 203 or Bartlett 101. TO THE ONE WHOWANTSTO DOEVERYTHING ANDTHE DISAPPEARINGGEOGRAPHERTo the second one: you and I will missthose nights with Don and Judy, butn >at much. To the other one: since,jj know what you're gettinginto, the kindest we can say is that youmust be a fool.SERVICESA little tutoring goes a iong wayTeacher with wide experience andexcellent references available forsummer tutoring Callnow! 684-0395.NANCYNANCY. It's been beautiful and mean¬ingful, and it seems that way more andmore as time marches on. Whatever,You're a Shining Star and Thehell with all the mix-ups, break-upsand throw-ups... Love a thousandtimes over, now and forever.HILLELHOUSENEEDS TO KNOWPlease help us with our mailing listCome, or mail to, Hillel, all changes inaddress Call 752-1127, come in, orwrite to 5715 Woodlawn Avenue.BLACKFRIARSThe final meeting is Sunday, June 3, at3:00 pm at Ms. Enid Reiser's. 5515 S.Dorchester. Election of new boardmembers, bring food for pot lucklunch, video showing of Sweet Charity.RESEARCHSUBJECTSWANTEDEarn 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 10:00-11:00 am 947-1794.CLAUDIATo Claudia, who if she could have,would have left Hyde Park with herremarkable world view and walkedthrough America, to help. Thank youfor the literary and political historylessons, the warmth, the concern, thesheer physical beauty even in the deadof winter Peace, love and Happy 21st.(2500 copies of "Deschooling Society"to be distributed by the College free ofcharge?!)SERVICESWill your child look forward toSeptember? Summer tutoring canprepare your child for fall Experienced teacher who loves kids is availablenow! Call 684-0395.LESBIANSAND GAY MENMarshalls are needed for the Marchagainst police harrassment (especial¬ly wymin). Training 6/2, 3 or 4;meeting 6/4; march 6/5. Call 549-2634SUMMER COURSEIN MODERNWESTERNARMENIANThis summer a fully accredited, nineweek, introductory level, intensivecourse in modern Western Armenianis being offered. The course will be theequivalent of a full-year, universitylevel language course. It will run fromJune 25 to August 27, 1979, and willmeet daily from 9:30 am till 12 00 pm,Monday through Friday. Heavy emphasis will be placed on the tundamentats of modern Western Armenian:grammar, reading, writing, oral expression and aural comprehensionFinancial assistance is available forthose who apply early The course in¬structor is Silva Tokattian, Lecturer inLinguistics. For further details, contact the Summer Extension Office at753-3137 or Mrs. Tokattian at 275-6798GAY AND LESBIANMarch against police harrassment.Tues 6/5 . 6 00 pm. Oak St. beach area,rally at Daly Ctr.POETRYA poetry Magazine (w/art) #7, teaturing Neil Aiers now on sale at ReynoldsClub Cr*•*' Hall and local bookstoresThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, June 1, 1979— 31'* V-S The Major Activities Boardcelebratesgraduation, exam week, andanything elseby welcoming backSTEVEGOODMANwith special guestJethro BurnsTonight at 8:30 p.m. MandelHall