Dean’s Student Task Force begins fall discussionsBy David RubinThe Dean’s Student Task Forceon Education in the College willhold its first fall meeting tomorrowat 8 pm in the East Lounge of IdaNoyes Hall.The Student Task Force wasformed last spring to evaluate andreport on the liberal arts curricu¬lum of the College. Tomorrow’smeeting, open to all interested stu¬dents, will include a brief state¬ment by Johnathan Z. Smith, deanof the College; a logistical reportby David Shute, the Task’s Forceadvocate to the dean; and a shorttalk by Ken Wissoker, a Task Forcemember.The Task Force is part of a gen¬eral review of the College by itsstudent and faculty members. Thestanding committee on curriculumof the College Faculty Council hasalready made the first of what wineventually be a series of reports on the College curriculum. The com¬mittee is examining the Core re¬quirements, the College Advisors,and the role of the University de¬partments in the operation of theCollege.David J. Smigelskis, associateprofessor in the New Collegiate Di¬vision and chairman of the stand¬ing committee, said the group’spurpose is “to talk about curricu¬lum as a set of four-year pro¬grams.” Its report, Smigelskissaid, will reflect what people, pri¬marily faculty members, thinkabout the College.According to Shute, the exis¬tence of a faculty committee doesnot mitigate the need for a similarstudent body.“The idea that students shouldbe concerned has not occurred tomost faculty committees,” saidShute, “students should be just asinvolved.” This view led him and Task Force co-founder LarryMcNally to start such a studentbody and seek the necessary re¬sources and support from Smith.Smith has given the Task Forcehis strong support. He said thattheir role would be “to look at thegap between rhetoric and what wedo.” Smith said the Task Forceshould look at how the College isdifferent from other colleges andhow it should be different. “Afterall,” Smith said, “there’s a thinline between being nuts and beingunique.”Smith said he hopes to make thereview of the College and its goalsan ongoing process. Presently, theTask Force occupies a singleroom, Gates-Blake 416. Eventual¬ly, Smith said he would like to com¬bine the student and faculty effortsinto a permanent force, endowedwith more significant office spaceand other resources. Both Smith and Shute expectsome cooperation between theTask Force and the standing com¬mittee in the near future. Howev¬er, Shute said the Task Forcewould be wary of the degree of fac¬ulty participation for fear that fac¬ulty might begin to dominate thediscussion.The final goal of the Task Forceis to make a report that will bothdescribe the College and make rec¬ommendations for changes in thecurriculum. This is not the onlygoal of the Task Force, andmembers cite such incidental ben¬efits as the stimulation of discus¬sion of the College by its students.To further this discussion, theTask Force is scheduling a seriesof public lectures on education andthe College. Two lectures have al¬ready been scheduled. On October23, Charles W. Wegener, HowardL. Willet Professor in the College will speak on “The Aims of Educa¬tion,” and on November 20, Karl J.Weintraub will give a lecture enti¬tled “Education and Culture”.Both talks will be given at 4 pm inSocial Science 122. In addition, theTask Force plans to announce reg¬ular office hours for students todiscuss their views on the Collegewith members of the group.David Shute,Task Forceco-founder4 . ~The Chicago Maroon“Solitary, singing in the West, I strike up for a new world.” —Walt WhitmanVol. 89, No. 11 The University of Chicago Copyright 1979 The Chicago Maroon Tuesday, October 9, 1979Two hurt in dorm brawlPrimitivo Rodriguez addresses “reorientation” forumCarol Klammer By Jamie GraffTwo University students weretaken to the emergency room atBillings Hospital, early Saturdaymorning with multiple headwounds after a private party at theShoreland turned into a brawl.According to observers, theparty in Room 1027 was beginningto fade around 1 am when threeCollege students, apparently unin¬vited, entered the room. ResidentPaul Brennan said “We didn’t in¬vite them and to my knowledge no¬Progressives view campus lifeBy Curtis BlackA “reorientation” forum held bythe Mobilization Committee for aProgressive Union drew fifty peo¬ple Thursday. Two students de¬scribed student life at the Universi¬ty, and urged new students tobecome involved in political activi¬ty in order to round out the collegeeducation and enrich the universi¬ty experience. There was also adiscussion on the significance of astudent movement, and the direc¬tions such a movement could takeat the University of Chicago.The Mobilization Committee an¬nounced that its next forum will beheld today, October 9 at 12 noon inIda Noyes. The forum, on the unionmovement on campus, is plannedto include representatives of thenew clerical union, the service andmaintenance employees union,and the Laboratory School teach¬ers union.The clericals and the Lab Schoolteachers are presently in contractdisputes with the university.Clay Martin, moderator of theforum for the Mobilization Com¬mittee, contrasted the University’s“progressive role in education andsociety” presented in OrientationWeek programs with “a largelyconservative outlook” and its“committment to the dominantbusiness class” which he traced to its founding by John D. Rocke¬feller.Sharon Pollack, a fourth yearcollege student who has workedwith Student Government andhelped form the Speak Out Coali¬tion and the Women’s Union, saidthat being politically involved as astudent gives a perspective on theeducation obtained at the Universi¬ty. “The University’s place in soci¬ety gives it a subjectivity of itsown,” Pollack said. She said whatis meant by “progress” here is theperpetuation of the system whichthe University is part of. "The Uni¬versity has a stake in telling usthings are a certain way.” shesaid.FeminismPollack said that for her. “fe¬minism is the most radical acti¬vism.” She said history is taught atthe University as “the history ofgreat white men,” and women atthe University are “forced to iden¬tify with men in power.” In doingso. they "sell themselves short,”Pollack said, and “run the risk ofbecoming most dangerous to oursisters. It is no accident thatHanna Gray, a woman, was chosento deal with the problem of Mar¬lene Dixon, another woman (asso¬ciate professor whose firing fromthe University sparked studentprotests; Gray headed a facultv committee to consider the firing),or that leaders of the anti-womencampaigns, Phyllis Schlaffly andAnita Bryant, are also women.”“Women here face a problemthat sheds light on the contradic¬tion felt by many students whowant to come here to learn but re¬alize that by doing so they are tak¬ing part in an institution whose ac¬tions they find appalling.” Pollacksaid that “by being an activisthere, you can study the thoughts ofgreat men without believing thatthey are the God-given truth.” Anactivist also gets “points of contactwith society” not available withinthe curriculum.Pollack recommended politicalinvolvement because to haveaccess to “new information youcan bring to your classes." youhave opportunity for “learning ex¬periences” such as meeting withadministrators and organizing stu¬dents. and “you can makechanges.”Primitive Rodriguez, a graduatestudent from Mexico who was ac¬tive in politics there, has workedwith the Organization of LatinAmerican Students, the May 22Committee and Mobilization Com¬mittee, and the Action Committeeon South Africa in his three yearsat the University. Rodriguez dis¬tinguished between two traditionsTurn to Page 3 body extended an invitation tothem.” One of the three claimed hewas invited.Club usedResidents of the Shoreland saw-one of the three students with whatthey describe as a stick or a club inhis hand before the time he went tothe party. Those at the party saidthat he tapped people with the stickand insulted them, calling them“whores, faggots, and drunks.”The three were then asked to leavethe party.The alleged club-wielder reportsthat he and one of his companionswent to his room on the ninth floorof the Shoreland and w aited for thethird in their party to return. Whenhe did not, they went back to theparty “because we figured thatsomething might have happened tohim.”Upon returning to the party, thestudents with the club reportedlycornered one of the students he hadbeen quarreling with before by thedoor. The student said, “He askedme to come out to the lobby. I felt afight coming on. He wouldn't letme go anywhere but to the door.When his attention lapsed. I wentinto the other room and askedsome others for help.”Another student then came out ofthe bedroom and told the studentwith the club “you are ruining theparty-leave.” One of the assailantsthen threw that student against thewall and the brawl began.Observers report the studentwith the stick stood away from thefighting on the floor. “When anopening developed, he went to itwith the stick.” said one of thosepresent. One of the victims was re¬portedly hit five or six times on thehead with the stick, which broke inthe course of the fight. Observersclaim they saw him hit people withthe stick fifteen or twenty timesthroughout the fight People at theparty eventually moved betweenthe two groups and got them outinto the hall.The student with the club claimed he went to 10th floor resident head James Wescoat. Wes-coat told both groups to leave theShoreland separately. Universitysecurity was not called and ap¬parently did not know about the in¬cident until they took statementsfrom the injured at the hospital.The club-wielder said that “thewhole party emptied out on us.There were 15 or 20 people comingat me from everywhere. The wholeparty was high.”He said “There were 15 of themand three of us and we got the bestof them.” He claims that the partyconsisted of “the freak group at theShoreland, the same group thatthrew the pie at the cop at theMcNamara thing.”The three alleged perpetratorswere at another party earlier in theevening at 5426 S. University Ave.They were involved in an alterca¬tion there and were convinced toleave. One of them returned to theapartment five minutes later withthe club, according to residents.The club was one of several banis¬ter standards over two feet longand two inches thick which hadbeen broken out on the floor belowthat night. The student, however,claims he found the club “outsidethe Shoreland on the street.”Complaints filedStudents who had been at theShoreland party met with directorof student housing Edward Tur-kington on Saturday night at 11D.m. They gave Turkington all theTurn to Page 3Staff—MeetingThere will be a Maroon staffmeeting today at 5 pm in Themaroon office The first threeissues will be evaluated andplans will be made for the Au¬tumn Quarter issues and activi¬ties.SEND A MAROONSUBSCRIPTION TOSOMEONE FAR AWAY!NAME _ADDRESSCITY STATE ZIPMAKE CHECKS PAYABLE TOCHICAGO MAROON. 1212 E. 59th. Chicago. Ill. 60637d RENEWALCH NEW SUBSCRIPTION$12 FOR ONE YEAR$8 FOR TWO QUARTERS$4 FOR ONE QUARTER TODAY7:30 P.M. IDA NOYES LIBRARYSTUDENTGOVERNMENTMEETINGOPEN ASSEMBLY MEETINGALL REPRESENTATIVESPLEASE ATTENDBotany BellyflopTues., Oct. 9, NoonStudent-FacultyTug of WarBotany PondHarper 500Wed., Oct. lO, NoonTricycle Race AroundHarper QuadThurs., Oct. 11,3 p.m.Women's PowderpuffFlag FootballStagg Field 19391979 FRL OCT. 128 p.m. Torchlight Parade9 p.m. Bonfire RallyNorth of BartlettlO p.m. Party at Phi Delta ThetaSaturday, Oct. 13HOMECOMINGlO a.m. Soccer vs. Beloitat Stagg FieldCalliope Parade1:30 p.m. Football vs. BeloitStagg FieldPost Game Reception -Alpha Delta Phi9-1 DANCE PARTYIda NoyesRock • Jazz • DiscoRefreshments2 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, October 9, 1979Open University, Mini-Courses, set registrationBy Jeff CaneThe Student Government Academic Af¬fairs Committee is initiating a program offive, free, non-credit academic “mini¬courses” taught by volunteer facultymembers this quarter. Registration for thefive courses will open Friday, October 12,starting at 9:30 am in the lobby of CobbHall.This experimental program is an attemptby Student Government to create an “openuniversity" by providing students non-cred¬it, academic alternatives to course-auditingand self-study. Courses will commence theweek of October 15, and run for either threeor five sessions of two to three hours each.Courses are described as seminar in nature,and each is limited to roughly ten students.The idea for a mini-course program origina¬ted last year as a result of the Academic Af¬fairs Committee’s participation in the “Lit-gtie 10 Conference”. The Conference was a|convention of representatives from the Ivy1?League schools, Sanford University and the|University of Chicago who met to compare4and discuss various academic and socialissues. Members of the Committee were im¬pressed with other schools’ academic flex-ibilty. The Committee noted that otherschools have different options which makeelective “mini-courses” possible.After the Conference, the Committee metwith Dean of the College Jonathan Z. Smithand discussed the idea of half-creditcourses. Instead of modifying the Universi¬ty’s traditional policy of one credit percourse, the Comittee decided to set up an al¬ternative program of free, non-credit, aca¬demic courses and sent out a letter lastspring to all faculty members in the College.The committee received thirty positive re¬sponses with six faculty members actuallywilling to teach. One of the six later had todrop out because of unexpected field work.Course OfferingsThe first five course offerings of the “free Lawrence Rosenwald will explore a densetextuniversity” will be:• Social Banditry as History and Myth:Ralph A. Austen, associate professor of His¬tory, will explore the relationship of ruralcriminals to the social order in literary andhistorical works.• The Anthropology7 of Monsters: A cross-cultural attempt to discover what effect thenotion of monsters has played in humanthought. Raymond Fogelson, professor ofanthropology and behavioral science willteach the course.• Stress, Emotions and Illness: Dr. ChaseP. Kimball will adress theory, research, andpractical applications of the mind, brain,and body.• An Intricate Poem: Shakespeare’s 129thSonnet: Lawrence Rosenwald, Harper Fel¬low in the College, will lead a detailed dis¬ cussion of the 129th Sonnet in order to arriveat the methodology for the reading of densepieces of writing.• Castaneda’s The Teachings of DonJuan: Jonathan Z. Smith, dean of the Col¬lege and the William Benton professor ofReligion and Human Sciences in the Col¬lege. will lead a close reading of Castane¬da’s work giving particular attention to theworld view embodied in the text and the phi¬losophical questions it raises.For the “naturally curious”The Chairman of the Academic AffairsCommittee, David Shute, a third-year En¬glish student, said that many interested fac¬ulty members had wanted to teach certaincourses in the past, but “they couldn’t jus¬tify devoting an entire Quarter to them”Shute says that these courses are "not lessloose intellectually, but less loose socially”,than regular academic courses.“These courses are directed towards peo¬ple who would be doing independent studyanyway,” said Shute, “or those who are nat¬urally curious".Shute noted that while many schools havea “free university”, the courses there areusually taught by students or graduate stu¬dents, and often the courses are non-aca¬demic.Non-academic, mini-courses are being of¬fered by the Student Activities Office this AQuarter. The SAO is offering twelve coursesfrom auto mechanics to wine appreciationat S10 to S25 a course. The SAO. says Shute,“addresses different needs”, than thosefound bv the Academic Affairs Committee.•By Darya GeeterRegistration for “Eclectic Ed.” a group of13 non-academic courses sponsored by theStudent Activities Office, opens tomorrow inthe Reynolds Club Corridor.“Eclectic Ed,” is an expansion of lastyear’s mini-course offerings. Program director Irene Conley said, “This is an ex¬pansion but also much more formalized,with specific times for registration. We hopeto reach people who perhaps never thoughtof taking courses like these before.”The mini-course program was organizedin response to a survey last year initiated byLaura Cottingham, a student in the College.Cottingham also helped organize the pro¬gram which was patterned on similar mini¬course offerings at other colleges.Courses offered include “the Stock Mar¬ket,” “Wine Appreciation,” and “Folk Gui¬tar,” and will be taught by a wide-range oflocal people. Myron Davis, a local photogra¬pher. will teach the photo course. The WineAppreciation course will be taught by a stu¬dent from California who grew up in a wine¬growing region, a stockbroker from theMerril-Lynch firm will teach about theStock Market and Harry Bostram from theUniversity Plant Department will continuehis popular Leaded Glass workshopRiley Davis, Director of Student Activi¬ties, said that the response to mini-coursesin the past has been “outstanding.” Al¬though the courses are offered to the com¬munity. University students are allowed toregister two days before the general public.Conley believes that the courses will almostbe filled by Friday.The courses will run from six weeks for anhour and a half each week. If successful,more courses will be offered in the WinterQuarter. Students have already suggestedadding courses in Mime and pottery mak¬ing.Conley hopes that the low cost (S10-S25)per course will encourage students to trydifferent types of eduational experiences.She said that the name “Eclectic Ed” de¬scribes the tone of the program well“We were looking for a name with educa¬tional overtones but a distinctly non-aca¬demic style. We must make it clear thatthese courses are fun and not accredited bythe University.”Tenants speak outFocusing on condominium conversions,high rents, tenant and landlord law, and ten¬ant owned cooperatives. 150 people gatheredat a South Side public hearing on tenantissues Sunday at Chicago Osteopathic Hos¬pital.According to one of the organizers, theforum was seen as a chance for tenants toair their gripes to politicians and each other.Among invited panelists were State Repre¬sentatives Susan Catania, Carol MoseleyBraun, Barbara Flynn Currie, and Aider-men Lawrence Blcom and Niles Sherman.“My rent went up more than 20 percentlast year,” said Hyde Park resident MorrieHorowitz, who called for "a tenant organiza¬tion to confront our landlords and our politi¬cians.”Harold Lucas, leader of the Black Ten¬ant’s Union and co-chairman of the forumcalled for the formation of a citywide tenantorganization to help preserve the inner citycommunities.“The poor, the elderly on fixed incomes,and the inner city blacks are being movedout, while the white middle class fleeing theenergy crunch, is returning to the city asurban pioneers’ ” said Lucas.Bloom told tenants to “go to the mayor. Waste less of your time on aldermen and goto her honor. She has intimidated the citycouncil, and led you on with promises tobring down excessive rents. Make her followthrough.”Co-opsDiane Preister, a member of a tenant-owned cooperative formed in 1945 by Uni¬versity students which now owns four build¬ings, spoke on the rigors and benefits ofbelonging to a cooperative, and presentedpeople with limited incomes “an attractivealternative” to poor housing, according toMilt Cohen, co-chairman of the meeting.Rent for a seven room apartment in one ofthe coop buildings was a little over $200 lastyear, according to Preistar, “because weput ail our money back into keeping up thebuilding,” she said. The membership fee forjoining is $100, refunded when the tenantmoves out of the coop, and the only obliga¬tion a tenant assumes in a coop is to shareequally in maintaining the entire buildingand grounds.The forum was the start of an organizingcampaign for the Hyde Park Tenants Union,which meets every second and fourth Thurs¬day at 7:30 pm at the Quaker MeetingHouse, 5615 S. Woodlawn. jBrawlContinued from Page 1 informa¬tion they had about the incident and de¬manded that the University take disciplin¬ary action against the three students. Afterthe meeting, the two injured students andanother who was slightly hurt initiated com¬plaint actions with the University and Chi¬cago police.Chicago police also talked to the allegedclub-wielder Saturday night. He said the po¬lice told him that since there was “no unbi¬ased observer.” any judge “will throw thewhole thing out.” He reported his version ofthe incident to the police on Saturdaynight.One of the injured was contacted Sundayby a Chicago police inspector and askedwhether he wanted to press the complaint.The student told the inspector that he woulddecide by 5 pm Monday “depending on whataction the University takes about this."The college disciplinary committee, madeup of faculty and students will have to makeany disciplinary decision related to the in¬cident. Lorna Straus, dean of students in theCollege, who convenes that committee, saidSunday. “I haven't received an official re¬port of the incident yet. but I expect to hearfrom Mr. Turkington tomorrow (Monday)morning.”ProgressivesContinued from Page 1at the University."In Mexico, as well as in most of the ThirdWorld, the University of Chicago is the ne¬farious Milton Friedman's Chicago Boys,and one of the leading institutions providingthe ideology and the ideologues for U S. im¬perialistic policies.” But he said he learnedupon coming here that “in the campus com¬munity, the Milton Friedman followers rep¬resent a minority, though a well-establishedand pretentious group." Rodriguez saidthere is an “ ‘other side of this campus’ tra¬ditions” which had made him feel at homeand come to love this community.“As an investment of the Trustees, theUniversity of Chicago stands for elitist priv¬ileges. but as a work place and as a source ofcritical knowledge and compromise, thisUniversity stands for the interests of thepeople.”Rodgriguez called it “refreshing and en¬couraging” to discover that “in one of the most select arenas of U.S. power,” dissentand rebellion not only exist but “are rootedin the structure and function of the Universi¬ty.”Dissent and creativity”His involvement in the University’s politi¬cal community made life here “more thanpapers, fees, restrictions, loneliness, fearsand paranoia,” Rodriguez said, but added“a sense of being, a spirit of courage, crea¬tivity. and independence.” Noting that “theadministration's function seems to beoriented to diminish these activities, hesaid. “To think, to understand, to engage,and to live are not the task of the Universityof Chicago administration but the challengeof the University of Chicago people."Rodriguez called the eighties “a new his¬torical period." a time when "progressivesand revolutionaries meet a common task: totake command of change, of the movementthis campus needs.” He said this would give“the revolution a chance to walk along thepace of reality, and reforms an opportunityto get to the heart of the problem.”Representatives of the Hyde Park Ten¬ants Union <HPTU) and the clericalworkers union addressed the group briefly.HPTU spokesman Ralph Scott told of effortsto organize tenants, and a citywide coalitionpressing for condominium and fair rent leg¬islation. Mike Hoffheimer from the clericalsspoke of last week's clerical vote rejectingthe University's contract proposal and au¬thorizing a strike if necessary “Studentsupport will be absolutely critical in anyconfrontation,” Hoffheimer said.The Mobilization Committee also an¬nounced the appearance of Bernadette Dev¬lin. Irish revolutionary and former Britishparliament member, at Ida Noyes on Thurs¬day, Oct. 11: a Conference on registrationand the draft at Northwestern University,Oct. 20-21; a Conference on LiberationStruggles sponsored by Stokely Carmi¬chael's All African People's RevolutionaryParty at the University, Oct. 19-20; and A-bortion Rights Week, sponsored by the Re¬productive Rights National Network duringthe last week of OctoberThe Committee also announced it wouldhold a general meeting tomorrow night at7:30 in Ida Noyes, and two organizationalmeetings to convene a Progressive StudentUnion on Tuesday and Thursday of nextweek. 7:30 p.m. at Ida Noyes.The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, October 9, 1979 — 3JOIN THE U.C. SKI CLUBINDECEMBER 15-22,1979• Seven nights lodging indeluxe condominiums atthe lifts• Six days all area lift tickets$240.00$100.00 deposit due 10-24Informational MeetingThursday, Oct. 117 p.m. Ida NoyesComplete information on all our activ-ties for the year.Featuring slides and a film.Memberships available $7.50/yr.Applications for the Vail trip.INTERESTED IN RACING? Check out theSki Team. Our low key approach is de¬signed to improve your skiing while hav¬ing a great time.DON7 MISS THE VAIL TRIPPLAN NOWNeed info call 955-9646 -tJi©<ra>«>a>(F©0X33 EK’STCtDtRIfc-'S>az?yo arfiawtRsmnrtr«vr>sv°[HRn?>Axr -trusoxi) =4fea>a> UW&R$fflELd<o>pu^<2>JF TBOoKg WJ3>o©t»IhL_Pete®?JPsudIL ?&iedLri(dlTL.SDa^iipl "3*T’ee4nva»vvicir-'tl&oiyr1 JtSlaro't—3>avS«L ZMkT^efll.3D®£.®c*4ji>cDEVIL IN. HERv 'JJ'jLp-OOO. &HO,i 1120pmW MS2*"" INNOCENT' V“,V COUPLES720 i 10 00pm.J^VTHURSDAV, OCT. IIOUANTRELL AUD. ICOWm)uc I P jugiiiRtp-uwofts nor APMirrcoOMMLV$2.004 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, October 9, 1979Alien tuningsat WoodwardComposer Easley Blackwood, professorin the department of music and the Col¬lege, will lead off the ninth year of Wood¬ward Court Lectures next Sunday when hespeaks on “Electronic Music in Alien Tun¬ings, (with illustrations by the compos¬er.)”Blackwood is a noted composer, whoseSymphony No. 4 received its world pre¬miere performance by the Chicago Sym¬phony last year.Three other lectures have been sche¬duled for Fall Quarter:Sunday, Oct. 28: Leon R. Kass. Henry R.Luce Professor in the College, will speakon “Biology and Human Affairs: Whetherto Whither and Why?”Tuesday, Nov. 6; Richard G. Stern. Pro¬fessor in the Department of English, theCollege, and a member of the Committeeon General Studies in the Humanities, willspeak on “The Invention of the Real."Sunday, Nov. 11: Arthur Mann, the Pres¬ton and Sterling Morton Professor of Histo¬ry. will speak on “The 1960s Revisited.”All lectures begin at 8:30 pm in theWoodward Court cafeteria and are fol¬lowed by a reception in the apartment ofIzaak and Pera Wirszup, Resident Mastersof Woodward Court and the sponsors of thelectures. Resident food critic Calvin Thrill¬ing says the food at the receptions is in¬variably among the best available oncampus.Art to sleep forThe camp-out has ended, but there isstill a chance to pick up an original print orwatercolor from the Joseph R. Shapiro,“Art To Live With” collection.Distribution of the several hundredworks will begin at 4 pm today in the Clois¬ter Club at Ida Noyes Hall, where the col¬ News briefsCompiled by David Glockner lowed by a bonfire at 9:30 and, later aparty sponsored jointly by Psi Upsilon. PhiDelta Theta, and Phi Gamma Delta frater¬nities.Saturday’s highlight is the football gamebetween the Maroons and Lake Forestwhich will begin at Stagg Field at 1:30.Among the half-time entertainment will bethe introduction of several players fromthe team’s pre-1940 glory days, a kazooband, and an alumni band. A homecomingdance is scheduled for 9 pm - 1 am at IdaNoyes Hal. Freshmen and orientationaides receive free tickets, but everyoneelse will have to pay a $1.50 admissioncharge. Jazz, rock, and disco bands willplay at the dance. UCID required.Vacancy...lection has been on display for the pastweek.Those with the first crack at the collec¬tion will be members of the small group ofconnoisseurs who spent Monday night atthe Ida Noyes Lounge to get low ticketnumbers for admission to the distribution.Those students will be admitted to the dis¬play area to choose their artwork in theorder of the number they hold.Students, staff, and faculty membersmay borrow any work from the collectionfor the fall quarter by paying a $3 insur¬ance fee.RosenbergmemorialThe University will hold a memorial ser¬vice this Wednesday for Harold Rosen¬berg, professor emeritus on the Commit¬tee on Social Thought and the departmentof art. Rosenberg died on July 1, 1978. Thememorial service will be held at 3:30 pmtomorrow in Bond Chapel. «■<** ^ „..Mr. Rosenberg, a noted art critic andscholar, will also be honored at Wednesdayafternoon’s opening of the Smart Galleryexhibit “Abstract Expressionism: A Trib¬ute to Harold Rosenberg." The exhibit willrun through Nov. 11. An opening receptionwill be held at the gallery between 5 and7:00 pm tomorrow.Homecomingcomes againSince the novelty has worn off a bit, BobGreene may not write another columnabout it and it may not make the networknews again, but the University will hold itssecond annual new and improved Home¬coming celebration this weekend.The festivities will begin Friday night at8 pm in the field located just east of Regen-stein Library. A torchlight parade throughcampus is scheduled to begin at 8:30. fol¬ r*\: .*Two University-owned apartment build¬ings near the corner of 55th and Ellis metan unlamented end last week as wreckingcrews began to demolish them and cratethe bricks for sale to a Chicago brick¬yard.The buildings, formerly used for studenthousing, had been used only for storageduring the past two years because theywere in disrepair. The University finallydecided to demolish the buildings becauseof the expense involved in heating andmaintaining them, according to Assoc.University Architect Edward Walsh.“They just had to come down.”MEET PEOPLE...HOME¬COMINGPARTY!★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★SAT., OCT. 13, 8:00 P.M.★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★Proudly featuring: Country Rock byTimothy Pee and the R. R. 3, A Disco,and The U.C. Jazz BandCover Charge $1.00Freshmen: Don’t forget the tickets you receivedin your orientation packets for free admission.Jointed sponsored by S.G. & O.B.S. AN EXHIBIT OFAMERICAN EDITORIAL CARTOONISTSremolds club loungeOctober 9-19<W4 care \ajMf rv-.e Mosf nycov\£i> + c* rec^ci .STOP THE.A)GAA1A/ PICTURES]tThTT\r*-HuIcjv—rThe Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, October 9, 1979 — 5JOIN THE U.C. SKI CLUBINDECEMBER 15-22,1979• Seven nights lodging indeluxe condominiums atthe lifts• Six days all area lift tickets$240,00$100.00 deposit due 10-24Informational MeetingThursday, Oct. 117 p.m. Ida NoyesComplete information on all our activ-ties for the year.Featuring slides and a film.Memberships available $7.50/yr.Applications for the Vail trip.INTERESTED IN RACING? Check out theSki Team. Our low key approach is de¬signed to improve your skiing while hav¬ing a great time.DON'T MISS THE VAIL TRIPPLAN NOWNeed info call 955-9646 uto^rmbejd(m TOoSCg WTtB’oolpTL-tfTD*CbiP D&stcjupI Cut*-5^S£rtr«KD«otHEDChamberlin House presentsm evening cfrehncd cnlerfajnmcnl£PDEVIL IN HEROamo.ULZOpmt“‘ JNNOCENTCOUPLEST2D f’ lO'OOpm.oct 11QUANTRELL AllD. ECODO209)uc to RfQtitm p - uwotk ,g nor Aonir no0MLY$2.004 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, October 9, 1979—Alien tuningsat WoodwardComposer Easley Blackwood, professorin the department of music and the Col¬lege. will lead off the ninth year of Wood¬ward Court Lectures next Sunday when hespeaks on “Electronic Music in Alien Tun¬ings, (with illustrations by the compos¬er.)”Blackwood is a noted composer, whoseSymphony No. 4 received its world pre¬miere performance by the Chicago Sym¬phony last year.Three other lectures have been sche¬duled for Fall Quarter:Sunday, Oct. 28: Leon R. Kass, Henry R.Luce Professor in the College, will speakon "Biology and Human Affairs: Whetherto Whither and Why?”Tuesday, Nov. 6; Richard G. Stern. Pro¬fessor in the Department of English, theCollege, and a member of the Committeeon General Studies in the Humanities, willspeak on “The Invention of the Real.”Sunday, Nov. 11: Arthur Mann, the Pres¬ton and Sterling Morton Professor of Histo¬ry, will speak on “The 1960s Revisited.”All lectures begin at 8:30 pm in theWoodward Court cafeteria and are fol¬lowed by a reception in the apartment ofIzaak and Pera Wirszup. Resident Mastersof Woodward Court and the sponsors of thelectures. Resident food critic Calvin Thrill¬ing says the food at the receptions is in¬variably among the best available oncampus.Art to sleep forThe camp-out has ended, but there isstill a chance to pick up an original print orwatercolor from the Joseph R. Shapiro,“Art To Live With” collection.Distribution of the several hundredworks will begin at 4 pm today in the Clois¬ter Club at Ida Noyes Hall, w'here the col-AN EXHIBIT OFAMERICAN EDITORIAL CARTOONISTSremolds club loungeOctober 9 - 19The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, October 9, 1979 — 5lowed by a bonfire at 9:30 and, later aparty sponsored jointly by Psi Upsilon, PhiDelta Theta, and Phi Gamma Delta frater¬nities.Saturday’s highlight is the football gamebetween the Maroons and Lake Forestwhich will begin at Stagg Field at 1:30.Among the half-time entertainment will bethe introduction of several players fromthe team’s pre-1940 glory days, a kazooband, and an alumni band. A homecomingdance is scheduled for 9 pm - 1 am at IdaNoyes Hal. Freshmen and orientationaides receive free tickets, but everyoneelse will have to pay a $1.50 admissioncharge. Jazz, rock, and disco bands willplay at the dance. UCID required.Vacancylection has been on display for the pastweek.Those with the first crack at the collec¬tion will be members of the small group ofconnoisseurs who spent Monday night atthe Ida Noyes Lounge to get low ticketnumbers for admission to the distribution.Those students will be admitted to the dis¬play area to choose their artwork in theorder of the number they hold.Students, staff, and faculty membersmay borrow any work from the collectionfor the fall quarter by paying a $3 insur¬ance fee.RosenbergmemorialThe University will hold a memorial ser¬vice this Wednesday for Harold Rosen¬berg, professor emeritus on the Commit¬tee on Social Thought and the departmentof art. Rosenberg died on July 1, 1978. Thememorial service will be held at 3:30 pmtomorrow in Bond Chapel. Mr. Rosenberg, a noted art critic andscholar, will also be honored at Wednesdayafternoon’s opening of the Smart Galleryexhibit “Abstract Expressionism: A Trib¬ute to Harold Rosenberg.” The exhibit willrun through Nov 11. An opening receptionwill be held at the gallery between 5 and7:00 pm tomorrow.Homecomingcomes againSince the novelty has worn off a bit, BobGreene may not write another columnabout it and it may not make the networknews again, but the University will hold itssecond annual new and improved Home¬coming celebration this weekend.The festivities will begin Friday night at8 pm in the field located just east of Regen-stein Library. A torchlight parade throughcampus is scheduled to begin at 8:30. fol¬ Two University-owned apartment build¬ings near the corner of 55th and Ellis metan unlamented end last week as wreckingcrews began to demolish them and cratethe bricks for sale to a Chicago brick¬yard.The buildings, formerly used for studenthousing, had been used only for storageduring the past two years because theywere in disrepair. The University finallydecided to demolish the buildings becauseof the expense involved in heating andmaintaining them, according to Assoc.University Architect Edward Walsh,“They just had to come down.”News briefsCompiled by David Glockner«• r do*i case \a)M + Hcuuip&pjrspr,** me a-f /nijSTOP TME»tAAW PICTURE*MEET PEOPLE...HOME¬COMINGPARTY!★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★SAT., OCT. 13, 8:00 P.M.★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★*******Proudly featuring: Country Rock byTimothy Pee and the R. R. 3, A Disco,and The U.C. Jazz BandCover Charge $1.00Freshmen: Don’t forget the tickets you receivedin your orientation packets for free admission.Jointed sponsored by S.G. & O.B.S.A Papal Celebration ; ■,;Photos by Andrew W. BrownPopefesf, Popestock, whatever you callit, never before in Chicago history hadsuch a great cross-section of humanitygathered with such singleness of pur¬pose. Almost every ethnic group, Chin¬ese, Italian, Irish, Polish, to name justa few, almost every religious faith, asvaried as Catholics are from Muslims.These photos bear witness to last Fri¬day's celebration at Grant Park,Refusing to letlife be trivializedBernard Brown"Religious organizations worried about what valuethey had in contemporary society. Well, they didn'thave much value at all if they used religion againsttheorists of Black Holes."By Mark WallachAccording to legend, when John D.Rockefeller founded the University ofChicago, he stipulated that the Universitywould receive financial assistance from himonly as long as Rockefeller Chapel con¬tinued to be the tallest building on campus.The edict, laid down not from vanity butfrom religious fervor, was designed to helpinsure that religious concerns have a conti¬nuing importance to the University com¬munity.The newest Dean of the Chapel entrustedwith that tall order is the Rev. Bernard C.Brown who was named dean early last sum¬mer. Brown’s primary goal as Dean is to in¬crease student participation in Chapel ac¬tivities. Toward that end, the Chapel held aday-long celebration last Sunday which wasdesigned to introduce students to the rangeof activities which the Chapel offers.Perhaps the Chapel’s purpose was best ex¬emplified by a poster which was handed outcontaining a drawing of a giraffe and afriendly admonishment to “Stick Your NeckOut — Participate!”As part of that effort to reach out tostudents, the Chapel is hoping for volunteerswho will usher at services, act asRockefeller Chapel tour guides, read at ser¬vices, and form humanitarian servicegroups. The Chapel will also offer a chanceldrama group directed by Ron Falzone ofCourt Theatre and will make a renewed ef¬fort to involve students in the Chapel Choir.Perhaps the most important new aspect atRockefeller will be a series of discussiongroups designed to address religious ques¬tions, problems of morality and the com¬plexities of contemporary life. On Sundaymornings, Methodist Chaplain PhilipBlackwell will lead a class broadly titled,“The Biblical Covenant and Life in theEighties” and on Thursday evenings DeanBrown is leading a class concerned withcontemporary problems in Christian ethics.In last Thursday’s discussion, for example,the class wrestled with Immanuel Kant’s be¬lief that lying is never justified — even if itmeans betraying someone hiding from amurderer.the Chapel’s stress on contemporary“relevance” is unsurprising because Brownfeels that in the past, religious organizationsin general have “suffered a kind of failure ofnerve” in presenting the challenge of theregligious quest.“Religious organizations worried aboutwhat value they had at all if they usedreligion against theorists of Black Holes. . .(Religious groups) suffered a terrific defeatto science because they felt they had amonopoly on truth.“We have to have a more humbleawareness of the environment of competingclaims for attention, for belief. We can’t behesitant to say what is present in Scriptureswhich does have a religious claim, a moralclaim. We have to make clear to people thatthere is something at stake.”As an example, Brown cites the inter¬secting concerns of religion and ecology.“Certain kids of things from Scriptures —care of the earth, the proper conditions forlife, the concern for future generations —these emphases are religiously based.”Having been a minister in Universitycommunities for over two decades. Brownfeels immensely rewarded — andsometimes frustrated — by working withcollege-age students.“You’re working with students at a for¬midable stage of their life — seeking out avocation, establishing patterns of relation¬ships, forming values, perhaps away fromthe family for the first time,” Brown observ¬ed, “They may be learning that life is muchmore difficult than they ever dreamed.“Often young people are circumscribedby illness, death of a parent, threats to self-identity, betrayal. To share that with a per¬son in a very, very honest way is gratifying.When that sharing takes place I feel affirm¬ed as a human being. The frustration comes from knowing that there are limitations ofwhat you can do for a person.”Another reason for Brown’s special in¬terest in student participation in the Chapelis his belief that it can help offset some ofthe negative influence of popular culture —an influence which Brown finds very troubl¬ing.“The power of popular culture is really itsability to provide images that people canidentify with,” Brown says. “The very suc¬cess of advertising seems to be predicatedon reducing a person. . . It seems to me —and I can’t prove it — as if peoplesometimes talk to each other as if they wereactors in a television commercial. If you canget people to act in predictable ways, thenyou can control them.”Brown sees religion and art as antidotes tothe pervasiveness of popular culture:“I think everything we do in the religiousliturgy — extending into personal relationsand groups — is very much a part of a totalexperience, to use an awful word, a“complexifying” experience — a refusal toallow people to settle for something that isuntrue...“The most successful way (to combatpopular culture’s negative influences) isthrough art itself. Music. It makes peoplerealize that there are more sides tothemselves than they ever knew. If you canadd to art, the religious liturgy, then you’vereally got something.”Brown’s emphasis on student participa¬tion in Chapel activities is quite differentfrom that of his predecessor, E. SpencerParsons, who was deeply interested in hisera’s political activities. Brown served as an assistant to Parsons during a time whenParsons was deeply engaged with the pro¬test movement of the late 60s and early 70s.At a time when other University ad¬ministrators were openly hostile to the pro¬test movements. Parsons was helping tolead them. He held quarterly anti-war Con¬vocations, offered the use of the Chapel tothe Students for a Democratic Society SDS),and allowed war deserters to use the Chapelas a place of refuge. WGN radio, which hadbeen broadcasting Chapel sermons for twodecades, cancelled its broadcasts becauseof Parson’s anti-war convictions. In addi¬tion, Parsons, who fought to have abortionslegalized, helped women obtain abortionsduring the period when they were illegal.Brown was very much a part ot thesepolitical upheavals — only much morequietly so than Parsons. Brown counselleddraft evaders in trouble with the law andhelped to insure that they received fairtreatment at a time when reactions againstthem were often frenzied. As for abortion.Brown couldn’t support Parson's position.“We’re very good friends and we agreed todisagree.” Brown said recently.Parson’s philosophy was ideally suited tohis era. He felt that the Chapel could bestfulfill its religious function by serving as aconscience for the community. He toldBrown, “You’re ministering to a passing parade. You can raise issues you hope willhave an impact.”Unsurprisingly, students found theChapel’s traditional services less and lessrelevant. In 1969, Chapel House, the centerfor discussions on ethical, Scriptural, andhistorical issues, folded. Chapel House hadalso served as a social center and as a placefor students to discuss vocational objec¬tives. Its proposed successor at the site,Pahlavi House, was never built, after prom¬ises of financial assistance from the Shah ofIran were never kept. After that, BishopBrent House tried to replace Chapel Housebut it was never really accepted as the Uni¬versity religious center and the four denom¬inations that had had special programs inChapel House — the Methodists. UnitedCampus Ministries, the Foreign Ministries,and the Lutherans — all abandoned BishopBrent House in order to establish their owncampus churches. Perhaps, too, student ac¬tivists may have felt that they could bestpursue their interest through these separatechurchesWith campus activism more dormant‘han in the 60s, it is fair to say that Bernard3rown is a different sort of dean than Par-ions, with different sorts of strategies, in anira that is also very different than that of^arsons.“One of the differences is that politicalalternatives are not as sharply defined,”Brown said. “When you’ve got a war that’svery unpopular you can mobilize a lot ofsupport. In our time — who knows9 There’snuclear energy, perhaps. I'm much more in¬terested in ethical reflection when thingsare not polarized, when better choices areavailable. . . I'm not hungering for the olddays.”Himself the son of a minister. BernardBrown grew up in several small towns inNorth Dakota. Because of his parents, whooften gave gifts to the disadvantaged,Brown remembers always having a strongconscience and an idea of humanity's suffer¬ings. As a youngster, he once got his glassesbroken in a fight with a child of anunemployed worker and felt that somethingwas not quite right when the child's parentsinsisted on paying for the glasses. At DukeUniversity, Brown suddenly confronted aworld where “life was more difficult than Ihad ever dreamed.” But after a painful firstyear, he survived.In 1955. Brown came to the University topursue his interest in the ministry, thenserved a three-year term as a minister atthe University of Minnesota. In 1958. hebegan a four-year sojourn at the Universityof the Philippines where he suddenly foundhimself uncomfortably located as a richman in a labor-intensive economy. “Therewere thousands and thousands ofunemployed people. People wanted to beyour gardener, your driver, your maid.”In the early 60s, Brown returned to theUniversity where he did his dissertation on asmall grass-roots black advocacy and civil-rights group that was separate from MartinLuther King’s movement. Shortly thereaf¬ter, he became an assistant to the Dean ofRockefeller Chapel. An opera lover. BrownBrown has also done stagework with Gilbertand Sullivan.If Brown had to describe himself in aword, the word he would pick would be“communitarian.”“It is basic to human beings to be in com¬munity with one another as creatures ofGod. contributing to the fulfillment of oneanother.” he said.“I fundamentally believe that there’s adisposition in people to be religious Peopleare basically not content to have their livestrivialized. That’s the promise with whichyou work.”WGN radio, which had been broadcasting Chapelsermons for two decades, cancelled its broadcastsbecause of Parsons's anti-war convictions.Shapiro Art-to-Live With CollectionWill be distributed today,Tuesday. October 9.1979 at4:00 p.m., Ida Noyes $3.00 until Dec. 1 1. U. C. I. D. requiredGet a real art work for that blank wall!The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, October 9, 1979 — 7LAFFER REAL ESTATE& DEVELOPMENT COMPANYREAL ESTATE BROKERSales • Conversions • DevelopmentsSelling Real Estate is for ProfessionalsWalterB. Laffer IIReal Estate Broker667-5745Your South Side specialist workinq for youLAFFER REAL ESTATE& DEVELOPMENT COMPANYHARVARD BUSINESS SCHOOLMBA PROGRAMAn Admissions Representative fromHarvard Graduate School of Business Administrationwill be on campusTuts (i a v , Oct o b c r 16, 1979to meet with students interested inthe two-year MBA ProgramContact theCaieer Planning and Placement Centerfor more details and to sign up loran information session.Ihr\nrd Business School is lonrnittcd tothe principle of equal educational opportunityand evaluates candidates without regard torace. se\. creed, national origin or handicapDISCOUNT MAGAZINESStudents, Faculty, Staff are eligible fordiscount rates on major magazines. Upto 70% off newsstand price and 50%off regular subscription prices.Newsweek . $1 598/yearTime . . 1820/yearBusiness Week . . 1 425/yearNew Yorker . . 15°°/yearWriter’s Digest . . . 9°°/yearHarper’s . 6°°/8 mos.Esquire . . . 897/yearFortune . . 15°°/yearSports Illustrated . . . . . 1560/yearRolling Stone . . . 798/yearPlayboy 1 250/yearSend ORDERS with names and addressto:Subscription BureauP.O. Box A3092Chicago. III. 60690Please enclose payment or indicate“bill later.” The Tai Chi Ch’uan Clubinvites you to an introductory class ofChi Ch'uan on Wednesday, Oct. lO,1979. Tai Chi Ch'uan is slow, soft,graceful, balletic and a rational meansof self defense.Tai Chi meets everyWednesday, 7.30 p.m.at Blue Gargoyle5655 S. Universityand every Sunday, 7:30 p.m.4945 S. DorchesterEnter on 50th StreetalsoKung-fuEvery Sunday, 6.-30 p.m.4945 S. DorchesterWORKSHOP IN HEBREW CALLIGRAPHY(Reading Knowledge of Hebrew Required)SUNDA Y — OCTOBER 28 — 2:00-4:30 P.M.Instructor. Darryl Rotman, Calligrapher. Artist. LibrarianHILLEL FOUNDATION, 5715 WoodlawnSign up at Hillel or call: 752-1127NATIONAL LAMPOON'Sol OCTOBERCOMEDYISSUEIt's October and the leaves are turning brown. It is a season ofchange — the clear, cold death of winter shines ahead of us.Soon we will be able to see our breath, frisk with small dogs inthe snow, and roll our cars over on patches of black ice. Withwinter approaching and good jokes sure to be as scarce assummer birds, now is the time to lay in a winter's supply ofjokes in the new October comedy issue of National Lampoon;and as for summer birds, you can probably mail away for themto Florida Yes, the National Lampoon Comedy issue hasenough rich, plump guffaws to keep you chortling right intospring. So go buy one now at your local newsstand orbookstore before David Frost starts nipping people's noses,making it a pain to go outside A gathering will be heldto celebrate the memory ojIL1ROLD ROSENBERGon Wednesday, October to, 1979at three-thirty o'clockin Joseph Bond Chapelat The University of Chicago1025 East 58th Street[STANLEY H. KAPLANFor Over 41 Years The Standard ofExcellence In Test Preparation 1f MCAT* DAT* LSAT]1 8RE • 6RE PSYCH • 6RE BIO • 6MAT JPCAT • OCAT • VAT • MAT • SAT !NATIONAL MEDICAL BOARDS • VQE• ECFMG !FLEX • NATL DENTAL BOARDS ‘TOEFLPODIATRY BOARDS • NURSING BOAROSFlailbM Profltxm, and Hour*Visit Any CMtif tm Saa far I^ T,*f**H *• Makl TH Oiffinaci ■nffrlflN t««t awamnow1 UncstMtai Ctttttttt Mm*ten AnM.Y 10022 (m A4 At. TUT PfKPAMATlONMCClAUSTt ftlNCI 1111CmUrs * tfaior US Cit*s Putrto lice1<xomo C*U4« ICHICAGO CENTER6216N CLARKCHICAGO, ILLINOIS 6066C1312) 76A 5151S W SUBURBAN10 S LAGRANGE ROADSUITE 201LAGRANGE, ILLINOIS 605251312) 362-664© SPRIN6, SUMMERPALL IMTENSIVESCOURSES SRAKTINGTHIS MOUTH:CUE....LSATSAT. . . • GItE • • . . G. 1ATL Courses Constantly UpdatedLicensing Exams In Center Self-StudyFor Mormtto* About Offt* Contort in Mora TN#n to Ma,o' uS Cm** A AbroadOl/TEIDE N.Y. STATE CALL TOLL FREE: M0-223-17UHARVARD UNIVERSITYKENNEDY SCHOOLOF GOVERNMENTIS LOOKING FOR FUTURELEADERS IN PUBLIC AFFAIRSLearn about Harvard’s Master’sProgram in Public Policyand ManagementTHURSDAY, OCT. 112-4P.M.with Dot BambochDean of Students atCAREER COUNSELING and PLACEMENT5706 University Ave.Seniors, Juniors, all majors welcome.The Chicago Political Union presents:George Travers vs Myron CherryCommonwealth Edison Speaker’s Bureau Environmental Lawyer Sierra ClubBe it Resolved: That the United States Should SignificantlyIncrease its Committment to Nuclear EnergyWednesday October 10 7:30 pm Kent HallSpeeches from the audience will be entertained8 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, October 9, 1979 1\I Calendar^| TUESDAYPerspectives: Topic: “Issues of Concern forSeparated and Divorced Catholics" guests TeresaSullivan, Father James Flosi, and Father ThomasP. Doyle, 6:30 am, Channel 7.Art to Live With: Collection Distribution. Spon¬sored by Student Activities 4:00 pm, Ida Noyes.Cognitive Science Lecture Series: “A Feature-Integration Theory of Attention” speaker AnneTreisman, 4:00 pm, Social Science 122.Hillel: Beginning Conversational Hebrew, 5:30-7:00pm, Hillel.Hillel: Intermediate Conversational Hebrew, 7:00-8:30 pm, Hillel.Calvert House: Instructions on the Catholic Faith,7:30 pm. All welcome.Hillel: Modern Jewish Philosophy class, 7:30 pm,Hillel.DOC Films: “Seventh Heaven" 8:00 pm, Cobb.Astronomy Club: Meets 8:00 pm, Ryerson 251.Everyone welcome, enter through Eckhart.Hillel: Israeli Folk Dancing, Ida Noyes Theatre,8:30-10:00 pm.Hillel: Advanced Conversational Hebrew, 8:30-10:00pm, Hillel.WEDNESDAYPrespectives: Topic: “Magnetohydrodynamic Elec¬trical Power Generation” guests Michael Petrick,Richard Smith, 6:30 am, Channel 7.Carillon Series: 12:15 pm, recital by Robert Lodine,at Rockefeller Chapel.Crossroads: English classes for foreign women, 2:00pm.Committee on Social Thought: Tribute to HaroldRosenberg, 3:30 pm, Bond Chapel.Spartacus Youth League: Informal discussion on“Soviet Troops in Cuba, U.S., Out of GuantanamoBay” 6:00 pm, Ida Noyes Memorial Room. DOC Films: "Sabrina" 7:15 pm, “Love in the After¬noon” 9:30 pm, Cobb.Badminton Club: Meets 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes Gym¬nasium.Calvert House: Bible Study at Woodward Ct. spon¬sored by Calvert House, 7:30 pm.Mobilization Committee: Meets 7:30 pm, Ida NoyesHall.Chicago Political Union: A Parliamentary Debate,7:30 pm, Kent Hall.Tai Chi Club: Meets 7:30 pm, Blue Gargoyle.Calvert House: Calvert House Prayer Group, 8:00pm, Calbert House.Science Fiction Club: Meets 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes.Everyone Welcome.THURSDAYPerspectives: Topic: “Cooperation Between theU.S. and the U.S.S.R. on MagnetohydrodynamicElectrical Power Generation” guests MichaelPetrick and Richard Smith, 6:30 am, Channel 7.NOMOR: Planning session 3:00 pm, Ida Noyes Hall2nd floor.Physics Colloquium: Speaker John A. Hertz, 4:30pm, Eckhard 133.Bernadette Devlin: on the struggle in NorthernIreland, 4:00 pm, Cloister Club Ida Noyes.Dept, of Microbiology: “Malaria in Vitro: Studieson Polymorphic Red Blood Cells” speaker Dr.Milton Friedman, 4:00 pm, Cummings 11th floorseminar room.Computation Center: Introduction to the DEC-204:00-5:00 pm. Cobb 107.Folklore Society: Meets 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes firstfloor lounge.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Lecture - “TheCity of San’a” 8:00 pm, Breasted Hall, Oriental In¬stitute.Hillel: Class in Talmud, 8:00 pm, Hillel.Law School Films: “Sullivan’s Travels” 8:30 pm,Law School Auditorium.-rttof A rnrUgERAtEDSTUDENT GOVERNMENTACADEMIC AFFAIRS COMMITTEEANNOUNCESTHE PILOT PROGRAMTHE OPEN UNIVERSITYThe Open University is an attempt by Student Government and the faculty of the College to help fillthe presently existing gap in the non-credit academic opportunities of the University between course¬auditing and self-study.The courses listed below are free, non-credit, academic courses taught by volunteer faculty mem-p’oers They are all to a degree interdisciplinary and are appropriate for students in any division ordisciplineThe courses all commence the week of October 15, and run for either three or five sessions of twoto three hours each. Registration for these courses will occur Friday, October 12, starting at 9:30a.m., in the lobby of Cobb Lecture HallThe courses are all siminar in nature and therefore enrollment will be limited. We suggest interestedstudents attempt to register as early Friday as possibleS. G. 1. Social Banditry as History and MythRalph A. Austen, associate Professor,Dept, of History and the CollegeWednesdays, 11:30 a.m., Pick 203. 5 sessions, limit 10 students.S. G. 2. The Anthropology of MonstersRaymond D Fogelsonn Professor Depts. Anthropologyand Behavioral Sciences and the CollegeWednesday, 11:30 a.m., Pick 203. 5 sessions, limit 10 students.S. G. 3. Stress, Emotions, and illnessChase P Kimball. M D Professor DeptPsychiatry, and Medicine and in the ColegeWednesdays, 5:00 p.m., Billings B130. 5 sessions, limit 12S. G. 4. An Intricate Poem: Shakespears 129th SonnetLawrence A Rosenwald. William Rainey Harper Fellow,the CollegeWednesdays, 3 p.m., Ida Noyes East Lounge, 3 sessions, limit 10.S. G. 5. Castaneda’s The Teachings of Don JuanJonathan Z Smith, Dean of the College andWilliam Benton, Professor of Religion and Human Sciences in the College andProf Divinity School and Dept New Testament and Early Christian LiteratureMondays, 4 p.m., Place TBA. 5 sessions, limit 10.Remember - Registration starts Friday. Campus filmBy Rory McGahanSeventh Heaven: Frank Borzage(1927). This is the first in Doc’s Borzageseries, probably the dogged director’s bestknown film — and rightly so. Janet Gaynorand Charles Farrell are properly inarticu¬late and impassioned, the half-toned light¬ing and backgrounds are sufficiently in¬corporeal, and the film’s ending is unique.The story is the simplest: Gaynor, streeturchin, and Farrell, street cleaner, fall inlove and conquer space, time, and — withthe help of some Parisian taxis — the Ger¬man army. Doc Films, tonight Tuesday, 8p.m.Sabrina: Billy Wilder (1954). AudreyHepburn falls in love with sappy cad Wil¬liam Holden in this would-be fable, but theatmosphere is quickly demolished byWilder’s hard sell images and character¬izations. Sentimental and sarcastic in allthe wrong places, the deadly unpleas¬antness isn’t relieved by Hepburn’sstrained and pedantic performance andthe incredibly miscast Humphrey Bogart— who seems to be playing in an entirelydifferent movie. Doc, Wednesday, 7:15pm.Love In the Afternoon: Billy Wilder(1957). Gary Cooper is disarminglystraightforward as the professional cad(Wilder loves cads) and Maurice Cheva¬lier is engaging and hammy as a Parisianprivate detective whose cello-playingdaughter goes in for the title activity withCooper. Wilder’s bitter tone and stagifiedset-ups do not always do the situations jus¬tice, but there is enough pleasantry fromMs. Hepburn — more subdued this timearound — and the jokes — are fairly funny— if not always in tune with one another.Doc, Wednesday, October 10, 9:30 pm.Sullivan’s Travels: Preston Sturges(1942). Hollywood director Sullivan (JoelMcRae), director of “Ants in Your Pantsof 1940,’’ joins the depression bums to re¬search his epic, “Brother. Where ArtThou?” Meeting up with hobo VeronicaLake, he discovers the hard way thatMickey Mouse is more effective than Ar- chibakRlalcLeish^o^a^l^Lak^putsit, “Deep-dish movies drive me out in theopen.” Only slightly marred by some over¬calculated slapstickery and moralizing,the film is relentlessly and ruthlesslyfunny. Law School Thursday, October 11,8:30 pm.All Doc Films are shown in Cobb Hall’sQuantrell Auditorium, 5811 S. Ellis Ave.;all Law School Films are shown in the LawSchool Auditorium, 1111 E. 60th St. Admis¬sion to Doc’s Tuesday and Wednesdayfilms is $1. Law school films are $1.50.ftjLaju A ft-fl.fl-fta.jLfl_ft.fi a a a.a.a_ojuiAji a s.The Devil in Her and Innocent Cou¬ples: Convince yourself you want to seethe porn double feature presented byChamberlin House in the Quantrell audito¬rium. The Devil in Her is a first class ex¬ample of high finance pornography whichattempts to explore mysterious worldswithout detracting from the real point ofthe movie: incessant incalculable sex. Thefilm is so terribly simple in plot it seems toaspire to be an “art film”: the type with amouth eating spaghetti for fifteen minutes.Although the film does employ some radi¬cal porn techniques in a half-hearted stabat creativity, it falls short of this goal, andreaches new highs in tastelessness. For¬tunately, all is brought into perspectivewith the film’s soundtrack which makes ashopping center jingle sound like Beetho¬ven. Students of drama will joyfully notethe confused approach of the cast to itsambiguous task. The star, however, man¬ages to transcend confusion and give it ev¬erything she’s got.The second feature, Innocent Couples. isalso representative of the genre, but itlacks organization the way that The Devillacks refined taste. This is not to say it istasteful, but it does manage to get right tothe point; after the opening scene, whichnever seems to go away, the film is aplotless wonder.Two dollars and enough intelligence tofind Quantrell Auditorium will get you fiveand one half hours of pom. The Devil inHer will be shown at 6, 8 and 11:20 pm; In¬nocent Couples at 7 :20 and 10 pm on Thurs¬day, October 11. No one under 18 admit-te<^’ Bennett JacksPRE-LAWMEETINGSTwo items of importance to those students who areapplying to law school this fall:(1) MEETING THURSDAY, OCTOBER 11thAT 3:30 P.M. IN SOCIAL SCIENCE 122Pre-law adviser will talk about the appli¬cation process in general.Office of Career Counseling and Placementwill discuss their services.Director of Admissions, University ofChicago Law School, will discuss appli¬cation to our law school.(2) LAW CARAVAN AT IDA NOYES CLOISTERAND LOUNGE MONDAY, OCTOBER 15th,FROM 1:00 P.M. to 5:00 P.M.Representative from 65 law schools will beavailable to give pre-law students informa¬tion on each law school.A unique opportunity for University ofChicago students to gain a great deal ofinformation.TAKE ADVANTAGEOF THESE 2 EVENTSSponsored bv (he Office of (he Deon of Studenfs in (he CollegeThe Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, October 9, 1979 — 9Choose up to 4 of these software tckages... FREE!LU value2 FREE softwarePakettes with ipurchase of Ja TI-58C msee coupon value4 FREE softwarePakettes withpurchase ofa TI-59■ see coupon ^TI Programmable 58C—$125 TI Programmable 59—$300Electronic Engineering • BlackbodyCivil EngineeringMathematicsLab Chemistry 1Marketing/SalesFluid DynamicsStatistical Testing Astrology59 Funi3D GraphicsProductionPlanning Suppci v>f LtxFree software from Texas Instrumentscan help make this semester a little easier.A special offer if you act now! From Au¬gust 15 to October 31, 1979 ... that’s yourspecial opportunity to purchase one of theworld’s most advanced programmablecalculators ... and get up to $40* worth offree software Specialty Pakettes in yourchoice of 16 different application areas.TI’s Specialty Pakettes are a new way toexpand the usefulness of your TI Program¬mable 58C or 59. The convenient notebookformat includes complete step-by-step pro¬gram listings, application notes, and sam¬ple programs. Just enter the program youneed and you can put it to work rightaway.fFour FREE SPECIALTY PAKETTESwith the purchase of a TI Programmable59. A $10* value. Two FREE SPE¬CIALTY PACKETTES with the pur¬chase of a TI Programmable 58C. A $20*value.Both the TI Programmable 58C and 59feature TI’s exclusive Solid StateSoftwareplug-in library modules. Each5,000-step module contains a wide selectionof prerecorded programs. Optional librarymodules are available in a variety of fields,including engineering, science, statistics,and business. The TI Programmable 59 has up to 960program steps or up to 100 memories.Magnetic card read/write capability letsyou record your own custom programs, orprograms from your Specialty Pakettes.$300.*The TI Programmable 58C features upto 480 program steps or up to 60 memories.*U S suggested retail price'Specialty Packettes do not requireplug-in module or magnetic cards’TI Programmable 59 required‘TI Programmable 59 with PC-100C orPC-100A printer plotter requiredUse this coupon to obtain your FREE Specialty Pakettes.□ I've bought my TI-58C. send me these 2 free Pakettes.□ I've bought my TI-59, send me these 4 free PakettesI 1 3 ...And it has TI’s Constant Memory featurethat retains data and program informationeven when the calculator is turned off.$125*.Act now!Visit your college bookstore or other TIretailer for more information, and let himhelp you select the program¬mable that’s right for you.Use the coupon below to takeadvantage of this special lim¬ited time offer.Send to Texas Instruments. P0 Box 53.Lubbock. TX 79408I Texas instruments will fulfill the offer you have selectedabove when you: (1) return this completed coupon, in¬cluding serial number, (2) along with your completedcustomer information card (packed in box), and (3) a| dated copy of proof of your purchase verifying purchaseI of a TI Programmable 58C or 59 (whichever is applica¬ble) between August 15 and October 31, 1979 itemsmust be postmarked on or before November 7,1979,I to qualify for this special offerIL 4NameAddressCity State »>ZipCalculator Serial Number (from back of calculator)Please allow 30 days for delivery Offer void whereprohibited by law Otter good in U S only1Texas Instruments technology— bringing affordable electronics to your fingertips. CLASS-GRADUATINGSENIORSFREE senior portraits for 1979-1980YEARBOOK. Have your picture takenanywhere, wearing any thing and do¬ing whatever you want. Just leaveyour name and phone number withStudent Activities Office and a YEAR¬BOOK photographer will get in touch.REMEMBER,NIFTYT-SHIRT DAYSare on Thursday and Friday, Oct. 11and 12. Special Progressive-ReformShabbat services and community get-together will be held on Friday at 5:30at Hillel, 5715 Woodlawn. Contact RickDinitz at 667-6944 or Art Lustig at 947-5071 for information.JOINCONCERT BANDCome to rehearsal no auditions Satur¬days at 1:00 pm. Ida Noyes Library.We are playing Walton, Handel, PDQBach.TAI CHI CH'UANAND KUNG FUTai Chi Ch'uan Club invites you to anintroductory class of Tai Chi Ch'uan onWednesday, Oct. 10, 1979. Tai Chi issoft, slow, graceful balletic and a rational means of self defense. Tai Chimeets every Wed. 7:30 pm at BlueGargoyle 5655 S. University and everySun. 7:30 pm 4945 S. Dorchester (enteron 50th St.) Also, Kung-Fu every Sun.6:30 pm 4945 S. Dorchester.BANDMEN NEEDEDJoin Concert Band no auditionsrehearsals Saturdays at 1:00 pm IdaNoyes Library. Playing Sousa, Reed,Borodin, Walton, etc. .MUSICIANSWANTEDTo join a chamber music group withothers of similar musical abilities andinterests, please call 753-2613 duringworking hours, or come to the musicdepartment. Also opportunity to playin Thursday noon Concert Series inReynolds Club.1979-80 YEARBOOKAdvance order your 1979-80 YEARBOOK Now, for only $10, at the StudentActivities Office in Ida Noyes, or at theYEARBOOK office, INH 218.Texas Instruments© 1979 le*as instruments incorporated I NCORPORATED 45668Auditions for Blackfriars' Production of Please prepare a songMusic will be providedYou're A Good Man Charlie BrownWILL BE HELDWednesday, Oct. 10,7-9:30 - Ida Noyes Cloister Club • Thursday, October 11,7 - 9:30 - Cloister Club • Saturday, October 13,1 - 3 - Ida Noyes Theater10 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, October 9, 1979IFIED ADSSPACE2 BR CONDO 2 BLKS FROM UC.Hdwd. firs., new kit. and bath. Avail,immed. $45,000. 565 1361, 321 0432.1808 N. WELLS TRIANGLE 2 br ACpark. 450 and up mgr. 943 3108.LAST UNIT LEFT1 br condo in Kenwood 4726 S. Greenwood. Tastefully renovated $32,000. Byappointment only. Matrix Realty Co.248 6400.Beverley Shores, Ind. Spectacularwindow wall view of Lake. Deluxe triievel of 2376 sq. ft. plus 792 sq. ft. basement. 3 bedrooms, baths. Familyroom. Brick fireplace. Garage withdoor opener. Central air. All new kitchen with 3 appliances. Immediatepossession. National Park leasebackexpected. $110,000. Call Renard atCallahan Real Estate. 219—926 4298.Apt. for rent 7 room, 2 bath, spacious,remod. near campus and mini bus.947 0787, 324 5116.a theme grader.VKRSMI.I.K.'>254 S. DorchesterWEI,I, MAINTAINEDBULBINGAttractive 1 xk and2'/2 Room StudiosF’urnishcd or Unfurnished$192-$291Based on AvailabilityAll Utilities IncludedAt Campus Bus Stop324-0200 Mrs. CroakLSATandGMATiAmityReview Seminars15 *tud»nt average class sizeTeam teaching techniqueConvenient weekend classesEXCLUSIVE MATH REFRESHER800-243-4767 University level Excellent pay. CallIsabel Garcia, Community and Family study Center, 753 2518.Left and Right handed people neededfor study on brain organization $3.00per hour. Call 753 4735 weekdays.SPAN ISH MANUSCRIPT TYPIST.Student part time. Translate trainingmaterials from English into Spanish.Must have studied Spansih at University level. Excellent pay. Call IsabelGarcia, Community and Family StudyCenter, 753 2518. ARTWORK posters, illustration,calligraphy, invitations, etc. NoelYovovich 5441 S. Kenwood 493 2399.Piano Lessons by experiencedteacher; Master of Music Degree inPiano Performance; ExtensiveTeaching Experience Children andAdults. Beginners thru Advanced Call752 7877. Everett at SHANI241 5173/752 5173.PERSONALSWriters' Workshop PLaza 2 8377.Rebecca or the iuggling instructor at12:30, Thurs 9/4. I left my watch on ablue coat and forgot to pick it up. If youhave it or turned it in call Stuart643 0238. ARTISTS ANDCRAFTERS doors. Join the Outing Club, $2 dues.Come to the meeting Wed Oct 10 7:30pm or call Peg Dordal 753-4912, JohnHardis, 363-5269SCENESRoommate wanted prefer woman.Large apt. in Park Forest, near ICG$250 per month and utilities Call748 4521 after 6:00.Student to help w/childcare andhousework in exchange for room andboard. Close to campus and transp.Call 294 3019 days; 288 6830 eves, andwknds.PEOPLE WANTEDFemale student needed to work fourafternoons per week. Help run ourhouse! Hours/pay flexible. Call Mr.Zonis 3 4549 or 548-4196 eves.Addressers wanted IMMEDIATELY!Work at home —no experiencenecessary—excellent pay. WriteAmerican Service. 8350 Park Lane,Suite 127, Dallas, TX 75231.FRENCH TRANSLATOR. Studentpart time. Translate trainingmaterials from English into French.Prefer native of France. Must havestudied French at University level.Excellent pay. Call George Ramsey,Community and Family Study Center,753 2518OVERSEAS JOBS Summer/yearround. Europe, S. America, Australia,Asia, Etc. All Fields, $500 $1,200 monthly. Expenses paid. Sightseeing. Freeinfo Write: IJC, Box 52-11, CoronaDel Mar, Ca. 92625.OFFSET PRESS TRAINEE. Studentpart time. Learn multi-color printing.Experience in photography or printingdesirable. Prefer person who will beon campus three years or more. Excellent pay. Call Kurt Robson,573 2518.MEN! WOMEN! Jobs on ships!American, foreign. No experience required. Excellent pay. Worldwidetravel. Summer job or career. Send$3.00 for information. SEAFAX, Dept.E-l Box 2049, Port Angeles,Washington 98362.RADIO TELEVISION TECHNICIAN.Student part time. Experience inrecording sound and video. Excellentpay. Call Robert Higgins. Communityand Family Study Center, 753 2974.Professor needsPlaza 2 8377. FRENCH MANUSCRIPT TYPIST.Student part time. Prepare copy formonographs and journals. Knowledgeof French grammar essential. Accuracy more important than speed.Excellent pay. Call George Rumsey,Community and Family Study Center,753 2518.WANTED: Club leaders for Zionistyouth movement. Salary and clublocation negotiable. Call 676 9790.AMBITIOUS PEOPLE Start ownprofitable business. We help. 225 2583.Native German speaker for informallessons. Call 955 0759.FOR SALE1974 Maverick 52,000 miles powersteering A/C radio 4 door new battery,muffler very clean. Must see $1,750.Call 241 5753.King size bed excel, cond. 3 1960.Looks aren't everything. Mechanically sound good car 1970 Chevy 70,000 mi.$300. Call 643 6365 after 5 p.m.PEOPLEFOR SALEProfessional photography for modelcomposites. Call 684 2286.Retired secretary will do typing of stu¬dent papers, etc. Student Rates Modern dance classes Yuni Hoffmandance theatre and school, 627 W. Lake,Chicago 924 4523, 648 0141.POTTERY CLASSES begin wk of Oct8. Adults: Mon. 7:30 10 p.m. Wed.9 11:30 a.m. Children: Wed. 3 5 p.m.Sm. groups. Lots of ind. attention.624 7568.Women's swim team organizationalmeeting all undergraduate women interested in varsity swimming, pleaseattend meeting at 7:00 pm on Tues.,October 9. Location: 2nd floor IdaNoyes Hall. If unable to attend, contact Jon at 753 0142 or leave messageat 753 3574.Organizational meeting of UCFolklore Society Thurs Oct 11, 7:30pm. Ida Noyes Lounge.Invest in a healthy vitalized body, atrained retentive and creative mindand a harmonious and joyful spirit.Workshops in Yoga, Self hypnosis,Massage, and Visualization andHolistic Health begin on campus thisquarter, Oct. 23 and 25. Taught by Dobbi Kerman M.A. a graduate of the U ofC who has been teaching for the U of Ccommunity since 1971. For info andreservations call 288 3706 or ens. serv.337 8100.A SINGULAR GROUP is a coop ofChicago artists and craftspeople offering a large selection of creativejewelry, ceramics, soft sculpture,painting and photography for sale. Weare having a special opening SaturdayOct. 13 from 10 4. We are located at57th and Woodlawn in the UnitarianChurch. Food and Drinks will be served.JEWELRY AND WEAVINGCLASSES!!! Begin Oct. 8! 5501 S. SERVICESIMPROVE YOUR GRADES! Send$1.00 for your 306 page catalog of collegiate research. 10,250 topics listed.Box 25097 G., Los Angeles, California,90025.(213) 477 8226.PRIME MOVERS: Student w/largetruck let me be the efficient cause ofyour move 324 1977.THERAPYTRAININGThe Chicago Counseling andPsychotherapy Center announces aPracticum in Client-CenteredTherapy, starting October 17 for 8months. Call 684-1800.FOURCORNERSMost units in this exciting conversionhave been sold. There are, however, afew choice 1 and 2 bedroom condohomes. Please visit our model at 1226E 54th St. Saturday or Sunday, 1-5 pmor call for an appt. Price from 42,500KENNEDY, RYAN, MONIGAL5508 S. Lake Park 667-6666PIANO LESSONS If you are interested in sharinggallery-shop space at 57th andWoodlawn from now through theChristmas season call Chris 493-3290Total dues will be $15. No Commission,but a few hours of work per week willbe required.RESEARCHONWOMEN ANDFEMALENESSThe Graduate Committee on the Studyof Womef: is preparing an Interdepart¬mental Directory of graduate studentsand faculty involved in research onwomen or femaleness. To be includedpick up a form in your divisional Officeor call 288 0826 or 684 5076 for more in¬formation.DECSYSTEM 20Learn to use the Computation Center'sDEC-20 computer, accessible fromterminals all over campus. A seminarto teach use of the system will be held:Thursday, October 11, 4:00-5:30 pm,Cobb 107 All welcome. No chargeGROUPTHERAPYThe Chicago Counseling andPsychotherapy Center has severalopenings for women and men 18 andover in a long-term group, starting Oc¬tober 18 Meets Thursday evenings 810 pm. Fee:S40/month, first two mon¬ths payable in advance. Preliminaryinterview required. Call 684-1800,leave message for Bill. R.N.'SBeginners through advanced- ex-perienced teacher and accompanist. ESCAPEDoctoral degree from Julliard SchoolNY tel 536 7167 or 548-0663. Get out of Hyde Park—or at least out- Positions are now available on all 3shifts for staff nurses interested incare of children with chronic illnessThe adolescent and toddler/preschoolunits care for the needs of children inthe acute phase of Chronicrespiratory, rheumatologic and renaldisease, as well as general pediatrics.Emergency room coverage is alsoavailable. La Rabida is a JCAH approved hospital affiliated with theUniversity of Chicago. Pediatric ex¬perience is preferred. Send resume orcall 363-6700 Ext 236. Nursing Depart¬ment La Rabida Children's Hospitaland Research Center, East 65th St atLake Michigan Chicago III 60649TRAILSUNDERGROUNDOuting Club program Oct 10 7:30 pmIda Noyes Library on caves and caving. Trip sign-up and business meetingfollowing.BASS PLAYERThe UC Jazz band needs a bass player(electric or acoustic) .immediately!Jazz experience preferred Call GeoffCox, 752-5734 or 753-1941.COLUMBUS DAYCELEBRATIONCELEBRATE EL DIA DE LA RAZAand the cultures of New world Oct. 12Friday 9 pm to 1 am. InternationalHouse assembly Hall. Live Latinmusic and entertainment. EveryoneWelcome.TYPISTExperienced. Work done in my homeTel 536-7167 or 548-0663.SPANISH TRANSLATOR. Studentpart time. Translate trainingmaterials from English into Spanish at The SAO Mini Course ProgramOffering budget-priced ($10-$25) courses inAuto MechanicsBartending (21 yrs. & older)Bike RepairChinese CookingDisco DancingFolk Guitar Leaded GlassMagic TricksPhotographyStock MarketLife in the Big CityWine Appreciation(21 yrs. & older)REGISTRATION:FOR STUDENTS:(Bring UC id)Wednesday, October 101 1 a.m.-3 p.m. Reynolds Club CorridorThursday, October 1 11 1 a.m.-3 p.m. Reynolds Club CorridorFOR NON-STUDENTS:Friday, October 1 21 1 a.m.-3 p.m. Reynolds Club Corridorand Student Activities Office ISRAELI FOLK DANCINGIDA NOYES HALL -1212 E. 59thTUESDAYS-8:00 P MBEGINNING TUESDAY, OCTOBER 9and every Tuesday thereafter.50 cents admissionORGAN RECITALTHOMAS WEISFLOGThe First Unitarian Churchof Chicago57th and WoodlawnSunday, October 144 o’clockOrgan works of J.S. Bach, Buxtehude,Dupre. Vierne, and othersFree-will Offering^ ParentCooperativefor Early LearningComprehensive PreschoolFullv professionally staffedDiverse, flexible curriculumOpen year round. 7:30 a.m. - 6:00 p.m.Half or full day programAge 24 months — kindergartenFor InformationLeif Backman684-6363 Parent Cooperativefor Early Learning. Inc.5300 S. Shore Drive.Chicago. Illinois 60615The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, October 9, 1979 — 11SURPRISE!Hewlett-Packardmakes professional calculatorsstudents can afford.Trade-l p To ExcellenceLimited Time Offer:SI0.00 trade-in credit on vour old calculator toward anew series E Calculator hv Hewlett-Packard, the pro¬fessional's choice.Between October 9 to November 9. 1979. we'll take inyour old calculator, regardless of brand or condition,and give you a SI0.00 credit toward the purchase ofvmir choice of:For Science and Engineering.The HP-31E Scientific. $50*The HP-32E Advanced Scientific withStatistics. $70*The HP-33E Programmable Scientific. $90*For Business and Finance.The HP-37E Business Management. $75*The HP-38E Advanced Financial withProgrammability. $120*All S models offer extra large bright red digits. commasthat automatically separate thousands, self-test diag-nostie. specific error messages, parenthesis free RPNlogit* and more.We stock HP accessories, too.FREE a vinyl binder with a purchase of anv HP.value at $4.95. Limited supply.Master Charge & Visa accepted.University of Chicago Bookstore5750 S. Ellis AvenueCalculator Dept., 2nd Floor753-3303V AST£PCHARGE 6. VISA ACCEPTED MOUNT SINAIMEDICAL SCHOOLDR. WISCH,PROFESSOR OF MEDICINEat the above schoolwill be on campusTHURSDAY, OCTOBER 11He will be happy to meet with interestedpre-medical students(primarily those who will be applying tomedical school next year, 1980)inHARPER 135from 2:00 to 3:30LARGE REFRIGERATORSONLY $50SMALL REFRIGERATORSONLY $30(PLUS $10 DEPOSIT)DEADLINE FOR ORDERINGWEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1#AVAILABLE THROUGHTHE STUDENTGOVERNMENT OFFICE,306 IDA NOYES HALL753-3273