Drug research during 1950 ’By Ben DavisSixteen lawsuits, for claims ap¬proximating $95 million, are cur¬rently pending against the Univer¬sity and a drug company, Eli Lillyand Co., in connection with the ad¬ministration of the hormone dieth-ylstilbesterol (DES) to about 1800women during a study conductedby the University from 1950-52.DES has been linked in severalstudies to cancer in women who re¬ceived it, and to cancer and birthdefects in their children.Two class action suits, one in1977 on behalf of women who re¬ceived DES and another in 1976 onbehalf of their daughters, havebeen filed. One of the main plain¬tiffs in the first suit, which is ex¬pected to come to trial next spring,is Patsy T. Mink, a former congressman from Hawaii and a grad¬uate of the Law School.The second class action suit, Morissey v. University of Chicago,was dismissed earlier this year bya state judge. An initial appeal wasdenied, but the plaintiffs may re¬appeal.Fourteen individual suits, most¬ly by DES daughters, are alsopending in state and federalcourts.In the mothers’ suit, Mink, Langand Wetherill v. University of Chi¬cago and Eli Lilly and Co., federaldistrict court judge John Gradyhas ruled that the plaintiffs are nota class. This ruling may be chal¬lenged.Of the charges in the Mink suitagainst the University and Lilly —battery, product liability, and fail¬ure to notify the women that theyhad participated in the experimentas soon as adverse effects of DESwere known — only the batterycharge currently stands. JudgeGrady rejected the product liabili¬ty argument on the grounds that no physical injury to the motherscould be proved, and ruled that theplaintiffs who were notified couldnot sue on behalf of women whowere not informed that they hadbeen in the study. Lilly has movedto separate the charges against itfrom those against the University.Miscarriage studyThe DES study was conductedfrom 1950 to 1952 by the late Dr.William J. Dieckmann, then chiefof obstetrics and gynecology atChicago Lying-In Hospital. Its pur¬pose was to test the effectivenessof DES, which had been widelyused in the 1940s for the purpose ofpreventing miscarriages.About two million womenthroughout the US were given DESbetween 1940 and 1970.One thousand eighty one womenunder care at Lying-In receivedTurn to Page 3 s brings on lawsuitsDr. Arthur HerbstThe Chicago Maroon“Solitary, singing in the West, I strike up for a new world.’’ —Walt WhitmanVol. 89, NO. 15 The University of Chicago ® Copyright 1979 The Chicago Maroon Tuesday, October 23, 1979Charles Moskos and Rep. Paul McCloskey Adam spiegeiDraft options viewedBy Chris IsidoreFriday night’s “Alternatives tothe Draft” Forum presented twovastly different suggestions onhow to upgrade the military andstill give youths a choice of stayingout of the military.Both Charles Moskos, professorof sociology at NorthwesternUniversity, and RepresentativePaul “Pete” McCloskey, (R.-Cal.), the former anti-war ad¬vocate, critized today’s army asbeing understaffed, non¬representative of American youth,poorly-educated, and unpreparedfor combat. Both stressed the needfor including the middle-class inmilitary service.Moskos and McCloskey critizedthe Army for trying to induce peo¬ple to join by using straight salary,and a show of hands in the half-filled Cloister Club showed that noone there would join even for twicethe salary being offered today. Butthe two men’s plans on how toupgrade the army were greatlydifferent.McCloskey’s PlanMcCloskey argued for a nationalservice in which every youthwould decide at age 18 between four choices. The alternativeswere:• 1) Enlist in the military fortwo years and be entitled to 4 yearsof educational benefits from arevived GI Bill.• 2) Train for six months in thereserves and then spend 5*'2 yearsin the ready reserves, and be en¬titled to 1 vear of benefits from theGI Bill.• 3) Serve one year of civilianservice in a government program,such as the Peace Corps, or Vista,or in a civilian program, such as aprivate charity.• 4) Choose none of these and forthe next 6 years be eligible for adraft, which would be used if notenough people chose the militaryoption. If drafted by this program,a person would be eligible for only2 years of benefits from the GI Bill.McCloskey’s plan, which he hasintroduced as a bill in Congress,would include both men andwomen.“I know of no fairer way to pro¬vide for a national concept of theshared duty of service,” Mc¬Closkey said. “There is no one whois unlucky enough to be draftedwho hasn’t had the choice of doingsomething else.”Turn to Page 3 Justice Stevens discusses Court,meets students in campus visitBy Allen So -vizralSupreme Court Justice JohnPaul Stevens met with many smallgroups of students, attendedclasses, and even managed tosqueeze in an early morning tennismatch during his hectic two dayvisit to the University.Stevens’s Thursday and Fridayvisit was the first event in the newVisiting Fellows series. The seriesis designed to allow students tohave the opportunity to meet pro¬minent people in public affairs insmall, informal groups, as well asallowing the visiting fellow to par¬ticipate in student activities.The culmination of Stevens’sstay at the University was a Fri¬day afternoon question and answersession in the Law Schoolauditorium where Stevens fieldedquestions on a variety of issues.Stevens commented on issues asvaried as President Carter’s re¬cent statements on desegregationand the proper training for a legalcareer.Stevens said President Carter’srecent statement urging that theChicago desegregation case bedecided by the ?ourts “wassomewhat unusual. ”Stevens was also critical of Con¬gress’s tendency to make legisla¬tion deliberately vague, leavingthe courts to decide controversialissues. He also noted an increasingtrend among judges to refuse to fillgaps that have been left in legisla¬tion.University experienceIn his opening statements,Stevens reminisced about his ex¬periences at the University. Inparticular, he spoke about anEnglish course he had taken fromNorman Maclean. Stevenscredited Maclean with teachinghim the skill of reading and for in¬fluencing him to study Englishliterature. “The study of English literature,especially lyric poetry, is the bestpreparation for the law.” Stevenssaid.Stevens commented on theUniversity today and said he wasmore conscious of similaritiesthan of differences. Students, hesaid, possessed “inquiring,helpful, healthy independence”and were not intimidated by hisposition.When questioned about theCourt’s recent First Amendmentdecisions affecting the press.Stevens said that the press lostcases only when they tried to ob¬tain some new constitutional im¬munity. The media have been con¬sistently successful in cases con¬cerning the abridgement of theirrights under the First Amend¬ment. Stevens said. Stevens answered a series ofquestions about the role of theSupreme Court.“The Court is overburdenedbecause it takes on more casesthan it needs to,” he said.The way for the Court to remedythis is “simply to be moredisciplined” in choosing the casesit will decide.He suggested the Court do thisby denying “certiorari (petitionsto hear cases on their merits)more than we do.” Another ?Iter-native would be to set up a lowercourt solely to review certioraripetitions.Stevens disapproved of pro¬posals for a new Court of Appealswhose authority would be justbelow that of the Supreme Court.Turn to Page 5PART-TIME JOBSON CAMPUSIf you're looking for an unusual job opportunity for thisfall and for the rest of the school year, The University ofChicago Alumni Telefund needs your help.We are now contacting thousands of Chicago alumni bytelephone for their gifts to the University. The programwill run through the entire school year.We II pay you $4 an hour. Phoning hours run from 6:00p.m. - 10:00 p.m. Monday through Thursday and from 9:30a.m. - 1:00 p.m. on Saturday. We require you to work 2sessions per week.You’ll be working as an Alumni Telefund Associate. Theseare people who have a mature presentation and can talkabout the University and its needs. We II teach you therest. Seniors and graduate students are among thosemost eligible.APPLY NOW!Call Gregory Volk at 753-0888 for a prompt interview orstop by in Cobb Hall (B23).A THE CHICAGOALUMNI TELEFUNDI tie Itudert ActivitiesOffice ardI tie Jazz Calleiypresenta concert ofJAZZwithThe Billy BandFREEHlSI il f illfKIDAT • OCICBEE 24)S*33 P.44.SUPPORTED BY FUNDING FROM THECHICAGO COUNCIL ON FINE ARTS JOIN THE U.C. SKI CLUBINDECEMBER 15-22,1979Seven nights lodging indeluxe condominiums atthe liftsSix days all area lift tickets$240.00$100.00 deposit due 10-24Wednesday, Oct. 24 at 7 p.m.Ida NoyesInformational MeetingCall 955-9646 ifyou can’t make themeeting or the deadline.Complete information on all our activitiesfor the year.Featuring slides and a film.Memberships available $7.50/yr.Applications for the Vail trip.Don't think the midwest hills are chal-lenging? Challenge the midwest! Jointhe U.C. Ski Team. For info call MitchLevine 752-5977 or come to practiceTuesdays 4:15 p.m. Bartlett Gym.DON’T MISS THE VAIL TRIPPLAN NOWNeed info call 955-96462 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, October 23, 1979Author saysRural China unchangedBy John DuganDespite sweeping and often capriciouschanges in official policy in China, life in therural northwest area of China has remainedlargely uneffected during the last sixteenyears, Swedish author Jan Myrdal contend¬ed during his Thursday Pick Hall lecture.In the lecture, entitled “China: the Revo¬lution Continued’’ after one of Myrdal’sbooks, Myrdal said that the extent to whichChinese rural life has remained is generallynot realized in the west.Myrdal started his lecture by stressing “Iam not a sinologist”. He disclaimed anyparticular field of concentration and listedChina as but one of many interests. He toldthe audience that many of the misconcep¬tions that Americans have about Chinacome from the way in which we receivenews about it.You hear a lot about upheaval in China;mass movements arreklgreat sweepingchanges in the fabric p# Chinese life throughvarious press report^ and the like. I thinkthe danger with thisps the same if you triedto judge inmorlanUchanges in Arh^rican lifemerelyby observing events on Capitol Hill,ratheTman seeing exactly what efW^allthis nqs on the people in, say, Duluth, MlmnesotOne^factor important to the continuity ofpoli<4( at the local level, according to Myr¬dal, wtos the impossibility of replacing thelocal leaders every time a new factiongained (-control. “Through all of thesechanges,\ Myrdal said, “the leadership isfor the most part still intact. The young menwho were Officers in the brigades in my firstvisit in 1962\many of whom were quite vocal(you rememlber the times) are now in posi¬tions of authority at a time when the govern¬ment is suppos\dt£i>e'gQing in a completelydifferent direction. Thisns important, andyou might not realize it from the reports ofgreat upheaval and purges ihatypu hear.”He suggested that policy talresato “trickle down” to the peasants in thecountryside, and that this process tends toblunt the sharp edge of official policy.“Things and plans that work very quickly inthe big cities of Peking, Shanghai. . . take avery long time to have an effect in the ruralparts of the country. It seems like, even withall the changes you hear about, they’re stillgoing in the same general direction thatthey were fifteen years ago.”Legal reformsMyrdal conceded that people do disappearand that human rights violations do occur.But he also said it is hard to appreciate the many small advances in Chinese societyfrom a distance. “For example, that wife¬beating is a crime in China is truly a greatleap forward. This is a country which only acouple of generations ago experienced theworst, most horrible poverty, deprivationand oppression . . . They are now, over along span of thirty years, moving for¬ward.”He cited examples where men guilty ofcrimes such as embezzlement were allowedto return to their jobs after a relatively shortperiod of punishment. “What is happening isthat people are coming back, not only on thebrigade level, but on higher levels. Thisamazes many people who follow the pressreports”.Of the quality of life in northwesternChina he said “there doesn’t exist anywherein the world — ifdjm’t ttriqk there is any¬where really — a) ‘nappy peasant’, but forthe most part ,1-mink these are com'eqt peo¬ple.”Concluding with ah outline of the sc&pe ofthe problems faeeeCby the Chinese people asa nation*->Myroal stated that “through theconscious work of the nine hundredAnillionrtp/of China, who are literally diggingthemselves out of poverty, they now havereached a certain s^Ste^df developmentwhere they have Ju/clgmge the nature oftheir economy, arfa I believe that they are1succeeding. But I VsoTfcelieve there aregreat problems ahead?Among those he detailed was the problemof material incentive V how much money :should go back into the production mechan- |ism, and how much to me workers them- ;selves. He also mentioned the complexbureaucratic problem of ‘toow to make sure :not to give material incentives to make peo¬ple have babies.” Chinii is one of the fewAsian countries dealingwith the problem ofoverpopulation with admeasure of success.Myrdal was introduced by Tang Tsou,professor of jpaiiii^al science, representingUnh^rslty^s China Project. Myrdal’smos\j4rominent books include Confessionsof a Disloyal European, Report on a ChineseVillage (1964), China: the Revolution Con¬tinued (1971), and China Notebook:1975-1978 (1979).His father, the Swedish author GunnarMyrdal, is the author of books on many sub¬jects. He is best known for his book AnAmerican Dilemma: the Negro Problem inModern Democracy. Tsou said the seniorMyrdal is “very famous in his own country”and that Jan Myrdal is “a very eminent andimportant writer in his own right”, pointingout the attendance of the Swedish ConsulGeneral at the lecture. News BriefsEmanuelle draws protestsSeparate protests involving members ofthe Bourgeois Capitalist Running Dog Lack¬ey Society and members of the Women’sUnion were held outside Kent Hall Sundaynight, while several hundred people attend¬ed the three showings of the X-rated movieEmmanuelle.Six members of the Women’s Union hand¬ed out literature criticizing the messagepresented in the film. The literature piecesaid, “The message of this film is that it isnatural for men to control the sexuality ofwomen — that men use women and thatwomen want to be used.”The Women’s Union’s action was “to tryto make people think about the influence ofpornography on their perceptions of theirown sexual identity.”“People won’t come if they feel these films are socially unacceptable,” said onemember of the Women’s Union.In a different action, eight members of theBourgeois Capitalist Running Dog LackeySociety protested the X-rated movie “notbecause it exploits women, but because itdoes not exploit men.” Members carriedsigns that said “men are objects too”, and“Pornography is the sincerest form of ex¬ploitation”. One member brandished a whipand another sported black leather briefs.Infinity Productions, an independent stu¬dent group that sponsored the film, said that“the whole pornography isue is over¬blown”. The group was denied a loan by Stu¬dent Government earlier in order to showthe film.Their profit for the evening was expectedto be about $100.Lunchtime career seminar“Life after graduation,” a series of noon¬time career seminars, inaugurates its fallseason with a forum on the media, October24th at Alumni House.Nick Aronson, consulting director of theNational Academy of Television Arts andSciences and director of radio and televisionat the University, and Erika Laurie, direc¬tor of personnel for the CBS broadcast groupin Chicago will be the featured speakers atthe forum.According to organizers, the forum willprovide contact between students and peo¬ ple in career fields so that students can havea better idea of how to plan their future.The meeting will be informal with par¬ticipants encouraged to bring their ownlunch. Brief opening statements will bemade by the featured speakers and the restof the forum will be devoted to a questionand answer session.Future forums will be centered around thelaw and theater. The law forum is tentative¬ly scheduled for November 7.All forums will be held at the AlumniHouse, 5733 S. University Avenue at Noon.DraftContinued from Page 1Moskos argued for changes in thevolunteer service which would try to im¬prove that system. He said that the draftwas not politically viable in the country to¬day.“Draft registration and the draft are seenas precursors to getting to another war,” hesaid. Besides that, “the draft could onlywork if a large majority of the youth weredrafted. Only one out of six, or one out of fivewould be drafted, and (that) raises the ques¬tion ‘Who will serve, and who will not?’ andit would require a lottery system of somekind. It would make serving some kind ofbad luck.”Moskos claimed that this would be verybad for military morale. Therefore heargued that the volunteer service must bemade to work. Moskos said that a large part of the pro¬blem lies in the educational assistance pro¬gram now sponsored by the federal govern¬ment.“Six billion dollars is given in educationalaid each year,” Moskos said. “Today youcan get more money by not serving than youcan by joining the military'.“Now is the time to consider an option,which would say the following: *No ablebodied person, male or female, could geteducational assistance to go on to collegeunless that individual performed, on avoluntary basis, some sort of national ser¬vice. . . on a short term basis.” This servicewould be either civilian or military.Moskos admitted that this would stillallow the upper class to escape service, “Nokind of voluntary service will include theRockefellers,” he said. But he feels that thiswould be able to resolve the problems of to¬day’s poorly educated, unprepared army.Hormone controversyContinued from Page 1DES, while another 1081 were given place¬bos. Lilly provided the drug, and a Lilly em¬ployee worked on the study.According to Dieckmann, each woman“was told that previous reports indicatedthat the tablets were of value in preventingsome of the complications of pregnancy andthat they would cause no harm to the fetus.”He concluded that DES was ineffective inreducing the risks of miscarriage.Although DES had been shown to causecancer in laboratory animals in the 1940s,the first conclusive evidence of a link tocancer in humans was produced in 1971 byDr. Arthur L. Herbst, then at Harvard andnow chairman of the obstetrics and gyneco¬logy department at the University.A major point of contention surroundingthe battery charge in the Mink case iswhether the women were aware that theywere participating in an experiment. BothMink and Phyllis Wetherill, a co-plaintiffand University alumna, say that they weretold the DES was “a vitamin pill.” Otherwomen were told that DES would maketheir babies healthier. But James Gladden,an attorney with Mayer, Brown and Platt,the University’s counsel, stated that thewomen “knew they were involved in astudy.”Notification delayAnother controversy concerns whetherthe University notified participants prompt¬ly when the risks of DES became known in1971. Wetherill said that she first heard ofthe Dieckmann study in 1973 and contacted the University, but was told then that shehad not been a participant in the study. Twoyears later she was informed that she hadbeen in the study.Most women in the study were informed ofDES risks by the University in 1975 or 1976.Mink, who was told in 1976, called the delaya “violation of a responsibility on the part ofthe University to have a high regard forhuman dignity.”Medical risksAlso at issue in the case are the medicalrisks of DES. The 1971 Herbst study connect¬ed DES exposure with a rare form of vagin¬al cancer, clear-cell adenocarcinoma, inDES daughters. No daughters of women inthe Dieckmann study have contracted thisform of cancer, although two-thirds of the390 known cases of clear-cell adenocarcino¬ma involve exposure to DES.In a second study, conducted at Harvardbut not published until 1977, after he hadcome to University, Herbst estimated therisk of clear-cell adenocarcinoma to be 0.14to 0.014 per thousand to DES daughters.The University denied that the report,which emphasized the low risk of developingthis cancer and which Herbst said shouldhave “a calming influence,” was connectedto the Mink lawsuit, filed a week before thestudy was published.Other reported effects of DES include ahigher risk of breast cancer — 4.6% inwomen who took DES, 3.1% for those whodid not — which Herbst termed “not statisti¬cally significant: a 63% incidence of vaginalabnormalities in DES daughters, and a31.5% rate of genital abnormalities in DESsons. Last year, a special DES task force con¬vened by Secretary of Health. Education,and Welfare Joseph Califano reported that“a clear association between in utero expo¬sure to DES and clear-cell adenocarcinomais established,” prompting the Surgeon Gen¬eral to send an advisory warning to 400.000doctors.The task force disagreed with Herbst’s as¬sessment of the breast cancer risk. Dr. Sid¬ney Wolfe, a member of the task force anddirector of the Nader-affiliated Health Re¬search Group, said that “the University ofChicago group stands almost alone in think¬ing that these findings (minimize the risk ofbreast cancer).” Wolfe charged the Univer¬sity with “institutional malpractice” forwhat he termed concealing the risk ofcancer.AbnormalitiesThe most recent DES study, publishedthis year by researchers at MassachusettsGeneral Hospital, suggests that the rate ofvaginal abnormalities in DES daughtersmay have been inflated by poor samplingprocedures.Although DES has been banned by theFood and Drug Administration (FDA) forpreventing miscarriages and as a fattenerin animal feed, it continues to be used forcancer treatment, estrogen replacementtherapy, and as a so-called “morning-afterpill.” The University Hospitals give DES asa contraceptive “to rape and incest vic¬tims,” according to John E. Milkereit,director of public affairs for the UniversityMedical Center.The FDA has not approved or established guidelines for the use of DES as a contracep¬tive. The HEW task force stated “to the ex¬tent that the drug is currently prescribed forthis purpose, it is used without proper physi¬cian or patient labeling.” Some Universitystudents say that they obtained DES as aroutine contraceptive at University hospi¬tals as recently as 1976.DES registryWetherill has formed a nationwide DESregistry which monitors scientific and legaldevelopments and assists DES mothers andtheir children. “There is a real need to helppeople understand what their conditionsare,” she said Wetherill noted that emotion¬al problems are one of the important conse¬quences of DES exposure, and that theyhave been largely neglected by the medicalprofession.Wetherill pointed to an increase in thenumber of legal actions being taken againstdrug companies.“There’s a lot more interest in reallydoing something” about DES daughters' ex¬penses," she said.The cost of a pregnancy for a DES daugh¬ter can be as high as $13,000. according toWetherill. As a result of the cost, she said,some DES daughters have chosen not tohave children.There are now several hundred DES law¬suits outstanding, mostly against compa¬nies which produced the drug. In the lasttwo months two women won suits againstdrug companies. In New York, JoyceBichler won $500,000 from Eli Lilly and Co.,and a Chicago woman. Anne Needham, wasawarded $800,000.The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, October 23, 1979 — 3The Political ForumpresentsKathleen O'ReillyExecutive DirectorConsumer Federation of America"Consumerism:An Agendafor the 80's"Thursday, October 25. 19797:30 p.m.Kent 107LAFFER REAL ESTATE& DEVELOPMENT COMPANYREAL ESTATE BROKERSales • Conversions • DevelopmentsSelling Real Estate is for ProfessionalsWalter B. Laffer IIReal Estate Broker667-5745Your South Side specialist working for you.LAFFER REAL ESTATE& DEVELOPMENT COMPANYSTANLEY H. KAPLANFor Over 41 Years The Standard ofExceience In Jest Preparation.t'HM’AHI hjMr yCAT- PAT- LSATlI SHE ■ SRI PSVCH ■ S«E BiTSuT jPCAT • OCAT • VAT • MAT • SAT iNATIONAL MEDICAL NOARDS • VQE • CCFMO !IIFLEX • NATL DENTAL BOARDS 'TOEFLmum BOARDS • NURSING BOARDSFlexible Programs and Hours1 -R Visit Aay Csatsr Aal Sm For IYtersolf Why Wa Moka Tbs Drttereoce i[ImUml centerBMMadHaa Ava.N.Y. iota (nr. «« 0L) TIOT RRf RARATlONOeCCIAUSTB tiMCC ItMCrntrrs m MU)»r US Cit«S Put'to »<0Toronto CwO t SwtiorlomIIIIIIIIIIIII^OUTWOI N.Y. STATE CALL TOLL FREE: M0-22S-174 — The CJtfcii0c*tt!rx*r **<•#&&**'*& W?CHICAGO CENTER6210 N CLARKCHICAGO. ILLINOIS 60660(312) 704-6151S. W SUBURBAN19 S LAGRANGE ROADSUITE 201LAGRANGE. ILLINOIS 60626(312) 362-5840 SPRIN6, SUMMERFAU INTENSIVESCOURSES STARTINGTHIS MOUTH:LSAT.UiiXT MONTH:11C AT. . . .SAT GHATOCATCourses Constantly UpdatedLicensing Exams In Center Self-StudyFor In tor matron About Other Center* m Mor* Than to Maior US Cit.ea A AbroadOUTSIDE N.Y. 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OCTOBER 24.12 NoonPLACE: HILLEL FOUNDATION - 5715 WOODLAWNSPEAKER:PROFESSOR JONA MICHAEL ROSENFELDDirector of the Paul/ Baerwald School ofSocial Work - The Hebrew Univ. of JerusalemSUBJECT: EMERGING SOCIAL WELFAREISSUES IN ISRAEL TODAYBring A Bag Lunch The University of ChicagoAlumni AssociationpresentsLIFE AFTER GRADUATION: THE MEDIAan informal discussion of careeropportunities in the mediafor interested studentsGuests:Nick AronsonandErica Laurie12 noon, October 24, 1979Alumni House, 5733 University AvenueBring your own lunch. (Beverages provided)Commoner seeks third political partyAlternative political groups formBy Chris IsidoreEnvironmentalist Barry Commonerspoke to a well-attended meeting of the newCitizen’s Party in the Loop last Wednesday.The Illinois chapter of what Commoner de¬scribed as “the alternative party” may wellbe the first to organize, and most of thecrowd of 200-300 came with the intention ofhelping with that organization.Commoner cited the lack of choices be¬tween the two existing parties as the reasonfor the Citizen’s Party.“The problem is that they (the two par¬ties) are not discussing what needs to be dis¬cussed,” he said. “The issue is who owns thecountry, and for whose benefit is it going tobe run . . . We have to raise a basic issue ofwhich comes first, meeting the interest ofthe people of the country, or conforming tothe private, profit-oriented interests of thebig corporations. Unless that is confronted,there is nothing to discuss.”Commoner cited statements by govern¬ment leaders that “there is no way of reduc¬ing inflation without reducing the standardof living,” as proof that they have put theinterests of the corporations ahead of the in¬terests of the people.“The government has abrogated its dutyof deciding what is best for the country,” hesaid.He charged that it is the corporations whomake the decisions today, and that their de¬cisions are based on profits, not on what is inthe national interest. Commoner quoted astatement by the president of Standard Oilof Indiana in which he said “We are not inthe business of producing energy, we are inthe business of maximizing the rate of re¬turn on our stock holders’ investments.”“And that,” said Commoner, “is whyStandard Oil is producing plastic instead ofoil . . . The interests of the oil companies donot coincide with the interests of the Ameri¬can people.”Commoner attacked all the present Pre-sidental contenders as holding the interestsof the corporations, including Senator Ed¬ward Kennedy. “Kennedy has stated that heaccepts Carter’s analysis of the economy,”he said.New party Adam SpiegelBarry Commoner: against “corporateAmerica”“The comparison is really very striking,”he said. “(Then) the major parties, theDemocrats and the Whigs, did not want to discuss the issue of slavery in the campaignfor fear of losing the election. In that periodof time the dominant political parties, likethe ones today, were afraid of dealing withthe basic issue that the country confronted.And there was no way to bring that issue be¬fore the public without creating a new politi¬cal (party).“We are not trying to create a third party.We are creating a new party. What we needto do is replace at least one of these, just asthe Republicans replaced the Whigs.”New HampshireCommoner also announced that he andconsumer advocate Ralph Nadar were plan¬ning to go to New Hampshire this winter andto confront the Democratic candidates withthe issues that they felt were important andforce them to comment upon them. Thisplan was cheered by the audience more thanany other statement that evening.Though there were a few members of theaudience who disagreed with Commoner’sviews, the overwhelming majority were there to help in the work that needed to bedone. Don Rose, another party leader, whoran Mayor Jane Byrne’s upset campaignvictory last year, asked the audience to givethree things. “Your money, your loyaltyand your work.” Many in the room respond¬ed to that call. The audience was split fairlyevenly between blue jeans and businesssuits, and between young and old. Many but¬tons showed the full range of liberal beliefs,such as anti-nukes, common cause, andERA.Local chapterThe organization is being divided up bycongressional district. Thomas Walker isthe chairman for the 1st congressional dis¬trict, which includes Hyde Park. The firstmeeting for this district was held last night,(Monday, Oct. 22). Walker, one of the organ-izors of the May 22 committee has said thathe would encourage people from the Univer¬sity to get involved, but that there would beno specific University chapter started, norwould the University community dominatethe district chapter, for the district includesmuch of the south sideDSOC organizes, invites Harringtonby Jeff CaneJoseph Schwartz, National Youth Coor¬dinator for the Democratic Socialist Organ¬izing Committee (DSOC), spoke Thursdaynight at the first meeting of the Universitybranch of DSOC last Thursday night.DSOC has announced plans to bring Mi¬chael Harrington, the group’s nationalchairman, to speak on campus sometimeearly in November. Harrington, a noted po¬litical scientist, is the author of “The OtherAmerica” and a University alumnus.DSOC, a 3,000 member national organiza¬tion founded in 1973, describes itself as “theleft of the possible”. DSOC has been activewithin the Democratic Party, organizing co¬alitions with labor, minorities, feministsand liberals disenchanted with the presentDemocratic administration.According to organization literature,DSOC acts as a support group for various so¬cial movements and also seeks to bring so¬cialism “out of the closet”.Some of the more notable members ofDSOC are labor leader William Winpi- singer, Congressman Ronald Dellums andGloria Steinem. Only in the past year havestudents been actively recruited.Modest ClaimsIn his forty minute speech, Schwartz toldthe sparsely attended meeting of the lack ofa mass socialist presence in this countryand its subsequent limitations for DSOC.“The old left built nothing permanent. Weare starting essentially from scratch,” saidSchwartz. But he also argued that the tradi¬tional leftist constituencies — labor, minori¬ties and the poor — are becoming increas¬ingly anti-corporate, although not yetsocialist.“As a socialist organization, we must bemodest in our claims.” said Schwartz.He urged the need to work for social re¬forms, “but these reforms will be eviscerat¬ed, unless you also work for broader struc¬tural change”.Schwartz spoke of DSOC as “walking atight-rope between social reformism thatdeals only with capitalism’s effects, and revolutionary politics”. He asserted theneed to avoid revolutionary posturing.“Saying here is our program, follow us,never works.” said Schwartz.After Schwartz’s speech, the meeting con¬cluded in a heated debate between Schwartzand several members of the SpartacusYouth League (SYL). who criticized DSOC’srole within the “bourgeois” DemocraticParty. SYL members argued that DSOCmembers are “reformists who are interest¬ed in making capitalism better”. Schwartzdefended DSOC’s role, arguing that “the leftprospers under liberals”. He further defend¬ed DSOC’s possible support of a Kennedycandidacy by saying that it “raiseshopes”.“But the important thing is to build amovement around a program of issues, nota candidate,” Schwartz said. SYL literatureadvocates a public debate with DSOC.The University DSOC branch plans towork with the Mobilization Committee andwill set up information tables this week atCobb Hall and at Reynolds Club.Progressive Union agrees to principlesCommoner, who is well known as an ex¬pert on solar energy, criticized the govern¬ments policies on energy. He called for amuch greater committment to renewablesources of energy, and a rebuilding of therailroads, but he did not go into great detailon these pfans. For the most part this speechtried to explain the need for the new party.Commoner said he expected the Citizen’sParty to grow and eventually replace thetwo existing parties, and made the compari¬son to the birth of the Republican Party justbefore the civil war.StevensContinued from Page 1Stevens also:• opposed mandatory retirement forSupreme Court justices. He cited OliverWendell Holmes as an example of a justicewho performed important work while hewas in his seventies. He said that a limitedterm of ten years for Supreme Courtjustices would serve no purpose.• said that the ERA was of “great sym¬bolic importance,” but that it would makelittle difference in the way cases are decid¬ed.• said that vacancies on the bench shouldbe filled by people who are “honest, in¬dependent, and knowledgeable about thelaw.”• opposed movement towards laws whichimpose mandatory sentences to achieveconsistency throughout the country. He saidthat this would result in generally moresevere sentences.Campus visitStevens arrived at the University earlyThursday morning and attended twocourses in the Social Sciences CollegiateDivision: “Public Law and the Separation ofPower” taught by Phillip B. Kurland and By Curtis BlackThe Mobilization Committee for a Pro¬gressive Union voted Thursday to form acampus-community union “to serve as amulti-issue organization committed to fight¬ing in the interests of students, campusworkers, and community people around theproblems that most concern them.”The new union went on to vote to lend sup-Ira A. Kipnis's class on the “legal process”.He had lunch with the committee forVisting Fellows at the Quadrangle Club andlater met with 30 students from the PublicAffairs and PERL programs. At dinner, hemet with yet another group of students whiledining in the apartment of Burton-Judsonresident master Jonathon F. Fanton.Throughout the receptions and meetingsthat he attended, Stevens was open andfrank with students. Questions duringvarious sessions ranged from general ques¬tions about the supreme court to delicatelegal matters.On Friday, Stevens played tennis at 7 amin the Field House. Stevens showed fineform despite the early hour and gave a per¬formance befitting a former member of thevarsity tennis team at the University. Therewas no questioning of the line calls.The second event of the morning was abreakfast with The Maroon staff. Stevenstalked about the differences and thesimilarities between The Maroon of 1948 (ofwhich he was chairman) and of today. Manyof the other questions dealt with the pressand their legal rights under the first amend¬ment.Stevens lunched at Burton-Judson withfirst and second year law students. Follow¬ing his question and answer session, he haddinner with President Gray as the last of¬ficial function on his schedule of activities. port to three activities this quarter, includ¬ing a demonstration against U.S. Navy re¬cruiters coming to campus November 8.The statement of principles endorsed bythe union, authored by Clay Martin, analumnus and staff member, declared oppo¬sition to “the class system” as “a denial ofthe principle of majority control over essen¬tial decisions.” It declared support forworking class people, racial minorities,women, and gay people as “oppressed peo¬ples” who “must be the solid base and con¬trolling forces in building a mass movementfor social justice.”The union pledged to “fight for a demo¬cratic University,” challenging "narrowcorporate educational policies and priori¬ties, ... the alienated, isolated.and oppres¬sive social life at the University, . . . racistand sexist admissions policies. ... aid andadvice to conservative and racist regimesabroad.” naming Chile and South Africa,and “the history of urban renewal and thechanging housing market (which shows)that the University and city businessmencan determine the basic living conditions inthis community, to the detriment of blacks,poor and working people, and students.”The statement of principles was chosenover three others, one calling for an organi¬zation “on this campus to advance the aimsof the labor movement;” another advocat¬ing a University union aimed almost entire¬ly at democratizing the University; and anexplicitly non-socialist statement calling for“broadening democracy.”Socialists“We shouldn’t be evasive about it — a lotof us are socialists, " said one union memberarguing for the prevailing principles state¬ment. “But you don’t have to be a socialistto join, and a lot of people in this aren’t so¬ cialists.”The organizational meeting followed adiscussion Tuesday on the four statementsof principles submitted to the committee.The Mobilization Committee was formed ata large meeting following the demonstrationon May 22 against awarding Robert McNa¬mara the Pick Award for promoting inter¬national understanding, and charged withpreparing for a campus organization to sus¬tain the level of political involvement thatsurrounded tht demonstration.The Committee met througn the summerdiscussing principles for the plannedcampus union. During the summer, theCommittee formed liason committees withthe Chicago Coalition Against Registrationand the Draft (C.A.R.D.) and the Hyde ParkTenants Union Committee members helpedorganize a block party to raise funds forlegal expenses incurred by the 5400 HarperTenants Association in August, and thisweekend the new union sent two delegates tothe C A R D, conference at NorthwesternUniversity.Navy protestThe new union voted to take part in a de¬monstration being organized by the Sparta¬cus Youth League against U.S. Navy re¬cruiters, who will be on campus Thursday,November 8. The demonstration will opposehaving recruiters on campus, the draft, andthe presence of U.S. forces on the militarybase at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba. The deci¬sion followed discussion of past “unitedfront” demonstrations led by the SYL.The union’s participation in the November8 demonstration is to be planned at its nextmeeting, tentatively scheduled for thisThursday. Ammendments to the principlesstatement will also be consideredThe Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, October 23, 1979 — 5By Mark WallachThree Laotian men, twenty days removedfrom a refugee camp in Unol, Thailand, arequietly explaining to a visitor that their foodration in camp consisted of one meal of riceand fish every second day. As the discussionproceeds, one of the men, a former soldiernamed Samlane, brings his arms to a foldedposition before him, revealing a long, hand¬somely engraved Laotian word on his rightforearm, printed in green. Asked by thetranslator to explain the word for the benefitof the puzzled guest, Samlane and the Lao¬tians gathered around the table break out insheepish grins and gentle laughs. The trans¬lator explains that the word refers to Sam-lane’s youthful days when Laotian customdemanded that each male completely fi¬nance his own wedding. The tattoed word,the translator explains, meant that Samlane“couldn’t afford a wife.” For the Laotianspresent, the word provided a fond remem¬brance of their homeland, a memory ofsimpler days before Communist rule causedthem to flee Laos and forever complicatedtheir lives.In the last year, about 56,000 Indochinesehave poured into the United States and anestimated 5,000 hve settled in Chicago. Tosome, it may come as a surprise that the In¬dochinese are actually composed of at leastfour different nationalities — the Vietnam¬ese, the Cambodians, the ethnic Chinese andthe Laotians (called Laochmong from theLaotian mountains) — and that only a rela¬tively small percentage fled their homelandby boat, thus making the term “boat peo¬ple” something of a misnomer.Mr. Phua (he asked that his real name notbe used), is one who did escape by boat. Be¬fore the Communist take-over of Vietnam in1975, Phua owned a 50-acre coffee plantationand employed as many as 80 servants dur¬ing the height of the coffee season. After thetake-over, Phua hid in his wife’s small vil¬lage house to avoid being sent to a Commu¬nist labor camp in the New Economic Zone.For the next four years, Phua made repea¬tedly unsuccessful attempts to escape. Fi¬nally, he found a friend with a boat andbribed his way past a Communist guard. “Ifyou have a house, you give them a house,”Phua said. “You give them everything.”The 42-foot boat which Phua and his twosons escaped on held 120 people and finallyarrived in a refugee camp in Malaysia.From there, he waited seven months beforebeing granted entry into the United Stateslast May. “I didn’t worry about beinghungry,” Phua says as he puffs on his Marl¬boro. “A little food is enought. Mostly, I wor¬ried about my family.” He does not knowPhua does not know howhis wife and two daughtersescaped from Vietnam, on¬ly that they are in arefugee camp in HongKong. "I'm 36 years old/7he explains, "but I lookolder."how his wife and two daughters escapedVietnam, only that they are in a refugeecamp in Hong Kong. “I’m 36 years old,”Phua explains, “but I look older.”For Mr. Sarun, the problems were a littledifferent. While fighting for the forces ofLon Nol against the Communists in 1973, hishelicopter was shot down while he was try¬ing to rescue the dead body of his command¬er from the city of Osandam. The crashgave him an injured back and he spenthours hiding in a foxhole before being re¬scued. After his father died of starvation in1972 and his brother was killed because ofSarun’s political connections, Sarunescaped to Thailand where he became thecoordinator of a refugee camp. Fending offthe intrusions of nature, Sarun helped therefugees to establish a road to the camp, digditches for draining, build a freshwaterwell, establish toilet facilities, and constructa make-shift hospital. Sarun also gave therefugees of Aranyapheth a culture. Underhis guidance, the refugees constructed atechnical center, formed a band, and start¬ed a theatre company. “I didn’t want thepeople to be hopeless,” Sarun says. “I gavethem hope. If they didn’t have that, theywould think of home very much.” After Sarun had been there for 4Vfe years, thecamp received a visit from UN secretary-general Kurt Waldheim. Sarun took the op¬portunity to make an impassioned plea forinternational understanding and specifica¬lly asked that no more Cambodians be sentback across the border and that other coun¬tries do more to accommodate Cambodianrefugees. According to Sarun, authoritiesbecame very angry with him and forced himto leave. He is now a caseworker in Chicagofor Traveler’s Aid. He has received news, hesays sadly, that the Aranyapheth camp nolonger has a coordinator and is being badlyrun.To gain entrance into the United States,Phua and Sarun, like all Indochinese refu¬gees, must submit to a complicated bureau¬cratic odyssey. After arriving, by land orsea, at any one of the four major refugeecamps — Thailand (170,000 registered refu¬gees), Hong Kong and Macao (68,500), Ma¬laysia (51,500), and Indonesia (49,000) — therefugee files an application. The refugee isthen interviewed by someone from the Im¬migration and Nationalization Service andthe application is reviewed by the nationalvoluntary agency (volags). The refugee’srecord is then checked by the FBI, the CIA,the FDA, and Army Intelligence. If every¬thing looks okay, the refugee is admitted onthe basis of four hierarchically-arrangedcriterion: (1) Whether members of the im¬mediate family are in the U.S. (2) Whetherthe refugee has worked for the U. S. govern¬ment, a U. S. firm or an Indochinese govern¬ment or firm in liaison with the U.S. (3)Whether members of the extended familyare in the U.S. (4) General humanitariangrounds.This last condition, may give the true“boat people,” whose plight is perceived ascritical, a higher priority than they wouldnormally perceive. Another group, theLaochmong, who fled from the mountains ofLaos because the Communists were at¬tempting to exterminate them by sprayingthe mountains with poisonous gas, may alsoreceive special dispensation. From 1960-75,the U.S. used these people to conduct war¬fare — but never officially acknowledgedthe Laochmong’s existence. If the dispensa-ton proposal is approved, the Laochmongquota will go from 600 to 1,000 per year.If the refugee is accepted, his data goes toa national voluntary agency in New York.From there, the Volags ticket the refugeesto various areas around the country, baseuon the number of refugees the local agenciesthink they can handle. In Chicago, there arefour major agencies — Traveler’s Aid(funded by the state through HEW), JewishFamily Service, Lutheran Family Service,and Catholic Charities — and severalsmaller ones (such as the American Refu¬gee Association), all of whom are coordinat¬ed by the Governor’s Office for Asian Assis¬tance. All of these services help the refugeesfind housing and employment and manyprovide counseling. For language training,Truman College has English classes (alongwith vocational training and counseling)geared toward every range of language skillfrom illiterate refugees to those with multip¬le degrees. The Asian Human Services alsoprovides language training and the Indo-Chinese Adult Education Consortion is astate-funded umbrella organization thatteaches bi-lingual education in 18 differentlocations around Illinois.Not everyone feels that the services forthe refugees works as neatly as this descrip¬tion makes it appear. One person familiarwith the agencies, who asked not to be iden¬tified, expressed exasperation that theagencies were so uncoordinated. GordonBainbridge, the coordinator of languagetraining at Truman College, remarked:'“The whole resettlement program is gener¬ally being run by pros. “(But) the Depart¬ment of Public Aid has a caseload far biggerthan it should have. It’s hard to know whoshould be doing what.” Steven Voss, thedirector at Traveler’s Aid, said, “A lot of itis very politicized because there are somany vested interests. If you don’t get thebig guns behind you, you may not get yourpercentage of the pie.”But a lot of the problems that bureaucra¬tic snafus may cause are off-set by thefierce motivation of the Indochinese them¬selves. “Personally, I find it kind of aston¬ishing,” says Ed Silverman, the governor’sdirector of Asian Assistance. “During thepast year, of the 6.000 refugees in Chicago,4,000 adults/" 3,000 of them became in¬volved in adult education courses. Comparethat with the Latinos. A recent study showed6 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, October 23, 1979 Danila Oder"Send these,At a party in Lombard last Saturday for Laotian refugees, the band, formed bytwo reunited countrymen, played traditional Laotian folk tunes and the Laotianthat 51% of the Latinos in Chicago speak noEnglish. The refugees may be more moti¬vated or the Latinos may have less need —one can survive quite well in Chicago speak¬ing nothing but Spanish.”Silverman reflected that working with therefugees has been an enormously gratifyingexperience. In his office last Friday at 5:15,he commented: “We’re accustomed to un¬usual hours. It’s not unusual for the staff towork 60-70 hours a week. It’s almost a 24-hour a day job. “We’re helping people in a very funda¬mental way and we know we've been effective. It’s a finite problem. It’s solvable.” Asthe refugees become more self-sufficient,Silverman says, they will probably run mostof the services by themselves.The composition of Chicago helps explainwhy the refugees have adjusted so wellhere: Chicago has so many different ethnicgroups that there is more tolerance for thedifferentness of the refugees. “They don’tstick out like a sore thumb,” says Voss,tom neSt-t0St, to me ”Danila OderDanila OderDanila OderAssociation sponsored an old-fashioned Laotian feast: dried bananas, pickledvegetables, tamarino fruit, papaya salad, and pate saul.which is crucial because “one of the funda¬mental principles of prejudice is in beingeasily identifiable.”Another advantage of Chicago is that jobsare relatively plentiful and the unemploy¬ment rate is only 4.6%. “It’s one of the lasteconomies to be hurt in terms of unemploy¬ment and one of the first to recover,” Silver-man observed. “And there are lots of uns¬killed jobs available in factories, assemblylines and maintenance. The Indochinese asa group have very high manual dexterity and patience.”So far, Chicago has been spared some ofthe problems that have plagued other cities.In Seadrift, Texas, for example, violenceerupted when overly ambitious refugeestried to outdo local fishing parties by fishingtwenty-four hours a day. “It was a case ofthe refugees not knowing what was expectedof them,” Silverman commented, “and thefact that no effort was made to educate thelocal people about the refugees.”Silverman added that some people have used the refugees as a scapegoat for such in-soluable problems as inflation, unemploy¬ment, and the lack of an ideal welfare sys¬tem. “The refugees become a whipping postfor all of those fundamental fears.” In Chi¬cago, however, with less competition forjobs, a complex ethnography, and what Sil¬verman termed “the best resettlement pro¬gram in the country,” the refugees have hadfavorable conditions in which to adjust."The refugees aresometimes a whipping postfor such insoluable pro¬blems as inflation,unemployment, and thelack of an ideal welfaresystem."That is not to suggest, however, that theadjustment for many Indochinese has beenanything less than wrenching. The refugees,unlike so many other groups seeking asy¬lum, have had no Indochinese communityhere before them. In 1970. for example,there were bout 6 Vietnamese in Chicago.Now there are 4,000. Mr. Sarun says thatsome of the Cambodians that he counselshave gotten lost on trains, gone up and downelevators until they were helped, and, on thejob, have a deathly fear of breaking tools.“In Cambodia, the Communists executedthem for breaking tools,” Sarun says. “Mostof the refugees are utterly hypnotized by thetall buildings,” Silverman noted. “After18-24 months w-hen the newness of beinghere wears off, the culture shock can bequite debilitating.”Morgan Jenkins, a first year graduate stu¬dent at the University, who is sponsoring theLuu family through Calvert House and Cath¬olic Charities, has helped his family con¬front what are the refugees’ two biggestproblems — the language barrier and theshortage of housing. “No, I’d rather youdidn’t photograph them,” Jenkins says afterconsiderable thought, “because I don’t thinkI could fully communicate its purpose tothem.”As for housing, Section 8 of the HousingCode allows families to move into govern-Some Cambodians havegotten lost on trains, goneup and down on elevatorsuntil they were helped,and, on the job, displayed adeathly fear of breakingtools. "In Cambodia, theCommunists executedthem for breaking tools,"Sarun says.ment-subsidized places. While 6.000 refu¬gees have been so certified, there is a wait¬ing list of 30,000 for subsidized housing,many of whom need housing for large fami¬lies.The nine-member Luu family, a Canton¬ese-speaking merchant family of ethnicChinese, arrived in Chicago from two dif¬ferent refugee camps only two days apart,each group having somehow- gotten word ofthe other’s arrival. They stayed briefly withrelatives in Chinatown before Jenkins founda house for them in Albany Park which hadbeen advertised in a two-line Tribune ad.“The Luus had relatives (with no sponsor)living in an uptow n apartment that had ratsand roaches,” Jenkins related. “They hadnothing to sleep on and no clothing.”Jenkins stressed that having a sponsor“makes all the difference in the world. Thesponsor has no legal obligations and it’s nota mammoth project. . . As hard as the agen¬cies try. they can’t always take care of ev¬erybody.”in his visits to the Luus. at first daily andnow weekly, Jenkins typically found theLuus lounging in pajamas. It is apparently acustom of the ethnic Chinese. When the Luuswere in their temporary quarters in China¬town, Jenkins, working through an interpre¬ter, was trying to establish furniture ar¬rangements with the Luus, specifically tosee if they wanted five beds. “They seemeddisconcerted (by the process) but alsohappy to get the beds.” When Jenkins andhis group returned later in a van. the Luu children ran down the street in their paja¬mas to greet the van. “I wonder what theneighbors thought,” Jenkins said.Another time, Jenkins arrived to find theLuu children engrossed in a television show.They were watching “Charlie’s Angels.” Itwas not, perhaps, an ideal introduction toAmerican culture.Helping the Luus has made Jenkins ex¬plore his own motivations. “When I metthem at the airport, they were all dressed indenim. I remembered that they were from amerchant class and were used to a ratherhigh standard of living. Before that, in mymind’s eye, I was helping orphans. Butthey’re a lot more street-wise than I am,much more shrewd, but it took me a while torealize that.”The refugees themselves never forgettheir roots. Last year, a family with villageelders settled in Kankakee. Within a year. 90people from their family’s native village"Having a sponsor makesall the difference in theworld to a refugee. Thesponsor has no legalobligations and it's not amammoth project."had re-settled in the area.With so many broken families, many ofthe refugees remember their old life in pre-Communist days with fond sentimentality.Sarun remembers how each Cambodian vil¬lage would have a Ceremony of Rain eachyear after the crops were sown. The villagewould welcome the rain by holding waterfestivals, and having paper boat races. “InApril we would go to the Pagoda to celebrateserenity,” Sarun says, “and in Novemberwe would pray to the moon to produce ahappy life.”Saysana, a Laotian who arrived here in’75, says that the family is still the heart ofLaotian society. “In Laos, we have a dyna¬mite ceremony called ’baci\” says Saysanabetween sips from his Old Style beer. Say¬sana. who is at a party in Lombard spon¬sored by the Laotian Association, explainsthat in “baci,” family and friends wouldgather around “what you would call aChristmas tree” with 6-inch strips of cottonattached to the branches. Each personwould then take the cotton strips off the treeand place it on a loved one’s arrn while si¬multaneously expressing love and wishingthe person success and happiness. “It’s themost beautiful thing there is,” says Say¬sana.“Ive been Americanized in every way youcan be,” Saysana chuckles. “But when itcomes to a family situation. I’m a real Lao¬tian.”Certainly, Americans have often beenpuzzled by the Indochinese cultures. JaniceBeckwith, who worked on research at Gov¬ernor’s State University last summer,which is assessing the refugees needs andhoping to issue recommendations by early"I've been Americanizedin every way you can be/'Saysana chuckles, "butwhen it comes to a familysituation, I'm a real Lao¬tian."next year, said that the Indochinese sense ofidentity is very different from that of Ameri¬cans. “Their sense of self-worth is derivedmore from their family and less from theirown self-image. What Americans call shy¬ness. they associate with humbleness.”Beckwith said that because the Indochin¬ese often don’t express their emotions theway Americans do. the Governor’s Statesurvey (which was sent to all refugees in Il¬linois) asked for manifestations of emotionwith such questions as “Do you break thingseasily?” In interviews. Beckwith said, it issometimes easier to understand the refu¬gees' emotions through facial expressionsthan through the refugees’ verbal answers“One man.” Beckwith recalled, “wanted toskip over his feelings. It was painful be¬cause there was so much there ... It was toomuch to talk about.”The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, October 23, 1979 — 7The University of ChicagoTHE SCHOOL OF SOCIAL SERVICE ADMINISTRATIONPRESENTSThe Second Allen T. Burns LectureONServing the Collective or theIndividual: Lessons fromthe Wars of IsraelBYProfessor Jona Michael RosenfeldDirector of the Paul Baerwald School of Social WorkThe Hebrew University of Jerusalemand Visiting ProfessorThe Columbia University School of Social WorkTUESDAY, OCTOBER 23,19794:00p.m.SCHOOL OF SOCIAL SERVICE ADMINISTRATION969 East Sixtieth Street • Room East 1Today 8 PM Ida Noyes LibrarySAPh#753-3273 STUDENT Z,GOVERNMENT j*MEETING ^esIssues To Be Discussed Include:Food Co-OpFreshmen ElectionsDecember ReferendumFinance CommitteeRecommendationsCommittee ActivitiesOPEN TO ALL INTERESTEDSTUDENTS IN THE UNIVERSITY ASHUM-AMSASeminar Series 1979-80Program in the Arts and Sciences Basic to HumanBiology and MedicineandAmerican Medical Students’ AssociationPresentAnn Dudley GoldblattLecturer and Consultant in Medical Law and Ethicsspeaking on the topicMisconceptions:Legal Images ofMedical PracticeMONDAY, OCTOBER 29, 19797:30 P.M.HARPER HOTHE UNIVERSITY OFCHICAGOTHE DEPARTMENT OFGERMANIC LANGUAGESAND LITERATURESPRESENTS A LECTUREbyHANNS STEFAN SCHULTZProfessor EmeritusDepartment of GermanicLanguages & LiteraturesonTHEODOR FONTANE:OR THE ART OF THE NOVEL26 October 1979Friday 4:30 p.m.Classics 211010 E. 59th Street, Chicago, Illinois 60637Admission is free and without ticket8 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, October 23, 1979Football skid reaches five in 14-0 lossby Andy RothmanTwo second half touchdowns were morethan the Beloit Buccaneers needed to beatthe University of Chicago football Maroons14-0 on Saturday at Beloit. The loss was Chi¬cago’s fifth straight and dropped theMaroons’ record to 1-5 overall.Chicago continued to experience difficul¬ties scoring from deep in their opponent’send as they wasted two first and goal oppor¬tunities in the game. Last week againstLake Forest the Maroons threw four inter¬ceptions inside the Foresters’ ten yard line.On their first possession of Saturday’s gameChicago drove down to the Beloit one yardline for a first and goal, mainly on the pass¬ing of senior quarterback Mark Meier (14-33with one interception for 200 yards on theday). After a running play lost yardage, Chi¬cago was called on the same rare penalty oneach of the next two plays; the Maroonslined up with a receiver too far back off ofthe line of scrimmage and could not scorefrom 15 yards out following the penalties.The first half was played to a scoreless tieand Meier would later describe the game as a, “dogfight throughout.” Chicago’s offensewas hampered by the loss of two startingrunning backs to injuries as co-captain NickFilippo and Scott Detwiler sat out the con¬test. One of the running back positions hadto be taken over by a player who had neverplayed the position before because of coachTom Kurucz’s thinning roster.With a depleted backfield Saturday, Chi¬cago’s rushing game accounted for minus 30yards. In all the Maroon offense gained only169 yards against the best defense in theMidwest Conference for total yardage sur¬rendered per game — the Bucs had allowedan average of only 152 yards a game in theirfirst two conference games.Meier noted one of the reasons the clubhas a depth problem is that very little re¬cruiting was done last spring after formercoach Bob Lmobardi left and before Kuruczofficially took over. In fact, Meier and Filip¬po were responsible for the bulk of theteam’s recruiting last year.Both Beloit touchdowns came as the resultof drives that gained first and goal situa¬tions from which the Bucs moved the ball in on the ground. Beloit got much of its 260yards on offense from one runningback whorushed for 110 yards on only nine carries.Meier, who, along with the rest of theMaroon seniors has only two games remain¬ing with the club, admits being somewhatfrustrated with the club’s losing streak,“After my freshman year I got reallypsyched because the team was building,”but last spring’s coaching change and re¬cruiting disappointment have thrust theclub into another building stage. Meier be¬lieves the team has a good outlook, “I’msure they will come around in a year or sobecause coach Kurucz is going to be doingsome serious recruiting this year.”Meier decided that the club is not down be¬cause, “we’re too close a group to let itbother us too much. After these two gamesI'll never play again and I know I will be ashigh as ever for them.” Chicago will shootfor a .500 conference season in in their lasttwo games as thei are now 0-2 in the league.This week’s game will be the final home ap¬pearance for the football team in 1979,against Grinnell. John WrightMaroon defense piles up on Lake ForestsJohn Joyce is Homecoming loss.Netters take third in tourney want .500by Darrell WuDurmAfter playing on the road for three suc¬cessive dates, the University of Chicagowomen’s volleyball team split the fourgames of their homestand this past week.Despite the two losses, the team played welland still hopes to finish the season with a re¬cord close to the .500 level.On Saturday, Chicago hosted a four team,round robin tourney. In the first round, theMaroons played a marathon match againsta persistant Eureka College team with theMaroons emerging the victor in five games.The first game was a solid win for Chicago15-7, but Eureka stormed back to take thesecond game 15-8. In the third game, Chica¬go won easily 15-8 after the team took a 10-0lead behind the bullet serving of juniorMary Klemundt. The fourth game was aclose seesaw battle in which Eureka edgedout Chicago 15-13. Then Chicago claimed thematch as they won the final game 15-10. Inthe other first round match, Macalester Col¬lege came back from a two games to nothingdeficit to beat Quincy College in fivegames.In the second round, the Maroons facedQuincy College. Quincy brought a 10-1 re¬cord to the fieldhouse. Although Chicagostarted strong, Quincy was clearly the supe¬rior team. During the first two games, Chi¬cago kept within reach but was unable tostop Quincy’s devastating offense. In thethird game, Quincy completely dominatedand took the match 15-9, 15-11, 15-4. In theby Lina GoodeThe University of Chicago Women’s Crewparticipated in the Head-of-the-CharlesRegatta on Sunday, October 21, rowing’sequivalent of the Boston Marathon. Com¬peting against 39 other crews in theLightweight Eights, it was the club’s fifthconsecutive year in this prestigious race.“The Head” is America’s largest rowingregatta, coach Susan Urbas explained, with3000 competitors and over 600 teamsrepresented. Sixty to a hundred thousandspectators typically line the shores of theCharles River in Boston every year, in aleisurely display of picnic and strolling ac¬tivity reminiscent of a bygone era.The purpose of the team’s participationwas two-fold, according to Urbas. “We arebetween rowing sites this fall, and have notbeen able to row daily as we normallywould. For the first time, we are not going tothe Head for mainly competitive reasons.Our purpose is to treat ourselves to a goodtime and to continue our efforts todramatize the difficulty of trying to row inChicago," she said.The fall regatta follows a successful sum¬mer season for the team. “We swept the other match, Macalester destroyed Eurekain straight games also 15-2, 15-2, 15-6.In final round action, Chicago played Ma¬calester. Although Macalester defeatedQuincy in their match, Chicago fared betterwomen’s events at the Chicago LakefrontFestival Regatta in August,” Urbas said,“winning the Elite Fours by 33 seconds andthe Elite Eights by 10 seconds. Come springwe will be training on the Chicago River andwe are going to be winners again.”The cumulative stress of operating avarsity-level effort as a sports club has af¬fected every team member, but theoarswomen are determined to keep “thesports alternative to varsity teams at theUniversity of Chicago” alive and growing.“I’m tremendously proud of this team.They have been through a lot of disappoint¬ment this spring and summer,” Urbas said.“We have had to get involved in things likecreating a non-profit foundation to finallyprovide the level of administrative andfinancial support the team requires but hasnot been available within the university inthe past. We are also undertaking develop¬ment of a new rowing site and building of aboathouse."Nonetheless, their spirits remain highand they are committed to a long winter oltough land conditioning. They are all veryspecial and deserve a lot of credit for theirdedication in the face of a multitude of pro- Mary Klemundt.After suffering a disheartening loss to dis¬trict opponent Lake Forest last Tuesday, theMaroons rebounded against Elmhurst Col¬lege Thursday. The team played a strongblems that would simply overwhelm mostpeople.”Besides the Head, the Women’s Crew willbe active this fall with shirt sales, workoutsin the rowing tank at the University ofWisconsin at Madison, and a special “Runfor Fun” October 27. The three mile coursewill traverse the Midway, and severalprizes have been donated by universityfavorites like Giordano’s and Powell'sBookstore.According to club president VirginiaSmith, the run should help raise money withthe $1.50 entry fee, but, she noted, “Theteam hopes it will also bring the universitycommunity a fun event they can take part into show their support of us.”Smith is also excited about the comingyear. “We have new people who shouldmake good, positive contributions to ourcrew. and we are extremely lucky to have acoach like Susan Urbas; she outshinesalmost everybody in the Midwest in rowingexperience, and is nationally known in therowing world. The combination of her ascoach, the experienced rowers, and our newmembers makes our future very promis¬ing.” Markovitz, in perhaps the best game of hercareer, handcuffed the Elmhurst team withher powerful spiking and consistent block¬ing. After Chicago was well in control of thematch, coach Rosie Resch began substitut¬ing in players from the bench in order to de¬velop more of the depth that the team lacks.Resch, pleased with the team’s perfor¬mance, explained that the women reallywanted to win after the Lake Forest game.With a split of the four games this week,the Maroons’ record is now 5-8. With fivescheduled games remaining, the team willhave to work hard and concentrate on win¬ning the close matches in order to salvage a500 season. Chicago will travel to Munde¬lein College tonight before returning hometo meet Wheaton and Aurora colleges at thefieldhouse on Thursday beginning at 7:00pm.Northfield and stay over on Friday night.Later the plans were changed and the teamflew to Minneapolis on Saturday morning.All this was of little consequence as theteam suffered its most disappointing loss ofthe season.Again the Maroons could generate almostno offense Their lone goal was credited toCy Oggins but was the result of a miscue bythe Carleton defense. Both offensively anddefensively the team did not play up to thepotential it showed earlier in the season.The team lost another victory prior to thiswhen it was learned that the game that wasoriginally forfeited by Beloit last Saturdaywill be replayed on Thursday at 4 pm atStagg Field. Due to the intricasies of theleague’s rules, this decision may actuallywork in the team's favor. The standings inthe Northern Conference have Lake Forestfirst at 4-0, Carleton second at 2-1 and theMaroons at 1-1 in third place. In case of a tieit will be resolved through goals for/goalsagainst statistics. If Chicago can beat LakeForest who they play on Wednesday atStagg Field at 4 pm. and win all the rest oftheir games they will have the same recordas Lake Forest. At this juncture however.Lake Forest has a considerably better goalsfor record of 19-2 to 7-2 for the Maroons. Thechange in the forfeit would work in theMaroons' favor if they can beat Beloit bymore than one goal, because the forfeit isscored as a 1-0 victory. Even with this fortu¬nate turn of events the Maroons will have toaverage almost four goals a game if theyare to keep their title hopes alive.The Maroons continue with their seasonand try to get back on track when they playLake Forest in a crucial game at StaggField on Wednesday at 4. and face Beloit in amake up game on Thursday also at StaggField at 4 pm.The Chtsaao 444WOO Qff»<xwsr 20,*against Macalester than against Quincy. Inthe first game, Chicago came back fromdown 3-9 to take a 13-10 lead, but could nothold on and lost 13-15. The second game waseven closer. Chicago took a 14-9 lead butagain was unable to sustain and Macalesterwon 16-14. After two disappointing losses,the Maroons fell apart in the third game,losing 5-15. Thus Macalester took the matchand won the tourney with a 3-0 record. Chi¬cago finished 1-2 for the day while Quincywas 2-1 and Eureka 0-3.Despite having a losing record for the day,the volleyball team played well. The teamwas simply no match for the teams fromQuincy and Macalester. Coach Resch wasespecially pleased with the performances ofJanet Sullivan, who Resch describes as“one of the best attackers around,” and match overall and had little difficulty de¬feating their opponents in three straightgames, 15-9, 15-12, 15-10. Sophomore EllenBooters denied at Carletonby Allen SowizralNeither a change of climate nor a changeof schedule could change the fortunes of theMaroon soccer team on Saturday. They suf¬fered their first conference loss of the yearto Carleton 2-1, in a game played at North-field, Minnesota. Originally the team wassupposed to take an eight hour bus ride toWomen’s crew : experience in BostonCampus Film —By Rory McGahanLazybones: Frank Borzage (1925). In thisexample of Borzage’s pre-Seventh Heavenwork Buck Jones plays Steve Tuttle — “thelaziest man in town” (close-up of molassesdribbling over a stack of pancakes). Itsounds like a basic Borzage melodrama,though: Buck saves a girl from drowningand adopts her daughter. The problem isthat years later he winds ud falline in lovewith the daughter. Doc Films Tuesday at7:15.History Is Made At Night: Frank Borzage(1937). Charles Boyer, Jean Arthur, and Colin Clive are hammy, unguarded, and in¬tense respectively; Leo G. Carillo’s accentprovides the laughs. Borzage’s feeling of no¬space, no-flow works right in this documentof overheated delirium and the isolated, in¬tense images take their toll. The plot makeszero sense, but who cares? It ain’t Tristan,but it will do. Doc Films, Tuesday at 9:30pm.The Fortune Cookie: Billy Wilder (1966). AT.V.-cameraman (Jack Lemmon) sues theCleveland Browns for causing some non-ex¬istent whiplash. Walter Matthau is his shv-ster, lawyer and brother-in-law, and theirlackadaisical interplay gives a lift to a gen¬eral leering. Doc Films, Wednesday at 7pm. Avanti!: Billy Wilder (1973). Jack Lemmonplays a stuffy and ulceric businessman whogoes to pick up his father’s body in Italy andruns into Juliet Mills instead. She is, yousee, the daughter of the woman Lemmon’sfather had been shacking up with when hedied. Technically Wilder’s work is impecc¬able, I guess, but the utter tastelessness andvulgarity (all the way down to the colorcoordinated clashing of clothes) kept mefrom surviving past the first reel. Butmaybe you Wilder fans can. Doc Film,Wednesday at 9:30 pm.Before The Revolution: Bernardo Bertoluc¬ci (1964). Through Marx out of Stendahl,Bertolucci’s film concerns an ineffectual in¬tellectual who plays around with his Com¬ munism and his aunt. Clumsier than hislater films, it’s probably more honest be¬cause of that. But the ‘poehe’ monologingand images, operatic exaggeration, and nosense of space tend to make the film moreflashy and meaningful. Doc Films, Thurs¬day at 8 pm.The Searchers: John Ford (1956). LawSchool Films, Thursday at 8:30 pm. For areview see last Friday’s Grey City Journalarticle The Searchers by Gary Beberman.All Doc Films are shown in Cobb Hall’sQuantrell Auditorium. Admission to theirTuesday and Wednesday night films is $1,$1.50 on Thursdays. All Law School Filmsare shown in the Law School Auditoriumand admission to their films is $1.50.[CalendarTUESDAYPerspectives: Topic: “Preparation for Death” guests Dr. DonaldSweet, Mary Anderson, and Kathleen Woods, 6:30 am, Channel7.S.S.A. Lecture: “Serving the Collective or the Individual: Lessonsfrom the Wars of Israel” speaker Prof. Jona Michael Rosenfeld,4:00 pm, S.S.A. 969 E. 60th St. Room East 1.Hillel: Class in Beginning Conversational Hebrew, 5:30 pm, Hil-lel.Romance Languages Dept: Lecture- “Lectures Commentes deTextes” speaker Nathalie Sarraute, 6:00 pm, Swift 3rd floor.Hillel: Class in Intermediate Conversational Hebrew, 7:00 pm.Hillel.Calvert House: Investigation of Catholicism, 7:00 pm, CalvertHouse.Hillel: Support Group for Children of Holocaust Survivors, 7:00pm, Hillel.DOC Films: “Lazybones” 7:15 pm, “History is Made at Night” 9:30pm, Cobb.Women’s Rap Group: Meets 7:30 pm, Women’s Center, 3rd floorBlue Gargoyle, Info call 752-5655.Hillel: Israeli Folk Dancing, 8:00 pm. Ida Noyes Theatre, 50c.Lutheran School of Theology: Seminar among Roman Catholics,Lutherans and Presbyterians, 8:00 pm, Lutheran School of Theolo¬gy auditorium, 1100 E. 55th St.Hillel: Class in Advanced conversational Hebrew, 8:30 pm, Hil¬lel.Astronomy Club: Open night at the Observatory, 9-11 pm on roofof Rye-son. Everyone welcome, enter through Eckhart.WEDNESDAYPerspectives: Topic: “Clinical Research and the Cancer Patient”guests Dr. Donald Sweet, Mary Anderson, and Kathleen Woods,6:30 am, Channel 7.Rockefeller Chapel: Service of the Holy Communion, 8:00 am.Hillel: Students for Israel: Prof. Jona Michael Rosenfeld speakingon “Emerging Social Welfare Issues in Israel Today, 12:00 noon,Hillel.Rockefeller Chapel: Robert Lodine University Carillonneur, reci¬tal, 12:15 pm. Free.Crossroads: English classes for foreign women, 2:00 pm.Dept of Biochemistry Seminar: "Cell Cycle Specific Control ofPhospholipid Biosynthesis in Rhodopseudomonas Sphaeroidesand its role in membrane Biogenesis” speaker Samuel Kaplan,4:00 pm, Cummings room 101.Chemical Physics Seminars: "The Alkali Halides Revisited” speak-er Dr. Joseph Berkowitz, 4:00 pm, Ryerson 251. UC Gymnastics: Instruction available between 5:30-8:00 pm, Bart¬lett gym, free.NOMOR: Committee meeting, 7:00 pm, Ida Noyes 3rd floorlounge.Calvert House: Bible Study at Woodward Court, 7:00 pm.DOC Films:“The Fortune Cookie” 7:00 pm, "Avanti!” 9:30 pm,Cobb.Hillel: Class in Modern Jewish Philosophy 7:30 pm, Hillel.Tai Chi Ch'uan Club: Meets 7:30 pm, Blue Gargoyle.Hillel: Class in Introduction to Jewish Mysticism, 7:30 pm, Hil¬lel.Badminton Club: Meets 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes gymnasium.Calvert House: Calvert House Prayer Group, 8:00 pm.Science Fiction Club: Meets 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes Hall. EveryoneWelcome.Country Dancers: Traditional Dances of England, Scotland, andNew England taught, 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes Cloister Club. Beginnerswelcome.THURSDAYPerspectives: Topic: “Effects of Lake Michigan on RegionalWeather and Air Pollution” guests Walter Bohan, Paul Frenzen,and Tetsuji Yamada, 6:30 am, channel 7.Committee on Genetics: Colloquium- “Genetic Recombination■^anction^r^nvolvetnrH^ontroLof^elKT^jj^r^feast/^sgeakei^Mr. Kenneth Jordan,from VanderbiltLaw School,will be on campus Wednesday,Oct. 24 from 9:00- 11:00amto interview students interestedin attending Law School.Please contact the Career Counseling &Placement Office, (312) 753-3286,to arrange an interview.Ann Oslin Vanderbilt Law SchoolAdmissions Nashville, Tenn. 37246 Robert Malone, 12:00-1:00 pm, Cummings room 1117.Lunchtime Concert: Music of the late Renaissance performed onrecorders by Linda Austern, Joanne DeGreg, and Hank Hassell,12:15 pm, Reynolds Club Lounge.Computation Center: Seminar-Introduction to SuperwylburMACRO, 3:30-5:30 pm, RI 180.Committee on Social Thought and Divinity School: Lecture-“Nights of Possession: Trancing and Acting in Brazilian Umban-da” 4:00 pm, Swift Lecture Hall.Dept of Microbiology:l Lecture- “Simple Genes in a Simple Orga¬nism: Yeast Histone Genes” speaker Dr. Lynna Hereford, 4:00 pm,Cummings 11th floor seminar room.Political Forum: “Consumerism: An Agenda for the 80’s” speakerKathleen O’Reilly, 7:30 pm, Kent 107.Table Tennis Club: Meets 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes 3rd floor.DOC Films: "Before the Revolution” 8:00 pm, Cobb.Hillel: Class in Talmud, 8:00 pm, Hillel.Law School Films: “The Searchers” 8:30 pm, Law School Auditori-RECRUITMENTREPRESENTATIVEMasters Programs inForeign ServiceGeorgetown University,School of Foreign Service• Two-year professionally orientedprogram of international studies locatedin Washington D.C.• Also, 4 year JD/MSFS and 2V2 yearMSFS/MA in EconomicsWHEN l Thurs., Oct. 25th, 9 am-4 pmWHERE: Career Counseling &Placement OfficemVALUABLE COUPONValuable Coupon!COLORPROCESSING- Kodak The 4th is Freewhen you pay for 3Bring in your favorite color slideswith this coupon and we’ll haveKodak make four same-size KODAKColor Prints for the price of threeYou get one FREE. Hurry, this offerexpires November 14,1979. Stop intoday for details.model cameraI 342 £«»st 55(6 SI 493 6700VALUABLE COUPON-CUT OUT * . <*■♦‘Hi’,PJL; i tiW6 1 |Q/& ran of„ UWT1LMdfi&JMST TOMo'Srtcwos^MJi'irclcdo & cpanj2^\-troVcJL-©axDtK.$TOURIE_£5‘0c?°z> ojfsiovcEmtnnr(Mfcfcl.TTWWBS <£2 JOjo&saxD<p23o> •The College and the Dean's Student Task Force on Education in the College announces the first lecture of .The Lecture Series on Liberal Education and the CollegeCharles W. WegenerHoward L. Willet Professor in the College and Chairman, Committee on Ideas & MethodsSTUDENTS AND THE AIMS OF EDUCATIONToday, Tuesday October 23 - 4:00 PM Social Sciences 1 2210 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, October 23, 1979CLASSIFIED ADSAD RATESMaroon classifieds are effective andcheap. Place them in person at theMaroon business office in Ida NoyesHall by mail to the Maroon, Ida NoyesHal' room 304, 1212 E. 59th St.,Chicago, 60637. Ail ads must be paid inadvance. Rates: 60* per line (30spaces) for U of C people, 75' per lineotherwise. $1 for special headline.Deadlines: For Tuesday paper, 12noon Friday; for Friday, 12 noonWednesday.Display advertising rates areavailable upon request. 753-3263.SPACE we'll move your soul (and possessions) 324-1977.The Self-Hypnosis Seminar begins thisThursday on campus at the Gargoyle,7:00-9:00 pm. Learn the fundamentalsof self-hypnosis and develop the skilland technique to use it in helpingcreate the self-attributes and life youwant, 7 sessions $70. Call Dobbi288-3706 or ans. serv. 337-8100.PERSONALS2 BR CONDO 2 BLKS FROM UC.Hdwd. firs., new kit. and bath. Avail.Immed. $45,000.565-1361, 321-0432.LAST UNIT LEFT1 br condo in Kenwood - 4726 S. Green¬wood. Tastefully renovated $32,000. Byappointment only. Matrix Realty Co.248-6400.1808 N. WELLS TRIANGLE 2 br ACpark. 450 and up mgr. 943-3108.Need an apartment or tenant? Call theStudent Gov't Housing Search Service753-3273.4-6 weekdays.1 large bedroom In two bedroom apt onlake 129/month + utilities with gradincludes pvt. parking workshop laun¬dry 667-5620 morns and 5-6 nights.Large 1 bd. apt. $350. 493-3822. 493-2179?Condo for sale. E. Hyde Pk., large 2bd. 493-3822 or 493-2P9.Co-op apt. for sale-3 rooms; sm.bdrm., separate Ivg. and dng rms., kit¬chenette, bath. Good location. Safe,well-maintained bldg. Only $73/mo. in-cl. all taxes and heat and gas. ONLY$24,500. Call PAULA 753-2719, 752-4506.Tired of Hyde Park? History grad, stu¬dent has very large 2 bedroom apt InNewtown to share with quiet, indepen¬dent man or woman. Close to lake andL-not a bad commute. $175/mo. CallJohn, 871-4572.Why schlep your laundry in the slush?Do it downstairs of your beautiful, ful¬ly carpeted one bedroom apt. atUniversity Park-just steps fromtransportation, shopping and school.Call today 372-6466. $375.00 4- security.Female Roommate to share EastHyde Park apt. 2 bdrm, 2 bath,dishwasher, carpet, a/c. Your share$270-must see. 643-8975.Northside studio lake view $244 Nov. 1Richard 753-3378.Furnished studio-5528 S. Hyde ParkBlvd. Roomy, clean, bright. $160.00 In-cl. everything; heat, lights, water.Avail, immed. Call 752-6755 after 7:00pm or ring Apt. 1003, 5528 S. Hyde ParkBlvd. Sunday, Oct. 21 or Sun. Nov 4 allday.1st, 2nd yr. Grads. Interested in cheapco-op living come see our house Sun.Oct. 28 4:30 pm. Rents average 65/mo.5621 University, 955-2653 GammaAlpha. Meets Thursday evenings 8-10 p.m.Fee.: $40/month, first two monthspayable in advance. Preliminary In¬terview required. Call 684-1800. Leavemessage for Bill.FULL TIME KEYPUNCHER. Ex' SCFNF^lperlence necessary. For small wv>*publications office in Hyde Park. Fun Run Oct. 27, Midway 9am-3mi.Familiarity with at least one foreignlanguage. 947-9418.MALE desk attendant-light chores -study time available. Call LehnhoffSchool of Music and Dance. 288-3500.Chicago Sinai Congregation seeks afull time secretary (40 hours) for theRabbi. Excellent typing skills, someshorthand. Available Dec. 1. Call Mrs.KalllSh 288-1600.Full-time openings In toddler playgroup. Campus loc. Meals $55/workweek. Call 288-5355.ADMINISTRATIVE SECRETARY forprofessional association on Universityof Chicago campus. Requires accuratetyping (50 wpm) good organization,ability to draft correspondence andhandle telephone inquiries. We needan experienced, motivated personeager to take an active interest in achallenging work environment. Com¬petitive salary, 7-hour work day, anexcellent fringe benefit package and asmall friendly office make this a greatopportunity. For appointment, call:Mr. Sullivan 947-2531. AmericanPublic Works Association 1313 E. 60thSt. EOE/M/F.Drivers (full or part time) wanted forevening pizza deliveries in Hyde Parkonly. Earnings potential $25-90 pershift. Car required. Call Jim. R.667-7213. Medici, E. 57th St.Wanted: 15-20 hour position availablein local financial institution. Light typ¬ing and ability to deal with publicvital. Call Ulana McCoy, 955-4444.Babysitter for 8 mo. old wanted MWFam and TTh 9-4 call 684-5581.Cooks. Fast, hard working people (ex¬perienced or Inexperienced) wantedfor very busy pizza restaurant. Nightsand weekends a must. Full or parttime. Please call Jim. 667-7213 Medici.E. 57th St. Writers' Workshop Plaza 2-8377.Good morning rosebud. See you In thegarden.Two single mother-students lookingfor other SMS to meet and talk. Callmothers evenings 363-7265,363-5528.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 ra¬tional 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.SINGLESHYDE PARK SINGLES-ChutzpahUnlimited, a singles group for Jewishadults, 25-45, is holding a Super Sun¬day Brunch, October 28. For more in¬formation, call Ed 324-3686 or Eleanor248-2661.FOLK DANCEFESTIVALFOR SALE The U of C Folkdancers will hold theirannual festival on November 2, 3 and4. There will be a dance party Fridaynight, an ethnic music and dance partySaturday night and workshops Sat.and Sun. beginning at 9 a.m. We willhave 3 superb guest Instructorsteaching Mexican, Bulgarian andMacedonian dance shops for begin¬ners. For info call Blythe 324-6287.Passport Photos while you wait. ModelCamera, 1342 E. 55th60615. Call 493-6700. Chicago, III.PEOPLE WANTEDNeed students to assist at MBA Admis¬sions Forum downtown Nov. 9 and 10.$4/hr. Contact 753-4281 for appoint¬ment before October 24.French tutor wanted for conversationpractice. Native speaker preferred butnot required. Call: 643-5214. 71 DATSUN 510; Excellent Cond.,Engine Rebuilt. $1200/Negotiable.Mary, 324-1820.HALF-FARE COUPON for sale. Am.Airline. Call 528-3016 eves.1968 Mustang fine mechanically somebody quirks $400. Call 288-5676 after 6pm or before 9 am.Closeout Special! Canon AV-1 with 50mm 1.8 lens now only $209.95! Specialbonus: a Canon hiking case, valued at$30.00 Special good until November 6,1979 or until out of stock. ModelCamera, 1342 E. 55th St.A Good-used Sofa-$15; Spice rack withsplces-$15; Wooden Shelves forglasses-SIO; Misc. Plants; KitchenUtensils. MUST SELL; am moving.Call Phil from 10/29 on after 9:30pm-288-7260.Gultar-Yamaha FG345, excellent con¬dition. $150 w/ case. 667-7517. ARTISTS ANDCRAFTERSIf you are interested In sharinggallery-shop space at 57th andWoodlChris 493-3290. Total dues will be$15. No commission, but a few hours ofwork per week will be required.WORK/STUDYA great variety of jobs Is still availablefor graduate and college students whoarc eligible for the Work/Study Pro¬gram. See Sara Johnson, Office ofCareer Counseling and Placement,Reynolds Club 200, for more informa¬tion. ,RUN FORCREWFun run Oct. 27, Midway 9 am 3 miThe Department of BehavioralSciences needs people who want toparticipate as paid subjects inpsycholinguistlc and Cognitivepsychology experiments. For furtherinformation call 753-4718.Two single mother students would liketo contact other s.m.s. interestd irpotential support network. Call eve;363 7265 or 363 5528.Wanted: Darkroom Technician 15-2Chrs/wk. Student with some experiencepreferable. Pay negotiable. On campus. 753-8669.The Chicago Counseling andPsychotherapy Center has severalopenings for women 18 and over in along term group starting October 25. PEOPLE FOR SALEProfessional photography for modelcomposites. Call 684-2286.ARTWORK posters, Illustration,calligraphy, invitations, etc. NoelYuovovich, 5441 S. Kenwood 493-2399.AMBITIOUS PEOPLE Start yourprofitable business. We help. 225-2583Housekeeper available 2 or 3weekdays. Prefers Tues./Fri. Call873-8071 eves.Editorial Services. References:Praxis, KS Hart, McGraw-Hill.Thomas Loesch: 348-2085.Prime movers: 1 or 2 men w big truck: NOTIMEFOR LOVE?Filled with gripes or wonderfully hap¬py stores of what it means to workwhile attending school? Maroonreporter writing series on studentswho work and needs to hear what youhave to say. call Richard at 753-3265.LOST AND FOUNDLOST: Elgin watch near Ad. Bldg.10/15/79. Great sentimental value.Reward. Mrs. Kahn 753-3370. SCIENCEAssoc, for Women In Science meetingMonday, Oct. 29, 7 30-9 p.m. EFI rm.480 featuring C. Sachs on “FINAN¬CIAL ESTATE PLANNING". Formore Info: M. Llstvan 3-8670.BIG STAMP SALEGENERAL STAMP COLLECTIONHarris World Album, 1000's ofworldwide singles, many UN FirstOay Covers, Minkus US Plate BlockAlbum, Plate Blocks 68-76, US and UNSouvenir Cards. NEED CASH, MUSTSELL! Call 753-8342 weekdays 5:30pm-7.00 pm, anytime weekends. Askfor Room 425. NO OFFER TOO LOWGreat Starter Collection.MICHIGANTHREE OAKS TWP. 485' on picturesque Gallen River - beautiful two levelcedar home on wooded two acres gent¬ly sloping to the River - 3-4 br. withmany amenities. Call for details!$119,500.THREE OAKS TWP. 25 acres zonedfight industrial-almost all tillable.Many feet of highway frontage$57,000. RITTER AND HEINZREALTORS, NEW BUFFALO, Ml.616-469-3950. LUNCHTIMECONCERTSEvery Thursday at 12:15 pm InReynolds North Lounge. This week,10/25, music of the late Renaissance inEngland and Italy, performed onrecorders by Linda Austern, JoanneDe Greg, and Hank Hassell. Sponseredby the Department of Music. Bringyour lunch and enjoy the concert!KOSHER KITCHEN?A kosher Cafeteria Is now beingorganized for '8—'81. If you would beInterested In buying some of yourmeals there, drop In at Hillel and leaveyour name.FORUMONREPRODUCTIVERIGHTSThere will be a forum on ReproductiveRights sponsored by the Women'sUnion for Abortion Rights Actionweek Speakers on the History ofReproductive Rights, Abortion and theHyde Amendment, and DES. Tues.,Oct. 23 at 7:00 pm In the East Loungeof Ida Noyes. SKI TEAMDon't think the Midwest hills arechallenging? Challenge the Midwest!Join the UC Ski team. PracticesTuesdays 4.15 pm at Bartlett Gym. In¬fo call Mitch Levine 752-5977.ADVANCED DISCOThere are still spaces left In the Ad¬vanced Disco.Eclectic Ed. $15. Sign up In Ida Noyes210. 3-3598 for Info.VERSAILLE5254 S. DorchesterWELL MAINTAINEDBUILDINGAttractive 1 Vz and2x/z Room StudiosFurnished or Unfurnished$192-$291Rased on AvailabilityAll Utilities IncludedAt Campus Bus Stop324-0200 Mrs. GroakTexas Instrumentsadvanced slide rulecalculator uuith programmabilityTI-55. Versatile slide rule calculator and “how to” book combinationfor statistical and mathematical problem solving-with simpleprogrammability.Advanced TI-55 capabilities include programming, plus a unique blend of hardware andsoftware support features Easily handles almost any mathematical operation, fromlogarithms and trigonometry to more advanced statistical problems Easy-to-understand140-page Calculator Decision Making Sourcebook shows you how to use the power ofstatistics, financial mathematics, and programmability in making better decisions, whateveryour field or profession Step-by-step examples cover analyzing relationships in dataverifying quality and performance, measuring change, forecasting trends testing researchclaims, and projecting investment returns.University of Chicago Bookstore5750 S. Ellis AvenueCalculator Dept., 2nd Floor,753-3303*1AHERCHA.RGE & VISA. 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