■ ■ 'The Chicago Maroon“Solitary, singing in the West, I strike up for a new world.” —Walt WhitmanVol. 89 No. 19 The University of Chicago Copyright 1979 The Chicago Maroon Tuesday November 6, 1979Holocaust in Cambodia“Estimates are that unless massive aid begins to arrive inCambodia almost immediately, as many as 2lA million peopleface death by starvation within the next month.’’Cesar Chavez Tim BakerChavez on boycottBy Nancy ClevelandKicking off the United FarmWorkers (UFW) lettuce boycott inChicago, Cesar Chavez spoke to apacked hall of more than 250 peo¬ple at the Lutheran School of The¬ology last Thursday.Chavez has led the UFW since1962, when he first founded thegroup.In his 20 minute speech, he ex¬plained why the boycott began, andwhy it is aimed at Red Coach Let¬tuce. Bruce Church, the boycott’starget, is the leader and largestgrower of the 13 major growerswith which the UFW has not yetsigned a contract.According to Chavez, the UFWhas been striking since January 1,1979, for higher wages. Presentlymost of the nearly 100,000 full andpart-time union pickers receive$3.70/hour pay, up from only $2/hour in 1970. They were offereda 7 percent raise by the growers."We will accept 7 percent if thegrowers took 7 percent profits,"said Chavez. He pointed out thatthe industry grossed $70 million inprofits last year, he contrasted thisprofit with the hardship of theworkers in the fields, and men¬tioned an incident earlier this yearTurn to Page 3 By John Dugan“The facts are beyond descrip¬tion. A normally articulate JoanBaez was all but speechless on theToday Show when asked to de¬scribe her recent visit to the Thai-Cambodian border. Others, likethe president of World Vision, aveteran of aid programs to variousdisasters around the world 'haveseen nothing comparable. ’ Thefacts are incomprehensible. An en¬tire nation faces imminent extinc¬tion.Thus spoke Dr. Edwin Silver-man, Director of the Governor’sInformation Center for Asian As¬sistance, Thursday at Internation¬al House. Silverman’s "CambodiaToday" lecture evolved into aforum with Dale Pontius, professoremeritus of Roosevelt University,and several representatives ofCambodian refugee groups speak¬ing up. All speakers implored theaudience to assist relief efforts inany way possible.Much of Silverman’s lecture con¬sisted of a litany of facts trying toput what he called the "incompre¬hensible" into words.• "Almost no food is being grownor produced in the entire country.Only about 5 percent of the ricepaddies appear to be in cultivation— and people have been eating see¬dlings, bark, and leaves in order tostay alive.• "The lucky are given a rationof 44 ounces of rice a day: onefourth the ration of Bangladesh inthe height of their famine. • "In August the Swiss press re¬ported, ‘so many corpses lie buriedin drought-stricken Cambodia thatmost of the drinking water is poi¬soned. Plague and malaria are rifein the population.’• "80 percent of the children aresuffering from the severest form ofmalnutrition. One report suggeststhat no children under the age offive exist.• "There are varying reportsthat only 40-55 doctors exist in theentire country (out of more than500 practicing before Pol Pot cameto power), and only a few hospi¬tals.• "The population has been re¬duced from more than 8 million inEdwin Silverman 1970 to between 4 and 5 million atpresent — a reduction of 40-50 per¬cent.• "Only 20-30 percent of the re¬maining adult population is male.Most of the females are widows.The population in Phnom Penh in1969, after the bombing, was600.000. By the end of 1970, 2 mil¬lion; presently — 75,000.• “There is only one birth forevery' ten deaths.• "Estimates are that unlessmassive aid begins to arrive inCambodia almost immediately, asmany as 24 million people or moreface death by starvation within thenext few months."Silverman concluded by sayingthat "the refugee situation poses achallenge: Can we as a nation re¬gain our moral purpose*1 Can wecut through the politics and theprotocol and become fully re-dedi¬cated to the value of human life?”A nation exterminatedDuring the question and answerperiod, many people stood up andmade impassioned pleas to thethose in the audience to help therefugeesPontius quoted a report that stat¬ed that "as many as two-thirds ofthose who try to make it from Viet¬nam to Thailand die on the way."He spoke of the deathly silence ofthe refugee camps, where manypeople have spent the last fouryears of their lives.Pontius became animated andTurn to page 8Chicago MBA average starting pay up 11%By Sherrie NegreaUnlike many graduates from theUniversity of Chicago, students inthe Graduate School of Businesscan be assured of employmentwhen receiving their degrees. De¬spite the growing number ofM.B.A.’s in the country, all 400Dam named provostPresident Gray yesterday ap¬pointed Kenneth W. Dam asprovost of the University effec¬tive July 1,1980.Dam, the Harold J. andMarion F. Green Professor inthe Law School, will succeed D.Gale Johnson, EliakimHastings Moore DistinguishedService Professor ofEconomics, who has been pro¬vost since 1975. Johnson willreturn to research andteaching.The provost holds the secondmost powerful position in theUniversity after the president,and is responsible forbudgetary policy and oversee¬ing academic affairs.A complete story on the ap¬pointment will appear in Fri¬day’s Maroon. business students who graduatedlast year were able to find jobs inthe corporate sector.Salaries paid to Chicago M.B.A’sranged from $15,200 to $39,000. ac¬cording to a report issued by theBusiness School placement office.The average salary paid to a Chi¬cago MBA. last year was $23,118.an 11 percent increase over theprevious year. Two years ago. theaverage was $20,406.Richard J. Thain. assistant deanand director of placement of theBusiness School, said the salary in¬crease is due to "inflation and thefact that M.B.A.s have increasing¬ly demonstrated their worth. " Chi¬cago’s business school has beenranked among the top threeschools in the country.In the past. M B A. salaries justbarely kept ahead of inflation.Thain predicts that salaries forM.B.A.s from the leading schoolswill continue to keep pace with in¬flation.The highest salaries reportedlast year were paid to older stu¬dents with M.B.A.s who had morethan one year of relevent work ex¬perience. M.B.A.s 33 years andolder received an average salaryof $28,174, while the youngestM B. As, aged 22 to 23, were paid anaverage of $22,352. The averagesalary of graduates with more than one year of experience was SI.459higher than those with less thanone year of experience.Age differencesThese salary differences may beattributed to the fact that somebusiness firms hire according toage. Consulting firms and invest¬ment banking firms, both of whichpay high salaries, tend to hireolder and more experienced gradu¬ates. Such firms sometimes pay$10,000 or more above the averagesalaries. Younger graduates arepreferred by banks, accountingfirms and package good manufac¬turers. These firms want to startM.B.A.s young and gradually pro¬mote them to higher positions.Although age and experiencehave some influence in salaries,personal qualities such as temper-ment. personality, charactertraits, and social skills are also im¬portant to employers. "Experiencecan be very positive, but experi¬ence in itself isn't a sure-fire cri¬teria," said Thain. He added thattoo much experience in "the wrongdirection" or in lines other thanbusiness can be detrimental.Another factor which affectssalaries is the geographical loca¬tion of the job. The highest averagesalaries were paid in the northeastand the lowest in the south. Sa¬ laries in the north central regionwere next highest to those in thenortheast. In Chicago, the averagesalary paid last year was $23,322. Astudy of last year's graduatesshows that about half the M.B.A.saccepted jobs in the north centralregion.Of the various industries thathired M.B.A.s from Chicago, bank¬ing comprised the largest singlecategory. Financial analysis wasthe largest functional type.InterviewsThe placement office of the busi¬ness helps attract business firms torecruit on campus. During the an¬nual "interview seasons" whichtake place in fall and winter, asmany as 20 employers will each in¬terview 12 students a day. Lastyear, over 304 employing organiza¬tions held over 10.000 interviews oncampus.A unique feature of Chicago'sBusiness School is the “biddingsystem". At the beginning of eachquarter, students are given pointswhich they "spend ” when biddingfor interviews The purpose of the"bidding system" is to enable stu¬dents to be interviewed by compa¬nies of their first choice, the "bid¬ding system" was developed at theTurn to Page 3mmmiGWWfiaNWINUTODAY TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 6thIDA NOYES EAST LOUNGE(2nd FLOOR)8 PMOPEN TO ALL STUDENTSIN THE UNIVERSITYFOR MORE INFO: VISIT IN 306 ORCALL 3-3273 25% OFF SALEGET ACQUAINTED SALE FOR U of CSTUDENTS AND FACULTYBrand name clothing such as H. FREE¬MAN, CHAPS, DONALD BROOKS, MAL¬COLM KENNETH, AQUASCUTUM, LON¬DON FOG, SERO and others at 25% off ofour very low listed prices.This is a special offer for U of C studentsand faculty only. This sale applies Mon -Fri from 3 PM - 6 PM and SAT from 10AM to 4 PM.Your U of C ID card is necessary for ad¬mission to this sale.Slight charge for other than basic alter¬ations.WILLIAM'S TRADITIONALCLOTHING19-S. LaSalle St. - 782-9885(Entrance on Arcade Place)i 6 ATTENTION!STUDENTS INCOMMON COREBIOLOGY COURSESIf you are registered in any of thefollowing BioSci courses this quarterbe sure you have also signed up for the“common lab” in Abbott 201.Completion of Experiment I deadlineis NOVEMBER 9th.BioSci 101 • BioSci 104 • BioSci 108BioSci 142 • BioSci 145 • BioSci 1692—The Chicago Maroon, Tuesday November 6, 1979 When does thetraining slop andthe doing start?At Scott we believe that the best trainingwe can give you is experience in putting yourideas to work Since we know that personalgrowth is your goat achievement ot that goal isrealized through doing Experience comes Iromdoing—putting your ideas to work enjoying ressibility and accepting accountabilityEach year, as determined, committed coltgrads join us. they bring new talents with themput these talents to the test immediately and wilaccept their challengesBecause we recognize individual diflerencpur approach is to build on your existing skills—enable you 1o start doingWhen does the training stop? It never doe?Scott Paper Company is an equal opporturemployer m/IContact your placement oltice tor informalRichard Stern “invents the real” at Woodward CourtBy Chris IsidoreTonight’s Woodward Court lecture willbegin with lecturer Richard Stern, novelistand professor of English, in the College,general studies in the humanities reading d“rather peculiar” essay of his. The readingwill be done not so much as an example ofhis work, but as an illustration of the writingprocess.“The essay is in a way about itself,” Sternsaid. “That is, it will illustrate formation ofstories, or at least it will display storymaterial on the way to being turned into astory.This is greatly what the lecture, entitled“The Invention of the Real,” will be about.This is also all the detail which the elusiveauthor wished to go into about his speech. “Idon’t want to give it away, partly because Ican’t,” said Stern. “If I reduced it to itspostulates, it wouldn’t be very attractive.For me, the chief interest is the form of thetalk itself.” So those wishing to find outmore about Stern’s unusual method of giv¬ing the talk will have to attend the lecture,which is being held tonight, Tuesday,November 8, at 8:30.Due to typographical errors in severalUniversity publications, the title of Stern’stalk was given as “The Invention of theReel”. But Stern cautioned that he wouldnot speak on “fly-fishing, cinematic history,or Virginia dancing.Stern has been teaching and writing atChicago since 1955. He has written ten books, including the novels Golk (1960);Europe (1961); In Any Case (1962); Stitch(1965); Teeth, Dying and Other Matters(1964); Other Men’s Daughters (1973); andmost recently, Natural Shocks (1978). If youdon’t remember many of these works beingon the bestseller list, don’t be surprised. Other Men’s Daughters did make some suchlists, but while Stem is one of the mostrespected novelists writing today, his workhas never been meant to appeal to the massaudience. “I wish I had a larger audience,”he says. “But I’m not interested in cateringto any particular public. I suppose my real public is the public of one...“You write as well as you can, you amuseand please yourself, and form what feelsbeautiful and deep to you... The result muststand for what is the best of me.”Besides his talents as an author, Stem is amuch acclaimed and much sought afterteacher. He screens all his students to see ifhe feels they are right for the course. “Veryoften you can tell a lot (about a student’swriting talent) at the beginning,” he said.“But as I’ve said often . . . one of the realpleasures of this game is to see a studenttransformed, in the course of a few weeks,into a writer...“I went into teaching, as most writers do,because it harmonized best with a writinglife. It has enabled me to pay the rent,because my professional writing career hasnot been very remunerative. At least I couldnot have raised four children on the pro¬ceeds. .. The University of Chicago has beenan exceptionally fine place to teach. By thatI mean it has been an exceptionally fineplace to lead this double life.”That double life has served Stem well.Besides his ten novels, he has been able towrite many short stories, poems, and plays.One of his plays was written on commissionfor the Reportory Theatre of Lincoln Center.He has received many awards, includingones from the National Endowment for theArts, and the National Institute of Arts andLetters. He has served as both a NationalCouncil of the Arts and Humanities Fellowand Guggenheim Fellow.Bertram Cohler talks on teaching and the CollegeBy David GlocknerLunch with Bertram Cohler can easilybecome a drawn-out affair. Late last week,Cohler took nearly an hour to chew his waythrough an egg salad sandwich, snatchingbites in between comments on teaching, theCollege, and his field of research, personali¬ty development. Cohler, who was appointedto the William Rainey Harper Chair in theCollege last year, will give his inaugural lec¬ture this Thursday, speaking on “PersonalNarrative and Life-Course” at 4 pm. inSocial Sciences 122.Cohler’s gregariousness may be partlyresponsible for his success as a teachersince coming here from Harvard in 1969. Awinner four years ago of the Quantrell Prizefor Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching,Cohler, who is himself a 1961 graduate of theCollege, believes strongly in the im¬portance of communication betweenstudents and faculty members both insideand outside the classroom. “It’s easy forteaching to stop being communication of im¬portant ideas,” he said, and to become littlemore than a bored teacher reading a dulllecture to a group of glassy-eyed students.This kind of teaching leads students to “afeeling of disconnectedness,” a sense thatstudies are only meaningless chores.Good teaching, on the other hand, can helpstudents realize that “scholarship can be ex¬citing.” According to Cohler, a good teacherpossesses “a certain element of showman¬ship,” is active in his field, and is stimulatedby the content of his courses.Teaching and scholarship are “intrin¬sically intertwined,” Cohler said. A personwho teaches but does not engage in researchis likely to stop thinking about the current problems of his discipline, while one whodoes research without teaching is neverforced to fit the bits and pieces of hisresearch together into a picture whichmakes sense to others.“Teaching in the College is indispensibleto good scholarship,” Cohler repeated,biting his sandwich for emphasis. ,Cohler does not believe that every form ofundergraduate teaching is equally wor¬thwhile, though. He was sharply critical oflecture courses because students and facul¬ty lack close involvement with each other.“The students are passive and theteachers are passive,” Cohler said. When ateacher comes to class each dry and reads aprepared text, his students don’t have thesame opportunity to watch him think thatthey have when they are able to ask himquestions and talk about the subject.“We can’t meet our enrollment problemswith increased numbers of those courses,”Cohler said, referring to proposals that theCollege improve its financial position by in¬creasing enrollment.But Cohler is not opposed to the idea of ex¬panding the College by “a couple hundred”students, so long as the quality of teaching isprotected. Both faculty and administratorsrealize that there are limits to the College’scapacity for expansion, set ultimately bythe number of students who want to comehere.“No one wants to sell out the College,” hesaid, because it is “the intellectual focus ofthe University.”Cohler made it clear that he doesn’t thinkthe College can maintain the quality of itseducation by insisting that all CommonCore courses be taught by full-time facultymembers. “It was never like that in the hey¬ day of the College,” he said. A smallnumber of highly talented graduatestudents would not undermine the quality ofthe Core or the College, Cohler believes.Instead of worrying about who will teachin the Core, those involved in the Collegeshould devote their attention to the qualityof the curriculum. In the long term, Cohlersaid, “we’ve got to rethink the whole ques¬tion of what is general education. . ., askingwhat ideas are worth having and teaching.”The College curriculum is still “working onthe skeleton of the Hutchins plan,” despitechanges in courses, faculty, and the needs ofstudents, according to Cohler.One particular problem Cohler pointed toin the College curriculum is the gap betweenthe “general education” courses offered inthe Common Core, or those to satisfydistribution requirements and the“graduate-level” courses which studentstake in their area of concentration. Thetransition between these two kinds ofcourses is difficult for some students, Cohlersaid.Cohler praised Dean of the CollegeJohnathan F. Smith and the Dean’s StudentTask Force on Education in the College fortheir efforts to examine the College cur¬riculum, and said he thinks the chances forcurriculum changes in the near future aregood. “The faculty is as concerned asstudents are” that the curriculum be thebest possible, he added.Cohler is well known for his research inpsychology, particularly his theory of how-personality develops as a person movesthrough the life-cycle. Personality develop¬ment is not a lock-step series of phaseswhich everyone must pass through, he said, David GlocknerBertram Cohlerbut differs from person to person whilefollow ing a general pattern. Understandinghow personality develops is a way of “mak¬ing our lives seem like they make sense,”Cohler said. His talk on Thursday willcenter on how persons “maintain a sense ofself-cohesiveness and identity” as they age.Continued from page 1^havezwhen a UFW picket wasunned down by a company worker.The present boycott against Red Coach;ttuce began only last month. On October7, the UFW dropped their 9 month long boy-ott against Chiquita bananas, after thatompany signed with the UFW, and startedheir Red Coach boycott.Chavez said that boycotts were only useds a last resort by the UFW, in part becausef the expense of making one effective. Inhicago, for example, 10 of the UFW’s near-1500 full-time volunteers are staffing a boy-ott headquarters, meeting with sympathet-: groups and soliciting support fromrocers not to stock the lettuce. The volun-jers are given room and board, $10 perI'eek for essentials and $5 per week forwalk-around money.” Even this minimal pay is a drain on the union’s meager fi¬nances, according to Chavez.Alice Thompson, one of the volunteers inChicago, spoke to members of the Universi¬ty’s Progressive Union last month, seekingstudent volunteers to visit local supermar¬kets and persuade the owners to boycott RedCoach lettuce. She reported that in HydePark, the A&P. and Mrs G’s have alreadyagreed not to stock the lettuce, while theHyde Park Co-op board will vote on the issueat its next meeting.“Chicago is the biggest outlet tor KeaCoach in the country,” according to Thomp¬son, and an effective boycott here wouldhave the greatest impact, she said.At the question and answer session follow¬ing his talk, Chavez was asked about therole of the Catholic Church in aiding hisunion. He replied that the further away thechurches were, the more help they gave. InChicago, according to Thompson, Red Coach sent a representative out to talk to theCatholic archdiocese and try- to persuadethem not to help Chavez and the farm¬workers. The archdiocese refused to cooper¬ate with the growers.Another question to Chavez about Team¬ster support revealed that he believes thelocal situation in California has improved,with short range local truckers refusing toload or carry the boycotted lettuce. Howev¬er he intimated that the long-distance, crosscountry haulers turned a blind eye to theboycott.The UFW raised more than $800 in dona¬tions at the lecture, according to Thompson,who says that “since Cesar has come to Chi¬cago, the boycott is really getting off theground.” This was the first stop in his Mid¬western tour. He has already visited Boston,New York and Washington in the East, andis swinging west again in a cross countrypublicity campaign. The Chicago Boycott Center is starting aUFW support committee in Hyde Park, andis planning to start billboarding publicstreets, according to Thompson. Billboard¬ing consists of holding aloft a large sign en¬couraging the boycott.“It’s cheap and effective,” said Thomp¬son, who urged anyone interested in helpingto contact her at 786-0528.M B.A. salariesContinued from page 1 businessschool four years ago and has since been co¬pied by twelve other business schools.In order to host the increasing number ofcompanies that recruit on campus, the in¬terview facilities are currently being en¬larged from 17 to 23 rooms. Thain said theexpansion of the facilities reflects “thegrowing reputation of Chicago’s businessschool and the marketing efforts of theplacement office.”The Chicago Maroon, Tuesday November 6, 1979—3®jit College of tt»e ZHn&erottp of ChicagoINAUGURAL LECTUREbyBERTRAM J. COHLERWilliam Rainey Harper Associate Professorof Social Sciences in the CollegePERSONAL NARRATIVEAND LIFE-COURSETHURSDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 19794:00 P.M.Social Sciences 122 1126 East 59th StreetTHE WOODROWWILSON SCHOOLof Public and International Affairsat PRINCETON UNIVERSITYwill interview students interested in pursuing a Master’s Decreein Public Affairs with the following fields of specialization:International Relations; Development Studies; Urban Affairsand Domestic Policies; and Economics and Public Policy.Interviews will be held on Friday, November 9th from 9 a.m.Sign up at the Office of Career Counseling and Placement.5706 University Avenue.Minorities and women are encouraged to attend. CAVthCLCUTKLCL4lU1 fEAStN[WAOtUHRpTUt SCjbJC?[McLtPCHItCtsCJV»NfcrRjDTT CX ft CB Ct s>C> 6C>H tO5fE.(M0PiAD2Tr' <rc5“^dcp ©axuPSxraceLE.^3?5Z7 SCDtUTITM tLftlD'VCHESDTrtrff-ED $E3<1><“ 5saa>^cnr -p-n?<Ld) -The (Jniversity of ChicagoAlumni AssociationpresentsLIFE AFTER GRADUATION: THE LAWan informal discussion of careeropportunities in the lawfor interested studentsGuests:Hubert WillU.S. District Court JudgeNorthern District of IllinoisJudith LandtAttorneyBaker & McKenzieSpecialists, International Law Antonin ScaliaProfessor of LawUniversity of ChicagoFormer U. S. Assistant Attorney GeneralElmer GertzProfessor, John Marshall Law SchoolChairman, First Amendment Lawyers AssociationChairman, Civil Rights Committee, Chicago Bar Association12 noon, November 7, 1979Alumni House, 5733 University AvenueBring your own lunch. (Beverages provided)NEED CREDIT? send for THE CREDIT GAMEToo young to borrow?New in town/no references?Erase bad debt recordsSkip bills without ruining creditReceive loans within weeks of beginning this programInformation on updated credit laws and legislationYour rights under the Federal Credit Acts SOLVE ALLTHESECREDITPROBLEMSwithTHE CREDIT GAME Tired of being without credit, or up to your neck in'minimum payments'? With this book you will learn howto make the $300 billion credit industry jump at yourcommand.”Send Check orMoney Order to WALL STREET PUBLISHING CO 303 5TH AVE.SUITE 1306NEW YORK, NY 10016 ONLY $5.95(N.Y residents add 8% Sales Tax)Enclosed is $NameAddressCity for BooksStateAllow 3 weeks for delivery. Zip4 The Chicago Maroon, Tuesday November 6, 1979The Crime of the CenturyBy Mark WallachWednesday, May 21, 1924, 4:45 P.M.:Bobby Franks, the 14-year-old son of a re¬tired millionaire, is umpiring a baseballgame at the Harvard School at 47th andEllis. Just now, as he hears players’ exple¬tives being hurled at him, he is receiving aneducation concerning the unhappy life of anarbiter.5:15 F.M. Young Franks leaves the gamein progress and begins the three block trekto his family’s mansion at 5052 S. Ellis.About halfway home, perhaps on the cornerof 49th and Ellis, two men in a 1919 rentedWillys-Knight cruise alongside of Franks,whisk the youth into the car, and continuetheir drive.7:00 P.M.: Dinnertime has come and goneat the Franks house. Several phone callshave failed to locate Bobby and now a maidasks if dinner should be served anyway.Jacob Franks, the master of the house,frowns and steps outside, peering intentlytoward the Harvard School.9:00 P.M.: Samuel Ettelson, a long-timefamily friend has arrived and he and JacobFranks, thinking that Bobby may havelocked himself in at Harvard School, walkover to the school. They break into a windowand search the school from attic to base¬ment.10:30 P.M.: With her husband gone, Mrs.Franks receives a telephone call. “This isMr. Johnson,’’ a voice at the other end says.“Of course, you know by this time that yourboy has been kidnapped. We have him andyou need not worry; he is safe. But don’t tryto trace this call or to find me. We must havemoney.’’ After a warning not to contact thepolice, “Johnson” hangs up and Mrs.Franks faints.Thursday, May 22, 2 A.M.: After much in¬decision, Franks contacts the police, seeksout two trusted police detectives, and tellshis story.9:30 A.M.: A special delivery letter, ad-Richard Loeb as a boy: Turning fantasy intoreality.dressed in ink but consisting of two type¬written pages, arrives at the Franks’ home.“Nerves whipped taut by an anguished allnight vigil almost broke as it was opened,’the Tribune reported, “and as Mr. Ettelsonsaid “Its deliberate tone struck terror intoour hearts.” The note, stating that youngFranks was still safe, set out four specific instructions and told Franks to obtain$10,000 in $20s and $50s.11A.M.: After having ordered the tracingof incoming phone calls to cease so that thetelephone operators wouldn’t gossip,Franks drives to a downtown bank. Heplaces the $20s and $50s in a cigar box as or¬dered and wraps it in plain white paper.3:15 P.M.: The final phone call comes. “Iam sending a Yellow Cab for you,” the voicesays, and then it tells Franks to have themoney with him, to get into the cab, and tocome to a drugstore on 63rd St.“I went to the home on a regular order,”the cab driver told the Tribune. “At firstthey told me to leave. Then they told me towait. Then a man came out and paid me off— 55 cents.”“Yes,” said William Taylor, a broker andfriend of the family. “I paid him off. Mr.Franks had forgotten the instructions andwhile he was trying to call them to mind thecall came from his brother-in-law that hebelieved the dead boy in the undertaker’s of¬fice was Robert.”The crime, which eventaully command¬ed international attention, sent Chicago’snewspapers into a week-long orgy ofscreaming front-page headlines. “KIDNAPRICH BOY: KILL HIM; “KIDNAPPEDBOY DIED FIGHTING”; “DIG FORFRANKS CLEWS,” the Tribune’s front pageproclaimed on consecutive days. Knowingonly that the boy’s body had been found in aculvert at 121st St. and that the death hadbeen violent, the search for the killer!s)began immediately. The police questionedthree instructors at the Harvard School andone, a chemistry teacher was suspected ofpoisoning the youth. Other officials favoredthe revenge theory, speculating that JacobFranks, who made his fortune in real estate,had caused some adversary to be sent to thepenitentiary in his early career as a pawnbroker. Others supported the moron theory,obviously recalling a case earlier in the yearin which a moron had kidnapped a child —and then released him unharmed. On thefourth day of its coverage, the Tribune an¬nounced that the police had evidence show¬ing that the crime had been mastermindedby a cocaine addict. For a time, police evenfeared that Franks had died accidentally be¬cause of his classmates taking the aphorism“Kill the Umpire!” all too literally. Finally,the police discarded the idea that Frankshad been the victim of what the Tribune de¬licately termed “a male annoyer of boys”because Franks “would not have enteredthe automobile of a strange man under thelure of money, as he never knew the need ofa dollar or cent.”On the second day of the investigation,though, some solid clues began to emerge.The ransom note, the Tribune reported,“with its faultless English, its scholarly dic¬tion bore a striking resemblance’' to a storyin Detective Magazine. “Look for the sus¬pect with that magazine in his possession,and you’ll pretty nearly have the man whokilled Robert Franks,” said one would-beSherlock Holmes. More significantly, ex¬perts deduced that the ransom note hadbeen written on a portable Underwood type¬writer with a defective lower-case “t” and“f.”The clue that finally lead to the killers’ ar¬rest about a week later though, was a pair ofhorn-rimmed glasses which an optician saidwas “too small for the average masculinehead.” The state’s attorney’s office began afeverish search to identify the owner of theglasses. They discovered that the glasseshad special hinges made by only one com¬pany, and that comparatively few had beensold in Chicago. At the assistant state’s at¬torney’s request, the company carefullypored through their records and traced thelenses to its owner. For the killers, the jigwas up. Bobby Franks ping and murder. “We had planned sincelast fall — some time in November I think —to kill him and get money from his father forransom. We planned all the details andthought we had everything airtight againstdiscovery.”“It was easier than we thought. He wasweak. When he started to resist we hit himon the head (with a chisel) and stuffed thegag into his mouth. . . He must have beendead within five minutes — while we werestill going along 50th St.“We drove around with him in the car forfour hours, until it got heavy dusk, then webegan undressing him in the car, took off ev¬erything but the underwear and stockingsbefore we got to the culvert. We took thoseoff there.” They then poured hydrochloricacid over the boy’s face, body and genitalsso he couldn’t be easily identified andtossed him into the culvert — but failed tonotice that one of his legs was sticking upout of the hole. They also failed to realizethat Leopold’s glasses had been left behindas had one of Bobby Franks’ stockings.After leaving the scene at 121st St., theyproceeded to 73rd and Lake Shore Dr. wherethey burned and buried the blanket BobbyFranks had been wrapped in. The typewrit¬er that had written the ransom note wasthen heaved into the lagoon near the yachtharbor in Jackson Park and the ransom notewas dispatched — though it only said Dearsir’ instead of ‘Dear Mr. Franks’ becausethey hadn’t planned beforehand who theywere going to kidnap.“Well,” said Leopold, “(the whole epi¬sode) was the kind of a thing there would bea thrill in and we wanted some easyTurn to page 6fi#*r Sinii you mo doubt te** by uuetla*/cv ten hee beta kida*®*** *11tm u# toasaur# 70a that he te at present *#11 tut•a.f. To* need -fear ae pkyaleal here for blaprovided 70a live 07 oarefall/ to the fol-lo»Ud laetruettoam, end eucfc otters aefom will receive by fatnr# ceavonleationa.Should you however, disobey iv of cmr Itstruct Ion# even sllfbUy, hie death *111t# the penalty.(, For obvious reasons eaho ab.solutely no atteept to ccasnnloat# witheither the polios authorities, or anyprivate agency. Should you already haveeoKXUhloated elth the polloe, allc* the*to continue their investigations, but donot cent ion this letter.12, Secure before r.oen today teathousand dollare, (lUJ.COC.COK Tfcl# eoneynet be eospoeed entirely.of GO 8110 ofthe following denoalnatlone>#2,000.00 in twenty dollar bills#8,000.00 In fifty dollar billsThe #oaey *’.>#t be old. *ny attempt to in¬clude ne* Or Barked bill* *111 render theentire venture futile.), The ecoey should be Pieced in a1mrgt pl«ar box, or If this Is lepoeelblela a heavy cardboard bos, 3XCUSHY ole sodted tespped In vhlta paper, tbs teippiagpaper should ba sealed st *11 opanlaas•1th sealing wax.4. Bars the annex with you preparedae directed above, and remain at hcaeafter ane o'clock F.tt. See that thetelephone 1* not 1a uae.Tfou will receive a future ccex-unle*ation Instructing you ee to your futurewove*.Is a final word of waruin^ - thisit a strictly ouuarcisl preposition,and we era prepared to put our threatinto execution should ve have reasonablegrounds to believe that ydf have coiaalttedan infraction of the above instructions.Uowav^f, should you oarefully foils* outour instructions t« the letter, «s canassure you that your ton *111 be aafolyreturned to you within sir hove of ourreceipt of the none/.Eight days after having murdered Rob¬ert Franks, Nathan F. Leopold, Jr. andRichard Loeb sat in the state’s attorney’s of¬fice and confessed. Questioned separately,they at first maintained their innocence,falling back on a carefully planned alibi.Leopold admitted that the horn-rimmedglasses found near Bobby Franks’ bodywere indeed his but insisted that he had lostthem the previous Sunday while on one ofhis frequent bird-watching expeditions. Onthe night of May 21st, Leopold maintained,he and Loeb had picked up some girls and abottle of gin at the Coconut Grove bar on53rd and Ellis and went riding in Leopold’sWillys-Knight in Washington Park. For atime, the alibi worked. “There was a feel¬ing,” the Tribune noted, “that both youngmen, and particularly Leopold had beencaught in a most remarkable net of circum¬stances while thoroughly innocent.”Soon, however, the Leopold’s chauffeursupplied proof that the Leopold car had beenin the garage all afternoon on May 21st: hehad been repairing it and had later driven itto a drugstore to fill a prescription. Further¬more, the workman who had discovered thehorn-rimed glasses said that the lenses hadbeen clear whereas if Leopold had droppedthem there earlier, they would have beencaked with mud.Once discovered, the pair coolly and im¬passively revealed the details of the kidnap- Instructions to Jacob Franks"It was just another experiment," said Leopold. "It is aseasy for us to justify that experiment as it is to justify anentomologist impaling a beetle on a pin."The Chicago Maroon, Tuesday November 6, 1979 —5money. “It was just another experiment.It is so easy for us to justify that experimentas it is to justify an entomologist impaling abeetle on a pin.”The capture of Leopold and Loebsparked a storm of interest. Leopold had en¬tered the University of Chicago at the age of16, transferred to the University of Michi¬gan a year later, then transferred back toChicago the following year, where he got hisdegree in philosophy. In May 1924, he was anineteen year old law student at the Univer¬sity and claimed to be a sixteenth centuryhistory buff — the “wickedest century theworld has ever known.” In addition, heknew fifteen languages and was fluent in sixof them. As for Richard Loeb, he entered theUniversity at the age of fourteen, then trans¬ferred after two years to the University ofMichigan where he graduated at the age of ready obvious to everybody — Leopold andLoeb had indeed kidnapped and murderedBobby Franks. In all, the prosecution calledeighty-one witnesses in trying to depict thecrime as particularly gruesome and subtlysuggesting — though providing no concreteevidence — that Leopold and Loeb werelinked to four other unsolved murdercases.Clarence Darrow began the defense bytaking the unprecedented step of callingupon a battery of psychiatrists to attest toLeopold’s and Loeb’s mental illness. Theirtestimony, which accounted for over 300pages of the official transcript and whichwas later published in part as the Hulbertand Brown report, provides a fascinatingcase study of Leopold and Loeb. Theswarthy Leopold, the report stated, was asickly child who had an effeminate manneruntil the age of nine. The third governess he"When the gates of Joliet close upon them," ClarenceDarrow said, "there is nothing but night, and that's littlefor any human being to expect."eighteen, Michigan’s youngest graduateever. In the fall of 1923, he returned to theUniversity as a graduate student in history.Neither of the pair ever lived in Universityhousing but rather in their family’s HydePark mansions. The late Will Geer, wholater achieved fame as an actor, most re¬cently as “Grandpa” in the television seriesThe Waltons, often recalled how he had thepair of twisted geniuses pledge themselvesto his Chicago fraternity only days beforethe murder.Immediately after obtaining their confes¬sions, State’s Attorney Robert Crowe an¬nounced his plans to the press. “I have ahanging case,” he said, “and I would bewilling to submit it to a jury tomorrow.” Thefamilies of Leopold and Loeb, millionairesboth, countered by hiring Clarence Darrow.“The fathers of these boys have an estimat¬ed combined fortune of $15 million,” astate’s attorney spokesman told the Tri¬bune, exaggerating the family’s real wealthby about threefold, “and we suppose it willbe millions versus the death penalty.”The trial began in late July with Darrowpulling a major surprise — he entered a pleaof guilty, thus stealing the prosecution’sthunder before the trial even begun. He alsochose a judge instead of a jury trial, so thatthe entire weight of imposing the death pen¬alty would be on one man.The prosecution began by compilingmountains of evidence to prove what was al¬ had was “homely, suspicious. . . and over-sexual in unusual ways (...) She gave him awrong original conception about sex, abouttheft, about right and wrong, about selfishn¬ess and about secrecy. He was so constitut¬ed that he never was able to emancipatehimself from her erroneous teachings andmistakes.” It didn’t help that the first schoolLeopold enrolled in was a girl’s school.“While yet a child he began to strive to bethe cold-blooded egocentric intellectualist,turning gradually from the unusual and in¬tense early childhood interest in religion to adeliberate overthrowing and eliminating ofGod, conscience, sympathy, social responsi¬bility and loyalty as being thoroughly unnec¬essary to him and unworthy of him as acompletely intelligent individual.” In aclass on torts at law school, he argued thatlegal regulations should not apply to onewho is a superman. As a teenager, he alsodeveloped a vivid fantasy life, particularly arecurring fantasy about king and slave. Inone fantasy, for example, he was a slavewho was the strongest man in the world,saved the king’s life by some derring-do,was offered his freedom and magnanimous¬ly refused it. It should be noted that Leopoldwas a bi-sexual.In some ways, the governess of the hand¬some Loeb had the opposite problem of Leo¬pold’s governess — she was totally re¬pressed. As a result, Young Richard didn’tlearn the difference between being a bov Nathan Leopold, Jr. (left), Clarence Darrow and Richard Iand a girl until he was eleven years old. Itwas about this time that Loeb began to thinkof himself as the “Master Criminal Mind ofthe Century” who could escape detectionfrom the world’s greatest detectives. Notcoincidentally, he learned to lie and to liewith impunity. As he grew older, he began tosteal. It was a case, one psychiatrist noted,of fantasy turning into reality.When the two troubled prodigies becamefriends, the results were explosive. “Leo¬pold was attracted to Loeb as a lover,”wrote Hal Higdon in The Crime of the Centu¬ry. “Loeb saw in Leopold an accomplice for his acts of petty thievery.” Together, theyrobbed Loeb’s old frat house in Ann Arbor,threw bricks through car windows, once in¬terrupting a couple making love, and oncestole a car, were pursued, and jumped out ofthe car just before it smashed into a pole. Asthe psychiatrists’ noted repeatedly, Leopoldand Loeb’s fundamental problem was thetremendous discrepancy between their in¬tellectual and emotional maturity.Meyer Levin, who wrote the novel andBroadway play called “Compulsion,” takesa psychoanalytic view of Leopold andLoeb’s crime. The murder weapon, the chis¬el, becomes a phallic symbol while the cul¬vert where Bobby Franks’ body wasdumped is the womb, the hydrochloric acidpoured on Franks’ body represents Leo¬pold’s effort to destroy the female side ofhimself. “If he wished he had never beenborn — wished he had never been born as agirl kind of boy — then the gesture was com¬plete: he had exorcised the curse on him¬self. He hd become unborn, in the womb ofthe mother who was in the earth.”“Another overwhelming thought came tome, changing the conception I had had untilthen of the crime,” says the novel’s narra¬tor. “Then ‘Leopold) was not merely(Loeb’s) accomplice. He wasn’t there onlybecause he was in love with Loeb. He had todo the murder because of some compulsionin himself. Just the way (Loeb) did.”The Franks’ mansion All photos from Chicago Daily Tribune. After the prosecution presented a few ofits own expert witnesses testifying to themental soundness of Leopold and Loeb, thetrial meandered to the dramatic closing ar¬guments of Darrow and State’s attorneyRobert Crowe.“I have heard in the last six months,”Darrow said, “nothing but the cry for blood.I have heard raised from the office of thestate’s attorney nothing but the breath ofhate. I have heard precedents quoted whichwould be a disgrace to a savage race. I haveseen a court urged almost to the point ofthreats to hang two boys, in the face of evi¬dence, in the face of experience, in the faceof all the better and humane thought of theage. . .“I am pleading for the future. I am plead¬ing for a time when hatred and cruelty willnot control the hearts of men. When we canlearn by reason and judgment and under¬standing and faith that all life is worth sav¬ing, and that mercy is the highest attributeof all.”After Darrow finished, Crowe began his6—The Chicago Maroon, Tuesday November 6, 1979*rd Loebfinal show. “Crowe gave the courtroom amad day of it,” the Daily News reported.“He spoke in a frenzy. He shouted andstomped and waved his arms. . . Into thefaces of the two young defendants he hurledepithet after epithet, his eyes blazing andhis voice screaming anger.”Crowe first tried to discredit the defense’spsychiatrists: “Your honor ought not toshock their ears by such a cruel reference to these cowardly perverts will have to be car¬ried to the gallows.”As his argument neared its end, Crowemade a devastating error: With the excep¬tion of Leopold’s father, Crowe said,“Everybody connected with the case havelaughed and sneered and jeered, and if thedefendant, Leopold, did not say that hewould plead guilty before a friendly judgehis actions demonstrate that he thinks hehas got one.”Overruling Harrow’s objection, JudgeJohn Caverly said, “let the reporter writeup that statement. Have that statementwritten up!” Moments later, he added:“The court will order stricken from the re¬cord the closing remarks of the state’s attor¬ney as being a cowardly and dastardly as¬sault upon the integrity of the court.”Two weeks later, Judge Caverly renderedjudgment: Leopold and Loeb would serve“life, plus 99 years.” The principal reasonfor not imposing the death penalty, thejudge said, was the youth of the defen¬dants.^Vhen the gates of Joliet close uponthem,” Clarence Darrow had said of theprospect of incarceration, “there is nothingbut night, and that’s little for any humanbeing to expect.” Nevertheless, when Leo¬pold was up for parole in 1957 after servingthirty-three years, he had compiled an im¬pressive record: He spoke 27 languages, hadtaken many University courses, had reclas¬sified the prison library, gathered statisticson parole prediction, and founded, withLoeb, a correspondence school. Perhapsmost importantly of all, he had volunteeredas a victim in a prison medical project de¬signed to find a cure for malaria.Loeb had not been so fortunate. In 1936, ina shower room scuffle with a fellow inmate,Loeb was stabbed 56 times with a razor anddied shortly afterwards. The attack had ap¬parently been launched from behind and theattacker had escaped unscathed.At first, the press reported that Loeb hadbeen killed after making a homosexual ad¬vance on an inmate. Edwin A. Lahey of theChicago Daily News wrote, “Richard Loeb,a brilliant college student and master of theEnglish language, today ended a sentencewith a proposition.” That classic leadturned out to be untrue, however, and infact, it may have been the inmate. JamesDay, who was frustrated by Loeb’s contin¬uous rejection of his advances.The horn rimmed glassesthe laws of this state to the penalty of death.Why, don’t you know that one of them has toshave every day of the week and that is abad sign0 The other one has to shave twice aweek, and that is a bad sign? One is shortone is tall, and it is equally a bad sign in bothof them.”On Leopold’s and Loeb’s lack of emotion:“And if it is the fate of these two pervertsthat they must pay the penalty of this crimeupon the gallows, when you realize it, youwill find that they have got emotion and youwill find they have got fear and you will find After Leopold was paroled in 1957, he set¬tled in Santurce. Puerto Rico where hewanted to “live quietly, and serve others toatone for my crime.” Among other things,Leopold published a book on ornithology,taught at the University of Puerto Rico, didresearch on intestinal diseases that plaguedthe island’s poor, worked for urban renewal,and searched for a cure for leprosy. He alsogot married.In 1965, six years before his death. Leo¬pold reflected on his prison life. “I don'tthink there was any element in prison which Real Lifeby Philip MaherPeter was in a long line of boys, roughly his size and age, that is,small and young. They bumped and jumped and fought their waydown the stairs on their way to the swimming pool. Timmy the bullyand his gang were laughing about something. Peter listened.Timmy turned to him. “Hey Pete! Say ‘one-two’!”“One-two,” said Peter.“Fuck you! Ha ha ha ha ha. . .” and everyone laughed exceptPeter, who didn’t understand. “Get it, get it? One, two, fuck you!”They all laughed gleefully.This time Peter joined in the laughter. He didn’t know what itmeant but it sounded good. “One-two, fuck you, one-two, fuck you,”he chanted to himself.Sister Ann was coming up the stairs. “Hey Pete!” yelled Timmy,“One-two!”“Fuck you!” shouted Peter, grinning.The line stopped. Sister Ann stopped. Everyone looked at Peter.He looked around. Sister Ann grabbed him by the arm and pulledhim away; her fingernails hurt. Peter didn’t understand. He heardthe boys tittering as he was dragged down the hall to the principal’soffice.* * *Peter shuffled down Broadway, towards home. He bumped hislunch box against his butt as he walked. He avoided the eyes of thebig people. It had been a bad day. Sister Ann and the principal hadsaid they would tell his parents what he had said. What was it he hadsaid? Oh yes: one-two-fuck-you. One, two, fuck you. He marched tothe silent beat, lunchbox bumping, “One, two, fuck you.”The A and P loomed ahead. Mmm. Peter thought of the candyinside. He walked in. Timmy had taught him this trick too.He ambled nonchalantly towards the candy section. Huge roundwomen rolled by with shopping carts. No one watched him. He kneltdown and stuffed his emply lunchbox with peanut-butter cups.M&M’s, caramels, Mr. Goodbars, Nestle Crunch’s, and some bub¬ble gum. He filled the box to the brim, then clasped it shut andwalked back down the aisle. No one noticed, for he was so small hefelt invisible. He turned the corner and strolled past the baggers,towards the door. A voice stopped him.“HOLD ON THERE SON.” A man in a tie approached rapidlvflashing his teeth like razors. “WHAT HAVE YOU GOT IN THATBOX?”Peter smelled aftershave. “Me? Oh, nothing sir.”“NOTHING EH? WELL WHY DON’T YOU JUST SHOW ME,HMM?”He was trapped. A fear rose inside him. He opened the box veryslowiy. Maybe the candy would disappear. It didn't. It lay there likethe crown jewels.“HMM. VERY INTERESTING. WHERE DID YOU GET ALLTHIS CANDY?”“Um. . . well. . . this I took to school w-ith me.” he pointed, “andthese my mother gave me. for dessert, I didn’t eat them.. . and thismy sister gave me. and um, these my friends gave me... they didn'thoVp rjpccprf pjfhpr“YOU’RE LYING, AREN’T YOU?” Peter eved the door; it wastoo far. “YOU KNOW, I COULD CALL THE POLICE RIGHT NOWAND THEY WOULD ARREST YOU FOR STEALING.” Petertrembled. The police! He had seen their leather belts, and theirhandcuffs, and their guns with the wooden handles. “TELL METHE TRUTH NOW, AND I WON’T CALL THE POLICE.” Thewomen were looking.“Yes sir, I stole them,” he murmured, tears welling up in hiseyes.The man quieted down. “All right son. That’s better. You knowit’s not right to steal, don’t you?” Peter nodded. A tear dribbleddown his cheek. He bit his lip “Now I’m going to take this candyback, and I want you to go home and tell your mother what you did.will you do that?” Peter nodded quickly. The man took the candy; itfilled his arms. “Now get going. AND DON’T YOU EVER STEALFROM HERE AGAIN.”Peter dashed for freedom. The fresh air filled him with nervousjoy. He ran almost all the way home, then stopped and sat on some¬one's stairs.He wouldn’t tell his mother. He would never go back to the A&P.And he would say those words over and over again.He got up and started home, lunchbox bumping and spirits soar¬ing. “One, two. fuck you!” he sung. “One. two, three, four!”caused me to grow up. to mature emotion¬ally. I think this is something that happenedfrom within...I don’t think prison has everreally rehabilitated anybody.”Only one real mystery remains in the caseof Leopold and Loeb. It is the question ofwho actually inflicted the death blow to Bobby Franks. Both men went to theirgraves insisting that the other had done it.Given the delicate psyche of each man. per¬haps the unsolved mystery was the best so¬lution of all.The Chicago Maroon, Tuesday November 6, 1979—7Campus film News BriefsHarrington to speakBy Rory McGahonThe Shining Hour: Frank Borzage (1938).Margaret Sullavan’s performance as an in¬credibly devoted wife is the rich emotionalcenter of this film. Too bad it’s not also thecenter of Ogden Nash’s script with itswould-be-sparkling repartee and its JoanCrawford. Crawford, you see, is a New Yorkshowgirl married to rich Midwestern farm¬er Melvyn Douglas; but she winds up fallingin love with his brother, Robert Young (Sul¬lavan’s husband). The photography is quitegood, although I can’t remember who’s re¬sponsible; and Borzage builds a fine fabricof crossed intentions, almost pulling Nash’scrazy and undeveloped plot strands to¬gether. Doc Films, Tuesday at 7:15 p.m.The Barefoot Contessa: Joseph Mankiewicz(1954). Ava Gardner is the title starlet andHumphrey Bogart plays a down-and-outdirector standing in for Mankiewicz. Incred¬ibly silly (what with Edmond O’Brien foam¬ing at the mouth and all), overlong, static,and talky, it still winds up oddly compelling:the backstairs psychology, Bogart’s lon-geurs. and Garner’s animality somehow fittogether; but don’t ask why. Doc Films,Wednesday at 8 p.m.Le Petite Theatre de Jean Renoir: JeanRenoir (1968). This is an elegant little port¬manteau film Renoir made for French tele¬vision back in ’68. although it wasn’t re¬leased here for several years.Straightforward technically and deceptive¬ly simple (one of the three playlets is lessthan five minutes and consists of a singleshot), the film features among other thingsan opera about a woman who falls in lovewith an electric waxer, an old man whotakes everything in stride, even his wife’sindiscretion, and Renoir’s introductions.Renoir’s last film. Doc Films, Thursday at 8p.m.Sherlock Junior: Buster Keaton & WhyWorry: Fred Newmeyer and Sam Taylor(1924, 1923). These are two certified silentcomedy classics and both are still prettyfunny. Sherlock Junior is an absolutescream with Buster an erstwhile young pro¬jectionist who is studying to be a detectiveand dreams himself into a brilliant, absurddream film as the title character. WhyWorry? is the most surreal, and probablythe funniest and best of the films featuringHarold Lloyd’s somewhat less compellingfigure. Here he gets involved with somegiants in South America. Also Lloyd’s clas¬sic short Never Weaken. Law School Films,Thursday at 7 and 9:30 p.m. By Jeff CaneMichael Harrington, social activist, au¬thor of “The Other America” and nationalchairman of the Democratic Socialist Or¬ganizing Committee (DSOC), will speakhere this Thursday, November 8, at 2:30 inQuantrell Auditorium, Cobb Hall.The recently formed University branch ofDSOC (pronounced Dee-Soc) is promotinghis visit, which members hope will givetheir organization “a needed boost”.“Michael Harrington, because of his re¬cognized work as a social activist and au¬thor is probably one of the best individualsto generate a realistic socialist movement inthis country,” says Richard A. Kaye, a sec¬ond-year student in the College and founderof the University DSOC branch.Harrington first came into national prom¬inence in 1962, with his book The OtherAmerica. The book, developed from an ar¬ticle he wrote for Commentary, detailed thepoverty, hunger, and misery of America’s“invisible poor” and advocated wide-rang¬ing reforms to be undertaken by the govern¬ment.The Other America became a best-sellerand profoundly shook the accepted notion of“the affluent society” and ultimately in¬fluenced President Johnson’s “War on Po¬verty” programs.Career of activismAs a result of the book’s success, Harring¬ton became a member of Sargent Shriver’stask force againt poverty and unemploy¬ment. In 1965 and 1966, Harrington was anadvisor to the mayor of New York City, andin 1968. he worked on Robert Kennedy’spresidential campaign. His work for the lib¬eral-left wing of the Democratic Party hasgiven him a receptive audience amongvarious liberals as well as socialists.Since The Other America, he has writtenmany books on social issues and socialismincluding The Accidental Century, Toward sDemocratic Left, Socialism, and The VastMajority.Harrington’s activism began in the early1950s when he joined the Catholic radicalmovement. He was a member of DorothyDay’s Catholic Worker group, which is ac¬tive in community welfare work in NewrYork’s Bowery. It was there, he later wrote,that he “first came into contact with the ter¬rible reality of involuntary reality.”Harrington a few years later left theChurch and became a member of the Social¬ist Party. During the next two decades, hewas active in the anti-war and civil rightsmovements and he became nationalf co-chairman of the Socialist Party. He later re¬signed in 1972, because of the party’s reluc¬tance to take a stand in the Presidentialelection and support George McGovern overRichard Nixon.In 1973, Harrington, along with 200 other members of the anti-war faction of the So¬cialist Party, created what has becomeDSOC. The strategy of DSOC has been tobuild a socialist presence on the left wing ofthe Democratic Party, and to build coali¬tions among social activists.DSOC now has a membership of 3,000 in¬cluding Congressman Ronald Dellums,labor leaders William Winpisinger and Vic¬tor Gotbaum, economist Robert Lekach-man, literary critic Irving Howe, JulianBond and Gloria Steinem.On the road to becoming a socialist acti¬vist, Harrington, who grew up in a St. LouisIrish-Catholic ghetto during the Depression,attended Holy Cross, Yale and the Universi¬ty of Chicago, where he earned a master’sdegree in English.University rememberedIn his semi-autobiographical book Frag¬ments of the Century, Harrington describedhis experiences at the University.At the University of Chicago in 1948there was even a graduate student Bo¬hemia, spread-out through a decayinginter-racial neighborhood with appro¬priately seedy rooms for rent (it hassince been urban-renewed into urbangentility). . .Everyone I knew at Chicago has apoem or play or novel in the worksand one history student was carefullyand falsely documenting his life sothat if he ever became famous hewould drive his biographers mad.. . . what made Chicago unique wasthat all this was done under the pa¬tronage of Aristotle and Aquinas.Harrington last spoke locally last winterwhen he spoke on “Sacraments and Social¬ism” at the Lutheran School of Theology.New involvementHarrington has been recently active inspeaking on college campuses in order topromote support for DSOC. In an article forThe New Republic, Harrington claims thatthere is a steadily rising increase in campusactivism. He sees this activism centeringaround the anti-nuclear movement, theSouth Africa question and the Nestle boy¬cott.“I am more optimistic about the 1980smovement than I was about the 1960s,”wrote Harrington.He also argued that “the same conditionsthat drove the non-activists of the 1970s tostudying and hustling will challenge the ac¬tivists of the 1980s to try to change the limitsthat impose such intolerable choices uponthem.”Harrington will also speak that same dayat Northwestern at 8 pm.with the Vietnamese prevailing in mostparts. Most aid has been refused because offear that it would find its way into the handsof the other side. The result of all this iswhat Silverman called the “holocaust” inCambodia today.During the question and answer session,some suggested that because of the ancientracial animosity between Vietnam andCambodia, the Vietnamese are unlikely toget out of Cambodia until they have suc¬ceeded in destroying it completely. Butothers insisted that Vietnam is jockeying fordiplomatic recognition and technical assis¬tance from the west and will pull out of Cam¬bodia as soon as they realize these goals.They also said that Heng Samrin, presidentof the Vietnamese installed government,was incensed at the U.N.’s recognition ofPol Pot (which the U.S. voted for) and thatthis accounted for his distrust of UnitedStates relief agencies.Aid organizationsSilverman then told of some of the organi¬zations that are attempting to deal with theproblem. Among these are:OXFAM America; 302 Columbus Avenue;Boston, Mass, 02116; (617 ) 247-3304.Catholic Relief Services; 1011 First Ave¬nue; New York, N.Y. 10022; (212 ) 838-4700.Other national organizations organizingrelief efforts are: U.S. Committee for UNI¬CEF, Church World Service, Food For TheHungry, Save The Children, and World Vi-CambodiaContinued from page 1 shouted,“If two million lives of Europeans were atstake you would be marching the streets.You see all kinds of extended, in depth cov¬erage of the politics of the Palestinian prob¬lem, the Mideast problem. Where do you seethe politics of Cambodia covered? No¬where.”He asked the crowd “where are you? Idon’t see the students in the streets. You goon with your daily lives. You go to your par¬ties. You act as if nothing is happening. Awhole nation is being exterminated!”A representative of the Cambodian refu¬gees asked the audience to remember “thatwe are all citizens of the world. We all havea responsibility to act and make people re¬spect human rights.”Silverman said, “don’t underestimate thepower of your voice. The people of Washing¬ton are insulated and they don’t know howyou’re feeling. You have a right — no, an ob¬ligation — to express yourself on this mat¬ter.”Silverman discussed some of the causes ofthe situation and gave a synopsis of recentCambodian history. Referring the audienceto the William Shawcross book Sideshow, hesaid that United States actions in SoutheastAsia, particularly the 1969 bombing of Cam¬bodia, implicated us in what is happeningthere. He said the bombing destroyed farm¬land, increased the dependence of the Cam¬ bodian government on U.S. money, causedthe cities to be flooded with refugees, andforced the peasantry to align with the KhmerRouge. He also said it forced the KhmerRouge into China’s influence and forcedmany moderates to the left.“The United States planted the seeds offreedom in Southeast Asia,” he said, “andthey have borne fruit.”In 1975, the Communist forces of Pol Pottook control of Cambodia. Silverman, refer¬ring to an article by Seymor Hersh in theNew York Times, said “Pol Pot believedthat the salvation of Cambodia was possibleonly through the expulsion of all foreignersand foreign influence and through ‘purifica¬tion,’ or evacuation of the cities.“All signs of modern civilization — type¬writers, radios, television sets, phono¬graphs, books — were destroyed. Hospitalswere ransacked. Intellectuals were system¬atically purged.“The ravages of war and the excesses ofthe Pol Pot regime have left the populacewith virtually no transportation, communi¬cation system, telephones, books, medicalsupplies, machines, or other aspects of mod¬ern civilization.”Since the Vietnamese invaded Cambodiain January of this year, he suggested thatVietnam might invade Thailand, in whichcase the United States could well be drawninto open conflict with the Vietnameseagain. Since the invasion, the two sides havefought bitterly for possession of the country,8—The Chicago Maroon, Tuesday November 6, 1979 Palestinians,Israeli’s meetThe Middle East situation will be dis¬cussed by members of the Israeli PeaceNow movement and local Palestinian ac¬tivists at a meeting tonight, November 6,at KAM Isaiah Israel Congregation, 1100E. Hyde Park Blvd. The meeting is one ofthe first where Israelis and Palestinianswill discuss how both Israeli security andPalestinian self-determination can beachieved in the Middle East. The meet¬ing will also provide an opportunity forthe airing of Israeli views other thanthose expressed by the hard-line Begingovernment. This event is sponsored bythe Jewish Mid-East Project.Tarcov lectureson PlatoNathan Tarcov assistant professor ofpolitical science and in the College, willspeak on “Human Being & Citizen inPlato’s Republic” Thursday, November8, at 8 pm in Harper 130. This will be thesecond lecture of the Collegiate Lectureseries in the Liberal Arts. Discussion andrefreshments will follow the lecture.Sandmel dead at 68Samuel Sandmel. the Helen A. Regens-tein Professor in the Divinity School,died Sunday night, November 4, ofcancer at Jewish Hospital in Cincinnati,Ohio. He was 68. A full obituary will ap¬pear in Friday’s Maroon.Want to be a lawyerThe second in a series of noontime ca¬reer seminars, “Life After Graduation”,will focus on the legal profession,Wednesday, November 7 in the AlumniHouse.Guests include Hubert Will, DistrictCourt Judge; Judith Landt, attorney withBaker and MacKenzie; Antonin Scalia,professor at the Law School and formerassistant to the Attorney General of theU.S.; and Elmer Gertz, professor at theJohn Marshall Law School, Chairman ofthe First Amendment Lawyers Associa¬tion, and Chairman of the Civil RightsCommission of the Chicago Bar Associa¬tion.As with previous seminars, the guestswill make a brief opening statement andthen answer students’ questions aboutthe legal profession. Participants are en¬couraged to bring a lunch and refres-ments will be provided.Tenant activistto speakEd Sacks, author of The Chicago Ten¬ants Handbook and an experienced ten¬ant organizer, will be teaching a tenants’rights/tenant organizing session Thurs¬day, Nov. 8, at 7:30 pm at the QuakerMeeting House, 5615 S. Woodlawn Ave.The session is free and open to the public,sponsored by the Hyde Park TenantsUnion.sion.In Chicago, the Emergency Task Forcefor Indochinese Refugees is in need of volun¬teers. Their address is 67 E. Madison; Room114; Chicago, Ill. 60603. Their phone numberis 346-0107.Jud Newburn, a graduate student in an¬thropology, formed a group after the meet¬ing called Cambodian Relief Now: HydePark Action Group. The group’s first meet¬ing will take place on Monday, Nov. 12, at7:30 at a place to be announced.The lecture, attended by approximately120 people, was sponsored by the programoffice of the International House, and put to¬gether primarily through the efforts ofNgoan Le, a Vietnamese refugee for 3V4years.Carleton proves too much for Chicagoby Andy RothmanIt was a weekend on the bus. Tom Kuruczand his University of Chicago football teamtravelled approximately 18 hours Friday,Saturday and early Sunday on their way toand from a season-ending 40-10 loss to theMidwest Conference Blue Division champi¬on Carleton Knights, at Northfield, Minneso¬ta.The ride served to extend the Maroons’already long season, but the team did notseem adversely affected by it as theyjumped to a 7-0 lead early in the firstquarter on a five yard sprintout-option run by quarterback Mark Meier and an extrapoint by Scott Jansen.Both teams were able to move well on of¬fense throughout as Meier ran and passedfor over 100 yards each and the Knights’passing game worked well. Carleton’s BillFord went into the game as the conference’sfifth leading passer while Meier was sixth.Carleton came right back after theMaroon score for a touchdown but missedthe extra point so Chicago held onto a 7-6lead. When the Maroons got the ball backthey were able to move into field goal range and Jansen added three points from 28yards out, to make it 10-6.Before the end of the half, however,Carleton scored twice, the secondtouchdown coming with only eight secondsremaining, to deflate Chicago.Although Carleton managed three secondhalf scores, Chicago threatened onnumerous occasions but, as has been theirproblem in the second half of the season,could not score. The Knights, now 4-0, willhost Red Division champion Lawrence, also4-0, this Saturday for the conference title. The Maroons, however, were not overly im¬pressed with Carleton. Sophomore end JeffForeman said, “I don’t think they’re thebest team in our conference.”Chicago played the game without two oftheir top performers of this year,sophomore safety and often-used quarter¬back, Do Kim, and freshman defensivelineman, Cassius Scott who had been askedto leave the team early last week by Kurucz.Chicago ends its season at 1-3 in the con¬ference, good for fourth place in the fiveteam Blue Division, and 2-6 overall.Axinnstreaks Unpleasant finish for Resch’s nettersThe University of Chicago varsity crosscountry team, paced by Mike Axinn’s fourthstraight individual conference win, finishedsecond in the Midwest Conference champi¬onship held Saturday in Wisconsin.The Maroons gained special pleasurefrom the meet in defeating Beloit as a team,after losing to the Bucanneers three weeksago. Carleton won the meet to succeed 1978conference winner Beloit as the leaguechampion.Other top Maroon finishers were DaveGreen, ninth; Marshall Schmitt, 17th; PaulHart 19th; Dave Taylor 24th; Tom Mattiske,26th and Claude Zeintek, 37th.Chicago’s Art Knight was ineligible for themeet under conference rules because he ranat Middlebury last year before transferring.Knight will run in this week’s NCAA regionalHere are Saturday’s team results; by Darrell WuDunnThe University of Chicago volleyball teamdropped both their matches last week to enda rather disappointing year with fourstraight losses. The two defeats last week,coming at the hands of the College of St.Francis and North Central College, putstheir final season record at a lowly 6-12.Last Monday, the volleyball squad travell¬ed to the College of St. Francis in hopes ofwinning their final road match of theseason. St. Francis, however, a Division IIcontender, quickly dissolved any chance ofa Maroon victory as they completely dominated the match. Chicago was virtuallyhelpless against St. Francis’ tremendous at¬tack. Halt the opponent players were amongthe best the Maroons had ever seen thisyear. Chicago tried all it could to stop St.Francis but their efforts were futile as theywere destroyed in straight games. 15-6,15-4,15-7.The Chicago team was simply over¬whelmed by the incredible St. Francis team.The entire squad averaged a two inch heightadvantage across the line over the Maroons.Coach Resch described St. Francis as thebest team Chicago has faced this season.Team Score Team SrorpCarleton 32 Coe 162Chicago 70 Lawrence 175Cornell 180Beloit 76 Monmouth 188GrinneU 80 Knox 221Seventeen vie for football supremacyby Mark ErwinThe drawings for the Intramural Footballplayoffs were held on Sunday afternoon. Thematch-ups were done randomly, with thefive division champions picking numbers (1-5) out of a hat. The three wild-card teamsthen drew numbers (6-8). In this manner,the three wild-card teams (who were pickedby seasonal point differentials) must face divisional winners in the first round. Twodivisional champions must face each otherin the first round.In the Undergraduate League, first-roundgames were played yesterday at 3:45,second-round games will be played onWednesday at 3:45. The Residence Cham¬pionship game will be on Saturday at a time to be determined (most likely 12:30.)The winner of the Residence champion¬ship will meet the Independent winner (Ed’sBar and Grill) for the Undergraduate cham¬pionship. The Grad League’s games will beheld on Tuesday (first-round) and on Thurs¬day (second-round). The Graduate cham¬pionship will be held on Saturday, probablyat 12:30.(Top ten rankings)Undergraduate(10) Lower Rickert_Commter Co-opDudley(9) Chamberlin 1979 IM football playoffs(3) TuftsHendersonMichelsonHale ResidenceChampion(6) Ed’s Bar & GrillIndependent Champion UndergraduateChampionGraduate(2) Psi Upsilon(8) Manifest DestinyHung JuryThe Pod(4) HooligansBarristers(1) Wabuno BayJunkyard Dogs' GraduateChampion All-UniversityChampionTim Baker The Maroons played their final officialmatch of 1979 at home versus a team fromNorth Central College. Although not theteam from St. Francis, North Central stillproved to be superior to Chicago. Behind theawesome spiking of their star player, NorthCentral clinched the match in four games.The first game saw Chicago spurt to a 5-1lead. North Central, however, controlled therest of the game and won 15-9. In the secondgame, North Central just continued fromwhere they left off. Well in commandthroughout most of the game, they took thelast ten points to win 15-7. In the next game,Chicago began to tighten up its play. Con¬centrating more than in the previous games,the Maroons were able to keep close to theiropposition. With a late surge, Chicagovaulted passed North Central to win 15-12.The fourth game was quite unusual. Chicagoplayed well on defense but were virtuallyshut out on offense. North Central nevercaptured more than a few points on a ser¬vice rotation, but Chicago could not matcheven that on their services. Eventually, withChicago unable to mount any points, NorthCentral won by the lopsided score of 15-1.The University of Chicago was never real¬ly able to give their opponents much com¬petition. Coach Resch cites the fact that itwas the final match of the season that caus¬ed the Maroons’ ‘‘lack of concentration.”Perhaps under different circumstances, thematch might have been closer.Hence, the women's varsity volleyballteam completes a very frustrating seasonwinning only one third of its matches. Theyear was a very disappointing one for coachResch and her players. However, with onlytwo players graduating and one returningafter a one year hiatus in Europe, next yearshould see a considerable improvement inthe University of Chicago volleyball squad.They created ■>THE STAR WARSPOSTER & TOLKIENCALENDARS.NOW THEY’VECREATED A WHOLENEW WORLDA new. fully illustrated(in color & btack& white)ep*c fantasyA Bantam BookOnly $8 95 WhereverPaperbacks Are SoldThe Chicago Maroon, Tuesday November 6, 1979—9CalendarFor lour years, you'velet them into yourliving room.Now you can takethem to bed.In the words of Rolling Stone's editors and inEdie Baskin's photos, everything you'vealways wanted to know—and much, muchmore—about these wild and crazyfolks. Introduction by BuckHenry. A giant Dolphinpaperback, $8.95.A Rolling Sion* Pr..« Book•I DOUBLEDAY VERSAILLE5254 S, DorchesterWELL MAINTAINEDBUILDINGAttractive 1 Vz and* 2Vz Room StudiosFurnished or Unfurnished$192 - $291Based on AvailabilityAll Utilities IncludedAt Campus Bus Stop324-0200 Mrs. OroakSorry aboutthe book,NanMallory’sRestaurant iTenth Floor1525 East 53rd StreetHyde ParkChicago. Illinois 60615312 241 5600Breakfast 8:30 to 11:00,Lunch 11:00 to 5:00, Dinner5:00 to 11:00, Friday andSaturday until 12:00, Sun¬day Brunch 10:30 to 4:00.Security, Parking Tai Chi Ch’uan: Meeting 7:30 pm, Blue Gargoyle.Badminton Club: Meets 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes gym-Approachto nasium.Transcendental Meditation: Introductory Lec¬ture, 7:30 pm, Public invited, free. Ida Noyes Li-TUESDAYPerspectives: Topic — “An Ecosystemthe Great Lakes” guests Robert Sugarman, ElaineKaplan, Madonna McQrath, John Parker, and JohnVallentyne, 6:30 am, channel 7.Rockefeller Chapel: Edward Mondello, UniversityOrganist will give a recital, 12:15 pm.Democratic Socialists: Michael Harrington willspeak on Democratic Socialism 2:30 pm, QuantrellAuditorium.UC Gymnastics Club: Instruction available 4:00 —8:00 pm, Bartlett gym, free.DOC Films “The Shining Hour” 7:15 pm, "Manne¬quin" 8:45 pm, Cobb.Organization of Latin American Students: Meet¬ing 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes Hall.Women's Rap Group: Meets 7:30 pm, Blue Gar¬goyle in the Women’s Center. Info call 752-5655.Hillel: Israeli Folk dancing, 8:00 pm, Ida NoyesTheatre, 50*.WEDNESDAYPerspectives: Topic — “Citizen Action for Lake Mi¬chigan" guests Robert Sugarman, Elaine Kaplan,Madonna McGrath, John Parker, and John Vallen¬tyne, 6:30 am, channel 7.Rockefeller Chapel: Service of Holy Communion8:00 am.Smart gallery: Masterpieces at Noon - A Non-Ca¬loric Alternative Thomas Crow will speak on ab¬stract Expressionist painting, 12:15 pm.Rockefeller Chapel: Robert Lodine, UniversityCarillonneur, will give a recital, 12:15 pm.Crossroads: English classes for foreign women,2:00 pm.Cognitive Science Workshop: English as a Con¬text-Free Language" speaker Gerald Gazdar, 4:00pm, Social Science 122Student Activities Office: Will conduct its quar¬terly film scheduling allocating open dates forWinter Quarter '80 Ida Noyes East Lounge 4:30pm.UC Gymnastics Club: Instruction available 5:30 -8:00 pm, Bartlet gym, free.Dept Romance Languages: Lecture — “II ViaggoChimerico E Notturno Di Dina Campana” speakerSilvio Ramat, 5:00 pm, Classics 21.United Front Demonstration: Planning meetingagainst naval recruiters, 6:00 pm, Ida Noyes Li¬brary. Hillel: Class in Modern Jewish Philosophy, 7:30pm, Hillel.DOC Films: “The Barefoot Contessa" 8:00 pm,Cobb- VScience Fiction Club: Meets 8:00 pm. Ida NoyesHall. Everyone welcome.Country Dancers: Traditional dances of England,Scotland, and New England taught, 8:00 pm. IdaNoyes Cloister Club.Dean’s Student Task Force: on Education in theCollege meets 8:00 pm. Ida Noyes.THURSDAYPerspectives: Topic — “Politics and Vietnam WarMovies” guests Robert Sugarman, Elaine Kaplan,Madonna McGrath, John Parker, and John Vallen¬tyne, 6:30 am, channel 7.United Front: Demonstration against U S. Navalrecruiters, 12:00 noon. Hutch Court.Noontime Concert: Program of music by Handeland Purcell., 12:15 pm, Reynolds Club.Orthodox Christian Fellowship: Meets 3:00 pm -5:00 pm. Rockefeller Chapel.Inaugural Lecture: "Personal Narrative and Life-Course" Bertram Cohler speaker, 4:00 pm SocialSciences 122.UC Gymnastics Club: Instruction available 4:00 -8:00 pm, Bartlett gym, free.Committee on Virology: Seminar — "Structure andReplication of Pseudo-Rabies Virus DNA" speakerDr. Tamar Ben-Parat, 4:00 pm Cummings 1117.Rockefeller Chapel: Evening Prayer, 5:00 pm.Table Tennis Club: Meets 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes Hall3rd floor.Medieval and Rennaissance Society: Meeting 7:30pm, Ida Noyes Hall. All interested persons.NOMOR: meets 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes 1st floorlounge.Transcendental Meditation: Preparatory Lecture,7:30 pm. Free. Public invited. Ida Noyes Library.DOC Films: "Le Petit Theatre de Jean Renoir” 8:00pm, Cobb.Collegiate Lecture Series in the Liberal Arts:“Human Being & Citizen in Plato’s Republic”Nathan Tarcov, assistant professor in politicalscience and the College. Harper 130, 8 pm.HACKER-PSCHORRNM>VHappy Birthdaydear Pub!Help us celebratethis Saturday, November 10 IBM'S Series/1 minicomputerwill visit the campus at the CCETuesday through Thursday,November 13-15.You are cordially invited todrop in for a visit between9 a.m. and 5 p.m.on those days,or attend the S/1 seminarsscheduled at 3 p.m. Tuesdayand 10 a.m. Thursday.10 The Chicago Maroon, Tuesday, November 6, 1979MMUMmi ■ 1.CLASSIFIED ADSAD RATESMaroon classifieds are effective andcheap. Place them in person at theMaroon business office in Ida NoyesHall by mail to the Maroon, Ida NoyesHall room 304, 1212 E. 59th St.,Chicago, 40537. All ads must be paid inadvance. Rates: 40' per line (30spaces) for U of C people, 75' per lineotherwise. $1 for special headline. _ _ _Oeadlines: For Tuesday paper, 12 FOR SALFnoon Friday; for Friday, 12 noonWednesday.Display advertising rates areavailable upon request. 753-3243. RESEARCH ASSISTANT WANTED towork on study of urb. flnan and politicsat U. of C. Job Involves some admin,and supvlslng responsibilities. Com¬puter exp. desirable, not essential.Willingness to learn more imp 20-30hrs/wk. Some eves. Beg. sal S5-7/hr.Call 753-2134, leave name, phone I andtime you can be reached. ARTISTS ANDCRAFTERS MEMORY GAMES WOMEN'S TRACKIf you are Interested In sharinggallery-shop space at 57th andWoodlChrls 493-3290. Total dues will be$15. No commission, but a few hours ofwork per week will be required.SPACENeed an apartment or tenant? Call theStudent Gov't Housing Search Service753-3273.4-4 weekdays.Studio for rent 12/1. University Park270/mo. 1 year lease security deposit.Call 752-5534.Looking for people in apt. who are in¬terested in another roommate, callKathy after 5p.m„ 447-2725.1 bedroom condo for sale by owner.Spacious, sunny, In modern East HPhighrtse. Supermarket, cleaners, etc.Evenings and weekends 538-2192 or538-2547. Piano for sale. Blond AcrosonicBaldwin. $500.00 288-3038.HOUSE SALE Nov. 3rd and 4th, 10:00a.m. continuing till all is sold. 63 E.Marquette Rd (67th and Michigan)753-3751 rm 326 on wkend. 483-3414 bedtable, rocker, books.Half Fare United coupon for sale.Make offer. Phone 467-39731971 Fiat 124 Coupe, mostly rebuilt.$1100.955-8998 •Ski package for sale: blizzard skis(epoxi, yellow, 180 cm): Scott poles,Koflach boots (leather, black, size 7»/z)Salomon bindings, very little used. Asa package only $50. Ph: 324-0741. NOTIMEFOR LOVE?Filled with gripes or wonderfully happy stories 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. MEMORY GAMES! Have Fun Pass¬ing Tests! Save Time Studying torecall facts, definitions, concepts, for¬mulas, foreign languages, dramaticparts • Anything you must remember!Ask my Record-a-Call about low coststudy groups. 643-2826.A SINGULARGROUPOur Gallery of creative arts and craftsis now open Tues.-Fri. 11-2, Sat. 11-3and Sun. 11-1, located at the corner of57th and Woodlawn in the UnitarianChurch. We have a large selection ofjewelry, pottery, paintings, softsculpture, macrame, weaving,photography etc. Stop in and browse.YEARBOOKAvail. Nov. 15, bedroom of 3. 1154 E.54th (by Field House) $115 per monthfurnished. Women only. Call 643-2454.PEOPLE WANTEDThe Department of BehavioralSciences needs people who want toparticipate as paid subjects Inpsychollnguistlc and Cognitivepsychology experiments. For furtherInformation call 753-4718.Chicago Sinai Congregation seeks afull time secretary (40 hrs.) for theRabbi. Excellent typing skills, someshorthand. Available December 1. CallMrs. Kalllsh 288-1400.Research laboratory on campus needsfulltime (40 hrs.) glassware washerand laboratory helper for period of sixto seven months, to start Immediately.Rate: $4.65/hr. Meticulous work anddependability are required. Will train.Call 753-2704EASY EXTRA INCOME! $500/1000Stuffing envelopes-Guaranteed. Sendself-addressed, stamped envelope toDEXTER ENTERPRISES, 3039Shrine PI. LA, CA. 90007Make substantial extra income. SeeNov. Post mag. 12 pages on Amway.Married. Car. Work own flexible hrs.PT 447-4339 by 10p.m.Craft people wanted to seli their goodsat Student Activities Craft Fair, Dec. 4and 5 in Reynolds Club. Call x3598 orx3570 to reserve a space. Entry freefor students.Wanted: Part time payroll clerk.General office-flexible hours. 483-2000.Ms. Thurmond.LIFE AFTER GRADUATION discusscareer opportunities in Law withAlumni in that field Wed. Nov. 7, Noon.5733 University. Bring your own lunch.Driver wanted-several hours, severaldays a week. Pay by hour. Call324-2759.Faculty family seeks student part-time for help with light housekeeping.Flexible hours. Call Jean or Paul.241-6764. GREAT APT SALE Nov 10-11. Manynew items, sofabed, barstools,carpeting, wood for shelving, plants, CIW fy I F ^etc. Free beer 752-7599 anytime. 1449 vnv wuuvE. 50th St. Apt. 18-B. UC HOTLINE753-1777From 7 p.m. to 7 a.m. there is a place Noyes 218. Photographers, writers,you can call if you have a Question, typers, copy-editors, and others in¬need a Referral, or want to Talk - The terested in selling the book, come.UC HOTLINE. Meeting tonight at 7:30 p.m. in IdaPI Varsity Indoor and Outdoor Track Infomeeting Wed. 7 at 7:30 pm In BartlettTrophy Room for more info call753-3574.MICHAELHARRINGTONHear Democratic Socialist MichaelHarrington speak Thursday, Nov. 8thin Quantrell Auditorium at 2.30 p.m.Brought to you by the U of CDemocratic Socialist Organizing com¬mittee.CRAFT FAIRAttention Craft-people; the AnnualStudent Activities Crafts Fair will beon Dec. 4 and 5. Reserve a space nowto sell your goods. Call x3750 or x3598.Entry free to U.C. students. HEAR HARRINGTONSPEAKHead of the Democratic SocialistOrganizing Committee Michael Harrington will speak in QuantrellAuditorium on Nov. 8th at 2:30 p.m.Sponsored by the U. of C. D.S.O.C.RUN FORYOUR LIFESALE: New Balance Waffle trainersUsed twice. $30 firm, size 6Va men's.Call 955-4022 between 6 p.m. and 7p.m.or after 11p.m. Ask or Abbe.GIVE A DAMN!Cambodia relief. First meeting Nov.12 Mon. 7:30 1-House home room.Group forming now for concrete ac¬tion. Hunger hurts!PEOPLE FOR SALEARTWORK - posters, illustration,calligraphy. Invitations, etc. NoelYuovovlch, 5441 S. Kenwood 493-2399.Typing done on IBM by college frad.Pica type. Term papers, theses,dissertations, law briefs, manuscripts,resumes, letters, etc. Fast, accurate,reliable, reasonable. Near North Side.Call today 248-1478TYPING-PAPERS-Pick-up anddelivery on Campus. $1.00 per page.Please call 484-4882. (Horl.)PERSONALSWriters' Workshop Plaza 2-8377.LOST-while spetinking in MistyMountains-one precious birthday pre¬sent. If found, please return to G.Smeagol.Dear Batya, congratulations on hav¬ing found a new job. I hope that yournew relationship will be rewarding,secure and creative. Best wishes, LoveLarry. JEWISH SINGLESTHANKSGIVING.Wednesday, November 21,1979 at 6:30p.m. for Jewish Single Adults, 25-45.Invited by CHUTZPAH UNLIMITED.Reservations required and limited. Nolater than November 17 at 12 noon.Call Ed 324-3484 or Eleanor 248-2441,weekdays 7-10p.m., weekends 10am-5pm. MICHAELHARRINGTONWill speak on Democratic Socialismon Thursday, Nov. 8th in QuantrellAuditorium at 2:30 p.m. Sponosred byU of C D.S.O.C.LUNCHTIMECONCERTSEvery Thursday at 12:15 In ReynoldsNorth Lounge. This week, 11/8, musicof Handel and Purcell, performed byJon Sumlda, trumpet, JenniferWltlard, soprano; and Tom Weisflog,piano. Bring your lunch, and enjoy themusic! BLACKFRIARSDon't be wishy-washy. Come seeYOU'RE A GOOD MAN, CHARLIEBROWN Nov. 14, 17, 18 at 8:00 p.m.with a matinee Nov. 17at2:00p.m. IdaNoyes Cloister Club.FUGUPLANWhy did the Japanese try to save theJews during World War II? Becausethey are both Oriental peoples. Hearabout it at Hillel House, this Sunday,Nov. II, at 7:30 p.m. from fhe personwho wrote the book, Rabbi MarvinTokayer. YOU DONTRED GIASSEto enjoy a Tecate Trio Bravo.Just take an icy red can of Tecate Beerimported from Mexicoand top it with lemon and salt.Out of sight!Gbco Importing Co . IncDallas. Texas 75229 TECATESERVICESPRIME MOVERS: 1 or 2 men w/bigtruck: We'll move your soul (andpossessions) 324-1977.CARPENTER: Shelf-systems. Plat-form beds. Minor remodeling.Repairs. Give me a call, I'll give you ahand. David 324-5447,RUG-CLEANING-we clean rugs andstairway carpets. $1.35 sq. yard. Formore info call A.E. Carpet CleaningCo. 752-2554, 955-9549.CONDO FOR SALEEast Hyde Park Condo For Sale.Large 2 BR, Sunroom w/b fireplace.Many extras. Phone 684-3167. ISRAELI COFFEE HOUSESponsored by Students for IsraelNOVEMBER 10th - 8:30 P.M. - ?FEATURING: RICK DINITZ, LARRY MOSSand OTHERSAT: HILLEL HOUSE5715 Woodlawn AvenueFalafel and Drinks For PurchaseSTANLEY H. KAPLANFor Over 41 Years The Standard ofExcellence In Test Preparation.(’HI t'AHI IUHHale House Presents:Ihe ityei Sir cticrstarring Clint EastwoodAction, Adventure and Fantastic Scenery in theAmerican Southwest and The Swiss Alps.Saturday, November 10 • Admission $1.50Show Times: 7:00,9:15,11:15In Kent Auditorium [MOAT-DAT’LSAT]I ear • eac aevru . cnc am . chat ISHE • SHE PSYCH • 6RE BIO • 6MATPCAT • 0CAT • VAT • MAT • SATNATIONAL MEDICAL BOARDS-VQE-ECFMGFLEX* NATL DENTAL BOARDS'TOEFL IIIIIP00UTRY BOARDS • NURSING BOARDSFlexible Programs and HoursVisit Any Cfatir JUISmFrt IYtursoH Mffcy W$ Mali Tht Dtffircsci rSTUDENTS FOR ISRAELMEETS: WEDNESDAY,NOVEMBER 7th-12 NoonSPEAKER: PROFESSOR DOVFRIEDLANDER,Dept, of Psychology,Director of CounselingServices, Hebrew Univ.,IpriKulpmTOPIC: STRESS OF LIFE INISRAEL & MODES OFCOPINGAfter the talk. Prof. Friedlander will present a slideshow and discuss study opportunities at Hebrew Univ.HILLEL FOUNDATION - 5715 WOODLAWN AVENUE N.V. Hlfl (ar. M tL) Tt»T PREPARATIONSPECIALISTS SINCE 19*9CtnttM >« Nil* U$ CilNt Fufft» »*0ToroflM CmMi $ SaitttrtMEI III| CHICAGO CENTRAI 6216 N. CLARK[ CHICAGO. ILLINOIS 60600 SMM, SUMMER 1FALL 1NTENSIVES jj (312) 7644151 COURSES STARTING ■THIS MONTH: 1j t. m. suauRSAN 1LSAT« • • • Gi *AT e # e # GKc |19S. LAGRANGE ROAD NeXT MONTH: jSUITE 201 MCAT.... SAT....CHAT |LAGRANGE. ILLINOIS 00625(312) 362-5940 OCAT |Courses Constantly Updated 1Cleansing Exams in Center Salt >Stody .Nr MertMNa* A*** O0m> Center* m More TPwn 80 Merer US Ctoe* A Aftree* 1^ OUTMDC N.Y. STATE CALL TOLL FREE: S00-tSS-1T«a J c Ruby's Merit ChevroletSPECIALDISCOUNT PRICESfor oil STUDENTS andFACULTY MEMBERSJust present your University ofChicago Identification Card.As Students or Faculty Membersof the University of Chicago you areentitled to special money-savingDISCOUNTS on Chevrolet Parts,Accessories and any new or usedChevrolet you buy from Merit Chev¬rolet Inc.Kt‘r/1 I hut (>rt nr 1GM QUALITYSOVC€ WWTS □ L 1/ lectin#u ithGENERAL MOTORS RAETS DIVISION O£W/UGMhuu” > 9-J* MRUBY’SCHEVROLET72nd & Stony Island 684-0400Open Daily 9-9, Sot. 9-S Part* open Sat. 'til NoonIRUBY’SW VOLKSWAGEN72nd & Stony Island 684-0400Open Daily 9-9, Sat. 9-J Port* open Sat. 'til NoonThe Chicago Maroon, Tuesday, November 6, 1979—111MBA ADMISSION FORUMSFor people who wantcareers in management:How to selectthe MBA programthat isbest for youCome to the MBA Admission Forums and meet representatives fromall of the MBA schools listed below. Pick up the catalogs and literatureyou want. Discuss the MBA program that is best for you.Get advice on financial assistance for veterans, minority students, etc.Attend special Daily Workshop Sessions with Admissions Directors,Placement Officers, MBA Employers, and recent MBA Graduates to learnhow the MBA Degree can help you qualify for the career in managementthat you want. The Forums are presented as a public service by theGraduate Management Admission Council and theAssociation of MBA Executives Inc. A nominal $2 registration fee per daycovers everything. Dial telephone number below for more details.Of Special Interest To:• The Working Executive •• College Graduates Seeking Positions in Management •• Women College Graduates Returning To Work •• College Students Who Will Graduate in 1979-’80 •Holiday Inn Mart Plaza350 North Orleans Street • Chicago • (312) 753-0898Drop in any time you wish during the hours listed below:Friday 1 SaturdayNOON to 7 P.M. I 10 A.M. to 4 P.M.November 9 1 November 10PARTICIPATING GRADUATE SCHOOLS OF MANAGEMENTAmerican Graduate School of International Management/American School of ManagementAmerican University/Atlanta University/Babson College/Boston University/Bradley UniversityCarnegie-Mellon University/Case Western Reserve Univers'ty/Columbia University/Cornell UniversityDartmouth College Amos Tuck School/Duke University/Emory University/George Williams CollegeGolden Gate Umversity/IMEDE Management Development Institute: Switzerland/Indiana UniversityKeller Graduate School ot Management/Kent State University/Lake Forest CollegeLouisiana State University/Loyola University Chicago/Michigan State UniversityMonterey Institute of Foreign Studies/New York University/Northeastern UniversityNorthwestern University/Ohio University/Pace University/Pennsylvania State UniversityPurdue University/Rollins College/Roosevelt University/Rosary CollegeRutgers. 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