The University of Chicago t Copyright 1979 The Chicago Maroon Tuesday, November 20, 1979The State of the University 1979Gray says the University must cut spending, emphasize researchand graduate schools; defends plan to increase College enrollmentBy Andrew PatnerUsing the metaphors of battle,President Gray Thursday urgedthe faculties to adopt a “hard-headed romanticism” in “an ex¬tended erosive trench warfare” tocarry the University through thenext decade as a leading researchuniversity.During her second State of theUniversity address, Gray sketcheda University already in a period offinancial hardship and entering anera of further uncertainty in enroll¬ments, employment, and supportfor research. As it is forced tomake selective choices, Gray said,the University is burdened by theoverexpectations of the past age ofgrowth.“Financial distress, concernover declining numbers of gradu¬ate students, fear for the future ofyoung scholars, anxiety over thefunding and respect for basic re¬search ... All these have led to anew sense of limitation, of dimin¬ished possibility.”“For universities, change can nolonger be equated with growth andproliferation of activity. Our firstobjective must be qualitativegrowth and committed adjustmentto its requirements. It is throughselectivity and the concentration ofstrength that we will in fact be ableto grow . . . ,” Gray said.Gray proposed a paring andpruning that would emphasize theUniversity’s strengths and phaseout those areas that have shownpoor performance, areas that fornow Gray chose not to identify.“It is our intention to educe thescope of current activity selective¬ly in order to allocate our re¬sources to do what we can do best,rather than trimming and reduc-Nude swims, sit-ins, a leaflet en¬titled “In the Spirit of Peace,” anda newspaper clipping about theUniversity of Chicago Committeeon Public Policy Studies areamong entries in the ChicagoPolice Department “Red Squad’s”file on “University of Chicago,Excerpts from the Red Squadindex appear on Page 31947-1971,” according todocuments released last week.“Red Squad” is a term for thesubversive unit of the ChicagoPolice Department’s intelligencedivision. The unit became widelyknown during the 1960s when RedSquad agents infiltrated, harass¬ed, and monitored leftist and blackliberation organizations, oftentargeting students. But agentswere active during the 1950s aswell. An index to the Red Squad’sfile on the University reveals thatthe campus was monitored duringthe Rosenberg and the McCarthyhearings.The 2-inch thick index and ac¬companying file were obtained ing across the board.”Graduate StudyWhat Gray feels the Universityearlier this year by plaintiffs in aclass action lawsuit, Alliance toEnd Repression et al, versusJoseph DeLeonardi, acting Chica¬go police chief. The Alliance is acoalition of 50 organizations work¬ing to defend civil liberties.The file contains an assortment *of “exhibits,” newspaper clipp¬ings, and leaflets pertaining tosue issues as student rebellion,race, the Vietnam W ar, the coun¬terculture, and faculty activities.A Red Squad “Interview Report”dated November 17, 1969, de¬scribes a leaflet called “In theSpirit of Peace,” which announcesa “speaking engagement of Mi¬chael Harrington at MandelHall.”In the same file, a 1967 clippingreports the appointments of seven“fellows” to the University’s Com¬mittee on Public Poiicy Studies.Among the appointees were JohnHope Franklin, Morris Janowitz,Hans Morgenthau, and JulianLevi. Their names were underlinedby the Red Squad.The information in the filedocuments Red bquad prioritiesbut does not disclose how, when, orif the information was used. Theidentities of informants are notrevealed, but many items in the can do best is graduate education,despite a decline in enrollmentsand employment opportunities.“The University has had a histo¬ry of going against the tide, and wefile — leaflets, clippings from TheMaroon, posters — could easilyhave been gathered by anyone whocame on campus.Despite the simple and publicnature of the items in the files, theRed Squad went to great lengths toreceive and record that informa¬tion. For example, on October 8,1969, an informant was “interview-The chief of the State Depart¬ment’s anti-terrorist divisionwarned Friday that the Americangovernment must improve its abil¬ity to deal effectively with terror¬ists. Terrorism is “a pervasive re¬ality of international affairs” andmust be treated as such, accordingto Ambassador Anthony C. Quain-ton.Quainton. the Director of the de¬partment’s Office for CombattingTerrorism, spoke at a conferenceon “Political Violence: Terrorismand Assassination” held Fridayand Saturday at the Center forContinuing Education.According to Quainton, almost must do so again by affirming thevalue of scholarship,” Gray said.“I believe it is our obligation tolead in designing the graduate uni¬versity of the coming decades. Theed” in the Museum of Science andIndustry parking lot. Forms forsuch “interview reports” bore thenotation “Also to be used foroverheard information.”In one file the University isdescribed as having “radical ‘oncampus meetings’ of differentgroups; anti-Viet Nam sentimentsby students and faculty.”200 acts of terrorism resulting in166 fatalities have been recorded inthe first nine months of 1979. Ap¬proximately 80 of these, 40 percentof ^he total, have been directedagainst American citizens or prop¬erty, Quainton said.While much of the terrorist ac¬tivity has been concentrated inWestern Europe, no geographicarea has gone untouched. The ter¬rorist threat within the UnitedStates remains small. Quainton be¬lieves.Another speaker at the confer¬ence, however, disagreed sharplywith Quainton on this point. YonahAlexander, the editor of “Terror¬ism: An International Journal”and a research associate at Geor¬getown University’s Center for generation of scholars who will becoming to maturity in the 1990’sand beyond will depend on suchleadership. If the trend of decliningenrollments continues for the nextfive years, there is some expecta¬tion that by the mid 1980’s thistrend will have stabilized and thatopportunities in the academic pro¬fessions will begin to improve . . .“We should be preparing tomaintain rather than to reduce ourgraduate student population.“Perhaps the decade precedingits centennary will see the recre¬ation of the graduate university.”To this end, Gray announced thatshe would soon appoint a commit¬tee to study graduate education atthe University. The committee willbegin its work by studying the just-completed report of another com¬mittee, the Bradburn commissionon enrollments.CollegeGray did not sidestep the prob¬lems of the College, however, say¬ing that it “is critical to the educa¬tional quality of the wholeUniversity.” and urging continuedand increased faculty participa¬tion in the College through addi¬tional teaching commitments."We must recognize that facultyparticipation in College programsis not a service but an opportunityfor engagement in one of the moststimulating and important of ourenterprises. We also should recog¬nize that a commitment to under¬graduate teaching and to the workof the College requires no abroga¬tion or diminution of commitmentto graduate training and to re¬search.”Gray gave a rather unexpecteddefense of her plan to expand theCollege to 3000 students. Whilemany members of the College fac¬ulty and student body have beenconcerned that an expansion mightmean the deemphasizing of Col¬lege programs. Gray attempted todispell the fears of the graduate di¬visions instead.Strategic and International Stu¬dies. said that “while the UnitedStates has been relatively free ofterrorism, it is likely to becomemore of a target in the future . . .Terrorists may be looking for newand more important areas ofoperation, so as to make a greaterimpact.”Turn to Page 3Publication noteThe Maroon will not publish thisFriday in observance of theThanksgiving holiday. There willbe two more news issues duringthis quarter and a literary review-on December 7 th.Campus groups, activities monitered by copsBy Claudia MagatTurn to Page 3Terrorism discussed at conferenceBy Jeff Davitzi iRuby's Merit ChevroletSPECIALDISCOUNT PRICESfor all STUDENTS andFACULTY MEMBERSJust present your University ofChicago Identification Card.As Students or Faculty Membersof the University of Chicago you areentitled to special money-savingDISCOUNTS on Chevrolet Parts,Accessories and any new or usedChevrolet you buy from Merit Chev¬rolet Inc.... ... t AKit/> I hut (>rcuP >G W herlmtf rWP/SKl GM QUALITYL'2'l SERVICE PARTSGENERAL MOTORS RAHTS DIVISION G t\U\L vVG 1/ Hurls Jjj iRUBY’SCHEVROLET72nd & Stony Island 684-0400Open Daily 9-9, Sal. 9-5 Port* open Sat. 'til NoonwIw RUBY’SVOLKSWAGEN r72nd & Stony Island 684-0400Open Daily t-9, Sot. 9-5 Port* open Sot. 'til NoonCourt Studio Theatre presents:George Bernard Shaw’sTHE PHILANDERERdirected by Abbie KatzNov. 23 - Dec. 2Fri. * Sun.8:30 pm, 7:30 Sundays$2.50 general admission$1.50 students/seniorsReynolds Club Theatre57th & University753-3581 Taste the pride of Canada.Molson.You’ll get a taste ofnearly 200 years of brewing heritage every time you opena cool, green bottle of MOLSON GOLDEN.™North America’s oldest brewery got its start backin 1786. John Molson, our founder, wouldn't recognizeour modem breweries, but he d be proud of thegood, smooth taste of GOLDEN.™A taste that says Canada in every refreshing sip.Brewed and bottled in Canada, imported by Martlet Importing Co , Inc., Great Neck, N. YNEED 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."“ ONLY" $5795(N Y residents add 8% Sales Tax)Send Check orMoney Order to WALL STREET PUBLISHING CO 303 5TH AVE.SUITE 1306NEW YORK, NY 10016 Enclosed is $NameAddressCity for BooksState ZipAllow 3 weeks for delivery.2 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, November 20, 1979Selections from ‘Red Squad’ filesHere are verbatim seiections from theRed Squad’s index to its file on the Universi¬ty of Chicago.9-22-52, Maroon, p. 3, c-1. (Student Gov¬ernment) Fought for and helped win recog¬nition of. . ., a Marxist group, as a campusorganization.FILE: 12-12-52, (Student Government)Passed resolution to send letters to Presi¬dent Truman in behalf of Rosenbergs.TRIBUNE, 6-2-53. Subpoenas (sic) formore than a score of professors at the Uni¬versity of Chicago were issued today by theSenate internal security subcommittee. . .FILE: A Dean of the Divinity School, . . .,spoke at a rally in New York City on behalfof the Rosenbergs.NEWSCLIP, 3-1-60. Student Governmentpresident,..., led a picket demonstration onFebruary 29,1960, in front of the State StreetWoolworth’s in protest of anti-Negro policyregarding lunch counter seating in SouthernStates.FILE: 10-21-62. (Student Government) Joint sponsor of Gospel for Freedom Festi¬val, Arie Crown Theater... See program at¬tached.5-12-67, CLIP University of Chicago tostudy fight on prejudice — SUBJ received$100,000 grant from the Ford Foundation tostudy how religious denominations are cop¬ing with racial prejudice in Chicago.11-7-67. FILE. University of Chicago stu¬dents protest Dow recruiters.FILE: Leaflet: Your job? Or your son?distributed by peace group.TRIBUNE art. 1-8-67. How does the winetaste? The search for relevance in the Chris¬tian ministry has led the University of Chi¬cago Divinity School to discard its old reci¬pes. The result is a new program of study.FILE: 2-23-68. Hyde Park Revolutionair-es, new organization, attempting to recruitstudents from the University of Chicago.Leaflet attached.CLIP. Sun-Times. 11-30-67. $3 million toUniversity of Chicago for ‘Tooling Up’ ofGhetto School Plan.FILE: Daily News. 12-4-67. UC studentburns draft card at rally.Maroon, 4-12-68. Teach-in discussion on racism in America, •‘crisis in White Ameri¬ca.”FILE: Re: Leaflet found in SUBJ Book¬store — leaflet attached.INFO. Report, 6-15-68. Iranian studentsprotest. Picketing Shah of Iran’s visit toUnited States.Sun-times, Art. 2-5-68. ‘‘Pool Resources,Education Critic Tells Universities.”CLIP. 11-14-68. 100 protested, picketed, in¬terrupted Levi inaugural dinner.Sun-Times, 10-14-69. Viet Moratoriumpicks up support here. SUBJ facultyplanned to hold discussions on the VietWar.10-10-68, Maroon. Ombudsman, ..., ap¬pointed.1-17-69. Clpg. on new class being given atthe University of Chicago Divinity School —“The Black Experience in America.”FILE: 4-25-69. Newspaper report on stu¬dents and faculty at the University of Chi¬cago drinking wine and talking things overat the University of Chicago quadrangle atthe end of the 9 day Tent-in and hungerstrike at the University of Chicago.FILE: Pamphlet passed out the (sic) Uni¬ versity of Chicago entitled “Reactionary So¬ciology” will continue to be issued and is is¬sued by the students in the graduate schoolof Sociology.FILE: 11-13-69. Bus departure for theVietnam Moratorium at the University ofChicago, Ida Noyes Hall, where it waslearned the buses would not depart until11-14-69.FILE: CLP. 5-4-69. CHICAGO TODAY in¬terviewed students from SUBJ and 2 otherschools about President Nixon’s speechwhere He (sic) asks the school administra¬tions to take a tough stand against lawless¬ness in their schools.2-27-70. Clpg. States that University of Chi¬cago students went for a swim in the nudeand it came off pretty well as far as the stu¬dents were concerned.2-10-70. Clpg. from University of Chicagonewspaper states that Gay Liberation is aneducation to other people.3-22-74. Speaker at the Oriental Institute ofChicago accused by students of writingbooks that are racist and demeaning to the“BLACK RACE.”— Claudia MagatNewsbriefsArtfor sale“A Singular Group,” a co-op of Chicagoarea artists, will be displaying their worksfor sale in the basement of the UnitarianChurch at 57th and Woodlawn until January1st.Prices range from 50 cents to $200. Pain¬tings, photographs, jewelry, soft sculptureand weaving are among the different typesof art available for purchase.The gallery is open from 11am- 2pm, Tues¬day through Friday; llam-3pm, Saturdayand from 11:30am-1 pm on Sunday.More artfor saleThe Art for Young Collectors’ exhibitionopened its sale of works to the generalpublic last Sunday. The exhibition waspreviewed by members of the RenaissanceSociety on Friday and Saturday prior to thegeneral opening.The exhibition features works for sale in aprice range from $8- $2,000. Over 4,000 worksbrought together from as far away as Japanand Africa are being offered to area buyers.The sale will continue until December 16in the Bergman Gallery on the fourth floorof Cobb Hall. The exhibition is opened from11am- 5pm daily and from 11am- 8pm onWednesday and Sunday.Calling allhorsesA granite horse trough, dating from about1905, has been installed on the parkway at1301 East 57th St.The trough was originally located a shortdistance east of its present location. It wasinstalled originally by* the South Park Im¬provement Association, now defunct, to helpkeep the Hyde Park neighborhood clean.The trough was restored by the Hyde ParkHistorical Society after it was discovered inthe back yard of building owned by Margretand Winston Kennedy.Thanksgiving serviceto be heldThe 52nd annual community-wideThanksgiving service will be held onThanksgiving day at 11am in RockefellerChapel.All churches and synagogues in the HydePark- Kenwood area will participate in the Tim BakerAfrican mask for saleservice. Hyim Goren Perelmuter of theKAM Israel synagogue will give the sermonentitled “The Mayflower and the St. Cath¬erine — some Thanksgiving reflections.”Father Dennis O’Neil of St. Thomas theApostle will direct the combined choirs of allthe churches and synogugues along with theChicago Children’s Choir.Last year, nearly 2,000 communityresidents attended the Thanksgiving ser¬vice.Weintraubto speakKarl Weintraub will speak on “Culture andEducation” today at 4 pm in Social Sciences122. State of theUniversityContinued from Page 1“In this discussion, I hope we will be care¬ful not to equate numbers and distribution ofstudents across programs in some literalway with our intended priorities or regardfor the different functions of the University.There is a troubling tendency to fear, for ex¬ample, that discussion of recommendationsfor increasing the size of the College mightindicate a lowered commitment or alteredregard for graduate training and research.“The College will always be relativelysmall as compared to its major competitors.In asking whether we might increase its sizeto three thousand students we should keep inmind that there already has been growthover the past years. It is time that we makea clear decision about the appropriate sizefor which we should aim. That will makepossible better planning of curriculum andrelated matters and will also allow for amore adequate and explicit attention tostrengthening the College.”Balanced budgetGray told of the financial efforts neces¬sary to put these strengthened programsinto effect. Bolstered by new directors andstructures of financial planning and devel¬opment, Gray said she has developed atimetable to balance the budget within fouryears.“We have given special attention over thepast year to examining the financial healthand prospects of the University.”Gray announced a new allocation of re¬sources. segregating about a third of all newincome for "some new faculty appointmentsat the junior and senior levels, ... thesciences, . . . book acquisition. . . . financialaid, (and) renovation or new facilities.”Citing this year’s budget increase for thelibrary, Gray said similar attention wouldbe given to faculty compensation in the com¬ing years. Although junior faculty salarieshave for the most part kept pace with thoseat comparable institutions, salaries of se¬nior faculty are no longer competitive, ac¬cording to the Chronicle of Higher Educa¬tion.Throughout her speech. Gray set forwardher philosophy of leadership and adminis¬tration.“I regard it as foolish romanticism tothink we can ignore difficulties, avoid dis¬agreement, or expect a single individual tooffer and impose a comprehensive solu¬tion.“In all this, it is not possible, if it everwas, to impose a simple blueprint on a com¬plex and mature institution with its diverseset of relationships and programs.“There is a tendency to see in the recur¬rent attention to budgets and financial mat¬ters not only the loss of growth, but a turningaway from our proper preoccupation witheducational and scholarly priorities, withThe Chicago high academic purpose, with the ultimatenature of a community of learning.“But, attention to budgets and similarmatters is useful and important only to thedegree that it will truly enable us to concen¬trate on our academic aims.”The next issue of The Maroon will carryan analysis and interviews in which theseand other issues will be discussed.TerrorismContinued from Page 1The U.S. government has issued “an invi¬tation for terrorists to take action” by fail¬ing to solve domestic problems such as in¬flation and unemployment, Alexander said.To deal with the terrorist threat in thiscountry, Alexander said, the governmentshould allow local and national police orga¬nizations to increase their intelligence-gath¬ering activities. He mentioned the increaseduse of wiretaps and paid informers as twopossible means of curtailing terrorist activi¬ty-“Congressional action has been movingtoward weakening rather than strengthen¬ing FBI and CIA investigative activities at atime when the dangers of terrorism are in¬creasing.” Alexander said.Although Ambassador Quainton refusedto comment specificaly on Alexander's sug¬gestions, he said in his speech that somemeans of intelligence gathering might “rep¬resent restrictions on our open society.”M. Cherif Bassiouni, a professor of law atDePaul University, and a third speaker atthe conference, offered several suggestionsfor controlling terrorism which he felt wouldnot undermine the freedom of individuals orof the press, but would aid law enforcementagencies. Bassiouni proposed the use of a re¬straining order to prevent the disclosure of"tactical information during an ongoing ter¬rorist activity that might endanger lives.”He also suggested that the governmentstation a public information officer at thescene of terrorist activities to help develop arelationship between law enforcement agen¬cies and members of the press.Some restraints on the media are neces¬sary to allow law enforcement agencies andthe government to fight terrorists, Bas¬siouni believes.“Idealogicaly motivated terrorists nor¬mally act for the dissemination of informa¬tion and fear,” and gain by the attentionthey attract, he said.The conference was sponsored by the de¬partment of Psychiatry and the Institute ofSocial and Behavioral Pathology It was thefourth in a series of conferences on terror¬ism. The series began in 1972.This issue of The Maroon was edited by JaanEliasMaroon — Tuesday, November 20, 1979 — 3grcvp jj55 ^ u)oodlau)r\ .'ffve L)ni+&*~'&r' Church )OPEN: Sai-. U~3tr 30—1EVERYONEGOESTOJIMMY’SThe PUB VERSAIU.E5254 S. IWdmtcfHimAttractive I f/t and♦ 2% Room StudiosFurnished or Unfurnished$192 - $291Based on AvailabilityAll Utilities IncludedA t Campus Bus Stop$24-0200 Mrs. CroakmCimILLII MEMORIAL CHAPEL$850 Sooth Woodlawn AvenueThursday • November 22 • 11:00 AMFifty-Second AnnualSERVICEPreacher:HAYIM GOREN PERELMUTER,RabbiK.A.M. Isaiah Israel CongregationSermon:“THE MAYFLOWER AND THESTE. CATHERINE-SOMETHANKSGIVING REFLECTIONS1Co-Sponsored by the Churches andSynagogues of Hyde Park and KenwoodNovember 20, 1979: THE 33rd I.ATKE-HAMENTASHSYMPOSIUMTUESDAY - NOVEMBER 20 - 7:30 PMCLOISTER CLUB OF IDA NOYES HALL1212 East 50th StreetThe metaphysical* historical, scientific,political, psychological, commercial andcomparative implications of the 3500-year-old feud between these gastronomicdelicacies. * ,PARTICIPANTS: PROF* ALLAN BRAZEN(Business), PROF. HARRY HAROOTTMAN(History and Far Eastern Lang. A Civ.').PROF* DAVID MALAMENT (Philosophy andConceptual Foundation of Science),PROF. BERNARDS.STLRERA1 AN (PoliticalScience and Eastern Studies).MODER ATOR: PROF. IR A K ATZNKLSON(Chairman, Political Science).Following Symposium, hack at Ilillei.Lathest Hamentash. sour cream, applesauceand cider for a small charge of fifty cents.Ml CASHFor UsedRecords1701 E. 55th684-3375to circulate petitions forHOWARD BAKERRepublican candidate forPresident of the United StatesCHARLES B.ARMSTRONG, SR.Candidate for 5th Ward RepublicanCommitteman, also candidate forState Representative, 24th Districtand candidate for Republican dele*gate, 1st Congressional District.Circulators will he paid.CallCharles B. Armstrong. Sr.842-5950. - ? - .... I y : . . - _ ; For Over 41 Years The Standard ofExcellence In Test PreparationOHM’AH I i uHIMCAT- DAT- LSATI1 MI*MEKT6N*MEBI0*8MT I| PCAT • 0CAT • WAT • BAT • SAT 12 NATI1 riNATIONAL MEDICAL BOARDS * VQE • ECFMGFLEX• NATL DENTAL BOARDS-TOEFL III 1POOUTRY BOARDS * NURSING BOARDS IFtoiibto Program* and Hour* 1Visit Aay CooUr Ail S** f*r |Yssrulf Why «• Mill tin OifforoMi ■Tilt *NC*ANATION 9•*tc.Au*r...NCiim I_' * Centers in Meiof US Cities. rut»to *t«,*1* Madison Am. ItK«nt« Canada t llano S«iU#fi»n4N.v.iaata«v •* «■)■RI CHICAGO CENTER6216 N CLARKCHICAGO. ILLINOIS 006601312) 764 5151S W. SUBURBAN19S. LAGRANGE ROADSUITE 201LAGRANGE. ILLINOIS 60625<3121 352 5840 SPRING, SUMMERFALL INTENSIVES ICOUHSES STARTINGTHIS MOUTH:LSAT. ilAT, .GKENEXT MONTH:11CAT., . .SAT.OCAT .GKATCourses Constantly UndatedLicensing Exams in Center Self-Studyfor amniaSR About Other Contort in More Then M Mater US Crtn A AbroadloUTSOC N.Y. STATE CAL^TO^FREEJW^O^Tta IIIIIIIIISRAELI FOLK DANCINGSATURDAY-NOVEMBER 24-8:00 P.M.sponsored by Hillel HouseIDA NOYES THEATRE - Third FloorPARTY-PARTY-AFTERDANCING(Replaced regular Tues. Nov, 20th Night)I.G.LT!T.G.I. Tecate! Tecate Beer imported from Mexico.Do it the Mexican way,straight from the can with lemon and salt.&beo Importing Co . IncDalias Texas 75229ROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPEL5850 South Woodlawn AvenueSunday • November 259 A.M, Eetitnenieal Service of Holy Communion10 A.M. Philip Blackwell. United MethodicChaplain. leads Discussion ClassII A.M. I niversitv Religious ServicePreacher. BERNARD O. BRC )WNDean of the ('hapel. • - - , . - , ...—m ■ ■ ■1 ■ ■■The Atom Bomb: Then and NowThirty-seven years ago, scientists at theUniversity of Chicago achieved the first con¬trolled release of nuclear energy — and sohelped to launch the nuclear age. In this ar¬ticle, we examine the human drama of thatmomentous occasion and in a companion in¬terview with the editor of The Bulletin of theAtomic Scientists Ruth Adams, we explore,among other issues, the increasing role ofnuclear energy in the world today.by Rebecca Lillian... do you know the story about Fa¬ther (one of the so-called “Fathers” ofthe first atomic bomb) on the day theyfirst tested a bomb out at Almogordo?After the thing went off, after it was asure thing that America could wipeout a city with one bomb, a scientistturned to Father and said, “Sciencehas now known sin.” And do you knowwhat Father said? He said, “What issin?” — from Kurt Vonnnegut, Jr.’snovel. Cat’s CradleA certain mystique surrounds thoughts ofthe scientists who helped create the atombomb. Perhaps it is our disbelief that plain, Roosevelt received a letter signed by AlbertEinstein. It was actually dated August 2,and was primarily drafted by Leo Szilard, aHungarian engineer who had been a stu¬dent, and later colleague of Einstein in Ger¬many. Szilard wanted Einstein to warnAmerican officials that Germany had thepotential for creating nuclear weapons. Theletter explained that Fermi’s and Szilard’swork could conceivably be used to construct“extremely powerful bombs of a new type.”It continued:“A single bomb of this type, carriedby boat or exploded in a port, mightvery well destroy the whole port to¬gether with some of the surroundingterritory . . .“In view of this situation, you maythink it desirable to have some per¬manent contact maintained betweenthe Administration and the group ofphysicists working on chain reactionsin America ...”Roosevelt responded to the warning by ap¬pointing an investigative and advisory com¬mittee, but work proceeded very slowly. Szi¬lard continued to worry, and persuadedEinstein to write to the President again inordinary people can be at once so brilliantand so devastating or perhaps it is our in¬ability to relate to the situation they were in.Here at the University, it is also perhaps be¬cause we feel an intangible connection tothem.Contrary to stories we often hear and tell,the atom bomb was not actually created atthe University. What was achieved here,however, was the first spontaneous splittingof an atom’s nucleus; the first sustained,controlled production of atomic energy.Without this work, completed at Chicago byEnrico Fermi and countless associates, theatom bomb would undoubtedly not havebeen developed as soon as it was.Fermi began to speak about his researchwith the U.S. government in 1939. A confer¬ence between Fermi and the navy depart¬ment, held in March, provided contact be¬tween scientists and government officialsregarding the atomic energy issue. Withinmonths, the dialogue increased, and theissue became a salient one.On October 11, 1939, President Franklin vr-Henry Moore’s sculpture, Nuclear Energy, can be viewed as a mushroom cloud or asa human skull.March, 1940. Movement picked up increas¬ingly after that. Roosevelt, apparently con¬vinced that nuclear energy had potentialmilitary applications, enlarged his Advisory Committee, which in turn increased theamount of federal money the nuclear scien¬tists received for their project.The select few who knew about the re¬search began to act with the wartime ur¬gency that characterized the first develop¬ments of atomic energy. On August 13,1942,the entire plan became known as the “Man-hatten Project.” Sanctioned and financedby the U.S. government, under the auspicesof the Army, work at Chicago was underway.But not every scientist at Chicago wasaware of the implications of their work. LeoSeren, a physicist who had just completedA high stakes gameEven during the intense, secretive years of the Manhattan project, though,people took time out to play the same insult games that are played today. Inhis memoir, Arthur Compton recalls how difficult it was to convince a col¬league, Ernest Lawrence, to move the Project to the University:“You’ll never get the chain reaction going here. The whole tempo of theUniversity of Chicago is too slow.”“We’ll have the chain reaction going here by the end of the year,” I pre¬dicted.“I’ll bet you a thousand dollars you won’t,” he challenged.“I’ll take you on that,” I answered...“I’ll cut the stakes to a five-cent cigar,” countered Lawrence.“Agreed.“I won the bet, but I haven’t yet received the cigar. Maybe the five centvariety is no longer made.” p ^ the work for his PhD in 1942, was persuadedto work on the Manhattan Project withoutany knowledge of the Einstein/Szilard let¬ters. Seren. who says now that he was great¬ly influenced by University president Rob¬ert M. Hutchin’s concern about the war, wasonly told that he was to work on a new, con¬centrated form of energy, to be used topower ships, submarines and the like. Theyoung physicist had to choose betweenworking on the Manhatten Project or beingimmediately drafted into the armedforces.“They didn’t tell me about a bomb untiltwo years later,” says Seren, who now deep¬ly regrets his contribution to nuclear weap¬on development. “I was aware of the con¬cept of fission chain reaction from mygraduate classes in physics, but I didn’tthink about a bomb.”Physicist Arthur Holly Compton, whoseprodding and influence was instrumental inmaking the University the site for the Proj¬ect, was very much aware of the explosiveuses of the research. Atomic Quest, his per¬sonal memoir of the Manhattan Project, isfilled with headings such as, “Can AtomicBombs Be Built on Time?” and “BuildAtomic Bombs, Fast.”Seren’s and Compton’s accounts do agreeon the sense of urgency that permeated thesecret experiments that took place beneathStagg Field. Compton knew precisely whythe work was so urgent. “Could (atomicTurn to Page 6The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, November 20, 1979 — 5Atom BombContinued from Page 5bombs) be ready in time to be effective dur¬ing the present war? ” he remembers in hisbook.Seren could only sense the degree of ur¬gency involved. “We thought it was unusual... It was the first scientific project whereall the country’s physicists and chemistswere urged to come work. There was a defi¬nite feeling of wartime urgency ..remin¬isces Seren.According to Compton, December 2, 1942,was a cold day in Chicago. The world wasbuzzing with recently disclosed news aboutthe Nazi Holocaust, about Mussolini’s latestaddress, about an American submarine thatsank several Japanese vessels. Only a smallgroup of people knew that “man . . . liber¬ated and controlled the power within theatom.”Plans to begin work on actual atomicweapons were proposed shortly after thesuccessful reaction at the University. Thefocus of the Project shifted to the laboratoryat Los Alamos, New Mexico, and the testingsite at Alamogordo. “We should surely beable to count on having the bombs ready, ifthey could be made at all,” wrote Comptonin 1942, “by the autumn of ’45.” Actually, bythat time, atomic bombs had already killedapproximately 105,000 people, and had in¬jured at least 99,000 more.On July 16, 1945, the world’s first atomicbomb was exploded near Alamogordo. Thefirst atomic bombs to be used in warfarewere dropped by the United States on Hiro¬shima and Nagasaki, Japan on August 6 and9. Leo Seren remained in Los Alamos duringthat time, and was horrified as the reportsof the extra casualties — deaths caused byradiation sickness, rather than by the initialexplosions — came pouring in.One month after the bombs destroyed thetwo Japan cities, Seren vowed never to workon nuclear weapons again. A major turningpoint in his life occurred on September 15,1945, when his first son was born. His childwas alive and healthy, but he continued tohear about the widespread sickness anddeath in Japan, which were caused “partial¬ly because of my efforts ... I did work onpeace time uses of the atom, but I began torealize the terrible problem of nuclearwastes ... I left the whole nuclear project in1961. The whole picture is different today.”Seren points out that the present genera¬tion of students has been extremely disillu¬sioned by the Viet Nam war, and thereforemost likely finds it impossible to compre¬hend the urgency that was felt during theManhatten Project. The Project had priori¬ty over all other scientific research, and hedoubts that such a situation could ever occuragain.The first atomic pile under construction is inthe squash court beneath Staff Field:Chunks of uranium are imbedded in thegraphite bricks. By Phoebe ZerwickIn Kent 102, adjacent to freshmanchemistry lecture halls, is the office of “TheBulletin of the Atomic Scientists.” Firstpublished in 1945, the “Bulletin” is amagazine of science and public affairs.Ruth Adams edits the Bulletin. Her shortcropped hair, sheep skin vest, corduroysand sandals seem to place her in Min¬nesotan wilderness rather than in the officeof the “Bulletin.”Adams worked on the editorial board ofthe Bulletin from 1953 until 1968. She spenttwo years teaching international relationsat Columbia College. She has also been theexecutive director of the ACLU in Chicagoand executive associate of the AmericanAcademy of Arts and Sciences. In 1978 shereturned to the Bulletin as editor.Adams has edited three books: “Contem¬porary China,” “Debate the ABM” and“Human Migration: Policies and Implica¬tions.”PZ: Could you tell me a little about thehistory of the Bulletin?RA: The Bulletin started thirty-five yearsago this December. It was published by theChicago Association of Atomic Scientists,who had come out of their wartimelaboratories and as you know, many of theintellectual scientists, such as Leo Szilard,were based here on this campus, along withEugene Reubenowitch and the ManhattanProject, and they felt a real responsibility totell, not only the American people, but theworld what his new force was going tomean. So the Bulletin first came out as asmall newsletter to help educate the publicand it grew quickly into a magazine andadopted its clock as the symbol of dooms¬day. The clock hands have moved abouttwelve times so far.PZ: Where were they when the magazinestarted?RA: At five minutes to midnight and nowwe’re at nine minutes to midnight. We mayhave to move it closer to midnight though ifthe Senate doesn’t ratify SALT and ifPakistan tests its nuclear device, which itseems it might well do in the near future.PZ: Do you find that more people are con¬cerned with nuclear power than with thearms race?RA: Nuclear power is responsible for focus¬ing attention on the arms race. When youtalk to people and you tell them that, for ex¬ample, the world this year will spend 425billion dollars on arms, that means morethan a million dollars a minute, suddenly itstarts to come home, not just the safetyquestion but also the priority questions ofwhere you put your resources and I knowthat the proponents of nuclear power arestruggling very hard so that people don’t re¬late these two issues. I know my responsewhen the nuclear industry talks to us is thatI’d feel better about them if they’d be on thefront lines to stop spending all that moneyon nuclear arms but they are patiently silenton these issues and I think that even perhapsfocuses on the fact that they are not verycredible or responsible to the needs of soci¬ety.PZ: Do you think there is a strong connec¬tion between the growth of nuclear powerand the increase in arms production?RA: Well that relationship isn’t very clear.First of all the nuclear power industry inthis country really hasn’t grown at all. Asyou know, there’s been a halt in almost allresearch and development and now with theKenemy report being released, it’s quite Exploring Nucl'■'//l! /////'L U'hard to give up that vision, but I think it’sbeen given up.PZ: Do you think we can use nuclear poweras a transition form of energy?RA: Well there really isn’t any way we canbecause it takes too long to make these reac¬tors functional and we’ve literally haltedtheir development, so there is no way thatnuclear power can be a transitional source.PZ: Would you like to see nuclear powerrefined or would you like to see it completelyabandoned?RA: Well, nothing would be nicer than if wefound either a safe way to use fission or wesolved the problems of fusion but that’sty far away.PZ: Do you think that solar energy is apossibility?RA: Yes, of course, but we can’t do thatover night. It’s going to be a long time in thefuture before it’s economical for large scaleuse. Obviously solar energy can be used insmall communities and rural areas and soon but to make it useful for an industrializedsociety is a long way off. So again, It’s not asolution for the immediate.PZ: What do you think the solution is?RA: Well, I think there’s only one solutionfor the short term and that’s conservation. Ithink the most serious criticism you canmake of our leaders in congress and inWashington today is that they haven’t founda way to make the American people unders¬tand what conservation means.PZ: “Bulletin” has supported the SALTtreaty editorially very strongly. Not that it’sI think the most serious criticism you can make ofour leaders in congress and in Washington today isthat they haven't found a way to make the Americanpeople understand what conservation means.clear that it’s going to be a long time before,if at all, the nuclear power industry goesahead. But the “atoms for peace” program,which not only the nuclear industry but allthe other nuclear scientists as well, many ofthem involved with the Bulletin, were veryhopeful at the beginning that nuclear powerwould bring peace ana wealth and energyand all the nice things and it’s been very so much about weapons but that it is the oneprocess by which the U.S. and the SovietUnion meet and confront and talk aboutthese problems and therefore we feel itwould be a major setback if SALT weredefeated by the U.S. We don’t kid ourselvesthat it’s going to mean too much for thearms race. The “Bulletin” has not taken aposition on a U.S. unilateral initiative. I feel, myself, that it’s time for the U.S. t<sider its security, whether the threais Soviet missiles or whether the tlour society will be iniquities and iand if we decide the latter then the owe can solve them is to save mone?arms race. I would like to see our ne:dent take himself off to Moscowdown and say, look this is harming lsocieties, if not the rest of the woiwe’re going to declare a moratoriiwe hope you’ll follow suit. I see ttfirst step.PZ: Do you think we’ll ever find a piwho would take this initiative?RA: I think it’s up to the AmericanIt’s easy to blame Carter, and it’sblame Congress for not doing thingseach senator and each representativget re-elected and if those voters dorout and say what they want, so in ttcomes down to the public. If I cafrom this small office, I would say6 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, November 20, 1979imjm ■ ■ i p - -lear EnergyvAt American public is being aroused across thecountry, the literature that comes in, the let¬ters that come in, the number of groups thatare organized and in that sense I’m op¬timistic. If you ask me what’s going to hap¬pen in ten years, if we don’t reverse thearms race and if we don’t learn how to con¬serve energy and if we don’t feel a sense ofresponsibility for the developing world - Ithink war is inevitable.PZ: How do you see the role of the universi¬ty in all of this?RA: Let me rephrase the question. Shouldthe contributions of a university to society the scientists, because they help buildbombs or because they help make com¬puters that that means that they knowanything more about the world in which welive in, that is socially, economically orpolitically. They’re men of wisdom in theirown fields but not necessarily in other fields.I think that those of us who are not scien¬tists, but citizens, have to look at them aspartners in making a better world, but notas the sole people who can make the worldbetter.PZ: In the light of his what do you think ofthe scientists on this campus?Scientists need to have more of a sense of respon¬sibility to the world they're helping to change.change as these problems get bigger and asthey get really threatening to our survival?My answer is yes. But the universities don’tdo that. They complain about the fact thatthey have less money now, that the govern¬ment doesn’t give as much support forresearch, but they don’t say why wespend money for things like the MX missile.They stay out of the political scene but thatmay be a luxury they can’t afford anymore.Point two, if we talk about education whatbetter place than an institution such as theuniversity to start doing something on con¬servation? This whole university ought tohave some general policy on conservationand they ought to be considering how con¬servation can be a way of life in the UnitedStates.PZ: What’s the relation between the“Bulletin” and the University?RA: Just friends. There is no formal rela¬tionship. In the past, really from the very’beginning, University faculty and ad¬Lhris PersansTim BakerRuth AdamsU.S. to recon-e threat reallyr the threat to; and inflationn the only waymoney on theour next presi-jscow and sitming both ourhe world, andratorium, andsee that as and a presidentsrican peopleid it’s easy tothings and yetntative has tors don’t comeo in the end it: I can judge1 say that the ministration has given us. not financial sup¬port, but support.PZ: How do you see the role of the scientistin modern society? The motto that Pugwashuses is that “While science has given us themeans to destroy ourselves, it has also givenus a universal language.” Do you think it ispossible for scientists to bridge the gap bet¬ween nations?RA: It’s certainly possible and it’s certainlyhappening. I think one has to think about therole of scientists as individuals in two ways.One, is because of their professional exper¬tise they have very important decisions tomake. In the U.S. one third of all scientistsand engineers are in defense related work.If you look at the world as a whole it’s 50%.Now, they can make a decision not to do thiskind of work, therefore scientists need to beeducated. Scientists need to have more of asense of responsibility to the world they’rehelping to change. That’s one aspect of it.Secondly, I think that it’s wrong to look to RA: We’ve always been close to the scien¬tific community at the University, but Ithink I can safely say about the Universityscientists, as I will say about other scholarshere, that they still live in an ivory towerand there are too few of them who are con¬cerned about these big issues and thistroubles me. It was quite different back inthe 40’s and 50’s. We had a much more ac¬tive campus. But today, very few people arespeaking out.PZ: You spent a lot of time in East Africa.What kind of work were you doing there?RA: Well, I was involved in the establish¬ment of a new international research centerin East Africa on insects. I didn’t knowanything about insects. Although I learned alot, my interest in it was as a non¬governmental model for internationalcooperation. Scientists from eighteen dif¬ferent countries contributed their time,without charge, and became sort ofvolunteer directors for awhile. Graduatestudents went and it was all done on anequal basis with African scientists andAfrican students and out of it came probablyone of the most important and interestingmodels for cooperation in science that wehave in the world. My primary interest wascooperation and then doing science that wasdirectly related to problems of developmentand certainly insects with their balance arerelated to the ecology, husbandry,agriculture, and human health.PZ: Are you usually in agreement with thearticles you publish?RA: Not necessarily. For example, we’ll berunning a special series of articles inJanuary and February on the status ofnuclear power in the United States and wewill be presenting a very careful and goodarticle by a representative from the nuclearindustry’, who wants us to get out of the non¬proliferation treaty, who thinks we shouldreturn to “atoms for peace” becausenuclear power is inevitable around theworld and the United States should be activein it so that we can have some influence.We’re going to publish an article by so¬meone who thinks that not only should alldevelopment be halted but that all nuclearpower plants be destroyed. We’re going tobe publishing an article on nuclear power inthe Soviet Union on why they think the risksare worth taking. We have another, a casehistory of the Philippines and their attemptsto use nuclear power, which is very criticalof nuclear power in the third world. In thatsense it will be a kind of a forum on nuclearpower and we’ll try to analyze where theU.S. is at and where it’s going.PZ: You mentioned that you will bepublishing an article by a Soviet writer. Itseems rare to have this kind of communica¬tion between Soviets and Americans.RA: We have an article by two Russians,academicians, on nuclear power in theSoviet Union. We try to open our pages toanyone. The cartoons that we use on thecover come from a Czechoslovakian artist.We publish articles from Japanese scien¬tists. We have an international editorialboard now with people on it from Africa,Asia and Europe. I suppose it’s part of ourphilosophy, that it’s one world and we’re allinterdependent. So, in a small way, we try todo that in our magazine. 1947194919531960196319681969197219741979 Seven minutes to mid¬night. The Bulletin's firstsymbol of nuclear dooms¬day.Three minutes to mid¬night. The Soviet Unionexplodes its first atomicbomb./Two minutes to midnight.The U.S. and U.S.S.R. de- •velop the hydrogenbomb. • ll# y/Seven minutes to mid¬night. The cold warbegins to thaw.Twelve minutes to mid¬night. Signing of the Par¬tial Test Ban Treaty.Seven minutes to midnight. The nuclear weapons club reaches fivemembers.Ten minutes to midnight.Ratification of the Nu¬clear Non-ProliferationTreaty.Twelve minutes to mid¬night. The first SALT ac¬cord.Nine minutes to mid¬night. The arms race in¬tensifies; the nuclearsafety problem grows.Nine minutes to mid¬night.MThe Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, November 20, 1979 — 7Y f- f; 0. K <'* 7? ok;^IteifSSPI SisiiSSifiS ^ ##r r*Preview of campus films through next Monday - T>' ' :77!.75777.;7fWsiittfc-S"« I 17777 >j77788SM'777,77. ■; ;V .7rfSfSlpfsi Smiling Through: Frank Borzage (1941).JAmong the flowers, eye-popping colors, andEnglish pastoral atmosphere, JeanetteMacDonald falls in love.with Brian Aherne— the son of the guy that killed her auntyears ago her guardian (Gend Raymondinpasty make up) is understandably perturbed. What with ghosts hanging around(quite literally), and the thin plot totallyswallowed up in a wash of color, image; and'{MacDonald's singing, the film winds up afine, ethereal, sort of Victorian romance, ifyou can swallow the pulpy sentiments,. Ian voiceFilmsStrange Cargo: "Frank Borzage (1940). Inthis bizarre, allegory, Ian Hunter . plays ■Chris1prison and Joan Crawford from the arms ofhi grangeand rpemorable performances .from thelikes <>f Albert Dekker, storms, sharks, andm f\ fer ous< I urn lies, 0 >ra age r .7 :. .. » ttwhole thing work with wild images to matchthe ha:. ray at9.15 pff 7. , ■ ■ ,. 7-ewiczmm.ffSfQfi00. 0v.7.7.:7:-7y'-:77...H it 0'0:.. ;)'00}0000f00* 7 y $ ( ^Students in the College are Invited ToThe v f Sc cial Service AdministrationProf ssional Option ReceptionWEDNESDAY, NOV 28,4-6 P.M. HARPER 284•.The professional option program provides oppor¬tune tied students to begin professionalstud their final year in the College.The during this common year countstowc asters degree and the bachelor'sdegree as well. During the Social Hour on November28, acuity will discuss programsjaf study at the87®'■ ;Sr COOPER'S00000v ^00^:. '0« <. . 7v7;7p«l%7-:: 7-v;7-. 7i -V|pie77:7fS will beinterviewingfor actuariesnovember28areinterested insigning upcontact youra b s in math or statistics preferred It thanis usual for Mankiewicz, this may well be hisbest effort. Edward G. Robinson is the headof an I aliai i-An leric in family ii Llttl s Italy- wti o owns at ir k, 17...... '7 it ;7 ont ■< I \ l ions'Jives SusanHaywaloves him make a fine pair: lean, tough, and... ^ . ipi, 11 lot viou {. |< f] i *j rt].. .self as the imperious father. There are somenice conceits on Mankiewicz's part too -the lazy bartender, Hayward emphasizing7 777777 777" 7 rifocf0afc 7 7 mok 7. cli ininter-it ail a riptl ij 1177 f Mrri, n:7f 7.7 1 -.iin 7 2. r ew 7.7 k.-.-it'ia lurk) . 7 > bjbwcounts. ') Doc Films, Wed- f 7:15■ 7 7 v .77.., 7 7v.77" 77777/, 7; ,i,v77:.No v7 ,;7 7 7'7;. i -7 7 . 7 7-. .. 1 ,777.7.mostly cheap and manipulative now. SidneyPoitier plays a young doctor who1 an uribe-■77 '/ ■ - ■' ■ ■ • 7 ■7"7 '■■/'" 77 1 7 ' 7 ’ 7 ’ 7 7 .". 7' " 7: 7'7. 7 ’. 7 7 . :, ■ .■■.■■■. ■.'■....... ■.. ....■... .both logic and character in the process, cop¬ping out both on the causes of Widmark's. 1tereffects of slickly formalized and under¬lighted race riot as quickly as he introducesit. Doc Films, Wednesday at 9:15 pm.A Foreign Affair: Billy Wilder (1948).When American congresswoman Jean Ar¬thur goes to Berlin to investigate the moraleof the American soldiers, she confronts JohnLund, soldier, and Marlene Dietrich, ex¬girlfriend of a high-ranking Nazi. Aftersome early and smart jabs at investigatorsand investigations, congresspeopie, etc., thewhole thing reverses and Wilder and co-scripter Leigh Brackett end up endorsingthe whole business. For the ultimate in rot¬ten taste there is Marlene's rendition of"Black Market". Doc Films, Thursday andFriday at 7 and 9:30 p.m.When Tony Curtis and Jack Lemmon wit¬ness the St. Valentine's Day Massacre, theyhave to hightail it out of the Windy Cityunfortunately they can only escape thesights of the mob in drag. Curtis winds upfalling for Marilyn Monroe and Rudy Vallee(recapitulating his performance in PalmBeach Story) for Lemmon. The film is fast-paced, almost too frantically so, and wastesno opportunity for a gag, cheap or not. It is funny, but in the end Wilder's snickeringstrategies (after allhowfunn c,uySrunning around in drag for two hours?)make you feel coated with bilge for your ef¬forts I9:30 pm.■: My | all • •iavi 7777'. ly 7 7 17,tf tha a w'V I r v ■aw inthe or ‘ 'CecilBeaton costumes, etc., etc., and no $7 mil¬lion can help that, pukor, too, seems to havebeen haViflH 'n thefilm w compc sed set-ups 77 e Ascol 11 c« si 17 tff ostlyit's faand a 7 ' haracter 1 iness.■ 7 te a te$y 7 7 '7 7777 7 1 wi.. v wasi 77.77. ms cr 1 ic I v ■, 1:.Ii !;Saturd 1 n. ..Moses and Aaron: Jean-Marie Straub andDaniele Huillet (1975). Confronting Schoe-: '•■7 77 7'7;' . •.... . . ..." . .'■ 7 ; 7 " 7 7 ‘ 7. ' { ‘: 7"' "7' ..'7. ‘7 7 7 7 7. 7 777." ,,7 77 :. , , , : ' : . • 7'.' ' .: •" 7 '■ ■...... ......; 7 ■ . 7 ' • .. . ...7..;,, , : ... ...• • •, ■ ' : ."v" ' " - ■pm.Mashenka: Yuri Raizman (1942). This■ '■ ' ■ 77'7 v :' ' '7 7'.and strength of the love between Mashenkaand her soldier boyfriend. I've never seena film by Raizman, but he has been noted forfine folksy sensibilities tor unguarded personal moments by such unlike types as OtisFerguson and Georges Sadoul. But beforewarned of the almost traditional poorlighting, editing, plotting of Soviet films,at 7:30 pm.Shors: Alexander Dovzhenko (1939).Dovzhenko is one of the certified greats ofthe Soviet, cinema, along with Eisensteinand Pudovkin. And for my money he's thebest of the lot: manipulating with intelli-,ow, p* pacedand te ution.• ' ■■: ' ' : 777 . ...... . ... 7-.J 7'in the civil war.■ ■ "" '7: - 7.77 7' .: •' .7: -..7.7 . ; .7,.' 7 777: ,7 7 7 , - -. 7 7’ .7 ;. 7'. 7McGahanROCKSANDSTARSby T. O. EndersThis is a story about a person in thefuture. In hrs society the ego c andcreativity limited to that rrsphere, the ephemeral need for progress.Exaltation of feeling is seen as destructive.Programming of social attitudes has reached perfection. When a person in this societytransgresses his programming, a conflictinvolving, pain arises. Our hero, realizingthat ht ose the ability tofeel, de ides to mental suicide bybringing the conflict to such a state of excitation that no fuses.8 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, November 20, 1979 A startling sound awakes me: a crystaltone cracks the slurring silence of machine.The u' • (B Iff ■ a | ra | rornptsm.e to f 11 1fM CUM -. corf dors ofmy attitudf see what t« drils ofthe ethical lattice can ■ • , notionstonight | gi . ,jt onto• trrfl ' • ■■••s thatcomprise the city from the loci of which risegreat shimmering citadels. Scratching thehryfogel ho d 01 my - buk nf state.DELAY ATTACK AN ABNEGATION OFSOCIAL SYMBOLIC AXES IS A PERVER-SION 0i ■ iE hoowaxt spit,out the window and turn back to my space.i have, sequestered in the bowels of mylabyrinthine complex (mine because of certain f ro 0 tfor 1 tors Wtl ‘er mynormative makeup. Efforts to vanquishthese filters, thus making everyone not onlyequal but identical have produced minds inwhich the sought attitudes course unchecked along the concourse of experience)■ \ 7 >■' .■: '”77 *: ” 7 ,7 7' : 7,,7”:;'.' .... 7.. .-J-. 7" the protytype for trapping light impulsesinto interlocking prisms so that an inex¬haustible set of refr; - Thisparticularity in my - permits memy social function. (LIGHTPAINT). I mustdo this.Control. I am so often left with only alingering sense of power. Symboisis withsought attitudes --- light paint -- cannot beinfused with the delicacy ofrebellion. It mu: . • ig, andits object rational ,ors ofdesire of pas¬sion, the deep sadness of cemetary smell:< feeling t• ■ • rn my palms outward, lips‘taut in defiance, to meet the surging tide ofquiesce r < e w “ w - ct our ,r .< nt : ysubme' je ever so effective an equalizer. Exultation is not allowedEventually the need for feeling will fade andwash Ml By N l(> Ik M reallyrerriotr *Egocentrism quelled by negative reinforcer Wl M to M I how "g hiss¬ing r,- FOR NOW!NOW'NOW'’The , .'itchesmy heart in clammy embrace. A slow soft/Tt i - «wee; s the ty r ow \/e notheard it before. I stand up compound buzzing - run out ... Garblerear or all side; he sound of /vhorlingwater spitting from pressed nozzle.Writhing, wrestling pin throughmy head try to tie me dow don't stop.Thougt thi y fill square, hisscrear ,.vay unattended Overagain: STAY AWAY, I fade: ,t pulsates. .... . • ... ". -:"7 7." " ,■ 3'^ 7::77- 77757*J77"MM7;s'l7;:J7777’-77I7I7771577..7.;7j.7777:7a7^7J£J..s,v.j7.7S7:,7j!7. .777.77777;'”'7:7J7;,S.-. ' ■ Sr 7.', ” 7 7' ■ 7: .7 ■ 1 '- j.-7- .* >7 .' 7 .■ rr. ■ARC for art's sake(Next door to Chicago Filmmakers; acrossfrom N.A.M.E.; Due's close by for lunch)by Helena SzeptThe Artists, Residents ofChicago (ARC)gallery's 6West Hubbard address re¬flects its mediating position inthe Art World: it stands in be¬tween the gutter of Halstedand the glitter of Michigan Av¬enue. Because it is a galleryrun by artists, ARC does notshow only profitable and es¬tablished works and is therefore a good place to discoverthe new. The gallery is cur¬rently exhibiting works bythree women artists: MarilynSward, Evadine Judge, andJane Stevens.The installation of EvadineJudge's neon sculpture exem¬plifies the innovative and inde¬pendent quality of the works presently shown in the gallery. Neon is currently chic in akitsch-Fiorucci way, yet Judge forgoes the temptation to form letters, words or pretty de¬signs. Instead, she uses the strands of light green neon as abstract lines of light intertwinedwith rope, chicken wire, iron grids and other city-gritty objects. Hurrah for Evadine. Theworks are enhanced by their dramatic installation in the "raw arc space". The bits of ropeand metal are at home with cement walls and sewer holes. Cold neon glows in the darkness,creating an aura of sleazy characters in city alleys, all the more effective because it is inthe abstract. Unfortunately, the sculpture titles, scrawled in chalk on the floor, detract fromthe impact of the works. A strand of neon twining around hanging rope knotted and unra¬veled at the end is titled, "Screw not". The other titles are also mostly plays on the hom¬onyms not; knot; no; know; etc. The trivilaity of the titles seems at cross purpose with thedramatic effect of the works in an urban environment.Marilyn Sward's delicate paper collages offer a reflective contrast to the bold statementof neon. Sward makes the paper herself, embedding objects and embossing the paper forcolor and textural effects. Each piece of paper thus has an individuality and integrity toserve as a subtly varied base for collage. The pieces are transformed and enhanced in theirregular translucent effects of watercolor and careful placement of collage. The result isan abstract expression with texture, beautiful in the subtle irregularity of the handmadeobject. Marilyn Sward is no newcomer. She won two awards last year at the 57th Street ArtFair and often teaches her unique art of papermaking.The gallery is also showing the photographs of Jane Stevens. Her pictures attempt to showinner moods of the subjects in movement and in relation to different backgrounds.The whole exhibit runs until December 1. I urge anyone interested good, honest art to gosee it. / ;German filmGermany's film industry, like itseconomy, is experiencing a resurgence. Arenaissance, to be more precise, becausethe brilliant but evanescent pre-HitlerGerman cinema has made indelible im¬prints on the new generation. There areechoes of Murnau in Herzog, Sirk inFassbinder and Lang in Wender. Herzogprobes the mystical; Fassbinder exploitsthe melodramatic; and Wender pursuesthe existential. In the next few weeks,several of their films will be showcased inChicago. To begin with, the Chicago FilmFestival is premiering Fassbinder’s newfilm The Third Generation, 9:15 Nov. 21 atthe Village Theater. Another recentFassbinder, The Marriage of MariaBraun, is having a commercial run at theBiograph. Both star Hanna Schygulla andreportedly represent a new direction forFassbinder. The Sandburg is presenting aretrospective of works by these threedirectors along with a new Herzog. Star¬ting Thanksgiving, a series of six films willshare the second half of the bill with Her¬zog's Woyzeck. The topic of Woyzeck, based on Buchner's masterpiece, seems anatural for Herzog's style. The first of thesix older works, Wender's The AmericanSoldier will be shown through Nov. 25 andfollowed by a two day run of Herzog's / amMy Films. The former has gained a strongreputation since its initial release; and thelatter, a seldom seen Herzog, soundsvaguely autobiographical. — TedShenCSO WindsIf the volume of applause is any indication of a concert's success, then the Chica¬go Symphony Winds concert Friday inMandel qualifies as a rousing one. Theplayers performed the Mozart wind pieces— Divertimento No. 14, the Divertimentoin B Flat and the C Minor Serenade — withexemplary virtuousity and unabashed enthusiasm. The performance bore outWoody Allen's assertion in Manhattan thatMozart makes life worth living. TheWinds' next concert will be given on Dec.12. - Ted ShenV Sheila (Meagen Fay) comforts her child,Joe Egg (Anna Coatsworth), in CourtTheatre's first production of the winterseason, A Day in the Death of Joe Egg.Performances this weekend are Fridayand Saturday at 8:30 ($5.50; $3 students)and Sunday at 7:30 (S4.50/S2.50) in the NewTheatre.Street SoundsSomething very special happened forthose who call themselves Hispanic lastFriday night in the Reynolds Club Lounge.Seventy-five people came to see and hearSonidos de la Calle (Street Sounds), spon¬sored by the Hispanic Cultural Society.The performance merged music withverse to describe aspects of our city thatare physically close, but culturally dis¬tant.The verses concerned both good and badaspects of street life. Its goal was to makeothers undestand the idea that "Some peopie think I'm black, but I'm really brownand I'm proud, and I'm not ashamed ofsaying it aloud. I'm brown, latino, andproud." So, when David Hernandez asked,"Do you really understand?" some wereable to say "I understand more than I didbefore." — Julio MateoThe Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, November 20, 1979 — 9Calenderby Philip MaherThe new mayor threw a festival and the lakefront was a circus. Showers ofshouts and laughter rained in the cool night air. A full moon shone kindly onthe scene like a great clown’s face.“Damn,” said Joe. “We can’t see anything from here. We’ll have to go upto the bridge.”Bill agreed and they pushed upwards towards the bridge on the S-turns.There they would obtain a superior view of Soldier’s Field where the“World’s Largest Fireworks Display” was billed to start at 10:30 that night.“What time is it?” asked Bill.“10:45,” Joe stated grimly. “We’re late.”Still the crowd swelled. Joe and Bill swam against the current. Faces bob¬bed by like colored balloons. Bill inquired if the show was over. Someonesaid yes. “Damn.”“Oh well.” They reached the top. The festive mob babbled on endlessly.With nowhere else to go, the boys clambered up a wall and perched on top,waiting for the crowd to thin.“Well, I got a couple of reefers,” consoled Bill, reaching into his sock.“All right.” Joe stared out at the lake. Boats floated everywhere,celebrating the end of summer.A loud BOOM! cracked the peace. Then again, BOOM!“Look,” pointed Bill. A young teenage girl, perhaps thirteen, strolled withtwo boys who looked like her brothers. She carried a brown paper bag. Oneby one they procured M-80 firecrackers from the bag and dropped them offthe bridge, scaring boats. BOOM! again. The girl and her brothers ap¬proached Joe and Bill.“Hey, you want to sell some of those?” asked Bill.“Naw,” they passed. But suddenly the girl came back and gave them eachan M-80. “Here you guys.”“Hey thanks!”The boys smiled again. Their luck was on the upswing. Bill lit a joint; theysmoked it, savoring the smoke and gloating over their acquisitions.“Looks like the real thing, don’t it?”“Sure does, wanna hit a boat?” They laughed.“Naw, let’s blow up this bridge.” They laughed some more, finished thejoint, and agreed to save the M-80’s for an opportune moment. That sayquietly for a while, listening to cries in the night and watching the sailboats’silent designs on the water.A large sailboat with a tall mast approached. Lights on the drawbridgebegan to flash; traffic stopped. “The bridge is going up! ” They leaped downfrom their perch and ran over to it. The bridge began to hum; the trafficgates descended.Bill scanned for cops, then started to sneak out onto it. “C’mon Joe,” Joehung back but then followed. A loudspeaker clicked on.“GET OFF THE BRIDGE! GET YOUR ASS OFF THE BRIDGE!” Theyjumped back.“Jesus, man. Touchy, ain’t he?”“Really.” Bill began to creep back. The bridge creaked.“GODDAMNIT, GET YOUR ASS OFF THE GODDAMN BRIDGE! ”They consulted. “Forget it,” said Joe.“Hell,” argued Bill. “The dude’s in his tower, he can’t come out. What canhe do?”Joe said unh-uh. Bill ran out onto the bridge and grabbed the rungs of theguard railing, hanging on despite the curses that poured over him like boil¬ing oil.A small crowd had gathered, pointing. He waved, like someone famous.The crowd laughed, hurrahed. He rose higher and higher, back and back. Hegazed down into the turning gears. The cursing ceased and a hush descendedas the sailboat glided underneath. The bridge came to rest, tilted like handsin prayer.Bill was high and alone on a limb with no choice but cling or fall. An oddfeeling of deja-vu crept over him. He wished Joe had followed. He turned hisback to the crowd and shut his eyes.Soon the bridge descended and again Bill watched the gears move: huge,ponderous cogs that turned in eerie slow motion. The bridge fell, and fell,and fell. He moved with it, sideways, and when almost down, rightedhimself.At that moment, as the two halves eased together, the headlights ofwaiting cars sprang into sight, blinding him. He blinked, covering his eyes.A riot of voices, pandemonium boiled over on either side. Where had theycome from? It had been so quiet. |He was shocked and suddenly scared, trapped. But the loudspeaker saidnothing. No policeman came forth. Slowly it dawned on him: he was un¬touchable. He had done the forbidden, he had seen the inner workings, hewas a hero.The bridge settled into place with a barely perceptible thunk. The trafficgates opened, yellow lights flashing.A little black kid on a stingray bike was first to cross. He snuck under agate and rode over the empty bridge — no hands. His smile lit the night. Hewas a hero too. By the time he reached the other side, the gates were rising.The torrent of faces rushed unchecked again, and the automobiles wereunleashed, roaring across the blaze of lights and flashing chrome.Bill walked back from his idyll; searching the faces he found Joe’s, whichwas grinning. Again they became just two big kids in the crowd,acknowledged but ignored.“Good going man,” said Joe. j“Aw it was nothing really.” They clambered back to their perch and wat¬ched the city stream by. They lit the M-80’s. TUESDAYPerspectives: Topic- “Medicaid and the States”guests Stephen Davidson, Jeff Goldsmith, and Rob¬ert Bennett, 6:30 am, channel 7.Jazz at Noon: A free concert of music by Gershwin,Ellington, and others. 12:00 noon, Reynolds ClubNorth Lounge.SYL: Rally-demonstration against CIA recruiters oncampus 12:00 noon, Hutchinson Court.Rockefeller Chapel: University Organist EdwardMondello, will give a lecture-demonstration andrecital 12:15 pm.Regenstein: Exhibit- “Vachel Lindsay” One-Hun¬dredth Anniversary of his birth, Nov. 10-Feb. 28.UC Gymnastics Club: Instruction available 4:00-8:00pm, Bartlett gym, free.DOC Films: “Smilin' Through” 7:15 pm, “StrangeCargo” 9:15 pm, Cobb.OLAS: Meeting, 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes Hall.Hillel: The 33rd Latke-Hamentash Symposium, 7:30pm, Ida Noyes Cloister Club.SYL: “Class Nature of the Soviet Union” classseries. 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes Hall.WEDNESDAY:Perspectives: Topic- "Solutions to Problems in Me¬dicaid” guests Stephen Davidson, Jeff Goldsmith,and Robert Bennett, 6:30 am, channel 7.Rockefeller Chapel: Service of Holy Communion,8:00 am.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Persian Circle-"The Tajik Language” speaker Rachael Lehr, JohnPerry, and John Woods, 12:00 Kelly Lounge 413.Commuter Co-op: Get together at 12:00 noon in theCommuter Lounge, G.B.l. Bring your lunch.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Turkish Circle-Turkish folksongs, 1:00 pm, Kelly Lounge 413.Crossroads: English classes for foreign women, 2:00pm.Committee on Social Thought: Doctoral Lecture-“The Fixed and the Flexible Worlds of ThomasMann” speaker Lee Herman, 4:00 pm, SS 302.Dept, of Biochemistry: Seminar- “Biochemical Re¬sponses of Membrane Interactions with EpidermalGrowth Factor” speaker Graham Carpenter, 4:00pm, Cummings room 101.UC Gymnastics Club: Instruction available 5:30-8:00pm, Bartlett gym, free.DOC Films: “House of Strangers” 7:15 pm, “No WayOut” 9:15 pm, Cobb.Badminton Club: Meets 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes gymna¬sium.Women’s Rap Group: Meets 7:30 pm, Women'sCenter in the Blue Gargoyle. Info call 752-5655.Tai Chi Ch’uan: Meets 7:30 pm, Blue Gargoyle.Country Dancers: Traditional dances of England,Scotland, and New England taught, 8:00 pm, IdaNoyes Cloister Club. Beginners welcome.Science Fiction Club: Meets 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes. Ev¬ eryone welcome.THURSDAYPerspectives: Topic- “Total Social Cost Analysis:The Total Social Cost of Coal and Nuclear Power”guests Thomas Long, Linda Gaines, George Tolley,and John Honekamp, 6:30 am, channel 7.Rockefeller Chapel: Community Thanksgiving Ser¬vice- “The Mayflower and the Ste. Catherine-SomeThanksgiving Reflections” 11:00 am.DOC Films: “A Foreign Affair” 7:00 pm, “Some LikeIt Hot” 9:30 pm, Cobb.FRIDAYPerspectives: Topic- “America’s Energy Futureguests Thomas Long, Linda Gaines, George Tolley,and John Honekamp, 6:30 am, channel 7.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Arabic Circle-“Satan in Christianity and Islam" speaker Nasir el-HassanDOC Films: “A Foreign Affair” 7:00 pm, “Some LikeIt Hot” 9:30 pm, Cobb.Court Theatre: “The Philanderer” opens today, 8:30pm, Reynolds Club Theatre.SUNDAYRockefeller Chapel: Ecumenical Service, 8:00 am.Rockefeller Chapel: Discussion class led by PhilipBlackwell, 10:00 am.Rockefeller Chapel: University Religious Service,11:00 am.Tai Chi Ch’uan: Meets 7:30 pm, 4945 S. Dorchester(enter on 50th).MONDAYPerspectives: Topic- “How Can One Tell When Psy¬chotherapy Is Working?” guests Eugene Gendlin,Bertram Cohler, and Dr. A. U. Vasavada, 6:30 am,channel 7.Dept, of Biochemistry: Seminar- “Transcription ofthe Xenopus 5S Ribosomal RNA Genes” speakerLaurence Korn, 2:30 pm, Cummings room 101.Dept, of Chemistry: “Extended Metal — Metal Bond¬ing in Halides of the Early Transition Metals. ANew Solid State Chemistry” speaker Prof. JohnCorbett, 4:00 pm, Kent 103.Anthropology at Chicago: “Locak Knowledge: Onthe Largeness of Partial Views” speaker CliffordGeertz, 4:00 pm. Breasted Hall, Oriental Insti¬tute.UC Judo Club: Meets 6:00-8:30 pm, Bartlett gym.Chess Club: Meets 7:00 pm, Ida Noyes MemorialRoom.Progressive Union: General meeting, 7:30 pm, IdaNoyes.Folkdancers: Meet 8:00-11:00 pm, Ida Noyes. Begin¬ners.y^f | could be PLAYGIRL'SIVU MAN OF THE 1980's!And Win Over $25,000 in Prizes!PLAYGIRL Magazine is looking for the Man of the1980's. Our staff photographers will be in theChicago area on November 28, 29 and 30 forinterviews and test shots.If you think you represent what men are all about call (312)467-0695 for an appointment or apply at 520 N. MichiganAve. Suite 622 from 9 am to 5 pm.You must bo 18 ye.irs (lr older and consent to nude photos in I’l AY(,IKI MA(,AZI\I10 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, November 20, 1979CLASSIFIED ADSAD RATES FOR SALEMaroon classifieds are effective andcheap. Place them in person atthMaroon business office in Ida NoyesHall by mail to the Maroon, Ida NoyesHall room 304, 1212 &. 59th St.,Chicago, 60637. All ads must be paid inadvance. Rates: 60' per line (30spaces) for U of C people, 75' per lineotherwise. SI for special headline.Deadlines: For Tuesday paper, 12noon Friday; for Friday, 12 noonWednesday.Display advertising rates areavailable upon request. 753-3263.SPACEProfessor in residence spring quarteronly, wishes to discuss the possibilityof occupying the apartment or house ofanother faculty member who seeks oc¬cupant while he or she is away for spr¬ing quarter. 753-8712.Huge room now avail for 1 or 2 inestab. Hyde Pk. collective. Lg. closets,cptd., solarium. Not cheap, but worthit. The Winter Palace, 288-6657,Room with bathroom in large Kosherapt. fully furnished at 55 Cornell-mustkeep Kosher. $110/mo. immediate oc¬cupancy. Call Larry or Miriam,752-2159, 752-2467. Male or female.1 studio apartment, $155 util, inc. 5120S. Hyde Park, sublet, Dec.1 avail. Call363-2352 or 643-1400.Faculty house for rent winter quarter.Call 373-6618 or 753-8564 for info.Interested in sharing apartment withfemale in Hyde Park. Can move innow. Call 955-7452 by 2:30p.m.APARTMENT SUBLET: 2 Br„ 2bath,carpet. Lease expires 7/80 4- garageavailable 12/12 call Zola 955-3015.Studio apt available Jan. 1. Blac-skstone Villa 752-2223.Furnished rm for rent in 4 bdrm apt.$87.50 mo. Call 288-8508.Avail asap-own room and use of studyin large 57th and Kenwood apt. Rent$200/mo. pref. Grad sutdent. Call955-9351 btwn 4-7.1 bedroom apartment in high rise con¬dominium overlooking lake. Com¬pletely redecorated, brand new ap¬pliances and air conditioners. Saunaetc. in building. South Shore area,close to 1C, Hyde Park bus, UCminibus. Rent from owner, $350 permonth. 667-5360 after 4pm orweekends. Available December 15thor January 1st. Piano-used upright, good condition,must sell for $100 or best offer, you paymoving. Call 363-3546 between 8-10p.m.AMC Gremlin '72, stick, a/c, am. fm.20 mpg (reg), runs well, always starts.56,000 miles, $795 negot. 667-6999 keeptrying.United Vi fare coupon, $50. 324-5852p.m.Antique bedroom set, $175. Call after5:00p.m., 734-1751.Sale continues at 63 E. Marquette Rd.(67th and Michigan) sofa, bed, tableand dresser left, some appliances.753-3751 wkdays, 483-3414 wkends.1973 station wagon, 23 mpg. Ford Pinto, 2 dr-4 cyl. 50000 miles. $450 . 752-6247/eve.75 Dodge Dart loaded, good condition,best offer, call 684-4509.Yours for the asking! Very cheapbookcases, lights, etc. Call 285-1398now! i1977 Chevette exc cond. $3400 leavingcountry-must sell. Call 288-8508 after6pm.Two OHM B Dynamic loudspeakers.Teak cabinets, txc. cond. Orig. $360.Now only $200 pr. 241-5164.Two designer shower curtains withplastic liners, hooks. $25 pr. Mountainvalley scene. Exc. cond. 241-5164.'73 Olds 88 Royale. Very good shape,running smoothly. New trans and rearsnows. 4 dr. full power, air cond. Nolonger need this second car. $750. CallSteven 324-6193 (eves).2 complete twin beds with spreads, 2Swedish armchairs. 1 chest 667-5960.HALF-FARE UNITED COUPONS forsale call 955-7472 or 241-7282 exceptweekends.PEOPLE FOR SALEARTWORK • posters, illustration,calligraphy, invitations, etc. NoelYovovich, 5441 S. Kenwood 493-2399.Typing done on IBM by college grad.Pica type. Term papers, theses,dissertations, law briefs, manuscripts,resumes, letters, etc. Fast, accurate,reliable, reasonable. Near North Side.Call today 248-1478Excellent, accurate typist with legalexperience will type papers anddissertations on IBM Selectric.Reasonable rates. 684-7414PEOPLE WANTEDThe Department of BehavioralSciences needs people who want toparticipate as paid subjects inpsycholinguistic 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. Kallish 288-1600Student attendants for the Oriental In¬stitute Museum. $3.36 per hr.Preference given those who qualify forWork-Study Program. Call Ray Tindelat 753-2491.OVERSEAS JOBS-Summer/yearround. Europe, S. America, Australia,Asia, etc. All fields, $500-$1,200 mon¬thly. Expenses paid. Sightseeing. Freeinfo. Write: IJC, Box 52-11, Corona DelMar. Ca. 92625.RESEARCH ASSISTANT WANTED towork on study of urb. f’.ian. andpolitics at U. of C. Job involves someadmin, and supervising respon¬sibilities. Computer exp. desirable notessential. Willingness to learn moreimp. 20-30 hrs./wk. Some eves. Beg.sal. $5-7/hr. Call 753-2134, leave name,phone 4 and time you can be reached.EXPERIENCED BABYSITTERneeded to care for 1-2 two year oldgirls full time Monday through Friday.Salary negotiable. If interested, call753-3526 evenings. Salary negotiable.The Fertility Unit at Michael ReeseHospital is seeking healthy males bet¬ween the ages of 20-35 for sperm dona¬tion. For information please contactDr. Z. Blnor, phone 791-4004.German translator needed by Looplaw firm to translate telexes intoEnglish. Require 4 to 5 hours at out of-fice. Contact Patty Stubbs 346 8500.Harper Square Child Care Centerneeds full time teaching assistant for2V2-3V* yr. olds. Begin Jan. 2, exp.pref. 4800 S. Lake Park. 538-4041, PERSONALSWriters' Workshop Plaza 2-8377.T. Oakenshield & Co.: I believe Ihave found a 14th for your party. He isa professional burglar named Bagginsand may be found at Bag-End, theShire. You will find my mark on hisdoor. G.Let me help you choose the right GIFTfor your one of a kind MOM, DAD,BEST FRIEND, or LOVER! AtSHANI'S!!!! 5501 S. EVERETT.MAROON PERSONALS AREF R E E!!! 5 I ines or less, drop them offin the Maroon office, Ida Noyes room304.Mallory’sRestaurant iTenth Floor1525 East 53ra StreetHyde ParkChicago Illinois 60615312 241 5660Breakfast 8:30 to 11:00.Lunch 11:00 to 5:00, Dinner5:00 to 11:00, Friday endSaturday until 12:00, Sun¬day Brunch 10:30 to 4:00.Security, Parking FREE KITTENS raised with children924-7357.LOST ANDFOUNDLOST: Medic Alert bracelet aboutNov. 4. Reward. Call 288-3111.FOUND: White male cat, w/peach-colored ears and tail, blue eyes. Found11/13/79, at Harper Sq. Apt. bldg. Calldays 538 4041, eves. 752-0152.E. Hyde Pk. 2 bd., new kitchen, cpt.$42,500 493 3822.UC HOTLINE753-1777From 7 p.m. to 7 a m. there is a placeyou can call if you have a Question,need a Referral, or want to Talk - TheUC HOTLINE.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.PROGRAMMERANALYSTComputing Services in the GraduateSchool of Business needs a Program¬mer/Analyst whose primary functionis to work with the GSB faculty. App¬licants should be well-versed instatistics and/or econometrics, in ad¬dition to having programming skills.The environment includes a DEC-2050and IBM 370/168. If Interested andqualified, call Faye Citron, 753-4290.The University of Chicago is an EqualOpportunity/Affirmative ActionEmployer.INTENSIVEGERMANHigh pass the German Exam! Studywith Karin Cramer, native German,Phd, suing the comparative structuraltranslation method. 15 week course, 60sessions, start Jan 14 Mon Thurs 12-1and 6-7. Call 493-8127or 753-0516.SALES SECRETARYHyde Park Hilton, Exciting job foroutgoing, people-oriented person Ex¬cellent typing, Great benefits, Salarycommensurate with experience. Ref.288-6500.DRACULA'SDRIVE-INPop-up Dracula Drive-In movieCARDS at "the funny papers" 5238 S.Blackstone, 955-0974 in Hyde Park.JIM POSTIN CONCERTSee Jim Post in concert:Old Town School North(Noyes Cultural Arts Center)Evanston. IllinoisNov. 23,24 & 25Information:(312) 525-7472 SENIOR PORTRAITSYearbook senior pix are now beingtaken. Portraits are free, and you canorder copies yourself ($3 for 8" x 10"or $1.50 for 5" x 7"). Be casual, be daring. Any seniors not pre-registecedlast year contact Yearbook im-mediately. INH 4218, 753-3562.Seniors who have not yet had youryearbook portraits taken, contact thefollowing H to schedule If your lastname begins with: A - Laura 241-5391;B •• Diane x3-3751; C - Adam SpeigelX3-5541, D -- Bob x3-3444, E - David(rm 1120) x3 8342; F - Robin 752 7705;G - Jackie Hardy X3-2249; H-Hecker -Jim 684 4104; H (the rest) -- Marlene493-5577. I,J - Doug 241 5431; K Nan¬cy 684-5478; L - Casey 752-7705; M -Nancy 684 5478, N,0,P - Phil X3-3444;R - Dan (rml822) X3-2240, S - John288 3598, T.U.V - Marty 947-0059; W ~Lisa 667-0463 or Nancy 684-5478; Y1 -Jim Yang X3-2261.ASINGULARGROUPOur 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.RIDESDrive 78 car to Palm Springs 50% gasallowance, depart after Dec. 20 Phone973-5041.WANTED: ride to Bloomington, Indfor Thanksgiving. Hyde Park cpI. will¬ing to share expenses, etc. Need rideWed. 21. Call 285 3071 P and O WestSENIORSH-HECKERIf you haven't had your senior portraitset up yet, meet your photographer(Jim) between 2:30-4 pm at the C-bench outside Cobb Today (Thurs¬day).‘ MEMORY GAMESMEMORY GAMES! Have Fun Passing 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.SEN10RSMIf you haven't had your pix taken yet,show up at the arch between Harperand Business East between 130 and2:30p.m. Tues., (today) to be shot.TAI CHI CH'UANAND KUNG-FUTal Chi Ch'uan Club invites you totheir regular Tai Chi meetings, Wed.7 30p.m. at Blue Gargoyle, and everySunday 7:30p.m., 4945 S. Dorchester(enter on 50th). Kung Fu meets everySunday, 6:30p.m., 4945 S. Dorchester.YEARBOOKHurry, Hurry. 1980 Yearbooks on ad¬vance sale now-still only $10 Beautifulcolor photos, senior portraits, sports,housing, people-200 pages in all Bookswill arrive May, but you can’t be sureof getting a copy unless you order now.The Yearbook is for sale in the StudentActivities Office. INH 210, 753 3591.Ask for Gunta.KITTENSBlack with white trim, playful, cuddly.Six weeks old. 752 7477.ECLECTICED GUITARMINI COURSEGuitar class on Thurs Nov. 22 postponed due to Thanksgiving Holiday. Classwill be held on MONDAY NOV 26-Same time and place. JAZZ AT NOONA free concert of music by Gershwin,Ellington, and others. If you enjoy jazzpiano and saxophone, bring your lunchand bring a friend to Reynolds ClubNorth Lounge at noon, Tues NOV. 20KOSHER KITCHENAt U.C. If you want it, come to a Plann¬ing Meeting at Hillel House. Monday,Nov. 26 at 7:30 pm. Call 752-1127 fordetails.UNIVERSITYSYMPHONYORCHESTRAAutumn Concert: Friday, Nov 30,8 30PM in Mandel Hall. Under conductorBarbara Schubert, the Orchestra willperform Beethoven's Leonore Over¬ture No 2, Shostakovich's Cello Con¬certo No.l, with soloist Don Moline ofthe CSO, and Tchaikovsky's Sym¬phony No. 1 in G Minor, "WinterDreams." Admission is free.SHANKSAdd to your woman friend's tendercaressing fingers with rings froShani's OPEN SUNDAY 2-6 pm Decopen Fridays 5-7, Saturdays 12-4 andSundays 2 6 5501 S. EVERETTE752 5173/241-5173YOUR RUBBERINITIALSYour initials in rubber stamps $1.50 at"the funny papers" 5238 S Blacksfone,955-0974 in Hyde Park.REDTAPEStuck in the bureaucracy? Issomething not working as it should?The Student Ombudsman can help youcut red tape and solve that problem.Talk to the Ombudsman in ReynoldsClub 204 or call 753-4206.SEND A MAROONSUBSCRIPTION TOSOMEONE FAR AWAY!NAMEADDRESSCITY STATE ZIPMAKE CHECKS PAYABLE TOCHICAGO MAROON. 1212 E. 59th. Chicago, Ill. 60637□ RENEWALF] NEW SUBSCRIPTION$12 FOR ONE YEAR$8 FOR TWO QUARTERS$4 FOR ONE QUARTER* WINTER COURT THEATRE presentstr% A Day in the Death of ME?&W■n- in The New Theatre, 57th and UniversityThursdays and Sundays, November 1 5 thru December 22 JOE E^pOby Peter Nicholsdirected by Nicholas Rudall8:30 p.m., Sundays at 7:30753-3581 set design by Linda BuchananThe Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, November 20, 1979 — 11-.-ty_ y ' , 1‘. ■ „..yOOj :*;w:n yy y;'■■■" ■- ■■: y il Sm* - *■„ *■■ II'lie College and the Deans Student/V/.sA I'oreenn I '.dueation, y " ' ■' ; ' ■: ' ■' ' • \ y . y " ■■!, M ^ /V ’11 ,P w W:-'V - ■ '••••' •••/in the (.allegepresent■ ■iFriday November 22 and 23' »-■ ■■ ; -• ' ■ ► . ' - ; : ■ 'A FOREIGN AFFAIR (7:00)SOME LIKE IT HOT (9:30) KARL J. WEINTR AUBI' _ . '' _ *- ( -J.Saturday Thoma> K. Donm IK. Di-iin^uishi'clS<*r\i<r ProlV—or in tin' I)«‘|kirtmrulof IIi-lor\. Doan of tlir I )i\ ision of flrr11mmuiitio of tin* lni\<*r-il\ of (’.hicajroNovember 24Sfx>nl:ini: <>n the lof>i<November 25SundayMOSES AND AARONNovember 26yMASHENKAAlexander Douzhenko s SHORS (9:00) Tuesday, November 20. 19794:00 P.M.Social Science 122All Films in Cobb Hall and $1.50Off Mfq SugLP’s NOW> » i ' < * 4 ‘ i• v> . r i?y|y;y'y’, * ' <4 - , «* N* y- ?*• *\ > ;yi ' ’ i& til IS i*' § *, fi imi >-'* ||i i c | - m ' y » j , $ -;V.; a rf/. -I.,..--.-. „V^ ' I St i > ’ > * -/i, ,v. 4 ',r ** :