This Friday, February 22Will be the last day all Winter Quartertexts will be available for sale.The Textbook DepartmentThe University of Chicago5750 S. Ellis AvenueTIME is Running Out!—Books must be returned in order to makeway for Spring Quarter texts.The Textbook Department will be open forbusiness after this date. Winter Quarterbooks not yet received as of this date willbe stocked for sale as soon as they arrive.BISHOP BRENT HOUSEThe Oratory of St. Mary and St. Johntti» episcopal {Anglican} Center atThe University of ChicagoASH WEDNESDAY LITURGY5:15 p.m. February 20Sunday9:00 a.m. Holy Eucharist (ecumenical)-at Rockefeller ChapelMonday through Friday9:00 a.m. Morning Prayer5:15 p.m. Evening Prayer5:30 p.m. Holy Eucharist (Sung onWednesday followed bysupper)Noon Eucharist on Thursday at BondChapel5540 South Woodiawn AvenueChicago. Illinois 00637 Telephone(312) 753-3392THE CHURCH OF ST. PAUL ANDTHE REDEEMERDORCHESTER AVE. at 50th ST.Ash Wednesday, Feb. 20 - HolyCommunion and Imposition of Ashesat 7 and 10 a.m. and 6:30 p.m, (with choir)Sundays-Holy Communion and Supperat 6:30 p.m.Wednesday, Feb. 27 - 6:30 p.m. -Holy CommunionSupper and discussion led byProf. Frank Reynolds, Divinity School‘Pent in a Diversity of Religions " NEW 2-drawer files $59.00NEW 6-ft. folding tables $49.00EQUIPMENT& SUPPLY CO.8600 COMMERCIAL AVENUEOPEN MON.-FRI.8:30-5:00SATURDAYSRE 4-21 11 9:00-3:00AUGUSTANA LUTHERAN CHURCHLUTHERAN CAMPUS MINISTRY5500 S. Woodlawn Ave.*♦93-6451Ash Wednesday - February 207:30 p.m. Imposition of Ashes,Sermon and EucharistThursday, February 2112:10 p.m. Eucharist with lunch following.Sunday Schedule8:30 a.m. Sermon and Eucharist9:30 a.m. Church School & Adult ForumDiscussion on Elie Wiesel'sIlight and Dca,m10:45 a.m. Sermon and EucharistPEI-IAWMtniNt ST THOMAS THE APOSTLE PARISHGod's People in extraordinary varietyHyde Park’sLandmark Church5472 So. Kimbark(55th Street at Kimbark)Chicago, II. 60615312/324-2626Fr. Thomas Fiti£'raid.PastorWelcomes YOU to our Lenten Mission EachWednesday a distinguished preacher willshare with us a personal reflection on theWord of God.Feb. 20 Ash Wednesday 7:30 p.m.Carroll Stuhlmueller, C.P.Catholic Theological UnionProf, of Old Testament StudiesSCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH * UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS ATTHE MEDICAL CENTER. CHICAGOInvites Applications fcr Degree ProgramsMASTER OF PUBLIC HEALTH (M.P.H)MASTER OF SCIENCE IN PUBLIC HEALTH (M S.)DOCTOR OF PUBLIC HEALTH (Or PH.)DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY IN PUBLIC HEALTH (Ph,0 )Concentrations are offered in Biometry. Epidemiology, Environmental andOccupational Health Sciences. Industrial Hygiene and Safety. Health Sciencesand Community Health Sciences, Administration and Health Law. Health Edu¬cation. Population Sciences and International Health.Financial assistance is available through Public Health Traineeships and Re¬search Positions. Deadline to apply for M P H. Program is February 15. 1980.Deadline for M S. Dr P.H., and Ph.O. Programs is six weeks prior to the quar¬ter in which the applicant wishes to enterFor further information, write or telephoneJames W WagnerAssistant Dean for Student AffairsUniversity of Illinois at the Medical CenterPD Box 6998Chicago, Illinois 60680(312) 996-6625The School encourages applications from qualified minority studentsCOUO3</>O' T(0CLcr«*■D"0oKfDS- the Dean of Students in the College.2 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, February 19, 1980 Life as a Law StudentA panel discussion by U of C graduatesnow in Law SchoolIHRSDAT, Fet. 211 13 p.m.1411II113MiBIffl'Wonfliili'XJilprogram held; more activity plannedU.S. Senate hopefuls vie inprimaries next monthAnti-draftBy Andrew PatnerLess than 100 people participated in a day¬long series of workshops against registra¬tion and the draft last Friday. The “educa¬tional event’’, sponsored by the ProgressiveDraftUnion, presented a variety of speakers ondraft and war resistance, the history ofAmerican interventionism, the current situ¬ation in the Middle East, and responses tomilitarism.This Thursday, February 21, the Universi¬ty chapter of the national Coalition AgainstRegistration and the Draft (CARD) willsponsor a teach-in of its own and on Friday.February 22, CARD will hold a demonstra¬tion at noon in Hutchinson Court.Members of the Progressive Union attri¬buted the low turnout at Friday’s event topoor publicity and the fact that similarevents were planned by CARD. But severalof the speakers said that the attendance wasa satisfactory beginning of what they saidwould be “a long fight.’’Ron Freund, director of Clergy and LaityConcerned, a lay and religious coalition thatparticipates in anti-military and otherhuman rights activities, traced the historyof draft resistance from the first call for adraft in 1790 through the present anti-regis¬tration effort.“President Carter says that people areoverreacting to his call for peacetime regis¬tration. We’ll keep overreacting!” Freundsaid.Freund said that with the huge nuclear ar¬senals of the United States and the SovietUnion, conventional forces would be usedonly in interventionary land wars to keep inpower present Third World governmentsfriendly to the United States government.Freund urged people to lobby local Con¬gressman Bennett Stewart who sits on the House Subcommittee for Independent Agen¬cies to urge him to oppose increased fundingfor the Selective Service. Stewart is the onlyone of the four candidates for the First Con¬gressional District seat who supports regis¬tration.Rev. A1 Sampson of the Southern Chris¬tian Leadership Conference, Ruth Deere ofthe War Resisters’ League, and Ellen Fink-lestein of Women for Peace, were among theother speakers at the opening session.Four workshops were held in the after¬noon. Professors Ralph Austen, HarryHarootunian, and John Coatsworth spoke onthe history of American intervention inLatin America and Asia, and students ledthe other discussion groups. One workshop,on women and war, did not permit men tospeak for the first twenty minutes of discus¬sion.The CARD teach-in will take place thisThursday in Quantrell Auditorium. The ses¬sions are as follows:•Noon to 12:45 — Personal Alternatives tothe Draft. Three speakers, including DavidFink, a Vietnam era draft counselor, willdiscuss alternatives to the draft includingconscientious objection.•12:45 — Domestic Aspects of the Draft.•1:30 — International Aspects of theDraft. Four speakers, including peace acti¬vist Sidney Lens, will speak.•2:15 — Economic Aspects of the Draft.Professors Donald McCloskey, ThomasNagle, and Adam Przeworski will speak.•3:00 — History of the Draft.Peter Treistman, a CARD organizer, saidthe teach-in is “to educate students on theissues so they won’t go on just emotion.”Triestman said he has not been disap¬pointed with the low reaction to the draft.“When you consider how quickly the anti¬draft movement has come about in compari¬son to the anti-war movement, I think thatthere has been a lot of positive reaction,” hesaid.CARD will also have a national protestagainst the draft in Washington D.C. onMarch 22.For more information about CARD’S ac¬tivities call 684-7270 or 288-8989. This is the second of two articles profilingcandidates for the U.S. Senate from Illinois.The first article. which appeared in theMaroon last Friday, featured DemocratsAlan J. Dixon and Alex Seith and republicanWilliam Scott who led their respective par¬ties for the March 18 primary nomination ina recent Chicago Sun-Times/WMAQ-TV sta¬tewide poll.Lieutenant Governor Dave O’Neal wasrunner-up in the Sun-Times/WMAQ poll forthe Republican nomination with 18 percentof those surveyed saying they would vote forhim. But Bill Greener III, an O’Neal advi¬sor, said that inaccuracies in the pollingprocess resulted in an underestimation ofO’Neal’s popularity. He said he was never¬theless “ecstatic” over the aount of supportO’Neal did receive in the poll.O’Neal has said on several occasions thatScott, if nominated, would be unable to winin November because of publicity surround¬ing his tax-fraud trial.“I personally.. . am very concerned of his(Scott's) viability as a candidate,” he said.While he said that he hopes Scott is acquit¬ted. O’Neal maintains that the attorney gen¬eral would best serve the Republican partyby withdrawing from the Senate raceThe major theme of O'Neal's campaign isthe establishment of fiscal responsibility inCongress. He proposes that the federal gov¬ernment not be allowed to increase itsspending by a percentage higher than the in¬flation rate of the previous year.Another of his ideas is the creation of aTaxpayer Inpact Plan (TIP). Under thisplan the Congress would have to inform thepublic of how much every federal programit approves would cost an individual taxpay¬er. One aim of TIP. according to Greener, isto debunk “liberal rhetoric” which holdsthat expensive social programs are alwayscost-efficient and worthwhile.On issues of foreign policy. O'Neal hascriticized the Carter administration for act¬ing in an “inconsistent” manner. Greenersaid that Carter's recent decision to beef upAmerican military strength is in direct op¬position to previous policies, such as thepresident’s anti-neutron bomb stance.O'Neal supports an increase in militaryspending and registration but doesn’t be¬lieve that a draft is necessary “at thistime.” according to Greener.The third Republican candidate. RichardCarver, drew an 8 percent rating in the Sun-Times/WMAQ poll. Carver, the mayor ofPeoria, announced his candidacy over ayear ago but has failed to catch on with therank-and-file yet. Although he is popular incentral Illinois, he admits that he has aname-recognition problem in much of the state, especially Chicago.Carver, like O’Neal, has accused Scott ofusing his trial to avoid discussion of contro¬versial issues. However, he has not yetcalled on Scott to withdraw from the Senaterace.Carver is considered a likeable “moder¬ate” by fellow Republicans, but also a veryweak candidate, considering the amount oftime he has spent campaigning.According to Human Events magazine,“By most accounts, Carver is out of it.”Among other Democratic candidates, areRobert Ash Wallace (3 percent in the Sun-Times/WMAQ poll), Dakin Williams (3 per¬cent), and Anthony Martin-Trigona <0 per¬cent).W’allace. perhaps the most liberal of thecandidates, is chairman of PSM Interna¬tional Corporation and former assistant sec¬retary of the U.S. Treasury.He has spoken in favor of a moratorium onthe construction of nuclear power plants.In his view “the only realistic short-termpossibilities for our national energy policyare conservation of oil and the increased,safe development of coal.” He advocates a“continued small reliance” on nuclearpower.Among Wallace's priorities is a nationalhealth insurance plan. He said that such aplan could be funded “for instance, by can¬celling the MX missile system.” He prefersSenator Edward Kennedy's plan to that ofPresident Carter because the former ismore comprehensive.The generals consensus is that Wallace isnot enough of a hard-liner on defense andgovernment spending to do well on March18. However his campaign received a boostlast month when he was endorsed by the In¬dependent Voters of Illinois.Williams, an arch-conservative from Col¬linsville. has run into problems attractingcontributions. As of December 31. his fundamounted to only $2000- half from his ownpocket and half from his mother s.Williams believes that defense and energyare of “paramount” importance at the mo¬ment and that social programs should be“curtailed where possible.” He said that“Under present circumstances we musthave guns.”He also said that taxes should not belowered until the Soviet Union ceases its ag¬gressive behavior and begins to disarm.Martin-Trigona, a perpetual candidate,has also found it difficult to attract financialsupport so far. He is further burdened by un¬popular pro-Palestinian views. Martin-Trigona has said that the Palestiniansshould be recognized as a nations and thatthe United States is a “hostage” to Zionistlobbyists.Httkw & y«tBy Chris Isidoreand Dave GloclanerWhen Michael Harrington, chairman ofthe Democratic Socialist Organizing Com¬mittee (DSOC), spoke here last quarter,his suggestion that the crowd support TedKennedy’ candidacy was met with boosand hisses.When he spoke at Columbia Universitylast month, this same suggestion was metwith laughter.According to the Columbia Spectator,Harrington was angered by the laughterand shouted “No! Excuse me, it is notfunny! It is not funny!”“If you tell me there should be a betterchallenge in 1980. I’ll agree,” he said,shaking his out-stretched arm. “We do notview Kennedy as a deus ex-Camelot. Wedon’t believe he is a messiah.“But he is the only real challenge to thestatus quo,” he insisted. “If there is a pos¬sibility of building a left wing coalition . . .this is where there is going to be one.”Harrington was opposed at the debate byStanley Aronowitz, a visiting professor ofpolitical science at Columbia, and also asocialist. The debate was sponsored by the Columbia DSC chapter.Aronowitz called for socialists to work tochange radically the current political cli¬mate, and to bring crucial issues to theforefront of American politics. All of whichmay be even more difficult than gettingKennedy elected this year.Almost everyone has a lobbyist thesedays. When the legislature is in sessionstate capitals around the country crawlwith lobbyists representing businessmen,workers, consumers, and hundreds ofother interests.In Minnesota, college students are thelatest group to acquire their own lobbyists.Student governments at colleges through¬out the state have united to send studentsto St. Paul to lobby for legislation favoringstudent interests.Among this year’s priorities, accordingto the student lobbyists, are passage of atruth in testing bill, defeat of a bill to raisethe Minnesota drinking age from 19 to 21,and approval of a measure that would ex¬pand the scope of the state scholarship pro¬gram.In a few years. Northwestern Universitystudents will be able to live with senior citi¬zens, if a proposed IntergenerationalHousing Complex is built.The idea for the Northwestern complexcame from similar projects at West Wash¬ington State University and Syracuse Uni¬versity, where students and elderly liveand take classes together.Although plans for the $3.5 million com¬plex are not complete, the project’sbackers — a Northwestern urban affairsprofessor and the director of the universi¬ty’s Christian ministry — say they have re¬ceived encouragement from Evanston offi¬cials and local senior citizens' groups.Northwestern University will not fundthe complex, so the two are seeking pri¬vate investors. They hope to begin con¬struction sometime in 1981.The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, February 19, 1980 — 3SPECIAL DISCOUNT PRICESfor all STUDENTSFACULTY and. nvuLi r MEMBERSJust present your University of Chicago Identificati*Card. As Students or Facjlty Members you -to special money-savinn r“'~~°art« A — The University of ChicagoNEW MUSIC ENSEMBLEionm *<*y c°".d °"y«vro/ef Wed you®5*r Motors A4J?T5K^pna,Gn 4,7 ••72nd & Stony Island 684-0400Open Evenings and Sunday p—* ■— " 8 pmSUNDAY,FEB. 24th ILEXINGTON ,HALL5835 S.University ave.||l|f:soT:m noonWCIAL DISCOUNT PRICESfor all STUDENTS andFACULTY MEMBERSJust present your University of Chicago IdentificationCard. As Students or Faculty Members you are entitledto special money-saving DISCOUNTS on VolkswagenParts, Accessories and any new or used Volks'*"—4'you buy from Ruby Volkswager Music of Berio. Ives,Stravinsky, & Tippett he Internship MB,an education that worksThe Internship MBA Program offers college graduates an intensiveone-year educational experience which combines courseworkleading to the MBA degree and two ten-week internships withChicago area business firms Tuition costs are partially underwrit¬ten by participating firms. The purpose of the Program is to providerecent college graduates, and others exploring career alternatives,with both the MBA degree and the experience needed to make in¬telligent career decisionsIn addition to coursework and the internships, students are involv¬ed in a program of activities designed to assist them in achieving aninformed and realistic approach to their career planning To thisend, students meet informally with executives representing a varie¬ty of firms and job categories, and participate in individual andgroup career planning sessions designed to hone their skills inresume preparation, job searching, and interviewing.The School seeks motivated, accomplished and well-rounded in¬dividuals who will be challenged by the demands of a rigorousworking/educational program The competitive admissions processdraws on a variety of indicators of accomplishments, includingGMAT scores, academic achievement, recommendations, priorwork experience, non-academic interests and activities, as well asmotivation tor undertaking the Program.Keller Graduate School is fully accredited by the North CentralAssociation of Colleges and Schools Financial assistance isavailable to accepted studentsFor more information, call the admissions office at (312)454-0880 or send in the coupon below.F * m ^ KkIlor Graduate School of Managemente I ■ ■ ® 10 South Riverside Plaza • Chicago, IL, 60606Ksw°gen72nd & Stony IslandOpen Evening* and c noon NCONIIMtCCNCEIT:S & WILLIS. Di ia' - •CATES <SOR*fr'CanaJAMES TURNER .'ana Studies and Research CenterCornel! University, Ithaca. N v direct _ — x m>\ DUO P/AN/STS12:00 NOON, TUESDAYREYNOLDS CLUB LOUNGESPONSORED BY SAPor^y, unaca, N.Y.Speaking on“MALCOLM lTuesday, Feb. 19th, 7:30 p.m.IDA NOYES HALL1212 E 59th St.ADMie'''" 99An 0r9an ADMISSIOization Nof Black Stud freeenfs (0BS) Programrive-iternPebruary menu, including coffetVaried Latin-American dish<SUNDAY, FEB. 0a ?isP«licCulturalSocietyFellow Fulbright: Eloquent enigmaVisitingBy Andrew Patner“To criticize one’s country is to do it a ser¬vice and pay it a compliment. It is a servicebecause it may spur the country to do betterthan it is doing; it is a compliment becauseit evidences a belief that the country can dobetter than it is doing. ‘This,’ said AlbertCamus in one of his ‘Letters to a GermanFriend, ' is ‘what separated us from you; wemade demands. You were satisfied 'to servethe power of your nation and we dreamed ofgiving ours her truth. . . ’ ”J. William Fulbright,The Arrogance of PowerJ. William Fulbright has always beensomething of an eloquent enigma. Through¬out his public career he has remained aNews Analysisloner and an iconoclast. Rejecting the poeticadvice of W. H. Auden, (along with justabout anybody else’s advice) Fulbright hasalways taken long views on political affairs,views that have made his career one ofseeming contradiction. He has been both astaunch internationalist and a committedisolationist ; a vocal critic of the War in Viet¬nam and an opponent too of the public pro¬tests against that war; a supporter of “na¬tional liberation” movements, including thePalestine Liberation Organization (PLO)and an opponent of every civil rights mea¬sure in this country; a man with firm rootsin the Ozarks as well as in Oxford; a philoso¬pher in “the age of crisis”, Fulbright is aman who quotes Burke and Camus in theage of television.Early careerBorn in 1905 in Fayetteville, Arkansas,Fulbright was the son of one of the wealth¬iest men in Arkansas who died when Ful¬bright was 18. After graduating from theUniversity of Arkansas in 1925 Fulbrightwon a Rhodes scholarship and studied histo¬ry at Pembroke College, Oxford, for threeyears. He continued his travels and study inVienna and received his law degree fromGeorge Washington University. In the 1930she returned to Arkansas to manage the bur¬geoning family enterprises that includedmanufacturing interests, newspapers, and aCoca-Cola bottling plant.In 1939, at the age of 34, Fulbright becamepresident of the University of Arkansas.When political enemies protested his ap¬pointment on the grounds of his age. Ful¬bright responded “I mean no offense (by myyouth) and I am confident that definite pro¬gress is being made every day to correctit.”Nevertheless, Fulbright was fired fromthe presidency and in 1942 was elected toCongress. In his third month in office, he of¬fered a resolution calling for the establish¬ment of the United Nations with full UnitedStates participation. The measure passedby a vote of 360 to 29.Scholarship programIn 1944, Fulbright was elected to the U.S.Senate, an office he held for 30 years. Earlyin his first term, he introduced a bill to setup an international exchange of scholars tobe funded by the sale of surplus U.S. warproperty. On August 11, 1946, President Tru¬man signed PL 754, the Fulbright Hays-Act, now known as the Fulbright Scholars pro¬gram. Looking back at this accomplishmentin 1958, Fulbright said, “The exchange pro¬gram is the one thing that reconciles me toall the difficulties of political life. It’s theone activity that gives me some hope thatthe human race won’t commit suicide,though I still wouldn’t count on it.”It was in the Senate that Fulbright was tobecome the spokesman, and sometimes solesupporter of unpopular causes. In 1954 hiswas the only vote to cut off funds to JosephMcCarthy’s witchhunting committee and in1956 he was one of 20 senators to sign the“Southern Manifesto” against the SupremeCourt’s desegregation ruling in Brown v.Board of Education. Beginning with the Ei¬senhower Administration, Fulbright crit¬icized United States policy towards the Mid¬dle East which he found inconsistent andanti-Arab. In 1959 he gave up the chairman¬ship of the Senate Banking and FinanceCommittee to assume the chairmanship ofthe Foreign Relations Committee. Fromthis post Fulbright launched a campaign of“public education” by using the commit¬tee’s hearings for the investigation and criti¬cism of American foreign policy.That same year he began a Congressionalcampaign to put foreign aid on a plannedlong-term basis and to emphasize economicaid over military assistance. In 1961 he tookon the Defense Department for allowingmilitary officials to lobby on behalf of right-wing organizations. Fulbright believedstrongly in the separation of powers thatdelegated the making of foreign policy to theSenate, and left its conduct to the Executivebranch.‘ DisillusionmentWith the Bay of Pigs invasion authorizedby President Kennedy, Fulbright began aperiod of disillusionment with Presidentialperformance in foreign policy that was toculminate with his publicly breaking withthe Johnson Administration over the Viet¬nam War and Johnson’s Asian Doctrine.Fulbright felt that the Senate had allowedits advise and consent duty to become a rub¬ber stamp for Presidential policies. Thisaquiescence had led to the “decline of theSenate”, a decline Fulbright attributed inturn to the end of the Senate’s traditionalfunction as a debating body.Fulbright had been the only one of Ken¬nedy’s advisors to counsel against theCuban invasion, and one of two to oppose theblockade of Cuba during the missile crisis.But Fulbright had participated in these dis¬cussions at Kennedy’s personal invitationand not in any official capacity. After theU.S. intervention in the Dominican Republicand the “blank check” effect of the Gulf ofTonkin resolution. Fulbright resolved to re¬vive the Senate’s influence in foreign poli¬cy-“Had we met our responsibility of carefulexamination of a Presidential request,”Fulbright said in 1966, “had the SenateForeign Relations Committee held hearingson the resolution before recommending itsadoption, had the Senate debated the resolu¬tion and considered its implications beforegiving its overwhelming approval, and spe¬cifically had we investigated carefully andthoroughly the alleged unprovoked attackson our ships, we might have put limits andqualifications on our . . . future use of forcein Southeast Asia."As chairman of the Foreign RelationsCommittee, Fulbright had been floor leaderfor the resolution that passed unanimouslyin the House and over only two dissentingvotes in the Senate. “My role in the adoptionof (that resolution) is a source of neitherpleasure nor pride to me today,” Fulbrightsaid two years later.Arrogance of powerFulbright based his opposition to U.S.foreign policy on what he called “the arro¬gance of power”, “a psychological need thatnations seem to have in order to prove thatthey are bigger, better, or stronger thanother nations.”“America,” Fulbright said in a series oflectures at the Johns Hopkins University in1966, “is now at that point at which a greatnation is in danger of losing its perspectiveof what exactly is within the realm of itspower and what is beyond it. Other great na¬tions, reaching this critical juncture, haveaspired to too much, and by overextension William Fulbrightof effort have declined and then fallen.“Power tends to confuse itself with virtueand a great nation is peculiarly susceptibleto the idea that its power is a sign of God’sfavor, conferring upon it a special responsi¬bility for other nations.”“If America has a service to perform tothe world — and I believe she has — it is inlarge part the service of her own exam¬ple.”Fulbright’s tactic for exposing this “arro¬gance” was to conduct a series of hearingson the Vietnam War beginning in 1966. Ful¬bright heard testimony from Defense De¬partment officials, generals, psychologists,psychiatrists, and university professors inhis attempt to ascertain the extent of Ameri¬can involvement in Southeast Asia and thelevels of support and opposition for that in¬volvement here at home. Fulbright's com¬mittee made public the “secret” wars inLaos and Cambodia and through televisionbrought these and other revelations intoAmerican homes.Criticized for creating division in Ameri¬can opinion and giving aid and comfort tothe enemy with his hearings and speechesagainst the war. Fulbright responded, aswas his custom, with more speeches. Speak¬ing on the duties of “a higher patriotism”,Fulbright defended the work of his commit¬tee by saying that “the calling of public mento account unquestionably adds to their bur¬dens, but the convenience of policy makersis not sufficient reason for the shutting downof public discussion.”Duty of dissentFulbright held that it was his obligation toshow “the world that America is not mon¬olithic in its support of present policies.”“The discharge of the duty of dissent ishandicapped in America by (a) tendency tofear serious criticism of our government. Inthe abstract we celebrate freedom of opin¬ion as part of our patriotic liturgy; it is onlywhen some Americans exercise it that otherAmericans are shocked. No one of courseever criticizes the right of dissent; it isalways this particular instance of it or itsexercise under these particular circum¬stances or at this particular time thatthrows people into a blue funk.”There were, Fulbright said, "two Ameri¬cas,” one, that of Abraham Lincoln andAdlai Stevenson was “magnanimous”, theother, that of Teddy Roosevelt and DouglasMacArthur. was belligerent. Fulbright pre¬ferred the “first” America.Fulbright did not confine his criticism toSoutheast Asian policy. He developed thepolicy towards the Third World that wasuntil recently the policy of the Carter Ad¬ministration, moving America away fromEast-West confrontation and towards North-South relations. It was Fulbright’s conten¬ tion that the U.S. needed to reverse itspriorities and place a support of ThirdWorld nationalism over an opposition tocommunism. He felt that the American peo¬ple were distinctly “unrevolutionary” andhad a hard time coming to terms with na¬tionalistic revolutions. This different per¬spective, in Fulbright’s view, made for aweakened U.S. influence in the ThirdWorld.Third World policy“We seem to be narrowing our criticismof what constitutes legitimate’ and ‘accept¬able’ social revolutions to include only thosewhich meet the all but impossible tests ofbeing peaceful, orderly, and voluntary - ofbeing, that is, in what we regard as our shin¬ing image,” Fulbright said.Fulbright continually supported efforts tostrengthen the UN and to give the SecurityCouncil and the Great Powers greater obli¬gations and responsibility, including placingall nuclear weapons under its control. Hesupported arms limitation and disarma¬ment treaties and once commented that“We seem to feel somehow that because thehydrogen bomb has not killed us yet, it isnever going to kill us.”Arab supportFulbright continues his support for theArab world to this day and is now registeredin Washington as a foreign agent for theUnited Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia. Hehas called for Israeli withdrawal to its 1967borders, the neutralization of Israel, the in¬ternationalization of Jerusalem, the recog¬nition by the United States and Israel of thePLO, and the establishment of an indepen¬dent Palestinian state on the West Bank. In1976 Egyptian President Sadat awarded himthe Order of the Republic, the second high¬est Egyptian honor, for Fulbright’s “knownposition in favor of the Arab cause” and forbeing the first U.S. official to recognize thePLO.No rights votesFulbright never voted for a civil rightsmeasure and voted for Nixon’s nominationof Clement Haynsworth to the SupremeCourt. One of his few votes seen as being infavor of civil rights was against the nomina¬tion of Harold Carswell. In 1975, Fulbrightdefended his civil rights voting record:“I voted my conscience at the time. Thatseemed to me the only way to vote, forvarious reasons - the most effective way,even from the point of view of bringingabout the integration of black people intoour society.” Fulbright maintained thatmore emphasis should have been directedtowards improved education and healthcare rather than the “legislation declara¬tion of equality.”When Fulbright was defeated in the 1974Democratic primary by Governor DaleBumpers by a 2 to 1 margin. Fulbright re¬sponded "I'm at a disadvantage in the ageof television." Both his critics and defenderslamented the loss of his civility and oratori-al skills from the Senate. Said one critic in1966 “His speeches seem to be prepared forinstant anthologizing, they are addressed asmuch to Posterity as to the Chair.”Tuition hikecontinued from page onesity’s tuition will remain among the lowestof the country’s major private universities.In dollar amounts the increase in roomand board will mean that beginning nextSeptember, freshmen will pay $2,815 forboard and room. They now pay $2,538. Stu¬dents living in single rooms will pay $3,205,an increase from $2,880.Kennington onDeseartesRichard Kennington will be the speakerfor the next Collegiate Lecture series pre¬sentation Thursday. February 21 at 8 pm inHarper 130. Kennington is a professor in theschool of philosophy at the Catholic Univer¬sity in Washington D C.He will speak on “Descartes and ModernPhilosophical Method ”The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, February 19, 1980 — 5Interviews By Mark WallachThis is the concluding part of the seriesof feature articles on the military.Bomb-loader,A fourth-year student in the College spent four yearsin the Marines, one of which was in Vietnam buildingbombs. He served in a unit called Mag-12, one of themost decorated units in the armed forces He asked thathis name not be used.The way I found out I was being sent to Vietnam waswhen I received the letters O.P. in R.V.N. Operation:Republic of Vietnam. 1 was in Japan when the reality ofgoing to Vietnam set in: I found out my air base inBeihoa < pronounced Ben-wa > had been lobbed by 103rockets.I wasn’t in the planes that did the bombing but Itouched every bomb that went out -- I loaded them. Ourdaiiv trag (detonation of explosives) was 250.000 pounds.We said we weren't flying napalm and we weren’t — wewere giving it to the VNAF (Vietnam Air Force). Wealso said we weren't flying flechette warheads — theyhad a thousand tiny nails sticking out. had 19 rocketsper pod and detonated in mid-air. They were consideredillegal because they were too inhumane. We were alsogiving them to VNAF One time one of the networkscame by to film our aircraft and we kept having to tellthem about 'Certain aircraft they couldn't film.The pilot was closest to seeing what he bombed buteven he never saw any faces. He saw things like storesand how many bombs were being unloaded. He was kindof removed. Sometimes after pilots had completed amission they would fly real low — in the free-fire zone —and if there was no one on our side down there, he wouldgo get it. If he got say. 50 confirmed kills, it wassomething to be proud ofPrimarily you're thinking about survival. Usually youhad an M-16 in your hand You had a real strong senseof power. You would take two prisoners and it wouldfeel real good But I want to stay away from theatrocities. People will think we were merciless.At Beihoa we would always be hit at night. Thesappers (saboteurs) would come under the barbed wireand set explosives under the aircraft or other strategicareas. A lot of casualties were from sapper attacks,when they would attack the flight lines and the hoochareas. You also couldn’t throw away the nine-volttransistor batteries you had. The N. Vietnamese wouldtake it out of the garbage, sell it, and use it to firerockets at you.The first rocket attack i experienced occurred threedays after I arrived. You learn to sleep very lightly atnight. I had tried to prepare for that first attack byhaving my flak jacket all laid out. When the attackcame, I missed the flak jacket, fell in a ditch ... I wasshaking for three hours afterward.The B-52 strikes were the scariest. You could actuallyfeel the earth shaking even if you were miles away. Theconcussion of that was phenomenal. After awhile, theViet Cong learned to adjust. They dug themselves intothe earth and even if they were only 60 yards away fromwhere the bomb hit, they survived.We had more technology there but we weren’t fightingthe same war as the Vietnamese. Their whole life waswar — they didn’t know peace . . . One of the first guys Iknew who was hit was collecting money for a Vietnamorphanage. The hardest thing is seeing the planespicking up the aluminum caskets.It was a lawless environment. I knew guys who werejust over there to kill. They considered themselves -brave, but it’s easy to be brave when you have an M-16.There were no formations, no inspections . . . Whoeverhad the most ammunition was in charge. I was at a cardgame once and a guy got mad and blew an explosivethrough the roof. If we were just there with no sappers,and no rocket attacks — no bonds to bring us together —we probably would have killed each other.Everywhere I went, people considered uswar-mongers. When we arrive someplace, our attitudeis “Hurrah, we’re here.” But in Vietnam we weredespised for breaking up families. We pride ourselves onbeing so civilized, but l think we’re regressing ethically.We feel the mightiest sword is right.We completely ravaged Vietnam. There’s little poolsof water where bomb craters used to be. And theVietnamese picked up all the bad characteristics ofAmericans: money making, prostitution. They heard ofguys who came back to America rich . . . What I’mworried about is that we won’t learn from the mistakeswe’ve made in the past.6 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, February 19, 1980 The Military bureaucracy: “Only Tolstoy could tBy Mark WallachThe military of the biggest bureaucracy in thecountry, says Morris Janowitz, Lawrence KimptonDistinguished Service Professor of Sociology, andauthor of The Professional Soldier, and it has someproblems inherent in any bureaucracy and someproblems unique to the military. Janowitz ticked offa checklist of some of the military’s troubles.•Frequent transfers of officers. As a result manyunits lack solidarity.•Over-centralization of authority Decisions areconstantly referred to higher levels resulting indelays, added paperwork and undercutting of com¬manders. Basic training, which could boost localmorale, is done in a central location.•Calculation of everything in terms of cost/ben¬efit analysis For example, a four-year tour of dutyis considered more efficient than a two year tour.“What good is it if a large percentage of people aredissatisfied?” says Janowitz,•Esteem The civilian population generally holdsthe military in low' regard. In addition, the militaryis still recovering from the trauma of Vietnam. ”•Eligible recruits The pool of eligible eighteen-year-olds will drop from four million to 3*& millionin the next five.years.•Inadequate living conditions The problem isespecially acute in the Navy, where ships are some¬times old and sailors are away from their family formonths at a time.•Lack of purposeness The armed forces' purposeis not to win wars. Janowitz states, but to preventthe oubreak of war. Often the ground combat forceshave no dear vision of their larger purpose. •Lack of integration between reserves and activeforces Janowitz, for example, would like the AirForce reserves to fly with the active Air Force sothat they would be in a position to be useful morequickly in combat.•More lucrative position in the private section AirForce pilots often defect to more lucrative jobs withcommercial airlines,•Lack of “engaging work” for enlisted men.•Insufficient ground combat forces compared tosupport forces,•A desertion rate double the pre-Vietnam level.Janowitz stressed that these problems hardly ex¬haust the problems of the military bureaucracy.“We’ve just scratched the surface,” he said. “OnlyTolstoy could describe it.” Improving this bureau¬cracy, Janowitz says, is one of the keys to an im¬proved military.Two weeks ago, a 12-volume, $300,000 Army studywhich was leaked to the press drew bleak conclu¬sions, Among some of the examples of incompe¬tence “The study found that based on target rangeperformance, tank crews were found to be at 40 to50 percent of combat readiness: the likelihood that %tank repairmen would correctly diagnose a repairproblem was pegged at 15 to 33 percent ; and nearlya quarter of the 1,288 tank crewmen tested on theM-60, the Army’s main battle tank, “did not knowwhere to aim when using battle sights.”Despite all this, Janowitz thinks the all-vounteermilitary can be made to work especially if it canrecruit a “more mixed clientele” and begin shortertours of duty. Pointing out that student aid totals$4.4 billion while educational benefits to veterans isI still feel the United States is the best country in theworld. A lot of men when they return to the UnitedStates and get off the flight — they kiss the ground. I didmyself. It felt so goodLinguistAfter a year at the University, this veteran spent fouryears in the Army before returning to the Universitylast fall. He was recruited Into the Army and promisedhe would be part of a special linguistics program — aprogram that did not, in fact, exist. He is now part of aclass-action suit against the military. He asked that hisname not be used.The thing that strikes you most about the military isthe waste and mismanagement of every conceivableresource: men, materials.The Army can’t provide enough combat training sowhen they go into a real situation, they’re going to beblown away. They have a sophisticated piece ofequipment called the Cobra Helicopter. They wouldn’tdo any elaborate exercises, but every 1-3 months theywould take it up. Going up and down is one thing, flyingit is another, and firing is still another. I have real doubtabout how effective they would be. Commanding officerswould swear up and down the pilots could perform theirduties. But the pilots were very dissatisified. They had ahelpless feeling.The commanding officers are a strange breed.They’re usually very unsure of themselves. When yousee some of these people in a command position, youwonder how they would do in combat. If they have anyadvance notice of something, they keep it to themselvesto try to increase their air of capability, to instill afeeling of dependence. When you get in a combatsituation, the distance breaks down, they’re no longerinfallible. I think the men would lose confidence.I can’t conceive of an Army attack. I don’t think we have the capability to initiate an attack. We’reoutnumbered and we're also improperly trained. TheRussians have much more realistic training exercisesand they’re better prepared. Our weaponry isn’t thatmuch more sophisticated than theirs.In the military, you’re really not a person. You’rereally not. I say that, but I really can’t convey what Imean. Your whole day is controlled. You get up.exercise, eat; work is meaningless. We have this thingcalled musical conixes. They’re great big boxes (withcamouflage equipment, tents, etc.). One day we’d takethe stuff out. The next day someone wouldn’t like it sowe did it again. Seven days out of a month. And at theend of the month it’s still the same. And there’s amillion things like that and it's all meaningless. Usuallyit’s some jerk who orders you around and after a day ofwork you’d feel really low. It’s probably where you getthe drinking problem.Under the pressure of basic training, people madethreats to each other to kill the platoon leaders. “Mygun can accidentally go off and hit you.” Accidents onthe firing range are very frequent although I neverheard of a case where someone was purposely killed.The drinking problem is horrible. It’s a very hard typeof existence. They expect you to be mindless. Doeverything for the team. No individuality. If you haveany intelligence at all, it rapidly declines.I thought at first it was primarily the young peoplewho drank. Then you find quite a few N.C.O.s(non-commanding officers) who have serious drinkingproblems. It runs all the way up through the ranks.They allow people to get rip-roaring drunk at the N.C.O.clubs. The C O. (Commanding Officer) is supposed to beaware of his men’s problems but most often he’s not.He’s at his drinking club. They have alcohol programsnow for dealing with it.Pilfering and the destruction of Army property is alsopretty well into the ranks; they allow it to happen.Anyone who looks knows what’s going on. The C.I.D.(Criminal Investigation Division has always had a problem with people being on the take.The officers have these reports called O.E.R. —Officer’s Evaluation Report — and they’re reallysomething to the officers. These things will make orbreak an officer. So regardless of whether he has thefunctional capability of doing something, he wouldalways say he does. If he ever had to prove hisstatement, he would expose his men to unnecessarydanger. One commander put his trucks out in the fieldand would rotate his people on them so that when thecommander came to check, he would never see thebroken-down trucks. He got a good E.O.C. The nextStudents who servedd describe it.”less than $90 million, Janowitz considers an im¬proved G.I. Bill essential to improving the mili¬tary.“It’s essentially an intolerable situation,” hesays. “If people who served had priority in obtain¬ing educational benefits, we’d be much betteroff...Congress has created a system of educationalbenefits by offering more to those who do not servetheir country than those who do...Right now, we’resubsidizing people to stay out of the Army.”Janowitz’s plan, drawn up with NorthwesternUniversity professor Charles Moskos, is quite spe¬cific, though still in the experimental stage. Underits terms, volunteers could serve either a two-orthree-year military stint and get full benefits or ayear of civilian service and receive fewer benefits.Those serving the longer period would receive$3,000 per year if they attended a private school and$1,000 for attending a public institution. They wouldalso receive a $250 monthly stipend while enrolledfor a maximum of 36 months.Estimating that about 10 percent or 350,000 eight-een-year-olds would respond to such a bill, Janowitzcalculates that the whole program would cost about$2 billion per year. With the savings in youth pro¬grams and human services, the price of the pro¬gram, Janowitz says, is not too high.Janowitz acknowledges that “to get people tofight in a contemporary democratic society is verydifficult...Many people find service even in thepeace time armed forces obnoxious.” Even so,given the virulence of the mass media’s attack onthe Army, Janowitz finds it “amazing we have suchan efficient Army...It’s better than we deserve.”commander who came in nearly got relieved of duty.The GLQ-3 is the ultimate example of reckless use ofmanpower and reckless regard tor life. It’s a relic ofWorld War II and it’s still used. It’s a high-poweredjamming machine. You’re expected to learn everythingabout it in two weeks and then you never see it again.The power is so high, and the tuning so slow, that itgives away your position. We had a joke that you shouldlearn to operate it from a remote location — then if youhad to use it, you run out a hundred yards, watch it bebombed, then go home.You learn about the structures that are supposed totake care of grievances. In fact, it’s a closed system.You point out inadequacies, they deny the inadequaciesexist. That’s what military justice is all about. Writingto your Congressman is a great tool, but it doesn’t work. . . Writing to a Congressman will get you on a blacklistalmost.One thing the Army stresses is the chain of command.Do it through your commanding officer. But if he’s theone who’s harassing you . . . The inspector general issupposed to be totally unbiased but he’s not going to doanything if he goes out golfing with the captain orgeneral. Some military men have a long record —fighting, drinking. So if they ever tried to appeal — theyalready have a record that makes them look bad. And ifyou lose your appeal — and it’s judged strictly — thepunishment is greater than if you had never appealed inthe first place.Women in the Army. One girl I met signed up to be alab technician to get a background in biology. Theyimmediately sent her to a clinic in which her sole dutywas taking signs for gonorrhea determination. Sixmonths later she was an alcoholic and horriblydepressed. There wasn’t a damn thing she could doabout it. That’s true of all M.O.S’s (MilitaryOccupational Specialty) and they don’t spare women.We’re all equal but probably not in the respects youwould hope. Most women I knew (not in the Biblicalsense) got pregnant to get out.I met a lot of great people in A S A. (Army SecurityAgency). They were a diverse mixture of brains, genius,and deviousness in one organization. No one washard-core military. Most were scholars, or students.You might say they did common, ordinary militaryexperiences in an artistic way. One guy put up on thebillboard: “Missing: One inflatable sheep withvibrator.” For some reason, we got away with it. If aG.U.R. would have done it, they would have hung him.The anti-draft protests strike you funny. Not thatanyone is correct in saying we should go to Afghansitan.But these people don’t have any concern for their country or the military. If these people say they want afree America they should think about whether they’llever have to defend their country. They’re not thinkingabout that at all. I think they should want to know aboutwhat condition the military is in. That there’s apotential disaster. Sure you can get yourself out, butwhat about your country?Army BatteryCommanderFor the last three years, Phillip Weiscup, who lives inSouth Shore, has been the battery commander of asmall unit that trains near O'Hare Field. For two weeksevery summer, the group goes to summer camp formore intensive training. Weiscup takes pride that lastsummer his unit was the best group in the battalion.Recently the Army’s own study showed they mayhave a problem in training personnel.You can’t take a bunch of high school drop outs andget them to operate the most sophisticated weaponry inthe world. In reality, the Army prepares a few top unitsand everyone else is making noise in the woods.Do officers cover up problems to get a good E.O.C.report from their superior officer?You can’t hide too much. It depends on how well youdo what he asked you to do. An immediate supervisor'sjob is to keep an eye on what you did. Trying to coversomething up is not very easy.What’s your view of women in the Army?Women aren’t taken seriously because they don’t havecombat roles ... I don’t think women should be in theArmy.What's your overall evaluation of the Army? The Army has bent over backwards to make it work.The discipline has become relaxed and officers are nolonger put on a pedestal. The Army has startedaccommodating people because they need to keep acertain number of people. People are starting to getaway with things and the Army is being destroyed in theprocess. This is manifested in the high AWOL rate, theincreased use of drugs, people calling in sick. It leads topeople not doing what their superiors say.When the Army shot Private Slovak after World WarII, they had become a little lax toward deserters. Theyhad to make an example toward him.If I tell someone to do something, they won’t do it if Idon’t have a particular interest. The likelihood of themdoing what I say is in direct proportion to how muchfollow-up I do. That’s true not justgeneral.Coast GuardFirst Class PettyJames Fowler, a freshman at the University, spentfive years in the Coast Guard. As a first class pettyofficer, he could send signals 700 miles to within aquarter mile accuracy.What is basic training like?With that kind of stress, you have to become goodfriends with everybody. We had a good time. You shutyour mind off to everything extraneous. Generally, youdidn’t have enough sleep If you felt yourself fallingasleep in class, you stood up at your desk.How is morale?Pretty high. You have a definite job to do. Theyemphasize that we have a definite peacetime mission ofsearch and rescue.Did you do any rescuing?I rescued a dog once The next day he got himselfback in the exact same situation.Was it tough re-adjusting to the outside world9It’s a radical change. In the Coast Guard, I knew all25 people in my unit, most of their life history, their twoor three favorite stories. We lived, worked, ate. andslept together. Here you can go two or three dayswithout seeing the people who live next to you.The social order is much more defined. You learn how¬to work under and above people. Here, you walk ontocampus and you're a 23-year old freshman. Your statusis uncertain. How do you stand compared to a 20-yearold junior? in the Army, but inOfficer,ezwAir Force Electrician, mMichael Myrrh is a fourth-year student who spent fouryears in the Air Force.I remember thinking when we were marching aroundin Basic Training that the Air Force prided itself ongetting the cream of the crop. The marching wasn'treally necessary. They were sticklers for stupidtraditions — having to wear a hat, saluting people youdidn’t really know. My biggest complaint was doingthose petty things.Being stationed at Mount Home, Iowa presentedparticular problems for me. I'm black and there wasnothing for black people to do there unless you were intohunting or fishing or ski resorts. But I took up boxing,joined clubs, went to a lot of movies and classes.A lot of times young blacks who were particularlysensitive may have seen racism when maybe it wasn'treally intended. It wasn’t really tolerated. There wasaffirmative action on the base.A lot of people who may have been prejudiced whenthey went into the military lost that prejudice as theymet different people. A lot of my friends who I met inthe military are southerners. But I think back then iswhen reverse discrimination had it’s beginning — anofficer who could be called on the carpet by a guy belowhim would resent it.It was a microcosm of the real world.The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, February 19, 1980 — 7. ~ ... , ■ ■ ■■ ^ ■pwp6*6” center too muchBarnes, Ripon rip MaroonsBy Andy RothmanThe University of Chicago men’s basket¬ball team tacked two more losses on to itsrecord last week at the field house, allowingthe Ripon Redmen. ranked seventh in Div,III to clinch the 1980 Eastern Division titlein the Midwest Conference. 94-81 on Satur¬day and going down to Lake Forest, 77-81with a poor showing in the second half.Saturday’s game was a showcase for thetalents of Ripon’s 6'-6“ senior center. TimBarnes. Barnes scored 18 points in the firsthalf and wound up with 33 while dominatingthe boards and effectively shutting off manyMaroon drives through the lane.Ripon mow 16-4 overall. 9-1 in the confer¬ence) started off slowly on the way to their13th consecutive win, a school record. CoachDoc Weiske's club was thoroughly out¬played in the first 4;30 as the Maroons tookleads of 9-2 and 11-4. Chicago started theirtwo 6'-4“ forwards. Rich Martin, and MitchPrice who. along with Pete Leinroth wereable to keep Chicago fairly even in rebound¬ing at both ends.The Redmen woke up in the middle of thehalf, running off eight straight points and 12of 16 to move ahead. After price picked uphis third foul with 11:00 to go In the half andMartin did the same less than four minuteslater. Maroon Coach John Angelus had themboth sitting on the bench. Barnes, the fourthleading scorer in the conference with anaverage of 18.3, took over with both of Chi¬cago’s “big” men out. scoring 14 of 16 Riponpoints over one stretch of 5:51 near the endof the half as his team built leads as big as 13points. Chicago came back with four pointsin the last five seconds of the half on two freethrows by Vlad Gastevich. who scored onlysix points in the first half and wound up with16 in his second straight subpar perfor¬mance. and a layup by freshman WadeLewis at the buzzer after Ripon’s inbounds pass hit the bottom of a backboard to givethe ball back to Chicago. The half endedwith Ripon on top 47-38.Chicago played its best ball of the dayearly in the second half, scoring sevenstraight to come back within four 49-45. and17:22 remaining in the game. Ripon cameright back, scoring six of eight, includingfour by Barnes, to go back up by eight.The Maroons got back to w ithin 63-62 with10:47 to go on a 13-6 spurt, led by five of Mar¬tin’s 11 points on the day. One more Chicagobasket would have seen the Maroons spreadout their offense, but instead. Ripon surgedback w ith a 13-4 run and Chicago never gotcloser than six points the rest of the way.With 5:32 left. Eric Kuby committed hisfourth foul and Chicago had five playerswith four. Martin then fouled out with 5:32 togo. When Leinroth, who had 17 points,picked up his fourth with 4:14 left all fiveMaroons on the floor had four; Ken Jacobs.Price. Kuby and Gastevich were the others.Gastevich and Kuby (10 points) wound upfouling out.The Maroons looked like they might giveRipon some trouble at the game’s end whenJacobs converted on a three-point-play, giv¬ing him 22, as Barnes fouled out, bringingthe Maroons back to an 88-81 deficit with1:35 to play. Chicago did not score the rest ofthe way, however, as Ripon ended Beloit’shopes for a third straight conference title byclinching the division. Chicago did manageto hold the conference's leading scorer,Ripon guard Terry Cramer (26.5) to a 16point effort.Thursday’s game saw the Maroons look¬ing unprepared to play as they faced LakeForest. Chicago managed to stay withinseven in the first half, trailing 39-32 at theintermission. In the second half. LakeForest was able to spread out their offenseand slow the game down, similar to the wayChicago did in its game last Saturday Pete Leinroth (44) was effective inside for the Maroons against Ripon.against Lawrence, on several occasions.Foul trouble also hurt the Maroons as Gas¬tevich picked up his third in the middle ofthe first half and wound up fouling out mid¬way through the second. Martin andLeinroth also fouled out with sizeable por¬tions of time remaining as Lake Forestpulled away from a disorganized Chicagoclub late in the game.Gastevich wound up leading the Maroonswith 17. Lake Forest seniors Dave Blanku-ship, second in the conference in scoring(22.3) and 20 and Tony Ferguson, sixth inVarsity, track: the conference at 17,5, added 19.After Saturday’s game. Angelus said, “ifwe could get a performance like we didtoday for the last two games I would call it agood season.’’Chicago enters the final week of the sea¬son with a 1-9 conference record. 5-11overall. Beloit, now ranked 13th in NCAA Di¬vision III nationally, after an 84-74 loss toRipon two weeks ago, brings its 7-2, 15-3mark to the field house this evening for a7:30 p.m. start. The game can be heard onWHPK. 88.3 FM, starting at 7:30 p.m.Women waste Central Men split twoBy Sarah BurkeThe University of Chicago women's trackteam, in their first home meet of the indoorseason, crushed North Central College, 83-6.this past Saturday. Unfortunately for thesquad, a lot of points came simply from thelack of competition as only five members ofthe N.C. team showed up Undaunted, theMaroons ran hard and two school records aswell as numerous personal records werebested,Vicki Powers, in the 200 meter dash,lowered her own school record of 28.8 sec¬onds by blazing to a 28.1. Hope Sirull cameright behind, coming across the line in 29.1seconds, a personal best. Chicago complet¬ed the sweep when Carol Petersen, in a timeof 29.3, placed third. North Central’s bestfinisher was Renetta Fisher who tied forsixth with Nancy Flores of the Maroons.In the field events. Becky Redman contin¬ued her record breaking performances byjumping 167*4’* in the long jump. Her effortwas good enough to break the indoor recordby nine inches, a mark she herself set lastweek at Illinois Benedictine. Nancy Flores,showing continual improvement, length¬ened her best mark with a jump of 14'6”.Barb Wery finished out the scoring gamer¬ing third place. N.C.’s Mary Markwell fin¬ished a distant fifth her best jump being12*11”,In the one race in which North Centralwas really competitive, Cheryl Lisy of N.C.blazed to a 10:45.7 in the 3000 meter run, eas¬ily out-distancing the field. Karen Luhn ofthe University of Chicago Track Club fin¬ished second in exhibition at 11:32.9 andWendy Shanahan came in third for theMaroons with a 12:18.0 clocking. Roundingout the scoring for Chicago was Sue Corne¬lius.An exciting race for the Chicago runnerswas the 400 meter dash. The field of fourrunners went through the first 200 metershead to head before Chicago’s hard trainingpaid off as Kathy Restifo pulled away and broke the tape in a near record time of 64.7.Alison O’Neill, running her best time of theyear, just edged out Carol Petersen, with a66.3 clocking. Petersen, w ho came across in66.8, was able to get by N.CYs Fisher in thelast 20 meters of the race.Both distance events of the day turned outto be time trials for Chicago as no NorthCentral girls were entered. In the 1500 meterrun. Casey Kerrigan, returning after an ill¬ness, outran the field finishing uneontestedin a time of 5:39,6. Debbie Duerksen cap¬tured second place with Sarah Burke com¬pleting the Chicago scoring. The 800 meterevent provided a tight race for 400 meterswhen Sara Vandenburg pulled away finish¬ing in a time of 3:01.1. Sarah Burke barelyheld off a strong finish by Barb Wery finish¬ing in 3:13.3.In the other events, Liz Baker just edgedout Hope Sirull at the tape to capture the 60meter dash in 8.5 seconds. Vicki Powers,running alone, ran a 10.35 60 meter hurdlerace to complete the running events. In theshot put. Nancy Flores took first with athrow of 7.52 meters. Becky Redmancleared 5’1*4” to take top honors in the highW.O.L.F.upset at dimprospects forprompt action^. . . By Allan SowizsalThe University of Chicago men’s varsitytrack team raised its indoor season recordto 3-1 last Friday night with a victory overWheaton and a loss to Wabash at the fieldhouse. Again the Maroons were especiallystrong in the running events but theyshowed some signs of weakness in the fieldevents, where the best they could do againstWabash was tw'o third place finishes.The Maroons won seven races against Wa¬bash while they won six of nine races,against Wheaton. Wabash's dominance ofthe field events along with their steady per¬formance in the running events was reflect¬ed in the score which saw the Maroons de¬feated. 79-51. The dual meet againstWheaton was much closer, although Chica¬go eventually prevailed 66-59, The outcomeof the meet was still undetermined until thefinal relay.Mike Axinn ran strongly in his first mile ofthe year easily winning in a time of 4:14.9with bis teammate Rich Heinle finishingthird against Wabash. The two mile runwent to Art Knight in 9:24.8 followed by an¬other Maroon, Dave Taylor, in third place.Tom Matiski was the victor in the 1000meters with a time of 2:19.8 ahead of DanUniversity of Chicago Director of Athlet¬ics, Jeff Metcalf, announced that his depart¬ment would consider a proposal to expandthe present women’s locker room in BartlettGymnasium at his second meeting with acommittee representing the Women Organ¬ized for Locker Room Facilities (W.O.L.F.)last Thursday.The proposal involves converting thepresent women’s locker room into a showerroom and annexing two aisles of the men’s Welsh, who finished second,Dan Henderson of Wheaton, who did notcompete in the mile, won the 800 in a time of1:56.0, followed by two Maroons, Paul Hartand Jim Bierv. Marshall Schmitt and EdDerse were first and second over the Whea¬ton runners in the 600. Dave Green’s time of51.6 was first, overall in the 400, while an¬other Maroon. Bob Kohout. was third in therace.Against Wheaton, Tom Goodrich finishedsecond in the 3QQ yard dash and he was fol¬lowed by his teammate Rich Gordon in thirdplace. Gordon also finished second in thefifty meter dash. In the relay, the Maroonentry of Ed Derse, Marshall Schmitt, DaveGreen and Jim Read finished ahead of bothWheaton and Wabash with a time of 3:37.4.In the field events Doug Chang was secondin both the long jump and the triple jump.Larry Whitlow placed second in the highjump and Greg Servatius finished third inthe shot put.On Thursday the team will have a dualmeet with the University of Chicago TrackClub in the fieldhouse. The Midwest Confer¬ence Indoor Championships are coming upon Saturday, March 1, at 11:00 a.m. in thefield house.lockers for women’s use. This would provide204 lockers and 6 showers for the women,compared to the 56 lockers and 2 showerswhich they are currently allotted.The W.O.L.F. organization was formedlast January to protest the inadequatelocker room facilities for women currentlyexisting at Bartlett. The women’s lockerroom is now allocated 3 percent of the totalnumber of lockers in Bartlett, 5 percent olthe showers, and 5 percent of the lockerroom floor space. These facilities, claimscontinued on page nine Ajump with Ginger McDonald placing sec¬ond, .. ,continued on page nineAthletic Dept, to ponder a Bartlett planBy Sherrie Negrea8 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, February 19, 1980Bartlett plan to be considered; no action this yearcontinuedW.O.L.F., are insufficient to accommodatethe number of women using the gym.Three other proposals were presented bythe athletic department to the W.O.L.F.committee at the first meeting on February7. Metcalf favors the latest proposal be¬cause it eliminates the need for renovatingthe plumbing system for the installation ofshowers which the other proposals require.Also, it would allow the men to retain directaccess to the pool from their locker roomwithout going up through the lobby area.Presently, the women must walk throughthe main lobby to get to the pool.This seems to be the one most feasible andinexpensive solution,” Metcalf said. ‘‘Turn¬ing the present women's locker room into ashower room is not a problem becauseyou’ve got the plumbing already there.”The only construction required by Met¬calf’s proposal is building a wall to separatethe lockers that would be reallocated to thewomen from the rest of the men’s lockerroom. The men’s and women’s lockerrooms, which are located next to each otherWednesday, February 13Undergraduate ResidenceVincent 24Filbey 13Thompson 17Compton 16WomenMystery Players over Upper Wallace by forfeitThursday, February 14Undergraduate IndependentU F. Outcasts 33Semi-Tufts 27Dred Scott’s Revenge 49The Gang of 5 22 in the basement, are divided by a wall be-hiiinnd the women’s showers. The womencurrently have access to he two aisles oflockers which would be allocated to themthrough a door in their locker room.The athletic department met with theBoard of Athletics and Recreational Sports,a committee which authorizes athletic con¬struction, to discuss the locker room situa¬tion on February 1. Metcalf said that ‘‘theboard does agree that there is a problem.The board did not take the role of opposition.‘‘There is no adverse situation about agree¬ing that two showers are enough for thewomen,” he said.Nevertheless, the board has deferred au¬thorizing any construction until the full ef¬fects of the opening of the field house are as¬sessed. Another consideration is how tofinance the project, the cost of which is es¬timated at $30,000. In the past, major fund¬ing for athletic construction and renovationhas come from private donations.Although Metcalf says that the opening ofthe field house will solve the locker roomproblems by attracting many women ath-- IM basketball-The Champs 49Joint Effort 39Undergraduate ResidenceCompton 28Filbey 26Shorey 23Lower Rickert 22Dudley B over Hale by forfeitFriday, February 15Undergraduate ResidenceBishop 42Upper Flint 12Phi Gam 38Salisbury 12 letes from Bartlett, several W.O.L.F.members disagree. They claim that womenwill continue to use Bartlett instead of thefield house because it is the only buildingequipped for gymnastics and judo. Anotherdrawback of the field house is that the trackfacilities close in the late afternoon for var¬sity practice, W.O.L.F. members also saythat Bartlett will continue to be popularafter the field house opens because of theunique combination of facilities it offers.Metcalf said that if the board authorizesany of the proposals, construction would notbegin until the summer. He said the lack offunding and the problem with displacingpeople who have lockers in Bartlett wouldpostpone construction until then.Despite the action taken by the athleticdepartment, the members of W.O.L.F. whoattended the meeting with Metcalf are dis¬satisfied with the proposal presently beingconsidered. Catherine Smith, one of theearly organizers of the group, said the pro¬posal does not give women enough lockers,showers, sinks or toilet space. She said thatthe W.O.L.F. organization has decided to re-Chamberlin over Lower Flint by forfeitSaturday, February 16Undergraduate ResidenceMichelson 35Thompson toHenderson 66Filbey 22Bradbury over Compton by forfeitUndergraduate IndependentThe Champs 25U. F. Outcasts 18Semi-Tufts over The Gang of 5 by forfeitJoint Effort over Charlie’s Cherves by forfeit quest 3-6 more showers and 100 morelockers than Metcalf allocated in his propos¬al.‘‘The College is recruiting more womenand women are becoming more athletic,”Smith said. ‘‘Bartlett should provide facili¬ties (though the actual number of female ap¬plicants to the College dropped this yearfrom last) proportionate to the number ofwomen who use the gym.’’ According to asurvey by W.O.L.F. members on February6, women comprise 25 percent of the peopleusing the locker rooms at Bartlett.Nancy Alexander, another W.O.L.F.member who attended the meeting, wasalso disappointed with the athletic depart¬ment’s response. ‘ They realize that there isa problem and they showed their willingnessto do something bout it”, she said, ‘‘butthey’re restrained by money and politicalproblems. I don’t think we’re going to getthe lockers or the showers by the end of thisyear and I’m discouraged by that.” Sheadded that W.O.L.F. will continue to fightuntil the women’s locker room facilities areimproved.Women’s trackcontinuedOverall, it was a strong showing for Chi¬cago, although a bit disappointing due to thelack of quality competition. The competitionshould improve next Saturday as theMaroons will host a 6:00 p.m. meet againstEureka. Loyola, Illinois Benedictine andNorth Central. This will be an especially im¬portant meet for the sprinters as Eureka’steam has the 5 event state championsprinter, Sandy Socha. If Saturday’s resultsare any sort of indication, the Maroos areready to give her a run for the money.Notice!Please note: Anyone who touches an IM of¬ficial will be suspended from all intramu¬ral competition for one calendar year. Twograduate students have already beenbanned for approaching officials in basket¬ball games this winter.The Intel NotebookCareers and Technology at IntelThe Microelectronics Revolution—and how you can be part of it.See us on campus at theBusiness School February 22.Intel is the acknowledged leader in fourmajor product areas: semiconductormemories, microprocessors, micro¬computer sys'ams, and memory systems.And we re extending our leadershipinto data-base management.We have career opportunities availableat any of our four great locations—Cali¬fornia, Oregon, Arizona, or Texas—in:□ Technical Marketing□ Finance□ Production Planning —ManagementIf you want to be part of the emergingmicroelectronics revolution, and areabout to receive an MBA (and for positionsin technical marketing have a technicalundergraduate degree): we d like to talkwith you. If you haven t already signed upto see us on campus feel free to leaveyour resume with one of our representa¬tives during our visit Or write to any ofour locations: CaliforniaIntel College Relations3065 Bowers AvenueSanta Clara, CA 950£LLOregonIntel College Relations3585 S.W. 198th AvenueAloha, OR 97005ArizonaIntel College Relations6401 W. Williams Field RoadChandler. AZ 85224TexasIntel MRI/College Relations12675 Research BoulevardAustin.TX 78759An Equal Opportunity Employer M F HinU COMMITTEE OF PUBLIC POLICY STUDIESLecture SeriesAlderman Edward Burkecandidate for State’s Attorney’s officewill speak on"The Role of the State'sAttorney in Cook County”Tuesday, February 19, 19804:30 p.m.Wieboldt Hall , Boom 303WORKING IN THE FOR-PROFIT SECTORA program on non-academic career opportunitiesfor graduate students.Panelists: three recent graduates now working inbusiness and industry, and two experienced busi¬nessmen/employers from the Leo Burnett Co.and the Printing Industry of Illinois Association.THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21st4:00 P.M.NORTH LOUNGE,REYNOLDS CLUB jThe Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, February 19, 1980 — 9CalendarN.BBrigadoon: (Vincente Minnelli, 1954):Love conquers all in this fairy-tale musical— its whimsical plot excuses most of itshoakiness. Two American hunters (GeneKelly and Van Johnson) stumble upon amagical Scottish village that only awakensone day every century. Cynical Jeff (John¬son) grunts and groans and wants to rushback to New York. But romantic Tommy(Kelly) sings and dances and is mes¬merized by the simple lifestyle and lovelyFeona (Cyd Charisse.) All this sung to thecharming tunes of Lerner and Lowe. Tues¬day at 7:15 in Quantrell. Doc; $1. —R.L.Lust for Life: (Vincente Minnelli, 1956) Ifthe Art Institute's collection of Van Goghsisn't good enough for you, maybe Minnel¬li's technicolor, cinemascope reproduc¬tions will suffice. It's a great, stylish, tor¬rid movie. Kirk Douglas plays Van Gogh;Anthony Quinn won an oscar for his supporting role as Paul Gauguin. Tonight,9:15. Quantrell; Doc; $1.The Magnificent Ambersons (OrsonWelles, 1942): The adjective applies to thefilm itself as well. This saga about the de¬cline and the fall of a wealthy and proudfamily, told through the fate of its arrogantson, moves from the innocent VictoriamEra to the begnning of the Machine Agewith extreme tenderness. Welles's powerof observation has never been keener:each scene conveys an overwhelminglynostalgic feeling. The film, Welles's sec¬ond, doesn't quite measure up to the bra¬vura virtuosity of Citizen Kane; but insubtlety and intelligence, this is probablythe better of the two. The uniformly excel¬ lent cast which includes Joseph Cotton,Agnes Morehead and Anne Baxter deliversan assemblage of sensitively wrought per¬formances seldom watched by those ofother films. Welles also continues his ex¬periments with deep-focus: the vertigousshots inside the hollow Amberson mansionheighten the air of decadence. The film hassome minor drawbacks, however: poorlyrecorded sound, choppy editing (dis¬claimed by Welles), and an ambiguousending tacked on by RKO. The realclincher comes at the end when Welles, indoling out credits, gives most of them tohimself. Quite obviously, all is Welles thatends Welles. A necessary film. Tomorrowat 8 in Quantrell. $1. Doc.The Garden of Delights (Carlos Saura,1970) Though the story centers on a Span¬ish family's efforts to get their amnesic fa¬ther to devulge the location of his hiddenmillions, the film concerns itself with thenature of the subconscious mind and thelanguage in which in records and commu¬nicates human experience. To jar AntonioCano's (Jose Vazquez) memory, thegreedy lot go to unbelievable lengths torestage episodes of his life, with Antonio'srole ranging from an observor to a partici¬pant in the actual and symbolic recre¬ations. Saura's timing has the entire filmflowing like a stream of consciousness. AsAntonio pathetically tries to find the wayout of his nightmarish living dream, onewonders what he is really thinking. Superbschizophrenia. Thursday at 8 in Quantrell.Doc; $1.50 -MMr.Amid chants of "No Fuckin' Tie," Jesse Lerner edged four other contestants inthe "P.J. Soles Be Alike Contest" Friday in Quantrell. Asked, "What do youwant to be when you grow up," Jesse answered, "I don't know." He later gaveenergetic performances of Rock 'n' Roll High School's title track and "Lobo-tomy" with the Trouble Boys at Psi U. TUESDAYPerspectives: Topic-‘‘How to Recognize Good Writ¬ing When We See It” guests Gregory Colomb FrankKinahan, and Joseph Williams, 6:09 am, channel7.Women’s Exercise Class: Meets 10:00 am, IdaNoyes.Rockefeller Chapel: Edward Mondello, Universityorganist, will give a lecture-recital-demonstration12:15 pm.UC Gymnastics Club: Instruction available 5:30-8:00pm, Bartlett, free.Hillel: Hillel sponsored Felafel Supper, 6:00 pm, IdaNoyes 3rd floor.Hillel: Film-“Kazablan” 7:00 pm, Ida Noyes 3rdfloor.DOC Films: “Brigadoon” 7:15 pm, “Lust for Life”9:15 pm, Cobb,pm, Cobb.Physical Education: Free swimming instruction foradults, 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes.Organization of Black Students: Speaker-Prof.James Turner speaks on “Life of Malcolm X” 7:30pm, Ida Noyes.Comm, on the Conceptual Foundations of Science:Lecture-’‘Interpreting Euclid” speaker Ian Mueller,8:00 pm, Eckhart 209.Hillel: Israeli Folkdancing 8:30 pm, Ida Noyes 3rdfloor.WEDNESDAYPerspectives: Topic-”Why Good Writing is Impor¬tant” guests Gregory Colomb, Frank Kinahan, andJoseph Williams, 6:09 am, channel 7.Rockefeller Chapel: Service of Holy Communion,8:00 am, followed by breakfast in the lowerlevel.Italian Table: Meets 12 noon to speak Italian, BlueGargoyle.Rockefeller Chapel: University Carillonneur RobertLodine give a recital, 12:15 pm.Commuter Co-op: Get-together in the Commuterlounge, 12:30 pm, G.B.l.Crossroads: English classes for foreign women, 2:00pm.Cog Com Colloquium Series: “Some Factors WhichInfluence Monaural Space Perception” speakerRobert Butler, 4:00 pm, B-102.UC Gymnastics Club: Instruction available 5:30-8:00 pm, Bartlett, free.Intercollegiate Relations Committee: Meeting,7:00 pm, Student Gov’t office. All Welcome. Moreinfo call Jenny 684-0331 or Greg 363-3114.Tai Chi Ch’uan: Meets 7:30 pm, Blue Gargoyle.Women’s Rap Group: Meeting 7:30 pm, Blue Gar¬goyle in Women's Center.Badminton Club: Meets 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes gymna¬sium.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.DOC Films: “The Magnificent Ambersons” 8:00 pm,Cobb.THURSDAYPerspectives: Topic-“The Plight of the Vietnamesein Indochina” guests Ngoan Le, Duong Van Tran,Joseph Tobin, and Steven Voss, 6:09 am, channel7.Women's Exercise Class: Meets 10:00 am, IdaNoyes.Noontime Concert: Beethoven and Haydn pianotrios at 12:15 pm, Reynolds Club North Lounge.Committee on Development Biology: “Initiation,Branching, and Growth of Empryonic Neurones”speaker Dr. Norman Wessells, 3:30-4:30 pm, Cum¬mings room 101.UC Gymnastics Club: Instruction available 4:00-8:00pm, Bartlett, free.Rockefeller Chapel: Evening prayer, 5:00 pm.Kundalini Yoga Society: Class meets 5:00-6:00 pm,Ida Noyes East Lounge.Christian Science Organization: Meets 5:00-6:00pm, Gates-Blake 117.UC Judo Club: Meets 6:00-8:00 pm, Bartlett gy. Be¬ginners welcome.Ski Club: meets 7:00 pm, Ida Noyes.NOMOR: Committee meeting 7:00 pm, Ida Noyesfirst floor lounge.Table Tennis Club: Practices 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes 3rdfloor.Organization of Black Students: General meeting,7:30 pm, Ida Noyes OBS office.DOC Films: “The Garden of Delights” 8:00 pm,Cobb.Collegiate Lectures in the Liberal Arts: “Descartesand Modern Philosophical Method” speaker Rich¬ard Kennington, 8:00 pm, Harper 130.Open 24 hoursAttendant ParkingHeated GarageAnnualMonthly Parking>C700sj / mo.AnnualDaily parking‘'3600moHand Car Wash'500Do-it-yourself375 hr.Soon To ComeFAST OIL CHANGUSED CAR RENTASTANLEY H. KAPLANFor Over 41 Years The Standard ofExceMence In Jest Preparation.ME * 6RE PSYCH * 6RE BIO • DATPCAT • 0CAT • VAT • MAT • SAT • SAT ACHVS •NATIONAL MEDICAL BOARDS»VQE • ECFMGFLEX * NATL DENTAL BOARDS'TOEFLpoootry boards • nursing boardsFlaxIMs Programs and HoursijJ . Visit AsyCsaUrAalSsi far• '1 VssrstH Why Wi Mali Tie Drftanact iTUT RRfRARATIONa*fciausts aiNd itasCtftitM •* US Cil«t Pvtfto l*oTofoole CmoSo I LofOSO Saitn'M IUS Madlaon An• N.Y taa» (nr M ft.)CHICAGO CENTER6216 N CLARKCHICAGO. ILLINOIS 60660(312) 764-6151S.W. SUBURBANIBS LAGRANGE ROADSUITE 201LAGRANGE. ILLINOIS 60625(312) 3626640 SPRING, SUMMERFALL INTENSIVESCOURSES STARTINGTHIS MONTH:DAT. , . LSATNEST MONTH:MEAT SAT. .CRKCourtas Constantly Updated .Licanslng Exams In Cantar Self-Studym kivonsing LAimi in vtmtr OOlT-olUOy8 9m IRITM—» Afcom Omm Cm+m% * Mo** Th** so m«k» us Onu a ao——^OTMDC NT.jnATt CALL TOLL FREE goO-m-ITO10 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, February 19, 1980AD 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, 60637. All ads must be paid inadvance. Rates: 60' per line (30spaces) for U of C people, 75' per lineotherwise. $1 for special headline.Deadlines: For Tuesday paper, 12noon Friday; for Friday, 12 noonWednesday.Display advertising rates areavailable upon request. 753-3263.SPACERoom available immediately in large4 bdrm apartment, 52nd and Green¬wood. $100/mo. 955-0481.Room available in 2 bedrm apt.$100/month. After 6. Karen. 268-1053.Seeking woman roommate to shareapartment Expenses about $80 mon-thly. Call 955-7452.Sublet big deluxe hi-rise sunny studioat 5020 S. Lake Shore Drive, w-wcarpet, modern kitchen, 24 hr. door¬man very safe. Campus bus, garageavail. Only $314/mo. but positivelynegotiable. 363-2567.Room wanted Spring Qtr. adv. grad,student Ive message Gd 752-2752.UC Grad, student looking for springand summer housesitting or sublet.Call Clara. 432-7274.Prof on Sabbat will sublet 8 rm turnapt responsible tenants April 1 to 31 5blocks east of campus $650 mo.955-2659.FREE now till March 1 large rm in 4B.R apt. After March 1 $108/month in-cl heat 54th and Woodlawn. Womenpreferred. Call 684-3363 anytime, FOR SALEChagall lith,. unsigned, 4 colors, BibleSeries $450.955-6589,Apt. sale-furniture-cheap. Call667-4796 evenings.Private party has the following forsale. Carpeting-all carpeting is 100%wool, high-pile, like new padding incl.70 yds gold, 12 yds green, 12 yds biackand white high shag. 3 oval goldframed mirrors, 48” high, 21" wide. 2red velvet barrel chairs. One marblepedestal, matching drapes and king-sized spread. Call 677-7207. If you'relooking for something good, this isworthwhile.PEOPLE FOR SALEExcellent, accurate typist w/legal ex¬perience will type papers and dissertations or IBM. Reasonable rated.684-7414.ARTWORK- posters, illustration,calligraphy, invitations etc. NoelYovovich 5441 S. Kenwood 493-2399.Typing done on IBM by college grad;pica type. Term papers, theses, lawbriefs, letters, resumes, manuscripts.New Town Lakeview area. Fast, ac¬curate, reliable, reasonable. 248-1478.TYPIST-Dissertation quality, helpwith grammar, language, as needed.Fee depending on manuscript condi¬tion and your requirements. IBMSelectric. Judith 955-4417.Needed experienced person to bartendfor parties, special occasions, clubparties, etc? For excellent service,contact B. Davies after 6 p.m. 978-6938.TYPING Term papers, thesis, etc.Convenient to U or C campus. Ar¬rangements for pick up and deliveryon campus. Reasonable rates. Pleasecall 684-6882. Joan Rothchild Hardin, PhD.Registered Psychologist in HydePark. 493-8766 days and eves, for appt.CONVERSATIONAL RUSSIAN offered by native Russian family. Appt.arranged to your convenience. $5 perhour. Call Svetlana at 973-7384GILBERT ANDSULLIVANRUDDYGORE at Kenwood AcademyAuditorium, 5015 S. Blackstone, Fri¬day, Feb. 29, Saturdav. March T,Saturday March 8 at 8 pm, $4.50 and$6; Sunday March 2 at 2 pm, $3.Tickets at Mandel Hall Box Office.FOUNDAssorted hats, scarves, gloves, boots,etc. from Freshman Winter Camp atGreen Lake Wl, 1/25-1/27. Please in-quire in Harper 241, 3-3250.SECRETARYUniversity faculty office seekscapable typist. We will train on wordprocessor. Responsibilities formanuscripts, correspondence,maintenance of files, typing of grantapplications, capability to handletelephone calls, personal contact withfaculty, staff and students. Pleasantenvironment with excellent universitybenefits. High school graduate witnsome college preferred. If interested,call Sharon at 947-1867.BARTENDERSExperienced Bartenders AvailableFor Parties Up To 300. Contact JohnBetween 8.00 and 11:00 am at 288-8722or Sam or Doug between 5:30 and 7.00pm at 667-8748 Lexington Hall (5835 S. University).Tippett's Sonata for 4 horns, Ive's Con¬cord Sonta, and Stravinsky's Concertofor Piano and Winds with LouiseMangos as soloist. Admission is free.For more information call the Dept, ofMusic, 753-2613.FOTAFOTA 80 still wants more programsand producers, especially in dance.Call Moko at 241-5338 or stop by out IdaNoyes Office.AUDITIONSPeople wanted to audition for SG Cof¬feehouse. Contact Rm 3102, 753 2249leave name, no. and message.WRITERSWANTEDPublished and unpublished writerswanted to participate in the Interna¬tional Black Writers 10th AnniversaryConference, Holiday Inn DowntownChicago, June 20 22, 1980. International Black Writers Conference seeksto discover new talent. Find out moreabout the conference by calling312-624-3184 or by attending the Satur¬day Noon Writers Orientation Sessionsat Wabash YMCA, 3763 South WabashAvenue, Chicago, 11.60653.MISAENESPANOLMiercoles de Cenizas el Primo Dia deCuaresma 7:00 p.m Feb. 20, 1980. In¬ternational House 1414 E. 59thMONEY ANDFAMEAre yours if you win the 1980 FOTACalendar Design Contest. Prize is $50plus your name on the calendar.Deadline is Mar. 14. Details at FOTAoffice INH 218 or Call Marlene,493-7681.For rent now-unfurn 1 br apt nearcoop. $l65/mnth 4- elec, secty dep.Call 955-0479, 9-5.Charming old house in private park onthe'lake in Hyde Park. 3 bedrooms,library, 2 baths, island kitchen, 2500sq. feet. Fully renovated, new floors,new walls, new plumbing, new kit¬chen. $1150/mo. Includes heat, janitor.Phone evenings 667-6215.PEOPLE WANTEDThe Department of BehavioralSciences needs people who want toparticipate as paid subjects inpsycholinguistic and cognitivepsychology experiments. For furtherinformation call 753-4718.OVERSEAS JOBS-Summer/yearround. Europe. S. America, Australia,Asia, etc. All fields. $500 51200 monthly. Expenses paid. Sightseeing. Freeinfo. Write: IJC, Box 52-11, Corona DelMar, Ca. 92625.Addressers wanted IMMEDIATELY!Qork at home -no experiencenecessary-excellent pay. WriteAmerican Service, 8350 Park Lane,Suite 127, Dallas, TX 75231.5th person wanted to join 4 others incooperative living situation. Beautifulhouse on residential block near cam¬pus and all transportation. $155 permo. incls. utilities. Call 955-2193.BAKER FOR PRESIDENTInterested in working on histeam? Call 947-8678SECRETARY/RECEPTIONIST-Professional School Computing Ser¬vices department seeks reliable andpunctual Secretary with excellent typ¬ing and communication skills. Dutiesinclude answering phones, greetingand directing visitors, typing lettersand reports, and performing generalsecretarial tasks. Call 753-4442 LeslieEvans, The University of Chicago.AA/EOE.Part time help needed at small in¬dependent book store, flexible hours,pleasant folks, call Geoff at the CircleBook Store. 1049 Taylor St, 733-4495.CLERICAL HELP WANTED Tem-porary, 2 afternoons per week. Filing,some typing. Must be near and respon¬sible. $4.50 per hr. Call 667-4220.Going to or through New York stateduring Spring Break? Will share ex¬penses, driving whatever. Call Marcusat 753-8342 room 421 please.We seek mothers of 14-16 month oldchildren to participate in a Dept, ofEducation study of mother and childlanguage. For further information call753 3808 1 -4 p.m. or 752-5932 evenings.Part time clerical; flex, hrs Preferwork study elig., graduate student.Will consider all. Ask for Ms. Meyer,753-4281, B School. SCENESGilbert and Sullivan's RUDDYGOREpresented in Kenwood AcademyAuditorium, 5015 S. Blackstone, Feb.29, March 1, March 8 at 8 pm March 2at 2 pm. Tickets at Mandel Hall BoxOffice.Hear music of Tippet, Ives, Childs andStravinsky on Sunday Feb. 24, at thenew Music Ensemble's Winter Con¬cert. 8:00 pm, Lexington Hall. Admis¬sion Free.ROSE/PUTTTIXDie. movie theatre tickets at ReynoldsClub Box Office.SAVE ON MOVIESRose and Plitt theatre discount ticketat Reynolds Club Box Office.UC HOTLINE 753-1777Got the Winter Quarter blues? If youwant to talk, have a question or need areferral, try the UC Hotline. ? p.m.-7 a.m.PERSONALSWRITER'S WORKSHOP PLaza2-8377.EUROPE this summer. Low Cost tour.Academic credit can be arranged. Callevenings. 752-8426.BAKER FOR PRESIDENTA Man for the80's947-8678Franco Fone, "Dark Lady laughedand danced and lit the candles one byone...." Tarot's my game; Dark Ladymy name.Roger-You think you're so damnsmart? I also get my "thrills" listen¬ing to THE AVANT-GARDE HOUREvery Thursday, 6-7 p.m. WHPK-FM88.3, so there. Dorothy.Unicorn divine, the sub broke throughthis week. Three down and one to fly.Dark Lady.AUSTRALIA-Earn big money rustlingkangaroos. Good experience! WriteArchimedes Enterprises, P.O. Box324-LEE, Perth, Aust.SERVICESPOTTERY CLASSES, Learn to makebeautiful pottery on the wheel. Smallclasses begin first week of March. Alsoafternoon classes for children. NanFreund 624-7568.Psychotherapy and counseling.Students, faculty, staff welcome. Feeson a sliding scale; insurance accepted. LIVE INFACULTY CONDOPrivate room w/bath in North Ken¬wood condo. Use of kitchen, livingroom, dining room; on campus busroutes. Asking $175 mo. but negotiable.753-3912, 373-1305.DRIVER WANTEDTo form car pool going to and fromloop with person who doesn't drive.Will provide car, gas, parking.955-9673.DREAMMERCHANTSLOVAN UNLIMITEDCall for appointment 493-4553AVANTE-GARDE HRThis week avant-garde choral music,featuring works by Ligeti,Schoenberg, Pallapiccola, Messiaen,and Webern. Thurs 6-7 p.m. WHPK-FM. 88.3ARETHERE?"Female/Male Differences in BrainAsymmetry" Jerre Levy Assoc Prof.Dept. Behavorlal Science TODAYEast Lounge Ida Noyes, 4.30. LUNCHTIMECONCERTSBeethoven and Haydinpiano trios per¬formed by Steven Kessler, violin,Davin Zelinsky, cello, and MichaelEdgerton, piano, as this week's lun¬chtime concert. Thursday February21, at 12:15 pm in Reynolds NortnLounge.NEWMUSICENSEMBLEIn concert Sunday Feb. 24, 8 00 p.m inCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOpen Daily11 AM to 8:30 PMClosed Monday1318 EAST 63rdMU 4-1062INTERNSHIPS IN LONDONSummer and Fall Semester, 1980POLITICS—House of Commons, Lords 8- Pressure GroupsFINE ARTS—Major London MuseumsSCIENCE—Research Labs, of Teaching HospitalsLAW—Criminal Law FirmsEDUCATION—Admin. 8 TeachingBUSINESS—Advertising, Travel, accounting, RetailTOWN PLANNING—Depts. in London BoroughsFull academic credit availableMay 19th 1980for 10 weeks: $1,300 (Board,lodging, tuition).Sept 10th 1980 for 14 weeks: from $2,300(board, lodging, tuition).Contact:EPA, Marymount College,Tarrytown,N.Y. 10591Phone: (914) 631-3200 YOPLAIT 8 OZ. CUPYOGURT 3 , sl00NORTHERN 4-ROLL PKG.TISSUE 99cHILLS BROS. 10OZ. JARINSTANTCOFFEEARMOUR STAR 1-LB. PKG.BACON $419$|29NAVEL ,ccORANGES 39 „GREEN BELLPEPPERS 49KRAFT 8 OZ. CHUNK SHARPCHEDDARCHEESE $119CENTER CUTPORK CHOP$ 1$179■ lb.SALE DATES FEB 20th ■ 23rd)IU.CFINER FOODSSERVING53rd PRAIRIE SHORESKIMBARK PLAZA 2911 VERNONWhere You Are A Stranger But Once!VERSAILLES5254 S. DorchesterWELL M AINTAINEDBill,DINGAttractive 1V2 and21/j Room StudiosFurnished or Unfurnished$192 to $291Based on AvailabilityAt Campus Bus Stop324-0200 Mrs. Groak The StudentGovernment FoodCo-op will nowaccept a limitednumber ofadditionalmemberships.Call 753-3273M-Th 4-6,Fri. 2:30-6:30A FEW UNRESERVED SEATS LEFT FORTHE CHICAGO SYMPHONY WINDSHUTCHINSON COMMONSFEBRUARY 22 8:00 P.M. $4.50 Students5.50 Faculty and Staff6.50 General Public in the music ofMOZARTTickets at Reynolds ClubBox OfficeThe Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, February 19, 1980 — 11Still the Champ.Over nine million Americansstill prefer to do theirsitups where theirfathers did theirs— at the local YMCA.Forbes MagazineThe fitness professionals:• highly trained professional staff• racquetball, handball and squashcourts• full size gymnasiums• indoor swimming pool• private locker facilities• fully equipped exercise and weightrooms• whirlpool, sauna and steambath• risk factor and exercise consultationREGISTER NOW for a one-year introductorymembership in the YMCA Men’s or Women’sFitness Center and receive a• $31.50 discount• Free racquetball racquet• Free individual fitness evaluationIntroductory Offer$31.50 Offon a Men’s or Women’s Fitness CenterMembership. Thts discount for newmembers only. Also receive FREE• Omega Racquetball Racquet• Fitness EvaluationPresent this coupon at the Hyde ParkYMCA through February 23E. 53rd Street 324-5300 I.F.CTI1RK SERIES ON KlltKRU, KM 'CATION'THE COLLEGEANDTHE DEAN’S STUDENT T ASK FORCE ONEDUCATION IN THE COLLEGEPRESENTWayne C. Booth•/Gporgp XI. Pullman Distinguisfipd Sprricp Prfopssor ofEnglish. Committpp on flip Analysis of I (Ip as and thp Studyof Methods, and TIip Coll pup.IS THERE ANY KNOWLEDGETHAT A WOMAN MUST HAVE?Wednesday, February 20. 4:00 P.M.SWIFT LECTURE H ALL. THIRD FLOORSpecial Woodward Court LectureThe Visiting Fellows CommitteeSponsorsA Question-And-Answer Sessionwith1 J. WILLIAM FULBRIGHTFormer Senator from Arkansas and Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations CommitteeWednesday, February 20, 1980 • 8:30 P.M.Woodward Court—5825 Woodlawn AvenueAll students and faculty in the College, and in the Divisions and the Professional Schools,are invited to attend and to participate.12 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, February 19, 1980