AnalysisHarberger: history of controversyBy Jeff CaneThe debate over Harvard’s ap¬pointment choice of Arnold Har-berger, chairman of the Econom¬ics department in the University,as director of Harvard’s Institutefor International Development(HIIH) continues to rage on theHarvard campus as well as the let¬ters’ page of The Maroon.At issue are Harberger’s alleged“connections” with the respectiveChilean military regime that haveroused vocal opposition from Har¬vard students, several facultymembers, and the Harvard Crim¬son.When Harberger visited the Har¬vard campus several weeks ago todiscuss the appointment with theHIID staff, about 100 students de¬monstrated outside the HIID build¬ing. Harberger later appeared at a forum and debated David Mar-bury-Lewis, chairman of Har¬vard’s anthropology department,and Stephen Marglin, professor ofeconomics. Harberger said that hedid not expect to change people’sminds but debated to “convincepeople that I didn’t have horns.”Harberger told the Crimson thathe would not come to Harvard“under a cloud,” but he indicatedat the debate that student opposi¬tion would not be a factor, but hewould consider whether the HIIDfaculty had any doubts about hisappointment. The faculty recentlyvoted overwhelmingly in favor ofHarberger’s appointment.The debate at Harvard echoes asimilar debate here five years ago,when it was reported in the press inSeptember 1975 that the Chileanmilitary regime imposed drastic cuts on government spending andemployment, at the urging of twoprominent University economicsprofessors, Milton Friedman andArnold Harberger. A New YorkTimes article of September 21, ofthat year described Milton Fried¬man as “the guiding light of thejunta’s ecomomic policy.” Afterthis article appeared, over 150 stu¬dents demonstrated on campus,protesting Friedman and Har¬berger’s policies.Friedman and Harberger bothdenounced the implication thatthey were responsible for thejunta’s actions and denied thatthey acted as consultants to thejunta. They noted that their trips toChile were privately financed andthat they met only with former stu¬dents. Although the 1975 trip toContinued to page 3Vol. 89, NO. 41 The University of Chicago (C) Copyright 1980 The Chicago Maroon March 7, 1980Summer Session Insert inside this issueOver 800 hear AndersonBy Jaan Elias andJon ShamisWell over 500 students jammedinto Quantrell auditorium and up¬wards of 300 students stood outsideCobb Hall to hear Illinois Con¬gressman John Anderson, a candi¬date for the Republican nomina¬tion for President, speak yesterdayafternoon.Anderson was here on the secondstop of a campaign swing throughIllinois after parlaying indepen¬dent and Democratic crossovervotes into strong second placeshowings in both the Massachu¬setts and Vermont Republican pri¬maries last TuesdayAnderson was greeted by enthu¬siastic applause and a standing ovation by most of the studentspresent.Lorna Straus, dean of students inthe College, introduced Andersonsaying that “it had been a long ti-mesince she was as enthusiasticabout a presidential candidate.”Anderson repeated early re¬marks about the Illinois primarybeing “a proving ground” in thecampaign trail. In a press confer¬ence earlier in the day he said “Ican’t be an also-ran in this state.”Speaking from notes, Andersonaddressed the bulk of his openingstatements to questions of foreignpolicy and the Persian Gulf.He said that he did not supportgiving additional aid to Pakistanwhich recently turned down a $400 million militarv aid package fromthe U S.Continued to page 3Stewart stalls draft billBy Andrew PatnerWashington) — CongressmanBennett Stewart last week cast adecisive vote in a House subcom¬mittee move that heid up fundingfor President Carter’s draft regis¬tration efforts.Stewart was one of six Congress¬men to oppose the President's re¬quest for supplemental funds forthe Selective Service System for fi¬scal year 1980. The vote to approvethe appropriation in the HUD-In-ternational Agencies Subcommit¬tee of the House AppropriationsCommittee failed on a 6-6 tie.“I opposed the registration ap¬propriation because there is nocompelling national emergencywhich dictates such a drastic poli¬cy change,” Stewart said in astatement to The Maroon Wednes¬day.Stewart said that he was opposedto any registration with the excep¬tion of a post-mobilization sign-upReferring to a report made by thedirector of the Selective Service toPresident Carter this January.Stewart said “(the report) clearlyindicated that the Selective Ser¬ vice System would be able to meetthe Department of Defense's stat¬ed need of 650,000 inductees, within180 days of an emergency with apost mobilization registration, in afar shorter period of time. The Se¬lective Service System indicatesthat the Service can begin sendingout induction notices within sevendays after mobilization."Carter has not released the Se¬lective Service report, most proba¬bly because its findings runcounter to his registration propos¬al.Stewart said that he favors“other measures" to improve the“manpower problem” of the allVolunteer Forces, "particularlyeconomic incentives."“The Department of Defense, inits annual report for fiscal year1981, clearly indicates that the con¬scription will not solve the prob¬lems of the All Volunteer Army,"the statement said.Washington sources agreed thatStewart has been under a greatdeal of pressure from the WhiteHouse and the Congregationalleadership to support the registra¬ tion plan. Stewart was reprimand¬ed by House Majority LeaderJames Wright (D-Texas) after hissubcommittee vote, a source saidStewart has, however, vowed tocontinue his opposition to the pro¬posed draft registration.“It makes no sense to establish aregistration policy that will neitheralleviate manpower problems norincrease the response time of ourarmed forces in case of a nationalemergency. Further. I believe thatsuch a policy will be socially devi-sive. Therefore. I will continue tooppose the President's registrationpolicy and. as a member of theHouse subcommittee which appro¬priates funds for the Selective Ser¬vice. I will continue to vote to denyfunds for this Administration topursue this policy." Stewart con¬cluded.The measure will come up beforethe full House AppropriationsCommittee this week. The NewYork Times has called the vote "toclose to call," and an aide to Stew¬art said that he did not “know if theAdministration has the votes. "Stevenson here next weekBy Chris IsidoreAdlai Stevenson III, the retiringjunior Senator from Illinois and theholder of one of the most reverednames in Illinois politics, will becoming here during tenth week ofthis quarter as the third VisitingFellow7 of the year.Stevenson bears a striking physi¬cal resemblance to his well knownfather, Adlai Stevenson, theformer governor of Illinois whotwice ran for President. But AdlaiIII does not possess his father’s el¬oquence or his wide-held respect.He was elected to Senate partly be¬cause of a distinguished recordthat he compiled as state treasur¬er. but greatly because his namemade him a top vote getter in the state.His first campaign was for staterepresentative in 1964. A disputeover districting between Demo¬crats and Republicans forced allthe state representatives to runstate-wide that year, and Steven¬son came in first above 235 othercandidates running at-large. He re¬ceived more votes in that electionthan any candidate had ever re¬ceived state-wide in Illinois, in¬cluding his father While in Spring-field. he put together a strongrecord in the legislature, and re¬ceived a "Best Legislator” awardfrom the Independent Voters of Il¬linois.In 1966 he ran for. and won, theContinued to page 5The Committee on Public Policy Studiesannounces three Spring Quarterseminars on1. Education Policy2. Medical Policy3. Economic Regulation* Enrollment in each seminar will be limited totwenty-five students.* Permission to register must be obtained fromRichard Hagman in Wieboldt Hall, Room 301(or 753-1896) prior to March 14.Winter Court Theatre presentsEXIT THE KINGby Eugene IonescoDirected by Joe GuastaferroThursdays - Sundays,March 13 - April 208:30 pm, 7:30 SundaysSpecial Preview at 8:30 onWednesday, March 12,only $1.50 New Theatre,57th & University753-3581 STUDENT CO-OPANNOUNCES:Expanded and Totally ReorganizedRecord SelectionBLOW THEWINTER BLUESAWAYJazz for all tastesalsoBlues, Folk, Pop and ClassicalNEW BOOKS IN STOCKIN ALL DISCIPLINESCome and BrowseBasement Reynolds ClubM-F 9:30-6:00: Sat. 12:30-4:00'The manGOLDEN f LUTEJAMESGALWAYon RCA Red SealJAMES GALWAYPlaysBACHTwo Flute Concertos • Suite in B MinorI SOLISTI Dl ZAGREBItc/I RED SEALARL1-2907 .A*Wco"'8.98 listLP’sreg. 6.68nowIU5flREDSEALWhere artists become legends. Sale Ends March 16, 1980 ^as.C5S JAMES GALWAYSONGOFTHE SEASHOREandOther Metodie* of Japan&■mRSbIREO StAl ARL1-2159XrV, vtB'1 111| HHk SI-ASCXVS\I^JAMES GALWAY^)LRL1-2284ColdenTlutcARL1-3534 £CLtoI-0QQCUJh»I-.Ies:COoK-I5:COLRU-51312—The Chicago Maroon—Friday. March 7, 1980Dark horse Senate candidate hereBy Chris IsidoreRobert Ash Wallace, a self-described“long-long-shot” for the Democratic nomin¬ation for US Senate made a practically un¬noticed appearance on campus this Wednes¬day.Wallace has been able to receive praiseand endorsements from the independent-lib¬eral wing of the party, but has received verylittle money or coverage in the Chicagopress. The entire Senate campaign seems tohave been lost in the shuffle of a busy newsseason for Cook County, where two-thirds ofthe registered Democrats in the state live.The Chicago media has been busy coveringstrikes by the CTA, the teachers, and thefirefighters, as well as the Presidential elec¬tion and the various foreign crises. This hasgreatly helped Secretary of State AlanDixon, who most polls show to be ahead, andattorney Alex Seith, who still has strongname recognition from his Senate campaigntwo years ago. Both these candidates alsohave substantial campaign treasuries,while Wallace has spent less than $100,000 sofar, and has not been able to afford any tele¬vision time. The two other candidates in therace, Anthony Robert Martin-Trigona andDakin Williams, are perennial candidateswho are not taken seriously by most politi¬cians.This is certainly not the case with Wal¬lace. This is his first campaign for any of¬fice, but he has long been active in politics,and his record has earned him the endorse¬ments of many respected politicians, suchas State Senator Harold Washington, Inde¬pendent Democratic candidate for Congressin the First District, State RepresentativeCarol Mosely Braun, (Democratic indepen¬dent in the local 24th district) and WoodsBowman (D-Evanston, Chicago), ChicagoHarbergerContinued from page 1Chile was the first for Friedman, Harberger had regularly visited since 1956.At the time of this controversy, StudentGovernment attempted to create a commis¬sion of inquiry to look into the Chilean ties ofFriedman and Harberger. John Wilson,then president of the University, attackedthe proposed commission as a “witch hunt”and circulated a hard-line letter against fac¬ulty co-operation. Wilson’s hostile stanceand Student Government’s own organiza¬tional problems stymied any inquiry.Several months later the issue of the Chi¬lean connection was revived and complicat¬ed with disclosures by the United States Sen¬ate Select Committee on IntelligenceActivities, that Chilean protegees of Fried¬man and Harberger were connected with co¬vert Central Intelligence Agency activitiesduring 1973. Committee witnesses main¬tained that some of these former studentsreceived CIA funds for research efforts thatled to the “shock treatment” economic mea¬sures adopted by the Chilean junta. BothFriedman and Harberger have said thatthey are unaware of any of their former stu¬dents having any relationship with theCIA.Critics of Friedman and Harberger’s Chi¬lean ties were heard from again when Fried¬man was awarded a Nobel prize in econom¬ics in 1976. Soon afterwards, the protestsdied down, and there was “absolutely zero”protest according to Harberger, until the re¬cent eruption at Harvard.However, the ties between Chile and theUniversity have an older and more complexhistory. The University operated an ex¬change program with the Catholic Universi¬ty of Chile, financed by the Agency for Inter¬national Development, from 1956 to 1964.Under these programs, many Chileanstudents studied at Chicago, and Chicagofaculty, including Harberger, taught inChile. Since 1956 Harberger has visitedChile every year, except in 1957 and 1967. Anumber of Chilean economics students,taught by Friedman and Harberger, be¬came prominent economists in Chile.Among these Chilean U of C economicsgraduates, who call themselves the “Chica¬go boys,” between eight and ten are officialsof the Chilean regime. The most prominents Aldermen David Orr (D-49), Martin Ober-man (the dean of the independents, D-43),and Larry Bloom (D-Hyde Park). Also ac¬tive in Wallace’s campaign is Leon Despres,former alderman from Hyde Park, and theIndependent Voters of Illinois-IndependentPrecinct Organization (IVI-IPO). But allthis support has spurred very little namerecognition for Wallace, even among the lib¬eral voters.Wallace is an alumnus of the University,receiving his doctorate in public finance in1956. While at the University he met PaulDouglas, then a University economics pro¬fessor. Wallace worked for Douglas in hissuccessful campaigns for US Senate in 1954and 1960. He became an aide to Douglas andthen Senator John Kennedy, and was respon¬sible for organizing the Midwest and West¬ern States for JFK’s pre-convention cam¬paign. He became assistant secretary of theTreasury in the Kennedy and Johnson Ad¬ministrations, and then became staff direc¬tor of the US Senate Banking Committee.Wallace’s economics are a mix of liberaland conservative. In 1977, as research direc¬tor of a special study on economic changefor the Joint Congressional Economic Com¬mittee, he reported that past solutions to un¬employment, such as deficit spending, wereno longer viable. He advocated a balancedbudget to curb inflation, and urged passageof a bill which would require a two-thirdsmajority of the Congress for deficit spend¬ing. But to balance the budget he wouldrather cut the MX missile and keep militaryspending at a constant real dollar level thancut social programs. He is in favor of CETAtype programs to help train unskilled unem¬ployed youth who he claims are the mostserious sector of the unemployed today, andcriticizes CETA for spending half of itsis Sergio de Castro, who is the Chilean Fi¬nance Minister, a Chicago Ph D. and a long¬time associate of Harberger.Harberger said that he always has made a“practice of maintaining links with studentsforever and ever.” It is these personal linksof Harberger with his former students thatcritics attack as collaboration with the Chi¬lean regime, and that Harberger and hissupporters maintain as necessary of for per¬sonal and academic integrity.“I could not do anything more than what Idid without betraying my friends,” Har¬berger said. He noted that some of his Chi¬lean friends are in the opposition party, theleft-center Christian Democrats. One of hisformer students, he said, had been a high of¬ficial in Allende’s government and was nowa political exile from Chile.Harberger said that he refuses to workwith the present government, but asks“must I shout from the roof-tops” in criticiz¬ing the present regime? He contends that tostop making appearances in Chile wouldmake his former students “look like moralcripples-I just won’t do that.”Repression balancedIn regards to ethical considerations, Har¬berger said “each individual has to makehis own peace in the world.”“If you work in policy areas in developingcountries, you can’t be prissy, or else youonly work in Costa Rica,” he said. He saidthat he has turned down invitations to visitKorea, South Vietnam, San Salvador, andthe Philippines, and that "the factor of re¬pression enters my mind.”“If a country is more repressive than RedChina, then I won’t go. If it is less repres¬sive, then I’ll go. I am willing to go to RedChina,” he said. “You can’t hold up dif¬ferent standards in different places,” hesaid.Harberger argues that repression in Chileis “much more limited” than it was in thefirst two years of the junta’s reign, 1973 and1974. He said that he believed that Chile isnow “at about mid-point among countries inthe world, as far as degree of repressive¬ness.”“I have changed my policy towards Chile,as it has changed its policy towards repres¬sion,” he said explaining his consultationwork for Endesa, an electric companyowned by the Chilean government. The Har¬vard Crimson has attacked this his consulta¬tion work as further evidence of Har¬berger’s ties to the Chilean government.Harberger said that he became associatedwith Endesa as a consultant for the Bechtel moneys on non-training programs. Wallaceentered the campaign last fall, when infla¬tion was 10 percent, stating that he was theonly candidate qualified to deal with the in¬flation problem, and speaking againstt man¬datory controls. But now that inflation hasrisen to 18 percent, he has changed his posi¬tion on controls. But he has also attackedSenator Kennedy’s controls proposal, stat¬ing that it would be unsuccessful without fi¬scal restraints. Wallace’s program calls fora six month freeze on wages, prices and gov¬ernment spending.Despite his criticism of Kennedy’s con¬trols, he has endorsed the MassachusettsSenator for President, citing his long tieswith the Kennedy family. His positions onissues other than economics are almost un¬iformly liberal. He is against draft registra¬tion and a peace time draft, calling the draft“a very heavy instrument, which shouldonly be used in the gravest of situations.”He does not feel that the Russian invasion ofAfghanistan is a significant threat to theUnited States, and he harshly criticizedCarter for “unilateral” actions, such as thegrain embargo and the Olympic boycott,which have not received the support of ourallies.“Carter botched the grain embargo, andbotched the Olympics,” said Wallace. “Hel¬mut Schmidt (Chancellor of West Germany)has been talking about how Carter has notbeen revealing to our allies what he is goingto do before he announces it, and then ex¬pects them to support it afterwards. Wemust start to work on multi-lateral ac¬tion.”On energy, Wallace stresses cleaningMid-Western coal, cutting the import of oil,placing a heavy tax on inefficient automo¬biles, developing gasohol, solar power, syn¬corporation for a small number of days in1978. Bechtel is a San Francisco-based con¬struction company, primarily involved inprojects in developing countries, and whosepresident is George Schultz, the formerdean of the business school in the Universi¬ty. Bechtel has a contract with Endesa, withwhich Harberger was involved, and whenthe contract ended. Harberger has sinceconsulted for Endesa, 2 or 3 days a year.The Harvard post, Harberger said is thatof “a glorified research assistant.” He saidthat he would go to Harvard, if he was givenassurances that he would be able to workwith students. He said that he intends tomake a decision before May 1, but that theprocess towards that decision was “movingat a snail’s pace.”Harberger noted the differences betweenthe traditional approaches towards interna¬tional policy assistance at Harvard and Chi¬cago. Harvard, he said, has people go overto other countries and as foreigners saywhat ought to be done. However, at Chicago,he said, it has been traditional to work joint¬ly with nationals in suggesting policy.“I like our way better,” he said.AndersonContinued from page 1“We cannot pour aid down the throats ofPakistan”, he said.He also said that he did not support mak¬ing a major committment to a nation whichwas located in that region which was unst¬able and showed signs of developing nucleardevices.Anderson quoted George Kennan sayingthat never “since WWII has there been sucha militarization of thought and discourse inWashington” and that the country shouldconcentrate on increasing its “domestic de¬fenses.”Anderson received a hefty round of. ap¬plause when he said that he was opposed toregistration and a peacetime draft.“In a time of peace you do not resort to amilitary draft,” he said.He said Carter’s move to reimpose thedraft was “more out of a desire to create thesymbols and not the substance of what was atruly creative foreign policy.”“I think we must sacrifice, if necessary,to limit our need for oil,” Anderson said.“The people of this nation are ready for aPresident who is willing to call for sacri¬fices.”Anderson stressed the need for “newideas in the Republican party.” thetic fuels, and emphasizing conservation.He finds Presidential candidate John Ander¬son’s proposal for a 50 cent per gallon gastax “intriguing”, but he said he would haveto examine it further before endorsing it.Wallace supports a moratorium on newnuclear power plants until they are provedsafe, and until the waste problem is solved,and he criticized Carter’s plan to turnMorris, Illinois into a nuclear waste dumpfor the country. He has also called for a re¬organization of the nuclear regulatoryagency which would separate its investiga¬tive powers from its licensing powers,claiming that the NRC is now in the positionof examining its own workW’allace is in favor of the ERA, and infavor of any extension or blocking of recen¬sions needed to pass it. “W’e should do whatis necessary to get ERA passed,” he said.“I’m in favor of equal rights for women, andI don’t think they have those rights today.”Wallace’s visit on campus was a smallone. Only one member of his campaign staffaccompanied him, and there were nomembers of the press other than TheMaroon following him. He spent some timecirculating throughout Reynolds Club, pass¬ing out literature, and talking to students.Then, after a lunch with professor MortonKaplan, he made an appearance at WHPK.There has not been any student organizationfor any of the Senate candidates on campus,and the overwhelming majority of the stu¬dents who met Wallace and talked to TheMaroon claimed they had no prior knowl¬edge of his candidacy. In that respect, hisvisit was successful in alerting at least oneset of students of his campaign, and hisstand on the issues.He asked for the support of the studentbody. He noted that his support that day onIllinois campuses had been just as strong asin Massachusetts where he carried the col¬lege towns.He asked for the students to show thesame dedication in the next ten days, towork on his campaign.“You saw that support that I got from thatlittle guy in Doonesbury,” Anderson told alaughing crowd.“He supported me so muchthat he even sold his car. Now I'm not ask¬ing you to sell yourcar, but I need yourhelp.”Anderson received a “Ho-Ho” tee-shirtand a scarf from Anderson for Presidentcampus committee chairman DavidBrooks.During the ensuing question and answerperiod Anderson called the recent U S. votein the U N. which censured Israel on thewest bank settlement issue “an effort tocover up a major blunder.”He said that we should have abstainedfrom the vote.Anderson said that he was opposed to theKennedy-Thurmond criminal control reformact calling it “a product of a calculated po¬litical deal.”Anderson said that he would not backdown on his gun control stand. “After stand¬ing up to those howling, hooting people inNew Hampshire I’m not going to backdown.”Anderson said that Republicans have torealize the need for a coalition betweenDemocrats. Independents as well as Repub¬licans. he said he had the ability to deal withmembers of the opposing parties, pointingout a bill he sponsored with Mo UdallAnderson said “I’ve got to be my ownman. I’ve got to be an honest man” to loudcheering.Anderson said he was against discrimina¬tion on the basis of “race, sex, religion, oraffectional preference,” in response to aquestion on discrimination against gays.He said that he was in favor of decrimin¬alization of marijuana and said that “we arepresently in a stage of learning” about thedrugs.Volunteers interested in helping with theAnderson campaign should contact BethPorris at 324-5447. The Anderson campuscommittee has over 80 members and hassponsored talks by Susan Catania and Gay¬lord Freeman.Anderson also introduced his candidatesfor delegate to the Republican convention,Robert Molloway and Hamilton Talbert.The Chicago Maroon—Friday, March 7, 1980—3It seems to be a rule that with responsibilitycome difficulty and conflict. The responsibili¬ty of voting in a Presidential election is no ex¬ception to this rule.In the March 18 primary conscientiousvoters will be faced with the conflict betweenvoting for the outstanding Presidential candi¬date, John Anderson, who is running in the Re¬publican primary, and supporting the excel¬lent independent candidates for local andnational office who are campaigning in theDemocratic primary.We strongly support John Anderson’s candi¬dacy. He has been talking issues to the peopleand the voters have begun to give him a heart¬ening response. We believe that his candidacyis becoming, as the national media would say,“increasingly viable,” and we believe thatvoters should support the one candidate whohas combined sensitivity on the issues withsensibility on the limits of government. Ander¬son has been unafraid to speak his mind, andwe like what he has been saying. He has been avoice of reason in the face of Carter's new coldwar and military buildup. He supports govern¬ment involvement in social programs but re¬cognizes that it may be time to try new eco¬nomic policies to deal with the twin problemsof inflation and unemployment.Anderson far outshines his Republicanrivals and his Democratic counterparts aswell. As a Washington columnist recentlynoted. Carter’s few successes have come frompast inconsistencies. As Carter becomes moreconsistently hawkish and election minded, hisfew good attributes vanish.Edward Kennedy’s candidacy has been trou¬bling from its onset. Although Kennedy has compiled a fine Senate record he has seemedconfused about whether he should embrace itor hide from it. His sponsorship of the federalcriminal code “reform” bill (“Grandson ofS.l”) indicates that he is willing to compro¬mise even on the issue of free speech. Thismust stand as a serious question of his politi¬cal integrity. Although we prefer him to theother Democratic candidates, we cannot en¬dorse him.The difficulty that voters face comes in thenon-Presidential races. The Republican candi¬dates are, to a man, undistinguished. Severalexcellent independent Democrats are seekingelection or re-election in the primary. Headingthis list is State Senator Harold Washington,candidate for Congress. Washington has beena leader of blacks and independent legislatorsin Springfield as well as in those communitiesin Chicago. He would bring a dynamic andcapable presence to Congress. IncumbentBennett Stewart has recently shown courageon the draft, but we feel that this display hasmore to do with his excellent staff than withStewart’s own politics. Should Washington winelection, we recommend this Metcalf e-Stew¬art staff to him.Robert Ash Wallace is the only candidatewith the intelligence and expertise to handlethe duties of a United States Senator. We rec¬ommend him in that race.For the State Representative race, BothCarol Moseley Braun and Barbara Flynn Cur¬rie have shown their independence and intelli¬gence in their terms in Springfield. Both havevirtually identical, outstanding records, withsupport for such important issues as the EqualRights Amendment, and numerous bill spon-sorhips and tenants’ rights. Independent voters should not let the conflict over cam¬paign strategy distract from the records of ei¬ther candidate, and we strongly urge thatDemocratic voters split their votes betweenthese fine incumbents.The 24th district has been able to have suchfine incumbents greatly because of the work offifth Ward Committeeman Alan Dobry. As theonly independent committeeman in the CookCounty Democratic party, he has been able toinfluence the slating of such qualified candi¬dates as Braun and Currie. For this alone, hedeserves support, but Dobry has served wellin his other functions as committeeman, andhas presented an example of what a commit¬teeman should be. The Sun-Times has calledhim the most important committeeman in thecity, and we couldn’t agree more. Dobry hasmore than earned the support of the thoughtfulvoter.We urge all voters to follow the electionraces closely in the next ten days. We hopethat they pay close attention to the issues andquestion those candidates who make them¬selves available to scrutiny. In the end, wehope that all eligible will vote. If you will beout of town, make the short trip to City Hall,Randolph and Clark Streets, and vote by ab¬sentee ballot. Otherwise vote from 6 am to 7pm at your precinct polling place on TuesdayMarch 18.We urge those who resolve the conflict thatthis election presents by choosing a Republi¬can ballot will vote for John Anderson and hispledged delegates Robert Holloway and Ha¬milton Talbert. We suggest that those whovote in the Democratic races support HaroldWashington. Robert Wallace, Carol Braun andBarbara Currie, and Alan Dobry.LettersCorrectionDue to limitations of space, a section oflast week's viewpoint on Arnold Harbergerand Chile was deleted, which the authorsconsidered crucial to their argument. TheEditor agreed to print a condensation of thedeletion. In addition, Milton Friedman'sbook was reprinted in the Chilean military-junta ’s initial statement of principles, andnot vice versa, as was stated due to typo¬graphical error.The U N. report on Human rights in Chile,dated Nov. 21, 1979, does not stop with de¬claring alarm at increasing political repres¬sion in Chile. In the face of Time magazineheralding the dictatorship's economic poli¬cy as a success, the U.N. report notes: "En¬joyment of economic and social rights . . . isaffected by the persistently high rate of un¬employment, combined with the high pricesof basic necessities and low level of wagesreceived by a large portion of the popula¬tion.” The report criticizes the MinimumEmployment Plan, under which agricultur¬al workers are employed for only the fewmonths of the year they are needed, and leftto face hunger for the remainder. It notesthat prices are increasing at the greatestrate for basic necessities, which is all thatmany can afford. Drastic cuts in social ser¬vices have put basic health care and educa¬tion increasingly out of the reach of poor andworking people, according to the report. Inshort, we can infer from this information,the ‘‘economic growth” is having opposite,and disastrous, effects on poor and workingpeople in Chile.With Harberger’s economic and politicalscience coming into greater favor, allowingthe rampant economic exploitation of thethird world’s working people by foreign andnative capital, and necessitating the sys¬tematic violation of democratic and humanrights, the vast majority of the world’s peo¬ple cannot be expected to lie as if dormantforever.— Curtis Black Harberger’s integrityTo the Editor:The portrait of the Chicago economist andpotential director of Harvard's Development Advisory Srvice. A C. Harberger. thatemerges from the columns of The Maroon(and. still further removed from the fact,the Havard Crimson) is a false one. I haveno hope of convincing the more vocal of hisdefamers. some of them friends of minewith whom I have learned over many yearsto disagree amicably but thoroughly. Butperhaps the undecided onlooker will wantanother view.I speak as a colleague and friend of Har¬berger since 1968; and, in case you think itrelevant, as an opponent of the Chilean re¬gime (let us overthrow it), the CIA (let usabolish it), and the military-industrial-sta¬tist complex (let us expose it). I speak formyself, as an observer of his words and ac¬tions.Harberger is not anti-democratic. Theonly meaning of "democracy” he could besaid to oppose is that embodied in the phrase‘ German Democratic Republic.” He is op¬posed, then, to the fascism of the left. He isalso opposed to the fascism of the right. Hisassociation with Chile dates from long be¬fore the generals: he is married to a Chi¬lean; most of his Chilean stuudents wereChicago students and Chilean citizens whenChile was a democracy, and hope for itsearly reestablishment.The significance of these facts will be¬come clearer to the disinterested reader ifhe performs the followiing mental experi¬ment. Suppose you were married to a Cana¬dian. and had other long and close attach¬ments to that admirable country. Supposethat after a civil war the government in Ot¬tawa crushed a rebellion in Quebec withtanks, brutally abrogating the constitution.Would you abandon your friends, divorceyour wife, refuse to travel in or advise thecountry? Maybe. But let those among youwho are quite sure they are without the abil¬ity to rationalize or even justify a continuingconnection with a country they love cast thefirst stones.The humanity that Harberger’s critics be¬lieve they possess in special measure re¬ quires one to treat others as human beings,not as objects or symbols or counters in apolitical game. I am sure that by someweighty doctrine of revolutionary faith theprinciple of humanity can be set aside. Somuch the worse for the faith.Donald N, McCloskevassosicate professorof economicsBoys and girlstogether againTo Rhonda Adams and her 11 others:Your recent protest letter addressed toThe Maroon editors complaining that thecrossword puzzle hint "Grey City Journal’scalendar girl” was a cheap sexist way to de¬scribe a woman and depressing to you aswomen not girls was feminique blubber derigeur is out it died with sensitivity trainingand vina-hide I quote the Editorette of Eti¬quette in The Monthly Chat a fine enjoyablemagazine from Texas she said in responseto the comment "of course ‘girls’ instead ofwomen’ is a solid no-no now” that "ofcourse ‘girls' instead of ‘women’ is a solidwho-cares now” or if you don’t agree wellhow about we’re all just guys and gals it’sonly a dumb crossword puzzle anywayShu-shu and the BlueBoysRites of SpringTo the Editor:We are saddened and sickened by theamount of space The Maroon has given tothe debate over Professor Harberger’s rolein Chile. For, although there is still snow onthe ground, nevertheless, spring is almosthere; and. as is always the case at this timeof year, rape is in the air. Yes, soon youngmen, sighing, will croon their thoughts ofwoman-as-object; couples will wander overthe campus, seeking secluded places wherewomen will be oppressed and debased. Oldmen will sit on benches and wish that theywere young again and once more capable oftreating women as things to be hated andused. Rape is all around, as it is said; rape iseverywhere. After all, what is dictatorship but the rape of the proletariat? What is in¬flation but the rape of the purchasing powerof the currency? What is the function of theWorld Bank, other than to forcibly insertand withdraw capital into and out of a defen¬seless economy? Until we recognize thatPinochet. Harberger. and some of their crit¬ics are men, and that men are the cause ofthe world’s problems, we will be as blind asa rape victim with her skirt thrown over herhead. Ignore the pigs, capitalist and Marxistalike: stop the rapes of spring.Vivama, Mea, Leshia, and AmemaWoman’s Revolutionary UnionThe ChicagoMaroonEditor: Andrew PatnerGrey.City Journal Editor: David MillerAssociate Editors: Chris Isidore and DavidGlocknerFeatures Editor: Mark WallachSports Editor: Andy RothmanPhoto Editors: Neal Cohen and Dan Bres¬lauLiterary Review Editors: Richard Kaye andMolly McQuadeAd Manager: Steven KaszynskiAd Designer : Jan BorengasserOffice Manager: Leslie WickBusiness Manager . Joel GreenStaff: Ben Adam, Curtis Black, SarahBurke, Jeff Cane, Peter Chapman, JohnCondas, Jeff Davitz, Mark Erwin, VictorGoldberg, Jake Levine, Rebecca Lillian,Audrey Light, Philip Maher, Greg Mizera.Sherrie Negrea, Cy Oggins, Chris Persans,Scott Rauland, John Shamis, AllenSowizral, Cecily Stewart, Howard Suls, Dar¬rell WuDunn, Phoebe Zerwick.The Chicago Maroon is the student ne ws¬paper of the University of Chicago, pub¬lished on Tuesdays and Fridays. Editorialand business offices are located on the thirdfloor of Ida Noyes, 1212 E. 59th Street Chi¬cago, Illinois 60637. Telephone 753-32634—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, March 7, 1980Minority admissions efforts: mixed resultsBy Chris IsidoreDespite an increase in the number of mi¬nority applicants this year, it is difficult tofind many who are satisfied with the Col¬lege’s minority recruitment program. Butthe administrators, if not the minority stu¬dents themselves seem optimistic about thefuture.“We’d like to see a larger proportion ofminority students,’’ said Jonathan Z. Smith,dean of the College. “We have made strides,but they are not sufficient and we will makesome more.”“I m not satisifed with the number of mi¬nority students,” said Loma Strauss, deanof College admissions, “But I’m also not sa¬tisfied with the number of women we havebeen able to attract, or the number of ath¬letes, or the number of musicians, or thenumber of student government types, or thenumber of first rate journalists, or thenumber of blonde hair blue eyed girls fromMontana. I think that the admissions pro¬gram has worked very hard and has come along way, in the past decade, but it has along way to go and it has more hard hardwork ahead of it to make the admissionsprogram reflect the fact that this is one ofthe top five colleges in the country.”“I think that one can never be totally sa¬tisfied,” said Donna Robinson, the coordin¬ator of minority recruitment in the Col¬lege.” “But I think we are doing the best wecan, and trying to improve. There arealways people who are not pleased.”The group which has voiced the loudestdispleasure has been the minority studentsin the College. Many have become active intrying to improve the numbers of blacks andHispanic students, which rose this yearafter a three year slide, by working in theOrganization of Black Students (OBS) or theHispanic Cultural Society (HCS). But as ac¬tive as they have been, with minority phon-athons and letter writing campaigns, theywould like to see much more done.“The best way to judge (the recruitmentprogram) is with results,” said MarkWheeler, president of OBS. “Judging by theresults, there is room for improvement. Iwon’t say the blame is with them, (the ad¬missions staff), but something needs to bedone.”“My main contention,” said Julio Mateo,president of HCS, “is that they (the admis¬sions office) should be more creative in re¬cruitment. OBS, HCS and SSC (the StudentSchools Committee) have had to introduceand plan (many of) these programs.”There are more explanations for the lackof minority students than there are adminis¬trators to explain them. All reasons holdsome truth, and none lend themselves toeasy solutions. But the one thing that can beagreed upon is the number of blacks and Hi-spanics enrolled in the College this year isfar too low. There are only 96 blacks, mak¬ing up 3.5 percent of the college, and 49 Hi¬Visiting FellowContinued from page 1normally unglamorous post of state treasur¬er. His record in this office was also an ad¬mired one. Stevenson ended the practice ofdepositing State funds in banks which werefriendly with the regular Democratic party,and used these funds to instead encouragebanks to finance small businesses in theghetto, or grant student loans, and withdrewfunds from banks that practiced racial orreligious discrimination, either in hiring orgranting loans. He also opened the State’s fi¬nancial records to the public for the firsttime. ... . , . .Despite his record in this post, and hisgreat name recognition state-wide. Demo¬cratic slate-makers refused to give him theDemocratic nomination for the US Senaterace in 1968. Party regulars were angeredby his criticism of Johnson’s Vietnam ac¬tions. This was the start of a brief breakfrom the Daley machine. Stevenson becamecritical of Daley’s handling of the Demo¬cratic convention that year, calling his po¬lice “Storm-troopers in blue," and callingthe party organization a “feudal structure .He started to build contact with the indepen¬dent-liberal wing of the party, and lookedlike he was going to split from the machine spanic students (1.8%). And the figure forblacks is still below the level it was from1976-78. Next year may be better, with appli¬cations from black students up by 16 percentthis year as of February 29. But the numberof applications from Hispanic students hasstayed the same, even with a slight rise inthe overall applicant pool.The numbers and percentages do not pointto any intentional discrimination by the Uni¬versity, and few if any critics are chargingthat. The percentage of minority applicantswho are accepted has stayed roughly thesame as the percentage of applicantsoverall who are accepted. (Somewherefrom 64-66 percent, depending on the year)The problem seems to lie in the number whoapply originally, and the number of those of¬fered admissions who decide to accept it.The first of these problems seems to indi¬cate a failure of the University to make con¬tact with minority students, the secondwould indicate a failure to appeal to thequalified student. (Though both problemsand explanations are inter related).Students and other critics have longclaimed the admission’s staff outreach pro¬gram to minorities have been deficent. “Ifound out about the University when I saw adocumentary on T V. about it,” saidWheeler. “My counsellor knew it was a goodschool, but he didn’t know too much about it.There are alot of well-qualified minority stu¬dents who don’t even know that the U of Cexists.”OutreachWheeler, Mateo and other students havesuggested a number of programs to improvethe outreach. One program would inviteguidance counselors from minority highschool and minority student organizationssuch as Aspira (Spanish for aspire), tocampus to get to know the University and itsprograms. The University has made an ex¬tensive effort to get prospective students tovisit campus. “We feel that if we can get astudent to visit campus, that is our best re¬cruitment tool,” said Fred Brooks, directorof College admissions. But there is no pro¬gram designed to bring the guidance coun¬selors to campus.The students have also suggested publici¬ty programs, which would have the Univer¬sity contacting the influential minoritymedia with stories about minority studentsin the college. This is a program which theUniversity has experimented with, andwhich it still engages in to a certain ex¬tent.But by far the most active program whichthe students have participated in has beenthe minority phonathons. Last quarter OBSand HCS members, working out of the ad¬missions office, were able to contacthundreds of black and Hispanic students tourge them to apply. The names of these stu¬dents were taken from the lists of NationalMerit and Achievement Finalists, and frompermanently until September 7, 1969.On that day he was holding a huge politi¬cal picnic for his allies at his home in Liber-tyville. Senators George McGovern andFred Harris were attending, as well as liber¬al independent Democrats from around thestate. An invitation had been offered toDaley, but no one expected him to attend.But he surprised everyone and showed, andit soon became obvious why he had. SenatorEverett Dirksen had just died, and Daleyhad traveled to Libertyville to make peacewith Stevenson who he was sure would runfor the seat. Daley may have had dif¬ferences with Stevenson but he was willingto forget them in order to preserve partyunity. With Daley’s support. Stevenson wasable to get the nomination without anyserious opposition. And after surviving atough media campaign attack from Repub¬lican Ralph Smith, he won with 58% of thevote.But once in the Senate, respect came tohim slowly, if at all. He received poor com¬mittee assignments, and finally tired of hiswork on the Senate Ethics Committee and acommittee to restructure the sub-commit-tee structure. He announced his retirementfrom the Senate early last year, and re¬ceived very little attention for his decision.Other than his attack on Carter last yearwhile he was considering a Presidential run,Stevenson has been a fairly quiet Senator, amoderate, straight party man who has re¬ceived very little national exposure He was students who had already contacted the Col¬lege.Lack of manpowerThere was a group of 666 prospective mi¬nority students on these lists for whom thestudents did not have phone numbers. Thesestudents were sent information about theCollege, and letters about the phonathonwhich asked them to send their phonenumbers back to the College so that theycould be contacted. OBS and HCS had hopedthat the letters could be sent outbefore theholidays, when many students had not yetdecided where to apply. But a lack of man¬power in the admissions office preventedthe letters from being sent until after thesecond week in January, and their effective¬ness was thus greatly reduced. Even withthese setbacks, the overall phonathon pro¬gram was considered a success. The stu¬dents have held a follow up phonathon sincethen to contact the minority students whohad begun the application process but weremissing some part of their application.All this activity by the students does notmean that the admissions staff is not activeon their own. Robinson has been in charge ofthe metropolitan search program this year,in which she writes to the principals of 150urban area schools, asking them to nomin¬ate qualified minority students at theirschools. These students are then sent infor¬mation about the University and Part I ofthe application. This year she heard from 35schools, and received 85 names, of which 25percent have applied. This year, the pro¬gram was only for non-Chicago schools, butRobinson is hopeful that it can be expandedto the Chicago high schools next year.In addition to this, the admissions officesponsors days when area high schools canvisit the campus, and has sent representa¬tives to more than a dozen black collegefairs around the country each year. Robin¬son is the coordinator of such programs,but all the admissions staff, includingBrooks, have played a part in these pro¬grams.This has raised the criticism that by hav¬ing everyone responsible for minority re¬cruitment, no one is responsible.“Everywhere where we have found suc¬cessful recruitment programs, there hasbeen some one person or some one officewhich has been responsible for recruitment,and there has been a clear policy with aclear goal,” said John McDermott, of thehighly respected Chicago Reporter, whichexamines racial issues in Chicago. The Col¬lege has neither a person nor an office whichis responsible, which is a decision which theadministration defends.“It’s wrong to have a black member of theadmissions office who only interviewsblacks, or a white who interviews onlywhites,” said O’Connell. “You should notlimit communications that way.”But there are others who still have ques¬considered to be in contention for Vice-Pres¬ident four years ago, and was one of the fivecontenders who Carter met with before theNew York convention. The press was actual¬ly more surprised with his attacks on Carterlast winter than they were with his decisionnot to seek re-election.Most political observers suspected that hewould have had an easy re-election cam¬paign. despite his lack of influence in Wash¬ington. After winning a special election in1970 to fill out the last four year of Dirksen’sterm, beating a downstate Republican whoran a tough “law and order” campaign. Ste¬venson won an easy re-election in 1974, win¬ning 63 percent of the vote. He probablywould not have faced any significant Demo¬cratic challenge, and his probable Republi¬can opponent, Attorney General WilliamScott, is under indictment for tax fraud.While in the Senate, Stevenson has com¬piled a moderate to liberal record. His firstyear in the Senate he received a perfect 100rating from the liberal Americans for Dem¬ocratic Action. The next year his ADA rat¬ing dropped to 80, where it remained for twoyears. In 1973 it rose to 89, and then back upto 100 in 1974. But it has remained between60-65 for the past three years. He has recent¬ly voted for conservative measures, such asthe neutron bomb, and the Clinch River Nu¬clear breeder-reactor.He has also indicated support for militaryregistration, but stated he is against a peacetime draft. In a letter to the University tions. “The counselors themselves are over¬worked, which does not allow Donna (Robin¬son) to develop and implement specificprograms,” said Mateo. “If the office wasmore conscious of her responsibilities, andwould not burden her with other duties, itwould be more effective.”Catch-22The problem of the University not beingable to appeal to qualified minorities is evenmore complicated. Part of the problem is acatch-22, where the low number of minoritystudents scares away many minority stu¬dents, which keeps the number of minoritystudents low, etc.,etc. A number of adminis¬trators and students mentioned a “criticalmass” a level of minority student whichonce reached, would make minorities feelmore comfortable and less isolated. No onewould venture a guess as to what this levelwas, but one student suggested a method forreaching it a bit more easily.“One thing that hurts the student body ingeneral, and blacks in particular, is the waythe University builds walls between under¬graduates and graduate students,” saidTony Knight, the vice-president of OBS.“There are only 310 of us (black students) inthe whole University. There just aren’tenough of us to separate us.”Another problem is the somewhat nega¬tive image that the University aquired in theblack community when it became active inurban renewal — an image among manyblacks and Hispanics of trying to keep theblacks out.“The University has a bad image,” saidKnight. “When I was putting up posters on63rd St. for Julian Bond’s visit, posters thatsaid ‘free — all welcomed', on them, I stillhad people asking me ‘can we go? Will theyallow us to go?’ They are still afraid to setfoot on University property. I know I hateseeing that long fence running along 61stSt.”The University has made an effort tomake minority student life here more at¬tractive. They have programs such as theMinority Students Contingency Fund, whichcan approve emergency loans to minoritystudents who are having problems The Col¬lege financial aid formula is still based uponthe need of the students. “Just as we don’thave two standards for admissions,” saidO’Connell, “wd don’t have two standards forfinancial aids. We try to never have a stu¬dent not come here because he can’t affordit. but we are not out to buy qualified minori¬ty students.”But Mateo would like to see greater schol¬arship programs for qualified minorities.“When the minorities see such programs setup, they will feel more positively about theschool, even if they don't get the money.They are just able to see that the school ismaking a strong effort to recruit minorities,and that impression can attract almost aswell as the money can.”chapter of the Coalition Against Registra¬tion and the Draft (UC-CARD) he stated:“Given the recent aggressive conduct of theSoviet Union, I believe that registration, asdistinguished from the draft itself, is an ap¬propriate signal of our readiness to defendout interests militarily, as well as politicallyand economically. Should the President de¬cide to include women in his draft registra¬tion proposal. I would support legislation tomake it possible.“I continue to believe that compulsorymilitary service in peace-time runs againstthe grain of the history of our country .”UC CARD is planning some type of protestor confrontation with Stevenson when hecomes here, even though student support forany action might be weak that close to finalexams. Stevenson’s visit may also be signif¬icant due to its closeness to the March 18 Illi¬nois primary. The primary will be only fourdays after his public speech here, scheduledfor 1:30 on Friday, March 14. in Harper 130He will be making on-the-record statementsat that speech, and there is a possibility thathe will make endorsements for the pri¬mary.Stevenson will be arriving on campus onWednesday afternoon, March 12. Unlike thefirst two Visiting Fellows this year, whostayed with Resident Masters, Stevensonwill be staying in one of the guest rooms inPierce Tower. He will be sitting in on someclasses in the Common Core and in the Pub¬lic Affairs and the Public Policy programs.; Chicago Maroon—Friday, March 7, 1980—510-1212-2 WORKSHOPSIDA NOYES HALL1212 E. 59th St, child core providedself-help health demo, women only abortionrights & sterilization abuselesbian talk & origami pornographyas violence against women slide showwomen's legal issues latino women in americaself-defense for womenwomen and the draftsara hoagland-male co-optation of thewomen s movementslide show * women in chinapoetry readingbatikFEmiNIST FEASTAll you can eat6:00 pmTOO 8:30 pm3-5 TheRuleofThumbandSIRENSCELEBRATEINTERNATIONALWOfTlEN’S DAYSAT. mARCH 8MASTERPRINTSfromLANDFALLPRESSYou are cordially invited toa preview reception cele¬brating the opening of aspecial exhibition which willbe on display at the Davidand Alfred Smart Gallery ofThe University of Chicago.5550 South GreenwoodAvenue. March 1 3 throughApril 27. 1980Parking is available in thelot at 55th Street andEllis AvenueThis exhibition is beingfunded in part by a grantfrom the Illinois ArtsCouncil, a State agency March 13throughApril 27Tuesday-Saturday10-4SundayNoon - 4The David and Alfred Smart GalleryThe University of Chicago5550 South Greenwood Avenue Robert Wise'sMarch 7"Klaatu barada nikto ..."cs IH DAY§11117:15Frederick Wilcox sFORBIDDENPI4NEl(Technicolor and Cinema Scope!)9:00March 8 7:1 5 and 9:15Michael Apted sMi tAll Films Cobb Hall $1.50Q. - Who’s That?A. - John CallawayQ. - What’s he doingin The Maroon?A. - He’s the specialGuest Speaker at the“On & Off TheRecord” - Soireenext Friday evening,the 14th.Q. - Where?A . - A t t h eQuadrangle Clubstarting at 8 p.m.Q. - What’s John Callaway Doing in Hyde Park?A. - He is a University alumnus, a visiting com¬mittee member who wants to bring youngUniversity & Hyde Park Residents together fora great social evening. Nice, huh?Q. - Sounds neat, what’s it cost?A. - A fin, with a drink included.Q. - Wow! How Do I Get a Ticket?A. - Only by Reservation. No Sales at the Door.Just send $5 for each ticket to “On and Off TheRecord” Box 9B, 4950 Chicago Beach Drive,Chicago 60615.Q. - Callaway, Cocktails and Dancing! Therejust May Be Life on the South Side after all.That’s off the record.A. - Of course. So, let’s leave Regenstein earlyand Go Dance “On The Record”.The Department of Music presents TheCONTEMPORARYCHAMBER PLAYERSof The University of ChicagoRALPH SHAPEY, Music DirectorSCHOENBERG • Suite, Op. 29 elsa charlston, SopranoSHULAMIT RAN. PionoRAN * Double VisionSHAPEY • Song of Songs No. 1 (Library of Congress Commission)MONDAY MARCH 10, 1980 • 8:30 P.M.THORNE HALL, 740 N. Lake Shore DriveFree and open to the public Students & FacultyWe have your newGas-SavingHONDA &DODGE OMNICome in and driveyours home today.See“Big Don” Williamscall 374-4305BOB NEALDODGE-HONDA7720 STONY ISLAND The University of ChicagoDepartment of MusicCHICAGO JAZZ ARCHIVEa 11r«- uilti rrrurilril <*\am|»lr*DR. EKKEHARD JOSTI ni\« r»it> «»f <»«twmm\‘Ft ROPE t\TRIXSMl T tTIOXS OF1 FRO- IMFRIC IV II 1 XT-0 iRDF.I \//SIXCE THE Min SIXTIES''FRID\Y M \R( H 7. 1080RRGFNSTFIN I.IBR \RY 2613:00 p.m,<>i«-n.i.»HEWLETTPACKARDSale ends March 21.1980SALE - SALE SALE - SALE7% to 12.5% OFFList SaleSTEP UP TO EXCELLENCESTEP CP TO SERIES E. HP31F. $50.00 $46.50.... „„ HP32E $70.00 $63.50‘i. Hr Ml TItoT’ v.. HP33E $90.00 S7S.75HP37E $75.00 S66.75^ •* v... HP38E $120.00 $105.00\ SERIES E FOREVERY NEED hi- -m .. .. j i ..n, . HP33C $120.00 $105.00UNIVERSITY of CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5750 S. ELLIS AVENUECALCULATOR DEPT. - SECOND FLOOR753-3303UNIVERSITY'PoulencOrgan ConrtrtD in Cj .MinorEdward AWuUiU\ soloistDebussyThree .VoctumeSibeliusSymphony .Mo. Iin D ALyor. Opus. \etmiss\on jta Tnrtni), A larch 7,s'30 pm.Rockefeller .VUmormf Uuipel59rh Sr. ^YVoodUwA.Aye.Barbara ScfuibertconductorInternational House FilmsRubles-Godoy's PCDE EBLLL WGM,Spanish with English Subtitles (Peru) 8 & 10 pmSaturdayMarch 8$1.501414 E. 59th St.The Chicago Maroon—Friday, March 7, 1980—7corku SIGQ&I in concert at the Blue Gargoyle** FRIDAY, mfiRCH 7, 8:00 p.m.$4.00 advance tickets at Spirit Records & Blue Gargoyle Lunch Service(Sponsored in part by a City Arts Grant from the Chicago Council on Fine Arts) 57th & UniversityFOUREXCITINGSEMINAR PROGRAMSfor UNIVERSITY STUDENTSTO EXPERIENCE AND LEARNABOUT ISRAELI. KIBBUTZ SEMINAR- MAY 15-JULY 24 - $975in cooperation with Kibbutz MaArtzi MovementII. SEPHARDIC CULTUREAND COMMUNITYIII. POLITICAL CULTUREAND IDEOLOGYIV. HOLOCAUST ANDREDEMPTION JUNE 1-28-$1150JULY 6-AUG. 2 - $1150JULY 6-AUG. 2-$1150SEMINARS II, III, IV in Jerusalem in cooper¬ation with Center for Jewish Community StudiesFOR FURTHER INFORMATION -CONTACT RABBI DANIEL I. LEIFER,HILLEL HOUSE, 5715 S. Woodlawn Avenue752-1127 forty at- Hit (elQAN C I N<3,tA VSI C ,*MUNCH\£9Ai.oo DonationSaturdayMarch 8 900 pm5715 5. WoodlawnThe Visiting Fellows Committeepresentsmmi 1. iisr/hii, m„ jjjin a publicFRIDAY, MARCH 14,1:30 P.M.HARPER 130All Students and Faculty in the College, the Divisions andthe Professional Schools are invitted to attend and to participate8—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, March 7, 1980Jazzman Jimmy Ellisat Gargoyle Tomorrowby Curtis BlackJimmy Ellis, one of Chicago's outstandingsaxophonists, brings his quartet to IdaNoyes Hall tomorrow evening, in a concertsponsored by the Chicago Front for Jazz. IThis is an opportunity to welcome a musi- ^cian who has represented Hyde Park on theChicago jazz scene for many years.Ellis's long experience includes such diverse gigs as the Duke Ellington Orchestra,the original Sun Ra Arkestra, the big bandsof Earl "Fatha" Hines and King Kolax;backing singers Sammy Davis Jr., PearlBailey, and Oscar Brown Jr.; and appear¬ances with smaller groups led by Eddie"Lockjaw” Davis and Al Grey. He now di¬vides his time between his quartet, studiowork, and teaching.1The Jimmy Ellis Quartet includes threeveteran musicians: bassist Bill Yancey,who has worked with Ella Fitzgerald, Errol jGarner and Sarah Vaughn; drummer |James Slaughter; and guitarist Herb White, 'who played with the late Gene Ammons, andis now part of the regular band at LarrySmith's Jazz Party Sundays at Chances R.The Ellis Quartet was appearing fivenights a week at the Palmer House last year— the kind of steady work that lets a unitdevelop its material and group sound. Theyhave performed in past months at the JazzShowcase and the Valhalla; Ellis alone hasbeen featured several times at the Sundayevening set at Chances R.One Sunday in February Ellis was there,shining strong alongside two of Chicago'smore experimental players, trumpeter Billy Brimfield and altoist Billy Perry. The occa¬sion was a tribute to Cannonball Adderlyand the legendary Chicago saxophonistNicky Hill. Ellis had the maturity and seasoned depth of AACM pioneer Brimfield,and the youth and vitality of Perry., "He plays alto as if it were a tenor,”i someone said to me, listening to Ellis thatj night. He gets a powerful sound from hismain horn (he also plays tenor and sopranosaxes), a fullness and extroversion whichplace him among Chicago saxophonists.His melodic lines bubble up, tenaciouslystretch rhythms, growl, shout, and cry. Heseems to have open ears for the timbral ma¬nipulations favored by younger musicians,yet reminds one that such vocal expressive- ^ness has always been a vital component of £straight-ahead swinging jazz. fjjEllis is a product of DuSable High School's “*famous music teacher Walter "Cap" Dyett. 3Dyett was involved in the education of most 5of those who make up the core of the "Chi- ?cago school" of saxophone playing — Gene jAmmons, Johnny Griffin, Von Freeman,and John Gilmore. These are hard playinghard boppers, with their sentimental side,uncompromising artists who were never iso¬lated from a base of popularity in their com¬munity. All are distinctly individual stylists— and the same tradition informs suchvarious sax voices as Fred Anderson, Sonny !Stitt, Ari Brown, Edward Wilkerson, Henry jThreadgill and Chico Freeman. (E. ParkerMcDougal and Prince James, two more finesaxists of this school, are featured ati Chances R this Sunday in a tribute to Gene Jimmy EllisAmmons and Jay Peters.)Ellis stands out in the company of Chicagosaxophonists, as individual and personal asany. His is a particularly beautiful flower¬ing from these roots. Ellis combines techni¬cal virtuosity with emotional directness.The consummate musician, classicallytrained at the Chicago Conservatory ofMusic, Ellis also has a very serious under[ standing of the deeper implications of music: as a spiritual healing force for a world full ofI wounds and divisions. He reminds one of Charlie Parker's response when an inter¬viewer asked his religion: "I am a devoutmusician," he replied.Ellis also directs his own big band, aworkshop he has held together with dedication and love for four years, and which heplans to premiere April 11 in its new homebase at the Blue Gargoyle. But while thatconcert will feature some of Chicago's finestyoung musicians, your chance to hear theunique saxophone of Jimmy Ellis comes tomorrow night at 8:30 in the Cloister Club ofIda Noyes. Admission is S3.Two New Exhibits Open at Smart and Renaissance Society Galleries1 wo campus galleries devoted to contemporary art are currently mounting new exhibits. 22 work during the seventies. An opening reception for the Smart Gallery's new exhibit, Mascolorful paintings in the abstract expressionist mode open to the public this Sunday from 5 to ter Prints from the Landfall Press, will beheld next Wednesday, March 12, from 5 to 7 pm.7 pm at the Renaissance Society Gallery on the fourth floor of Cobb Hall. Entitled simply j The 78 work exhibit includes prints in several styles by many artists, including Ed Paschke,Joan Snyder, the exhibit sensitively represents the development of this feminist artist's Christo, and William Wiley.1972 — one of 22 paintings to open at the Renaissance Society Gallery this SunJoan Snyder, "Womanchild,day. Robert Cottingham, "Cottingham Suite #24, Hamburger," 1980 — one of78 prints to open at the Smart Gallery next Wednesday.dDavidMiller Mo viesJean Arthur and Jimmie Stewart in Capra's Mr. Smith Goes to Washington.Jimmy StewartTribute to Jimmy Stewart: More accurately, a two night tribute toGeorge Cukor, for the Sandburg is showing two of the finest Cukors thisMonday and Tuesday, only one of which stars Mr. Stewart. But don't bedismayed. The Stewart tribute is a month long affair, and showcasesseveral classic Stewart performances. Throughout his career, Stew¬art's persona underwent several metamorphoses. It was molded mostsignificantly by Capra, Lubitsch, Hitchcock, Mann, and Ford. TheSandburg management unfortunately did not schedule any Hitchcock orFord. They however did come up with Winchester 73 (Mann, 1950), TheMortal Storm (Borzage, 1940), The Shop Around the Corner (Lubitsch,1940), and Mr. Smith Goes to Washington (Capra, 1939), all pivotal filmsin establishing Stewart's critical reputation. In The Philadelphia Story(1940), a classic if there ever was one, Stewart plays an earnest reporterwho is sent, along with photographer Ruth Hussey, to cover the weddingof socialite Katherine Hepburn. Hepburn, being a good Philly Mainliner, doesn't want nosy reporters around; neither does she want herex-husband Cary Grant around. But after she warms up to them andrekindles her fire with Grant, she changes her mind about the impending marriage. The film, based on a Philip Barry play written specifical¬ly for Hepburn and adapted for the screen by the acerbic wit OgdenStewart, revitalized Hepburn's career. But it's more than a Hepburnvehicle. She had enough sense to stipulate in her contract (negotiatedall by herself) that Grant and Stewart play the male leads. They, true toher hope, delivered two of the most sparkling comedy performances.The supporting players, especially Virginia Weidler as Hepburn's precocious sister, all show marvelous sense of comic timing. They and thetrio of stars handle the witty dialogues with panache. And Cukor's expert and loving orchestration makes this one of the most gracious of allfilms. Stewart's performance garnered him an Oscar. The bottom halfof the double bill, Travels With My Aunt (1972), stars the irrepressibleMaggie Smith. Based on a Graham Greene's novel, it tracks a square's(Alec McGowan) liberation with help from his Bohemian aunt from thefetters of conventional lifestyle. It's a Cukor film all the way, neatlyfinalizing his existential approach to life and art. The Sandburg, March10 & 11. 951-0627. $3. -TSDay the Earth Stood Still (Robert Wise,1951): An alien emissary to earth,Klaatu (Michael Rennie), lands hisflying saucer in a Washington D.C.baseball field. Out he steps, bearing agift for the President — a technologi¬cal wonder that would eliminate sick¬ness from the world. Unfortunately,one paranoid soldier mistakes the de¬vice for a weapon, fires, destroys thedevice, and wounds Klaatu (an amaz¬ing accomplishment for one shot, butlet that pass). Klaatu recovers quicklyat Walter Reed where he also explainshis mission to the President's secre¬tary: he has a message for citizens ofthe world, and it is too important to en¬trust to anything less than a meeting ofall the world's leaders. True to the fif¬ties (and the eighties?), the secretaryexplains such a meeting is impossible:"I want to be frank with you, Mr. Klaatu. Our world is presently filled withtensions and hostilities." Klaatu is theimmediate victim of these T&Hs: he'sconfined to the hospital. He escapes, ofcourse, and turns to the scientific community for a hearing. Through a further series of misunderstandings,Klaatu is killed, and Gort, the fourteen foot robot that has accompaniedhim on his journey prepares to destroythe Earth. All this may sound credible(this is after all SF), but it is incredible on screen. Least well explained isthe sense of immediate danger ani¬mating everyone. Klaatu is also sus¬pect: he knows English perfectly, yetis unable to foresee each inevitableconfrontation. The twists of plot seemless probable than necessary for themoralistic ending; and they also helphide the true relationship betweenKlaatu and the robot Gort. Finally,since Klaatu's Washington landlady(Patricia Neal) plays a major part inEarth's salvation, one wishes more ac¬tion had been filmed in the dark elevator where she is stuck with Klaatu during his 30 minute world blackout. (Washis appeal down to earth, or otherworldly?) If this is a classic of fiftiesSF, fifties SF isn't very good. Tonightat 7:15 in Quantrell. Doc; $1.50. —DMForbidden Planet (Fred MacLeod Wilcox, 1956): One of the most influentialSF films ever made; ideas from itreappear blatantly in Star Trek andLost in Space. As much fun as it is seeing a youngster version of Capt. Kirk,more and different stuff makes themovie worth seeing. The plot followsstandard fifties SF lines: Leslie Nielsen and crew travel to the galaxy'souter limits to investigate the disappearance of a scientific expedition.There they find one survivor, professor Walter Pidgeon (often comparedto Shakespeare's Prospero in TheTempest), and his gorgeous daughter.Subsequently they encounter sex, love,death, and horror. These classic issuesand ones of morality vs. machines pervade the film; but its Freudian foundations undercut the standard roles insuch conflicts. This basis is humorously and subtly set up; in one scene Nielsen hides from a naked woman between a V-shaped pair of trees. Oncestated, it reveals new meanings behind every action. And the action holdsattention well. No masterpiece, butfun, funny, and pretty bizarre. Plus, it has great special effects. Tonight at9:00 in Quantrell. Doc; $1.50. — GBThe Caine Mutiny (Edward Dmytryk,1954): A modern day Mutiny on theBounty. Humphery Bogart, in a switchof roles, plays the tyrannical Capt.Queeg whose psychological quirkscause the mutiny. The minions he op%mU presses and offends include Van Johnson, Fred MacMurray, and Jose Ferrer. The cast is uniformly excellent,all out proving that they can outtalkeach other. Talk, for that matter, isthe film's chief weakness. But it's perhaps the reason Debate Society pickedthis film. Tomorrow at 6:30, 9, and11:15 in Kent 107. $1.50, $1 for thosewith ball bearings. — TSAgatha (Michael Apted, 1978): Tantalizing themes of repressed homosexuality and appearance vs. reality runthrough this costume drama basedloosely on an incident in the life ofAgatha Christie. A fortyish Christievanished for eleven days in 1926, andshe never revealed the truth behindwhat remains an unsolved, real lifemystery. Agatha offers a hypotheticalsolution, based more on romance andthe charisma of its actors (VanessaRedgrave and Dustin Hoffman) thanprobability. An unexpected twist inplot, (though seemingly obligatory in amovie about Christie) mars whatcould have been a successful comedyof 1920s manners. Hoffman plays anAmerican journalist in pursuit of Redgrave's Mrs. Christie. Brooding, dimlylit photography by Vittorio Storraro(Luna, Apocalypse Now). Tomorrownight at 7:15 and 9:15 in Quantrell.Doc; $1.50. - KH Kathy Brady and Katherine Wiley in Court Studio's In the Region ofIce.Court One-ActsBeginning tonight, Court Studio presents two one-act plays which runfor two weekends. The first is In the Region of Ice, a play adapted anddirected by John Johnson. It concerns a crisis point in the life of a youngnun (Kathy Brady) when she and another sister (Katherine Wiley) areconfronted by a disturbed and brilliant Jewish student (Richard Kaye)at the Catholic University where they teach. Also starring Joan Bradshaw as the young man's mother, the play is based on an award winningstory by Joyce Carol Oates which was also made into an AcademyAward-winning film. As presented here, the play is short, sometimesfunny, but always moving.The second and longer one act is Chicago playwright David Mamet'sDuck Variations, directed by Mark Bernstein and starring Gale Heliumand Kim Robillard as two aging men who gather on a bench to museabout the habits of ducks. Their humorous and often hysterical conversation speaks more of their own fears and preoccupations, however, asthe men talk of life and death among the webbed-footed.Performances are in Court Studio's Reynold's Club Theatre, Fridaythrough Sunday, March 7-16. 8:30 pm; 7:30, Sundays. 753-3581. $1.50;students, $1.50. — RKMusicUC Symphony Orchestra: Any program that schedules a Sibeliussymphony gets my nod. The Sibe¬lius in this case is Symphony H2 inD, opus 43. Since the orchestra isplaying in Rockefeller this time,they have decided to take advan¬tage of their locale. They will ac¬company the chapel's biggest in¬strument in the Poulenc's OrganConcerto in g. The organ grinderis Edward Mondello. The lovelyThree Nocturnes by Debussy provides the necessary breather. Tonight in Rockefeller at 8:30. Free,but donations (to cover the cost ofperformance at the chapel) willbe welcomed. UC Symphony Or¬chestra may not be of the samecaliber as the CSO yet, but theythey don't charge you $20 perhead. So, spare a dime. — T.S.Coffee, tea and SG: Student Gov¬ernment's cure for winter quarter blahs is a relaxing coffeehouse. Bagels, donuts, coffee and Lhot apple cider will be for saleand five different musical actswill be for free. A classical musictrio will play at 8:30. At 9:15, en Jergetic folk guitarist David Kayewill perform. Nick Filipo (minusDaniels) will do his folkie bluegrass thing at 10. The dynamic Aduo of folk rock, Christie andDave, will play at 10:45. NativeHyde Parker Shelton Sallie willclose the evening with jazzy r & b.Tonight in the Ida Noyes Librarythe grey city journalTim Baker, Gary Beberman,Cottingham, Jaan Elias, Peter Eng, lHausler, Bennett Jacks, Karen Kapn(Less, Jake Levine, Bob Lewis, RetMakos, Rory McGahan, Molly McQuMark Neustadt, Jeanne NowaczewsfAndrew Patner, Martha Rosett, RenSchilke, Helena Szepe, Ray Uliassi,Phoebe Zerwick, and Ellen ZimmernEdited by David Miller. Associate edkowski. Contributing editor: Ted SheThe lake, last weekend.2—the grey city journal—Friday, March 7, 1980Korean Art5,000 Years of Korean Art: Sandwiched between the two giants of EastAsia — China and Japan, Korea has historically been overshadowedand dominated by its two neighbors both politically and culturally. But,as the conduit of traffic between the two, it has had periods in which itsarts flourished and even rivalled those of China and Japan. This exhibit,assembling artifacts from various major periods, serves to dispel thenotion that Korean culture is derivate. It also includes objects and materials from the prehistoric indigenous population. Through April 27, atthe Art Institute, Michigan at Adams. Mon Wed, Fri, 10:30-4:30; Th,10:30 8; Sat, 10 5; Sun, noon-5. 443 3600. Admission discretionary; Th.free -TSuntil 1 am. Admission free.Live Party : The Battling Tops willplay at a Breckenrige dorm partytonight at 10. Free refreshments,too. Admission free with UC ID.Jimmy Ellis Quartet in the CloisterClub of Ida Noyes Hall, Saturday,March 8 at 8:30 pm, $3 admission.See review on p. 1.Acisand Galatea: It's a shame thatHandel masques are so rarelymounted nowadays. In Handel'sdays, they were like My FairLady— popular and often revived.The UC Chorus and Orchestra, inn, Curtis Black, Neal Cohen, Laurag, Nels Erickson, Sandy Harris, Donpner, Richard Kaye, John Kim, JulieRebecca Lillian, Philip Maher, JeffQuade, Robin Mitchell, Mike Moore,vski, Adam O'Connor, Danila Oder,’enee Saracki, Robert Saska, Chucksi, Lisa von Drehle, Ken Wissoker,?rman.editors: Karen Hornick, Mary Manihen. Friday, March 7, 1980. a departure from their traditionof masses and other large scalechoral works, will present Acisand Galatea, a lesser known butenchanting Handel work. The soloists, all seasoned singers, areCarol Loverde as Galatea, Rob¬ert Heinrikson as Acis, AlonzoCrook as Damon, and JamesMack as Polypheme (the mon¬ster). Eric Weimer is the guestconductor. Tomorrow and Sun¬day at 8 in Bond Chapel. Free.753 2612.Organ Recital: University organist' Edward Mondello presents a program of works by two well knowncomposers, Bach and Brahms aswell as works by three obscureones, Maurice Durufle, SamuelScheidt, and Charles Tourne-mire. Rockefeller MemorialChapel. Tuesday, March 11, at 8.Free.Paul Goldstein and Patrick Hogan:A concert of experimental music:"Music for Keyboard and strings(& Things)/' experimental "clas¬sical'' piece for two pianists/one N. Mobile at 8:30 p.m. 237 7555.$3-5."Seated Maitreya" from 5000 Years of Korean Artmusic director, Ralph Shapey.The program will also include thegroup's pianist, Shulamit Ran'sown Double Vision and Schoenberg's Suite, Opus 29. SopranoElsa Charlston will be featured.Mon., March 10 at DowntownNorthwestern's Thorene Hall, 740N. Lake Shore Drive at 8:30 pm.Free!Tommy Makum, Liam Clancy:Irish eyes aren't the only onessmiling when these guys singtheir songs. Request them to do"The Band Played Waltzing Matilda" if they don't on their own.Clancy does the best version of itthat I've ever heard. Sat., March8 at Steinmetz High School, 3030Two puppets and two women, members of the Women's CollageTheatrj, perform a scene from Sirens.Sirens &The Rule of Thumb Exit the King: Eugene Ionesco'sdrama, a highly stylized ritualis¬tic death rite, opens at Court Theater Thurs., March 13 at 8:30 pm.It will run Thurs.-Sun. throughApril 20. Curtain time is 8:30 allnights but Sunday, which is 7:30.753-3581.The Killer : If Court Theater has putyou in an Ionesco mood, you canhear a radio version of his secondfull length play, starring BrianMurray. Mon., March 10 at 8pmover WFMT, 98.7 FM.Herd: All we know about Ew Ross'performance art is that there aremany rubber stamped sheep onthe poster. Find out more tonightat Midway Studios, 6016 S. Ingleside at 8 pm. 753-4821. Admission$1.50.Tympanic Sights: Jean Sousa andSteve Banks will explore the synergistic effects of light and soundwaves in theirs, the last of Midway Studios winter quarterschedule of performance art.Sat., March 8 at the Studios, 6016S. Ingleside at 8 pm. 753-4821$1.50.Chicago Women in the Arts: Arethey evolving, or spinning theirwheels? That is the title of apanel discussion with JoannaFrueh, C.L. Morrison and Barbara Aubin. Thur., March 13 atARC Gallery, 6 W. Hubbard at 7pm. 266 7607. SI donation.Celebrate International Women'sDay: Along with the evening ofwomen's theater, there will be aday full of political and culturalworkshops (free) and a dinner(all you can eat for a buck.)From 10 am to noon there will bea women's self help health de¬monstration, a talk on abortionrights and sterilization abuse, alesbian talk and origami (?) anda slide show called "Pornography as violence againstwomen, " from 12 to 2 workshopswill be on women's legal issues,Latina women in America, a talkon women and the draft, and selfdefense for women; from 2 to 4 feminist philosopher Sarah Hoagland will speak on male co optation of the women's movement,there will also be a slide show onwomen in China, from 4 to 6 Pri-mavera will sponsor a poetryreading, there'll be batik, too. Fe¬minist feast begins at 6. It alltakes place Sat., March 8 at theIda Noyes Hall.Calendar compiled by Rebecca Lil¬lian.Tomorrow night two plays about women's lives will be performed atthe Blue Gargoyle as part of the International Women's Day celebration. Both The Rule of Thumb and Sirens were produced collectively,reworking the traditional forms of theater into a medium suitable forexpressing women's experience.The Rule of Thumb is constructed as a poem, with the resoundingrefrain: "The history of man is written in woman's blood." RonniScheir, who compiled the script while writing a book on violence againstwomen, describes it as "a patchwork quilt of women's lives," depictingwomen's "strength and wisdom against a backgroung of violence andwoman-hating." Every scene is superbly acted and powerful, especiallyMorenike Bruce's delivery of Sojourner Truth's immortal speech,"Ain't i a Woman?"Women's Collage Theatre from New York will perform Sirens. A "collage" play, Sirens is compiled and adapted from the writings of Penelope Mortimer, Robin Morgan, Dorothy Richardson, Joanna Russ, andfrom improvisational work by the cast. Through the collective voices ofdivergent women, past and present, renowned and forgotten, Sirenstells the story of one woman in transition. Women's Collage Theatreacts out this story with a traveling art collection and life sized puppets.Both plays will be performed Saturday, March 8 at 5655 S. Universityat 8:30 pm. Tickets, which range from $3 to $5 based on ability to pay,are available at the Reynolds Club Box Office and at the door. — AnnLahiff and Barbara Bochnovic.grand piano. "HogansteinBlues," experimental jazz workfor clarinet and mouthpiece,piano keys and strings, hummer,singers, shouters, and audience.Wed., Mar. 12 at noon in ReynoldsClub. Free.Free at lunch: The last lunchtimeconcert of the quarter, sponsoredby the Dept, of Music, will feature a mystery guest. Thurs.,March 13 in Reynolds ClubLounge at 12:15 p.m. Free.Hanah Jon Taylor, a very talentedflautist and soprano saxophonistwho has taken many influencesand welded a highly individualand creative style which yieldsquite enjoyable music. Hanah appears with Dave Williams on bassand Otis Gould on drums. ThisSunday, March 9 at 8 pm at theProgressive Arts Center, a pleas¬ant art-filled listening spacewhere free fruit and cider aresometimes served, located at1416 S. Michigan. Also Saturday,March 22 at 8 pm and Sunday,March 23 at 4 pm at the OsunCenter for the Arts, 2441 E. 75thSt. All concerts have a $4 admis¬sion charge. — CBE. Parker McDougal and PrinceJames play a tribute to late greatChicago saxophonists GeneAmmons and Jay Peters at LarrySmith's Live Jazz Party, ChancesR in Harper Court, Sunday,March 9 starting at 9 pm. $5cover.UC at NU: The University's ownContemporary Players will perform three pieces, including Songof Songs No. 1 by the group's 5-o>QThe lake, last September.the grey city journal—Friday, March 7, 1980—3DavidMiller MoviesCourt One-Acts IBeginning tonight, Court Studio presents two one-act plays which runfor two weekends. The first is In the Region of Ice, a play adapted anddirected by John Johnson. It concerns a crisis-point in the life of a youngnun (Kathy Brady) when she and another sister (Katherine Wiley) areconfronted by a disturbed and brilliant Jewish student (Richard Kaye) Iat the Catholic University where they teach. Also starring Joan Bradshaw as the young man's mother, the play is based on an award winningstory by Joyce Carol Oates which was also made into an AcademyAward-winning film. As presented here, the play is short, sometimesfunny, but always moving.The second and longer one-act is Chicago playwright David Mamet'sDuck Variations, directed by Mark Bernstein and starring Gale Heliumand Kim Robillard as two aging men who gather on a bench to museabout the habits of ducks. Their humorous and often hysterical conversation speaks more of their own fears and preoccupations, however, asthe men talk of life and death among the webbed-footed.Performances are in Court Studio's Reynold's Club Theatre, Fridaythrough Sunday, March 7-16. 8:30 pm; 7:30, Sundays. 753 3581. $1.50;students, $1.50. — RKquarter blahs is a relaxing coffeehouse. Bagels, donuts, coffee and Ihot apple cider will be for sale Iand five different musical acts Iwill be for free. A classical musictrio will play at 8:30. At 9:15, en- Iergetic folk guitarist David Kayewill perform. Nick Filipo (minusDaniels) will do his folkie blue Igrass thing at 10. The dynamic Iduo of folk rock, Christie andDave, will play at 10:45. NativeHyde Parker Shelton Sallie willclose the evening with jazzy r & b.Tonight in the Ida Noyes Librarythe greyTim Baker, Gary BebermanlCottingham, Jaan Elias, Peter Eng IHausler, Bennett Jacks, Karen KapLess, Jake Levine, Bob Lewis, R<Makos, Rory McGahan, Molly McGMark Neustadt, Jeanne NowaczewAndrew Patner, Martha Rosett, RenSchilke, Helena Szepe, Ray Uliassi,Phoebe Zerwick, and Ellen Zimmei IEdited by David Miller. Associate (Ikowski. Contributing editor: Ted St IMusicUC Symphony Orchestra: Any program that schedules a Sibeliussymphony gets my nod. The Sibe¬lius in this case is Symphony #2 inD, opus 43. Since the orchestra isplaying in Rockefeller this time,they have decided to take advan¬tage of their locale. They will ac¬company the chapel's biggest in¬strument in the Poulenc's OrganConcerto in g. The organ grinderis Edward Mondello. The lovelyThree Nocturnes by Debussy provides the necessary breather. Tonight in Rockefeller at 8:30. Free,but donations (to cover the cost ofperformance at the chapel) willbe welcomed. UC Symphony Or¬chestra may not be of the samecaliber as the CSO yet, but theythey don't charge you $20 perhead. So, spare a dime. — T.S.Coffee, tea and SG: Student Government's cure for winter2—the grey city journal—Friday, March 7, 1980 ■oc2o>O)<0ITOt/>3Kathy Brady and Katherine Wiley in Court Studio's In the Region ofIce.Day the Earth Stood Still (Robert Wise,1951): An alien emissary to earth,Klaatu (Michael Rennie), lands hisflying saucer in a Washington D.C.baseball field. Out he steps, bearing agift for the President — a technologi¬cal wonder that would eliminate sick¬ness from the world. Unfortunately,one paranoid soldier mistakes the de¬vice for a weapon, fires, destroys thedevice, and wounds Klaatu (an amaz¬ing accomplishment for one shot, butlet that pass). Klaatu recovers quicklyat Walter Reed where he also explainshis mission to the President's secre¬tary: he has a message for citizens ofthe world, and it is too important to entrust to anything less than a meeting ofall the world's leaders. True to the fif¬ties (and the eighties?), the secretaryexplains such a meeting is impossible:"I want to be frank with you, Mr. Klaatu. Our world is presently filled withtensions and hostilities." Klaatu is theimmediate victim of these T&Hs: he'sconfined to the hospital. He escapes, ofcourse, and turns to the scientific community for a hearing Through a fur¬ther series of misunderstandings,Klaatu is killed, and Gort, the fourteen foot robot that has accompaniedhim on his journey prepares to destroythe Earth. All this may sound credible(this is after all SF), but it is incredible on screen. Least well explained isthe sense of immediate danger animating everyone. Klaatu is also sus¬pect: he knows English perfectly, yetis unable to foresee each inevitableconfrontation. The twists of plot seemless probable than necessary for themoralistic ending; and they also helphide the true relationship betweenKlaatu and the robot Gort. Finally,since Klaatu's Washington landlady(Patricia Neal) plays a major part inEarth's salvation, one wishes more ac¬tion had been filmed in the dark elevator where she is stuck with Klaatu during his 30 minute world blackout. (Washis appeal down to earth, or other¬worldly?) If this is a classic of fiftiesSF, fifties SF isn't very good. Tonightat 7:15 in Quantrell. Doc; $1.50. —DMForbidden Planet (Fred MacLeod Wil¬cox, 1956): One of the most influentialSF films ever made; ideas from itreappear blatantly in Star Trek andLost in Space. As much fun as it is seeing a youngster version of Capt. Kirk,more and different stuff makes themovie worth seeing. The plot followsstandard fifties SF lines: Leslie Niel¬sen and crew travel to the galaxy'souter limits to investigate the disappearance of a scientific expedition.There they find one survivor, professor Walter Pidgeon (often comparedto Shakespeare's Prospero in TheTempest), and his gorgeous daughter.Subsequently they encounter sex, love,death, and horror. These classic issuesand ones of morality vs. machines pervade the film; but its Freudian foundations undercut the standard roles insuch conflicts. This basis is humorously and subtly set up; in one scene Nielsen hides from a naked woman between a V-shaped pair of trees. Oncestated, it reveals new meanings behind every action. And the action holdsattention well. No masterpiece, butfun, funny, and pretty bizarre. Plus, itThe lake, last weekend. Jean Arthur and Jimmie Stewart in Capra's Mr. Smith Goes to Washington.Jimmy StewartTribute to Jimmy Stewart: More accurately, a two night tribute toGeorge Cukor, for the Sandburg is showing two of the finest Cukors thisMonday and Tuesday, only one of which stars Mr. Stewart. But don't bedismayed. The Stewart tribute is a month long affair, and showcasesseveral classic Stewart performances. Throughout his career, Stew¬art's persona underwent several metamorphoses. It was molded mostsignificantly by Capra, Lubitsch, Hitchcock, Mann, and Ford. TheSandburg management unfortunately did not schedule any Hitchcock orFord. They however did come up with Winchester 73 (Mann, 1950), TheMortal Storm (Borzage, 1940), The Shop Around the Corner (Lubitsch,1940), and Mr. Smith Goes to Washington (Capra, 1939), all pivotal filmsin establishing Stewart's critical reputation. In The Philadelphia Story(1940), a classic if there ever was one, Stewart plays an earnest reporterwho is sent, along with photographer Ruth Hussey, to cover the weddingof socialite Katherine Hepburn. Hepburn, being a good Phil ly Mainliner, doesn't want nosy reporters around; neither does she want herex-husband Cary Grant around. But after she warms up to them andrekindles her fire with Grant, she changes her mind about the impending marriage. The film, based on a Philip Barry play written specifical¬ly for Hepburn and adapted for the screen by the acerbic wit OgdenStewart, revitalized Hepburn's career. But it's more than a Hepburnvehicle. She had enough sense to stipulate in her contract (negotiatedall by herself) that Grant and Stewart play the male leads. They, true toher hope, delivered two of the most sparkling comedy performances.The supporting players, especially Virginia Weidler as Hepburn's precocious sister, all show marvelous sense of comic timing. They and thetrio of stars handle the witty dialogues with panache. And Cukor's expert and loving orchestration makes this one of the most gracious of allfilms. Stewart's performance garnered him an Oscar. The bottom halfof the double bill, Travels With My Aunt (1972), stars the irrepressibleMaggie Smith. Based on a Graham Greene's novel, it tracks a square's(Alec McGowan) liberation with help from his Bohemian aunt from thefetters of conventional lifestyle. It's a Cukor film all the way, neatlyfinalizing his existential approach to life and art. The Sandburg, March10 & 11. 951-0627. $3. -TSpresses and offends include Van Johnson, Fred MacMurray, and Jose Fer¬rer. The cast is uniformly excellent,all out proving that they can outtalkeach other. Talk, for that matter, isthe film's chief weakness. But it's per¬haps the reason Debate Society pickedthis film. Tomorrow at 6:30, 9, and11:15 in Kent 107. $1.50, $1 for thosewith ball bearings. —TSAgatha (Michael Apted, 1978): Tantalizing themes of repressed homosexuality and appearance vs. reality runthrough this costume drama basedloosely on an incident in the life ofAgatha Christie. A fortyish Christievanished for eleven days in 1926, andshe never revealed the truth behindwhat remains an unsolved, real lifemystery. Agatha offers a hypotheticalsolution, based more on romance andthe charisma of its actors (VanessaRedgrave and Dustin Hoffman) thanprobability. An unexpected twist inplot, (though seemingly obligatory in amovie about Christie) mars whatcould have been a successful comedyof 1920s manners. Hoffman plays anAmerican journalist in pursuit of Redgrave's Mrs. Christie. Brooding, dimlylit photography by Vittorio Storraro(Luna, Apocalypse Now). Tomorrownight at 7:15 and 9:15 in Quantrell.Doc; $1.50. — KHhas great special effects. Tonight at9:00 in Quantrell. Doc; $1.50. — GBThe Caine Mutiny (Edward Dmytryk,1954): A modern day Mutiny on theBounty. Humphery Bogart, in a switchof roles, plays the tyrannical Capt.Queeg whose psychological quirkscause the mutiny. The minions he op-1SUMMER STUDY AT THEUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOThe Summer Session is a longtime tradition at the Universityof Chicago.Summer Session courses carryfull academic credit, and aretaught by the regular faculty ata 30% reduced summer rate. Choose from a wide rangeof graduate and undergraduateofferings including intensivelanguage courses, a specialLatin Program, and a full spec¬trum of the liberal arts.Summer Session begins June 23.The Universityof ChicagoSummer SessionAll information on courses for Summer Quarterstudents is contained in this announcement. No oth¬er catalogue will be issued.Duration and schedule of courses vary. All meetfor class 30 hours and yield at least 100 units (3'/:semester hours) of academic credit and range fromthree weeks to ten weeks. Check the starting andending dates of each course. If dates are not listed,the course meets for the entire session.Registration for Summer Session V isiting StudentsSummer Visiting Students must register in personfor all courses at the Office of the Summer Session,1307 East 60th Street, Monday and Tuesday, June23 and 24, between 9:30 and 4:30. Late registrationwill be on W ednesday, June 25. Transcripts are notrequired.All students are automatically eligible for StudentHealth Services. In addition, all students must becovered by an adequate insurance plan by eitherpurchasing the University’s Blue Cross/Blue Shieldplan at $50.00 for the Summer Quarter, or by pre¬senting evidence of similar coverage, whereupon thestudent w ill sign a statement of waiver.All courses (except for some special institutes andworkshops) are part of the regular University cur¬riculum and carry full, regular academic credit.Since registration as a Summer Visiting Studentdoes not constitute admission to any University de¬gree program. Summer Visiting Students may peti¬tion to apply such credit toward a degree only ifthey are later admitted as degree candidates in theUniversity.Unless otherwise indicated, all courses yield 100units of credit (3‘/j semester hours). Undergraduatecourses are numbered 001-299; graduate levelcourses are numbered 300 or above. Courses listedwith both a 200 level number and a 300 level num¬ber are available for either graduate or undergradu¬ate credit. Some graduate courses are open to un¬dergraduates, as indicated. Some courses requireconsent of the instructor. Student must obtain aconsent-to-register form from the Summer SessionOffice, have it signed by the instructor or the appro¬priate departmental officer, prior to registering.Grade reports will be mailed, and grades are filedin the Office of the Registrar after the end of theSummer Session. Transcripts may be requested atany time thereafter. A fee of S3.00 per transcript ischarged. Students who intend to transfer creditfrom the Summer Session toward a degree at an¬other institution should make such arrangementswith that institution in advance. The University ofChicago cannot guarantee the acceptability of itscredits elsewhere.Students not wishing to receive grades should reg¬ister for an “R,” which indicates that the student isregistered for the course. Summer Visiting Studentsmay not audit classes without payment of tuition.For tuition, see Tuition and Rates below,schedule 1.For L'C Regular Degree StudentsRegistration will be June 23 and 24. Consult Sum¬mer Quarter Time Schedules available about June 5for detailed instructions and for courses not listedhere. UC students register according to regular pro¬cedures, not through University Extension. Tuition and Rates1. Tuition rate for all UC undergraduate degreestudents and Summer Session Visiting Students (un¬dergraduate or graduate):I course $445. 2 courses $750, 3 courses $10552. Tuition rate for all graduate degree students inthe Division of Humanities and Social Science:1 course $490, 2 courses $800, 3 courses $11103. Tuition for all other University students is at theregular rate. Grade reports will be mailed at the endof the Summer Sessiob4. The Returning Scholar. For students at least 35years old or 10 years out of their last degree pro¬gram (for details call 753-3137), tuition:I course S315, 2 courses $530, 3 courses $750Note: Courses are not contingent upon a minimumenrollment.HousingA limited number of rooms in the University Resi¬dence Halls is available to Summer Session studentson a first-come, first-served basis. Students wishingto arrange for a room should write or call: The Uni¬versity of Chicago Extension, 1307 East 60th Street,Chicago, Illinois, 60637 — phone: (312) 753-3137.Students may prefer to make private housing ar¬rangements in the University community ofHyde Park.QuestionsWrite or call: The University of Chicago Extension1307 East 60th Street Chicago, Illinois 60637Phone:(312)753-3137AbbreviationsM, T, W, Th. E Indicate days of the week; M-F indi¬cate 5 class meetings per week, MW, TTh indicatetwo sessions per week. Prereq: prerequisite; thesymbol = means “identical with”; “Arr” to bear-ranged. Unless otherwise indicated, twice weeklyclass meetings are for one hour twenty minuteseach; thrice weekly class meetings are for fiftyminutes each. Number in parentheses refers to sub¬ject codes used during registration.In keeping with its long-standing traditions and pol¬icies, The University of Chicago, in admissions,employment, and access to programs, considers stu¬dents on the basis of individual merit and withoutregard to race, color, religion, sex, national orethnic origin, handicap, or other factors irrelevantto fruitful participation in the programs of the Uni¬versity. The Affirmative Action Officer is theemployee designated by the University to coordinateits adherence to this policy, and the related Federaland State laws and regulations, including Section504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, as amended.Court TheatreThe season will feature three outstanding produc¬tions and will extend from July 3 to Labor Day withperformances scheduled W ednesday through Sun¬day at 8:30 pm and matinees on Sunday at 3:00 pm.For details, call or write to: Court Theatre,Reynolds Club, 5706 University Avenue, Chicago,Illinois 60637, Phone: (312) 753-3581.Anthropology(400)205/305. Approaches to Language and MythDiverse aspects, functions, and foundations of lin¬guistic and mythological theories in their interrela¬tions. Some focus on comparative poetry (primitive,archaic, contemporary US). Intensive study of ma¬jor mythic/poetic texts. 1:30-3:30MWF(June23-July 25). Paul Friedrich, Professor, Departmentsof Anthropology and Linguistics.247/347. Introduction to Political AnthropologyComparative analysis of political structures andprocesses in different cultures. Theoretical ap¬proaches developed to account for nature of thesestructures and processes. Form and content of polit¬ical oratory and discourse in other cultures: imagesof reality, values and meanings, power and authori¬ty. Political anthropology’s insights into the processcharacteristic of our own system. 9-12 WF (June25-July 25). Jean Comaroff. Assistant Professor,Department of A nthropology and the College.316. African Systems of Thought: Tradition andModernityDiscussion of major themes in study of Africantraditional thought and its transformation, with em¬phasis on models of change, the problem of ‘con¬version’ to world faiths, and the emergence ofmodern ideological forms. 10-12 MWF (June 23-July 25). John Comaroff, Assistant Professor, De¬partment of Anthropology and the College, Chair¬man, Committee on African Studies. Art History(213)270 385. Art of IndiaHistory of sculpture and architecture of the sub¬continent from the earliest times to the 12th C A.D.1-2:30 TTh. Pramod Chandra. Professor, Depart¬ments of Art and South Asian Languages andCivilizations and the College.340. Renaissance and Baroque Painting in SpainSpanish painting from the Flemish phase ol the late15th C. through conversion to Italian Renaissancestyle in the 16th C and development of schools otValencia. Seville, and Madrid during the 17th C .Pedro Berruguete, Fernando Vane/, Juan deJuanes, El Greco, Zurbaran, Velazquez andMurillo. 1-2:30MW Far! Rosenthal, Professor,Department of Art and the College.Behavioral SciencesBehavioral Sciences (401)264 393. Freud: Basic Psychological WritingsIntensive critical study of Freud’s work on psycho¬analytic method, evidence and observations concer¬ning psychological development, social relations,personality organization, and emotional processes.Prereq: 2nd year standing or consent of instructor.10-12 M WF. (July 28-A ugust 29) (or can be arrang¬ed). David Orhnsky, Professor of Psychology,Social Sciences Collegiate Division.319. Behavioral GeneticsSurvey of progress in human behavior genetics. Re¬view of Mendelian genetics and quantitative geneticanalysis. Genetic factors in general and specialabilities, sex differences, and psychopathology. 1-3TTh (June 24-July 31). R. Darrel/ Bock, Professor,Departments of Education and Behavioral Sciences.411. Psycholinguistics—IIAdvanced research in psycholinguistics. Prereq:Cog. Comm 301, 401. To be arranged. David Mc¬Neil, Professor, Departments of Behavioral Sci¬ences and Linguistics.421. Development of Sex DifferencesSynthesis of available research literature on sex dif¬ferences and a critical evaluation of explanations ofthose differences from biological, cognitive and so¬cial perspectives. Prereq: Consent of instructor.1-3:30 MW (June 23-July 30). Martha A. McClin-tock, Assistant Professor, Department ofBehavioral Sciences, and the College.422. Induced Social ChangeAnalysis of planned intervention into psychosocialsystems with respect to entry, impact, and unanti¬cipated consequences. 2:30-4:50 TTh (June 24-July31). John C. Glidwell, Professor, Department of 'Behavioral Sciences.Human Development (440)355. Child DevelopmentEmphasis is on social development in early child¬hood, especially the 1st year of life. The orientationis bio-social, with equal emphasis placed in the bio¬logical and the cultural. Implications for adult be¬havior, and for culture in general will also receiveattention. 1-4 TTh (June 24-July 31) Daniel C.Freedman, Professor, Behavioral Sciences.Biology andChemistrysee SciencesEconomics(405) ~210. Introduction to FLconomicsRead and understand applied econometric studies.Elementary calculus; statistical inference procedureswithout assuming much prior statistical knowledge.6:20-9 pm T, Henri Theil, Prof essor of Economicsand the Graduate School of Business.222/318. Topics in American Economic HistoryApplication of economic analysis to important is¬sues in American economic history : role of inden¬tured servitude and slavery in colonial labor market,record and sources of 19th C. economic growth,slavery and the Southern economy, economic ef¬fects of the frontier, social saving and the expansionof the railroads, the development of national capitalmarkets; economic causes and effects of 19th C. im¬migration, and quantitative analysis of social andeconomic mobility. A research paper on a topic inAmerican economic history is required. Prereq:Econ 300 or equivalent. 10-11:20 TTh. David Galen-son, Assistant Professor of Economics, and theCollege. Education(415)305. Principles of Curriculum IAn introduction to ways of viewing the problems ofcurriculum development. Contrasting ideas of curri¬cular planning are examined. 9-11:30 MW (June23-July 30). John R. Ginther, Associate Professor,Department of Education.306. Quantitative Inquiry I1-2:20 TWTh (June 24-July 31). David R. Rogosa,Assistant Professor, Department of Education.333. Women in Educational Administration9-12 MTWTh (July 14-July 21). Lorraine LaVigne,Principal, Nursery, Lower, Middle, LaboratorySchool.345. Child ( are Research SeminarMeetings to be arranged. Prereq: consent. A. AlisonClarke-Stewart, Associate Professor, Departmentof Education.346. Development of Sex Differences1-3:20 MW (June 23-July 30). K. Alison Clarke-Stewart, Associate Professor, Department of Edu¬cation.354. Approaches to the Teaching of CompositionPrereq: English 320. 3-4:20 MW, George Hillocks,Jr., Associate Professor, Department of Education.358. FAidence in Evaluation9-12 TTh (June 24-July 10). John R Ginther, As-sociate Professor, Department of Education.364. Methods and Materials of InstructionMeets with Education 354. 3-4:20 MW, George Hil¬locks, Jr., Associate Professor, Department ofEducation.378. Reform in Higher EducationMeetings to be arranged. Marie Jones, AssistantProfessor, Department of Education.390. The School Principalship9-12 MTWTh (June 23-July 10). R. Bruce McPher¬son, Director, Laboratory School.403. Fligher Education: An Overview9-12 MTWTh (June 23-July 10) Harold S. Wechs-ler, Assistant Professor, Department of Education.421. Special Problems in Urban Education1:30-2:50 TTh. Edgar G. Epps, Marshall Field Pro¬fessor, Department of Education.429. Project Design and FAaluation9-12 MTWTh. (July 14-July 31). Roger A. Pillet,Professor, Departments of Education and RomanceLanguages and Literatures, and the College.452.(Educ.) 432.(Beh.Sci.) Organizational Process,Reality and ChangeDeals with how managers, administrators, andother influential participants engage effectively andineffectively in problem solving, communication,influence and conflict resolution. Episodes of actualorganizational behavior, provided by the instructorand by students, are examined to illuminate themeanings of process, system, and organizational ef¬fectiveness; conflict; role and role change; com¬munication; power-dependent relations; balancedand unbalanced structures; cooperative and com¬petitive conflict management; and organizationallyproductive motivation and learning. Appropriatefor managers, administrators in schools and busi¬ness. department heads, team leaders, and otherpeople in evaluative and supervisory positions, aswell as for students of social and organizationalprocesses. 2-3:20 MW (June 23-July 30). FrederickF. Light hall, Associate Professor, Departments ofEducation and Behavioral Sciences.461. Internship in Higher EducationMeetings to be arranged. Harold S. Wechsler, As¬sistant Professor, Department of Education.462. Practice Teaching—EnglishPrereq: consent. 9-12 MTW Th (July 14-August 14).George Hillocks, Jr., Associate Professor, Depart¬ment of Education.464. M.A.T. Reading and Research, History/SSPrereq: consent. Meetings to be arranged. MarkKrug, Professor, Department of Education.464 07. M. A.T. Reading and Research—MathematicsPrereq: consent. Meetings to be arranged. ZalmanUsiskin, A ssociate Professor, Department of Edu¬cation.483. Curriculum and Instruction. SeminarPrereq: consent. Meetings to be arranged. HaroldS Wechsler, Assistant Professor, Department ofEducation.484. Controversies Involving Science2:30-3:50 MW. Joseph Ben-David. Professor, De¬part men i of Education.498. Special Problems in Education: Higher Educa¬tionPrereq: consent. Meetings to be arranged. HaroldWechsler, Assistant Professor, Department ofEducation.499. Dissertation ResearchPrereq: consent of faculty member in Education.Meetings to be arranged. Staff.505. New Topics in School: Algebra and (.eometrv1-3:50 MTW Th (July I4-Julv3l). Zalman Usiskin,A ssociate Professor, Department of Education.509. Workshop: The Educational lives of Museums10-11:30 MW (June 23-August 14). William D. Pat¬tison, Associate Professor, Departments ofGeography and Education, and the College.513. Arithmetic, Calculators, and Problem-Solving1-3:50 MTWTh (June 23 July 10). Max S. Bell,A ssociate Professor. Department of Education.English(225)266 341. The Novel in SocietyThis course will involve an analysis of a half-dozenbig 19th C. novels w hich treat of social issues.10-11:30 MW. Robert E. Streeter, Professor,Department of English and the College.288/441. American l iterature Survey IAmerican writing in its historical context from colo¬nial beginnings to Civil War. Jonathan Edwards,Franklin Irving, Poe, Emerson, Thoreau, Melville,and Hawthorne. Variety of genres will be consi¬dered. 1-2:30 MW. Robert E. Streeter, Professor,Department of English and the College.306. Interpretation of Intellectual TextsIntroduction to the arts of “scholarly Reading.’’Discuss major British and American texts from18th-20th C., attempting to do justice to originaland to understand problems raised by attemptingindependent reading of a work. Prereq: I year hu¬manities or consent. 9:30-11:30 TTh (June 23-A ugust 12). Wayne C. Booth, George M. PullmanDistinguished Service Professor, Department ofEnglish, Committee on the Analysis of Ideas andthe Study of Methods, and the College.317. Forms of CriticismIntroduction to 2 or 3 ways of talking responsiblyabout literary quality. Improved critical inquiry andargument. Several short papers and 1 term paper,based on close reading both of critics and works dis¬cussed. Prereq: I year humanities or consent. 1-3TTh (June 23-A ugust 12). Wayne C. Booth, GeorgeM. Pullman Distinguished Service Professor, De¬partment of English, Committee on the Analysis ofIdeas and the Study of Methods, and the College.418' 267. Shelley and KeatsCourse reading of major poetry with special atten¬tion to its literary, and historical contexts. One termpaper. No exam. 1-3 MWE (June 23-July 25).James Chandler. Assistant Professor, Departmentof English, and the College.French(232)101-2-3. Elementary FrenchIntensive version of three quarter sequence. Accu¬rate reading of standard French and correct pro¬nunciation. Register en bloc for French 101-2-3.9:30-12:30 MWE Edward Buck bee, Assistant Pro¬fessor, Department of Romance Languages and Lit¬eratures, and the College.201-2. Intermediate French: Ora! and Written Com¬positionDeveloping writing and speaking ability throughgrammar review, conversation, and composition.Opportunity to complete French 203 in Aut. '80.Prereq:,French 103 or equivalent. Register en bloctor French 201-2. 10:30-12:45 MWE (June23-August 22). Erancoise Meltzer, Assistant Profes¬sor, Department of Romance Languages and Lit¬eratures, the College, and the Committee on Com¬oro live Studies in Literatures.106. Reading French forf.raduale StudentsFor graduate students who wish to prepare for areading examination in French in order to satisfythe foreign language requirement of their respective, departments. Fundamentals of grammar and basicproblems of translation. Skills necessary for ac¬curate and idiomatic rendering of French texts intoEnglish; reading in various genres will be dealt withintensively in class Register in the Office of theDean, University Extension. 9am-5pm, M-F. Thiscourse does not carry academic credit and musthave a minimum enrollment of 15 students. Pre¬ registration is essential. Deadline: June 6. Fee: $175.IJ. of C. student aid funds cannot be used for non¬credit courses. 9:30-12 M-F (June 23-August I).Charles K ranee. A ssociate Professor of RomanceLanguages and Literatures, and the College.German(240)101-2-3. Elementary GermanTo attain proficiency to read materials of averagedifficulty accurately and with speed. Includes oralparticipation in class, written and reading exercisesto be done outside. Laboratory materials.are avail¬able for independent practice. Register en bloc forHerman 101-2-3. 9-12 M-E Robert D Hummel,Associate Professor of Germanic Languages andLiteratures, and the College, and Staff.History(430)131-2-3. History of Western CivilizationA year-long (three quarter) course offered intensive¬ly. Seeks continuity in depth at selected points in thehistory of Western Civilization by focusing on top¬ics chosen to illustrate the character of problems ofWestern history at critical moments of its develop¬ment and to provide material for an interpretationof the social, cultural, and intellectual products ofimportant periods. No Incompletes. 9-12 and 1-2MW; 9-10 E, Ralph Austen, Associate Professor,Department of History, and the College; JohnBoyer, Assistant Professor, Department of History,and the College; Peter Novick, Associate Professor,Department of History, and the College; Carole E.Straw, William Rainey Harper Instructor in theCollege.223. Colloquium on Medieval HistoriansIntroduction to ways in which history was writtenbetween the 4th and the 14th C. Extensive readingsfrom the works of medieval historians in translationrequired. Interpretive strategies, their modificationsover time, use of historical writings as artifacts thattestify to broad transformations in culture. Firstmeeting Tuesday, June 24, 1:30. Karl E Morrison,Professor, Department of History and Sew Testa¬ment and Early Christian Literature.224. Survey of Medieval Culture: 200-900Introduction to history of Latin West between the2nd and the 9th C. History of ideas will illustratereorientations of thought that Christianity producedwith regard to literary culture, the family, and thesecular government. Extensive readings of texts intranslation required. 9:30-1 1 TTh. KarlE Morri¬son, Professor, Department of History and SewTestament and Early Christian Literature.239. The Age of the Baroque—I eta baroeeaAspects of European culture in its economic, social,and political environment from mid-16th C. to endof the 17th C. Which aspects belong properly withinthe category ‘baroque’? Is the term a valid historio¬graphical concept? Texts and audio visual materia!presented, largely Italian, w ith the former availablein English or French for the use of those studentswho do not know Italian. Students taking thecourse for credit in Italian will present oral reportson an Italian subject and written versions of samereport in Italian. Students registered for history maypick a subject either in Italy or in any other part ofthe world of which they read the correspondinglanguage; and discussions of these contributionswill be aimed at establishing the degree to whichnon-Italian products of baroque culture are in¬debted to Italian models. 9-10:30 TTh. Eric llCochrane, professor, Department of History, andthe College.247. The European l eft Since 1848A colloquium treating major topics in the historyow working class movements in the leading Euro¬pean states from the Communist Manifesto toEurocommunism. 3-5:30 T, Peter Sovick, AssociateProfessor, Department of History, and the College.276. Classics of European HistoriographySelected passages from major and minor historiansin the Western tradition from classical antiquitv tothe 19th C. Class discussion on texts selected by theinstructor to understand w hy the work in its histori¬cal context and the reasons for its positive or nega¬tive acceptance in succeeding ages. Various genresof historical writing and their relationship withparallel genres, such as antiquarian studies andbiography. Oral reports by students on texts chosenin consultation w ith the instructor. Graduate stu¬dents must and undergraduate students may thensubmit the report in the form of a written paper.3:30-6 pm M or W, Eric H! Cochrane, Professor,Department of History; and the College. 488. Military Strategy : Historical ApproachesHistorical and theoreticcal examination of the character, development, application and conceptualiza¬tion of military strategy, from classical antiquity tothe 20th C. Lectures and discussion of classics ofmilitary strategy and their changing uses. Shortpaper and final examination. 7:30-10pm T, WalterEmil Kaegi, Jr., Professor, Department of Historyand the College.489. Topics in Military HistoryProblems in historiography of military history asw eil as case studies of military historical subjects in¬cluding decisive battles and “turning points.” Someattention to problems of comparative analysis.Short paper and final examination. 7:30-10pm W,Walter Emil Kaegi, Jr., Professor, Department ofHistory; and the College.505. Reading and Research in Byzantine andRoman HistoryConsent of Instructor. Time to be arranged with In¬structor. Walter Emil Kaegi, Jr.. Professor, Depart¬ment of History; and the College.517. Readings in 16th C. European Arts and Fetters10 meetings, to be arranged. Donald F. Lat h,Bernadolle E. Schmitt Professor, Department ofHistory.518. Readings in Political History of 18th C . Europe10 meetings, to be arranged. Donald F. Lach, Ber-nadotte E. Schmitt Professor, Department of His¬tory;519. Ear Eastern International Relations1842 to present—lecture, discussion format. 10meetings to be arranged. Donald F Lach, Berna-dotte E. Schmitt Professor, Department of History.Italian(256)101-2-3. Elementary ItalianIntensive version of three quarter sequence. Goal isto reach a good reading and conversational level.Much emphasis put on written composition.6:30-9:30 pm M-E (June 23-August I). Register enbloc for Italian 101-2-3. Paolo A. Cherchi, Profes¬sor, Department of Romance Languages and Liter¬atures, and the College.Latin(258)SPECIAL PROGRAMA Ten Week Intensive Program fashioned to equal atwo and a half year college Latin course. A uniqueopportunity for students in a wide range of disci¬plines. No previous knowledge of Latin is requiredor presupposed.Latin 201. Latin forms, syntax, vocabulary;9:30-11:00 and 1:00-3:30 M-F (June 23-July 25)Latin 202-203. Translation, prose composition,sight work, survey of Latin language and style, andelectives; 9:30-11:30 and 1:30-4 M-F (July 28-Aug.29)Weekly lectures in various disciplines will be givenby eminent scholars in classics, including JonathanSmith, Alain Renoir, David Bjork, RichardMcKoen, Karl Weintraub, Paolo Cherchi, BraxtonRoss, Arthur Adkins, James W hue, Lester King,Jerome Tay lor, Thomas McBride, D NicholasRudall, Wayne Booth, Walter Kaegi, BernardMcGinn, Noel Swerdlow. Robert Carter. Karl Mor¬rison, et al. The Universityof ChicagoSummer Sessionbegins lune 23Additional hours of individual and group instruc¬tion prov ided by staff outside formal class meet¬ings.Register en bloc for Latin 201-202-203. 300 creditunits.Summer Session visiting students must apply. Askfor application blank.Director: John Wyatt, Visiting Professor of Latin,Department of Classical Languages and Literatures.Associate Directors: Nancy Helmbold, AssociateProfessor of Latin, Department of Classical Lan¬guages and Literatures, and the College; PeterWhite, Associate Professor, Department of Clas¬sical Languages and Literatures, and the CollegeTeaching Assistants: Ralph J W ood and PollyHoover, Lecturers, Department of Classical Lan¬guages and Literatures.Library Science(730)301. Organization. Evaluation and Use of LibraryMaterialsBasic principles of cataloging and classification:evaluation and use of general reference materials;sources of information about general books andperiodicals. 9-10 M-F (June 23-August 15). D. Kath¬ryn Weintraub, A ssociate Professor, GraduateLibrary School.308. Principles of Computer Organization andProgrammingAssembly language is used as a means of introduc¬ing principles of computers and computer program¬ming. The PL/1 programming language is then in¬troduced. Simple programs for file maintenanceand searching and other non-numerica! processesare written in assembly language and PL/1 and runon IBM 370 168. Use of terminals and WYLBURfor text-editing and remote job-entry are introduc¬ed. Experimental on-line searching of computerizedcatalog (M ARC) records is carried out. No math re¬quired 4.30-6:10 V/K T (June23-August 15). DonR. Swanson, Professor, Graduate Library School.320. Law l ibrariesMethods in legal research and bibliography; prepa¬ration of legislative histories; special problems inreference, cataloging, and classification of legal ma¬terials. 5:00-6:40 TTh, (June23-August 15). JudithW right, Lecturer, Graduate Library School.326. Reading of AdolescentsA survey of the reading patterns of adolescents, de¬velopment of criteria for evaluation, analysis, anduse of materials in reading guidance, and the studyof significant investigations and trends in the fieldof young people's reading. 1:00-2:40 TTh (June23-August 22). Zena Sutherland, Associate Pro¬fessor, Graduate Library School.327. Library Work with ChildrenObjectives, functions, and services of library workwith children in school libraries, and public librar¬ies. 2:55-4:35 TTh (June 23-August 15). EllinGreene, Associate Professor, Graduate LibrarySchool.337. History of Printing and PublishingAn outline of the history and spread of printing inthe Western World from 1400-1900 with attention tothe printing process, the development of type de¬sign, and illustrations, the organization of the trade,the growth of reading, the development of author¬ship. 10:20-12 MW (June23-August 15). HowardU W inger, Professor, Graduate Library School.339. Introduction to Manuscript and Archival Col¬lectionsOffers a survey of intellectual and operational issuesaffecting the collection, preservation, organizationand bibliographic control of original manuscriptsource materials in context of research libraries, ar¬chives and related depositories. In conjunction withformal presentations, participants will be expectedto engage in firsthand investigation based on theUniversity Library’s collections. Prereq: consent. 8meetings (June 23-A ugust 15). To be arranged.Robert Rosenthal, Curator, Department of SpecialCollections, University Library.a359. Organization and Searching of MechanizedBibliographic Data BasesMachine-stored bibliographic data bases offer li¬braries an information retrieval mechanism of in¬creased efficiency and effectiveness. This course willsurvey the diversity of such systems currently avail¬able with consideration of their scope, variety, limi¬tations, and implications for the future. The pri¬mary emphasis will be on scientific data bases(physical, biological, social) because these representthe majority of those likely to be encountered.8:30-10:10 MWF (June 23-August 15). PaulineAngione, Lecturer. Graduate Library School.378. C.overnmcnl DocumentsExamination and evaluation of official publicationsof state and national governments, both domesticand foreign, U.S. state governments, and interna¬tional agencies as sources of research information.Consideration is also given to alternative ways inwhich document collections are organized and ad¬ministered for library use. 12:40-1:45 M W F (June23-August 15). Frank Conaway. History Bibliog¬rapher, University Library.397. Development of International BibliographicControlDefines and traces evolution of systematic biblio¬graphy. with particular reference to the idea of auniversal catalog. 19th and early 20th C projects areexamined. Particular attention is given to moderndevelopments through UNESCO. IFLA, FID andother bodies. The changing environment of infor¬mation proliferation, expressed needs, and biblio¬graphic and communications technology is de¬scribed as prov iding a basis for explanation ofchanges in concepts and practices. 10:20-12. TTh(June 23-August 15). U Boyd Hayward, AssociateProfessor and Dean, Graduate Library School.473. Systems for Subject Access to LibraryMaterials: Their Principles, Theory and Develop¬mentAn examination of principles, through the analysisand comparison of several major systems. Coursework includes a discussion of some methodologiesfor the formal description of such systems, an ex¬amination of the published schedules together with(a survey of research studies of these systems and acomparison of the similarities and differences inapplication of these systems to some specific prob¬lems. Prereq: Lib Sci 301. 1:55-3:35 MW (June23-August 15). D. Kathryn Weintraub, AssociateProfessor, Graduate Library School.487. Seminar: Problems of Library BuildingsThe relationship between physical structure and li¬brary function; contemporary and historical meth¬ods of solution; planning and building procedures,library furniture and equipment; problems relatingto air treatment, illumination, and acoustics; andmaterials of construction. Prereq: consent. To bearranged. (June 23-A ugust 15). Herman H. Fussier,Martin A. R verson Distinguished Service Professor,Graduate Library School.Mathematics(350)101-102. Fundamental Mathematics I and IICovers content of Math 101 and 102. Student mayregister for full double course of 101; if qualified,may register for 102 only. Elementary algebra. Co¬ordinate geometry. Functions: algebraic, circularand exponential. Prereq: Consent. 9-10:30TuWThF. Staff105. Introduction to Computer ProgrammingProgramming principles and techniques for elemen¬tary data manipulation by computer. Algorithmicproblem solving. Introduction to computer systemorganizations and applications modes. Prereq:Math 102 or equivalent. 11-12 MWF. Staff151-152. Calculus I and IIStudent may register for full double course or 151; ifqualified, may register for 152. Limit. Derivative.Differentation of algebraic functions. Applicationsof the derivative. Introduction to integration.Calculus of transcendental functions. Prereq: Con¬sent. 9-11. M TuWThF. Staff.153. Calculus IIIContinuing Math 152. Techniques and theoreticalconsiderations, parametrics, Taylor expansions.Prereq: Math 152 or equivalent. 8-9 MWF, Staff.186. Elements of Croup TheoryConcept of a group: examples, definition, first con¬sequences. Lagrange’s theorem. Cyclic groups.Applications to number theory. Groups acting onsets. Sylow's theorems and p-groups. Groups ofprime power order. Galois theory. Prereq: Under¬graduate status or consent. 11-12 MTThF. Israel N.Herstein, Professor, Department of Mathematics,and the College.250. Elementary Linear AlgebraMatrices and determinants. Theory of vector spaces and linear transformations. Introduction to linearalgebras. Characteristic roots and similarity. Someapplications and computer supplements of thesematters. 8:30-10 MWF. Staff.392. Simulation of Flows in Porous MediaDerivation of models of single- and multi-phaseflow in porous media. Mathematical and computa¬tional analysis of the resulting differential systems.Prereq: consent. 1-2:30 TTh. Jim Douglas, Jr., Pro¬fessor, Department of Mathematics, and the Col¬lege.432. Ring Theory, IIContinuation of Math 431, with emphasis on specialtopics from current literature, in the direction ofgeneric matrices and non-cross products. Prereq:Math 431 or consent. 9-10:30 TTh. Israel N.Herstein, Professor, Department of Mathematics,and the College.551/574. Reading and Research in MathematicsTo be arranged. Staff.608. Seminar in Numerical AnalysisAttention given to recent research activity in numer¬ical solution of partial differential equations. Pre¬req: Consent. Time and place to be announced.Staff.623. Seminar on Number Theory as Illustrative ofMathematical Communication (meets with Educa¬tion 520)Identification and discussion of some basic prob¬lems in the communication of mathematical ideas toyoung people. The course in Number Theory in the1970 Student Science Training Program serves as alaboratory delineating the fundamental issues to bebrought under consideration. Active engagement inthis course in Number Theory is expected of allmembers of the seminar. Course credit up to 2Cmay be divided between Math 623 and Educ 520 atthe option of registrant. Prereq. Consent of Profes¬sors P.J. Sally and A.L. Putnam. 9-10 M-F, and 1-3Th. Paul J. Sally, Jr., Professor and Chairman,Department of Mathematics, and Professor, theCollege.629. Seminar in Applied MathematicsAttention given to recent work in selected areas ofapplied mathematics Prereq: consent. Time andplace to be announced. Staff.631. Seminar in AnalysisAttention given to recent research activity centeredon singular integrals, harmonic analysis, and theboundary behavior of analysis functions. Prereq:consent. 2-4 M. Staff.632. Seminar in Algebraic Groups and AlgebraicGeometryAttention to recent research with special concern forMumford’s conjecture on reductive groups, and fordiscrete subgroups of Lie groups. Prereq: consent.Time and place to be announced. Staff.633. Seminar in TopologyAttention will be given to recent research activity inalgebraic and geometric topolony. Prereq: consent.Time and place to be announced. Staff.634. Seminar in Ring TheoryAttention to recent research in commutative andnon-commutative rings. Prereq: consent. Time andplace to be announced. Staff. Philosophy(285)301. Introduction to PhilosophyIntensive study of fundamental problems in episte¬mology, ethics, and aesthetics, by way of classicaltexts. Readings include Descartes, Kant, Rawls, andQuine. Open to undergraduates. 10-11:30 TTh. TedCohen, Associate Professor, Department of Philos¬ophy, Committee on A rt and Design, and theCollege.302. AestheticsStudy of contemporary issues in the philosophy ofart, including nature and aesthetic, problem ofmetaphor, and possibility of criticism. Readingsfrom last 10 years. 1-2:30 TTh. Ted Cohen, Associ¬ate Professor, Department of Philosophy, Commit¬tee on A rt and Design, and the College.307. The Development of Ethical Theory fromSedgwick to RawlsCritical study of the development of ethical theoryfrom Sedgwick’s Methods of Ethics to Rawl’sTheory of Justice. Texts: Sedgwick, G.E. Moore,W.D. Ross, R.B. Perry, C.L. Stevenson, R.M.Hare, and Rawls. Reference to a variety of recentstudies (e.g., Scheenwind on Sedgwick, Lyons onUtilitarianism, Nozick on Rawls). Prereq: consentof instructor for 1st and 2nd year students. 1-2:30MW F (June 23-August 6). Alan Donagan, PhyllisFay Horton Professor of the Humanities and Pro¬fessor and Chairman, Department of Philosophy.Political Science(470)262. Study of International RelationsCritical examination of major social science ap¬proaches to international relations. . . discussioncourse. 2-5 MW' (June 23-July 25). Morton A. Kap¬lan, Professor, Department of Political Science, andChairman, Committee on International Relations.371. Postwar Foreign PolicyDiscussion of U.S. foreign policy from 1945-1955 interms of international conditions and perceptions ofstatesmen. Designed to heighten students’ ability toengage in critical analysis. Open to undergraduates.2-5 pm TTh (June 23-July 25). Morion A. Kaplan,Professor, Department of Political Science andChairman, Committee on International Relations.Psychologysee Behavioral SciencesRussian(287)101-2-3. First Near RussianAcquisition of sufficient knowledge of grammarand basic vocabulary to enable the student to read awide variety of Russian texts with the aid of a dic¬tionary. Emphasis on: reading, writing, aural com¬prehension, elementary conversational ability. Reg¬ister en bloc for Russian 101-2-3. 9:30-12:30 M-Th.Anna Lise Crone and Billy Joe Darden, AssistantProfessors, Department of Slavic Languages andLiteratures, and the College.SciencesBiological Sciences (116)137. Mechanisms of InheritanceBasic concepts in the science of genetics. Lecturesand discussions will range from Mendelian geneticsto regulation of gene expression. 9-12 MWF. (June23-July II). Gary van Zant, Research Associate,Department of Biochemistry.136. How Animals WorkLectures, discussion, and independent study; behav¬ior and organ function in terms of physiologicalprincipals. Aspects of mammalian physiology of thenervous, cardiovascular, renal, endocrine andhematopoietic systems will be considered. Examplesof unique functional adaptations to life at oceanicdepths, high altitudes, and climatic extremes will bereviewed. 9-12 MWF (July 14-A ugust I). Eric L.Simmons, Research Associate (Professor) Depart¬ments of Medicine and Radiology, and Committeeon Immunology.186. Molecular Patterns of Biological Control andReproductionMolecular descriptions of cellular structure andfunction that are important in the organization ofbiological systems. Some physical and chemicalconcepts presented as aids to understanding biologi¬cal interrelationships. 9-12 MWF (August 4-August The Universityo! ChicagoSummer Session753-313722). Philip Keim, Research Associate (AssistantProfessor), Department of Biophysics and Theoret¬ical Biology.200. General BiochemistryElementary course describing chemical nature ofcellular components, enzymes, and mechanisms ofenzyme activity, energy interconversions and bio¬synthetic reactions. 9:30-10:30 M-F, Earl A. tvans,Jr., Professor Emeritus of Biochemistry and theCollege.Chemistry (320)220-221. Organic Chemistry I, IIBehavior, stereochemistry, and spectroscopic prop¬erties of organic compounds, and the relationshipbetween structure and reactivity. Compounds im¬portant in science, industry and nature. Techniquesnecessary for the isolation, purification, and identi¬fication of organic compounds and their method ofpreparation. Prereq: 1 full year of chemistry.Courses must be taken in sequence. Instructor’sconsent required for those enrolling in Chemistry221 only. Under special circumstances, the lectureportion of the course may be taken without the lab¬oratory portion. 200 credit units. 9:30-11:20 MTThF(lecture) and 1-5:50 MTu (lab). Lab fee: $30 eachcourse. Wilbert H. Urry, Professor of Chemistry,and the College.Social SciencesSocial Sciences Collegiate Curriculum (478)111-2-3. Political Order and ChangeIntensive version of three quarter sequence. Ill:Historical perspectives on human association. Aris¬totle, Locke, Rousseau, and Burke: identificationof social facts, analysis of political problems and ex¬pectations concerning human association. Ap¬proaches to individuality and community, freedomand order, change and continuity. 112: Principles asapplied to historical and institutional settings. Cal¬houn, Lincoln, Douglass, Thoreau, Tocqueville,Federalist Papers, Supreme Court opinions. 113:Economic analysis—economic constraints on publicpolicy, role of government in economic relations.Adam Smith, R.H. Tawney, Milton Friedman. Ap¬plication of acquired analytical techniques to cur¬rent problem areas: drugs, all volunteer armedforces, financing educational TV, future of cities.10:30-12:30 M-F, Joel Beck, Assistant Professor,Social Science Collegiate Division, and AssociatedFaculty Committee on Social Thought.Spanish(288)101-2-3. Elementary SpanishIntensive version of three quarter sequence. Read¬ing, pronunciation, understanding and speaking.Register en bloc for Spanish 101-2-3. 9:30-11:30M-F. (June 23-August 22). Luanne Buchanan, Lec¬turer, Department of Romance Languages and Lit¬eratures, Rene de Costa, Associate Professor, De¬partment of Romance Languages and Literaturesand the College, and Joshua Zion, Lecturer, De¬partment oj Romance Languages and Literatures.Statistics(370)220. Statistical Methods and ApplicationsIntroduction to statistical techniques and methodsof data analysis in the social and natural sciences.Examples from the biological sciences emphasized;data description and reporting; random variationand sampling; principles of experimental design;one- and two-sample problems; linear multiple re¬gression; analysis of variance; analysis for discretedata. Prereq: Two quarters of calculus. Use of highspeed computers for which no previous experienceis expected. 1-2:30 TTh. Paul Sampson, ResearchAssociate (Assistant Professor), Department ofStatistics.Drawing Franklin McMahonDesign Lynn Martin"Seated Maitreya" from 5000 Years of Korean ArtKorean Art5,000 Years of Korean Art: Sandwiched between the two giants of EastAsia — China and Japan, Korea has historically been overshadowedand dominated by its two neighbors both politically and culturally. But,as the conduit of traffic between the two, it has had periods in which itsarts flourished and even rivalled those of China and Japan. This exhibit,assembling artifacts from various major periods, serves to dispel thenotion that Korean culture is derivate. It also includes objects and materials from the prehistoric indigenous population. Through April 27, atthe Art Institute, Michigan at Adams. Mon-Wed, Fri, 10:30-4:30; Th,10:30 8; Sat, 10-5; Sun, noon-5. 443 3600. Admission discretionary; Th.free — TSuntil l am. Admission free,ive Party: The Battling Tops willplay at a Breckenrige dorm partytonight at 10. Free refreshments,too. Admission free with UC ID.immy Ellis Quartet in the CloisterClub of Ida Noyes Hall, Saturday,March 8 at 8:30 pm, $3 admission.See review on p. 1.els and Galatea: It's a shame thatHandel masques are so rarelymounted nowadays. In Handel'sdays, they were like My FairLady—popular and often revived.The UC Chorus and Orchestra, inCurtis Black, Neal Cohen, LauraNels Erickson, Sandy Harris, Donar, Richard Kaye, John Kim, Julie>ecca Lillian, Philip Maher, Jeffade, Robin Mitchell, Mike Moore,<1, Adam O'Connor, Danila Oder,tee Saracki, Robert Saska, ChuckLisa von Drehle, Ken Wissoker,nanlitors: Karen Hornick, Mary ManJB. Friday, March 7, 1980. a departure from their traditionof masses and other large scalechoral works, will present Acisand Galatea, a lesser known butenchanting Handel work. The so¬loists, all seasoned singers, areCarol Loverde as Galatea, Rob¬ert Heinrikson as Acis, AlonzoCrook as Damon, and JamesMack as Polypheme (the mon¬ster). Eric Weimer is the guestconductor. Tomorrow and Sun¬day at 8 in Bond Chapel. Free.753 2612.Organ Recital: University organist' Edward Mondello presents a program of works by two well knowncomposers, Bach and Brahms aswell as works by three obscureones, Maurice Durufle, SamuelScheidt, and Charles Tournemire. Rockefeller MemorialChapel. Tuesday, March 11, at 8.Free.Paul Goldstein and Patrick Hogan:A concert of experimental music:"Music for Keyboard and strings(& Things)," experimental "clas¬sical" piece for two pianists/one N. Mobile at 8:30 p.m. 237 7555.$3 5.music director, Ralph Shapey.The program will also include thegroup's pianist, Shulamit Ran'sown Double Vision and Schoenberg's Suite, Opus 29. SopranoElsa Charlston will be featured.Mon., March 10 at DowntownNorthwestern's Thorene Hall, 740N. Lake Shore Drive at 8.30 pm.Free!Tommy Makum, Liam Clancy:Irish eyes aren't the only onessmiling when these guys singtheir songs. Request them to do"The Band Played Waltzing Matilda" if they don't on their own.Clancy does the best version of itthat I've ever heard. Sat., March8 at Steinmetz High School, 3030Two puppets and two women, members of the Women's CollageTheatrj, perform a scene from Sirens.Sirens &The Rule of Thumb Exit the King: Eugene Ionesco'sdrama, a highly stylized ritualis¬tic death rite, opens at Court Theater Thurs., March 13 at 8:30 pm.It will run Thurs.-Sun. throughApril 20. Curtain time is 8:30 allnights but Sunday, which is 7:30.753 3581.The Killer: If Court Theater has putyou in an Ionesco mood, you canhear a radio version of his secondfull length play, starring BrianMurray. Mon., March 10 at 8pmover WFMT, 98.7 FM.Herd: All we know about Ew Ross'performance art is that there aremany rubber stamped sheep onthe poster. Find out more tonightat Midway Studios, 6016 S. Ingleside at 8 pm. 753-4821. Admission$1.50.Tympanic Sights: Jean Sousa andSteve Banks will explore the synergistic effects of light and soundwaves in theirs, the last of Midway Studios winter quarterschedule of performance art.Sat., March 8 at the Studios, 6016S. Ingleside at 8 pm. 753-4821$1.50.Chicago Women in the Arts: Arethey evolving, or spinning theirwheels? That is the title of apanel discussion with JoannaFrueh, C.L. Morrison and Barbara Aubin. Thur., March 13 atARC Gallery, 6 W. Hubbard at 7pm. 266 7607. $1 donation.Celebrate International Women'sDay: Along with the evening ofwomen's theater, there will be aday full of political and culturalworkshops (free) and a dinner(all you can eat for a buck.)From 10 am to noon there will bea women's self help health de¬monstration, a talk on abortionrights and sterilization abuse, alesbian talk and origami (?) anda slide show called "Pornography as violence againstwomen," from 12 to 2 workshopswill be on women's legal issues,Latina women in America, a talkon women and the draft, and selfdefense for women; from 2 to 4 feminist philosopher Sarah Hoag-land will speak on male co optation of the women's movement,there will also be a slide show onwomen in China, from 4 to 6 Pri-mavera will sponsor a poetryreading, there'll be batik, too. Fe¬minist feast begins at 6. It alltakes place Sat., March 8 at theIda Noyes Hall.Calendar compiled by Rebecca Lil¬lian.Tomorrow night two plays about women's lives will be performed atthe Blue Gargoyle as part of the International Women's Day celebration. Both The Rule of Thumb and Sirens were produced collectively,reworking the traditional forms of theater into a medium suitable forexpressing women's experience.The Rule of Thumb is constructed as a poem, with the resoundingrefrain: "The history of man is written in woman's blood." RonniScheir, who compiled the script while writing a book on violence againstwomen, describes it as "a patchwork quilt of women's lives," depictingwomen's "strength and wisdom against a backgroung of violence andwoman-hating." Every scene is superbly acted and powerful, especiallyMorenike Bruce's delivery of Sojourner Truth's immortal speech,"Ain't i a Woman?"Women's Collage Theatre from New York will perform Sirens. A "col¬lage" play, Sirens is compiled and adapted from the writings of Penelope Mortimer, Robin Morgan, Dorothy Richardson, Joanna Russ, andfrom improvisational work by the cast. Through the collective voices ofdivergent women, past and present, renowned and forgotten, Sirenstells the story of one woman in transition. Women's Collage Theatreacts out this story with a traveling art collection and life-sized puppets.Both plays will be performed Saturday, March 8 at 5655 S. Universityat 8:30 pm. Tickets, which range from $3 to $5 based on ability to pay,are available at the Reynolds Club Box Office and at the door. — AnnLahiff and Barbara Bochnovic.grand piano. "HogansteinBlues," experimental jazz workfor clarinet and mouthpiece,piano keys and strings, hummer,singers, shouters, and audience.Wed., Mar. 12 at noon in ReynoldsClub. Free.Free at lunch: The last lunchtimeconcert of the quarter, sponsoredby the Dept, of Music, will feature a mystery guest. Thurs.,March 13 in Reynolds ClubLounge at 12:15 p.m. Free.Hanah Jon Taylor, a very talentedflautist and soprano saxophonistwho has taken many influencesand welded a highly individualand creative style which yieldsquite enjoyable music. Hanah appears with Dave Williams on bassand Otis Gould on drums. ThisSunday, March 9 at 8 pm at theProgressive Arts Center, a pleasant art filled listening spacewhere free fruit and cider aresometimes served, located at1416 S. Michigan. Also Saturday,March 22 at 8 pm and Sunday,March 23 at 4 pm at the OsunCenter for the Arts, 2441 E. 75thSt. All concerts have a $4 admis¬sion charge. —C0E. Parker McDougal and PrinceJames play a tribute to late greatChicago saxophonists GeneAmmons and Jay Peters at LarrySmith's Live Jazz Party, ChancesR in Harper Court, Sunday,March 9 starting at 9 pm. $5cover.UC at NU: The University's ownContemporary Players will perform three pieces, including Songof Songs No. 1 by the group's The lake, last September.the grey city journal—Friday, March 7, 1980—3Sissy Spacek, as Loretta Lynn, strumming a second hand guitar, a gift from her husbandAnother Star Grows Up Bluesman Corky Siegelat Gargoyle TonightCorky Siegel is the first bluespianist/harpist to play with a symphony orchestra. His collaborations with local composer William Russo and San FranciscoSymphony Orchestra conductor Seiji Ozawacreated overwhelming, unprecedentedsounds in both types of music.But Siegel won't be bringing an orchestraalong when he comes to the Blue Gargoyletonight. He'll be alone with his blues har¬monica and his boogie woogie piano. And, ifpast solo performances are any indication,the sound will still be overwhelming.Siegel is no stranger to this part of town.He was born and bred on Chicago blues; oneof his main influences is Muddy Waters. Yetthis bluesman is no imitator. His style ofblues, ranging from the sad to the silly, islaced with his own brand of folk, jazz, androck.You can hear the sad (usually wordlesswails on the instruments) and the silly("Skyscrapers scraping the stars from thesky/ Poking the man in the moon in the eye/Pointing to where we're going to end up/ Upin God's heaven, if we have any luck") to¬night at the Blue Gargoyle, 5655 S. Universi¬ty, at 8. Tickets are available at Spin-it Re¬ cords and the Blue Gargoyle lunch serviceand cost $4. — RLScript slips but critic flipsCoal Miner's Daughter. Directed by Michael Apted. With Sissy Spacek and TommyLee Jones. Screenplay by Tom Rickman.by Jan BorengasserCoal Miner's Daughter tells a familiarrags-to-riches story — another example ofthe genre of music biographies in which werecognize parts of The Buddy Holly Story,Elvis, The Rose, and of course, Nashville.But Coal Miner's Daughter has the substance, variety, and talent to make it amemorable movie despite the well-wornpath it treads.Sissy Spacek's convincing portrayal ofLoretta Lynn from age 13 to 33 — from "ig¬norant" hillbilly bride to assured Nashvillesuperstar — is at the core of the film. In addition to an amazing demonstration of act¬ing virtuosity, Sissy also sings. Though hervoice may not be as good as Loretta's, theresults are pleasing enough: it's reportedthat Loretta herself was pleasantly sur¬prised at Sissy's sound.Spacek gives her character a depth andgenuineness that avoids both phoniness andsentimentality. A simple coal miner'sdaughter she might be, flushed with the suc¬cess of her first public appearance in ruralWashington, but a glint of steel and ambi¬tion forcasts later developments.The early scenes of the movie authentically depict the life and people of ButcherHoller, Kentucky, where Loretta was bornand wed. Filmed largely in Blackie, Ken¬tucky, the rural mining town is captured inall its hazy, monochromatic commonness(the sensitive cinematography of Ralf D.Bode), and spalshed with occasional color.The script is similarly filled with nativehumor: returning Army veteran MooneyLynn (Tommy Lee Jones) is reminded ofthe three alternatives he faces — "coal mining, moonshining, or moving on down theline."Jones' character does its share of chang¬ing too, as Mooney fills a succession of rolesfrom young, frustrated husband and coalminer, to hustling manager of a new singer,"tax deduction" of a Grand Ole Opry star,and, finally, to supportive marriage partnerwho does double duty as father and motherfor numerous Lynn progeny.The supporting cast frequently shines.Levon Helm is first-rate as Loretta's dignitied and adoring father. Novice actressPhyllis Boyens plays Loretta's mother con¬vincingly. Finally, Beverly d'Angelo's char¬acterization of Loretta's mentor, Patsy Cline, is nothing less than fine, and is a realtribute to Apted's search for authenticity.Rickman's screenplay is based on Loretta's autobiography. It moves rapidly, slip¬ping from vignette to vignette, condensingtwenty years of varied experience, humor,and tragedy into two hours of film. Yet whilethe attempt to demonstrate the rapiditywith which Loretta found herself hurledalong life's path is noble, one feels that certain aspects of Loretta Lynn's life are hur¬ried over too quickly. Spacek does not eekthe pathos from Loretta's onstage break¬down as Ronee Blakely did in her portrayalof Loretta in Nashville. Still, there's a lot toadmire, enjoy, and remember in CoalMiner's Daughter. Ruddy gore; Or, the Witch's Curse. By W.S.Gilbert and Arthur Sullivan.Directed by Ellen Martin.At Kenwood Academy Auditorium, 5015 S.Blackstone, March 8. 363 0567 or 288-2436.by Rebecca LillianMid way through the beautifully mountedsecond act of Ruddygore, I had forgottenmost of the first act's little flaws. By the time the final curtain went down — to thestrains of a joint cast/audience chorus of"God Save the Queen"—I had forgottenthem all. That I didn't leave the theaterhumming a melody from the show, or recit¬ing its best patter song, is certainly not thefault of the Gilbert and Sullivan Opera Com¬pany.Ruddygore is just uncharacteristicallybad Gilbert and Sullivan. The convolutedplot has Gilbert's unique bizarreness, butminus his comical, brilliant rhymes and bit¬ing satire. Sullivan's music, at best, soundslike it was rejected from the pair's other,better shows. At worst, it sounds like self-parody. It is no accident that I, as loyal aSavoyard as they come, recognized few ofthe operetta's songs.Yet, if a company such as this one dedicates itself to promoting Gilbert and Sullivan, we must accept the duds and appreci¬ate the effort. And their obvious effort paysoff, especially in the final act. Consideringthe limited resources, the company has puttogether a refreshing production.Soprano Joan Culler is charming as RoseMaybud, the lovely maiden whose beautyscares away every prospective suitor. RayLubway is adequate when playing farmerRobin Oakapple, who is really the cursedSir Ruthven Murgatroyd in disguise. WhenRobin takes on Ruthven's true evil identity,however, Lubway brings the character tolife. David Currie, as Robin/Ruthven'sfaithful servant, is the hammiest and bestactor in the bunch. But the show's true starsare Dave Stockwell and Helen Bailey.Stockwell growls and howls his wayacross stage as Ruthven's brother, thewicked baronet Sir Despard Murgatroyd.Later, when Despard reforms, Stockwellplays him as primly and properly as a Victorian gentleman should be. And Gilbert'srapid rhymes glide off of Stockwell's tonguewith an ease that approaches that of the lategreat G 8. S master, Martyn Green.As Mad Margaret, Bailey flops around injoyous abandonment. Even when she mar¬ries Despard and supposedly "normalizes,"she retains a bit of the sweet lunatic. Yetthere is nothing messy or out of control inBailey's superb acting and singing..A strong chorus supports any successfulGilbert and Sullivan production, and thisone is no exception. Nor would the show bethe same without Rafaello LaMantia's andJoshua Patner's appropriately beautiful,cute, scary, and impressive sets and cos¬tumes.If this is what the Gilbert and SullivanOpera Company can do with a mediocre op¬eretta, imagine what they could do with oneof the duo's many masterpieces!A Working Class HenDanilo Dolci, an Italian poet and socialworker, will appear on campus next week atthe invitation of the William Vaughn Moodylecture series.His close work with Sicilian peasants andworkers has resulted in unforeseen socialreform. The south of Italy has long been subject to universal poverty, natural disaster,and the iron-handed rule of the Mafia. Dan¬ilo has helped bring politicization and mod¬ern education to this area; his work has pro¬duced a closer relation with Italy'sNorth oriented government, progressiveschools, dams, new design for Sicily'sblighted urban areas, and more opportuni¬ties for employment.Because his political tactics are peacefulrather than violent, and astoundingly effective, Danilo has been compared to Gandhiand Martin Luther King. Like them, he hasacquired an international reputation for hisgentle willfulness, for the example he sets:Erich Fromm wrote, "Danilo Dolci is livingproof that humans, on their own initiative,can act and create without bureaucraciesand achieve concrete goals that the alienat¬ed, the subservient and the self serving can- Is Something To Seenot...He has provoked significant change inthe daily life of the region where heworks...by pushing people to act essentiallyas a human community...He tries to under¬stand, always in greater depth, the innerneeds and life of human beings."Born in 1924, Danilo left architectureschool just before he would have graduatedfor work that is closer to people. His talentas a poet is simple and spontaneous yetstrong and pragmatic:you prevail by resisting the nauseaprevail if you lose the least:it there's nothing to loseprevail resisting the temptationto escapethe infinite temptations tokill yourselfprevail if you search and dont loseyour sense of directionif you dont kid yourselfThe reading is at 8 pm on Tuesday inBreasted Hall of the Oriental. Institution.Free. —KH4—the grey city journal—Friday, March 7, 1980BusinessSystemsAnalystsWe have promising new career opportunities availablein our Corporate Information Systems Planning Divisionfor individuals who are self starters and seek work in aproject/consulting oriented work environment.As a Business Analyst you will direct or consult on thedevelopment of detailed information systems re¬quirements and/or the development of strategic andoperational information systems plans. These designsrequire you to analyze business problems and select the“best solution” based upon financial, operational andtechnical analysis.You will be looking at entire departments such as realestate or corporate banking to analyze the long termneeds of the business and evaluate existing systemsplans against a changing business environment.Qualified candidates must possess finely tunedanalytical skills developed through formal education(MBA level) and Business/Engineering, or a minimum 3-4 years experience as a Business or Systems Analyst.Familiarity with operations analysis, financial analysis,general systems theory, and the use of methodologiesfor information systems development and planning arerequired qualities. Effective communication skills andboth interviewing and management reporting situationsare required.The project orientation of this position offers variedchallenging work experience with a potential for highvisibility and considerable advancement opportunities.Our salaries are excellent and our benefits are the bestin the banking industry, including profit sharing and afree lunch program. For confidential consideration, sub¬mit resume, or call:David Fyhrie (312) 732-6443TAL, PL/1 using IMS Programmer/Analystpositions are currently available at alllevels of candidates with aminimum of 1 year experience in the aboveFIRST CHICAGOThe First National Bank ot ChicagoOne First National PlazaChicago, II. 60670Equal Opportunity Employer M/FV /Chamber HfrusicSolos or Small Ease m friesfor tlic ~GlThtj HdfctLKCemonal Concerton Uprit 26, I960'Will 6c Relit- Sat. Apr: 5)lam~2pm.Sign tip in tfiiTfiwsLi Papt.orCnW 3-Z6I3 MARCH SALEMADNESS atHEAR AGAIN STEREO, Inc.Storewide Savings of 35 % -75 % jon used, demo, cabinet blemmed,and salesman sample components.Specials like ...GARRARD DD75 TURNTABLE 119.95DIRECT DRIVE SEMI AUTO W-CART... 119.95PHILLIPS COLLARO AUTO TURNTABLE . 39.95GARFYX SP6 SPEAKERS Each 75.00SUPEREX PR0914 HEADPHONES . 21.95and one-of-a-kindused and democomponents like...EPICURE MODEL 4 Pre-Amp . 179.95MARANTZ 2270 RECEIVER . 250.00BIC 940 TURNTABLE . .35.00PIONEER PROJ. 120A SPEAKERS .. Each 49.95TEAC A400 CASSETTE DECK . 135.00DYNACO SCA80q INT. AMP . . 85.00(All merchandise subjectto prior sale.Sale ends 3-22-80)AND MUCH, MUCH MORE!HURRY IN!COMPLETE SYSTEMS from$75 to $750 All equipmentguaranteed and 60-daytradeback.HEAR AGAIN STEREO7002 N. CALIFORNIA 338-7737OPEN MON.-SAT.Rockefeller memorial Cliapel5850 South Wnotllaw n AvenueSUNDAYMARCH 99 \.M. Ecumenical Service ofIlnlv CommunionPreacher: Donald l. .liaison. AssistantDirector. College Admissions1 1 A.M. University Religious Serv icePreacher: BERNARD O. BROWN.Dean of the Chapel HIIUIHIIIIlHIIlllHHIUllHIIIIHIlHIHlIHHIIIIinilHiniSPECIAL DISCOUNT PRICESfor all STUDENTS andFACULTY MEMBERSJust present your University of Chicago IdentificationCord As Students or Faculty Members you ore entitledto special money-saving DISCOUNTS on ChevroletParts, Accessories and any new or used Chevrolet youbuy from Ruby Chevrolet.(Q)OD4CBAL MOTOBS MflTS DIVISIONKeep That Great GM Feeling With GFN VINE GM Parts "72nd & Stony IslandOpen Evenings and Sunday 684-0400 pParts Open Sat. 'til noonEiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiuiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiSPECIAL DISCOUNT PRICESfor all STUDENTS andFACULTY MEMBERSJust present your University of Chicogo IdentificationCard. As Students or Faculty Members you are entitledto speciol money-saving DISCOUNTS on VolkswagenParts, Accessories and any new or used Volkswagenyou buy from Ruby Volkswagenk72nd & Stony island 684-0400Open Evemngi and Sundays Farts Open Sat. 'til rsoonKIMBARK HALLCondominiums80% MORTGAGE LOANS AVAILABLEThe developers are offering model units forinspection every Sat. and Sun. between 1and 5 p.m.36 opts:24 - 1 bedroom, 1 bath from 30,350-37,0006 - 2 bedrooms, 1 bath from 37.000-38,8506 - 2 bedrooms, 2 both from 46 000-46,900All apartments include new kitchens and appliances,new bathrooms, carpeting and decorating (colors ofyour choice), triple-track storm windows and kitchenstorm doors, modern laundry facilities and individuallocker space.Your inspection is invited,51 26 S. Kimbark Ave. - Phone 643-4489Harry A. Zisook & Sons, Agts.786-9200NO COVER Coffee, bagels, donuts,Cider availableIDA NOYES LIBRARY 8:30 -1:00 CLASSICAL TRIODAVE KAYNICK FILIPOCHRISTIE & DAVESHELTON SALLIEThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, March 7, 1980—13SponsoredbyStudentGov’tWhy doquarter activities fee?Because...*The Major Activities Board (MAB) faces rapidlyrising artists’ fees and production costs. The proposedfee would greatly enhance the quality & variety ofconcerts and shows. In addition, the proposed fee,to be paid by graduates and undergraduates alike,would extend to all students the MAB DISCOUNTTICKET PRICES!*The student government finance committee hasexperienced a dramatic rise in both graduate student organizations requesting money to sponsor campusactivities and in the amount of money requested byall student organizations. Over $80,000 in requestswere received this year and last year. The committeeonly receives $30,000 annually to distribute. As aresult campus activities suffer, as do students whocould have enjoyed such activities. The fee would pro¬vide approximately $75,000 for all student organiza¬tions, allowing campus activities to expand and secur¬ing money for future demand.YOU DO NEED AN ACTIVITIES FEE. VOTE "YES" IN THE REFERENDUM.BALLOTS WILL BE PLACED IN YOUR REGISTRATION PACKETS.THESE ARE JUST A FEW OF THE SUPPORTERS OF THE FEESSAMarcia Me CabeSOCIAL SCIENCE DIVISIONPaul BartoneBarry RhoadesMatt RueterTed SnyderBIOLOGICAL SCIENCES DIVISIONJeffrey Gutterman DIVINITY SCHOOLSusan TurkBUSINESS SCHOOLAnn V. BenenatiBruce Della HorneJames OsofskyDave PriestlyLarry Schilmeister PHYSICAL SCIENCESDouglas MuderLAW SCHOOL HUMANITIES DIVISIONAlmerindo OjedoMaria SvolosAnn BushmillerKenneth FreedJoe GriffinDavid JaffeCarol SwansonJoe Paul MEDICAL SCHOOLJack OhringerAnne Peters^ jemey uuucmidii ■ wnne reierb j20% OFF 20% OFFOFF20%OFF20%OFF A TERRIFIC BOOK SALE20% OFF ON ANY PURCHASEDear Students, Faculty Membersand Friends:For a long time, we have wanted tofind some way of expressing our appre¬ciation to you whose year-roundpatronage is the core of our businessand whose friendship makes it allworthwhile.So here’s our way to say thank you.For five days only, March 4, 5, 6, 7, 8you will receive 20% off on any bookpurchase from the General Book De¬partment. Call it a private sale or whatyou will. We hope you will find this aworthwhile occasion.The University ofChicago BookstoreGeneral Book Dept.(1st Floor Only) 20%OFF20%OFF20%20% OFF 20% OFF14—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, March 7, 1980Men’s Track Wins Conference IndoorsBy D. Winship TaylorIt had been four years of up hill toil com¬ing into this meet: ’77 fourth. ’78 third, ’79second by 3 5/6 points, when finally, througha true team effort, the University of Chicagomen's track team had a Midwest Confer¬ence championship to its credit after Satur¬day’s meet at the field house. In front of acrowd of fifty, the Maroons had four cham¬pions, two meet records, and numerous per¬sonal records. What really was seen was theteam's depth and joint effort, as exemplifiedby placing two people in every runningevent, except for the 300 yd dash. 60 yd dash,and the two mile run.Overall, only the shot putters failed togarner any points in a tight field. The fieldevent as a whole added 10 points to thecause, with Gary Peter’s 6th in the polevault, and Steve Willette's triple perfor¬mance in the triple (4th), long (4th), andhigh (6th) jumps.Mike Axinn’s performance in the mile setthe pace for the Maroonsin the runningevents. Axinn set a conference record of4:12.8 for the mile, followed by Art Knight’sunsuccessful bid for second. Art’s thirdplace time was his career best to date. Withdetermination Chip Pfaller and Jim Readmade it to the finals of the 60 yd. high hurd¬les. Read proceeded to place third (whichwas disputed as second) and Pfaller an ex¬ceptional fourth. This was followed by EdDerse’s and Bob Kohout's third and fourthfinishes in the 400m. dash, exhibiting thefour years of desire to win at the conferencemeet.Next was an exceptional performance, inRunning shoeControversyBy Dr. S. David StulbergQuestion: What should I look for in buyingan athletic shoe?No one’s health has improved more as theresult of the physical fitness boom of the lastdecade than that of the athletic shoe in¬dustry; unless, perhaps, it is the health ofpodiatrists, who seem to require that all newrunning shoes be fitted with expensive orth-otics. The amount of money now being de-Ask Dr. Stulbergvoted annually to research related to athlet¬ic shoe design is probably only justifiable ifit turns out that sore feet cause cancer.The result of all of this interest and activi¬ty in athletic footwear is a huge and confus¬ing variety of shoes and. fortunately for allof us, a substantial improvement in overallquality. Although most of these shoes weredesigned and produced in response to an in¬crease in popularity of running, the shoescan be used in a wide variety of athletic ac¬tivities.I cannot, in this column, summarize thespecific characteristics of the various ath¬letic shoes or make specific recommenda¬tions about which shoe is best for you. Iwould like, however, to point out some of theproperties of athletic shoes which might in¬fluence your selection of a particular shoeand suggest under which circumstancescertain properties of a shoe might be mostimportant. If you are interested in a detaileddescription of the characteristics of current¬ly available athletic shoes you might want toconsult the October, 1979 issue of “Runner’sWorld.” This issue is often available in ath¬letic shoe stores.In that issue, shoes are analyzed with re¬gard to the following properties:(1) Impact Response: In the past fewyears, substantial progress has been madein reducing the amount of shock that is ab¬sorbed by the foot and legs during running.This ability of well designed shoes to absorbshock can be important in preventing inju¬ries. Individuals who are running for longperiods of time, who are running on hardsurfaces and who are prone to knee pain,shin splints or tendonitis should be sure theshoes they select provide good shock protec¬tion. Shoes vary not only with regard to theContinued to page 16 part stimulated by Rich Henle, by Jim Bieryfor a first in the 600 m dash. Biery, a firstyear student, was followed by veteran TomMatiski who placed fifth in an event 200 mshorter than his usual. Rich Gordon pickedhimself up after a rough season, and placed5th in the finals of the 60 yd dash.One of the most exciting runs followed inthe 800 m run. Paul Hart, with a personal re¬cord edged teammate Marshall Schmitt atthe tape for second as Schmitt unsuccessful¬ly attempted to hold off the runner fromCoe. Dave Green followed in the 1000 m runwith a championship win of 2:12.8, a newconference record. Dan Welsh followedthird after not only getting boxed in, butgaining scars from being spiked. In the 300yd run, a weary Steve Willette placed fifth.Mike Axinn also doubled, placing 3rd in the 2mile against a competitive field. In the finalevent, the mile relay team of Jim Read, EdDerse, Marshall Schmitt, and Dave Greenexemplified the whole team's effort with thefinal championship, over two seconds offtheir 1979 record. The feeling of the relay’sBy Darrell WuDunnWith less than four weeks until the open¬ing game, the Chicago Maroons baseballteam continues to prepare for the 1980 sea¬son, after a winter of indoor practice in thefield house. With a much tougher schedulethis year. Coach Chuck Schacht hopes theteam can match last year's 11-9 record.Like last year, pitching will be the key fac¬tor in determining how the team will fare.“We’ll be as good as our pitchers.” ex¬plained Coach Schacht earlier this week. Heis concerned with the lack of depth and ex¬perience in his pitching staff especiallysince last year’s mound ace, John Bruns,used up his eligibility in 1979. Chicago’s pre¬mier pitcher this year will be junior Joe1 t fNeal ConenPaul Harris will be counted on heavilyin the outfield and at the plate and team’s victory was perhaps best ex¬pressed by the stoic Green’s victory signalsas he crossed the finish line. Needless tosay, the thrill was contagious. Congratula¬tions also should be given to other meet con¬tenders; Greg Servatius, John Grayhack.Jerry Stephenson. Doug Chang. Frank Ta-mura, Tom Goodrich, and Dave Taylor whoall gave their best for the winning cause.Overall the meet was a competitive one.Four records were tied or broken by non-Chicago competitors. Lawrence’s Ken Ur-banski won the shot put, while Coe's PaulWagner set the pole vault record at 13’6”.His teammate. Dan Meade, won the highjump, while Monmouth's Bill KomperdaKinczel, who Schacht feels had an off yearlast season <1 win. 5 losses. 5.02 ERA) butshould re-establish himself this year as asolid, college pitcher. Also returning will bejunior Ralph Hruban who has shown muchimprovement in his two years with theMaroons. Last year, he posted a fine 4-0 re¬cord with a 2.67 ERA. The only southpaw onthe staff is freshman Nick Yarsam whomSchacht expects to have a fine college ca¬reer. Another newcomer. Do Kim has alsoshown some promise. Coach Schacht hopesthat this year’s pitching staff can signifi¬cantly lower last year’s earned run averageof 4.98.The Maroons are quite solid at the infieldpositions although some tightening up is stillneeded. Behind the plate will be junior DonCiciora who batted .309 last year. Backinghim up will be sophomore Dave Callans whoSchacht claims has an excellent throw tosecond. Starting at first will be sluggerByron Trott who led the team last year with16 runs batted in. Unfortunately. CoachSchacht is still looking for a backup in caseTrott is injured. Chicago has an excellentdouble play combination with junior DeanCarpenter at second base and senior ScottJansen at shortstop. Carpenter, reboundingfrom a bad knee last year, has been hittingwell in practice. Jansen had a superb seasonlast year, hitting .304 and leading the team took honors in the triple jump. SteveMcCrary of Grinnell took the long jump, andmatched the 60 yd dash record of 6.5. The 400m run was won by Cornell’s Doug Heth-erington. while Brad Lang of Beloit tied the60 yd High Hurdles in 7.8. Bill Williams ofCoe took the 300 yd dash and Todd Schafer ofCarleton set a record in the 2 mile run with a9.02.8. Finally, James Francis of Coe ran1:56.5 for first in the 800 m Run.In all the meet was a fine competitiveevent, and was responded to by a truely fineteam effort by Ted Haydon’s trackmen. AsMarshall Schmitt aptly put it at Jimmy’safter the meet, “we may have been the run¬ners, but Ted is the Coach.”with two home runs and ten stolen bases.Juniors Shakar Bahudur and Jon Win-kelreid continue to vie for the starting spotat third as they did last year.Coach Schacht is extremely pleased withhis outfield in all respects. Senior PaulHarris returns at centerfield Last year.Harris hit .324. stole nine bases in ten at¬tempts, and fielded errorlessly. In rightfield will be sophomore Jeff Foreman wholed the Maroons in batting last year with a.370 average. Two players are still beingconsidered as the starting left fielder. Jun¬ior Brian Weber appears to be the primecandidate, however, freshman Bill Janko-vich has looked very promising.Chicago’s strengths will be in the hitting.“We feel we should be able to hit as well asanyone.” claimed coach Schacht. TheMaroons averaged over five runs per gamelast year. Speed will also be an advantagefor Chicago.“We hope to do a lot of running: take a lotof chances on the base path and force mis¬takes against some teams who are not usedto a Chicago team coming out and forcinganything. In the past we’ve had kids whojust try to lay back and survive and now weare going to try and put some pressure on.”said Schacht.The Maroons will be playing a very toughschedule this spring especially the first fewContinued to page 16Natatorium: looking for mega- $$$By Howard SulsA few years ago a story appeared in theMaroon heralding the construction of a na¬tatorium complex, as part of the upgrad¬ing of athletic facilities at the field house.The natatorium, which included squashcourts, locker rooms, a 50 meter pool, asundeck, and the offices of the Departmentof Physical Education, was to have costabout $5 million and have been completedsometime this year. Somewhere, however,between the printing of that article and thepresent, these plans have become side¬tracked.According to Dean Of Students, CharlesD. O’Connell, any rumors of a lost possibledonor were not true. “The University hasbeen trying very hard to find a donor Wemay have been too ambitious. We areunder an obligation not to construct anybuildings unless we have an endowment. Italked to Calvert Audrian and LynnBender (Director of Physical Planningand Construction and University Planner)about the cost of a facility. What would abare bones facility cost? A 50 meter poolwith lockers, no sundeck and no phvs ed of¬fices would be $4.2 million; without lockersS3.8 million, with an additional mainte¬nance cost of $1.3 million.” Jeff Metcalf, Director of Athletics, isalso interested in the issue of a new pool.“It is our highest priority, now that thefield house is in hand. Any major improve¬ment would be a new pool.”There is no doubt that the existing twopools on campus, at Bartlett Gym and Ida Noyes, are less than adequate at only 20yards. “The filtration system (at Bartlett)is in bad shape." says Henry Thoman. as¬sistant men’s swim coach, and now a lawstudent who did his swimming at Duke. “Ican never count on the water being theright chlorination. There is no way the peo-Continued to page 16...Jr*, 1 ^-^3*iff***''*Perkins & WillProposed Natatorium complexBaseball preview: high hopes for springThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, March 7, 1980—15IM reportBartoast beats Frottage; Psi U drops VincentBy Mark ErwinThe Intramural Basketball playoffs gotunderway this week, with most of theranked teams advancing through early-round competition. In the UndergraduateResidence tournament, Hitchcock droppedFishbein 45-15 to advance to the quarter¬finals against Henderson, who were 44-15victors over Phi Gamma Delta, who playedwith 4 players. The two teams met lastnight, however none of Thursday’s resultswere available at presstime. Dudley andDodd-Mead were also paired up in thequarter-finals. Dudley defeated Bishop53-34, while Dodd-Mead just got by LowerRickert 25-23 in other first round games. TheHitchcock-Henderson winner will meet theDudley-Dodd-Mead winner in the semi¬finals. Tufts and Psi U met in one of theother quarter-finals. Tufts was a 29-21 victorover Upper Rickert, while Psi U upset Vin¬cent by a score of 36-28. Chamberlin ad¬vanced to the next round by handing Michel-son a 26-9 defeat. The big surprise of thetournament is that Chamberlin will be meet¬ing Bradbury, and not undefeated Commut¬er Magic as had been expected. CommuterMagic won the game with Bradbury 32-20.Eight winning teams will battle it out for theUndergraduate-Residence title, with theeventual winner to play the Independent champion for the Undergraduate champion¬ship. The pairings for the IndependentLeague torunament are as follows: DredScott’s Revenge, 53-26 winners over TheLosers, will play the winner of the Coho’s-Semi-Tufts game. The Champs will playGrand Illusion with the winner facing U.F.Outcasts, who beat Zero the Hero 36-32 in theother bracket.The Graduate League playoffs are now inthe quarter-final stage as well. Dartos RisesAgain defeated Frottage 39-32 and will nowmeet the tough Mr. Bill Show, who had afirst-round bye. The Snow Bears, 51-39 vic¬tors over My Last Chance will now faceWillis Reed. In the other bracket, Uranusand the 7 Moons received a first-round bye,and will now play Controlled Substance, whobeat the Six-Packers 39-31. The DivinitySchool outlasted Med II by a score of 37-29and will now meet the Albanian Refugees,who had a bye in the first round.In the Women’s Intramural Basketballplayoffs, Salisbury-Dodd will face the win¬ner of the Upper Wallace-Lower Wallaceshowdown for the Residence championship.The Residence winner will then meet thewinner of the other bracket to determine theWomen s Championship. The other bracketincludes match-ups between MysteryPlayer and IM One, with the victor facing the winner of the Full Court Press-Bom-berettes game.In all probability, the Men’s All-Universi¬ty championship will not be decided until thefirst week of Spring Quarter. On Monday,the remaining Undergraduate teams willmeet to decide when they would like to con¬tinue play. The Graduate League will do thesame on Tuesday, with most of the teamsprobably wanting to hold out until nextquarter, due to tenth week finals schedules.In any case, there appear to be some excel¬lent match-ups coming up in all leagues, soas the NCAA and NIT have their own tour¬naments going The UCIM tourney is rightthere also!BaseballContinued from page 15weeks. Among the opponents Chicago willbe facing early on will be Division I Univer¬sity of Illinois-Chicago Circle, I.T.T. whowent to the NCAA Western Regionals lastyear, and four time national championLewis University. “I would say it’s thetoughest schedule Chicago has played infour years,” described Schacht.In the Midwest Conference playoff sys¬tem, Chicago will face rival Lake Forest atthe end of April for a four game, home andhome series. The first team to win threegames, or an inning by inning tiebreakershould the teams split the four games, willplay the winner of the Lawrence-Ripon play¬off for the Eastern Division title. CoachSchacht feels that his ballclub is better thanLake Forest, however, ‘‘I thought we were abetter team (than Lake Forest) last year.There is just something about it that LakeForest plays the best baseball they are cap¬able of against us. We play good ball butthey just always play better.’’Last year,Neal CohenScott Jansen loosening upStulbergContinued from page 15extent to which they provide such protectionbut also with regard to whether this protec¬tion is in the forefoot or rearfoot. Individualswho are running fast and with shorterstrides need more forefoot protection. Thosewho run more slowly and with longer stridesneed rearfoot shock absorption.(2) Flexibility: In general, the more flex¬ible a shoe, other things being equal, the bet¬ter. Stiff shoes are uncomfortable and morelikely to lead to injuries.(3) Wear: Shoes vary surprisingly widelywith regard to wear of both the soles anduppers. Moreover, there is usually not atrade-off between wear and other importantperformance characteristics of a shoe.Thus, particularly in the newer shoemodels, one should investigate the wearcharacteristics of a given shoe.(4) Rearfoot Control: Many causes of footand leg discomfort are related to how theheel of the foot strikes the ground. In part,this can be affected by the dee:3n of the heelof the shoe. In my experience, however, thisis most affected by how well the shoe fits anindividual’s heel. This is particularly truefor individuals with narrow heels. Someshoes have special laces for holding the heelin the shoe. Individuals who tend to spraintheir ankles should also pay close attentionto how well the heel of the shoe fits theirfeet.(5) Traction: This characteristic of shoedesign - reflected most importantly in thetype of material used to construct the sole -is particularly important if the shoes are tobe worn on wet surfaces. Shoes with po¬lyurethane soles provide the least tractionon wet surfaces. Intramural Basketball Top Ten(first place votes in parenthesis)Points1. Mr. Bill Show (6) 952. Albanian Refugees (3) 923. Uranus and the 7 Moons (1) 824. Snow Bears 775. The Champs 696. Dred Scott’s Revenge 677. Willis Reed 528. Chamberlin 419. Hitchcock 3510. Dudley 27Votes: Dartos Rises Again, Controlled Sub¬stance, Henderson, Divinity School, TuftsNeal CohenSchacht ponders his team’s futureLake Forest won the final three games ofthe four game series.Because of the very tough schedule, coachSchacht does not feel that the team’s recordwill show much improvement over lastyear’s record. He expects to play about .500ball with about 12 wins. He is, however, re¬luctant to make any real prediction. “Wefeel several things can happen to the sched¬ule. It can be miserable: we can lose a wholeton of ballgames just because we’re playingbetter people, we might get down early,maybe the pitching doesn’t come through.Or everything could fall in place: we canwin all those ballgames . . . It’s that unpre¬dictable.”The Chicago Maroons open their 1980 sea¬son on Wednesday, April 2 at ConcordiaTeachers College. The team plays its homeopener at Stagg Field on Saturday April 5against Chicago State University. All fansare encouraged to come out and support theMaroons and see what Coach Schacht de-scribes as “very respectable baseball.”(6)Weight: The newest athletic shoes aresubstantially lighter than older shoes of oth¬erwise comparable quality. This may beparticularly desirable for individuals whoare running at relatively fast speeds butwho also want good shock absorption protec¬tion.Although ultimately one should select theshoe that feels the most comfortable, inorder to provide those of you who do not sub¬scribe to “Runner’s World” with a list fromwhich you might begin to select your shoes,I have listed (in alphabetical order) the toprated running shoes (with regard to theabove characteristics) for 1979:Men’s:Adidas Marathon TrainerAdidas TRX TrainerAutry ConcordeBrooks Hugger GTBrooks Super VillanovaBrooks VantageBrooks Vantage SupremeNew Balance 620Nike DaybreakOsaga KT-26Puma Fast RiderReebok AztecSaucony Trainer 1980Specs International InnsbruckWomen’s:Adidas Lady Marathon TrainerAdidas Lady TRX TrainerBrooks Lady Super VillanovaBrooks Lady VantageNike LiberatorReebok Aztec PrincessSaucony Ms. Trainer 1980Thom McAn Jox RoadhandlerN atatoriumContinued from page 15pie who come out here and put out an effortare being fairly treated. It is a shame wedon’t have a facility that is the minimumwe need. It’s amazing to me that a majoruniversity like this doesn’t have a 25 yardpool. The main thing is not so much forswim meets, but for peak hours, and a fa¬cility for the community as a whole. Wecould do a lot more with physical educa¬tion classes such as canoeing, water polo,scuba, and diving. It would also free up thepools for community swimming. The ad¬vantage to the University communitywould be much greater than the advantageto a small group of varsity athletes.”At present, intercollegiate meets are notheld at Bartlett, with the exception of onethis year, because the Bartlett pool is only20 yards long and meets are held, for themost part, in 25 yard pools. Also, diving isforbidden under NCAA rules due to the in¬sufficient height of the ceiling. “It’s diffi¬cult to adjust working out in a 20 yard pooland racing in a 25 yard pool,” continuedThoman. When Mark Spitz was in town re¬cently, this question was put to him and hereadily agreed that the difference in swim¬ming in a smaller pool was the greateramount of rest involved in flip turns.What about recruiting? Pete Anderson,Head Swim Coach: “It’s very difficult toget a blue chip prospect. I have to sell theschool, because they’re coming here to goto school, not to swim. Without a doubt,having a top-notch facility would help.This is one of the top five schools in thecounty academically. We would get somesmart kids, who are also good swimmers.Showing them a top notch pool would real¬ly make a difference. With a facility wecould be a power within five years.”Steve Frederick, swim team captain,echoed that view. “It would be great for re¬cruiting, not just for swimmers, if therewas a first class pool. We could have apowerhouse with swimmers who don’twant to swim, at let’s say Indiana, andwant to go to a good school. We could prob¬ably attract every swimmer who would goto the Ivy League, every swimmer whogoes on to be a doctor or a lawyer. It onlytakes a few good people to change a pro¬gram. The University is a fine academicinstitution, and swimming is not first onthe list, but with a good facility we couldadvertise and become champions, withoutlowering the academic standards. I knowso many high school swimmers that wentto Columbia, Brown, Stanford, etc.,schools that aren’t great in swimming, buthave top academic programs.”Dean O’Connell agrees. “The lack of a facility is a disgrace when recruiting stu¬dents, not only undergraduates, but gradu¬ate students and even faculty. There is areputation in some circles that the Univer¬sity of Chicago is so academically and in¬tellectually oriented, and doesn’t careabout the students. There is no question weneed things, but it will take time.”The pool, or natatorium as it is properlycalled, first came into thought as the ideaof former University Presidents EdwardLevi and John Wilson. Wilson, as a dailyswimmer, had a personal interest, but nomore than anyone else who appreciatesthe value of a good pool. Even then it wasrealized that something was needed as arecreational outlet to boost morale in thewinter. However, these things do not hap¬pen overnight, as evidenced by the dedica¬tion of Regenstein 25 years after the plansfor a new library were conceived.Another major advantage to a top-notchfacility would be the probably national ex¬posure afforded to the University throughits utilization for national meets. At pres¬ent the most outstanding facility is atCleveland State, where 12 national com¬petitive events have been held since itsopening in 1974. The complex includes twopool facilities and is considered withoutpeer in terms of lighting, for competitionand television; filtration system; low poolturbulence; and as an excellent “fast”pool has seen numerous records shat¬tered.The Board of Trustees is well aware ofthe favorable publicity a pool could bring.It could be used for Division I, II, and IIImeets, AAU meets, and even the OlympicTrials. Obviously, being located in a majormetropolitan area, with easy nationalaccess and plenty of available hotel spaceit would be an ideal place for majormeets.Frederick said, “People would want tocome here year after year. The Californiaschools don’t want to go East, and viceversa, and nobody wants to swim at In¬diana or Alabama. Chicago would be per¬fect.”So granted, this University could use amajor facility for the benefit of the com¬munity as a whole. As one of the top insti¬tutions in the country the students deserveit. As former president John Wilson said ina speech at a Trustee-Faculty Dinner onJanuary 12, 1977 “I believe we can gener¬ate and sustain activities that, without in¬truding upon our academic selves, willstimulate a sense of participation and en¬joyment and thus enhance the total life ofthe University.”16—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, March 7, 1980GOLD CITY INNgiven * * * *by the MAROONOpen DollyFrom 11:30 a.m.to feOO p.m.5228 Harper 493-2559(ifwr Hmrpf Court)Eat more for less."A Gold Mine Ot Good Food"Student Discount:10% for table service5% for take borneHyde Park’s Rest Cantonese FoodPIZZAPLATTER1460 E. 53rdM13-2800No delivery VOX P0PULI-V0S DEO.Leinekugel'sSTILL ON TAPThe Pub• Eye Examinations• Contact Lenses• (Soft and Hard)• Fashion Eye Wear• Contact Lens SuppliesDR. M.R. MASLOVOPTOMETRISTSMUSOt]SOFtENSfrr—1»mlHyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th363-6363REPAIRSPECIALISTSon IBM, SCM.Olympia, etcFREE repairestimates; repairsby factory-trainedtechnician.RENTALSavailable withU. of C I D New andRebuiltTypewriters,Calculators,Dictators,AddersU of ChicagoBookstore5750 S. Ellis Ave753-3303Mastercharge and Visa Accepted PASSOVERALL MEAL RESER VA TIONS FORTHE ENTIRE HOLIDAY AND ALLSEDER PL A CEMENTS WILL HA VETO BE MA DE IN WINTER Q UA R TERBEFORE SEMESTER BREA K.IF YOU HAVE NOT MADE YOUR MEALRESERVATIONS AND SEDERPLACEMENTS. COME TO HILLELFOUNDATION. 5715 WOODLAWN AVENUEBEFORE YOU LEAVE FOR SPRING RREAK!SATURDAYMARCH 88:30-1 P.M.Reynolds Club LoungeThe University of Chicago Kundalini YogaSociety offers a four hour introductory Yogaintensive. If you are interested in creating abody that feels just right, tuning your mind togreater clarity, learning how to cope with stressand study more effectively, or if you just wantto spend a really enjoyable Saturday morning,come and join us at the Reynolds Club Lounge(5706 University Ave.). Please come with afairly empty stomach, some loose fittingclothes, a blanket and ten dollars.MAY THE FORCE BE WITH YOU!mmr Eye ExaminationsFashion Eye WearContact LensesDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist(53 Kimbark Plaza)1200 E. 53rd St.493-8372Intelligent people know the differ¬ence between advertised cheapglasses or contact lenses and com¬petent professional serviceOur reputation is your guaranteeof satisfaction. Court Studio presents:David M a niet’sDICK VARIATIONS amiJoyc e Carol ()afes*IN THE REGION OF ICEFri.-Stm.. March 7-168:30. 7:30 Sunday81.50 sf udents/senior citizens.82.50 general57th & l'diversity753-3581Hi|hr^arkPtpr_attii Uubarrn1552 E. 53rd - Under IC tracksPipes - Pipe Tobaccos -Imported Cigarettes - CigarsMon.-Sat 9-8. Sun. 12-5Students under 30 get 10% off.ask for “Big Jim"NEW 2-drawer files $59.00NEW 6-ft. folding tables $49.00EQUIPMENT& SUPPLY CO8600 COMMERCIAL AVENUEBRANDRE 4-21 1 1 OPEN MON.-FRI.8:30-5:00SATURDAYS9:00-3:00The University of ChicagoMusic Department presentsThe University of Chicago Choruswith orchestra nG-F-HANDELS MASQUEAC IS & GALATEAEric Weimer,guest conductorCarol Lovcrde (jalateaRobert Hemrihson AcisAlonzo Crook Vamcnlames Mack TolyphemeKenneth Dorsch.harpsichondSaturday S Sunday, March £ &>9, I9f$0-£:00pm'Pond Chapel,lQ25 E.SPth Stl'Tree and open totfiepufiCic— TheFLAMINGOand CABAN A C.LI B5500 S. Shore Drive• Studio and 1 Bedroom• Furnished and Unfurnished• V. of C. bus stop• Outdoor Pool and Gardens• Carpeting and Drapes Inch• Security• University Subsidy forStudents and Staff• Delicatessen• Barber Shop• Beauty Shop• J.B.D, Restaurant• Dentist• ValetFREE PARKINGM.SnyderPL 2-38009TUDCNTGOMGRNMCNTMCGTIMG TU0)D4Y, MrtRCH 118=00 P.M.Last meeting of the quarterThe Chicaqo Maroon —Friday, March 7, 1980—17Calendar «►FRIDAYPerspectives: Topic - “Helping People: Goal-Orient¬ed Practice in the Social Welfare System" guestsLaura Epstein, Thomas Young and Ronald Rooney,8:09 am, channel 7.Crossroads: English classes for foreign women,10:00 amGrad. Comm, on the Study of Women: “Women andPolitics in Contemporary Japan" speaker Jacque¬lyn Swearingen, 12 noon, Ida Noyes.Islamic Society: Friday prayer will be held 12:30 pmin the home room of I-House.Geophysical Sciences Colloquium: "Air Quality Im¬pact Assessment for Fossil-Fuel Generating Sta¬tions” 1:30 pm. Hinds Lab Auditorium.Workshop in Economic History: “Robin Hoods andOther Bandits: Quantitative Aspects of Crime inMedieval England” 3:30 pm, SS 106.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Arabic Circle -"The Succession of Revolutions in the History ofIraq" speaker Mazin Safar, 3:30 pm, Pick 218.Women’s Union: Meets 5:00 pm in the Women'sUnion office above the Frog and Peach.Hillel: Liberal-Progressive Shabbat Services, 5:30pm, Hillel.Hillel: Yavneh (Orthodox) Shabbat Services, sun¬down, Hillel.Hillel: Adat Shalom Shabbat Dinner, 6:15 pm, Hil-lel.UC Karate Club: Meets 7:00 pm in the dance roomof Ida Noyes.Doc Films: "The Day the Earth Stood Still" 7:15 pm,“Forbidden Planet" 9:00 pm, Cobb.UC Christian Fellowship: Discussion - "Salvation byFaith” 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes 2nd floor lounge.Stud, for Libertarian Society: Watch Milton Fried¬man’s TV show “Free to Choose” the last twobroadcasts will be aired consecutively, beginningat 8:00 pm. Meet in the Shoreland TV room on the2nd floor.Rockefeller Chapel: University Symphony Orches¬tra, 8:30 pm, Free.SATURDAYKundalini Yoga Society: Introductory class, 8:30am. Reynolds Club Lounge.Hillel: Yavneh (Orthodox) Shabbat Services, 9:15am, Hillel.Hillel: The Upstairs Minyan (Conservative-Egali¬tarian) Shabbat Services, 9:30 am, Hillel.Creative Dance and Movement Group: Meets 12:30pm in the dance room of Ida Noyes.Primavera: Open Poetry Reading 4:00-6:00 pm, IdaNoyes 2nd floor east lounge.Crossroads: Saturday night dinner, 6:00 pm, no res¬ervations.Debate Films: "Caine Mutiny" 6:30 , 9:00 and 11:15pm, Kent 107. Doc Films: "Agatha” 7:15 and 9:15 pm, Cobb.Hillel: Party - dancing, music, beer and munchies,9:00 pm. Hillel.SUNDAYRockefeller Chapel: Ecumenical Service of HolyCommunion, 9:00 am.Hillel: Lox and Bagel Brunch, 11:00 am.Rockefeller Chapel: University Religious Service,11:00 am.Hillel: Telephone call to Soviet Refuseniks Danieland Sarah Fradkin, Leningrad, USSR, Hillel’sAdopted Family, followed by letter writing ses¬sion, 11:00 am, Hillel.Crossroads: China - Fresh Insights - Prof. HarrieVandestoppen talks of his impressions of Chinaduring his recent visit, 3:00 pm.Crossroads: Bridge at 3:00 pm. Beginners and ex¬perts welcome.Folkdancers: Meet from 8:00-11:30 pm, Ida Noyes.Intermediate and advanced.Hunger Concern Group: Meets 8:30 pm, Ida NoyesMemorial Room.MONDAYPerspectives: Topic - "Widowhood - Grief and Lone¬liness” guests Elizabeth Bankoff, Helen Lopata andSheldon Tobin, 6:09 am, channel 7.Crossroads: English classes for foreign women,10:00 am.Dept of Microbiology: "Herpes Simplex Virus TypeI: Temperature-Sensitive Accumulation and Al¬tered Conformation of Viral Glycoprotein gB inMutant and Revertant Strains and Relationship toDefects in Viral Replication” speaker Mary Haffey,2:30 pm, Cummings 11th fl seminar room.Dept of Chemistry: “Chemi-and Bioluminescence ofOrganic Peroxides" speaker Prof. Gary Schuster,4:00 pm, Kent 103.Cognitive Science Lecture Series: “On Saying That. . . in Chinook” speaker Michael Silverstein, 4:00pm, SS 122.Kundalini Yoga Society: Meets 5:00-6:30 pm, IdaNoyes East Lounge.UC Judo Club: Meets 6:00-8:30 pm, Bartlett gym. Be¬ginners welcome.UC Karate Club: Meets 7:00 pm in the dance roomof Ida Noyes.Chess Club: Meets 7:00 pm in the Memorial room ofIda Noyes.Action ERA: Meeting 7:30 pm, First UnitarianChurch, 5650 S. Woodlawn.Progressive Union: Meeting at 7:30 pm in the IdaNoyes Library. Everyone welcome.Folkdancers: Meet 8:00-11:00 pm, Ida Noyes. Begin¬ners.TUESDAYA SINGULAR GROUPcreative arts cooperativeis having a specialEINSTEIN’S BIRTHDAYCELEBRATIONSAT. MARCH 8, 11 -557th & Woodlawnin the Unitarian Churchcreative gifts for your favorite physicistcome in to meet our new artistsand to share some birthdaycake with us. Perspectives: Topic - “Support Systems for Widowsand Widowers” guests Elizabeth Bankoff, Helen Lo¬pata and Sheldon Tobin, 6:09 am, channel 7.Women’s Exercise Class: Meets 10:00 am, IdaNoyes.Original Experimental Music: Classical and Jazz,12:00 noon, Reynolds Club.Rockefeller Chapel: University Organist EdwardMondello will give a recital lecture demonstration,12:15 pm.Physical Education: Free swimming instruction foradults 7:30-8:30 pm, Ida Noyes.Hillel: Israeli folkdancing, 8:00 pm, Ida Noyestheatre. Rockefeller Chapel: Evening prayer, 5:00 pm.Orthodox Christian Fellowship: Meets 7:00 pm, IdaNoyes 217.NOMOR: Committee meeting in Ida Noyes firstfloor lounge, 7:00 pm.Table Tennis Club: Practices 7:30 pm, Ida Noye 3rdfloor.South Asian Student Association: Lecture - "HowBengali is the Bengali Mind?" speaker David Kopf,8:00 pm, Swift Hall commons room.FRIDAYPerspectives: Topic - “The Usefulness of Latin to theWEDNESDAYPerspectives: Topic - "Women as Widows” guestsElizabeth Bankoff, Helen Lopata and SheldonTobin, 6:09 am, channel 7.Rockefeller Chapel: Service of Holy Communion,8:00 am. . mItalian Table: Meets 12 noon to speak Italian, BlueGargoyle.Rockefeller Chapel: Robert Lodine University Caril-lonneur, will 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.Dept of Biochemistry: Seminar - "Mechanism of Vi¬tamin K-Dependent Carboxylase” speaker JohnSuttie, 4:00 pm, Cummings room 101.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Lecture - "Afgh¬anistan: The Revolution of April 1978 - December1979” speaker Amin Saikal, 4:00 pm. Pick 016.Badminton Club: Practices 7:30 pm in the Ida Noyesgymnasium.Tai Chi Ch'uan: Meets 7:30 pm. Blue Gargoyle.Women’s Rap Group: Meets 7:30 pm, in theWomen’s Center at the Blue Gargoyle.Lower School Council UC Lab School: Lecture - "Children; Self Love - Self Esteem” speaker Dr. MariaRiers, 8:00 pm, Judd Hall theatre. Free and open tothe public.Science Fiction Club: Meets 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes. Ev¬eryone welcome.Country Dancers: Meets 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes CloisterClub. Beginners welcome.THURDAYWomen’s Exercise: Meets 10:00 am, Ida Noyes.Noontime Concerts: Featuring Elizabeth Baltas,flute, 12:15 pm. Reynolds Club North Lounge.Eastern Orthodox Lenten Services: at 3:00 pm,Bond Chapel.Christian Science Organization: Meeting 5:00-6:00pm, Gates-Blake 117. Various Disciplines” guests Arthur Adkins, JohnWyatt, Robert Carter and Polly Hoover, 6:09 am,channel 7.STANLEY H. KAPLANFor Over 41 Years The Standard ofExcetence In lest PreparationMCAT• GM AT* LSATMi • ME PSYCH • SHE BIO • DATPCAT • SCAT • VAT • NAT • SAT • SAT ACHVS •NATIONAL MEDICAL BOARDS • VQE • ECfMOFLEX • NATL DENTAL BOARDS 'TOEFLPONXTtY BOARDS • NURSING BOARDSFtaalMa Piuhw and HewnVoit tor Cmttt us Ft>Taantd Vkf W* MiU Tfet BMwmmTUT MtUAMTtOMWf CtALMTS MNCt 1«MCsRMfl * M** US CitttL Ptftrtei’GH*flaHlKAPLANIW'lf iignlMwnv. nm imf. da m.)CHICAGO CC NT! N6216 N. CLARKCHICAGO. ILLINOIS 0060013121 7044181t. «V OU0UN0AN101 LA GRANGE ROADSUITE 201LAGRANGE ILLINOIS 80826<312) 382 6040 SPRINfi, SUMMERFALL INTENSIVE*COURSES STARTINGTHIS MONTH:MCAT.. . .SAT GRENEXT MONTH:4 vk/MCAT LSAT. ..CRE... J5ATL Court.. Constantly UpdatadLlcanslng Exams In Cantor Saif-Studyaw amm o»» cmm m an rm. ac aaaw us c«a • WrawOUTS0C AY. ST ATI CALL TOLL FAK: MO-221-ITUThe University of ChicagoROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPELEDWARD MONDELLOORGAN RECITALTUESDAY EVENING, MARCH 118 O'CLOCKGUEST ARTISTSDALE TERBEEK,Counter-tenorDAVID BEAUBIEN,DrummerWorks of Samuel Scheidt; Johannes Brahms; Johann Sebastian Bach;George Frideric Handel and Maurice Durufl£. Admission is withoutticket and without charge.>U7 SI liH jfKUJiBring your ball gowns and tuxedos back from break!TUXEDO JUNCTION featuringunder the direction of Jimmy HendersonFRIDAY, APRIL 25, 1980Tickets now at Reynolds Club Box Office U.C. Students $5.00U.C. Faculty & Staff $12.0018—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, March 7, 1980FIEO ADSAD RATESMaroon classifieds are effective andcheap. Place them in person at theMaroon business office in Ida NoyesHall by mail to the Maroon, Ida NoyesHall room 304, 1212 E. 59th St.,Chicago, 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.SPACEReward $50 cash for signing a lease onor before March 7, large studio apt.$216 incl. utilities. Cali 324-5592 or963-4600. Ask for David Cholst or callElen Acailes 753-2209 apt. at 51st andKenwood.$25 Reward for lease of apt. between55th and 59th and Harper and Ellis.Any size, starting Summer or nextFall. Call 753-2249 ext. 1203, can leavea message.Room available in 2 bedroom apt. $100.Call Karen. 268-1053.SUMMER SUBLET - 3 br. 2 ba. apt.date and price negot. fully equippedON CAMPUS modern 947-9597 eves.5123 S. KIMBARK, Desirable Studioand 1 bedroom apts., newly decoratednear shopping, transportation and U ofC. Inquire premises engineer. FredSallman. 752-8066 or Sat. and Sun. 1-4p.m. Call 643-4489, HARRY A. ZISOOKAND SONS, 786-9200.FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED Bdin 2 Bd apt on C Bus Route $150nonsmoker eves. 667-4796 days,947-6363 Kay.1 bdrm avail 4/1 in 3 bdrm turn apt.,56th and Univ. Your share of rent$116/mo. + util. Phone (day) 753-2430or (eve) 288-3111.Sublet big deluxe sunny studio, 12th floRegents Pk. lake view, safe, campusbus, w-w carpet $314/mo. POSITIVE-LY NEGOTIABLE. Call 363-2567/eveLarge 2 bedroom, 56th and Dor¬chester. Available April 12. Renovatedapt in small building (very quiet)8525/mo. 643-9423.Spacious remodeled 2 bedrms, 5 rmapt with new kitchen, bath, hardwoodfloors, exec. loc. close to campus. $450.363-1332.STUDENT APARTMENTS Availablefor sublet. Can accomodate twb per¬sons. 52nd and Drexel; 54th and Ellis.Furnished, utilities included. 787-1778days; 288-5972 before 10 p.m.Remodeled 1 bedroom with diningroom, new kitchen, new bath, close tocampus. $350.363-1332.1 bdrm in 2 bdrm apt. Airy high rise,near lake. 1C, minibus A/C, parking,$102 + elec. Grad, nonsmoker pref.Start June. Call Jane, 7-6897 or538-6159.One bedroom available in 4 bedoomapt. Fireplace, sunporch. Washer-dryer in bldg. $150. Near many storeson Univ bus route. 55th and Cornell.Call 288-4411.4 rm apt. 1 bedroom prime E. HydePark loc. Hyde Park Blvd. at park.$300. 458-6815 or 288-2175.ROOMMATE WANTED in HydePark at 55th and Cornell. Share with 1other person through at least Sept. 1.Full use of kitchen, living-dining area,and laundry facilities Immediate oc¬cupancy upon signing lease. Rent$175/month incl heat but no gas. Callday 753-8737 and night 684-0203 oranytime, 525-6872. Ask for Mac.PEOPLE WANTEDThe Department of BehavioralSciences needs people who want toparticipate as paid subjects inpsycholinguistic and cognitivepsychology experiments. For furtherinformation call 753-4718.SECRETARY/RECEPTIONIST. Pro¬fessional School Computing Servicesdepartment seeks reliable and punc¬tual Secretary with excellent typingand communication skills. Duties in¬clude answering phones, greeting anddirecting visitors, typing letters andreports, and performing generalsecretarial tasks. Call 753-4442 LeslieEvans, The University of Chicago.AA/EOE.5254 S. DorchesterWELL M AINTAINEDBUILDINGAttractive 1 V2 and2Va Room StudiosFurnished or Unfurnished$218.o $320Rased on AvailabilityAt Campus Bus Stop324-0200 Mrs. Croak ANYONE WITH TALENT: musi¬cians, comedians, mimes, clowns,magicians, etc. for forthcoming SGGuide to Entertaining SG office753-3273.Wanted: Improverished law studentwho knows some company law, to helpme set up a computer consulting co.Fee is negotiable, call 752-7635.Intrntl Women's Day March 8 childcare help needed free dinner-all youcan eat at 6:00 pm in exchange for afew hrs of your time. Call Joanne.324-1121.Part time Secretary. Dept ofBehaviroal Sciences. Contact Dr.Gendlin's office. 753-2085.PEOPLE FOR SALEExcellent accurate typist w/legal ex¬perience will type papers and disserta¬tions or IBM. Reasonable rates.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,TUNE UPS and other work. Cheap.Call 753-8342 X2607, keep trying.FRENCH native teacher offers tutor-ing all levels. Ph. 268-9262.Computerized Word Processing toMeet all of Your typing needs. Perfectfor: Manuscripts that will need revi¬sion/dictation/repetitive typ¬ing/forms/tables/statistical work.Reasonable rates! Nancy Cohen378-5774.Math Student, experienced program¬mer, looking for freelance jobs. (Notime for a full time job). Name thesystem and the language, and I'll doit or let me do the deciding. Ratesreasonable. Call 752-7635.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 Poulenc, Debussy, andSibelius performed by the UniversitySymphony Orchestra on Friday,March 7 in Rockefeller Chapel, 8:30pm. Organ soloist Edward Mondelloand the sea-nymphs of the UniversityChorus will assist. Admission is free,but free-will donations will be ac¬cepted at the door.Ella Jenkins Concert for children Sun.Mar. 16, 2:30 pm 5650 Woodlawn.Benefit for Scholarship Fund of HydePark Unitarian Co-op School. Tickets$2.50. Bake sale after.RUMMAGE SALE, SAt. Mar. 15 at the53rd St. YMCA, 10-4, to benefit AnconaMontessori School.SERVICESPsychotherapy and counseling.Students, faculty, staff welcome. Feeson a sliding scale; insurance accepted.Joan Rothchild Hardin, PhD.Registered Psychologist in HydePark. 493-8766 days ano eves, for appt.CONVERSATIONAL RUSSIAN of¬fered by native Russian family. Appt.arranged to your convenience. $5 perhour. Call Svetlana at 973-7384.Pregnancy tests. Saturdays 10-1Augustana Church. 5500 S. Woodlawn.$1.50 donation. Southside Women'sHealth Service. 667-5505.We keypunch your data. Precise, fast,cheap. Call Mike 753-2517.Counseling and psychotherapy for in¬dividuals, couples, and families.Registered psychologists. Slidig-scalefee. Payment through insurancewelcome. Daytime, evening, andweekend hours. Chicago Counselingand Psychotherapy Center. 684-1800.Seminar for Parents-"Choosing andCoping with Child Care Options, 9 am•12 noon. Saturday March 15, HydePark Union Church, 5600 S. Woodlawn.Co-sponsored by the Parent Networkand the Child Care Task Force. Childcare provided. 50c per child. $5 fee.We Buy and SellUsed Albums,45’s and Tapes1701 E. 55th684-3375 ROSE/PUTTTIXDie. movie theatre tickets at ReynoldsClub Box Office.SAVE ON MOVIESRose and Plitt theatre discount ticketat Reynolds Club Box Office.PERSONALSWRITER’S WORKSHOP PLaza2-83^7;Kittens free to good home. 363-5756after 4 p.m.ATTENTION: Be it known that on thisday March 7th, 1980. Helene Davitz isgraduating from college. Good luckMeany!Hey Pete (e)Keep working, you can do it cela m'estegalHunny?I lay in kemmer alone, not trusting aTerran. I was male, which caused fur¬ther debate among by friends aboutmy gender.--The Gethenian.STOOPID H Don't be so defensive.You are paranoid. Misdirected.MYOB- Roger II.Dave and Phil, Go jump out a window.March 7 is National RA-RA Day. Eat ara-ra for lunch.Hi Edoh hawayou do. Bro.Dear Bunny Honeyz" + 2dz' + wz-(Doc) exp. (iwt)Love DocSam-We have the bike stereo + JuicyFruit, Since you're not insured, we'llreturn the gum. Answer soon—our pa¬tience is wearing thin. M & E.ADMIT IT—Your Mississippi wasjust as bad as my California Howabout a rematch (or a remap) ?EMB each day brings with it more joyand happiness. Our time together isprecious and important, nevertiresome, but always vibrant and en¬joyable. Let us not change our ways,but grow in our care for each other.WAR.Qwerty: Welcome! It's not solonesome here anymore. To the fullpage! Speed Racer. ing coming on. Get my shoe, Will you?Ef-Fone: Your goddamn ad was notseen by the correct person at the cor¬rect time. Next time, drag it inyourself, and leave off calling menames. I'm very sensitive.Reading are positive. Dark Ladymakes spring changes."Knock-Knock” "Who's There?""Joe" "Joe who"? "Joe Mama."Typed under protest.I have gone 6 months without injury.Now, if my legs begin to ache we'll aliknow whose fault it will be. And I donot mean Malka's!!! See ya atBusghetti, notattheC-Shop. YKW.Ron, Appolfo's Chariot makes revolu¬tions. Am I that far out of your orbit?J.QWERTY. Welcome to the Maroonpersonals column! (It's growing fast-might be a page soon) Personally, Icould never wade through eighteenpages of READER personals eachweek. Glad to have you. Franco Fone.There are no rats in this library, thankyou very much. My cleaning andhygiene are strickly top flight. Amore appropriate mascot might havebeen chosen to represent my denizens,if I may say so. Reg.Qwerty: Are you the real thing? If so,glad to see you! Should we try to getmore writers—I can send out the high-sign to a few. Barefoot Dreamer (Ps—Yes, I came from the Reader too!)YEARBOOKS $10Advance order your 1980 yearbooknow. Only $10. Color, seniors, 200beautiful pages. For sale at StudentActivities Office 2nd fl. Ida Noyes. Askfor GuntaGILBERT ANDSULLIVANRUDDYGORE at Kenwood AcademyAuditorium, 5015 S. Blackstone, Fri¬day, Feb. 29, Saturday, March 1,Saturday March 8 at 8 pm, $4.50 and$6, Sunday March 2 at 2 pm, $3.Tickets at Mandel hall Box Office.Ah yes...alas! A winter's ridingbareback over rough terrain has left aknotted mane that your jagged hovescan neither untangle...nor flee. Faitaccompli? C.Irene & Kathleen: Become Reader-readers (hint, hint). Your everlovingPersonals writer.ALL in favor of a Pink Floyd fan clubsay: "Baa!" But don't get fleeced bythe dogs.-Izak.DOC, Carrots galore? How about 36, orany combination thereof? I know wecan do it, the sooner the better. Love,BUNNY.SA Silence is for composers, subtletiesfor poets-at least tell me where youfound the quotation. This is the lastpaper this quarter, sc have a nicebreak. JBERBECKYThey took the game right out of it. I gothit in the head with one of their signs,and t fell in a hole, and all I could seewere the bottoms of their shoes as theymarched right.no.6TRIVIA QUESTION: Can anyonename the comic strip characters in theex-strip "KIWI"?I have become uncomfortably numbWhat I need is some company insidemy wall. Izak,PG rips off UC. That's you and me.Liz, RA-RA. It may be disgusting but itis more fun, or so I hear. Ask Motor-mouth. BUNNY.HOO-HOO call me a cab. I feel a Sor¬ US HOTLINE753-1777Are you Partied Out? Studied Out?tired Out? Down and Out?Call Us and Talk it OutThe UC Hotline-QuestionsReferrals, and someone to Talk to.7PM-7AMDELUXE APTS.2 and 3 bedrooms, new security buzzersystem, laundry facilities. Jtnitor onpremises some apts. available. Na¬tional Mortgage. Call 430-2300. Marion.CIVIL LIBERTYENDANGERED?R. HAVIGHURST VS.E. KENNEDY'S S1722Quaker Forum on S 1722 (formerlyomnibus Federal crime bill SIGuestProf. Robert Havighurst (Nat'l Chairof Comm. Against Repressive Legisla¬tion), speaking on E. Kennedy's &Strom Thurmond's bill now before USSenate. Soon after Meeting for Wor¬ship (10:30-11 30) Sunday March 9.Refreshments. Everyone welcome.Quaker House 5615 Woodlawn.HANDEL IN BOND!COME HEAR!:LIVE FROM LENINGRAD -USSR!'Talk By Telephone With Soviet RefuseniksDANIEL & SARAH FRADKINHillel’s Adopted Familyat 11 A.M.SUNDAY MARCH 9HILLEL HOUSE5715 Woodlawn Ave.Present will be Yakov \annai.former RefusenikWrite Letters to Fradkins, Govt. Officialsin US and USSRL U of C Chorus and orch. presentsHandel's ACIS AND GALATEA Satand Sun. March 8 and 9, 8:00, BondChapel. FREE.POETRY READINGOpen Poetry Reading on Sat. March 8at 4 p.m. at 1212 E. 59th St. Want toread? Call 752-5655. Sponsored byPrimavera.UNIVERSITYSYMPHONYORCHESTRAWinter Concert, Friday March 7, at8:30 pm in Rockerteller Chapel. Underconductor Barbara Schubert the Or¬chestra will perform Poulenc's OrganConcerto, Debussy's Three Nocturnes,and Sibelius's Symphony no. 2 Admis¬sion is free, buf free-will donations willbe accepted at the doorFOR SALEAPT. SALE: bed, oak desk, rug, lamp,shelves, etc, etc. Ph 268-9262.For sale-couch-88" contemporary des¬ign; dark blue tweed upholstery,avocado green slipcover; two seatcushions, clean. Good condition. Goodbuy 288-6147,Leaving Hyde Park! Must sell apt con¬tents. Living room, bedrm., kitchenfurnishings all good condition. Willtake best offer. Call 472-6770 eve orleave message.WEIGHTS AND BENCH SET FORSALE, Cement filled weights withbrand new bench. Name your price.Call 241-7488 and ask72 Toyota Mark I1 loaded eng. ecx. BW12" TV, fldg bed 667-4909IS THERE LIFEAFTER SINGLESBARS?An innovative study is being con¬ducted in the Behavioral SciencesDivision on a relatively unexploredand immensely important socialsystem- the couple (married or "livingtogether"). As volunteers you andyour partner will be asked to give ran¬dom samples of your thoughts andfeelings over a one week period. Thepurpose of this investigation is toisolate the sorts of factors, both withinand outside the relationship of two peo¬ple, which shape the nature of their in¬teraction. For more information, callK Nash at 241-6061.SENIOR PORTRAITSChoose and order your own 5 x 7 or 8 x10 copies of your senior portraits. Pro¬ofs on display from 6-10 pm Mon andTues March 3 and 4, at the Yearbookoffice Ida Noyes 218. Get pictures ofyour friends, too. Only $1.50 (5x7) and$3.00 (8x10) . Ph 3-3562.KUNDALINA YOGADon’t miss our introductory YOGAINTENSIVE! This Sat. See display adfor details. LEINENKUGEL'SBy popular demand Leinenkugel stillon tap at the Pub.LEARN FOCUSINGVolunteers wanted who would like theopportunity to be taught focusing con¬tact. Doralee Grondler at 753-2085 orcome to Beecher 407.THE GREEN WALLROBLES-GODOY'S GREEN WALLfilmed in Peru. Showing Sat. March 81-House, 8 and 10pm. $1.50 colorw/Engtish subtitles.DREAM GROUPLearn more about how your dreamswork—what the images mean and howdreams contribute to your personalgrowth. Sundays March 16-April 20 2-4pm. $60. Contact Chicago Counselingand Psychotherapy Center 684-1800.CAPITALPUNISHMENT,ANYONEWanted: serious, capable C.P. ad¬vocates for SEMIPUBLIC debate ordiscussion. 288-0877 even.EUROPEEUROPE thei summer. Low cost tour.Academic credit available. Call753-4865 (day); 752-8426 (evening).ELECTION '80Vote for the alternative: CelesteScarbelli for state's attorney-write IncandidateBIRTHDAY PARTYA Singular Group is having an Eins¬tein Birthday Party on Sat. March 8,11-5 at 57th and Woodlawn, in theUnitarian Church Meet our new ar¬tists and share some birthday cakewith us.DEADLINEReminder-Applications for the Har¬vard Conference are due TODAY!Drop off in either the S A.O or S G of-fice, Ida Noyes Hall.THE NEWHYDE PARK HILTONPositions opening for experiencedWaiters. Waitresses, Hosts, Hostesses.Cashiers, Cooks, bus boys, BarPorters, Kitchen help Call 288-5800ext. 6162 for appointment Ask tor Mr.BrownLAST CHANCETo see Milton Friedman's "Free toChoose' Last 2 shows will be on chan¬nel 11 TONIGHT from 8 to 10 pm.Come see them in the Shoreland 2ndfloor TV lounge. Food and drink. Bethere Aloha. SLS.WINTER CARWASHHave your car washed tomorrow byWOMEN'S CREW. High quality treat¬ment of vehicle to remove Ice and salt.Do your car and UCWC a favor.Regenstein pkg lot 9 00. Blizzarddate Next Saturday March 15.“MUTINY!"Hecate Films Presents"Caine Mutiny"starring Humphrey BogartSat. March 86:30,9:00, 11:15Admission $1.50$1.00 for those with ball bearingsWE WISH...there were more like you. BonneAnniversaire Jane. 124.FIZZICISTSFRIENDSNow's youe chance to buy yourfavorite physicist something special atthe E instein open house at the SingularGroup gallery in the UnitarianChurch. Special birthday party thisSat. from 11-5. Celebrate with us. TAI CHI CH'UANThe Tai Chi Ch'uan Club invites you toparticipate in an introductory class ofTai Chi Ch'uan on Sunday March 9,7:30 pm at 4945 S Dorchester (enter on50th Street) Tai Chi Ch'uan is soft,slow, balletic and an excellent ways toexercise the mind as well as the bodyWe study the Long Yang form whichhas therapeutic, spiritual and martialaspects We co-ordinate the physicalmovements of Tai Chi to thephilosopy of Tai Chi. Everyone iswelcomed to this introductory class ofTai Chi Ch'uan. Tai Chi is not foreveryone but possibly it is right foryou We will also have an introductoryclass of Kung-Fu Sunday, March 9,6 30 pm at 4945 S Dorchester (enter on50th St.) Ail are welcomed.COFFEEHOUSERelax with some hot cider and liveentertainment. Featuring Dave Kay,Nick Filipo, Christie and Dave,Shelton Sallie, Ida Noyes Librarytonight 8 30-1.00 no cover,NEWTIME8 to 10 for the last 2 installments ofMILTON FRIEDMAN'S "Free toChoose". Food and company while youwatch TONIGHT in the Shoreland 2ndfloor TV rm SLS.The Chicago Maroon—Friday, March 7, 1980—19Graduate studentreferendum:STUDENTACTIVITIESVOTEYESballots in registration packetsAPRIL 1 - MAY 301980NOS. 41-57 &SPECIAL ISSUE