The Chicago Maroon“Solitary, singing in the West, I strike up for a new world.” —Walt WhitmanVol. 89 NO. 43 The University of Chicago (c) Copyright 1980 The Chicago Maroon Tuesday, April 8, 1980What will you wear?Lascivious SaturdayBy LCBWith the advent of spring comesanother tradition that the Univer¬sity has been powerless to control— the Lascivious Costume Ball,that amorphous, biannual, Diony¬sian evening that usually rangesfrom the raunch to the frankly bi¬zarre will take place this SaturdayApril 12 in Ida Noyes Hall from 9p.m. to 1 a.m.Coming under the leadership ofa group called Peer Pressure En¬terprises, this year’s ball coordin¬ators claim they will offer “a cele¬bration of human sensuality ratherthan a glorification of the or¬gasm.-’ In keeping with this effortto move towards the inner sensua¬lity of man and woman, spokes¬man Steven Silver says that thisyear’s ball will dispense with“plastic sexuality and instead willbe light, fun, and intelligentlydone. Erotica rather than porno¬graphy.”According to Silver, plastics andstag films are out and “underly¬ing. raw sensuality” is in. Films ofElvis and the Beatles will join themore traditional movie offerings.A “go-go” featuring music “fromacross all spectra” will provideMaroon electionThe election for the Maroon’s1980-81 editor will take place to¬night at 7:30 in the Mar oon office.All staff members are asked toattend. space for dancing pleasure andpool facilities and “sensual foods”will also be available.Other new features of this sev¬enth LCB in twice as many yearsinclude the live band Tiger Tiger,strolling troubadors, magicians,and attempts to make the entireaffair multi-media. In answer tomany inquiries. Silver says thatthe popular strippers will returnthis year. Contests will be held foroutstanding physiques (male andfemale) and suitable prizes will beawarded.Turn to Page 3CalifanoBy Chris IsidoreSpeaking to more than 100 stu¬dents, former HEW Secretary Jo¬seph Califano claimed that the in¬effectiveness of government todaywas due to “the lack of the lubri¬cant of mutual trust,” both withinand outside of Washington.Califano spent only a shortamount of his speech detailing thelack of public confidence in gov¬ernment. What he did go into detailon was the manner in which the“four” branches of the govern¬ment, which he defined as the ex¬ecutive, legislative, judicial andthe media, had lost the confidenceand trust in each other to do thenecessary jobs in the face oftoday’s problems.Califano’s views were ones of a Students question Gray planto expand size of the CollegeBy David GlocknerThe Student Advisory Commit¬tee (SAC) to the President has is¬sued a report questioning the wis-don of proposals to expand the sizeof the college.The group’s study came in re¬sponse to a report made this winterby the Bradburn faculty advisorycommittee on enrollments. TheBradburn Committee’s report out¬lined five alternatives which theUniversity could pursue to main¬tain its financial stability in theface of an expected decline in grad¬uate student enrollments in thenext decade. Of the five choices.President Gray and other Univer¬sity administrators have most ac¬tively considered the one whichwould expand the size of the Col¬lege from 2700 to 3000 studentswhile attempting to maintain grad¬uate enrollment at near its presentlevel.The SAC report focused on threemain problems that an expansionof the College could bring: main¬taining the quality of undergradu¬ate education, maintaining thequality of the student body, andproviding adequate facilities forthe additional students.“We would look skeptically uponany plan for increasing the size ofthe College that did not state expli¬citly how teaching demands are tobe met if enrollment increaseswhile the size of the faculty re¬mains constant,” the report said.The SAC rejected the possibilitiesof allowing class sizes to grow or ofincreasing the number of graduateassistants or instructors who teachin the College.“We do not consider increasingclass sizes to be an acceptable so¬lution. The importance of class sizeis most obvious in the CommonCore, where direct discussion is aprimary requirement, but thisCommittee feels strongly that theUniversity’s commitment to smallclasses must extend to more ad¬vanced levels as well. We urge thefaculty to consider class sizes ofbetween eighteen and thirty stu¬ dents as the desired level for allCollege courses.“The tradition of staffingcourses with regular facultymembers ought not to be alteredmerely because of increased Col¬lege size . . . Students come to Chi¬cago because they believe thatonly members of the faculty teach;if this is not the case and is notplanned to be the case, future poli¬cy may benefit from public debateon the matter.”The members of the SAC“wonder how the College will beable to admit more students whilemaintaining the quality of the stu¬dent body.” according to the re¬port. Avoiding a decline in thequality of students will require aGray’s expansion plans criticized “financial commitment to an aug¬mented recruitment program,”and a greater commitment to fi¬nancial aid. the report said.The SAC report also noted thatan expansion of the College maycreate a need for more studenthousing, more College advisors,and would further strain an“already overextended” StudentActivities Office.In its discussion of the BradburnCommittee’s recommendations ongraduate student enrollment, theSAC called on the Graduate Educa¬tion Committee to “considerchanging employment trends in itsdiscussions of educational policy.”It also recommended that the Uni¬versity consider using graduatestudents “as paid tutors, advisors,and assistants in the expanded Col¬lege program.”Despite its criticisms of propos¬als to expand the College, the SACdid not offer any alternative solu¬tions to the University’s long-termfinancial problems. Instead, thereport emphasized the need togather additional information be¬fore a final decision on enrollmentpolicy is made.Although their report did not re¬flect it. members of the SAC weredivided about the effects of an in¬crease in enrollment on the char¬acter of the College. Many of thegraduate students on the 27-member committee apparently be¬lieve that undergraduates areoverreacting to the problems thatexpansion will cause.“Instead of sitting down andthinking carefully” about what thereal difference is between being ina class of 32 and a class of 42 stu¬dents, some people are reacting ina “kneejerk” manner, said onegraduate student member of theSAC. The University’s options arelimited because “it’s a question ofbalancing the budget.” he added.The SAC was also divided on thequestion of whether or not gradu¬ate students should teach in theCollege. Several graduate studentsfavored such a Dolicy. while under-Turn to Page 3speaks on governmenttrue Washington insider. He hadbeen active in the Johnson Admin¬istration for many years, and hadbuilt a distinguished career as aWashington lawyer before he be¬came Carter’s Secretary of HEW.His anecdotes about the time heserved were mostly about onebranch of government interferingwith another branches out of lackof trust for the other.“I had many surprises when Ibecame head of HEW,” he told theaudience “But my biggest sur¬prise was the amount of litigationthat I was involved in as Secre¬tary.” Califano said that it was notpossible to compile a list of all thecases that the HEW was involvedin, but that the list of just the cur¬rent cases, those where there wereactive proceedings going on. num¬ bered over 300, with 25 new onesbeing added each calendarquarter.“The courts take too much of arole because they don't have faithin the executive to do his job.” hesaid He told of how the courts hadcome to tell HEW which casesshould receive priority in theirload of discrimination cases, howthey had ordered Califano to askthe Office of Management the Bud¬get for hundreds of new employ¬ees. and then demanded to see thememo he had sent asking for thatincrease.Califano pointed to the unwork¬able number of committees andsub-committees in Congress as anexample of the Congress’ lack offaith in the executive. “Three outof every four federal tax dollars are spent outside of the control ofthe budgetary process.” said Cali¬fano “What interest groups wereonce willing to leave the Presidentand Congress to decide on year byyear, they now want written intolaw.”“There is now a law for every in¬terest. with nothing left to trust Inthe last two weeks of the last Con¬gress, 189 laws were passed. TheLegislature does not trust the exec¬utive, and neither the executivenor the legislature trusts the peo¬ple to follow the laws which arepassed "Califano pointed to the rise of thespecial interests as a major fault inthe lack of trust. “Today there aremore than 300 Congressional com¬mittees. each attend by the specialTurn to Page 3Here’s how to eliminate 18 hoursof study time each week.If your study technique is typical, you spend 26hours each week buried in your books, 66-2/3%of this study time is wasted on an antiquated setof procedures. Procedures that have remainedunchanged for over a hundred years.What's worse, you presume there is nothingyou can do to improve. The prevailing attitudeon campus is "You either have it or you don’t!"What nonsense!Any student with average intelligence can im-proue his reading and stuc^i skills at least 3times with a) better techniques, b) expert coaching. and c) controlled practice. And he can do itquickly— in time to dramatically increase hisgrades in the current semesterFor this is precisely what the Evelyn Woodcourse offers, and backs it up with an iron-clad,no-nonsense, written guarantee.THE GUARANTEEAny student who attends every Evelyn Woodclass, completes the required practice, yet doesnot improve reading and study skills at least 3times will be eligible to receive a full tuition refundOver 1,000,000 GraduatesOver 95% SUCCESS!Since 1959. three Presidents have invited EvelynWood instructors to teach their staffs how to readbetter All in all, the list of famous graduatesreads like Who's WhoHugh Alexander.U S CongressBirch Bayh.U S CongressJackson Betts.U S CongressDaniel BrewsterU S CongressAllan Cranston.U S CongressJohn Dingeil.U S CongressMadame GandhiIndiaJohn Glenn.U S Congress Charlton Heston.ActorDaniel K Inouye.U S CongressEdward KennedyU S CongressDavid S King.U S CongressBurt Lancaster.ActorThomas J MclntryeU S CongressMarshall McLuhan.WnterJoseph M MontoyaU S Congress Gaylord Nelson.U S CongressJulie NewmarActressWilliam ProxmireU S CongressAbraham Ribicofi,US CongressHerman Scheebei!U S CongressGeorge SegalActorA1 Ulman.U S CongressJ Irving WhalleyU S CongressWhy Do So ManyStudents Enroll?This question was posed to several thousandcollege freshmen who had just enrolled in the Evelyn Wood course. The answers were varied,but mostly on the same wave length: 1) Theywanted to reduce their study time: 2) Theywanted to feel more confident in class, more incontrol; and 3) They wanted to learn more, toachieve better grades.At the end of the course, each student wasasked if his goals were met. Oyer 95% said yes.The other 5% received their tuition backWhy Do Most StudentsRead Slowly?Most students have no idea what their readingability is. If they are typical, they read about 300words per minute (or one page of a novel). Whyis it that students read at virtually the same speed,considering how very different they all are9The cause can be traced back to the FirstGrade. When we were taught to read, we wereasked to read out loud, word-by word. Later, inthe Second Grade, we were asked to stop sayingeach word out loud. But we never really did. Factis, you're saying these words right now—not outloud, but to yourself, one word at a time'This means you read only as fast as you talk—about 250 to 300 words per minute. (As if toprove the point. Guiness's Book of World Recordslists John F. Kennedy as delivering the fastestspeech ever at 327 words per minute).How Do You Learn To ReadFaster? With The SameComprehension?At the Mini-Lesson you will find out how theEvelyn Wood course eliminates the habit of reading only one word at a time. How you can learnto read 3 or 4 words instead of only one. To seehow natural this is, look at the dot in the middleof this phrase.the grass • is greenTry as you may you can t help but see theother words. With training, you learn to use thisnatural, but un used potential. You learn to seegroups of words simultaneously. This will double,triple, possibly quadruple your present ability.This concept is diametrically opposed to the old-fashioned speed reading technique of pickingout key phrases. In the Evelyn Wood course,skimming is a dirty word!The PRICE BOILS DOWNTO $2 AN HOUR.Read what the University of Illinois studentpaper said (Ed Sejud): “If a student avails himselfof all the facilities by the (Evelyn Wood) Instituteand attends all the class sessions, the price boilsdown to only about $2 an hour, cheaper than anyprivate tutoring you’ll ever find. Spread over fouryears, the course can save thousands of studyhours and can probably affect a boost in a student’sgrade-point average. Assignments which oncetook days can be accomplished in a matter ofhours, leaving much more time for other pursuits.The Institute estimates that it can save averagestudents 350 hours of study time each semester—probably an understatement ".TAKE A FREEEVELYN WOODMINI-LESSON THIS WEEK‘Ask about the special 25%STUDENT Discount‘Enter the drawing for a freescholarshipDon't take anybody's word for it—not ours,not anybodys. We developed the Mini-Lessonso you could make up your own rrund aboutthe course. The Mini-Lesson lasts only 1 hour.During that short time, you have a chanceto try your hand at it—to find out if it reallycan do the job for you. In 60 minutes over80% of theaudience increases reading speed.Just a little, but enough to know what it’s like.At the Mini-Lesson you will find out how theEvelyn Wood technique handles difficult textbook material. How it improves memory andconcentration. How it makes reading apleasure instead of a chore. Let’s face it, ifthe Evelyn Wood course is for real, you oughtto know about it.Chicago Theological Seminary5757 UniversityTuesday April 8 4:00 PM & 6:30 FMWednesday April 9 4:00 PM & 6:30 PMThursday April 10 4:00 PM & 6:30 PMIf you cannot attend, please call 2361996 for information and registration2—The Chicago Maroon, Tuesday, April 8, 19801Newsbriefs■i Shoreland vandalismThe Shoreland Council has been billed thisweek for vandalism totaling $1516. OnMarch 3, the legs were broken off a babygrand piano in a study lounge on the secondfloor of the Shoreland. Laura Uerling, secre¬tary of the Shoreland Council said that al¬though the council has the funds to pay forthe damage, “activities this quarter will beseriously curtailed.” Anybody with infor¬mation about this act of vandalism shouldcontact Roberta Van Dusen in Room 320 atthe Shoreland.Cambodia forumCambodia Relief Now will present a “Re¬port from Cambodia” Wednesday April 19at 7:30 pm in the Reynolds Club Lounge. Aspeaker from the American Friends ServiceCommittee will comment on her recent visitto Cambodia and the film Cambodia: YearZero will be shown. An organizational meet¬ing will follow.Nuclear marchCitizens Against Nuclear Power will spon¬sor a Chicago contingent to the March for aNon-Nuclear World to be held in Washingtonon April 26. Round trip bus fare will cost $45and reservations can be made by callingCANP at 472-2492.Eclectic EdregistrationEclectic Ed., the non-academic, non-cred¬it mini-course program of the student activi¬ties office, will hold student registrationWednesday April 9 and Thursday April 10from 10 am to 4 pm in the Student ActivitiesOffice, second floor of Ida Noyes Hall.The courses to be offered are Women’sSelf-Defense, Bakers Clay, Clogging. Lead¬ed Glass, Harmonica, Advanced BallroomDance, Vegetarian Cookery, American SignLanguage, and Wine Tasting (for those 21and over). The courses range in cost from$10 to $25 and UCID is required. Registra¬tion for faculty and staff members will beheld on Friday April 11 fromlO am to 3 pm. Bevington to speakDavid Bevington, professor of English andin the College, will offer the first of thisquarter’s series of Collegiate Lectures in theLiberal Arts this Thursday April 10, when hespeaks on “ ‘That I Might Hear Thee CallGrea Caesar Ass Unpoliced’; Tragedy andPolitics in Shakespeare’s Antony and Cleo¬patra.”The lecture series is sponsored by theDean of the College and the teaching staff ofthe Human Being and Citizen course. Itseeks to contribute to the community of dis¬course about the books, themes, and ques¬tions central to liberal education. Lectureslater this quarter include Ralph Lerner onTocqueville, Bertram Cohler on Freud, andEdward Wasiolek on Tolstoy’s War andPeace.All lectures take place in Harper 130 at 8pm and are followed by refreshments anddiscussion.Law and ethicsHarold Berman, Ames Professor of Lawat Harvard University, will speak on “TheMoral Crisis of the Western Legal Tradi¬tion” Wednesday April 9 at 4 pm in SwiftHall.Berman’s lecture combines the HerbertL. Seamans Lectureship of the NationalConference of Christians and Jews and theD.R. Sharpe Lecture on Social Ethics of theUniversity Divinity School.Quantrell Awardnominees soughtRecommendations for the Llewellyn Johnand Harriet Manchester Quantrell Aw ardsfor Excellence in Undergraduate teachingare being accepted by Dean of the CollegeJonathan Z. Smith. The awards are present¬ed annually at the Spring Convocation andcarry a cash prize of $2500.Any professor who teaches in the Collegeis eligible for an award and any student inthe college may make a recommendation.Nominees are then selected by a facultycommittee. Individually signed lettersshould be addressed to Smith at the Office ofthe Dean. Harper 209. The deadline for therecommendation is May 1. Geophysicist honoredRobert Clayton, professor of chemistryand geophysical sciences, has been chosenas the recipient of the National Academy ofSciences' George P. Merrill Award. Theaward honors distinguished work by an ac¬tive investigator in the field of meteors, me¬ teorites. and space. Clayton is the third re¬cipient of the award since its inception in1970 and will receive a $1000 honorariumalong with the award at the annual meetingof the Academy in Washington on April 21.SACContinued from Page 1graduates argued that College teachersshould be regular faculty members.However, several of the undergraduatemembers of the SAC do not share the opin¬ions of the graduate student members. Twomembers of the SAC were sharply critical ofGray for her attitude toward the SAC andtoward undergraduate concerns about pro¬posals to increase the size of the College.“I’m really disgusted with the wholething,” said Brian David, member of theSAC and chairman of the Student SchoolsCommittee. During her meetings with theCommittee, Gray made a habit of "listeningto what people say and then tearing themdown. It doesn’t seem as if she takes the rec¬ommendations seriously,” David said.David was particularly critical of Gray’sfailure to be specific about how' she will per¬suade graduate faculty members to teach inthe College. “They expect them to magical¬ly appear rather than step down and teach .. Some like to teach, but I don’t think that’strue of the vast majority,” he said.Jenny Gurahain, a former member of theSAC, aiso criticized Gray’s approach to thisproblem: “She will not discuss the problemof how to get teachers to teach when theydon’t want to teach now.”The SAC report will be before the Commit¬tee of the University Senate w'hen it con¬siders the Bradburn report this spring orsummer. CalifanoContinued from Page 1interests. The basic fact is not whether ornot (they represent issues) which are goodor bad,” he said. “Nothing is more appeal¬ing than wanting to help the handicapped.But to focus on their narrow concerns doesnot realize the (full range of social plan¬ning). Single interest groups avert the abili¬ty to compromise as they tend to see onlythe horn of their adversary. The past embit¬ters the future, and little good can beachieved.”Califano was reluctant to point out whathe felt were the correct answers to the manyproblems he described, but he did advocatepublic funding of House and Senate cam¬paigns. He also advocated national healthcare, and, until its passage was possible, alaw requiring that employers provide a min¬imum amount of health care to each em¬ployee. Clearly Califano was not taking a li¬bertarian or conservative view about theproblem of government interference. In¬stead he turned his argument in a new andsomewhat unusual way, that is let the gov¬ernment get out of its own hair so that itcould function most effectively.Califano claimed that government in¬volvement in people's private life was hereto stay, and that even ending involvementwith the private sector in many instanceswould be a form of interference. “If the gov¬ernment helps the research of heart trans¬plants, it must decide when life ends. If it funds some, all, or even no abortions, itmust be making a decision on when lifebegins. Questions such as birth and deathused to only be considered by philosophers.But now that the government has started toparticipate, it must consider and decidethese questions for itself. And even if it endsthese participations, this, too, is a decision.These are not questions for one departmentor even one branch of the government to de¬cide. They are questions for society to de¬cide. And it becomes difficult to do this withthe lack of mutual trust present today....” “You re the future.” he told the young au¬dience at the end of his speech. “My purposeis to get you interested in the problems, nomatter what career you choose. Just as thecrudest lies are those told in silence, thegreatest danger is when citizens don’t par¬ticipate. American democracy will not betrampled by the Russian Bear. An examina¬tion of History shows that the 16 greatest so¬cieties crumbled from within. Unless werestructure our thinking, this crisis willcrumble us.”LCBContinued from Page 1Those attending in the buff will be admit¬ted free. Those clothed in a lascivious cos¬tume will pay $3, and anyone else will becharged $4.50. No cameras or liquor are per¬mitted and the event is limited to Universitystudents, staff, and faculty members UCIDis required.The Chicago Maroon, Tuesday, April 8, 1980—3STANLEY H. KAPLANFor Over 4] Years The Standard ofExcetance In Test PreparationMCAT-SMAT- LSATan • m. mm • me no • wrMAT • SCAT • VAT • NAT • SAT • SAT ACHVS •NATIONAL MEDICAL NO ARDS * VQE • ECFMOFLEX •NATL DENTAL DOANDS * TOEFLPOMATIY ISAAK • MIRSMG BOARDSVisit trCn^MbtfaYearwN Wk, .•■•UTtaTMT MMPAJIATIONMCUIMTI twct IMCwHn a Hu* US Crtat Fwrti InTwm Cjm* • I*CHICAGO CINTtH•211 N. CLANKCHICAGO. ILLINOIS I(3121 m-6111IIIl I.W SUGUMSAMIt S. LA GRANGE NOAOsurrealLAGHAMGf. ILLINOIS «(3121 2U-H40 SPAMS, SUMMERFALL MTENSIVESCOURSES STARTIHCTHIS MONTH:4 wk/MCATLSAT GRE SATNEXT MONTH:CHAT....LSATCourses Constantly UptititfLicensing Exams In Cantor Salt-StudyPm mummm Aa—10»m C —»n a uai T»— ID 04 Cum * »»»—OUTMDC NY. STATE CALL TOLL FUSE: NO-ta-imAttention, College Seniors:The Committee on Public Policy StudiesTWO YEAR MASTER’SDEGREE PROGRAMincludes analytic courses in Economics,Political Science, and Statistics; appli¬cation courses offered by the Com¬mittee and other departments or pro¬fessional schools; and Policy Seminarsdevoted to scholarly, interdisciplinaryinvestigation of public policy issues.Application deadline: May 15301 Wieboldt Hall, 1050 East 59th St.753-1896 marianrealty, inc.mREALTORStudio and 1 BedroomApartments Available- Students Welcome -On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-5400FRESH GRADE AFRYERS 49Whole^N X clb.Cut-Up 53‘ibGROUND BEEF 1FAMILY PACK 3 Lbs. or MoreFRESH V 59lb.Clb.FARMLAND SLICEDSLAB BACON 89STEWARTS PRIVATE BLEND jp jTQCOFFEE 26 oz. 5TOUNASAUSAGE OR CHEESEPIZZASCOT JUMBOTOWELS 1 2 oz. 996939 cRollSCOTTBATHROOM MeTISSUE roiCELLO ■ WNCCARROTS 19,Pkg.SALE RUNS APRIL 9-12KU.CFINER FOODSSERVING53rd PRAIRIE SHORESKIMBARK PLAZA 2911 VERNONWhere You Are A Stranger But Once! 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Industrial, manufacturing, marketing, mechanical, en¬vironmental quality control, process, product, project, sales andsystems) • TECHNICIANS (electronic, electrical, mechanical, andfield service) • RESEARCHERS • CHEMISTS • SYSTEM PRO¬GRAMMERS AND ANALYSTS • COMPUTER SCIENCE PER¬SONNEL (software and hardware) • TECHNICAL WRITERS •BUSINESS SYSTEM DEVELOPERS • and othersAdmission Free no name registration confidentiality respectedSponsored by Business People Inc.100 N. 7th St., Minneapolis, MN • Toll Free 800/328-4621We charge no hiring lee to you or the employerminNEW 2-drawer files $59.00NEW 6-ft. folding tables $49.00EQUIPMENT& SUPPLY CO.8600 COMMERCIAL AVENUEOPEN MON.-FRI.8:30-5:00SATURDAYSRE 4-2111 9:00-3:004—The Chicago Maroon, Tuesday, April 8, 1980Spring Cleaning: Throwing it all outBy Andrew PatnerWhen I went to Ray School, the studentsin the third-floor classrooms still had those19th century desks where each unit wasfixed firmly to the floor in a series of rowsand you wrote on a desk that was attachedEssayto the chair of the kid who sat in front ofyou. The desk tops had a hole for aninkwell and a notch for a fountain pen andthey opened on a hinge to reveal the usualamalgam of junk accumulated by 12 yearolds; wads of gum (some antiqued byyears, decades? of storage), pens, pencils,crayons, broken compasses andprotractors, erasers, scratch paper, pagesof books, doodles, love noes (undelivered,received and purloined), and.occassionally, a returned math test or anoverdue book report.• • •Each classroom had three or fourbulletin boards as well as a corkboard strip across the top of the blackboard.Most teachers tried to change theirbulletin board displays every month or so,taking down the best fall haiku and puttingup the most imaginative snow pictures,replacing the eggshell art with currentevents clippings, removing Martin LutherKing’s picture and putting up GeorgeWashington and Abraham Lincoln. Someof my teachers were as dutiful in theirbulletin board schedules as they were intheir daily lesson plans while the boards ofother teachers reflected their owndisorganization.• • •Though we all made attempts eachFriday to rummage through our desksbefore the weekend, and despite our jointcampaigns to keep our classroom wallstopical, the big push for cleanliness cameeach April. Industrial size garbage canswere rolled in and we began a masscrumpling, dumping, and trashing of ourjunk and unwanted momentos. Not onlywere the bulletin board displays changed,but so was the background constructionpaper. As the old collages were takendown, shadows of the removed shapeswere exposed — temporary remnants oftemporal expressions. But then the oldfaded paper was taken down and waddedup to join the already flying balls ofmimeo sheets as winter tensions meltedinto spring paper fights. Cries of surprisewent up as items given up for lost werefound anew and desks were emptied totheir Labor Day starkness. In cleaningthere was chaos, and to this day wheneverI see or hear the word “purge” I think ofRoom 312. As one is further removed fromgrammar school by time, spring cleaningis left behind or is at least transformed. Iaccumulate more junk now and throw outless. My desks are much larger now andthey don't have hinged tops. My files andclippings spill out of numerous drawers. Idon’t have any bulletin boards, my officewalls have many cartoons, photos, andposters taped to them. Without the annualcalendar of grade school my wall offeringsare less seasonal. My chair is no longerfixed to the floor. • • •But when spring comes and the out ofdoors grows more appealing, I long formore order inside. I’d like to know that Ihave to throw some things out, make somepriorities in my mad melange. I’d like towalk into the office one morning and findall the walls clean, save for some leftovershadows. I’d like to find my drawersempty and my desk top clean. And I’d liketo lift that top up on a hinge and find alove letter amidst some colored pencils.TO ALL UNDERGRADUATESThe Dean of the College and the Staff of“Human Being and Citizen ’presentCOLLEGIATE LECTURE SERIESIN THE LIBERAL ARTSon books, themes, and questionsconsidered in the Common CoreThursday, April 20Monday, April 28Thursday, May 8Thursday, May 24 David M. BevingtonRalph LernerBertram CohlerEdward Wasiolek “That I Might HearThee Call GreatCeasar Ass Un-policied': Tragedyand Politics inShake spear'sAntony andCleopatra.”“The Complexionof Tocqueville'sAmerican"“Freud's Meta¬psychology:Neurology orPsychology“War and Peaceand The MagicCircle ”HARPER 130-8 P.M.After the lecture, there will be refreshments andthen discussion in Harper 281+. r 1IWC 4 II 41 11IIM 4 44DANCtS IMA HI MlFriday, April 11CHATTANOOGA CHOO CHOO- A "practice" dance - Instruction 8:00 p.m.9:00 p.m. U.C. Jazz Band, Geof Cox, DirectorFree Ida NoyesFriday, April 25TUXEDO JUNCTIONmusic by the incomparable Glenn Miller Orchestra,under the direction of Jimmy Henderson.Refreshments served. 9:00 p.m. Ida NoyesU.C. students: $5. Faculty, Staff, Alums: $12.Tickets available at Reynolds Club Box OfficeThe Chicago Maroon, Tuesday, April 8, 1980—5Spring!By Howard SulsWhen I had to dodge a Frisbee last week Iknew spring was finally here. That time ofyear when you would rather be sitting in thequads or throwing around a ball than up onthe fourth floor of Reg. When joggers be¬come a moving hazard and you can see agirl’s legs again.Although Mother Nature was good to usfor a change this winter, spring is still joy¬fully welcomed. Everyone comes out oftheir cocoon. Who wouldn’t rather flip on aT-shirt than a turtleneck?For those of you unfamiliar with the morepleasant diversions around here in thespring, here’s a short list.• Porching at Alpha Delta Phi: Frequent¬ed mostly by Alpha Delt’s, obviously, butthey won’t turn anyone away. Best timesare lunch, weekends, and after dinner, andthe beer is usually cold.• The Point: No, not the beer from Wis¬consin. Adjacent to the Shoreland, it’samazing how close the Point can be in warmweather. The Point is a great place to throwa softball or football, but can be precariousfor frisbee-playing because of the bizarrenature of the wind coming off the lake. Goalone or with friend(s). Best at 3 A.M.,sunrise, or any nice afternoon.• The Quads: My favorite. When theweather gets sunny, the Quads fill up. Evenif just for a few minutes, it can be a wildplace to hang out. Watch out for frisbeesthough. The jugglers by Eckhart are alwaysentertaining, and any dry spot is likely to betaken around lunchtime. The quads arealive at night: For frisbee in between thetennis courts and in front of Eckhart, andfor breaks, eating C-shop ice cream insteadof A-level candy bars. • Psi U: For the best in verbal abuse,walk in front of Psi U. The music has beenexceptional lately, and the Sty is full of won¬derful characters willing to insult and/orwhistle at anyone who has the audacityand/or courage to walk by.• Regenstein Beach: Although still a littlecold, the beach is a crowd-pleaser. The westside is well-suited for frisbee, except atnight when the sprinklers turn on. always agreat place to parade your physique, or topretend you’re doing work. Try to actuallyread anything while sitting out there. Lots ofluck.• Harper roof: although illegal, it’s per¬fect for stargazing and there is a wonderfulview of the smokestacks on the South Side.Good luck getting up there.• Ryerson Roof: Spectacular night view of downtown. Don’t get caught though, oryou’ll get a view of the inside of the Dean’sOffice.• House of Eng on top of the Del Prado:Pretend you’re a major league ball playerand bring your best girl or guy up for a beer.The terrace offers a nice view of the lakeand downtown.• The Midway: After monsoon season youcan go duckhunting or jogging, but bewareof the winos. Usually you can find a softballgame in need of an extra player or two.• Wrigley Field: The bleachers. Need Isay more? Go early.These are just a few of the more notablehangouts in the area. If you can find yourown spot, more power to you. But whateverhappens and wherever you go, enjoy your¬self, and be glad that spring is here.The Maroon CrosswordThe Maroon wil offer a prize to the first person to turn in a correct completedcrossword puzzle.By Nancy AsquithAcross1. Egg drink4. Destination for Illinois AttorneyGeneral?8. State for 51 down (abbr.)10. of a kind11. Decree13. Wirephoto svc.14. Kielbasa or chorizo, to aGerman16. Amin 17. Underworld god18. Farrow19. Haute, Ind.21. Move oneself24. Fuss25. Either26. Before the (nautical)28. Opp. of exo-31. Chicagoans, for example35. “The Violent It Away”(O’Connor title)36. Beyond37. The Loop, for example 38. Susan tray40. Ohio city43. French pancake45. Its leaves were worn in 20 down46. Surrealist Man47. Lincoln50. Chicago sociologist53. On the path of Kansastornadoes?54. First name of “Little House onthe Prairie” author56. Flightless bird57. Zamiatan novel58. Corps of Engineers59. Cong. O’NeillDown1. Pro-ERA group2. U.N. to a Frenchman3. Bacteria4. French for “I love you”5. Announcement6. Roman numeral7. Watch or calculator feature8. Two of a kind9. Part of a church12. East European leader15. Command given a dog17. Role for a bee20. See 45 across21. Neutron device22. A Great Lake23. Hoarse or grating24. Statistics procedure27. RR stop29. Scott decision30. Norway city32. Late Mayor33. Finish, with “up”34. Driver’s entitlement to proceed(abbr.)39. Enthusiasm41. Roman numeral42. Heron43. Local denizen, to be eatenhumbly44. Tear down48. Lamb sound49. One of the seven conts.51. Site of nuclear mishap52. two three four55. Nixon (initials) By Philip MaherIVIrs. Alexy owns a beautiful old stonehouse on Chicago’s near north side. We stoodoutside and she showed me secrets of thebuilding’s past.“See those bricked-in spots?” she pointed. Isaw six of them. “That’s where my fatherdecided to modernize, after the war. Youshould have seen the leaded windows,” shesighed, “they were so beautiful.”“What happened to them?”“Oh, we threw them out. You couldn’t givestained glass away back then.”I was there to repair the one survivor, thewindow Mrs. Alexy’s mother persuaded herhusband to keep. It was worth one thousanddollars.Modern day Chicagoans live in a stainedglass paradise, yet most of them are obliviousto it. A walk down any sidestreet reveals anamazing variety of leaded glass windows. Someare so dirty as to appear worthless, but moreand more are re-appearing restored, shiningwith their original beauty.Leaded glass is everywhere in Chicago, fromthe smallest workingman’s flat in Old Town tothe grandest mansion in Hyde Park. The southside has it; the north, and the west. Keep aneye peeled and you will even notice it in someold factories.Why? Chicago was in the right place at theright time. The reconstruction of the city afterthe great fire of 1871 coincided with the artsand crafts movement sweeping America andEurope.The motto of this movement was laborare estor are’, to work is to worship. Craft wascombined with art. Buildings became morethan functional shelters, they were works of artas well. Drainpipes took the form of lion heads;ceilings, walls, even floors were ornamented;elaborate floral designs sprouted everywhere.European craftsmen who had left the oldcountry found work here beyond their wildestdreams. What had been saved for churches andpalaces only in Europe was for everyone inChicago. (Stained glass windows cost a mere$1.50 per square foot in 1880, compared to $35 to$60 today.)This was art for the workingman as well asthe wealthy. It was the style, it was cheap, andstained glass added a touch of ethereal beautyto even the simplest home.Times changed of course, and the windowspeople had thought so highly of in 1880 began tocollect dirt in the 20th century. And more dirt,and more, and more . . . Perhaps a few coats ofpaint by the 1950’s and stained glass was soonforgotten — left to the churches and a fewsaloons.(It is interesting to note that these two placesof refuge, of meditation, of people gathering,were the keepers of the colored glass.)Of course, a few smart investors did notforget. They knew the value of finecraftmanship never goes down, and bought uphundreds of old windows for a song. Fortuneswere made this way.Still, Chicago’s incredible stained glasscollection remained virtually untouched,forgotten under a thick layer of soot.Neighborhoods changed and the new residentsdid not even know what that was underneaththe coat of paint in their living room.Urban Renewal roared through in the 60’s,6—The Chicago Maroon, Tuesday, April 8, 1980City of Lightwrecking ball in full swing. Victorian buildingswent down faster than they had gone up; theirglass went with them. Many wreckers, lookingfor an extra buck, broke up the windows to sellthe scrap lead.X ou want that stuff?” the wreckerasked the man incredulously.“I’ll pay you for it,” the man replied, “fivebucks a window.”The wrecker did some figuring. “Well, that’smore than the junk man’ll give me. You wantall of ’em?” very simple ornamental designs. There isusually very little color, with textured clear oramber glass surrounding a small design.These were easily and cheaply produced, somost buildings built during the time had them.Deco windows can still be bought cheaply —averaging $25 to $100, again depending on theparticular window.Deco windows were usually made with zincinstead of lead, which makes them strongerthan the Victorian windows.Deco windows are so abundant in Chicagothat many antique dealers pass them up. Onedealer had an offer to buy one hundred of themfor dirt cheap. He refused because they wouldtake so long to sell.Although they are not usually suited for acenterpiece, deco windows make attractivesidelights or add a dash of color to that funnylittle nook in your house.3. Beveled Glass Windows. Considered bymany to be the aristocrat of leaded glass. Thisis clear plate glass with the edge ground at anangle. The result is a dazzling prismatic effect.A well done beveled window is one of the mostbeautiful things you will ever see; rainbowsshimmer and dance across the surface, castinglight into the room.Beveled glass must be kept clean though. Awalk down any sidestreet reveals old, dirtybeveled windows that have no life, no sparkle.All they need to look like a million dollars is agood clean up job.Bevelling requires much work, and istherefore the most expensive leaded glass.Expect to pay $250 to $500 for a good piece.4. Modern Art Glass. Stained glass isre-establishing itself in this country after a longModern dayChicagoanslive in a stainedglass paradise,yet most of themare oblivious to it.“Yep.” As the man drove away with twelvewindows he heard the wrecker boasting to hisfriends, “Sixty bucks! What a sucker!”Of course the man was no sucker. That wasback in 1966. He sold the windows for twenty apiece; they were good ones. Today they wouldgo for $150 to $200.The days of five dollar windows are gone,but there are still some good deals to be had.One must know what to look for, however, andhow to look at it.The following are some guidelines todifferent types of leaded glass and their worth.1. Victorian Window's. These are theoriginal Chicago windows that you see so oftenin old Victorian homes. They are characterizedby colorful, flowing designs; usually lots offlowers and ribbons and scrolls. Because oftheir age they are often in need of repair, butthe investment is usually worth it.The glass used back then was of the highestquality — usually multi-colored, often with arippled texture (to refract the light). A cleanedand resored Victorian window is a piece ofhistory, and a stunning one at that.One note of caution: take the cost of repairinto account when buying an old window. Ahundred dollar window is not such a great dealwhen it costs another hundred to repair.Victorian windows of average size (1x3) goanywhere from $100 to $300, depending on theircondition and design.2. Deco Windows. Popular in the 20’s and30’s, as their name suggests. They are easilyrecognized by their straight, angular lines and dormant period. New techniques mixed withold make this the most exciting form of stainedglass around.Many artists are adopting this as their solemedium, with amazing results. WhereVictorian glassmakers were restricted by thestyle of the day, the sky is the limit in the1980’s. There is no style characteristic ofmodern glass; it ranges from imitation of theVictorian to the abstract; landscapes,surrealism, even portraits are being done inglass today.Thus there are no representative prices. Noteveryone can afford a large window, so modernartisans are making small windows and“suncatchers”. Today’s buyer can have stainedglass for five dollars or five thousand.Trust your instincts. If the craftmanship isgood, and the design pleasing, you can not lose.Stained glass, like fine wine, only improveswith age.otained glass is a unique art form. It isspiritual, yet sensual. It is static, yet kinetic. Itcan soothe, or it can dazzle.Stained glass windows are alive with light.To live with one is to re-discover its characterdaily. As the seasons change and the years goby, your window will become an old friend,always there, always casting its peaceful lightin your home.The French novelist Renee Bazin wrote thata stained glass window is “a spirit before it isan image”. Chicago’s got a lot of spirit. Call of the WearyBy Chris IsidoreNo academic goal is as elusive or as frus¬trating as the Ph D dissertation. Nor is anyas lonely. It is not unusual for a student towork for nine years on a dissertation forsome divisions. During this time, the stu¬dent is usually isolated, not taking classes,not regularly meeting with their disserta¬tion advisors, not receiving much support orunderstanding from those around them whohave never worked on a dissertation of theirown.These problems probably cause more stu¬dents to give up their goals than anythingelse, yet they are problems that are rarelyaddressed by the University. That is whathas led one former dissertation student,April Wilson, to start a support group forUniversity graduate students.Wilson hopes that the group will provide aplace for dissertation students to come todiscuss common problems, and to find un¬derstanding ears. “I know what it is like togo through (the problems of writing a dis¬sertation)” said Wilson, who tried for threeyears to write a dissertation of her own.“It’s good to talk about the negative aspectsof the project. Once you’ve said the worstabout it, then you can see what you do likeabout it.“Writing a dissertation is a very isolatingsort of thing. When you don’t have anyclasses, your days loom ahead for just youand your dissertation. It can be very unset¬tling, and very difficult to have any sort ofstructure. It’s tough to get support from theadvisors. They don’t have the time to talkabout these kinds of problems. They areoften too busy with their own research tocare, and there is a certain reluctanceamong students to let their advisors knowthat they are having these sorts of porblems. . . Most of the time students who are hav¬ing problems do their best to hide from theiradvisor.”Besides the feelings of isolation, the dis¬sertation student also feels an intense senseof competition with other dissertation stu¬dents in their fields. For this reason, Wilsonwill try to limit each support group to onestudent from each field. “I think it would bevery hard for a person to be candid with acolleague or someone who they may be incompetition with in the future for a position.I want to make sure that what they sayabout their problems does not hurt themlater on, and that nothing gets outside of thegroup. I want it to be a place people can goand feel safe, and get some feedback fromother people.“When you’re writing a dissertation,you’re in competition with lots of good peo¬ple, and it’s easy to lose sight of the fact thatyou’re good, too. When people realize thatthey are not the only ones having problems,they can feel much better about their ownwork. Also, the low paying, menial jobs thatmany dissertation students take to pay therent are not the types of jobs that give you much satisfaction, or support, or sense ofyour own worth.”One of the real “tricks” to being able tofinish a dissertation is picking a subjectwhich is both manageable and interesting.This is one area where W ilson feels that theadvisors could be a real help to the students,but rarely are. “When students think of thedissertation as a big thing, it’s easy to betempted to write on a very big subject, likecontemporary though. You have to picksomething narrow. You’re not just writingfor yourself, you are writing for your advi¬sor and the dissertation committee, so itends up not being your own document, eventhough you’ve written it. You have to becareful, then, when you narrow it down. If itgets too narrow, it’s difficult to be some¬thing you want. The good advisors are thepragmatic ones who are helpful when youare trying to pick a topic, and who supportyou throughout the process.” Wilson hopesthat close to half of the people in the groupwill be students who have not picked a topicyet, and that the other students can be helfulin guiding them.The horror stories that are circulatedabout unhelpful advisors are more nu¬merous than the students who actually com¬plete their dissertation. Wilson tells thestory of a friend who worked for two yearswriting an oral statement (a prelude to thedissertation itself), and was then told by heradvisor that that was not what an oral state¬ment should be. When she asked how to doan oral statement, the advisor only told herto go and look at other oral statements.Even if the students can deal with theloneliness, the lack of structure and the un¬helpful advisors, most of the divisions alsodemand a series of exams and require¬ments. “Some make more sense thanothers,” said Wilson, “and some seem de¬moralizingly difficult. I think the wholegraduate school system is really lousy, it’salmost arbitrary who gets through. In theDivinity School, (where Wilson studied) Ialways felt that it was theology in action.What seemed to determine if you gotthrough was grace.”Wilson has had training in client centeredtherapy, and is being trained to teach focus¬ing. While the group is meeting, she will bemeeting with a therapist to discuss thegroup’s progress. Because of these meet¬ings, she will be charging $15 for the sixweek program, though anyone who cannotafford the fee can negotiate the price. Thegroup will be meeting on Monday eveningsfrom 7-9 pm, running from April 21 to May-26. An interview is suggested before enter¬ing. For more information, call 667-3038.Stalking thePh.D. DissertationChris PersansThe Chicago Maroon, Tuesday, April 8, 1980—7Katfish and Backpacking...Imggm* nr * ■;IJHP #:*vk.'**k* *♦» f*f* ^004,MCMRSfScott Rauland<gl>1 The University of ChicagoDepartment of Music presentsSUSAN DUERfortepianoworks by Mozart, Haydn, Reinagle, BeethovenFRIDAY • APRIL 11.1980 - 8:00 P.M.BREASTED HALL • 1155 East 58th Street$2.50, general$1.50. student with ID $.50 discount to CMS subscribersTickets and information at Concert Office, 5835 UniversityAvenue, 60637, 753-2612, and at Breasted Hall on evening ofperformance only.Please make check payable to The University of Chicago andenclose a self-addressed stamped envelope.COMMUNITYORGANIZERSACORN needs organizers to work withlow and moderate income families in 19states (AR, SD, TX, LA, TN, MO,FL, CO, NV, PA, IA, OK, MI, AZ,NC, GA, SC, CA, CT) for political andeconomic justice. Direct action on neighbor¬hood deterioration, utility rates, taxes,health care, redlining etc. Get a job thatmakes change. Long hours, low pay —training provided.Contact the Career PlacementOffice for interview Tues., April15 or write Kaye Jaeger,ACORN, 404 Lodi St., Syracuse,NY 13203 (315) 476-01628 The Chicago Maroon, Tuesday, April 8, 1980 SUMMERJOBSFull TimePlenty of WorkPHONE #346-1792PIZZAPLATTER1460 E. 53rdM13-2800No delivery Next to 1C tracksAnnual MonthlyParking $5700Annual DailyParking *3300Hand CarWash $500Do-It-YourselfRepairw/tools $375Fast OilChange $<| 300plus grease $4.00extraSOON TO COMEUSED CARRENTAL, 667-2800 JCHINESE-AMERICAi'ARESTAURANTSpecializinq inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOpen Daily11 AM to 8:30 PMClosed Monday1318 EAST 63rdMU 4-1062 SPECIAL DISCOUNT PRICESfor all STUDENTS andFACULTY MEMBERSJust present your University of Chicago IdentificationCard. As Students or Faculty Members you are entitledto special money-saving DISCOUNTS on ChevroletParts, Accessories and any new or used Chevrolet youbuy from Ruby Chevrolet. ^&PS1 GM QUALITY RflSERVICE MOTS |^|SEN DULL MOTORS HURTS DIVISIONKeep That Great GM Feeling W ith GENUINE GM Farts "72nd & Stony Island 684-040072nd & Stony Island 684-0400Open Evenings and Sunday Parts Open Sat. 'til noon —2 Miles - 5 Minutes AwayFrom The UNIVERSITYSPECIAL DISCOUNT PRICESfor all STUDENTS andFACULTY MEMBERSJust present your University of Chicago IdentificationCard. As Students or Faculty Members you are entitledto special money-saving DISCOUNTS on VolkswagenParts, Accessories and any new or used Volkswagenyou buy from Ruby VolkswagenOpen Evenings and Sundays Parts Open Sat. 'til noon EllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltllDeep in the Heart of TexasScott RaulanaMaroon Display Adsget results!!The Tai Chi Clubis having a demonstrationof Tai Chi Ch’uan onWednesday, April 9,1980at theBlue Gargoyle5655 S. UniversityAll are Welcome.Demonstration: 7:30Introductory Class: 8:15We meet every Wednesday here. Peter LaBello, violinBrian Ferguson, double bass•Gene Collerd, clarinetNorbert Nielubowski, bassoonRoss Beacraft, trumpetSteve Wilson, tromboneJoel Cohen, percussionBarbara Schubert, conductorflpp'tl 10 I ^/S’pmReynolds NortKThursday Lunchtime Concert Series -Sponsored by the Department of Music In ,/tl tmorum'Roland Barthes' Erich Fromm-Murid RukeyscrTHlf/vWhen /oum cdeajJ ev'Cn fhcA,! u/n/ fit (/ lose /Mj/// jlxl*//sjM/hes / *sn estn/«.<•» , yyff f-cI VJ/// obi/l ne\a pees*5Oui of si lent-*)Si/(net */if/be Afrt/s fhqAs/lcnc etb M bi'//tttsiy mi ife.M «.Seminary Coop bookstoreRebel Without A CauseThursday, April 10 Cobb Hall $1.50 6:30,8:30,10:30Men s Crew CLThe Chicago Maroon, Tuesday, April 8, 19fir 9CalendarTUESDAYHillel: Yavneh (Orthodox) Passover Services,HillelWomen’s Exercise Class: Meets 9:30-10:30 in IdaNoyes dance room.Hillel: Upstairs Minyan (Conservative) Passoverservices, 10:00 am, Hillel.Molecular and Cellular Biology Training Pro¬gram: Colloquium - “The Differentiation of Retin¬al Glial Cells: an Analysis of Cell-Specific Markers”speaker Paul Linser 12:00, Cummings rm 1117Rockefeller Chapel: University Organist EdwardMondello will give a recital 12:15 pm.Dept of Geophysical Sciences: Seminar - “Regula¬tion of Diversity at Highter Taxonomic Levels”speaker James Valentine, 4:00 pm, Hinds 101.UC Ki-Aikido Club: Meets in the Fieldhouse Wres¬tling room at 4:30-6:30 pm.UC Gymnastics Club: Instruction available5:30-8:00 pm in Bartlett gym, free.WHPK: Nick Filippo will be on WHPK with livemusic, 6:00 pm.Physical Education: Swimming instruction7:30-8:30 pm, Ida Noyes. Free.UC Outing Club: Business meeting, 7:30 pm, IdaNoyes.Hillel: Israeli Folk Dancing, 8:00 pm, Ida Noyestheatre.Conceptual Foundations of Science: Colloquia“Piaget and Freud: Understanding the Concept ofEgocentrism “speaker Jan Hutner 8:00 pm, Eckhart209.Doc Films: “Unconquered” 8:00 pm, Cobb. WEDNESDAYItalian Table: Meets 12 noon at the Blue Gargoyleto speak Italian.Rockefeller Chapel: University Carillonneur Rob¬ert Lodine will give a recital 12:15 pm.Committee on Genetics: Colloquium - "Analysisof the Tn3 DNA Translocation Element Using Gener¬al Gene Fusion Methods" speaker Malcolm Casada-ban 12:30 pm, Cummings room 1117.Commuter Co-op: Get-together in CommuterLounge, GB1, 12:30 pm.Dept of Chemistry: Lecture - "Regulation in an al¬losteric Enzyme (Aspartate Transcarbamylase)”speaker William Lipscomb, 1:30 pm, Kent 103.Committee on Virology: Seminar - "MessengerRNA Modification and Eukaroytic Genetic Expers-sion” speaker Aaron Shatkin, 2:30 pm, Cummings101.Computation Center Seminar: Introduction to Su-perwylbur 3:30-5:15 pm, RI 180.Dept of Linguistics: Lecture - "The Greek CivilWar: Who was to Blame?” speaker Prof. John Ia-trides, 4:00 pm, SS 122.Dept of Biochemistry: “Estrogen Regulation of Vi¬tellogenin Gene transcription and ChromatinStructure” speaker David Shapiro, 4:00 pm, Cum¬mings room 101.UC Gymnastics Club: Instruction available5:30-8:00 pm in Bartlett gym, free.Slavic Forum: Lecture - "Tamerlane and the Revo¬lutionary Proletariat” speaker Prof. Adrian Mon-tero, 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes East Lounge. Forum on Cambodia: Janet Kuller, AmericanFriends Service Comm, on her recent trip to Cam¬bodia, slides, film "Cambodia Year Zero” 7:30 pm,Reynolds Club East Lounge.Hillel: Class in Maimonides and Nachmanides:Philosophical issues in the Explanation of the Law,7:30 pm, Hillel.Badminton Club: Meets 7:30 pm in Ida Noyes gym¬nasium.Women’s Rap Group: Meets 7:30 pm in Women’sCenter 3rd fl Blue Gargoyle. Info 752-5655Tai Chi Ch’uan: Meets 7:30 pm in the Blue Gar¬goyle.Science Fiction Club: Meets 8:00 pm in Ida Noyes.Everyone welcome.Country Dancers: Traditional dances of England,Scotland, and New England taught 8:00 pm. IdaNoyes Cloister Club. Beginners welcome.Doc Films: "Far From the Madding Crowd” 8:00pm, Cobb.THURSDAYWomen’s Exercise Class: Meets 9:30-10:30 in IdaNoyes dance room.Lunchtime Concerts: Special performance of“L’Histoire du Soldat” 12:15 pm, Reynolds ClubNorth Lounge.Immunogenetics: Lecture - "Genetic Fine Struc¬ture of the Murine Major Histocompatibiliy Com¬plex” speaker Dr. Donald Shreffler 2:30 pm, Cum¬ mings room 101.Center for Middle Eastern studies: Lecture - “Thetransmission of Egyptian Popular Ballads” speakerPierre Cachia, 4:00 pm, Pick 016.UC Gymnastics: Instruction available 4:00 - 8:00pm, Bartlett gym, free.UC Ki-Aikido Club: Meets in the fieldhouse Wres¬tling room 4:00-6:00 pm.Committee on Virology: Lecture - “Transcriptionand RNA Processing in the Regulation of Adeno¬virus Gene Expression” speaker Phillip Sharp, 4:00pm, Cummings 101.Computation Center Seminar: Introduction to theDEC system 20 4:00-5:30 pm, Cobb 102.Kundalini Yoga: Stress-Away yoga course meets5:00-6:30 pm, Ida Noyes East Lounge.UC Judo Club; Meets 6:00-8:30 pm, Bartlett. Begin¬ners welcome.Men’s Crew Club: Film-"Rebel Without a Cause”6:30, 8:30, 10:30 pm, Cobb.NOMOR: Committee meeting 7:00 pm, Ida Noyes1st floor lounge.Table Tennis Club: Practices 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes3rd floor.Collegiate Lectures in the Liberal Arts: "That 1Might Hear Thee <Jail Great Caesar Ass Unpolicied’:Tragedy and Politics in Shakespeare’s Antony andCleopatra” speaker David Bevington, 8:00 pm,Harper 130.Stamp Club: Meeting 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes 3rdfloor.Law School Films: “Six of a Kind” 8:30 pm, LawSchool Auditorium.Campus FilmUnconquered (Cecil B. DeMille, 1947): Along, melodramatic look at the outbreak ofthe French and Indian Wars in which the In¬dians are stereotypic savages and theFrench are conspicuous by their absence.The entertainment revolves around GaryCooper’s efforts to stop the uprising and toregain his property (an indentured slaveplayed by Paulette Goddard) from villainBoris Karloff. If Unconquered is an indica¬tion of things to come, Doc’s DeMille seriespromises the insipid ideologies of fallquarter’s RKO series crossed with the spec¬tacles of winter’s Minnelli series. Who needsit? Tonight at 8 in Quantrell. Doc; $1. —DMFar from the Madding Crowd (John Schle- singer, 1967): This treatment of what is,granted, one of Thomas Hardy’s weakernovels, does no service at all to the original.Julie Christie plays Bathsheba, an heiresspursued by but not torn between three men(Alan Bates, Peter Finch, and TerenceStamp). Filmed on location in Dorset, thefilm’s strongest feature is its setting Earlyon we see Bates’s flock of sheep driven off acliff by his deliquent dog. Later, Stampplays munbledy-peg with his long, sharpsword to Christie’s aroused fascination. Theapproximate 10 minutes these two scenescomprise are the only really interestingones in the film — which works out to be 7%of the entire film. One wishes Roman Po¬lanski’s version of Tess will one day be re¬ leased in America; Schlesinger’s view of theworld — at least in this film — is far toosunny. Tomorrow at 8 in Quantrell. Doc; $1.-KHRebel Without a Cause (Nicholas Ray,1955): James Dean is great. He was the bestactor at eliciting the tension between under¬standing adult responsibility and wanting achild’s love and guidance. And Rebel is thebest film which examines that tension. Ar¬riving in a new neighborhood, Dean seeksfriendship within the boundaries of his ro¬mantic vision. Director Ray confronts himwith a world of scared, isolated individuals,virtually all of whom fight Dean or hidefrom him. It’s a world constantly battling it¬self, destroying its own desires. Ray’s blar¬ ing colors, oppressive compositions, andquick actiin and tone changes maintain anunderlying anxiety throughout. This is not aCinemascope print, so you’ll be missingmuch of the film’s feel; but it’s worth seeingagain when the widescreen prints areshown. Thursday at 6:30, 8:30 and 10:30 inQuantrell. Men’s Crew; $1.50. — GBSix of a Kind (Leo McCarey, 1934): CharlieRuggle plays a meek New York banker whoplans a two week vacation driving to andfrom Hollywood. A tight comedy also star¬ring George Burns, Gracie Allen, and W. C.Fields. Unseen by these reviewers. Thurs¬day at 8:30 in the Law School Auditorium.LSF; $1.50.The A^orty cf De'foorr'10—The Chicago Maroon, Tuesday, April 8, 1980The Maroon C Uss*?Ce4 /{isAD 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.SPACESUMMER SUBLET - 3 br. 2 ba. apt.date and price negot. fully equippedON CAMPUS modern 947-9597eves.Female roommate wanted. Newlydecorated apt. 2 baths. Along a mini¬bus route. 57th and Drexel. CallCarole. 7S3-3776.TWO ROOMS avail, in apt. close tocampus. $102/mo. 288-8508.F wtd. to share 3-bdrm apt. 52nd +Dorchester. May - Aug 31 w/poss. Falloption. 493-2767.1 bdrm in 3 bdrm apt. Lake view, a/c,on minibus routes. 24 hr. security.Parking. Start June. Call Jane, 7-6897or 538-6159.Ky. Pk. Nr. UC 4 rm apt. tile bath.,adults, avaul now reas. BU8-0718.Sublet w. fall option; 3 rms, 1 bdrm.Woodlawn Ave. Near campus. Univer¬sity bldg. $258/mo. U.C. faculty, staffonly. Call Tom. 753-3342 days.Studio apt avail May 1. Pref. grad stu¬dent. $225/mo. 238-7941.25 dollars that's peanuts. $100 rewardfor a lease for a 4 bedroom apt. Star¬ting approx. June 1. Call 684-0928 or753-4109 after 5 p.m.Roommate needed-nice 2 story car¬riage house on UC bus route. 7352 S.Shore Dr. $140/mo. Call Albert.363-4061 days. 734-7449 evenings. Keeptrying.Looking for tenant or an apt? Come toStudent Govt. Housing service. Listupdated weekly.Large room, priv. bath, near campus.493-5271.Roommate wanted to share beautiful,spacious carriage house in SouthShore. Good location. Conveninenttransportation. Mature male or stu¬dent preferred. Rent from $100 to$137.50 per month including utilities.Call 721-6510.Graduate Families with kids. Saveover $100 per month on Rent.Moderate income. 667-4038.FOR RENT E. Hyde Pk. 1 bdrm large493-3822.CONDO FOR SALE, E Hyde Pk 2bdrm new condition. 40's 493-3822 or493-21792 ROOMS-3 BDRM apt nr campusgrad pref. Jun 15-Dena 955-0321.ROOMMATE WANTED to share 2 b-room apt in Regents Park. Air condi¬tioning, tennis courts, lake view, etc.On E-W bus and B mini-bus routes.$161/month. Available June. Peggy955-7770.HOUSE FOR RENT-58th Harper 3bdrm firlpl side yard 667-0996 or324-6039.Faculty housing fine Hyde Park homedirectly on campus Sept 80 June 81 3bdrms plus den 2 studios Ig kitchen wfireplace 3 bths, Ig fenced yard screen¬ed porch fully furnished stereo colorTV etc care for dog $800 month. Call241-5459 evenings.PEOPLE WANTEDEASY EXTRA INCOME! $500/1000Stuffing envelopes-Guaranteed. Sendself addressed stamped envelope to:DEXTER ENTERPRISES 3039 ShrinePI. LA, CA90007.JOIN Women's Crew. Call Susan.955 0932 or Virginia, 3-2233 *315.Volunteer to monitor/record tapes forblind students. Stop by Hinds 59B orphone 288-7077,Typist needed for 35 page paper.Thesis quality German quotes. Foot¬notes, biblography. Call Linda.753-2249 rm 1311.DEDICATED LEAD SINGER 8.GUITAR PLAYER wanted for ver¬satile, innovated, driving ROCKBAND. 753 4896 Days, 363 9038 NitesMANUSCRIPT TYPIST (3) Part time(12/15 hours/week), schoolyear, fulltime summer if desired. Will be train¬ed to type camera-ready copy on IBMcomposers. Must type 55 wpm. Abilitytype Spanish or French copydesirable Top student rates ContactGeorge Rumsy, Community andFamily Study Center, 753-2518.RECEPTIONIST/SECRETARY TheGraduate School of Business seeksreliable and punctual secretary withexcellent typing and communicationskills. Duties include answeringphones, greeting and directingvisitors, typing, and performinggeneral secretarial tasks. C VIII CanAlison Fairly 753 4442 in the personneloffice. AA/EOE.ACCOUNTING ASSISTANT, TheGraduate School of Business seeks fastand accurate Accounting Assistant to John Fuegi, Prof, of Comp. Lit., Univ.of Maryland will speak on "TheHonored Murderer; Brecht's Poemson Josef Stalin" Thursday, 10 April4:15pm, Wb206 (free).Know where the stockyards are?Pullman? Chicago's finest blvds? Webicycle Sun am. Jim 955-0481.PERSONALSWRITER'S WORKSHOP (Plaza2-8377)handle payroll ot over 200 members,and perform some tasks associatedwith the keeping of accounts. Natureof the position requires discretion. CIX. Call Marla Rivers. 753-4443 in thePersonnel Office. AA/EOE.Jr., Sr., or Grad School Women. EarnSubstantial Extra income working 3 or4 hrs. weekly from dorm or apt.667-4339 evenings.College students. Earn $50 weekly ormore selling food bars in dorms andfrats. Call Jim 667-4038.The Chicago Counseling andPsychotherapy Center, 5711 SouthWoodlawn, Chicago, IL 60637 aRegistered Psychological Agency#71-42, has openings for women (2-3)and men (1-2) in an established onao-gnroup0nmeetsrmwISklyP on° Thursday ||x m°re davs to the Celebration of theevenings 8-10 pm. May 1, 1980 will be Great Vowel Shift,the first meeting with the newmembers. Fee is $45/month, first twomonths payable in advance. Groupleaders: Margaret S. Warner Ph.D,and William Bradley MTS. Call684-1800 and leave message for Bill toset up preliminary service. PROFESSIONALRECORDING24 tracks, computer automated mix¬ing, various outboard equipment.Demo rates extremely reasonablecall: Experienced Engineering after6:00 pm 493-3810.We just had twins and can't keep our nctwo young cats. They're free, friendly, LUL/fc Kohouse trained, neutered, and haveshots. Cat lovers help us! Call 684-6585before 10 pmFirst Law of Gizmatics: The momentyou have the exact change, themachine is out of what you want.-GIZMOWriters, reporters, cartoonists forSUBURBIA weekly. 752-7977.OVERSEAS JOBS-Summer/yearround. Europe, S. America, Australia,Asia, Etc. All fields, $500-51200 mon¬thly. Expensespald. Sightseeing. Freeinfo-Write: ILC, Box 52-11 Coroan DelMar, Ca. 92625.Exper. babysitter for 4 mos babyM.W. am, Tu. Th. pm. 288-7721 after9pm.PEOPLE FOR SALEARTWORK - posters, illustration,calligraphy, invitations, etc. NoelYovovich 5441 S. Kenwood 493-2399.Typist-dissertation quality, help withgrammar, language, as needed. Feedepending on manuscript. IBM Selec-tric. Judith. 955-4417.GRAPHS, figures for all kinds of mss.Perfection guaranteed. Lin 3-4887.624-6218 evenings.Will do typing (IBM) 821-0940.SERVICESFOR SALESofa 83" with arms, 2 chairs,bookshelves. Reasonable. Hurry!752-3210.74 Vega for sale. $500 or best offer./eg667-0996 or 324-6039.SCENESPsychotherapy and counseling. Feeson a sliding scale; insurance accepted.Joan Rothchild Hardin, PhD,registered psychologist. In Hyde Park.493-8766 days and eves, for appt.IBM Typewriter serv. 10 yrs. exp stu¬dent ana faculty discounts. Call LeRoy787-8220 anytime.Tennis lessons B. Lyttle. 324-0654.We load or haul almost anythingalmost anywhere. Both labor andtruck provided. Call W P Bear241-7052. MAROON PERSONALS AREFREE!!! 5 lines or less, no charge. Br-ing them over the the Maroon office, P I I (Z R VIda Noyes304, riUVJD TKamikaze guppies are killers. Theyare mean, vicious, devious creatureswho love no one. They come flyingthrough the air and go for your rightcheek. At the instant of contacf youand the guppy are bofh dead.The worst music at the right time. Thevery latest from the British scene.Punk/Raggae/et al. Listen to PEERPRESSURE RADIO Friday nights1:30-4:30 am. WHPK 88.3 FM Politemusic.MADMAN-Time is out of joint. I'mleaving the joint. Coming?BRUCE-You better read the per¬sonals. TV Pow must have a phonenumber.To follow tradition, in celebration offhe Great vowel shift you must kick apink jellybean up 4 flights of stairs onthe Eve of the Shift. (If you don't havefour flights in a row you can kick it upone flight, pick it up and run down, andkick it up again). This is so yourchildren won't be born with pink jelly¬bean eyes. On GVS Day you must takea shower BEFORE 11 am for goodluck in the next year.Anyone interested in purchasing smallhuman bones cheaply please call theCat Woman. Not in the Cat Houseanymore, it's Mouse.Lascivious Costume Ball Needs streetmusicians and volunteers for the even¬ing of April 12 Sat. Free admission.For information call Steven Silver753-2240 ext 11005. National Opinion Research Centerneeds individuals to perform a varietyof clerical tasks associated with thedata collection portion of a survey. Ac¬curacy essential. 37V2 hours per week.$4.25 per hour plus benefits. Apply inperson at 6030 South Ellis Ave. An Af¬firmative Action/Equal OpportunityEmployer.Rubgy practice Tue and Thur 4:00 pmStagg Field all interested welcome.FORUM ON CAMBODIA Janet KullerAmerican Friends Service Comm, onher recent trip to Cambodia, slides,Film: "Cambodia Year Zero"Wednesday, April 9 at 7:30. ReynoldsClub East Lounge. Sponsored by Cam¬bodia Relief Now. Organizationalmeeting to follow.WOMEN NEEDEDNormally menstruating women whohave children needed as medicalresearch volunteers reimbursement is$275.00. Call Dr. Hatch at 7-1739 or7-5365.LUNCHTIMECONCERTSEvery Thursday at 12:15 in ReynoldsNorth Lounge. This week, April 10, is aspecial performance of L'Hlstoire duSoldat concert suite of Igor Stravin¬sky, performed by an ensemble ofmusicians conducted by BarbaraSchubert. Bring your lunch and enjoythe music.CO-OPS"Health Tips for the Elderly," April 13at 3:00 pm. Chicago College ofOsteopathic Medicine 1000 East 53rdStreef. Free Parking.FREE SWIMMING INSTRUCTION:Ida Noyes Hall, 7:30-8:30 pm Tuesdaybeginning April, 1980. M. Benson.Lesbian Alliance organizationalmeeting Thursday April 10th for infocall 753-3751. Weds eve LIGHT AND AIRY 2 bdrm co-op oneast end. Doorman, elevator, parking,priced at $54,000, cash for equity. CallMiss Hanes or Miss Zurne. KEN¬NEDY, RYAN, MONIGAL &ASSOCIATES 5508 S. Lake Park667-6666.NEW FORLEFTHANDERSScissors, school supplies, kitchen aids,etc. Send stamped envelope for freebrochure. Lefty's Unlimited, P.O. Box302, Jamaica, NY 11426. HOLISTICHEALTHLearn what creates the optimallyhealthy life and re-create yours! En¬joy high levels of health and veil beingthrough designing and implementingyour own holistic program through useof inventories, life style diary,visualization and behavorial self¬management. Includes nutrition,aerobics, stress-management, life-satisfaction, self-healing. Taught byDobbi Kerman M.A. Holistic Healthconsultant 5 sessions $55 begins onCampus Tues. April 15 9:00-10:30 atthe Gargoyle call 288-3706, 664-6650.SPSS CLASSINQUIRYThe quarterly undergraduate journalINQUIRY is now accepting essays onall subjects for its Spring issue. Thedeadline for submissions is Friday of Learn to use SPSS Statistical Packagefor analyzing data. 6 sessions: $25Computer time provided. Come toComputation Center before April 11 toregister-call 753-8400 for information.Class starts April 15. COMP-CENTER TAICHICLASSES CH'UANThe spring quarter class list is cur¬rently available Seminars are in¬troduction to: DEC-20, Superwylbur,Superwylbur Macro, DEC-20 Batch,1022, and SCRIPT. Courses in: SPSS,JCL and BASIC. For more informa¬tion, come to main ComputationCenter, Rl C-B27, or Business Office,5737 S. University, or call 753-8400TEN-TWENTY-TWOMaintain a bibliography?i? Keep a Index arecord collection? Keep a name andaddress file? System 1022, which runson the Comp-Center's DEC-20 com¬puter, will help you in these tasks andmany more involving entering andretrieving data. A two sessions in¬troductory seminar to 1022 will be heldTuesdav and Thursday, April 15 and17, 3:30-5:00 pm, Rl 180. All welcome.No charge.BASIC CLASSLearn to program in BASIC on theDEC-20 computer. Register at Com¬putation Center before April 11 for 8session course beginning April 15. Cost$25. Computer time provided. Call753-8400 for more information.LANGUAGECLASSESWe are offering two levels of F R E NCHand SPANISH as well as basic GER¬MAN and RUSSIAN. Re-registrationthis week Call 684-6060 for information.Class fees: $8 for students.UC HOTLINE753-1777Are you partied out? Studied out?Tred out? Down and out? Call us andtalk it out. The UC Hotline-questions,referrals, and someone to talk to. 7pm-7 am.JIMMY ELLISBIGBANDCONCERT Tai Chi Ch'uan is soft, slow andballetic but still an effective means ofself-defense. It contains the grace ofdance and endurance of jogging. It hasspiritual, emotional and therapeuticaspects as well as physical ones. Likemost things that are good, it requireswork But it calms and relaxes you asit builds you physically and spiritual¬ly. If your interest in Tai Chi isphysical, spiritual, medicinal or mar¬tial, we hope that you wil come to ourdemonstration on Wednesday, April 9,1980 at the Blue Gargoyle, 5655 S.University. Demonstration and ques¬tion/answer period 7:30 pm. Introduc¬tory class 8:15pm. All are welcomed.YOGARevitalize and harmonize body mindand spirit with yoga posturesbreathing and meditation. Springclasses begin Tues. April 15, 5:30-7:00at the Gargoyle - 5 sessions $35. CallDobbi 288-3706, 664-6650.SELF-HYPNOSISSEMINARSelf-Hypnosis can help you create yourlife the way you want it. Learn to useself-hypnosis to improve concentra¬tion, study skills, and exam prepara¬tion. Identify and actualize goals moreeffectively. Increase creativity,develop physical skills, improvehealth, self-esteem and change habits.Begins on campus Tues. April 15 at theGargoyle 7:00-9:00 pm. 5 sessions $65Taught by Dobbi Kerman, M.A. U of C,Graduate clinical hypnotherapy pro¬gram, Call 288-3706, 66^-6650FOOD CO-OPNow accepting additional member¬ships Order food on Friday, pick it upon Tuesday. To join call 753-3273 M-Th4:00-6:00, Friday 2:30-7:00WANTED-Friday, April 11GARGOYLE (57th8:00pm. at THE BLUEand University) Please donate your rummage. ParentCo-op for Early Learning, will hold arummage sale, May 3rd, 9 am - 5 pm.Location: 5300 S. Shore Dr. For moreinfo, and pickup please call 684-6363Thank you.TRAVELEUROPE this summer. Low cost tour.Academic credit available. CallMr. Reamer, 753-4865 (day), 752-8426(eve).STAMPCOLLECTORSStamp Club meeting Thursday, April8, 8:00 pm. 3rd floor Ida Noyes.SPRING FESTIVALSat. April 12 at Crossroads Interna¬tional Student Center, 5621 S.Blackstone 5 pm to midnight featuringBuffet, International games, andcasino live music, magic show andmore EDUCATIONSPECIALIST/PROGRAMMERGraduate school of Business needsProgrammer in its Computing Ser¬vices division to provide programmingadvice, to program in FORTRAN, toact as document librarian, and tosupervise student advisers Program¬ming experience, statistical ex¬perience, and excellent communica¬tion skills required Experience withDEC helpful Salary: 14-20 K, depen¬ding on experience. Contact ScottTeissier, 753-4291. EOE/AAJCLCLASSConfused by JCL error messages?Want to use tapes and disks? Solvethese and other JCL problems by taking the COMP-CENTER S JCL courseSix sessions beginning Aoril 14. cost$20 Come to Computation Centerbefore April 11 to register-cail 753-8400for more information.ASingularGroup57th & Woodlawnin theUnitarian Church^ the]funny papers5238 S Blackstone955-0974The Chicago Maroon, Tuesday, April 8, 1980—11■ -m I ; A A ;,;■ .i-;'hM&ikznK%:'. A'iy^fvS' AvA .'*&>w Lascivious Costume Ball featuring a Go-Go, Bur¬lesque Show, a live band, pool facilities, bodypainting, contests, sensu^§^^&, diMies, a ma|lshow and more.■This SaiHftlatjrIda Noyes Hall. evenmg$4.50 out of costume$3.00 in costumeFree Admission in the nude.UCID required No camerasPresented by Peer Pressure EnterprisesSelf DefenseAirtjg^Jp&n Sign LanguageGuitarRegistration: Wed. April 9For Students: 10 a.m. - 4 p.r(Bring UC ID) Thur. April 10CloggingBaker’s Clay HarmonicaWine tasting<21 years & Older)Vegetarian Cooking1^1 Noyes 210Ida Noyes 210