4The Chicago Maroon“Solitary, singing in the West, I strike up for a new world —Walt WhitmanVol. 89, NO. 47 The University of Chicago (c) Copyright 1980 The Chicago Maroon Tuesday, April 22, 1980Students meet atHarvard conferenceBy Peter ChapmanEleven students in the Collegeattended the Second Intercolle¬giate Conference at Harvard onApril 11-13, where they discussedand compared problems of studentlife with representatives fromseven other colleges.The students formed four com¬mittees, to discuss students ser¬vices, teaching and tenure,women’s studies and sexism, andracism. A fifth topic, educationalpolicy, was incorporated into theteaching and tenure committee.Brown, Bryn Mawr, Columbia.Duke, Harvard. Penn, and Yalealso sent representatives to theconference. Dartmouth and Prin¬ceton were invited but did not at¬tend.The conferees met with the pur¬pose of proposing plans to correctspecific problems at the represent¬ed colleges. The Intercollegiateconference was established lastyear by the Association for Colle¬giate Research and Communica¬tion, a student group at the Univer¬sity of Pennsylvania, where thefirst conference was held lastspring. Harvard President DerekBok opened this year’s conferencewith an address, suggesting thatstudents should spend their timestudying, rather than arguingabout administrative policy, sincestudents wield no real authority inthat area.The students assembled on thenight of the llth, then separatedinto their respective committees.About 80 students from the eightschools attended. Jenny Gurahian,Brian David, Bart Lazar, and BethStahle represented the College inthe student services committee;Larry McNally, Leslie Perlman,and Stephen Jeffries discussedteaching and tenure; Susan Rosen¬berg, women’s studies; and TonyKnight and Chris Scott, racismEach school’s committee had pre¬pared an outline of topics to be dis¬ cussed.The College committee outlineswere written after discussion withInter-House representatives, stu¬dent deans, and student groups.After 17 hours of discussion, eachcommittee presented an oral re¬port to the conference members.The written committee reportswill serve as the official proposalsof the conference, to be publishedwithin several weeks.“Although an official report willbe published, we will stress per¬sonal contact in presenting ourproposals,’’ said Gurahian. “Wewill meet with the administrationon April 28th and with studentgroups on the 29th. We'll also meetwith representatives of dorm coun¬cils to discuss our conclusions,”she said.Members of several committeesfound that problems facing stu¬dents at each school were oftenunique, and that it was difficult todiscuss common problems and so¬lutions. However, members of thewomen's studies committee didnot share this difficulty.“We all come from commonbackgrounds,” said Rosenburg. amember of the women’s studiescommittee. “We all have a basicconcern about sexual harrass-ment. However, we disagreedabout the goals to be established,and those presented to us at the be¬ginning of the meetings were notincluded in our final report.” Thatcommittee focused on three cen¬tral issues: establishment ofwomen’s studies programs, era¬dication of sexual harassment byfaculty and administrators, andimprovements in campus securityat all the attending colleges.The student services committeediscussed housing, dining, healthservices, and counseling for stu¬dents. The major concern amongcommittee participants was lackof student input in these areas.Their report emphasized studentcounseling, especially advice con¬cerning time schedules.An update on the continuing crisis in Cambodia and photos from theAmerican Friends Service Committee appear on pp. 6-7. Grads OK student feeBy Chris IsidoreDan BreslauIntercollegiate representativeJenny GurahianAlthough two conferences havebeen held in as many years, noplans have been established for an¬other conference next year. How¬ever, Gurahian suggested that asimilar conference among areacolleges could be held next winter.An area conference would empha¬size student government involve¬ment in student life. Though the official results of lastmonth’s graduate student vote on astudent activities fee probablywon’t be released until after theCollege has voted on the proposal.The Maroon has learned that thefee passed among graduate stu¬dents by a narrow margin.Graduate students have not paidany activities fee up to this pointand they voted on the fee duringregistration at the end of lastquarter. The turn-out was veryhigh, according to Charles O’Con¬nell, Dean of Students.“The turnout was remarkable.”O’Connell said. “It was within afew votes of being one half. This issignificant enough to go ahead withthe College vote.” O’Connell hasindicated that the fee must be ap¬proved by both graduate and un¬dergraduate students before it canbe implemented.The turnout and support for thefee were not equal in the differentgraduate and professional schools,but O’Connell said that turnout wasreasonabiv heavv in all areas, and as high as 75 percent in some divi¬sions.All University and student gov¬ernment (SG) officers contactedwere reluctant to make any com¬ment on the vote, either publicly orprivately.“It would be like declaring a win¬ner and giving an analysis of thepresidental vote based on the NYvote, before the polls close in Cali¬fornia.” said Jeff Leavell, SG Fi¬nance Committee Chairman.The final arrangements for theCollege vote have not been made,but it will probably be held duringundergraduate registration, begin¬ning the eighth week of thisquarter. Unlike graduate students,the undergraduates are alreadypaying a four dollar Major Activi¬ties Board (MAB) fee per quarter,and would only be voting to raisethat fee by one dollar per quarter.A typographical error in an ar¬ticle last week about SG electionsmade it appear that there was oncea voluntary student fee which hadbeen successful There has neverbeen such a fee, although graduatestudents currently may pay theMAB fee if thev choose.Former guvDukakis to visit in MayMichael S. Dukakis, who wasgovernor of Massachusetts from1975 to 1979. will be the VisitingFellow at the University of Chica¬go from May 6 through 8.Dukakis was born in 1933 inBrookline. Massachusetts, and at¬tended Brookline High School. Hereceived his bachelor’s degreefrom Swarthmore College in 1955,and then served two years in theArmy of the United States, sta¬tioned in Korea. In 1960 he receivedhis law degree from Harvard Law-School.He became a member of theMassachusetts House of Represen¬tatives in 1963 and served in thatbody for the next eight years. In1970* he ran unsuccessfully for lieu¬ tenant governor of Massachusetts,on the Democratic ticket headedby Boston's Mayor Kevin White. In1974 he was elected governor ofMassachusetts. In 1978 he was de¬feated in the Democratic guberna¬torial primary.Last January Dukakis was ap¬pointed Director of Intergovern¬ment Studies in the John F Ken¬nedy School of Government atHarvard. He is also a lecturer inthe school, teaching courses instate and local government man¬agement.In the early 1970s Dukakis wasmoderator of “The Advocate” onpublic television and he has re¬sumed that role now. Michael DukakisReiner is 7th Ryerson LecturerErica Reiner will deliver the sev¬enth annual Ryerson Lecture to¬morrow at 4:30 pm in the LawSchool Auditorium. In her lectureentitled Thirty Pieces of Silver.Reiner will discuss her research inthe preparation of the University’sAssyrian Dictionary.Reiner, the John A. Wilson Pro¬fessor in the Oriental Institute, isEditor-in-Charge of the Dictionaryproject which will include studies*of over 20,000 Akkadian words usedby ancient Babylonians and As¬syrians. Reiner has also publishedten volumes of linguistic analysisand research including an Elamitegrammar.The Ryerson Lecture was estab¬lished by the Board of Trustees in1973 to permit a distinguishedmember of the faculty to share hiswork with the campus community.Previous lecturers have been S.Chandrasekhar, Dr. Albert Dorf-man. John Hope Franklin, PhilipKurland, Robert Streeter, and Ste¬phen Toulmin. Erica ReinerCenterforLatin AmericanStudiesLOVERS AND CABALLEROS:THE LATIN IMAGE INHOLLYWOOD MOVIESPRESENTED BYPROF. ALLEN WOLLOFTHE DEPARTMENT OF HISTORYATRUTGERS UNIVERSITYThursday, April 244:00 p.m. Social Sciences122SPECIAL 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— 72nd & Stony island— Open Evenings and SundayGM QUALITYS£HVJC€ PAPTS 0SENEBAL MOTORS PARTS DIVISIONKeep I hat Great G\1 Feeling If ith GEM LIME GM Farts "684-0400Parts Open Sat. 'til noon2 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 Volkswagen72nd & Stony Island 684-0400Open Evenings and Sundays Parts Open Sat. 'til noonm iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiCornell Law SchoolUndergraduate Prelaw ProgramJune 9 to July 22, 1980A demanding six-week programfor college students who wantto learn what law school is like.For further information write toProf. E. F. Roberts, Cornell Law School314B Myron Taylor Hall, Ithaca, NY 14853 Get 10°°offon truck andtrailer rentals.JARTRAN NEIGHBORHOOD DEALERSCHICAGO4051 S. California Ave. 601 N. LaSalle at Ohio847-0630 943-25871750 N. Western252-2989 ■ Jartran Truck Rental| 7800 Red Road, Suite 129| South Miami, FL. 33143III Please send me a Jartran 10% discount card.City/State/ZipSchool Class ofNo one can rent you a truck or trailer like Jartran can.You'll probably move 4 or 5 times before you'rethirty. So a card that saves you 10% every time yourent a truck or trailer can save you a lot of moneyover the years.Just clip the coupon and send for your freeJartran discount card. It gives you an additional10% off Jartrans already low rates.What’s more, you don't have to be a truck driverto drive a Jartran truck. Because Jartran rentsbrand-new Dodges (and other fine makes) withautomatic transmission, radio, a custom cabwith bucket seats, and special fuel-saving design. Jartran also rents brand-new Fruehauftrailers that are so light and perfectly balanced,anyone can hook one up. Who can save you $$$every time you move?Jartran can.JartranTruck RentalREPAIRSPECIALISTSon IBM, SCM.Olympia, etcFREE repairestimates, repairsby factory-trainedtechnician.RENTALSavailable withU of C. I D New anuRebuiltTypewriters,Calculators,Dictators,AddersU of ChicagoBookstore5750 S. Ellis Ave753-3303Mastercharge and Visa Accepted Secretaries Acct. ClerksTypists SwitchboardAll Office SkillsSUMMER JOBSEarn top hourly rotes this summeron a variety of interesting tem¬porary office assignments in thearea you prefer to workSTIVERS TEMPORARYPERSONNE, INC.Chicago 332-5210 Elmwood Park 453 3380Aurora 892-7037 Evanston 475-3500Deerfield 945-4750 Ford City 581-3813DesPlaines 635-7080 Oak Brook 654-0310Schaumburg 882-8061Equal Opportunity Employer M F2 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, April 22, 1980Newsbriefs *Morgan, Clayton receive honors from Science AcademyModel U.N. group will meet ThursdayLetters to the EditorWhy not the best for SG finance ?time for original investigations in astronom¬ical physics of “sufficient importance andbenefit.” Morgan is the 41st recipient of theMedal and previous winners include GeorgeE. Hale. A.A. Micheson, Otto Struve, and S.Chandrasekhar.Robert Clayton, professor of geophysicalsciences, was awarded the George P. Mer¬rill award at the NAS meeting, and formergeography department chairman GilbetWhite received the Environmental QualityAward for his “revolutionary work in theunderstanding of the design and manage¬ment of floods and other environmental di¬sasters.” White also received a $5000 hon¬orarium.campus to talk on international issues.They will meet Thursday at 7:30 pm in IdaNoyes Hall to plan future activities, adoptbylaws, and elect officers. All interestedgraduate and undergraduate students arewelcome. For further information, callDavid Geerinck at 241-5737.Orthodox vespersFather Cyril Lukashnak, Orthodox stu¬dent chaplain will celebrate Orthodox Chris¬tian Vespers this Thursday April 24 at 3 pmin Bond Chapel.Theology students holdhut-in to protests. AfricaAs a protest to Continental Illinois Bank’spolicy of loaning funds for use in South Afri¬ca, a group of seminary students at the Lu¬theran School of Theology will build a huttoday on the seminary grounds similar tothat lived in by non-white South Africanworkers. The Lutheran School of Theologybanks with Continental.Seminary students will live in the hut thisWednesday through Friday. The protest willcorrespond with a meeting of the seminaryboard that will discuss the LSTC policy onwithdrawing funds from Continental be¬cause of the South Africa issue.The seminary protest will also coincidewith an April 28 stockholder challenge spon¬sored by Clergy and Laity Concerned. A res¬olution to review Continental’s loan proce¬dures will be offered.On April 29, the Financial InstitutionsCommittee of the Illinois House of Repre¬sentatives is scheduled to consider a billprohibiting the State of Illinois from doingbusiness with any banks loaning funds toSouth Africa.Within the Lutheran Church, The Luther¬an Coalition on Southern Africa is introduc¬ing resolutions at more than 17 regional con¬ventions of Lutheran Church bodies that callfor divestment from corporations and with¬drawal from banks involved in South Afri¬ca.Women win at chesstourneyThree University students won prizes atthe second annual Midwest Women’s OpenChess Championship held at Chess MatesChess Club in Evanston on April 12 and 13.17women from 4 states competed and LauraRomeo of Michian took first place.Laurie Silvestri, a second year student inthe College, and Jane Sapp, on leave fromgraduate study in economics, each won 3 oftheir 5 games to share the prize for topplayer rated below 1200. Sandra Goldberg, afirst year College student, won 2 games anddrew one to win the trophy for best unratedplayer. A recent alumna of the college,Lyonette Louis-Jacques (’79), also compet¬ed.The UC Chess Club has 6 womenmembers, the most of any chess club in Chi¬cago.By Andrew PatnerFifty-six posters stolen from promoters ofthe Lascivious Costume Ball earlier thismonth were left in front of The Maroon of¬fice last Friday, April 18. The posters,which were reproductions of a nineteenthcentury depiction of Venus and Cupid, werewrapped in a garbage bag and had eachbeen stamped several times in red ink withthe words “Pornography is ViolenceAgainst Women.” The posters were accom¬panied by an unsigned note typewritten onnotebook paper. Addressed “To whom itmay concern,” the note read in part:“The article in The Maroon (April 8)showed that Peer Pressure Enterprises hasa complete lack of sensibility to the dif¬ference between pornography and sensua¬lity.”That article had described reforms in thenature of the LCB made by this year’s spon¬sors, Peer Pressure Enterprises. The groupsaid it would replace “the strictly pornogra¬phic with the sensuous.' The day after that Dan BreslauJohn PodhoretzCounterpoint gets grantCounterpoint magazine, a campus journalof arts, letters, and politics, has received agrant of $5000 from the Smith RichardsonFoundation of Greensboro, North Carolina.Counterpoint editors Tod Lindberg and JohnBodhoretz, both second year students in theCollege, will use the grant to underwritepublication of the magazine which is distri¬buted free periodically throughout the aca¬demic year. Other groups that receive fundsfrom Smith Richardson include the AudobonSociety, the Boy Scouts of America, and theAmerican Enterprise Institute.Writing tutor hoursUndergraduates can get help with allaspects of writing papers by visiting thewriting tutors in Gates-Blake Room 203. Theoffice is open the following hours:Monday 9:30 to 11:30 am,Tuesday 10 to 11 am and 1 to 5 pm.Wednesday 9:30 am to noon and 12:30 to5 pm.Thursday 10 to 11 am and 11:30 am to12:30 pm. *Friday 9:30 am to 1 pm.Tutors are also available at other hours byappointment. Students may call 753-4728 or752-5655. All tutors have mailboxes in Gates-Blake 319-A. Over 300 students contact thetutors each quarter.article appeared three masked assailantsattacked an LCB promoter as he sold post¬ers in Cobb Hall. They stole his remainingstock of posters valued at over $50 and re¬placed some of them with posters from agroup called Women Against Pornography.The assailants also hit the vender, Collegestudent Joshua Straus, in the face with aplate of shaving cream.The unsigned note also said “We do notoppose erotica but pornography designed asbenign sensuality is intolerable. This year’sadvertising and description of comingevents did not deviate from the traditionaltheme. The masculine perspective onhuman sexuality is hardly universal. Whatis provocative to Peer Pressure Enterprisesis offensive to us.”The identities of the group that attackedStraus, or of the person or persons whobrought the posters to The Maroon Officeare still unknown. Straus had called campussecurity officers but at his request the Chi¬cago Police Department was not notified. William W. Morgan, Bernard and EllenSunny Distinguished Service ProfessorEmeritus at the University’s Yerkes Obser¬vatory in Williams Bay, Wisconsin, wasawarded the Henry Draper Medal of the Na¬tional Academy of Sciences at the 117th An¬nual Meeting of the NAS in Washington,D.C. yesterday.Morgan received the Medal and a $1000honorarium for “his pioneering researchesin spectral clasification, leading to a newstandard of accuracy in our knowledge ofthe distances of the stars and the structureof our galaxy.” The Draper Medal wasfounded in 1883 to be awarded from time toNot every student group gets to strollaround the corridors of the United Nationslobbying for the interests of Djibouti andBelgium, but the International RelationsCouncil (IRC) managed to do that and morein this, its first year of existence.The IRC was formed to send students tomodel United Nations conferences. Itsmembers attended two conferences, — inNew York and at Harvard — and they willmeet Thursday to plan an expanded sched¬ule for next year. The group is consideringsending delegates to several more collegemodel UN conferences, as well as sponsor¬ing a high school and a college conference inChicago. They also hope to bring speakers to. The following letter was accidentallyomitted from last Friday’s Maroon. We re¬gret the omission and print the letter here.To the Editor:Next week Student Government electionswill be held, and a candidate will be electedto fill a position I have held for two terms —that of Chairman of the Finance Committee.The Finance Committee's responsibility ismuch greater than most students realize.The Committee funds a wide variety of stu¬dent groups and activities on campus. Dur¬ing my two years as Chairman we annuallyreceived $80,000 worth of budget requestsand had only $30,000 to distribute per year.Obviously, difficult choices had to be made,and under such circumstances practicallyevery student organization was dissatisfiedwith their allocation. If the proposed studentactivities fee is approved by student refer¬endum, more money will be available foractivities, but budget decisions will continueto be difficult for the Committee.Committee members have spent, and willspend in the future, countless hours in bud¬get hearings. Decisions made by the Com¬mittee are in no way aided by an education¬al background in economics or business,even though at first glance it may appear tobe beneficial. The only "business" associat¬ed skill employed is the ability to add andsubtract. The Committee's recommenda¬tions are. and should be. based upon a jud¬gement as to what activities provide themost value for the greatest number ovf U ofC students. Recognizing the diversity of thestudent body, the Committee attempts tofund a variety of activities such as the Year¬book. WHPK-FM, the Festival of the Arts,the Organization of Black Students, and theCountry Dancers. The programs of these or¬ganizations must be open to the entire stu¬dent body, and the funding of political or re¬ligious activities is prohibited by the StudentGovernment Constitution. The Chairman ofthe Committee plays a vital role in develop¬ing policy, in arranging for hearings, in counseling organizations on how to getthings done, and in acting as a liason be¬tween student groups and the University Ad¬ministration.I have been disturbed by the recurringproposition that passing Econ 200 (I barely-passed it) qualifies a student for this type ofwork. While the title contains the word “fi¬nance”, finance courses at the U. of C. donot make a chairman. What is needed is acandidate who:1) has had experience with student orga¬nizations on this campus,2) has the organizational talent to set upmany long meetings and hearings.3) has a good knowledge of campus andcity resources, e g., where a student goes toget the best printing price on 500 84” by 11”posters,4) knows U of C administrators and hasthe ability to work w ith them for students,and5) the drive, energy, and fairness to makeit all come together.Clarke Campbell possesses these quali¬ties. Clarke's interest in the Committee be¬came evident to me 3 months ago when hestarted attending all of our meetings — hisattendance record is better than those ofsome of my Committee memebers. He haslearned about the Committee, how it worksor does not work, the problems it faces andthe possible solutions. No other candidatehas this advantage. Through his inspectionof Committee records he has acquired asense of history invaluable to determiningthe financial needs of student organizationsand their activities in the coming year.Clarke Campbell is, in my estimation, themost qualified of all the candidates runningfor election to the chairmanship of the Fi¬nance Committee. The position is an all-Uni-versity post — any U of C student can votefor the candidates. I urge you to vote forClarke Campbell this Monday and Tues¬day.Jeff LeavellStudent in the CollegeLCB posters returnedThe Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, April 22, 1980 — 3Tickets on sale today and tomorrow/For MAB fee payers only. Graduatefee card also on sale.Tickets go on general sale Thursday'/q? ^MAB fee payers $4.00Others $7.50Graduate Fee Cards $4.00_ ^U.C. I.D. required - All seats General Admissiory^r ’No Seating Provided Hr ^ ^:srvo^^0s\ve ;et\cea\e^eboaeta°;\n°TS£S°Available AtStudent Coop BookstoreReynolds Club Basement5706 S. University9:30-6 M-F12-4:30 Sat.Buy it once Enjoy it a lifetime. Recorded music is your best entertainment value. \ot^co-J\a9ePace ^enCaado$?^eC°Appearing at Beginnings,4/22”"Epic" is a trademark of CBS Inc. '*) 1980 CBS Inc.4 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, April 22, 1980Lithuanian Prideand Birute Tamulynas Philip MaherGermans moved back in, and in 1945, the Communiststook over, where they remain today, she said.Tamulynas and Gestautas both shy away from politics.The club at present merely recalls traditional Lithuanianculture. Tamulynas explained that while most Lithuan¬ians believe in the same cause, freedom, they are dividedon how to achieve it. The political prospects for Lithuaniaare certainly bleak, so the exiles are forced to keep theirculture alive in other lands.Unfortunately, each generation of Lithuanians born inAmerica become more American and less Lithuanian.While Tamulynas speaks Lithuanian at home. Gestautasspeaks it mostly to her grandmother, but not all thetime.As the women grew up however, they realized what agood thing they stand to lose. “You were born and raisedwith it,” said Tamulynas, “You can’t just stand back andlet this culture die.”Gestautas agreed, “It’s partially a feeling of belonging,but it’s also a realization that if I don’t do it, who will? Youdo it for your parents — and for your children.”The two women started the Lithuanian Club just lastquarter. A few friends, Gestautas’s brother and sister(who also attend the University), and a quick scan of thestudent directory for Lithuanian names brought the initialmembership to fifteen or twenty. The club is still in itsformative stages, however, and while it has a sponsor,funds have not been applied for yet.Because there are so many second and third generationLithuanians at the U of C, membership is open to thosewith little or no Lithuanian upbringing. The Club is pre¬sently teaching some of these members rudiments of theLithuanian language.By Philip MaherBernadette Gestautas and Birute Tamulynas are thefounders of the University’s Lithuanian Club. The twowomen attended the same high school on Chicago’s South¬west side but were never made conscious of their commonbond until being immersed in the melting pot of the Uni¬versity. Gestautas explained, “We looked around and sawother Lithuanians, and noticed their names on class lists,but no one was talking to each other. So we decided tostart the club. We w'anted to give Lithuanian students achance to get together, and to teach people with a littleLithuanian blood more about their background.”Chicago has one of the largest concentration of Lithuan¬ian people in the world outside of Lithuania; most live inMarquette Park, Tamulynas’s neighborhood; in BrightonPark and in Bridgeport, Gestautas’s home. These areaare filled with the Lithuanian families who fled the Rus¬sian takeover in 1945, and the German takeovers of 1917and 1940. Gestautas’s grandparents came to America dur¬ing World War I; Tamulynas’s parents escaped as recent¬ly as 1950.The history of Lithuania is a seesaw’ of freedom and ser¬vitude; it is no wonder that Lithuanians cherish their iden¬tity. Tamulynas said that in the 1400s Lithuania extendedfrom the Baltic to the Black Sea, and from Prussia wellinto Russia. But 300 years later the country had been div¬vied up between Prussia, Russia, and Austria. In 1865Russia outlawed the Lithuanian press in an attempt to ex¬punge the language itself as well as the Lithuanian iden¬tity, said Tamulynas. This resulted in their first under¬ground newspaper. Bernadette GestautasBy the Bolshevik revolution in 1917 the Germans hadmoved in, but the end of the war pushed them out, accord¬ing to Tamulynas. From 1918 to 1940 the Lithuanians en¬joyed their only freedom in modern times. In 1941, theOn April 22, 1970, Earth Day activities loudly informedus of the long-impending environmental crisis. “Ecology”and “biodegradable” became household words as themedia publicized cleanup drives, demonstrations, andteach-ins. Ecologists like Barry Commoner warned that“the ecological facts of life are grim.” The Environmen¬tal Handbook, prepared by Garrett deBell for the NationalEnvironmental Teach-in, said, “The crisis of the environ¬ment cannot wait another decade for answers.”Ten years later, we still grope for answers, and the factsremain more grim than ever. Ecological problems areusually not publicized until a major crisis, such as lastyear’s accident at Three Mile Island, occurs. Barry Com¬moner is becoming well-known but as a presidential hope¬ful. Environmental jargo is passe.But there are still a few people who are anxious tospread the word about scarcity, pollution and recycling.Ken Dunn does this through his Resource Center, and tocelebrate Earth Day, the recycling center held a fair onSunday.A small crowd of enthusiastic, eco-minded people flewkites, perused exhibits on solar energy, and learned howthey can clean up by recycling. Enjoying the cool springbreezes, it seemed possible — even among the rubble at Danila OderEarth Day at the Resource Center (61st and Blackstone)61st and Blackstone — that hard work and some attentive¬ness to the earth could keep the planet a little greener. —Rebecca LillianEarth Day, 1980Rethinking medical educationBy Ted StromIt seems almost traditional to view the pre-med as theobsessed, grade-grubber familiar mainly with organicchemistry and the sound of the closing bell at Regenstein.Such characters are not limited to the University; the nar¬rowness and redundancy of their courses with respect tomedical school has in recent years been the concern of anumber of educators across the country. In 1976, a philan¬thropic group called the Commonwealth Fund beganbankrolling programs at several universities in an at¬tempt to broaden the scope of pre-medical and medicaleducation. Last week students and faculty from eight suchprograms met at the Center for Continuing Education todiscuss their programs’ progress.Chicago’s ASHUM program which has received about$6 million from the Commonwealth Fund, aims at attract¬ing students with diverse career goals with a common de¬sire to thoroughly understand human biology. Curricularreforms at Chicago have been more sweeping than atother Commonwealth-funded schools. About three fourthsof the pre-clinical medical education has been revised, in¬cluding new’ treatments of anatomy and histology, phar¬macology and physiology, neurobiologv, and pathology.In addition, new courses in the Liberal Arts of Biology andMedicine (LABM) range from anthropology and historyto human behavior, law, and philosophy — all designedwith ASHUM’s needs in mind. For example ASHUM stu¬dents can presumably get more out of Michael Gardner’sScience and Human Values” course than from a more ad¬vanced philosophy course.But while its curriculum has been a qualified success,the combination of a low number of applicants and a highattrition rate clouds ASHUM’s future. Dr. Godfrey Getz,former chairman of ASHUM’s curriculum committee,concedes the program's lack of success here but adds thata program seeking to attract students with a variety ofill-defined career goals should expect a high attrition rateas a consequence of helping students mold their interests Neither is it altogether unexpected that the only “inter¬face” program without an early assurance of a place inmedical school should receive fewer applicants than otherprograms.While the programs include a variety of degree tracksdistributed over seven or eight years, the programs arealso innovative in their curricular and extra-curricularreforms. Here are brief descriptions of other “interface”programs seeking to broaden the pre-medical education.• At Johns Hopkins University, an impressive new“Behavioral Biology” BA program combines a rigorouspremedical background with courses in neurophysiology,psychology, and sociology. Under the broad influence oftheir Human Biology program, students in Public Health,Bioengineering, and a shortened BA/MD program cantake new courses which integrate the social and biologicalsciences.• By reducing the number of redundant courses in theirsix year MMeDIC program, Boston University studentshave the time to pursue clinical and/or academic indepen¬dent study programs. Karen Amato, a third year studentin MMeDIC, studied various aspects of children's healthcare and health education in a non-institutional setting.• Brown University’s new Biomedical Ethics programtries to integrate diverse faculty and student groups. Thesucess of the program, says fifth year student LloydMinor has been “partially fulfilled.”• Duke has new courses in basic biomedical sciencesand in interdisciplinary approaches to Human Develop¬ment and Medical Anthropology.• Dartmouth’s program, which is similar to Duke’s, re¬distributes several medical and undergraduate coursesamong the third through sixth post-high school years.• The Rochester Plan is an exercise in liberal liberaleducation. Students selected for it after their sophomoreyears are assured admission to medical school and en¬couraged to spend the next four years pursuing almostany field as long as they complete the required pre-clini¬cal medical courses. Fifth year Rochester student ErastHafkowycz, for instance, is working toward a Masters de¬ gree in Philosophy. As at other schools. Rochester otterssuch new interdisciplinary courses as “Dilemnas studies,community health, sociology, and philosophy.• The University of California at San Diego's HealthProfessions Program is a strictly undergraduate venturethat broadens pre-medical education chiefly by requiringtwo liberal arts minors. For example, the “Health Care-Social Issues” minor consists of two required courses andfour restricted electives in the social science.One popular idea at the conference, was that of earlyassurance of admission to medical school. One adminis¬trator, Duke’s Dr. Suydam Osterhout. suggested that theidea should be applied to 80-90% of all medical school ad¬missions. The Chicago contingent, however, argued thatmany students have not planned their careers that early,and should be encouraged, not penalized, in testing thewaters of various health-related fields before being re¬quired to make a decision on attending medical school.Some students felt that the programs at Chicago andRochester will fold when Commonwealth withdraws itssupport. Most of the programs enroll less than fifteen stu¬dents per year (only five at Dartmouth), not a major in¬novation by national standards. To increase the numbersand visibility of the programs, the conference's boldestproposal suggested that some students participate in a“mandatory reciprocal transfer” program that would befunded by Commonwealth. This transfer would occurafter the sixth year at the University, or after the fourth,fifth, or sixth year at other schools. The proposal is nowunder consideration by a conference subcommittee, butits chances of success with the autonomy-conscious ad¬missions committees are slim at best.At least a few of the students left the conference feelingenthusiastic about their program's broad, flexible, andthorough approach to human biology. But perhaps themost important questions were left unanswered: What ef¬fect, if any. will all this have on the way doctors are edu¬cated in this country? And will some general reformsarise out of these experimental programs, or will the en¬thusiasm simply disappear when the money runs out?The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, April 22, 1980 — 5By Mark WallachLast November, in a speech delivered atthe University, Director of the Governor’sInformation Center for Asian Assistance,Dr. Edwin Silverman, said that “unlessmassive aid begins to arrive in Cambodiaalmost immediately, as many as 2*4 millionpeople face death by starvation within thenext month,”The number of Cambodians who did diefrom starvation is unknown but the figure isnot as high as was initially feared. In De¬cember, the Cambodian harvest, althoughonly about 15 to 20% of normal, providedgreat relief and in January of this year, thepreviously bungling relief efforts, whose or¬ganizers had been accused of stockpilingfood in warehouses, began to untrack andprovide relief to starving Cambodians. Sixhundred trucks were dispatched with foodand a number of train lines and bridgeswere repaired. According to Silverman.“(Cambodian President) Heng Samrin hasbeen co-operative within the limits of thetechnology and food available.”To date, the outside world has contributed$300 million worth of aid to Cambodia, withworld governments having contributed halfthat amount. The Cambodian Crisis Com¬mittee hopes to raise an additional $200 mil¬lion in the coming months and anther inter¬national conference is being planned. Withmany of Cambodia’s roads almost com¬pletely destroyed and the December harvestnavmg given out in March, relief efforts willcontinue to be of paramount importance.According to Silverman, the two biggestproblems relief groups face in the comingmonths is getting supplies into Cambodiabefore June when the monsoon begins and inlocating enough seed rice. So far, the inter¬national community has located about halfof the seed rice needed for relief,According to Newsweek, in an article en¬ titled “Bungling Toward Another Fam¬ine?”, the major international relief agen¬cies (the Red Cross, UNICEF, and theWorld Food Program) have insisted onusing the questionable and costly air andsea-lift operations to import food instead ofthe more effective and cheaper “landbridge” from North Chan. “The big interna¬tional organizations are playing with peo¬ple's lives in Cambodia to cover up the factthat they’ve been thoroughly embarrassedby the way efforts have gone to date.” saidan enraged fieldworker.Another difficulty is the de facto Vietnam¬ese government which has been operating inCambodia. The Cambodians regard theVietnamese presence as a hedge against areturn of Pol Pot’s murderous regime, but ifthe Vietnamese stay longer than necessary,they will quickly be resented. Janet Fuller,who last Saturday at Crossroads gave aslide presentation of her recent visit to Cam¬bodia with the American Friends ServiceCommittee, supplied evidence of the Cam¬bodians' fear of Pol Pot’s return. “They in¬sisted on showing us many of the commongrave sites,” she said. “It was difficult forus to look at them. But they thought it wasimportant for us to know what had hap¬pened,”The overwhelming concern, of course, isstill to supply Cambodians with as muchfood as possible. Right now. people who areworking receive about a pound of rice a daywhile those who are not receive half apound. Supplies should last for anotherthree or four weeks. Beyond that, the Cam¬bodians still face a real threat of starvationuntil the next harvest in December.“On the one hand, the American peoplehave been very generous,” said Silverman,“but the response has not been equal to theneed. Given the Iran and Afghanistancrises, and the Olympic boycott, it is diffi¬cult to keep the Cambodian situation in thepress and to get sufficient offers to donateeffort.”In January and February of this year. Janet Fullervisited Cambodia with the American Friends Ser¬vice Committee. These photographs are a record ofher visit.The refugees: New HardshipsBy Mark WallachLast year, when Indochinese refugees first beganstreaming into the United States, they shared problemssimilar to the millions of immigrants who had precededthem. Their most immediate problems were to learn thelanguage, locate housing, find a job, and seek an educa¬tion.In at least one crucial respect, though, the Indochineserefugees differ from their predecessors: The present refu¬gees had no choice in leaving their native land. “Unlikethe earlier immigrants who made a decision — sometimesa very painful decision — to leave, the refugees didn’thave a chance to make such a decision,” says Joe Tobin ofTravelers’ Aid. “They didn’t have a chance to get used tothe idea of leaving by degrees.”Many of the refugees who have now been here from nineto eighteen months have experienced a period of delayedmourning, in which they have had time to reflect and un¬derstand the finality of their flight from their homeland.Grief often lies just below the surface, even as the refu¬gees try to cope with new jobs and new situations.The family, traditionally the heart of the Indochineseculture, has also been battered, as children and parentsalike struggle to regain lost confidence. In one typical ex¬ample, said Tobin, a Laochmong father who had been acommander of 300 men in Laos complained to Travelers’ Aid that his 16 year old son was not at home often enough.(He was off playing soccer with American kids.) In akitchen scene, although no blows were struck, the boybrandished a knife at the father, an act of defiance almostunheard of in Laos. Says Tobin, “The boy was telling hisfather, ‘Some commander you were. Look what you got usinto.’ ”In many cases, the children’s disrespect stems from theloss of confidence which they perceive their parents havesuffered. As.children have become more proficient atspeaking English than their parents, says Tobin, and areput in a position of representing their family to strangers,the traditional family hierarchy is further eroded. And asthe children become more Americanized and questionwhy they should have pride in their homeland they fled,they will face a potentially wracking crisis of identity.Virtually all of the refugees have lost some of their ex¬tended family, which often members as many as thirtypeople. Many, says Edwin Silverman, have lived throughthirty years of war, lost all of their possessions, and spentfour or five aimless years in squalid refugee camps wait¬ing only to be resettled. In some cases, two wives haveappeared, the husband having assumed the original wifehad died.Travelers’ Aid, like other services that aid the refugees,uses a variety of methods to help the refugees. Specifical¬ly. they try to combine traditional American counsellingwith traditional hallmarks of the refugees’ native culture. For example, since Cambodians traditionally seek advicefrom their elders, Travelers’ Aid has encouraged the refu¬gees to strengthen the Indo-Chinese community in Chica¬go buy transplanting aspects of their native culture to Chi¬cago. Travelers’ Aid has helped the refugees to celebratetheir native New Year and has also helped establish aBuddhist-Cambodian orchestra. In general, says Tobin,the refugees are a resilient people.The main goal of relief agencies now is to insure contin¬ued funding. With 360,000 Indo-Chinese refugees now inthe United States, and some of the hundreds of thousandsin refugee camps continuing to pour in, relief agencies arestill struggling to accommodate newcomers. And as agen¬cies follow-up on the refugees already here, the number ofcaseloads continues to rise. “Our worry is that as theIndo-Chinese situation drops out of the limelight it willcease to be chic to sponsor a refugee,” Tobin added.Given the large number of refugees who have alreadyresettled, it is remarkable how well they have coped. Al¬though states like Texas and California have had more se¬vere problems than Chicago, of the 12,000 refugees whohave resettled in Chicago, according to Silverman, onlytwo have, in the jargon, “acted out.” One was an elderlywoman who committed suicide and the other a mentally-ill Cambodian who killed a secretary at Travelers’ Aid sixweeks ago.“I look at it as one more fatality of the war in Indo¬china,” said Joe Tobin.Site of common grave in CambodiaThe Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, April 22, 1980 — 79mFRESH GRADE ABONELESSPORK ROASTAGARS SMOKEDPICNIC HAMCENTER CUTPORK CHOPS 1 89lb.83 clb.1 59lb.FIRST CUT 99 lb.FLORIDA JUICE 129ORANGES 5 Bag I129RUBY REDGRAPEFRUITSLAND O LAKESOLEOFOLGERSINSTANTCOFFEE 5 Lb. Bag59 clb.4 99BANQUETCHICKEN. BEEF OR TURKEYPOTPIES 8 oz. 3:1 00SALE RUNS APRIL 23-26nitcFINER FOODSSERVING53rd PRAIRIE SHORESKIMBARK PLAZA 2911 VERNONWhere You Are A Stranger But Once!NEW 2-drawer files $59.00NEW 6-ft. folding tables $49.00qdAlin equipmentDIC AN V & SUPPLY CO.8400 COMMERCIAL AVENUERE 4-2111 OPEN MON.-FRI.8:30-5:00SATURDAYS9:00-3:008 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, April 22, 1980 REO SPEEDWAGON S A DECADE OF ROCK AND ROLL 1970 TO 19801FEATURING ROLL WITH THE CHANGES; ' RIDIN THE STORM OUT,TIME FOR ME TO FLY AND MORE GREAT HITS.RELIVE THE EXPERIENCE, ON EPIC RECORDS AND TAPES*Buy it once. Enjoy it a lifetime. Recorded music is your best entertainment value."Epic'' is a trademark of CBS Inc. © 1980 CBS Inc Management and Direction: John Baruck Management Co.Next to 1C TracksDo it YourselfRepairs$3.75 hourwith tools$4.95 hourrented tools -(metric & standard)Fast Oil Change$16SOON TO COMEUSED CARRENTAL667-2800PIZZAPLATTER1460 E. 53nM13-2800No delivery ******************* PORNChamberlin House *presents y*Another Spectacular Night *of *******Wed., April 23, 7-12 p.m.|Kent Hall £**£ “Two Senoritas” 7-8, 9:30 -10:30 $* “Inside Me” 8:30-9:30. 11-12 **Plus *“Anatomy of a Teenage Marriage” *8-8:30, 10:30 -11 **i . 2.00 All Night 18, U.C.I.D. ********Will You Be Proudto Show Your BodyIn This Summer's Fashions?|Hyde Park YMCA1400 East 53rd StreetChicago, Illinois60615324-5300 CHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOpen Daily11 AM to 8:30 PMClosed Monday1318 EAST 63rdMU 4-1062I _=—=—}mmmmmmfmmmmmrnmaBM|______________mmmtrnmammmmmmm^^mmmimmm^m—mmmm________mmmwmm**«mm—*™™^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^******™**i^Campus Film ' ’King of Kings (Cecil B. DeMille, 1926): De-Mille knows no limits in this monumentalfilm. Grandiosity prevails, such as the im¬mense cast (which includes a variety of an¬imals and birds) and the “Hallelujah”Chorus from Handel’s Messiah. But De-Mille’s tendency to overdo is forgivable,even appropriate, considering that the filmis about Jesus of Nazareth. Excellent actingby H. B. Warner as Christ, Dorothy Cum-ming as Mary, and Joseph Schildkraut asJudas, along with titles quoting passagesfrom the New Testament, relate a detailedaccount of Christ’s life from his healing thesick to the Resurrection, despite its ex¬cesses and occasional lapses into tedium(after all, we already know the story), thisfilm establishes DeMille as a king himself.Tonight at 8 in Quantrell. Doc; - MWTwo Senoritas, Inside Me, and Anatomy of aTeenage Marriage: Pornography present¬ed by Chamberlin House. Tomorrow, 7 to 12in Kent. $2The Whole Town’s Talking (John Ford, 1935): Edward G. Robinson plays two rolesin this screwball comedy-cum gangsteropus: one’s a mild-mannered clerk; theother’s his look-alike opposite, “Killer”Manion, just escaped from the local prison.There are the usual mix-ups, stupid cops,and hordes of loud, fast-talking reporters.Robinson as clerk loves Jean Arthur ; in onewonderful scene he takes his first drink andreceives his first kiss. Ford’s action-orient¬ed composition takes advantage of a goodscript and the director’s favorite cinemato¬grapher, Joseph August, who manages per¬fect transitions from comedy to drama. To¬morrow at 7:15 in Quantrel. Doc; $1 fordouble feature. — RMcGA Girl in Every Port (Howard Hawks,1928): This silent is one of Hawks’s earliestcomedies. We missed it during it’s first run,and it’s presently missing from the Doc of¬fice. We know only that critics rank it highamong Hawk’s comedies, that the plot in¬volves two amorous sailors who encounterLouise Brooks, and that Hawks is capable of making films worth seeing. Chicago repre¬mier. Tomorrow at 9 in Quantrel. Doc; $1for double feature. — GBWuthering Heights (William Wyler, 1939):Sam Goldwyn and Wyler conspired to turnEmily Bronte’s Gothic novel about obses¬sive love into a hokum masterpiece. Theyhad plenty of good help: Gregg Toland’sdeep focusing cinematography; Hecht &MacArthur’s vernacular script; andLaurence Oliver’s histrionics. Olivier’sHeathcliff probably was what Bronte had inmind — dark, handsome, and smoldering.Merle Oberson looks exotic but is no matchfor Olivier’s intensity. She is more a decora¬tive object. David Niven hoves in the back¬ground and comes to the fore occasionally.A very entertaining movie in its own way,but no more than that. Thursday at 8:30 inLaw School Auditorium. LSF; $1.50 —- TSPassion of Joan of Arc (Carl Dreyer,1928): A pivotal film and a magnificent ex¬ample of transcendental cinema. Dreyer’sJoan is no saint, but a central character in a passion play. He looks past the social andpolitical implications of Joan and gets to theheart of the issue — the emotions elicitedand felt by her. This Joan is an oppressedwoman whose ultimate triumph lies in herliberation. The film proceeds at an unrelent¬ingly slow pace. Dreyer’s obsessive use ofclose-ups transforms faces into battle¬grounds of emotions. Falconetti’s, in partic¬ular, has launched a thousand criticalessays. Thursday at 7:15 in Kent 107. Doc;$1.00 for double feature — TSThe Scarlet Letter (Victor Sjostrom,1926): Sjostrom starts his tale well beforeHawthorne’s; the film’s halfway over be¬fore Hester is even in jail. But once there,the care invested in the love affair pays offas Hawthorne’s action unfolds with speed.Chillinworth prys, Dimmesdayle suffers,and the town commits blind infustice. Thisfilm has a point to make, and it makes it.Yet, despite its quality, this is one for fansonly. Thursday at 8:25 in Kent 107. Doc;$1.00. — DMTht tpjraitg of Chicago"Divinity Students Sflnuty (^ok^cxchccIS RELIGION PERIPHERAL INCONTEMPORARY AMERICA?WEDNESDAY • APRIL 237:30 P.M. EDWARD SHILS"Society and the Sacred0THURSDAY • APRIL 249:30 A.M. JOHN EUDES BAMBERGER, O.C.S.O.*Defining the Center: A Monastic Perspective"2:00 P.M. IRVING ZARETSKY"Religion, Politics and the Profit Economy0FRIDAY • APRIL 259:30 A.M. PRESTON N. WILUAMS"Religious Traditions: Public Ministry and the SocialOrder0ZOO PM. CATHERINE ALBANESE"Dominant and Public Center: Reflections on the 'One'Religion of the United States0SWIFT LECTURE HALL • 1025 EAST 58th STREET NEWWWAY-THURSDAY T:X>m-6:Wnmmyq:?>0A»~5WmSATURDAY n00m-i:00*»SEMINARY COOP BOOKSTORES75? south uH/veRsiryIfic Cattuj Heifetz Memorial presentsJin Evening 4 Chamber Music&randcn6ur$ Concerto MeZ in f IfajorCello Concerto in 0 Hfcijor JfaydnString Quartet in Lr Ifajor, K 307-liCozart Ifiilderaus Ostcti -ScfiumantLTrio Op M-TiimicmitftSatun-Lui. lb-8-30pmfoond Chapel - FreeThe Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, April 22, 1980 — 9CalendarTUESDAYWomen's Exercise Class: Meets 9:30-10:30 pm, IdaNoyes dance room.Comm, on Public Policy Studies: Seminar - “FactorSubstitution in U.S. Manufacturing, Reconsi¬dered” speaker Prof. Joel Gibbons, 1:30 pm. Wie-boldt 301.Dept of Microbiology: “Protein Degradation Dur¬ing Bacterial Spore Germination; From Physiolo¬gy to the Gene" speaker Prof. Peter Setlow, 4:00pm, Cummings 11th floor seminar room.Dept of Sociology: “The Origins of the South Afri¬can State” speaker Prof. Stanley Trapido, 4:00pm. Pick 218.UC Ki-Aikido Club: Meets 4:30-6:30 pm, Fieldhousewrestling room.UC Gymnastics Club: Instruction available5:30-8:00 pm, Bartlett gym, free. ,E. F. Clown Company: Mime Workshop, 7:00 pm,Ida Noyes Cloister Club.Physical Education: Free swimming instruction7:30-8:30 pm, Ida Noyes.International House: Pianist Bill Hayashi in reci¬tal, 7:30 pm, I-House.Progressive Union: Planning for May 22nd 7:30pm, Ida Noyes. All welcome.Doc Films: “The King of Kings” 8:00 pm, Cobb.Hillel: Israeli Folkdancing. 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes.WEDNESDAYPerspectives: Topic - “How the Census is Used”guests Philip Hauser, Teresa Sullivan, Steve Laue, 6:09 am, channel 7.ERA: Statewide Student ERA March in Spring-field, bus leaves from in front of Regenstein at6:30 am. Wear green and white. Sponsored by Ac¬tion ERA.Italian Table: Meets 12 noon in the Blue Gargoyleto speak Italian.Commuter Co-op: Get-together in the CommuterLounge, G.B.l - 12:30 pm.Dept of Chemistry: Lecture - “Reversible OxygenCarriers” speaker Jack Baldwin 1:30 pm, Kent103.Crossroads: English classes for foreign women,2:00 pm.Computation Center Seminar: Introduction toSCRIPT 3:30-5:00 pm, Cobb 104.Dept of Art: “Looking at Words: The Representa¬tion of Texts in Seventeenth Century Dutch Art”Speaker Svetlana Alpers, 4:00 pm, 5540 S. Green¬wood.Cog Com Colloquium: "Understanding RSVP Sen¬tences” speaker Mary Potter 4:00 pm, B-102.Dept of Biochemistry: "Biochemistry of a SimpleBehavioral System" speaker Daniel Koshland, Jr.4:00 pm, Cummings room 201.Ryerson Lecture: “Thirty Pieces of Silver” EricaReiner 4:30 pm, Laird Bell Law Quandrangle, GlenLloyd Auditorium.UC Gymnastics Club: Instruction available5:30-8:00 pm, Bartlett gym, free.Doc Films: "The Whole Town's Talking" 7:15 pm,“A Girl in Every Port" 9:00 pm, Cobb.Tai Chi Ch’uan Club: Meets 7:30 pm, Blue Gar¬goyle. Women’s Hap Group: Meets 7:30 pm, in theWomen’s Center 3rd floor Blue Gargoyle.Badminton Club: Practices 7:30 pm, Ida Noyesgymnasium.Evolution Discussion Group: "Rates of Chromoso¬mal and Phenotypic Evolution” speaker R. Lande,8:00 pm, Hinds Lab.Science Fiction Club: Meets 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes.Everyone welcome.Country Dancers: Traditional dances of England,Scotland, and New England taught, 8:00 pm, IdaNoyes Cloister Club.First Chair: Lecture-demonstration Chicago Sym¬phony String Quartet, 8:00 pm, Hitchcock.THURSDAYPerspectives: Topic - “Turkey’s Role in the West¬ern Alliance System Since World War II” guestsThe Honorable Sukru Elekdag, Frank Tachau andRichard Chambers, 6:09 am, channel 7.Women’s Exercise Class: Meets 9:30-10:30 am, IdaNoyes dance room.Dept of Microbiology: “The Role of Surface Struc¬tures of Host and Parasite in the Attachment ofChlamydiae to Host Cells” speaker Nancy JeanneLevy 11:30 am, Cummings room 1117.Lunchtime Concerts: Music by Locke, Lully, Han¬del and Pepusch performed by an ensemble ofBaroque instruments, 12:15 pm.Immunogenetics: “The I Region of the MurineMajor Histocompatibility Complex: Structure,Function and Genetics,” 2:30 pm, Cummings 101.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Lecture - “The Political Orientation of Islamic Philosophy"speaker Muhsin Mahdi, 4:00 pm, Pick 016.Center for Latin American Studies: "Lovers andCaballeros: The Latin Image in Hollywood Mov¬ies” speaker Prof. Allen Woll, 4:00 pm, SS 122.UC Gymnastics Club: Instruction available4:oo-8:00 pm, Bartlett gym, free.Committee on African Studies: "SociopoliticalAttitudes of Blacks in Soweto" speaker Prof.Mark Orkin, 4:00 pm. Pick 205.UC Ki-Aikido Club: Meets 4:00-6:00 pm, in theFieldhouse Wrestling room.UC Judo Club: Meets 6:00-8:30 pm, Bartlett gym,beginners welcome.Zen Meditation: Meets 6:00-7:30 pm. Ida Noyes.Newcomers welcome, info call 752-7635.NOMOR: Committee meeting 7:00 pm, Ida Noyes1st floor lounge.Doc Films: “The Passion of Joan of Arc” 7:15, “ThfScarlet Letter" 8:25 pm, Kent.Table Tennis Club: Practices 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes3rd floor.Law School Films: “Wuthering Heights” 8:30 pm,Law School Auditorium.Hellenic Civilization: “Greek Schizoglossia: APartial Linguistic Autobiography” speakerKostas Kazazis, 4:30 pm, Harper 103.FRIDAYPerspectives: “The Prospects for Turkish-Ameri-can Relations in the 1980's” guests The HonorableSukru Elekdag, Frank Tachau, and RichardChambers, 6:09 am, channel 7.Cornell SummersWork For YouPlan your educational investment wisely.Cornell University offers a wide variety ofsummer courses and special programs withtuition at $110 per credit or less. By ac¬celerating your degree program, you canprobably reduce the cost of your educationsignificantly.Besides, where else can you polish yourwriting skills and learn to use a computer orbe in an undergraduate prelaw program andtake a course in conceptual drawing? Whereelse can you be in the company of so diversea group of faculty and students in such auniquely attractive settingof hills, lakes, gorges, andwaterfalls?Interested? Write or call foran Announcement today.Cornell University SummerSession, 1 11 Day HallIthaca. New York 14853Phone 607/ 256-4987• Eye Examinations• Contact Lenses• (Soft and Hard)• Fashion Eye Wear• Contact Lens Supplies SmBSI&LOMBSORiNSDR. M.R. MASLOVOPTOMETRISTS Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th363-6363 fRegister Nowfor the Summer ShapeYou Want!SPRING FITNESS CLASSESHyde Park YMCA1400 East 53rd StreetChicago, Illinois 60615324-5300 WHEN IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA VISIT u NIVERSAL STUDIOS TOURA* MCA COMRANVOpens April 25th at a theatre near you.BILL MURRAY as Dr. Hunter S. Thompson-PETER BOYLE“WHERE THE BUFFALO ROAM” co-starring BRUNO KIRBY andRENE AUBERJ0N0IS • Screenplay by JOHN KAYEMusic by NEIL YOUNG • Produced and Directed by ART LINS0NSOUNDTRACK AVAIIABLE ON BACKSTREET/MCA RECORDS & TAPES A UNIVERSAL PICTUREKHEg * WffPthf novlt OH THF Tw&a tftf/HP of & ^ Ifw&p LftfSP of &“I hate toadvocateweird chemicals,alcohol, violence ory insanity to anyone..but they’ve alwaysworked for me.”10 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, April 22, 1980HAtKooM I F \ E.DSPACEElegant, sunny, 4 bdrm, 3 bath condo;2470 sq. tt., newly renovated, mod kit;sunporch, Kenwood area. 538-3407.Male mature roommate wanted toshare 2 br. furnished condo on 56th,Dorchester $165.00 a month + Vs elec-tricity. Call 947-9262.WANTED: male roommate-quietspacious apt. only 2 blks fr. Regens-tein! $110/mo. + utilities. Avail May1! Call David evenings 684-5334.Roommate needed. 2 bedroom base¬ment apt. East view Pk. Avail May 1or earlier. $130/mo and util. Near 1C,Co-op, mini-bus, Jet. exp. and point.Great for summer. Call Hank or Dan-ny, 667-5620.2 br 2 bath available in Newport topfloor excel view 7:00 pm call 241-6338,753-2655 9-5.Summer sublet: Furnished 1 br. apt.Long Island, N Y. 35 min. to NYC, 20min, to Jones Beach. Call 516-746-6352.SUBLET w/option to renew beg. May1. 1 bdrm apt on Harper behind Co-op.$190/mo. Call 955-4413 anytime.SUMMER SUBLET - 3 br. 2 ba. apt.date and price negot. fully equipped.ON CAMPUS modern 947-9597 eves.Studio apt for rent: 5728 S. Blackstone.Available May 1. 180.00 363-1384 or234-7403. PEOPLE FOR SALEAccurate, Fast Typing with CollegeDegree and Legal Exp. will type termpapers, theses, letters dissertations-what-ever your typing needs. In Hydepark, but will pick up and deliver onCampus. REASONABLE Call 684-7414Eves.ARTWORK posters, illustration,calligraphy, invitations, etc. NoelYovovich 5441 S. Kenwood 493-2399.GRAPHS, figures for all kinds of mss.Perfection guaranteed. Lin 3 4887.624-6218 evenings.Will do typing (IBM) 821-0940.Typing done on IBM by college grad;pica type. Term papers, theses, lawbriefs, resumes, letters, manuscripts.Fast, accurate, reliable, reasonable.New Town area. Call 248-1478.TYPIST - Dissertation quality, helpwith grammar, language, as needed.Fee depending on manuscript. IBMSelectric-Judith. 955-4417,Position desired: Editing and re¬writing. Have a BA in English fromChicago, veteran of Joe William's Ex¬pository Prose Writing class, now inChicago GSB. I can make even brashBusiness students and unintelligiblemath geniuses sound literate. Salary:Negotiable. Call Linda evenings,945-7264.Available June 1 one bdr apt at UnivPk condo 55th and Blackstone. Newlydec ac sec sauna pool one blk fr shopand 1C $390 month heat ind call955-0396.$25 reward for one or two bedroomHyde Park ap* with June-July lease.Willing to pay up to $375. Call Claudia955-4022.FOR RENT Furnished Condo 56th andDorchester June '80-Sept. '81 3 bdrms,2 baths, back yard, private porch.$600/mo. Call 955-6512.1 bdrm in 3 bdrm apt Lake view a/c, 24hr. security. On campus and minibusroutes $102 and elec. Call Jane, 7-6897or 538-6159.2 ROOMMATES needed for 3-bdrmapt. $150/ Lake view, A/C, garage, lotsof light and SDace. Start now or June.548-4911. .FOR RENT: 3 rm. apt., 1 bdrm.Woodlawn near campus. Avail May 1.University bldg. 258/mo. U.C. facultystaff only. Call Tom, 525-1374 eves.PEOPLE WANTEDOVERSEAS JOBS-Summer/yearround. Europe, S. America, Australia,Asia. Etc. All fields, $500 $ 1200 mon¬thly. Expenses paid. Sightseeing. Freeinfo-Write: ICL Box 52-11 Coroan DelMar, Ca. 92625.Experienced babysitter with recentHyde Park references seeks full-timecare of infant or small child,preferably in my Hyde Park homeCall Mary 955-3558.Wanted: Person to attend meetings ofthe Board of Directors of a Hyde ParkCondominium, take the minutes, andtype them. Call Helene at 324-1414.Earn extra money at home. Good pay.Easy work. No experience necessary.Send for application. Home Money,Box 2432B, Iowa City, Iowa, 52240.OVERSEAS JOBS-Summer/yearround Europe, S. America, Australia,Asia. Etc. All fields, $500 $ 1200 mon¬thly. Expenses paid. Sightseeing Freeinfo-Write: ICL Box 52-11 CoroanDelMar, Ca. 92625.Writers, reporters, cartoonists forSUBURBIA Weekly. 752-7977.FOR SALEMOVING CROSS-COUNTRY MUSTSELL 10 pc. Living Rm st. $475.00 orcan be broken into 2 sets. Panasonic-Quadraphonic Stereo 4 speakers turn¬table receiver $175.00 or Best. DoubleBed s/frame 125.00 Call 752-1622 or752-1624 ask for Kim or Cindy.470 sailboat-US 878 w/trailer, sails andcover. Price negotiable after 10 pm548-0386.Apartment sale queen-si. sofa bd.,dishwasher, tables, book cases, lamps,small dresser Call 288-7496 morn-ings/evenings.VERSAILLES5254 S. DorchesterWEU, MAINTAINEDBUILDINGAttractive ll/2 and2 V2 Room StudiosFurnished or t’nfurnished$218 to $320Based on AvailabilityAt Campus Bus Stop324 0200 Mrs. Croak SERVICESProfessional word processing servicesguaranteed error free Easyrevisions-24 hour service. Researchpapers, reports, proposals fast effi-cient, economical. Call 268-2611.Carpentry, drywall, painting, wiring.Competent and imaginative work.Free estimates. 684-2286.PERSONALSWRITER'S WORKSHOP (Plaza2-8377)WANTED: Someone interested inplaying tennis on regular basis. I'm afemale, lower-intermediate levelplayer with moments of inspiration.Call 493 4532.The Avant-Garde Hour-for the moreenlightened listener. Tues. 3-6 pmWHPK-FM 88.33rd Law of Gizmatics-lf your flight islate, the one you're connecting to is ontime.-GIZMOMADMAN-Finding thrim is only astart-keeping thrim is extremely dif¬ficult. I only fall down once a week orsoThis Thursday on the Avant-GardeHour- Live interview with Max Litchitz 3-6 pm WHPK-FM 88.3Inquisitive Lady: you borrowed myname at the Bursars but I don't knowyours. Who are you? Spud.Chantons ce qui nous quitte avecamour et art"Are you going to see the ChamberlinPorn Movies Wednesday night atKent?"This week on the Avant-Garde Hour-Tues: Music of Ornstein and Antheil.Thurs: Special live interview withMax Lifchitz 3-6pm WHPK-FM 88.3Happy Birthday, Will!Dial.,a snmmerjob:800-331-1000Work as a Manpowertemporary. Flexibleschedules. Good pay.Assignments available inyour college town orhometown. Please call,toll free.MANPOWERTEMPORARY SERVICES I haven't appeared lately 'cause I'vebeen to spring training at IBM in Ken¬tucky. Reg: You're my idol. BarefootDreamer: wanna play footsies?QWERTYPROFESSOR. Evening classes can befun and educational. But who wasMohammed's mother?MADMANPETER PRESSURE RADIO. Thevery latest from the British IslesPunk/Reggae/et. al. Tune in onWHPK 88.3 FM Friday nights, 1:30 to4:30 am.LOST AND FOUNDLOST: Brown leather briefcase atquad rangle club. Initials NAHS. Im¬portant documents. $25 reward forcontents. Call 753-4517, 493-2379,LOST: Blue coat in Burton Judson din¬ing room 4/14. Call 241-6240.FOUND: At 57th and Maryland, grayand black tabby male cat, approx. 9mos. Owner or interested party callLinda, wk 3-3581, eve 667-4204. Veryfriendly, but my cats are jealous.LOST: In December 1979: Red plaidcoat, made of heavy wool. $30 reward.This coat belonged to my grandfather.Left in Ekhart lecture room. Call Hank684 3403 or 924-2721, keep tryingplease.WOMEN NEEDEDNormally menstruating women whohave children needed as medicalresearch volunteers reimbursement is$175.00. Call Dr. Hatch at 7-1739 or7-5365. fees. It is responsible for bringing ma¬jor entertainment to campus. Theseven member board runs the entireconcert planning and produc*:;n fromchoice of artist to clean-up.Deadline is May 2.TRAVELEUROPE this summer. Low cost tour.Academic credit available. CallMr. Reamer, 753-4865 (day), 752-8426(eve).INFORMATIONAvoid the proposed military draft on¬ly legal way. Full details and pro¬gram, $3.00 Marantha, 142 BollingDrive, Bangor, ME 04401.FOOD CO-OPThe Student Govt. Food Co op is ac¬cepting members. Order food on Fri¬day Pick it up Tues. Call 753-3273 after¬noons.HYDE PARKCONDOATYESTERYEARPRICES4 bedroom condominium homes at 50thand Dorchester for $47,500-549,500Common elements and exteriors ex¬tensively rehabbed. Apartments thatwill be sold 'as is' have hardwoodfloors, formal dining rooms, loads ofcloset space and more. Quiet residen¬tial block, close to transportation.363-1332 or 288-2175.UC HOTLINE753-1777Are you partied out? Studied out?Tired out? Down and out? Call us andtalk it out. The UC Hotline;questions,referrals, and someone to talk to. 7pm-7am. POETRY READINGMichael Horowitz, main-line beat poetreads Thursday, April 24th at 8 pm inClassics 21. Free admission. Spon¬sored by the Chicago Review.INQUIRYThe quarterly undergraduate journalINQUIRY is now accepting essays onall subjects for its Spring issue. Thedeadline for submissions is Friday of5th week. Send via fac-x to INQUIRY,Ida Noyes checkroom.FOR RENTSpacious 2-bedroom apartment withformal dining room, hardwood floors,new kitchen and new bath. ExcellentHyde Park location. $450.00. Call363-1332.MABApplications for the Major ActivitiesBoard are now available in Ida Noyes210. All positions are open and allstudents both graduate andundergraduate are welcome and en¬couraged to apply.MAB is funded by the undergraduateactivities fee and voluntary graduateBankingTired of Staying at home?Want to work closerto home?Why not be a ...BANK TELLER!(Full & Part-Time)You can work closer to homeand earn a nice salary as aBank Teller at the Hyde ParkBank & Trust Company.Experience as a Teller ormoney handling is helpful,but not necessary because..WE'LL TRAINYOU!We are conveniently locatedin the heart of Hyde Parknear I.C., CTA shoppingcenters and the lake. Foryour personal interview andmore information callPersonnel at 752-4600.Hyde Park Bank& Trust Company1 525 E. 53rd St. ChicagoEqual Opportunity Employer M F RAMONESRAMONESRAMONESTHEY'RE COMING!!!See ad in this paperBEATLESA new Beatles album, "Rarities," aNEW Jimi Hendrix album, "9 to theUniverse," plus new releases by JudyCollins, B.B. King, The Romantics,Heart, The Clash, Pink Floyd, andTom Petty. All at the Student Co-opBookstore and Record Store,downstairs in the Reynolds Club.We're open M-F 9:30-6:00, Saturdays12-4:30.A unique journaldesigned to keepscholars and studentsabreast of contem¬porary thought in thesocial sciences,humanities, law andphilosophy.Literatureof LibertyThis quarterly featuresover 100 in depth summaries of selected articlesfrom 400 journals Eachissue also includes amajor bibliographicalessay addressing thetheme of human libertyCurrent essay topics in¬clude John Stuart Mill,The Idea of Progress.Natural Law. TheAmerican Revolution.John Locke. Environmentand Natural ResourcesSend order and paymentl $12 year) toLITERATURE OFLIBERTY. 1177 Universi¬ty Drive. Menlo ParkCA 94025NameAddressMC Visa * LUNCHTIMECONCERTSEvery Thursday at 12:15 pm inReynolds North Lounge This week,April 24, is a performance of music byLocke, Lully, Handel, and Pepusch, byan ensemble of Baroque instrumentsplayed by Linda Austern, DeniseBoneau, Julie Jeffrey and PamelaMorgans. Bring your lunch!MEDICAL ETHICSDiscussion on abortion Thursday,April 24th at 5.30 pm, Calvert House,5735 University^ SITAR CONCERTSjom Majumdar, North Indianclassical music. International HouseSat. April 26, 8 pm. Donations $2students and senior citizens, $4 others.Indian sweets and snacks served,gratis.SENSATIONALPORNChamberlin presents a triple feature,"Two Senoritas," "Inside Me," and"Teenage Marriage" Wednesday,April 23, 7-12 pm Kent Hall. $2SHOP FORMOTHER'S DAYAT ARTISANS21Portrait/sketches Ellida SuttonFreyer ($5-50) at Artisans 21, 5225 S.Harper, through May 10. Sat 1-4 pm,Sun and weekdays by appt. Call288-7450. BALLROOMDANCINGAn ADVANCED BALLROOM DANC¬ING CLASS has been added to theEclectic Ed mini-courses for Spring. 6lessons, $20-Begins Thurs Apr 24, 5pm. Sign up in Student Activities 210Ida Noyes.MICHAELHOROWITZMain-line beat poet reads Thursday,April 24th at 8 pm in Classics 21 freeadmission. Sponsored by the ChicagoReview.PORNOGRAPHYInterested in the debate on por¬nography? Women's Union will show aslide show put together by WomenAgainst Pornography on April 24,Thursday at 7:30 pm in the MemorialRoom in Ida Noyes. Discussion after¬wards. BLACKFRIARSPrepare ye the way . . .to InternationalHouse Auditorium for GODSPELL,Blackfriars' Spring show May 8-11.AD 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, 75c per lineotherwise. $1 for special headline.Deadlines: For Tuesday paper, 12noon Friday; for Friday, 12 noonWednesdaymarianrealty, inc.mrealtorStudio and 1 BedroomApartments Available- Students Welcome -On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-5400STANLEY H. KAPLANFar Over 41 Years The Standard ofExcetence fn Test Preparation.mcat-gmat-lsat!Mi• Mi PSYCH• Mi BIO* DATPGAT • 0CAT • VAT • MAT • SAT • SAT ACHVS »NATIONAL MEDICAL BOARDS • VQE • ECFMOFLO • NATL DENTAL BOARDS 'TOEFLPOOiATYY BOARDS • NUftSMG BOARDSFkoilMs Program* and HoursfSfcmWMPLANIMMiAmM.■ N.Y. mO ftr. M ft.) Vtul hr C*6tH U4 $m f wTaaruff Wt, »i aft* Tft Mtaraantut aateAJMTtONapacuujsTt au»ca i«mCmiot * VS Crlat Nt»l» Uilv«H< 'WHO 4 tailCHICAGO CENTER6716 N. CLARKCHICAGO ILLINOIS 606*0<312! ZM-6181i w tuauaaAMIS 6 LAGRANGE ROADSUITE 301LAGRANGE ILLINOIS 606761317) 367 6*40 SPRINfi, SUMMERFALL INTENSIVESCOURSES STARTINCTHIS NONTH :4 vk/MCATLSAT CRE SATNEXT MONTH ■CHAT I-SATCourt** Constantly UpGatsdLicensing Ciams In Csntar Salt-StudyLviv*'>amy b * ■ i»'■ —r — j— r - 0*» ;« w< w mot Ykw K Max* Jt Coot t *otmOUTSIDE MY. STATS CALL TOLL FREE: tOO-MVITIThe Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, April 22, 1980 — 11—.Join theMajor Activities BoardApplications Available InIda Noyes 210Deadline May 2Open to all Students University of ChicagoGraduate School of BusinessBayesian Statistics:A ReviewDennis V. LindleyFord Foundation Visiting Professor of Statistics,Graduate School of BusinessA series of eleven lecturesbeginning Wednesday, April 16, 1980All lectures will be held from 2:00 to 3:20 p.m.,Monday, Wednesday, Friday (April 16--May 14),Rosenwald Hall 15miimmim—nilWednesday, April 23rdChicago Quartet LAST CHANCETO VOTE IN STUDENTGO VERNMENT SPRINGGENERAL ELECTIONSVOTE TODAY AT THEFOLLOWING LOCA TIONS:Cobb HallReynolds ClubLaw SchoolB-SchoolI-HouseShorelandBurton JudsonPierceWoodward 9:00 - 4:0011:00-7:0011:00-1:0011:00-2:005:00 - 7:005:00 - 7:005:00 - 7:005:00 - 7:005:00 - 7:00ALL OFFICES ARE OPENFOR ELECTIONYOUR VOTE IS IMPORTANT!!