view Iran effortsMorton Kaplan ProfessorsBy Andrew PatnerThe chairman of the University’scommittee on international rela¬tions and a University sociologistwith a special interest in the mili¬tary both took dim views Sunday ofthe failed attempt to rescue theAmerican hostages in Iran lastweek.Calling the rescue attempt a“mismanaged stunt,” Morton Ka¬plan, professor of political scienceand chairman of the internationalrelations committee, said the plan was “yet another domestic, politi¬cal move” of an “indecisive” and“amateur” Administration.Kaplan criticized the use of mili¬tary force in Iran and said, “thebest way to get the captives out isjust to cool it.” He also said thatsince a decision to use force hadbeen made, he could not under¬stand ’why it was done with so lit¬tle redundancy.”“When the Soviets attempt sucha mission they have four or fivetimes the forces they need,” Ka¬plan said. “We should not have at¬ tempted this unless there was atleast an 80 percent chance of suc¬cess.”Kaplan said that the failed raidwas indicative of “a team of ama¬teurs who don’t know what theyare doing. Carter has had no con¬ception of anything since the firstday he took office.”The Iranian situation has “beenmishandled from the beginning,”Kaplan said. “If we were going totake in the shah we should havedone so after he was deposed. ButTurn to Page 9 Morris JanowitzThe Chicago Maroon“Solitary, singing in the West, I strike up for a new world —Walt WhitmanVol. 89, No. 49 Tne university of Chicagonil m. v?raimi; l uiHouse clears bill toreenact registrationBy Jeff CaneEfforts to revive military draftregistration for 19- and 20-year oldmen made further progress lastTuesday when the House of Repre¬sentatives voted to provide $13.3million for the resumption of mili¬tary service registration.The final House vote was 219-180,closer than some supporters of reg¬istration had predicted. Congress¬man Bennet Stewart (D-Ill.) of theFirst Congressional District,which includes Hyde Park, votedagainst the funding proposal. Ele¬ven of the 24 Illinois Representa¬tives, most of them Republicans,voted against the proposal, whileten supported the bill.Under current law, the Presidenthas the authority to resume draftregistration for men, but needsfunds from Congress to do so. Ifpassed by the Senate, the bill ap¬proved in the House last Tuesdaywould transfer $13.3 million fromthe Air Force personnel account tofund President Carter’s registra¬tion program.The funding proposal may go tothe Senate within two weeks, butwith summer recess loomingahead, Senator Mark Hatfield’s(R-Oregon) threat to filibuster thebill may prevent it from being con¬sidered before adjournment.If the bill is brought up in theSenate and runs up against a fili¬buster, there is a possibility thatenough Senators would vote forcloture, thus cutting off debate.Sixty votes are needed to end de¬bate.It may not be possible to findthose sixty votes quickly, however,because much debate is expectedin the Senate. Tuesday’s Housevote came after prolonged andemotional debate.If approved by the Senate, thebill would require every man born in 1960 and 1961 to go to his localpost offices and fill out a registra¬tion card sometime this summer.An aide to Senator Adlai Steven¬son III, (D-Ill.) said that Stevensonwould vote for draft registration.In a written statement, Stevensonsaid that although he believes that“compulsory registration in peace¬time runs against the grain of ourhistory ... given the recent aggres¬sive conduct of the Soviet Union, Ibelieve that registration would bean appropriate signal that we in¬tend to defend out political and eco¬nomic interests.”Stevenson’s statement also saidthat he favored registration ofwomen. He noted that he had beena supporter of the volunteer army,and said that he had not yet decid¬ed whether he would support apeacetime draft.Senator Charles Percy tR-Ill.)issued a statement two weeks agoin favor of registration, but hecould not be reached for furthercomment.Responding to the House vote, agroup of Chicago anti-draft organi¬zation, coordinated by the ChicagoCoalition Against Registration andthe Draft (CARD) announcedTurn to Page 9ThousandsBy Rebecca LillianWashington, April 26 — Close to40,000 demonstrators from aroundthe nation converged on thegrounds of the Washington Monu¬ment Saturday to protest the proli¬feration of nuclear power andweapons.Barry Commoner, environmen¬talist and Citizens Party Presi¬dential candidate told thedrenched crowd, “I want to thank © Copyright 1980 The Chicago Maroon t Tuesday, April 29, 1980DivinityBy Andrew PatnerFranklin (Chris) Gamwell hasbeen appointed to a five year termas dean of the University DivinitySchool effective July 1, 1980. Hesucceeds Joseph Kitagawa, whowill return to full-time teachingand research in the Divinity Schooland the department of Far Easternlanguages and civilizations.Gamwell is currently associateprofessor of ethics and society inthe Divinity School and director ofthe field education program for theprofessional ministry students inthe school.Gamwell was recommended bya faculty search committeechaired by Professor Brian Ger-rish that also included professorsAnne Carr, Martin Marty, FrankReynolds, David Tracy, and Anth¬ony Yu. Gerrish said the searchcommittee had been meeting sincelast Autumn quarter and that its“thorough” search had looked forcandidates “from both inside andoutside” the school.Gamwell received a bachelor’sdegree in economics from YaleUniversity in 1959 and a Bachelorof Divinity from the Union Theo¬logical Seminary in New York. Hewas ordained a minister in theUnited Presbyterian Church in1963 and from 1963 to 1966 he waspastor of the Church of the HolyTrinity of the West Side ChristianParish, an inner city congregationon Chicago’s West Side.He received his master’s degreefrom the Divinity School in 1970and his doctorate in 1973. Whiledoing his academic work he stud¬ied with Alvin Pitcher and Schu¬bert Ogden. He has a special inter¬est in philosophical and theologicalethics and their relation to political school dean namedFranklin Gamwellthought, especially to Americanpolitical problems.He was an instructor in the Di¬vinity School from 1971 to 1973, andfrom 1973 to 1975 he was an assis¬tant professor at ManhattanvilleCollege in Westchester County,New York. From 1975 to 1979 hewas a philanthropic advisor to theRockefeller family in New YorkCity. He returned to the faculty ofthe Divinity School in September of1979.Gamwell said that he was “quitesurprised” by the appointment.“I owe a great deal to the Divin¬ity School and I have a great dealof esteem and love for the school,”he said. The school has had only twodeans in the past 25 years. JeraldBrauer served as dean for 15 yearsbeginning in 1955 and Joseph Kita¬gawa will complete his tenth yearas dean when he leaves the postthis June.The Divinity School is consi¬dered one of the finest theologicalschools in the world and its facultyis one of the most distinguished atthe University. “The faculty issimply unrivalled among theologi¬cal schools,” Gamwell said.Anthony Yu, a member of thesearch committee and a formerclassmate of Gamwell praised thedean-designate.“He has a tremendous capacityfor leadership.” Yu said. “He hasnot only done excellent work but hehas also lived his special field inChristian social and personalethics. He has had tremendous so¬cial concerns and he has been anactivist in the very best sense.“All the faculty members haverecognized his special gift of prag¬matism tempered with very hu¬mane and visionary qualities,” Yusaid.Outgoing Dean Kitagawa saidthat Gamwell brings a “happycombination of different talents,interests, and experiences” to theschool. “He is young, well educat¬ed, and idealistic and he has donevery well in all of his experiences.”Kitagawa said.Kitagawa will return to teachingand to the completion of two booksthat he has been working on forseveral years. The first is a histori¬cal treatment of various religiousand aesthetic experiences involv¬ing holiness and beauty in JapanThe second will deal with recentdevelopments in Asian and East¬ern religionsmarch against nukes in D.C.you all for coming out and gettingyour feet wet in order to changehistory.” The crowd remained atthe afternoon-long rally despite acontinuous chilling rain.The Coalition for a Non-NuclearWorld, sponsor of the march, hasfive basic goals: 1) an end to nu¬clear power proliferation, 2) anend to the production, storage anduse of atomic weapons; 3) an en¬ergy-economy built around safe,clean, inexpensive, and renewable energy sources; 4) an economybuilt on the guarantee of a job forevery American; and 5) a commit¬ment to honor those treaties madebetween the U S. government andthe native American people. Manyof America’s uranium deposits lieon land governed by native Ameri¬cans.Several participants spontan¬eously added the failed attempt torescue the hostages in Iran to theirlist of complaints. “We are obviously in the handsof very irresponsible men,” saidDr. Helen Caldicott, Australian pe¬diatrician and president of Physi¬cians for Social Responsibility.In a later speech. Caldicott expli¬citly detailed the effects of radia¬tion on children and fetuses Offi¬cial statistics can be meaningless,she charged, since the governmentarbitrarily decides where andwhen and if at all to test for radia-Turn to Page 94--( aC t <4>yTHE BULLETINOF THE ATOMIC SCIENTISTSwANNOUNCESAn International EssayCompetitionIn honor of its founding Editor, Eugene Rabinowitch, theBulletin of the Atomic Scientists and the Albert Einstein Fund' offer a $5000.00 prize for the best essay onHow to Eliminatethe Threat of Nuclear WarThirty-five years after the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki,the danger of nuclear war is greater than at any other time. Fivenations have nuclear arsenals and many more are on thethreshold.The Editors and Directors of the Bulletin believe that once theseweapons are used the ensuing war will be mankind's last and willmark the disappearance of our civilization. We appeal to thoseindividuals born after Hiroshima to address the issues of peaceand survival.Mail Your Essay toThe Rabinowitch Essay CompetitionThe Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists1020-24 East 58th StreetChicago, Illinois 60637 USAAdditional copies of this announcementare available at the above address Competition RequirementsT he Competition is restric ted to indi¬viduals born on or after August 6, 1945Contestants must submit an original andthree copies of an English language essaynot to exr eed 4()(X) wordsA self-addressed envelope and returnpostage must be included with each entryI he contestant must submit a statementgiving the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientistsfirst and exclusive publication rights forone year from date of submissionEntries must be postmarked bySeptember 15, 1980 Review ProceduresThe Bulletin Editors and Editorial Councilwill review all essays The final decisionwill be made by an international andindependent jury whose members will beselected by the board of directors.The Award$5000 00The Rabinowitch Award Essay will bepublished in the january 1981 Bulletinof the Atomic ScientistsALL ENTRIES MUST BE POST-MARKEDON OR BE TORE SEPTEMBER 15, 19802—The Chicago Maroon, Tuesday, April 29, 1980NewsbriefsWalk with IsraelFor the third consecutive year the HydePark-Kenwood Council of Jewish Organiza¬tions will sponsor the Walk with Israel onSunday May 4. The walk will start with reg¬istration at 8 am at Congregation RodfeiZedek, 5200 S. Hyde Park Blvd. It will pro¬ceed along 57th Street and the Lake Michi¬gan Bike Path to Michael Reese Hospital.Walkers will then return along the lakefrontRabbi Daniel Leifer leads Israel walkto KAM Isaiah Israel Congregation, ChicagoSinai Congregation. Hillel House and finallythe Drexel Home for the Aged in Wood-lawn.This year’s walk has been organized withmuch help by high school and college stu¬dents. At the opening ceremony there will beIsraeli dancing, and buttons and balloonswill be distributed. Anyone interested inwalking or sponsoring a walker should callYaffa Kosloff at 924-4470 or the Hyde ParkJCC at 363-2770.Repubs meetA Hyde Park Republican official will bethe featured speaker at a meeting of the Col¬lege Republican organization this Thurs¬day.The talk by the unnamed local official is the first in a series of appearances the groupplans to sponsor during the remainder of thequarter. He will speak Thursday at 7:30 pmon the second floor of Ida Noyes Hall. A reg¬ular business meeting will follow the presen¬tation. Both meetings are open to all.Housing forum set“Housing with People in Mind” will be thetopic of a community forum sponsored byUniversity Church, Hyde Park Union, andUnited Church of Hyde Park on ThursdayMay 1 at 7 pm at University Church/BlueGargoyle at 57th and University.The forum will open with speeches byHarvey Lord, minister of UniversityChurch, “Why Churches and Synagoguesare Alarmed about Housing,” and LarryBloom, fifth ward alderman, “It’s GettingHarder to Find Housing in Hyde Park.” Fol¬lowing these presentations, small-groupworkshops will address the particular inter¬ests of those who buy housing, those whorent, students’ housing options, and thosewho are concerned about the quality of lifein our community. Among the resource per¬sons will be Steve Perkins, a South Shorecommunity developer, Robert Lucas, exec¬utive director of the Kenwood-Oakland Com¬munity Organization (KOCO), Don Ervin,an officer in the cooperative housing move¬ment, and a representative from the RehabNetwork.Carthaginian barbequeAfficianados of child sacrifice will be in¬terested in an illustrated lecture on “ChildSacrifics at Carthage” tonight at 7 pm inBreasted Hall of the Oriental Institute.Lawrence Stager, an associate professorin the department of Near Eastern lan¬guages and civilizations, will deliver the lec¬ture.Stager believes the economic beneiftsrather than the religious significance ofchild sacrifice may be the reason that thepractice flourished for over five centuries inCarthage.For the past six years. Stager has beenstudying a burial ground located within theancient city of Carthage. Carthage, a oncepowerful city located on the North Coast ofAfrica in what is now Tunisia, was loathedby Greek and Roman writers for, amongother things, its brutality and human sacri¬fices. Rome and Cathage also fought againsteach other in the Punic wars during thethird and second centuries B.C.E.Hither & Yon Lawrence Stager with Carthaginian urnIn excavations of the Carthage cemeteryfor sacrificial victims, Stager discoveredfrom the inscribed stone monuments mark¬ing the graves that it was mainly the elite —priests, politicians, artisans — not the com¬moners, who sacrificed their children. Theevidence of the burned remains found in thesmall ceramic urns reveals that in thefourth and third centuries B.C.E., the greatperiod of Carthaginian civilization, childsacrifice actually increased. Stager esti¬mates that during these two centuries atleast 20,000 victims were sacrificed to Tanit,a Carthaginian goddess and her male con¬sort Ba’al Hamon.According to Stager, this new informationreveals the hidden logic behind the flourish¬ing practice of child sacrificing in Carth¬age: by limiting the number of inheritors ofthe wealth, the elite could maintain theirproprietary wealth and power, and still re¬ceive the blessings and favors of the gods.Infants, children, and animals — usuallylambs or kids which were acceptable substi¬tutes for children — were systematically sa¬crificed and buried in the Precinct of Tanitfor more than five centuries dating fromabout 700 B.C.E. until 146 B.C.E. In 146B.C.E. the Romans invaded and conqueredCarthage, and put an end to the sacrifice ofchildren. However, they did not end childsacrifice in the outlying settlements aroundCarthage over which they had no direct con¬trol.The lecture marks the opening of an ex¬hibit on “The Excavation of Carthage,”which will be at the Oriental Institute fromApril 29 through July 27. The museum whichis at 58th & University is open Tuesdaythrough Saturday from 10 am to 4 pm, andon Sundays from 12 noon to 4 pm. Lindsay readingVachel Lindsay’s poetry will receive anencore performance tomorrow WednesdayApril 30 at the Regenstein Library RoomA ll at 4 pm.Lindsay, whose centennary is being ob¬served this year, lived in Hyde Park for sev¬eral years and composed many of his poemshere. He often sought inspiration at the Uni¬versity Church at 57th and University.Florence Lowdon Miller, Walter Blair,Tim Erwin, Maggie Hivnor, and DaveShields presented a standing room onlyreading of Lindsay’s work at the Fortnightlyof Chicago earlier in the year and they willrepeat their reading tomorrow with RobertStreeter acting as master of ceremonies.Yearbooks on saleWhat’s blue, doesn’t have a title, has adoodle on the front cover, has lots of quotesfrom famous anthropologists, and is stuffedwith pictures?The 1980 University of Chicago yearbookhas arrived — and on time, at that. Although100 of the 600 copies have already been sold,the remaining copies will be on sale atvarious campus locations for $10 a copy dur¬ing the coming weeks.Persons who preordered yearbooks or se¬nior portraits may pick them up in the year¬book office from 8:30 to 10:30 am Mondayand Wednesday, and from 6 to 10 pm onMonday. In addition, people can orderglossy 8x10 copies of any photograph fromthe yearbook. Copies of black and whitephotos are S3 apiece, while color photo¬graphs are $5. Photographs can be orderedat the yearbook office in Ida Noyes Hall.By David GlocknerCurb jocksIvy League colleges should reduce theiremphasis on varsity athletics, according toYale University president A. Bartlett Gia-matti.In an address this month to Yale alumniGiamatti called for shorter varsity football,basketball, and hockey seasons, eliminationof post-season competition, a requirementthat each coach work with more than onesport, and a ban on all forms of athletic re¬cruiting other than on-campus visits by ath¬letes.Giamatti criticized Ivy League schoolsfor allowing athletic programs to grow outof proportion and said that many IvyLeague members encouraged their athletesto “spend far, far too much time ... on ath¬letic pursuits.”Giamatti made similar proposals in writ¬ing to the presidents of the seven other IvyLeague universities in December. So far,the league has not taken any formal actionon the recommendations.Cops stop sit inPolice ended a week-long student occupa¬tion of the University of Massachusetts atBoston administration building this monthby arresting more than 35 students. A groupof 20 had camped on the third floor of thebuilding for seven days to protest the firingof a student affairs officer and the universi¬ty’s refusal to grant tenure to two black fac¬ ulty members. The students had also sought51 percent student representation on all uni¬versity committees affecting student con¬cerns.Responding to the demands. University ofMassachusetts chancellor Robert Corriganoffered to bring the dismissal of the studentaffairs officer before a grievance board andto study new forms of student government.He refused, however, to yield on the issue oftenure for the two faculty members. Theprotestors ridiculed Corrigan’s statementand continued their occupation.University police attempted to force theprotestors from the building by turning offheat and ventilating systems and prevent¬ing food from reaching the protestors. Thearrest came as about 50 students pried opena door and tried to bring food to the group.At that time, police gave everyone in thebuilding the choice of leaving or facing ar¬rest. Although almost half of the group left,the 35 remaining students were arrested.The following day, 29 students were eachsentenced to ten days in jail and ordered topay $75 in court costs. Leaders of the protestsay they will appeal the sentences.New Mich. pres.The University of Michigan installedeconomist Harold Shapiro as its new presi¬dent this month, and University of Chicagopresident Hanna Gray showed up to helpwith the festivities.Speaking as a representative of privateuniversities. Gray reminded Shapiro that a past University of Michigan president hadlong ago come to Chicago to warn of thedangers of overemphasizing athletics, andsuggested that a reciprocal warning mightbe in order. She also warned Shapiro thathis job will be more difficult than those ofhis predecessors.During his part of the program, Shapirotold the audience of 3000 that a universityhas the twin responsibilities of criticizingthe present condition of society and of pro¬viding means of improving it. Shapiro alsosaid that professional education must aid“in the extension of knowledge” as well aspreparing students for particular careers.NU take security steps“I am very sorry that it took somethinglike this to make people take some positiveaction,” a Northwestern University rapevictim wrote after university officials an¬nounced a series of measures to combatrape.The improvements in campus securitywere ordered four days after the womanwas abducted on campus and raped by twomen. She had been walking with a friend,who escaped the attackers.Northwestern president Robert Strotztold students that the university would hireadditional campus patrol officers, improvelighting on campus, install additional emer¬gency phones on campus, and discourageoutsiders from loitering on campus.Despite Strotz’s promises to the contrary,several student leaders at Northwestern fear that the measures are only temporaryand will be withdrawn after the furor overthe most recent incident abates. The dayafter the new security measures were an¬nounced. five hundred students attended arally sponsored by the NU student govern¬ment to protest the rape and demand im¬provements in campus security. The vic¬tim’s letter was reaed at the rally.Temple Athletics hitEight female athletes have filed a classaction suit against Temple University inPhiladelphia demanding an end to practiceswhich allegedly discriminate againstwomen athletes.According to information in the suit, 42percent of the university’s varsity athletesare women, but women's teams receiveonly 13 percent of the toal athletic budget.The suit also charges that Temple has re¬peatedly ignored warnings from its own fac¬ulty members and administrators that thepresent structure of intercollegiate athleticprograms discriminates against women.Among the specific inequalities alleged inthe suit are that the women’s gymnasticteam is required to use old and unsafeequipment while the men’s team uses betterequipment; that women only have onelocker room, fifteen minutes away by carfrom the university stadium, and which canonly be reached by going through a men’slocker room; and that women are requiredto wash their own uniforms, while men arenot.The Chicago Maroon, Tuesday, April 29, 1980—3EXHIBITGRAPHIC WORKSOF ISRAELWORKS BY: 29 Israeli ArtistsNOEMISMILANSKYPINHAS COHEN-GANGAD ULLMA VIMICHAEL EISEMANIGALTUMARKIN .May 1 -31,1980HILLEL HOUSE5715 WOODLAWN AVENUECelebratingIsrael’s32ndBirthday WALKMWITH MSRAELSunday, May 4,1980HYDE PARK-KENWOODWALK WITH ISRAELREGISTRATION—8:00 a.m.Congregation Rodfei Zedek5200 S. Hyde Park Blvd., ChicagoWALK • HELP • SPONSORWALK CARDS available at Hillel House-5715 WoodlawnFOR INFORMATION CALL: WALK CENTER(Hyde Park JCC), 363-2770Help Israel’s People Through theJEWISH UNITED FUND—ISRAEL EMERGENCY FUNDA Project Of The Hyde Park-Kenwood Council Of Jewish Organizations In Cooperation With The Chicago Jewish Youth Council And TheYoung Leadership Division Of The Jewish United Fund. Participating Organizations Include Akiba-Schechter Jewish Day School: B'naiB rith Hillel Foundation At The University Of Chicago Chicago Sinai Congregation Congregation Rodfei Zedek Council For Jewish El¬derly (South Side) Drexel Home Ezra Habonim, South Side Chapter Gustadt Horner Chapter, B nai B rith, Hyde Park Jewish Commun¬ity Center K A M —Isaiah Israel Congregation Michael Reese Hospital And Medical Center Neivelt Post Jewish War Veterans: ORTPioneer Women Kadima Chapter South Side Hadassah South Side Lodge Bnai Brith South Side School Of Jewish Studies t ESCAPE TO JAPAN^ Spend this summer with a Japanese familyIndependent Study Credit Available J%OLIO *Call Jim Popkin at (312) 332-6555J or write to:Trans Lingual Inc., 8 S. Michigan, Chicago IL 60603Sponsored by Trans Lingual Inc./Japan Air LinesASHUM-AMSASeminar Series 1979-80Program in the Arts and Sciences Basic to HumanBiology and MedicineandAmerican Medical Students’ AssociationPresentProfessor J. S. Weiner, D.Sc., F.R.C.PThe University of Londonspeaking on the topicThe Human Ecologyofthe SavannaWEDNESDAY, APRIL 30, 19807:30 P.M.HARPER MEMORIAL 130Chicago Review Speaker Series—presents—TESS GALLAGHERAuthor of Instructions to the Double and Under Stars, awarded the 1979Voertman Poetry Award from the Texas Institute of Letters; currentlyteaching at the University of Arizona Poetry Center.Gallagher reads from her work onTHURSDAY. MAY 1. 8 P.M.Renaissance Society Bergman Gallery, Cobb HallUniversity oi Chicago S811 EllisReadings are without ticket and without charge.MABApplication Deadline FridayPick up applications in Ida Noyes 210Open to all StudentsMajor Activities Board4—The Chicago Maroon, Tuesday, April 29, 1980Life with a HyenaBy Philip MaherWhen the hyena’s teeth closed on his arm, Rob Medinamust have wondered why he ever signed up for the expedi¬tion. The hyena was drugged however, and its bone crush¬ing jaws did not do their work. Medina was also not toohappy the time hungry safari ants swarmed over his body,but ants are easier to shake off than hyenas.Last summer Medina, a third year behavioral sciencestudent in the college, was a volunteer on a project inves¬tigating the behavior of spotted hyenas in the Masai MaraGame Reserve in Kenya. The project was sponsored byEarthwatch, a foundation that supplies research pro¬grams with funds and volunteers.Hyenas are one of the most misunderstood animals inthe world, according to Medina. African folklore caststhem in the role of devil or buffoon, he said, while Westerneyes see the hyena as a slinking scavenger, too unwillingand cowardly to kill its own food.“Actually hyenas are very clean, very intelligent ani¬mals,” Medina said, “and they are excellent hunters.”One scientist’s observations have shown that lions sca¬venge from a hyena’s kill much more often than the com¬monly held reverse notion. This is not to say that hyenasare wasteful, said Medina. “After hyenas are throughwith a kill, there's usually a sliver of bone and a smallpuddle of blood left. That’s all.”The hyena’s dreadful leer comes from his well-devel¬oped jaw. The sharp front teeth puncture tough flesh, themiddle teeth crush bones, and the back teeth sever ten¬dons and cartilage.“We had just darted and tagged one, and we were tak¬ing him to a dry river bed where we could hide him frompredators until he woke up. I was in the back of the LandRover, holding him in my arms, but its an incrediblybumpy ride because of all the aardvark burrows. Mean¬while the drug was wearing off and the hyena’s eyes keptsnapping open. When his jaw closed on my arm I nearly hit the roof. But we got him there ok.”A dry river bed was also the source of the safari ant fias¬co. The team lay the drugged hyena smack in the center ofan ant trail, and in seconds, hyena and scientists alikewere seething with ants. “We threw that hyena in the backof the truck, drove off, got out, and started tearing off ourclothes.” Medina smiled about that episode.The Masai Mara is one of Kenya’s world famous gameparks, teeming with wildlife. Elephants, giraffes, zebras,impalas, lions, baboons, wildebeests, and of course,hyenas roamed steadily around the scientific team. Me¬dina snapped photographs of impalas, a big bull elephantthat wandered into camp, and lions with blood stainedmaws toying with a wounded wildebeest. Even these didnot begin to capture the scope of the savannah, he said.“Everywhere you look, for 360 degrees, there are herds of animals.”“Out in the field you have to stay near the truck,” Me¬dina explained, “especially with lions near. They haven’tlearned yet that people and their trucks are separatethings. If they found out people were meat, we’d haveproblems.”Hyenas too are wary of humans. Getting close enough todart them with tranquilizers is not easy. “You can’t chasethem down in the truck because they’re too fast and theground is too bumpy,” said Medina. Instead the team hidin a tree in an area baited with the scent of a dead wil¬debeest. Sure enough, the hyenas came, but darting themproperly is also not easy. “You don’t want the dart to goall the way through their skin, but you don’t want it tobounce off either. It’s hard because the gun has only three ♦different powers. You can either load it ahead of time andhope the hyena comes within range, or you can wait toload and run the risk of scaring them off. in six weeks, weonly darted five hyenas.”A successfully darted hyena is tagged for identificationpurposes. A blood sample is taken and a quick examina¬tion made before the hyena is rushed off to a dry river bedwhile the drug wears off. The rest of the team’s time isspent sitting near hyena dens, observing hyenic behavior.“That’s the boring part,” said Medina. “They don’t do allthat much, and we re not even sure how much our pre¬sence affected their behavior. Once we were sitting therewatching and a gang of tourists came roaring up in a truckand jumped out right in front of us. They thought we werewatching elephants.”Still, Medina loved the experience and through it hasgained direction in his academic pursuits. “I only wish Ihad done it before.” he said. “But at least now I knowwhat I want to do.”Most of all, however, he learned the truth about thismisunderstood animal. “They make great pets. I met aguy over there who had one for a pet. and was looking foranother. I wouldn’t mind having one — but I don’t knowthat he’d be too happy around here.”Deliberations of a ProspectiveWith the passing of the recent prospective weekends,our man in the dorm fondly remembers his own delibera¬tions as a high school senior.By John ShamisI had never thought too highly of the University of Chi¬cago. As far as I was concerned, it was a bunch of high-rise buildings sticking out from between run-down tene¬ments. A place where sex-starved geeks with calculatorson their belts wore plastic framed glasses and spent fouryears avoiding muggers as they hurried from theirclasses to the library.I only knew one person who attended the University. Hetold me that it was unsafe: unsafe to cross the Midway;unsafe to walk home from the library at night; and unsafeto leave Hyde Park unless in a car with doors securelylocked. He spoke of professors who didn’t give a damnabout their students; and of getting a ‘C’ in a class inwhich he had a 9(1 average. It was no surprise to anyonethat I didn’t consider the U of C.When a representative of the University of Chicagocame to my Chappaqua. New York high school. I went tohear him because I really was not up to listening to myEnglish teacher. The representative said, “Before you de¬cide not to consider Chicago, go out and take a look at it.”I more or less dismissed that idea and went to my nextclass.A few weeks later (it was still October) I had convincedmy parents to take me to visit Oberlin (my first choice)and after much tactical argumentation (see How to WinFriends and Influence Parents) I showed that it was onlythree inches on the map between Ohio and Chicago, andbesides I had never been to Chicago. In truth, I only want¬ed to look at Northwestern; but by this time, one of mybest friends was attending the U of C and I knew that if Ididn’t drop by he would never speak to me again (Thiswas fairly tempting). In any case, I was not impressed inthe least with Northwestern. I was too preppie and peopleseemed to feel that college was a place to hibernate forfour years until they fulfilled the requirements for a de¬gree.As we drove by the Museum of Science and Industry, Istarted wondering whether he had made a wrong turnsomewhere: I didn’t see any slums or tenements. Finally,we arrived at the University and parked by Pick Hall. Iwas supposed to attend a class with my friend at oneo’clock. We walked into the second floor classroom. I re¬member saying to myself, “chairs with the UC insig¬nia...so that’s what the Rockefellers spent so much moneyon.”Professor Marvin Zonis walked in the room and theclass snapped awake. Zonis spoke of the land he owned inVermont and how it related to Friedman’s economictheories. I left the room after the hour was up with mymouth hanging open thinking to myself, “That’s whatlearning is all about!”My interview was next and the admissions office mademe fill out one of those little white cards which asked formy board scores and class rank. For a moment. 1 wrastempted to lie but I quickly said. “Who wants to go hereanyway.” So I proudly wrote down 510 verbal. 690 math. Class Rank: 137 Out of 295. I gave the interviewer mycard. He looked at it and gave me one of those “what thehell are you wasting my time for?” looks. I respondedwith a “the feeling is mutual” look. Soon, we were talkingabout dozens of things I knew absolutely nothing about:art, culture, why I wanted to attend the University. By theend of the hour he said. “I really didn’t think you belongedhere at first, but now I more than encourage you toapply.” Before I left, my friend took my folks and me tothe C-Shop. This almost convinced me that my originalopinions of the University were correct. Nonetheless, Italked all the way through Indiana of my new enthusiasmfor the University of Chicago.By April. I had been accepted to both Chicago and Ober¬lin. and soon was on a train to Cleveland. As the trainstopped at Municipal Stadium in Cleveland (a short trip toOberlin), I looked out the window and said to myself.“This might be my cultural center for fouryears...HELP!!!” Nonetheless. I spent a day and a half atOberlin which seemed to me to be a cross between a hicktown and a truck stop. When I got on the train tor the re¬mainder of my second journey, I saw one of my goodfriends. It surprised him. that is. you don’t expect to seesomebody you know get on a train in Elvira. Ohio.When we arrived in Chicago at Union Station I waswearing a three-piece suit w ith cow boy boots, a backpack,and a cowboy hat which made me look over seven feet tall.I thought it would amuse my friend as it was my costumefor a play I was in back home. We crossed State when itw as five o’clock. My friend and I agreed that we had bet¬ter call the admissions office to be sure that they wouldwait for us. We walked into a building near the IC andwent over to a pay phone. A woman, who was using thephone next to where I was standing saw my outfit. dropped the phone in mid-sentence and began to laughhysterically. A number of people gathered around andlooked at me as if I was trying to assault the poorwoman.After we got off the IC at 59th Street, we walked towardthe admission office. As we passed the Lab School, a littlekid came up to me and said. “Are you going to go here?”We shrugged and he responded, “Fred Brooks is mydaddy!” Prospie week-end wasn't anything special Iasked professors and students which they would choose.Oberlin or Chicago; all favored Oberlin. We walkedaround a bit. but it was rainy and everything smelled ofGary.As the time for my decision neared. I called up myfriend in Chicago every time I had a question Whenever Icalled, his friend would yell into the phone. “Whateveryou do. don t come here! Go to Smith, go to Holyoke, go toVasser. but don't come here!”In the second week of May. I ran into one of my sister'sfriends in a bus station outside of Baltimore on my way toWashington. D C. I asked him where he thought I shouldgo. He said that I ought to go to Chicago. I said. “O K., butI’m holding you responsible.”He has since left the country and is teaching English inthe rural areas of Mainland China.Cambodia dialogue (Cont’d)In last Friday’s letters' section, members of CambodiaRelief Now objected to the Citation in last Tuedav'sMaroon of a Newsweek article that had suggested that themajor relief organizations in Cambodia were taking a badmisstep in using an airlift instead of a "land bridge” fromNorth Chan to provide relief shipments to Cambodia. Theauthors also accused “some members of the press” of“needlessly blunt(ing)” relief efforts.In further checking out Newsweeks' story, we contactedBarbara Fuller, who visited Thailand. Vietnam, and Cam¬bodia during three weeks last February. She stated thatlast summer the Red Cross had decided not to use the landbridge from North Chan because (1) many of the roadsand bridges were in disrepair. (2) Pol Pot’s guerilla forceswere intercepting some of the food intended for Cambo¬dia's starving, and 13) the supplies would have had to passthrough an area still being fought over by Pol Pot andHeng Samrin forces. Further contradicting the Newsweekarticle. Fuller added that the major relief organizationsare using the air lift only on an emergency basis to importrice and that two of the three main supply routes to Phnom Penh are by water (barges from the MekongRiver and boats from Kampong Som Harbor).Despite Newsweek s apparently erroneous article, theCambodians still face daunting problems, some of thempolitical. Anthony Lewis of the New York Times said in arecent column that the “Vietnamese-backed regime inPhnom Penh has not allowed relief to come in by Thailandand has been slow to admit outside experts.” He addedthat the Thailand government may close its borders or“even push the refugees back across ” Fuller also notedthat Pol Pot’s murderous regime (as well as U S. bomb¬ings) did much to destroy the infrastructure of availablelocal officials who could help expedite the relief effort.In noting Cambodia’s problems in distributing aid. how¬ever. we are in no way implying that citizens should with¬hold their contributions to relief efforts which, as we notedlast Tuesday, "continue to be of paramount importance.”As the Economist of London put it. “Feed hungry Cam¬bodians now . ask the questions later ”— Mark WallachThe Chicago Maroon, Tuesday, April 29, 1980—5*1II* David Miller6—The Chicago Maroon, Tuesday, April 29, 1980 David Miller- \ By Mark WallachandTed ShenThis article was born, we should admit atthe outset, out of our growing frustrationwith the quality of the banks in Hyde Park.We wanted to see whether or not our feelingsof discontent were shared by many othersand if they were, to discover in exactly whatways students perceived the banks as fail¬ing. In addition to examining the history ofboth Hyde Park Bank and University Na¬tional Bank, we also wanted to look at thebranch banking laws which gives the twobanks a local monopoly and evaluate theprospects for change.In our (admittedly small) random sampleof 44 Hyde Parkers (almost all of them stu¬dents), we asked them to evaluate the banksin each of four different categories: tellerservice, checking account features such asoverdraft protection and service charges,savings account features such as interestrates and minimum deposits, and finally,ability to handle complaints. Participantswere asked to rate each service from 1 to 5with one being very poor and 5 excellent.As a rough indicator, taking 3 to be anaverage score, 13 of 17 respondents ratedUniversity National Bank below average (3thought it was average), and 19 of 26 respon¬dents thought Hyde Park Bank was belowaverage. (Some participants had had ac¬counts at both banks and some had neverbanked at either). The individual categoriesclosely followed the broader overview (noteveryone answered each category). Twentyrespondents gave University Bank’s tellerservice an average rating of 2.4, 18 gavetheir checking account features an averagerating of 1.6, 12 rated their savings accountfeatures a 2.4 and 15 rated the bank’s abilityto handle complaints a 2.3. As for Hyde ParkBank, the breakdown went like this: Tellerservice: 2.3 (19 respondents); checking ac¬count features: 2.0 (13 respondents); sav¬ings account features: 2.8 (13) and finally,ability to handle complaints: 2.6 (14). In nocase did the respondents rate a category ashigh as average (3.0).But even bevond the raw statistical evi- the account was 50 cents overdrawn, remo¬val of check cashing privileges after bounc¬ing one check, and a service charge for“early withdrawal” from a savings ac¬count, were among the many examplescited. One man reported that when a tellerhanded him a well-worn $1 bill, she told himit was in fact a $10 bill. Another woman saidthat her neighbor had been told they had towait twelve days before having access totheir checking account. Standard practice,of course, except that the neighbor’s deposithad been in cash.A few others were upset with unan¬nounced changes in policy. UniversityBank, for example, raised its minimum de¬posit for free checing from $100 to $300 andits monthly “service charge” from $2 to $4apparently without notifying some of its cus¬tomers.In addition to the pettiness, the unan¬nounced changes in policy, and the slow ser¬vice, we encountered many complaints ofincompetence. One woman reported thatwhen she tried to make a withdrawal fromher savings account, she discovered thatUNB had misplaced $900. One graduate stu¬dent said sometimes he received a record ofa check lie had written, but no returnedcheck Other months, he received the re¬turned check, but not the record of it. As forHyde Park’s automatic teller in which cus¬tomers can insert their MAC card to make awithdrawal, one woman said it took her ayear to get the card after she had applied forit. She suggested customers get married todouble their chance of receiving the card.She added that one of the first few times shetried out her new card, she had received $45after applying for a $50 withdrawal.Beyond the magnitude of their gripes,what irked many of the customers most wasthat the banks didn’t seem concerned abouttheir customers. One student said that sometellers acted like “they were doing you afavor” if you did business with them. Onecustomer of HPB said it was “like taking ablood test” to prove you were a customer.One customer of UNB said he had actuallyencountered the president of the bank in thelobby of the branch bank. “He was handingout flowers to little old ladies. When 1 went they have us bjdents and anotltected all maladded that if thlto be competitiffornia, they’dSaid another:where there ar^ing for not a lot <in line for more |switch banks.”sponse to our qujthey banked inconvenience.Surprisingly,thought it unnec|bank in Hyde p£in our survey wfall reported thatlcine Rubenstein Fdressed some qagainst her balbank’s vital role [a number of relstance, she credfdrive-in facilitiesvices (MAC) in tlmoreover, had ej|stalling limitedCo-op. Recently,one-line serviceto alleviate trailmeasures for irher, are beingalso said she wo!swer a specificrather than respctelephone intervicThe histories oilchanging naturethe trend toward!monopoly. The Hjlbusiness in 1928 u7& Trust Co. It was Ieast corner of 53 alperiod in 1933. thethe Roosevelt-imfrium. After the begrow’ steadily; an{reflected in yet arIC National Ban!moved across theA Tale of Two BaCries and Whispedence in our imperfect poll, we were sur¬prised by the depth of many people’s anger— and it didn’t seem to matter which bankthey were talking about. “I’ve never hatedan institution as violently as I do that one(HPB),” said one respondent. Anothercalled HPB “rotten with a capital R” andyet another referred to UNB’s “bloody-min¬dedness.” One woman referred to the “per¬secution complex” her bank had contribut¬ed to. Another participant who had bankedat both places said that the banks had the“impersonality of a large bank and the inef¬ficiency of a small bank.” After one studenthad finished venting his spleen, he said gra¬tefully, “Thanks for letting me gripe.”In fairness, a few people did say that theyhad had “no problems” with the banks. Onegraduate student who banks at UNB saidthat the tellers were “courteous” and thathe has “been pleased” with the bank. Evenso, some of these compliments had a back-handed flavor. Said one student who hadrated HPB’s checking features a four andUNB’s a two, “They’re (UNB) stupid in los¬ing things, but they're fairly pleasant in try¬ing to get them corrected.” He added, "1don’t fee! they’re out to rip you off except asbanks do.”Probably the most frequently aired com¬plaint referred to the slow service. Somesaid it had taken them two to three hours toopen an account and, particularly at HPB.manv said 40 to 60 minute waits in line were up to him and suggested that the bank usemore than two tellers, he gave me a broadgrin and brushed me off entirely.”common.A number of the respondents were irritat¬ed with what they perceived as the banks'pettiness. Accounts of bounced checks when Ken Sticken, a vice president of UniversityBank, answered some of the students’charges. He said that if a customer had a$1,000 savings account, for example, hewould be available for a 5V4% interest rate.He also noted that, for an additional fee, acustomer could have an “automatictransfer account” which would provideoverdraft protection or a checking account.“If we returned someone’s check for being50 cents short in their account, I would re¬verse it instantaneously,” he said. “I hopethat situation doesn’t arise very often.”More generally, he said, “A lot of peopledon’t know that they’re talking about.” Hepointed out that many people become angrywhen they can’t cash a check because of“uncollected funds,” yet this problem wouldoccur at any bank cashing an out-of-towncheck.Unwittingly, though, Sticken put hisfinger on exactly the reason behind HydeParkers’ banking w’oes. Asked if he thoughtUniversity Bank was competitive with HydePark Bank, he replied that he did. He thenadded. “I don’t think we offer any servicesthat they don’t have.” Only after thinking amoment did he say that perhaps UniversityBank could provide some services morecheaply than Hyde Park Bank as a result ofbelonging to the Federal Reserve System.Many students echoed Sticken’s tacit ad¬mission in fact Hyde Park and UniversityBank have a quasi-monopoly. “Basically, headquarters. Theidle ever since UsKenwood Nationalits move, the bank a|this time, to NationChicago. In 1956,building. Nine yearwas changed from abank. This metamo]other name change:Trust Co. The ban]identity ever sinceThe University Naof the two. It was ortor, Charles W. Hoffthe bank, called lopened for businessman of the board. Irwith Central Hydeknown run on banksminated in the Ro<March 5, 1930. whibank w as to reopention. The bank closweek later, after exjuni. The University 1one opened south oState Street. Of theonly 59 were reopening the moratorium.In 1943, the bank cversity National BaHoff sold the bank,their newly-acquirerfacelift. The bank vThree years later, thother time. It has Igroup since 1970.Dy the balls,” said several stu-ther said that the “system pro-anner of inefficiency Hethe Hyde Park banks “tr(ied)tive in another state like Cali-be out of business in a week.”“I came from a small townire a few local banks compet-)t of people. If you had to stand"e than ten minutes, you wouldIn the only unanimous re¬questions, all respondents saidin Hyde Park as a matter ofA Sticken also said that helecessary for some students toPark. Of the several studentswho banked at home by mail,hat they were satisfied. Fran-;in of Hyde Park Bank also ad-i of the complaints levelledbank. She emphasized the)le in the community and citedrecent innovations. For in-'edited the bank with the firstties and automatic teller ser-n the neighborhood. The bank,d expanded its services by in-ed banking operations in thetly, the bank also instituted ace queue in the main buildingtraffic problems. And other’ improvement according tolg contemplated. Rubensteinwould have preferred to an-fic list of written questions,esponding to the charges in a;rview.;s of the two banks show thejre of banking in Chicago and-ards consolidation and locale Hyde Park Bank opened for28 under the name of IC Bankwas then situated at the north-53 and Lake Park. For a brieft, the bank was shut down by-imposed nationwide morato-ie bank reopened, it began to; and its new prosperity waset another name change: theBank. Three years later, its the street into its presentinks:ers. The building had been sittinge its previous owner, the HP-ional Bank, folded in 1932. Withbank again changed its name;Jational Bank of Hyde Park inL956, the bank purchased its; years later, the bank charterfrom a national bank to a stateietamorphosis resulted in an-nange: the Hyde Park Bank &le bank has maintained thissince.sity National Bank is the olderwas organized by a local real-I. Hoff, in 1918. One year later,lied University State Bank,isiness with Hoff as its chair-ard. In 1924, the bank mergedHyde Park Bank. The well-banks started in 1930 and cul-be Roosevelt moratorium of0. which proclaimed that no■eopen unless in sound condi-ik closed, then reopened oneter expiration of the moratori-ersity State Bank was the onlyauth of the Loop and east ofOf the 202 banks in Chicago,reopened immediately follow-onum.aank changed its name to Uni-lal Bank. Seven years later,bank. The new owners gavesquired building an extensiveaank was sold again in 1967iter, the bank wfas sold yet an-has been run bv the same Part of the blame for theinefficiency of the two banks can be laidsquarely on Illinois’s branch banking regu¬lation. This law stipulates that a bank be al¬lowed only two branches and they must bewithin a two-mile radius of the main bank. Itwas passed in a time when downstate legis¬lators feared the encroachment of wealthierChicago banks. Many other states had theirown versions of this law' to restrict branchbanking, but currently Illinois is one of thefew states which still retain it. Recently,bills to repeal or alter this law have comecloser and closer to passing. It appears thatrestrictions on branch banking will such belifted. When that time comes, as one of itscustomers gleefully points out, “the HydePark Bank will be wiped off the map bydowntown banks.”We used this opportunity to air the pub¬lic’s indignation at Hyde Park banks. Thenext move, however, is up to the banks.They can either improve markedly or facethe fate of the dinosaurs. — We asked respondents to rate the banks on a scale of 1 to 5 with one being very poorfive excellent. This was their response.University National Bank andRating 1 2 3 4 5Teller Service 10% 50% 20% 20% 0%Checking Account Features 33% 33% 22% 6% 6%Savings Account Features 25% 33% 17% 17% 8%Handling ComplaintsHyde Park Bank 27% 27% 33% 13% 0%Rating 1 2 3 4 5Teller Service 32% 21% 32% 16% 0%Checking Account Features 46% 23% 23% 8% 0%Savings Account Features 31% 23% 8% 31% 8%Handling Complaints 21% 29% 29% 14% 7%Financial StatementsASSETS UDH UNBCash and Due from Banks 4,670,6*2 3,069,052U. S. Gov't Securities 11,000,090 6,130,604Obligations of U. S. Gov't Agencies 11,050 6,773,482State and Municipal Bonds 20,705,072 100,159Other Investments 142,270 674,956Federal Funds Sold (n/a) 1,930,000Loans (Exiluding Unearned Income) 00,372,047 14,266,068Less: Allowance for Possible losses (710,650) (116,214)Bank Premises & Lquipraent 2,536,061 577,**66Investment in Affiliated Companies 500,760 (n/a)Other Assets 1,943,392 006,622» 121,241^616 34,132,237LIABILITIESDeposits: Demand 33,617,909 13,426,950Tiipe 74,713,607 17,660,175Other Liabilities 0,211,727 461,102Capital Stock 2,400,000 400,000Surplus 3,000,000 l,600,OQo| Undivided Profits 1,290,453 541,950121,241,616 “34,132,237Operating incomeInterest and Fees on Loans 6,651,257 1,745,450total Interest on Investment Securities 2,006,5** 1,005,414Other Operating Income 1,220,404 254,12612,076,320 3,004,992! operating expenseSalaries & Employee Benefits 2,336,64* 700,669Interest on Deposits 5,200,524 943,196Provision for Loan Losses 640,000 75,000Other Operating Expenses 2,093,30.2 . . 737,70610,070,0^ 2*-o2,773NET INCOME 1,242,370 292,794—2 jThe Chicago Maroon, Tucsoay, April 29, i -7U.S.D.A. CHOICERIB ROASTU.S.D.A. CHOICE 111RIB STEAKU.S.D.A. CHOICESHOULDERIAMB CHOPSGRADE ACHICKENSADDLE LEGSFROZEN MR. G.STEAK FRYPOTATOES BAGCOUNTRY DELIGHT LOW FATCOTTAGE o<)CHEESE 77 79Lb.99Lb.89Lb.4949cLb.c1 6 oz.BUMBLE BEETUNARED LABELSHORTENING 791 4942 oz.LIBBYS DEEP BROWNBEANSSALE RUNS APRIL 30-MAY 3iWJrttCFINER FOODSSERVING53rd PRAIRIE SHORESKIMBARK PLAZA 2911 VERNONWhere You Are A Stranger But Once! Jfii TheTHIS SUNDAY, MAY 4th at 8:00 P.M.in theLAW SCHOOL AUDITORIUM,Old-time CountryMusic that com¬bines elements ofmountain music,country blues, ca-jun, bluegrass &ragtime to createa dynamic sound,fresh and excitingyet solidly rootedin tradition. Tickets availableat theReynolds ClubBox Office orat the door$3.50$2.50 with UCIDTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOTHE COMMITTEE ON SOCIAL THOUGHT( THE FRANK KNIGHT LECTURESHIP FUND)THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESSannounce a series of lecturesbyJOHN SPARROWAll Souls College, OxfordTHE ONE AND THE MANYDilemmas of DemocracyThursdav. Ma> I • ALTRUISM FOR ALLihursdav. \ia>« THE NEW REPUBLIC:The Old DebateThursdav. Mas i5 EDUCATION AND RESEARCHrhursda). via» u ACQUISITIVE EQUALITY4:00 P.M.CLASSICS BUILDING, ROOM 101010 East 59th Street NEW 2 drawer Wes $59.00NEW 6-ft. folding tables $49.OnBRAND EQUIPMENT& SUPPLY CO.8600 COMMERCIAL AVENUERE 4-21 1 1 OPEN MON.-PRI.3:30-5:00SATURDAYS9:00-3:00. ^ , x U)oodl&tA)r\ ^( in the Uni -ton &n Chvrch )<5-Corowtiop of ttatommttenaiThe romance and enchantment of the Arthurianlegends will be captured on Saturday when a kingis crowned in Rockefeller Chapel.There will be Medieval-style combat onthe Midway. 9:30 a.m. -1:00p.m.Contests and displays in RockefellerNoon - 2:30 p.m.Promptly at 3:00,the Coronation ceremonywill begin. Call 667-6946 forma$3 m ore inform a tion.A Medieval costume M.A.R.R.S.is required to attend COX LOUNGECOFFEE SHOPSpecial Offer —FREE Lemonade withany $2 purchasestuart hall — business school7:30 * 4:00 M-FOFFER EXPIRES MAY 5. 1980quality foods - affordable prices8—The Chicago Maroon, Tuesday, April 29, 1980‘Long-term patience is required to free the hostages...once we waited and since therewere adequate facilities in MexicoCity,” American officials shouldhave reconsidered their offer ofasylum.‘‘The Iranians thought that thiswas 1953 all over again,” Kaplansaid. ‘‘We should have allowedIranian doctors to examine theshah’s medical reports.”Kaplan said that most any movethe United States makes againstIran at this time would be “coun¬terproductive.”“The only excuse for going inthere was political. The Iraniangovernment can only wonder whatwill he (Carter) feel driven tonext?” Kaplan said.“All we are doing with present policy is increasing support forKhomeini,” Kaplan said. “The re¬gime in Iran is going to collapse. Ican’t say if it’s going to fall nextyear or two years from now, but itis going to fall. They can’t run thecountry. We have to be askingwhat will it be succeeded by.”Kaplan said “the two things wewant to avoid are Iran fallingunder Soviet domination and thecountry becoming divided. Ameri¬ca should create the fewest diffi¬culties for the ‘quasi-moderate’forces in Iran.”Kaplan said he included IranianPresident Bani-Sadr in the “quasi¬moderates.”“I don’t like him or what he’sdoing, but he’s the best we’ve gotthere,” Kaplan said.Kaplan was generally pessimis¬tic about the Carter Administra¬ tion’s ability to resolve the hostagesituation by continuing present po¬licies.“This is not a serious Adminstra-tion,” Kaplan said of the CarterWhite House.Morris Janowitz, Lawrence A.Kimpton Distinguished ServiceProfessor of Sociology, and an au¬thor of numerous volumes and ar¬ticles on the armed forces, sharedKaplan’s opinion of the rescue at¬tempt.“I’ve always been opposed tomilitary intervention,” Janowitzsaid, “Although this one was well-intentioned, from what I knowabout it it was not likely to suc¬ceed.“Long term patience is requiredto free the hostages. Freedom willcome when Iranians realize thattheir self-interest lies in the United States and not with the SovietUnion,” Janowitz said.“The one thing we have to pre¬vent now is another military inter¬vention,” Janowitz said.Janowitz said, “The Presidenthad to do something. The mood ofthe country is restless.”Janowitz proposed that all thePresidential candidates issue “ajoint statement to remove this (theIranian situation) from politicaldiscussion.”“What is needed now is some¬thing like what Lyndon Johnsondid after the Tet Offensive in Viet¬nam,” Janowitz said. Janowitzsaid that it would not be necessaryfor Carter to withdraw his candi¬dacy as Johnson chose to do andsaid “there are many differentways for politicians to make con¬tributions to a depoliticization.” Janowitz criticized the role of thepress in covering the Iranian situa¬tion.“The politicians are to blameless than the press,” Janowitzsaid. “The press has been coveringthis like the Olympics rather thanshowing the need to depoliticize.”Janowitz also criticized the actu¬al plan of the rescue mission.“Americans don’t have a traditionlike the Israelis for covert opera¬tions. One wonders what the Israe¬lis would have said had the Admin¬istration shown them what theyplanned to do.”“We have to prevent a repetitionof this. There is always a possibili¬ty of military intervention. It maynot be designed to free the hos¬tages this time. We just have toprevent an intervention from hap¬pening again,” Janowitz said.Campus FilmMale and Female (Cecil B. DeMille, 1919):An aristocratic family and two of its ser¬vants become stranded on a South Sea is¬land. Exploiting their return to nature, thebutler controls the new society via physicalthreats. The plot is very similar to LinaWertmuller’s Swept Away; but while Wert-muller reduces love and politics to sex anddogmatism, DeMille presents various ap¬proaches to love (including Wertmuller’s)and develops society as natural, orderlymanifestations. And, unlike Wertmuller, inthese states, people can create happinessand self-esteem, rather than doom them¬selves to misery regardless of their sur¬roundings. Male and Female is tediouslylong, but it is still infinitely more watchableand complex than anything by Wertmuller.Tonight at 7:15 in Quantrell. Doc; $1 for do¬uble feature. —GBThe Road to Yesterday (Cecil B. DeMille,1925): DeMille was entranced briefly by re¬incarnation, an idea which worked well withhis commercial formula of juxtaposing his¬torical episodes within one movie. The wily DeMille knew that he could get away withshowing sins of the past graphically as longas he repented coyly in the present. In thisone, a couple whose marriage is on therocks takes a train trip to the west hoping tosalvage their union. The trip ends with atrain wreck, and they are transported backto their previous lives in the middle ages.The wife’s obsession with the idea that herhusband has done her injury turns out right:she was oppressed by him in their earlierlives. They right their ways, return to thepresent, and live happily ever after. Thetrain wreck sequence was an impressivetechnical feat for its times; and the psycho¬logical implications must have been simplyamazin’. Tonight at 9 in Quantrell. Doc, $1for double feature. — TSThe Warlord (Franklin Schaffner, 1965):Schaffner started out as a TV director, buthas since moved on the bigger, if not better,things (Patton, Nicholas and Alexandra).Still, he has found time to turn out one of themost interesting and intelligent films of theseventies (Islands in the Stream); and this,a fine novelistic handling of small-scale melodrama. He works here with carefulcutting and blocking rather than visual orliterary flourishes. The story concerns afeudal lord (Charlton Heston) and the deci¬sion he must make between his kingdomand the woman he loves. Schaffner wiselyplays down the swinging swords and battle-axes in favor of moral and intellectualdrama, supported by a script in which theidea of medieval talk is more than high-falu-tin’ nonsense. The result, if not always over¬whelming, is impressive in a quiet way thathas become rarer and rarer in recent films.Wednesday at 7:15 in Quantrell. Doc; $1.-RMcGThe Wages of Fear (Henri-George Clouzot,1953): Some men will do anything formoney. That’s not quite the point of Wagesof Fear, but the utter desperation thatdrives four men to truck nitroglycerinacross the Andes for two thousand dollarsalso drives them head-on into a existentia¬list wall. The first third of the film is as slowas the lazy lifestyle in their South Americanvillage, but the pace quickens once the longhaul begins. Tension mounts in repeated crescendos as the drivers encounter one od-stacle after another. Although Clouzot bela¬bors his message until it becomes tiresome,the film is gripping, and far better than Wil¬liam Friedkins’ remake. The Sorcerer.Thursday at 8 in Quantrell. Doc; $1.50—MWEasy Living (Mitchell Leisen, 1937):Screenwriter Preston Sturges’s time wasyet to come when he and Leisen made thisshort feature length comedy. Although itbegins as an inspired farce. Easy Living isplaced among the lighter, less jarringSturges works. Jean Arthur’s characteriza¬tion of a poor member of the New Yorkworking class is unrestrained; her love forthe son (Ray Milland) of a stockbroker (Ed¬ward Arnold) is familiar and reassuring,and eclipses the film’s desperate v;ew of lifeafter The Crash. “But too often in the film,chaos overwhelms common sense, and weare treated to visions of Depression-boundNew York in all its hectic aimlessness.” —Richard Corliss; unseen by these review¬ers. Thursday at 8:30 in the Law School Au¬ditorium. LSF; $1.50Nukestion levels.Pete Seeger altered the mood of the rallyby telling the crowd, “We must sing cheer¬ful songs, even though we’re dealing herewith death and destruction. This is a joyousstruggle.”Feminist singer Holly Near, joiningSeeger on stage, said that the conglomera¬tion of issues, “are not just causes. They arenecessities, if we are each to live a healthylife.”A variety of environmental and politicalgroups were represented at the demonstra¬tion. Only one student from the Universityattended, however. People of all ages andraces huddled in tents and make-shiftshelters in attempts to escape the rain.Commoner offered several proposals for anuclear moratorium. The first step toward amoratorium, he said, would be to make pub¬lic all classified information on nuclearpower and nuclear weapons. This wouldlead to a special, open United Nations con¬ference on a nuclear moratorium, he said.“It is absolutely insane to ask people tosupport a nuclear program without knowingwhat its effect will be,” Commoner shout¬ed.After his speech. Commoner discussed hisPresidential candidacy. He told The Maroonthat he sees Illinois Congressman John An¬derson as a “pseudo-alternative,” accusingAnderson of being pro-nuclear and anti¬labor.Spokesmen for the Coalition for a Non-Nuclear World were frustrated that theweather diminished the size of the crowds.But the activists that did come remained atthe site into the early evening.Organized anti-nuclear activities beganFriday morning, with citizens from approxi¬mately 200 Congressional districts lobbyingtheir Representatives and Senators. Thelobbyists, working with Non-Nuclear World. Inc., the Coalition’s lobbying arm, discussedlegislation on nuclear waste, OccupationalSafety and Health Administration regula¬tions, the MX missile, and Native Americanland rights.An interfaith religious service was heldFriday night to celebrate that “the earth isholy.” Following that, 1000 people marchedto the White House, where several hundredheld an all night candlelight vigil.The Coalition planned another demonstra¬tion for Monday, linking the Department ofEnergy and its nuclear programs with thoseof the Pentagon. Only protesters trained innon-violent civil disobedience were allowedto remain at the Pentagon in order to blockall entrances. Several groups prepared toremain there indefinitely. DraftWednesday that it would begin a prayervigil when the registration bill is introducedin the Senate. The vigil would be heldaround the clock and would last as long asdebate continued. The group plans to holdthe vigil at the Federal Building in down¬town Chicago, where Percy and Stevensonhave offices.Several local anti-draft religious, civil,and student groups, are involved in the co¬alition, including the American Civil Liber¬ties Union, and Clergy and Laity Con¬cerned.On campus, the University chapter ofCARD has urged people to write letters totheir Senators, asking them to vote against the bill and not to support cloture.In related anti-draft activities, thecampus CARD group is planning severalevents this week to commemorate the 10thanniversary of the shootings at Kent Stateand Jackson State University.A film entitled The Truth About WhatHappened at Kent State will be presentedthis Wednesday, April 30. at 7:30 in the EastLounge of Ida’ Noyes. After the film. Mi¬chael Schudson. assistant professor of soci¬ology and in the College will lead a discus¬sion.The campus CARD organization will alsohold a vigil on Friday at 12:30 at the centerof the quadrangles in commemoration ofthose who died at Kent State and JacksonState on May 4. 1970.MONDAY - THURSDAY ^TO^-S^OmFRIDAY 93CW5-00,>mSATURDAY 11:00«-W«iSEMINARY COOP BOOKSTORES7S7 schjth univep>$iTy/The Chicago Maroon, Tuesday, April 29, 1980—9TUESDAYWomen’s Exercise Class: Meets 9:30-10:30 am, inthe Ida Noyes dance room.Committee on Genetics: “The Genetic Control ofChromosome Segregation During Meiosis inYeast” speaker Sue Klapholz, 11:30 am, Cummun-ings room 1117.Astrophysics Dept: "Status of the Solar NeutrinoProblem,” speaker Brad Filippone, 12:00 noon,AAC Conference Room.Committee on Public Policy Studies: “The IranianCrisis and U.S. Inflation: An Intervention Analy¬sis” speaker Ali T. Akarca, 1:30 pm. Wieboldt301.Islamic Religious Poetry: Lecture - “Tiny Mirrorsof Divine Beauty - The Development of PersianMystical Poetry” speaker Annemarie Schimmel,3:30 pm, Swift Lecture Hall.Dept of Romance Lang, and Lit.: Lecture - “AndreBreton et Freud: Ecriture Automatique et LivreAssociation: Wien/Paris/New York" speakerMarcelin Pleynet, 4.00 pm. Classics 20.UC Ki-Aikido Club: Meets at 4:30-6:30 pm in thefieldhouse wrestling room.UC Gymnastics Club: Instruction available5:30-8:00 pm. Bartlett gym. free.DOC Films: “Male and Female" 7:15 pm, "The Road to Yesterday" 9:00 pm, Cobb.Physical Education: Free swimming instruction7:30-8:30 pm, Ida Noyes.3Hillel: Israeli Folkdancing, 8:00 pm, Ida NoyesTheatre.Music Dept.: Lecture - “Is Mode Real?" speakerHarold Powers, 8:00 pm, Regenstein 264.WEDNESDAYPerspectives: Topic - “The Recovery of SpanishDemocracy" guests Jose Luis Aranguren, JuanMarichal and Ricardo Gullon, 6:09 am, channel7.Italian Table: Meets 12 noon at the Blue Gargoyleto speak Italian.Commuter Co-op: Get-Together at 12:30 pm inG.B.l.Islamic Religious Poetry: Lecture - “Sun Trium¬phal - or Love Triumphant - Maulana JalaluddinRumi" speaker Annemarie Schimmel, 3:30 pm,Swift Lecture Hall.Dept of Biochemistry: Seminar - "Structure andFunction of Human C-Reactive Protein” speakerTeh-Yung Liu, 4:00 pm, Cummings room 101.Dept of Chemistry: “Recent Developments in theSynthesis and Biosynthesis of Antibiotics” speak¬er Jack Baldwin. 4:00 pm, Kent 107.Dept of Art and Dept of History: Lecture - “TheArt of the Italian Renaissance in Poland" speakerProf. Zygmunt Wazbinski, 4:00 pm, CWAC 157.Cog Com Colloquium Series: "What We Can LearnFrom Brain Organization About Human LimitedCapacity” speaker Marcel Kinsbourne, 4:00 pm,B-102.UC Gymnastics Club: Instruction available 5:30-8:00 pm, Bartlett gym, free.Tai Chi Ch’uan Club: Meets 7:30 pm in theWomen’s Center, third floor of Blue Gargoyle.ASHUM: “The Human Ecology of the Savanna'speaker Prof. J. S. Weiner, 7:30 pm. Harper 130.Women's Rap Group: Meets 7:30 pm in theWomen's Center, third floor of Blue Gargoyle.Badminton Club: Practices 7:30 pm in the IdaNoyes gymnasium.Country Dancers: Traditional dances of England,Scotland, and New England taught, 8:00 pm, IdaNoyes Cloister Club. Beginners Welcome.Science Fiction Club: Meets 8:00 pm Ida Noyes. Ev¬eryone welcome.Evolution Discussion Group: “DNA Repair as theAntidote to Mutational Change” speaker B.Strauss, 8:00 pm, HGS 176.Doc Films: “The Warlord” 8:00 pm, Cobb.Chicago Ensemble: Music of American Composers,8:00 pm. International House.THURSDAYPerspectives: Topic - “The Prospects for the Fu¬ture of the Constitutional Monarchy in Spain”guests Jose Luis Aranguren, Juan Marichal andRicardo Gullon, 6:09 am, channel 7.Women’s Exercise Class: Meets 9:30-10:30 am, IdaNoyes dance room.Lunchtime Concerts: Solo piano concert by JanLauridsen, 12:15 pm, Reynolds Club NorthLounge.Comm, on Human Development: Lecture - “Formsand Functions of Theoretical Explanations”speaker Kenneth Gergen, 1:00 pm, Beecher 102.Immunogenetics: “Enumeration and Conservatin of Ummunoglobulin Genes Coding for the KappaVariable Regions” speaker Dr. Israel Schechter,2:30 pm, Cumming room 101.Eastern Orthodox Divine Liturgy. Vespers, 3:00pm. Bond Chapel.Islamic Religious Poetry: “The Voice of Love - FolkPoetry” speaker Annemarie Schimmel, 3:30 pm.Swift Lecture Hall.UC Gymnastics Club: Instruction available4:00-8:00 pm, Bartlett gym, free.Committee on Social Thought: Lecture - Altru¬ism for AH” speaker John Sparrow, 4:00 pm. Clas¬sics 10.UC Ki-Aikido Club: Meets 4:00-6:00 pm. fieldhousewrestling 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: Meets 7:00 pm, Ida Noyes 1stfloor lounge.Table Tennis Club: Meets 7:30 pm. Ida Noyes 3rdfloor.Organization of Black Students: Meeting, 7:30pm, Reynolds Club North Lounge.Doc Films: “The Wages of Fear" 8:00 pm, Cobb.Chicago Review: Poetry Reading by Tess Gal¬lagher, 8:00 pm, Bergman Gallery, Cobb.Law School Films: “Easy Living” 8:30 pm, LawSchool Auditorium.FRIDAYPerspectives: Topic - “The Prospects for the Fu¬ture of the Constitutional Monarchy in Spain”guests Jose Luis Aranguren,'Juan Marichal andRicardo Gullon, 6:09 am, channel 7.IN CONCCRTSUN MAV 4 8pmSPVRO • GVRASpecial Guest StarTKKCTS: $8.00, 9.00 & 10.00 at TlOKTftONBOX Of«C€ Chorglt bV Phone !-800 *23 8114CMc Optra House The University of ChicagoDepartment of MusicHAROLD POWERS(Princeton University)“IS MODE REAL?”TUESDAY • APRIL 29,1980REGENSTEIN LIBRARY 2648:00 P.M.THE PUBLIC \4 INVITED TO ATTENDFREE OF CHARGE marianrealty,inc.REALTORStudio and 1 BedroomApartments Available- Students Welcome -On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-5400Pizzeria Chicago’s Finest Stuffed Pizza Edwardos South Open: lues.-Thurs. b Sunday, 4 11:30 P M.Fri. & Sat., 4 PM-12;30 A MPIZZASmall Medium LargeDelicious Mixture ofMozarella CheesesAdditional Ingredients: 295 4 75 560Sausage. Pepperonior Canadian Bacon 1 50 1.80 225Fresh Mushrooms,Green Peppers. OnionsorGarlic 60 80 1 30DeliciousSTCJFFED PIZZARegular Deluxeserves 2-3 serves 4-5Blend of MozarellaCheeses 545Additional Ingredients:Sausage. Pepperonior Canadian Bacon 1 50Fresh Mushrooms.Green Peppers, OnionsorGarlic 60EDWARDO’S FAMOUSSPINACH SOUFFLEPIZZA (made withfresh spinach) 7.20 7251 8080935 DELIVERY241-7960Tues., Wed., Thurs.,Sun.4:00 -11:15Fri., Sat.4:00 -12:15 DELICIOUS SALADSEdwardo’s Salad Bowl: Fresh and crispwith enough tasty ingredients to roundout any pizza meal $1.00Antipasto Salad Bowl: delicious combinationof genoa salami, cheeses & peppers spreadover crisp lettuce G drenched in our ownvinegar & oil based dressing.regular $2.50 deluxe $3 95serves 2 3 serves 4 or moreTry our house dressing. It s good enough tobe called Mansion Dressing.Beverages:Soft Drink 50 75Pitcher of Soft Drink 2 25Coffee 40Milk 40Corkage Fee50C per person1321E. 57th Street Take Home One or More PartiallyBaked Pizzas For Your Freezer10—The Chicago Maroon, Tuesday, April 29, 1980]/iy€ U AD5 // your receipts! Some Senior portraitsare also ready for pick-upDear Ellie: Luck and Love,Best wishes. Dinner at my placePhone #? PAT MAD 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: 60c per line (30spaces) tor U of C people, 75c per lineotherwise $1 for special headline.Deadlines For Tuesday paper, 12noon Friday; for Friday, 12 noonWednesday.Display advertising rates areavailable upon request. 753-3263.SPACEElegant, sunny, 4 bdrm, 3 bath condo,2470 sq. ft., newly renovated, mod kit;sunporch, Kenwood area. 538-3407.SUMMER SUBLET 3 br . 2 ba apt.date and price negot. fully equipped.ON CAMPUS modern 947-9597eves.$25 reward for one or two bedroomHyde Park apt with June-July lease.Willing to pay up to $375. Call Claudia955-4022.1 bdrm apt to rent 250. No dogs allowednr lake 643-4640.University of Chicago grad studentneeds room to rent in Hyde Park. Mustfind room in July or August, 1980 Call889-5079. Leave name, number. Deb¬bie.Choice summer sublet 1 br. turn apt,54 4- Woodlawn, front porch $195, allUtil. 3-4896, 288-7688Mature non-smoking black female la*student looking for reasonable rentclean, quiet, warm apartment. T(share, rent or sublet. 667-6323.56th and Kenwood 2 bdrms 1 bath surcork firs wbf csm + wdws elevtr. blgd$80,000 947-0032.$50 reward if we sign your lease for 2-(bedrm Univ area apt. Call 288-443*wkdays6-8pm.Summer Sublet: 2 bedroom + Iroombedroom 2 bath kitchen 54 thKimbark $380/negot. 493-5457.LAKE MICHIGAN RETREAT-65 mifrom Hyde Park 5 br, screen porch,300' beach $2000/mo. or $4500 season753-2461.4 bedroom condominium homes at 50thand Dorchester for $47,500 $49,500.Common elements and exteriors ex¬tensively rehabbed Apartments thatwill be sold "as is" have hardwoodfloors, formal dining room, loads ofcloset space and more. Quiet residen¬tial block, close to transportation.363-1332 or 288 2175.Spacious 2 bedroom apartment withformal dining room. Hardwood floors,new kitchen and new bath. ExcellentHyde Park location. $450.00. Call363-1332.FOR RENT: Furnished Condo, 56thand Dorchester. June '80-Sept. 81. 3bdrms, 2 baths. Back yard. Privateporch. $600/mo. Call 955-6512.SUMMER SUBLET avail June toSept. 4 br. 57 Dorchester. $400/mo.955-4567Summer sublet fall option good location share with one other, womanpreferred $150 plus half utilitiesCarol 955-5019, or 493-2047.Cooperative Household-5 bdrm houseon Dorchester. 2 rms open. June 1.Shared cooking 493-5419.Hy. Pk. UC 2Va 4 rm avail now. Nicebldg Adults. BU8-0718STUDIO SUBLET, Sunny, 6th floor5455 Blackstone. $l90/mo. indud. util.June to Oct. 1, w/option to renew. Call241-5031.PEOPLE WANTEDEarn extra money at home. Good pay.Easy work. No experience necessary.Send for application. Home Money,Box 2432B, Iowa City, Iowa, 52240Handyman 6.00 hr painting, lightcarpentry. 643-4640.Experienced help wanted writingthesis in education. Monetary feenegotiable. 735 Hawthorne Ln.Geneva, IL.60134.Part time waiters or waitresses youmay choose your hours--no experiencenecessary--we train Come in or callMrs. Schlender Quadrangle Club.753 3696VERSAILLES5254 S. DorchesterWELL MAINTAINEDBUILDINGAttractive 1 l/t and21/* Room StudiosFurnished or Unfurnished$218«o $320Based on AvailabilityAt Campus Bus Stop324-0200 Mrs. Groak Writers, reporters, cartoonists forSUBURBIA Weekly. 752-7977,Housecleaner Lite duties Facultycple. Campus loc., you choose hrs.$4/hr. 241-5164 eves.FOR SALERhodes Stage 88 electric piano perfect.$750. 753 4896; 288-7688Galley proofs of recently publishedbooks. Nominal charge. 955-0293. Un¬common Aleichem!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.Will do typing (IBM) 821-0940.Experienced babysitter with recentHyde Park references seeks full-timecare of infant or small child.Preferably in my Hyde Park home.Call Mary, 955 3558.Typing done in IBM by college grad;pica type. Term papers, theses, lawbriefs, resumes, letters, manuscripts.Fast accurate, reliable, reasonable.New Town area. Call 248-1478.TYPISTS Disseration quality. Helpwith grammar, language, as neededFee depending on manuscript. IBMSelectric-Juditn, 955-4417,Loving care mother would like to dobabysitting in her home. Call anytime.363-8670GRAPHS, figures for all kinds of mss.Perfection guaranteed. Lin. 3-4887.642-6218 eveningsTYPIST Turabina PhD Masters thesesterm papers rough drafts. 924-1152.SERVICESCarpentry, drywall, painting, wiring.Competent and imaginative work.Free estimates. 684-2286.WANTEDWANTED: Tickets to College Gradua¬tion. Will pay $$. Leave messge forRm. 418, 752-5757.LOST AND FOUNDLOST: One Dragon Kite. 45 feet long,multi-colored cellophane, answers toname of "George". High sentimentalvalue. Reward for return. Margo at753 2249LOST "Bingo" brown and black andbeige tiger striped male cat. Reward,285-6490. 4825 S. Kimbark. USEDAUTOMOBILESJEEPS $59 50, CARS $40 00 TRUCKS$112.00 Call (615) 266 5142, Ext. 405SUMMERWORK/STUDYFull-time or part time jobs Appliestions due April 30!!! Graduate students apply at Career Counsel¬ing and Placement, Reynolds Club 200.College students apply at College Aid,Harper 242.COMPUTEROPERATORComputing Service in the GraduateSchool of Business needs a depen¬dable, experienced compuferoperator. Candidates must be able andwilling to move heavy boxes. Startingsalary $5.50 per hour. Call ScottTeissier, 753 4291. AA/EOE.GODSPELLComing soon to an International Housenear you! May 8-11 $2-53 Special dis-count for groups of 25 + 955-8198.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.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.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 graduatefees. It is responsible for bringing ma¬jor entertainment to campus. Theseven member board runs the entireconcert planning and production fromchoice of artist to clean-up.Deadline is May 2.PERSONALSWRITER'S WORKSHOP (Plaza 2-8377)WILD PARTY at BlackstoneHall, Saturday May 3 9:30 ?Be There.Laura Schulkind, Joachim Li andMartin Lazor, the yearbook is hereand waiting for you to pay the rest ofyour deposifs and pick yours up. INH218, 8:30-10:30 am M-F and Mon nites6-10pm. (753-3562).4th Law of Gizmatics-lf you think youhave all the answers, let a child askthe questions._ GIZMOART LOVER-Scandal nothing, thiscould boil blood and make fingernailsfall out. Let's split to the Black Sea.Hey Hey?FanAll good and true book-lovers practicethe pleasure and improving avocationof reading in bed. (Eugene Field).Dear Sir: your astonishment's odd;/lam always about in the quad; andthat's why the tree/will continue tobe/since observed by yours faithfully,GodAnyone who advanced ordered 1980Yearbooks may pick them up at INH218 from 8:30-10:30 am M-F and6-10pm Mon. nites. You must bringmSunCHINESE-AMERICAiVlRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOpen Daily11 AM to 8:30 PMClosed Monday1318 EAST 63rdMU 4-1062 TRAVELEUROPE this summer Low cost tour.Academic credit available. CallMr. Reamer, 753-4865 (day), 752-8426(eve).SHOP FORMOTHER'S DAYAT ARTISANS 21Portrait/sketches Ellida SuttonFreyer ($5-50) at Artisans 21, 5225 S.Harper, through May 10. Sat 1-4 pm,Sun and weekdays by appt. Call288 7450COACHHOUSEFOR RENTWe don't usually rent but here is acoach house in Kenwood. 2 bedrooms. $425 plus utilities. Prefer older singleor young married couple No dogsAvailable now. Call 493-0666 special from a Singular Group'screative arts coop. We are having anopen house Sat May 3 from 114 at 57thand Woodlawn in the Unitarian Church. Stop in and browseRetreshments will be served Ourregular hours are Wed Sat. 11-2, Sun.11:30-1.TESSGALLAGHERWill read her poetry Thursday at 8 pmin the Bergman Gallery, Cobb Hall inMay 1st sponsored by the ChicagoReviewSAVE GASHave a steaming hot Edwardo's pizzadelivered to your door or dormBeverages and salads to. Call 241 7960,$1 delivery feeLUNCHTIMECONCERTSEvery Thursday at 12:15 pm inReynolds Club North Lounge Thisweek, May 1 is a solo piano recital byJan LauridsenBARRY COMMONERWill be on campus Monday, May 5, tospeak on the Topic-"The Cause andCure of Environmental Health Pro¬blems" 12:00 noon, U of C Lyiny-ln-Hospital, Dora DeLee Hall. All arewelcome.FOOD CO-OPMembership avail now in SC Food Co¬op. Fresh inexpensive meats and pro¬duce. Order on Fri. pick it up on Tues.Call SG Co-op M-F on Tues 753-3223between 3:00-6:00.POETRYREADINGTess Gallaher, author of "Under theStars" and "Instructions to the Double" will read Thursday, May 1 at 8 pmat the Renaissance Society, BergmanGallery, Cobb Hall. Sponsored by theChicago Review.WE DELIVEREdwardo's Pizzeria will deliver anyorders for a $1 fee. Call 241-7560 forservice in Hyde Park and Kenwood.APARTMENTWANTEDFemale graduate student relocating toChicago wants to share apartment andliving expenses with female roommate Prefer spacious apartmentlocated near good transportation andshopping Need occupancy by May24th. Please send rep'y to PO Box 6782,Chicago, II. 60680 or call 846-7U0 after6BE GOOD TOYOUR MOMBuy your favorite Mom somethingNext to 1C TracksDo It YourselfRepairs$3.75 hourwith tools$4.95 hourrented tools -(metric & standard)Fast Oil Change$16SOON TO COMEUSED CARRENTAL, 667-2800 J 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 4987SecretariesTypists Acct. ClerksSwitchboardAll Office SkillsSOMMER JOBSEarn top hourly rates this summeron a variety of interesting tem¬porary office assignments in thearea you prefer to workSTIVERS TEMPORARYPERSONNEL, INC.ChicagoAuroraDeerfieldDesPlaines 332-5210892-7037945-4750635-7080Schaumburg Elmwood ParkEvanstonFord CityOak Brook882-8061 453-3380475-3500581-3813654-0310Equal Opportunity Employer M FDirect fron\tl'£ir 5,RO, peHonr\M\p2at P\e Wb\[R\lly of G\ia^o -FlorcofC LowcW \iilerWlLer BUorTui\£rwu\VHvr\orDave ^KieLdrynvkitrr of cct^.mo - - Robert £ f)trccicrOv Q^^n\poryTer|orny$r\ce oj\4chd Poetry4 P-"V ,, <T|>rvl v30,T1ye>epKT^oor\ A-11The Chicago Maroon, Tuesday, April 29, 1980—11"\rWhen are you going to realize there’smore to spring than school?VONFREEMANi11When THE history of the jazz saxophone inChicago is finally written, tenorman VON FREEMANwill have to be placed in the top rank, alongsideGene Ammons, Johnny Griffin and RoscoeMitchell. ”—Art Pepper, "Chicago Tribune" AND FRIENDSWITHTHE TELSON-GOLEMMEBAND FRIDA Y,MAY2CLOISTER CLUB8:30 pm$3 Student$4 Other\ / sCo-Sponsored by International HouseRecently emigrated Soviet artistsEdward Shmiderviolinwith Laura Shmider, violaand Slava Mendelssohn,piano •Music ofBach, Borelli, Brahms,Schumann, Beethoven, Mozart,Paganini and othersFriday, May 2 - 8 PM$2 students$3 othersThe U of C Dance Ensembleand Colla VoceFriday, May 2, 8 PMSunday, May 9, 3 PMI-House Aud. 82 Gen. Adm. h.1(TI\ The Festival of the ArtsJOIN US, FOR THE BEST INART AND ENTERTAINMENT