Medieval magic comes to MidwayBy Chris IsidoreBefore the Coronation, outsideRocke teller The University was host to 500visitors from the Middle Ages thisweekend and the general consen¬sus among those visitors is thatthey fit this campus like a knight-errant fits his best set of chainmail.The visitors, all dressed in elabo¬rate medieval garb, had come tocoronate the 21st King of the King¬dom of the Middle, here at the Col¬lege of the Gray Gargoyle. Thosestudents who were so unpreparedas to wander onto the Midway in20th century clothing must havefelt a bit like Midwestern Yankeesin King Arthur’s Court. The day’sactivities, including a Melee andseveral Tournaments, were opento spectators of all centuries, but only those who were from theproper era were allowed to attendthe Regal Coronation held in Rock¬efeller Chapel, or the even morelavish Royal Feast held in Hutchin¬son Commons that evening.Most of the people who partici¬pated in Saturday's activities arevery serious members of The Soci¬ety for Creative Anachronism,which has more than 3,000 officialmembers nationwide, and over 10to 12,000 people who participate intheir events. Their costumes whichthey proudly showed off this week¬end were almost the least of theirmedieval states of mind. All haddone research to find names ofperiod, and most had worked to de¬velop a fairly complete persona, apersonal history of a person whocould have lived in sometime in be¬ tween 650 and 1650 CE. Somemembers have completed elabo¬rate genealogy charts, tracing whothe family of their medieval alteregos were. The research and thepersona which a person picks isvery often a study in self psycholo¬gy, according to Friar Bertram,the head of the U of C chapter,(known in this century as DavidSchroder) “When you have achoice of what your name will be,what your profession will be. whattime period you wish to live in, thechoice really gives you an opportu¬nity to define what kind of personyou would like to be.’’Bertram is an early 13th centurypriest He met Eromene Aspasia,who is a 13th century Byzantine,while he was on the Fourth Cru-Turn to Page 3 Chris isiaoreKing Alen Elegil crowns hissuccessorThe Chicago Maroon“Solitary, singing in the West, I strike up for a new world —Walt WhitmanVol. 89 No. 51 The University of Chicago t Copyright 1980 The Chicago Maroon Tuesday, May 6, 1980mERA“Crucial” march set Student expelled aftergrade switch on computerBy Jeff CaneThe nearly fanatical obsessionwith grades that some College stu¬dents often display apparently ledone such student to break into theRegistrar’s office earlier thisquarter in order to change hiswinter quarter grades.For “unauthorized entry " intothe registrar’s office, for takingthe key to the records' room, andfor changing his grades on the reg¬istrar’s computer terminal, a sec¬ond-year student in the Collegewas recently expelled from theCollege, the first expulsion in sev¬eral years.According to a statement the stu¬dent made to Paul Ausick assistantdean of students, on April 10, thestudent entered the registrar’s of¬fice in the Administration Buildingduring its regular hours andwalked to the south fire exit at theback of the office, where, unno¬ticed, he altered the lock on the fireexit door with an Allen wrench, sothat it would remain unlocked. He also took a key from the recordsroom, which had been left in thelock.At about 10:45 pm that same day.the student entered the registrar'soffice through the south fire exitdoor facing Cobb, the door he hadpreviously altered. He then had toopen a second door, which he didby sliding the lock with a piece ofwire. Once in the office, he merelyhad to open the records' room doorwith the key he had taken earlier.The computer terminals in theregistrar's office are normally seton a selection function at night andwould have run unchanged allnight. In order to hook into the re¬cord of his grades on the terminalthe student needed to know the cor¬rect program password.The student found enough infor¬mation lying in various desks inthe office so that through a combi¬nation of luck and knowledge ofcomputers, he was able to get tohis grades. He then changed all ofhis winter quarter grades to“Bs“. Chris PersansAlthough he apparently tried,the student could not return theterminal to its original display. Hethen left the registrar's office thesame way he had entered Thewhole incident lasted roughly 45minutes.During this episode, he wasaided by another student who stoodwatch outside the AdministrationBuilding with a walkie-talkie inorder to warn of any approachingUniversity security or police, andthe student inside the Registrar'sTurn to Page 3Budget - cutting liberal Dukakis hereBy Curtis BlackPredicting “a Mother's Dayweekend no one will forget,’’ Ac¬tion ERA leaders on campus arehoping for a total turnout of 100,000or more in the National March forERA Ratification this Saturday atGrant Park, which they considercrucial to the chances for theEqual Rights Amendment’s suc¬cess.“If it doesn’t get passed in Illi¬nois this year it will be in real tro¬uble,” said Univeritiy of ChicagoAction ERA leader Lynn Hart. TheNational Organization for Women(NOW), which is coordinating themarch, has called the vote by theIllinois legislature expected thismonth “our last chance for ratifi¬cation in this century.”“If the ERA is not ratified,Michael Dukakis women will continue being paid onthe average half of what men arepaid,” Hart said. “And academicwomen will continue to get a merefraction of the tenure which maleacademics receive.”ERA sponsors in the IllinoisHouse narrowly won approval ofratification by the House JudiciaryCommittee last Thursday, and theentire House will vote on theamendment within weeks. If itpasses the House, the ERA mustthen w’in approval by the Senate.Over 225 national organizationsare participating in the march,along with many national leaders.Mayor Jane Byrne and Rev. WillieBarrow' from PUSH, and actressesMario Thomas and Jean Stapleton.Students from the University willgroup together under a white, pur-Turn to Page 7When a governor loses his cam¬paign for reelection and finds him¬self between political offices, therearen’t many jobs that offer a com¬bination of prestige and publicitysuitable for keeping alive a politi¬cal career.Former Massachusetts governorMichael Dukakis, who arrives oncampus today as the University’sfifth Visiting Fellow', faced theproblem of finding such a job twoyears ago, when he lost the guber¬natorial primary race to conserva¬tive Democrat Edward King. Butunlike many politicians, Dukakissolved this problem rather well. Henow teaches at Harvard, where heis director of intergovernment stu¬dies at the John F. Kennedy Schoolof Government, and he has also managed to stay in the public eyeby resuming his role as host of thepublic television show The Advo¬cates. Dukakis was host of thatprogram in the early 1970s.Dukakis earned a reputation as afinancial conservative during hisfour-year term as governor Whenhe assumed office, he found a $450million budget deficit and a state inperilous financial condition. Duka¬kis broke his 1974 campaign prom¬ise not to increase Massachusetts'sincome and sales taxes and alsobegan a series of budget cuts.He refused to give raises to stateemployees and took several mea¬sures to reduce welfare expendi¬tures. including proposing a“workfare” plan to require that able-bodied welfare recipients findwork.Although his financial measurespulled Massachusetts back frombankruptcy. Dukakis discoveredvoters were far from grateful forthe high taxes which resulted Inan election year dominated by talkof California’s tax-cutting Proposi¬tion 13. Dukakis steadily lost popu¬larity and was defeated by a pro¬portion of 51 to 42 percent.While he was governor. Dukakiswas frequently referred to as theeastern version of California'sGovernor Jerry Brown LikeBrown. Dukakis considered him¬self a conservative on fiscal mat¬ters, but took a more liberal atti¬ tude on social issues such asabortion and the death penalty.Also like Brown, Dukakis lived aspartan lifestyle while in office.The day of his election in 1974. hetold reporters that he and his wife“would have no idea what to dowith" the $40,000 a year governor'ssalary. Dukakis was also fond oftaking the Boston subw ay to work,spurning the official limousinesIn his three-day visit to the Uni¬versity, Dukakis will sit in onclasses and meet with students. Heis scheduled to lecture on “Statesand Cities - A New Role for StateGovernment” this Thursday at 4pm in Social Sciences 122 A ques¬tion and answer session will fol¬low.®CopyrightNowLegalDefenseandEducationfund/Concept&DesignbyJaneTrahey. If any other countryin the worlddenied Vi its populationequal rights under the lawthe United States would be thefirst to speak out.But in more than 200 yearsof democracy, the United Stateshas been silent aboutthe basic rightsof women!National March for ERA RatificationSaturday, May 10,1980—Chicago, Illinois• Assemble—9:30 a.m. on Columbus Drive btw. Monroe & Jackson• Participants are urged to dress in white• Lobby—Tuesday, May 13 in Springfield, IllinoisFor more information: Call (312) 782-7205Illinois Ratification Office18 S. Michigan Suite 1110Chicago, III. 606032—The Chicago Maroon, Tuesday, May 6, 19801Shakespeare inspires Bloom at WoodwardBy Chris IsidoreAllan Bloom, who will deliver tonight’sWoodward Court lecture, is a political scien¬tist distinct from many of his more empiri¬cal-minded colleagues. The questions heraises concern political philosophy morethan political behavior, and for his answershe examines the works of Plato and Shake¬speare instead of voter surveys or electionresults. In tonight’s lecture, he will discussthe questions of social justice and politicallegitimacy, and will look to Shakespeare formany of his answers. The lecture, entitledJustice and the Christian King: Shake¬speare’s Richard II, will begin at WoodwardCourt at 8:30.“My work has been in political philoso¬phy,” said Bloom, “I’ve been particularlyinterested in the relationship between poli¬tics and literature . . . The reason why Istudied Shakespeare is that he seems to un¬derstand man’s and men’s desire for glory,and quest for justice, about as well as any¬body. Its perfect training for sensibilitiesneeded for politics. Abe Lincoln felt that heunderstood the problems of government bet¬ter from Macbeth. The return of that kind ofreading of Shakespeare, for inspiration, isthe reason that I have studied him.”This kind of study makes Bloom an unusu¬al political scientist in today’s academicsurroundings. He is officially a member ofthe Committee on Social Thought, not thedepartment of political science. But Bloomfeels that his work and his thinking are verymuch in tune with the University’s. “Thereis no question that those books, (Shake¬speare, Plato, etc.) are taken very seriouslyhere,” said Bloom. There is the problem,perhaps, that we take them almost tradi-Medieval MagicContinued from Page 1sade. She became “his lady,” and cameback to England with him to live with him ashis “niece.” In this century, her name isAmy Guildroy, and the two of them live onthe North Side, having met in the EasternUnited States, not the Middle East.The juxtaposition between the two worldswas also amusing. “Excuse me my lord.”asked one ‘maiden,’ “would you have 20cents so I could make a phone call.” Themagic of the atmosphere seemed enhanced,not diminished, when knights piled theirgear into a Honda at the end of the day.“When the costumes go on. you really feellike magic is working.” said Bertram*Bertram. Eromene. and the rest of the Uof C chapter belong to a campus organiza¬tion called MARKS — the Medieval AndRenaissance Recreation Society. Bertramis not a student, so the president of thecampus organization is Marina of EastCliffe. (a.k.a. Martha Taylor i The organiza¬tion has 15 to 20 regular members, but Ber¬tram expects that the interest generated byholding the event will bring many more peo¬ple into the U of C chapter.The University chapter belongs to theKingdom of the Middle, one of seven king¬doms in the United States, and the one withthe largest geographic area. It stretchesfrom the Ohio-Pennsylvania border toKansas, and from Saskatchewan to Arkan¬sas. The Kingdom of the Middle was foundedby a U of C undergraduate. Cariadoc of theBow, in 1970. The Society had already beenactive nationally for five years at that point,but when Cariadoc started the Kingdom ofthe Middle, there w'ere only a handful ofcompetitors for the crown. The King is cho¬sen in a Crown Tournament, in which thecontenders do battle in armour, with wood¬en swords. The battles look very realistic,and very painful to spectators, but Bertramsaid that the armour takes the full blow, andthe competitors feel nothing.The next event that the members of theKingdom can participate in will be theCrown Tournament to select the next WinterKing. The Tournament will be held in a nun¬nery in Racine, Wisconsin during the officialMemorial Day Weekend, May 23-26. But typ¬ical to U of C, there are no members whoparticipate in Battles or Tournaments. Theywill be going along for the same reason mostof the visitors came here this weekend, tocompare costumes and customs which theyhave discovered about “their” time, to tionally too seriously here, or seriously tootraditionally, and we have to keep askingourselves why we are doing it, and why weought to do it. I think that Chicago is one ofthe best atmospheres for getting people totake books seriously in this, (the proper)way, and my experience this year seems toconfirm this. It is not a place where one hasto be too much on the defensive about doingthings this way.”Bloom’s lecture will analyze the right andlegitimacy of a ruler, and he feels that Sha¬kespeare’s works in general, and Richard IIin particular, do a good job in dealing withthis.“Shakespeare talks about great politicalissues, and shows in many ways that themost interesting, the most exciting and themost poetic thing about man is his quest forjustice, and the problems of ruling andbeing ruled. In Richard II, Shakespeareshows one particular kind of king, one par¬ticular kind of man, who claims to rule legi¬timately, and who is deposed. This play, in avery powerful way, raises the questions oflegitimacy and justice, or when one shouldobey and when one should disobey, and theexcruciating problems, for those who havedisposed a ruler, of establishing legitima¬cy.“This is a problem we don’t see well anylonger, because of the ease with which wejustify revolution today. There was (once)always the conflict of wanting to realize jus¬tice, and the need for some kind of stability,so there was always the principle that no¬body has the right to rebel, but there is aright to rebellion based on justice. We’ve be¬come terribly easy about it today, that ev¬erybody has a right to rebellion, no matterwhat. This began in the 17th Century, withenjoy themselves, and to meet people withthe same unusual hobby.There is also an annual Pennsic War sche¬duled for the third weekend in August thissummer, and every summer, in westernPennsylvania. This will include large scalebattles, with 1,200 expected to attend thisbattle between the Kingdom of the Middleand its allies, and the Kingdom of the Eastand its allies.It is not too late for students to join thegroup to participate in either of theseevents. It is not necessary to do the kind ofresearch that some members do beforegoing on either of these, in fact one third ofthe people who participated on Saturdayhad never had previous contact with thegroup. There will be a meeting of MARKSon next Monday night. May 12. at 7:30 in IdaNoyes. Students can also contact Bertram inthe evenings at 588-0856. the term Revolution, which implies some¬thing progressive, and assurances of jus¬tice. With the theory of Marxist Revolutions,it is easy to be sure of your progress and jus¬tice, because when you believe history isgoing in a direction of improvement, thenyou can justify that opposition. If it is a veryquestionable opposition, and it seems uncer¬tain of whether what comes afterwards isgoing to be better than what came before,then a revolution requires much more re¬flection and more responsibility. Shake¬speare lived prior to the time of the ideologyof Revolution, so for him, it was a muchmore ambigious question.”Bloom returned to the University lastyear after close to a year’s absence. He re¬ceived his bachelor’s and master’s degreesand his doctorate from the University, com¬pleting his dissertation on the political phi¬losophy of Isocrates, in 1955. He did postdoc¬toral work at the University of Paris in1954-55, lecturing in the Department of En¬glish there. From 1955 to 1960 he was a lec¬turer in the College here. He was an assis¬tant professor of political science at Yale in1962-63, and assistant professor of govern¬ment at Cornell from 1963 to 1965. He servedas an associate professor there from 1965 to1970. He had visiting professor appoint¬ments in the Political Science at the Univer¬sity of Tel Aviv and in the American studiesat the University of Paris in 1969 to 1970.From 1970 until he returned here last yearhe was a professor of political science at theUniversity of Toronto.Most students here probably have readsome of Bloom’s work, perhaps without rea¬lizing it. His critical translation of Plato’sRepublic is the standard one used here andat most other Universities. That transla- Allan Bloom Chris IsidoreComputer capertion; which was published in 1968. was histhird major work. In 1960 he translated“Politics and The Arts: Rosseau’s Letters toM. D'Alembert on the Theatre. In 1964 he co¬authored a book with Harry Jaffa on Shake¬speare's Politics. Last year his translationof Rosseau's Emilie, along with an introduc¬tion and notes, was published. He is now-working on an analysis of that work.Continued from Page 1inside the Registrar's office equipped him¬self with a walkie-talkie. Even before start¬ing out he had taken further precaution bycalling all the telephone numbers in the reg¬istrar’s office to make sure no one was stillthere when he was to arrive.The student apparently confided what hehad done to his roommate, for the next dayhis roommate went to Ausick. and describedwhat had happened. The student was subse¬quently called before Ausick. at w hich pointthe student confirmed his roommate'sstory, and described in further detail whathad happened.Disciplinary hearings foilowed. and the decision to expel the student was made. Thestudent appealled but the appeal was turneddown. The student has since left the Univer¬sity and has gone home. The University hasnot filed any criminal charges against thestudent.The student who stood watch outside hasnot been disciplined by the University, andit is unknown w hether that student's identityis known yet to administration officials.The student declined to comment, sayingthat he w as concerned about possible reper¬cussions by the University if he did. Admin¬istration officials were unavailable for com¬ment on the incident.NewsbriefsCohler on FreudBertram Cohler will speak on Freud's Me¬tapsychology: Neurology of Psychology?this Thursday. May 8 as part of the Colle¬giate Lecture Series in the Liberal Arts.Cohler is an associate professor of behavior¬al sciences and education and was recentlynamed as the William Rainey Harper Asso¬ciate Professor of Social Sciences in the Col¬lege. Cohler, a winner of the QuantrellAward for excellence in undergraduateteaching, has a special interest in Freud andin the developments of personality through¬out the life cycle. The lecture series is spon¬sored by the Dean of the College and theteaching staff of the Human Being and Citi¬zen course. It seeks to discuss books,themes, and questions considered in theCommon Core. The last talk of the quarterwill present Edward Wasiolek discussingTolstoy’s War and Peace. Cohler’s lecturewill be held at 8 pm in Harper 130. Refresh¬ments and discussion will follow.Draft resistanceA workshop on draft resistance will beheld at Ida Noyes Hall at 7:30 pm onWednesday, May 7. Laura Kroutil of the Na¬tional Headquarters Committee in SanFrancisco will discuss draft information,strategies of resisting, and the conse¬quences of resisting. Social work jobsIs there life after graduation"? If you're in¬terested in social work the Alumni Associa¬tion will offer a program tomorrow.Wednesday. May 7 at 12 noon to convinceyou that there is Robert Adams of the Unit¬ed Way. Amos Moore of the Illinois Pardonand Parole Board, and Ravindra Katiyar,director of professional services for the Sal¬vation Army, will discuss opportunities insocial work at Robie House. 5757 Woodlawn.Beverages providedEllsberg speechPoisoned Soup Department Daniel Ells-burg will be the speaker at the benefit din¬ner for Women for Peace this Friday. May 9at DePaul University's Stew art Center, 2324N. Seminary. Ellsberg is a former Chica¬goan who leaked the Pentagon Papers to thepress and has been involved in protestingnuclear weapons development. In his re¬cently published memoir. Will. G. GordonLiddy revealed that he once was plotting toslip LSD into Ellsberg’s soup before hespoke at a similar fundraising dinner. FredHolstein will provide musical entertainmentand tickets are available from Women forPeace. 343 S. Dearborn. 663-1227.The Chicago Maroon, Tuesday, May 6, 1980—3Ament an Express Company. I*W0American Egresswon’t penalize you for graduatingduring a credit crisis.American Express hasn’t changed its application qualifi¬cations for graduating students during the current credit crisis.That’s because the American Express* Card isn’t a creditcard. It’s a charge card. There’s no revolving, open-end credit.You are expected to pay your bill in full every month. So with theCard, you don’t get in over your head.You use your head.American Express is continuing its special applicationplan for graduating students. If you have a $10,000 job (or thepromise of one) lined up, you can apply for an American ExpressCard right now.You’ll need the Card for everything from business lunchesto vacations, from buying clothes to buying theatre tickets.You’ll have new responsibilities after graduation. TheAmerican Express Card will help you manage them.To apply for a Card, just pick up an applicationat one of the displays on campus. Or you can call the toll-free number 800-528-8000,and ask for a special student application.The American Express Card. Don’t leave school without it.AMERICANEXPRESS4—The Chicago Maroon, Tuesday, May 6, 1980An Education beyond AcademiaBy Tanja Meyer-OertelHave you ever considered getting out of the Universitymold by becoming an active member of the Hyde Parkcommunity? More than sixty University students alreadyhave by offering their services as community volunteersthrough the Student Volunteer Bureau.The Student Volunteer Bureau (SVB) is a new campusorganization based at the Blue Gargoyle, dedicated to“providing a way for students to become active in andlearn more about their community while providing agen¬cies with their services as volunteers,” explains BobRueter who works with Gargoyle director Ann Kok to coor¬dinate the Bureau’s activities.In volunteering through the SVB, a student makes acommitment to work that is tailored to his interests andtime schedule. If provides rewarding alternative to acade¬mia and isolation. To dispel any initial fears and to pro¬vide continued support while students are working, theBureau organizes orientation and follow-up activities.The need for renewed student-community involvementwas recognized two years ago by the Gargoyle’s board ofdirectors who felt that students were focusing too heavilyon themselves, and were interested only in the yoga andself-help classes sponsored by the Gargoyle. A programwhich could spark student activity in the communityseemed like a good idea, explained Kok. “After all,” shesaid, “the Gargoyle was originally a student run organiza¬tion.” Last summer a survey was made of 150 communityorganizations to determine their interest in working withstudent volunteers. Forty-two of the agencies replied thatthey had always been interested in student help, but hadnot known how to appeal to the student body. Kok, then astudent in the School of Social Service Administration, of¬fered to do her field placement with the program; BobRueter and Nancy Kendall, students in the College, werehired as assistants, and in October of 1979 the Bureauopened.University response to their effort has developed slowlybut postively. The 60 students who volunteered this yearworked over 1100 hours in such agencies as the DrexelHome for the Elderly, the Woodlawn Child Health Center,the Blue Gargoyle Youth Center, the Southeast School forMentally Retarded Children, the American Civil LibertiesUnion, Cambodia Relief Now, and various school tutoringprograms. One first-year student, Michael Glidstein,taught a physical education course at the Hyde ParkNeighborhood Club.Darren Sharpe, a second year student in the College,volunteers Tuesday afternoons from 3 to 4 p.m. at the Koz-minsky School at 54th Street and Ellis Avenue. ForSharpe, volunteering involves a one hour tutoring sessionwith a child (age 8-12) in reading or math. He explained.“It is really enjoyable because the kids really want to bet¬ter themselves and are really responsive to help. I haddone volunteering with the Woodlawn Juvenile Court Sys¬tem last year, but the youths were assigned to see me aspart of their sentence, and their evident lack of interest ineven seeing a movie was quite depressing. I heard aboutthe SVB at Student Activities Night, and after talking toAnn Kok thought I’d give tutoring a try. It has been a very positive experience for me. While some of the kids getfrustrated because they do not see immediate, concretechanges in their ability. I can really see the improvementthat they have made.”Katie Nash, assistant dean of students in the College,was not, like many at University, aware that the SVBexists, but remarked, “The idea is beautiful. The badthings about the community are always emphasized to thestudents, and here is a program which emphasizes thegood things that students can do.” Nash has promised tomake the advising staff aware of the program so that theycould suggest volunteering as an option to the many stu¬dents interested in community work but unaware of howto get started.The University administration has already made somefinancial committment to the SVB, which also receivedsome funds from Rockefeller Chapel, the United CampusChristian Ministry, and the Blue Gargoyle Much of thismoney goes to pay Kok, and she explained that it is diffi¬cult to get funds from outside agencies unless the bureaucan show substantial involvement with the University.However, Johnathan Kleinbard, University vice-presidentfor community affairs, has offered to provide four fully-subsidized work-study positions for the 1980-81 academicyear.Bob Rueter explained that the staff is interested in in¬volving community members (five have already contact¬ed the Bureau independently) as well as University stu¬dents, although until the bureau has more staff this will bedifficult. The most common reasons people volunteer hesaid, are feelings of social responsibility, enjoying workwith children or adults, building on former work experi¬ences, and/or exploring career options in social agencies.He explained that the Bureau keeps an active job descrip¬tion file of agencies and individuals looking for volunteersand coordinates the referral process. Kok and Rueter hadoriginally hoped that volunteers would keep in close touchwith the Bureau after they began working; however, theyhave realized that the Bureau must provide personal andgroup follow-up for volunteers, and this will be one of themajor focuses for next year’s staff. Kok and Rueter willremain in charge of the program, but Kendall, who coor¬dinated the activities of volunteers at the Gargoyle, hasBob Rueter and Ann Kok already left, so there will be three staff positions avail¬able. This year the Bureau has also received constant sup¬port from the United Way’s Volunteer Action Center in de¬veloping and implementing their program as well asreceiving suggestions on prospective employers.Bureau activities, which peak at the beginning of eachquarter, are slowly winding down as students concentrateon their school work and the year draws to a close. Stu¬dents interested in volunteering this summer, getting ahead-start on options for next year, or just discussing theprogram, whould visit Kok or Rueter at the Blue Gargoyle(5655 S. University), call 955-4108.The staff, the volunteers and those they have reachedare all pleased with this year's progress and hope that theprogram will continue to grow. Sharpe summed up thehopes of the Bureau saying. “I think it is a very good pro¬gram; I only wish students would get more involved inworking in the community. There is a lot more to an edu¬cation than what goes on within the ivy walls of the Uni¬versity. and if students would be willing to try I believethat within this community there is something foreven one.A haven for the up and coming artistBy William GoldsteinAlthough its location seem out of the way of the artworld, the Hyde Park Art center (HPAC), located at 5236S. Blackstone, is in the thick of the Chicago art scene.The Center has attracted much attention as a home ofinnovative art. In recent years, it has been at the core ofthe school known as the Chicago Imagists which theCenter’s coordinator, Robert Hutchinson, describes as “araucous, rambunctious, highly personal form of art.”“It’s a good first place to show,” says Hutchinson, whotakes pride in the center's willingness to take chances onnew artists. Noting that space in commerical galleriessuch as the Art Institute and the Michigan Avenue galler¬ies is tight, Hutchinson says that the only alternatives arethe HPAC and the cooperative galleries along HubbardStreet.The purrent show which will run through May 18 (Tues¬day through Saturday, 11 am to 5 pm), shows the works ofthree photographers — Balthasar Burkhard, Jesse Hick¬man and Francois Robert. Burkhard's work, a series ofphotographs entitles “Portfolio,” examines his own face.Despite this, says Hutchinson, the abstractness of the Dho-Self-portraits by Balthasar Burkhart tographs, the plays of shadow and tone, is "as significantas the documentary function.” Hickman's photographspresent a forceful image of a single object against a starkwhite background. Two of the images, which are subdivid¬ed into nine segments, are produced on a hugh scale (10feet by 10 feet), and several small prints serve as workingphotographs for the larger ones. The single images in astark setting, says Hickman, “come out of my short stintas a commercial photograph.”Robert’s photographs fall into two categories. One de¬picts sequential images of a scene while the other includesa series of photographic “portraits." For the second cate¬gory, Robert asked his subjects to display all the posses¬sions which they were carrying with them at the time ofthe photo session. The objects were then placed on a sheetof graph paper and photographed along with the owner'shand. The arrangement of the objects (determined byRobert), the shapes of the objects, and the nature of theobjects, form a composition that provides a glimpse of theowner's personality.Almost from its inception in 1939. the Center has sup¬ported an art school, making it the only school gallery inthe city on the same premises. In terms of Hyde Park, sayHuthcinson and Hardy Schlick. a teacher at the Center,the school is the more significant part of the Center; Itprovides a link to the community in a way that the gallery,with its visitors from mostly outside the area, cannot.Staffed by a dozen teachers, many of whom are profes¬sional artists and photographers, the school has morethan 140 students and offers 16 classes (for both childrenand adults) in ceramics, photography, portrait drawing(the most popular classes), and sculpture and paintingThe proximity of the gallery provides students with an op¬portunity for first-hand study and the gallery is making Photography by Francois Robertplans in which featured artists will talk with students.Established by the Fifth Ward Art Guild, the Center’soriginal goal was to "stimulate community interest inart." Under Don Baum's direction in the sixties, theCenter began to attract local, national and even interna¬tional attention as an "all-out. dropout alternative" to theNew York avant-garde. HPAC sponsored a series of dis¬plays by young artists who. according to the Center s offi¬cial history, "assumed groups' soubriquets after the man¬ner of rock groups." Some of the resulting exhibition fromthese group efforts were called the HAIRY WHO. NON¬PLUSSED SOME. CHICAGO ANTIGUA, and perhapsmost appropriatelv of all, FALSE IMAGE CHICAGOSTYLE.The Chicago Maroon, Tuesday, May 6, 1980—5'The JerusalemCm a r t e tAuthor i. Producer of fint Films2.ev Kedem, will be presenthursday May 8, 7--30PMAdm.sste* PRE*E tv Mernfffri l Contributors, t 1 00-IHillel 5715 WoodI3 wnU.S.D.A. CHOICEPORTERHOUSEor 979T-BONE STEAK lb.U.S.D.A. CHOICE 009SIRLOIN STEAK It >bHYGRADE SUGAR-CURED ■ 891SMOKED BUTTS .59'FRESH CALIFORNIASTRAWBERRIESNESCAFEINSTANT COFFEEFROZEN BANQUETDINNERS 469991 0 oz.C1 1 OZ.BAYSENGLISH MUFFINSKRAFT AGED SLICEDSWISS CHEESE 59 c6 Pk1 298 oz.c32 oz.SALE RUNS MAY 7 THRU MAY JOREALEMONLEMON JUICE 99ytucFINER FOODSSERVING53rd PRAIRIE SHORESKIMBARK PLAZA 2911 VERNONWhere You Are A Stranger But Once! SPECIAL DISCOUNT PRICESfor all STUDENTS andFACULTY MEMBERSJust present your University of Chicago IdentificationCard. As Students or Faculty Members you are entitledto special money-saving DISCOUNTS on ChevroletParts, Accessories and any new or used Chevrolet youbuy from Ruby Chevrolet.GM QUALITYSERVICE PARTSGENERAL MOTORS BARTS DTVLSJONKeep Thai Great CM Feeling F ith GFMl IMF CM Paris "72nd & Stony Island 684-0400f—-j Open Evenings and Sunday Parts Open Sat. 'til noon2 Miles - 5 Minutes AwayFrom The UNIVERSITYs0 SPECIAL DISCOUNT PRICESfor all STUDENTS andFACULTY MEMBERSJust present your University of Chicago IdentificationCard. As Students or Faculty Members you are entitledto special money-saving DISCOUNTS on VolkswagenParts, Accessories and any new or used Volkswagenyou buy from Ruby Volkswagen72nd & Stony Island 684-0400Open Evenings and Sundays Parts Open Sat. 'til noonT[ lllllllllllllllllllll“At dusk we reachedthe inn overlooking theuniversity . . . found itsreputation for hospital¬ity and good will justlydeserved.”JIMMYSWest room now openduring lunch for nicesandwiches andcocktailsMon. thru Fri. Secretaries Acct. ClerksTypists SwitchboardAll Office SkillsSDMHERIOBSEarn top hourly rates this summeron a variety of interesting tem¬porary office assignments in thearea you prefer to workSTIVERS TEMPORARYPERSONNEL, 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/FNEW 2 drawer files $59.00NEW 6-ft. folding tables $49.00EQUIPMENT& SUPPLY CO.8600 COMMERCIAL AVENUEOPEN MON.-FRI.8:30-5:00SATURDAYSRE 4-21 11 9:00-3:00Tht Cniocrsitu of ChicagoTHE DIVISION OF THE HUMANITIESThe Lester Aronberg Judaica Lectureship Committee,the Department of Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations,and the Committee on Social ThoughtannounceA LECTUREbySHIMON APPLEBAUMProfessor of Classical Archaeology and Ancient and Jewish HistoryTel Aviv UniversityAuthor of Jews and Greeks in Ancient Cyrene, Prolegomena to theStudy of the Second Jewish Revolt, and other writingson the topic:New Aspects of the Revoltof Ben Koziba(Bar Kokhba)MONDAY, MAY 12, 19808:00 P.M.Breasted Hall 1155 East 58th StreetThe lecture is free and open to the public6—The Chicago Maroon, Tuesday, May 6, 1980Acupuncture comes to UCBy Philip MaherAcupuncture will be taught at the University this sum¬mer if enough people sign up. The course will be taught bya young man named Sung Baek. Now a fourth year stu¬dent in the College, concentrating in biochemistry and ap¬plying to medical schools, Baek would already have beenan MD if he had stayed in his native Korea. The Universi-Student profilety however, does not accept transfer credits readily.Baek was born and raised in Korea. While still a child,his grandfather, a doctor, introduced him to the rudi¬ments of Oriental medicine through the I Ching. At 15,Baek entered acupuncture school and studied The YellowEmperor’s Book of Internal Medicine, which is a 4000 yearold text and the definitive primer of acupuncture. Sincethen, he has cured more than fifty people without surgery,including his own father.Baek was working at a Western type hospital in Koreaand had already seen one man die from severe hemorrhoi¬dal bleeding. When his father developed the same prob¬lem, Baek insisted that he take Oriental medicine, but hisfather did not believe in it, and instead checked in at thehospital. He grew weaker and weaker while the doctorscould not identify the source of the bleeding. “Finally,”Baek recounted, “I could not stand it any longer, andthough the hospital did not allow it, I brought him the med¬icine. He checked out the next day. The packet of herbshad only cost $1.50.”One of the best aspects of acupuncture is the absence ofside effects. There are none whatsoever, said Baek, “ifyou make a mistake, you just take the needle out.” The super thin needles are absolutely painless, he says.There are fifteen skills an acupuncturist must know,Baek said, and with each needle he uses them all at once.Some needles are used to give energy, for diseases ofweakness; others take away bad energy. Needles are notthe only tools Baek uses — herbs are also essential.Oriental medicine does not depend on the patient’s be¬lief in it. Baek said, though many skeptics insist any ben¬efits are purely psychological. He explained, “There arethree ways of healing. One extreme is to treat the bodydirectly, such as cutting a tumor out, or the use of antibiot¬ics. Some problems require surgery,” he said. “The otherextreme is psychiatric. If the patient believes he will re¬cover, he will recover. The problem is that the belief mustbe one hundred percent. The middle way^is to treat withki. The body is ruled by ki, which is controlled by themind. Acupuncture works with ki.”Ki is one of the basic tenents of Oriental thought. Basi¬cally, it is the vital energy of life, which concentrates atcertain points throughout the body. These points can beused to save a life, with acupuncture, or to take a life, withthe martial arts. For this reason, it is not surprising, ac¬cording to Baek, that he is both an expert in acupunctureand holds a fourth degree in five martial arts: ken do, taikwan do, iealito, kung fu, and tan kum to. “If you knowhow to manage your energy,” he said, “once you knowone, the others come quite easily.”Ki often continues though the body’s organs may ceaseto function. Baek used the example of yoga masters whoare able to stop their hearts for hours or days, yet stillretain their ki, and with it their life.Presence of ki together with an absence of vital signs isknown as false death, said Baek. Stroke victims are espe¬cially prone to this symptom. Western medicine realizesthis — not giving up on a patient until brain death appears— but Western doctors have limited methods of revivingthese people. According to Baek. stroke sufferers, as wellas drowning victims if retrieved soon enough, can be re¬vived by a single well placed needle. While there aremany Western type hospitals in Korea, each of them keeps Sung Baekan acupuncturist on hand for stroke and paralysis vic¬tims. “For these problems,” said Baek, “there is no otherway.” Baek himself has revived one drowning victim andtwo stroke victims this way.When told that this seems incredible. Baek said, “Onceyou understand it, it’s not incredible at all, it’s perfectlylogical. Of coure it would take me a hundred hours to ex¬plain it all.”Presently Baek teaches a class once a week at the Mid¬west Center or Oriental Medicine, located on the NorthSide. He would like to start his course at the Universitythis summer, if enough people sign up Otherwise thecourse will begin in the fall It will be open to laymen andprofessionals alike, since the class will begin with thebasics. First Baek plans to introduce the class to ki Theywill learn to feel it. and then to understand its circulationand vital points. Next, the class will learn to manage thecirculation and points for healing purposes, involving acu¬pressure and execises. Then Baek will introduce acupunc¬ture. The course will be a continuing one. so that thosewho wish to pursue acupuncture will be able to do so. Any¬one interested should call Student Activities at 753-3563.Solution to lastMaroon Crosswordpuzzle This Library closes at 3amBy Allan SowizralBefore it was refurbished during a six-week period inearly 1979, the Pierce Tower Library had been an aban¬doned room on the eleventh floor of Pierce Tower.“There are several common areas in Pierce that werevirtually unused,” says Thompson House resident headTim Erwin. “The other resident heads and myself askedourselves w'hat we could do with the unused space. SincePierce has mostly doubles, and people live in closequarters with noisy hallways, we thought an area for quietstudy would be feasible and would fulfill a need.”The project w'as remarkably inexpensive: an estimated$700. Student volunteers sanded, stained and varnishedtables obtained from University-owned buidings at 55thand Ingleside w-hich were slated for demolition. The post¬ers and frames that adorn the library’s walls were origi¬nally donated to Regenstein Library. Students obtained anoriental rug from the Smart Gallery, put two fresh coatsof paint on the walls and obtained bookshelves from theplant department for $300. The whole process, says Erwin,increased cooperation between the houses.Dave McCloskey, a member of the original renovationteam and now a library monitor, said, “There are a lot ofsurplus items on this campus. If we could find twentytables and forty chairs without any problem, you know that resources are being under-utilized.At the library's opening, the organizers sponsored a din¬ner in which the price of admission was a donation of aplant or book. The library collected 200 volumes includingtextbooks, an Encyclopedia Britanica donated by ShoreyHouse, and a leather bound Roget’s Thesaursus.Last year the library was open five nights a week from 7pm to 1 am. and this year, with the addition of work study-funds for the library monitors, the library closes at 3 am.The library can accommodate up to 25 people and is oftenfull during the early evening hours.McCloskey said that the library is utilized most duringmidterms and finals. The monitors, who help with refer¬ence problems, sell coffee, and try to prevent theft andvandalism, are chosen on the basis of seniority and theircommitment to improve the TowerErwin also spoke of possible renovation of the secondfloor hallway, the basement snack bar and the bike room,which will be converted into a mini-gym complete with auniversal weight machine if the necessary $2000 can beraised. McCloskey is skeptical about making future im¬provements. “The library was the easiest project becausethere were no structural problems. The only way to con¬tinue with improvements is with money from the housingoffice — and they have been unwilling to spend it. The stu¬dents are willing but we're constrained by our budget.”ERA marchContinued from Page Ipie, and gold banner atColumbus Drive and Monroe Street at 9:30am this Saturday, according to Action ERAco-leaders Hart and Theresa Henn, who saidmarchers are planning to wear white in thetradition of the suffragettes.NOW hopes the effort will duplicate thesuccess of the 100,000 strong march onWashington in 1978 which led Congress toextend the deadline for ratification to June30, 1982. Thirty-five states have ratified theconstitutional amendment since Congresspassed it in 1972, and the approval of threemore states is needed to make it law.“Illinois is the only northern industrialstate w'hich is still unratified.” Hart said. Intwelve votes before the Illinois House orSenate since 1972, the ERA has always wona majority, but has failed to capture thethree-fifths of the vote required for approvalof constitutional amendments in both housesin the same year. Illinois is the only statethat requires so large a margin for ratifica¬ tion.Sponsors of the amendment in the Housepredict they will win the 107 of 177 votesneeded in the coming House vote, thoughthey admit it will be close. Pro-ERA forceshave been lobbying intensively in the pastmonths, and 30 students from the Universityhave participated in the lobbying efforts, asw-ell as demonstrating in Springfield with600 students supporting the ERA.Hart said that in a Springfield meetingwith ERA advocates. State Senator RichardNewhouse “said that the ERA has becomethe issue in Springfield.” The amendmentfell two votes short of passage in 1978 whensome black legislators traded their supportfor ratification in return for support in afight over House leadership.According to Hart, Newhouse said oppo¬nents “would be smart to vote for it and getit out of the way, because it’s not going to goaway.” The bill cleared the House commit¬tee last week when two ERA opponents ab¬stained from voting.National leaders of the AFL-CIO, UnitedAuto Workers. Teamsters, and United MineWorkers came to Illinois in April to lobby forERA passageHenn is one of an estimated 300 ERA sup¬porters in Springfield for the House commit¬tee hearings. She said testimony in support of the amendment came from the chairmanof the Chicago Association of Priests, thepresident of the American Bar Association,and the president of the Illinois Federationof Labor.In addition. Assistant Secretary of De¬fense Kathleen Carpenter testified that theEqual Rights Amendment would have no ef¬fect on drafting women or assigning them tocombat duty. According to Henn. ERA pas¬sage would assure women in the military ofequal training and pay. Henn said that sinceWorld War II. 200,000 military women haveserved under fire and many have been takenprisoner of war, w ithout adequate prepara¬tion. Henn added that women veterans arenow ineligible for veterans benefits.Testifying against the ERA. a leader ofthe Veterans of Foreign Wars claimed thatextending veterans benefits to women wouldbe too costly. Henn said Anti-ERA activistPhyllis Schlafley argued that governmentshould pay attention to more importantissues, such as inflation and foreign policy.Henn said that “Schlafley totally ignoredCarpenter s testimony” by linking passageof the ERA with drafting womenAccording to Henn. ERA supporters faroutnumbered opponents in attendance at thecommittee hearing. Hart feels that thestrong pro-ERA lobbying effort, and ab¬ sence of much organized opposition, “re¬flects the climate of opinion in the state andin the country.” She added that a religiousrally against the ERA annunced by Schla¬fley for last week failed to materialize, al¬though Schlafley reportedly plans a similarrally this week.There is no organized opposition to theERA on campus Action ERA collected over250 faculty and staff signatures on a petitionsupporting the ERA in less than three dayslast week. Hart said.NOW has focused the ERA campaign oneconomic discrimination against women,emphasizing that working women earn anaverage of 59 cents for every dollar menearn, and “women who struggle to earn col¬lege degrees earn less than men with eighthgrade educations.” According to NOW, “theeconomic gap between men and women isgreater mow* than it was 20 years ago.”The main effect of the amendment wouldbe on discriminatory laws. Hart and Hennsaid. They said there are 800 federal stat¬utes. and more state laws, that discriminateon the basis of sex. According to NOW. Su¬preme Court rulings have generally made itmore difficult to press sex discriminationsuits, and have been narrowing laws whichoutlaw specific forms of sex discrimina¬tionThe Chicago Maroon, Tuesday, May 6, 1980—7\STUDENT LOAN ^'^lTvT^™PRESENTSA CONFERENCE ON 20th CENTURYRUSSIAN LITERATUREFriday, May 9,1980 • Ida Noyes Library • 1212 East 59th St.CANCELLATION PROGRAMI. Eschatology in Russian Literature, 9:30 -10:30Commentator: Diane Ignashev, University of ChicagoImportant Notice toGraduate Students & Studentsin The College "The Mythologem of Death in Vasilij Rasputin’s Works"Constance Link, Indiana University“The Permanent Apocalypse in Andrej Belyj’s Petersburg”Erica Brown, University of ChicagoII. Decadence in Russia, 10:40 -11:40Commentator: Milton Ehre, University of Chicago“The Poetry of Aleksandr Dobroljubov: Towards a Definition of Russian Decadence'Jean Laves Hellie, University of Chicago"Brjusov’s Zemnaja os’: Decadence & Experimentation with Narrative Viewpoint”Patricia Suhrcke, University of ChicagoAll Spring Quarter Student Loan checksmust be picked up from the Student LoanCenter by Friday, May 16.Unclaimed 1979-80 Student Loan checkswill be cancelled at 3:00 P.M. on May 16,1980.Student Loan CenterBookstore 4th floorHours 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.sThe Visiting Fellows CommitteepresentsMICHAEL S. DUKAKISformer Governor of Massachusettsspeaking onStates and Cities -A New Role for State GovernmentQuestion-and-Answer Session To FollowTHURSDAY, MAY 8,1980,4:00 P.M.Social Sciences 122III Poetry of the Soviet Period, 1 00 - 2:30Commentators: Ralph Matlaw & Lisa Crone, University of Chicago"The Presence of Mandel stam in the Dedications to Axmatova’s Poema bez geroja’Rory Childers, University of Chicago"Zabolotskij’s ‘Cerkesenka’"Raya Avichai, University of Chicago"Cvetaeva’s Encomium to Rilke: ‘Novogodnee’”Ronald Meyer, Indiana UniversityIV.The Russian Prose Tradition, 2:40 - 4:10Commentator: Betty Yetta Forman, Wellesley College“The Influence of Crime & Punishment on Singer’s ‘Musician of Lublin”’Wanda Sorgente, University of Illinois at Chicago Circle“The Little Man: Ivan Bunin's ‘Loopy Ears’"Thomas Marullo, University of Notre Dame"Thematic Integrity in Olesa’s Zavist’”Donald Gillis, University of ChicagoFeatured Speaker: VLADIMIR MARKOV, UCLAspeaking on:“WHO WAS THE GREATEST RUSSIAN POETOF THE TWENTIETH CENTURY?”Social Sciences 122, 5 p.m.8—The Chicago Maroon, Tuesday, May 6, 1980MO* Think Mintk&i'b DayThink CmCey'DCuisinartsreg. nowFPC-9ADLC-8DLC-7 130.00 103.95175.00 139.95250.00 199.95Copco Spice Racksreg. 24.00 Now 1 5®5 .SpecialTeapots1.8 litercapacityyellowredrustwhiteblackSale ends May 15While quantities lastMon.-Sat. 10 am to 6 pmSun 12 noon to 5:30 pm cooley'sIn Harper Court5211 S. Harper Court363-4477The University of ChicagoAlumni AssociationpresentsUFE AFTER GRADUATION: SOCIAL WORKan informal discussion of careeropportunities in social workfor interested studentsGuests:Robert AdamsDirector of Community Research and DevelopmentUnited Way of Metropolitan ChicagoAmos MooreUnited States Probation OfficerIllinois Pardon and Parole BoardRavindra KatiyarDirector of Professional ServicesSalvation Army Harbor Light Center(outpatient psychiatric and medical services)12 noon, May 7, 1980Robie House, 5757 Woodlawn AvenueBring your own lunch. (Beverages provided) £Blackfriars presents St>'V%$ 3S? -May 8, 9,10,11International HouseAuditoriumTickets $2 students$3 othersCurtain at 8:00 p.m.Groups of 15 and over $1.50 opening nightCall 955-8198dwmfoiCOU-EGEPROGRAMSDAYCOBB HALLMAY 93-5 RM3:00QuarttrellAuditorium MastersgftneCollegiate Divisions4:00 & 4:30 Special presentationClassroom by each field ofPresentations concentrationFind out divisional and concentrationrequirements. Talk to divisional Mastersand faculty members.The Chicago Maroon, Tuesday, May 6, 1980—9Campus filmThe Ten Commandments (Cecil B. De-Mille, 1923): If you disliked Cecil’s 50’sversion of “Exodus”, be sure to skip thisone. The later film was not nearly as mora¬listic as this one, nor did DeMille glorifysenselessly obsessive characters as badly.Two stories are presented here. The first isan abridged version of the escape fromEgypt and the punishment at Mt. Sinai. Ithas lots of pageantry, but it’s of the “Wow!They did that in 1923” sort, and it’s unim¬pressive. The main story tells of a profaneman’s ascent to power and his self-inflict¬ed fall. Even though his punishmentevolves from his own action, DeMille’smessage seems to be: Be Good cuz Godsays. Goodness has nothing to do with loveof other humans; instead, you blandly fol¬low some rules. The only way to proveyour love is through sacrificing yourselffor those rules and becoming a martyr.Characters regularly act out such claimsand DeMille additionally assaults us withheavy-handed images (a church wall col¬lapses, but two giant tablets, built into thewall, remain standing). A tedious 2V2hours. Tonight at 8 in Quantrell. Doc, $1. —GBThe Criminal (The Concrete Jungle) (Jo¬seph Losey, 1960): Stanley Baker plays acon who finds out in the hardest way thatlife outside prison is as stunted and en¬trapped as life inside. Losey fills in thebackground of this lower-case crime talewith his patented combination of polishedsurfaces and terrorizing confrontations.He is helped immensely by the hoveringphotography, which keeps the light coldand harsh, emphasizing the huge sculptedspaces and the masses of dark. But evenmore effective is the suffocating intimacyLosey gets from his performers—in partic¬ular Baker's intense prisoner, and themenacing prison guard of Patrick Magee).Tomorrow at 8:45 in Quantrell. Doc. SI. —RMcG CalendarTUESDAYWomen's Exercise: Class meets 9:30-10:30 am inthe dance room of Ida Noyes.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Turkish Circle -“Reflections of the Turkish War of Independencein Literature" speaker Inci Enginun, 1:00 pm. Pick218.Resource Analysis Seminar: "Energy Policy andour Obligations to Future Generations" speakerBrian Barry and Thomas Veach Long, II, 1:30 pm,Wieboldt 301.Dept of Microbiology: “Genetic Minapulation inChinese Hamster Cells” speaker Dr. Ronald Wor-ton. 4:00 pm, Cummings 11th floor seminarroom.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Lecture - "Ha¬lide Edip (Adivar)” speaker Inci Enginun, 4:00 pm,Pick 016.Women In Medicine: Presents Barbara Orcutt: Aninformal talk on Midwifery/Gynecology/Birth¬ing/Women and Health, 4:30 pm, Billings hospi¬tal M137.UC Ki-Aikido Club: Meets 4:30-6:00 pm in the field-house wrestling room.Hellenic Civilization: Lecture - “Heraclitus: River.Bow and Fire" Harper 103, 4:30 pm.UC Gymnastics Club: Instruction available5:30-8:00 pm, Bartlett, free.Physical Education: Free swimming instruction7:30-8:30 pm, Ida Noyes.Transcendental Meditation Society: Public Lec¬ture on Transcendental Meditation program, 7:30pm, Ida Noyes Library.Doc Films: “The Ten Commandments" 8:00 pm,Cobb.Hillel: Israeli Folkdancing, 8:00 pm, Ida NoyesTheatre.WEDNESDAYPerspectives: Topic - "The Cultural Shift to Narcis-sim" guests Peter Homans, Donald Levine and Dr.June Singer, 6:09 am, channel 7.Dept of Microbiology: “Multi-Stage Chemical Car¬cinogenesis” speaker Dr. Thomas Slaga, 11:30 am,5812 Ellis, rm J-135.Italian Table: Meets at 12 noon in the Blue Gar¬goyle to speak Italian.Theoretical Astrophysics Seminar: Journal Club,12 noon. Astronomy and Astrophysics Center,5640 S. Ellis.Commuter Co-op: Get-together in the CommuterLounge, G.B. 1, 12:30 pm. Committee on Genetics: "Double-Jointed Herpesu_... HSV Genome Isomerize.1117Committee on Social Thought: “The Spiritual Ren¬aissance of the Twelfth Century and Some NewThemes of Gothic Art" speaker Otto von Simson.1:00 pm, Pick 016. . ,Dept of Chemistry: “Some Investigations otStereoelectronic Effects" speaker Jack Baldwin,1:30 pm, Kent 103.Computation Center Seminar: Introduction to Su-perwylbur Macro, 3:30-5:30 pm, RI 180.Cog Com Colloquium Series: “The Mechanisms byWhich Redundancy Aids Reading" speaker RalphHaber, 4:00 pm, B-102.Dept of Biochemistry Seminar: “snRNPs andscRNPs: New Classes of RNA-Protein Complexesfrom Eukaryotic Cells" 4:00 pm, Cummings room101Art History: “The Work of Eugene Atget speakerJohn Szarkowski, 4:00 pm, SS 122.Slavic Forum: Lecture by T. Anemone on Nabo¬kov, 4:30 pm, Harper 284.UC Gymnastics Club: Instruction available5:30-8:00 pm , Bartlett, free.Doc Films: “The Lineup," 7:15 pm, "The Criminal,8:45 pm, Cobb.Badminton Club: Meets 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes gym¬nasium.Women's Rap Group: Meets at 7:30 pm in theWomen’s Center, 3rd floor of the Blue Gar¬goyle.Tai Chi Ch’uan Club: Meets 7:30 pm in the BlueGargoyle.Country Dancers: Traditional dances of England,Scotland and New England taught, 8:00 pm, IdaNoyes Cloister Club. Beginners welcome.Evolution Discussion Group: “Evolution of Mito¬chondrial DNA" speaker W. B. Upholt, 8:00 pm,HGS 176.Science Fiction Club: Meets 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes,Everyone welcome.THURSDAYPerspectives: Topic - “The American Quest for aSupreme Fiction” guests James Miller and RobertStreeter, 6:09 am, channel 7.Women’s Exercise: Class meets 9:30-10:30 in thedance room of Ida Noyes.Eastern Orthodox Divine Liturgy: Confession10:30 am, Liturgy, 10:45 am, Bon Chapel.Hillel: Faculty Lunch - “Cultural and Religious Differences, Ashkenazic and Sephardic Jewry”speaker Rabbi Dr. Rifat Sonsino, 12 noon, Hillel.Lunchtime Concerts: Performance of flute duets,12:15 pm, Reynolds Club North Lounge. Immuogenetics: “Genetics and Regulation ofRabbit Immunoglobulin Allotypes, speakerKatherine Knight. 2:30 pm, Cummings room 101.Eastern Orthodox Divine Liturgy: Vespers 3:00pm. Bond Chapel.UC Gymnastics Club: Instruction available4 00-8:00 pm, Bartlett, free.UC Ki-Aikido Club: Meets 4:00-6:00 pm, in thefieldhouse wrestling room.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Lecture - “Cus¬tom and Shari a in Sedentarized Tribal Societyaccording to Legal Documents from the JudaeanDesert" speaker Aharon Layish, 4:00 pm, Harper103.Social Thought Press: “The New Republic: The OldDebate" speaker John Sparrow, 4:00 pm, Classics10.Germanics: Lecture - “Confessions of a Poet; Po¬etry and Politics in Bertolt Brecht's Lyric” speak¬er Reinhold Grimm, 4:15 pm, Classics 21.UC Judo Club: Meets 6:00-8:30 pm, Bartlett gym.Beginners welcome.Zen Meditation: Meets 6:00-7:30 pm, Ida Noyes.Beginners welcome.NOMOR Committee Meeting: Meets 7:00 pm, IdaNoyes 1st floor lounge.Table Tennis Club: Meets 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes 3rdfloor.Hillel: Four Films - “The Jerusalem Quartet #9,”a series of four half-hour documentary films, 7:30pm, Hillel.Doc Films: “Death In Venice" 8:00 pm, Cobb.Collegiate Lectures in the Liberal Arts: “Freud’sMetapsychology: Neurology or Psychology?”speaker Bertram Cohler, 8:00 pm, Harper 130.FRIDAYPerspectives: Topic - “The Care and Feeding ofLong Poems” guests James Miller and RobertStreeter, 6:09 am, channel 7.GRADUATES!You are unique. therefore your resume should re¬flect your special talents. We offer18 yeors experience in IndustrialPersonnel Management and we knowwhat employers wont. In today srecessionary environment, that willmake the differenceWe can prepare your resume to getthe maximum interview response foryou For more information call;Bryan-RossConsultants(312) 485-4836Join 10's of Thousands in a March that will make history in the fight for Equal RightsSATURDAY MAY 10NATIONAL ERA MARCH IN CHICAGO*Assemble at 9:30 A.M. on Columbus Dr.between Monroe & Jackson, under theUniversity of Chicago Banner.•March south to Roosevelt. • Rally at Grant ParkL^DressjnJWhiteJWe the undersigned members of the University of Chicago faculty andstaff support the passage of the EQUAL RIGHTS AMENDMENT. •Over 225 National Organizations represented•Jean Stapleton and Mario Thomas•National Leaders•Marching BandsDue to lack of space the names of others who signed this petitioncould not be included.Robert Adams Anna Carr Dolores G. Ellis J. David Greenstone John T. Kirkpatrick Gayle McKeen Adel* V. Pardee Mildred SouthClaudia Allan Elizabeth Cawelti Joan L. Erdman Jacqueline Grundy Joseph M. Kitagawa David McNeill Anne E. Patrick Noncy L. SteinUucija Ambrosina Anna M. Chian Cynthia Ernst Joseph Robert Hanc Gail Kligman R. Bruca McPherson Shirley Payne George W. StockingPamela Amat . Evelyn Clarke Debra Evanson Russell Hardin Charles Knight Sally Mendoza Eleanor Pettigrew Susan StodolskyKatMaon A. Anderson Zita Cogan Nancy Teaman Marion Hardman Suzanne C. Koboso Vincent L. Michael D. J. Piane Geoffrey R. StoneEvelyn D. AkK Ted Cohan Linda Tisher P. M. Hauser Mae M. Krugmon Sharon Mikulich . Arlene J. Polinsky Jane S. StrablePaul A utick Bartran Cohler Carolyn Tlemmlng Susan Henkins ' «4 Ross W. Lambert. Jr. ' Carolyn Miller Stephanne Powell Dorothy Sharpless StrongRalph Austen Bernard S. Cohn Melon K. Flint Mark J. Heyrman Edward W. Laves Gail D. Miller Maryann G. Putnam Dadako TengonRalph Bargan Jean Comaroff Burton S. Floroday Myrna Hieke Karen Lawler Sheila Miller-Reeves A. K. Ramanujan Alice L. ThompsonSuzanne Barnacle Irene A. Conley Raymond D. Fogelson Amy Hilsman Barbara J. Lewert Stephen Montell Sophie Ravin Clair* E. TothDavid l. Bartlett Kathy Cotton Carol Forster Sarah D. Hodgkin Faye A. Lewis Philip I. Montag Kenneth J. Rehag* Thomas TrabassoEarl Ball Mihaly Csikszentmfhalyi Lewis Fortner Dannis P. Hogan James W. Lewis Mary M. Moore Lance Rips Margaret TurnerHorn Dieter Betz David L. Cunningham Paul Friedrich Mary Lee Hoganson Susan Levin* Mlchoel Moreno Karen B. Robb Terence TurnerMamiaM. Bark lay Geraldine Cunningham Franklin 1. Gam well Doris B. Holleb C. R.Lincoln Eileen Morris Milton Rosenberg Valerio ValeriCharles Bidwell Jana Curry Stephen Gessner Helen Howe Jomes Lindholm Martha Ruth Morrow Ann Roth Beth VanceLoii Bisek Michael Dailey Langdon Gilkey Murray Hozinsky Julie Anne Loeffler' Patricia Morse Jean Schilt Barrik VanWinkleJudith Blair Eleanore DePooli N. S. Glnsburg B- Stephen Humphreys Robin Lovin Katherine H. Mosely Phillippe C. Schmitter Harold WechslerWayna Booth Thelma Diaz Gisela Goettling Jonellen Huttenlocher Julie Robinson Ludwig Linda R. Myers Betty Schneider John WeilRuby Rowan E.C. Dimack M. Kathryn Gohl Ronald Inden Lucretia Morriot C. M. Naim David Schneider Marie WesterRichard L. Bowltr Claire Marie Dolinar Susan GoldinMeadow John Kurt Jacobsen Peter W. Martin Donald Nelson Michael Schudson Samuel P. WhitselNancy Bradnay Emily Dorns Hanna Goldschmidt Donald Jones Re* L. Martin Larry Nespor Oreet Segal Sarah S. WilsonWayna Braslor Camille Dotts Leo A. Goodman G. R. Kantor Colin P Masica Ralph W. Nicholas Susan H. Shapiro Robert Wimpleberglaa Brilmayar Starkey Duncan Daisy Gordon Ira Katinelson Robert L. McCaul Elizabeth NoeHe Neumann Richard A.Shweder Benjamin WrightDon S. Browning Lorraina P Dwell* Robert M Gran! Kenneth Kaye James D. McCawley Peter Novick Bernard Silberman Hans ZeiselRichard Brynteson Mary E. Earp Grace Green Christiana Kelley Darlene McCampbell Nancy O'Connor Michael Silverstein Norman ZideLinda K.Budd David Easton Susan C. Green Mary Ann Kiely Martha K. McClintock Wendy O'Floherty Ellen ZimmermanEnrique (. Camacho Henry G. Ecton Larry Greenfield Joan King Eunice H. McGuire Thomas A. Owens Raymon L. Lolomon Marvin Zonis10—The Chicago Maroon, Tuesday, May 6, 1980Hey ho.< uvs Qo >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 noonWednesday.Display advertising rates areavailable upon request. 753-3263.SPACESUMMER 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 Claudia955-4022.56th and Kenwood 2 bdrms 1 bath suncork firs wbf csm + wdws elevtr. blgd.$80,000 947-0032.ROOMS FOR THE SUMMER-Close tocampus, library, and gym. Phi DeltaTheta is looking for summer boarders.Low rent, Many extras. Call now.955-7672.FOR RENT: Furnished Condo, 56thand Dorchester. June '80-Sept. 81. 3bdrms, 2 baths. Back yard. Privateporch. $600/mo. Call 955-6512.SUMMER SUBLET frn. 2 bdrm 54 &Woodlawn, $220 mo. util incl 288-4446.Cooperative Household-5 bdrm houseon Dorchester. 2 rms open. June 1.Shared cooking. 493-5419.Hy. Pk. UC 2Vj 4 rm avail now. Nicebldg. Adults. BU8-0718ROOMMATE WANTED Share fur¬nished apartment with business stu¬dent. Summer only. 54th and Ken¬wood. Easy parking. Close to campus.S155/mo. Call Phil 363-4950 PM,FOR RENT: Spacious 2 bedroomapartment with formal dining room,hardwood floors, new kitchen andbath. Excellent Hyde Park location.$450 Call 363-1332.HYDE PARK CONDO ATYESTERYEAR PRICES: 4 bedroomcondominium homes at 50th & Dor¬chester for $47,500-$49,500. Commonelements and exteriors extensivelyrehabbed. Apartments that will besold as is have hardwood floors, for¬mal dining rooms, loads of closetspace and more. Quiet residentialblock close to transportation. 363-1332or 288 2175.SUBLET June 10-Sept 15, Sunny 2bdrm apt near Museum, Lake, 1C,minibus, shopping. $375/mo. Phone955-2759 or 363 6320.Medical student interested in a familyhouse willing to sublet a room. CallHARRY: 288 4329.11/2 rm apt. to sublet this summerw/option to renew lease th-fall$200/mo. Call 288-8113.Studio apt. Available July 1 or August1 Flamingo residence, 5500 S. ShoreDr. A stone's throw from theShoreland. Security. University dis¬count available. $276 unfurnished; $298furnished (without discount) CallRobert, evenings 684-0326.SUMMER SUBLET May 6 to Aug 25three rooms 165 per mo finest location.BU8-3216.St.-apartment 5501 S. Cornell 160-util,incl. av. June 15.684-5400.SUMMER SUBLET Spacious 4 rm apt1 or 2 bdrms nicely turn Avble June 15-Sept 21. 684-1302 anytime.1 bdrm apt sublet now w/option torenew; 3Vi rms, $280/mo Ig livrmw/south windows, near 54th and Ken¬wood by park. 493-8794.5405 S. Woodlawn June rental turnapts. 643-2760 Mrs. GreenCo-op apt 4 rms near U of C sun porchkit pantry microw, freezer, low asses$22,000 or best 947-9599.Summer sublet with fall optionavailable mid-June. Prairie Shores,across from Michael Reese. Studio,140/mo. Call 842-6541This historic 1906 Lloyd Wright studiodesign Prairie House has natural woodand other Prairie features throughout4-bedrm home on dbl. lot. Totallyrestored by contractor family incl.new kitchen, bath. Suburban setting 3blks from lake, beach and transpn inSouth Shore. You'd pay $170,000 for itin Hyde park, but the South Shoreprice is $89,000. Do you really thinkthere's $80,000 worth of difference inthe two communities now that SouthShore Bank has revitalized theneighborhood? By appt only toqualified buyers Call between 10-5.375-6353Large Kenwood home for rent. 9bedrooms, 5’ 2 baths, tarn rm. partially furnished Available Aug 1 1980 1oSept 1981. 4901 S. Greenwood Contact536 1643 after 5 pmSCENESDiscover Chicago's boulevards! Thebakeries & past too. We bicycle SunAM Call Jim 955-0481. PEOPLE WANTEDEarn extra money at home Good pay.Easy work. No experience necessary.Send for application. Home Money,Box 2432B, Iowa City, Iowa, 52240.Experienced help wanted writingthesis in education. Monetary feenegotiable. 735 Hawthorne Ln.Geneva, IL. 60134.$70 per month for each weekend of National Guard training. Call Al Novotneat 288-5036 or contact your PlacementOffice.Part time waiters or waitresses youmay choose your hours--no experiencenecessary--we train. Come in or callMrs. Schlender Quadrangle Club753-3696.Looking for co-author for paper on abiomedical ethical topic. Intend to sub¬mit for publication by end of May.90o/o off work already completed.Background in philosophy/ethicsuseful. Call Larry Stone 324-0519.Babysitter needed in my home oncampus. Half-time, mostly afternoons.Call 241-7545 aft 6.SUBJECTS NEEDED Third Gradechildren needed for U of C study in¬volving simple perceptual tasks. Pay$5 for a single 20 min session. Call753-4731 for appt 9:30-11:30 Mon-Fri.and 3:00-5:00 Mon. & Thurs.FOR SALEUnusual buy in beautiful brick bldg. 4bdrms 3 bath condo. Windows on 4sides. Sunny, completely renovated inlate 77, interior and exterior. Mod. kit¬chen, storage, laundry area, grass. 25min. walk to UC, campus bus at cor¬ner. Kenwood. $82,000. 13% mort.538-3407.VW bus 1974 am/fm radio 64T mil runsgood $1500 or best 947-9599,'69 Buick LeSabre: power steer andbrakes, air, auto trans, with reg andsnow tires. Runs ok, but needs timingchain. $500 or best offer. 493-5508Poetry, Jewish studies galley proofs.955-0293, mornings.Air conditioner: Sears Coldspot. 11,000BTU's. Excellent condition. $65. Call373-7247Akai CR-81 D 8-Track Stereo TapeDeck. Recording Capability. Fast For¬ward. Make Offer 285-2574PEOPLE 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.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 needed.Fee depending on manuscript. IBMSelectric-Judlth. 955-4417.RUSSIAN TUTOR-Native Speaker-Reasonable rates-Conversation, Com-posltion, Grammar. 324-4236.GRAPHS, figures for all kinds of mss.Perfection guaranteed. Lin. 3-4887.642-6218 evenings.SERVICESCarpentry, drywall, painting, wiring.Competent and imaginative work.Free estimates. 684-2286.WANTEDWANTED. Tickets to College Graduation. Will pay $$ Leave messge forRm. 418, 752 5757.LOST AND FOUNDA class ring belonging to Janet Reidhas been found. It is being held for herinCLSC 109.Keys found in park at 54th and Ken¬wood. Call Ralph, 288 6304 evenings orweekends.TRANSCENDENTALMEDITATIONPublic Lecture Tues. May 6 12:00 noonIda Noyes East Lounge 7:30 pm IdaNoyes Library.BRECHTLYRIC"Confessions of a Poet; Poetry andPolitics in Brecht Lyric" speakerReinhold Grimm, U. of Wise., Thursday, 4:15 pm, Cl. 21.GODSPELLGODSPELLGODSPELLGODSPELL_ _ PERSONALSWRITER'S WORKSHOP (Plaza2-8377)Must find home/homes for our 3wonderful cats ages lVs-4. All shots, allneutered, all beautiful. Free to lovinghome. Call 667-2312.This week on the Avant-Garde Hour-Music for 18 musicians by Steve Reich,along with works of Philip Glass andAnthony Braxton. Tues. 3-6 pmWHPK-FM.CONNOISSEUR OF FINE ART Thereason I am so unusual is because youopened a small door inside that let outall my possibilities. Keep your foot inthe door, OK?C Y 5/8 talk then or B4. UR Convenience. 2/78 was right. Now I think 2late. Never knew what u thought, B asU were B4. B there. Deutsche greek.Luv hell. U R sensitive. Dont U carehow U hurt me? Bfuddle me? try me?Blst?6th Law of Gizmatics-A horse can bedriven to water, but a pencil must belead.GiZMOErbecky-When do I get my necklace? 6Andy H.: Whadda you mean? Mr. Bill.LOUISVILLE MAP THIEF You'veestablished a new low. What sort ofcreep steals maps from the library col¬lection?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 14 pm,Sun and weekdays by appt. Call288-7450.RU MOVINGEAST?Nice Jewish boy w/truck going fromChgo. 2 Boston last 2 weeks in June.Will make stops en route. -No size orquantity 2 large or small. Inexpensiverates-experienced movers, 667-7498SUMMER BC/BSOff-Quarter BC/BS Coverage for Sum¬mer Quarter-Friday, May 30 Is ab¬solute deadline for enrollment. Pick upoff-quarter applications in Adm 103.MURIEL RUKEYSERAre you a fan of the late MurielRukeyser? (The poet.) We are lookingfor someone who will write a briefcommemoration her honor for the spr¬ing Literary Review. Call 753-3263 andask for Molly or Richard.COME TO EUROPEI am going to Europe this summer andwould like to join forces with others,praferably fluent in German orItalian. Call Mark Hrecz at 955-0380evenings.LEADSINGER DOGBERRY BEWITH YOUand also with you. Let us prey.$2470 FORSUMMER JOBUntil June 30 the National Guard willpay a $1500 enlistment bonus and $970for eight weeks summer training. Call288-5036 and ask for Al Novotne or con¬tact your Placement OfficeLUNCHTIMECONCERTSEvery Thursday at 12:15 pm inReynolds North Lounge This week,May 8, a program of flute duets byMozart, Hasse, and others, performedby Mary Cormier and Steve Veichm.Bring your lunch and enjoy the music.INTENSIVEGERMANHighpass the German exam this sum¬mer. Study with Karin Cramer nativeGerman PhD using the comparativestructural translation method coursestarting June 22 M-F 9:00-11:00,5:00-7:00 call 493-8127, 753-0516PERLAPPLICATIONSWill be accepted until May 13. Applications and information are available inCobb 330 from 9 to 2. 753 4121. DICTAPHONETYPIST EXCHANGEBACH ATHIS BESTFour partitas for harpsichord. Friday,May 9th at 8:30 pm. Call 493-6451 for in¬formation.PIZZAPLATTER1460 E. 53rdM13-2800No delivery United Charities is in need of a part-time dictaphone typist, 2 days perweek, in our Service for the Aged,vicinity of 61st and University. CallMrs. Levitan, 939-5930 An Equal Op¬portunity Employer.CHILDCAREWORKER Mature woman seeks comfortablequiet living space, 4-6 months, whilecompleteing dissertation. Will ex¬change service such as regular errands or driving, reading aloud,teaching English, other limitedresponsibility, for reasonable rent.References Leave message at947-0732 or at 386 5145.Wanted for full-time employment in aGroup Home for Emotionally Troubl¬ed Teen agers on the north side ofChicago Mileu therapy, casework,group work and psychiatric consultation part of the program. Call or write:Jewish Children's Bureau, 1 SouthFranklin St., Chicago, II. 60606 Phone346-6700 ex. 339 An equal opportunityemployerJ TAl SAfflYOttCHINESE^AMERICAinIRESTAURANTSoeciahzinq inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOpen Daily11 AM to 8:30 PMClosed Monday1318 EAST 63rdMU 4-1062; D ’ 7 j• o - k 3 -(NEXT YEAR IN JERUSALEM!CoMeec Siuiioms Recen? Grjflu.itf'sStudy Jewish TextsLive a Jewish LifeMIDRESHETYERUSHALAYIMA co-educationalone year program atNEVE SCHECHTERThe Jerusalem cjmouso*The Jewish Theological Semm.jr,ot Americai, v- VERSAILLES5254 S. DorchesterWELL MAINTAINEDBUILDINGAttractive 1 V2 and2'/2 Room StudiosFurnished or Unfurnished$218u>$320Based on AvailabilityAt Campus Bus Stop324-0200 Mrs. CroakNext to 1C TracksDo It YourselfRepairs$3.75 hourwith tools$4.95 hourrented tools *(metric & standard)One Month OnlyFast Oil Changes10.95May 1 - May 31SOON TO COMEUSED CARRENTAL667-2800SENNETTII** AUTHORITY§■! BERGE R 111*1*11Lead vocalist needed for ambitiousrock band ready to gig. Phone Paul,363-9038, or Steve, 753-8342, ext 1031.Serious inquiries only, pleaseADMINISTRATIVESECRETARYE xperienced administrative secretaryneeded immediately for GSB healthadministration research group60wpm typing minimum, strongorganizational/managerial skills.Some college preferred. Pleasant, in¬formal setting. Call Peggy Rampersad, 753-3661. AA°EOEUSEDAUTOMOBILESJEEPS $59 50, CARS $40 00 TRUCKS$112.00. Call (615) 266 5142 Ext 405. ■——■8 ABOUT LOOKING■ MURRIN1THE ALLEGORICALEPIC ■IHHIIlllCHOMSKy *■■RULES AND REPRESENTATIONS—■llltllliRFMINARY COOPBOOKSTOREIHiiill!575"7S.UN l VER s i t y l! &-VS11Hiltiona=guardThe Guard belongs:For more information call:SPEC 5 Al Novotne at288-5036 or 288-5028Or contact your schoolPlacement Office. 51500 CASH BONUS!!OR s2000 SCHOLARSHIPYOU ALSO GET:Good Pay, Vocational TrainingPart-Time (One Week-end a Month)The Chicago Maroon, Tuesday, May 6, 1980 -1114Istarring PeterSellersandGeorgeC.Scottwinnerof60internationalawardsDr.Strai?$ek>veLaughatoutrageouscomedy! Listentogreatmusic! Dance’tilyoudrop!SATURDAY MAY108:30p.m.orHOWILEARNEDTOSTOPWORRYING ANDLOVETHE BOMB DIRECTED BY StanleyKubrickLawSchoolAuditoriumblues/funk bluegrassotafest featuring The PHILGUYBAND UNITYBLUEGRASSTHURSDAY MAY87:30p.m. 9:30p.m. adm. *1.00comedytroupeROCKO&HAT SIMWAVEDANCE $3.50UCID-TicketsatReynoldsClubBoxOfficeIDANOYESHALL1212E.59thSt.sponsoredbyWHPKRadio4.50othersoratthedoor