Profile: Robert Mulliken’s 65 years in scienceKristy stewarrRobert S. Mulliken While many professors retirefrom research and teaching whenthey reach the age of 65, manyothers continue their work wellbeyond official “retirement” asemeritus professors. Walter Blair,Mary Jean Bowman, PhilipHauser, Robert Havighurst,Charles Huggins, Norman Ma¬clean, Raven McDavid. RichardMcKeon, Milton Singer, and SolTax, are but a few of those profes¬sors who have continued active re¬search and publication RobertMulliken, Nobel Laureate in Chem¬istry, has, at age S3, not only con¬tinued his work, but he has noteven taken the preliminary steptowards retirement by assumingemeritus status. In this profile andinterview, Mulliken looks back at a scientific career that spans morethan 65 years.By Alan Granger“The trouble with the worldtoday, most scientists believe, isnot that there is too much science,but rather that the scientific atti¬tude — the essence of science — isfar too little understood and too in¬adequately applied to human prob¬lems. Even among scientists them¬selves, outside their ownspecialties, the scientific attitudeis far too rare and is never fully de¬veloped. Now you ask, just what isthe scientific attitude? Briefly, it isan attitude in which supreme valueis attached to the idea of the objec¬tive truth.”— R.S. Mulliken, Speech to UC Trustees, April 9. 1937Robert Sanderson Mulliken wasborn in 1896 in Newburyport, Mas¬sachusetts. The house in which hewas born, “one of the old houses,not one of the grand ones, but apleasant and modest one on a sidestreet” had been built in 1798 by hisgreat-grandfather His father, Sa¬muel Parsons Mulliken. was a pro¬fessor of chemistry at MIT, then along thirty-mile commute south ofNewburyport.Mulliken’s first interest seems tohave been nature. Encouraged byhis aunt and, one supposes, hismother (whose paintings hang inhis office in Jones), he had a par¬ticular interest in botany and be¬came something of a taxonomist. As he wrote, “In excursions by bi¬cycle into the country, I had be¬come intimately acquainted withthe natural environment, in (par¬ticular) the flora.” John Slater, vi¬siting with him in the summer of1926 wrote. “We not only saw(Newburyport); we also went intothe country, to Plum Islandnearby, full of wild flowers, sweetfern, and all the manner of inter¬esting growing things. There 1learned that Robert Mulliken had agreat leaning toward botany. Heknew all the plants he saw, told meabout them, their habits, their fra¬grances. He had walked throughthese woods since he was a boy.”Mulliken felt, however, that “inHigh School although interactingTurn to Page 3The Chicago Maroon“Solitary, singing in the West, I strike up for a new world —Walt WhitmanVol. 89, No. 53 The University of Chicago (C, Copyright 1980 The Chicago Maroon Tuesday, May 13, 1980Danila OderDowntown ERA rally100,000 in ERA rallyhundreds from UofCBy Sherrie NegreaThousands of men and womendressed in white marched downColumbus Drive Saturday in sup¬port of the Equal Rights Amend¬ment.Chicago Police estimated that20,000 demonstrators participatedin the march and that 80,000 to100,000 came to the rally at GrantPark. ERA organizers said 100,00attended the march, based on esti¬mates by Mutual Radio Reports.Nearly 600 students and facultymembers marched under the Uni¬versity of Chicago banner, chant¬ing ERA slogans and carryingposters.The turnout of ERA supportersfrom the University was muchhigher than campus ERA organ¬izers had predicted.“It was great, it was fantastic,”campus ERA leader Lynn Hartsaid about the U of C delegation.“It was about 500 more than we ex¬pected.” she said.Over 100 organizations were re¬presented in the march, includinglabor unions, religious groups,womens groups, and colleges anduniversities. Coming from everystate from Florida to Alaska, the demonstrators comprised a di¬verse group of ages and politicalaffiliations.After the two-hour long march,the crowd of peaceful demonstra¬tors gathered at Grant Park tohear speeches by politicians, Hol¬lywood celebrities, and feministleaders.Mayor Byrne began the rally andwelcomed the visitors to a citywhich she said had looked at awoman and said “why not?” Byrnesaid the women of America arenow looking to their legislators andsaying “why not?” to the ERA. Shepledged her support for the ERAand promised to lobby Illinois le¬gislators in support of it.Actress Jean Stapleton told thecrowd, “I’m here today because Ihappen to be a woman, and I’m atwar with the mistaken belief that Ishould be in a glorious position ofsuppression.”Television host Phil Donahuesaid he had “come late to realizethat equality of sex insures betterrelationships, better kids, less va¬lium and less alcoholism.”Feminist leaders speaking at therally included president of the Na¬tional Organization of WomenTurn to Page 3 "There is no single action or so¬lution,” to the problem of increas¬ing the number of women and mi-nority students on theQuadrangles, President Gray saidin an interview last month.Gray suggested that increasedpublicity might bring aboutgreater diversity in the studentbody. “We have to go about en¬hancing the visibility of the institu¬tion in general. We have to makethe University better known,”Gray said.Gray said that the search to re¬place outgoing College admissionsdirector Fred Brooks was “near¬ing its final stages,” and that theUniversity had advertised “wide¬ly” for the position. Gray said shewas not familiar with the search orthe applicants.Gray said that her sitting on out¬side boards of directors and trust¬ees helps to improve the image ofthe University as well as “tobroaden my own experiences.” “Idon’t think we should be insular,”Gray said.Gray sits on the boards of theCummins Engine Company andthe J.P. Morgan Company, andseveral not-for-profit organiza¬tions including the Pulitzer Prizesand the Museum of Science and In¬dustry. She is also chairman of theAmerican Council of Education.Gray said she is “not expanding”her activity on for-profit boards.She assumed her Cummins andMorgan directorships before com¬ing to the University.Gray made these comments inan interview with The Maroon lastmonth. Portions of the interview inwhich Gray discussed the expan¬sion of the College and graduatestudent teaching in the College ap¬peared in the May 2 Maroon. Graydoes not permit a transcript of herinterviews to appear in question-and-answer form.Gray said that she “worries”that she does not spend enoughtime with students. “1 would like tospend more time with the studentbody,” she said. “I don't think that you ever spend enough time doingthat.”“I have tried to hold outside in¬volvement to a minimum,” Graysaid. “I say no to most things.”Gray said that much of the trav¬eling that she does is for alumnivisits.„ Responding to proposals for stu¬dent representatives or observerson the Board of Trustees. Gray rei¬terated her position that she is therepresentative and spokesman onthe Board for students, faculty andstaff.“A board should not consist ofpeople who are essentially repre¬senting a constituency of anysort,” Gray said, citing the factthat there is no faculty representa¬tive on the Board.“A board of trustees is a boardthat has to act as an oversightboard. It is important that the fu¬ture is not sacrificed to the pres¬ent. It should not be acting on anadministrative capacity, except to put this administration in or takethat one out. It should not be consti¬tuted in such a way that it becomesmixed up with other groups,” Graysaid. Gray said that student andor faculty representation workswell at small colleges or at schoolsthat have a single faculty.On other subjects. Gray said thatproposals were being reviewed forthe possibility of a new library forthe sciences. Such a library couldbe built adjacent to the existingRegenstein Library which wasplanned to house the University-collections in the humanities andsocial sciences.Gray said that a University com¬mittee on aw ards and prizes wouldbe appointed soon. That committeewould have as its first order ofbusiness the reinstitution of thePick Award through negotiationswith the Pick Fund of Chicago Ifthe award were made again, itwould be awarded in the 1980-1981academic year.Gray speaks on admissions,publicity, Board of TrusteesBy Andrew PatnerALUMNI REUNION ’80The Office of University Alumni Affairs/University AlumniAssociation invites students, faculty, and staffto special reunion activitiesFaculty/Alumni DiscussionsEra IFoundation and a New Era1892-1928Jerald BraucrMaynard KruegerChauncy HarrisJean F. BlockFriday • May 16 • 3:30 • Ida Noyes Hall • Lounge Era IIIUrban Renewal1951-mid 60sModerator Richard TaubPanelists Ira BachYaletta PressSaturday • May 17 • 3.00 • Ida Noyes Hall • East LoungeModeratorPanelistsEra IIReorganization and InnovationHutchins, 1929-1951Moderator Edward RosenheimPanelists Margaret RosenheimKenneth Northcott(Other panelists tobe announced)Friday • May 16 • 3:30 • Ida Noyes Hall • East Lounge Era IVThe New University: Change and ItsImpact in the Late 60s and 70sModerators Ian MuellerJancl MuellerPanelists Bruce LewensteinLoma StrausNorman BradbumSaturday • May 17 • 3:00 • Ida Noyes Hall • LoungeI nt erfratemi ty SingSaturday, May 17, at 9:00 p.m. in Hutchinson Court2 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, May 13, 1980NewsbriefsUniversity grantThe University has received a $1 milliongrant from the Joyce Foundation tostrengthen graduate education here.Some of the money will be used to launch aprogram of challenge grants to stimulategraduate school alumni donations, whilemuch of the remaining money will providefinancial aid to graduate students.The University plans to increase graduatestudent financial aid by 13 percent nextyear, which is approximately the same per¬centage that tuition will rise. In addition,the financial aid program will adopt onan experimental basis next year a newmethod of packaging aid to graduate stu¬dents. The experimental program will in¬clude tuition assistance to a significantnumber of students at the dissertation level,more awards to second and third year grad¬uate students, and several prize fellowshipsoffering full tuition and living expenses forentering graduate students.More political groupsIf you’re kicking yourself because youmissed last week’s organizational meetingof the Young Democrats, you still have achance to get in on the ground floor of twomore campus political organizations:The Public Interest Forum will hold an or¬ganizational meeting at 6:30 pm Thursday,May 15 on the second floor of Ida NoyesHall. The Public Interest Forum will at¬tempt to bring public figures to speak oncampus.The Young Americans For Freedom willform this Wednesday at 7:30 pm on the thirdfloor of Ida Noyes Hall. According to Chris¬topher Pomeroy, the College student at¬tempting to found a campus chapter of thenationwide group, the purpose of the YoungAmericans For Freedom is to “bring to¬gether students who are for freedom withinreason, i.e. cannot support the Libertarianplatform for legalizing prostitution, and soon.”ERAContinued from Page 1Eleanor Smeal, author Betty Friedan, andeditor of Ms. magazine Gloria Steinem.Smeal said that Phillis Schlafly, an anti-ERA leader, had announced on Chicagoradio Saturday that the demonstrators wereeach paid $10 to come to the march. Thecrowd laughed when Smeal said, “Sorry,you didn’t get the checks.”Meanwhile, Schlafly was elected an alter¬nate delegate to the Republican NationalConvention by Illinois Republicans Satur¬day at a state GOP gathering in Peoria.Governor Thompson, who has supportedERA, did not oppose Schlafly’s election atthe convention.The Illinois House of Representatives willvote tomorrow on the ERA, which has beendefeated there 10 times. The vote will pro¬ceed to the Senate if it passes in the House.Illinois is among 15 states which have notratified the ERA. The measure must be ap¬proved by three more states by June, 1982 tobecome part of the Constitution.Although anti-ERA groups did not attendthe rally, an anti abortion group called ProLife Action League marched through GrantPark, holding its annual Mother’s Dayweekend vigilPolice reported no confrontations at therally except for one incident in which awoman ERA supporter was temporarily de¬tained for harassing the director of the anti-abotion group.The campus ERA campaign will continuethis week, focusing its efforts on lobbyinganti-ERA state legislators.A bus sponsored by the National Organ¬ization for Women will carry studentsto Springfield tomorrow to be presentwhen the House votes on the ERA. The buswill leave 18 S. Michigan Avenue at 7 am to¬morrow morning. The fee will be $12. Formore information, call the NOW office at782-7205.“It’s imperative that we have the sameshow of support that came to the march goto Springfield Wednesday,” said LynnHart.ERA organizers will also be distributingpostcards addressed to Mayor Byrne and <9)Jim KalettNorman PodhoretzPodhoretz lectureNorman Podhoretz, editor of Commen¬tary magazine, author, and a leadingspokesman of the Neoconservative move¬ment, will speak on “The Clear and PresentDanger: Do We Have the Will to Resist Sovi¬et Imperialism?” tomorrow at 8 pm in theLaw School Auditorium.Podhoretz’s appearance is sponsored bythe Law Students’ Association, the Commit¬tee for a Strong America, and Counterpointmagazine, published by Podhoretz’s sonJohn, a student in the College.Rape victims to meetA support group for rape and sexual as¬sault victims is forming in the Hyde Park —Kenwood area, and will hold its first meetingtonight at 7 pm in the Blue Gargoyle. Acting as resource persons at the meetingwill be the director of womens’ services atthe Loop YWCA, a person who helped set upa rape crisis center in Columbus, Ohio, anda representative of Billings Hospital.Child care and escorts home will be pro¬vided.Arias named to BoardMiguel Arias, a third-year student in theCollege, has been named to the CollegeBoard’s advisory panel on student con¬cerns.The panel, which was formed in March,consists of 15 students from around thecountry who advise the College Board on theservices it provides to students. The CollegeBoard, for those with short memories, is thenonprofit corporation responsible for theScholastic Aptitude Test (SAT), the LawSchool Admissions Test (LSAT), the Medi¬cal College Admissions Test (MCAT), and ahost of other standardized exams.Arias will be glad to communicate anysuggestions to the Board. He does not re¬spond to complaints about test scores.Citizen’s Party candidateFollowing Barry Commoner s visit lastweek, another leading figure of the CitizensParty, Sidney Lens, comes to campus to¬morrow afternoon. Lens is a former Chicagounion organizer, long-time political activist,and a contributing editor to the Progressivemagazine. He is now running for U.S. Senateon the Citizens Party ticket.The Citizens Party, formed in 1979, advo¬cates social control of large corporations,development of solar technology, and aforeign policy which steers away from thenuclear arms race towards ‘inte nationalunderstanding.’The Party is currently trying o collect the25,000 signatures required to p c Lens, Pres¬idential candidate Barrv Commoner, andVice-Presidential candidate LaDonnaHarris on the Illinois ballot in November.Speaking with Lens will be Dr. QuentinYoung, Illinois Chairman of the CitizensParty and Director of Medicine at CookCounty Hospital. Ida renovations?The University is considering a renova¬tion of Ida Noyes Hall to provide more spacefor student activities, according to Ombuds¬man Bruce Lewenstein and Assistant Deanof Studerts Paul Ausick.Although plans for the rennovation arestill at a very early stage, one proposal in¬cludes adding a northeast wing on to thebuilding. The new wing would house a the¬ater, while the Pub would be moved upstairsto the present courtyard area, which wouldbe glassed in. The locker rooms would berenovated and new bowling alleys and ameting room would be installed The entirerenovation would cost approximately $3 mil¬lion.The University is also considering propos¬als to remodel the basement of ReynoldsClub to improve the Coop and to install elec¬tric games.— Linda LowdGeorge LammingWest Indian novelistThe West Indian Novelist George Lam¬ming will discuss his novel. Season of Ad¬venture, on Thursday, May 15, at 4 pm in So¬cial Sciences 122.Lamming's appearance is sponsoreu bythe Committee on African and Black Hu¬manities and the William Vaughan MoodyLecture Committee.Governor Thompson urging them to workfor ERA ratification. The cards will beavailable on the Quads and in Reynolds Clubtoday between noon and 4 pm. Cards arealso available in the office of Court Theateron the third floor of Reynolds Club.For additional information on campusERA activities, call Lynn Hart at 752-7020 orTheresa Henn at 955-9635MullikenContinued from Page 1in a reasonable way with the people,and expressing optimism about humanprospects, I had privately dehumanized my¬self and the surrounding human and animalworld under the influence of thoughts onscience, especially on the theory of evolu¬tion. In short I came to look on people andanimals as basically machines.” He addsthat “afterwards, very gradually, I rehu¬manized myself.” These feelings, though,that “biological phenomena, and especiallymankind, were of relatively trivial impor¬tance" and that “perhaps life (from thepoint of view of the universe, was) just askin disease which affects plants like our lit¬tle earth” are feeling0, he cites as “partialexplanation of my choice of chemistry atMIT.”Robert Mulliken is a scientist first andlast: the search for objective truth has beenthe focus of his entire life.He has his regrets though. In May 1940,Mulliken sent a “Peace Resolution of theAmerican Association of ScientificWorkers” to Science magazine, which rec¬ommended “to our fellow citizens the whole¬hearted and increasing support of all rea¬sonable programs which seek a betterunderstanding of the causes of the war, andwhich will preserve peace for the UnitedStates.” Mulliken is embarrassed about thisincident. He says he was “taken in by peoplewho had what seemed to be a good idea, butit was just a Russian front ... it was purelya matter of international politics.” How hewas taken in is evident in the wording of theresolution: “The futility of war is especially clear to scientists. For war, as a method ofsolving human problems, is out of harmonywith the rational spirit and objective meth¬ods of science” and “scientists know thatdemocracy and freedom of thought, whichare precious to us both as citizens and asmen of science are endangered in the emo¬tional turmoil which accompanies war. Thecontinuance of progress now largely de¬pends upon the scientists of neutral nations.American scientists can best fulfill theirshare of their responsibility if the UnitedStates remains at peace.” Mulliken under¬stood that war might be lethal to the scien¬tific attitude and the uninterrupted searchfor objective natural truth and was taken in— not guessing the politics. As he says, “Ofcourse that is why I got into it. It was be¬cause of the scientific attitude. They seemedto be in favor of a more scientific ap¬proach.”In 1941, Mulliken was on one of the com¬mittees of the National Academy which rec¬ommended pursuit of the uranium project.From 1941 to 1945 he was in charge of theInformational Division of the MetallurgicalProject — the Chicago division of the Man¬hattan Project for the development of theatomic bomb — which received and distri¬buted classified reports from other labora¬tories.Mulliken's work was recognized in a rushin the sixties. Between 1960 and 66 he wasgiven five awards by various sections of theAmerican Chemical Society, delivered theSilliman lectures at Yale in 1965. was givenhonorary doctorates by Columbia and theUniversity of Stockholm, and finally, in No¬vember of 1966, the Nobel Prize in Chemis¬try.Most recently. Mulliken has been workingwith computers and the interpretation ofdata. He is working every day in his officeon the third floor of Jones Laboratory writ¬ing a book “into which.” he says pointing toa large table covered with notebooks, “Ihave to fit all those things. I'm just not feel¬ing too good about that now — taking ex¬tracts from the results — if I do what 1 setout to do, 1 think I'll have to abbreviate,which might be called biting the bullet.”When asked if he ever plans to retire, he re¬sponds that he cannot understand “why any¬one would want to retire and do nothing. Right now I'm getting sort of behind thetimes on some things so I’m thinking ofdoing something a little different but it’snecessary to do something. You can’t justsit around.”Between filter-less Chesterfields (“I thinkPauling said eight minutes or 12 minutes offmy life for every cigarette (laughter).”), heexpresses his concerns about the threat ofunlimited population growth and Soviet ex¬pansionism. Remembering his trip to theSoviet Union in 1958, “I took a ride on thesubway. I went an enormous distance down.The subway is so far below the surface. Evi¬dently, I thought, they intend it as a bombshelter. That was 1958. We don't do anythingabout shelters for people but there they’vegone into it very intensively — they plan towin the war. They’ll have only 20 millionkilled which happened already in the SecondWorld War so they’re used to it. I think theycould take it whereas we’ll have 150 millionkilled which eventually means everybody.They’ll give us a choice — either you dowhat we want or we ll wipe you out. Maybe.The question is really whether they want usdead or alive and I would think they'd ratherhave us alive and doing what they want.”“The Population Bomb” Mulliken worries“is still ticking. What hurts me very much isthe idea of the growth of the population willresult in cutting down all the tropical forestsand exterminating the natural species —that goes back you see to my appreciation ofthe plants and animals.” He speculated inJanuary 1974 in the Bulletin of the AtomicScientists “how many people would beenough for a happy, interesting world. Oneperson would obviously not be enough, nottwo. nor I think 100,009 or a million. Perhapsthree million spread around the world Orlet us say a billion at the very most, and lessin the long run. That would be enough formany lively interchanges, yet would clampdown the all too rapid development ofscience and technology ...” How the pres¬ent population of 5 billion was to be reducedwas to be researched — the difficulty nowwas in finding a “reasonable solution” in thevaunt of “unreasonable” growth. “Each ofus has his preferences (or prejudices), butso have other people. Let us not let thesesentiments get in the way of a reasonable so¬lution.”Tuesday, May 13, 1980 — 3The Chicago Maroon7tie University ofChicago, Depaipnenref MusicUniversity ChorusZnc Warner director \jAttention;Graduate StudentsReading FrenchFor Graduate Students i FAUREREQUIEM!! GABRIELIIN ECCLESIISj with theUC Brass Quintet 60Jane Green sopranoj James Tucker hantone| Thomas WeisfJocj^rcjatui Tnday 11> May 19flout 83o\ Rockefeller ChapelI Tree and open to thepublicFor graduate students who wish to prepare for a readingexamination in French in order to satisfy the foreignlanguage requirement of their respective departments. Fun- jdamentals of grammar and basic problems of translation.[ Skills necessary for accurate and idiomatic rendering ofI French texts into English; reading in various genres will be jdealt with intensively in class. Register in the Office of the| Dean, University Extension, 9am-5pm, M-F. This course does ]not carry academic credit and must have a minimumenrollment of 15 students. Pre-registration is essential.Deadline: June 6. Fee: $ 175. U. of C. student aid funds cannot 'be used for non-credit courses, 9:30-12 M-F (June 23- jAugust 1). Charles Krance, Associate Professor of \| Romance Languages and Literatures, and the jCollege. \yAll June Graduates Please Note!!!THE E. R. MOORE CO. WILL BE IN THE BOOKSTORE,SECOND FLOOR, WEDNESDAY, MAY 21, ANDTHURSDAY, MAY 22, FROM 8=30 AM. TO 4=30 P.M.TO TAKE ORDERS FOR CAPS AND GOWNS.PLEASE ORDER AT THIS TIME.UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5750 S. ELLIS AVE., CHICAGO, ILL.4 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, May 13, 1980Unlocking Secrets of the Job-HuntBy Mark Wallach“Behold, I send you forth as lambs among wol¬ves ..."— Jesus ChristThe standard job-hunting strategy that most careercounselors will sell you, says Richard Nelson Bolles inhis job-hunting manual What Color Is Your Parachute,is "the numbers game." This game, which includescontacting executive search firms; answering or placingnewspaper ads; going to private and governmentemployment (or placement) agencies; and makingpersonal contacts, often has, as its keystone, theresume. When you locate an appropriate job (if theagencies or your contracts haven’t), you mail out yourresume, which you hope will lead to a job interview andoffer.Since surveys indicate that each hundred resumessent out will result in 1-4 invitations for an interview, thejob-hunter is adviced to mail out at least 500 resumes, orperhaps 1000 or 1200, with some experts saying there isno limit. The conscientious campaigner will then keep acard file — responses, interviews, etc.How well does this method work? Fine for somepeople; poorly for most. One study of several differentcompanies indicated that, on average, the companiesinvited one resume-writer to an interview for every 245resumes they received. The average represented arange in which the most responsive company sent outone invitation to an interview' for every 36 resumes theyreceived, and the least responsive, one interview forevery 1188 resumes.Often, says Bolles, the job-seeker concludes his searchby accepting a job in which he is either underemployed,in the wrong field, or operating below the peak of hisabilities, "...the one thing that the job-hunt system inthis country does, and does exceedingly well,” saysBolles, "is scaring people to the point where they aremore than willing to lower their self-esteem and hencetheir expectations as to w'hat they will settle for.”Since Bolles book is intended "to save you frommaking the mistakes that literally millions before youhave made” he offers the three key prescriptions ofwhat he calls the "creative minority”:Key No. 1: You must decide just exactly what youwant to do."Key No. 2: You must decide just exactly where youW'ant to do it, through your own research and personalsurvey."Key No. 3: You must research the organizations thatinterest you at great length, and then approach the oneindividual in each organization who has the power tohire you for the job that you have decided you want todo.”Written with warmth and humor ("Procrastination, asmy grandfather used to say, sent more people to hellthan whiskey”), Parachute, like many self-help books.The NumbersEffectivenessMethod Usage* 1 RateApplied directly to employer 66% 47.7%Asked friends about jobs where they work 50.8 22.1Asked friends about jobs elsewhere 418 119Asked relatives about jobs where they work 28 ! 19 3Asked relatives about jobs elsewhere 27.3 7.4Answered local newspaper ads 45.9 23.9Answered nonlocal newspaper ads 11.7 10.0Private employment agency 21 0 24 2State employment agency 33.5 13.7School placement office 12.5 21.4Civil Service test 15.3 12.5Asked teacher or professor 10.4 12.1Went to place where employers come to pick up people 1.4 8.2Placed ad in local newspaper 1.6 12.9Placed ad in nonlocal newspaper .5Answered ads in professional or trade journals 4.9 7.3Union hiring hall 6.0 22.2Contacted local organization 5.6 12.7Placed ads in professional or trade journals .6Other 11.8 39.7* Percent of total jobseeker using the method** A percentage obtained dividing the number of jobseekers who found workusing the method by the total number of jobseekers who used the method,whether successful or not*** Base less than 75,000Source: U S. Bureau of the Census, survey, 1972Published: Occupational Outlook Quarterly, 1976Sample: Ten million jobseekers contains its share of pep talks ("You can do it!” blurtsone chapter head). By the time Bolles finishesexplicating his three keys, the reader shares hisenthusiasm.The first key. deciding which skills you enjoy mostand do best, requires you to define goals, skills,controlling forces, and outlines for the future All of thismay sound decidedly vague, but Bolles provides a bevyof specific exercises' to help unravel what is at the coreof your “inner nature.” In one exercise, designed touncover significant influences of the past. Bollesencourages the reader to write down the two mostimportant events of each five year period of his life. Inanother exercise. Bolles provides detailed instructionsfor the reader to write a diary of his entire life. Stillanother four-part exercise inquires of the reader: "Whoam I?” The reader must then explain what excites himabout each of the ten ways in which he has labelledhimself, probe for the common denominators in each ofhis answers and answer finally: “What must my careeruse (and include) for me to be truly happy, used andeffective?” A detailed supplement, “The QuickJob-Hunting Map” incorporates the whole arduousprocess into a systematic self-search.In the second key, deciding where to work, Bollesoutlines a strategy that will include "the mostthorough-going research that you have the patience anddetermination to do”: (1) After researching what cityand what field to work in (being sure to identify yourskills on as high a level as you can legitimately claim),choose from among the hundreds ofbusinesses/organizations/agencies/foundations. etc .the ones which most appeal to you (2) Throughinterviews, determine the state of the local economy;study journals in your field to pinpoint the areas youwant to work in. One should also be aware of all theavailable different options. (3) Determine if theorganization you have picked can make use of yourstrongest skills, again by interviewing everybody ofimportance in the organization.Bolles next targets the reader toward a “hidden jobmarket." If, after tireless research, "you uncover, asyou are very likely to, a need in the organization youlike (or organizations), which you can help resolve, theyare very likely to create a brand new job for you ""Creation of new positions is the key to theprofessional job market,” says Bolles. "One third of from Whaf Color Is Your Parachute?today’s jobs didn’t exisi ten years ago.The final step, approaching the one man or woman inthe organization who has the power to hire you. buildsupon the hours of research. Having talked with people inthe organization, having diligently avoided thelow-echelon personnel office, having understood theinner workings of the organization, and one hopes,having identified, talked to, and understood the oneperson who has the power to hire you. you are ready tobe interviewedYou will approach this interview with numerousadvantages: First, by having seen your interviewer in aprevious non-hiring situation previously, you have giventhe hirer a chance to "windowshop” for talent,something that most companies spend a great deal oftime doing and which reduces stress when the actualjob-hiring interview occurs. Second, you are so familiarwith the problems of the organization that you knowexactly what resource you can offer. And finally, youknow the personal quirks of your interviewer so wellthat you are able to address with eloquence, theproblems which most concern him. As Bolles notes. “Heor she who gets hired is not necessarily the one who cando that job best; but. the one who knows the most abouthow to get hired."For those who don t accept the Bollesian approach, orwho seek additional advice. Bolles provides literallyhundreds of references for almost every conceivabletype of job and job-hunter, including in many cases, anevaluation and description of each reference Includedin this wealth are special references for collegestudents, women, minorities, the handicapped, theself-employed, writers, volunteers, as well as thoseinterested in business, the clergy, the military, and thegovernment.Bolles says that 86 percent of the people who use hismethod find a job: although that statistic comparesphenomenally with other methods of job-hunting (seetable), Bolles doesn’t say what percentage of the 86percent are actually satisfied On rare occasions, too.Bolles’ presentation of the current job-market is poorlyinterpreted or flimsy. “Insiders." Bolles writes,“estimate that, currently. 86% of our working peopleare under-employed " In fact. Bolles was referring to areport from California State at Fullerton whichconcluded that 86 percent of newly-minted jobapplicants were poorly suited for their previous jobs.(Hence, they were seeking a new job. hardly a shockingdiscovery.) On another occasion. Bolles accepts astatistic that was "once cited ” by an organization “now-out of business.”Despite such quibbles, the dramatically superiorresults that Bolles claims for his method are hardly indispute His brand of hustling self-salesmanship is awelcome alternative to the ordeal of sending out aresume whose final destination is certain to be the"circular” file."He or she who gets hired is not necessarily the one who can dothat job best; but the one who knows the most about how to gethired."The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, May 13, 1980 — 5\KIMBARK HALLCondominiums80% MORTGAGE LOANS AVAILABLEThe developers are offering model units lorinspection every Sat. and Sun. between 1and 5 p.m.36 apts:24- 1 bedroom 1 bath from 30,350-37,0006 - 2 bedrooms, 1 bath from 37,000-38,8506 - 2 bedrooms, 2 bath from 46,000-46,900All apartments include new kitchens and appliances,new bathrooms, carpeting and decorating (colors ofyour choice), triple-track storm windows and kitchenstorm doors, modern laundry facilities and individuallocker space.Your inspection is invited,51 26 S. Kimbark Ave. - Phone 643-4489Harry A. Zisook & Sons, Agts.786-9200STANLEY H. KAPLANfor Over 41 Years The Standard ofExceience k) Test PreparationMCAT'GMAT* LSATME • ME PSYCH • 6RE BIO • dm-WAT • 0CAT • VAT • HAT • SAT • SAT ACHVS •NATIONAL MEDICAL BOARDS • VQC • KCFMttFLEX*NATH. DENTAL BOARDS«TOEFLmumrr boards • musing boardsWbiMM md Homedi kupOIn■ W ■■ w *nr.tiatll* HK| V«it Ir-Cntx Sm f«Ymtw* Wt. .* nb TIm SWmmmnit Mt^AiunoNMCCUUST6 MMCS t«MC*o4«t * Mat* Ul C<t»i Hr* •<»tarww CoMil.dCXtCAOO CCNTtN62H N. CLAHKCHICAGO ILLINOIS IIJ12I 764-6151Il I • SLMUASANIB S LA GRANGE ROADSlfTf 201LAGRANGC ILLINOIS 60626(3121 S24640 SPRING, SUMMERPALL INTENSIVESCOURSES STARTINCTHIS MONTH:4 wk/MCAT....LSAT ORE SATNEXT MONTH:CMAT... . T.S ATCourt** Constantly UpdstsdLlconslng Exams In Can tar Saif-Studymmm ASaw ONf Can* * tax* Tha* M *«•» US Cam* S a*«m*^OCTMM N.Y. STATS CALL TOLL FREE: •0^22M71O( IIIIIIIIIIIIIITEACHERSCONSIDERING A CAREERCHANGE? READY TO FINE TUNEYOUR SKILLS?Challenging, Rewarding StudyLeading toMASTER OF SCIENCE INTEACHINGONE-YEAR PROGRAMAPPLY NOW FOR OCTOBER, 1980DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION5835 S. KIMBARKCHICAGO, IL 60637753-3821 NEW 2-drawer files S59.99NEW 6-ft. folding tables $49.99BRAND EQUIPMENT& SUPPLY CO.8600 COMMERCIAL AVENUERE 4-21 1 1 OPEN MON.-FRI.8:30-5:00SATURDAYS9:00-3:00 ATTENTIONThe Maroon is seeking aBusiness Manager and anAdvertising Manager for thesummer and next year. In¬terested students should con¬tact The Maroon. 753-3265.Third Floor, Ida Noyes Hall.All VarsityLettermen!!Undergraduatesand GraduatesThe 75th AnnualOrder of the C BanquetWill be Wednesday,May 14,1980 at 6:30 P.M.Please R.S. V.P. by Monday, May 12in Bartlett 101 if youhave not already done so.PIZZAPLATTER1460 E. 53rdM13-2800No delivery marianrealty,inc.REALTORStudio and 1 BedroomApartments Available- Students Welcome -On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-5400 -Next to 1C TracksDo It YourselfRepairs$3.75 hourwith tools$4.95 hourrented tools -(metric & standard)One Month OnlyFast Oil Change*10.95May 1 - May 31SOON TO COMEUSED CARRENTAL667-2800 STUDENT HEALTHINSURANCE 1980-81Important NoticeSTUDENTS IN THE COLLEGE — You will be required to makea decision about health insurance for 1980-81 when youpre-register THIS MONTH.GRADUATE STUDENTS — You will be required to make adecision about health insurance for 1980-81 at AUTUMNREGISTRATION.PICK UP A BROCHURE NOW.Student Blue Cross/Blue Shield Plan BrochuresAvailable at:• Registrar’s Office• Student Health Service• Your Dean of Students’ OfficeIf you have any questions about insurance coverage, contact the StudentInsurance Officer at 947-5966, from 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Mondaythrough Friday.6 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, Mav 13. ip«nA student village, Pierce II, and other odditiesA model of the proposed Student VillageWhat would have beenBy Chris IsidoreThe recent discussion of increasing the enrollment ofthe College is hardly new to the University. From its birthin 1892, the University has seen its enrollment climb inspurts and jumps, and in most cases it has tried to plan forsuch growth.The last time a major expansion was planned occurredduring the early to mid-’60s. In 1965. a 56 percent increasein enrollment over the next ten years was expected, (from6,941 to 10,854) and the demand for student housing wasexpected to increase from 55 percent of the undergradu¬ates in 1965 to 75 percent in 1975, and from 22 percent of thegraduates to 35 percent in that same period. The magni¬tude of this expansion was based on projections that na¬tional college enrollment would rise from 4.5 million to 7million by 1970, and that the University, as a “teacher ofteachers” would be forced to expand its facilities exten¬sively to provide the additional faculty needed to meet thenation-wide boom. The expansion never took place asplanned, with enrollment peaking at 8,579 in 1968, then de¬clining to 7,773 by 1975, an overall increase of 12 percentover 1965. But before the decline started, a faculty com¬mittee study had proposed, and much excitement wascreated, over the plans for a new Student Village.The early plans were quite lavish. The Village was toinclude a music center, theatre, art center, cafeteria,gym, bowling alleys, snack bar, bookstore, post office,and most importantly, fairly luxurious housing for some1300 students. Also included in the original plans was theconstruction of a second Pierce Tower, which was to holdroughly 250 students. The Village, which was also calledthe North Quadrangle, was to lie on the blocks betweenGreenwood Avenue and Cottage Grove, and between 55thSt. and 56th St. Out of all of these plans, only the art centerwas completed, (The Cochrane-Woods Art Center, withthe David and Alfred Smart Gallery).These plans were first formally proposed in May of 1965by the Faculty Advisory Committee on Student Resi¬dences and Facilities, commonly known as the Blum Com¬mittee, after its chairman, Walter Blum, Professor ofLaw. Its descriptions of the new facilities were closely tiedto its criticism of existing ones, such as Pierce Tower,Woodward Court. Ida Noyes and Bartlett Gym, and ittried to correct past mistakes, or make up for existing de¬ficiencies. The report became a source of much excite¬ment and discussion on campus, and despite changes inenrollment projections and difficulties in fundraising, theproject was not totally abandoned until the purchase ofthe Shoreland relieved much of the pressing need for morestudent housing.A look at the report today is interesting, not only as amatter of curiousity, but because its criticisms of defi¬ciencies and the solutions it suggests are still relevent tothe current facilities, especially with the planned expan¬sion.The report outlined a number of general assumptionswhich it felt should guide the University in the develop¬ment of student residences and facilities. The first wasthat “it is of the utmost importance that the University atleast keep pace with the quality of housing for unmarriedstudents which has been built at other high qualityschools.” The report said that Pierce and Woodward,“suffer badly in comparison with housing built by otherschools with which the University competes for students. . students now in the newer dormitories complain not somuch about the high rent as about the inadequacy of thefacilities; and no one seriously contends that poor qualitydorms with low rentals wouid serve to attract a largenumber of students to the Urwersity or hold them here.”To improve the dorms, the report suggested “space perstudent should be considerably greater; there should beless doubling up in bedrooms; decor should be less institu¬tional; sound conditions should be superior; and moregenerous provisions should be made for accommodationsother than sleeping rooms.”The committee kept its own guidelines in mind when itdescribed in detail what should go into the second PierceTower, also known as Pierce II. (Note: it is because of theplanned Pierce II that all room numbers in Pierce Towerhave the number 1 in front of them A room on the fourth floor of the Pierce II would have been called 24XX.)Pierce II was supposed to be constructed where the park¬ing lot is today, and was to connect to the Pierce I by asecond floor corridor which met the similar corridor inPierce I behind the security door. The committee speci¬fied that the one-room double, which is the prominent typeof room in Pierce I, should be eliminated from Pierce II.Instead, it suggested two types of rooms, one room sin¬gles, and three room suites for two people. It recommend¬ed that each two story house have about 45 singles and 10suites for 20 occupants, bringing the house population to 65instead of the 80 in a Pierce I house. The single roomswere to approach the size of the Pierce I double. Most, butnot all, w’ere to be two or three in a row, “with double par¬allel connecting doors (preferably of the sliding variety)between the rooms. “This would have enabled neighbor¬ing students to create double or triple suites if theywished.The core of the tower, where the lounges and otherhouse facilities are located, were also to be changed.Study rooms, laundry room and typing rooms, which arein the core in Pierce I, were to be moved to the basementand the lounge was to be larger. It was also to be brokenup in order to get away from the bare rectangularity of thepresent lounges. This was to be done with coves, alcovesand nooks, as well as by having smaller rooms opening offthe main lounge, one which would hold 10 to 12 students,another which would hold four or five “In general,” thereport said, “it is important that the whole lounge area bebrighter, warmer, more inviting than is the case now inPierce. The house lounges should not be simple replicat¬ions of one another; variety among them is desirable.”Though the committee dealt mostly with problemswhich are still present in Pierce today, it also looked oneproblem which has since disappeared — the need to beepmale and female residents separated. “Some arrange¬ment should be worked out through which men’s housesand women’s houses could peacefully coexist in the newtower,” the Committee wrote. “That is stairways and ele¬vators should be so devised that one or more houses couldbe designed for women with some reasonable certaintythat only women would have access to that house. Thismight be possible with a separate elevator for each of thetop three houses.”Pierce II was postponed indefinitely. By the time theBlum Committee report was published in the < brand new )University of Chicago Record in January 1968, the planshad been “set aside for the forseeable future.”Plans for the Student Village however, were still beingactively considered. The Village was to be set up some¬thing like Pierce II, but with less regularity.The committee wrote. “The basic unit of constructionfor undergraduate housing in the New Area (which is howthe Blum Committee refered to the North Quadrangle) should be individual houses formed into a large clusterthrough the sharing of a common wall or walls. Thehouses should have relatively small populations in orderto achieve the maximum flexibility, a quality which ratesthe highest priority in planning student housing . . . Nohouse should exceed four floors . . .“It is assumed that the corridors in each house will nec¬essarily be short. The monotonous corridors, which is anaffliction to the spirit in most residence halls, should beavoided. Bathrooms should be associated with somegroup or groups of suites, thus avoiding the use of a gangbathroom.”Besides the housing, the North Quadrangle was also tohave a music center, on the southwest corner of 55th andGreenwood, next door to the Arts Center; a bookstore; asnack bar: and a theatre, which was to be in between theField house and Pierce. There would be some apartmentunits tow ards the western portion of the housing for mar¬ried students or junior faculty. The single-student unitswere also considered a potential site for fraternities. Onthe far west end of the Quad, past the track, where tenniscourts are today, was to be the new gym. This idea wasalso scrapped, and it was replaced by the concept of a na-tatorium between Bartlett and the Field House.Cars would have been banned from the Village. Park¬ing. deliveries and even garbage collection would havebeen situated underground. The Committee was also con¬scious of the conflict between having the layout of theQuadrangle seem open to the whole community, and theproblems of security. For this, though, they were not ableto suggest any solutions. One of the benefits of the locationof the Village, the Committee believed, was to have thestudents circulating around all parts of the campus at alltimes of the day. It did not wish the North Quad to becomean isolated and self-contained village where undergradu¬ates spent all of their time when they were not in class.They believed that this would be solved by upgrading theUndergraduate Library in Harper, (which they mistaken¬ly believed would attract more College students than Re-gensteim. and by the renovation of Ida Noyes. The com¬mittee felt that the renovation of Ida Noyes, and theplacement of the bookstore nearby would create a secondcenter of activity which would attract students from allaround the campus. The suggestions they made about theIda Noyes renovation included moving Midway Travel,and the Reynold’s club barber shop and billards room toIda Noyes, as well as a new' Coffee shop. The coffee shopturned out to be The Pub, but many other suggestionswere never completed, mostly because they called for theclosing of the “Women’s gym” and the pool in favor ofnew' facilities, which were never completed. The book¬store. which had been moved to its present location as atemporary measure after a fire, remained in the Universi¬ty Press building. And the Main stop for the shuttlebusses, which was originally supposed to be Ida Noyesturned out to be Regenstein. But some of the improve¬ments in Ida Noyes, like new furniture, a new entrance onthe north side, and a footpath by Lexington Hall did occur,tieing Ida Noyes to the main quadrangles more easily.The housing problem which had made the need for plan¬ning and development so crucial in the mid-60s continuedthrough to the end of the decade In his 1969 state of theUniversity address. President Edward Levi said that over800 applications for student housing had been turneddown, and that the entering class had been reduced. Butwith funds slow in coming, the University drasticallychanged its plans and bought the Shoreland. That pur¬chase. and the decline in enrollment, postponed “for theforseeable future” the Student Village that might havebeen.The early plans were quite lavish. The Village was to include amusic center, theatre, art center, cafeteria, gym, bowling alleys,snack bar, bookstore, post office, and most importantly, fairly lux¬urious housing for some 1300 students. Also included in the originalplans was the construction of a second Pierce Tower, which was tohold roughly 250 students.The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, May 13, 1980 — 7SURFSIDERetreat (full-time) with yourfamily to Lake Michigan sshore on high bluff of DuneAcres. Panoramic windowseven in kitchen. Only 45minutes from Hyde Park(also on South Shore Trainline). Excellent schools, lowtaxes, great neighbors. Fourbedrooms - high cathedralliving room has cozyfireplace. Designed by Keck(Hyde Park s favoritearchitect) - to settle estateappraised price low$200,000's. Call Chicago No.493-6153, or (219) 926-2176Chesterton LOW TAXES COUNTRYLIFENear Michigan City, Ind. (exiton Tollway 1 hr.) Horses O.K.Swimming O.K. (on your ownprivate lake). Newly finishedbrick 4 bedroom, 2 bath brickradiant heat - solar floor - toceiling windows. Total 3acres available if desired.Woodburning fireplace -white oak planked ceiling.Everything under warranty.Low faxes. - Coolspringschools - Price for House &Vi acre $85,000 - assumable13.5% mortgage, no points.LOW TAXES APPROX. $250GSXEBAL MOTORS RAfiTS DIVISIONCall Chicago #493-6153 Eves., Charlotteor Chesterton(219) 926-2176, RitchieOntui£L . L 21GM QUALITYSERVICE PASTSKeep That Great CM Feeling With GEN LISE GM Farts'72nd & Stony Island 684-0400Open Evenings and Sunday Parts Open Sat. 'til noon2 Miles - 5 Minutes AwayFrom The UNIVERSITYSPECIAL DISCOUNT PRICESfor all STUDENTS andFACULTY MEMBERSJust present your University of Chicago IdentificationCard As Students or Faculty Members you are entitledto special money-saving DISCOUNTS on VolkswagenParts, Accessories and any new or used Volkswagenyou buy from Ruby VolkswagenSPECIAL 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. ^472nd & Stony Island 684-0400 EOpen Evenings and Sundays Parts Open Sat 'til noon EEMlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll Rockefeller Chapel and The U.C. Brass SocietypresentBAROQUE MUSIC FORNATURAL TRUMPET,CORNETTO AND ORGANbyDONSMITHERS and ED MONDELLOBach Clarke KrebsMusic of Vivian iBuxtehude Frcscobaldi PurcellTuesday, May 20, 8:00 S3 Gen. Admission; $2 StudentsTickets are now on sale at Reynolds ClubUEJtioiia=guartThe Guard belongs:For more information call:SPEC 5 Al Novotne at288-5036 or 288-5028Or contact your schoolPlacement Office. *1500 CASH BONUS!!OR >2000 SCHOLARSHIPYOU ALSO GET:Good Pay, Vocational TrainingPart-Time (One Week-end a Month)n Fly to Israelbn the Wings ofan Eagle.NESHER is the Hebrew word for Eagle.Jewish tradition has it that the children of The Bible flew to Israel on the “wings ofan eagle.” We're not about to ftx)l around with tradition! But we'd like to help youcreate your own fantasy. Nesher International offers you the opportunity to tly toIsrael direct from New York nestled comfortably between the wings of our DC-8Super Jets. Enjoy the benefit of the lowest fares ever offered. Convenient weeklydepartures from JFK New York. SPECIAL CHARTER AIRFARE FROMEAGLE’S LAIREconomy hotel and sightseeing pack¬ages available for your stay in Israel.For information contactyour travel agent or call Toll FreeNesher International800-22l-26(X)/in New York call(212)489-9292PEACE/CONFLICT — THURSDA Y, MA Y15, 7:30 P.M., FREEIsraeli Film, in color, in the cinema verite tradition, examines the arguments now being waged within the Israeli family.DISCUSSION FOLLOWING * led by ELLIOTT CHODOFF, U.C. Grad-student and Midwest Representative, American Zionist Youth Foundation.HILLEL FOUNDATION - 5715 WOODLAWN AVENUE8 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, May 13, 1980A Magician’s Bag of TricksBy Philip MaherI found Alexander Leavens seated comfortably at thecomputer terminal where he works, captivating a make¬shift audience with sleight of hand. Bee playing cardsshuffled across his fingers until, for some reason, hestopped. He turned a card over, “Ten of Diamonds?’’ andhis audience groaned, stumped again.To loosen up, he showed me a few. The Ace of Spadesbecame Diamonds in my hand, and the card I picked mys¬teriously turned up wherever he wanted it. I resolved towatch more carefully, but despite my scrutiny, cards van¬ished into thin air while we talked, then reappeared at thesnap of his fingers.While Leavens shuffled the cards, he talked easily aboutmusic he likes, his home town, and Tinkerbell, a word Ilater realized he said whenever he wanted me to look up,away from the cards. “Presentation is everything,” hesaid, “People think they can go into a magic shop, buy atrick, learn it and memorize the patter that comes alongwith it, like, ‘This mystery comes to us from the ancientpyramids of Egypt.’ How ridiculous! Who would listen tome if I talked like that? You’ve got ot adapt each illusionto your own style.”Leavens’ manner is natural and relaxed. He said hedoesn’t go in for black capes or mystic attitudes. “Magicis changing,” he said, “it used to be that people wantedthe black capes and piercing eyes, but the new magicianslike Mark Wilson and Doug Henning have changed that.They don’t pretend to have supernatural powers. But theystill amaze people.”Style is the secret of any magician’s success, accordingto Leavens. Doug Henning (“The Magic Show”) is ayoung magician who has transformed the world of profes¬sional magic with his casual, relaxed manner. In one ofhis most famous illusions, Henning, his two assistants,and a Siberian tiger emerge from a small black box hehad rolled out on stage. The illusion stumped professionalmagicians around the country for months until they rea¬lized it was an old trick that he had adapted to his own style.Leavens admires Henning, having taken up magic inearnest after seeing “The Magic Shop” on television eightyears ago. He has some staged illusions in his repertoire,but prefers sleight of hand, or prestidigitation.While he has most of the standard card tricks down pat(he began memorizing them as a child), Leavens isalways making up new ones. “I like cards because of theirinfinite variations,” he said, “Card tricks are constantlyevolving. After you learn a trick, you adapt it to your ownstyle. But when you do it over and over, you find ways tomake it more interesting, and those are new tricks. Thensometimes you’ve got to make up new ones on the spot. Aguy once told me, in the middle of my act, ‘I see whatyou’re doing’, so just to prove him wrong, I re-shuffliedthe whole deck and told him I could still find his card. Ididn’t know what I was going to do but I had to do it fast!When I found it I was as shocked as he was.” That trick isone of Leavens’ best.Stage fright still afflicts him somewhat. “I’m alwaysnervous when I begin my act. So I use a surefire, nevermiss trick — a cane that appears out of nowhere. It’s pure¬ly mechancial, a gimmick, but it gets that little gasp fromthe audience. Once I hear that, I’m fine and then I canstart the good stuff.’Leavens taught a mini-course for Eclectic Ed. last fall,in which he taught his students some basic card and cointricks. He also performed at the Wooded Island Festival,performs sometimes on the street, and hires himself outfor parties or occasions. He said he would not want tomake it his living though. “There’s too much pressure onthe professional. He has to practice hours every day, andhe can’t afford to slip up even once. Can you imaginebeing on a stage trying to levitate a ball when you knowthe sting just broke and the ball isn’t going to go any¬where?”Instead, this magician is at U of C concentrating inmath, which he says is very much like magic. “It’s all anillusion, but it flows so smoothly. Working out a proof isjust like working out a difficult illusion. You sweat and Alex Leavensstrain until finally its perfect, and it all flows together. It’sa great feeling.”Alexander Leavens is a magician, but does he believe inmagic? “I create illusions,” he said, “the magic is all inyour mind.”By Timothy Wickland & Ralph ScottInstructions:The clues in this puzzle are different than the clues found in the standardcrossword puzzles carried by most publications. The clues used in this puzzleare similar to those used in the London Times and Atlantic Monthly. Eachclue contains not only a standard definition of the answer, but also additionalevidence about the answer using some sort of play on words: puns, ana¬grams, double definitions, homophones, and/or hidden words.To aid those not familiar with this type of clue solving, we offer the followingexamples:1) clue:answer:2) clue:answer:3) clue:answer:4) clue:answer: Investigation shows Sonny’s ex frantically covered up scorch (8)RESEARCH-RE(SEAR)CH-CHER “frantically”, i.e., anagram,“covering up” SEAR (-scorch); “investigation” is the standarddefinitionShe’s in charge of knitting rayon piece (4)GRAY-“piece” hidden in “knitting rayon”; “she’s in charge” isthe standard definitionPlace to learn group swimming (6)SCHOOL-“place to learn” and “group swimming”; a double defi¬nitionCon men verbally set up sociologist (5)SHILS-homophone for shills (-con men) “sociologist” is the stan¬dard definitionFollowing each clue are numbers in parentheses indicating the number ofletters in the answer. When the answer consists of more than a single word,the numbers of letters in each portion of the answer are given. There arefour abbreviations among the across answers, and the numbers in parenthe¬ses following the clues for these abbreviations gives the total number of let¬ters in the answer. Punctuation in the clues may be used deceptively.ACROSS1 Advanced student is inside, mea¬suring radii (4)6 British put into words verseabout Indonesian island (9)15 Grind mill grain in rear office(9)17 Addition to warranty for spindrier (5)18 CIA infiltrated Americans forDemocratic Action briefly inNova Scotia yesterday (6)19 Campus locale within urban area(6)20 Usual place for nuclear fission re¬quirements (6,4)25 Primate backed up into branch,overlooking surroundings (3) 27 Engrossed with sprung trap (4)28 Roll out barrel for hospital test(3)29 First chips in neat pile (4)30 Sounds like why uninitiated girlgot all mixed up about bikini topvolume, structure (7)31 Cranes dive to get abalones (6)33 Wild orgy results in a leg fracturefor rock figure (8)35 Without night robe, mother ofmany is petrified (5)37 Circle, circle, sounds like star(5)38 Demonstrators swung leatherbelts (6)40 Owl flies close to ground (3) (3)33 Grin about one very loud catbird(7)34 Stands for relaxation on commut¬er trains (6)36 Thoughtless person tamperedwith unfinished robot (4)38 Amos. Andy start working to¬gether in tropical paradise (5)39 Begs to be slapped silly lessquietly <6)41 Substance sounds like buzzer inraging fire (5)42 Take cue from shakeup: acquireoil source (4 >43 Movie bit part is frustration inthe beginning, fame at the end(5)44 Great idea, man: deal reds first,then beat it <5)45 Slings mud from banks of slug¬gish rivers (5)47 Shield from mis-cue (3)48 Lift one lip for delicious nut (4)49 Switch places for animals' tails(4)53 Oh no! Peek, but keep quiet (3)41 Tests in which confused snail ini¬tially gets failing grade (6)43 Soft as funny chubbies (6)46 Beautiful, top-grade pine axed(4)47 Supreme eroticism contents Ara¬bian general (5)48 Course is without one hazard (4)50 Ridiculous prohibition for sportsgroup (3)51 Carbon copy goal: both sides (4)52 Make adjustments on dress (5)54 Very cold water found in Pacificequator (3)55 Police car crashes in our yard(5)56 Large quantity of red elm pulp(6)57 Rend senseless stereotypical UCstudent (4)58 Temporary failures lie in most ofhastier ventures (1,9)DOWN1 Scores reds with a thousand dol¬lars; gets drugged (6)2 Take care of emptv rental stock(4) 3 Moslem ruler is in CIA gambit(3)4 Acted out of low-grade impulses(3)5 Sound of woe from Greek charac¬ter <3>7 Thesaurus author shocked to findbread mold (5)8 Raise money outside presidentialcenter (6)9 Chief, informant involved inneckrub/massage parlor closing(8)10 Disdainful of tango dancing on arailroad (8)11 Back bilious front for politicalmovement (3)12 She’s stoned. no° Yes! (3)13 Teens loiter around a house (6)14 Regarding ocean casually causeswipe out (5)16 Squint at map of coastal city <5>20 One nurse succeeds; Californiaconstructs landmark (5)21 Throw back first brown ball (3)22 Paper strand (6)23 Maddox, e g., is average oneamid star material (6)24 Signs up loners to be rehabilitat¬ed (6)26 The Strip is an “in” place (9)32 Darn westerners start returning The Maroon willoffer a prize of $5 tothe first person to re¬turn a correct, com¬pleted puzzle to theMaroon office.The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, May 13, 1980 — 9CalendarTUESDAYWomen’s Exercise Class: Meets 9:30-10:30 am, IdaNoyes dance room.Resource Analysis Seminar: “A Positive Ap¬proach to U.S. Energy Policy” speaker CharlesCicchetti, 1:30-3:00 pm, Wieboldt 301.Hellenic Civilization Lecture: “Orientale Lumen:Greek Neoplatonism in the Latin Middle Ages”speaker Bernard McGinn, 4:30 pm. Harper 102.UC Gymnastics Club: Instruction available5:30-8:00 pm, Bartlett gym, free.Hispanic Cultural Society: Meeting for allmembers 7:00 pm, Ida Noyes.Doc Films: “Madam Satan” 7:15 pm, “Cleopatra”9:15 pm, Cobb.Hillel: Israeli folk dancing 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes.Astronomy Club: Meets in Ryerson 250, 9:00 pm.Enter through Eckhart. WEDNESDAYPerspectives: Topic - “National Energy Policy andOil” guests Theodore Eck, James Hartnett, Ed¬mund Kitch and Rodney Smith, 6:09 am, channel7.Italian Table: Meets at 12 noon at the Blue Gar¬goyle to speak Italian.Commuter Co-op: Get-together in the CommuterLounge, G.B. 1, 12:30 pm.Cog Com Colloquium: “Face-to-Face Interaction”speaker Starkey Duncan. 4:00 pm, B-102.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: "Applying forOverseas Grants: How and When" speaker MaryCay Martin, 4:00 pm, Pick Lounge.UC Gymnastics Club: Instruction available5:30-8:00 pm, Bartlett gym, free.Doc Films: "Fixed Bayonets” 7:15 pm, "The DirtyDozen" 9:00 pm, Cobb.Women’s Rap Group: Meets 7:30 pm, in theWomen's Center, 3rd floor Blue Gargoyle.Badminton Club: Meets 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes gym¬nasium.Tai Chi Ch’uan: Meets 7:30 pm, Blue Gargoyle.Science Fiction Club: Meets 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes.Everyone Welcome.Country Dancers: Traditional dances of England,Scotland, and New England taught 8:00 pm, IdaNoyes Cloister Club. Beginners welcome.NEW ZEALAND ■ OftLEG-O-LAMB 1FRESH MEATY ■■SPARE RIBS I TU.S.D.A. CHOICECHUCKSTEAKSLEAN MARKET STYLESLICED BACONHILLS BROS.INSTANTCOFFEE 189 lb.49lb.Clb.10 oz. 449SCOTTJUMBOTOWELSNIAGARASPRAYSTARCHKRAFTSBAR-B-QSAUCEIDAHOPOTATOES BAG59 cRoll89 c22 oz.59e129SALERUNSMAY 14 THRU MAY 17)IU.CFINER FOODSSERVING53rd PRAIRIE SHORESKIMBARK PLAZA 2911 VERNONWhere You Are A Stranger But Once! GRADUATES!You are unique...therefore your resume should refleet your special talents. We offer18 years experience in IndustrialPersonnel Management and we knowwhat employers want. In today srecessionary environment, that willmake the difference.We can prepare your resume to getthe maximum interview response foryou. For more information, call:Bryan-RossConsultants(312)485-4836CHINESE-AMERICAisIRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOpen Daily11 AM to 8:30 PMClosed Monday1318 EAST 63rdMU 4-1062 Evolution Discussion Group: “Implications ofGroup Selection for Rates of Evolution” speakerM. Wade, 8:00 pm, HGS 176.THURSDAYPerspectives: Topic - “Neighborhood Revitaliza¬tion in South Shore” guests Richard Taub, JohnMoore, and Ronald Grzywinski, 6:09 am, channel7.Women’s Exercise Class: Meets 9:30-10:30 am inthe dance room of Ida Noyes.Eastern Orthodox Divine Liturgy: Confession10:30 am. Liturgy 10:45 am in Bond Chapel.Lunchtime Concerts: A Performance of Brassquintets, 12:15 pm, Reynolds Club North Lounge.Immunogenetics: “Genetic Control of the Com¬plement System” speaker Dr. Margaret Gold¬man, 2:30 pm, Cummings room 101.Eastern Orthodox Divine Liturgy: Vespers 3:00pm. Bond Chapel.Smart Gallery: Exhibit - "Joan Miro: The Develop¬ment of a Sign Language” May 15-June 18.Comm, on African and Black American Humani¬ties: "Discussing His Novel: Season of Adventure”speaker Gerge Lamming, 4:00 pm, SS 122.Social Thought/Press: Knight Lecture - "Educa¬tion and Research" Speaker John Sparrow, 4:00pm. Classics 10. UCKi-Aikido Club: Meets 4:00-6:00 pm, Fieldhousewrestling room.UC Gymnastics Club: Instructions available4:00-8:00 pm, Bartlett gym, free.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: "SesameStreet’ The first segment of Sesame Street adapt¬ed for \rabic speakers will be shown in SSA,Room E>, 4:00 pm.UC juou CiuD: Meets 6:00 pm, Bartlett gym. Be¬ginners welcome.Zen Meditation: Meets 6:00-7:30 pm, Ida Noyes.Newcomers welcome.NOMOR: Committee meeting 7:00 pm, Ida Noyes1st floor lounge.Thompson House: Film - "Deliverance’ 7:00, 9:15and 11:30 pm, Kent 107.Doc Films: "The Reckless Moment’ 7:15, LaRonde" 8:45 pm, Cobb.Table Tennis Club: Meets 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes 3rdfloor.Hillel: Israeli Film - "Peace/Conflict’ 7:30 pm,Hillel.FRIDAYPerspectives: Topic - "Development and Commu¬nity Participation in South Shore” guests RichardTaub, John Moore, and Ronald Grzywinski, 6:09am, channel 7.Campus filmMadam Satan (Cecil B. DeMille, 1930): In thiscomedy DeMille loses all sense of what's funny oreven tasteful. Bob Brooks (Reginald Derry) thinkshis wife is ''sub-zero” so he seeks thrills with avampish vaudeville singer. Learning that her hus¬band is out for a hot time, Brooks's wife (KayJohnson) decides o "turn into lava” if that's whatit takes to win him back. The film might have beenbetter if Brooks at least seemed worth the win¬ning. Nonetheless, passions heat, tempers flare,and barometers rise during a masquerade ballthat's held inside a zeppelin. DeMille mistakenlyrelies on humor that insults women and on moralizing that's always unbearable. Tonight at 7:15 inQuantrell. Doc. $1 — MWCleopatra (Cecil B. DeMille, 1934): The bio ofthe Egyptian vamp gets^revamped ^t least onceevery decade, but none quite tops the DeMille ver¬sion in silliness. While the Bard portrayed her as awoman in love and Shaw depicted her as a kitten inheat, DeMille sees her as Claudette Colbert of theNile. Claudette does indeed look very fetching,showing off her gams every chance she gets. Otherwise she goes through the motions as if she werestill with the Folies Bergeres. Except this is FoliesDeMille. The rest of the cast seem as if they hadwandered onto the set after an all-night toga party.For the record, Warren Williams impersontesCaesar, and Henry Wilcoxon pretends to be MarcAnthony. This is purely low camp. Tonight at 9:15in Quantrell. Doc, $1 for double feature. — TSLa Ronde (Max Ophlus, 1951): A prostitute solic¬its a soldier; the soldier makes love to a maid; themaid seduces a student . . . and the merry goround continues to turn. Max Ophuls glorifies theshort lived romance as each lover shares his or her new-found affection with the next partner inthe daisy chain. All walks of society are capturedby his fluid camera as they propel the magical,waltz-like movement. A mysterious carousel manager self-consciously sets the scene, explains theaction, fixes "breakdowns,” and censors the film.It contains an all-star French cast, including Simone Signoret, Anton Walbrook, Simone Simon,and Danielle Darrieux. Simultaneously arty andentertaining, this is how great movies are made.Thursday at 8:45 in Quantrell. Doc; $1.50. — GBDeliverance (John Boorman, 1972): Machismoin the Deep South. Adapted from James Dickey'sprize-winning story, the film scrutinizes comraderie under stress. The subjects under examina¬tion are a bunch of buddies on a weekend huntingtrip. What the film reveals about their charactersand motivations is not at all pleasant. Both JonVoight and Burt Reynolds deliver extraordinaryperformances. Thursday at 7, 9:15 8. 11:30 in Kent.Thompson House, $1.50. — TSHarold and Maude (Hal Ashby, 1971): Can a neurotic, suicidal teenager find love and happiness?Why, of course, if he hangs around with a cheeryoctogenarian. Bud Cort is the rebel with a deadlyobsession, and Ruth Gordan plays his comfortingolder friend. Their off-beat, May-December affairis packed with wacky, kooky, and kinky humour asthe two unorthodox lovers challenge every conceivable social norm. Vivian Pickles, playingHarold's overbearing mother, is wonderfully castrating. As for the direction, it has a certain manicness characteristic of the early '70's. But this isstrickly a fantasy and a cult movie for good reasons. Thursday at 7:30 & 9:30 in Law School Auditorium. FOTA, $1.25. — TSSailing Club MeetingWed. May 14inIda Noyes at 7:30 p.m.General Elections will be heldPlans for summer activitieswill be discussed.A c 5 <space""'$25 reward for one or two bedroomHyde Park apt with June-July lease.Willing to pay up to $375. Call Claudia955-4022.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. 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, formal dining rooms, loads of closetspace and more. Quiet residentialblock close to transportation. 363-1332or 288-2175.Co-op apt 4 rms near U of C sun porchkit pantry microw, freezer, low asses$22,000 or best 947-9599.Large Kenwood home for rent. 9bedrooms, 5'/i baths, fam. rm. partial¬ly furnished. Available Aug 1 1980 toSept 1981. 4901 S. Greenwood. Contact536-1643 after 5 pm.Cooperative Household-5 bdrm houseon Dorchester. 2 rms. open June 1.Shared cooking. 493-5419.Sublet our sunny 1 bdrm 3Vi rm apt.this summer. Avail June 10-Sept. 30th.54th and Woodlawn. $247/mo. Call dayor night: 241-7659 or 241-5235.Furnished apt for rent starting June. 1year lease Univ park condo 55th andBlkstn near coop. Lvg.-bdrm, sep. kit¬chen dressing rm enormous south win¬dows. Air cond. Best security. On cam¬pus bus route $325 4- call 667-2608Roommate wanted to share 3 bdrm aptin Regents Park. Air conditioning, ten¬nis courts, lake view. On E-W and Bbus routes. $161/month. Avail June.Peggy 955-7770.ROOMMATE WANTED-Roomy, sun¬ny apartment. $100/month. Call643-3395 around 9:30 AM.LONDON: 2 bedrm furnished flatavailable September for academicyear. $375. Royston, 4074 Grove,Western Spring, IL 60558. 246 1762.Room for rent in est'd Hyde Park col¬lective, 134 plus food, utilities, call288-6657 anytime. Keep trying.FOR RENT: 1 room in a spacious airconditioned 3-bdrm apt. $108 per mo.Call night 924-2744 or day 856-5605.Kenwood coach house 2 br 2 baths new¬ly rebuilt. $625/mo. unfurn., more ifturn. 947-0377.St.-apartment 5501 S. Cornell 160-util,incl. av. June 15.684-5400Summer sublet-Big, sunny 2 bed. $305.Furnished. Roof Garden. June 15-Sept15 (neg. 1.5125 Dorchester. 955-54982 turn bdrs, 1 ba on campus Jun 15-Sept 15 $200.00 neg. Grad or med stud.Tel 955 9673VERY LARGE STUDIO for summersublet. Phil 493-2594 try hard.Summer sublet 3 br 2 bath East ViewPark. 753-3764 eve 643-0629Available June 1-one bdr apt at UnivPk condo 55th and Blackstone. Newlydec ac sec sauna pool one blk fr shopand 1C $390 month heat incl call955-0396.1 bdrm furnished apt on lake, 15thfloor, near campus. Laundry, store,rest./bar, pool. For rent June-Sept684-739761st Dorchester: Modern 2 & 3 bd apts.rental from $350.00 to $425.00 a month.Sec, dep. req. 425-7300SUBLET, l br in 2 br apt. $135 5415 S.Ellis avail. now-Oct. option to lease infall/porch! Call Anne 9-753-1568 days,Michael 643-0483 nights.Studio apt available from June 15-July31 for 5195/month with option to signlease beginning Aug 1 at $210/month.Safe building, 1 block from Co-op 5455S. Blackstone 241-7034SUPER-SUMMER SUBLET: 2-~3bedrooms, sunporch, remodeled, oakfloors, furnished. $300. No smokers.Call Neil 363-7067OLD WORLD ELEGANCEOne of S. Shore Dr. classic smallbldgs, huge palatial 3000 sq. ft. 8 rm2Vi bath apt ornate sculptured andbeamed ceilings, w/b fplc, near beach,1C, CTA. (dry, good security.Available June no pets (allowancepossible for talented decorator) professional adults $625 mo call 221-6606.alsoSimilar 6 room l’/i bath avail June 1$495 mo. Call 221-6606.also3Vi rm in same bldg ideal for singleavail. July 1 $235 mo. Call 221-6606.Bedroom available in Regents Park inlarge furnished carpeted apartment.29th floor view of lake; modern appliances; on bus route. Rentnegotiable. Call John at 324 44625405 Woodlawn 2 rm & 2Vi rm aptsturn. June occ Ms. Green 643 2760667-5764 F t C "D2 ROOMMATES WANTED: 57th andDorchester 3 bdrms 6 rms a/c I havemost furniture you'll need $200/mo. incl. all util. Call anytime 324-5078 askfor Dave, leave a message.University Park studio. 55th and Dor¬chester. Drapes, w.w. carpet. $30,750.435- or 955-7399FEMALE GRAD STUDENT seeksroom or studio apt. for summer andfall qtr. Call collect evenings413-549-6164 (AmherstMA).Student in college interested inhousesitting over summer. Likesanimals. Leave message for Nick at753-8342 rm #411.SUMMER SUBLET-1 bdrm apt$275/mo. Completely furnished heartof campus-near 1C stat. beautiful viewof Midway. Available mid-June lateSept. 667-4309 or 876-2148Subletting apt summer, Regents Park.3 bdrm, 3 bath. $500/mo. call Chad at684-5952.PEOPLE WANTEDEarn extra money at home. Good pay.Easy work. No experience necessary.Send for application. Home Money,Box 2432B, Iowa City, Iowa, 52240Camp Staff-Nurse, canoe tripper, ar¬chery, arts crafts, baton, firlery. Girlscamp Wis. 761-1838 eve.$70 per month for each weekend of Na¬tional Guard training. Call Al Novotneat 288-5036 or contact your PlacementOffice.COMMUNITY DEVELOPER Needstreet-wise, trans-cultural person towork directly with families in tem¬porary shelter Also to recruit andtrain volunteers, and to develop largecommunity programs. Prefer collegedegree and experience in counselingand social work. Resumes by May 15.Neighborhood Care Coalition, 1701West Garfield Blvd., 60636. Phone436-2078 or 776-2502 for information.Someone to stay with 3 boys (12, 14,and 16) while mother goes on vacation.Ref. cook modest meals. Boys Iv. 8.00ret 4:00. Near Univ. 493-7472 May 28June 13. Share with a friend or take jobfrom 6/6-6/13FRENCH MANUSCRIPT TYPIST.Student part-time. Prepare copy formonographs and journals. 55 wpm.Knowledge of French grammar essen¬tial. Accuracy more important thanspeed. Excellent pay. Call GeorgeRumsey-Community and FamilyStudy Center. 753-2518.Wanted immediately: person to typeinteresting material, up to 20 hrs/wk.Very flexible hrs. in H P. $5.00/hr,through mid-August 493-4551 pm.3-2317 days.OFFSET PRESS TRAINEE Studentpart time during school. Full time insummer available. Learn multi-colorprinting. Experience in photographyor printing desirable. Prefer personwho will be on campus three years ormore. Excellent pay. Call MatthewWoodruff. Community and FamilyStudy Center. 753-2974.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,Minolta XG-7 camera, Rokkor-X lens,flash unit. Never used. $200. Call MikeB . 667-7517Apt. Sale-Furniture, good and not sogood, including sofa bed and exquisitecouch, and kitchen gear. 493-2040, evesand wknds.5 rm Co-op apt. 56th-Univ. 947-9852evenings. Keep trying.PERSONALSWRITER'S WORKSHOP (Plaza2-8377)Qwerty: That's right-you were awaywhen I gave my bio. Home-sweet-home is (for me) Hawai'i. So, where'syours? How come you're here (HP)?Barefoot DreamerMADMAN Are you serious? I can't af¬ford to lose again. My last adventurewill have no escape.8th Law of Gizmatics-T.V. substitutesfor imagination, music creates im-Happy Birthday Judy! (late) thesound of music award, for makingyour own kind of music, singing yourown special song, dancing to your ownoff beat beat!John-Though Pete, Repete, and Godknows Levi have been vying for my at¬tention, you are the one that I love.You make me ultimately happy.Tickle- FetishBruce I'll let you wear my Sox hat,Don, give Marly your Reader namesoon, or else! Trouble Girl (Or else:No Reader personal!) t>s ★Reg Where are you? I miss yourmessy handwriting. LAWNo. 6: When we go to Paris, wearingred dresses and eye shadow, we won'thave to deal with the stupid weasels,the goon-heads, and the creepolas ofthe world. It'll be just us and ourcoffee shop and good King Leonard!.See-ya-there! ErbeckyPE RITON: If you turn down the temp,of the white icebox, the things insidemight not spoil, they probably willripen.MADMANSCENESCOMMUNITY HEALTH SEMINAR"Physical Fitness for Health and aGood Life." Chicago College ofOsteopathic Medicine Thursday, May15. at 7:30 pm 1000 East 53rd Street.Free Parking.ASTRONOMY CLUB will meet at 9:00pm, Tuesday May 13 in Ryerson 250. Atrip to Yerkes will be discussed follow¬ed by viewing through the Ryersonobservatory. All welcome. Enterthrough Eckhart.FREE PARTY-Beer and chips. For allalumni/ae of Jesuit high schools, col¬leges, or universities Friday May 16,8:30 pm at Jesuit House 5554 S.Woodlawn. Meet some old friendsHyde Park Garden Fair, May 16, 9 to 6,May 17, 9 to 4 at 55th and Lake ParkShopping Mall.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.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.TYPING Your thesis or your finalquarter paper. Convenient to the cam¬pus for pick-up and delivery.Reasonable rates. Please call 684-6882.Summer child care. Organizing smallgroup, ages 5 to 8. All day, all summer.Call evenings 363-7265.TYPIST Dissertation quality, helpwith grammar, language as needed.Free depending on manuscript. IBMSelectric. Judith. 955-4417GRAPHS, 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 Gradua¬tion. Will pay $$. Leave message forRm. 418, 752 5757.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.RU MOVINGEAST?Nice Jewish boy w/truck going fromChgo. 2 Bosfon last 2 weeks in June.Will make stops en route. - No size orquantity 2 large or small. Inexpensiverates-experienced movers, 667-7498.SUMMER BC/BSOff-Quarter BC/BS Coverage for Summer Quarter-Friday, May 30 Is ab¬solute deadline for enrollment. Pick upoff-quarter applications in Adm 103.CHILDCAREWORKERWanted 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 writeJewish Children's Bureau, 1 SouthFranklin St., Chicago, II. 60606 Phone346-6700 ex. 339. An equal opportunityemployer.$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 contact your Placement Office ACHTUNG!ENJOY LEARNING GERMAN THISSUMMER! Take APRIL WILSONScourse and highpass the German ex¬am. Starts June 23. 3 sections, M-F.10:30-12, 1-2:30, 6:30-8. To register,call: 667-3038.PARTY;PARTYCitizens party forum. Sid Lens andQuentin Young on "Why We Need aNew Party" Wed. May 14, noon inReynolds Club N. LoungeTO ACT ORNOT TO ACT1 actor, 1 actress needed for short 16mm film. No pay (or minimal pay);screen credit, scr exp etc. Call Angelo772-0831, leave name and phone no.MARRIOTT'SGREAT AMERICAGo spinning, soaring, screaming andsplashing and save! Buy GreatAmerica discount tickets at theReynolds Club Box Office and save upto S1 95 per person. Tickets good from5-3 to 7-27 and 8-25 to 9-13.GIVE ME MYBUTTON BACKTo whoever found a green cemeteryworkers union local 106 button at theRamones Concert, please contact Jeffat 493-1184. Reward isofferedATTENTIONMUSICIANSThe Department of Music is nowscheduling a series of informal lun¬chtime concerts for next year(1980-81). If interested in performingany type of music, please come to Lex¬ington Hall to apply, or contact Bar¬bara Schubert.ANTI-WARPOETSAre you a pacifist or a poet? Join us fora reading of anti war poetry, eitheryour own or others'. For informationweek.INTENSIVEGERMAN THE MOSTCONTROVERSIALMAN INAMERICACome hear Ncrman Podhoretz speak¬ing on "The Present Danger" Wednes¬day at 8:00 pm in the Law SchoolAuditorium.LUNCHTIMECONCERTSEvery Thursday at 12:15 pm inReynolds North Lounge This week,May 15, the New U.C Brass SocietyQuintet with Kenny Davis and BillRisler, trumpets; Richard Merte,horn; Tom Martin, trombone; andGeorge Beakman, tubaCelebrate Eno's birthday by partyingand listening to Music for SpaceCadets this Thursday nite from 1-4 amon WHPK-FM 88.3THE DECLINE NEEDATYPIST?Excellent work done in my homeReasonable rates Tel 536-7167 or548-0663NEW MUSICENSEMBLE2 Big Spring Concerts: Sunday May 18and Sunday May 25. 20th centurychamber works by Kupferman, Brit¬ten, Debussy (May 18) and Wucrinen,Hindemith, and others (May 25). Bothconcerts at 8 pm in Lexington Hall(5835 S. University). FREE!RESUMESWould you like a professional-lookingindividualized resume? We offer type¬setting and offset printing serviceswith choice of typeface, format, paperstock. Call 753-2074 or drop by theHuman Resources Center, 1225 E 60thSt.DON'T SQUEAL!But Deliverance is showing Thursdayin Kent 107-7:00 , 9 15 and 11 30.Highpass the German Exam this sum¬mer, study with Karin Cramer native AC TUC U/CCTGerman PhD using the comparative ^ I liu ilLOlcall Adam, 241-6740 or Molly 753-3265 RADV'C HW CIDC(days). The reading is planned for 8th I O vyli r I [\ ustructural translation method course Find out when Norman PodhoretzStarting June 23 M-F 9-11, 6-8. Call speaks on "The Present Danger"493-8127. Wednesday at 8:00 pm in the LawSchool Auditorium. SUMMERJAZZ BANDDISCOUNT TICKETSFOR GREATAMERICA DELIVERANCEThursday, May 15, 7:00, 9:15 and 11.30pm, Kent 107 If you are interested in playing in aSummer Jazz Ensemble, let us knowright away! Call Geoff at 752-5734 orIrene at 753-3598 UC students, staffand faculty.You've read about Rose! You've beenpleased with Plitt! Now marvel at ourdeal on Marriott's Great Americatickets! Check it our at your nearestReynolds Club Box Office.Wise. HIDEAWAYComfortable family owned cabin onquiet No. woods lake available *or rent5-31 to 7-19 and 8-2 to 9-30. X3598USEDAUTOMOBILESJEEPS $59,50, CARS $40 00, TRUCKS$112,00. Call (615) 266-5142 Ext. 405WRITINGTUTORSThe University needs graduatestudents to help College students withwriting next fall. Application forms inHarper 209.VERSAILLES5254 S. DorchesterWELL MAINTAINEDBUILDINGAttractive IV2 and2Vz Room StudiosFurnished or Unfurnished$218to$320Based on Availability1At Campus Bus Stop324 0200 Mrs. GroakThe Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, May 13, 1980 — 11I ireticCreative MovementEnsembleIda Noyes DanceRoomMay 1 7, 3 p.m.. FREE •FOTApresentsDock BriefsMay 17, 1 p.m.Little TheatreUniversity High$2 students$3 others CHICAGOOPERATHEATREOld Time \Music Conventionand PicnicMay 18noon to dusk /v on the quads |\ (in case of rainat Ida Noyes) mozart, bizet, pucciniand othersMay 14, 8 p.m.Internat’l House Theatre david catesTickets$2.50 Students$3.50 others carol olsenmay 15, 8 p.m.international house^ free ^Comedy TroupeMay 16, 8 p.m.Law SchoolAuditorium$4 Students\ $5 others' Poetry Reading \with ED DORNauthor of GunslingerMay 15, 8 p.m.Ida Noyes LibraryFREEalso...Poetry Workshop4:00-5:30 p.m.Harper 175limit 15 music, poetry,tai-chi performanceby Bill HayashiMay 18, 8 p.m.Reynolds ClubW FREE/"HAROLD NAND MAUDE(film event)May 15, 7:30 & 9:30 p.mLaw SchoolAuditorium• ;-Wm Wi m' - * \I m |mt-mm' *'X, * *