Special EditionThe Chicago MaroonVolume 91,no. 62 The University of Chicago Copyright 1982 The Chicago Maroon Monday, June 7.1982Levine new College dean; Straus oustedSSCD master namedas Smith’s successorDonald Levine, new Dean of the CollegeBy Darrell WuDunnDonald Levine, current masterof the Social Sciences CollegiateDivision (SSCD), has accepted hisappointment as the new Dean ofthe College. Levine will succeedthe Dean Jonathan Z. Smith onSept. 15.The new appointment comesafter months of discussions by theDean of the College search com¬mittee. The committee presentedits recommendations to PresidentHanna Gray late last month. Graythen offered the post to Levinewho, after several weeks ofthought, decided to accept the postlast Thursday.As master of SSCD, Levine in¬itiated and helped develop the newdivisional curriculum re-quirements, the first major changein the curriculum since 1966.The new requirements includeone year of language and one lesscourse required for graduation.Changes in the civilization coursesand requirements were also made.Levine told the Maroon that thisprocess of improving the Collegecurriculum which he initiated withthe SSCD will play a major part inhis administration.By David BrooksA University of Chicago studentis now recovering in the intensivecare ward of Henrotin Hospitalafter having been repeatedlystruck on the head with an axe dur¬ing a mugging attempt on N. Dear¬born avenue early Friday morn¬ing.Jay Barish, a fourth yearPolitical Science major had goneuptown with another U.C. studentThursday night to celebrate theend of his finals. On his way backto the car, at 12:50 a m., Barishand his friend were approached bya man wearing a ski mask carry¬ing a full size axe.They ran toward the car on the900 block of North Dearborn. Theassailant caught up with them atthe corner of Dearborn andDelaware and hit Barish in theforehead with the axe. Theassailant then demanded money,detectives said.As Barish went down from thefirst blow, he told the assailant thathe could not get the money out ofhis pocket according to police. Theassailant hit him twice more in theback of the head and several timesin the body. He said, however, that in orderto improve the curriculumreorganization of the College isnecessary He said that the Collegefaculty must get organized to takeresponsibility for curricular mat¬ters.Levine also emphasized thatorganization is more importantthan just having great scholars.“Teaching is important and moreso in the College,’’ he said.In announcing Levine’s appoint¬ment to the University faculty,Gray said, “Donald Levine’s ap¬pointment is a further affirmationof the strength of the College atChicago, its close linkage with theDivisions, and the significant par¬ticipation of the faculty in thegovernance of this University.’’“He has made a major contribu¬tion not only to the organizationand vitality of the College but alsoto undergraduate teaching, forwhich he received the QuantrellAward in 1971,’’ she said.Levine’s appointment as Dean ofthe College was overwhelminglypraised by members of the faculty.Smith, the current dean, said.“This is the best appointment theycould have made. Levine hasThere were several people whowitnessed the crime, police said.One of them, off-duty policemanWillie Thomas chased theassailant away from Barish intoWashington Square Park, wherethe man surrendered after Thomasfired a warning shot.Police are holding Kevin Adders.21. of 5739 S. Meade on charges ofaggravated battery.Barish was rushed to HenrotinHospital. He was visited there byHenry Toutain, Associate Directorof Student Housing, some friendsfrom the University and hismother, who heard of the incidenton network news in ColoradoToutain said that Barish wasalert and talking the morning afterthe incident. He went into surgeryabout noon on Friday.Barish had suffered two skullfractures and multiple lacerationson the head and body but is nowlisted in good condition. He is alertand talking, though he is sufferingfrom headaches and there is swell¬ing over his eyes.Hospital officials said that hewould probably not be releasedfrom intensive care until Tuesday. energy, vision, and tremendoussupport of the faculty.” He added,“it’s the best piece of new's I’veheard in the past five years.”Wayne Booth, who served asDean of the College during the late1960s, also described Levine’sselection as a “marvelous choice.”“He is someone who knows theCollege as well as anyone. He willbe a first rate dean,” Booth saidCharles Wegener, who chairedthe committee recommendingLevine as well as several othercandidates, also praised the ap¬pointment. Levine is “what theCollege needs now,” he saidWegener described Levine as “nota radical, not a revolutionary” butas someone with a realistic view ofthe College.Wegener said that althoughLevine was on his committee’s listof recommended candidates, noone w as singled out as a top choice.Richard Taub, chairman of thePublic Affairs program which wasstarted by Levine in the late 1960's,said Levine is “an activist with acommitment to the College.”“If you’re president < of a univer¬sity) you can choose someone safe,not someone who makes waves,”Taub said. “What is pleasing isthat Gray is going with a wavemaker.”“I’m optimistic,” said chemistryprofessor Norman Nachtrieb.Levine has “done wonders with theSocial Sciences Collegiate Divi¬sion. He’s had people rethink thecurriculum and he’s restructuredthe discipline.”Levine is the first Dean of theCollege to be educated in the college. As a student during Hutchins'presidency, Levine received hisB.A. at age 19 in 1950. He studied inGermany in 1952 as the first post¬war exchange student betweenGermany and the US. He laterreturned to the University andreceived his Ph D. in 1957.Levine spent the next five years away from UC. He did sociologicalstudies for several years inEthiopia and almost helpedestablished a national universitythere. Considered too critical of theEthiopian emperor. Levine return¬ed to the University in 1962.Levine served as the first Masterof the SSCD after the Collegeunderwent a major reorganizationin 1966. During his tenure asmaster between 1966-1968, Levinesaid he was concerned primarilywith bringing the University facul¬ty into the College. Levine alsocreated the Public Affairs pro¬gram in those years.Levine tole the Maroon that hehas not yet drawn up a detailedagenda of what he wants to ac¬complish in his five years as Deanof the College. He did say.however, that besides thereorganization of the College andimprovements in the curriculum,he would like to examine thegrading system, the quartersystem, and the advising system.Levine said that the SSCD hasalready initiated a look into thegrading system and that the SSCDfaculty "overwhelmingly favors amore differential gradingsystem.”Unlike Smith. Levine is not op¬posed to the quarter system butbelieves the College "should makeit more humane ”One of the priority items in thecoming year will be a "good hardlook” at the advising system.Levine said Levine believes thatthe College faculty should be in¬volved in some way in the advisingof students. “My guess is thatsome change will come,” LevinesaidWhen Levine takes office inSeptember, he will bring in abasically new team of ad¬ministrators to the College. LornaStraus will step down as Dean ofStudents in the College on June 30,continued on page three Straus’term endsJuly 1By Chris IsidoreLorna Straus. Dean of Studentsin the College, will not be reap¬pointed when her two year termexpires at the end of this month.This decision, which was a sur¬prise to many, including Straus,was revealed in a letter fromJonathan Z. Smith, the departingDean of the College.Straus, who has served as theDean of Students in the Collegesince Oct. 1, 1971, will remain onthe faculty as a tenured professor.She has taught MammalianBiology, one of the more popularcourses in the College, since 1969.Smith, President Hanna Grayand the new Dean of the CollegeDonald Levine, all said that therehad been a clear understandingthat Straus would leave when herterm ended this spring But Straus,and many other administratorsand faculty members expressedsurprise and disappointment thatshe would not be returning.Smith’s letter to StrauS did notexplicitly state that she would notbe reappointed, but instead thank¬ed her for her work as Dean ofStudents. “As the close of yourtenure as Dean of Students in theLorna StrausCollege draws near,” Smith wrote,"I wanted to express, on behalf ofcolleagues and students, past andpresent, the deep sense ofgratitude the College owes you foryour many years of devoted ser¬vice...”“Know that when you return toyour full time teaching andresearch, after July 1, you carrywith you the grateful well done'and firm hopes for the future fromevery member of this College." itread.continued on page threeMan bludgeons UCstudent with axeCampus Films EditorialsA Foreign Affair (Billy Wilder, 1948). Aprim Iowa congresswoman (Jean Arthur),looking suspiciously like Claire Booth Lucewith her braids and briefcase, investigatesthe moral malaria infecting American GI’sin the postwar ruins of Berlin. Her spinstersoul is shocked by the amount of fraterniz¬ing between the GI’s and the Herrenvolk.But she soon changes her mind when com¬ing up against the warm form of John Lund,a sergeant in charge of morale whobiological urges triumph over duty. Therival for his affections is none other thansultry Marlene Dietrich, a black marketbabe whose goods are hot! A Foreign Affairwas one of the first realistic and postwarfilms and ranks with the works of Rosseliniand DeSica Though a sardonic comedy, thefilm cuts deep and tells the truth, which isthat under pressure, men and women do notfollow the Ten Commandments. The USCongress did not like this film, it was de¬nounced on the floor of the House ofRepresentatives and the embarassedDefense Department issued a statementclaiming that the film gave a false image ofour Occupation Army, who were a noble andcelibate company of warriors. Tues., June 8at8:00 $1.50 DOCThe Gang’s All Here (Busby Berkeley,1943). As Carmen Miranda once said aboutBerkeley in The Detroit News. “That manees crazee!” Crazy he certainly was, as thisgarish Technicolor extravaganza — thewildest, most chaotic, and finally the mostcharacteristic Berkeley effort ever —wonderfully proves. Alice Faye stars as thegirl in love with James Ellison. Sherelentlessly pursues him after he's dumpedby his childhool sweetheart But who cares?The real star is the immortal Miss Mirandaas “The Lady in the Tutti Frutti Hat“ whomakes her entrance in a gold cart drawn bytwo gold-painted oxen while wearing atowering thirty-foot headdress of fruit andbananas. Her scene with the giant dancing bananas was banned in Brazil, and Rio hasnot been the same since. Even the stoic Ben¬ny Goodman turns up as a lusty, hot-lippedmusician who performs (?) two duets withCarmen. This stellar example of wartimedivertissement is a tribute to the vision ofBerkeley and the photography of EdwardCronyager: the pair brought together never-before-seen visual effects, strangely mobilecamera angles, and bizarre devices such aswater curtains tinted with rainbow lights todemonstrate the Berkeley love affair withleggy chorines the kaleidescope. Withmusical direction by Alfred Newman, uncleof Randy , The Gang's AH Here is an orgy ofDancemania that will make you forget thelast nine months of Regenstein (All copies ofCivilization and Its Discontents must bechecked at the door). Thurs.. June 10 at7:15 $2.00 DOCThe Boy Friend i Ken Russell. 1971 >. As ishis habit, campmeister Russell takes on anuncompromising material — SandyWilson’s saccharine musical — andmagically transforms it into a work ofcinematic modernism that wildlytranscends its source. Unlike the Wilsonoriginal. Russell’s Boy Friend is abackstage musical — a la 42nd Street — fullof snide asides, loving glances, unprofes¬sional performances on stage andunspeakable behavior off. Twiggy — theemaciated model of Bamaby Street — isPolly, the chorine awaiting her big breakuntil Glenda Jackson (in an uncreditedcameo) breaks hers. Her win-to-centerstage saga features Russell’s usualaudacious visual style — here with oversiz¬ed Art Deco sets and scenes on the wing of abiplane With Christopher Gable as thecutesy boy friend and Tommy Tune as theEmpire State Building, The Boy Friend isperhaps Russell’s most personal vision ofthe agonies and private fantasies of the ar¬tist. Thurs , June 10 at 9:00. $2.00 DOCMaroonMembership on the staff of the Chicago Maroon is open to all studentsin the University. So join in this summer with your articles, photos,and ideas! Come to the Maroon office on the third floor of Ida NoyesHall and ask for Darrell.Your student newspaper.New and RebuiltTypewriters,Calculators,Dictators, AddersCasioHewlett PackardTexas InstrumentCanonSharpElectronic Watches*2 REPAIRSPECIALISTSon IBM, SCM,Olympia, etc.FREE repairestimates; repairsby factory-trainedtechnician.RENTALSavailable withU. of C. I D.The University of Chicago Bookstore970 East 58th Street 2nd Floor* 753-3303 A time for renewalThe news of Donald Levine’s appointment as Dean of the College is cause for op¬timism: it signals the beginning of what may be a new renewal in the College, arenewal of the University’s determination to make an undergraduate educationat Chicago without question the best available anywhere.Although one should always counsel cautious optimism with the coming of anew administration, Levine has already demonstrated a clear grasp of the goalsof a liberal education, most notably with his innovations as Master of the SocialScience Collegiate Division: namely, requiring all students to take both calculusand one year of foreign language, as well as changing the non-Western civilizationsequence requirements.Even more important, during Levine’s tenure as Master the SSCD faculty hasbegun to work together in planning the curriculum of the division.It is significant that Levine is himself a graduate of the College, and that he at¬tended the University when the College offered the best undergraduate educationin the country, in the years of Robert Maynard Hutchins’ presidency.It is not mere nostalgia which Levine brings from his experience as a studenthere, however. Levine has pledged to reorganize the College so as to more greatlyinvolve the faculty in developing and defining the curriculum. When only a hand¬ful of faculty members appear at College Council meetings, or perhaps even readthe Dean’s state of the College report, it is all too ciear that the organization of theCollege as a College, and not just a collection of departments, must be strengthen¬ed.It is more than 15 years since any major changes have been made in the form ofundergraduate education at UC, and certainly the forces of inertia will be work¬ing against any effort to change things. With the cooperation of the faculty,however, there is a good chance that Levine will be able to improveundergraduate education here far beyond anyone’s present expectations.A dean for studentsThere are Deans and then there are Deans. There are Deans who mouth thefamiliar platitudes, of what a great College we have here at the University, andthen there are Deans who see it as their job to do more than prop up a glossyreputation. There are Deans who spend thousands of words attempting to ar¬ticulate a public relations program for the College, and then there are Deans whoview their task as attempting to make the College a decent place for students.There are Deans who have an open ear for any student or for any problem, andthen there are Deans who are mysteriously inaccessible (to the point where theirsecretaries virtually run their offices). Quite simply, there are Deans who we’llbe sad to see go and there are Deans who...Lorna Straus considered changing her administrative title from Dean ofStudents in the College to Dean for Students in the College. Nothing could be amore appropriate description of the administrative official who has been the mosttireless student advocate over the past 11 years.Dean Straus has been one of the most visible administrators. For students in theCollege, she served as an open door into the administration. As a problem solvershe was impeccable and as a sympathetic ear she was invaluable. In short, shewas the most popular of administrators. Among the student body, at least.Her tenure as Dean of Students has seen a drop in the attrition rate in the Col¬lege, an accomplishment which should be credited largely to Straus. She hasoverseen the advisors system, an institution which has come under attack recent¬ly and which she has strongly defended. Straus seems to understand that with allits faults, the advisors system better serves the needs of the students than thefaculty counseling systems which exist at other schools.Primarily, though, Dean Straus has served the individual needs of the students.She has been tough when it was demanded and she has gone out of her way to ironout the injustices which arise in student life. She has displayed a profound dedica¬tion to the College which we have all valued.We are not absolutely certain of the reasoning surrounding the end of Straus’sterm. The advantages of inaugurating a whole new administrative team with thenew Dean of the College Donald Levine do not outweight the advantages of havinga person of Straus’s character in that position.LettersFarewell to a friendTo the editor .When I learned that Lorna Straus wouldnot be the Dean of Students in the Collegenext year, my first thought was, 1 don’tbelieve it, it can’t be true My secondthought was, Why? It is the second, the incredulity that has stayed with me and is uppermost in the minds of everyone else whoknows.Mrs. Straus has been respected, admiredand loved by all students who have knownher. She has been supportive when we werediscouraged, rational when we lost perspeclive, ingenious when we thought we were ata dead end and has always worked withstudents on a wonderfully personal level. Ican’t count the number of times when shehas been of great assistance to me andothers when we felt totally lost. She can always find a way to solve a problem, otheralternatives where we see none and hasalways been sympathetic to students’ needs.Mrs. Straus has been everything a Dean ofStudents should be and more.At this point I feel anger and I feelhelpless. 1 am going to graduate and will notneed the aid of a dean of students next yearbut I commiserate with students who will bein the College next year who will not haveMrs. Straus to tum to.Lorna Straus has been a teacher, an ad¬visor and a friend 1 will miss her when Ileave but I feel that the students next year,including those who have not known her,will face a greater loss.Sufia KhanStudent in the College2—The Chicago Maroon—Monday, June 7,1982NewsStrausoustedContinued from page oneNeither Smith, Gray, nor Levine spokewith Straus before she received the letter.The official announcement of Levine’s ap¬pointment will not be made until today.Straus described the letter from Smith as“nice,” but added. “It’s not as personal as aconversation would have been.”Most of the administrative posts in theUniversity are held by faculty memberswho rotate in and out of the positions. Butthe position of Dean of Students in manyareas is a much more long-term post.Straus’s 11 year tenure was not unusual. SolKrasner has been the Dean of Students forthe Physical Science Division for 18 years,and the late Catherine Ham had served asDean of Students in the Humanities from1973 until shortly before her death this year.Many faculty members in the College ex¬pressed either hope that Straus would stillbe reappointed, or disappointment that shewould not be returning.“I would be surprised if she wasn’t reap¬pointed,” said Norman Nachtrieb, professorof Chemistry. “Lorna Straus has done an ex¬traordinarily fine job. She understands theproblems of the College and is sensitive tothe needs of the students,” he said.“I’m dumbfounded to hear about this,”said Clifford Gurney, master of theBiological Science Collegiate Division.“She’s been an excellent dean. In all mydealings with her she’s been very sup¬portive. very helpful.”“I can’t imagine how the College is goingto function without her,” said BertramCohler, spokesman of the Committee of theCollege Council, the College’s executivecommittee. “It’s shocking and horrifying.She absolutely should have been reap¬pointed.” Cohler said.Those apparently less upset with Straus’sdeparture cited the need for rotation of ad¬ministrators and the chance to start withnew leadership in the College as being goodfor the College.President Gray cited the University’stradition of having faculty members rotatein and out of deanships as a strength, andsaid, “With a new dean in the College, itseems the appropriate time for rotation witha new dean of students.”Smith said there was a clear understan¬ding two years ago that both he and Strauswould leave this spring. “We were both go¬ing back to what we were suppose to be do-ing here.” he said. He added that the newDean of Students in the College will be a dif¬ferent position from what Straus has held.“You’re probably going to see a change inthe conception of the Dean of Students of¬fice,” he said.Levine pointed to the vacancies of three ofthe five divisional Masters along with thevacancy of the dean of student position as animportant benefit for the College. “This willbe the first time since 1965 (when the Col¬lege was reorganized) that we’ll have awhole new team in,” he said. He said that hewould not reappoint Straus to the position.He said he believed that there had been anunderstanding she would definitely be leav¬ing at the end of her term this June “I wasTheWilmington4901 S. DrexelStudio Apts From $298•Unfurn. or Furn.•Utilities Incl.•Security Guard•Service Shops•Laundry facilities•Convenient transportation285-3500Mrs. Jordan, i 1 ^ informed her term was up,” said Levine.But Straus said that she was very surpris¬ed by the decision. She knew of no suchunderstanding. She said that there had beenno discussions with her about her term orher reappointment before she received theletter from Smith on Wednesday night.She said that the only understanding thatwas made two years ago when she was reap¬pointed was that her term ought to be co-with that of the outgoing dean of the College.“That is a principle with which I agree 100percent,” said Straus.Straus was in the middle of her first termwhen the Oxnard was named the new Deanof the College in Spring of 1973. She said atthat time she offered to resign so that hecould appoint his own Dean of Students, butthat he requested that she stay. She wasthen reappointed once during his term.When Oxnard left five years ago, her termwas also up, but Smith asked her to staythen, too. She was reappointed one last timetwo years ago.A new dean of students will not be chosenuntil at least mid-July, according to Levine.Straus said that she does not know how thetransition will proceed, since the letter fromSmith was very definite in its sense that herterm was over on July 1. Because ofprevious committments, Levine will not beable to take over the position of Dean untilthe beginning of next fall.Straus is a life long resident of Hyde Park.Her father was on the faculty of the lawschool. She attended the University HighSchool, and attended the College for twoyears, from 1949-51, at the same time asLevine was here as a student. She then leftto receive her B.A. in the History andLiterature of France from Radcliffe in 1955.While at Radcliffe, she met FrancisStraus, who was a Biology major and pre-med student. She started taking biologycourses in order to understand more of whathe was studying. He was admitted into theMedical school here, and she returned toHyde Park in 1955 to marry.Straus started working, but took coursesin biology as a student at-large as her schedule and finance permitted. She thenbecame a full time graduate student, andreceived her M S. in Anatomy in 1960 andher Ph D. in 1962 from the University. Inspring of 1964 she was appointed to teachbiology in the College. Her husband wasalready a faculty member. She won a Quan-trell Award for excellence in undergraduateteaching in 1970. She received tenure in 1973.Levinecontinued from page oneCollege on June 30. and Levine has alreadysaid that he will not reappoint her. In addi¬tion, mastership terms in the BiologicalSciences and the Humanities CollegiateDivisions will end this summer. A replace¬ment for Levine as SSCD master will also bemade.Although Smith’s term as Dean of the Col¬lege was to end on June 30. he has agreed toserve until September, since Levine said hecould not take the deanship until the fall.Levine wants to complete the manuscript ofa book he has been working on for the pastfew years.The Deanship appointment “came to meas a little shock.” Levine said. “I wouldhave preferred to wait a few years. I havesome regrets about not being able to con¬tinue the SSCD changes that I initiated.”HYDE PARKTHE VERSAILLESIDEAL FOR STUDENTS324-0200• Large studios• Walk-in Kitchen• Utilities included• Furn. or unfurn.• Campus bus at doorBASED ON AVAILABILITY5254 S. DorchesterCfiazfotte CVi(zitzomczReaf £itate Co. 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