The Chicago MaroonN°- 14 The University of Chicago Friday, October 14, 1977March and rally for ERAwill seek to influence stateratification before recess Oxnard accepts USC dean posteight months after quitting here’W■Charles E. Oxnard, professor of anatomy and former dean of theCollege, has accepted a position at USC as dean of the graduateschool. He will leave Chicago after the spring quarter.By Abbe Fletman andSusan MalaskiewiczIn the style of the old suffragistsand in memory of ERA authorAlice Paul, supporters of the EqualRights Amendment (ERA) willmarch from the corner of State andWacker at 2 pm tomorrow andrally at the Civic Center The U ofC Women’s Union (WU), an af¬filiate of the Committee for theERA, is the Chicago-basedcoalition that will sponsor therally.ERA was passed by Congress onMarch 22, 1972 To become law,however, the amendment must beratified by three-fourths of thestates, a total of 38. Final passageof the amendment is questionable.Unless three more states ratify itbefore March 22, 1979 the amend¬ment will die.Passage is further complicatedby three ratifying states havingtried to rescind their votes The.Justice Department is in¬ vestigating the legality of ex¬tending the deadline beyond 1979,Attorney General Bell said lastweek.Supporters and opponents ofERA agree that the necessarythree states are likely to comefrom a list of 15. Illinois is a keystate because it is the only Nor¬thern industrial state that has notratified yet. Also, if Illinoisratifies, it could influence moreconservative states such asMissouri and Arkansas to followsuit.The Illinois state legislature hasrejected ERA three times, eachtime by a small margin in onehouse In any other state, ERAwould have passed, becauseIllinois is the only state thatrequires a three-fifths majority topass an amendment. Most statesrequire only pluralities or two-thirds votes. By Jon MeyersohnOnly eight months after steppingdown as dean of the College tocontinue his research, anatomyprofessor Charles E Oxnard lastmonth accepted a post as dean ofthe graduate school and Univer¬sity research professor at theUniversity of Southern CaliforniaOxnard, who served as dean ofthe College from 1973 until last.January, gave up the deanship oneyear before his formal term ex¬pired. At that time he said, "Fiveyears as an administrator areenough.”A leading evolutionary biologistwho came to the University in 1970,Oxnard had accepted the post ofchairman of the anatomy depart¬ment for this year, but did notinform the department of his in¬tention to leave until SeptemberOne source close to the departmentsaid that Oxnard had left them“somewhat in a lurch,” because ofplans to expand the departmentAnother source said thedepartment had "been screwed abit” by Oxnard’s late decision, andfelt he should have notified thedepartment sooner. Echoing on asmaller level last year’s decisionby Medical School dean DanielTosteson to leave for Harvard,Oxnard has left the anatomydepartment in limbo Oxnard wasinstrumental in leading thedepartment toward a “functionaland evolutionary model” thatwould have totally restructuredthe department.Leonard Radinsky, associateprofessor in the anatomy depart¬ment, is now acting chairman ofthe department, and acting MedSchool dean Robert Uretz mustdecide about the future of thedepartment Anatomists are particularly upset now becausethere has again been talk ofmerging the departments ofanatomy and biology, a possibilitythat had been ruled out recently serve as chairman here However,his change of plans did not come asa surprise to College facultymembers interviewed by TheMaroon The professors said thatERA to 3The U of C contingent of ERA supporters prepare posters forSaturday’s march downtown. (Photo by Philip Grew) Oxnard, 44, accepted thedeanship at USC after he agreed to Oxnard to 3Oxnard visited USC in JanuaryAlthough Oxnard told TheMaroon that his decision to resignfrom the deanship "had norelation” to any future plans toaccept another administrativepost, Oxnard visited theUniversity of Southern Californiain the same month that hestepped down as deanAccording to ZohrabKaprielian, USC's executive vicepresident. Oxnard visited theUSC campus in January, 1977 atthe invitation of the school'ssearch committee Oxnard an¬nounced his resignation in thesecond week of JanuaryThe USC search committeecomposed of faculty ad¬ ministrators. and students wasformed in the summer of 1975 tofind a provost. USC did not have aprovost at the time, and after thesearch had gotten underway, thegroup decided not to carry out itsoriginal plan to create the newpositionOxnard was considered forboth the provostship and for th*>deanship of the 12.000-student USCgraduate school. Kaprielian saidthat the committee "took a broadminded look at all the people wewere looking at ”Praising Oxnard. Kaprieliandescribed him as a veryscholarly gentleman who willmake an excellent dean ”New time religionMartin Marty: Gauging trendsBy David SkeldingWhen a national magazine ornewspaper has a question abouttrends in modern religion, theyturn to Martin E. Marty,professor of the history ofmodern Christianity in theDivinity School He is one of thenation’s most highly regardedand oft-quoted experts onreligionMarty has spent his entireacademic career at theUniversity, having joined thefaculty in 1963 after spending 10years as a Lutheran ministerHe would not want to teachelsewhere: “This is a school thatisn’t interested in the final,practical result of learning Thepremium is always placed onpeople who have a gift or apassion for isolating questionsand beginning to address them Ilike the sense of possiblediscovery, however modest, asopposed to mere transmissionThe role of the Divinity Schoolin a secular university is com¬plementary to the academic atmosphere on campus, saidMarty. The goals of the DivinitySchool are to "examine andexplicate the main traditions ofwestern thought Christianityand Judaism and to contributeto the scientific study of religion,neutral and value-free. ” The study of religion, then,needs no other justification in theUniversity. Marty actuallyperceives a trend toward theincreased recognition of religiousstudiesMarty to 3Professor in the Divinity School Martin E. Marty: “There had beena perceptible increase in the numbers of people who take seriouslythe intellectual dimensions of religion ” (Photo by GwendolenCates) University gets two grants,but still short of final goalBy Abbe FletmanWith the addition this summer ofa $500,000 challenge grant from theKresge Foundation for renovationof the Field House and a $1 millionmatching fund for acquisitions byRegenstein Library from ananonymous trustee, the Campaignfor Chicago moves closer to itsannounced goal of $280 millionThe Kresge grant must be metwith equal funds by the Universityby August before the Foundationwill give the money to theUniversity The funds will be usedin the second phase of Field Houserenovation, to build fencing,handball, and other facilities onthe first floor An additional$200,000 above the grant andmatching gifts are needed tocomplete the floor“As you can imagine.” saiddevelopment director ClydeWatkins, “we re hustling around toget the matching money.”The library fund will have greatimpact on the University becausethere is no time limit on the giftThe grant will be used to matchother gifts of endowment funds foracquisitions by Regenstein The second phase of the Cam¬paign for Chicago, initiated byformer University presidentEdward Levi in June, 1974, willraise special extra funds in ad¬dition to regular alumni drivesThe Campaign identifiedoperating funds, endowmentfunds, and building funds as itsmajor priorities By June 30, 1978,they hope to raise $50 million, ofwhich $20 million will be foroperation costs. $15 million for theFundraising to 2InsideSanity p.3Editorial p.4Opinion p.5GCJ p.7Calendar p.15Sports p.16SG defeats two proposalsBy David BurtonAs SG prepares for next weeks’ election,two controversial resolutions about ERAand' Kent State were defeated at anassembly meeting Wednesday Thatmeeting also saw the introduction of 29constitutional amendments to be submittedto referendum next weekActing president Carol Swanson ruled thetwo resolutions out of order Citing aprovision in the new constitution barring thediscussion of non-University issues,Swanson’s ruling was appealed by SethRosen, formerly of Speakout.Rosen said that ERA and the Kent Stateprotest concerned students, but theassembly maintained the chair’s decision.Joe DeLisa, author of the new clause in theconstitution said, “I think an importantprecedent has been set tonight.”Most of the 29 constitutional were ap¬proved and then combined into fourquestions to be sent to referendum Studentswill vote next week on whether they thinkCORSO’s ability to recognize studentorganizations should be subject to the deanof student’s veto power, a prerogative deanCharles O’Connell said he will not exerciseStudents will also decide at the electionwhether vacant assembly seats should befilled by the assembly or the seat’s con¬stituencySw'anson delivered a “ state of the studentgovernment report” to the assemblyTuesday in which she advocated eightstudies and programs She appealed to theassembly to “take stock of our organizationand goals to choose those directions in whichFundraising from 1endowment, and $15 million for building“People seem to grasp smaller goalsbetter,” said Harris.When Levi announced the second phase,the endowment was top priority. ‘‘It isabsolutely necessary,” said Levi, “to keepthis university as a viable, significanteducational institution ”President Wilson, on the other hand, hasshifted the Campaign focus, centering onthe need ‘ to raise large amounts of sup¬port” for the endowment, but also usingfunds for “faculty support, student aid, thelibrary', and academic programs ”Vice-president for academic resourcesChauncey Harris also seemed to recognizethis shift in focus “All universities areinterested in increasing their endowments.”said Harris “Some are increasing morethan us But we use more funds. We’reanxious to do things now ”The Campaign, however, is moving SG should move.”Also last week, David Kellog of the YSLannounced his candidacy for SG presidentIf elected from the field of four, Kellogpromises to “unfurl a program ofrevolutionary communism” and to neglectany services SG may provide because they“don’t mean anything until the ad¬ministration is abolished. ”Two candidates, Swanson and KathyWeston of the NEW'S party, have managedto piece together full or almost full slates forthe election Swanson’s BLISS party, in¬strumental in the defeat of the ERA andKent State resolutions, plans to streamlineSG while maintaining current programs.NEWS, a new party forming aroundW'eston’s candidacy, wants to implementmany of the same programs as BLISS, butin a manner that would be “more responsiveand accessible to students,” said WestonA number of assembly members haveexpressed concern about Swanson’s refusalto resign as vice-president prior to theelection, a move that will force SG to holdanother vice-presidential election if shewins the presidency. That election, to beheld in a few weeks, would cost SG over$200A presidential debate among the fourcandidates will be held Sunday in the IdaNoyes theater There will be one six to sevenminute initial speech by each candidate,follow'ed by a 45 minute question and answerperiod and a final three minute summary byeach candidate The debate will begin at7: 30 pm.toward its goals slowly. When the secondphase was announced. Gaylord Donnelley,chairman of the board of trustees, told thepress $64 million had already been raisedAccording to President Wilson’s report toAlumni and Friends, “At the end of March1977, gifts, grants and pledges totaled about$143 million.” So the Campaign has onlyraised $79 million since June 1974 as opposedto $160 5 million in its first three years“The fund-raising has not gone quite asrapidly as we originally hoped,” saidHarris He attributed this to the economy“In the fall of 1974.” said Harris, ‘ thestock market was down People did notcontribute for tax and financial reasons.”The University solicits gifts fromChicago-based and national corporations,alumni, and other private individuals.The Campaign has not yet modified itsgoals, but there is no time table for theCampaign other than the June, 1978projection NewsBriefsSome campuscurbs rebuiltSloped curbs that permit the used wheelchairs for the handicapped, are beingconstructed at hundreds of street cornersthroughout the citySeveral corners on campus are beingmodified as part of this projectThe building of these ramps stems froman ordinance passed on May 28,1975 by theChicago City Council The regulation statesthat all new corners must have leveledcurves. Whenever the corners are to bereplaced because of deterioration or theinstallation of utilities, the ramps must bebuilt.Jonathan Kleinbard, vice-president forcommunity affairs and assistant to thepresident,‘said that there have been manycomplaints about the construction here oncampus. One problem with the work is thattraffic signs, including one-way and stopsigns, must be temporarily removedDespite this, the city Engineering Depart¬ment feels that most, if not all corners, w illeventually have ramps, particularly thosein the LoopBaha’i Club willmeet FridaysTonight from 8 to 11 on the second floorEast Lounge in Ida Noyes Hall. ProfessorHeshmat Moayyad will give an Introductionto the History and Principles of the Baha’iFaith This presentation is the first in ayear-long series of informal talks scheduledfor every Friday night and sponsored by theBaha’i Club. Moayyad is currentlyprofessor of Persian Language andLiterature He taught at the University ofNaples, Frankfurt University and HarvardUniversity before coming to the Universityof Chicago in January 1966. ProfessorMoayyad served on the National SpiritualAssembly of the Baha’is of Italy and iscurrently a member of the Chicago Baha’iAssembly.Following Moayyad’s talk there will be anopen discussion, refreshments andfellowship. Baha’i literature will be madeavailable at no costName LawSchool chairA new professorship in the University ofChicago Law School has been established bya Chicago lawyerIntended to promote research andteaching in a comparative and internationaleconomic regulation, the chair was foundedby Chicago attorney Lee A. Freeman, who,with his wife Brena, matched a grant fromthe Ford Foundation No sholar has yet beennamed to the chairDean of the Law School Norval Morrissaid of the new position “There is no doubtof the increasing importance of antitrustlaw in the economic life of this country Andas international economic relationshipsgrow in number and complexity, theproblems of preserving competitive, freemarkets likewise become both more dif¬ficult and even more important Theestablishment of the Freeman Chair is mostwelcome, building on ‘this5 law- school’s established strengths in antitrust, tax andcomparative law and recognizing the needfor scholarly leadership in the future inthese fields. ”Freeman is a senior partner in theChicago firm of PTeeman. Rothe, Freemanand Salzman He is noted as one of theleading antitrust lawyers in the UnitedStates today.Today is bluejeans dayFriday, Oct 14, is national Blue JeansDay, as designed by the National Gay TaskForce and endorsed by the UC GLF and theGay-Lesbian Coalition of MetropolitanChicago Denims are in order for the well-dressed homosexual.For information, call Martha Fourt or SueHenkingat 752-1000.More DEC timeThere is a gold mine on campus justwaiting to be cut into fully interactivecomputing has arrived at the University inthe form of the DEC-20 computer After asummer of hard work, the system is up andready to go. Every attempt is being made tointegrate the new facility w'ith the familiaracademic life on the Quads: terminalclusters in Regenstein and HarperLibraries, in Pick Hall, and at the Com¬putation Center provide easy access to thesystem There are Comp Center seminarsand manuals aplenty to introduce the newresource to campus usersAnd. as if wonders would never cease, theComputation Center has announced theopening of a $600,000 fund for the support ofstudent and faculty computing activities.Not only has new-age computing arrived,but it’s going to be cheap The as of yetlargely unexploited fund a rare creatureindeed in our grant-hungry university worldis desiened to suoDort research andclassroom activities on the University’sIBM 370 and the new DEC.Faculty may submit requests to depart¬mental chairmen for funds to supportdevelopment of classroom materials or in-class use of computer facilities. Faculty,and students with faculty sponsors, mayrequest funds for projects ranging fromminor research papers to dissertations andmajor research endeavors Funds to matchoutside grants, making University facilitiescompetitive with outside computerresources, as well as seed funds fordevelopment of grant proposals and com¬pletion funds for projects which have runout of their budgeted computer funds, areavailable to faculty members, who maycontact Fred Harris at the Comp Center forfurther informationBest of all, both students and faculty areentitled to free-for-all “get acquaintedaccounts,” good for $25 worth of computertime for registered students. $50 for facultymembers, upon presentation of UniversityID at the Computation Center BusinessOffice, 5737 S University Avenue Theseaccounts may be renewed each quarter,while the supply lastsIn addition to regularly scheduled CompCenter seminars introducing the newfacilities. Louise Rehling. Director ofAcademic Computing, has announced thewillingness of the Center staff to speak toany and all interested comers about anyaspect of the system capabilities or funding.Rehling may be contacted at 753-8426A further note for persons interested inkeeping in touch with Comp Center ac¬tivities: you may add your name to themailing list for the Center’s (free) monthlynewsletter by calling the Advice Desk, 753-8443,.A $1 million gift from an anonymous trustee will aid Regenstein Library’sacquisitions. (Photo by Tim Baker)Sat., October 15Sun., October 16 81/2 /Federico Fellini7:15 and 10:00 Cobb HallAPU TRILOGY Part II: APARAJITO/Satyajit Ray7.15 and 9:30 Cobb HallThurs., October 20 NOSFERATU/F.W. Murnau8:00 only Kent 107 $1.50$1.50$1.00— The Chicago Maroon — Friday, October 14,1977Sanity forum draws 50 todiscuss emotional issuesA panel discussed maintaining sanity at the University in a forumheld Tuesday (Photo by Ben Davis)Alienation, dehumanization and otherhazards of academic life were topicsdiscussed at a forum Tuesday night entitled.“How to be a student and keep your sanityat the U of C,” sponsored by the* University-religious counselors The meeting drew 50peopleA six-member panel closely involved withcampus life offered various ways to copewith reality in Hyde Park. Membersrepresented the faculty, students andreligious leaders“Don't fall to the pressure of peers,”advised chairman of Romance languagesand literature and resident head PeterDembowski. “Too many times students setunrealistic goals. They take too many dif¬ficult courses at the beginning because theirfriends think they should.”Student ombudsman Jack Ohringer saidthat if students are interested in an activitythat the University does not offer, theyshould not sit and wait for the University todo something but take some steps them¬selves“If we don't take advantage of theUniversity, the University will take ad-vant age of us,” he said “You have to takeinitiative and decide what you want to doand howto doit”Ohringer said he did recognize a cry fromstudents for more social and afhleticfacilities.Divinity School student Emile Townerssaid, “Leave if you’re not finding the thingyou u'ant here It takes courage to leave, butyou may wind up killing yourself if you'reconstantly unhappy.” Towners was anundergraduate in the College, and received a diploma, although she did change hermajor four timesCommunity involvement is one way toavoid isolation, according to Towners “Ifpeople see you are committed, and that youcare, other people mav think that thev cando something for themselves. Worry aboutothers,” she continued, “not alwaysyourself.”Towners said it is to maintain a sense ofhumor "You can always see something tolaugh at on campus you just have tonotice it Too many times I see peoplewalking around with glum looks, staring atthe ground If you can lighten up on your¬self, you will relax.”Dean of Rockefeller Chapel E SpencerParsons, who has had contact with studentsat various schools since 1947, said that oneword could characterize the Universityisolation“The commitment to academia here cutsout other things,” he said “The narrow¬band of experience here tends to isolatepeople from other realms of human ex¬perience.“How many students are aware of youngkids crying or old people stumbling ”’Parsons saidAccording to Parsons, students in thefifties were involved in service projects,those in the sixties championed socialcauses, this generation isn’t involved wdthanything beyond its own academic world“Kids found aliveness for themselveswhen they were involved in otherprograms,” he saidParsons also felt that relationships withpeople and with ideas are important It takes time to establish relationshipswith people and to reflect and think I thinkyou’ll never have more time for these thingsthan in these years at school.”Professor ot political science Ira Katz-nelson, head of the Hillel House AdvisoryBoard, said it is important for a student tofind someone he can trust.“People can be patient and willing tolisten,” he said It's okay to impose a littleon the faculty. We have office hours weare paid somew hat to listen ”Katznelson said that faculty face the sameproblems as students do The dimensionsare different publication pressure prestige among peers; but faculty can gothrough the same litany of problems thatstudents face“Hyde Park can become an enclosedworld for my colleagues too You have to getout of Hyde Park from time to time ”Campus methodist minister LawrenceBouldin. the moderator of the forum, said afollow-up forum may be held in the winterquarter The forum would concern studentinvolvement in institutions and programs inthe community It would better informstudents of resources and problems in thecommunity through various organizationsOxnard from 1tnere was little doubt amongfaculty that he was interested in futureadministrative posts when he resigned.Oxnard, reached at a conference inPrinceton, N.J., said he had made hisdecision around the middle of September,but that he had been offered the USC post inthe spring He said that he and his wife hadthought about the move over the summer Asource in the anatomy department said MrsOxnard had been out to California lastspring to look for a home for the Oxnardsand their two sonsOxnard said he had been looking for thekind of post that would allow him “to con¬tinue my research in human evolution andhave administrative responsibilities. Thejoint arrangement at USC attracted me.”Oxnard denied being approached by USCw-hile he was still dean of the College, butone source familiar with USC’s search saidthat the school had been looking for aprovost for a year and a half and that Ox¬nard’s name may have been on that listUSC decided not to name a provost, but tosplit the post into two areas, graduate andundergraduate, of which Oxnard wasnamed dean of the graduate divisionOxnard does not see himself as aprofessional administrator, but as an“important segment of the faculty who doadministrative work ” He said he tried tofulfill that at Chicago, but when asked whyhe stepped down early, would only say againthat ‘ five years were enoughOxnard will be concerned with ad¬ministration as it relates to graduateeducation He said he will miss Chicago, butis leaving because he is “strongly of theopinion that one goes to a place because onesees different opportunities ”Oxnard did noi mention ms acceptance ofthe chairmanship of anatomy department inthe phone interview Wednesday, but sourcesin the department said they thought therewas no way Oxnard could have accepted thedean’s post at USC before he decided tobecome chairmanOxnard, who will leave after springquarter, will continue his research in ananatomy department ranked belowChicago's This fact led one faculty memberto speculate that Oxnard was interested inmoving up to an administrative postelsewhere After stepping down here, he hadlittle administrative responsibility, and themove to USC restores him the power, plusthe independence to do research, he did nothave here One source said Oxnard probably did not resign irom tne aeanship becauseof the USC position, but that he had beenapproached by a number of other schoolsabout possible posts. The source also saidthat Oxnard had to know he was in therunning for the USC post as early asJanuary, when he visited the school, addingthat his departure would have littlenegative effect on the College“He must like power, administrativefunctions, and contact with the heavies,”said one source close to the anatomydepartment“That is blatantly hypocritical” he said,•‘because nine months ago Oxnard said hehad no further interest in administrativework in the near future ”ERA from 1Members of the Women’s Union an¬ticipate a larger University contingent thanthe 200 students who turned out for the lastERA rally on May 14th But members arenot convinced that the amendment willpass, although it will probably come up for avote during this session of the legislature“Each time the bill comes up,” saidWomen’s Union member Sharon Pollack,“there’s a smaller chance of it passing thenext time.”“We’re fighting a lot of conservativeelements in Chicago itself, as well as thevery conservative people downstate,” saidWU member Cathy Thomas.Nonetheless, WU members have beenpassing out leaflets on campus during thelast few days, hoping to inform as many aspossible of the rally Thomas said she hasbeen gettiqg good response from first-yearstudents and transfers, many of whomwee surprised that ERA has not yet beenratified in IllinoisSuzanne Haig, a Committee for the ERAorganizer, believes that “massive attackson civil rights have been coming from allbranches of government: the SupremeCourt, Congress, the President, and thestate.”“It’s a bipartisan attack.” Haig con¬tinued, “and it necessitates a massivevisible movement ” Abortion, maternity,and affirmative action programs are amongthe rights Haig cited as being removed“It’s a different economic situation thanthe sixties and early seventies,” she said,“and recession is* affecting what thegovernment does It’s also a differentpolitical climate “The right wing is organized; thegovernment doesn’t want to grant rightsBut we can’t sit back and let it happen.”The Committee for the ERA is a coalitionof 70 affiliates: the South Side NationalOrganization for Women (NOW), the BlackWomen’s Task Force, campus groups,labor, religious groups, and others. TheCommittee was organized last year andsponsored the May 14th rally that drewmore than 1,200 people.The rally is being held in honor of militantsuffragist Alice Paul. Paul, jailed severaltimes for her activities, founded theNational Womens’ Party. She authoredERA in 1923 and it was introduced in theCongress every subsequent year until itfinally passed in 1972. Paul died in 1977 atthe age of 92The University contingent will meet infront of Breckinridge House at 1:15 pm onSaturday and march at the rally togetherMarty from 1“There has been a perceptible increase inthe numbers of people, no matter what theirdiscipline, who take seriously the in¬tellectual dimensions of religion It is not theUniversity’s business to give you a faith orto provide for your worship, but a lot of uslooking at the modern university are puz¬zled to see how unmonitered and unstudied aforce is, namely religion, that is behindmost of the wars of our time and that isprofessed by the majority of the people inthe world. We are a better university for thisimpulse, which was strong in manygraduate divisions, but now increasingly soin the undergraduate ”Marty sees three modern religious trends,in America. The first is “a long term trendof moderate, mainline Protestant decline,joined by a long term of moderate Catholicand Jew-ish decline ” While these churcheshave always kept up with populationgrowth, there has been “a relative loss ofthese older established groups.”Marty says that this long-term declinewas obscured in the 1950’s by the baby boomwhich caused an artificial prosperity for thetraditional religions. This decline reap¬peared in the sixties because “thesechurches began to put themselves to work inthe social sphere ” They did not addressthemselves to the individual’s personalexperience “In the seventies, almost anysocial problem that people take up becomesintractable If you’re for one pesticide, youthereby contribute to another disease ” Thisinability “to get something going in theseventies” has frustrated people in the social sphere and has turned them toward amore personal religious lifeThe desire for a self-centered religionaccounts for the second trend, which iscommonly called, “Born againChristianity.” For Marty, this is “a religionborn in the great awakenings, the revivalsof America It w as a style of religion that, ina way. disengaged people from society andculture for a long time It said that thechurch has nothing to do with politics or thearts; the issue is Are you personallysaved ””Each time this type of faith has beenasserted in America, there has been aprosperity for the movement and then “inits second generation, they begin to beconcerned with putting this faith to work insociety.” This type of religion has alwaysbeen present, says Marty, but has gained anew visibility because “it has what millionsof Americans are looking for at themoment: personal security, authority, andpersonal experience. The new forms ofreligion will give to you a good deal morethan the more settled forms.”Marty sees two styles to the “born again”movement On the one hand, there is themore historic form of born againChristianity which settles into what Martycalls, “the old family album religion ofAmerican Protestants, which is veryfamiliar ” The second style is the fadishreligion that is currently in vogue. Martycalls it “the religion of celebrities, of latenight television and of political office, fromPresident Carter on down ” This secondstyle is characterized by high-pressure.Madision Avenue conversion techniquesMarty predicts that “the fad will be offsoon” but that the firmly rooted vein of themovement “has a lot of variety in it. a lot ofcritical vitality, some good social criticism,and a new openness to culture 1 think it isjust one of the periodic, revitalizations ofAmerican religion, but one that has causeda measurable power shift ”The third trend Marty sees is the currentpopularity of “religions” such as est,Scientology. TM, and eastern thoughtMarty says that these “offer some of thesame things as the born again movementintense experience, strong authority, strongcommunity.” .Although he does not want tounderestimate their significance. Martydoes not think that "as many of them will bearound in 20 years as will be the converts ofthe born again movement, because theirsupport is regionalized in California andcampus areas You won’t find them in asmall town in Iowa The born againmovement, on the other hand, is anchored intens of thousands of little churches aroundthe country ”day, October 14, 1977 — 3The Chicauo Maroon — FiEditorialERAThe Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) that hasbeen voted down three times by the Illinois statelegislature will probably come to a vote duringthis session of the assembly. The text of theamendment is simple. It states, “Equality ofrights under the law shall not be denied orabridged by the United States or by any state onaccount of sex.” The amendment will finally putthe idea of equality of the sexes permanently intothe action, evep though it is already law.The amendment has been voted down by a onlysmall margin in Illinois each time. A visibleshow of support for the amendment is thereforenecessary and useful if it is ever to become law.The Maroon endorses the ERA rally that willtake place tomorrow and hopes that the marchand rally will swing the necessary statelegislators to vote for the amendment.In addition we urge the University to makepositive efforts toward recruiting more womenstudents and more women faculty members.Equal opportunity for women should beguaranteed bv the constitution the Civil RightsAct. Though the Civil Rights Act does guaranteeequality for women, ERA supporters realize thatis necessary to once again bring home the pointthat women are being discriminated against. Wemust support their efforts by endorsing theamendment, but find it unfortunate that it is nownecessary to create a separate amendment toremind the US that women should not bediscriminated against.No strict constitutionalist can honestly supportan amendment that is already on the books, butas a human statement re-protecting the rights ofwomen, no legislator should vote against it. Alegislator who respects the constitution willrealize that ERA has wrongly become an issue offeminists versus anti-feminists but because it isnow an issue that any right-thinking voter shouldsupport as an idea, and because if Illinois doesnot ratify it is unlikely that other, more con¬servative states will, support for ERA on ourhome front is crucial.Illinois is the only northern industrial state notto ratify ERA, which does not bode well for theamendment if it is defeated here. As much as wewish there were no need for such a seeminglyredundant piece of legislation, the issue hasbecome a volatile one. Equal rights for womenare of course necessary and timely, and for thissimple reason, but not because the amendmentis particularly worthy on its own merit, we urgeall residents of Illinois to do work to pushpassage through the state legislature.Chicago MaroonEditor: Jon MeyersohnNews Editor: Abbe FletmanFeatures Editor: Karen HellerSenior Editor: Peter CohnSports Editor: R W RohdePnoto Editors: Gwendolen Cates, Philip Grew'Graphics: ChrisPersansBusiness Manager: Sara WrightAd Manager: Micki BresnahanOffice Manager: Lisa McKeonStaff:Tim Baker, Richard Biernacki, Peter Blanton, David Bur¬ton, Lynn Chu, Benjamin N. Davis, Jeanne Dufort, PeterEng, Andrea Holliday, David Jaffe, Mariam Kanter, MortFox, Andrew Magidson, Susan Malaskiewicz, Mary LisaMeier, Doug Miller, Mark Pennington, Sharon Pollack, JohnPomidor, Eric Von der Porten, Rosemary Safranek, DavidSkelding, George Spigot, Steve Strandberg, Carol Studen-mund, Howard Suls, Carol Swanson, John WrightThe Chicago Maroon is the student newspaper of theUniversity of Chicago, published Tuesdays and Fridaysduring the regular academic year The Maroon office islocated at 1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, Illinois 60637. Thetelephone number is 753-3263. Letters to the EditorSparing expenseThe Maroon has received thefollowing letter:To Mark Handel, Chairman,Election and Rules Committee,Student GovernmentAs you may know, I will be acandidate for the Presidency in theupcoming Student Governmentelections. Were I to retain my seaton the Court, SG would have tosuffer the expense and in¬convenience of a second specialelection in the event of my winning.To avoid this possibility* I herebyresign my seat, with the intentionthat the vacancy thus created befilled in the October 18-19 elections.This resignation shall take effectimmediately. Thank you.Kathy WestonWhite heatTo the Editor:Your editorial concerning‘ minorities” prompts us to pen thisnote of protest W'e have fear thatThe Maroon has, for once, slippedinto elitism While we applaud yourattempts to attract jazz musiciansand other talented black peoplededicated to “cultural diversity” toapply to the University, we wonderwhat the ultimate effect could be onthe “integrity and quality” of ourworld renowned white studiesprogram While some have recentlyquestioned whether courses such asWestern Civilization and Ideas andMethods have inadvertantly slippedinto a “nebulous program of whitestudies.” we would not like to followtoo closely the example of theUniversity of Johannesburg (SouthAfrica) “forever remaining a whiteisland in a black sea.”The racism exhibited by youreditorial, which is virtuallysynonymous with its elitistassumptions, is but a sign of theactual reason why substantialnumbers of black students will neverby attracted to the University ofChicago We have nothing to fear forthe “integrity and quality” of ouruniversity, as it will forever remaina bastion of blue blood white studiesin a “culturally diverse” worldJulie TrowbridgePaul GootenbergRobert SauteRipped offTo the Editor:1 went to “Rip-Off” auto repairshop in Hyde Park and ended uppaying much more for the service Igot than I was told I would have toThe story goes as outlined below'and since I think it is useful for otherHyde-Parkers to know what mayhappen to them when dealing withthe people at “Rip-Off,” I submitthis letter to you for publication inThe Maroon1) Wednesday morning (Sept28th; I left the car at “Rip-Off” tocheck the brakes2) Later that day <or next day)when I phoned them, I was told thatthe problem was with the mastercylinder, that it could probably berebuilt although only after opening itthey would know for sure Theyquoted a price of $75 for parts <arebuilding kit) plus labor.3) At this point I phoned an Ope)dealer and they told me that theprice of a new one was $75. In face ofthis I told the people at “Rip-Off” togo ahead and rebuild the mastercylinder.4) In the next 3 days 1 phonedtwice a day and was told the samestory: that the car will be ready thatday or the next5) By Saturday I was told thatthey could not rebuild the mastercylinder because, as they said, ascrew was missing in the oldcylinder6) The only solution now seemedto. be a new' cylinder They gave a new estimate $120 for parts pluslabor I told them to go ahead andget the new one7) Finally Tuesday at noon when Iphoned once more, they told me thatthe car was ready and that the finalcharge on it was $120, in agreementwith the previous estimate.8) To my surprise, when I wentthere to pick up the car the bill was$148.50. I argued that I could un¬derstand a difference of five or tendollars, but thirty dollars was toomuch Despite all my argumentsthey didn’t change the bill and Ipayed.Their main argument was thatthey had said that there was thepossibility that the cylinder couldnot be rebuilt and I should thereforepay for the time lost and moneyspent on the rebuilding kit. Myunderstanding of this, is however,quite different: while taking thecylinder apart they should im¬mediately see w'hether or not it waspossible to rebuild it; this, clearly,w'ould imply that the labor costs hadto be minimal (above what thevwould be if I had just ordered, sincethe beginning, the replacement)because they needed to take the oldcylinder out in one case or the otherFurthermore there would be no needfor the purchase of the rebuilding kitif it was not possible to do the jobI didn’t get any coherent reply tothe arguments above nor did I get anexplanation for the fact that the finalprice quotation obtained over thephone of $120 being different frommy final bill of $148.50.I should add, however, that thebrakes are working properly and, sofar, the repair seems to have beengood. It is really too bad that “Rip-Off” lived up just too well to itsname.Jorge Crispin RomeoBlockedTo the Editor:I am *one of the new facultymembers referred to in your articleof October 7, 1977 Seeing that mymain interest lay in the field ofaljgebraic geometry, the University,with infinite wisdom has chosen tomake me an associate professor inits department of mathematics, not(as reported in your article) thedepartment of chemistryAs a child I showed some promisein chemistry; my crowningachievement being a bomb whichdestroyed the outhouse on ourfamily farm. The active ingredientsif memory serves were gasoline andHTH. Ever after this my parents(acting, perhaps, in loco univer-sitatis) encouraged non-laboratorysciences.Also worthy of note is the spellingof my last* name, BLOCH notBLOCKSpencer BlochDigesting HEWTo the Editor:The Maroon misunderstood PaulTurner, the HEW official quoted inlast week’s article on the in¬vestigation of law school hiringpractices. He told you that the lawfaculty’s hiring process violatesTitle IX of the Civil Rights Act if ithas a discriminatory impact onblacks or women. (Your article saidthe opposite) If HEW makes atentative finding that the faculty’sprocedures have a discriminatoryimpact, the faculty must justifythose procedures. In analogousareas of the law, such justificationsare often exceedingly difficult toprove The “good faith efforts”referred to in your article may notbe enough, since the focus of the lawis not on the intentions of the em¬ployers, but on the procedure theyuse and the results it brings themMoreover, the law faculty will not,as your article intimated, beginnegotiations with the Women’s Caucus if HEW finds against it atthis stage In fact, if HEW follows itsstandard procedure, it will decide ona remedy itself, which will becomebinding on both the faculty and theWomen’s Caucus unless they chooseto initiate further legal proceedingsWhile HEW’s findings shouldcome down soon, it is probablyinaccurate to intimate that they willdefinitely do so. They have beenswallowed up and are presentlybeing digested by the bureaucraticmachinery HEW has in Washington,which may not see fit to spit themout again for a very long time.I hope this clears some of theconfusion stemming from theselengthy and amorphous proceduresMary Ann Bernard.Third Year StudentThe Law SchoolExpensive SGTo the Editor-As a student, I am concernedaoout excess expenditures inStudent Government CarolSwanson, presidential candidate,has neglected to resign her post asvice-president I can understandthat Carol wants to be sure of aposition in S.G. However, on Oct 6,Earl Andrews, treasurer of S.G ,estimated that this additionalelection will cost the students $200SG has a lot of work ahead of it andcan’t afford to lose money and timein such waste. Unfortunately, thedeadline for resignation has past Inthe event of Carol’s election, thestudents will have to absorb thiscost.David PellmanHorowitz revealedTo the Editor:Last Friday's Maroon containedan interview with the announcedcandidates for Student GovernmentPresident. Carol Swanson, CathyWeston and myself At the end of thearticle I was quoted as saying thatSG should “become an activistgovernment and act as a platform ofYSA’s views.” This is a misquote,and has no resemblance to my realposition it also draws attentionaway from the very real social andfinancial crisis facing students,faculty and staff at this university.In the past few years, the sharpincrease in tuition coupled withsevere cuts in financial aid haveresulted in increased burden onstudents The staff and faculty havebeen similarly affected: the size ofboth has declined, real wages havedropped, workloads have increasedIn tms same period, theenrollment of women and blackshave dropped, both in absolutenumbers and as a percentage of thestudent body. This is most striking inthe case of blacks Only 15 blackstudents are in this years freshmanclass of over 650 students,representing 2.3 per cent of theseentering students ,Student Government has a choice:it can either continue in its currentineffectual policies, or it can beginthe process of organizing students soas to really change this universityThere are no other alternativesThis is the perspective of theYoung Socialist Alliance before,during and after the electionsRegardless of the outcome, we willwork both inside and outside SG withany individuals or organizations todefend the rights of studentsWhether this involves opposition totuition increases and cutbacks,support to the ERA, or de¬segregation of Chicago Schools, weare prepared to work with anyonewho also wants to defend the rightsof studentsRoger Horow itz4 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, October 14, 1977OpinionBy Roger DeschnerTwo years ago it became clear that there was somethingwrong with the way Student Government operated Not thatit had suddenly become clear then, because it had beenpainfully obvious for a long time. There was no organizationthat represented anything like the entire student body - whatwas called “Student Government” was truly a misnomer asvarious special interest groups vied for total control, andusually one of them got it On several occasions SG even triedto disband, realizing its ineffectiveness, but alas, it failedeven in doing away with itself.Then in the fall of 1975 a committee of SG and non-SGmembers was formed to write a new constitution The firstthing we did was to study the structure and functioning ofStudent Governments and their constitutions on othercampuses Based on what we saw, we were surprised, to putit midly, at the autonomy and power that a group of students,selected democratically by students, not just could have, butdid have, on many campuses around the nation. Many of theschools we examined were of equal caliber to the Universityof ChicagoAs we framed the new constitution we tried to rely as muchas possible on the electorial, or political, if you will, processWe started by making all students members of SG, andcalling it the Student Association. While this idea did getwatered-down somewhat in subsequent discussions andratification debates, the direct election of the chief officers ofthe Student Association by the student body as a whole wasintended to serve as a stimulus for debates of vital campusissues among students. The current presidential race in¬dicated the validity of this notion.A more sensitive issue, and the issue that the currentpresidential campaign seems to be focusing upon, is howshall the Student Association, its officers, and assembly berelated to the University administration"' This was to be aStudent Government, period There are literally dozens ofstudent-faculty and student-administration disciplinarycommittees and advisory councils, which are of positivebenefit both for the students and for the University as awhole We did not propose to do away with them, althoughthere was some discussion of how to link them, either directlyor indirectly, to SG. A free and independent SG would notthreaten these organizations, but would rather strengthenthem, since their function as a student-administration in¬terface would be more clearly defined FSACSL, IHC, etcwould no longer have to compete with SGWe have all. I hope, heard the adage about he who controlsthe purse strings and so on If you haven’t, it is again:Whoever funds an organization controls that organization Ifthe office of the dean of students wishes to continue fundingSG (CORSO) it can, but a student association cannot bedependent upon the administration for funding If thestudents’ own organization is to be controlled by students, thestudents must fund it. This is why we need a student fee TheMajor Activities Board, with its uncontrolled fee. has donequite well independent of administration control It’s time weextended this ideaThe fee enacted last spring, which the administration hasso far failed to collect, is trivial compared to the fee on manyother campuses I would not propose a higher fee, but ratherthan abolish this absolutely necessary fee, SG should pay theadministration for the costs in billing and data processingthat it incurs as a result of this fee Then the administrationwould have no reason not to collect it. since the students havealready voted to lew themselves the feeThe constitution that was first proposed in the spring on1976 has come a long way, and has seen the effect of manycompromises, without which it would have died long ago Wemight still be at the starting line with the old SG Since itsenactment last spring, there has been much confusion andmany crises, as can be expected whenever a totally newmode of operation is adopted There are some things thatwere just plain forgotten when the new constitution wasdrafted As the kinks are worked out, things will run moresmoothlyWe are almost there!However, some of the amendments that some, such as thedean of students, are attempting to have enacted, willdestroy this one great chance that we have for a SG that isfree, strong, and independent enough to make a difference inthe intellectual and social lives of the students of theUniversity I urge therefore voting against those amend¬ments that would violate the student run nature of studentgovernment, and for those candidates for office who haveexpressed their support for a free and independent student-controiled Student Government DISCO PARTYAT HILLEL5715 woodlawnFREE ADMISSION - CHEAP BEERDANCING BEER MUNCHIES Thinking Of ACareer in The RabbinateorJewish Communal Service?Rabbi Richard Chapin, Dean of AdmissionsHebrew Union College (Reform)will be at HILLEL HOUSE5715 WoodlawnTUESDAY-OCTOBER 18thmorning and afternoonCALL HILLEL: 752-1127to make an appointmentMathematics and language majors...WHATS AH NSACAREER?Take the PQTand find out.If you are receiving a degree in mathematics or in aforeign language before September 1978. a careerwith the National Security Agency could begin with atraining program in one of several different careerfields. That’s why the Professional Qualification Testis so helpful in identifying the NSA field where youraptitude is strongest.You must register by November 5 in order to take tin:PQT on campus —it will not be given again during theschool year. By scoring well on this test, you willqualify for an employment interview. During tin;interview, an NSA representative will discuss therole you might play in furthering this country’scommunications security or in producing vital foreignintelligence information.The PQT helps to measure your aptitude for careerareas such as:LANGUAGES —Foreign languages ore valuable toolsfor research, analysis, and documentation projects. Advanced training in language (perhaps a newlanguage) can be expected.GOMMUNIGATIONS — Developing and testing logicaldesigns for global communications is a uniquepursuit. It follows that your training programs in thisarea will be both extensive and esoteric.PROGRAMMING. Our vast communications analysisprojects could not be effectively managed withoutthe latest computer hardware software and peoplewho know how to use; them.PICK UP A PQT BULLETIN at your college placementoffice. It contains a registration form which von mustmail prior to November 5 in order to lake the lest onNovember 19.Electronic Engineering. Computer Science. Slavic.Mid-Eastern and Asian language majors and Mathe¬matics majors at the Masters level may interviewwithout taking the PQT.U.S. Citizenship is requiredNATIONAL SECURITY AGENCYAttn: M321Fort George G. Meade. Maryland 20755An Equal Opportunity Employer m f.The Chicago Maroon — Friday, October 14, 1977 — 5STUDENT GOVERNMENTNOTICE OF ELECTIONS AND REFERENDUMSElections will be held on Tuesday and Wednesday, October1 8 and 19, 1977 for the following offices:PresidentThree (3) First-Year College RepresentativesOne (1) Graduate Humanities RepresentativeOne (1) Divinity School RepresentativeOne (1) Social Service Administration RepresentativeOne (1) College Representative for students not living in the undergraduatehousing system, excluding First-Year StudentsOne (1) Public Policy Committee RepresentativeReferenda on Constitutional amendments, already passed by theAssembly, will also be presented. Copies of the amendments areavailable at the front desk of Ida Noyes Hall the Student Activities Of¬fice, the Student Government Office, and in Regenstein Library near themain door.All registered students are eligible to vote for President and on thereferenda. Representatives are voted on by those students in the con¬stituency.Polls will be open as follows:Cobb Hall (outside weather permitting)Reynolds ClubEllis Ave and 58th St. (weather permitting)Social Service AdministrationRegenstein LibraryWoodward Court, Pierce, Burton-Judson Tuesday Wednesday9:30-11:45 9:15-11:3011:30-1:00 11:30-1:0011:30-1:00 12:00-1:3011:30-1:30 12:00-1:004:00-8:00 4:00-8:005:15-6:455 5:15-6:45Anyone who wishes to work as a pollwatcher at $3.00 hour or anyonewith questions regarding the elections or referendums, please call 753-3273 or Mark Handel, chairperson Election and Rules Committee at 753-3754.PLEASE VOTE!! ff\H OUR SHOWROOM NOW...FORD FIESTAEurope’s most successful new carin historyEPA-rated at:MPGHWY. / 34 MPGCITY’(In Calif , 43 mpg highway/30 mpg city *)tA car (hat has outsold every new car nameplateever introduced in Europe, based on a comparisonot sales in (he first si* months.*Your actual mileage may vaiy depending on howand where you drive, car condition and oohonaiequipment.FORIFIESTAI IK3 ES"" I I ZT. Foul Fiesta 3-Doorwith Decor GroupSTANDARDFEATURES:• Front-wheel drive. Go in snow, on ice• Room. Seats 4 adults More back seatleg room than any other imported ordomestic car of its kind. Transverse-mounted engine gives nearly flat floor• Fold-down rear seat. For 29 cu. ft.loadspace • Hatchback. Load, unload easily throughrear door.• Easy service. See-through battery,radiator, brake fluid units.• Goes 0-50 in an average of 8.8 seconds(an average of 9.1 seconds , Calif,emissions equipped models).• 7,500-mile or six-month, whicheveroccurs first, intervals for oil changes(normal driving). Many life-lubricatedparts.Motors FORDInc2347 South Michigan Avenue/Chicago, Illinois 60616 / (312) 326-2550Service Dept. 8-6 Mon.-Fri. Sales Dept. 9-7 Mon.-Fri. Sat. 9-5THE MAJOR ACTIVITIES BOARD6 — The Chicago Maroon Friday, October 14,1977 presentsMUDDY WATERSwithKOKO TAYLORFriday Oct. 21in mandel hallConcert & Tickets 5706 S. University$2.50, $2 with fee$4.50, $4 everybody elsetLin.H.'Pl.. ikZ-UTK-Law contra artBy Karen HornickIn my non stop reading years, ages 12 to 14 or so,there fell into my hands a "completion" of theautobiography James Whistler had begun near theend of his life. The completor was a modern writerwhose name I forget and have never come acrosssince. The book was trashy and exploitative, aimedat the best seller list (which it never, to myknowledge, attained) but it was memorable inparts, as trashy books often are. One passagedescribed Whistler's notorious courtroom battlewith John Ruskin.Whistler, acting as his own lawyer, sued Ruskinfor libel. The painter had been angered by Ruskin'spublished attacks on his works and talent. Onepainting in particular, Ruskin had asserted, wasworthless because it bore no resemblance to the"fireworks over a river" the painting's title hadsuggested the work was "about".At court, the easily inflamed Whistler attracteda great deal of negative publicity. Noh-representational art, already considered scan¬dalous, was now equated in the public eye withcrazy James Whistler. Whistler won his case,received a few pence in damages, but made ashambles of his cause and remained embitteredwith the legal system for the rest of his life.Whistler was a poor attorney, but the court was aworse judge of art. Whistler vs. Ruskin, as recordedin the trashy book, proved one thing to me . Art andLaw don't mix. They are adversaries.As a result of my experience with the trashybook, then, I can't help but feel that the best piecesin the Smart Gallery's current exhibit, "ArtistsView the Law in the Twentieth Century", are thosethat are most highly critical of the law. To be sureartists who use their medium as pedestals are ofteninsulting and frustrating, but they are almostalways intriguing. Jack Levine's famous The Trialis a good example of my point. It is the Star of theshow.The Trial is a large (72 x 63 inches) oil paintingdone mainly in tones of brown. Figures represen¬ting the traditional members of the court — a judge,a witness, a juror, among others — are posedaround the iconographic symbol of justice, thescales. That none of Levine's figures look at thescales is the most obvious element of the work thatLevine employs to communicate exactly how ef¬ficiently the courtroom is a purveyor of justice.There is symmetry in the composition of The Trialthat isn't usually expected from a twentieth centurypainter. Ironically, Levine's subject is the asymmetry of the law, balance gone awry. Levine'ssatiric bite is penetrating and basic.Anotner large oil on display is Francis Bacon'sMan in Blue Box. Like Levine, Bacon is admirablefor his ability to advance his vision of a social in¬stitution without sacrificing any obligations to thecompletion of an aesthetically ambitious work.Some other artists with works on display, in con¬trast exhibit very little concern for anythingbut the reformation of a legal wrong. George Grosz'illustrations from Das Gesicht der HerrschendenKlasse (The Face of the Ruling Class), for exam¬ple, are really political cartoons. They are crudelydrawn, appreciable as art only now that the par¬ticular era in German history they are targeted athas passed.Other works, more numerous in the exhibitcontrast sharply with Grosz's. These are thesketches and watecolors done, by the painters Kenyon Cox and John LaFarge, in preparation forcommissioned murals that now hang on the walls ofcourtrooms in New York and Minnesota. They areappealing works and characteristic of a genre, butconvey nothing of their creator's personal view.Similar are the photographs of the interiors andexteriors of a sampling of American courthousesbuilt within the last seventy five years. The photosreveal the attempts of designers like AlexanderBlair and Frank Lloyd Wright to capture legalideals in architectural style.Perhaps the most ideological piece in the exhibitis not actually in the exhibit. Edward Kienholz'sThe State Hospital, a large sculpture now housed inStockholm, is represented by a grouping of relatedobjects — Drawing for "The State Hospital" (reallya scaled down, sculptural representation of the ideabehind the larger work), photographs of the largerwork, "concept" pieces (like the mocking "Contract" between "The Artist" and "The Buyer"),and well written, explanatory plaques. The articleson exhibit, even removed from the central piecethey only suggest, declare aching misery. Kienholzmakes no plea for reform; he simply says "This isthe way things are terrifying, unimproveable."Like The State Hospital, Christo's Running Fenceis represented in "Artists View the Law" bydrawings done in preparation for it. Christo at¬tracted a great deal of attention two summers agowhen he built a curtain fence that stretched fromSonoma County, California, 24 miles inland, to thesea. An explanatory text from the exhibit states theartist's ambition:"Christo insists that everything having to dowith the Running Fence — the television crews,the construction workers, the group ofprotestors called the Committee to Stop theRunning Fence, the farm owners, and themultitude of legal proceedings — all becamepart of the work of art."If one accepts Christo's belief, the two drawingsin the exhibit are as essential to Running Fence asanything else. They are definitely all that remainsof Christo's role in Running Fence, for the workitself was taken down a few weeks after it wascompleted.In general, I prefer exhibits not structuredaround a common subject. Individual pieces tend tofall too easily into categories, thematic headingsfor the exhibit's catalogue, that do little for thecollection's chances of establishing a sense of unityand prohibit it from making its own coherentstatement. With "Artists View the Law in theTwentieth Century", we get categories like "SocialProtest", "Famous Cases and Personalities", and"Lawyers and Officials". One leaves the exhibitpleased because most of the works on display arefine and fascinating, but puzzled about what thecollection, the forty two individual pieces taken asa whole, is trying to say. "Artists View the Law inthe Twentieth Century" was compiled to celebratethe seventy fifth anniversary of the U.C LawSchool. Perhaps that is all there is — or has to be —to it.The exhibit will run through November 27. TheSmart Gallery is open Tuesday through Saturdayfrom 10 00 AM to 4PM and Sunday from noon to4PM. Admission is free. A catalogue of the exhibit,$3.00, is available to students at a 10° o discount.BRENT HOUSE UNIVERSITY MINISTRY5540 WoodlawnDAVID BARTLETTProf, of New Testament, Divinity SchoolPastor of Hyde Park Union ChuechJEWS AND GENTILES INTHE EPISTLE TO THE ROMANSWednesday, Oct. 197:15-8:30P.M.Sponsored by the Lutheran, Methodistand Episcopal campus ministries.POWELL’S BOOKSTORERecent acquisitions:GERMAN LANGUAGE Literature.History, philosophyFRENCH LiteraturePOWELL’SBOOKSTORE1501 East 57th St.955-77809am-11pm everydayCASH FOR BOOKS POWELL’SBOOK WAREHOUSE1020 S. Wabash8th floor341-07489-5 Mon.-Sat.(take IC to Roosevelt,walk 2 blocks)POWELL’S BOOKSTORE Thedifferenceis strikingThe OlympiaS12 PortableTypewriterOnly $89.00Rugged OlympiaSm-9Only $169.00oYou’ll love the look and touch of Olympia’shandsome new S12 Portable Typewriter. It'sperfect for home and school and featuresvertical half-spacing for typing math equationsand chemical formulas, clear-view aligningscales, automatic ribbon reverse and a repeatspace bar.Stop in and compare the Olympia S12 to whatyou're used to. You’ll find the difference isstriking.Mastercharge&Visa University of Chicago Bookstore5750 S. EllisTypewriter Dept. — 2nd floor753-3303Monday to Friday 8 to 5Saturday 9 to 1STARTS NEXT WEEK ATWatertower Theatres20th CfNTtlRY-FOX PiesentsA RICHARD ROTH Presentation ol A FRED ZINNEMANN FtimJULIAIII?,, JASON ROBARDS HAL HOLBROOKROSEMARY MURPHY aM MAXIMILIAN SCHELL*™Directed by Produced by Screenplay by Based upon the story byFREO ZINNEMANN RICHARD ROIH ALVIN SARGENT LILLIAN HELLMANPGJ^OTAL GUO/ro SUGGESTEO ‘££>i rmcrccnn erne PRINTS BY DelUXE fasom€ mateRiAt mav not 8f surTAsiE fo«chrxxwenI UlU|"\ULU ULLLnUL ’C-1977 20>h Ceotufy-FoxThe Japanese backbeat3y Patrick Will ^ " mrnm-mThe premier of Stomu Yamashta's Go Too this paslMonday evening was billed as something of a specialoccasion The Japanese composer packed the Ivanhoetheater (thanks in part to WXRT and the $2.00 admissionfee.), and provided 500 Chicagoans with 2 hours of interesting, energetic, and perplexing music.Yamashta presented a first rate band, including alumnifrom Santana and the last two versions of the HerbieHancock group. The remainder of the personel were allfrom lesser known bands, or were accomplished sidemenin their own right. I found myself slightly in awe of the factthat this ten piece entourage could squeeze itself onto theminimal stage, but they managed to do so without anyserious collisions. There weren't any collisions of amusical nature either, which was perhaps the most surprising thing of all. It seems that the apprenticeshipsthese players served elsewhere have left them admirablydisciplined, for there was nary a hint of the pyrotechnicsor random noodling which have become the unhappyhallmark of the fusion genre. The only complaints onecould have here were with Patrick Gleeson, whose synthetic segueways sounded like out takes from the Environment series; and with the composer himself, whosepercussive bashings were often less than necessaryalthough for the most part he retrained himself. But theband was otherwise as tight as any other ten piece inrecent memory ( except for Chicago perhaps, but Lordknows they don't count any more . .) There were nocrashing egos, boring solos, or any of the other banalitieswhich have become de Rigeur of late, just...Music. And for once the music seemed to have thespotlight mostly to itself. Which brings us to the composer. Yamashta is a classically trained musician whohas composed successfully in any number of genres, andwho has just recently begun to explore multi media. This show, while not exactly "multi media", presents part 11 inwhat is to be a three part series of "Go" productions, thefirst having its premier in England last year. The entiresequence marks Yamashta's newfound interest in "pop"music. . .But wait. Haven't we seen this all before? The "serious"composer takes a leap at the Top 40 - and falls flat, hisreputation tumbling after. Generally, composers have levelled their sights at the most accessible end of theidiom, those pentatonic cliches which have boredaudiences for years. But those notes just won't take to atransplant, so the composer just sounds stiff and awkwardin his new shoes. ..Thankfully, it seems that Yamashta may avoid thisgroup altogether a group which most notable includesWeber/Rice of J.C Superstar and Evita fame. Rather,Yamashta looks more like a Philip Glass or a CAN(although still from quite a distance), utilizing thefamiliar "pop" patterns as something of a collective 'id'eefixe', arranging them within a novel framework Thisframework took the form in concert of a suite. Thematerial in "Go Too" was primarily disco, with severallovely ballads and a regae number (from "Go I) thrownin for contrast. The music relied very little on thedogmatic insistence of the disco sound. Although repetive,the music was internally varied, and quite continuous as asuite. Cross rhythms abounded, no doubt the Santanainfluence, and the audience (nay, even this reviewer) wasoften uncertain as to just where the backbeat was actuallycoming from. Furthermore, the economical use of theabundant musical talent was admirable and served toexecute the music quite tastefully.Several performances should be mentioned. Jess Rodensang beautifully throughout the show — his voice adding abluesy touch to the proceedings, Michael Shrieve, PaulJackson, and Brother James provided a seamless bottom,Chicagoan Ave Cherry was a delightful combination ofdancing and wailing; and Kevin Shrieve (Michael'sbrother), who looked age 15, tops, dropped everyone'sjaws with his tasteful soloing.Given all of the above, the concert could not miss. Andclearly it did not. However, Yamashta still seems to be inthe generative stages with his new concept, presentedpartially in this concert, the material and direction stillneed a little more close synchronization But should thisproject come together - and "Go Three" will provide theanswers there could be some interesting things comingout of the old fusion bag very soon.MotorsSales / Leasing / Parts / Service2347 So. Michigan Ave. Chicago 326-2550* Manufacturers suyjjes ted retail price. Delivery, optional equipment,license, title, taxes, dealer preparation not included. 9f y«iueGoi 9fc...Sluwe il with dkm.People in this community gave nearly 7,000 unitsof blood last year, but that still amounted tofewer than half the units the Blood Bank usedThere is always a need for blood Nobody canmake it But you can give it.Come by our tent (that big thing in thequadrangle over the "C" bench near Cobb) andfill out a pledge card todayGet In the giving habit.Give Blood.UCHC BLOOD BANKBILLINGS, M-134947-5579DOC PRESENTS:DRIAN DE PAUMA’SCARRIEFriday Oct 14 6:30, 8:45,10:45 Cobb $1.50 WERNER HERZOG’SThe Great Ecstasy ofWoodcarver SteinerandLand of Silence andDarknessThursday Oct 20 Cobb $1.50II By John LanahanOne of the oldest but least exercised filmgenres is the "prison picture". This type offilm usually aims at one of tw* themes. 1)the horrible state of American prisons; 2) astory of personal "rehabilitation." The filmShort Eyes, opening today at the Loop andCinema theaters, seeks to transcend eitherthe simple social protest of such works as Iam a Fugitive From a Chain Gang andFortune and Men's Eyes, or the syruppyportrayals of "rehabilitation" of JailhouseRock. Part of the film's complexity can beattributed to its lineage as a stage piece,which gives it aesthetic roots outside therather narrow conventions of the "prisonpicture". Much of the work's attendantconfusion can also be explained as anuneasy attempt to wed social protest with aview of the social outcaste and "criminaljustice" in the social microcosm of "theTombs" House of Detention in New YorkCity.An occasional prison picture has sought toexamine the relationship of the prison inmate with the society that imprisoned him:20,000 Years in Sing Sing and White Heatboth examined, on an individual level, theHobbesian tango of order and anarchy of theprison and the inmate. In these works,however, the prison is usually a faceless andgray instrument of repression — withoutpersonality, emotion, or intelligence. ShortEyes, however, removes the focus from theindividual, and concentrates on the societycreated by the prisoners or, to use thelegally correct term, jail inmates (they arenot prisoners, since they are awaiting trial,and have not been convicted or sentenced).Like Jean Genet's play Deathwatch, and toa lesser extent John Herbert's Fortune andMen's Eyes, the jail becomes a bizarremicrocosm of the far larger mechanismeuphemistically referred to as the criminaljustice system. In the totally repressiveenvironment of the jail life becomes,ironically, anarchic. The inmates are in asocial and legal no man's land—accused,but not convicted. Legal remedies availableto prisoners, such as federal habeas corpus,are not available to them; they do not evenhave the certainty of a prison sentence togive their life structure. They are incarcerated until tried or until they can postbail. Within the jail, order and "justice" areadministered by a discretionary blend of thewhims of the guards and the hierarchy ofinmates.The author of Short Eyes, Miguel Pinero,gave the play a continuing undercurrent ofirony when he made the title character, aman accused of molesting an eight year oldgirl, into a young and middle class white. Asa result, the one character who on theoutside of the jail would be far above theother inmates on the social scale, becomesboth the alien and the pariah. The work thusdraws a nice contrast between the expectations of the alleged "short eyes"concerning his legal and social rights, andthe ephemeral validity of those rights oncethey are tested in jail. The jail becomes itsown criminal justice system, dispensing"justice" on the basis of rumor, opinion, and Nathan George and Shawn Elliott at the razor's edgeracial tension. The worst enemies of "shorteyes" are, ironically, the white guards andfew white inmates who feel personallyshamed by the stigma of the perversecrimes allegedly committed by a member oftheir race and a member of the ruling class.The work has an additional level ofcomplexity in that Clark Davis, the alleged"short eyes", actually is a child molester —but it is unclear whether he molested thechild who is currently pointing the finger.The piece offers its audience no easysolution, either let the man back on thestreet, and let him "scar up some little girl'smind"; or keep him in the Tombs for acrime he may or may not have committed,to be harrassed and eventually murdered bythe inmates and guards. The epilogue,greatly cut in the film, adds another note ofanguish when it becomes obvious that themurder of Davis will never be made public,and is covered up because the problem is fartoo difficult to solve except by violence anddeath. At the end of the film, the lieutenantin charge of the cell block informs the in mates that Davis was wrongly accused by ayoung girl "not in her right mind," and thathe and "Clark Davis's parents hold you allmorally guilty” for his "suicide" of cuttinghis own throat with a razor. The lieutenantalso states, "Clark Davis was an innocentvictim of circumstances". The questionthen becomes, who was guilty for the circumstances.The work avoids becoming a "problemplay" or "social picture", however, sincethere is no indication that there is a betteralternative, or even an escape, from thecompartmentalized anarchy of jail. Thelegal protection afforded by criminalprocedure dissolves when even a whitemiddle class male is accused of certaincrimes; the situation then reverts to the lawof the urban jungle. And it is here, in myopinion, that the concept of the filmbecomes confused and loses some of thecomplex but focused irony of the play. Thewhole cover up scene of the epilogue isglossed over, and somehow responsibility for the whole affair is supposed to fall onJuan, Davis's unwilling father confessor, asthe camera zooms in on him when thelieutenant announces, "Clark Davis was aninnocent victim of circumstances." The filmalso has some of the trappings of the socialprotest prison picture and hampers theimpact of the work since the point of thepiece, as far as I can tell, is not that jailsmust be reformed, but that jails concentrateand underscore a certain type of humansocial conduct that cannot be reformed.The film also elaborated on Pinero's plot,mostly to its disadvantage. Pinero himself,Curtis Mayfield, and another unnamedactor were added in an interesting butsuperfluous subplot involving homosexualrivalry and general nihilistic street punkviciousness. Pinero, however, provedhimself a damned good actor (either that orhe is an incredibly obnoxious person). Oneother scene, added to the play, has CurtisMayfield and Freddy Fender giving animpromptu concert in the House of10 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, October U, 1977I!nsennI-eesejtI<Jra51f Detention dayroom, and not only un¬necessarily delays the entrance of ClarkDavis to the unit, but also makes jail seemlike some kind of grown up day camp forstreet fighting men. Another scene, in¬volving cockroach racing, was amusing butgratuitously distracting.The film also seemed far too eventful forwhat must be the incredible boredom of jail.The action of the play took place in one day,but the film gave the impression of a span ofat least three or four days. There would benothing wrong with that if the play had beenso adapted; but the film made the point thatthis is a dawn to dusk drama, and strove forrealism in other aspects of jail life which itignored in this one.The direction, by Robert M. Young, wascompetent but not overly exciting. Mostscenes made the transition from stage tofilm well, and Young used cross cutting andtracking shots to create an ambience of jaillife that would be impossible to produce onstage. Although the editing and lightingwere bland, Young's use of tracking shotswas excellent. Davis's murder scene wasdone with an understatement that made itscruelty all the more glaring. The acting wasgenerally tightly knit, and the group scenesshifted focus and accent well.The individual performances weregenerally fine. Tito Goya was naive, in¬nocent, but thoughtlessly cruel and uncaring as Cupcakes, the unwilling apple ofeveryone else's eye. Shawn Elliott wasespecially good as Paco, the razor sharp,desperately abandoned and gay PuertoRican in love with Cupcakes. An unnamedblack actor was excellent as Omar, the ultracool, glib, lazy and lyrical dope fiend whohas spent 17 of his 33 years in the House ofDetention. The focal characters, however,Jose Perez as Juan, the compassionate butunsuccessful raisonneur of the Tombs; andBruce Davison as Clark Davis, "shorteyes", had difficulty with their admittedlydifficult roles. Perez came across as toorational and far too self sacrificing for oneas cagey as he was reputed to be. Davisonexcelled at the WASP ish awkwardness anymiddle class white would feel on the inmatesside of the bars; but he had difficultycombining his alienation with his environment with his gushy, overly detailedconfession and priest penitent relationshipwith Juan.Short Eyes might well be subtitled,Pear and Loathing in Lower Manhatten. Itadds a new, far more socially fatalisticelement to the American prison picture thanhas ever appeared before. There is not theindignation that one felt at the end of themost recently preceding prison picture,Fortune and Men's Eyes. Instead, the sameexistentialism of Genet's Deathwatch hascrept into the roster of American cinema.Short Eyes is not a film about prisons asopposed to other aspects of life, but usesprison as a metaphor and satire for theoverall conflict between anarchy and order.It is a glimpse of a world few readers willever see; but in Pinero's vision, it underliesthe fabric of all our lives. Short Eyes openstoday at the Loop and Cinema theaters. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••*By Anne GluskerRainer Werner Fassbinder is a young andextraordinarily prolific German director.He is continually a subject of controversy,as no one can quite decide whether or not heapproves (horrors!) of the things hedocuments in his films. Film critics and filmaudiences are inured to the idea that a filmmust have a meaning, must make either apositive or negative commentary. ThatFassbinder doesn't do this makes him undeniably perverse. He also has a perverseway of viewing human interactions, and thehuman interactions he chooses to view areoftentimes themselves perverse. He hasbeen accused of being anti Semitic, antigay, misogynistic. He has also had lesstopical charges leveled against him that heis cold, a dispassionate and unfeelingdirector. Four of his films are coming toChicago, the dates ranging from thisSaturday through early December, and nowChicago moviegoers will have a chance toform their own opinions.Fassbinder, especially in his early films,can be heavy handed- -abusing the dank anddepressing tone that is the hallmark of hiswork (this is not surprising: he stretchedthe word "prolific" to its limits in 1970, bymaking seven films that year). Fortunately,the films wending their way in our directionare all intriguing ones—and representativeof Fassbinder's work. This last is important.One could get a very misguided idea aboutFassbinder if Effi Briest shown lastFriday at Facets-was the only one of hisfilms to be seen. It is a romantic tale with acoherent narrative adapted from apreviously published work, taking place inthe past in soft pastel shades. Fassbinderusually writes his own films and they oftendo not unfold along conventional plot lines;they usually take place in the present anddeal with decidedly unromantic, if notbrutal, topics. Many are shot in black andwhite. Those in color still manage to have adeadening effect. Whereas the black andwhite films deaden by means of numbness,those in color suffocate by means of anoverabundance of something be it money,sex....The Bitter Tears of Petra von Kant (1972)will be at Facets Mutimedia Center (1517 W.Fullerton, 281 9075) on Saturday; Jailbait(1972) will be at the Art Institute (ColumbusDrive at Jackson, 443 3737) Oct. 18-21; CEFwill present Beware of a Holy Whore (1970)at Cobb Hall on Oct. 30; and way off in thefuture (but worth the wait) is ChineseRoulette (1976) at Facets Dec. 2 8. It's interesting—not to mention enlightening—tosee as many Fassbinders as possiblebecause he belongs to the Bergman/Altmanschool of ensemble filmmaking. It'sfascinating to see the beautiful MargitCarstensen become ugly; to see her thecenter of attention in one film and a veryminor character in another. Several nameson both sides of the camera constantly recurand Fassbinder himself turns up as Sascha,the movie producer, in Beware of a HolyWhore.Beware is The Story of the Making of aMovie movie It concerns, not so much thetechnical creation of the movie, but rather the behind the scenes petty politicking,desperate drunken flirtation and randomfuckings. The cast and crew wander arounda huge and seemingly forsaken hotel, standat the bar in the lobby—drinking and takingjibes at each other. An actor named EddieConstantine plays himself, HannahSchygulla plays an actress named Hannah,and R.W. as Sascha the producer surveysall, looking like a smug and somewhatportly rat. It's not a terribly pretty film.Neither is Jailbait, which is the story of afemale specimen of jailbait giving theblessed flower of her womanhood to ateenaged motorcycle man. Her fathercatches on and things quickly escalate fromstandard adolescent-parental squawking toinflamed Oedipal trauma. During thecourse of this escalation the protagonistcompletely overwhelms and overpowers herlover. An American version of this storywould no doubt cast two very sexy people asthe protagonists, whereas Fassbinderlogically uses ugly people to tell an uglystory.The Bitter Tears of Petra von Kant andChinese Roulette are- both visually andwith regard to their casts—pretty films.However, their scenarios are every bit asugly as those of Jailbait ana Beware. Petra(like much of Fassbinder's work) is aboutsexual fascism. Petra von Kant is abeautiful, stylish designer. She lives in abeautiful, stylish apartment. Said apartment is filled with a great many still whitefaceless mannequins—which lends a rathereerie quality to the film. More eerie still,Petra has a pinched looked servant (IrmHermann) who never speaks and who, inless enlightened times, might have beendescribed as spinsterish. Petra meets upwith a dumb, pretty bit of fluff namea Karinand seduces her. The film goes on fromthere, involving Petra's mother anddaughter, exploring the ramifications ofwhat Petra and Karin and Marlene (theservant) do to each other. It's wonderful.Chinese Roulette is something of a horrorstory. It's equally as pretty as Petra andequally as cruel. The story devolves upon acrippled child whose parents are separatedand who each have a lover. She manages,through great cunning and conniving, to getall four up in the family's terribly rich andelegant country mansion at the same time.The lovers, the parents, a few servants, andthe child come and go, eat dinner, drinkwine, in general behave in a terriblycivilized and proper fashion. The hint ofhorror lurking under the surface is embodied in several agonizing shots of the childin leg braces, clomping slowly down thehuge and ancient halls. Tension builds untilthe final scene a horrible game of ChineseRoulette, which is a sort of TwentyQuestions type guessing game, using one ofthe players as a substitute for the proverbialanimal, vegetable, or mineral.Go see these films. Then you too candecide whether you think R.W Fassbinderhates women, gays, Jews, filmmakers,moviegoers, everyone, or no one. Orwhether you think he's a Genius In OurTime, perverse and gratifying, disparagingeveryone equally and deservedly.The Chicago Maroon — Friday, October 14,1977 — 11RESEARCHSiena only two dollars (to coverpostage) for your copy of Ourlatest mail-order catalog of over7 000 research papers• Quality Unturpetted• Fast. Dependable Service• Speeches, Report*, etcAUTHORS RESEARCH SERVICES INC407 South Dearborn Street Suite 600Chicago Illinois 60606312-922-0300 DOROTHY SMITHBEAUTY SALON5841 S. BLACKST0NEHY3-1069Call for appts.7 A.M. - 7 P.M.Monday thru Friday,closed SaturdayWedgie Haircuts - Perms •Tints & Bleaches TAl~£AVt-MMCHINESE AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCAKTONESf ANDAMERICAN DISHESONEN DAILY11 A.M. TOtUMOAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO MOP M.Ordmrt to toko out1319 last 63rd MU 4-1067 I , l- EXAMINATIONSV ASHIUN KYEWtAHCON ! Af.'I I.KNSKSDR. KURTROSENBAUMOptometrist(53 Kimbark Plaza)1200 East 53rd Street493-8372Young Designs byELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERS1620 E. 53rd St.288-2900Test Preparation Forlow School Admission TostGrad. Monogement Adm. TestGraduate Record ExaminationMedical College Adm. TestDental Aptitude TestRegistered NursingBoardsMwWE MAKE THE DIFFERENCE782-21857 S. DIARftOEN-CHICAGO6560 N. SHERIDAN RD. STUDY ABROADw ill)SY R AtTISK IM YT:KSITYSpring Semester Program*FLORENCE Italian I .an gunge and Literature. History. Fine Arts. Humanities.Political Science, Social ScienceMADRID Spanish Language and Literature. Public Contminiicatiou*, PineArts. History. Political Science. Aiilliro|>ology. Social Science.Busincss/Managcmcnt, Kducation. Philosophy. Sociology.TheologySTRASBOURG French. Language and Literature, German Language.History. Fine Arts. Religion. Polilieul Science. Social ScienceAMSTERDAM Dutch Language and Lulltire. Fine Arts. History. SocialScience. F.conomies. Social \A ork. Human Development.AnthropologyLONIX IN Lnglish. History. Fine Arts. Political Science. Television andRadio. International (Oinmunieations and Public Affair's Report¬ing. Drama. Art History. Studio Arts’ APPLY NOW•FINANCIAL AID AVAILABLE* NO LANGl AGE B A( KGROIJND NE< FSS AR Y•COST IS COMPARABLE TO A SEMESTER ON SYRACUSEI DIVERSITY’S CAMELSI or fnrllirr iiiforiiuiiioii timl appliraliou:rariise l niversilyl>i\isioii of International Progratm*. \broad.335 Comstock \venueSyracuse. V* Wk 13210 (31 51 123-3171t)v)40O 111 ldmSin"6t- cj<<<N X Free Camera Check-UpActing funny? Saturday October 2210 AM -4 PMStop in and have your cameraor lens checked free hy ourtwo qualified repairmen!See you Saturday.A PRIVATE MIXTUREfrom(312) 288-51515225 S. HARPERCHICAGO,.ILL 60615 Where you can findImported CigarettesImported CigarsImported PipesImported dry cigarsImported Pipe Tobacco& Other Accessories A sterile‘Ashes’By John LanahanSexual dysfunction (now that I've got your attention)has long been a potent and fertile metaphor in Westerndramatic literature. It has been a vehicle for not onlyoutrageous comedy, as in Roman drama and commedia,but also as one to convey intense emotional pain, as in theworks of Tennessee Williams. David Rudkin's Ashes, thecurrent production at the St Nicholas Theater, suecessfully fuses these two aspects of faulty humanprocreation into a work concerned with personalfreedom a barren landscape has no hinderances. Theplay ends on the hope that only when released from thechain of cyclical regeneration, can individual humanpotential be realized.Structurally, the play is mostly a set of monologues bythe two main characters, husband and wife, about theirrespective realizations that parenthood, either natural oradoptive, is not in their lives. Throughout the piece, acontinuum is provided by their various encounters withmedical and social agencies in their attempt to engenderor acquire children. The play begins as a farce, in whichthe comic potential of the mechanics of sex is graduallyundercut by cruelty and embarrassment when sex is nolonger a simple and joyous means of continuing thespecies, but becomes an elusive and painful discipline thatproduces no biological result. The director, StevenSchachter, had little difficulty in giving the self consciousand»contempletive farce of the play a comic shrug ofdetermination. The production, however, failed to capturethe pain and humiliation that eventually engulfs the twonon reproducing protagonists. The show continued to bemechanical and gimmicky when it should have beensubdued and personal There was almost no emolionaiinteraction between the husband and wife, and whatshould have been an existential odyssey degenerated intoa rather facile acceptance of sterility.There was almost no interaction- between the husband and wife;,and.what should have been an existentialodyssey degenerated into a ratherfacile acceptance of sterility.Many of the faults of this production can be attributed tothe uneven quality of the acting. John Mahoney andAllison Giglio, who each played a number of roles as thevarious medical and institutional personnel confrontingthe would be parents, were successful in providing amechanical and impersonal background to a deeplypersonal tragedy. Carole Lockwood as Anne, the femalehalf of the increasingly desperate couple, had some finemoments in which she moved from comical determinationthrough painful failure to bleak but enlightened acceptance. John Malkovich as Colin, her husband, did notdrop his detached and snide contempt for his embarrassing and often ridiculous predicament until hisfinal long speech when he returns from a funeral. Thefuneral, we are told, occured as a result of a bombing inColin's native Belfast, although Mr. Malkovtch'sscramble of certain British dialects gave the audience nolinguistic indication of that fact. The most serious flaw inthe acting was that there was almost no interaction between the two main characters, either physical oremotional. The eroticism became posed, clinical, sterile;it never suggested the intense personal commitment ofeach character. The show, as a result, came across as akind of test tube commedia that somehow wandered intobarren existentialism or was it Buddhism?The set, by David Emmons, was a simple playing area,backed by a triptych of translucent scrim, onto whichwere projected slides. The space was open and flexible;but the scene changes often seemed hectic and resulted inthe actors appearing rushed and the scenes beginningunfocused. The costumes by Stephen English were preciseand generally very good The lighting, by Jane Highland,illuminated, but was often upstaged by the gimmickyeffects of the slides projected on the set.St. Nicholas Theater has risen in the last few years tothe position as the leading young theater in this city. At ,tsbest, the group presents well executed and sharplydefined productions of modern British or American plays,or American classics. With Ashes, however, the group hasundertaken a show that requires closer ensemble workand more directorial sensitivity than the group seemscapable. The show is brittle and episodic when it should beemotional and flowing. For those of you, however, who arestill enamored of trendy New Town and what it has tooffer, the St. Nicholas Theater is located at 2851 N.Halsted Street, in Chicago. Call 348 8415 for ticket information and show times.^•-4:~'' liiiiiliifcilffrrTIiiiMMii Guide to filmBy Karen HellerAdmission to CEP and NAM films is SI.50.Admission to Doc fiims is $1.00 on Tuesdaysand Wednesdays and $1.50 on all other days.CEF, NAM and Doc films will be shown inQuantrell auditorium in Cobb hall.Carrie (1976), directed by Brian dePalma. (Doc) A horror thriller set in an allwhite, verdant and serene (must beSouthern California) here all the girls arethin and have peaches and cream complexions. Sissy Spacek plays Carrie, thetown misfit, who is cursed by a wildlyevangelical mother (Piper Laurie) andblessed with telekinetic powers. Bored bymoving ashtrays and pitching kitchenknives with her powers, she moves on tobigger and better things. Although made ona small budget, Carrie is a jolting andmemorable film. Spacek and Laurie areterrific. John Travolta with dented chin and"media's sexiest eyebrows," plays a creep.Recommended. Friday at 6 30, 8 45 and10 45.8V2 (1963), directed by Federico Fellini.(CEF) This is a film I always want to likebut each time I see it, I'm further awayfrom doing so. Beautiful Marc* iin Mastrionni is a frustrated filmmaker whomakes cheap films about his cheap life. Isense that everything is supposed to beprofound but end up laughing at the film'smost sober scenes and squirming in myseats during the "lighter" moments. But ifyou expect to make the intellectual cocktailset and scene, you'd better see this one.Saturday at 7 15 and 10 00.Aparajito (The Apu Trilogy: Part II)(1957), directed by Satyajit Ray. (CEF)This film continues the story of the samefamily in Pather Panchali. The father diesand the mother and small boy, Apu leave theholy city of Bencares and go to a distantvillage to live. Apu starts his education in alocal school, wins a scholarship and goes offto college in Calcutta. While he is away, themother, lonesome for him, becomes ill andin a series of scenes, conveys the essence ofher deep but stoic love. A remarkable filmof poignant sensitivity and beauty.Recommended. Sunday at 7.15 and 9 30.Barravento (The Turning Wind) (1962),directed by Glauber Rocha. (NAM) A studyof mysticism and oppression amongBrazilian fisherman a key work in cinemanovo. Monday at 7:15 and 9 30. Tiger Shark (1932), directed by HowardHawks. (Doc) Mike Mascarena (Edward G.Robinson) is "the best damn fisherman ofthe Pacific." He is a liar when he thinks theoccasion demands and a fiend whenaroused. But most of the time he is a goodfellow He loses a hand to a shark but winsthe hand of the attractive Quita. He marriesbut soon discovers that a good looking,fellow fisherman (Richard Arlen) issmitten with Quita. She sort of grooves onhim too. Tuesday at 7 30. Today We Live (1933), directed byHoward Hawks. (Doc) Joan Crawfordportrays Diana Boyce Smith, an Englishgirl (no one is less English than our girlJoan, but she tries). She is in love with aBritish naval officer (Robert "FatherKnows Best" Young) but she encountersGary Cooper and, understandably, falls forhim. He goes off and is believed to be dead.She carries on with Young without benefit ofthe clergy. Young loses his sight, Cooperregains his life everybody's a hero in thisThe Valhalla Exchange is agreat novel by Harry PattersonThe Valhalla Pub is agreat bar here in Hyde Park ^congenial atmosphereselective Jazzpitchers of BeerAlways free hot butter popcorn. fl1515 E. 53rd Student discountsin the Heart oi Cosmopolitan Hyde ParkUsed Desks, Chairs,Files, Drawing TablesC BRAND ) EQUIPMENT&SUPPLY CO.8600 Commercial Ave.Open Mon.-Sat. 8:30-5:00RE 4-2111 •Eye Examinations•Contact lenses (Soft & Hard)•Prescriptions FilledDR MORTON R. MASLOVOPTOMETRISTSHyde Park Shoppinq Center1510 E. 55th363-6363HA VE YOU EVER DREAMED OF OWNING YOUROWN BOOKSTORE?Come to the Seminary Co-op and buya piece of one —4200 people have already begun theircareers as bookstore owners.Seminary Co-operative Bookstore, Inc5757 S. University Ave.Mon -Fri.: 9F:30-4 00. Sat.: 11:00-4 00 Levi’sfor Less!Hundreds of other items on saleOctober 6-16!bS4 <)2 & 519not ;n all storeMIi!brook Snopping CenterNILESN. Broadway Ave. & BarryCHICAGOEvergreen PlazaEVERGREEN PARK2449 West Devon AvenueCHICAGO111 E. Chicaro Ave.CHICAGO4046 N. Cicero AvenueCHICAGO5120 N. Harlem Ave.HARWOOD HEIGHTS7040 Indianapolis 3lvd.HAMMOND, IN.North Riverside ParkN. RIVERSIDEFord CityCHICAGOThe Chicago Maroon - Friday, October U, 19// — 14TK# I don trememberreader Attend a IE speedreading lesson TONIGHT!At Tonight's Mini-Lesson you'll actually improve yourreading efficiency, both speed and comprehension,by using our techniques which have worked for over14 million people just like you.Whether you're a "Lazy Reader'' unable to concentrate,a "Word-at-a-time Reader" who spends days, weeks,and months reading material that should take minutes andhours, a reader who can t remember anything you read,or a "Skimmer", who reads fast but retains little . .we can help you.All the advantages of Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamicswill be explained and demonstrated completely at theFREE Mini-Lesson. Stop wasting valuable time . . .you've got nothing to lose, everything to gam!Attend a FREEMini-Lesson TonightmThe word ata time reader Bring this coupon to the mini-lessonfor a super tuition savings.TONIGHT A FREE MINI-LESSONat the Chicago Theological Seminary5757 University, room 133The lazy reader Tonight Fri. Oct. 14 7:30 pmSAVE $100.00If you cannot aHend a Mini-Lesson cal!Pam Modica af 236-1996 for informationand registration.The shimmer There is still room in theclass beginning Oct. 20at the Chicago Theological Seminary5757 University, room 133m iMost people go through life reading,without ever learning how! EVELYN WOODREADING DYNAMICS14 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, October 14,1977CalendarF ridayCenter for Middle Eastern Studies: Faculty-Student Luncheon, 12:15 pm, Ida Noyes Hall;Arabic Circle: “The Population Problem inEgypt,” speaker-Farag El-Kamel, 3:30 pm,Pick 218 (discussion in Arabic); PersianSociety: “The Prospects for Cooperation andConflict in Relations between the People’sRepublic of China and Iran,” speaker-Fariborz Maissami, 3:30 pm, Harper 135(discussion in Persian); Sherry Hour, 4:30,Kelly 413.Committee on Virology: Seminar- “VirusPseudotypes and Cell Receptors,” Dr. RobinWeiss, 12:30 pm, Cummings 11th Floor.Geophysical Sciences Colloquium: “InitialResults From the Nimbus 6 Limb RadianceInversion Radiometer,” John Gille, 1:30 pm,Hinds Auditorium.Department of Economics:Workshop/Organizational Meeting —Econometrics, “Why Should ConsumerSentiment be so Important to ConsumerDurable Expenditure?” Frederic Mishkin,3:30, Social Sciences 105; Workshop/ThesisSeminar — Latin American EconomicDevelopment and Public Finance, “Cost-Benefit Analysis for Peak-Load Pricing andLoad Management,” Henry Lim, SocialSciences 402, 3:30 pm.Contemporary Mathematics from a HistoricalViewpoint: Dynamical Systems & the ZetaFunction of Weil,” John Franks, 4 30 pm,Eckhart 133.Calvert House: Friday Night at Calvert,”Barbecue and Volleyball, 5 pm, CalvertHouse.Hillel House: Reform-Liberal Services atHillel, 5:30 pm; Adat Shalom-Bayit ShabbatDinner, 5458 S Everett, 7 pm; Lecture-“Terrorism. Social or PsychologicalPathology,” Dr. Lawrence Freedman, 8:30pm, Hillel House.Crossroads: Slideshow- “Ethnic Chicago,” 8pm.Baha’i Club: Informal Talks, 8 pm, EastLounge - Ida Noyes. ARTSDoc Films: “Carrie,” 6:30, 8:45, 10:45 pm,Cobb Hall.Court Studio Productions: “Little Murders,”8:30 pm, Reynolds Club Theatre.SaturdayChange Ringing: Handbells, 10-11 am, towerbells 11 am- 1 pm, Mitchell Tower RingingRoom.Crossroads: Outing to Morton Arboretum,leave Crossroads at 10 am; Saturday NightDinner, 6 pm, Crossroads.Compton Lecture Series: “The Solar Input, 11am, Eckhart 133.Hillel: Disco Party, free admission, cheapbeer, 9 pm, Hillel, 5715 S Woodlawn.March & Rally for the Equal Rights Amend¬ment: March assembles at 2 pm on the cornerof State & Wacker, rally following at CivicCenter. For more info call 288-0327.SPORTSMen’s Cross Country: Double dual meet, 11am, Washington Park.ARTSCEF Films: “8V2,” 7:15 & 10 pm, Cobb Hall.Court Studio Productions: “Little Murders,”8:30 pm, Reynolds Club Theatre.INTERNATIONAL House Talking Pictures:“King of Hearts,” 7:30 pm, "The HarderThey Come,” 9:30 pm, 1414 E 59th stSundayUnited Church of Hyde Park: Light buffetsupper and short program, 5:30 pm, 53rd &Blackstone.Rockfeller Chapel: Service of Holy Com¬munion, 9 am; University Religious Service -Preacher, Bernard Brown, “God’s Way ofBeing God, 11 am. Rockefeller Chapel.Calvert House: “Sunday MorningTheology,” speaker-Bernard McGinn, "TheChurch, 10:15 am, Bond Chapel.Hillel: Lox and Bagel brunch, 11 am, Hillel.Crossroads: Bridge, 3 pm, Crossroads, 5621 SBlackstone.The Landmark Concert Series presentsYEHUDA HANANIIsraeli cellistSUNDAY, OCTOBER 16, 7,30PM%Vivaldi Sonata No. 4Franck.' Sonata in A MajorMiaskovski.. Sonata No. 2 in A, Opus 81Schubert... .Sonatina No. 1 Opus 137(arr. Hanani)Paganini.... "Moses" Variations for One String(arr. Hanani)The Sanctuary, KAM Isaiah Israel Con¬gregation • llOO East Hyde Park Blvd. •$5.00 for unreserved seats • $2.00 forstudents Blackfriars: Membership meeting, 3 pm.Cloister Club.Free Vegetarian Festival: 5:30 pm, HareKrishna Temple, 1014 Emerson St., Evan¬ston.Brent House: Sunder Supper and SocialHour, 5 30 pm, Brent House, 5540 SWoodlawn.Tai Chi Chuan: Class, 6:30 pm, 4945 S Dor¬chester, enter on 50th St.Student Government: Presidential Debate,7:30 pm, Ida Noyes Theater.Crossroads: Film- “Inventing a Nation,” 8pm, Crossroads.Woodward Court Lecture-Discussion Series:“The Supreme Court: On the Quantity ofJustice,” Gerhard Casper, 8:30 pm, ResidentMasters’ Apt. 5825 S Woodlawn.ARTSCEF Film: “Apu Trilogy,” Cobb Hall.Court Studio Production: “Little Murders,”8:30 pm, Reynolds Club Theatre. Ki-Aikido: Bartlett Gym Wrestling Mats, 6pm - 7:30 pm.Change Ringing. Tower bells, 6:30-8:30 pm,4th Floor Mitchell Tower.Southside NAM: Meeting, 7 pm, Ida NoyesLibrary.Chess Club: Meeting, final chance to enter 4-round UC Fall Championship, one gameweekly, 7 pm, Ida Noyes Hall.TuesdayHillel: Students for Isreal, “China in theMiddle East,” Shai Harel, 12 noon, Hillel.The 1977 Adrian Albert Memorial Lectures:“Geometry & Physics,” M.F. Atiyah, 4:30pm, Eckhart 133.Episcopal Church Council at Chicago:Evensong, 4:30 pm, Bond Chapel.UC Science Fiction Club: Meeting, 8 pm, IdaNoyes Hall.MondayDepartment of Chemistry: “Atoms andMolecules in a Two-Dimensional World.Structure and Dynamics of AdsorbedMonolayers,” Prof. J. P. McTague, 4 pm,Kent 103. Southside Creative Writers’ Workshop:Meeting, 8 pm, 5744 S Harper, P. Long.International House Folkdancing: Teaching& refreshments, 7:30 pm, I-House.Women’s Rap Group: 7:30 pm, Blue Gargoyle,3rd floor.Undergraduate Behavorial Sciences Meeting:Clarification of changed requirements, Psy B102, 4 pm.Department of Microbiology and the TrainingProgram in Infectious Diseases with theCommittee on Immunology: “Structural andCellular Aspects of Immunoglobulin Syn¬thesis,” Dr. John Hopper, 4:30 pm, Cum¬mings 101.The Divinity School/The Department ofSouth Asian Languages & Civilizations andthe College: “The Karma Theory in VedicRitual and Hindu Mythology,” Prof. WendyD. O’Flaherty. 4:30 pm. Swift Hall CommonRoom.Hillel: Beginners Yiddish, 6:30 pm, Hillel;Beginners Conversational Hebrew, 7:30;Advanced Yiddish, 8 pm, IntermediateYiddish, 9 pm, Hillel House, 5715 SWoodlawn. UC Table Tennis Club: 8 pm, Ida NoyesTheatre.Amnesty International: Letter writing, 8 pm.Crossroads.Hillel: Advanced Hebrew. Halacha and TheHolocaust, Hillel, 8 pm.Student Government Speakers Committee:“Social Psychology of College Classrooms &Dorms,” Prof. Strodtbeck. 8 pm, Ida Noyes.SPORTSWomen’s Volleyball Team vs Elmhurst. 7 30pm, Ida Noyes Gym.ARTSDOC Films: “Tiger Shark,” 7:30 pm. “TodayWe Live,” 9 pm.Student GovernmentPRESIDENTIAL DEBATESEveryone InvitedSunday, October 16 at 7:30Ida Noyes Hall 3rd floor-TheatreSponsored by Student GovernmentActivities CommitteeThe Chicago Maroon — Friday, October 14, 1977 — 15Maroons roll to homecoming victory, 21-14By Mark Penningtonwith Jacob RachlinThe action out on the field looked in¬nocent, if unprecedented. Some guys inMaroon uniforms were methodicallydisassembling a football team from Beloit.21-14.In the stands, which were filled tocapacity people were out having fun, allthose undergrads who should have beenburrowing into the farthest recesses ofRegenstein, all those alums who are sup¬posed to be interested in other things, andall the administration, which is supposed tobe interested in the alumsWhat’s more, funds that could have beenused to buy The Pedantic Journal or forsome other worthy effort, had been used to the opposition made scoring noises near theend of the game, there was never really afeeling that the home team would lose.The first quarter was just for each team tofeel the other out. Both teams had a coupleof possessions and by the time the quarterran out the basic pattern for the rest of thegame had emergedBeloit relied almost exclusively on their230 pound fullback Jim Degan who crunchedthe inside of the Maroon defense for 178yards and almost all the Buc’s rushingyardage. At times, but only at times, Deganseemed a juggernaut.The Maroons answered with an insidethreat of their own, fullback Mark Ramirez,who had his third consecutive game withover 100 yards A Beloit outside stunt con¬Dale Friar stiff arms a Beloit defender The Maroons beat Beloit 21-14. (Photo byDavid Jaffe)possession of the ball on their own 20 yardline with just under two minutes remainingin the first period. Five and a half minuteslater, after a drive in which all four Maroonbacks carried the ball, Meier handed off toRamirez on Beloit’s 26 and before anyonecould blink Ramirez had danced, darted,and dipped into the end zone Chicago led 7-0after Scott Jansen’s extra point.Chicago’s next chance led to anotherdrive, this one also of 80 yards and eating uplots of time on the clockRamirez carried the ball several times fornot a great deal. Jammed up the middle andshut in outside, Meier decided to go up topPasses to Ramirez and to split end ChuckWoods of 17 and 27 yards, plus a pass in¬terference call in the endzone set upRamirez’s second score of the day from oneyard out Another Jansen kick and the scorestood 14-0.Beloit mounted a final drive with less than2 minutes left in the half and put a scare intothe homecoming crowd Helped by a fine 56yard pass and a borderline interferencecall, the Buccaneers managed to get insidethe Chicago 15 before they ran out oftimeouts, organization, and finally timeIn the second half, the Maroons madeblocking adjustments designed to coun¬teract the unexpected Beloit defensivepattern which had shut down the usuallypotent Dale Friar and his outside runs.Those changes opened up the offensesome, but as time went by in the second half the defense inability to shut down Degan,especially on third down situations, becamemore and more obviousAfter the game, Lombardi diagnosed it as“overkill” by Maroon noseguard DavidO’Connor He was beating the Beloit centerso badly he was ending up out of positionThat error allowed the Buccaneer’s tomarch up and down the filed a lot, but theyonly managed to score in the last minutes ofthe third quarter A kick fake failed, so thescore remained 14-6.The final minutes might have been a lotscarier if David Newell hadn’t broken upone Beloit fourth quarter drive by in¬tercepting a pass in the endzone and if MarkMeier had not then taken his team on a final80 yard drive and then carried the ball infrom the one himself and if Jansen hadn'thit his third extra point But they did Ohyes, Ramirez caught another clutch passSurprise.The last drive made the final Beloit effortsgallant but empty The last two minutessaw: a Beloit drive fail; a Maroon punter,Byron Trott, take an intentional safety toget out of his endzone and gain a free kick;another Beloit drive finally leading to ascore on a busted pass play; another failedtwo point conversion; and an unsuccessfulonside kick. And another Chicago winThe next Maroon game is next Saturdayafternoon at 1:30 at Lake Forest. The gamecan be heard on WHPK, 88.3 FMprovide a press box and a brick buildingwhich houses both teams, restrooms, aconcession stand, and some newborn prideat the University of Chicago. Chicagofootball is back to stay.Down on the field, Bob Lombardi wasdirecting his team to their first conferencewin. The Maroons were in control of thevisiting Buccaneers from the beginningEven when the score was close, even when tained the other part of the Chicago groundgame, Dale Friar, until the second halfSome of the slack on offense was taken upby sophomore quarterback Mark Meier,who passed for 86 yards in only four at¬tempts and ran for some important gains.Nick Filippo, the other home team halfback,ran powerfully inside and did his usual finejob of blocking.The Boys from Bartlett assumedMark Ramirez (36) scores one of three Maroon touchdowns last Saturday, as A1Howe (52), Mark Meier, and Nick Filipp (22) look on. (Photoby David Jaffe)t — VSportsV 4Netwomen third at state Emm the-mzdmBy Rosemary SafranekA tense tiebreaker late last Saturdayafternoon edged the women’s tennis teaminto third place in the Illinois Small CollegeChampionship held last weekend in Quincy,Illinois. While Augustana and Wheatoncolleges finished first and second respec¬tively, Chicago and St Francis Collegeswere tied for third place with 6 team pointseach at the completion of the tournament.The top singles players of each team playeda 12-point, “lingering death” tiebreaker.After a 10-minute warm-up, the first personto win 7 points, with a lead of 2, wouldcapture third place for her team. TopChicagoan Cheryl Flynn did just that, andafter brief play, won the tie-breaker 7-5 andthird place for the Maroons“Never again,” she sighed at the endBesides breaking the tie, Flynn accountedfor 2 of the team points by reaching thesingles quarterfinal, where she wasdefeated by fourth seed and eventual winnerAnne Radloff of Augustana, 6-4,6-4.“Cheryl played her well. She waspatient,” Coach Chris Scott said, pleased byFlynn’s performance with an experiencedRadloff.The doubles team of Carolyn La Grange -RoseMary Safranek contributed theremaining 4 points to the team total. Theyreached the semi-finals by downing thefourth seed from St. Francis in the quarter¬finals late Friday night 6-0, 7-5 The rainplagued tournament was moved indoors anddue to a shortage of courts quarter-final matches lasted past midnight Safranek’ssharp net play complemented La Grange’soackcourt steadiness that accounted for thevictory However, St. Francis had the lastword Saturday morning as their top-seededdoubles team of two “over-30” motherssurprised the slow-starting, inconsistentMaroons, 6-1, 7-5. In a play-off for thirdplace between the losing semi-finalists,Chicago defeated North Park, 6-3,6-4Tennis to 17 HomecomingBy Rory RohdeWhile it wasn’t Corvallis, homecominghas reached respectability at the Universityof ChicagoAt least that was the consensus of an in¬formal poll taken among the last people toleave the Pub’s victory party last Saturday1,500 fans packed Stagg Field for homecoming, including President Wilson, JayBerwanger. Mary Jane Mulvaney, and Ella Moynihan of the class of 1912. (Photoby Da via Jaffe)16 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, October 14,197/ success; I-M’sevening; Bill Roule, Jeff Metcalf, MarkPennington, Tim Bastian, and GeorgeSpink.Over 1,500 fans turned out for the game,packing the grandstand and overflowing tothe sides One felt they were real fans, notjust curious passers-by, all having funA lot of things contributed to the successof homecoming The gates, gatehouse,painted stands and pressbox all contributedto an authentic football atmosphere Onefreshman, on approaching “Stagg SportsComplex,” was heard to say, “It’s a realgatehouse it’s a real football field.! ”A lot of people contributed to the successof homecoming, too many to name; MarieHovell of Student Activities did a super joborganizing the whole thing, from getting theband to persuading Distinguished ServiceMath Professor Irving Kaplanskv to playthe calliopee (his first time) when theregular player got sick, SteveThomas was a great clown-cheerleader.Walter Jeschke donated labor for the signsThe WAA did the decorating while the Orderof the C made John Wilson an honorarymember Athletic Director Jeff Metcalfe didthe athletic side, and Bob Lombardi and theMaroons topped it off by winning their firstconference gamePressbox to 17Steve Jones sets to kick while Kim Hongwatches. Jones and Hong helped thesoccer team to their first win in four years(Photo by John Wright)__Pressbox from 16As .lay Berwanger, original Heismantrophy winner said, “My God, they’replaying real football out there' ’’I was pleasantly surprised Oregon Stateupset BYU. 24-19“Don’t assume anything.”After experiencing a run-in with thisyear’s IM department first hand, the bestadvice I can give anyone involved with thedepartment is that quote from directorDan TepkeAs IM manager for Alpha Delta Phi, Iturned in our football entry last Wed¬nesday, but not having yet received the $10forfeit deposit from our house treasurer, Iasked the IM secretary, “Will you trust mefor it' ” meaning I’d turn it in as soon as Icould I figured that because I worked inthe office I was good for 10 bucks.Being busy with newspaper deadlinesand other feeble excuses, I forgot to get thecheck in Thursday, the deadline for en¬tries. I brought it in Friday, only todiscover the schedules had been made-outand that Alpha Del and Greenwood hadboth been left out for not turning theirmoney in on time./Stickwomen lose 3The Chicago field hockey team sufferedthree defeats this past week, unaided bytheir offense which has not yet scored thisseason The Maroons dropped two mat¬ches last Saturday, as Notre Dameshutdown Chicago 5-0 while U. ofWisconsin edged the Maroons 2-0 Bothgames were played on Astro Turf ChicagoTuesday hosted Valparaiso, losing 4-0Coach Delores Larkin said the team isout-experienced in several cases “We’restill playing catch-up” said LarkinThe team played Northwesternyesterday Chicago plays at Concordianext Tuesday before returning for a StaggField match against Rockford nextThursday.I-M Top TenIntramural Top Ten1. Wabuno Bay Buccaneers (2)2. Sugar Bears (1)3. Legal Eagles (1 >4. Snorklers5. Hitchcock6. Phi Gamma Delta7. Mathews8 Upper Rickert9. Psi Upsilon10. Walloo’s WacksOthers receiving votes: Henderson,Thompson South. Linn, Chicago 7 Firstplace votes in parentheses Soccer team wins first game in 4 yearsBy John PomidorThe men’s soccer team boosted theirrecord to 1-2-1 by downing Loyola, 2-1, atStagg field Wednesday. Coupled with lastweek’s tie against Lake Forest, the Maroonsare off to their best start in four yearsCoach Barry DeSilva had many heroes totalk about, but the primary one was DeanCarpenter, who scored both goals The firstone came on a penalty kick, and the secondwas scored with two minutes left on anassist from Don WelchWhile Carpenter was leading the attack,center back Pete Wendell and goalie MattRebole held the defense “Wendell wasswitched to the position to shore up thedefense, and Matt played an excellentgame,” remarked DeSilva. Pete blendedthe defense together and allowed for a game of control In the last 30 minutes, we were allover Loyola ”Saturday, the Maroons played wellenough to win, but still came up shortagainst Ripon, 2-1 DeSilva took the loss instride, though.“Ripon is undefeated and leads the con¬ference, but we outplayed them It was awell fought game, and if we had a fewbreaks going for us, I think we’d have won ”DeSilva pointed to six near-misses by theMorton offense One goal was nullified on aquestionable advantage call, and anothershot was blocked when the ball hit the Ripongoalie in the face. Also, the team was un¬dermanned, as a few players had heavyworkloads and could not make the tripThe lone goal was scored by ZbigniwBanas DeSilva is pleased with his team’s per¬formance so far, and feels the team is“coming around ” Though the conferencerecord is 0-2-1, the coach feels that if thosegames were played later in the year, theteam would have done much betterA few of DeSilva’s reasons for optimismabout the future are freshmen Carpenterand Banas Last year, the team managedonly three goals. The output this year isalready at seven, as Carpenter has sixscores and Banas the other Next year, afew more area high school players areexpected to help outMeantime, the Maroons travel to WesternMichigan tomorrow, and they can be seen atStagg Wednesday for a 3:30 contest withTrinity ChristianI was shocked and dismayed Althoughthe IM department was strict last year,they never did anything like this,especially when it was the first timearound for a new rule As far as I canremember, Bill Bendl had always tried toenforce the rules in such a way that peoplewould get a chance to play if they wantedto, which is the whole idea behind in¬tramuralsWhen I explained w-hat the secretary hadtold me, it turned out she thought I meant Iwas asking her to trust me until theThursday deadline, an understandablemisunderstanding. I was told the entryblank made was clear on the matter I w asnot given the benefit of the doubtIt seemed that I had a good case Un¬fortunately, I am told by a friend who tookThe Legal Process, or some such course,that when one party asks for an exceptionto a contract, it is his duty to make theexception perfectly clear But if there wasanything to be learned from the Shorey-Thompson South softball incident lastyear, it is that w'hen you start getting tootechnical and lose sight of the goals ofintramurals, enjoyable competition foreverybody who wants to participate, youmight as well forget the whole thingSports shortsV-ball refs neededThere will be meeting for all personsinterested in being volleyball officialsMonday, October 17 at 7 p m. in Ida NoyesGym and again on Tuesday. October 18 at12:30 p m in Ida Noyes Library Attendanceat one of the two meetings is manditory.Further informationVolleyballers winChicago’s women’s volleyball team wonthree of its four matches this week im¬proving their record to 6-20 The Maroonsonened with a loss to U. of Wisconsin(Parkside) 5-15, 5-15, last Thursday af¬ternoon, and then squeeked by LakeForest 16-4, 15-11 The Maroons defense,which had fallen apart against Wisconsinaccording to coach Rosalie Resch, cametogether for two solid matches in IdaNoyes on Monday, smashing Barat College15-1, 15-6 and defeating North Central 15-7,15-11Chicago took on St Zavier in a con¬ference match last night 'resultsunavailable at press time). The Maroonstravel to St Xavier for a tough conferencematch before returning home to take on astrong team from Elmhurst college nextTuesday at 7:30 in Ida Noyes GymChicago is 2-0 in league playRuggers lose, 10-0The University of Chicago Rugby-Football club opened their season lastSaturday with a 10-0 loss to I^oyola in agame played at Washington Park Co¬manager Steve Hollopeter said the scrumplayed well but the backs needed work ontheir timing The ruggers travel toMarquette for an away match thisSaturday Anyone interested in joining theclub should contact Hollopeter at 324-4823or Bill Patterson at 643-4053 IM footbal1 reason opensAnother intramural footbal) ? jason wasinaugurated this Wednesday. As of presstime no scores were available, but somepreseason favorites are shaping up In theGreen league, Dan Tepke’s Fishbein houseis starting strongly in its quest for theoverall title, with the removal of strongAlpha Delta Phi and Greenwood teams fromthe league However, Thompson SouthLower Rickert, and Shorey should all betough 30 look for a real battle in this leagueIn the White League, Sid Hutner’s Hen¬dersonians look strong, but, Vincent, Tufts,and the freshmen Thompson North teamcould give last year’s second place overallfinishers a tough time In the Red LeagueHitchcock and Phi Gamma Delta are thetwo tough teams, so look for the winter ofthis week's showdown to take theleague.Upper Rickert and Psi Upsilon arethe favorites in the eight team Blue League,but Lower Flint and Shoreland 8 & 9 could beteams to watch In the 3 team IndependentLeague anything could happen withWalloo’s Wacks and Chicago 7 dead evenWith the dispansion of the Wild Bunch,Thincladssecond twiceThe Maroon thinclads placed second in afour-way meet with Bradley UniversityTuesday.The cross country team lost to Beloit 33-22 last weekend, while Ratine team* fromRockford and Judson Chicago was sweptTuesdav as Bradlev runners captured thetop eight spots Pete Smith. Marshall Sch¬mitt, and Lester Savitt were top finishersfor the Maroons in both meets. Smithfinished first for the Maroons in Beloit,taking fourth place overall, while Schmittwas tne top Chicago runner againstBradley, taking ninth placeThe harriers are scheduled for a dualmeet tomorrow in Washington ParkSport club councilThere will be a general meeting of thesport club council on Thursday. October 20,at 8 p m in the East I^ounge of Ida NoyesHall In addition, all sport club presidentsmust have their memberships, budgets, andother paperwork into the IM and Rec sportsOffice by Monday. October 17th For furtherinformation, call Dan Tepke at 753-4691Short shortsThe Maroon women's soccer club. QuelBogue. will play HF United at Staff Fieldat 10 a m Sunday The Sailing club hastheir first regatta tomorrow TheDedication of the Field House has beenscheduled for Nov 10. when the first floorwill l>e completed The facility will notopen for use until sometime laterChicago has been selected to host theMWAC indoor track meet this winterLake Forest, tomorrow’s football op¬ponents. played against the first Chicagoteam in 1892 The game ended in an 18-18tie- / defending football champions for the pasttwo years, a big gap is left in the graduatedivision Look for the Wabuno Bav Buc¬caneers to fill that gap. with a little com¬petition from Mathews in the Red league,while in the Blue League Sugar Bears. LegalEagles, and Snorkelers all look strong, withthe edge of the Sugar Bears.Tennis from 16Other Chicago entries, singles. CathyVeach and doubles team, Kathy Brewer-Joan Hiam lost in the opening roundCoach Scott while pleased with theshowing was not contented with third place.“If everyone could have won just one morematch, we would have won .And the breakswere there, Cheryl had 3 game points to goahead 5-4 with Radloff, Cathv was aheadthree games. RoseMary and Carolyn wereahead 5-4.”Winners of the state tournament advanceto regional competition to be held at anundetermined date in the spring. Chicagohosts the tournament that will includeschools from surrounding statesAs the regular season continued, theMaroons defeated North Park. 8-1. Tuesday,but narrowly lost to University of Illinois,Circle Campus, 5-4. Wednesday. Saturdaymorning Chicago travels to Wheaton, whilenext Monday they face Northeastern;Tuesday, DePaul; and close the seasonThursday with another chance at CircleCampus All next week's matches will beplayed at the University and 58th St courts,at:3:30p mCathy Veach drives a forehand TheWomen's tennis team took third at state1 Photo by Phil Grew)AMSTADTER FURNITUREBACK TO SCHOOL SPECIALS-Bedding BargainsTwin Size Box Spring & Mattress Sets 29.95Full Size Box Spring & Mattress Sets . 59.95Desk Chairs 9.95Chest Drawers 39.95-Plus all Kinds of Bargains7315 COTTAGE GROVE DAILY 9-5 224-7444 PITCHER $1.50 64 oz.MONDAY, TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, THURSDAYCAFE ENRICO1411 EAST 53rd STREET M-TH 11:30 AM-1 AMFRI-SAT. 11:30 AM-2 AMSUN. 4 PM-1 AMROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPEL5850 South Woodlawn AvenueSUNDAY*0CT0BER 16,19779 A.M.SERVICE OF HOLY COMMUNIONCo-Sponsor: Episcopal Church CouncilCelebrant: Donald Judson, Episcopal Chaplain11 A.M.UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICEBERNARDO. BROWNAssociate Dean of the Chapel' GOD'S WAY OF BEING GOD" HYDE PARK PIPE AND TOBACCO SHOP1552 E. 53rd - Under IC tracksStudents under 30 get 10% offask for “Big Jim”Mon. - Sat. 9 - 8; Sun. 12-5PipesPipe Tobaccos Imported Cigarettes CigarsYou are invited to anOPEN HOUSE for STUDENTS- Learn more about our Christian community- Meet other studentsSunday, Oct. 16, 5:30-7:30pm(light buffet supper, short program)UNITED CHURCH OF HYDE PARK53rd & Blackstone363-16209:15 am Innovative & Family Worship10:00 am Adult Study Groups & Sunday School11:00 am Traditional Worship TERRORISM SOCIALOR PSYCHOLOGICALMALADY?dr. lawrencefreedman DEPT of PSYCHIATRYFRIDAYOCT 14 8:30 athillel 5715 woodlawnBRENT HOUSE UNIVERSITY MINISTRY5540 WoodlawnSUNDAY SUPPER5:30 Social Hour6:00Supper ($1.25) ALLtogetherAt One LocationTO SAVE YOU MORE'WACtN.CMIVROin VOIKSWASIM .SPECIALDISCOUNT PRICESFor ALL STUDENTSAND FACULTY MEMBERSJust present your University ofChicogo Identification CardAs Students or Foculty Members ofthe University of Chicogo you are en¬titled to special money sovmgsDiscounts ,jr, /oik:. wc-gen & ChevroletParts accessories and ony new orused Volkswagen or Chevrolet youbuy from Volkswagen South Shore orMerit Chevrolet Inc.U101A1N) * NMVMSinOA IHtUB)SALES * SERVICEALL AT ONE 6REAT LOCATIONMERITCHEVROLETVOLKSWAGENSOUTH SHORE7 234 Stony IslandWiom: 484-0400Op»n Dally 9-9 PM. / Sat. 9-3 P M.Part* Opan Saturday too til 12 Noon*AMr • MltlHnMESSAGE TO FOREIGN STUDENTS:INTERNATIONAL HOUSE ASSOCIATION offers you an opportunity to explorebeauty, history and spirit of rural life in mid-America—on the annualFALL FOLIAGE TRIP*hike rustic trails in southern Indiana^attend Parke County Covered Bridge Festival*visit pioneer villages*live at Indiana University*sail in underground caverns*tour Virgil I, Grissom space memorialINCLUDED: 600-mile deluxe charter bus, all admissions and guidedsightseeing, small bus for country roads, small boats for cave trip, snacks,two nights housing.DEPARTURE: I House Fri. Oct. 21,7:30 p.m.RETURN: Sun. Oct. 23, 10:30 P.M.Student rate: $48. Others: (Limited number) $58. This is a non-profit ac¬tivity of IHA.Call 363-0290 evenings for reservations and information, or siqn-up onIHA bulletin board. 1414 E. 59th St. (Ca|| 332.4m afternoons) Hello Hyde Park!Kelly Girl is in Town!We’re glad we’re here. . .in the short time we’ve been herewe’ve received a warm welcome. . .loads of people lookingfor short term work have come in and gone out to workfor a few days or a few weeks.Why don’t you come in too? We have exciting assignmentswaiting.. .for typists, secretaries, S.B. operators, Key punch,.. .all office skills. Call for an appointment or drop in.1515 East 52nd Place955-91259 am - 4 pmequal opportunity employer m/fCLASSIFIED ADRSPACEHyde Pk nr UC I rm studio 2V* rm apt.well kept bldg, adults nr 1C, bus, park,lake, reas. BU8-0718.tTstory TOWNHOUSE for sale byOWNER. Exc. condition, 4 bdrms., I'/jbaths, Ivng. rm., large fam. rm. in fin.bsmt., dng. rm., mod. kitchn. appliances, new roof, fr & bk yd, pkg.Nice Location. Walk to UC. Call 9552689 after 5 p.m.5 room, 2 bedroom apt Newlyremodeled $400 Util inc. 5123 S. DorChester 363-0043.Female seeking room in private homeor apartment call 493 8382 or 947 6373day, Kathryn.Own Ig. rm. in exceedingly nice HYDEPARK APT. for female 25 35 non-smoker. $110/mo. & util 752 5124PEOPLE WANTEDENVIRONMENTAL ACTIVISTS!Work with Citizens for a Better Environment in the areas of canvassing,petitioning, and fund raising. Workpart time (3 evenings per weekk) orfull time; salaried positions. Futureadvancement opportunites if you canwork full time or next summer. Call939-1984 M-F for interview.Wanted 4 actors ranging approx 20, 40,60 & 80 yrs old for film (16 mm b&w)shof on UC campus. No pay, sorry. Butgood experience, (not porn) Mike241 5038Male blood donors type A-l- or B+-needed for research $20 paid per pint.Call rose at 947 5689COMMUNITY WORKERS CitizensAction Program has a 7 yr. rec as anAlinsky style organization fightingpolitical corruption & urban decay.Salaried positions. Part time or fulltime. Call 929-2922 bet 101.Someone who can translate a shortpersonal letter from English toCroatian. Will pay a reasonable fee.Mark 752-5284,Wanted: Part time secretary, musttype well, year round position. Call 3-4548 after Tues.Volunteers needed to help tutorchildren ages 2-17 Mon., Tues or Weds4-7 p.m. at Children's Center. Call SueDuncan after 8 p.m. 288-6003Belly Dance Lessons Jamila Day 9475600 Eve. 955-5019.Subjects wanted for PsycholinguisticsExperiments. Will be paid. To registercall 753-4718PEOPLE FOR SALEFRENCH Native Teacher offers tutormg - all levels - reasonable and experienced. Ph. 324 8054.ARTWORK - Illustration of all kinds,lettering, hand-addressing for in vitations, etc. Noel Price. 493 2399.RESEARCHERS Freelance artistspecializes in just the type of graphicwork you need. Noel Price. 493-2399.For Experienced Piano Teacher of allLevels - Call 947-9746;Thesis, Dissertations, Term Papers,Inc Foreign language gen corres.Lates IBM corrective SEL IItypewriter. Reas, rates. Mrs. Ross239-4257 bet 1 la.m. & 5 p.m.Japanese Native Teacher offers tutoring all levels 753 0225U of C Faculty Member's wife likes tobabysit at their home on a regularbasis. 324 3219Experienced proofreader wants work.References. Call 947-0330.TYPING SERVICE/HYDEPARK/538 6066 after 5:00p.m.SCENESFREE ENGLISH CONVERSATIONCLASS for non native speakers at I-House. Call 324-1776.Photofest and disco dance Sunday Oct.16. Photofest 2 p.m. with sensuously-clad models from Hustler, Cheri,Fling. Amateur photographerswelcome $25. Disco-dance 8 p.m.$10.00 males, couples. Women free.\ pizza !PLATTER14*0 E.SMWU S-2ROOFAST DELIVERY |AND PICKUP THE FLETCHER SCHOOL OF LAWAND DIPLOMACY Tufts University,Medford, MA (suburban Boston) TheFietcher School is a graduate school ofInternational Affairs providingmultidisciplinary graduateprofessional preparation for careers ingov't service, intn'l banking andbusiness, intn'l organizations,teaching and research, and other intn'lcareers. Admission is to a two yearMasters program, w/provision for PhD study. All undergraduate majorsare eligible. INTERVIEWS FRIDAY,Oct. 21 CAREER COUNSELINGAND PLACEMENT OFFICEREYNOLDSCLUBFOR SALEOPEL MANTA RALLYE '74. AntiqueBronze, autom., sun roof, AM/FM,rear defog. Cal! 947-6245 work, 667-8416home.COLLEGIATE RESEARCHPAPERS. Thousands on file. Allacademic subjects. Send $1.00 for mailorder catalog. Box 25918Z, LosAngeles, CA 90025, 213-477 8474QUALITY XEROX COPIES, 8 centsea. 1st Unit Ch 5650 Woodlawn, hours95, 7-10 daily.PERSONALSBlood & guts so our styles don'tmatch. Love ya anyway. Maybe that'swhy I always gave in before. Will youmeet me halfway? - Jean the machine.LOST a pair of beige suede gloves.10/7. Between 59th & 60th onWoodlawn. Sentimental value. Call753 2074Summer chem lab partner, still wantto go in on Vj case of avocado? How'sVermont? Stop by and have a beer.What has 30 legs, stripes and leatherballs? Joing the UC Rugby club andfind out.Writers' workshop PL2 8377Pregnant? Troubled? Call 233 0305betw 10 a.m. - 2 p.m. for lifesavinghelp. Free test referral.DATING SERVICE. Over iToOmembers. Ladies join free. 274 6940 or274-6248.SOME SWELLPUPSGreat German Shepherd Pups - 7 wk.Call Jonathan 493 2556 eves.COLOR BLIND?Color Blind People wanted for experiments in visual perception.Variable hours. $2.50 per hour. Call947 6039STEP TUTORINGReminder: Workshop Sun., Oct. 16.4:30 p.m. 1357 E. 56th St.REPAIR CLINICSat., Oct. 22, stop in & have yourcamera or lens checked at nocharge. See if your equipment isreally up to snuff. A qualifiedrepairman will be in our storefrom 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. See youthen. MODEL CAMERA 1342 E.55th St. LOST AND FOUNDFOUND - small grey mama cat whohas lost her kittens - vicinity of 55thand Kenwood. Call 955-3622.CIBACHROMEDEMOFri & Sat. Oct. 14 & 15 Color printingfrom slides will be demonstrated inour store on Fri from 1-5 & Sat from 104. Stop in and see how easy it is.MODEL CAMERA. 1342 E. 55th St.GERMANREADING EXAMExpert tutoring in all fields by nativeGerman PhD Years of experience.High success rate 493-8127 anytime.GAY PEOPLEPotluck dinner Saturday Oct 15. 7p.m. till? Call 753-3274 for location.TODDLERBABYSITTINGFull time sitting in a warmstimulating setting in a family apt.near campus. Our small play groupreceives nutritious food and fine carefrom a former teacher. Call 684 2820.LITERARYMAGAZINEPrimavera is on sale in most HydePark stores & Bob's Newstand. Weneed women to join the editorial staffCall 752 5655 if you can help out."INSIDER"Watch for the free ad supplement toyour college newspaper The subject is"Focus on Personal Energy: The NewFitness." iSPERM DONORSWanted Sperm Donors for Artifical In¬semination. Donors must be parents.For information call 947 1813.MEDICICONTINENTALBREAKFASTCome to the Medici Sunday morningfrom 9:30 1 and enjoy Sunday papers,fresh orange juice, homemadesweetrolls, fresh fruit, homemadeyogurt and coffee All you can eat for$1.95.PAN PIZZADELIVEREDThe Medici Delivers from 5-10.30weekdays, 5-11 weekends, 667 7394.Save 60 cents if you pick it up yourselfRAP GROUPA Women's Rap group will meet everyTuesday at 7:30 p.m. on the 3rd floor ofthe Blue Gargoyle. For more info - 752-5655.PREPARE FOR: (39th fJMCAT • DAT • LSflT • GMAT z-GRE • OCAT • VAT • SATNMB I. II. Ill • ECFMG * FLEX * VQENATL DENTAL BOARDS • NURSING BOARDSFlexible Programi & Hour*There IS a difference!!!For Information Please Call:2050 W DevonChicago, III. 60645(312) 764 5151SPRING, SUMMER, WINTER COMPACTSMOST CLASSES START EIGHT WEEKSPRIOR TO THE EXAMSTARTING SOON:LSAT-SAT-GREOTHER CENTERS CALL TOLL FREE. 800 223 1782Centers in Vaior US Cities Toronto. Puerto Rico ana Lugano Switzerland BENEFIT AUCTIONYou're urged to come look and buyitems and services (150) likeneedlepoint kit ... loaf of bread bakedevery month for one year ... 2 dinners... hand knit sweater . arrange andrun a children's party ... 1 adultgeneral membership at Hyde Park Y.Come to International House, 1414 E.59th St. Sun., Oct. 16, 1977 for the firstChicago Children's Choir Auction, afund raising affair sponsored by agroup from the choir's parent committee. Registration and viewing: 12-2p.m.; Auction: 2-5 p.m., refresh¬ments! For further information callBob Bator 643 1881.BLACKJACKRoulette, craps, bar. Make the sceneat Las Vegas Night, Sat., Oct. 15, 9p.m. - 1 a.m., Del Prado Hotel. 53rd YHyde Park Blvd $3.50, students $2.50.Benefits Parent Coop Preschool. STUDENTS-PARTTIMEPAID JOBSJoin 1977 Consumer Rights Campaign.Make own hrs. & work in own area.Positions immediately. Grassrootsfundraisers to coordinate ad book &film premier for serious federation ofcommunity organizations. Train. CallRyan Leary at 427 6284. Non-Profit.PREGNANTPOSSIBILITIESRapidly deteriorating world prospectsrequire ideas. Global psychopiasmseeks information, stimulation.Unusual, important. Details 25 centsand stamp. Cortex, 24 Collingswood,New City, NY 10956 ELMO MOVIESA manufacturer's representative fromthe Elmo Corp. will be in our store Fri& Sat Oct. 14 & 15 to demonstrate theirnew Super 8 Sound Cameras &Projectors. Stop in & say hello!MODEL CAMERA 1342 E-54th SJ.JANE ADDAMSBOOKSTOREANDBAKERY37 South WabashRoom 702Chicago782-0708-¥■ * * * *. *. *-¥-■¥- *-*-•¥-+* *MIDWAY TRAVEL SERVICEIN LOBBY OF “AD” BUILDINGCAN SUIT ALL YOUR TRAVAL NEEDS.Group flights during Thanksgiving Breakfrom Chicago to NYC $134.00leaving 11/23 arriving 5:30 pmreturning 11/27 arriving 6:00 pmfrom Chicago to Washington DC $120.00leaving 11/23 arriving 5 pmreturning 11/27 arriving 6 pmReservations and payment must be made by 10/21.TEL. 753-2301“International House “Talking Pictures”presentsA NIGHT OF FOREIGN FILMS October 14 & 157:30p.m. "King of Hearts"9:30 p.m. “The Harder They Come"Admission: residents $1.00, non-residents $1.50 1414 E. 59th StreetThe rhiraoo Maroon — Fridav, October 14, 1977 — 19n f k i l ~ r k.£ v ft- 7Tr *T if • # • # * • # ir N 4 1/y» c m J. r . l \ \- * * #■ * » *The 1978Festival of the Arts Committeeinvites all“arts”-relatedcampus groups andactivities....to aWine andCheese PartySunday,Oct. 16 7:30 p.m.Ida NoyesLibrary ALICE PAUL MEMORIALMARCH and RALLYfor theEqual Rights AmendmentSaturday, October 15March Assembles at 2:00 p.m.corner of State & WackerRally Following at Civic CenterThe ERA in its entirety reads as follows:Sec. 1. Equality of rights under the law shall not bedenied or abridged by the United States or by any stateon account of sex.Sec. 2. Congress shall have the power to enforce byappropriate legislation the provisions of this Article.*Sec. 3. This Amendment shall take effect two yearsafter the date of ratification.* Almost identical wording appears in the 13th, 14th, 15th, 19th,23rd, 24th and 26th Amendments and does not deny the Statesthe right to act or enforce the Amendment.Don't be left out of THE LARGE U of C CONTINGENT. We willmarch together. Part of the UC contingent will meet at 1:15 pm infront of Breckinridge to go to the march. For more information call288-0327, 752-2269 or 363-6086. -Tke flying £mx Bax '' . v 'i,,, „<•...*;•I*?'&.■wz.m% :■■>. * It happens finally. . .we live up to our name!! On this Sunday we will deliverto anywhere in Hyde Park-Kenwood One (or more!)FLYING LOX BOXESfor the price of one thin $5.00 bill. It will contain enough for two (count themtwo) generous sandwiches, bagels from Kaufman’s, cream cheese (chive regularor lox), your choice of cole slaw or potato salad, and two genuine Dr. Brown’ssodas. All this and delivered before 9:00 am Sunday too. There is a catch how¬ever, you must pay for it by Saturday night. For $1.25 extra we will also deliverone fresh Sunday N.Y. Times.By the way as an inducement we will also have on saleImported Greek Feta 089Cm per lb. Herring in cream or ^ gg.. wine sauce | per lb.Freshly Smoked Chubs 049\J per lb. Wisconsin Colby 1 69Kosher Pastrami H 99| per lb. Imported Ball Edam 099prices are for one pound or moreHours:M-F 10 am - 8 pmSat. 10 am - 8 pmSun. 8 am - 3 pm The Flying Lox Box5500 S. Cornell241-7050 or 705120 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, October 14,1977