The Chicago MaroonVol. 87, No. 16 The University of Chkaao Friday, October 21,1977Swanson victorby wide marginin SG electionsBy David BurtonActing president Carol Swanson waselected president of the Student Govern¬ment (SG) elections held last Tuesday andWednesday.Swanson, of BLISS, captured 53 percent ofthe vote while Kathy Weston, of NEWS,received 31 percent' of the vote RogerHorowitz, of YSA, secured seven percent,ofthe vote and David Kellogg, of SYL. got sixpercent.Three referenda failed to receive thenecessary 60 percent, but Referendum 1,which was entirely technical and un-controversial, passed.The defeated referenda would haveallowed the SG assembly to fill vacatedassembly seats itself and would have of¬ficially reinstated faculty members onCORSO and the student court. Five SGassembly representatives were also electedas just over 10 percent of the studentassociation turned out to vote.The election results are as follows:Carol Swanson (BLISS) 449Kathy Weston (NEWS) 262Roger Horowitz (YSA) 56David Kellogg (SYL) 47Write-ins 31TOTAL 845Yes NoReferendum 1 578 161Referendum 2 421 356Referendum 3 m :(66Referendum 4 386 346Charles Godbey was elected Other Collegerepresentative; Carla Schick was electedgraduate humanities rep ; and Andrea“Sam” Pennington (BLISS), Gerry Mildnerand Brian David were elected freshmanrepresentatives There was a four-way tiefor the Divinity School seat of one write-invote each. Prince Charles lunches with undergrads,tours University during four hour visitBy Jon MeyersohnHis Royal Highness Prince Charlesmarked his first official visit to the UnitedStates with another first, a glimpse ofAmerican university life, when he spentfour hours Wednesday on campus.The Prince dined with President Wilsonand 230 undergraduates, participated in adiscussion about George III, viewed anelectron microscope, toured the Quads byfoot, and stopped for tea before quitting theUniversity shortly after 4 pmResponding to an invitation issued in thesummer of 1975, Charles decided to makeChicago the only university he would visit onhis nine-day, 10-city tour of the countryAfter festivities downtown in whichCharles was made an honorary citizen ofChicago, the Prince’s 20-foot whitelimousine took him to Ida Noyes Hall, wherehe was greeted by Wilson, vice-president forPrince to 3The heir to the British throne leavesBurton Judson Court after a question andanswer session with students (Photo byGwendolen Cates) his four hour visit to the University Wednesday (Photo by Gwendolen Cates)Charles ’ American education“Are there any American universitiesthat compare with Oxford and Cam¬bridge'” Prince Charles asked PresidentWilson during Wednesday’s luncheonApparently, the Prince of Wales, heir tothe British throne, knew very little aboutthe University before his visit hereThe president said that the University,Harvard, Yale, Princeton and Stanfordwere of the same caliber as the twoEnglish schools Wilson gave the Prince abrief description and history of theUniversity and during the lunch theytalked at length about the educationalsystems in both countriesWhile Wilson spoKe the Prince listenedattentively, appearing deeply interestedHe asked several general questions aboutAmerican universities and somespecifically about the University ofChicagoThe Prince praised a biography of Queen Victoria; “It deals with her truecharacter You know she really did have agreat sense of humor.”He also mentioned the demonstratorsoutside Ida Noyes protesting England’spresence in Ireland and paused after theluncheon to read a couple of the signsQuickly adopting Wilson’s commentsabout the University into his address,Charles opened by saying the student’sbrightness made him feel “positivelyscruffy ”Chicago is the only university PrinceCharles will visit on this tour and it is thefirst American school he has toured ex¬tensively.Charles spent a total of four hours here,dining, debating, touring the campus andtalking with many members of theUniversity Those who spoke with him saidhe asked questions and appeared trulyinterested” in their responsesFaculty establishes centerto analyze law, economics University given $1 million grant;unrestricted gift to go to CollegeBy Andrea HollidayBy Peter BlantonFaculty from the economics department,law school, and business school haveestablished an institute to study theeconomic, legal, and political problemsassociated with government regulation ofthe economyWith funding from the Sloan and MellonFoundations, the Center for the Study of theEconomy and the State is an in¬terdisciplinary research institution forProfessor of economics George Stigler willdirect the new Center for the Study of theEconomy and the State faculty, students, and post doctoratestudents from other universities to study thelong-term effects of public regulation on theeconomy.George Stigler, director of the Center anda professor in the economics departmentand the business school, has been a leadingfigure in the application of economicanalysis to the study of government andpoliticsOther members of the center includeMilton Friedman and Gary Becker of theeconomics department. Sam Peltzman andPeter Pashigian of the business school andWilliam Landes. Richard Posner, andKenneth Dam of the law schoolFaculty members of the Center will studythe changing role of the federal govern¬ment, privacy and consumer protectionThe Center expects to attract funds tosupport graduate students writing theirdissertations and post doctoratal researchSpeaking of the unusual opportunity forstudents, economics department chairmanArnold Harberger said that the Center willmean a lot more money for young people ”The program will bring post-doctoratefellows from various universities to un¬dertake major research projects PelzmanCenter to 3 A $1 million unrestricted gift to theUniversity by Mary R Morton, who diedApril 8. has been allocated to the College byPresident WilsonThis is the first time that the College hashad such a sizeable unrestricted gift at itsdisposalMorton, of Bronxville, N Y., received aPh B from the University in 1908 She wasthe sister of Lulu Quantrell. whose husband,Ernest Quantrell, served on the Board ofTrustees until his death in 19621 ne Quantrell family have been generousbenefactors of the University, focusing theirinterest and support on the College In honorof their parents, Morton and Quantrellestablished the .lay and lane MortonMemorial Scholarship Fund Gifts from theQuantrells were used to establish awardsfor excellence in undergraduate teaching, torebuild the interior of Cobb Hall, to be usedfor undergraduate classes, and to renovateHarper Library for undergraduatesMorton left three-eighths of her residuaryestate to the University to be used for itsgeneral purposes”Because of the interest that the Quantrellfamily has shown in the College, PresidentWilson decided that the “general purposes”of the University would best be served byallocating a principal portion of Morton s gift for the establishment of an endowmentfund for the CollegeThe income from the fund will be used forpurposes to be recommended by the dean ofthe College and approved by the presidentNo decision has yet been made on how tospend the moneyJonathan Z Smith, dean of the College,said he was delighted” about the fund, andhopes that more monies will be added to itsoon“Now we can start thinking about takingcertain kinds of initiatives that haven't beenpossible before,” he saidSmith indicated that the money might beused to initiate improvements in un¬dergraduate instruction and in faculty in¬struction and researchI Inside ,Editorial p.4Letters p.4GCJ p.5Calender p.15Sports p.16Billings group studies gonorrhea resistant to penicillinStephen Lemer, Josephine Morello and Marjorie Bohnhoff (1. tor), of the medicalschool, have been researching two new strains of gonorrhea resistant to penicillin(Photo by Tim Baker)By Katherine BorlandTwo recently discovered strains ofgonorrhea resistant to penicillin treatmenthave been baffling doctors around theworld, but work by a group of Universityresearchers is helping to uncover the causeof their sudden appearanceDr. Stephen Lemer, assistant professor ofmedicine, said that the old practice ofsimply increasing penicillin dosage asgonorrhea becomes more resistant to thedrug is no longer feasible.“We have now reached the capacity of thehuman buttocks,” he said, referring to thenumber of shots now necessary to cure somecases of gonorrhea.To complicate treatment, said Lerner, thenew strains of gonococci < the bacteria thatcause gonorrhea) are capable of completelydestroying penicillinDr Lerner and his research associatesDr Josephine Morello and MarjorieBohnhoff have been studying the ‘geneticsof antibiotic resistance” at the Universityfor over four years They have successfullyattributed the growth in gonococcalresistance to penicillin to genetic changes inthe organism and have located four dif¬ferent genes, each coding for resistance to aspecific antibiotic and one multipleresistance gene in the gonococcusThese genes are responsible for variouscell functions and only inadvertantly confer .increased resistance.“For example,” said Lemer, “one gene which codes for a structural element in thecell envelope can mutate,” creating astronger cell lining. Because antibioticsattack the gonococcus through its celllining, “this gonococcus, then, would bemore resistant to penicillin ”Until recently, increased dosage ofpenicillin overcame the growing resistancepower of gonococci, but early in 1976 twosuper-resistant strains evolvedThese two strains, “one from West Africa,the other from the Philippines, have thepotential to make penicillin useless in thetreatment of gonorrhea, ” said Lerner“This was not unprecedented,” he added.“They had occurred in other bacteriabefore, but two independent strains ofgonococci suddenly acquired the ability tomake penicillinase” an enzyme thatdestroys penicillin.Lerner predicts that future treatment ofgonorrhea “is going to be much more dif¬ficult and costly.” One promising alter¬native to penicillin is the antibiotic spec-tinomycin, but this is six times more ex¬pensive and does not cure syphilis, whereaspenicillin doesOne other problem with spectinomycin isthat gonococci have the potential to resistthis drug also.“Just as they acquired the gene forpenicillinase, they could acquire a gene todestroy spectinomycin,” said LernerFor Lerner, a more serious problemarising from the new strains of gonorrhea is the possibility that the bacteriummeningococcus, a close relative of thegonococcus, may acquire the penicillinasegene Meningococci can cause meningitis, alife-threatening disease“That is a spectre we fear”, said Lerner,“because it is more serious thangonorrhea.”A doctor at Billings reports that the twonew penicillin-destroying strains ofgonococci have not yet hit the Universitycampus “I don’t think it is a current problem ccampus,” said Student Health Clinic chiiThomas Stockart Penicillin is currentlused at Billings to treat gonorrhea.Women who think they may haigonorrhea should visit the studeigynecology clinic or the local Chicago Boaiof Health station for a free examination artreatment. Men are advised to seek fr<care at Student Health at Billings of tlChicago Board of Health stationGAO investigation, two new billshelp renovate South Side homesBy Abbe FletmanAs a result of an investigation by theComptroller General of the United States,the Department of Housing and UrbanDevelopment (HUD) will reconsiderthousands of claims by South Side Chicagohomeowners.Two additional pieces of legislation, theHome Improvement Loan bill and theHousing Audit bill, now before the HouseCommittee on Banking. Financing, andUrban Affairs, will increase the availabilityof funds for home improvements andrequire the General Accounting Office,(GAO), the oversight arm of Congress, toevaluate HUD programs bi-annually.A report released in July by the Comp¬troller General’s office said that “Chicagoarea homeowners have been treated un¬fairly and inconsistently under theDepartment of Housing and UrbanDevelopment’s program to compensatehomeowners for major defects affecting theuse and livability of existing homes. ”Under the Federal Housing Assistanceprogram. HUD inspectors assess the homesof low income buyers for structural defectsbefore offering the owners federally-insuredpolicies on the homes in which the govern¬ment guarantees the mortgage company’spayment But according to Joyce Carter, anaide in First Congressional Districtrepresentative Ralph Metcalfe’s office. inspectors overlooked “serious structuraldefects” such as poor roofs that are“hazards to life and health.”After HUD reexamines the homes, ownerswill be compensated for their losses throughgovernment grants.The program was enacted in 1974 to assistolder, declining neighborhoods. HUDdefines such neighborhoods as those havingat least 50 percent of residential buildingsconstructed before 1940The Home Improvement Loan bill willprovide low- and middle-incomehomeowners with below-the-market-rateloans for necessary repairs such as plum¬bing, electrical, heating, and structuralwork The interest rate would be threepercent and loans would be up to $15,000.Metcalfe said that theinability ot homeowners to financenecessary major repairs and improvementsis largely due to a lack of funds for therepairs Metcalfe attributes this to rod liningpractices of some commercial lending in¬stitutions which refuse to make loans tominority and other low- and middle-incomeowners.Under the Housing Audit bill, the GAOwould determine whether state, regional,and local agencies are following communitydevelopment and housing plans; whetherthere is waste in management of federalStaff meetingThere will be a Maroon staff meeting Tuesday at 7 pm at the Maroonoffice, third floor of Ida Noyes. All new and returning staff members areurged to attendA reporter for the Chicago Tribune will talk about news writing, andthere will be an informal discussion of directions the Maroon should takethis year Refreshments will be served. housing programs; and whether federalhousing funds are used in conformity withcivil rights legislation. These bills, however, still at the cormittee stage of the legislative process, coutake months before they reach the Houjfloor.New monies will be available for the renovation of South Side homes. (Photo bvCarol Studenmund)DOC FILMS PRESENTS SILENT MOVIE/Mel BrooksFriday < let. 216:30. 8:30 and 10:30 pmCobb Mall 81.30 HIGH AND LOW/Akira KurosawaThursday <)<*t 278 pmGobb Hall 81.302 The Chicago Maroon t-riday, October 21,1977NewsBriefsjWriting tutorsfor CollegeFor the third year, writing tutors areavailable to help undergraduates with allaspects of writing papers. This program isfree for University of Chicago students.Tutors for freshmen are located in Gates-Blake #218 and can be reached at 75:’.-4728Tutors for upperclassmen are in Gates-Blake #215; the phone extension is 75:1-4845All tutors have mailboxes in Gates-Blake#M19-AThe office for freshmen tutors is staffedthe following days and hours;Tuesday 8: MO to 10: MO am and 2 to 4 pmWednesday 12 . MO to 2 pmThursday 8;MO to 10 am. and 11:45 amto 12:45pm. and2 to4pm.There is also a tutor available in Gates-Blake #M12 every Tuesday from 2:MO to 5 pm.and every Thursday from 2: MO to 5 pmUpperclassmen can find a tutor in Gates-Blake #215 even,' Wednesday from 9 to 11: MOam . £ nd by appointmentTh- tutors request that students bringthem something written to comment on.Students should check with their professorsto find out which tutor is assigned to theirsectionThe following is a list of tutors and theircourse assignments.Hum 104 Manet Heller & Judy PageHum 107 Robert McKay & Eric NyeHum 110 Carol LevineHum 115 - Robert McKayHum 120 Richard MeadeHum 12M 81 Anne HighamSoc Sci 111 - John Kennedy & EleanorGorman . # ,Soc Sci 121 Bonnie Birtwistle & JayAtkinson & Linda Bergmann & Susan ArtSoc Sci 141 Jay AtkinsonSoc Sci 151 Linda BergmannSoc Sci 161 Susan ArtSoc Sci 171 Bonnie BirtwistleUpperclass Tutors Brian Stonehill &Susan Griffin & Darrell RistJoel Seidman,71By Susan MalaskiewiczJoel Seidman, professor emeritus of in¬dustrial relations, died from an apparentheart attack in his office just before his 9am class on MondavPrince from 1public affairs D.J.R Bruckner, and dean ofthe College Jonathan Z. SmithSeveral hundred onlookers cheered as the28-year-old prince left his car and slowlymade his way up the steps of Ida NoyesSurrounded by photographers from thecity papers and TV stations, Charlesseemed relaxed and regal Though he wasunder heavy guard by secret service agents,and campus and city police, he waved andsmiled at his well wishers.Not all of the crowd gave Charles afriendly welcome. 15 placard-carrying pro¬testers brought together on 12-hours noticeby the Youth Socialist Alliance called forBritain to withdraw from Northern Ireland.But this was the only political overtone ofthe day, as Charles impressed students as apolite, humorous world-traveller above day-to-day politics.Even the famous cynicism of U of Cstudents seemed melted by Charles’ charm,and many appeared to modify theirthoughts about the monarchy• He seemed to have a purposeful nobilityabout him,” said one student after Charlesdefended his role in Britain at a questionand answer session at Burton Judson Court• Even though the monarchy has no directpower, it does fulfill a certain desire andmood some people have.” Charles told astudent at B JThat mood certainly seemed to rub off onthe students, for whom the entire affair wasdesigned from the start Wilson decided toinvite him with the students, particularlyundergraduates, in mind, and that was how'the event emergedCharles ate lunch with 2M0 un¬ Seidman, 71, was born in Baltimore andearned both his A B and Ph D from JohnHopkins University. During the 19M0s andearly 1940s, Seidman conducted researchfor several labor organizations, includingthe National Labor Relations Board. Heserved in the U S Army Air Force from 194Mto 1945.In 1947, Seidman joined the University ofChicago as an assistant professor in theCollege He became a professor of industrialrelations in the business school and thesocial sciences division in 1958 Seidmanretired from the University in 1971He was a visiting professor of industrialrelations at two universities in New Zealandfrom 1974 to 1975. and at the University ofHawaii from 1975 to 1976 Seidman returnedover a year ago to become a lecturer in thebusiness schoolSeidman, an authority on industrial-laborrelations, wrote numerous books and ar¬ticles on trade unions, collective bargaining,and labor law. In addition to his research, hew?as active in community affairs in HydePark, heading the Hyde Park CooperativeSociety for many years' Seidman was an enormously nice andpleasant person-not quite as tough andmean as your ordinary Chicago professor,”said Thomas Whisler, professor in thebusiness school and one of Seidman s firststudents.“In the past, it was so hard to findanybody who really knew the politics of thelabor movement the way he did. There wereonly half a dozen others in the country whohad that insight Seidman could get behindthe statistics to find out how the unionsworked and what they meant to theirmembers. He was a great interpreter of thelabor unions.” said Whisler.Seidman is survived by his wife Evelyn,his tw'o daughters, his sister Miriam, and hisgrandchildren.Several of Seidman’s books and articles,as well as information about his life andcareer, are on display in the lobby ofRosen wald HallBellow sentence10 daysSaul Bellow, Nobel laureate and Raymondand Martha Hilpert Gruner distinguishedservice professor on the Committee onSocial Thought, was sentenced to 10 days injail Tuesday for failing to pay $11,150 inalimony payments to his third wife, SusanGlassnian BellowBellow was ordered jailed by CircuitCourt Judge Mary Ann McMorrowAlthough Bellow did not appear in court, hewas given five days to file an appeal bond todergraduates chosen randomly by theNational Opinion Research Center Duringthe lunch the Prince seemed curious as hechatted with the Wilsons, and thoughstudents were advised on such protocolmatters as not throwing wine glasses downafter toasting or asking Charles for hisautograph, the Prince himself forgot part ofthe meal’s planned schedule, a toast toPresident CarterAfter a meal of roast tenderloin, lake troutand a choice of two wines, the Prince andWilson delivered short speeches Wilsoncalled the students the University'sleading citizens,” and Charles commentedin the intelligence and manner of thestudents, suggesting that his mother didn’tcome to the University during her visit toChicago last year because she would havebeen co-opeted into debating with studentsThe Prince, however, was co-opted, andafter his lunch he wras driven across theMidw ay to B 1 , where he led a discussion onKing George III, a favorite ancestor of hisStudents who had signed up for the eventquestioned the Prince about the 18th Cen¬tury king remembered on this side of the\tlantic for his inglorious contributions toAnglo-American relations and hisquestionable mental stateCharles, however, said we should havesympathy for King George and felt he wasmisunderstood as a personAdam Pool, one of the students who talkedwith Charles about the monarchy, said he‘felt nervous at first ”Pool asked the Prince why. if King Georgewas not insane, as Charles contends, did themonarch usurp the power of Parlaiment andlose America.“He answered somewhat indirectly,” said avoid jailing for failing to pay $2,500 amonth If Bellow agrees to pay to the backalimony, the jail sentence will be droppedBellow’s wife obtained the divorce in 1968on grounds of desertion and mental crueltyA $150,000 property settlement was agreedupon and Susan Bellow’ was given custody oftheir son, Daniel.Later, a Circuit Court Judge found thatBellow, whose books have appearedrepeatedly on the best-seller list, hadmisrepresented his true wealth As a result,child support payments were increased andBellow was ordered to pay the temporaryalimonyBellow’s 1976 income totalled $461,MOM.This includes literary commissions, hisUniversity of Chicago salary, his 1976 Nobelprize, and $160,000 for his book, “Hum¬boldt’s Gift ”The trial to determine whether to makethe alimony payments permanent will beginNovember 15Bellow is on leave this year from theUniversityPoli sci takes sixAPSA awardsThe political science department did quitewell at the annual meeting of the AmericanPolitical Science Association, held Sep¬tember M in Washington D C as professorsNorman Nie and Paul Peterson, and formergraduate students John Petrocik, KristiAndersen, Mary Pollingue and Mary Cor¬nelia Porter took six out of a total of 11awards presented at the meetingNie, with co-authors Petrocik, currentlyassistant professor of political science atUCLA, and Sidney Verba of Harvard,received the Woodrow Wilson Award for“the best book published last year ingovernment, politics, or international af¬fairs.” Their work was The ChangingAmerican Voter.”Peterson was presented the GladysKammerer Award for the best book in thefield of U S national policy” for SchoolPolitics Chicago Style.”Andersen and Pollingue. who took theirdegrees at the University in the past year,won two of seven dissertation awardsAndersen, now on the faculty at Ohio State,was recognized for the best dissertation inthe field of American Politics in 1976 Herwork was drawTi from the same study thatproduced “The Changing American Voter”and appears as a chapter in that bookThe dissertation written by Pollingue.formerly one of Joseph Cropsev’s students,now at Northern Illinois University, wasnamed the best dissertation in politicalphilosophy for the yearThe sixth prize went to Porter, now at Barat, for the best paper presented at tne1976 APSA meeting.Susanne Rudolph, Chairman of thepolitical science department, said of theChicago sweep, “It’s only to be expected.”Rudolph said it was particularly significantthat as the University’s small <24 people)department took a majority of the nationalAPSA recognitionShe also noted that in a department inwhich female enrollment approaches M0percent only in good years, three alumnaewere among those honored Rudolph at¬tributed the good showing to, “Providence,and the kind of care we like to give ourgraduate students ”State RepMann retiresState Rep. Robert E. Mann, a Hyde ParkDemocrat and dean of the liberal bloc in theGenera) Assembly, announced Thursdaythat he will step down after his current termexpires next yearMann, 48. told a hastily called meeting ofhis supporters that he was retiring after 16years in the legislature “in order to spendmore time with my family .”First elected as a regular Democrat,Mann, a lawyer, quickly broke with theDaley organization and rose to the forefrontof the fight for political reform, lakefrontconservation, increased benefits for publicaid recipients, and the abolition of capitalpunishment.Independent Democrats in the district,which includes portions of fourpredominantly black wards south of HydePark, said a search committee will beformed within days to choose a candidate toreplace Mann on the March primary ballotThe organization Democrats, who un¬successfully attempted to purge Mann in1972, are expected to mount a strongchallenge for the vacated seatFaculty members:Don’t forget to mailyour presidentialballots toThe Maroons ,Pool “He said George respected the powerof Parlaiment and tried to influence them asmuch as possible. I think he handled himselfquite well.”The Prince also fielded questions aboutIreland. Rhodesia, and the cost of runningthe monarchy, a question that made him alittle nervous.” said Pool Charles com¬pared Ireland and Rhodesia by saying thatthe struggles were so difficult that it wouldbe hard to solve them But basically, therewere no surprises or policy statements“The Prince sees himself above thepolitical sphere,” said one secret serviceagentThough not a politician. Charlesrepresents a public figure is accompaniedby the press wherever he goes Therk:ognition the University will receive fromthe visit is seen as important by ad¬ministrators. though the event generallycarried a low-kev toneThe University spent about $10,000 ondecorations, food, and work-time, but ifofficials had wanted to. the event couldeasily have cost twice thatBruckner's office spent $60 a piece for M6ostrich plumes that were surmounted on 12crowns bearing the Prince's motto.: IchDien The undergraduate lunch cost about$M500 and a lunch for reporters cost about$moo Overtime and other labor costs havenot been computed yet. but probably costthe University over $5000Administrators hope the price tag forCharles’ visit will pay off in media exposureand the probability that the Prince will tellpeople about the University Each time hetalks about American education, he willmention the University of Chicago becauseit is the only American university he has seenMost people seemed impressed with thePrince's humor and relaxed manner. Theycrow ded around him w hen he stopped to talkon his walk through campus He pausedevery few steps to field questions and askstudents what they were studyingWhen he inquired what one woman did.she answered. “I teach English ”“No, only a version of English.” thePrince respondedWith Bruckner at his side. Prince Charlesw alked to Bond Chapel and spent a couple ofminutes inside From there he went to aprivate tea with Wilson and JosephKitagawa, dean of the Divinity SchoolAfter the tea the Prince climbed into hislimousine and left for the Museum ofScience and IndustryHe w as, to all who saw or talked to him. afriendly and human figure, a “real personwho knows himself and his role," asBruckner said Hardly the character onewould expect from the next King ofEnglandCenter from 1[hopes that after these fellows leave Chicago,!they will continue to conduct similiarl{research at their universitiest The Center was established. Stigler said,;[to formalize and institutionalize work that!has been flourishing at the University “The Center was • long overdue.” Peltz-jman said I don’t think any group in the;country is as good as what we have here "Chicago Maroon Friday, October 21, 7977 3EditorialComing outWhat does it take to get the University’s ad¬ministrators out of their fifth-floor hideaway inthe ad building and onto the quads with the restof us? If the events of the last two weeks are anyindication, it appears that football games androyal visits are what it takes.After last weekend’s successful Homecomingthat saw President Wilson don his raincoat towave a Maroon pom-pom at Stagg Field, thefestivities continued with a gala reception givento the Prince of Wales. Flanked by a guard of theUniversities most reclusive administrator’s -including community affairs vice-presidentJonathan Kleinbard and the anglophilic D.J.R.Bruckner — the Prince got the red carpettreatment.Charles’ lunch with students gave us a chanceto put our best foot forward Bringing togetherthe finest positivistic traditions with red, white,and blue democracy, the Prince’s students hostswere selected randomly by the National OpinionResearch Center’s computerAs a result, the University made it into thenews; students got a glimpse of the continent’smost charming heir, and ail of us had our spiritsraised by the excitement of the day.Yesterday, things returned to normal Wilsonand his men went back to their carpeted offices.The tables in the Cloister Club were folded upand put in storage. Students walked to Regen-stein to; resume their studies. Certainly Wed¬nesday’s pomp was a fine thing for us all, - itdidn’t cost too much, it was a lot of fun, and itgave the university some needed recognition.But in reflecting on the day’s event, the peoplewho set it up seem somewhat out of character.When Wilson introduced the 2:>0 un¬dergraduates lunching with him to the Prince as“the University’s leading citizens,” his phraserang metallically in the ears of students whomust approach Wilson through hispublic relations whiz Bruckner, and who ispractically unseen by the pressCertainly the expense of the event is well worthit when measured in press exposure andproprietous overtones, but for a group of guar¬ded men who rarely venture into the public eye,it represented an exercise in hypocrisy.Editor: Jon MeyersohnNews Editor: AbbeFletmanFeatures Editor: Karen HellerSenior Editor: Peter CohnSports Editor: R W RohdeFlioto Editors: Gwendolen Cates, Philip GrewGraphics: Chris PersansBusiness 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 606.57 Thetelephone number is 75:5-3268.4 The Chicago Maroon Friday, October 21,1977 Letters to the EditorNow a princessTo the Editor:I was not, alas, invited as one ofthe select few who will enjoy a mealin the company of Prince CharlesThis is not such a great loss, though,because England is, after all, only a3rd rate power. In view of thisoversight, however. I would like toask that in the event PrincessCaroline is invited to the U. of C., Ibe first in line to have dinner withher, preferably at my place. Hercountry’s economy seems relativelymore secure and she is, beyond adoubt, the most beautiful woman inour generation Once she got a tasteof U. of C. wit and charm she wouldquickly realize that her Parisian isan insurance salesman and is, at :’>5,many years past his primeMark HerskovitzOxnard backlash ITo the Editor :I find it necessary to reprimandThe Maroon for the irresponsiblejournalism displayed in its front¬page articles of October 14, 1977 onDr. Charles Oxnard These articleswere intended to cast doubt on DrOxnard’s candor and integrity. Evenwith the most solid evidence, suchstatements should be scrupulouslyedited and should be confined to theeditorial page. Under the cir¬cumstances, where the truth of thestatements was not satisfactorilydemonstrated, they were certainlyunworthy of inclusion in an allegedlyfactual news story appearing as thefeatured article of the front page Ibelieve The Maroon owes anapology, not only to Dr Oxnard, butto its readers as well for this lapse inproper journalistic style.Sabrina McCarthyIITo the Editor:Your dreadful piece on CharlesOxnard in the October 14th Maroontroubled me. It is true that heresigned the deanship of the Collegeand will be going to USC next yearIt is also true that for more than adecade he has been a popularteacher and friend to many of ushere He will be missed, but peopledo move on as opportunities appearand as circumstances change.What concerns me is your need todrape this story with slurring in¬nuendoes, an odious comparison,and a generally negative tone both inthe article and the inset Suchmorbid imagining published in thecampus newspaper dismays anddemoralizes more than it informs itsreadersIt is essential to the life of theUniversity that from time to timeprominent scholars give up some oftheir teaching and research time toassist in administrative tasks In myopinion your treatment of one suchscholar who has made a majoradministrative contribution to thisUniversity puts this close tie bet¬ween scholarship and ad-<-ministration at risk.lari E. Dyrud, M DProfessor and associate chairmanDepartment of PsychiatryElitist attitudeTo the Editor:We, the undersigned, would like toexpress our disagreement with thecontent and the tenor of The Marooneditorial of Friday, October 7,1977Substantively, we deny TheMaroon’s bland allegation that "noone here would actively support aquota system.” If this fatuousgeneralization only applies to TheMaroon staff or the grandiose editorial "we”, the statement isgratuitously ambiguous; if it ap¬pertains to the University com¬munity at large, it is seriouslymistaken A significant number ofstudents support quotas as anecessary means <and measure) ofachieving equitable racial andsexual representation.Hitherto, minority programs andtoken gestures notwithstanding, theUniversity has failed to achieve andsustain a reasonable level ofminority enrollment (Even TheMaroon calls this failure "em¬barrassing,” though the choice ofthe word implies more concernabout the appearance ofdiscrimination than the reality ofinequity ) There is no particularreason to expect any appreciableimprovement without a moreserious effort than any previousLike the Carter administration,The Maroon favors, "minoritysensitive action,” but is opposed toquotas What does this mean inpractice" Minority sensitive actionwon’t oblige the University to doanything substantial in order toraise the enrollment of minoritiesand women. Students would have nolegal means to enforce their ac¬ceptance. At best, the Universitywould make only a token gesture; atworst, the enrollment of minoritiesand women would continue todecline Quotas would at leastguarantee that a certain percentageof students would be minoritystudents or women. It forcesthe University to work out effectiveplans to raise minority enrollmentFurther, the students would havelegal recourse to enforce theirdemocratic right to a qualityeducation The counterposingargument of reverse discriminationis a specious rationalization foracquired privilegeWe appreciate The Maroon’ssupport for increasing financial aidfor minorities, but we have todissent from its speciousqualifications and patronizing toneThe tenor of the article implies thatminorities are to be viewed as in¬teresting exhibits in a culturalmenagerie for the edification oftheir presumed superiors Even theword "disheartening” displays akind of stilted, ritual concern, thenoblesse oblige of a self-designatedelitistFinally, the editorial ends with achildish prophecy of an alreadyestablished fact that minorityenrollment has declined andsuggests an "unconditional” supportof any "extreme” except the onemost reasonable measure needed;quotas, the setting of equitable andmeasurable minimal standards foraffirminative action If The Maroonis serious in its desire to attractminority students, it must come toterms with the elitist attitude thatpervades its editorial and the wholeUniversity communityAnne Okijlso Seth RosenHugh Wilson Kathi ThomasRobert Saute Lauren FurstWerner Wothke Sheila BradyRoger Horowitz Bill CartmillClay Martin Jeffrey GouldTrar-v Scott Michelle FoxBob Van Meter ^ris Peslei .oH/iiictoHt Woltcane Weil/.The big plantationTo the Editor:I think some attention should bepaid to the article concerning OBS inthis Tuesday’s Maroon in par¬ticular, the following statement:"According to Mervin,black students, apparentlymistaken for community residents, are occasionallystopped by security officersand asked to produce theirstudent identification.”I have seen such incidents with myown eves However, as I am un¬mistakably white, it follows that Iam a U. C. student and not a"member of the community,” so Ishall never be forced to submit tosuch treatment myselfThe University avows nodiscriminatory policies, but if aperson can be stopped and in¬terrogated merely on the basis of the *color of their skin, is this notblatently racist’> Is it not a sadcommentary that this University sofears., "community residents’’(apparently so easily distiguishedby their skin tones) that they arebarred from campus.' No wondersuch fear exists in Hyde Park theuniversity does nothing for thecommunity, but rather seeks to wallitself off with blocks of demolished"demilitarized zones” and a pistol-toting security force Is this not apolicy of Aparthied*'The big question is how long arethe rich scions of corporations goingto put up with this WTiy doesn’tsomebody speak out " Or is everyonejust too satisfied with life here on thebig plantation, where they are neverfar from a white security phoneThomas M. C. FosterWhistlin’ Rip OffTo the Editor:Thank God someone finally isblowing the whistle on Rip-Off AutoRepair I had approximately thesame experience as Mr Romeowhen I took a VW in to have aheadlight unit replaced The price Iwas quoted didn’t come near theprice I finally paid, and the worktook forever The people at Rip-Offare the most uncooperative I haveever come across, and the quality oftheir work sucks I can recommendtwo places, though, which arereasonable and reliable: BlakeDavis at the Resource Center, andRev’s on the north sideWilliam GrimesSwift kickTo the Editor:In the October 11th issue of TheMaroon, in an article on theSeminary Co-operative Bookstore,reporter Lynn Saltzman twice notesthat the location of the SeminaryBookstore is in "the basement of theDivinity School.” The SeminaryBookstore is in fact in the basementof the Chicago Theological Seminary(also known as CTS) What is in factin the basement of the DivinitySchool (Swift Hall) is the "SwiftKick”, otherwise known as theDivinity School CoffeeshopAs a member of the SeminaryBookstore, and as a frequent user ofthe Divinity School coffeeshop, I feelit would be best if your readers wereaware of the fact that they will notfind a bookstore in the basement ofthe Divinity School, nor will theyfind pastries and coffee in thebasement of CTS The DivinitySchool is located in the center of themain quadrangle on Campus, andCTS is located at the corner of 58thand UniversitySusan RossPresident,Divinity School Association<? > ",<? I iIV < t jO lOO-lf.M l ) "1 2 ?r4rI.;i Driving Gloves/ wish m y prist ilad beetron a shower of hot spark s.from aand t though! i made the probableimprobableBut that iv£»s a fancya short lived swept pea climbing up my back fence,like a girls summer organdy dross. . "Wftttedworn only once or twic e.texcerpt Copyright 1973by Diane Wakrtski) Photos by Jeanne DufortBy Margaret OlinThe twenty paintings by Richard Shift, on view in the Bergmangallery until Sunday, might be considered examples of conceptualart. What is unusual about this is that conceptual artists rarelymake paintings. Conceptual art is based on the assumption thatthe visual arts might as well be invisible, for the "art" is in themind rather than the object, and it is the mind that the art musttry to engage. (continued on p. 7)Diane Wakotvski (p.ll)The Chicago Maroon Friday, October 21, 1977 5******#***##*******#**** GOLD CITY INNgiven * * * *by the MaroonNew Hours: Open DoilyFrom 11:30 a.m.to 9410 pm.A Gold Mine Of Good Food"Student Discount:10% for table service5% for take homeHyde Park's Best Cantonese Food5228 Harper 493-2559[mmm Hryr Col)Eat more for less.(Try our convenient take-out orders.^MCATGRE PREPARE FOR:DAT • LSAT • GMATOCAT • VAT • SATNMB Ml. Ill * ECFMG * FLEX - VQENAT’L DENTAL BOARDS • NURSING BOARDSFlexible Programs & HoursThere IS a difference!!!mpunfOUCATIOWAl CENTERTEST preparationSPECIAtlSTJ SINCE 193RFcr Information Please Call2050 W DevonChicago, III. 60645(312) 764 5151SPRING, SUMMER, WINTER COMPACTSMOST CLASSES START EIGHT WEEKSPRIOR TC THE EXAMSTARTING SOON:LSAT-SAT-GREOTHER CENTERS CALL TOLL FREE: 800 223 1782Centers in Maior US Cities Toronto. Puerto Pico and Lugano. Switzerland ALLTOGETHERAt One LocationTO SAVE YOU MORE■T W ACER . CHEVROLET V01KSWACIN .SPECIAL DISCOUNT PRICESFor ALL STUDENTSAND FACULTY MEMBERSJust present your University ofChicogo Identificotion Cord.As Students or Faculty Members ofthe University of Chicogo you are enhtled to soeciol money savingsDiscounts ■ jn /oik-.v/c-gen & ChevroletPorts, accessories and any new orused Volkswagen or Chevrolet youbuy from Volkswagen South Shore orMerit Chevrolet Inc.SALES l SERVICEALL AT ONE MEAT LOCATIONr©VOLKSWAGENSOUTH SHORE7234 Stony IslandPIimm: AI4-0400Opon Dally 9-9 P.M. / Sat. 9-3 P M.Part* Op.n Saturday too till 2 NoonOPENS THIS WEEK ATWatertower Theatres20fh Cf NTUfiY FOX PresentsA RICHARD ROIH Presentalion ol A FRED ZINNEMANN FilmVANESSA REDGRAVEJULIAalsostarringDirected by Produced by Screenplay by asJohannBased upon the story byFRED ZINNEMANN RICHARD ROTE! ALVIN SARGENT LILLIAN HELLMANPG[PARENTAL GUIDANCE SUGGESTED ^'soot »UTE«l*l MA* WOT ftf SUIT ABLE FOB CWLDAtN Music byGEORGES DELERUE PRINTS BY DetUXE©1977 20th Century-Fox6 The Chicago Maroon Friday, October 21, 1977» W , (■*(*'• -<V* • V A rockTempestBy Eden ClorfeneHow can you help but be skeptical about a ballet that isadvertised to be a rock adaptation of Shakespeare's "TheTempest," dedicated to the memory of Elvis Presley?That's James Clouser's "Caliban," the latest rabbit theChicago Ballet has pulled out of its hat to open its fourthseason at its new locale, the garish Medinah Temple.This is not the first time someone has set Shakespeare todance I know of Balanchine's and Ashton's productions of"A Midsummer Night's Dream," and John Cranko'sproduction of "Taming of the Shrew." But, in making themonster Caliban the central figure, this is the first time achoreographer has done a number on Shakespeare, and arock number at that!With the costumes that Zobelea De Jong seems to haveretrieved pell mell from her grandmother's attic, and thehuge, gymnasium like stage ^one big enough to accomodatethe Moscow Circus, which performed there over a decadeago), "Caliban" at first looks like the outrageous concoction one would expect. The original score by the band,St. Elmo's Fire, begins the production with a very loudchord, and bang-we're gracelessly thrust onto what seemsmore like J. M. Barrie's Never Never Land then Shakespeare's magical isle.Immediately, all 24 members of the Chicago Ballet appear on stage and dance wildly, in what Clouser's programnotes call "the dances of today." Gradually the charactersof the drama emerge, and within the chaos, we are shownthe prologue of the play.From beginning to end, the whole thing is hilariouslyabsurd and is more a burlesque caper than a ballet.Prospero, dressed in a smart khaki uniform, a scalp cap tomake him bald, and holding a whip, looks more like a liontamer than a king. Caliban and Ariel, the two charactersfor whom fantastic costuming would be acceptable, wearonly scanty loin cloths. Trinculo and Stephano, the cohortsof Caliban from the marooned ship of Prospero's brother,Alonso, are guised as a court jester and a butle-, respectively. The parade also has room for three goddesses andtheir slaves who dance for the wedding ceremony ofMiranda and Ferdinand in Act III- Ceres looks like Tar'zan's Jane, and one of the slaves is encumbered with agreen glittery sphinx headdress. To top it all, the chorus,vested in different attire throughout, appear in the grandfinale in black and white vaudeville tuxedo leotards, tophats and all.Prospero, dressed in a smart khakiuniform, a scalp cap to make him bald,and holding a whip, looks more like alion tamer than a king. Caliban andAriel, the two characters for whomfantastic costuming would be acceptable, wear only scanty loin cloths.Clouser ladens his choreography with a similar sort ofspectacle. His vocabulary goes little beyond impressiveturns, stark poses, and elementary pointe work. Theprogram notes are indispensible, as such limitedchoreography reveals practically nothing of the story orcharacters' personalities. Even the love duet betweenMiranda and Ferdinand is surprisingly tame; the onlyindicator of their relationship is the fact that they're dancing together.While one might wonder why Clouser didn't attempt tomake kinetic poetry out of Shakespeare's poetry, or why herobbed the play of its integrity in exchange foe a circusyspoof, Clouser oddly enough maintains his own integrity bykeeping his adaptation a comedy throughout. "Caliban" issurprisingly bereft of pretension and noble aspirations. It'sas if he said to his dancers, okay kids, this whole thing isgood clean fun and if we're going to succeed we're going tohave to pull out all the stops. And what saves the day wasthat the ensemble came through and pulled it off.And damn if I don't eat my words, the company looksgood, better than they ever have. They have reached acertain level of technical competence that just wasn't therein their previous seasons. The three male leads, GennadiVostrikov (Caliban), James Sutton LAriel), and RichardCollins (Prospero) possess real staqe presence and dancingability - it is uncommon to see a young company with suchstrong male dancers. Brian Kelly delivers a fine comicperformance as the iester TrinculoThe women, were of more varying abilities, led by NancyOnizuka, cast as Miranda. A lovely lyrical dancer, herperformance nevertheless lacked the sureness and confidence that her partner Ferdinand, Michael Job, had.And if you can forget the initial fanfare, St. Elmo's Fire isa complement of fine versatile musicians. The capabilitiesof its five members included flute, voice, percussion, bassand guitar."Caliban" was all in all an appropriate season opener.Let's hope that the rest of the season, which portends thedifficult "Giselle," "La Fille Mai Gardee" will be worthierof the abilities that "Caliban" made clear the dancers have.< ,V ? 4 j) s ■>.$.*mMidsummer Night’s Dreamalso Oct. 31 8pm Tickets at Mandel Hall Box OfficeThe Chicago Maroon Friday, October 71 1977 7Hello 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 Place955-91259am-4pmequal opportunity employer m/f WE HAVE CALENDARSIN WHICH YOU WILL FIND THE FIFTY-TWOSATURD AYS ON W HICH W E ARE NOW OPEN,11:00- LOOIF YOU DON’T LIKE SATURDAYS,COME IN SOME OTHER DAY AND BUY SOME OFH< )W ARD NEMERl)V*S P< IETRY.Seminary Co-operative Bookstore, Inc5757 S. University Ave.Hours: Won.-Fri.: ‘EHO-1:00, Sal.: 11:00-4:00(continued from p. 5)Conceptual artistsencourage their viewers (or thinkers) toquestion the capacities of art. This leads toart whose essence is often in the telling, or inthe case of temporary art, in after the factdocumentation.The Shift paintings, on the other hand,attempt to raise questions about art throughthe associations of their forms and brightcolors alone. Each painting is in reality twopaintings, for each canvas is divided moreor less down the middle into two contrastingareas painted in different styles. One style isgeometric abstraction, generally apyramid, triangle, or box, painted in flatcolors. This side is very finished and ismade up of clear, simplified, and controlledforms. The other side is full of drips, marks,and collage elements such as newspapers orlabels, a style which makes reference eitherto abstract expressionism or to some easilyrecognizable illusionistic style based ormaking the painting process visible. Each ofthese two categories has its traditionalintellectual content. In the twentieth century, geometrical abstraction is conventionally associated with hatred and fearof organic form. It attempts to depict anideal, rarified existence apart from ournormal realm of flux and change. Drips andsplashes, on the other hand (or the otherside, in the case of these paintings),traditionally refer to processes: either tothe process through which an artist tries tolive immediately and spontaneously, or tothe ecstatic process of artistic expression.Splotches, scraps of paper, and awkwardgestures indicate a "sincere" groping forthe means of expression.The formal challenge Shiff is tackling is tohold these twc contrasting styles together.Although he does not always succeed, whenhe does, (which is often), his canvasses holdtogether both formally and conceptually,yet the tension between their two styles isalways palpabie.Triangle #12 is a case in point. The left sideis a sharply delineated triangle, and theright side is a collage of paper, brushstrokes, pencil marks, and daubs. Thenarrow shape of the painting encourages the Paintin Richard Shiff viewer to look from side to side to makecomparisons; the small size of it encouragesclose study. The warm colored collage sideseems to complete the cool geometric side.The same formal principle organizes bothsides of the canvas in each side a simpleform emerges from and threatens to fadeback into a background very close to it incolor. The canvas holds together conceptually as well, the collage side containsmessy pencil sketches for geometric abstract paintings like the one on the otherside of the canvas. The painting thus turnsout to depict its process of becoming as wellas its state of being. As a whole it raises thepossibility that the concepts behindgeometric abstraction and abstract expressionsim are complementary and interdependent. It implies that "process art"depends on the existence of some absolute,purified state, while this absolute state isunattainable without sketchy, complicatedplans.Other canvases raise related problems.Some, such as Black Box (Leonardo),betray the spontaneity in geometrical art,and show how geometrical patterns areused in tentative, groping ways. Others,such as Gray Box (woman with box), playon the pre planned quality of supposedlyspontaneous styles the dotted lines whichslice up the lady's side of the painting makeit seem constructed in accordance withsome mysterious geometric plan. There arealso a few paintings which are openlyparodiesof other paintings in the show.This brings us to the question of why somany paintings were included. If there hadonly been ten paintings, each wouldprobably have been more striking. Theartist, however, was apparently moreconcerned that the paintings be understoodHe was determined to include enoughvariations and interrelationships for theviewer to be able to understand the paintings and enjoy their rather whimsicallyposed questions about art. That thesequestions are posed within painting and inconjunction with a concern for solvingformal problems and creating beautifulcanvases, and not by trying to do away withall that, is part of the paradoxical charm ofthe show.HUNTING MUSIC performed by the UC Horn QuartetOctober 21,8 pm Bond ChapelAdmission free, voluntary donations to the Brass Society..1,\ A TTENTION GRADUA TE STUDENTSREADING FRENCH READING GERMANPreparatory Courses forThe Foreign Language Reading ExaminationGraduate students who wish to prepare for the Foreign Language Reading Exams scheduledin Spring 1978 can now register for a course especially designed to meet their needThe University Extension Division, in cooperation with the Departments of RomanceLanguages and Literatures and Germanic Languages and Literatures, is offering on campustwo NON-CREDIT courses, each equivalent to a two-quarter sequence, spanning a 15-weekperiod:FH 106 Reading French for Gradute StudentsM-Th 8:30-9:30 AM, beginning Jan. 3, endingApril 20*; meets in Cobb 104GH 106 Reading German for Graduate StudentsM-Th 8:30-9:30 AM, beginning Jan. 29, endingApr. 27*; meets in Cobb 101The fee is $150 for the 15 week course. There will be a one-week breakduring interim (week of March 20).N.B. University of Chicago student aid funds cannot be used for non-credit courses.Courses must have a minimum enrollment of 15 students. Preregistrationis, therefore, essential. Absolutely no auditors. If you wish to register,please fill out the coupon and complete your registration as soon aspossible at:CCE 1307 E. 60th St. Room 121 between 9 AM and 5 PM, Monday-Friday.753-3137Deadline for registration: December 2. 1977.* Reading examinations wili be given by fhe Test Administration on Monday April 24(French) and Monday May 1 (German). Courses have been scheduled to least conflictwith regular credit classes, and to end immediately prior to the reading exam for optimalresults For further information concerning reading exams, consult the Spring QuarterTime Schedule or call Test Administration, RC 201.753-3283.NameLocal Address -Zip.Permanent Address Local PhonePhoneI wish to register for: FH 106 GH 106Do you expect to take the reading exam in Spring 1978?Fee $ Processed by Date _LEADERSHP$Why wait years? A fewgood men and women canenter a world ofresponsibility and authorityalmost immediately aftergraduation . . . through theMarine Corps OfficerCandidates Class. FromOCC, men and women movequickly into a wide varietyof interesting, rewarding,and challenging fields,including aviation.learn how to lead, learnhow to lead the best—UnitedStates Marines. See yourMarine representative.The Marines are looking fora few good men.MarinesOfficer Selection536 S. Clark St,Chicago, II 60605AC 312 553-6692/3MrMsAddressCity —StateSchoolClass of--Phone P/t/use mei/laid mlOi matiOnUu Obligation ol courseZip..Birth Date STUDENT/FACULTY DISCOUNTS UP TO $4.50r-"ALL CHICAGO LOVES 'PIPPIN'!".MOST EXCITING MUSICALOF THE 70 sA5 YEARS ON BROADWAY • WINNER 5 TONY AWARDSUseThis SfllD E NTDISCOUNT COUPON - Save up~to $4.5 (T ]Good For TUES., WED.&THURS. EVES AT 8 PM; WED&SAT. MA T. 2 PMI Reg. Price, ORCH. $16.00 (Eve)ORCH. $15.00 (Mat).MEZZ. $13.50 (Eve)MEZZ. $12.00 (Mat)' 2nd BAL. $ 9.00 (Eve)1 2nd BAL. $ 8.00 (Mat) Disc. Price$12.00$11 00$10.00$ 9.00$ 7.00$ 6.00 Present this coupon with your I.D. at ,box office. Tickets may be purchasedin advance, or 30 minutes prior to 'curtain time. For groups, special Iadditional discount, phone 977-1705. I| SHUBERTTHEATRE 22 West Monroe^Clucago,j6060.)U‘“LOOKING FOR MR. GOODBAR’ ISONE OF THE STRONGEST MOTIONPICTURES EVER MADE—AND ONEOF THE BEST! Richard Brooks should gettwo Oscar nominations, one for his screenplay,one for directing. And Diane Keaton should getthe Oscar to take home as best actress of theyear in this UNFORGETTABLE, HIGH-IMPACT FTLM\”-LuSmith,New York Daily News1^'miujooiibarA FRtOOU HUDS PSOOUCTION [LOOKING FOR MR GOODBAR ^DIANE KEATON’TUESDAY WELD WILLIAM ATHERTONRICHARD KILEY RICHARD GERE ***** FREDDIE FIELDS* JUDITH ROSSNER •»- M^* RICHARD BROOKSR RESTRICTED cwp^tvx i w atxf M^rywher? i'om Books • • • • »»***•>’*«'*k.-n<J!i*k ffoyrr i*a<Utii* Oh CoLm©* w 'jpr> far ft* ftfse-.ecNOW SHOWINGAt These Selected TheatresESQUIRE, OLD ORCHARD, GOLF MILL,Chicago Skokie NilesNORRIDGE, WOODFIELD, YORKTOWN,Norridge Schaumburg LombardORLAND SQUARE, EVERGREEN.Orland Park Evergreen ParkRIVER OAKS, RIDGE PLAZA,Calumet City Griffith. Ind.yjv. M'trooi -rio -v, G-fobe* 21, W7Talking Heads at the Quiet KnightBy Anne GluskerA stark name ringing with nuances; starkclothes, colors well defined; words spat outprecisely; minimalist melodies and flat,intriguing lyrics overlaid with liltingrhythms. This is Talking Heads Usually.Last Tuesday at the Quiet Knight, however,thts was not the case. The lines blurred, thewonderful starkness and precisiondissolved. But, first, some history.Talking Heads is a New York baseo "newwave" band which got its first contract bybeing one of the first 'and best) bands on theCBGB circuit. Before the term "new wave"was coined, their music was called punk,iike everything being played in the Bowery.This din't quite fit and the band's music wassoon dubbed "art rock." The title is appropriate as three members of the band(David Byrne, Chris Frantz, MartinaWeymouth) attended the Rhode IslandSchool of Design. The Heads' arty pretensions are apparent by a large chunk ofFrench in one song and their lyrics arecopyrighted under the name "Bleu DisqueMusic". (The New York underground seems♦c have a great passion for the FrenchRimbaud is one of Patti Smith's idols andTom Verlaine stole his name from the poetPaul Verlaine.) The original three werejoined early this year by Jerry Harrison, anex Modern Lover and, rumor has it, aHarvard man. They quickly became one ofthe pre eminent bands on the circuit, alongwith Television, the Ramones, and RichardHeil and the Voidoids. When people alongthe Bowery began placing bets on whichbands would first obtain a record contract,many put their money on Talking Heads.Although a single came out in early summer, their LP, Talking Heads: 77, wasn'treleased until a few weeks ago. They werebeaten to the studio by Television as wellas the lesser likes of Mink de Ville. TheRamones already have two albums out, plusa singie which made it into the Top 100Now the album's out, adorned with a hurtyour eyes bright red cover. It's good, though somewhat disappointing they can dobetter. It has a dreadful moment (a dirgecalled "Tentative Decisions" "Girls askcan I define decision?/Boys ask can Idescribe their function?") and a superlativeone, "Psycho Killer". Their chance to dobetter came at the Quiet Knight, where theywere booked for four shows. They weren'tbetter at the show ! saw (they didn't evenplay "Psycho Killer"). They played anextremelv short set dess than an hour), andfor $7.00 that's no great shakes. The roomwas nowhere near sold out, but thosepresent displayed much, though perhapsmisdirected, enthusiasm. Much to mysurprise, many memoers ot me audiencewore safety pins, spray painted sleevelessjean jackets and ultra short hair (both menand women). Perhaps Chicago punkers areso starved for anarchy they'll look for itanywhere even in Talking Heads' brand ofarty minimalism.The Heads usually stride onto the stageand immediately begin to play. David Byrnesays in his very clear way, "The name ofthis band is Talking Heads." They playThat's all they do Most songs are preceededby a precisely articulated announcementfrom Byrne "The name of this song is..."Frantz slides behind, then starts poundingat his drums. Byrne, in black pants and alight colored shirt, picks up his amplifiedacoustic guitar. Weymouth, with herseverely bowicut blond hair, slides the strapof her bass over her head. Harrison, formfitting red T shirt hugging his chest, standspoised over the keyboards. David intoneswhat the name of this band is, and they slam into the first song No between song patter,no dancing. No theatrics unless you'd callDavid's frantic, spastic strumming of hisguitar and the way his eyes pop out at thepeak of certain songs theatrics. DavidByrne is the talking head. He sings leadvocals (and there are very few back upvocals to be sung), plays guitar, writespractically all the songs, introduces bothband and songs. He's the visual center ofattention. Although Jerry and Tina arepleasing to the eye, they focus on their instruments with quiet, unflamboyant intensity and Chris is all but buried backbehind his drums. David's body twitches,his neck swivels, he spits words into themicrophone and all eyes are on him as hedoes so.The other night the band's clearly definedminimalism was torn and frayed around theedges. They wandered onto the stageaimlessly, seemingly with no purpose.Harrison's shirt was stretched out,Weymouth's hair cut was shaggy, Byrne'sshirt collars looked tired. Lyrics were difficult to decipher (unusual for this band).Byrne didn't announce many songs or themembers of the band (perhaps an unseenvoice saying "Ladies and Gentlemen,Talking Heads" made any such announcement superfluous) He made a fewcomments to the audience. His hips movedThese last two actions might seem to comefrom enthusiasm and/or a rapport with theaudience. In fact the comment making andhip shaking only served to destroy the ironythat is Talking Heads powerful, movingmusic rendered in a totally dispassionate manner (Critics have called them autistic).It wasn't a manifestation of Byrne's learning to relax, but rather mere laxity. It wasas if the band felt that since the place wasn'tpacked by both common folk and the Press,since it wasn't an Event and there was nolikelihood of one of their peers strolling in,why bother?It's not as if the lack of these things isirrelevent. The sight of a small club containing quite a few empty chairs isdisheartening for both performer andaudience. And, of course, the knowledgethat a minor celebrity might be sitting at thenext table or that the papers might do a ravereview adds to the wonderful tensiontense, taut, ready to snap that was lackingat the Quiet Knight The ability of a newband to transcend the milieu from which itsprang, to operate in a vacuum, is an excellent test. Although Talking Heads by nomeans passed with flying colors, theycertainly didn't fail- as was evident in someof the audience's ecstatic reaction. Afterthey first appeared on stage, several peopleinsistently cried, "Go Day vid," "Go Teena." Tina won out, getting many morecheers than David.Perhaps it's only a question of time beforethe Heads learn to perform minus the indulgent atmosphere New York provides.That indulgent atmosphere includesfavorable write ups in the illustrious NewYork Times And when Frantz andWeymouth got married a while back, thenot so illustrious Village Voice carried abox on their back cover containing a pictureof the newlyweds and the headline"HEADS WED " It's impossible for them tobring a ready made environment to theirperformances But it's to their advantage toattempt performing as if it matteredbecause ultimately it does They are performing in suDport of their first album and ifthey do better, eventually it will be an Eventwhen Talking Heads come to town."I can't seem to face up to the facts/ 'm tense and nervous and I can't relaxI can't sleep cause my bed's on fireDont' touch me I'm a real live wire."*1^ 1515 E. 53rdPresentsJazz for a Sunday AfternoonSunday October 30 2-7pmSensuous sound of thePurple Circle TrioalsoGuillermo Knightflamingo guitaristMnslrr of the flamingo, one of the mo*»l trulyflam in *£o j*tii tarts t v on roiiltl ever until to heat..tf- (.on genial Atmosphere.. .Good JazzPitchers of Beer\lwa\s free hot butter popcornStudent discounts-In llie llriirt of (.osino/Mililiiii llyile Park 1Attention Musicians:\ on want to plav in an ensemble orlsmall "roup, but von don't know whereto find other interested musicians?The Music Societymav be able to help \oti.Stop l>\ the Student \eli\ities Office, or calll)a\ id (ilier. (68 1-8536)ROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL r.llrtOI Sniilh \Xoodlnun \\etiucSt Aim • OCTOBER 23o \.M.\ SKKYIt F OF HOI A COM Ml MON( o-Spon-or: Kpiocopal ( luircli t ouncilCelebrant: Donald .Iiid-on. p/risco/ntl ( hu/ilniiiI I \.M.I imrr»it\ It elisions Scr\ iceW . STI Itl l\<; C \It ^ . ( onferenee MinisterIllinois ( onferenee of the I oiled t luircli of t hrist-VICTIM OR SH \PERM can there be aJudaism for adults ?THE NEED FOR A CONTEMPORARYAPPLIED JUDAISMdr irving i. zaretsky research assoc.u.c. divinity schoolOCT. 21FRIDAYAT HILLEL5?l5woodlawn8:30 pmHYDE PRRK PIPE RND TOBRCCO 5HOP1552 E. 53rd - Under IC tracksStudents under 30 get 10% offask for “Big Jim”Mon. * Sat. 9 - 8: Sun. 12-5PipesPipe Tobaccos Imported Cigarettes CigarsThe Chicago Maroon Frioav. October 21, 1972 9through already Hitler influenced Germany. There appear to be two possiblereasons for such naivete either Heilmanactually was this oblivious in her youth or,more likely, Sargent consciously omittedany political awareness in her characterbecause it might have detracted from thedepiction of the friendships - Julia andLillian, Lillian and Hammett -- that is thecrux of the film.Overall, Sargent has successfully adaptedHeilman's portrait. He has toned downHeilman's personality, as we know it today,to increase interest in the story and therelationships. Hal Holbrook and RosemaryMurphy portray Heilman's good friendsAlan and Dottie. It is not until a good wayinto the film that the viewer realizes that theVirginia gentleman 'Alan' is Alan Campbelland the extravagant 'Dottie' is DorothyParker. It's a waste of two excellent actorsbut essential to the film's conception ofimportant people becoming backgroundwhile quieter, less known people are madecentral to the story and prevailing mood.Unfortunately Holbrook and Murphy treatthe roles like cameo appearances on a BobHope Christmas Special and ham it up,disrupting the film's elegance.Hammett was already a famous writerwhen he took up with Heilman. Robardsplays Hammett as many imagine he musthave been, always cool and passively understanding. In Julia, he never leaves theirCape Cod cottage and the nearby woodswhere they camped and fished. He remainsseparate from her New York social life, herexperience in Europe, and Julia. Robard'sHammett is as attractive as Fonda'sHeilman. His understatement complimentsher anger and anxiety.Also excellent is Maximillian Schell asJohann, Julia's comrade in the Underground and Meryl Streep and JohnGlover as particularly obnoxious societyfriends of Lillian's. Susan Jones as theyoung Lillian and Lisa Pelikan as the youngJulia are very goodThere are mars in Julia, the most seriousbeing the cinematography, the beginning ofthe film's greatest asset. Zinnemann anddirector of photography Douglas Slacombeover use soft focus in the childhoodsequences and abuse a green filter in theGermany scenes both techniquesbecoming such commonly accepted conventions in recent large production filmsthat they are becoming law. When Zinnemann has a good thing going, he becomesall too aware of it and continues long after ithas worn out its novelty and effectIf nothing else, Julia is worth seeing forthe final scene between Lillian and Julia.Lillian is told to deliver a hat which holds$50,000 of Julia's money to a Berlin cafe. Themoney is to be used for smuggling prisonersout of Germany. Unbenounced to her, it isJulia who is her connection. They reminisceabout the past few years and their radicallydifferent experiences. Together they sharea strong will and passion. Julia is more openthan she has ever been before. She tellsLillian to be brave and promises that soonthey shall be reunited in peace. It is one ofthe most memorable scenes of the past tenyears. The level of acting is at its highest.The viewer can sense, even share, Fonda'stears and strongly admire Redgrave's faithand courage.The scene is a coalescing of five greatwomen Lillian and Julia, Ponda andRedgrave, and the author Heilman Theviewer is convinced of Julia and Lillian'sdedication. Lillian's love for Julia, alwayspresent, is returned by Julia, in a moretangible form than Lillian ever extended toher. Lillian's anger is fortified and heruncertainty diminished. Redgrave andPonda portray all this so believably that itbecomes almost impossible to detach theirreal life personalities from the characters'qualities. The viewer comes to admire Juliaand Lillian, reconfirm respect for Redgraveand Ponda and expand belief in Heilman,the real life modern Lillian who somehowthe viewer senses mothered and broughttogether the other four amazing women.By Karen HellerThe opening scenes in Fred Zinnemann'sJulia appear as a series of Monet Paintings;opulent in hue, shadow filled and hazy. Thefirst image is of a rowboat on a river with aperson sitting, fishing as mist surrounds theboat.Next there is a scene of the Gare du Nordin early morning; the steam rises out of thetrain, filling the station and blocking theblue light of dawn.The early scenes of Julia and Lillian aredominated by pink and cream, evoking thepaintings of Renoir. Such a beginning iswell suited for a treatment of a piece fromLillian Heilman's Pentimento, a collagecreated by scratching below the presentsurface to view what was before. The impressionists, particularly Monet andRenoir, were highly successful at capturingpast sensations in a strangely femininemanner.Julia is the masterpiece of Heilman'shazy memory. Julia, the woman is one ofHeilman's most memorable friends. Theother, Dashiell Hammett, is also captured,but more vividly because the relationshipwas more vivid. With Julia, whom Heilmanknew from 1918 to 1937, the friendship wasnever defined by romantic notions orPuritanical distance. The friendship constantly bloomed and changed with the tworemarkable women.Julia is extremely wealthy. When inAmerica, she lives with her elderly grandparents on a large estate somewhere on theEast Coast. Her oft married mother flitsaround Europe and periodically sends forJulia. Although Lillian's background isnever clearly drawn, she appears to comefrom a more stable and middle class home.The first half of the film centers on Julia andher special world. The second half revealsmore of Lillian's character through her 30year relationship with Hammett andsporadic visits with Julia. Lillian'sbackground and family are insignificant inview of these friendships and her maturecreative development.Agile, knowledgeable, always self-confident, Julia appears older than theyoung Lillian. She is remembered andportrayed, in youth and in womanhood, as afascinating, attractive, almost perfectperson. Together Julia and Lillian writepoetry; they explore the family grounds andLillian proves her physical capabilities,although limited, to Julia. When they areolder, they discuss men in general. Bothfantasize about a wild affair in Paris untilLillian discovers that Julia might haveactually had one.Julia goes off to Oxford to study medicineand then to Vienna to specialize. Lillian'slife is still loosely defined; time is markedby visits to Julia. Julia gets caught in astudent riot and loses a leg. She moves toGermany and starts working in the Underground. Lillian's life becomes moredistinct and interesting through her richrelationship with Hammett and development as a writer. At the same time Julia issmuggling people out of Germany before thewar, Lillian struggles, and succeeds withher first play, The Children's Hour. Lilliancomes into wealth, finery and fame whileJulia makes her profoundest rejection of thethings she naturally possessed.The most important relationship inLillian's life is with Hammett but it neverreplaces her relationship with Julia. Thereexists a sensuality between the two womenwith little touching and no implicitsexuality, as many critics have intimated.Lillian never kisses Julia's face even aftershe is dead. "I never kissed it when she wasalive so I felt it would be wrong to do so indeath."As Julia, Vanessa Redgrave is strikinglybeautiful. Physically, she is one of the mostgraceful and naturally good looking actresses around. Lillian describes Julia atOxford as reaching "the perfect combination of beauty and charm" Redgravelooks the part even though she is twice Julia's age at that point. Her character ispure and good and believable. She makesJulia as remarkable as Heilman describesher. She makes Heilman's life and memoryeven richer than previously assessed bygiving such life to the character.The greatest wonder in Julia is JaneFonda as Lillian. A terrific actress whoworks far too infrequently, she bridges thephysical disparity between herself andHeilman by matching spirits. As she statedin a Newsweek interview "Lillian is ahomely woman and yet she moves as if shewere Marilyn Monroe....Well, that's fine forLillian, but it wouldn't look right if I did it.So I played her more ascetic than she reallyis.” Fonda's Lillian is constantlyvulnerable, nervous and angry. It is the lastquality that Julia admires in her. In theirlast meeting, she tells her "never lose youranger, it is your strength " It is this angerthat pervades Scoundrel Time, her account10 The Chicago Maroon Friday, October 21,1977 of the House Un American ActivitiesCommittee and its persecution of her andher friends. It is the thing that makesHeilman remarkable, and an ideal for somany. But in Julia it is the vulnerability andyouthful anxiety that is novel and fascinatesthe viewer.Except for a first awkward scene withJason Robards as Hammett in Cape Cod,Fonda is constantly vibrant. OccasionallyAlvin Sargent's screenplay is trite, particularly when Heilman is frustratinglyworking on The Children's Hour, tin oneabsurd scene, Heilman throws thetypewriter out the window like it was acigarette butt.) Yet somehow Fonda alwayssurfaces on top. Sometimes Lillian appearsfar too naive. She travels to France, thenAustria and Germany unaware of the advent of war (even though thecinematography and music scream it) andundisturbed that she is a Jew passingDiane Wakoski:grace at 40By Sarah SchulmanWith a wild wooly coat and an International Woman'sYear bag, Diane Wakoski was everything I expected at herTuesday poetry reading on Circle Campus. Her 13th volume"The Man Who Shook Hands" will be published byDoubleday in the Spring. However, the pervading issue ofthe reading was the poet's 40th birthday. In her introductory comments she referred to the theme of failure.Reflections on 20 years of writing poetry have lead to therealization that all of her greatest failures have beenfailures of perception.The first of 4 new works, "The Ring" (based on a poem byDenise Levertov) refers to Wakoski's short lived marriageand how to deal with a wedding ring after divorce. Insteadof tucking it away in a box, she carries it on her key chain.The ring hangs there constantly "reminding me of failure".Reaching middle age has made Wakoski reflect more onher own mother. The shock of discovering that shephysically and emotionally resembles her mother has lefther fearful of her own abilities to overcome what hermother could not fight against."One thing that has terrified me in the darkevery night of my lifeis the thought that I would be like my mother,. . .that I would look like herheavy and unfashionable...insisting that I love everything, anyway,. . .Do we have no courage to live our own lives ?Do we hope the past will live them for us?. ..We must ask grace from ourselves."(from Driving Gloves, Copyright 1973) Thorny Trunksgreen isthe color ofha,you thought I would say life?but, in fact,I was simply going to mentionthe color of a bicycleI saw a little boy riding today,moving along the streetas ifthere were a lizardten feet tallbehind him,as ifhe had suddenly rememberedit was raining,though only sunflooded hisface./ thought of you,with thorns growing out ofyour body,exotic,beautiful,just waiting for meto press against them.But you do not understand,perhaps,that for me, beautyis somethingwhich cannotI be touched (Copyright 1975 by Diane Wakoski) In a letter to young writer Terry Stokes, Wakoski expresses the sympathy she has for new poets. The greatpatronage provided by the universities creates the "truewage slaves of poetry". Sometimes these programs workagainst the poet not for him. Good poets will be misunderstood and can never accept that misunderstanding. "Letpoetry be your salvation instead of a deadly, drearyproposition."Not wanting to do what everyone else does, Wakoski, whogrew up in southern California, didn't learn to drive untilshe was 32. Driving has taught her that things that seemcontemptable because they are a part of everyday life, alsohave a mythical reality. She sees driving as the only activity of the average American that is related to meditationand philosophy. That's one of the reasons that Americansare addicted to driving. They drive automatic cars so theydon't have to worry about the machine. They can concentrate on thinking.Learning to appreciate those periods of solitude, she hasbeen faced with another problem. In her introduction to"Hitch hikers" (recently published in Daryl Hine's Poetrymagazine) Wakoski said that there is nothing democratic inher personality. However, she experiences pangs of guiltwhen she passes a hitch hiker. "It is my political statementnot to pick them up." She dreams each night of a hell whereshe is a hitch hiker and no one will oick her up"It is the look each one gives me of needdesperate need'pick me up or I'll fail to reach my goal' ".Wakoski at age 40 is still "not understanding why l failedbut knowing that I did." Yet, she does not seem moroseabout her prospects for the future. "I've realized at 40 thatI've given up love and have decided to take up eating anddrinking Next year, maybe instead of poetry, I'll write acookbook."Test Preparation ForLow School Admission TostGrad. Manogement Adm. TestGraduate Record ExaminationMedical College Adm. TestDental Aptitude TestWi MAKE THE DIFFERENCE782-21857 S. DEARBORN-CHICAGO6560 N. SHERIDAN »P.DOROTHY SMITHBEAUTY SALON5841 S. BLACKST0NEHY3-1069Call for appts.7 A.M. - 7 P.M.Monday thru Friday,closed SaturdayHair Styling ■ PermanentsTinting-Facials-Skin Carea T 4 « V { XJii SALES withservice is our I, BUSINESS 8V REPAIR specialistson IBM. SCM, §€ Olympia & othersFree Estimate >\ Ask about ourRENTAL with 11n option to buyNew & Rebuilt ATypewriters <u> CalculatorsOictators 4~U ' AddersU. of C. Bookttore ♦V 5750 S. Ellis Ave.753 3303 YY MASTER CHARGE. ooe BANKAMERICARO V0 £ 6 C A " * t + KING OF BEERS* • ANHEUSER BUSCH INC • ST LOUISWHEN DO ENGLISH MAJORSSAY BUDWEISER ?The Chicago Maroon Friday. October 21,1977 llNow PlayingMuddy WaterswithKoko T aylorTonight in Mandel Hal!7 and 10 pm$2, $2.50; $4, $4.50Coming A ttractionsOct. 29Celebrate Halloween with MAB at aCostume party, starting at 8:30pmDance, eat and maybe win the prize <■ 'rbest costume.Free for MAB fee payers in costume25<t for others in costume50<t for everybody elseNov. 18A coffeehouse in Hutchinson CommonsJohn Fahey guitaristMegan McDonough, singer8pm$2. $3Refreshments will be available. Bring some*hing tosit on.The best Moravianmeal in ChicagoBy Tom FlanniganMany immigrants from Eastern Europe found Chicago awonderful haven after a long ocean voyage in the early partof the twentieth century. We are all extremely fortunatethat these peoples brought their cuisine with them. Individuals who don't have an aversion to sauerkraut anddumplings may find Eastern European cooking among themost flavorful in Chicago.Perhaps the finest of a host of remarkable Slavicrestaurants in the Chicago area can be found at 4142 West26th street. Club Moravia has not received a great deal ofpublicity from the local press and most of its patrons areneighborhood people. If you are willing to forego the frillsand ambience of many metropolitan restaurants you will berewarded with superb food at reasonable prices in a humblebut charming storefront.When you enter Club Moravia you pass a hallway thatadjoins the dining area. The alcove is decorated with tinypeasant dolls adorned in native costume. A door on the leftis the entrance to the Moravian Society of Chicago, thesource of the colorful miniatures. Although the peasantdolls are provided as a decoration, they may be purchasedfor around five dollars. Even those who are not interested inMoravia's answer to the Hummel should pause to examinethe intricate costumes as they will certainly not be found atthe local Burger King.The dining area is an extension of a typical local bar. Itcontains about twenty tables and the walls display muralsof Moravian rural scenes. The paintings are an interestingaddition to an otherwise routine ethnic restaurant setting.Nothing on the menu at this establishment costs over fivedollars. By far the best dish is Svickova, ($3 95) pickledbeef with gravy. The entree is somewhat similar to GermanSauerbraten and should not be toe unusual for Americanpalates. Mrs. Rusicka, owner of Club Moravia insists onusing beef tender lorn when Svickova is prepared The resultis an incredibly tender, flavorful dish that surpasses theversion offered by such Bohemian restaurants as Pilsner,Olympic and Plaza Dining Room in the western suburbs.Even people who are not overly fond ofdumplings may be won over by the onesserved at Club Moravia. They arefeather light and don't feel like andirons in your stomach after you haveconsumed thern:Roast duck ($3.95) is provided on a regular basis and is asgood as any you will find in the Chicago area for the price.Club Moravia also offers a number of daily specials. Theexact sequence of their appearance on the menu is difficultto forecast since it depends on the whims of the cook. Someof the best specials include beef with horseradish sauce (tryTuesday or Wednesday), boiled beef with potatoes(Thursday) and fruit dumplings (Friday). The last dish issimilar to the nalesniki offered in Polish restaurants andhas the consistency of blintzes.All entrees include soup or salad, dumplings and dessert.The soup is often liver dumpling and the dessert is usuallykolacky. Even people who are not overly fond of dumplingsmay be won over by the ones served at this establishmentThey are feather light and don't feel like andirons in yourstomach after you have consumed them.The waitresses at Club Moravia are from the old schooland have a tendency to mother dining parties they perceiveas non neighborhood folk Their demeanor adds to thehominess of the place and augments an already pleasurabledining experience.Club Moravia serves a variety of beers and this beverageis particularly appropriate to Slavic food. A glass ofWurzburger costs .75 and Stroh's slightly less. Bottles ofPilsner Urquell cost $1.00 and are highly recommended.This beer is one of the best in the world and naturally enjoysa symbiotic relationship with Czechoslovakian food since itis brewed in Pilsen. The taste is somewhat bitter but is easyto get used to. Remember the adage, when in Brno ao likethe Moravians.The CTA can provide convenient service to the front doorof the restaurant. Take the 55th street bus to Pulaski,change for the northbound bus and get off at 26th. You canwalk the last three hundred metres west in order to build upan appetite. After such a filling meal, diners may betempted to avail themselves of the service offered by theeastbound 26th street bus.To reach Club Moravia by car, duplicate the CIA routeYou can head north towards Chinatown and proceed weston 26th street, but the going can be slow. The area betweenAshland and Pulaski on 26th street is a crowded Mexicanneighborhood. Although this region of the city has aremarkable variety of interesting stores and street scenes,the traffic can be maddeningly slow. The 55th streetPulaski route is much faster and speed is important whenhunger is a factor in your decision making. Visil ClubMoravia before it is "discovered" by hordes of peopleoutside of the neighborhood and caravans of diners fromArlington Heights destroy the ambience of the bistro Thisrestaurant represents oio Europe ano old Chicago at itsbest. o Free Camera Check-Upin — ^. COO oS ^... OActing funny? Saturday October 2210 AM -4 PMStop in and have your cameraor lens checked free by ourtwo qualified repairmen!See you Saturday.imiiiiiji mini%Used Desks, Chairs,Files, Drawing TablesBRAND EQUIPMENT&SUPPLYCO.8600 Commercial Ave.Open Mon.-Sat. 8:30-5:00RE 4-2111A New WeeklyLiberalFriday EveningShabbat ServiceAt HILLEL5715 WOODLAWNFRIDAY, OCT. 21st at5:30 PM.Sponsored by The Chicago Conference of TempleBrotherhoods through its Sambafyon Program. LOX & BAGEL BRUNCHSundays -11:00 A.M,Also: Orange Juice - Coffee - Tea -Tomatoes - OnionsCost: $1.00 per sandwichHillel House - 5715 Woodlawn“Is Death the End?”Dorothea Harvey, B.A., B D.. PH. D.will lecture on thisvital subjectSunday. October 30th,1:30 P.M.Swedenborg Center,5710 S. WoodlawnChicagoAdmission FreeA PRIVATE MIXTUREfromWhere you can findImported CigarettesImported CigarsImported PipesIm ported dry cigarsImported Pipe Tobacco& Other Accessories(312)288-51515225 S. HARPERCHICAGO..ILL 50615£•*“<The Chicago Maroon ‘•“•'iday. Qctobe ::i. 197' 15nrGuide to filmBy Karen HellerAdmission to Law, School and CEF films is$1.50. Admission to Doc films is $1.00 onTuesdays and Wednesdays and $1.50 on allother days. CEF and Doc films will beshown in Cobb hall. The Law School film willbe shown in the Law School auditorium, 1111E. 60th Street.Silent Movie (1976), directed by MelBrooks. (Doc) The glory of not hearingBrooks foam at the mouth is enough toendear even the Melophobe back into hisbarn. Brooks best work since The Producersand Get Smart. Brooks, James Coco andMarty Feldman want to make a new silentmovie but know they'll never get the moneytc produce if they don't cast big name actors. At the same time they must fight offthe evil forces of Engulf and Devour, anenormous conglomeration and BernadettePeters, who, for some insane reason,Everyone thinks is a bombshell. (No humanhas ever so closely resembeled a goldfish,)With Paul Newman, Burt Reynolds, MarcelMarceau and Anne Bancroft Friday at 6 30,8 30 and 10 30.To Have and Have NoM944), directed byHoward Hawks. (Law) A great film withscreenplay by Jules Furthman and WilliamFaulkner based on the Hemingway novel,starring Bogart and Bacall, musical accompaniment by Hoagy Carmichael and thedeft direction of the master. Bogart is aprofessional sports fisherman in 1940French Martinique. While pursuing his skill,he is coerced to fish in the deep waters of proand anti Vichy lawlessness by the push ofhis own moral principles and the lure of aconsumately attractive woman. WithWalter Brennan. Friday at 7 00 and 9 00. Alice's Restaurant (1969), directed byArthur Penn. (CEF) You've heard therecord, now see the movie. Arlo Guthrieplays himself —an easy going musician,Class W draftee and a litterer with acriminal record. Arlo travels to beautifulStockbridge, Mass to visit friends Alice andRay Brock. A collection of particularlylikeable characters with self humor (EvenOfficer 'Obie' playing himself) wonderfullycaptured under Penn's always originaldirection. Pat Quinn is especially good asAlice. With appearances by Pete Seeger andLee Hays. Saturday at 6 30, 9 00 and 11 30.The World of Apu (Apu Trilogy Part III)(1959), directed by Satyagit Ray. (CEF)Ray's protagonist, Apu, whose consciousness developed from the village life ofPather Danchali and the university ofAparajito marries the exquisite SharmilaTagore and grows beyond selfconsciousness. Sunday at 7 15 and 9 30.Road to Glory (1936), directed by HowardHawks. (Doc) Lionel Barrymore arrives atthe unpleasant conclusion that glory can begained only in death. Warner Baxter,leading the regiment, does not help, becausehe only wants to kill his rival, FredericMarch, who's also the next in command.Tuesday at 7 15Barbary Coast (1935), directed by HowardHawks, i Doc) An impoverished Southernbelle (Miriam Hopkins) comes to SanFrancisco to marry her fiance. Instead, shemust finally choose between two types ofgold digging-gangster Edward GRobinson or prospector Joel McCrea.Tuesday at 9 00 Long Distance CallYou say you love me dartin', please call meon the phone sometime.You say you love me dartin', please call meon the phone sometime.When / hear your voice, it ease my worriedmind.One of these days I 'm gonna show you hownice a man can be.One of these days I'm gonna show you hownice a man can be.I'm gonna buy you a brand new Cadillac, ifyou'll only speak some nice words aboutme.Hear my phone a ringin', sounds like a longdistance call.Hear my phone a ringin', sounds like a longdistance call.When I picked up my receiver, the partysaid, "another mule kickin' in your stall."I'm ready/ am ready ready as anybody could be.I am ready - ready as anybody could be.I am ready for you, I hope you're ready forme.I got an axe ana pistol,A graveyard frame.I'm shootin' tombstone bullets.Wear in' balls and chain,I'm drinkin' T and T, smokin'dynamite.I hope some schoolboy starts a fight,Because I'm ready ready as anybody canbe.I'm ready for you, I hope you're ready forme.All you pretty little chicks,With your curly hair.I know you fee! like I ain't nowhere.But stop what you're doing,Come over here,I'll prove to you baby that I ain't no square. Because i’m ready ready as anybody canbe.I'm ready for you, I hope you're ready forme.I 've been drinkin' gin like never before,I feel so good I want you to know.One more drink, I wish you would,It takes a whole lot of lovin' to make me feelgood.Because I 'm ready ready as anybody couldbe.I'm ready for you, I hope you're ready forme.It's All OverWell I had a woman, she was so mean to me,boys, in every wayWell I had a woman, she was so mean to me,boys, in every way.Well it's all over, it's all over now friends, Ifound another little girl to take her placeThe morning that she left me, oh how I hateto see my baby go away.The morning that she left me, oh how / hateto see my baby go away.Well it's all over, it's all over now friends, Ifound another little girl to take her place.I've been so many nights siftin' right thereby my telephone,Hopin' she would call me, knowin' all thetime she was out and gone.Well it's all over, it's all over now, you knowI don't have to be alone.All songs copyrighted by McKinleyMorganfield.Tickets will be on sale at the door for MuddyWaters tonight at Mandel hall. Shows areat 7 and 10 p.m.\ VIf you’re consideringa Mercedes280E,drive a Peugeot604.Like the Mercedes 280 E. the Peugeot 804 >L h.i* tour-wheelindependent,su>pen>ion, .i responsive >i\-cvlinder engine (our" i* ,iV-6), power steering (ours i* rack and pinion), a unitized hod\ heldtogether with thousands of weld', power window*, tullx recliningfront bucket seats, tinted glass, and meticulous attention to detailThe Peugeot 604 has alsobeen engineered tor asuperior level otcomfort. W'irhoversized sht*ckabsorber*, large coilsprings, a floating ditfeiseats that are actually timed to the suspension system.Rut comfort isn’t the onlv thing that sets the 604 iparr from theMercedes. There* also the price. Which spirts at ibour Ml.000.And which may he it* most comforting feature of all.Inc.Sales / Leasing / Parts / Service2347 So. Michigan Ave. Chicago 326-2550Manufacturer’s suggested retail price. Delivery, optional equipment,license, title, raxes, dealer preparation not included. £hc t[ntocrsity of ChicagoROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPEL59TH STREET AND WOODLAWN AVENUE . CHICAGO, ILLINOISSunday, Afternoon at 4:00 p.m.October 30, 1977Johannes BrahmsREQUIEMNANIERICHARD VIKSTROM, DirectorTHE ROCKEFELLER CHAPEL CHOIRAND ORCHESTRA (50 players)JANICE HUTSON, Soprano WILLIAM DIANA, BaritoneTickets: Reserved $6.00 • General Admission $5.00 • Students $2.50Available at: Reynolds Club Box Office, 5706 S. University AvenueCooley’s Corner, 5211 S. Harper AvenueMail Orders to: Chape! Music Office, Rockefeller Memorial Chapel59th Street and Woodlawn Avenue, Chicago, Illinois 60637n*ka checks payable to Tha UnivertHy of Chicago and enclose a ttawped, self-addressed an*,I ope14 The Chicago maroon Friday, October 21,1977CalendarF ridayCenter for Middle Eastern Studies: Faculty-Student Luncheon, 12.15, Ida Noyes Hall;Arabic Circle, “The Return to Shawqi,"Erfan Shahid, 3:30 pm, Pick 218, (discussionsin Arabic); Persian Society, “Prospects forCooperation and Conflict in Relations Bet¬ween the People’s Republic of China andIran, Part II,” Fariborz Maissami, 3.30 pm,HM 135, (discussions in Persian); SherryHour, 4:30. Kelly 413.Department of Economics: “Job Placement,”William Brock, 1.30, SS 402; Workshop -Economic History, 3 30 pm, SS 106;Workshop - “Brazilian Government Policiesin Agriculture The Case of Grains andSoybeans," Tulio Arvelo-Duran, 3:30 pm. SS402.The Committee on Latin American Studies:“Mexico’s Double Heritage,” Dr. IgnacioBernal, 1.00 pm, SS302.Geophysical Sciences Colloquium: “Studieson Russian Kimberlites,’’ N.V. Sobolev, 1:30pm, Hinds Laboratory Auditorium.Calvert House: “Friday Night at Calvert,"5:00 pm, 5735 University, barbecue &volleyballBrent House. Sherry Hour, 5 pm, 5540Woodlawn.Crossroads: Tour of Ethnic Restaurants, 6 15pm, Crossroads.Hillel: Adat Shalom Shabbat dinner, 6:30 pm;Lecture - “Can There Be a Judaism forAdults?” Dr. Irving Zaretsky, 8.30 pm;Reform-Liberal Services, 5 30 pm, Hillel.Christian Forum: “Faith, Integrity and theReligious Use of Language” 8 00 pm. Brent. ARTSDoc Films; “Silent Movie,” 6.30, 8.30, 10 30pm, Cobb Hall.LSF Film: “To Have and To Have Not,” 7and 9 pm, Law School Auditorium.MAB Concert: Koko Taylor and MuddyWaters, 7 & 10 pm, Mandel Hall.Court Studio Production: “Little Murders,”8:30 pm, Reynolds Club Theatre.SaturdayChange Ringing: Handbells, 10-11 am, towerbells 11 am - 1 pm, Mitchell Tower Ringingrm.Sixth Compton Lecture Series: “ThermalEnergy From the Sun.” 11 am, Eckhart 133.Committee Against Racism: CampusMeeting. 1 pm, Ida Noyes East Lounge,discussion topics: Campaigns AgainstSociobiology & South African Apartheid andOrganizing CAR on campus.Benefit Performance for the Wyler’sChildren’s Hospital: “Beauty and theBeast,” 2:30 pm, Goodman Theatre (EastMonroe at Grant Park)Crossroads: Saturday Night Dinners, 6 pm,5621 S. Blackstone.SPORTSMen’s Soccer Team vs Beloit, 1:30 pm. StaggField.UC Cross Country: Varsity Dual Meet. 11 am;UCTC Open 4 mile run, 12 noon, WashingtonPark.ARTSCEF Film: “Alice’s Restaurant,” 6 30, 9 00and 1130 pm, Cobb HallInternational House. I Hop Record Dance. Court Theatre Studio Production: “Little10:00 pm, I-House Assembly Hall. Murders,” 8 30 pm, Reynolds Club Theatre. SundayRockefeller Chapel. Service of Holy Com¬munion, 9 am; University Religious Service -“Victim or Shaper.” W. Sterling Cary, GuestPreacher. 11 am, Rockefeller Chapel.Hillel: Lox & Bagel Brunch. 11 am, Hillel.Free Vegetarian Festival: Hare KrishnaTemple. 5.30 pm, 1014 Emerson, EvanstonCalvert House: Sunday Supper, 6 pm, CalvertHouse, (sign up required).Crossroads: Bridge. 3 pm, 5621 Blackstone.ARTSCEF Film. “APU Trilogy." 7:15 & 9 30 pm.Cobb Hall.Court Studio Productions: "Little Murders,”8:30 pm, Reynolds Club TheatreTai Chi Chuan Class: 6 30 pm, 4945 S Dor¬chester, enter on 50th.Crossroads: Film “Alistair Cooke’s America- Gone West,” 8 pm. Crossroads. Ki-Aikido: 6-7 30 pm, Bartlett Gym wrestlingmats.Change Ringing. Tower Bells. 6:30-8:30 pm,4th floor Mitchell Tower.Chess Club: Meeting, 7 pm, Ida NoyesMemorial Room.SPORTSIntramural Table Tennis Tournament IdaNoyes, call 753-4691 for details.TuesdayHillel. Students for Israel. 12 noon, Hillel;Advanced Hebrew. 8 pm; Halacha and TheHolocaust, 8 pm; Hillel Israeli Folk Dancing.8 pm, Ida Noyes Hall.The Graduate School of Business and theDivinity School: “The Ethical Consequencesof Alternative Incentive Systems," YaleBrozen, 4 pm, Breasted Hall, “FiduciaryEthics and The Market," Elmer W Johnson,8 pm, Breasted Hall.Calvert House: Liturgy Planning Group, 6 30pm, Calvert House.Brent House: G.B. Shaw’s “St. Joan,”discussion led by Donald Judson, EpiscopalChaplain, 7 pm, Brent House.MondayDepartment of Chemistry Seminar with ProfHenry Linschitz, 4 pm, Kent 103.Department of Microbiology and the TrainingProgram in Infectious Diseases With theCommittee on Immunology: “Repertoire ofAntibodies to One Hapten in an Inbred Strainof Mouse," Dr. Alfred Nisonoff. 4 30 pm.Cummings Life Science Center.Hillel: Beginners Yiddish. 6:30 pm: BeginnersHebrew', 7:30 pm; Advanced Yiddish, 8 00;Intermediate Hebrew. 9 pm, Hillel house. The South Asian Student Association:“Homosexual Love in Urdu Poetry,” C M.Naim, 7:30 pm, Foster Lounge.UC Libertarian Alternative: ACLU speakerLance Haddix addresses victimless crimelaws, 7 30 pm, Ida Noyes.Music Department: Lecture - by HoraceFitzpatrick, 4 pm, Lexington Studio.Woodward Court Lecture Series: "Recombinant DNA,” R Haselkorn, 8 30 pm. 5825 SWoodlawn.ARTSDOC Films: "Road To Glory." 7 15 pm and“Barbary Coast,” 9 pm. Cobb Hall.YO HON’ST-Shirt FactorySpecializing in CreativeT-Shirts - Sweat Shirts -Jackets - TrousersSpecial discount prices oncolumn silkscreen printingFor clubs, teams, etc.V.11103 S. Michigan Ave.994-0231 aThe Chicago Maroon Friday, October 21, 1977 15yyay} /Cfo^n Otwl ZW/-. Aldl\vourfolksmyoudecide■hangeyourmajor*// ^Wo (Tvtf IsVZUj /°t/H& y^yy{~ y^yo'e ^.*dtky^Ts, 9&*nx-stum/, y^c yy&*\yfuyT* 1s£>/ h^ty%y-X/XL <% 7%u<y~ y&&? ^T^nvt /&C44/>yyyy-yyyy^c /X7-j2 deep y^u/^x, '=&%/&€ yfy&t <yf'S'' s . if \ /Cfwti yCTt/2&y$£yiTw/zc ^uyic ^7/yts*kn *±?AtAnheuser-Busch, weh^1;Buschbeerjus*- ^iUstone’*eb?lieveinLc Upi,-j~, c ;n hr„'4 7-/), 3>: 77,.C/7/,'Ca9o 4lar°Oo prt•day. October H*7. >977 enMoo>(»!Afsr 'evt- ;ni"<"a/;"^',Ofx,^^*,ir^‘"K. M/A spectator’s guide towomen’s field hockeyAction gets intense near the goal as two opposing players attempt to score whilegoalie Coleen Cacic, Donna Cieffi, Patty Murcer, and Marilyn Redman attempt todefend. (photo by .John Wright)By Jeanne DufortConstance Applebee never imagined itwould be this way What the enterprisingyoung woman from England brought to theStates was a game played by gentlewomen -a game of skill, to be sure, but primarily agame of control and leisure. The slashing,driving force of today’s game makes fieldhockey as removed from Applebee’s genreas NBA basketball is from DoctorNaismith’s creation. Any resemblance tothe original production is strictly Dar¬winianField Hockey, as taught by the originalMs. Applebee. is unnatural. Sticks cannot belifted high for a powerful drive; they cannoteven be gripped as one would a club. Aplayer cannot protect the ball with her bodyor slap away an opponent’s stick or doanything at all that might smack of “takingadvantage” of her opponentThe goalie is least protected of all Onceshe stops the small hard ball, she must stiflean impulse to fling it as far from her goal ashumanly possible, settling instead for asimple kick that invariably leaves the thingwithin attacking range. Should she fall on remain neatly positioned about the field andno longer are designated offensive playersthe only ones who score goals Play is wideopen and fast-paced The women who playfield hockey are superbly conditionedathletes who run without rest for full 35minute halves. Timeouts and substitutionsare for sissy games like footballThe 1980 Olympic games will includewomen’s field hockey for the first time. TheU S team, currently ranked tenth in theworld, hopes to earn a trip to the USSRgames with its free flowing, innovativeapproach to field hockey. Though still farshort of national caliber play, the Chicagofield hockey utilizes the “American” ap¬proach to the continental game.A trip to Stagg Field next Thursdayaround 4 p m. will net the sports fan an houror so of spectating at a fast and furiouscontest, as Chicago takes on- WheatonCollege Following is a guide to intelligentviewing:Eleven players comprise a field hockeyteam Chicago employs a 5-3-2-1 system.The five are attack players whose primaryconcerns include bedeviling the opposinggoalkeeper and putting the ball in the goal three times in a ritual of sportsman iiip,struggle to send the ball hurtling to awaiting teammate The ball may bovanced in a number of ways: the dribble, aseries of short taps; the drive, a hardground shot designed to cover longdistances; the push, a short ground shot; theflick, a wristy shot that lifts the ball aboveground and is difficult to control once in¬tercepted; and the scoop, a short loftingpass.A solid tackle employs none of thetechniques mastered by Bears All-ProW ally Chambers The field hockey tackle is an outcome of anticipation and smoothstickwork: taking the ball from an opponentwithout body contact is the object. Inmanipulating the ball, players are allowedto use only the flat face on the left side of thestick; both right and left-handed olaverscarry the stick along the right side of thebodv. flat face forwardPlay is interrupted frequently by thesound of the officials' whistles Sticks, lif¬ting the stick above shoulder level, is afrequent violation Advancing is called if theField Hockey to 18SportsS 4 IM reportFootball favorites emergethe ball in a desperate attempt to prevent agoal, the goalkeeper is then subjected to apenalty stroke: an offensive player shootspoint blank from seven yards out Penaltystrokes rarely failDespite rules that encourage gentle play,field hockey has been Americanized Somesay it has been brutalized Modern playemphasizes attack No longer do players The three are the back line of offense andthe front line of defense Two fullbacks playback, the last line of defense before thegoalkeeper The one, of course, is thesolitary goalieThe first of two 35 minute periods beginswith a bully; two opponents square off overthe small leather ball and, after tapping theground and then sticks with one anotherForesters bomb ChicagoBy Mark Penningtonwith Jacob RachlinThe Lake Forest Foresters ambushed theMaroons deep in the wilds of the north sidelast Saturday For four quarters of football,the suburban smashers turned the haplessChicagoans every way but loose, winning 42-6It was a day when nothing Chicago didturned out well The first time Byron Trottdropped back to punt for the luckless legion,his kick was blocked. Three plays later,Lake Forest quarterback Frank Melch hithis flashy split end Duplain Gant in theendzone for 15 yards and a touchdownAt that point, unbeknownst to theForesters’ homecoming crowd, the gamemight as well have been stopped That scorewas enough to win But Lake Forest keptgoingWhen the northsider’s tailback Greg Lattowasn’t picking up yardage from his deep-back position, backfield mate Peter Magriniwas getting it straight ahead When thosetwo weren’t stealing the show, things gotworse, because when the Foresters weren’trunning, they were passingGant moved and cut seemingly ef¬fortlessly and could have had even moreyardage if Melch had delivered the ballmore consistently. The other receiver,wingback Steve LaPierre. broke loose in thesecond halfThe two receivers were responsible formost of the hometeam scoring threats andpicked up much yardage on long bombs thatkept the fans cheering and the Maroondefensive backs cursing all day longFor Chicago. Dale Friar went over the100-yard mark on four separate occasions,and was dropped in the backfield to put himunder that mark each timeAt one point in the second quarter,Chicago fullback Mark Ramirez fumbledthe ball away Maroon hopes were revivedbriefly when Lake Forest obligingly turnedthe ball back over on the very next play Then Ramirez fumbled again immediatelyAnd so it went.Friar broke a couple of long gainers, butthe rest of the cast was never able to carrythe ball into paydirtQuarterback Mark Meier couldn’t connecton a pass until he hit Friar coming out of thebackfield late in the third quarter for thelone Chicago touchdown. Scott Jansen'sextra point attempt bounded into theMaroon offensive lineman when he had tomake a false start after an uncertainplacementChicago trailed 28-0 at the half TheMaroons looked consistent in the openingminutes of the third quarter but their driveended with the incomplete passThe very next drive led to the score Thenit was back to rushing downhillLake Forest showed by far the mostphysical defense the Midway men have seenFootball to 18 By Howard SulsAs the first week of the IM football seasonended, most of the favorites are performingas predicted, with a few exceptions In theGreen League, the winner of the Shorev-Fishbein game meets Thompson South forthe right to represent the league in theplayoffs Thompson rebounded from anopening loss to Shorey to defeat Fishbeinand Lower Rickert. while Shorey was upsetby Lower Rickert and Fishbein beat LowerRickert to set up the tie for the division leadIn the Blue League Psi Upsilon is runningaway from its opposition, blowing outShoreland 8 A 9 and Salisbury 33-6 and 32-0respectively, and defeating Bishop 14-0 Inthe White League. Henderson is emergingas the clear-cut favorite, overpoweringDodd-Mead, Tufts, and Bradbery, with nostaunch opposition ahead Last week’s big game was the Phi Gamma Delta-Hitchcockmatchup in which Phi Gamma Deltaprevailed 2-0 in a close game However, thegame was protested for various reasons andthe word from IM Director Dan Tepke andSupervisor Dennis Thatcher is that thegame will be replayed if it affects Leaguestandings, which is probable In the In¬dependent League Walloo’s Wacks defeatedMad Dogs to set up their confrontation withChicago?Graduate Red League action saw theWabuno Bay Buccaneers wallopingLaughlin 33-0 to remain the favorites, withHarper Hall and Mathews a distant secondThe Blue League looks like a toss-up asElan. Sugar Bears, and Legal Eagles are allundefeated, while Black Sheep has one lossBig games this week have Eagles versusboth Black Sheep and ElanThinclads running wellBy John PomidorThe varsity cross country team raisedtheir record to 6-4 last Saturday with vic¬tories over Chicago State, North Park, andthe North Central B team in a double dualmeet at Washington ParkThe Maroons fared best against ChicagoState, scoring a perfect 15-50 win. as thelosers could place no man higher than the19th position However, since the Maroonscould use their best seven times, and countvc-vnv \«v ' «Ted Haydon takes times as an unidentified opposing runner keeps stride withPete Smith and Marshall Schmitt < photo by John Wright) only the first five, Chicago State was givenpositions eight through twelveThe North Central College B team gavethe UC boys a run for their money, though,losing only 31-28 Especially important wasthat the Maroons put their extra two menacross before Central could finish with fiveThis meant Central has positions 11 for 12.instead of 9 and 10. and ended with fourextra pointsThe Maroons had little trouble againstNorth Park, winning 21-40 The only thingthat kept them from another perfect scorewere two North Park men who placed thirdand fourthCoach Ted Haydon was pleased with theteam's performance, pointing to four menwith sub-22 minute times for the four mileevent; Marshall Schmitt at 21:17; PeteSmith 21:18; John Pearson, 21:57; and JimThvedt, 21:59 Haydon was also happy withparticipation in the event, as 25 Maroonsentered He feels the team is making goodprogress, and should be ready for theMidwest Conference ChampionshipsNovembersMeanwhile, the Maroons will participatein the Track and Field National Cham¬pionships tomorrow Haydon does not ex¬pect the Maroons to do as well in this eventas last weekend, but feels running againstthe high-calibre track clubs will be a goodexperience for his team The next homemeet will be the UC Invitational October 29.11 a m at Washington Park.The Chicago Maroon Friday, October 21, 1977 17 -4Field Hockey from 17bail strikes a player and rebounds in a waythat might cause advantage to that player steam Obstruction, placing your bodybetween the ball and an opponent or usingyour stick to hinder an opponent, is anotherfrequent cause for the ubiquitous whistle tosound. In all cases, except when theviolation occurs within the striking area bya defensive player, the offended teamreceives a free hit from the point ofviolationThe goalkeeper is afforded one protectionunder the rules: no offensive player mayadvance between the last defensive playerand the goalie without having possession ofthe ball. Offsides violation returns the ballto the defensive team.All shots on goal must come from withinthe striking circle, a 16-foot radius from thegoal. The goal itself is four yards wide andseven feet high The field is 60 yards wide by10C varas longPenalties incurred by the defensive teamwithin the striking * circle bring s iffpenalties The offense is awarded a penaltystroke if the violation prevented a sure goalfrom scoring, otherwise a short corner isawarded. On a short comer, the ball isplaced along the end line while the attackingteam minus one hitter w’ho stays with theball - lines up along the edge of the strikingcircle Defenders iine up by the goalie andrush the attackers as the ball is hit, at¬tempting to clear the ball before the at¬tackers can receive the ball and shoot ongoalSpace is created by the flow of playersacross the field. Each player is looselyresponsible for covering certain areas; thatis, the left wing moves along the leftsidelines, the center halfback plays themidfield area, and so on. Players can movebeyond their area and teammates willcover, lending flexibility to an establishedsystem. Dave O’Connor (77) and Greg Servatius (53) pursue the action while Mike Dunn (651 takes p shot to the head from an opposing piaverThe Maroons were getting hit all dav against Lake Forest as they lost 4iH).The enjoyment of spectating increaseswith an understanding of the game Try-picking out one player, perhaps the centerhalfback, and following her movementabout the fietci Watch as she creates spacefor her teammates to enter and moves tonew space tc receive or intercept the ballThe crux of the game may be the score, butgoals are few and far between Themovement and flow about the field give fieldhockey a flavor uniaue among sports. .Itmay be rough and Americanized, but thesport was and is the sport of gentlewomen Football from 17this year Meier and Friar were popped onnearly every play, no matter which phase ofthe option was being executed WhenChicago tried to pass, the defenders blewthrough the thin Maroon LineWhen Chicago went over to defense, thestory was no brighter The defensive backswere forced to try- to knock the ball looseafter Lake Forest’s taller, faster receivershad it in their hands Often they were suc¬cessful. but not often enoughThe Foresters added two second halftouchdowns using many of reserves on both sides of the line of scrimmageAfter the game, the losers milled about incrushed confusion Defensive back ChuckWoods looked like football’s answer toFreddy Patek as he sat dazedly on hishelmet at the forty yardlineFinally, head coach Bob Lombardi calledhis charges together in a team huddle for afew- words and the team headed off the fieldtogether Their overall record now stands at2-2 and the conference mark is 1-1Tomorrow. Chicago goes to LawrenceCollege The game will be broadcast live onWHPK, 88 3, at 1:30.Sports shortsStickwomen lose; tie Intramural Top 10 Bootmen up recordThe women’s field hockey team showedseveral signs of improvement this week,first holding Northwestern to only twogoals last Thursday, and then scoring theirfirst two goals of the season in a tie againstConcordiaThe Maroons held the big Northwesternteam scoreless in the first half, but wereunable to generate a score, while theiropponents collected two in the second halfThings were different Tuesday as CathyPhillips scored from the field and CathvMoore connected with a penalty shot,giving Chicago a temporary lead, butConcordia tied the game later on“ It was a very good game ” said CoachDelores Larkin, Everything is comingtogether ”The Maroons take on U of Wisconsinnext Saturday at Milwaukee, a team theylost to 2-0 earlier in the season Chicagoreturns home for their final home gamenext Thursday against Wheaton at 4pm onStagg FieldFootball standingsMW AC East DivisionLawrenceRiponChicagoLake ForestBeloitLast weeks scores:Chicago 6 at Lake Forest. 49Beloit, 0 at Ripon. 50 W11 L001 11 1 1. Wabuno Bay Buccaneers < 4)2 Sugar Bears (1)3. Elan4 Phi Gamma DeltaHitchcock i tie)6 Legal Eagles7 Psi Upsiion8 Black Sheep9 Henderson10Walloo’s WacksChicago A 71 tie)Others receiving votes: Mathews. Harper,Thompson SouthFirst place votes in parenthesesSailing club racesThe University of Chicago sailing club srace team sent two two-man teams to theDavis Trophy regatta last weekend atIowa State University Chicago placed 12thout of 13 entries.Team members Landy Carien, ChrisWoodruff, .loan Hiam and Bruce Shapiromanned a pair of Flying Juniors, each boatracing 10 times“It was pretty intense ” said Carien,who is the club’s racing captain “We weredefinitely not outclassed, we just needsome practice.” she addedThe ciuo will be participating in aregatta at Millikan University thisweekend, their last race until springAnyone interested in any aspect of the clubshould call Carien at 753-2249 or club,president Marco Hanig at 684-8154 The Soccer team extended their recordto 2-3-1 this week with a loss to WesternMichigan followed by their second win infour years, a 5-2 victory over Trinity-collegeAlthough the Maroons lost by a score of5-1 against Western Michigan, CoachBarry DeSilva was pleased with his team’splay. ‘When you play a school that big youexpect to be killed ” DeSilva saidChicago faired better against Trinity.Dean Carpenter provided the strongscoring punch, connecting for two goals,while Pete Wendel, Kim Hong, andZbigniw Banas each booted one“We have a good team, though we relacking in depth ” said DeSilva, ‘They’reall working hard ”The Maroons are at home twice for thenext two games, taking on Beloit at 1:30tomorrow and then Northwestern at 3:30next Wednesday Both games are StaggFieldNetwomen split twoA win and a loss highlighted last week’swomen’s tennis action Last Saturday theMaroons fell to a tough Wheaton team 8-1Cathy Veach’s singles win provided thelone point. While most set scores wereclose, Chicago lost the crucial gamesgiving the state tournament runners-up avictory.On Monday the Maroons defeatedNortheastern College 7-2 on the Univer¬sity’s Quadrangle courts Steady play inthe strong wind and smart doubles tacticsgave Chicago the edge The Maroons willtravel to Northeastern next Monday, Oct24.Tuesday’s rain cancelled match with DePaul. It was rescheduled for Oct. 27.Coach Chris Scott extended the seasonby adding a final home match with LewisCollege, Nov 1Spikewomenwin 1; lose 2The women’s volleyball team won onematch while losing two this past week,making their season record 7-4 overallChicago’s win came in a conferencematch at Trinity college last Thursday, asthe Maroons took the match in threestraight games, 15-12,15-7,16-14Chicago was 3-0 in conference play atthat point, but St Xavier dropped theMaroons for their first conference lostSaturday, beating the Maroons 15-12, 15-6,14-16,15-6.Chicago met Elmhurst in a non¬conference match Tuesday, and lost thefirst two games 5-15 and 10-15. At thispoint we started to come together againWe had not been playing well, even atTrinity,” said coach Rosalie Resch. TheMaroons took the next two games 15-9, 15-13, but then were edged in the final gameby Elmhurst’s strong defensive team Il¬ls. Resch was pleased that the team wasable to make such a strong surge afterbeing down two games.Chicago takes on Wright Jr College andNorth Park at North Park Saturday, andthen goes to Mundalien for a matchTuesday before returning home for a tri¬meet next Thursday at 6:00 in Ida NoyesGym Both North Park and Mundalien areconference games Since only the top twoteams in the conference go to state, bothgames are musts for ChicagoSaturday October 22 ALICE'S RESTAURANT/Arthur Penn6:30,9:00 and 11:30 Cobb Hall $1.50Sunday October 23 APU TRILOGY Part III: WORLD OF APU/Satyajit Ray7:15 and 930 Cobb Hall $1.5018 The Chicago /fldfoqn iFriday, October 21,■ n r/r.jjVc 3 ' '* i 7* I V *Imw - mmmmmmCLASSIFIED ADSSPACEHyde Pk nr UC 1 rm studio 2Va rm apt.well kept bldg, adults nr 1C, bus, park,lake, reas BU8-0718.5 room, 2 bedroom apt. Newlyremodeled $400 Util inc. 5123 S. DorChester 363-0043.4th needed for apt. V2 blk. fromKimbark Plaza own bdrm. (small).Call 363 3933.Elegant 2 bedroom 2 bath co-op apt.Superb view from 23rd fir. Formaldining room. Custom kitchen, all newappliances. Beautiful window treat¬ments & built-in cabinets. Spotlighting. Luxuriously carpeted andtiled floors. $41,500. Shown by appointment only. 643 1476.Married Student housing: 1 bedroomapt., $201. all utilities. MOVE IN NOW,PAY NO RENT TIL NOV. 1. Call 3244576 or 753-3574 ask for Debi.1 bdrm. unfurn. Th rms. in E HydePk. Available Nov. 20. $225. Call 4932253 after 6.HOUSE FOR SALE2 story TOWNHOUSE FOR SALE BYOWNER. Exc. condition, 4bdrms„ l'/sbaths, Ivng rm., large fam. rm. in fin.bsmt., dng. rm. mod. kitchen appliances, new roof, ft. 8. bk. yd. pkg.Nice location. Walk to UC. Call 955-2689 after 5p.m.PEOPLE WANTEDCOMMUNITY WORKERS CitizensAction Program has a 7 yr. rec as anAlinsky-style organization fightingpolitical corruption & urbn decay.Salaried positions. Part time or fulltime. Call 929 2922 bet 10-1,Belly Dance Lessons Jamila Day 947-5600. Eve. 955-5019Subjects wanted for PsycholinguisticsExperiments. Will be paid. To registercall 753-4718.20 29 yr. old heterosexuals needed for3-mo. study of mood and activity': (1)stable couples not living together, (2)male and female roommates who arenot sexual partners, and (3) males andfemales w/out regular partners. Wantcontracepting individuals not usingpill or rhythm Will pay. For moreinfo, Call Mary Rogel, PhD. 947 6596days.OVERSEAS JOBS summer/yearround. Europe, S. America,Austrailia, Asia, etc. All fields, $500$1200 monthly. Expenses paid,sightseeing. Free inform. Write International Job Center, Dept. 11. Box4490. Berkeley, CA 94704.Reliable couple/person(s) to housesitand care for 2 kids (12 and 9) on occasional week-ends or overnights.$60/wkend. Call 878-9227.Part-time work weekends andevenings in social rehab department ofDrexel Home planning and carryingout of recreatonal activities. Interestor experience with aged helpful. Mustbe eligible for work - study. Contact DMcCauley or D Davis. 643 2384.Accounting tutor needed for MBAcourse. Call 955 7192.Man student as part time companionfor autistic boy After 6. HY3-7973.Harper Square Child Care Ctr. Fullday child development program forchildren 2Vz - kdgtn. Call 538-4041. PEOPLE FOR SALEFRENCH Native Teacher offers tutoring - all levels reasonable and experienced Ph. 324 8054.ARTWORK Illustration of all kinds,lettering, hand addressing for invitations, etc. Noel Price 493 2399.RESEARCHERS Freelance artistspecializes in just the type of graphicwork you need. Noel Price 493-2399Thesis, Dissertations, Term Papers,Inc Foreign language gen corres.Lates IBM corrective SEL IItypewriter. Reas, rates. Mrs. Ross239-4257 bet 11a.m. & 5 p.m.TYPING SERVICE/HYDEPARK/538 6066 after 5:00p.m.For reliable babysitting call 24) 6779.For Experienced Piano Teacher of allLevels Call 947 9746SCENESFREE ENGLISH CONVERSATIONCLASS for non native speakers at IHouse. Call 324 1776.UC Horn Quartet in concert Fri, Oct.21, 8:00 p.m. in Bond Chapel, UCCampus. Free (voluntary donations toUC Brass Soc) music by Tippett.Langley and othersFolk Music, Rock, Mime. What areyou into? Find it at Here is Israel, Sun10/23, 4 p.m. 5200 S. Hyde Park Blvd.We have corned beef, too! $2.50.CHICAGO FRONT MUSIC. LeroyJenkins Violin. Nov 18, 8 p.m. IdaNoyes Library.Lunchtime RAP GROUP for Womenstaff of UC starts Thurs. Oct. 27 1 p.m.at Blue GargoyleCHICAGO FRONT MUSIC JosephJarman - reeds. Oct. 29, 8 p.m.,Reynolds Club.FOR SALECOLLEGIATE RESEARCHPAPERS. Thousands on file. Allacademic subjects. Send $1.00 for mailorder catalog. Box 25918Z LosAngeles, CA 90025, 213 477 8474.QUALITY XEROX COPIES, 8 centsea. 1st Unit Ch 5650 Woodlawn, hours95, 7-10 daily.HORNET '74 excel cond lo-mile A/C,AM/FM, radial tires, 4 dr sedan $2,100or best offer. Phone 468 4917 or 2643782,"Immigrant Woman," is a paperbackby Mary Bolek, U of C grad, and isavailable at Stuart Brent Books, 670 N.Michigan; Roosevelt Univ Books,Jane Addams Books, 37 S. Wabash.Yard Sale. Stainless serving pieces,oriental rug curtains, lamps, clothes,books, etc. Sat. 10/22 10:00 3:00 5484 S.Everett, rear. RAIN DATE 10/23 orcall 363 2519.BMW 71 2002 eng/pts. 68 body AM-FM,new snow tires, gd. cd. 324-3227.PERSONALSWriters' workshop PL2 8377.PREGNANCY TESTS SATURDAYS10-1 Augustana Church, 5500 S.Woodlawn. Bring 1st morning urinesample. $1.50 donation. SouthsideWomen’s Health. 324-6794.Sunday at Brent House5540 S Woodlawn5:30 Social Hour6:00 Supper7:00 G B Shaw’s St. JoanDiscussion led by Donald Judson,Episc. Chaplain "EXECUTIVE 8. PROFESSIONAL"LOANS BY MAIL $5000 'to 35,000signature only. No advance fees accepted. M.D.'s, Denfists, Residents,Senior Medical Students, College &University Educators, Federal, Stdte& Municipal Employees, GS-12 orhigher, Corporate Employees making$20,000 or higher. Send brief resume foChatham Financial ConsultantsDepartment UCM PO Box 21406Chicago IL 60621.Peter Blanton Qualifies (AND HOW)Snagglepuss and Katrina are twogreat cats who need an apartmentthrough June Enjoy their friendshipwithout taking on any long termresponsibility. Kurt, 752-1000 (rm 607),evenings They are desperate - callsoon!Wanted Prepossessing Co ed to accompany gentleman to ChicagoSymphony Concert. 288 6370.BUGS BUNNY meets Bogie & Bacallin SLICK HARE. FRI 78.9Law AudNora - Maybe the romance of theBogart movie in the Law Schooltonight will help us get back together.Nick.COLORBLIND?Color Blind People wanted for experiments in visual perception.Variable hours. $2.50 per hour. Cal!947-6039.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 youthere. MODEL CAMERA 1342 E.55th St.MEDICICONTINENTALBREAKFASTCome to the Medici Sunday morningfrom 9:30 1 and enjoy Sunday papers,Ifresh 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 7394Save 60 cents if you pick it up yourself.RAP 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.GAY PEOPLEGeneral meeting UCGLF Mon, Oct.24 7:30p m. Ida Noyes301STEREOGEARAll kinds, fully guaranteed. No lowerprices are legal. Tl Calculators, tooCall 752 3818EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURTROSENBAUMOptometrist{53 Kimbark Plaza)1200 East 53rd Street493-8372 JCL CLASSLearn Job Control Language for theIBM 370 computer. Class will in¬troduce operating system concepts,teach tape 8, disk usage, and basic JCLstatements. 6 sessions. $20 Computertime provided. Come to ComputationCenter before Oct. 27 to register orcall 753 8400 for info.LITERARYMAGAZINEPrimavera is on sale in most HydePark stores 8. Bob's Newstand Weneed women to join the editorial staff.Call 752 5655 if you can help out.PAN PIZZADELIVEREDThe Medici Delivers from 5-10 30weekdays, 5-11 weekends, 667 7394.Save 60 cents if you pick it up yourselfPREGNANTPOSSIBILITIESRapidly deteriorating world prospectsrequire ideas Global psychoplasmseeks information, stimulation.Unusual, important. Details 25 centsand stamp Cortex, 24 Collingswood,New City, NY 10956PIANOStark Studio upright for sale Excellent condition, easy to move.$600.00. 373-0518WANT TO DIRECTA PLAY?Proposals for Winter productions inCourt Studio Theatre die by Oct. 31.Forms available 8, questionsanswered. RC 304, 753-3582MIDSUMMERNIGHT'S DREAMOxford Cambridge Shakespeare Co.will do 2 performances only, Oct. 30 8.31 at 8 p.m. Tickets at Mandel BoxOffice.FREE PUPPIESAdorable 6 wk. terrier mix pups, smaliapt. size free1 947-9246CONSULTATIONSERVICEAre you disturbed by the loss of a lovedone, by death, divorce, or separation’Call 721-1169.My armycoat’s assTAI-$AVt-\&NCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCAKTONCSC ANDAMERICAN DISHESOffN DAILY11 A.M. TOtUMOATS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO A30 PM.Ot4t* to toko out111* Coot **4 MU 4-TOO3| PIZZA i! PLATTER1440 K. SMIMl S-24001 FAST DELIVERY j1 AND PICKUP» 1Young Designs byELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERS Spokesmen Elcycle §LcpMCM hyde Pail? BKd.ASelling Quality Imported BikesRaleigh, Peugeot, MotobecaneAnnouncing a full inventoryof MOPEDS on display.Open 10-7 pm M-F10-5 pm Sat. .684-3737 KENNEDY, RYAN, MONKAl A ASSOCIATES, INCDirectory of ValuesWe Know Hyde ParkReal Estate Inside OutI■ HOUSES FOR SALEPREVIEWOFFERINGFourteen town homes will bebuilt this winter at 49th andDorchester, designed by Y.C.Wong. Preliminary plans areavailable for your inspecfionaf our office. Call 667 6666.56TH AND BLACKSTONEClassic 2^2 sfory greystonewifh six bedrooms, 3V2 bathsWood-burning fireplace,natural oak trim. $142,500. Tosee call Mrs. Haines.SETTLE IN BEFORETHE HOLIDAYSSpend your Thanksgiving inthis bright, We^ss-designedtownhome. Cook your turkeyin a spacious well-equippedeat-in kitchen. Watch thefootball games in a super rec.room. To see this 3 bedroom2V2 bath townhome cal!Richard E. Hild, 667-6666(res. 752-5384), "Ask aboutthe extras."ERAOF ELEGANCEThree story brick! Evidenceof beautiful living abounds ingracious large Hyde ParkBoulevard residenceButternut-panelled livingroom with curved bay-windows, high fireplace.Study adjacent, largemodern kitchen tor gourmetcook, spacious bedrooms on 2floors above. All systems ex¬cellent - back yard andprivate parking. $165,000Call Charlotte Vikstrom. I PROMISED YOUA ROSE GARDENGracious Kenwood home h»a unique style combin'w/comfortable family-liviilayout. Magnificent flowtgardens contain over 1«varieties of roses. This famly has loved it & you will to*$157,500. To see, call MrHaines, 667-6666.JACKSON PARKHIGHLANDSGracious living room witwoodburning fireplace. 4-plubedrooms, 3*/2 baths anroom to expand. Screenepo^ch, large eat-in kitchen,car garage. $80,000 ~o vejicall Eleanor Coe, 667-6666.iN TOWN LIVINGL-shaped living room w/woo'burning fireplace A skylitdining room. Large famil-kitchen. Powder room,bedrooms, 2 baths and roonto expand. Asking $40,000 0???. To see call Mrs. Haines667-6666.MORE THAN ATOWNHOUSEEnd unit, windows on thre€sides and lovely naturegarden beyond brick garderwall give space & beauty. 6rooms plus built-in bookcasearea in lower level. Centra!air, handsome parquet floorsPrivate parking, quiet cul-desac avenue near shoppingplaza. Immediate possession$78,500. Charlotte Vixstrom667-6666APARTMENTS FOR SALECONVENIENCE PLUS1 bfedroom co-op in welllocated, well-managed HydePark building. Off-streetparking Board approval re¬quired To see call GeorgeBilger, 667-6666.BRETHARTE DISTRICT4 bedrooms, 2V2 bath condo inmove-in condition. Largefamily kitchen w/laundrycenter. Floors newiy sanded.Off street parking. $61 500To see, call Mrs. Haines.667 6666THE GREAT ESCAPETO PRIVACYQuiet modern secludedelevator condominium bldgon Harper Ave. near Co-opprivate parking Two apart¬ments each one bedroom -are offered for quick saleElectric heat, low assessment. Call 667-6666.BRETHARTESCHOOL DISTRICT6 rm. condo, 3 BRs, 2 baths,large LR w/mock fireplacesand balcony, gallery hall, formal DR. nice kitchen, largeback porch, outdoor inter¬com. 55th near Lake Lowassessment, $35,000 Call DonTillery 667-6666.NEATTWOFLATFrame building, two 6 roomapts., 1 bath each. Perfect forlive in owner. Near 76th andExchange. Price $24,500. CallFrank Goldschmidt, 66?-6666LUXURYON A BUDGETThis fine apartment buildingcontains tour rental unitsplus a deluxe owner's apartment. Probably the mos*elegant 8 '00m apt in HydePark Rents pay ail operatingcosts. $195 000 Cali FrankGoldschmidt, 667-6666 OVERLOOKINGLARGEGARDENNear University of ChicagoWoodlawn Ave condo souttof 55th. Super ideal for singleperson or profess ionacouple. Four sunny rooms inmodern beautifully-keptbuilding Low monthly cost$32,500. Call CharlotteVikstrom, 667-6666NEAR 59TH AND HARPERAiry, light 4 room Co-opBeautiful kitchen and baftFrench windows open to theMidway view Full diningroom, king size bedroom,storm windows, air con¬ditioners First time ottered$25,000. Equity includes inside parking. Call CharlotteVikstrom, 667-6666CONDOMINIUMELEGANCEBeautiful duplex unit withcathedral ceiling in livingroom 5 bedrooms. 3 full & 2half baths, wail to wallcarpeting, plush wallcovering, 24 hr. doorman,built-in bookcases in library,new modern kitchen gashearth fireplace, $116,600firm. To see please callFrank Goldschmidt, 667-6666MOVE NORTH(JUSTALITTLE)Sample the privacy of EdtonPlace. Discover the naturalbeauty and spacious rooms ofa fully restored 4 bedroom, 2bath turn of-the centurycondominium homeAvailable for immediatepossession. On 48th St nearKenwood $49 500 Call 667-6666DORCHESTER7 •■oom, 4 bedroom l"? bathcondo Large fencedbackvard Priced of $31 500Call 66’-o6661461 East 57th Street Chicago Illinois 60637’.:•• • 667-6666Daily 9 to 5 Sat 9 to 1, Or cal! 66T 6666 Anytime1620 E. 53rd St.288 2900ANNUAL WINE SALEOct. 21 - 24GRAND CRUCLASSE LAMBRUSCOReg. Sales Price Reg. Sale11970 Chateau Bouscaut 8.99 6.99 Price1970 Chateau La Tour Bicheau 4.99 3.99 Fratelli 1.98 1.5911970 Chateau Troplong Mondot 7.99 5.99|1970 Chateau St. Julien-Beychevelle 7.99 5.99 FRENCH WINES11970 Chateau Ripeau 6.99 4.99 Reg. Sale11970 Chateau Chauvin 6.99 4.99 Price11970 Chateau Pedesclaux 8.98 6.9811973 Chateau La Mission Haut Brior Special 10.95 1970 Lagrange 8.99 6.991969 Chateau Beausejour 8.99 6.79|1970 Chateau Lascombes 9.95 7.49 1970 Phelan Segur 7.89 5.99|l967 Chateau Cheval Blanc Special 21.50 1973 Pierre Ponelle Beaujolais 4.991970 Chevalier Cotes de BeaunePREMIER GRAND CRU CLASSE Villages 3.49\ Reg. Sale 1973 Pierre Ponelle Moulin-a-Vent 3.99I Price 1973 Pierre Ponelle Fleuri 3.9911973 Chateau Mouton Rothschild Special 15.95 1973 Pierre Ponelle Morgon 3.491 1966 Chateau Margaux Special 24.95 1973 Pierre Ponelle Brouilly 3.39; 1971 Henry Bouchard BeaujolaisSAINT-EMILION Chateau de Vurenard 2.991 1970 Chateau Beausejour 8.98 5.98 1971 Henry Bouchard Julienas 4.99i 1969 Chateau Pavie 7.98 6.98 1971 Henry Bouchard St. Amour 3.2111970 Chateau Pavie 9.99 6.99 1970 Henry Bouchard Nuits St.George 6.99RED & WHITE BURGANDIES 1964 Paret Beasesejour 2.99Heg. Sale 1973 Pierre Ponnelle Beaujolais 1.99Price Domaine de Le Roche 2.991971 Clos de la Commaraine 10.99 8.99 RARE PORTS1971 Hospices de Beaune Pommard 16.95 12.95 1957 Barbosa Port 6.991971 J.V. Vosne-Romanee 6.99 4.99 1937 Kopke Port 13.991971 J.V. Mercurey 5.99 3.99 GERMAN WINES1970 Chateau Corton Grancey 12.95 9.99 SaleJaboulet Vercherre Douilly-Fuisse 5.98 4.99 PriceRED TABLE WINE 1975 Piesporter Goldtropfchen 3.99Req. Sale 1971 Demmer Liebfraumilch 3.49Price 1971 Trittenheimer Altarchen 3.9911971 Alexis Lichine Corton 7.95 5.99 1975 Steinberger (Kabinett) 4.99