Vol. 89, No. 27 The University of Chicago c. Copyright 1979 The Chicago Maroon Friday, January 11, 1980Graduate enrollments slide;committee outlines optionsBy Jaan EliasIf the present decline in the sizeof the graduate divisions contin¬ues, the University will be facedwith a number of hard options inthe coming years, a faculty adviso¬ry committee on enrollments hasreported.The committee’s report, issuedlast quarter, states that the situa¬tion is so serious, “it is a threat tothe existence of the University aswe have known it.”The committee based its recom¬mendations on the belief that theenrollment of the University mustbe kept at 8000 students in order tomaintain financial stability.While total applicants to the Uni¬versity have increased by 19 per¬cent, applications to the graduatedivisions have fallen 37 percentFouth-year College studentsGordon Crovitz and Adam Schul-man have been awarded Rhodesscholarships for the 1980-81 and1981-82 school years. They wereamong lour students chosen fromthe Midw’est to receive the awards.Rhodes scholarships provide win¬ners with full tuition, room andboard, and a stipend for two yearsof study at Oxford University.Crovitz, a PERL major, plans tostudy jurisprudence at Oxford, andmay later attend law school. Hewas co-editor of the Chicago Jour¬nal for three years, joining thepaper shortly after it was foundedin 1975. He resigned that positionlast year, but remains on the Jour¬nal's board of directors.While still in high school, CrovitzwTote for the Raleigh News and during the past decade, and the en¬rollment of the University is downseven percent. The report said thatthe decline in applications hasbeen offset somewhat by increas¬ing the admissions rate but con¬cluded “we are now’ reaching alimit in what can be done withouteroding the quality of the graduatestudent body.”The report notes that the declinein graduate enrollments at the Uni¬versity is part of a nationwidetrend in declining graduate enroll¬ments. The University, the reportstates, suffered one of the sharpestdeclines in the nation.The committee outlined five pos¬sible responses to the decline in en¬rollments and applications to thegraduate divisions:• aggressively recruiting gradu¬ate students while also increasingthe size of the College;Observer, his home town newspa¬per, and worked in the news de¬partments of several radio sta¬tions. doing his first radio new'sshow at the age of 14. He has alsowritten for the Washington Postand Time magazine.Schulman, a chemistry major,will enter a 2-year B. A. programat Oxford in physics and philoso¬phy. He hopes to go on to study thephilosophy of science at the gradu¬ate level and then to teach philoso¬phy of science. Schulman has par¬ticipated in several researchprojects directed by Universityprofessors and also spent a sum¬mer working at Cold Springs Har¬bor Laboratory.According to Crovitz, applyingfor the Rhodes scholarship was *’alot like applying to college.” Appli¬cants had to answer a series of bio-Turn to Page 22 • significantly increasing thesize of the College;• adjusting the size and thescope of the University to maintainthe present graduate/undergradu¬ate ratio of students;• increasing the sizes of the pro¬fessional schools:• changing the orientation ofgraduate programs from doctoralprograms to more career orientedmasters programs.The committee rejected the lasttwo options because the profession¬al schools are already operating attop capacity and changing the na¬ture of graduate programs wouldrequire significantly transformingthe nature of the faculty and wouldnot guarantee increased enroll¬ments, the report said.The report said the first option ofaggressively recruiting moregraduate students was based ontwo judgements which “unfortuna¬tely cannot be support by hard evi¬dence ” In order for this option tobe feasible the report said that thedownward trend in employmentopportunities would have to end infive to seven years.and the Uni¬versity would have to buck thetrend of decreasing graduate en¬rollments.If this option is chosen, the com¬mittee recommended that the pro¬posals of previous committees toincrease enrollment be followed.Keep PickBy Andrew PatnerThe committee appointed byPresident Gray last May to reviewUniversity awards in the wake ofthe controversy surrounding lastyear's Pick Award has recom¬mended that the University contin¬ue to make the award.But in the harshest official criti-Two awarded RhodesBy David GlocknerHospital complex receives $14.5 millionRobert Mitchell presents gift to Mrs. GrayBy Jeff DavitzJovan scents are sweeter thanever to University of Chicago fundraisers now that Bernard A Mit¬chell, founder of Jovan. has madea $14.5 million pledge.Mitchell’s donation will be usedas part of the University’s planned$80.2 million modernization pro¬gram for the medical center.According to William R. Haden,director of development, Mit¬chell’s gift is the “largest singlecommittment from a living indi¬vidual” ever received by the Uni¬versity. Mitchell presented 2.5 mil¬lion dollars of the gift to HannaGray at a luncheon on December19.Mitchell has said of the Uni¬versity that “it is one of the fewplaces that genuinely make a dif¬ference. My family and I want tohelp maintain and strengthen thattradition in the vears ahead.Mitchell also cited the Universi¬ ty as a “leader in medical educa¬tion. research, and patient care.”According to John J Piva, Jr.. associate vice-president for themedical center, the University stillneeds $63.7 million to meet the Norman BradbumThese include proposals to person¬alize the applications procedureand to emphasize the record of theplacement office in finding em¬ployment for graduates.1 he committee noted that fellow¬ship funds for graduate student aidhave declined in real terms duringthe past years and speculated that increasing funding in this areacould increase the ability of theUniversity to attract highly quali¬fied graduate students."Among ten comparable gradu¬ate programs .Chicago is eitherlast or next to last in financial aidTurn to Page 3despite flaws: studycism of the award to date, the fac¬ulty advisory committee for Uni¬versity awards and prizes lashedthe way the aw ard was created andits recipient chosen.“The procedures by which theAlbert Pick Award w as establishedand its first nominee selected aretroublesome in several aspects.The award was established withoutcontribution$80.2 million goal.The remainder w ill be providedthrough a combination of internalfinancing, a fund drive and bondsissued through the Illinois HealthFacilities Authority The bondissue awaits approval.Central to the modernizationprogram is the construction of anew 500 t>ed hospital at 58th St andMaryland Ave. The new facilitywill replace the present hospital'saging patient care and supportunits.William Mercer, health systemsplanning coordinator said that thevacated facilities will be renovatedfor other patient care servicessuch as physical therapy, physicalrespiratory therapy, and dialysis.Mercer also said that the newhospital would significantly in¬crease the medical center'soperating efficiency by centraliz¬ing certain key functions such assupplies It will not increase thenumber of beds any significant consultation withfaculty The language of the awardwas restrictive in certain respects.In the establishment of the awardit w as not made clear that the com¬mittee's selection was subject tothe approval of any higher authori¬ty. whether that be the President,the Council of the Senate, or theBoard of Trustees. The committeedid not seek advice from the Uni¬versity community as to w hich in¬dividuals might be appropriate re¬cipients of the award. There wereno lengthy deliberations w ithin thecommittee nor careful elaborationof convincing documentation insupport of the candidate se¬lected...”However the committee conclud¬ed that with the establishment of astanding committee on aw ards andwider participation in the earlystages of the nomination process itwould be possible, and desirable,for the University to make awardsin a variety of areas including pub¬lic service, the fine arts and publicadministration.The body of the committee's re¬port often seems to contradict itsrecommendations on the subject ofnon-academic awards. The com¬mittee was split, according to thereport, on w hether or not an aw ardin international understanding wasby nature a political award, but allmembers agreed “that the awardin its present form is ill-defined,”Turn to Page 3MORTON - MURPHY AWARDSThe deadline for application for Fall QuarterMorton-Murphy awards is Friday, February 1st,1980. The awards for a maximum of $150. aregiven “to show recognition to students who havemade some significant contribution above andbeyond the call of duty or personal fulfillment tocampus life.”An undergraduate or graduate student mayapply directly for an award or be nominated byany member of the University community student,faculty or staff.SPRING QUARTER 79 RECIPIENTSWEREGeoffrey Cox Rosemary SafranekBrian David Byron TrottAnn Harvilla Cordelia WatsonMORTON-MURPHY APPLICATIONSARE AVAILABLE IN HARPER 252(CHANCES 1'Features a Super Salad Bar . Steak Burgers Super Sandwiches Soup and SaladBar Steak and Salad Bar Carry-outs available 7 days a week The Michelob is on uswhile you wait to pick up a carry-out order (Sorry, only 1 person can drink free1)5225 S. Harperin Hyde ParkTelephone 363-1454(Good with this ad )We’re swinging Steakburqers 7 days a week Our waiting for winter isfinally over....come ski with us,U.C. SKI CLUBSteaxnkoatAhSPRING BREAK MAR.21 - 30RT. AMTRACK & TRANSFERS7 nights Condos (all the amenities) 5 dayslifts “incredible skiiing” 6th day to relax.S430°° ($150 deposit due 1/21)LACROSSE WEEKENDCARNIVAL FEB. 22-24RT TRANSPORTATION, 2 NIGHTS LODG¬ING. 2 days lift tickets, dinner Saturday.$7000I*J (Members) s25 deposit due 1/24LEARN TO SKI NIGHTSSUNDAY, JAN. 13 SATURDAY, JAN. 19WEDNESDAY, JAN. 30 FRIDAY, FEB. 15Includes: equipment, lifts, lesson,transportations1950 Members s2400 Non-Members. Group RatesAvailable.CROSSCOUNTRYDAY IN THE PARKFEB. 2(Required sign-up meeting Monday Jan.21 7 p.m. Ida Noyes.)Equipment Rental, 3 hr lesson (beginner& advanced) Hot Lunch & refreshments.All in Jackson Park.s1 800 Members s20°° NonMembersSKI TEAMSki your best this year with the UCSki Team. $20Membership Fee includes coaching,race fees, transportation subsidy, andother extras. Competition and coachingis geared to both beginning and advanc¬ed racers. Practices every Tuesday even¬ing; Meetings, Mondays at 7 p.m., IdaNoyes. Next races: 1 /16, Olympia; 1/19LaCrosse Cup; 1/20 Wintergreen. Formore info call Mitch 752-5977; Robin752-7705.UC SKI CLUBMembership s750 yearRegular meetings Monday & Thursday, 7p.m. Ida Noyes. Special meetingTONIGHT 7 p.m. IdaFor Information Call 955-96462 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, January 11, 1980NewsbriefsFlying carpetFinancial aid cut back this quarter0 Oneway out of your troubles is to help the Uni¬versity find its missing Kerman carpet. TheUniversity if offering a reward of up to$10,000 for information leading to the recov¬ery of the 18-by-30 foot rug, which was madein 1900 in Kerman, Iran. The rug, which hadhung on the wall of the east transept ofRockefeller Chapel, was stolen sometimearound September 13, 1979.The 45 panels of the rug depict the ruins ofPersepolis, the capitol of ancient Persia.Persepolis was a group of palaces built inthe fifth and sixth centuries B.C., but burnedin 330 B.C. by Alexander, who failed to ap¬preciate the architectural splendor of thecomplex.The rug had previously hung in the Orien¬tal Institute at the library of the QuadrangleClub. It was given to the University by Chi-cago-area collector Mary Hooker Dole.Persons with information about the carpetmay arrange with the Chicago police or theFederal Bureau of Investigation to give in¬formation anonymously. Anyone with infor¬mation about the theft is asked to call Area 1Burglary, Chicago police (744-8382) or thelocal office of the F.B.I.The man whowould be kingThe University Connally for President As¬sociation which supports the former TexasGovernor John B. Connally in his quest forthe Republican Presidential nominationwill hold its organizational meeting this af¬ternoon at 4 pm in the library room of IdaNoyes Hall.John and NellieBooth honoredThe Modern Language Association(MLA) has chosen Wayne Booth to serve astheir president during 1932. Boot!) , theGeorge M. Pullman Distinguished ServiceProfessor of English and in the Committeeon Ideas and Methods,will serve as secondvice-president of the group this year andfirst vice-president in 1981 before taking of¬fice as president. The Modern Language As¬sociation is composed of scholars of all themodern languages of the Western world.During his tenure as an officer of the groupBooth plans to try to improve employmentprospects for scholars of modern languagesand literatures.Free to choose“Ivory craftsmen carving intricate statu¬ary, women working in garment sweat shop. . these people aren't going to be here for¬ever. these are stepping stones offered bythe market ” (Milton Friedman) If you'reinterested in this free market philosophy, orif you’d like to see its leading guru debateeconomists who hold different economicviews, vou’re free to choose to watch h ried-man's ten-part television series which pre¬mieres tonight on Channel 11 at 9 pm.Free to Choose will present Friedman.Paul Snowden Russell Distinguished Ser¬vice Professor of Economics and 1976 Nobel Laureate, discussing inflation, public edu¬cation, the cause of the Great Depression,and consumer protection in weekly hour-long programs. The series was filmed at lo¬cations around the world and the debateswere taped here at the University, althoughFriedman now lives in San Francisco.Friedman and his wife have also authoredan accompanying text which will be avail¬able soon.Art to Live WithIt’s Art to Live W'ith time again. Paintingsfrom the collection of Joseph Shapiro will bedistributed in the Cloister Club of Ida NoyesHall today beginning at 4 pm. There is a $5insurance charge, and you may keep yourpaintings until June 4.Professors dieWilliam H. Zachariasen, 73, the ErnestDeWitt Burton Distinguished Service Pro¬fessor Emeritus of Physics and in the Col¬lege, died December 24 in Santa Fe, NewMexico.Zachariasen got his start in science early,publishing his first scientific paper at age 19and receiving his Ph.D. from the Universityof Oslo just four years later. He came to theUniversity of Chicago in 1930.During his career, Zachariasen made im¬portant contributions to the theory of X-raycrystallography. He also served as a SeniorStaff Physicist on the Manhattan Projectfrom 1943-45. He was chairman of the De¬partment of Physics for eight years andserved for three years as Dean of the Divi¬sion of Physical Sciences.Henry Mehlberg, professor emeritus ofphilosophy, died December 10 at his home inGainesville, Florida. Mehlberg, 75, taughtat the University from 1955 until 1970.Mehlberg was an important figure in theempiricist movement in philosophy whichtook place between the 1930s and the 1960s.Among his books are Problems of QuantumTime and The Reach of Science.Born and educated in Poland. Mehlbergcame to North America at the end of WorldWar II to teach at the University of Toronto.He also taught briefly at Princeton Univer¬sity before coming to Chicago.Havighurst scholarshipWe still don’t know what Robert McNa¬mara did with his $25000, but Robert J. Havighurst .professor emeritus of educationand human development used a recentaward he received for the same amount tostart a scholarship fund to be administeredby the committee on human development.And Bernice Neugarten professor of humandevelopment .has been appointed deputychairman of the 1981 White House Confer¬ence on Aging. A former president of theGerontological Society, Neugarten has pub¬lished extensively in the field of adult devel¬opment.Zonis on IranMarvin Zonis. associate professor ofhuman development, will offer his latest as¬sessment of the Iranian situation tonight at8:30 pm at Hillel House. 5715 S. WoodlawnAveZonis is an authority on Iran and a formerdirector of the University’s center for Mid¬dle Eastern studies. He recently translateda major treatise of the Ayatollah Khomeiniand has presented his estimations and pre¬dictions on numerous radio and televisionprograms.EnrollmentContinued from Page 1for its graduate students. Itoffers the fewest teaching opportunities, it isthird from last in available research assis-tantships, and it is next to last in the numberof students receiving aid,’’ the committeerevealed.The committee concluded that respondingto the problem by increasing aid would bethe riskiest of the possible responses. “It isnot at all certain that increasing the amountof aid available will produce the necessaryincrease in graduate student enrollments,”while it would undermine the Universities fi¬nancial position, the report said.The second possible response of increas¬ing the size of the College was based on theability of the College to attract greater /numbers of applicants and w’ould not re¬quire additional faculty members becauseof the close affiliation of the College andgraduate faculties, according to the report.Applications to the College have increasedby 26 percent during the past decade and thecommittee said that a three percent in¬crease in the number of College studentsevery year could be a feasible goal. Thiswould change the ratio of undergraduates tostudents in the graduate divisions from thepresent 50:50 ratio to a 60:40 ratio in1983-84.Staffing problems have already causedovercrowding and the addition of non-facul¬ty instructors in College core and basiccourses The report noted that the numberof faculty-taught core courses has increasedin the past year but concluded, “we stillhave a way to go, even at present enroll¬ments, before we meet our obligations instaffing the core and the basic courses withregular faculty.’’The committee also noted that a largerCollege would change the character of stu¬dent housing and put increased pressure onactivity space.The report concludes that “expanding theCollege would appear to be the path of leastresistance, especially since we seem to bemaking progress in attracting a greaternumber of high quality undergraduates. Butof all responses, it is potentially the mostradical in its effect on the University, be¬cause it reverses the historic relations be¬tween the divisions and the College ... thedistinctive character of the College and theUniversity will be lost.’’The third response of maintaining presentenrollment ratios would imply a decline inthe size of the College and also necessitate afurther reduction in the size of the faculty.The report concludes that this response“implies a reduction in faculty size thatwould reduce the richness and diversity ofthe University and even further reduce theopportunities to hire new junior faculty.”The report also notes that a combinationof these various responses can be formulat¬ed. “W’e have adopted this strategy (of pres¬enting clear types of responses) deliberate¬ly in order to clarify the issues involved . . .it is possible, even likely, that in the re¬sponse the University ultimately adopts sev¬eral of these types will be mixed.’’The report encourages discussion aboutthe options "in the widest possible circles.”The report goes on to suggest that formalmechanism be instituted through the Coun¬cil of the University Senate.Paul Meier, Ralph and Mary Otis IshamProfessor of Statistics, and spokesman forthe Council of the University Senate, saidthat the report has been received by the Sen¬ate though not formally discussed yet. Hesaid that it would be on the agenda in the fu¬ture.The committee was formed during thespring of last year by President Gray to re¬port on the future composition of the Univer¬sity. Norman Bradburn. Tiffany and Mar-gret Blake Distinguished Service Professorof Behavioral Sciences and director of theNational Opinion Research Center, chairedthe committee which consisted of Alan Don-agan. Phyllis Fay Horton. Professor of Hu¬manities and chairman of the philosophy de¬partment: Philip C. Hoffmann, associateprofessor of pharmacological and physiolo¬gical sciences. Norman H Nachtrieb. pro¬fessor of chemistry. Tetsuo Najita. profes¬sor of history and far eastern languages anddirector of the center for Far Eastern stu¬dies. Thomas L. Whisler. professor anddirector of reseach in the Graduate Schoolof Business Serving as ex-officio membersof the committee were Jonathan F Fanton.vice president for academic resources,Charles D. O'Connell, dean of students in theUniversity and Jonathan F. Smith, dean ofthe College.Bradburn said that he has not receivedmuch reaction on the particular options dis¬cussed in the report though he understandsthat discussion of the report has been initiat¬ed on the departmental level.Bradburn said that he believed that thefirst response seemed to be closest to the po¬sition of President Gray in her State of theUniversity speech. He also noted that Grayseems to want an increase in the size of theCollege “almost as a good in itself," and in¬dependent of fiscal considerations.Bradburn said he was “not very optimis¬tic” about the viability of the increased aidtowards graduate students in halting theslide in graduate enrollments.“1 think the University may be in for aperiod of relative decline,” he saidThe Ch Pick AwardContinued from Page 1and that “a substantial modification in pro¬cedure” was needed “to achieve the goalsfor which the award was established.”At several points the report is plainly crit¬ical of awards outside of scholarship or ser¬vice. An award, the report says, “must fallwithin an area of activity in which the Uni¬versity has demonstrated competence Inthe absence of this competence, we ought toleave the honoring to others ... As we moveto the periphery of our concern as a univer¬sity, the seriousness and weight of our jud¬gement diminish.”Although the report argues that the Uni¬versity should not cease to make an awardbecause of controversy, it does point outthat awards given for public service mightseem to carr$r a stamp of corporate approv¬al that is not universal. “There are in factmany circumstances in which the communi¬ty is far from being of any truly corporatemind, for the University is composed of menand women with highly divergent views. Asone leaves the relatively narrow realm ofcollective professional competence, thosedivergences come to the fore, and resent¬ment at the presumptuousness of others tospeak for one in these nonacademic mattersis easily understood. These are feelings thatdo not need encouragement.”At another point in its report though, thecommittee states that “in recognizing excel¬lence in an area where it provides trainingand instruction, the University encouragesan area of activity to which it has alreadymade a commitment,” and cites the profes¬sions, public policy, and the creative arts asexamples of these areas. “More problemat¬ic,” the report says, “is our honoring indi¬viduals for achievements in areas that arenot our principal concern and where we mayhave no special competence as a universi¬ty.”Although it does not say how the PickAward should be given in the future, it doesrecommend that all University-wide awards“should provide the opportunity for theawardee to spend a period of time at theUniversity,” and suggests that award recip¬ients might offer lectures, performances, orclasses as a part of their visit. The PickAward, the report proposes, might enable"outstanding individuals from other nationsto experience and enrich the life at this Uni¬versity.”The report calls for a permanent commit¬tee on awards that would review proposalsfor new awards and procedures for makingthem, as well as reviewing nominees. It alsoproposes that each award “have a distinctfocus It suggests that the Rosenberg Medal,which has been given in the past to the dis¬coverer of insulin, the Julliard Quartet, andthe chairman of the Cummins Corporation,be given tor the creative and performingarts, and that the Benton Medal, which hasbeen given to three former trustees, begiven for public service.As a part of its attempt to set the histori¬cal context of University aw ards, the reporttraces the history of honorary degrees andother all-University honors One of the ob¬servations of this survey is that the currentpolicy of awarding honorary degrees onlyfor scholarship and to retiring presidentsand chairmen of the Board of Trustees isone that evolved over a period of years. Infact, the report notes, the first honorary de¬gree was presented to William McKinley.The section on honorary degrees concludeswith the 1958 instance when the Law Schoolfaculty asked the University to award a de¬gree to Queen Elizabeth. “This request.”the report notes, “was unanimously reject¬ed by the Committee on Honorary De¬grees ”The committee s chairman. Dr Irwin HRosenberg, professor of medicine, is awayfrom residence for an extended period andno member of the committee appears tohave been designated as a spokesman in hisabsenceThe report will be considered at the nextmeeting of the Council of the Faculty Senateon Tuesday. January 15.Staff meetingThe first staff meeting of the new yearwill be held this afternoon at 4 pm Allpresent .returning .and new staffmeml>ers are urged to attendcago Maroon — Friday, January 11, 1980 — 3Letters to the EditorGo nuclearTo the Editor:As a layman long active in environmentalissues, I feel the need to keep open a topicconsidered by many University studentsclosed, yet already profoundly affected bythem, and still of the utmost importance forour nation and our people: America’s futuresources of energy.The attack on nuclear power, so recentlybegun, has already been devastatingly suc¬cessful. A moratorium on new plants is in ef¬fect, and several plants begun as nuclearare now being converted to coal. The con¬version to coal is the crux of the issue today.Despite all our hopes and wishes, the abilityof America, still the most technologicallyadvanced in the world, to power itselfthrough clean energy sources such as thesun, geo-thermal energy, wind energy, hy¬droelectricity. etc., is still decades away.Even were all the money that current re¬searchers could ask for be given them, theproblems of making new energy sources vi¬able for heavy industry’s needs and fornorthern Midwest and North Atlantic states’needs are years away from being solved,much less from being implemented (witnessthe time between GM’s recent battery-driv¬en automobile breakthrough and substantialproduction of it being given as about 10years). For the foreseeable future, powerplants in most of the country will have to bebuilt as coal or nuclear powered ones 'fueloil obviously being in short supply).The problem now is with coal. An October7 New York Times article and, more em¬phatically, a November 4 New York TimesMagazine feature depict in horrifyingly realterms what the closure of nuclear powerplants can led to. The burning of high sul¬phur coal found in the Midwest and East re¬leases vast amounts of fine particulatesthroughout the atmosphere, capable of trav¬eling hundreds of miles and remaining inthe air for weeks at a time. These particlesare so small they are capable of gettingthrough the most expensive and elaborateair-pollution control devices the EPA has.Recent Yale University research has shownthat 140,000 deaths each year are related toair pollutants, “but principally sulphates”!Brookhaven National Laboratory has esti¬mated that 21.000 deaths occur each yeareast of the Mississippi due solely to the“particulates that emanate principallyfrom coal- and oil-burning power plants.”Seventy-three percent of the sulphates overNew York City are calculated to have comefrom Ohio and Pennsylvania coal-burningplants. Not only are cancer, emphysema,and heart diseases very real dangers of coalplants, acid rainfall containing more andmore sulphuric and nitric acids is beginningto fall now in the Midwest as well as theNortheast, as reported in a September 11CBS environmental feature story. This rainmay soon begin to affect crop yields andforest growth.From the EditorIn the recent past The Maroon's letter pol¬icy led to the domination of these pages bylong-winded diatribes and the propagandaefforts of various letter-writing groups. Inthe interest of making these pages a morediverse and readable forum we have adopt¬ed a new letter policy. As in the past all let¬ters sent to us become the property of TheMaroon We ask that writers limit their let¬ters to 500 words. We resei-ve the right toedit letters for reason of length or clarity.All letters must be signed with the name ofan individual or individuals and shouldcarry some statement of the writer’s rela¬tionship to the University communityNames will be withheld upon request Unsolicited opinion pieces should be limited to1500 words and should include the writer’sphone number. All correspondence shouldl>e addressed to the Editor and should t>etyped and triple spaced. We welcome allcomments and criticism. In view of these problems, which havebeen very cursorily enumerated here, itshould be a wonder that there are not thou¬sands of young people demonstratingagainst coal power plants But air pollutionis not exciting. It has been with us in oneform or another for many decades. Despitethe FACT that the highest detected level ofradiation near Three Mile Island, theWORST ACCIDENT in nuclear power histo¬ry, was about equal to the dosage receivedby a person who lives in Denver, Coloradofor about six months (because of the higheraltitude, the atmosphere filters out less ofthe sun’s same harmful radiation), and thatthousands of people NOW are annuallydying from the effects of the NORMALworking procedure of nuclear power’s onlypresent alternative, coal, many would shutdown the nuclear industry.This is the logic that would have ended ourmanned space program when three astro¬nauts accidentally died in their capsule, andthat would have ended our unmanned spaceprogram upon Skylab’s descent to earth.Fonda and Hayden have much politicalground to gain leading a successful “peo¬ples’ movement.” An anti-coal movement ispolitically impossible for them as coalminers are a working class and potentiallylarge socialist bloc. Set up against this,young people desire to demonstrate againstthe evils of our 20th century civilization RA¬DIATION is certainly a mass hysteria w'ordto a generation brought up on “The AmazingColossal Man,” and other movies about ra¬diation-caused monsters and mutants. But itis too bad that politics have been so infusedinto an environmental issue: the campusLeft denouncing nuclear power as a profit-inspired danger and the campus Right call¬ing it a ’ socialist failure.” It is unfortunatethat throughout much of the country’s intel¬lectual community today, to disagree with aJane Fonda or a Ralph Nader on a particu¬lar issue can lead to being dubbed a “right¬winger.” It is unfortunate that thousands ofpeople can be led into demonstrating for acause without being fully informed first,simply because the leaders of that cause areformer leaders of possibly noble and mass-inspired causes. It is also unfortunate thatmost of the pro-nuclear spokesman are fromthe utility companies. They obviously do notwish to discuss the dangers of coal plantssince these are under their managementalso.We must thank those who have helped topoint out the problems with nuclear power.It is certainly not my wish that nuclearplants be with us always. The only methodfor most of us to help the environment is toconserve energy rather than waste it. Butfor those who wish to do more themselves, itis in the interests of us all not to exaggeratethe dangers of one power source while ignor¬ing the horrifying effects on the entire ecos-phere of its major present alternativeSincerely.Jonathan Brooknergraduate studentOriental InstituteKooky leftTo the Editor:I regret not having attended the anti-CIArally, for I missed a good opportunity to yellnasty words at the protesters. Therefore. Ihave to find other ways to vent my frustra¬tions. This letter is the means that I havechosen. I want to respond, on behalf of thoseof us who reside in the fever swamps of thekooky right, to Rhonda Adams bombastictirade that appeared recently on this page.Her letter was devoid of any concrete crti-cisms or ideas, illogical, absurd, but aboveall. enjoyable reading.Ostensibly, at least at first. Miss Adamsseeks to criticize the extreme right and left.She fails to endear herself with the SYL,they are all naughty people according toher, but it turns out that Miss Adams is alsopart of the kooky left. Therefore, she spitsmost of her venom towards the right of thepolitical spectrum.Basically, Miss Adams seems to be insin¬uating that patriotism is the route of most evil. I plead guilty to all charges of being apatriot, but I plead not guilty to the heinouscharges that Miss Adams levels. I fail to seewhy hating the CIA, the FBI, Jimmy Carter.Rosalyn Carter, and the Library of Con¬gress is morally superior to, or more fruitfulthan, singing ‘God Bless America.” My ini¬tial response to the charges that patriotismfosters lynchings, detention camps, geno¬cide, and cruelty to animals is unprintable.Suffice to say that the charges are ridicu¬lous, unfounded, untrue and warped.Next, Mi$s Adams declares that authori¬tarianism is bad. which is true. Patriotism,remember, leads to authoritarianism, sosomehow' the people have to be protectedfrom patriots. In case you were wondering,this is just the function that democraticMarxism fulfills, according to Miss Adams.Of course, it just so happens that she iswrong. First of all, a hybrid betweem Marx¬ism and democracy is something that no onewill ever see. Furthermore, I charge thatMarxism fosters lynchings, detentioncamps, war, genocide, and various othersports.E^very Marxist government in the worldtoday is authoritarian. Every Marxist gov¬ernment that has existed has been authori¬tarian. I see no signs that it will change, un¬less Miss Adams classifies tanks in thestreet of Prague, the KGB, the Berlin wall,and the Gulag as symbols of democracy.Let’s look at the accomplshments ofMarxism. Twenty million people died underJoe Stalin. Ten to thirty million people diedin Mao’s Cultural Revolution. Pol Pot, thegreat Pol Pot. killed three million people.Russia runs the biggest series of detentioncamps in the world. China is fast becomingthe nightmare depicted in George Orwell’s1984.Miss Adams, and her compatriots, shouldlook around the world more often. Fromwhere do the people flee, and to where dothey go? The boat people come from Marx¬ist Indo-C’hina, not South Korea. The peopleare defecting from Russian to the UnitedStates, not the other way around. One mil¬lion people have lied Castro’s Cuba, not Ni¬caragua. No doubt Miss Adams can quotecountless grandiose justifications for hertheories, but they are invalid. In theoryMarxism may be valid, but the world hasseen what Marxism turns out to be.James MitchellStudent in the CollegeKooky rightTo the Editor:The patriotic backlash to the seizure ofAmerican hostages in Iran has emboldenedright-wing, anti-communist students on thecampuses. Chauvinist demonstrators burnIranian flags. The pro-imperialist backlashhas generated provocative attacks on theSpartacus Youth League (SYL), which is re¬cognized on many campuses as the commu¬nist organization. Such attacks occurred atthe University of Chicago and at OberlinCollege in Ohio, the latter noted for its liber¬al reputation. In both instances, the threatsof physical violence were aimed at demon¬strations which were sponsored or initiatedby the SYL for the purpose of driving re¬cruiters of U S. imperialism’s murderouselite 'the CIA and the Navy) off campus.The SYL has built numerous such demon¬strations on campuses across the country.But not until recently have they evokedright-wing counter-mobilizations. The SYLwill not be intimidated by these campus re¬actionaries nostalgic for My Lai, carpetbombing, COINTELPRO, the cold-bloodedmurder of the Panthers, Kent and JacksonState students. We will continue to mobilizeand vigorously defend demonstrations todrive recruiters for the American imperial¬ist war machine off the campuses.At the U of C other elements of the leftcringe at the right-wing mobilizations. Thespineless liberals of the Progressive Union(PU) have responded to the right-wing bycovering for it under the guise of “politicaltact”. In a letter published in the 30 No¬vember, Maroon, Rhonda Adams, a leadingmember of the PU, finds the cause of right-wing hysteria to lie in the “dogmatism andabrasiveness” of the SYL and its activi¬ties”. This implies that if the SYL did notfight for its politics, the right-wingers wouldvanish. After all, reminds Adams, “You can(still) hate the CIA, the FBI, Jimmy Carter,the Shah of Iran, Khomeini. . . without sup¬porting the SYL.” What Adams and the restThe Chicago Maroon — Friday, January 11, 1980 of the PU represent are classic liberals who,under the guise of being “anti-dogmatic”,are unable to deal with revolutionary poli¬tics of the SYL and advocate a bourgeoisprogram.Adams has the same methodolgy as thebourgeois New York Times which describesthe vicious, premeditated murders by theKlan in Greensboro as a “shoot out betweenextremist”! Members of the PU believe thatthe Klan and other fascist scum have theright of “free speech” in order to organizetheir brutal murders of Blacks, trade union¬ists and communists, while at the same timeadvocating racist gun control laws. This isgiving the racist police and their Klan co¬horts an open field day, while blacks are leftdefenseless against attacks.Unlike the liberals, the SL/SYL advocatesthe right to Southern Black armed self-delense, for the abolition of gun control, andfor labor and blacks to organize to smashthe fascist Klan. No doubt Rhonda Admasdoesn’t find this very tactful!Some PUer’s even advocated that theCold-Warrior, Dean of Students of the Busi¬ness School, Lubosh Hale, be given the rightto speak at a demonstration against U.S.military recruiters on campus, so that hecould spew forth his anti-communist, pro¬imperialist views. One wonders why thesePUers didn’t join Hale in organizing theirown pro-US demonstration to send more UStroops to Guantanamo!The PU refused our offer for a united frontdemonstration against CIA recruiters oncampus because they ‘didn’t want to be seenas a front group for the SYL.” Clearly, thestrongest political impulse of this motleygroup of cynical New-Left overs and demo¬crats is anti-communism. What else couldone expect from an organization that spentthe summer debating whether to call them¬selves democratic or socialist and decided itdidn’t matter?U. S. imperialism is decaying, its rapiddecline exacerbated by acute inter-imperi¬alist rivalries and accelerated by its richlydeserved historic defeat in Vietnam. The USbourgeoisie’s only hope for recapturingtheir position as the supreme financial/in¬dustrial capitalist power is victory in impe¬rialist war against the Soviet Union. WhileCarter and his Democratic and Republicanallies howl for “austerity”, they mount in¬creasing attacks on the living standards ofthe working class. It has been the revolu¬tionary Trotskyism of the Spartacus YouthLeague which has consistently demonstrat¬ed against representatives of US imperi-alsim on campus and has put forward theonly program for smashing this racist, capi¬talist system. JOIN THE SYL! WE HAVE AWORLD TO WIN!Nick Arnold for theSpartacus Youth LeaguePlay panelsTo the Editor:How many of you have heard of the Stu¬dent Advisory Committee to the President(SACP) and the Faculty Student AdvisoryCommittee on Campus Student Life(FSACCSL)? These committees supposedlyenable approximately 25 student represen¬tatives to meet with President Gray 8 timesa year and 10 student representatives tomeet with Dean O’Connell, vice-presidentand dean of students in the University, 12times a year. SACP comittee members areappointed members from major student or¬ganizations, while FSACCSL studentmembers were elected by the student body.Supposedly, these meetings are a way forthe student body to express it’s concerns,complaints and compliments to the presi¬dent and dean of students along with initiat¬ing needed changes. Realistically, however,the administration does not take the com¬mittees seriously, in fact, President Graywas absent from a number of meetings lastyear and missed the first meeting of thisschool year.These committees were designed by theUniversity administration as propogandatools. Their purpose is two fold: (1) to paci¬fy students by letting them blow off steam to‘big time’ administrators and (2) a vehiclefor the administration to sell its programsand actions to the student body. A glaringexample of this was a meeting whereFSACCSL members spent 1 hour and 25minutes listening to the assistant dean ofstudents, Paul Ausick, explain the renova¬tion of Mandel Hall, (meetings are only 1 hr.and 40 min long >. The administration had al¬ready decided on the way Mandel was to berenovated, and student input wouldn’t havechanged the plans one bit.1 believe it would be a good idea for TheMaroon to print the minutes of each com¬mittee’s meetings They should also list thenames of the committee members so thatthe student body will know who to contact tovoice their concerns.I would like to conclude by saying that Iam not personally downgrading any admin¬istrator. I don’t know any of them wellenough to do that. I am only voicing my con¬cerns about specific actions and/or policies.President Gray should be commended forcreating SACP, yet, she should be criticizedfor making it a play committee instead of areal one.*********Next Week In Black History:18 Dr. Daniel Hale Williams who performedthe first successful heart operation was bornin 1856.*********Golden Star Award: Hitchcock Hall Main¬tenance Personnel for correcting mostmaintenance problems within 24 hours afterbeing informed of them.Golden Fleece Award: The Student Activ¬ities Office for insinuating that Black stu¬dents should assimilate and attend “white”social functions while at the same time im¬plying that white students do not need to beintroduced to exclusively Black social expe¬riences.Charles (Tony) KnightVice-PresidentOrganization of Black Students &FSACCSL Committee MemberColleague respectTo The Editor:Along with the mounting diplomatic ten¬sions between the United States and Iran, in¬cidents have occurred involving the harass¬ment of Iranian students in this country byAmericans. These incidents, having as theiraim the creation of scapegoats from ethnicstereotypes, are very disturbing to us, espe¬cially when they occur on university cam¬puses.We feel that our scholarly activities aswell as our non-academic lives are greatlyenriched by the presence of colleagues withwidely varying backgrounds and differingperceptions of human society and of the taskof studying it. The harassment or intimida¬tion of any person or group within the uni¬versity therefore constitutes not merely adanger to the community as a whole and tothe various subgroups who might be singledout for such treatment, but also a personalloss to each one of us.We therefore wish to state our full andfirm opposition to any harassment or intimi¬dation of Iranian students here, or of thoseof any other nationality or ethnic group.30 graduate students in sociologyJames S. ColemanUniversity Professor of SociologyThe ChicagoMaroonEditor: Andrew PatnerGrey City Journal Editor: David MillerManaging Editor: Jaan EliasFeatures Editor: Mark WallachSports Editor: Andy RothmanLiterary Review Editors: Richard Kaye andMolly McQuadeSenior Associate Editor: David GlocknerAssociate Editor: Chris IsidoreSenior Editors: Abbe Fletman and ClaudiaMagatAd Manager: Steven KaszynskiAssistant: Jan BorengasserOffice Manager: Leslie WickBusiness Manager: Joel GreenProduction: Jacob Levine, Scott Rauland,and Karen HornickThe Chicago Maroon is the student news¬paper of the University of Chicago, pub¬lished on Tuesdays and Fridays. Editorialand business offices are located on the thirdfloor of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St., Chi¬cago. 60637. Telephone. 753-3263. OpinionSummacontra counterpoint:In defense of gay liberationBy Peter BurkholderIt is a sign of rising prominence of the GayLiberation Movement that Counterpointchose in its December issue to give fivepages to a flip, disparaging, and misleadingattack against the homosexual movement.Roger Kaplan, the article’s author, is con¬cerned that homosexual organizations triedto stop production on Christopher Street inGreenwich Village of William Friedkins“Cruising”, a movie about multiplemurders among a segment of the gayleather-bar set Kaplan decries this attemptat “prior censorship”. His article is less anargument than a string of prejudiced re¬marks, but some points he makes call forcorrection.(1.) Mr. Kaplan bemoans the use of theword “gay” to mean “homosexual” as “thekind of corruption of the English languagethat goes hand in hand with shoddy thinkingand the erosion of norms of civility and polit¬ical decency”. This seems to bother Mr. Ka¬plan inordinately, as he puts the word “gay”in quotation marks everywhere he uses it.Let me explain.Naming oneself is important. It was im¬portant for black people to reject the words*“nigger” and “colored” and choose insteadthe word “Negro”, and later, the words“Afro-American” and “Black”. This is partof self-definition, defining oneself in one’sown language rather than using words bor¬rowed from the oppressor. Similarly in theirrebellion against both those who would callthem sinners (“pervert” or “queer”) andthose who would label them as mentally dis¬eased (using words like “invert” and “ho¬mosexual”). homophile partisans in the late1960s chose words to define themselveswhich had arisen in their own cultures. Thewomen went back to Sappho and used “les¬bian” as a badge of pride; the men adoptedthe word which had originated in Frenchtheatre slang (as an adjective to describemen who played female roles on stage) andhad been in common use in their subculturefor more than half a century, the wordwhich causes Mr. Kaplan dyspepsia:“gay”.This was not a randomly chosen word. Itwas, in fact, what gay men (and some gaywomen > called themselves and each other,it was used to describe the gay underworld,and it was the only term, slang or otherwise,which had no pejorative sense It had theadded benefit of not being sex-specific. Itwas not widely known among straights, al¬though its use was well-documented in theliterature on homosexuality as early as the1950's. Its use needs no justification.If its use in a positive sense disturbs MrKaplan. I can only find in that a sign of how-much despises homosexuality or. if you will,gayness. As for “ruining a perfectly goodword”, let me point out that it is people likeMr. Kaplan who propagate double meaningsfor the perfectly good words "queer” and“fruit” Mr. Kaplan is enraged not becausethis word has a double meaning, but be¬cause its double meaning is not used toslander us.(2.) Mr. Kaplan implies that the gay com¬munity used strong-arm tactics in trying tostop production of “Cruising”: he points outthat gay groups asked Mayor Koch to revokeFriedkin’s permit, and asserts that city per¬mits and police protection “are routinelygiven to film companies meeting safety reg¬ulations.” This is not the case. Normally,neighborhoods involved are consulted in is¬suing a permit for filming in their area It isentirely proper for a neighborhood, such asthe gay community around ChristopherStreet, to refuse to host a film it doesn’t like.This is hardly “censorship”; the film can bemade elsewhere. As it turned out, whistle¬blowing by protesters ruined much of the sound, which had to be redubbed, and non¬cooperation by bar- and apartment-ownersnecessitated moving off location to set film¬ing. As for police “protection”, it was vast,far more than is usually required, and morethan once the riot squad waded into non-vio¬lent crowds to club demonstrators. In sum.neither the permit approval nor police pro¬tection w'ere routine in this case, and the re¬quest to the city to stop the film’s locationproduction was entirely proper and justi¬fied.(3.) Mr Kaplan’s claim that the protesterswere "acting in nearly complete ignoranceof a creative work” is simply not true; asynopsis of the plot, together with quotesfrom the script, was widely distributed overthe summer.The script is ugly, the murderer kills hisvictims during sex. chops off their genitals,and stuffs them into their mouths. The po¬lice are first introduced in the form of “twopatrolmen (who) force two transvestites tosuck them off in the squad car.” <1 quotefrom the synopsis.) Police investigate themurders only to keep a senior officer s re¬cord good, not because of concern for gaymen. The policeman hero. A1 Pacino, “goesgay”, arranges a meeting with the killer,and kills him during sex, copying the mur¬derer’s own style — an act for which he re¬ceives a citation.No one looks good in this picture. When re¬latively little is known about the urban gaymale lifestyle, which this picture purports toshow, it is understandable that gays wouldbecome upset at such a picture. It is franklyequivalent to portraying Africans as canni¬bals and Native Americans as bloodthirstysavages: that may be what straight whiteAmerica wants to believe, but it is not true.Friedkin was seeking a vehicle for combin¬ing sex and violence which would sell to themainstream herterosexual culture, and ste¬reotypes of gay people are what he found.The result is a story as untrue to gay men aspornography is to the sexuality and person-hood of women.<4.) Mr. Kaplan asserts that violent filmshave not been proven to cause violent ac¬tions. I would have thought that the rape of agirl with a pop bottle after a similar rapewas shown on a TV movie, the murder trialof a Florida teenager where his defense ar¬gued that he was stimulated by TV violenceto try it out on his elderly neighbor, or lastwinter’s experience with “The Warriors”,which many theatres cancelled after gangviolence erupted during or after the movie,would suggest that there is a problem hereand that violent movies are not innocuous. Afilm which equates sexuality with violence,as this does, is dangerous to all of us whowould separate the two. and a film whichpurports to equate my sexuality as a gayman with the violence of murder and thepower of cops over transvestites, as thisdoes, is greatly offensive to me. My civilrights and my very life are endangered ifanyone believes the picture “Cruising”draws of gay men 1 have a right and an obli¬gation to oppose it.(5.) Finally, and centrally, Mr. Kaplan at¬tacks homosexuals themselves and the ideaof gay people organizing as a group. Heclaims, somewhat obliquely, that gay peo¬ple are outside the social structure becausethey do not have children, that this explainswhy major religions do not endorse homo¬sexual relations, and that because they donot form families gay people do not and can¬not represent, as do trade unions and ethnicgroups, “a force of stability in the society, avital element of the American polis”. Heconcludes: “Homosexuals are not a minori¬ty’, for they have nothing in common withone another but their deviance ”I disagree. To begin with, every accusa¬tion Mr. Kaplan levels against gay people —that they cannot bear and raise children andform families, that they act against “God’s will”, that they form an unstable element insociety — is untrue. Gay people provide doc¬tors, truckers, teachers, politicians, andothers to the community; gay people tend tolive in stable neighborhoods over longperiods; gay relationships often last as longas marriage; gay fathers and lesbianmothers all over the country, single and cou¬pled. are having, adopting, and raising chil¬dren: there are gay churches, synagogues,theologians, and religious societies — this isnot a “force of stability”, a “vital element ofthe American polis”?Further. I would argue that gays are a mi¬nority group similar to women and toblacks, just as unified and as angry The sit¬uation of blacks, women, and gay people inthis country are very different, and theissues they have to deal with diverse. Thevery sources of their group identities aredifferent. Blacks are an ethnic group set offby their skin color and history from main¬stream white culture. Women form a groupacross ethnic, class, and social lines, slowlyrecognizing the systematic pigeon-holing oftheir aspirations w hich binds them togetheras an excluded group, set off from male cul¬ture. And gay people, defined at first bywhat we like or how we feel, more likescience fiction fans than like an ethnicgroup, find ourselves set off from the her¬terosexual mainstream, threatened byphysical, economic, and social harmYet all of these groups are alike in onesense. It is normal to be white, male, andhead of a household these are the history-makers. the powerful, the prominent < enter¬tainers excepted, for entertainment partlydepends upon the abnormal). These threegroups — blacks, women, and gays — aredefined by the mainstream as being dif¬ferent. "them” instead of “us”, something“other” and therefore incomprehensible orcontemptible. It is this psychological op¬pression. this exclusion from “normality”,which gays share with blacks and women, itis no wonder that gay people have bandedtogether 'to protect their community, or in¬dividuals within their community who arepersecuted,” as Mr. Kaplan describes thefunction of ethnic groups.Gay people are attempting not to exercisepower, for by forcing our will on others wewould only undermine our own progresstowards freedom, but rather to publishtruth, using the provocation of this film totalk about how we really think, feel, andact.Radical gays and feminists envision abasic change in our w ays of doing businessas a society, a change away from the exer¬cise of power — whether governmental, mil¬itary. corporate, or from personal violence— and towards the recognition of the pre¬sence and value of each individual and eachconflicting concern, where decision-makingbecomes rooted in the idea of mutual re¬spect. This way of doing business takes forgranted that disputes which have strongfeelings on both sides should not be resolvedby one or another group" s exercising power,for there can be no easy solutions; onlythrough a process of participation byeveyone in seeking clearness and compro¬mise can a creative solution, one acceptableto all. be found.Thus, the demonstrations against “Cruis¬ing” seeks not to squelch the movie but toput the lie to it. and to call the public to atrue understanding of gay people and the in¬sights and resources lesbians and gay menhave to bring a restructured, nonviolent so¬ciety. The demonstrators are. in the oldQuaker phrase, “speaking truth to power”.Their share of the truth is the knowledgethat gay sexuality is not based on violence,as the movie portrays it, but is founded inlove and equality; their call to Hollywood isto cease exploiting gay stereotypes forshock and to begin to explore our blessingsas a real peopleThe Chicago Maroon — Friday, January 11, 1980 — 5i Ruby's Merit ChevroletSPECIALDISCOUNT PRICESfor all STUDENTS andFACULTY MEMBERSJust present your University ofChicago Identification Card.As Students or Faculty Membersof the University of Chicago you areentitled to special money-savingDISCOUNTS on Chevrolet Parts,Accessories and any new or usedChevrolet you buy from Merit Chev¬rolet Inc. iGM QUALITYSOMC€ PARTS ’ keep I hut (/frtir6 1/ heelinguith y•ENEBAL MOTORS BASTS DIVISION6W/W4 RUBY’SCHEVROLET72nd & Stony Island 684-0400Open Daily 9-9 Sat. 9-5 Parts open Sat. 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WRATH Friday, Jan. 11Admission s150AC GOD IsHn a series of 5 films^ V/Ly on Latin American Themes International House1414 E. 59th Street6 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, January 11, 1980Don't smoke this roachPeriplaneta americana (AmericanCockroaches detect a pheromone whenmolecules drift into contact with thousandsof tiny pores on his antennae. A single molecule is sufficient to react chemically withthe membrane and a threshold number ofmolecules triggers a nerve impulse to thebrain. Thus a cockroach can detect andidentify chemical signals, from food odorsto the musk of receptive females.In the presence of females, males exhibitcharacteristic behaviour. After trackingdown the source of the pheromone a malewill initiate a courtship ritual. Rituals varyfrom species to species, but usually involvewing fluttering, seductive swaying, andhypnotic sweeps of the antennae. The ritualends when the male twists his abdomenaround and grabs the female with his phallomere — a sort of grappling hook which heuses to hold onto the female during copula¬tion.Males that have been isolated from females for several months show spontaneoushomosexual behaviour. Though they revertto normal behaviour when placed with mature virgin females, homosexuality can beinduced by dousing other males with femalepheromone.Such studies, however weird or cruel theymight sound, are relevant to problems ofcockroach control: a homosexual animaldoes not mate and produce fertile offspring.Pheromones could be used to lure males to adeath trap, lowering the number of fertilemales available for mating. Any techniquethat lowers the reproductive rate will reduce the population, a more obviously beneficial goal than merely watching cockroach sexual pecularities. Cockroach)I Other studies reveal that cockroaches are■ among the "smarter" insects — if an insect| can be referred to as "smart." Like computers, they are preprogrammed for specif-j ic behavioural responses to external and in-| ternal stimuli. Because they reproduce so| abundantly and so often, they are capable ofI rapid genetic shifts and can "learn" in anevolutionary sense.For example, cockroaches living in res| taurants have evolved special techniquesj for outwitting the manuevers of pest conscious proprietors. To exterminate insect| pests, restaurant personnel spray insecticides on surfaces where insects have been! seen, usually on the top sides of shelves.These insecticides, usually contact poisons,are fatal only to insects that run throughthem. A cockroach who avoids stepping in! the poison will survive.Despite their relatively sophisticated be; haviour, which makes them difficult to exi terminate but interesting to observe,: cockroaches remain among the least popu! lar of insects. Although their worst attributes are their ugliness and their penchantfor living in dirt, cockroaches are the target’ of extensive (ana expensive) control programs. They get more attention than, for example, the insidious house fly.For those who still insist that cockroachesmust go, here is some practical and somephilosophical advice.Dr. Ed Raffesperger of Cornell Universityrecommends boric acid powder (availablej in some drugstores -- try Walgreen's) andground silica gel as relatively safe and effective pesticides, instead of poisoning the: insect, these powders abrade a delicate wax layer on the insect's integument — its outer"skin." The insect dies by desiccation.! Sprinkling either of these powders in cracksi and corners where the insects scuttle will; help reduce a cockroach population.I Making your house a less attractive habi( tat is an excellent control technique.Cockroaches feed on all sorts of organicaebris and are particularly fond of starch,so simple cleanliness will discourage themAll insects have difficulty retaining moisture and most of them require a continuousI ly available supply. By being careful not to} leave damp rags and sponges lying around,j you can reduce a cockroach population.Reducing the population is a reasonablegoal. Eliminating cockroaches from a buildj ing is virtually impossible They come infrom outdoors, or from neighboring buildings, they hitchhike in on packages or ingrocery bags. They cannot be kept outi Try regarding them philosophically: evenI though prehistoric cockroaches were a foot! long the species has survived essentiallyj unchanged for 280 million years, a robusttest of time by any standard We know ofabout 2500 species (compared to 15,000 spe| cies in the class Mammalia) andcockroaches have almost a world wide dis-.ribution.They are not vectors of infectious dis-■ eases, they are by nature shy ano retiringand prefer not to be seen. Even if you docatch a glimpse of them, observing their be¬haviour can be facirating and rewarding. So... let them stay! Perhaps we ought to learnto live with them. After all, what do theirdirty feet matter, as long as they havecharisma?by Martha Rosett“Kill it!"STOMP!!!. . . Missed , . . and the dark intruderhurries away unscathed.Everyone is familiar with that epi¬sode, Virtually all buildings havecockroaches. You may only be awareof the larger species or of large popula¬tions, but even if you do not see them —the insects are there.Cockroaches have entered our jhouses, but, being furtive and generally unattractive, they have had trouble jfinding a place in our hearts. Whowould ever imagine cuddling a cock¬roach? Or who would think of admiring ;its evolutionary stability? What good !are cockroaches? They lack the aes¬thetic appeal of butterflies (though tro¬pical cockroaches are amazingly color¬ful), and our common pest species(though some have wings) rarely flyand never perform the marvelous aero¬batic feats of dragonflies.No one would argue that cockroaches arethings of beauty, joys forever, and thattherefore they should be tolerated in ourhomes. As a final condemnation: they havedirty feet.Yet cockroaches are not so unclean. Theytrack through the dirt all day, but so do we;they are less rude than the house fly, whofirst walks on animal feces and thenwanders in the sugar bowl. A house fly is aflying contagious ward. In comparison acockroach is as clean as you or I, and proba¬bly grooms himself more often.He still looks ugly to us, especially whenwe see him only briefly, from above, as hescrambles to escape a murderous heel. Whowould look alluring in these circum¬stances?Have you ever really taken time to meet acockroach? Watch him when he is undis¬turbed. To a patient and careful observercockroaches reveal their special charisma.After his mad dash for safety he is likely tostand still for a while. His long antennaequiver delicately and sweep backwards andforwards. Eventually he will groom himself,thoroughly and meticulously, in the self ab¬sorbed manner of a cat.Cockroaches have much in common withpeople. When man learned to provide ;shelter for himself, his accommodations appealed to cockroaches, too. As man modi¬fied his homes, devising better heating, in Idoor plumbing, and food storage facilities inkitchens and pantries, cockroaches becamemore enthusiastic tenants. Today they are jthe commonest household insects. Forthem, carrying a social stigma is not too ,high a price to pay for the comforts of !home.Traditionally a "roach" is a species of jfish. Recently the term has been adopted as islang for a marijuana joint. A former Har |vard professor, Dr. H E. Evans, pointed outthat "The cockroach is the only animal inwhich both male and female are rightfullycalled 'cocks.' "Though they go by the same name, maleand female cockroaches are quite differentboth in morphology and personality. Females exude a chemical that acts as anaphrodesiac perfume. This pheromone (asit is called) is detected by the male andgives him a very clear message: "Femalesnearby!“ DMrW&Tf Jhursdau 12**15jfojnokfs C(o6 Xortfi {otwa^Sponsored (?u t(xe Department of jvtusicCkeck tlte- weekfij .Marootv Jor programThanks to our management team, Xerox isentering the 80’s with a future that neverlooked better. Or more exciting. We see a timeof great change. Where our leadership oftomorrow will be determined by what wedevelop today. But Xerox literally wrote thebook on people-oriented management, sowe’re looking forward to the challenge. We’reeven selling our concepts to other companiestrying to duplicate our success. But we still setthe standards.Management careersfor those whoappreciatethe virtues ofsuccess.MBA’s who start with Xerox have many paths to choose from. All leading to thetop. We’re worldwide leaders in reprographics, telecommunications, publishing,and much more! Best of all, we have a real competitive edge in all these areas, andthat’s a great advantage.You can’t find a company with more to offer an MBA than Xerox. If you’relooking forward to challenges, and managing ambitious programs, we’d like tohear from you.Check with your college placement office for campus interview dates andschedules. Then talk to our campus representatives about careers thatcan’t be duplicated.Xerox is an affirmative action employer (male/female)'fe:amNESE AND AMERICAN RESTAURANTSPECIALIZING IN CANTONESE DISHESFAMILY DINNERS & ORDERS TO TAKE OUTOur Remodeling is complete!Open again for business!PHONE: MU 4-1062WE CAN ARRANGE ANY SPECIAL DISHES YOU WISHWITH ADVANCE NOTICEOPEN: 11:00 A.M. TO 8:30 P.M.CLOSED MONDAY1318 EAST 63rd STREET CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60637 : Attention Seniors and M.A. Candidates!Evaluation StudiesAdministrative ProcessesEducational Statistics and PolicyPolicy Analysis and DevelopmentSocialization PolicyIf so, you w ill bo interested in theM.A. and Ph.D. programinADMINISTRATION AND POLICY STUDIESatTHE SCHOOL OF EDUCATIONNORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITYEVANSTON. ILLINOISCome and talk to Professor Fax Lomax CookWhere: Room 201. Reynolds Club5706 UniversityV\ hen: Tuesday. January I 512:00- 1:00 P.M.OrCall Fran BirndorfSchool of Education312-492-37305 Are you interested in pursuing graduate studies in the following areas? j'In a quiet and vigilant way Critical Inquiry is continuing to show whathumane, intelligent discourse is like. —Bernard Bergonzi, Times LiterarySupplement lo lune 1978Critical Inquiryregularly publishes the tinest essays oncriticism filmhistory and culture musi literaturethe visual artsEdited by W. J. T. Mitchell • Wayne C. Booth • Robert E. StreeterElizabeth Abel • Robert von HallbergSpecial issuesAutumn 1978Spring 1980 Special Issue on MetaphorThe Language ot ImagesBoth issues are included in a specially discounted two-year retroactivesubsc ription.20% discount to Cl subscribers>hnson, and RichardsonFICTION AND THE SHAPE OF BELIEFA Study ot Henry Fielding with Glances at Swutt,by Sheldon SacksA Phoenix paperback to be published in February 1°80. See the Winter 1°7°issue ot Cl tor tour major reassessments ot Sacks s work as well as tor a bookorder torm._THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESCritical InquiryTwo-year retroactive subscription, to begin with the Autumn 078 S/Issue on Metaphor (vol. 5, n>>. U: All Individuals S25.o0One-year subscription, to begin with the Autumn 197° issue Ivoi. o. no. 1Individuals Slo.00 Students $14.40NameAddressCity State Country - *1Visa or Master C harge accepted. Please enc lose account number. Interbanknumber (Master Charge only*, expiration date, and signatures Or mail withyour c heck or money order to The University of Chicago Press, 11030 I anglesAvenue, Chicago, Illinois t>0o28. t ! ! 7‘ Ii2 — the grey city journal, Friday, January 11, 1980'MoviesM*A*S*H* (Robert Altman, 1970):Hawkeye (Donald Sutherland)and Trapper John (Elliott Gould)are surgeons in an AmericanArmy hospital just behind thefront lines during the KoreanWar. Everybody there is at leasta little nuts; and no wonder,given the gory operating roombusiness at hand. Altman showsplenty of blood and guts, so thesource of insanity is clear; butthe film's continuing popularityis more likely due to its incessantcollegiate humor. The principalsare all laconic, compromising fellows out to get all they can; theirvictims include both their peersand their superiors. It their exploits aren't engrossing at leastthey're entertaining. The filmalso spares us the pretentiousmoral claptrap of ApocalypseNow. Tomorrow at 7 and 9:30 inthe Law School Auditorium.SI.50. — D.M.Halloween (John Carpenter,1978) :Not just any insane man,but "pure evil" itself, stalksthree high school girls to killthem. Since its release two yearsago, Halloween has become aclassic, firmly establishing JohnCarpenter among the important,young "film school" directors.Unlike his associates (e.g. Francis Coppola, Martin Scorsese,and Brian DePalma), Carpenterembraces traditional film values.This work contains a compellingstory; simple, expressive camera work; and no preaching. Italso has cinema's new wave sexsymbol, P.J. Soles. And it's scaryas hell. Tonight at 7, 9, and 11 ihQuantrell. $1.50 — G.B.The Sorrow and the Pity (MarcelOphuls, 1972): A four and halfhour examination of the treatment of French Jews during theOccupation. Candid interviewswith survivors, interspersed withfootages from the period, testifyto the heroism and endurance ofthe Jews and expose hypocrisy onthe part of some Frenchmen. Thefilm represents a high point indocumentary filmmaking. Itslength may deter some viewers,but the filmmaker's earnestnessin reliving a painful episode fromthe past makes the film a necessary experience. Sunday at 7 inQuantrell. $1.50. — T.S.Get out your Handkerchiefs (Bertrand Blier, 1978): Frustrationdrives a man (Gerard Depardieu) to cure his wife, Solange(Carol Laure), of her two yearmelancholy. He enlists the aid ofa stranger (Patrick Dewaere) tomake her pregnant and, hopefully, happy. Together they fail tomake Solange smile and get another helper who is also unsuccessful. The chauvinistic attitudes of the three attending menare comically reflected by the si¬lent Solange as she is draggedabout like an object to variousparts of northern France Reliefcomes when she rescues Chris n.b;O'). WHPK88.3 Frt 11 Mar. 9. — D. S.F hotography Rediscovered: A majorsurvey of American photographyfrom 1900 1930. Many times morecaptivating than the ToulouseLautrec show which was described as "the focal point of theentire art world" by the chairman of the board. Art Institute,Michigan Avenue at Adams.Mon Wed, Fri 10:30 4.30; Thurs,10:30 8; Sat, 10 5; Sun, noon 5.Admission discretionary; Thursdays free. 443 3600.3lan of Chicago/ 1909 1979: 30 original drawings, including theworks by Jules Guerin and Fernand Janin, that were later pubshed in the Plan of Chicago. ArtInstitute (info, above).Chicago Architects: A selection ofdrawings and manuscripts byvarious architects. The works,many of which have never beenexhibited before, date from the1870's through the 1950's. Art In¬stitute (info, above).Artists-100 Years: Works byalumni of the School of the Art Institute. Through Jan. 20. Art in¬stitute (info, above). — D. S.TheaterNickle on the Wine and Watch Outfor the Feet: Two plays byCharles Michael Moore, directedby Sam i Chester. Abraham Lincoin Center, 3858 Cottage Grove,Friday and Saturday at 7:30p.m., Sunday at 3 p.m. throughJanuary."The Neon Woman": Divine (PinkFlamingoes) and Holly Woodlawn (star of Andy Warhol's"Trash") star in this burlesquecomedy about a Baltimore stripjoint. A rare Chicago appearanceof the greatest queen of theAmerican theatre. The ParkWest, 322 W. Armitage Five performances, Jan 12 19. All tickets$10 at Ticketron and Park Westbox office. — D. 5.A lesser known band, but not least important, is the Battling Tops. The Tops were formerly a powerful punk Odysseus in Phaeacia: This pilotFernando Dolto (negitive) and Roger Johansen (copying, titles, printing), "I WANT LUNCH,". 1980. Photographic poster advertisement for Frank Mazza's WHPK radio show, Fridays, noon—2.20 copies of this and another "I WANT LUNCH" poster (depicting eight two foot long dead grasshoppershanging from a pole carried by two men; negitive origin unknown) disappeared from University bulletinboards between Tuesday and Wednesday afternoons. Mazza has plans to reproduce additional copies of theseposters on non photographic paper for wider distribution Further details at noon Joday, 88 3 FM, 753 3588.The reproduction above is made from an original in the print collection of Mark, thief and patron of the arts- D M.WHPK benefit tomorrow nightThree student bands: The Trouble Boys, the Brain Police, and The Battling Tops will play at a rock & rolldance party this Saturday at Alpha Delta Phi house. The dance is a benefit fundraiser for WHPK, the university radio station, which is badly in need of funds.The Trouble Boys play lively, raunchy rock & roll, but are reprtedly developing new styles, so if you want tocatch them while they are still a trashy garage band, see them now. The Brain Police play more mainstreamrock: "You Really Got Me," "Cocaine," and 'My Sharona," typify their style.group known as the Inductors with a wild female lead singer. She is gone, but the band is still strong, playingSex Pistols, "Submission,' "Contours," "Pipeline," and a few originals.Check it out. Three hot bands and goodies for only $2. The WHPK benefit at Alpha Delta Phi (right next toCTS bookstore) at 9 tomorrow night. — Renee Sarackiing of this bizarre set of characters seem to be in English Tomorrow at 7:15 and 9:15 inQuantrell. $1.50 — B.J.Cimaron. (Wesley Ruggies,1931).One of the tew Westerns tohave garnered a top Oscar, thispioneer saga about the OklahomaLand Rush seems dated now. Thedirection is pedestrian, the actingwooden and stilted, and the narrative rhythm curiously out ofsync. But a very young, prim anddetermined Irene Dunne shines.Of course, the climax is when allthose wagons careen to their destinations. It was a big deal backthen, but all the chase Westernsin the intervening years havemade it tame stuff for the jaded•contemporary sensibility. Monday at 7:15 in Quantrell. $1. —T.S. brasxa, where Roger is woundedby outlaws while protecting Carolyn's honor. Roger opens theStandish Bank in response, thereby protecting the sheepish townspeople's money from the wolfishoutlaws. Another crash and thedeath of a son or two impede unbridled commercial development. Faith in capitalism is reaffirmed in the face of the GreatDepression at the movie's endRoger is told by his grandson thathe made his money not for himself, but because he was part of agreat growing nation. On thewhole. The Conquerors is effective propaganda, okay entertainment, and lousy cinema. Mondayat 9:30 in Quantrell. $1. — D. M. Art program, part of the award winning Chicago Radio Theatreseries, will eventually be part of anationally broadcast serializetion of Homer's epic. The scriptwas written, produced and directed by Yuri Rasovsky in close col¬laboration with many leadingclassical scholars, including theUniversity's own Nick Rudall,James Redfielo and Jari DyrudMon., Jan. 14 on WFMT, 98.7 FM,at 7:20 pm.Vienna Moderne: 1989 1918, this exhibit of the finest arts and craftsfrom turn of the century Austriais proclaimed "an early encounter between taste and utility." Both benefit from the encounter. Household items fromfurniture, clothing, and utensilsto posters, paintings and stained "Seeing Society Photographically"glass are all exquisitely crafted by Howard Becker. Thorne Hall,The exhibit shows strong influ- 720 N. Lake Shore Drive Tonightences of the flowing post Victori- at 7:30. Freean Art Nouveau style, and at the "Dance Companies in Chicago" byListen & learntian — a thirteen year old boy The Conquerors (William Wellwith beautiful eyes, an I Q. of 158,and a capitalist father — from hisworking class summer mates.The strength of this film is in theintriguing relationship betweenSolange and Christian, whichlasts as more "normal" pairingscrumble. The subtitles are so welltimed that the hilarity and suffer man,1932): Roger (Richard Dix)and Carolyn Standish ( AnneHarding) rise and fall in tandemwith the economic welfare of thenation in this pseudo historicalmovie structured around threeAmerican financial crashes. Thecrash of 1873 sends the newlyweds from New York to Ne Musicthe grey city journalGary Beberman, Curtis Black, Laura Coftingham. Meleme Deal, Ozzie Encers,Sandy Harris, Bennett Jacks, Rebecca Lillian.. Philip Maher, Rory McGahan,Mark .Meustadt, Sharon Pollock, Martha Rosett Rene Saracki, Danny Schulman,Ted Shen, Lisa von Drehle, Ken Wissoker.Edited by David Miller. Copy edited by Mary Mankovyski. Producec by KarenHornick and David Miller. Friday, January 11, 1980 Lunchtime Concert: TheQuarter series begins with a performance of Hugo Wolf lieder byJames Tucker, baritone, andRobert Ray, piano. Bring yourlunch to Reynolds North LoungeThurs, Jan. 17 at 12:15 pm.Live Jazz Party: The second of theweekly parties at Chances 'R'features Richard 'Ari' Brown ontenor sax, Steve Coleman on altosax, Ken Prince on piano, MiltonSuggs on bass and Robert Shy ondrums. Sun, Jan. 13 in the GrillRoom 5225 Harper, 8:30 pm to 1am. S3 cover. 363 1550. same time hints of the spare Decostyle coming around the corner inthe 1920's. By all means see it.This is the show's first exhibit inthe United States (the Art institute missed a chance to snatch itup). Smart Gallery, 5550 Greenwood. Through February 25:Tues Sat, 10 4; Sun, 12 4.753 2121.Free. —'P.M.Winter Murals Without Walls: ArshileGorky's Aviation Murals rediscovered. A fascinating look at thegovernment art projects of the1930's as well as at the seeds ofAbstract Expressionism.Through Feb. 3. Museum of Contemporary Art, 237 E. Ontario.Tue Sat, 10 5; Sun, 12 5. 280 2660Students, $1 — D. S.Material Pleasures: The results of afabric workshop held at the Institute of Contemporary Art in Philadelphia for artists who customarily paint or sculpt. Fruit ofthe loom MCA (info above) Jan. Linda Winer, Theater and dancecritic for the Tribune. DePaulCommons, 2324 N Freemont. ThJan 17, noon. Free.College Bowl: Cheer on The Maroonteam (25°o grey city) the doubleelimination tournament of thequiz game Winners will represent the University in regionaland national competitions. Thinkabout such questions as, Fromwhat Keats poem did F.S. Fitzgerald take the title of his novel,Tender is the Night? Sat and Sun,Jan 12 (9.30-7) and 3 (3:15 11), inthe Ida Noyes Hall Library.(Answer "Ode to a Nightingale.")the grey city journal, Friday, January 11, I960 — 3Friday doc FumsJanuary 1 1 7:0Q, 9:00 and 1 1:00John Carpenter sHALLOWEENSaturday January 1 2Bertrand Blier's 7:15 and 9:15GET OUT YOUR HANDKERCHIEFSSunday January 13 7:00Marcel OphulsTHE SORROW AND THE PITYAll films $ 1.50 Cobb HallCopies of our fascinating and informative 12-page brochure con¬taining synopses of all 80 films in our schedule will be availablesome time on Friday. Also, if you haven t already picked up one of ourgiant calendar posters, there are still some in the entrance to Cobbas well as outside Cobb 309.ATTENTION DOC MEMBERS: There will be an organizational meetingon Saturday Jan. 12 at 1:00 on the Third Floor of Cobb (Anyoneinterested in joining DOC is welcome to attend). 25% OFF SALEGET ACQUAINTED SALE FOR U of CSTUDENTS AND FACULTYBrand name clothing such as H. FREEMAN, CHAPS,DONALD BROOKS, MALCOLM KENNETH, AQUAS-CUTUM, LONDON FOG, SERO and others at 25%off of our very low listed prices.This is a special offer for U of C students and facultyonly. This sale applies Mon - Fri from 3 PM - 6 PM andSAT from 10 AM to 4 PM.Your U of C ID card is necessary for admission tothis sale.Slight charge for other than basic alterations.WILLIAM’S TRADITIONALCLOTHING19-S. LaSalle St. - 782-9885(Entrance on Arcade Place)STUDENT CO-OP BOOK STOREBasement Reynolds ClubHours M-F 9:30-6:00Sat. 12:00-4:30-Used Textbooks for Fall courses-Broad selection of general stock-New Records-Classical, Folk, Jazz, Blues, Popular-we can special order at customer’s requestLatest in Games, including Dungeons and Dragons, etcPSYCHEAND <SOCIETY4 — the grey city journal, Friday, January 11, 1980The charisma of star chemistryThe Electric Horsman. Directed by SidneyPollack, screenplay by Robert Garland;photographed by Owen Roizman. With Robert Redford and Jane Fonda.by Tea ShenMaybe the 80's will be a re run of the 30'safter all. Hollywood certainly thinks so. Thespate of holiday films testifies to this revi¬sionist trend, albeit a trend filtered throughthe new morality of the 60's and the technical wizardry of the 70's. The audience wholines up outside numerous theaters sharesmuch with that or 50 years ago. Like the earlier generation, it faces an uncertain economy and an even more precarious politicalclimate. It asks for reassurance from film.It can no longer tolerate the social experi¬mentation of the 60's. But the mechanicalescapism of the 70's provides no satisfactoryhaven either. Today's audience, like that ofthe early 30's, demands to be diverted by entertainment with human interest.The season's top critical hit Kramer vs.Kramer harkens back to the tearjerker tra¬dition of The Kid and The Champ. Amongthe popular hits, The Jerk reverts to the infantile slapstick of the earlier minor come¬dians; Star Trek and The Black Hole reworkthe Buck Rogers formula; and Going InStyle rehashes the old Road plot with a trioinstead of a auo. in its own way, The Electrie Horseman, another hit of the season,brings back the populist comedy of FrankCapra.The Capra films of the 30's, notably MeetJohn Doe, Mr Deeds Goes to Town and Mr.Smith Goes to Washington, all have in thema naive small town hero who comes upagainst big city slickers. He is at first mani¬pulated by them, but he eventually catcheson to the game And, ultimately, the hero'sinnate integrity exposes the fakeries of thesophisticates and triumphs over their wiles.The heroine is usually a city reporter in ca¬hoots with the big boys. She's out to get herstory by exploiting the innocence of thehero, but she ends up falling for him and hisways.The hero of The Electric Horseman,Sonny Steele (Robert Redford), is less gullible but no less honest than, say, LongfellowDeeds. He is an ex rodeo champ currentlyriding on promotional circuit endorsing acereal product for a conglomerate. His prizehorse, Rising Star, is the conglomerate'ssymbol of success. The trappings of com¬mercialism gnaws at Sonny's conscience.He drinks to forget.The conglomerate is hosting a sharehold¬ers' convention in Las Vegas. Rising Starand Sonny are to take part in a show extoll¬ing the virtues of corporate America. ButSonny finds out that the horse has beendrugged with steroids in preparation for theshow. He rides Rising Star off in a blaze; thetwo go out on the lam.In the meantime, Hallie Martin (JaneFonda), a NYC newscaster who has been ho¬vering in the background, sniffs a goodstory. She coaxes Sonny's friends into reveating his whereabouts. She finds Sonnyand milks the story out of him; Sonny in¬tends to take the horse to the wild Mustangcountry of Utah where it belongs. She de¬cides to go along with him for an exclu¬sive.Meanwhile, the corporate biggies are wor¬ried. Their million-dollar horse is goneandtheir merger plan in jeopardy. The chase isor>.Sonny and Hallie are in the ma jestic Utahmountains, eluding their pursuers ano> slow¬ly reaching their destinations. The citifiedHallie gets to know both nature and Sonny.Inevitably, she falls in love with him. Shechanges her mind about the exclusive andtells Sonny of ner deception. But everythingis alright; he's in love with her, too.They finally find a valley of Mustangs andset Rising Star free. By this time, the heat isoff. Unbeknownst to them. Sonny has be¬come a symbol of righteous rebellion. Thecereals are selling like hot cakes. He is nolonger a liability to the conglomerate; he isan asset.The film, however, doesn't end here As aconcession to the times, it finishes on adownbeat. The lovers go their separateways; Hallie back to her NY newsroom,Sonny on the road. Fonda and Redford horse around where there are neither nukes nor dirty air.The populist tone of The Electric Horseman is obvious. The film takes iabs at themanipulative mentality of the corporateworld, a world in which money reigns. Itpokes fun at the fakery of advertising andmedia. It pits the open, expansive vista ofthe Utah mountains against the neon-littered, claustrophobic cityscape of LasVegas. And there is no doubt as which offersthe better alternative. Yet, the film avoidsthe fervent sincerity characteristic of theCapra opus. Populist sentiments here serveto make the hero more attractive, not theother way around. Herein lies the crucialdifference between a Capra and this film. Inthe former, stars are used to make the popu¬list message more palatable; in the latter,the populist posturing is a plot device to enhance the appeal of the stars. Perhaps, ul¬timately, this distinction separates a director's film from a star vehicle.The stars—Redford and Fonda—haveteamed up previously in Barefoot in the Park. In the intervening years, their careers have taken similar paths. Both startedout as ingenues, then eased into sex symbolroles, and, of late, nave settled into mature,intelligent parts. In the process, they havebeen transformed from likeable actors intoicons of desirability. Both are now potentbox office draws with strings of recent hitsbehind them. Their striking similarity ex¬tends into their off-screen lives as well. Bothespouse liberal causes. Fonda is associatedwith the anti nuke movement iust as muchas Redford is with the clean air contingent.Each presents a public persona which com¬bines concerned citizenship with a sense of |sheer professionalism. They're role-modelsfor our time, both on and off the screen. Infact, Redford is a male Fonda, and viceversa. Their reunion on screen seems just asinevitable as their appearing in films advoeating their beliefs.The director of this momentous occasionis Sidney Pollack, a director familiar to both He had guided Fonda in her firstserious roie in They Shoot Horses, Don'tThey? And, he is something of a house director for Redford, having directed the actor inthree previous films, Jeremiah Johnson,The Way We Were and Three Days of theCondor. He knows the abilities of each starand here puts them to good use. It's interesting and a pity that Fonda ana Redfordseldom get leading men or ladies of equalfooting. Redford has had more luck withNewman and Fonda with Redgrave. Theonly strong Redford leading lady, other thanFonda, that I can think of is Streisand. Butin The Way We Were, Redford was more apassive WASP dreamboy to Streisand.Fonda had been luckier but not by much. InThe Electric Horseman, they're equals.They have to be. The sparrings and the affection between the two generate the kind ofelectricity known as star chemistry.Redford is not as much an actor as Fonda.He lacks Fonda's range. But, here, he playsthe simpler character. His underplaying,coupled with Fonda's agressive acting,lends an air of authenticity to the whole affair. Redford is convincing as the honesthorse thief, and Fonda the hardened newscaster. The only jarring disbelieving bitcomes at the end when the characters aredenied their obligatory walk into the sunset.The film should have ended earlier when thepair watch Rising Star galloping to his freedom. But, I suppose, the new morality dic¬tates that each should pursue his own career. No doubt a more "realistic" approachto contemporary romance.Like a good Capra, The Electric Horseman has its share of minor parts backing upthe stars. Valerie Perrine, as Sonny's ex-wife, Willie Nelson, as his buddy, and JohnSaxon, as his corporate nemesis, all shine intheir roles. Owen Roizman's cinemato¬graphy, especially that of breathtakingUtah mountains, is quite stunning. Thenthere are those tuneful Willie NelsonnumbersThe success of The Electric Horsemanmay set the tone for romantic comedies ofthe 80's. The romance may not be enduring,and the populist message may be tame Butfor two hours or so the audience can have afun time watching two likeable stars fighting ana clawing their way into love This is,in the time honoured Hollywood parlance, aformula for a socko winner.Mom splits, dad sitsDustin Hoffman .1 Justin Henry Meryl Streppby Karen HornickRobert Benton's Kramer vs. Kramer wasthe smash of the Christmas movie season.Critics praised Nestor Almendros's cinema¬tography, Meryl Streep and Dustin Hoff¬man's acting, Benton's direction and adaptation of the Avery Corman novel. Theyliked the way characters develop through¬out the movie (they all seem more mature inthe end) and its "honest, realistic" treatment of contemporary social problems. Fewmissed its flaws — improbable details likethe job Streep gets off the street that pays$31,000 a year, occasionally overbearing cuteness (Justin Henry,as the son, is a cherubin the Hollywood tradition), and dialoguecomprised of cliches — but few called thesedamaging flaws. Kramer vs. Kramer, theysaid, is an imperfect masterpiece.A masterpiece of popular entertainment.that is; Kramer vs. Kramer is not"une coup de cinema," but it has a strong,classical story line, is true to life, and elicitsa strong emotional response from its audience. "I could have watched it tor two morehours," said one viewer, wiping dried tearsfrom her cheek at the movie's end, and herresponse seems typical. Kramer vs.Kramer's charms — its truth, intelligence,and poignancy — are difficu t to resistIn the movie, a father (Hoffman) mustcare for his son after his wtfe (Streep) walksout When she returns 18 months later, sheand Hoffman go to court to battle over custody of the child The movie ends fairly happily, with suggestions the parents could reunite.Kramer's truth lies in the fairness with which it views the maelstrom of socialissues at its center: Wives have the right tcwalk out on husbands if they're needs aren'tmet at home — or do they? What about thechildren? Can a mother who's left her childhave it back when she feels ready for it.however well the child has accustomed himself to her absence? Why do so many families find themselves in this predicament?Why can't fathers play more active roles in♦heir children’s lives? Why is it impossiblefor mothers and fathers to pursue inter¬esting careers and be decent parents? Andso on. These are the problems floatingthrough Kramer; out Benton doesn't dealwith them directly. He raises them simplyby telling his story — the issues raise themselves. Kramer avoids easy resolutions.Benton wisely sees that in life there is muchi contusion and little resolution. Because we see all sides of the film's situations — wesympathize with Hoffman one moment, andStreep the next — Benton draws out feelingfrom us, not political agreement.In Kramer vs. Kramer, a woman devas¬tates a young child by leaving him, and aman steps into her abandoned role as activeparent with complete success — so completethat, when she returns for her child, the audience roots (if it roots for either side at all)tor the father to maintain custody. Hence,some have argued the film promotes ananti feminist point of view On the contrary,Benton's perspective is simply broad andhonest. In this society, in which marriage isthe accepted institution for child rearing, awoman who leaves her child must face consequences. But Benton's script, and Streep'sperformance, do not suggest that her sacn-I fice wasn't worth it.the grey city journal. Friday, January 11, 1»90 — 5Is there a place for writing ofPermanent Value in theAmerican publishing scene?The University of Chicago Bookstorecordially invites you to attend a lecture on“Publishing and Literature”by Roger W. Straus, Jr.atCobb Hall, Rm. 209January 14, 2:00 P.M.>Mr. Straus, president and chief executive officer of theYeiv York publishing firm of Farrar. Straus and Giroux,has been an editor and publisher for forty years.Admission is open to the publicwithout charge.6 — the grey city journal, Friday, January 11, 1980Designs for living return to SmartVienna Secession whose leaders, painterGustave Klimpt and architect Otto Wagner,i split with the ruling academic establish¬ment and moved Viennese art in the direction of Art Nouveau, then the undergroundrage in France. Although French Art Nou-veau has caught on in the last few years in abig way, very few people have bothered tolook at the Viennese version of Art Nouveau.Vienna Moderne had a brief life in the Unit¬ed States when New York's Lord and Tay¬lor's, of all places, put on a show in NewYork of the new Viennese art in hopes ofstirring up commercial interest in the artfor Lord and Taylor's to invest in. The show, which appeared around 1917, was somethingof a bomb. American patrons considereoVienna Moderne's elegant, clean, brightstyle to be a tacky joke, and so Vienna Mo¬derne had to wait until only recently until itreceived any serious attention."Vienna Moderne's brief but brillianttwenty years," said special curator for theexhibition, Jans Ernest Adlmann, "was oneof the earliest skirmishes in the importantmodern design confrontation between thecamps of style and functionalism, ultimately creating a new enviromental concept thatformed the basis of the Modern Style."Adlmann gathered together over threeby Richard KayeThe first major United States exhibition ofVienna design, the focus of a Chicago artworld controversy, opened Wednesday nightat the Smart Gallery. Vienna Moderne:1989 1918, a showing of the arts, designs, furniture, and decorations which developed inVienna at the turn of the century, arrived oncampus on the final leg of a tour which hastaken the exhibit through New York, Ore¬gon, and Houston.The exhibit, considered to be something ofa coup for the Smart, was originally sche¬duled to appear at the Art Institute of Chi¬cago, but after a series of events which leftthe Art Institute in what is lately its usualembarrassed position, the Smart Gallerywas chosen since it was one of the few Chi¬cago museums able to handle the show. TheArt Institute reportedly cancelled the Vienna Moderne exhibit, even though it had fin¬ancially committed itself to the show, inorder to devote full museum attention to theToulouse Lautrec exhibition put on lastmonth. Critics claim that the Institute's dis¬interest in the Vienna show was a perfect example of that museum's all too obvious flaw— its preference for the big, crowd pleaserssuch as the Pompeii and Lautrec shows atthe expense of more imaginative — andmore important exhibits such as ViennaModerne.The Vienna Moderne squabble supposedlybegan with the resignation of Institute cura¬tor, John Keefe. Keefe resigned partly out ofdissatisfaction with the Institute's handlingof the Vienna exhibit, whereupon the Art In¬stitute decided to drop the show. Keefe —whose background makes him rather uni¬quely suited to put on a show of Viennese artof the period — offered to put on the exhibitanyway, as an outside curator. The Art In¬stitute said nay, and soon there was a searchfor a museum prepared to do the show.There aren't that many museums in Chica¬go in first place, and through various ma-neuveringsthe Smart got hold of what verywell may be one of the more important ex¬hibitions in Chicago this year.Included in the exhibit are works of the ar¬tisans and architecture-designers of the Josef Hoffmann, Silverware, 1904i hundred pieces of furniture, textiles, porce| lains, lithograph posters, silver and ceram¬ics from Viennese and American privatecollections."The people who were so pleased with ourFrank Lloyd Wright show last year shouldreturn to see how much men such as Wright| owed to Central European artists and de-: signers," said Edward Maser, the Smartj Gallery's Director. "American art histori¬ans and critics have almost exclusively focused on French and English designs of theperiod, but the Vienna Moderne exhibit hasa good deal to say about the enormous influence Viennese art at the century's turn hadon modern art movements.""There's no question that this exhibitionwill go very far in enhancing a much-under¬valued movement," said John Keefe, guestcurator for the exhibition."Everyone speaks of the Bauhaus movement and the Art Deco movement of the1920's, but Vienna Moderne actually predates those movements. Until this exhibitnone of these works received attention in amajor American show."According to Adlmann, the Vienna Mo¬derne style is made up of the designs of twoViennese associations, the Vienna Secessionand the Wiener Werkstaette (Vienna Workshops). The Vienna Secession was a group ofprimarily young Viennese artists who choseto secede from the establishment's ren'owned Artist House organization in 1897 in; order to exhibit their work along with thework of their avant garde contemporaries."Secession Style" is what Adlmann termsthe Viennese "reassessment" of the FrenchI Art Nouveau, and it was most successful inits craft and two dimensional applications.Coupled with the artists of the Vienna Worki shops, who demonstrated an interest in analmot severe, utilitarian style, the Secession! School became preocupied with "the total1 work of art." The result was a wide range ofpersonal accessories, furnishings, and occassionally even clothing Almost exclusively supported by Viennese Jewish patrons ofthe time (the large Jewish industrialists,merchants, and banking families such asthe families Wittgenstein, Henneberg,; Mauthner, and Rothschild), Vienna Mo; derne was nurtured by the interest of an isoI lated, well to do Jewish patronage which,1 according to Adlmann, "was in flight fromi the merely material" and which pursuedand created pure art and music that wasI hyper Viennese".The Smart Gallery Exhibition, the first! exhibit in the Gallery's history to make fulluse of the Smart's lower gallery room, willI continue from now until February 25. Adi mission Is free.100 artists, 100 tearsby Laura CottinghamOreos come in packages of 39. Beers comein six packs. But years don't usually comein groups of 100. Neither do artists. At leastnot when you see them on the street — infact, they're most often in anti groups ofone.But a current exhibit at the Art Institutetakes the works of a hundred artists thathave been produced in a hundred years andputs them in the same space. All of the ar¬tists are alumni of the School of the Art Institute. All of the years are from 1879 (theyear the School was incorporated) to 1979.According to Katharine Kuh, exhibitioncurator, a collection of this nature is "atbest a historical survey; at worst a med¬ley."This particular collection is incomplete asa historical survey and not eclectic enoughto constitute a desirable medley. After defining such loosely bound but definitiveboundaries, the exhibit refuses to optimizethese conditions by refusing to take anyrisks. Not even any safe risks.A safe risk would have been to includesome photography in the exhibit. It's riskybecause photography is a new art form, butit's sate because photography is palatable toeven the most conservative of Museumgoes. But you won't see any photography.You won't see any conceptual art, either.None of that interesting stuff many Art Institute students were doing in the sixties:drawing up plans for art that involved thecooperation of the light switches in the offices of Chicago skyscrapers, putting together art that involved the physical as wellas the aesthetic presence of the artist.According to Kuh, these omissions —which also include the omission of all com Ed Paschke, "Guitao," 1978mercial art that came out of the school -are "due to limits of space". But I thinkthey're due to limits in something else. Afterall. how does limiting the exhibit to "the finearts" because of "limitations of space" reconcile with the Henry Rubloff Paperweightcollection? Are paperweights "fine art", ordon't they take up space?What does take up space in the 100 Year —100 Artists Exhibit are paintings and sculpture. Most of it tried and true. While wandering through the show for the fourth time Iwas excited by a woman's exclamation of "I love it, I love it." I scurried across the gallery to discover what had prompted suchemotive expression. It was American Gothic, it was familiar, tried and true.Few of the other paintings in the exhibitare as recognizable although some of the artists are. You'll see two Georgia O'Keefe,two Claes Oldenburg, an Ivan Albright, anEd Paschke, and others.Of course they're good. But what is oneisolated painting doing with other isolatedpaintings if they're not doing anything together?the grey city journall, Friday, January 11, 1980 — 7When does thetraining stop andthe doing start?At Scott we believe (bat the best trainingwe can give you is experience tn putting you'ideas to woik Since we know.that pe'sonaigrowth is your goal achievement ot that goal isrealized tnrough oomc E.penence comes fromoomg—putting you> Oe.is to work enioymc responSiDility and accepting accountability£acn year, as aeteimined committed collegegtndsiomus they bung new talents with them WePut these talents to the test immediately ana wiiimgi.tccepi their challengesBecause we recognize motviduai diHettncesou> approach is 10 build on your existing skills—toenable you to sla't doingWnen does the training slop7 It nevet doesScott P,ipei Company is an equal opportunitySCOTT DANCE 8:30 p.m.CONTEST 10:00 p.m.FIRST PRIZE S100!!!plus chance to go on to regional competitionRegister for contest in SAO, Ida Noyes 210X 3598STUDENT GOVERNMENTMEETINGfirst of the quartertuesday, january 15th, 8 p.m.IDR NOYES ERST LOUNGEall are invited to attendstudent government office: IN 306 753-32738 — me grey city journal, Fricay, January 11, 1980Theatre fund drive continuesby Philip MaherOn December 17, sold out Mandel Hallroared its approval of Second City's benefitperformance for the Court Theatre's newbuilding. The show, a twentieth anniversaryspecial entitled, I Remember Dada, orWon't you Come Home, Saul Bellow?, wasvery much a success, according to CourtTheatre director Nicholas Rudall. Over$4,000 was raised by general admissionalone, plus some $100 pledges and $1,000donated by Second City. Although this is adrop in the bucket compared to the $100,000needed, Rudall is confident of raising the remaining funds before spring. The SecondCity benefit was particularly helpful in putting the fund raising drive into the limelight.Second City brought down the house withtheir hilarious blend of university, city, andtopical humour. Some of the skits were classical comedy, easy to laugh at, such as theFugue Brothers, a takeoff on Second Cityprogeny, the Blues Brothers.Others hit closer to home. A U of C studentat Billings with a sore tooth waxes indignantover the plight of the common man on thewaiting bench: "Listen," he says, "/ tookUrban Affairs at the U of C, I know yourproblems better than you do."The best skits did both, however; particulariy the famous "Football returns to the Uof C." Professor Coach at the blackboard:"This, men, is the line of scrimmage.""Pardon me sir," pipes Throckmorton,"but I believe that is a line segment."At any rate, the satire was pure and biting, and while the comedy ranged from esoteric (Kierkegaard jokes) to plebian(Jimmy Piersall jokes) it was always hilari¬ous.Rudall is in intense consultation withHarry Weese & Associates now, drawing upworking plans for the new building. This involves final decisions on everything fromthe size of the stage to the lighting in thedressing rooms. "Once the working plansare complete it is almost impossible to The plan above is "U of C Theatre Revised Plan 'B'," dated November 9, 1979. It is one of sixpreliminary design sketches prepared by Harry Weese Associates for the University's Of¬fice of Physical Planning and Construction. These plans have not yet been approved by theBoard of Trustees, and they have not yet been revised and developed for actual use in con¬struction. They are published here with the permission of Court Theatre.make any changes in design," Rudall says.The 250 seat theater will most likely beerected on the east side of Ellis between 55thand 56th.Meanwhile the Theatre is busy making itself known on campus. According to Rudall,few students realize what a tremendous re source they have in the Court Theatre. "TheTheatre is for the community," explains Rudall, "and this is the ideal community forclassical theatre. It would be a shame if webui't this new building and it was just for anelite few." Therefore Rudall is giving informational talks to faculty and students, or "Support Court!11ganizing a full time publicity staff, andcreating a ticket subscription series withspecial rates for students.Rudall wishes to thank Hope and LesterAbelson for their donation of $300,000 whichhas made this final fund raising push possible'cKyyjt rvurvT^urfv-fcio-t at ct{rt’li' - rYvOtktr-a - — CKw\d. thJLO'enyLoft — fereVvu^ j-CTCC ~ V\CV4Y I/-.y&w"4<Acntie*i+vcb Yeet - irc-cXStC\iAt\/LCA. f\"■/AacpBFGrH1 Z CcrB^f Cr\ A, •• CE, , p■ H J-\ cjkfMCjCot* te concent-sated dn fa.(rtf ^at Ouvteu^ W* feu** t inokt w den Ccla, 0+-ra a.tty S\rSt S'ttu t tv Otm ( f&v i cduCfe KJ ft. r&n PivLcvty FjLAtai (fuL xi~ t*A<L u>-cCF g&yUyvu( d+.c? .td !y\^ ryyy\,CjBaa* ^ c\ea& U air hx(d?"very try vsYatr ytar) HsJasA, WatcC\ frxyyy 4CUe tjocUttSome of Samuel Beckett's handwritten notes for the Goodman's current production of his Krapp's Last TapetKrapp's Last Tape at GoodmanKrapp's Last Tapeby Samuel BeckettDirected by Samuel Beckettat The Goodman Theatre, 443 3820by Laura CottinghamHow could watching a black space wherea man eats banana halves, plays a tape recorder, and opens a dictionary be interest!ng? Before seeing Beckett's Krapp's LastTape, I wouldn't have known. Now I stilldon't know, but I know that Beckett knows.His production of Last Tape opened lastnight at the Goodman Theatre and is one ofthe most interesting experiences a night atthe theater can give.More literal seeming than Beckett's otherworks. Last Tape is a sixty nine year oldman playing a tape he made of himself whenhe was thirty-nine. The younger voice reminds the man of a different self: A vain,yet optimistic self. When his vanity repulseshim, his lost optimism sickens him, heswitches off the tape as fast as you run from an old acquaintance you hated when youshared the same street address, and certainly have no use for now that you've relocated miles away.But one part of the tape forces Krapp toreplay it. It is a love scene. One might ex¬pect Beckett to mock a love memory, to sentimentalize, to reduce it to drivel. But hedoesn’t:...Sun blazing down, bit of abreeze, water nice and lively. Inoticed a scratch on her thighand asked her how she cameabout it. Picking gooseberries,she said. I said again I thoughtit was hopeless and no goodgoing on and she agreed withoutopening her eyes. (Pause) Iasked her to look at me andafter a few moments—(Pause)after a few moments she did,but the eyes just slits because ofthe glare. I bent over to get them in the shadow and theyopened. (Pause.Low) Let me in.(Pause) We drifted in amongthe trees and stuck. The waythey went down, sighing, beforethe stem! (Pause) l lay downacross her with my face in herbreasts and my hand on her. Welay there without moving. Butunder us all moved, and movedus, gently, up and down, andfrom side to side.We accept the beauty of the prose as Beckett's recognition of the human need for companionship. But it's still as if Beckett viewsthis need with contempt For he gives us abeautiful memory, but it's still only a memory. The sixty nine year old Krapp has nolover, no friend. Beckett wants to remind usof our inherent loneliness and our refusal —perhaps inability—to recognize and accommodate this condition Inevitably we try toescape loneliness. Inevitably, we can't.the grey c Rick Cluchey, founder of the San QuentinDrama Workshop, is Krapp. His precise acting and Beckett s meticulous directioncreate a dynamic experience. Somehow,! you want to keep on watching. Nothing isj happening a man is sitting at a table likeqesk, a shielded bulb burning over his head.He gets up a few times, moves his handsabout various desk top objects a few timesHow Beckett makes nonaction non boring isI excitingAnd knowing that Cluchey's performanceis the way Beckett wants his Krapp to act isj even more exciting. After each perforj mance Cluchey and Goodman ArtisticDirector Gregory Mosher lead an audiencediscussion. Wednesday night Cluchey spokej of Beckett's insistence on keeping the performance as colorless as possible Clucheyalso confirmed our curiosity as to how Beckettian his actions on stage really are: "Whatyou saw is what he wants."! See it.ity journal, Friday, January ll, 1980 — 9ASHUM-AMSASeminar Series 1979-80Program in the Arts and Sciences Basic to HumanBiology and MedicineandAmerican Medical Students’ AssociationPresentWalter McClure, Ph.D.Vice President and Director of Health Policy Group at InterStudyspeaking on the topicAlternatives ToRegulation in HealthCare PolicyTUESDAY, JANUARY 15, 19807:30 P.M.SOCIAL SCIENCES 122 Xerox sales teams don’t just knock on doors.They determine our clients’ needs and work outsolutions. Xerox has a unique sales training pro¬gram which gives our people the competitiveedge they need in a rapidly changing marketplace.Xerox sales teams are a study in aggressive leader¬ship. And they built a path for your advancement.At Xerox, we know how to reward hard work.Our sales teams advance quickly and enjoy theirsuccess. And, of course, sales come easier whenyou work for a leader. Our equipment is wellknown for a high degree of dependability and ourclients know that. They also know that they getwhat they want when they need it. Graduate into a Xerox sales career. We’re yourinformation center of the future.Check with your college placement office forcampus interview dates and schedules. Then talkto our campus representatives about careers thatcan’t be duplicated.XEROXXerox is an affirmative action employer (male/female).Starting a sales career at Xeroxis an education unto itself.SHAPIRO 'ART TO LIVE WITH” COLLECTIONDistribution Today, at 4:00 p.m.Pick up number at Ida Noyes checkroom assoon as possible $5.00 to students and staffwith I.D.. Rental period thru Wed., June 4thHebrew Calligraphy Workshop(Reading Knowledge of Hebrew Required)8 Sessions,Beginning Sunday, Jan. 13:Feb. 3, Feb. 24, Mar. 16, Mar. 23,April 20, May 11 and May 25.SUNDAYS -11,00 A.M.-12:30 P.M. BECHET! ~IDIRECTSBECKETT.sKRAPP’S "TUITION* $25. - Hillel Affiliation -Membership Required.TEACHER,Mrs. Darryl Rotman-Kuperstock ■ M &>°DPl/W1 MllT .STI/DI© THtATT^1 IIh 1 (Colv^BvS fifrLilli 1 no* roe)TAPEREGISTER NOW! at HILLEL FOUNDATION5715 WOODLAWN AVENUE [Goodman] Sfjl N' ,»eo\syjC S^e°aodS*a"‘-SSSfeS-SsSSk—c\»sS•oof-**-10 — the grey city journal, Friday, January 11, 1980GREY CITY VINYL GUIDESomethingold,somethingnewOld and New DreamsDon Cherry, trumpet; Dewey Redman,tenor saxophone, musette; Charlie Haden,bass; Ed Blackwell, drums. ECMby Mark NeustadtToday it is easy to forget how insecurethe state of jazz was twenty years agowhen Ornette Coleman came riding out ofthe West with his plastic saxophone: jazzfans were torn between cool schools andhard bop fanatics. Gerry Mulligan and theWest Coast sound was considered the mostadvanced thing in jazz; and the Dave Brubeck band and the Modern Jazz Quartetwere the most popular and successfulgroups then active.Ornette Coleman's band changed all ofthat. His music firmly reestablished swingand blues feeling as central to jazz. He alsorevived improvisation, not as ornamenta¬tion of set chords or melodies but, as wasproper, as a genuinely free approach tomusic. Ornette Coleman could only accom¬plish all of this because he surroundedhimself with immensely talented sidemen;and it is these sidemen — Charlie Haden,Don Cherry and Ed Blackwell from theoriginal Coleman band and Dewey Red¬man from a later band in the sixties — whoperform together on Old And NewDreams.With musicians of this caliber (and in¬tegrity) it is inconceivable that this shouldbe a bad album. The only chance is that itmight be an unexceptional one, but I canhappily report that Old and New Dreams,save for a few moments of questionabletaste, is an exceptional record. It is exceptional because it simultaneously conjuresup the music of the old Ornette Colemanquartet, and illustrates the developmentsof the musicians since they left the Coleman band. All have matured, and two —Don Cherry and Ed Blackwell — have de¬veloped styles since their Coleman daysthat establish them as leaders of their gen¬eration.Ed Blackwell's drumming is essential tothe story of jazz reestablishing a relationship to West Indian and African styles. In1958 Blackwell had already done extensivestudy of traditional drumming in New Orleans where he lived and of African andBata styles. His knowledge of the tuningsof drums was well beyond that of any jazzdrummer of his day. Since then he has increasingly attempted to assimilate African polyrhythms into his style, and his suecess at this, along with his round tone andlaid back swing, is responsible for his current excellence. "Togo,” composed byBlackwell, as the liner notes say, is "basedon a Ghanese traditional," and it is a perfeet showpiece for his skills. It is composedof two drum patterns in an ABA arrangement with a melody for the trumpet andsaxophone accompanying the A pattern.The playing of all four musicians is basedon the drum patterns, both in tone andrhythm, offering a good illustration of howBlackwell's music, and jazz as a whole,can approach its West African neighbor.Don Cherry has also moved away fromthe traditional material of a jazz musicianand toward third world music. But Cherryis much more eclectic than Blackwell, andfinds his fodder in the songs of many countries and times. What is constant in hismusic is lyrical approach to melody that ishard to describe adequately or compare tothat of any other jazz musician. Don Cherry, Ed Blackwell, Ornette Coleman, and Charlie Haden on the cover of anOrnette Coleman Quartet release from the early sixties.The SpecialsCherry started out in the fifties as another hot flashy kid playing a CliffordBrown type hard-bop horn. But when hemet Ornette Coleman, he adjusted himselftotally (and more successfully than anyother musician) to the genuinely played,intensely challenging improvisations ofthe Ornette Coleman band. He switched toan undersized pocket trumpet to achievethe quickness of response necessary forthe music and cultivated a warm sinuoustone that has grown to be one of the sweetest sounds in all of jazz. The great question about Don Cherry (the same one thatwas asked about Miles Davis) was alwayswhether he could make the adjustmentfrom great sideman to great leader; andalthough there have been a few rocky moments, Cherry definitely now has the stature of standing second to no musician.Increasingly Cherry has viewed improvisation as the expression of free, unrestrained melody rather than variations on atheme. His solos are like songs that burstsuddenly out from the music, weave theirway through the contours of the accompaniment, and fall again into the background. He plays themes like an ancientstoryteller tells tales: with great surenessand confidence in the content of his yarn.There are many good examples of thisstyle on Old and New Dreams.The other two musicians on the album are the worthiest companions. CharlieHaden playing his heavy, sonorous bass,and Dewey Redman with his surging andvery fast solo work. The record is essentially a blowing session, and everyone getsa turn more than once.The less that is said about the productionof the record the better. Manfred Eicher,the producer, has shown a vulgarity that isstriking and typical. An echo effect is usedon some of Don Cherry's trumpet solosand, on "Togo," Ed Blackwell's drums aredivided between the speakers so that thesound annoyingly jumps back and forth.This album along with a few others — anArt Ensemble of Chicago record and a LeoSmith record — indicate the abandonmenton the part of ECM records (now distributed by Warner Brothers) of its "Europeansound as the future of jazz" policy. I washoping that Eicher, the impresario ofECM, would have abandoned his cheapecho chamber production along with thispolicy. No such luck.Overall, Old and New Dreams is a reminder that it is possible to play very goodimprovised jazz nowadays. The men onthis album are all most likely over 40, butthey have lost none of their spirit or desireto play creative music. This record contains very much of that miraculous musiccalled jazz, and it continues to inspire musicians and listeners alike. Specialsby AAelanie DealThe "Rock Against Racism" movementhad its inception in Great Britain, acountry that has long been troubled notonly with racial and class clashes, but alsowith seemingly senseless gang warsamong cultural subgroups — mods,rockers and teddy boys — each of whichhas its own sharply defined musical tastes.One's politics are defined by one's musicalaffinities, according to young Britons, anda newly awakened awareness of racistovertones in rock & roll has caused them todemand a new kinc of sensitivity and evena new kind of music.Eric Clapton has attempted to dispel racist charges levelled at him after the pressquoted racist remarks made by him, bytouring extensively with Muddy Waters,and freely acknowledging the heavy musical debt he owes to American blues artists.Elvis Costello is now apparently trying tocorrect his racist image (after his muchpublicized Ray Charles debacle) by producing a racially mixed band called theSpecials. Ironically, Costello was one ofthe leaders of the early RAR movement.For the British, the way to meld biackand white music is to incorporate rock andreggae, reggae music itself having a variety of influences: African tribal musicAmerican rhythm and blues, and Caribbe¬an soul. Reggae is the music of a downtrodden political and religious subculture,anc this adds to its appeal to working-ciassBritish youth. The Specials' music combines the lazy, intoxicating Jamaican bluebeat with the quirky verve of rock's NewWave. Their debut album contains anti racist lyrics in songs like "It Doesn't Make ItAlright" ("Just because you're a blackboy/Just because you're a white/lt doesn'tmean you've got to hate 'em/lt doesn'tmean you've got to fight,'It doesn't make italright/It's the worst excuse in theworic") and "It's Up to You," which continue the music as political-statementmessage of punk as learned from the angriest and most moving rasta anthems toanti oppression. "Do the Dog" is addressed to the ever battling factions: "Allyou punks and all you teds/National frontsand natty dreads'little Hitlers/and skinheacs."As with the best reggae, serious themesare presented in a lilting combination ofmellow ard funky rhythms. "Too MuchToo Young," with its rather jocularchorus, bemoans the plight of a youngwoman "married with a kid when youshould be having fun," and addresses thesub ect of oirth control.Desoite the serious lyrical content ofmany of the songs, the album as a wholehas a party atmosphere from the raucouscrowd in the background of "Nite Club" tothe mock courtroom intro to "Stupid Marriage." A rowey trombone solo highlights"A Message to You Rudy" and a mesmerizinc sway of sax and organ permeatesthe whole.Perhaps due to the Costello influence,the Specials have a special deal with Chry¬salis Records whereby they have their ownlabel, "2 Tone," with a trademark figuredressed much like the Specials themselvesin all their publicity photos, black suit, tie,hat, shoes and shades, white shirt andsocks. The group's stance seems to besummed up in the lyrics of "It's Up toYou" (which has a steel drum intro echoing Costello's own "Watching the Detectives")We won't go away'Cos we've come out tostay ...We can't force you to enjoythis musicTake it or leave itWe'll carry on regardlessIf you don't like it you don'thave to use itit's up to you ...- Black — white — unite ...the grey city journal, Friday. January 11. 1980 — 11■f W$ Rockefeller Memorial Chapel! -'ji : -•» -V5850 Soulli VL oo<llav\ii Xvoihk*Sumlay. Januar\ 150 A.M. ECUMENICAL SERVICE OKHOLY CO MM l MON10 A.M. 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Ellis Ave753-3303Mastercharge and Visa AcceptedJEWISH COOKING CLASS -SEPHARDICNORTH AFRICAN STYLE8 SESSIONS - Enrollment Limited to10 PeopleWEDNESDAYS, 7:30 P.M.,JANUARY 16^TUITION: $20 - Shared Food Costs; and^Hillel Affiliation-MembershipRequired.TEACHER: DR.YAACOV SELHUBREGISTER NOW!at HILLEL FOUNDATION5715 Woodlawn AvenueREFORM RABBIS ARE NOT- PSYCHOLOGISTS- CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGISTS- LEGAL ADVISORS- SOCIAL WORKERS- MARRIAGE COUNSELORS- TEACHERS- RELIGIOUS LEADERSTHEY ARE MOREThey are RabbisRabbi Samuel k. Jaseph. National Direehh <>l idmissions.Ilebrett I nion CoIleae-Jeuish Institute of Religion,u ill be on campus It eilnesdnv. January 16 at10 t. )l. - I !*. M. (.all 7~*2I 127 fur an appointment.The College-Institute also offers degree programs in Jewish Education.Jewish Communal Service. Cantorial Studies\ and Graduate Studies. 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Blackstone955-0974COME TO THE FIRSTBLACKFRIARS MEETING OF THE DECADE!MONDAY, JANUARY 14 - 7:30 p.m.IDA NOYES LIBRARY12 —tthe grey city journal, Friday, January 11, 1980announces...NEWHOURS:9 A.M.-9 P.Mfor your convenienceStop in for coffee anda pastry on your wayto the office or to class.WE NOW HAVEHaagen- Dazs Ice CreamThe Very Best45c Single Scoop The ChicagoMaroonis looking for aPHOTOGRAPHY EDITORfor the rest of theacademic year (or longer). !•*■■■■■If interested, pleasecall 753-3265 and askfor Andrew. ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■*The SAO Mini CoursesBread-bakingBeginning discoAdvanced discoAmerican sign languageCalligraphyQuiltingGuitarLeaded glassRegistration:For Students: Tuesday, Jan. 15(Bringucid) g;3Q a.m.. 4 p.m. |da Noyes 210, SAOWednesday, Jan. 169:30 a.m. - 4 p.m. Ida Noyes 210, SAOFor Foully Staff, Alums Thursday, Jan. 17(and late students registration). 11 aFor additional Info, CallStudent Activities753-3598 WeavingPhotographyWine-tasting(21 years & older)' — — ^ ^ j i ----- --11 a.m. - 3 p.m. Reynolds Club CorridorThe Chicago Maroon — Friday, January 11, 1980 — 19Maroon cagers sandwich 3 wins in first 5 gamesBy Andy RothmanWhile everyone frantically tried to closeout the Autumn Quarter successfully inearly December, the University of Chicagomen’s basketball team managed to piece to¬gether a three game winning streak overTrinity Christian College Concordia Collegeof Michigan, and Siena Heights in betweenlosses to Ripon and Eureka College as theyopened their 1979-80 season.Each of the wins came at home as theMaroons began the season by playing four oftheir first five games at the Henry CrownField House. The last two of these gameswere part of the first University of ChicagoHoliday Tournament which was won byEureka College.The tournament opened on Tuesday, De¬cember 18 with Eureka a perennial Nation¬al Association of Intercollegiate Athleticspower, easily defeating Grinned 85-47. Grin¬ned was held scoreless for over seven min¬utes late in the first half while Eureka wasscoring 16 points to take 36-12 lead and thegame was never close thereafter.In Tuesday’s second game ,the hostMaroons took on a strong Siena Heightsteam After playing to a 27-27 tie in the firsthalf the teams were still even at 38 with14:02 remaining in the game. The Maroonswent on an 8-0 spurt to go up 46-38 with 10:38to go. Chicago still led by 53-46 with 6:015 re¬maining before Siena came back to make it53-52 with just over four and a half minutesleft in the game. The Maroons scored thegame's next five points to take a six pointlead with 1:14 left but Siena stormed back togain a tie at 60 with eight seconds remain¬ing Chicago forward Fete Leinroth hit twofree throws with three seconds showing onthe clock to gain what was Chicago’s thirdstraight win. Siena's Wilson led all scorerswith 20 points. Leinroth, a junior, led Chica¬go with 14 points and 10 rebounds while jun¬ ior Vlad Gastevich (currently the team’sleading scorer with a 12.2 avg.) had 13 andsenior Ken Jacobs added 11.The next night Chicago met Eureka in thetournament championship game. The gamewas all but over mid-way through the firsthalf as Eureka used a 14-0 burst to turn a20 12 game into a 34-12 contest . In the wholefirst half Eureka connected on 21 of 28 fieldgoal attempts, an incredible 75 percent clip.The Maroons never got closer than 15 pointsMary BartholomewKen Jacobs: leading the way off theboards.in the second half and finally succumbed91-69 Afterwards. Chicago coach John An-gelus would say. “I don’t think, in all fair¬ness to our team that we were physicallyready to play that game. A team like thatwas so big and strong that it wouLd take our very best effort to give them a ball game ”Eureka’s Reed had 22 points while Blantonscored 21. Gastevich and Jacobs each had 14for Chicago while sophomore Elric Kuby tal¬lied 11,all in the second half.Before the tournament, on Saturday, De¬cember 15 the Maroons got by ConcordiaCollege with a 66-62 win in a game that wasclose throughout. Chicago took a 24-14 leadafter a 10-0 streak with 8:56 to go in the firsthalf,but Concordia came back to trail byfour at the half. 36-32.The teams stayed close in the second halfas the Maroons led 60-52 with 4:00 minutesleft. Concordia was able to get back to with¬in two at 64-62 with 24 seconds remainingbut Leinroth made two free throws with twoseconds remaining to clinch the Maroonwin. Leinroth was also the game’s topscorer with 16 points to go along with his 10rebounds. Ken Jacobs had 12 points andeight rebounds (he is currently Chicago’stop rebounder with an 8.1 avg.). Sopho¬mores Kuby and Rich Martin each collectedseven rebounds.The Maroons opened their home season bydestroying Trinity Christian 76-45. Thegame was never close as Chicago took an18-2 lead with 9:51 to go in the first half andled 35-17 at the half. Gastevich led a- bal¬anced attack with 19 points and nine re¬bounds. Leinroth had 16 points and eight re¬bounds .and Martin bucketed 13 whilepulling down nine boards. Ken Jacobs wasthe top rebounder with 16.Chicago’s season opener was on SaturdayDecember 1. at Ripon, in a Midwest Confer¬ence game. The Maroons trailed 36-27 at thehalf but were able to pull within three onseveral occasions in the second half beforebowing 73-65. Ripon's Terry Cramer scored27 points and 6'7" Tim Barnes added 17 forthe Redmen. Jacobs and Gastevich had 16for Chicago while Martin scored 14.Overall .Angelus says he is ,“Very pleased,” with the way the team has beenplaying. He adds, ‘‘The team is playing aswell as they can play. 1 would say, from acoaching standpoint,! can’t ask for muchmore. They’re giving a one hundred percenteffort.”The team has been back on campus sinceJanuary 3 and. according to Angelus,‘‘Weshould be in good shape physically now be¬cause we’ve been working hard and finalsare over.” The club did suffer one setbackthis week when sophomore wing Jeff Fore¬man sprained an ankle in practice and willbe out indefinitely.As for the schedule Chicago will play onlyone home game in January, a non-confer¬ence game next Tuesday evening againstNiles College. Angelus does see some goodwith the odd schedule ‘‘Normally it’s not agood idea. The league makes the schedule.The only advantage is that some of theseroad games could have been played in lateFebruary but at that time the kids would berunning into midterms or a little after so wewere able to barter for the dates to playthem early. I’d rather play them early inJanuary so that the kids don’t have any aca¬demic pressure and this way we do have anice string of four or five home games Ifwe’ve got our club together we can make arun at people.”Tomorrow night the 3-2 Maroons play aleague game at Carlet.on. Carleton’s 6'8''center, Jim Tolf .played with Chicago be¬fore last year. Angelus believes ‘‘We’ve gotto do a reasonably good job on Jimmy andkeep him off the boards as much as we canand let him get his 15-20 points but not lethim get 15 or 20 rebounds. It’s going to bevery difficult because if there are a lot ofhigh lobs inside, and he can rally sky, andhe’ll jam a couple on us,”Next Tuesday’s game against Niles can beheard on WHPK 88.3 FM beginning at 7:15pmCoach Hurt, women hoops ters hopefulBy Darrell WuDunnEntering their third season under coachMarcia Hurt .the University of Chicagowomen’s basketball team hopes to matchtheir success of the last two years. Witheight players returning from last year’s squad, coach Hurt is optimistic for a goodseason and a district title.Going into the 1980 season, Hurt brings a26-17 career record with the Maroons. Lastyear, Chicago was 13-9 overall and finishedsecond in the district to Lake Forest with aToning up in the Chicago pump roomBy Howard SulsTucked away on the west side of the sec¬ond floor of Bartlett Gym is a small roomthat houses one of the newer and more pop¬ular clubs on campus, the weight club.Many a basketball player and jogger hasbeen startled by an occasional yell eminat-ing from the confines of that small room,usually from the mouth of business schoolstudent (and former Cornell weightlifter)Judah Epstein doing squats with 575pounds. Quite a moving sight indeed.The weight club had been in existencefor two years in an inactive form whenTony Abati and Andy Ragone revived itand received sports club money. For a fivedollar membership fee and five dollar-monthly dues anyone can join. At presentthere are 140 members, up from the origi¬nal 38, including 6 women and 5 faculty.The club has 2200 pounds, 2 flat benches, 2squat racks, three Olympic bars, two curl¬ing bars, an incline bench, a curling bench,and a dumbbell set. Future plans includemoving to the Field House and purchase ofanother bench, power rack, leg equipment,incline bench, and dumbbell set.What kind of person lifts weights? Origi¬nally most members were graduate stu¬dents, ex-college jocks trying to keep in shape and avoid boredom. Now the club isfairly split between undergraduates andgraduate students, with varsity teamsusing the equipment for some training.Open seven days a week, morning hoursfind mostly physical science and medicalpeople, afternoons, business school stu¬dents and undergrads.What drives these people to participatein this sado-masochistic ordeal, pushingthemselves to the brink of pain, three, fourtimes a week, two or three hours at a time?Is it glory? Is it the expression of the in¬nate human desire for competition and ex-cellence‘, The satisfaction derived fromthe knowledge of self-achievement andprogress?On this question the club is fairly dividedinto two schools of thought. One studentelaborated the former: ‘T read in Busi¬ness Week that corporate recruiters lookfor the strong, athletic types. I’m just try-’ing to get a better job.” The other philoso¬phy is much simpler, ‘‘Curls for the girls.Pects for sex.”Seriously, though, weight lifting is a fair¬ly moderate form of cardiovascular exer¬cise, but more than that it requires a senseof discipline and drive. Stronger, bigger,better looking, in shape. It is simply agroup of people desiring to improve them¬ selves.The best thing though, is the people. Asense of camraderie fills the room. It is amuch more pleasant atmosphere thanmost private clubs, and a lot cheaper.There is no enmity between members,whether grad or undergrad, M.D. orPhD., biology or physics, student or facul¬ty, male or female. There are no barriershere between people, just iron to pump.Everybody helps everybody else out. Itmay be the one place on campus wherethere are no grimaces, except during lifts,no unhappy faces.The benefits don’t come quickly. Slowlythough, you notice your body seems a littlebigger here, a little bigger there. Shirtsare a little tight across the arms and back.You wake up, look in the mirror, and yourbody is changed. The old, tired, flabby youis a little thinner, tauter, bursting at theseams. Your veins have mysteriously ap¬peared. It becomes a pleasure to gaze intothe mirror.Whether power lifting or just body build¬ing, pumping iron has no equal. To DanTepke and English student Joe Branotti,it’s a good way of releasing tension. To SueShott, it is a way of building strength andpower for karate. Whatever your bag is,come out and pump. 4-1 record.The team lost two key players from lastyear including their captain and star playerJanet Torrey. who is presently studying inGermany. However, with the great majorityof the players returning, a solid nucleus ofthe squad remains.According to Hurt ,the team’s mainstrength lies with a strong and well-bal¬anced starting team. Leading the way isjunior co-captain Nadya Shmavonian at forward who returns for her third year on theteam. In several games last year, Shmavon¬ian pulled down over twenty rebounds alongwith scoring in double figures. Complement¬ing Shmavonian at the other forward posi¬tion will be either junior Mary Klemundt orco-captain Cheryl Flynn, a senior who re¬turns to the team after a two year hiatus.Starting at center will be sophomore EllenMarkovitz who has proven her abilities afteronly one year on the squad. Rounding outthe starting team at the guard positions willbe juniors Kim Hammond and ChristieNordhielm.One weakness that plagues the team is thelack of depth. Coach Hurt will have to relyheavily on her starting team. Backing upMarkovitz at center will be junior LauraUerling. Supporting the starting forwardswill be juniors Jean Helwege and newcomerTurn to Page 21Sports writersneededAnyone interested in covering a varsitywinter sport should contact Andy Rothmanat 753-3263 or leave their name and phonenumber in the sports mailbox in Ida Noyes303. No previous experience is necessaryReporters wishing to cover wrestling andwomen’s swimming are especially needed20 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, January 11, 1980Run at your own paceTracksters improve, ready for indoorsBy Allen Sowizral very competitive in the Midwest confer- Knight and Olympian Rick WolhThe motto of the IlnivArcitv rtf Phioonn annn i i h.. . , .. , ™ .By Allen SowizralThe motto of the University of Chicagotrack team, under the coaching of Ted Hay-don seems to be. “run at your own pace.”and thus far the results have been impres¬sive The team, which is now preparing forthe upcoming indoor season, looks to beContinued from Page 20Holly Gump. Coming off the bench at guardare sophomore Lee Badgett and the onlyfreshman on the team,Susan Fortunato.Coach Hurt describes the Maroon attackas a “motion offense,” that will feature fre¬quent fast breaks. With quick plays,theteam will try to outrun the opponents orcatch them off guard Despite a lack ofdepth , such game strategy will requiremuch substituting from the bench in orderto give the starters the needed rest.Hurt is fairly optimistic for the 1980 sea¬son. From the several weeks of practice theteam has developed a very good mental atti¬tude, the best Hurt has seen in her threeyears here. The players consistently workhard. “They never give up whether they areup 20 points or down five points,” explainsHurt.This year’s schedule consists predomin¬antly of home games unlike last year whenthe team played most of their games away.Hurt explains that the status of the Field-house determined much of the schedulingover the past few years. With the Fieldhouseclosed last year due to reconstruction, theteam did not have adequate facilities to playmany home games. With the reopening ofthe Fieldhouse the team is able to host mostof the teams that hosted them last year. Thisscheduling will certainly help the Maroons.Despite coach Hurt’s high hopes, she doesnot expect the team’s record to necessarilyreflect this optimism. In an extremely toughfirst half of the season, Chicago will bemeeting Division I Northern Illinois Univer¬sity, several Division II teams, and a few Di¬vision III powers. With an easier secondhalf,Hurt sets her goal on a .500 season.In district competition, Hurt has muchhigher expectations. She hopes for a perfect5-0 first place finish this year. The Maroonsmajor rivals will be North Park College andlast year’s district champs,Lake ForestCollege (a team Hurt felt Chicago couldhave defeated last year for the title). Al¬though both of these teams have improvedsince the 1979 season, Hurt feels that shewould be disappointed with anything lessthan second place and hence, an invitationinto the state tournament.The women’s basketball team opens its1980 season at the Illinois State UniversityInvitational tournament which will be heldtoday and tomorrow. The team’s first homegame will be next Thursday night in theFieldhouse against Valparaiso University. very competitive in the Midwest confer¬ence. The distance runners finished secondin the conference during the cross countryseason, which is an example of the team’spotential.The team has many accomplished run¬ners. but beginners should not be dis¬couraged from joining the team, which nownumbers about 40 runners. “I try to pay in¬dividual attention to everybody, whetherthey’re good or bad,” said Haydon. “Theaim of the team is to try to help runners im¬prove.” Haydon notes that every runnerwho has run for the team, from beginners toOlympians, have improved their previoustimes Coach Haydon feels that a main por¬tion of his duties as coach consist of tryingto, “predict and judge what an individual iscapable of running so I don’t ask him to dothe impossible.”Haydon’s program consists of runningworkouts in terms of quality rather thanquantity. “This makes the program moreaccessable to the busy Chicago scholar ath¬lete.” All workouts are recorded so eachrunner has a log of his individual progress.The program also is highly flexible so thateach runner is exposed to a variety of eventsso that he is able to find his area of profi¬ciency. Haydon also cited the existence of ayear long program that includes training inthe summer, as well as the excellent facili¬ties at the Field House and Stagg Field.Among the runners produced by Haydon’ssystem are Mike Axinn, David Greene, Art Knight and Olympian Rick Wolhuler whoruns with the University of Chicago TrackClub. Axinn is the Midwest conferencechampion in cross country and has qualifiedfor the United States Olympic trials afterrunning one of the best times ever by a per¬son his age Greene is the conference cham¬pion in the mile, having run a 4:17.3 mile, anunofficial school record of 1:54.3 in the 800and a 9:21 two mile, all indoors. Knight wassecond in the conference in cross countryand ran with Axinn in the AAU crosscountry championships. Wolhuter repre¬sented the United States in the 1976 Mon¬treal Olympics in the 800 and 1500 meterruns and is currently training for the Mo¬scow Olympics. The sprinters on the teamare Rich Gordon, Chip Faller and Frank Ta-mura. Ed Derse, Bob Kohout and JamesVerhoulst. who has recovered from a tendoninjury, are the quarter milers. The middle(Jistance events are covered by Dan Welsh,who may also run the steeplechase. TomMatski, Rich Heinle, David Glockner, PhilipMe Goff who won a major letter in crosscountry, Marshall Schmitt, James Biery,and Paul Hart who placed in the mile run atthe conference championships last year.Jim Adamo, Richard Keen, David Taylor,Dan Davies, Claude Zientek. and LarryWhitlow run the long distance races. JamesRead is one of the top hurdlers in the confer¬ence and runs the events with teammateTom Goodrich.In the field events, Gary Peter and Tom Track hoursAs of January 8, 1980 the Henry crownField House track was made available forWinter Quarter recreational usage duringthe following times:Monday-Thursday 8:30 a.m. - 9:30 a.m.11:30 a.m. - 4:00 p.m5:30 p.m. - 10.30 p.m.Friday 12:00 noon - 4:00 p.m.5:30 p.m. - 10:30 p.m.Saturday 9:00 a.mSunday 10:30 p.m.CLOSEDThe track will also be closed during var¬sity athletic events which takeplace during the above hours.The indoor track in Bartlett Gymretains normal hours includingthe 4:00 p.m. - 5:30 p.m., slottaken for practice in the fieldhouse by varsity teamsFurlong are prospects for the pole vault.The shotputters are John Grayhack, DougSiebery, and Larry Wilt, who may also trythe decathalon Les Firestein. a freshman,is an experienced long jumper and triplejumper which should help the team. MarkMeyer, the football quarterback, may beback to participate in the high jump. CoachHaydon stressed that he always tries to fieldas many team members in a meet as poss¬ible and that anyone who is interested inrunning in welcome to come out for theteam.Swimmers set for successful seasonBy John CondasThe University of Chicago men’s swim¬ming team, led by captains Steve Frederickand Adrian Trevino, and new coach PeteAnderson, are looking forward to their firstmeet of the season, the Illinois Intercolle¬giate Championship, being held this week¬end at the University of Illinois-CircleCampus.This year’s team promises to be evenmore competitive than last year's team,which finished third in the Midwest Confer¬ence’s annual meet. The team has nine re¬turning lettermen and also includes fouroutstanding freshmen who should score wellfor the team in meets. Two standouts, whosetop performances will be counted on, in¬clude Steve Frederick and Andy Neff, who iscalled “the most flexible, best swimmer inthe history of the University,” by coach An¬derson.The team has been working hard in pre¬paration for the upcoming season, havingtwo-a-day practices every weekday and onelong practice on Saturdays. The team swimsan average of 12,000 yards per day. CoachAnderson feels this large number of yards isnecessary because most high school swim¬ mers have difficulty adjusting to longer col¬lege distances. Along w ith swimming 12.000yards a day, the team is utilizing an isokine¬tic weight program.Although the swimmers are working hardthis seas< n, perhaps new coach Pete Ander¬son is working even harder. Coach Andersongraduated from Albion College in Michiganwhere he was a back-stroker and a distanceman on Albion’s team. He then went to grad¬uate school at Bowling Green State Univer¬sity in Ohio where he received an advanceddegree in physical education with emphasison facility design. He is a dilligent recruiter,recruiting swimmers daily, mostly alongthe east coast.Although he feels swimming is important,Anderson realizes that academics comefirst. “If a swimmer has a practice and a labsimultaneously, the swimmer goes to thelab,” Anderson says. He is assisted by Chi¬cago law student Henry Thoman. a DukeUniversity graduate, who has contributedmuch of his time to the programCoach Anderson has two goals for thisyear’s team, a second place conference fin¬ish, and qualifying as many swimmers aspossible for nationals. Last year’s thirdplace conference finish was the team's bestever, and Anderson believes this year’s team can finish second to perennial powerGrinnell College. He also hopes to have sev¬eral swimmers qualify for the nationalchampionships held later in the season.Also, Anderson feels there are several keysto expansion of the team A new pool, atleast 25 yards long, is necessary to developthe team Bartlett Gym's smaller lengthhandicaps the University’s swimmersgreatly. Also, a diving board would be a wel¬come acquisition. Another key for improv¬ing the team is the recruiting of top notchswimmers. With more blue chip recruits,obviously the team becomes more powerfuland also develops a strong foundation for fu¬ture seasons The final key for improvementis the coach's ability to have enough time foreveryone. Due to the academic nature of thecollege, Chicago swimmers need to receivemuch personal attention from Anderson.This weekend's meet starts on Friday andruns all day Saturday with finals being heldon Sunday at 4:30 p.m. This meet is im¬portant for the team because it will showwhat Illinois schools are strong and also w illindicate how well Chicago compares withthese other colleges. Coach Anderson hopesthe team will finish among the top seven Di¬vision III schools, behind powerful Wheatonand North Central Colleges.IM reportReferee awards announced, final football rankingswinter.By J. A. NetosThe Intramurals Dept has chosen the in¬dividuals to be awarded for their contribu¬tion to IM sports as officials.Brian Holmgren w^as awarded a ratingof 5, and received a whistle and a lanyard,for his football and basketball officiating.We are happy to note that our friend JimMuckle was awarded a rating of 4 for hisofficiating in football anjl basketball, and aUC-IM Official Shirt. Jim is leaving thedreary Chicago winter in order to bask inthe blazing Texas sun for a few months.We will all miss his irreverent and pleas¬ant company, and hope that it will not betoo long before we see him here againGood Luck, Jim!Among the officials who were awarded arating of 5 in football officiating, and aUC-IM Official Shirt, are Jeff Paulson,Matthew' Rueter, Alan Burns, Rich Meade. Nick Choporis, Stephen Sundquist, and, ofcourse, Brian Holmgren. Bill Roth wasawarded a rating of 5, and an official shirt,for his basketball officiating, as did SteveKritchevski for his excellent job as a vol¬leyball official.Please Note:Because of a move toward energy con¬servation, the Henry Crown Field Houseand Bartlett Gymnasium w ill be closing at10:00 pm week nights. This will necessitatethe rescheduling of all IM basketballgames originally scheduled for 9:30 pm.effective January 21, 1980. The list of res¬cheduled games will be posted outside theIM Office, INH 203, beginning on Monday.January 14. 1980. In addition, the new re¬creational lockerooms in the field houseare open and users are reminded to carryan extra pair of sneakers in to preserve theupstairs floor and track during the Space limitations caused the omission ofthe top tens from the last sports section ofthe Autumn Quarter.Intramural Basketball Top Ten• first place votes in parenthesis1.Albanian Refugees <io> 992 Mr. Bill Show 903. Dred Scott’s Revenge 874. Uranus & the 7 Moons 855. Controlled Substance 606. Chamberlin 567. Dudley 558 Divinity School 509. Hitchcock 4910. The Champs 27Votes: Dartos Rises Again. Gang of Five.Tufts, Vincent. Lotto’s Final IntramuralFootball Top Ten(first place votes in parenthesis)1 Wabuno Bay Buccaneers <s) 902. Junkvard Dogs «4) 863. PsiUd) 844. Manifest Destiny 805. Tufts 756. Patchworks . 627. Hooligans 408. Ed’s Bar and Grill 329. Chamberlin 1610. The Pod 5Votes. Smegma Breath. Hung Jury.We’re All Whores, lower Rickert.DudleyThe Chicago Maroon — Friday. January 11, 1980 — 21Calendar★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★FRIDAYPerspectives: Topic-“U.S. Policy and the CurrentCrisis in South East Asia” guests M. Ladd Thomas,Dwight King, and Frank Reynolds, 6:09 am, channel7.Grad. Comm, on the Study of Women: "Keep theHome Fires Burning: The Weltanschauung of theRight to Lifers and Implications for the Proabor¬tionist Struggle" Noon, Ida Noyes 2nd floorlounge.Italian Table: Meets noon, Blue Gargoyle to speakItalian.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Film-"InnerLife" Traditional world of Islam. 12:30 pm. Pick016.Workshop in Industrial Organization: "NashTheory and Behavior in Experimental MarketMechanism" speaker Vernon Smith, 1:30-3:30 pm,Ro 301Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Arabic Circle-"Classical Quotations and Innovation in the Poetryof Abu Nuwas” 3:30 pm, Kelly 413.Workshop in Economic History: "Land Use and LandTenure: Theory and Empirical Analysis" speakerDonald Jones. 3:30 pm. SS 106.Hillel: Liberal Progressive Shabbat Services, 5:00pm, Hillel.Women's Union: Meets 5:00 pm, Ida Noyes abovethe Frog and Peach.Hillel: Yavneh Services, sundown, Hillel.UC Gymnastics Club: Instruction available 5:30-8:00pm, Bartlett gym, free.Hillel: Adat Shalom, Shabbat Dinner, 5:45 pm, Hil¬lel.UC Karate Club: Meets 7:00 pm in the dance roomof Ida Noyes Hall.Ski Club: Learn to Ski Night meeting 7:00 pm, IdaNoyes.DOC Films: "Halloween" 7:00, 9:00 and 11:0 pm,Cobb.Christian Fellowship: Presents James Sire speakingon "World Views” 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes.Rockefeller Chapel: Presents Paul Manz, organist.Hymn festival and Vespers 8:00 pm.I House: film-’Aguirre, Wrath of God” 8:00 and10:00 pm, I-House.Disco Dance with Contest: Dance at 8:30, contest at10:00 pm. Register at S. A.O. Office, or phone 3-3592for info.Hillel: Lecture by Professor Marvin Zonis-'Tran andthe United States" 8:30 pm, Hillel.SATURDAYCollege Bowl: Preliminaries 9:00 am and all day,Ida Noyes.Creative Dance and Movement Group: Firstclass-12:30 pm, Ida Noyes Dance Room.Men’s Indoor Track: Invitational Practice Relays.1:00 pm, Crown Field House.Smart Gallery: Exhibit-"Vienna Moderne:1898-1918" Arts and Crafts from turn of the centuryVienna, Jan. 10-Feb. 25.UC Gymnastics Club: Instruction available 2:00-5:00pm, Bartlett gym. freeCrossroads: Buffet Style Dinners, 6:00 pm, No reser¬vations necessary. $2.00 Law School Films: “M*A*S*H" 7:00 and 9:30 pm, LawSchool Auditorium.DOC Films: "Get Out Your Handkerchiefs” 7:15 and9:15 pm, Cobb.Crossroads: Sitar Recital by Som Ranjan Majumdar,8:00 pm, free.Front for Jazz: Presents Little Willie AndersonBlues Band. Ida Noyes. 8:30 pm. Charge at thedoor.SUNDAYRockefeller Chapel: Ecumenical Service of HolyCommunion, 9:00 am.Rockefeller Chapel: Discussion class-Topic: "Chris¬tianity and Contemporary Literature" 10:00 am.Hillel: Lox and Bagel Brunch, 11:00 am. Hillel.Rockefeller Chapel: University Religious Services.11:00 am.Hillel: Hebrew Calligraphy workshop, 10:00am-12:30 pm, Hillel.Crossroads: Bridge, 3:00 pm, beginners and expertswelcome.DOC Fil ns: "The Sorrow and the Pity" 7:00 pm,Cobb.International House: Student Concerts, featuringGlen Nielson, pianist. 7:30 pm, free.Tai Chi Ch’uan: Meets 7:30 pm, 4945 S Dorchester(enter on 50th St).Folkdancers: Meets 8:00 - 11:30 pm at Ida Noyes.MONDAYPerspectives: Topic-"Widowhood: Grief and Loneli¬ness" guests Elizabeth Bankoff, Helen Lopata, andSheldon Tobin, 6:09 am, channel 7.Crossroads: English classes for foreign women,10:00 am.Dept of Chemistry: "The Glass Transition of AtomicGlasses "speaker Hans C. Andersen, 4:00 pm, Kent103.UC Gymnastics Club: Instruction available 5:10-8:00pm, Bartlett gym, free.UC Karate Club: Meets 7:00 pm, Ida Noyes.Ski Club: Sign up meeting 7:00 pm, Ida NoyesChess Club: U.C. Winter Round Robin, 5-roundround robin tournament in sections of 6. Registra¬tion 7:00-7:15 pm, rounds begin 7:30 pm, Ida NoyesMemorial room.DOC Films: "Cimarron" 7:15 pm, "The Conquerors”9:30 pm, Cobb.Medieval and Renaissance Recreation Society:Meeting, 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes. All interested per¬sons welcome.Folkdancers: Meets 8:00-11:00 pm, Ida Noyes Hall.ATTENTION GRADUATE STUDENTSGERMAN EXAMHigh-pass the German exam this Spring withthe structural translation technique of KarinCramer, PhD., native German, years of teach¬ing experience. Course starting Jan. 14(4 hrs/wk) for 15 weeks. Mon.-Thurs. 12-1,6-7.Call 753-0516 or 493-8127 we Buyused Records1701 E. 55th684-3375HYDE PRRK PIPE RNO TOBRCCO SHOP1552 E. 53rd - Under IC tracksStudents under 30 get 10% offask for “Big Jim'Mon. - Sat. 9 - 8; Sun. 12-5PipesPipe Tobaccos. Imported Cigarettes Cigars, KHomeiniSUCKS!Bumpe* S'icKr-r^. S? 79□ Khoniptni Sui ksU Kb:* point Is A Jen.IJ Khomeini s MotherWears American ArmyBoolsT-Shirts $8 00S. M Lrirnrvifjo ir-jr.unjro m ah rirsADO W SAITS TAXf>or:d chei.k or money order10Liberty West ProductionsP O Box 1322Provo, Utah 84601e 1979 LWf’K) Day Delivery Rhodes ScholarsContinued from Page 1graphical questions and write a 1000-wordessay. After an initial screening by a Uni¬versity committee, Schulman and Crovitz,along with one other College student, wereallowed to compete with 70 other studentsfrom around the state for the two Illinoisspots in the regional competition.Of those 70, nine, including Crovitz andSchulman, w'ere interviewed by the stateRhodes scholarship committee, chaired byformer University president John Wilson.Crovitz'and Schulman were the two studentschosen to represent Illinois in the regionalcompetition. Interviews at the six state Mid¬western regional competition helped judgesselect the four scholarship winners from the12 students who had survived the state com¬petition.Although the interviews were probablythe most important parts of the final selec¬tion process, Crovitz and Schulman saidthat it was impossible to prepare for them.Crovitz said he had heard of one applicantwho was asked as soon as she entered theinterview room, to "tell the funniest joke you’ve ever heard” Schulman and Crovitzsaid that many of the interview questions fo¬cused on ethical issues important in theirfields of study. Adding to the difficulty of thecompetition for the pair was the fact thatboth tbe state and the regional interviewstook place during the University’s fallquarter exam week. The scholarship win¬ners were announced several hours after thecompletion of the regional contest.The Rhodes scholarship program is paidfor by a fund established by the 19th-centuryBritish financier Cecil Rhodes, and recog¬nizes students with outstanding academicand leadership qualities.Until recently, applicants had also to bemale and athletes, but that requirement hasnow been dropped, according to Mary Mar¬tin. Director of International Affairs. OneCollege student has won a Rhodes scholar¬ship in each of the past four or five years,Martin said, but it is unusual for two Univer¬sity students to win scholarships the sameyearCrovitz and Schulman are scheduled todepart by boat for England in early Sep¬tember. The boat fares for America’sRhodes scholars will be paid by the Rhodesscholarship foundation.Clip and Save>CO</>■ocCOQ.O PERSPECTIVES ON THE MIDDLE EASTIRAN AND THE UNITED STATES.FRIDAY PROFESSOR MARVIN ZONIS, Center for MiddleJANUARY 11 Eastern Studies, Dept. Behavioral Sciences and8:30 P.M. The CollegeFRIDAY ISLAM, THE ARABS AND HISTORY.JANUARY 18 PROFESSOR JOHN E. WOODS, Depts. History, Near8:30 P.M. Eastern Languages and Civilizations and The CollegeFRIDAY THE PEACE PROCESS AND ISRAELI DOMESTICJANUARY 25 POLITICS.8:30 P.M PROFESSOR LEONARD BINDER, Dept. PoliticalScienceFRIDAY PEOPLE AND POLITICS IN THE MIDDLE EAST.FEBRUARY 15 Reflections on 6 years of living in Iran and extensive8:30 P.M. travels in Israel and all the Arab countries.PROFESSOR JAMES E. BOWMAN, Depts. Pathologyand Medicine, Committee on Genetics and The College:Director, Blood Bank and Comprehensive Sickle CellCenter.j B_NA]_B;RITH_HJLLEL FOUNDATjON_^57_l_5WOODLAWNpue duoThe PERL* Program AnnouncesA Series of LecturesRHETORIC AND ALL THATSwift Lecture Hall - 3rd Floor 4,00 P.M.Wed., Jan. 16 - THE IRONY OF RHETORIC by Wayne C. BoothGeorge M. Pullman Distinguished ServiceProfessor, Dept, of English and The CollegeWed., Jan. 30 - THE RANGE AND RHETORIC OF ECONOMICSby Donald McCloskey, Associate Professor,Depts. of Economics and HistoryWed., Feb. 13 - THE FORMATION OF LANGUAGE ABOUT CLASSIN EARLY INDUSTRIALIZATION by Ira KatznelsonProfessor, Dept, of Political Science andThe CollegeWed., Feb. 27 - CONSTRUCTION AND MIS-CONSTRUCTION OFTHE CONSTITUTION by Philip B. KurlandWilliam R. Kenan, Jr. Distinguished ServiceProfessor in The College and Professor inThe Law School*Politics, Economics, Rhetoric and Law6HUBIThe Varsity Sport of the Mind THINK YOU’RE SMART?Come watch the 1979-80 University ofChicago College Bowl Tournament.Matches on: Sat., Jan. 12 - 9:30-6II)A NOYES LIBRARY Sun., Jan. 13 - 3:00-1022 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, January 11, 1980 ClipandSaveCLASSIFIED ADSAD RATESMaroon classifieds are effective andcheap. Place them in person atthMaroon business office in Ida NoyesHall by mail to the Maroon, Ida NoyesHall room 304, 1212 E. 59th St.,Chicago, 60637. All ads must be paid inadvance. Rates: 60' per line (30spaces) for U of C people, 75' per lineotherwise. $1 for special headline.Deadlines: For Tuesday paper, 12noon Friday; for Friday, 12 noonWednesday.Display advertising rates areavailable upon request. 753 3263.SPACECLASSIC S SHORE DRIVE Bldg, bylake. Lovely 1 bedrm apt., laundry,new brown shag crpting, very private,ideal for single. Top security, byU.C.bus, 1C, CTA. $195. 221-6404. Availnow3 hrs. weekly maintenance work, ifdesired.Do you love children? Free room andboard in exchange for child care 7:30-9:00am wkdays plus approx. 4-6hrs./wk. Call 343-2805 pm’s before 10.Roommate wanted! Reoents Park. 3-bdrm apt. $150. Gene or Sue. 324-2853.Furnished room in two room flat on se¬cond floor of home. Kitchenfacilities.Good location. (5407 S.Harper). Available now. Call anytime.955-7083.Professor here Spring quarter onlyseeks nice apartment or house to rent.753 8712.2 BEDROOMS TO SUBLET,Southwest corner of Rengency Park.Top floor, great view. Call JayLavelle. 667 6464.FOR SALE71 Plymouth Duster. New tires, bat¬tery. Good running cond. $650 or bestoffer Call 667-7529.Stereo system. Niko receiver, Garrardturntable. $175 or best offer. 667-7529.LOST AND FOUNDFOUND: Bracelet vie. 57th andBlackstone. 12/31/79. Call anddescribe. 955-2287LOST: Black leather man's wallet lostbefore Christmas, on campus. CallLaura. 241-5391.PERSONALSAnyone interested in readings and in¬formal discussions in the Der-rida/deMans Menace phone Ron at7-1950 or 752-8018 today. Faculty arewelcome.Hey Jay; tell me the one about thegoats.OLD ELEGANCE-private room andstudy in gorgeous larae S. Shore Dr.apt. in very special bldg. Excellentsecurity, clean congenial and maturemale, non-smoker $125 incl. util.221-6606.PEOPLE WANTEDSpecial event catering Part time staffbeing organized to cater qourmetmeals for special university events.Exciting opportunity, excellent pay.Contact Sharon Rosen. 753-35279:00 4:00p.m.PART TIME HELP WANTED. Tern-porary secretarial work-typing, filing,telephone. 10am to 3pm. Weekdays, atHinds Blgd. Call GeophysicalSciences. SMRP. 753 8114.Driver w/van part time please phoneanytime. Goodman. 753-6342.TUTOR WANTED for STEP Tutoringprogram. Volunteer two hours eachweek to help a high school or gradeschool student. STEP is a U. of C. Stud.Org. Contact Carla at 241 5044 or Daveat 241 5178.Participate in a research experiment.Nromal healthy volunteers over age 21needed. Earn up to $8.00 per hour. Youmust be available for 6-9 hours perweek for at least 10 weeks. For furtherinfor call Dept, of Psychiatry. 947 6984or 947-1211.Facility family seeks Univ. student tokeep Elementary School age girlscompany and prepare simple meal(option to stay and eat) Tues. and orThurs. 2:30-7 p.m. Good pay on campus. 955-6384 eves.Free tickets to the Folk Festival in exchange for a few hrs. of your time. Avariety of jobs available. For more in-fo. call Karen 955-91)2 or Lee 955-5770,MANUSCRIPT TYPIST (4) part time(12-15 hours/week). School year, sum¬mer if desired. Will be trained to typecamera-ready copy on IBM com¬posers. Must type 55 wpm Ability typeSpanish copy desireable Top studentrates. Contact George Rusmey Community and Family Study Center.753-2518Native speaker of Tamil with cleanenunciation in formal and colloquialstyles needed for taping and other services Wnt Spr Qrs Hrs vary 4-10hrs/wk. $5/hr. Call Prof. J. Lindholmfor appt 753-4355. POSTAGE METER JOCKEY:In charge mail room CFSC 12-15hours/week. Filling orders, handlingboxes, going to the Post Office. Preferundergraudate with two-plus yearsbefore graduation. Call Isabel Garcia.GFSC. 753 2518.RECORDING FOR THE BLIND INC.We need a studio director for its U of Cbranch, College degree required.Stimulating work supervisingvolunteers. Hours flexible. Mathbackground A plus. Call 288 7077,939-4162.HELP WANTED 12 15 hrs/wk. Stu¬dent help for Language Lab. Tues—Thurs - Sat. mornings. Knowledge offoreign language desirabe. Call Mr.Toth at 3 2676.Over 270,000 Summer Job. Full refundif you don't get your chioce through us.Send $2.95 to: Collegiate Press Box556, Belleville, Mich. 48111.LIGHT MAINTENANCE: 3-4 hrs/wkat 5416 Dorchester flexible hours. Call241 S563.JOBS! For Winter and SpringQuarters are availabel noe to studentswho qualify for Work-Study. Come toReynolds Club, Room 200-CareerCounseling and Placement. (753 3289).FOR SALEPortable TV Sony Panasonic-blackand white-12 in. screen. 288-8237.U of C Commemorative plate shows 9scenes. 595 00 Goodman. 753-8342.WV Red 1968 Bug, Excellent Radio,Extra Heater. $500.493-5774.PEOPLE FOR SALEWill do professional typing from copy,dictaphone or shorthand. (821-1868).Excellent, accurate typist w/legal ex¬perience will type papers and disserta¬tions or IBM. Reasonable rated.684-7414.ARTWORK- posters, illustration,calligraphy, invitations etc. NoelYovovich 5441 S. Kenwood 493-2399.Thesus, Diserf, Manuscripts, LatestIBM Corrective Sel II typewriter.Rates based on Vol and Condition ofdraft. Best Eminence Bond turn. Mrs.Ross. 239-5982.SCENESWomen: Best assertiveness trainingon campus. UC Karate Club.HISPANIC CULTURAL SOCIETYparty tonight at Cecilys. 955-4437.Karate is Zen in Action. UC KarateClub 7:00 Mondays and Fridays. IdaNoyes.Karate is physical, mental, spiritual.Try it.UC Divinity Women's Caucus presentsa public lecture by Judity Plaskow,Religious Studies Dept., ManhattanCollege on "Women as Body: TheHistory of an Idea" Monday, January14, 3:30 p.m Swift Hall Commons.Reception following.SUMMER JOB WORKSHOPTues. January 15th at 12:30 in theNorth Lounge of Reynolds Club. Spon¬sored by Career Counseling and Place¬ment.WANTEDGestafax machine Hyttle 324-0654.LOST AND FOUNDFOUND: Samoyed found vie. Regenstein Dec. 19. Phone after 5 684-4706.LOST: One Hoop earring near Regens-tein Library 1'7'80. Sentimental value.Reward, (f found call 955-6496 after6pmPERSONALSAffectionate 6-mo. old kitten (male,housebroken, black and white) needshome immediately. Call Tom. 753-3342(daytime).Rickey: your little Indian in the Kimb-zrk corner double is ready to entwineyou in her long black hair We can findnirvana together with a little incenseand a little belly-dancing. Call me I'llalways be Poo to you.George: I love you more than wordscan say. Marry me, let me have yourbabies, or my life won't be worth it. IHo# Do YouSpoil jRelief? jMMYS will leave Tim tor you. Millions ofkisses. Martha.LEW - There's a snake in my bed!JAL.Applications for representatives to theKasongo Corporation now being ac¬cepted Hong Kong tailored blazer forchosen fewLook our for the Eighties. RegYEARBOOKSTAFF MEETINGAll survivors of the Decemberdeadline.Meeting in the Yearbook Offlee on Monday, December 14 at 7:00p.m. Bring eneray, ideas, and relaxa¬tion devices. Call Laura if the time'sincompatible but your sensibilitiesaren't.X-MENOUTNew Spiderman, Thor, X Men at thefunny papers 5238 Blackstone.AGUIRRE, WRATHOF GODWERNER HERZOG'S Aguirre, Wrathof God showing at 8 pm and 10 pm Fri¬day Jan. 11 at 1-House. $1.50 admis¬sion.VOLUNTEEROrientation and introduction tovolunteer positions and the studentVolunteer Bureau. 7:00 pm, Thurs.Jan. 17 in the Blue Gargoyle library.5655 S. University. Call Anne Kok orBob Rueter for info at 955-4108BOOK SALEWednesday, Jan. 16, 11 am-2 pm inReynolds Club Lobby. The CHICAGOREVIEW will be selling review copiesof recent books and will be offeringsubscriptions at reduced rates.ADMINISTRATIVEASSISTANTWe are looking for a well organized in¬dustrious individual to perform avariety of tasks for a large membership association. Must be a self-starterwith abilty to handle many projectssimultaneously. Must be able to writewell. Excellent opportunity for a re¬cent college graduate. Jobs include ar¬ranging conferences and workshops,preparing and implementing pro¬grams to promote member services,corresponding with members, andhandling many of the jobs necessary tomanage a membership organization.College degree required. No typingneeded. Some travel. Campus loca¬tion. Send resume to: American Plan¬ning Association, 1313 E.60th St.Chicago, II. 60637.MR. NATURAL'SBACKUnderground copies on sale at the fun¬ny papers in Hyde Park 5238 S.Blackstone 955-0974.COMP-CENTERCLASSESThe Winter Quarter class list is cur¬rently available. Seminars are in-droduction to: SCSS, Superwylbur,1022, and SCRIPT. Courses in: SASand BASIC. For more information,come to main Computation Center.R.l. C-B27, or business Office, 5757University or call 753 8400.LOX AND BAGELBRUNCHBeginning Sunday January 13. 11 00am $1.50 per sandwich. Hillel, 5715Woodlawn.WOMEN'SEXERCISEWomen's exercise class meets T-Th,10am in Ida For more informationcall 752 3651 eves only.BASIC CLASSLearn to program in BASIC on theVERSAILLES5254 S. DorchesterWEI,I. MAINTAINEDBUILDINGAttractive 1 V2 and2V2 Room StudiosFurnished or Unfurnished$192 to $291Rased on AvailabilityAll Utilities IncludedAt Campus Rus Stop324-0200 Mrs. Croak DEC 20 computer. Register at Computation Center before January 16 fora session course beginning January 22.Cost $25 Computer time providedCall 753 8400 for more information.BLACKFR1ARSCome the the first meeting of thedecade Monday January 14 7:30 pm inthe Ida Noyes Library.TAI CHI CH'UANThe Tai Chi Ch'uan Club invites you toan introductory class of Tai ChiCh'uan on Wednesday, Jan. 16, 1980Tai Chi Ch'uan is slow, soft, graceful,balletic and a rationa1 means of selfdefence Tai Chi meets every Wed.7:30 pm at 4945 S. Dorchester (enter on$0). Also Kung-Fu every Sunday 6:30pm, 4945 S. DorchesterDECSYSTEM20Learn to use the Comp-Center'sDEC-20 computer. An introductln tothis friendly and interactive computerwill be given on Thursday, January 17,4.00-5:30pm. Cobb 102. All welcome,No chargeS.T.E.P.TUTORS WANTED for STEP Tutoring Program. Volunteer two hourseach week to help high school or gradeschool student. STEP is a U of C StudOrganization. Contact Carla at241 5044 or Oave 241 5178FOLK FESTIVALTickets for the 20th annual U.C. FolkFestival, Feb. 1-3 go on sale Monday,Jan. 14, Reynolds Club Box Office.PEDIATRICPHYSICALTHERAPISTOpening in our modern P.T. dept. LaRabida is a pediatric hospital af¬filiated with the U. of C. Patients arethose with J.R.A., C.P., Burns, Orthoand Neuro. impairments. There is in¬volvement in clinics, conferences, androunds with various pediatricspecialities. Competitive salary andfringe benefits. Such as 4 weeks vaca-tiona and tuition reimbursement. Youmust be Illinois registered or eligibleNew grads considered. Please call:363-6700 ext. 233 Personnel coordinator, La Rabida Children'sHospital and Research Center East 65th Street at Lake Michigan, Chicago,III 60649 Equal Opportunity EmployerM/FMICHIGANTHREE OAKS TWP. 485' on Picturesque Galien River-beautiful two levelcedar home on wooded two acres gent¬ly sloping to the River-3-4 BR withmany amenities. Call for details!$119,500 ( 616)469 3950.JOYOUS LIVING with Lake viewfrom this lovely 2-level furnishedhome with beautiful Sun and Fun PoolEnclosure, whirlpool bath, sauna, tennls court, nice skating rink Call for aviewing! $295.000. (6)6 ) 469-3950TEN-TWENTY-TWOMaintain a bibliography? Index arecord collection? Keep a name andaddress file? System 1022, which runson the Comp-center's DEC-20 computer, will help you in these tasks andmany more involving entering andretrieving data. A two session introductory seminar to 1022 will be heldMonday and Wednesday. Jan 21 and23, 3:30 5:00 pm, Cobb 102. Allwelcome. No charge.ART EDITORWANTEDWill you cast a discerning eye aboutChicago for us? Recruit reproducibledrawings, woodcuts, prints, etc.& Alsophotographs. You need not be a practicing artist to make a graphic con-tribuiton to our quarterly. Call 955-8321or 753 3265.GAY COFFEEHOUSEThe Gay and Lesbian Alliance willhold its first coffeehouse of the quarterthis Friday at 8 pm in the Ida NoyesLibraryUC HOTLINE 753-1777Got the Winter Quarter blues? If youwant to talk, have a question or need areferral, try the Uc Hotline-7 pm-7am.MODERN HOMELive on campus, 3 bdrm., 2 studios,playrm., garye and air. Immed possCall Eleanor CoeKENNEDY, RYAN,MONIGAL 4 ASSOCIATES5508 S. Lake Park 667-6666FOUR CORNERS Exciting opportunity to own a 1, 2 or 3bdrm. condo in excellent central HydePark' location Complete rehab inbuilding and apartment. Immediateoccupancy Finance available. Modelopen 12 to 4 Sat. and Sun. 1233 E. 53rdSt.KENNEDY,RYAN,MONIGAL & ASSOCIATES5508 W Lake Park 667-6666CO-OP ON CAMPUSWbfplc.. beamed ceiling in charming 2bdrm in very special bldg Modern kitand bath. Call Eleanor Coe.KENNEDY, RYANMONIGAL 8, ASSOCIATES5508 S Lake Park 667-6666VISUALIZATIONANDHOLISTIC HEALTHEnjoy high levels of health and well¬being. Learn about holistic health anddesign and implement your own pro¬gram through use of the life style diaryand visualization in a supportivegroup. Thurs. at the Gargoyle,* 30-7:30 beginning Jan. 31. Call Dobbi288 3706, or 337-8100SELF-HYPNOSISSEMINAROn campus beginning Jan 29 from7:00 9 00pm Learn the fundamentalsof Self-Hypnosis and develop the skilland technique necessary for its use"It has the power fo help youtransform whatever area of your lifeyou address it to from enhancing studyskills and improving health to deepening relationships and clarifying andnefping you attain future goafs "7 sessions, $70 Taught by a clinical hypnotherapy program graduate CallDobbi 288 3706 or 337-8100ENJOYComplete a day of study by giving andreceiving a deeply relaxing massagebefore a warm crackling fire Ambientenvironment, friendly people, excellent instructor, center of campus.Thurs Jan 31, 7:30-9 30 pm, 5655University 7 sessions $70 Reservations call Dobbi 288-3706 or 337-8100YOGAReenergize and harmonize body,mind, and spirit Begin Yoga Jan 29 atthe Gargoyle 5 30-7 00 pm. Hathapostures, breathing, energization,meditation and deep relaxation 7 ses¬sions $40 Call Dobbi 288-3706 or337-8100/vaje/o/te- tydcA.faosrvReal Estate Company1638 East 55th Street 493-0666BUILD ON HYDE PARK’S CHOICE CORNER...Vacant R-5 parcel. Now 200 frontage.Will divide into four 50' sections.. $28,000 each. Expanded residential or multi-familyuse. O.K.HISTORIC “PRE-COLUMBIAN EXPO” HYDE PARK HOME IN GOLDEN AREA NEAR59TH BLACKSTONE. Charming library with fireplace - high, high ceilings. 11-rooms, 21/2 baths. $250,000.$39,000 buys condominium over looking the lake 1 bedroom, new kitchen. Here'syour chance. Other deal fell through, so this is last season s priceLUXURY 56TH STREET CONDO at penthouse level right on the Lake side, 4bedrooms, 4 baths, approx. 3,000 sq. ft. Imagine...his and hers studies Main study isrosewood, true luxury. Jackson Towers. 56th & Everett. $163,000.ASK ABOUT A 4 BEDROOM HOUSE FOR RENT with option to buy on a small lake.New construction - builder worried, can have below cost near Michigan City.HAPPY NEW YEAR! HAPPY NEW 8 ROOM HOME Enjoy the vintage advantage. Ken¬wood's first home (1867) built during the Johnson administration (Andrew not Lyn¬don) This fully restored home in a country like setting. Just large enough for com¬fortable family living, three bedrooms and study, plus perfect place for in-law or stu¬dent. Make your New Year's resolution to see this home. Call us $190,000.IN THE HEART OF HYDE PARK...under $50,000 (would consider rent w/option) for aone bedroom apt. on Hyde Park Blvd. and 54th Nice views, bright and light con¬dominium. Full large bedroom and unusually large comb, living room/diningNOSTALGIA AVENUE...Greenwood Avenue Available July 1st Brick Two-Story-House. Super kitchen, island cookery, french doors leading to wide sun deck Fourbedrooms, 11/2 baths. Traditional Victorian woodwork throughout...$128,000.AVAILABLE FOR OCCUPANCY IN AUGUST. How's that for looking ahead? 1979price on choice two bedroom SPACIOUS Narragansett (50th St.) apt...woodburningfireplace, spectacular views. Priced in $70's.We also have a free standing, kenwood coauch house brick - 6 rms., 2 baths in HydePark, $95,000, a five room co-op apt near for $39,500. a large Victorian frame 11 roomhouse for $106,000 (negotiable)...and other property. Give us a call.“TURN YOUR DOLLARS INTO BETTER QUARTERS”For Sales Information Call.CHARLOTTE VIKSTROM, BROKER493-0666- Kathy Ballard, Sales Associate (res. 947-0453)Ken Wester, Sales Associate (res. 947-0557)The Chicago Maroon — Friday, January 11, 1980 — 23FEATURINGKoko TaylorFenton RobinsonBlind John Davis■;( :; • /' ^ /; j! \? -s ii;. V, !j ’ I ..J : 'j ' 1 v.i 1: >.. I k: UC'O ! i ! v~/k..: i •. >C.presented by Major Activities BoardMandelHall Jan. 18; i ^ :; Doors open at 7, Concert at 8; .r tickets available at the Box Office$2 MAB fee-payers, $4 othersat the door $3 MAB fee-payers, $5 othersall tickets general admissionMAB graduate membership cards forwinter quarter now at the B.O. - Get big MAB discounts!