Panel participants (1. to r.) Rev. Peter Neely, S.J., Rabbi Daniel Leifer,Rev. Philip Blackwell, and Rev. Bernard Brown Clergy speak on draft issuesBy Gerard PollAt a forum on “The Draft: Moraland Religious Concerns” last Tues¬day evening in Ida Noyes Hall, apanel of clergymen all agreed thata draft is not necessary now and allsupported conscientious objection.The panel included the Rev. Ber¬nard Brown, Dean of RockefellerChapel, Rabbi Daniel Liefer of Hil-lel House, and the Rev. PeterNeely, S.J., of Calvert House. TheRev. Philip Blackwell of the Meth¬odist Foundation also participat¬ed.“I don’t like to see the draft usedas a threat for foreign policy,”Brown told the audience of 25 peo¬ ple.Brown said he acknowledges theright of the government to have adraft, explaining that no politicalsystem can be founded on the ab¬solute right of the individual. Theproblem, Brown said, is decidingthe degree to which the privilege ofthe community overrides that ofthe individual.Brown said that U.S. law has re¬cognized the privilege of individualconscience in past wars, allowingconscientious objectors (COs) toexempt themselves from thearmed services even though theConstitution does not mandatesuch exemptions. Brown said theachievement of our society in al¬ lowing conscientious objection is“the recognition of the appeal to ahigher authority than itself.”In a reference to past practicesof allowing CO status only to thosefor whom pacifism was an integralpart of their religion as stated bychurch authorities, Browm saidthat, “defining a conscientious ob¬jector as a member of a peacechurch’ is too narrow.” He said theconscientious objector should beconsidered a part of a larger moralcommunity.Liefer said that the most “au¬thentic” Jewish position towardthe draft is similar to Brow'n’s: oneof selective conscientious objec-Turn to Page 20The Chicago Maroon“Solitary, singing in the West, I strike up for a new world —Walt WhitmanVol 89, NO. 46 The University of Chicago (C) Copyright 1980 The Chicago Maroon Friday, April 18, 1980Fred BrooksStudent aid reviewedBy Sherrie Negrea Two late entries expand SG fieldBy Chris IsidoreWhen Fred Brooks leaves theUniversity this year as director offinancial aid, the department hecontrolled will have changed inseveral of its policies, yet many ofthe criticisms of students directedtoward it will remain the same.Brooks was appointed director offinancial aid in 1972, four yearsafter he came to the University asassistant director of admissions.He announced last February thathe will be leaving both of his posi¬tions as director of admissions andfinancial aid sometime after theend of spring quarter.The general policy of the finan¬cial aid program, according toBrooks, is “to set up a policy whichattempts to meet the needs of eachstudent so he can enroll in the Col¬lege. We have tried to administeran aid program to assure that thedemonstrated need of a studenthas been met.” Brooks empha¬sized that the policy is not onewhich attracts students to the Col¬ lege by offering them financialaid.“The major thing we have triedto do over the years,” Brooks said,“is to try to remove financial (con¬siderations) from the students’ de¬cisions to come here. In that re¬gard we have tried to enablestudents to come to and remain inthe College.”Brooks said the most importantchange he instituted during histerm was to inform students aboutthe financial aid process. “Wehave tried to open up the process tostudents and to keep open com¬munication between students andthe financial aid office.” Toachieve this, Brooks started a pro¬gram whereby financial aid coun¬selors visit the residence halls todiscuss the various types of aidavailable. Students also can learnabout the financial aid programsthrough the counseling offered on aone-to-one basis.Another change Brooks broughtabout was the “individualizing” ofTurn to Page 20 Next week’s race tor StudentGovernment (SG) president hasgrown from two to four candidates.The last minute entries of Liber¬tarian Greg Keranen and his “Cutthe Fat” slate, and of independentcandidate David Appel make thisyear’s election even more uncer¬tain.The SG constitution requiresonly a plurality to win, not a major¬ity, so with the vote not being splitfour ways, any predictions are dif¬ficult. Incumbent Jeff Elton maybe able to benefit from having hisopposition split three wavs, buteven Keranen, whose campaign iscertainly the most unusual if not hemost organized, could win if thethree other candidates split thevotes of students who want to con¬tinue to have a Student Govern¬ment. Appel running as an inde¬pendent will have a difficult race,but Steve Kehoe won as an indepen¬dent two years ago. And Bittan andhis New' Breed Candidacy slatehave had the most visible cam¬paign to date.Appel has had the most experi¬ence in SG of any of Elton’s oppo¬nent. Last year he was FreshmenRepresentative, and SG Parlia¬mentarian, and worked to set upthe “Little 10” intercollegiate con¬ference. This year he has served aschairman of the Activities Com¬mittee and as finance director forThe official precinct canvass ofthe March 18 Illinois primary,which was finally released lastweek, shows several races in thearea w'hich were changed by thelarge crossover of independentDemocrats to vote for RepublicanPresidential candidate John An¬derson. But one independent. FifthWard Democratic CommitteemanAlan Dobry, was barely savedwhen some Anderson supportersstayed in the' Democratic pri¬mary.Dobry. who is the only indepen¬dent Ward Committeeman in Cook Festival of the Arts (FOTA).His campaign has been late instarting; he entered on the day be¬fore filing deadlines. He stressesleadership from the president overcommittee structure rather thancomplicated reorganization planswhich he says would be ineffective.He stresses the need for moregraduate student involvement, andmore SG services for graduate stu¬dents, such as on-campus day carecenters for married students.Unlike NBC, which has raisedthe issue about the expansion of theCollege without endorsing one sideor the other, Appel has come outagainst the expansion, stating thathe feels that SG must work againstthe present planning. And Appelhopes to change the access to theFinance Chair, by considering al¬ternative funding methods whichgive a greater role to the membersof different organizations.Keranen and his liberterarianCut the Fat campaign want tochange the entire purpose andstructure of SG, and would move toeffectively end the funding of stu¬dent organizations on campus byreturning SG funds to students.Such refunds would only come toroughly $1.25 per quarter, per stu¬dent and would severely damagecampus organizations; includingWHPK, which needs much morefunding than they can presentlyraise by themselves if they are tostay on the air. Other organiza¬tions and the SG services like theCounty, won a narrow race overregular Democrat James Wil¬liams. 3380 to 3248, but a total of 443Democrats who voted in the FifthWard w rote-in Anderson for Presi¬dent on the Democratic side, de¬spite a warning from Andersonsupporters that those votes wouldnot help their candidate.Independents such as Dobry hadbeen urging Democrats who sup¬ported Anderson to stay in theDemocratic primary and write inAnderson, a gesture they saidwould do just as much to help An¬derson as voting in the Republicanprimary, where the results of vot¬ing for the candidate had nothing David Appelhousing referral service, refriger¬ator rental and the food coop w ouldalso be likely to end.Keranen and his party have untiltoday to place an amendment onthe ballot. The amendment willread:1) Make Student Government astrictly voluntary association,funded by voluntary contribu¬tions.2> Offer to refund money allocat¬ed ato the SG to students on a percapita share basis if they prefernot to support SG.3) Abolish all mandatory fees,other than tuition, or make themoptional.Keranen claims that there wouldbe enough voluntary contributionsto run SG, and that there was oncea voluntary fee that worked outwell. The Maroon could find a doc¬umentation of this second conten¬tion.to do with how many delegates hereceived. The delegates were se¬lected in a separate vote, a votethat Anderson easily won in thiscongressional district. Anderson'speople argued that they needed thevotes in the non-binding portion oftheir primary in order to be de¬clared the winner, and that write-in votes on the Democratic sidewould not make a difference. In theend it appears that all the contro¬versy on both sides brought outenough independents to vote togive the independent Democratsvictories in most races, as well asgive the area overwhelming to An-Turn to Page 3Analysis: Illinois primary resultsBy Chris IsidoreTUXEDt) JLNCTICNledturiiw ATHE GLENN MILLER0LCLESTLAlllMl<‘l tin* (Hi (M t k ii < (JIH HV I I SI 11 M SFriday, Aim il J >MC F.H. Ida Noes I ailRefreshments and Hors d’Oeuvres will De served.U.C. STUDENTS: $5.00 Per PersonFACULTY, STAFF AND ALUMNI:$12.00 Per PersonTickets available at the Reynolds Club Box OfficeSponsored by the Student Activities Office and Festival of the Arts '801 Need help to plan for a career? g| Looking for Alumni contacts? jj| ALUMNI-STUDENT j| BRAINSTORMING || SESSION 1H Saturday, April 19, 1980 §gm mjjH 3:30 p.m. at Robie House j§EE The Alumni Association plans to establish stronger connections SEEHH between alumni and students to make the transition into the 5E1= professional world smoother for students. We want to establish |||s[ contacts for students with alumni who could help them in their ||j|H career search. In order to see both points of view and to define =HH directions for this plan, please come to this brainstorming §S§H session and hear what we plan to do for you and let us know =E== what you would want us to do. inj| If you want to participate in this meeting |gjjjj please leave your name and phone number g|M with the receptionist at Robie House or jj§1 call 753-2195. The t[mt)ersitg of ChicagoStudents Sfinutty (fatfi&ieKceIS RELIGION PERIPHERAL INCONTEMPORARY AMERICA?WEDNESDAY • APRIL 237:30 P.M. EDWARD SHILS"Society and the Sacred"THURSDAY • APRIL 249:30 A.M. JOHN EUDES BAMBERGER, O.C.S.O."Defining the Center: A Monastic Perspective"2:00 P.M. IRVING ZARETSKY"Religion, Politics and the Profit Economy"FRIDAY • APRIL 259:30 A.M. PRESTON N. WILLIAMS"Religious Traditions: Public Ministry and the SocialOrder"2:00 P.M. CATHERINE ALBANESE"Dominant and Public Center: Reflections on the 'OneReligion of the United States"V SWIFT LECTURE HALL • 1025 EAST 58th STREETcoolcy’s corner2 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, April 18, 1980Hither & YonBy David GlocknerColumbia helps outA Columbia University task force has pro¬posed that Columbia begin a broad commu¬nity outreach program which would involvethe school’s graduate students in programsto improve neighborhood conditions.Under the proposal, Columbia wouldoperate a neighborhood health clinic andlegal clinic, while architecture and planningstudents would draw up plans for the ren¬ovation of local buildings. Other studentswould be available to aid community groups in providing various services.The proposal still has a long way to go be¬fore it can be funded and put into effect,however. It must be approved by universityofficials, faculty members of the affectedgraduate programs, one or more state agen¬cies, and community organizations.In its report, the task force said that sucha program could help halt further deteriora¬tion of the neighborhood around Columbia,as well as provide graduate students withvaluable field experience.Look for the union labelSeveral eastern schools are consideringjoining a boycott of the Cottrell and LeonardCompany, one of the nation’s largest and ol¬ dest manufacturers of caps and gowns.Harvard, MIT, Boston, Welleseley, Bos¬ton University, and the University of Penn¬sylvania have all received requests fromrepresentatives of the International Ladies’Garment Workers Union (ILGWU) to boy¬cott the firm. Student groups at several ofthe schools also support a boycott.The ILGU accuses Cottrell and Leonardof trying to prevent unionization at its plant,creating dangerous working conditions, andunderpaying its workers. The NationalLabor Relations Board (NLRB) has begunproceedings against the firm for allegedanti-union activities. According to theNLRB complaint, Cottrell and Leonardthreatened to shut down its factory ifworkers voted for unionization and has re¬fused to rehire striking employees. Thecompany has denied the charges againstitAdministrators at several of the schoolshave expressed concern that if they decideto boycott the company, it may be too late toarrange replacement caps and gowns intime for spring commencement.Whopping tuitionUniversity of Toronto students don’t ac¬cept double-digit tuition rate increases withthe same nonchalance as their Americancounterparts.When Canadian officials announced planslast month to raise tuition by 14.5 percentnext year, a group of students occupied theuniversity president’s office for two days.They also presented Ontario’s Minister forUniversities and Colleges with a petitionsigned by 2400 people protesting the rise.Despite the protests, the government in¬tends to go ahead with the increase, whichwill bring the school’s tuition to the level of$835 a year.But we meant tobaccoThe University of Minnesota at Minneapo¬lis is attempting to force a store run by itsstudents association to stop selling drugparaphernalia.The store and the university have a con¬tract which includes "smoking parapherna¬lia’’ on the list of items which the store isallowed to sell, but they disagree about just what that term includes.The university claims to have signed thecontract with the impression that smokingparaphernalia included only such tradition¬al items as tobacco pipes, cigarette paper,and ashtrays. But the managers of the storesay nothing in the contract forbids themfrom selling items commonly used in con¬suming illegal substances. The universityand the store have taken the matter before acommittee of the school’s senate, which willattempt to settle the dispute.Efforts by state legislators to ban para¬phernalia sales have put pressure on theuniversity to close the store’s "headshop.”Last fall, university administrators reject¬ed a request from a student store at theschool’s Duluth campus that it be allowed tostock drug paraphernalia.EconometricsIn attempts to improve their financial sit¬uations, two schools have decided to sell offsome rather well-known assets.The University of Pennsylvania is near¬ing completion of an agreement to sell itsprestigious economic forecasting unit,Wharton Econometric Forecasting Asso¬ciates (WEFA) to a private buyer. WEFA.,which is presently associated with Penn’sWharton School of Business, is the thirdlargest econometric service in the nation,and sells economic forecasts and models.The sale is expected to bring the Universityof Pennsylvania between $10 and $12 mil¬lion....and Whistler’s motherThe University of Glasgow in Scotland isoffering a slightly less worldly item forsale: a collection of 11 paintings by JamesMcNeill Whistler. The University plans touse the expected $320,000 from the sale tohelp pay for its new art gallery.A number of British art historians andmuseum officials are outraged by the pro¬posal, particularly because the Universityof Glascow is a center for the study ofWhistler’s works. University officials saythat cutbacks in government funding afterconstruction began left them short of themoney needed for their gallery and forcedthem to sell the paintings.PrimaryContinuedderson on the Republican side.The two local independents who did lose,Timuel Black, candidate for State Repre¬sentative in the 22nd district, and BernitaPetty Stewart, candidate for Fourth Wardcommitteeman, lost by such large marginsthat the crossover vote did not make a dif¬ference. Black would have needed almost 70percent of the estimated 1100 crossovervoters in his district to bullet for him (givehim all three of a possible three votes) inFifth Ward Voteorder to win. This seems unlikely, becauseonly 40 percent of the people who voted forPresident on the Democratic side voted inthe State Representative race. Stewart lostby 3264 votes, and there were only a total of1160 Republican votes cast. The North Side,though did see some setbacks for indepen¬dent Democrats due to the Anderson cross¬over.Here is how the final vote from this arealooks.President -Democratic RepublicanCarter 6102 58% Anderson 2703 82%Kennedy 3362 32% Reagan 345 10%Anderson (write-in) 443 4% Bush 192 6%LaRouche 323 3% Other 31 1%Brown 237 3% Crane 24 1%SenateDixon 3906 48% Carver 887 44%Wallace 2364 29% Scott 653 32%Seith 1171 14% O’Neal 475 24%Williams 401 5%Martin Trigona 283 4%States AttorneyDaley 5534 69% Carey 1851 100%Burke 2463 31%Local RacesWinning Delegates to the National Conven¬tion from the 1st Cong. Dist.DemocraticRichard Newhouse (Carter)Charles Chew (Carter)Renalult Robinson (Carter)Tyrone Kenner (Kennedy)Eugene Sawyer (Kennedy)Josie Brown Childs (Carter)Patricia Wicoxen (Carter)RepublicanRobert Holoway (Anderson)*Hamilton Talbert (Anderson)** Delegates to Republican Convention arenot legally boundDemocratic Edna Selan Epstein (Carter)Alternate DelegatesAndrew Smith (Carter)Joseph Gardner (Carter)Margaret Michaliski (Carter)Ola Roudez (Carter)AlternateGeorge Williams (Uncommitted)RepublicanHarold WashingtonRalph Metcalfe, Jr.Bennett StewartJohn StrogerLarry BullockMargaret SmithQuentin GoodwinTimuel BlackCarol Moseley BraunBarbara Flynn CurrieGeorge Cole First Congressional District race.30,522 48%12,356 19%10,810 17%10,284 16% No Republican RaceState Representative, 22nd District15,3804 35%10,603 24%9,333 21%8,3384 20% Susan Catania, 2325, 100%State Representative, 24th District23.3734 46%18,031 35%9,871 19%Fourth Ward CommitteemanBernard EptonSamella Taylor 43271420 4 75%25%Timothy EvansBernita Petty StewartAlan DobryJames Williams 4333 80% I1091 20% George WilliamsIFifth Ward CommitteemanI3380 51% I3248 49% Bernard Epton 277 100%1062 100% NewsbriefsERA march in SpringfieldA statewide Student Day for E R A. willtake place on April 23 in Springfield to rallysupport for the coming vote on the amend¬ment in the Illinois legislature. Planned ac-tivites include a rally, briefings, and visitswith legislators at the State Capitol. Thelocal chapter of Action ERA will providetransportation for anyone interested in at¬tending. Buses are scheduled to leave Re-genstein at 6:30 a m. and the fare will be$10. For more information call 782-7205.Deerfield fellowJames Swanson, a third year student inthe College has been awarded a $1200 Deer¬field Fellowship in American history. Swan¬son was among ten students in the U S. who won the fellowship. The recipients willstudy early American history and culturein Deerfield. Massachusetts for two monthsthis summer.CARD carrying partyFor those of you who cannot decide be¬tween the cornucopia of events planned forthis Friday night (that’s tonight — April18th) C A R D (the coalition opposing thedraft) has decided to complicate your livesfurther. There will be a fundraising party atthe Winter Palace (5100 So. Ellis) tonightfrom 9 pm to 2 am. Even those among youwho are politically apathetic (or maybe justdissillusioned) and/or broke are welcomeCome prepared to enjoy yourself.Earth Day celebrations plannedIf you have ever seen V’olkswagen micro-buses chock full of newspapers and won¬dered what they were doing and who was re¬sponsible for them then you don't knowabout Ken Dunn. Dunn operates the Re¬source Center, a private recycling center lo¬cated at 61st and Blackstone (adjacent tothe University of Chicago steam plantwhose black stacks you have probably no¬ticed and wondered about sometime or an¬other). Dunn founded the Resource Centerin 1970 and it is presently unique in ChicagoFor years it has operated at a loss and hasalways maintained a subsistence existence,though recently it has begun to operate inthe black.Dunn received his master’s degree fromthe University in 1972 in Ideas and Methods,having done his thesis on, appropriatelyenough, the correlation between wasted re sources and discontent.After ten years of earning his living by re¬cycling this year's Earth Day (Tuesday.April 22) holds special significance for Dunnand his colleagues at the Resource Center.To celebrate they have planned an after¬noon of events for this Sunday (April 20th >from 9 am to 4 pm. Billed as an Earth DayFair, activities such as kite making (mate¬rials provided), organic food ingestion,games, and renewable energy and resourceworkshops are planned.The Chicago Office of the EnvironmentalProtection Agency plans similar activitiesfor Tuesday. April 22 at the Federal Plazawhich is between 219 and 237 Dearborn atJackson. Fifteen environmental groups willbe present with exhibits, slide shows, photoexhibits, films, many leaflets, and a jazzband Activities are planned from 11 am to2:30 pm.Chicago Maroon — Fridav, April 18, 1980 — 3TheEditorialOur SG endorsementsIt is always easier to take inaccurate, cheapshots at an organization like Student Govern¬ment (SG) than it is to make constructive crit¬icisms. Unfortunately, this year’s SG electionhas brought out much more of the former thanthe latter. SG President Jeff Elton has serveda strong and positive, though not perfect,term, and is now running for re-election. Inde¬pendent candidate David Appel has begun awell-thought out campaign, and he would cer¬tainly make a good president. But his lateentry and his lack of experience compared tothe incumbent gives Elton an edge in our eyes.The other two slates of opponents, headed byBrad Bittan on the New Breed Candidacy(NBC), and Greg Keranen on the Libertarian,Cut the Fat slate, have flooded the campaignwith charges which are generally inaccurate,and proposals for reforms which at best wouldbe ineffective and at worst destructive. We en¬dorse Jeff Elton for a second term.Elton and his administration have beenmore effective than other recent administra¬tions. The food coop and the drive for a studentfee have started to improve student life. If thefee does pass as expected, SG will be able to doeven more for students, provided it has a pres¬ident who has a good understanding of StudentGovernment and its relationship to the Uni¬versity administration. Elton has this under¬standing, and has used it to lobby successfullyfor several measures.Appel has had some experience withcampus administrators, but it is clear that nei¬ther Bittan nor Keranen are at all familiar »with the narrow channels for change whichare open here.Suggestions for SG reorganization, and SGnewsletter, a student representative to theBoard of Trustees, and a student center are allworthwhile, and all are much more likely to beaccomplished if a qualified candidate, such asElton is elected. Bittan’s “reforms” such asmatching funds for dorm parties and rotatingSG meetings do not appear to be productive.Bittan’s criticisms of Elton have generallybeen inaccurate, and clearly betray his unfa¬miliarity with the University, SG, and thefacts. For the record: Elton did solicit studentopinion before his Washington trip; the SG budget is open to any and all interested stu¬dents to study and examine; and students dohave recourse if they disagree with the Fi¬nance Committee, recourse which has beenexercised this year. Bittan may be right thatSG has not spoken out on some of the issuesimportant to the University community, buthe does not seem willing or capable of leadingthe debate on these issues.The other candidates on Elton’s ResponsiveAction Party's (RAP) slate are also betterqualified than their NBC opponents, thoughthe differences are not always as defined.RAP’ss vice president Jenny Gurahian hasmore experience than does the NBC candi¬date, Sarah Burke. NBC’s candidate for trea¬surer, Greg Wendt, is perhaps the best quali¬fied of his slate, but RAP's Andrew Stone hasexperience as treasurer at the University ofPennsylvania that makes him as qualified,and as a Business School student, he offerssome graduate student representation. RAP’scandidate for Finance Committee chairman,Clarke Campbell, is one of the more impres¬sive candidates for any office, as his work onthe student fee vote and other projects hasshown, and he has our hearty endorsement.The race for secretary is not as clear, withboth RAP’s Chris Scott and NBC’s Mark Dayqualified for the position.Students who are considering voting for theCut the Fat party should be sure they realizethe true implications of their platform: theabolition of Student Government and extra¬curricular activities on campus in order to re¬fund little more than a dollar a quarter to stu¬dents on this campus. The administration hasplaced the quality of student life low enough intheir budgetory priorities that students cannotafford to do the same. Organizations likeWHPK, MAB, and SG need more funding, notless, if they are to improve. The Libertariantalk of forming a “strictly voluntary associa¬tion” is an attempt to create a straw issue.Student Government is not mandatory in anysense of the word; it has no judicial or regula¬tory power nor can it levy fees. It is an organi¬zation which benefits all students and studentorganizations. To vote for the “Cut the Fat”candidates or their referendum would serve to dismantle the small amount of funding avail¬able for extracurricular activities.The other referendum on the ballot dealswith the proposed increase in the size of theCollege. Although it is a non-binding vote, itconcerns an issue which is important to all stu¬dents and faculty members, but which hasseen very little debate on campus. We hadhoped that such a serious proposal would bethe occasion for debate, but open discussionhas not happened. We urge students to voteneither yes nor no on the referendum, and in¬stead to write-in the word “Debate.” If enoughstudents do this. President Gray may see thatthere is a need for public discussions, andallow students to have a voice in this decision.Any vote without discussion will contribute lit¬tle to the resolution of this issue.We emphasize that this is an election open toall students: undergraduate, graduate, andprofessional. We urge all eligible to vote andwe commend Jeff Elton, Clarke Campbell,Jenny Gurahian, and Andrew Stone to thevoters.The ChicagoMaroonEditor: Andrew PatnerGrey City Journal Editor: David MillerAssociate Editors: David Glockner and Chris IsidoreFeatures Editor: Mark WallachSports Editor: Mark ErwinPhoto Editor: Dan BreslauLiterary Review Editors: Richard Kaye and MollyMcQuadeAd Manager: Wanda JonesOffice Manager: Leslie WickBusiness Manager: Joel GreenStaff: Dan Adam, Curtis Black, Sarah Burke, Jeff Cane.Peter Chapman, John Condas, Jeff Davitz, Victor Geld-berg, Jake Levine, Rebecca Lillian, Audrey Light, PhilipMaher, Greg Mizera, Sherrie Negrea. Cy Oggins. CrisPersans, Scott Rauland, John Shamis, Allen Sowizral. Ce¬cily Stewart, Howard Suls, Darrell Wu Dunn, Phoebe Zer-wickThe Chicago Maroon is the student newspaper of theUniversity of Chicago, published Tuesdays and Fridays.Editorial and business offices are located on the thirdfloor of Ida Noyes Hall. 1212 E. 59th Street, Chicago, Illi¬nois, 60637. Telephone 753-3263.Letters to the Editor4 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, April 18, 1980 Ugly womenTo the Editor:I am writing to express my support forKatherine Borland’s views (“Bo Go Home ",April 14) that men constantly, and in allways, exploit women as objects. I think it isdisgraceful that men persist in building theillusion that women are idyllic and some¬thing beautiful. It is time for men to face thereality that women are in no way beautiful,and, in fact, are quite ugly. They are lumpyand, by and large, are silly looking. In theiryouth they are frequently bony, and as theyage they almost invariably tend towardsflab.This is not misogyny. 1 am merely statingthe facts, and the sooner men understandthat their exalted view of women is simply amanifestation of women’s vanity, the betterfor all of us.Student in The CollegeName withheld by requestCollege complaintTo the Editor:As undergraduates we would like to voiceour concern over current proposals to in¬crease enrollment and cut spending. We un¬derstand that a university must seek educa-1Your ombudsman reportsstop a student from finding a responsibleperson with whom to discuss her experi¬ence. First, without someone else’s perspec¬tive, the student may be unable to decidewhether she is misreading a professor’sfriendliness or whether she has been impro¬perly approached. Second, if she has beenasked or pressured for sexual “favors,” sheneeds to take action to protect her reputa¬tion and academic future.Finally, a student has a responsibility toothers, a responsibility to help change theprofessor’s actions if they are improper.Other students should not be put in the samemind-wrenching situation of having sexualpressure cloud what should be an academic. my office is handled in complete confidence.No one — advisors, professors, or parents —need know about your concern My assistantand I are both students, and, if you wouldprefer talking with a woman, my assistantis Sula Fiszman. Our office is in ReynoldsClub 204. The telephone is 753-4206.There are other people, such as thevarious deans of students or departmentchairmen, with whom you might prefer totalk. Choose the person with whom youwould feel most comfortable, the personwhom you trust and respect.In the cases with which they were in¬volved, the appropriate academic deanstreated formal complaints of sexual harass¬By Bruce LewensteinThree times in the past ten months,women have come to the Student Ombuds¬man to discuss sexual harassment. Al¬though one said that her professor had madean improper advance overtly, the other twohad been confused by the mannerisms oftheir professors. They could not decidewhether their professors were merely gre¬garious and friendly or whether they weremaking advances.Even the appearance of an improper ad¬vance is a serious problem to the student in¬volved. These three students, and otherswith whom I have discussed sexual harass¬ment, say that it is natural to react by think¬ing, “Did I do something to lead the profes¬sor on?” or, “Am 1 imagining things?”If the student is certain that an improperadvance has been made, is of firm resolve,and can predict the professor’s response,she can say or do what she thinks necessaryto stop the professor’s actions.But a student may be too confused to actimmediately. In two of the cases whichcame to my office, the professor involvedwas supervising the woman’s research. Thewomen said that they were unsure what therepercussions to their professional relation¬ship with the professor would be if they triedto take action.A professor is the person “with the mostknowlege in a room where knowledge is theonly business of the hour, a figure of authori¬ty, confidence, intellectual grace,” says Jo¬seph Epstein in Familiar Territory. Stu¬dents and professors want to know eachother better. In a university where one of thegoals is an intellectual community, it is bothappropriate and proper for students andprofessors to seek friendships outside theclassroom. But it is inappropriate and im¬proper for anyone in the community to takeadvantage of that friendship for anythingother than intellectual purposes.To a student unsure about the extent of theprofessional relationship, unsure aboutwhether she has been approached, and un¬sure about how the reaction of a “rejected”professor might interfere with her career,any action to prevent an improper relation¬ship seems difficult and awkward. The stu¬dent is left confused, embittered, and some¬times deeply hurt.Often students keep their suspicions tothemselves. They are properly concernedabout charging a professor with a serious of¬fense, especially if they are unsure that any¬thing improper has occurred. This is a justi¬fiable concern, since a false charge canseriously injure both the career and life of aprofessor.But it is important that this concern not scholarly relationship.Although the three formal complaints tomy office involved heterosexual relation¬ships, I also know of students who believethey have been approached for homosexualrelationships. In either situation, the peopleinvolved may be members of the faculty, in¬structors, or graduate assistants.Whether you are male or female, if youbelieve you are a victim of sexual harass¬ment, contact someone, if only to help youdecide whether you are in fact a victim. Youmight feel most comfortable speaking withthe Student Ombudsman. Any visit or call to ment carefully and seriously. In at least onecase, quick action by the dean resolved theproblem.I believe University policy should appointthe Dean of the College or the apropriate di¬vision or professional school as the officerresponsible for investigating complaints ofsexual harassment. This policy should bepublished in the Student Information Manu¬al.Other problems on campus are also exa¬cerbated when students do not know whereto go for information or help. About onethird of the 78 complaints I received this quarter might have been avoided if studentshad known more about University policy,procedure, or administrative structure.The Student Information Manual and thequarterly Time schedules both providemuch useful information. Although the Man¬ual also has phone numbers and buildingschedules, much of the book contains Uni¬versity policies and regulations which stu¬dents should know. In two cases, studentswanted information about disciplinary pro¬cedures which was available from the Man¬ual.The Time Schedules contain much of theinformation regarding billing and paymentprocedures, course change deadlines, andgrading and other policies which affectevery student. In several cases this quarter,students ran afoul of procedures becausethey had not followed instructions printed inthe Time Schedules. In one case, a studenttried to pay her bill in person at the bank,instead of mailing the payment, as instruct¬ed both on the bill and in the Time Sched¬ules. It took several days for the bank toroute the payment to the proper depart¬ment. As a result, a late payment fee wasassessed. The bursar accepted the student’sexplanation, and waived the late fee.Some problems involve not policy or pro¬cedure, but merely particular details of ad¬ministrative operations at the University.Although these problems involve such seem¬ingly unimportant matters as conflicting in¬formation regarding registration dates orthe incomplete recording of a grade, theyare often the most frustrating to students.Students feel as though they must face animpersonal bureaucracy in these cases.For example, for the last two quartersabout five percent of the complaints broughtto my office, including the one concerningthe late fee. involved the new Student Infor¬mation System (SIS), which went intooperation last summer. Students, and some¬times staff members, do not yet completelyunderstand the SIS. This leads to confusion,and the plaintive cry, “The computer won'tlet me do it!”The core of the SIS is a central data basefor all students from which various courses(such as the registrar and financial aid) re¬ceive necessary information. The SIS com¬puter performs many operations, such asbilling and course registration, which wereformerly done by hand. Appendix 1 dis¬cusses the system and some of the specificcomplaints involving it which I have re¬ceived. I hope that as more people becomeacquainted with the SIS and its capabilities,we will hear more often the happy cry. “Thecomputer let me do it!”Turn to Page 20tional goals w’ithin the framework of soundfinancing. But this financing must be madeaccountable to these goals and not the otherway around. Further discussion of publicityand management policies as well as fund¬raising concerns would serve both the Uni¬versity’s financial status and its education¬al goals.Like many undergraduate students at theUniversity of Chicago, w-e chose to comehere. We did not come out here because wewere not “Ivy League” material. We choseChicago because w'e sensed that it enjoysmore consistent, challenging, and coherentaims in the education it offers. We value thesmaller class size and relative accessibilityof professors. Should Chicago lose thesehighly distinctive qualities in a mistakenimitation of other universities’ manage¬ment policies, it will lose much of its appeal.Any financial institution must not consideronly how much money it needs and where itcomes from but also why it comes. An edu¬cation is a substantial investment of timeand money. If Chicago compromises its dis¬tinctive strengths, it will lose its attractionas an investment precisely when it seeks toincrease funds.The problem of how to spend the fundsavailable most efficiently for the education¬al goals sought must also be openly consi¬dered. Ways to improve University publici¬ty and salesmanship could also benefitUniversity financial plans. Specific propos¬als embracing these concerns as well as in¬come sources should be planned with theirspecific effect on College life in mind. Ihefuture of the College must not be entrusted to the indeterminate effects of enrollmentand tuition increases; deliberate planningmust address both the problems of solvencyand character. Any financial policy com¬mitted to the Collge’s survival and not to themaintenance of an indifferent institutionwill not substitute vague commitment togeneral educational values for specific com¬mitment to the means which make thosevalues a reality — means such as class sizeand faculty availability.Nancy OrrBarbara BiagasStudents in the CollegeBudget buzzTo the Editor:An issue in the Student Government (SG)article on April 15th needs clarification. Ihad never stated to the Maroon’s reporterthat it was illegal or impossible to make theSG budget public. I simply pointed out thatthe current administration has not taken theinitiative in letting the students know howtheir own money was being spent. The ob-tainment of the budget upon request meanslittle since we do not presently have a groupof officers who are willing to enforce or en¬courage its availability.Brad BittanStudent in the College Vote!To the Editor:My name is Jeff Lasky. 1 am writing in thehope of drawing the attention of all students,graduates and undergrads, who are inter¬ested in improving the social life on campus,and who feel that the students as a wholeneed an organ through which we can ex¬press our views to the administration. Wehave the vehicle by which to accomplishmany things, but this organization needsyour participation to be a valid voice for thestudents. This group is our elected represen¬tatives — Student Government.I was Secretary of SG under two differentadministrations, and the last two Presi¬dents, Steve Kehoe and Jeff Elton. What Ihave seen is a total reorganization of priori¬ties and a new efficiency and confidence,which had to be built from practicaly no stu¬dent support and total disorganization. 1served on a Finance Committee which hadto distribute $30,000 to groups asking for al¬most $80,000. What 1 learned is that every¬one in SG donates immense amounts oftime, but finds they must defend their rea¬sons for being a member of SG any timesome irrationally selfish egghead asks themabout it. People in SG are working as a coor¬dinated group on projects and services thatmost people do not have the time to organizeor run themselves. This is especially true ofthe graduate students, who claim they aretoo busy to even vote on anything that has todo with campus life, yet have representa¬ tives who may be the most effective peoplein SG. Student Government elections arecoming up April 21st and 22nd. and I am ask¬ing all University students, for your own ra¬tionally selfish reasons, to vote for the peo¬ple you think should be in SG.I am not going to endorse anyone for of¬fice. I will not run for office myself after twoyears of participation because there aremany very qualified candidates with moretime than I have to do a great job. By votingfor the candidates that you think will do thebest job. you will be voting for the programsand services you enjoy, just a sample ofthose being the refrigerator rental service,the housing search service, the food coop,plus events such as Homecoming and theLascivious Costume Ball. Funding is avail¬able and used by every group on campus. Itis ludicrous to think that SG is not an impor¬tant organization, because of the effect ithas on campus, and all of the activities weenjoy.There are four very qualified candidatesfor President asking for your support. Ithink it is to our own advantage to take ad¬vantage of these candidates, and selectsomeone who can represent us. whether heis seeing the President of the University, orthe President of the United States (bothdone this past year).This may be the most important StudentGovernment election in a long time, poss¬ibly for a long time to come For our owngood, vote April 21st and 22nd.Jeff Lasky3rd Year UndergraduateFriday, April 18, 1980 — 5The Chicago MaroondOur Student Body Has A Real Choice;ANOTHER YEAR OF INACTIVITYORTHE ACTIVEALTERNATIVEPresident: Brad Bittanvice Pres: Sarah BurkeSecretary: Mark E. DayTreasurer: Greg WendtFinance Chr: Nick Diafotis• ;n• •• 7 - V > • '• . r ; ' • '. mNBC: HELP US MAKE i_ _ I■ ■ rnmmm ■ rnmm ■ v mmm m■ ' - • •. :y j — X : ■'. •' • \ ■■ " ■ '* ■ U* . ■ <■:; ■: ... v . V '• is v ! '„o. ■i. ■; .e New Breed CandidacyTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGONORA AND EDWARD RYERSON LECTUREthirtypiecesof silverby Erica ReinerWednesday, April 23, 1980, 4:30 p.m.The Glen A. Lloyd Auditoriumof the Laird Bell Law Quadrangle1111 East 60th Street Action ■■Jeff EltonJenny Gurahian PresidentVice- PresidentAndrewClarke Campbell T rea surerFinance ChairChris iBRECK/GREENWD/BLKSTNBrian RobertsHITCH-SNELLAllen GrangerPJERCEJoe HolzmacherSHOPELANDChris CarrJohn BooromWOODWARJD CJGabe HelouBurton-JudsonJohn PolsterLaurie Silvestrie SecretaryOTHER COLLEGESekhar BahadurOanniile FoullonLindsey JohnsonBart LazarNoreen MarriottUnmi SongFRATERNITIESMark KosminskasSS ASteve WhiteEleanoi Knop Spc SCIDiana MingauwKate PovermanDiVJNJTYEmlyn Ot*PHY SCIDon JordanBUSINESSBrad GordonHUMCharlie WordellSeth LererAPRIL 2122 VOTE R.A.P.UC STUDENTS ONLY!For $75, you cartjoin the Extension course,HISTORY OF CHICAGOSETTLEMENTS,and e-x-p-l-o-r-e Chicagoneighborhoods — the history,architecture, ethnic groups, etc.This five lecture course meetsWednesdays, beginning April 30from 7-9 pm at Spertus College,618 S. Michigan.Included are 2 all-day Saturdaybus trips to neighborhoods.(Ethnic lunch, too) May 10, June 7.Tom Knudtson, Dept, of City andCommunity Development,CoordinatorTo reserve a space, phone 753-3137or register at 1307 E. 60th St.6 _ The Chicago Maroon — Friday, April 18, 1980HenriCartierBressonI remember seeing a puppy after the partial removal of the cerebellum. He movedacross the room, rarely colliding with the furniture, but he had become thoughtful. Heestablished his itinerary carefully. He pondered before going around an object,requiring a great deal of time and thought to accomplish movements to which he hadpreviously paid no attention. In the language of the time, we said that the cortex hadassumed for him certain functions of the lower regions. He was-an intelligent dog. Idon't know whether this made him very useful or harmful to his kind, but we canquite well imagine that he had lost what Genet, anotner exile, has so well named,’sweet natal confusion’. To sum up, he either had to die or reinvent the dog."Of rats and men", Situations.Jean Paul Sartre, 1905-1980He had taught us not to be content. His intransigence expressed itself in the ever unappeased need, to confront time and timeagain, the terms of his existence; in not accepting labels but yet in looking for a side totake; in committing himself to freedom butalso to the possibility of alienation that cancome with it. Where others got assimilated,he risked through his actions not only the fa¬vour of the powers to be, but also his ownimage, his own following and his own saferole as an intellectual. He threw overboardthe easy solution: consistency at the purelevel of ideas, where validation is alwaysvague and defeat never definitive. Hewasn't always correct. Others might have been more clever or even more eloquent,but few were as symptomatic of our hopes |and impasses. More than anyone else in thiscentury, he became a point of precipitationfor the quests in all of us for understandingour time, for commitment of some kindleading to a better life and for forming relationships with people in an unalienatingmanner; and they in turn became in him, a ;life unstoppable.Genius, he had once said, is not a gift butan outcome that we invent in desperate situations. We have to be thankful to Sartre forhaving offered us the outcomes that he hadforged in the inextricability of his situa¬tion. — San/ay Tiwari Richard Marton (top) as Claire and Dwight Stock as Solange in The Maids.Genet's Maids Comes AliveThe Maidsby Jean Genetdirected by Robert BresloReynolds Club Theatre, tonight and tomor¬row night at 8:30; Sunday at 7:30. $2.50; stu¬dents $1.50.by Elizabeth OldfatherFor an almost voyeuristic glimpse of TheMaids see Court Studio Theatre's producti¬on. The play by Jean Genet is, in brief, thestory of two maids who play at being theirmistress in a nightly ceremony. They do sowith such intensity that society's chalked indivision between the fantasies we use to reconcile ourselves to reality and reality itselfis erased in the minds and deeds of the twomaids. The fantasy of killing the mistressbecomes reality as the maid, while "play¬ing" the mistress, drinks poisoned tea intended for the real "Madame."Director Robert Breslo's hope, in thisproduction, is to "capture at least some ofthe intensity of Genet's social and sexualanger." If the play was intended to embodysuch anger Mr. Breslo's direction comesclose to gaining that end. But if the role-playing of the maids intends to be a description of human reality; a man as a social animal with sexual passions, then Mr. Breslohas slighted such an intention for the sake oftrumpeting loudly about an inexact notion of"social and sexual anger."Society, in The Maids, is a trap. Our exis- .tences are defined by social relationships,and these relationships are parasitic. Wemight expect to gain freedom by engagingin criminal deeds, but Genet's portrait of theworld contains no absolutions. Even crimeexists only in relation to the lawful. Thus theline between criminal and saint is smudgedby their dependence upon one another. Thisis the tale-chasing demon Genet has broughtout of the closet and put on the stage, and theone to which Mr. Breslo has given too littleattention.But since Mr. Breslo aims at portrayingthe passion, if not the philosophy, of theplay, the production has a kind of excel- .lence. Consonant with Genet's desire, the ;characters Claire and Solange (the maids) and Madame (their mistress), are all actedby men. Dwight Stolks, as Solange, adeptlyarticulates his character's anger, her fan¬tasy of glory, ana her sometimes subtle,sometimes brazen lust. Stolk's Solange isemotionally taut as he leads the audiencethrough the turns and twists of her mono¬logue with clarity. It is Solange's brief mo¬ment of glory; Stolk makes Solange's re¬velry in the nobility of fantasized crimeunderstandable and elicits the audience'ssympathy, despite the repugnant aspects ofSolange's character.Joe Fierse, as Madame, is equally no¬teworthy. He, in gesture and delivery, radi¬ates Madame's self-centeredness. His cos¬tume and make-up, the latter very like JoelGrey's in Cabaret, made him look older, instead of younger than both of the maids.This caused a few of Madame's cutting linesto be less cruel than they ought. BecauseFierse's portrayal of Madame borders clo¬sely on charicature, he successfully showsthe dark comedy in Madame's distortedimage of herself, as when she tries on facialexpressions before the mirror.Richard Martin, making his acting debutas Claire, was with that qualification, quitegood. His speaking in falsetto during most ofthe play underscored the unnaturalness ofthe man/woman actors, but was also a con¬straint upon his talent. One suspects that itlimited his range of expression more than itemphasized the already obvious masculini¬ty of the performers.The third floor Reynolds Club Theatre isroomier for the audience than the crampedNew Theatre and is well suited to the play,i The stage design is a mixture of the elegant| and the tacky, hopefully a result of budget: rather than intention. Yet the sets are sowell arranged that the single room in whichthe play's action occurs seems spacious.The divon upholstered in the flowery fabricwas a nice expansion on the numerous references and handling of flowers.Court Studio's production of The Maids isone to be seen by anyone interested in mod¬ern French theater or acting good enough todivert one's attention from the pieces miss¬ing from this interpretation.ETHICAL ASPECTSWpr MODERN GENETIC RESEARCH^1PROFESSOR JAMES BOWMAN: Depts. PathologyMedicine; Committee Genetics; Director of LaboratoriesUHc; Director, Comprehensive Sickle Cell Center.PROFESSOR ALBERT DORFMAN: Richard T. CraneDistinguished Service Prof. Dept. Pediatrics; Dire. JosephP. Kennedy, Jr. Mental Retardation Research Center-Prof. Dept. Biochemistry Committee Genetics, andCommittee on Developmental Biology.FRIDAY - APRIL 18 - 8:30 PJJ.DLLE1 FOUNDATION — 5715 WOODLAWN AVENUESUMMER CfSMPSTAFF WANTEDRepresentatives fromCfiMP CHIResident Camp of the JewishCommunity Centers of ChicagoGreat Summer Opportunity!!Now Interviewing for SummerPositions - Good Salary -Beautiful LocationFOR MORE INFO - CONTACT RON LEVIN (312)782-0724 CAMP CHI -1 S. FRANKLIN, CHG 60606YiAasda/fe A cAd/wisriA) i/a/e1630 East 55th Street 493-0666ARCHITECT SWAN DESIGNED TowTihou.se/AUached Garage! 54th Blackstone.Y ou’ll love the convenience and space. Your children will love the private yard andnear-by park. Y our plants will love the special mini-greenhouse. 8 room & 2 baths.$145,000.00ON HIGH FLOOR - BLACKSTONE & 55th...Leaving June. 2 bedroom in»University Park condo - South Towner, priced to sell at $62,000. This is lovinglycared for. Master B.R. over 20 ft. long, 2 baths. See anytime - phones answered until9 p.m. by real humans. Mortgage no problem. Let’s talk.MAKE SENSE OUT OF YOUR DOLLAR...Not just an apartment. Pool, health-club, sauna, and more. Available June 15, 55th near DORCHESTER - Spacious im¬maculate one bedroom condo on high, light floor. Priced to 6ell, $49,500. You maysee Today! Owner may consider special financing to qualified buyer. Ask us.SEEKING TWO BEDROOM PLUS STUDY? Near campus at 57th and Kimbark -Stunning designer kitchen, freshly decorated throughout, natural oak floors. Contractsale possible at descent interest rate. $68,500.“HANDYMAN SPECIALS” NEAR 50th DORCHESTER. 8 room condos inrestored building. All up to code, $49,500. 8 rooms, low interest financing alreadyapproved. Y ou finish apartment inside to your own taste.SOUTHSHORE DRIVE...( io-op apartment, 8 rooms, 4 baths, private beach, near73rd Street. All cash and hoard approval required. $35,000.J rFriday, April 186:30 / 9:45andSunday, April 202:30Cobb Hall- also on Sunday -Eric Rohmer’sMY NIGHT AT MAUD’S7:15/9:15 Kent 107ALL ABOVE FILMS $1.50Monday April 21 Cobb $12 by George CukorA DOUBLE LIFE 7:15THEACRESS 9:15SO WHAT if you're notDANCING ALL N/GNT FOR. NONE!?/./'ARE !/0U GOING TO LET THATstop you?&Tlu. OoJlOt Moraikoh f»r Sb/IIoJC NeBKnetc/i ptopU who jml hJU io TAAXy.~Tkcd to-ea-hi> yoU-f Mmic. (a.//VtLtii.hm'S} rifrA*fa*4,Aits, /WHERE ; CLda. Noijii Hall% WHEfr/: 8 pm- I am F/U. AP/UL /81/Ohf MUCH : .80 4* cud mi 66} o /t9\3 ro duc-fioHV -2—the grey city journal—Friday, April 18, 1980Inti-illimaniInti-lllimani Chilean BenefitInti Illimani, a six man Chilean folk group, will appearSunday afternoon in a benefit concert for the Chicago Committee to Save Lives in Chile, at the Medinah Temple.The concert is dedicated to the memory of Pablo Neruda,the great Chilean poet. Besides contributing immensely tothe cultural life of Chile, Neruda served his nation as a senator and ambassador. Arrested soon after the military coup inSeptember, 1973, Neruda died within months in a militaryhospital, under guard and isolated from his family. His poetry was banned by the junta, and his wife exiled.Inti-lllimani was touring Europe as "ambassadors of theChilean people" when the coup toppled Allende's PopularUnity government. The group had been part of the New Songmovement which flourished in Chile under Allende, and re¬placed the importation and imitation of North Americanmusic which had been pervasive previously. Inti-lllimaniand many others played across Chile, in factories, miningcenters, and for students and peasants.The New Song musicians, following Victor Jara (who, withthousands of others, was murdered in the days after thecoup), sing songs of their people's realities and aspiration.Inti-lllimani's music features lyrical spring, reed, and percussion arrangements and a strong vocal style, utilizing all I six voices in unison, harmony, or counterpoint They use thetraditional Andean instruments of pan pipes and quenaj (notched flute), guitar and its relative the charango, and| simple drums, but instill their music with a fresh contem-i porary spirit which led one reviewer to liken their sound toI that of Oregon, the American ethnic jazz ensemble.Since the fascist coup, Inti-lllimani has toured the world,j keeping alive the spirit of democracy in Chile and generatinggreat critical and popular acclaim. The group's credo states:"We are here, singing, now most of all, because our voicesare the testimony of many voices which are silenced orj gagged in our country. Now most of all, because we are a cryof liberty and we are here to tell you what we are seeking,why we are struggling."South African exile poet Denis Brutus will also participate,reading Neruda's works, along with Margaret Burroughs,director of the DuSable Museum.Anyone who remembers Quilapuyan's Chicago concert lastyear will anticipate a beautiful and moving afternoon withInti-lllimani, this Sunday at 2:30 pm at the Medinah Temple,600 N. Wabash. Tickets are $5 to S15. Call 922 7240 for information. —CSMo viesReggae on Film: Part l of the ThirdWorld Music Film Series organized byThe Kaamil Group. Eight movies con¬cerning or containing the indigenousJamaican music, reggae, which hasbeen quite influential on recent music.The classic film of this genre, TheHarder They Come, is included in thisprogram (today at 3:30, tomorrow at3:10); it is the only feature length filmthat will be shown. Also scheduled isthe American premiere of Dread Beatan' Blood, a movie about the lyricist ofthe group Poet and the Roots, LintonKwesi Johnson. (Tomorrow at 12:30and 9:50, Sunday at 6:35). The screenings continue all through this weekendat the DuSable Museum of AfricanAmerican History at 740 E. 56th Place.Program schedule and information at421 1443.The Deer Hunter (Miichael Cimino,1978): An almost embarrassing, per¬sonal, imploring endorsement: Notgreat cinema, but certainly great art.The more I see this movie the less Ilike it, but I will never forget the emotional and intellectual impact of myfirst viewing. The film's mature commitment to the strength of love overhate is comparable to that of TheBrothers Karamazov or ParadiseLost. More so like a great work of liter¬ature, The Deer Hunter is full of smallimages that recur to give structure, oroccur once to give mystery and symbolism. This film has not yet been un¬derstood—the people who found it racist or hawkish cannot take theirargument very far, but they may havedistracted critics from thinking aboutthe film as if deserved to be thoughtabout. Absolutely to be seen. Tonightat 6:30 and 9:45 and Sunday at 2:30 inQuantrell. Doc; $1.50. —KHThe Maltese Falcon (John Huston,1941) : A clever classic that did muchto solidify Bogart's image as toughcynic with a tender heart. As DashiellHammett's Sam Spade in search ofthat elusive black bird, Bogart is hardboiled as they can be. Along the way,he banters with a menagerie of kookycrooks, including the suitry MaryAstor, the sissy Peter Lorre, and thesinister Sydney Greenstreet. Thefilm's lasting merit is due more to thebrilliant acting and the terse, wittylines than to Huston's direction. Inthis, his first directorial effort, Hustonrelies heavily on the prefab WarnerBros, atmosphere and sets. His use ofthe camera, however, remains hope¬lessly a hodgepodge of old tricks. Saturday at 7 and 9:30 in the Law SchoolAuditorium. LSF; SI.50. — TSThe Mouse That Roared (Jack Arnold,1959): A comedy from the fellow whogave us some mighty fine B movies.This one is notable for several liilari-ous impersonations from Peter Sellersand a magisterially funny performance from Margaret Rutherford.Good enough for a few guffaws, but notexactly riproaring fun. Sunday at7,8:30, and 10 in Quantrell. Men'sCrew, $1.50. TSMy Night at Maud's (Eric Rohmer,1967): in this, the third of Rohmer's"Moral Tales," Jean Louis Trintignant, mathematician and Catholic,confronts his conscience in the guise ofone seductive woman (Maud) — anatheist and a hard nosed sensualist.Yes, there's lots of talk and little action, but that's the idea. The focus is onthe incessant intellectual dialogues,which are both more realistic andmore coherent than those of his NewWave colleague Godard, if less manic.All the talk works, though, because ofRohmer's careful and sensitive plac¬ing, planning, and cutting; because ofthe intellegence of the actors; but stillmore because of Nestor Almendros'clear and balanced black and whitecamerawork, a model of good andgraceful support work. Sunday at 7:15 and 9.15 in Kent 107. Doc; $1.50.-RMcGA Double Life (George Cukor, 1947):Ronald Coleman's performance in thisis one of the earliest I've seen in a longtime. He plays an actor whose stagecharacter heavily influences his offstage persona. Torn by Othello's inevi¬table self-destruction and his own de¬sire to correct his past, Coleman losescontrol and transforms into a Je-kyll/Hyde character. Cukor masterfully manipulates the audience's sympathies: first it cares for Coleman,then fears him, and finally becomesimplicated in his terrors. A horribleand fascinating film. Monday at 7:15in Quantrell. Doc; $1. GBThe Actress (George Cukor, 1953):Cukor's warmhearted tribute to actresses (and actors) everywhere.Based loosely upon Ruth Gordon'searly life, the film recounts the actress's struggles to move from home tothe stage. As should be, actors take thecenter stage. Jean Simmons plays the young, determined, and ambitiousGordon with much elan and sincerity.(She tries hard to emulate the gushyenthusiasm of the young Hepburn.) Asher stubborn, cranky father, SpencerTracy gives a natural, unaffected andsubtle performance. (One of the bestin his career.) And Teresa Brewerholds up her own very well, giving anunderstated portrayal of Gordon's un¬derstanding mother. A very refreshingTony Perkins shows up now and thenas Gordon's preppie boyfriend.Cukor's mise en scene, while glori¬fying the acting profession, also underlines the sacrifices involved in makinga choice. In Gordon's case, it's one between a career and a conventional, secure lifestyle. A modest film that outdistances many large scaled ones inachieving emotional resonance. Monday at 9.15 in Quantrell. Doc; $1 for double feature. — TSTheaterThe Maids: Tonight and tomorrownight at 8:30; Sunday at 7:30 in thethird floor Reynolds Club Theatre.753 3568. $2.50; students, $1.50. See review, p. 1.The Sound of Music Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest: Is it "How do you solve aproblem like MacMurphy?" Or is it"Nurse Rached is 60, going on 70?" Anything But Sue Productions presents the Lower Rickert House Musicaltonight and tomorrow night in the IdaNoyes Theater at 8. 75c at the door;Woodward Court residents, free.God: Woody Allen's play within a playfeatures a writer named Hepatitis andan actor named Diabetes, who arehaving trouble creating a hit for theDrama Festival of Ancient Athens.They become so desperate that theyphone the original author — Allen'sperformance was taped during a longdistance phone call to Chicago studios.This typically Allen esque comedy("part greek, part Great Neck") stars Tony Roberts (often Woody's sidekick) and Avery Schreiber (erstwhileSecond Citizen who eats Doritos for aliving.) The National Radio Theatre ofChicago M>on, April 21 at 8 pm overWFMT, 98.7 FM.Sheikh Muzaffer: The current leader ofthe Halveti Jerrahi, el'hajj Muzafferddin Ozak el*Jerrahi, and the Jer¬rahi Dervishes of Istanbul present theSufi Ceremony of Dhikr in RockefellerChapel. Tomorrow at 7 pm Free.MusicLive at the Pub: Nick Filippo (minusDaniels) plays folk ish tunes tonight.The Pete Baron Jazztet will play to¬morrow. Both shows run from 9:30 to12:30. Free, for Pub members only.Pete, Paul, &. Pat: "Piano Players,Plunkcs, and Punders", Peter Golemme, Paul Goldstein and PatrickHogan perform a piano concert of traditionai and contemporary jazz thisSunday in the International House Au¬ditorium, 1414 E. 59th St. at 7:30 pm.Free.Bill Hay ash i: The winner of UniversityConcert Competition will give a recitalof Bach, Mozart, Chopin and Schuberton Tues, April 22 in the I House Audito¬rium at 7:30 pm. Free.The First Four Chairs: The last lecturedemonstration of the "First Chair"series, in which principal players inthe Chicago Symphony explain theircraft, will be given by the ChicagoSymphony String Quartet Wed, April23 at 8 pm in Hitchcock Hall. Free.Go for Baroque for lunch: Ensembleworks by Locke, Lully, Handel and Pepusch performed by Linda Austern(Recorder and treble viol), DeniseBoneau (violin), Julie Jeffery (Violade gamba), and Pamela Morgans(harpsichord). Thurs, April 24 in theReynolds Club Lounge at 12:15 pm.Free.Blues to Benefit Bennie Lenard: ErwinHeifer, Mama Yancey, Big TimeSarah and other blues artists play afundraiser for Bennie Lenard's civilrights suit against four policeman andthe Village of Melrose Park. Lenardwas the victim of severe police brutali¬ty over a year ago. Sun, April 20 at Orphan's, 2462 N. Lincoln, from 3-9 pm.372 5908 Donation S3.50.Jazz Your Nukes Away: Sparrow, theJeff Kay Band and the Dave Gordonband perform at this benefit for Citizens Against Nuclear Power. This Sunday at Redford's Pub, 2548 N. Halsted.7:30 pm-1 am. S3Trouble Boys: Tomorrow night at theCubby Bear Lounge, 1059 W. Addison.Joe Daley and Jimmy Ellis: Tenor saxstar Daley and alto sax master Ellisjoin the regulars at Larry Smith's LiveJazz Party. This Sunday at Chances'R' Restaurant in Harper Court (52ndand Harper) from 8:30-1 363 1550. S5cover.Douglas Ewart and Orchestra Inven¬tions: Tomorrow at 8 pm at the Columbia College 11th St. Theatre S5, S4students. See preview on p. 8.The Boys of the Lough: One of the British isles' most popular folk groups,these guys play flute, fiddle, pennywhistle, mandolin, and their ownvoices. Martin O'Conner, a melodianplayer from Dublin, will make a guestappearance. Tonight at Stages MusicHall, 3730 N. Clark, at 8:30 and 11.540-0203. $5 cover, no minimum.ALIVE! The sound of this all-womencontemporary jazz quintet is characterized by it's powerful polyrhythmicpercussion. Members get inspirationfrom "gospel meetings, the deepwoods, and outer space." Wed, April23 at Stages Music Hall, 3730 N. Clark,at 8 and 10 pm. 549 0203. $5 cover, nominimum.Etc.A Little Fair: A showing and sale ofAmerican Indian jewelry, embroideryfrom Ghana, Tanzanian baskets, jewelry from the Ivory Coast and Ethiopiaand other imported arts and crafts.Today, from 11 am to 7 pm, at the BlueGargoyle. All proceeds benefit theAmerican Indian Brotherhood.Calendar compiled by Rebecca Lillian.the grey city journalGary Beberman, Curtis Black, Jaan Elias, Nets Erickson, Abbe Fletman, RichardKaye, Jake Levine, Rebecca Lillian, Jeff Makos, Rory McGahan, Molly McQuade,Jeanne Nowaczewski, Elizabeth Oldfather, Mark Neustadt, Steve Nitzberg,Martha Rosett, Renee Saracki, Helena Szepe, Marjie Williams, Ken Wissoker.Edited by David Miller. Associate editors; Laura Cottingham, Karen Hornick,and Mary Mankowski. Contributing editor: Ted Shen.Because of a production mistake, the captions accompanying the photographs inlast week's Joan Snyder cover story were reversed. Apologies are extended toSnyder, Laura Cottingham, and Suzanne Ghez. Friday, April 18, 1980the grey city journal—Friday, April 18, 1980—3Applications for the Major Activities Board„ are available in Ida Noyes 210All positions are open.Applications welcomed from all students. DEADLINE May 2 Major Activities BoardSPECIAL DISCOUNT PRICESfor all STUDENTS andFACULTY MEMBERSJust present your University of Chicago IdentificationCard. As Students or Faculty Members you are entitledto special money-saving DISCOUNTS on ChevroletParts, Accessories and any new or used Chevrolet youbuy from Ruby Chevrolet.GM QUALITYSERVICE RAJ7TSGENERAL MOTORS RWJTS DIVISION' Keep That Great GM Feeling if ith GENUINE GM Farts "72nd & Stony Island 684-0400Open Evenings and Sunday Parts Open Sat. 'til noon2 Miles - 5 Minutes AwayFrom The UNIVERSITYSPECIAL DISCOUNT PRICESfor all STUDENTS andFACULTY MEMBERSJust present your University of Chicago IdentificationCard. As Students or Faculty Members you are entitledto special money-saving DISCOUNTS on VolkswagenParts, Accessories and any new or used Volkswagenyou buy from Ruby Volkswagen72nd & Stony Island 684-0400The University of ChicagoDepartment of Musicpresents a LECTUREPeter GiilkeMusic Director, Dresden State Opera“A new edition of Beethoven’s FifthSymphony; experiences and deliber¬ations during the exploration of thesurviving sources ”Monday April 21,1980Regenstein Library 264 4:00 p.m.Free and Open to the Public KIMBARK HALLCondominiums80% MORTGAGE LOANS AVAILABLEThe developers are offering model units torinspection every Sat. and Sun. between 1and 5 p.m.36 opts:24 - 1 bedroom, 1 bath from 30,350-37,0006 - 2 bedrooms, 1 bath from 37,000-38,8506 - 2 bedrooms, 2 bath from 46,000-46,900All apartments include new kitchens and appliances,new bathrooms, carpeting and decorating (colors ofyour choice), triple-track storm windows and kitchenstorm doors, modern laundry facilities and individuallocker space.Your inspection is invited,51 26 S. Kimbark Ave. - Phone 643-4489Harry A. Zisook & Sons, Agts.786-9200 NEW 2-drawer files $59.00NEW 6-ft. folding tables $49.00BRAND EQUIPMENT& SUPPLY CO.8600 COMMERCIAL AVENUERE 4-21 1 1 OPEN MON.-FRI.8:30-5:00SATURDAYS9:00-3:00Quiet, restful Country Club atmospherePrivate cabanas available/ 1-''Olympic-size heated Swimming PoolPhone Mrs. Snyder PLaza 2-3800$ $.art\in ao5500 South Shore DrivePLaza 2-38000 COURT TbeATReCourt Studio Theatre presetsJean Genet'sTHE MAIDSdirected by Robert BresloFri. - Sun., April 11 - 208:30 Fri. & Sat., 7:30 Sun.General admission $2.50,Students/seniors $1.50Reynolds Club Theatre5706 S. University753-3581 JOHN COLLINS, seminarian"My name is John Collins. I'm aseminarian. I had the idea of being apriest for a long time before I didanything about it. I was too scared ofmy feelings."But I finally took the plunge andit's the best thing I ever did. It wasn'ta shot in the dark. Friends helped.Talking to seminarians helped. Andprayer was the biggest help"Perhaps you, like John, havethought about the priesthood orreligious life but never really lookedinto it.How about looking into it now?— Mail Coupon Today!Please send information on:Diocesan Priests □ Religious Priests□ Brothers □ Nuns □ Lay MinistriesName. s 13 -2AddressCity State ZIPVOCATIONS COMMITTEE/SUPREME COUNCILKIIIGHTS or COLUIIIBUSNew Haven, CT 065074—the grey city journal—Friday, April 18, 1980One Less Than Brilliant BeginningMy Brilliant Careerdirected by Gillian Armstrong with JudyDavis, Sam Neill, Wendy Hughes, RobertGrubb and Max CullenBiograph Theatre, 2433 N. Lincoln. 348 4123$4.by Jeanne NowaczewskiMy Brilliant Career is a new Australianfilm based on a 1901 novel by Sarah MilesFranklin, and written, produced, and direct¬ed by women. I wish I could say it is a wise,witty, and helpful statement we will all wantto add immediately to our literary and cinematic collections of sensitive explorationsof the condition of women, but the film de¬nies the category. It finds its genre in thoseshort novels for adolescents which featuretomboyish young girl-turning-womanheroines in pioneer or westward-ho settingswho perform valiant actions, dream a gooddeal, and leave off their stories before fullmaturity. Just as we all applaud NancyDrew when she tossed off poor Ned's ad¬vances in favor of yet another mystery, sowe applaud Sybylla Melvyn's prankish be¬havior and audacious refusal of a good man,Harry Beechum, in favor of her career, described by herself as "brilliant" before ithas even a hope of beginning.The film is warm hearted and appealingand it's easy to like it while it plays, but outin reality afterwards, cold questions rise upthat the film can't answer; it's been highlyacclaimed, but like other loudly touted "relevant" films, An Unmarried Woman andKramer vs Kramer, its treatment of theissues is superficial and incomplete.But better to be generous first, accusativeafter; the film's bound to be popular, firstbecause it's a delight to watch. The picturesque Australian turn-of-the-century settinglets us feast our eyes alternately on lace-trimmed, hour glass women in ornate, femi¬nine parlors and sandy, frazzled herds ofsheep beneath cobalt skies. Sybylla, brisklyplayed by Judy Davis, is the girl who canunite these two spheres with a flourish.Raised in the Outback, she is sent to herwell-to-do grandmother's to acquire refine¬ment; she acquires some, but not enough to Judy Davis and Sam Neill.prevent her from trilling a few drinkingsongs in the parlor.This bawd/lady combination has oftenproved effective, however, and Sybylla'scase is no exception; she attracts the twomost eligible bachelors in her grandmother's set. The first, Frank, is a prigwhom she haughtily rejects, but the second, jHarry Beechum, challenges her wit and ;arouses her affections. They are near a mu¬tually desired marriage when Sybylla is Iforced to work as a governess to pay off old jfamily debts; Harry's willing to wait, but jwhen he asks her again she refuses on the jgrounds that her longing for a career would ;destroy him. The film ends some unspeci- jfied amount of time later as Sybylla startsthat career by putting a manuscript, pre¬sumably an autobiographical novel, in themail.This final scene is the film's strongest,most effective moment and the trjumph of jDavis's sensitive portrayal. She deposits thetome-sized package in the rough rural post-box and leans against the fence. In the Iamber dawn light, the wind blows her hair jfrom her face and she surveys the wide,bare fields and the bulging sun; it's a sub- I m #Gillian Armstrong.lime scene, and she seems to possess it. Thetriumph of having completed her work radi¬ates from her and her fingers twitch anddrum the fence rails with irrepressible ex¬citement. She seems at this moment an em¬blem of all that a woman can feel when sherealizes that she has overcome all the obst¬acles and crafted something eternal andtrue to herself and her womanhood.Miss Davis' performance is supported bycareful, charming characterizations bySam Neill as the clear-headed Harry, Robert Grubb as the peculiar Frank, and PatKennedy and Max Cullen as the two eccen¬tric dowager grandmothers who oversee theyoung Harry and Sybylla. All the charactersmake the most of the simple dialogue andcontribute to the film's humor. Sybylla isbest at this because most unusual; she likesphysicality, tipping over boats and engagingin pillow fights so as to get into Harry'sarms. She makes the most of her provincialbackground in order to shock, noting at din¬ner that the day's acquistion of three newbulls will "keep a few cows happy."But back to that emblem. We are told tolove Sybylla for her boldness, but her innermotivations are never explained and we're left wondering if the girl has the stamina towithstand the angst-filled life she's just cho¬sen. She may have truly assessed the con¬straints of marriage but she gives no indica¬tion that she realizes independence alsoinvolves sacrifice.Sybylla's commitment to a career isnever well defined. At first, she wants to bea pianist (anyone just back from a showingof Coal Miner's Daughter can't help buthope that Tommy Lee Jones will appear togive the girl a tour of all the classical musicstations in the Outback) and later the exactnature of Sybylla's commodity of talent continues to be vague. She contemplates actingand occasionally recites poetry. We knowshe keeps a journal because the film openswith her busy at this task, and we knowshe's written a volume by the film's end, butfhe pains of creation, of her exact literaryphilosophy, and of how the events we haveseen have been transformed into literature,we haven't a clue. This is a particularily an¬noying absence in her scenes with the swin¬ish, illiterate backwoods family; the cam¬era gives us her face with all itshypersensitive artistic suffering, but hidesher conception of the enormous turn in herfortunes. Furthermore, we never see herwriting during this interlude, and it seemsunlikely that she should have found the soli¬tude or energy to do so, so that the finalemergence of the foot-thick memoirs seemunbelievable.Harry's grandmother is herself a wise,sprightly matriarch who seems to relish herfreedom, using her time to dabble in paint¬ing and consider the affairs of those abouther. After Sybylla's first refusal of Harryshe takes the girl aside, listens sympathetic¬ally to her vague notions about the repres¬siveness of marriage, and then quietly coun¬sels; "Loneliness is a high price to pay forindependence." It's a simple statement, andtrue enough, but Sybylla has no response.She needn't acquiesce, of course; there arealternative definitions of independence, butSybylla doesn't seem to think she needsthem. Her blythe boldness seems foolhardy;if we'd seen a bit more of the thinking Sybyl¬la, who must be there, the emblem wouldhave Deen strengthened and the film couldhave transcended its genre. As it is, thework's charming, but not wise.Nijinski Never Lived Like Thisby Molly McQuadeThere are many good grounds for com¬plaint in Nijinsky, but two aspects of themovie demand comment. One is the ratherobvious matter of adaptation (the decisionsmade by the filmmakers in their vulgariza¬tion of Nijinsky's life). Slightly more subtleis the way the movie reveals its sympathywith "gay" problems, yet a derisive hostili¬ty toward women.Nijinsky did lead an exciting life. Born in1889 to two Polish dancers, with his sister hebegan training at the Imperial School of Bal¬let in Leningrad (then named St. Peters¬burg). The move was made from economicneed. Abandoned by her husband, and ham¬pered by her eldest son (mentally impairedafter a childhood fall), Nijinsky's motherhoped to launch her children into the com¬parative comforts of the Russian civil ser¬vice. (If they could become dancers at theMariinsky Theatre, they would qualify.) Itwas due to his unusually strong thighs thatNijinsky was admitted to the school. Aftersubmitting to years of taxing regimen, heeasily graduated into the next elite: theMariinsky company itself. There he attracted immediate notice, and was given solodances, not the customary corps roles.Meanwhile, Sergei Diaghilev was seekinghis own fortune. This son of Russian noblemen was to make a worldwide mark. In Petersburg he had gathered a circle of admiring, artistic minded young men abouthimself, edited a magazine about new developments in Russian art, worked for theMariinsky — before being fired — and mostimportantly, had brought an exhibition ofRussian art (and later, Russian music andmusicians) into Western Europe. Coming asthey did after a hiatus in artistic communi .cation between East and West, the exhibit ,and concerts stirred quite a response. The 1 Nijinski in life.wily, gifted, ambitious Diaghilev decided tocapitalize on his success by organizing atour of Russian dancers.It was then that he met and wooed Ni¬jinsky. The dancer had already had a few af¬fairs with men, but none had turned intolasting attachments. Diaghilev, on the otherhand, was sophisticated and self assured.He indulged his habits fairly freely in Petersburg, then a liberal city. While Nijinskynever had another male lover, Diaghilevfound other willing dancer/acolytes. Thesepartnerships were always artistic as well assexual, though never so fruitful as the oneformed with Nijinsky.What was the outcome of their match?Several ground breaking ballets choreo Nijinski in art.graphed and danced by Nijinsky, composedto music that raised the hackles of refinedaudiences, and with sets and costumes thatdazzled by sheer imaginative extravagance.1 These productions pushed ballet forwardfrom the swamps and swans to Martha Graham. Also, by forming his troupe Diaghilevbrought leading dancers to the West, beginning with Karsavina, Nijinsky, and Pavlova, but including too many others to list. Hisdancers raised the standards of their art.Diaghilev's other helpmeets numberedamong the most adventurous and talentedartists of the day: Picasso, Stravinsky,Ravel, Bakst, Benois, and Debussy. Bybringing his company West, Diaghilev adi vanced all the arts, but the effects were felt most profoundly by dance. It had languishedin Europe for years, relying on outmodedtraditions and the memories of long-goneperformances; male dancers had becomemere escorts to lacy, fluttery, whiteswathed sylphs.What do the producers of Nijinsky do withall of this? Exploit it for every teardrop theycan get. And the temptations are there: art,sex, fin de siecle decadence, the Italian seashore, steamy German locomotives . . .hotels, chocolates, majestic plumed hats.What could we do but cry over it? And besides, Nijinsky's life didn't end tranquilly.He was led into giving up Diaghilev tomarry a Hungarian society girl. It ruinedhim.The real story of Nijinsky is sad, noble,and disagreeable because it can't be ex¬plained. It is not just the mystery of how avacuous person like his wife snared him (onboard ship while Diaghilev was away). It isnot just the matter of why Nijinsky, inno¬cent yet brilliant, succumbed so automatically to his worldly wise mentor. Not eventhe powerful influence and later urge for re¬venge of Diaghilev seem enough of an an¬swer when one wonders what accounts forNijinsky's schizophrenia, diagnosed at agethirty-one, and the unending humiliation ofi his life after that. (Cared for by his wife, inand out of institutions, nearly killed duringI the Second World War, he was neglected byj most of his colleagues and friends, and^ eventually died of natural causes.) Butknowing Nijinsky's tragedy, the melodramaJ it become in film is especially offensive.The culprit, of course, is the script — filledwith unbelievably glib and obvious dialogue.I Gifted as Nijinsky was (and well played by| George de la Pena), he would never havespoken fatuously, nor would Diaghilev havej sacrificed urbanity for psycho-babble.Continued on page 8journal—Friday, April 18, 1980—5the grey cityDavidMillerThe following personal account illus¬trates contemporary problems recog¬nized by even the least politically sensi¬tive individuals:—the actuality of assault in HydePark,—the insensitivity of Chicago Police,—the dehumanized AmericanCourt System, and—the extreme vulnerability ofwomen to all of the above.For this reason we feel it's importantto print it. —The Editorsby Laura CottinghamTuesday, March 18 was a night likeany other night at Jimmy's. Threefriends and I were sitting around smoking the usual number of cigarettes. Theonly non-usual conversation focused onthe Illinois primary election returns.David had just returned from the victo¬ry parties downtown. He told us theKennedy campaign headquarters hadturned off the television and it lookedlike a morgue down there. Karen sug¬gested we leave.The four of us walked north on Woodlawn. At the corner of 54th and Wood-lawn we exchanged goodbyes — I wasleaving for Mexico in a few hours. Theywalked west, I walked east.Just past Kimbark I heard somequick footsteps from behind and in thatmoment I felt someone grab me in atight hug around the chest. I thought itwas someone I knew. I turned to facehim and said, "Hey, how you doing?" Itwasn't anyone I knew. As I was thrownto the ground, I screamed.There were two of them but one ofthem wasn't doing much. I wrestled tostand up and they held on to me. The lit¬tle guy was behind me, feeling down mywaist and thighs. The bigger guy was infront of me feeling down my breast be¬neath my bra. I looked for a knife or agun and hoped I didn't see one becausethey didn't have one, not because theywere waiting to surprise me later. Theguy in front told me to shut up.The little guy behind me emptied allthe contents of my pockets: a wallet,two sets of keys, a pair of glasses and apack of Marlboros.I was glad they got what they wantedand didn't have a knife, and I hopedthey would run away quickly. I thoughtmaybe this wasn't happening, that Iwas having a nightmare about what6—the grey city journal—Friday, A was going to happen to me in Mexico.The bigger guy in front locked hisright arm around my neck and startedto drag me toward Kimbark and towardthe ground. I stared him in the eyes andsaid, "No, you don't want to do this."He said "Shut up." I knew if he had aknife, he would have used it by now, so Ilet myself scream as he pushed me tothe ground and tore at my jeans.I struggled away and ran four or fivesteps before he forced me to the groundagain. I wondered why David, Karen,and Ken didn't hear me because Ithought I had just seen them a momentago. Didn't they know it was me whowas screaming?The guy had a difficult time stayingon me to undress me because I keptfighting back. Finally, he sat on mythigh and beat the side of my head tothe ground with his fist. He kept tellingme to shut up.The little guy was still standingaround and then they both ran west toKimbark. I followed, screaming, as Isaw them turn north. I kept screamingbut stopped running and picked up ascarf one of them had dropped.Some people from the building on thecorner came down and I went in the en¬trance way with them. I felt sorry forbothering them with my screams butwas glad I hadn't been raped or killed. Ikept crying because I thought l wouldhave nightmares in Mexico and maybeget killed there.Someone let me into their apartmentand handed me a glass of Scotch. Ididn't want it as much as I wanted thekindness the gesture communicated. Iheld it as I sat on the couch. I was cry¬ing a lot. The people told me the policewere there. ✓I think there were four police cars.One of the policemen asked me if Icould give a description of the men —could I identify them? I was sure Icould tell what they looked like. Espe¬cially the guy who feit my breasts andgrabbed my vagina: I had really lookedhim in the eye when I thought maybe hedidn't really want to do it. I thought forsure I could identify him immediately. Ithought if I saw this man again I wouldfeel an intense desire to kill him.There were more than six patrol carsby now and a lot more people than that.I told the story to a few different poli¬cemen and they wrote it down. Then, ormaybe before then, they took me tothree different police cars, each with adifferent black man in handcuffs in theback. Because I had only seen two men,seeing three suspects confused me. Ienvisioned three different policemengrabbing the first three black guys theyril 18, 1980 saw on the street as soon as they heardof the attack.I looked at the first guy and knew itwasn't him at all. That's when I thoughtthey really had just grabbed three lone¬ly guys walking the street.The second guy wasn't the one but hewas little and might have been the morepassive attacker, but I hadn't reallyseen his face and he looked so little andyoung.The third guy didn't want to come outfrom the back seat and the policemangrabbed him by the shoulder and pulledhim into the light. He wore a hat whichthe policeman tore off to exposebraids. "Didn't you say he hadbraids?" the policeman encouragedme; I said "yeah" but thought of all theChicago cops grabbing every guy offthe street that had braids. This guylooked like the guy but when I looked athim I didn't feel any sort of desire to killor throw the glass of scotch I was hold¬ing at him, so I couldn't imagine how hecould be the one. I said maybe but Iwasn't really sure. All the policemenseemed angry and frustrated and I feltlike it was my fault and I wished I knewwhat I was doing wrong. I heard some¬one in uniform say that they had enoughto "take them in."I thought that the police must knowsomething that I didn't and that's whythey're mad at me.More policemen were yelling "Vic¬tim, victim, where's the victim?" Iwent back to show the police where Iwas first thrown in the mud. They werelooking for footprints. They asked me ifI smoked and I said sometimes. I rea¬lized they wanted to see if the freshlydropped cigarettes on the ground weremine. I said,-"Those are mine, theywere in my pocket." They were happybecause the cigarettes were right nextto where I said I was first accosted.As I was indicating where I went tothe ground, two policemen in a car withdoors closed looked at the drink in myhand and screamed "What the hell areyou doing drinking, Lady?" I hadmaybe taken a sip in the apartment forcourtesy's sake but I was just holdingit. I yelled back even louder and muchruder, "What the fuck do you want meto do?"Policemen started asking me if Iwanted to go to the hospital and politelytried to validate the fact that I hadn'tbeen raped. I said I wasn't raped but Ihad two big bumps on the left side of myhead and my left side had taken someknocks. They told me they would haveto take me to the police station to fill outpapers and they might just as well takeme to the hospital to make sure I didn't AssaultA First Phave a concussion or anything. Drivingto the police station l said I'd ratherstop and get my roommate than go tothe hospital. The policeman asked me"What could she do?" We drove pastmy apartment.At the police station we went upstairsto the room and I saw the suspects stillhandcuffed. There were also some peopie from the apartment building whosaw the guys run from Kimbark and54th and jump into a car when I wasscreaming. I realized I was a real vic¬tim disappointment: everyone knewthat these were the guys who attackedme but I was too dumb to give a definiteidentification. I walked into the roomwhere the suspects were and I stared atthem. I noticed the little guy lookedyoung because he was young, but Iknew the jacket he was wearing and thehaircut were definitely the same as theguy who emptied my pockets. The guywith the braids had his hat coveringthem again but I looked at his shirt andhis face. The image of the man with hisarm locked around my neck reap¬peared. It was the same face.When I knew I knew what I knew, Iwent downstairs and informed the poli¬cemen at the desk. They said great anddecided I should probably be taken tothe hospital for X rays. One of the poli¬cemen drove me to Michael Reese andchecked me in. The attendant asked meif there was anyone she should call. Ifelt sad to say that there wasn't.One of the attendants wheeled mearound to the specific rooms for X raysand a urine sample. When he found outmy injuries were the result of an attackhe said, "You were just looking toopretty for 'em, that's all." He said itwith a smile and I'm sure he meantwell, but I wondered how much uglier Ineeded to be.The hospital called the police to come and get me afterokay but if I get sisleep and don't gesomeone call themgoing to be in Mexicbe okay, probably.Back at the poawarded both sets <less than forty doll,my wallet. There vroom where I signethe stuff. One of thethree black guys wto identify. He hacwhat had been the ccrying in the cornemen came in to tebeen towed away. 1more in the cornethan the two assail*low card on the deshis thirties.The policemantowaway informatiithe desk if they didcharge the man wi1the crying man in tmitted they didn't,guy who attacked rrlice that the drivercent. The driver ha<car when the othering to steal a carsaid, "Why steal arob this girl?" Thattold me later.Men were cominroom, dressed in psuits. They were r<the guys had confesangry because theweek away frommeant they had to hwas the "property"One week," theitimes.I sat down facintin Hyde Park:Person Accountafter they decided I wasget sick or dizzy or go ton't get up I should havethem, t told them I wasMexico. They said i wouldably.le police station I wassets of keys and the littleI dollars that had been iniere were five men in thesigned the papers and gotof the men was one of theiys who l had been askede had been the driver ofthe getaway car. He was:orner. One of the policeto tell him his car had/ay. The man cried somecorner. He looked olderssailants and I saw a yel; desk that said he was innan who offered themation asked the men at/ didn't have anything ton with — he motioned to1 in the corner. They ad-In't. In the next room theed me was telling the poiver of the car was innor had been waiting in thethers, originally intendcar radio, saw me andal a radio when we canThat's what a policemanming in and out of thein police uniforms andre real excited becausenfessed. They were alsothe young one was onejm being 17 and thatIto let him go because heRrty of juvenile court.''Bthey muttered a fewHieing three suited men and two policemen standing behindthem. Mr. State's attorney told me howbad these black guys were and how theyhad such bad records. Why, the one guywas just paroled in January."I don't know who started this at¬tempted rape business,'' he said. Imade a mean face. I wondered if Ishould give him an historical or biologi¬cal explanation.The man paused for a moment, andstarted with a different approach. Hesaid they wanted to see how I felt aboutthe charges or something or something.Mr. State's attorney said that my as¬sailant had all this valuable informa¬tion about burglary in Hyde Park andthey could plea bargain to get it. Theysaid the attacker confessed to stealingand beating me but no mention hadbeen made of rape or sexual assault." if we try to say he tried to rape you thejudge will think the whole thing is fab¬ricated, it's just too hard to prove."I knew they had plenty of evidence toprove robbery and battery.I told them I understand stealing but Idon't understand bodily abuse. I toldthem that what the man did that waswrong was try to rape me, and that'swhat he should be scolded or chastisedor imprisoned for. I told them I don'tcare what they do to him, but if I amgoing to be used as a tool for their littlecat and mouse, catch the bad guysgame, I'll say what he did — we'll call itwhat it is or I quit.The state's attorney said to me,"Lady, if the guy had wanted to rapeyou, he would of."I said I was leaving and going to Mex¬ico and good bye. They said, "You un¬derstand why it wasn't an attemptedrape, don't you?"A University of Chicago police officerdrove me home. I asked him why no onefrom the University had been there. He said he thought they had been called.He told me the way the guys had beencaught. He had been in Harold's Chicken on 53rd Street and he heard scream¬ing. He thought it was some kids but itpersisted, so he went outside and he stillheard it. He got into his car and drovestraight to Kimbark where a car wasbarreling north without any headlightson. It was the three guys.We drove back to Kimbark to see ifwe could find my glasses or my walletanywhere. No luck. He dropped me offat my apartment. I took a shower, tooka taxi, took a plane, flew to Mexico.I was gone for two weeks.One of the policemen got two contin¬uances for the court date. I saw PaulAusick (Assistant Dean of Students! onthe second floor of the AdministrationBuilding. He told me that security hadcalled the person on duty the night Iwas attacked and the man had an¬swered the phone, took the message,hung up and had gone back to sleep.Then Ausick called the Southeast Chi¬cago Commission (SECC), a localtrouble-shooting organization. ASECC woman told me she would be intouch with me to offer legal advice andwould go with me to the felony court onFriday. She said she read the records ofmy attackers and they were really badguys.The week and a half between my re¬turn to Hyde park and the time in felonycourt passed. I told a lot of people aboutthe incident. In an Easter Sunday telephone conversation with my mother, Itold her. She didn't cry or get upset butasked me how I felt now. I told her l wastrying to forget it, and it was over, whatcould I do? She told me to be mad. I saidI didn't know where to direct myanger.On Friday, April 11 at 12:45 campus I security picked me up in front of Regen-I stein. My roommate came with me andwe picked up the woman from the SECCand some young man carrying a fatbook. On our way to police head¬quarters, the woman told me that vic¬tim's compensation didn't cover mylost glasses or the hospital bill.I said I kind of felt sorry for the threeguys. She said that not all people who| grow up in the ghetto turn into crimi-! nals that there are some nasty whiteI boys in Winnetka and that nobody real¬ly knows what makes people commitj crimes.I know that I don't commit crimes beJ cause nobody ever offered it as a betteroption than what l do now.When we got to police headquartersI my roommate and I went to the! bathroom. When we came out and en-! tered the courtroom the nice policeI man, the same one who gave me my; keys and money and called me aboutthe time of the trial, approached me. Hei said that I really needed to testify be-! cause this guy had such an ugly recordj of doing similar things to similarwomen and I should do it and stop feelj ing sorry for the guy. I asked him whatj he was talking about. He said the| woman from the SECC said I wasn'tgoing to testify because l felt sorry for| the guy's socio-economic condition. Ihadn't said anything about not testify-j ing.Someone called my name. As I was! directed to the rear room behind thecourt, the woman from the SECC askedj me if I understood why it wasn't at! tempted rape.I went to the back room where I rej counted the attack to the prosecutingattorney. She explained that I shouldi answer all questions as briefly as possi ible: This was just a preliminary hearing to establish whether enough evi¬dence existed to justify a trial. As shewas filling out the forms a big whiteman yelled, "Cottingham." The attor¬ney and the friendly policeman next to: me motioned that I was here and wei were just finishing up. The man bel-| lowed again "Cottingham, get out! there." I turned around indignantly and! he glared at me as if I were painting myI fingernails while a crowd of spectatorsdemanded my appearance on the foot¬ball field.The process started with me givingmy name and answering simple questions from the prosecuting attorneyi about where I was and what happenedj the night I was attacked. It was a farI from explicit account.My assaulter was standing there andI I had to point to him a few times so it I was clear who I was referring to. Then' the defense attorney asked me questions.The first ones were bothersome but; not too upsetting. He enjoyed emphasiz¬ing the fact that I was coming homefrom a bar and that my glasses were inI my pocket rather than on my face. He} liked the fact that it was late at night,and that it was dark. But nis favoritei one was in reference to the articlesi taken from my pockets, "Did you helpI them?" he asked.j I had directed two attackers to mypockets in hopes of getting rid of themand sparing my body and my life and: this man asks me if I "helped them,"i yes or no. l started to explain what hadhappened and the judge said "answeryes or no."I was mad no one let me give the fullaccount of the story and yet this defenseattorney was given the opportunity tomake a fool of me. I yelled back "no"and the judge said there wasn't any reason to yell in the court.Then the defense attorney became interested in the temporal aspects of theattack, how short the encounter hadbeen, implying that I hadn't really hadthe opportunity to see the assailant atall, what with spending most of the timeon the ground and all. And surely whenthe man had his hands on my breasts Iwas looking at his hands, not his face.I hadn't been given the opportunity totell the part about the man's armaround my neck, when I really lookedhim in the face. I was mad and hosj tile.Two fat older women were standingI in the corner snickering. The prosecut! ing attorney looked annoyed.At the end of it all the judge set thedate for my assailant's arraingment. 1j came off the stand in tears of pain andi rage. The defense attorney steppeddown to tell me he didn't mean to upsetme, he was just doing his job.I wasn't listening.The prosecuting attorney came downto chastise me for my emotional behav-! ior. She said it didn't further my caseany. She said I needed to trust her.I said if the de humanized court sys-i tern didn't permit me to express myselflegally, I'd express myself emotional! iy-The woman from the SECC said shej could explain to me what the prosecutj ing attorney was saying to me. I said Iheard what she was saying and didn'tneed anyone to tell me.The University of Chicago security1 man drove us home.There will be a trial by jury within thenext year or so.the grey city journal—Friday, April 18, 1980—7I'm Crampe^Songs the Lord Taught UsCrampsIRSI Was a Teenage WerewolfHad braces on my fangsI Was a Teenage WerewolfAnd no one even said thanksAnd no one even said stopA mid west monsterOf the highest gradeAll my teachers thoughtIt was growing pains—"I Was a Teenage Werewolf”by Renee Sarackiroll tradition of all great front-men. Lux la¬tely has been cultivating* a sort of pompadour which more resembles Elsa Lanchester in Bride of Frankenstein than any 50'srockabilly rebel. Lux will writhe alongstage, jump atop the amps and dive into thecrowd while gurgling the words to "I Was aTeenage Werewolf.”Last summer producer Alex Chilton re-is-! sued the group's singles on an EP titled,Gravest Hits. With no album around withwhich to judge the group, Gravest Hits became the definitive Cramps on record and itwas great. The only original on the EP is atune called "Human Fly.” "Human Fly”was the definitive Cramps song, borrowingheavily from the old rockabilly style ofJohnny Burnette, Carl Perkins, etc. and adding bizarre/eerie guitar touches and a dir¬gelike drumming effect. Lyrically "HumanFly” harkens back to the days of ? and theMysterians' "96 Tears.” Lux warbles in hisinimitable style, "l-l'm a human fly/I -1The Cramps first came to my attention ^one wintry night in February, 1979 whenthey backed up some relatively unknown copunk group, The Clash, at The Palladium in £New York. Both my friend and I had heard jiof the group and their lead singer, Lux Inte¬rior, was known to us through his multipleappearances in Lisa Robinson's rock maga¬zine Rock Scene. Needless to say, our im¬pressions were somewhat skeptical of agroup whose two main influences were rock¬abilly and television, but we looked forwardto seeing them and deciding for ourselveswhether this group was a campy nostalgiaact or the genuine article. After the show weboth agreed that we had seen the genuine ar¬ticle.Bryan Gregory, guitarist (in a group withtwo guitarists and no bass player) would pe¬riodically rip the mike away from Lux and iiet off a scream of near frightening inten I "Poison Ivy" Rorschach.sity. Bryan also has platinum-streaked hair,a shark-tooth earring and five cigarettes ab¬laze in his guitar while playing. A pretty in¬timidating character. Second guitarist andmanager of the group is "Poison Ivy” Rors-! chach. Ivy is relatively sedate live and willonly occasionally smile to the crowd. Otherwise she just tends to pout and pose. Drummer Nick Knox seems to be obscured by theoutrageous personalities of the othermembers but it is his steady back-beat thatgives the group its authenticity. Finally,lead singer Lux Interior captures the audi¬ence's attention in the time honored rock 'n'Ewart's InventionsPerformed Tomorrow spell F-L-Y/l-l say buzz, buzz, buzz/Andit's just because/I'm a human fly and I don'tknow why I've got 96 tears and 96 eyes."After this heartrending lyric comes thewarped guitar effect and finally the heavy,heavy drumming of Nick Knox enters andthe song repeats. A true punk classic.It's true that The Cramps' songs all tendto sound the same and that musical progression ain't one of their strong points. But sowhat. Whoever said rock 'n' roll should beart? Did Gene Vincent or Eddie Cochranthink so? From the deep recesses of American pop culture, the Friday night CreatureFeature developed and it is from this pastthat The Cramps developed. If you are a TVchild brought up with two headed transplants and green slime then The Cramps arethe group for you.With the arrival of "Human Fly" and"The Way I Walk” (an old Jack Scott rockabilly standard which features Bryan'sscreams) a new term was introduced intomusical terminology, "punkability.” Whatculture rejects and deems trash is the life-source of The Cramps. It is in this way thatThe Cramps refer back to the garbage-bands of the 60's in America. Groups likeThe Count Five, The Trashmen, BobbyFuller and of course, perhaps, the greatestpunk, ? and his Mysterians.The Cramps have finally appeared on analbum this year: Songs the Lord Taught Us.The album is produced by Alex Chilton andis prime Cramps — which is to say, it'spretty awful. The songs include much of thesame material that the group has performed for the last two years including, "IWas a Teenage Werewolf,” and "ZombieDance.” Also included is a manic cover ofJohnny Burnette's "Tear It UP” which isnothing if not different from the original.The real surprise of the album is a four minute cover of the old Peggy Lee standard,"Fever.” "Fever” is minimalist music evenfor The Cramps. It is composed of a repeat¬ing guitar riff backed by a soft, repeatingdrum tap. It sizzles. Vocally Lux's (andeven Bryan's) self restraint is amazing andserves to heighten the tension in the song.Cramps' detractors have always claimedthat the group is sterile and that they lackthe sensuality and freedom of their pastheroes. They were viewed as an artifact or,even worse, a novelty. This just isn't thecase and one listen to this album shouldprove it.Nijinski Continuedby Curtis BlackAmong all of the AACM musicians of in¬ternational stature, Douglas Ewart is prob¬ably the most accessible to Chicago audi¬ences. Although he has recorded with HenryThreadgill, Muhal Richard Abrams, andothers, and although he has toured Europewith Quadrisect and with George Lewis, hestill finds forums for his immense, unbound¬ed creativity.Ewart has presented his Orchestra Inven¬tions several times in recent years, and hasproven his stature as a composer. This Sat¬urday's version again seems weightedtoward reeds and percussion, a configura¬tion within which Ewart enjoys particularcolors and textures.Ewart came up through the AACM BigBand under Muhal Richard Abrams, andhis approach develops that tradition, withits expansive counterpoint and subtle use oftone. Heard in rehearsal last week, one ofOrchestra Invention's pieces sounded like awind chorale with a marching band some¬where in the field (somewhat like CharlesIves); overlapping repeated patternsemerged as expanding, breathing, or surg¬ing blocks of sound.Any of Orchestra Invention's impressivepersonnel would be worth seeing by them¬selves. The Orchestra includes themembers of Quadrisect (George Lewis,James Johnson, and Mwata Bowden), TheEthnic Heritage Ensemble (KahilEl'Zabar, Ed Wilkerson, and Henry LightHuff), as well as three members of AdegokeColson's band (Colson, Wallace McMillan,and Dushun Mosely) and two members ofThe Jimmy Ellis Big Band (John Jacksonand Vandy Harris). Many others will par¬ticipate, and anyone may be spotlighted.Ewart has just returned from a successfultour of his native Jamaica, and this may bethe best reason to attend. Ewart has foundhis own strong voice on many reed instru¬ments, and each instrument has a distinc¬tive character. Ewart's imagination leadsto an amazing variety of formats and histechnical ability allows him to deal with Douglas Ewarteach competently. A few examples: Lastsummer he explored new ensemblic possibi¬lities with a reed and voice contingent whichalso presented a piece of absurdist musicaltheater with Ewart playing synthesizer.Ewart's Bamboo Forest, with Joseph Jar¬man and Threadgill joining him on the bam¬boo flutes he handcrafts, is still remem¬bered as an outstanding concert. He hasperformed in duet with drummer HankDrake, and recently with Drake andThreadgill.Ewart and Orchestra Inventions performtomorrow night at 8 at Columbia College'sllth Street Theatre, just off Michigan (ac¬cessible via the Illinois Central Rooseveltstop). Admission is $5, $4 for students. Continued from Page 5(Rather than show his charisma, he is ob¬liged to talk about it.) The love betweenthem seems but an Edwardian trapping —company for the endless wood panelling,glamorous armchairs, masses of bed linenand bedecked chairs, ad nauseum. (It's notexplicit sex.) The dancing itself is strange,because it's presented as theater, not dance.The faces of the dancers ogle up at us, grimywith make-up, while their bodies are cut off.The stage seems too small, not fit for itsblaze of color. Particularly irritating is thedirector's apparent wish for de la Pena todance effeminately (when Nijinsky himselfwas far too talented to be typed). And Ni¬jinsky's legendary masturbatory squirmwhile dancing the Faun in "L'Apres-midid'un Faune” is milked for all it's worth. Re¬ally repulsive.And then there are the limits of LeslieBrowne and her part. True, Romola dePulszky was rather a nitwit when she joinedthe troupe; she only wanted to follow Ni¬jinsky, wherever he went. She bore him afantastic, mindless "crush.” (Just for him,she gave up a promising social life in Buda¬pest!). But when their story is heard to theend, Nijinsky's wife showed him a greatdeal of devotion. She proved to be a courageous woman. None of this comes through inthe film.Instead, Romola, the only important fe¬male character, is put through a series ofhumiliations. The first being played by Leslie Browne — a dancer who can dance(though Romola can't) but cannot act.Every pathetic moment in her part (thereare too many) fogs into mawkishness as westare at her immutable doll's face. And yet,there is good reason for her trouble with the part: it's degrading and preposterous.Whatever dignity and self possession thereal Romola may have had, this one lacks it.In front of us all, Browne is forced to giveraceless chase to her hero. (Why him? Whoknows. There isn't even depth to the enigma.) The superficial spirit of Romola's pur¬suit indicts it, as does her clunkish hectoringof company officials to let her into theirranks. Once admitted, she is absolutely brazen (as the real Romola was not), presuming on Nijinsky every odd minute. Benefiting from the producers' miscarriage ofchronology, she lets Nijinsky rape her whenhe's disappointed by something Diaghilevhas done. She serves as an object of his frustration, and as his means of revenge on hismaster. Rent blossom. (Theirs was reallyno such cause and effect mingling. And Ni¬jinsky was extremely differential where sexwas concerned.) Once married, and rejected by Diaghilev, Nijinsky proceeds prompt¬ly (and achronologically) to go mad; hemumbles about Tolstoy and the peasants,love and God. Poor Romola splits at theseams. (In real life, she was remarkablyforbearing.) She thoroughly debases herself, offering her husband "back” to Diaghilev because she doesn't think she's goodenough for him. Diaghilev spurns her andher gift.If this isn't misogyny, then what is it, in afilm where all other women are either lightheaded or incompetent? (Even the greatKarsavina gets short shrift.) The oddly oldfashioned cushioning of the movie seems designed to protect and disguise its homosexual content. It's melodrama from anotherera pasted onto a somewhat more provocative modern theme, endorsing one minorityto the loss of another. And it isn't likely toplease.8—the grey city journal—Friday, April 18, 1980VOTE!!!THE STUDENT GOVERNMENTSPRING GENERAL ELECTIONSWILL BEHELD ONMON.-TUES.,APR. 21-22 AT THEFOLLO WING LOCA TIONS:Cobb HallReynolds ClubLaw SchoolB-SchoolI-HouseShorelandBurton JudsonPierceWoodward 9:00 -11:0011:0011:005:00-5:00-5:00-5:00-5:00- 4:00-7:00-1:00-2:007:007:007:007:007:00ALL OFFICES ARE OPENFOR ELECTIONYOUR VOTE IS IMPORTANT!!marianrealty, inc.■REALTORStudio and 1 BedroomApartments Available- Students Welcome -On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-5400 Cornell UniversityProgressive PlanningSummer ProgramJune 2-20, 1980Neighborhood Housing StrategyChester HartmanCommunity Economic DevelopmentRichard SchrammVideo and Filmfor Community DevelopmentTimothy KennedyCritical Theorvand Planning TheoryJohn ForesterPolitical Economyfor Health PlanningSander KelmanTuition and fees are $495.For application, write:Progressive PlanningSummer ProgramCornell UniversityDepartment of City andRegional Planning201C Sibley HallIthaca, NY 14853 UmbrellasBeautiful white and maroonwith the University logo!100% nylonPerfect for travel........strolls in the rain....a lovely gift forsomeone special golf, golf, golfWhile they last Gift DepartmentUniversity of ChicagoBookstore5750 S. Ellis—VLIVE ENTERTAINMENTATTHE PUBFRIDAY NICK FILIPPO9:30 -12:30 P.M.SAT. THE PETE BARON JAZZTET9:30- 12:30 P.M.PUB MEMBERSHIP & 21 YEARS REQUIRED JLOYOLA UNIVERSITY• of Chicago820 N. Michigan Ave.CPA Coaching CourseFor November 1980, Examl.The course is taught with one PURPOSEin mind THAT YOU PASS THE CPA EXAM2.Our statistics for recent Exams show thatabout 80% of our students passed or con¬ditioned the exam upon completion ofcourse.3.Our price is $350.00. Less for conditionees.Free repeat privilege.4.Classes - Every Monday, Wednesday andsome Fridays.5.For information call 670-3144Classes Begin June 13Loyola University is an equal opportunityEducator & Employer 9 A.M. Ecumenical Service of Holy Communion10 A.M. Discussion Class-Leaden ROBIN LOVIN’,Assistant professor of Ethics and Society, Divinity SchoolTopic: “Trajectories in Faith"11 A.M. University Religious ServicePreacherKALLISTOS TIMOTHY ^ ARESpalding Lecturer in Eastern Studies., Oxford UniversitySermon:“THE HUMAN PERSON INORTHODOX SPIRITUALITY" SCHOOL Of PUBLIC HEALTH - UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS ATTHE MEDICAL CENTER. CHICAGOInvites Applications for Degree ProgramsMASTER OF PUBLIC HEALTH (M P H.)MASTER OF SCIENCE IN PUBLIC HEALTH (M S )DOCTOR OF PUBLIC HEALTH (Or P H.)DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY IN PUBLIC HEALTH (Ph.D.)Concentrations are ottered in Biometry Epidemiology Environmental andOccupational Health Sciences. Industrial Hygiene and Safety Health Sciencesand Community Health Sciences Administration and Health Law Health Education. Population Sciences and International HealthFinancial assistance is available through Public Health Traineeships and Research Positions Deadline to apply for M P H Program is February 15 1980Deadline for M S . Dr P H and Ph D Programs is six weeks prior to the quarter in which the applicant wishes to enterFor further information write or telephoneJames W WagnerAssistant Dean for Student AffairsUniversity of Illinois at the Medical CenterP 0 Box 6998Chicago Illinois 60680(312) 996 6625The School encourages applications from qualified minority studentsthe grey city journal —Friday, April 18, 1980—9z\RENOWNED CHILfftH-NNDENN FOLK DROOP NONORIND CHILE'S NODIL PRIZE PORTPABLO NERUDAf\Tr AppMrtnfl Will Sm17a. 'S Donnl* Brutus' fx| Margaret Burroughsm.'llR - \ ) Nicholas Rudall_ Studs Terkelh-,—fT t C Carlos Cumpianu 1 11 lit n-1 fqn /Slide ShowMEDINflH TEMPLE, SCIN. APRIL 20, 2:30 P.M.*00 NORTH WABASHTICKETS: TICKETRON OR CHICAOO COMMITTEE TO SAVE UVES IN CHIU5*2 S. DEARBORH. SUITE 510. CHICAQO. 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Enjoy it a lifetime.Recorded music is your best entertainment value.'Epic” is a trademark of CBS Inc. © 1980 CBS IncHEAR AGAIN STEREOPRESENTSIncomparable Stereo ValuesGARRARD GT55 $ 109.95GRAFYX Model SP8 $85.00 ea.Reconditioned Components,40% to 70% OFFHEAR AGAIN STEREO7002 N. California338-773710—the grey city journal—Friday, April 18, 1980At last, for all those possessed disciples or would-beparticipants in the most outrageous mixed-mediaextravaganza of our time, here sTHE OFFICIALGive yourself over to absolute pleasure with over 800full-color frame blow-ups depicting actual scenes from themovies, plus the complete dialogue and song lyrics.Editeo and adapted by Richard J Anobile • Screenplay byJim Sharman and Richard O Brien • Introduction by SalPiro. President of The Rocky Horror Picture Show FanClub192 pages • 7" x 9V4" • S6.95. paperback • $15.00, clothTHIRD PRINTING • 100,000 Copies in PrintAt your local bookstore, or order directlyfrom the publisherA&W Visual Library95 Madison Avenue, New York 10016Cornell SummersWork For YouPlan your educational investment wisely.Cornell University offers a wide variety ofsummer courses and special programs withtuition at $110 per credit or less. By ac¬celerating your degree program, you canprobably reduce the cost of your educationsignificantly.Besides, where else can you polish yourwriting skills and learn to use a computer orbe in an undergraduate prelaw program andtake a course in conceptual drawing? Whereelse can you be in the company of so diversea group of faculty and students in such auniquely attractive settingof hills, lakes, gorges, andwaterfalls?QSrnbli X^umni^4 Interested? Write or call foran Announcement today.Cornell University SummerSession, 1 11 Day HallIthaca, New York 14853Phone 607/ 256 4987GOLD CITY INNgiven * * * *by the MAROONOpen DailyFrom 11:30 a.m.to 9HH) p.m.5228 Harper 493-2559{n+mr Hmrp+t Court)Eat more for less.A Gold Mine 0\ Good Food'Student Discount:10% for table service5% for take homeCantonese Cornell Law SchoolUndergraduate Prelaw ProgramJune 9 to July 22, 1980A demanding six-week programfor college students who wantto learn what law school is like.For further information write toProf. E. F. Roberts, Cornell Law School314B Myron Taylor Hall, Ithaca, NY 14853MyiipparkPippattb Unharru f’luiy1552 E. 53rd - Under IC tracksPipes - Pipe Tobaccos -Imported Cigarettes - CigarsMon.-Sat. 9-8. Sun. 12-5Students under 30 get 10% off.ask for “Big Jim” SURFSIDERetreat (full-time) with yourfamily to Lake Michigan sshore on high bluff of DuneAcres. Panoramic windowseven in kitchen. Only 45minutes from Hyde Park(also on South Shore Trainline). Excellent schools, lowtaxes, great neighbors. Fourbedrooms - high cathedralliving room has cozyfireplace. Designed by Keck(Hyde Park's favoritearchitect) - to settle estateappraised price low$200 000 s. Call Chicago No.493-6153, or (219) 926-2176ChestertonCall:The Hudson Co.Chesterton(219) 926-2176OntuiBjwCOUNTRYLIFENear Michigan City, Ind. (exiton Tollway 1 hr.) Horses O.K.Swimming O.K (on your ownprivate lake). Newly finishedbrick 4 bedroom, 2 bath brickradiant heat solar floor - toceiling windows. Total 3acres available if desired.Woodburning fireplace -white oak planked ceilingEverything under warranty.Low taxes. - Coolspringschools - Price for House &7 acre $85,000 - assumable13.5% mortgage, no points.CUSTOMER INFORMATION FROM GENERAL MOTORSHOW GM "PROJECT CENTERS"CREATE CARSFROM CONCEPT TO CUSTOMER IN THREE YEARS AND THREE BILLION DOLLARSThroughout the history ofthe automobile industry, prod¬uct change was almost alwaysevolutionary. But in 1973, GMdetermined that the times re¬quired revolutionary changes. Itstarted its first Project Center—which by itself heralded a revo¬lution in the use of science andtechnology to meet the chang¬ing demands of the market¬place. A few months later, theArab countries launched the oilembargo. Fortunately, machin¬ery was already in motion inGM to create and develop newcars and components in a newway and faster than ever before.GM’s first Project Centerbrought out totally new full-size cars: smaller, yet roomier,and far more efficient than theirpredecessors. The advertise¬ments said they were "designedand engineered for a changingworld"—and they were. AnotherProject Center, begun in 1975,developed the immensely popu¬lar GM X-cars.Led by the five car divi¬sions, Project Centers gatherpeople, ideas, and knowledgefrom all 30 divisions and staffsof General Motors. In the firststage, which we call "concept-ing” experimental engineers,environmental scientists, forward planners, and marketingexperts pool their thinking.Their objective: what the marketplace will require. This is themost important stage. Here wemust determine not only what kind of car, but how many wemight be able to build and sell Iyears later. Economics, cus- Itomer tastes, availability ofvarious kinds of fuels must becompared with state-of-the-arttechnology—and what stepsmust be taken to advance thattechnology quickly yet surely.In the "concepting" stage,a new car is conceived. If the caris to be sold to customers three jyears later, construction of new jplants must begin and basic jtooling must be ordered.The second phase of theProject Center takes 24 to 30months. It encompasses devel¬opment. design, structuralanalysis, handling analysis,emissions, noise and vibration,safety, reliability, serviceabilityand repairability. manufactur¬ing, assembly, marketing, fi¬nancing.Advanced product engi¬neers and research scientistswork w ith the one hundred fiftyto two hundred people at theProject Center and thousandsmore in the staffs and divisionsto transfer new science andtechnology to the new car. Com¬ponents are hand-built and"cobbled" into existing modelsfor road testing.Prototype cars are hand-built at a cost of more than$250,000 each. These enablethe Project Center team to de¬termine how newly developed,pretested components operateas a unit. Then, pilot models will !be built from production toolingand tested stune more. Newtechnology, such as structuralanalysis by computer, saves time. Lead time has been re¬duced by 259 from ten yearsago. when cars were far lesscomplex.After almost four millionmiles, nearly three billion dol¬lars. and nearly three years ofwork, the new cars—quite un¬like anything before them-start coming off the productionline at a rate of better than one aminute.There are now eightProject Centers in GeneralMotors. Four are developingnew cars using hydrocarbonfuels, one is creating an electriccar. and others are working oncomputerized engines andemission controls, a new kind ofautomatic transmission, and theinflatable restraint system.New and revolutionarycars can't be mass produced forthe road overnight. But by put¬ting all the parts of GeneralMotors to work together, wefound a way to speed up theprocess. We have integrated thecreativity of thousands ofhuman minds to make inventioninto reality when it's needed.This advertisement is part of ourcontinuing effort to give custom¬ers useful information abouttheir cars and trucks and thecompany that builds them.General MotorsPeople building transportationto serve peoplethe grey city journal—Friday, April 18, 1980—11The ABCs of the Bsby Jake LevineBy all accounts, the first annual B-movieMarathon at the Sandburg Theater twoweeks ago was a great success. Severalhundred film buffs turned out to see twenty-four hours of such pictures as Cun Crazy,Deranged, High School Confidential, andGlen or Glenda, I Changed My Sex."Each year fewer and fewer films comeout of the Hollywood studios," lamented thefestival's producers; "The new trend in thefilm industry is for a major studio to pour allof its money into one massive production inthe hopes of creating a 'blockbuster.' Studi¬os are now willing to put sixty million dol¬lars into the creation of glossy trash ratherthan make sixty low budget features. The B jfilm, which was at one time the staple of the £film industry, is now becoming extinct." ^The B films were traditionally the bottom ^half of a double bill — an added attraction to *-a major studio's "A" film to give movie- ggoers a "bargain." Made by independentsstudios, the Bs turned a profit by keeping ocosts to a minimum. Since the total grosses >that the Bs could reach were constant, pro- ajducers looked to cut corners on everything ^from screenplays, acting, and sets to photo 3graphy and editing. In the thirties and for- gties a B film could be turned out within a 3month (not unusually in a week or two) for £ten or twenty thousand dollars.The essence of the B movie is its voyeuris- jtic approach to a sensational or lurid (or |both) subject matter. Treatment of the cho- jsen topic is secondary: the producer's ob¬jective is to bring in the picture as quickly ;and cheaply as possible. The topics are con¬temporary, often capitalizing on the latest 1fads, thus underscoring the need to rush thejob. The timetable takes its toll on every |step of the filmmaking process, but because jjust about every aspect of the movie takes a |back seat in the producer's mind, the film'sdirector and performers have enormous op¬portunities for innovation and creativity.The result is either terrific, banal, or de¬lightfully awful.Much of the current B movies' thunderhas been taken by television. The networkshave a surprisingly similar view of their John Cassavetes in The Killersshows: emphasis on quantity and speed ofproduction. There is one notable exception:television has no qualms about paying largesalaries to performers if they can deliverthe ratings. Still, the other elements arethere, such as slapdash scripts and bizarreor sensational subject matters. If televisionis the same thing, why not stay home?What the Sandburg festival proved,among other things, is that there are great Bmovies that won't be seen on television, atleast not for a great while, and some weshouldn't even wait to see on the tube. Some! won't turn up because of violence, some because of sex and nudity, some because they' are just too inane.Consider these two teen pictures: High School Confidential (1959) and Malibu High(1979). HSC is the tale of a new kid at highschool who sets out to be the coolest kid| around but turns out to be the local narc.j The "motive" of the picture is to educate theI public about the evils of marijuana addic| tion and its presence in American high| schools. It's really an attempt to cash in onthe teens — the motive seems to be part ofthe joke! Malibu High, a despicable buthighly watchable movie concerns a highschool senior who decides to become a pros¬titute to get revenge against the boyfriendwho dumped her. She is soon employed bythe mob, first as hooker, later as hit "man."She quickly discovers that she enjoys "wasting" people. There is nothing socially re¬ deeming in this picture — its nineteen year-old producer apparently decided to make amovie aimed straight at the evil imagination of teenagers.Two other films screened at the Festivaldemonstrated that B pictures can be entertaining, well-paced, and even slick. GunCrazy (1949) could certainly hold its ownagainst Bonnie and Clyde. John Dahl has athing about guns, and his girlfriend PeggyCummins is also quite a shot. Together theyknock over banks and hit payrolls, flee thefuzz but get their just desserts in the end.(Best Line: "Killed a man!" says John,"Killed a man just so we could live withoutworking.) Roger Corman's Bucket of Blood(1959) is a quickly paced "Jerry Lewismeets the beatniks" movie that's terrif¬ically funny — many consider it Corman'sbest work. (It is reported to have been shotin two days.)Other notable films from the festival in¬cluded Don Seigel's The Killers, Paul Bar¬tel's Death Race 2000, and Edward Dein'sShack Out on 101. For some reason, the producers of The Killers insist it is from the Ernest Hemingway story. It was Ronald Rea¬gan's farewell to acting, and he makes atop notch villain. ("Larceny's OK, but homicide's against my principles," he informsone cohort.) Death Race 2000 is a well doneversion of the cross-country car race genre,with David Carradine and Sylvester Stallone yukking it up for the cameras. ShackOut on 101 may be one of the best of the RedMenace pictures. All the action takes placein a greasy spoon run by Keenan Wynnwhile his hashslinger (Lee Marvin as"Slob") dishes out nuclear secrets in between cheeseburgers.Finally, a few words about the screwiest,if not the most popular, film of the festival,the incomparable Glen or Glenda, IChanged My Sex. This piece of incoherenceout Bs the Bs. From the festival's promotion: "The cult film whose reputation issweeping the nation features the marvelouscamp antics of Bela Lugosi as a doctor whocontemplates the bizarre story of Glen, atransvestite trying to cope with his "shame¬ful" desires in a society that mocked hisvery soul." If you find it, watch it.Dale Messick Explains Brenda, the Strip, and Growing Oldby Abbe FletmanDale Messick may be a case of realityimitating art. "Fans often ask me if Brendahas red hair because I do," said Messick,the 74-year old creator of Flash reporterand comic strip feature Brenda Starr. "ButI'm a redhead because she is."Both women also share a sense of mis¬chief and a disarming frankness that leadsone to wonder who influenced whom. Butany notion that Dale Messick and her ereation are one is quickly dispelled by hearingMessick talk."Personally, if I were Brenda," Messicktold an audience gathered at The FunnyPapers last Saturday, "I would get rid ofhim." Messick referred to Brenda's husband, a man plagued by jealousy and a raredisease controlled by black orchid serum.As the audience began to express disbelief,however, she said not to worry. "Brendawill stay with her mystery man.'While Brenda started at the Flash as astar reporter, Messick did not achieve suc¬cess so easily. She was born in Indiana onApril 11, 1907, and was drawing stories forclassmates by age 10, four years before acontinuity comic book had appeared on themarket.In the thirties Messick moved to NewYork, comic capital of the world, and took ajob as a greeting card artist. She then beganpounding the pavement, looking for a syn-dicte to buy her strip."That's when I changed my name fromDahlia to Dale," she said, commenting onthe difficulty of making it as a woman car¬toonist. "Now I get letters addressed to 'Mr.Messick' asking for a 'daring picture' ofBrenda," she added. "So I send them aframe of her going over Niagara Falls in abarrel."It was not until 1940 that Messick got herbig break. One of her beaus, a political car¬toonist for the New York Daily News heard j that the Daily NewsChicago Tribune syndi-1 cate was looking for eight new strips to inset! into papers in comic book form. The syndi-I cate took a look at one of Messick's storyboards, but didn't like it. They gave her 24j hours to come up with something better."My hands were shaking" at the end of| that 24 hours, Messick said, "and I had toget a friend to do the lettering." But Mes-i sick's strip was accepted and Brenda Starrj made her debut."Brenda is really a soap opera on paperj with a few laughs," said Messick, who pro-! duces the strip in her studio on the north| lakeshore. "I work as hard to make the stripinteresting as I did when I started," Mes-! sick said. She has tremendous concentra-I tion, often spending four solid hours sketch¬ing without a break.When Messick creates a situation, she Loften doesn't know right away how the story =:i will end. "I just get the characters together §! and let them go," she said. "Isn't life like -othat?" But this method has backfired. >"Once I got Brenda into a fix that I couldn't qget her out of," Messick confessed. "So Iwoke her up. I can't do that too often."But Brenda's readers don't seem to mind.Judging from the small but ardent crowdthat gathered to hear Messick speak, theyare a loyal bunch. And Messick is true tothem as well. Unlike most major cartoon¬ists, Messick takes suggestions from herreaders. When one listener bemoaned thefact that Messick had cut off Brenda's hair,Messick countered, "I did it because thefans wanted to see how it would ’ook." Mes¬sick also said that the birth of Star-Twinkle,Brenda's two year-old daughter, was in¬fluenced by letters from fans."Most of the cartoonists I started withhave gone to their rewards," Messick said,and she now toys with the idea of retire¬ment. "I'm getting kind of tired. There area lot of other things I'd like to do," she said.Painting transparent watercolor portraits ! Dale Messick at The Funny Papers last Saturday"would be a great thing to retire to," shemused.About a year and a half ago, Messickhired an assistant, Richard Pietrzyk, who is"working into the strip" and may take itover when Messick retires. Messick wouldthen be kept on as a consultant by the syndi¬cate, which owns all rights to the strip. Hername would continue to appear on it.While Messick is saddend by the public'sloss of interest in daily comic strips, she hashope that a Brenda Starr movie, which isnow in the works, will raise readership. BoDerek presently is slated to play Brenda,and Messick is not at all pleased. "Her hairis terrible," she said. Messick advocated anationwide search for a Brenda just like thehunt for the perfect Scarlett O'Hara 41 years ago.Two Brenda Starr movies have alreadybeen produced, one starring Jill St. John,but neither is very good, Messick said."Probably after I'm six feet under they'llmake a terrific movie," Messick said, "andI'll haunt them." But by all accounts thisseptagenarian will outlive the moviemakers.Perhaps it is a love of her work that keepsMessick young. She is nine weeks ahead onSunday strips and taunted the audience withrelish: "If you only knew what's coming . . .But I won't spoil it for you."All she would say was that a new charac¬ter, "Galaxy Girl," will be introduced soon.And that Brenda will continue to get in andout of her peculiar brand of trouble.12—the grey city journal—Friday, April 18, 1980CalendarFRIDAYGeophysical Sciences Colloquim: "Paleoclimate"Modelling of the Northern Hemisphere IceSheets" speaker G. Deward Birchfield 1:30 pm,Hinds Lab Auditorium.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: "The HalvetiOrder of Dervishes" speaker Bradford Martin3:30 pm, Pick #016.UC Gymnastics Club: Instruction available5:30-8:00 pm, Bartlett, free.Hillel: Adat Shalom Shabbat Dinner, 6:15 pm Hil-lei.Doc Films: "The Deerhunter’’ 6:30 and 9:45 pm,Cobb.UC Karate Club: Meets at 7:00 pm in the danceroom of Ida Noyes.Islamic Society: Lecture — “Democracy and Consultation in Islam" speaker Dr. Fazlur Rahman, 7:00pm, Ida Noyes.Crossroads: Games night and social evening, 7:30Afghanistan: Dave Kline, reporter just returnedfrom Afghanistan will be speaking at 8:00 pm atthe University Church, 5655 S. University. $2 do¬nation.Hillel: Lecture — "Historical Perspectives on theRelations Between Muslims, Christians and Jewsin the Middle East” speaker Prof. StephenHumphreys, 8:30 pm, Hillel.CARD: Fundraising party for the Coaltion Against Registration and the Draft 9:00 pm-2:00 am, at theWinter Palace, 5100 S. Ellis.Pub: Live music at the pub. Nick Filippo, 9:30pm-12:30 am, Ida Noyes basement.SATURDAYUC Ki-Aikido Club: Meets 10:30 am in the field-house wrestling room.Compton Lecture Series: "The Ultimate Fate ofthe Universe" 11:00 am, Eckart 133.UC Gymnastics Club: Instruction available2:00-5:00 pm, Bartlett, free.Alumni Association: Alumni-Student Brainstorm¬ing Session, 3:30 pm, Robie House.Crossroads: Buffet style dinner, 6:00 pm. No res¬ervation necessary.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Sufi Ceremonypresented by Sheikh Muazffer and the HalvatiJerrahi Dervishes of Istanbul, 7:00 pm in Rocke¬feller Memorial Chapel. Reception following inIda Noyes.Law School Films: ‘ The Maltese Falcon" 7:00 and9:30 pm.. Law School Auditorium.Pub: Live music at the pub. The Pete Baron jazz-tet, 9:30 pm-l:30 am, Ida Noyes.SUNDAYRockefeller Chapel: Ecumenical Service of HolyCommunion, 9:00 a.m. Resource Center: An Earth Day celebration be¬tween 9:00 and 4:00 pm, games, displays, lemon¬ade and pizza! 6100 Blackstone.Rockefeller Chapel: Discussion class-topic — "Tra¬jectories in Faith’ 10.00 a.m.Hillel: Lox and bagel brunch 11:00 am, Hillel.Rockefeller Chapel: University Religious service,11:00 am.Oriental Institute: Film — "Rivers of Time" 2:00pm, Oriental Institute.Doc Films: “The Deerhunter" 2:30 pm, Cobb.Crossroads: Bridge, 3:00 pm. Beginners and ex¬perts welcome.Badminton Club: Meets from 6:00-7:30 pm, IdaNoyes gymnasium. New players welcome.Hillel: Yom Ha'atzmaut Celebration — Full CourseIsraeli dinner, cloister club Ida Noyes, 7:00 pm,83.50.Men’s Crew: Film — “The Mouse That Roared" 7:00,8:30 and 10:00 pm, Cobb.Doc Films: "My Night at Maud's" 7:15 and 9:15 pm.Kent 107.International House: "Peter, Paul and Pat" PianoPlayers, Plunkers, and Pounders” — Jazz PianoConcert, 7:30 pm, I-House Auditorium.Tai Chi Ch uan: Meets 7:30 pm, 4945 S. Dorehester(enter on 50tn).Interactive Drama: Explore women's strength,first meeting. 8:00 pm, 4923 S. Kimbark. Call285-1274 for information. Hillel: Speaker for Yom Ha'atzmaut, Prof. Benja¬min Neuberger, 8:15 pm, Cloister Club, INH.Hillel: Israeli folkdancing, 9:00 pm, Ida Noyes 3rdfloor.MONDAYPerspectives: Topic - “The History of the Census-guests Philip Hauser, Teresa Sullivan and SteveLaue, 6:09 am, channel 7.Crossroads: English classes for foreign women,10:00 am.Hillel: Yom At atzmaut celebration on the Quad¬rangle, singing and dancing, live entertainmentIi noon.Public Affairs Program: Lecture - "Financing theCities” speaker Roger Vaughn, 4:30 pm. Harper130UC Judo Club: Meets 6:00-8:30 pm. Barlett gym.Beginners welcome.UC Karate Club: Meets 7.00 pm in the dance roomof Ida Noyes.Doc Films: A Double Life" 7:15, "The Actress" 9:15pm, Cobb.Chess Club: UC Snrimz Swiss 4-round tournament,7:30 pm, Ida Noyes Memorial room.Cobb Hail Sunday, April 20Men sCrew Club 7?00 / 8?30 / 1 OtOOINTERNATIONALHOUSEPRESENTSSOM MAJUMDARON THE SITARIN AN EVENING OFNORTH INDIANCLASSICAL MUSICINDIAN SWEETS& SNACKS WILLBE SERVEDDURING THEPROGRAMAPRIL 26 SATURDAY 8 P.M.ASSEMBLY HALL1414 E. 59th STREET, CHICAGO, ILTEL: 753-2270DONA TIONS A CCEPTED A T THE DOOR COURT ThCATRC5706 S University Avenue Chicago, Illinois 60617 733-3581LAST WEEKIonesco's EXIT THE KINGDirected by Joe GuastaferroNominated for 4 Jeff CitationsNew Theatre57th & UniversityTickets at Mandel Box Officey Tickets on sale Tues. and Wed. April 22 andee payers only. MAB graduate fee cards aon sale. Box office open 9:30 A.M. Limit 2 tickets perID/ 2 ID’s per person All tickets general admission -no seating MAB fee payers $4 Others $7 (beginningThurs. April 24) Graduate Fee Cards $4.00 UC IDRequiredThe Chicago Maroon — Friday, April 18, 1980 — 19OmbudsmanContinued from Page 5The SIS allows offices access only to theportions of a student’s central file necessaryfor their own work. For example, the bursarhas access to financial information but notgrades, while the registrar has access togrades but not financial information.The SIS currently bills for the bursar’s of¬fice; registers students, records grades, andschedules classes for the registrar’s office;and provides information to the deans of stu¬dents, student housing, financial aid, li¬brary, and career counseling offices. Whenall parts of the system have begun operation(scheduled for Summer 1980), the loan of¬fices and the Alumni Association w ill also betied into the system.Eventually, operations which now occurin central locations will be delegatedthrough the SIS to the appropriate office.For example, financial aid information willbe entered to a student’s account directly atthe divisional dean of students’s office,where financial aid decisions are made. Inthe past, this information has had to be sentto the Administration Building and pro¬cessed there.Because the system is “interactive,”changes in a student’s status, when enteredat a terminal, will immediately change thestudent’s records throughout the SIS. Thisflexibilitv allows changes to be made whilea student waits, if necessary. In one casethis quarter, a student’s loan disbursementwas restricted because of outdated Univer¬sity grant information in the SIS. Within tenminutes of my call to her dean of students,the student’s updated information was con¬firmed and entered into the system, freeingher loan.Currently, the most noticeable aspect ofthe SIS to students is the billing system. Thecomputer prepares bills by reading a stu¬dent’s registration, financial aid, and otherinformation. When the payment is receivedby U.S. Mail at the University’s lockboxdowntown, checks are credited to the properaccount by the bank. Once each day, the SISreceives a magnetic tape from downtown,from whih changes in accounts are record¬ed.Most of the problems which have come tomy office stem from the rigorous efficiencyof this system. If a student’s first bill is un¬paid after the due date, the second bill auto¬matically adds a late fee. If the second bill isunpaid, the computer automatically re¬stricts registration. Many students, remem¬bering a day when due dates had no mean¬ ing beyond the bursar’s forlorn hopes,continue to delay their payment. The resultis a penalty.Again, the system can be flexible in thesecases. In a typical case, a student had de¬layed his payment for Autumn quarterwhile waiting for a state-guaranteed loan toarrive By the beginning of Winter quarter,it had not arrived, and he was restricted.After the bursar accepted a letter from thebank stating that the loan had been ap¬proved, but not yet processed, the Bursareasily instructed the computer to removethe student’s restriction.Delayed transfer of information withinthe SIS caused at least one problem. When astudent in the College preregisters, the reg¬istrar puts the information in a “hold” file inthe SIS. At the beginning of a new quarter,the information for all unrestricted studentsis automatically moved to an “active” file,at which time the Bursar prepares the firstbill.If a student is restricted when the quarterbegins, however, the transfer to “active” isnot automatic. When the restriction iscleared (by the student paying his bill or li¬brary fine, or correcting some other prob¬lem), all indications of restrictions are auto¬matically removed in the SIS. However, theRegistrar must then manually enter the stu¬dent’s records in the ‘’active” file. As thismanual entering occurs after the beginningof the quarter, a student may be liable for alate registration fee. The student who cameto our office after being caught by this sys¬tem withdrew from school for other reasons.However, the flexible system allows a deanof students to waive the late registration feeif he believes the student has a legitimateexcuse for not having cleared the restric¬tion.Many potential problems created by theSIS (such as those caused by increased effi¬ciency) were foreseen by the operators ofthe SIS, others (such as the need for manualtransfer of late registration information)were not. In general, the comments heardby the Ombudsman’s office about the SIShave been good. As students and adminis¬trators become more familiar with the sys¬tem, 1 expect the number of problems tocontinue to drop.There are some problems where the stu¬dent knows the policy, the procedure, andeven the administrative reason for both. Buthe does not know where to go for help in in¬terpreting the policy or to alert the Universi¬ty to problems with the procedures. Many ofthe calls to my office asking for information fall in this category. Five of the seven com¬plaints regarding the department of athlet¬ics were in this category.University officials respond quickly toproblems of this kind. Director of AthleticsHarold R. “Jeff” Metcalf bemoaned theneed for an intermediary each time wespoke. He asked all complainants to comedirectly to the responsible person at the De¬partment of Athletics.In many situations, Metcalf’s request isright. For those problems caused by rigidapplication of a policy or by misunderstand¬ings between a clerk and student, the quick¬est solution is to ask the official responsiblefor the policy. Whenever possible, I suggestthat students do this before coming to theOmbudsman. Other kinds of problems, how¬ever, and those where different perspec¬tives interfere with operation of a policy orprocedure will continue to involve the Om¬budsman.Assistant Ombudsman Sula Fiszman pre¬pared a report describing both the formalproblems and the informal comments we re¬ceived about athletic facilities (see sportspages). Many of the informal commentsdealt with particular equipment problems inthe locker rooms at Bartlett Gym and theHenry Crown Field House. She concludedthat the department of athletics quickly at¬tends to complaints about physical prob¬lems with the facilities, and that more com¬plex problems should be brought directly toMetcalf or Mary Jean Mulvaney, chairmanof the department of physical education andathletics.Finally, there are problems which fallunder no administrative policy, procedure,or operation. Academic complaints, such asgrade appeals or requests to retake tests,are in this category. Almost a quarter of thecomplaints this quarter involved academ¬ics.In the nonacademic problems which fallinto no specific category, a student may dis¬cover a useful procedure. Few others, how¬ever, benefit from his learning. One studentrecognized this difficulty, and came to ouroffice for help in notifying others thatthieves sometimes sell stolen books to theused bookstores in Hyde Park. In discus¬sions with two bookstores, I learned that al¬though this is true, the bookstores arecaught in a bind. They realize that, unknow¬ingly, they sometimes buy stolen books.However, there are only a few', less-than-perfect ways by which they can tell if bookshave been stolen. They believe that theirmost certain option — to stop buying usedaidContinued from Page 1was the “individualizing” of on-campus ex¬penses, a cost which plays a major role indetermining a student's financial awardfrom the College. Previously a standardbudget was assumed for all students livingin the residence halls regardless of the costsfor the various meal contracts and rooms.Under the new policy, the particular roomand meal contract are taken into accountwhen the financial aid committee estimatesa student’s budget. As a result, Brooks saidstudents have a sense of freedom in temrs ofwhere they want to live on campus.Off-campus budgets are not individualiz¬ed but are based on surveys conducted bythe financial aid office.The procedure for applying for financialaid has not changed significantly duringBrooks’s term. Students w'ho request finan¬cial aid from the University are expected toapply for assistance from non-Universitysources which may include educationalfoundations and governmental programs. Inaddition students are required to contributea specific amount of their personal earningsand savings each year.The amount each student must contributetoward his educational expenses is deter¬mined by the Committee on College Aid.Broks said that the Committee has foundthat it has had to increase the amount of stu¬dents’ contributions. This amount will in¬crease by $400 next year and will range from$1600 for first-year students to $2000 forfourth year students. Older students are ex¬pected to donate more because it is assumedthat students will earn more each year theyare at the College.20 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, April 1 Once a student’s personal and parentalcontribution have been estimated, the Com¬mittee then subtracts this amount withother non-University aid from the total ex¬pense budget. The difference serves as thebasis for determining the amount of aidawarded by the College.The funding for the various types ofgrants and loans available to students is di¬vided among federal and University re¬sources. With the exception of the Guaran¬teed Student Loan Programs, all federalassistance is based on a student’s demon¬strated need.In the past year the University spent $1.5million to assist undergraduates. Approxi¬mately $75-100,000 of this amount was grant¬ed to non-need students.A new program which was instituted thisyear is the College Honors Scholarshipbased solely on academic and extracurricu¬lar performance, this program will grant$15,20,000 to 12-15 high school seniors accept¬ed into the College each year.Brooks estimates that about 60 percent ofthe students in the College receive someform of financial aid based on demonstratedneed. An additional 10 to 15 percent of thoseenrolled in the College receive assistancefrom federally insured loans.As director of the financia aid office fornine years, Brooks isaware of the com¬plaints students have regarding various po¬licies.A common criticism among students isthe alleged cut in aid which usually ocursafter a student’s first year in the college. Ac¬cording to Brooks, this cut results from anincrease in loans and self-help, which stu¬dents are warned of prior to entering theCollege, and more importantly, an increasein family income.“I am very aware of this problem,”I, 1980 Brooks said, “but almost in every case theparents’ income has increased. Students donot know about their family income. I amconvinced after 12 years in financial aid thatmany parents do not share informationabout their income with their children.”Brooks said that studies conducted by thefinancial aid office have shown that eachyear University assistance is increased for20 percent of the students receiving aid, isdecreased for 20 percent, and is unchangedfor 60 percent.“Students whose aid has been cut are veryvocal,” Brooks said. Thoe whose aid hasbeen increased are not very vocal, he added,because it usually reflects a problem, suchas a death in the family or loss in parentalincome.Another complaint of students is the de-Draft Continued from Page 1tion.The Jewish position is not absolutely pa¬cifist, according to Liefer. The idea of indi¬vidual worth and responsibility leads to indi¬vidual decision-making, Liefer said, and onecannot follow the state at all times withoutquestioning, especially on matters wherelives are at stake.“War must be avoided, but it is acceptedas an ultimate last resort,” Liefer said.There are no grounds for ideological war¬fare, nuclear warfare, nor war for exter¬mination of a people, according to Liefer.Other situations must be considered separa¬tely to determine the acceptability of war.The Jewish tradition accepts the necessityfor government and law, but the state is notthe object of supreme loyalty. Liefer told thegroup that the law is seen as giving properdirection to human behavior, and as holdingthe possibility for improving society. books at all from walk-in customers —would not serve their customers’s needs.After several weeks of discussion, the fol¬lowing procedures were suggested for peo¬ple whose books have been stolen:1. Immediately report the incident to Uni¬versity Security.2. Take a list of the books to all neighbor¬hood used bookstores. The list should in¬clude, for every book: title, author, edition,condition, and identifying marks.3. Put the date of the report to UniversitySecurity on the list. This may help the book¬stores when identifying a suspect.4. With the list, specify what you wouldlike the store to do if someone tries to sellthem your books: a) refuse to accept them,or b) pay as little as possible for them, andyou w'ill reimburse them for this amount.5. If you recover your books, notify thebookstores that they can disregard yourlist.There is no guarantee that stolen bookswill appear or be noticed at the used book¬stores. But the bookstores cannot know thatthe books are stolen unless they have beennotified. The notice to University Securityprotects all parties — victims, thieves, andbookstores — against inaccurate or mis¬leading reports.The Ombudsman’s office received 78problems during the Winter quarter. Wretook some form of action in 66 of those cases,providing only advice or information in theremaining 12.Over 32 additional people called orstopped at the Ombudsman’s office to get di¬rections, report broken telephones, or seekquick informtion. Five people sought legalaid information.Forty-four undergraduates, 26 graduates,and eight alumni or other affiliates used theservices of the Ombudsman’s office.I talk to many students at study breaksand sherry hours, in the libraries and cof-feeshops. I receive many comments beyondthe formal complaints made to my office.Whenever possible, I learn what problemsstudents are finding on campus and suggestways to avoid them. In this report, I havetried to present information which I hopewill prevent some future problems. Howev¬er, the most effective way to prevent prob¬lems is for students, faculty members, andstaff to know as much about the Universityas possible. Students should read the Stu¬dent Information Manual and Time Sched¬ules. Turn to the appropriate official forhelp when necessary. The Ombudsman’s of¬fice is always ready to help.crease in aid they face when moving off-campus. A third-year student who asked notto be named left the residence halls and wasshortchanged $1100 in gift assistance and$100 in loans. Claiming that his family in¬come had not changed, he found that off-campus housing wasn’t cheaper and decid¬ed to move back into a dormitory.Brooks, however, asserted that accordingto surveys, the expenses for off-campushousing are cheaper than for the residencehalls.” I don’t believe it costs more unlessyou live extravagantly,” he said.To offset next year’s tuition increases,Brooks said that the University will in¬crease its financial aid assistance approxi¬mately 18-20 percent. The University willspend more than $2,000,000 in direct aid toundergraduates next year.The Catholic position, according to Neely,is similar to the Protestant and Jewish posi¬tions in support of conscientious objection.It is right for Catholics to criticize the stateand to question w hether registration is justi¬fiable. The Catholic Church also acknowl¬edges the right of the citizen to refuse to reg¬ister. In short, Neely said, blind obedienceto the state is criticized as a moral evil.In speaking of alternative service proj¬ects, Neely said that the conscientious ob¬jector “owes some other service to the com¬mon good.’’The conscientious objector must avoid“living off of society.”Blackwell recommended that those whowould be conscientious objectors in theevent of a draft should write a statementand submit it to their congregation or someother organization. In this way one wouldhave a document on record indicating a po¬sition which pre-dates any future draft ac¬tion.Next meet tomorrowWomen’s track sets recordsBy Sarah BurkeThe beginning of the women’s outdoortrack season has raised the question ofwhether the team can maintain its perfectundefeated record from the indoor season.The meet results now indicate that the teamis picking up where they left off at springbreak — victoriously.In a nonscoring meet at University of Illi¬nois — Circle Campus two weeks ago, the re¬cords again began to fall as Vicki Powersand Cindy Sandborn led the Maroons.Powers, in her last outdoor season for Chi¬cago, seems determined to leave the Uni¬versity possessing all the school sprint re¬cords. She added another one as she set anew record in the 400 meter hurdles. Like¬wise, Sandborn turned in a strong double,shattering the records in both the 1500 and3000 meter runs. Other strong performanceswere turned in by Casey Kerrigan in the 800and Carol Peterson and Alison O’Neill in the400. It definitely was a strong start to theoutdoor season.April 12th marked the first home outdoormeet, against Illinois Benedictine and Milli-kin. The event was somewhat of a disap¬pointment to the team, even though theymanaged to win by 2 1/2 points. The timeswere not up to the usual standards of the team but nevertheless the strength anddepth of the squad prevailed.The distance runners were the strength ofthe team in this meet. Trish Briscoe ran a37:39 in the five mile run, leading a Maroonsweep of the event in an exciting 1500 meterrun. Cindy Sandborn just edged Anne Ineichof Millikin at the tape to get an importantfirst place. Wendy Shanahan finished thirdfor the Maroons in her best double effort ofthe year. She had earlier placed second inthe 3000 meter run, won by Sandborn. Theteam also easily won both the mile and thetwo mile relays.The sprinters also were instrumental inthe win as they consistently placed in theirevents. Becky Redman ran strong in herfirst attempt at the 400 meter hurdles thisyear, as she won first place. Remarkably,Vicki Powers fell down in the race and stillrecovered to place second. She also placedsecond in the 100 meter hurdles with new¬comer Jackie Carrera third.The field events were important as Chica¬go placed in every event. In the long jump,Redman, Nancy Flores, and Sara Wolper allpointed and the Maroons gained their firstpoints in the discus in 2 years as Laura Verl-ing and Julie Chill placed fifth and sixth re¬spectively. Bill SimmsAlison O’Neill runs away from competitorsin mile relay. Coach Crawford (right) urgesher on.Overall, the meet was an important war¬mup for this Saturday’s University of Chi¬cago Invitational to be held on Stagg Fieldstarting at noon. The Maroons hope thatthey can continue their success by winning aresounding victory. V-ball moves upBy Glen CooperTwo recent tournaments have seen a bigimprovement in the performance of the U.of C. volleyball club. Playing in the WesternIllinois University Open, the team took sec¬ond place in the “Low A’’ division, and atrophy - their first in several years. A localtournament in Lisle, Illinois ended with theU.C club in a tie for second.The Western Illinois tournament, in sce¬nic Macomb, Illinois, is a large event, withteams coming from Iowa, Missouri, and Illi¬nois. Unfazed by this, the folks in maroongave a very strong showing. Led by the pin¬point setting of Marty Gross and Marty Ball,and the power hitting and blocking of tokentall players Glenn Cooper and Bruce Davis,the team finished in first place in their poolAided by outstanding all-around play by vet¬erans Jay Russo and John Vlahoyannis, andnewcomer Gary Webster, they came frombehind to take a long, very close semifinalmatch. The by-then exhausted group thenlost to a very polished St Louis teamBuoyed by their recent success and the re¬turn of big hitter Rob Streit. the U. C. clubhad high hopes for the Lisle tournament.The team breezed through pool play, losingonly one game, to get into the three-teamplayoffs. There they lost two extremelyclose games to the South Chicago VolleyballClub, an old rival, which went on to win thetournament.Judging by these recent performances,the club’s prospects appear excellent for theupcoming regional championships at the U.of Illinois - Circle Campus. The club willenter two teams, one in the “B” divisionchampionship on April 20, and one in the“A" division April 27.Ask Dr. StulbergQuestion: Is rope skipping a good wayof getting in shape?Rope skipping has many apparent attrac¬tions as a form of exercise. It does not costmuch to participate. Anyone can do it al¬most anywhere. It is said to develop cardio¬vascular and muscular endurance and itmay also improve agility, coordination andmuscle strength. The sale of jump ropes hasskyrocked in the past two years. Recent stu¬dies, however, have indicated that ropeskipping is not as efficient a method of con¬ditioning as its propenents originally sug¬gested. These studies indicate that if a per¬son wants to get physiological benefits fromrope skipping, the heart rate levels and timespent skipping have to be at least as great asthose for jogging. In other words, ten min¬utes of rope skipping is not equal to 20 or 30minutes of jogging. Because jogging in¬volves more muscle mass than skipping inplace, it is likely to be better for developingphysical fitness. In other words, at a givenheart rate, jogging uses more energy thanrope skipping.Question: Are women likely to sustain dif¬ferent injuries than men in any givensport?Until relatively recently, little data exist¬ed on the patterns of injury which occurredin various sports. Even less information wasavailable on the incidence of injuries by sex.However, recently, information has beencollected concening the pattern of injurieswhich occur to men and women participat¬ing in basketball, baseball/softball, andgymnastics. This information indicated thatmen and women who played basketball hadthe greatest number and highest relativefrequency of injuries. Gymnastics was asso¬ciated with more injuries than base¬ball/softball. Men and women were injuredwith equal frequency in each of the sports.Moreover, the distribution of types of inju¬ries incurred by men and women were vi-tually the same in each sport. Women maybe somewhat more prone than men to anklesprains in sports such as basketball. I he im¬plication of this information may be thatprograms to treat and prevent injuries asso¬ciated with participation in sports should beessentially the same for men and women. From thePressboxOrioles face renewed pennant challengeBy Howard SulsThe 1980 baseball season opened here inChicago with the White Sox pitted againstthe defending American League championOrioles. I had the opportunity to catch theopener as well as the last game of theseries, and being an Oriole fan first, and aWhite Sox fan when they play everyone butthe Orioles, I found fipening Day muchmore enjoyable than the other threegames. At any rate it was good fun. albeita little cold, and I had a chance to talk tosome of the Oriole players, about the team,playoff hopes, and the proposed strike.Kiko Garcia, shortstop: A lot of writersthink we’re going to finish a little bit lower,but we're feeling like we're going to take itagain.Earl Weaver, manager: We didn't playthat badly but you're not happy with theresults (1-3 for the four game series). Wehad three fairly good performances.Palmer gave us a real good game openingday and Steve Stone, even in the game thatgot broken opened 8-2, pitched real welland I was pleased with him. Mike Flana¬gan was a little bit wild due to the inactivi¬ty. (My smoking) depends on what Stod¬dard, Tippy Martinez, and Kerrigan do. Ifthey go out there and get them out in ahurry the smoking will be down. If it’s like(Friday) when after I took out my starterwe gave up 6 runs, you end up smokingtwice as much.It doesn’t make much difference whoyou pick. We are going to do our best andtry to play the type of baseball we did lastyear and try to do the things we did lastyear. We have the ability out on the field. Ifthey have those type years then we’ll be inthe race all the way.I really don't think about it (the strike)one way or another. I hope things are re¬solved. I think everybody in baseball is.Benny Ayala, reserve outfielder: On an¬other team I would play a little bit morebut not that much. Maybe against left¬handers most of the time. I'm pretty happybecause this ball club is a winning ball club and I'm learning.Dave Skaggs, catcher: Everybodywould like to play everyday. I myselfwould like to play everyday, but there’s noguarantee to say you're going to play ev¬eryday anywhere. Playing with the Oriolesis probably the best place you can be play¬ing. The team is great, the guys getalong.Nobody would like to strike and itwouldn't do anybody any good to strike butif we have to strike, what Marvin Millerthinks we'll have to do is what we'll do. Ithink the players will stick together realwell.New York, Boston, and Milwaukee areall tough, but consistently we're rightthere with everybody, and if we can get afew breaks here and there we'll get on topagain, and I think we have a good shot atwinning the whole thing again. Our pitch¬ing is going to be tough and it's alwaystough. Tim Stoddard is going to hold hisown even with the loss of Don Stanhouse(who was lost to the Dodgers).Mark Belanger, shortstop, and Orioleplayer representative: iThe strike) issomething we did a great deal of thinkingabout, and the procedure of how we'regoing to go about it. The players won't gobackward, and that is exactly what they(the owners) want us to do. We re very ad¬amant, very unified, and if it comes downto May 22 and we have to strike, we will. Asof right now, based on the way negotiatingmeetings have gone, it won't be settled. Ifthere isn't any settlement at that time, it’sapparent the owners want a strike. Thereshouldn't be any reason to be where we arenow. You can’t give something and try totake it back four years later. As long as Ilike the game and as long as I feel I can dothe job, then I'm going to continue toplay.Rick Dempsey, catcher: Our pitchingstaff is notoriously slow starting. They allare around the plate early in the season.They throw a lot of strikes, which is whythey get hit, but after a couple of startstney all bear down, start picking away, hit¬ting the corners, and hitters aren’t gettingas many good hits. We only got ten winsout of Palmer last year, and if Jimmy stays healthy the whole season we'rethinking about 20 wins, which will make upfor the loss of Scotty McGregor or DennisMartinez.I don't know if we can beat any club inour division. We have the talent to do it.and if we execute the way we did last yearwe can beat any team in our division.They're all stronger, and with the additionof the Detroit Tigers, it’s going to be a heckof a race.Frank Robinson, first base coach: Thisis a good organization, it's great people towork for here, there’s outstanding talentyear in and year out. A lot of people didn'tthink we were capable of doing it last yearand took us for granted until it was toolate, and this year they're shooting at usbecause we are the defending champs. It’sgoing to be tougher and we're going tohave to work a little harder and do the lit¬tle things that help win ball clubs.1 like challenges, I like to earn my way.If I think that this is fulfilling enough forme I'll stay here and work for Earl Weaverwho I think is the best manager in base¬ball. If it (a manager's job) comesalong.that's fine. I don't want to be a coachthe rest of my life.Gary Roenicke, outfielder, who hit 25home runs in only 376 at bats last year: Ihear he tEarl) is planning to use meagainst right-handers and left-handers. Ithink I can benefit the team more by play¬ing more often As far as repeating goes. Idon’t see why not. We have basically thesame people, and if we can have the samekind of years from some of the guys, andbetter years from other of the guys. I don’tsee why not. I would like to contributeoften and hopefully we can win one moregame.Despite their disappointing seriesagainst the White Sox. the Orioles are offand running towards another pennant. Itwill be interesting to see Earl Weaver tryto out-maneuver the rest of the lerguetoward that goal, using his sometimeshelter-skelter lineup of juggled bodies, re¬lying on the percentages to help wingames. Let us just hope he has a full sea¬son to try to do it.The Chicago Maroon — Friday, April 18, 1980 — 21Refugees getRevenge,titleThe 1980 All-University Basketball Cham¬pionship was decided on Wednesday eve¬ning at the field house and, as expected, theAlbanian Refugees won, 66-39 over DredScott’s Revenge. The game was close all theway until the early part of the second halfwhen the Refugees broke loose and neverstopped running. After trailing 26-21 at thehalf, Paul Harris and Karl Roddy led DredScott’s back to within one at 32-31 with 12:01remaining. The Albanians took over afterthat, scoring 34 of the game’s final 42points.Softball will start next Wednesday or assoon as the Midway dries following lastweek’s bad weather. North Field cannot beused until the women’s softball season ends.Teams may arrange to play on the pointnear the Shoreland. The Ladder Tourna¬ments have been announced and schedulescan be picked up in the Intramural office.Final Basketball Top Ten(First place votes in parenthesis)Points1. Albanian Refugees (10) 982. Snow Bears 873. Mr. Bill Show 814. Uranus and the 7 Moons 775. Dred Scott’s Revenge 636. The Champs 617. Chamberlin 558. Dudley 509. Hitchcock 3810.Frottage 29IM reportIndependentNearest ForeignBorder 11Wabbit 0Long John SilverImpersonators 2Get Smart 1Nearest ForeignBorder 3Rock Island : 2Get Smart 2Team Commuter 1K.U.U.C. over Wabbit by forfeitWomen’sUpper Wallace 2Bradbury 0Tufts 2Dudley 0 Kevin Moore lSnell 0GraduateLiberal Tradition ioEconomista oVan der Waals Force 2Manchester United oBehavioral Science 2Thunder bay iBehavioral Science over Economista by forfeitMens Undergrad ResidenceFishbein 1Dodd/Mead 0Hitchcock 2Shorey 0Compton 1Filbey 0Hale 2Thompson 1Henderson 6Upper Flint 0Chamberlin 5Dudley 1Bradbury 3Henderson 2Lower Flint 7Greenwood 0Thompson 7Tufts 0Socim Top Ten(First place votes in parenthesis)Points1. Jeff (5) 872. Liberal Tradition (5) 873. South Side Squidos II 704. Long John Silver Impersonators 665. Nearest Foreign Border 626. Van der Waal’s Force 577. K.U.U.C 458. Chamberlin 389. Hitchcock 2810.Fishbein 21Votes: Behavioral Science, Thunderbay,Get Smart, Dodd/Mead. BradburyCalendarSaturday, April 19Men’s Baseball vs. Lake Forest College12:00 Stagg FieldWomen’s Track and Field: University ofChicago Invitational Meet12:00 Stagg FieldTuesday, April 22Men’s Baseball vs. North Park College3:00 PM Stagg FieldWednesday, April 23Men’s Track and Field: Varsity, UCTC,and Open4:00 PM Stagg Field Field House adds some classBy Sula FiszmanThis is the athletics appendix of the Stu¬dent Ombudsman’s winter quarter report.In the opinion of many, the reopening ofthe Henry Crown Field House improved thequality of life at the University more thanany other change on campus this year. Itcertainly sparked much discussion aboutthe University’s athletic facilities: the im¬provements to date and the goals still to bemet. We see several reasons for the increas¬ing involvement of the Ombudsman’s officein these discussions.An increase in the number of problemsand inconveniences naturally accompaniesthe initial stages of any endeavor. The open¬ing of the Field House proved no exception.More often than not, however, the depart¬ment of athletics was aware of the com¬plaints regarding the new facility before werelayed them, and solutions were already inthe works. Hence, hair dryers out of reach,benches missing, and inadequate drainagewere transitory problems.The question of who uses the facilities atwhat time is more intractable. Many com¬ments which came to us involved the closingof the Field House track to recreational jog¬gers from 4 to 5:30 pm for varsity trackteam practice. This is the second winter inwhich the Ombudsman’s office has receivedthis complaint. Last year, the faculty boardof athletics and recreational sports consi¬dered a petition from 700 people to alter itspolicy, but the board elected to continueclosing the track to individual runners in thelate afternoon.The situation is frustrating to recreationalathletes and the department of athleticsalike. Recreational athletes are confused bythe apparent inconsistency of an institutionwhich emphasizes academics instead of ath¬letics but, nonetheless, gives preferentialtreatment to varsity athletes. The depart¬ment of athletics is confronted with the im¬possible task of simultaneously pleasing ev¬eryone with the limited resources at hand.Compromise solutions are not readily ap¬parent.The construction of a second indoor trackwould be the ideal solution to the currentoverdemand for track time. Until the Uni¬versity can afford this solution, however,the recurrence of the problem indicates aneed to reexamine last year’s decision.The increasing interest in sports, togetherwith an apparently increasing ratio ofserious recreational athletes to varsity ath¬letes, requires renewed direct consideration of who uses what when. Any decision shouldexplicitly and publicly state and explain thepriorities on which it is based.Often progress is accompanied by in¬creased demands for further progress. Thisquarter saw the birth of Women Organizedfor Locker-room Facilities (W.O.L.F.), agroup of recreational athletes who wouldlike to see the women’s locker room in Bart¬lett Gym expanded to provide more show¬ers, lockers, and floor space. With limitedresources, alternative uses of these re¬sources must be carefully weighed withneeds. Assessments to determine the opti¬mum benefit from a given expenditure varydrastically depending on one’s perspective.Currently, the Field House has an overcapa¬city of locker space for women, and the ageof Bartlett Gym (completed in 1904) sug¬gests that any structural changes to that fa¬cility might have wide-ranging and expen¬sive implications. On the other hand, to thewomen who stood in lines waiting for show¬ers this past quarter when the Field Housetrack was closed to recreational runnersand to the women who participate in sportswhich cannot be transferred to the FieldHouse, the need for expanded facilities atBartlett Gym appears pressing. The prob¬lem will again be acute during future Winterquarters when the track team moves in¬doors. Thus the closing of the track and thecrowded locker facilities are related.The locker room problem is being ad¬dressed by the board of athletics and recrea¬tional sports. The process will not be aspeedy one. Alternatives, costs, and impli¬cations must be evaluated. Our office is notmandated to participate in the decision.Rather, our responsibility is to insure thatproblems are directed to the proper chan¬nels and that all people involved are com¬municating with each other. W.O.L.F. hasbeen resourceful and aggressive in this re¬spect, and the department of athletics hasbeen receptive. The need for our involve¬ment has been minimal.Not all students have been as adept asW.O.L.F. at locating the proper people with¬in the department of athletics to whom toaddress problems. Comments or complaintsabout the physical condition and operationof the facilities should go to Dan Tepke,director of facilities. Questions about largerissues or policies of the department of ath¬letics should go to Jeff Metcalf, director ofathletics, or to Mary Jean Mulvaney, chair¬man of the department are closed, com¬ments can be written on the complaintsheets outside the offices. Our office will bedelighted to help whenever students are un¬sure where to begin.ATTENTIONBSCD Students Interestedin Undergraduate ResearchEdmonson Research Fellow SummerStipends are AvailableStudents Interested in Applying fora Stipend should contact ProfessorGerson Rosenthal, Gates-Blake 17,No later than April 21,1980.22 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, April 18, 1980r<uis die cUssi-fidoSPACEWANTED: Male roommate to shareone bedroom apt. 5480 Cornell. $165.Phone 643-1482 after 6 p.m.HOUSE FOR RENT-58th Harper 3bdrm frpl. side yard 667-0996 or324-6039.Duke Univ. Prof Chicago PhD andfamily (wife and 3 yr old child) seekhouse sitting opportunity in Chicagoduring May-August 1980 or any part ofthat period. Call Bistrow 753-3539.Roommate needed. 2 bedroom base¬ment apt. East view Pk. Avail May 1or earlier. $130/mo and util. Near 1C,Co-op, mini-bus, Jet. exp. and point.Great for summer. Call Hank or Dan¬ny. 667-5620.Summer sublet w/fall option 1bedroom in 2 bedroom apt. 21st fl. lakeview, private bath dishwasher, air-cond. furnished. Rent: 196/mo. Call241-5044.Summer sublet: Furnished 1 br. apt.Long Island, N Y. 35 min. to NYC, 20min. to Jones Beach. Call 516-746-6352.Looking for an apartment or tenant?Come to the Student GovernmentHousing Service. Weekly list availablefrom 3-6 Mon-Friday at the SG office, __ »-room 306 Ida Noyes Hall or call FOR SALE753-3273.Rental avail June 15-Oct 1.Remarkable Hyde Park hse and Irgdog (food prepaid); turn, 3 bdrms, CA,$450 mo + util. Faculty or serious cou¬ple call 955-9549. assistants in its acquisitions depart¬ment. Must be able to work 10-20 hoursper week, be a currently registeredstudent. Call personnel, 955-4545, bet¬ween 9:30 am and 1:00 pm to arrangean interview.Camp Agawak for girls, Minocqua,Wl, has openings for counselors,secretary, kitchen and nursing posi¬tions. (Male and female). 6704 N.Talman, Chicago, IL 60645 or call761-1838.Earn extra money at home. Good pay.Easy work. No experience necessary.Send for application. Home Money,Box 2432B, Iowa City, Iowa, 52240.Earn $s between classes as a ChapelTour Guide. Attend one or two trainingsessions this quarter. For informationcall Gina at Rockefeller MemorialChapel 3-3381.Want to see your creative effortsplastered all over campus? FOTAneeds help w/publicity. Call 955-7122,5-7 p.m.SECRETARY-People Oriented FastPaced Office-Hyde Park Hilton-Exciting Job in Sales and CateringDept-Exc. Typing-Lt. Steno-RefsNatalie Vitek-288 5800.SUMMER SUBLET - 3 br. 2 ba. apt.date and price negot. fully equipped.ON CAMPUS modern 947-9597eves.Studio apt for rent: 5728 S. Blackstone.Available May 1. 180.00 363-1384 or234-7403.Female student wanted for summersublet June-Sept. close to campus$95/mo. Call 288-7662.Mature male roommate to share fur¬nished 2 br. condo on 56th Dorchester165.00 month + Vi electricity. Cail947-9262.SUMMER SUBLET, June 22-Sept. 1.Spacious 1 bdrm apt 5 minutes fromRegenstein. $220/mo. Call 667-4547.Available June 1 one bdr apt at UnivPk condo 55tn and Blackstone. Newlydec ac sec sauna pool one blk fr shopand 1C $390 month heat incl call955-0396.Large turn studiob apt, 2 loft bdrms,wdbrng frpl, all electric. Call after 8.288-1964.$25 reward for one or two bedroomHyde Park apt with June-Juty lease.Willing to pay up to $375. Call Claudia955-4022.WANTED: Male roommate (pref.grad student) Quiet, spacious apt. On¬ly 2 blks fr. Regenstein! $110/mo. +utilities. Avail May 1! Call David even¬ings 684-5334.FOR RENT Furnished Condo 56th andDorchester June '80-Sept. '81 3 bdrms,2baths, back yard, private porch.$600/mo. Call 955-6152.1 bdrm in 3 bdrm apt Lake view a/c, 24hr. security. On campus and minibusroutes. $102 and elec. Call Jane, 7 6897or 538-6159.2 ROOMMATES needed for 3-bdrmapt. $150/ Lake view, A/C, garage, lotsof light and space. Start now or June548-4911,FOR RENT: 3 rm. apt., 1 bdrmWoodlawn near campus. Avail May 1.University bldg. 258/mo. U.C. facultystaff only. Call Tom, 525-1374 eves. 74 Vega for sale. $500 or best offer.667-0996 or 324-6039.Stereo equipment-hall brands. Lowestprices guaranteed. Call 955-7672.6 pc. Smoked Glass Dinette Set RabbitCoat sz 9/10-Rocker-Many Smallitems. 933-0018-after 7 pm.ART SALE, Brn. shag rug, tape recport stereo, 7 in rec tapes, curtains,etc. Cheap! 268-9262.MOVING CROSS-COUNTRY MUSTSELL 10 pc. Living Rm st. $475.00 o:can be broken into 2 sets. Panasonic-Quadraphonic Stereo 4 speakers turn¬table receiver $175.00 or Best. DoubleBed s/frame 125.00 Call 752-1622 or752-1624 ask for Kim or Cindy.PEOPLE FOR SALEAccurate, Fast Typing with CollegeDegree and Legal Exp. will type termpapers, theses, letters dissertations-what-ever your typing needs. In Hydepark, but will pick up and deliver onCampus. REASONABLE Call 684-7414Eves.ARTWORK posters, illustration,calligraphy, invitations, etc. NoelYovovich 5441 S. Kenwood 493-2399.GRAPHS, figures for all kinds of mss.Perfection guaranteed. Lin 3 4887.624-6218 evenings.Will do typing (IBM) 821-0940.Typing done on IBM by college grad;pica type. Term papers, theses, lawbriefs, resumes, letters, manuscripts.Fast, accurate, reliable, reasonableNew Town area. Call 248-1478.TYPIST - Dissertation quality, helpwith grammar, language, as needed.Fee depending on manuscript. IBMSelectric-Judith. 955-4417.Position desired: Editing and re¬writing. Have a BA in English fromChicago, veteran of Joe William's Ex¬pository Prose Writing class, now inChicago GSB. I can make even brashBusiness students and unintelligiblemath geniuses sound literate. Salary:Negotiable. Call Linda evenings,945-7264,Tennis lessons special rates for 2 ormore Brad Lyttle 324-0654. voyage. We blew it. Was it ever time?Granny.Happy Birthday VICKY. With lovefrom your Family of Farmers.MADMAN: The dream I had lastnight, the dream I had last night -Youwere in it, and I was in it too. Therewere a lots of stripes.2nd Law of Gizmatics: Watching TV islike sitting in front of a moving train.You may be on the right track, but itdoes no good to stare at it.GIZMOERBAS, ERBAS, Erbecky, Sorry, mymouth hurts. I saw many flyingmoose. It was most astonishing. Onekicked me. A Low Flyer. 6.Former jogger with sore feet lookingfor bicyclists with a yen to Chicago bysunrise, Call Nancy, 684-5478.BAREFOOT DREAMER: The colorsof your vision jump to my eyes. Musicand movies, and moving to music aremy fave raves, too. For you I hope thatsoon you will be barefoot dreaming ingreen grass and warm sand.Frank O'PhoneSENSUAL DELIGHT 3, you wore aruffled pastel band Saturday. Wespoke but briefly and now I search foryou. I'll look for you by the jukebox inthe C-Shop tonight and tomorrow after9 Bind the band. Shellshocked.To Elie D and Friends: the party wasbetter than my greatest expecatations. The Time Warp was fun but PatM. was by far the best. Love D. J.L.Playful Curls: the sheep has tried tocook our goose. May he slink off intodarkness. But I don't want the goose todie. Please call as you promised Ther-sities (nerd).Fan, let's see the light. Tonight, Reg 5.I'll be behind a wall. Izak.WOMEN OF SALISBURYBe an athletic Supporter - Come andcheer for our undefeated soccer teamSat.CHAMBERLINLOST AND FOUNDLOST; Steel key ring w/at least 9 keysand whistle, citadel bike key and smallmailbox key. Reward for its return.Please leave any info in Yearbookmailbox in Ida Noyes.Remember those warm mittens youused to have? They may be at theReynolds Club Box Office lost andFound. Please stop by soon and findout. Board are now available in Ida Noyes210. All positions are open and allstudents both graduate andundergraduate are welcome and en¬couraged to apply.MAB is funded by the undergraduateactivities fee and voluntary graduatefees. It is responsible for bringing ma¬jor entertainment to campus. Theseven member board runs the entireconcert planning and production fromchoice of artist to clean-up.Deadline is May 2.TRAVELWANTEDFOR RENTStarboat available. Racing condition.Need partner/will rent to experiencedsailor for summer. Call 955-9549.HYDE PARKCONDOATYESTERYEARPRICES4 bedroom condominium homes at 50thand Dorchester for $47,500-$49,500.Common elements and exteriors ex¬tensively rehabbed. Apartments thatwill be sold 'as is' have hardwoodfloors, formal dining rooms, loads ofcloset space and more. Quiet residential block, close to transportation.363-1332 or 288 2175.WOMEN NEEDED GAY PEOPLENormally menstruating women whohave children needed as medicalresearch volunteers reimbursement is$175.00. Call Dr. Hatch at 7-1739 or7-5365.SERVICESPsychotherapy and counseling Feeson a sliding scale; insurance accepted.Joan Rothchild Hardin PhD,registered psychologist in Hyde Park.493-8766 days and eves, for apptCarpentry, drywall, painting, wiring.Competent and imaginative work.Free estimates. 684-2286.The Rustic Continental Studio-Beautiful haircuts and care. By ap¬pointments only 288 7080. Roger, Boband Linda.DOG FOUNDLoveable, fluffy white dog found infront of Ida Noyes house. Needs ahome. Housebroken, obedient. Call241-7560.PEOPLE WANTEDThe Chicago Counseling andPsychotherapy Center, 5711 SouthWoodlawn, Chicago, IL 60637 aRegistered Psychgological Agency#71-42, has openings for women (2-3) _ nr/... * . cand men (1-2) in an established ongo K t KoUN ALOing Long Term Therapy Group. Thegroup meets weekly on Thursdayevenings 8-10 p.m. May 1, i960 will bethe first meeting with the newmembers. Fee is $45/month, first twomonths payable in advance. Groupleaders: Margaret S. Warner Ph.D,and William Bradley MTS. Call684 1800 and leave message for bill toset up preliminary service.COUNSELORS: Adirondack boyscamp Lake Placid NY area. 7Vs weeks.$500 $600. Sailing, riflery, trip leaders,sports, driver 39 Mill Valley Rd., Pitt-sford NY 14534. Interview on campus.Committed volunteers needed to helpeffective Latino community organization do fundraising on April 19th.English/Spanish speakers preferredCall Beth at 235-2144 for more information.Pollwatchers needed for Student GovtElections, Mon and Tues, Apr 21-22.Pay is $3.50/hr. Leave name w/SG of¬fice btwn 4-6:00 at 753-3273, orw/Nadya 955 8725.Library on campus needs student INQUIRY The Gay and Lesbian Alliance officewill be open Friday during the day andevening as well as all day Sat. for pro¬spective students. There will also be aplanning meeting Monday, April 21stat 8 pm third floor Ida Noyes. Or call753-3274The quarterly undergraduate journalINQUIRY is now accepting essays onall subjects for its Spring issue. Thedeadline for submissions is Friday of5th week. Send via fac-x to INQUIRY,Ida Noyes checkroom. FREE PARTYCome to a party fundraiser for thecoalition against the registration andthe draft. Friday April 18th at thewinter palace 5100 S. Ellis from 9 pmto 2 am. Music and refreshments.FOR RENTSpacious 2-bedroom apartment withformal dining room, hardwood floors,new kitchen and new bath. ExcellentHyde Park location. $450.00. Call363 1332. POMEROYWRITER'S WORKSHOP (Plaza2-8377)Forget the Reg-Come shake a leg! TheDance Marathon for Senior Weekwants you!RADIOACTIVE WAVES tonight at7:30 pm on WHPK 88.3 Put on yourhelicopter beanies its music for the in-teiligensia.WANTED: Someone interested inplaying tennis on regular basis. I'm afemale, lower-intermediate levelplayer with moments of inspiration.Call 493 4532 next week.To the Old Man: Name 2 reasons:Love doesn't count because I'd pity thepool soul the Marquis de Sade lovedThe jlder lady.Chief: what I have2 say 2 u I'm 2polite2 say in public. U said let's leavethings as they were Ur wish isgranted Out of sync. Next timearound may b better. Twins r 2 close 4comfort. I ken 2978 vividly gift becamea cross. I ken 419 not at all. Bon EAGERGARDENERI would like to find part-time workgardening and doing general yard-work, in Hyde Park, I enjoy the work.Experienced Call 752-8368 evenings.SPRING MUSICALAnything But Sue Productions and themen of Lower Rickert present THESOUND OF MUSIC FLEW OVERTHE CUCKOO'S NEST Fri and Sat 8pm Ida Noyes 75c.SEXIs good but THE SOUND OF MUSICFLEW OVER THE CUCKOO'S NESTis better. Fri and Sat Ida Noyes 8 pm.Anything But Sue Productions. 75cMABApplications for the Major Activities INDEPENDENT CANDIDATE forSFA Court. Please vote. MON &TUES.WOMEN IN MUSICNew albums from Chirs Williamsonand Margie Adam, plus favorites byHolly Near, Peggy Seeger, Meg Chris¬tiansen, and many others. All in theWOMEN IN MUSIC section at the Stu¬dent Co op Book and Record Store,downstairs in the Reynolds Club.Were open M-F 9:30-6:00, 12-4:30Saturdays.APARTMENTWANTEDFemale graudate student relocating toChicago wants to share apartment andliving expenses with female roommate Prefer spacious apartmentlocated near good transportation andshopping Need occupancy by May2 4th.Please send reply to PO Box 6782,Chicago, III. 60680 FOOD CO-OPThe Student Govt. Food Co-op is ac¬cepting members. Order food on Fri¬day Pick it up Tues. Call 753-3273 after¬noons.EUROPE this summer. Low cost tour.Academic credit available. CallMr Reamer, 753-4865 (day), 752-8426(eve).TAI CHI CH'UANTai Chi Ch'uan is soft, slow andballetic but still an effective means ofself-defense. It contains the grace ofdance and endurance of jogging. It hasspiritual, emotional and therapeuticaspects as well as physical ones. Likemost things that are good, it requireswork. But it calms and relaxes you asit builds you physically and spiritual¬ly. If your interest in Tai Chi isphysical, spiritual, medicinal or mar¬tial, we hope that you will come to ourintroductory class Sunday, April 20,1980 7:30 at 4945 S. Dorchester (enterof 50th). All are welcome. WIN AMILLION $But first see THE SOUND OF MUSICFLEW OVER THE CUCKOO'S NESTFri. and Sat. 8 pm Ida Noyes 75cPresented by Anything But Sue Pro¬ductions and Lower Rickert House.AFGHANISTANDave Kline, Journalist, will be speak¬ing on his recent trip to AfghanistanFriday April 18 University Church 5655S. Univ.8pm.FOLKMUSICPlease donate your rummage. ParentCo-op for Early Learning, will hold arummage sale, May 3rd, 9 am - 5 pm.Location: 5300 S. Shore Dr. For moreinfo, and pickup please call 684 6363.Thank you.INFORMATIONAvoid the proposed military draft on¬ly legal way. Full details and pro¬gram, $3.00 Marantha, 142 BollingDrive, Bangor, ME 04401.TIREDOFDORMLIFE?DELTA UPSILON, a co-ed fraternity,is taking applications for summer and'80-'81 residents. We feature low rent,no meal contract, on campus location,and a relaxed atmosphere. Call753-3444 for more info, or drop by andpick up an application. Undergrads on¬ly. Apply by April 19.Sherry hour for prospective membersof Delta Upsilon-Fri. April 11,4:30-6:00. Come see the house, meetDU members and till out an application. 5714 S. Woodlawn.STEPTUTORINGSTEP needs volunteers to tutorelementary and high school students.Help a kid feel intelligent. Call Dave at241-5178 or Carla at 241-5044.BRIEF AFFAIRHave 18 hour fling with a senior. Part¬ner of your chloce at the Marathon. Gofor it! TheFLAMINGOand CABANA CLUB5500 S. Shore Drive• Studio and 1 Bedroom• Fiirni-hml and 1 nfumi-h»‘<|• i . of ( ]. I HI" 'toil• < Bitdoor Pool and (>anien>• < laqx-tin^ and Drape- fuel.• See»irit\• l niveruits SuB-iiK forStudent- and Staff• Delieatessen• Rarl>er Shop• Brants Shop• J.B.I). Re-taurant• Denti-t• \ a letFREE P ARKINGM.SnyderPL 2-3800 Your Vote CountApril 21 - 22VOTE FORC.A. P0MER0IndependentSJ^JL CourtAlbums by Inti-lllumani, The Klex-morim, Pete Seeger, George andGerry Armstrong, Bill Monroe'sBluegrass Boys, and many, manymore Now in stock at the Student Co¬op book and record store, downstairsin the Reynold's Club. We're open M-F9:30-6:00, 10-5 Saturdays.FREE DRUGSWill not be given out at LowerRickert's THE SOUND OF MUSICFLEW OVER THE CUCKOO'S NESTbut you'll have a good time anyway,ida Noyes Fri. and Sat. 8 pm AnythingBut Sue Productions 75c.BRAINSTORMINGSESSIONNeed help to plan a career? Lookingfor Alumni contacts? ALUMNISTUDENT BRAINSTORMING SES¬SION Saturday April 19, 1980, 3 30 pmat Robie House. The Alumni Associa¬tion plans to establish stronger con¬nections between alumni and studentsto make the transition into the profes¬sional world smoother for students.We want to establish contacts forstudents with alumni who could helpthem in their career search In orderto see both points of view and to definedirections for this plan, please come tothis brainstorming session and hearwhat we plan to do for you and let usknow what you want us to do. If youwant to participate in this meetingplease leave your name and phonenumber with the receptionist at RobieHouse or call 753-2195. PIZZAPLATTER1460 E. 53rdM13-2800No deliverySUMMERJOBSFull TimePlenty of WorkPHONE #346-1792A unique journaldesigned to keepscholars and studentsabreast of contem¬porary thought in thesocial sciences,humanities, law andphilosophy.Literatureof LibertyThe Chicago Maroon — Friday, April 18, 1980 — 23LoudonWainwrightIll Opening Act:Jethro BurnsonMandolin Tomorrow Night 8:00Hutchinson CommonsTickets at R.C. Box OfficeMAB $3/Others $5All Seats General AdmissionThe Gordon J. Laing Prize, 1979has been awarded toALAN GEWIRTHforReason and MoralityThe Laing Prize is presented each year by the Boardof University Publications to the faculty authorwhose book, published within the last two years,has added the greatest distinction to the list ofThe University of Chicago Press PREVIOUS WINNERS1978 Sewall WrightEVOLUTION AND THE GENETICS OFPOPULATIONS, VOL. 31977 Marshall SahlinsCULTURE AND PRACTICAL REASON1976 Keith M. BakerCONDORCET1975 Eric CochraneFLORENCE IN THE FORGOTTEN CENTURIES,1527-18001974 Stuart M. TaveSOME WORDS OF JANE AUSTEN1973 Edward ShilsTHE INTELLECTUALS AND THE POWERS1972 Edward WasiolekTHE NOTEBOOKS OFFYODOR DOSTOEVSKY, 5 VOLS.1971 Herrlee G. CreelTHE ORIGINS OF STATECRAFT IN CHINA1970 Gerald D. SuttlesTHE SOCIAL ORDER OF THE SLUM1969 Leonard B. MeyerMUSIC, THE ARTS, AND IDEAS1968 Philip FosterEDUCATION AND SOCIAL CHANGEIN GHANA1967 Donald F. LachASIA IN THE MAKING OF EUROPE, VOL. 11966 A. Leo OppenheimANCIENT MESOPOTAMIA1965 TangTsouAMERICA'S FAILURE IN CHINA, 1941-501964 William H. McNeillTHE RISE OF THE WEST1963 Bernard WeinbergA HISTORY OF LITERARY CRITICISMIN THE ITALIAN RENAISSANCE, 2 VOLS.