THE CHICAGO MAROONVolume 90, No. 20 The University of Chicago Copyright 1980 The Chicago Maroon Friday, November 14, 1980Three Women in AreaAttacked in Past WeekAdmissionsLevels Are -Ok: HallBy Chris IsidoreThere is no need for the College to admitmore students than it is presently doing,even if College administrators want to in¬crease the size of the student body from 2700to over 3000 students, according to Dan Hall,the new Dean of College Admissions.This fall, 734 first-year students and near¬ly 100 transfers entered the College. Hallfeels that if this number is maintained, andthe percentage of students who leave theCollege before graduating is reduced, theUniversity’s goal of expanding the Collegeto more that 3000 students should be met.“The student attrition rate is consistentlygoing down over a period of time. So myunderstanding is that if you look at thefigures there is no need for us to go beyondthat 850 new students in order to achieve ourgoals.’’ Hall said.Hall firmly supports plans for the expan¬sion of the College. “I think it has the poten¬tial for being very, very positive,’’ he said.“The term used around here is criticalmass, and I think that there is a great dealof justification to it; that in fact you do needa certain number of students in order to pro¬vide this whole educational experience.”Even though Hall is satisfied with thenumber of students admitted this past year,he is working to increase the size of the Col¬lege’s applicant pool, and to raise thepercentage of those who, once offered ad¬mission, actually enroll in the College.To increase the size of the applicant pool,this year’s application procedure has beenchanged. In previous years, applicants wererequired to pay a $20 application fee uponreturning Part I of their College application.This year, however, applicants need not paythe fee until they complete both parts of theapplication.Hall feels this change in procedure isresponsible for an increase in the number ofpreliminary applications received. So far,2000 students have sent in Part I of the appli¬cation, compared to 750 received at thistime last year.“The problem is that we can’t read this asproff,” Hall explained. “Kids might just befilling this out and sending it in because it’sfree. Is this really showing interest?”“The positive part of this” Hall said, “isthat we are able to know more about thesestudents and send them more information ata much earlier date. We’re sending out allthe material that we have to these people,and we are able to identify what their in-By Robert DeckerThe fare increases proposed last week bythe Regional Transportation Authority(RTA) have so outraged some South Side le¬gislators that on Monday two of them calledfor the abolition of the Authority rather thanan increase in the fares.Their remarks came shortly after RTA of¬ficials announced a proposal which wouldraise the cost of a bus ride on a ChicagoTransit Authority (CTA) bus to $1 by thissummer. The CTA, funded largely by theRTA, now charges 60 cents for bus fare.State representative Larry Bullock (D-24)and state senator Richard Newhouse (D-22)made the comments this week inmeetings with reporters. Newhouse’s dis¬trict includes most of Hyde Park, whileBullock represents much of the city’s near Dan Hallterest area is so we can get them specific in¬formation.”Hall said that the University would like tochange the ratio of male and femalestudents, but he doesn’t have any specificanswers or specific programs to increasethe percentage of women students.“That takes time to do,” he said. “Theschool traditionally has had a larger percen¬tage of male than female. Then you have theperceptions of the neighborhood, and thatissue I think probably affects womenmore than it does men. It’s an overall pro¬blem. We’ve got to get students and theirparents to campus, and we’ve got to get highschool teachers and counselors to campus.And that will begin to deal with this problemof what I think is a false perception of thearea.”Hall is also working to raise the number ofminority students on campus. Much of thework in this area is being done by minoritystudent themselves. The Organization ofBlack Students (OBS) and the HispanicCultural Society (HCS) have already held aphonathon to contact those black andhispanic students who have sent in Part I ofthe application. But no specific phonathonor mailing is planned for women applicants.Hall wants to see more detailed researchdone on those students who do not comehere, both those who are accepted but turndown the College, and those who don’t evenapply.“I think that research is very much a partof what admissions should be doing,” hesaid. “What I’d like to get at are thosestudents who indicate an interest in the Col¬lege and then do not apply. In the past yearsthere has not been very complete researchdone on those students who do not comehere.southeast side, including a portion of northHyde Park.According to RTA officials, the increase isnecessary because of an expected $150 mil¬lion deficit for the present fiscal year. TheRTA finance committee is scheduled tomeet today to discuss the proposed in¬crease.The proposed hike is “unnecessary andunreasonable,” according to Bullock (D), a22nd district state representative and one ofthe most outspoken opponents of the fare in¬crease. He termed as “severe” and “tre¬mendous” the effect that the increase wouldhave on his constituents, many of whom, hesaid, are “underemployed and out ofwork.”Bullock added that a $1 fare would be agreat obstacle for individuals who use pub¬lic transportation to look for work. Bullock By Sherrie NegreaTwo female students at the University anda female employee at Billings Hospital wereassaulted last week, according to Chicagopolice.Two of the incidents occurred late lastSaturday afternoon in the alley next to Ed-wardo’s Pizza which leads from 57th St. to58th St. A suspect in one of these incidentswas arrested and charged with battery. Po¬lice said that the suspect, who is a Universi¬ty employee, was released on bond. A courthearing is scheduled for Monday, November17.Police report that a female employee ofthe hospital was walking on 58th St. at 6:15p.m. when a man drove by in a car, jumpedfrom the vehicle and pushed a club in herchest. The victim then screamed, and theassailant drove away in his car. Police ar¬rested the suspect minutes later.The other incident in the alley occurredbetween 5:40 and 6 p.m. on the same after¬noon. In this case, a female graduate stu¬dent in the social sciences was walkingdown the same alley to the back entrance ofher apartment, when a man approached herand hit her on the head with a stick. Thewoman then fell to the ground in the alleyand was found by a jogger shortly after. The woman, who was reportedly unconscious,was then taken to Billings Hospital whereshe was given three stitches. Still undertreatment at the hospital, she is unable torecall anything about the assault. A suspecthas not been named in the case.The third incident occurred last Mondaynight at 12:30 a.m. on the 5700 block on S.Blackstone Ave. The victim, a 20 year oldstudent in the College, was walking alone onBlackstone and was attacked from behindby a man carrying a small knife. The assail¬ant struck the student in the face and pulledher toward his oody. The victim thenscreamed, scaring away the offender. Po¬lice have not named the suspect.Police confirmed that a robbery also tookplace afthe home of an elderly woman onthe 5700 block of S. Blackstone on Oct. 29.The victim, a woman in her eighties, was re¬portedly forced into her bedroom, struck onthe face, and then robbed. A suspect has notbeen named.Jonathan Kleinbard, Vice President forCommunity Affairs, who oversees campussecurity operations, said he regarded thecrimes as “extremely serious incidents.”“We have a lot of manpower in the(campus) area and we’ve asked for addi¬tional manpower in those areas,” he said.results, the mayor said “a considerablenumber of hopes and dreams of large seg¬ments of the American population will bewashed away.”Young, the first guest of the Visiting Fel¬lows Committee to appear on campus thisyear, termed Reagan’s victory over Carter“a massacre — by any measure ” He ap¬praised it as one of the most “decisive andsignificant” presidential victories in the lastcentury but insisted that the electoratevoted to repudiate Jimmy Carter and not toembrace Ronald Reagan.The mayor made several sharp partisanattacks on Reagan, whom he referred to as“pruneface,” and on the Republican party,whose members he said “literally turntheir backs on the cities, on the blue collarworkers, and on the minorities.” Young alsosuggested that there were racial connota¬tions in Reagan’s sweeping victory and inwhat he termed America’s current “shift tothe right.” He linked the resurgence of theKlu Klux Klan and the recent antisemiticbombings in Paris to the rise of conserva¬tism.Continued on page 18Interview with Coleman Youngon page 5South Side Legislators Blast RTA Fare Hike Coleman YoungYoung Sees Tough TimesBy Jeff FriedmanIn an address on campus Monday, Detroitmayor Coleman Young cast a pessimisticview of the next four years under a Reaganadministration.Assessing the significance of the electionsaid that the “great majority” of his consti¬tuents rely on the CTA for transportation toand from work.Newhouse agrees with Bullock that thefare increase will create problems for SouthSide residents. “The whole notion of a fareincrease flies in the face of the original pur¬pose of the RTA — to reduce fares or to holdthem at the original level at the time of theRTA’s inception,” Newhouse said.“The effect of such a substantia! in¬crease,” Newhouse said, would be to “lockthe poor into their neighborhoods” and “in¬terrupt commerce,” as well as to denylower-income families access to cultural re¬sources outside of their neighborhoods.Newhouse also echoed Bullock’s concernabout those who rely on the CTA for trans¬portation to work, saying that for thoseContinued on page 18 JackieHardyKIMBARK LIQUORS& WINE SHOPPERS SHOP1214 East 53rd (Kimbark Plaza)493-3355 (Specializing in all Party Needs)WINE SPECIALS(RED, WHITE, ROSE)MOUTONCADET ...BOLLASOAVE .. .1979 (LAVIN)pouhIyFUISSE . . . 750ml 4"069750 ml O PEPSI,HAWAIIAN PUNCH,SUNKIST ORANGE8 Pk. 12 Oz. 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OtffNWOOO370S* MilkChKOQO2346464HICKORY HILLSMill Crook C*M*rtVl'iMtM..*♦9 9200 HYDf PARK»Sl9f S3*6CH.CO907*2-3030NEXT FRIDAY NIGHT - REGENSTEIN BLUESBUT TONIGHT ELECTRIC BLUESWITH8:00 P.M. Cloister Club, Ida NoyesTickets at the Door $2.00 - Students$3.00 - Others% Sponsored by the U. of C. Folklore Society2 The Chicago Maroon, Friday, November 14, 1980NEWS BRIEFSGiordano’s Hopes toOpen in 90 DaysGiordano’s, the king of Chicago’s pizzaparlors, is definitely moving into Hyde Parkthis winter, according to an employee at thechain’s main office in Oak Brook, Illinois.Giordano’s recently signed a lease for thebuilding which formerly housed the Eaglerestaurant and tavern, at 5311 S.Blackstone. The employee, who asked not tobe named, said that Giordano’s plans toopen within 90 days.The menu and prices at the Hyde ParkGiordano’s will be “exactly the same’’ as atthe eight other Giordano’s restaurants, theemployee said.Although final plans for the interior of thebuilding have not yet been drawn up, thedecor will probably contain a “contem¬porary butcher block” motif, like many ofthe Giordano’s restaurants, according tothe employee.Community GroupFights Steak HouseThe West Hyde Park CommunityOrganization (WHPCO), a local citizensgroup, has begun a petition drive in opposi¬tion to the construction of a Bonanza SirloinPit restaurant at 53rd St. and Cottage GroveAvenue. The group has also requested apublic hearing with the Hyde Park KenwoodCommunity Conservation Council (CCC) topresent their objections.According to WHPCO’s president, CarolBrown, area residents would prefer a smallshopping center or convenience food storeon the vacant lot. West Hyde Park currentlylacks any grocery stores and the original ur¬ban renewal plan for the area designatedsuch a development for the land. However,the site’s zoning would permit the construc¬tion of either the 250-seat Bonanza or a set ofretail stores.At the time of the renewal plan’s creation,during the 1960s, the Chicago Department ofUrban Renewal sold the land to a shoppingcenter developer who subsequently wentbankrupt. University National Bank tookpossession of the property and would nowlike to sell, with the sole requirement thatthe developer meet the zoning designation.Area residents formed the WHPCO lastyear in response to a proposal to build aBurger King franchise on the Cottage Grovesite. The group lobbied the CCC, a communi¬ty advisory committee to the Department ofUrban Renewal, to recommend against theBurger King construction.Although the CCC sided with arearesidents, its recommendations are not bin¬ding on the Department of Urban Renewal,who did okay the project. The Burger Kingproposal was later dropped due to problems between the prospective franchise ownerand the Burger King Corporation.Brown says that the WHPCO realizes thatsince the Bonanza Restaurant meets zoningrequirements, the Department of UrbanRenewal cannot block construction.However, the organization believes thatsubstantial public opposition mightdiscourage Bonzana from building in theWest Hyde Park area. The petition cam¬paign, with a goal of 2,000 signatures, andthe proposed hearing are two ways in whichthe WHPCO will publicize area opinion.The group has also formed a committee todevelop alternative uses for the lot. Brownsays that although the group has madesimilar inquiries in the past, this is theirmost serious attempt to find a developersuitable to the community. Possible uses tobe examined include a co-op shoppingcenter, or a rezoning of the lot for residen¬tial use. —Henry OttoLatin American ChairThe University has received a $750,000 giftfrom the Tinker Foundation of New York toestablish a visiting professorship of LatinAmerican and Iberian studies.The chair, which will be named the Ed¬ward Larocque Tinker Visiting Professor¬ship in Latin American and Iberian Studies,will be used to lure Latin American andIberian scholars to the University to teachand conduct research.The Tinker Foundation has already en¬dowed similar visiting professorships atfour other American universities — Stan¬ford, Columbia, the University of Wisconsin,and the University of Texas. Among the peo¬ple who have held the Tinker chairs else¬where are the President of Peru, FernandoBelaunde Terry, Mexican writer CarlosFuentes, and Brazilian journalists AlbertoDines and Elio Gaspari.Go Before the Rush:Writing Tutor HoursUndergraduates can get help with allaspects of paper writing by visiting theWriting Tutors in Gates-Blake #203. Lastyear, over 300 students contacted the Tutorsduring autumn quarter. Open office hoursfor autumn quarter are:Monday — 9:30 am to 1:30 pm and 2 pmto 5 pmTuesday — 9:30 am to 1:30 pm and 4 pmto 5 pmWednesday — 10 am to 4 pmThursday — 9 am to 1 pmFriday — 10 am to 1:30If these hours are inconvenient, studentsmay make individual appointments at othertimes by calling 753-4728 or 752-5655. Thetutors also have mailboxes in Gates-Blake#319-A. Currie on Gay RightsBarbara Flynn Currie, State Representa¬tive from Illinois’s 24th District, will speakon “Gay Rights in the Illinois Legislature”this Sunday, November 16th at 8 PM in theIda Noyes Library. Currie has ben a long¬time supporter of gay rights in the IllinoisLegislature, and she will speak on attemptsto guarantee gay rights in Illinois as well asIllinois’s recently passed constitutionalamendment. That amendment will reducethe Illinois House, and was heavily foughtby various minority groups as a threat toLast year’s troubles are plaguing theHunger Concern Group, a student organiza¬tion which for the past two years has per¬suaded more than 100 students with dor¬mitory board contracts to give up seven din¬ners a year to help fight world hunger. TheUniversity’s housing and dining service con¬tributed the cost of those meals — last yearmore than $1000 — to charities specified bythe Hunger Concern Group.Because of problems with unreliable stu¬dent participation in last year’s program,Edward Turkington, director of the studenthousing and dining service, informed thegroup that it will only be allowed to hold onefast in the dormitories this year.In a letter to two of the group’s officerslast spring, Turkington said that “Althoughthe students who signed up agreed to par¬ticipate for the entire year, in fact manybegan to drop out after the first date.Students who were supposed to fast changedtheir minds and demanded that they be fedeven though their meal card had been pull¬ed. We had problems of this kind on everydate. Of the original 168 students who signedup for the “Stand Against Hunger,” only 99 minority representation. Currie’s talk issponsored by the University of Chicago Gayand Lesbian Alliance. Refreshments will beserved.Ombudsman’s HereTrouble with the University bureaucracy?The student ombudsman may be able tohelp you out. This year’s ombudsman isStephanie Browner; her office is on the sec¬ond floor of Reynolds Club. For more infor¬mation about services offered by her office,call 753-4206.participated in the final fast of SpringQuarter. In addition we know that therewere several students who managed to ob¬tain food even though they were on the fastlists.” Turkington originally denied thegroup permission to sponsor any fasts in thedormitory cafeterias this year, but relentedthis week, and agreed to allow one fast dur¬ing Winter Quarter.“We’re happy with anything we can get,”Mike Zeman, the group’s president, saidafter receiving Turkington’s permission forthe fast. According to Zeman, the HungerConcern Group plans to expand its activitiesthis year to encourage students living out¬side the dormitory system to participate inthe fasts by donating the cost of one dinnerto the Hunger Concern Group, which willthen distribute it to charities. The groupplans to hold its first campus-wide fast onThursday, November 20.Last year the Hunger Concern Group gave$420 of the money earned by the fasts to UN¬ICEF, to be used to aid that organization’sCambodia relief effort, and $600 to theWoodlawn Child Health Care Center's emer¬gency food fund.The new stairway in the University bookstore opened on Monday.Hunger Concern Regroups; Plans CurtailedrPOST LIBRIS• Coffee House •Saturday, Nov. 15Nov. 21, 28, Dec. 59:30 P.M.-1:30 A.M. FREE ENTERTAINMENT BY:Paul BartoneRonald WardJim GuentherJordan WankoffFROG & PEACHIda Noyes FREE COFFEE!Quiche, Bagels, Baklava,Hummos, More DelectablesThe Chicago Maroon, Friday, November 14, 1980 3 DanBreslauThe correct suit foryour interview datesAs you plan your first interviews in the businessworld, remember that the accepted outfitter foryoung executives is Brooks Brothers; this is thelook, and the label. Our “Brooksgate” suits arethe ideal introduction to this famous company,for these are suits quite moderate in price, andcut on slimmer lines. Brooksgate suits (coat,vest and trousers) begin at $170. You are assuredof a suit with the unique correctness that isBrooks Brothers. Visit us in the Loop, or atNorthbrook.ISTASUSHED ISISO/ljp/Aliens tr Hoys furnishings. |fats echoes74 E. MADISON ST., CHICAGO, ILL.NORTHBROOK COURT, NORTHBROOK, ILL.ELECTIONS 1980IMPLICATIONS FOR THE AMERICAN JEWISHCOMMUNITY ANDTHE STATE OF ISRAELROUND TABLE DISCUSSION with:PROF. J. DAVID GREENSTONE,Dept. PoliticalScience and Committee on Public PolicyPROF. IRA KATZNELSON, Chairman, Dept.Political Science and the College.PROF. NORMAN NIE. Dept. Political Scienceand Senior Study DirectorFRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14,8:30 P.M.HILIEI FOUNDATION 5715 W00DLAWN AVENUE4-The Chicago Maroon, Friday, November 14, 1980 VIEWPOINTA Pre-Professional Division?By Jeffrey Arlin Loeb and JonathanAdam ZimmermanIn these times of economic uncertainty,high unemployment, and boasting grand¬parents, it has become apparent even to theadministration that there is a need for an¬other new collegiate division. But it will benew only in a formal sense, since the compo¬nents of its structure have been ever pres¬ent. The program will be designed specifi¬cally for pre-professional — in particularpre-medical and pre-law — students. It willbe composed of the basis of detailed empiri¬cal analysis of the goals and necessities ofpre-professionals, both past and present.The educational objectives of this pro¬gram shall conform to the high quality stan¬dards which have long been associated withthis University. To insure the quality of stu¬dent grades, the number of courses perquarter shall be no more than three, andwhen one of these three is particularly diffi¬cult or is time consuming in nature, the restof the pre-professional’s schedule shall beselected from a list of appropriately rele¬vant courses, such as gym, basket weavingand underwater kite flying. Those especial¬ly difficult courses, which pre-professionalsin the past have feared and have done every¬thing in their power to avoid, albeit withoutsuccess, shall be spread out over twice thenumber of quarters so that no longer shallthese courses obstruct the grades of the pre¬professional. In addition, information shallbe made available for the students whichshall detail the grading practices and thereading lists of each instructor in the Uni¬versity. Special courses shall be offered toprepare the students for standardized tests,scores on which are highly emphasized edu¬cational objectives, not only for the studentswho have to take them but also for the insti¬tutions which require them for admission.In accordance with these educational ob¬jectives special administrative privilegesshall be made available to the pre-profes¬sional. For example, he shall have the op¬portunity to drop any course at any time forany reason without penalty or mention onhis transcript. The reason for this alterationin the bureaucratic form is quite simple:some pre-professionals often do not becomeaware of their understanding or just plain standing in a particular class until after themidterm, which may occur rather late on inthe quarter. Students in this new programshall also be issued, upon request, specialpermission not to attend lectures, or to post¬pone an exam or a paper due to unforseencircumstances (e.g. another more pressingexam or paper or just not feeling up tosnuff.)A well-rounded unique individual is highlydesired by most professional schools;hence, this program shall mold such individ¬uals. Extracurricular activities shall be re¬quired for all students in the division, andtime shall be allocated so that the pre¬professional shall have no excuse for notbeing uniquely well-rounded. Pre-medicalstudents shall choose from several wellthought out activities, including “the art ofbed pan changing” and “the skill of washinglabware.” The pre-law student shall auto¬matically have both a position on the debateteam and a seat “on” student government,both of which shall provide ample instruc¬tion in bumptiousness. To complete thiswell-rounded individual, seminars shall beoffered on a regular basis by prominent andsuccessful pre-professionals of the past on“how to drive your fellow pre-professionalor lay student to insanity by your newlyfound uniquely stereotypified, well-roundedcharacter,” and on “how to create an unfa¬vorable impression in an otherwise favor¬able interview.”The goals and aspirations of this programand of this new division are now quite clear.A unique type of student is to be created whoobtains all that he wants and more from thisalternative to undergraduate education.Hopefully, each student shall be betterequipped to meet the requirements and thegoals of the fine professional schools of thisnation. It is also hoped that the professionalschools shall take note of this noteworthyprogram, which they have inspired throughtheir policies for admission, and that theywill encourage its development at other in¬stitutions. In this way the high quality of theprofessions of medicine and of law and ofthose who practice in the future ever shallbe respected as they should be respected.The authors are both pre-professionals inthe College.rChicago Style By Retar Zal<THE CHICAGO MAROONEditor: David GlocknerManaging Editor: Chris IsidoreNews Editor: Sherrie NegreaFeatures Editor: Laurie KalmansonProduction Manager: Joan SommersSports Editor: Michael OcchioliniPhoto Editor: Dan BreslauCopy Editors: Katie Fultz, Gabrielle Jonas,Jay McKenzieBusiness Manager: Lorin BurteAdvertising Manager: Wanda JonesOffice Manager: Leslie Wick Literary Review Editors: Richard Kayeand Candlin DobbsStaff: Andy Black, Sharon Butler, NealCohen, Bob Decker Aarne Elias, Anna Feld¬man, Jeff Friedman, David Gruenbaum,Margo Hablutzel, Jackie Hardy, AndreaHolliday, David Holmes, Nate Honorof,Robin Kirk, Bob LaBelle, Linda Lee, NinaLubell, Jay McKenzie, Charles Menser,Margo Orlovich. Steve Polansky, TracePoll, Jon Shamis, Dan Tani, Joe Thorn,David Vlcek, Terry Wilson, Kittie Wyne,Darrell WuDunn.ColemanDuring his day-long stay at the Univer¬sity, Detroit Mayor Coleman Younggranted a Maroon interview to answerquestions about the Reagan election, hisproblems with Detroit, and the generalstate of black politics in American cities.Young was interviewed in PresidentGray’s home by Richard Kaye.Kaye: First off, there probably isn’t amore important question one can ask youthan how you plan on proceeding asDetroit Mayor now that Ronald Reaganis about to enter the White House. Do youthink it’s going to be a constant strugglebetween the cities and the FederalGovernment, with cities such as Detroitforever trying to squeeze money out of aRepublican Senate and Administration?Young: It’s going to be a constant strug¬gle and it always has been. Even withPresident Carter adopting a positive ur¬ban program and a Democratic-controlled Congress it was a constantstruggle. Several of the most importantparts of Carter’s urban policy are stillheld up in Congress. Legislation whichwould provide monies to go into a generalfund for cities which can show a need,based on such factors as level ofunemployment, was defeated last year inthe Congress after it was recommendedby the Congress. This year, revenue¬sharing bills have been held up in Con¬gress. First of all, I’d hope the presentCongress, which will be back in session ina few days, will take care of this unfinish¬ed business. The problem of getting someof these bills renewed and others extend¬ed, and even new bills passed, will beginnext year. It certainly will not be easierwith Reagan having been elected andwith a very conservative element havingachieved a majority in the Senate.But on the other hand, I believe that fora new president to attempt to reversepolicies that have been aimed for thesocial welfare of working people, elderlypeople, minorities, poor people andothers would be a great mistake. Hewon’t get away with that. The pressuresfrom the people would be so great that hewouldn’t be able to go as far to the rightas he’d like to. It will be very interestingto see just what Reagan proposes in thelight of cold reality when he assumes of¬fice, as opposed to the rhetoric of thecampaign. If the new administration at¬tempts to mess around with unemploy¬ment compensation, with food stamps, with welfare, where literally millions ofpeople — workers and others, white andblack — find themselves forced into theroles of recipients, there’s going to besome blood-shed in this country. I myselfhave never been on welfare, but I col¬lected unemployment compensation forone thirteen-week period in my life. I hadworked all my life. I’ll never forget theresentment I felt when I went to theworkmen’s compensation window andsome young gal was going to give me ahard time about what I considered mymoney. It was money. And I startedacross the counter. I just didn’t think Ihad to take that, and I don’t think thatany American citizen has to considerthat they’re begging when they seekwelfare help. If you’ve been working inthis country, if you’re a taxpayer, oreven if you aren’t, if your parents were,that’s part of your birth right as anAmerican. You’re not expected to starve.And no government should be in a posi¬tion of determining people starve bybureaucratic decisions. That’s why I saythat we could be heading for a period ofreal tension. I think Reagan will sensethis enough to recognize that he cannotgo too far towards challenging the pastgains of the American people. I hope he’swise enough to see this.Kaye: In terms of the future, what wouldyou as a member of the Democratic Par¬ty recommend as a way of fighting right-wing shift in this country? Should peoplelook beyond Reagan to 1984 and, say,back someone like Kennedy?Young: Right now, you don’t go beyondReagan — you deal with Reagan. Weought to be gearing ourselves for 1982,when the next round of Congressionalelections comes up. If the pendulumtheory works out, and it very often does,when you see a sharp swing in one direc¬tion politically quite often the next twoyears the pendulum swings another way,it will be a remarkable chance for Demo¬crats to regain control of the Senate, andstrengthen our position in the House.That’s the way of building a platform for1984.Kaye: You’ve been accused of having toocomfortable a relationship with the bigcorporations. You were one of the keypeople responsible for the Chrysler bail¬out through pressure you put on JimmyCarter, and yet even after Chryslerreceived government money it closed plants. Do you work in a kind of trap-likesituation all the time, where you’reforever trying to woo big business butwhere you’re also angered by bigbusiness’s incredible influence and itsabuses?Young: When you work in a coalitionyou seek to find common ground, an areaof agreement, with some group whichmight have entirely different positions ona number of different questions. The ideais to reach agreement on one questionthat is of basic importance to all who area part of that coalition. You fight theother fights when you come to them, youtake it one fight at a time.As far as Chrysler is concerned, it wasvery, very clear that it is vital to the cityof Detroit, to the state of Michigan, andeven to the United States, that we retainthe third largest automobile maker andthe tenth largest corporation. It wouldhave been devastating for us to haveallowed Chrysler to have collapsed. Fordwould have been next. It would haveopened up the utter destruction of theAmerican automobile industry, and thatwould have been economicallycatastrophic for our country.As far as Chrysler having closedplants, we knew Chrysler had to closeplants. No one ever believed that a billionand a half dollars would allow Chryslerto keep all its plants open and retain itsprevious position. The whole automobileindustry is retrenching. The whole faceof American industry has changeddrastically. We need to diversify, to findnew markets, new demands, to furnishjobs for our work force and to meet thedemands of an ever-expanding worldpopulation. Nothing stands still, andDetroit, the automobile industry, norAmerica will ever be the same after thisrecent recession. It’s ironic that you’re telling me thatI’ve been accused of being the hand¬maiden of big business. In my early daysI was called a Communist. I’m used tobeing called names. Neither charge istrue. (Laughs).Kaye: What plans do you have for im¬proving the Detroit public schoolsystem? Is there any hope of keeping theschools integrated?Young: As far as the Detroit schools areconcerned, today the Detroit schools areninety-percent black, so the battle tokeep the Detroit schools integrated hasalready been lost. I think Detroit is todayfifty-five to sixty percent black, whichmeans that the great number of whitechildren who live in the city of Detroit goto private or parochial schools. In orderto guarantee that Detroit schools offer aquality education I think you have toremove property tax as the exclusivebase of dependence of the schools. Rightnow in Michigan about half the moneyrunning schools comes from propertytaxes that are paid in a given communi¬ty. So if you have a rich community, andby rich I mean if you have a big, fifty-million dollar plant in a district, you havea good school system. If, on the otherhand, you have a poor community withworking people and no valuable proper¬ty, it doesn’t matter if you tax twentymillage, you won’t raise enough money.You could tax yourself blind and notraise any money. That’s why I believethat property tax is not the way. The pro¬perty tax ought to be pooled across thestate and go into a state pool, and thestate should fund all schools from ageneral fund of income tax. This wouldguarantee each child should get a chanceof a quality education. I didn’t say thateach child should get an equal amount ofContinued on page 18- A History of SongBlackfriarsBy Tad PethybridgeWhat in the world is a “Blackfriar?” Theword might first make you think of some¬thing that sticks to your clothes when walk¬ing through a thick forest, or perhaps of anorganization of sorcerous monks. In reality,the meaning has very little to do with eitherof these, except to the extent that monks aresometimes known to chant or sing, and aburr inside one’s clothing could very wellmake him dance around a bit. Singing anddancing are very much a part of the Black¬friar organization, the organization thathas, for all but a short time since 1898,brought musical comedy to the Universityof Chicago campus.Blackfriars, the oldest registered studentorganization on campus, has had an inter¬esting history. The group began as an all¬male club whose purpose was to present“original musical comedy.” (Feministsneed not take offense; there was also an all¬female organization.) Privately financed,the productions were on a slightly differentscale than those of the present; budgets Tammy Ravitts and Doug Jones hold thelead roles in the Blackfriars’ current prod¬uction, The Man of LaMancha.ranged up to ten-thousand dollars per show,and the group was known to import direc¬tors from New York. The organizationflourished until 1941 when the war appro¬ priated many of its members, sending itinto a sort of hibernation. In 1957 the organi¬zation was revived and started to rebuild,producing skits for the Beaux Arts Ball,which has since metamorphosed into theLascivious Costume Ball.The group started to write and produceoriginal musicals, but after a while high-quality original shows became scarce, andin 1972 the organization produced its first“stock” show, “Anything Goes!” Between1972 and 1977 the group tried once more todevelop interesting and entertaining newshows to present, but the logistics of writingand producing good original shows onceagain proved too much, and the organiza¬tion returned to doing stock shows. Sincethat time they have performed such wellknown shows as, “A Funny Thing Happenedon the Way to the Forum,” “Once Upon aMattress,” “You’re a Good Man, CharlieBrown,” and “Goodspell.”Although the Blackfriars are not Juilliardor the American Academy of DramaticArts, they have had their share of perform¬ers who have gone on to success in commer¬cial theater. The late Will Geer, Grandpa on CBS’s The Waltons, once performed withthe Blackfriars, as did Joel Grey, whostarred in “Cabaret!”The Blackfriars’ current production of“Man of La Mancha” will be presented No¬vember 13-16. The musical’s book tells thestory of Don Quixote de la Mancha, a goodman who becomes slightly confused andsaunders out to practice knight-errantrythree hundred years after everyone else hasgiven it up. Battling vicious windmills andperfidious barbers along the way, he gal¬lantly follows the “quest” described in theshow’s most famous song, “The ImpossibleDream.”The Blackfriars present shows twice ayear: one in the fall, and one in the spring.The shows are rehearsed from four to sixweeks before performance; actors cansometimes spend more than twenty hours aweek in rehearsal.Each hour on stage in front of an audiencecan represent anywhere from fifteen to fiftyhours of preparation.However, to those who seek and enjoy thesmell of the greasepaint and the roar of thecrowd, it’s worth it.The Chicago Maroon, Friday, November 14, 19*0-5'National Bestseller!‘Abbie HoffmansSOON TO BE AMAJOR MOTION PICTUREIntroductionby NORMANMAILER Illustratedwithphotographs44 Easily one of the best autobiographies to come out of the 60’s... an intelligent and rollickingly funny book.”—N.Y. Times Book Review^An authentic, off-the-wall American hero His writing is ascandid as a snowball in the face.”—Soho Weekly^ Somehow, Hoffman manages to make the politics of the ridic¬ulous seem logical. The madcap pose falls away to reveal anastonishing truth: that Abbie Hoffman is moved, in his way, byfierce patriotism.”—Boston Globe^A fascinating image of a man who senses that he is exposed,naked, and knows that he can’t go backward, or stand still, butmust come home.”—San Francisco Review of BooksNOW IN ITS 4th PRINTING ANDSOON TO BE A MAJOR MOTION PICTURE... FROM UNIVERSALPerigee paperback. $6.95 / Putnam hardcover. $13.95 / At all bookstoresPublished by PERIGEE BOOKS]A Division of The Putnam Publishing GroupUSED STEREO EQUIPMENTONE DAY SALE!Saturday, November 15ll:00am-5:00pm ONLY!Large selection of name brandcomponents - guaranteed and handyman'sspecial section. All items must be sold -compact speaker, $6.00 a pair!ADC Cart new from $6.50.HEAR AGAIN STEREO7002 California, 338-7737Open Mon.-Sat. at 11:00 a.nt. 328-5999Direct from DeKalbAS LOW AS $3«"$29TO YOUR DORM<1-3 OA r$ DELIVERY)6-The Chicago Maroon, Friday, November la, 1980 FALL OUT OF BEDRight onto campus. 2 bedroom, 1 study condo near S7th &Kimbark Modern, well laid out kitchen TLC & elbow greasewent into refinishing traditional built-in bookcases & tire-place and dining room hutch. $55,000 Call KenGOLDEN OPPORTUNITYfor cozy, neat-as-a-pin 2 bed¬room condo, tight & quietNice oak floors, French doorsfife Low assessments 5bth Stnear Harper $68 900 CallCleveNEED ELBOW ROOM?There’s more than enough to spare in over 3200 sq^ft.10 rm. condo. Gigantic living & dining rooms. 3 baths.Needs paint. 51st & Woodlawn. $69,500. Call Ken.THE TOWN & GOWNERT T]J 0i • dm MHandy to both worlds with campus bus & IC nearby Homey,6+ room, 2 bath, move-in condition Parking space free53rd & Cornell $72,900 Call CleveMAKE AN OFFERon this 6Vi rm Hyde Pk Blvd condo (near 55th). 2 bathsBuiIt-ins Eat-in kitchen Owner leaving country Asking$75,000 Call Ken493-0666Ken Wester, Sales Associate, 947-0567 (eves)Cleveland McCowan, Sales Associate, 799-1419 (eves)Charlotte Vikstrom, Broker, Sales 498-0666 (eves)J DR. M.R. MASLOVOPTOMETRISTS• Eye Examinations• Contact Lenses (Soft & Hard)* Ask about our annual service agreement• Fashion Eye WearHyde Park Shopping Center1510 E. 55thN 363-6100_Itheg r e v r c i f v i o u rn a Io v /13th Year 14th Issue 14 November 1980CLASSIC -JAZZ MANWITHCOUNTRY ROOTS:CHARLIE HADENCharlie Haden performing at Hutchinson Commons.grey city staff writer Jim Guentherrecently interviewed bassist CharlieHaden when Haden was on campus fora MAB concert.by JIM GUENTHER"He looks like he's gonna pullthat thing over on him.""Yeah, but can't you just feelthe intensity of his playing? it'snot that he's laying down a lot ofnotes, it's that each phrase is someaningful."Such was the exchange be¬tween two observers at a recentconcert at the University of Chi¬cago. Guitarist Pat Metheny,drummer Paul Motian, saxo¬phonist Dewey Redman, and thesellout crowd in Hutch Commonswere all watching, listening andfeeling Charlie Haden's bass solo.Ranging from tender strokes toearth-shaking strums, Haden'splaying expressed the most pri¬mal instincts, the most romanticvisions of this simple-heartedmusic maker.On his album Magico, releasedthis past year on ECM, Haden re¬veals a world of influence as heexplores sounds with Scandina¬vian saxophonist Jan Garbarekand Brazilian guitarist/pianistEgberto Gismonti. Yet he re¬mains close to his roots in old-time country mus[c. On Meth-eny's latest album, 80/81, Hadenalludes to such melodies as "OldJoe Clark" and "Ramblin' Boy.""When I was five years old, Iheard Mother Maybelle Cartersing 'Ramblin' Boy," and I justcried," he confesses.In jazz circles, Charlie Hadenis regarded as a giant. Everyyear in Down Beat Magazine'sInternational Critic's Poll, he isranked as one of the top bassistsin the world. Old and NewDreams, an ensemble includingDon Cherry, Dewey Redman, andEd Blackwell along with Haden,preserves and expands the iconoclastic legacy of Ornette Coleman. Their album on ECM, alsotitled Old and New Dreams, waslauded by the New York Timesand Rolling Stone as one of thebest releases of 1979. Talking to Haden, though, onegets the impression that hedoesn't care too much about crit¬ic's polls or record reviews. He isa modest man whose concern isthe music.gcj: How long have you beenworking with Pat and how didthis band come about?Haden: In May, Pat gave us acall and we recorded an album together.gcj: Had you had much contactwith him before that?Haden: I met him and knew himand really liked the way heplayed, but I'd never played withhim before.gcj: And you've been playingwith Dewey and Paul for sometime.Haden: I've been playing withPaul with Keith Jarrett since1967, and I've been playing withDewey with Ornette since 1968.gcj: Going back to your begin¬nings, I understand you beganyour musical career with yourfamily.Haden: Yes, my father was acountry-western hillbilly singerand harmonica player. In the1920's, he started out in Dallas,Texas with a partner. He met mymother, they got married and shewas added to form a trio. Then aseach one of us was born, we wereadded to the family — singing.From the time I can remember, Iwas taught to sing all harmonyparts by ear. We could never goflat or sharp; Dad would get veryupset.So that's what I did until I was15. We played radio shows everyday, all over the midwest on thebig radio stations. Before ourfamily was singing together, myparents were on the Grand OleOpry and did different things.They were close friends with theCarter Family.gcj: Maybelle Carter made youcry.Haden: Oh yeah, she was really agreat guitarist and a great musi¬cian. A great Singer. And herdaughters Helen, Anita, and June(now June Carter Cash) were really good singers. I grew up with all those people — Red Foley,Chet Atkins.gcj: So how did you go fromcountry music to what you'redoing now?Haden: I started listening to jazzwhen I was in grade school. Mybrother Jim had some records.He played the bass on our radioshow and he was really interestedin jazz. He brought home recordsof Jazz at the Philharmonic,Lionel Hampton, Charlie Parker,Dizzy Gillespie, and Stan Kenton.I used to listen to his records asmuch as I could and I really lovedthe music. I just grew up wantingto play.gcj: And wanting to play jazz?Haden: Yeah.gcj: You met Ornette then in thefifties?Haden: I met Ornette in Los An¬geles. I was working at the Hill-crest Club there with Paul Bley,Lenny McBrown, and Dave Pike.Lenny McBrown, the drummer,brought Ornette in one night andintroduced him to me. He invitedme over to his house and weplayed music together. Really hitit off right away,gcj: What was that music like?Haden: Ornette was playing hisown music in a very free way, un¬like what I was used to playing. Before I met Ornette, I was usedto playing chord changes inbebop language. Sometimeswhen l would be at jam sessions,I would feel to play outside thechord changes or to play on theinspiration of the song. WheneverI'd try to do that, the other musi¬cians would get upset becausethey'd get lost. But when I metOrneiTe that's what he was doing— playing on the feeling of thepiece rather than on the chordstructure.gcj: Was Ornette's harmelodicconcept developed at that time?Haden: That's what it was —playing on the inspiration of thecomposition. It means creatingyour own chord structure to atune in the improvising,gcj: Do you feel this is the foremost concept in your playingnow?Haden: No...no. When l play withdifferent musicians I play theway I feel, the way I hear. I'vebeen very fortunate to haveplayed with musicians that I feelclose to and are very honest intheir music and very dedicated.That's the way I've learned toplay — playing with great musi¬cians.gcj: / particularly like the wayyour sounds relates to guitarplayers — here with Pat, with Egberto Gismonti, and back withJohn McLaughlin.Haden: Whenever I play with aguitarist, I try to make the bassan extension of the guitar, tomake it part of the bass of the gui- . tar and make it part of the full¬ness. I play with gut strings,which makes it close to the woodof a guitar.gcj: So do you feel a close affin¬ity for the guitar?Haden: I feel a close affinity for... musicians I feel close to, nomatter what instrument theyplay.gcj: Right now, you're doing a lotof work with Old and NewDreams. Could you say something about that band?Haden: Old and New Dreams —we've been playing together for along time with Ornette. We juststarted playing as a group whenwe recorded Old and NewDreams on Black Saint in 1976.People were asking us to keep thegroup, and we wanted to do thatalso, so we recorded anotheralbum for ECM and did sometours. We're playing all of ourmusic plus some of Ornette'smusic. We just did another albumfor ECM which is live-in-concertand will be released some timenext year.gcj: A cut that l particularly likeon the ECM Old and New DreamsJ is your "Song for the Whales.”3 How did that come about?* Haden: I've been following the| plight of the whales for a long3 time. I read a piece in the New* York Times about how they arebeing killed, and how people aretrying to get an international lawpassed that would stop the killingof whales. But there is a big con¬flict involved because a lot of peopie make their living by whaling,and they have no alternative. Soit's a very complex situation.But the whales are so beautiful.One time I was playing a concertat Notre Dame and someone saidthat the stuff I was doing with mybow sounded like the whales. Ihad never heard how the whalessound. I said, "It does?" and hesaid, "Yeah." So he sent me a re¬cording of the hump back whale'smating calls. They were verybeautiful. That, combined withmy concern for their being al¬lowed to live, inspired this song,gcj: You've been involved in poUticaI causes before with the Lib¬eration Music Orchestra and thesituation in Portugal. I under¬stand you were thrown in jailthere. What exactly happened?Haden: That was just a tour wedid in Europe and one of the coun¬tries was Portugal. I didn't wantto play there because it was in1971 when it was a fascist govern¬ment. Ornette had already signeda contract so we had to play. I dedicated a song to the black liberation movements in Mozambique,Angola, and Guinea Bissau whichwere the Portuguese colonies. Iwas arrested.It's just a matter of having con¬cern for humanity and concernfor life. I think it is every artist'sresponsibility to improve thequality of life and to communi¬cate human values. It's a politi¬cal commitment.I think it is every artist's responsibility to improve the quality of life and to communi¬cate human values. It's a political commitment.Woody Allen’s“Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex ...But Were Afraid to Ask’Saturday, Nov. 15 7:00/8:45/10:30 Cobb Hall$1.50 men’s crew"Though a few have been offended by the play's sexually explicit nature, the bawdinessis, with rare exception, extremely humorous and witty because it satirizes myths andconventions of sexuality."- Lee Chaitthe grey city journalLAST 3 WEEKS!Organic Theater CompanyPresents(A Pornographic Victorian Musical)JUST ADDED!FRIDAY, NOV. 14 LATE SHOW, 11:30 PM(Bring this ad and a friend for 2 for 1 discount)THRU NOV 30Leo A. Lerner Theatre Weds, thru Sun.4520 N. Beacon Call 728-1001MC & VISA Accepted Student/Senior Rush Vi hour prior to curtainje heaven and the earth—2theith darkness over the surface ofness. sGod calNight. And theday.e$God said, “Ithat it ma^O^and it sewater which wi to preface a work with an explanation ofthe author’s aid^why he wrote the book, and the relationshipto other earlier or contemporaryIn the case of a philosophical;plai^ajionMHa¥^L0llsatever might appropriately beabout philosophy in a preface—say a historical statementof the main drift and the point of view, the general content andSeminary Coop Bookstore5757 SOUTH UNIVERSITYMON-THU 9:30-6:30FRI 9 = 30-5 SAT 11-4 r The University of ChicagoPi DEPARTMENT OF MUSICSunday • November 16 • 8:00 p.m.NEW MUSIC ENSEMBLEworks by Toch • Stravinsky • SchullerCinastera • Mitchell • LevinLexington Hall • 5831 UniversityThursday • November 20 • 8:00 p.m.student recitalELIZABETH BALTAS • baroque flutewithjane Greene, sopranoVictoria Graef-Grenier, harpsichordThomas MacCracken, viola da gambaGoodspeed Hall • 5845 S. Ellis Avenue3 • LUNCH TIME CONCERTS:Thursdays, .12; 15 -12:45 p.m. Reynolds Club North Lounge.Bring your lunch, Enjoy tlie music.M cQncerts free unless otherwise specified. Information at 753-2612.THE BLUE GARGOYLEVegetarian Food Service5655 South University(Inside the University Church)9:00 AM - 1:30 PMf 1Fill in the advertisement, cut out, and bring in between 9:00 AM and11:30 AM to receive 20 cents off any order. Good 11-19-80 thru 11-24-80.Check One:- First time customer ofB.G. Food Service- Very infrequent customer- Occasional customer- Frequent customer- Almost daily customer ofB.G. Foodj If you are not a first timer, why do you patronize the B.G. Food1 Service ? An y suggestions for us ?The ROCKY HORROR SHOWthe original stage version(on which the movie was basedfwith the London CompanyTickets on sale now at SAO Reynolds Club CorridorRoom 210, Ido Noyes on Nov. 17 at lunchtime2 THE GREY CITY JOURNAL FRIDAY, 14 NOVEMBER 1980Friday 14 Saturday 15 Sunday 16——-Monday 17 Tuesday 18 Wednesday 19 Thursday 20«Maggie KastARTDrawings by Johann Michael Rottmayr(1654-1730): An historically completeexhibition of the artist considered to bethe first great painter of the AustrianBaroque. Perhaps the most interestingaspect of the display is the freshness ofcolor the drawings exhibit: Becausethe drawings were protected from ex¬posure to light, the colors are more ex¬plicit than one would expect fromworks of this period. Accompanyingthe exhibit is a series of lectures byAustrian Baroque specialist andSmart Gallery Director Edward A.Maser. This week, he speaks on "Jo¬hann Michael Rottmayr and His Signi¬ficance," on Sunday, November 16 at2:00 p.m. in the Cochrane-Woods ArtCenter, 5540 S. Greenwood, Room 157.Free. The exhibit runs through De¬cember 14th in the David and AlfredSmart Gallery, 5550 S. Greenwood.Tuesday-Saturday, 10-4; Sunday,noon-4. Also free. —LJCMembership Discount: The Student Ac¬tivities Office can offer discounts onstudent memberships to the Art Insti¬tute if at least 150 people sign up forthem. Students will receive discountsat the museum store and the GoodmanTheatre, plus free admission to themuseum. All for only $9.00 (regularprice is $15.00). Sign up in Ida NoyesHall, room 210 by November 10. —LBNewspapers InAmerica: The newest exhibit at theMuseum of Science and Industry is aspectacular tour de force on the Amer¬ican newspaper industry whose cast ofcharacters includes our very ownHanna Gray. If you like capitalist realism you'll love this one. Sponsored bythe Robert R. McCormick CharitableTrust and designed by DeMartin,Marona, Cranstoun and Downes, theexhibit cost nearly $1 million to build.It is located behind the museum's steelindustry exhibit and will be on displaypermanently. — TPFILMCoal Miner's Daughter (Michael Apted,1979): The filmed verson of LorettaLynn's autobiography, starring SissySpacek as Loretta, Tommy Lee Jonesas her husband/manager MooneyLynn, and Beverly D'Angelo as PatsyCline. The script is hampered by thefacts of the case — as Loretta Lynn be¬comes less interesting, so does herstory. Still, she is so endearing in herearly scenes, and the film is so ambi¬valent about the value of the successshe finally achieves, that you leave thefilm with a profound sense of loss. Thegee it's lonely-at-the top syndromehas long been a movie cliche, but fewrecent movies have portrayed it soconvincingly as Coal Miner's Daughter. It's a deflated view of the Ameri¬can Dream, and all the more movingfor its characters' belief in thatdream. Also starring Levon Helm, inhis acting debut, as Loretta's father.Tonight at 6:30, and 11, in Quantrell.Doc; $1.50. - MA 'Rebecca (Alfred Hitchcock, 1940): Thiselegant but rather limp thriller is theonly Hitchcock film to win an Aca¬demy Award for Best Picture, which only proves the worth of AcademyAwards. David O. Selznick produced,and he demanded absolute fidelity tothe Daphne du Maurier bestseller onwhich it was based; with constraintslike that, it's remarkable Hitchcockmade anything of it at all. LaurenceOlivier, pouting and drooping his eye¬lids with Byronic elan, plays a noble¬man whose second wife (Joan Fon¬taine) is haunted by the posthumousinfluence of the first, the late Rebecca.Judith Anderson plays the wickedhousekeeper Mrs. Danvers, and thatvillain nonpareil George Sandersplays Rebecca's old lover. The filmhas a great opening and a couple offine sequences, particularly a disas¬trous costume party, but the overb¬lown romantic histrionics almost spoilthe whole thing. Even though it's bare¬ly Hitchcock, it's still entertaining inthe way only Hitchcock can be. Tomor¬row at 7 and 9:30 in Law School Audito¬rium. Law School Films; $1.50 — MAPierrot Le Fou (Jean-Luc Godard): Ar¬ guably Godard's most famous film,Pierrot le Fou is a film noir in color, atragedy about the absurdity of roman¬ticism in the world today. Dissatisfiedwith hits bourgois Parisian life andrich wife, Ferdinand (Belmondo) setsoff on a trip across France withMarianne (Karina), part-time babysitter, part-time revolutionary. Godard depicts the struggle between Ferdinand's yearning for a nostalgiccultural past and Marianne's fascina¬tion with terrorism, guns and money ina series of loosely linked sketcheswhose styles range from musical com¬edy to gangster movie. Perhaps theGodard film which most comprehensi¬vely elaborates the cinematic versionof the notion of woman was treacher¬ous enigma. And who can forget SamFuller's impromptu definition of cine¬ma? Saturday, November 15. The Ren¬aissance Society at the Bergman Gal¬lery, 4th floor Cobb Hall. 7 and 9 pm,Rs members free, $1 for others.-L JCEverything You Always Wanted to KnowAbout Sex But Were Afraid to Ask(Woody Allen, 1972): Woody Allen im¬proves vastly on Dr. David Reuben'ssententious best seller by telling us onething Reuben forgot — sex is basicallysilly. So is the movie, which makes noattempt to be insightful, consistent, orinstructive, and consequently is one ofAllen's friendliest movies. Uneven,but there are moments that match thebest film comedy of the decade —Gene Wilder's zoophile in "What isBestiality?" is a standout, as is thefinal segment on what happes duringorgasm. With John Carradine, BurtReynolds, and Tony Randall. Tomor¬row, Saturday Nov. 15, at 7, 8:45, and10:30, in Quantrell. Men's Crew; $ 1.50— MAShockproof (Douglas Sirk, 1948) : A Sirkmovie with a script by Sam Fuller andstarring Cornel Wilde adds up to amelodrama buff's dream. Wilde playsa parole officer in love with one of hisparolees (Patricia Knight) — a perfect situation for Sirk's oppressive miseenscene. Monday, Nov. 17, at 7:15 inQuantrell. Doc, $1.00 — MAThunder On the Hill (Douglas Sirk,1951): Sirk was never saddled with amore bombastic script than this. It hasto do with an accused murdress (AnnBlyth) awaiting execution, and the efforts of a nun (Claudette Colbert — anun, sure) to absolve her. Needless tosay, Sirk has a great time with it any¬way, digging into the inflated emotionswith verve — it's amost primal in it'sintensity. Monday, Nov. 17, at 8:45 inQuantrell. Doc, $1.00. — MAMUSICMarie-Claire Alain The preeminentFrench organist plays half a programof Bach, including the Partita on Seigegruesset, Jesu guetig and the Fan¬tasy and Fugue in g minor, and half aprogram of French music, includingthe 2e Fantaisie by her brother Jehan(killed in his early twenties duringWorld War II) and Franck's 3eChorale, in a minor. 8:00 p.m., Tuesday, November 18, Rockefeller Chapel. Students $6, others $10. -PTDNew Music Ensemble A concert ofchamber music by twentieth centurycomposers both living (Schuller, Ginastera) and ded (Stravinsky, Toch)and two I can't identify (Mitchell,Levin) which was to inaugurate Goodspeed Recital Hall will be held in Lexington Studio intead, since the newroom (predictably) isn't ready yet.8:00p.m., Sunday, November 16 Free-PTDRare Chamber Music Pianist JeffreySiegel joins the Chicago SymphonyChamber Players, including Dale Clevenger, hornist, for Mozart's PianoQuartet in g, K. 478, and Horn Quintetin Eb, K. 407, and Brahms' Horn Trioin Eb, Opus 40. The occasion is a benefit for the Akiba Schechter JewishDay School, but even if there werent' a worthy cause it would be a worthy concert: these people have been col¬leagues for years and play together asif they werent' busy most of the timeheading up the CSO string and hornsections. 3:00 P.M. Sunday, November16, Congreation Rodfei Zedek, 5200 S.Hyde Park. Students $4.00, others$8.50; tickets from the school (sameaddress) or by calling 493 8880.-PTDMusic of the Baroque Thomas Wikman'srenowned ensemble performs Han¬del's Ode to Saint Cecilia, Bach's twoviolin concerto, and two smallerpieces in the last offering of this par¬ticular program. 8:00 P.M. Tuesday,November 18, United Church of HydePark, 1448 E. 53rd St. S8.50-S17.50, students and seniors less; details at643-0600.Cave Art Ensemble: Having played to¬gether at various Hyde P,ark streetfairs and parties for the past couple ofyears, this band is 'getting its act to¬gether and taking it on the road.' Play¬ing spirited jazz and jazz-rock, andfeaturing the inventive compositionsof guitarist Martin Sereno, they ap¬pear tomorrow night at the Pub in IdaNoyes, 9:30 pm through 1:30 am.DANCEJoel Hall Dancers: See review in thisissue of the grey city journal. Friday,November 14, Saturday, November 15at 8:00 p.m., and Sunday, November 16at 3:00 p.m. at the Francis ParkerTheatre, 330 West Webster St. $7/$6.Dance concert in Hyde Park: MaggieKast, a Hyde Park resident whodances on the Northside, will performhere this weekend. Tonight and tomor¬row, The Blue Gargoyle will present"Dies irae (Day of Anger) — ForFriends and Strangers." This solodance/theatre piece is a series of elegies for the dead. As a funeral celebration, it explores the meaning of deaththrough several media and artists:Verdi's "Requim," children's rhymes,and poetry by Ann Sexton completment Maggie Kast's movement. Bothcelebratory and mournful, the pieceexplores feelings associated withdeath and dying: the desire to die,anger when faced with the inevitable,and awe at the relationship betweenlife and death. Inspired by the death ofa friend of Ms. Kast's, the dance ex¬presses a very personal religion. It isthought provoking and meaningful.Friday, November 14, and Saturday,November 15 at 8:00 at the Blue Gar¬goyle, 5655 S. University. $3.00 — MWTHEATRECharley's Aunt: Brandon Thomas' clas¬sic farce of college pranks concernstwo Oxford students — Charley andfriend — who want only to declaretheir love for two chaste young maid¬ens. But this simple plan is soon upsetby a series of mistaken identies, ineluding a man dressed up as Charley'srich aunt from Brazil. Produced bynearly every English speaking theatrein the world, Charley's Aunt playsthrough November 16th in the Reynolds Club Theatre (third floor) at 57thand University. Friday and Saturdayat 8.30, Sunday at 2:30 and 7:30. Tickets are $4.00 $2.50 for students and seniors. Call 753-3581 for ticket info andreservations. —LBMan of LaMancha: The Blackfriarspresent Dale Wasserman's Man of LaMancha under the direction of VickiChauvin. The musical plays November 13-15 at 8:00 p.m. and November 16th at 2:00 p.m. in the Assembly Hall at International House, 1414E. 59th St. General admission, $3 50;students, $2.50.Mrs. Warren's Profession: Mrs. War¬ren's Profession is Shaw's controversial attack on the hypocrisy of 19thcentury society. Young Vivie Warren— emancipated, intelligent, self suffi¬cient — is astounded to learn that hermother rose from poverty to richesthrough prostitution. Directedby Nicholas Rudall, Mrs. Warren'sProfession plays through December14th in the Reynolds Club at 57th andUniversity. Thursday through Satur¬day at 8:30, Sundays at 7 30. Call753 3581 for info and reservations.thegreycityjournal13th Year 14th Issue 14 November 1980Lester Afflick, Brad Bittan, Curtis Black, Leland Chait, Peter T. Daniels, JohnEgan, Susan Franuziak, Ingrid Gartner, Jim Guenther, Nancy Harward, JackHelbig, Danny Kahn, Jeff Makos, Judy McCarthy, David Miller, Adam O'Connor, Mark Pohl, Renee Saracki, Margaret Savage, Bruce Shapiro, John Sva-tek, Michele White, Brent Widen, Ken Wissoker.Special Contributions this week from Scott Buchanan, Don Dayhoff and K.G.Wilkins.Molly McQuade, Unclassifiable Page editor.Mike Alper, film editor.Richard Pettengill, music editor.Lucy Conniff, book editor.Lisa Bloch, managing editor.Edited by Laura Cottingham.Production this week by Lisa Bloch, Laura Cottingham and David Miller.The grey city journal is published weekly by the Chicago Maroon, Ida NoyesHall, 1212 East 59th Street, Chicago, Illinois. For advertising information, callWanda at 753 3263.FRIDAY, 14 NOVEMBER 1980 THE GREY CITY JOURNAL 3Wallflower OrderDANCING UNDER DIFFERENT ORDERSby MICHELE WHITEExcept for an occasional entrancing mo¬ment, Joel Hall Dancers are pretty but uninspiring. If the performances tonight, Saturday and Sunday are like last weekend's,the company will attempt to do too muchwith too little. The problem with their concerts extends beyond nervous dancers,lack of technique, or even bad choreography. Rather, it reflects serious questions about art and the artistic process.A comparison with a feministdance/theatre troupe in Chicago lastweekend will clarify the issues. As Wallflower Order's “Collective Song" indicated, working under an egalitarian philosophy is trying and time-consuming. But,doing everything themselves—'from designing a new brochure to rehearsing toplanning their tour schedule—creates acloseness among the members, and thisstrong group spirit permeates WallflowerOrder's performance.Joel Hall, on the other hand, directs JoelHail Dancers. The dancers execute hisideas and interact with each other throughhim. Occasionally, this method results inprovocative choreography. For instance,several pieces end with stunning groupposes, and in “Elektra," the four furiesfloat in and around each other. Usually,however, the lack of cohesion caused me tocompare individual dancers. Their movements felt stilted, as if not completely theirown.That the whole performance is an exten¬sion and a magnification of one man becomes apparent as soon as Hall himselfsteps on stage. Joel Hall can dance!- Inboth appearance and movement, he is dra¬matic and stunning, jazzy and sophisticat¬ed. He would like his performers to be likehim. Unfortunately, they were not able todo it.Hall ends up relying on flashy steps thathis dancers can not execute. They look em¬barrassingly humorous especially when hecaptures the audience and clarifies whatthe steps should look like. He also dependsheavily on impressive lighting techniques,like silhouettes. The concert had numerous“professional” touches that separated theawe struck audience from the spotlightedperformers, instead of cultivating inti¬macy between them, as does WallflowerOrder. In his dances, Joel Hall re explores wornout themes with modern movements.“Nightwalker” took advantage of the“natural” tension between the sexes. Inthe established pattern, men carry andsupport women. Women wearing slinkydresses fling their hips. A man throws a» woman to the floor, suggesting seduction.Men fling their hips.In contrast, Wallflower Order breaksdown the stereotypes that Hall perpetu¬ates. For example, they recreated the dis¬comfort of a seventh grade sock hop. Thegirls were so uptight about fulfilling expected roles that they didn't see how ill fit¬ted they were for them.In “Pieces of Lies," Wallflower Orderexplored the characters that one womanplayed in her life: tomboy, trophy winner,burn out, mad romantic, and tutued balletstudent. None of these were her, but, sheasked, “If I don't lie, who am I?" She con¬cluded by stating that if "I were I," shewouldn't be so cooperative and agreeable.She would argue and not let “You" alwaysget your way.In another place, the dancers asked eachother if they had ever committed indecentacts with women. “Yes," one said “acts ofomission." She had failed to come to thesupport of women in need. Women needthe help of other women.United by a single ribbon around theirwaists, the dancers began the concert witha sensuous closeness. This sense ofwomen's solidarity previewed the feelingof the entire evening. I enjoyed seeingwomen take hold of a women's art. Womendanced for women about women.To contrast these two groups may be un¬fair, in that I'm comparing a superb col¬lective with a mediocre traditional troupe.Collectives, nevertheless, have much tosay for themselves. Their communal spiritcan carry them through technical difficul¬ties: Wallflower Order sometimes becamelaborious or melodramatic, but in the context of the supportive atmosphere they hadcreated, these faults were easily over¬looked.The traditional structure in which JoelHall works creates interpersonal tensionswhich must be overcome in performance.Dancers also need full mastery of theirroutines before they can explore the expressiveness of the movements. When JoelHall's dancers can overcome these obst¬acles, they are striking. UM4 ZU /U^/i£dAjn4ERLANGERCla^iU' J&95wtthprxcfr m our classic tradition this JOCKputt fatytwit far u indy a fafi nctxsrproduct of uncompromsciWfuseo*ty die classic all natural uytrcijuntsIwnvsekctlxrrkiijorait unusucdlu nek metis*'(bacasUtdoaWsCkivfcd fra subtle accent purr yeast aeu( crystal dust wstff-ls-jwtvtotcommonlyyoo<(Seer the absdutc fcnatwtto*CONTfNTS 12 hi 01 • BfcERc 1980 Jos Schlit/ Brewing Company Milwaukee Wl4 THE GREY CITY JOURNAL FRIDAY, 14 NOVEMBER 19801THE DISHONORABLE PEACEOF RAYRayby Barry HannahAlfred A Knopf$7.95by JACK HELBIGIt is terribly, excruciatingly difficult tobe at peace...when all our history is war.Barry Hannah, Ray.Suicide rates are always higher inpeacetime. It seems without war peoplebeconrte selfish; they covet their neigh¬bor's goods, fortune, wife, husband. Theybecome neurotic, bite their nails, smoketheir cigarettes and make unreasonabledemands of the world. But everyone getstogether for a good war. During a "goodwar," life's petty pace goes unnoriced ascitizens guard against the enemy's as¬sault. A mobilized society makes everyonefeel important; they exist for a purpose —victory. But in times of peace, the individ¬ual loses his wartime importance: he nolonger feels the daily excitement of war,and his life loses meaning. The nobilityand glory of war become the mundanityand triviality of peacetime life.The half hearted Vietnam War was farfrom glorious, but our adjustment to peacewas as difficult as our adjustment to thepeace following World War II. The immo¬rality of the war spread first into publiclife, and from there into the Americanhome. Pleasure became more importantthan love, the self more important thanfriendship. National Lampoon, with itswhining, self-centered, mastabatory com¬edy, became the voice of cynical America.Barry Hannah's novel describes thisAmerica of the '70's and '80's.Ray was a pilot in Vietnam, and, at thetime of the novel, is a highly paid doctor.He has a sexy wife, a beautiful lover, somekids, a few friends, and a Lear jet which flies him aimlessly around the country. Helives a meaningless life, constantly remembering snippets of Vietnam, or ima¬gining he is fighting with Jeb Stuart in theCivil War; he is also alienated and semi¬schizophrenic. Ray is a complex, difficult,interesting character, and Hannah has tobe commended for his craft in creatinghim.Hannah has Ray narrate Ray in a halfthird, half first person style, designed topull the rug out from under the readerwhenever possible: "Ray, you are a doctorand you are in a hospital in Mobile, exceptnow you are a patient but you're still me."Ray narrates the story in a halting, frag¬mentary fashion. Chapters and abruptly,and sentences meander as Ray refuses toconfront his memories. But Ray cannotescape the war either; he cannot separatethe beautiful in life from his visions ofNam:Westy and I are hugging. The thrillgoes around the world. I seem tohave made her pregnant...(the nextday) it turns out she wasn't pregnant. My brain is in squalor and tor¬ment.But now its like another friend lost inNam."Edward, what you got?""I've got something, something onme!"Then I saw the SAM missile go intohis exhaust. It was a big white flower spraying in the night. There wasEdward, Lieutenant Commander forSt. Paul, Minnesota...falling inpieces.Behind every action, every musing andquestion, Ray fears, "I should have delivered him. I should have been awake."Barry Hannah has also cleverly confused the sequence of events in the novel,leaving the reader with no idea of when the Barry Hannahstory is being told (during Ray's stay inthe mental hospital, or after his releaseand return to normal life?). Often past andpresent are woven together so well wecan't place the point when today's musingbecomes yesterday's action. As a result,the book is vivid (and infuriating, if thereader prefers traditional, chronologicalstories). Hannah furthr confuses the narrative by jumping from place to place, aquality I enjoyed, but again, one whichwould frustrate the traditional reader. Finally, Hannah has written a book full ofwitty situations and prime satire. In fact,the finest, wittiest sentence is concernedneither with Ray nor with war, but withRay's Persian cats:My three well fed and luxuriouslymoving furred Persian Cats roam- around with their big eyes.Yes, Barry Hannah has written a clever book; disguising himself as Ray, he hasfractured his short book (113 pages) intosixty two chapters and further into smalllumps of sentences. No reader can fail tofeel Ray's pain; to read this novel is to liveRay's confusion of guilt, pain, and compul¬sion. We empathisize and that is the pointof the novel. When Hannah visited thecampus a while ago, his reading wasmarked by two quirks: his trumpet play¬ing and his speech that "we should all loveone another." That plea for love motivatesRay and causes Ray's sad alienation.It is unfortunate that only wars seem tounite men; only when we are working together to kill another nation of men do westop bickering among ourselves. Onlywhen we are faced with death do we discover those qualities which are life giving.love, friendship, courage and discipline.Perhaps this is why all "history is war"and why "it is terribly, excruciatingly dif¬ficult to be at peace."FROM SCHOOLGIRL TO CHICAGO MACHINISTFighting Jane: Mayor Jane Byrne and theChicago MachineBy Bill Granger and Lori GrangerThe Dial Press$12.95by BRAD BITTANJane Byrne is a complicated woman.Since her 1979 mayoral victory in Chicago,her term has been full of controversy.Fighting Jane attempts to confront thesecontroversies by tracing Byrne's politicalcareer. By combining extensive researchand a keen journalistic eye, the Grangershave assembled a penetrating and lucidprofile of an unusual political figure.Margaret Jane Burke was born on May24, 1934. She was baptized a RomanCatholic, lived with her family on the Northwest Side of Chicago, and graduatedfrom St. Scholastica High School. After a"slow" freshman year at St. Mary's Col¬lege in Indiana, she attended Barat College in Illinois. Jane's decision to attendBarat was an early indication of the kind ofenvironment she was attracted to:There was something attractive, too,about the tiny size of Barat. All her lifeJane Byrne would be a person who liked toshine, to be the star of any gathering, theperson in control.After graduating from college, she married William Byrne. Just two years later,he was killed in an airplane crash while Jane Byrneserving in the Marines. Not long after,Byrne got a job on the Chicago Committeeon Urban Opportunity. It was a minor one,but it did give Byrne the chance to workunder the auspices of Richard Daley andhis mighty Democratic Machine. Afterseveral years, she was transferred to theDepartment of Consumer Sales, Weightsand Measures, one of fifty six departmentsin the gigantic bureaucracy of Chicago. AsCommissioner of this Department, Jane was an instantaneous success. As theGrangers point out:Jane Byrne surprised everyone from thebeginning. She still dressed like a teenager— wearing short skirts, ruffles, brightcolored eye shadow and lots of fussy bowsand flowers in her blond hair — and shewas dismissed at first as a dumb blondwho would be better as a secretary insteadof commissioner But she was tenacious inrooting out corruption in Weights andMeasures and that surprised them in theHall nearly as much as Daley's continuingchampionship of her.The rise of Jane Byrne within theChicago Machine structure started severalmonths after Mayor Daley's humiliationby party liberals at the 1972 DemocraticConvention. One day Daley called Jane into his office and said: " 'Maybe we havebeen wrong, I think some mistakes havebeen made. Maybe we should broaden thebase of the party. If we were serving theneeds of the people, we wouldn't have thistrouble.' " She was quickly identified withthe opponents of the party's reform wing.When Mayor Daley died on December 20,1976, Jane Byrne's political career wasjust beginning.After Michael Bilandic became Mayor, aseries of issues ("Taxigate," the problemof removing snow during the hard winterof 1979) made him extremely unpopular.Jane Byrne had thought about running forMayor during that whole winter. Why didshe run? The Grangers explain it this way: Jane Byrne missed the stage, the brightlights, the news conferences, the sense ofexercising power and of being part of theinner club of people who exercised power.Byrne won the election with 82% of thevote, better than Daley had ever done.Since Jane Byrne has been Mayor, shehas consistently tried to eliminate the iniquities that a massive Political Machinenecessarily generates.‘This point has beerbrought out in her confrontation with theBus Drivers' Union, and in her handling ofthe Firemens' strike earlier this year. Oneagrees with the Grangers in saying thather unpopularity is self induced. However,the Grangers are extremely stubborn intheir journalistic approach when theyclaim that "she should build coalitionsrather than work against -them." It is arare virtue indeed when a politician hasthe courage and decency to overlook whatmight be politically advantageous topreserve the public good. Like all electedofficials, she has to deal sensitively withthe men and women around her. However,in practically all cases that concern thegeneral welfare of the city, she has acteddecisively and fearlessly. The followingstatement about Byrne from politicalcritic Dora Williams isdifticult tocontest:The point is that Jane Byrne — you neverdefeat her. She attacks and she attacksand she attacks and this is a characteristicI think she shares with a lot of men thatmost women don't have . . . She just goesright ahead and keeps pushing.FRIDAY, 14 NOVEMBER 1980 THE GREY CITY JOURNAL - 5Produced by Bruca Springstoan. Jon Landau, Stave Van Zandt. Management-. Jon Landau."Cokjmbto’' it a trademark of CBS Inc. * 1980 CBS Inc.AVAILABLE AT ALLSPIN-IT LOCATIONS$10.99 L.P. or TAPE TALES OF TWO SPACESGYM-DANDYHALL-OWE’ENCONCERTThe University Symphony havefound a hall that does justice to theirsound. The stone and glass walls of theIda Noyes Gym ensure reverberation,while the small volume of the spacekeeps it from being excessive; andwhatever you put under a basketballcourt to make it resilient, as well asthe wood itself, aid the transfer of vi¬brations to the listeners. (The princip¬le is the same as in the rebuilt AveryFisher Hall in Lincoln Center.) Themajority of the audience Friday nightsat on the floor; those who opted forthe uncommodious spectator's galleryprobably didn't hear as well, thoughthey did get a better view of the cos¬tumes. This Halloween concertbrought out more angels than witches,at least one sorcerer, and a conductorlooking like a fairy from Arthur Rack-ham's Midsummer Night's Dream il¬lustrations.Barbara Schubert led her forcesthrough Mussorgsky/Rimsky-Korsa¬kov's Night on Bald Mountain, Sait- Saens' Danse Macabre, and Dukas'Sorcerer's Apprentice. The first andthird were delightful, thanks in part tomarvellous brass and woodwind sec¬tions — I must particularly mentionthe clarinet soloist (anonymous, sinceinstead of programs there was apompous announcer who mispron¬ounced "Saint-Saens"), probably thesame one who has been gracing Sym¬phony concerts for several years now.The Danse suffered from a ploddingtempo and absence of Viennese lilt (noone could waltz that slowly or stodgi-ly) and from the typical suave tone ofconcertmaster Michael Jinbo. Thestrings of the solo violin (representingDeath, as whom the player wasgarbed) are tuned tighter than nor¬mal, to produce a shriller sound thatbites through the orchestral texture,but Jinbo made it sound too good, toolike himself; similarly, a few yearsago in a Mandel Hall P. D. Q. Bachconcert the hosepipe player was sogood he made it sound like a horn — inboth cases, the burlesque was miss¬ing.This first major concert of the year— allowed just five rehearsals —augurs well for the Music Departmentin the season of its move at long last tonew and adequate facilities. If Good-speed and Mandel complement theSymphony, there's good listening instore. —Peter T. DanielHUNDREDS DISSERVEDAT BRAZEN ARCHES"The Chicago Chamber Brass wasestablished in 1977 to bring excitingperforming of the finest brass musicto people of all ages. This dynamicbrass quintet, made up of seasonedprofessional musicians, has distinguished itself in the Chicago areathrough formal recitals, 'pops' con¬certs, and a series of innovative edu¬cational programs." — Program Bro¬chure.The Chicago Chamber Brass presented the Rockefeller Chapel debut ofits fall series on Friday, November 7.Although the programming was excel¬lent and the musicianship outstanding, the acoustic reverberation madehe outstanding program insipid. Technical expertise was lost, and virtuosi¬ty drifted, wasted, into the cavernousexpanse of the chapel's lovely archi¬tecture.The concert consisted of nine pieces,ranging in style from Bach's "Little"Fugue in g minor to "Bess, You Is MyWoman Now" from Gershwin's Porgyand Bess, all played with a style andpresence as dynamic as any composercould ask.Ornamentation of the fugueand of a Canzona by Scheidt were asflawless as the dynamics in the Earleof Oxford's March (Byrd) and the Fi¬nale from String Quartet Op. 18, No. 2(Beethoven) were breathtaking, but,again, most of it was lost if one didn't know the music and what to listenfor.A highlight of the evening was offered after the intermission in theform of an "Andante and Rondo"from Hummel's EB Trumpet Concer¬to. The solo trumpeter, Thomas Par-riott (an excellent player from Texas)gave a performance which was spar¬kling, and for the first time in the evening, was aided by the hall. The andante soared and floated almostethereally through the echos to makeall the other offenses of the hall tolerable. The Gerswhin likewise "worked"for them, creating an over all favor¬able conclusion to the evening.The concert closed with Berlioz"Trimphal March" and was followedwith a campy, but fun, encore ofSousa's "Stars and Stripes Forever"(piccolo obbligato furnished by piccolo trumpets).The Chicago Chamber Brass' firstconcert of the season should probablybe considered a success, and futureones should be looked forward to withgreat anticipation. A more agreeabfehall would be nice; however, with thetalent, craftsmanship, and artisticelan displayed in the November 7thperformance, even that problem couldbe overcome with a bit of effort.—Scott Buchanan & Don Dayhoff“The River.”Twenty new songs onBrace Springsteen and The E Street Band.On Columbia Records and Tapes.SWEET HONEYFLOWSAT MEDINAHTEMPLE"We come warmWe come gentleWe come strong... Like Honey in the Rock."Sweet Honey in the Rock is a musi¬cal collective of black women. Singingwith only the accompaniment ofshakers and beaded gourds, the groupsoars and moans, expressing the ex¬hilaration of freedom along with thefrustration of political, economic, andsocial bondage.Performing a benefit for the Coali¬tion of Labor Union Women at the Me-dinah Temple on October 25, SweetHoney was a quintet composed of Eve¬lyn Harris, Yasmeen Williams, YsayeBarnwell, Geraldine Harding, andBernice Reagon. Along with ShirleyJohnson, who gracefully and vividlyinterpreted the concert in sign lan¬guage, they took the stage like de¬scending angels, resplendent in flow¬ing gowns. The concert began with aBernice Reagon composition filledwith music of the earth, the whish andwhirl of sea and wind, the voice of thedead "not under the earth/'Tis the an¬cestor's breath."Reagon, the principle composer andleader of the group, brought SweetHoney together in 1973. Since then,more than 16 women have been withthe group at some time. Now an oralhistorian at the Smithsonian institute,Reagon has been singing for liberationsince the early 1960's when she worked Sweet Honeywith the Student Non-violent Coordin¬ating Committee (SNCC) FreedomSingers. This experience in the CivilRights Movement was brought to thestage as the group sang the story ofFanny Lou Hamer, a singer and acti¬vist who was beaten and jailed for try¬ing to register Mississippi sharecrop¬pers to vote.Sweet Honey sang of the black expe¬rience from Soweto to the suburbs.The "Easy Street" that upwardly mo¬bile blacks may strive for turns outnot to be so easy, according to thisrhythm n' blues flavored number. Oneof the most striking pieces of the eve¬ning was an intertwining of individualAfrican chants into a swelling, throbbing whole. They sang of political op¬pression in America and South Africain songs like "Joanne Little," "Soweto," and "Echoes of the Past," a trib¬ute to the Wilmington Ten.The influence of the black church in the Rockpervades their music. As Ysaye Barn¬well said, "I sing because the Word isof such vital importance to the Exis¬tence of Black people. I sing withSweet Honey because singing theWord is like taking communion."Their repertoire contains many spiri¬tuals, including "There is a Balm inGilead" and "Ain't that Good News,"which they sang with extraordinaryfervor. Closing the concert BerniceReagon announced, "We'd like to endthe evening with a hymn." "AmazingGrace" was never before so excitingand rich.Though the predominantly white au¬dience was highly appreciative, theyseemed too inhibited to participate inthe music. A singing, shouting, stomp¬ing crowd would have added much tothe excitement onstage. Nonetheless,Sweet Honey in the Rock is a culturalawakening and a spiritual experience.— Jim Guenthera >laj(>r (\mrt Studio I Vtkluct i<>i 11 )y I Jranc 1< mTl i< )inasdirected i)v Michael I IiklchrandOct.81.\ov.l.2. 7.8.9. 14.15.Hi8 W )|»n» (78<) Stin.cvcs.)Sunday mat inccs 28<)84 (82 50stiidcuts.scniorcitiy.cilN)Reynolds ( lubTliincl Floor Tlicat57th & l niversitv Avc. 758 8581 IV6 THE GREY CITY JOURNAL FRIDAY, 14 NOVEMBER 1980Appearing at the Riviera Theatreor* November 15th, 1980DARKNESSON THE EDGE OF ROCKPXLE.ROCKPILE IS NOW. Nick Lowe, Dave Edmunds,Billy BremnerandTbrry Williamsbring you “Seconds Of Pleasure.”No life is complete with¬out “Seconds Of Pleasure.”On Columbia Records andTbpes.‘Columbia’ is a trademark of CBS Inc©1980 CBS Inc.Give t he gift of music.FIRST TIME OFFERED:SUPERB COUNTRY ESTATE -IN THE CITY!Quality home on Vi acre in lovely Kenwood area_ $325,000dfiazfotte OJiftihom ~Re.al Citatc Co. (312)493-0666THE EPISCOPAL CHURCHAT THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOPRESENTSFACULTY-STAFF LUNCH DISCUSSIONEVERYMAN AND THE CHURCHWith DAVID BEVINGTONTuesday, November 18 11:45 -1 PMBISHOP BRENT HOUSE5540 S. Woodlawn CHtNfSE-AMERICAtfRESTAURANTSpecializing mCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOpen Daily11 AM to 8 30 PMClosed Monday1318 EAST 63rdMU 4-1062 The Poetry Center<►1 the Museum of C onirmf >or,ir\ ArtpresentsNED ROREMIN RECITALELSA CHARLSTON DOROTHY KEYSERFRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21-8 PMTHORNE HALL • NORTHWESTERNUNIVERSITY • CHICAGO CAMPUS740 N. Lake Shore - $4.00 admission$2.00 for Students—MCA Membersnot for profit550 547.50NEW AND USEDDesks • Chairs • File CabinetsSorters • Much MoreDelivery AvailableBRAND EQUIPMENT8550 S. south ChicagoPhone: RE 4-2111Open Doily »:30 AM-5:00 PM, Sat. 9:00 AM-3:00 PMEye ExaminationsFashion Eye WearContact LensesDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist(53 Kimbark Plaza)1200 E. 53rd St.493-8372Intelligent people know the differencebetween advertised cheap glasses orcontact lenses and competent pro¬fessional service.Our reputation is your guarantee ofsatisfaction.V / OpenHouseSat. Nov. 1511 -4ASingularGroup57th & Woodlawn(Unitarian Church;many newarts & crafts.Stop in!refreshments/AMATEURNIGHT"Open Mike”"Musical”Fridav, Nov. 147 - 9 PM11 AM - 10 PMMONDAY - SATURDAYCLOSED SUNDAY57th & UNIVERSITYNEXT TOHUTCHINSON COMMONS^ )FRIDAY. 14 NOVEMBER 1980 THE GREY CITY JOURNAL 7iiiiiijjiimimiinuiiunnii by K.G. WILKINSHe's the perfect guest for all your par¬ties. He'll call you up every Thursdayand ask, are you having a party? Do youknow who's having a party? Will the foodbe good? All the people you introducehim to say he seems pretty wild. Butyou've seen worse. He goes to partieswith you and says I've got to check outthat girl over there in the corner. Hestarts arguments with all your friendsand lies to your thesis advisor. Wheneveryou get to a party, it's dying out becauseyou got lost before he forgot the addressand the hosts' names. Ever resourceful,he borrows cigarettes from everyone andstuffs them into a Qualoisecarton afterripping off the filter tips. Then, after he'sinformed all the women that he's theworld's greatest pornographic poet(because I know what women like),Donne starts to hop around from room toroom, looking for a rich virgin.Samuel Coleridge takes the joint thatsomeone hands him and goes into thebathroom with it. There he samples allthe cologne and finds the birth control.Blind Milton shaves himself carefully,leaving shaving cream all over thebathmat. Then he strolls out, having setthe towels on fire in the tub. Now DylanThomas is ready to start some action —the gin he had with dinner and the 3beers he's had since are beginning towear off. So Baudelaire grabs a bottle ofvodka and wraps it in his jacket. Hetakes a coke bottle and fills it with water.Everyone is convinced that he'sdangerous, so they leave him alone.You're pouring your warm beer into theavocado tree when one of your oldfriends asks where you met thismadman. You bum a cigarette and denyintent. The two of you discuss the lousypoetic atmosphere of Dostoevsky untilyou come to a disagreement over ThePossessed. You say that any fool can see the sexual overtones of a Russian winterand she says weather is weather isweather. You decide to find Percy Byshe.He's talking to some girl in tight yellowsatin jeans about his friendship with theeditor of the NY Review of Books. Youput your cigarette out in the wanderingJew and tap him on the shoulder. Heshows you the orange drink mix he'sstuffed into his sweatshirt. You tell WaltWhitman that it's time to go and he nods.He tells the girl he'll gether into the ABA convention for sure andgrabs your arm. He picks up his jacketand you carry the coke bottle.When you go, the relieved hostess seesyou both to the door. Lord Byron writeshis autograph on her doorframe with amagic marker before kissing her good¬bye. Passionately. Backs arched. Hercurrent lover exchanges glances withyou: one disgusted for one blase. Whenyou get in the elevator, Appolinaire hitsall the buttons. As the two of you walkdown the street, mixing the orangepowder with the water and vodka, apatrolman gives William Wordsworth a ByronLIFEgood looking over. (It's alright, officer,she's my sister, he shouts.) When youarrive at your front door, T.S. Eliot ripsup a hyacinth bush and gives it to you.You ask for his last cigarette and buy itwith a kiss. Then you send Ted home toSylvia.When you get upstairs you plug in thetypewriter, pull the phone out of the wall,and take a handful of aspirin with abottle of mineral water. The cat liesdown on your pillow, but you've got agood poem to write tonight.of the IssueROckefeueE cb\pei pceseivrs The fr)0£Ai tAie ofevepyiman£> the qxfondshipe si qeoece pt\ybipecteo By cll€N nOApTjNDates: November 14,15,16,21,22,23 28,29,30Times: 8:30 p.m.; Saturday matinee ai. 2:00 p.m.Place: 59th & Woodlawn AvenuePrices: $5 general, $4 student/senior citizen: matineechildren under 12,2.50; 3.50 generalSPECIAL BENEFIT PERFORMANCE FOR COURT THEATRE,THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 20 AT 8:30 P.M., *10.00THE GREY CITY JOURNAL FRIDAY, 14 NOVEMBER 1980'i iijiiiiinip1 ii ' i ininTU€SMY, N0M€MB€R187=30 P.M.IDd NOYG5 5UN PARLOR /iTTcnp/ince rcquircdSTUDGNTGOJGRNMGNTMGGTINGThe Chicago Maroon, Friday, November 14, 1980 1 5SPORTSHarriers to RegionalsBy Andy RothmanThe Chicago Seven invades Rock Island,Illinois this Saturday. No riot police shouldbe needed, not even if they run well.Seven representatives of the University ofChicago cross-country team, replete with“Chicago Seven” shirts, will be competingin the Midwest Regional meet at AugustanaCollege as part of the NCAA Division IIIchampionships on Saturday.The Maroons and teams from 50 otherschools in the region will be competing forthe right to run in the Divison III nationalmeet at the University of Rochester inRochester, New York next week. The top sixteams and the best six individuals from non¬qualifying teams will go to the nationals.Chicago Coach Ted Haydon rated histeam’s chances earlier this week, “I’d haveto say that the team is a longshot to qualify,even though it is a flat course and most ofthem have run it before. We are running inthe toughest district in the country.” Lastyear the Maroons finished 12th, but MikeAxinn, now a junior, did qualify for the na¬tionals.Axinn has won each race he has enteredthis fall except one, and that was a secondplace finish in the University of Chicago In¬vitational. Among his wins this season arethe Midwest Conference and Beloit Invita¬tional meets.Haydon is confident of Axinn’s chances inthe regional meet, “I think Mike will runvery well. He’s much improved this yearover last. He ran a 4:31 mile Tuesday nighton the track, which is very fast for cross¬country. It was a good sign because I think the opening mile is very important in theseraces.”Other Maroons competing in the regionalmeet will be seniors Rich Heinle (13th in theconference meet) and Tom Matiski (16th).Joining them will be junior Art Knight(24th), sophomore Frank McGoff andfreshmen Bob Fisher and Aaron Rourke.The Maroons may not actually be enteringtheir best team in the meet. Senior DaveGreen has been busy with interviews atmedical schools and has missed severalpractices thus deciding to forego the region¬al competition.Wabuno HoldsChamberlinat BayBy David GruenbaumNot many people turned out for theUndergraduate IM Football Championship,figuring that Ed’s Bar and Grill would whipChamberlin handily, and expecting to see anEd’s-Wabuno Bay matchup in the HannaBowl. But as people poured in for the All-University final, they were shocked to learnthat Wabuno was playing Chamberlin in¬stead.Wabuno Bay came into the game a littlebit confused. After a classic battle with theStiffs, they had figured to romp in the HannaBowl. But because they had scouted thewrong team, they did not know much aboutthe undergraduate champions. Chamberlin,on the other hand, had done their •jjj Graduate All-StarsOffensiveQuarterback — Peter Reaven (Stiffs), Alan Burnsjy (Wabuno Bay)Center — Bill Gardner (Capitalists)Tight End — Brett Schaffer (Wabuno Bay)Guards — Frank Kettle (Junkyard Dogs), John•X Grayhack (Stiffs)Wide Receiver — Phil Olson (Junkyard Dogs),•:j: Phil Harris (Epstein's Animals).DefensiveDefensive Line — Alan Hergert (Bovver Boys),:$ Judah Epstein (Wabuno Bay)Middle Linebacker — Kevin Tetsworth (Wabuno£• Bay)Cornerbacks — Mark Meier (Stiffs), CheeksMorris (Junkyard Dogs)£: Safety — Dave Schmidt (Stiffs), Bill Pellatier(Wabuno Bay)■x Punter — Tim Dove (Capitalists)•iji Honorable MentionPaul Thompson and Don Devine, WR (Capital-X; ists), Todd Lewis, DL (Big Med Machine), Pete*:•: Wendell, S, Bill Garcia, CB, Patrick Longan, CB(Res Ipsa Loqar), Doug McTaggert, OL (Bowery•X Boys), Marty Gleason, CB (Manifest Destiny),S; Mark Patrizo, S (Chicago Seven I), Rick Peters,WR (Smegma Breath II), Tom Spratt, OL (FlyingCockroaches), Don Huber, DL (Wabuno Bay).homework, sending people out to watchseveral of Wabuno’s games.Consequently, when the game opened,Chamberlin held the advantage. Quarter¬back Mark Hoffman was able to rip apartWabuno’s zone defense with throws to hisclutch receivers, Don Pasulka and WayneBlaszak. On the other side of the field, AlanBurns, Wabuno’s quarterback, was havingproblems. Whenever he’d throw to his bigreceivers, Kevin Tetsworth and Brett Schaf¬ fer, there would be a flock of Chamberlindefenders around to block the ball, or knockit out of the receiver’s hands. Burns wasalso heavily pressured by Chamberlin’s ex¬cellent rush, which featured All-Stars KurtFlorian and Randy Fiete. The pair sackedBurns several times. Burns ultimately hitTetsworth in the end zone for a touchdownand Wabuno took the lead 6-0. Chamberlincame roaring back to score an apparenttouchdown, but the play was called back foran illegal block. Chamberlin, however, keptits compusure and Hoffman came rightback to fire a touchdown pass th WayneBlaszak, to tie the score at 6 as the half end¬ed.In the second half Wabuno dominated butcould not score, mainly due to the incredibledefensive play of All-Star safety, DonPasulka. Meanwhile, Wabuno’s own All-Stars, Judah Epstein and Don Huber, weregetting an excellent rush on Chamberlinquarterback, Hoffman. The rush stalled theChamberlin offense and finally, with fiveminutes left in the game, Burns hit BillPellatier in the end zone for a touchdown.The extra point gave Wabuno a 13-6 lead.Chamberlin mounted a final drive as timeran out, but could not score.In the undergraduate final, Chamberlinbeat Ed’s Bar and Grill 31-25. Chamberlinjumped off to a 25-6 lead at halftime asquarterback Hoffman burned Ed’s defen¬sive zone repeatedly for long gains andtouchdowns. Chamberlin put great pressureto Ed’s All-Star quarterback, BrianHolmgren, sacking him several times — thefirst time that had happened this year. Ed’sBar & Grill fought back to a 25-18 score, asHolmgren threw touchdown passes to ChrisLombardi and Doug Barge, but a missed ex¬tra point and another Chamberlintouchdown buried Ed’s.r***T0 ALL UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO REGISTERED STUDENTS****An Announcement From The University Health Services:If yon need medical attention daring hoars that the University Health Serviceis closed (evenings, weekends, and major national holidays), please utilize onrPhysician-on-Call. If yonr medical condition warrants emergency treatment, theUniversity Health Service physician will facilitate yonr being seen in the BillingsEmergency Room. A UNIVERSITY HEALTH SERVICE PHYSICIAN CAN MAKE THEDIFFERENCE BETWEEN WAITING TWO HOURS IN THE EMERGENCY ROOM VERSUSNO WAIT AT ALLThe list of University Health Service physicians on call forthis month is available at the following locations:— all University Housing System staff (supervisors, masters,resident and assistant resident heads)— all divisional deans— the Student Hotline (753-1777)— Campus Security (753-2211)— Telepage (947-5700)— the Billings Emergency Room (947-5411)— the Hospitals and Clinics Administrator-on-Call (947-5700)— and is posted on the University Health Service door (BillingsHospital S-l 19)TTCP TT1H-The Chicago Maroon, Friday, November 14, 1980 The University of ChicagoAlumni AssociationpresentsLIFE AFTER GRADUATION:OPTIONS IN PUBLIC POLICYan informal discussion of careeropportunities in public policyfor interested studentsGuests:The Honorable Richard H. Newhouse, Jr.SenatorState of IllinoisPastora CaffertyAssociate-ProfessorSchool of Social Service AdministrationCommittee on Public Policy StudiesAnn GrahnExecutive OfficerArgonne Universities Association(Former Program Coordinator,Center for Policy Study,University of Chicago)12 noon, November 18,1980Robie House, 5757 Woodlawn AvenueBring your own lunch. (Beverages provided)DanBreslauCollege Football, Chicago StyleBy John CondasA typical Saturday afternoon — I am sit¬ting in front of a 25-inch color televisionwatching 70,000 Texas Longhorn fans hold¬ing 2 fingers in the air, gesturing “Hook’em, Horns!” or I am in Birmingham, Ala¬bama, watching the Crimson Tide, in 25-inch glory, roll up mammoth scores againstpowerhouses such as Southern Mississippiand The Citadel. During any one of theseweekly spectacles, I am constantly remind¬ed of the “colorful pageantry of college foot¬ball”. From USC to Penn State, millions ofcollege students drink to, cheer for, andworship their college football teams. Unfor¬tunately, you may be thinking, we at theUniversity of Chicago are not privileged toexperience this wonderful pageantry on such a large scale. Stagg Field used to hold70,000 fans; its replacement holds 1000.Nevertheless, the “pageantry of collegefootball” does exist at the University. It isknown here, however, as the “colorfulpageantry of Intramural football.”Nearly every afternoon, frustrated under¬grads and once-great graduate students suitup and play football the way you would ex¬pect U. of Chicago students to play football:wobbly passes, running backs tripping onyard stripes, and wide receivers droppingpasses that Jim Thorpe could catch evendead. Yet, even though 12 year old LittleLeaguers could give some IM teams a goodgame, students participate and spectate ra¬bidly.Besides the questionable skill level ofSPECIAL DISCOUNT PRICESfor all STUDENTS andFACULTY MEMBERSJust present your University of Chicogo 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. ^_ t£GM QUALITYSBMCf PARTSamsNU. motoss wurrs onmoMKeep I hat Great GM Feeling K ith GLi\LI.\t GM Farts72nd & Stony IslandOpen Evenings and Sunday 684-0400Parts Open Sot. 'til noon VERSAILLES5254 S. DoreheeterWELL MAINTAINEDBUILDINGAttractive 1 Vz and2*/z Room StudiosFurnished or Unfurnished$218.o $320Based on AvailabilityAt Campus Bus Stop124-0200 Mra. CroakWe Buy and SellUsed Records2 Mil- S Minutes A\A.ayFrom The UNIVERSITYSPECIAL DISCOUNT PRICESfor all STUDENTS andFACULTY MEMBERSJust present your University of Chicago IdentificationCord. As Students or Faculty Members you are entitledto special money-saving DISCOUNTS on VolkswagenParts, Accessories and any new or used Volkswogenyou buy from Ruby Volkswagen 1701 E. 55th St.684-337572nd & Stony Island 684-0400Open Evenings and Sundays Ports Open Sat. 'til noon Y T I 00 Y S UUP RR INGBUSINESSAVENUE Typing ServiceIBM MEMORY TYPEWRITERform lettersreportsmailing listsRESUMESexpert consultation(copies that look like theoriginals at a low.low price)535 N. MichiganCall Lucille at 329-1223 some teams, there is also the appearance ofthe players themselves. Some players wearfootball jerseys, surely proof positive oftheir high school varsity days, while otherschoose the tough, rugged, slovenly look ofdirty sweats, greasy hair, and unshavenfaces. Finally, some choose the “student-athlete” look: button-down shirt and cleanpants, designed for convenience: Chem labuntil 3:20, on the Midway ready to play by3:25. Just remember to remove the T.1.55.Then there are the teams themselves.Chamberlin House team members, withtheir official “Chamberlin House”sweatshirts, overwhelm their opponents withspecialty teams and 40 loudly yellingsubstitutes, while still others, unfit forphysical contact, roam the sidelinesdiagramming every play. Their HouseTeam and staff is probably larger thanthose of most teams in the Big 10. Of course,Chamberlin also came up with the ultimatepsyche-out: eye-black to block out the in¬tense Chicago sun.Although the participants set quite a co¬lorful pace, the spectators themselves con¬tribute much to the pageantry. There arethe scouts, spies who carry a secret note¬book in their pocket and spend their after¬noons scouting other teams, diagrammingthe broken plays they are intently watching.Also, there are the fans who come out just toenjoy the game. Nothing can inspire an IMteam more than boistrous fan support: jeal¬ous males snickering at their house’s inep¬titude, and freshmen who, after four yearsof watching high school football, still don’tknow what a first down is.Although our varsity team is not in theUPI Top Ten, we do have our IntramuralTop Ten. Even though we don’t have Jimmythe Greek give the point spread when Chi¬cago plays Lake Forest, we do have DavidGreunbaum (current prediction record:24-1) tell us by how many points Lower Rick-ert will defeat Upper Flint. The Univ. of Chi¬cago may not have any players in the SeniorBowl, but someone in your house may belucky enough to play in the First Univ. ofChicago Intramural All Star Game.Obviously, for better or worse, IM’s havepriority over varsity sports in the minds ofmost students, but far too many of these stu¬dents substitute Big-Time Intramural Foot¬ball for Big-Time College Football, blowingIM’s out of proportion. Those same peoplewill also take this article as seriously asthey will take this year’s Hanna Bowl. Undergraduate All-StarsOffensiveQuarterback — Brian Holmgren (Ed's)Center — Marty Zenni (Psi U)Guards — Ed Rompala (Ed's), Randy Fiete(Chamberlin)Flankerback — Bo Iravedra (Upper Rickert)Wide Receiver — Wayne Blaszak (Chamberlin),Bill Seeper (Commuters)Punt Returner — Pete Juhn (Tufts)DefensiveDefensive Line — Mike Schackelton (DewsBrothers), Kurt Florian (Chamberlin)Middle Line Backer — Pete Janicki (Ed's)Cornerbacks — Greg Williams (Breckinridge),Gregg Barclay (Lower Rickert)Safety — Don Pasulka (Chamberlin), Bob Bouland(Hale)Punter — John Garber (Breckinridge)Second TeamQuarterback — Mark Hoffman, Chamberlinalt. — BJon Winklereid, CommutersCenter — Jim Casey, Chamberlinalt. — Bob McCarthy, TuftsGuards — Steve Argires, Commuters;Pete Layton, Dudleyalt. — Larry Wilte, Vagrants;Dave Steidl, FilbeyFlankerback — Dave Schaffer, Psi Upsilon;alt. — Jay Barish, HitchcockWide Receiver — Chris Lombardi, Ed's BarDave McCabe, Filbeyalt. — Jeremy Fein, Breckinridge;Tom Markopolis, Commuters;Jerry Doyle, Psi UpsilonDefensive Line — John Cunningham, Dudley;DaeShute, Breckinridgealt. — Doug Barge, De'd Bar andGrill;Jim Gillespie, Upper RickertMiddle Linebacker — Josh Newman, Tuftsalt. — Steve Leuzinger, LowerRickertCornerback — Joe Furan, Dudley;Monty Mullig, Upper Rickertalt. — Jim Long, Ed's Bar and Grill;Rob Mirque, Dews BrothersSafety — Jim Augustinsky, Chamberlin;Pete Kang, Lower Rickertalt. — Steve Dekowski, Henderson;Jon Winklereid, CommutersPunter — Paul Robinson, Lower RickertMOST VALUABLE PLAYERSGraduate League — Alan Burns, Wabuno Bay.His leadership both on the field as aquarterback, and off the field as a manager, enabled Wabuno Bay to win the All-University title.Undergraduate Independent League — BrianHolmgren, Ed's Bar and Grill. Like Burns,Holmaren is both a natural leader and oro*nizer.Undergraduate Residence League — DonPasulka, Chamberlin. The best all-around playerin Residence, Pasukla went both ways forChamberlin at wide receiver and could have beennamed All-Star at either position. ^JWheaton Beats NettersKittie WyneThe Maroon volleyball team took fourgames to lose its season-ending match Mon¬day. The match was on the road againstWheaton, which now goes on to compete inthe state tournament this weekend, wherethey are seeded third.Wheaton, one of “the” teams to beat inMidwestern Conference volleyball competi¬tion this year, has a strong bench and anumber of tall hitters. Wheaton showed anexcellent defense and had excellent spikers,who were able to consistently place theball in holes left by the Maroons.The Maroons entered the first game ag¬gressively, and played well as a team. BevDavis’ serving was a strong point of theoffense. After the two teams exchangedseveral rallies, Wheatons power nnanyshowed through as they pulled ahead to win16-14.The second game belonged to theMaroons, who wanted it, worked for it, andwon it 15-8. Sue Fortunato’s serving figuredstrongly in the attack, and Karin vanSteenlandt, Randi Wagner, and CelesteTravis played well at the net with goodblocking and spiking. The Maroons all-outteam effort enabled them to win the game.The turning point came in the third gameShaky Maroon serving resulted in a myriad of missed scoring opportunities, whileWheaton played consistently throughout thegame. Wheaton won the game 15-5.The Maroons had a hard time trying tocome back in the fourth game. The team¬work was there, especially Janet Torrev’ssets and Mary Klemundt's hitting, butWheaton held them off to win the game 15-8and take the match.This was the final varsity matches forsenior co-captains Klemundt and Torrey,both of whom had outstanding games Mon¬day. Coach Rosie Resch said she was im¬pressed with their playing, especiallyKlemundt, who “was hitting harder thanshe had hit all year.” Torrey’s sets werewell placed and enabled the hitters tostay on the attack throughout the match.The defense also played well. Sue For-tunato and Audrey Light, backcourtspecialists, displayed excellent playing.Light was also valuable when she came tothe front court, hitting some deep effectivesets.Coach Resch was pleased with the team’splaying and is looking forward to next year.The Maroons are losing only two seniors;with five freshmen, one sophomore and onejunior returning next year. This strongfreshman class gives the Maroons a goodfuture over the next few seasons.The Chicago Maroon, Friday, November 14, 1980 17Coleman Young SpeechContinued from page lIn light of the new Republican leadership,Young, Detroit’s mayor since 1973, soundeda cry for social reform and government as¬sistance, “The needs of our people are stillreal and we expect our government to dealwith them,” Young said. Young added, how¬ever, that his experience with Republicanpresidents has not been entirely negative.He mentioned specifically his moderate suc¬cess in collecting federal urban aid fundsunder Gerald Ford’s administration, andthe fact that during Ford’s presidency De¬troit received its largest single federal grant ever. Young vowed to continue his workwith business and community leaders tocommunicate Detroit’s needs to Reagan.At the conclusion of the mayor’s fifteen-minute speech, the floor was opened forquestions. In response to several inquiriesabout prospects for blacks during the nextfour years, Young stressed the importanceof collective, organized action among allminorities.Regarding the likelihood that Reaganmay appoint two or three members to the U.S. Supreme Court, Young said “He mayvery well set this country back for the rest ofthe century.”InterviewContinued from page 5money, or that each district should get anequal amount of money. Because it costsmore to educate a child in some districtsthan in others. It costs more to educate achild who has been culturally, raciallydeprived, in order to bring him up to thesame level as some kid from a mid¬dle class family. But we want oureducation system to do what it’s suppos¬ed to do, to create equality of opportunityby allowing each student to rise to max¬imum of his potential.Right now it has become, again, aracial thing. The poorer the city ofDetroit gets, the more the middle-classpeople and businesses leave, the smallerthe property tax becomes. You thenhave to impose more millage. It’sa tribute to the people of Detroitthat they just passed a mmage for fourmillion, despite the unemployment andhard times. That indicates as much asanything that poor people and black peo¬ple of Detroit are interested in getting thebest for their kids. But they can’t do it bythemselves.Kaye: Looking at this city for a moment,what do you think of Chicago’s JaneByrne? What do you think are her suc¬cesses and failures?Young: Well, I don’t know enough aboutJane Byrne to be conscious of any suc¬cesses she has had. (Laughs).Kaye: Why do you think blacks inChicago haven’t taken on the morepowerful political positions in this citythat they’ve taken on in other cities? Whydon’t blacks in Chicago have the kind ofclout that they have in your city, in LosAngeles, in Atlanta?Young: This city hasn’t achieved thedegree of minority leadership that othercities have because of the carry-over, theinertia, the remains, from the Daleymachine. This city is completelymachine-controlled. Under Daley it wassomething like a benevolent dictatorship,but it was nevertheless a dictatorship. Itwas almost like Philadelphia.Philadelphia is a very good parallel.Both cities have about forty-five percentor more of a black population. Both citieswere dominated by strong regimes. I callDaley’s administration a benevolent dic¬tatorship as compared to the malignancy that you saw in Philadelphia under Riz¬zo, but it had the same effect. Both caseshad a completely controlled electorate ofpeople who were so used to being herdedto the polls, of having the carrot and clubused as a method of dictating their vote,that they’re incapable of any political ac¬tion. I see that changing in Chicago, par¬ticularly among black voters. Two newCongressmen, Washington and Savage,were elected in spite of the opposition ofthe machine. I understand that a youngman named Daley was just elected toState Attorney Genral for Cook County inthe face of the opposition of the machine.It seems to me that these developmentsmight offer the possibility of independentpolitical action for Chicagoans. I’d hopeso.Kaye: So you think blacks in Chicagomay be their way to garnering the kind ofbig political power we’ve seen blacks getin Detroit and Atlanta?Young: It’s easy to overblow the “bigpolitical power” that I have, or thatMaynard Jackson has, just becausethere’s a black mayor in Detroit andAtlanta. It doesn’t mean in our societyblack people control the government.Anybody who knows anything about theway government is controlled in thiscountry knows that there’s a powerstructure in a system of major corpora¬tions and vested interests which are mostinfluential, and which might be evenmore decisive in their control of society.They determine the economics of oursociety, they determine investment anddisinvestment, and so forth. Many whitepeople look upon the fact that there’s ablack mayor as a black take-over. Well,hell, I was never under any illusions.When we had a white mayor I knew thatwhite people were in control. And they’restill in control. The difference is that thepoor white who’s worried that the blacksare taking over is being taken advantageof as much as any black person. I’m nottheir enemy. I’m not in control of a damnthing. I’m trying to make it. I’m trying tohelp my people make it to some level ofequality. There’s no way in hell you cansay that blacks have taken over. So manyblack people are poor, and we still havemost of the people in the prisons. Thatdoesn’t sound like taking over to me.RTAContinued from page 1earning the minimum wage, the $10 weeklycost of commuting on the CTA would repre¬sent a substantial fraction of their earn¬ings.But Newhouse said he is not convincedthat RTA officials are serious about carry¬ing out the proposal for a fare increase. Ne¬whouse suspects that the proposal is “a ployto use leverage on the legislature” to con¬vince them to increase state support for theRTA.Fifth Ward alderman Larry Bloom said18-The Chicago Maroon, Friday, November on Wednesday that although mass transpor¬tation is an essential service, the “RTA,CTA, and the legislatures say that the bruntshould be paid by the rider.” Bloom be¬lieves that in the legislature there is a “pre¬judice against the city and the inner citypopulation, now that more substantial tax¬payers are in the suburbs, where there is nodemand for mass transit.”Bloom called the proposed fare increase“short-sighted,” because “the health of theentire region is dependent on the health ofthe central city.”14, 1980 CALENDARFridaySeminar on Longitudinal Data Analysis and Sur¬vey Design: “The *40-‘50 Census Project: RescuingAchieval Data for Cross-Temporal Research,"speaker Hal Winsborough, 12:00-2:00, NORC MainConference Room.Geophysical Sciences Colloquium: “180/160 and170/160 Fractionation Studies and the Demise (?)of Oxygen Geothermometry Above 500*C” speak¬er Dr. Alan Matthews, 1:30 pm, HGS.Workshop in Labor Economics: “Black/WhiteEarnings Ratios Since the Civil Rights Act of 1964:The Importance of Labor-Market Drop-outs”speaker Charles Brown, 1:30 pm, Ro. 405.Workshop in Economics and Econometrics: "TaxShields and Optimal Capital Structure” speakerSusan Chaplinsky, 2:00-3:20 pm, Ro 301.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Arabic Circle-“The Conflict in the Gulf” speaker Prof LeonardBinder, 3:00 pm. Pick 205.Workshop in Economic History: “Agriculture andthe German Economy, 1870-1945” speaker JosephLee, 3:30, SS 106.Dept of Slavic Lang: “Kings-the Good Guys”speaker Prof- Dodona Kiziria, 3:30 pm, Classics10.Mineralogy/Petrology Seminar: “Trace Elementsin Perthites” speaker Dr. Roger Mason, 3:30 pm,HGS 101.Philosophy Colloquia: “The Presuppositions ofInduction” speaker Brian Skyrmes, 4:00 pm.Harper 103.S.G. Activities Committee: Meeting at 4:00 pm, SGOffice, Ida Noyes 306.Hillel: Liberal-Progressive Shabbat Service, 5:30pm, Hillel.Gymnastics Club: Informal practice, 5:30 pm,Bartlett gym.Hillel: Adat Shalom Shabbat Dinner, 6:15 pm, Hil¬lel.Jazz Piano Players Peter and Paul: Concert 7:30pm. International House home room.Hillel: Lecture “Elections 1980-Implications forthe American Jewish Community and the State ofIsrael” speakers Profs J. David Greenstone, IraKetznelson and Norman Nie, 8:30 pm, Hillel.SaturdayOuting Club: Cross-country hiking and map read¬ing practice in Palos Hills Forest Preserve. Bringlunch and compass, meet 9:30 am in Ida Noyesparking lot. $2.50. Aikido: Meets 10:30 am. Bartlett gym.Compton Lectures: “Examining the World of theAtom with Radiowaves” 11:00 am. Eckhart 133.Kinetic Energy: Creative Dance group meets 11:00am, Ida Noyes dance room.Crossroads: Buffet dinner, 6:00 pm. No reserva¬tion necessary.Women’s Union: Dinner-all women welcome, 6:00pm, Ida Noyes. $1 contribution.Law School Films: “Rebecca” 7:00 and 9:30 pm.Law School Auditorium,Pub: Live music. 9:30-12:30 pm. Pub membershiprequired.SundayLutheran Campus Ministry: Sermon and Eu¬charist, 8:30 am, Sunday school and Adult educa¬tion, 9:30 am. Sermon and Eucharist, 10:45 am, 5500S. Woodlawn.Rockefeller Chapel: Ecumenical Service of HolyCommunion. 9:00 am. Discussion class, 10:00 am.Hillel: Lox and Bagel Brunch, 11:00 am, Hillel.Rockefeller Chapel: University Religious Service,11:00 am.Crossroads: Bridge, 3:00 pm. Beginners and ex¬perts welcome.Chicago Symphony Chamber Players: Concert at3:00 pm, Congregational Rodfrei Zedek, 5200 S.Hyde Park Blvd. Beneft for the Akiba-SchechterJewish Day Dschool.Rockefeller Chapel: Carillon instruction - learn toplay the 100-ton set of bells at Rockefeller, 3:00 pm,59th and Woodlawn.Women’s Union: meeting 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes.GALA: “Gay Rights in Illinois” speaker BarbaraFlynn Currie, 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes Library,MondayCenter for Cognitive Science: Symposium of Meta¬phor and Thought — “Image Schemas: Is LogicalForm an Epiphenomenon?” speaker George La-koff, 10:00 am, Swift Lecture Hall.Center for Cognitive Science: Symposim — “Whenwords collide: Interpretation of Selectionally Op¬poses nouns and verbs” speaker Balerie Reyna.1:30 pm, Swift Lecture Hall.Center for Cognitive Science: Symposium — “AStructure-Mapping Approach to Metaphors andDept, of Chemistry:l “Some Features of PotentialSurfaces of Radicals and Diradicals” speakerProf. Ernest Davidson, 4:00 pm, Kent 103.St. ^rajorg of Myssa fgtbertw£achari$t at 10530NOV. 16:DIESIRAEThe Sunday next before theend of the Church YearWorsfiippiufl at C.TS.5757 S. UniversityHOUSE OF CHIN1607 E. 55thExcellent Chinese CuisineCantonese, Mandarinand SzechwanCarry-out andDining Room ServicePhone: 752-3786Hours: Tues.-Thurs. 11:30-9:00Fri. & Sot. 11:30-10:00Sunday 2:30-9:00aosed MondayYoung Designs byELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERS1620 E. 53rd St.288-2900 Rockefeller MemorialSunday, November 16,19809:00 a.m. Ecumenical Service of HolyCommunion10:00 a.m. Discussion Class, "WhollyArt- A Survey of the Place ofReligion in Modern Art"11:00 a.m. University Religious Service,Fazlur Rahman, Professor in theDepartment of Near EasternStudies, is the speaker.5:30 p.m. Evening Prayer> i-mm*'CLASSIFIED ADSCLASSIFIEDClassified advertising in the ChicagoMaroon is 75 cents per 30 characterline. Ads are not accepted over thephone, and they must be paid in ad¬vance. Submit ail ads in person or bymail to The Chigago Maroon, 1212 E.59th St., Chicago, IL 60637. Our office-is in Ida Noyes, room 304. Deadlines:Wed. noon for the Fri. paper, Fri.noon for the Tues. papers.SPACE2 rooms open in sunny 4 person apt.avail. Jan 1 or earlier $120 + heat -+util. 493-9497.Room needed Jan and Feb 1981 for Uof C alumna, taking III Bar Exam.Rent/babysit/housework in exchangefor room. Twice house sat for D Bev-ington (Eng Dept). Call collect (202)462-1936 or write Barb Grau, 1669 Col¬umbia Rd NW, apt 109W, Wash DC20009.$60 reward: Take housing contract.Studio $185/mo. 975-7751 eves Scott.One large bedroom available torJanuary occupancy in 3-bedroom aptat 53rd/Woodlawn. $112/month plusdamage deposit. Bradley 324-7859,anytime, for more information.1 rm. in elegant 5 bdrm condo, fullktchn, fireplace, 2 Irge Ivng rooms,laundry, 12 min from Reg, 5 from Co¬op only $125! Call 955-0944 or 955-0945keep trying.One bedroom available in spaciousthree bedroom apartment. $155 permonth. Call early morn or late eves:241-5391. Ask for Laura.1 bdr in house 2 blks from campusavail now thru spring break $170/mofurnished kit/laundry privs quietclean close 493-4551 eves.PEOPLE WANTEDPaid subjects needed for experimentson memory, perception and languageprocessing. Research conducted bystudents and faculty in The Commit¬tee on Cognition and Communication,Department of Behavioral Sciences.Phone 753-4718.Airline jobs-free info nationwidewrite Airline Placement Bureau 4208198th SW #101 Lynood, WA 98036Enclose a self addressed stampedlarge envelope.WANTED: Translators, tutors-allforeign languages, especially FarEastern. Send resume to P O. Box127, Wilmette, Illinois 60091.Earn $5-20 per hr part-time fromhome. Call eve. 667-4339 (Sales).Make big bucks tutoring confusedorganic students! Call 753-2249 rm1302 or leave message or call 324-1536and ask for Duke.Wanted for part time work beginningJanuary 1981; student (preferablygraduate) with computer/program¬ming skills, some knowledge ofFrench language. Some familiaritywith basic notions of linguistics aplus. Applications being acceptednow. Phone 753-3884.OVERSEAS JOBS-summer/yearround. Europe. S. Amer., Australia,Asia. All fields. $500-$1200 monthly.Sightseeing. Free info. Write: LJCBox 52-1LS Corona Del Mar, CA 92625.PART TIME-3 days a week-Contlnuing Medical Education Office.Verbal and written skills, typing 45wpm, accuracy with numbers, in¬itiative and ability to work with littlesupervision. Clerical experience.Call: Allison Fairley, The Universityof Chicago, Personnel Office, 7534464.FOR SALE1975 Vega Good Condition StereoTape Deck. $600 Call 748 2014.1977 Aspen wg. 4-speed standard lowmileage 4 new tires + snows callPhil, 493-2594, keep trying.77 Camaro It ps pb ac am-fm stereoexcel cond. $3300. 874-0313 52k-mile.MOVING SALE-Toys, games, books,clothes, Sunday Nov. 16, 11-5 p.m.Markovich. 953 E. Hyde Park Blvd.Silk Screen materials: 12” x 18”screen, squeegee, Inks, etc. $20. Keith3-8648 days, 643-4562 8-10 pm.Apartment Sale: Bedroom suite:yellow metal kitchen cabinet; hand-painted dishes, Mexican Indian;misc. items, call 538-5616or 3-4040Mens 10-speed Joanov bicycle,Honeyweli electronic flash, Vivitar200mm 7-4 lens Phil, 493-2594 late.1967 Pontiac Tempest Faithful com¬muter/shopper winterized 3 new tires$300 or best offer 363 0539 FOOD FACTSVariety is the spice of life, so use itsparingly.PERSONALSWriter's Workshop (PLaza 2-8377)Help! I'm so loooonely . . . (Qwertyand LAW—where the heck are you?)Barefoot Dreamer.SNUGGLES: Quit pouting, it makesme sad. How's about some cards?Come on, you turkeys! Get some per¬sonals in the paper, 5 lines or less arefree!!! Sorry, Barefoot, I can't thinkof anything to write, I’m onlycreative at home. How about a loaf ofbread? LAWEVERETT, are you reading fheMaroon? I told you.MAYONNAISEWell, the paper doesn't come out (getit?) on Thursdays. Happy Birthday,honey.LOST AND FOUNDLOST: In Pub, beige scarf w/thin redstripes. Lost on election night In INH,woman's leather gloves - grayishmauve. Call Rob or Sunny, 241-5458,Of. 753-8594 REWARD!FOUND: Male dog, short brown hair,approx 8 mos old. On 59th St. 324-0840or 644-8338.Lost 11/8 in Jimmy's: Experimentaltiming unit in yellow cigarette case.$15 reward. Call 728-4848; ask for Ed.SCENESCHANGES is starting again in HydePark. Listening, focusing, communi¬ty. No fee, all are welcome. The BlueGargoyle, Sunday, Nov. 16, at 8:00p.m. For info call 955-8515.DANCE-sponsored by Sholom Singlesfor Jewish Singles 21-39. November 15at 8:00 pm. 3480 North LakeshoreDrive. Members: $2.00; Non¬members: $4.00. 525-4707; 324-3686.SERVICESBABYSITTING, CARWASH,PAINTING-We can help. We have aready supply of neighborhood teens,pre-screened and trained to handleyour temporary job. CALL: The BlueGargoyle's Youth Employment Ser¬vice, 955-4108, Mon-Thurs 10-5.TYPIST-Dissertation quality. Helpwith grammar, language as needed.Fee depending on manuscript. IBMSelectric. Judith 955-4417.TYPIST exp. Turabian PhD MastersThesis Term Papers Rough Drafts.924-1152.FIREWOOD, We Oellver. 221-0918.Will do typing 821-0940.ARTWORK-Posters, Illustration, let¬tering, etc. Noel Yovovich 493-2399.The Chicago Counseling andPsychotherapy Center. Client-centered psychotherapy. 5711 S.Woodlawn, 6354 N. Broadway, 111 N.Wabash, Chicago. A RegisteredPsychological Agency. (312 ) 684-1800.THE WRITER'S AID. Editing andwriting: flyers, pamphlets, reports,books, ghost-writing; resumes;creative pieces. Prompt, professionalservice. 288-1911. We move almost anything almostanywhere. Call W.P. Bear Moving Coat 947-8035, 241-5841 by midnite.English Classes for Japanesespeakers who would like to improvetheir skills in speaking and writing.Teacher is a UC PhD candidate inFar Eastern Studies with 2 yrs.teaching experience in Japan. Groupor individual instruction. Call 947-0323or 241-6349 before 8:30am or even¬ings.Typing done on IBM by collegegrad; pica type. Term papers,theses, law briefs, resumes, let¬ters, manuscripts. Fast, ac¬curate, reliable, reasonable.New town area. Call 248-1478.Pregnancy Tests Saturdays 10-1Augustana Church 5500 S. Woodlawn.Bring 1st morning urine sample. $1.50donation. Southside Women's HealthService. Call 667 5505.SENIORS PLEASESENIORS Yearbook needs your quipor quote to go with your portrait byNov. 15. Be sure to attach name anddeposit in envelope outside YearbookOffice INH 218.HAM IT UP!SG Coffeehouse Auditions-Nov 11th8:00, Reynolds Club N. Lounge. Call3-3273 for more info.ASPEN ASPENASPEN$285: 7 nites lodging, 5 days lifts, wewill help organize car pools. Spacesare filling up fast to make reserva¬tions and for info UC Ski Club Robin752-7705.PIZZADELIVEREDThe Medici delivers pizza as well ashamburgers, salads and desserts at 5pm and Sat. Beginning at 4 p.m.MAROONSUBSCRIPTIONSSubscribe now and send a Maroon tosomeone far away. $4/quarter$12/year. Special rate after Nov. 1 $10for the rest of the year. Send checksto CHICAGO MAROON/SUBSCRIP¬TIONS 1212 E. 59th St. Chicago, II60637. Act now and get the most foryour money.RIDESRide to Philadelphia wanted. AfterDec. 10th. Will share expenses, driv¬ing etc. Call Mark at 3-3776, rm 307BUckstone Hall.FILM DATESAny rec stered students organizationinterests t in showing a file duringwinter qu. rter must contact Libby inStudent Ac ivitiesby Nov. 17 at 4 p.m.TREATISE SURVEYUsing or planning to use TREATISEto write your thesis? Your help withthis survey could help you. Pleasecontact Bill Sterner at 753-3495, 9am-4pm. Mon-Fri.STUDENT BANDSAny new student bands who wish tobe included in a Maroon feature arti¬cle, please contact Brad Blttan at753-2240 ext. 1619. HOME COOKINGIndependent residence house offersdelicious meals at reasonable prices.Adjacent to campus on University.Call 753-3990 to arrange introductorylunch or dinner.COFFEEHOUSEThurs. night at Blue Gargoyle, 5655 S.Univ. 9-10:30 Open, no live show.10:30 12 Jena Camp, folk guitar,ballads. Gourmet coffees, teas, freshbaked goods. 50c cover.LITERARYMAGAZINEPrimavera, a women's literarymagazine, needs more women to jointhe staff. Call 752-5655 or 548-6240. Onsale in most bookstores.BORINGSATURDAYSCome down to the basement ofReynolds Club and browse around thePhoenix Book and Record Store.We're open from 12:00-5:30 everySaturday...lots of used books, newWILLTRAIN2 good spellers and 55 wpm typists forwork on mini-computers. For. Lang,helpful. Attn, to details necessary. .Campus location. Also, one part-timer. 947-9418.WOMEN! SUPPERWOMEN: do you have feminist in¬clinations heretofore submerged? Doyou have dinner plans this Sat nite?Come eat homemade food and findout what we're doing and how you canhelp. New members, non-memberswelcome. 6 pm Sat. Ida Noyes 2nd fir.$1 contrib.LIVE MUSICAt the Pub in Ida Noyes, Music by alocal Jazz/rock group Saturday 9:30-12:30. Memberships and 21 age re¬quired.MELLOW OUTPOST LIBRIS S.G. Coffeehouse, Sat.,Nov. 15, Frog and Peach, INH, 9:30-1:30. Free coffee, free entertainment,good eats, Wanna perform? Call 3-3273.FOODFOR THOUGHTStimulate your palate and your mind-UC women! Come get involved w/theWomm's Union. Political Disc..worn n and Reagan-hearty food,muc \ cheer, good music. All for $1Sat 6 pm Ida Noyes.MAN OFLA MANCHABlackfriars present "Man of La Man¬cha” Nov. 13-15 at 8 pm and Nov 16 at2 pm. $2.50 for students $3.50 forgeneral admission. Tickets on sale atCobb.BORINGSATURDAYSCome down to the basement ofReynolds Club and browse around thePhoenix Book and Record Store. We'reopen from 12:00-5:30 every Satur¬day...lots of used books, new recordsgaming supplies and paper goods.STANLEY H. KAPLANFor Over 42 Years The Standard otExcellence m Test PreparationmcatTgmatTTsatGRE • GRE PSYCH • GRE BIO • DATPCAT • OCAT . VAT . MAT . SAT • SAT ACHVS. NATIONAL MEDICAL BOARDS . VOE . ECFMGFLEX • NAT L DENTAL BOARDS • TOEFLPODIATRY BOARDS • NURSING BOARDSFlexible Programs and HoursVtftjf Any C«nt* *0>Vour%Jl Why w* Mjkl Th#DtHfOC*TEST PREP AAA TO*SPECIALISTS SINCE f936C#n|#c* m Map* U S C'b#»Pu##tO AcoToronto CAnjxJA 4 Zone?'SwIllNN marion realty,Inc.IBOtH'OOCHICAGO CENTER6216 N CLARKCHICAGO ILLINOIS 60660(312) 764-5151S W SUBURBAN19 S LA GRANGE ROADSUITE 201LA GRANGE ILLINOIS 60S2S(312) 352-5640 SPRING, SUMMERFALL INTENSIVESCOURSES STARTINGthis MONTHCHAT....SATNEXT MONTHl SAT cat —Course* Conalandy UpdatedL«C4K***no «n Cpniar StudyFor rtwntKX feoU C«*l n MW ^ » Wp JS (A* »QUTSIOC NY STATE CALL TOLL TA€E Studio and 1 BedroomApartments Available- Students Welcome -On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-5400 WOMEN.. REGANWomen come eat soup and spaghetti,listen to music, discuss women andReagan-the next 4 years w/TheWomen's Union Sat at 6 Ida Noyes 2ndfir $1 Contribution.UC HOTLINE753-1777CAN'T COPE? Got a problem? Giveus a call at 753-1777. We will listen.Also intormation and referrals. 7 pmto am everyday.SEXWoody Allen's "Everything youAlways Wanted to know About sex, butWere Afraid to Ask.” Sat., Nov. 15;7:00, 8:45, 10:30, Cobb Hall; $1.50;Men's Crew Club.BLUESDon't miss U of C favorite EDDYCLEARWATER-TONIGHT! 8.00pm at the Cloister Club, Ida Noyes.Tickets at the door $2.00 student. $3.00others.ASSISTANTCOMMUNITYORGANIZERExciting opportunity for socialreform. Work with new progressiveorganization interested in nursinghome reform opening for a fulltimeVista (Volunteer in Service toAmerica) position. Experience inworking with elderly, communityorganization, and speaking skillspreferred. Be a change agent! Con¬tact; J. McGillick, Illinois citizens forBetter Care-663-5120.STATISTICSTUTORWANTEDIf you did well in Stat 200 last yearand would like to tutor please callJanet at 947 8025.OPEN HOUSESat., Nov. 15, 11-4 57th and Woodlawnin the Unitarian Church A SingularGroup has many new arts and craftsstop in and browse. Refreshments.WOMEN'SRAP GROUPA Women's Rap Group meets everyTuesday at 8:00 pm at 5655 S. University Ave. For info 752-5655.BARBARACURRIEWill speak on "Gay Rights in Illinois”Sunday Nov. 16th at 8 pm in the IdaNoyes Library. Refreshments. Spon¬sored by GALA.GRE YC1TYITESSunday brunch at 12:30. Bring non-Entenmann edibles to celebrate ourlast planning meeting of the quarter DON QUIXOTEBlackfriars present "Man of La Man¬cha" Nov. 13-15 at 6 p.m. and Nov. 16at 2 p.m. in the I-House assemblyhall, tickets on sale at Cobb.PAMZEKMANSPEAKSPulitzer Prize Chicago Sun-Timesreporter Pam Zekman ("The MirageTavern") at Sholom Singles forJewish Singles 21-39, 3480 North LakeShore, November 19 at 7:30 pm. Info:525-4707; 324 3686 (Ed).CAFFEINEADDICTSFree coffee, POST LIBRIS, SG Cotfeehouse, Sat., Nov. 15, 9:30-1:30, Frogand Peach, INH. Talented? Call 3-3273.TARKUSEDLiiter viina palju piina, dollar rahapaljupaha-rahvaviisIS ROCKY HORRORART?We're not sure, but we have tickets tothe original London company shownow on tour. On sale at SAO rm. 210Ida Noyes, and at Reynolds ClubMonday.ISARTROCKY HORROR?As a basis for comparison, try SAO'smembership discount to the Art Institute. $9 (regular $15) room 210 IdaNoyesIS?Discounts on Art Institute memberships and Rocky Horror Show ticketsSAO, rm 210 Ida Noyes. Alsoavailable during lunch Monday atReynolds Club.GAYCOFFEEHOUSEHear state rep. Barbara Flynn Curriespeak on "Gay rights In the IllinoisLegislature" this Sunday, Nov 16 at 8pm in the Ida Noyes Library. A GALAevent.CLOSET ARTISTS!!Would you like to brighten up SpringQuarter at the U of C by bringingtheater troups, jazz groups, danceensembles, poets, and others to cam¬pus? Attend FOTA's final fall-quartermeeting Mon at 7 in Ida Noyes 218GOODBYEOLD PAINTInterior and exterior painting, qualitydecorating and wait repair. Insuredreferences upon request For freeestimate call 924-6674.EXERCISE OR/&SPORTS?ALL BOW ACTIVITIESREVUCEV TO 30 MINMOVEMENTS FOR MAXPHYSICAL HEALTH BVW0RLV AUTHORITIESEPOCHAL DISCOVERY OF30IVTs FORMULAS FOROPTIMUM FITNESSEditor: Sidney Blacks tone(Hasivasid Univetsitu)& Do It Yourself— ATEST SOUR HEART, LUNGS, 1730 JOINTS, MUSCLES ETCWITH 30 MOVEMENTS; THEN PEAK EACH FOR 30 MINUTES3 TIMES WK AT HOME, ALL AGES, THROUGHOUT LIFE."EXERCISE or/& SPORTS?"UNIVERSAL PUBLICATIONS. $1.95. AT ALLCAMPUS BOOKSTORES. ASK FOR MANAGER.The Chicago Maroon, Friday, November 14, 1980-19