II!{i THECHICAGOMAROONVolume 90, No. 27_ The University of Chicago Copyright 198113 Win TenureBlack,WomenNamed inLaw SchoolBy Sherrie NegreaThree women and one black were amongthe six people whose appointments to theUniversity Law School faculty were an¬nounced Tuesday by Law School Dean Ger¬hard Casper.The announcement of the appointments,which were made during the past year,comes three months after the Universitysigned an agreement with the Labor Depart¬ment requiring the Law School to make“good faith” efforts to appoint “one or morewomen or black faculty members.”The appointments announced were:—assistant professor:Diane Wood, presently a professor at Geor¬getown University Law School.—visiting associate professors:Ronald Carr, former Special Assistant to At¬torney General Edward Levi in 1975-75, anda partner with a San Francisco law firm.Linda Deacon, partner in a Los Angeles Lawfirm.—lecturer:Edna Epstein, a second-year facultymember and former attorney with a Chica¬go Law firm was reappointed.George Leighton, Federal District Courtjudge for the Northern District of Illinois.Dennis Hutchinson, currently an associateprofessor at Georgetown University LawSchool. Hutchinson has also been named thePeter B. Ritzma Professor in the College, aone-year position. He will teach in the NewCollegiate Division’s Politics, Economics,Rhetoric, and Law program.Two of the appointees, Epstein andLeighton, have already begun teaching atthe Law School, while the others will join thefaculty in the fall.The selection of the three women and ofLeighton, a black, represents a majorchange in the hiring practices of the LawSchool, which have come under fire in re¬cent years from students groups and the fed¬eral government.The appointment of Diane Wood raisesfrom one to two the number of women withprofessorial titles at the Law School. Otherwomen faculty members include the twolecturers whose appointments were an¬nounced Tuesday and the staff attorney ofthe Mandel Legal Aid Clinic, the LawSchool’s clinical program.Leighton is the only black presently on theLaw School faculty. No black holds a profes¬sorial position.The Law School has a history of problemsconcerning the number of women and mi¬nority group members on its faculty. In themid-70’s black and wemen law studentscomplained that the Law School discrimin¬ated against women and minority group fac¬ulty candidates. At that time, a law student Gerhard Caspergroup, the Law Women’s Caucus, submittedtwo lists of more than 80 women whom theyfelt were qualified to teach at the LawSchool. The faculty’s appointments commit¬tee accepted the names but continued to ap¬point white men to the available positions.In 1977, after a three year period when nowomen or blacks had served in either junioror senior faculty positions, the LawWomen’s Caucus filed a complaint with theDepartment of Health, Education and Wel¬fare charging that the Law School with dis¬crimination in its hiring practices.A year later, HEW issued a report whichfound no evidence of discrimination but stat¬ed that the University “had failed to takeappropriate affirmative action in the hiringof women and other minorities to senior fac¬ulty positions” during the period of 1974-77.The report also said that the Lav; School’swomen and minority representation in jun¬ior faculty positions was in compliance withfederal policies.continued on page 2 Thirteen professors were awarded tenurein the University’s annual December 15 ten¬ure decisions, Provost Kenneth Dam toldmembers of the faculty council this week.The decisions represent the majority of thetenure decisions made during the pastyear.The 13 promoted to the position of asso¬ciate professor with tenure were selectedfrom 100 faculty members whose cases wereconsidered by the various University de¬partments.Six faculty members received tenure inthe biological sciences division, four in thehumanities, two in the social sciences, andone in the physical sciences.Of the other cases considered, ten werepromoted to associate professor without ten¬ure, 67 were reappointed for periods of fromone to four years, three resigned, and sevenwere fired.As has been its police for more than 15years, the University has refused to releasethe names of those awarded tenure, on thegrounds that to identify those who receivedit would permit the identification of thosewho do not. The Maroon has unofficially re¬ceived the names of several of the facultymembers promoted, and, after verifyingthose and compiling a more detailed list,will publish them next weekThe number given tenure this Decemberis four greater than that of the two proceed¬ing years, when nine faculty received ten¬ure.Tenure decisions are made by a processinvolving tenured department members,deans of divisions, the provost, and Presi¬dent Gray. The department members meetto consider the cases of their junior col¬leagues, then pass their recommendations along to the dean of their division, who inturn submits them to the Provost and Presi¬dent Gray.Tenure Isn’t EasyBy Robert Decker“Incumbency in elective or political of¬fice, whether it be the presidency of theUnited States or the prime ministry of acountry, should not be regarded as a qualifi¬cation for appointment to the academic staffof the University. "Tenure decisions at the University of Chi¬cago are not taken lightly. While theaverage applicant to the College may havehis application for admission read by threeindividuals, the assistant professor whohopes for promotion to the tenured positionof associate professor may have his creden¬tials reviewed by over 50 of his colleaguesbefore a decision is made.The 1970 report of the Committee on theCriteria of Academic Appointment, com¬monly known as the Shils Report, after thecommittee's chairman, is the guide used bythe University’s divisions in tenure casesAmong the criteria which it sets, in order oflisting, are research (“the sine qua non ofacademic appointment"), teaching, “Con¬tribution to the Intellectual Community,”and Services.”Each department in the University’s divi¬sions has its own appointive body of tenuredfaculty members, and the actual methods ofarriving at tenure decisions vary from de¬partment to department. The departmentalrecommendations go to the dean of the divi¬sion or school, and then to the Provost andPresident for final approval or rejection.continued on page 15Doomsday Draws NearerBy Margo HablutzelandHenry OttoThe clock on the cover of the Bulletin ofAtomic Scientists was moved up to four min¬utes to midnight in the Bulletin’s Januaryissue — the closest the clock has stood to the“midnight” of nuclear devastation since thehands reached two minutes to midnight in1953.The Bulletin was founded at the Universi¬ty in 1945 and maintains its offices in KentHall. It is published by the University in con¬junction with the Educational Foundationfor Nuclear Science ten times a year.Ruth Adams, the editor of the Bulletin,termed the clock “a symbol of the latenessof the hour as mankind confronts or fails toconfront” the threat of nuclear war. Move¬ment of the clock toward midnight repre¬sents the Bulletin’s belief that conditionshave worsened in the struggle to prevent nu¬clear devastation.Added to last year’s move from nine toseven minutes before midnight, the new ad¬vance represents the greatest jump foward for the clock in one year's tie since a five-minute jump in 1968.The clock has moved forward six times inits history and backwards only four (to asfar back as 12 minutes to midnight in 1963and 1972). This is the first time that thehands have been pushed up twice in a one-year period, and Adams sees the situationas “damn" serious.”Adams and co-editor Bernard T. Feld ex¬plained the reasons behind the clock’s latestmove in the Bulletin’s January editorial.They cited recent declarations by the USand the USSR that a nuclear war is finally“thinkable”, coupled with both countries'refusal to declare that they would never ini¬tiate a nuclear attack as the primary rea¬sons for the clock's advance. Other factorsin the decision include the disintegration ofthe SALT II talks, increased conflict and de¬clining political stability throughout theworld, and President Carter’s DirectiveFive-Nine reorienting US nuclear strategytoward the destruction of military targets.Only the fact that — current plans call onlyfor attacks on the seats of governmentrather than all cities keep the clock from THE BULLETINOF THE ATOMIC SCIENTISTSV2J4 minutes to midnightnearing the two-minutes-to-midnight markreached following the 1953 development ofthe hydrogen bomb.Adams and Feld sent their proposals forthe editorial to the Bulletin’s Board of Direc¬tors, who then drafted a memo to their In¬ternational Editorial Council. The editorscontinued on page 3Our waiting for winter isfinally over....come ski with us,U.C. SKI CLUBSteanuxratSPRING BREAK MARCH 20-29Round Trip Amtrak & Transfers7 Nights Condos (all the amenities)5 days lifts, "incredible skiing"6th day to relax$465 ($250 deposit due 2/10)LACROSSE WEEKEND CARNIVALFEBRUARY 20-22Round Trip Transportation2 Nights Lodging2 Days Lift TicketsDinner SundayMembers $88 Non-Members $93($40 Deposit due 1/26)LEARN TO SKI NIGHTSIncludes:EquipmentLiftsLessonTransportationMembers $23 Non-Members $27(Group Rates Available)SKI TEAMSki your best this year with the UCSki Team - $20Membership Fee includes coaching, race fees,transportation subsidy, and other extras.Competition and coaching is geared to bothbeginning and advanced racers. Practicesevery Tuesday evening; Meetings, Mondays at7 p.m., Ida Noyes FOR TEAM INFORMATION -Call Mitch, 752 5977UC SKI CLUBMembership $7.50 yearRegular meetings Monday, 7 PM - Ida NoyesFOR INFORMATION, CALL Robin, 752-7705 Law Schoolcontinued from page 1After receiving the report, the Universitydenied HEW’s allegations, but shortly after¬wards signed a conciliation agreement withHEW, which was subject to approval by theU.S. Department of Labor.But the Labor Department did not ap¬prove the agreement and in the summer of1978 decided to carry out its own investiga¬tion of the matter. The department’s conclu¬sions, issued later that year, reaffirmedHEW’s findings; it stated again that al¬though there was no evidence of discrimina¬tion, the Law School had failed to take ap¬propriate affirmative action in the hiring ofwomen and minorities for senior faculty po¬sitions during the period from 1974-77.The final conciliation agreement betweenthe University and the Labor Depatmentwas not reached until October of 1980, whenthe agreement took effect. Under the settle¬ment with the Office of Contract Compli¬ance Programs, the University agreed “tocontinue to make every good faith effort to appoint one or more women or black facultymembers to the Law School faculty as op¬portunities to hire occur.” More specifical¬ly, the University said it would make an ef¬fort to encourage women and minoritygroup members to apply for faculty posi¬tions.The settlement did not specify any quotas *or timetables for reaching the determinedobjectives.Dean Casper said that the appointmentsannounced this week were not part of thesettlement. The appointments, he said,“just reflects our long standing effort to hirethe best and as we do, to hire a most diver¬sified faculty as we can.”Candidates to the Law School’s facultyare first considered by an appointmentscommittee which reviews applicants and in¬vites some of them to visit the University.The Committee then makes a recommenda¬tion to the faculty which then votes on theapplicants and passes their choices to DeanCasper. After consideration by the Dean,the final decisions are made by the Univer¬sity Provost Kenneth Dam.a Convenient Auto Service for thebusy STUDENT or PROFESSOR andat low discount pricesWhen your foreign or domestic carneeds service and you’re too busy towait...Call on Al Sax Tire Co... We’llservice your car while you’re atschool - working, teaching or learningHere’s how we do it:1. Call us to let us knowyou’re coming.2. Then just drop your car off atAl Sax Tire Co., 92nd and Stony Island3. Show us your U. of C. I.D.4. While you’re busy doing yourthing, we’ll be busy doing ours.Our expert mechanics willinspect your car and recom¬mend necessary repairs. Onyour authorization, we willrepair your car.5. Stop back before 5:00 to findyour car repaired and ready to go.6 And Save Up to an Additional15% on Parts and Labor.It’s that simple.Here’s what we can do:Tune-ups, Brake Service,Front-end Service, Shock Absorbers,Tire Service, Battery Service.UNIROYAL. GENERAL. MICHELIN, B.F. GOODRICH. GOOD YEARAL SAX TIRE CO.9200 STONY ISLANDAny questions call 374-1500THE CHICAGO MAROON1 Quarter ($4)Name 2 Quarters ($8) /Full year ($12)Address •»City State ZioMoke checks paya'"- • ioChicago Maroon/SubscriptionsPh: 312/753-3263 1212 E 591 h St. Chicago, If 606372 The Chicago Maroon — Janua,*y fis 199$2 Million PresentThe University received a welcomeChristmas present over the winter break ofthree separate grants totalling more than $2million. The funds were presented to the Hu¬manities Division, the Law School, and acombined group from the Department ofMedicine, the Graduate School of Business’Center for Heath Administration Studies,and the National Opinion Research Center.The Humanities Division received$1,350,000 from the Andrew W. Mellon Foun¬dation to be used to appoint or promote jun¬ior and intermediate level faculty membersand to provide post-doctoral fellowships anddissertation support for graduate students.President Gray commented that “the grantwill provide a bridge, enabling the Universi¬ty to encourage the very best of this genera¬tion of graduate students to engage in aca¬demic careers and to retain the very best ofthe generation of younger faculty membersnow in entry-level positions.’’ The grant ispart of the Mellon Foundation’s “Fund forthe 1980s” given to research universitieswhich emphasize graduate training, and isto be used over the next seven to tenyears.The law firm of Baker & McKenzie donat¬ed $1 million to endow the Russel BakerScholars Fund for faculty research and stu¬dent scholarships at the Law School. Thegift was made in memory of Russel Baker,founder of the law firm. Baker, who died in1979, received his Ph.D. in 1923 and his lawdegree in 1925 from the University. GerhardCasper, Dean of the Law School, acknow¬ledged the grant saying “the profession oflaw has become highly competitive. Theneed for maintaining the highest quality oflegal education in that environment isugent, and this support for faculty researchis precisely aimed to help us meet thatneed.”Finally, the University received a $499,993grant from the Robert Wood Johnson Foun¬dation to support a twenty-two month studyto compare conventional training in internalmedicine with “primary care training pro¬grams.” Primary care training programs,established in the late 1970’s through fund¬ing by the Johnson Foundation, emphasizepreventive medicine, patient counseling andeducation, and the promotion of morehealthy lifestyles. Dr. Alvin Tarlov, Profes¬sor and Chairman of the Department ofMedicine received the grant and will be as¬sisted in the research bv study directorNuclearWASTEDisposalMethodsAlteredBy Andrea HollidayAll radioactive wastes from medical test¬ing here are now being disposed of by a com¬mercial firm rather than the government,and a warehouse on the grounds of BillingsHospital is being prepared for temporarystorage of the wastes.According to the University RadiationProtection Officer Ed Mason, most of thewastes were formerly sent to government-owned Argonne Rational Laboratories inArgonne, Illinois for disposal. However, nowthat Franklin McLean Memorial Research NEWS BRIEFSPeter Weil, Research Associate (AssistantProfessor) in the Department of Medicineand the Graduate School of Business Centerfor Health Administration Studies and assis¬tant study director Mary Kay Schleiter, Re¬search Associate in the Department of Med¬icine. Survey work will be conducted by theNational Opinion Research Center.Women Set ProgramReproductive Rights Action Week, theWomen’s Union’s first major event thisyear, will take place January 19-23. January22 marks the eight-year anniversary of theSupreme Court decision that legalized abor¬tion.“We want to educate people as to repro¬ductive rights issues and motivate them towork for the goal of full reproductive rightsfor all women. Although we’re celebratingthe gains we’ve made so far, it’s importantto remember that women still don’t possessfreedom to make decisions about their ownbodies,” explained Women’s Union memberElizabeth Hoffman.The week’s evening events will begin withspeakers from Women of All Red Nationsdiscussing the forced sterilization of NativeAmerican women on Monday, January 19,at 4:00 pm. On Wednesday, Pauline Bartwill talk about JANE, an all-woman, femin¬ist illegal abortion service run in Hyde Parkin the 1960s, and a member of Women Or¬ganized for Reproductive Choice will speakabout the Right-to-Life movement and the“Human Life” Amendment at 7:30 pm. Bothprograms will be in the Ida Noyes Library.The final evening event will be a women’scoffeehouse with live music, poetry read¬ings, and refreshments, on Thursday, Jan¬uary 22 at 8:00 pm in Reynolds Club. In addi¬tion, all week there will be tables inReynolds Club and Cobb Hall during lunch¬time with reading materials and a NationalReproductive Freedom petition for thosewho choose to sign it.Bowlers to FloridaThe University of Chicago College Bowlteam plays in its first major intercollegiatecompetition of the season this weekend inTallahassee, Florida. The competition, aninvitational tournament sponsored by CBSRadio, is being held on the Florida StateUniversity campus, and features 11 teamsfrom the southeast, midwest and far westcompeting for places in the national finals to be held later this year. To qualify for the na¬tionals a team must win three games in Tal¬lahassee without losing.Chicago's first opponent will be last year’swestern states regional and national playoffchampion California State-Fresno. If Chica¬go wins that match, its next two opponentswould be Tulane University and San JoseState. If Chicago wins all three of thosematches, the team will automatically quali¬fy for the national finals. All the matcheswill be taped for CBS Radio and broadcastin Chicago Sunday evenings at 7:30 onWBBM-AM.This year’s University team mixes somenew blood with veterans of the squad thattook fifth place at last year’s nationals. Indi¬vidual competitions held in December de¬termined a group of all-stars who augmentthe members of the intramural champion¬ship team on the University’s varsity squad.College students Tammy Ravitts and Zbig¬niew Banas and Business Student LorinBurte played on the intramural champions,and they are joined on the varsity by CollegeStudents David Rubin, J.S. Gillespie, Mi¬chael Alper and John Podhoretz, BusinessStudent Mich Gilaty and Graduate studentDavid Saltzman. The all-stars were selectedfrom among the fifteen other teams in theUniversity competition.Further intrasquad competition deter¬mined that Burte, Rubin, Gillespie, Alperand Gilaty would represent the Universityin Tallahassee. Burte, the team captain, Gil¬lespie and Rubin were on the team that re¬presented Chicago at last year’s nationalfinals. The team is coached by Thomas Ter¬rell, Assistant to the Dean of the DivinitySchool.Golan Fiddles AroundReturning to his alma mater as PrincipalSecond Violinist of the Chicago SymphonyOrchestra (CSO), Joseph Golan opened thisyear’s First Chair Series Monday night atPierce Tower.The six year old series brings principalmembers of the CSO to campus for informallectures and demonstrations. Golan beganMonday’s lecture by joking through an im¬provised “warm-up,” and went on to discussthe way the CSO and other major symphonyorchestras conduct auditions.The best - although not wholly practical -method of holding autions is to have the mu¬sician perform in a small chamber musicsetting, according to Golan. To demonstrate this approach, Golan conducted a mock au¬dition for Chris Berenyi, a student in the Col¬lege who is concertmaster of the UniversityChamber Orchestra. Golan and Berenyiplayed the first movement of the Bachdouble violin concerto.After lecturing on the various aspects ofhis job, Golan fielded questions from the au¬dience. He discussed the seating of the vio¬lins and the orchestra’s method of filling va¬cancies, and the various careers availableto violinists as teachers, soloists, orchestramemebers, and commercial musicians.Golan has treaded most of the avenues opento violinists. Asked about commercialmusic, he performed songs from “JollyGreen Giant” commercials, and told abouthis experiences working for that company.Golan showed little respect for commercialmusic - when asked if he had ever playedmuzak, he quipped “I think that muzak isgenerally performed by deceased musi¬cians.”Golan’s practice habits are far from ex¬treme. He said that he is too busy to prac¬tice, but that when he was young, he playedfor three or four hours a day.Golan joined the CSO in 1953 as a first vio¬lin under Fritz Reiner. In 1969, he auditionedfor the principal second position under Soltiand has held that post ever since. He studiedwith only one teacher, George Perlman.Other symphony orchestras in which Golanhas played are the New Orleans Symphony,the New York Opera Company orchestra,the Grant Park Orchestra and the CSO’straining orchestra, the Civic Orchestra, ofwhich he is now a string coach.The remaining programs in the series,which is sponsored by the Friends of theSymphony, are:January 19 Ray Still, oboe, HitchcockHall;February 2 Larry Combs, clarinet, Burton-Judson;February 23 Chicago Symphony StringQuartet, Shoreiand;April 15 Dale Clevenger, horn. WoodwardCourt;all performances begin at 8 p.m.—Nina LubellCorrectionTwo photographs by Audrey Light in re¬cent issues were incorrectly credited to DanBreslau. Light took the cover photograph ofthe bus in last Friday's Maroon and the pho¬tograph of the new library control desk inTuesday’s paper. We regret the error.Institute, which generates much of the Uni¬versity’s nuclear waste, ;s no longer affiliat¬ed with the government, it is no longer eligi¬ble to use the government facility atArgonne for disposal.Mason explained that although FranklinMcLean’s Dept, of Energy contract expiredDecember 31, 1979, Argonne has continuedto handle much of the University’s radioac¬tive refuse as a courtesy until other ar¬rangements could be made. Wastes fromthe University made up a tiny fraction of theradioactive material that Argonne shippedto a govenment burial site in Idaho.The University has signed a new contractto turn over all of its nuclear waste to theAtomic Disposal Co., which formerly han¬dled about one-third of the material. Thefirm, which has similar contracts withNorthwestern University and MichaelReese Hospital, will now pick up a truckloadof 55-gallon drums here about once veryquarter, according to Mason.A warehouse west of Franklin McLeanwill be used to store the drums until a truck-load of 40 drums accumulates. At the mo¬ment, the wastes are being held in the la¬boratories where they originated while theUniversity estimates the cost of preparingthe warehouse — emptying and cleaning it, improving the heating system and securi¬ty.The cost of this and all other aspects ofdisposal will be borne by the 250 individuallabs on campus that produce radioactiverefuse. Mason estimates the annual cost ofdisposal at “$50,000 — and rising fast. Thecost has doubled over the past two years.”Mason’s office is encouraging the labs to re¬duce their production of the wastes wherepossible — partly by requiring the labs topay for disposal themselves.Atomic Disposal Co. ships the drums tothe state of Washington where, after carefulinspection at the state border, they areburied in a “shallow landfill” on a reserva¬tion in Richland, Washington — one of threecommercial radioactive burial sites in thecountry. The Washington state governmentallows no nuclear wastes into the state ex¬cept those that are medically generated.Material from nuclear reactors and weap¬ons is rejected, according to a law passed bypublic referendum last November.Mason pointed out that radioactive w astesfrom medical research differ radically fromreactor- or defense-generated material. Hesaid the radioactive isotopes used in re¬search and for diagnosis of cancer and car¬diovascular patients “have very short half- lives and low level of radioactivity.”In contrast to hazardous chemical wastes,which the EPA is just beginning to come togrips with, the Nuclear Regulatory Com¬mission rules governing radioactive wastedisposal have remained unchanged for sev¬eral years. According to'Mason, “nuclearwastes have been handled carefully and effi¬ciently for the past 25 years. We reallyhaven't had any trouble meeting the StateHealth Dept, or NRC requirements.”Clockcontinued from page 1and the Board then met to discuss the Coun¬cil’s recommendations before Adams andFeld wrote the final draft. Although the en¬tire process took six weeks, Adams said thetime was necessary for formulating the rea¬sons for the move. Those involved in the de¬cision were nearly unanimous that the clockshould be advanced and that the clock is toonear to midnight for safety.The Chicago Maroon — Friday, January 16, 1981 — 3iii iifjOfinrIS IE lit VOU com HEAR RIGHT.EEATHRIHG THE SIHGLE.IEEP ON LOVING VOU'.’RED SPEEDWAGONI EPIC BB AND WES.PRODUCED BY KEVIN CRONIN. GARY RICHRATH. KEVIN BEAMISH CO PRODUCED BY ALAN GRATZER MANAGEMENT JOHN BARUCK MANAGEMENT"EPIC" IS A TRADEMARK Of CBS INC © 1980 CBS INCAVAILABLE AT YOUR FAVORITE RECORD STORECAREERS IN SYSTEMS,DATA PROCESSING andINFORMATIONCONSULTINGOur representatives will be at the CareerCounseling and Placement Office todiscuss career possibilities in systems,data processing and informationconsulting. We have outstandingopportunities for 1981 graduates of theCollege.January 21,1981aArthurAndersenAn Equal Opportunity Employer LETTERS TO THE EDITORAbout the NewspaperTo the Editor:Stop the presses! There is a better alter¬native to an “official newspaper” for theUniversity. The Office for University Newsand Information should use our own ChicagoMaroon for communicating officially withstudents, faculty and staff.The mechanics are easy: the Universitycan purchase one or two or even more fullpages in the Maroon at normal advertisingrates once each week. It can use a standardnewspaper format, although perhaps with adifferent style of headlines and borders toset apart from the rest of the paper. Eachpage can have a label such as “UniversityDigest” with this in small print: “producedby the Office for University News and Infor¬mation to communicate official notices &important information to students, faculty &staff at the University of Chicago. This pagepaid for at normal advertising rates.”This technique should prove much moreeffective than yet another official flyerwhich is often thrown away and always ex¬pensive to separately print and distribute.And the school newspaper will benefit fromthe extra business.Dave BakerStudent in the Law SchoolProblems at Pete’sTo the Editor:I offer the following personal account towarn Hyde Park shoppers of the false ad¬vertising practiced by one of its local mer¬chants. On January 10th, I spotted a sign inthe window of Pete’s Food Market advertis¬ing 3 lb. bags of red delicious apples for 69ceach. On approaching the window I saw 3 lb.bags of red delicious apples displayed be¬neath a handmade sign on which was writ¬ten: “Extra Special 69c”. I selected two ofthese bags and brought them to the cashier.She rang them up at $1.00 apiece. I asked,“Weren’t these apples 69C a bag?” She re¬sponded, “No, we’re all out of those apples,these are different apples and they cost $1.00a bag.” The bags were in fact unmarked. Ipurchased the apples, finding this still agood price, but feeling cheated. I advisedthem to remove the misleading signs intheir window. On passing Pete’s Food Mar¬ket the next day, I saw the same signs in thewindow.We, as a community, should not toleratesuch practices. I urge all who have similarexperiences to bring them to the attention ofthe consumer community. Perhaps thenmerchants will get the message: “Practicewhat you print!”David BerkowitzStudent in the CollegeSparts on WomenTo the Editor:Firing a rifle through the window of aCambridge bookstore because it carried“Playboy,” leading mass marches to“clean up” Times Square, calling cops onHarvard students for showing “DeepThroat” and picketing scores of other filmsall over the country, offering bounties forthe capture of alleged rapists and “takingback the night” with marches which resem¬ble lynch mobs — these are the activitieswhich presently consume what is left of thefeminist movement. Whereas ten years agofeminism used to be identified with militantstruggle — however misguided — againstoppression, today’s anti-porn crusadershave moved so far to the right that someeven embrace anti-homosexual bigot AnitaBryant as a “sister.” According to The Fe¬minist Connection (October, 1980), poor Anita, who not so long ago was mobilizingbible-thumping, right-to-life yahoos againstgays, is now just “an emotionally batteredwife” and we must reach out to her now andmake her path easier.”Feminists have recently taken to the war¬path againt pornography under the ridicu¬lous slogan: “Pornography is the Theory,Rape is the Practice.” At a time when Ron¬ald Reagan is moving into the White Housewith the political backing of the “Moral Ma¬jority” and the Klan, when the Polish popedeclares that even looking at your wife withlust is adultery, when self-proclaimed leftistcheer the veiling of Iranian and Afghanwomen, this latest outburst of petty-bour¬geois moralism reflects the general right-ward drift and supports the recent govern¬ment and right-wing offensive against social“deviance” of all sorts. (Deviant fromwhat? As someone once said, perversion iswhatever you don’t happen to be into.) Theanti-porn frenzy is dangerous and reaction¬ary, putting feminists in an objective blocwith the most conservative forces in society.At bottom, it is an attempt to impose cen¬sorship. What will be the next step? Will theself-appointed censors also want to stoneadulterers and “loose women”? That isKhomeini’s program, and he is certainly aworld leader in the fight against “smut.”There are no suggestive ads for Jordachejeans in Teheran; you can bet your life onthat!Rape is a horribly frightening and violentcrime. Women certainly must have the rightto defend themselves against the violence ofsick individuals. As Marxists, we defend theright of self-defense against criminal as¬sault, including the right to bear arms. Butwe vehemently oppose vigilante-type ac¬tions or calls for more cops to get tough onrapists. In this racist society, it is blacksabove all who get framed up in the courts,often on rape charges. Remember theScottsboro and “Kissing” cases, where in¬nocent black youth were railroaded to jailon trumped-up rape charges.It is not pornography which is the sourceof violence against women. It is this capital¬ist society with its enforced poverty, rigidfamily structure and straightjacket morali¬ty w'hich breeds the frustrations which ex¬plode in violence.We invite everyone interested in discuss¬ing this important question to come to theSpartacus Youth League forum, “From BraBurning to Book Burning: Feminists Jointhe ‘Moral Majority’s’ Anti-PornographyCrusade,” on Friday, January 16 at theReynolds Club Lounge. D. L. Reissner, amember of the editorial board of “Women &Revolution,” will present a Marxist analysisof the feminist anti-pornography move-ment- Dave Richardsfor the Spartacus Youth LeagueTo the Editor:In your last issue, you posed the question“What is a Chicago Maroon?” Here is ouridea of the Official U.C. Mascot.Gary K. Kilberg Jeff Kitzler Martin LazorStudents in the College4 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, January 16, 1981Swimming in theDeep End....1 xX£7>, /v-<; 7"-1?H' y/_A-v ,4.i Jf-' /7- t iih% -7WTo the Editforbidfr°™ them or:any ofEditorial Comment:The main vice in the world today issanctimonious hypocrisy.Whatever else Hitler, Mussolini, andTojo were, they were no hypocrites.They spoke and acted againstdemocracy and human rights.Brezhnev, Castro, and Khomeini aresanctimonious hypocrites, who speak ofdemocracy and human rights, but actagainst them.That is the crux of the problem,which also exists at universities,including Chicago University, wherethe dean of students is an offender, notto mention the director of ArgonneNational Laboratory.Take heed, ye professors! Shape upor ship out!You can’t make a superior school outof smugly supercilious saps, any morethan you can make a great governmentout of grandiose goons, or for thatmatter, an outstanding Olympics out ofodious ogres.This is an extremely grave matteralthough, of course, if you neglectgravity, then you might not think itmatters, until you suffer theconsequences as an artist°r reP'’°duction"*oi e*Cerptsdiversity 0‘°cbe DUb,ished by Z ^added to the libra”*”,*6*5 or to beiCo ZZesemed in £ Ans0rrionsffke Dia« on the Krou„H ,0n °f touniversity, r rofl * °Unds of the“"'H not attend any^nl” Perform and 1Performances on 1US,ca)orthe6 °f mV na“eTn anyanH ' forbid' r these events No " ny advertisingWorks and none of m t6S from ™yWordings may fa” ™yj?sicaIorganization at the Un, * a"y indentCb'«K0 without f,W uVerSity11 t'tten permission °bta,nin* myA“d*to^m0diaeMaJ0fOUantre«ne*apaper. and pr* °°n stud«ntreceive any Cnm .• a*ent • • . willand renro/ mp,lmentary Dllhr UProductions of m y pu°Jicationsadmission to any of V Work a"d freemay ‘ake place in ?Lmy redta,s which' Wi" not attena V,dni‘>'-ChfaCUl‘y men>ber onyJutUre byChicago and I win he University of ‘an/ atudent den,o„s°rLPaniCiPatey advertising for r 10PS °n camPusthe'" bTaded f0 me w^bB°°kS "«eh‘* tender. be returned toThe following*° my home, and * if not invitedmusical program in k.th y attend arrmvolved, I S®'" Whlch I amfollow). Neither wilM^"™’' 122 names‘beir lectures - atte"d any To the Editor:S:tr-^UoVradesnow. My Son rapidly writes MyCOEnTosed°"s an interesting treatise,w^M8; Son wrote. We shower OurBlessings uponjo^He ^treatise togethe g-- pad_ by assembling sheets of 4 x 0 Ppaper, to which he has access at work.I Am certain you will-findinteresting. synopsis ofMyTs:Srsrph tTs a tually turneda departing body. Now. tt cnn hetransferred into another bodythat of an animal, according to theaJLnt of a dastardly sinner.’“tCcan be upgraded into variousdenominations. The greater ** “ '^L^the journey through hell. Amcompense for hisds on earth. This is called/ustice. Sin will be dealtgly. No sinner is immuneent Someday, the hunterthe hunted and vice versa,a fantastic backlog. Thus,for the treatise, dated10 1979. My Son takes Myin this month of July, duringSPIRIT will showerand Dear Editor,is »tl0MSt!ldents’ 1 hava a Dream. It* 8 building Piston-head in shape asninny stories high as it must be. Oneach floor of my building you will findfour rooms across and each story:ihy" so that the effect is aby thi3, ' tW‘Sted ar0U"d many timeaby the time you reach the top.n each room you will find a HayesPhot h, U°f °re) Ultra‘Hi^ Vacuumhotoemission electron, MicroscopeThe latest Computer Terminals ABioChemist-Physicist and MedicalScientist. And People?. YesBiochemists. Mathematicians, ’Chemists, Biologists, CellularBiologists. Computer Programmershy sicists Electronic Engineers andww y °n Under*rad Science Majorshat will these people be Doing?hey will be studying separatesegments of DNA! In hopes, thatwithin a sh rt period Qf time> Cancerwill be eradicated as it is found inwhatever shape or form.I have had this farfetched dreamsince my dear grandmother died manyyears ago and I will fight for the meansto my end and till my dream isrealized.There is an immediate means to/•’righteous Love, Peace and accomplishing this end. it is the"”landing, as My Holy Voice Federal Legalization and controlled:stance. Because ^7 Holy , markct of Marijuana. I am notvoid of form. Only My belove suggest.ng that Pot is good for you osign His Name. May the to smoke a Doobie for Science. I willIrns of Love be always lit m O say that people will continue to smoke,s for you. j L,. d ,that the Annual profit of abon dollars per annum could be putto fantastic use by Society. Forsocieties all over the world. Pleasesupport me and my cause at the Statelevel via your local College Studentstate Lobby....LettersFrom theNot-so-Sane P.s. And don’t forget the many littleextras acquired via spinoff in the MoonRace. Those will be astounding in thisinstance also.•*-.O *E$T£8S UNION«2r s \.k s*luCmICOO :* S3605t-00 7«59»251 09/07/90 ICS I<>“CCID CS0aa<42 w5m TOmT n£- »0Bk NY 7 09-CT 0 CiuE9Tinsequences. i ^either wiJJ j namesIf George Washington were here, he / eir foctures or nerf attend any ofwould blast you! / Pot Wlsh to be invited?**”068’ and 1 doYou may be sure of that! / 0nies. 0 visit their S*t«8Y LBnSInC. J0*N v*ilh*900n 1212 E»ST 59T* STCHIC*50 Iw hOhlT »nC *nn» h0l9j*n kS bbeSIDEntSeverelj visit theirUnaffiliated Physi<Idealistic Scient dlstributi„n of tnd-on and oonBerkeley, Californja T09 Y0J« INF09«»TION nuCL£*b One h»j 0IS»b»E*»E0N*X BhILIPPSOn1270 *vE UP The *hE9IC*SnE* »0»< ny 100212112** ESThchcOh*The Chicago Maroon — Friday, January 16, 1981. T^Ccui^ouse.Appefou# „ .*’*' creamu chic.Ken, live/poite a.oo auiche~varies daihj aoobismarcK herring ' 1.50 tine cheese * fruit A-°°Souc5~spinach chedda/ 1.50 uichussoiso 1.50bated french. onion a.oo gaxpacho 150Salads' , Lqfeen salad 1.00 cucumbers xoitti sou/ c/earn. her bs 1.50mushrooms cl Iol maisori u5 'tomatoes viriaigretlfe/ i.as>^ . cottage cheese d fresh fruit" a. AS•auuAairtchcs'^chicken salad, uuifh'hoaif^breasterf turkey and bacon cJub 3.15^bacaa, lettuce a/d+omoCfo so-creamy chicKea liver txcte>blacK loread ga/ruskes- hajnburaer-l/a lb. ground sir'Ioirt on blacK. bread, ct\ pafcCfoes H.OO- nova loX, creana cheese- and- toasted fcageJ . S.50Omelette *Egg£~omeieftes^ckcice erf uhite. or ^ohJedf>bia^ bagel 0/ English inuffiarv amj combination. of suuss cheese, mushroonas & hand H.35~c/earned spinacK uith Mlaridaise. h.35*shrimp creole* 5.°°- sour' c/eam. $ she/ried mushrooms~aux"f ir\e heCbes 3.50~Kaqs Benedict^ choice erf ham or bacon. ^00Unfhcut meat 350^eggs parmesarrs eggs scrambled lightly voi't'h parmesart,Engl* sh muffin ffreshfruit., 35o^3 eggs scrambled with fresh chives, TOast + ch potatoes 350light lunches~Gtajuche~uaries cAxi l^.xuitK'fr'esh.'f^ui'f' H.ii~ ‘/h poached chicken in crea/n. ta/ragon sauce, vegetable * rice 5.00~ tarte prGue.nca.i~ ratatouille in a crisp tarte shell,"topped, with.swiss cheese <#■ mushrooms, with. vegetable M-50~ tuna nicnise~ cKunK white tuna on a. bed- of lettuce, green beans,tomato,ga/banao beans, it-onion, with hard boi led erg<rvimgretfedressino h.50~spinach lasagne., Wrtk'ueqctable-' s.oo-chicken iivers sauteed, udn wine, onions and mushnems., on rice- s.50~poached wesh h«Ke Supe/iorUihrttfisK, UegCte-ble & ch. potatoes }.oo~pan-fVied-fVesh 6rook.iro'ut, delioateJu breaded-, vegefable * ch potatoes 1.00~ broi led beef live/ with onions, vcgstalde «• ch ptffocroes M.50-chopped s>r lorn steaK, sauce, bordelaise, vegetable <*- ch. potatoes 5.25~nwussaKa,aHea/N oasse/ote of eggplant", ground lamb am cheese- (,.50-Cou/t SteaXjlralb.'buH'deaK, ch potatoes and vegetable- g,50~Woo fork. Strip SteaK, 13-Wox. boneless cehtencTit, ch potatoes 11.50side order sauteed mushrooms aorth steak., toosauce b envoi se. uii ria srnak . .50 extra-.^ "for lu/xch. “ HdJthdbxtj 'iV'VL Scxtu/cfa^j U»30 'Yo 5-005341 South Hc^pejT Avmu.^;»a iWp€^ Co-u/T— The Chicago Maroon — Friday, January 16, 1981 Off Street" Po/Ki rvo^theg r e v c i t v i o «u r n a Io K w 713th Year 17th Issue 16 January 1981BEING A TERRORISTIS STILLTHE BEST REVENGEThe Third GenerationRainer Werner FassbinderChicago Premiere at the Film Center atthe School of the Art Institute, Columbus atJackson. Tonight, Friday, January 16 at5:30 and 7:30; January 17 and 18 at 3:30,5:30 and 7:30. $2.50.By Andrea Staskowski-HvolbekThe Third Generation, Rainer WernerFassbinder's most recent film, standsamong the best (Fox and Friends, FearEats the Soul, The Marriage of MariaBraun, Effie Briest) work of his prolificcareer, over 35 films since 1969. Althoughnearly all his films are financed throughthe West German government state sub¬sidy system, this film was produced by hisown company in order to avoid possiblecensure of the politically volatile topic.Thematically a rich and complex film,Fassbinder created a provocative sound¬track weaving a dense aural tapestry withlayers of music, conversation, TV andbackground noise. Acting as photogra¬pher, Fassbinder's mobile camera bringsus close to the characters imparting asense of his physical presence and his pas¬sion. Visually one can feel the anguish ofthe man who once said, "When I meet peo¬ple in the street and in the railway sta¬tions, see their faces and their lives, it fillsme with despair. I often want to screamout loud."A church, once the center of the city, itspinnacle, the focus of all life, is now notonly obscured by the surrounding ultra¬modern skyscrapers but it is supersededby office buildings like the one from whichwe survey it. Inside the office, replete withtechnological toys, we find a secretary(Hannah Schygulla) watching Bresson'sThe Devil Probably on TV when the indus¬trialist, P. J. Lurz (Eddie Constantine) re¬turns. Later, after Lurz tells him about thedepressed market for computer securitydevices, the police inspector (Hark Bohm)relates the gist of a dream to him. "If therewere no terrorists," he says laughingly,"the State would have to create them."The complicity between the State and in¬dustry intimated here runs as a thread ofsuspense throughout the the film.Deftly, Fassbinder's visuals and narra¬tive establish the film's political perspec¬tive, to the accompaniment of pulsatingelectronic sounds and flashing titles. The world we inhabit is rife with cacophony, itsheartbeat is electronic, its controllingcenter is Capital.Played almost as a comedy of manners,Fassbinder presents "a comedy in 6 partsabout party games, full of suspense, ex¬citement and logic, horrorand madness,just like the fairy tales they tell to chil¬dren, to make the life which ends in deathmore endurable." The terrorists enact thisadult fairy tale, albeit unwittingly, at thewhim of Capital, with the result of convinc¬ing the citizenry of the need for tighter se¬curity measures. In other words, the ter¬rorists serve Capital's goal of creating amore repressive society. The third genera¬tion of the title is the third generation ofterrorists (sharing many biographical details with the Baader-Meinhoff group).They resemble less the preceding genera¬tions of terrorists than the forces of repression within the society they purport to con¬demn.A montage of vignettes introduces themembers of the cadre: Susanne, the secre¬tary, and mistress to her father-in law, thepolice inspector; Edgar, her husband, acomposer (Udo Kier); Rudolph (HarryBaer), a record store clerk bullied by hisboss; Petra (Margit Carstensen), a richhousewife in love with Hilde; Hilde (BulleOgier), a history teacher fascinated with atape of a sado-masochistic sexual en¬counter; and August (Volker Spengles),the group leader. Bored all of them, theyseek excitment: "Guerilla training," saysRudolph, "is the only great adventureleft." Like Arthur, Odile, and Franz in Go¬dard's Band of Outsiders, they dress upand behave like media-images of banditsto escape from their meaningless lives.Terrorism, for the third generation, is astyle of living devoid of political anaylsisand political passion.No one reads a newspaper, or a book, orlistens to radio news, or even talks aboutpolitics. Rather they drink wine, eatpastry, play Monopoly seriously, andbanter about exotic aliases. Always a tele¬vision drones in the background providingthem with the little information they possess. When they do encounter a youngman with a suitcase full of books — withunderlinings — they ridicule him merci¬lessly. The group reads aloud the underl¬ings in a Bakunian text. These snatches ofhis philosophy on the possibility of positive Hilde (Bulle Ogier) and Suzanne (Hanna Schygulla) in a shot from Third Generation.human development create a sound mon¬tage interspersing with a TV personalityespousing the antithetical view thathumans are disposed toward evil.Fassbinder does not depict any of hischaracters as evil; he attempts to revealthe mechanisms of repression they haveinternalized from their youth. The passages of bathroom graffiti which introducethe film's six sections provide a vivid illustration of how people come to willingly ac¬cept repression as a way of life:"Slave seeks master to train me as adog.Am independent and ready to giveup everything and fulfill everywish., Will be here next Thursday at 4PM.Every true sadist will recognize theslave in me right away.A slave who is ready to give himselfup completely, whatever might happen."Notice found in the men's room ofthe Zoo Station, righthand toilet on1/23/79, West Berlin.While the luridness of the graffiti may bealienating, Hilde's behavior exemplifiesthe mentality. First, in the classroom, wewitness a lack of integrity when she refuses to accept a student's challenge to theinterpretation of events she presents.Therein Hilde reveals her submission tothe institution. She cuts off discussion stating that she is paid to impart historicallyverifiable interrelationships and not to ex¬press her personal opinion. Hilde appears to be oblivious to the political ramifications of her teaching position (fostering thebeliefs of the state) yet she accepts terrorist code messages while on the job.In the sexual realm Hilde's masochismbecomes more pronounced. Not only doesshe submit to the rape by Paul, she enthu¬siastically accepts his domination. Fass¬binder beautifully summarizes the relationship when we see Hilde lightly runningdown the hall to get Paul the dark beer hedemands. Her every effort is to pleasehim.The entire cadre manifests this same at¬titude toward their leader, August. Neverdo they request an explanation, ratherthey act on command. When undergroundand a dispute arises over the appropriatecourse of action, it is quickly resolved byagreeing to follow customary terrorist be¬havior.Fassbinder's position is clear: there canbe no revolution until the psychologicalstructures of domination are rooted out."My films," says Fassbinder, "are found¬ed on the belief that revolution doesn't be¬long on the cinema screen, but outside theworld. When I show people on the screenthe way things can go wrong, my aim is towarn them that that's the way things willgo if they don't change their lives. I nevertry to reproduce reality in a film. My goalis reveal mechanisms of repression in away that makes people realise the necessity of changing their own reality." TheThird Generation is finally an indictmentnot only of the terrorists, but of the entirepopulation. Fassbinder challenges thecomplacency which feeds on the lull offairy tales. He challenges us to accept re¬sponsibility.DOC FILMSToday:William Shatner, Leonard Nimoy, DeForrest Kelly,and many others inSTAR TREK: THE MOTION PICTURE7:00 and 9:30Tomorrow:STAR TREK Matinee at 2:30THE MARRIAGE OF MARIA BRAUNRainer Werner Fassbinder’s renownedwork, starring Hanna Schygulla*7:15 and 9:30Sunday:Wim Wenders' THE SCARLET LETTER7:15 and 9:00Friday and Saturday films in Cobb Hall; Sunday in Kent 107the mirror of natureeertzfJi^Keafre'sfafeTnteenth-century baliSiauJ //f p*.perfaick acfSOP BOOKSTORE5757 s universitym/th 9:30-6=30f9=30-5 S 11- 4Monday, January 19thTHERay Still, OboeCHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRAFIRSTIn a lecture-demonstrationCHAIRHitchcock Hall8pmAdmission free!GREY CITY JOURNAL -FR4v( 16 jaNUARV 19812-*0 Friday 16 Saturday 17I Monday 19 Tuesday 20 Wednesday 21ARTPhotographs by Paul Rivkin: Those ofus who dabble in photography (andwho doesn't?) are usually glad to haveour snapshots come out in focus. PaulRivkin, a third year student in the col¬lege whose photographs are currentlyon exhibit in the Harper Mezzaninecorrider, has gotten his focus right,and a good deal more. Split aboutevenly between portraits and still lifesof familiar objects (with one land¬scape and one process shot for goodmeasure), his photos exhibit the kindof care and attention to technical con¬siderations that are the first sign ofreal photographic professionalism.His still lifes, generally more suc¬cessful than the portraits, are con¬ceived and executed with the kind ofarresting composition that heightensthe textural and temporal uniquenessof objects and scenes. They consist ofthe standard Weston array of wallsand household fixtures, with sharp,low sunlight illuminating them invari¬ably from the left (as also in the por¬traits); but while the subjects and set¬ups may be familiar, the resultingphotographs, like all good work in thisvein, have the ability to make themnew. Not all the portraits achieve quiteso strong an effect (letting the facesthemselves do most of the work, whichcan have its advantages, thoughthey're not used here), but one,''Marie,'' is as happily revealing of thequirkiness of a human face as''Mixer" is of a chrome and porcelainHamilton Beach contraption. The ex¬hibit can be viewed in the corrider ofHarper Mezzanine; the photographsare for sale. —MAFILMStar Trek (Robert Wise 1979): Or how tospend a fortune and turn out a dullscience fiction movie. There are somenice special effects, but all too oftenthey are marred by Wise's decision tolinger on them far too long. The plot isunnecessarily cryptic, as if somethird-rate hack had been ordered toemulate Kubrick's 2001. The TV seriesworked best as an expansion of Ken-nedy-era American ideals; the movielacks this point of view and substitutesnothing in its place. Friday, Jan. 16, at7:00 and 9:30, Saturday, Jan. 17, at2:30 in Quantrell. Doc; $2.00 - NMThe Philadelphia Story (George Cukor,1940): Main Line belle KatherineHepburn tries to marry decent, downto earth (and dull) John Howard, buther playboy ex-husband Cary Grantdoes what he can to frustrate herplans. Jimmy Stewart and Ruth Hus¬sey are also on hand as two scandal-sheet reporters covering the wedding,who contribute still further to the ro¬mantic complications. This extraordi¬narily graceful adaptation of PhilipBarry's play is one of the true classicsof American comedy; there is virtual¬ly nothing wrong with it. (Except LJCdoesn't like its personal politics.) Inthe 1956 musical vesion, High Society,the^e was much ado about the monied Nora (Diane Rudall) and Torvald (Nicholas Rudall) in a Doll's HousepW butr eveclasses having to justify themselves,The Philadelphia Story is blissfullyexempt from such worldly concerns.Saturday, Jan. 17, at 7:15 and 9:30, atLaw School Auditorium. Law SchoolFilms; $1.50. — MAThe Marriage of Maria Braun (RainerWerner Fassbinder, 1979): Fass¬binder's comment on German opor-tunism after the War. Hanna Schygul¬la as Maria Braun is brillant.Tomorrow, Saturday, January 17 at7:15 and 9:30. Doc; Cobb Hall. $2.00.The Scarlet Letter (Wim Wenders,1977): A modern German adaptationof the nineteenth century Americannovel. Wim Wenders made no majorchanges in the story; the film is a liter¬al translation from word into image.Although Wenders does not count thisfilm among his best films, it is defin¬itely worth seeing, especially for thechance to see Germanic interpretationof Natanial Hawthorne's novel of adul¬tery, confession and contrition. WimWnders meets Hester Prynne, andthey get along fairly well. Sunday,Jan. 18, at 7:15 and 9:00 in Kent 107.thegreycityjournal17th Issue 16 January 198113th YearBrad Bittan, Leland Chait, Peter T. Daniels, Susan Franusiak, Jim Guenther,Jack Helbig, Danny Kahn, Jeff Makos, Neil Miller, Mark Pohl, Renee Saracki,Margaret Savage, Bruce Shapiro, John Svatek, Michele White, Ken Wissoker.Copy editing by Felicia M. Cylich and Andrea Thompson.Mike Alper, film editorRichard Pettengill, music editor.Lucy Conniff, book editor.Edited by Laura Cottingham.Production this week by Susan Franusiak and .aura Cottingham.The grey city journal is published weekly by the Chicago Maroon, Ida Noyes Hall, 11212 East 59th Street, Chicago, Illinois. For advertising information, call Wanda at753 FAME. Doc; $2.00 — JHThe Shanghai Gesture (Josef von Stern¬berg, 1941): The impossibly beautifulGene Tierney is forced to get by as ahostess in a Far Eastern opium den.This late effort by von Sternbergshows him working under greater fi¬nancial restrants then usual, but withhis imagination as prodigal as ever.Monday, Jan. 19, at 8:00 in Quantrell.Doc; $1.00.MUSICBrian James and Stiv Bators: Anyoneinterested in seeing two early punk pioneers and what they're up to now, Isuggest you go. Brian James was theguitarist of The Damned and wasabout the best thing that group hadgoing for it. After leaving TheDamned, James hitched up with iggyPop's band for awhile and toured withhim. James' guitar playing for Iggywas simply amazing, sinking into blistering solo after solo. Stiv late of TheDead Boys, tried forming an imitationDead Boys, after star guitarist Cheetah Chrome left the group. Stiv Batorsand The Dead Boys never really got offthe ground and now Stiv is hooked upwith James. Sounds like an interestingnight of music from two of Punk's firstjourneyman. Tonight, Friday, January 16. Ida Noyes gym. 9.00 p.m. —RS ~The Plasmatics: For those of you still interested, ex porn star Wendy O. Williams Brings that unique combinationof sex and violence to Chicago whenher band, The Plasmatics play atStages this Saturday. I really can'tcriticize them as I've never heardthem but it seems to me to be part ofthe old Kiss syndrome for decadentpunks. Count me out. If I were you I'djust watch them on Friday's tonightand then decide. Stages 3730 N. Clark.Saturday, January 17 around 10 00 —RS ,FRIDAY, 16 JANUARY >981 'GREY GlTY JOURNAL Reggae Party — The One Love ReggaeBand will play Saturday night at aparty sponsored by SGAC and LSA. Tobe held at the Law School, the partywill start at 9 p.m. Admission is freewith U of C ID. — JGTenerman Chuck Woodfork and the Robert Shy Trio An evening of straightahead jazz this Saturday night at 9:00.Chances R, 5225 Harper Ave., inHa.'per Court. $3 cover charge. — JGThe James Lewis Ensemble. HydeParker James Lewis will be featuredas a pianist-vocalist along with MarcoGarcia on reeds, Gerald Lindsey onelectric bass, and Melvin Davis ondrums for an evening of funk, jazz, andrhythm and blues. The Valhalla, 1515E. 53rd St. Saturday, January 17 at9:00. $3 cover. — GGCreation Sing Along Haydn's Creation,Parts 1 and 2, will be sung (in English); scores provided) by the audience at Rockefeller Chapel, 8:00 P.M.,tonight. Rodney Wynkoop conducts;soloists, piano accompaniment. Free!Symphonic Wind Ensemble: Programunannounced. 12:00 noon, Thursday,January 22, Goodspeed Recital Hall(4th floor); free.Mandel Week: The reopening of Mandel Hall will be celebrated in Feburarywith appearances by the Contem¬porary Chamber Players (Friday the6th), Peter Serkin (Tuesday the 10th),and the University Chorus and Orchestra (Saturday the 14th). Admission tothe last is by free ticket now availablefrom the Concert Office, Goodspeed310. The CCP is free, and Serkin tickets can be bought at the same place.Bad News, Good News Zita Cogan(who is the Concert ottice; announcesthat due to illnes the Gabrieli Quartethas canceled their American tour.Tickets for the scheduled January 23rdconcert will be honored at a substituteconcert to be arranged for later in theseason. She expects to program an at¬traction of equal interest Of course,no one else plays Britten's 1976 Quartet. However, Zita also announces thata second concert grand piano has beenacquired for Mandel Hall, to match theone that returns there from its temporary home in Rockefeller Chapel. Thiswill make possible the programmingof the considerable two piano litera¬ture and (are you listening, Barbara;perhaps some two piano concertos -Milhaud's, for instance, is great fun. -PTDUniversity Organist Edward Mon-dello will celebrate his twentieth anni¬versary in that post with a recital oforgan music by Handel, Franck, andDavid; he will be joined by CSO trum¬peter George Vosburgh. The concerttakes place Sunday night, January18th, at 8:00 PM, in Rockefeller Chapel; students $2.50, others $4.00.Mondello has actually been a uni¬versity organist for twenty sevenyears: before succeeding his teacherHeinrich Fleischer in his present postin 1960, he was the Bond Chapel organ¬ist (playing a different instrumentfrom the one there now). Among hisduties are Sunday services in theChapel, the Chapel concert series, andthe informal lecture demonstrationsthat he has been giving for the pasteight or ten years. These programs, at12:15 on Tuesdays, offer Ed a chanceto talk to the curious, to explain the* workings of the organ, and to explorethe literature with anyone interestekd. He is now beginning to welcomeother musicians to these programs;last week a cellist joined him, andother organists from a wide area willsoon be heardEd Mondello is particularly proud ofthe classes he teaches in elementarymusic theory. Introducing novices tothe clefs, to sight singing, and to musical dictation help him sharpen his ownskills in these important areas Hisprivate organ students are one exampie of his influence on the local com munity — among them is Tom Weisflog, organist at Lyric Opera andorgan advisor to the Chicago Symphony, as is also the music and art editor of the U of C Press. Mondello hasbeen harpsichordist with Music of theBaroque for quite some time, and wasinfluential in persuading the CSO to in¬stall a pipe organ in Orchestra Hall.He has toured the US extensively,once representing this country at aCanadian Guild of Organists convention.Pick up a ticket at the ReynoldsClub box office, and join in the tributeto a fine contributor to the musical lifeof the area. — PTDTHEATREA Doll's House by Henrik Ibsen: thestory of Torvaid and Nora Helmer,whose perfect marriage turns out to bea horrible sham. Although the playwas first produced in the late nineteenth century, it remains timely andeffective. Nicholas Rudall directs him¬self as Torvald Helmer, the stiff, bour¬geois husband, and Diana Rudall isNora Helmer, the perfect housewifewho is pushed too far. To be reviewednext issue. January 15 February 22 inthe Reynolds Club first floor theatre.Tickets on sale now at the ReynoldsClub Box Office; student discounts areavailable. Call 753-3581 for further in¬formation. — MSPlaymates by Herbert Allen: the lovesand times of Vita Sackville-West andSir Harold Nicolson, whose sham of amarriage turns out to be perfect. ThisMasterpiece Theatre style drama isfun in parts, but is too long and full ofself congratulatory platitudes aboutlove and marriage. One BarbaraMcGreevy is terrifically vampy intrue 'twenties fashion as Violet Treyfusis. Vita Sackville West's lover. Therest of the cast does not have herstrength of presence but does admir¬ably. Produced by the Chicago CityTheatre Company on the fourth floorof the Fine Arts Building, 410 S. Michi¬gan. Runs through February 22; gen¬eral admission is $6 00. Call 663 3618for reservations and information. —MSChildren of a Lesser God: The TonyAward winning drama about a teacherat a school for the deaf and his court¬ship and marriage to one of his stu¬dents. The first three fourths of theplay is a marvelous examination intothe feelings of deaf people vis a vis thehearing world. The play shows how the'normal' world fails to attribute everyday human strengths and weaknessesto people who seem different. The lastpart of the play is a mess, it raises in¬teresting questions but provides fewclues as to how they can be answered.Are deaf people handicapped or dothey merely speak another language?How should deaf people try to adjust tothe hearing world? Should deaf peopleeven try at all? Blackstone Theatre, 60E Balbo, thru Feb. 14. Call 977-1700 forticket information. — NMETC.^ Women's Coffeehouse: An evening ofmusic, poetry readings, and food withChristy Nordheim, Sidney Spinster,and Elizabeth Fides providing the musical entertainment. Sponsored byWomen's Union. Thursday, January 22at 8:00. Renold’s Club. Free.See the Illinois state animal: 700,000 lllinois students elected the white taileodeer as the official state animal. Overa century ago, taxidermist Carl Akeley created the "Four Seasons" dioramas, which illistrate the seasonal differences in appearance and habits ofthe wh te tail. The "father of moderntaxidermy'"s creations are on displayat the Field Museum, Roosevelt Roadat Lake Shore Drive. Monoav thruThursday 9 4, Friday ® 9, Saturdayand Sunday, 9 5.3BlackbodyRadiation Oil/Gas/EnergyCivilEngineeringFluidDynamics 59 FunSecurities\ < ■1 11111...liVj-uiiiiiiiiiStatisticalTestingProduction/Planning ProgrammingAidsLabChemistry Marketing/SalesAstrologymmElectronicEngineering Mathematics3D Graphics REINVESTMENTMODULE SURVEYINGMODULEBUSINESSDECISIONSMODULESECURITIESANALYSISMODULE ELECTRICALENGINEERINGMODULEMATHUTILITIESMODULEFree software ($50-$120 worth). Plus a cashrebate when you buy the programmable.PrinterUtilitynFree software plus cash rebates.A $10 rebate on a TI-58C—$25 rebate on a TI-59.The TI-58C. An exceptional value.Up to 480 program steps or 60 mem¬ories. Plus Constant Memory™ thatretains data when turned off. $130.The TI-59. Top-of-the-Line.Up to 960 program steps or 100memories. Magnetic card read/write capability. $300.Modules turn a programmableinto a dedicated calculator. Paketteshave selected programs you key in. □ I’ve bought a TI-58C. Send me the one module and theI one Packette listed below, plus my $10 rebatej □ I've bought a TI-59 Send me the two modules and two NamePackettes listed below plus my $25 rebateMODULES PAKETTES AddressALTERNATE ALTERNATE. Send to: Texas Instruments Free Software OfferI P.0. Box 725, Dept. M, Lubbock, Texas 79491 Calculator Serial Number (from back of unit)I Return this coupon with (1) Customer Information Card (packed with calculator), (2) Dated copy of proof of purchase betweenJanuary 1,1981 — March 31,1981 Items must be postmarked by April 14,1981 Please allow 30 days for delivery Offer void ij where prohibited Offer good in U S A Tl reserves the right to substitute items See your Tl Dealer for complete details 'U.S. suggested retail prices. *For use w ith TI-59 only.© 1981 Texas Instruments Incorporated Texas InstrumentsINCORPORATED 45748AGREY CITY JOURNAL- FPinAV 1A l A Ki i iadv lamby RENEE SARACKIThe year is now over and what a perfect¬ly mediocre year it's been for pop music inthis country. John Lennon's revoltingdeath in December served as a pathetic re¬minder to all music fans that pop musiccannot save the world and that, at best, itmay speak to individuals on a personallevel and move them, but it can no longerspeak for a generation, as if it ever could.The 60's were a time of unabashed naivetyand no one saw that better than Lennonhimself in 1980. And today, just as the 60'sflower children saw the futility in theirpassive peace demonstrations, 1976’spunks are beginning to acknowledge thefact that their hostile posturings and ag¬gressive stances are just as ineffective inbringing about positive change.All is not lost, however, since thereexists in England a small group of artists(the beginnings of a movement perhaps),who have realized that to create somethingof import is only to express truths as theysee them. If they have a knack for melo¬dies or lyrical tendencies as well, whatmore is needed? Often personal tormentand pain fills these songs with truths toohard to hear. Yet when we hear them weknow that we are in the presence of artistsrather than clever polemicists. Men whocreate for themselves and not for others. Itis this dedication to the personal that hasuniversalized pop music from it's bluesand jazz roots, through Frank Sinatra andElvis, right up to the present. No amountof right headed politiczing (such as heardfrom The Clash) can fill the void a true popsong fills.980 saw the emergence of a new form ofphotojournalism in the pop music worlddebut issue of The Face.by ex-New Musical Express (NME) chief,Nick Logan, The Face arrived on new-stands in May with glossy, quality pageschock full of colorful full page portraits ofall our favorite punk posers. The Face'sHail of Fame includes such luminaries asSiouxsies, Ari Up and The Slits, The MoDettes, Paul Weller and John Lydon.Hardly a month goes by without TheFace's latest word on the latest trend. I'lladmit it's a bit trendy but it's an absolutelydelicious treat. Who can resist Julie Bur-chill's latest scathing indictment of Ameri¬cans' values/tastes or Paul Weller's latestpaisley print? The Face with its^minimumything Rolling Stone should One of The Face's star pin-ups in 1980was lead Bunnyman Ian "Mac" McCul¬loch. Echo and the Bunnymen are one ofthe most inventive, dazzling and imagina¬tive groups to appear in 1980. Last year onthe independent Zoo label they released"Rescue"; a dynamite single which beginswith an irresistable hook and continueswith rich and mesmerizing melodies. Echo songs, however, is McCulloch's verbaldexterity. Often The Teardrop Explodes'themes become banal variations on someof love's more unpleasant side effects.This rivalry promises to be interesting andinformative to the groups involved and thepop music fan regardless of which grouponp> favor*;H3be but is not. can barely wait for the nextcenterfold of Mick "Clothes" Jones(NME's t zers name) to decorate my barren wall with.FRIDAY, 16 JANUARY 1981- XVVVVand the Bunnymen also appeared on a su-purb Liverpool sampler, Street to Street.Street to Street seemed to signal the end ofMersey beat and the creative rut Liverpoolhad been in since the rise of The Fab Fourand the rebirth of a new Liverpool, withEcho and the Bunnymen leading the way.Crocodiles, the year's most promisingdebut, was an album with a rich, baroquesound which,%as many critics have correct-ly noted, owes a debt to the melancholicmusic of The Doors and thebest of the 60'spsychedelic rock. What* differentiatesEcho and the Bunnymen from theirtripped out predecessors is a sense of styleand humor. Just listen to "Villiers Ter¬race" or take a look at Ian McCulloch'shair and you'll know what I mean. Echoand the Bunnymen, with their camouflageclothes and Oxfam raincoats are a modernGothic delight. The cover of Crocodilesfeatures the band members in various contemplative positions in a forest with mas¬sive practically leafless trees at night.This in itself is an arresting cover but withthe lighting it is simply superb An evoca¬tive, haunting and memorable cover.From what I've read it seems that Echoand the Bunnymen are bogging down theirstage show with dry ice and tricky psychedelic effects. I can only hope that this is aslight exaggeration and am eagerly await¬ing their American stage debut to judgefor myself. One thing is for certain andthat is that Echo and the Bunnymen are agroup with more wit and style than any Li¬verpudlian export since you know who.tcno and tne Bunnymen are not alone inthe psychedelic revival and are neck andneck with The Teardrop Explodes, anothergroup in the Liverpool battle of the bands.Ian McCullough's ex pal and band mateJulian Cope split with Mac after a bitterfeud and formed his own band, The Tear¬drop Explodes. The Teardrop Explodesshare Echo's fondness for military chicand dry ice on stage, and it seems that fortwo groups so violently opposed to one an¬other, they are amazingiy similar. Earlierthis year, The Teardrop Explodes also re¬leased an impressive debut album, Kili¬manjaro. Unlike the incessant drone of hisrival's song, lead singer/bassist Cope'stunes incorporate jazzy horn sections inhis songs, and are played at a more uptem¬po pace. What is missing in Cope's best— GREY CITY The alliance between Art andRock 'n' Roll has always been somewhatquestionable. I can think of only three menin the history of pop music, that I wouldcall artists: Bob Dylan, Van Morrison andJohn Lennon. Ian Curtis, lead singer of JoyDivision, had he lived, seemed a worthysuccessor to these men.While I willingly recognize the qualityand beauty inherent in the best works ofthe above-mentioned artists, none of themwith the possible exception of Lennon areamong my heroes. Trash has always beenmy guiding light in rock 'n' roll, hence mylove for Gene Vincent, The New York Dollsand all of 77's punks. Quality in music issomething I always theoretically admiredbut seldom ever listened to. I shall alwaysprefer the excessive emotionalism foundin rock 'n' roll music to the craftmanshipand beauty found in art. The music is slow and droning, ploddingon with relentless repetition. And the voice(if indeed you could call it that) was a dullflat monotone. That was what l oncethought. Now after listening to the haunt-ingly beautiful, "Love Will Tear UsApart", I have realized that Ian Curtis hadmore expression in his quiet monotonethan many a screaming rock 'n' roller. Theslight shifts his voice takes on in "LoveWill Tear Us Apart", beautifully and subt¬ly complement the meanings in the song. Ihave never heard a song so sad and yet soencouraging as "Love Will Tear Us Apart"and it is to Ian Curtis' credit as an artistthat he can give others hope and joythrough his own personal pairThe power and intensity in the music ofIan Curtis will continue long past his pre¬mature death. can't think of a more ap¬propriate tribute for a man than the factthat his work will be remembered longafter other's are forgotten.As usual, England set the trends whiteAmerica followed in 1980. While Americahad its share of pop music mavericks,groups worthy of the media hype they get,they all seem to lack one crucial ingredient: soul. Groups like The Talking Headsmade interesting headway into the areasof funk and polyrhythms but it all seemedso academic. Four young eggheads experi¬ment with rhythms that don't suit them.Another prime example of this phenome¬non is James Chance aka Black. I'm sorryIt is for these ceasons that it was so hardfor me to fully acept Joy Division. It wasonly after a friend/fanatic would wear outthe turntable with Unknown Pleasures,Closer, and various singles that I slowlyand reluctantly became ensnared in thepower and beauty in the words and musicof Joy Division. By this time, however,Curtis was already dead and Joy Divisionwas no more.The anguished pleas and tortureddemons that manifested themselves in JoyDivision's music made me realize that artwasn't static and detached; something tobe analyzed and dissected (not unlike amortician's cool and detached work on acadaver). Art is born out of pain and tor¬ment and is something real and vibrant,something alive and human. It is man at¬tempting to exorcise his demons publicly,and in doing so speaking to all men. Art asa universal plea for help. s art is orrendifficult due to it's highly refined languageand form, it requires a certain patiencehard work to be fully appreciated..Once it is understood, though, the rewardsare immeasurable. It is like being given agift of sight for the first time. Imagine thisfeeling occurring while listening to Joy Di¬vision and you'll understand some of theirmagic.journal — Jimmy, you can screech all you want butyou'll never be James Brown, Therefore, Ihave come to believe that there is only ongenuine rock 'n' roller in America, a manwhose life is pure rock 'n' roll muyth, andthan man is Johnny Thunders.Thunders never had the technical virtu¬osity of some guitarists but he has hislicks. He may be a bit sloppy on stage buthe's still a great dancer. He has heart. Andsoul. A messed up, shook up kid with aflashy style and guitar. Some things neverchange. Long live Johnny Thunders. Andlong live Rock 'n' Roll.5OH,FAULKNERWilliam Faulkner: His Life and Workby David MinterThe Johns Hopkins University Press325 pp., $16.95by LUCY CONNIFF"Those two fat volumes, withwhich it is our custom to commemo¬rate the dead-who does not knowthem, with their ill-digested massesof material, their slipshod style,their tone of tedious panegyric, theirlamentable lack of selection, of de¬tachment, of design?"—Lytton StracheyAfter attempting to read JosephBlotner's two volume biography of Wil¬liam Faulkner (1897-1962), it is with greatinterest that one now reads and relishesDavid Minter's new biography. Blotner,like Carlos Baker, Ernest Hemingway'sbiographer, amassed a great amount of in¬teresting material on his subject. Howev¬er, in order to understand both the manand the artist one had to sort throughmany "ill-digested masses."Fortunately, David Minter usesBlotner's biography as a foundation for hisnew study, rather than an example. In thisconcise biography, he traces the connec¬tion between Faulkner the man andFaulkner the artisf. To do this, he reliesheavily on Blotner's biography, as well asother published and unpublished materialsby and about Faulkner. In directing and digesting all this material, Minter has suc¬ceeded in constructing a thoroughly read¬able, fascinating account of the flawed life #Henri Cartier-Bresson'sWilliam Faulkner,Oxford Mississippi, 1947and artistic achievement of WilliamFaulkner.From the little boy who enjoyed "puttingthings over on people," to the man whoachieved the same effect in his writing,William Faulkner succeeded in both dis¬turbing and enthralling people through hisactions and writings. Certainly,the peoplein his home of Oxford, Mississippi (the Jef¬ferson of his Yoknapatawpha County)never did fully understand or appreciatehim. They knew his family, but wouldalways think of him as "quair." WilliamFaulkner (he added the "u" later) was thenamesake of his famous great-grandfa¬ther, "the Old Colonel," a soldier and awriter. Although Faulkner's grandfather,"the Young Colonel," John Faulkner, fol¬lowed the distinguished pattern set by hisfather, Faulkner's father Murry was theopposite. An alcoholic and a dismail fail¬ure in both work and marriage, Murrysneered at his first-born son, calling him"snake lips" and "quair" like the rest ofthe town. (When Faulkner modelled theSartoris family on his own family, he omit¬ted Murry.)From his mother, Faulkner gained thesupport he lacked from others in his fami¬ly. She felt her son was a "genius" beforehe had proven himself. She, as well as hisolder friend Phil Stone, provided the en¬couragement he needed in a relatively cul¬tureless community. It is in this section ofthe biography that Mintor clearly estab¬lishes the growth of the artist and the foun¬dations of his art in both his communityand its history. With his mother's andStone's commitment, Faulkner was able toabsorb the continual rejection of the com¬munity, while understanding its historythrough talk and reflection. He never finished high school, but read widely on his own and under Phil Stone's direction.Yet, it is only when he left Oxford that hebegan, in writing, "to put things over onpeople." When his first lovve (and futurewife) Estelle Oldham married her firsthusband, Faulkner joined the Royal AirForce in Canada to become a pilot inFrance during World War I. Although henever actually flied (the war ended beforethat), he began to write letters home de¬scribing his training flights and crashes.In reality, he was still a cadet, yet he camehome wearing a bought officer's uniformaccompanied by a fake limp. The fictionalbattered veteran was a person thatFaulkner held fast to throughout his life.Even when he became a famous man, itwas hard for him to give it up.When Minter writes about the boyhoodand early manhood of Faulkner, he is athis best. He presents in a clear way, theconflicts that are the center of Faulkner'slife and art. For example, the people of Ox¬ford rejected their native son, yet he con¬tinued to live there. Throughout his life, hetraveled, but always returned:"'You're a country boy,' Sherwood An¬derson said, 'all you know is that littlepatch up there in Mississippi where youstarted from.'"During the 1920s in New Orleans, thewriter Sherwood Anderson triggeredFaulkner's creative imagination to returnto "his own postage stamp of native soil."Faulkner began to write less poetry andmore fiction.He wrote his first novel, Soldier's Pay,and fell in love with a new woman, HelenBaird. During the first half of Minter'sbook Faulkner's attitude towards womenis developed incisively and compassiona¬tely as another conflict that colored hisart His mother, his earliest and staun¬ chest supporter, never deserted him. Es¬telle, his first love, deserted him, as didHelen Baird. They were, in a sense, unat¬tainable from the beginning, Minter as¬serts, yet their departures left Faulknerembittered. He also reveals howFaulkner's bitterness towards womencolors their fates in Sanctuary. Yet whenFaulkner came to the creation of the childCaddy Compson in The Sound and the Fury,he felt that he had created "his heart'sdarling." He never lost her, as he did hislater loves, especially his daughter Jill. Inhis mind they were the "girl-women" who,he knew, would grow up and leave him forother men.Also, throughout the book, Minter de¬scribes and explains Faulkner's alcoholicbinges in relation to his life (hisfather drank in the same way) and his art(he found a release and transcendencefrom his life and art through binges).Early in this biography, there is a success¬ful attempt by Minter to reveal howFaulkner transmutted the conflicts of bothhis family's past history and his presenthistory into his art, juxtaposed to a levelheaded picture of Faulkner the man tryingto live the life of both a farmer and a writ¬er.Minter's task is not an easy one becausethere is so much material available onFaulkner. Therefore, his success is to thebenefit of all those interested in Faulkner.However, a major portion of the biographyis spent explicating Faulkner's youth andhis first great writing period, perhaps toomuch. Also, Minter tends to repeat certainphrases over and over again, much to thereader's annoyance. Yet, from his por¬trayal of these formative years, one real¬izes how crucial they were to Faulkner'slife and art.f (?,DAY o JANU ARY 1981GREY CITY JOURNAL6WlMTfiMADNThere’s still time to sign up for ourWine Tasting class. Sample thedelights of the California vineyards.Impress your friends. Be a legend inyour own time. Registration throughTuesday, in Rm. 210 Ida Noyes. $20covers all materials.P!)§<§©UINTTickets now on sale for Feb. 19 per¬formance of Sweeney Todd. Also,two-for-one coupons are now on sale.Good at many of Chicago’s finestcultural attractions.HARNIt UlMiYAn informal concert of records andvoices, 4 p.m. Wednesday in the MainReading Room.Our favorite Yale graduate, Flashi; Gordon, valiantly struggles againsti: Ming the Merciless and his temptingdaughter, Aura. But can he survivethe tunnel of terror? Tune in today, ,| 12:15 p.m. Reynolds Club Lounge! *On Monday: The Shark Men! ATTENTIONARTISTSAND OTHERSFota is now accepting sketchesfor the 1981 FOTA calendar andT-shirt designs.Please submit PRELIMINARYSKETCHES or IDEAS byJANUARY 23, 1981 to theStudent Activities Office, Room210, Ida Noyes Hall. A cash prizewill be awarded.For further information,contact Brian David, 947-8161cp IDAY. 16 JANUARY 1981 GREY CITY JOURNAL — 7Iby JIM GUENTHERGreg and I — we had long hair. Thatdoesn't mean what it used to, cultural an¬alysts will tell you. They say that thecounter-culture, a remnant of the greenAmerica of a bygone time, is searching fornew definitions, trying to get in touch withitself. Flower children and peace niks aremellowing out, trading beads for blowdryers. Activism has turned to apathy.Those same analyzing folks will also tellyou that traditional values are comingback. Charlie Daniels, the archetypicalurban cowboy, has told the Russians to goto hell. "Never did think it would ever hap¬pen again," he sings. Turn on your AMradio and hear "bomb, bomb, bomb,bomb, bomb Iran" in surfer harmony. Fol¬lowing this, you hear the President-electthreatening to do just that. They say thiscountry is getting conservative* They saythings ain't what they used to be,Greg and I — we can't really say howthings have changed. We're young lads,born in 1962. During the Summer of Love,we were just getting ready for kindergar¬ten. Still, we have a certain reverence forthat era, that feeling. The time holds a ma¬gical mystery for us and we often dwell inits ideals, its poetry. We've spent morethan a few evenings looking for that ideal¬ism in Dylan, Neil Young, all the poets.We were searchin' for a heart of gold.What could be more romantic? What couldbe more out of touch with the times? Inter¬state 80 seemed like a good place to startlooking. With our packs, our sign, and myguitar we waited. Taking the guitar isalways a hassle, but I could never leave itbehind. I had just learned a song off NeilYoung's new album, Hawks and Doves,and I was anxious to play it wherever Iwould be tolerated. It's a delicate, whis¬pering piea:"Little Wing, don't fly awayWhen the summer turns to fallDon't you know some people sayThe winter is the best time of themallWinter is the best of all.""Little Wing" is so simple; hell, thereare only two chords. Like much of Young'swork, it is childlike, yet its implicationsare desperately relevant. Little Wing, agentle bird, represents the fading ideals ofpeace. She is the dove.This brief ballad introduces the "dove"side of Hawks and Doves. The instrumen¬tation is acoustic, the voice is his classicwhine, the emotion is a spark. It is thewarning of tin soldiers and Nixon comingin "Ohio." It is the apocalyptic vision of"After the Goldrush". It is the relentlessness that kept us searchin' for that "Hear-rt of gold". Upon hearing it, I appreciatedit, even thought I understood it. That lazystrum, those basic melodies felt so comfortable.When I flipped the album over to the"hawk" side, I didn't know what the hellwas going on. The production soundedstraight out of the Nashville studios, thethemes straight out of the GOP platform,complete with a token thrown to labor. Myfirst thought was that Neil must be joshin'us. Listening again, I found no satire. Hewas serious, but I didn't understand.Back on US 80, we ran into some luck. Aniron-faced hardhat was commuting fromChicago to his home in rural Indiana. "I'llpick up hitchers if they look decent. Neverhad no problem," he told us. I guess welooked decent; our hair was under ourstocking caps.The announcer on the radio said some¬thing about the hostages in Iran and our driver commented, "I'm fed up to herewith that situation. At least now that Rea¬gan's gonna be in, something will happen." Greg and I looked at each otherknowing what that meant for us younglads, born in 1962."L.A. Woman" was on the radio. It wasa good chance to change the subject."The Doors are coming back.""Yeah, l used to dig the shit out of JimMorrison," he reflected.He took us to the Indiana Turnpike, drop¬ping us off by the exit ramp. Greg wasn'ttoo unhappy about being out of that car."We wouldn't be able to talk with thatguy for more than ten minutes withoutcoming to a major conflict in values.""That's not true, he dug the hell out ofJim Morrison.""You mean, dug the shit out of Morri¬son."I stood corrected. How could I have for¬gotten such graphic imagery? Still, nomatter how or why you dig it, rock n' roll isrock n' roll. It was through this commonbond that could see his point of view. Hewas a worker, Neil Young's "UnionMan." "I'm proud to be a union manI make those meetings when l can,yeah."He has his institutions, we have ours, yetwe share a few.The wait for our next ride was long andcold. Finally, a woman stopped herbeaten-up Impala in the middle of traffic."Get in quick. Throw your stuff in theback seat." We did as we were told.This was Nancee. She was coming fromOmaha where her husband beat her,where she was fired from her job becausecocktail waitresses aren't supposed to bepregnant. She was going to Fairborn, Ohiowhere her boyfriend was going to love her,where she could start a new life. She need¬ed something new and fresh; she was ayoung lass, born in 1961.Nancee knew all about drifting, beingbohemian. She was hitching around thecountry when she was twelve. Dope? Herparents turned her on when she was ababy. That was cool with Nancee, she hadturned-on her own two year old daughter.Men? By the time she was fourteen, sheknew everyone on the block. The Law? They taught her all about it during heryear and a half in prison.One more thing about Nancee, she was amember of the moral majority. After hav¬ing more men than she could count, shewas looking for a traditional commit¬ment. The kind of relationship she hopedfor with Frank in Fairborn is idealized inthe first cut on the "hawk" side, a lovewith "stayin' power, through thick andthin." Her traditionalism extended into re¬ligion and politics. The Bible, according toher, is the literal word of God. Nancee alsosaid that Ronald Reagan is the man to putthis country back on its feet.Though she was knowledgeable about allkinds of music, Nancee's favorite tuneswere country. "They say so much aboutlife," she explained. I wasn't one to arguewith one of her experience. Taking thebackroads through Indiana and Ohio, welistened to local country music stations.After a while, I began to develop a sensibil¬ity about the Nashville sound. Throughthis, I realized that the "hawk" side of thealbum is damn good country music.Nancee found us a good meal and awarm place to spend the night.We exchanged addresses and em¬braced.The next day we were off for Pittsburgh.After a little while on the side of the road,we caught a ride that was going all theway. The driver was an engineer, and asuccessful, wealthy one at that. He seemedto like us in a fatherly sort of way. I guesswe struck him as nice kids.In eastern Ohio, it gets hilly and Gregwas rocked to sleep. As everything wasquiet, I asked a big question. "So, what doyou think of the new administration?"He was excited. Government is too bigand the military is too small. The citiesshould be saved from within, not throughfederal spending. I expressed a concernabout growing American imperialism; heexpressed a wish for the return of Nixonand Kissinger. Throughout our discussion,my points were brutally attacked, yet Iwas respected. By the time we reachedPittsburgh, I had a deep regard for thisman.We weren't just dumped somewhere inPittsburgh; our driver found exactlywhere we were going and let us off there.Fifteen minutes later we were relaxing inGreg's friend's dorm room, when we hearda knock on the door. It was our driver. Ihad left my hat and gloves in his car and hetracked us down to return them.That evening I thought about the engi¬neer, Nancee, and about the title trackfrom Hawks and Doves. The ideology ofnational defense is clearly expressed,"Ready to go, willin' to stay and pay/U.S.A., U.S.A./ So my sweet love candance another free day/ USA, USA." As Ibegan to dig country music, and as Ithought of the warmth of my hawkish newfriends, another line came to mind, "Gotrock n' roll, got country music playin'/ Ifyou hate us you don't know what you'resayin!"I couldn't condemn these people but Ididn't have to accept their values. Aftercoming to understand the "hawk" side ofthe album, I listened to the "dove" sideagain. "Lost in Space," the third cut, be¬came especially significant. The narratoris torn between a lover he is losing to theestablishment and the call of his ideals. Allhe is left with is "the deep sea blues." Des¬perately, he repeats his plea, "live withme." Hawks and doves are fundamentallydifferent, and a relationship is broken bythis difference.Greg and I — we got our hair cut. We'reyoung lads, born in 1962. They say we'resupposed to go to the post office and fill outsome kind of form. Suddenly, thinkingabout hawks and doves has become morethan birdwatching.8- -GREY C»TY JOURNAL FRIDAY, 16 JANUARY 1981 -Energy Program SuccessfulEfforts to reduce energy consumption inUniversity buildings have been more suc¬cessful than anticipated, according to astudy released yesterday by William B.Cannon, Vice-President for Business and Fi¬nance.However, unexpectedly large increases inthe price of electricity have left the Univer¬sity facing a possible $500,000 deficit in itsenergy budget by the end of the fiscal yearin June. Rising energy costs have been anincreasing burden for the University in re¬cent years, and are budgeted at $11 millionin the current fiscal year — 3.6 percent ofthe total. Because of the expected deficit,Cannon’s report stressed the “need for anextra conservation effort during the next sixmonths.”The study, conducted by the University’soffice of energy management and conserva¬tion, reports that the consumption of elec¬tricity has been reduced from 134 millionkilowatt hours in fiscal 1978-79 to 127 millionkilowatt hours in fiscal year 1979-80, whichended last June. A substantial reduction innatural gas consumption has also takenplace, according to the study.The savings reflect various conservationefforts made by the University over the pastseveral years. The savings have come infour major areas: reduction of electricalconsumption, greater temperature control,reductions in ventilation, and the installa¬tion of computer systems to control energyuse in buildings. Efforts to reduce the consumption of elec¬tricity have centered on the installation oftimers to automatically shut off lights, andon rewiring buildings to reduce the lightinglevels.To save on heating and air conditioningcosts, the University has ordered that build¬ing temperatures be no warmer than 65 to 68degrees in the winter and no cooler than 82degrees in the summer. Officials are alsoconsidering the installation of a central airchilling plant to replace smaller air condi¬tioners. Finally, the University is consider¬ing a program to install storm windows andinsulation where they would prove cost-ef¬fective.Ventilation in buildings is also being re¬duced in order to save the energy used bothto operate the equipment and to heat thecold air drawn in from the outside.The installation of a Johnson Controlscomputer two years ago to control the heat¬ing, ventilation, and air conditioning sys¬tems in Regenstein Library has reduced en¬ergy use there by 20 to 30 percent, accordingto the report. The University now hopes toexpand the system to include other campusbuildings.While it was originally estimated that thiswould save about $30,000 per year, it hassaved nearly $70,000 annually. The system ispresently being expanded to Bartlett Gym¬nasium, the Henry Crown Field House,Cummings Life Science Center, Cochrane-Woods Art Center, and the Surgery Brain Research Institutes.Additional projects have been proposed toincrease energy efficiency, including theTenurecontinued from page 1Among the criteria considered in makingtenure decisions at the University, none ismore important than scholarly research.Acording to Quantrell Award-winnerRichard Taub, associate professor of socialsciences in the College, “The issue of tenureis too often cast as ‘teaching’ versus ‘re¬search’. Both are possible criteria.“After the basic scholarly criteria areconsidered,” Taub said, “there must beroom for other criteria to come into play.Otherwise, what happens is that the criteriabecome too unidimensional. Teaching veryseldom gets the weight that it ought to.”Nevertheless, Taub said, there is a certain“bedrock level” of scholarly attainment“below which you cannot go: ... One startswith a minimum notion of accomplishmentsin research and publication.”The danger faced by a university such asChicago, which claims to seek for its facultypersons whose accomplishments and poten¬tialities are adjudged to be of the very high¬est order, Taub said, is that “a great under¬graduate teacher” and a competent scholar,but not “a towering figure of scholarship,”is “the sort of person we don’t get, who wedon’t try hard enough to keep or to pro¬mote.”David Shute, a fourth-year student in theCollege whose work on the Dean’s StudentTask Force on Education in the College has renovation of the University steam plantand the construction of a garbage incinera¬tor which would generate electricity.led him to consider the issue of tenure, saidthat the University’s “institutional identityrequires that great researchers get tenureeven if they are lousy teachers.” He said hedisapproved of the practice of granting ten¬ure in the College to those faculty memberswho have joint appointments in the Collegeand other divisions, unless they have de¬monstrated an ability to teach effectively.“An ‘old-boy’ network is making these de¬cisions,” Shute said. Shute said he disap¬proves, however, of the use of student evalu¬ations in making tenure decisions, because“students are unclear in their criteria forevaluating instructors.”The emphasis on research is not a point ofunanimity among the faculty. Frank Kina-han, Assistant Professor of English, anotherQuantrell laureate, said that there is a di¬versity of opinion within his own depart¬ment, and that seniority does not necessari¬ly determine the view which a facultymember will take of research versus teach¬ing.“The phase heard most often,” Kinahansaid, “is ‘Is this person a valuable memberof the community.’” Kinahan said one mustavoid the view that tenure decisions aremade by abstract units of people — "Theyare made by individuals... There is no auto¬matic system in which certain credentialsmake bells ring, automatically determiningtenure.” Tenure committees, he said, do notbase their recommendations on abstractconsiderations.THE BLUE GARGOYLEVegetarian Food ServiceOpen 9 AM to 1:30 PMMonday-FridayOpening January 5 for Winter TermServing:Healthy DessertsDeli cious Be veragesWhole Grain BreadsGreat Soul Wanning SoupsDaily Ho t En tree5655 S. University (corner of 57th & University)Inside the University ChurchBring this ad in for 50c off on our soups. r Book Spacefor Spring BreakDepart ReturnRoundtrip Space 20 Mar. 29 Mar.Chicago to San Francisco *272.00Chicago to Los Angeles 302.00Chicago to New York (Piedmont) 165.00(Midway) 198.00Chicago to Washington (Piedmont) 147.00(Midway) 188.00Chicago to Boston (Piedmont) 164.00Remember - regular fares are subject to increase at anytime, so book now and SAVE.MIDWAY TRAVELAd. Building 753-2301PROFESSIONAL OPTIONAdmissions MeetingBUSINESS LAWFor all students in the College inter¬ested in the Graduate School ofBusiness or the Law School, or admis¬sion to the Joint Program leading todegrees in both Schools.Tuesday, January 204:00 P.M.Harper 284 Walnut LegDESKSWood $75.00Matching Chair. Available(AII wood, armlott, fwivol)Good Selection of New and UsedDesks, Chairs, File Cabinets, Etc.BRAND EQUIPMENT8560 S. CHICAGO RE 4-2111Open Daily 8:30-5, Sat. 9:00-3 SAVE!!! SAVE!!! SAVE!!!40%-70% off on reconditionedstereo components at Hear AgainStereo, Inc, 100% guaranteed,60-Day trade-back. This week'sone of a kind specials:SONY TC 666D $175.00MARANTZ 2270 250.00ADVENT 201 149.95DUAL 1249 99.00GARRARD 95B 25.00ONKYO A-7 175.00H/K 175 Demo 219.00Plus much, much more.HEAR AGAIN STEREO7002 N. Californio, 33S-7737Open Mon.-Sat. at 11:00 a.m.The Chicago Maroon — Friday, January 16, 1981 — 15• *v I j *• r > \ I 4.DR. M.R. MASLOVOPTOMETRIST•Eye Examinations•Contact Lenses (Soft & Hard)* Ask about our annual service agreementFashion Eye Wear&SOFLENS(polymacon)Contod LensesHYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER15101.55th363-6700 Young Designs byELIZABETH GORDONHAIR De$IGNCRS1620 E. 53rd St.288-2900 GRAFF & CHECKReal Estate1617 E. 55th St.lVi-2Vi-4 RoomApartmentsBased onAvailabilityBU8-5566Available toall comers CHINESE-AMERICAtfRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOpen Daily11 AM to 8:30 PMClosed Monday1318 EAST 63rd1U 4-1062AR 101«These twoTI calculators can help youhandle courses in math, in science, or business.No\y and in the real world.One real-world lesson you'll learn inschool is the importance of productiv¬ity. Time you spend doing the mathpart of the problem is time you can’tspend learning concepts.A Texas Instruments professionalcalculator will help make your studytime more productive. And it can alsohelp you move into the world of a pro¬fessional A world where knowing theconcept is only part of the solution.Bringing out the answer requires aworking knowledge of a powerfulpersonal calculator.Economical TI Business Analyst-Iwith Statistics and advanced busi¬ ness functions.Pre-program¬med with busi¬ness functionsfor time-valueof money, statis¬tics, profit mar¬gin. And otherproblems you’ll encounter inbusiness school. Other capabilities in¬clude percent, squares, logs, andpowers. Its 140-page book, “Keys toMoney Management’’^ $4.95 value),has step-by-step instructions plussample problems. It’s an extra valuewith every BA-I. The TI-55 advanced slide rulewith statistics and program¬mability.This capable calculator has AOS™easy entry system, statistical func¬tions, 10 memories, 9 levels of paren¬thesis, trig, powers and roots, plusprogrammability. Its book, “Calcula¬tor Decision Making Sourcebook” (a$4.95 value), helps you get all thepower pre-programmed into the TI-55.See the whole line of TIcalculators at your collegebookstore or other retailer.*TVademark of Tfexas InstrumentsIncorporated. Fifly^tjrsInnovator!Texas Instruments technology — bringing affordable electronics to your fingertips.C1980 Texas instruments incorporated Texas InstrumentsINCORPORATED 45731 G.W. OPTICIANS1519 E. 55thTel. 947-9335Eyes examined and ContactLenses fitted by registeredOptometrists.Specialists in QualityEyewear at ReasonablePricesLab on premises for fosf service ■ framesreplaced, lenses duplicated on dprescriptions filledHYDE PARKThe Versailles324-0100Large StudiosWalk-in KitchenUtilities Incl.Furn.-Unfurn.•Campus Bus at DoorBased on Availability5254 S. DorchesterBigJim’sPipe &Tobacco Shop1552 E. 53rd St.(Under the I.C. tracks!9 a.m.-7 p.m. weekdays12-4 p.m. SundaysTEST PREPARATION FORLin School Aomissioo TestGmmmtt Mmmemert Adm TestGraduate Record iiAMianioiMedical Colleoe Aim Test '641-2185in Aim Test Jajktesteprep16 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, January 16, 1981SPORTSBy Guy WardWill Hogan came off the bench to lead theChicago men’s basketball team to its secondstraight league victory, this time over LakeForest by a score of 73-48 at the FieldHouse.Hogan had 16 points for Chicago, andcenter Mitch Price had his second consecu¬tive strong performance, playing well on theboards and scoring 11 points.Hogan replaced Pete Leinroth with nineminutes left in the half and Chicago leading24-20. He quickly chalked up four points onoutside jumpers. Hogan scored the last Chi¬cago bucket of the first half, tipping in abreakaway set up by a Price steal. In thesecond half, Hogan moved to the inside,scoring on drives through the lane.Price played an outstanding first half,leading the team in rebounds with seven.After a series of three layups, Price stunnedthe Lake Forest defense with a hook shot,making the score 30-25 for Chicago.Price encountered some foul trouble earlyin the second half, but continued to help theMaroons dominate the boards. TheMaroons’ rebounding, coupled with their ag¬gressive defense, enabled them to build a 21point lead relatively early in the secondhalf. The Lake Forest squad was forced toshoot from the outside, without much suc¬cess, and were usually unable to get secondshots.Chicago’s starters were Leinroth, Price,junior guard Eric Kuby, sophomore guardWade Lewis, and freshman center MikeShackleton. Leinroth snagged 8 points,Lewis totaled 9, Kuby had 7, and Shackletonovercame a very cold first half to score 10points, including a slam dunk with six sec¬onds left to play.The Maroons’ bench contributed strongly 73-39sure on Lake Forest, gradually putting thegame out of reach. Lake Forest was heldscoreless for the first five minutes in thesecond half, while Chicago scored 10 unans¬wered points.Coach John Angelus labeled Chicago’sperformance as “dynamite’’ while one LakeForest fan remarked, “embarrassing!’’ TheMaroons are now 2-0 in league competition,and 7-3 overall. Their next home game isJanuary 24 against Knox College.IM Top TenMen's1. Albanian Refugees2. Divinity School3. Superstiffs4. BRM5. N.U.T.S.6. The Champs7. Wall Street Walkers8. Greenwood9. E.F.U. Stew10. DudleyTeams to watch: Abnormal Deviates, Bo'sHose,Dews Brothers, Fishbein, ChamberlinWomen's Top Five1. Full Court Press2. Misfits3. Bomberettes4. Snell5. Medical SchoolTeams to watch: Dudley, Alpha DeltaPygmies. By Audrey LightNadya Shmavonian scored a season high34 points in leading the women’s basketballteam to a 73-39 victory over Wright JuniorCollege Tuesday night. Shmavonian’s scor¬ing was complemented by the Maroons’ ag¬gressive player-to-player defense whichheld W'right to only five fieldgoals in eachhalf.Chicago was never challenged as itopened an 8-1 lead on two quick baskets byShmavonian and outside shots by Mary Kle-mundt and Janet Torrey. Seven minuteselapsed before Wright scored its first field-goal to make the score 12-4. Wright pulled towithin six points by scoring off an offensiverebound at 12:25, but could get no closer.Shmavonian poured in eight more pointsand Christie Nordhielm, Kim Hammond,and Helen Straus each made inside basketsto open a 20-point lead at 7:10. Only a rash ofChicago turnovers and Wright’s accuutefree throw shooting kept Wright in the gameas it pulled to within 11 points at the half.Torrey opened the second half with ajump shot, and Straus followed by convert¬ing an offensive rebound into a lay-up.Shmavonian then blew the game open by ad¬ding two freethrows, a jump shot, and twoinside baskets on assists by Torrey andHammond. Despite enjoying a lead as largeas 35 points, the Maroons refused to let up ondefense. Wright was forced into numerousturnovers and scored only 14 second halfpoints.All ten Chicago players scored, with Kle-mundt making 12 points to join Shmavonianin double figures. Straus led the team in re¬bounds with 9 - 6 off the offensive board -while Shmavonian had 8 and Klemundtpulled down 7.The Maroons are undefeated this quarter,having won a hard-fought 70-61 victory overNortheastern on January 8th They own a3-2 record and a three-game winning streakextending back to a November victory overElmhurst.Coach Diane Nestel is pleased with theteam’s progress since November. “Thehard work we put in after Christmas hadpaid off,” she said. "Defensively, we are im¬proving on what we had. and offensively,people are getting a better idea of what wewant to accomplish.’’ Nestel was particular¬ly satisfied with the depth displayed in Tues¬day’s game, saying. “It’s good to haveplayers to put in and not lose momentum.There’s no dead weight on this team.”The Maroons return from last night’sgame at Valparaiso to host North Park Col¬lege Saturday at 4 pm. North Park is Chi¬cago’s first district opponent of the season.to their victory, scoring a total of 26 points.In addition to Hogan, sophomore Mike Vailhad six points, and senior Bob Kusyk andfreshman Mike Murden grabbed two apiece.Price commented at the half, “We are get¬ting a lot of help off the bench both offensive¬ly and defensively,” and Lewis noted afterthe game that “the team was there.”The first half was a close contest, endingat 36-35 with Chicago on top, but in the sec¬ond half the Maroons increased their pres- WomenCrushW rightMenCruise ByLake F orestEarly IM LeadersStill Going StrongBy David GruenbaumThe intramural basketball season is near¬ly half over and the four teams which beganthe season highest in the rankings remainthe best. The Albanian refugees and the Di¬vinity School have rolled through all of theirearly games with comparative ease. BRM isalso undefeated and the Superstiff’s onlyloss has come at the hands of the DivinitySchool.In important games this week, Hitchcockknocked off previously undefeated PhiGamma Delta, 33-15. In a key battle for sec¬ond place, Commuter Magic nipped LowerRickert, 37-35, despite the play of DaveSchaeffer. Dudley knocked off arch-rivalChamberlin in a fierce game for the divisionlead. Snell put 65 points on the board to de¬feat Tufts in women’s play to remain unde¬feated.On January 27, the University indoortrack meet will be held in the Field House.Because of unusually large interest in themeet, anyone with a valid ID can enter theField House that night and participate in themeet, regardless of whether or not theyhave a facilities pass. Games to WatchFISHBEIN-GREENWOOD Fri 6:30 BGSpread: Greenwood by 2 Battle forleague championship between two of thebest undergraduate teams.SUPERSTIFFS-ABNORMAL DEVIATESFri 8:30 BGSpread: Superstiffs by 2 This is an impor¬tant test game for both teams. After theirfirst round loss to Divinity School, the Su¬perstiffs have remained undefeated. TheDeviate come into this game undefeated,having not faced a serious challenge yet.Trivia Question:Which famous University social institu¬tion captured the intramural football title in1935?The Chicago Maroon — Friday, January 16, 1981 — 17CALENDARFridayCrossroads: English classes for foreign, women,10:0 am, 5621 S. Blackstone.Kundalini Yoga: Classes meet 5:00-7:00 pm, IdaNoyes. •Seminar on Longitudinal Data Analysis and Sur¬vey Design: “The Problem of Simultaneity in Sto¬chastic Models” speaker James Colemen,12:00-2:00 pm, NORC Main Conference room.Geophysical Sciences Colloquium: “Evolution ofthe Atmosphere" speaker James Walker, 1:30 pm,HGS.Dept of Microbiology: “Restricted HEL-12 VirusInfection in De Novo Infected Human and CanineCells” speaker Roberta Black, Cummings room1117.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Arabic Circle-“The Influence of Arabic Poetry on the Poetry ofManuchihri” speaker Ibrahim al-Sinjilawi, 3:30pm. Pick 218.Mineralogy/Petrology Seminar: “Nickel Parti¬tioning Between Diopside and Liquid by Iron Mi¬croprobe Techniques” speaker Dr. Ian Steele, 3:30pm. HGS 101.Workshop in Economic History: “Planning forPeace: The Surplus Property Act of 1944” speakerLouis Cain, 3:30-5:00 pm, SS 106.Hillel: Reform-Progressive Sabbath Services, 5:30pm, Hillel.Gymnastics Club: Meets 5:30 pm, Bartlett gym.Beginners welcome.Hillel: Adat Shalom Shabbat Dinner, 6:00 pm. S3,Hillel.Doc Films: “Star Trek” 7:00 and 9:30 pm, Cobb.Spartacus Youth League Forum: “From Bra-Burning to Book-Burning — Feminists Join the"Moral Majority's Anti-Pornography Crusade”7:30 pm, Reynolds Club Lounge.Hillel: Lecture- “Current Soviet Policy Dilemmasin the Middle East” speaker Prof. Roger Ham¬burg, 8:30 pm, Hillel. Post Libris: Coffeehouse- this week, Katie Greeno,Tom Davis. Dave Pelman and Dave Richard, 9:30pm-l:30 am, Ida Noyes Frog and Peach.SaturdayAikido: Meets 10:30 am, Bartlett gym.Kinetic Energy: Creative dance and MovementGroup meets 11:00 am, Ida Noyes dance room.Crossroads: Buffet dinner, 6:00 pm. No reserva¬tions necessary. 5621 S. Blackstone.Doc: "Star Trek” 2:30 pm, “The Marriage ofMaria Braun” 7:15 and 9:30 pm, Cobb.Law School Films: “The Philadelphia Story” 7:15and 9:30 pm. Law School Auditorium.Crossroads: “Crisis in Poland-Views from Inside”7:30 pm, 5621 S. Blackstone. All welcome. Free ad¬missions.Hillel: Kumsitz- In Celebration of Tu-B’Shevat;Storytelling by Prof. Ted Cohen and Dr. ZanvelKlein; singing and guitar playing: Tu B’Shevat Re¬freshments, 8:30 pm, Hillel.SundayRockefeller Chapel: Ecumenical Service of HolyCommunion, 9:00 am, Discussion Class, 10:00 am,University Religious Service, 11:00 am.University Church: Concert- Martin Luther KingJr. Celebration-theme: "A Call to Action: Follow¬ing Dr. King in the 80’s” featuring the CommunityRenewal Chorus. Part of morning worship, 11:00am, 57th and University. Public invited.Hillel: Lox and Bagel brunch, 11:00 am, Hillel.Oriental Institute: Film- “Rivers of Time” 2:00pm. Oriental Institute. Free.Calvert House: Lecture- “Catholic Responses toSuffering” speaker David Tracy, 7:00 pm, 5735University.Doc Films: “The Scarlet Letter” 7:15 and 9:00 pm,Kent 107.Women’s Union: Meets 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes. MondayPerspectives: Topic- “What is Pain? guests Dr.Frederick Brown, Dr. William Weddington andDr. Richard Miller. 6:09 am, channel 7.Hillel: Gary P. Zola, Assist to National Director ofAdmission, Hebrew Union College — Jewish Insti¬tute of Religion, interviewing at Hillel, 9:30 am-12noon.Crossroads: English classes for foreign, women,10:00 am, 5621 S. Blackstone.German Table: Meets 12 noon in the Blue Gargoyleto speak German.Kundalini Yoga: Class meets 12-1 pm in IdaNoyes.Dept of Microbiology: “A Gene Conversion Mech¬anism for Transportation of Yeast Mating TypeGenes” speaker Dr. James Haber, 12:00 pm, Cum¬mings 11th fl seminar room.Christian Science Organization: Weekly meeting,2:30-3:30 pm, Gates-Blake 428.Computation Center Seminar: Introduction toMM, An Electronic Mail System, 3:30-5:00 pm,Cobb 107. Dept of Chemistry: "Emerging Methodology forOrganic Synthesis" speaker Prof. Paul Wender,4:00 pm, Kent 103.R.R. Action Committee of the Women’s Union: Re¬productive Rights Action Week- “The ForcedSterilization of Native American Women,” 4:00pm, Ida Noyes Library.Kundalini Yoga: Classes meet 5:00 pm, IdaNoyes.Gymnastics Club: Meets 5:30 pm, Bartlett gym.UC Chess Club: Tournament meets 7:00 pm, IdaNoyes 2nd floor.FOTA Meeting: 7:00 pm, in FOTA Office. IdaNoyes 218. New members are welcome.First Chair: Ray Still, Oboe, 8:00 pm, HitchcockHall. Admission free.Doc Films: “The Shanghai Gesture" 8:00 pm,Cobb.TuesdayPerspectives: Topic- “Drugs and Pain’ guests Dr.Frederick Brown, Dr. William Weddington, andDr. Richard Miller. 6:09 am, channel 7.Join the Episcopal Church Council this Quarter forFACULTY/STAFF LUNCH DISCUSSIONTuesday, January 20,11:45 -1 PMUNITY & DIVERSITYCanon Richard Young, LeaderBISHOP BRENT HOUSE5540 South Woodlawn Ave.wNew andRebuiltTypewriters,Calculators,Dictators,AddersU of ChicagoBookstore5750 S. Ellis Ave.753-3303 REPAIRSPECIALISTSon IBM, SCM,Olympia, etc.FREE repairestimates; repairsby factory-trainedtechnician.RENTALSavailable withU.ofC. I D.Mastercharge and Visa Accepted Eye 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. / ®mor‘al fhapdSunday, January 18,19819:00 a.m. Ecumenical Service of Holy Communion10:00 a.m. Discussion Class - Poet/Prophet: Vision andRevision led by Ronne Hartfield, Dean of Students at theArt Institute of Chicago11:00 a.m. University Religious Service Philip Blackwellpreaching, Associate in Ministry at the Chapel andcampus minister for the United Methodist Foundation -“The Lamb of God’’8:00 p.m. Organ Recital - twentieth anniversarycelebration for Edward Mondello, University Organist.With George Vosburgh on trumpet, of Chicago SymphonyOrchestraCURRENT SOVIET POLICY DILEMMAS IN THE MIDDLE EASTPROFESSOR ROGER HAMBURG, Dept, of Political Sciences, Indiana UniversityFRIDAY, JANUARY 16, 8:30 P.M. HILLEL FOUNDATION, 5715 WOODLAWN AVENUE“KUMSITZ” In Celebration of Tu B’ShevatSATURDAY, JANUARY 17, 8:30 P.M.COME SIT AROUND THE LOGS BURNINGIN HILLEL’S FIREPLACE and listen to the:STORYTELLING OF:PROFESSOR TED COHEN, Philosophy Dept.DR. ZANVEL KLEIN, Child Psychiatry Dept.(who return upon popular request.)SINGING AND GUITAR PLAYING - Bring Your GuitarTU B’SHEVAT REFRESHMENTSSPONSORED BY THE STUDENT STEERING COMMITTEEHILLEL FOUNDATION5715 WOODLAWN AVENUE REFORM RABBIS ARE NOT- PSYCHOLOGISTS- CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGISTS— LEGAL ADVISORS- SOCIAL WORKERS— MARRIAGE COUNSELORS- TEACHERS- RELIGIOUS LEADERSTHEY ARE MOREThey are RabbisGary I*. Zola. Assistant to the \olionnl Director of itl mi** ions.The Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Keligion.will be on eampuH January ID. 1981 at Hillel. 3715 Woodlawn. . ( all 732-1 127 for an appointment.^'CdL'0' rhe ColleZe Imtitute als0 offers degree programs in Jewish Education,Jewish Communal Service, Cantorial Studies, and Graduate Studies.18 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, January 16, 1981CLASSIFIED ADSCLASSIFIEDClassified advertising in the ChicagoMaroon is 75 cents per 30 characterline. Ads are not accepted over thephone, and they must be paid in advance. Submit all ads in person or bymail to The Chigago Maroon, 1212 E.59th St., Chicago, IL 60637. Our otficeis in Ida Noyes, room 304. Deadlines:Wed. noon for the Fri. paper, Fri. noonfor the Tues. papersSPACERooms to sublet, $85/MONTH +utilities. Phone 324 0868. Keep trying.Room available in three bedroom aptclose to U of C 955-5280, 947 0060.2 bdrm. remodelled co op, hardwoodfloors, formal dining, extras. Ownerfinanced, 32,000 363-2529.Female roommate wanted to share 5rm furnd apt at 55th & Everett. Non-smoker. Rent 150. Call Pat. Day;886 3717; Eves 955 2118.IV2 rm apt avail nr 56th and Kenwdturn, $210/mo lease w/opt to renew.Call eves 324 3882.ROOM FOR RENT immed. close toReg. 122/ + util. Call 241-6171.Grad roommate needed tor 3 bedroomapt $137 54th & Harper. Call Karin667-2273 (or 955-8375 after 1/17)5405 Wood I awn, 2 rm turn apt one person Mrs. Green 643-2760 or 667-5746.WANTED F grad student non-smokerto share 2 bdrm 2nd fl apt 54th & Ellis$155 mo plus util cat owner welcome.Call Rozalyn 363 8610.For rent E. Hyde Park. 3 bdrms, 2baths, dining rm. large, qu!et. $575 noundergrads. 348-0010,644-54571 fern student to rent 1 bdrm in 3 bdrmapt $200 a mo no util 57th and Dor¬chester call Kim 363-2675 avail immed.Studio and 1 bedroom now available atthe Chicago Beach Hotel (apts) Allutilities paid new management call643-7896.PEOPLE WANTEDAIRLINE JOBS-Free info Nationwide-write Airline Placement Bureau 4208198th SW #101 Lynnwood, WA 98036Enclose a self addressed stampedlarge envelope.VOLUNTEERS WANTED:Overweight women wanted for hor¬mone study. Required ages 18-35,200 300 lbs. For more info, call947-1825.MANUSCRIPT TYPIST (English,Spanish, French). Part-time (12/15hours week) school year, full-timesummer it desired. Will be trained totype camera ready copy on IBM com¬posers. Must type 55 WPM. Top stu¬dent rates. Skill in grammar/composition. Contact George Rumsey, Com¬munity and Family Study Center.753 2518WANTED: Sports car enthusiast tohelp with maintenance and driving otsports cars. Pay low but experiencegreat. T.N. Clark, 322 SS, 753-2134.Asst receptionist for animal clinic afthours MTuThF 324-4484 call between9 12, 3-7.Publicity Co-ordinator part-time flexi¬ble hrs, demonstrated performancerequired. Send resume to Irene Smith,Hyde Park Neighborhood Club 5480 S.Kenwood 60615.FOR SALE1975 Mercury Comet cpe., all options,new muffler, battery, tires, etc. Lomiles; excellent cond. $1850/offer;498 2684Norelco 185 dictating recorder likenew. 15 cassettes, table mike ind.$120. 363 4277 2 9 pm1970 MUSTANG auto trans, pwr strpwr br, good engine call 363-5509FRYE BOOT S-Origina I-style, tan,women's size 6. Worn seven times.Best offer. 955-1542.U of C memorabilia plates, cards andetc.C.B. Goodman 5454 S. Shore60615Antique Upright Piano BeautifulHand carved Maple. Fair Playing condition. $175 or best offer. Call 493-5720after 6:00TYPEWRITER FOR SALE-Used,Good Condition Smith Corona ManualCall 684 7414 after five.Attention Musicians: Brand new 6channel TEAC mixer. Still in originalbox Used twice $330 Call Aarne at643 1394 after 6.WINE CLASSA special mini course in the delights ofCalifornia vineyards Register now atStudent Activities Rm 210, Ida Noyes SERVICESTHE WRITER'S AID. Editing andwriting: flyers, pamphlets, reports,books, ghost writing; resumes;creative pieces. Prompt, professionalservice.288-1911.TYPIST Disseration quality. Helpwith grammar, language as needed.Fee depending on manuscript. IBMSelectric. Judith 955-4417.ARTWORK Posters, illustration, lettering, etc. Noel Yovovich 493 2399.The Chicago Counseling 8,Psychotherapy Center. Client-centered psychotherapy. 5711 S.Woodlawn, 6354 N. Broadway and 111N. Wabash, Chicago. A RegisteredPsychological Agency. (312) 684-1800.SHOPPER'S AID for the overworkedor working couple. Groceries boughtand delivered by bona fideundergrads. Home cleaning/-maintenance also available. 498-9108.Excellent, Accurate TYPIST will typeterm papers, theses, dissertations,reasonably priced. Pick up anddelivery on campus. CallWanda-684-7414 after 5 pm.PERSONALSWRITER'S WORKSHOP (PLaza2-8377)Women's Breakfast Club-8:00 am(groan) Wed. in Hutch. You know whoyou areFinancial Aid got you strapped? Can'tafford to fly down to Jamaica? Reggaeat the Law School instead. Jan 17, 9-1UCIDreq.Throw down your books! Come hearfeminist-folksinger Kristin Lens at 8pm Thursday Jan 15 in Ida Noyes.Tickets are $3 at RC and at door. Sponsored by the UC Citizens Party.Gun runners have informed us thatAssassin weapons will be available atWoolworth's next week-call first.To the girl with whom I exchangedhellos on Jan. 13 at 6:30 pm on E. 56thSt. I was heading west, you wereheading east. You wore a green coat,mine was dark blue. I enjoyed yoursmile and hello. Let's meet and saymore. Reg A-level. 3 pm, Sunday orWed. Be daring.CHARLIE Second year grad schoolCharlie where are you? I met you lastyear at a computer seminar, and wetalked many times after. You told meof Poland and breaking away fromhome. It's been since June. Please reply. Undergrad Amy.GO SOUTH!Learjet broken? All is not lost. Reggaeat the LAW SCHOOL, Sat. Jan 17, 9-1.UCID required.VOLUNTEERDevelop and share skills you will usein your career by volunteering in thecommunity. Tutor, write grants, be afriendly visitor or political assistant.Call the Volunteer Bureau, 955-4108 orstop by the Third Floor office, BlueGargoyle, 5655 S. Univ.ENNUI AGAIN?Student Gov't Acitivities meeting Fri¬day, Jan. 16, 5 00, S.G. Office.TUTORPlan to Teach in the near future? Whywait? Local children need help in allareas and levels: math, reading,science Contact the Volunteer Bureauin the Blue Gargoyle, 5655 S. Universi¬ty, 3rd floor, or call 955-4108.JOHN LENNON1940-1980In loving memory and in fond tribute,Sholom Singles presents "The YellowSubmarine" and "The MagicalMystery Tour" plus selected Beatleshorts, January 17 at 7:00 pm at theTemple Sholom, 3480 North LakeShore Drive. Admission Members:$2 00; non members: $4.00. For moreinfo: Call 525 4707 (days); 324 3686(evenings/weekends).DOES YOURM1NDMATTER?It does to us People are needed forongoing experiments in handednessand psychology. Interesting and profitable. Call 753 4735.DEADHEADS:ALERT!Don't miss the Grateful Dead Film!Monday Feb 9. Shows at 6 00, 9 00 and11:45pm. Admission2 50 JETSETTERSFuel bills too high on your Learjet?Cutting back on that Caribbean vacation? Don't cry, fly by the LAWSCHOOL instead and reggae all night.Jan 17,9 1. UCID required.UC HOTLINE 753-1777Was the break too short?? Secondweek and two weeks behind? CallHotline, open 7:00 pm to7:00 am sevendays a week.LATENTTALENT?Let it shine at POST LIBRIS-AuditionsWed Jan. 21, 8:00, N. Lounge,Reynolds Club. Questions? Call753 3273.DISCREETMUSICTurn on and Tune in every Wednesdaynit at 10:30 pm for the best in the Pro¬gressive music experience Foreignand Domestic, on WHPK-FM 88.3 inStereo. Music which is as ignorable asit is interesting.DEC-20 SEMINARSAn introduction to the ComputationCenter's DEC-20 computer, willbe given Tuesday, January 20, 4:-5:30,Cobb 107. Introduction to EDIT on theDEC.-20 will be held Thursday,January 22, 4:00-5:30, Cobb 107. Allwelcome, no charge.FREETICKETSTo the Folk Festival! We need peopleto cook, drive, answer phones, put upperformers, etc. For more info, callDan, 493 6850 or Lee, 955-5770.CHILDCAREExc. full-time care for infantavailable. Stimulating environ.684-2820.ELECTRONIC MAILLearn how the electronic mail systemrunning on the Computation Center'scomputer can facilitate your day today communications. A seminar in¬troducing this system will be heldMonday, January 19, 3:30 5:00 pm inCobb 107. No prior computer ex¬perience is necessary.TREATISEUse the computer to format dissertations in accordance with UniversityRequirements. Comp-Center seminarwill illustrate use of the TREATISEprogram. Wednesday, January 21,3:30-5.00pm, Classics 10. All welcome,no charge. No previous computer ex¬perience necessary.FOLKDANCINGMon Jan 19 U.C.F.C. and M.A R.R.S.will hold a joint Renaissance DanceWorkshop with guest teacher PatRader. Teaching begins at 8:00 in theCloister Club in Ida Noyes Hall.Teaching will be until ten with re¬quests thereafter.PASSPORT PHOTOSPASSPORT PHOTOS WHILE U-WAIT. Model Camera, 1342 E. 55th St.493-6700.AIRLINE JOBSFor information-write AIRLINEPUBLISHING CO. 1516 E. Tropicana7A 110 Las Vegas, Nevada 89109. In¬clude a self addressed stampedenvelopeLOCAL BANDSUnsigned bands are invited to senddemo tapes (three songs) to WHPK,c/o Dr. Rock, 5706 S. University,Chicago 60637. Listen Friday, 3 pm,88.3 fm. Best tapes sent to record com¬pany. Cassette only, and lyric sheet. RIDE-SHARINGNORTH SIDEFREE GAS inexchange for ride NSideto/from U, wkdays. I'm near Clarkand Diversey. Flexible arrangements.Josh 3-4238, 348 4695.STEPTUTORINGHelp a kid feel intelligent Volunteertwo hours a week to tutor an elemen¬tary or high school student. Call Claire(643 3542) or Dave (493 3925).SCRIPTYOURPAPERLearn how to format your paper or artide by using SCRIPT, a programwhich runs on the Amdahl computer.A two session seminar will be heldTuesday and Thursday, January 27and 29, 4:00 5:30, Classics 10. Allwelcome, no charge.CRISIS IN POLANDViews from inside: A Panel DiscussionSat. Jan. 17, 7:30 pm at Crossroads.5621 S. Blackstone. After 6:00 pm, dinner, 684 6060.THE MISFITSAre ready to play at your next party.Standard, original and new wave rock.By day call Steve Katz 947-5345 Terry667-6212 evenings.SASCLASSLearn to use SAS (Statistical AnalysisSystem). A six session course in¬troducing this package starts January26 Come to Computation Centerbefore January 22 to register Call753-8400 for information. Computertime provided. Cost: $25.MUSICIANSUC BRASS SOCIETY needs tubists,trombonists, HORN players andplayers of ANY OTHER INSTRUME NT. Bassoonist 8< cellists especial¬ly welcome. Phone 947-6352, 324 0868,or 241 5794, or write: UC Brass Soc1212 E. 59th, Chicago IL 60637TAICHIKUNG-FUDEMONSTRATIONThe Tai Chi Club presents ademonstration of Chinese Martial Artson Sun. Jan. 18, 1981 at 6:30 pm at 4945S. Dorchester (enter on 50th St.) Allare welcomed and refreshments willbe served. A new class for seniors 50 to80 yrs old will begin also on Sun. Jan18, at 5:00 pm at the same location.New students 65 and older are admit-tedFREE!FORTRAN CLASSlearn to program in Fortran. Ten ses¬sion class begins January 27. Come toComputation Center before Jan 23 toregister. Call 753 8400 for more in¬formation. Computer time provided.Cost: $30.GRATEFULDEAD FILMGrateful Dead Film QuanfrellAuditorium Monday February 9Shows at 6:00,9:00 and 11:45 pm. Sponsored by Phi Delta Theta Admission$2.50.ASSASSINS NOTEDue to a late gun shipment fromBiafra, Assassin will not begin untillate next week targets will be assignedthen be patient.THEATREDISCOUNTSGet discount tickets to Sweeney Todd,now on sale in Rm. 210, Ida Noyes. FOTATIMEVery IMPORTANT Festival Of TheArts committee meeting on Monday,January 19 at 7 pm, FOTA office, 2ndfloor Ida Noyes. New members are en¬courage to attendGRATEFUL DEADTO HYDE PARKSee the Grateful Dead Film 3 BIGSHOWS!!! 6:00, 9:00 and 11:45 pm,Monday, Feb. 9th in Quantrell Aud.KUNDALINIYOGAYoga classes starting now! Your firstclass is free. This quarter each classwill emphasize a specificRESOURCE! (E g. courage, commitment, compassion). We meet M F, 5-7pm Ida Noyes Hall. TWO-FOR-ONECoupons good at many Chicagocultural attractions, now on sale fortwo cents each at SAO Sorry, limit onecoupon per person per day. Room 210Ida Noyes.YOGA FOR LUNCHA great way to give yourself a breakfrom a stressful day. Gently exerciseyour body. Learn to relax your mind.Classes will emphasize physical adjustment (back pains, headaches) andstress coping techniques We meetM,W 12-1 pm Ida Noyes Hall.GRATEFUL DEADFILMED INCONCERTSee one of the Greatest Rock Filmsever made! Monday Feb 9th Showsat 6 00, 9:00 and 11:45 pm. AdmissionVALUABLE COUPONPay for two,the third is free.KODAK ColorEnlargementsUP TO 16" x 24”• Bring in this coupon wift-iyour favorite Kodacolor filmnegatives color slidescolor prints or instant colorprints• Get 3 KODAK Color En¬largements for the price of 2Hurry; offer ends March H, 1981. Ooc~oozmodel camera1342 E. 55thCLIP AND SAVE.. COLORPROCESSING. Kodak Si/aJe ' Id a.493-0666Call anytime8% Assumable {city mortgage) Corner apt.55 Dorchester - 2 bedroom - A little larger than most. Avail¬able June. $67,500. Charlotte.Gorgeous Front View of Lake from 20th floor.THREE BEDROOMS. 4800 Lake Shore. $119,500. CallMarie. Available now.Golden Era Hoin Golden Area, 57th & Black-stone. 9 rms., well kept W»$kl£l56jfco. Call Charlotte.One of Hyde Park’s Newest Construction.Model Corner House. l‘/j years old. (You couldn'tbuild it today for this price) Near park, tennis and kiddieplay area. 7 rooms - parking. Kenwood Ave. south of 54.$149,500. Charlotte. Available July.57th & Kimbark Coado ftmfce rooms - new kitchenacross from Ray Schools $SBiKXXQ9ll anytime. Call Ken.Leap to Lab or Library! New](really 2 bedroomf f56th 8t Kimbark. C&lUKip. 2 bedroom condo'. yard & garage.2,000 Square Feet of Sunny 7 rooms - Priced to sell,in Kenwood. Tip Top. new. Woodburning fireplace.$69,500. Ken.1890 Cottage near 54th Place & Dorchester.Just listed, finished panelled basement. Full useablepanelled attic space. Nice shape but small. $65,500.Call Marie.Announcing 103/4% Assumable on 2Vi story brickresidence near 54th Dorchester. 7 rooms. 2 fireplaces,nice back yard. Needs work but worth the effort. $82,500.Call Charlotte.Nine Room Sheet Rock Shingle Residence.Near 56th Kenwood; $205,910 Ask for Charlotte.May still be showriWllws c#se4«4High in the Sky - Pie in the Sky. Low Price.$31,500. this is a new listing. Owner leaving the country.Gorgeous view of city and lake. Two-plus rooms 'studio'at 55th & Dorchester. Call Marie.WELCOME TO SALES ASSOCIATEMARIE WESTER. HI. MARIEKen Wester (eve.] 947-0557, SalesMarie Wester (eve.) 947-0057Cleveland McCowan (eve.)799-1419. SalesCharlotte Vikstrom 493-0666. BrokerThe Chicago Maroon — Prioav, January T6 1981 — i?