THE CHICAGO MAROONVolume 90, No. 30 The University of Chicago Copyright 1981 The Chicago Maroon Friday, January 30, 1981UC Doctor FoundSlain in ApartmentTwo RetractClaims onSG VoteBy Chris IsidoreTwo of the five people who signed state¬ments to clear Student Government (SG)Treasurer Greg Wendt of alleged voting im¬proprieties in an election for fraternity rep¬resentative to SG last fall have now said thattheir statements were false.Wendt came under suspicion during lastfall’s election when a poll watcher saw himplace four ballots in a box at InternationalHouse. When the box was opened, four bal¬lots were found folded together, all filled outfor Wendt’s fraternity brother DavidStamler. SG held an impeachment hearingat which Wendt produced four letters signedby students living at his fraternity. The let¬ters claimed that the four had filled out theballots, and then placed them in Wendt’smailbox for him to deliver. SG found Wendtguilty, but voted to censure him rather thanforce him out of office.Two of four who signed those letters havenow told the Maroon that they never voted,that they never placed ballots in Wendt’smailbox, and that they had been asked tosign these statements after SG officials no¬tified Wendt they intended to take actionagainst him.The fifth statement about the incidentcame from David Stamler, who told SG thathe had seen Wendt remove four ballots fromhis box at the fraternity.Barbara Yarnold, who was a boarder atWendt’s fraternity told the Maroon lastweek that she signed the note because shewas totally disinterested in Student Govern¬ment, and because Wendt, who is Treasurerat the fraternity, had indicated to her thathe might be able to get her out of the boardcontract required of all fraternity resi¬dents.“Greg Wendt came up to me one day,”Yarnold said, “and asked me to do him afavor, which was to sign an affidavit claim¬ing that I had given him my ballot, whichwasn’t the case at all. I had never seen thething before. And he told me — you know itwas sort of implicit — that he would help meget out of the board contract.”Yarnold did not have a board contractwhile living at the fraternity last quarter be¬cause a doctor certified that she could noteat the food there. The decision by the fra¬ternity to accept that note was made beforefall quarter began, and before Wendt hadarrived back on campus from summerbreak.Then last quarter there were protestsfrom fraternity members who did not thinkthat Yarnold should be excluded from theboard contract. Yarnold said that Wendttold her that she would have to have the fullcontract this quarter in order to live thereLater in the quarter, however, roughly amonth after Wendt’s censure, she claimsthat Wendt told her that she would only haveto have a partial contract for this quarter.According to Yarnold, she decided to fi¬nally tell the Maroon her story after hearingWendt spreading false rumors abnY an¬other SG official.Yarnoiu said sne believed this was doneto disci'cc..’. ►iic uncial in future elec-t.ons. “Yna* reaiiy made me angry,” shesaid, “and I called up (the SG official) to tellhim what was going on. And it’s scary be¬cause if a person can do something like this Greg Wendtfor such low stakes, imagine what he can dowhen the stakes are greater.”Yarnold moved out of the fraternity theday after talking to the Maroon. She saidthat she felt house pressure and tensionwould make it difficult to stay there onceher charges were known. “The house is avery close-knit thing, and Greg Wendt isvery pow-erful in the house and has manyfriends,” she said.A second person who signed a letter onWendt’s behalf last fall confirmed yester¬day that that letter w;as false.“I was prepared to vote, but I just didn’tget around to it,” said the student, wrhoBy Sherrie NegreaThe United States government should nothave negotiated with any Iranian officialsfor the release of the former hostages whilethey were still in captivity, according to twoleading authorities on Iran and internation¬al relations at the University.Marvin Zonis, an associate professor inthe College, and Morton Kaplan, Chairmanof the Committee on International Rela¬tions, both told the Maroon this week thatthe U. S. government should not have nego¬tiated with terrorists.The taking of the hostages “was a mas¬sive violation of international law and there(was) nothing to discuss until the hostageswere released,” Kaplan said. “That shouldhave been our simple position.”Zonis, who has served as a consultant tothe U. S. government on Iranian affairs,said if the government had followed his ad¬vice, “they wouldn’t have done any nego¬tiating. And I don’t think it would have beenany worse.”While Kaplan said that the Carter admin¬istration handled the hostage crisis “terr¬ibly”, Zonis commended its efforts. “I thinkthey handled it pretty impressively,” Zonissaid. “1 appreciate and admire PresidentCarter for his restraint and self-control dur¬ing va period of) great frustration."Another specialist on Middle Eastern af¬fairs at the University, Leonard Binder, aprofessor of political science, disagreedwith the position that no negotiations shouldhave been held with the Iranians. But Bind¬er criticized the former Carter administra- By Henry OttoDr. Baruch M. Aaron, 41, a resident at theUniversity Hospitals, was found shot todeath Wednesday, in his apartment in theUniversity Park Condominiums, 1400 E. 55Place.Aaron’s father, Joseph, discovered thebody around 5 pm after being informed bythe Hospital that his son had failed to reportto work on Wednesday. Aaron was foundlying just outside his bedroom, wearing thesurgical trousers he used for pajamas. Heapparently was preparing for bed at thetime of the shooting.Police believe Aaron was shot at leasttwice in the head with a small-caliber auto¬matic pistol between 8 and 9 pm Tuesday.Several neighbors reported hearing whatmight have been gunshots at that time butasked to remain nameless because of a wishto avoid further involvement in the affair.“Someone came to me, after the fact, andasked me to consent to give my name ascasting a ballot. I didn’t mind someone cast¬ing a ballot (for me) since I hadn’t gottenover there to cast my own. If I had already-cast my own ballot, I would not have con¬sented.”The person said that it was not Wendt whohad asked, but that “it had been madeclear”, during the discussion that Wendthad filled out the four ballots himself, andhad not found them in his mailbox. “At thetime I didn't think it was that important,”with Iran are necessary for the US to protecttion for not dealing more directly with Aya¬tollah Khomeini and other Iranian clerics.“We tried to negotiate with the wrong peo¬ple, Bani Sadr and company, who thoughtthey could come to power,” Binder said in atelephone interview with the Maroon. “Wetalked to anyone who could have talked to usinstead of the people who could deliver ontheir promises.”Yet, he added. “We’ve had very little ex¬perience in dealing with revolutionary situa¬tions and I think making mistakes was ex¬pected.”One problem in the negotiations processpointed to by all four faculty members inter¬viewed by the Maroon was the inadequatelevel of understanding by U S. officials ofthe Iranian people and their culture. Thisshortcoming, they said, ranged from lack ofinformation on the Iranian political situa¬tion while the former Shah was in power tothe Iranians negotiating methods.“The whole issue goes back to a lack of un¬derstanding before the coming to power ofKhomeini the extent to which the Iranianshated and despised the regime of the Shah,”said John Woods, historian at the Universitywho lived in Iran for five years. “In support¬ing dictators like the Shah we should expectthis type of hostility.”Zonis added: “Never underestimate a na¬tion swept by rage. This was a revolutionand we didn’t realize that.”All four professors believe that the USshould resume relations with Iran, but notuntil the emotions surrounding the hostagetrauma have subsided. Improved relations did not notify the police.Some casings from a handgun were foundnear the body, but there were no signs of astruggle, forced entry, ransacking, or rob¬bery according to Chicago Police Lt. JohnHensley. Police have no suspects or motiveat this time.Aaron, who was divorced and lived alone,was a Voluntary Clinical Fellow in Derma¬tology at the University Hospital. A 1964graduate of the medical school, he hadserved in the medical corps in Vietnam andhad worked as an emergency-room physi¬cian in Indiana. However, a broken wristsuffered in an accident prevented him fromperforming cardiovascular-puiminary re¬suscitation, and he returned to the Universi¬ty to study dermatology. He was serving asa resident at the University and at MichealReese Hospital.the student said.The second witness made the statement inorder to protect Yarnold from legal action.“I assume that someone is going to try toslander her,” the student said, “I don’t think^its necessary for him to do that. If she wants _to go through wdth this, then I can help heiout and confirm that she is telling thetruth.”The second student also confirmed Yar-nold’s story that Wendt had tried to spreadrumors about another SG official. “I was atthe incident,” the person said.” He 'Wendt)was making quite an implication, trying toContinued on page 16Faculty Sayits interests, namely oil, in the Persian Gulfthey said.The future of Iran itself is less certain,they said, because of its severe internalproblems and the current war with Iraq.Zonis feels that the release of the hostageswill have a negative effect on Iran’s domes¬tic affairs. “The internal crises will sudden¬ly open up and will be exacerbated by it (thehostages’ release),’’ he said. “The hostageswere serving as a unifying element forIran.”Kaplan predicts that the present govern¬ment there will not remain in power muchlonger. “There’s going to be another revolu¬tion." he said. “The present (rulers) simplycannot run a modem government.” Kaplansaid he expects Khomeini's ruling govern¬ment to be replaced in “a relatively shorttime ”Agree that U.S. Should Not Have NegotiatedMistakes Hurt in Iran,^****************************************************************************************¥*¥¥^*************************** ^i]ew 'clieclufeSC.W. AirportLimousineServiceO'HARE AIRPORT SCHEDULEHOURLY SERVICE TO AMD FROM AIRPORTALL DEPARTURES FROM□ ’HARE AIRPORT LOCATED ATCARSON’S ROTUNDA BUILDINGLOWER LEVELFROM O’HAREWindermere Hyde Park TO O’ H A R ERoberts c.c. E. Del Prado Hilton Arrive Departure5:00 AM 5:10 AM 5:15 AM 5:20 AM 6:00 AM 6:30 AM6:00 AM 6:10 AM 6:15 AM 6:20 AM 7:00 AM 7:30 AM7.00 AM 7:10 AM 7:15 AM 7:20 AM B:15 AM S:30 AMB:00 AM B:1D AM B:15 AM B:20 AM 9:15 AM 9:30 AM9:00 AM 9:10 AM 9:15 AM 9:20 AM OO□ AM 10:30 AM10:00 AM 10:10 AM 10:15 AM 10:20 AM 11:10 AM 11:30 AM11:00 AM 11:10 AM 11:15 AM 11:20 AM 12:10 PM 12:30 PM12 00 AM 12:10 PM 12:15 PM 12:20 PM 1:15 PM 1:30 PM100 PM 1:10 PM 1:15 PM 1:20 PM 2:10 PM 2:30 PM2:00 PM 2:10 PM 2:15 PM 2:20 PM 3:15 PM 3:30 PM2:4 5 PM 2:55 PM 3:05 PM 3:10 PM 4:15 PM 4:30 PM3:30 PM 3:40 PM 3:45 PM 3:50 PM 5:15 PM 5:30 PM4:15 PM 4:25 PM 4:30 PM 4:35 PM 5:4 5 PM 6:00 PM5:00 PM 5:10 PM 5:15 PM 5:20 PM 6:15 PM 6:30 PM5 45 PM 5:55 PM 6:05 PM 6:10 PM 7:00 PM 7:15 PM6:30 PM 6:40 PM 6:4 5- PM 6:50 PM 7:50 PM B:O0 PM7:15 PM 7:25 PM 7:30 PM 7:35 PM 8:40 PM B:4 5 PM8:00 PM B.IO PM B:15 PM 6:20 PM 9:15 PM 9:30 PM9:00 PM 9:10 PM 9:15 PM 9:20 PM 10:15 PM 10:30 PMSCHEDULE SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT PRIOR NOTICELAST BUS LEAVES O’HARE - 1C:3C PMMIDWAY AIRPORTSCHEDULEFROM MIDWAYRoberts C.C.E. WindermereDel Prado Hyde ParkHilton TOArrive MIDWAYDeparture5 30 AM 5 40 AM 5:45 AM 5 50 AM 6 20 AM 6 30 AM7:45 AM 7.50 AM 8 00 AM 8 05 AM 8 40 AM 9 15 AM100 AM 1 1:10 AM 1 1:1 5 AM 1 1 *0 AM 1 2 00 AM 12 15 PM2 00 PM 2:10 PM 2:1 5 PM 2 20 PM 3 00 PM 3 15 PM3:00 PM 3:10 PM 3:1 5 PM 3 20 PM 3 50 PM 4 1 5 PM5:00 PM 5:10 PM 5:15 PM 5 20 PM 5 30 PM 6 15 PMG 00 PM 6 10 PM G:1 5 PM 6 20 PM 7 00 PM 7:30 f:i::NO Service on Saturday and SundaySCHEDULE SUBJECT TO CE «NGF WITHOUT PRIOR NOTICEO'hare Fare $6.25Midway Fare $5.00CALL FOR ADDITIONALINFORMATION and SCHEDULES493-2700-1 955-8800****************************J2 The Chicago Maroon, Friday, January 30, 1981 *-****************************♦***♦*******************♦♦**************************************♦*♦******♦**♦**********♦*♦ a Convenient Auto Service for thebusy STUDENT or PROFESSOR and{1,at 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 your /thing, 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. MIChfELIN, B.F. GOODRICH, GOOD YEARAL SAX TIRE CO.„„„ 9200 STONY ISLAND(In business since 1959) fS9"? A A f\f\Any questions call 374-1 500ATTENTION: STUDENTS TAKING COMMON COREBIO SCI COURSESyou are aware by now that the Common Lab, BioSci 099,is required to fulfill the BioSci Common year requirements.A number of you have not yet started your lab experimentsand you are again being advised to report to Abbott 201(947-51 E. 58th) as quickly as possible to begin them. Pleasenote the following:BioSci 102 - Lab required for ALL students*109 - Lab required for ALL students*117 - Lab NOT required120 - Lab required for ALL students*122 - Lab NOT required126 - Lab NOT required127-01 - Lab NOT required*127-02 - Lab required for ALL students*140 - Lab required for ALL students*171 - Lab NOT required*177 - Lab required for ALL students*179 - Lab required for ALL students*181 - Lab required for ALL students *183 - Lab required for ALL students** Exceptions were notified when they registered for the course concerningtheir specific lab requirements.You will not be able to “make up" these exper:ments in a foilowinsquarter — they must be completed by the end of each quarter of yoursequence since the foilowins quarter's inscructor(s) will also be choos-ins two other experiments for you to complete.Any questions? Come to the BSCD office, Harper 228.NEWS BRIEFSASHUM Still Alive,Accepting StudentsThe ASHUM (Liberal Arts and SciencesBasic to Human Biology and Medicine).Pro¬gram is now accepting applications for ad¬mission to the program next fall, programcoordinator Dr. Godfrey Getz has an¬nounced.Because of uncertainties about the contin¬uance of its funding, ASHUM facultymembers were unsure last fall whether ornot a new class would be admitted to thefour-year program. However, funding for atleast one more class has been obtained, andthe University has agreed to see the classadmitted next fall through the entire four-year program.The ASHUM program is designed for stu¬dents who plan to go on to careers in thehealth professions, including medicine, hos¬pital administration, social service, eco¬logy, natural science research, and otherareas. Established five years ago, the pro¬gram accepts applications from students intheir sophomore, junior, and senior years inthe College. Students who complete the pro¬gram receive a bachelors degree in a cho¬sen discipline as well as a Masters ofScience in Human Biology. Within theASHUM program students may also receivea Masters in Public Policy or Social ServiceAdministration and a Certificate of Concen¬tration in Human Biology.The ASHUM faculty has planned threemeetings to take place this quarter whichwill introduce students to the program andto provide information about the program’srequirements. The meetings will take placein Harper 130 on January 30 at 12:30 p.m.; February 10 at 5:00 p.m.; and February 16at 5:30 p.m.MandelSound ‘Thrilling’After the first rehearsal of the UniversitySymphony Orchestra in newly-renovatedMandel Hall Wednesday night, directorBarbara Schubert declared she was “reallythrilled" with changes made in Mandel toimprove acoustics. “The sound on the podi¬ um is very different...I think everyone inthe orchestra could tell."Before the renovation, the players haddifficulty hearing each other and beingheard in the audience, largely because of in¬sufficient space on stage. Since many of theplayers had to sit behind the prosceniumarch, much sound was lost into the openspaces above, beside, and behind thestage.Now, moveable platforms have beenadded to the front of the stage, enabling theentire orchestra to sit comfortably in frontof the arch. A moveable screen closes off this front part of the stage from the part be¬hind the arch, reflecting the sound towardthe audience.According to Schubert, the improved re¬hearsal facility will mean a lot to the or¬chestra. “The potential for developing ourensemble skills, our musical skills, has beenmuch enhanced," she said. “Working in thehall continually should make a tremendousimprovement in the orchestra."— Andrea HollidayAlarms Disrupt PornVincent House’s showing of the X-ratedfilm Ms. Magnificent was disrupted Tues¬day night when three fire alarms in Kenthall were pulled 20 minutes into the firstshow.The auditorium was emptied, and the firedepartment arrived to check the call. Afterthe movie resumed, members of VincentHouse stood watch over each fire alarm.Later, just before the first show let out,two students arrived with cameras and pho¬tographed the people leaving the first showand arriving for the second show.Some protestors showed up for the thirdshowing of the film, including two peoplewho had been seen coming down from up¬stairs Kent after the fire alarms had beenpulled. The protestors heckeled some of theaudience, but did not try to enter KentHall.Despite the problems, Vincent House wasable to make money on the $400 film. Thehouse council had picked the film earlierthis quarter without any opposition fromany council members.THE PUBMonday - Saturday4:00 P.M.-1:30 A.M.Ida Noyes Basement Stop in for coffee anda pastry on your wayto the office or to class.Haagen- Dazs Ice Cream Mon. thru Fri.9 A.M.-9 P.M.Sat. 10 A.M.-9P.M.In Ida NoyesV <STUDENT ACTIVITIESCOFFEESHOPSFEATURING PASTRIES.PAUL BUNYAN COOKIES.FRUIT. YOGURT.SANDWICHES. MILK.COFFEE. 19 VARIETIES OFTEAS. HOT CHOCOLATE. ETC.Cobb BasementOpen 8:30 - 4:30 M-F Nonesuch4th Floor - WieboldtOpen 8:30 - 4:30 P.M.Weiss CoffeeshopAbove LibraryOpen 8:30 - 4:30; 6:30 -10:00 P.M.JThe Chicago Maroon, Friday, January 30, 1981 — 3Vandals Loot LibraryTo the Editor:Recently the student paper has publisheda great deal about the problems of food sup¬ply in the basement of Regenstein Library. Iwonder if the depletion of valuable librarymaterials through vandalism and theft is aproblem which your journal regards asequally worthy of discussion.I have used Regenstein library since 1974as a graduate student of the U of C and haveused institutional and other libraries else¬where in the country and overseas. WhereRegenstein is good, it is very, very good;where it is bad, it is due to pillage. Of late,when looking for materials in my area of in¬terest (South Asia), my chances of findingwhat I am after have slipped to around50-50. In the case of books, I find myself re¬sorting more and more frequently tosearches, and I find more and more thatthese searches turn up nothing. I wish Re¬genstein kept a “graveyard'’ catalog of ma¬terials missing and presumed lost irrevoc¬ably; there are a lot of works I value enoughto give a memorial service for.On a number of occasions I have asked li¬brary staff why the example of other institu¬tional libraries is not followed at Regen¬stein. At one time or another I have used thelibraries at Camegie-Mellon University andat the University of Michigan. The first isprivate, the second public; but both institu¬tions have installed systems whereby bor¬rowed materials are demagnetized longenough for the user to leave the buildingwith them. I don’t believe either institutionwould have such a system if it were not ef¬fective in stopping theft.The staff I have questioned at Regensteintell me such a system would be “too expen¬sive”. None of them have volunteered tostate the dollar amount installing such asystem is estimated to involve. I think it istime that the University community de¬manded to know just how much a good sys¬tem to protect the resources of JRL willcost. It is the only basis on which all of uscan decide whether the continuing theft ofjournals, newspapers, books, maps, docu¬ments—replaceable as well as, alas, oftenunreplaceable—is really cheaper or moretolerable than the means of stopping it.M.H. KlaimanDepartment of LinguisticsEl Salvador VitalTo the Editor:Misconstructions such as those presentedin the Maroon article “Officials, ProtestorsTrade Charges on El Salvador” can not gounchallenged. Vital issues are at stake. TheU.S. supported Junta’s suppression of fun¬damental political and human rights (over10,000 have died in the last year), and theyearnings of El Salvador’s people for a trulydemocratic socio-economic and politicalorder demand that the facts be understood.Most central to my criticism is theMaroon’s sympathetic and voluminous cov¬erage of the State Department official’smost colorful quotations, the representationof those who denounced his evasions andprevarications as a small group of extrem¬ists, and the silence of the Maroon concern¬ing several other well-attended events dur¬ing the National Week of Solidarity with thePeople of El Salvador. The truth is that theoverwhelming majority of the audience re¬cognized that Mr. Blacken had great diffi¬culty defending U.S. foreign policy in Cen¬tral America.With respect to Nicaragua, Blacken s atti¬tude revealed intensified disdain for thatcountry’s revolutionary government. While90% of Nicaragua’s organized workers areaffiliated with the Sandinista CentralWorkers’ Union, Blacken stated that the4 — The Chicago Maroon, Friday, January 30, LETTERS TO THE EDITORState Department sought to promote “mod¬erate" trade unions there. Questioning himfrom the audience, I demonstrated that hewas referring to the unions sponsored by theAmerican Institute for Free Labor Develop¬ment, a body closely associated with theC.I.A. and its successful destabilization ofthe Allende government in Chile.Blacken admitted that the government ofEl Salvador has little popular support, andthat it is incapable of containing acts of ter¬ror by the right-wing paramilitary organiza¬tions (although he persisted in the officialU.S. denial that these organizations havedirect ties with the “security forces”). Hefailed to counter the charge that theA.I.F.L.D. sponsored “agrarian reform”was a farce, a ploy to divert international at¬tention from the atrocities of governmenttroops in the countryside toward the sup¬pression of the revolutionary organizationsof the peasantry.Blacken’s insinuation that many of theatrocities had been committed by the revo¬lutionary left, disguised in government uni¬forms, as a means of propaganda, justifi¬ably provoked my discourteous response:“That’s a lie!” The reply from an unnamedspectator followed: “How would youknow !” I politely request that this individu¬al reflect on the transparency of Blacken’sstatement, and refer him to the investiga-tons by such reputable organizations as Am¬nesty International. Furthermore, I wantthe record to be clear that at most two per¬sons applauded the State Department line,while considerably more applause washeard in opposition. Contrary to the asser¬tions of the Maroon reporter, there was noequal division of loyalties in the audience.The use of fabricated evidence (i.e. pub¬lished reports of Nicaraguan and Cuban in¬volvement, later retracted) in support ofU.S. escalation of military support to theJunta in El Salvador is not a new- tactic. It isreminiscent of the exploitation of the 1964“Gulf of Tonkin incident”, which in factnever happened, to obtain Congressional ap¬proval of the landing of Marines in Vietnam.The State Department seeks to obscure therealities of life in Central America from ourpeople, for it is unlikely that many NorthAmericans would condone genocide in prop¬ping up the rule of El Salvador’s corrupt oli¬garchy against the demands of the popularorganizations.References in the press to “guerrillas ofthe extreme left” do not depict adequatelyEl Salvador’s revolutionary movement. 98%of El Salvador’s wage-workers who are or¬ganized in trade unions, together with thepeasant organizations, have united all dem¬ocratic and revolutionary elements withinthe country to form the Frente DemocraticoRevolucionario (F.D.R.). In alleviating po¬litical repression in El Salvador, the Revolu¬tionary Democratic Front will have initiat¬ed the process through which a just andhuman society, characterized by the satis¬faction of the needs of all the people, can bebuilt. In accordance with its program for anon-aligned foreign policy, the F.D.R. seeksfriendly relations with the United States.But U.S. support to the bloodstained Mili¬tary-Civilian Junta of El Salvador mustcease, and NOW!. Andy HowardDepartment of Sociology1981 Coverage InadequateTo the Editor:As both a spectator and participant in lastweek’s events concerning El Salvador, Iwant to express my great disappointmentwith the Maroon's inadequate coverage,misrepresentation of the situation, and ap¬parent ignorance of the issues involved.On Tuesday and Wednesday, over 100 peo¬ple saw films and slide shows which ex¬plained the political, economic and socialfactors leading to the present strife in ElSalvador. Immediately following the speechby John Blacken of the State Department, asizeable crowd attended a forum with re¬presentatives from the academic communi¬ty, church groups, Amnesty International,and the El Salvador Solidarity Committee.On Sunday, over 200 people gathered atthe Augustana Lutheran Church in HydePark to hear church and labor leaders, localpoliticians, and a representative from theSalvadorean Human Rights Commission,speak out against U.S. aid to the junta. Thisis only a small reflection of the protest ef¬forts in Chicago, and in other cities and un¬iversities nation-wide. In all cases an at¬tempt is being made to explain the wholestory, expose the fallacies of the State De¬partment, and present a strong case againstU.S. intervention; yet the Maroon choseonly to present the State Departmentstory.The junta is painted as “a flawed but basi¬cally decent government” of “military andpolitical moderates” concerned for the so¬cial welfare of El Salvador; while the FDRis a group of “Marxist revolutionaries” re¬sponsible for mass carnage. In fact, theFDR is a united front of democratic and rev¬olutionary forces—of student, labor, pea¬sant, church and professional groups, sup¬ported by the majority of the population.Meanwhile, the junta is an unpopular, re¬pressive regime propped up by a small,wealthy oligarchy, and by U.S. political,military and economic support. Amnesty In¬ternational reports thousands of innocentSalvadoreans killed or “disappeared” whilein the hands of government security forcesand paramilitary organizations. Once againthe U.S. is aiding a governemnt at war withits own people. Most of us have learned totake the State Department line with at leasta certain degree of skepticism; I had hopedthe Maroon would do the same.Cindi SanbornStudent in the CollegeUse WHPK for PRTo the Editor:I cannot soundly advise the Universitywhether or not to fund the upgrading ofWHPK. I have neither the knowledgeabilitynor much right to rule on the many concernsbehind any decision. In addition, because ofthe current financial deficit, I must respectany University reluctance to upgrade. With¬out meaning to say no hard efforts are pre¬sently being made to improve WHPK, con¬sidering the stations’s past performance,one must seriously ask if WHPK is worth theinvestment.Nevertheless, I feel WHPK does have onepotential pay-off that ought not be over¬looked. The University needs publicity. (Italso needs better community relations.) Ifthe station gets its act together, and if it getsthe upgrading, it might just help out. Suchhas been the case in South Bend, Indiana,where the University of Notre Dame enjoysgreat popularity and prestige. Aside fromfootball, basketball, other cultural eventsand a library open to the public in the sum¬mer, Notre Dame has professional rock androll and classical music radio stations thathave won it northern Indiana’s admiration.I do realize that these stations representmuch more than anyone here presently aims for, but I do suspect a lesson may behad. if WHPK does upgrade itself both pro¬fessionally and electrically, the Universitymay obtain a more appreciated, favorablepublic image.I admit that at 100 watts the station cannotgive nation-wide or city-wide publicity.However, it can do a good job locally, andlasting University publicity must start here.On the one hand, the University can floodthe nation’s secondary schools with adver¬tisement, but it must do so repeatedly. Onthe other hand, it can help establish acampus life that stimulates lasting andglowing comment on academic and sociallife from students, faculty, alumni and localresidents. Upgrading WHPK is a step in thatdirection. If the University finds WHPKcapable of competitively attracting a largeaudience, it should help. In return, the sta¬tion will “upgrade” campus life and make itsomething to enthusiastically speak aboutboth here and elsewhere.Mason Wilburn CoxStudent in the UniversityA Note on VicesTo the Editor:It’s called “The Pit,” and with good rea¬son. It’s a place where vices abound;quarter-gobbling electronic games, a widevariety of vending machine ‘junk’ food, notto mention temperamental washing ma¬chines given to mid-cycle burnouts. And to¬night I found conversation there, concerninganother wholesome aspect of life at the Uni¬versity—the supposedly profitable, housesponsored showing of pornographic films.The young men I spoke with were under¬standably concerned, their fund raiser Ms.Magnificent, had been plagued by a multip¬le false fire alarm, hecklers snapping Polar¬oid photos of the audience, and the financialloss of flyers torn down, despite their ingen¬ious placement in such locations as BondChapel. They were upset, but I sensed an airof pride as well. Injured pride. “What rightdo they...?” Right? “They” had no right atall to infringe on a legitimate student proj¬ect. But it wasn’t so much what happened,as why it happened that concerned me. Whyshow a dirty film to begin with? “To raisemoney,” came the obvious reply, and fur¬ther—“Because most films lose money, butnot X-rated ones.”I haven’t had much experience with eco¬nomic theory. In fact, I haven’t had muchexperience with life in general At age 18, Ican’t tell anyone else how to live his or herlife, but I’d like to. I’d like to say that I real¬ly wonder why the most popular extracurri¬cular pastimes at this school seem to be:Delectronic games based on obliterating amechanical opponent, (i.e. Space Invadersand Missile Control), 2) taking that “kill"principal out of the console and onto theQuads, via the proposed campus-wide “As¬sassin” game, and 3) dirty movies. 1 can’ttell someone that I think it’s all a little sick.Everyone is entitled to his, her, or its opin¬ion and lifestyle. We live in a free society.Strange how to me, so many people seemtrapped in mental “Pits”, when we’re livingin one of the most thought-provoking envi¬ronments possible. I don’t propose any solu¬tions. Right now, I just wonder.1st year student in the CollegeLetters PolicyThe Maroon welcomes letters to the ed¬itor. We request that writers limit them¬selves to 500 words, and we demand thatall letters be typed and triple spaced. Wereserve the right to edit letters for rea¬sons of length or clarity, although werarely bother to do so. If you wish to beconsulted before your letter is edited,please include your telephone number.Although we attempt to print all letterswe receive, space limits occasionallymake this impossible.SenateForeignRelationsv Headaks SundayCharles Percy during an earlier visit to the UniversityOne of the few students who ever made aprofit attending the University of Chicago,Illinois Senator Charles Percy, will return tohis alma mater Sunday to deliver a Wood¬ward Court lecture entitled “Priorities forToday.”Percy, the new chairman of the powerfulSenate Foreign Relations Committee, thereigning king of the Republican party’s em¬battled moderate wing, and a Universityalumnus and trustee, will speak at 8:30 inthe cafeteria of Woodward Court. His ad¬dress is expected to touch on both foreignand domestic issues.Although Percy is now securely amongthe nation’s elite, with a personal wealth ofseveral million dollars, his origins were farless grand. Percy, born in 1919, was raisedin the north side neighborhood of RogersPark, where he began to show the businessacumen which allowed him to rise to thepresidency of the Bell and Howell companyat the age of 29.Percy’s first business venture came at theage of five, when he sold subscriptions to theCountry Gentleman magazine — and won anaward from the publisher for selling morecopies than any other salesman in an urbanarea. Later, during the Depression when hisfather was out of work, he helped his family make ends meet by peddling his mother’scookies door-to-door.Percy’s most lucrative early businessventures came at the University, though,which he attended on a half-tuition scholar¬ship. He founded a cooperative buying ser¬vice which provided the campus fraterni¬ties, with coal, food, furniture, and cleanlinen. By the time he received his B.A. in1941, the service did $150,000 a year in busi¬ness and earned Percy an annual profit of$10,000.Another of Percy’s enterprises at the Uni¬versity consisted of providing small collegeswith the names of prospective students. Thecolleges offered Percy five cents for thename of each high school student interestedin attending college, and a bonus of $10 forevery one of those who actually enrolled.Percy, in turn, hired high school students tosupply him with the names of their class¬mates — but at three cents a name, and witha five dollar bonus for enrollment.While in the College, Percy’s concentra¬tion was economics, and his grades weregood enough to earn him a position as a stu¬dent marshall — the highest academichonor the University bestows on students.During his years at the University, Percyspent his summers working for Bell and Howell, and went to work there full timeshortly after graduating. He rose quicklythrough the company’s management andwas named president in 1949.-Percy’s first major political role came in1960, when, after playing a leading roleinRepublican party fund raising efforts, hechaired the Republican Party PlatformCommittee. He ran for governor in 1964, butwas defeated by Otto Kerner in the Johnsonlandslide that year. In 1966, he resigned hispost as chairman of Bell and Howell, and en¬tered the race for the Senate seat then heldby Democrat Paul Douglas. Douglas, ironi¬cally, was a former University of Chicagoprofessor a teacher of Percy’s. Douglas wasknown as the liberal conscience of the Sen¬ate, but supported American involvement inVietnam. Percy ran as a young dove candi¬date and defeated Douglas handily.During the mid-60's Percy was seen as the“boy-wonder” of Republican politics, andwas often mentioned as a possible presi¬dential candidate. But Percy never actuallyran for the office, and with the Republicanparty’s increasingly conservative tone, hischances of securing the nomination mayhave passed.During his years in the Senate, Percy’s ef¬forts have concentrated on governmentalreform and foreign affairs. He was one ofthe major forces behind the passage of theCongressional Budget Reform Act of 1974,which changed the congressional budgetingprocedures and established the Congressio¬nal Budget Office, and he also worked hardfor approval of the 1978 Civil Service Re¬form Act.Many of Percy’s positions on major issueshave been unpopular among his fellow Re¬publicans. This was particularly true duringRichard Nixon’s years in the White House,when Percy worked against such Nixonprojects as the Anti Ballistic Missile pro¬gram, the supersonic transport plane, andthe Supreme Court nominations of Hayns-worth and Carswell. Percy was also one ofthe most outspoken Republican critics ofNixon during the Watergate affair.More recently, Percy was a strong sup¬porter of the Panama Canal and SALT IItreaties, and worked last fall to prevent theSenate from blocking the sale of nuclear fuelto India. Bethe Calls forEnd to ForeignOil DependenceBy Andrea HollidayIn a lecture here Wednesday, energy ex¬pert Hans Bethe called for a massive effortto free the United States from its depen¬dence on foreign oil. Oil independence couldbe achieved within ten years, he said. Bethe,a well-known theoretical physicst, was oncampus Tuesday through Thursday as a Vi¬siting Fellow.“The oil crisis is real — very real — andwe'd better take note of that,” Bethe told thecrowd of several hundred that jammed theEckhart lecture hall Wednesday. “It is not amyth concocted by the oil industry, nor canthey do much about it.”Bethe discussed a recent conference atthe Hoover Institution at Stanford Universi¬ty which considered the consequences forthe US should the world's supply of mideastoil be cut off. In such a situation, Bethe said,America would have to reduce its importsfrom foreign sources outside of the mideastContinued on page 16Blacken Article BiasedTo the Editor:This letter is written in response to an ar¬ticle which appeared on the front page oflast Friday’s Maroon. While it is importantthat the Maroon cover the speech of StateDepartment official John Blacken, I do feelthat the article failed to mention many rele¬vant facts concerning the withdrawal ofU.S. military aid to the junta in El Salvadorwhich were raised by Blacken’s audienceand pursued in a forum later that same af¬ternoon.Blacken’s arguments were two: first, thatthe U.S. is backing the junta “composed ofmilitary and political moderates.” Had yourreporter followed the subsequent forum, hewould have heard a representative of Am¬nesty International present quite a differentpicture: “Since the governing junta tookpower on January 9, 1980, more than 10,000people have been killed and hundreds have‘disappeared’ in the violence carried out bythe National Guard, various police organi¬zations, and the right-wing paramilitarygroup called ORDEN.” Mr. Blacken’s at¬tempt to distinguish between the officialmilitary forces and paramilitary organiza¬tions did not stand up to examination in theforum by a representative from the ChicagoCommittee of Solidarity with El Salvador.“The current leaders of paramilitary orga¬nizations are former military leaders whoassumed their positions immediately afterretiring from the military. Paramilitary or¬ganizations are known to coordinate theiractivities with the regular military. For ex¬ample, the abduction and subsequent assas¬ sination of six leaders of the FDR < Revolu¬tionary Democratic Front) was carried outby 180 uniformed and 20 plain-clothes armedmen.”The junta’s campaign of terror and re¬pression has caused a stream of resigna¬tions from the government. Many ChristianDemocrats have left the government andjoined the FDR. Hector Dada Hirezi, a one¬time Christian Democratic representativeto the junta, explained, “while it is true thatthe obstacles along the road have been enor-mus, it is equally true that the junta is in¬capable of acting against those whom I per¬ceive to be the principal opponents of theprocess, and it is clearer with each passingday that those persons are installed in thevery structure of government.”Mr. Blacken’s second appraisal of the sit¬uation was the “The junta is not a populargovernment, but it has no opposition,” total¬ly dismissing the rational response of theSalvadorean people to unite under the ban¬ner of the FDR, which is composed of manyworker, peasant, professional and religiousorganizations. The struggle of these peopleagainst dictatorship and brutal repressionhas been going on for 50 years. The FDR isfar from bing a Marxist terrorist organiza¬tion: it is, as opposed to the junta, truly pop¬ular.International support for the FDR is alsosignificant, including such countries asWest Germany, Mexico, Ecuador, Panamaand Nicaragua. In Chicago, especially sincethe assassination last March of Nobel Prizewinner Archbishop Oscar Romero, therehave been numerous demonstrations tobring attention to the civil strife in El Sal¬vador and call a halt to U.S. military aid to the junta there. Petitions are currently cir¬culating nationwide to make people awareof the situation and to let policy-makersknow that the current U.S. policy in El Sal¬vador is unacceptable.If the State Department wishes to end ter¬rorism in El Salvador, it must stop all aid tothe current junta. As former Ambassador toEl Salvador, Murat Williams, has said, “Amilitary assistance program will not pacifythe country any more than it has pacifiedother countries where we have sent ourcounterinsurgency training teams. Therewill not be peace until El Salvador works outits own destiny and solves its own medievalproblems of extreme wealth in the midst ofextreme poverty.”Diana MingauwCo-chair.Organization ofLatin American StudentsChicago in Own WorldTo the Editor :In your January 20 issue, an article byRichard Kaye discussed the unwillingnessof Dean Smith, and presumably other ad¬ministrators, to pursue change for a moreviable curriculum and a better public imageof the University of Chicago.These wishes are chimerical at best,given the attitudes of the university fromthe top on down. It must be realized thatthere has been a conscious effort here not toadvertise the university — the belief is that“those who should know about the place, doknow.” That is why the university will getcaught in the 80 s and 90’s unprepared toThe ( meet financial and academic challengesbecause those who should know don’t know... and don’t care.Self-congratulations is the modus operan-di here, not deliberate efforts to join the realworld. It is why the university could neverhope to be a Harvard or a Stanford, wherecareful efforts are made to “spread theword” about their institutions. Yes the U ofC will continue resting on its self-madelaurels. It will also sink into the mire of ri¬gidity, lack of imagination and an unwilling¬ness to admit that a university is a businessthat must operate in the market place. . .inthe real world.Name WithheldWHPK Deserves AidTo the Editor:I fail to understand why the administra¬tors involved with WHPK are not doing ev¬erything in their power to make sure the sta¬tion gets 100 watt status and stays on theair.The station provides a practical outlet forstudents interested in radio. Moreover, it isa needed informational and emotional linkwith campus that students—forced to scat¬ter all over Hyde Park—have when athome.As part of an administration dedicated toincreasing the population of the College,(already known for its estranged studentbody) it would be extremely short-sighted ofPaul Ausick (et al.) to take any action thatwould further divide what should be a learn¬ing community.Tanja Meyer-OertelStudent in the Collegeicago Maroon, Friday, January 30, 1981 — 5twmBCVK*Z£CO&Dsoae We will be open before, duringand after all Folk FestivalPerformances. Come on down!Reynolds Club Basement, 5706 S. University Ave. 753-3561Because professionals at the Na¬tional Security Agency contribute to thevital dual missions of foreign intelli¬gence production and communicationssecurity And now career opportunityand challenge await candidates whoare language majors or skilled inunusual foreign languages.Your role as a professionallinguist at NSA: NSA offers a widerange of challenging assignments forSlavic, Near Eastern and Asian lan¬guage majors involving translation,transcription and analysis/reporting.Newly-hired linguists can count onreceiving advanced training in their ,primary languages and can plan on <many years of continued professional,growth.The benefits: NSA also offers asalary and benefit program that’s trulycompetitive with private industry Thereare assignments for those who wish totravel and abundant good living in the \Baltimore-Washington area for those who wish to stay close to home.Coundess cultural, historical,recreational and educational oppor¬tunities are just minutes away fromNSA’s convenient suburban location.To find out more: At NSA yourfuture will be linked to the nations. Thevital role that the National SecurityAgency7 plays demands and ensuresconstant challenge and professionalgrowth.Tb find out more about NSA careeropportunities, schedule an interviewthrough your college placement office.For additional information on the Na¬tional Security Agency, fill in the infor¬mation blank below and send it toMr. Bernard Norvell, College Recruit¬ment Manager, National SecurityAgency, Attn: Office of Employment (M32R), Fort George G. Meade,Maryland 20755.An Equal Opportunity Employer.U.S. citizenship required...jwfcx The NationalI©! SecurityAgencyMore than just a career.\ 1I d like more information about career opportunities with NSAName (print) _AddressDegree Level.University _ Phone NoMaiorThe language career you choose today couldinfluence national security tomorrow.6 — The Chicago Maroon, Friday, January 30, 1981 BigJim’sPipe &Tobacco Shop1552 E. 53rd St.(Under the I.C. tracks! *9 a.m.-7 p.m. weekdays12-4 p.m. SundaysCHINESE-AMERICAtfRESTAURANTSpecializing mCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOpen Daily11 AM to 8 30 PMClosed Monday1318 EAST 63rdMU 4-1062G.W. OPTICIANS1519 E. 55thTel. 947-9335Eyes examined and ContactLenses fitted by registeredOptometrists.Specialists in QualityEyewear at ReasonablePricesLob on premises for fast service framesreplaced lenses duplicated andprescriptions filledYoung Designs byLIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERS '1620 E. 53rd St.288-2900TtST PREPARATION FORl«« School Admission TestGruhih Mrhmemeit Aom Test6mou«te Record IiimimiiohMeoicju Cohere Aim TehVI MARK l« 019 MM MCI641-2185 IHfep• <4 M V •• * * A A*AA *21th Annual Folkfestival of MusicThe University of Chicago FolkloreSocietyJanuary 30 February 1No admission charge except forconcerts.236 9555 for price and ticket info.by Liz MilnerThe earth keeps some vibration goingThere in your heart, and that is you.And if the people find you can fiddle,Why, fiddle you must, for all your life...And I never started to plow in my lifeThat some one did not stop in the roadAnd take me away to a dance or picnic.I ended up with forty acres;I ended up with a broken fiddle---And a broken laugh, and a thousand memories,And not a single regret.("Fiddler Jones" fromEdgar Lee Masters'Spoon River Anthology)The music of people like EdgarLee Masters' ''Fiddler Jones"will be heard this weekend as theUniversity of Chicago FolkloreSociety presents its twenty-firstannual Festival of American FolkMusic.Since its inception in 1961, theFolk Festival has become one ofthe University's most popularevents, and is considered to be oneof the three of four finest folk fes¬tivals in the country.As befits a Folklore Society ac¬tivity, the origins of the Festivalare shrouded in myth. The Festi¬val started, it is said, in 1960,when Mike Fleischer, then presi¬dent of the Folklore Society,threw a shoe at his televisionscreen and vowed to woo Americaaway from "Puff the Magic Drag¬on" style folk pap by holding a fes¬tival that would bring people intocontact with real folk music andreal folk singers. Fleischer and a small band of followers were en¬tranced by this vision and, asBruce Kaplan wrote in a 1971Maroon article, "gambled a lot ofmoney they didn't have, screwedup their winter quarter, andworked their asses off... to bringthe urban audience the range,depth and beauty of the AmericanFolk tradition in a setting wherethe traditional artists wouldn't beswamped by huge crowds and thepresence of commercial perform¬ers whose acts were tailored tothe demands of urban concertstages and audiences."Other Folklore Societymembers say the Festival ori¬ginated somewhat less dramat¬ically as a committee product andas the logical outcome of the Soci¬ety's hootenanies Whatever itsorigins, the festival is the mostsuccessful student-run event inUniversity of Chicago history.The Festival should not be con¬sidered soley a University of Chi¬cago tradition, however. The orig¬inators intended it to be a trulynational festival that would pres¬ent the best in traditional Ameri¬can folk music, and the Festivalhas since met and surpassed itsoriginators' expectations: It hasbecome an integral part of Ameri¬ca's musical heritage by exposingtalented traditional musicians toappreciative audiences. The Festival has not only helped to pre¬serve but also to disseminate andrevitalize traditional American also provides an opportunity forMidwestern musicians and audi¬ence members to meet in work¬shops, exchange ideas, and per¬petuate traditional musicalstyles.The importance of local musi¬cians is highlighted this year by alarge number of Midwestern par¬ticipants. The Festival will alsofeature a number of husband andwife groups, so it should come asno surprise that the theme of theevent will be the family and its in¬fluences on the preservation andadvancement of folk music.Country, Bluegrass, and "OldTimey" music will be very muchin evidence this year. [Vernon Ox-ford will make his first appear¬ance after a triumphant perfor¬mance at the Brooklyn Academyof Music. Though Oxford's HankWilliams-influenced vocals haverecently made him the toast ofEurope, he has only recently be¬come popular in the U.S. He willbe accompanied by some of Chi¬cago's finest country musicians.Due to a last minute cancellation,The Hot Mud Family, a stringband from Cincinnati, will appearin place of the ArmstrongBrothers. The Hot Mud Familyplays and sings Bluegrass and OldTimey music. A second bluegrassgroup, Del McCoury and the DixiePals, features the vocals ofMcCoury (a former member ofBill Monroe's Bluegrass Boys) ac¬companied by fiddle, bass, and and wife duo who sing and playmandolin and guitar. Art Thieme,who makes his Festival debutafter 18 years on the Chicago folk-scene, will sing and play guitar,banjo, and musical saw.The blues will also be well re¬presented. Mama Yancey, thelegendary octogenarian bluessinger, will make her fifth consec¬utive appearance at the Festival.She'll be accompanied by ErwinHeifer, a Chicago blues pianistwho, like Vernon Oxford, enjoyedtremendous popularity in Europewhiie remaining relatively unk¬nown in the U.S. James "Son"Thomas will play and sing bluesfrom the Mississippi Delta, whileanother Mississippian, Anne Pitt¬man, will sing traditional spiritu¬als and hymns."Old Country" traditions will berepresented by Cuz Teahan andFriends, who play and sing tradi¬tional Irish music while accompa¬nying themselves on concertinaand fiddle. Eienor and GranamTownsend, a husband and wifeteam of champion fiddlers fromOntario, Canada, will playFrench, Canadian, Irish, andAmerican bluegrass fiddle tunes.A local group, The Chicago Barn-dance Company, will play andperform the dances of the South,Midwest, and New England. Andback by popular demand to tellmore whoppers are The Folk-tellers, two professional storytell¬ers from Tennessee who became[QjSSSgSaB By featuring lesser- banjo. the stars of the 1978 Festival.known artists, the Festival has al¬lowed formerly obscure musicalstyles to enter the American Traditional Midwestern musicwill be represented by Bud Hunt,who sings and plays banjo, andDicie and Otis Johnson, a husband ■ It's clear from this impressive'1 lineup that this year's Festival isgoing to rank among the finestmusic mainstream ■fUT^rf^KTHl ever held.A COMEDY IMPROVISATION TEAMJan. 31, Feb. 1Saturday at 8:30, Sunday at 2:30 & 7:30$3.00 General Admission$2.00 Students and Senior CitizensReynolds Club Third Floor Theatre57th and University753-3581A Court Studio Production —DOC FILMS—Tonight at 7:14 and 9:30:Join us for one of the most popular, intense, and talked aboutfilms of 1978. making its long-awaited campus Debut:Alan Parker s MIDNIGHT EXPRESSTomorrow at 2:30 and 7:00:Walt Disney’s 101 DALMATIONSand at 9:30 (separate admission):Elliot Gould as Philip Marlowe in Robert Altman’s filmversion of Raymond Chandler’sTHE LONG GOODBYESunday at 7:00 and 9:30:Louis Malle's LACOMBE, LUCIENAll films in Cobb Hall. $2.ft'THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOORGANIZATION OF BLACK STUDENTSPRESENTS A LECTURE BYHOWARDSAFFOLDPRESIDENT OFAFRO-AMERICAN POLICE LEAGUEMONDAY, FEBRUARY 2,1981IDA NOYES HALL1212 EAST 59th St.7:30 pmAUDITIONSfor two COURT STUDIO productionsPhotoanalysisby Michael Kirbydirected byLibby Morse Wormsby Roma Grethdirected byKatherine mato-von HemertCast:WORMS — 2 Women, 30-35PHOTOANALYSIS 1 Woman, 18-251 Woman, older1 Man, professorial typeAUDITIONS: Jan. 31, Reynolds Club Monday; February 2ndTHELarry Combs, ClarinetCHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRAFIRSTIn a lecture-demonstrationCHAIRBurton-Judson8pmAdmission free!1-3 PM baudrillard.0MY2 GREY CITY JOURNAL — — FRIDAY ;0 JANUARY 1981Friday 30Monday 2 r Saturday 31 Sunday 1Tuesday 3 '! Wednesday 4 Thursday 5FRIDAY 30 JANUARY 198113th Year19th IssueGary Beberman, Brad Bittan, ueland Chait, Peter T. Daniels, Susan Franusiax,Jim Guenther, Jack Helbig, Richard Kaye, Neil Miller, Mark Pohl, ReneeSaracki, Margaret Savage, Bruce Shapiro, John Svatek, Michele White, K.G Wilkins, Ken Wissoker.Copy editing by Felicia M. Cylich and Andrea Thompson.Mike Alper, film editor.Richard Pettengill, music editor.Lucy Conniff, book editor.Edited by Laura Cottingham.Production this week by Laura Cottingham and Susan Franusiak.the grey city journal is published weekly by the Chicago Maroon, Ida Noyes Hall,1212 East 59th Street, Chicago, Illinois For advertising information, call Wanda at753 FAME. ARTPieces from the Afrikan Art Collection on display tomorrowand much of the plot inovlves his re¬venge on the surgeon who did it. Somuch for malpractice insurance. Monday, Feb. 2, at 8:30 in Quantrell. Doc;$1.00.21st Annual Festival of American FolkMusic: When I told a banjo-pickin'friend that I'd be going to the Universi¬ty of Chicago, she asked, "Isn't thatwhere they have that folk festival?"This is an event not to be missed.Friday at 8:15, $4.50 admissionVernon OxfordThe Folk TellersThe Chicago Barn Dance CompanyBud HuntAnnie PittmanGraham 8. Eleanor TownsendSaturday at 3:00 PM, $4.00 admissionHot Mud FamilyCuz Teahan 8. FriendsAnnie PittmanDicie & Otis JohnsonVernon OxfordSaturday at 8:15, $5.50Hot Mud FamilyThe Folk TellersCuz Teahan 8. FriendsJames "Son" ThomasArt ThiemeDel McCoury 8. the Dixie PalsSunday at 7:30, S4.50 admissionGraham & Eleanor TownsendBud HuntMama Yancey & Erwin HeiferDicie 8, Otis JohnsonJames "Son" ThomasDel McCoury & the Dixie PalsFilms, workshops, and lectures will beat Ida Noyes on Saturday and Sunday.All concerts will be at Mandel Hall. —JGTHEATRE A Doll House: Nicholas Rudall directsthis Court Theatre production of theIbsen classic about a woman's escapefrom marriage. Through February22nd, Thursday through Saturday,8.30PM; Sunday, 7:30 PM. Tickets are$6 7.Mixed Nuts: Shelly Kaplan directs andperforms in a series of musical interludes with a team of fifteen improvisetional actors and actresses. Using avariety of folk instruments includingFilms by Kenneth Anger: The Renaissance Society's American VanguardCinema series continues with a showing a films by Hollywood's most demonic enfant terrible. Anger (neverwas a film maker more aptly named)started making films when he wasnine; at fifteen, he turned out the astonishing Fireworker (1947), made inhis parents' living room while theywere out cocktail party hopping, onfilm stolen from the U. S. Navy.Fireworks is a Deren esque psychorama as it might have ^een filmed by aspeed freak homosexual E >senstein.Anger subsequently turned to a glossier, more pseudo Hollywoodish apprach to film. Eaux d'Artifice (1953)replaces frenetic editing with graceful, liquid lap dissolves, in which adwarf dressed as Marie Antoinettewanders about, and eventually be¬comes one with, the fountains of theTrivoli Gardens in Rome, all to the accompainiment of Vivaldi's The FourSeasons, in Scorpio Rising (1963,Anger evicts the decaying ChristianAge as he involves the pagan Age ofAquarius, to the tune of "Fools RushIn." The titans of this new age are agang of pop drenched v, kers; their,gods are Brando and Dean. (The preceding age had decayed to the pointwhere its god was no longer Christ,but H. B Warner.) In Invocation ofMy Demon Brother (1969), Anger, like the hurdy gurdy, concertina, bag¬pipes, fiddle and cuica, Kaplan createsan evening of surprising musical andmime interludes with the accompaniment of the Ap Shenkin Ensemble. Kaplan, a Chicago mime as well as a mu¬sician, debuts wonderfully. There aresix performances, and no single one isalike. Saturdays at 8:30 PM and Sun¬days at 2:30 PM and 7:30 PM throughFebruary 1. Reynolds Club ThirdFloor Theater. Tickets are $3, $2 forstudents and senior citizens — R.K.most of his avant garde colleagues,further repudiates the solipsism of hisearlier work by depicting the epicstruggle between the outgoing Christian Age and the incoming Ac-quarian.Film Culture magazine offered themost outspoken appreciation of Angerin awarding him its Tenth Annual In¬dependent Film Award, "for his entirecreative work in general; for hisunique fusion of magic, symbolism,myth, mystery, and vision with themost modern sensibilties, techniques,and rythms of being; for revealing itall in a refreshed lift, persistently,constantly, and with a growing com¬plexity of means and content; at thesame time, for doing it with an amazing .larity, directness and sureness,for giving to our eye and our sensessome of the most sensuous and mysterious images cinema has created, forbeing the Keeper of the Art of Cinemaas well as the Keeper of the EternalMagic Directions."Screenings are Saturday, Jan. 31, at7 and 9 p.m. in cobb 425. Admission toRenaissance Society members only.The $5 membership fee includes ad¬mission to the entire film series, previews of ehibitions and other Societyactivities, as well as discounts on exhibit catalogues ana other Societypublications.— MAFILMS BY ANGERGREY CITY JOURNALNancy Buchanan: Performance of IfOnly I Could Tell You How Much I Re¬ally Love You. Tomorrow, Saturday,January 31. 2:00. The Renaissance So¬ciety, 4th Floor Cobb, $3 nonmembers,$2 members.Afrikan Art: First Chicago exhibition ofa private collection. Tomorrow, Saturday, January 31. 9:00pm-12:30am.Jackson Park Terrace, Guest Room,6040 South Harper.FILMMidnight Express(Alan Parker, 1978):The "true" story of Billy Hayes' im¬prisonment in Turkey for dope smug¬gling, and his subsequent escape. Thetitle refers to the code name for Hayes'escape p‘an. But rather than focusingon Hayes' physical and emotional dis¬cipline, the film dwells on one degra¬dation after another in agonizing de¬tail. Wnen Hayes finally escapes, itseems a matter of sheer chance. BradDavis is extremely unlikeabie asHayes — he demonstrates not so muchstrength of will as inhuman impenetrability. The film does manage tocreate a kind of mythic impetus, andit's less boring than it should be. It'salso dangerously and simple-mindediyxenophobic, especially now that thereare fifty-one fewer Americans in theMiddle East for us to worry about. To¬night, Friday, Jan. 30, at 7:15 and 9:30.Doc; $1.00 — MA.The Treasure of the Sierra Madre (JohnHuston, 1943): A trio of terrificallyflorid performances (Humphrey Bo¬gart, Walter Huston, and Tim Holt),superlative photography (by TedMcCord), and the perfect material forJohn Huston, Hollywood's patron saintof lost causes (by way of B. Traven),all help to pull this one together intoHuston's second most consistently en¬tertaining effort, it's about gold feveramong a couple of down-and-outers inMexico. Bogart, who spent years trying to break out of the bad guy mold,gets to play a real bad 'un here — noth¬ing short of evil personified — anddoes a creditable job of it. And a pesoto anyone who knows who that is sell¬ing Bogart his lottery ticket. Tonight,Friday, Jan. 30, at 7 and 9:30 at LawSchool Muditorium. LSF; $1.50. — MA101 Dalmations (Walt Disney Studios,1961); The central plot conceit — apack of Dalmation pups is terrorizedby wicked Cruella de Ville because shewants a new fur coat — can be harrow¬ing for the kiddies. What the hell, socan Snow White, so bring 'em along.More wit than other Disney features,but the charm is a bit forced. Still, youcan't quibble with an American insti¬tution. Tomorrow, Saturday, Jan. 31,at 2:30 and 7 in Quantrell: Doc; $2.00.— MAThe Long Goodbye (Robert Altman,1973): Raymond Chandler's PhilipMarlowe becomes a schlmiel playedby Elliott Gould. Altman's castingisn't perverse anything-for an effectmyth inversion (although Nina van Pailandt as Lauren Bacall does borderon it), it's a serious but sour commentary on the sad state of American heroworship. Like most of Altman's movies, it tends to slip in and out of carica¬ture too often, but when he treats Marlowe with respect, it's genuinelytouching in a way that Robert Mit-chum zomboid portrayal never approaches. Tomorrow, Saturday, Jan.31, at 9:30in Quantrell. Doc; $2.00 —MAThe Cat and the Canary (Paul Leni,1927): The grand-daddy of the hauntedhouse genre, and also an important example of the German expressionist in¬vasion of Hollywood. It's the old storyof a dying millionaire assembling hisheirs, who are summarily knocked offduring the night. Monday, Feb. 2, at7:15 in Quantrell. Doc; $1.00.The Penalty (Wallace Worsiey, 1920):Lon Chaney plays an underworld mastermind in a film that no one hereknows anything about. Doc calls it"outlandish," and it sounds like it is —Chaney has had his legs amputated,3&s°v\P9*-OP0V0G.HOF ONEWOMAN’S LIFEI did not write this to tell my friends whathappened. I did not write it to exploit whathappened. I wrote this so those of you whodo not know me, and do not need to knowme, could see how neurosis grows and howit can be checked. I want to show how thera¬py, which is often treated as a joke or asham, is helping thousands of people to behappier. I want to show the very serious con¬sequences of child abuse; how even an iso¬lated incident can distort a child's future.There are estimates that one in four chil¬dren is the victim of neglect, violence, emo¬tional or sexual abuse. The fact that thereare estimates shows that society is facing upto its responsibility for children. I hope thatthis personal account can give the estimatesemotional value for you, even if you werenever the victim.0, Rose, thou art sick!The invisible wormThat flies in the night, In the howlingstorm,Has found out thy bedOf crimson joy,And his dark secret loveDoes thy life destroy.William BlakeI come from a perfectly commonplacesmall town in the Midwest. My family isthoroughly and complacently middle class.My house is no different from thousands ofother brick ranch-style homes built in thefifties. My family consists of bright, attractive, socially-adjusted people. We are no dif¬ferent from millions of other life-long Mid-westerners.When I was a child, I always felt alone. Iwas afraid of new things, new places. I led afantasy life which precluded all real action.I dreamed hundreds of nightmares. I couldnot tell people what I felt, or if I could com¬municate that, I could never say why I feltso angry and depressed. Like a character inHenry James, I felt some awful fate hungover my life. I, a young girl, dreamed ofbeing a spy or at least a detective. I wantedto solve mysteries, and to tell lies. Every¬one, including myself, felt that I was headedtor a sanitorium.When I was thirteen, I refused to go toschool. I would hold hysterical scenes morn¬ing, noon, and night. My parents wouldplead with me to be responsible. They couldnot understand the terror that school in¬ spired in me. Finally, I was hospitalized,"for tests". My psychiatrist, after spendinga total of two hours with me, diagnosed hy¬poglycemia. He recommended Valium anda private education. I was packed off toboarding school. I was assured it was achoice of this school or an institution whichrequired no tuition. I had read Ken Kesey,and based my decision on that experience.Once I had started school, I did well. I wasgood at classes, extra-curricular activities,and dorm living. I was haunted by the fearof a total breakdown re-occurring. I had theencouragement, friendship, and several"steadies". I developed an enormous crushon one teacher, who trod a fine line betweenprofessional respect and unprofessional in¬volvement. He kept reassuring me thatwhen I was no longer so young, I could be aproper object for his affection.Eventually, I grew tired of the strict rou¬tine and tired of hard work. I left for collegebefore graduating. Once in college, it be¬came impossible for me to ignore my neuro¬sis. The fears that confronted me when Ithought about the future were overwhelm¬ing. My emotional and sexual interactionswere complicated, ugly, and painful. Thehigh ambitions I had cherished in highschool became burdens. I was withdrawn,constantly hurt by even the mildest criticalremark. The few compliments I received, Iignored, unable to believe in my good quali¬ties. I became fearful of leaving the dorm. Iwas avoiding an old lover, whom I fearedwould continue to be malicious. I wanderedpassively in and out of people's lives, ac¬cepting rejection or admiration as vagariesof fate. I decided to enter analysis after see¬ing a movie about (Elizabeth Taylor beingcommitted) left me shaking with uncontrollable horror. I knew that I could no longer gothrough life clinging to men, hoping that thisone man would save me from my fears. Ihad begun to passively accept sadism inmen. I would subject myself to humiliationfrom my friends for being so weak. I staredinto my family's blank faces when I toldthem no one could care about me.My parents divided the problems of analysis up the middle; my father could not un¬derstand why he had to pay sixty dollars anhour; and my mother could not understandwhy I had to talk about my childhood. I worried it would not work. Attending mentalhealth psychologists hadn't worked. My psychiastrist, a man in his early thirties, ex¬plained it would take a lot of time and a lot of work."Yes; just so, in your circumstances: butfind me another precisely placed as youare.""It would be easy to find you thou¬sands.""You could scarcely find me one. (If youit, you are peculiarly situated: very nearhappiness; yes, within reach of it. The mate¬rials are all prepared; there only wantsmovement to combine them. Chance laidthem somewhat apart; let them be once ap¬proached and bliss results."Charlotte BronteThe process of analysis is painful. Therewards are proportional to the willingnessof the patient to suspend control over the di¬alogue, and to accept the tedium of self-ex¬posure. If I preferred silence, I would haveto discuss the need for silence. If I wanted torehash a painful argument, I had to submitto interruption and analysis. If I rattled onabout self-improvement, I had to subjectmyself to questions about past failures. Ihad to learn to classify events, emotions,dreams, reactions, and new ideas accordingto their priority in session. The doctor couldoften seem heartless and powerless. Hispart is to provide objectivity in the real dia¬logue: that of the patient's past with the pa¬tient's present. There are no perfect doctorsany more than there are perfect patients.The struggle is to begin to accept the painfulaspects of human interaction without re¬treating from society.Not all the breakthroughs or "clicks" aremade in session. Probably most are not. Butit was in session that I began to appreciateand hope for breakthroughs. It is theseclicks that restored my confidence and hopefor a better life. I was afraid to confront myguilt complexes, but when I did, I found thatI was merely human in my errors, and not amonster.The initial breakthrough came a fewmonths after I had started analysis. It cer¬tainly did not consist of a blinding light, andI did not see its importance for severalyears. A friend had told me her deepest se¬cret — that from the time she was twelveuntil she left for college, her step father hadharassed her with constant sexual atten¬tions. "He never touched me, but I was tooyoung to know he wouldn't. I couldn't tellanyone. I knew that." I began to cry withher. I sensed for a moment that I was cryingfor myself as much as for her, but had noidea why. I could remember nothing similar to her story at all. I felt this same awful s.ness whenever I heard about child moleing.A few nights later, I had a dream. Indream, this same woman and I were balsitting in a certain house. Then the settincthe dream changed. I was in a stone dontory, looking out at a private park closemy high school. It was dawn. The colorsthe grass and the trees and the pink swere all (preternaturally) bright, aimglowing. I saw a young man walking acr<the circle of grass. He was carryingwoman's negligee and a man's pajamaseach arm. I thought, "Next time, he'llmine." There the dream ended, but l felttaxed and hopeful. I could see no meanincthe dream.Eventually, I began to see men again. Cman had been paying a lot of attention to ifor months. He asked me to lunch. Whetalked to him, he smiled and praised me.had a few dates before becoming loversthought that he was the most gentle and biliant man that I had ever known. He k<praising me, and allowing me to makethe decisions.The man's attitude changed. The affwent downhill quickly. He drank heavand neglected his studies. We had horrilarguments. He spent a great deal of tiiand effort persuading me that l wasnaive if I wouldn't want sadistic s<"Women like it. They just don't admit iHe criticized me, my family, my work, ifavorite thinkers. He kept me with him cistantly, urging me to confide all my pnlems in him. He would tell me that he woiaccept me in spite of my being a hopeiineurotic. When I threatened to leave,would promise to change. The sessions wmy psychiatrist were mere repetitions ofsuits and arguments. My family and frierwere concerned, but I would not confidethem the true violent nature of our relatioI justified staying with him by sayinglove him." In fact, I had come to accept tlI would never be a mature and hapwoman, and that I would never find rrwho could love me as he did.I continued in therapy. It was when tman began to tell me that I should chardoctors and see an old man who had s«plenty of rotten neurotics like me, thacould see how much he wanted me to stherapy, or at least to consult the typedoctor that would hinder my growth. Imitted to myself that he did not love me w4 GREY CITY JOURNAL FRIDAY 3iil sad- a healthy love, but a sadistic inadequate jea-olest- lousy. I was afraid to leave him. I spentmonths working in therapy and renewingIn the my friendships so that when l was alone, Ibaby- would have support.'ing of I very quickly found a new man, who im-lormi pressed me as easily dominated and comose to paratively normal. I failed to dominateors of him; I was unable to either subvert or curek sky his self-involvement. When this affairilmost ended, I resolved to give up sexual involveacross ments until I had learned why l had faileding a before. I wanted to know what event orlas on events in my childhood had left me so fear-5'11 be ful in the ensuing years. I wanted to knowelt re- why my sexual relationships always re-ling in volved around a struggle to dominate theother person? I lost interest in sex. I was den. One pressed. I lost interest in eating and sleepi to me ing. I saw a talk show about incest which de-Vhen l pressed me for days. It made be rememberne. We that when I was a little girl two other little✓ers. I girls were talking about what some man hadidbrii- done to them. They didn't teil any adults,e kept just me. I felt so sad that no one could help5ke all them then.In the midst of summer, I was writing aaffair poem for therapy when the word masochistleavily came up in the poem. I had been acting likeorrible one in the relationships. I had loved more>f time passionately the men who had hurt me. Ifas too was ashamed of this pattern, and resolvedc sex. not to see my therapist for a while. I wasnit it.” filled by self-loathing. I was a pervert whork, my wanted to be hurt. I didn't want to be thism con- way, but I could see no way to change my-/ prob- self.; would I went out to Colorado with my father inopeless the summer. For the entire trip he talkedive, he about God. He is very religious. I grewns with angry with him and told him that I didn't be-lsof in- lieve in God. I hadn't believed since I wasfriends very young. I had decided that since thenfide in world is rotten, and that God should not letlations. things be so rotten, that he must not exist. Iying ''I knew that I had had a more specific firstept that reason, but could not remember what ithappy was.id man After returning to Chicago, I was writinga story about a young girl's discovery of theten this facts of life. At first it was easy to write andchange then became very difficult. I had nothingad seen more to add. I went to do some automatic, that I writing at the library. A.W. is a process ofto stop writing very rapidly, one's thoughts for antype of indefinite period of time, without distractionh. I ad- or direction. The technique can reveal remewith pressed memories. After doing this for twoOUtrj£o-£3JCartIhtcooJSc- hours, I didn't look at what I had written. Icould remember being attacked by two boyswhen I was very young. The memoryseemed vague and trivial.The next day I went to a professor's officehours. The week before, I had submittedsome creative writing to him for criticism. Iwent in and saw that the papers were cover¬ed with comments. It went through my mindthat he hated the pieces and was going to tellme just how awful he thought they were. Inreality, he told me that they were good.While he was telling me that, I kept think¬ing, "He wants to use you, to hurt you insome way.” I trusted and liked the teacher,and he was being professional, but I was re¬sponding with distrust and dislike. When hesuggested that we should have another con¬ference, I was passive about the time andplace of the conference. I knew that my re¬actions were not logical/but I couldn't stopit or understand it.Two nights later, I was in a bookstore whena friend of my sadistic lover's walked in. Iwas scared that he would recognize me,even though he had always been sympathet¬ic with me. I bought my book and wenthome. That night I couldn't study. I keptthinking about the way I had reacted tothese two men. I saw the professor's compli¬ments for my work caused me to associatehim with the high school teacher and the sa¬distic lover. I realized that I had always dis¬trusted those two men but l was passive anddependent in the relationships. I also sawthat one of my male friends was selfish andthoughtless but that I was almost always theone who sought him out. I wondered againwhy l always felt the need to attach myselfso tightly and possessively to men when Iwas seldom unhappy without them. Some¬thing I had said to my psychiastrist cameback to me: "I have always associated lovewith pain.”I was watching the ten o'clock news. Twochildren had been abducted and sexually as-sualted that night. I thought, "How sympa¬thetic they all are with those kids.” Later inthe evening, there was a public service announcement about child abuse, listing sex¬ual abuse in its catalogue of woes. I thought,"How sympathetic all society is with children who are hurt. It was different when Iwas a a child.''The next morning l was very depressed; Ifelt like I was carrying a lead weight on myshoulders. I thought again about the weekbefore. I tried to piece together the automat ic writing with the creative writing. I want¬ed to connect real life and fiction. It was likereconstructing a newspaper without anindex. I returned to the point where thestory had ended, and saw that the automaticwriting memory was set in the samehouse.The memory of the attack became clear. Irelived it. I was staying at a distant cousin'shouse for a few days. Her two grandsonswere staying there also. They were olderthan me; I was five or so. I went into thecloset to change clothes. From behind theplastic bags of stored winter clothes camethe two boys. One locked the closet door, be¬fore grabbing my mouth and arms. Theypushed me on the floor. (What did they say:"Girls!”) I fought and finally was off thefloor. I pulled down my T-shirt and held myshorts. I unlocked the closet door, kickingthe boy closest behind me. I ran out of thecloset, the bedroom, and down the corridor,through the kitchen, and another corridor,out the back door. My elderly cousin was inthe garden, far behind the house. "Land'sSakes! Whatever happened to you?” sheasked. ! knew that she had always let theooys get away with anything they liked. Iknew that l could not tell her what hap¬pened. (That l was a girl). I had no word forwhat they'd done. I said, "Stevie hit me.”When the boys slunk out the back door later,my cousin told Stevie not to hit me again."You shouldn't hit a girl, especially one a lotsmaller than you,” she said. I know that lforgot that incident a short time after the actual events. But before l forgot it, I madejudgments and those reactions served as thecore of my fears. I buried that closet in thedarkest corners of my mind and in that clos¬et I buried my trust in men and God.I knew what all boys wanted from girls (Ican hear him saying it now, clenching hisrat-sharp teeth.) was something bad, some¬thing that hurt. I knew that men werestronger. I also thought that maybe I shouldhave liked it, male attention, after all. Ithought that somehow it was meant to hurt.Certainly those two little boys were notafraid of getting punished. Later l would endure cruelty in men because I did not be¬lieve that my revulsion was good. I wouldassume that all men were sadistic to somedegree; and not realize where the assump¬tion came from and be able to disagree withit. I knew that there was no God because Iwas always being told that God looked afterlittle girls, and he hadn't looked after me. When I was withdrawn and anti social it wasthe pain and subsequent fear of that after¬noon coming over me, without the consciousrealization of the source. I desired for oneman to protect me from my tear, and tosave me from my distrust and anger. Thenervous breakdown occurred at puberty be¬cause I was then expected to vie for maleapproval, which part of me saw as danger¬ous. Whenever I heard about child molestation, I cried for my own pain, which was allthat my conscious mind would accept.I know part of what the dream meant. Thefirst part took place in that cousin's house. Iwas running from the darker corridor intothe warm and sunny kitchen. When I hadknown that the actual attack was over, andthat I had survived it, ana escaped from it.The second part of the dream, the stonebuilding I was in, was the "wall” of distrustand fear. I was dreaming about life outsidethe prison. Outside it was beautiful and nat¬ural. There was love in the outside world.The dream had reassurred me because itshowed the possiblity of freedom, and thequality of that freedom.If you have gone through analysis, andseen in yourself the work of repressed memories, you know the exhilaration which onefeels with conscious realization. You knowthat what one does not remember still af¬fects your attitudes. I hadn't rememberedbeing attacked for fifteen years; I couldn'tuntil l had the resources of fifteen years ex¬perience. The most important resource washaving enough self-confidence to search forthe past which l had buried out of fear. I feltand still feel fear when I remember theevent. But this fear cannot rule over me anymore. I was able to tell adults this time, as Icould not the first time. I was lucky to haveas friends people who could look at a 20-year-old and comfort the 5 year old.I know that children forget things; theycertainly don't repress where they left theirmittens or where they lived when they were3 years old. I know that remembering whatwas repressed does not grant someone immunity from personal problems. I know thatnot all children can forget being molested. Iknow that not all neurotics were sexuallyabused as children. This story is my story itis as honest as autobiography can be and itis also as singular. You see, I said that I waslucky to have friends to comfort me. I wasvery lucky to have friends who could acct ptmy childhood experience and see my anaiysis as a positive step.y 30 JANUARY 1981 GRFY CITY JOURNAL 5will have a crucialplanning meeting forits WINTER issueSunday, Feb. 1 7:30 pmMaroon Office, Ida Noyes— All interested writers should attend —r‘THeetioy Studentstit rfCt *76e @oC(eyeInterested in theProgram in theArts and Sciences Basic toHuman Biology and Medicine(ASHIM)FRIDAY, JANUARY 30, 198112:30 P.M.HARPER 130FAUl l/n and DEANS representing The University of Chicago’sSCHOOLS OF MEDICINE. PUBLIC* POLICY, and SOCIAL SER-MCE ADMINISTRATION will he present to describe the Programaims, content and relations with other programs. ASIH M studentswill aUo he available to answer am questions. Freshmen and Sopho¬more?* interested in any aspect of human health are especially urgedto attend. - KEMBARK LIQUORS1214 E. 53rd St.493-3355SALE ITEMS 1/30 THRU 2/3750 ML OLD TAYLOR 80 4791.75 Liter CANADIAN CLUB 15°’Liter SK0L GIN 409750 ML JOHNNIE WALKER BLK 999750 ML BEEFEATER GIN 6"Liter CHIVAS REGAL 14"750 ML MARTELL VS0P 14"750 ML HUBLEIN BRASS MONKEY 389Liter KENTUCKY TAVERN 80 599Liter E & J BRANDY 649750 ML FITZ 86° 5"6-12 oz.CANS SCHUTZ BEER (WARM ONLY) | 99CHAMPAGNES FOR VALENTINES DAYKORBELL (Brut ■ X-Dry) 6PAUL MASSON (Brut - X-Dry, Pink) 4J99LA D0MAINE (Brut & X-Dry) 3"GANCIA ASTI SPUM0NTE 5" 3/1700GREAT WESTERN (Brut & X-Dry) 5"750 Ml 0NDINE GERMAN WINE 2 99750 ML L'EPAYRIE (Red or White) 2"750 ML CABERNET (Rose) D'ANJOU 2"1.5 Liter CAPELLA (Valpoliceila)(Bardolino) 399Brandeis UniversityJACOB HIATTINSTITUTE IN ISRAELWhat does it offer you?• a semester of study in Israel in the Fall term• coursework in English on the political, economic andsocial development of Israel and in its language,history and archaeology• a strong program of Hebrew language study• important internship opportunities in social serviceagencies in Jerusalem• field trips, study trips, interviews with prominentIsraelis, a kibbutz visit• financial aid is availableApplication deadline: March 15For further information, see your StudyAbroad advisor or write:Office of International ProgramsBrandeis UniversityWaltham, Massachusetts 02254(617) 647-2422Brandeis University admits students of any race, color nationalor ethnic origin, sex. age or handcap to d its programs andactivitiesGREY CITY JOURNAL FRIDAY 30 JANUARY 1981STRIPING OUT ATARby Mark Poh!"I was always interested by what's hap¬pening in a specific place where you aresupposed to look at something, and you seea lot of other things. . . You go to theLouvre in Paris, and you have a window,and all of a sudden you see in that windowframe the landscape of Paris, absolutelygorgeous." — Daniel BurenUgly rumors floating around, sayingthat the stripes painted on the 1C doors aresome type of "modern art'*. Lots of ani¬mosity directed at the thought. . . "I coulddo that MYSELF!" and such reactions.Daniel Buren, the painter, cautions usagainst judging his work by a precon¬ceived, traditional set of criteria for "goodart"; he says, "The people, who look verynice and say, 'Well, what is it? I don't un¬derstand?' or, 'It's very interesting, whatis that?'. And then you say, 'It's verticalstripes' and they are hurt, almost, they sayor think, 'But I saw that! What is it?"'In the Museum of the Art Institute of Chi¬cago, there's a picture window overlookingthe 1C tracks. The window is labeled — it'sa work by Buren. Outside the window, 1Ctrains run. The train doors are striped —they are Buren's work. Buren presents themuseum-goer with a challenge — to seethe art in everyday life. Buren's stripes aren't meant to be viewed in the way one normally views art. Hefeels most people have set patterns and ex¬pectations for viewing art, and so, by giv¬ing us uniquely uncategorizable "verticalstripes," he asks us to go beyond theseready-made opinions and confront hiswork on a more intimate level.He says ofhis work that "there's no one way to do orsee it." He leaves his work open-ended andsubject to the viewer's interpretation;Anne Rorimer of the Art Institute ofChicago says we can "see it on manylevels."Buren uses his stripes as targets or focalpoints. They are a tool which he uses todraw attention to the contexts of everydayscenes. His stripes are not so much as ar¬tworks in themselves as they are worksabout art. Rudi Fuchs called Buren's work"metapainting" — painting about paintingitself.Along with making his audience awareof their surroundings and presenting hiswork in a way which can't be type-cast,Buren designs his works so they break outof the traditional art-context, the muse¬um.This striving to make people aware ofthe contextual biases in which they viewart is evident in most of Buren's work. In a1975 exhibit in Germany, "A Partir de la',"Buren graphically illustrated the modernbias of exihibiting art at eye-level by cov¬ ering the wallsof the museum with stripes-except where paintings had been exhibitedwithin the last ten years. At New York'sJohn Weber Gallery in 1973, Buren hung aseries of striped banners extending fromthe gallery's inside, out across the street.Entitled "Within & Beyond the Frame,"the work was an attempt to illustrate orcall attention to the cultural bias of exhibiting art predominantly in museums.Since Buren's work relies on interac¬tions with its environment, his installa¬tions are always unique and unmovable.To do a museum exhibit, he must go to thatmuseum and see what he can do with itsenvironment. When the exhibit is finished,it cannot, by its very nature, be moved to adifferent exhibiting location and so it istaken down. The only lasting evidence ofmost of Buren's exhibits is a large volumeof published interviews, reviews, and pub¬ licity releasesBuren has been very active recently. Lo¬cally, he finished the 1C work in Novemberof last year, and did a showing in Detroitwhich just closed. In late 1977, he constructed a piece for the Art Instutute's''Europe and the '70's" exhibit, a piececomposed of white and green stripes ar¬ranged inside the Art institute's museum.A year before that, he constructed a piecefor a museum in Milwaukee.Presently, Buren is exhibiting in NewYork City and Paris, and will be opening ashowing in Holland soon. He also hasworks exhibiting in other areas of Europeand California.Buren is trying to take what Tom Wolfecalled "The Painted Word" to its extremeHe's asking us to become aware o* the artistic context and to break away from ourprefabricated set of artistic expectations.y'vCUT tllTIIIS \• --Vv-^VlV si lfm 1 y' §444tg\ y1 /V*4* • •• :'•Jt y x *>•HE OPEN UNIVERSITYThe Open UniversityExcited students, Small classes,Guided study The Academic Affairs Committee of Student Governmentwill be offering non-credit courses from the FourDivisions and Professional Schools this spring quarter.We ask all faculty, emeriti and qualified graduatestudents of the University to please consider teaching aclass - three to five meetings of from two to three hours -in a singular, interesting specialty of their own. For moreinformation please call 241-5448 or 753-2233 Extension241. Thank you.FRIDAY 30 JANUARY 1981 GREY CITY JOURNAL 7T.‘HerjJ'V1 °f Ut'ttveu(fen'tiYe (oten'dnns), «. 1. the:Uending. 2. the persons8 — GREY CITY JOURNAL - FRIDAY 30 JANUARY 1981MEDICAL SCHOOL:HOW TO CUREAFMANdALHEADACHE.Take the money worries out of medical school with an Armed Forces HealthProfessions Scholarship Full tuition Books. Fees Necessary equipment And$485 a month.Once selected for a Physician scholarship-available from the Army Navy orAir Force-you are commissioned as a second lieutenant or an ensign in theReserve. Serve a 45-day active-duty period annually while in the program Andagree to serve on active duty after graduation You will serve one year for eachyear of participation in the scholarship program (3-year minimum commitment).You receive excellent sajary and benefits More importantly, you get invaluableexperience working beside dedicated medical peopleFor more information mail this coupon to:Armed Forces Scholarships. PO. Box C1776. Huntington Station, NY 11746Yes, I am interested in Armed Forces Health Professions Scholarshipopportunities for physicians. I understand there is no obligation. (0M)Army □Name. Navy □ Air Force □ 1004Address.City iP'ease Pnnt) Sex □ M □ FAptState. Zip.Enrolled at+To graduate mt _Phone._ (School).-Degree A IIIWalnut LegDESKSAll Wood $75.00Matching Chairs Available(AII wood, armlet$, swivel)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!on reconditioned stereo compon¬ents, fully guaranteed at 40-70%off retail prices likeone of a kind specials: this week'sPHASE-UNEAR 2000PHILIPS GA 212 55,00i 0NKY0 A-7022 .... *50-00MARANTZ 2270 240.001 PIONEER HPM 40 ea 75.00KENWOOD 1033 35.00E.P.I. LS-70 .. ea. 35.00MARANTZ 2100 109.00H/K CITATION 16S 175.00plus much, much moreHEAR AGABN STEREO7002 North California338-7737Open Mon.-Sat. at 11 AM The Divinity SchoolpresentsA History of Religions Club LectureHUMAN SACRIFICE AND THEAZTEC VISION OF PLACEby David CarrascoProfessor of the History of ReligionsUniversity of ColoradoFebruary 5, 1981 4:00Divinity SchoolSwift Hall — 3rd Floor Lecture halllA&faant&x£a/&493-0666ENTRANCE TO ELE¬GANCE - ELLISAVENUE BEAUTYNear 50th, nine roomgreystone reflections ofanother era. Hand¬some wood. Lots ofliving space. Quietstreet. All sytemsexcellent. SI 45.000.Garage with new over¬head automatic door.Ken Wester [eve.] 947-0557. SalesMarie Wester (eve.) 947-0057Cleveland McCowan (eve.)799-1419. SalesCharlotte Vikstrom 493-0666. BrokerLIKE BEING NEAR THE LAKE? Over 3.000 sq. ft. condonear 53rd & Hyde Park Blvd. Excellent 8 plus (curvedbay sun room) rooms, lust Listed. S106.000.ALL GROWN-UP SIZE ROOMS. Sometimes the thirdbedroom is a small maid's room", but these are alllarge. Kitchen has handsome cabinetry, extra storagehutch. Immaculate, sunny spacious convenient Cornellcondo, lust listed. S85.0002.000 SQUARE FEET OF SUNSHINE. 7 room condopriced to sell in Kenwood. Tip top new. Woodburningfireplace. $69,500.NEAR THE TOP & A REAL FIREPLACE. Elegant Narra-gansett building near Lake Shore & 50th. Parquet floors,formal tradition rooms. S69.500SMALL 1890 HOUSE in the 55th & Dorchester groupAmazing space indoors - paneled basement - finisheddormer type space on 2nd floor. S65.000. Call Marie.UNIVERSITY AVENUE TRADITIONAL VICTORIAN.You must see the nice rooms throughout. Beautiful wood¬work. woodburning fireplace AND A NEW GARAGESI29.500 Ken.MAJESTIC FULLTHREE STORY HIGHBRICK. Historic Ken¬wood residence 1899curved bay windows,magnificent mahoganypaneled living room.Spacious nine rooms onfirst and second. Piusfull 6 rm. servantsquarters on third.Sacrifice price. Askabout attractive finan¬cing $195,000.The Chicago Maroon, Friday, January 30, 1981 — 15The Shoreland coffeeshopCouncil Clears Way for ShopBetheContinued from page 5as well, because of the need to share the re¬maining oil supply with other countries. Acutoff of oil from the mideast, which sup¬plies 55 percent of the world’s oil, wouldmean that auto use in the US would have tobe cut in half, and that eight million peoplewould lose their jobs.Bethe cited several other reasons for re¬ducing American dependence on mideast oilapart from the threat of a boycott. These in¬cluded the high cost of imported oil, declin¬ing world petroleum reserves, and the needfor America to “regain political freedom ofaction in the middle east.”Oil imports cost the US $70 to $80 billion ayear, Bethe said. “Less than that investedannually...could free us from the need to im¬port within ten years.” He stressed the im¬portance that this would have for the othercountries of the world, all of whose energyproblems are worse than our own.The nation faces two distinct energy prob¬lems, according to Bethe — meeting its totalenergy needs, and meeting the need for fluidfuels such as oil and gas. The latter, he feels,is the more difficult problem, and can bestbe solved through a combination of conser¬vation programs and the use of syntheticfuels. He also urged high prices for energy,in order to encourage conservation effortsand provide an incentive for production.Turning to nuclear power, Bethe repliedto one of two flyers distributed at the lectureby anti-nuclear groups. The flyer was head¬ed: “Can we afford nuclear power?” SaidBethe: “We cannot afford not to use nuclearpower.” He pointed out that nuclear reac¬tors were the cheapest source of power forall countries except the U.S. and Canada.“Of course, safety is a prime considera¬tion,” he said. He said public apprehensionabout the probability of dangerous nuclearaccidents was exaggerated. He quoted theKemeny report on the Three Mile Island ac¬cident saying that the “actual radiation re¬leased had a negligible effect” on the popu¬lace. He also cited the findings of theRasmussen study, commissioned by theAtomic Energy Commission, indicating thatthe probability of a reactor meltdown wasone in 2000 reactor-years and the probabilityof a break in the containment building, theonly circumstance under which radiation could be released, was one in 100,000 reac¬tor-years. Even if radiation were released,he said, there would be no fatalities as adirect result. The only serious danger is thatof latent cancers which might come into evi¬dence over a thirty-year period, and eventhis would not appear as a dramatic rise inthe cancer rate, Bethe said.SG VoteContinued from page 1put words into someone else’s mouth.”Wendt denies Yarnold’s story. He told theMaroon that, “she is lying,” and calling hera “disgruntled border,” and “just a bittergirl.” He said one reason she was telling theMaroon her story was because she felt thehouse had cheated her out of money. “Shehad a $700 credit with the house, and I gaveher a letter of intent Friday night telling herthat she would only get $560.75 back.”Yarnold spoke with Maroon her story lastFriday afternoon, before Wendt informedher about the money she would get back.She also said that she accepted, and washappy with the money she was getting backfrom the fraternity, and that she felt it was afair amount of money to receive.Wendt also feels that Yarnold’s primarymotive for making her claims were re¬venge. “1 was nasty to her as treasurer,” hesaid. “She didn't like the arrangementshere. I was surprised to see her back at thebeginning of this quarter.Wendt said that there was displeasureamong house members that Yarnold wasnot on a full board contract, “because shewas eating all her meals at the C-shop.”Yarnold admitted that she did eat manymeals at the C-shop, however, she claimedthat this was because she met many of herfriends there, and because her dietary prob¬lem had eased as the quarter had pro¬gressed.Wendt had no comments about thecharges that he had tried to spread rumorsabout a SG official.Despite repeated attempts, the Maroonwas unable to reach for comment either ofthe two remaining students who signedstatements saying that they had filled outballots and placed them in Wendt’s box forhim to deliver. By Henry OttoThe Shoreland Council met in a specialsession Monday night to act on the reopen¬ing of the Shoreland coffee shop. The stu¬dent-run snack shop closed earlier thisquarter following the discovery that it hadlost over $1700 during the fall.The two major obstacles to reopening thecoffee shop are the repayment of lastquarter’s debts and the selection of a newmanager. The Office of Student Housing sti¬pulated that the snack bar must remainclosed until the Office receives the close to$1200 it paid for salaries and equipment re¬pairs last quarter. The Shoreland Councilvoted to pay the debt with the $600 remain¬ing in the coffee shop’s account and a $600loan from the Council to the coffee shop.The council also accepted the resignationof Kevin Wendorf as the coffee shop manag¬er at Monday’s meeting. Wendorf acceptedfull responsibility for the coffee shop’strouble, citing his inability to control thetheft of cash and inventory as the majorcause for the loss. He admitted that hisfailure to keep detailed financial recordsprevented him from discovering the pro¬blem until January. Up through the end of last year Wendorf reported an $1800 profit toStudent Housing and the Shoreland Council.The lack of financial records finally led tothe closing of the coffee shop. The Office ofStudent Housing failed to receive a report onthe snack shop’s profit or loss despite re¬quests throughout the quarter. Uncertainabout the coffee shop’s status, Edward Tur-kington, Director of Student Housing, finallysummoned Wendorf to appear in his officewith all available records. Wendorf discov¬ered the $1700 loss while preparing for themeeting earlier this quarter.Although some Council members ex¬pressed concern over the possibility of find¬ing a suitable manager for the coffee shop,the majority were strongly behind reopen¬ing the snack bar. Members were reluctantto critizice Wendorf, and suggested insteadthat the Council itself might have been atfault for not clearly defining the manager’sduties and for their failure to supervise hisactivities. The Council recognized the needto fulfill these obligations when the searchbegins this quarter for a new manager. JimDaly, president of the Shoreland Council,said he believed that Monday’s meeting hadunified the Council and that the Council wasnow prepared to accept its responsibilitiesto insure the coffee shop’s success.KODAKMailersfor home delivery.For bright, clear color...just the way you like it.■ Just pioce your roll of exposedKodak film in a KODAK Mailerodd postage and drop inmailbox'■ Mail your Kodak slide film directto Kodak in o prepaid processingenvelope• Receive quolify color processingby Kodak■ Finished slides delivered by mail $2$4 89PK20 mailer(20 exp)29PK36 mailer(36 exp)University of Chicago BookstorePhoto Department, 2nd Floor970 E. 58th753-3317 AS« FO*COLORPROCESSING.. Kodak VEND-A-COPY ANNOUNCES-THE COPICARD—|Vend A-Copy announces a new COPICARD servicewhich will be available on library photocopy machines onor about February 1, 1981. The COPICARD is a walletsize card which will be available in four denominations.The number of copies purchased is encoded on the COPICARD and as each photocopy is made the Vend A Copyequipment deducts one copy from the encoded card.When the encoded copies have been expended, the cardmay be discarded and replaced by purchasing a new one.COPICARD prices will be:QUANTITY COPICARD Price Price per copy100 $ 7.00 $.07m 18.00 .06500 27.50 .0551000 50.00 .05Rising costs have made it more difficult to providethe personnel and services required by the heavily usedphotocopy machines in the libraries at the coin operatedprice of 5 cents per exposure. After negotiation andagreement with the University of Chicago Library, thenew price structure has been established and Vend ACopy has agreed to increase its service and maintenancepersonnel during all hours that the libraries are open.Further information will be provided at Regensteinand the departmental libraries in the coming weeks.Copicards will be sold at the Cashier's Office of Regen¬stein Library weekdays from 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., andon Saturdays from 9:30 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. COPICARDSmay be purchased by mail direct from Vend-A-CopyCorporation, 765 Route 83, Suite 113, Bensenville, Ill¬inois 60106.On or about February I, 13111 the coin-operated price of the Vend-A-l'opyphotocopy machine* in the librarie* of the University of Chicago will belOcents. Mm WOMEN-HATING,RACISM andVIOLENCE in the TOP-40a mixed-media presentationbyALIX DOBKIN&DENSLOW BROWNSat. Jan. 31Ida Noyes Library7:00 P.M.$2.00»■ -*»***»»«•- -16 — The Chicago Maroon, Friday, January 30, 1981 EricBeckerSPORTSBeloitBeatsRiponBeloit College beat Ripon'fSr&Uast Wednes¬day night, setting up IplWfttle for secondplace in the Midwest Conference’s East Di¬vision between Ripon and Chicago this Fri¬day night at the Field House.Ripon comes into this Friday’s game withthe 13th ranked offense nationally in Divi¬sion III basketball, averaging 81.8 pointsper game. Ripon is led in scoring by TerryCramer, who is averaging 22.5 points pergame from the guard position. Ripon hastwo men at 6’6”; Brian Reinfleisch atcenter, with a scoring average of 10.7, andOwen Glodossky scoring 11.3 from the for¬ward position. The other forward is Ripon’ssecond leading scorer, Ashley Copper, whois averaging 17.5 a game.This Friday night’s game should be amatchup between Ripon’s high powered of¬fense, and the Maroons’ strong defense,which is eighth best in Division III with astingy 58.1 average. The Maroons’ two mainobjectives will be to shut down the outsideshooting of Cramer, and negate the heightadvantage and inside power of Reinfleischand Glodowsky. If Chicago is able to buildan eaarly led, look for the Maroons to gointo a spread offense to minimize Ripon’s Bench Keyto RiponGameBy Assistant CoachJim HargesheimerA significant factor in our winning of latecan be directly attributed to our bench. Itseems whenever we need to be picked up of¬fensively or defensively this year, our benchhas come through. Consistant help from oursubstitutes was an important part of thegame which we lacked last season.Getting Ready for RiponRipon will be our toughest test to date.They are big and strong at the forward andcenter positions, and have the leadingscorer in the Midwest Conference, TerryCramer, at one guard position. Ripon is alsoa perennial Midwest Conference basketballpower.A concentrated effort on defense as wellas intelligent offensive pllfr will be a mustfor us to whip the Redmen.height advantage.Friday’s game starts at 7:30, and will bebroadcast on WHPK, 88.3 FM.— Michael Occhiolini Eric KubyAlbanians Walk Over Wall,Div School Nips BRMScoreboardMen’sChamps 54 E.F.U.Stew38Five Particles in a Box by forfeitover Abbott SistersN.U.T.S. 82 Hi How Ya Do II 9Tufts 29 Vincent 27Lowlifes by forfeit over theChampsUpper Rickert34 Sons of Chamberlin 28E.F.U. Stew65 Basketball Team 26Phi Gamma Delta45 Breckinridge 32Shorey 31 Hitchcock A 28Immoral Minority34 Orangutangs 31Albanian Refugees61 Lemmings 33Wall Street Walkers48 Manic Defensives 45Spuds54 Farensyl Pyrophosphate 51Bo's Hose by forfeit over Team 7Hi How Ya Do29 Basketball Team 28E.F.U. Stew72 Average White BasketballTeam 50N.U.T.S by forfeit over LowlifesDivinity School 49 B.R.M. 43Greenwood 50 Hitchcock B 11Upper Flint 28 Thompson 26Lower Rickert 39 .... Dodd/Mead 18Superstiffs34 Corpus Medicus 25Dudley 65 Fallers 25Compton by forfeit over SalisburyDews Brothers 52 ... Commuters 45Norval's Criminals43 Five Particlesin a Box 42Women'sMisfits 30 Full Court Press 21Lower Wallace 14 Thumpers 10Bomberettes 26 Med School 19Snell 28 Dudley 8Upper Wallace by forfeit over Bishop By David GruenbaumThe Albanian Refugees played the toughWall Street Walkers Wednesday night with¬out their big man Brett Schaffer. Althoughthe Refugees had a little trouble scoring atthe start of the game, holding only an 8-7lead at the end of the first quarter, goodpassing and excellent defense soon allowedthe Albanians to open up a bigger lead andthey held on for a 48-36 victory.This win allowed the Albanians to remainunbeaten and at the number one spot in thetop ten. It was the first loss for the sixthranked Walkers. Excellent refereeing jobswere turned in by A1 Novotne and Nick Cho-poris.In another important game, secondranked Divinity School edged out thirdranked BRM 49-43. The fourth ranked Ab¬normal Deviates were idle, while fifthranked Bo’s Hose won a game by forfeit.Seventh ranked N.U.T.S. destroyed Hi HowYa Do 82-9, while the eighth ranked Super-Stiffs defeated Corpus Medicus 34-25. Theninth ranked Champs beat E.F.U. Stew54-38 but then lost a game by forfeit. Finallytenth ranked Dudley defeated Fallers65-25.In important undergraduate games, theDews Brothers held on to beat the Seeper-less Commuters 52-45, in a game for the divi¬sional lead, while Shorey House pulled aslrght upset in defeating favored HitchcockA 31-28. Midwest Conference Basketball StandingsEast DivisionConference West DivisionConferenceAll Games All GamesBeloit 5-0 14-1 Monmouth 5-1 9-4Chicago 4-1 10-3 Carleton 4-4 6-8Ripon 3-1 9-3 Coe 4-4 7-9Lawrence 2-4 8-7 Cornell 3-3 8-5Lake Forest 1-4 3-8 Knox 2 4 3-9Grinnel 0-6 1-11Games to WatchE.F.U. STEW-N.U.T.S Mon 6:30 HCF 3Spread — N.U.T.S. by 8 . . .N.U.T.S. is com¬ing off a big win < 82-9) over Hi How Ya Dowhile E.F.U. lost to the Champs 54-38. Al¬though E.F.U. Stew has a high powered of¬fense, N.U.T.S should be able to take advan¬tage of E.F.U’s slightly weaker defense andcome away with a victorv.PHI GAMMA DELTA-UPPER RICKERTSun 3:00 HCF 2Spread — Phi Gam by 10 . . . Phi Gamis nowthe leader in this division where no team canpull too far ahead without being upset bysomeone else.SUPERSTIFFS-BOVYER BOYS Mon 6:30HCF 2Spread — Superstiffs by 8 . . . The eighthranked team has had a little problem withoffense lately, even though their defense hasremained tough, but they should have littletrouble with the Bovver Boys.HENDERSON-FISHBEIN Fri 7:30 BGSpread: Fishbein by 6 . . . With the additionof freshman sensation Steven Lines, Hen¬derson is now a team to be reckoned withand this game should be a lot closer thanFishbein-Henderson’s first encounter.The Maroon's season record on Basket¬ball Picks is 19-3.Men's Top TenAlbanian RefugeesDivinity SchoolBRMAbnormal DeviatesBo's HoseWall Street Walkers 7. N.U.T.S.8. Superstiffs9. The Champs10. DudleyTeams to Watch: E.F.U. Stew, Fishbein,Spuds, Greenwood, Dews Brothers. Bus for BeloitThose interested in riding a charteredbus to the basketball game in Beloit nextweek should call 753-4070 for informa¬tion. The telephone number reported inan earlier edition of the Maroon was in¬correct.Men's Residence Top Ten1. Dudley2. Fishbein3. Greenwood4. Dews Brothers5. Alpha Delta Phi6. Chamberlin7. Phi Gamma Delta8. Hitchcock "A”9. Commuters10.Henderson10. ShoreyThe Chicago Maroon, Friday, January 30, 1981 — 17 MaryBartholomewCALENDARFridaySpanish Table: Meets 12:30 pm in the Blue Gar¬goyle to speak Spanish.Physics Undergraduate Journal Club: "Quarks,etc." speaker Zbigniew Banas, 12:30 pm, Eckhart209.Geophysical Sciences Colloquium: "OrganizedConvection in the Tropics and in Mid-Latitudesspeaker Edward Zipser. 1:30 pm, HGS.Mineralogy/Petrology Seminar: "The Origin ofthe Earth” speaker Prof. Joseph Smith, 3:30 pm,HGS 101.Computation Center Seminar: “Introduction toSuperwylbur MACRO 3:30-5:30 pm. RI 180.South Asia Film Festival: "People’s Stories 4:00pm. South Asia Commons, Foster Hall.Kundalini Yoga: Classes meet 5:00-7:00 pm, IdaNoyes.Hillel: Reform-Progressive Shabbat Services, 5:30pm.Gymnastics Club: Meets 5:30 pm, Bartlett gym.Hillel: Adat Shalom Shabbat Dinner, 6:00 pm.Doc Films: "Midnight Express” 7:15 and 9:30 pm,Cobb.Hillel: Student Discussion on "Jewish and Chris¬tian Ideas on Human Nature” led by Hilary Wol-pert, Maryleigh Erler and Jane Bestor, 8:30 pm,5715 Woodlawn.SaturdayHillel: Yavneh (Orthodox) Sabbath Services, 9:15pm.Hillel: The Upstairs Minyan (Conservative-Egali¬tarian) Sabbath Services, 9:30 am.GRAFF & CHECK Join the Episcopal Church Council this Quarter forReal Estate THURSDAY NOON EUCHARISTS1617 E. 55th St. AT BOND CHAPELl!/2-2!/2-4 Room every week, & this February 1st forApartments SUNDAY EVENING EUCHARIST & SUPPER,Based on—, 5:30 & 6:00 PM, atAvailabilityBU8-5566 rb BISHOP BRENT HOUSEall comers 1 5540 South Woodlawn Avenue Aikido: Meets 10:30 am. Bartlett gym.Kinetic Energy Creative Dance Group: Meets11:00 am, Ida Noyes dance room.Crossroads: Buffet dinner, 6:00 pm. No reserva¬tions necessary. 5621 S. Blackstone.Court Theatre: “Mixed Nuts” Comedy-improvteam of 15, 8:30 pm, Reynolds Club.Doc Films: "101 Dalmations" 2:30 and 7:00 pm."The Long Goodbye” 9:30 pm. Cobb.SundayRockefeller Chapel: Ecumenical Service of HolyCommunion. 9:00 am. Discussion Class 10:00 am.University Religious Service, 11:00 am.Hillel: Lox and Bagel brunch. 11:00 am. Hillel.Court Theatre: “Mixed Nuts” a comedy-improvteam of 15, 2:30 pm and 7:30 pm, Reynolds Club.NOMOR: Rabbi Arnold Jacob Wolf speakingabout a mutual freeze on the nuclear arms race,3:00 pm, Augustana Lutheran Church 55th andWoodlawn. Open to all.Crossroads: Bridge, 3:00 pm. Beginners and ex¬perts welcome.MARRS: Medieval and Renaissance dancing,7:00Woodward Court Lecture: Charles Percy speakingon "Priorities for Today” 8:30 pm, 5825 S. Wood¬lawn.MondayPerspectives: Topic — “Urban Transportationand Energy: The Automobile” guests Sarah La-Belle, Joseph Scholfe and David Young, 6:09 am,channel 7.Crossroads: English classes for foreign women,10:00 am, 5621 S. Blackstone.German Table: Meets 12 noon in The Blue Gar¬goyle to speak German.Kundalini Yoga: Meets 12 noon in Ida Noyes.Gymnastics Club: Meets 5:30 pm, Bartlett gym.UC Chess Club: Meets 7:00 pm, Ida Noyes 2ndfloor.Doc Films: “The Cat and The Canary" 7:15 pm,"The Penalty” 8:30 pm, Cobb.First Chair Series: Larry Combs, clarinet, 8:00pm, Burton Judson. Free.Center for Latin American Studies: Lecture —"Tobacco Workers in 18th Century Mexico"speaker Loren McWaters, 2:00 pm, Pick Lounge.STUDENT DISCUSSIONJEWISH AND CHRISTIAN IDEAS ON HUMAN NATUREDiscussants: HILARY WOLPERT (representing Hillel Foundation]MARYLEIGH ERLER (representing Calvert House]JANE BESTOR (representing Rockefeller Memorial Chapel]FRIDAY, JANUARY 30, 8:30 P.M., HILLEL FOUNDATION, 5715 WOODLAWN AVENUECo-sponsored by: Hillel Foundation, Calvert House and Rockefeller Memorial Chapelr Eye ExaminationsFashion Eye WearContact LensesDr. Kurt Rosenbaum aOptometrist(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.DR. M.R. MASLOV 'OPTOMETRIST•Eye Examinations‘Contact Lenses (Soft & Hard)*Ask about our annual service agreement•Fashion Eye WearHYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER7510 E. 55th363-67 00 /BAUSCHLOMESOFLENS(poiymacon)Contoct Lenses Rockefeller MemorialChapelSunday, February 19:00 a.m. Ecumenical Service ofHoly Communion10:00 a.m. Discussion Class: “Poet/Prophet:Vision and Revision’’11:00a.m. University Religious Servicethe speaker is Rabbi Daniel Leiter,Director of Hillel Foundationon campus New andRebuiltTypewriters,Calculators,Dictators,AddersU ot ChicagoBookstore6750 S. Ellis Ave.753-3303 REPAIRSPECIALISTSon IBM, SCM,Olympia, etc.FREE repairestimates; repairsby factory-trainedtechnician.RENTALSavailable withU of C. I D.Mastercharge and Visa Accepted<0 Rent thisSpace for only •$182 x 2 — Gets Results!Call Wanda, 753-326318 — The Chicago Maroon, Friday, January 30, 1981CLASSIFIED ADSCLASSIFIEDClassified advertising ir. 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 officeis in Ida Noyes, room 304. Deadlines:Wed. noon for the Fri. paper, Fri. noonfor the Tues. papersSPACE2 bdrm remodelled co op; hardwoodfloors, formal dining, extras. Ownerfinanced, 32,000 363 2529.LODGING for male grad student orprofessor 2 large rooms, private bath,kitchen, phone. Desirable location.$160/month. PLaza 2 8377.Large room, pvt. bath near campus.Phone 772 2787 eves.$150 REWARD: Move into any room inUniv. hsg. system (where rent is aprox$185/mo. CALL SCOTT 975-7751.1 Fern student to share 3 bdrm apt w/2same + 1 cat, 1 block from campus$120/mo -f util 955-1824.1 Br avail in 3 br apt at 55th & Cornell$170 363 6623.2 ROOMS in congenial house 2 blksfrom Reg. 122/mo+ util Female pref.Call 241-6171.Male roommate to share 2 bedroomcondo on E 56 and Dorchester. $200 +elec. Call 288 2740 eves.1 bdrm on top floor of Univ. Park.South view, carpeted. Indr. parkingoptional $400, 493-3111.Large 2 bdrm apt furnished close to Uof C Call 955 7080CUSTOMER SERVICEREPRESENTATIVE(Telephone Sales)If you re looking for part-time employ-tnent that offers the convenienceof a Downtown location plus fullscheduling including evenings Scweekends, then this is the opportunitythat you have been looking for! If youare a dependable, punctual individ¬ual with a clear precise speakingvoice you qualify with us. With Mont¬gomery Ward Insurance Group asyour employer, you will be providedwith everything you need to enjoy thisposition as Customer ServiceRepresentative.In addition, we offer a good compen¬sation plan with excellent benefitsincluding paid holidays Sc vacations.For an interview appointment, callTom Benson, 621-6036. Personnel Dept.No. 0000. between the hours of 9am-lpm ONLY.MONTGOMERY WARDINSURANCE GROUP140 S. State 3tChicago, IL. 60603Equal Opportunity Employer M/F Room available in 3 bdrm apt 57th andDorchester Prefer F nonsmoker. $200per mo incI util. 684 7704.1 bdrm in 3 bdrm apt. A/C, 24 hrsecurity, laundry, on campus busroutes. $110/mo. Nonsmoker, prefergrad or prof, student, intend to stay ayear. Call Jane, 538 6159.Furnished room Kitchen priv on UCbusline and also walking dist Call 9557083.3 bdrm condo. Prime UC area. Assess.+ price low. Must sell. 667 4038 pm.PEOPLE WANTEDAIRLINE JOBS Free info Nationwidewrite Airline Placement Bureau 4208198th SW #101 Lynnwood, WA 98036Enclose a self addressed stampedlarge envelopeVOLUNTEERS WANTED:Overweight women wanted for hor¬mone study. Required ages 18-35,200 300 lbs. For more info, call947 1825.WANTED: Infant care worker 3 aftnswk references imp't 285 1398.Kennelman ass't morns vet clinicMTTF 324 4484 9-12, 307 pm.Need Loving Reliable sitter for twomobile children, 3 & 7. 55th andBlackstone. Salary negotiable Jobsharing possible. 241 5892OVERSEAS JOBS-Summer/yearround. Europe, S. America, Australia,Asia. All fields $500-$1200 monthly.Sightseeing. Free info. Write IJC Box52-IL5 Corona Del Mar, CA92625.Research center needs part timetypist. Experience wifh crt or terminalpreferred. $4.25/hr. 20 hrs a week withmore hrs. available. Flexibleschedule. Call 565-0319,9-4.Earn extra income. Part time. Easysales. 667 4339 after 5 pm for appt.WANTED: Non Exercising In¬dividuals to participate in a study to:Non invasively study cardiovascularhemodynamics in trained and untrain¬ed individuals. Call Paul McFarlane791 3280 or page on long range beeper791 4141.WANTED: Trained (40m/wk) in¬dividuals to participate in a study to:Non-invasively study cardiovascularhemodynamics in trained and untrained individuals. Call Paul McFarlane791 3280 or page on long range beeper791-4141.HYDE PARKThe Versailles324-0200Large StudiosWalk-in KitchenUtilities Incl.Furn.-Unfurn.•Campus Bus at PoorBased on Availability5254 S. Dorchester The Chicago Counseling &Phychotherapy Center. Clientcentered psychotherapy. 5711 S.Wood lawn, 6354 N Broadway and 111N. Wabash, Chicago. A RegisteredPsychological Agency, (312 ) 684-1800SERVICESTYPIST Disseration quality. Helpwith grammar, language as neededFee depending on manuscript. IBMSelectric. Judith 955 4417.ARTWORK Posters, illustration, let¬tering, etc. Noel Yovovich 493 2399.Excellent, Accurate TYPIST will typeterm papers, theses, dissertations,reasonably priced. Pick up anddelivery on campus. CallWanda 684-7414 after 5 pm.Theraputic Massage. W coast grad,yoga instructor. A neurocirculatorynonsexual experience. $12.00 1 hr-U/2session. Eves. 955-1973.SHIPPING/PACKING World wide &USA Packing & Shipping services. CallAir-Sea Pac, Inc. Tel. 312-766-8226 forinformation.Grace Richards formerly atWindermere Beauty Shop now atRandells. 5700 S. Harper. 324-2007Spanish lessons in Hyde Park in¬dividual and group instruction bynative speaker 667-6762COMPUTERIZED WORD PROCESS¬ING/TYPING—all typing jobs in¬cluding : Manuscripts/Dissertationsand their Revision; Tape Transcription; List Maintenance; Form Let¬ters—Nancy Cohen, 378-378-5774.TYPIST: High quality work byfreelance writer. Competitively pric¬ed, prompt; minor editing withoutcharge. IBM Correcting Selectric.After 6 pm. 472 0860.PERSONALSWRITER’S WORKSHOP (PLaza2-8377)NM Here is the Personal you havebeen looking for. Watch this space.Grad students: Unite to protesl unfairstudent activities fee. SEND PENNIES!To my Chicago pals,It was so great seeing all of you.Remember that Chicago is a greatplace and have fun. When are youcoming to Palo Alto so we can do itagain? Love, AEMSECRETARYHyde Park Bank is currentlyseeking a -ecretary w;th1-3 years experience. Youmust be able to use the dic¬taphone; shorthand notnecessary, but preferred.Familiarity with banking andfinancial matters would oea big plus. For your appoim-i-mnt, please can.Personnel752-4600HYDF PARK DANK£ TRUST CO.1525 E. 53rj StreetChicago, llli.icis 6061 5Enuoi C’Dportunitv Employs* m f SG We want your body. Wait until theSpring elections. Any persons whowant to run on out platform (or createit) leave a note at the Sex AnarchyBox Cloakroom, INHJohn So you've hit the Big 20!Statistics show your brain will nowcommence deteriorating I'll love,anyway. Happy Birthday! AmyEAD, It certainly had its ups anddowns.-The Maidenform Woman (Younever know where she'll turn up.)BIOLOGY TUTORIALBiology Tutors are available to anystudent enrolled in an undergraduatebiology course. For more information,go to the Biological Sciences office inHarper Room 232 or call 753-2767.STEP TUTORINGHelp a kid feel Intelligent-Volunteertwo hours a week to tutor an elemen¬tary or high school student. Call Claire(643 3543) or Dave (493 3925).FOR SALEU of C memorabilia plates, cards andetc. C.B. Goodman 5454 S. Shore60615.PASSPORT PHOTOSPASSPORT PHOTOS WHILE-UWAIT. Model Camera, 1342 E. 55th St.493-6700.LOST AND FOUNDIs it you who found my loved pocketcamera Minolta 16QT in a leathercase? If so PLEASE call meat 324 3830. You'll like the award you'llget for returning it.LOST. Umbrella brown Smithsonian.Left in Rockefeller 1/25. Return toChapel office or Denise 288-1911.LOST: Brown leather checkbook. Hassentimental impt'ce. 955-8375.DATA ANALYSTNEEDEDNeed data analyst; should have somefamiliarity with statistics packages onDEC 20 system; hours negotiable;earn up to $7.50/hour depending onqualifications. Call Ronald Durnford,7 6869UC HOTLINE 753-1777UC Hotline also has information oncampus activities, pregnancy testingand referrals, counselling facitlitiesetc Open 7:00 pm. to 7:00 am sevendays a weekdiscreet musicTurn on and Tune in every Wednesdaynite 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 oit is interesting.DOES YOURM1NDMATTER?It does to us. People are needed *otongoing experiments in handednessand psychology. Interesting and pro¬fitable Call 753-47-5.ART INSTITUTEPick up your discount memberships inRoom 210, Ida NoyesMOVINGI have a truck and can mova thingsFAST AND CHEAP. No job too small.Cali Peter at 955 1824 INCREASEJOB PROSPECTSGive a boost to your careerSign up now to volunteerCall us today, don't hesitate955 4108Whatever your interest or skill, theVolunteer Bureau has a place for youCLAIRE 0#ASAClaire O'Asa will be 21 years of age onFebruary 2. Havoli la hanau, you littlegrounghog!GUITARGuild D 25 Acoustic guitar. Beautifultone and action $300 with soft shellcase. 643-6246, leave name andnumber.RESEARCHERAVAILABLESeeking full or part-time work asresearch assistant to professor orother with similar need Hours andpay negotiable. Call Peter at 643 6246HAPPY BIRTHDAYNaxYouoknowxwhooIxmeanomyxduckosoupxmyoeiderdownxwarmth.oAnyway,xoxyou'llogetxyourso(andxmore Jotomorrow.Justx Desserts oMaybe xdinnerotoxoxyouroEagle-eyedxbyrodowatcherxLove.UCPEP BANDWe are inviting musicians of allabilities to join us tonight at 7:30and/or tomorrow at 3:00 at the HenryCrown Field House for the UC Riponand UC- Cornell games. For further into call John Harris 643-1735 (753-2105)or just show up fnr the gamesSKI WITH USThe UC SKI CLUB Learn to SkiNights, LaCrosse Ski Weekend, SpringBreak trip to Steamboat Springs Col¬orado. Meeting every Monday 7 pmIda Noyes. Robin 752-7705GAY PEOPLEHelp the U.C. Gay Alliance plan itsevents, films, discussion groups, etc.Corn'’ to our Thursday meetings at 8pm or call 753-3274.STAMPCOLLECTORSSta p Club Meeting Thursday Feb 58:1/ PM 3rd Fluor Ida Noyes Discus¬sion Liechtenstein Postal Histc. y,Tra Jing Iceland and Russia.VINCENT SEXISTSUsing people is ugly and pornographyis sick. Shame on your greedWOMEN-HATING,RACISM ANDVIOLENCEin the Top ',0. Mtxed-m.edia picsentation given by Alix Dobbin and DeosiuwBrown. Sa‘. Jan 31. Ida Noyes Library,7:00 pmASSASSINSAssassin agents prepare to playAssignments MUST be pioked up bet¬ween 1 4 nm today i., Cobb Hall.Game should start Monday.BABYSITTINGWill do babysitting on Sat. or Sun atyour home or mine. 752 4574 SPACE WANTEDProf on sabbatical leave seeks furnished apt to let Spring Quarter, nearUC campus Piano desirable call 412-361 7079Professor here spring quarter onlyseeks furnished space for two 7538712.WANTED small apt near campus now.Sublet OK 947-0995 eves or leavemessage Ginny 324 2684TABLE TENNISInterested in going to ACU-I Championships? Elimination tournamentWednesday, February 4, 6:30 pm,Field House Is floorHO-HOT-SHIRTSHo ho T shirts are on sale today atReynolds Club. Cost: $5.00 sizesS.M.L.XL.LONELY NIGHTS?It's hit Harvard, it's hit Yale, and nowgirls, the U of C! Bedtime Incpresents night time tuck-in service. Goto bed in style Have a nightcap, a bedtime story, and be tucked in all for only $1.00. For details call 753 2233 room231 or 233. Leave messageLIBRARYCLERKThis job is ideal for a graduate or col¬lege student who has had experienceusing a large university library Mainduties are to borrow materials fromlibraries and keep accurate records oftransactions. Library experience required/Student preferred Start between 8287.00 9262.00/20 hr wk with 3weeks vacation. Call Nancy 753 1122An Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity EmployerSPANISH TABLEMeets 12:30 in the Blue Gargoyle toconverse in Spanish.COMING OUTIsn't easy, but it's worth it. If you'regay and want out of the cioset, we canhelp you make the transition We restudents just like yourself, and ourhelp is understanding and confidential the U. of C Gay Alliance drop bySunday through Tiiurs. 7.30-10pm orcall us a♦ 753-3274. ida Noyes 3rd floorUSE YOURMINDChicago Review needs yours. Read,discus-, and select essays, reviews,poetry, and fiction for quarterlypublication with internationaldistribution Grad students andundergrads form all disciplines acewelcome Also artists. Meeting 7:30Mon, Tucs, Wed at 58H Kenwood.753-3571, or can 643 3898 for info.ATTENTIONFACULTYMEMBERSDid you' child have trouble learning toreod? We are doing a study on readingin children age 9 to 14 Each child attends 6 individual sessions and is paio$3 00 per session For informationplease call 753 4735 M FLOCAL BANDSUnsigned bands are invited to senddemo tapes (three songs' to WHPK,C/0 D,. Rock, 5706 S UniversityCr -age *0637 Listen Friday, 3 pm,86.3 fm Best rapes sent to -ecord company. Cassette only, and lyric sheetMAROON CLASSIFIEDS WORK FOR YOU!!The Chicago Maroon, Friday, January 30, 1981 — 19The University of Chicago Folklore Society— presents its —21st AnnualFolk FestivalSchedule of Concerts:Friday, January 30 / 8:15 p.m.Vernon OxfordThe Folk TellersThe Chicago Barn Dance CompanyBud HuntAnnie PittmanGraham t Eleanor Townsend Saturday, January 31 / 3:00 p.m.Cuz Teahan and FriendsHotmud FamilyAnnie PittmanDicie Fr Otis JohnsonVernon Oxford Sunday, February 1 / 7:30 p.m.Graham Fr Eleanor TownsendBud HuntMama Yancey Fr Erwin HeiferDicie Fr Otis JohnsonJames "Son” ThomasDel McCoury & the Dixie PalsAll Concerts in Man dell HallFree Workshops at Ida NoyesOn Saturday and Sunday For Saturday, January 31 / 8:15 p.m.Hotmud FamilyThe Folk TellersCuz Teohon and FriendsJames “Son” ThomasArt TheimeDel McCoury Ft the Dixie Palsmore information, call 753-3567 Tickets on Saleat Reynolds ClubBox OfficeMajor Activities Board presentsDAVID BROMBERG LEO KOTTKESaturday, February 7Mandel HallTickets: $4 MAB fee payers$8 Ail Others(Reserved Seat Ticketson sale at Reynolds Club) Tickets on Sale Feb. 2,9:30 AM, Reynolds ClubMaximum of 2 tickets per ID,2 ID's per purchase.