JohnKloostTHECHICAGOThe University of Chicago Copyright 1981 The Chicago Maroon Friday, February 6, 1981Greg WendtSG Investigates Wendt ERA Vote Push Linkedto Rules Fight: CurrieBy Anna FeldmanAt a special meeting Tuesday night, Stu¬dent Government (SG) formed a specialcommittee to investigate recent allegationsagainst Treasurer Greg Wendt.The meeting was called after 14 Assemblymembers signed a petition calling for thespecial session. Assembly member RichardSzesny, who circulated the petition, submit¬ted a resolution calling upon SG to “demandthe prompt and immediate resignation ofGregory Wendt.” Wendt refused to resign,instead asking SG to let him “finish the nineweeks (remaining in his term of office) andsteal away in the night when my termends.”After Wendt indicated that he would notresign if asked to do so, the Assembly votedto form a seven-member committee to in¬vestigate recent charges disputing thetruthfulness of defense evidence in Wendt’strial last quarter for voting irregularities.Wendt was convicted of malfeasance of of¬fice in November on charges that he castfour ballots illegally in the fall election forfraternity representative to SG. Wendt ad¬mitted to depositing the ballots, but main¬tained that he had not filled them out.“I found four marked ballots in my mail¬box,” he said, “and deposited them in the I-House ballot box.” Later, Wendt said, he an¬nounced at his fraternity that he neededthose who filled out the ballots to come for¬ward. According to Wendt, four people vo¬lunteered affidavits saying that they hadfilled out the ballots. “At no time did Icoerce anyone into signing an affidavit.”Wendt said that he was so happy to have theaffidavits that “I did not in any way try tocertify the validity of those affidavits.”Two of those who signed the affidavits toldthe Maroon recently that they had not filledout the ballots, and that Wendt had filled outthe ballots himself. “I don’t think this latestchange adds anything,” Wendt said. SGmembers, however, decided to reopen thecase, many asking for Wendt’s resignation.Wendt submitted a resolution at the begin¬ning of Tuesday’s meeting condemning hisown actions but permitting him to remain inoffice. “I admit ignorance, stupidity...Itcould be interpreted as wrongdoing,” saidWendt. Still, Wendt said he feels “railroad¬ ed” and “cornered.” “I don’t think anybodyhere can really understand what I’ve gonethrough.” Wendt’s resolution was neveracted on, however, because it was ruled outof order.The investigation committee met for thefirst time Wednesday afternoon, and will de¬liver a report at the Assembly’s next meet¬ing Tuesday, February 10 at 7:30 pm. De¬pending on its findings, the committee ofseven SG members may bring articles ofimpeachment. The committee is made up ofthree undergraduate students — Mark Day,Lindsey Johnson, and Sufia Khan — andfour graduate students — George Kamp-stra, John Martin, Mustafa Mohatarem, andCarol Swanson.By Darrell WuDunnJob prospects for college graduates intechnical fields look promising this year,but hiring has decreased for graduates withdegrees in humanities and social sciences,according to the University placement of¬fice and several national surveys.Placement officials and employment re¬ports also indicated that the best opportuni¬ties and highest salaries are available tograduates with engineering and computerscience degrees, which the College does notoffer.The Endicott Report, published by thePlacement Center of Northwestern Univer¬sity, projects a 15 percent increase in hiringfor 1981 graduates at the Bachelor’s degreelevel, and a 10 percent increase for those atthe Master’s degree level. But the increaseswill be mostly in the technical fields, as thereport projects a slight decrease in hiringfor students with social science and liberalarts degrees.Julie C. Monson, Director of the Universi¬ty’s Office of Career Counseling and Place¬ment, is still very optimistic. She points outthat these national surveys are based on theemployment trends of large corporationswith a great demand for technically orient¬ed graduates. While large corporations are By Chris IsidoreEfforts to pass the Equal Rights Amend¬ment (ERA) in Illinois are again centeredon changing the state law which requiresthree-fifths vote in both houses to ratify fed¬eral amendments.Illinois, the only northern industrial statewhich has not yet ratified the amendment, isone of only five states which require thevotes of more than a majority of allmembers to ratify the aifiendment. TheHouse Rules Committee is expected to voteTuesday on whether to change the rule toallow amendments to pass with 89 votes in¬stead of the present requirement of 107.State Representative Barbara Flynn Cur¬rie (D-Hyde Park), called on the Rules Com¬mittee last week to approve the change tomajority votes. She called the rule “not onlyunreasonable but downright obstructive.”“For me, the issue is not just ERA,” Curriesaid yesterday, “it is how to establish pro¬cedures that make sense. Unfortunately, formany people the issue is whether people likeor don’t like ERA.”If the rules change is approved the ERA islikely to pass the Illinois House for the firsttime since 1975. There were 102 votes for theamendment last spring, and ERA backersclaim to have 99 solid votes for the amend¬ment this year.It is uncertain what chance the ruleschange has, though. The change would firsthave to win approval from the House RulesCommittee, which is made up of 11 Republi-“large-volume” employers, they do not nec¬essarily represent the entire market.“In fields such as social service, journal¬ism, publishing and theater, employers donot actively recruit,” she said. But sheadded that these employers, and small bu¬sinesses, are still hiring college graduates.According to the College Placement Coun¬cil, a national agency, business and industri¬al firms offering expanded job opportunitiesinclude manufacturers of petroleum-relatedand rubber products, and of automotive andmechanical equipment, public utilities, andaccounting firms. Federal agencies antici¬pate a 15 percent hiring increase after thelifting of the partial hiring freeze temporari¬ly imposed by President Reagan.Students with degrees in the socialsciences or humanities can find reasonablejob opportunities in banks, insurance com¬panies, management firms, retail stores,and public utilities. But finding employmentin publishing and academia may be quitedifficult.According to a survey of career plans ofrecent College graduates, compiled by theoffice of the Dean of Students, most gradu¬ates enter or plan to enter law, medicine,business management, governement ser¬vices, technical fields, teaching at the high cans and nine Democrats. Currie believesthat most or all of the Democrats will votefor the change, but that supporters haveonly “maybe one” Republican vote on thecommittee. 11 votes are needed to get therules change out of committee. Currie is op¬timistic about the bill’s chances for passagein the full House if it is approved by the rulescommittee. If the committee votes againstit, the change is not dead, but its passagewould be far less likely.The chance for the rules change in theSenate are even more confused. Democratsmake up a majority of the upper house, byone vote, but the Republicans took a advan¬tage of two absent Democrats at the begin¬ning of this year to elect a Republican Sen¬ate President. This would give them controlof all the committees in the Senate, includ¬ing the Senate Rules committee. That dis¬pute is now being decided by the Illinois Su¬preme Court.The National Organization for Women(NOW) in Chicago told the Chicago Sun-Times on Wednesday that they were noteven planning a “major-thurst” for theamendment in Illinois this year, becausethey expected the legislature to be preoccu¬pied with reapportionment. They insteadplan to concentrate on preventing passageof an amendment which would outlaw abor¬tion, birth-control pills and interuterine de-Continued on page 5Julie Monsonschool level or higher, communications, orjournalism. This survey does not indicatewhich graduates entered their fields direct¬ly and which did graduate study first. Morethan half of the graduates from the Collegecontinue their education on the graduatelevelContinued on page 5BA/BS Job Prospects Mixed9TUDGMTGOVI€RMM€MTMCGTIMG TUESDAY, FEBRUARY lO7:30 P.M.ID/1 NOYG9 SUN P/1RL0R att€ND/imc€ rgquircdSNEAK PREVIEWFebruary 1C) & 11StarringAn Intel Recruiting Team"ALL ABOUT INTEL”Twice during the last decade, technological innova¬tions at Intel Corporation have revolutionized the worldof microelectronics—first with the semiconductor mem¬ory, then with the microprocessor computer-on-a-chip.Our business is built on this ability to introduce newtechnologies and products. To this end. we Ye beenresponsible for more than a dozen highly innovativeproducts that are now industry standards, and at leastseven major semiconductor tabncation processes.Today, we are the indisputable leader in four sig¬nificant product areas: semiconductor memory, memorysystems, microcomputer components, and micro¬computer systems. And from sales of just $4 million in1970. we Ye grown to over $6h0 million in revenues in 1979How did we do this in such a short period of time?With a lot of bnght, dynamic, and innovative people atevery level—from management to staff supportWe’d like you to be in on the excitement and thechallenge. At any of our five Intel locations: Santa Clara,California; Portland, Oregon; Phoenix. Arizona; Austin.Texas; and Albuquerque, New Mexico.Sign Up for Campus Interviews.Our recruiting team will be on campus soon to giveyou a preview about careers at Intel If you're about to receive a degree in the following dis¬ciplines —Electrical Engineering. Computer Science. SolidState Physics, Chemical Engineering, Materials Science,Accounting. Finance. Operations Management, Business,Economics. Production Management. Industrial Rela¬tions, or other related fields- sign up now in your place¬ment office to talk with one of our representatives oncampus.Or send your resume to Intel College Relations at oneof our locations in the area of your geographic preferenceCALIFORNIA: 3065 Bowers Avenue,Santa Clara. CA 95051.OREGON: 5200 N.E. Elam YoungParkway, Hillsboro, OR 97123.ARIZONA/TEXAS/NEW MEXICO:6401W. Williams Field Road.Chandler, AZ 85224.An equal opportunity employer in/f/h. HYDE PARKThe Versailles324-0200Large StudiosWalk-in KitchenUtilities Incl.Furn.-Unfurn.•Campus Bus at DoorBased on Availability5254 S. DorchesterGRAFF & CHECKReal Estate1617 E. 55th St.F/2-2V2-4 RoomApartmentsBased onAvailabilityBU8-5566Available toall comersBigJim’sPipe &Tobacco Shop1552 E. 53rd St.(Under the I.C. tracks!9 a.m.-7 p.m. weekdays12-4 p.m. SundaysG.W. OPTICIANS1519 E. 55thTel. 947 9335Eyes examined and ContactLenses fitted by registeredOptometrists.Specialists in QualityEyewear at ReasonablePricesLab on premises for fost service framesreplaced lenses duplicated andprescriptions filledTV2 — The Chicago Maroon — Frida/, February 6, 1981NEWS BRIEFSecycling Recycling Recycling Recycling RecyclinFinance AppointmentsThe University has announced the ap¬pointment of two financial officials. WilliamJ. Hogan, Jr., has been appointed comp¬troller, and Ralph Muller named director ofbudget.As comptroller, Hogan will be responsiblefor monitoring expenditures and revenuesin all of the University’s accounts, accord¬ing to Alexander Sharp, vice-president for <Dfinancial affairs at the University. His ap- £pointment is effective next Friday. vMuller’s duties will be to coordinate the abudgeting process for the University, work- ^ing with provost Kenneth Dam and others §involved in writing the University budgetMuller has already begun work.Both Hogan and Muller are from Massa¬chusetts, as is Sharp. Hogan is presentlycomptroller of the University of Massachu¬setts, and Muller most recently served asdeputy commissioner of welfare for Massa¬chusetts.Black History MonthFebruary is Black History Month, and theOrganization of Black Students (OBS) hasplanned a month-long series of cultural andeducational events to mark the occasion.Two events are scheduled for this week¬end. Both are open to University students.Saturday, Feb. 7: Dalloi-Ethiopian ReggaeBand 7:30 Ida Noyes Hall theater.Sunday, February 8: Lecture by Dr. BcbbyWright, director of the Garfield MentalHealth Hospital. 7:30 pm Ida Noyes HallCloiser Club. Community support for recycling effortsin Hyde Park have tailed off during the pastyear, according to Ken Dunn, director of theResource Center.Dunn said that his Kenwood recyclingcenter now generates twice as much glassand a thousand times as many aluminumcans as his Hyde Park center, and that thedifference between the two is increasing.For Hyde Park residents who want to re¬cycle their paper, glass, and aluminum, theResource Center makes it easy. The Centerhas can crushers near soda machines in thecloak room of Ida Noyes Hall, the EnricoFermi Institute, and the Billings Hospitalmedical student lounge. It is also working toreplace a crusher stolen last year from theReynolds Club.The Resource Center runs a regular HydePark pick-up of cans, bottles, newspapers,cardboard, and telephone books. Schedules for the pickups can be found in each issue ofthe Chicago Journal.A group of University students, the Stu¬dents for Ecology of Community (SEC) hasbeen working with the Resource Center toinvolve campus dormitories in major recy¬cling efforts.For information about the ResourceCenter’s services call 493-1466, and for infor¬mation on SEC call David Obstfeld at643-4562 before 10 pm.Holy Books!Construction for a new room to house theJudaica book collection donated to Regen-stein Library last spring is expected to becompleted next month, according to Mi¬chael Ryan, Assistant Curator in the SpecialCollections Department. The room was built to display the 20,000volume Judaica book collection which Lud¬wig Rosenberger, a retired Chicago busi¬nessman who acquired the collection, pre¬sented to the library last year. Consideredthe second largest collection on Judaica inNorth America, the collection contains sev¬eral first edition volumes, including copiesof Marx’s Das Kapital and Hitler's MeinKampf.The new room, which measures 20x20feet, is located in the area between the spe¬cial collections department and the reservereading room. To accommodate the newroom, space was taken from reserve read¬ing room and the wall separating it from thespecial collections was torn down. A newwall was built to separate the new roomfrom the reserve reading room.Another addition to the special collectiondepartment is a new seminar room next tothe exhibit room for the Judaica collection.The seminar room will be available to facul¬ty members whose classes use books fromthe special collections department.Ryan hopes that the new exhibit room willspark interest in the Rosenberger collec¬tion. “Creating the Rosenberger room notonly was a tribute to Mr. Rosenberger butwas also our attempt to bring the collectioninto the special collections departmentrather than putting (it) away somewhereaway from the public,’’ he said. “It is ourhope that in making the books visible we canstimulate interest in the collection.”The room is constructed from glass sothat the public can view the collection with¬out entering the room. Although the roomwill be kept locked from the general public,anyone who would like to use the books maydo so by filling out a form at the special col¬lections department.Tffeetitty Studettteitt rftt tDivi4io*ui &UCeyeInterested in theProgram in theArts and Sciences Basie toHuman Biology and Medicine(ASHIM)TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 19815:00 P.M.HARPER 130FACULTY and DEANS representing The University of Chicago’sSCHOOLS OF MEDICINE, PUBLIC POLICY, and SOCIAL SER-\ ICE ADMINISTRATION will he present to describe the Programaims, content and relations with other programs. ASHUM studentsw ill also he available to answ er anv questions. Freshmen and Sopho¬mores interested in any aspect of human health are especially urgedto attend. pf\ouDlv ppesenUSFrr.,Fffi’7~ •8 ••30IDA MOTES QWtADMisskw*. '2)2 efst <5fp5tTickets 13.00 at dooPv^The Chicago Maroon — Friday, February 6, 1981 — 3LETTERS TO THE EDITORUnhappy ReturnsI agree with M. H. Klaiman: it is too easyto do harm to the JRL collection, not onlyintentionally but also unintentionally (if onereturns a book after hours, there is no choicebut to dump it in the deposit bin to wait forother books to be dumped on top of it). Whatpossible justification is there for allowing ir¬replaceable books to be taken out of the li¬brary? Or for allowing faculty indefiniteprivileges? Sometimes I think the people atJRL would just as soon not get the booksback!William SellersDepartment of Economics.Friskingat the Reg?To the Editor,Thank you for printing Ms. (?) Klaiman’sletter on book theft from Regenstein Li¬brary. It’s refreshing to hear from someonewith enough guts and enough spunk to give adamn and act on it.Let me add my own estimate in support ofher testimony : the library is missing morethan one third of its better, classic texts onmedieval religion, philosophy, and litera¬ture.This case is no doubt an exception, but Ihave just waited four months for the veryhelpful people in interlibrary loan to obtainfor me a copy of a work by Etienne Gilson.The book is among those numerous store¬front titles which serve as padding for ourinitially impressive card catalogue system.Letters PolicyThe Maroon welcomes letters to the ed¬itor. We request that writers limit them¬selves to 300 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. I am in no position to judge the effective¬ness or appropriateness of a magnetic de¬tector network, but I am in a position to tellyou that the current system is not workingand that I am being inconvenienced, if notoutright cheated, by its ineffectiveness.Just how is the library using its securitydollars? What are the costs and the alterna¬tives for improving security at JRL? Andwhat are these costs when weighed againstthose of running extensive interlibrary loanrequests and replacing classic texts at in¬flated prices? W’hy not frisk users? I wishsomeone had frisked the down parka thatwalked out with Gilson, Jean LeClercq, andGordon Leff under its belt.I, too, would like to hear from the powersthat be on this question. I have a sneakingsuspicion that, for a university that bills it¬self as a research institution, this school hasan uncanny way of not putting its moneywhere its mouth is.Susan Aarongraduate studentDept, of English ganizations, or that land reform is a totalfarce, without benefit to the peasants. Nev¬ertheless, the junta enjoys no popular sup¬port, and there is enough evidence of itshuman rights violations for the US to refrainfrom unqualified support of it. On the otherhand, it helps no one at all for the US to pullout completely at this point and leave theSalvadoreans to their own devices. Becausethe US has since the 1950’s pursued twooverriding objectives in El Salvador — polit¬ical stability and economic growth (as mea¬sured in GNP) — which blinded us to thegrowing social tensions there, we are inlarge part responsible for the Dresent crisis,and thus have a moral obligation to try toresolve the conflict. To pull the rug fromunder the junta now would be to spark amuch wider, more intense, perhaps pro¬tracted civil war that will claim many morelives and in which there will not be anyhuman rights to speak of. Such a war could very well spill across national borders. Thebest approach at this point, it seems to me,is that of linkage: the junta must be made tounderstand that US support (economic andpolitical; I’m not sure about military) istotally contingent upon the institution of im¬mediate, substantive reforms. Upon tnereturn of stability, we must ensure theholding of free elections. This has in factbeen the approach of Ambassador Whiteand the Carter Administration, although it’sprobably true that Mr. White did not receiveenough backing from Washington to pushthe junta as hard on reform as he wouldhave liked. The firing this weekof Mr. Whiteby a new administration that is more inclin¬ed to brush aside human rights and the needfor substantive reforms in favor ofgeopolitics does not at all bode well for thepeople of El Salvador. Peter Laingraduate student, Department ofPolitical ScienceMaroon, Si?To the Editor:I would like to make a few' comments con¬cerning the letters from Andy Howard,Cindi Sanborn, and Diana Mingauw, all con¬cerning the Maroon’s coverage of thespeech given by John Blacken of the StateDepartment and the issue of the US supportfor the ruling junta in El Salvador.First of all, before criticizing the Maroontoo freely, you really have to appreciate thelimitations under which a small campuspaper operates. The story in question wasthe impression of one reporter, which mayor may not have been flawed (I don’t know,not having been there), but unless you sendtwo or three reporters to such events, it’s al¬most impossible to achieve a “balanced”story if the reporter makes errors of judg¬ment.As for the Maroon’s “silence” during lastweek’s other El Salvador-related events,even if the Maroon wanted very much tocover these events, it’s not always easy tofind or divert the resources (reporters,whatever) to do so. You just cannot covereverything of importance to everybody. Norshould that be the goal of any newspaper.Anyone who relies solely on the Maroon forinformation may very well get a distortedpicture, but I think it’s fair to say that any¬one who really cares about the situation inEl Salvador should care enough to go outand get other sources of information. Inother words, you have to evaluate theMaroon in perspective. But it’s really wrongto attribute to the Maroon a conscious effortto distort the issues involved (the secondparagraph of Mr. Howard’s letter impliesthat he believes this to be the case). Studentreporters write to get published, to get expe¬rience, to get something in the “experience”column of their resumes, but they do not asa group decide to promote certain politicalviews. Regardless of how good they are, Ithink it is applaudable, especially on thiscampus, that some people do put in the timeand effort to do more than just hit the books.Lastly, those who complain about the unbal¬anced coverage of the Maroon can do some¬thing about it: they can write for theMaroon.From what I’ve read, which admittedlyisn’t much, I feel less certain than the au¬thors of last week’s letters that the FDR hasoverwhelming popular support, or that theleft is not behind some of the atrocities com¬mitted against, for example, the peasant or- Common Sense I Common Sense IITo the Editor:Your comments concerning SenatorPercy’s “charming but vapid” speech werequite interesting. From your article, I’mquite surprised that we were listening to thesame speech. You listened to a boring tiradeconcerned only with expressing “free mar¬ket platitudes in place of programs”. Iheard a fresh expression of specific prob¬lems and solutions which our country facesby one of the nation’s most articulate andknowledgeable legislators. Instead of the“blanket condemnation of governmentallvinspired inefficiency and misallocation of re¬sources”. I heard specific instances ofwaste such as the student loan program andthe overabundance of government commis¬sions and instances where the free marketallocates resources more fairly and effi¬ciently than the government such as in thecase of airline deregulations and gasolineprices. I also heard many specific govern¬ment programs which the Senator praised.I did have rouble understanding yourcomprehension of the Senator’s spoken En¬glish, until I also realized that you had agrasp of the U.S. Constitution equivalent tomy nine year old sister. Implied in the Con¬stitution is not “that one federal govern¬ment is better able to attend to the interestsof all its citizens than decentralized deci¬sion-making bodies ever could”, but that thefederal government should serve as a recon¬ciling element between the basically auton¬omous state governments. All of our found¬ing fathers would be appalled to view theextreme power of the federal government.In addition, I thoroughly resent your infer¬ence that people in Washington understandall of American’s desires and needs betterand can solve all problems better than thepeople themselves. Our government wasfounded upon the principles of individualfreedom and local autonomy rather thanfederal centralization.I also thoroughly resented your conde¬scending tone throughout the article and youinsinuation that the current attitude in thecountry is simply a fad which has prevailedfor some time. The liberal leaders can nolonger be afforded the luxury of merely de¬claiming for the federal government, andholding up government as the cure of all oureconomic and societal ills. For those whoare either incapable or undesirous of listen¬ing to “one of this year’s hippest economicanalysts”, Senator Percy’s message wasthat free market solutions can be substitut¬ed for many cumbersome and inefficientgovernment programs and the problemswhich this nation faces can not simply besolved by massive government programs.Grant KaufmanStudent in the College To the Editor:I agree and disagree with Laurie Kalrnan-son’s “Viewpoint” article on Senator Percy.Percy’s speech seemed, to me, exactly asshe described it — charming but vapid. As agood politician, he tailored his act to his au¬dience. He also refrained from saying any¬thing ingenuous enough to offend anybody.All this was evident and so Ms. Kalmansontells it. However, as she proceeds to criticizethe senator’s speech in detail, she makes afew broad statements that strike me as a re¬flexive, ill-pondered, and perhaps even a lit¬tle noxious.What does she mean, for instance, whenshe speaks of “responsibility for the poor”and “for the protection of consumers?” Iinfer that the government requires a mecha¬nism, less capricious than the market, todeal with such matters. However, while wecontinue to employ a market economy, thegovernment can only do well by a strategythat complements the market mechanism,and only ill by a plan that hobbles it. For thisreason, education will serve the poor muchmore effectively than welfare programs.Dissemination of information to the publicwill protect consumers better than federalrestrictions. Are we all wards of the state,that some official (much brighter than we)must take charge of our financial activities?I think not. One misses the point of govern¬ment ‘of the people’, when one would “as¬sign responsibility” for the welfare of an.adult, and thus take the responsibility out ofhis own hands.Ms. Kalmanson’s construction of the Con¬stitution also disturbs me. Of course the doc¬ument authorizes the government to collecttaxes, raise armies, and establish courts toprovide those desirable services which can¬not or ought not be entrusted to the privatesector. I do not read therein the implicationthat a central government can attend to theinterests of all citizens better than a localorgan. Central direction often generates atiresome lack of variety: in wages, in quali¬ty of goods, etc. It curtails the freedom ofchoice that is so valuable an element of oureconomic system. Furthermore, market dy¬namics do not really produce “scattershot”results. A synthetic solution, borne of con¬flict in the market, can surely adjust theeconomy more precisely than wfB *hc arbi-Confinued on pageKalmanson Replies: Economic and polit¬ical freedom are two of my favorite things.It is evident from their letters that J.S. Gile-spie and Grant Kaufman feel the same wayI do on that score. However, what is notclear is whether either student has ever con¬sidered what role the government shouldplay when these two sorts of liberties be-come mutually exclusive categories.4 The Chicago Maroon — Friday, February 6, 1981LETTERStrary fiat of a team of government experts.Security warrants some measure of federalprotection and supervision. Can we imag¬ine, though, that the Founding Fathers in¬tended that the government should usurpthose functions adequately performed bytheir own local organizations?Ms. Kalmanson feels that we court dangerby pruning our government to fit the currenttimes. “What will we be left with in the longterm?” Surely, if we cut off a malignant fed¬eral organ, the member that somedaygrows to replace it cannot be more objec¬tionable than the one we removed! Her ref¬erence to the mythical giant Procrustescauses me to think of another legendary rob¬ber: Robin Hood. I wonder if she would liketo compare the government to this robber?1 agree with Ms. Kalmanson that Percy,Reagan and others do us no good at all bymerely criticizing the government that paystheir paltry salaries: they must act. Toooften, a generous impulse does not translateinto responsible action. Therefore I’d like toremind the Features Editor, and everybody,that economic freedom, like political free¬dom, is not just a means to further socialwelfare, but an end in and of itself.J.S. GilespieStudent in the CollegeContinued from page !Currie is not readv to give ud the fight onERA in Illinois, though. “1 was sorry to seeNOW’ say that (they would not push forERA),’’ she said. “We plan to spend most ofour time on the business of the people of thestate, not on drawing our own maps.” She agreed with NOW, however, that thebattle against the anti-abortion amendmentwould be very tough. “I don’t mean to saythat ERA should be the only thing that weshould be concerned with,” she said. “Ithink that there would be a pretty goodchance that some kind of anti-abortionamendment would pass here in Illinois.”Should the anti-abortion amendmentcome up in Illinois, the vote on the ruleschange might suddenly shift, according toCurrie. “If conservative amendments, likethe anti-abortion amendment, start comingdown the pike from Washington, I think thatsome of the people who oppose the ruleschange because they oppose ERA will sud¬denly change their position,” she said.Right now, though, Currie doesn’t thinkmany anti—ERA legislatures are likely tovote in favor of the rules change. “It is verydifficult to find people opposed to the ERA,but who are in favor of change the rules to areasonable procedure,” Currie said. “Un¬fortunately, there are a number of peoplewho are in favor of ERA who oppose the ideaof changing the rules. This would make therules vote difficult, in a general house vote.The last time a rules change was introducedto the entire house four years ago. itfailed.”If the rules change does come to thehouse, though it would take only a constitu¬tional majority of 89 votes to pass thechange.Currie also points to the fact that the 3/5rule has been in effect only since 1970.Amendments ratified before then onlv hrdto receive a majority. If the 3/5 requirementhad always been in effect, the 13th Amend¬ment, which outlaws slavery, would nothave been passed by Illinois.The four other states which require morethan a constitutional majority, Colorado,Kansas, New Hampshire and Idaho, haveall passed the ERA, though Idaho has votedto try to rescind their ratification.Major Activities Board presentsLEO KOTTKEDAVID BROMBERGSaturday, February 7Mandel HallTickets: $4 MAB fee payers$8 All Others(Reserved Seat Ticketson sale at Reynolds Club)(All University of Chicogo students ore MAB fee-poyers.)Maximum of 2 tickets per ID,2 ID’s per purchase. JobsContinued from pageStarting salaries are ’ gnest for gradu¬ates in the technical and science fields andlowest for liberal arts graduates, accordingto the Endicott Report. Nationally, thisyear’s graduates with Bachelor’s degrees inchemistry and other scientific fields can ex¬pect to earn starting salaries of about$19,000 annually. Economics graduates canexpect to begin at about $17,000, while liber¬al arts graduates can expect startingsalaries of about $15,000.Although Monson does not know whethergraduates from the College and the Divi¬sions earn more than the national averages,she remarked, “University of Chicago stu¬dents are very highly regarded by re¬cruiters.”Monson believes that employment pros¬pects for graduates are “better now than inthe past five years,” particularly for thosewith Bachelor’s degrees. More B.A. re¬cruiters have appeared on campus this yearthan in the past. “There is a growing needfor bright, energetic people with B.A. andB.S. degrees,” she said.With the exception of technical areas,“One’s major does not predict one’s job,”Monson said. She stressed the flexibility of adegree from the College, claiming that anyCollege graduate is well prepared for al¬most any job.Monson also believes that grades are notas important as students may think. Whileemployers in research and other academicareas require high grades, most employerslook for someone who is more than just astudent and who works well with others, asevidenced by extracurricular activities.Monson emphasized that job-seekersmust know what they want. They shouldlearn about potential employers by consult¬ing directories of businesss, publishers, orsocial services.Monson admits that some graduates mayhave some difficulty finding their first jobs because they lack the ‘standard’ talents.“They have the talent” to be successful,said Monson, “but they need to convince theemployer.” These students must be morepersistent and more sophisticated in theirjob search than than experienced workers,she said.NEXT FRIDAY: Job opportunities forgraduate and professional students.ASSASSINOBITUARY:By the close of business on 3 February 1981the following Assassins' bodies were found,jcold and hardening:name codenameJohn Robb BugheadMike Perlin BengalErasmo Passaro HarpoDean Li MoondogLarry Schaefer Le ManEric Oshiro BlowfeldAndy Lum BatmanWinslow Wise IsraelDan Stetzel PlatoStan Ciepiela CalypsoJim Biery AthensJon Arnold NukemVince Ferrera BismarkMark Contreras ChicoPaul Billingsley TrotskyCharles Mencer LaCosteBest kill to date: Agent Chico found dead in! a phone booth, shot by a dart from his assas-. sin’s gun. The dangling receiver said “I’ll belooking for you.” Assassin note: the deathaddress “prepare to die” must be oral.Signed death certificates are final. By the! way, don’t let the death column fool you., there are women in this game, it's just that; they're doing the killing. Let’s hear it forj Mata-Hari! “Only 118 left!”Assassin Inc.“Death by Plunger”agent 74-06-38.Send your Valentinea Maroon Personal.3 lines or lessare free. Deadlinefor Friday Feb. 13issue:Feb. 10 at 12 noonNo ads will be takenover the phone.GET PERSONRLThe Chicago Maroon — Friday, February 6, 1981 — 5ITANLEY KUBRICKSSaturday, February 7thLAW SCHOOL AUDITORIUM2:00 matinee - 7:15 - 9:45 $2PROGRAMMER/ANALYSTThe Center for Research in Security Prices in the GraduateSchool of Business needs a full-time programmer/analystto develop and maintain research data bases and assist inthe overall research effort. Applicants should haveexperience with IBM 370/Compatible (OS/VS or VM);knowledge of PL/I or Fortran, (DBMS and/or 370ASSEMBLER desirable alsO); and prior training - orwillingness to learn - finance and statistics. Goodcommunications skills essential. Position availableimmediately. Salary range S1 9K - $23K, plus University ofChicago benefits, including partial tuition remission.Position offers considerable flexibility, responsibility,challenge and opportunities tor growth. If interested andqualified, contact Richard Jaffe, 753-4793. The Universityof Chicago is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative ActionEmployer._ « grateful dead»--198i»f (114 c 771777777771 ~ 7TS --FEB.^th mondayp,ntNT 11 Quantrell Auditorium, m 6MHFM L D i 2 5 10/2! j5 11.51 UPTOWN TUtm i i 2 l - tl 5 3J013»lt tT 1141 ( N C( 0 1/33 |tO »FFJn3S/f<Ct! t ICS 01,1 7i I5»»»43 7 : 3 3 P SAT Ftl 21 1931 IM.il IGet A Ticket?? BUMMER - SEETHE FILM!!! We Buy and SellUsed Records1701 E. 55th St.684-3375TEST PREPARATION FORLiw School Admission TestGmouite Minioement Adm TestGmouite Record EmmiutionMedical College Adm TestVI «AK> T W VTfMICI ypcr641-2185 jfHfep1S tejrXm - CMC*PART-TIME JOBSPhone/Mail CampaignTelephone NumberSearch Positions9-5, Mon.-Fri.s4.00/hr.Call Vivian Nix753-0875Cobb B-23(or come by) 493-0666TWO F AMILIES SHOULD GET TOGETHERThis is tor you! A two flat on Woodlawn Avenue. Sevenrooms each. Finished recreation room in front part ofbasement. Recent two car parage. Only $135,000. Ownerflexible.LIGHT UP AN OLD FLAME in your fireplaceas you look over the city in all directions. Approx. 2.000sq. ft., five rooms, gracious heritage condo. 12 minutesto downtown Chicago. 50th & the Lake. $69,500.TALLER THAN OTHERS vou clear all the rest.High floor, splendid formal 5 room apt. in splendid for¬mal cooperative building. 50th- hast end. 555.000. Pri¬vate financing available.“ON THE MIDWAY" VIEWERSFrench doors floor-to-ceiling look out on park setting.Inside, heautitullv restored woodwork and tastefullydecorated, move-in condition. 5 room co-op. GAR ACLINCLUDED. Near 59th - Stony. $55,000.MAHOGANY EVERYWHERE in vour next home.I Beautiful woodwork abounds. Spacious 1899. three storybrick. Nine rooms plus a full six room third floor (ser¬vants quarters). 48th Kenwood. SI95.000. Low cost pri-j vate financing.Ask for our free inventory sheet.We have lots more. Coll anytime.Ken Wester (eve.) 947-0557, SalesMarie Wester [eve.] 947-0057Cleveland McCowan [eve.]799-1419, SalesCharlotte Vikstram 493-0666, Broker*Qivuckif Cht&eBtfckwabeqtli+Crttm CheeseSa&iUhtAIce Cft&mMfk UA&i sponsored by SGACFROG & PEACHIda NoyesFriday, Feb. 6 9:30-1:30Free Entertainmentby: Coach Sim & Co.OPEN MIKE.V %?S', q6 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, February 6, 1981I 5 <XI% * m wThey allagreed it was* a most unusualentertainmentmm « m « The maps andpulleys seemed^strangely outof place% i « i The mechanicalaspect of theactors brought *their humanityinto question * 9 m m mWere the animalsbehaving on cue?C. 3? i 41 Hby Dotty Attiepp. 18-24 in WHITEWALLS, a magazine ofwriting by artists, Issue 5.Attie's work is represented in Words asImages, an exhibition co-sponsored byWHITEWALLS and the Renaissance Soci¬ety of the University of Chicago.The opening reception is Sunday, Febru¬ary 8, 5:00-7:00 pm at the Renaissance So¬ciety, 4th floor Cobb.p.18f I *As they walked* up the aislesall was stillat * i » p 19 P 21mm * #mJust before thecurtain beganto descend somemembers of theaudience criedoutft m * m *P 23 It had trulybeen anevening they #would neverforget* m k ^—CAREERS IN PUBLISHINGThe Division of the Radcliffe Publishing Course, a six-weekgraduate program in book and magazine publishing atHarvard University will be on campus on Thursday. Feb¬ruary 12. A general meeting will be held at noon to discusscareer opportunities in publishing. For more information,please contactWilliam Snyder753-3286 !I University of Chicago BookstorePhoto Department970 E. 58th, 2nd Floor , 753-3317 —DR, M.R. MASLOVOPTOMETRISTttAUSCHLOM6 •Eye ExaminationsiSOFLENS1 (polymacon)j Contact censes •Contact Lenses (Soft & Hard)*Ask about our annual service agreement•Fashion Eye WearHYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER7570E. 55th363-6700 SLILY TOMLIN • CHARLES GRODIN NED BEATTY A LIJA Production"THE INCREDIBLE SHRINKING WOMAN’’Written by JANE WAGNER Music by SUZANNE CIANI • Produced by HANK MOONJEANExecutive Producer JANE WAGNER Directed by JOEL SCHUMACHER A UNIVERSAL PICTURERead the JOVE Book • Copyright © 1980 by Universal City Studios, Inc IpgIWnaiTW. rowwt suectsm <a»GREY CITY JOURNALNOW PLAYING AT A THEATRE NEAR YOU CHINESE-AMERICAtfRESTAURANTSpecializing mCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOpen Daily11 AM to 8 30 PMClosed Monday1318 EAST 63rdMU 4-1062Young Designs byELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERS1620 E. 53rd St.288-2900OpenHouseSat. Feb. 711 -4ASingularGroup57th & Woodlawn(Unitarian Church)Many newarts & craftsStop in!refreshments6 FEBRUARY 1981FRIDAY 6 SATURDAY 7 SUNDAY 8MONDAY 9 TUESDAY 10 WEDNESDAY 11 THURSDAY 12FILMFilms by Stan Brakhage: If anyone maybe called a true poet of experimentalcinema, it is Brakhage. He uses themedium with a sure sense of its plasticcapabilities; watching one of his filmsis like taking part in its creation.Wonder fling, filmed in collaborationwith Joseph Cornell, is an abstractstudy of the Third Avenue El in NewYork; though almost purely abstract,in some ways it is his most convention¬al film, since the emphasis remainssolely on the screen image. In personalfilms like Window Water Baby Moving(about his wife giving birth), SiriusRemembered (about the corpse of thefamily dog) and Thigh Line Lyre Tri¬angular, the act of filming is held upfor scrutiny. And Mothlight denies thenecessity of filming — made entirelyof pieces of moths and flowers stuckbetween strips of mylar tape, it is, ac¬cording to Brakhage, “what a mothwould see from birth to death if whitewas black and black was white.” Sat¬urday, Feb 7, at 7 and 9, in Cobb 425.Part of the Renaissance Society’sAmerican Vanguard Cinema series;admission is open to Society members,and a student membership costs $5.00- MAFour Nights of a Dreamer (Robert Bres¬son, 1971): Bresson effortlessly trans¬poses Dostoyevski’s stores to modernday Paris, where the meaning of thestruggle with loneliness and nihilism isif anything enhanced. Jean-PierreLeaud plays an artist who saves ayoung woman from suicide, and findshimself falling in love with her whilehe tries to reconcile her with her oldlover. Only an artist of Bresson’s lyri¬cal and meditative gifts could show ussuch beauties in the heart of the city.The exquisite night photography is bvPierre Lhomme. Sunday, Feb. 8, at7:15 and 9 in Quantrell Doc; $2.00 —MAThe General Line (Old and Sew) (SergeiEisenstein. 1929): Or, what happens togood party members who drink theirmilk. Eisenstein opens his first andonly “small” movie with a sustainedblast of overpowering polemics, butonce that subsides he settles (not alto¬ gether comfortably) into the scaled-down dimensions of his story. It has todo with collectivization in the prov¬inces, as led by a poor farm woman,Martha Lapkina. Eisenstein’s use ofideological montage is intrusive here,and it only serves to depersonalize thealready sketchy protagonists. But he’salso more willing to just have a goodtime with the story, and while he neverstops preaching he at least shows signsof a vestigial sense of humor — there’sa barnyard love scene that has to beseen to be believed, and the last laughwas so funny, it helped keep him out ofSoviet films for the next ten years.Monday, Feb. 9, at 7:15 in Quantrell.Doc; $1.00 — MAEarth (Aleksandr Dovzhenko, 1930);Dovzhenko's films show that Sovietfilm can be as poetic as it is polemical.Earth is a mystical depiction of the lifeof the seasons, and the lives of thosewho make their livelihood by it. Mon¬day, Feb 9, at 8:45 in Quantrell. Doc;$1.00.Mamie (Alfred Hitchcock, 1964): TippiHedren plays a kleptomaniac; SeanConnery plays one of her victims who,instead of having her arrested, mar¬ries her. Criticized at its release for itsapparent incoherence, it has in recentyears been hailed as one of Hitch¬cock’s most daring and original psy¬chological thrillers. Friday, Feb. 6, at7:15 in Quantrell. Doc; $2.00.Frenzy (Alfred Hitchcock, 1972): Hitch¬cock returns to his “innocent man whois framed” theme with mixed results.The plot concerns a series of murdersinvolving strangled women, and theman who is believed guilty because hisex-wife is one of the victims. Techni¬cally, Hitchcock has never been bet¬ter, and the film is full of the macabrecomedy for which his films arefamous However, the film is not assatisfying as it should be. Hitchcock’sbest films were suspenseful becausethey left a lot to the audience’s imagi¬nation while framing the boundaries ofthat imagination. Frenzy is more ex¬plicit than it needs to be. Also, the filmwould have been better if there werefirst-rate actors in the lead rolesrather than the no-names Hitchcocksaid he preferred. If you are notplagued with memories of Hitchcock’sbest films, this one should be worthyour while. Friday, Feb. 6, at 9:15 inQuantrell. Doc; $2.00 - NM A Clockwork Orange (Stanley Kubrick,1973): Kubrick’s movies are not so ce¬rebral as he would have us believe. AClockwork Orange, as a case in point,is a masterpiece of visceral filmmak¬ing, but as a treatment of delicatemoral questions it is a mess. Sometime in the not-distant-enough future,roaming ritualistic street gangs ter¬rorize the populace; when one of them(Malcolm McDowell) is caught and re¬formed, he is denied any sense of freewill, becoming the organic machine ofthe title. Problem is, when he re¬reforms, he’s no better, just more funto watch. All of which would makevery little difference, except that Ku¬brick appropriates the moral argu¬ments of Anthony Burgess's novel toget to the opposite moral conclusion.In other words, he cheats. Saturday,Feb. 7, at 2:00, 7:15, and 9:45 in LawSchool Auditorium. Shown by UpperRickert House; $2.00 — MAHeart Beat (John Byrum, 1979): Life,according to Carolyn Cassady, can bereduced to the conflict between Levit-town and Greenwich Village, or atleast that is the impression one getsfrom watching this film version of herautobiography. Jack Kerouac andNeal Cassady (the model for On theRoad's Dean Moriarty) are the film’sostensible subjects. Because it's pre¬sented from Carolyn’s point of view,and she is no match for either of them,there's a disorienting conflict of tem¬perament here — it’s a basically schi¬zophrenic movie, which wouldn’t be sobad except that it only acts on thestrength of one of its convictions. You1could sav it’s only a movie — but thenremember that that simpering homoplayed by Ray Sharkey is supposed tobe Allen Ginsberg, and you’ll realizethat an injustice has been done Still,anything with Sissy Spacek can t be allbad (she plays Carolyn, and NickNolte does what he can with the miser¬ably conceived role of Neal. The weaklink, oddly enough, is John Heard’sKerouac. Saturday, Feb. 7, at 7:15 and9:30. in Quantrell. Doc; $2 00 — MAMUSICFlute and Guitar Concert : with Jim Bro-kaw and Kevin Byrnes. 12:00, Thurs¬day, February’ 12, Goodspeed Hall.FreeMore Bad News — Good News: The tick¬ets for Saturday night's Beethovengala in Mandel Hall are all gone, butthe dress rehearsal will be open to thepublic. 7:30, Thursday, Februarv 12,Mandel Hall.Contemporary Chamber Players . Musicof Gunther Schuller and Shulamit Ran,etc. 8:30 tonight, Mandel Hall. FreePeter Serkin: Piano; Wolpe, Haydn, andthe Goldberg Variations; 8:30, Tues¬day, February 10, Mandel Hall. Stu¬dents $4.50, others $8.50.THEATREA Doll House: Nicholas Rudall directsthis Court Theatre production of theIbsen classic about a woman’s escape♦rom marriage. Through February22nd, Thursday through Saturday, 8 30PM; Sunday, 7:30 PM. Tickets are$6 7.<\% w&vtqIGary Beberman, Brad Bittan, Leland Chait, Peter T. Daniels, Susan Franusiak, Jim Guenther, Jack Helbig, Richard Kaye, Carol Klammer, Neil Miller,Mark Pohl, Renee Saracki, Margaret Savage, Bruce Shapiro, John Svatek,Michele White, K.G. Wilkins, Ken Wissoker.Contributions this week from Scott Jarol, Gene Paquette, and Ellida SuttonFreyer.Mike Alper, film editorRichard Pettengill, music editorLucy Coniff, book editorEdited by Laura CottinghamProduction this week by Laura Cottingham, Susan Franusiak, and CarolKlammerthe grey city journal is published weekly by the Chicago Maroon, Ida NoyesHall, 1212 E. 59th Street. Chicago, Illinois, 60637. For advertising information,call Wanda at 753-FAME. HOT MUSICON CAMPUSSATURDAYif you’re into blues/folkLeo Kottke and David Bromberg,two of the finest guitarists in acousticmusic, will appear on a double bill thisSaturday at 8:00 p.m. in MandelHall.These musicians exemplify a stylethat embraces the traditions of theblues and bluegrass, rock and ragtime. This “American eclecticism”,as it is called, is an attempt to tie to¬gether these diverse elements of ourmusical heritage. It is too off-the-wallto be pop music, too progressive to befolk music, and too fun to be artmusic. Emanating from such talentsas Kottke and Bromberg, however, itis important music and good music.Kottke is a master of the 12-stringguitar. Perhaps it could also be saidthat the 12-strong is his master as itdraws from his hands melodies with aperverse simplicity, tunes with atwist. As he explained in an interviewwith Guitar Player Magazine, “Pick¬ing up the guitar to me is like chewingyour nails, it's a nervous habit. In theprocess, things pop up.” In performance, he is a storyteller, using asong or some guitar licks to illustratehis message. Lyrically, that messagetells of "the same old shit in a dif¬ferent way,” according to a friend ofhis. In his own words, Leo Kottke is “apeculiar musician ... an oddity", yetit is such noncomformity that is theseed of his creativity.Coming out of the folk revival of theearly Sixties, David Bromberg has emerged as an adept and, above all,versatile string player. While attending Columbia University, he hung-outaround the Greenwich Village folkscene. He quit school and decided todevote his time to guitar, fiddle, anamandolin. As a sideman with every¬one from Bob Dylan to ChubbyChecker, he played over seventy recording dates. In the Seventies andnow in the Eighties, he has been recording primarily as a solo artist andwith his own band.His latest album with the DavidBromberg Band, You Should See theRest of the Band, is not just a showcase for his versatility; it is a hot re¬cord. Dominated by blues includingFenton Robinson's theme "As theYears Go Passing By”, it also features a dixieland tune, some quicksilver Irish music, and "Sharon”, abad assed funk number. UnlikeKottke, whose style is a synthesis ofdiverse influences, Bromberg goes tothe source. He is not one, but manydifferent musicians. From his performance, we can only expect unpredic¬tability.For Saturday night's show, Kottkewill perform as a solo act, whileBromberg will be accompanied by afiddle player. Each artist has playedat the U of C in the past three years toan enthusiastic reception. Tickets areavailable at the Reynolds Club for $8and $4 (MAB payers). —JimGuentherif you’re into jazzThe campus based Chicago Frontfor Jazz, which has in the past promot-ea popular and successful concertsfeaturing such artists Little Willie Anderson, Eddie Taylor, the LegendaryBlues Band, and Hannah Jon Taylor,has once again tapped the seeminglyendless supply of fine local blues andiazz talent. This Saturday night at 6 30pm in the Cloisters Club at Ida NoyesHall (1212 E. 59th Street), the 15 pieceWalter Cartwright Band will performan impressive array of big band stan¬dards in the Count Basie Duke EHington Quincy Jones tradition.Cartwright and his musicians arecertainly qualified to do such. Bandleaaer Cartwright is a talented reed-man as well as a composer and arranger, who holds three musicaldegrees from DePaul University andpresently runs the music departmentat Bogan High School. A typicalCartwright Band concert concerntrates on his personal, creative arrangements of jazz standards — a lotof Basie and Ellington, some Quincyand Thad Jones, and a smattering ofNeal Hefti and Woody Herman.Cartwright is fortunate to havesome of Chicago's best jazz musiciansto bring out the art of his arrangements. Many, notably trumpetersSonny Earl Turner and Walter Strickland (who is also currently administrator of the A.A.C M.) and trombon¬ist John Avant, are former membersof the Duke Ellington, Count Basie,and Earl "Fatha" Hines band. Drummer Marshall Thompson has performed with such stars as EddieHarris, Johnny Griffin, and DexterGordon, and, along with Wilbur Camp¬bell, is widely considered the most demanded session percussionist in thecity. Many band members have alsoperformed in a variety of theatre andstudio bands.Multi-faceted reedmen John Rich¬ardson, Bernard Scarrella, Lucius White, Horace Smith, and Sam Playerall play at least three saxes and winds,facilitating Cartwright's intricate ensemble passages. Trumpeter CarlWooly and trombonists Nate Pryorand Carl Lawson add firepower to thebrass sections. Bassist Randy Fordand keyboardist Irma Thompsonround out the rhythm.By hosting the Walter CartwrightBig Band, the Chicago Front for Jazzis offering an excellent opportunity tosee a disappearing musical tradition— black big band jazz. Cartwright'sband is one of the few on tty? scenetoday that can do justice to the "hits"of Basie and Ellington: Cartwright'sarrangements are unique and personal but true to the original; the band isa tautly disciplined one under his leadership; and the soloists' improvisations are fiery and creative but alwayswithin the frameowrk of the band'sorchestration.This last aspect is highly reminiscent of the classic Ellington bandsSolos were never written out but eachinstrumentalist was well aware of hisrole in interacting with the rest of theband. Likewise, on a larger scale, thedifferent sections — reeds, trumpets,and trombones, interacted to producesuch a myriad of sounds and tonesthat Ellington used colors to describethem. Cartwright seems to havegrasped these concepts in rus arrang¬ing, orchestrating, and bandleading,and his band is experienced and tatented enough to have them materialize.The three dollar admission makesthis concert quite a bargain, but itwould be a shame to miss it no matterwhat the cost Here's one of your lastchances to see standards like "Takethe A Train", "One O'clock Jump",and “C Jam Blues" played the rightway by the right musicians.— Gene Paquette6 FEBRUARY 1981 GREY CITY JOURNAL 3by RENEE SARACKI"The Only Group That Matters," "ThePearl Harbor Tour," and of course, "TheClash on Parole." I realize now that it wasall the result of clever promo men and per¬haps, The Clash themselves. I guess theonly thing wrong is that I once believedthose slogans and what they stood for.Maybe The Clash were once sincere, whoknows? What I do know is that in the faceof almost insurmountable evidence, TheClash are just a stylish pop group commit¬ted to change as long as they look good, agroup whose impassioned words give wayto shallow deeds. In 1981, The Clash (morebecause of than despite Sandinista) are aspolitical as The Stones. All this mock re¬bellious furor early in both group's careersand for what? So Andy Warhol's Interviewcan display Joe Strummer 10 years fromnow, hob-nobbing with Diane van Fursten-berg. Well, count me out.It's a little hard to take because I hadbeen a loud and often foolish supporter inthe past. As early as Feb. 1978 when thefirst Clash singles were available in Buffalo, I had ceaselessly followed them. Forthree years, I have amassed every ClashIp, every single, countless buttons and tshirts, magazines, pamphlets and booksabout The Clash and have witnessed threeAmerican tours. Not one person couldquestion my loyalty and most importantly,I believed in what I thought they stood for.They gave a whole generation of unemployed, unwanted and unsure Englishyouths a certain dignity. They foughtagainst the National Front in Englandthrough benefits for Rock Against Racism(RAR). And they yelled and bragged abouttheir undying commitment to their follow¬ers. Geez, they practically offered theirservices as heroes. Even in the beginning,it was clear that The Clash set themselvesup as symbols for youths to follow. Afterall, weren't they once just the same as them? Yeah, once.The earliest sign for me that all was notwell in Clashdom came with the release ofLondon Calling in early 1980. Never beforehad The Clash made such blatant concessions in their music. Pure pop for now peopie is great as long as it carries no loftypretensions which London Calling did.Somehow the anger was missing in themusic and the lyrics became empty andsilly. Wouldn't you know that London Call¬ing became the album with which TheClash conquered America. To this day,American critics are still praising TheClash and London Calling. Personally, Ilisten to The Clash's least popular record(critically and financially) the most: Give'Em Enough Rope. Granted, Give 'EmEnough Rope was a failure, it was a sin¬cere failure. London Calling is a slick, suc¬cess and it reeks of sell-out.Later that year, The Clash made theirthird foray to these shores with their "15Tons Tour," featuring London Calling. Icaught them in Detroit in March and forthe first time realized that The Clash hadfinally "arrived." Bonafide pop stars, you might say. Meeting them backstage I realized that (at least on this particular evening) The Clash had lost most of the conviction and enthusiasm present in theirfirst two American tours.After that American London Callingtour, Joe and Mick (not unlike Mick andKeith) were seen gracing the covers ofCreem, Hit Parader and gasp! ROLLINGSTONE. Americans finally go punk. Butagain, as was the case with Blondie, punkis just no longer punk. And The Clash arenot punks!By this time folks who know better aregetting a little weary of The Clash andtheir fancy slogans but as Ricky Nelsononce sang, "I was a fool." It wasn't untilthe group's latest Ip, Sandinista was re¬leased last December that I recognized thedepths to which they had finally sunk!Meet Gauchos Strummer and Jones,serious enemies of the late Somoza. Theheavy-handedness of the title is indicativeof the whole album. As a matter of fact,this is a very heavy album: 3 records, 6sides; overbearing orchestration, heavymock dub ("The Crooked Beat"), seriousthemes etc. Suffice to say, the list is end¬less. Mick's tearjerker, "Somebody GotMurdered" is wretched pop music by anyone's standards. And it is quite a slidedown from the earlier super, "Stay Free"on Give 'Em Enough Rope.Everything on Sandinista is laid on likeAunt Jemima's Maple Syrup; thick and ut¬terly indigestable. Even the intended humour is below the level of Boris andNatasha on The Bullwinkle Show. Justlisten to "Ivan Meets G.l. Joe" and tell mewhich is funnier.It is virtually impossible to listen to theentire V/i hrs. of Sandinista straight, with¬out throwing the album out the window.Yes, The Clash have expanded musicallyinto ugh, Calypso, making even Harry Belafonte sound good, not to mention Rappermusic! Check it out, everybody, check itout! Paul's dub I can deal with but JoeStrummer’s imitation of a funky Ian Durysends my tone arm across the record. San-4 The Sale Continues at Spin-itOver 400 Classical, Rock, Jazz & Soul L.P.'s from C.B.S.$4.29.. - 3 for $ 12.00 - 5 for $ 19.00Here are a few of the recordsCaroU KirvqTapestryincluding.IFeel The Earth MoveI SoFar Away H* Too Late You ve Got A F fiendWhere You Lead.'Will You Love Me Tomorrow ^Smack water JackJeff BeckWiredBtoe Wind Come Dancmg/LedBootsHead For Back stage Pass Love is Green DAN FOGELBERCSOUVENIRSincludingPart Ol The Plan, Better ChangeWknots Changing HorsesThere s A Place m The World For A GamblerTHE TIMESTHEY AREA CHANGIN'DYLAN! I NCI DOINGTHE TIMES TMCYARE A CHANG IN VONE TOO MANv \MORNINGSj the lonesome deathj Of HATTIE CARROUI BALI AO Of MIj HOLLIS BROWN ^1 north countryBLUESJAMS JOPLIN'SGREATEST HITSOther Artists include:Ramsey LewisEarth. Wind & FireHerbie Hancock SantanaStreisandPoco Dave MasonIsley Bros.ChicagoSale Ends February 17, 1981 Weather ReportLou RawlsAnd Many more!Spin-it1444 E. 57th 684-1505Spin-it now, Spin-it later but Spin-it!6 FEBRUARY 1981 GREY CITY1 !i i* mi imm l wig' --1* „ fi" W, 1 1a • fgj > r * m dinista, despite how much one may want tosupport The Clash, is a silly bore. The boysare in a musical quandary, like headlesschickens they are haphazardly utilizingmusical genres for no discernable purpose. Feeling the need to abandon the primitive three-chord punk of their firstalbum in favor of material a bit more challenging has left The Clash rootless. Theyaren't John Lydons who can almost casually create a Pistols or a PIL, they'rejust four average blokes with an aboveaverage sense of style. All of which bringsme to Rude Boy.Jack Hazan and David Mingay's RudeBoy is a poor film but also a very revealingfilm particularly about The Clash. Following the group in early '78 when they werestill angry young punks up until their rockabilly/Chicago gangster-like imagechange in late '78/early '79, right beforetheir first American tour, Rude Boy'spseudo documentary tone is a total sham.It's no wonder, The Clash disowned theflick. It makes them look like con men.Rude Boy follows the day to day exploitsof a weary and lazy young punk, RayGange. Ray's misplaced anger, general in¬ertia and hostile posturing is meant to berepresentative of 'all the young punks.'Opening with Ray at work in a sleazy pornshop probably in West London, Rude Boytells the story of his political neutrality in atime when choices must be made. Ray istorn between his growing infatuation withThe Clash and their Commie ideals and hisskinhead friends who lash out againstCommie's like the Anti-Nazi League(ANL) and RAR. Ray uses The Clash for atemporary high, a night's thrills: they inspire him, make him think he's a some¬body. After the gig's over though that oldemptiness comes back to haunt. The livesequences in the movie are extraordinary,The Clash really do play with their heartsand it is easy to see how for 2 hrs., they cantransform lazy sods into fervent revolu¬tionaries. It is with the filmed sequenceswith the group, the re creation of fact,where the movie reveals itself. In one scene, Tovarich Strummer meets Ray in apub and as ineloquently as possible ex¬plains the way. Life as rock 'n' roll social¬ists. Ray incoherently offers a few weakracist rebuttals and remains uncommitted. He does, however, offer his services asa roadie. Joe seeing this as an opportunityin which to reform this dumb geezer ac¬cepts the offer.Traveling the The Clash for the hugeVictoria Park Rock Against Racism demonstration, Ray's infatuation growswhile the group's tolerance of him wanes.It seems that all Ray is good for is downingpints of ale and picking up groupies. MickJones expresses his weariness with Rayseveral times culminating in the recordingstudio. Mick has just finished the vocaltrack for "Stay Free" (which the audiencesees) and Ray comes up to talk. He too, isfrom Brixton and is deeply moved by thesong and its memories for him. He is tooinarticulate to say anything, however, andends up making a racist comment aboutblacks. Mick just quietly shakes his headin hopeless disgust and whispers, "I don'tknow about you, Ray, I just don't know." Finally, Ray is humiliatingly kicked out ofthe group's entourage, The Clash becomestylish stars and all is well.Ray is a victim. A victim of the beliefthat rock 'n' roll stars are heroes. Men whomake a difference. If Rude Boy says anything it says that you are your own hero. Ifyou accomplish anything in life, you areresponsible and no one else can shoulderthat burden for you, no matter how hardthey may try. yWhen all is said and done about TheClash, that which stands most in my mindis the resemblance between The Clash andThe Rolling Stones. As American criticsrepeatedly pointed out, London Calling isThe Clash's Exile on Main St. The 80'salbum to match the 70's. While I personally think Exile is a far more lasting albumthe similarities are there. A two recordmusical extravaganza, with each groupsumming up past influences to producesomething new. Substitute Jagger andRichards for Strummer and Jones and youhave two old faces in new clothes. RudeBoy bears out this resemblance even earli¬er; The Clash shoot pigeons on roofs, TheStones piss on a gas station wall, pure ado¬lescent rebelliousness, 'full of sound andfury signifying nothing.'Later, The Clash being the clever imagemanipulators they are sell this bill of goodsto adoring fans, just like the dirty, raunchyRolling Stones. Insert "White Riot" for"Satisfaction." Even on stage Joe andMick assume the roles of Mick and Keef.This is strikingly evident in Rude Boy atGlasgow's rough Apollo theater, where Joesimperingly tells the increasingly unrulymob to 'just cool out' and Mick just strutsaround the stage kicking bouncers and tell¬ing these gorillas to 'fuck off, they (thefans) are only fucking dancing.' Kinda likeMick and Keith at Altamont, no? I wonderif they know they were being filmed? Butof course they did, they are after all veryclever pop stars. They're still incrediblystylish and Mick's lovely poses will continue to decorate my wall but only for aesthetic reasons. Rest in peace 1977.SAT NITE FEB. 7- ^PliLAW SCHOOL GREEN LOUNGE.Fun&cd BANDBEVERAGESBOOGIE —— ——.The University of Chicagoi DEPARTMENT OF MUSICfrida^feb. t MUSIC IN MANDEL:A CELEBRATIONCONTEMPORARY CHAMBERPLAYERS8:30p.m. freeChamber Music Seriesluesdav PETER SERKIN, pianofeb. 10 8:30 p.m. admission chargeConcert GalaSaturday UNIVERSITY SYMPHONYfeb. 14 UNIVERSITY CHORUSwith Soloists8:30 p.m. free with ticket, NOONTIME CONCERTSnow in Coodspeed Hallfob s UNIVERSITY SYMPHONYfob 12 BRASS ENSEMBLE|IM BROKAW .ind KEVIN BYRNES,ilute and guitarIS GERMANY US?How German Is Itby Walter AbishNew Directions, 252 pp., $14.95by SCOTT JAROLThey cultivated commercialism, struckup rows of redundant houses, and laidsewers through mass graves forgotten atthe end of a previous era. New Deutsch¬land has captured the spirit of dynamic,commercial America.So seems the message of Walter Abish'snew novel, at least as suggested by its title,but more than "How German is it?" ask"How American is it?" Abish seems to believe that the Germans are obsessed with"an indiscriminate fascination with allthings American." Is "Americanism" inGermany an imitation, or is it just the sim¬ilar result of rampant commercialgrowth?Until the early 1870's, Germany was anagrarian state, divided into very indepen- can; they do love American music; they'llpay outrageous prices for blue jeans andcowboy boots. But Abish examines muchbroader issues.In How German Is It, Abish explores so¬cial sterility, the sort of human behaviorwhich appears to accompany unharnessedcommercialism. His stark descriptions detail his cynicism, underlined with sympa¬thetic frustration. Through Ulrich Hargen-au, a writer, he explores the town ofBrumholdstein, built on the former site ofa concentration camp, and named afterthe revered German philosopher Brum-hold (perhaps with the hope that some ofman will rub off on the town). Brumhold¬stein, with its dominant trait its fresh, vi¬brant growth, competes for recognitionwith nearby Daemling, the cultural centerof the region. If Ulrich is the chief protago¬nist, then Brumholdstein is a very closesecond.Ulrich returns from France seeking tocarry on his father's glorious, if unethicalpolitical activities. What he discovers isAbish explores social sterility, the sort of human behavior whichpears to accompany unharnessed commercialism.dent territories, each ruled over by a noblelandlord. In 1871, The Chancellor of Prus¬sia, Otto von Bismarck, began to unifyGermany. In the interest of self-preserva¬tion, the feudal lords reluctantly joined to¬gether to form a unified nation.Once united, the Germans began to real¬ize their subordinate position in interna¬tional economics. The British had alreadycolonized and industrialized, and if theGermans didn't follow quickly, they wouldhave been completely overtaken.1 he growing strength of other industrialnations forced the bold Wagnerian Ger¬many to yield to a homogenizing world.Realizing that there was no longerstrength in gnarled-rooted traditions, theGermans joined the race for economicascendancy by way of fast paced industri¬al capitalism.By World War I, the feudalists structureof Germany had all but vanished, andWorld War II accelerated German techno¬logy to a level that nearly led to international German supremacy.Postwar materialism led the Germansto a fascination with many things Ameri- that Brumholdsteiners regard the weeklyterrorist explosions (the actions of the Ein-zieh Group), only as inconvenience whichmake for more paperwork, thereby bring¬ing about the usual squabbles over whowill be selected to re-design the damagedstructures.Abish uncovers the hollow interactionsof postwar Germans. His characters, whohave momentum and lack motivation,crack against each other like billiard balls.Helmuth Hargenau, an architect, and Ul¬rich's brother, designs a house for Giselaand Egen, two of Brumholdstein's aristo¬crats. When a local magazine runs a feature story on the house, Helmuth becomesupset because they fail to mention hisname. Eventually Egen leaves Gisela andruns away with Rita Tropf-Ulmwhert, apseudo-aesthete who takes lots ofphotographs of unkempt beds and the like.They stay at Helmuth's house afterHelmuth's wife has, at Helmuth's request,left him. Ulrich Hargenau begins an affairwith Anna Heller, the schoolteacher, butshe decides abruptly to return to her loverJonke. In the meantime, Rita begins to mm HkH 1 nlWalter Abishtake an inters! in Helmuth, and Egen,naturally displeased, leaves the house.And so on.Despite his experimental writing style,occasionally bothersome, Abish success¬fully casts an enveloping air of culturalconfusion. He uses difficult devices such asextended repetition, introspective ques¬tioning (italicized for brow wrinkling ef¬fect), abrupt scene shifts, and an elusive plot. But as the novel progresses, it becomes easier to accept Abish's unorthodoxy. His devices work.How German Is It, subtitled WieDeutsch 1st Es, reveals the human weak¬nesses which have developed in postwarGermany. Abish, an American, shows realconcern for the emptiness of modern life.This book, no doubt, was written with asarcastic smile.somewhat mixed feelings about mixed nutsby ADAM CRITSSunday evening, February 1, the MixedNuts players filed out of the Reynold'sClub third floor theater and headed for alocal bar. Armed with a half-dozen pizzas,they were going to celebrate their fourthand final performance at Court Studio The¬ater. This was the new comedy improvisation team's first booking in what they hopewill be a long career.Billed as a "team of 15," the show wasactually comprised of only twelvemembers. Shelly Kaplan, the show's direc¬tor and organizer, explained that the threemissing members were absent because ofillness. Kaplan created the Mixed Nuts inmid December of last year. She held audi¬tions which were open to actors versed inimprovisational and theatre techniques.The members of her group all have a com¬mon background. They are at variousstages of instruction at Player's Workshopof Second City. Professionals or studentsby day, they go to night classes to learncomedy and improvisational methods for« five eight-week sessions. There are presently about two hundred students atPlayer's Workshop. The group does nottake its training lightly at all. Manymembers of the team are interested in pursuing serious careers in comedy. Kaplan,for instance, is already a clown.Improvisation is at the heart of theMixed Nuts act and the group constantlytakes suggestions from the audience. Al¬though there is a certain skeletal formatfor the sketches which they perform, theactors rely most on their on-stage prowessto generate laughs — with mixed success.No two of their Court Studio performanceswere exactly alike and Shelly Kaplan ad¬mitted that some of the sketches had gonemuch better or much worse on previousnights. The vast majority of their sketcheswere based on drills and exercises that theactors had learned at Player's Workshopor in books that they had studied on theirown. Although their improvisation andregular communication with the audiencecreated a certain familiarity about theNuts, their act was too infrequently suc¬ cessful. There were simply too much im¬provisations which fell flat, and not enoughplanned dialogue to fall back on.The Nuts have shown themselves versatile. At Court Studio they performed with¬out props (except for the proverbial rub¬ber chicken), operated their own lighting,and handled all their own publicity. Ka¬plan stresses that egalitarianism reallyruns the show. However, in the show itself,egalitarianism was translated into sloppyrandomness. It was obvious that individu¬al roles were chosen only at the opening ofeach act. And despite Kaplan's insistancethat the group's members were chosen fortheir ability to work together, playersoften interrupted one another and individ¬uals were constantly trying to upstage thegroup as whole. At moments, a veritablepower struggle seemed to be the only realaction on stage.Once a proposed improvisation had beenbegun, the group appeared to draw in onitself. The players became self involved,forgetting the audience and re enteringtheir classrooms. They made no effort to command the audience's attention, andseemed unconcerned about the relativesuccess of their performances. Eachsketch carried an undertone of silent self¬applause and, at times, suppressed gig¬gles.Mixed Nuts antics were accompanied byAp Shenken, a musical ensemble based inHyde Park which specializes in medievalEuropean chamber pieces. Although the"band" used several funny-looking instru¬ments, including a hurdy gurdy (not to beconfused with the Italian instrument of thesame name), their music was distinctlyun funny. Casting a somewhat bubonicmood over the sketches and the brief inter¬mission, they were not the wisest choicefor Mixed Nuts.Numerous successful comedy groupshave risen out of the Player's Workshop ofSecond City. Shelly Kaplan frankly hopesher group will follow that tradition. Theteam is presently seeking professionalbookings all over the Chicago area. However, l think Mixed Nuts should becanned.6 FEBRUARY 1981GREY CITY JOURNALCampusCommons r*Introducing CAMPUS COMMONS ...A Campus location for Campus people ...5841 South Blackstone ... real estate appraisers say that threethings are most important in an address: "Location, Location,and Location ..."Just steps away from the University of Chicago campus ...one block from the 1C ... a few minutes from your own Lake,called Michigan ... and your own Plaissance, called Midway. ..twenty minutes to downtown Chicago ... a campus bus stop atyour front door.That superb location is CAMPUS COMMONS, the latestHyde Park condominium offering a special investmentopportunity to special people.People who number just one or two, because our apartmenthomes are studio, convertible — one and one-bedroom units.People who work or study in the City.People who understand the value of location.People who want an affordable home.In short, people who recognize value.Besides its superb location, CAMPUS COMMONS offersseven unique apartment types, many with balconies, all withviews of a quiet and stately courtyard, all available with"Standard" features including tuckpointing, storm windowsand doors, new hot water heater, hardwood floors, the latest inenergy efficient boiler controls, redecorated front hallways,landscaping and more. And all available with optional"Deluxe" packages including designer kitchens and sleepinglofts.The initial, pre-opening discount prices start at $17,900.CAMPUS COMMONS CondominiumA Campus location for Campus people.CAMPUS COMMONSPriority Reservation on PlanNaturally, the residents of CAMPUS COMMONS will havefirst priority to take advantage of this unparalleled investmentopportunity. Those units purchased by residents will bewithdrawn from the market.To give others an opportunity to reserve a chance to own ahome in this superb location, we have set up a PriorityReservation Plan. Non-resident Priority Reservations will berecorded in the order in which they are received. The firstgroup received gets the first choices. And, for those receivedon or before February 18, 1981 we will guarantee the right topurchase available units at the special pre-opening discountprices now in effect.If you would like to preserve your opportunity to purchase aunit in CAMPUS COMMONS, fill out the coupon and send itto us with a good faith deposit of $300.00. Your deposit will beheld in escrow and will be returned to you upon writtenrequest, of course.Keep in mind the sooner you reserve your place in line, thebetter your chance to own the unit of your choice at CAMPUSCOMMONS. DOC FILMSTonight:Two by Alfred HitchcockMARNIE 7:15FRENZY 9:15Tomorrow at 7:15 / 9:30:Remember the Beat Generation? See where it all began,as we present Sissy Spacek, Nick Nolte, & John Heard asJack Kerouac inJohn Byrun’sHEART BEATSunday at 7:15 / 9:00:Robert Presson'sadaptation of Dostoyevski’s “The White NightsFOUR NIGHTS OF A DREAMERAll films in Cobb HallSPECIAL DISCOUNT PRICESfor all STUDENTS, STAFF,and FACULTY MEMBERSJus* present your UniversityChicago Identification Cord. Asstudents, Faculty Members or Ad¬ministrative Staff you are entitledto special money-saving DIS¬COUNTS on Chevrolet Parts. Ac¬cessories and any new or usedChevrolet you buy from RubyChevrolet© CMOiMurrswa manSPECIAL DISCOUNT PRICESfor all STUDENTS, STAFF,and FACULTY MEMBERS72nd & St<®Open Even Just Present your University ofChicago Identification Card. Asstudents, Faculty Members orAdministrative Staff you are en¬titled to special money-savingDISCOUNTS on Chevrolet Parts.Accessories and any new or usedChevrolet you buy from Ruby.Chevrolet Krrp / hot (sfrytl G V h-eUngUiih OLM l>t G* HvuParts OpenSat.'til noon72nd & Stony IslandOpen Evenings andSunday684-0400 2 Miles-5 MinutesAway FromThe UNIVERSITYSales Coordinator Telephone 241-5737CAMPUS COMMONS5841 South BlackstoneChicago, Illinois 60637l may want to own at CAMPUS COMMONS. Please put me onyour Priority Reservation List. I enclose a good faith deposit of$300.00 made payable to MRG, Inc. (Send check or money orderonly). I understand that my deposit is fully refundable if, prior tosigning a sales contract, 1 decide not to purchase a unit.I also understand that this coupon, along with my deposit, mustbe received on or before 2/18/81 in order for me to be guaranteedthe opportunity to purchase a unit at CAMPUS COMMONS atthe very low, pre-opening discount prices now in effect.NameAddress ——-City State ZipTelephoneM THE NEWTONIAN REVOLUTIONSEMINARY COOP BOOKSTORE5757S UNIVERSITYm/th930/630f 930/500 S1100/400NEVER AT RESTt»henwestfallGREY CITY JOURNAL6 FEBRUARY 1981 ~Etc \ Df^XO7T0WPa>'i *«.i *9 16 FEBRUARY 1981Walnut LegDESKSAll Wood $75.00rV" ;Matching Chairs Availablet All wood, armiess, swivel)Good Selection of New and UsedDesks, Chairs, File Cabinets, Etc.New andRebuiltTypewriters,Calculators,Dictators,AddersU of ChicagoBookstoreb75C Ellis Ave.753-3oo~V-~TrmHW^iA REPAIRSPECIALISTSon IBM, SCM.Olympia, etc.FREE repairestimates; repairsby factory-trainedtechnician.RENTALSavailable withU. of C. I D.Mastercharge and Visa AcceptedEye ExaminationsFashion Eye WearContact LensesDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist(53 Kimbark Plaza)1200 E. 53rd St,493-8372Intelligent people know the differencebetween advertised cheap glasses orcontact lenses and competent pro¬fessional service.Our reputation is your guarantee ofsatisfaction. MIME WORKSHOP The Poetry Centerof the Museum of Contemporary ArtpresentsChip Is Back!!CHIP GOREFormer Chief Mime Instructor at theiBody Politic Theaterwill be leading another mimeworkshop sponsored byE.F. Clown & Co.FREE ADMISSIONWEAR LOOSE CLOTHINGSATURDAY, FEBRUARY 7 1-4 P.M.|IDA NOYES DANCE ROOMISRAEL PROGRAMSAU YOU EVER WANTED TO KNOW ABOUTVISITING, STUDYING AND WORKINGIN ISRAEL AND ALIYAHInformation will be available on the full variety of Israelprograms and you will have the opportunity to talk with:ROB HATLER - Shaliach for the AmericanZionist Youth FoundationRONIT DULEV * Aliyah ShaliachMERON BERGMAN - American ZionistYouth FoundationYORAM METZER - Kibbutz <5 A liyah ProgramsAT HILLEL FOUNDATIONLOX AND BAGEL BRUNCHSUNDAY, FEBRUARY 811:00 A.M.-1:00 P.M.5715 WOODLAWN AVENUE LINDA PASTANFRIDAY. FEBRUARY 13 8 PlyTHE ARTS CLUB • 109 EASTONTARIO ST • S3.00 admission$2.00 for Students—MCA Membersrno PROFIT fGOLD CITY INNgiven * x *by the MAROONOpen DailyFrom 11:30 a.m.to 9:00 p.m.5228 Harper 493-2559Eat more for lessA Gold Mine Of Good FoodStudent Discount10°o for table service5°o for take homeHyde Park's Best Cantonese FoodTHE OPEN UNIVERSITY-The Academic Affairs Committee of Student Governmentwill offer non-credited courses in the Spring quarter thatmight be completed in four to five meetings. These coursesare meant to fill the presently existing gap in the non¬credit academic opportunties in the University betweencourse-auditing and self-study. We petition the faculty, emeriti, and graduate students toteach such a course/ be it only a part of a current course,a specialty, or an isolated thought or work that needsdiscussion. We shall handle all logistical and administra¬tive details.If you are interested and your spring schedule allowsplease call 241 -5448 for more information.The Need for small classes bound by no other purpose but the love of learning.The Chicago Maroon — Friday, February 6, 1981 — 15iKVi vflA'JoaJ-i AUMuOt. VO Ynlflc'•SPORTSQueens of the Road■<, ^'-4^«Si!GREENWOOD-FISHBEINStiffs, Dews Brothers UpsetBy David GruenbaumIn the biggest upset of the intramural bas¬ketball season, Lower Rickert shocked thepreviously undefeated Dews Brothers 48-32.After holding a 9-8 slim lead at the end of thefirst quarter. Lower Rickert began to playreally well defensively, forcing the DewsBrothers into costly mistakes.Mark Peebles made several key steals forLower Rickert while Jay Aragones ledLower Rickert in scoring, making severaleasy layups in the second half.In another big game, the Bovver Boysshocked the Superstiffs 57-49. The Super¬stiffs have had a rough time in the past fewgames and have been unable to put thingstogether. Notably absent at this loss was theSuperstiffs star guard Mark Meier.Upper Flint nipped Alpha Delta Phi 31-27in a minor upset. Alpha Del had been in sec¬ond place in the red league and now' drops tofourth.In other important games, the numberone ranked Albanian Refugess defeated theWall Street Walkers 48-36. Number tworanked Divinity School beat Trimmed andBurning 72-54, but had a much tougher timewith Five Particles in a Box beating themby only eight points, 50-42. Number threeranked BRM beat the seventh ranked Ab¬normal Deviates 54-42, while Bo’s Hosewhipped Frottage 79-24 and moved tonumber four in the rankings. N.U.T.S. had atough time beating E.F.U. Stew but held onto win 46-40 and moved up to sixth in therankings. The Champs, the eighth ranked team, were idle. Ninth ranked Dudley had agood week, blowing away Thompson 76-18,and then beating Alpha Delta 55-30.In women’s play, Upper Wallace upsetpreviously undefeated Snell 40-17. The Mis¬fits and Full Court Press won games by for¬feit. Mystery Basketball Team was idle, theBomberettes beat Dudley 22-7 and the MedSchool edged out the Alpha Delta Phi Pyg¬mies 22-16. In the last scoreboard it was in¬correctly reported that Lower Wallace hadbeaten rival Upper Wallace 29-26. In factUpper Wallace beat Lower Wallace by thescore of 28-9.Team track results are in and they indi¬cate that Upper Flint, behind the perfor¬mances of Phil McGoff and Kevin Bright,won the men’s indoor track meet Flintscored 100 points for its performance. On thewomen’s side, powerhouse Snell won themeet behind a true team effort. They scored100 points, while Bradbury received 92 andCompton 80 points. By Audrey LightPlaying five consecutive road games is aformidable task, but Coach Diann Nestelcontends that the women's basketball team,‘'seems to play hard against anyone — homeor away.” Nestel has evidence to back herclaim, as the Maroons got through the firstthree road games unscathed. Chicagothrashed district opponent Trinity 79-27,won a 70-68 thriller against Knox, and foughtfor a 67-56 district win over a strong Lake'Forest team.The Maroons did not expect much of achallenge going into the January 28th gameagainst Trinity. According to Nestel, “Thequestion was not whether we would win orlose, but whether wre would play well. That'snot easy to do against a poor team.”Chicago managed to maintain its intensitythroughout the game, shooting 49 percentfrom the field and collecting 42 rebounds toTrinity’s 25. Helen Straus led the way byscoring with 18 points, while Nadya Shma-vonian scored 16 points and pulled down 13rebounds. Kim Hammond and Janet Torreyalso scored in double figures.It was then on to Knox College for a hard-fought battle that was won on a last-secondbasket by Shmavonian. Chicago came outstrongly to open an 8-2 lead, but that provedto be the biggest spread of the game. TheMaroon lead was down to four points at thehalf and dissolved into a tie when a Knoxplayer hit two freethrows late in the game.With less than a minute on the clock andthe score still tied, Knox brought the balldowm the floor. Good defense by the Mar-rons forced a bad pass which Mary Kle-mundt intercepted. Straus, who already had 20 points, took a shot but failed to connect.However, Shmavonian was there to grab therebound and put up the winding shot at thebuzzer. Shmavonian’s clutch play gave her14 rebounds for the game — 10 off the offen¬sive board - and 16 points.The team had only three days to recuper¬ate from the Knox game before travelling toLake Forest on Tuesday. The Maroons couldnot afford a letdown since their 2-0 districtrecord was on the line. “Lake Forest is thesecond best district team after NorthPark,” said Nestel. “We went in knowing wehad to play a tough game.”The Maroons won by virtue of an excellentfirst half in which they maintained defen¬sive pressure on the ball and stifled LakeForest’s strong outside shooters Shmavon¬ian once again provided the offensiveheroics, scoring a game-high 28 points. Chi¬cago opened up a huge half-time lead whichLake Forest could not overcome despite out-scoring the Maroons in the second half.The toughest part of the schedule is now'behind Chicago, as the only remaining dis¬trict games are against pereniallv weak St.Xavier and Mundelein. However, the teammust continue to prove itself in order to w ina berth in the 1AIAW State ChampionshipTournament. “At this point it’s very impor¬tant that we are 3-0 in the district,” saidNestel. “But it becomes imperative that wedo well against non-district opponents.”Another road game was slated for lastnight against George Williams, a team thathas taken Chicago to the wire in the past twomeetings. The Maroons travel to St. Xavieron Monday before finally returning to theFieldhouse on February 14th.Women's Top Five1. Misfits2. Mystery Basketball Team3. Full Court Press4. Bomberettes5. Med SchoolTeams to Watch: Upper Wallace, Snell"v r Men's Top Ten1. Albanian Refugees 7. Abnormal Deviates2. Divinity Sc’iool 8. The Champs3. BRM 9. Dudley4. Bo's Hose 10. E.F.U. Stew5. Wall Street Walkers Teams to Watch: Spuds, Fishbein, Green-6. N.U.T.S. wood, SuperstiffsWkWrestlers Lose Competition;Win Meet Before It StartsBy Michael OcchioliniEven before the first match of Wednes¬day’s wrestling meet began, the Maroonsled North Park College by 18 points, 24-6, asa result of forfeits by both teams. Once ac¬tion started, the Maroons hung onto theirlead to win 33-16.North Park failed to field wrestlers in the150, 167, 177, and 180 pound weight cate¬gories, while the Maroons forfeited in theheavyweight class. Coach Leo Kocher saidhe was disappointed that North Park hadonly six players in the meet. “I think thatstarting out with 18 point lead cut down ontheir competitive edge.”Kocher was also somewhat disappointed16 “The Chicago Maroon — Friday, February 6,in the performance of his squad, which lostthree of the five matches it wrestled.The Maroons’ Tim Brachenburg won afall in the 118 weight class, and Ken Barrwon 6-0 at 142. Mark Farwell lost a close de¬cision at 126 by a score of 6-4, and SteveRubin lost 12-6 at 158.The other Maroon defeated was GeorgeCopper, who was still recovering from a tenday layoff due to a knee injury. Copper lost12-6 in the 134 class, with the layoff obvious¬ly effecting his performance.The victory raised Chicago’s duel meet re¬cord to 4-1. The meet was the last home con¬test for seniors Steve Rubin and Bill Blais.The Maroon’s next competition is this Satur¬day at the Concordia College Tournament. Games to WatchBO’S HOSE-WALL STREET WALKERSI Fri 8:30 HCFH-3Spread: Bo’s Hose by 1 Battle of the B-school. The big tali, rough, tough Bo’s Hosetakes on the smaller, quicker, crafty Wall: Street Walkers. It is certainly not a pareto-: optimal situation for both teams, as theloser will fall to third place in this league.N.U.T.S. - CHAMPS Sun 1:00 HCFH-1Spread: N.U.T.S. by 2 Last time thesetwo teams met, N.U.T.S. came away thevictor by 6 points. The Champs are not ex¬actly crazy about N.U.T.S. and couldupset.GREENWOOD-FISHBEIN Fri 8:30 BGSpread: Greenwood by 1 Look for anupset here, Jim Sahs of Greenwood has beenon a tear and if Kevin Gleason returns to hisform of freshman and sophomore season.Greenwood should win. On the other hand,Fishbein has been playing good consistentbasketball all season and their tough de¬fense has given everybody problems. Shouldbe a great game!MISFITS-SNELL Fri 7:30 HCFH-1Spread: Misfits by 8 The Misfits, not tobe confused with the local band, has beenthe best women’s team thus far. Snell on theother hand suffered their first loss of theseason at the hands of Upper Wallace lastweek.The Maroon season basketball predictionrecord is 26-5.1981 Crew FundDriveBy Lina GoodeThe women’s crew team has begun a fund¬raising campaign to earn $2700 for a coach¬ing launch and an outboard motor for useduring its practices on the Chicago River.The main project is a raffle, for whichticket sales begin today. Team memberswill sell $1 tickets, with the first prize a giftcertificate donated by the University Book¬store. In addition, several Hyde Park res¬taurants and stores have donated meals andgift certificates to support the fund-raisingdrive. Ticket sales will continue throughFebruary.The tickets will be available in ReynoldsClub on Tuesdays and Thursdays between 11am and 1 pm. For information on the tick¬ets, call Virginia Smith at 753-2233 or ElisseGhitelman at 955-5253. The drawing for theprizes will be held on March 8. The teamalso plans its second annual Valentine’s Daycarnation sale to aid its fund-raising ef¬forts.Once the money is raised, according toSmith, the boat will be put to use immediate¬ly, “starting with our week of training dur¬ing spring break. Besides its function to as¬sist our coach during on-the-water training,it is imperative that we have the motorizedboat for safety reasons.”SPORTS- ‘ '4-' ' '★ Resident Red League•.DudleyChamberlinUpper Flint..Alpha Delta■.FiibeyThompson: Falters''Hale★ Resident Blue League1 Dews Brothers| Lower RickertCommutersComptonDodd/Mead|Psi Upsilonw Graduate Red LeagueH ~J Bo's HoseAlbanian RefugeesV Wall Street Walkers.SpudsOrangutangsImmoral MinorityDiana Ross & the SupremesFarenyl PyrophosphateManic Defensives:§ FrottageLemmings1 Team 7 W10775441 100 6W987433W76775433221* Open Rec. L122667L001133556670 8W Li DynastyBookstoreN.U.T.S.McCormickIP it DocsTrimmed & BurningGSB FacultyGeneric B Team 44433211 ★ Resident White LeagueFishbeinGreenwoodHendersonBradburyMichelsonHitchcock "B"★ Resident Green LeaguePhi Gamma DeltaHitchcock "A”ShoreyTuftsUpper RickertBreckinridgeVincentSons of Chamb.★ Graduate White LeagueDivinity SchoolAbnormal DeviatesBRMSuperstiffsCorpus MedicusNorval's CriminalsTrimmed and BurningFive Paricles in a BoxBovver BoysAbbott Sisters RevisitedLDS Institute★ Independent LeagueN.U.T.S.The ChampsE.F.U. StewBasketball TeamHi How Ya DoLowlifesAWB Team1 ; •• i Scoreboardw1085422W109866320 Men'sw107665443321W9775441 Abnormal| Deviates 52 Trimmed and Bu rning 41AlbanianRefugees 48 Wall Street Walkers 36' Orangutans 42 Lemmings 24i Fishbein 48 Michelson 31Thompson by forfeit over FiibeySpuds by forfeit over Team 7Manic Defensives 41.. Immoral Minority 36|j Vincent 35 Breckinridge 18Chamberlin 46 Fallers 34|f Bo's Hose 79 Frottage 24I FarneyselH Pyrophosphate 55 Diana Ross 31I Dudley 55 Alpha Delta 30Corpus Medicus by forfeit over Norval'sm BRM 54 Abnormal Deviates 421 Divinity School 50 Five Particles 42Fishbein 33 Henderson 23pfTrimmed and Burning by forfeit over Norval's CriminalsAbnormal Deviates 58 Five Particles 321 Upper Flint 31 Alpha Delta 27Dudley 76 Thompson 18H Fallers by forfeit over PilbeyH Greenwood 53 Bradbury 9: Lower Rickert 47 Compton 291: m★ WomenWMisfitsMystery BasketballBomberettesSnellFull Court PressMed SchoolmmCome Ski with usU.C. SKI CLUBamLoalSPRING BREAK MARCH 20-29Round trip Amtrak & transfers 7 nights condos ( althe amenities) 5 days lifts, "incredible skiing$465 (250 deposit due 2/10)LACROSSE WEEKEND CARNIVALFEBRUARY 20-22Round trip transportation, 2 nights lodging, 2 days lifttickets, dinner SaturdayMembers $88, Non-Members $93($40 deposit due)LEARN TO SKI NIGHT FEBRUARY 13Equipment, lifts, lesson, and transportationMembers $23, Non-Members $27(Group Rotes available)Regular meetings Monday, 7 pm - Ida NoyesFor information coll Robin, 752-7705 STANLEY H. KAPLANFor Over 42 Years The StanoarO ofExcellence in Test PreparationCPA . GMAT . LSAT . GRESAT . MCATFLEX • NATIONAL MEDICAL BOARDS • ECFMGNURSING BOARDS • TOEFL • VOEGRE PSYCH • GRE §tO • DAT . pca: • OCat . vatMAT . SAT ACMVS • NATIONAL D€**tAc BOAROSPOOiA^nv BOARDSFlexible Programs a no HoursVisa Any Ane S#4 F<xyoWhy W« Ua*a ’’A■ test preparationspecialises since maC*"** * MAO' U SEducator Caftan Pjato Rcc131 w 5rnr Si Tronic Canada A Zuto*NEW YORK tOOtO S-ruanatoCHICAGO CENTERN C««013) 7*4-6161S w SuburbanI9 S La G^ano* Road/'SwAa 201LaG<ang« ihnoa 60525(31 2) 362 SB40•north ana suburban474 Ca**»a> a^. joq: Max(312)433 7410 SPRING SUMMERFALL INTENSIVESCOURSES startingThis month*CAT...GRE .SAT...DATN*XT MONTHU wk/MCAT...SATCaraar SaA Studyu ytm dam VK RP Cam I Ad1 Y STATE CALL tOU. FREE 'U Superstiffs by forfeit over Abbott SistersShorey 27 Sons of Chamberlin 21Corpus Medicus 42 Bovver Boys 34Dodd/Mead 37 Psi Upsilon 33Phi Gamma 32 Upper Rickert 24Hitchcock "A" 32 Tufts 24Bovver Boys 57 Superstiffs 49N.U.T.S. 46 E.F.U Stew 40Lowlifes 60 Average White 24Phi Gamma 35 Tufts 29Lower Rickert 48 Dews Brothers 32Hitchcock "A” 39 Upper Rickert 22Chamberlin 56 Thompson 6Upper Flint 33 Fallers 31Shorey 32 Vincent 30DivinitySchool 72 Trimmed and Burning 54Compton 39 Psi Upsilon 26Women'sFull Court Press by forfeit over TuftsMisfits by forfeit over Lower WallaceUpper Wallace 40 Snell 17Bradbury by forfeit over ThumpersBomberettes 22 Dudley 7Med School 22 Alpha Delta Pygmies 16,Upper WallaceAlpha Delta PygmiesDudleyThumpersTuftsBishopLower Wallace “1marian realty,me.Studio and 1 BedroomApartments Available- Students Welcome -On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-5400i"**00* ft' THEUNITEDCAMPUSCHRISTIAN MINISTRYA cooperative campus ministry at the University of Chicagolocated at University Church and The Blue Gargoyle 5655University Ave Chicago, Illinois 60637.“Hidden Lights in Race Relations"byJean Johnson Assistant for Campus Ministry andCoordinator of the Black Campus FellowshipSunday, February 8 10:55 a.m.Lectionary readings are Isaiah 58 7-10 I Corinthians 2 1 55Matthew 5:13-16.Join the Episcopal Church Council this Quarter for:FACULTY/STAFF LUNCH DISCUSSIONon Tuesday, February 10, 11:45-1PM, onKNITTING TOGETHER THE ELECTwith The Rev. Robert Page Taylor, C.S.W.director. Episcopal Services Svstem, Diocese of ChicagoBISHOP BRENT HOUSE5540 South Woodlawn AvenueThe Chicago Maroon — Friday, February 6, 1981 — 17CALENDARFridayCrossroads: English class for foreign women. 10:00am, 5621 S. Blackstone.Grad. Comm, on the Study of Women: “VictorianReviewers vs George Eliot's Middlemarch” speak¬er Janet Heller, noon, Ida Noyes.Dept of Economics: “Limited Dependent VariableModels and Autocorrelation" speaker Paul Ruud,1:00-3:00 pm, SS 402.Geophysical Sciences Colloquium: “Applicationsof the Lu-Hf Isotope Method to Meteorites, theEarth’s Mantle, and Terrestrial Crustal GrowthOver Geologic Time" speaker P.J. Patchett, 1:30pm, HGS.Dept of Microbiology: “Synthesis and Structure ofthe Sindbis Virus Membrane Glycoproteins”speaker Dr. Dyann Wirth, 2:30 pm. Cummings11th floor seminar room.Dept of Economics: “Earmarking Trains: Finan¬cial and Political Control of Australian Railwaysto 1939” speaker Jonathan Pincus, 3:30 pm, SS106.Mineralogy/Petrology Seminar: "Discussion ofDon Anderson’s Proposal; Basalts Come FromMantle Eclogite. Not From Peridotite” speakerProf. Peter Wyllie and Prof. Frank Richter. 3:30pm HGS 101.Doc Films; "Mamie” 7:15 pm. “Frenzy" 9:15 pm,Cobb. Undergrad Philosophy Club: Lecture and discussion given by Ted Cohen “Aesthetics: The Purestof Philosophical Science" 4:00 pm. Classics 21.Kundalini Yoga: Class at 5:00 pm. Ida Noyes.Hillel: Reform-Progressive Services, 5:30 pm,Hillel.Gymnastics Club: Meets 5:30 pm, Bartlett gym.Hillel: Adat Shalom Shabbat dinner. 6:00 pm. Hil¬lel.Meadville/Lombard Spice: Film — “Out of Histo¬ry the making of Judy Chicago's “Dinner Party”7:00 pm. Unitarian Church, 57th and Woodlawn.Donation: $2.00SaturdayAikido: Meets at 10:30 in Bartlett gym.Kinetic Energy Creative Dance and MovementGroup: Meets 11:00 am. Ida Noyes dance room.Crossroads: Buffet dinner. 6:00 pm, no reservationnecessary. 5621 S. Blackstone.Doc Films; “Heart Beat" 7:15 and 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 1:00 pm— Come meet Rob Hatler, Shaliach for AZ\S,Ronit Dulev. Alivah Shaliach. Meron Bergman.AZYD, Yoram Netzder. Kibbutz and Aliyah Pro¬grams, tell you all you ever wanted to know aboutvisiting, studying and working in Israel. Hillel.Quaker House: “Philippines Prisons: Amnesty In¬ternational” Tom Joyce speaker, after Quakermeeting, 11:45 am, 5615 S. Woodlawn.Oriental Institute: Film — “Egypt: Gift of theNile" 2:00 pm, Oriental Institute.Crossroads: Bridge, 3:00 pm. Beginners and ex¬perts welcome. 5621 S. Blackstone.Racquetball Club: Meets 3:30-5:30 pm. Field Housecourts 1-4.MARRS: Official meeting, 7:00 pm. Ida Noyes.Doc Films: “Four Nights of a Dreamer" 7:15 and9:00 pm, Cobb.MondayCrossroads: English classes for foreign women,10:00 am, 5621 S. Blackstone.Kundalini Yoga: Class meets 12 noon, Ida Noyes.Gerjnan Table: Meets 12 noon in the Blue Gargoyleto speak German.Spanish Table: Meets 12:30 pm in the Blue Gar¬goyle to speak Spanish.Christian Science Organization: Meets at 12:50 pmin Gates-Blake 428. Dept of Biochemistry: “Aspects of the Enzymo-logv of Duplex DNA Replication in E. Coli and inYeast” speaker John Scott. 2:30 pm, Cummingsroom 101.Center for Cognitive Science: “Are Apes TooClose for Comfort?” speaker Sue Savage-Rum-baugh and Duane Rumbaugh, 3:30 pm. Haskell315.Dept of Chemistry: “Studies of Dynamical Pro¬cesses in the Condensed Phase with Non-LinearSpectroscopy" speaker Prof Robin Hochstrasser.4:00 pm, Kent 103.Kundalini Yoga: Meets 5:00-7:00 pm, Ida Noyes.Gymnastics Club: Meets 5:30 pm, Bartlett gym.UC Chess Club: Meets 7:00 pm, Ida Noyes.Doc Films: “The General Line” 7:15, “Earth” 8:45pm, Cobb.Organization of Latin American Students: A rep¬resentative in Defense of Human Rights in Colum¬bia will speak and present a slide-show on the situ¬ation in that country. 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes EastLounge. Public invited.TuesdayPerspectives: Topic — “Democracy and the NewLeft: Equal Power for Everyone?” guests JaneMansbridge, Harvey Moloth and Brian Barry. 6:09am, channel 7.For bright, clear color...just the way you like it.m Just place your foil of exposedKodak Sim m a KODAK Matterodd postage and drop inmailbox• Mai you: Kodak slide film directto Kodak in a prepaid processingenvelope• Receive quality colof processingby Kodak• Fashed slides delivered by matUniversity of Chicago BookstorePhoto Department, 2nd Floor970 E. 58th753-3317 COLORPROCESSINGe. Kodak Ten years have passed since fourKent State University studentswere killed and nine wounded atthe hands of the Ohio NationalGuard.There have been other books—some good, some bad. Not onehas told the complete story ofboth the shootings and the mis¬carriage of justice.The Kent State Cover up byNew York trial lawyer JosephKelner. chief trial counsel to the13 victims, and writer JamesMunves, is the only book thatreally tells the complete story—with no punches pulled—of thecampus massacre and the subse¬quent “whitewash" trial. In fact,it’s the only book about the trial. Originally published in hard¬cover at $! 5, this new $6.95 high-quality 306-page documentedpaperback names names andshows photographic evidence.“Will haunt our memories for along time to come. The facts,grippingly reconstructed as in agood detective story, are unfoldedbefore an uncaring Americancourtroom... the reader is caughtup, involved, outraged," saysNew York Supreme Court JusticeEdward J Greenfield.You too, will be outraged atthis flagrant coverup. No TVshow, no other book tells thecomplete chilling story! At yourbookstore, or send check ormoney order today for $6.95 plus$1 postage and handling to:KAHEM BOOKS225 Broadway, New York 10007The NBC- TV special “Kent State" is partially based on this book.Watch for it in early February. Rockefeller MerporialCbapelSunday, February 89:00 a.ra. Ecumenical Service of HolyCommunion10:00a.m. Discussion Class: "Poet/Prophet:Vision and Revision"11:00 a.m.University Religious Service - Bernard0. Brown, Dean of the Chapel,preachin rjThe car needs selling, the kids needsitting, the puppies need a home...;YOU NEEDMaroonClassifiedsReconciling Christ and CareerThe Christian in SocietyFridays at 7:30 p .m. Ida NoyesEast LoungeFebruary 6: “Who is Master, Christ or Corporation?”Mr. Kenneth Block (Chairman of Board, A.T. Kearney)February 13; “The Christian in Medicine’’Dr. Vernon Dennis (Physician, Swedish Covenant Hospital)February 20; Can a Shepherd Ever Best?”Dr. Thomas Havard (Pastor, Cornell Baptist Church)February 27: “Secular Academics vs Christian Faith?”Prof. Sandy Schwartz (English Dept., U. of Chicago)March 6; “Creative Expressions of Belief”Mr. Wayne Stayskal (Editorial Cartoonist, Chicago Tribune)Presented byUofC Christian Fellowship CLASSIFIED ADSCHIP iS BACK1Chip Gore returns this Saturday foranother mime workshop! Chip will bein Ida Noyes Dance room from i 4 pmSaturday Feb 7. Sponsored by EFClown & Co.A CLOCKWORKORANGETomorrow Stanley (2001) Kubricks AClockwork Orange, Starring MalcolmMac Dowell. Saturday, Feb 7th, 2 .00matinee, 7:15, 9 45 in the Law SchoolAuditoriumAGENTGUSFor information on Agent Gus Call 7532240 Ex. 1613-1616 Will help set up.PHILIPPINESHUMAN RIGHTS?Quaker Forum: Thomas Joycediscusses first-hand observations ofPhilippine prisons and justice; andAmnesty Inf Soon after Meeting forWorship OO 30 11 30) Sunday. Feb#.Refreshments. E veryone welcomeQuaker House 5615 S Woodlawn ASSISTANTPROJECTDIRECTORFull-time aslstant project director forNational Opinion Research Center’sLong Term Care Methodology project.Applicant needs strong background inresearch de ,ign, survey design,survey analysis, and writing ofscholarly reports tor policy researchNeed very good writing skills, abilityto meet deadlines, ability to initiateand take responsiblitfy for researchtasks. Minimum M.A degree. 37V» hrwk/with 3 weeks vacation Goodsalary. Call Nancy 753-1122GRATEFULDEAD FILMGrateful Dead Film QuanfretlAuditorium Monday February 9,Shows at 6 00,9 oo and f l :45pm Sponsored by Phi Detta Theta Admission12 50,BEETHOVENEnjoy classic entertainmentORANGE Saturday Feb 7. ORIENTALCARPETSDuring two years of living in the middie east I came to know families whotake pride in handweaving smallnumbers of fine qualify carpets whichI personally select and import Aftervisiting carpet stores in Chicago I canhonestly say that my carpets are finerin quality and design and much lowerin price. If interested please call DavidBradley (PhD student) at 241-7163 or643 8613.REGGAE LOVERSThe University of Chicago Organizetion of Black Students sponsors a partyfeaturing ‘Dallof’ an Ethiopian reggaeband Saturday February 7 1981 52 00Ida Noyes Hall Theatre 9.00pmi 30am Black History Month 19#LGILBERT ANDSULLIVANIOLANTHE at Mandet Hall. 57th andUniversity, Friday, Feb 20 8. 21 at 8pm, Feb, 22 at 2 pm. Tickets at MandetHall Box Office18 - The Chicago Maroon - Friday, February 6, 1981CLASSIFIEDClassified advertising in the ChicagoMaroon is 75 cents per 30 characterline Ads are not accepted over thephone, and they must be paid in ad¬vance. Submit 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 T ues. papersSPACELODGING for male grad student orprofessor. 2 large rooms private bath,kitchen, phone. Desirable location.$ 160/month. PLaza 2-8377.2 ROOMS in congenial house 2 blksfrom Reg. 122/mo+ util Female pref.Call 241-61711 bdrm in 3 bdrm apt A/C, 24 hrsecurity, laundry, on campus busroutes. SI 10/mo. Nonsmoker, prefergrad or prof student, intend to stay ayear. Call Jane, 538 6159Sublet 1 BR APT 3/9-5/10/81 1C andMinibus stops Furnished 47th andLake PK S191/Mo Kevin 538 5719.For Rent Spacious 2 bdrm 2 bath aptover looking lake; perfect condition.In 1st class E. Hyde Park condo.Garage included. 24 hr security. Call667-8128 before 8:30 am.University Park 2 br Condo with park¬ing space included. $540 per monthavailble Immed. Anderson and Wells.493 74001 BR in 3 BR apt. 57th and Dorchester-Little Peirce. $200/mo incl. all 363-2675S3351 br apt light nice bldg E Hyde*ParkMarch 1 643 1400, 324-2141, 753-8020$335$$$ Be safe and warm, (RICHERTOO). Take over my Univ. Housingcontract call 955-2742 anytimeTransferring from city-must rent 1bdroom in Newport. Upper floorbeautiful view. Fully carpeted-A/Cavail immed 584-8269 after 4:30.PEOPLE WANTEDVOLUNTEERS WANTED.Overweight women wanted for hor¬mone study. Required ages 18-35,200-300 lbs For more into, call947-1825OVERSEAS JOBS-Summer/yearround. Europe, S America, Australia,Asia. All fields. S500-S1200 monthly.Sightseeing Free info. Write IJC Box52-1L5 Corona Dei Mar, CA 92625.Research center needs part timetypist. Experience with crt or terminalpreferred $4 25/hr. 20 hrs a week withmore hrs. available Flexibleschedule. Cat! 565-0319, 9-4.Earn extra income. Part time. Easysales 667-4339 after 5 pm for appt.Lab Tech Hospital and University RIAtechnician (prefer ASCP). Contact Dr.Maroulis at 947-5364.Full-time administrative secretaryposition available immediately atLutheran School of Theology: clericaland admin, responsibilities. Salary:$10,000 $11,500 . 667-3500, ext 214 8:304:30 pm.The Chicago Counseling andPsychotherapy Center, 5711 SouthWoodlawn and 6354 North Broadway,needs people who are willing to talkabout their personal problems andfeelings tor 10 sessions with apsychotherapist-in-training. Participation should not be seen aspsychotherapy or as a substitute forpsychotherapy, although participantsmay find it a useful experience. Par¬ticipants will neither be paid norcharged for their sessions. Call Pat at684 1800FREE DENTAL TREATMENT ANDFREE ROUND TRIP TO L A Looking for patients with cavities for theCalifornia Dental Board Exam onApril 24 or 25. Contact Dr. Cho at 7-6276or 7 6753Part-time office assistants needec forsmall management consulting firm.Help process employee opinionsurveys and do general office work.Must be good typist. Hours flexible butduring normal business day. Ternporary and occasional okay. Good opportunity for Industrial Relations andB School students. Some chance forfield assignments for mature andresponsible people Locateddowntown, 1 block from Van Buren 1Cand Jeffrey Ex Stop. $5.25 hr. CallEllen Bernstein. 663-5278.Students(s) needed to code questionnaires. Minimum of 20 hrs wk, total ofapprox 150 hrs Prefer 1 student whocan work full time 41/hrs. AmericanPublic Works Association, on campus,947 2545 CLASSIFIED ADSPart-time secretary 15 hours/weekGood typing (50-60wpm) and organizational skills. Call Dr. Gendlin's office.At 753-2085.SERVICESTYPIST-Disseration quality. Helpwith grammar, language as neededFee depending on manuscript. IBMSelectric. Judith 955-4417.ARTWORK Posters, illustration, lettering, 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-l'/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. 324-2007.COMPUTERIZED WORD PROCESSING/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 0860The Environmental and OccupationalHealth Sciences Program at theSchool of Public Health University ofIllinois at the Medical Center,Chicago, Offers graduate and profes¬sional degree programs leading to theMaster of Public Health, Master ofScience, Doctor of Public Health, Doc¬tor of Philosophy Financial Support isavailable to train qualified studentsfor careers in environmental scienceand management; industrial hygiene,health effects and toxicology, andenvironmental occupational aspectsof medicine, safety, psychology, riskassessment and policy analysis. Forfurther information contact: TrishaMurphy, School of Public Health,Uhiversity of Illinois, Box 6998,Chicago, II 60680 The Unviersity of Il¬linois at the Medical Center is an Af¬firmative Action/Equal OpportunityEmployer.Professional Typing of resumes,thesis, reports, forms-reasonablerates call Midwest Secretarial Service235-5417.Carpenter 5 yrs exp. will exchangework for rent of room in U of C area338 5615IVORY TOWER HOME SERVICEhire a student to paint, plaster, cleanyour apt, shop, put up shelvestranslate Latvian and much more!493-9108PERSONALSWRITER'S WORKSHOP (PLaza2 8377)Hey, Charlie, I called the Hot line lastnight It was great! - Anonymous.Don't forget to mime with Chip Saturday from 1-5 in INH Dance rmE F ClownQUESTION: Who is the more dashing,Lord Byron, Shelley, or J. Chandler?ANSWER: We can't tell by the pictures but the last is most certainly thesweetest. L.F.RDear SG—Remember the old adageWendt today—gone tomorrow See youthis spring. Sex Anarchy PartyChip is back!!! Saturday 1 4pm INHDance Room. EFCOh, Doc, you are giving me such pain.What will you when I say yes? LoomisHillo Is there anybody in here’Whenthe Personals are ail ads—I knowwe're in trouble! Qwerty s excused -but how about the rest of you us?Barefoot DreamerWhen there's no room left in hell thedead shall work the earth —AgentSatan got his assignment on Wednes¬day. AssassinAre you an artist or a photographer?Would you like to display your artworkin EX LIBRlS (Regenstein 'A leveU?Call Sufia Khan 753 2249 or 753 3273Who knows agent Bambi? JD at B-JTell us. Reality need not interfere. seXanarchY partY Mailbox in IHNWomen's breakfast club, 8 00 am(groan) Hutch. You know who you areBe there. I may regret this, but to all you valentines out there, valentine personals 3lines or less are free!! Deadline is Feb10 at noon. Ads must be mailed orbrought to the office, none will betaken over the phone unless you bribeme. All other personals 5 lines or lessare free. How about some action?LAWDAB-1 still care, love. If ever you feellike trying to adjust to my levelPLEASE call CEKLaura Er, Hello you little toots! Itseems that the Cat Woman is comingout of hiding againTo the (I think) B-School student withdark hair who was studying in HarperFriday afr: you're cute!! SASHAAgent Oswald: The Beatles said "Letit be," but I won't cause I'm the oneafter 109DISCREET 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 asit is interesting.PASSPORT PHOTOSPASSPORT PHOTOS WHILE-UWAIT Model Camera, 1342 E. 55th St.493-6700.LOST AND FOUNDLeather checkbook lost. 955-8375.Bracelet found at Hanna Gray's party.Call 3-2270 or 3-0430 and describeFOUND: Brown angora-lambswoolgloves after winter camp at GreenLake. To claim call 3-2826 or come toHarper 269Gray Pekingese-poodle found at 54thand Greenwood call 947-8183.ATTENTIONFACULTYMEMBERSDid your child have trouble learning toread? We are doing a study on readingin children age 9 to 14. Each child at¬tends 8 individual sessions and is paid$3.00 per session. For informationplease cal! 753 4735 M-FLOCAL BANDSUnsigned bands are invited to senddemo tapes (three songs) to WHPK,c/o Dr. Rock, 5706 S. University,Chicago 60637. Listen Friday, 3 pm,88.3 fm. Best tapes sent to record com¬pany. Cassette only, and lyric sheetFOR SALETAPESTRY LOOM and warpingboard, $45.00; electric broom, $15 00;student model flute, S100.00; call 363-7135, evenings.U of C memorabilia plates, cards andetc. C.B. Goodman 5454 S. Shore 60615.SPACE WANTEDProf on sabbatical leave seeks fur¬nished apt to let Spring Quarter, nearUC campus Piano desirable call 412-36i 7079.Furnished Hyde Park sublet apart¬ment WANTED mid Feb thru Junesuited for family of four responsibletenants pise phone 643-8465 eves.WANTED to sublet one bdrm or studiostart Feb March end Aug-Sept phoneMichael 268 1877.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 643-6246PROJECTASSISTANTWe need a reliable and efficent assistant to perform a variety of clericaltasks with the data collection portionof survey. You must be able to followinstructions carefully, maintaindetailed records, and lift 50 lb boxeson a regular basis Previous office experience required/shipping andreceiving helpful Some college preferred. 37Vt hr wks/8,775 00 + benefitsCali Nancy 753-1122 Affirmative Ac¬tion/Equal Opportunity Emplover COMING OUTIsn't easy, but it's worth it. If you'regay and want out of the closet, we canhelp you make the transition. We'reStudents just like yourself, and ourhelp is understanding and confiden¬tial. the U. of C. Gay Alliance drop bySunday through Thurs. 7:30 10pm orcall us at 753 3274 Ida Noyes 3rd floor.ARE YOU LONELY?Are you without friends? Do you feelunloved and lonely? Then wear agargoyle-it'll be your friend foreverBuy a Ho-ho today at Cobb. Cost- $5 00Sizes: S,M,L,XL.BEETHOVENCONCERTAll tickets for the Feb. 14 allBeethoven concert by the UniversitySymphony Orchestra and the Unversi-ty Chorus have been distributed, butyou can hear the orchestra and choruson the following dates: Thursday, Feb -12; Open Dress Rehearsal for all-Beethoven concert (7:30-10:00 pm,Mandel Hall); Saturday, March 7;University Symphony OrchestraWinter Concert, with music ofSchumann, Britten, and Nielsen(8:30pm, Mandel Hall); Friday, May1; University Chorus, "A MusicalBestiary” (8:00pm, RockefellerChapel); Saturday, May 30; Universi¬ty Symphony Orchestra Spring Con¬cert, with music of Schubert, Brahmsand Stravinsky (8:30pm, MandelHall).I.F.C. PARTYNow that midterms are over come tothe interfraternity party tonight atPS1-U. There will bean interfraternitybeer chug at 9 pm and free beer foreveryone! All UC students welcome!Dancing also!UOFC GIGOLOSERVICEWomen Tired of the lonely bed scene?We at Blackstone Hall will rise to meetyour every need. We help withhomework too. 753-3773 or 753-3774Call me!SOCANDEDMAJORSTeach a challenged pupil-volunteer atthe Southeast School for RetardedChildren in Hyde Park. Contact theStudent Volunteer Bureau at 955-4108.3rd floor of the Blue Gargoyle.MELLOWOUTMidterm blues? Relax at Post Libris,the S.G Coffeehouse, tonite 9 30 i 30Frog and Peach, INH. Free coffee hotcider and more delectable goodies.HELP!Energetic, efficient student needed tohelp clean my Hyde Park home About6 hours a month Good pay to hardworker. Call 493 1011 evenings.SANKABRANDit's not; but free it is. Coffee at PostLibris, tonight, 9:30-1 30 Frog andPeach, IHNMOVINGI have a truck and can move thingsFAST and CHEAP No job too smallCall Peter at 955 1824BABYSITTINGWill do babysitting on Sat. or Sun atyour home or mine. 752-4574.STUDENT MENTALHEALTHTwo Maroon reporter seek studentswith stories, positive or negative,about their experiences at StudentMental Health No names will be usedand confidentiality is insured, butplease get in touch or leave message a*Maroon (753 3263) as soon as possibletor Sherrie or Richard.Al ANDTHEPHILIPPINESQuaker torum: Thomas Joycediscusses first hand observations ofPhilippine prisons and justice, andAmnesty Int. Soon after Meeting forWorship (10:30 11 30) Sunday, Feb 8Refreshments Everyone welcomeQuaker house 5615 S. Woodlawn.ASINGULARGROUPWe are a co op of artists and crattspeopie sharing selling space at 57th andWoodlawn We are open Wed Sat 11-2stop in New artists are invited to join SUN & SAILINGSpring break in the Virgin Islands?Students to share cost of charteringsailboat in superb cruising watersBoat 200 at air 400 rt Space limitedcall Hank soon 684-6054 or 3-3257JOSHUAMURPHYCall Jill at 241 6921 re:bike.OPEN HOUSEA Singular Group arts co-op is havingan open house in honor of Valentine'sDay. Wonderful gifts for your favoritesweetie. Stop in Sat. Feb 7, 11 4 57thand Woodlawn in the UnitarianChruch. Refreshments.ORANGEStanley Kubrick'sA CLOCKWOR K ORANGESaturday, February 72:00, 7:15and9:45Law School Auditorium.GRATEFUL DEADTO HYDE PARKSee the Grateful Dead Film 3 BIGSHOWS!! 6 00, 9 00 and 11:45 pm,Monday Feb. 9th in Quantrell AudMAGAZINESClean out your house and bring cur¬rent issues to Billings Hospital, 950E59, main entrance. Info desk.Especially popular: women's magsNewsweek and Time, Essence, Ebony,Sports IllustratedBANDS ANDMUSICIANSBRAND NEW MIXER 6 channel. 4track TEAC model 2A mixer Inoriginal box with the original warran¬ty. $330 Call Aarne at 643 1394 or 753-8342 (4817) and leave a messageKOTTKE/BROMBERGTix on sale today show Sat 2/7 go!CHILDCAREAre you a working parent interested inbest possible care for your child? I amcreative, loving young woman w/pro*exper in caring for children of aliages Lg Hyde Pk apt. will providemeals, creative activities for yourchild Days. Very reasonable fee CallAnne 241-7017 or 241 5410 anytimeLeave message Excel refs. 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.SCENESGilbert and Sullivan's IOLANTHE,presented in Mandel Hall, 57th andUniversity, Feb 20 and 21 at 8 pm,Feb. 22 at 2 pm. Tickets at Mandel HallBox Office.REGGAE LOVERSThe University of Chicago Organiza¬tion of Black Students sponsors a partyfeaturing 'Dalloi' an Ethiopian-reggaeband Saturday February 7 1981 $2.00Ida Noyes Hall Theater 9:00pm-1 30am Black History month 1981.There will be an organizationalmeeting for all undergraduate womensoftball players on February 11, 1981at 6.30 pm. The meeting will be held atthe Henry Crown Field House in thewomen's varisity locker room. Formore information call Coach Kirby at753-3574WOMEN'S RAPGROUPA Women's Rap Group meets everyTuesday at 7:30 pm at 5655 S. Unviersi¬ty Ave. For info 752-5655LITERARYMAGAZINEPrimavera, a women's literarymagazine, needs more women to jointhe staff Call 752 5655 or 548-6240 Onsale in most bookstoresRECYCLEMAGAZINESWe need current issues at BillingsHospital, 95 E59, main entrance. Infodesk All welcome but especially:Women's, sports, black and newsmagazinesFICTION WORKSHOPShoun Dawiels (Molly Ramanusan!offering telling-writing workshopsJournals/novel s/short-stories/autobiographical fiction, (copies of TheSalt Doll available at Staverbookstore). Call 6674)673UC HOTLINEFelling pent up, frantic, don't knowwha* to do? Call Hotline, open sevendays a week, 7 00pm to 7:00am-. • * l ■ -1 - ' -ijOur lowest price ever!\ .' * ■ tt r ' *model camera1342 E. 55th 493-6700Minolta XG-IAUTOMATIC PERFORMANCE.AUTOMATIC SAVINGS.It's the most economi¬cal 35mm automaticMinolta SLR. Easyenough for beginners /fbut packed withsophisticatedfeatures. s1999545rmn 2.0 lens ^4: |The Chicago Maroon — Friday, February 6, 1981 — 19Tuesday February 10,1981Polling Places:Cobb 10:00-2:00Reynolds Club 1 IKK) - 2:00. 5:00 - 7:001-House 5:00 - 7:00Pick Hall 10:00-2:30