Dexter GordonP-1 gcjArchitect’smodel ofnew Universityhospital. Copyright 1981 The Chicago Maroon Friday February ?G 1981Rubloff Gives $5 Millionfor Hospital, Medical SchoolBy Sherrie NegreaThe University has received a gift of $5million from Chicago real estate developerArthur Rubloff for use in the construction ofit’s new hospital and for medical academicprograms.The pledge will be applied towards theUniversity’s campaign to raise $35 millionin the next three years as part of theMedical Center’s Modernization Program,which will provide $70.2 million for the newhospital and $20 million for academic im¬provements in the Pritzker School ofMedicine and the Boiological sciences divi¬sion.Construction of the new 469-bed hospitialbegan last October and is expected to becompleted in three years. The new hospitalwill be a six-story building linked to BillingsHospital by a new 48-bed intensive caretower. The vacated space in Billings andChicago Lying-in Hospitals will be used bythe Medical School for teaching and ad¬ministrative purposes.Rubloff has been associated with theUniversity for several years and currentlyserves as a member of the University’sCitizen Board and as a Trustee of the Cancer Research Foundation. Rubloff is also chair¬man of the Board of Rubloff DevelopmentCorp., a corporation which he founded in1930.A donor to several institutions in theChicago area. Rubloff said the University’sMedical Center modernization project is “afar-sighted move further to enhance themedical facitlities and programs whichyearly benefit hundreds of thousands of per¬sons from Chicago and elsewhere.”When he announced his pledge. Rubloffsaid. “An ambitious undertaking of suchsignificance to medical science, to theUniversity of Chicago and to the city comesalong perhaps once in a lifetime, and 1 wish¬ed to become involved through my personalsupport for the projectRobert Uretz, Dean of the Division ofBiological Sciences Division and of thePritzer School of Medicine, said, “the needfor private support for our facilities and pro¬grams in medical, research, and health careisexpecially important today. Mr Rubloff spledge insures that our plans for theMedical Center will be successfully com¬pleted without any compromise in the quali¬ty of our efforts.”THECHICAGOMARVolume 90, The University of ChicagoStudents Skeptical on Tuition HikeBy Robin Kirk, Jay McKenzie andAndrew BlackAlthough College students are not pleasedby the size of the 17-percent tuition increaseannounced this week, the announcement hasleft most of them resigned to the inevitable— and pondering their financial futures.The Maroon spoke with a number ofstudents at random after the new tuitionfigures were released Tuesday. Few seem¬ed furious with the University for the in¬crease, but several questioned the logicbehind it.“I’ll accept it because that’s the way Iam,” said second year College studentSusan Rosenberg, “but it does soundridiculous to me.” Rosenberg noted theUniversity’s comparison of its tuition rateswith those at several Ivy League Univer¬sities, and said “It sort of bothers me thatthey’re only comparing themselves with theIvy League schools. If they want to knowwho they’re competing with, it’s not justHarvard; it’s small liberal arts colleges andthe U. of I. and U. of M. Some of the ra¬tionale they’re using bothers me.”Another undergraduate, who asked to re¬main anonymous, questioned the value hereceived for his money. “After all, I’m pay¬ing this kind of tuition to get into a hugechemistry class where my T.A. can’t evenspeak the language. That’s an absurdity.With the kind of reputation this school has,it’s unreal.”Third-year student Mark Kite wonderedabout the logic of the simultaneous hike intuition and financial aid. “It sounds likethey’re just taking money in and passing itout again with no real change. I’m against itof course There has been no increase in services, as far as I can tell.” The size of the announced increase inUniversity expenditures on financial aidfailed to allay student concerns about theimpact of the increase on their personalfinances, particularly given PresidentReagan’s plans to cut federal student aid.Some speculated that middle-class studentswill be most vulnerable to the tuition in¬creases because they may be unable tosecure additional aid or loans, and in¬capable of raising the extra dollars at homeor by working.“I think it’s too big a raise. It’s especiallybad because of Reagan’s cutbacks. ThereBy Mike AxinnWherein Les Firestein, a Politics,Economics. Rhetoric, and Law major fromthe class of 1983, with no previous boxing ex¬perience and hardly any training, fights inthe Chicago Golden Gloves tournament.Prologue - the weigh-in, as told by Fires¬tein:“There were all these guys standingaround in the corner practicing moves, jab¬bing the wall, each other, and generallytalking about who they were going to beatup, or maybe just the act of beating up.“There were two divisions, open andnovice. I figured I’d enter in novice becauseI had no experience at all. What did I have tolose against some guy who’d never won atournament before? But when they calledout ‘novice,’ all these guys who’d been stan¬ding in the corner hustled up into line aheadof me.“Now these guys were big and I could pic- are a number of people, myself included,who might have to leave because of the in¬crease,” said second-year student DianeSchirf. “I don’t know if I’ll be able to stay inthe dorms next year.” another said.But not everyone was upset by the in¬crease. “It doesn’t shock me; it’s only goingto go up,” said Mary Struthers, a third yearCollege student. “I took time off, and I guessI’m glad I came back quickly....I have abrother at Stanford, and I saw in the Maroonwhat he’s paying. (In comparison to that.)$6000 isn’t that bad. I do think we re gettinga fine education.”ture what they'd look like in the ring, theirbodies glistening with sweat and theirmuscles bulging like muscles growing ontop of other muscles. I’d never have achance.“I heard the guys come up to weigh in‘Name;’ ‘Grover Jones ’“’How old are you?’ 16.’“’Club;’ ‘The Ibh Jan A1 Sati TempleHead Crushers.’“’Name; ’ “Thaddeus T. Jefferson '“’Age:’‘17.’“’Club:’ ‘Windy City Gym.’“They finally got to me.“’Name;’ ‘LesFirestein.’“’What?’ ‘Les Fire—Stein.’“’How do you spell that?’ ‘F-i-r-e-s-t-i-e-n.’“Age:’‘19.’“Club:’ ‘Uhh well Sir, 1 don’t exactlyhave a club, but I go to the University ofChicago ’“’YOU’VE GOTO BE KIDDING ’ The Kosher Killer, Les Firestein. gets tapedup before his victory Tuesday night.“Now this guy looked like he'd beenfighting for 50 years, and he had a face toprove it.“’Ever fight before0’ ‘Well, not exactly.Actually, I’m kinda doing it on a whim. Doyou think I should go through with it?’“’Sure kid I did the same thing when Iwas your age. It's a real experience.’“This was very encouraging, consideringthat this guy had a nose which was completely mashed into the side of his face. 1pictured a classic fight scene where a goodlooking young fighter comes out and gets hisface mutilated by an angry veteran ‘Heain’t pretty no more.’ they’d say.”If you think you’ve tried everything toescape the boredom, depression, andContinued on page 10The Kosher Killer lakes to the ringPERL to the Golden Gloves DavidBrooksNEWS BRIEFSBillings Drug RobberyThe Maroon has learned that in an armedrobbery that occurred three weeks ago atthe Billings Hospital pharmacy, two menescaped with a large quanity of drugs withan estimated street value of more that$15,000.At about 3:15 p.m. Saturday, January 31,two armed men gained entry into thehospital pharmacy shortly after it closed.According to statements from the five staffmembers in the pharmacy during the inci¬dent, the two men demanded to know wherethe narcotics were.One of the men then placed a gun to anemployee’s head and demanded cocaine andother drugs. The victim responded that thedrugs were in the Pharmacy vault.The five pharmacy workers were then in¬structed to lie face down on the floor whilethe two men emptied the vault. According tothe police, all controlled substances in thevault were taken, including codeine,demerol, and amphetamines.The men fled the pharmacy with the drugsand one victim’s purse, which contained $50and some credit cards.The replacement cost of the drugs to thehospital is about $1000, according to Univer¬sity officials. However, according to theChicago Police Department’s narcoticsunit, the drugs are worth at least 15 timesthat value when sold on the street.The victims described the robbers asblack men, one of whom was between 5’8”and 5’10” tall and 25 to 30 years old, whilethe other was 5’3” to 5’5” and 19 to 23 yearsold.Police do not yet have any suspects.— Darrell WuDunn James TurnerMalcom X ProgramThe Organization of Black Students (OBS)will sponsor a program tomorrow nightcommemorating the life of El-Hajj Malik(Malcolm X) Shabazz. The program, tobegin at 7:30 pm in the Cloister Club in IdaNoyes Hall, will include a film called “TheLife and Times of Malcolm X,” produced byformer ABC newsman Gil Noble, and a lec¬ture by James Turner, director of theAfricana Studies and Research Center atCornell University.Turner, a former Northwestern Universi¬ty graduate student and a long-time Chicagocommunity activist, is a founding memberof the African Heritage Studies Associationand is on the board of directors of Trans-africa, the black American lobby for Africaand the Carribean. He has also writtennumerous articles on various aspects ofAfro-American life. Goddess of Prep HereIt’s not easy to be preppy at the Universityof Chicago, according to The Official Prep¬py Handbook, which lists the University asone of the nation’s ten least preppy schools.But aspiring preppies, as well as the few ge¬nuine articles here, will have a chance tolearn about their creed when Lisa Birnbach,editor of The Official Preppy Handbook,speaks today at 12:30 in Classroom II at theLaw School. Her appearance is sponsoredby The Phoenix, the Law School studentnewspaper.In the three months since its publication,the handbook has sold 750,000 copies, and isnow the best-selling paperback book in thecountry.Birnbach was a columnist for the VillageVoice for a brief period before she was ask¬ed by the Workman Publishing Company toedit a book on preppies. She graduated in1978 from Brown University.College BowlersRomp on wayTo NationalsBy Robert DeckerIf your mind is “a magnet for trivial,useless, obscure pieces of information, thenyou’re perfectly suited for College Bowl,”says Tammy Ravitts, one of six members ofthe University team which won a smashingvictory in the College Bowl Regional finalsheld last Saturday at Illinois Institute ofTechnology (IIT).Competing against 10 midwest schools,the Chicago team came away undefeated in five double-elimination matches withUniversity of Wisconsin - Eau Claire (se¬cond place), University of Wisconsin -Whitewater, Rush University, and host IIT(fifth place). University of Wisconsin -Milwaukee and Northwestern Universitycaptured third and fourth place respective¬ly1 The Chicago team qualified before theregional match for next month’s nationalfinals, as a result of its victory at the FloridaInvitational competition held January inTallahassee. The finals are scheduled totake place March 16-23 in Charlotte, N.C.According to team captain Lorin Burte,the team members prepare for matches byquizzing each other and by consultingvarious trivia books. The team members, hesaid, have solid general backgrounds andareas of specialty: Burte’s is sports,Ravitts’ is astronomy, Mitch Gilaty’s ismovies, David Rubin’s is the Civil War, JimGillespie’s is organic chemistry, andMichael Alper’s is literature and art. Theteam members are all fourth-year studentsin the College, except for Burte and Gilaty,who are both second-year students in theGraduate School of Business.The questions range widely in difficulty,said Ravitts. “You never know if they’ll beridiculously hard or pathetically easy.” Byway of example, the team was called uponSaturday to identify three Dadaist artists,on the basis of clues given about the artists’New York milieus (Duchamps, Picabia, andTzara were the correct answers given joint¬ly by Burte and Ravitts).In a less taxing question, the team wascalled upon to identify their own school:“the American university which in 1943 tookover the editorial responsibility for the En-Continued on page 3STUDENTGOVERNMENTMEETING TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 24]7=30 P.M.IDd NOYES SUN P4RLOR dTTCMDdrice rgquirgdmodel camera1342 E. 55th 493-6700 COUKTCiUDIO presentsWORMS cJrectecTljy (StkerinePHOTOANALYSISAmato von Hemertlighting by Marty Heitz MorseFeb. 20-21 830pmFeb 22 730pmReynolds Club Theatre 753-35815/th & University $3/$2sfudents&srs For bright, clear color...just the way you like it.■ Just place your roll of exposedKodak film in a KODAK Maileradd postage and drop inmailbox■ Mail yout Kodak slide film d«ectto Kodak in a prepaid processingenvelope■ Receive quality color processingby Kodak■ finished slides delivered by mailUniversity of Chicago BookstorePhoto Department, 2nd Floor970 E. 58th753-3317 COLORPROCESSING.. Kodak2-The Chicago Maroon, Friday, February 20,1981r,y*krGray Talks on Expansion, NeighborhoodBy David GlocknerIn an interview last week. UniversityPresident Hanna Gray defended plans to in¬crease the size of the College, reaffirmedthe University’s commitment to participa¬tion in the community, and briefly discussedthe union negotiations facing the Universitythis spring.“It continues to be our plan, subjectalways to what we might learn to bring us toa reconsideration of it, to have a College ofthe maximum size of 3000 and to bring theCollege to that size over this next period oftime," Gray said. The current enrollment inthe College is approximately 2740 students,up 40 from last year.The College should be able to achieve thisexpansion without increasing the size of theentering classes. Gray said. The expansionplan “doesn’t call for increasing the size ofthe entering class every year. It calls ratherfor arriving at a more or less stable admis¬sion size of 850 students and then havingroughly the same number that we have nowfor four years.”In expanding the College, however. Graysaid. “The condition we have to review overand over again is that we're simply not look¬ing for numbers at the expense of quality ofthe person (applying). If we were to findthat we’re not getting the kind of applicantseither in number or in quality that we hadhoped to be. then we shouldn’t be admittingstudents just to have bodies.”Gray said that the decision to expand theCollege was made both to improve the quali¬ty of life in the College, particularly by im¬ Hanna Grayproving the climate for extracurricular ac¬tivities. and to preserve the size of theUniversity at a time when the graduatepopulation is shrinking.Given this decline, “we could say. well,we're going to be a much smaller universi¬ty. and in being a smaller university we’llreshape ourselves. We ll have fewer pro¬grams, we’ll have fewer faculty, and soforth. I think that’d be too bad.”Speaking about the University’s role inthe Hyde Park neighborhood. Gray said thatthe University “is very much involved in the neighborhood and wished to be. but that itshould be involved as a neighbor, a col¬laborator and a partner. The University isscarcely in a position...to dictate anything.”The University’s present role in the com¬munity may not seem as highly dramatic asduring the era of urban renewal she said,but focused on “the things that sustain theneighborhood” such as crime control andhousing.She pointed to the University’s sale of theWindermere Hotel last year as an exampleof its efforts to maintain the availability ofrental housing in Hyde Park. However, “interms of property owned by people otherthan ourselves, we scarcely have the kind ofposition to direct what people are going to dowith their own property.” The University’sefforts with such property are largelylimited to attempts at persuasion. Graysaid.Gray was reluctant to discuss the series ofunion contract negotiations expected thisspring. She said that the University’s pre¬sent financial position would permit it “ob¬viously no more flexibility than we’ve had inthe past in dealing with union demands.She added that the situation facingUniversity administrators this spring is “avery different situation” than the one whichfaced her at Yale in 1977, when that school'sblue collar union staged a long strike TheUniversity of Chicago “has had a long tradi¬tion of dealing with a variety of unions,”while at Yale “the strength of the unionmovement came much later.” "The natureof the union is also different here.” Graysaid. —College BowlContinued from page 2cyclopedia Britannica.”The team’s only weakness, according toAlper, an English concentrator, is religionFor every other area covered in the ques¬tions, however. Alper said two members ofthe team are well-versed.One regret expressed by Burte was thatChicago was unable to compete at IIT withits rival from last year, Northwestern,because that school’s team was eliminatedearly in the competition.Ravitts remarked that although Nor¬thwestern had “64 intramural teamsentered” in the competition on the Evanstoncampus, their performance at IIT was“pathetic.”Although the team members themselvesreceive no monetary award if they win thenational championship, the winning team’sschool will receive a cash award which willbe distributed in scholarships through itsfinancial aid office.New andRebuiltTypewriters,Calculators,Dictators,AddersU of ChicagoBookstore5750 S. Ellis Ave.753-3303 REPAIRSPECIALISTSon IBM, SCM,Olympia, etc.FREE repairestimates; repairsby factory-trainedtechnician.RENTALSavailable withU. of C. I D.^83^ i-m-Mastercharge and Visa AcceptedGilbert & Sullivan sI0LANTHE3performances only!!This weekend only, in Mandel Hall, the Gilbert 4 Sullivan OperaCo will perform I0LANTHE with the accompaniment of a largeorchestra and chorus.Reserved section: Friday 4 Saturdayevening-$6General Admission: Friday 4 Saturdayevenmg-$5Sunday Matinee-S3 50Evening performances begin at • p » Sunday matinee begin* at 7 p m Deer* wd open•A beer early and ticket* are avertable at the Reynold* Club be* Othca NEW MUSIC ENSEMBLE.Drattvl*Kolb• Stra\. insk v*and othersSunday, February 22 8:00 P.M.Goodspeed Hall-Free DR. M.R. MASLOVbAuscH OPTOMETRIST| B [AddOSOFLENS Eioimnotions(potymocoro • Contact Lenses (Soft & Hard)Comocuenous . , .*Ask obovt our annual service ofreement■Fashion Eye WearHYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER15101. 55th363-6700 !The Chicago Maroon, Friday. February 20.1981-3wr All V Walnut LegDESKSAll Wood $75.00Matching ChairsfAII wood, armlets, swivel)Good Selection of New and UsedDesks, Chairs, File Cabinets, Etc.BRAND EQUIPMENT8560 S. CHICAGO RE 4-2111Open Daily 8:30-5, Sat. 9:00-3 HELP! HELP! HELP!We're overstocked with choice used anddemo stereo components so we've markedeverything down to sell this weekend, Feb.79, 20, and 21. Come on in and pick up onsome incredible bargains like these one ofa kind specials:MARANTZ 2240 M85MPHILIPS GA 312 75MPIONEER CTF 7171 14940KENWOOD ICX 1030 220"GARRARD DV 75 109°°KENWOOD KR 7400 189°°Complete stereo systems from $75 to $750. Saleprices end Sat., Feb. 21 at 5:30 p.m.plus much, much moreHEAR AGAIN STEREO7002 North California338-7737Open Mon.-Sat. at 11 AMCHINESE-AMERICAi'4RESTAURANTSpecializing mCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOpen Daily11 AM to 8 30 PMClosed Monday1318 EAST 63rdMU 4-1062G.W. OPTICIANS1519 E. 55thTel. 947-9335Eyes examined and ContactLenses fitted by registeredOptometrists.Specialists in QualityEyewear at ReasonablePriceslob on premises lor lost service framesreplaced lenses duplicated anaprescriptions filledBigJim’sPipe &Tobacco Shop1552 E. 53rd St.{Under the I.C. tracks)9 a.m.-7 p.m. weekdays12-4 p.m. Sundays We Buy and SellUsed Records TEST PREPARATION FORLsi School Aomissioo Test6mniti Mahmemeht Aim TestGuouite Record EiimhutiohMedical Couhe Rim. Test JHWl «A*f ?W OHfHlfWCL NV641-2185 prep1701 E. 55th St.684-3375 GRAFF & CHECKReal Estate1617 E. 55th St.1V2-2V2-4 RoomApartmentsBased onAvailabilityBU8-5566Available toall comers HYDE PARKThe Versailles324-0200Large StudiosWalk-in KitchenUtilities Incl.Furn.-Unfurn.•Campus Bus at DoorBased on Availability5254 S. DorchesterSPECIAL DISCOUNT PRICESfor all STUDENTS, STAFF,and FACULTY MFMBERSJust present your University ofChicago Identification Card. 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.MonoM imts bmnoMKrrp I hat Cl rat C W FrrUagft ah CIS UMt CM Fan,SPECIAL DISCOUNT PRICESfor all STUDENTS, STAFF,and FACULTY MEMBERSrfXM72nd & St(Open fvenSunday'O' AQA Just Present your University ofChicago Identification Card. Asstudents, Faculty Members orAdministrative Staff you are en¬titled to special money-savingDISCOUNTS on Chevrolet Ports.Accessories and any new or usedChevrolet you buy from Ruby^Chevrolet. Parts OpenSat.'til noon72nd & Stony IslandOpen Evenings andSunday684-0400 2 Miles-5 MinutesAway FromThe UNIVERSITY Eye ExaminationsFashion Eye WearContact LensesDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist(53 Kimbark Plaza)1200 E. 53rd St.493-8372Intelligent people know the differencebetween advertised cheap glasses orcontact lenses and competent pro¬fessional service.Our reputation is your guarantee ofsatisfaction.^/uix/alfe tyiAdpfaunySftea/ Sx/cz/e493-0666FEATURES OF THE WEEKCO-OP55th & So. Shore DriveMagnificent space, magnificent western skies &Museum views from prominent "PromontoryYes!Over 1,000 sq. ft., two bedroom. two bath, $49,500. Toptleck enclosed solatium plus many special features.Across from park. 11 :> yrs. old.\ote: March 1. 2:00 p.m.-4:00 p.m., Sunday OpenHouse. 54th # Kenwood. You may sneak preview" byappointment. 7 room corner tou nhouse. $149,500.CONDO' rm- d bath, 2400 sq. ft. overlooking Museum ofScience & Industry. One of Hyde Park 's most elegantbuildings. $12H,()(X).Would you like to know about other property f ( all usany time. We have a complete inventory of attractivelistings.Ken Wester (eve) 947-0557, SalesMarie Wester (eve.) 947-0577Cleveland McCowan (eve.)799-1419. Sales .Charlotte Vikstrom 493-0666, Broker4-The Chicago Maroon, Friday, February 20,1981+J. f r*Dexter GordonAND THE STATE OF THE ARTby Jim GuentherSwaggering up to the microphone, thelegend introduced the next number in hisstately grumble.“Lady Day used to say, ‘Living for you iseasy living/lt’s easy to live when you’re inlove/And I’m so in love, there’s nothing inbut you.”With that, he lifted his horn to his lips andled his quartet through “Easy Living,” a bit¬tersweet ballad for the Valentine’s Day au¬dience packed into the opulent CyrstalBallroom of downtown Chicago’sBlackstone Hotel. After his solo the sax¬ophone giant held his instrument parallel tothe floor, as if in the a ritualistic offering,and turned it upside down, draining out thespit.Though pianist Kirk Lightsey was soloingand bassist David Eubanks and drummerEddie Gladden were comping, Dexter Gor¬don remained the center of attention. As hemock-conducted his sidemen, his handsdanced clownishly. Satisfied with their per¬formance, he stepped off the bandstand tosmoke a cigarette and rap with his fans.When you're an institution, you do as youplease.Confirming his stature in the jazz com¬munity, the readers of Down Beat haverecently elected him to that magazine’s Hall of Fame, an honor rarely bestowed upon aliving musician. In addition, he has beennamed Jazz Musician of the Year for thepast two years and No.1 Tenor Saxophonistfor the past several years.Long, tall Dexter has been at the forefrontof the scene since the Bop Revolution of the1940’s. His direct, yet suave sound had aprofound impact on John Coltrane and Son¬ny Rollins, two tenormen that set the stylesthat have been emulated for the past twodecades.A large part of Dexter’s career was spentas an expatriate in Europe after the City ofnew York revoked his cabaret card becauseof drug charges. Returning to the UnitedStates in 1976, his subsequent years havebeen productive and glorious.gcj: How do you feel about your years inEurope?Dexter: From ’62 to ’76. Basically, I lived inCopenhagen, and Paris also for a while, butI want traveling all over. They were verypleasant, very lovely to me. I had a greattime, especially in Copenhagen. There’s aclub there, the Montmarte, where we werelike the house band. Still, I was free to touraround; it was more or less perfect. I wasn’tgetting rich, but I did have a nice time. I feelthat living over there and becoming sofamiliar with so many different cultures andlanguages broadened me mentally, musically.gcj: Many musicians go to Europe becausethey think their music will be morerespected there as an art form rather thanlust as entertainment.Dexter: That's very true. Strangely enough,the Europeans, the whole world has knownthat jazz is an original American art form. InAmerica, they don’t know that. But all overthe world...(he laughs) It was understoodwhen I first came to Europe; they laideverything out for me. It was “Mister Gor¬don,” “Herr Gordon,” “Monsieur Gordon”,you know, “What would you like?”, “Whatwill you have?”. It was like another world.Say, wow!So you can understand why I was therefor fourteen years. The understanding theyhave, the mentality is so rewarding. When Icame back to the States, though, it wasfabulous. I’m living in New York now. Thingshave changed, people are beginning tounderstand that my music, our music, issomething special.gcj: So you're getting more respect herenow?Dexter: It's not just a matter of respect. Peo¬ple are beginning to understand that this isan art form. This is something special It'sthe only place in world where this has hap¬pened originally. They don’t have any LouisArmstrongs in France. They don’t have anyColeman Hawkinses in Taiwan. They don't have any Lester Youngs in Peking. Youknow what I mean? But all over the worldthey’ve always understood this. There’s noArt Tatum in London. You dig? There's noBud Powell in Oslo. There’s no TheloniousMonk in Antwerp. You know what I mean?gcj: I’m hip.Dexter: There's no Sonny Stitt in Madrid.There’s no Jackie Mac in Athens. It’s amaz¬ing here in America...you know, a cat bewalkin’ down the street, get busted, put injail, fucked, you know what I mean? Twentyyears! Yeah — The whole world could knowthat his man’s a prince, but nobody’ll tellyou around here. In the States, it’s fan¬tastic, it’s ridiculous....I’m gettin carriedaway.gcj: That’s your privilege.Dexter: Well. yes. but I usually don't dothat; I'm so fucking cool....gcj: In Hyde Park, people talk about all theold clubs. Back in the Forties, what was thescene on 55th Street?Dexter: 55th Street was one of the hipavenues. There used to be White City. RumBoogie, the Beehive. (To Willie Kennedy, anold friend): Was the Beehive on 55th7Willie: Yeah. 55th. I remember when you us¬ed to play in Billy Eckstine s band.gcj: With Sarah Vaughn. Bird and Diz?Dexter: Yeah, Gene Ammons, Sonny Stitt. Itwas great.gcj: My favorite record of yours sinceyou've been back in the States is the bigband album. Sophisticated Giant.Dexter: You like that? Me too.gcj: Yeah, some great biowing over somegreat arrangements. Anything like that com¬ing up?Dexter: Actually, you couldn’t repeat that.But I think my next album wifi be with str¬ings, a ballad album.gcj: Strings? A lot of times they mess thingsup.Dexter: It’s difficult to arrange for strings, asyou’ve noticed, especially in jazz. But thereare a few people who can do that. Thisalbum will be orchestral with strings, frenchhorns, that kind of thing. We re also goingto do something for television, for video.That’s the wave of the future. Once jazz getsa footing, we'll be in. It’s time somethinglike this happens—some hip music in peo¬ple’s living rooms.gcj: Dexter, you 're really at a pinnacle rightnow with these awards from Down Beat.Dexter: Isn’t that wild? Don't know what todo with all of this,gcj: So how do you feel right now?Dexter: Great. I feel swell.gcj: What do you think of them? What's yourmeasure of success?Dexter: You know, man. I really don’tthink about that too much. It’s lovely to berecognized. Of course it s unusual to be inthe Hall of Fame while you’re still livingThey usually wait until the motherfucker isdead, but I’m here! It's beautiful, but Ihaven’t thought too much about it becauseit’s a little heavy. If you start thinking aboutthat, you stop your progress. I dig it, I ap¬preciate it. but if you start thinking aboutHall of Fame, Jazz Musician of the Year,No.1 Tenor, you wouldn't think aboutanything else. You'd just walk on air the restof the way. But I'm not going to stop. Withall that shit going, it sounds like the mother¬fucker just stopped. I mean O.K., thank-you.I want to be president, shit. RonaldReagan made it, I can make itgcj: You’re a better actor than he is.Dexter: Yes, you’re right! How did youknow? But if you start thinking about howcute you are, you can’t play“Fried Bananas.”Willie: I hear that. Dex.ARl£S/Hourof our DeathSTIMPSON &Women: Sex —DOC FILMS-TONIGHT: Violent people in violent times:Robert De Niro and Jodie Foster inMartin Scorsese's TAXI DRIVER 6.45, ir.OOWarren Beatty and Faye Dunaway inArthur Penn's BONNIE AND CLYDE 9 00SUNDAY: Two poetic exeercises in the horror film:Roman Polanski 's REPULSION M5Starring Cathenn DeneuveGeorges Fanju's EYES WITHOUT A FACE 915ALL FILMS IN COBB HALLMonday, February 23rdTHEChicago Symphony String QuartetFIRSTIn a lecture-demonstrationCHAIRShore landCRYSTAL BALLROOM8pmAdmission free! INSIDE INFORMATIONON A CAREERIN ADVERTISINGNow you can get professional help!A leading advertising agency executive who hasrecruited many college students into the business,many of whom now hold major jobs in the field, haswritten a 40 page booklet “PLANNING A CAREERIN ADVERTISING.”Now for the first time you can get sound advice onproper courses to take in college, and learn the insand outs of applying for a job in an advertisingagency.Learn the types of jobs that are available, and tipson how to get them!To get this helpful guide send $5.00 toCourt Communications, Inc.,15 Perry Court, Armonk, NY 10504.^SEND ME PLANNING A CAREER IN ADVERTISING ^NameAddress.City State_College. Zip.TOLSTOY KUBLER-ROSS JUNGQ3inRIkillmiH0t-£i< Have you thought aboutMIND, DEATH, IMMORTALITY???Do you want to read and talk about it?An interdisciplinary seminar discussion on the sur¬vival of the human personality, as seen byphilosophers (Plato, Aristotle), theologians (Aquinas,Tillich), psychologists (Freud, James), sociologists(Mitford, Aries), clinicians (Kubler-Ross, Fiefel),novelist and playwright (Tolstoi, Shakespeare).Participants read works of these authors and shareviews with each other and the seminar leader.Ten weekly sessions Non-creditSeminar leader:Journet Kahn, Ph.D.Further information on seminar and enrollment238-6825 5V.>5m>0cZ>i/iPLATO MITFORD SHAKESPEARE GOLD CITY INNgiven * * * *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 Discount:10% for table service5% for take homeHyde Park's Best Cantonese Food Rockefeller MerporialChapelSunday, February 229:00 a.m. Ecumenical Service of HolyCommunion10:00 a.m. Discussion Class:"Poet/Prophet: Vision and Revision '11:00 a.m. University Religious ServiceRohm Lovm, Associate Professor of/1hies and So< /c»iy, the Divinity School2. THE GREY CITY JOURNAL FRIDAY 20 FEBRUARY 1981r FRIDAY 2 L I SATURDAY 21 SUNDAY 22MONDAY 23 TUESDAY 24 WEDNESDAY 25 THURSDAY 26I was introduced to Photoanalysis by aprofessor in graduate school. He had beena pupil of Michael Kirby, who is chairman ofthe theatre department at NYU and editor ofThe Drama Review I have a growing in¬terest in epistemology and linguisticcriticism, and Kirby's "strucuturalist play”is particularly pertinent to my studiesThe first question I'm asked after so¬meone reads Photoanalysis is What is itabout?" The best answer I can give is,"What do you think it is about?” The plot ofPhotoanalysis is not really a story, but aprocess — how the minds of the audienceand the characters organize or structure in¬formation. How do we transform seem” to"is”?Photoanalysis humor comes from ourrecognition of how involuntary this organiz¬ing instinct, no matter how contradictory orludicrous the information seems Kirby alsohas a wonderfully ironic sense of how wetell stories to each other — how we struc¬ture our world through languageIn a sense, the play is a mystery, but wesoon discover that we are creating themystery we are trying to solve. The mind,Photoanlysis tells us. is both a problemsolver and problem creator Libby Morse/ thought they were dead at first. I lookedcloser, no change So I walked out to theback and dumped them. When they hit thatgood cool garden dirt, they knew they werefree You've never seen so much activity!They disappeared in an instant. From amole hill to a plain; I learned a lot aboutworms that first dayRoma GrethAnd I learned a lot about Worms the day Italked with Roma Greth the author of theCourt Studio Theatre production playing theweekend of February 20-22 Ms. Greth wroteWorms after her sister-in-law had anawkward experience with an owner of aworm ranch in Pennsylvania. The ranchcreated in the Reynold s Club third-floortheatre is the setting which Greth scharacters, Dorothy Nestor and MadonnaMiller tangle in a struggle for survival thatparallels the life of the worm who finds iteasier to appear dead when captive but isable to find freedom when the darknesscloses in. Perhaps it is easier for us all tobest survive underground where the lightsare out.Katherine Amato-von HemertSusan Mullen and Diane Doughtery in Worms by Roma Greth Court Studio TheatreWorms by Roma GrethDirected by Katherine Amato-von HemertPhotoanalysisby Michael KirbyDirected by LiDby MorseFriday and Saturday at 8:30Sunday at 7:30$3 general admission$2 students and seniorsA slide appearing in Photoanalysis by Michael KirbyFILMTaxi Driver (Martin Scorsese, 1976):New York cabbie Travis Bickle(Robert DeNiro) decides to clean,up those mean streets in a oneman crusade against urbandegradation. Instead of letting hisplot build up to a violent climaxof terrifying inevitability (as hedid so effectively in MeanStreets) Scorsese dangles thepromise of bloodshed in front ofus like a carrot on a stick.Though Scorsese's technicalgifts are surer than ever, overallTaxi Driver is only slightly morecoherent than the disastrousLooking For Mr. Goodbar. CybilSheperd proves she still can tact. and God only knows whatshe’s supposed to be doing hereanyway, but Jodie Foster as achild prostitute is excellent.Clinical in the extreme, and aboutas compelling as having yourteeth drilled. Tonight, Friday,Feb. 20, at 6:45 and 11 in Quan-trell. Doc; $2.00. — MABonnie and Clyde (Arthur Penn,1967): Bonnie and Clyde, in caseyou didn't know, were a coupleof fun-loving kids who liked robb¬ing banks, though as the filmmakes clear, it wasn’t all beerand skittles and four-inchheadlines. The film is generallycredited with signalling the arrival of the French nouvelle vague inthe U.S., though there had beenisolated harbingers before it.What that means for theuninitiated is that it’s an eclecticexercise in all sorts of film syn¬tax. done with enough flair sothat at its worst it is merelyuneven, while at its best itrepresents a fresh and con¬sistently inventive way of making(and watching) movies. It tendstoward formulaic overanalysis,but it’s uncannily intelligentthroughout, thanks especially tothe screenplay by Robert Bentonand David Newman, and directorPenn's willingness to takechances. Fay Dunaway and War¬ren Beatty are superb in the titleroles, but even they take a backseat to the spectacular characterwork of Gene Hackman, EstelleParsons, and Michael J. Pollard.Tonight, Friday. Feb. 20. at 9 inQuantrell. Doc; $2 00. — MAFilms by Harry Smith: TheRenaissance Society continuesits American Vanguard Cinemaseries with a showing of films bythis West Coast innovator andcreative heir to the great Germananimator Oskar Fischinger. Hisearly abstractions are animatedshorts with distinctly organic (andsome say erotic) resonances.Heaven and Earth Magic is ananimated collage feature, like aMax Ernst illustration come tolife, as well as an exercise mToonwfGary Beberman, Brad Bittan, Leland Chait, Adam Crits, Peter T. Daniels, SusanFranusiak, Jim Guenther, Jack Helbig, Richard Kaye, Carol Klammer, Neil Miller, Mark Pohl, Renee Saracki, Maragret Savage, Bruce Shapiro, Andrea Thompson, K.G. Wilkins, Ken Wissoker.Mike Alper, Film Editor.Richard Pettengill, Music Editor.Lucy Conniff, Book EditorEdited by Laura Cottingham.the grey city journal is published weekly by the Chicago Maroon, Ida Noyes Hall,1212 East 59th Street, Chicago, Illinois, 60637. For advertising information callWanda at 753 FAME. logical absurdism, in which everypermutation of the images usedis pursued. Tomorrow. Saturday.Feb. 21, at 7 and 9 in Cobb 425.Admission is open to allRenaissance Society members,and a student membership stillcosts a mere $5.00. — MAPsycho (Alfred Hitchcock): A woman(Janet Leigh) on the run from thelaw takes refuge in a desertedmotel run by Tony Perkins andhis mother (?). Of course you allknow what happens. Hitchcock'stracking and cutting gives the au¬dience the fun of experiencingthe terror and exploring the eerybetter than virtually any other filmever made. Only the ending is adowner. Saturday. Feb. 21. at 7:15& 9:30 in the Law SchoolAuditorium. Law School Films;$1.50— NMRepulsion (Roman Polanski, 1965):Catherine Deneuvre delivers asubtle. yet enthralling per¬formance as a young beauticianwho gradually spirals intomadness within the space of herapartment. The screenplay's im¬age of decay, in particular that ofa spoilt rabbit which coincideswith that of Deneuvre's owndecline, combines with GilbertTaylor’s subjective camera tothrow a dark, ominous mood overthe film. One quickly becomesabsorbed in the character study,yet the material is as puzzling asit is fascinating: never is a clearmotive given for Deneuvre's des¬cent into murderous insanity, andnever does anyone around herrealize that the pretty girl is ac¬tually pretty sick. This is one ofPolanski’s most dark, yet in¬teresting works. Sunday, Feb. 22.at 7:15 in Quantrell. Doc; $2.00 —SFEyes Without a Face (Georges Fran-ju, 1959): An imaginative andhighly entertaining variation onthe mad scientist genre, withPierre Brasseur and assistantAlida Valli carving up youngwomen to graft their faces ontohis disfigured daughter. It’s not agruesome shocker, but an at¬mospheric and eerily poetic film,and it has touches of humor thatmake Brian DePalma’s supposed¬ly adult comic horror lookpositively infantile in comparison.Sunday. Feb. 22. at 9:15 in Quan¬trell. Doc; $2.00. — MA Nanook of the North (Robert Flaher¬ty. 1922): The grand-daddy of alldocumentaries and still strongenough to stand with the best ofthem. It's about Eskimos, and totry to narrow it down any morethan that would not do justice tothe fullness and integrity ofFlaherty's vision. He shot whatmust amount to a hundred or somiles of footage and the result isa distillation of the choicest andmost illuminating moments.Nanook was made before Flaher¬ty began staging the bulk of hisscenes, a practice which didmuch to discredit the authenticityof his better-made Man of Aran.What we have here may be oneof the most complete portrayalson film of a culture caught justbefore its demise. Monday, Feb.23. at 7:15 in Quantrell. Doc;$1.00. — MAMoana (Robert Flaherty. 1926):Flaherty brought his judiciouscamera-sense to the South Seasto film this study of the peopleand traditions of Samoa, a culturesomewhat more luxurious thanthat of Nanook s North, but noless intriguing. Monday. Feb. 23.at 8:15 in Quantrell. Doc: $1.00.Black History Month Film Series:Third World Arts is sponsoring aBlack film series to be shownevery weekend through themonth of February. This week¬end's bill includes The Connec¬tion (Shirley Clark. 1961), aclassic of improvisational cinemaby one of the few women direc¬tors in American film, featuringJackie McLean. It is a penetratingview into the lives of eight NewYork musicians surviving in theunderground culture of America,and is a must for jazz and filmbuffs. Also: Black PreviewTrailers (1934-1948) which con¬tains original theatrical previewsfrom black films of that period:and Jittering Jitterbugs (1939)with Hamtree Harrington. LeeNorman's Orchestra, and ArthurWhite s Lindy Hoppers — a jivecomedy set in a Harlem night¬club. and studded with excellentdance numbers Friday. Saturday,and Sunday. Feb. 20. 21, and 22at 7 and 10 pm. at the Tiki Loft. 61E. 24th St., one half block behindthe Chicago Defender Newspap¬er. Donation is $2 00 For furtherinformation contact Keith Davis atFRIDAY 20 FEBRUARY 1981 THE GREY CITY JOURNAL 924-1830.MUSICHaymarket Party: Featuring the OneLove Reggae Band and theSmokey Brothers Blues Band.Five hours of continuous musicand dancing. Saturday night. 9PM to 2 AM Alpha Delta Phi. 5747S. University. One Dollar. — BSChances R: Tenorman Ed Petersonwill be backed by the Robert ShyTrio for an evening of jazz thisSaturday night at 9:00. Chances Ris in Harper Court. 5225 S. HarperAve. $3.00 cover. — JGValhalla: Pianist Louis Hall andFriends will bring to Hyde Parktheir funky brand of progressivejazz this Saturday night at 10:00.Valhalla, 1515 E 53rd St. $3.00cover. — JGlolanthe: 8:00 tonight and tomorrow,2:00 Sunday. Mandel. Tickets atReynolds Club.New Music Ensemble: works ofDratteli, Kolb. Levin. Whittaker,and Stravinsky 8:00. Sunday.February 22. Goodspeed. FreeMozart's Mass in C: scheduled forthis Sunday, is postponed toMarch 8th. Tickets for February22 will be honored thenOTHERA Doll House: Nicholas Hudaiidirects this Court Theatre pro¬duction of the Ibsen classic abouta woman's escape from mar¬riage Through February 22nd,Thursday through Saturday. 8:30PM: Sunday, 7:30 PM Tickets are$6-7.Leslie Ullman: The Poetics Organiza¬tion presents, as its first event ofthe year, a reading by Ullman ofher recent works Ms. Ullman isthe author of Natural Histones(published by the Yale Series ofYounger Poets, 1979) and herwork has appeared in The NewYorker. Antioch Review. The Na¬tion and elsewhere The readingwill take place on Wednesday,February 25th, at 8 pm. in the firstfloor library of Ida Noyes Hall.Vincent Katz, a student in thecollege, will also be reading. Ad¬mission is free3MUSICS MAND6LA C EL ED R.A TIONckdby Peter DanielsThe trouble with most “modern” music isthat you usually only get to hear it once.Three pieces that were performed duringMandel Week deserve to become familiarso that they may be understood and en¬joyed. Peter Serkin began his recital Tues¬day night with the Passacagtia (1936) ofStefan Wolpe, a German - Palestinian -American composer. The basic structure, aconstant repeated several-bar figure, re¬mained nearly as perceptible as the oneunderlying Bach’s Passacaglia. while aboveit ranged great changes of mood that in¬corporated a demented Viennese waltz anda savage tarantella. Recurring motifs ofhard-hammered adjacent notes and quick-repeated tones unify the work. Serkin prov¬ed again, in case the point is still doubted,that music in the school of Webern (Wolpe'steacher) can be both dissonant andbeautiful, both harsh and moving. Last Fri¬day the Contemporary Chamber Players,conducted by Ralph Shapey. offered twoworks that demand repeated performances.Ellen Taaffe Zwilich’s Chamber Symphony (1979), occasioned by the death of her hus¬band, is sensually elegiae: she exploits thetwo woodwinds, three strings, and pianofully: her program note mentions some for¬mal matters, but they are almost beside thepoint, and on one hearing, only slightlybegin to emerge. The CCP posted threeNew Yorkers to present Shulamit Ran’sApprehensions (1979). Is one permitted tolike a cantata when one is repulsed by thepoem? Ms. Ran uses soprano (JudithNicosia), clarinet (Laura Flax), and piano(Alan Feinberg) to reach into the bloodyheart and lacerated soul of Sylvia Plath.whose four stanzas are built round the“colors” white, grey, black, and red. Thesong cycle is excruciating and exquisiteand immensely powerful. It is covertlyfeminist, and the male pianist, excellentthough he was, seemed incongruous (butwhy doesn't it seem incongruous for Bar¬bara Schubert to conduct the orchestra inso much male music? Do songs havegender? Women recitalists' accompanistsare usually men....). The CCP also playedGunther Schuller's Double Quintet! 1961) forwoodwinds versus brass, a prime exampleof the beep-honk school of composition.A word on the new sound of the new Mandel Hall is appropriate here. It is a touchmore live than it was, with under twoseconds of reverberation; highs tend to becovered by lows (though Ms. Nicosia'ssoftest whispers were perfectly audible).The best place to hear the orchestra(discerned by wandering about during aBeethoven rehearsal) is no longer thebalcony, but — probably due to the newacoustic clouds, which hang about mid¬balcony level — the section of orchestraseats that is not under the balcony. Thegreatest change in sound, though, thanks tothe clouds and to the wall that fills the pro¬scenium during musical events, is that theperformers can now hear each other. Dur¬ing the first fugal section of the BeethovenMass, the chorus could hear somethingnever before audible to it — the other parts!This will result in truer pianossimos. for itwill no longer feel that no sound is comingout unless one shouts.I return now to Peter Serkin. “Haydn”normally suggests galant. light-hearted,lovely. But the Eb Sonata is not these: it isdark, subtle, unyielding. Serkin rendered itperfectly, never Haydnizing. nor ever (incontradistinction to Paul Bempechat's verySchumannian Haydn at the Goodspeed Hall opening) romanticizing. But then came anintermission and, late in the evening, theGoldberg Variations. The last time theywere heard in Mandel Hall, Roslyn Tureckplayed them first on the harpsichord andthen on the piano, making a persuasivecase for piano performance. Serkin.however, did not. He was best in the in¬trospective ones — Nos. 2, 5, 8. etc. —which generally move chordally, pianistical-ly. But the canons Nos. 3. 6, 9. etc. — andthe virtuosic numbers — 1, 4. 7, etc. — heseemed to play as if he were at a harp¬sichord. without attention to dynamics orrubate, without ritard at the ends. Perhapshe tried to avoid the accusation of roman¬ticizing Bach. (But Bach can take it!) TheFrench Overture that opens the second half(No. 16) lacked grandeur. And toward theend — toward 10:30 at night — he seemed totire. No. 29. with repeated pounding chords,and No. 30, the raucous Quodlibet. lackedenergy. (It clearly was a physical problem;his recording played that morning on WFMTof the last three variations was splendid, aswas the closing repetition of the basic Air.)Peter Serkin played an ambitious program,and overreached himself: but one wouldgladly go hear him do it again."ROSIE THE RIVETER AT FILM CENTERby Mike AlperThe Life and Times of Rosie theRiveter (Connie Field, 1^80): Apowerful documentary on the ex¬perience of women workers dur¬ing World War II, Rosie iseverything a documentary shouldbe: convincing, intellectuallychallenging, emotionally engag¬ing, and eminently watchable. Thedepletion of the labor force thatresulted from the first call-up oftroops during the opening monthsof WW II led to an unprecedentedinflux of women into skilled jobswhich had formerly been the ex¬clusive domain of men. “Rosie theRiveter” was the generic term forthese women, not only in their capacity as riveters, but aswelders, shipfitters, machine tooloperators, and any other occupa¬tion previously consideredbeyond them because of somenonsense about differences inmale and female physiology.(Indeed, one woman interviewedmaintains that women were moresuited to certain of these jobs,their generally smaller and finerhands being more sensitive tominute incremental adjustmentsof the machines.) But the womenwho do the talking as Rosie areanything but members of a genre,they are distinctive individuals,and the work they do is as much apart of them as the color of theireyes. It is by emphasizing this point that Rosie makes itsstrongest points. There is no nar¬ration, except for the voice-overson the maddeningly conde¬scending March of Timenewsreels and government pro¬paganda films, which are skillfullyintercut with interviews of fiveformer Rosies. The interviewees(culled from the more than 700women the director and herassistants spoke with) are theheart of the film. They talk aboutthe work they did during those waryears with a fondness that is rareand touching. Director Field hassaid that Rosie is not about thelabor force, but about the nature ofwork itself, and the importance ofhaving meaningful work to do. Of course, the film takes on muchmore far-reaching sociological im¬plications when it deals with thewomen workers’ disenfranchise¬ment upon the return of thetroops, but they are that muchmore effective for being implica¬tions. Rosie does not deal withshrill polemics or abstractgeneralizations, but with what itmeant for a number of women tohave jobs that meant something tothem, and then to have them takenaway. The implications are ob¬vious, and the filmmakers’ con¬tempt for the position that justifiesthe disenfranchisement on thegrounds of economic expediencyis undisguised. But whatever con¬clusions one may reach on seeing Rosie the Riveter, they are givenforce by having been derived fromthe testimony of those who ex¬perienced both the joys and the in¬justice of being Rosies. Winner ofthe gold medal for Best Documen¬tary at the 1980 Chicago FilmFestival, where its appearancewas one of the few moments thatsalvaged the entire Festival. Satur¬day, Feb. 21, at 3:30, 5:30, and 7:30,and Sunday, Feb. 22, at 5:30 and7:30, at the School of the Art In¬stitute Film Center, ColumbusDrive at Jackson Blvd.; $2.50. Alsoappearing on the same bill is LoveIt Like a Fool (Susan Wargraf,1977), a documentary on ac-tivist/folk singer MalvinaReynolds.To the EditorAfter a silence of six months I find I mustcomment again.Please accept this nonverbal criticism ofthe Grey City Journal’s Friday the 13th“event”. As images continue to take overthe role of words in our post-literate societythe GCJ has shown itself sensitive to thechanges of our culture. Unfortunately,GCJ, in its enthusiasm to prove itsallegiance to these artistic changes, forgotto say anything with its images.When words fail, often pictures do too.Please return the GCJ to its formergreatness as a newspaper filled with bothimages and words. A mixed medium for atransitionary time.Photostatically yours,X.P.EsqRenee Saracki (Guns for Hire, 6 Feb 1981) isat once dead right and dead wrong aboutThe Clash and “Sandmista”, their latestalbum.Yes, Renee, they are “just four averageblokes with an above average sense ofstyle”, not the rockenproletariat you envi¬sioned them to be. That should not, however, mean they no longer “matter’;they are still one of the finest bands in thethird wave rock, and Sandinista is quite agood album, which I feel you’ve judged toharshly.It was heart-wrenching to hear how youplayed the role of Number One Fan, only tosee your heros Move Toward the Center. Iguess I don't understand, though, how theevolution of their music betrays and “com¬mitment” you claim they made to their fans.Artists have commitments only to their art.Back in the 1960’s, Dylan’s folkie fans con¬demned him when he went electric, but asan artist he simply felt adifferent directionwas needed in his music. We as listnerscan then say “Yes, I like it” or “No, I don’tlike it”. But we don’t have the right to brandit a sellout because, as in this case, they nolonger produce your preferred brand ofsocialist realism. That’s unfair, just as I ad¬mittedly, have been unfair to Reverend Bobsince his latest transformation (tran-substantiation?).The Clash have no responsibility to live outyour dreams of what they should be. Theirresponsibility is to put out the music thatmeans something to them. If you haveevidence taht they are not producing whatthey believe in because of some market pressures (either coercion or seduction), byall means publish that evidence. I will bethe first to join the “Free the Clash” move¬ment to give them the support they need toput on vinyl what is in their heads andhearts. Otherwise, stop this “sellout” talk.As for the album, it is musically very good,much better than any three disk collectioncould be expected to be. And, like “LondonCalling”, it is more “accessible” (and, thus,potentially more commercially successful),than their earlier efforts. And another thin;if you don’t like reggae/ska/dub, just sayso, rather than taking a cheap shot at theirexecution of the genre. Reggae and dubare by their very nature less energetic andless wanton than is straight rock; tocharacterize an album so perneated by theirinfluence as being heavyhanded andoverbearing is either being unfair or unaware.Also, not everybody thinks rock should be apolitical instrument; some of us even feel itis rightly an expression of “pure adolescentrebelliousness”. As you may rememberfrom you own adolescence (I do from mine),part of that rebelliousness took the form oftaking stands and later repudiation (orforgetting) them. It’s part of growing up,and thus part of rock. That shouldn’t meanthat rock is then trivial; there are many kindsof rebellion, and Sandinista shows no lessanger than did its predecessors. It’s simplytaking a different musical form.The problem here is that you have an un¬justified hatred for “popular” music. Admitit, Renee; you take as given that anythingbeconing widely accepted by the Americanmiddle class cannot possibly be wor¬thwhile, and, armed with that attitude, youlisten disapprovingly to Sandinista and panit. After all, now that being a Clash fan nolonger carries with it the cachet of the avantgarde, you no longer want to be a Clash fan.Admit it; as Dr. Freud (sort of) said, “Oncewe recognize the problem, we can begin todeal with the solution.’Ken NovakGraduate School of Business4 THE GREY CITY JOURNAL •FRIDAY 20 FEBRUARY 1981t ff • a vPURIM MASQUERADE PARTYSATURDAY. FEBRUARY 21-8:5. P.M.-HILLEL FOUNDATIONS^ WOODLAWN AVENUEMake-Up Artist to Help with Costumes~PRIZES~5o cent admissionrCOFFEE"QuitM., CheeseVtj&tMA* Pipbtkkum.bcqdi+Cttm Cheese(ttCftomc>otLdCidSA HOUSEsponsored by SGACFree Entertainmentby:Dave SulcerHugh BlumenfeldJOSEPH BEN JACOB AND HIPOLYTUS BEN THESEUS:A CONTRAST IN CULTURAL AND LITERARY VALUES.Rabbi Norman Lewison, former Hillel Director at Temple & Ohio UniversitiesFRIDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 8:30 P.M., HILLEL FOUNDATION, 5715 WOODLAWN AVENUE.(MmSUMMER QUARTER 1981. AND THE 1981-1982ACADEMIC VEAR WILL BECOME AUAILABLE.MARCH 2. 1981IN HARPER 252ALL STUDENTS WHO WISH TO BE CONSIDEREDFOR FINANCIAL AID MUST APPLY NOWDeadline ---- April 17th JAMES S. HUDNALL DISTINGUISHEDVISITING LECTURE SERIESJONATHAN E. GRINDLAYCenter for AstrophysicsDepartment of AstronomyHarvard UniversityJames S. Hudnall Distinguished VisitingLecturer in the Division of Physical SciencesMondayFebruary 23, 198 13:30 P.M.Eckhart 133 GLOBULAR CLUSTER X-RAYSOURCES; COMPACT BINARIESOR BLACK HOLES?* * * * ♦♦a***********************WednesdayFebruary 25, 19813:30 P.M.Eckhart 133 X-RAY SPECTRAL SIGNATURESIN THE ACTIVE GALACTICNUCLEI AND QUASARSFridayFebruary 27, 19815:00 P.M.Kent 107 TIME VARIABILITIESIN THE COSMOS(This lecture especially for graduate students)The Chicago Maroon, Friday, February 20.1981-9,Two Golden Gloves fighters square off Tuesday night.BoxingMaroons CloseSeason onRoad SaturdayBy Michael OcchioliniThe men’s basketball team winds up itsseason this weekend on the road, facing CoeCollege on Friday night and Monmouth Col¬lege Saturday afternoon.Chicago record currently stands at 10-7,with the Maroons coming off a loss to RiponCollege last Saturday by a 82-59 score.Chicago was down by four points at the half32-28 and managed to tie the score at onepoint early in the second half. The Maroonsmissed an opportunity to take the lead,however, and allowed Ripon to gain controlof the offensive play. Chicago was outscored50-31 in the second half, having trouble scor¬ing on Ripon’s zone defense. “They gave ustrouble with the 1-3-1 zone, for we wereunable to get the ball into the corner andreverse it fast enough to beat the zone,” ex¬plained Assistant coach Jim Hargesheimer.Foul trouble also hurt the Maroons, withcenter Mike Shackleton fouling out with 14minutes remaining the game.Chicago’s opponents this weekend are twogood teams: Coe College lost to Beloit, thenumber one ranked Division III school in thecountry, by only four points last week, andMonmouth leads the West division of theMidwest Conference with only one loss onthe season.“They will be two very difficult games,”said Coach John Angelus, for “a lot dependson Friday night’s game. If we are batteredand bruised it will difficult to play on Satur¬day, yet a win would really pick us up.”Angelus believes the key in stopping bothCoe and Monmouth will be neutralizing theirrunning game thorugh controlling the offen¬sive flow, and hitting the offensive anddefensive boards.Coe is led by Dan Meade, who at 6’7” isone of the conferences leaders in scoringwith a 20 points per game average, and alsoleads the team in rebounding. Coe plays apressure defense and has a slightly betterset offense than Monmouth.Monmouth has nine players on their teamover 6’5”, and has a 6’8” substitute center inJim West who is averaging in doublefigures. Jim Thronton and Tim Jones startat the two guard positions, both beingamong the conference leaders in scoring“We plan to try to keep them from gettinginto their game, and to go into the four cor¬ner offense as much as we can in the firsthalf,” said Angelus. The four corner shouldhelp the Maroons minimize Monmouth’sgreat advantage in height.It’s been an up and down season for theMaroons, who have now lost four straightgames after Ripon College broke its sevengame winning streak in late January.Chicago is scoring an average of 65 pointsper game to their opjionens 61.5 and hopesto shut down the offense of Coe and Mon¬mouth this weekend.Basketball Statisticsfgm fga fg% ppgLewis 81 161 50.3 12.2Kuby 72 166 43.3 10.9Shacideton 71 190 37.6 9.9Leinroth 61 123 49.5 9.3Price 45 81 55.5 6.0Mahoney 25 47 53.2 4.9Hogan 41 89 46.1 4.2Horkan 21 42 50.0 3.1Vail 13 33 39.4 2.7Murden 14 21 66.6 2.4DeLuca 2 2 100.0 1.7Kusyk 2 7 28.5 1.0Jordan 1 2 50.0 .4■XylyX;' Continued from page 1drudgery of winter quarter at the Universityof Chicago, you just haven’t been creativeenough.Golden Gloves boxing: I didn’t exactlywonder why I hadn’t thought of it myselfwhen I heard that Les Firestein, class of ’83,had decided to enter the Golden Gloves. Butbeing an athlete myself and knowing thatsports are a fine release from academic life,I simply figured the kid was taking upserious boxing.I ran into Les on Sunday night. He was sit¬ting at a table in the Regenstein coffee shopwith two friends of mine, so I grabbed achair and sat down.“Are you the kid who’s going to fightGolden Gloves,” I asked after I heard himtalking to one of my friends about boxing.He looked big enough, at least by U. of C.standards: about 6’2”, 165, and fairlymuscular. I’d seen him working for theAnderson campaign last year, well-dressed(ala Brooks Brothers), with tortoise shellglasses, brown eyes, and neatly-combedrust-hued hair. A straight-looking guy withan innocent, My Three Sons quality abouthim, but still obviously a New York Jew. Itwas the perfect foil for some South Side kidout for blood.“Yeah, that’s me. How did you hear aboutit?”As I questioned him, the stark reality ofthe situation became apparent.“Have you ever boxed before?” “No.”“What type of training do you do?” “I’velifted some weights.”“Any running?” “No.”I looked at him incredulously. “Well. Iwas on the wrestling team in high schoolWe went up against some pretty tough citykids.”“Ok. Can you see without your glasses?”“No. I’m legally blind.”I was speechless. Meanwhile, my friendresumed the conversation he'd been havingwith Les before I sat down.“You’ve got to to keep your shirt tucked inor they’ll hit you below the belt.”“Do you think I’m really gonna pissblood?”“Well, your muscle tissues break downwhen you get hit hard, and it leaves yourbody through your urine.”“What else? How do I keep from gettingdisfigured? I don’t want to get a cauliflowernose.”“Don’t turn your head to the side or he’llbust your nose. And it’s cauliflower ear, notcauliflower nose.”“What about my stance?”“Fight him close and keep your guardup.”“Like this?” He imitated the Ali rope-a-dope style.“No.” “How about this,” he said, crouching onthe floor in an air raid position.“Yeah, now you’ve got it,” my friend saidas we all burst out laughing, realizing thatFirestein was no more a boxer than HannaGray. I wondered why he had chosen boxingas his poison when he could just as easilyhave taken a stroll down King Drivescreaming racist insults. Still, it was ob¬vious that Les was getting a great deal ofpleasure from his quest - and I knew that itwasn’t all masochistic.What was it about life at the University ofChicago that possessed a 19-year old studentwith no boxing experience to enter a tourna¬ment like this, destined for disaster, but en¬joying it immensely?Experience.As college students, we are constantly be¬ing told that we have no experience, that we“don’t know what it’s like in the real world.”Most people around here, unless they’redestined for permanent ivory towerdom.relieve their need to see the real world bygoing and doing something. Whether it’s atrip to Chinatown, blues at the Checker¬board, or dining at Harold’s Chicken,there’s always a sense of rejoining the“real” world when you do something offcampus.What Les Firestein had done was to lightupon something which, short of joining amercenary group in Angola, is experiencepar excellence: the act of physicallyfighting youths from low socioeconomicbackgrounds is completely dichotomous tostudent life at the University. Furthermore,it’s real because it dramatizes class ten¬sions which exist in Hyde Park but are rare¬ly confronted by students.The only thing left for him to do now is gointo that ring and get his face bashed in.Editor’s Note: Les Firestein’s GoldenGloves record was 1-0, as of press time forthis issue. His scheduled opponent for Tues¬day’s fight didn't show up, so Firesteinreceived a bye. He was scheduled to enterthe second round of competition last night.Tuesday's Maroon will carry the results ofthe fight.ScoreboardMen’sTufts 39 Upper Rickert28Henderson 39 Michelson 30Lower Rickert 42 Commuter Magic 22Hitchcock B 23 Bradbury 13Champs 77 Average White Basketball Team 33BRM 58NUT 3101Fishbein 41Lowlifes 41 Hi How Ya Do 36Albanian Refugees 70 Diana Ross and the Supremes 26Bo's Hose 52Divinity School 47 Abnormal Deviates 44Faliers 30Chamberlin 61Immoral Minority 63Women’sTufts by forefeit over Alpha Delta PygmiesTufts 33Upper Wallace 2410-The Chicago Maroon, Friday. February 20.1981 DivinityNipsDeviatesBy David GruenbaumThe Abnormal Deviates almost pulled thebiggest upset of the year, but DivinitySchool pulled itself together and came out ofthe game with a 47-44. The Deviates ran offto an 8-4 lead early in the first quarter, asDivinity’s normally great outside shooter,David Kling, missed several fifteen andtwenty footers.However, Kling got his act together andhelped bring Divinity to within one at theend of the first quarter. Divinity’s betterand bigger board play became apparent inthe second quarter when they ran off to a 24-20 lead. But a technical called againstDivinity and some incredible outsideshooting by Deviate’s guard Doug Hagerhelped change the momentum, and theDeviates tied the game and then took a 27-25lead at halftime.In the third quarter the Deviates took athree point lead, but Divinity bounced rightback to take a 35-31 lead at the end of thethird quarter. Bob Gray tied the game at 35when he stole a Divinity pass and then hit ashort jumper The Deviates took a 40-39 leadwith three minutes to go when Hager againhit another twenty footer. The lead openedto three before Divinity’s CharlesHeadington went to work under the boards.In the last two minutes, Headington madetwo free throws and a rebound off a freethrow to give Divinity a 45-44 lead which wasnever challenged. Divinity dropped in twomore free throws in the last twelve secondsto fatten the final margin to 47-44. DougHager for the losing Deviates had to be themost valuable player of the game though;he hit well over 60 percent of his tw’entyfooters.In other important games. Greenwoodpulled a slight upset in beating Fishbein 41-37. Greenwood’s star forward Jim Sahs wascold for most of three quarters, but the restof his team played well enough to keepGreenwood in range. When Sahs got hot inthe fourth quarter, he helped Greenwoodopen a big lead that Fishbein didn’tchallenge until the last thirty seconds, whenthey ran off a string of baskets. A missedfree throw, however, killed any chance of amiracle victory.Immoral Minority knocked off the Spudsin another minor upset, 63-50. ChamberlinHouse came back from a 4-3 deficit at theend of the first quarter to take a twentypoint lead at halftime and went on to punishUpper Flint 61-11.Playoffs for basketball will begin on Mon¬day. The tournament should be in Tuesday’spaper.Games to WatchSNELL-MYSTERY BASKETBALL TEAMFri. 8:30 BGSpread: Mystery by 10 .... Mystery Basket¬ball Team is made up of members of the in¬tramural office and members of the PE.department. Together they form anawesome team. Snell after cleaning up onali the poorer teams in the league have hadtheir troubles lately in playing all the goodteams.The Maroon's record on basketballpredictions is 37-6CLASSIFIED ADSCLASSIFIEDClassified advertising in the ChicagoMaroon is 75 cents per 30 character lineAds are not accepted over the phone,and they must be paid in advance. Sub¬mit all ads in person or by mail to TheChicago Maroon, 1212 E 59th St.,Chicago, IL 60637 Our office is in IdaNoyes, room 304 Deadlines Wed noonfor the Fri paper, Fri. noon for the TuespapersSPACEibdrm. apt available in a 4-bdrm apt. at57th and Drexel now until summer $160rent incl. utilities Call 241-6740Coop apt. on lake: 2 br.. 1 bath, eat inkit. Ig wbfpl 28,500 374-02191 bdrm. w bath. furn. 57 & Blkstn inexch for babysitting Board neg241-5201 eve.Fern non-smoker to share twobedroom apt at 54th-EIlis. Cat ownerwelcome. Rozalyn 363-8610.ROOMMATE WANTED to share largesunny apt w/2 others (females)$H8/mo (incl heat) 643-3395Room in 7-room apt. Near campus.$115/mo Mar 1 grads only Ask for Jimor Anne 241-5410WALK TO CAMPUS rent 2 br 2 bamodern prof decor apt nr trains shopsparking drapes rugs pool 947-9597SUBLET furnished studio E Hyde Pk &Dorch. spr & sum qtr UC Bus at door324-7863SUBLET April to Sept (flexible) under$70/mo BDRM in apt w/3 others niceCarol 752-5835Spacious 2 bedroom condominium,with sunroom. in six flat $63,000 Phone324-3263 before 12 and after 4 Anytimeon WeekendLg turn rm pv kitch $225 incl util.363-3458PEOPLE WANTEDOVERSEAS JOBS-Summer/year roundEurope. S. America. Australia. Asia Allfields $500-$1200 monthly SightseeingFree info Write IJC Box 52-ILS CoronaDel Mar CA 92625Full-time administrative secretary posi¬tion available immediately at LutheranSchool of Theology: clerical and adminresponsiblities Salary: $10.000-$11.500667-3500. ext 214 8 38-4:30 pmPaid subjects needed for experimentson memory, perception and languageprocessing Research conducted bystudents and faculty in the Committeeon Cognition and Communication.Department of Behavioral SciencesPhone 753-4718 WANTED: Experienced offset printer towork 10-15 hours every week. Ex¬perience with color work preferred.Employment to last at least two years,summers available Call Matt at753-2518 Tu and Th. You must bequalified and reliablePart-time sitter needed spring quarterfor 8-month boy in your home 493-9548ref Required.Babysitting in my home for 2 smallchildren. Approx. 6-8 hrs per wkdaytimes Will negotiate times and payCall Vicki 285-0229Singers. artists. poets, actors!Celebrate May Day by participating in afestival of working class culture. May 2.For more info contact "The People,Yes!" c/o Chicago Area TUAL PO Box87380. Chicago 60680 or call 388-3871.Subjects needed for business schoolexperiments on decision making Payabout $4/hr. Call 753-3683 (can leavemessage.)General clerical assistance neededTyping skills a must. 24 hours/week,$4 00/hour. Hours flexible, weekdays.Regnery Gateway. Inc.,Bookpublishers 116 S. Michigan.346-6646 KarenWANTED-Babysitter for 2-yr-old near55th/Blackstone Ref req 947-0995 ormessage Virginia 324-2684WANTED IMMEDIATELY Part-time col¬lege student for general office work inLoop Good starting salary and flexiblehours Previous work experience notrequired, but preferred Call Georgannefor details 782-8994Part time secretary needed appr 3 hrs/-day Typing filing bookkeeping hoursflexible Call 753-2702FOR SALENow is the time to stock up Pre- inven¬tory sale on Darkroom paper—50% offor more MODEL CAMERA, 1342 E 55thSt 493-6700SERVICESTYPIST-Dissertation quality Help withgrammar language as needed. Feedepending on manuscript. IBM Selec-tric Judith 955-4417ARTWORK Posters, illustration, letter¬ing. etc. Noel Yovovich 493-2399Excellent, Accurate TYPIST will typeterm papers, theses, dissertations,reasonably priced Pick up and deliveryon campus Call Wanda 684-7414 after 5pmSHIPPING/PACKING World-wide & USAPacking & Shipping services. Call AirSea Pac. Inc Tel 312-766-8226 for in¬formation. TYPIST: High quality work by freelancewriter. Competitively priced, prompt,minor editing without charge IBM Cor¬recting Selectric. After 6 pm 338-3800 or472-2415Will do typmg-IBM Selectric-821-0940WOMEN! Self-defense classes begMon Mar 2: 7-9 pm Blue Gargoyle 5655S Univ. 6 wks $25. Register call 332-5540(Chimera Inc) today.Typing term papers please call 684-6882for efficient typingl am a mother of a 3-yr-old boy and Iwould like to do babysitting in myhome. I have good experience 5316Dorchester. 324-5626 anytimeSCENESBENEFIT PARTY for Haymarket Featur¬ing the One Love Reggae Band andSmokey Smothers Blues Band Satur¬day. February 21. 9 pm-2 am. AlphaDelta Phi, 5747 S University. $1.TENANTS RIGHTS WORKSHOPSpeakers including attorneys and EdSacks, author of the Chicago Tenant'sHandbook. Open discussion withspeakers and organizers. Sponsored byHyde Park Coalition for Housing andTenant Rights Lutheran School ofTheology 1100 E 55th St. Sunday Feb22. 2 pm-5:30 pm. FreePERSONALSWRITER S WORKSHOP (Plaza 2-8377)To the B-School baby w/the maroonsweater in Harper Wed: Am I to bedoomed to unrequited lust? SashaTo my Valentine goat Love you. Kitten.Womens Breakfst Club Weds 8 am(groan) Hutch You know who you are!Why is the fourth floor of the Reg themost interesting place to study?Because a certain minority group ismaking a wonderful takeover, andthey re not black or oriental either On¬ward boys'BEAUTIFUL CAT must find new homeBlack. 4-year old spayed female Freewith litter box. scratching post, dish andfood! 752-7477Vive La Mardi Gras! Gumbo YaYa FONKPARTY 612 Shrlnd Sat 2-28PUPPY IIB-School is tough but hang in therebeantown is coming up Pup IThe End of SG as we know it — SexAnarchy Party convention Thursday at 7pm in Ida Noyes—XYYCome mime with me at the MimeWorkshop. Sat Feb 21 1-4 pm Ida E.FClownCALENDARFridayCroMroadr English classes for foreign women. 10:00 am.5621 S. Blackstone.Grad Common the Study of Women: "Fertility: The deci¬sion to Contracept" speaker Kristine Charnowski. 12 noon.Ida Noyes 2nd floor.Phyaica Undergraduate Journal Club: "Spin Aligned HAtoms" speaker Philip Lacovara. 12:30 pm, Eckhart 209Geophysical Sciences Colloquim: "Northeastern Africa asa Model for an Early Phanerozoic Shield" speaker JohnRogers, 1:30 pm, HGS.Oriental Institute: Two exhibits- "Near Eastern Costume"and "Remembrances of the Near East" open throughMarch 31, 1155 East 58lh StCenter for Middle Eastern Studies: Arabic Circle- "TheAnalytic Point of View in Salah Labki's Diwan al-Sa'm"speaker Samuel Abd al-Shahid, 3:30 pm, Pick 218Kundalini Yoga: Class meets 5:00-7:00 pm. Ida NoyesWoaaen'a Union: Meets for business and discussion 5:15pm- "How We Became Feminists" Ida Noyes.Hillel: Reform-Progressive Services. 5:30 pm, 5715WoodlawnOymnastics Club: Meets 5:30 pm. Bartlett gymHUM: Adat Shalom Shabbat dinner. 6:00 pm. S3, 5715WoodlawnDoc Films: "Taxi Driver" 6:45 and 1T00 pm. "Bonnie andClyde" 9:00 pm. CobbUC Christian Fellowship: "Can A Shepherd Ever Rest?speaker Dr. Thomas Havard. 7:30 pm. Ida Noyes EastLoungeHUM: Lecture- "A Contrast In Cultural and LiteraryValues’’ speaker Rabbi Norman Lewison. 8:30 pm, 5715Woodlawn.Post Libria: Dave Sulcer and Dave Blumenfield, 9:30-1:30pm, Ida Noyes Frog and PeachSaturdayAikido: Meets 10:30 am in Bartlett gymSooior Weak Dance Marathon: Has been postponed untilearly AprilCrossroads: Buffet dinner, 6:00 pm No reservationsnecessary.5621 S BlackstoneMao's Craw: Film- "Blazing Saddles" 7 00. 8:45 and 10:30pm. Cobb.Law School films: "Psycho" 7:15 and 9:30 pm. Law SchoolAuditoriumCrossroads: International Poetry reading. 7:30 pm. allwelcomeHUM: Purim Masquerade Party. 50 cents admission,prizes. 8:51 pm, 5715 Woodlawn SundayRockefeller Chapel Ecumenical Service of Holy Commu¬nion. 9:00 am, Discussion Class, 10:00 am. UniversityReligious Service, 11:00 amHUlel: Lox and Bagel brunch. 11:00 am, 5715 WoodlawnOriental Institute: Film: "Rivers of Time (Mesopotamia)"2:00 pm, 1155 E. 58th StCrossroads: Bridge. 3:00 pm Beginners and expertswelcomeRacquetball Club: Meets 3:30-5:30 pm. Field House courts1-4.Greek Student Assocation: The Women's Movement inGreece Today" speaker Voula Lambropoulou, 7:00 pm. In¬ternational House East LoungeDoc Films: "Repulsion” 7:15 and “Eyes Without a Face"9:15 pm, Cobb.New Music Ensemble: Concert of 20th Century music. 8:00pm, Goodspeed Hall. FreeMondayPerspectives: Topic- "Failure in First Grade and Its Con¬sequences" guests John Glidewell. and Dr SheppardKellam. 6.09 am, channel 7Crossroads: English classes for foreign women. 10:00 am.5621 S. BlackstoneKundalini Yoga: Meets 12 noon in Ida Noyes.Oermaa Table: Meets at 12 noon in the Blue Gargoyle tospeak GermanChristian Science Organization: Meets at 12 50 pm inGstes-Blake 428 ,Dept of Biochemistry: "Structure Of A Membrane Recep¬tor for Endocytosis of Glycoproteins" speaker KurtDrickamer. 2:30 pm, Cummings room 101.Division of Physical Sciences: "Globular Cluster X RaySources; Compact Binaries or Black Holes?” speakerJohathan Grindlay, 3:30 pm, Eckhart 133.Computation Cantor Seminar: "Introduction to DISSPLA3:30-5:00 pm. R! 180Dept of Chemistry: "Factors Influencing Carbomum IonStability" speaker Prof PaulGassman. 4:00 pm. Kent 103Center for Middle Eastern Studies Lecture "Knowledge.Virtue and Action: Shari’a and the Sufi Way in Islam"speaker Ira Lapidus. 4 00 pm. Breasted Hall. Oriental InstituteKundalini Yoga: Meets 5:00-7 00 pm. Ida NoyesOymnastics Club: Meets 5 30 pm. Bartlett gymChess Club: Meets 7:00 pm. Ida Noyes 2nd floorDoe Films: "Nanook of the North" 7:15 pm, "Moana" 8:15pm. Cobb WANTEDChild s fold-up stroller. 947-0995 ormeesage/Virginia 324-2684RIDE WANTEDTo WHTFD, Conn, end of finals weekwill pay gas, tolls and drive Will pay ex¬tra if you're driving back. Call 684-8567before 10 am or after 9 pm.MOVINGI have a truck and can move thingsFAST and CHEAP. No job too small. CallPeter at 955-1824UC HOTLINE753-1777Feeling snowed under? Call Hotline753-1777 open seven days a week from7:00 pm to 7:00 am.DISCREET 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 as itis interesting.PASSPORTPHOTOSPASSPORT PHOTOS WHILE U WAITModel Camera, 1342 E. 55th St.,493-6700FREE COFFEEInflation hasn't hit us yet come to PostLibris, this Fri. INH.PERSONALPROTECTIONSHRIEK ALARM Send $3 90 (includespostage) to William Everett, 5811 W Na¬tional Ave West Allis, WISC 52314A SINGULARGROUPWe are a co-op of artists and craftspeo¬ple sharing selling space at 57th andWoodlawn. We are open Wed-Sat 11-2stop in. New artists are invited to join.BombshellMedicalDiscoveriesSPORTS0R/& 30 BASICMOVEMENTS FOROPTIMUM HEALTHSport smedicineSPORTSMEDICINE statesthat sports ore mainly forfun, glory or money, butcause more injuries andaccidents than betterhealth....While TheAmerican MedicalAssociation advocatesBasic Body-work forFitness & Heolth ...for allages at home throughoutlife . For a condensationof world authorities read,SPORTS or & EXERCISEedited by SidneyBlackstone (B.S. HarvardUniversity) at allbookstores and The COOP,reduced this wk to 95‘.Young Designs byLIZABETH GORDON!HA IK DC SIC NIKS1620 E. 53rd St.288-2900 POST LIBRISDave Sulcer & Hugh Blumenfeid Fri.Feb 20. IHN, 9:30-1:30IMPROVEGRADESStudy better and improve your gradeswith a pair of SILENCIO SOUND MUF¬FLERS They will eliminate distractingnoises that disturb concentration Only$8 pr. Call 955-0115 from 7-10 pm fordelivery within 24 hrsDOES YOURMIND MATTER?It does to us. People are needed forongoing experiments in handednessand psychology Interesting and pro¬fitable Call 753-4735. (Lefties pleasecall).PASSPORTPHOTOSWhile you wait passport photos. AbleCamera, 1519 E 53rd 752-3030CAMPUS BANDSAll campus bands interested in beingincluded in a Grey City Journal articleplease contact Brad Brittan at 753-2340ext 1619WOMEN’S RAPGROUPA Women s Rap group meets everyTuesday at 7:30 pm at 5655 S UniversityAve For info. 752-5655LITERARYMAGAZINEPrimavera, a women's literarymagazine needs more women to jointhe staff Call 752-5655 or 548-6240 Onsale in most bookstoresNEED A TYPIST? Excellent work done in my homeReasonable rates Tel: 536-7167 or548-0663IMSOCIMEntry forms are available in the IM Of¬fice (INH 203) Deadline for entries isFebruary 25,1981HO-HO HELPERis your relationship on the rocks? Havecandy and flowers Decome meaning¬less? When all else has failed, give thatspecial someone a Ho-ho-it never fails!'Ho-ho's are on sale today at Cobb Cost$5 00 Sizes S.M.L.XLEXCAVATIONA book of poems by Alice Ryerson, onsale at U of C BookstoreTEXANS ANDFRIENDS OFTEXASTexas Independence Day (145th) March2 Celebrate with us at the Pub any timeafter 5 pm Raise the flag, do a fewtwelve-ounce curls, sing a bit. D. Jonesand J WoodsSENIOR WEEK?Unfortunately, we must cancel thedance marathon set for Feb 21. It willbe held early next quarter All those in¬terested in dancing, seniors andothers, contact Brian at 947-8161 orleave your name at SAOMIME WORKSHOPCome join E.F. Clown for an alter noonof mime Sat , Feb 211-4 pm Ida NoyesFree!!ORIENTALCARPETSTL. JB RB. SM. SK. lM. GH. Plus LVare now proud owners of exquisitecarpets which will appreciate in bothbeauty and value Your carpet fromAfghanistan. Iran, and NW Pakistanawaits! Buy now as changing politicaland economic conditions in the MiddleEast result in higher prices for eachsubsequent shipment. David A.J.Bradley 241-7163, 643-8613.YOU DON'T HAVE TO BE ADOCTOR, DENTIST OR NURSETO CONTRIBUTE TO THEPUBLIC'S HEALTH. WE OFFERTHE POUND OF PREVENTION -NOT THE OUNCE OF CUREJoin Us AtIllinois only School of Public HealthUniversity of Illinois at the Medical CenterChicagoMasters & Doctoral Degree Programs are offeredin Biometry, Epidemiology, Environmental andOccupational Health Sciences, Industrial Hygieneand Safety, Health Sciences and CommunityHealth Sciences, Administration and Health Law,Health Education, Population Sciences andInternational Health.Financial Assistance is available through PublicHealth Traineeships and Research Assistantships.Deadline to apply for M.P.H. Program isFebruary 16, 1981. Deadline for M S., Dr.P.H.and Ph.D. Programs is six weeks prior to thequarter in which the applicant wishes to enter.For further information, write or telephone:James W. WagnerAssistant Dean for Studentand Alumni AffairsUniversity of Illinois at theMedical CenterP.O. Box 6998Chicago, Illinois 60630(312) 996-6625The School encourages applications fromi qualified minority studentsThe Chicago Maroon, Friday, February 20,1981-11NOW THAT ITS OVER,PLEASE JOIN US FOR ACONVIVIAL GLASS OF WINE.Finally! The carpeting is down. All the planks and barricades havebeen removed. The books are back on the shelves, inviting you tobrowse.In short, the remodeling project (we thought it would never end) atthe General Book Dept, of your University of Chicago Bookstore iscompleted.PLEASE JOIN US IN CELEBRATING and see for yourself the tran*sformation that has been wrought. Complementary wine and cheesewill be served.L.