THECHICAGOMAROONVolume 90, No. 40 The University of Chicago! m 00 00 00 00 DO 00CAUL ! CALL ] [r i, i Ii ..... • *LL OATA COI*F»0 PKUP iBACfC 1on oo do on oo ooMOLO 3 100: J134University OrdersAdvanced PhoneNetwork Copyright 1981 The Chicago Maroon Friday, March 6, 1981Dissident Kung Here in FallBy Sherrie NegreaA new telecommunications system will beinstalled at the University this summer toreplace the present Centrex telephone ser¬vice and to provide a more centralized com¬puter system on campus, Frederick Sween¬ey, the University’s Director of Operationsannounced this week. “It didn’t make any sense for them tostring wires paralleling the Illinois Bellcables,” Sweeney said. “So we decided toget together and plan for a combined tele-Continued on page 5 Roman Catholic theologian Hans Kunghas been named the John Nuveen VisitingProfessor at the University for fall quarter,1981.Kung, a prominent theologian whoseviews on papal infallibility, birth control,and the right of a women to hold church of¬fice prompted censure from Vatican author¬ities, is currently on the faculty of the Uni¬versity of Tubingen, in West Germany. In1979, Pope John Paul II revoked Kung’sstatus as a Catholic theologian there. How¬ever, he remains on the faculty as a profes¬sor of ecumenical theology, a positionbeyond the control of Church authorities. Heis expected to return to Tubingen after hisstay here.Kung will hold his appointment in the Di¬vinity School. “The University is committedto academic freedom,” said FVanklin Gam-well, Dean of the Divinity School, “and weare pleased to express that committment byinviting someone whose freedom (has beenquestioned).”Kung will teach two graduate courseswhile he is here, both dealing with his majorsubjects of study. One will be an introducto¬ry course on Ecumenical theology, the other an advanced seminar addressing the ques¬tion “Does God exist?”. He has written best¬selling books on both subjects.Kung will also be giving a series of severalpublic lectures on campus during thequarter, as part of the Hiram W. Thomaslecture series. He is expected to live in HydePark while he is here.Hans KungReport to Sanction Wider Use of GradsAlthough officials for both the Universityand the company providing the new systemrefused to discuss its cost, the Maroon haslearned from several sources that it will ex¬ceed $5 million.The new system, called the IBX integrat¬ed business exchange, will link all tele¬phones to the campus computer system. Thecampus telephones now in use will be re¬placed by two types of push-button tele¬phones which can be programmed to carryout communications functions not availableon the Centrex phones. Another main fea¬ture of the system is its capability to simul¬taneously carry voice and data transmis¬sions, allowing the user to speak to someonewhile using the same line to connect a termi¬nal to the campus computer system.Designed and manufactured by InteComInc., a division of the Exxon Corporation,the new system will be owned and operatedby the University. The present Centrex tele¬phones are supplied by and rented from Illi¬nois Bell. The University signed a contractfor the installation of the system with Inte¬Com last January after the plan was ap¬proved by the Board of Trustees. Sweeneyrefused to disclose any financial informa¬tion about the new system, because he saidhe was prohibited from doing so by anagreement in the contract with InteCom. Hesaid, however, that the new system will cost25 percent of the present operating costs ofthe Centrex system.The new telecommunications system wasrecommended by a study begun two yearsago to determine the University’s telecom¬munications needs. At that time, the compu¬tation center was being reorganized into adata network which would have linked allcampus computers through wires. But be¬cause the wires needed for this systemwould have paralleled identical cable wiresof Illinois Bell, the project was postponed sothat the University could plan a more eco¬nomical communications system to inte¬grate both the computers and telephones. By Robert DeckerThe use of graduate students as lecturersin courses in the College is the subject of amajor report to be released this spring,which will recommend that “with propersafeguards, lecturers can provide a highquality of teaching in the College,” and that“under controlled circumstances the use ofgraduate students as instructors is desir¬able.”The Committee on the Use of GraduateStudents in the College, which is preparing areport for Jonathan Z. Smith, Dean of theCollege, has established a set of guidelinesconcerning the selection, training, evalua¬tion, and supervision of lecturers, based onthe work of a previous committee whichmade broad recommendations on the sub¬ject in 1979.Chaired by Richard Strier, assistant pro¬fessor of English and a member of the Hu¬manities Collegiate Division governingcommittee, the committee will recommendthe use of internship program to train lec¬turers, as is now the practice in some under¬graduate mathematics courses, as well asthe continuing use of faculty supervisionand student evaluations of graduate studentinstructors.One of the questions raised by the 1979 re¬port was whether increasing the size ofclasses was preferable to using graduatestudents as lecturers in the common core,(given the proposed increase in the size ofthe College).“The ideal situation is to keep the classsize small,” Strier said. In the College as awhole, Strier said, “the number of lecturersmay increase in the absence of other alter¬natives.”As the increase in the number of studentswill come from better retention rates how¬ever, the main pressure will be placed oncourses in the 200 level, beyond the coreStrier said the committee will recommendthat the selection of lecturers be from “as wide a pool of applicants as possible,” andbe done on a committee basis rather than byindividuals.“The Committee exists to keep the situa¬tion under control,” Strier said. “There is nodanger that we will become like stateschools,” he said, which use a large numberof graduate students as instructors. Striersaid there were many positive aspects to theuse of graduate students. “We don’t evenwant the use of graduate students to belooked upon as a necessary evil,’ ” hesaid.Graduate students, Strier said, typicallyshow “an eagerness for the subject,” andare “closer to remembering what it is like tobe a student (at that level).”The usage of graduate students as instruc¬tors varies widely from department to de¬partment, even within the same collegiatedivision. Largely because of the unexpectedloss of two faculty members last spring, theeconomics department has had to rely heav¬ily on graduate students for staffing its“core" requirement for concentrators ofeconomics 200-203.By contrast, the political science depart¬ment this year will use only one graduatestudent as the primary instructor in a totalof two courses. According to Nathan Tar-cov, chairman of the undergraduate pro¬gram, the PhD. candidate teaching thesecourses is one of the top students in the de¬partment. and his appointment was necessi¬tated by the departure of two facultymembers earlier this year.“We hope to hire several more people (asregular faculty members),” Tarcov said;four new members are to be hired in thenear future. Tarcov said thpt the growth ofthe number of political science concentra¬tors has “increased the average size ofclasses,” rather than creating a need forgraduate student instructors. Over the pastseveral years the fraction of facultymembers teaching undergraduate (200 level) courses has increased, according toTarcov.“The paper requirement will have an¬other effect,” Tarcov said. Now that politi¬cal science concentrators must spend twoquarters writing a B.A. thesis, “pressurewill be taken off the 200-level courses.” hesaid.In the Humanities Collegiate Division(HCD), the major use of graduate studentsis in elementary courses in foreign lan¬guages. According to Braxton Ross, masterof the HCD, all of these graduate studentscome from the University’s student body,are “carefully screened,” with the division¬al master and the dean of the College closelyscrutinizing the appointments.Ross said graduate student have “notbeen very successful teaching in the Hu¬manities core,” because of the breadth ofknowledge demanded by common coreclasses. But student evaluations of languageinstructors have been “very good ” Stu¬dents commending these instructors in lan¬guages have sometimes mistaken them forregular members of the faculty, Ross said.There is a wide use in the common core,however, of William Rainey Harper Instruc¬tors, who are recent PhD. recipients whoteach for two years at the University andthen leave. Ross said about 40 of the 108 sec¬tions of Humanities core courses will betaught by Harper Instructors this year.Despite this reliance on non-facultymembers, Ross said in his four years asContinued on page 5Publication NoteThis is the final issue of the Maroon forthe Winter quarter. The Chicago Liter¬ary Review will appear, God willing,next Friday. The Maroon will resumeregular publication on April 3, the Fridayfollowing the start of Spring quarterclasses. Have a nice vacationSTUDENT GOVERNMENTFINANCE COMMITTEESummer Autumn WinterAllocationsIf you have any questions or comments callClarke Campbell, Finance Committee Chairman 753-3273Organization Request Grant/LoanOrganization of Hack Students $361 $211WNPK 3530 2400Student Government 1358 1358WNPK 270 0Socialized Medicine 200 0Stamp Club 555 115Graduate Committee on the Study of Women 260 260STEP Tutor Program 160 160SG Activities Committee 784 784Homecoming 575 275/300Organization of Hack Students 1475 1145Front for Jazz 5785 380/750FOTA 5000 800Student Government 251 251Concert Band 855 0Medieval and Renaissance Recreation Society 75 50Chinese Music Society 300 200GALA 2566.32 654.95/300College Republicans 641 0Graduate History Council 216 132E.F. Gown 482.50 482SG Activities Committee 31.25 31.25Chinese Student Association 340 340One Shot Productions 245 175Middle Eastern Students Association 1575 400University Feminist Organization 1763 1250Primavera 3705 0/2000Organization of Latin American Students 1116 837WHPK 2733 2000College Bowl 645 645Law School Students Association 1572 500Hunger Concern Group 143 143Inquiry 3029 1500Change Ringing Society 30 30Chess Oub 705 120Student Government 3285.29 3285.29wocxTrwr s 3000 1800/1200SG Activities Committee 610.35 610.35SG Activities Committree 50 50Yearbook 8910 0/8910Debate Society 5265 2665Christian Fellowship 225 ' 0Black History Month 8990 4165Le Gab Francois 195 195International Relations Council 7300 0Women's Union 660 0STEP Tutoring Program 125 125Concert Band 385 385 Organization Request Grant/LoanHispanic Cultural Society 58 58Hispanic Cultural Society/Spanish Gub 30 30UMOJA 1295 100Country Dancers 589.79 590Commuter Coop 689.87 610Women's Union 65 65Women's Union 465 330Linguistic Circle 250 100FOTA 4200 4200Graduate Committee on the Study of Women 2966 2381Computer Gub 235 25Law School Students Association 312 312Spartacus Youth League 225 0Law School Students Association 550 550WHPK 7581 4470Lithuanian Gub 387 272Assalin, Inc. 877 47.61/250Linquistic Circle 250 100Greek Student Association 1050 735American-German Law Students Society 230 0Spanish Gub 193 83SG Activities Committee 2057 2057Women's Union 552.50 255/150Front for Jazz 2115 865/1250Student Government 1300 1300SG Activities Committee 277.50 275Chamber Orchestra 3302.50 0Armenian Students Organization 418 418Assasin, Inc. 53 44Christian Fellowship 295 0Student Government 380 380Student Services Committee 128.24 128.24SG Election A Rules Committee 420.25 420.25Hispanic Cultural Society 1305 0Graduate Students in Romance Languages 185 105Senior Week 478.50 478.50SG Fmonce Committee 600 600Round Table on International Relations 650.40 0Anthropology Film Group 369.66 214.66GALA 1314.95 0Hispanic Cultural Society 117 117Iran Society 105 65Organization of Latin American Students 175 45GALA 500 0Chamber Orchestra 252 252SG Day Care Center Committee 700 500Women in Medicine 45 45The Chicago Maroon — Friday, March 6, 1981NEWS BRIEFSDemolition Makes Tenants Ill, AngryTenants at 5143 S. Kenwood have organ¬ized to protest demolition in their buildingby condominium developer Michael Gross.A city building inspector ordered a halt tothe work Wednesday because Gross hadbegun the work without obtaining a buildingpermitr-Tenants in the building, among whom is aweek-old infant, complained of headaches,nosebleeds, and other symptoms from theplaster dust created throughout the buildingas a result of demolition in the vacant apart¬ments. They also complained that workmenwearing masks were dumping dust anddebris from a third-floor window without achute, which is illegal.Gross told the Maroon that all wreckingand dumping in the building has stopped,that he spoke with 5th ward alderman LarryBloom Wednesday about the tenants’ com¬plaints, and that he “will probably meet’’with Bloom and the tenants Saturday morn¬ing at the tenants’ request. He said he plansto go ahead with the work as soon as archi¬tectural plans are submitted to the city’sbuilding department and a permit is ob¬tained.Ralph Scott, of the Hyde Park Coalition onHousing and Tenants’ Rights (HPCHTR) ishelping to plan the meeting. The HPCHTR isdrafting a “10-point Hyde Park rehabilita¬tion covenant,” which it hopes to present toGross Saturday. HPCHTR plans to try to getdevelopers starting new work in the neigh¬borhood to sign the document, which will bea good faith agreement outlining principlesaf consideration for tenants of buildings un¬dergoing rehabilitation or conversion.' The 5143 S. Kenwood building is owned byPhilip Gross and managed by Sack Realty.Tenants received a notice of condominiumconversion in November.—Andrea HollidayPoet Heany ReadsThe Irish poet Seamus Heaney will readselections from his work this Sunday, March8th, at 7:30 pm in the Swift Lecture Hall.Heaney, the recipient of several literaryawards, is the author of five books of poetry.The highly acclaimed North (1975) and lastyear’s Field Work are the most recent of hisworks. Though young, Heany is often men¬tioned bv critics as one of Ireland’s bestpoets.This Sunday’s reading is Heaney’s first inChicago, and is sponsored by the MortonDauwen Zabel Lecture Series and tne Chi¬cago Review Speaker Series.Seek $2.7 million inHospital ImprovementsThe University of Chicago hospitals areseeking approval from a local hospital regu¬latory agency for $2.7 million in improve¬ments of equipment and facilities.The most expensive of the three projectsplanned is the purchase of a new $1.1 milliontomographic body scanner, a computerizedradiology device. Also included in the hospital’s request tothe Chicago Health Systems Agency (HSA)is a $992,(XX), modification of hospital facili¬ties to enable the hospital buildings to beconnected to the University’s central energycomputer, which regulates building temper¬atures to save energy. Once the system isconnected, the University hopes to save$500,000 in heating and cooling costs annual¬ly-The hospitals are also seeking permis¬sion to purchase two incinerators, at a costof $700,000. These would meet new Environ¬mental Protection Agency (EPA) emissionsguidelines, according to John Pontarelli,director of public affairs at the medicalcenter.The HSA is a public agency which regu¬lates hospital expenditures in an effort tocontrol the costs of medical services.Writing Tutor HoursW’riting Tutors are available to give stu¬dents free help with papers for theircourses. The Tutors’ Office in Gates-Blake#203 will be open during these hours forWinter Quarter:Monday — 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. and 1 p.m. to 3p.m.Tuesday— 9 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. and 3 p.m. to 5p.m.Wednesday — 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.Thursday — 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.Friday — 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. and 1 p.m. to 3p.m.If these hours are not convenient, studentsmay telephone the Tutors to make appoint¬ments for other time slots. The office phone number is 753-4728 or 753-5655. Notes canalso be left in the Tutors’ mailboxes inGates-Blake #319-A. Over 400 students con¬tacted the Tutors during Autumn Quarter of1980.Vanishing PhonesStudent abuse of the campus telephones inHarper Memorial Library was responsiblefor the removal of several telephones therelast month.Someone discovered a method of makinglong-distance phone calls from the campusphones, and, after the University receivedbills for the calls, the phones were re¬moved.Fortunately, for most campus phoneusers, the incidents at Harper seem to havebeen the exception, not the rule, and noother phones are scheduled for removal, ac¬cording to the Office of Telecommunica¬tions.—Matthew BrennemanMemorial for RavinA memorial service for professor Ar¬nold Ravin, who died last Saturday, willbe held on Wednesday, March 18, at 3 pmin Bond Chapel.Ravin was a prominent researcher andone of the founders of the Arts andSciences Basic to Humanities and Medi¬cine (ASHUMi program. He was theAddie Clark Harding professor in the de¬partments of biology and microbiology,the College, the Committee on Genetics,and the Committee on the ConceptualFoundations of Science.convertible one bedroom/kan-'vart-a-bal 'wan 'bed-rum1. a large studio which has been converted to acharming one bedroom. 2. a condominium homewith designer kitchen just steps away from thecampus. 3. an affordable alternative to payingrent. n. see economical.Even we were surprised at your response to Phase I.In Phase II, those willing to make a fully refundable good faithdeposit of $300.00 have the option of purchasing availableunits at CAMPUS COMMONS at the prices in effect on theday that their Reservation Application and deposit are re¬ceived. There already has been one price increase, and moreare on the way. Don't pay more in the future because youwant to shop carefully. Prices are subject to change withoutnotice.Reservation Deposit Applications and Property Reports are availa¬ble at the model sales office.Prices start at $18,900.Model open Monday through Friday 7pm-9pm,Saturday 12-5pm, Sunday 12-4pm. Closed WednesdaysCampusCommons5841 South Blackstone AvenueChicago, Illinois 60637 241-5737 DO YOU FEEL THAT DIVINE INTELLIGENCE GOV¬ERNS THE UNIVERSE? COULD THIS INTELLIGENCEHAVE A HEALING EFFECT ON YOUR OWN LIFE?COME HEAR“WHAT CHRISTIANSCIENCE TEACHESABOUT INTELLIGENCE’’A LECTURE BY JEAN I. TAINSH.MEMBER OF THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCEBOARD OF LECTURESHIP. FIRSTCHURCH OF CHRIST. SCIENTIST,BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTSFRIDAY, MARCH 6th, 7:30pmAT THE CENTER FOR CONTINUING EDUCATION1307 EAST 60TH STREET, CHICAGO(SOUTH SIDE OF THE MIDWAY.BETWEEN DORCHESTER AND WOODLAWN). NO OFFERING• CHILDCARE AND• PARKING PROVIDEDSponsored by IOth Church of Christ. Scientist. 1448 E. 57th Street.Chicago, and the Christian Science Organization at the U of CThe Chicago Maroon — Friday, March 6, 1981 — 3“N Students Question Mental Health MethodsBy Richard Kaye and Sherrie NegreaIn our various conversations with stu¬dents on their experiences at the Universi¬ty’s Student Mental Health Clinic, we cameacross a wide gamut of impressions, rang¬ing from the highly enthusiastic to the stron¬gly critical. Some students believed theClinic began or renewed their faith in thepsychotherapeutic process, while otherscomplained that the Mental Health Clinicgave them deep suspicions about the abilityof psychiatric therapy to help them come toterm with their problems.Among students who criticized the Clinic,one of the most common views was that theClinic was simply an extension of the Uni¬versity bureaucracy, and its staff memberswere people who, while well-intentioned,saw their jobs as to keep students perform¬ing well in school, attending classes, and‘’fitting in.”The Mental Health report of the Clinic,which has been included in the overall Uni¬versity Student Health report ever sinceMiriam Elson, its mam author, retired frorpthe Clinic, does clearly hold some specificviews on certain student complaints. Afteracknowledging that “the most frequentcomplaint we hear from newcomers is theabsence of a meeting place which cutsacross divisions and schools,” the 1979 Men¬tal Health report finds that “there are manysuch places scattered through the Universi¬ty area, and on any given day, enoughevents and activities are listed in theMaroon to fill a week of evenings”.The Report’s authors go on to say thatthese students’ complaints must relate tothe fact that “these students have oftencome from small private colleges and major state universities where they have had sucha facility.” The authors of the Report no¬where suggest that such student complaintsmay be legitimate in their own right, andunrelated to previous experiences at schoolswith more activities and social centers.Some students we interviewed did criti¬cize Clinic psychiatrists for reducing allproblems to questions of “How can you getover this so that you can get on with yourschool work?” and, of primarily attemptingto have students “adjust” to University de¬mands. One such case involved a Collegestudent named “Harriet” who went to Stu¬dent Mental Health because she was wor¬ried that her sister was becoming an alco¬holic. Harriet said that on her first visit thepsychotherapist tried to convince her thatthis was not a problem which she should bepreoccupied with.“She essentially said to me, ‘What busi¬ness is it of yours what’s going on with yoursister? Your business is school now.’ Shethen went on to ask me all about school. It sohappened that my school work was goingquite well then. But she insisted that myproblem really related to school, and shejust didn’t want to directly approach thisproblem. It was very frustrating having hertell me that my problems were actuallysuch and such when they weren’t.”“It seemed to me that my therapist at Stu¬dent Mental Health had a very narrow per¬spective on people and problems,” Harrietcontinued. “I think people at Student MentalHealth tend to see everything in terms ofschool.”The question of just how much the StudentMental Health Clinic values “adjustment”to the University to the detriment of otherfactors in a patient’s well-being is a compli¬cated one. Most students do seek StudentMental Health’s assistance because theirproblems are interfering with their schoolbusiness, and yet a few students interviewedSave With Our Campus Discount!Show us your campus identification for 20% savingson prescription eyewear for you and your immediatefamily. (Offer may not be combined with any other.)Come to the Eyewear Experts for quality, service andvalue!The Evewear ExpertsOffices Located Throughout ChicagoConsult Your Yellow Pages ForOffices Open Nearest You. said they resented what they believed wasthe psychotherapist’s tendency to center thepurpose of the therapy on getting a studentto proceed with studies. Clinic psychiatristPeter Johnston emphasized that the Clinic isnot primarily designed to handle problemswhich might require long-term therapeuticwork. And according to Director Kramer,one of the main ways in which Student Men¬tal Health judges the ‘’success” with pa¬tients is by checking graduations lists inorder to see whether patients have graduat¬ed from their programs.“Somebody who really needs a profession¬al, who is really having trouble coping,shouldn’t go there,” said “Alan”, a studentin the College who was having trouble con¬centrating on his work while he was in a se¬vere state of depression.“They might be good as a referral ser¬vice, but for very intensive help, I don’tthink Student Mental Health is the place togo.”Alan left his therapist after three visits toStudent Mental Health, and eventually wentto a psychiatrist in the Loop. After seeingthat therapist several times for a month for$250 a week, Alan stopped his therapy.“I still didn’t have any control over my¬self, but I could do schoolwork.”Nevertheless, he withdrew from school,taking incompletes. and did not return untilsecond week of the following quarter.The question of when it is appropriate forpsychotherapists to give specific “advice”to students came up several times duringour interviews with Clinic patients. A largenumber of students remembered that theirtherapists did give them direct advice onmatters, sometimes on the first and secondvisits. Although a number of studentsclaimed they were annoyed by this, somesaid they were much better for it. One fe¬male College student said that she was irri¬tated to find her therapist telling her suchadvice as “stop doing the dishes of yourroommates, stop talking to so many peoplewhen you go to the library,” but was laterpleased to see the therapist stop pushing ad¬ vice and move on to what became a verypositive kind of therapy.“Sometimes advice is given,” said psychi¬atrist Johnston, “but usually the therapistwill try and have the patient array beforehimself the different options in a given situ¬ation.”“I’d say the therapists are very good atcutting through your problems,” “Margie”,a third-year college student said. “I was im¬pressed with the Clinic, and I found that itwas a real therapy situation rather thananalysis. One thing I liked is that we workedout some solution together. And my thera¬pist was very responsive. I feel that the ther¬apy that Student Mental Health offers isvery necessary, but very limited.”Margie went to the Clinic because she hadfeelings of “aloneness” and “alienation”which made her “depressed and frustrat¬ed.” Her dormitory Resident Heads advisedher to go to Student Mental Health.One group of individuals we spoke withwho had consistently negative opinions ofthe Student Mental Health Clinic were gayand lesbian people. Every gay or lesbianperson we spoke with expressed dissatisfac¬tion with therapists at the Student MentalHealth Clinic, and a number said they alsoknew of gay friends who had found the Clinicgrossly inadequate to deal with the prob¬lems of a gay or lesbian student. The rei¬terated complaint was that Student MentalHealth psychotherapists were not so muchanti-homosexual as totally unfamiliar withthe problems of gay people.Some students who reported dissatisfac¬tion with Student Mental Health stated thatthey had decided to go for professional helpelsewhere, without a specific referral fromthe Mental Health Clinic. Chicago Counsel¬ing and Psychotherapy Center in Hyde Parkwas one such clinfc mentioned as was theWexler Clinic at Michael Reese Hospital.Neither are free like the Student MentalHealth Clinic is, but both clinics have a slid¬ing scale payment system for those who arehard-pressed financially.Just 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. QT72nd & Stony IslandOpen Evenings andSpnday684-0400SPECIAL DISCOUNT PRICESfor all STUDENTS, STAFF,and FACULTY MEMBERS72nd & ShOpen Even(V » /i Sunday'Xjs ad/i72nd & Stony IslandOpen Evenings andSunday684-0400Just Present your UniversityChicago Identification Card,students, Faculty MembersAdministrative Staff you are en¬titled to special money-savingDISCOUNTS on Chevrolet Parts.Accessories and any new or usedChevrolet you buy from Ruby^Chevrolet.4 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, March 6, 1981Reading Period Popular But UnlikelyBertram Cohler By Don LaackmanDespite support among some students,faculty, and administrators for the creationof a reading period before final exams, theidea is unlikely to be put into effect withoutextensive changes in the quarter system.Several University administrators saidthey approved of a reading period, but didnot see how the idea would be workable. Aweek-long reading period could not be addedto each quarter, according to Lorna Straus,Dean of Students in the College, because thiswould leave only four weeks for vacationsduring the year. However, she seemed moreoptimistic about the possibility of a two orthree-day reading period, which might befeasible if each quarter began on a Wednes¬day or Thursday. One risk to this proposal,she noted, was that students might not showup for the first few days of classes.Straus also suggested cutting the examschedule from five to four days, giving stu¬WHAT OTHER COLLEGES DO BEFORE FINALS WEEK:College Reading Period Finals Period Term LengthStanford Classes, no papers, One week 10 weekstests or homeworkDartmouth None One week 10 weeksNorthwestern One week One week 9 11 weeksHarvard 10 days 2 weeks 15 weeksPrinceton 10 days 2 weeks 15 weeksU of C None One week 10 weeksPhone SystemContinued from page 1communications system.”The University then hired Bell NorthernResearch, a Canadian consulting firm, todetermine what type of system would meetthe University’s requirements. After thefirm submitted its report, the Universitycontacted eight telecommunications compa¬nies for consideration and later selected In-teCom from this group.Besides the collaboration with the campuscomputer system, Sweeney said capabilitiesand costs were major reasons for purchas¬ing the new system. “The main reason forputting in the system,” Sweeney said, “isthat it allows us to have simultaneous voiceand data capabilities and it will cost lessthan what we have now only for voice. Wewill not pay any more (for the new system)than we are currently paying.”Sweeney said that the new system is alsoless expensive because it is a digital system(which converts the voice to code throughthe telephone) and because of the availabili¬ty of new technology. The Centrex system isan analog system, which has been outdatedby recent telecommunication technology, hesaid.The system will also save money becausethe University will not have to pay rentalfees for the new telephones, as it presentlydoes to Illinois Bell.The type of system the University has pur¬chased is a recent development in telecom¬munication technology which has only beeninstalled at two other businesses in thecountry, American Airlines and New York’sCitibank.‘‘We are the first university in the countryto have it,” Sweeney said. ‘‘But numerousuniversities have contacted us and asked usabout this and are awaiting the results ofour system.”Though the system is new on the market,Sweeney explained that the technology in¬volved has already been developed, but in adifferent form. ‘‘Everything the (new) sys¬tem does is already being done but it is notpackaged in this way,” he said. He addedthat “there’s nothing risky in terms of thesystem’s technology.”The system will primarily consist of twotypes of push-button telephones, a standardand electronic model, and a master controlunit. The phones will replace all of the 9,000Continued on page 18 dents the Monday of finals week to study.This would require a careful scheduling toavoid conflicts, she said.Nobody has “ever thought seriously aboutchanging the system,” according to Paul Ausick, assistant dean of students in theUniversity. Ausick said that any changewould have to be initiated by the faculty.Each of the faculty members interviewedsupported a reading period which, in thewords of chemistry professor NormanNachtrieb, would give students “time to re¬flect before thev take exams.”Two other faculty members, GeorgePlaye and Bertram Cohler, advocated notonly instituting a reading period, but alsochanging the University’s academic calen¬dar from the quarter system to semesters.The quarter system is “inhuman for stu¬dents and faculty,” Cohler said. Cohler, whoattended the University as an undergradu¬ate, said he believes the quarter system re¬quires too much material to be crammedinto too short a time. Cohler said he liked thetheory of a reading period, but believes it isworkable only in a semester system. Playesaid that if the University switched to a se¬mester system, it could continue to hold asummer quarter, and that this would re¬quire a translation of credits into semesterquarter hours.Student reaction to a reading period wasoverwhelmingly positive. Second-year stu¬dent Dean Grosshandler said, “It would benice to be able to sit back and take a look atwhat we’ve done during the quarter. We’dprobably learn the material better.” Otherstudents echoed his comments.When asked about a switch to a semestersystem, however, student opinions becamemore divided. Some thought a semesterwould only drag the quarters out. These stu¬dents did not feel a semester system woulddecrease the pressure on students, becauseas a one third-year student put it, “U of CSchramm ‘NEXT’ Big PowerBy Steve ShandorDavid Schramm, chairman of the depart¬ment of astronomy and astrophysics, is oneof “the hundred most powerful people forthe 80s” according to NEXT magazine. Alsonamed to the list is University alumnus Ed¬ward Stone of the Jet PropulsionLaboratory. The two are the only physicalscientists in the wide field of men andwomen that NEXT magazine feels have a“potential to change the shape of things tocome.”Astrophysicist Schramm is well-knownfor his now accepted estimate of the age ofthe universe. His investigations into the lifecycle of the universe have also brought himwidespread recognition both within and out¬side of the scientific community.Commenting on NEXT’S selection of himas one of the 100 most powerful persons forthe next decade, Schramm said, “It’s a nicegroup to be included in.” But Schramm hassome reservations about the accuracy of atleast some of the predictions. Noting thatRonald Reagan's budget director DavidStockman is also on the NEXT list, Schramm said, “If Stockman, Stone and Iare on the same list, they’.re wrong about atleast one of us.” Schramm observed that itis doubtful that any researcher in the puredoubtful that any researcher in the puresciences will gain much power in theprevailing atmosphere of budgetaryrestraint in Washington.In spite of this, though, Schramm hopes touse the recognition to combat budget cuts inastrophysics research. Schramm sees thedistinction as a “way of gaining access topeople like Stockman” to get them to “re¬cognize that science does have an importantrole to play in the future.” Once a name be¬comes well-known, Schramm noted, “it’seasier to make an influence — easier to gainaccess. It opens more doors.”Schramm feels that the wider recognitionof himself and Chicago alumnus Stone wilhave “positve effects indirectly” for theUniversity as well. “It may be beneficial inrecruiting students,” especially in thesciences, Schramm addedSchramm is very pleased by the fact thatboth he and Stone are astrophysicists. Hehopes that this is a reflection of the future of students will be competitive and driving nomatter how classes are arranged.”First-year student Carmel Sella said thatshe enjoys going home for vacation with noclasses to worry about, which is an advan¬tage to the present system.A big objection to the quarter system,though, is that students do not get homefrom school until mid-June, and jobs areharder to find since many other schools fin¬ish in May. One graduate student com¬plained that ten weeks is not enough time todo an adequate research paper, a sentimentthat Mr. Cohler shared.No one — faculty, administrators or stu¬dents — thought that other colleges onquarter systems had found satisfactory so¬lutions to the reading period question. Stan¬ford University has an eleven week quarter,but the last week of classes is a dead’ week.Professors do not assign homework, papersor tests for the tenth week, but they do holdclasses. Nachtrieb said that this took awaythe active participation of students. The lec¬tures would then become a passive learningexperience and no one would benefit “nomatter how much professors like to hearthemselves talk.”Katie Nash, Assistant Dean of Students inthe College, thought such a plan would de¬tract from class participation and discus¬sion, which the University community hasalways considered a fundamental part ofthe education here.Northwestern’s method of varying thelength of the quarters to accommodate areading period was also viewed unfavor¬ably, largely because students and adminis¬trators thought this would be too confus¬ing.David Schrammastrophysics. Schramm sees “more growthintellectually” in the field in the next tenyears. By using his influence to convincepeople in Washington of the great potentialfor application of astrophysics research,Schramm hopes to ensure more technicalgrowth in the field as well.NEXT is a new magazine which special¬izes in the prediction of trends in all areas ofprofessional life. Over a million copies of thefirst issue were sold. An even wider circula¬tion is expected for this, the second issue.Qrads**** ^ Continued from page 1master he “hasn’t really had any difficulty”finding faculty members to teach in thecore, and that “slightly more facultymembers now are teaching in the core thanthree years ago,” although the percentageof sections taught by regular faculty has notincreased. “There has been little flight fromthe core” by regular faculty, Ross said.Bernard Silberman, master of the SocialSciences Collegiate Division, said “Thesame number of senior (faculty members)are now teaching, but there is a growing gapbetween the (number of course sections)and the number of senior faculty willing andable to teach.” Silberman said that any fu¬ture increase in the size of the College willcause “greater pressure on courses at the200 level,” which has already resulted in ashift of teaching from graduate courses toundergraduate and dual-level courses. (with both 200 and 300 numbers).Although the dean’s committee on the useof graduate students has not yet made anyrecommendations concerning the use of lab¬oratory assistants (LAs), and course assis¬tants in the Physical Sciences Collegiate Di¬vision, the Physical Sciences StudentAdvisory Committee has been conductingcourse evaluations of each section for thepast two years.According to Peter Chen, committeechairman, student reaction to LAs “varieswidely.” In introductory chemistry courses,the LAs “are almost all first and secondyear graduate students,” and generally“have no teaching experience," Chen said.Chen said the present shortage of beginninggraduate students would probably preventany fundamental change in the quality ofLAs.Committee member Elliott Nickbarg saidthat among the complaints lodged againstLAs and course assistants, are insensitivity to students’ questions, the inability of someforeign grad students to communicate effec¬tively, and occasional “ornery” behavior.This is more the exception than the rule,however, Chen saidIn the mathematics department graduatestudents are also used on a broad basis, asthe primary instructors in courses up to the143 calculus level. These instructors, Chensaid, are generally in their third year ofgraduate study and have served a year longapprenticeship. Student reaction to these in¬structors, he said, has been “very good.Most people don’t even know that they’regrad students. They are no worse than theprofessors.”Official student complaints about gradu¬ate teaching assistants have not been nu¬merous, according to Stephanie Browner,Student Ombudsman “There have been acouple of complaints about TAs ” Brownersaid, “but no more than one would expect.”The Chicago Maroon — Friday, March 6, 1981 — 5i *'4.1-1$<xa4Mt.ui itizktobWiip. 4<U&vm.lllt-Z imm t&i6 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, March 6, 1981An emergency stop for repairs canwipe out even the best-heeled traveler.Luckily, all you need is the price of aphone call to get you the money beforeyour car gets off the lift. Here’s what todo when you need money in a hurry.In Call home. Report the situation, andtell the folks they can get emergencycash to you fast by phone.b Ask them to call Western Union’stoll-free number, 800-325-6000 (inMissouri, 800-342-6700), anytime, day ornight. They charge the money and theservice fee to their MasterCard* or VISA* card. A Western Union ChargeCard Money Order, up to $1,000, will beflashed to the Western Union office oragent nearest your emergency.a Pick up your money—usually withintwo hours—at the local Western Unionoffice or agent. There are 8,500nationally, except in Alaska.Conveniently, about 900 locations areopen 24 hours. It’s that easy.Be sure to remind your parents aboutour toll-free number. It’s all they need tocall Western Union to the rescue.•The MasterCard name i> ow ned by Interbank Card Association’The VISA name is ow ned by VISA InternationalWestern Union Charge Card Money Order.The quickest way to getemergency money. G.W. OPTICIANS1519 E. 55thTel. 947*9335Eyes examined and ContactLenses fitted by registeredOptometrists.Specialists in QualityEyewear at ReasonablePricesLob on premises for fast service ■ framesreplaced lenses duplicated andprescriptions filledBigJim’sPipe &Tobacco Shop1552 E. 53rd St.(Under the I.C. tracks)9 a.m.-7 p.m. weekdays12-4 p.m. SundaysCHINESE-AMERICA^RESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANOAMERICAN DISHESOp«n Daily11 AM to 8 30 PMClosod Monday1318 EAST 63rdMU 4-1062TEST PREPARATION FORLm School Aomissioo TestGoimmte Bmmemeit Aim TestGomwte Record EiamwtiorMedical Colleoe Aim Test ;641-2185in Aim Test 'MtestWpwpYoung Designs byELIZABETH GORDONIHAIR DESIGNERS]1620 E. 53rd St.288-2900o » 1 « i . 0*1 • I I S * I ? •» Ol13th Year«tr i00"**9 2i|th1 Issue 6 M6 March 1981words asimagesby ROGER GILLMAN and DEBORAH HOLDSTEIN■mg 5 - - £K'I'Ji'Sfer ; -- -.. " * S~ ' '" r*Lat//""*f - ~ s -cX^~ 5f5wSj“* , ' -*titer-- -*r*,m, * -' :' ..wsby Arakawa, of The Mechanism of Meaning, 1963 71 , p, 15 of Whitewalls #5You may have missecka show youshould have seen. Even though theRenaissance Gallery's most recent show,"Words and Images," closed February28, it remains accessible through thecatalogue available at the Gallery; as aspecial issue of Whitewalls, a magazineof writing by artists, it offers aworthwhile experience through itsphotographs and introductory essay(even if not quite the same experience ashaving seen the show itself).The idea behind "Words and Images"is interesting; however, the quality ofwork chosen to exemplify its concept isuneven. The intention of Buzz Spector,Reagan Upshaw, and Roberta Upshaw(the guest curators of the show and theeditors of Whitewalls) was to presentartworks which use both words andimages in a way that experimentallyextends an earlier tradition of word andimage use in other ways: for example,the classical greek vase was incised withwords spoken by the characters depicted;the Renaissance angels of the Nativitymedieval manuscripts were illuminatedheld scrolls reading "Gloria in ExcelcisDeo"; Baroque portraits often includedthe sitter's name and rank, and so on.The recent history of artworks whichattempt the integration of visual andverbal modes of perception also providean important context for understandingthe body of works in "Words andImages." They are part of a traditionwhich may have begun with the Cubists,who incorporated works into theircollages and paintings (Picasso's "StillLife with Chair and Cane," for instance).Later, the Dadaists and Surrealitscreated puns through the surprisingjuxtaposition of words and images (as inDuchamp's Mona Lisa entitled"L.H.O.O.Q", or in Picabia's "Portrait ofMarie Laurencin").The work of three Americans whoemerged in the 1950's most closelyanticipates the works in "Words andImages": Robert Rauschenberg, JasperJohns, and Cy Twombley. Rauschenbergused newspapers and signs, sometimesfor more than compositional effect, whileJohns' works included names of colors,names of maps, and numbers. InTwombley's paintings, doodling andhandwriting interweave form andmeaning.Pop artists like Andy Warhol and JimDine used words as images, while RoyLichtenstein made his works literary by use of cartoon captions which wereindirect comments on American life. AndIndiana's "LOVE," "EAT," "DIE,"series, made some fundamental conceptsof existence fundamental to the design ofhis paintings.In contrast to their predecessors, the contemporary artists in this showattempt to integrate textual and visualelements in such a way that the artworkwould be radically violated by theirseparation.We concluded that the works of threeartists were particularly successful; in fact, Shusaka Arakawa, William Wiley,and Ed Ruscha also founded the newmovement. Shosaka Arakawa's Courbet'sCanvas (1972) is a response to acomment made by his teacher, MarcelDuchamp, about the nature of paintingsince Courpet: that art has becomeretinal at the expense of the conceptual.And the painting is successful in makingtext and image inseparable. Theconstrained elements of the work — alinear, stenciled texT — is balanced bythe gestural coloring of the letters, thediagonal line arbitrarily cutting throughthe linearity, and the tube-squeezed globsof paint at top and bottom.Wiley's Summer Remknits (1975)appers badly executed, but purposefullyuses words to create a visual and verballandscape — the words themselves arecomparable to the lopographic featuresof a map. The words a'so create punswhiie the drawn line effortlessly,successfully flows from word into loopingline into image, for example.On the other hand, Ruscha, in Mexico,Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska(1980) uses landscape as background forwords. The only perspective to a veryuniformly flat, nondescript horizon line(in Holiday Inn colors) is created by theplace names printed in graduallydecreasing letter size — the interplay ofliterary place within visual space iscrucial to the work's success.Of the younger artists represented, wefound Dottie Attie's In the Ivory Coast. . .(1980) to be a unique, intriguing, visualand textual narrative. While the series ofsmall drawings, each in its own,near-cinematic frame, seems to beambiguously juxtaposed with anoccasional frame of handwritten text, itinstead invites our imaginations to createa story; the work is challenging in itsconnections, and yet not prohibitively so.The text ieads the viewer/reader to asensually provocative impression, andthen gracefully to luscious images —actual details from old masters'paintings, like Inge's The Bath.There are many other younger artistsrepresented in the show, most of whoseworks we did not find as interesting;their conception and execution were notas successful at integrating words andimages as those we've highlighted. Theexperiment itself, however, is ultimatelya worthy and educative one, as thepossibilities tor "Words and Images"seem limitless.YALERUSSI3N CHORUSIn ConcertMarch 13 7:30 P.M.Goodspeed Hall - FreePresented by SAO & Music Dept.ELECTRIC BLUES -CHICAGO STYLECHICAGO FRONT FOR JAZZ PRESENTSIN CONCERTTHE LITTLE WILLIE ANDERSONBLUES BANDJames WheelerGuitarSat. March 7th8:30 pm Adm. $3TICKETS AT DOOR IDA NOTES HALLCLOISTER CLUB1212 E. 59fh St. DOC FILMSTonight: Peter Sellers as Inspector Clouseauin Blake Edwards ’THE RETURN OF THE PINK PANTHERTomorrow: Thank heaven for...Vincent Minelli’sGIGISunday: Alain (JONAH...] Tanner’sLA SALAMANDREAll Films in Cobb Hall at 7:15 and 9:30THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOThe William Vaughn Moody Lecture CommitteepresentsA Reading .byDENNIS SILKAuthor of The Punished LundMONDAY, MARCH 9, 19818:00 p.m.HARPER MEMORIAL 13011 16 E. 59th Street, Chicago, Illinois 60637Admission is without ticket and without charge2 GREY CITY JOURNAL FRIDAY 6 MARCH 1981Friday 6 Saturday 7 Sunday 8Monday 9 Tuesday 10 Wednesday11 Thursday^FILMSon of Paleface (Frank Tashlin, 1952): Acomedy wherein a dentist (Bob Hopo)heads out West to collect his legacyand gets involved with sharpshooterJane Russell and Roy Rogers. As anex-cartoonist, Tashlin has a reputationtor innovative sight gags, but an in¬ability to give the gags much contin¬uity. Tashlin's films are reputed tohave kept comedy alive during a verydry period in the 1950s. Unseen by thisreviewer. Wednesday, March 11, at8:30 in the Law School Auditorium.Phoenix films; $1.50 — NMDreams and Nightmares (1974): A docu¬mentary about the Abraham LincolnBrigade in the Spanish Civil War,which won the red ribbon at the Ameri¬can Film Festival the year of its re¬lease. The film will be introduced bySid Harris, a Hyde Park resident and aveteran of the Spanish Civil War.Thursday, March 12, at 7:30 in Quantrell. Sponsored by the U.C Studentsfor the Citizens Party; donations are$1.00.Young Frankenstein (Mel Brooks, 1974).Fine black and white cinematographyand superb casting dominate the bestof Mel Brooks' films. Marty Feldmanas Ygor and Terri Garr as Franken¬stein's dizzy blonde assistant stand outparticularly over a Transylvanianlandscape perfectly reminiscent of thehorror films of the 30s. Watch it forpuns and belly laughs, of which thereare many, or look tor a somewhatdeeper meaning as Brooks' commentson his life and art. The scene with theblind hermit is perhaps the single funniest scene in the last 20 years ofAmerican cinema. Who plays that hermit, anyway? With Gene Wilder,Cloris Leachman and Peter Boyle asthe monster. Saturday, March 14, at7:15 and 9:30 in Quantrell. Doc; $2.00- LBMidnight (Mitchell Leisen, 1939): A bitof Continental froth served up by acast, most of whom are quite accomplished at this sort of thing: ClaudetteColbert as a golddigger posing as JohnBarrymore's mistress to get a rise outof Barrymore's wife, Mary Astor. DonAmeche also hangs around as Col¬bert's beau, and even though he's woefully out classed by the others, even hehas been known to turn in a polishedcomic performance. Unseen by this re¬viewer Tuesday, March 17, at 8:30 inLaw School Auditorium. Law SchoolFilms; $1.50.The Graduate (Mike Nichols 1967): Acomedy that everyone should see. Thebasic plot is familiar, involving thegoings on of recent college graduateBeniamin (Dustin Hoffman), Mrs. Robinson (Anne Bancroft), and Mrs. Ro¬binson's daughter, Elaine (KatharineRoss). As has often been written, TheGraduate is one of those rare moviesthat captures its time. What makes thefilm so revealing about the 1960s isthat underneath Benjamin's cynicismand professed indifference to society'sexpectations of him lies a person wi1hvery conventional desires. Benjamin'sability to eventually reconcile thesetwo divergent sides produces a newmodern man. Wednesday, March 18,at 8:30 in the Law School Auditorium.Phoenix films; $1.50 — NM_Top Hat (Mark Sandrich 1935): Thequintessential Fred Astaire GingerRogers movie. As usual F^ed falls for the rest of the film. The sets are the ultimate in pure 1930s gloss. Irving Ber¬lin has said that this is his favorite filmscore and it is hard to argue with him.Berlin's score includes a top tapnumber ("Isn't It A Lovely Day to beCaught in the Rain"), Astaire's inventive solo to the title song, and thefamous "Cheek to Cheek" — the gent¬ly flowing romantic pas de deux thatestablished the team's image tor eternity. The first hour of Top Hat is purejoy. Only the last part of the film suf¬fers because of an overdose of thebland mistaken identity plot. Duringthe 1930s, the film was a perfectescape from the Depression. It shouldalso be a perfect escape from finalsweek depression. Thursday, March 19,at 8:30 in the Law School Auditorium.Law School Films; $1.50 — NMEl Salvador: Another Vietnam: A documentary produced by a team of freelance filmmakers, which was made aconsiderable risk last December whenseveral members of the internationalmedia were assassinated. The film in¬cludes interviews with Richard Feinberg, a State Department official,leaders of the Democratic Revolu¬tionary Front (FDR), Archbishop Ar¬turo Rivera y Damas, and peasantsdriven into refugee camps by rightistterror squads. The film draws parallels between Ei Salvador and Vietnam,particularly the "agrarian reform"program which was set up in bothcountries by the same group of people.The film is being sponsored by theCenter for Latin American Studies,and will be shown this afternoon, Fri¬day, March 6, at 12:30 in the ReynoldsClub Lounge.The Return of the Pink Panther (BlakeEdwards, 1974): Peter Sellers playsthe inept Inspector Clouseau for thetwenty eighth time, and proves onceagain what kind of comic genius ittakes to play the same character somany times without succumbing to asingle slack moment. He is tremen¬dously aided by Blake Edward's beautifully controlled direction; his comicsense hangs so delicately between un¬derstatement and broad slapstick thatever twitch of Sellers' lip can throwthe balance to one or the other extreme as the occasion demands. Thisone has him tangling with vacuumcleaners, "mieunkeys,” an interna¬tional jewel thief (Christopher Plummer), and his own disastrous invest! gative instincts. Oh yes, there is a plot,but it escapes me at the moment Tonight, Friday, March 6, at 7:15 and9:30 in Quantrell. Doc; $2.00. — MAFilms by Marie Menken: The Renais¬sance Society appends a little epilogueto its American Vanguard Cinemaseries, with a showing of films that arrived too late to be shown the firstweek of the series as scheduled. Men¬ken is a New York filmmaker who hasbeen associated with Andy Warhol(they've appeared in each other'smovies). Saturday, March 7, at 7 and 9in Cobb 424. All are welcomed.Gigi (Vincente Minelli 1958): Louis Jordan is the man about town in fin-desiecle Paris, Hermione Gingold is anold friend of Jourdan's, Leslie Caron isGingold's granddaughter who is beingprepared for life as a courtesan, andMaurice Chevalier is the spry old impwho knows everybody. The film'sjokes about sex were risque by 1958standards, but are somewhat palenow. But the Lerner-Lowe score is luscious and shines even though neitherCaron nor Jourdan are really singers.Minelli's superb direction are most evident in the scenes at Maxims and thebeautiful settings of the title song andthe Chevalier Gingold number, "I Remember It Well." Maurice Chevaliersteals the film, and who can resist theway he rolls through "I'm Glad I'mNot Young Anymore." Add his rendition of "Thank Heaven For LittleGirls" and all who have any inclination towards the musical genre shouldnot miss this film Saturday, March 7,at 7:15 & 9:30 in Quantrell. Doc; $2.00NMLa Salamandre (Alain Tanner, 1971):Bulle Ogier plays the flame resistantlizard of the title, a free spirited gaminand sometime factory worker, whosemotives (and/or lack of them) forshooting (and/or not shooting) herguardian are investigated by two writ¬ers who want to turn her into a TVmovie of the week. The only catch isthat she is no more willing to let thempluck out the heart of her mysterythan she is to let the authorities do so— there may not even be a mystery topluck. Tanner's stylistic tricks sometimes obscure his themes (the conflictof personal freedom and social responsibitity, the death of the spirit in theMachine Age, etc.) but they never ob¬scure the endless fascination of thefilm's enigmatic heroine. Beautifullyfilmed in luminous, bleached out blackand white by Renato Berta and SandroBernardoni. Also starring Jean LucBideau and Jacques Denis. Sunday,March 8, at 7:15 and 9 30 in Quantrell.Doc; $2.00 — MATwo Free Films: "The inner world ofJORGE LUIS BORGES" — LikeSwift, Poe, and Kafka, Borges is awriter who haunts the imagination, inthis film, the man who is today's dominating literary figure exposes theroots of his art, revealing a world ofbrilliance, erudition and mystery.Drawing upon his twin heritage — onegrandmother was English and hismother was the Spanish translator ofKatherine Mansfield; one grandfatherwas a hero of the Argentinian War ofIndependence — Borges uses classicallanguage to write of a futuristic worldanchored in a half real, half-imaginedpast. One »s never certain whether oneis reading fact, myth, allegory, orGREY CITY JOURNALGinger on first sight and chases her for<\% TowrrafGary Beberman, Brad Brittan, Leland Chait, Peter T. Daniels, Stu Feldstein,Richard Flink, Susan Franusiak, Jim Guenther, Scott Jerol, Jack Helbig, RichardKaye, Carol Klammer, Jeff Makos, David Miller, Neil Miller, Danila Oder, MarkPohl, Renee Saracki, Margaret Savage, Bruce Shapiro, Andrea Thompson, Micbele White, Brent Widen, K. G. Wilkins, David Waldman, Ken Wissoker.'Mike Alper, film editor.Richard Pettengill, music editor.Lucy Coniff, book editor.Edited by Laura Cottingham.Production this week by Laura Cottingham and Susan Franusiak.the grey city journal is published weekly by The Chicago Maroon, Ida Noyes Hall,1212 E 59th Street, Chicago, Illinois 60637. For advertising information, callWanda at 752 FAME. some combination Throughoutthe film, Neruda's poetry is heard inimpeccable English translation. Tuesday, March 10. 1:00 pm at the Centerfor Latin American Studies, SocialScience 122. FreeMUSICMusic from Marlboro: Andras Schiff,piano; Hiroko Yajima, violin; andGary Hoffman, cello: young artistsfrom Serkin and Casals' famouschamber music commune will olavHaydn's Trio in Eb, Hob. XV:29, Bartok's Sonata No. 1 for violin and piano;and, especially for everyone whoheard the Beaux Arts Trio last week,Dvorak's "Dumky" Trio in e, Op. 90.8:30 Tonight, Mandel. Students $4,others $7.50, tickets at Concert Office,Goodspeed 310. — PTDUniversity Symphony Orchestra: Canthey bring off a second major concertin three weeks? "We'd put up evenmoney now, with Barbara at the bat."Schumann, Manfred Overture; Brit¬ten, Four Sea Interludes from PeterGrimes; Nielsen, Symphony No. 2,"The Four Temperaments." 8 30, Saturday, Mrch 7, Mandel. Free. — PTDRockefeller Chapel Choir: conducted byRodney Wynkoop. Mozart, Mass in C;music for the Epiphany season. (Post¬poned from Februry 22.) 4:00, Sunday,March 8. Rockefeller Chapel. Ticketsat Reynolds Club.Collegium Musicum: A varied choraland instrumental program. 8:00, Sun¬day, March 8, Bond Chapel. FreeOboe and Organ Recital: Keith Hooper,an oboist who's studied with everywell-known teacher (including Hol-liger) but still doesn't think he's got itright, since now he's working with him(the CSO's Ray Still, that is), and hisguest, Michael James, organist fromWimborne Minster, England, nresenta program of solos and duos. i2 15Thursday, MarchlO Rocknfel'er ChapelFree — PTDUniversity of Wisconsin Concert Choir:a recital conducted by Rodney Wyn-koop's teacher Robert Fountain Evening, Tuesday, March 17. RockefellerChapel. Students $3, others $5. Ticketsat Reynolds Club.Free Tickets: Free tickets to a performance this Sunday of the JanacekChamber Orchestra. 8 pm OrchestraHall. Music of Vivaldi, Corelli andCzech composers. Good seats! Pickthem up today from Student Activities,Room 210 Ida Noyes Hall. 753-3592 OTHER- Seamus Heaney: will read from his poet¬ry on Sunday, March 8, 7:30 pm SwiftLecture Hall, 1025 E. 58th St. The read¬ing will be sponsored by the MortonDauwen Zabei Lecture Committee ofthe University of Chicago English De¬partment, and by the Chicago ReviewSpeaker Series, with help from the Illi¬nois Arts Council. The reading is freeand open to the public.Heaney is highly regarded by critics inthis country and across the Atlantic asperhaps the most important Irish poetof his time. "His words give us the soil-reek of Ireland," C B. Cox wrote in theSpectator, and the late Robert Lowellcalled Heaney"...the best Irish poetsince W. B. Yeats." Said Richard Kellin the Guardian, "Heaney...has thegift of finding a new and consummatephrase to evoke physical qualities, andwhen these take on a symbolic resonance the result is superb."Heaney is the author of six collectionsof poetry : Death of a Naturalist, Doorinto the Dark, Wintering Out, North,Field Work, and Poems 1965-1975, aswell as Preoccupations: SelectedProse 1968 1978.A MANUAL FOR SONS: is taken fromBarthelme's novel The Dead Fatherand also includes two of his celebratedshort stories. In the play, four "sons"examine fat^jrs in a series of mocklectures and satiric caricatures thatpaint fatherhood as a repressive insti¬tution that must be "turned down" inorder that we may attain a "goldenage of decency and calmed fevers."Momma comes in for some abuse aswell. Barthelme, a winner of the Na¬tional Book Award, has been called"One of the U.S.’s most stylish andoriginal satirists..." by TIME magazine. A MANUAL FOR SONS bringsthis fresh comic voice to the Chicagostage for tne first time Director Lyon,whose previous Chicago productionwas an adaptation from stories byDorothy Parker, is joined in this showby David Cole, Aidan Quinn and KimRobillard.The production runs two weekendsonly, Fridays and Saturdays at 8 30pm and Sundays at 7:30 pm Court Stu¬dio is in the Reynolds Club Third FloorTheatre, 5706 S. University Ave. Tick¬ets are $3 and $2 for students and senior citizens. For information call753 3581.ANDERSON BLOWS THE BLUESLocal blues enthusiasts have plentyto look forward to this Saturday nightwhen Willie Anderson and his band appear at Ida Noyes in a concert sponsored by the Chicago Front tor JazzAnderson is one of the finest con¬temporary blues harmonica playersand a capable singer as well. Born inWest Memphis, Arkansas, he learnedhow to play in Chicago in the early 50'sunder tutelage of the late Little WalterJacobs, the founder of the post war,amplified harmoniA style. For thepast 25 years he has been an impor¬tant figure in this city's musical sceneas the leader of his own bands whichhave included such luminaries asLuther Tucker and Jimmy Lee Robinson, and as a sideman with such performers as Muddy Waters, Otis Spannand Johnny Young. Among the legendary Chicago nightspots he hasworked are the Zanzibar, the Hoilywood Rendez Vous and PeppersLounge He has also taken part in anumber of blues festivals includingthe watershed 1970 Ann Arbor event.Although he has never sought to makemusic a fulltime career, preferring in¬stead to earn a comfortable living as astone mason, he has been the subjectof two record albums, one of theB O B and the other on the Violet record label.Anderson's strongest musical suit ishis superb sense of timing He phrasesin a delightfully jagged and incisivemanner, placing his accents slightlyahead of, or behind the beat to injecttension into the music. Like his mentor, Little Walter, he often uses jazzand Latin rhythms in additions to thewalking beat characteristic of mostpost war blues. He is one of the tew currently active mouth harpists toplay the big, chromatic harmonicawith its eerie minor key sound.Appearing with Anderson at Saturday's concert will be three veteranChicago bluesmen Fred Below ondrums, Dave Myers on bass andJames Wheeler on guitar Both Belowand Mvers began their careers asmembers of Little Walter's backupband, the Aces, and thus they possessa deep familiarity with the sort of harmonica blues that Anderson performs.For many years, Below was the housedrummer for Chess Records, the company that dominated the record industry here during the 1950's andearly 60 s. In this capacity he tookpart in a series of recordings with Littie Walter, Muddy Waters, HowlingWolf and Sonny Boy Williamson thatare widely considered the greatestever made in the blues field. Myersalso has recorded widely and, in addition to his stint with Little Walter, hehas worked in the bands of Otis Rushand Junior Wells Rounding out thegroup, guitarist James Wheeler hasplayed with blues singers Billy BoyArnold and Eddie Boyd, and soul performers Otis Clay and O.V. Wright. Heis a fluent, jazzy instrumentalist whoshould provide Anderson with excellent support.The performance will begin at 8.30and will be held in the Ida Noyes Cloister Club at 1212 E. 59th St. It is open tothe public and admission is 3 dollars atthe door For a session of distinctiveand powerful blues, don t miss WillieAnderson and his band this Saturdaynight.David WaldmanFRIDAY 6 MARCH 1981 -3Ralph Bakshi has released a new movie,American Pop, an animated film depictingthe past eighty years in America. Beginningwith a Jewish family's persecution inCzarist Russia, the film follows this familyas*it emigrates to New York, and as theyoungest son tries to break into the musichall business. The rest of his family perishesin a sweat shop fire, but he continues hisstruggles for vaudevillian success. His son,in turn, tries to break into Be-bop, and sotoo, Be-bopper's son tries to break into firstfifties Beat poetry, and then sixties-protestacid-rock. This son, the music hall singer'sgrandson, is successful for a while, but mel¬lower hard times of the Seventies bring himdown. He sells drugs for a while on thestreets of New York, followed by his adoptedson, "Little Pete," who acts as his"gopher," running drugs around New Yorklike cups of coffee. When "Little Pete"trades some cocaine for the right to recordone song, and that song is naturally a hit,"Little Pete" has made it in the New Waveworld. This film is melodramatic in the thir¬ties tradition of bad musicals. But again,like Busby Berkely's films, American Pophas some nice and dazzling sections. If youcan, see it on a Tuesday at a Plitt Theatrefor a dollar.On February 23, twenty college studentsfrom Columbia, DePaul, Loyola, Northeas¬tern, Northwestern, U. of Illinois and U. ofWisconsin at Madison met at room 107 of theContinental Plaza; there we informally in¬terviewed Ralph Bakshi. He was liveiy, andcongenial, although he didn't seem to beable to decide if he was being interviewed orhosting a party. Several times he interrupt¬ed the interview to offer cokes and coffee, orto call room service to hurry the delivery ofsandwiches. He seemed impressed, orrather, unnerved by our seriousness. Hementioned that he must have been our agein more relaxed times.What follows is an edited version of this in¬terview;. J.H.; What was your idea behind Ameri¬can Pop?Bakshi: Just to show different periods ofAmerica. To show what life mighthave been like. It's hard for me tounderstand that the fifties and six¬ties are like history to you guys.N.U.: Where did you get your ideas forthe early part of the film DosPassos?Bakshi: It's interesting. I love ReginaldMarsh and Dos Passos. I started to read U.S.A. It was okay. Verydated. I don't think I used DosPassos, but... certainly... maybe.. . I don't know.Depaul: Wasn't there a Disney on thecredits?Bakshi: The Disney people sent over WaltDisney's grandson to learn how toanimate. It was very funny because in the middle of the day hewould do the gopher work — learn¬ing the basics and getting coffeeand people would be shouting "HeyDisney!" It became very embar¬rassing. So we just called him"Mouse" after a while.J.H.: I hear that Disney's studio is in a lotof trouble.Bakshi: If they come to me for trainingthey must be in trouble. (Laughs.)J.H.: Are you planning a Bakshiland?Bakshi: (Laughs.)J.H.: Seriously, what are you planning ondoing next?Bakshi: Doing a picture with FrankFranzetta. A fantasy. I should bemy replacement for Lord of theRings.J.H.: How about the far future.Bakshi: What I would like to do, I don'tknow if I can, but l would like to doa comedy. Make you laugh hysteri¬cally. Laugh so hard you would fallout of your seats. I would like to trythat. It's very tough to do. Something outrageous. Off the wall. Like"Saturday Night Live," when itwas good.N.U.: I read that you became fed up withthe animation process because itwas so rigid, when you were work¬ing at Terry Tunes. What do youthink of today's cartoons for chil¬dren?Bakshi: I don't think animation has pro¬gressed much since I worked forTerry Tunes. Especially for chil¬dren. If you consider all the won¬derful things you can do for chil¬dren. How imaginative they are,how receptive they are. The flightsof fantasy they take. You're nottalking down to them in animation.It would be wonderful. I'm not put¬ting Disney down, but God so manythings they don't do. Nothing isbeing done. I don't know why.Maybe because adults are makingthe cartoons for children. Loyola: What do you think of critics? Andhow do you read their views?Bakshi: That's a tough question. Thereare good reviews and bad reviews.I think I don't listen to a person whojust cuts me apart. But if the per¬son is saying something interesti¬ng, I might be learning sometime. Imean that. I'm always willing tolearn. I ran into one critic whothought he was going to see a histo¬ry of American pop music, and hewas so sure he was going to see ahistory that he hated AmericanPop. Ridiculous. If a critic is talk¬ing about film, film structure, mo¬tivation, character development,they have something to say.Depaul: You've been distributed by Par¬amount, 20th Century Fox, and nowColumbia. Is there any reason forchanging distributors so often?Bakshi: My first picture, Frits the Cat,was distributed by a small distribu¬tor, Cinemation. That picture wasvery successful. At which pointA.I.P., the biggest of the small,jumped in and distributed HeavyTraffic. At which point the big guyscame in. I did a movie for Para¬mount called Coonskin where forty-five people started to riot and Para¬mount pulled the picture out ofdistribution. I was also doing a pic¬ture called Hey Good Looking forWarner Brothers, but when theysaw Paramount pull Coonskin theystopped production of Hey GoodLooking. After that I did a picturefor Fox called Wizards which didvery well. Basically, the studioswould call me. If you have two hitsback-to-back it is home run time.N.U.: Would you consider Wizards atraining ground for Lord of theRings?Bakshi: I think Wizards was more of ahomage to Pulp Comics. CertainlyI don't think it was a warm-up forLord of the Rings. I think I shouldhave done a Wizards II instead.N.U.: Any plans to finish the Lord of theRings?Bakshi: Oh sure. Possibly, it really de¬pends on some problems with thefirst part. They have to let me fin¬ish it off first.J.H.: You hear about all these skyrock¬eting budgets for films, how have ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★■AANIMATEby JACK HELBIG“A Legend in HiFriday, March 138:00 P.M. Magician Exl4 GREY CITY JOURNAL- — FRIDAY 6 AANED BAKSHI budgets increased for animatedfilms?Bakshi: Let me say this about animation.The cost of animation has re¬mained the same. The budgets forlive action haveincreased becauseof the cost of gasoline. Basically,inflation is making animation com¬petitive with live action. It used tobe that animation was much moreexpensive. It's now getting cheaperthan live action films.U.W. at M.: The great thing about Ameri¬can Pop was that the audience for¬got that the film was animated.Bakshi: That's right. And the interestingthing is that in animation you cantotally control the environment.You can't do that in live-action. Thecolor you chose in the backgroundwill affect your audience, and thatis much more important than thebackground details of live action.Only animation can do that. It's re¬ally a great medium. Great formind control. (Laughs.)N.U.: I kind of noticed that the characterofTony (in American Pop) remind¬ed me of Robert Blake.Bakshi: You know someone else told methat today. Richard Ebert saidthat.N.U.: Roger Ebert.Bakshi: Roger Ebert. Could have beenRichard Ebert. His twin brother.(Laughs.)N.U.: That wasn't intentional was it?Bakshi: No. I wanted him to be JamesDeanish.J.H.: Do you see any great changes in an¬imation, with the great technologi¬cal advances in video. Coppolatalks a lot about the amazing leapshe's taking with his new equip¬ment.Bakshi: The great changes have come inspecial affects, not in animation. Ican't think of any great changes.Um, yes-yes. The great changeshave come in training animators.With videotape systems we cannow see immediately how an ani¬mator is doing. We used to send outthe film at the end of a day, and getit back the next day and see howthe drawings are doing. Now wehave a videotape set-up, so that wecan see how we are doing immedi¬ately. I've never seen anything like it. The average age of an animatoris now 22. Staggering. And we'vetrained them all.J.H.: Aren't you worried about growingtoo big, too successful, so that youlose touch with your animation andyour crew?Bakshi: You're 100% right. The more youget away from committees, themore you know your artists, andthe more you respect that one-to-one relationship, the more your artgrows. But the minute that anima¬tion is done by slaves in an animation factory, everyone loses touchwith the film. I like things small,we have the smallest animationcompany ever doing feature lengthfilms.N.U.: The Village Voice review for Amer¬ican Pop . . .Bakshi: I don't want to hear it! They hateme.N.U.: Well, they say that the theme ofyour film seems to be that quote:"music will get you shot, or it willcorrupt you or it will lead you todrugs and angst." Well how far offare they?Bakshi: I'd rather read the New YorkTimes. (Laughs.) Well The VillageVoice has been after me for a longtime. If that's what that guy got outof the film, fine! I've never made afilm that everyone loved.Depaul: Do you oversee the financial partof your enterprise? And how doesthis affect your work?Bakshi: Very Difficult. The directorwants more money, and the pro¬ducer wants to save money. I'm putin a bad position when I'm both producer and director. If I see a sceneI'd like to do, I hold off because Idon't have the money to do it. I'mgetting worried. One of the prob¬lems I'm having is that my two jobsare conflicting. It's getting to thepoint where my day is 45% crap. Itused to be 10% crap. In this busi¬ness you have to grow or die. Youcan't get smaller. You've got tokeep growing or fade away. It'skind of strange.Depaul: Coppola is having that problem.Bakshi: Coppola. Francis, and I'm angryat Francis, the world's greatestdirector, has become all involvedmaking his company. He shouldMandel Hall*3 U.C. *8 Other have built a structure that wouldhave allowed him to make films.He's so angry at Hollywood. Buthe's so talented, too talented...Depaul: ...to play Louis Mayer.Bakshi: Yes. And Francis knows this, hejust can't stop. It's an interestingthing. We were walking around hisnew studio and he kept saying"This is my sound stage. This is mygiant screen," and l said "Coppola,you haven't talked about a movie intwenty minutes!" And then I gotfurious. I shouted "Yes, and this isyour house, this is your car, yourpen!!" This is the guy that madeGodfather.J.H.: Who do you think is your greatestcompetition?Bakshi: Myself. The problem is thatwhen one of my films fails, it's notBakshi who's failed, it's animatedfilms. If I failed all of Hollywoodwould say animation is a failure.But if I had some real competition,if Hollywood came out with ten fea¬tures a year people would know.But there is no competition yet inanimation.J.H.: How does it affect you to see Hol¬lywood making films like Popeye,where they take an animated car¬toon character and put him in alive action film.Bakshi: I wish Fleisher had done thefilm. That would have been won¬derful. Well I've got to wrap it up,I'm going to leave. No one is throw¬ing you out. We've got sandwiches,cokes, beer. Stay as long as youlike. Thank you.N.U.: One last question. Have you everwanted to do a film with MelBlanc.Bakshi: Mel wouldn't do my stuff. Toodirty.Despite his offer, we all left fairly quicklyonce the interview had ended. But before weleft, Ralph Bakshi handed out thick presspackets to everyone, and challenged anyoneto a game of pinball. A guy from ColumbiaCollege took him up on it. Bakshi lost verybadly, barely scoring 2,000 points, but hetook it well, cheerfully handing out businesscards, inviting everyone to apply for work athis studio, and spreading the myth of theAmerican Dream: Even someone fresh outof college can find work in HollywoodGREY CITY JOURNAL —5PRESENTS:BARGAIN COFFEE!! WED 3/11 - WED 3/18ALL COFFEE 25'!LONGER HOURS SPRING QUARTER.-A-11pm M-Th. (also noon-8 Sat,noon-11 Sun)FRESH FRUIT • ALL KINDS OF BAGELS •MIKE'S MOM'S GRANOLA and MORE!SPRING QUARTER - FOR A LIMITED TIMEONLY-MIKE'S MOM'S T-SHIRTS!r Panel Discussion"JEWS BY CHOICE"Co-sponsored by Jewish Family and CommunityService and the Hyde Park Jewish CommunityCenter.Sunday, March 81:30 P.M.1100 E. Hyde Park Blvd.A panel discussion for couples in which onemember has converted to Judaism. Topics to bediscussed will includeMarriagesFamily RelationshipsJewish CommuniyRelationshipsFree to Hyde Park Jewish Com¬munity Center members - $1.50 fornon-members.For further information and registration, con-y tact Ms. Roberta Siegel, 268-4600.Dr. 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 with quality material.Beware of bait advertising.Eye ExaminationsFashion Eye WearContact Lenses IT’S UNANIMOUSFOR “SECAUCUSin ...very funny...one ofthe most enjoyablemovies of the year...”!Box Office"One of the year’ss«aiKm7 10 best "• Time Magazine, Richard Corliss• LA. Tlmee, Charles Champlin• LA. Herald-Examiner"One of the year’s10 best’’•Mademoiselle‘Hollywood Reporter, Arthur Knight•The OregonianQ"One of the year’ss<cau<us7 10 best• Boston Globe• Soho News, N.Y. City• Seattle Times, John HartIOne of the year’s10 best’’• Good Times, Santa Cruz, Calif.•Hollywood Press•WNEW, N.Y. CityS!caucus7A film by JohnSayles *r-IAll wood, ormlots. twivol)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 GOLD CITY INN• eJU «JU *£*given * * * *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 FoodNew andRebuiltTypewriters,Calculators,Dictators,AddersU of ChicagoBookstore5750 S. Ellis Ave.753-3303 . REPAIRSPECIALISTSon IBM, SCM,Olympia, etc.FREE repairestimates; repairsby factory-trainedtechnician.RENTALSavailable withU.ofC. I D.Mastercharge and Visa Accepted"UnimpeachableQuality - Greg WendtResign yourself to buying aHo-ho T-Shirt at:Reynolds Club Today & Wed. 9:30-2:30B.J. Monday DinnerCobb Tuesday 9:30-2:30W.C. Wednesday DinnerPierce Thursday Dinner$5 All Sizes CALL FOR INFO •3-3511 Days3-2249 ext. 3419,leave messageWe Buy and SellUsed Records1701 E. 55th St.684-3375 #6 —GREY CITY JOURNAL- FRIDAY 6 MARCH 1981WHAT A LONG STRANGE TRIP IT’S BEENcomes to their music, and every judgmentis sure to be criticized. This is my bias:I'm not as interested in what they play ashow well they play it. The Dead have a bigrepertoire, but if you've seen them enough,you're not likely to be surprised rr\conce a show. The one surpriiend was "Bin^LSpng" on. Thursday nfunfprtunafety It wasn't as gopd assions youtiear on Japes tir^a 1972'Thursday ’wf*. p warn? up, show, vwere, ? some * /n^/ing Vhomentk* <Mu^c Ne^r *$tqpp*<ir tfbsed the lirst «#tirfttpafly tbok the wraps offhis potfar.^'Ctt^na Catfcunflower — I Kn<You 6ider" was as go&l as ever, partilarly the lead towards tfte end. They wteregiving us a taste of whatfi^e^ qpuld do* butonly a taste. The percussion solo was unu¬sually lackadaisical, but "Truckin'"made up for it, especially in the breakafter the lyrics. "Black Peter" was the v oars, avoided puddles, walked aimlesslyhigh point of the show. Garcia sang like he into the street, carried wilted roses, smiledjust got his throat back. There's one line >at strangers. The Dead Heads were raggedhowever, had voice (and maybe lyrics)problems. It didn't bother the Dead Headstoo much; "Fire on the Mountain" meansseventh heaven on a Friday night in Chi¬cago — "sacred time" and "sacred space"brought out of the classroom and into yourhead."Estimated Prophet" is an interestingson. Bob Weir once said in an interviewthat it is a satire on the nuts who often tryto lay religious raps on the members of theband. The crowd sings along as if no ironywas intended, though, and the song whichoften follows tells them, "Wake up to findout that you are the eyes of the world/hat are they trying to say, anyway?“ Qpe message came through clear as a?l)feat night: "A love that's real will netfa<|i away," the song that never fails. ThecF6wd after the show was well into its sec¬ond-day funk. People looked for towedthat always blows 'em away, "See herehow everything leads up to this dayY andit's just like any other day that's everbeen." It hits the right combination of exis¬tential expectation and timetesS confusionto appeal to a Dead Head lust in frompoints east and heading nowhere in partic¬ular. Farther on in the set was "Goin'Down the Road Feelin' Bad," a good songto hum on your way home to Cleveland. Wewere happy. SBt the edges, but ready for number three.* It was no disappointment; Saturday wasb9 far the best show. It was obvious from"!tack Straw" on: this was the night. Whenth§ Dead open with ^iis song you can bepretty sure it'll ^ a hot show. As Bob,Jeri^y and Phil build up the tension beforethe iinal chorus th« cVowd inevitableyleaves their seats. It's tough to describehow much better Garcia was pn Saturdaythan on the previous nights, ft seemed as ifFriday was a quantum leap better. The he had gotten W years younger overnight;all new "Minglewood Blues" got a piercing y or, as ray friend put it plainly enough,lead out of Jerry, and Bob played the cow- "JefTy .wotfe upt"'His guitar was back inboy act just right. There was a difference > the groove, and hi^oice was strong andin the crowd and in the band. People were clear. "Candyman" s^id it all: "Won't youeverybody you m#et that the Candy-.ntan's in town ..." ♦The second set started with "Cold Rainand Snow — Greatest Sffery Ever Told,"two of my personal favori^s. The tone ofsettled in now and psyched for a GratefulDead weekend. It's this feeling that ex¬plains why the Dead are so much better ina two or three show gig than a one-nightstand — they warm up to their surround¬ings. The second set started with a "Scar¬let Begonias — Fire on the Mountain" jamwhich was instrumentally superb. Jerry, "Cold Rain" was perfect, ar#^h| leadswere dazzling. Bob's "Greatest StodyHroused the crowd as it always does; he getNight A GOOD NIGHT AT BODY POLITICLaura Innes and Tom Mula in Twelfth Night.by KYLE HENDERSONSo goes one of the Dead Heads' favoritelines from "Truckin'." Looking at thecrowd in front of the Uptown Theatre lastweekend, I could believe that for most ofthem it had been a pretty strange trip, butit certainly hadn't been long. The medianage was somewhere around 20, but theylooked and acted just like the people atRoosevelt Stadium in New Jersey the firsttime I saw the Dead in 1974. It isn't thatDead Heads are stuck in a time warp. Thenonsense about "leftovers from the 60's"which most rock music critics affix to theDead and their followers doesn't explainanything. It's just that there's a certainambience surrounding a Grateful Deadconcert which makes time, miles traveled,and papers to hand in irrelevant. That re¬ally hasn't changed a bit since I've beengoing to see this band.For three evenings in a row the DeadHeads turned the area around Broadwayand Lawrence into a free zone. True, therewere a few Chicago cops there, and maybethere were even some busts for all I know.But otherwise the band's followers ownedthe lace — it was a typical city involved inquite an atypical daydream.This set of shows began for most of us ona cold morning about a month ago when welined up at Sears, Wards, and God knowswhere else to get the tickets which were togo on sale at 9:30 a.m. Dead tickets go fastsince the object, if you've got the cash, is togo to all three shows. If you go to see theDead Thursday and Friday, what elsewould you rather be doing on Saturday?Then came the weeks of waiting, listeningto albums and tapes, and making arrange¬ments of out-of-town friends to staysomewhere.It's easier to talk about the Dead in gen¬eral than It is to review their concerts.Dead Heads are pretty subjective when itTwelfthTwelfth NightBody Politic Theatre2261 N. Lincoln Ave.by STUART FELDSTEINWelcome to Illyria, a ludicrous land oflovers, lookalikes, lushes, louts and laugh¬ter. On this Twelfth Night, women becomemen, wise men become fools, and mischiefis in the air. Never was there a world morehilarious or entertaining. William Shake¬speare's classic comedy, currently tran¬sported to the Body Politic Upstairs Stage,receives royal treatment from the cast ofChicago locals in a bright, witty producti¬on.Sometimes warm and sentimental, oftengritty and vulgar, the play combines thebest elements of situation and slapstick.Situation: A shipwreck strands Viola(Laura Innes) in Illyria, where she dis¬guises herself as a man in order to servenoble Orsino (Ray Rodriguez), who lovesbeautiful, stubborn Olivia (Jay EllenHad), who falls for the disguised Viola.Complication: Sebastian, Viola's twinbrother, did not drown in the wreck as shethought and has also arrived in Illyria. Sowho needs General Hospital?It all makes sense in the end, thanks tothe brilliant characterizations and gener¬ally excellent vocal technique. The trio ofOrsino, Viola, and Olivia is exceptionallywell played, but it is Ms. Innes who bringsthis main plot to life. She appears to have agood time playing a woman having a goodtime playing a man caught in a bizarrelove triangle. Rodriguez and Ms. Hand are as enthusiastic as their parts permit, butone may initially find difficulty in under¬standing Mr. Rodriguez's occasionallygarbled Shakespearean English.However, this main plot is upstaged bythe subplot, a common phenomenon inmost productions. The mischievous trip ofToby Belch, Andrew Aguecheek, andMaria are played to the hilt. Stan Winiars-ki's Belch is a living caricature, a drunk¬en, conniving oaf who takes thorough satisfaction in mischievous pranks. GerryBecker makes a triumphant Body Politicdebut as the foppish dupe Aguecheek, agood-natured chap with a charming doseof happy go-lucky, whose only care is whatwill please him next. Jill Holden's Maria is a lusty, clever wench, supplying the meansfor mischief where Andrew and Toby sup¬ply the will.Together these three hound Olivia'ssteward Malvolio, played by William J.Norris. His Malvolio typefies the pseudo¬snobbery of the upper stations of thehousehold; laden with gold chains and alarge mirror around his neck in which heconstantly admires himself, he providesthe perfect weakness on which Toby, Andrew and Maria play. Although he supplieshis character with a low pitched, discomforting whining sound which I suppose is alaugh and which moves quickly from humorous to annoying, the sight of himprancing around the stage in yellow stock to tread the thin line between being ener¬getic and being silly. (Silliness is Bob'sbiggest downfall, although it gives someDead Heads a good laugh. He's particular¬ly prone to it in songs like "Little RedRooster" and "Good Lovin'," where hedoes his Pigpen imitation. A silver spoonkid from Atherton, California just can'tmake it as the soul king, even if he doesrun away from home at 15.) On SaturdayBob stayed on the right side of the line, ex¬cept when he got to "Good Lovin'.""Terrapin" was excellent, and fadedinto the best percussion solo of the week¬end. The band did some strange thingswith guitar feedback that really made youhold on to your seat. We were high aboveLawrence Avenue by that time — Chicagowas our town. Then came the climax of theweekend: Phil's bass lead into "The OtherOne." The band was playing very quietly,everyone was waiting with anticipation be¬cause we knew it was coming, and thenPhil ripped into those notes, the lightscame on, and the band blew the placeapart."The bus came by and 1 got on, that'swhen it all began." It's a theme for mostDead Heads and probably means something different for each one. It may soundcorny, but I remember a little bus trip toWinterland a few years ago which changedeverything, and almost everyone canmatch my story. "Cornin' around" is ex¬actly what the Dead do, and we always go,and we're never disappointed tor long(especially if we can get to every show).Those moments like Phil's bass line Satur¬day night make it worthwhile. If you wantto understand it, study the phenomenologyof religion for about ten years. If you wantto experience it, hop on the bus.Burned in: fix from three nights of The Dead,strung together with Lysergic Acid Diethyamiaedot abstractions.ings and "cross garter'd" brings ade¬quate, hilarious recompense for the grat¬ing quirk.The fool, played by Tom Mula, roundsout the stories, contributing his antics andsongs to both situations. Mula's fool is aworldly-wise fool, alternately provingfools wise and the "wise" fools, realizingthings when others cannot, baiting rulerand servant alike. The cast also includesDavid Westgor as Sebastian, Viola's twinbrother, Vince Viverito as his faithful rescuer, and Richard Kuhklman, a fellowfoil for Malvolio.Directors Pauline Brailsford, recentlyseen in the title role in Cout'Theatre's Mrs.barren's Profession, and Susan Dafoehave done a fine job staging the materialfor a tiny, three sided stage, with realisticmovement and wonderful comic surprises.Great care has been taken to insure thatall lines will be clearly understood, yetnone of the comic inflections and tones areforegone. Much of the charm of the eve¬ning is due to the intimacy of actors withthe audience. The performers are often nomore than an arm's length distant from aspectator, and one begins to feel and sharein the actors' enthusiasm. Because of theunelaborate, but quaint, set and simplisticuse of lighting, this closeness of watchersand doers is a valuable asset.The sum of the parts equals the whole;Twelfth Night is one entertaining piece oftheatre. If this be the food of delight, playon!Twelfth Night runs Thursdays throughSundays, through April 5 at the Body Politic Upstairs Stage 871 3000.FRIDAY 6 MARCH 1981 -GREY CITY JOURNAL 7ra !«FRIDAY 6 MARCH 1981Finally, the excitement ofJourney on stage is cap¬tured on record. With fourpower-packed sides of yourfavorite Journey classics,plus two new songs neverbefore recorded. JOURNEYCAPTUREDJOURNEY CAPTURED THE LIVE TWO-RECORD SETINCLUDING. THE PARTY'S OVER (HOPELESSLY IN LOVE).'ON COLUMBIA RECORDS AND TAPESProduced by Kevin Elson Columbia is a trademark of CBS Inc © 1981 CBS IncAvailable at: SfuM^t^ecMcU $10.38 L.P.The University of ChicagoDEPARTMENT OF MUSICfriday MUSIC FROM MARLBOROmar 6 Mandel Hall 8:30 p.m.Haydn, Piano Frio in F-tlat. Bartok, Sonata No. I for violin andpiano; Dvorak, Piano Frio in F. Min I Dumsky")$7.50 Admission — UC Student, $4Saturdaymar 7 UNIVERSITY SYMPHONY ORCHESTRABarbara Schubert, ConductorMandel Hall 8:30 p.mSchumann, Overture to Manfred; Britten, hour Sea Interludesfrom Peter Crimes; Nielsen, Symphony No >. Ihe hourFemperaments"Sunday COLLEGIUM MUSICUMmar 8 Howard M. Brown, DirectorBond Chapel 8:00 p m.Dances trom humley Part Books Fye, Western Wind Mass;I rescohaldi, Can/onas; Monteverdi Madrigalsconcerts are tree unless otherwise noted♦♦i j * * K'\ 1 A ’l* * - V, | V flliillv*Sunday Night Fever!StourBring^Jte' ffpgi '■... .. v JteL %¥'Friends.’ A», - .^ FOODn0S.FOR FOUR$995INCLUDES:4 hot dogs4 cups chili4 orders friesANDpitcher of soda pop!(No Changes in Sale Menu)Since1924 oldest chili parlorin Chicago37th and ARCHER • 927-7807TTTnihtnn ujiraTrtUi1 L-l 1 I I 1 n T I I i IT m ill rriTHTM 1 1 I 1 iCourt Studio Theoter presentsA MANUAL FOR SONSfrom the fictions of Donald Barthelmeadapted and directed by Christopher Lyon$3 general admission$2 students & senior citizens March 6 8,13 158 30 pm Fn Sat7 30 pm Sun Reynolds Club Theater57th & University753 3581The Chicago Maroon — Friday, March 6, 1981 — 15tLETTERS TO THE EDITORAn Embarassed Don Quixote Takes a FallTo the Editor:Guess who? Wait, don’t rip this up! I writeto report the regretful death of my whitecharger after my brave attempt to rescuethe Damsels being held captive by the fiend¬ish College Republican Organization. Quitefrankly, I was a bit shocked when afterdoing battle with democracy’s foes, myhorse doubled up in laughter. The animal lit¬erally laughed itself to death. In fact, every¬where I went people would fall into convul¬sions ! One good soul recovered long enoughto hand me the latest issue of the ChicagoMaroon. It was then that I discovered thetrials and tribulations that awaited me. It seemed that there was a slight flaw in myrecent battle; there were no damsels in dis¬tress, no evil plot, and the College Republi¬cans didn’t even have a castle. Boy, werethe neighbors upset. Since then I have beena social leper, hiding my face in fear ofcreating fatal laughter in the people I en¬counter.In a recent letter to the Maroon entitled“Attack on Gays Immoral,” I denouncedthe College Republicans for what I thoughthad been an attack and campaign againstthe gay community. Friends of mine hadseen an ad that they thought, as 1 wouldlater believe, was put in by the College Re¬ publicans entitled “Heterosexuals”. Wetook the statements “the young conserva¬tives are on the campus” and “Gala is one ofits prime targets” as a proclamation andnot a warning. Without investigating fur¬ther, I sat down to defend the free worldagainst this imagined demon. Since then Ihave learned the painful reality. Quite to thecontrary of my original assessment, the Col¬lege Republicans have turned out to berather decent chaps who reacted in a level,adult manner to my rather childish provoca¬ tion. I would like to say categorically thatthe College Republicans are not Nazis, buf¬foons, animals, abortionists, murders, toe-jams, or slimeballs. Likewise the CollegeRepublican Organization is not responsiblefor an attack on the gay community, geno¬cide, debauchery, mutilation, the invasionof Poland or the spread of head lice in Afri¬can aborigines. Please feel free to interactwith these young people. Really, I dis¬continued on page 18Far East Faculty Denounce Racist AttackTo the Editor:The Department of Far Eastern Lan¬guages and Civilizations supports Mrs.Gray in her recent denunciation of the wan¬ton and abhorrent destruction of a col¬league’s office in Foster Hall, and congratu:lates the Maroon for its sensitive editorialreminding the academic community of themeaning of such racially inspired acts andthe consequences for academic freedom, asthe Maroon editorial suggests the act of vio¬lence cannot be understood as a simple ran¬dom event. The dimension of racial slur,which accompanied the destruction, mustbe seen as an assault upon the academy andthe cherished conventions of academic free¬dom. The larger context of comparable actsat other universities transforms the sense ofpersonal grief experienced by our colleagueinto a general peril directed at all of us who constitute the academic procession in theUnited States. It is our conviction that theacademic community of the University ofChicago should firmly reject any viewwhich seeks to apprehend such outrage as alocal and isolated act which can easily beforgotten. Moreover, as academics and stu¬dents we must express our determination todiscourage any effort to discredit and inter¬rupt the purpose of the University throughacts of racial vandalism, and reaffirm ourunequivocal opposition to the ugly reap¬pearance of racially motivated outrage inAmerican life.Signed by H. D. Harootunian, chairman ofthe department of Far Eastern languagesand civilizations, and ten other FELC facul¬ty members.Copyright 1981 by Jim Reedy _ dm inistfetio/i® jacks iif cod tuition © .SKi/ia iiWa/ice in 0C revenues©.T)v5 se/tistune,yt flo/iej hdhs the World 60 Around thru the $,r ■©making fre:/nd© W>rk nander 4ryodaf&Jes©-Hi^di/i^nc® raised stided Ski©, but confute*yersifg buaaetCS)^ nwditnrf ^ OC ms-k tided (Vcan tiaiys >t Qtff.Ensim Co,]~.sio'erable jaw to ®iieVe he recess oipiowaCD.COFFEE HOUSEFrog & Peach Ida Noyes Food, Free CoffeeFriday, March 69:30 -1:30 Performers:Mort Shallman, guitarMike Nass, magicVince Michael& Sharon Peshkin, mimeEU auWHAT DO BETTY BOOP, BENNY GOODMAN,THE ORIGINAL DIXIELAND JAZZ BAND, ALJOLSON, AND GEORGE GERSHWIN HAVE INCOMMON? - THE INFLUENCE OF KLEZMERMUSIC — Eastern European jazz and cabaret musicbrought to the U.S., at the turn of the century, where itthrived and has since become part of American jazz, folkand popular music.Concert!: SAT. APR. 4 - 2:00 PM AND 1:30 PM(Mandel Hall) General Admission: $7.00Students/Senior Citizens: $4.50Dance: SUN. APR- 5 - 8:00 PM(Ida Noyes Cloister Club)General Admission: $6.50Students/Senior Citizens: $4.00Master Classes: MON. APR. 6 • 1 PM(Center for Continuing Education)Admission. $1.00Lecture/Demo: MON. APR. 6 - 7:30 PM(Center for Continuing Education)General Admission: $4.00Students/Senior Citizens: $2.50For In far mat Ion/reservations call ilsle marian realty,inc.Studio and 1 BedroomApartments Available— Students Welcome —On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-5400Newton752-0943 (evenings, week-753-3105 (weekdays) orendsj.Concert Tickets also available atReynolds Club Box Office DR. M.R. MASLOVOPTOMETRIST»Eye Examinations•Contact Lenses (Soft & Hard)*Ask about our annual service agreement•Fashion Eye WeartsAUSOfLOMBSOFLENS(polymacon)I Contact LensesHYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th363-6 700 □ Rockefeller Memorial Chapel59th & Woodlawn AvenueMass in C, K. 115Sunday, March 8, 4 pmRockefeller Chapel ChoirRodney Wynkoop, Directortd»arii Monde 1U*. OrganistTickets: *4 General Admission, $2 Students & Sr. Citizens16 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, March 6, 1981 uiwnsAvailable at the Door, at Reynolds dub Box Office, or by call.n* 753.3i81Milk'SPORTSWin Puts Women in TourneyBy Audrey LightAccurate freethrow shooting and a toughdefense carried the women’s basketballteam to a thrilling come-from-behind victo¬ry in Monday night’s play-off game againstConcordia College. The 62-57 win allowedChicago to advance to the state tourna¬ment currently under way at Augustana Col¬lege.The Maroons were spurred on by a desirefor revenge, since a 47-50 loss to Concordiain the last regular season game forced theminto the play-off.“The kids were frustrated that they lostthe (regular season) game,” said CoachDiann Nestel. “But when it gets down to thenitty gritty, they play hard. They weren’tabout to do the ultimate choke.”Instead, the team pulled off the ultimatecomeback. After trailing 51-57 with only 3V2 minutes left in the game, the Maroons capi¬talized on Concordia’s fouls to outscoretheir opponents 11-0 in the game’s closingminutes.Nadya Shmavonian narrowed the gap byhitting a free throw with just over three min¬utes remaining. When Shmavonian missedher second attempt, Helen Straus grabbedthe rebound and scored to pull Chicago towithin three points.After Concordia missed the front end of aone-and-one, Karin Van Steenlandt wasfouled in the backcourt and sank bothfreethrows to make the score 56-57. Secondslater, Straus scored on an inbounds passfrom Christie Nordhielm to put Chicagoahead for the first time since the first half.The basket gave Straus 13 second-halfpoints after going scoreless in the firsthalf.However, the game was not over yet. Con-Deviates Bedevil DivinityBy David GruenbaumIn a meeting of the number one and tworanked basketball teams, the Albanian Ref¬ugees blew away the Divinity School 66-43.The Refugees were awesome; their “runand gun” offense and extremely tough de¬fense were just too much for the slower andmore methodical Divinity School. It was notthat Divinity played badly — they shot welland played reasonably good defense — itwas just that the Albanians were in anotherleague on Wednesday night.Brett Schafer had twenty-two points andcontrolled the boards, while guard SteveShapiro combined good outside shooting andkey drives to score eighteen points and leadthe Refugees. Mike Adamek pumped intwelve points and Charles Heddington tenpoints for the losing Divinity School. TheRefugee’s team was especially impressive.Along with Schafer and Shapiro, Kevin Tets-worth, Todd Lewis, and Eddie Foley, allcombined on the fast breaks and back doorsthat gave the Albanians the winning mar¬gin.In the undergraduate final, N.U.T.S. de¬feated Dudley 48-30. N.U.T.S. had a little bitof a problem getting started, as startingcenter Dave Steidl was unable to attend thegame and Mike Healy overslept. So insteadof Noah Used to Start (N.U.T.S.), Noah Sil- verstein started. Dudley kept within shoot¬ing range in the first half, as they were downby only four, 21-17, as the half ended. But su¬perior shooting by Bob McCarthy, DaveMcCabe and Larry Wilt enabled N.U.T.S. topull away to an eventual 48-30 victory. DoKim and Jim Moskal of Dudley were im¬pressive in a losing effort.The residence final provided for some in¬teresting moments on Tuesday night. Dud¬ley outlasted Chamberlin 34-24. Dudley ranoff to a 8-3 lead at the end of the firstquarter, but Chamberlin’s defense shutdown Dudley in the second quarter andChamberlin took an 11-9 lead at halftime. Inthe third quarter the momentum shifted asDudley’s Kim and Joe Duran combined togive their offense a lift. Dudley took a com¬manding 21-13 lead and although Chamber¬lin pulled within five, 24-19, in the fourthquarter, Dudley hung on for the 34-24 victo¬ry.In the women’s open rec finals, the Mys¬tery Basketball Team defeated Full CourtPress 36-20. Women’s basketball coach,Dian Nestel led Mystery to victory with ex¬cellent passing and outside shooting. To¬night in the All-University playoffs, the Al¬banian Refugees meet N.U.T.S. at 6:30, andUpper Wallace takes on Med School at 8:00in the field house.Men's Top Ten1. Albanian Refugees2. Divinity School3. Bo's Hose4. N.U.T.S.5. BRM6. Wall Street Walkers7. E.F.U. Stew8. Dudley9. Abnormal Deviates10. ChamberlinResidence Top Ten1. Dudley2. Chamberlin3. Hitchcock "A"4. Greenwood5. Dews Brothers6. Phi Gam7. Lower Rickert8. Fishbein9. Henderson10.ShoreyWomen's Top Five1. Mystery Basketball Team2. Misfits3. Full Court Press4. Upper Wallace5. Bomberettes ScoreboardMystery BasketballTeam 36Dynasty 57Bookstore 71N.U.T.S. 48Albanian Refugees65.Divinity School 49Albanian Refugees 61Dudley 34 Full Court Press 20N.U.T.S. 55Pit Docs 46Dudley 30..Divinity School 43Bo’s Hose 35BRM 35Chamberlin 24Games to WatchALBANIAN REFUGEES-N.U.T.S. All Uni¬versity Championship 6:30 Fri HCFlSpread: Albanians by 10 . . . The Refugeesblew away Divinity School on a run and gunoffense. This will not be nearly as effectiveagainst N.U.T.S. who are a fast team. Inorder to win, N.U.T.S. must keep BrettSchafer from working inside and Steve Sha¬piro from driving.MEDICAL SCHOOL-UPPER WALLACEAll University Championship 8:00 Fri HCFlSpread: Upper Wallace by 1 . . . Last timethese two teams met, Upper Wallace pulleda big upset. This should be an excellentchampionship game. cordia had a chance to regain its lead whenNordhielm committed her fifth foul prevent¬ing a fastbreak lay-up. But the Concordiaplayer missed both freethrows and it wasJanet Torrey’s turn to go to the line after shewas fouled on the rebound. Torrey sank bothfreethrows to give Chicago a three pointlead with 30 seconds remaining. Shmavon¬ian added two more freethrows to producethe final score.Shmavonian finished as the game’s highscorer with 23 points, despite being sidelinedby foul trouble for nine minutes of the sec¬ond half. Torrey added 13 points, includingfour long bombs in the second half.Caught in the midst of a jubilant post¬game celebration, Torrey was quick todownplay her scoring heroics. “There was alot of clutch stuff from everybody,” shesaid. “This victory is due to four days ofgood preparation and a lot of desire.”The win sent the Maroons into the statetournament with a 13-5 record. They facedthird seeded North Central College in agame played yesterday afternoon. “It’sgoing to be hard (to win the state champion¬ship),” said Torrey. “We haven't seen allthe teams, and we don’t know what it’s liketo play three games in three days. But if ourbig people stay out of foul trouble, I think wecan do it.”Maroons Fall 74-69Despite playing what one observercalled their “best game of the season,”the Maroons fell to North Central Collegeyesterday by a score of 74-69, endingtheir championship hopes.The loss left the Maroons with a finalseason record of 13-6, their best in recentyears.Spikers WinFirst TourneyThe University’s volleyball club won theWestern Illinois Invitational volleyball tour¬nament February 28, its first championshipin over five years. Competing at the tourna¬ment were veteran players Martin Gross,Martin Ball, John Vlahoyannis, and GlennCooper, joined by newer members TimLorello, Scott Cotherman, and GlennMcPherson.This event, held in Macomb, Illinois, isone of the largest of the year, with teamsfrom Illinois, Iowa, Missouri, and Indianacompeting in four divisions. Chicago wonone of the two “A” divisions, defeating eightother teams.Chicago looked strong in morning poolplay, winning all four games convincingly.Afternoon matches were much less success¬ful, as the team struggled through threestraight losses but finally pulled out an im¬portant win in the final game. This recordearned the Chicagoans a first-round bye inthe playoffs, and a needed rest.In playoff competition the team began toregain its earlier form, and won the semifi¬nal match handily. The finals producedsome good, exciting volleyball, as Chicagolost an extremely close first game and won asimilarly close second game. In the thirdand deciding game, Chicago began doing ev¬erything right, and the result was a convinc¬ing win and a well-deserved championship.The University of Chicago volleyball clubhas two teams which are now preparing forthe regional championships in April. In ad¬dition, the club will for the first time host itsown tournament, at Henry Crown FieldHouse on April 18. More details on this later,but keep in mind this chance to see somehigh-quality volleyball in a convenient loca¬tion.— Glenn Cooper By Michael OcchioliniAlthough they don’t sell carnations on Val¬entine’s day or agressively hawk T-Shirts onthe quads, there is a men’s crew team atChicago, and the club hopes to make its pre¬sence known this year with the help of theirnew' coach Murray Beach.Beach, along with the obvious qualifica¬tions that the name implies, is currently themanager of the pre-elite Olympic squad forthis year's summer season, and was former¬ly the assistant coach at Dartmouth. Beachhas had long experience in crew competi¬tion, coaching a recent US National teamand rowing for Harvard from 1973 to 1976.An accountant at Alexander Grant, Beachplans to be with the team at least three prac¬tices a week during the spring season.Besides having a new coach, the club hasacquired the freshman boat from Harvard.“This will be a turnaround year for us,”noted team member Andy Lang, and thecombination of a new coach, boat, and theirfirst full year competition since 1977 will ho¬pefully result in a competitive spring sea¬son.The club competed this year in the fall,and spent the winter quarter working out inthe Field House in preparation for the up¬coming season. The team will go out on thewater during the first week of springquarter, practicing at the Lincoln Park La¬goon across from the zoo. The crew is at aslight competitive disadvantage practicingat Lincoln Park, for the Lagoon is only 2000meters long compared to the average two tothree mile practice run of other colleges.The club has roughly twenty members,fairly evenly split between graduates andundergraduates. Most of the club membershave had their initial crew experience atChicago, although there are a few memberswith previous rowing experience Theteam’s first meet is April 18 against NotreDame and Michigan State. Chicago success¬fully competed against Michigan State lastsummer and fall, but the Notre Dame squadcould give Chicago some trouble.A Note of ThanksTo the Editor:My teammates and I would like publiclyto thank Mr. David Gruenbaum of theMaroon for his outstanding coverage of theintramural basketball season this year. It isour feeling that he has provided an invalu¬able service to the University communitythrough his knowledgeable and comprehen¬sive articles and special features, whichhave given due recognition to an aspect ofuniversity life which is very important tomany of us.George J. Yamin, Jr.The Divinity SchoolTne Chicago Maroon — Friday, March 6, 1981 — 17Phone SystemContinued from page 6campus phones in the Centrex system. Fac¬ulty members and administrators will beasked which type of phone they want in¬stalled. Sweeney expects that the new sys¬tem will be divided evenly between electron¬ic and standard models.Both types of phones will have the samefeatures, with the exception of computerterminal capabilities on the electronicmodel. The electronic model will have a de¬vice that can connect the telephone to any ofthe campus computers.Some of the capabilities of the new' tele¬phones include automatic call forwarding,which will transfer an unanswered call toanother predetermined phone number, andautomatic call conferencing, which allowsmore than two people at different locationsto speak on one line simultaneously.QuixoteContinued from page 5patched the wrong people. Even Don Quix¬ote had his bad days.Now onto the mail. My staff was bombard¬ed with phone calls soon after the paper hitthe streets, Surprisingly enough, most of thecalls dealt not with the unfortunate choice ofvillians, but my defense of the gay commu¬nity. The number of supporters and dissent¬ers were about even, although the one thatcalled me “satan s helper” will remainclose to my heart. There was, however, onechap that was interested in a far more directmode of communication. This young man,who we will call Thumper, had a startinglyprecise plan for reorganizing my anatomy.Thumper felt a quick class in chiropractywould soon straighten me out. And like atrue civilized man, he offered to set up a mu¬tually convenient appointment! SorryThumper, I’m still a coward at heart. The new phones will also allow abbreviat¬ed dialing, by which a seven digit telephonenumber can be dialed by pressng only onenumber, for a maximum of ten numbers foreach telephone.Sweeney expects that the 753’ campusphone numbers will change when the newsystem is installed. That decision, he said,will be arranged by Illinois Bell, which willstill charge the University for off-campusphone calls.Centrex telephones which allow a user todial only campus numbers will not bechanged, even though the new phones can beprogrammed by the computer to reach anyoutside line. Sweeney said the decision notto change the capabilities of these phoneswas based on “economic” factors.The installation of the new’ system, begin¬ning this summer, will take nearly 18months. The process will require a replace¬ment of all telephone wires in all campusbuildings. The telephones will first be in¬stalled in the Graduate School of Business.In all sincerity, I feel just aw’ful about thatarticle and place all the blame on myself.Although I stand by my convictions, I wasgreatly mistaken and very unjust in my at¬tack on the CRO. Yet what transgressed wasgood intended and a reaction of what I per¬ceived to be a viscious campaign. There wastruely no malice intented. I thought I haddiscovered the greatest threat to westerncivilization since Ge. Jack Ripper unco¬vered the communist plot to put fluoride inour water in Doctor Strangelove. However, Iwill not 1) join the writing staff of the Na¬tional Enquirer, 2) become a monk, or 3)flagellate myself in front of Hanna Gray.Like the old lady on Saturday Night Live I’lljust say “nevermind” (By the way did youhear about the oppressed blind welders?Stay tuned).Jonathan TurleyStudent in the CollegerRockefeller MemorialCbapelSunday, March 89:00 a.m. E cumenical Service of HolyCommunion10:00 a.m. Discussion Class:‘ Poet/Prophet: Vision and Revision"11:00 a.m. University Religious ServiceBernard O Brown,Dean of the Chapel% f^eit((Organ Srnrfit (Emtrrrt)JTlitehcll Jlmoto , Conbucrorwith j£koma* TDeisffo^ , Onanist5t. thoma$ the Jfpestie Church SyiZ 5. KimtarkInformation 12? •General : /5.0OStufcenU, 5enior*:{ 3:505uni»a y , KUrch %3:00. fM. CUSTOMER SERVICEREPRESENTATIVE(Telephone Sales)li you re looking for part-time em¬ployment tkat otters the con¬venience ot a Downtown locationpins full scheduling includingevenings & weekends, then this isthe opportunity that you have beenlooking tor! If you are a dependable, punctual individual with aclear, precise speaking voice youquality with us. With MontgomeryWard Insurance Group as your em¬ployer, you will be provided witheverything you need to enjoy thisposition as Customer ServiceRepresentative.In addition, we otter a good com-peusaboi plan with excellentbeaefits including paid holidays &vacations. For an interview ap-pomtmeit, call Tom Beisou, 6216036, Personnel Dept. No. 0193,between the hoars oi 9 a.m. - 1p.m. ONLY.MONTGOMERY WARDINSURANCE GROUP140 S. State St.Chicago, IL. 60603Equal Opportunity Employer M/FGRAFF & CHECKReal Estate1617 E. 55th St.V/i-lVi-A RoomApartmentsBased onAvailabilityBU85566Available toall comers CALENDARFridayGrad. Comm, on the Study of Women: “KatherinePhillips (1632-1634): A Poet Lost Through Preju¬dice" speaker Catherine Membretti. 12 noon. IdaNoyes 2nd floor.Geophysical Sciences Colloquium: “What theNortheastern Mar'in of North America Was Likein the Lower PaLozoic” speaker Stuart McKer-row, 1:30 pm, HGS.Middle Eastern Center: Arabic Circle — “Mysti¬cism and Metaphor in Ibn Arabi and Plotinus’speaker Michael Sells, 3:30 pm. Pick 218.Mineralogy/Petrology Seminar: “Metasomatismand Sedimentation in the Early Solar Nebula”speaker Dr. Glenn MacPherson, 3:30 pm. HGS101.Women’s Union: Meets 5:15 pm, Ida Noyes.Hillel: Reform-Progressive Shabbat Service, 5:30pm. and Adat Shalom Shabbat dinner, 6:00 pm.UC Christian Fellowship: “Christianity and theArts” 7:30 pm. Ida Noyes East Lounge.Internationa! House Film: "The Bicycle Thief3orom Sarret" 8:00 pm. I-House.C.A.U.S.E.: Party at 8:30 pm. The Blue Gargoyle.Featuring the Smokey Smothers Blues Band.Post Libris: Guitar, Magic and Mime. 9:30-1:30.Ida Noyes Frog and Peach.SaturdayInternational Women’s Day: Panel Discussion —“Women Around The World” 7:30 pm. free, allwelcome, 5621 S. Blackstone.Greek Student Association: Party. Music, dance,food drinks. I-Hcuse. all are welcome, 8:00 pm.SundayRockefeller Chapel: Ecumenical Service of HolyCommunion, 9:00 am. Discussion Class. 10:00, Uni¬versity Religious Service. 11:00 am.Hillel: Lox and Bagel Brunch. 11:00 am, Hillel.H.P. Jewish Comm. Center: Panel Discussion —"Jews By Choice" 1:30 pm. 1100 E. Hyde ParkBlvd. Info call 268-4600.Organ Benefit Concert: The Pitzen Brass, 3:00pm. St. Thomas the Apostle Church, 5472 S. Kim-bark. Info call 324-2626.Women’s Union: Film — “Right out of Historythe making of Judy Chicago’s "Dinner Party" 4:00and 7:00 pm. Reynolds Club Lounge.MARRS: Official meeting. 7:00 pm, Ida Noyes.Concert: David Cates in recital at I-Hose Audito¬rium, 7:30 pm. MondayC.A.U.S.E.-. Meeting. 12:30 pm, Reynolds ClubLounge. Open to the Public.Dept of Chemistry: “Trapped Trajectories andTransition State Theory” speaker Prof. Philip Pe-chukas, 4:00 pm, Kent 103.Middle East Center: Lecture — "Arabic and Ear¬lier Egyptian Contract Formularies” 4:00 pm. Ori¬ental Institute.OLAS: Meeting at 7:30 pm, to plan symposium onCentral America. Ida Noyes, Open to the public.William Vaughn Moody Lecture Comm: Presentsa reading by Dennis Silk, 8:00 pm. Harper 130.TuesdayCenter for Latin American Studies: Two shortfilms on Jorge Luis Borges and Pablo Neruda, 1:00pm, Social Science 122.Comm, on Developmental Biology: Develop¬ment of the Excitable Membrane” speaker Dr. N.Sperelakis, 1:30 pm. Anatomy 104.University Feminist Organization: Women's HapGroup meets 8:00 pm in the Women's Center. 3rdfloor of the Blue Gargoyle.WednesdayComm, on Virology: "The Control Region forAdenovirus Via RNA Transcription” speaker Dr.Roberto Weinman. 4:00 pm, Cummings 101.Sloan Colloquium: "Representation and controlproblems in Perceptual A.I.'” speaker Raj Reddy,4:00 pm, Beecher 102.Akiba Schechter: Open house for prospectiveparents, 7:30 pm, 5200 S. Hyde Park BlvdHyde Park Al-Anon Group: Meets at 8:00 pm, 1stUnitarian Church, 57th and Woodlawn. Info call471-0225.Phoenix Films: "Son of Paleface” 8:30 pm, LawSchool Auditorium.ThursdayPhilosophy Colloquium: "The Significance ofNaturalized Epistemology" speaker Prof. BarryStroud. 4:00 pm. Swift 201.Comm, on Virology: "Gene Transposition in Bac¬teria and Factors Which Influence it” speakerProf. M. H. Richmond. 4:00 pm. Cummings 1117Ill. Central Hospital:*‘Ala-Teen group meets 7:00pm, 5800 S. Stony Island. Info call 471-0225.UC Students for Citizens Party: Film - Dreamsand Nightmares” 7:30 pm, Quantrell $1.00ran Join the Episcopal Church Council During Lent forWEDNESDAY NOON SPEAKER SERIES:MARCH 11: “CONFESSIONS OF ST. AUGUSTINE”with KARL F. MORRISON, prof, of Historyand New Testament & early Christian Literature/BISHOP BRENT HOUSE5540 South Woodlawn AvenueHYDE PARKThe Versailles324-0200Large StudiosWalk-in KitchenUtilities Incl.Furn.-Unfurn.•Campus Bus at DoorBased on Availability5254 S. Dorchesterma R °On Looking for Unique,Part-Time Employment?The American Bar Association seeks articulate,highly-motivated University students for an on¬going membership information/fund-raisingprogram. Students selected for this effort willbecome familiar with public and professionalservice programs sponsored by the Associationand will discuss them with A.B.A. members.Positions are immediately available. The pro¬gram runs from Mon.-Thurs. evenings, 6:30p.m.-9:30 p.m. The salary is $5/hour (plusbonuses); students hired to work must be willingto work a minimum of two sessions per week.Interested? Please call Teri Sykora at 947-3957, afternoons for preliminary interview.AMERICAN BAR ASSOCIATION1155 E. 60th St. Chicago 60637An Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity Employer M/F/HCLASSIFIEDS WORK !!18 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, March 6, 1981CLASSIFIED ADSSPACECoop apt on lake: 2 br, 1 bath, eat inkit; Igwbfpl; 28,500 374 0219.Fem nonsmoker to share two bedroomapt at 54th at Ellis Cat ownerwelcome $155/mo. Rosalyn 363 86102 bdrm apt avail. Apr 1 $350/mo.conv. loc. NO ROACHES! 241 7670.Spacious 2 bedroom condominium,with sunroom, in six tlat. $63,000Phone 324 3263 before 12 and after 4.Anytime on Weekend.Studio and 1 bedroom apts nowavailable at the Chicago Beach HotelApts. All utilities paid new management call 643-7896.Luxurious executive home on 7 acreswith creek adjoining Indiana DunesNational Park near Chesterton. 2400sq. ft., 3 Br, 2B, 3 car garage. Swimming pool with all accessories.Fireplace, cent, air, 5 appliances,many extras. 40 min to U of C via caror train. $140,000. Call Renard atCallahan Realty. 219 926 4298.Room available starting Springquarter in a spacious four bedroomapt. two blocks from campus.Graduate or professional studentspreferred. Low rent. Call 493-3031.Lg. 5 rm 2 bdrm I ba 5300 blk DorChester for rent $375. 493 3664Studio 5455 S. Blackstone avail April$235 util incl. 667 4251.LONDON FLAT (S Hampstead) forrent, 1 Oct. min. let 6 mos. fully turn;2 3 adults. Nr shops, transpt. Olkin,950 Lathrop, Stanford, CA 415 857-1497.So. Shore Co op 2 br. 2 ba den w/b frplcarpeting drapes applicancesdishwasher low monthly assessmentsunder $30,000 Owner 731-4922.FEMALE NONSMOKER Roommatewanted to share 2 BR 50th & Cornell.$193/mo. Spring qtr. call Bethea752 0726.Female roommate wanted spring qtr.w/possible summer 8. fall options.Your own room in sunny plant filledapt 1 bl from lake. Classical musicand a very sweet cat await you all for$150 mo Call 643 9059 anytime.Rm. avail in lg 2 bdrm apt. $190/mo.54th & Woodlawn female 6842504/667 6695.CONDO Charming sunny 1 br 4 rms.wbfp lg modern kitchen on Blackstonesouth of 55th $61,00o Owner 955-3220.PEOPLE WANTEDPaid subjects needed for experimentson memory, perception and languageprocessing. Research conducted bystudents and faculty in the Committeeon Cognition and Communication,Department of Behavioral Sciences.Phone 753 4718Someone experienced with childrenwanted to live with mother/4 yr. oldrent exchange for 15 hrs child careweekly 667-8235 evenings.Prof, needs elementary clerical typinghelp. Flexible hours/days. $4 hr.bonus. Comfortable Hyde Park Apt.Call 643 8435.Bright person wanted to work onunusual finance job Mornings. $4/hrstart, then more. South Shore933-1857.Quandrangle Club needs desk clerkMonday and Tuesday midnight to 8.00am. University of Chicago student on¬ly. Preferably long term. Call MrFulop 493 8601FREE DENTAL TREATMENT ANDFREE TRIP TO L A Looking for patients for the California Dental BoardExam on April 24 or 25. Contact DrChoat 7 6276 or 7 6245RECEPTIONIST: Sat. only 9 3 Lighttyping preferred. Local R E OfficeCall Mrs. Haines 667 6666SERVICESTYPIST Dissertation quality Helpwith grammar, language as neededFee depending on manuscript IBMSelectric. Judith 955 4417.ARTWORK Posters, illustration, lettering, etc. Noel Yovovich 493-2399Will do typing IBM Selectric 821 0940IBM Tpewriters repaired for LESS bya former IBM customer engineer withover 8 years experience. Why pay IBM$54 00/hr. for service when you don'thave to? Generic Typewriter LeonWhiten. 427 0175.Typing, bibliographies Help withdrafts, for dissertations, spelling,grammar Call 684 6882Typist Accurate fast theses termpapers etc. Reasonably priced Call924 7399 Belle POST LI BR ISMort Shallman, guitar, Mike Nass,magic, and Vince Michael and SharonPeshkin, mime tonight at Post LibrisCoffeehouse, 9:30-1:30 at The Frog andPeach. Free Coffee WOMENAround the World A panel discussionSat March 7, 7:30 p m at Crossroads5621 S Blackstone All weldome Admission FreeHOME FOR SALEIVORY TOWER HOME SERVICESHire a student to paint, plaster, cleanyour apt, maintain your condo bldg,translate Latvian and more! 493-9108Pregnacy tests Sat. 10 1 AugustanaChurch 5500 S Woodlawn Bring 1stmorning urine sample $2 donationSouthside Womens Health Service.THE WRITER'S AID Resumes;editing & writing: flyers, pamphlets,brochures, reports, books, ghosting;creative pieces. Prompt, professionalservice. Call 288 1911.The Chicago Counseling andPsychotherapy Center. Client-centered psychotherapy. 5711 S.Woodlawn 6354 N Broadway, and 111N Wabash, Chicago. A RegisteredPsychological Agency. (312) 684 1800.TYPIST: High quality work byfreelance writer. Competitively pric¬ed, prompt; minor editing withoutcharge IBM correcting selectric.472 2415 or 338 3800FOR SALENew Yamaha G 23) classical guitar753 3424 (9-5) Steve.Complete 54 vol. great book set 77 edi¬tion cost S500/best offer. Call 643 3898'80 Mustang s/Auto, F M/tape/stereo.Perfect condition. $5000. 241-5295.Three quarter size violin. Good quali¬ty, with case and bow $150. Call684-0565 evenings.Full size student violin for sale perfectcondition. Cost $285 new. Will sell $200.684 0565 evenings.3 bdrm. 2 bath. Condo East Hyde Pk.5526 E Cornell. Sunporch, lots of lightwoodwork stripped thruout modernkitchen assumable mortgage. $85. Call955 3629 days eveningsTDK 7" reel tapes 90 mins"Superior Quality Low Noise" 3.99.597 7934CHEAP one way CHICAGO-SEATTLE Ticket. Good 3/815/81.363 2754.PIANISTSInterested in joining the University ofChicago Symphony Orchestra for aspring performance of Stravinsky'sPetrouchka (1947 version)? Auditionswit) be held early in spring quarterFon more information, contact Bar¬bara Schubert at the music depart¬ment. 753 2612.TRUETo find out more come to the con¬ference on Women and the Universityat U of C. April 23 24 Speakers andworkshops. Save those days!WHAT A BARGAINAll coffee 25c Wed 3/11 Wed. 3/18 atEx Libris Reg A level open: M Th 6-11Sat noon 8 Sun. noon 11 $PASSPORT PHOTOSPASSPORT PHOTOS WHILE UWAIT Model Camera. 1342 E. 55th St493 6700MOVINGI have a truck and can move thingsFAST and CHEAP No job too smallCall Peter at 955-1824ASINGULARGROUPWe are a co op of artists and craftspeopie sharing selling space at 57th andWoodlawn We are open Wed Sat 11-2stop in. New artists are invited to join.DOES YOURMINDMATTER?If does to us People are needed forongoing experiments in handednessand psychology Interesting and profitable Call 753 4735. (Lefties pleasecall)PERSONALPROTECTIONSHRIEK ALARM Send $3 90 (incudespostage) to William Everelt, 5811 WNational Ave., West Allis WISC 53214ON VACATION?Married couple, professionals, willingto house sit June September Call RBrum 828 8495, 364 0175 evesDEFENSE STUDIESUG and Grad students interested injoining a non political discussiongroup to examine defense issues during Spring Quarter Call Andy at241 6371 or Lap at 3 3777. EXCAVATIONA book of poems by Alice Ryerson, onsale at U of C Bookstore. $4PITZEN BRASSBENEFIT CONCERTSun., March 8th, 3 PM At St. ThomasChurch, 5472 S Kimbark Ave MitchellArnold conducts, Tom Weisflog,organ. $5.00, $3.50 for students,seniors. 324 2626.AVANT-GARDE?If you're a UC student interested inpromoting avant garde arts on campus, come see Libby in SAO. Room 210Ida NoyesYEARBOOKSAdvance orders are being taken nowfor the 1981 yrbk. they will be $12.50 until Spring quarter. $14 afterwards INH4-218SCHOLARSHIPSHEREA few partial tuition scholarships forUC students to the Aspen Music Schoolare available. Interested? ContactPhilip Gossett, Chairman Dept ofMusic, Goodspeed 309, immediately.ORIENTALCARPETSAlthough many carpets have beensold, you can still choose from abeautiful selection ranging fromdelightfully primitive 4'x6' Afghanis toexquisite 7'xl0' fine Persian designs.You must see m# carpets in order toappreciate their full worth and highquality David B Bradley 241-7163/643 8613.RUMMAGEThe Blue Gargoyle Rummage Saleneeds donations of all kinds to supportits youth and student programs. Salein on April 11, 10 to 5. Drop off donations at 5655 S. University, or we canpick them up on Fridays and Saturdays by appointment. Call 955 4108TRUE OF FALSEThe unemployment rate for womenPh.D.s in the social sciences is two tofour times that of men.PET GUINEA PIGSCall 324 9513 B 8. W 5-7 pm $3.UC HOTLINE753-17779th week's got you all tied up in knots?Need an ear? Call Hotline, 753-1777,open seven nights a week from 7 :00 pmto 7:00am.RAVENING JOYLast two weeks: paintings, drawings,writings, photographs by CaludiaTraudt New works have been addedFeb 21 thru Mar 15 3 to 7 daily. 1645East 53rd upstairsRIDESI need a rige to Lexington KY or Cin¬cinnati spring break will share ex¬penses Call 753 2249*1225.Anyone needing a ride to So Calif, forspring break call Will 493-2694Need driver to take car to Northampton Mass (stand trans) will split expenses. 947-8348.Need ride to N. Carolina (Duram)Around March 20th Call Jim 241-6414SPACE WANTEDWanted Hyde Park House or apartment to sublet for week of June 16 21 tohouse my visiting relatives Pref nearcampus (we'll water your plants, feedcat) call Barbara at 363-5660 or667 3500 (x211) leave message if not in.SEAMUS HEANEYSeamus Heaney will read from hispoetry on Sunday, March 8 at 7:30 pm,Swift Lecture Hall Robert Lowell call¬ed Heaney "the best Irish poet sinceW B Yeats." Free and open to thepublic.LITERARYMAGAZINEPrimavera a women's literarymagazine, needs more women to jointhe staff Call 752 5655 or S48 6240 Onsale in most bookstoresLOST AND FOUNDKitten found but can't keep Free toloving home 955 4929 evenings ADVOCATELearn to negotiate, advocate and interview while you help nursing homeresidents gain their rights. For information about Illinois Citizens forBetter Care training in April, drop bythe Student Volunteer Bureau. 3rd fl..Blue Gargoyle, or call 955 4108AUDITIONSWe are auditioning for a May produc¬tion of "Pippin". Singing, dancing re¬quired. 126 March 7, Ida NoyesLibrary.CONCERT BANDBand members: Great concert! Don'tforget the rehearsals tomorrow andnext Sat. Thanks, John.SCENES"The William Vaughn Moody LectureCommittee" presents a reading byIsraeli Poet Dennis Silk, author of ThePunished Land, on Monday eveningMarch 9 at 8 pm in Harper 130 Open tothe public without chargeRESEARCHASSISTANTResearch Assistant is needed for project on Urban Politics and fiscalstrain. Some course work in politicsand policy analysis preferredStatistics background and experiencewith SPSS using mutliple regressiondesirable Eligibility for work study aplus. 10-15 hours per week Call753-1122 An Affirmative Action EqualOpportunity EmployerFREETICKETSFree tickets to a performance thisSunday of the Janacek Chamber Orchestra 8pm Orchestra Hall. Music ofVivaldi. Corelli and Czech composers. Good seats! Pick them up today from Student Activities, room 210,Ida Noyes Hall. 753 3592.Kennedy, Ryan,Monigal &Associates5508 S. Lake Park667-6666CenMfair~T~i mT hiI®57TH & KENWOODAttractive 5 room con¬do w/WBFLPC. Excel¬lent campus location.Priced in mid-$70 s.Call for info.MODERN 4 BEDRMFree-Standing customhome w/side drive. 3stories of lite andspace. Spacious LR-DR. Extra large kit¬chen. 2 family rooms.Call Jan Haines.56TH & KIMBARK2 BR IV* BATH plussummer breakfastroom overlookinghuge backyard. 20 ft.MBR. Natl w/w thru¬out. WB FPLC GarageAvailable. Call JanHaines.WALK TO CAMPUSFrom this bright andcheerful 1 BDR condo.Seller will assist infinancing. Call Pat493-8647. MICHIGANYr round ranch home Union Pier, Mi oil heat. 3 bdrms., 2 full tile bthsMode kit. w/lg brkfst rm mini kit inrear bdrm Dr 15 x 20. Lr. 15 x 24 bothhave panelled walls, tile ceilingsHrdwd floors thruout. Lg walkinclosets. Storm windows New roofAlum gutters Full bsmt Lot 66 x 258'2 blk from beach. Near ski resorts,school, shopping, church 90 min fromChi. Ideal location. Ask for Lake AveHome Nadra K Rea! Estate.616 469 2090 '493-0666 Os.STRAIGHT TOCAMPUSTWO BLOCKSSunny oJde world charm withmodern insides. 5 rm condoavailable June. 55th Ingleside$49,500.ACROSS FROMMUSEUM OF SCIENCEHandsome building. Han¬dsome view. Excellentlocation. Excellent sire (sevenrooms - three baths). Condo$128,000.CALL ANYTIMEOVER 3.000 SQ. FT.means comfort, privacy andspace. Condo has 5 bedrooms,biggest dining room in HydePark. Near 53rd Hyde ParkBlvd $106,000.NEWPORTON THE LAKENew mortgage at 13’/«% with20% or 10% down - orassume the old mortgage at9J/4%...on 2 bedroom - 2 bathcorner condo apt. lune oc¬cupancy. 4800 Chicago Beach.$74,800. South TowerDitto outside views. SouthTower, high floor. $75,500.Ditto North views. NorthTower, garage included.$84,500.UNIVERSITY PARKCONDO - 55th STREETONE BEDROOM,High Floor. $42,000ONE BEDROOM$43,500 plus $3500 forgarage.STUDIO.$31,500 - open parking$1,500. Must be sold together.TWO BEDROOMS- 7.999% assumable mor¬tgage... Price. $64,500.Wrap-around" corner Con¬do.Call Any Time493-0666The Chicago Maroon — Friday, March 6, ’981 — 19Tuesday, March 31,8 P.M.HtlilBMW