THE CHICAGO MAROONVolume 90, No. 49 The University of Chicago Copyright 1981 The Chicago Maroon Friday, April 28, 198'Trustees Chair RenekerDies After Heart AttackBy Chris IsidoreRobert Reneker Robert Reneker, Chairman of the Univer¬sity’s Board of Trustees, died of an apparentheart attack yesterday afternoon. He was68.Reneker was at a business meeting atwhich University President Hanna Graywas present when he collapsed. He wastaken to Rush Presbyterian St. Luke’s Hos¬pital at#3 pm. He was pronounced dead at3:36. •Reneker became a member of the Boardof Trustees in 1972, and was elected itschairman in 1976. He was the retired chair¬man and chief executive officer of Esmark,Inc., a holding company with major inter¬ests in foods, chemicals, energy, services,and personal products.He was also an alumnus of the University,the first one since the 1930s to serve as chair¬man of the Board of Trustees. He receivedhis Ph.B. in 1933.The Board of Trustees has the fiduciaryresponsibility for the University, but doesnot usually become directly involved withacademic questions. The typical member isSecurity Union Votes Down OfferBy Darrell WuDunnMembers of the University’s campus se-cui ity union overwhelmingly rejected a pro¬posed two year contract for the approxi¬mately 70 full-time offices in Local 200 of theIllinois confederation of Police (ICOP).In a vote last Friday, union members de¬cided by a 38-8 margin to send the contractback to negotiations. The security officershave been working without a contract sinceFebruary 1.When voting on the contract, the officersj were asked, on the ballots, to indicate their! reason for voting against ratification. Basedon these results, Michael Brosnan, a unioni member on the negotiating committee, saidi that the main objection to the proposed con¬ tract was the requirement that officerswould have to report to duty for roll call fif¬teen minutes before their watch began.The University wanted this clause in thecontract in order to increase the efficiencyof the security department. By arriving onduty fifteen minutes early, an officer couldreach his post and relieve the officer on theprevious watch on schedule, University offi¬cials said.David O’Leary, Director of the UniversitySecurity Department would not comment onFriday’s vote against ratification. EdwardColeman, however, the University’s direc¬tor of personnel, admitted that he did not ex¬pect that this clause was going to be the rea¬son for rejection of the contract.Although some officers expressed disap-Threats Mar ElectionBy Don LaackmanIn the midst of intense campaigning andfierce competition for Student Government<SG) seats in last week’s election, severalstudents involved with the election were tak¬ing special precautions to guard their per¬sonal safety. Threats of violence, obscenephonecalls and personal harassment mar¬red this year’s campaign, and one SGmember is still receiving threatening let¬ters.Shortly after receiving the first threats,SG officers Sufia Khan, vice president-elect,and Lindsey Johnson, the outgoing vicepresident and chairperson of last week’selections, notified the University’s securitydepartment. Security officers told Khan andStaff NoticeMembers of the Maroon staff are urged tovote in a referendum on proposed changesin the Maroon constitution. Information onthe amendments, which would make thepost of Grey City Journal editor an electiveposition, is available in the office. Staffmembers may vote in the referendum byusing ballots available in the Maroon officeorr Wednesday and Thursday of this week. Johnson, who received tne majority of thethreats, to phone in every few hours, turn inall written threats, and report all threaten¬ing phone calls. University security thenreported the incidents to the Chicago policedepartment. Both police departments arekeeping records of the incidents.Khan and Donna Miller, newly electedSecretary, were the only people to receivewritten threats. None of the letters referredto personal harm, but tended to warn thewomen of potential danger, saying thingssuch as. “Drop out or drop dead,” “You’rethe target Monday and Tuesday;” and“Stay out of our way.” Khan has still beenreceiving threats after the election.Johnson. Khan, and Clarke Campbell, SGpresident-elect, were the victims ofthreatening phone calls. Several phone callswere made on the new SG phone number,which only SG members know because thephone was recently installed and thenumber is unlisted. The calls varied in con¬tent from someone screaming obscenities,to heavy breathing, to threats similar tothose in the written letters. Johnson receiv¬ed calls at her home on a number whichvery few people know. She recently movedinto the apartment and her address is notcontinued on page 13 Dointment with the proposed salary in¬creases, Brosnan did not believe that mon¬ey was a major cause of the contract’srejection. The proposed contract wouldhave given security officers a 9% wage in¬crease this year and an 814% wage increasenext year. These increases are comparableto those recently settled by the Universitywith other unions.The contract rejected on Friday was notthe first contract proposed. An earlier ver¬sion of the contract was reached by the ne¬gotiating committee two weeks ago. Howev¬er, union members on the negotiatingcommittee were going to present that ver¬sion to the local without giving their recom¬mendation. The first version would havegiven security offices an 8% wage increasefor the second year of the contract.In order to get the recommendation of theunion negotiators, the University negotia¬tors reopened talks and agreed to the 8'4%wage increase for next year. The union ne¬gotiators then presented the revised con¬tract last week with their recommenda¬tion.Neither the union nor the Universitywould discuss any further details of the pro¬posed contract until a final contract is rati¬fied.Further negotiations have not yet beenscheduled. Negotiators for the Universitywill be meeting with the University adminis¬tration and the security department direc¬tor to assess the situation before resumingnegotiations.Other University contract negotiationsare still in preliminary stages. Talks withthe Teamsters Local 743 which representsthe food service and maintenance workershad been postponed due to scheduling prob¬lems with the Federal mediator. Their con¬tract expired on March 31.University officials will be meeting the li¬censed practical nurses early next month toreopen wage negotiations, on their two-yearcontract which will expire next spring.The clerical workers union, also a part ofteamsters local 743, are beginning to drawup proposals for a new contract. Negotia¬tions for their contract will not begin for atleast another month. more likely to be a Chicago business leaderthan an educator. Unlike many other major;private universities, alumni are in the mi¬nority on Chicago’s Board of Trustees.Reneker was born in Chicago on August 4,1912, and attended Calumet High School be¬fore enrolling in the College. After he gra¬duated, he joined the purchasing depart¬ment of Swift and Company, becomingvice-president in 1955, director in 1959, pres¬ident in 1964 and chief executive officer in1967. The various enterprises that made upSwift were later reorganized as Esmark.President Gray released a statement yes¬terday concerning Reneker’s death. “BobReneker was an extraordinary individual.He had the gift of leadership and he usedthat gift with enormous effectiveness for theUniversity and for the many other institu¬tions and organizations with which he wasconnected. He thought of the University aspart of his family, and he left an indeliblemark on it. He was a man of great warmth. Iwill miss him deeply, as a colleague and as afriend,” Gray said.In addition to his service on the Universi¬ty’s Board of Trustees, Reneker also servedas a director of General Dynamics Corp.,Jewel Companies, Inc., Tribune Co., USGypsum, Morton-Norwich Products, Inc.,Walter Chemicals, and MoneyMart Assets,Inc. He was vice-chairman of the ChicagoCommunity Trust, and a past national presi¬dent of the Boy Scouts of America. He alsoserved on the Council of the University’sGraduate School of Business.Services are now planned for Thursday at2 pm in Rockefeller Chapel.He is survived by his wife Betty.Woman AttackedNab AssailantAfter ChaseA 20-year old Hyde Park resident was sex¬ually assaulted in the hallway of her apart¬ment building at 5118 S. Dorchester earlyMonday morning.The attack occurred shortly before 1 am.After the woman walked from her taxi to theapartment building and entered the hall¬way, she was struck by the assailant, whosexually assaulted her. Neighbors whoheard the woman’s screams called police.Both University and city police responded tothe call.Police chased the suspect immediatelyafter they arrived, but lost him shortly af¬terwards. They spotted him again later inthe morning and, after a lengthy chase, cor¬nered him in the garage of an apartmentbuilding near the corner of 54th St. andGreenwood Ave.One shot was fired during the incident,when a University security officer fired hisrevolver when the suspect lunged at him.The shot grazed the suspect, who was takento Michael Reese Hospital after his capture.The suspect was identified as MichaelWebb. He was treated and released to thecustody of the police. Police reports did notindicate whether or not the suspect wasarmedAfter his arrest and release from MichaelReese, Webb was taken to police head¬quarters at 21st and Wentworth, where thevictim identified him in a lineup. Webb iscurrently being held on charges of deviatesexual assault. A#•2 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, April 28, 1981Poet Lieberman ReadsPoet Laurence Lieberman will read fromhis work on Thursday, April 30, 4:30 in theIda Noyes Hall Library. Lieberman is theauthor of five books, most recently God’sMeasurements (poems) and the critical Un¬assigned Frequencies: American Poetry inReview. The Washington Post said of God’sMeasurements: “Lieberman, in his thirdbook of verse, clearly takes his place along¬side the dozen or so most interesting Ameri¬can poets now at mid-career... He reveals amastery of craftsmanship.” “The spirit ofthis body of work,” said Georgia Review ofthe same collection, “is what chiefly arrestsus — a joyous and encompassing tone, onethat takes (or makes) pleasure seemingly ineverything. The poems are life-fulfilling,even life-generating.”Lieberman is a regular contributor to theNew Yorker, among other magazines, andis poetry editor at the University of IllinoisPress. He is also a professor of English atthe University of Illinois.The reading is presented under the aus¬pices of the Chicago Review, and is partiallysupported by a grant from the Illinois ArtsCouncil. Everyone is invited to attend.Architect SpeaksArchitect Bertrand Goldberg, the design¬er of Marina City, will lecture Thursday at4:30 in Swift Hall 106.Sponsored jointly by the Public Affairs.program and the Center for Urban Studies,Goldberg will speak on “The South LoopNew Town,” giving an update on plans forthe development of the area around Dear¬born Park, a*ong the South Branch of theChicago River. Joshua TaylorJoshua Taylor Dies:Art Historian, CuratorJoshua C. Taylor, former William RaineyHarper professor of art history died Sundayafter a brief illness. He was 63. At the timeof his death, Taylor was director of the Na¬tional Museum of American Art.Taylor joined the University faculty in1949, teaching courses in art history and hu¬manities divisions. He won a Quantrellaward for excellence in undergraduateteaching in 1956, and became a full profes¬sor in 1960. Taylor was named to a WilliamRainey Harper chair in 1963, and in 1970 wasappointed director of the National Museumof American Art, then the National Collec¬tion of Fine Arts, a branch of the Smithson¬ian Institution in Washington, D.C. He visit¬ed the University in 1979 as a WoodwardCourt lecturer.Taylor’s colleagues remember him as “an BRIEFSextraordinary teacher” and “a great per¬son.” Many point to his involvement withthe development of artistic ideas and pro¬grams in the University; others note his“great following” of students. “He was anextraordinarily magnetic teacher,” saidRobert Streeter, Distinguished Service Pro¬fessor of English. Joel Snyder, AssociateProfessor in the Committee of Art and De¬sign, said that Taylor’s “exuberanceshowed in everything he did.” Taylor, saidSnyder, “had a very important impact onthe intellectual life of the community.” OfTaylor’s work in Washington, Snyder said,“He took a sleepy little old museum andmade it a major place to visit in Washing¬ton. He brought a distinction (to the muse¬um) it hadn’t had in a hundred years.”Taylor’s success with the museum mightbe attributed to his outlook on education.“Education,” he once said, “is not sitting byyourself reading a dull book. Education isexploration. We are trying to develop an at¬mosphere that touches everyone who comes(to the museum): visitors, students,staff.”Born in Hillsboro, Oregon in 1917, Taylorattended art school in Portland where he de¬signed for theater and ballet productionsand graduated in 1939 from Reed College.He received advanced degrees from Prince¬ton University —Anna FeldmanGustafson on TheologyJames Gustafson, professor in the Divin¬ity School, will “Say Something Theologi¬cal” this afternoon when he delivers the an¬nual Ryerson Lecture at 4:30 pm in the LawSchool auditorium. The lecture will discussthe role of historic religious tradition in theformulation of modern theology and the human experience of dependence on powersbeyond our control. Gustafson, a specialistin the application of ethics to areas likemedicine and business, has taught at the Di¬vinity School since 1972.Retired English ProfArthur Friedman DiesArthur Friedman, a retired distinguishedservice professor in the English depart¬ment, died Friday in London. Friedman waschairman of the department from 1960-3,and was at the University from 1932 until hisretirement in 1977. Since then, he divided histime between London and Lakeside, Michi¬gan.Friedman’s major work was a five-vol¬ume collection of the works of Oliver Golds¬mith, published in 1966. At the time of hisdeath, he was preparing a collection ofDavid Hume’s essays for publication.Writing Tutor HoursTen writing tutors are available to givestudents free help with papers. The tutors’office in Gates-Blake 203 will be open duringthese hours for spring, 1981:Monday — 9 am to 12 pm and 2 pm to 5pm.Tuesday — 12 pm to 1:30 pm and 3 pm to 5pm.Wednesday — 9 am to 4 pm.Thursday — 9 am to 5 pm.Friday — 9 am to 12 pm.If these hours are not convenient, studentsmay telephone the tutors to make appoint¬ments for other time slots. The office phonenumber is 753-4728 or 752-5655. Notes canalso be left in the tutors' mailboxes in Gates-Blake *319-A. About 400 students contact theTutors each quarter.HALCYONREPERTORYCOMPANYSenarios of theOld Commedia dell’artedirected by John SzostekMay 1-3May 8-10Friday & Saturday8:00Sunday 3:00Ida Noyes TheatreTickets on SaleAt Door SI.50Funded in Part by SGFCSponsored by FOTAThe Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, April 28, 1981 — 3Peter and the Terkeland other musical beastsinA collection ofchoral workson the theme ofAnimals in MusicfeaturingProkofiev’s“Peter and the Wolf”narrated byStuds Terkel Soloists:Carol Loverde-SopranoJanice Hutson-Soprano(Singing Rossini’sComic Duet for Two Cats)Dale Terbeek-AltoDonald Doig-TenorRobert Schroll-BassThe University Chorus and OrchestraConducted by Rodney WynkoopFriday, May 1st, 8 p.m.in Rockefeller Chapel$8SO South Woodlawn AvenueTickets: $6 General Admission; $3 Students and Senior CitizensChildren under 10 accompanied by an adult-Free. Tickets availablefrom Ticketron, the Reynolds Club Box Office, and at the door.For additional information call 753-3381.4 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, April 28, 1981Panamanian Ambassador Urges Restraint in El SalvadorBy Mary Katherine LarsonAddressing a group of Latin Americanistswhose interests during the discussion fo¬cused primarily on the violence in El Salva¬dor, Panamanian Ambassador Juan JoseAmado III told his audience last Friday that“(Jose Napoleon) Duarte is presently thebest decision El Salvador has.’’ The Ambas¬sador's visit to the University was co-spon¬sored by the Center For Latin AmericanStudies and the Pan American DevelopmentFoundation, an organization dedicated tobuilding “a constituency of US citizens con¬cerned about the importance of inter-Ameri¬can understanding and cooperation.”Ambassador Amado pin-pointed the be¬ginning of Salvadoran unrest as the periodbetween 1930-1935 when the first big revolu¬tions occurred. “El Salvador is about onethird of the size of Panama and has aboutthree times the population of Panama,” ex¬plained the Ambassador. “So what you real¬ly have there is a population explosionwhere people don’t have the opportunity foreconomic development — they are lackingon the social needs of the country and theydon’t have the opportunity to participate po¬litically...Unfortunately the changes thathad to occur throughout the years were notfast enough and then you find this presentconflicting problem of the lack of opportuni¬ties for the citizens.”Ambassador Amado then stressed thatthe violence which had erupted from thislack of opportunities is only supported by a“noisy minority” of Salvadorans. “The pasttwo years have shown that the violencedoesn’t have any strong public backing. Asyou might recall several strikes were calledand they were unsuccessful. There’s a clearpicture of the needs of the country to changecertain social standards, certain politicallaws as to have new rules of the game. It isour understanding that it is a complete sen¬timent of the people that are looking for¬ward to those changes...Most of the peopleare not backing any violence or any political reaction of that nature right now. Unfortun¬ately you have the silent majority and youhave the noisy minority (causing) all of theproblems that you are facing right now inthat country.”During an interview which followed aQuad Club luncheon, the ambassador saidthat the left seemed to pose more of a threatthan the right to Duarte’s moderate govern¬ment. “The left are more organized. Theyhave been receiving backing in their mili¬tary actions. They have used the guerillatechniques which are hard to combat and toeliminate. So in general terms they do forma group whereby the government does facemore of a difficulty to control and to finallyerect a peaceful solution. On the other hand,we also find that the left groups are formedby people, usually very humble people, thatdon’t have anything to lose because theydon’t have anything so they are seekingsomething better.. .On the other hand, the at¬titude of the right groups is to try to kill thehunger of the people by killing the people.”Although the Panamanian ambassadorstressed the healthy relationship betweenthe United States and Panama, he describedthe reasons for American intervention in ElSalvador as political and ideological and un¬concerned with humanitarian goals. “Rightnow you have two reasons behind the US ac¬tion and attitude in El Salvador. We can de¬fine them as the political reason and theideological reason. The political reason ba¬sically comes from the internal commit¬ment of the present administration that hadcriticized strongly the position of the pastadministration regarding the face or thename of the US around the world. (The Unit¬ed States) has been losing face when Russiawent into Afghanistan, the hostage crisis inIran...Cuba acting in Angola and some otherAfrican nations. So. based on that, there wasa political commitment by the new adminis¬tration with all cases that might happenwhere there is a sign of intervention fromother countries, especially in this area.“And second (was) the ideological com¬ mitment, whereby the United States cannotaccept having more countries involved inthe hemisphere with a total economic andpolitical system like the communist (gov¬ernment) would be. Those two things tied to¬gether have been, from our point of view,the reaction of this administration in orderto participate in a very active basis in ElSalvador...For the United States things arethe way they are and that’s a fact. There isno humanitarianism (involved here). Theyhave to participate — otherwise the new ad¬ministration will be losing face (if the leftistgroups take over El Salvador). For (theUnited States) it is as simple as that.”Juan Jose AmadoWhen asked whether the United StatesCentral Command Forces in Panama weretraining military personnel for use in El Sal¬vador, ambassador Amado stated: “If mili¬tary people are trained in Panama with the Central Command Forces or together withthose military personnel and they are -sentto El Salvador, Panama becomes, then, partof the military intervention of the internalaffairs of another country. And this is some¬thing that Panama will not accept responsi¬bility for. We have strongly made the pointto the US government, to this administra¬tion, and they have been very responsive.“To the best of our knowledge people arenot being trained in Panama any more forthat purpose of El Salvador. (The militarypersonnel) are being trained in differenceplaces in the States from what I understand.But most of the people (in El Salvador) areonly technical assistants to the armedforces of El Salvador and are not the mili¬tary personnel fighting the guerrillas rightnow.”Ambassador Amado stressed that Pana¬ma has a view of the Salvadoran crisiswhich is independent of any decisions or ac¬tions the United States may make. “Wehave to be honest with each other,” statedthe Panamanian official. “We have to tellthe United States what we feel is the positionof our country in a very honest and openway. If because we signed the (canal) treatywe have to be committed to any US policies,I think that the Treaty has been a mistake.“By signing the treaty we have shown thata peaceful solution can be found to any prob¬lem between two countries.. .The UnitedStates might feel that because we have afriendly relationship, we can back their po¬sition. It might be true if their position isclearly explained to our country and if ourgovernment feels that there is a reason toback it. But we have to be very careful andwe would like to be very clear also. Here weare talking about a general action-militaryaction against another country7 and that def¬inition is the one we cannot approve.”In looking forward to the future and!toward an end to the violence in El Salva-Jdor, the ambassador said that the ideal jUnited States position would be as mediator ;Continued on page 13The Morris FishbeinCenter for the Study ofthe History of Scienceand Medicinepresents a lecture byG.E.R. LloydAncient Science andPhilosophyCambridge UniversityWere Ancient AnimalsGood To Think With:The Development ofZoological TaxonomyThursdayApril 30 4 P.M.Pick lbRefreshments hollowJOE MORRIS ChampionDebater of“Among the University English Speakingof Chicago's most Worlddistinguished alumni'*- TIME 7:30 p.tn. Tuesday, April 28Ida Noyes Hallrutei’narThursday NOONTIME CONCERT: freeApril 30 Peter Golemme, pianoCoodspeed Hall 12 15 pmA program of \azz piano music.Thursday ELLEN HARRIS, SopranoApril 30 HOWARD M. BROWN, Baroque FlutewithHarpsichord - Kenneth Dorsch, Thomas MacCrackenViole da gamba - Julie Jeffrey, Kathryn SytsmaGoodspeed Hall 8 00pmSecular Cantatas and Sonatas tor Soprano andBaroque FluteFriday UNIVERSITY CHORUS & ORCHESTRA1 "A Musical Bestiary"Rockefeller Chapel 8pm (Admission Charge) 4fc.The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, April 28, 1981 — SWomen Call for Reforms at Chicago, Other Universities— ——~By Sheila BlackThe two-day conference on “Women in theUniversity” opened last Thursday nightwith a panel discussion which addressed theproblems of discrimination aeainst wnmpnin academia. Featured speakers includedTille Olsen, author, Sissy Farenthold,former Texas state legislator and formerpresident of Wells College, and Mary JoeNeitz, sociologist and Chicago alumna.Approximately 500 people, mostly womenbut including many men, nearly filled theLaw School Auditorium for the discussion.Betsy Hirsch, a member of the GraduateCommittee on the Study of Women (GCSW)which organized the conference, opened theprogram with a brief summary of the con¬ference’s purpose. Though she recognizedthat the University has awarded degrees tofemale graduates since its founding in 1892.Hirsch said that the University shares withmany other schools a “profound need forchange" in its attitude toward women.GCSW has identified five major areas wherechange is needed. These include:• Affirmative action in faculty hiring.Only 10.9% of the University’s faculty arewomen, most of them lacking full professorstatus.• Curriculum. Besides the lack of awomen’s studies program, GSCW also ob¬jects to the lack of the study of women in the Tillie Olson courses in the existing curriculum.• Social Environment. GCSW sees a needfor greater interaction between women stu¬dents, staff, anQ faculty at the University.• Discriminatory policies and practices.Little financial aid is offered to part-timeand returning students, most of whom arefemale, Hirsch said. GCSW also wants day¬care for children of University employees.• The University’s relationship with thelarger community. GCSW believes that theUniversity should give greater support toresearch relevant to women, for example, astudy of the formation and effects of socialstereotypes.Olsen spoke first on “Female Creativity inan Academic Environment.” Olsen urged“rethinking, revising, and rediscovering thepast,” as preparation for the future develop¬ment of female creativity, which she saidoften meets opposition in the traditionallymale dominated academic world.Farenthold, president of the all-womenWells College in New York from 1976-1980.spoke on “Strategies for Change.” Farenth¬old was an undergraduate at Vassar, but® until she accepted the position at Wells,S viewed academia as “benign and rational.”^ As the only woman in a 150 member Texasstate legislature, Farenthold was accus-js tomed to the difficulties faced by women inu public life, but found the situation of womenin higher education “appalling.” Farenth¬ old focused on changing the curriculum atWells, to encourage women’s talent andscholarship. Implementing a program ofwomen’s studies at any institution, Farenth¬old said, requires the combined support of atleast two of three distinct groups: the stu¬dents, faculty, and administrators.Neitz, a graduate student at the Universi¬ty from 1973-1980, is one of three women inthe 50 member sociology department at theUniversity of Missouri at Columbia. Shesooke on the “The Value of a Feminist Vi-ision”. Describing the university as a malepreserve, where participation is a maleprerogative, Neitz credited her own femin¬ist outlook, and the support from others whoishared her views, with giving her a sense of]direction in what she considered a non-re-ceptive academic environment for the Uni¬versity. Prior to her studies here, Neitz at¬tended New College in Sarasota, Florida,where two out of 55 faculty were women.Neitz said when she left New College, thepercentage had increased as the result ofthe women students' active participation inthe hiring process.Though the presentation met a favorableresponse from the audience, Susan Griffin,a graduate student in the English depart-Jment here, said that some of the difficulties!of women graduate students mentioned inthe talks were problems encountered by all)graduate students, male and female. IA Businesslike Look at US-China TradeBy Laurie KalmansonIn 1972, former Red-baiter and then-Presi-dent Nixon normalized diplomatic relationswith the People's Republic of China. In theyears since Nixon first peeked behind thebamboo curtain, US-Sino trade has passedthe four billion dollar a year mark. East-West relations have come a long way sincethe days when Chinese spokesmen routinelydenounced the running dogs of imperial cap¬italism; within the last two weeks, the Chin¬ese celebrated the opening of the first Coca-Cola bottling plant to grace the mainlandsince 1949. How to deal effectively with apeople that takes idealogy as seriously asAmericans take business was the theme oflast week’s conference on “Trade Opportun¬ities In Today’s China” held by the BusinessSchool.Co-directed by Dave Beeman, Steve Hoff¬man, and Lydia Huana of the GraduateSchool of Business’ Asian Business Group,the half-day conference was as much a so¬cial event as it was an opportunity for cor¬porate and academic China watchers toshare their perspectives with the businessleaders of tomorrow. Key-note speakerChristopher Phillips, the current president of the Washington, D.C. based NationalCouncil for US-China Trade, struck a notecarefully restrained optimism in his open¬ing address. While Phillips cheerfully pre¬dicted that US-China trade could easilyamount to as much as 10 billion dollars ayear by 1985, he took pains to stress that thepresent business climate in the PRC issomewhat chaotic.The Chinese have been subjected to abewildering array of policy directives in thelast thirty years, from Mao’s redirection ofurban youth “down to the villages and up tothe countryside” to the excesses of the Cul¬tural Revolution. China’s current leadersare continuing to follow the dicta of theopen-door policy hammered out by Mao andNixon, with a few adjustments. According toPhillips, “the plethora of new' official enti¬ties created by the decentralization of stateauthority” leaves foreign businessmen won¬dering “with whom should I deal?” Not toworry though; Phillips’ advice to US tradersis remarkably straightforward and to thepoint. As China adjusts to shake-ups in herbureaucratic structure, the canny foreignerwill do well to remember not to “over-reactto either problems or prospects” while keep¬ing in mind that the key to successful trade lies in “careful analysis of how Americanproducts and services fit in with the devel¬oping country’s national priorities.”China’s current national priorities, ac¬cording to conference panelist and professorof political science Tang Tsou, reflect thepresent government’s responses to the ex¬cesses of previous regimes. “What we seenow is a reformist movement, where uto¬pian ideals have been replaced by the rever¬sal of Mao’s monolithic leadership.” WhenTsou peers into his “cloudy crystal ball” hesees his native country as ready to enter“the brightest period in the Communist re¬gime since 1949.” Like Phillips, however,Tsou’s optimism is carefully tempered withrestraint. “China will move forward only in¬crementally while the bureaucrats and thereformers accommodate each other.”Not half so guarded in his praise forChina’s hesitant embrace of capitalism wrascorporate representative Theodore R.Ruwitch, Vice President and Assistant tothe Chairman at Beatrice Foods.Throwing caution to the winds, Ruw’itchexpressed his hopes for Beatrice’s penetra¬ tion of the Chinese market with all the gung-ho enthusiasm of the older pre-MBA genera¬tion of American businessmen. “AtBeatrice, the 37th largest corporation in theUS, we feel that the Chinese people havebeen starving for consumer goods for thelast thirty-five years. The Chinese peopleare now' in a period of rising expectations,and we at Beatrice are prepared to satisfythem.” Whether or not the gap betweenChina’s present economic output and thematerialist desires of her people can be sa¬tisfied by Beatrice Foods’ cookies and icecream remains to be seen. But Ruwitch isready to give it a try.Another corporate speaker was GregoryG. Tallas, Vice President and Head of TheFirst National Bank of Chicago’s ChinaGroup. Tallas carefully detailed the widerange of economic problems that threatenChina’s development, from the lack of asuitable industrial infrastructure to Presi¬dent Reagan’s threatened curtailment ofExport-Import Bank credits. Tallas, like theothers, sees China s ootential as great, pr^-Continued on pageCrerar Deal NearA final announcement is expected beforethe end of this week on the agreement by theUniversity to purchase the Joseph CrerarLibrary, which is now located at the IllinoisInstitute of Technology, (IIT). The one-million volume Crerar collection is one of(the nation’s largest libraries of scientificand technical publications.The library is likely to be housed in a newbuilding which would include the collectionsof five of the six existing departmentalscience libraries here. Some members ofthose departments are concerned with theloss of the departmental libraries close totheir offices, and the mathematics depart¬ment has refused to merge with the centralscience library.But the addition of the Crerar will greatly enhance the diversity and the prestige of theUniversity’s library. The University’s li¬brary would jump from its present positionas the 12th largest university research li¬brary in the nation to fifth place. The Crerarlibrary, which has been at IIT since 1962,has 12,000 titles and periodicals, as well as410,000 items on microfilm on all areas ofscience, engineering, technology and medi¬cine.Martin Runkle, director of the Universitylibraries, Jonathan Fanton, vice presidentfor academic planning and institutional £planning, and James Yuenger, director of £University News and Information, have con- afirmed that the final settlement with Crerar £and IIT is close at hand. °The present Crerar Library building, on HT’s campus.6 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, April 28, 1981\ ICQt , Sr. <1 «. «V) «**<By Vincent HillaryProtest Salvador AidOver 1000 persons at the University ofTexas-Austin marched last week in opposi¬tion to U S aid to El Salvador. The demon¬strators want all U S aid to El Salvador cut,according to a report in the April 20 DailyTexan. Some 60 organizations participatedin the march through downtown Austin thatculminated in a rally with speeches by ajournalist, a professor, a pastor, and an ex-CIA agent. The march proceeded peacefullydespite one minor altercation between the-main body of the marchers and some sup¬porters of the Rev. Sun Myung Moon.Dorm BombardmentOfficials at Columbia University are at aloss to explain a rash of object-throwing in¬cidents from a high rise dormitory. In re¬cent weeks furniture, bottles, books, waterballoons, cans, and ice cubes have beenpushed or thrown out of the East Campusdormitory complex. One professor and twoautomobiles have been hit.The Columbia Spectator reports the uni¬versity’s response has been limited to circu¬lating a letter urging students to refrainfrom throwing objects out of their windows.A university spokesman noted, “We’repraying that we can make it through theyear without somebody getting killed orseriously hurt.”Obscene RuggersThirty rugby players from Notre DameUniversity went a little too far in a recent postgame celebration according to the Mi¬chigan Daily. It seems one of the traditionalvictory festivities is the “elephant walk.” Inan “elephant walk” each player places onehand between his legs so the person behindhim can hold on. However, this time theplayers decided to do the “elephant walk”through the University of Houston campuswithout any clothes on. As a consequence allthirty students were dismissed from theteam. Notre Dame’s Dean of Students saidhe would consider reinstating the playersonly if they “engage in some kind of commu¬nity service to demonstrate their reputationhas changed.”UVa Dislikes CodeA survey of students at the University ofVirginia indicates only 28 percent favorkeeping the single-infraction policy of theuniversity’s honor code. Under the policy astudent found guilty of lying, cheating, orstealing is automatically expelled. The sur¬vey reported in the April 20 Chronicle ofHigher Education was commissioned by thestudent-run honor committee. Crime Rates DownCampus crime has been held in checkthrough concentrated prevention efforts atthe University of North Carolina and atMIT, according to recently released statis¬tics. An article in North Carolina’s DailyTar Heel reveals that most categories ofcrime were down at UNC from year-agolevels. Minor thefts decreased from 371 to243 incidents, while major thefts declinedfrom 89 to 56 incidents. Bicycle thefts, as¬saults, and forgery also decreased in fre¬quency.At MIT all categories of crime were downsubstantially from previous years averages,except for dormitory theft. Only one rapeand three armed robberies occurred at MITin 1980 according to the MIT student news¬paper.At both schools security officials attribut¬ed these turnarounds to student coopera¬tion, special “student alert’ groups, andheavy usage of campus escort services. AtMIT escort usage increased 40 percent over1979 levels to nearly 9000 calls this year. The Gonzaga University Law School Stu¬dent Legal Services organization has under¬taken a case of biting significance, accord¬ing to an article in the Michigan Daily. Itseems five elderly Spokane, Washingtonresidents had all their teeth removed in Feb¬ruary under a state funded program. InMarch they were all to receive custom setsof false teeth. However, between Februaryand March the state program had its fund¬ing eliminated, leaving no money to pur¬chase the dentures for the five victims. Thelegal services organization hopes to forcethe state to rectify the problem. Perhaps thebudget axe has finally bitten off more than itcan chew.Disaster Strikes atHopkins Spring FairOrganizers of Johns Hopkins University’sSpring Fair weekend entertainment extrav¬aganza are probably wishing they had nevergotten involved, following this years marredevent. According to The Hopkins News-Let¬ter, all bands on one stage had to be can¬celled following several fights in the crowdand the threatening of the stage manager bya knife-wielding youth. At the other stagethere were complaints about the noise level,some of the bands were uncooperative, andseveral nearby campus buildings were bro¬ken into. To top off the hardships, there wasa steady drizzle throughout the event. Theorganizers had purchased rain insurance incase rainfall totalled 0.2 inches, but consis-continued on page 17 |v*>1/2 PriceDRINKS TUESDAY7PM TILL CLOSEBRISTOL LOUNGEEnjoy a FREE* carafe ofwine with dinner in theChartwell House anyTuesday 5 to 10 PMXHYDE PARKHILTON4900 S. Lake Shore Dr288-5800 WITH UCID...andWe haven’t forgotten faculty & staff...IT’S THE SAME DEAL FOR YOU ON WEDNESDA Y!The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, April 28, 1981 — 7CHINESESUMMER COURSES"JO-" £ Intensive and evening courses in MandarinI Chines^jyill be offered^this summer c ChengJ _V eng Borcfiert; Senior Lecturer in Crimes*"Pr.r infnrmiiir\n ooiii Aft*'- -£.A')r<Tox information. ca!T493-6420after noons and eveningThe quickest way to getemergency money.RENT-A-CAR ® |•' ii i -a——r$13.56per#d<iy 200 Free MilesSe’tC TrccKS w. JfeOAAanc Cornel: OOT-ZiWVf — The Chicaoo W.eroc' — "uesoay, Aoni 28 198’An 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. VISA+ card. A Western Union ChargeCard Money Order, up to $1,000, will beflashed to the Western Union office oragent nearest your emergency.3Call home. Report the situation, andtell the folks they can get emergencycash to you fast by phone. 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.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 Be sure to remind your parents aboutour toll-free number. It’s all they need tocall Western Union to the rescue.•The Master* aril name is ow ned by Interbank Card Assooatum‘The V|SA name is n» ne»l by VISA Internal tonal - . -Western Union Charge Card Money Order. CARE.help andhopesince1946Send your help toCARE208 S. LaSalle StreetRoom 673Chicago, IL 60604-FORSUMMEROFFICEJOBS-See YourYellow PagesSTIVERSTEMPORARYI ’l RSONNCLEEO M/FHYDE PARKThe Versailles324-0200Large StudioseWalk-in KitcheneUtilities IncheFurn.-Unfurn.eCampus Bus at DoorBased on Availability5254 S- DorchesterCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCantonese andAMERICAN DISHESOpen Da(♦* „11 AM ts C:30 PMC'.csvJ Mono** - .1?16E>.ST 63'rMU 4-'M2 • (Writers Bambara and Vendler to VisitToni Cade BambaraBy Richard KayeToni Cade Bambara, a noted black nove¬list and short story writer, and HelenVendler, best known as a poetry critic andauthor of the award-winning, “Part of Na¬ture, Part of Us’’, will be two visiting writ¬ers at the University this week. Vendler,who will stay for several weeks on campusdelivering lectures, is being brought here by the Department of English. Bambara willbe here for two days visiting classes and giv¬ing a reading of her work Tuesday nightcourtesy of the Committee on African andBlack American Humanities and the Wil¬liam Vaughan Moody Lecture Committee.Bambara, who lives in Atlanta, Georgia,is best known as the author of the recentnovel “The Salt Eaters”, as well as the shortstory collections, “The Seabirds Are StillAlive” (Random House) and “Gorilla, MyLove and Other Stories”. She has also editedtwo collections of black short fiction, “Talesand Short Stories for Black Folks (1969) and“The Black Woman”. Bambara has taughtat several universities, worked as a free¬lance writer, social worker, actress, andconsultant at a number of conferences onthe humanities.“I can’t remember a time when I was notwriting,” Bambara once said in an inter¬view. “The original motive was to try to dothings that we were not encouraged to do inthe language arts programs in the schools,namely, to use writing as a tool to get intouch with the self. In the schools, for exam¬ple, writing, one of the few crafts we’retaught, seems to be for the purpose of teach¬ing people how to plagiarize from the dic¬tionary or the encyclopedia and how tocreate as much distance from your ownvoice as possible. That was called educa¬ tion. I’d call it alienation.“I always thought writing was rather friv¬olous, but it was something you did becauseyou didn’t feel like doing any work. But inthe last five or six years I’ve come to appre¬ciate that it is a perfectly legitimate way toparticipate in struggle. That writing, shar¬ing insights, keeping a vision alive, is ofvalue and that is pretty much the motive forwriting now. Although I can’t really say Ihave a motive now. I’m compelled. I don’tthink I could stop if I wanted to.”Bambara will read her fiction today at 4pm in Social Sciences 122. Admission is free,and there will be a discussion with Ms. Bam¬bara after the reading.Helen Vendler will deliver a series ofthree lectures on Keats while she is oncampus. Her first, on Keats’ “Ode to aNightingale”, will be delivered Wednesdayin Swift Lecture Hall at 4:30 pm. OnWednesday, May 6, Vendler will deliver alecture on “Ode to a Grecian Urn”, and onMay 13th, she will give a talk on Keats’ “ToAutumn”. All of Vendler’s lectures are partof her forthcoming book on Keats’s odes.Vendler, who is a professor of English atBoston University, is highly regarded as atop-notch critic of poetry whose writing isboth scholarly and unpedantic. She has beenpraised for her fresh, unmuddled approachto literature which makes her insist on what she calls the “simplicity, naturalness, andjaccessibility of poetry”, and she is adamant;in her belief that poetry must be taken up by;others other than the “literary special-!ists”.Her work on the poetry of W'allace Ste¬vens, “On Extended Wings: The LongerPoems of Wallace Stevens” Harvard Uni¬versity Press, 1969) is widely acknowledgedas a classic. She has written entire books onYeats and George Herbert, and has editeda collection of essays in honor of the criticI.A. Richards. Vendler’s most recent book,a collection of review, essays, and articleson some forty poets (everyone from Eliot toSylvia Plath to Robert Bly) has been the re¬cent recipient of a National Book Critics Cir¬cle Award, regarded as the most prestigiousliterary award in America now that the Na¬tional Book Award Committee has been dis¬banded. Vendler frequently reviews poetryin The New Yorker, the New York TimesBook Review, The New Republic, and otherjournals. She has taught at many universi¬ties, among them Cornell, Swarthmore, Ha-verford and Smith College, and she has beena judge of the National Book Awards and thePullitzer Prize for Poetry.A reception in Swift Hall’s Common Roomwill immediately follow Ms. Vendler’s lec¬ture on Wednesday, where she will answerquestions from members of the audience.Majority Rule and the FCC: NewStations Will be Like OldBy Laurie KalmansonThere is presently enough unused capaci¬ty on the UHF portion of the television spec¬trum to allow for the insertion of 250 addi-tional stations. The FederalCommunications Commission is expected todivvy up the rights to these vacant slotswithin the next six to nine months. The re¬search of California Institute of TechnologyProfessor and Chairman of the Division ofHumanities and Social Sciences Roger Nollwill be instrumental in helping the FCC toformulate its algorithm for the allocation ofthese exclusive goods.On campus last week as this year’s Gus-tavson Lecturer, Noll gave a talk titled“Majority Rule Preferences For SpectrumAllocation In The FCC.” While the title wasa mouthful, Noll’s thesis was as simple ashis research results were startling.It is a classic finding of social welfare re¬search that collective decision-makingbodies are highly subject to manipulation by-cabals. Clever Senators have known this foryears. The secret to successful control ofany decision making body that requires amajority vote lies in skillful agenda manipu¬lation. If, for example, a group has before itthree proposals named A, B, and C, thecanny bureaucrat who favors proposal Cwill structure the voting process so that Aand B are run off against each other, leavingthe winner of that contest to competeagainst choice C. This process, known as cy¬clical voting, unfairly increases proposalC’s chances of success.Professor Noll was wondering whether aparadigmatic collective decision-makingbody like the FCC would be subject to theinstabilities that such agenda manipulationcan introduce. It turns out that the FCC issurprisingly stable. The reasons why areeven more surprising.Noll was able to convince some of theFCC’s brass, several Congressmen, and afew of the FCC’s lower-level staff membersto participate in a simple gaming experi¬ment. Noll gave all the participants pokerchips that symbolized TV stations and askedthem to allocate the stations to different¬sized cities. The FCC’s high-level staff members use an allocation scheme uncanni¬ly similar to the scheme used in 1951 to allo¬cate rights for existing television stations.Although the Congressmen and the lower-level staff members didn’t come as close,they too seemed to be following the same un¬written rule. Upon closer examination itturned out that both the present system ofstation allocation and the game players’schemes were tied to logarithmic estimatesof television stations per capita. Long livethe status quo.When the FCC first approached him for assistance in analyzing its method of alloca¬tion stations, Noll decided to develop boththe economically and technologically feasi¬ble solution sets. Technological limits in¬clude the fact that stations within 250 milesof each other have to be given different fre¬quencies to prevent signal interference. Theeconomic problems were basically issues ofdistribution; it would not be reasonable togive all the stations to Wyoming, for examp¬le. After eliminating the impossible solu¬tions, Noll was left with a large set of eco¬nomically and technically feasible solutionsthat a simple economic calculus could notsolve. According to Noll, “television sta¬tions offer information to their viewers thatforce us to make decisions based on socialwelfare.” Economics, which still claims tobe relatively value-free, would be of no helpSome 75 knights, vassals, squires, maid¬ens (fair and otherwise), and other charac¬ters, from medieval times came to HydePark Saturday. The gathering was called bythe University’s Medieval and RennaisanceRecreation Society (MARRS) to commemo¬rate St. George, of dragon-slaying fame, aswell as to let the attendees feast, joust, and there.The next step was to run the games withpracticing bureaucrats as participants. Thequalitative choice models that came up timeand again were so consistent with presentFCC policy, that Noll had no choise but toreport that the people in charge of station al¬location think things are just fine the waythey are now. and all decisions in the futurewill be based on the present model, the phe¬nomena of cyclical voting aside.According to economist Stephen Salant, amember of the Committee On Public PolicyStudies, the allocation of profit-makinggoods like television stations will makesome groups better off than others, no mat¬ter how you slice it. Many will be better off.and many will be no better off at all when.Continued on page 13celebrate.The day’s events including dragon calling,a trivia contest, story-telling, and dancing,as well as the feast. For those wonderinghow to call a dragon, the winning call was.“Hey! You with the foul breath! Get overhere!” And. of course, a good time was hadby all.The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday. April 28, 1981 — 9EDITORIALCity Wrong on Orly’sOpening a new restaurant is always a gamble, but one risk Orly’sowner David Shopiro never counted on was that city officials wouldgo back on their decision to grant his new restaurant the liquor li¬cense it needs to survive.Shopiro’s battle in recent months to retain the liquor license thatcity officials promised him repeatedly, granted him, and now wantto revoke is an example of Chicago’s bureaucracy at its worst — atale of mistake after mistake by city officials and, worse still, thedetermination of the city to make Shopiro pay for its errors.The story began last summer, when clerks in the city’s Depart¬ment of Revenue told Shopiro that he would have no trouble obtain¬ing a liquor license for the restaurant he planned to open at 55th andHyde Park Blvd. According to Shopiro, he received oral confirma¬tion of this on three separate occasions. Based on these assurances,Shopiro signed both a lease and loan documents, and began con¬struction.But what neither Shopiro nor the city clerks knew was that theone-block precinct in whi£h the restaurant is located was voted dryin a 1956 referendum by communityresidents seeking to close a trouble¬some bar. Under city law, the onlyway for the “dry” designation to belifted is through a referendum onthe ballot of a general election. Cityofficials discovered the mistake toolate to place the issue on the No¬vember ballot, however, and thecity’s Office of the General Counselhas now begun proceedings to re¬voke Orly’s license.The city lawyers have told Sho¬piro that rannot obtain a licen¬se until precinct resident* reversethe results of the 195C vote through anew referendum in the next gener¬al election scheduled for November 1982. Jt seems virtually certain that precinct residentswould approve such a referendum a survey showed that 99 per¬cent of the precinct’s residents favor granting Orly s a liquor li¬cense. But neither the strong community support for Orly s nor themistakes of the city clerks have swayed the city from its position,and on May 11, a circuit court judge will rule on whether or notOrly’s can keep its liquor license until a formal vote can be taken in1982.While at least one community leader has argued publicly thatOrly’s should not receive its license because “the law is the law,” wequestion whether this case deserves the zealous attention which cityofficials are giving it. This appears to be an instance where the lawserves no purpose other than to harrass an innocent businessmanwhose efforts are strongly supported by the surrounding communi¬ty. Those considering the case must do so not only with an eye to thelaw, but also to the mitigating circumstances of the city’s errors.We find it difficult to believe that the city’s lawyers have nothingbetter to do with their time than persecuit an enterprising young bu-sinesman whose only mistake was to accept the advice of city offi¬cials. Men like Shopiro, willing to devote their time, energy, andmoney to the city’s developing neighborhoods, are people Chicago —particularly Hyde Park — needs more of, not less, and who deserveencouragement rather than harassment from local officials.Chicago StyleiALL RIGHT, WERE GOING TOTRY IT AGAIN. AMY,MICHAEL, YOU BOTH SUuajOGREAT. BcJTBQ6^_O DON'Tj TSn sweat /e^ v x )/ Mm. /V A sot myAd™ Rm«n ‘ ^' ^jAUELO/AH £H0IR^ !V AUDITOR WHJz pOUNOED IN H80 WELL, l Hope 50.OKAY, OK! TWO.. READY?^ A ~OKJE< AMD A - TU/O.^^ -<^Oh, myjesos /uO/ao MEAVP AS/.EADE7H MS AE//HE /TO A fiLACS/A TAESVAS J'U/ASRS tf/S GLORY BE S/tfPU..f Oooo, any/ ^ ^vQ_ MOW, MICHAEL..% J7 S ^HE G/l/ETH ME STRENGTHWHEN / WANDER ALOVS,FOR (UYALKTtfmm 77/EEHADCUUS,AM/DSTMO1/7*6/ °fmovwgJ) U //Ol*,7&B.. )■ By Peter ZaleJr ' ^pRE A ROU //JG ,STOVE/ ^A/Of ALO/YpSC Yoo /mbsc/le /{JRal Robertsl-fflUELWAH [mVmORIUMfoumo is MO/SQLETTERS TO THE EDITORJoin the MLATo the Editor:I am sure Stephanie Browner does an ex¬cellent job as (choke) Student “Ombudsper¬son.” However, I don’t see the necessity ofusing such a homely word to describe the of¬fice. After all, the term “Ombudsman”refers to the function, not the sex, of the indi¬vidual. I concede that “Ombudswoman”might be more satisfactory in this case. Butto inflict a Caliban-like “Ombudsperson” onthe undeserving readers of the Maroon with¬out warning seems a bit dire. It is un-Ameri¬can. It is un-British. It is French. (Apologiesto Mark Twain.) LONG LIVE THE ENGLISH LAN¬GUAGE! DEATH TO NEWSPEAK! JOINTHE MLA!Militantly,Chris SandroliniBillings PoorTo the Editor:As a member of the University communi¬ty, I am shocked and dismayed by my re¬cent experiences with Billings Hospital. OnSunday, April 12th, I phoned the EmergencyRoom at Billings and was disconnectedtwice! (I had to contact the EmergencyRoom because Student Health is not open onTHE CHICAGO MAROONThe Chicago Maroon is published twice weekly, on Tuesdays and Fridays, with a circulation of12,000 throughout the Hyde Park area. For advertising information, cal! 753-3263. Offices are inIda Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, IL 60637.Editor: David GlocknerManaging Editor: Chris IsidoreNews Editor: Sherrie NegreaProduction Manager: Joan SommersViewpoints Editor: Jay McKenzieFeatures Editor: Laurie KalmansonSports Editor: John CondasAssociate Editors: Robert Decker,AnnaFeldman, Henry Otto, Darrell WuDunnStaff: Michael Alper, Andy Black, Sheila Black, Aame Elias, Stuart Feldstein, VictorGoldberg, David Gruenbaum, Margo Hablutzel, Vincent Hillary, Andrea Holliday,Robin Kirk, David Kirschner, Mary Katherine Larson, Linda Lee, Audrey Light,Charles Mencer, Neil Miller, Pat O’Connor, Trace Poll, Nina Robin, Jon Satin, SteveShandor, Yoon Son, Dan Tani, Joe Thorn, Peter Zale.Photo Editor: Dan BreslauCopy Editors: Matthew Brenneman, KateFultzLiterary Review Editors: Richard Kaye,Candlin DobbsBusiness Manager: Lorin BurteOffice Manager: Leslie WickAdvertising Manager: Wanda Jones weekends.) Upset with being disconnected,I then called the Billings Public RelationsDepartment, and to my surprise, that officewas open on Sunday.Fifteen minutes and four phone callslater, I got in touch with someone in theEmergency Room, who informed me thatBillings has no medical advisory serviceand that I should phone Michael Reese. 1cannot believe that this is the situation alone of America’s foremost teaching hospitals.In general, public confidence in BillingsHospital is at an all-time low, especiallyamong students. There are many rumorsand stories that circulate among students.There are many rumors and stories that cir¬culate around campus accusing the hospitalof improper medical care and willful negli¬gence. I think that it is high time to inves¬tigate some of these charges to determinewhether or not these are merely rumors orthe actual state of affairs. It is important forthis information to be made public as soonas possible.Julia RathGraduate Student in theSocial SciencesRightist ThreatTo the Editor :In their letter of April 7, Tom Powers andMark Robinson, two members of the CollegeRepublicans, suggest that gay people andgay organizations like GALA have nothingto fear from right-wing Republicans likethemselves. I do not know what Mr. Powers and Mr. Robinson or other members of their!organization each think about gay issues,but I do know that a majority of politicianswho identify themselves as right-wing Re¬publicans do not support gay rights, andeven actively seek to oppress gay people.For example, former Reagan campaign,chairman Senator Paul Laxalt will intro-,duce into Congfess a bill, the Family Protec-,tion Act, which includes the following provi-,sion:“No federal funds may be made avail¬able...to any public or private individual,group, foundation, commission, corpora¬tion, association, or other entity whichpresents homosexuality, male or female, asan alternative lifestyle or suggests that itcan be an acceptable lifestyle.”According to the Congressional ResearchService, a government agency that reviewsthe impact of proposed legislation, ???“The condition on federal funding thatwould be imposed by this section is sweep¬ing. No person who was a homosexual orwho even intimated that homosexualitymight be an unacceptable lifestyle could re¬ceive any federal funds under such pro¬grams as Social Security, welfare, veter¬ans’ programs, or student assistance.Similarly, any organization that indicatedthat homosexuality flight be an acceptablelifestyle would be ineligioie for any govern¬mental assistance.”If this bill becomes law, Jonathan Turleycould be denied any federal loans to helppay for his education here because he wrotethe letter which opened this discussion, andall members of the Maroon staff who helpedplace the ad his letter addressed could be10 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, April 28, 1981 Copyright1981byPeterZaleSecond of two parts VIEWPOILast Call for Amtrak?By Jay McKenzieDo you ride a train in any of 36 states out¬side the northeast? Kiss the tracks good¬bye. Next year’s federal budget allots onlyenough money to keep Amtrak alive andrunning on 450 miles of track. The remain¬ing 23,550 miles of track currently home topassenger rail travel will go to seed. Liter¬ally.Look beneath the weeds a year from nowand you’ll find decaying ties, loose spikes.Freight trains don’t need track that’s pas¬senger-smooth, and by contract, threemonths after the last Lake Shore Limitedrolls, the freight railroads are no longer re¬sponsible for maintaining the tracks tohigh-speed standards. Freight trains don’thit the Amtrak speed limit of 79 mph;crates of lettuce don’t mind the bumps.You can be sure that the freight railroadswon’t pay for first-class track upkeep.What does all this mean? Simply thatwhen we start national passenger serviceagain — say when gas hits $5 a gallon —we’ll have to pay once more for track im¬provements. And at similarly inflated.prices.Here’s the problem. President Reaganhas proposed a budget of $613 million forAmtrak during the coming fiscal year.Sounds like a lot, right? And it is. Howev¬er, it’s also less than the current year’sbudget. By a couple hundred million. Andtherein lies the problem.Amtrak, like the rest of us, lives within abudget. Government agencies, like therest of us, usually plan to have the sameamount of money from year to year, if nota little more. Amtrak is no exception. Inanticipation of a continued level of govern¬ment support, Amtrak agreed to buy 150railroad coaches to replace some of itsWW-II era fleet, that’s a $130 million gone,Amtrak president Alan Boyd told Con¬gress, leaving $483 million of PresidentReagan’s proposed budget.Another problem: those Northeast Cor¬ridor trains again. It seems that Amtrakruns half its daily trains — carrying 43% ofits passengers and making 48% of its in¬come — between a handful of cities in theheavily-populated northeast. So, whenmoney is tight — as it would be on the Rea¬gan budget — it seems only logical to makethe first investment there.Cost of the Northeast Corridor service?$253 million, according to Amtrack. Whichleaves us with $230 million of the proposedbudget. Which isn’t enough to run the re¬ mainder of the national system. In fact,it’s only half the needed amount.What will that remaining $230 millionallow Amtrak to do? First, it will ‘allow’Amtrak to pay off the $14,500 workers anear-national shutdown would idle, Am¬trak spokesman Jung Lee said. Such pay¬ments, incidentally, are required by unioncontracts, which in turn were made in ob¬servance of the special nature of railroadwork. In short, they aren’t negotiable.Once we’ve paid these 14,000-plusworkers for not working, how much moneyfrom the proposed budget is left? Thirtymillion — coincidentally the amount nec¬essary to mothball all the stations and allthe extra coaches (283 of which are brand-new and too tall to be used in the east,where clearances are less).Is this the new government frugality?Seems more like the same old governmentlunacy to me. Why pay $200 million in un¬employment to non-working workers?Especially when, for an additional $240million added to Reagan’s proposed bud¬get, we can pay all of them to work — in allthe stations, aboard all the trains.Amtrak’s budget — as is the entire fed¬eral budget for next year — is currentlybefore Congress. President Reagan hassubmitted his recommendations, and it isfrom these that next year’s budget willtake shape.In a recent phone interview, I spoke toCongressman Harold Washington, a Dem¬ocrat, whose district includes the Universi¬ty. Washington, a prominent black leader,was elected to his first term last No¬vember.When asked about restoring Amtrak’sprevious level of funding, Washingtonsaid, “I support that. The CongressionalBlack Caucus has already recommendedthat it be restored. If we’re serious aboutenergy, if for no other reason, we have tocontinue to support Amtrak.”One of Amtrack’s most popular routes —the Lake Shore Limited — runs daily be¬tween Congressman Washington’s homecity of Chicago and New York and Boston.Several other routes also pass through Chi¬cago, and many students at the Universitydepend upon Amstrak for transportationbetween campus and home.Julio Mateo, a fourth-year student in theCollege, works during holidays and overthe summer for Amtrack as a member ofthe ^rain’s service crew.“By the end of this year,” Mateo said.‘‘Amtrack will have replaced or refur- Budgetm ny'' • /V %(in millions)Total Reagan Proposal : $613•Contractual obligations tocar builders $130•Operation of NortheastCorridor $253• Labor protection toemployees laid off $200•Cost of shutting down system outsideof Northeast Corridor $30Total of above $613Sources: Amtrak Spokesman Jung LeeTestimony of Amtrak PresidentAlan Boyd before Congressbished all of their.cars. And since in thepast the main problem was the equipment,it would be a shame if Amtrak didn’t get toprove itself with the new cars.”Mateo said the possible shutdown of thesystem outside of the northeast ‘‘comes ata bad time. I think there is room for cuts.It’s very political, congressman trying toprotect their districts, and so on.”“Ridership has increased,” Mateo said.‘‘Look at the City of New Orleans (a dailytrain between Chicago and New Orleans).Just about every day it has 21 cars, 700people.”“There’s a lot of romance attached to itall,” Mateo added. “I do buy a lot of Am¬trak’s rhetoric about costs and other prob¬lems, too.”Here. Mateo hits upon a key point: Am¬trak’s rhetoric. In the course of preparingthese articles I talked to many people onboth sides of the fence, both for andagainst Amutrak’s budget request. Inter¬estingly, many people who in some fashionopposed Amtrak’s request also claimed tobe proponents of train travel. As my re¬search grew, I found out why: Amtrak hasmade its share of mistakes.Members of the National Association ofRail Passengers (NARP), a private grouppromoting train travel, are often privatelycritical of some of Amtrak’s actions. A fel¬low passenger aboard the Lake Shore Li¬mited last year turned out to be a membeVof NARP. “It’s awful sometimes to haveAmtrak on our side,” he said. “But it’s theonly game in town.” Indeed, NARP isn’t the only agency thathas problems with Amtrak. GrahamBeene, in a fair and well-argued piece en¬titled “Where Are You, Benito, Now ThatWe Need You? (Washington Monthly,April 1980), shows that Amtrak and two ofits sister agencies aren’t talking, either.Beene gives a disheartening — to say theleast — picture of bureaucratic entangle¬ment. It seems the FRA (Federal RailroadAdministration), created to develop a na¬tional rail policy, was supposed to workwith Amtrak to improve track in theNortheast Corridor. Beene waxes poetic:So FRA looked at Amtrak, andAmtrak looked at FRA — war¬ily, at arm’s length — and theyboth came to the conclusionthat neither knew how to re¬pair the Northeast Corridor.Then they did the only logicalthing: they hired a contractorto do it for them.So FRA and Amtrak hired DCP (De-Leuw, Cather, and Parsons) to tell themwhat to do. Got that? Unfortunately, noclear lines of communication and authori¬ty were laid out. Like many a bad mar¬riage — or menage a trois, in this case —the partners fell to fighting They wouldn’ttalk to one another. They pouted. Theyweren’t being listened to, they claimed.Now what?You guessed it — they went to a mar¬riage counselor. Amtrak. FRA, and DCP ihired Arthur Andersen, a consulting firm,to patch up their shaky alliance. The Un¬happy partners spent $3 million, only to re¬ject the advice and can the counselor.It is this sort of thing — funny, if itweren’t for the tax dollars involved — that jmakes defending Amtrak difficult. Noth- 'ing would please me more than to see the !abuses of the system corrected. As a fre- ;quent passenger on Amtrak and a taxpay |er. I’d like to see greater efficiency.But you can’t reform a system that hasall but ceased to exist — and that’s what jwill happen to Amtrak unless Congress!votes additional funding.Sure, I like trains. Certainly. I find them ja bit romantic. Yes. I have made several jtrips aboard Amtrak. It would be dishonest Ito conceal these facts.But there is also the hard, cold fact thatin an era of scarcity, trains are an impor-tant link in an efficient system of national jtransportation.Maybe we should think twice beforefunding that link out of existence.The Cocaine Connection and Joseph McCarthyBy Geoff PotterThere is presently a Congressional in¬vestigation dealing with alleged cocaineabuse in Hollywood. Perhaps Hollywoodwill retaliate with a movie about cocaineabuse in the government. Somehow I don’tthink it would have to be all fiction.Exactly what is this committee concen¬trating on the movie industry alone? Threepossibilities spring to mind (spring!spring! spring!):1) Is Hollywood alone in its illegal drugconsumption? No. In many walks of lifewhere workers make large amounts ofmoney, cocaine is bought and abused.Sometimes the drug fiend even rolls it intocigarettes. (Watch out — someone mightoffer you one sometime, and then beforeyou know it you’ll be hooked.’) On WallStreet, where a couple of men were arrest¬ed some time ago for selling the whitepowder, reports were written of people ac¬tually rubbing it on their gums!2) Does the drug in question provoke riots, murder, and — worst of all — rockand roll? No. There is very little effectupon society as a whole when some richpeople buy and ingest cocaine (no matterhow they made enough money to afford it)While one is under the influence of thedrug, he is not likely to harm anyone nearhim (unless the person in the area regardsbeing offered a ‘toot’ dangerous physicalharm). After the drug has worn off, theabuser is not physically addicted and so isnot likely to go out and rob some innocentbystander to get money for his next “fix.”(The only real harm done is to the nose,and even this problem has a silver lining,as many wealthy plastic surgeons couldtell you.)3)Is the industry corrupting our inno¬cent young by condoning — worse, promot¬ing — abuse of cocaine? No The movie in¬dustry, which seems to breed idols forAmerica’s youth, does not openly advocatethe use of cocaine. The last film I can re¬call dealing with the drug was Woody Allen's “Annie Hall,” and in that picturethe comedian accidentally blew the costlystuff into the carpet. This scene hardlyshows the cocaine user in a heroic light.(One could envy the vacuum cleaner, how¬ever — that is, if one were a potential co¬caine abuser.)If these reasons have proved groundless,there must be another purpose for the Con¬gressional investigation of Hollywood.Could it be that the politicians intend to di¬vert attention from their less-than-suc-cessful attempts at solving current eco¬nomic and social problems by focusing theeyes of America upon a minor fuss in asegment of society sure to generate exag¬gerated publicity? That’s a little hard tosay, but I wouldn’t put it past them —never can tell what them bad-burned poli¬ticians are up to.If the investigation brings out somenames (any names — it doesn’t really mat¬ter whose) it is going to act as some sort ofblack-listing organization Not purposely, perhaps, but what current movie-companyexecutive < money-grabbing leeches thatthey are) is going to hire a director, writer,or actor whose name has been sulliedacross America with allegations of filthydrug abuse9 None.And what right has this committee toseriously jeopardize the future work of anyAmerican9 When the charge of illegal ac¬tivity is as hard to prove as the use of aningested drug, mere suspicion and venge¬ful insinuation may carry the same career-destroying weight as valid proof.Let the Congress turn to more pressingAmerican problems and leave the forgingof morals to the individual citizens of thiscountry. When Joseph McCarthy tried topurge the country of “Communists” dur¬ing the 1950s he also wrecked the contribu¬tion to society of many patriotic citizens.And when the government put its footdown on public immorality by the prohib¬ition of alcohol, the result was even lesssatisfactory'.The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, April 28, 1981 — 11Paid Advertisement Paid Advertisement Paid Advertisement Paid Advertisement Paid Advertisement Paid AdvertisementWe - a group of intellectuals andreligious leaders-applaudAmerican policy in El Salvador*In what the State Department accurately describes as “a textbookcase of indirect armed aggression by Communist powers,” El Salvadorhas been under military attack by a coalition of guerrilla groups whoseability to wage war depends on weapons supplied by the Soviet Unionthrough such client states as Cuba, Nicaragua, Vietnam, and others.That these guerrillas, dominated by the Salvadoran Communistparty and other Marxist-Leninist factions, should be getting weaponsfrom the Soviet bloc is not surprising. If they succeed in taking over ElSalvador, another country in this hemisphere would be added to Cubaand Nicaragua as instruments of the further expansion of theburgeoning Soviet empire. Nicaragua, for example, is among the fewcountries to have acquiesced in the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, andCuban troops have been used in Africa and the Middle East to serve inthe coming to power of parties subservient to the Soviet Union.The fact that the Soviet bloc has been pouring arms into the arsenalsof the guerrillas in El Salvador is, then, not surprising. What issurprising is the support the guerrillas have received from liberals andsocialists both in the United States and abroad.These non-Communist apologists for the guerrillas tell us—andthemselves—that the war in El Salvador is caused by intolerable localconditions and not by outside intervention. Yet the government in E!Salvador, backed and encouraged by the United States, has beenworking to improve those conditions. It has inaugurated a program ofland reform so extensive that the extreme Right has turned against itwith as much murderous vehemence as the extreme Left. Withoutintervention by the Soviet bloc there would be less violence and abetter chance for the reforms to take hold, as well as for the presentgovernment to bring the anti democratic Right under control. Indeed,we believe that only American protection, and aid, will make it possiblefor the Salvadorans now to create their own free and stable society,secure against depredations of both Left and Right.The apologists also tell us, and themselves, that the insurgents aresupported by the people of El Salvador. Yet the failure of the mostrecent military offensive launched by the guerrillas is acknowledgedeven by their allies in Cuba and Nicaragua to mean that they have notsucceeded in enlisting popular support. The apologists also tell us, and themselves, that by opposing theguerrillas the United States is aligning itself with the forces of rightwing repression” and against the forces of “progressive change. Yet itis the government of El Salvador that today represents progressivechange. As for the guerrillas, similar movements which have come topower in Cuba, Vietnam, and Cambodia have brought not pro¬gressive change” but totalitarian regimes far more repressive than eventhe most repressive of the regimes they have replaced. Moreover,being so much more ruthless in dealing with opposition than thoseearlier regimes, they are much less likely to be liberalized. Nor are theylikely to be overthrown in their turn by movements genuinely seekinggreater democratization and more protection for human rights.Finally, the apologists tell us, and themselves, that “anotherVietnam” is in the making in El Salvador. Yet there is little likelihood thatAmerican military and economic aid to the government in El Salvadorwill lead either to the commitment of large numbers of American troopsor to a defeat of the forces we are trying to help.There is, however, a sense in which El Salvador could becomeanother Vietnam. If we abdicate and allow the Soviet bloc to force aCommunist regime into existence there, El Salvador will suffer thesame hideous fate that has befallen Vietnam since that country wasunified under totalitarian Communist rule: a new Gulag, thousandsupon thousands of refugees driven into the sea, the destruction of anyhope for future liberalization, and the creation of another armedinstrument of Soviet imperialism..Because the United States has a vital stake not oniy in holding theline against Soviet expansionism and the totalitarian horrors thatfollow in its train but also in helping the Salvadoran government tostrengthen democratic institutions through free elections and furtherland reform, we deplore the misguided support being given by non-Communists to the forces opposing these aims. We applaud thedetermination of the United States government to assist thegovernment of El Salvador which is working, against armed opposition,to build a more stable and equitable society and thereby add to the sumof freedom in the world.Sponsored byThe Committee for the Free WorldKen Adel manSRI Inter nauma)*Joseph AdelsonUniversity tit Mi* higanBarbara AmielMm k-on sRichard H AraujoNotunH>i Cttlhnk* RegisterHadley ArkesAmherst CollegeDr Eyelyn AveryTnwson Stale UniversityDr Sheldon AveryJohns Hopkins UniversityEdward C. Ban lie IdHarvard UniversityGregory J Bardac keAmen* ,»n Tr.ide Union C«nHntadrutDavid Bar-lllancone ert punts* Murray BaronA. i ut.h y fn Media In*William Barrettauthor .md phikisopherDennis Alan BartlettSt ign.itiuv Institute of USEJames L BaughmanUniversity <»f W«* «»nsmArnold Beichman.HifhorHerman BelzUniversity of MarylandRobert BenneLutheran S« hoot of TheokigyCKh agoWilliam J BenneffTh* National Humanities CerWaller Bern*Amen* an Enterprise InstituteKenneth J Bialkin Kenneth T BlaylockPresident Amer;* an FederalCm is erpment f.mpii ryeesDonald Blinkeninvestment UmkevA maud de BorchgraveauthorRobert H BorkYale S*hooiEric M Breinde!Hazard La* S.K...IThomas R BrooksBrenda BrownAndr/ej Br/eskiUtmvr*.i»y in C.ili*«*nJohn H BunzelTHE COMMITTEE FOR THE FREE WORLD211 East 51 Street, New York. NY 10022I am interested in supporting the work of The Committee forthe Free WoridEnclosed is my contribution ofNameAddressZip(please print) Kim CarneyUniversity irf Texas. ArlingtonLeo CherneResearch Institute of AmericaRay S ClineC.s,rg.t*wer UntversHyJoan ColebrookJames S ColemanUniversity of Chu agoFrancis W. Conn. S JLos AngelesJuan E elipe C onneallyI*»s Aitgeie*berf CoiJane Larkin CrainauthorWerner J DannhauserCornell UnuifxiiyRev Thurston Davis. S JAppr.ii of Cons* irltot Found, it*.Christopher De MulhHarvard Urov.fvtyStephen DonadtoMtddiehury t<Milorad M DrachkovitchM*«*er InM.-jut**!Terry F.astland.Mil horNi< k EherstadfMm.inUWmr.s,KEdith Efron|!imrr*t»v ot Ho* HesterFric h £it hmanH.i’i ■Mark Fail offI ti.-Tsiti Ot.gr.Kathryn B FeuerIWrv.rstiy \ r.r, .Edwin J Feulner . JrI . Met to.*Chester E E inn Jr Midge DecterExecutive DirectorRita FreedmanF*e* Ow SxkllDvmoMaurice FriedbergWaller Galenson1 Umv sityRobert W GilmorePresident N«-%v York Friend*Thomas W. GleasonPm-s biUtunmm., I o. .<shr*Philip Gold( M'orgeiinrn UtuvefsirRobert A GoldwiiRichard Grepter.H.-thoiDavid GutmannVflhuvsvm l.V.nersOscar HandltnH ;t -:r.' I ersCarl F H HenryPaul B Hen/eRobert HessenH.-*.t Irtstin*y,uNorman HillI’n's A Hukp R.mdoljih bistrtutiGertrude HimmelfarbVaclav Hole vox sky1Paul Hollander( 'irvefs-ty .Z M-rss.u hi MW'Sidney Hook Franklin G HuntErich IsaacCity Coliege of New YorRael Jean IsaacauthorGeorge JonasChalmers JohnsonUmv.fsiK of CaJitornwi. ISheila K JohnsonEounciiixm lor Demo. rah* IRuth S KingWriters .,,w‘ Artels •..r |Y.„Mwidk FastMilton R KonvifzCornell Unn.fsmNeal KozodoyCommentaryAtleen S- KraditorBoston UiuversilyJames C I aForceUCI ASteven Lagerfeld.mjHv*Michael I edeenbu U irshm^oM QtHWU 'KGeorge J 1 erskiUm. tsKx .*• Son Fran. ,***Janice M LesterNmvmhiI C»iihiJk R.-|We»Mil hael E LevinC:t- ('••&-.» ••• N.-v YorkLeonard W LevyClaremont <»» eiu.it. $*h*.Guenler 1 ewvMNadia 1 ifshitzH. IAo<..sSamuel LipmanI ranklm N I it tellEugen l.oebl Vivian Lowe•ounwiiivtMauro Lucentini/: GmiouWcEdward I uttwakKenneth S Lynn•Johns Hopkins UniversityMarion MagidFrancis X MaterNtifui'Uii C itlhofh RegisterHarvey C Mansfield. Jr.Harvard UniversityPhilip N Marc usInstitute lor Fdu* niion,ii Affairsition Gustavo B MarinCh.wmwtn A!*d,ila Cuban Mov«> the Malachi B MartinHuber MatosCuts* Independterile y Demo* rjR Bruce McColmForrest McDonaldUniversity of Alafven.iConstantine C MengesHods* 4) 111st It I It.Cord MeyerMiha/lo MthajlovN.it «m.i< Hlinvilltnes Cent.Stephen MillerAmrm .in Fnteriwise Instiu,Thomas Molnaron* h*«Steven C. MunsonNe|» Vo*4 Tim. s M.n*i, .uJoshua Muravc hikCenter t*a Sir.it.-g?. and IntSfudtesJames H Ntc hols JrIJames Nuec h'erlein<.■ •l .etf Olsen John O’SullivanThomas L PangleUniversity ot TorontoFrederick B. PikeUniversity of Notre DameNorman PodhoretzPaul R PorterauthorArch PuddingtonLeague tor Industrial DertMnr.eWillard V QuineHarvard UimerxityDorothy RabmowitzauthorBogdan RaditsaFairieigh Dickmvin UmversiiyLeo RaditsaSt J*4w S Colk-.J,Antonio RamirezLilvw itMirn.iiisiPaul RamseyPrAustu . Ur.i RanneyAm* ri. an Enteritris*- InstrtuPhilip RteffUiiKeisity ot Penm.ylv.mi,iEugene V RostowY.iir UniversityL L RowneyI • (*«ai U S Army iH*-t tMvron RushC.civH UmersityBayard RustinC lvwrm.Ni Yu uil r.MSeymour Sameti.orsnuinty rel.iti.iiis , onsu1SolW SandersNHllll.lt»stRichard M ScammonJames V Sc hall S J<»• i*«(•'«..un Untc. iMlyMias M Schwar/harfPaul SeahurvI twvelsN. ot C lPeter ShawState l JmrrxitvDav id Stdorsky Seymour SiegelJewtvh Theolognai SemmaryPhilip SiegetmanSan Fran* is*o Slate UniversityLawrence EL StlbermanFxe* Vw ePr. v Crcw kcr Nat l BankAllan P SindlerUniversity of California BerkeleyMa* SingerHudson InstituteJohn P SiskGon/.igu UniversityLewis A lambsArizona 5t.»te UniversityW Scott ThompsonTufts UniversityJackson TobyRutgers UniversityFrank N TragerN*w York UniversityDonald W TreadgoldUntversriy of WashingtonErnest van den HaagN,v* York law S* h»w>lBen J WattenbergC h.wrman. tor a DM.i)orilyAlbert I WeeksN.-w Y»wk UoivrtsrtyEugene P Wtgnerf'rm. el.in UniversityWalker A Williamsf'.eihK'.MVt Cocm. .JRuth R WisseM t.ii: Um.-TsiiyPeter P Wuonski•NfthoiV Refhth.wk.x CPeter WorthingtonI—mm o SunRev Mu hael J WrennIhaddeusP WojvikNV S..»f, B,..* I.'ins VounqvrPaid Advertisement Paid Advertisement Paid Adveitisement f Imo R /unA.lrw.*. I b N.,12 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, April 28, 1981 Paid Advertisement Paid Advertisement Paid AdvertisementElectioncontinued from page 1listed anywhere. She received no writtenthreats, however.Although the threats against Khan,Johnson, and Miller were the most seriousincidents, several other minor problemsalso plagued candidates and SG officials. Inthe vice presidential race, fraudulentposters appeared on campus claiming tosupport New Emphasis Wing (NEW) can¬didate Jim Eccleston. The posters, whichwere distributed without Eccleston’sknowledge, contained obscenities and im¬plied that Eccleston would use the vicepresident’s office improperly. The postersjwere sharply critical of Student Govern¬ment.Penny Lindgren the NEW candidate forpresident, was also the victim of harass¬ment. A candidate from another party toldstudents near polling places on the day ofthe election that Lindgren had withdrawnfrom the race. Lindgren said she never con¬sidered dropping out. She also reported thatthis same candidate advised her not to turnin the nominating petitions which placed heron the ballot. The candidate denies herstory.The wide-spread corruption of the cam¬paigning process seen this year has not oc¬curred in several years. The last major inci¬dent took place three years ago, when aFCCContinued from page 9the FCC distributes the rights to these newstations.However, in a few short years, when thespace shuttle lifts communications satel¬lites aloft routinely, and the entire nation iswired for cable reception, none of this willmatter anyway. Business School student was threatenedenough to warrant the presence of a securityofficer in her room while she slept. None ofthe threats this year have been specificenough to be considered harmful, andLieutenant Adams of the security depart¬ment never felt that Khan and Johnson wereendangered. Although Khan has suffered nopersonal injury, she said that the threats“put me under a lot of pressure, and Ihaven’t been able to work.”Khan and Johnson both commendedAdams and the security force for theirassistance and interest in their safety.Although no legal action can be taken if theperpetrators are caught, the administrationhas been notified and intends to takedisciplinary action.AmbassadorContinued on page 5for the different groups. “The kind of politi¬cal solution that might be developed in ElSalvador has to include the different groupsthat are active in the nation. Unfortunatelyyou have very extreme groups — an ex¬treme right group that gets involved in theviolence, and an extreme left group. Thosegroups are the very difficult ones to sft downwdth at a table and work out a solution forthe country. But you have some people fromthe left and some people from the right whoare willing to sit down and get a middle lineof action for that nation. The government it¬self right now has that attitude. In factDuarte’s government is a government rightin the middle and they are trying to coordi¬nate all efforts in order not to have the rightand the left killing each other. Of course,that responsibility is so difficult when youhave other nations helping or throwing mili¬tary weapons to those extreme groups.“And of course you have seen that the gov¬ernment in El Salvador has been critized as tfce entity that is forcing more violence intothe area, which I do not believe is the case.Again, the government is trying to keep thenation fairly peaceful. Duarte is presentlythe best decision El Salvador has.“I don’t know whether he might be theleader which could really join the wholeforces. That would be up to (the Salvadoranpeople) to decide, as well as it would be up tothem to sit down at a table and see what kindof social reform the country needs, whatkind of economic activity wrnuld have to bedeveloped in order to solve the many prob¬lems affecting the citizens and also what arethe political changes and rules of the gamethat have to be tallied for the future...The solution to El Salvador has to be their ownsolution. It cannot be the Panamanian solu¬tion for the US solution or the Cuban solution They have to sit down and talk thingsover.”China from page tivided that her present leaders can attractsufficient investment capital.After the speakers had their say, the floorwas thrown open to questions from the students and faculty in the audience. The con¬ference ended with a cocktail reception, andmutual congratulations for a job well doneLETTERSContinued from page 10denied Social Security benefits after they re¬tire.In addition, the EPA would deny gay peo¬ple protection under the Civil Rights Act of1964, allowing employers and landlords todeny people jobs and housing on the basis ofsexual orientation.Frightening as the provisions of this billare, they are nothing new-: conservative,right-wing politicians have always main¬tained staunch anti-gav positions. And I donot mean that they simply do not like us:they persistently try to deny us the rights weare supposedly guaranteed under the Con¬stitution. Some even want to deny us theright to exist.Mr. Powers and Mr. Robinson may notagree with the Family Protection Act or themany other anti-gay proposals and positionsadvanced by the New Right, but if theychoose to call themselves “right-wings,”they should not be surprised or indignantwhen others therefore assume they hold thesame views most right-wing politiciansespouse. Nor should they as members of aright-wing organization feel unjustly at- tacked by ads such as the one Mr. Turleymisinterpreted. It is not w'e who are unjustlyattacking or misinterpreting.Those interested in learning more aboutthe EPA can read our pamphlet “The Fami¬ly Protection Act Could Change Your Life”(available at the GALA offioei and “theAnti-Gay Backlash,” an article which ap¬peared in the April 8-14 issue of the VillageVoice (on reserve at Reg under its author’sname: Bush, Larry).Scott Dennis!for GALAiTry Out ChangesTo the Editor:The Conference on Women and the Uni¬versity was great! It provided many opportunities for meeting people with similar con¬cerns and for learning and sharing together.!I particularly enjoyed the workshop entitled“Alternatives to Privilege — for Men,’]where about 10 men, another woman, and Ittalked about feminism and about alterna-jlives to traditional gender roles.continued on page 15|Applications for 1981-1982 MAB membership are now available in the Student Activities Office,Room 210, Ida Noyes Hall. DEADLINE: Friday, May 8.TOM HA'SHOAHHYDE PARK-KENWOOD COMMUNITYHOLOCAUST MEMORIAL SERVICETHURSDAY, APRIL 30 7:30 PM.CONGREGATION RODFEI ZEDEK - 5200 Hyde Pork Blvd.All the Jewish Institutions of our Neighborhood gather tor a Community YomHa'Shoah Service. A Program of Selected Music and Readings from The Literatureof the Holocaust. • ’ . ... i* - • .Far SastKitchen 1654 E. 53rd955-2200 --Cocktails"^and TropicalDrinksThis week's specialBeef Sub Gumwith Egg Fu Yung $2°^served until 2:30 j .m. Tues.-Sa: eat in orcarry outOpen daily and Sunday 11 a.m.to i a .nr.Closed Mondavs. Lunch served Tuesdaythro Safari*v V. t.m. to 2:30 o.rr. “THE PEOPLE, YES”May .2,1932 _ —Mayday Festival of People s Art & MusicWORKSHOPS -12:30-4:30 5600 S. Woodlawn‘ SJtdo wn 36 — full iength play performedMy - -Soutn Bend Workers Theatre• Songswapping Workshop« Poetry Readme• Democracy & Reaction in American Culture• Biack Jazz 6 BiuesCONCERT - 7:30 - Center tor Continuing EducationLuck' Looe: - Jim Holanc - Free Holstein - Chns lnserre ■Pegs', Uoschuttz - ±arry °enr - Tarboiiom S’.'ong Sana -Alien Scn*var:2 - Dennis Bt vie* • Peoples School of Music •V,e ier Jrro: - Migue Munoz ■ Kevr Henry & jack Fmarhen Wmtf6sConcert $4 WnoleDa* $5Information: 721-146$ 386-387*.Sr?onf o’ed ov Traoe Unio' f oner, ^eagirr International Zen Do/oandU.C. Ki-Aikido CivbProudly Present... * VLECTURES &DEMONSTRATIONS■ -. * . 1ByTANOUYE TENSHIN ROSHI“ZEN INTHE M^ftTIALARTS”Wrestling Room, Reid House4.3d PM.$2 Admission. $4 Mat Fee for participants.-ANO •. • -. V -~ —- LL'— —‘THE RELEVANCE OF PRACTJCINOZEN IN THE UNIVERSITYCOMMUNITY"Ida Noyes Hal7:00 P.MContriDution Requesiect _Tarouye Rosn: ts tie neao o: the international* 2e~ Dote anc Cnozenii and notes 6th and 7th J1 Degree Biack Bets tn s>x Madia' ArtsALL ARE WELCOMEi ne wmeapo AAaroor — Tuesoa>, Aor:. 2e. 19S’SPORTSBOX SCORESChicago 9, Lake Forest 4Chi. (9) AB R H BlLewis 2 2 0 0Carpenter 3200Foreman 3 2 12Barnhart 1000Trott 3 0 2 4Jankovich 2 0 0 0Mendelsohn 0 10 0Ciciora 3 0 0 0Bedel! 2 0 10Weber 3 110McGuire 2 10 0LF (4) iSova#4BlassbergBoberekDroletPillHumphreyTrotterHaygoodFryeMillerMcKinlayDoyleMartinTroyTotals TotalsWeber, Troy (2), Blassberg, McKinlay, Martin. LOB Lake Forest 3, Chicago 4. 2B ForemanSB-Lewis (2), Weber, Mendelsohn (2), Blassberg, Drolet, Haygood. S Jankovich. SF TrottLake ForestChicago1 Pitcher IPH R E1 Lake Forest|: Hartmann 3 2 4 3I Smith (L) .2143§ Raybon 2.1 2 1 0p Chicagoi|2 Winkelreid,(W,l-2) 7 4 4 3I HBP By Raybon (Lewis). PB BedellBaseball Splits PairBy Jon SatinOn Saturday at Stags Field the ChicagoMaroons baseball team split a doubleheaderagainst Lake Forest College. Lake Forest,Chicago’s only conference opponent, raisedtheir season series record against Chicagoto 3-0 by winning the first game 2-1. The winin the first game clinched the four gameseries for Lake Forest, allowing them toplay the winner of the Lawrence-Riponseries in Round II of the Midwest AthleticConference playoffs.Despite the cold weather, the first gameturned into a pitcher’s duel between LakeForest’s J. Prince and Chicago’s JimMarauto. Maranto went the distance forChicago, giving up only two runs on six hits.Lake Forest scored one run in the secondand one run in the third inning. Prince heldthe Maroons scoreless until the bottom ofthe sixth when Don Ciciora, with two out, tri¬pled, scoring Bill Jankovich for theMaroon’s only run.In the nightcap, despite getting one lesshit than they had in the opener, Chicagoscored nine runs, mainly because of thelackluster Lake Forest defense. TheAikido and theArt of ThoughtBy Jeff DavitzSeldom at the University of Chicago doesone encounter a teacher who openly prefersthat his students not think during class. It isnot that Karl Frogner. biologist and Univer¬sity of Chicago Aikido Club sensei (or teach¬er) is not interested in his students learningthe art of Aikido. In fact, just the opposite.That is precisely why, according to him. hisstudents must not in the usual sense thinkabout what they are doing.To most of us this seems paradoxical. Butto Fronger and other skilled practitioners ofAikido, a “soft” martial art, apparent para¬doxes like “effortless effort” and “uncon¬scious consciousness” are not just intellec¬tual abstractions, but day-to-day truthsunderlying their art.Aikido is an extremely graceful martialart that uses no attack or counter-attack.The aim in Aikido, rather, is to shift theforce of the attack back onto the attackerwithout ever conflicting directly with the at¬tacker’s movements. The throws in Aikidoare in this way, explains Frogner, “creat¬ed” by the attacker. One works at joiningwith an attacker’s thrust, for example,rather than meeting with it head on or try¬ing to block it away. Once the attacker hascommitted himself the outcome is inevita¬ble, says Frogner, provided the practitionerof Aikido successfuly joins with the at¬tacker. Eventually, the attacker is caughtor moved off-balance, and from the force ofhis own movement is thrown to the ground.The reason, though, that Frogner andothers practice Aikido is not simply to learnhow to defeat attackers — in fact, there is nosuch thing as a “contest” between two Ai¬kido participants — but to instead achievethe “coordination of mind and body.” In.class, Frogner does not emphasize the[movements in a particular technique nearlyas much as the principles underlying their(existence. The techniques, says Frogner,'“are just a way of testing to see if you are[getting the lesson.”Frogner notes that the objective of mind-body coordination is embodied in all East-iern martial arts. The advantages of Aikido,as Frogner sees it, is its emphasis on theprinciple of non-conflict. The aim, in other'words. is not to beat the attacker, but to Maroons went on to win the second gamt9-4.The Foresters’ fielding problems were ty- }kpified in the fourth inning with Wade Lewison second base. He reached second on a sto¬len base after being hit by a pitch which ap¬parently never touched him. The LakeForest pitcher attempted a pick-off movewhich ended up in center field. The centerfielder was slow in getting to the wild throw,and when he finally reached the ball, he bob-bled it, allowing Lewis to score without anyMaroon swinging the bat.Senior first baseman Byron Trott led theMaroons’ offense with 2 hits and 4 runs bat¬ted in. Jeff Foreman had the only extra basehit of the game, a two-run double. JohnWinklereid went all 7 innings for Chicago,giving up three earned runs on 4 base hits.He also struck out nine Foresters.Chicago’s next game is a doubleheadertoday against the University of Illinois-Chi-cago Circle at Circle. Nick Varsom is slatedto pitch the first game and Don Ciciora thesecond. The Maroons’ next home game isFriday at 3 pm against Chicago State Uni¬versity. BASEBALL“neutralize” his aggression by joining withhim. Frogner reiterates this idea of har¬mony in class, imploring his students torelax their minds and to follow the flow ofthe attack.Frogner explains that in Aikido it is essen¬tial to relax the mind so that the body can“naturally center itself.” The maintenanceof a stable center is known as “keeping onepoint.” This is done by focusing “ki” (veryroughly “spiritual energy”) in a single spotin the lower abdomen. This is not, saysFrogner, done by straining muscles but byconcentrating awareness. The stability andstrength of movement in Aikido stems fromthis centering.Frogner is adamant, though, that none ofthese principles can be learned by rationallytrying to work them out. They can only beunderstood if one “quiets the rationalizingside of the mind” and allows oneself to expe¬rience them.The club which began in 1972 has approxi¬mately twenty members now. They meetTuesday from 4:30 to 6:30, Thursday 4:00 to6:00, and Saturday from 10:30 to 12:30. Allclasses are held in the wrestling room of thefield house. Beginners are welcome.Frogner says that they should probablycome during the first hour of class on eitherTuesday or Thursday. This Thursday the Ai¬kido club is sponsoring a lecture/demon¬stration entitled “Zen in the Martial Arts.”The talk will be given by Tenshin Roshi headof International Zen Dojo. Lake Forest 2, Chicago 1LF (2) AB R H Bl Chi. (1) AB R H BlSavage 4 10 0 Lewis 3 0 10Doyle 3 0 10 Carpenter 3 0 10Hafenscher 3 0 11 Foreman 4 0 0 0DeMien 3 0 0 0 Trott 4 0 0 0Santacaterina 3 12 0 Winkelreid 3 0 10Miller 3 0 0 0 Jankovich 2 110Bigwood 2 0 11 Ciciora 3 0 11Wessel 2 0 10 Weber 3 0 10Geisser 3 0 0 0 Callans 3 0 0 0Totals 26 2 6 2 Mendelsohn 0 0 0 0Totals 28 1 6 1E - Geisser (3), Trott, Jankovich, Maranto. DP- Lake Forest. LOB - Lake Forest 7, Chicago 9.2B - Doyle. 30 - Ciciora S - Wessel. SF - Ha-fenscher.Lake Forest 123 456 789 R H E011 000 Oxx 2 6 3Chicago 000 001 Oxx 1 6 3Pitcher IP H R ER BB SOLake ForestPrince (W) 6.2 6 1 1 3 6Sullivan (S) .1 0 0 0 0 0ChicagoMaranto 7 6 2 2 2 1? 'i " , '"■JS■'>/ p? imi i nn mamWomen Drop Two SaturdayBy Kittie WyneThe Knox College women’s softball teamtraveled to Chicago Saturday to face theMaroons in a doubleheader. The Maroonslost the first game, 14-4, in five innings andthe second, 17-11, in seven innings.The first game started with a bang for theMaroons. They quickly put away the firsttwo batters, let two runs in, then settleddown to grab the third out. Then on offense,a couple Maroons got on base, but no fur¬ther. From there the tone of the game wasset: Chicago struggled for control of thegame all five innnings but just couldn’t getit. The fifth inning was Knox’ best, whenthey scored six runs and held the Maroons tothree batters. Senior Clarice Begemannpitched a solid game, but the Maroon de¬fense was weak and recovering from sever¬al key injuries.The Maroons began strongly in the secondgame as they again held Knox to two runs inthe first inning and then scored seven them¬selves. The Maroon offense was helped somewhat by wild Knox pitching. Neverthe¬less, the Knox defense displayed strong, ac¬curate fielding at crucial times. In the sec¬ond inning senior Mary Klemundt lost ahomerun by seconds as the Knox shortstopmade an excellent play. The Maroons’ de¬fense held Knox until the fourth inning. Thescore was tied 7-7 at the top of the fifth untilKnox caught fire, scoring five runs. In thesixth inning Knox tallied four more runs andtook over the game. Sophmore Kittie Wynepitched the distance despite a slow start.In both games the Maroons started slow¬ly, but showed promise. With two games leftin the season they can look ahead to im¬proved team play. The Maroons are hostingLake Forest College this afternoon at 4 p.m.on North Field in their final district game ofthe year. Tomorrow, they will host GeorgeWilliams College at 4 pm on North Field intheir final game of the season. Seniors MaryKlemundt and Clairice Begemann will bemaking their final appearancesMaroons.14 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, April 28, 1981SPORTSWallace RestrainsInsane UnknownsBy Pavia CrruenbaumUpper Wallace upset the Insane Unk¬nowns 3-1 in a game played over the week¬end. Diana Kaspic led the way for Wallacewith two goals and Kimberly Spring playedan excellent game at halfback. Dudleyknocked off formerly third ranked LowerWallace 2-0. These two results allowedShorev to move to number one in the rank¬ings while Upper Wallace moves and theUnknowns drop to third.In men’s socim, Phi Gam knocked offChamberlin 2-1 in overtime. Chamberlincontrolled most of the game but could notput in more than one goal during regulationand overtime. Frondizi and the Specs con¬tinued to play well, beating Learned Feet 7-1to remain at first place in the rankings. TheOrient Express and the Liberal Traditionplayed in an important matchup yesterday,but results were not available at presstime.K.U.U.C. had a forfeit win over Mean FreePath, who should be forfeited out of theleague by now. Lower Rickert remained atfifth as they had a forfeit win over Fishbein,on Sunday.Fishbein missed the game as most of theirplayers forgot to set their c'^ks forward anhour. Mauri Diane showed for BenavorialScience matchup against BRM and the re¬sult was a 7-0 Behavorial Science victory.Diane scored four goals to help lead theway. Psi U was idle and moved up to sev¬enth place despite problems with the legali¬ty of pledges on their team. F.C. Beneluxwas also idle. Upper Rickert blew out LowerFlint 4-1 to move to ninth place. Greenwoodmoved to tenth with their impressive lateshowing against Upper Rickert.In othe games, Henderson beat Chamber¬lin “B” 4-1, as Sang Tin Suh scored twogoals. Bradbury beat Shorey 6-0 as LeonidSagalovsky pumped in four goals. Mr. Saga-lovsky has scored in only two games out offive but has nine goals to his credit. TheCommuters slipped by Flint United in dou¬ble overtime 1-0 as David Weiss scored thegame’s only goal. The game was delayed bya half hour as both teams entered into aheated discussion over whether Mr. Weisswas a legitimate intramural participator.But, frankly it doesn’t matter anyway, asonly one independent team will go to theplayoffs and that team will almost surely bethe Koreans. ScoreboardMen'sHenderson 4 Chamberlin B 1Upper Rickert 4 Lower Flint 1Bradburv 6Chamberlin 4Behavorial Science 7.... BRM 0Frondizi 7 Learned Feet 1Commuters 1 Flint United oDodd/Mead 7 Tufts 2Saudi Union 2 Bomber’s Bov 0Phi Gam 2 ...Chamberlin 1 (O.T.)Hale 1 Upper Flint 0Fallers 2K.U.U.C. by forfeit over Mean Free PathWomen'sCompton by forfeit over Upper FlintDudley Swine 2Lower Flint by forfeit over DoddUpper Wallace 3 Insane Unknowns 1Games to WatchFISHBEIN-SECOND COMING OF CHAM¬BERLIN Tues 4:00 M-ESpread: Fishbein by 1 . . . Should go to ashootout. Fishbein can complete a perfectrecord if they go to a shootout againstChamberlin. Neither of these teams will begoing to the playoffs.FLINT UNITED-SAUDI UNION Thu 5:00M-ESpread: Saudi Union by 1 ... Must game forboth teams, even though both are likelyplayoff bound. The Saudi Union team cannotshoot to save their lives, but their passing isquite good and they play well as a team.FALLERS-PHI GAM Wed 5:00 M-ESpread: Fallers by 1 . . . Phi Gam played areally good game against tough Chamberlinto upset last week. Phi Gam will have toplay well again to upset Fallers. In order todo this, they will have to contain Faller’sfine offense.F.C. BENELUX-LEARNED FEET Tues5:00 M-WSpread: Benelux by 3 .. . Benelux should beable to coast in this game, but the last time Icalled Learned Feet to lose they came upwith an amazing upset victory. Which teamis the real Learned Feet? Are they the teamthat lost to Frondizi in a slaughter, or theteam that upset Behavioral Sciences? Intramural Top Ten-Men's1. Frondizi and the Specs2. Orient Express3. Ting and The Liberal Tradition4. K.U.U.C.5. Lower Rickert6. Behavorial Science! 7. Psi U8. F.C. Benelux9. Upper Rickert10.GreenwoodTeams to Watch: Chamberlin, Phi Gam,Europeans, Fallers, Commuters, SaudiUnion Intramural Top Five-|Women's1. Shorey2. Upper Wallace3. Insane Unknowns4. Dudley5. Lower FlintTeam to Watch: Lower WallaceTo the Editor: iWe. the people of the Saudi Union SportingClub, through the will of Allah, protest yourpersecution of us. Thank you.The people of the SaudiUnion Sporting ClubLifters Are VictoriousBy John CondasThe University of Chicago's two competi¬tors in the Illinois State Powerlifting Cham¬pionship. Judah Epstein and Jim Shorin. re¬turned to Hyde Park successful, as Epsteincaptured second place in the 198 pound classand Shorin set a new Illinois state record inthe 165 pound weight class, bench pressing330 pounds. The meet was held Saturday atNorth Park College, and featured over 70competitors.Both lifters almost did not qualify in theirclasses, as Epstein was less than threequarters of a pound from disqualification,while Shorin had only one quarter of a poundto spare, weighing in at 164 *4 pounds.Epstein improved on his third place finishin last year’s championship, as he lifted atotal of 1395 pounds. 490 in the squat. 365 in the bench press, and 540 in the dead lift. Ep !stein lost to champion Gavin Stevens ofjNorthern Illinois University by only 251pounds.Shorin. although finishing ninth overall inhis class, did surpass the former Illinoisstate record bv five pounds in the benchpress. Faring poorly in his first two at¬tempts at the record, he finally lifted 330pounds in his third and final attempt at therecord. Altogether, Shorin lifted 1080pounds, his record-breaking 330 pound lift inthe bench press, 320 in the squat, and 430 inthe dead lift.The meet was very competitive, as manystate records were shattered, and one na¬tional record was set in the 181 pound class,as Terry Bradv set a record in the squatlift.GreatConferencecontinued from page 13A community exists in Hyde Park whichcan be a fitting forum for continuing thetype of dialogue begun at the Conference.That community calls itself Changes, and isa place where both students and non¬students meet each week At Changes anyperson, whether newcomer or oldtimer, canlead or suggest any sort of group that theywant. Since there is much interest atChanges in getting beyond existing roles. discussions concerning feminism and relat¬ed topics are very welcome.Many of the groups at Changes emphasize jlearning and practicing skills that help peo- !pie to listen carefully to each other. Changeshas also had groups for dancing, makingmusic, exploring dreams, storytelling, dis¬cussing specific topics and for simply con¬versing Two sets of groups usually takeplace during the evening, with a break in themiddle for announcements and for socializ¬ing.We at Changes invite anyone who is inter¬ested to try us out. Changes is free, andmeets every Sunday evening at 7:30 pm inthe Blue Gargoyle. 5655 S. University.Miriam KanterHYDE PARK FOREIGN & DOMESTICTRANSMISSIONS4820 S Cottage Grove624-4024 24-HOURTOWINGSPECIAL!$795ff + FLUIDTRANSMISSIONTUNE-UPSPECIAL! STANLEY H. KAPLANFor Over 42 Years The Standard ofExcellence in Test PreparationCPA • GMAT • LSAT • GRESAT • MCAT • ACTFLEX . NATIONAL MEDICAL BOARDS . ECFMGNURSING BOARDS . TOEFL . VQEGRE PSYCH . GRE BiO • DAT • PCAT • OCAT • VATMAT • SAT ACHVS • NATIONAL OENTAL BOARDSPODIATRY BOARDSFlexible Programs and HoursVisit Any C«n(#f And See Fo»Yoofseft Why We Make Th«CXt»f#nc«TEST PREPARATIONSPECIALISTS SINCE '936Centers in Map' U S CitiesEducation Centers Puerto R*co131 W 56th St Toronto C»n*oa & ZunchNEW YORK loot9 SwitzerlandCHICAGO CENTER6216 N ClarkChicago. Illinois 60660(312) 764 5151S W SUBURBAN19 S La Grange Road/Suite 201La Grange Illinois 60525(312) 382 5640•NORTH 1NW SUBURBAN474 Centrsl A^e, Upper Mall LevelHighland Park Illinois 60035(312) 433-7410■WOT ALL COO«Sf S avail ASICucenerng Eiema *For rtonnetor AOout Otar C4hten si MOUTSIOE N Y STATE CALL SPRING, SUMMERFALL INTENSIVESCOURSES STARTINGTHIS MONTHLSAT...GRE...SAT...ACTNEXT MONTH4 wk/LSAT...GMATCourses Const entty UpdatedCenter Sell Studyore Tten 90 Mepi US Oes * AfroedTOLL FREE 600 223 1782 AL SAX TIREThe Front End Brake SpecialistsFRONT DISCBRAKE SPECIAL$37’5Mos,C.rs•Install new front disc pads•Inspect Rotors•Inspect Hydraulic System•Repack front wheel bearings•Inspect Seals1 Additional Parts or Service Extra DRUM BRAKESPECIAL$29’5p«axu•Install front or rear brake linings•Inspect All Drums•Inspect coaiplete hydraulic systemAdditional Parts or Service ExtraTURNING ROTORS & DRUMS ALSO SALE PRICED!!!liSQ "srlTIRE COMPANY9200 STONY ISLAND374-1500The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, April 28, 1981 — 15T* YI tO* iCompiled by Mike Alper, Stu Feldstein,Neil Miller, and Yoon SonT-Men (Anthony Mann, 1947): DennisO'Keefe plays one of those self-effacingcourageous treasury agents that can existonly in the movies, who is called upon togo undercover to crack a counterfeitingring. While the plot is rather trite and theacting rather laughable, Mann risesabove the B-movie material to constructan eerily effective film. Mann capturesthe ambience of the grimy life of organ¬ized crime. One particularly powerfulscene is where O’Keefe must watch andkeep quiet as the mob exposes and dealswith O’Keefe’s fellow undercover agent. Ifonly Mann had dispensed with that annoy¬ing narration. Tuesday, April 28th, at 7:15p.m. in Quantrell. Doc; $2.00 After thefilm, critic and scholar David Bordwellwill present a lecture on Mann’s career. —NMSide Street (Anthony Mann, 1949): A filmnoir by one of the masters of the genre.Farley Granger plays a clerk who steals an envelope containing money, and fromthen on wishes he had never been born.Not Mann’s best, but good enough to keepyou thoroughly engrossed. Tuesday, April28, following Mr. Bordwell’s lecture, inQuantrell. Doc; $1.00. — YSAnthropology Films: Latin America: TheAnthropology Film Group continues itsseries of ethnographic documentarieswith two films about native Latin Ameri¬can cultures. Appeals to Santiago (D.Metzger and C. Wilson) records the eight-day Mayan fetival honoring patron saintsin Chiapas, Mexico. Narration is not bythe ethnographer but by participants inthe Cargo ceremonials themselves. Yan-amamo Ax Fight (T. Ashe and N. Chag-non) details just a few minutes of a fightoccuring during a tense visit betweenYanamamo relatives. It is unusual for itspresentation and re-presentation of thefight in four parts with increasing degreesof interpretation by the ethnographerChagnon. Tuesday, April 28, at 7:30 in IdaNoyes Library. Anthropology FilmGroup; Free.i Day Without Sunshine (1975): A monu¬mental documentary focusing on condi¬tions among agricultural laborers inFlorida’s citrus industry and the way inwhich agri-business shapes the lives of in¬dividual workers. The activities of theUnited Farm W’orkers are explored, asare the potential and promise of labor or¬ganization for one of the most downtrod¬den sectors of America’s working class.Fighting for Our Lives (1973), a documen¬tary concerning the origins of the U.F.W.in California, will be shown as well. Thurs¬day, April 30, at 7:30 at the Blue Gargoyle, 5655 S. University Ave. Sponsored byO.L.A.S.: donation $1.00.Just Like At Home (Marta Meszaros,1978): More proof that film is not onlyalive in Eastern Europe, but that it isflourishing with a degree of vitality oftenlacking in Western film. This Hungarianfeature tells the story of an alienated ex¬patriate who returns to Hungary after anunsatisfying stay in the States, and whofinds himself developing a deep spiritualbond with a young girl whose dog hesteals. A delicately balanced, sensuallyrich exploration of the male psyche from awoman’s perspective. Starring JanNowicki, Zsuzsu Czinkoczy, and AnnaKarina. This is the film’s Chicago pre¬miere. Tuesday, April 28, at 8 in the Berg¬man Gallery. Renaissance Society; $1.00for members, $1.50 for Doc members,$1.00 for others.Dirty Harry (Don Siegel 1971): Clint Eas¬twood is San Francisco cop Harry Calla¬han, as he pursues a dangerous psychotic.This is an excellent action movie, as Clintgoes through all sorts of heroics to nail hisman. But the film’s philosophy of violenceis frightening. There have been other Hol¬lywood heroes who could express them¬selves only through force, most notablyJohn Wayne. But unlike Wayne, Eastwoodis not living in a lawless world like the OldWest or the Pacific front of World War II.Rather Eastwood’s use of violence is de¬picted as the way to deal with problems inthe modern world. On the other hand,maybe the modern world is not much dif¬ferent than the Old West. Wednesday,April 29th, at 8 p.m. in Quantrell. Doc;$2.00 — NM Arsenic and Old Lace (Frank Capra,1944): Newlywed Cary Grant has a pairof troublesome aunts who take pity on lon¬ely old men, give them a little elderberrywine laced with poison, and bury them inthe cellar, or the “Panama Canal” asGrant’s insane brother Teddy (as in Roo¬sevelt) calls it. Sinister brother RaymondMassey and his assistant Peter Lorre dropin, on the run from the law, and complica¬tions ensues (if they haven’t already). Ahilarious adaptation of Joseph Kesselr-ing’s play; between Teddy’s charging upSan Juan Hill (the staircase) and Grant’sabsentminded babbling, one begins to losetrack of who’s the real crazy. Wednesday,April 29 at 8:30 in Law School Auditorium.LSF; $2.00. — SFSunrise (F. W. Murnau, 1927): One of the un¬disputed masterpieces of the silent cine¬ma, and as moving today as the day it wasmade. Fox brought Murnau to Hollywoodfrom Germany to make this poetic studyof a man (George O’Brien) caught in aclash of values between urban excitementand rural tranquility; this was one of thelast films Murnau made before he himselfwas done in by the urban excitement ofHollywood. Thursday, April 30, at 7:15 inQuantrell. Doc; $1.00.Tartuffe (F. W. Murnau, 1925): Murnauturns Moliere’s play into a movie within amovie, for an intriguing if somewhat pe¬dantic examination of changing styles inart and morality. Photographed by the in¬comparable Karl Freund, who was re¬sponsible for the visual brilliance of mostof the silent German masterpieces. Thurs¬day, April 30, at 9 in Quantrell. Doc;$1.00.Announcinga new major inHistory, Philosophy, & Social Studiesof Science & MedicineStudents interested in obtaining information about the new undergraduatemajor in History, Philosophy, and Social Studies of Science and Medicineare invited to a meeting onWednesday, April 29th, at 4:15 in Harper 284The program is designed to allow students to make reasoned evaluations of the role ofscience and medicine in society, and to be able to interpret the ethical and cultural dimensionsof science and medicine The program will be of special interest to students who plan topursue careers in the sciences, medicine, science policy, science journalism, and historyand philosophy of science WHAT’S ON TAP FOR THE SOUTH LOOP?The man with some ideasis the designer of Chicago’sMARINA CITYBERTRAND GOLDBERG(Architect/Developer/ Vertical-City Planner)11The New South Loop New Town ”Thursday, April 30 4:30 P.M.Swift 10616 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, April 28, 1*81HITHER AND YON CALENDARContinued from page 7tent with their luck for the weekend, rainfallonly amounted to 0.1 inch on any given day.So far on one has determined what effectthis will have on next year’s Spring Fair.Incompletes forVolcanoes?A notice in the Washington State Universi¬ty Daily Evergreen on April 14: “Studentswho received an incomplete on their reportcard last year because of the Mt. St. Helenseruption are reminded to meet with profes¬sors before this mark becomes an ‘F’grade.”Some people have all the excuses. More FemaleCollege PresidentsThe number of female college presidentsin the United States continues to grow, ac¬cording to an American Council on Educa¬tion survey reported in the Chronicle ofHigher Education. The survey of 2,765 insti¬tutions of higher education found 219 hadwomen college heads. This figure is up from148 in 1975. Twenty-one four-year publicschools, 41 two-year public schools, 124 four-year private schools, and 33 two-year pri¬vate schools were run by women. The larg¬est increases were shown by publicinstitutions which experienced a 400 percentgain in female college heads. Privateschools experienced a 20 percent increase. TuesdayRockefeller Chapel: Mark Smith will give a recitalof the music of J.S. Bach at 12:15 pm.Comp. Center Seminar: Introduction to SCRIPT4:00-5:30 pm, Classics 18.Comm, on African and Black Amer. Hum.: ToniCade Bambara reading and discussing her fiction,4:00 pm, SS 122. Free.Aikido Club: Meets 4:30 pm. Field House wres-.tling room.Ryerson Lecture: “Say Something Theological!"speaker James Gustafson, 4:30 pm, 1111 E. 60th.Lutheran Campus Ministry: Celebration of Eu¬charist at 5:30, pizza supper and discussion0:00-7:00 pm-“From Batman to Paul: Superhero1like Myths and the Theology of thfcCross" speakerRobert Jewett, 5500 S. Woodlawn. 'Hispanic Cultural Society: Meets 7:00 pm, IdaNoyes.Racquetall Club: Meets 7:30 nm. Field House --ts 1and 2.UC College College Republicans: Speaker JoeMorris-world debater 7 30 pm, Ida Noyes. Phys. Ed.: Free swimming instruction 7:30-8:30pm, Ida NoyesHillel: Israeli folkdancing. 8:00 pm, Ida NoyesTheatre. 75*.University Feminist Org.: Women's Rap Group,8:00 pm, Women’s Center Blue Gargoyle 3rd fl.Comm, on the Conceptual Found, of Science: “TheUse and Abuse of In-Principle Arguments: Gerry¬mandering Explanations in Psychology and Biolo¬gy" speaker Bob Richardson, 8:00 pm, EckhartWednesdayRockefeller Chapel: Service of Holy Communion,8:00 am. Carillon Recital at 12:15 pm.Commuter Co-op: Get-together in the CommuterLounge, Gates-Blake basement 12:30 pm.CAUSE: Meets 12:45 pm, Reynolds Club Lounge.Everyone welcome.Comp. Center Seminar: Introduction to DISSPLA3:30-5:00 pm, RI 180SUNDAYBUFFETChicago s finestfrom 1 1 30 a m to 8 p.m.champagne served until 5 p.m.garden fresh salads •cheeses from around the world •fresh vegetables •fresh seafoods •salmon delights •crepes, ribs, fowl •roast round of beef •chilled melons •a variety of pastries •served in a greenhouse atmospheredisplayed like a marketplacean experience you must share...at theHyde Park HiltontheChartwellHouse4900 S. Lake Shore Drive288-5800make your Mother’s Day reservations nowspecial menu —Department of Far Eastern LanguagesandCenter For Far Eastern StudiesPRESENTS“PORTRAITOF A LATEEDO WOMAN”Edwin McClellanSumitomo Professor ofJapanese StudiesYale UniversityThursday, April 30Harper 130 4 pm Dept, of Biochemistry: “Mechanisms of Lactose Transport in E.Coli Membrane Vesicles” speaker Dr. Greg Kaczorowski, 4:00 pm,Cummings room 101.Sloan AI Lecture. “A Model of Spatial Reasoning" speaker DrewMcDermott, 4:00 pm, Beecher 102.: Table Tennis: Meets 7:00-10:00 pm. Field House 1st fl gym.| Badminton Club: Meets 7:30 pm. Ida Noyes gym.1 Computer Club: Meets 7:30 pm, discussion of computex computeri systems, also NCC plans, Ryerson 251, enter Eckharts front door.| Science Fiction Club: Meets 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes.| Country Dancers: Meet at 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes. Free, beginners wel¬come.! Hyde Park Al-Anon Group: Meets 8:00 pm in the 1st UnitarianChurch, 57th and Woodlawn. Info call 471-0225.I Hunger Concern Group: Meets 8:30 pm, Ida Noyes room 217.ThursdayEastern Orthodox: Divine Liturgy at 8:00 am, Rockefeller Chapel.Women’s Exercise Class: Meets 10:30 am, Ida Noyes dance room.La Table Francaise: Meets at 12 noon in the Blue Gargoyle.Italian Table: Meets at 12 noon in the Blue Gargoyle to speak Ita¬lian.Episcopal Church Council: Noon Eucharist at Bond ChapelComm, on Genetics: “Rosy and Bithorax: Molecular Investigationsof Gene Expression” speaker Welcome Bender, 2:30 pm, Cum¬mings.Comp. Center Seminar: Introduction to SCRIPT, 4:00 pm. Classics18.Morris Fishbein Lecture: “Were Ancient Animals Good to ThinkWith: The Development of Zoological Taxonomy” speaker G.E RLloyd. 4:00 pm. Pick Hall.Aikido Club: Meets 4:00 pm, Field House wrestling room.Dept, of Biochemistry: “Structure and Expression of the Human In¬sulin Gene" speaker Graeme Bell. 4:00 pm. Cummings 101.Center for Far Eastern Studies. “Portrait of a Late Edo Woman'speaker Edwin McClellen, 4:00 pm. Harper 130.Dept, of Physics: “The Interactions of Fast (MeVI Molecular Ionswith Solid and Gaseous Targets" speaker Donald Gemmell. 4:30 pm.Eckhart 133.Zen Meditation: Meets 6:30-8:30 pm, Ida NoyesIll. Central Hospital Ala-Teen Group: Meets 7:00 pm. 5800 S. Stony.Info call 471-0225.Debating Society: Practice at 7:00 pm. Meeting at 8:00 pm, IdaNoyes.L iUCSailingClubMTonight7:30 rIda Ndyes LectureSeriesDesigfl 99Free For MembersRefreshments Wifi FollowThe Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, April 28, 1981 — 17CLASSIFIED ADSCLASSIFIEDClassified advertising in the ChicagoMaroon is 75 cents per 30 characterline. Ads are not accepted over thephone, and they must be paid in ad¬vance. Submit all ads in person or bymail to The Chicago Maroon, 1313 E.59th St.. Chicago. IL 60437 Our officeis in Ida Noyes, room 304. Deadlines:Wed. noon for the Fri. paper, Fri. noonfor the Tues. papers.SPACE3 bedroom condo spaciojP airy, invery good condition, with brightsunroom 163,000 Phone 334-3343 before13 after 4 anytime on weekend.Room in big sunny coed lakefront apt.w/porch $i38/mo 341 7589 p.m. Need housing and don't know where tosfart? Student Government offers ahousing list of off-campus housing!Three month subscription availablefor only S3 and it works. Call 753-3373for more information.Room available in sunny apt at S4th &Kenwood May 1st occupancy S130/mo.includes util 753-1099.1 bed rm apt for sale in the Newport inHyde Park; lake view, new carpet,new indoor pool; call 373-7539 after4pm.Graduate students; cooperative livingone block from campus. Low rent. Im¬mediate opening for summer sublet.Other spaces available for summer orpermanent occupancy. Call 955-3453. Coach house for rent-hardwood fir 3firepl. laundry fac. 5 rms 4- workspdarkrm avail 1/3 adults-no dogs cat ok550 + util North side 771-4371.Large 3 bdrm apt, 3 bath, 1 blk fromminibus route Available mid-June-endof Sept 753 4938.Roomate wanted. Spacious apt. securebldg., lakeview. dishwasher, AC. laun¬dry room, parking. Available 5/15/81,350.00 Call Sue or Carol after 4:00 pm,324 3853.Lge 2 bdrm furn apt for 2 or 3 w/porchsublet June Sept pets ok call 334 5240.SUBLET; 1 mo. 2 br apt. Large airyfrnshd rms/crib, laundry, bus near.Any summer m© 752-6525. Regents Park 1 bdrm, 2 rm apt withair cond., carpeting, and excel view oflake. Avail for one year or longer beg.July 1. 388 3580.3 Rm unfurn Ig eff apt at 51st AWoodlawn. S212/mo avail 5/17. Call443 1124 after 6.Fern, roommate wanted fo share w/2others $137/mo. 53rd & HarperNonsmoking. 241 4380eves.Furnished, Convenient One BedroomApt To Sublet 55th and Harper $250Call Phoebe or Hilorie 241-5431. SPACE WANTEDResponsible grad student wlslws tohousesit approx, mid June to Oct. Willdo house and yard work. Call Tucker753 3550 (eve).43-4 bedroom house near UC from Oct'81 - June '82 or longer. Rent & renovation negotiable. Call Mark Pohl 753-3774 or John Garber 753-3751.Working female would like summersublet close to campus. 383 2247.University family of four needs two tothree bdrm apt to sublet from May 1 toSept 30 947 8025Visiting Prof and spouse, on sabbatical from Case Western ReserveUniv. Cleveland. Ohio would like toRandy Warsager:Professional Commodity Futures Trader"I enjoy being at the heartof the action. For a personlike me, who likes to seeimmediate and tangiblerewards for my efforts, thereis no greater personalsatisfaction than being afutures trader."Randy Warsager first became inter¬ested in futures trading when he be¬gan to study the underlying dynamics ofmarket movement while working towarda Ph D. in psychology. When he madetrading his career, Randy found that theNew York Mercantile Exchange had what hewas looking for."NYMEX is a well-managed, rapidly expand¬ing exchange that offers some of the most excit¬ing markets anywhere, especially platinum andheating oil. NYMEX is going to be my homebase for a long time.''If you'd like to know more about why RandyWarsager and other young professionals arechoosing careers as NYMEX commodity futurestraders, just write or phone for our new brochiThe Professional Futures Trader: A Career.NEW YORK MERCANTILE EXCHANGE Four World Trade Center New York NY 10048 212 938 2222Please send me your new brochure, The Professional Futures Trader: A CareerNAMEADDRESSCITY STATE ZIP rent/lease onebdrm, FURNISHEDapt close to campus for one year, begJuly 1, 1981. Contact H. Griffith at 7533998 for info and details.Responsible students seek 3 or morebdrm apt in Hyde Park. Call MarkWilliams or Gary Pietoni at 753-2240Housesitting for all or part of the sum¬mer Mature UC student with ex¬cellent references. Call Steven Silver753 2240 rm 1105.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 4718CHILDREN'S NARRATIVES ANDGESTURES. U of C faculty researchneeds children, 4 through 12 years ofage, to participate in a study ofchildren's narratives and gestures.The procedure is enjoyable to childrenand takes about 1 hour on campus Ifinterested, please call 3-4714 for an appointment.Executive Secretary. M-F 8:30-5.Salary negotiable. Immediate open¬ing. Shorthand necessary. Secretaryfo the General Manager. Hyde ParkHilton. Apply in person. 4900 S. LakeShore Dr. 288 5800.Retired professor needs help with yardand garden 1 block from U of C cam¬pus Wages and total hours accordingto what worker can and will do. Call447 8583 between 8 am and 8 pm.Domestic help wanted cooking andshopping both gourmet and plebian. 1or 2 days per week. Call 753-2134 andleave name and phone number.SINGER SEEKS PAINIST who likes"Standards” repertoire (the Style ofSinarta. Bennet, to Streisand. TomJones, etc) If you like to improvise inthis genre, call me. Object is to workup material for our amusement andperhaps local performances David484 2284.Sex, drugs, rock n roll and otherthings. Get involved in WHPK now orfor the summer. Umlimitedpossibilities. Who know, you could beanother Skafish or Dahl. Come by ouroffices in the Reynolds Club from 12 2and talk to SteveE xperienced Lacrosse players to workwith 10-12 year olds. Join in bringingLacrosse to Hyde Park. Call Herb, 493-5542 eveSERVICESTYPIST Disseration quality. Helpwith grammar, language as neededFee depending on manuscript. IBMSelectric. Judith 955 4417ARTWORK-Posters, illustration, lettering, etc Noel Yovovich 493 2399.TYPIST: High quality work byfreelance writer. Competitively pric¬ed. prompt; minor editing with outcharge IBM Correcting Selectric.Afler 6pm 338 3800 or 472 2415.Term papers Reasonable rates. Alsohelp with spelling, bibliographies,dissertation form. Call 684-4882Fine wood stripping/refinishingEuropean style craftsmanship.871 1545, 472 1654Typing done on IBM by college grad;pica type. Term papers, theses, lawbriefs, manuscripts, letters, resumes,etc. Fast, accurate, reliable,reasonable. New town area. Call to¬day 248 1478Hyde Park Unitarian Coop NurserySchool offering 8 week summer session. Info call 241-5179/484 3845.CARPENTER: Platform beds,bookshelves, painting and other minorjobs or repairs 343 4341.REMODELING AND CARPENTR Y/Cabinetry service offered forsummer, June to Sept. I would preferone or two fairly major remodellingjobs, but am open to smaller moreprecisely defined work-decks, adding/removing walls, built ins, etc. Ican do the design, and construction, in¬cluding drywall, wiring, painting. Idesigned and built the PhoenixBookstore in Reynolds Club. Otherreferences on request David 484 2284.Tennis lessons: low rates 'til 5/15beginners welcome call 753-3945Term papers. Reasonable rates. Alsohelp with spelling, bibliographies,dissertation form. Call 484-4882.PERSONALSSINGLE ? Meet attractive, honest peopie like you! Send ad for 20* discount.Low fee Romance Co. 850 N. LakeShore Drive 41017 Dept 195 Chicago.IL 40411.18 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, April 28, 1981CLASSIFIED ADSHAPPY BIRTHDAYROGER LOUISCome to a clowning workshop at 7 pm,Thursday Cloister Club. Free! Sponsored by EF Clown & Co. BLIPDo de do de do de Vince.Happy Birthday TOO YOU(Altamero) don't forget your icecream!Do de do de do de SG.FOR SALE1980 Puch MK2 moped Never ridden,in original crate. Dealers price $1120,asking $900 753 4928Tl PC 100 printer for SR-52 or 56calculators. Excellent condition; willthrow in math and statistics librariesfor SR 52. $70 or best offer. 753-4928.Guinea pigs $3. 324-9513, 5-7 pm.Desk, table. 4 chairs, end table, wirebookcase, window fan. desk lamp,vacuum, prices somewhat negotiable.667 7456. 6 30 12:00 pm, all day Sat andSun.HOUSE SALE. Sat. May 2, 10 4. 5513 S.Kenwood. Sofas, dask. 54" rnd. oaktbl., teak tb!., bed files, rugs dishes,etc.Collector selling: quilt collection, in-dian rugs, concha belt, Zuni inlaybracelet, and Eskimo sculpture. CallCarol T ay lor 285 6490.Eumig Sound Projector and Soundmovie camera-sued twice Paid $430Will sell for $300 call Carol Taylor 2856490PEER PRESSURERADIOTell Tchaikovsky the news. All thehas beens, could have beens, and yetlobe's in progressive pop. Fridays2:30 5.00 pm on WHPK 88 3 fm Information for the ear. Now sponsoredby Wax Trax.NEEDATYPIST?Excellent work done in my home.Reasonable rates. Tel: 536-7167 or548 0663MOVINGStudent with Pickup Truck can moveyour stuff FAST and CHEAP. No jobtoo small! Call Peter at. 955 1824 10am 10 pmPASSPORT PHOTOSPassport Photos while you wait atModel Camera. 1342 E 55th St.YOU MISSEDGreg Shires, who sailed with the in¬famous Ted Turner and many othersin the America Cup and Fasinet! YOUMISSED Quen Culfra who, havingnever sailed, decided to sail aroundthe world, and DID! DON'T MISS JimConsidine speak about racing and sailsin the last of the UC Sailing Club's Spring Lecture Series—Tuesday April 28For more info call 753 4693.MAJOR ACTIVITIESBOARD POSITIONS:1981-1982.Pick up applications in SAO in Ida.Everyone welcome to apply. Due May8 5:00 pm, same placeGETTINGSENTIMENTAL?Tickets on sale now for the big springdance featuring the Tommy DorseyOrchestra May 15, Ida Noyes Hall. $6students, $12.50 others Tickets atReynolds Club Box Office.CO-OP HOUSEHOLDRoom available June, in 5 bedroomhouse at 54th and Dorchester Sharedcooking and cleaning Grad or nonstudent preferred. Call 493-5419LAURENCELIEBERMANLaurence Lieberman will read fromhis poetry on Thursday. April 30. 4:30,Ida Noyes library Free and open tothe publicLANDLORDTROUBLE?The Maroon is doing an article on thebest and worst of Hyde Parklandlords If you've had an experienceyou'd like to tell about, call us at 7533263 and leave a message for JonYour name can be kept confidential JAZZ CONCERTECKANKAR presents the unique softjazz sounds of Darwin and Friends inconcert at 7:00 pm Saturday May 2 atthe Civic Opera House. Phone 973-6677.FIELD SERVICETECHNICIANSPart time: no experience requiredgraduate and undergraduatestudents: Do you need money to helppay for increasing tuition and livingexpenses? If you answered yes, thenyou should explore this opportunity.The automotive battery sales divisionof a multi-billion dollar corporation isimplementing a unique and excitingmarketing and sales program. Thecompany provides complete trainingand will arrange your working hoursto coincide with your school schedule.In addition, as a member of the startup team, you will gain valuable ex¬perience which will enhance yourcareer development The position in¬volves making service calls in a company dispatched vehicle, diagnosingautomotive failures and replacing batteries as necessary. To qualify, youshould be an energetic, personabie,well groomed individual who has avalid driver's license and the ability tooperate standard transmissionvehicles We offer an hourly rate ofpay plus incentive earning potential.For more detailed information, callMrs. Monahan at 640 4000 April 27th toMay 1st.ANCHOR AWAY!ANCHOR STEMA BEER & ANCHORPORTER Now available at the Pub,Ida Noyes Hall, San Francisco finest.UC HOTLINE 753-17775th week blahs got you down? CallHotline, open 7 days a week from 7:00pm to 7 00 am.BASEBALLShowsmith Park is again organizingits Pee Wee & Little League teams. Ifyou are interested in playing plese call624-6262 or 241-9219. We need volunteercoaches too. BEAT THE EMPTYMAILBOX BLUESTired of rushing to your mailbox onlyto find dust left from the last delivery?Do you feel lonely and isolated? For amere $3 (student rate) you will begreeted at your mailbox withstimulating, informative mail onmany subjects, for many interests. Beinformed, be popular! Send name, address payment to: Watfs Group, 6506West Palatine Chicago Illinois 6063KPETS2 puppies for tender loving home 1male, 1 female, about 5'/2 months.Puppies were born and reared in anabandoned building and are still veryshy. Call Carol Taylor 285-6490YOUR DOG'SSAFEDid I find your DOG? Young, fairlysmall female. Lighl with black/browntinge. One ear droops. Pink and blacknose. Wonderfully affectionate. Trained found April 23 Call 924-6164. 5365776ATTENTIONJUNE GRADUATESJUNE GRADUATES: If you are theson/daughter of a U. of Chicago alumnus/a, will you please contact TheUniversity of Chicago Magazine,Robie House, 5757 Woodlawn. 753-2323or 2325, We want to take your photoCOFFEEHOUSEThurs. April 30 at Blue Gargoyle, 5655S. Univ. Ave. 9:00 and 10:30: PeterBurkholder, piano and vocals; 9:45and 11:15 Sandy Andina, orig and contemp folk. Food and beverages, 50'coverWANTEDWill pay top dollar for Bio Sci lOoTlassnotes for the past four weeks on a tutorContact Paula at 643 3444 DAVID BORDWELLNoted film scholar and critic DavidBordwell will speak on the films andcareer of Anthony Mann betweenDOC's showings of T Men and SideStreet tonight in OuantrellAuditorium, Cobb Hall. Refreshmentswill be servedHIHIHIHIHIHIHIDELTA UPSILON FRATERNITY Agreat place to live We are: a co-edhouse cooking and laundry facilities,TV mostly single rooms low rent.Sherry hour on Wed April 29 at 7 pmfor all interested undergrads 5714 SWoodlawn 753 3444 Come see what'supHYDE PARKHILTONEMPLOYMENTNow operated by Metro Inns, Inc.NeedsWAITERS/WAITRESSES Any shift;part time or full time; experience notnecessary. Will schedule around yourclasses Apply in person Mon thru Fri11-5. 4900 S. Lake Shore DrDUDUDUDUDUDUDo you want a break from dorm life?Consider a Delta Upsilon Fraternity aco ed house cooking and laundryfacilities TV mostly single rooms lowrent. Sherry hour for all interestedundergraduates Wed April 29 at 7 pm5714 Woodlawn 753 3444MOVING?RVDKH RENTS TRUCKSLOCAL AND ONE-WAY LOW RATES• Move with a friend.• Minimum age requirement to drive -18 years old.• Fast, Easy and dependable.One-Way & Local Movesexpires 6/30/81Good at Either LocationRyder Truck Rental, Inc. Lake Park Rentals1050 W. Pershing Road 6633 S. Cottage GroveChicago Chicago523-5555 684-7457 marian realty,inc.mRtAUORStudio and 1 BedroomApartments Available— Students Welcome —On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-5400SALE DATES 4/29-5/2/81U.S.D.A. ChoiceRIB ROAST *2U.S.D.A. Choice CRIB STEAKS *2 49tb.79lb.FRESHGROUNDnrrr family pakDEEr 3 lbs. or MoreDEL MONTESliced or HalvedPEACHES 59DEL MONTECORN, PEASGREEN BEANS2 CANS FOR # M17 oi.TOTINO SSausage, Cheese, orCanadian Bacon £ ■ AOPIZZA i2.z. 1CHICKEN-OF-THE-SEATUNA bVi oz. CanYOPLAITYOGURT 3 >..S 112 oz.FINER FOODSSERVING53rd PRAIRIE SHORESKIMBARK PLAZA 2911 VERNONWhere You Are A Stranger But Once!The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, April 28, 1981 — 19