THECHICAGOMAROONVolume 90, No. 57 TjTeUniversiWofChicagoCopyright1981TheChicago Maroon • Friday, May 29, 1981Summer Walkout Threatened as Service,Maintenance Workers Vote on ContractCoffee Shop Faces EvictionBy Anna FeldmanFacing the loss of its lease, the Hyde ParkCoffee Shop, a popular eating spot for manyarea residents, may close within sixmonths, according to owner Harry Verros.The coffeeshop, located at 53rd St. and S.Hyde Park Blvd., is the only restaurant inthe area open 24 hours a day.The coffeeshop opened 12 years ago at itspresent location with a 15-year lease. Thefirm which manages the building, Baird andWarner, Inc., recently termined the lease,attempting to evict the coffeeshop from theDel Prado Hotel. Verros has challenged theeviction in state courts, but without successso far. He plans to appeal the case to theState Supreme Court, but doubts that theCourt will agree to hear it.The case began as a suit by Baird andWarner, Inc., for possession of the coffee¬shop space, on the grounds of a late pay¬ment of rent. The jury ruled in the land¬lord’s favor, and an appellate court laterupheld the decision.Verros, owner of the coffeeshop since Au¬gust, 1977, could not say under what termsthe coffeeshop might remain at its presentlocation. “I don't know what the demands ofthe landlord are,” he said. He said that hewould be willing to remodel or “do almostanything” the owner wanted in order to re¬main in the building. “I don’t know whetherthey want me to sell it or what,” he said. “I’m getting no response.”A spokesman for Baird and Warner wouldgive no reason for the closing of the coffee¬shop. Verros is now being asked to leave, ac¬cording to the spokesman, because he lostthe case. He would give no further detail onthe rationale for closing the coffeeshop.“He’s lost the cases where he’s had a monthfor appeal,” he said. “It’s just a matter oftime. When and if we do get a new operator(for the coffeeshop), then we will go to thecourts and tell him to get out.”Verros said that if forced to close, there isno chance that the coffeeshop would moveand open elsewhere. “A business, in order tosurvive, needs a certain ethical, a certainlegal, a certain economic environment,” hesaid. The coffeeshop. according to Verros,would lose this environment if it had tomove to another location. Qon^ on page jgPublication NoteThis is the final issue of the 1980-81 Chi-1cago Maroon. The Chicago Literary Re-1view will appear next Friday, June 5. Sum- ijmer publication, and with it the 91st 1volume of the Maroon, will begin on Fri-|;day, July 3.For those interested in working on nextflyear’s Maroon, there will be a staff meet-1,ing this afternoon at 4 pm in the Maroon |ioffice on the third floor of Ida Noyes |jHall. IRonald ThistedFour WinBy Chris Isidore By Darrell WuDunnFour professors of widely different back¬grounds and experience were named as thisyear’s Quantrell Award winners at yester¬day’s honors assembly. The four $2,500prizes are given for excellence in under¬graduate teaching.Chih-ch’ao Chao, associate professor ofFar Eastern Languages and Civilizations,Mark Ingrham, the Samuel K. Allison Dis¬tinguished Service Professor of Physics,Sam Peltzman, professor in the GraduateSchool of Business, and Ronald Thisted, theLeonard Jimmie Savage Assistant Profes¬sor of Statistics, will receive the awards atthe commencement exercises in June.The committee which selected this year’swinner received roughly 100 letters fromstudents recommending professors they hadtaken. The committee also reviewed lettersfrom past years.Ingrham has been at the University thelongest of the four winners, arriving beforeThisted, the youngest winner, was even Leaders of the union representing the Uni¬versity’s 900 service and maintenance em¬ployees have urged union members to rejectthe University’s final contract offer andvote to strike, if necessary, following abreakdown in contract negotiations lastweek.In a letter circulated last week to the ap¬proximately 900 members of TeamstersLocal 743, the union’s 20 member negotiat¬ing committee recommended the rejectionof the University’s proposed 3-year con¬tract. A two-thirds “No” vote on the ballot¬ing, which began this week and will continueuntil next Ffiday, would authorize a strike.A possible strike, however, would not occurfor at least another month. to April 1, the date the old contract expired.A 35c per hour increase in April and a fivecent per hour increase in October are alsoproposed for each of the next two years. Theunion has asked for a $1.25 per hour in¬crease for the first year.Simpson does not believe that the workeswill accept an offer with wages less than therates )other city hospitals are paying. Ac¬cording to union figures, this means that theUniversity would have to increase its offerby 75-80C per hour.Edward Coleman, the University’s per¬sonnel director and chief negotiator said, |however, “those are their figures. Our fig¬ures are different.” While he admitted thatthe University pays less than other hospitalat some grade levels, he said that the Uni¬versity is ahead at other levels.Coleman said that, “the University cannotkeep pace with other hospitals.” The Uni¬versity does not have the money to payhigher wages than those offered, he said,;citing the proposed cuts in federal and statemedicaid funding which threaten UCHCwith a loss of more than $15 million.David Bray, executive director of UCHC,said last month that “A $15 million loss...isnot manageable without firing hospitalworkers...”Simpson said the union might accept a re¬duction in the number of employees if thereactually is not enough work to do. However,he does not believe that the workload couldbe reduced. Continued on page 19 JMark Ingrham Quantrell sborn. Ingrham came here as a graduatestudent in 1939, but left in 1941 due to thewar. He returned to join the faculty in 1947He has taught a wide variety of courses overthe last 34 years. This year he taught Phys¬ics 121, an introductory physics course, andPhysics 334.Chao came here in 1969 after teachingChinese to students in Taiwan, Singaporeand Hawaii. He has been teaching full timefor more than twenty years. Since cominghere, he has taught courses in Elementary-Modern Chinese and Intermediate ModernChinese.Peltzman has taught undergraduates inhis economics 200 course, an introductorylevel course. He came here as a visiting pro¬fessor in 1968 for one year, and returned tothe faculty permanently in 1973. He receivedhis Ph.D. from the University in 1965, aftergetting a Bachelor’s of Business Adminis¬tration from the City College of New York.Of the four winners, Peltzman teaches thelargest undergraduate classes, but said thathe doesn’t think access by students is as bigof a problem as some students think. “Stu¬dents always start off by saying, ‘You prob¬ably don’t know me,’ or ‘You probably don’tChic-ch’ao Chao Union members include all service andmaintenance workers in the University Hos¬pitals and Clinics (UCHC) and in thecampus dormitories and buildings.Wages are the main issue of disagree¬ment. Robert Simpson, the local’s businessagent and chief negotiator, said that the ne¬gotiating committee feels “the offer is inad¬equate.”The proposed contract gives workers a40( per hour increase this year retroactiveSam Peltzmanremember me.’ But even with the largeclass, I get to know about half of the stu¬dents,” he said. “I certainly don’t try’ to re¬strict access by students. Some studentsjust don’t take advantage of the access be-Continued on page 19STARTSFRIDAYMAY 29MONDAY-THURSDAY9-30-6-30FRIDAY 9-30-5SATURDAY ■ ■■■■■■■■■» Jfc » •••••(( (i • a • a ■ a a a * a aOUR 20TH ANNUALSPRING SALENOW. ■ ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■I■ ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■av.v.v.v.v.v.v.v.BBv.a.a.a.V.VBaBaBaBv.alv.v.v.v.v.v.v.v.■ a...■v.v.v.v.v.v.v.v■v.v.v.v.v.v.v.v■ . . .a . . ii . a aa a . i a., a.. ....a■ a. ........a..a....... ._.i.a......a.fa . . a a a .a a a aiS.aaaaHaaBBaa.a>aaa aa.aaa.a~.a.v.v.v.v.v.a.v.v.vaaa..aa...aa.a.a.ii.aaaa..aaa..a...aaa...aa....a.a.a.i■.aaaa..aaa..a...aSALEENDSJUNE 13 I2 The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 29, 1981NEWS BRIEFS782 Want Cooler RegFood Service Day” on Tuesday to generatesupport and revenue.The Blue Gargoyle food service serveshomemade vegetarian lunches five days aweek in the University Church, 5655 S. Uni¬versity. On Tuesday, in addition to the regu¬lar menu, chili and pizza specials will beserved and the work of local artists will beon display. Those attending the lunch willdiscuss problems and alternatives for thefood service in the coming year. Among theoptions under consideration, meal plans,operation as a consumer co-op, greater vol¬unteer assistance, and the establishment ofdisplay space for student and local artists.Thursday, June 4 is the final day of opera¬tion for the food service this quarter. Students Win$10,000 GM PrizeA team of eight graduate students has wonthe $10,000 General Motors “IntercollegiateBusiness Understanding Competition.” Thestudents compiled a 122-page essay on thetopic “Business and Government: What arethe Rights and Responsibilities of Each?”The prize money which is paid to the Uni¬versity, will be used by the Committee onPublic Policy Studies to establish a coursefor students to enter the competition in fu¬ture years.The students participating in the competi¬tion were Gerald Kellman, Robert Michael,Halsey Roberts, Paul Zorn. Jay Frank. Rob¬ert Unger and Mary Ellen Woods, all in thePublic Policy program, and Gregory Spe-vok, a student in political science.Lecture Really SundayA newsbrief in last Friday’s Maroon in¬correctly said that Robert Me. Adams’Woodward Court Lecture on “Basic Re¬search and National Policy” was scheduledfor last Sunday. The lecture is indeed, asdozens of posters around campus attest, thisSunday, May 31, at 8:30 pm. The Maroon re¬grets the error.Staff NoteMaroon staff members are reminded toattend the end-of-the-year picnic scheduledfor Sunday at 5 pm at the Point.Despite a surge of complaints about theinadequate air circulation in Regenstein Li¬brary from students and employees, theconditions in the library will not changewithout authorization from William Cannon,the University’s Vice-President for Busi¬ness and Finance. Although Cannon couldnot be reached for comment, Martin Run-kle, Director of the University Libraries,said he was presently writing Cannon to re¬quest improved conditions in Regenstein.Last Friday, a group of five library em¬ployees formed the Ad Hoc Committee forFresh Air in Regenstein, and circulated pe¬titions in the library complaining about the“intolerable” conditions for users, employ¬ees and books. Within four days, 782 signa¬tures had been collected, which were thensent to Runkle.Runkle said yesterday that the recenttemperature levels in Regenstein were the“result of the desire to conserve energy. Iam concerned about the extreme tempera¬tures and I hope we’ll be able to d<? some¬thing about it,” he said.Stricken CommutersThe University has begun making plans toaid staff members, faculty, and studentswho may be left without a way to reachcampus if, as expected, the Regional Trans¬portation Authority (RTA) shuts down nextweek.Beginning Saturday, the University willoperate a transportation hotline between 6am and 6 pm to serve as a clearinghouse forthose who either need or can provide rides tocampus. Department chairmen are also urged to establish sign-up sheets for rideswithin their own offices.In addition, the University is also plan¬ning to provide limiteed bus service for em¬ployees and students. Busses will makepick-ups in areas with high concentrationsof employees, probably with one or two pick¬up points in a zip code area. A charge forthis bus service is likely. Details of the busservice have not yet been determined,; how¬ever.Save Blue FoodIts survival threatened by mounting costsand government budget cuts, the Blue Gar¬goyle food service will hold a “Save theTHANK YOAmy FreiUchNancy HillLiz CassanosCharlie CoffeyDon LindgrenMike NobleiSs V. ■;/'Mike SlaterlohnEfujKKaLindsey JohnsonJoe PierriCy OgginsPam ChaoNoreen MarriotClarke CampbellFor helping to make the first Memorial affair tri/JflThe Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 29, 1981 — 3 \IlISellers: Sign up in Room 210, Ida NoyesHall. A $2 registration fee willbe charged. Limited spaceavailable.Buyers: Here’s your chance to furnishyour apartment or find thatthat one-of-a-kind something-or-another.Saturday, May 3010 AM-2 PMIda Noyes Parking Lot(If rain, Ida Noyes Cloister Club)For Info: 753-35914 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 29, 1981 It’s Not Easy, But ForeignStudy Possible for StudentsBy Pat O’Connell“The best-kept secret at the University ofChicago is that it is not impossible to getcredit for study in a foreign institution,”says Lorna Straus, Dean of Students in theCollege. Referring to “a campus rumor tothe contrary,” Straus said that the Universi¬ty’s policy towards study abroad has notchanged in the last five years — only its per¬ception among students has. “We have hadstudents studying in institutions around theworld every year I have been here,” shesaid.To study abroad, a student must first seehis advisor or a dean for information and pe¬titions. Each petition is then reviewed indi¬vidually and decided upon by the Committeeon Academic Standing. When making its de¬cision, the committee considers where thestudent will be studying, when he will bestudying, what courses he will take, whathis major is and how study abroad will fit itohis degree program.The faculty, according to Straus, can bevery helpful to students considering studyabroad, because many faculty members arefamiliar with available programs abroad.The Office of International Students Ser¬vices, located in the administration build¬ing, offers help to foreign students studyingat the University, as well as to Universitystudents intending to study abroad. The of¬fice can help students choose the foreignstudy programs most suited to their aca¬demic requirements. Straus cautioned, how¬ever, that many programs offered at foreigninstitutions are “not serious academically”or “ferociously expensive for what theyoffer.”Although the University has no formalstudy abroad program nor any plan to insti¬tute one, students may choose from amongthree means of obtaining credit for studyabroad. A student may make special ar¬rangements to be registered at the Universi¬ty while studying under a tutor abroad. Stu¬ dents may also register as full-time studentsin foreign institutions and then petition tohave their credits transferred here. Anotheroption is for students to take classes offeredby an American institution with campusesabroad.While Straus acknowledges the intangiblebenefits of study abroad, she says that aca¬demics come first. Practicality is the mostimportant factor in determining whether astudent’s petition to receive credit for studyabroad is approved. Students will benefitfrom study abroad only if the program sup¬plements the coursework in their major atthe University, she said. Since the studentultimately receives a degree from the Uni¬versity of Chicago, the “overall shape of adegree requirement” should be determinedby University faculty.Students who study abroad are notguaranteed that all of their credits will betransferred here. Stephanie Levy, a secondyear student in the College, studied at theUniversity of Paris and the State Universityof New York campus there. Even though shestudied for a full year in Paris, Levy re¬ceived four credits (or the equivalent of onequarters’ work) for her coursework. Levyfeels that the experiences gained by study¬ing in a foreign country are well-worth tak¬ing the year off.Signe Anderson, a fourth year student inthe College, attended Western WashingtonUniversity in Morelia, Mexico for onequarter before transferring here. She saidthat she had no problems transferring cred¬its from her coursework in Mexico.Last year the University of Chicago had30-35 students studying in Western Europe,the Far East, Australia, India, among othercountries around the world. It is not the Uni¬versity of Chicago that is keeping more stu¬dents from studying abroad, according toStraus, but the enormous costs involved.Also, many students are not willing to sacri¬fice a year or two from their coursework tostudy abroad. ljIGet to WorkDixy Lee Ray:By Steve ShandorFormer Governor Dixy Lee Ray de¬scribed the American economy as “soft anddeclining” and the American people as“gutless” when she addressed a group ofstudents on the topic “Energy and the WorldEconomy” last Friday afternoon. In the lec¬ture, Ray, the last Visiting Fellow for thisacademic year, tried to impress upon herlisteners that though the current energy sit¬uation is serious, there is still hope if Ameri¬cans “roll up our sleeves and get to work.”Characterizing ours as “an era of self¬doubt, an era of questioning,” Ray proposedthat the machinery of American progresshas come screeching to a halt because“we’re afraid of doing anything if it can’t beperfection.” Ray feels this is most evident inthe field of energy research where the de¬sire to accept only a perfect energy sourcehas produced regulations which “instead ofleading to progress, lead to paralysis.” Be¬cause of this, Ray noted, “our economy hasfaltered and our productivity is goingdown.”As evidence of this, Ray pointed out thatthere are presently thirteen nuclear powerplants standing idle, waiting to produceenough energy for one million people.“Every month of delay,” she explained,“makes the customers in their areas paythirty million dollars more for electricity.”Ray, a former chairman of the AtomicEnergy Commission, said that the Ameri¬can people are “not able to put in perspec¬tive the risks involved (in nuclear power).”Noting that one trainload of uranium canproduce as much energy as 63 trainloads of coal, Ray asserted that nuclear power is“in¬finitely more efficient, infinitely better onthe environment, infinitely safer and morehealthful” than other sources of energy. Inspite of this, she said. America stands“ready to foreclose the nuclear option.”The rest of the world is not following suit,however. Ray pointed out that in less thanten years more than half of the electricityused in Western Europe and Japan will begenerated in nuclear power plants. “Whilethe rest of the world is moving ahead,” Raysaid, “we are standing still.”In addition, Ray warned her listeners,“Unless we wake up and realize that eco¬nomic progress depends upon using ourknowledge and technology,” we can neverexpect the rest of the world to reach ourstandard of living. In support of this view,the former governor explained that if theUnited States were energy self-sufficient,this would release vast quantities of oil Dackinto the market which Third World nationscould utilize for industrialization.Ray did exhibit hope for the future howev¬er. “I have great faith that the private econ¬omy can do more than it has done (to pro¬duce energy) if it is unshackled from theregulations government has placed on it,”she said. In order to reverse the present eco¬nomic decline, Ray suggested, “Peopleneed to wake up and I think there is evi¬dence that this is happening. I think thatPresident Reagan’s victory is one (suchpiece of evidence).” Analyzing the Reaganvictory, Ray, who ran as a Democrat, re¬marked “I think a lot of it is a reactionagainst too much government, and I thinkthat is a very healthy sign.” |IBuckminster Fuller, ' Planet’s Friendly Genius’Buckminister FullerThe fact that R. Buckminster Fullerdefies labelling may be the most revealingthing that can be said about him. In his life¬time, he has worked in the capacity of archi¬tect, urban planner, inventor, governmentconsultant, poet, artist, and mathematician.Among other accomplishments, he is knownfor his invention of the geodesic dome.At the age of 85, he has written a bookcalled Critical Path, which contains the ur¬gent message of man’s need to reorder hisworld or face its imminent destruction with¬in five years. According to Fuller, through anew, evolutionary application of technology,man can eliminate economic scarcity, thesource of all suffering and war, and livemore in harmony with his universe.The interview was conducted by JeffBackstrom, graduate student in the educa¬tion department, and David Obstfeld, under¬graduate in political science.Q: I’ve been trying to come up with onepossible, logical order for your thinkingwhich is as you would put it "omnidirection¬al” and I thought we could start with thewhole social, political, and economic, thatis, the broad realm of human concernstoday and work from that into your vision ofwhat the solutions to the problems are . . .I see us as being at a stage wherewe are coming out of that womb ofpermitted ignorance.BMF: I’d go even broader if I were you.Q: You want to start with . . .BMF: With synergy, which just means be¬havior of whole systems, unpredicted by thebehavior of any of the parts considered se¬parately. There’s nothing inlhe single atomper se, that tells us it’s going to compoundwith other atoms and make chemical com¬pounds. Nothing in that one atom per se says that. There’s nothing in chemical com¬pounds per se that predict biological proto¬plasm. There’s nothing in biological proto¬plasm, per se, that predicts camels andpalm trees and respiratory exchange ofgases between the two. In other words, I findthe larger is never explained by the lesser.My own working assumption for fifty-threeyears has been that to understand at allabout humans you have to have at least aworking assumption of how humans were in¬cluded in the design of the universe, andthen things get a little clearer. other creatures other than humans havesome built-in special equipment that givesthem some special advantage in some spe¬cial environment — for example, a littlevine that grows just in the Amazon, no pla<jeelse; or a little dog with very short legs so itcan follow’ the scent, its nose will be close tothe ground and its right paw is so big; or abird with beautiful wings — wonderful whenflying but when not flying, unable to divestitself of its wings and we find the bird great¬ly hampered trying to walk. 1 saw that manycreatures had brains so humans were notWhen I was born, reality was everything you could see, touch, smell,and hear going back to the brain and not to the mind. Suddenly, a newinvisible rule came in; electronics, alloying, and chemistry.Q: What do you feel is the purpose of manin the universe?BMF: I have the working assumption thathe’s here as a local universe informationgatherer and local universe problem solverin support of the integrity of an eternally re¬generative universe.Q: Are the problems that man solves justman’s problems or are they the problems ofthe cosmos?BMF: Man was installed on earth initiallyto get acclimated and learn, not to functionas I just said, w’hich is really very divinefunctioning. It was not an oversight that wewere designed to be born naked, absolutelyinexperienced and therefore absolutely ig¬norant — beautiful equipment — but hungryand thirsty and driven to learn only by trialand error, what works and what doesn’twork. You really have to learn, scientif¬ically, by experience, experiential evidence,and we were given an enormous cushion ofresources to allow for trial and error, learn¬ing that our mind is everything, that muscleis nothing. Muscle and cunning are still incontrol of hurhan affairs. We’re still in amess. So what we’ve been going throughthat may seem unpromising to you is thetrial and error of learning that things can’tbe solved by politics.Q: Well, we have this function as local uni¬versal problem solvers and informationgatherers but according to your book, wehaven’t had the chance to meaningfully ful¬fill that function.BMF: That’s right.Q: In fact, we’re in a situation now wherethe question has to be raised whether we’llever have the opportunity to do that.BMF: I see us as being at a stage wherewe are coming out of that womb of permit¬ted ignorance. We were provided with enor¬mous resources with which by trial anderror to learn that our minds are everythingand learn that if you don’t go along with thetruth things get worse. The reason I’ve beenable to support my theory of how and whywe’re here is predicated on the fact that all unique in having brains. We don’t have anyspecial environment equipment that weknow of. Brains of all creatures are alwaysand only coordinating the information of oursenses — what we smell, touch, see, andhear. Brains deal in the temporal specialcases and remember the special cases.That’s what we call memory. Human mindshave the capability quite other than that of"brains”. I find there is a great misunder¬standing... I often hear these words used in¬terchangeably. Human mind has the capa¬bility to discover relationships existingbetween special cases that are not in anyway predicted by the special cases consi-I see nature trying very hard atthe present time to bring through ayoung world that really never willtake over and be forever, and getout of the way forever that we haveto earn a living.dered separately. Here's where the braincan’t see and the mind can see. Newton’slaw of gravitational interaction can only beapprehended by human mind. The path ofthe planets was designed. They were discov¬ering some of the design of the universe.That humans were admitted to some of thedesign of the universe must mean to me thatwe’re here for something very important.Q: But according to your book we haven’tonly been engaged in the innocent activity ofinformation gathering. We’ve made somedecisions of how’ our societies will developthat perhaps weren’t very wise or today arepresenting very serious problems. I waswondering if you could elaborate on whattype of problems have developed resultingfrom decisions that we made that weren’tmerely information gathering but ratherdisorderly types of activity?BMF: It’s a question of whether we learnquickly enough. I say that when nature hasan important function (that certainly is a very important function I’ve just described)she always has alternate circuits and fail¬safe. I find its just a very simple thing. Inorder to have humans on our planet, wehave to have energy. We need a lot of energyto get experience. Vegetation has seeds. Inorder to get its seeds distributed to get root¬ed, it has to blossom those little gliders intothe wind. So you see all these seeds going allover the place Hopefully some of them willland at a favorable spot. So when nature hasan important function and chances of sur¬vival are poor, she makes many starts. I’dhave to assume that she must have alter¬nate teams As I began to make this myworking assumption, I saw it took about 7billion years to develop this particular plan¬et with its biosphere — it was an incrediblepiece of design so I say she’d have many al¬ternate ways of carrying on . . .I was born into a moment of great acceler¬ation of affairs. I could really feel it and onlyin my lifetime, eighty-five years old, we’vegone from ninety-five percent illiteratehumans of the total to sixty percent literate.In other words, we’ve tripled our populationand yet gone up to where the majority arenow literate vs. the vast majority are illiter¬ate. When you were illiterate you had tohave leaders and all the bad patterns of poli¬tics and we come out of times when we wereilliterate. But now we’re at the point whereyou as young people really have vocabu¬laries . . .Q: Has the growth of literacy changed thenature and demand for leadership?BMF: Yeah. We don’t really need leader¬ship. We don't need somebody to tell you andI how- to get together. I find the leadership inpolitics, religion, and business is competi¬tion and is all based on misinformation.Thomas Malthus was the first human inhistory, educated and literate, to have thetotal data, vital statistics around the closedsystem of spherical earth. And he said veryreasonably in his first book of 1810 that hu¬manity clearly was reproducing itself at ageometrical rate of increase and increasingits life support at only an arithmeticalrate.Sixty-three years later, we have Darwin.He commited himself to the theory of evolu¬tion and explaining it as a consequence ofsurvival only of the fittest species and indi¬viduals within the species.His contemporary, Karl Marx, said, T ac¬cept Malthus as absolute science. I acceptboth Darwin and Malthus. Therefore thereis nowhere near enough to go around; sur¬vival of the fittest; to me the worker is thefittest because he knows how to handle toolsto make the products and sow the seed.' Hesaid these other people are parasites. Thecapitalists said, ‘You’re referring to us,that’s a joke because Darwin is right, sur¬vival of the fittest, and we?re on top of theContinued on page 19OLAS OLAS OLAS OLAS OLAS OLAS OLAS OLAS OLAS OLAS OLASOLAS Newsletter - a quarterly magazine published by U. of C. students- cordially invites all members of the university community to contributewith articles on social, economic and political issues related to LatinAmerica and the Caribbean. Also, we welcome original fiction and poetry,as well as book, music, art and movie reviews.The Newsletter is open to criticisms. Please don’t letthem hold you back. Mail them!Organization of Latin American StudentsOLAS Newsletter1212 E. 59th St.Chicago, IL 60637OLAS OLAS OLAS OLAS OLAS OLAS OLAS OLAS OLAS OLAS OLAS7”! . /.V.... \ •. . v .' ■7/ ji ~~ • 7" Sports SeriesBEACH TOWELSWATCHFOR OURSUMMERWHITESALE |beginning June 5955-010052nd & HarperHARPER COURT,Vh’e’bhKfrf^o*M&fodn ->5VIEWPOINTA Scientific Look at Cocaine - a Dangerous DrugBy Dr. Charles SchusterCocaine is in the news. There have beenseveral recent incidents which have givenrise to media concern with the non-medi¬cal use of cocaine. The coverage has de¬monstrated that myths still abound aboutthis potent psychotropic drug. I would liketo take this opportunity to address some ofthese issues raised in the media regardingcocaine.Several months ago an Illinois Appellatecourt judge ruled that cocaine was mis-classified under the law asa narcotic. Mycolleague (Dr. Marian Fischman) and Ihave previously testified in both state andfederal courts that from a scientific view¬point cocaine is not a narcotic drug. To beclassified as a member of the narcoticclass a drug must meet certain criteria:1. It should share the profile of actionsproduced by the prototypic narcotic,morphine (e.g. analgesia, charac¬teristic subjective effects inhumans).2. Repeated administration of morphineproduced tolerance which extends toall other members of the class of nar¬cotic drugs (e.e. there is a cross toler¬ance between members of the class).3. All narcotic drugs substitute in mor¬phine dependent organisms and thusprevent or reverse the morphine with-drawl syndrome.4. Certain actions of all narcotic drugsare blocked or reversed by a drugcalled naloxone (an narcotic antagon¬ist).Cocaine fails to meet any of these cri¬teria and thus from a pharmocologic view¬point it is incorrect to classify it as a nar¬cotic. Instead cocaine shares many of theBy Jeff Davitz actions of the psychomotor stimulentdrugs (e.g. the amphetamines) and there¬fore belongs in this class.Unfortunately the media coverage of theappellate court decision implied that be¬cause cocaine was not a narcotic it wastherefore a relatively harmless drug.Comparisons were made in which it wasstated that cocaine was no more harmfulthan coffee or nicotine. I strongly disagreewith these statements. However, I agreeand wholeheartedly support the court’s de¬cision that cocaine is not a narcotic but dis¬agree with the implication that if cocaineis not a narcotic it must be relatively har¬mless. That interpretation is neither logi¬cal nor does it fit with the facts.Similarly, a recent Maroon article crit¬icized the Congressional investigation ofcocaine use in Hollywood (Maroon-April28, 1981-Geoff Potter, The Cocaine Connec¬tion and Joseph McCarthy) as a return tothe smear tactics of the McCarthy era. Iwould agree with the author of that articlethat it is unlikely that we will obtain anyvalid insights into the prevalence of co¬caine use in Hollywood nor whether thisuse is having any ill effects. Anecdotesfrom biased samples of people testifyingbefore a congressional committee are nota method to obtain epidemiological data onnon-medical cocaine use and its conse¬quences. This article, however, depictedcocaine use as innocuous andagain impliedthat it is a harmless drug which those thatare wealthy enough to afford can enjoywith no concern for any possible dele¬terious effects.What are the facts about cocaineCocaine is the principal active alkaloidof the plant Erythoxylon coca. The chew¬ing of the coca leaves for their cocaine con¬ tent (as well as an excellent source of vi¬tamins) has been practiced by the indiansof Peru, Boliva and Brazil for centuries.The practice which can be likened to ourcustom of coffee drinking (presumably atleast in part for its caffeine) and to thechewing of the Khat leaf (for its content ofcathinone, another stimulent drug) by theYemenites. In these instances, however,the substances are used in their naturalform and by a route of administration(oral) which limits the rate of onset of thedrug effect and the peak effect which canbe achieved. Studies of Peruvian indiansallowed to chew coca for several hours re¬veal blood levels of cocaine which are onlya fraction of those we have observed inpeople who “snort” pure cocaine. Further,the chewing of the coca leaf is a culturallyregulated practice which has been incor¬porated into a stable life style of theseSouth American Indians. Clearly such cul¬tural regulation of cocaihe use does notexist in our society if indeed it is even poss¬ible. We therefore cannot look to the expe¬rience of coca chewers to suggest the med¬ical or social impact that cocaine use mayhave in our society.What do we know about pure cocaineCocaine has two principal sets of ac¬tions: it is a psychomotor stimulant drugand, as well, a local anaesthetic. It is usedin medicine for certain types of nose sur¬gery because of its local anaesthetic pro¬perties. It is preferred to other local an¬aesthetics because in addition to causinganaesthesia it produces vasoconstrictionand thus limits bleeding during the surgi¬cal procedure. When administered as alocal anaesthetic, cocaine’s effects areusually limited to the site of injection.When cocaine is snorted (intranasal),I have just heard the news. The HydePark Coffee Shop may soon be closing. TheHyde Park Coffee Shop! That bastion oflate night post-studying (post anything)adventure could soon be as closed as it isnow open — 24 hours a day.Never mind that the cream in thecreamers has long since passed the pointof flowing. Never mind that they arealways cleaning the floors with ammonia 5or 6 feet away from where you are tryingto eat. The taste is only dying a seconddeath. Never mind the stares from thehaggard weirdos. They are probably won¬dering about many of the same things youare. Like what the french fries are actuallymade of. And yes, one night they probablyate with the same silverware you are usingnow. Never mind that the coffee is tocockroaches what the tar pits were tosaber tooths. (It’s a shame because thatone almost made it to the other rim.)Never mind all that. The Hyde Park Cof¬fee Shop is the classic restaurant of HydePark. Harold’s has got fifty third street(sorry, Mellow Yellow), but the Hyde ParkCoffee Shop has got Hyde Park. It symbol¬izes what all of us late night stragglers feelso intimately about life. The Hyde ParkCoffee Shop exists past the wee hours ofdawn to serve bad food.But it is really more than that whichdrives us there at one or two or three in themorning bone weary from, but excited by,a paper on the universality of the Oedipuscomplex. (“No, I mean it. Balinese kidsare just like upper middle class neuroticVienese Jewish hysterical adolescent girlswho hate their fathers. They hate theirfathers too. Only get this. They don’t knowwho their fathers are.”) We go to the HydePark Coffee Shop because there is no other Closing the Meccaplace to go. Sure there is the Tiki until 4,but unlike the Hyde Park Coffee Shop, theTiki cards. And when you think about it,you want to go, early in the morning whenyou are just snake eyes away fromdespair, to a place with a future. To a placeopen 24 hours a day. And open for noreason except to serve bad food.When I am older than I am now andthinking about my days as an undergradu¬ate, I will perhaps above all think of thoselate nights made later by a trek to the“HPC.” Where, I wondered, did the “S”ever go? Just one of those quirks of linguis¬tic evolution, I guess. Maybe when JamesMcCawley is done with his Chinese menushe can take a look at the development ofabbreviations for the Hyde Park Coffee Shop and clear up the confusion.I will think of those nights because therewas a warmth among friends that I havenever quite felt any other way. It is, forwhat it is worth, a bit of adventure thatspices up some of the day-to-day dreari¬ness of differential equations and OedipusComplex papers. It is a mecca of perspec¬tive. I have never laughed so much as Ihave at the Hyde Park Coffee Shop.There was that one freezing night myfirst year. (Actually there were an inter¬minable number of freezing nights myfirst year, but I am thinking of one realbruiser in particular.) It was the middle ofwinter quarter and my roommate and Ihad been looking at the house copy of theStanford catalogue all night. (In memoryit is always the middle of winter quarter. mainlined (intravenous) or smoked (freebasing), its effects depend upon the dose,the individual and to some extent the en¬vironmental conditions under which thedrug is taken. Cocaine produces a dose-related increase in heart rate. This effectis potentiated by exercise or fear. At highenough doses cocaine, because of its localanaesthetic properties, can cause seriousand even fatal depression of the electricalactivity in the conduction pathways of theheart. Its central nervous system effectsare as well dose-related. At low doseshumans describe a mild stimulation andfeeling of competence and well-being. Thiseffect is more marked if they have beentired or bored beforehand. There is usuallyincreased loquaciousness and sociability.Further increases in dose increase thesefeelings with people often describing theexperience as intensely euphoric. The ef¬fect is short-lived, however, and within30-60 minutes most users wish to repeat theexperience. Often the user will continue tosnort the drug until the supply is exhaust¬ed. It is rare for a coke user to put someaway for tomorrow. If supplies are limited(as they are because of price for mostusers in the USA), the aftermath of a co¬caine spree may be relatively innocuous.If supplies are less limited, however,several possibilties may ensue. The firstis, of course, accidental overdosage. Deathmay follow prolonged convulsions and hy¬perthermia or from cardiac failure. It ismore likely that this will occur with peoplewho use cocaine intravenously since its va¬soconstrictive properties tend to limit itsabsorption from snorting. Nonetheless,these effects can and have occurred tousers with all routes of administration.Fortunately over-dosage deaths are rare.Continued on page 19As I remember it, Winter Quarter of myfreshman year was five repetitions of thesame two weeks.) We set out from theShoreland. We couldn’t hear each othertalk for the wind w'as so strong in our ears.We were freezing and the snow kept whip¬ping around in our eyes. It is not very farfrom the Shoreland to the Hyde Park Cof¬fee Chop, but that night was especiallymiserable. Up ahead we could see thedreary light peering out under the orangeshadows, that specialty of Chicago life.We opened the creaky door that I have tobelieve was built that way. And there wewere. Well, at least I think there we were,but I was too numb to know for sure.Warmth. The coffee was as bad that nightas it ever was. Some of the weirdos hadstayed home. But some of them showed up.My favorite, the one studying to become amortician, was there. He acknowledged usin his own special way — he didn’t look upwhen we came in. It was nice, though. I in¬sist. And not nice in some ridiculous leftbank intellectual boehmian way. The HydePark Coffee Shop really is ugly. As mymortician friend was fond of saying,“Make no bones about that.” But neverwas the comraderie so warm as it was onthat night. We thawed, ate and got sick to¬gether. On the way home we got into asnowball fight.Hemingway looked for a clean, well-litplace to celebrate his nihilism. The HydePark Coffee Shop isn’t clean — they, doclose once a year for “Kitchen Cleaning.”I suppose it is well lit. But the Hyde ParkCoffee Shop isn’t the scene for any nihilis¬tic orgies. It is human in every way. Fromthe hair in the soup down to the finger nailsin the sandwiches. It bustles when otherplaces are dark and depressing. It belchesmuzak when other places crust away onMozart. It has so few pretensions — per¬haps using “garni” to describe whatContinued on page 196 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 29, 1981LETTERS TO THE EDITORSocial SurveyTo the Editor:What follows is a brief summary and out¬line of the results from the “Quality of Life”survey discussed at the Graduate Women’sConference last month. Because so manypeople have requested that I do so, I am sub¬mitting them to you for publication. I shouldnote that instead of presenting an elaborateinterpretation of the results, I have chosento organize them in such a way that the com¬ments and percentages speak for them¬selves.The purpose of the survey was to samplesome of the attitudes held by undergradu¬ates about the quality of life in the College. Icannot say that it is a scientific endeavor byany means. (It was mainly distributed onthe fourth floor Regenstein — hardly a ran¬dom sample) What I can say, however, isthat 86 people took enough time to answerthree pages of questions pertaining to howthey live their lives here.I. The breakdown of the students who re¬sponded to the survey:— 6 percent first year students— 49 percent second year students— 28 percent third year students— 17 percent fourth year studentsII. General social life information:— a little less than half said that theyget off campus 5 or fewer times perquarter; a little over half said thatthey get off campus 6 or moretimes per quarter.— 83 percent said that they attend cul¬ tural events in the Loop or on theNorth side of Chicago— 90 percent said that they attend cul¬tural or sports events on campus— 40 percent said that they attend“many” parties— 65 percent said, that they like theirliving situations— 75 percent said that they meet over5 new people per quarter— 85 percent said that they believethat the social life of the individualis an integral part of his or her — almost everybody said that theyare getting a good education here— 70 percent said that they think thatthe quality of life should be im¬proved— 44 percent of the females who re¬sponded said that they have“steady” boyfriends— 33 percent of the males who re¬sponded said that they have“steady” girlfriends— 65 percent said that they like theUniversity of Chicago. III.W’hat the surveys said:Students, on the whole, expressed adeeply felt ambivalence toward thisschool. There appear to be severalreasons for this somewhat contradic¬tory feeling:The sources of this ambivalence.1. Too much work and too littletime2. Hyde Park: narrow in characterand unsafe.3. The need or desire for some com¬panionship . . .4. But the right kind of companionship...5. The quality of one’s life is an indi¬vidual consideration.*6. The feeling of sacrifice.7. Other casusesBut not everyone complains.— “I think that there is reallynothing wrong with U of C ex¬cept that it is a style to dis¬like it.”— “I will do my darndest to getsomething out of my experi¬ence here and be glad of it.”In conclusion I think that it is important tonote that most students who responded tothe survey, despite their complaints, saidthat they do like it here at the university.The work is hard for a conscientious stu¬dent, but most people seem to think that it isworth the additional effort to remain at thisschool.Laura WeissStudent in the CollegeThe American MedicalStudents AssociationpresentsGRAND ROUNDSTherapy includes dance, beverageand music by Spanish ChevereSay‘-Ah!"lust what the doctor ordered!Saturday, May 309:30 p.m.International House$1 Admission — UCID RequiredFinanced by the Student Activity Fee"A Little Social Medicine TH6GREEK AND AMERICAN FOODBreakfast LunchDinnerGRADUATION SPECIAL$1.00 Discount(on any check over $3.00 per person with U.C.I.D.,after 7:30 p.m., Monday-Friday)The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 29, 1981 — 7COFFEE HOUSE Friday, May 299:30 PM -1:30 AMIda \ovcs Hall Coach Sim s& SpeedySponsored by SG AC Food. I' ree (joffppSUNDAY. MAY 31st 4:00 p.m.Mandel Hall 5706 S. UniversityTiCKeis. 5)4 00 General Admission$2 00 Students & Sr CitizensAvailaoie ai Reynolds Ciub Box OfficeTicketron and at the DoorTHE ROCKEFELLERCHAPEL CHOIRdirected by Rodney WynkoopI G O 51 STJIAVINSKy’S An Evening ofIndian Classical MusicSOMMAJUMDARon the Sitar ;l4 *-426Friday, May 29th8:00 p.m BBS m.International House1414 E. 59th St.Public - $4.00Students &Senior Citizens - $2.00 Si V,■ i. • VS’ i ■-* ; •'* 'Jz ■ ' Rockefeller MerporialCbapelSunday, May 319 a.m. Ecumenical Service ot HolvCommunion - Philip Blackwell, Associate inMinistry at the Chapel10a.m. Discussion Class -David Bartlett, Associate Professor of NewTestament and Coordinator oi the MinistryProgram, the Divinity School.11 a.m. University Religious ServiceLES NOCES, by Stravinsky4 p.m. Mandel HallThe Rockefeller Chapel Choir, conducted byRodney Wynkoop. Accompanied by the MusicalCollege of Roosevelt University Percussiontnsemble, and on tour pianos, tasley Black¬wood. trie Weimer, Cerald Ri//er, and AndreaSwan. $4, $2 students and senior citizens./■INTERESTED IN PUBLIC POLICY?-^The COMMITTEE ON PUBLIC POLICY STUDIES will hosta meeting to acquaint students withprogram offerings leading to the M.A. degreein Public Policy Studies.The meeting will be held:Tuesday, June 23:30 - 5:00 p.m.Wieboldt 301Students currently registered in thegraduate divisions and professional schoolsas well as seniors in the Collegeare invited to attend.For further information CALL: 753-1896 IF THE RTA SHUTS DOWNThe University of Chicago is arranging an office to serveas a central point for information for staff and studentswho will need transportation in the event of a shutdown bythe Regional Transportation Authority (RTA). This planwill go into effect only if a shutdown occurs.You are urged to make your own plans in advance to getto and from work if you use an RTA facility - commuterrailroad or CTA bus or train.•Keep tuned to radio and TV for up-to-date RTAinformation.•Arrange for a ride with your spouse, a friend or a fellowemployee.•Each department head is urged to establish an officesign-up sheet for staff who need rides or can providethem.If you can provide a ride or need a ridecall this emergency number:TRANSPORTATION HOTLINE753-0700Storting Saturday, this number will be staffed from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m.The transportation hotline will be a source of information about theUniversity’s efforts to assist staff and students in meeting tran¬sportation needs.8 The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 29, 1981i29 Mav 198113th Year n33rd Issue 3 e-\ t J-o- u r a hSOMEREADINGCompiled by Laura CottinghamMike Alper (soon to be ex grey city filmeditor): Some 19th century autobiogra¬phies — Mill's, Nesman's Apologia ProVita Sua. Then something light — after all,it's summer — Joyce Carol Oates's Bell-fleur, because she's wonderful, despitewhat LJC thinks; Graham Greene's newone; and lots of Raymond Chandler — ev¬erybody should read lots of RaymondChandler, even LJC. Also Ellis Island,Mark Helprih. And for LJC, CollinMcCabe's book on Godard.HHIHHflHiPaul Ausick (Assistant Dean of Stu¬dents): I don't really plan things, I justwalk into bookstores and buy things. Onething I do want to read is a book that wasrecently reviewed in The New Republic,it's about the Colorado River and waterpolicy in the West — I might not even waittill the summer to read it. I'm reviewingJohn McPhee's Basin and Range for thenext CLR, that's a good book I'd recomm e n d.Ralph Austen (Professor, Department ofHistory) I've been doing so much readingin African economics that l wouldn't rec¬ommend to anyone. What about tellingpeople to go to the movies? I haven't reallyplanned any summer reading. I do want toread some novels, so maybe the recom¬mendations you print will help me plan myst. HHHHHHIHHHiHIGeorge Beadle (President Emeritus andHonorary Trustee of the University): Ingeneral I don't read books, I read mostlyjournals that tend to be moderately specialized, rather scientific. I would recom¬mend Issac Assimov, all his books aregood and very readable. I'd also recom¬mend Where has all the Ivy Gone, a bookabut the University that my wife wrote,and These Ruins are Inhabited, a bookabout Oxford that's hilarious — my wifewrote too.HHHlHUHHHHHJoel Beck (Assistant Professor, SocialSciences Colligiate Divison): I'm readingRemembrances of Things Past and PhilipAries's new book The Hour of Our Death.I'd recommend War and Peace — that's aterrific book to read during the summer,and anything by Anthony Trollope.HHHEric Cocrane (Professor, Department ofHistory): I'm teaching this quarter so I'llmostly be reading background for mycourse. I'm also writing a book. Summerreading is really only for people like theFrench, who.take a month at the beachevery summer. But I do have to read abunch of current Italian novels, includingsome Oriana Fallachi. I'm also reading aGreek novel by Tachtes, but I doubt if peopie will get very far with it, it's jTQt_mtranslation.Jean Comaroff (Assistant Professor, Department of Anthropology): Besides stu¬dent papers, I'm reading Susan Griffin'swomen and Nature; and Women ofWonder, which is science fiction by andabout women. I recommend Nadine Gor- ftSUMMERdimer's Burger's Daughter and DorisLessing's Children of Violence triology.Irene Conley (Director of Student Activi¬ties) : I just finished Richard Stern's re¬cent book of short stories, Packages — it'sso U of C. So I'm going to read all of Sternthis summer. I'll recommend Stern andIris Murdoch's The Word Child. Forlighter reading, summer is a good time forall women to read Margaret Drabble. IHILaura Cottingham (soon to not be greycity editor): I'm reading lots of advertise¬ments and some Althusser — just to findout why he murdered his wife. I waited forsomeone to recommend Village Voicestaffer Ellen Willis's collections of essays,Beginning to See the Light. Since no oneelse did, I will — it's smart thoughts onthese often unintelligent times.HMHRichard Flink (grey city staff, artist):I'm reading New York City subway maps.e se .HHHHHHHHHIHFlo Hammet (Assistant editor, Universi¬ty of Chicago Magazine): Some authors Iintend to read more of include AliceAdams and Grace Paley. I just finishedPaley's Little Disturbances of Man, so I'llrecommend that. I also want to read thenew biography of Joseph Conrad, andprobably some Dickens and Melville —especially Melville, it's nice to read aboutwater during the summer.Chris Isidore (soon to be Maroon edi¬tor): Maroon copy and as a little else asposs I e.Frank Kinahan (Assistant Professor,Department of English): I don't have timeto do much reading because I'm workingon a book. But I can recommend the bestIrish novel that no one has ever heard of:The Curse of the Wise Woman by LordDunsany. IHHHHIHHHHHHHHRichard Martin (soon to be grey cityfilm editor): I'm going to read everythingAntoni Artaud ever wrote — everyone elseshould too. I'm also reading Life AfterDoomsday, tattoos, and subtitles. HIMartin E. Marty (Professor, DivinitySchool): I'm reading a wonderfullystrange book by Wilfrid Mellers calledBach and the Dance of God. And if peoplehaven't yet read the wonderful ChineseMedieval novel translated by my colleague, Anthony Yu, they should. The thirdvolume is out now — it's U of C Press -and it's called Journey to the West.flflHIGerald Mast (Professor, Department ofEnglish, Filmophile): I'm reading lots ofissues of the Quarterly Review of Film Studies, to catch up. but I'm also readingsome Althusser, Lacan and Foucault.Then I'll relax and read Burgess's EarthlyPowers. I don't like to recommendbooks. HHHHHHHHflHHHHHNorman F. Mclean (William RainyHarper Professor Emeritus in the College): All I'm gonna read this summer isabout forest fires so that I can finish a bookI'm writing. As for a recommendation —why not read my A River Runs Through It— that's good summer readingHHHRalph W. Nicholas (Professor, Depart Diane Keaton's The Boardwalk Plaza Hotel, Miami Beach; from Reservations, 1980ment of Anthropology): I haven't reallyhad a chance to think about what I'm read¬ing but there's a stack of four books hereon my desk that I know I want to read, andI think I can even recommend them toothers: Gordon Harrison's Misquitos, Maleria and Man: A History of the Hostilitiessince 1880, Ashis Nandy's At the Edge ofPsychology: Essays in Politics and Cutture, Benitta Eisler's The Lowell Offering:Writings by New England Mill Women,1840-1845, and Jeanne Favret Saada'sDeadly Words: Witchcraft in the Bocage— which is an interesting book aboutwitchcraft in France, it even tells yo howto doSam Peltzman (Professor, BusinessSchool): I'm reading that book by Gilderthat's on the best seller's list — Wealth andPoverty. It's lousy, but it's good propa¬ganda, that's why I'm reading it.Richard Pena (Director, Film Center atthe School of the Art Institute): I'll bereading The Zero Sum Society by LesterThurov, Lesliason Dan Gereuses by DeLa-clo and Michel Foucault's Power/Knowl¬edge. I recommend Fun in a ChineseLaundry by Joseph von Sternberg — whichis probably the best autobiography by arector. HHHHIHHIHHHiiiHRenee Saracki (grey city staff): Camusonce called him "the greatest Americanwriter of the 20th century" and that's goodenough for me. My favorite Cain book isMildred Pierce even though it strays fromthe prototypical bent macho novels fromCain's earlier period, Miidrea Pierce has akind of hysterical energy that is impossi¬ble to control. For more tough, lean, andcool reading, I suggest Dashiell Ham¬mett's Continental Op stories or perhaps,my favorite novel of all time, Dash's RedHarvest. And finally, I'll be finishing thatperverse and creepy Mike Hammer mys¬teries of Mickey Spillane. Mike could kill aguy or a dame with just a look.| Jonathan Z. Smith (Dean of the Col¬lege): The only systematic reading I'mdoing is The Collected Works of Marx andEngels. It's been translated into sixteenvolumes. I want to read it from beginningto end — at one a week I should get throughit before the end of the summer.HHILorna P. Strauss (Dean of Students inthe College): I'm reading The Biographyof Peter the Great. I'd like to also read upon the American Civil War — and I thinksome Jane Austen would be a perfect an-tidote to a busy schedule.lHIBHHHIJimmy Wilson (Proprietor, WoodlawnTap): Bob Child's got a book out — I'm try¬ing to think of the name of it, do you knowthe name of it? If you wanna wait a min¬ute, I'll cal my wife, she'll know the nameof it.Ken Wissoker (grey city; staff, book¬seller): The Voice, New York Rocker, InThese Times, Haymarket. Somehow it'salways magazines that actually get read.More ambitiously, I'm willing to claimthat l will read two new books in culturalmarxism that I have urging people to buy,but haven't gotten around to myself: Mi¬chele Barrett, etal. ideaology and CulturalProduction and Terry Lovell, Pictures ofReality. Also Marshal Sahlins' new book(marxist culturalism?) Historical metaphors and Mythical Realities. To others Ican recommend without reservation AliceMiller's Prisoners of Childhood which Ifind terribly psychological true to life as Iknow it. It has brought out strong emotion¬al responses in everyone I know who hasread it. Dealing with feelings of grandio¬sity and failure, it's a must for anyone tak¬ing incompletes along for the summer.MIMarvin Zonis (Associate Professor, Be¬havioral Sciences): I'm going to read D M.Thomas's The White Ho1el and six Phd.dissertations — I'll probably have to rfeadthem first. I recommend the Bible.*- notenough people read i.t.1drTONIGHTU. C. Folklore SocietypresentsThe Best In Bluegrass.THE DRY BRANCHFIRE SQUAD8:30 pmIda Noyes Hall$4 S3 studentsThe University of ChicagoDEPARTMENT OF MUSICFridayMay 29SaturdayMay 30ThursdayJune 4 COLLEGIUM MUSICUM: MOTET CHOIRHoward M Brown, Director8:00 pm f-ree Bond ChapelMusic tor My Lady - Choral and Instrumental Music fromthe Ibth CenturyUNIVERSITY SYMPHONY ORCHESTRABarbara Schubert, ConductorDeborah Dratteli, Guest Conductor8:30 p m f-ree Mandel HallSchubert, Symphony No. ti; Brahms. Shicksalslied Iwith chorusI;Stravinsky. BetrouchkaNOONTIME CONCERT:Jeff Kallberg, Piano12 15 p m |-ree Goodspeed HallMo/art. Sonata in L. K U2; Chopin, l our Mazurkas, op 24CHAMBER MUSIC SERIES 1981-82Information and subscriptions availableat Concert Office, Goodspeed ill)m D0C III USTonight: 5 Classic Horror Flims, All for One Admission6:15 Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee inthe horror of dracula7:45 Peter Lorre in rrminrocTHE BEAST WITH FIVE FINGERS9:25 Boris Karloff and an all-star cast inBRIDE OF FRANKENSTEIN10:55 Vincent Price inTHE TOMB OF LIGEIA (Cinema Scope)12:50 Val Lewton and Jacques Tourneur’sTHE LEOPARD MANTomorrow night at 7:15 and 9:30Burton and Taylor howling all through the night in Mike Nichols multi-Oscar-winning film ofEdward Albee's WHO’S AFRAID OF VIRGINIA WOLF?Sunday at 8: Satyjat Ray’sDAYS AND NIGHTS IN THE FORESTAll films in Cobb Hall.“Touch of Class”Semi-formal DancefeaturingBB SpinOpen Bar, Hors d’ oeurvesTuesday, June 99 p.m. Quadrangle Club$5 tickets in advanceon sale at RCBO Sat., May 30Seniors and their guestsSENIOR DISORIENTATIONCelebrate the coming of graduation....Friday, June 5Musical Entertainment atThe Pub, Ida Noyes10:00 p.m.MiAN EVENING WITHCHICAGO’S ARTISTIC DIRECTORStheir favorite pieces:Gregory Mosher, Goodman Theatre4*Cindy Sherman, St. Nicholas TheaterJason Brett, Apollo TheaterJames O’Reilly, Body Politic TheatreNicholas Rudall, Court TheatreVal Gray Ward, Kuumba WorkshopRobert Falls, Wisdom Bridge TheatreStuart Gordon, Organic TheaterBrad Hall, Practical TheaterJeff Hagedorn, Theater BabylonEric Steiner, North Light RepertoryArnie Saks, Travel Light TheatreChuck Smith, Amistad ProductionsArnold April!, City Lit TheaterReading fromMONDAYJUNE 8 D0"' e,t*me ,7:30p.m.Tickets $5.50/$5*CALL 443-3800'Stud*ntt/S*mort/A I C Mimbcrt SubtcrlbcrtKaooamanJColumbus Or at Monroa St./Chicago-GREY CITY JOURNAL ■FRIDAY 29 MAY 1981 -/'\ m a ® C\P) id [71 CJO £ ■ 3* Li's" ■© b dr VFILM tral literature: Franz Schubert'sSymphony No. 8 in B Minor, D.759,known as the "Unfinished,” underthe baton of guest conductor Deborah Drattell; Johannes Brahms'sSchicksalslied, Op. 54, for which theUniversity Symphony Orchestrawill be joined by the UniversityChorus (Rodney Wynkoop, Direc¬tor); and Igor Stravinsky's complete ballet Petrouchka, performedin the revised 1947 version. Both theBrahms and the Stravinsky workswill be conducted at the concert byBarbara Schubert, Music Directorand Conductor of the UniversitySymphony Orchestra. The threeworks that will be performed on Saturday night's concert have presented the 110 piece University Symphony Orchestra with a richlearning experience over the courseof spring quarter. Schubert's "Un¬finished" Symphony demands bothtechnical precision and artisticsubtlety from each and everymember of the orchestra, for onlythrough the most careful shaping ofall musical details is Schubert's familiar masterpiece able to speakanew to players and audience alike.Brahms's Schicksalslied exhorts theorchestra to heighten its technicalfluency and develop its coloristicsensibility, as well as to interactwith human voices in an unusuallysophisticated manner. And Stravinsky's vibrant ballet score presUofC ORCHESTRA FINALE ents a virtually unparalleled oppor¬tunity for the musicians to mastercertain rhythmic and technical prin¬ciples of playing, and to confront thefresh, dramatic originality of Stravinsky's youthful style. Admissionto the University Symphony Orchestra's May 30th concert is withoutticket and without charge. Thedoors will open at 8:00 p.m.Jeff's Horror Nite: To get you in themood for finals, Doc presents theirthird annual night of monsters andmayhem. The range of films beingshown is impressive, and reveals justhow much variety there has been with¬in this underappreciated genre. Justas a personal note: two of tonight's of¬ferings — The Beast with Five Fingersand The Leopard Man — contain thesequences that have most persistentlycropped up in my nightmares since Ifirst saw them twelve years ago. TheHorror of Dracula (Terence Fisher,1958): Christopher Lee's urbane Countputs Frank Langellas recentcampy/sexy interpretation to shame,in this, the best of the Hammer Studiocycle of horror flicks. This entry wasmade before the series degeneratedinto anything for a thrill campiness;it's a handsome, stylish, and wittyproduction, and lots of good dirty fun.Tonight at 6:15 in Quantrell. The Beastwith Five Fingers (Robert Florey,1946): A brilliant pianist (Victor Fran-cen) suffers a stroke, and trains himself to play just as well with his onegood hand. Then he dies, but his handremains to haunt his amanuensis(Peter Lorre) — no pun intended. Thegenuine chills are undermined bysome feeble humor, but it's effectivenonetheless, and represents the lastflowering of the old Hollywood studiohorror films. Tonight at 7:45 The Brideof Frankenstein (James Whale, 1935):One of the all-time greats. It starts offwith Mary Shelley telling us thatthere's more to the old story than wastold in the original Frankenstein. Itseems the monster (Boris Karloff)escaped the avenging mob, and nowthe good doctor (Colin Clive) is con¬structing a mate for him (Elsa Lan-chester, giving her lungs a good air¬ing). The unsurpassed productionvalues and the elegant photography byJohn Mescall contribute to makingthis an even better film than its illus¬trious predecessor. Tonight at 9:25.The Tomb of Ligeia (Roger Corman,1964): The last Corman/VincentPrice/Edgar Allen Poe collaboration,and not quite up to the standards of theearlier entries, if only because of thegratuitous intricacies of the plot. (Thescreenplay is by Robert Towne, whoeventually mastered such intricaciesin Chinatown.) Still, it's a visually richfilm, and Corman's talents as a met-teur en scene have never been more inevidence. Vincent Price stars as aman terrorized by the wiles of his(supposedly) dead wife and his (ap¬parently) insane new wife. . . Shadesof Vertigo. Tonight at 10:55. The Leopard Man (Jacques Tourneur, 1943):Tourneur's work with producer ValLewton represents the apotheosis of Bmovie terror; to get around budgetlimitations, Tourneur and Lewton relied more on mood than on shocking ef¬fects, and the results were a string ofthe most enduringly effective horrorfilms to come out of Hollywood TheCat People, I Walked with a Zombie,and this story of a psychopath, whofinds an ideal cover up for his crimesin the townspeople's fears of a murderous leopard. Tonight at 12:30. All filmswill be shown in Quantrell. Doc: S2.00— MADays and Nights in the Forest (SatyajitRay, 1970): This is a film by the man who put the Indian film industry on thescreen with his Apu Trilogy. It is aboutfour friends who go into the country fora holiday. And as if entering the forestof their unknown aspirations, theybegin to discover the meaning not onlyof their past, but also of what they areseeking in the future. It makes a verysatisfying film because Ray weavesthe story of the four men and a com¬mentary on Indian society, in a stylethat is both fresh and lyrical. Sunday,May 31 at 8 p.m. in Quantrell. Doc;$2.00 - YSChristmas In July (Preston Sturges,1940): Dick Powell writes an ad campaign and wakes up to find himselffamous. Unseen, but Sturges alwaysmerits a recommendation in this col¬umn. Wednesday, June 3, at 8:30 inLaw School Auditorium. LSF; $2.00.Bedazzled (Stanley Donen, 1967): Required of all would-be graduates. Sat¬urday, June 6, at 7:15 and 9:30 in Quan¬trell. Doc; $2.00. Julie Andrews passholders admitted free.A Chump At Oxford (Alfred Goulding,1940): Laurel and Hardy desecrate thehallowed halls. Wednesday, June 10 at8:30 in Law School Auditorium. LSF;$2.00.Dr. Strangelove (Stanley Kubrick,1964): The end of the world, at the rateof one laugh every twenty seconds.Why is this the last movie being shownon campus this year? Thursday, June11 at 7 and 9:30 in Law School Auditoriurn. LSF; $2.00.Who's Afriad of Virgina Woolf (Mike Nichols 1966): Believe it or not, Eliza¬beth Taylor and Richard Burton couldact on the screen together, and this adaptation of the Edward Albee play isthe proof. Burton is a tired middle-aged college professor married to a sardonic, seductive Taylor. They in¬vite a young professor (George Segal)and his wife (Sandy Dennis) over oneevening, and the talkathon begins. TheBurton and Taylor characters are misanthropes who gain strength onlythrough the humiliation of the other,while Segal and Dennis are at once fa¬scinated, revolted and drawn into thestormy relationship. A disturbing filmthat will make you wonder what kindof person you'll be in twenty years.Saturday, May 30, at 7:15 & 9:30 inQuantrell. Doc, $2 — NMHis Girl Friday (Howard Hawks, 1940):The best American sound comedy isalso the fastest. Hawks rewrote BenHecht and Charles MacArthur's TheFront Page, making reporter HildyJohnson a woman (Rosalind Russell)— not incidentally, one of the most pro¬vocative and profound portrayals of awoman in a man's world that Hol¬lywood has to offer. As her former hus¬band and editor who'll do anything toget a story or her, Cary Grant is bril¬liant. As always with Hawks' come¬dies, don't blink or you'll miss some¬thing priceless. Monday, June 1 at 8 inQuantrell. Citizen's Party; 50c — MAGrapes of Wrath (John Ford 1940): Thisadaptation of the Steinbeck novel is aneffective blend of New Deal politicsand genuine human drama. The Joadfamily is forced to seek migrant workin California when its native Oklahoma becomes the Dust Bowl during theDepression. Henry Fonda gives hisbest performance as Tom Joad, theson back from prison. Tom Joad doeshis best to keep the family afloat whileworking within the established systern, but he begins to realize the oldsystem has no intention of letting himor his family survive. The catalyst inTom's transformation is his old friend(John Carradine) who tries to organize the migrant workers. The case forgovernment largesse may be overstated and may seem outdated in the Reagan era, but few of us who were bornafter World War II has had to observesuch a widespread threat of starvationin this country. Friday, June 12 at 8p.m. in Quantrell. Citizens films: 50c— NMBlack Independent Cinema, USA: A festival of documentaries and shorts byindependent black filmmakers will beheld at the South Shore High SchoolAuditorium, 76th at Constance, fromJune 12 to June 18. Opening withCharles Burnette's Killer of Sheep,winner of the Critics Prize at the 1981Berlin International Film Festival, theseries includes works by WarringtonHudlin, Ayoka Chenzira, and JackieShearer. For ticket information, callAndrea Bailey at 472 6550.GREY CITY JOURNAL Spring Concert — To culminate aseason filled with musical chal¬lenges and artistic accomplishments, the University SymphonyOrchestra will present its springconcert on Saturday night, May 30,at 8:30 p.m. in Mandel Hall. Thisfinal concer of the Orchestra's1980 81 season will feature three di¬verse masterpieces of the orchesPost Libris: The last SG coffeehouse ofthe year with the jazzo Post Libris:Coach Sims and Speedy will play theirjazz at the last SG coffeehouse of theyear. Tonight at 9:30 at Ida Noyes.Free.Kenwood Academy Music: Featuring anoriginal operatic version of Cinderella,along with Cavalleria Rusticana byMascagni, the Choral Department willpresent concerts Saturday at 7 pm andSunday at 4 pm. Kenwood Academy,5015 S. Blackstone Ave.Robin Lane & the Chartbusters: Out ofBoston, this band brings their,rock'n'roll excitement to the IdaNoyes Gym next Friday, June 5 at 9pm. $2 with UCID, $4 other.1-House Music: This Sunday at 7:30, International House will present its thirdannual concert of experimental musicwith works by Joe Jones, TheodoreLucas, LaMonte Young, and GeorgeTHESATURDAY'Daily News": a performance. By Richard Flink in collaboration with: TomBlackman, Laura Cottingham, MikeDonaghy, George Horner, TherezaLanitis, Clar Monaco, Andrea Silver-man. Date: Sunday, June 7, 1981.Time: say, seven-ish. Place: MidwayStudios Gallery at The University ofChicago 6016 So. Ingleside. Brecht among others. Both musiciansand "non-musicians" are welcome toparticipate in this performance; cal!Paul at 753-0277 if interested.Collegium Musicum-Motet Choir:Directed by Howard M. Brown, thisensemble will perform tonight, May29, in Bond Chapel at 8:00 pm. Free.University Symphony Orchestra: Intheir final concert of the year, the or¬chestra will play works by Schubert,Brahms, and Stravinsky Saturdaynight, May 30, in Mandel Hall at 8 30pm. FreeLes Noces: Rodney Wynkoop will conduct a performance of the music fromStravinsky's ballet, scored for chorus,soloists, four pianos and percussionensemble this Sunday at 4:00 pm inMandel Hall. Admisson is $4, 52 forstudents and senior citizens.Dry Branch Fire Squad: With virtuosityand brilliance, mandolinist Ron Tho¬mason will lead this Springfield, Ohioband through their repertoire of bljegrass and old-time country music to¬night, May 29, at 8:30 at Ida Noyes $4,$3 for students.OTHERHaymarket Fundraiser: Party, Party,Music, Dance. Tonight, 9:00 pm 2:00am. 5343 South Harper. SI donation.Save the Blue Gargoyle Food ServiceDay: Works by local artists will be displayed and chili and pizza will be onspecial on Tuesday, June 2 as custom¬ers are urged to come and show theirsupport for this vegetarian food ser¬vice. Options for survival are to be eftscussedHot Dogs: The hot dog stand at FullertonParkway and the lakefront is food forthought for a group of young Chicagoarchitects whose work in drawingsand models will be on display at theMoMing Gallery, 1034 West Barry,from June 5 July 18.Writers in Performance: This serieswhich opened with a reading by Ten¬nessee Williams will conclude Monday, June 8 at 7:30 pm with "An Evening with Chicago's ArtisitcDirectors." Featured among thereaders will be Nicholas Rudell, artistic director of Court Theatre, andJames O'Reilly, artistic director of theBody Politic Theatre, who frequentlyacts and directs at Court.29 Mav 1981 - .. f , II r^ 113th Year - T * Y p j ‘ J :n u r a ,33rd Issue CL © J C ,1 ° nGary Beberman, Brad Brittan, Leland Chait, Peter T. Daniels, Stu Feldstein, Richard Flink, Susan Franusiak, Jim Guenther, Jack Helbig, Richard Kaye, Carol Klammer, Jeff Makos, David Miller, Neil Miller, DanilaOder, Mark Pohl, Renee Saracki, Margaret Savage, Bruce Shapiro,Andre Staskowski Hvolbek, Andrea Thompson, Michele White, BrentWiden, K. G. Wilkens, David Waldman, Ken Wissoker.Mike Alper, film editorAndrea Thompson, book editorEdited by Laura CottinghamProduction this week by Laura Cottingham and Susan Franusiakthe grey city journal is published weekly by The Chicago Maroon, IdaNoyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th Street, Chicago, Illinois 60637. For advertisinginformation, call Wanda at 753-FAME. MUSICFRIDAY 29 MAY 1981 3I AM CINEMAGCJ: How did you know for sure youwanted to make films as opposedto write?MP: Oh well when I was young, ev¬erybody intelligent was interestedin films. It was a long time ago.That's even in the silent era. Itwas quite different then. It was anew form of...telling a story, a newform of expression. There were nolanguage barriers of any kind.You could make any films youliked. (Pause) You could satisfyyour own national public. Youcould exchange them to any othercountry abroad. You didn't have todub anything. You just had torewrite the titles in a different lan¬guage. It was a very social media.It's a great pity it never went.What we're seeing now is a slightrevival of interest because of thesuccess of Napolean, which is a si¬lent film presented as silent filmsused to be with a full symphony or¬chestra and sound effects(laughs). I like Napolean's beinga big success from its point of viewof it being a good film. In otherwords, I was trained to make filmsas images and I'm interested inpeople's faces. I'm not interestedin being clever, clever, clever andfollowing them all around theplace with a steadi-cam and shoot¬ing them always in profile. Myfilms are usually built up from re¬actions and human emotions, andfor that you'd better get in close.That's what films are about.They're about a lot of other thingstoo but the most interesting thingis that you photograph thought.ROYAL CINEMAGCJ: Do you find that in trying toappeal to a commercial audiencethat you are being restricted interms of what you say in yourfilms?MP: Of course, of course. •••You're asking a very importantquestion. It's the most importantquestion. It's exactly like writinganywhere. Where's your market?Can you get into it? Uh...from theFrench point of view, the Frenchdon't have to worry, the cleverFrench people like Louis Mallewith Atlantic City and Truffautand people like that and Jan LucGodard too, are interested in mak¬ing some films with an Americaninterest or American slant butthey're not going to give up theirpersonality toward that becausethe French quite rightly are veryproud of their film industry.They've always had a film in-dustrys, they will always have afilm industry. It will always beFrench. They have an inexhaust¬ible supply of wonderful youngwomen who seem to be able to actthe ass off any other woman. Really amazing. And the French likethe French films. They adoreAmerican films but if they had tochoose, they would have French.And of course, they have to makethis choice because they'reFrench and because their public ismainly French. And*we, our publie, you see is not devoted to us atall. They understand the Englishlanguage, that means they're notdevoted. They're open wide ontelevision to television series fromAmerica and they're open wide onthe cinemas and that’s why thegovernment a lorig t:me ago, inrlposed a certain protest that if youplayed a lot of American films in your cinemas then you had to playa certain percentage of Englishfilms. Although I benefitted fromit some times, I'm not in favor ofthat. I'm not in favor of any re¬strictions. I think there should bebloody good films in English madein England which would be accept¬ed with delight and joy in Americabecause they're different. Now, upto now, up to ten years ago whenfilms were plentiful, they were notreceived with delight and joy.They were received with moans,''Oh, another goddamn Britishfilm. Never going to understand aword they say.''GCJ: The British people, your audience, it seems as if part of the im¬position; to pay a tax to showmany American films had to dowith the fact that British audi¬ences wanted to see Americanfilms more than they want to seeBritish films.MP: No. There were more of them.We're talking about a time whenthe whole of the world was clut¬tered by American films. This isno longer the case.GCJ: So it had more to do withwhere the capital was to startfilms off.MP: But still I'm not in favor of anyrestriction of any kind. (Pause)Just as when television finallycame in in England, the film busi¬ness tried to hide it and I thought itwas ridiculous. Just another formof distribution, that's all.A HUNGARIANGCJ: I'd like to get to your relation¬ship with Emeric Pressburger. Itsounds like he would come up withsome sort of story and you wouldadopt it...MP: Usually it was his original idea,and then we would both develop ittogether.GCJ: What about with direction?MP: Oh, I directed it. He couldn'tdirect anything. He's too intro¬verted, too quiet.GCJ: Was '57 the last year you madea film together?MP: Umm.GCJ: Why did you split up?MP: It was my doing not his. Ithought we were getting into a bitof a rut. We went back to Kordathinking we could do more withhim and it, we weren't nearly asfree as before the war. We foundthat he had too many obligationsand contracts already and theywere bound to influence our deci¬sions. The result was we madefour films of which I had onlywanted to do two. The other two Ididn't want to do. I never thought Iwould be in a position where I hadto make films I didn't want tomake. Emeric was very indepen¬dent. He's actually a lion of inde¬pendence but all the same he's aHungarian like Korda. I said let'sget out of here, and he agreed.Then we lined up a film with Au¬drey Hepburn and Mel Ferrer andit came to nought after six monthswork. So then we did the Battle ofthe River Plate. It was about thefinding and the defeat of the GrafSpee (WWII German warship) offthe coast of Montivideo. SouthAmerica. Did you ever see it? It'srather a fine sort of war film. I'venever made one before It wasrather fun. And I had most of theBritish navy to play with. It was abig success, l-n fact it was the biggest commercial success I've everhad. It was made for about 300,000pounds, i was a bit unhappy abou"it because i was tied down to the facts too much. This was a histori¬cal thing. I found lots of things todo which made up for my generaldissatisfaction and dealing withfacts. I'm not crazy about facts. Infact, I'm quite resentful aboutthem.BUNUELGCJ: There are ways in which youdeal so much with fantasy or withthe supernatural...MP: Fantasy yes, but supernaturalno. Just fantasy. So does Bunuelwho is the only master I reallywould admit to.'He's better than Iam. I think he's a very great talent. He can do practically anything.GCJ: But Bunuel seems more to attack ideas and you seem to museon them. Do you know what Imean?MP: Hmmm,..Whe.n it's a questionof religion, well of course.GCJ: It's difficult to exactly tellwhat it is you really want to say, or what your axe is to grind? I knowyou don't need to have one butthat's one of the things that makesyou most interesting as a film¬maker. It's really evident that ifyou see two of Godard's films youknow what he wants. Bunuel too, Ithink it's real evident especiallywith regards to religion and capi¬talism. I'm trying to get something out of you that you don't putin your films.MP: No. Bunuel's middle films weremostly about religion. But hislater films have been about thebourgeoisie. And he's just havingfun.GCJ: (Incredulous) You think he'sjust having fun?!!!MP: Oh yeahGCJ: You don't think he means it?MP: No.GCJ: He can't just make a film likeThe Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie and not mean any of it?AAP: I think he's having a wonderfultime. Wouldn't you like to have allthat money to spend and make funof the bourgeoisie? PEEPBY LAURA COTTINGHPHOTOS BY LAURA CGODARDGCJ: How do you feel about film Gbeing used as a vehicle forchange?MP: It's marvelous.GCJ: What do you think about someof the more directly politicalthings, say Godard works wherehe attempts to utilize Neo Realismwith...MP: Well, Godard does really per¬sonal films and one hopes and believes that he really believes what t\he...hopes (chuckle).GCJ: What do you mean by person¬al. I would say Godard makes politicai films as opposed to personal.MP: Yeah, but I don't think he's Gpulling our leg. Do you? hGCJ: What do you mean?MP: These films that he makeswhich are supposed to be aboutpolitics, pornography, this, thatand the other, do you think he real¬ly means it or do you think he'spulling our leg?GCJ: I'd like to believe the man justbecause... vMP: I could believe anything of Go¬dard. A wicked, wicked individu-GCJ: Wicked? SMP: A man who gives nothingaway. <GCJ: What do you mean?MP: Just that. fGCJ: But you seem to think Godard (isn't serious.MP: I didn't say so. tGCJ: No. You just think he has fun,and I interpreted that to mean...MP: I asked you.MP: The film that he's making nowwhich is in conjunction with Coppola will be a very good film Ithink. He's got a very good story.For a change.GCJ: What's it about?MP: I can't possibly tell you. All Ican tell you is the title. It's calledPassion.GCJ: Passion. It sounds like a Coppola film. Where's it bemgfilmed?MP: They're shooting it in SwissItaly. (Pause) But it's about asmall town where there's one littlefactory and a big movie companyis working there, it’s a very goodidea Not just an idea, a very goodstory. Which I believp is rare forhim.4 FRIDAY 29 MAY 1931 GREY CTeTpowellHAM AND RICHARD MARTINCOTTINGHAMCOPPOLAGCJ: How much do you think youshould consider speaking of politi¬cal implications of film what kindof effect your films have on youraudience. Let me give you an ex¬ample, Coppola's Apocalypse Nowwhich <n one way starts out as ananti-war film but because of the ef¬fects one could argue that it actu¬ally glorifies war. Is that at all anissue with you?MP: No. I thought he was complete¬ly successful in being honest aboutwar. In fact I thought it was themost successful American filmsince Birth of a Nation practical¬ly-GCJ: Successful in what way?MP: At taking the blame for thewhole thing on the shoulders of thefilm, like Griffith did with the CivilWar. I thought it was a very im¬pressive film but I could also seethat for Americans, it's so contro¬versial in many, many ways that itwill probably be ten years beforeyou realize what a great film it is.I felt that before I met Coppola(laughs). I may as well sav that.AMERICAGCJ: Do you have any favoriteAmerican directors?MP: In the past you mean?GCJ: Yeah or anytime. Past isfine.MP: (Pause) Yes. I always admirevery much W. S. Van Dyke. Be¬cause he's so direct and obviouslya lovely sense of humor. Anythinghe did practically was successfulexcept Marie Antoinette (laughs).I first noticed his name on a pic¬ture just between the silents andsound era, it was a picture calledWhite Shadows on the South Seasand he took the picture over fromRobert Flaherty I thought it wasbeautifully handled Up til then, hehad been making Westerns andthings like that for MGAA. Whenever they were in a mess, theyalways seemed to give him a picture to do rather like Victor Flemthat time who came from all sort;of assorted backgrounds, from nowhere practically and seemed tchave an instinctive flair for direct ing big pictures (Pause). I don'tknow where they got it from it justgrew with them. I mean, VictorFleming would make a picturelike For Whom the Bell Tolls andwould also make The Wizard of Ozand Gone With the Wind. And theyare all very good. I think a greatstory-teller and particularly somebody who can push things aroundlike that is pretty good. I alwaysadmired that. Of course, there arelots of great artists in Americanfilms but you asked me what I par¬ticularly like. Well I like that theability to take on anything and doit. And do it very well, a lovelyhumor. He directed The Thin Manas if he had directed comedy allhis life. He hadn't.SCORSESEGCJ: What about now? What aboutfilmmakers now? Are there any inthe States that you like?MP: I think Martin Scorsese's aboutthe best director I know here.GCJ: Earlier in the interview yousaid he wasn't intellectual but Never falls or rises below or abovea level of complete success. That'squite a feat because there's not agripping story just the way thingsare seen and staged.GCJ: What do you think of RagingBull? Do you think it was a suc¬cess?MP: I do. Yes. I loved it. Is it being asuccess?GCJ: The way he deals with stereo¬types is stupid, I think. Well, per¬sonally as a woman I don't appre¬ciate the machismo in all hismovies. All his mean beat up andshoot people. And any femalecharacter in any of his movies is anonexistent person, some sort ofsex object or a traditional femalepassive role. I feel that he's notchallenging himself.MP: Perhaps you should give him alittle more time. He hasn't beengoing very long has he?GCJ: He is more sensitive about hisfilms as compared to say, BrianDePalma, who I think, his vio¬lence is there just for violencesake. I feel it's sloppy. And I dofeel in a Scorsese film that there'ssomething intelligent about the MP: Funny, I don't remember thefight scenes in Raging Bull, I remember the love scenes.GCJ: Are you serious? Oh God! All Iremember is the fight scenes.MP: Do you remember the lovescene?GCJ: Ummm...no.MP: I wonder if you went there ex¬pecting him to direct a love scenelike a fight?GCJ: Well, I remember him beatinghis wife. I remember the wife get¬ting beat around and just the sameold assumption that a woman isthe property of her husband.MP: It's not fair either. It's muchmore often the wife who beats thehusband.GCJ: Is that the case? Really?MP: In lifpGCJ: Again if you want to portray itaccurately, what are you doing?Are you exposing it or are you offering it as a model?MP: I don't know. I hadn't thoughtabout it because I'm not doing it.GCJ: You made the comment thatLaura should give Scorsese achance? What did you mean?MP: I think that he will go awayvery sensitive. What did you meanby that?‘Xp: | mean he doesn't bring his intellect into show business. Hework very much. I thought MeanStrts was really a great film. somt? yucan facloi ferent k!o with York and the background that he knows sowell and also much more of astudy of a man and a woman. Ithink he will do that himself in hisown time. At present he's prettymuch used up all that he thinks,feels, smells from where he came.But l think it's a major talent. Anda world talent, very much appre¬ciated in Europe. Not just becausethey're violent American films butbecause of what he's trying to do.PEEPING TOMGCJ: How do you feel about critics?I knew that after Peeping Tommost of the critics really laid intoit for various reasons and it wasignored until Martin Scorsese rediscovered it.MP: Yes, that's right.GCJ: What do you think of critics ingeneral. Do you think they're un¬fair or unintelligent?MP: No. There was something theydidn't understand about PeepingTom. Their idea of its face valuewas very different from mine. Theface value of the film from mypoint of view was that it was atragic case for which you shouldhave compassion. Somehow thisflew by right amongst their roses.Also, I think they suspected me fora long while. And they may havesuspected me and Emeric andprobably thought, 'It's that wickedHungarian who's influencing thisbright, blue-eyed power.' And thensuddenly, well lo and behold,Powell is the demon So itcould have been that you know.Ahh! Now we know where all ofthese sadistic undertones comefrom, why Moira Shearer getshacked to pieces. It's Powell, it'snot Pressbigrger at all. Why doesthe doctor get killed so pitilessly inA Matter of Life and Death, Burntalive? It's that bloody Powellagain. So you see, this may "havepassed through their minds. I liketo mix complete realism with fantasy in that way. it gives people afrightful shock. Perhapsthey haveGCJ: That was a really powerfulitvertones we’dJRNAL *~ FR -A-•been through. I wasn't about tomake them pretty.GCJ: Susan Sontag thinks that Peeping Tom is the best film about filmthat's ever been made.MP: It probably is. I am the cinema.Practically, more or less. I joinedit when it was an infant art but justgetting to its peak as a silent art.In other words, as the best form ofcommunication between the na¬tions that ever has been. And whenwe were all in Paris, we were justswallowing Russian film afterRussian film, which were beingrushed straight from the griddle toParis and every other capital inthe world. There was no barrier inlanguage, you see and becausethey were making films for mainlyilliterate people, they invented anew form of image and cutting andthose were for peasants. So ofcourse, the intellectual swallowedit whole. There's a very thin linebetween intellectuals and pea¬sants.GCJ: Were you conscious when youmade Peeping Tom...I know youremarked last night that you weretold what the script was about andyou liked it a lot and you liked theidea.MP: There was no script then, hejust gave me the idea.GCJ: So did you consciously overlaythe structure?..MP: Not consciously, I was bound todo it because he would come everytwice a week perhaps, with whathe'd written and I would read itand say, 'Well it wouldn't happenlike that or I couldn't do it like thatand this is why.' The whole film iswritten like that from the point ofa view of an image maker and a MICHAEL POWELLword writer. (Pause) And so,since it was all about a movie stu¬dio and an assistant cameramanand using a camera, we were allexperts. We were all that already.We think with the lens. It gets thisextra dimension. At the time wewere so happy, bustling about fullof energy and good-will. Made it insix weeks. Very pleased with our¬selves. But the critics wanted toput us down the lavatory.GCJ: They all thought you werenasty.MP: You don't want to know anymore do you?GCJ: When you talk about yourfilms, you talk a lot about stories.MP: That's because we write ourown. GCJ: What do you see your filmsproviding for your audience? Doyou see yourself as a connection inthe storytelling tradition...MP: Yeah.GCJ: What do you think a storyshould be about? How do ideascome to you? Do you start withideas like what you think should betalked about?MP: Hmm.J like a film with amoral and I can't make a filmwithout a theme. I just can't.GCJ: If you were hard pressed tocommit yourself to your own senseof morality in your films whatwould it be? I think the morality inPeeping Tom is really ambiguous.Is that the intent of your statementin the film?MP: The main thing one should feelin the film is compassion. Thatwas the intention.MY MOVIESGCJ: Do you think Coppola will finance your next film?MP: Well, I can go anywhere for thefinancing. I never expected to getit from Francis anyway. It wouldreally interfere with what I wasdoing then, helping out, readingscripts, advising, consulting, dis¬cussing things. I was developingthis as a sort of sideling to be financed elsewhere. The film yousee, might be based in England orit could be based in Hollywoodwherever the budget was better. It's a studio based film but thereare some very spectacular exteri¬ors round the world in Japan andIceland, Australia. But that'squite easy. It's a matter of organi¬zation. It's a matter of organizingwith the people on the spot be¬cause obviously you're going toshoot doubles. It's like playingwar.GCJ: What about this film that youwant to make about a man and awoman? What's your idea?MP: Oh it's based on the earth/seatrilogy by Ursula K. Leguin. Ifyou've read them you know whatit's about and if you haven't readthem I advise you to. A majorwriter.GCJ: She was here on campus lastyear. I heard her speak. She spokeas a matter of fact, about storytell¬ing and narrative.MP: Did she?GCJ: Uh huh. She spoke about thecontinuity of narrative.MP: I didn't know she did much ofthat sort of thing. I've only met herthree times. She's a delightful per¬son. Charming head doesn't takemuch care of herself though. Typi-cal sort of professor's wife. Shehas really a marvelous mind. Andthe more you ask of her, the bettershe is.LJC: I'm satisfied (To Richard) Areyou?RM: Yes. (To Michael Powell) Areyou satisfied?MP: Oh yes, quite. Thank you.GCJ: Thank you.Your “Art-To-Live-With” painting must be turned in to Student Activities Rm 210, Ida Noyes Hall byWednesday, June 3. Late Charges begin Thursday, June 4: 25* per day - including weekends.If it is raining, please wrap your painting in plastic.given -¥■ -¥- -¥■ -¥■by the MAROONOpen DailyFrom 11:30 a.m.to 9:00 p.m.5228 Harper 493-2559Eat more for less“A Gold Mine Of Good Food”Student Discount:10% for table service5 % for take homeHyde Park’s Best Cantonese Food FORM AND MEANINGIN ACTION AND ARTEpic Music and SongRitual “Songs In Stone”Game SpectacleT-Th 10-11:30 Winter, SpringNCD 231-32, Hum 216-17, Soc.Sci 223-24MacAloon, Morgan, Nicholas,Olmsted, Seidel, Wegener Dr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometristI (53 Kimbark Plaza)8 1200 E. 53rd St.493-8372Intelligent people know the differencebetween advertised cheap glasses orcontact lenses and competent pro¬fessional service with quality material.Beware of bait advertising.Eye ExaminationsFashion Eye WearL Contact Lenses ALiterary ReviewDeadlines: Wednesday Noon for alldisplay and classified advertising.No CaleJendarCall Wanda or Leslie, 753-3263for advertising information.GREY CITY JOURNAL6 FRIDAY 29 MAY 1981Atlantic CityDirected by Louis MalleScreenplay by Jon QuareStaring Burt La"r^*Br. Kate Reid,a-d Saliv Saradon i*Sandburg TheaterBy RICHARD MARTIN"Those who say we're in a timewhen there are no heroes — they justdon't Know where to look."Ronald Reagan, Inaugural AddressWe are at the heart of a movie traditionwhich has been and still remains con¬cerned with the acts which shape the char¬acter and development of American cul¬ture. As a supreme medium for themeaningful development of action, themovies are peculiarly suited to makesense of the process of definition under¬gone by the United States and her inhabi¬tants: the attempt to answer the question"What is an America/American?" Frenchdirector Louis Malle and American play¬wright John Guare have collaborated tomake Atlantic City , a movie which at¬tempts to answer this question.The action takes place in Atlantic Citywhich, since New Jersey legalized gam¬bling there in 1976, is now on its chaoticway to becoming the East Coast version ofLas Vegas. We've all heard the stories —partly truthful, partly media hype — aboutthe horrific effects the gambling industryhas had on Atlantic City: small businessesare forced to close down; historical build¬ings are destroyed to make room for thehotel-casinos; the poor become gamblingjunkies. Although Atlantic City touchesupon these issues, Malle and Guare haveforsaken the potentially sensational andhave chosen to portray the city with docu¬mentary-like coolness, holding back andkeenly observing. Thus, the city becomes abackdrop against which the characters areportrayed: and their situations are pre¬sented so personally that we feel directorand playwright share genuine respect andconcern for their characters. This dicho¬tomy of style within the movie — documen¬tary and personal portrayal — allow us tosee both the frantic aspects of Atlantic City— its constant destruction and construc¬tion, its decay and renewal — and the ef¬fects of isolation and social alienation itproduces in its inhabitants.But alienation and isolation are commonto inhabitants of any modern city. Whatmakes the characters of Atlantic City — orthe inhabitants of any American City — sodistinctly American is the way in whichthey confront their environment with a neurotic sense of identity, neurotic be¬cause it is influenced by gangsters andmovie stars. Lou (Burt Lancaster), an old-timer, dreams of the old days of Al Ca¬pone, Lucky Luciano, and Bugsy Segal;Grace (Kate Reid), Lou's hypochondriacemployer and keeper, came to AtlanticCity forty years ago for a Betty Grablelook-alike contest; Sally (Susan Saran¬don), a backcountry girl from Saskat¬chewan, Canada, hopes someday to makeit in Monte Carlo, "just like Grace Kelly."Early in the film, when a rambling oldresort hotel crumbles to make room for anew hotel-casino, the film takes up thestory of another relic — Lou, concentrat¬ing on his relationship with his twentyishneighbor, Sally. Although they live in thesame apartment building, their mutualknowledge is strictly vicarious: Lou, whocan see into Sally's apartment from hisbedroom window, watches her nightly ritu¬al of rubbing fresh lemon juice on theupper part of her body; Sally knows Lou'sname from his mailbox. They are also mu¬tually dependent on the gambling in¬dustry: Lou scrounges for a living as arunner, making the rounds in AtlanticCity's slums and picking up dollar bets; Sally waitresses at the Oyster Bar in theResort's International Hotel during thedays, training at night to be a croupier.The washed-up Lou and the social-climb¬ing Sally cross paths when Sally's husbandand her sister (pregnant by him) come toAtlantic City. They ask to crash at herplace until they can sell a bag of cocainethat they had stolen from some thugs inPhiladelphia. Sally's husband approachesLou and asks the old man to help him find abuyei for the dope. After Sally's husbandis brutally murdered by the thugs fromPhili, Lou inherits the rest of the dope,finally getting to play the part of agangster he never was. With his new foundwealth and self-confidence Lou woos Sallywho is eager to learn about the world, and,as little as he knows, he's a font ofknowledge compared with her. But Lou isall appearance. When the thugs beat upSally, thinking that she's carrying thereset of the dope, Lou doesn't defend her.When Grace, who has known Lou for fortyyears, learns that Lou didn't fight for the"defenseless" Sally, she razzes him, say¬ing he's always been a coward and callinghim by his old nickname, "numb nuts."Lou is backed into a corner: he realizes he's not a "man" and never has been. Nowhe's forced to act. Lou sets himself up withthe thugs, knowing well that these ma¬chine like gangsters will kill him if theydon't get their hands on the dope. Lou andSally are again attacked by the thugs, butthis time Lou acts, pulling out a gun andblowing them away. Lou is now in thesame league as his heroes Al Capone andBugsy Segal — he's finally killed a man.After the murder, Lou and Sally leaveAtlantic City and hold out in a hotel. ThereLou watches the local television stationdramatically report the murder via their"eye cam" reporting unit; Lou sees a com¬posite drawing of himself flashed on thescreen, later his picture is in all thepapers. Lou's identity as a gangster, hismachismo is re-enforced by the media. Hehas become a media movie star.The way Lou reacts to his environmentand the people in his life reflects Malle'sand Guare's appraisal of the American di¬lemma: because we are so young, void ofan established culture and still searchingfor a national identity, we are forced to actin order to define the most rudimentaryborders of our identity. And film and elec¬tronic media play an influential role inshaping and perpetuating this attitude.Although Atlantic City superbly docu¬ments both how Americans are forced toact in order to define their identity, and themedia's role in re-enforcing and glorifyingviolent acts, Malle and Guare accept thesephenomena too passively. Atlantic City isa fairy tale of American machismo. At theend of the movie, after Lou and Sally fleeAtlantic City, they decide to go their sepa¬rate ways: Sally drives off into the sunsetwith visions of Monte Carlo dancing in herhead; Lou returns to Atlantic City and isreunited with Grace and at peace with thecity he had earlier despised. When youleave Atlantic City you feel light headed,feeling as if America's problems — ourneurotic sense of identity, our penchant forviolence — are just a passing phase in thelarger scheme of America's history. Butshould we be left with such a feeling of pas¬sive acceptance, acceptance of the ma¬chismo mentality that Lou emulates, thata man must be a defender of women andthe murderer of other men in order to de¬fine his masculinity?On most levels Atlantic City is an excep¬tional film: intelligently directed, inter¬esting to watch, visually engaging, andwell cast (Burt Lancaster gives one of hisbest performances to date). But on a the¬matic level — the meat of the film — Atlan¬tic City is a disappointment. It does not gofar enough: a film that is adventurousenough to address the question of thepower of the media to shape the social atti¬tudes of its audience, it should also becourageous enough to be conscious ofmodels that it offers its audience. AtlanticCity does not study American machismo;it asserts it./I■l PRIME RIB SPECIAL$£95Includes baked potato, vegetable of the day,house salad. Beverage extra. Coupon mustbe presented; one coupon per person.Monday thru Saturday 5:30 till 10 p.m.CHARTWELL HOUSEat the HYDE PARK HILTON288-5800 4900 South Lake Shore Drive X mIii■iJFRIDAY 29 MAY 1981 -GREY CITY JOURNAL-Margaret,su"9/asse< Rj chard \V a £ *€ f\r\dj?PORTRAIT$pecta,(/VP * cUMV' f knis 4-4*Ren*e Sar ac kiJeff Mako ' Laura com,n9 hamVf € 5Richard Kaye in the centerr*ura Comsome photos by LJC nOhamV.M 5=2video Atari Games,Recorders. Movies,Accessories,Giant T. V. THE HYDE PARKVIDEOMOVIECENTER1605 E. 55th (next to Morry’s Deli)ftt-Thur. 10-6 288-3600Friday 10-9Sat. 10-6Ask about ourMOVIE CLUBS288-3600 The one stopstore for all yourvideo needs: Sales,service, movie rentals, trades,blank tapes, film to tape transfers and ...we deliverDR. M.R. MASLOVOPTOMETRIST•Eye Examinations•Contact Lenses(Soft & Hard) BAUSCH&LOM8SOFLENSfpoiymacon)i Contact lenses;* Ask about our annual service agreement•Fashion Eye WearHYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th 363-6100 CHINESE-AMERICAi'tRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOpen Daily11 AM to 8:30 PMClosed Monday1318 EAST 63rdMU 4-1062 SPECIAL DISCOUNT PRICESL for all STUDENTS, STAFF,V and FACULTY MEMBERSJust present your University ofChicogo Identification Card. Asstudents, Faculty Members or Ad¬ministrative Staff you are entitledto special money-saving DIS¬COUNTS on Chevrolet Parts Ac¬cessories and any new or usedChevrolet you buy from RubyChevrolet.UmA CLMtStCM HvuSPECIAL DISCOUNT PRICESfor all STUDENTS, STAFF,k and FACULTY MEMBERS Parts OpenSat.'til noonJust Present your University ofChicago Identification Card. Asstudents, Faculty Members orAdministrative Staff you are en¬titled to special money-savingDISCOUNTS on Volkswagen Parts.Accessories and any new or usedVolkswagen you buy from RubyVolkswagen.2 Miles-5 MinutesAway FromThe UNIVERSITYSTANLEY 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 DENTAL BOARDSPODIATRY BOARDSFlexible Programs and HoursVisit Any Center And See ForYourseH Why We Make Tr»eDifferenceTEST PREPARATIONSPECIALISTS SINCE 1938Centers m Major U S CitiesPuerto RicoToronto Canada 4 ZurichSwitzerlandHiEducation Centers131 W 56th StNEW YORK 10019CHICAGO CENTER6216 N ClarkChicago. Illinois 60660(312) 764-5151S W SUBURBAN19 S La Grange Road/Suite 201La Grange. Illinois 60525(312) 352-5640•NORTH 5 N W SUBURBAN474 Central AveyUpper Mall LevelHighland Park. Illinois 60035(312) 433-7410•not acl courses available SPRING, SUMMERFALL INTENSIVESCOURSES STARTINGTHIS MONTH4 wk/LSAT...GMATNEXT MONTHSummertime MCAT, SAT, ACT4 wk/GMATCourses Constantly UpdatedLicensing Exams m Canter Sell-StudyFor mtomwlon About 0**r Certsr* w Mora Than 80 Major US Cities & AbroadOUTSIOE N Y STATE CALL TOLL FREE 80^223 1782 SUMMER EMPLOYMENTwith a future...Environmentally related constructiontype work in and around ChicagoWE ARE ASBESTOSABATEMENT SPECIALISTSWe are hiring now and paying a good hourly wage you shouldbe healthy with some manual work experience phone 312-228-0550 for information aboutASBESTOS CONTROL INCORPORATEDMt. Prospect. II.AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYERUgh) Duckling$13.50 per day 200 Free MilesB“rnTers 667-2800 Walnut Wood DesksSpecial$135.00 ^Ifcgr^iifLots of Chairs,Files and UsedOffice EquipmentDelivery AvailableBRAND EQUIPMENT8560 S. Chicago RE 4-2111Open Doily 8:30-5, Sot. 9:00-3New and RebuiltTypewriters,Calculators,Dictators, AddersCasioHewlett PackardTexas InstrumentCanonSharpElectronic WatchesU. of ChicagoBookstoreTypewriter & Calculator Dept. 970 E. 58th2nd Floor753-3303 REPAIRSPECIALISTSon IBM, SCM,Olympia, etc.FREE repairestimates; repairsby factory-trainedtechnician.RENTALSavailable withU. of C. I D. marian realty,inc.mBCAllOfiStudio and 1 BedroomApartments Available— Students Welcome —On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-5400The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 29, 1981 — 17SPORTSA Final Look at Spring SportsBy John CondasMen's Top Ten1. See Your Food2. Mean Old Squirrels3. Med School4. Who Needs Sweaty5. Feel Your Disease6. N.U.T.S.7. Lower Rickert8. Chamberlain9. Nabobs10. HitchcockHonorable Mention: We B Bad, Henderson, Commuters, Step Aside Buddy, HaleGreenwoodMen EndCrew WithUpsetsBy Turner Cromwell With the quarter almost complete, springsports have followed suit and have all con¬cluded or soon will conclude as well. I havetried to compile some short reviews of allthe spring varsity sports, although these areby no means exhaustive.SWIMMING: Although swimming is not aspring sport, the men’s team had four swim¬mers who qualified and attended the Divi¬sion III National Tournament over springbreak: Phil Hofmann, Mike Noble, AndyNeff, and Frank Bozich.BASEBALL: The team battled rain-outsalmost as often as opponents, but still fin¬ished with a eight and nine record. ByronTrott and Dean Carpenter both made theMidwest Conference Second team. ByronTrott also won the most valuable playeraward. Thanks to Jon Satin for freezing dur¬ing those balmy April and May home gamescovering the team.The University of Chicago baseball teamfinished the season on Saturday with a doub¬leheader at Concordia College. The Maroonswon the first game 11-3 behind strong pitch¬ing by Jon Winkelried. Winkelried raised hisfinal season record to 4-2. The Maroonsdropped the second game, 4-3. Don Ciciora started and Jim Maranto and Nick Varsampitched in relief.SOFTBALL: A young women’s softballteam finished the season with a near-.500 re¬cord. They were led by senior Mary Kle-mundt and freshman Karen Kitchen. MaryKlemundt was named the team’s MVP.Thanks to Kittie Wyne, who managed tocover their games even while playing on theteam.MEN’S TRACK: The men captured astrong third place finish in the Midwest Con¬ference Indoor meet, while placing fifth inthe Conference outdoor meet. The men alsohad several competitors in the prestigiousDrake Relays. Dave Green and Mike Axinnboth competed in the Division III NationalMeet held in Cleveland.WOMEN’S TRACK: The women did wellboth indoors and out, especially at home,capturing first place finishes in both an in¬door and outdoor tournament held at Chica¬go. They also captured a strong fourth placefinish in the Illinois Division III meet. Thewomen were led by MVP Carole Petersen,sophomore Alison O’Neill, and freshmenKarin VanSteenlandt and Helen Straus.Thanks to H.L. Sirull for her coverage of theteam.TENNIS: The tennis team posted a win¬ning season, defeating several strong teams during the season. They finished third in theMidwest Conference tournament. The teamwill be returning nearly all players nextyear, so high hopes for them in the futureare justified. Thanks again to Kittie Wyneand to Coach Simms for his excellent photo¬graphs.That covers it for the spring. I realize thatI did not cover as much sports as I shouldhave, but it’s not easy following five varsitysports, several club sports, and interestingfeatures with a full-time staff of one. Anyonewho is interested in writing next year, by allmeans contact Audrey Light or Chris Isi¬dore, because the sports staff has neverbeen plagued by overcrowded conditions.Also, in IM Soccim, Ting and the LiberalTradition measured up to “tough graduatestandards” and won the men’s champion¬ship, upholding the honor of varsity sports.Finally, because Dave Gruenbaum wasmore concerned with men’s soccim, re¬member that the Dudly Swine won thewomen’s championship, upsetting the In¬sane Unknowns, 2-1. The Swine were led allyear by leading goal scorers Sue Adelhardtand outstanding goalkeeper Helen Straus.With my one last potshot at IM’s taken, Ihave one last request: please have a nicesummer.Food is Top Contender inBattle for Softball CrownBy David GruenbaumThe University of Chicago men’s crewteam ended its spring season on an upbeatnote by defeating Michigan State and GrandValley State in a 500 meter dash and finish¬ing second to Michigan State in a 2.000meter race Saturday. The coaches of bothrivals were startled by the strong ChicagoA-boat performance. Paul Springer, of hostGrand Valley, expressed his complimentsby observing that Chicago was “no longerthe doormat of the Midwest.” Grand Valleyhas one of two varsity crew teams in theMidwest and one of the most solid programsin the region.The Maroons did not do as well at the Wa¬terloo Regatta the previous weekend.There, the A boat jumped to a second placestart behind the St. Paul Rowing Club; how¬ever, despite prompting by stroke AlanHodges, the crew failed to take up the ratingin the second half of the race and was unableto hold off challenges by the MinneapolisRowing Club and the University of Minneso¬ta A. The Chicagoans finished 7.08, 4.93 and.81 seconds behind the three teams respec¬tively, but well ahead of Lincoln Park andthe University of Minnesota B team in the1800 meter race.The club, open to all associated with theUniversity, will begin its summer seasonsoon and invites all interested and pros-pective rowers to participate Unfortunately since this is the lastMaroon of the year I will be unable to coverthe finish of the softball tournament whichshould conclude this weekend. Several im¬portant games were played yesterday butresults were unavailable at presstime. Theresident champion was determined asChamberlain met Lower Rickert, and Hen¬derson met Hitchcock, after which thechampionship was played between the win¬ners. The independent champion was alsodetermined yesterday as N.U.T.S. met StepAside Buddy, and We Be Bad played FeelYour Disease; the winners of these gamesmet for the championship.In graduate play, See Your Food meetsMean Old Squirrels, and Med School meetsthe Nabobs in semifinal action. The winnersof these games will meet in the graduatefinals. See Your Food will be going for its third straight victory in a major sport, as itscore is made up of the same people whocomprised the Wabuno Bay Buccaneers andthe Albanian Refugees.In women’s play Snell plays Upper Wal¬lace for the undergraduate title, and thewinner of this game will meet Med Schoolfor the All-University title.In pingpong Yoon defeated Banas in inde¬pendent singles, and now will face Cavero,who beat Haas for the residence champion¬ship.Personal Note — I want to thank the peopleof the intramural office for helping me outeven though I must have been a pain attimes. I also want to thank my readers whothrough both their positive and negativecomments made writing this column worth¬while.I thoroughly enjoyed writing this year’scolumn, and unlike a few others who have ScoreboardHale 11 Breckinridge 10Hitchcock 10 Hale 9Henderson 15 Greenwood 13Commuters 10 Compton 4Lower Rickert 10... Commuters 8Upper Rickert by forfeit over SalisburyChamberlain 28 Upper Rickert 14Mean Old Squirrels by forfeit over HeadLiceNabobs 14 SWAT 12See Your Food ...Who Needs Sweaty 4Med School 9 Sieves 7tried to cool down the fever and enthusiasm,I believe that intramurals at the Universityof Chicago should be as high pitched and ex¬citing as it was this year. Sometimes at theend of the quarter it’s about the only thingthat we have left that’s enjoyable. I hopetherefore, as I will be graduating this year,that some one as interested in intramuralsas I am will continue the kind of coveragethat intramural deserves, next year.LETTERSWeWant AirTo the Editor:I am always pleased by the University’sefforts to control costs. Lower costs, andtherefore lower tuition rates, are in the in¬terest of everyone here. Part of controllingcosts is, of course, using heating and air con¬ditioning sparingly. The design of Regen-stein, for example, is particularly well-suit¬ed to retaining expensive heat. It is sealedfrom top to bottom and it is well insulated.These facts have recently been brought tomy attention by the arrival of the warmerweather. As the temperature outside rises,it has become progressively more difficultto work in Regenstein. In the winter, one could cope with temperatures which paral¬leled those outside. The option of wearingextra clothing was always available. Unfor¬tunately, the corresponding alternative forhot weather is, beyond a point, sociallyunacceptable even in the relatively open-minded atmosphere of the U. of C.The solution is, of course, to turn on the airconditioning. It is senseless to build a multi¬million dollar research facility, staff it withscores of employees, invest heavily in com¬puters, book collections, and everythingthat makes Regenstein one of the best li¬braries in the world, and then to make it un¬usable by skimping on the climate control.Why not just dim the lights while you’re atit? (Please, that was just an example.) Airconditioning will raise costs. It will raise tu¬ition. Fair enough; I am willing to pay theextra five or ten dollars it would cost(perperson) tq lower the temperature a few de¬grees, because it will also restore a oncecomfortable research facility, now proposed site for space shuttle heat shield testing, toits former usefulness. Suffering is undoubt¬edly good for the soul, but it has negative ef¬fects on one’s concentration. In severe casesit can even cause delirium, hysteria, or aninterest in sociology. Please, while there isstill time.Jon OsborneStudent in the GraduateSchool of BusinessCount HeadsTo the Editor:Student Government’s consideration of in¬stalling a computer to help handle thet inance Committee’s functions, is a signifi¬cant issue. This issue has been debated forquite awhile and there has not been a strong18 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 2V, ivtn-M- Continued from page 5heap because we’re the fittest and theworker has very little imagination. What weneed is some real capability analysts withgreat daring and a willingness to risk life,limb, and capital.’This brought about the two basic camps.And since that time, the United States andRussia, or whoever happened to be the so¬cialist state, we’re only talking a hundredyears ago now, we have each guy saying‘you may personally not like our system butwe’re convinced we have the most logicalingenious way of coping with lethal inade¬quacy of life support on our planet. But be¬cause there are those who disagree diamet¬rically we can only resolve by trial of armswhich system is fittest to survive.’ That’swhat we’ve been having going on here andwhy Russia and the United States for thelast thirty years are putting over twohundred billion a year, then last year fourand this year its going to be six hundred bil¬lion in arms! When you talk about Ford andGeneral Motors losing money, losing fivebillion, compare that to six hundred billiongoing into arms. Here we’re talking aboutI call wealth the organized capa¬bilities to take care of so many for¬ward days of so many lives.thirty years times the average of twohundred billion dollars a year, that’s six tril¬lion. Six trillion dollars to organize the high¬est capability of humans, scientifically, tokill more and more people at greater andgreater distances, in shorter and shortertimes. I came into the world at a time whenelectronics commenced an invisible worldand reality. When I was born, reality waseverything yoti could see, touch, smell, andhear going back to the brain and not to themind. Suddenly, a new invisible rule camein: electronics, alloying, and chemistry. Isaw we’re continually learning to do moreand more with less and less. You understand that?Q: Ephemeralization.BMF: I call it ephemeralization. I found aworld of such specialization and invisibilitythat the specialist over here cannot see theinvisible there. Nobody is integrating, look¬ing at the potential you could with doingmore with less. Sum totally, Malthus waswrong.Q: So the “misinformation” you speak ofrefers to that fact that technology now hasthe capacity to make scarcity, and so mostof present difficulties, obsolete.BMF:' Yes. And that got me into how Icommitted myself, fifty-three years ago, tomaking an experiment to see what an indi¬vidual could do. If I could do more with lesswe might someday be able to instead of let¬ting all the advanced science go to how tokill, take the most advanced science andapply it directly to livingry. So that got meinto the geodesics and so forth. I was able,ten years ago, to really look at the totalscore of all the real increases of capabili¬ties, of electronics, and of alloying, and soforth, and to clearly see that, by engineer¬ing through the design revolution, we couldhave all of humanity living a higher stan¬dard of living than anybody has ever known,during which time we could phase out forev¬er all further use of fossil fuels and atomicenergy. We could live entirely on our energyincome. That’s what Critical Path is about.Critical Path contains the message that wedo have the option to make it — lit’s terriblyexciting. It’s very different from just beingoptimistic. ’Q: What is the change we have to make inthe way we use our mind?BMF: An enormous amount of self-educa¬tion and daring to go along with the experi¬mental evidence you come upon. That’s re¬ally the biggest of all. I’ll give you somevery important information, you check itout the best you can, and find out if I’mright.Nature does some very big, abrupt things,like coming out of the womb. Someday youcan get your own mouth and you can cut theumbilical cord. We have an enormous um¬bilical cord of error and conditioned reflex. All the children born since 1969 were bornafter we got to the moon. And not getting tothe moon is absolutely the thing that it wasclear to humanity — “you’ll never get to themoon.” Now if you’re born, if you are tenyears old, you say a human being can doeverything. There’s a generation comingthrough just like that. And each generationis a little less misinformed, is less possessedof the misconditioned reflexes and eachchild born successfully appraises a littlemore reliable information. I see nature try¬ing very hard at the present time to bringthrough a young world that really will takeover and be forever, and get out of the wayforever that we have to earn a living. We doliterally have, in terms of real wealth, theability to look out for humanity and takecare of all its needs. We can have four billionbillionaires the minute we begin to makesense. We are going to get an accountingsystem which will be similar to the account¬ing system that the universe uses. We willbe dealing with energy and time, magni¬tudes of energy and time.Q: What’s your vision of the purpose of theindividuals in this new world who aren't con¬strained by the need to earn a living? Whatwill be the activities? What will be the pur¬pose of the activities?BMF: The computer will make it veryclear. I asked a great oil geologist if hewould write me a scenario of nature makingpetroleum from the time the vegetation andthe algae impound the sun radiation andconvert it. I wanted to know all the energythat went into producing the tree as well asinto the refining process. I said, "in theterms of what you and I pay the public utili¬ty, per kilowatt hour, what did it cost natureto produce a gallon of petroleum0” It cameout way over a million dollars a gallon. Andjust to say it couldn’t cost anything, that allit cost is my pipe and my daring to put my pipe down, somehow or other to get hold ofthat land and drill, is absolutely inadequateto talk about it. That is nature’s own figure.And in terms of having, or paying, it wouldcost you a million dollars a gallon. I find that Imany jobs are not producing wealth. I callwealth the organized capabilities to takecare of so many forward days of so manylives. So, I find that 70 percent of the jobsare not producing any wealth, and peopleare spending four and five million dollars aday of gasoline petroleum to go to work. Thecomputer is going to make it very clear thatit will pay to pay everybody a million dollarsa day to stay at home.I would say that, when you begin to stay athome, you begin to be a kid again and say,,“what was I thinking about before they toldme I had to earn a living0”. Then you wouldsay, “you know, it’s great out here, it’sfine”. But every human being has a drive todemonstrate competence. There’s going tobe enormous competition to get on to prod-iuction teams. We won’t connect producing,with making money, nothing to do with that.The difference is they would love it. It reallyis unnatural to earn a living. You’re doingwhat someone else tells you to do ratherthan what you see to do. A hydrogen atomdoesn't have to earn a living before being al¬lowed to behave like a hydrogen atom.Q: Are there tools whereby we can gainthis greater imagination; that is for peoplealready born who don’t have the good for¬tune to be born since 1969?BMF: All I’m trying to sell is the fact thatwe are crossing some kind of threshold intoincredible mystery. But a mystery is go¬verned by principles. And you have to dareto go to principles. That’s why I say youncourage to personally go along with experi¬mental evidence and you’re going to find!day by day so guided into more interesting,light.It really is unnatural to earn a living. You’re doing what someoneelse tells you to do rather than what you see to do. A hydrogen atomdoesn’t have to earn a living before being allowed to behave like a hy¬drogen atom.Cocaine fr°m p6 is likewise increased.We are currently investigating the psy- Quantrell Continued from page 1 Poll Firstchological characteristics of those who cause they think the rlass is larpp ” Continued from page 18A more likely consequence of repeatedhigh dose cocaine use is a period of depres¬sion after coming down from a cocainehigh (the so-called cocaine blues). This de¬pression can motivate the person to seekout more cocaine in an attempt to improvetheir mood. In those affluent enough to af¬ford cocaine we see a cyclical pattern ofuse similar to that of the speed freaks ofthe sixties. A high followed by a crashleading to further drug use.If this pattern is continued a secondproblem may occur — the development of find the cocaine experience so seductivethat they show this escalating pattern ofdrug use. At present we cannot predictwho will fall into this population and do notbelive that an individual can be certain oftheir reactions either. The question each ofus must answer is whether a 30-60 minutesperiod of euphoria is worth the risk.Dr. Schuster is a professor in the de¬partments of psychiatry and pharma¬cological and physiological sciencesand the College. Thisted came here five years ago after re¬ceiving his Ph.D. from Stanford University.He received his B.A. from Pomona Collegein 1972, and he said his time there had some¬thing to do with his decision to come here.“Teaching was highly valued by the facultyat Pomona,” he said. “I’ve always enjoyedteaching, and the opportunity to teach bothundergraduates and graduate students wasa very strong (reason for choosing Chica¬go).” He teaches a “Potpourri” of coursesin the statistics department, including Stat200, Stat 225, which are general statistics consensus among S.G.'s offices and Com¬mittee Chairman, as to what action shouldbe taken.I believe that this question should be takento the students as a whole (as should otherissues of such significance). I urge our newStudent Government officers to sponsor acampus-wide referendum concerning this!question, and encourage them to set upjsome form of debate in order to educate stu-'dents about its advantages and disadvan-jages.Brad Bittana toxic psychosis. It has been demonstrat¬ed experimentally that amphetamines canproduce a toxic psychosis characterized Mecca courses, and Stat 220. Student in the College 1by paranoid-schizopherenic symptoms innormal human volunteers. Although it has Continued from page 6comes with the hamburger is its only fail- Union Votes on strike on,™™Page,HvJv UCC11 UUlllUllOll aivU ill itiV iuuv/i uivl j ^similar reactions have been described byclinicans for cocaine users in both SouthAmerican and the USA. The toxic psycho¬sis shows a rapid remission when drug useis stopped. However, despite the toxic psy¬chosis many users return to cocaine useand find that the toxic psychosis redeve¬lops, usually more readily then the firsttime. I am of course emphasizing the poss- ing in this respect. And for us that isenough. Enough to brave the elements tofind new ones in our food. Enough to bravethe menacing stares from the cashierwhen we don’t have exact change. Even atthe end she would wish you good night. He¬mingway should have changed his mind.Jeff Davitz is a third-year student inthe College. The Union’s negotiating committee is alsodissatisfied with the proposed health andwelfare benefits. The committee does notfeel that the University has offered ade¬quate improvement in benefits. Colemansaid that the benefits are comparable tothose at other hospitals.Coleman also said that “The Universitymust negotiate as a University and not just the University is if you reject the Universi¬ty’s Proposal and vote to strike, if neces¬sary, to enforce our reasonable and legiti-lmate demands.”Voting on the contract proposal will endnext Friday. After the ballots are counted onthe following Monday, the union will notifythe federal negotiation conciliation service,which has been involved in the negotiations.ible toxic effects of cocaine. As stated atthe outset, like every other drug, cocaine'seffects are a function of dose as well as in¬dividual differences in sensitivity to thedrug. Snorting of low doses of cocaine byphysically and psychologically healthy in¬dividuals may be a relatively harmlesspractice. Our experience indicates, howev¬er, that this experience is sufficiently se¬ductive to some individuals that use be¬comes more repeated and doses areincreased. With these increased doses therisk of physical and psychological toxicity EVlCltlOIl Continued from page 1 as a hospital. \\ e have employees both in thehospital and on campus.” He explained thathospitals tend to pay higher than other insti¬tutions. Contract negotiations broke downearly last week with an agreement still“some distance apart,” said Coleman. Theunion negotiators agreed to present the Uni¬versity’s final proposal to the member¬ship.The letter addressed to the membershipreads “Your Union’s Negotiating Commit¬tee believes that the only way in which youwill receive adequate consideration from call a strike by a two-thirds “No” vote, theunion is required to give ten days notice be¬fore a strike can occur in the hospitals.A strike, if one does occur, would not takeplace until late June or early July saidSimpson.According to Coleman, the University hasmade no contingency plans for a strike, butindividual management personnel may bemaking their own plans. He said “manage¬ment people would be expected to pick upthe slack.”But Verros said that the fact that he wouldnot relocate does not mean that he has any¬thing against the neighborhood. “I loveHyde Park,” he said.If the case is considered by the State Su¬preme Court, further action will continuesometime in September or October, accord¬ing to Verros.The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 29, 1981 — 19CALENDARFridayCenter for Latin American Studies: “Memorias deUn Mexicano” Documentary Film, 1:00 pm,SS122.Geophysical Sciences Colloquium: “ArticulateBrachiopods are Alive and Living on the WestCoast: Studies in Hydroponics” speaker MichaelLaBarbera. 1:30 pm, HGS.Mineralogy/Petrology Seminar: “Crystal Struc¬tural Changes in Rutile and Fluorite Type Di¬fluorides at High Pressures,” speaker John Jamie¬son. 3:30 pm. HGS 101.Oriental Institute: Exhibit — "Alexander and theEast”.Hillel: Reform/Progressive Minyan Potluck Sup¬per, 6:00 pm.Doc Films: Horror Nite III: “The Horror of Dra-cula”, "The Beast with Five Fingers,” “Bride ofFrankenstein,” “The Tomb of Ligeia,” “TheLeopard Man” 6:15-12:30 pm., Cobb. Crossroads: Buffet dinner, 6:00 pm, no reserva¬tions necessary, 5621 S. Blackstone.Doc Films: “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?”7:15 and 9:30 pm, Cobb.UC Students for Citizens Party: Concert-Jan andAnne Hills-Burda, Fred Campeau, 8:00 pm, IdaNoyes, $2.Dept of Music: University Symphony Orchestraplaying “Petrouchka” 8:30 pm, Mandel Hall,free. M.A.R.R.S.: Meeting. 6:30 pm, Ida Noyes, allmembers please attend. ■International House: Annual Concert of Expenmental Music, 7:30 pm. I-House Auditorium.Doc Films: “Days and Nights in the borest 8.00Woodward Court Lecture: “Basic Research andNational Policy” speaker Robert McC. Adams.8:30 pm. Woodward Court. WednesdayHyde Park ALAnon Group: Meets 8:00 pm, 1st Un¬itarian Church, 57th and Woodlawn. Info cal!471-0225.Comm, on Genetics: “Interactions of Tn% withPlasmids" speaker Roxanne Laux, 12:30CLSC 101. pm,ThursdaySunday MondaySaturdayFirst Unitarian Church: Flea Market — 10:00 amto 4:00 pm, 57th and Woodlawn. Lutheran Campus Ministry: Sermon and Eu¬charist, 8:30 am, Sunday School, 9;30 am, Sermonand Eucharist, 10:45 am, 5500 S. Woodlawn.Rockefeller Chapel: Service of Holy Communion,9:00 am. Discussion class, 10:00 am. University Re¬ligious Service, 11:00 am.Oriental Intitute: Film — “Megiddo: City of De¬struction” 2:00 pm. Free, 1155 E. 58th St.Crossroads: Bridge at 3:00 pm, beginners and ex¬perts welcome, 5621 E. 58th St.Rockefeller Chapel: “Les Noces” with the Rock¬efeller Chapel Choir and the Musical College ofRoosevelt University Percussion Ensemble, 4:00pm, $4. $2 students. German Table: Meets at 12 noon in the Blue Gar¬goyle.Spanish Table: Meets at 12 noon in the Blue Gar¬goyle.Dept, of Chemistry: “Recent Advances in Me¬chanistic and Exploratory Organic Photoche¬mistry” speaker Prof. Howard E. Zimmerman,4:00 pm, Kent 103.Kyudo: Japanese Archery meets 4:00-6:00 pm, IdaNoyes.Citizen Party Films: “His Girl Friday” 8:00 pm,Cobb. Hillel: Faculty Lunch — “The Talmudic Methodand its Relationship to Law” speaker NormanAsher, 12 noon, 5715 Woodlawn.La Table Francaise: Meets at 12 noon in the BlueGargoyle.Italian Table: Meets at 12 noon in the Blue Gar¬goyle.Episcopal Church Council: Noon Eucharist atBond Chapel. _ ,Comm, on Virology: “Mechanism of Transforma¬tion by Harvey Sarcoma Virus” speaker Dr. EdScolnick 4:00 pm, CLCS 101.Dept, of Physics: "Waiting for Proton Decay”speaker Howard M. Georgie, III, 4:30 pm, Eckhart133.Ill. Central Hospital Ala-Teen Group: Meets at7:00 pm, 5800 S. Stony. Info call 471-0225.-SUNDAYBUFFETChicago s finestfrom 11:30 a.m. to 4 p.m.champagne served until 4 p.m.garden fresh salads •cheeses from around the world •fresh vegetables •fresh seafoods •salmon delights •crepes, ribs, fowl •roast round of beer •chilled melons •a variety of pastries •served in a greenhouse atmospheredisplayed like a marketplacean experience you must share..at theHyde Park Hilton LEARN TO SAILU of CSailing ClubAnnounces its JWSummer Lesson SeriesReasonable CostConvenient Scheduling 4Registration and Swicn TestingWednesday, June 3 7:30 p.m.Jda Noyes Hall For Info: 684-6054Romance Languagespresents...A POT-POURRI CONCERTSchubert, Poulenac,Music of Edith Piafwith the Trout QuintetFriday, May 29, 8 p.m.Goodspeed HallGPUIMMEMORIAS DE UN MEXICANODocumentary film by filmmaker SalvadorToscano about the Mexican Revolution.The film has been declared a Mexican“national monument. ”Admission is free, and a discussion willfollow, moderated by Visiting Professorof History Lorenzo Meyer.Friday, May 29 SS 122 1:00 pm ‘'jo/uzdcUfa WiA&faarri493-0666NEAR CAMPUS57th & Kimbark - could be one or two bedrooms - Ex¬cellent condo, remodeled four years old - "countrykitchen." Low monthly - good financing. $53,000.56th & Kimbark - five sunny rooms - near Ray School -probably re-do the kitchen - price reflects thisallowance.56th & Harper - rent with option to buy - $325?00 mon¬th, option fee non-refundabie - decide next year - fiverooms, $67,500 (flexible). *55th & Blackstone - 4 spacious rooms - sunny largebay window, woodburning fireplace - Quiet lovelyspot. $59,500.55th & Dorchester - Five rooms. Back balcony, frontsun room. Excellent condition throughout, $59,500 -make offer.55th - 6th floor of "University Park” - Two bedroomcorner “wraparound." Excellent financing throughContinental. $65,000. includes parking.55th - We have three one bedroom condos - at variousgarden or high locations. $42 - $43,000.ON THELAKEFRONTTwo story STUNNING CONDO - Spacious as a house.$162,500.HOUSESix bedrooms - Bret Ha' ? School - Big yard VictorianStone & Brick - Owner "wrap-around” low costfinancing. $149,500, available July.OPEN HOUSESunday,May 3i 53rd &Universityf '■ s, t ♦ - *. , ‘ /v\ \'l yXJ r20 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 29, 1981 Broker Cooperation Always^ Call anytime - 493-0686HOUSESCOZY (pOTTAGE in Hyde Park. This 2 bedroom-plushome has a lovely sunny southern exposure. Upper$60's. Ray School District.BEAUTIFULLY REFURBISHED turn-of-the-centuryhome overlooking park. Quiet fenced backyard withparking. Wood-burning fireplace. Walk to campus.$133,000. Some owner financing.VICTORIAN OPPORTUNITY! This lovely old Ken¬wood Queen Anne has spectacular east, west andsouth sun, a completely redone coach house, fencedyard, and more. $175,000.WALK TO SHOPPING (only a few steps away) andlive in this efficiently designed 3 bedroom, 2-Vi bathtownhouse. Private backyard, central air and more.$105,000.COZY FIREPLACE, garage, fenced backyard, 3bedrooms, 2Vi baths, 2 dens make this townhousea super buy at $139,500.CONDOMINIUMSELLIS ESTATES. Only four left! 4 and 5 bedroomfrom $76,000. Call today!CORNELL VILLAGE. Beautifully decorated! Endunit. A buy at $125,000.ONE BEDROOM. Upper $40's. Clean and neat.Quiet street. Excellent study area. Call today! CLASSIFIED ADSCLASSIFIEDClassified advertising in the ChicagoMaroon is 75 cents per 30 characterline. Ads are not accepted over thephone, and they most be paid in advance. Submit all ads in person or bymail to The Chicago Maroon, 1212 E.59th St., Chicago, IL 60637. Our officeis in Ida Noyes, room 304. Deadlines:Wed. noon for the Fri. paper, Fri. noonfor the Tues. papers.SPACENeed housing and don't know where tostart? Student Government offers ahousing list of off-campus housing!Three month subscription availablefor only S3 and it works. Call 753-3273for more information.Summer sublet. Regents Pk 3 rm aptconsisting of bdrm. kitch. Ig living rmwhich can be used as second bdrm,carpeting, a/c, and excellent view ofthe lake. Can also renew lease afterthe summer. 288 3560Female roommate wanted to sharesunny 2 bdrm hi-rise apt. Begin 7-1-11.Near Lake. 1C buses. Prefer grad.Mary 752-3277.Summer sublet-completely furnished(incl kitchen utensils and dishes) 2 br.Reasonable rent and elec avail. June19-Sept. 2 Call Janet 753-8374 (days)752 8653 (eves). FOR SALE BY OWNER. Sunny 4room condo in prime UofC location.Lg Mod kitchen, WBFPL, hardwoodfirs, built-in bookcases etc. 955-3220Condo for sale by owner w/14% mtg totrenov. all mod kitchen & bath, 5 rms 2bdrms. fp. OW. prk 440-6038. 955 20522 bedroom apartment sublet from Julyto August. Drexel 57th block. 241-7288.Large 7 room apartment for rent inEast Hyde Park. 1 year lease $695/mo.Prefer family. Call 667-5769.1 bdrm on Lake, near 1C and mini-rtfor July. Aug. (June if needed) RentNegotiable. Call Mike am's 241-6060Beautiful furnished room in mostwanted condominium of Hyde Park, 24hour doorman, top security, universitybus at the door Wall to wall window,wall to wall closet, air cond., linensand room cleaning provided. 8200 permonth all utilities included, extrasavailable to considerate houseguest. Uof C ID card required. Call 684-7128.S6th & Harper avail July or Aug. 2bdrm, fully carpeted, a/c, all modappl., walking dist. to UC, 1C 8, shopping. Rent incl ht water & heat. 8570.324 5237 or 704-892 4454.NEED ROOMMATE for SEPT 1st 2 br55 & Woodlawn 250/mo 363 1705 ferngrad pref Apt is nice and secure. Summer Sublet. 1-3 rooms open. Furnished, on the lake. 8125 per month.Call 955 8664 or 955 18382 roommates wanted for 4-br apt.8125/mo., incl. heat. 1321 E. 57th apt 3,nr. Kimbark. Avail June. Call Mark orFrank at 947-8184, anytime. Nosmokers or pet-owners please.SUMMER SUBLET Furn apt 2 blksfrom Reg 2 bdrm Sunporch clean 753-3751 rm 104 or 229.Quiet, resp female for rm in part,furn. condo 53 & Woodlawn Ig kitchenWasher/dryer avail. August throughJune 220/month 955 9635.Summer Sublet one bedroom in 3bedroom furnished apt June-Sept 308175 negotiable Alison 288-1535.Summer sublet furnished studio insecure building by the point 8175/mo288-0885SUMMER AND FALL QUARTERS 1or 2 br apt available unitl Jan 1. Rentneg about 83-400. Near UC! Call Alex¬ander 288 1866. 643-6438.Spacious 2-bdrm coop, remodeled,hdwd firs. 824,900 owner finance saleor rent. 363 2529.Airy fully remodeled. 1-bdrm coop. Igliv. rm & study. 819,500. owner financ¬ing possible 363-2529 2 BR apt Unfurn nr campus 55th andWoodlawn 8500 Sept 1 Grad StudentCouple Preferred. 241-7425eves.Furnished summer sublet now, 2 rmsavailable in fall. Large sunny house 2blks from Reg 135 + util Grad studentspref. Call 241-6171 eves.1 BR for SUMMER SUBLET w/falloption 57th and Maryland 5195/monthincl heat 324-8845 after 5 pm.SUMMER SUBLET Large, sunny,furnished room in 2 br apt. 54th andWoodlawn 5100/month. Call Jon 288-2520.SPACE WANTED1 BR apt w/kitchen for 1981-82 schoolyear. Also sublet for summer. Call493-9547 late pm2-3 Br apt w/kitchen. bath. Begin Sept1981. Betw 55th-59th, BlackstoneDrexel. Call 753-0379 or leave message753-2270 for Huang.Two students entering professionalschools in Fall seek two rooms in closeto campus apartment Sept 1 orsooner Call Vince 955-6681 or Tanya241 5246.Wanted: studio or 1-br to 8300. oc¬cupancy anytime. Can exchange (butnot obligatory) large 2-bath 3-br apt8300 + . Call 288-6026.A MUST SEE! Spotless cozy one bedroom condo at54th and Dorchester. Priced to sell. Upper $40's.BEAUTIFUL . . . Sun, space (huge living room withbalcony), new kitchen and bath. Super big backyardand . . . PARKING! Call today for this 5 room condo.A great buy in the lower $70’s.55TH AND EVERETT, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, lots ofnatural wood trim. Upper $80's.GREENWOOD COURT convertible 3 bedrooms.New kitchen and baths. Some stripped wood. En¬closed front porch and large open back proch forentertaining. $71,500.ON CAMPUS/OWNER FINANCING - 2 bedroomswith 2 enclosed sunporches. Upper $70's.SPECTACULAR SUNSHINE. This cozy 2 bedroomhome is walking distance to U of C campus. Im¬maculate! Charming! Mid $50's.THE RIGHT LOCATION, south of 55th 2 bedroomhome with family room, modern kitchen, garage. Mid$80's.SUN OR CANDLELIGHT - this home shines in both.4VS rooms with lots of charm and natural woodwork.A super buy at 57th and Kenwood. Upper $60's.ENOUGH LIVING ROOM for large gatherings. Fourbedrooms, lots of extras include beamed ceilings,large butler pantry, dining room breakfront. A mustsee at $84,500.56TH AND BLACKSTONE. Turn of the centurycharm with appropriate modernization and the con¬venience of your own laundry facilities in the apart¬ment. 2 bedrooms plus study, bath and a half. Upper$60's.IF YOUR CAR NEEDS A GARAGE and you need a 2bedroom home, this might be the place you've beenlooking for. Featured also is a balcony overlooking apark and a large backyard. Upper $40's.NEWPORT. 2 bedroom with garage space. Upper$70’s.NEWPORT. Large 1 bedroom. North view. Mid $50's.58TH AND BLACKSTONE. 4 bedroom, 2 bath, over2,000 sq. ft. Super location. Large enough for afamily. Walk to Lab School. $140,000.EAST HYDE PARK. Stunning 3 bedroom, upper $80'swith very low assessments.THE MEWS. Lovely, lovely building. This 1 bedroomplus study has natural woodwork, beamed ceilings,and a woodburning fireplace. A super buy! Mid$60's.NEAR FARMERS FIELD. Large 7 room apartment,big back porch and lovely yard. Sunny andmoderately priced in the upper $60's.5401 HYDE PARK BLVD. Inside parking, 2 bedrooms,2 baths. Upper $60's.COOPERATIVESLISTEN TO THE WAVES from this cozy retreat witha fully eastern exposure. 1 bedroom co-op is only$15,000. Low monthly assessment.56TH AND DORCHESTER., 3 bedroom. 2 bath, wood-burning fireplace. Upper $60’s. Ask about ownerfinancing.HILD REALTY GROUP1365 E. 53rd St. J SUMMER SUBLET: Roommatewanted to share apt. at 54th & Harper.Furnished bedroom & sunporch, largekitchen, on campus bus routes nearCTA, 1C. 8185 + util. Avail. 6/17. CallAndy at 684-3178 until 11 pm.Townhouse near campus 2 br 11/2 babrick 3 level, fin bsmt central ac byowner, financing, 80‘s 955-6409.Sublet studio w/kitchen & bath, goodbldg June 7-Sept 27, 53d & Dorchester$250 neg. Call George 363-2972.Summer Sublet large 1 bedrm (can be2 bdrm) 57 and Drexel. Furnished.$315 -I- util 955 1827 or 753-4154.KOSHER SUBLET: bdrm, living 8din rms. Kosher Kitch. Avail mid-June Labor Day, $225 + util. 955 2882HYDE PARK near 51st St. Newlydecorated V/i & 3V? rm. apts. stove &refrigerator. Call Cash 643-7896.Large furn. apt for 2 can be seen fromJune 16 on Call 955 7083SUMMER SUBLET 57 & Dorchester,AC avail, immed , $150/mo. (neg),Dave 7'2 2665.Grad student (non-smoker) to shareapt 6 blocks from campus 7/1/81 orsooner w/fall option. Approx.160/month incl. Utilities call 493-2556after 6 pm.Roommate wanted for Regents Parkapt., S170/mo. Pref nonsmoker. Greatlake view. Avail Aug. 643-1329.Condo for rent summer and fall furn orunfurn 3 br 2 bath sun porch cookskitch pleasant location $650/mo call643 2842Apt July Aug nicely furnished loc idealbetween 57 & 58 St. ONE personresponsible nonsmoking 8350 per mo667 7791 weekends eve.4 Br Furn. Hse in Hyde Park for rent tovisiting faculty family 667-6097.Furn AC 1/2/3 br summer sublet 57th& Dorchester, near 1C, stores $150-$250/br/mo. util incl. W/D Call 324-4973 or 241-6781 or 947 8623 (afts.eves), keep trying.Summer sublet semi furnished 2bedroom apt. 1 block West of Reg. 8275mo call Mike or Ed after 6 pm 947-0292SUMMER SUBLET efficiency 57thand Drexel Mdn Bid June 15-Sep* 15493 5159WkDay Eve.Summer sublet Furnished studio 55th& Cornell 8165/mo, 643 8913.SUMMER SUBLET 1 bdrm in 2 bdrmliv rm bath apt $160/mo incl util furnnice building 54 & Ellis Avail June 13-Sept 28 Scott 753 2240 rm 1919 Ted 2415336 Great summer sublet with fall optionin coachhouse 1 br in 3 br place Screen¬ed porch, nice yard. Easy walk to cam¬pus Share with 1 or 2 others + 1 friend¬ly dog. Rent 8180 -F share utilities.Grad prfrd. Call Kim-947-1872 days;324 7406 eves. Avail June date flexible.Large third floor Kenwood house in ex¬change for sitting with boy 8 girls 12, 14mostly evenings; occasionally over¬night or weekends. 1 bdrm, huge livingroom, half kitchen, separate stairs,campus bus route. Must enjoy kids,teenagers. Available June IS. Call w/2refs: 548 0017.Spacious 2 bdrm condo sun rm. d rmoak flrs-v. gd. condition. Low assmt.Central residential H. Pk location Ph324 3263 after 4 wkends 859,5001 BDRM APT good location, spacious,lots of sun, lots of fun. Avail. July 1 forlong as you want. $310 mo. 955 8864 orNancy: 753-1122.Sublet Jun 20 Jul 11, Dorchester & 51, 1bedroom, air cond., stereo AM/FM,color TV, nicely turn., lake view, 324-9004 Ricardo.SUBLET: Mid June to late Sept large,sunny 1 BR apt furn (incl kitchen supplies) lake view laundry in bldg, near1C reasonable rent Call 324-1072.Sublet w fall option. 1 rm in 3 bdrm. 54& Kimbark 8145/mth. Grad studentspreferred 955 3520June to Sept 1 bdrm in a 2 bdrm 5 rmapt. Harper and 54th PI. $175 permonth. Call Steve955-5610.2 bdrms in 4 bdr. for sublet over summer or for entire yr 8140/mth pvt bathavb David or Richard 684-4567.LITTLE PIERCE. Air-cond.. secure$154 includes utils. Male non smokerpref. 955 3290 eves.Room avail 6/15 or 7/1 in Ig 3 br 3-person apt. Prefer tenant for summer1981 1982 Sunny bk porch, big bkyd,laund, 1/2 bl fr B bus stop at 52nd 6Kenwd. $127/mo incl heat Call Lukeor Carol 324 4459GRAFF & CHECKReal Estate1617 E. 55th St.V/i-lVi-A RoomApartmentsBased onAvailabilityBU8-5566Available toall comersCONDOMINIUM FOR SALE6Vt rooms in Central Hyde ParkGet Sunstroke in Midwinter, grow yeararound garden, Apt. 3SImported Tiles, oak cabinets in kitchen and baths. FrenchDoors; hardwood floors Barbeque patio, jungle gym insheltered backyard Low monthly assessments $89,000955-1696/753-8517 Woman to share 2 bdr apt near HP co¬op 8175/mo + utl. Avail June 5. Sum¬mer 4- fall option 288-2478.Unique opportunity. UC alum, ownerconverting graceful 6-flat nr. 73rd &lake offering for 30 days large 6 rm. 2bath units w/yard, parking 836,000-839.000 375 7435. Garage wanted for summer storage ofcar near 56 & Kimbark. Call Steve 324-3693HOUSE SITTER AVAILABLE midJune Sept will feed pets, water plants,mow lawn. Resp U of C bus-schoolgrad References avail 753-0107.53rd and Kimbark, 2 br, 8125/mo. +util Aircond. unfurnished call 493-9139Nancy or 753 3777 AndySummer sublet 54th and Kimbark onebdrm in 3 bdrm apt own private bath BMinibus Laundry Facilities $175 butprice negotiable call Mike 324-6354Summer sublet (Jun 1 to Aug 31)w/fall option. (Female) Regents Pk. 1bedroom in a 2 bedroom apt. Air-cond.View of the Lake. Separate bath roomRent negotiable 241 5044 (best arounddinner time).SUMMER SUBLET Across fromPierce and Field House. 8400/month 3bedroom semi-furnished. Call Greggat 643 2767 before 10 am.Fern roommate tor the sub/year 53rdand Harper. Share w/2 othersNonsmokers 241-6380 pms.SUMMER SUBLET (June 15-Sept 1)spacious studio with lake view andpool $248 00 monthly rent includesheat. Parking available. Call 324-87882 female law students seeking 3rd forlarge furnished 3 br apt, 54th & Cornell, reas rent, lease begins Sept 6430158 Ann or Kelly.Large, light apt. 1 bdrm. Kitchen din¬ing rm 57 & Harper Summer Subletw/fall option. 955-4392.NON SMOKER wanted to share 4bedroom apt We share cooking, shopping, $115. Avail June 15. 684-3327.SUMMER SUBLET: Large bdrm inbright spacious, nicely furnished 2bdrm apt Dining rm, living rm,solarium small garden, color TV. Dor¬chester 8. 53rd Rent negotiable 493-2041HOKANSON REAL ESTATE223 Broadway Chesterton 926-2178YOUR OWN PIECEofSmall private lake, spring ted. New brick fourbedroom architect designed home — attachedgarage$84,500$17,000 down - 13'/,%guaranteed financingExcellent schools shopping - South Shore Electric to U of CStop or 1 hour drive non-stop via skywaySeller desperate Call Kay at (219) 926-2178 or Chicagophone m Hyde Park 493-8167 PEOPLE WANTEDPaid subjects needed for experimentson memory, perception ard languageprocessing Research conducted bystudents and faculty in the Committeeon Cognition and Communication.Department of Behavioral SciencesPhone 753 4718HYDE PARKThe Versailles324-0200Large StudiosWalk-in KitchenUtilities Incl.Furn.-Unfurn.•Campus Bus at DoorBased on Availability5254 S. DorchesterThe Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 29, 1981 — 21CLASSIFIED ADSGoing to be here this summer? Rece¬ding for the Blind needs you to helptape books for fall term. Come in nowfor training. 2 hrs a week on campus.288 7077.Summer Day Camp Staff NeededCounselors, Canoe and MusicSpecialists. Experience with childrenpreferred. Hyde Park JCC. Call CarolKahn at 268 4400.Desk Clerks Midnight to 8:00 A.M.,Wednesday and Thursday: Midnightto 8:00 A M., Friday and Saturday.Meals included Call the QuadrangleClub 493 8601 or Campus 3 3696.CHILDRENS 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.Counselors wanted for summer campin Michigan. Strong Jewishbackground. Relate well to children.Camp Young Judaea. 676-9790.Babysitter for my 4 yr-old girl. Hours& pay flexible. Call Deborah at 9552148Loving reliable babysitter wanted,daytime, for 2 kids 7 4 3 hours, salarynegotiable 955 1696 or 753 8517.Bartender needed. Must have ex¬perience. Apply between 2-5:30 pm.Great tips, nice atmosphere. HydePark Hilton 4900 S. Lake Shore Dr.Personnel Dept.Are you overweight, or have dieted butcan't keep the weight off? If youanswered yes. you may be interestedin our program for gutrition at theBehavior Analysis ResearchLaboratory (B.A.R.L.), The Universi¬ty of Chicago. This program has beendeveloped and refined at B.A.R.L.over the past 12 years. If you are concerned about your weight, please callthe Behavior Analysis ResearchLaboratory, The University ofChicago, at 947-6537. There will be asmall fee to cover materials 4 relatedprogram costs.Pipe &TobaccoShop1552 E. 53rd(Under the I.C. Tracks)9 a.m.-7 p.m. weekdays Part time secreatary wanted for smallcampus office call 753-2950.POST DOCTORAL FELLOW orresearch associate (assistant pro¬fessor). Immediate opening for col¬laborator on interdisciplinary team.Longitudinal, perspective, socialpsychiatric, epidemiological researchon children and families in Woodlawnin Chicago Includes community wideintervention program evaluation. Ap¬plicant must hold completed Ph.D insociology, psychology, humandevelopment or other relateddiscipline. Must be able to take thelead in new research directions andcollaborate with other -laboratorymembers. Stipend starts at $13,380 fornew Ph D to $18,000 depending on ex¬perience and training Send letter ofapplication, vita, letters of recommen¬dation and publication reprints to: Dr.Sheppard G. Kellam, SocialPsychiatry Study Center, Universityof Chicago, 5811 South Kenwood Ave.,Chicago IL 60637.STATISTICIAN/METHOLOGIST. Im¬mediate opening for collaborator in in¬terdisciplinary team. Longitudinal,Perspective, social psychiatric,epidemiological research on childrenand families in Woodlawn in Chicago.Includes community wide interventionprogram evaluation. Applicant musthold Ph.D. in statistics or related field,or two years experience in appliedstatistics beyond masters.Longitudinal data analytic experiencevery desirable Appointment asresearch associate with faculty rankfor qualified individual. Send letter ofapplication, vita, letters of recommen¬dation and publication reprints to: Dr.Sheppard G. Kellam. SocialPsychiatry Study Center, 5811 SouthKenwood Ave., Chicago IL 60637.SCIENCE SECRETARY for computerentry of manuscripts and to coordinatemanuscript construction. Must havegood typing skills and experience inSuperwylbur. Educationalbackground in social, behavioral, orbiological science highly desirable. 35-40 hr/wk. Call 947-6902. SocialPsychiatry Study Center.TELEPHONE SALES Immediatepart time, permanent salaried posilions open for articulate conscientiouspeople. Telephone experience preferred. but not required. Convenientdown town location. Call A. Weston at930 2000FOR SALETDK. MAXELL. SONY CASSETTETAPES IN STOCK U of C Bookstore.Photo Dept 753-3317.VIDEO TAPES VHS. BETA, UCA INSTOCK U of C Bookstore Photo Dept.2nd fl. 753 3317.We Buy and SellUsed Records1701 E. 55th St.684-337S BINOCULARS LEITZ. Bushnell,Tasco-IN STOCK U of C Bookstore.Photo Dept. 2nd fl. 753-3317.BATTERIES-For watches, camerameters IN STOCK U of C Bookstore.Photo Dept. 2nd fir. 753-3317.STOP WATCHES. DARKROOMTIME RS IN STOCK U of C Bookstore,Photo Dept 2nd fl. 753-3317.TRIPOOS-Davis and Sanford-INSTOCK U of C Bookstore, Photo Dept.2nd fl. 753 3317.FRANZUS 110/220V converters INSTOCK U of C Bookstore. Photo Dept.2nd fir. 753-3317.U of C dinner plates circa 1931 4memorabilia CB Goodman 753-8342.Invest in antique oriental rugs. Wehave for every one a rug in any size.Prices from $35 and up. Reasonablecall Peer Oriental Rugs 7231’/i NorthSheridan Rd. Chicago 764-9141.Zenith 13" Color TV for Sale ($200) call752-1021 after 5 pm (Luiz).FOR SALE California Car body goodcondition runs well $1100 OBO Chuck753 8342 if 214.Air conditioner $50; women's bicycle,as is, $5; raincoat and white stag coatw/fur collar $10 each 2 old trench coats$5 each fit woman's 5/6; wranglerboots $10; frye boots, excellent condi¬tion, $30 fit women's shoe size 6'/j. Call947 8654 (home), 753-4377 (work).SAILBOAT, force-5, good condition.$650. Call 955-1341, keep trying.Hiking boots. Vasque Cascade III.men's 7Vj B. Name your price-they aretoo small for me. 978-4393.Fendar Mustang, S175; amp $100 CallSteve 752 3721.Schwinn bike for kid 6-7 at $40. 6842812.Great Books of Western World codection, mint condition $350.684-2812.1979 VW Convertible excel rebuiltengine fair body $300.667-0493.Olympia Report Deluxe ElectricTypewriter w/French characters andbrackets. $275,- 2-drawer file cabinet.$40. Sofa bed. $50. Polaroid SX 70,Alpha 1, Model 2, $75; Electric FryPan. $15. Harriet 363 5244.Int. Encyclopedia of the SocialSciences. 17 volumes, excellent condi¬tion $275. 5364)037.Ford Maverick 72 Good Condition $500call Days 752 7772 Cindy.Rnd-rtp charter ticket NYC-Athens6/4. Athens NYC 7/10 $571. W/connecting disc fit rnd-trip Chgo-NYC $173.Call 753 4260 9 5. 924-5717 eves.Butcher Block table 2* x 4' $145 BruerCharts, $30, Sot abed $25. Jam ticketclub $20 call Adam 947 9770.Young Designs byELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERS1620 E. 53rd si.288-2900PROGR AMM ER/AN AL YSTThe Center for Research in Security Prices in the GraduateSchool of Business needs a full-time programmer/analystto develop and maintain research data bases and assistin the overall research effort. Applicants should haveexperience with IBM 370/Compatible (OS/VS or VM);knowledge of PL/I or Fortran, (DBMS and/or 370ASSEMBLER desirable also); and prior training — orwillingness to learn — finance and statistics. Goodcommunications skills essential. Position availableimmediately. Salary range $19K - $23K, plus Universityof Chicago benefits, including partial tuition remission.Position offers considerable flexibility, responsibility,challenge and opportunities for growth. If interested andqualified, contact Richard Jaffe, 753-4793. The Universityof Chicago is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative ActionEmployer. Large wooden desk Good condtion butneeds refinish Free if U-haul 667-1786eves, weekends.SERVICESTYPIST Disseration quality. Helpwith grammar, language as needed.Fee depending on manuscript. IBM- Selectric. Judith 955 4417. QT Why change? Aren't integralsmore fun than clove smokes? If you'reever drifting to Bolivia drum yournails, or click your heels 3 times andwe'll go to MIT, or at least near Kansas B&A-QTOh Mary B! Is old Sevres good fornothing but breaking? May we meet inthe second empire's potteryheaven...Vive la France! ART HISTORY GRADSTUDENT NEW ARTEXAMINER WRITERIf you have Foucault Books you bor¬rowed via MB, could you call me ordrop them otf at the Maroon Office?Soon? LJC 643 6246ARTWORK 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.After 6pm. 338 3800 or 472-2415.Typing 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 1478.TYPIST Exp. Turabian PhD Masters.Term Papers. Rough drafts. 924-1152.Will do typing - 8214)940.FOR RE NT-Overhead, film strip pro¬jectors U of C Bookstore. Photo Dept2nd fl. 753-3317.KODAK, FUJI, POLAROID FILM INSTOCK U of C Bookstore. Photo Dept.2nd fir. 753-3317. To the Women's Breakfast Club, twoweeks left, come on ladies. Wednesdaymornings will not be the same.Dear Mr. W, Meow, purr, meow, pur-rrrr Love, your little feline.O Ham O Mine, Your hocks drive mewild with desire. You sexy sow, you!Dear Rachel: Leo Burnett will neverbe the same. You'll shake then w/yourcharm and talent.Dear Margarita: Your Hard Times ina Bleak House are now behind you.Oliver, David and we all share yourGreat Expectations for a success inthe Pickwick Papers.Dear Goat, it's been a great year.Hope for many more. All my love,your Kitten.Oh my sweet, pink, porcine one, whencan we make mad passionate piggylove? Meet me at the Trough. Oinksmooch. 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! Cali Peter at: 955-1824 10am 10 pm.PEER PRESSURERADIOTell Tchaikovsky the news. All thehas beens, could have beens. and yet-to-be's in progressive pop. Fridays2:30 5:00 pm on WHPK 88 3 fm. In¬formation for the ear. Now sponsoredby Wax Trax.The Chicago Counseling andPsychotherapy Center. ClientcenteredPsychotherapy. 5711 S. Woodlawn,6354 N. Broadway and 111 N. Wabash.Chicago. A Registered PsychologicalAgency (312) 684 1800.Violin repair in Hyde Park. WilliamWhedbee 6844)565 evenings.JOB MARKETS, salaries, housing,schools, climate, much more. Com¬parative city analysis of Colorado byprofessional planner. Sent $6.50 to Col¬orado Source book Box 132-C,Loveland, Colorado 80537.TYPING: Term papers, reasonablerates. Also help with spelling,bibliographies. Dissertation form. Call684-6882.W.P. Bear trucking is back! We movealmost anything almost anywhere!Call 947 8035 8 am 12 midnight.Do-it-yourself Divorce. Cook County,IL-Uncontested divorce $50 100. Com¬plete how to book. Mail $15 check orMO to ENAAQ Publications. 1359Edgewood. Lake Forest, IL 60045. Dear Brian, do you cater formalbedroom affairs? Meet me betweenthe sheets. BYOC love, little lapin.Dear Roadrunner. Birds do it, bees doit, even educated geladas do it. Let'sdo it.LOST AND FOUNDLOST: sm gold ring with a sm. dia¬mond on Sun. 5/17 on 1st floor Regens-tein. REWARD It was my grand¬mothers engagement ring/Please call955-6509. pleaseLOST: Black umbrella w/cover andbrown handle. Lost 4/22 on 4th floorCobb. Please return. Reward. 324-7846.FOUND: I found a watch on Harper,near 54th Place, on May 23. To claimit, call Tom at 955-6570, weekday evenings and describe it.RIDESDELAWARE ride wanted. Call Mark753 3776. CAMERA/TAPE RECORDERREPAIRSU of C Bookstore Photo Dept 2nd fir.753 3317.WOMEN'SRAP GROUPA Women's Rap Group meets everyTuesday at 7:30 pm at 5655 S. Universi¬ty Ave. For infor. 753 5655.CAMERAS FOR SALECAMERAS CANON, NIKON, OLYMPUS. ROLLEI, MINOX IN STOCK Uof C Bookstore Photo Dept. 2nd fir. 7533317.PERSONALSCongratulations GJM, future Presi¬dent of the CCC.To the gorgeous man with the sun¬glasses—do you love as good as youlook?Joe B. and J. Netos—Farewell to twoof my favorite secret honeys.HELP! I checked a book (Bio) out ofReg for somebody 1st or 2nd quarter. Idon't remember for whom. The year isalmost over and I will have to pay forit unless it is returned. Please checkyour shelves—I'm getting desperate!!Sharon Peshkin.Frankie—You're a senior. Tell theWorld to go to Peoria.-Frankie's RoomieMiss Mary—Happy 2 quarters an¬niversary! Condomania rules. And nomore hairdresser jokes. F's roomieCongratulations Jenny and Sufia andThank you for the Memorial Affair!-INSTANT-PASSPORTPHOTOSEAST 53rd STREETPHONE 752-3330 See San Diego after finals I need a person(s) to drive a car to San Diego con¬tact Sean at 752-1203 9am 4pm.RIDERS WANTED: Ride offered toNORTH CAROLINA at the end of thequarter date and route flexible callJim at 753 8342 room 703.WANTEDArmenian grandmother needs gradua¬tion tkt. Will pay-Call 6844)331.Need graduation fix for June 13 Willpay mucho pesos Call 753-2233 room541.Furniture for Apartment: Beds.Chairs, Desks. Bureau, or Sofa. Call753-3751 rms 104 or 229.PAYING CASH...CASH...CASH fortickets to the College Graduation. Call955 7712. 4 9 pm.FILM PROCESSINGSAME DAY PROCESSING -EKTACHROME ONLY - IN BY 9BACK BY 2. U of C Bookstore PhotoDept. 753 3317.ORIENTALCARPETSI have just received another shipmentof choice handknotted carpets con¬sisting of sizes 3 x 5 to 9 x 12 in warmearth tones (deep red, rust, beige,brown, etc.) Designs are well balanc¬ed and piles are rich and well cut.Prices are very reasonable for the ex¬cellent quality. Call David Bradley241-7163 or 643-8613. PHOTO PAPERKODAK, AGFA, ILFORD PHOTOPAPER IN STOCK, U of C BookstorePhoto Dept. 2nd fir. 753-3317.LITERARYMAGAZINEPrimavera, a women's literarymagazine needs more women to jointhe staff. Call 752 2655 or 548 6240 Onsale in most bookstores.GRAD. TICKETSNeed 2 tickets. Will pay more. Callevenings 363 7265.STEREOEQUIPMENTSONY, PANASOCIC. ONKYO EQUIPMENT IN STOCK U of C. BookstorePhoto Dept 753 3317.TRADE AIRCONDITIONERSTrade my working large AC for yourworking small AC. 667 8562/3 1426.UC HOTLINE 753-1777Getting Seniorltts and you're not evena senior? Graduating and you don'tknow what you're doing? Call Hotline,open seven days a week from 7:00 pmTHE MAROONis seeking applicants for Business Manager,Advertising Manager and ProductionManager for the 1981-82 school year.Interested parties please call 753-3283 andask for Chris or Wanda. to7:00am.BOOKSALEUsed book sale. 20% off 40,000 titlesAspidistra Book Shop 2630 N. Clark.Noon-10 pm.HST PREPARATION FORIn Semi imssmTirfirnom Mmmmch Am fcrMmol Cam* Am Tin Jtt6412185 *fgg22 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 29, 1981CLASSIFIED ADSDRIVER WANTEDDrive our wagon. NYC to campus firstweek Sept 324-0240.FOLKCONCERTJAN & ANNE HILLS BURDA, FREDCAMPEAU! Folk concert Sat. May 308 pm Ida Noyes S2 UC StudentsCitizens Party Call 324-1098 for info.MANDARINCHINESESummer intensive and eveningChinese language courses will be offered by Cheng Yang Borchert, Seniorlecturer in Chinese, beginning June 15.For information call 493-8420 after 3pm.NON-CONTRACTHOLDERSLimited number of Brunch Tkts. stillavailable Call 303273 today, or takeyour chances at the door.2 ROOMSAVAILABLEJUNE 15 SEPT 15 $112/per mo callGato 753 8342 #702 or 643 4314.CHEAP FURNITUREVanishing from the city—goatt sell acouch, table, chairs, desk, householdother junk. Real cheap, ($2-$3apiece).Call Laura, 643 6246, leave messageCONDO FOR SALECondo for sale 6V2 rooms central HydePark, apt 3S full sun imported tiles,oak cabinets kitch French doors,hrdwd firs, patio jungle gym $89,000955 1696APARTMENT SALESunday May 31 Everything must go.Furniture. Large rug w/pad, completekitchen, quality art supplies, artbooks 4800 S. Lake Shore park Apt. 908All dayMERCEDES BENZFOR SALE1969 Mercedes 250, 4 door sedan, allpower, air conditioning, am/fr/swradio, new Michelin tires, leatherseats, engine rebuilt, needs transmis¬sion work. Some body rust. $1500 firm.Call 684-7414 after 6pm-Keep trying.TEACHER WANTEDAssistant teacher wanted for the 19811982 year at Phoenix School, a oneroom school for children aged 6-11.The job is 15 hrs/wk, with a flexibleschedule. For more information callLeslie at 955 2775 Phoenix School or536 1626 hmTOWN-HOME¬OWNERProfessional re roofing specificationswritten tor and being used in 1981 onHyde Park Town Homes. Another firstfrom BPTS with the Roofing Peoplefor answers to your roofing problem.To take part and have all your roofingproblems solved send $5 for partici¬pant package and order form toBuilding Products Technical ServicePO Box 293. Art. Hts., »L 60006 Creditgiven for $5 with the purchase ofSpecifications.GORGEOUS STUDIOView of lake, no bus line, turn., pkg, tv,sunny. Avail June Sept, or Aug Sept.$225 Call 288 4411.SENIOR EVENTSYes, there will be happy times Checkyour mailbox tomorrow or Monday fordetails. MAGNIFICENTBUILDING11 units on South Shore Dr. offerschoice apt living, several sizes. OLDELEGANCE, huge trazzia lobby,grand stairway with oak railings andcolumns, arches, near beach. 1C,Univ. Bus, top security andmaintenance, excellent integratedtenants, laundry, inside garageavailable. 1 bdrm apts from $235-8325.9 room w/fireplace and beam ceiling$650. Near Country Club park in SouthShore, Univ. 10 min, for July 1. Call221 6606. Other possible openings. Nowtaking applications for Sept 1, Oct. 1.Adults preferred, no pets.ARE YOU HYPER?We need subject who are nervous oranxious to particpate in a drugpreference study. We pay up to $195.Only commonly-prescribed, nonexperimental drugs are used. For further information please call 947 6348between 10 am and Noon weekdays ex¬cept Wednesday TURKOMAN-AFGHANCARPETSExtremely fine mauri carpets, allnatural dyes, classic designs. Alsounusual animal design Baluch prayerrugs. 241 7163/643 8613.SUMMER VACATIONRENTALWooded retreat: log house surroundedby 20 acres of rolling woods 65 mileseast of Hyde Park in LaPorte nearMichigan border, 15 min. from thelake. Peaceful rural recharge.Available for reasonable rental June &July Call 753 2729 or 548 4196BLUEGRASSCan grow in the South Side. Come herethe DRY BRANCH FIRE SQUAD,tonight, in Ida Noyes Hall. 8:30 p.m.It's an evening you won't soon forget.ARE YOU BETWEEN40 AND55 YRS.OF AGE?We need subjects in this category toparticpate in a drug preference study.We pay up to $195. Only commonlyprescribed non-experimental drugsare used. For further informationplease call 947 6348 between 10 andNoon weekdays except Wednesday.GRAD TICKETSName your price! 241-6126.sss$$s$sns$s$$$Tickets needed for college graduationcall 643 3319. PEOPLE WANTEDPart time office help wanted. Assist inprocessing employee attitude surveys.Must be good, fast typist. Available10 30 hours per week for at least 8weeks. Downtown office near Jeffreybus stop and Van Buren 1C. $5.25 perhour Call Ellen Bernstein. 663 5278WHY IS GODLAUGHING?A friendly reminder from Doc Filmsthat next Saturday. June 6, at 7:15 and9:30, is the U of C's own cult movie,BEDAZZLED, which we will bescreening for the 11th time in the last12 years. It features Peter Cook,Dudley Moore, Raquel Welch (asLust) and at 2 bucks a ticket, is lessthan a penny a laugh. Come early anddon't be left out! (The film is in CobbHall, of course).FREE CATCAT needs home-adult x-male, wh &TICKETSNEEDED halr 500,1 w'klas 11055College graduation tickets neededdesperately! Will pay cash, call 6433888GRAD TICKETSEagerly desire 1 extra ticket. Will payvery generously. 324-2611. DON'T MISSThe DRY BRANCH FIRE SQUAD, thebest in Bluegrass! Chase away your9th week blues. Tonight 8:30, IdaNoyes Hall. $4, $3 studentsHOUSESITTERSAVAILABLEResponsible students available towatch and care tor your house for thesummer Willing to maintain gardensplants and animals. Call Barry 441-6395. Refs availableSUMMERTIMEGive a hand to someone who needs youthis summer. Volunteer a few hourseach week as a tutor, friendly visitor,emergency room assistant or aide at aschool for the retarded. Contact theVolunteer Bureau at 955-4109 or dropby our office, 3rd floor. Blue Gargoyle. MOVING SALELots of stuff! 10-speed bike, turn-table,floorlamps, household goods, books:Apt 311, 5728 Blackstone: SaturdayMay 29 10am 5pmGRADUATINGSENIORS!Despite popular opinion THERE ISLIFE AFTER GRADUATION If thistopic intrigues you, please joinrepresentatives of the Alumni Association for quiche and coffee at theHISTORICAL ROB IE HOUSE.SATURDAY MAY 30. from 10:30 am toNoon. Call 753 1905 to let us know howmany pieces of quiche we should orderfor you.APARTMENTFOR RENT2 br 2 bath apartment, fully furnishedSummer quarter, modern, carpetedoverlooking the lake. 5300 S. LakeShore Drive. $630 per month 753-3623,9 5 pm COFFEEHOUSEThurs. June 4 at Blue Gargoyle. 5655 S.Univ. Ave. 9:00 and 10:30 Thom Davis,contemporary folk guitar. 9:45 and11:15, Shelton Sally, Rhythm 'n' blues.Food and beverages. 50* coverART FAIRHISTORYSlides of the 57th St Fair presented bya member of the Art Fair CommitteeFri May 29. 8 00 pm at Crossroads5621 S Blackstone Admission Free GREATAPARTMENTFor rent 3 br, 3 bath apartment fullyfinished Summer quarter, moderncarpeted, overlooking lake 5300 S.Lake Shore Dr $750 per month 7533673. 9 5 pmGRADUATION...IS DAYS TILL GRADUATION!!! ELWOODS??Is your plenty in need of need? Call theinverse cornucopia! CHILDCAREChildcare near campus, stimulatingactivities, small group, family atmosphere. Call John or Judy. 684 2820.Full time infant care available in myhome near UC Call Judy 684 2820BON TEMPOSINGERSPerforming through dinner tCrossroads Sat. May. 30 . 5621 S.Blackstone, singing starts at 5:30 pm.Dinner at 6 00 pmATOUCH OFCLASSSeniors, dance with your classmatesTuesday, June 9th. Tickets $5.00 onsale tomorrow. That pays for an openbar and hors d'oeuvres plus live musicby BB Spin Buy your ticket now. CENTRALHYDE PARKBuilding being converted to office ren¬tal. Rental from $5 to $8.50 sq. ft.minimum space 1000 sq. ft. largerspace up to 10000 sq. ft. Occupancy1982 call 684 3000WASHINGTON D.C.Want to help arrange a drive away toDC? I am looking for co-drivers. Cali684 1808 for info.JUNIORS....379 DAYS UNTIL YOUR GRADUATION!BEHAVIOROpportunify to study infantbehavior—creative persons could findpaper topic in data—transcribev i d eo t a p e s — v o I u n t e e r s orworkstudy—call Janet 241-7281. DEMONSTRATEAGAINST U.S.INVOLVEMENT INELSALVADORJoin thousands of Chicagoans in amarch to protest U.S. aid to ElSalvador and the military build upMeet at Seneca Park Chicago Ave.,East of Michigan at 11:30 am, Saturday May 30th Ad sponsored by UCStudents for the Citizens Party.CHILDREN WANTEDLimited number of children will be accepted for an all day activities pro¬gram ages 6 8 For Info Cali 7S2 5069AID EL SALIVAD0RPARTY for the people of El SalvadorLive music, dancing, cash bar. Satur¬day, May 30. 8:30 pm at CrossroadsCenter, 5621 S. BlackstoneWHY BUY SOMEWHERE ELSEWHEN MODEL WILL MEET ANYLOCALLY ADVERTISED PRICE?If any locally advertised price within 14 days of yourcamera purchase is lower than the price you paid at ModelCamera, we will credit or refund the difference, or at ouroption, accept the merchandise in return for a full refund.Proof of purchases plus a copy of the advertisement is allthat is needed. (This program is in addition to our BONUSBOOK benefits and other customer services.)MINOLTA XG-MIT FITS YOUR HAND AND YOUR MIND• Special contoured hand grip• Aperture-priority automation• Full metered manualexposure• 2-year camera warranty/5-year lens warrantyINSTANT PASSPORT PHOTOS TAKEN ANDCUT TO SIZE WHILE YOU WAITFUJ110024 exposures$-|95reg. 2.65Limit 1 per couponmodel camera1342 E. 55th St. 493-6700The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 29, 1981 — 23r1" *f\RobinLane& theChartbusters plus...SpecialGuestTIXNOW ONSALE Friday June59pm*2ucids4other