— Grey City Journal —HERZOG: DEVIL AS FILMMAKER- GCJ cover 1 — — InterviewSinaiko: new on the dean’s listpage fiveThe Chicago MaroonVolume 92, No. 10 The University of Chicago ©Copyright 1982 The Chicago Maroon Friday, October 8, 1982Students say aid officemisleading on job ‘award’Rv PTlicco finttliph ^Argonne National Laboratory By Elisse GottliebComplaining that they had been“deceived” by the office of collegeaid, seven transfer students to theUniversity have sent a letter tomembers of the Administration,charging that their financial aidstatements led them to believe thatthey had been guaranteed jobs,when in fact they were not.Students receiving statements offinancial aid are quoted total dol¬lar amounts they may expect to re¬ceive from the College. Theseamounts are broken down into fourallotments labeled Gift Assistance,Supplemental Educatonal Oppor¬tunity Grant, Educational Loan,UofC assumes control of ArgonneBy Jeffrey TaylorThe University of Chicago re¬ceived confirmation Wednesdayfrom the Department of Energy(DOE) to assume managerial re¬sponsibility for the Argonne Na¬tional Laboratory. Funding hasbeen reassured by DOE for at leastfive more years.The laboratory, heretofore runthrough a tripartite arrangementbetween the University, the DOE,and the Argonne Universities Asso¬ciation (AUA), was rumored to bethe target of an alleged ReaganAdministration plan to shut downone major national laboratory be¬cause of Federal budget cuts.DOE spokesman Brian Quirksaid, however, that the laboratory“is still a viable institution and isnot on the chopping block.”In the past, the University hasacted in a solely operational capac¬ity, carrying out policy and pro¬gram decisions made by the AUA.Under the new agreement the Uni¬ versity will itself take responsibili¬ty for these decisions.As of Oct. 1, the U of C has beenestablished as the sole contractorwith DOE of Argonne. Althoughthis contractual arrangement ex¬tends for only one year, the Univer¬sity and DOE will begin negotiat¬ing a five year contract to beginOct. 1, 1983.The Argonne Universities Asso¬ciation, a consortium of 30 univer¬sities primarily from the Midwest,is disbanding. The AUA wasformed in 1965 to act as the policy-,making body of the laboratory.Last winter, the AUA board oftrustees decided that the tripartitecontract was an “extraordinarilydifficult management-operationarrangement” and that it would bebest for Argonne to work for a solecontractor arrangement.Director of University News andInformation James Yuenger saidthat, in order to dictate policy, theUniversity will establish a board ofFinances force studentsto attend other schoolsBy Anna FeldmanA recent survey in The New YorkTimes shows that across thecountry, the number of freshmenaccepting admissions to college,then forfeiting their deposits to at¬tend other schools, is on the rise.Such schools as Harvard, Brown,Dartmouth and Middlebury allhave reported an increase in thenumber of students who, even aftersubmitting a non-refundable de¬posit, choose to attend another col¬lege for a variety of reasons, espe¬cially for financial considerations.According to Zina Jacque, asso¬ciate director of College admis¬sions at the University of Chicago,the number here, too, is increas¬ing.“It depends on so many factors,”said Jacque, who could not nameany one particular reason as thecause of the change in students’ de¬cisions. “When a major competitor goes to its wait-list late in the year,say in July or August,” she said, ittakes away many of those studentswho accepted admission here butfor whom U of C was not the firstchoice.Jacque agreed with the Timesarticle, saying that recently, manymore students are staying closer tohome because of their financial sit¬uation.According to the Times, “All of¬ficials involved say that the majorfactor is the economic situationand that it reflects doubts aboutwhether students and their fami¬lies can afford private colleges inthe face of soaring tuition ratesand declining Federal tuition assis¬tance.”Many students accepted to selec¬tive universities, even after send¬ing in a deposit, realize during thesummer that the expense isContinued on page seven governors of up to twenty individu¬als, “including President Gray,Provost Adams, and facultymembers, scientists and special¬ists from this and other universi¬ties. We will also consult industrialtechnicians,” he said.Walter Massey, a professor ofphysics here, will remain directorof the laboratory, directly respons¬ible to the provost and PresidentGray.Quirk called the new arrange¬ment “a vote of confidence for theUniversity,” and expressed theDOE's approval of the U of C’s in¬volvement so far.The DOE’s overall budget hasnot yet been appropriated by Con¬gress, so the amount of Argonne’sallocation is also undecided. Itsoperating budget last year was$212 million.Quirk said that although it is un¬likely, “there is still a very slimpossibility” of the lab beingclosed.The 1700-acre Argonne NationalLaboratory employs 4600 people,and is located 28 miles southwest ofChicago. It was formed under theAtomic Energy Act of 1946 as adirect offshoot of the World War IIMetallurgical Laboratory at theUniversity. It was established topursue the peaceful uses of nuclearenergy-.The laboratory built the Experi¬mental Breeder Reactor (EBR-1)which was the first to yield electricpower. It also played a key role inthe development of the boilingwater reactor that is used in manynuclear generating plants.The laboratory now uses itsbroad-based resources to solveproblems of energy supply, energyutilization and environmental pro¬tection. Besides its nuclear energyprograms, the laboratory conductsresearch in basic energy sciences,high energy’ physics, nuclear phys¬ics, fossil energy, conservation andrenewable energy’ development,and biomedical and environmentalsciences.Research by Jeffrey Taylor andTom Elden. and Term-Time Employment.The students said that they weredisillusioned to find out that term-time employment, the fourth cate¬gory under total College aid, is notnecessarily work/study employ¬ment which is subsidized by thefederal government. Because allfour aid categories are listed under“Total College Award,” the com¬plainants assumed that they wereguaranteed of receiving all thesemonies.The students’ letters to the Ad¬ministrative officials reads. “If theOffice of Financial Aid feels thatwe should find some type of jobthat is not Office-affiliated, thenthe amount therefrom should be in¬cluded in the ‘Estimated Re¬sources’ section of the FinancialAid Certificate under ‘StudentEarnings. By including Term-Time’ under ‘College Award’ andnot under ‘Estmated Resources.’ itis implied that ‘Term-Time Em¬ployment’ is something other thansimply employment during theyear, when in fact it is not!”David Goodman, who wasamong those signing the letter, toldof his experience finding a job.“I applied to a number of schoolsas a transfer, and got my financialstatements verv close to the dead¬ line for deciding among schools.My decision to come here wasbased on the amount of financialaid I was told I would be getting,and that included a $1500-a-termjob,” he said.“I got to school, and after a coup¬le of days went with a friend to thecollege aid office to find out aboutour jobs. We went in thinking thatwe were on work/study. We werereferred to someone who told ussarcastically, I’d love to give youa job, but I just don’t have any.'After a lot of searching, I found ajob on campus washing dishes. Thejob will not give me enough hoursto make up the $1500 promised. Myfriend still has not found a job,” hesaid.Jeremiah Bosgang, who alsosigned the letter, voiced his com¬plaint against the term-time em¬ployment program. “I went to thecareer counseling office to look forprospective jobs. I took down thenames and numbers of about half adozen that I wanted or was quali¬fied for.” Bosgang said that hewent to see each of the prospectiveemployers, but was turned awayeach time. “When they found out Iwasn't work/studv, they said theyjust didn't have the funds,” hesaid. Continued on page sevenOFFICE OF COLLEGE ADMISSIONS i■»-6 Eas* 59m S»'ee* Ch-cagoJeremiah Bosgangt Committee or Cc*dge Aid s o»ea*ec to inform you that you rave oee'-identic yea' Th>* award * based upon cattefui evaiua^o* of you' hnanciai ime 'eve<se s>oe of this certificate An add't>one» e«p.anar on of the md«v:ioseo Memorandum to Students and Parents p*ease complete anc s-<urn it directty to me Office of College Adm,**jons w-rn you' Rep»v Caro DATE July 6,CRCM thE COMM’ 982”rEE ONidejicTgjrCQUJTCt<*&*t*go <H» Aaatotaoca I—iiSflL-mT«r*-Tu»# ♦z *;> .. vs*Wp.$£• .x, / •. fV‘v &■ , Vro*icou«M*te •:■.Ufitt- A■ — _ m p§ hMM,..,,ESTIMATED COLLEGE EXPENSEST'*ve< A lowerce tout-o’-jtete onfytTOTAL ESTIMATED expenses 11.600.■ -11.356, -feP &IFHEE9HH SBHBh• Students »re ssosetad to contribute eecr v*«< toward the** eoucet«c>«a< eapensee from »no eceoem< veer wrung* Farn.no «each vew at a HuOtr1 & earn.ng power nrrww if Undent* -.anno' ear" the designated amount they ma> WQweM »n •''cease m me-'students may choose to replace some o> e» ot the 3es*gn»teQ •oan amount pv increased Mraatf* "on emptoymemSTUDENT COPYThe statement of financial aid received by Jeremiah Bosgangincluded $1500 figure listed under ‘College Award — Term-TimeEmployment.’ The space for ‘Estimated Resources — Student’sEarnings-Academic Year’ was left blank. Bosgang was not award¬ed any aid under the Federal Work/Study Program.ICome to theASHUMSTUDENT/FACULTY PICNICSaturday, October 9 th at 1:30 pmBehind Lab School• Games, • Students,• Food and a • Family and• Good Time!! •Friends welcomeKNOCK YOUR SOCKS OFF!!(Rain Location: Cox Lounge, Basement of Business School) THE FLAMINGO APARTMENTS5500 South Shore DriveSTUDIOS & ONE-BEDROOMS• Unfurnished and furnished• U. of C. Bus Stop• Free Pool Membership• Carpeting and Drapes Included• Secure Building• University Subsidy for Students & Staff• Delicatessen • Beauty Shop• Barber Shop • T J.’s Restaurant• Dentist • Valet ShopFREE PARKING.MRS. HARRIS 752-3800TheManagement Information Systems DepartmentofMORGAN STANLEY & CO.Incorporatedinvites all seniors, of all majors, especially those pursuing honors degrees,*»>to a presentation on our Management Training ProgramWednesday, October 13,1982North LoungeReynolds Club4:00-6:00 P.M.\ . /We are actively recruiting Fall Graduates.Our program offers the following benefits:• Interaction with innovative and exceptionally talentedsecurities industry professionals.• A chance to begin a career in Data Processing at one ofWall Street's leading investment banking firms.• Guaranteed and rapid career progression in a challenging,fast paced environment.• An outstanding compensation program for those who meetthe challenge.Contact the Career Services Officefor additional information.Wine and Cheese2—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, October 8, 1982***$■:■ *v . > •k_!’News in briefHesse works atBergman GalleryAn exhibition of the lovely, sometimeswhimsical, often haunting graphic works ofEva Hesse opened at the Bergman Gallery.Sponsored by the Renaissance Society,the show is being held in Cobb Hall, 5811 S.Ellis Ave., and will run through Nov. 7.Susanne Ghez, director of the gallery, saidTuesday that nearly 500 people attended theopening.“It was a wonderful turnout,” she said.“People came from all over the city whichreally takes a lot of effort.”“I think it’s marvelous,” Ann WoodFarmer, president of Arts in Public PlacesInc., said of the opening. “The work is verydisciplined, very interesting.”Ellen H. Johnson of Oberlin College,where the exhibit originated, organized theshow. The 92 works on display were selectedfrom Hesse’s estate, museums, and privatecollections.The pieces are arranged in achronological order, and date from the late50s through 1969. The work reveals Hesse’sprogression in the graphic medium, and thearea in which she is most famous, sculpture.Ghez said that the show is funded bygrants from the National Endowment forthe Arts and the Illinois Arts Council. Shealso said that a substantial private donationmade by John Stern, a trustee of Oberlinand a board member of the RenaissanceSociety, “made the exhibit possible.”Lucy Lippard, who Ghez said wrote adefinitive monograph on Hesse, will give aspecial lecture entitled “Twelve Years”Oct. 18 at 6:30 p.m. at the gallery.Lippard will speak on the 12 years sinceHesse’s death at age 34 of a brain tumor,“and will put her work into perspectivegiven the 12 year distance, and the im¬portance and impact of it,” Ghez said. Because attendance will be limited to 100,Ghez said that those interested should makea reservation by sending in a check ormoney order made payable to theRenaissance Society. The cost is $2 formembers and students and $3 for thegeneral public.Bendix to speak hereNoted sociologist Reinhard Bendix willdeliver the Albion W. Small lectures on his¬torical sociology next week. These lectures,originally to be held last spring, were res¬cheduled when Bendix became ill.Bendix has authored many scholarlybooks and articles including Max Weber: AnIntellectual Portrait and Work and Authori¬ty in Industry. Bendix received his bache¬lor’s, master’s, and doctorate degrees fromthe University of Chicago. Since earning hisPhD in 1947, he has taught at Berkeley.- The lecture series is named in honor of Al¬bion Small, the head of the Sociology De¬partment at the U of C from its inception in1892 until 1925.The first lecture will be presented Mon¬day, Oct. 11 on “Objective and SubjectiveMeaning in History.” The other two lecturesare “Embattled States” Wednesday, Oct.13, and “Relative Backwardness and Intel¬lectual Mobilization” Friday, Oct. 15. Alllectures will be held at 4 p.m. in SocialSciences 122.Centrex-IBX connectsMembers of the University communityshould know that it is possible to communi¬cate directly between the black Centrexphones and the new IBX phones. Until theinstallation of the IBX system is completed,persons using one telephone system can calla number on the other system by dialing 180and then the last five digits of the number.Thus Centrex phone users, particularly stu¬dents living in dormitories, should dial 1802-XXXX to reach a person with an IBX This direct communication between theIBX and Centrex systems was set up by theoffice of telecommunications for the conven¬ience of University phone users. Students donot have to use a pay phone to call an IBXnumber. Furthermore, there is no unitcharge for using the 180 procedure.Pediatrics symposiumThe Department of Pediatrics is sponsor¬ing a symposium on growth and develop¬ment Oct. 20 through 22 at the UniversityMedical Center. The symposium has beenplanned in memory of Dr. Albert Dorfman,former director of the Kennedy Mental Re¬tardation Research Center and formerchariman of the Department of Pediatricsand director of the LaRabida Institute. Over20 basic scientists and clinicians throughoutthe US will gather to discuss their researchin genetics and biochemistry.The symposium will be held from 9 a.m.until 5 p.m. in Dora DeLee Hall, room CLI168. It is free and open to the public. Formore information contact Dr. NancySchwartz at 962-6426. Former Luce scholarsto speak on programThe Luce Scholars Program may not beas well known as the Fulbright or RhoadesScholarship competitions, but it is one of themot prestigious awards granted in thiscountry each year to only 15 persons. Lucescholars spend a year in an Asian country ina placement selected to coincide with thescholar’s previous work and academic expe¬rience. All costs are covered by the programand eligibility iis broad: one must haveearned a BA and be under 30 by the time theAsian year would begin and not have ma¬jored in Asian studies or international rela¬tions. University of Chicago alumni mayapply.On Oct. 13 at 7 p.m. in the Career Libraryof the Office of Career Counseling andPlacement, Reynolds Club 201, two formerLuce Scholars will discuss their Luce expe¬riences and the application process. Now astudent at the Law School, Jill Willis was aLuce Scholar in 1979-80 with the NationalWomen’s Education Center, Saitama,Tokyo. Steven Koch, MBA and JD from theUniversity of Chicago, was a Luce Scholarin 1977-78 with the Economic DevelopmentFoundation, Center for Research and Com¬munications, Manila. Students interested inthe Luce Scholars Program should attendthis meeting to become familiar with theprogram and to learn the ingredients forsuccessful application.The University of Chicago may nominatetwo candidates. The deadline for nomina¬tion papers is Nov. 1. Information and appli¬cations are available in Administration 223and Reynolds Club 202. For further informa¬tion contact Julie C. Monson, director of thecareer counseling and placement office at962-7044.H :U1UlinCfiCHCCICIHOP OCTOBER WINE SALESA VE UP TO 40% ON NUMEROUS ITEMS SPEC I ALL Y PRICED FOR THIS SALE!SALE DATES: October 8th thru October 14thAll items listed below are 750 ml. unless stated otherwise. Delivery available — sale items not included.WE OFFER FREE CONSUL TA TION ON DEPARTMENT OR PERSONAL PARTIES. FOR THE LA TEST INFORMA TION ON WINE OR CHEESEPHONE DEAN GOLD, STORE MANAGER, 324-5000. CALL FOR OUR LIST OF SPECIAL PRICES ON 1979 CLASSIFIED GROWTHS.FROM ITALY FROM CALIFORNIA FROM FRANCESAVE ON SOME OF ITALY’SFINEST OFFERINGS . . .From Luigi Ferrando of the Piedmontedistrict...SPANNA 1980Produced from the Nebbiok) grapeRegularly $3 99CAREMA 1976Produced from the Nebbiolo grapeRegularly $6 99(ovriKxolumiKfiwM.in NOWNOW 3.395.99BARBERA CONTERNO1979One of the most reputable andhighly respectedproducers. C QQReg $6.99 .. 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The “term-timeemployment” category is listed on the form under “Total College Aid” insteadof under “Estimated Resources.” The latter category includes parental con¬tributions and a student’s summer earnings and savings. Were the College toguarantee and provide work/study to needy students, money earned throughthese jobs would certainly qualify in some sense as “aid.” That “term-timeemployment” is classified as “aid” leads to the impression that the Office ofCollege Aid will play a role in helping students find work or securing a job forthem.Considering the cost of an education here, the amount of money offered to pro¬spective students in their financial aid packages has to be one of the most impor¬tant factors in making the decision to attend. The amount of money the Office ofCollege Aid expects a student to earn during the school year by working may bea major portion of his resources; not having that money may be a sufficientlylarge obstacle to prevent some students from matriculating.We understand that the Office of College Aid does not have as many funds as itwould like to have to dispense to needy students; however, it is difficult tobelieve that the financial aid form was planned carelessly, or that the Officemade an oversight in giving students the impression that they would be provid¬ed with work study. It is more difficult to understand how this could have hap¬pened when the Office’s previous concern for students is kept in mind. In thismatter, the Office has been negligent and irresponsible. Even if it does not con¬sider itself to be responsible for assisting students looking for term-timeemployment, it is nonetheless obligated to say so clearly. In failing to explain itsposition, it has misled new students it should be eager to keep.WHAT IS BOB’SNEWSSTAND?It’s newspapers from all of America’s great cities. It’s 3,000different periodicals imported from everywhere—all over theworld—just for you. Fashion, art, technology, sports, news,comics! It’s a dozen political viewpoints; Arab magazinesnext to Israeli magazines: French next to English. Left, right,center, whatever—all in one frenzy of pictures, print andideas to pique your interest and perhaps broaden your per¬ceptions. Is Bob’s political? We believe in a free press.Bob’s is greeting cards—3,000 different, unconventionalcards. Blank note cards from around the world with illustra¬tions of incredible beauty, embossed cards, Jewish cards,Afro-American cards, handmade Chinese cards. We have 100different ways to say “I love you” at Bob’s.Bob's is maps of all the states and 50 of its cities. It's candy,colorful buttons and rock T-shirts. Bob’s is posters, paper¬backs and postcards!What is Bob's? Bob's is a wonderful way to express yourselfand keep up with a world of news and ideas.Bob’s is convenient! Open til midnight 7 days a week!NEWSSTAND Since 1965HYDE PARK5100 S. Lake Park684-5100 LINCOLN PARK281 ON. Clark883-1123 ROGERS PARK6360 N. Broadway743-1444We bring the whole world...to You WHAr AR£ GCWNA DO ?!VAikVrf &or no wofJk Pod tut\AjO£K-?e-OfrgAM /\ i-iAlf Pc-tcr t—W&,feszrrL(OFFICE «C0UEGE[F(NIAn36(AL Atpn ^TH£_CH(CAr£) CH RQfjiC^COLLEGE AID IGET" l CLASSY !FoCLT-Hf.PPXf IOF OME • \All,, , /A \a1uA-;t-£ aftoe. fOR H- [ —""'AcOTlA^. — " •T. -UdA A birr \\odbfrue H°oru... loo*. fWmUAbbth 'iooLettersUnited Church explains programsTo the editor:I am writing to note a mistake in the issueprinted for the back to school week of Sep¬tember 24th-30th regarding the UnitedChurch of Hyde Park. The selection “Reli¬gion on the Quadrangle” gave a confusinglisting without clarification of our church. Itwas confusing because we were listed be¬tween the address of University Church andthe explanation of the University Church’sministry. Further, there was no descriptiveexplanation of our church nor its program.The United Church of Hyde Park is an ec¬umenical, interracial congregation whichhas the longest history of protestant: min¬istry in the Hyde Park community. We cur¬rently have two services of worship on Sun¬day morning in order to accomodate theneeds of our congregation. The first serviceis oriented towards students and familiesand is characterized by being informal yetrespectful of liturgical seasons and drama.The second service is at 11 a.m. and is char¬acterized by an emphasis on choral musicand preaching. A wide range of people andinterests are represented at each service,but students, faculty, and University affili¬ates make up about one third of the congre¬gation.Our church seeks to be an active voice inthe community being active in numerousways. The mission might be best represent¬ed by our Agape ministry: Neighbors Serv¬ing Victims of Crime. Numerous studentshave been active as volunteers in the pro¬gram, and several students and facultyhave benefited from our court escort ser¬vice.The ecumenical relations of the churchare important as we are recognized as oneof the study churches of the Council onChurch Union (COCU). Our merger repre¬sents three denominations: United Churchof Christ, United Methodist, and UnitedPresbyterian, U.S.A. Our gathered congre¬gation represents an even wider spectrum of Christianity. Such pluralism has causedsome to wonder who we are and what is re¬presented at the United Church. Perhapsthis is best answered in a quote which ap¬peared in the book Chicago Churches andSynagogues. “The United Church...housesan active, multi-ethnic community of Chris¬tians who are deely committed to ministryin the church and in the Hyde Park neighor-hood.”Rev. R. Mark BiddlePastorLetters policyThe Chicago Maroon welcomes submis¬sions to its letters to the editor section. Let¬ters may be responses to articles or view¬points appearing in the Maroon or they maydeal with relevant topics which affect stu¬dents, faculty, or staff of the University orHyde Park residents. Except for extraor¬dinary circumstances, the Maroon will onlyprint letters that are written solely for thepurpose of appearing in the Maroon’s let¬ters section.All letters submitted must be typed andshould not exceed 500 words. The Maroonreserves the right to edit for length any let¬ter exceeding 500 words. Letters to the edi¬tor will appear only in Friday issues.CorrectionIn last Tuesday’s story on the Medievaland Renaissance Re-Creation Society(MARRS), the Maroon incorrectly statedthat its meetings are on Thursdays. Themeetings are Tuesdays at 7:30 p.m. in theSun Parlour of Ida Noyes Hall.Also, in the “25 years ago this week...”column, the Hyde Park Co-Op's 4th birthdaywas set in 1957. It was the Hyde Park Co-OpFederal Credit Union.The Maroon regrets the errors.Special Back-to-School OfferFREE DELIVERY*(Ground floor only)Used Desks, Chairs, File Cabinets•Many chairs priced at $500•Wood Desks at s5000 & up* Minimum purchase for free delivery * 10000BRANDEQUIPMENT 8560 S. ChicagoRE 4-2111Open Daily 8 30-54—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, October 8, 1982InterviewSinaiko: new student dean with tough act to followBy Robin KirkThe University administration changesfrom academic year-to-year in bureaucraticsubtleties which escape most students. Thisfall, however, has brought several crucialshifts in terms of student life, including anew Dean (Levine), new masters, and newadvisors. But the change which will weighmost heavily on the daily life of Joe andJane College is the appointment of HermanSinaiko as the new Dean of Students in theCollege.Sinaiko, born in 1929 and a professor ofHumanities in the College, came to this of¬fice on Oct. 1 with nothing but praise for hispredecessor, Lorna Straus, and hopes histerm as the dean will continue to build uponadvances already made during her popularterm. The following is an interview conduct¬ed with Sinaiko Oct. 5.Maroon: What long-term plans do you havefor the office of the Dean of Students?Sinaiko: Right now, I’m mostly finding outabout the office. I am reviewing all the poli¬cies and procedures of the office, as I thinkshould be done often, to see if there are waysto make things more efficient, simplified.One of my central concerns is the quality oflife for all students in the College. I want tocontinue to improve it and also to changestudent perceptions. There is a sense amongstudents that life is bad here and that’s part¬ly a myth. I want there to be a sense thatHyde Park is an interesting place to live andwork, that it is diverse, and that it reflectsthe people who are here. I would love to re¬duce the crime rate, but the things I can doare limited. I’m always interested in hear¬ing serious suggestions from students aboutthings that could be done and even real com¬plaints. If procedures are mechanical or un¬feeling, or cause unnecessary harassment, Iwant to know. Maroon: What about your more immediateshort-term goals?Sinaiko: If a student has a complaint, theyshould come right to me. I’m trying veryhard to keep my door open. One of the greatadvantages of having the deans and masterson the same floor is that the communicationbetween the faculty and the administrationhas actually improved. Having the wholeadministration in one place is a wonderfulidea. I am specifically looking at gradingpolicies and want to discourage as much aspossible the habit of getting incompletes.The situation of incompletes on this campusis just awful. I also want to provide supportsystems for students who are dealing withissues that are not so much personal as pro¬cedural. For example, freshmen panic overpapers, stress, and exam preparation. Theyare dealing with things they have never hadto before and they really feel it. On the other end, I want to enhance the services of thecareer counseling office so that students geta sense of where they are going from here.We could proyide support on these issues, akind of middle ground between StudentMental Health and ordinary bull sessions inthe dorms. It wouldn’t be advisory, and it’snot quite therapy. I guess workshops is sortof the idea, similar to the stress workshopwhich was held last year and was very popu¬lar.Maroon: What is your most important roleas Dean of Students?Sinaiko: This office occupies a positionsomewhere between the strictly academicclassroom and the dorms, a kind of middlepoint between these two services. To facili¬tate the work a student does here as much aspossible is important. It means being an ad¬vocate for student needs and interests in allparts of the College.Herman Sinaiko, dean of students in the College photo by dan breslau Maroon: In what ways has the overhaul inadministrators changed the office?Sinaiko: The hope is to effect as much inte¬gration as possible between divisions, theadministration, and the academics, so thatthere is less of a split between dorm and ac¬ademic life. We don’t have an ideology.There are lots of old College hands at teach¬ing up here, people who are devotees of theCollege. Since the College, because of a de¬crease in the enrollment of the graduateschools and the separation of the profession¬al schools, is more central to the life of theUniversity, it’s important to get together.Maroon: In reference to your comments ofthe “quality of life,” how does the new in¬crease in female undergraduates fit in?Sinaiko: It’s got to be nicer for everybody.Since we are largely a residential college,we are more responsible for the quality oflife. I think more women are looking towardschools that their brothers would have con¬sidered fifty years ago. Our admissions re¬flect that.Maroon: Again in reference to life and prob¬lems students have, will the decrease inavailable financial aid create more prob¬lems for you to deal with?Sinaiko: Certainly the situation is very com¬plicated. It’s almost impossible for a stu¬dent to work their way through college, tomake $11,000 per summer. We are one of theonly institutions left to have aid-blind ad¬missions. How long we can continue that, Idon’t know. I get the sense people feel theyare being treated equitably by the people inthe financial aid office, even if they don’talways get what they ask for. Everyonecomplains about the cost, not unfairness.Maroon: Finally, is there anything youwould like to add?Sinaiko: I’m certainly enjoying the office sofar and I'm looking forward to a kind of wideopen review and reflection of what goes onin the College. I hope this office will providea lot of input.Combine fine theatre and fine dining.Court Theatre patrons with ticketsenjoy a 10°7o dining discountand complimentary wine-tastingLuncheon 11 to 4 • Dinner 4 to 11 • Sunday Brunch 10:30 to 2:30free parking • major credit cards honored1525 E. 53rd Street • 10th floor • Hyde Park241-5600 AustraliaCanada IMPORTED BEERS FROM IrelandItalyLUTHERAN CAMPUS MINISTRYAugustano Lutheran Church5500 S. Woodlawn Ave.6:30 a.m. — Sermon b Eucharist9:30 a.m. — Sunday School 6 Adult Forum:“Living More With Less ”10:45 o.m. — Sermon b Eucharist6:00 p.m. — Campus Ministry Supper (S2/person)You're Invited! Germany Sweden Yugoslavia Norway Mexico JapanHolland Denmark China Poland Jamaica EnglandSPECIAL IMPORTED BEERS AT HALF PRICE!!from YUKON GOLD LAGER CA1Rce394«CANADA 6 Pack/12 Oz./Non-Ret. OHLC 4.13CASE OF 24 7.99from KROMBACHER PILS caifVrqGERMANY 6 Pack/12 Oz./Non-Ret. smll i.oaCASE OF 24 9.98FROMENGLAND BIG BEN6 Pack/12 Oz./Non-RetlPEPSIDIET PEPSIMOUNTAIN DEW 67lCase24 12 Oz. CansCANADIAN CLUB6" 750 MLReg. 8.49 Reg. 4.58SALE 2.29CASE OF 24 8.98BEER SUPER SPECIALGROLSCHFROMHOLLAND Reg *22“W 6 Pi3.99 PackGIN or VODKA6981.75 Liter FROM FRANCECOTE DE BEAUNEVILLAGES39sReg. 4.99Sale ItemsthroughOctober 14Store HoursMon-Fri 7 am MidSat 7 am MidSun 12 noon - MidLINCOLN LIQUORS1516 E. 53rd St.Phone 752-4238 750 MLWe reservethe rightto correctprinting errors.Sale itemsnot iced.The Chicago Maroon—Friday, October 8, 1982—5iiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHILLEL CLASSESBEGIN THIS COMING WEEKYIDDISH - BEGINNERSTeacher: Mrs. Pearl KahanSAYINGS OF THE FATHERS(PIRKEI AVOT)WITH COMMENTARY OF THEMAH ARAL OF PRAGUE (1525-1609)Teacher: Mr. Michael ShapiroINTRODUCTION TO JEWISH LIFEAND THOUGHT: A THEOLOGICALAND SYMBOLIC APPROACH#Teacher: Rabbi Daniel I. LeiferBEGINNING TALMUDTeacher: Mr. David NeumarkWEEKLY TORAH PORTIONAND COMMENTARIESTeacher: Rabbi Louis LazovskyA PHILOSOPHICAL SURVEYOF BIBLICAL LITERATUREBEGINNING WITH GENESISTeacher: Rabbi Norman LewisonADVANCED TALMUD -MONDAY, OCT. 11,6:00 P.M.-MONDAY, OCT. 11,7:00 P.M.-TUESDAY, OCT. 12, 8:00 P.M.-TUESDAY, OCT. 12, 8:00 P.M.-THURSDAY, OCT. 14, 8:00 P.M.■THURSDAY, OCT. 14, 8:00 P.M.-TO BE ARRANGEDALL CLASSES HELD AT THEHILLEL FOUNDATION - 5715 WOODLAWN AVENUEFOR MORE INFORMATION CALL - 752-1127iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiimiiiiiiii NORTHERNIRELAND:Prospects andProblems— a panel discussion —Led by: Prof. Emmet Larkin, University of ChicagoWith: Eileen Mackevitch, WBEZ Radio reporterProf. Lawrence McCaffrey, Loyola UniversityCyril Gray, British Embassy, Washington D.C.Liam Cannife, Irish Consulate, ChicagoSaturday, October 92:30 pmInternational House1414 E. 59th St.ADMISSION FREELooking forUnique Part-Time Employment?The American Bar Association is looking for people with excellent oral communicationskills for a membership solicitation/fundraising program.Individuals hired for this effort will contact A.B.A. members nationwide by telephoneto discuss the public service, education and membership programs of the Association.If you possess good speaking abilities and can make a positive impression over thephone, an immediate position awaits you.The salary will be $4.50 per hour. The hours will be 6 p.m. to 9 p.m., Monday throughThursday. Applicants should be willing to work two sessions each week.To apply contact Eloyise Robinson from 1 p.m. to 4:45 p.m. for a preliminary inter¬view.947-4170American Bar Association1155 E. 60th Street Chicago, Illinois 60637affirmative action/equal opportunity employer m/f/h J6—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, October 8, ly82NewsSG approves appts, hears reportsBy Tom Eldenand Margo HablutzelFrom the time its members unanimouslypassed a resolution to limit the meeting to 45minutes, student government’s Wednesdaynight meeting went more agreeably thanthat of last week.The Finance Committee’s recommenda¬tions were passed unanimously, but only oneof the four groups considered was given allof the funding that it had requested. The SGFood Co-Op was given the $10 it requested.The Gay and Lesbian Alliance (GALA),which had requested $250, was given $210.Pocket Poetics was given the $100 that it hadrequested for a loan, but its grant was cutfrom $338 to $295. The group which sufferedthe biggest cuts was the Chinese StudentsAssociation: it received $115 for a dinner forwhich it had requested $240, and received$55, instead of the requested $140, for itsquarterly budget. A proposed picnic re¬ceived no funding.Several other committees also made re¬ports. The Academic Affairs Committee an¬nounced it will hold a General EducationRound Table discussion on Oct. 20 at 7:30p.m. in Swift Auditorium. To be moderwat-ed by Charles Wegener, chairman of Ideasand Methods, the panel will consist offormer dean of the College Jonathan Z.Smith, president of the Loop and Communi¬ty Colleges Salvatore Rotella, and NathanTarcov, a professor of political science inthe College.The Committee also announced it willsponsor a forum on the Baker report ongraduate education reforms in the Universi¬ty, published last spring.The Activities Committee announcedplans for a semi-formal Homecoming danceto be held in Barlett Gym on Oct. 16. Thedance will feature Air Flow Deluxe, a Chi¬cago band specializing in swing music of the1930s and early 1940s. The Student Services Committee an¬nounced that the “Gargoyle Express’’ willbegin running on Friday and Saturdaynights to take students downtown fromcampus. A motion was made and passed tohave the buses stop at Burton-Judson on theoutbound and return trips. The motion wasbacked by a letter from the Burton-JudsonHouse Council.The dates, times, and places for SG fallelections were decided. On Nov. 3, ballotingwill take place at Cobb Hall, Reynolds Club,the business school, the medical school, theShoreland, and the dormitory cafeterias. OnThursday, Nov. 4, balloting will be held atthe Reynolds Club and Cobb. Exact timeswill be announced soon. Fall elections arebeing held because last spring’s electionswere invalidated by the Student-Faculty-Administration (SFA) Court. The courtcharged that the Election and Rules Com¬mittee violated their own by-laws and theSG constitution by tabulating ballots beforeelections were closed.A motion was made and passed to post¬pone the Student-Faculty Court appoint¬ments until next week’s meeting.The following committee appointmentswere made:Election and Rules — Wendy Lin, JoanSperl, Keungsuk Kim, Jeff Wolf, Tony Vag-nucci, Pat Vidal, and Susan Smith.Activities Committee — Jan Assadi, Jack¬ie Hardy, Martina Howe, Roni Dersovitz,Amy Laird, Henry Lee, Mimi Lee, DanLaurence, Don Lindgren, John Maragnore,David Shannon, Mike Noble, Barry Water¬man, Evan Weir, Dan Yardeu, John Tub-man.Ex-Libris — Kahane Corn, Brian Bursell,and Liz Cassanos.University Services — Robin Henke, Ju¬dith Praitis, Robert Kester, and Jeff Fried¬man.U of C to benefit from projectBy Jeffrey TaylorThe University of Chicago will benefitfrom the projected $3 billion development ofa lakefront residential, retail, and officecomplex, according to a spokesman fromthe Chicago Dock & Canal Trust which ow nsthe property.Chicago Dock President Charles Gardner,in a press conference, Tuesday named theUniversity as one of the firm’s two hundredstockholders.Chicago Dock along with Equitable LifeAssurance Society, will develop the 50-acrelakefront site located between MichiganAve. and Lake Shore Drive and betweenGrand Ave. and the Chicago River. Thecomplex will take nearly 20 years to com¬plete. The University’s shares were bequeathedby an unknown descendant of Chicago’s firstmayor William Ogden, who foundedChicago Dock in 1847. The value of thelakefront property is considered to beamong the highest in the country.Gardner refused to comment on thepercentage of stock controlled by theUniversity. He told the Maroon, “Mydisclosure of the University as a beneficiaryhas received too much attention. It was amistake on my part, and I am reluctant todisclose further information.”Jonathan Kleinbard, vice-president forUniversity News and Community Affairs,said that the University has a “fractional”interest in the firm, but that further com¬ment was “premature.”Costs send students elsewhereContinued from page onetoo great and that they must decline. Theadmissions offices at the most selectiveschools then resort to their waiting lists, andpull in students who have reserved spaces intheir second choice colleges, which thenrefer back to their own waiting lists, and soon.“It’s a case of big fish eating medium fisheating small fish eating immeasurable sizedfish,” said the dean of admissions at Lewisand Clark in Oregon.Jacque said that it is nearly impossible totell exactly how many of those forfeiting de¬posits do so because of late acceptance totheir first choice school, and how many doso because of financial reasons. Sometimes these students go to another school withoutnotifying U of C, and even when they do,said Jacque, “You’re never sure whetherthey’re telling you the truth” about whythey chose another school.Some feel that students put down depositsat more than one university merely to delaytheir final decisions. It makes it very diffi¬cult for admissions offices trying to preparefor the incoming class. “You have no ideahow to plan your enrollment, especially interms of housing,” Jacque said.She added that administrators discussedthe ethics of “double-depositing” last weekat a meeting of a national organization ofcollege admissions officers.Aid officeContinued from page oneBosgang said that, like other students towhom he had spoken, he was very dis¬couraged by the whole process. He said thatin the career counseling office, students aretold to look through binders of job listings asoutdated as “old classified ads in the morn¬ing paper.”“Then they give you a map of Chicago anda pat on the back,” he added.Bosgang said that the office of College aidshould make it clear to students on term-time employment that it does not haveguaranteed jobs waiting for them at school.“They should say, ‘When you get to Chicago,you’re going to have to look for a job.’ Had Iknown that, I wouldn’t have spent timegoing to their little orientation meetings,”he said. “I would have gone looking for ajob.”According to Bosgang, a student wouldhave to work in a minimum wage job for 16hours a w'eek to earn the $1500 quoted by thefinancial aid office under expected term-time employment income. There is a cate¬gory in the financial award statement for“Estimated Resources: student earnings —academic year.”“If they want to estimate how much we’llmake (in a job during school), fine,” saidBosgang, “but it should have been put underthe estimated resources.”“It’s a real oversight,” he continued. “Ireally feel that we’ve been deceived.”Jerry Reiser of the office of College aid explained that the office is sensitive to thestudents’ complaints, and said that he un¬derstands “why some students can be con¬fused.”Reiser emphasized that the aid certificateis accompanied by information either aboutwork/study or about term-time employ¬ment. Students on term-time, according toReiser, are referred to the Career Counsel¬ing and Placement Office. He agrees thatthe initial certificate should have been“twice as clear,” and he is certain that thestudents’ complaint will command “officialresponse.”Dorothy Harris of the Career Counselingand Placement Office also expressed her re¬gret that the University could not be of moreassistance to term-time employment stu¬dents. She said that there really are notenough jobs at this point, and it does seemthat there has been an increase in studentsunable to find work.Harris said that when students come tosee her she does not “have enough time tospend with them, and... can only give quickhints.” Part of the problem, she said, is thatthe office is “understaffed, and funds arevery limited. We have no job developer.”Harris has given two sessions on findingemployment here, attended by a total ofabout 325 undergraduate students. Shefound that the students were “disgusted thatthere was no job list available.”The students who signed the letter are:Jeremiah Bosgang, Michael Aronson, DavidAugustin, David Fel, David Goodman, Wil¬liam Hanrahan, and Allen Zeltserman.COURTESY OF THE OFFICE OF UNIVERSITY NEWSGround was broken Monday for the John Crerar Science Library. PresidentHanna Gray (above, second from right) and members of the board of trusteeswere present at the ceremonies. The library, which will hold over one millionscientific volumes, is scheduled to be completed by 1984. Located just north ofthe Cummings Life Science Center, the Crerar Library will be the cornerstone ofthe new science quadrangle. Below is an artist’s rendering.^V> - "- /fY- A-;... ' \« ■ '■ 7■ .A •'r.-;:>7r-r nma«rrTHENEW PUB Best prices in town on domestic and imported beers. 8 beers on tap.N.Y. pizza by Medici. Nachos, too. Big screen T.V. this weekend.UCID required. 21 and over only $2.00 annual membership.Buy at door.The Chicago Maroon—Friday. October 8. 1982—7The Graduate School ofBusiness Presents(c%czSfSiTH£l98S CA^EERCONFERENCEFriday,October 15thIda Noyes Hall—Featuring—MR. BARRY SULLIVANChairman & CEO, First Chicago Corp. and The First Na¬tional Bank of ChicagoDR. JOHN J. LEACHPresident, Chicago Consulting Ctr., Ltd.PANEL SESSIONSEncompassing a variety of fields in businessOPPORTUNITIESTo meet with speakers and panelists at lunch and aclosing cocktail reception.REGISTRATION:October 6,7,8,11th,Stuart Hall Lobby,11:00 a.m. -2:00 p.m.FOR INFORM A TION & BROCHURE,CONTACT THE BUSINESS STUDENTS ASSOCIA TION,STUART HALL BASEMENT,PHONE 962-/093. FIESTA SPECIAL EVENT COORDINA TORSPresentsAn Evening of IllusionsSaturday, October 23, 1982 — at theJohn J. Glessner Mansion — 1800 South Prairie Avenue$25 Per Person includes:• Two Cocktails • Complete Buffet Dinner• An enlightening look at the Illusions of the Stock Market withStock Broker John W. Rogers.• Guided tour of the 35 room Glessner Mansion• A chance to solve the Mystery of “An Illusion ” and win aFantasy Escape for two- COCK TAILS BEGIN A T 7:30 P.M. -Make Checks Payable to: FIESTA INC.Carmen Gonzalez, FIESTA INC.5201 S. Cornell, Chicago, IL 60615To make reservations call FIESTA 667-3700 before Friday, October 15th.October Typewriter Specials! marian realty,inc.mREALTORStudio and 1 BedroomApartments Available— Students Welcome —On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-5400CHICAGO SINAI CONGREGATION5350 South Shore DriveHoward A. Berman, RabbiSmith CoronaPortablesClean & Oil $2gooAll models that we serviceRepair extra - Free estimatesNEW IBMCORRECTINGSELECTRICIIDual pitch, V2 spacing, 13”2 elements included $U7 WyO90 day guarantee m m. JWhile quantities last 4 ONLYNEW IBMCORRECTINGSELECTRIC13” with sound reduction featureDual pitch, hall- SQfvQOOspacing, two elements Vr JuRincluded.90 day guarantee. While Quantities last.IBM CORRECTINGSELECTRIC II -13”Select used^739^30 day guarantee • No trade-inswhile quantities last.Rebuilt machines also available $810.00with six month guarantee New IBM NON CORRECTINGSELECTRIC ll’SDual pitch - V2 spacingwith 2 elements • 90 day guaranteeWhile quantities lasti3” 74900is- 769“ jSjfj| All sales final • No exchange • No credit • No refunds |The University of Chicaqo Bookstore_Typewriter Department (2nd floor)E-J 970 East 58th St. • 753-3303 §>qai Temple, founded in 1861 asChicago s first Reform Synagogue, is aCongregation committed to the historicliberal religious and social principles ofAmerican Reform Judaism. We are adiverse community of people of all agesand backgrounds, who live throughoutthe greater Chicago area. Our activeprogram of educational, cultural andsocial activities enables us to exploreand confront the spiritual and moral .challenges of our time, guided by the in¬sights of the Jewish Tradition.Sinai extends a special invitation tothe students of the University of Chicagoto join us for our regular worship ser¬vices and programs.Sabbath ServicesFridays, 5:30 pmWeekly MorningWorshipSundaysStudy Forum 9:30 amWorship Service 11:00 amFor further information,please call or visit theTemple office - 1780 East54th Street -288-1600.> MemberAmerican Optometric AssociationHI*DR. M.R. MASLOV• EYE EXAMINATIONS• FASHION EYEWEAR• All TYPES OFCONTACT LENSESASK ABOUT OUR ANNUALSERVICE AGREEMENTLOCATED INTHE HYDE PARKSHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th363-61008—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, October 8, 1982GREY CITY JOURNALBy Nina BermanWerner Herzog, a leading figure inthe so-called German New Wave Cine¬ma, has been working nearly fouryears to complete his most difficultproject to date. Filmed in the jungle ofPeru under trying geographic, techni¬cal and social conditions, and starringwild-eyed maniac actor Klaus Kinski ofAquirre: Wrath of God, Woyzeck andNosferatu fame, Herzog's Fitzcarraldoopened in Germany earlier this year torave reviews. Currently showing at theNew York Film Festival, Fitzcarraldoprobably won't reach Chicago for sometime, but a Les Blank documentary en¬titled Burden of Dreams about theshooting of Fitzcarraldo, is screeningat Chicago's Facets MultimediaCenter.Far more than an account of theproblems involved in filming in thePeruvian jungle under the direction ofa perfectionist like Herzog, Burden ofDreams discusses the relationship be¬tween director and subject, the role ofthe artist, and the film profession ingeneral. It also raises the politicalquestion of whether a Westerner likeHerzog, engaged in a capitalist enter¬prise in an underdeveloped land, canpossibly come away from the Ventureas anything more than an exploiterwith his product. Even with his leftwing sympathies, and respect for thePeruvian Indians and cultural diver¬sity, Burden of Dreams suggests thatHerzog only reproduced the exploita¬tive conditions he sought to avoid.Arriving in Peru in 1979 at a timewhen the country was building up for aborder war with Ecuador, the junglewas heavily patrolled by the military,and oil and lumber concerns were in¬creasing their appropriation of Indianterritory, Herzog was predictably per¬ceived by the local Aguaruna Indiansas just another exploiter. However,after much negotiation, Herzog wasable to convince the Aguarunas that,unlike the industrial profiteers, he wasnot planning to stay forever, and hebegan shooting using Indian labor. TheWestern press labeled him a madmanand an exploiter. The Aguaruna tribalcouncil, a newly created body designedto provide a unified political voice forall the Aguarunas, saw Herzog as adangerous presence who wanted tokeep the indigenous population in itsplace by portraying the Indians as pri¬mitive savages in the typical Hol¬lywood fashion. Herzog responded bysaying that "they didn't really want tobe real natives," and that in an agewhere native cultures are quickly los¬ing the battle against a growing homo¬genized version of an American-styledculture, his film would be "one of thelast feature films using real natives."In any event, on December 1, 1979, agroup of armed Aguarunas surroundedHerzog's camp and forced the filmcrew to flee down river on canoe wav¬ing white flags.The incident dramatizes several keypoints emphasized in Burden of 8 October 1982 • 15th YearDreams. For one, the barrier betweenHerzog and his subject, Fitzcarraldo,dissolves. Herzog, a European, ven¬tures into the Peruvian jungle equippedwith his tech crew and technology inthe hope of fulfilling a personal dream,the film Fitzcarraldo. Similarly, Fitz¬carraldo, an Irishman, travels to Peruduring the early 20th century rubberboom, and once there, decides to builda grand opera house in the jungle sothat his idol Enrico Caruso, the highestrepresentative of western culture, cansing opera to the natives. Both are de¬termined to do anything and every¬thing — battle the jungle, triumph overnature, push human labor to its limit —in order to translate their vision into re¬ality. In the end, both suffer defeats bythe very Indians they so exploited withthe highest of intentions.Describing the incident, Herzog ex¬plains that he was the object of an indi-Three hundred tons. reef attack aimed at the Peruvian mili¬tary establishment and itsmultinational economic allies. True ornot, the incident recalled at the begin¬ning of Burden of Dreams is the first in¬dication that Herzog will play, likemany of his characters, the contradic¬tory role of both reinforcer of myth (inHerzog's case, Indian myths about thewhite man), and victim of myth.After being forced out of theAguaruna territory, Herzog moved theset location 1500 miles south and strucka deal with the local Machiguenga Indi¬ans, promising that if they let himshoot there he would help them securelegal title to their land. With Jason Ro-bards as Fitzcarraldo and Mick Jaggeras his sidekick, all seemed well untilRobards came down with amoebic dys¬entery and had to return to the States,vowing never to see the Peruvian jun¬gle again. Committed to a world tour and production of the new album Tat¬too You, Jagger left soon after, andwith more than 40 percent of the filmshot, production crashed to a dead halt.Refusing to replace Jagger, Herzogwrote out his part, and cast Kinski(whom he once called a "paranoid schi¬zophrenic") in the star role. While film¬ing Aquirre, also in the Peruvian jun¬gle, Kinski threatened to walk off theset after Herzog denied his request tofire a certain sound man. Pulling out agun Herzog said, "Before you reach thebend in the river, there will be eightbullets in your head and the last onewill be for me."However, as an obsessional hero,Kinski was well suited for the role. Likemany of Herzog's characters who findthemselves on the verge of a frontierthat they believe is open but in factpresents insurmountable obstacles,Kinski played the aspiring conquista¬dor Aguirre with chilling magnifi¬cence. At the end of that film, Aguirrestands on a wrecked raft, which is cov¬ered with dead bodies and screechingmonkeys, and proclaims that he willbuild the purest dynasty to last 1000years. Kinski, with his blond hair, blueeyes, and German tongue, is a stark re¬minder of what Hitler said — the ThirdReich will last 1000 years.Yet Burden of Dreams shows Kinskito be something of a primadonna. Fear¬ing infection, Kinski refuses to con¬sume a drink prepared by Indianwomen because they spit in it first. Heuses canned milk for the shot instead.The scene is ironic considering that itwas the Europeans with their diseaseswho succeeded in wiping out millions ofIndians following the Spanish conquest.In fact, four Indians did die of diseasesthey contracted in the film camp, eventhough Herzog purposedly separatedthe two camps — one for the Indians,the other for the Europeans — so thatthere wouldn't be too much cultural"contamination."Yet with all his good intentions andrespect for cultural integrity Herzogmanaged to create an environmentthat more and more came to resemblea migrant workers camp. By boat,plane, and foot Indians converged onthe film set to earn their S3.50 a day,twice the going wage. Yet, since thecamps were built for only a three-month residency, and many Indianshad already been there for more thansix months, conditions were rapidly de¬teriorating — there was severe over¬crowding, poor sanitation facilities andinadequate medical supplies. Decidingthat Indian men could no longer bringtheir wives or families, Herzog onlycompounded the already strained so¬cial and sexual tensions and succeededin disrupting the sacred Indian ritualshe had intended to preserve. Hebrought in prostitutes in a lame at¬tempt to remedy the situation.Following setback after setback in¬cluding the almost insurmountableproblem of hauling a 300 ton boat up acontinued on page 4WERNER AND HIS BOATTHE CONSEQUENCES OF: : PRAGMATISMJosef meielierTHE HERMENEUTIC: IMAGINATION:semi5757:S; UNiVERSl T:Y: M: F 950-6/SI 1-4• * i 1 1 lTHE •FALCON • INN11603-05 East 53rd St. • Just East of the 1C tracks10:30 AM-2 AM•5 Draft Beers(Old Style, Miller Light,Stroh’s, AugsburgerDark & Michelob)•3 Draft Wines•On “B” busroute - 53rd &Cornell •A Full Rangeof MixedDrinks•Kitchen open(Fine hamburgers &assorted sandwiches•Juke Box &Video Games(Including Pac-Man, Ms.Pac-Man, Donkey Kong& Centipede)The Falcon Inn is proud to restore toHyde Park the magnificent antique barand fixtures from The Eagle. Come in tovisit these old friends, and sample HydePark’s newest tavern.Ajcr Meal tfieuiXuXnnivers^ CeWirAtuH of aII HCW'vror^s&Gvmmtieis2>Xr21 Gzdlcrv5225 &OMtkOctober 9ik - October !5tH• badi'lc ♦pamper tHAiite *jpaHttki£r• ooBoiucs *ciXMiw k(mono$> }• • btMHGt • w'cAvuCg'* < • llAHtt CrAJtMAVt invite uou to outvnviuuy raerfum tulcAififrlu?krut win* —’OttvK-J’Ak 12'Spiu.2—FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1982—THE GREY CITY JOURNAL A I I I I I I 1 1 1 11 I I I ITTTonight at 7:15 and 9:45: ,Harrison Ford, Carrie Fisher, Mark Hamill, Alec Guineas ancI DarthVader go chasing through the galaxies in George Lucas STAR WARS.DOC/LSF, IN MANDEL HALL.Tomorrow at 7:15 and 9:30:DOC is proud to present the Chicago premiere of Rainer WernerFassbinder’s brilliant movie starring Giancarlo Giamini and HannaSchygulla, LILIMARLEEN. In Cobb Hall.S Trlpeafshowing of George Lucas’ STAR WARS. DOC/LSF. In LawSchool Auditorium.Then at 8:00: a __ ..As part of the best of DOC Foreign Series, we are showing YasujiroOzu’s TOKYO STORY. (Sep. adm.) In Cobb Hall.Tuesday, October 12, at 7:30 pm:Fred Camper will speak on John Ford, followed at 8 pm by a screeningof HOW GREEN WAS MY VALLEY. Reception will follow.I I ITT7 DOC FILMS 17THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESS5801 South Ellis Avenue Chicago, IL 60637Chicago‘ 'Narayan wakes in me a spring of gratitude, for hehas offered me a second home. Withouthim I could never have known whatit is like to he Indian. ”—Graham GreeneThe University of Chicago Press welcomesR. K. Narayan to campus for his October 11threading. We are proud to be the publishers of manyof his novels in paperback,including:WAITING FOR THE MAHATMA$4.50 /THE ENGLISH TEACHER$3.95THE DARK ROOM$4.50MR. SAMPATH—THE PRINTER OF MALGUDI$4.50SWAMI AND FRIENDS$3.95VTHE BACHELOR OF ARTS$3.95THE FINANCIAL EXPERT$4.50Also A callable—R. K. NARAYANA Critical AppreciationWilliam WalshCloth $12.50MAB PresentsA FREE CONCERTJONATHAN RICHMANAND THE MODERN LOVERS•Friday, Oct. 15,9 P.M. Mandel Hall•First Come First Serve Seating•No Tickeets Will Be Sold•No Camera or Sound RecordingEquipment will be permitted inside the Hall.> « I • • < • . « VI 4 * 4 « - • » 4iWWUnii wjiin mxiii ii^ir• •••••••••The Synaptlcon; Eugene X Rator with Joseph PinzarroneFILMStar Wars (George Lucas, 1977) Amodern version of Flash Gordon,this film is excessive in everyway. Even my father liked it. Fri.Oct. 8 at 7:15 and 9:45 pm. inMandell Hall, and Sun. Oct. 10 at2:30 pm. in the Law School Audi¬torium. Doc/LSF $2 — NMLili Marleen (Rainer Werner Fass¬binder, 1980) A cabaret singer be¬comes a pawn of the Nazi regimeby singing a song which is able totouch the hearts of all Nazi sol¬diers/civilians — that is, the bu¬reaucracy finds its mesmerizingqualities useful for keeping thesoldiers' minds off what is reallygoing on. Sound and color in thisfilm are lush, but in some ways adistraction from the issues beingraised. The anthem, which issung repeatedly, definitelyleaves an imprint on the mind —but it is hard to decide whether itsinsistently pounding quality isemblematic of Nazi brainwash¬ing, or merely annoying. Sat. Oct.9 at 7:15 and 9:30 pm. Doc. $2—NMSome Like It Hot (Billy Wilder,1959) Tony Curtis and Jack Lem¬mon flee in drag to Florida asmusicians in an all-women or¬chestra after witnessing the St.Valentine's Day rubout. Yet notwithout both musicians vying forthe orchestra's ukulele-ladencrooner, Marilyn Monroe, orwithout Lemmon snaring a pro¬posal from a screws-loose mil-lioniare, Joe E. Brown. Of all hisfilms wi1h Lemmon, Wilder con¬siders Some Like It Hot his best.Little wonder. Curtis' imperson¬ation of Cary Grant, Monroe'ssimple, warm-hearted blonde,and Lemmon's daft, euphoricDaphne, have each become com¬edy classics. And nothing canbeat that last line. Zany, clever,and uproarious. Sat. Oct. 9 at 7 &9:30 pm. LSF $2 — PFThe Tokyo Story Yasujiro Ozu,1953) An examination of the ef¬fect which change in surround¬ings and of values has on fami¬lies, this film — simple,methodical, and elegant — is bothuniquely Japanese and yet elo¬quently universal in its concerns.Sun. Oct. 10 at 8 pm. Doc. $2The Iron Horse (1924) and ThreeBad Men (1926) It is a shame thatonly three of John Ford's 40-or-sosilent Westerns still survive(Straight Shooting, his first direc¬torial effort, 1917; The IronHorse; and Three Bad Men), forin them glitter signs of later ge¬nius. Already apparent in IronHorse and Three Bad Men wereFord's uncanny ability to manip¬ulate landscape, framing, andcomposition, and his now-trade¬mark fascination with populism,ritual, self-sacrifice, and individ¬uality. Yet Ford still had much tolearn. Whereas Iron Horse (thestory of the transcontinentalrailroad) was Ford's first majorsuccess, the triviality of its un¬derlying melodrama (the originsof Three-Fingers; not, incidental¬ly, a tequilla) betrays it. ThreeBad Men, on the other hand (across between The Three Muske¬ teers and Ethan Edwards in trip¬licate), retains much of its origi¬nal epic grandeur. Mon., Oct. 11at 7:15 & 9:30 pm. Doc. $1.50—PFTHEATERYou Never Can Tell Court Theatreopens this season with one ofGeorge Bernard Shaw's "PlaysPleasanf." This comedy is a mod¬ern romance set in England atthe turn of the century, and tellsthe story of a "romantic" dentisttrying to win the attentions of a"rational" young woman.Through October 31. CourtTheatre is located at 5706 S. Uni¬versity. Tickets are available atthe Reynolds Club box office; orcall 962-7300 for single night tick¬ets, 962-7272 for season subscriptions. Moby Dick The Remains Theatreperforms an original adaptationof the Melville novel. The playwas developed through a colla¬borative workshop process lastsummer which brought togetherthe Remains Ensemble, guest ar¬tists, and Triple Action Theatre'sdirector Steve Rumbelow. Amulti-level adaptation, the playcombines three interwoven"points of view" — Ishmael, Mel¬ville, and an omnicient narrator— in addition to portraying physi¬cal components of the whaling in¬dustry and the character rela¬tionships developed withinMelville's epic. The play runsthrough Nov. 7, Tues. throughSun. at 8 pm.; tickets are $8 and$10. The Goodman Theatre,Monroe St. and Columbus Dr.443-3800.School For Wives The BeaconStreet Playhouse opens the sea¬son with a classic comedy-farceby Moliere. An aging, selfish manattempts to hide the youngwoman he desires from the world,by raising her as an idiot. Theplay runs through Nov. 7, Wed.through Fri. at 8 pm., Sat. at 7:30pm., Sun. at 3:30 & 7:30 pm.; tick¬ets are $8 $9. At the Beacon StreetPlayhouse, 4520 North Beacon St561-7300.The Man Who Had Three Arms The Goodman Theatre presents Ed¬ward Albee's newest work.Directed by Gregory Mosher.The Goodman Theatre, MonroeSt. and Columbus Dr. 443-3800.ARTEva Hesse: A Retrospective of theDrawings This exhibition is de¬voted to the drawings of influen¬tial sculptor Hesse, a leading ex¬ponent of "Post-Minimal" or"Antiform" art. The show runsthrough Nov. 7. At The BergmanGallery of the Renaissance Soci¬ety, located on the fourth floor ofCobb Hall, 5811 Ellis Ave. Open 10am. to 5 pm., daily. Free.Fantasy Landscaping Etchings,lithographs, serigraphs, andmixed media drawings by EvanSullivan. The Younger Gallery inThe Great Frame Up, 1428 E.53rd. Open Monday - Friday, 12-9pm., Saturday 10-6 pm., Sunday12-6 pm. 752-2020. Free.Tulips, Arabesques, and Turbans:Decorative Arts from the Otto¬man Empire This exhibition ofover 200 works of Ottoman artconsists of ceramics, metalware,textiles, paintings, and calli¬graphy from the 16th and 17thcenturies. The objects on exhibitreflect the conflict between theGrey City Journal 10/8/82Staff: Nina Berman, Curtis Black, Pat Cannon, Keith Fleming,Sara Herndon, Michael Honigsberg, Richard Kaye, MadeleineLevin, Paul O'Donell, Sharon Peshkin, Abby Scher, Judith Sil-verstein, Cate Wiley, Ken Wissoker.Production: Nadine McGann, David Miller, Steven Diamond.Editor: Nadine McGann. austere and the sumptuous, andalso display the transference ofimaginative ideas between thedifferent crafts which resultedfrom the Ottoman system of ar¬tistic production — the employ¬ment by the Ottoman court ofhighly skilled designers who pro¬duced designs which were thencarried out by various othercraftmen. The show runs throughDecember 5. At the David andAlfred Smart Gallery, 5550 S.Greenwood. Open 10 am. to 4 pm.Tuesday through Saturday. Noonto 4 pm. Sunday. Free.Jonathan Franklin: PaintingsLarge, richly colorful, and figu¬rative canvases portray interac¬tions between men. Effect resultsfrom 'subject' (rather than 'pre¬sentation,' per se) and is emo¬tional, even mystic. Through Oct.30 at Artemesia Gallery, 9 WestHubbard, Tuesday-Saturday,11-5. Opening reception: tonight,5-8 752-2016. Free. —DMArt 3 Three Brandi Performanceinstallation in Raw Space (thatis, the basement), the part of thisgallery known for its presenta¬tion of (at least) interesting and(always) unconventional pieces.Opening night performance: to¬night 5-5:30. Upstairs, PaperScrolls by Marilyn Sward, an ac¬complished Arc regular whomakes her material (paper), andtreats it with watercolor; we gen¬erally see continuous and subtlevariations in texture, tone, andcolor. Tonight's opening, 5-8.Through Oct. 30 at Arc Gallery, 6West Hubbard, Tuesdays-Satur-days, 11-5. Live Brandi, Satur¬days, 12-3; Tuesdays, 5-6.255-7607. Free. —DMMark Lazarus: Sculpture andDrawings Psychological themesand physical process are interwo¬ven in works made from paperpulp, paint, wood, and plaster. In¬stalled by the artist with a care¬fully conscious use of space. Sept.27 - Oct, 15. Midway Studios.The Synapticon by Eugene X Ratorwith Joseph Pinzarrone... a key¬board-controlled household ner¬vous system. First performance,Fri., Oct. 8 at 8 pm.; also Oct. 9,14-16 at 8 pm. NAB Gallery, 331South Peoria. Gallery hours areTues.-Sat. 1 1:30-4:30 pm.733-0886. $2 donation.MUSICContraband Original rock-newwave-pop live at InternationalHouse, 1414 E. 59th St. Sat. Oct. 9,9 pm.-l am. $4 includes openbar.Steve Reich The Avant-Garde Hourwith David Blair Taub, onWHPK, will include Drumming(complete), Tehillim, (Chicagoradio premiere) and Music for aLarge Ensemble. ComposerReich will be a guest on the show.Wed. Oct. 13, 2:30-5 pm.MISCAlma Mahler: Patron as Muse Fe¬minist art critic Alessandra Co¬mini will present this lecture onWed. Oct. 13 at 4 pm. at CourtTheatre, 5535 S. Ellis. The lecturewill be followed by a reception atthe Cochrane Woods Art Center.Free.Northern Ireland: Prospects andProblems A panel discussion ledby Professor Larkin, with WBEZreporter Eileen Mackevitch andrepresentatives from the Wash¬ington D.C. British Embassy andthe Irish Government. Sat. Oct. 9at 2:30 pm., International House,1414 E. 59th St. FreeTHE GREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1982—3You Never Can TellCOURT THEATRE: YOU NEVER CAN TELLby Paul O'DonnellIt is somehow typical of the University ofChicago to present a "Classic-5" series intribute to the great playwrights. The GreatBooks capitol, faced with a talented com¬pany of actors and a beautiful new theater,is bound to respond with the Great Plays.The seriousness of the undertaking shouldnot keep anyone away from Court Theatre this season, however; these plays are calledgreat for a reason and promise, as the cur¬rent production of G.B. Shaw's You NeverCan Tell bears out, to provide interestingtheater.Shaw delighted in putting social conven¬tions in embarrassing positions, in tying hischaracters into tight social knots until theywriggle obscenely to be free and in so doing expose their most ridiculously human emo¬tions. And so in You Never Can Tell, playingat Court through October 31, a pennilessyoung dentist cleverly woos a moneyedModern Woman, a creation of turn-of-the-century Liberalism. Meanwhile the ModernWoman's younger siblings, too blithe andpractical to be Modern, cast about in searchof their long lost father. Shaw took many of the lines directly fromhis own letters and personal statementsabout marriage. Among the quips and off¬hand criticism, therefore, we are liable tofind some genuine social commentary on aperiod in which the Modern era was blos¬soming. The romantic characters vacillatebetween independence and sentamentalism,as they struggle to be Modern. This, takenwith the pedagogical air of the Classic-5winter season, could lead the student to ap¬proach You Never Can Tell with a lot ofquestions. Does this portrait of early femin¬ism still apply? Do we concern ourselveswith marriage in the same way these char¬acters do? Would Shaw have liked Court'sproduction? Forget it. Who knows? Thepoint is this: Court Theater has worked up afine rendition of one of Shaw's most classic-ly funny plays.The acting throughout keeps up the en¬ergy and quick pace that Shaw requires. JoeVan Slyke, playing the romantic lead, car¬ries us through the spasms of an unbeliev¬ably complicated character very believ¬ably. William Brown and Charlotte Maier,as the two orphans, are fresh through fouracts. Forcing every delicate situation to itslimit for their own amusement, these twobrats of the British upper class provide mo¬mentum and surprise whenever the actionlooks as if it takes a dull turn. Mr. Brown, inhis Court Theatre debut, and Ms. Maier,who appears more comfortable here than ineither of her previous Court roles, are agood team and play well together. KennethNorthcott, as the witty and wise waiter,could have been mistaken for one of thosepolite English actors who makes his livingsolely from roles like this one. The cast as awhole was able to play Shaw's lines in high-comic style without appealing tongue-in-cheek to the audience. For a comedy asbroad as You Never Can Tell this balance isvery hard to achieve.Set design and costumes are critical for aplay set in this period. Joseph Nieminski isresponsible for sets that are attractive with¬out losing the element of Victorian gaudi¬ness. The costumes, designed by JessicaHahn, were tastefully done.From the student's point of view, it seemsa shame that You Never Can Tell was notsaved until those gray, dreary weeks ofwinter quarter when a play as funny, brightand refreshing as this could serve to lift thespirits of the downtrodden. But perhaps thenour minds would be so well worked that thelighthearted vigor of the play would be lostamong critical questions of serious mes¬sages and dated attitudes.Tickets are $9 and $11 at the ReynoldsClub box office.BURDEN OF HERZOGcontinued from page 140 degree slope (the film's central met¬aphor) using equipment that could onlyhandle a 20 degree slope, Herzog finallyadmits that the whole situation mustmake one question the film profession.Yet throughout Burden of Dreams Her¬zog fails to consider his own role in thatprofession and continues to sacrificeeverything and everyone around himfor the image. For example, we see anIndian almost struck in the head duringan arrow catching game, but instead ofstopping the proceedings, Herzog, frus¬trated by the lack of visual power of thegame, tells the arrow thrower to keepgoing, harder and harder.During the boat hauling scenes, thenarrator asks the Indians if they fearfor their lives. All reply, yes. And atone point, a woman recounts the storiesshe heard about Herzog and the prod¬uction before she arrived at the set.''They will tear off my face and use mygrease for airplanes." Though seem¬ingly incredulous, Blank gives cre¬dence to this common Indian mythabout the white man, no doubt becom- -ing more popularized with the increase °-in economic exploitation by oil and ^lumber concerns, by including at the "*right hand corner of the screen animage of a Nestle's milk can. At the end of the film Herzog, in obvi¬ous despair, says that Kinski believesthat there is something erotic about thejungle, "but to me, I see it full of ob¬scenity. Nature here is vile and base. Isee fornication and asphyxiation andchoking and fighting for survival and growing and rotting away. The treeshere are in misery, the birds are in mis¬ery — they don't sing, they j ust screechin pain. ...Even the stars are a mess."If I believed in the Devil, I wouldsay that the Devil was right here, and isstill right here. But I have no choice, I have to do this work. I live my life or Iend my life with this project." And hejustifies the project and his role as afilmmaker by proclaiming that hisdreams are our dreams and that "theonly difference between you and me isthat I can articulate them," and unlesswe want to become cows in a field wemust articulate ourselves.In contrast to the so-called democrat¬ic form of filmmaking primarily pro¬moted by theorist Andre Bazin, Herzogchooses to articulate our dreams withimages that are blindingly static, flat,and almost monochromatic. In a per¬fect marriage of form, content and mo¬viemaking, Herzog's images, like hischaracters, overwhelm with their ob¬sessiveness and suffocate with theirpower.Throughout Burden of Dreams Her¬zog maintains that he will help securethe Machiguenga Indians' legal title totheir land. Whether he succeeded is notmentioned in the film, yet it would bequite a feat for some gringo to triumphover the incredibly complex, Kafkaes-que Peruvian bureaucracy, so that afew Indians could get some land. He didmanage, however, to pull his 300 tonboat that he liked so much over an im¬possibly muddy hill in the mddle of thePeruvian jungle, something no one, noteven Fitzcarraldo, ever achieved. Andafter all, that was what he was afterfrom the start.5537 KIMBARK2E SUNDAY 12:304—FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1982—THE GREY CITY JOURNALRockefellerel9 amEcumenical Serviceof Holy Communion11 amUniversity ReligiousServiceBernard O. BrownDean of the Chapel 5234 S. Dorchester Ave.Walk to museums, parks, the lakeSTUDIO APARTMENTSFurnished and unfurnishedutilities includedLaundry roomSundeck • Secure buildingCampus bus at our doorCall 9-5 for appointment324-0200 (Cornell J3aptist Church iSBC)5001 S. Ellis Ave.Sunday Morning9:45 * College Bible Class11:00 - WorshipWednesday Evening7:30 - Prayer Service8:45-Choir Practice For Transportation Call:Glenn Hewitt(288-1820)Hill Hammock(684-7747)CAMPUS SUBSCRIPTIONS TOfc^c^eUrjJorK 8tme0are now available at a 30% discount ratefrom single-copy price. (Discount only forweekday paper.) Newspapers are availableby 8:30 a m. on the day of publicationwhen classes are in session. Daily discountrate is 35*.Sunday papers are available on a sub¬scription basis also, but no discount isgiven. (Sunday papers will be availablefor pick up after 8:30 a.m. on Mondaywith Monday’s issue.Your paper can be guaranteed for the firstday of subscription on October 11 only ifpayment is received by October 8. Anyorders received after October 11 will beprorated according to the number ofsubscription days left in the term.Please mail or drop off the bottom portionof this slip to:The University ofChicago BookstoreGeneral Books Department970 East 58 StreetChicago, IL 60637Count me in for The New York Times!I will subscribe 5 days 6 days .7 days Sunday only .Enclosed is my check for $ .Please make checks payable to theUniversity of Chicago Bookstore,General Books Department.Fall Term (ends Dec. 17)Mon-Fri $16.80 Mon-Sun $39.60Mon-Sat 19.60 Sun Only 20.00There will be no delivery during examweek and holidays.Name: —Address:Dept.: Phone: By popular demand the movie that“will leave you feeling 10 feet tall”is now playing at theatres everywhere.Rex Reed, syndicated columnistOFFICERAND AGENTLEMANPARAMOUNT PICTURES PRESENTSA LORIMAR-MARTIN ELFAND PRODUCTIONA TAYLOR HACKFORD FILMRICHARD GERE • DEBRA WINGERAN OFFICER AND A GENTLEMANAlso starring DAVID KEITH and LOUIS GOSSETT. JR. as FoleyOriginal Music by JACK NITZSCHE • Written by DOUGLAS DAY STEWARTProduced by MARTIN ELFAND • Directed by TAYLOR HACKFORDR RESTRICTEDUNDER 17 REQUIRES ACCORRPANTINSPARENT OR AOUU GUARDIAN A PARAMOUNT PICTURECopyngh! * MCMi * « K >i by Paramount Picto/e* CO'OO'ST'O** SR ft-QTMs <Vi*(y»CCHECK LOCAL NEWSPAPERS FOR THEATRE LISTINGSTHE GREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1982—54 ♦ *,4.;4 444444444444/*4 4.4.4 4 ♦ + 4 4 + 4 ♦ 4 4 4 ♦4 \4 ^•4 4 444444444444^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ >*;* 4 + 444444 4 '4 *£4-44444444 4 4V-4 +^ 4 4 4 4 44 + A 4 4 4 4 _ ,44 4 4 4 4 • .4 -4. .''4 4 4 4 +• 4fJ4 4 4 4 -'4 > + +;V.4 4 4 4♦ 4 4 4‘•'V. 4 * 4 4♦' 4 4 4- 4 4 4*•• 4- 4 4 *%4 4 4 4 44 4 4 4 4. ^4 4 4 4 4 44 4 4 4 4 4 W&* ■ 4 4 4 4 4 *pMk 4 4 4 4 4 *'4 • 4 4 ‘ 1 4 4 4.i* 4 4 4 4 4- 4-:'-f4 + 4 + 4mJ&L,-4- 4,4 4 4 4 4 44 4 4 4 4 4 4 4k 4 4 4 4 4P 4 4 4 44 ' 4 4. 4 . <V 4 -4' "♦>:4 4 4 >* 4 4 .m+M-mJ 4- 4W- f:' ■ +444»M.>*.;,;;4 4 4 4 .jgi^'4 • 4 4 4 +V/4 4 4 4 44 4 4 4 +|>V#> 4 + + +4 4 4 4 4 4PROPAGATION OF VIOLENCEby Robert KubeyWe've seen the likes of this movie before.A gang of hoods, mercilessly dominating anurban high school, are pitted against anidealistic rookie teacher (Mr. Norris), whoaims to win the day for education. Unfortun¬ately, Class of 1984, which owes nothing toGeorge Orwell except for the school's TVsurveillance system, is not in the sameleague with its more distinguished ances¬tors Blackboard Jungle, or Up the DownStaircase. And, it is far more violent.Mr. Norris will not be intimidated by the"new wave" punks menacing his musicclass and like Glenn Ford and his memora¬ble classroom switchblade fight in Black¬board Jungle, he is forced to retaliate withthe same street tactics employed by the stu¬dents. The simplistic plot is built entirelyaround making you hate the gang memberswith such a passion that you are glad to seethem done in. The film succeeds in this bystacking one vicious punk-perpetrated actupon another until you can barely wait tosee each of them receive a massive dose oftheir own medicine. As a result, viewingClass of 1984 is an experience in fear, loath¬ing, and revulsion: fear of having to sitthrough the next poorly acted scene or an¬other tasteless episode of opened flesh;loathing of almost all the characters; andrevulsion at all the bloodshed and at one'sself for being manipulated to the point offeeling relieved to see one of the thugs evi¬scerated by a skillsaw.Such artistry as this is the stuff thatmakes "professional" wrestling popular. Inwrestling, the villainous "Sheik" or somesuch "bad guy" nearly maims the "goodguy" for 45 minutes while breaking everyrule in the wrestling handbook before, some¬how, miraculously, at the end, the good guyrecovers and pounds the Sheik with every¬thing he had coming. Such highly contriveddrama exploits our baser tendencies andconstitutes cheap entertainment.Banality is the appropriate word to de¬ scribe Class of 1984. Nevertheless, there aretwo unsavory points this wrestling match ofa movie attempts to make. .First, that gro¬tesque violence is the wave of the future(made explicit by Alice Cooper repeatedlysinging the theme, "I Am the Future"). Butrather than condemn barbarism, the film ul¬timately glorifies and justifies it. The sec¬ond point is that there are some people soscurrilous and beyond reform that theymust be extinguished by any means possi¬ble.Four additional "mini-messages" are hid¬den in the film's narrative, messages that"Dragnet's" Jack Webb would embraceheartily: capital punishment makes sense,the police are encumbered by regulations,juveniles should be tried as adults, and oneshred of circumstantial evidence should beenough to incriminate. Defenders of the firstamendment beware, for rather than vio¬lence, what is most terrifying about this filmis its use of extreme emotional rhetoric toassault existing civil liberties.Still, the violence in 1984 is not easily viewed, and its acting, writing, and ultimaterationale ieave much to be desired. The twoleads, Perry King as the crusading teacherand Timothy Van Patten as the gang leader,are adequate, but there is no convincing de¬velopment of the characters or explanationof their motivations. Scenes between Kingand Merrie Lynn Ross, who plays his peren¬nially cheerful and pregnant wife, are soself-conscious that they nearly match the vi¬olence for turning one's stomach.Veteran actor Roddy McDowall deliversanother uneven performance as theoverwrought, alcoholic biology teacher.McDowall manages to carry orie of the fewmarginally satisfying scenes, however,when he goes over the edge mentally andbegins teaching his class full of punks at thepoint of a gun. When a murder by buzz sawand a gun-toting biology teacher are thehighpoints of a film, be assured that themovie in question is sick.Mark Lester, who served as director,screenwriter, and executive producer canbe held most responsible. He shares screenwriting credits with John Saxton andTom Holland, who managed to crank outreams of cliche dialogue. Lamenting hisalienated students, Roddy McDowall criesout, "If only I could get them to use theirminds." Cliched dialogue is matched by un¬inspired dialogue. After the gang squirts si¬mulated blood in the face of Mr. Norris, hiswife asks incredulously, "What kind of stu¬pid idiots would do that?"On top of everything else, most of the gangmembers look to be in their mid or latetwenties and run a drug operation thatbrings in $4,000 a week. What, one wonders,are they still doing in high school?There is little subtlety to Class of 1984.While its characters are hit in the face,stomach, and genitals by chains, brassknuckles, baseball bats, steel pillars, andentire automobiles, the viewer is relentless¬ly hit over the head with blood and gore, in¬sipid dialogue, and an utterly predictableplot. It is among the most exceedingly de¬pressing films I have ever seen. See it atyour own risk.5309 S. Blackstone • 947-0200OUR FAMOUS STUFFED PIZZA IN THE PANIS NOW AVAILABLE IN HYDE PARKOPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK • 11 AM T012 MIDNIGHTCocktails • Pleasant DiningPick-Up“Chicago’s best pizza!” — Chicago Magazine, March 1977“The ultimate in pizza!” — New York Times, January 19806—FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1982—THE GREY CITY JOURN’AL 312/643-5007 CHAMBER ENSEMBLETRIO CON BRIOFLUTE • OBOE • VIOLATA> SSEVWCHINESE-AMERICAN RESTAURANTSpecializing in Cantoneseand American dishesOpen Daily 11 A.-8:30 P.M.Closed Monday1318 E. 63rd MU 4-1062 HYDE PARK UNION CHURCH5600 S. Woodlawn Ave.Church School (ail ages) 9:45 a mWorship Nursery Provided 11:00 a.m.W. Kenneth Williams, Minister! Susan Johnson, Baptist Campus MinisterCome, Worship, Study, ServeUgly Duckling^ RENT-A-CAR c.1608 E. 53rd Street$14.50 per doy 200 Free MilesBetween IC Tracks, - _ _ —and Cornell 00» "JoWwCOPIES COPIES COPIES (COPIES COPIES COPIES (COPIES COPIES COPIES (Copies The Way You Want Them!• Same Size or Reduced • Colored Papers• 1 or 2 Sided • Card Stocks• Collated or Sorted • Fine Stationary• Plastic Spiral Binding • 8V: x 11 or Legal SizeFast, sharp, economical copies from anything handwritten, typed, or printed size for size, or in anyreduction ratio on your choice ot colored or whitebond paper!XEROX® COPYINGw per copy8 V* ” x 11”20# White BondHARPER COURT COPY CENTER5210 S. HARPER288 2233 Plu* COMPLETECOMMERCIALOFFSETPRINTINGSERVICE*' by Cate WileyThe Atomic Cafe is a funny movie. Funny,ha-ha, the way old John Wayne and ErrollFlynn swashbuckling melodramas areamusing to us today. We don't swoon any¬more, we hold our sides in glee at the silli¬ness that was taken seriously, oh such a longtime ago. So go see The Atomic Cafe for agood laugh, but don't expect to see anythingterribly thought-provoking or, God forbid,disturbing. If you are at all aware of the pro¬portions the arms race has reached and ofthe directions in which the Reagan Administration is pushing it, you'll be disappointed.Perhaps you'll even be angry.There is nothing wrong with a little levityin examining serious things, but as medica¬tion the producers of this film have providedan overdoes of laughter. It consists mostlyof clips of Presidents Truman, Eisenhower,and Johnson saying silling +hings about howfortunate America has always been thatGod is a Democrat and since we've beenblessed with the Bomb we'd better take ad¬vantage of it to beat the hell out of the OtherSide, whom everyone knows is devoid ofmoral quality. (The film doesn't mentionthe fact that Truman knew Japan was readyto surrender when he decided to drop thebomb — but perhaps I am asking too muchof what I thought was a "protest” film.)There is some reminiscing about the CivilDefense Program (remember crawlingunder your desk in grade school?) enlivenedby the hit Burt the Turtle tune "Duck andCover." There is a hilarious scene featuringthe United States Army and the Bikini Is¬land natives before the latter were evacuat¬ed to make room for A-Bomb target prac¬tice. Of course, the Army folks look prettydumb conversing in sign language, but so dothe Islanders as they sing "You Are My Sun¬shine" in Bikin-ise, presumably in gratitudefor the evacuation. All in all, the movieseems to be saying, "My, weren't we a na¬tion of fools way back then..." but it doesn'tgo any further.The footage, the radio songs (Bill Haley and the Cornets do a number about life afterthe bomb, something like "13 girls and I'mthe only guy left.”) all stop in the mid 1950's.I even heard someone in the audience saythat the film was made years ago, and wasnow being re-released. Not true, but with allthe fun being poked at the average Ameri¬can in 1950 there is not a whisper of the reali¬ty facing us in 1982. No funny clips of Presi¬dents Kennedy, Carter, or Reagan. Therewere a few obligatory shots of Nixon duringthe McCarthy hearings, and as expected theaudience jeered. I wonder if we will evertire of Nixon; when he is going to be old hatenought that so-called political films can'tstick in a clip of him for a guaranteed titterof recognition. The film defeats itself as propaganda andthere is not enough of a story line for it to belabelled Entertainment. But it is worse thana failure; it is subversive to all of the move¬ments trying to do something about disarmament. By making us laught at Americanpost-World War II propaganda, it lulls usinto a complacent ignorance of how impor¬tant and destructive this propaganda was.Despite excellent footage of nuclear ex¬plosions, the film is not informative — Idoubt anyone would leave the cinema feel¬ing "better informed." One of the most solidbases for the arms race for the past thirtyyears, from an American standpoint, hasbeen civilian passivity. We have always believed that the military knows best and are not terribly concerned about their methodsas long as not too many of our boys getkilled. By focusing on Civil Defense, evensarcastically, The Atomic Cafe serves onlyto reinforce the political naivete thiscountry is famous for. How much morepleasant it is to laugh at the antics of ourparents than ask ourselves critically howmuch we have learned from their mistakes.Political apathy is what Mr. Reagan iscounting on to build up the defense budget;if The Atomic Cafe is the film media's ver¬sion of protest, he won't be disappointed.The Atomic Cafe is playing at the LakeShore, at the corner of Broadway and Bel¬mont, three blocks east of the Belmont Elstop.VIOLENCE OF PROPAGANDAThe University of ChicagoTHE DEPARTMENT OF ART HISTORYandTHE VISITING COMMITTEE FOR THE VISUAL ARTSannounceThe Robert B. Mayer Memorial Lecture SeriesonART PATRONS AND PATRONAGEWednesdayOctober 13: “Alma Mahler: Patron as Muse’’Alessandra Comim, Southern Methodist UniversityCourt Theatre, 5535 S. Ellis AvenueOctober 27: “The Isenhetm Alter piece: Its Patrons and its Public”Andree Hayum, Fordham UniversityCourt Theatre, 5535 S. Ellis AvenueNovember 10: “Botticelli and the Problem of Understanding HumanistPatronage of Painting"Charles Dempsey, The Johns Hopkins UniversityCochrane-Woods Art Center Lecture Hall5540 S. Greenwood AvenueNovember 17: “Roman Mosaics: Between Patron and Pattern Books’Katherine Dunbabin, McMaster UniversityCochrane-Woods Art Center Lecture Hall5540 S. Greenwood AvenueDecember 8: “Painting and Patronage at the Mughal Court in India”Ellen Smart, Curator of Asian Art, The Walters GalleryCochrane-Woods Art Center Lecture Hall5540 S. Greenwood AvenueEachJecture will commence at 4:00 PM. and will be followed by areception at the Cochrane-Woods Art Center.Admission is without charge and the public is cordially incited. (or festive eating and drinkingEnjoy....fresh crepes, quiches, sandwichesunusually good salads andtempting dessert crepes...Join us early for hearty breakfast specials....and Hyde Park s best ice cream sundaes,full drink menu affordably pricedOur Chili is the best...we wonChicago s Great Chili Cook-Offnl overallNovember 1, 198053^667-2000THE GREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1982—7BLACKBERRY PICKING TFirst Sunday in AugustEach year, my parents take the old car—The Chevrolet station wagon.Arm themselves with plastic bags, jeans, long-sleeved shirts—A*i fen mfc»■»My father wears a battered capWe drive to the Sourland Mountainsto pick blackberries for winter jam.The gnats are thick,As we wade through shoulder-deep reeds,They buzz around us, forming clouds of blackness.Plunging into the swamp,Where ticks wait for human flesh.My sneakers squish and the wet fringe of my jeansSlaps against my bare ankle.Father, Mother, and I,Hike the mountain in single file.The dog is not with us this year—She has grown old and too rheumatic for family jauntsWe separate, each stopping to climbinto the brambles.The crop is meagre this season-mown by the farmers,Parched by the sun.We can find only stunted nubblesToo bitter to eat raw. jAt the crest we turn backDisgruntled; our half-empty bags dangli’ fm... -t i LETTERSTo the Editor:I was going to ask if Richard (Ithought his last name was Martin)Marternus' article in the Orientationissue of the Grey City Journal was in¬tended to be a parody of the preten¬tious, verbose, completely self-ab¬sorbed and narcissistic, public (ofcourse) self-(of course) examinationthat a certain group of "serious” and"suffering” U of C students, or formerstudents, loves to engage in. But I re¬ally don't think it was, amazing asthat seems. I certainly hope if he cutshis finger again on some less "mania¬cal evening” in the not too distant fu¬ture, he'll just put on a Curad andthank heaven he finally really hasgrown up.On the other hand, I wish to thankCurtis Black for his restrained, well-written and very interesting article onthe effects of urban renewal in HydePark.Karen O'Connor4th year studentin the CollegeTo the Editor:In reference to your critic's reviewof Moliere's Femmes Savantes: Theplays generally considered to be Mo¬liere's masterpieces are The Misan¬thrope and Tartuffe, not The Miserand Tartuffe as your critic stated.Both The Misanthrope and Tartuffeare highly polished, mature, brilliantcomedies, contrary to your critic'simplication that they are youthfulfarces. Far from disliking them, asyour critic stated, Moliere rewroteTartuffe three times in order to get itperformed (it kept being banned bythe censors) and said of The Misan¬thrope "Je n'ai (...) pu faire mieux etsurement je ne ferai pas mieux.”I am sorry if these comments seempedantic, but if one is going to makeconfident literary generalisations,they should probably be accurateones. As for the review, I'm glad Ms.Wiley liked the play, though I shouldhave though Philaminte's dogmaticviews on women using their mindscombined with her semi-educatedcondition and preoccupation with re¬forming the French language had atleast as much in common with mod¬ern feminists' positions as with Phyl¬lis Schlafly. Moliere would probablyhave said to both groups, a plague o'both your houses.Sincerely,Lee Sarah Liberman8—FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1982—THE GREY CITY JOURNALNew and RebuiltTypewriters,Calculators,Dictators, AddersCasioHewlett PackardTexas InstrumentCanonSharp REPAIRSPECIALISTSon IBM, SCM,Olympia, etc.FREE repairestimatesRENTALSavailable withU. of C. I D.The University of Chicago BookstoreTypewriter & Calculator Department970 East 58th Street 2nd Floor753-3303Put the pastin yourfuture!Thoroughly renovated apartments offer the convenienceof contemporary living space combined with all the best elementsof vintage design. 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Clark St.. Chicago. II 606J4880-54001724 Sherman Ave., Evanston. IL 6020!(above County Seat!864-4441The Chicago Maroon—Friday, October 8. 1982—17University HistoryLeopold and Loeb: millionaires, prodigies, criminalsWednesday, May 21, 1924, 4:45 P.M.: BobbyFranks, the 14-year-old son of a retired million¬aire, is umpiring a baseball game at the HarvardSchool at 47th and Ellis. Just now, as he hearsplayers’ expletives being hurled at him, he is re¬ceiving an education concerning the unhappy lifeof an arbiter.5:15 P.M. Young Franks leaves the game in pro¬gress and begins the three block trek to his fami¬ly’s mansion at 5052 S. Ellis. About halfway home,perhaps on the comer of 49th and Ellis, two men ina 1919 rented Willys-Knight cruise alongside ofFranks, whisk the youth into the car, and continuetheir drive.7 P.M.: Dinnertime has come and gone at theFranks house. Several phone calls have failed tolocate Bobby and now a maid asks if dinner shouldbe served anyway. Jacob Franks, the master ofthe house, frowns and steps outside, peering in¬tently toward the Harvard School.9:00 P.M.: With her husband gone, Mrs. Franksreceives a telephone call. "This is Mr. Johnson," avoice at the other end says. “Of course, you knowby this time that your boy has been kidnapped. Wehave him and you need not worry; he is safe. Butdon’t try to trace this call or to find me. We musthave money.” After a warning not to contact thepolice, "Johnson” hangs up and Mrs. Franksfaints.Thursday, May 22, 2 A.M.: After much indeci¬sion, Franks contacts the police, seeks out twotrusted police detectives, and tells his story.9:30 A M.: A special delivery letter, addressedin ink but consisting of two typewritten pages, ar¬rives at the Franks’ home. “Nerves whipped tautby an anguished all-night vigil almost broke as itwas opened,” the Tribune reported, "and as Mr.Ettelson said, ‘Its deliberate tone struck terrorinto our hearts.’ ” The note, stating that youngFranks was still safe, set out four specific instruc¬tions and told Franks to obtain $10,000 in $20s and$50s.11 A.M.: After having ordered the tracing of in¬coming phone calls to cease so that the telephoneoperators wouldn’t gossip, Franks drives to adowntown bank. He places the $20s and $50s in acigar box as ordered and wraps it in plain whitepaper.3:15 P.M.: The final phone call comes. “I amsending a Yellow Cab for you,” the voice says, andthen it tells Franks to have the money with him, to get into the cab, and to come to a drugstore on 63rdSt.“I went to the home on a regular order,” the cabdriver told the Tribune. "At first they told me toleave. Then they told me to wait. Then a man cameout and paid me off — 55 cents.”"Yes,” said William Taylor, a broker and friendof the family. “I paid him off. Mr. Franks had for¬gotten the instructions and while he was trying tocall them to mind the call came from his brother-in-law that he believed the dead boy in the under¬taker’s office was Robert.”The crime, which eventually commanded inter¬national attention, sent Chicago’s newspapers intoa week-long orgy of screaming front-page head¬lines. "KIDNAP RICH BOY: KILL HIM”; "KID¬NAPPED BOY DIED FIGHTING”; "DIG FORFRANKS CLEWS,” the Tribune’s front page pro¬claimed on consecutive days. Knowing only thatthe boy’s body had been found in a culvert at 121stSt. and that the death had been violent, the searchfor the killer!s) began immediately. The policequestoned three instructors at the Harvard Schooland one, a chemistry teacher was suspected of poi¬soning the youth. Other officials favored the re¬venge theory, speculating that Jacob Franks, whomade his fortune in real estate, had caused someadversary to be sent to the penitentiary in hisearly career as a pawn broker. Others supportedthe moron theory, obviously recalling a case earli¬er in the year in which a moron had kidnapped achild — and then released him unharmed. On thefourth day of its coverage, the Tribune announcedthat the police had evidence showing that thecrime had been masterminded by a cocaine ad¬dict. For a time, police even feared that Frankshad died accidentally because of his classmatestaking the aphorism “Kill the Umpire!” all too lit¬erally. Finally, the police discarded the idea thatFranks had been the victim of what the Tribunedelicately termed “a male annoyer of boys” be¬cause Franks "would not have entered the auto¬mobile of a strange man under the lure of money,as he never knew the need of a dollar or cent.”On the second day of the investigation, though,some solid clues began to emerge. The ransomnote, the Tribune reported, "with its faultless En¬glish, its scholarly diction bore a striking resem¬blance" to a story in Detective Magazine. "Lookfor the suspect with that magazine in his posses¬sion, and you’ll pretty nearly have the man whokilled Robert Franks,” said one would-be Sherlock Holmes. More significantly, experts deduced thatthe ransom note had been written on a portableUnderwood typewriter with a defective lower-case“t” and "f.”The clue that finally led to the killers’ arrestabout a week later though, was a pair of horn¬rimmed glasses which an optician said was "toosmall for the average masculine head.” Thestate’s attorney’s office began a feverish search toidentify the owner of the glasses. They discoveredthat the glasses had special hinges made by onlyone company, and that comparatively few hadbeen sold in Chicago. At the assistant state’s attor¬ney’s request, the company carefully poredthrough their records and traced the lenses to itsowner. For the killers, the jig was up. .Eight days after having murdered RobertFranks, Nathan F. Leopold, Jr. and Richard Loebsat in the state’s attorney’s office and confessed.Questioned separately, they at first maintainedtheir innocence, falling back on a carefullyplanned alibi. Leopold admitted that the horn¬rimmed glasses found near Bobby Franks’ bodywere indeed his but insisted that he had lost themthe previous Sunday while on one of his frequentbird-watching expeditions. On the night of May21st, Leopold maintained, he and Loeb had pickedup some girls and a bottle of gin at the CoconutGrove bar on 53rd and Ellis and went riding in Leo¬pold’s Willys-Knight in Washington Park. For atime, the alibi worked. "There was a feeling,” theTribune noted, "that both young men, and particu¬larly Leopold had been caught in a most remark¬able net of circumstances while thoroughly inno¬cent.”Soon, however, the Leopold’s chauffeur suppliedproof that the Leopold car had been in the garageall afternoon on May 21st: he had been repairing itand had later driven it to a drugstore to fill a pre¬scription. Furthermore, the workman who had dis¬covered the horn-rimmed glasses said that thelenses had been clear whereas if Leopold haddropped them there earlier, they would have beencaked with mud.Once discovered, the pair coolly and impassive¬ly revealed the details of the kidnapping andmurder. "We had planned since last fall — sometime in November I think — to kill him and getmoney from his father for ransom. We planned allthe details and thought we had everything airtightagainst discovery.” "It was easier than we thought. He was weak.When he started to resist we hit him on the head(with a chisel) and stuffed the gag into his mouth...He must have been dead within five minutes —while we were still going along 50th St."We drove around with him in the car for fourhours, until it got heavy dusk, then we began un¬dressing him in the car, took off everything but theunderwear and stockings before we got to the cul¬vert. We took those off there.” They then pouredhydrochloric acid over the boy’s face, body andgenitals so he couldn’t be easily identified andtossed him into the culvert — but failed to noticethat one of his legs was sticking up out of the hole.They also failed to realize that Leopold’s glasseshad been left behind as had one of Bobby Frank’sstockings.After leaving the scene at 121st St., they pro¬ceeded to 73rd and Lake Shore Dr. where theyburned and buried the blanket Bobby Franks hadbeen wrapped in. The typewriter that had writtenthe ransom note was then heaved into the lagoonnear the yacht harbor in Jackson Park and theransom note was dispatched — though it only said‘Dear Sir’ instead of ‘Dear Mr. Franks’ becausethey hadn’t planned beforehand who they weregoing to kidnap.“Well,” said Leopold, "(the whole episode) wasthe kind of a thing there would be a thrill in and wewanted some easy money. "It was just another ex¬periment. It is so easy for us to justify that experi¬ment as it is to justify an entomologist impaling abeetle on a pin.”The capture of Leopold and Loeb sparked astorm of interest. Leopold had entered the Univer¬sity of Chicago at the age of 16, transferred to theUniversity of Michigan a year later, then trans¬ferred back to Chicago the following year, wherehe got his degree in philosophy. In May 1924, hewas a nineteen- year old law student at the Univer¬sity and claimed to be a sixteenth century historybuff — the "wickedest century the world has everknown.” In addition, he knew fifteen languagesand was fluent in six of them. As for Richard Loeb,he entered the University at the age of fourteen,then transferred after two years to the Universityof Michigan where he graduated at the age ofeighteen. Michigan’s youngest graduate ever. Inthe fall of 1923, he returned to the University as agraduate student in history. Neither of the pairever lived in University housing but rather in theirfamily’s Hyde Park mansions. The late Will Geer,THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOThe William Vaughn Moody Lecture CommitteepresentsA Reading byR. K. NARAYAN(Author of Malgudt Days, The Financial Expert, The Bachelor of Arts, etc.)MONDAY, OCTOBER ii, 19828:00 p.m.SWIFT LECTURE HALL1025 E. 58th Street, Chicago, Illinois 60637Admission is without ticket and without charge18—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, October 8, 1982who later achieved fame as an actor, most recent¬ly as “Grandpa” in the television series The Wal¬tons, often recalled how he had the pair of twistedgeniuses pledge themselves to his Chicago frater¬nity only days before the murder.Immediately after obtaining their confessions,State’s Attorney Robert Crowe announced hisplans to the press. “I have a hanging case,” hesaid, “and I would be wiling to submit it to a jury.tomorrow.” The families of Leopold and Loeb,millionaires both, countered by hiring ClarenceDarrow. “The fathers of these boys have an esti¬mated combined fortune of $15 million,” a state’sattorney spokesman told the Tribune, exaggerat¬ing the family’s real wealth by about threefold,“and we suppose it will be millions versus thedeath penalty.”The trial began in late July with Darrow pullinga major surprise — he entered a plea of guilty,thus stealing the prosecution’s thunder before thetrial even began. He also chose a judge instead of ajury trial, so that the entire weight of imposing thedeath penalty would be on one man.The prosecution began by compiling mountainsof evidence to prove what was already obvious toeverybody — Leopold and Loeb had indeed kid¬napped and murdered Bobby Franks. In all, theprosecution called eighty-one witnesses in tryingto depict the crime as particularly gruesome andsubtly suggesting — though providing no concreteevidence — that Leopold and Loeb were linked tofour other unsolved murder cases.Clarence Darrow began the defense by takingthe unprecedented step of calling upon a battery ofpsychiatrists to attest to Leopold’s and Loeb’smental illness. Their testimony, which accountedfor over 300 pages of the official transcript andwhich was later published in part as the Hulbertand Brown report, provides a fascinating casestudy of Leopold and Loeb. The swarthy Leopold,the report stated, was a sickly child who had aneffeminate manner until the age of nine. The thirdgoverness he had was “homely, suspicious... andoversexual in unusual ways (...) She gave him awrong original conception about sex, about theft,about right and wrong, about selfishness andabove secrecy. He was so constituted that he neverwas able to emancipate himself from her errone¬ous teachings and mistakes.” It didn’t help thatthe first school Leopold enrolled in was a girl’sschool.“While yet a child he began to strive to be thecold-blooded egocentric intellectualist, turninggradually from the unusual and intense earlychildhood interest in religion to a deliberate over¬throwing and eliminating of God, conscience, sym¬ pathy, social responsibility and loyalty as beingthoroughly unnecessary to him and unworthy ofhim as a completely intelligent individual.” In aclass of torts at law school, he argued that legalregulations should not apply to one who is a super¬man. As a teenager, he also developed a vivid fan¬tasy life, particularly a recurring fantasy aboutking and slave. In one fantasy, for example, hewas a slave who was the strongest man in theworld, saved the king’s life by some derring-do,was offered his freedom and magnanimously re¬fused it. It should be noted that Leopold was a bi¬sexual.In some ways, the governess of the handsomeLoeb had the opposite problem of Leopold’s gov¬erness — she was totally repressed. As a result,Young Richard didn’t learn the difference betweenbeing a boy and a girl until he was eleven yearsold. It was about this time that Loeb began to thinkof himself as the “Master Criminal Mind of theCentury” who could escape detection from theworld’s greatest detectives. Not coincidentally helearned to lie and to lie with impunity. As he grewolder, he began to steal. It was a case, one psychia¬trist noted, of fantasy turning into reality.When the two troubled prodigies becamefriends, the results were explosive. “Leopold wasattracted to Loeb as a lover,” wrote Hal Higdon inThe Crime of the Century. “Loeb saw in Leopoldan accomplice for his acts of petty thievery.” To¬gether, they robbed Loeb’s old frat house in AnnArbor, threw bricks through car windows, once in¬terrupting a couple making love, and once stole acar, were pursued, and jumped out of the car justbefore it smashed into a pole. As the psychiatristsnoted repeatedly, Leopold and Loeb’s fundamen¬tal problem was the tremendous discrepancy be¬tween their intellectual and emotional maturity.Meyer Levin, who wrote the novel and Broad¬way play called “Compulsion,” takes a psychoan¬alytic view of Leopold and Loeb’s crime. Themurder weapon, the chisel, becomes a phallicsymbol while the culvert where Bobby Franks’body was dumped is the womb, the hydrochloricacid poured on Franks’ body represents Leopold’seffort to destroy the female side of himself. “If hewished he had never been born — wished he hadnever been born as a girl kind of boy — then thegesture was complete: he had exorcised the curseon himself. He had become unborn, in the womb ofthe mother who was in the earth.“Another overwhelming thought came to me,changing the conception I had had until then of thecrime,” says the novel’s narrator. “Then (Leo¬pold) was not merely (Loeb’s) accomplice. Hewasn’t there only because he was in love withLoeb. He had to do the murder because of someReynolds ClubSPONSORED BY: starting Monday, cot. 11:Student Government OfficeS.G. Activities Committee ld^Syffo^?" University Historycompulsion in himself. Just the way (Loeb) did.”After the prosecution presented a few of its ownexpert witnesses testifying to the mental sound¬ness of Leopold and Loeb, the trial meandered tothe dramatic closing arguments of Darrow andState’s attorney Robert Crowe.“I have heard in the last six months,” Darrowsaid, “nothing but the cry for blood. I have heardraised from the office of the state’s attorney noth¬ing but the breath of hate. I have heard precedentsquoted which would be a disgrace to a savagerace. I have seen a court urged almost to the pointof threats to hang two boys, in the face of evidence,in the face of experience, in the face of all the bet¬ter and humane thought of the age...“I am pleading for the future, I am pleading fora time when hatred and cruelty will not control thehearts of men. When we can learn by reason andjudgment and understanding and faith that all lifeis worth saving, and that mercy is the highest at¬tribute of all.”After Darrow finished, Crowe began his finalshow. “Crowe gave the courtroom a mad day ofit,” the Daily News reported “He spoke in afrenzy. He shouted and stomped and waved hisarms... Into the faces of the two young defendantshe hurled epithet after epithet, his eyes blazingand his voice screaming anger.”Crowe first tried to discredit the defense’s psy¬chiatrists: “Your honor ought not to shock theirears by such a cruel reference to the laws of thisstate, to the penalty of death. Why, don’t you knowthat one of them has to shave every day of theweek and that is a bad sign? The other one has toshave twice a week, and that is a bad sign? One isshort one is tall, and it is equally a bad sign in bothof them.”On Leopold’s and Loeb’s lack of emotion: "Andif it is the fate of these two perverts that they mustpay the penalty of this crime upon the gallows,when you realize it, you will find that they have gotemotion and you will find they have got fear andyou will find these cowardly perverts will have tobe carried to the gallows.”As his argument neared its end, Crowe made adevastating error : With the exception of Leopold’sfather, Crowe said, “Everybody connected withthe case have laughed and sneered and jeered, andif the defendant, Leopold, did not say that he wouldplead guilty before a friendly judge his actionsdemonstrate that he thinks he has got one.”Overruling Darrow’s objection. Judge John Ca-verly said, “let the reporter write up that state¬ment. Have that statement written up!” Momentslater, he added: “The court will order strickenfrom the record the closing remarks of the state'sattorney as being a cowardly and dastardly as-This article was written by Mark Wallach in 1979.Dnlv the BESTis g3od enoughAt the Hair Performers, we know there is no substitute for a great permand shaping. We make sure every styling is great by making sure everydesigner is great. Our designers are constantly educated in the latesttechniques. 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Perhaps most importantly of all, he had vo¬lunteered as a victim in a prison medical projectdesigned to find a cure for malariaLoeb had not been so fortunate. In 1936, in ashower room scuffle with a fellow inmate, Loebwas stabbed 56 times with a razor and died shortlyafterwards. The attack had apparently beenlaunched from behind and the attacker hadescaped unscathedAt first, the press reported that Loeb had beenkilled after making a homosexual advance on aninmate. Edwin A. Lahey of the Chicago DailyNews wrote, "Richard Loeb, a brilliant collegestudent and master of the English language, todayended a sentence with a proposition.” That classiclead turned out to be untrue, however, and in fact,it may have been the inmate, James Day. who wasfrustrated by Loeb’s continuous rejection of his ad¬vances.After Leopold was paroled in 1957, he settled inSanturce, Puerto Rico where he wanted to "livequietly, and serve others to atone for my crime.”Among other things. Leopold published a book onornithology, taught at the University of PuertoRico, did research on intestinal diseases thatplagued the island’s poor, worked for urban ren¬ewal, and searched for a cure for leprosy. He alsogot married.In 1965, six years before his death, Leopold re¬flected on his prison life. “I don’t think there wasany element in prison which caused me to grow up,to mature emotionally. I think this is somethingthat happened from within... I don’t think prisonhas ever really rehabilitated anybody ”Only one real mystery remains in the case ofLeopold and Loeb. It is the question of who actual¬ly inflicted the death blow to Bobby Franks. Bothmen went to their graves insisting that the otherhad done it. Given the delicate psyche of eachman. perhaps the unsolved mystery was the bestsolution of all.The Chicago Maroon—Friday, October 8, 1982—19ISRAELI FOLK DANCINGTUESDAYS: 1212 East 59th Street - 3rd FI.COST: 75 cents per eveningINSTRUCTOR: Dalia PahidisNEXT MEETING — TUESDAY, OCTOBER 12,8:00 P.M.Sponsored by the Hillel Foundation HOUSE OF CHIN1607 E. 55th St. •752-3786Dining Room - Carry OutCANTONESE, MANDARIN, &SZECHWANClosed Mondays G.W. OPTICIANS1519 E. 55thTel. 947-9335Eyes exaiWMrf tad Caatact Leases fitted byregistered OpfeaMfrats.Specialists ia Qeefity fyewear at ReaseaabtePrices.Lob on premises for fast service framesreplaced, lenses duplicated and prescriptions filledNow Featuring:* Homemade Fruit salad‘Homemade Soup* French-dip Beef•Hot Spiced Cider INTER-VARSITYCHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIPSince all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God,they are justified by his grace as a gift, through theredemption which is in Christ Jesus.— Romans 3:23-24A Christian student organization proclaimingChrist as Lord and Savior— Everyone Welcome —Fridays 7:30p.m. Ida Noyes HallThis week: Eugene Clay & Dan Dix,"Missionary outreach in Germany ”Bible study/fellowship groups now forming.Call 324-6219 for more information.^ TERM PAPERSERVICEFIFTEEN THOUSAND PLUS SELECTION CATALOGUETrident Marketing introduces the definitive answer to your term paper and assignmentproblems. 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M4W 1A620—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, October 8, 1982 the university of Chicago%department of musicfiumuWAY L A N DROGERS',*_> ®si i uUJUUJ5UJXf—s *5 ISportsTHE INVITATION LECTURE SERIES OF THEGRADUATE SCHOOL OF BUSINESSpresentsDr. Leo F. Buscagliaauthor - lecturer - teacherspeaking on‘The Ultimate Value”OCTOBER 14, THURSDAY7:30 PM, MANDEL HALL$5 - general admission$3.50 - faculty/staff$2.00 - studentsTickets available at Reynolds ClubGridders begin conference playBv Cliff GrammichWhile hopes for a winning season forChicago’s football team may have beendashed by four defeats in its first fourgames, the team could salvage part of thisseason with a winning conference season.The conference schedule starts this Satur¬day.This year, the Midwest Conference hassplit its football teams into North and SouthDivisions. In the North Division, Lawrence,Beloit, Ripon, Carleton, Lake Forest, andChicago will compete. Entered in the SouthDivision are Cornell, Coe, Grinnell, Knox,and Monmouth.Chicago will face four of its divisional op¬ponents in its conference schedule. Lastyear, with all conference teams in the samerace, Chicago finished eighth with a 2-6record.This Saturday, the Maroons travel to LakeForest. Lake Forest, who has not been con¬sidered a contender for the divisional crown, has posted a 3-0 record so far. LastSaturday, the Foresters defeated Knox 7-0.Knox defeated Chicago 17-3 in an inter divi¬sional but non-conference game three weeksago.On Oct. 16, the Maroons will face BeloitCollege at Stagg Field. Beloit’s record is 3-1and they are considered among the topteams in the division. The following week,Chicago will play Ripon College. Ripon hasbeen judged by the coaches to be the secondbest team in the North Division. Ripon is 2-2after its first four non-conference games.On Oct. 30, Chicago will conclude its con¬ference schedule at Lawrence University inAppleton, Wisconsin. Lawrence is the defen¬ding conference champion and the favoriteto win the North Division. Last year,Lawrence was a semi-finalist in the DivisionIII national championship playoffs. After itsfirst three games, Lawrence is 2-1. The win¬ner of the North Division will host the SouthDivision champion on Nov. 13 to determinethe Midwest Conference champion.Midwest Conference teams’ non-conference recordsLake ForestBeloitCarletonLawrenceRiponCornell hosts Chicago 10/9at Chicago 10/160111 hosts Chicago 10/302 at Chicago 10/23 Knox 1 2 defeated Chicago 17-3Monmouth 1 3Grinnell 1 3 " defeated Chicago 22-15Coe 1 3CHICAGO 0 4Soccer socked by Circle 5-0By Cliff GrammichOn Tuesday at University ofIllinois-Chicago, the Maroons soccer teamwas blanked 5-0 by a powerful Circle team.The defeat left the Maroons’ record at 2-2before starting conference play this week¬end.Circle took a 2-0 lead by the end of the firsthalf. In the beginning of the second half, Cir¬cle quickly scored to take a 3-0 lead. Duringthe last five minutes of the game Circle add¬ed two late goals to win the game 5-0.Chicago, expecting a strong offensive per¬formance from Circle, played in a 4-4-2 for¬mation. However, Circle was able to cir¬ cumvent this defensive strategy wellenough to score its goals. Circle was alsoquick enough to drop back fast onto defenseto shut out the Maroons.This Friday, the Maroons begin con¬ference play against Ripon College atRipon, Wisconsin. Chicago is in the NorthDivision of the Midwest Conference, alongwith Carleton, Ripon, Beloit, Lawrence, andLake Forest. Ripon is 2-0 so far in con¬ference play.The Maroons will travel Saturday to Ap¬pleton, Wisconsin to face Lawrence Univer¬sity. Lawrence has lost the only conferencegame it has played this year.Volleyballers spark the fizzleBy Kittie WyneThe women’s volleyball team beat TrinityCollege 15-10, 16-14, 15-8 Monday then lost toTrinity Christian College Wednesday 15-6, 4-15,17-19, 5-15.Monday evening the Maroons kept controlof the match with real team effort to win inthree straight. Individually and as a teammember, each player performed well. Theopportunity to call upon reserve setters Ma-ja Jaede and Sheila Dugan with notableresults demonstrated the strong bench.Trinity College had good hitters and aHockey teamtops ConcordiaBy Jane LookThe U of C field hockey team hosted Con¬cordia College Tuesday afternoon at StaggField. The Maroons displayed total offen¬sive and defensive control of the game in de¬feating Concordia 4-0.Fourth year student Trish Briscoe scoredtwo goals while third year captain HelenStraus and second year student Alison Duffyeach added a goal to highlight the Maroons’balanced offensive attack. Chicago’s defen¬sive domination was evidenced by the factthat Maroon goalie Maureen Breen did nottouch the ball during the duration of thegame.The victory raised the team’s record to 3wins and 2 losses. The team will host theUniversity of Notre Dame Tuesday at 4 p.m.at Stagg Field and will travel to ValparaisoUniversity Thursday for a 4 p.m. match. strong defense but the Maroons were able tocounter with height on the line and astronger defense.Wednesday’s match was a disappoint¬ment to the Maroons. They began strong,lost the second game, rallied but droppedthe third game, then lost the match. In thethird game they were down 2-9, came backto 14-14, took the lead at 15-14, tied at 15-15,16-16, took a 17-16 lead then lost the game 17-19. After the first game which was well ex¬ecuted, the Maroons were beset with missedserves, unforced errors, and net balls, and alack of teamwork resulting in collisions anda loss of offensive strength. The offense wasthus unable to use strategy as effectively asin previous matches. Trinity Christian hadstrong hitting, a fine defense, and, especial¬ly in the second game, managed to pick outand capitalize on the Maroons’ weaknesses.Coach Rosie Resch was disappointed butstill has total confidence in the future per¬formance of this team. The team is stillabove .500 for the season with a 4-3 record.They have a week off before visitingWheaton College next Tuesday at 7 p.m.Wheaton is traditionally a big strong teamwhich will present a challenge for theskillful Maroons.Sports CalendarCross CountryOct. 9 — at Beloit College InvitationalSoccerOct. 8 — at Ripon College, 4 p.m.Oct. 9 — at Lawrence University, 1 p.m.FootballOct. 9 — at Lake Forest College, 1:30p.m. The Chicago MaroonThe Chicago Maroon is the official newspaper of the University of Chicago. It ispublished twice a week, Tuesdays and Fridays. Editorial and business offices arelocated on the third floor of Ida Noyes. 1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, 60637. Telephone753-3263.Darrell WuDunnEditor Margo HablutzelFeatures Editor Nadine McGannGrey City Journal Editor Aarne EliasOperations ManagerAnna FeldmanManaging Editor Cliff GrammichSports Editor Keith FlemingChicago Literary Review Steve BrittBusiness ManagerRobin KirkNews Editor David BrooksViewpoints Editor Paul O’DonnellChicago Literary Review Jay McKenzieAdvertising ManagerWilliam RauchNews Editor Wally DabrowskiProduction Manager Dan BreslauPhotography Brian CloseOffice ManagerAssociate Editor: Jeffrey TaylorStaff: Mark Bauer, John Collins, Kahane Com, Caren Gauvreau, Jesse Halvorsen,Keith Horvath, Marc Kramer, Linda Lee, Steve Shandor, Aili Tripp, Kittie Wyne.The Chicago Maroon—Friday, October 8, 1982—21PHOTO BY DAN BRESLAUThe women’s tennis team met Northeastern University yesterday on InglesideCourts. Although second year student Elizabeth Fama lost her match in straightsets, Chicago emerged the victor winning five of nine matches.AClassified AdsCLASSIFIEDADVERTISINGClassified advertising in the Chicago Maroon is$1 per 45 character line. Ads are not acceptedover the phone, and they must be paid in ad¬vance. Submit all ads in person or by mail toThe Chicago Maroon, 1212 E. 59th St., Chicago,II 60637. Our office is in Ida Noyes, rm 304.Deadlines: Wednesday noon for the Fridaypaper, Fri. noon for the Tuesday paper. In caseof errors for which the Chicago Maroon isresponsible, adjustments will be made or cor¬rections run only if the business office isnotified WITHIN ONE CALENDAR WEEK ofthe original publication. The Maroon is notliable for any error.SPACENo, not ALL the great apartments are taken.This two-room, fully furnished, air conditionedbeauty could be yours. Large rooms, large win¬dows, tile bath; quiet, attractive bldg, near48th and Greenwood. Has microwave oven.$275/month includes electric. Call 285-5392.5100 S. Cornell Chicago Beach Apts. Studio & 1bedroom apts. S260-S360. Immed. occupancy.Students welcomed. Call 493-78965100 S. Cornell Chicago Beach Apts. Studio & 1bedroom apts. S260-S360. Immed. occupancy.Students welcomed. Call 493-2525 or 643-7896.Still looking for housing? Live at InternationalHouse, a graduate residence center. Graduatestudents encouraged to apply. Call 753-2280,2270.ROOM AVAILABLE in faculty home nearcampus in Exchange for after school supervi¬sion of a 7 and 9 yr old. 643-1118.56th and Harper. Avail. Oct. 2 BDR MS,Beautif, hdwd. Firs., A/C, mod, appl., walkingdist. to UC, 1C & shopping. Rent incl. ht. water& heat. Prefer grad students or faculty. $550.Aft. 7 pm, Ray 890-9390.Spacious sunny unfrnshd l-bdrm apt avlb Nov1 5528 Hyde Pk Blvd-Hirise sec bldg w laundry;on campus & city bus; rent $375; call Monica orTim at 752-7552or 962-7420 (leave message)Spacious sunny 2-bdrm furnished apt avlb Nov1 5424 Hyde Pk Blvd-hirise sec bldg w Indry; oncmps/city bus; $675/mn or best offer; call Timor Monica 752-7552 or 962-7420 (Ive message)Furnished room in 5 room apt elevator 1 blockfrom campus. 2 references necessary. Call324-7104 before 8:00 am and bet. 5-7 pm.SERVICESJUDITH TYPES-and has a memory. Phone955-4417.CHINESE COOKING. Experienced teacher.Full participation. Small informal classes. Allyou need is appetite and enthusiasm. For in¬formation call Wendy Gerick 538-1324.CATERING. Custom menus for all occasions.Chinese, Thai, Indian, Middle East, French,many other specialities. Wendy Gerick 538-1324.JAMES BONE, EDITOR-TYPIST, 363-0522CELLO LESSONS by Chicago Symphony Or¬chestra. Cellist Don Moline. Beginners to ad¬vanced, ages 8-80. $25/hr. 281-3257. Lve nme,phone. Weddings and Portraits photographed. CallLeslie at 536-1626 or 955-2775.Tennis lessons. Brad Lyttle. 324-0654Dependable, mature live-in babysitteravailable. For more information call 684-2820.RACQUET STRINGING. 1 DAY SERVICETennis, Racquetball & Squash Racquets pro¬fessionally strung $10-20 Kevin Shalla 947-0997.TYPING. Term papers, theses, etc. IBM Cor¬recting Selectric. All Projects welcome. 791-1674TERM PAPERS, Professional papersletters,Resumes and other writing. Help withrewriting if needed. Reasonable 684-6882PEOPLE WANTEDWANTED P/T LEADERS FOR ZIONISTYOUTH MOVEMENT - HRS. FLEXIBLE -JUDAIC BACKGROUND - SALARY - CALL676-9790Help Wanted: Asst. Manager for Cafeteria(nights) and Asst. Manager for Catering Ser¬vice. 20-30 hrs per week. Hyde Park location.Begin immediately. Must be neat and presen¬table with some talent in the preparation andpresentation of food (need not be professionalexperience) Perfect for Faculty or studentspouse. Call 753-2369 Richard to arrange inter¬view.Nice student to babysit for nice baby occa¬sionally, regularly, nights, days, 324-5171CHILD CARE need responsible woman to carfor infant and 3 year-old 8AM-6PM dialy 241 -6894.Babysitter: in my home on campus. For afterschool vacation. Call 241-7545 aft. 6 p.m.I want to compile list of potential sitters for my5-year-old Could be any part of any day Call493-6198 weekends or 10:30 -11:30 pmweekdays. EmileTo help repair bike ASAP call 752-5033.JAMES BONE, EDITOR-TYPIST, 363-0522.CARING, creative, nursery school teacher hasSm toddler group in home; for more info call684-2363.Responsible person to pick-up child from LabNursery School and sit with in my home from2:15-c.4:00 MWTh-1:25-4:00 Tu 643-4968 Callafter 5 pm.Babysitter for two-year old. Tues. Thurs. Fri.9:30-3:30Call 493-8059.OVERSEAS JOBS - Summer/year round.Europe S. Amer., Australia, Asia, All fields,$500-$1200 monthly. Sightseeing. Free info.Write |JC Box 52-1L5 Cornoa Del Mar, CA92625.To help repair bike AC. P call 752-5033.Babysitter: in my home on campus. For afterschool and vacation. Call 241-7545aft. 6 pm.Paid subject needed for experiments onmemory, perception and language processing.Research conducted by students and faculty inthe Committee on Cognition and Communica¬tion, Department of Behavioral Sciences.Phone 962-8859. I am in need of a student to work approximate¬ly 10 hours per week on a flexible schedule forgeneral office work. Typing, filing, basicclerical duties. Must be reliable, type at least40 wpm. Please call 947-1869 Sharon Cohen ifyou are qualified and interested.The American Bar Foundation seeks a part-time (days) research asst well-versed in soc.sci. quantitative analysis to work on a series ofstudies of lawyers. Tasks include pretestanalysis & revision, data analysis, & reportwriting & editing. Min. BA/BA w/computertext editor & SPSS req. Exp. in report writing& editing helpful. Work expected to continuenow thru June. Hrly wage dependson exp. CallAnn Shenassa 667-4700 Ext. 262 2-5 pmThe American Bar Foundation seeks part-time(days) research asst, to code a series of surveyquestionnaires on lawyers. Min. 2 yrs collegereg. Familiarity w/soc. sci. research & quan¬titative analysis. SPSS helpful. Work is ex¬pected to continue now thru March. Hrly wagedepends on exp. Call Ann Shenassa 667-4700Ext. 262 weekdays. 2-5 pm.Medici Coffeehouse and Pan Pizza has anopening for 1 kitchen position and 1 wait, posi¬tion. Apply in person Monday throughtWednesday Between 9 and 2. 1450 East 57thStreet.STUDENT REP. NEEDED to promote our an¬nual Spring Break trips to Florida and ourWinter Ski Trips. Reps, receive Free Trips.Call or write: COASTAL TOURS INC, P.O.BOX 68, Oak Forest, II 60452. Ph: (312) 535-3212Tutors needed to tutor 8-12 yrs old, Jr high,high school, and adults in reading, math andsciences. Call Student Volunteer Bureau at 955-4108SCENESThis is the last day to register for electric edcome to RM 210 IDA NOYES.Calvert House Friday October 8 5:30 pm Col¬lege Students Program: "Coping with the Col¬lege or What Am I Doing Here?" Speaker:Suzanne Kobasa, Ass't. Prof. Dept. BehavioralSciences. Free Pizza SupperOVEREDUCATE YOURSELF W/ECLEC-TR 1C ED 753-3501Writers' workshop PLaza 2-8377PERSONALSBut, Jim - I Thought De Revolutionibus waspublished in 1543. Narratio Prima in 1541.F seeks M 26 JRF. Physics req'd. Goodw/hands - Or is that too specific? RSVPDear N.D.H. Thank you for designing the newMedici breakfast menu. CV6FOR SALETable .. buffet .80, sml. oakdresser .65, BooksTable .. buffet .80, Sml. oakdresser .65,bookshelves, cabinets, misc. Reasonable. 463-6085. Eves NS.FOR SALE: FORD 78 FIESTA METALICSILVER EXC. CONDITION DLX INTERIORAM°FM CASSETTE NEW BRAKES 2850°OF-FER 947-9030947-8205MESSAGEDodge Dart 1974 No rust good condition, 6cylinders, call after 6 pm 268-2092PASSPORT PHOTOS WHILE YOU WAIT!Model Camera 1342 E 55th 493-6700.One large sofa $100 Call Karen1981 HONDA ACCORD LX, Silver, AM, FMCass., A/C, PS, 16K$7495.643-4408Dr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist(53 Kimbark Plaza)1200 E. 53rd St.493-8372Intelligent people know thedifference between advertisedcheap glasses or contact lensesand competent professionalservice with quality material.Beware of bait advertising.Eye ExaminationsFashion Eye WearContact Lenses Karpen convertible couch. Double bed sizeHerculon. Cover-Excellent condition. Veryattractive-reasonably priced. Phone 624-3867Stereo table $75 girls bicycle 13 in $25 Touristbriefcase $25 call 288-7143 eve.1972 Toyota Corolla $500. Call 955-2030BEDS-New from 19.95/pc. U.S. Bedding. 548-5515LEAVING TOWN APT SALE - Sat Oct 9th at5631 S. Kenwood apt-2A starting at NOON-noearlier, some furniture, cookware and lotsmore!YARD SALE, furniture and lots of items forstudent apartments. Sat. Oct 9 10-4 5540Blackstone.1973 Toyota pickup, camper cap, snows. Goodcondition. $1500/offer. 363-6082.Woman's white Peugeot 10 speed 1979 model;barely used. Excellent condition. $180. Callafter 7 PM all day weekend 324-4829.PIANO LESSONSBeginners-Advanced. Doctoral degree fromJuilHard school, N.Y.Tel: 536-7167.KUNDALINIYOGACLUBhas been teaching yoga and helping people for5 years. Our purpose is to train teachers andexpand experience. A course for beginners isstarting on Weds at 5 PM IDA NOYES Hall 338-6066YOGABeginning Mon. Oct 11th revitalize Body, Mind6 Spirit through the practice of yoga postures,breathing techniques, meditation & relaxation.A perfect balance to the life of the mind. Place:5527 S. Dorchester, time: 6-8:00 pm. Led byDobbi Kerman for the U.C. community since1971.9 2 hr. sessions $65. Call 997-4176, 664-6650.SELF-HYPNOSISSEMINARBeginning Mon. Oct. 11th learn to utilize hyp¬nosis to improve concentration retention & ex¬am prep; make daily life more active, en¬joyable & purposeful; change habits, managestress & increase creativity. Taught by DobbiKerman M.A. a UC graduate who had trainedin clinical through the hypnosis clearing houseand is in private practice as a psychotherapist.8-10:30 PM Mondays. 9 2’/2 sessions $150.Registration ca 11 667-4176/664-6650AEROBIC DANCINGBeg. Wed. 10-13, 5:00 at Ida Noyes 6 ClassesFor $15 Call Lily Li 753-2249 For More Info.INTRODUCTION TOCOMPUTER CONCEPTSThe Computation Center is offering a seminarfor non-computer users: Introduction to Com¬puter Concepts, Monday, October 18, 3:30-5:00p.m. and 5:30-7:00 p.m. in Harper 406-408.Please register for either class at the BusinessOffice, 5737 S. University Avenue. All arewelcome — no charge. •SPORT CLUBSInformational packets are now available inIHN. 203. Registration material due Oct. 20.Mandatory meetings Oct 13 and Oct. 26.ASHUMCome To The Student/Faculty Picnic Sat. Oct.9 1:30 behind lab school. Knock your socks off!BABYSITTER NEEDEDMature, reliable sitter needed for my 8 yr. oldboy. Hours will be 3:15-6:00 pm M-Th; 2:30-6:00 p/n. F. Call Dr. Elbert Collins 425-8000 ext5800 days & 324-3849 eves. Or call Michelle 363-7265 eves.HOUSE FOR SALECharming 2 bedroom house in Homewood. Din¬ing room, Den, Fireplace, Hard Wood Floors.Large lot, lovely gardens. Short walk to 1C 7983074 Eves.BABYSITTERAVAILABLEOpenings for children Age 4 Months 8 Years inmy home. Lots of experience. Call Kanta 947-0078.Hyde Park Hair Designers, LtdAs the weather turns colder, you want a little more, a bitfuller hair. We have the perm to give you what you need -soft natural curls, feminine looks.•ALL HAIR CUTS $15.00 (Reg. 2000 and up)•$500 OFF AN ALL PERMSOffer good for first time clients withthis ad. Saturday excluded.1620 East 53rd St. • 288-2900We Have Redken22—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, October 8, 1982HOMECOMING BARBECUEStuffed PIZZA from Edwardo's, BRAT-WURST, HOT DOGS, DANISH, SOFTDRINKS, BEER! Live music. The Interfrater¬nity Council Homecoming Barbecue. BartlettField. October 16. After the football game.LOOK FOR DISCOUNT TICKETS ON SALEIN THE DINING HALLS.THE KRINGLESARECOMINGThe KRINGLES are coming to Weiss, Cobb,NON SUCH, and Ex Libris! Look for them theweek of October 11. A service of THE KR-INGLE CONNECTION.ATTACHE ASSOCIATESINFORMATIONMANAGEMENT SERVICESWordprocessing/Typing of DissertationsThesis, Research Papers-Notes, ProposalsMailings (Personal/Business), CurriculumVitaes: Pick-up & Delivery Service. MartiBuick: 643-1452.DINOSAUR DAYSSAO OFFERS DISCOUNT FIELD MUSEUMMEMBERSHIPS ONLY $15 Rm. 210 IDANOYESACHTUNG! GERMAN!TAKE APRIL WILSON'S GERMANCOURSES THIS FALL 8. HIGH PASS THEWINTER LANGUAGE EXAM! Classes willmeet MWF for 15 weeks, beginning Oct. 11. Forinformation & to register, call 667-3038.ASTRONOMY CLUBFirst meeting Wed. Oct 13 RY251 8pm. Comeall.REFRIGERATORFor sale: Sears refrigerator like new w/FreezTwice as big as dorm models. Price $150 negot.FINANCE COMMITTEEMeets 5:30 Monday in Ida Noyes 3rd floor.Please have budget forms in by noon that day.SCIENCE FICTIONThe Science Fiction Club is a dedicated groupof fans intent on keeping abreast ofFRIDAYSAO: Eclectic Ed Mini-course registration 10 am-4pm Rm 210 Ida NoyesHillel: Dinner in the Sukkah 6:30 pm Hillel,752-1127 for infoLSF & DOC Films: Star Wars 7:15 pm & 9:45 pmMandel Hall $2.00Court Theatre: You Never Can Tell 8 pm NewCourt Theatre Building. 962-7300 for infoInterchristian Fellowship: 7:30 pm Ida NoyesCenter for Middle Eastern Studies: Seminars: Dr.Adnan Bouni: “Palmyra” 11 am; “Ras ibn Hani”2 pm Oriental Institute, Rm 208. Also: Arab Cir¬cle: Mrs. Da’ad Hakim “The Importance of theSyrian Archivs for Research” Pick 218 3:30 pm.And Opening Party: Ida Noyes 7-11 pmCalvert House: Mass at Noon & 5 pm. “Copingwith the College, or What Am I Doing Here?” 5:30pm Speaker: Suzanne Kobasa, Ass’t. Prof. Dept.Behavioral Sciences. Free pizza supper.CARP: Presentation “Who is Reverend Moon?”Blue Gargoyle 1 & 3 pm FreeCrossroads: English Class: Beg., Int., Adv. 10 am684-6060Hinds: Lecture: Robert C. Aller “Mad Hunt:ALVIN in the : Panama Basin” 1:30 pm Auditori¬um. and Lecture: Frank M. Richter “On the Ther¬mal Evolution of the Earth” 3 pm HGS 101SATURDAYHumanities Open House A day long event: over 40special tours & seminars. Registration 9 am-2 pmReynolds Club. Principal Address: RobertStreeter, “Living with the Unpredictable” 11 amMandel hall. Tours & seminars 10 am, 1 pm, 3 pmincluding University Chorus Open Rehearsal 1 pmRockefeller Chapel & Organ Demonstrations 2 pmRockefeller Chapel. Free. For info 962-8542International House: Discussion on Northern Ire¬land 2:30 pmField Hockey: UC vs. U of Wisconsin-Green BayTime TBA Stagg FieldHillel: Simchat Torah Celebration, Yavneh 6 pmMinyan 7:30 pm HillelMusic Dept. Rose is a Rose is a Rose GertrudeStein Read & Sung 8 pm Mandel Hall 962-7300 forinfoDOC Films: Lili Marleen 7:15 pm & 9:30 pm CobbHall $2.00 Classified Adsdevelopments in the SF world. Our tastes arevaried and include Moorcock, Heinlein, Vance,Tolkien, Asimov, Niven et al. Note: Dr. Whofans are welcome. Meetings are Tuesdays at8:00p.m. in the Library of INH.WRITER'S GROUPIf you're at any stage of a writing project, wecan help with the psychological side ofWriting—procrastination, slowdown, self-criticism. For information on our workshopcall The Writer's Group at 684-1800.SAILINGCLUBThere will be an organizational meeting of theU of C Sailing Club on Monday, October 18 at8:00pm in the Ida Noyes Library.POLAR ITY MASSAGERelax tensions and revitalize yourself with aPolarity Energy Massage. Deep and gentlepressure that rekindles your healing energies.Bob. 324-7530 for info or appt. No sex calls,please.INTRODUCTION TOTHE DEC-20Learn how to use the Computation Center'sDEC-20 computer in a two-part seminar, Tues¬day, October 19, 3:30 - 5:00 p.m. and 5:30 - 7:00p.m. for Part I and Wednesday, October 20,3:30 - 5:00 p.m. and 5:30 - 7:00 p.m. for Part II,all in Harper 406-408. Please register in theBusiness Office for either session of Parts Iand 11. The Business Office is at 5737 S. Univer¬sity Avenue. The sessions are open to everyonewithout charge.INTRODUCTIONTO EDITLearn how to use the DEC-20's native lineeditor, EDIT, to create and modify text andprograms. This Computation Center seminaris open to all with no charge, on Thursday, Oc¬tober 21, 3:30 - 5:00 p.m. and 5:30 -7:00 p.m. inHarper 406-408. Please register for either ses¬sion at the Business Office, 5737 S. UniversityAve.TRANSCENDENTALMEDITATION PROGRAMIntro, lectures 4:00 or 8:00 pm Weds Oct 13, IdaNoyes. Hall. Come learn how to gain deep rest,CalendarLSF: Some Like it Hot 7 pm & 9:30 pm Law SchoolAuditorium $2.00Court Theatre: You Never Can Tell 8 pm NewCourt Theatre Building 962-7300 for infoCrossroads: Buffet dinner 6 pm $3Calvert House: Mass at Noon & 5 pmInternational House: “Resident Council Party”with Countraband 9 pm-2 am $4 NO one under 21admittedAuditions: For Blackfriars’ fall show, “Guys andDolls.” 10 am to 6 pm, New Theater, ReynoldsClub.SUNDAYOriental Institute Films: Rivers of Time 2 pmBreasted Hall. FreeDOC Films: The Tokyo Story 8 pm Cobb Hall$2.00DOC & Law School Films Present: Star Wars 2:30pm Law School Auditorium $2.00Hillel: Simchat Torah Celebration Yavneh 9:15am, 6 pm Minyan 9:30 am HillelCourt Theatre: You Never Can Tel 12:30 pm & 7:30pm New Court Theatre Building 962-7300Calvert House: Mass at 8:30 am, 11 am (BondChapel), 5 pm Supper at 6 pmMONDAYSAO: Art-to-Live-With Shapiro Collection on Dis¬play 12 pm-5 pm Ida Noyes Cloister ClubOriental Institute: Public Lecture: Dr. IreneWarner “Horses on the Citadel: A Bronze Breast¬plate & Archaeology of Hasanlu, Iran” 8 pm Man-del Hall. Reception following at Oriental Institute.FreeDOC Films: The Iron House 7:15 pm Three BadMen 9:30 pm Cobb Hall $1.50Graduate School of Business: Public Workshop:Benjamin Kleinmuntz “Laboratory and Field Stu¬dies in Lie Detection” 2 pm Rosenwald 405Social Sciences: Public Lecture: Reinhard Bendix“Objective and Subjective Meaning in History” 4pm Soc Sci 122Calvert House: Mass at Noon & 5 pmHillel: Class in the Sayings of the Fathers (PirkeiAvot) 7 pmCrossroads: English Class, Beg., Int., Adv., 2 pm684-6060 release stress, and improve functioning ofmind and body. Info. 947-0463WANTED/P.T.M.A. or Phd. student with strong organiza¬tional and administrative skills. Interact withgovernment, business, school, university, andlabor officials. Central Loop location. Ph. 782-8967Interns, M.A. or Phd, from any academicdiscipline. Able to research, synthesize, andwrite short summaries and abstracts. Workwith former professor. Loop location. Ex¬cellent opportunity to interact with business,school, university, state and local governmentexecutives. Ph. 782-8967INTRODUCTION TOSUPERWYLBURCollect, edit, and format text. Submit batchjobs to the Amdahl 470. You can do all this andmore with SUPERWYLBUR. The Computa¬tion Center is offering an introductory seminarfor SUPERWYLBUR which is open to all withno charge on Friday, October 22, 3:30 - 5:00p.m. and 5:30 - 7:00 p.m. in Harper 406 408.Please register for either session at theBusiness Office, 5737 S. University.SPSSA six session course introducing the StatisticalPackage for the Social Sciences (SPSS) will beoffered by the Computation Center thisquarter. Classes will be held Mondays andFridays, November, 1-19, in Harper 406-408,from 5:30 - 7:30 p.m. The cost is $30.00. Pleaseregister by Friday, October 29 in the Center'sBusiness Office. Computer time is provided.Call 962-7158 for further information.FORTRAN PROGRAMM¬INGLearn to program on the Computation Center'sDECSYSTEM-20 using FORTRAN. This tensession course includes computer time and willbe held Tuesdays and Thursdays, October 26 -December 2 (with no class the week ofNovember 22), in Harper 406-408, 5:30 - 7:30p.m. Registration is required by Monday, Oc¬tober 25 in the Center's Business Office (962-7158). Further information is available in aclass schedule also available at the BusinessOffice. Computer time is provided. The cost is$50.00. S.G. FOOD CO-OPAre you interested in good quality food at rockbottom prices? The S.G. Food Co-op is startingits 5th year with an organizational meeting onTuesday, Oct. 12, at 7:00p.m. at Quaker House,5617 S. Woodlawn Ave. Old and New MembersWelcome.AUDITIONSFor Blackfriars' Fall production of Guys andDolls will be held Oct. 9, From 10-6 in the NewTheater Reynold's Club. Bring a song and havefun!BUFFETDINNERSaturday at Crossroads 5621 S. Blackstone.6:00 p.m. Cost $3.00. All students welcome.UOFC FRENCH CLUBLes Parleurs Francais will have its firstmeeting Saturday at 7 PM at Phi Delt, 5625South Univ. For more info, call Georges at 753-3990GUITAR LESSONSFor the beginner interested in traditional andcontemporary fingerpicking styles. Individualinstruction Call Tim 324-4980SERVICESNine-month training program inclient.centered psychotherapy begins midOctober. Limited openings still available. Forfurther information call Chicago Couseling andPsychotherapy Center. 312°684-1800.Chicago Counseling .. Psychtherapy Center.Client-centered psychotherapy. 5711 S.Woodlawn, 6345 No. Broadway, and 111 No.Wabash, Chicago. A registered PsychologicalAgency. 312°684-1800CAMPUS MOVERS Big Truck and smallervan. low cost, compare! Free wardrobe car¬tons. Call anytime667-8327TABLE TENNIS, HANDBALL, SWIMMINGEntries due Oct. 20. INH 203 for entry formsand information about intramural activities.Paid subject needed for experiments onmemory, perception and language processing.Research conducted by students and faculty inthe Committee on Cognition and Communica¬tion, Department of Behavioral Sciences.Phone 962-8859Cfiazfotte ^ihtzomczReat Estate Co. We are co-operating brokersMember National Association of Realtors ChicagoReal Estate Boards iHmois Association of Realtors493-0666 • CALL ANYTIMESTUNNING WOODLAWN AVENUE NINE ROOM APT. . . .over 3,000 sq. ft.... superb new designer kitchen, shiny wonderful oakfloors — entire nine rooms are in showcase splendor. Brand new listing.Near 51st. $148,500CLOSE TO CAMPUS . . . on 57th & Kimbark there are two condosavailable:1) seven rooms — oversize country kitchen, nice back porch — light,bright apt. overlooks garden $72,0002) four rooms — could be 2 bedrooms. Has open front terrace withfrench doors. Kitchen completely new. 5 yrs. Built-in oak buffet.Many nice features. $49,500HOW ABOUT A HOUSE FOR CHRISTMAS? Nine rooms near58th & Blackstone. Beautiful natural woodwork, many turn o’ centuryleaded windows but modernization where you want it — wall of glasskitchen w/sun deck. Available Mid-Dec. $245,000EVEN A GARAGE IS INCLUDED . . . in sale of one bedroomco-operative near 59th & Harper. Lots of book shelves. Formal diningroom. $31,500TAKE ADVANTAGE OF UNUSUAL LOAN AT 10V4% . . .and win a 6 room re-furbished condo nearly 1800 sq. ft. in the process.Entire interior & Exterior re-done 3 yrs. Central air — Low - low monthlyass’t. Near 58th & Harper. $88,500 (flexible)NEAR MICHAEL REESE &MERCY HOSPITALS ... andminutes away from here, 8 roomtri-level about 2500 sq. ft. centralair, central vacuum — landscaped,professionally kept grounds — only13 yrs. old — will qualify for specialloans. $124,000SOUTH SHORE near the country club,building. Inside garage. Six rooms $35,000 — Luxury mid-rise vintageCo-operative IThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, October 8, 1982—23Now it cancost half as muchto call homefor moneyLONG DISTANCE CALLS MINS. BELL MCI SAVINGSNew York City to Miami 24 $ 6.45 $4.15 35.7%Boston to Los Angeles 41 12.20 7.93 35.0Minneapolis to St. Louis 5 1.40 .84 40.0Washington, D.C. to Durham i 1 .34 .15 55.9| Memphis to New Orleans 31 7.91 5.10 | 35.5Austin to Philadelphia 7 1.96 1.21 j 38.3; Phoenix to San Francisco 10 2.69 1.69 37.2Rate* >how comparative pricing between Bell's evening rate and MCI'* evening rate Final rate authorities on all tariffed services are MCI Tariff KX' 1 and AT&T Tariff FCC 263.MCI will cut the cost of yourlong distance calls 15 to 50%.And MCI will give you afree five minute phone call*anywhere on our nationwidenetwork. Simply call the numbershown on the right.MCIThe nation’s long distancephone company.*At MCI* night and weekend rate MCI Telecommunications Corp.875 North Michigan Avenue, Suite 1510Chicago, IL 60611312-751-8161□ I want to cut the cost of my long distance calls 15 to 50%.Please send me more information.NameSchool AddressCity State ZipPermanent AddressCity State ZipPhone number at School