Grey City JournalAN INTERVIEWWITH DENNIS ALTMANGCJ cover Grey City JournalINTRODUCINGMR. AND MRS. MOVIEGCJ page threeThe Chicago MaroonVolume 92, No. 14 The University of Chicago ©Copyright 1982 The Chicago Maroon Friday, October 22, 1982Stigler wins Nobel for econmotion havp phanoprt nnp nf thp ramp rlnsp<;t to Pivintf Sftmp noliti-By Steve ShandorGeorge T. Stigler has become thethird member of the Universityfaculty to win the Nobel MemorialPrize in Economics Science in thepast seven years. Stigler, theCharles A. Walgreen DistinguishedService Professor Emeritus ofAmerican Institutions, is a pioneerin the field of economic informa¬tion theory.In announcing the award, theRoyal Swedish Academy ofSciences cited Stigler for “his se¬minal studies of industrial struc¬tures, the functioning of marketsand causes and effects of publicregulations.” This year the Nobelprize carries a tax-free stipend of$157,000.At a press conference at Rosen-wald Hall held several hours afterthe announcement, Sigler ex¬plained his theories which led tohis prize. The theory of economicinformation, he said, “has to dowith the fact that how much youknow about who sells what at whatprice has influence on the way youshop.”This area of research relates toconsumers as well as industrialpurchasing agents. As an example,Stigler said that a tourist paysmore to live in a city than a long¬time resident because the touristhas not learned the best places toshop and may not bother to learn.Despite his generally conserva¬tive economic policies, Stigler's in¬novative ideas on economic infor¬ mation have changed one of themost basic accumptions of classi¬cal economics — namely, the beliefthat each consumer has perfectknowledge.Instead of attributing such anunrealistic trait to the consumer,Stigler suggested that for each con¬sumer there is an “optimumamount of good information.”Once the consumer has this limitedamount of knowledge, the cost ofgathering additional knowledgewould exceed any economic advan¬tage the consumer might havefrom using it.As Stigler pointed out, this eco¬nomic theory of information hasbecome an “enormously popularsubject in professional economicliterature.” It was also thought¬providing enough to help Stiglerget his Nobel Prize.Stigler, very much a member ofthe “Chicago School” of econom¬ics, is a firm believer in the free en¬terprise system. He said that gov¬ernment has taken on “a role notunlike a benevolent god.” Everytime the slightest thing goes wrongin the free market, he said, there isalways some group saying, “Thestate should do something aboutthis.” Like fellow Nobel laureateand colleague Milton Friedman,Stigler believes that the net effectof governmental regulations,spawned by good intentions as theyare, is protection of the very indus¬tries they were developed to regu¬late.It was on this subject that Stigler came closest to giving some politi¬cal observations. “I don’t think theachievements (of the Reagan ad¬ministration) have been at all re¬markable” in the a-ea of deregula¬tion. In fact, Stigler specificallysingled out “the regulation of thetrucking industry” as a severe set¬back to the belief that governmentshould have less of a role in themarketplace.Stigler acknowledged that Presi¬dent Reagan had called to congrat¬ulate him on the award and thattheir “mutual good friend”, Secre¬tary of State George Schultz, hadsent him a telegram.Asked if he had any advice togive the President on the economy,Stigler said “not really” andadded, “I don’t consider my exper¬tise in practical political mattersto be significant.” Stigler did say,however, that he thought “the waragainst inflation has been a re¬markably successful one.”Continued on page five PHOTO BY DARRELL WUDUNNUniversity of Chicago Economist George Stigler met membersof the press just several hours after he learned of his NobelPrize Wednesday.Faculty differ on arms freezeBy Amy RichmondOn the Nov. 2 ballot, Cook Countyresidents will be able to expresstheir opinions on the nuclear armsrace, as a referendum calls for theUS-Soviet weapons freeze.The referendum poses the ques¬tion, “Shall the United States gov¬ernment propose to the SovietUnion that both governmentsagree immediately to freeze the testing, production, and further de¬ployment of all nuclear weapons,missiles, and delivery’ systems in amanner that can be verified byboth governments?”Interest in the nuclear freezeissue has been growing nation¬wide. On Aug. 5, a freeze proposalnarrowly failed in Congress. Then,in mid-September, Wisconsin resi¬dents approved a nuclear freezemeasure by a three to one margin.Professors criticize education essayBy Eric GoodheartPanelists of the Round Tablecriticized premises in the CarnegieFoundation Essay, that educationshould establish “a renewed senseof community” for society. TheRound Table, sponsored by the Stu¬dent Government Academic Af¬fairs Committee, met Wednesdaynight to discuss “General Educa¬tion and its Uses.”Much of the discussion focusedon “A Quest for Common Learn¬ing,” a Carnegie Foundation essayoutlining an education that the au¬thors deem “necessary and tai¬lored to any institution.” They pro¬pose six categories under whichcourses should fall: “Shared Use of Symbols, Shared Membership inGroups and Institutions, SharedProducing and Consuming, SharedRelationship with Nature, SharedSense of Time, and Shared Valuesand Beliefs.”Panelist John MacAloon, assis¬tant professor in the socialsciences was uncomfortable withthe notion that an education couldbe “tailored” in such a way. Hewondered if it was not just “thesame old thing: If it’s too big, itshrinks; if it’s too small, itstretches.”The authors designed the propos¬al to respond to what they felt wasa need in society for a renewedsense of community.PHOTO BY DAN BRESLAUPanelists of the Round Table discussed general educationand its uses Wednesday night. Pictured from left to right areJonathan Z. Smith, John MacAloon, Charles Wegener, SalvatoreRotella, president of the Loop Community Colleges, and NathanTarcov. According to the Carnegie essay,“(Education) should focus on ourareas of interdependence, asmembers of the human family andof a specific society. In short, itshould concentrate on those expe¬riences that knit isolated individu¬als into a community.”“I think it’s fair to say that thereis nothing which is presented thatis specifically American,” saidNathan Tarcov, associate profes¬sor of political science. “It’s allhuman. . .There is nothing calcu¬lated to unite us.’According to Tarcov, U of C isnot any different in this regard. “Iwonder if the political premisemakes sense,” he said.Panelist Jonathan Z. Smithcalled the proposal a prime exam¬ple “of the insipid right wing liber¬al politics that lie behind these gen¬eral education schemes, a broadnebulous g’mish that can stir any¬one.” The proposal contained “noheat, no acknowledgement of dif¬ference,” said Smith.“All of the things that make(education) interesting have beenleft out,” he said.All of the panelists were, as mod¬erator Charles Wegener put it,quite happy to “dissociate” them¬selves from the Carnegie essayand move on to discuss “GeneralEducation and its Uses” more di¬rectly. Since most of the audiencehadn’t actually read the essay, itbecame their “inside joke.” Dr. Salvatore Rotella, who is thepresident of the Loop CommunityCollges, pointed out that “There issomething in education that shouldbe for everyone.” In the Communi¬ty Colleges, where people of allbackgrounds are seeking so manydifferent kinds of professionaltraining, Rotella thought that a un¬ified program of general educationsuch as the one which the Carnegieessay proposed would be “very dif¬ficult to approximate.” He felt,however, that “the document couldhelp each institution to find its ownprogram.”Tarcov supported Rotella, say¬ing that an educational “package”had no use; nonetheless, a genuineconcern about general educationon the part of the faculty was im¬portant, he said.Smith emphasized method oversubject matter. Students, he said,can look to either philosophy, ac¬counting, or veterinary medicinefor their subject. What he thoughtcounted were the questions theyasked. Even reading an income taxform could be “a cosmogonic expe¬rience,” were it approached prop¬erly. In his mind, the principalfault of the Carnegie essay wasthat it did not address this task.“Questions are asked during mo¬ments of pause,” he said. “Curric¬ulum is merely the excuse. Yourtime here is 95 percent drivel andfive percent education.”Continued on page three On the November ballot sevenstates and eighteen cities andtowns, together comprising abouttwenty-six percent of the nation’selectorate, will vote on the issue. Inthe Chicago area several organiza-tons are pushing for the referen¬dum’s passage, including the Chi¬cago Council of Scientists, theChicago Area Faculty for theFreeze, and the Nuclear FreezeReferendum Committee.The work of the arms freeze pro¬ponents has drawn considerablefire from the Reagan administra¬tion. The administration contendsthat any freeze will be in the Sovi¬et’s best interests because it willsecure their nuclear superiority.Verification is also noted as amajor concern by administrationofficials. They feel that if theagreement cannot be verified, thefreeze would amount to no morethan a unilateral reduction of ournuclear arsenal. Instead, the ad¬ministration favors negotiating anarms reduction agreement withthe Soviet Union without firstagreeing to an arms freeze.Whether nuclear superiority ispossessed by one side is difficult todetermine. Differences in deploy¬ment and design make superiorityhard to ascertain, and statisticalinformation is easily juggled.Bruce Winstein, associate profes¬sor of physics at the University ofChicago and member-at-large ofthe executive committee of theChicago Area Faculty for theFreeze (CAFF), feels that the em¬phasis on the superiority issuefuels the arms race, “W’hen youtalk of who s ahead and who isn’t,you’re sucked back into the race,”he said.Ben Solomon, faculty member ofKennedy King College and vice-chairman of CAFF, argues that su¬periority is “meaningless” withthe overkill arsenals now pos¬sessed by e'urh side.Continued on page fiveProfessor of Medieval Jewish HistoryneSrau 'University lerusafemairem 11A Cfose 'Reading of andossierv uose j\eao,mqOnyumtioriat 'VcSunday October 24 1982i:3o ? 'M.^niltct foundation, 5715 iVoocUawn Ave. -A Dr. Kurt Rosenbaum The Committee on Slavic andOptometrist East European Studies(53 Kimbark Plaza) Presents a Lecture1200 E. 53rd St.THE PROSPECTS OF493-8372Intelligent people know thedifference between advertised SOVIET AGKIUULI UKLbycheap glasses or contact lensesand competent professional D. GALE JOHNSONservice with quality material. Department of EconomicsBeware of bait advertising. University of ChicagoEye ExaminationsFashion Eye WearContact Lenses Wednesday, October 41, ivoa4:00 p.m.Social Sciences Building 1221126 East 59th StreetTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOAXXUnited WayCrusade of MercyPLEASE GIVEm■«3iiw THE COMMISSION ON GRADUATE EDUCATIONannounces anOPEN MEETINGto discuss the Report of the CommissionAll graduate students are invitedto attend and to participate. Social Sciences 112Monday, October 25,12 Nooni .1 L —mks2 The Chicago Maroon--Friday, October 22, 1982S—i 1——. ,v lid* sdij 'k>\ « s-Kd-dy/Lf & S\d. 1News News in briefRound TableContinued from page oneMacAloon asserted that the most impor¬tant education comes through peer interac¬tion. At the Community Colleges, wherethere is more diversity, he observed the stu¬dents watching each other and learning im¬portant lessons “even before the professorcame in the door.” He suggested that Rotel-la’s students might be getting the best gen¬eral education of all.“Our faculty is very concerned aboutbringing the diversity out so that educationcan take place,” said Rotella.He said that one also has to address the“bureaucratic reality”: Given the sepa¬rateness of the various departments, therewas a need for some kind of coming to¬gether. The problem was adjusting generaleducation to the needs of his students, manyof whom are not completely literate, despitetheir high school diplomas.Wegener was concerned that the panelistsdiscuss “the uses” of general education, as¬suming that the requisite “pause, serious¬ness, commonality, and diversity” werethere.“It can’t promise to solve a particularproblem beyond getting people to think,”said Tarcov.“If we actively ask questions and try tounderstand, we derive benefit,” said Smith.“Use is a political question, and how you re¬spond to it will depend on your politics.”According to Rotella, general educationmight help an institution become moreaware of itself. “A periodic concern aboutinterrelatedness helps the institution defineitself so it can act as one, even if it is ‘dropin-drop out,’ ” he said.MacAloon said that general educationshould promote “self-conscious reflection”before the professor comes into the room;thus, the apparatus of education becomes“an attempt to promote peer learning.” Leonhardt at MandelThe University of Chicago Early Music atMandel Series opens its second season witha concert by the internationally known harp¬sichordist, Gustav Leonhardt, on Sunday,Oct. 24, at 8 p.m. in Mandel Hall, 57th St. andUniversity Ave.The program will include the A.L. Cou¬perin, Pieces de Clavecin (1751); PancraceRoyer, Pieces de Clavecin (1746); W.F.Bach, Five Polponaises; and J.S. Bach,Suite in E-flat.General admission is $9, U of C students$5. Tickets are available at the Departmentof Music Concert Office, Goodspeed Hall,5845 S. Ellis Ave., 60637, 962-8068, and at theMandel Hall Ticket Center, 962-7300.Argon ne tool to losefunding to LosAlamosThe Intense Pulsed Neutron Source I(IPNS-I), a highly sophisticated nuclear re¬search tool at Argonne National Laboratorywill lose funding from the Department ofEnergy (DOE) upon the completion of asimilar facility at Los Alamos, New Mexicoin 1986.Funding has, in fact, only been allocatedthrough 1983. The DOE last year paid $4.4million to the project, and this year uppedthe figure to $4.6 million.IPNS-I Director Jerry Lander said thatthe DOE had promised a “longterm” ar¬rangement, and the fact that funding wasnot guaranteed past 1983 had “a veryserious impact on morale” at Argonne.The DOE had not originally intended tofund the IPNS-I, but it was built quicklyfrom other machines and proved to be veryuseful.E. S. Beckjord, deputy director of Scienceand Technology at Argonne, said that theIPNS-I, which produces a concentrated neu¬tron beam used to test materials such asuranium, has “made a big splash on the sci¬ entific world.” He expressed “optimism”that the machine might receive continuedfunding regardless of the Los Alamos proj¬ect, because of its importance at Argonne.Argonne is managed and operated by theUniversity of Chicago under contract withDOE.Keith BakerMeeting Mondayon Baker ReportThere will be a student meeting to discussthe Baker Report, filed by the Commissionon Graduate Education. Students will beasked to give their comments on the report,as well as any additions they deem neces¬sary.The meeting will be held at noon, MondayOct. 25, in Social Science room 122. University to awardscholarships to kidsof police, firemenStarting next year, the University willaward full-tuition scholarships annually toas many as 12 students from families of Chi¬cago police officers or firefighters. The four-year scholarship represents a worth of morethan $30,000.The program has been established tothank public safety workers for protectingthe Hyde Park-Kenwood area. The scholar¬ships are an extension of a program startedseveral years ago in which children of pub¬lic safety workers competed for half-tuitionscholarships to the College.The scholarships will be awarded on acompetitive basis to as many as six studentswith a parent in the police department andup to six more with a parent in the fire de¬partment.SG petitions duePetitions for those interested in running inthe Nov. 3 and 4 Student Government (SG)elections are due in the SG office, Ida Noyesthird floor, by 5 p.m. Monday, Oct. 25.There are 45 seats available, includinggraduate positions, the commuter seat, andon the Student-Faculty-AdministrationCourt. Petitions are available at the StudentActivities Office and at the SG office.Reg book salecontinuesRegenstein Library continues its booksale today and Monday on B level. 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October 22. 1982NewsStigler winsNobel PrizeContinued from page oneBefore introducing Stigler at the pressconference, James Yuenger, director of theUniversity News and Information Office,read a statement from President Hanna H.Gray, which said, “This is a moment ofgreat satisfaction for all of us who admireand esteem George Stigler of our university,and, I believe, for those committed to thehigh standards of scholarship that Georgehas set.”University of Chicago Provost RobertMcCormick Adams added that Stigler’sNobel Prize is a “richly deserved reward”which will “warm the hearts of all George’scolleagues.”From the beginning of the press confer¬ence, Stigler set a very light-hearted and jo¬vial tone. Anticipating questions on how hewould spend the money, Stigler noted thathe has three sons “who are accustomed to ahigh standard of living” and with whom hewill consult on how to spend the money.Stigler said that the news that he had wonhad not plunged him into any instant depres¬sion. Rather, he said the news had increasedhis “respect for the wisdom of the selectingcommittee.”Looking ahead in the field of economics,Stigler predicted a Nobel prize for his col¬league Robert E. Lucas, vice-chairman ofthe economics department and the foremostof the “rational expectations” theorists cur¬rently gaining support within the economicworld. Stigler said that Lucas’ prize mightnot come “right away because he’s stillquite young, but in terms of achievementhe’s earned it already.”U of C Economics Professor Gary Beckersaid, “George’s main contribution has beento the field of industrial organization. Hiscontribution to this field was to bring to beara combination of careful theorizing and em¬pirical testing of the implications of histheory. Two major contributions have beento pioneer the economic analysis of the roleof information in decision-making and theevaluation of the causes and consequencesof public policy. George is the dominant per¬son in the field of industrial organizationand has influenced the research of almostevery economist in his field.”Sam Peltzman, a professor in the businessschool, said, “George’s most significantcontribution has been industrial organiza¬tion and the economics of regulation. In bothfields he has been a leading force. He essen¬tially started the economics of regulation byhimself. His contributions on industrial or¬ganization have been extremely important.He always insisted on empirical evidencefor his and others’ theories, rather than justdoing theory for its own sake.”Stigler was born in Renton, Washington in1911. He received his BBA in 1931 from theUniversity of Washington, his MBA in 1932from Northwestern, and his PhD in 1938from the U of C. He also holds honorary de¬grees in science from Carnegie-Mellon Uni¬versity, the University of Rochester, the George StiglerHelsinski School of Economics, Northwes¬tern, and an LLD from Brown.Stigler has taught at Iowa State, the Uni¬versity of Minnesota, Brown, and Columbia.He came to the University of Chicago in 1958and since 1981 has been the Charles R. Wal¬green Distinguished Service ProfessorEmeritus of American Institutions in theGraduate School of Business and the depart¬ment of economics. Although he has emeri¬tus status, he teaches a business schoolcourse on the public control of economic ac¬tivity and a workshop in economic and legalorganization.Stigler is a member of the American Eco¬nomic Association, the National Academy ofSciences, and the American PhilosophicalSociety. He has been the editor of the Jour¬nal of Political Economy since 1974.From 1971 to 1974 Stigler served as vicechairman of the Securities Investors Protec¬tive Commission, and was a member of theBlue Ribbon Defense Panel from 1969 to1970. In 1960-61 he was chairman of the PriceStatistics Review Committee of the NationalBureau of Economic Research.His books include The Theory of Price(1946), Capital and Rates of Return in Man¬ufacturing (1963), The Intellectual and theMarket Place and Other Essays (1963),Essays in the History of Econometrics(1965), The Organization of Industry (1968),The Behavior of Industrial Prices (with J.K.Kindahl in 1970), The Citizen and the State(1975), and The Economist as Preacher andOther Essays (1982).Stigler’s prize brings to 51 the number ofNobel Prize winners who have been facultymembers, researchers or students at theUniversity. He is the third faculty memberto win the economics award. Milton Fried¬man and Theodore Schultz (with Sir ArthurLewis) received Nobel Prizes in 1976 and1979 respectively while professors here.turned &U On(in dluan/ jtfa//jNow Featuring:* Homemade Fruit salad‘Homemade Soup* French-dip Beef‘Hot Spiced Cider Arms freeze referendumContinued from page oneSuperiority is not a question of the amountof mega-tonnage each side has, according toNathan Tarcov, associate professor of polit¬ical science in the College. Connecting thesuperiority issue to the idea of overkill is“an impressive sounding argument,” hesaid. “But for purposes of deterring nuclearwar, what counts is not the number of weap¬ons but whether, after an attack, enoughweapons survive to make a counter-attackdevastating enough so it would not be worththeir while to make the first strike.”Tarcov contends that the crucial questionis not the size of each side’s stockpile, buthow these weapons interrelate. With thefreeze, Tarcov worries that the danger ofwar would increase. “If we have a freeze wewould be forbidden from having new formsof delivery systems and what we need is asecure deterrent with several differentforms,” he said.The issue of the verification of any freezeagreement is also hotly debated. Opponentsargue that the freeze differs from previousarms agreements because it attempts todeal not only with testing and deployment,but also with the production of nuclearweapons. This requires new methods of ver¬ification which must be more sophisticated,since it is harder to detect activity inside afactory.Morton Kaplan, professor of politicalscience and chairman of the Committee onInternational Relations, also voices concernover whether a freeze agreement can be suf¬ficiently verified. New sub-kiloton weaponsare difficult to monitor because of theirsmall size, and deployment vehicles canoften fire both nuclear and non-nuclearshells, making control of them nearly im¬possible, Kaplan said.Proponents of the freeze maintain thatpresent technology in satellites and radar isadequate to detect any testing, deployment,and production of nuclear weapons. Thefreeze would even make verificationsimpler, according to Ted Strom, MD/PhDstudent at U of C and member of the Com¬mittee on Arms Control and Disarmament.“Verification of a nuclear freeze involvesonly a ‘yes’ or no’ answer,” he said. “It ismuch easier to verify than a weapons ceil¬ing.”Freeze proponents also argue that thegreater risk is in the arms race itself and notin the risk of verification ability. Largescale cheating by the Soviet Union would beeasy to verify and minor cheating wrould beirrational, since it would be risking detec¬tion for an insignificant increase in its nu¬clear arsenal.Proponents also feel that a freeze wouldaid in slowing the spread of nuclear arms toother nations. According to Solomon, the USand Soviet Union, if under a freeze agree¬ment, would then have an interest in pres¬suring other nations to halt their nuclearweapons production. He also believes afreeze in the major powers' arms production would decrease the sale of non-weaponsgrade material, not covered in the Non-Proliferation Treaty, since its sale wouldonly help nuclear arms-developing coun¬ tries gain in relation to the superpowers’ nu¬clear capabilities.Both Tarcov and Kaplan disagree. “It isalready the case that it is in the best interestof the US and Soviet Union to discourageother nations from developing nuclearweapons,” said Tarcov. As to the exporta¬tion of non-weapons grade material, Kaplanfeels a freeze would have no real effect. Po¬litical competition is the cause of the proli¬feration and this will not end with thefreeze.Kaplan and Tarcov support attempts atreducing current levels of arms. However,like other freeze opponents, both men viewthe freeze as the wrong solution to a veryreal problem. “People tend to assume toooften that any arms proposal is good, but aparticular arms control proposal can harmdeterrence,” said Tarcov.Kaplan shares these sentiments, “Nu¬clear war is dangerous, but it doesn’t followthat a freeze is a reasonable way to dealwith the issue.”What do freeze proponents hope to accom¬plish wdth a referendum on the Cook Countyballot? “We are trying to show politiciansthat there is a concern. We are working tohelp create a ground swell that will put pres¬sure on the politicians, so that they’ll eitherhalt the arms race or fail to get re-elected,”said Sid Nagel, associate professor in thephysics department.If they lose the election, the pro-freezeforces pledge not to let the issue die. Ateach-in on nuclear war, coordinated nation¬ally by the Union of Concerned Scientists, isscheduled for Nov. 11, at Mandel Hall, andCAFF plans a membership drive. They feelthe burden to end the nuclear arms race isours: “If we don’t stop, they will not stop.”Over a quarter of the electorate will beasked whether the freeze is an acceptablestep to take in ending the arms race. Its an¬swer, whether or not the Reagan adminis¬tration pays it heed, will be an interestingstatement on a major dilemma of ourLox& Bagel BrunchOrange Juice, Coffee,Tea, Tomatoes, andOnions, Too.Every Sunday11 am - 1:00 pmHillel •Foundation5715 Woodlawn Ave.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 PARKINGMRS. HARRIS 752-38QOThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, October 22, 1982—5Editorial‘Yes, we have no funding’The federally-funded Work/Study program, a mutual service for the Univer¬sity and for students receiving financial aid, has become a source of confusionand frustration for many students seeking employment through the pro¬gram.Eleanor Borus, associate director of financial aid, says that about 800 stu¬dents receiving financial aid have Work/Study in their aid packets. No figureswere available as to the dollar amount allotted; however, Borus said that theOffice of Financial Aid bases the amount distributed directly on the projectedamount in the program, determined by the Office of Career Counseling.At the Office of Career Counseling, Work/Study Coordinator Dorothy Harris,said that of the $500,000 allocated for Work/Study, $275,000 will (eventually) bepaid to undergraduates. Harris also said that while 725 to 750 letters of eligibili¬ty were sent out, Work/Study funds will pay for only 416 jobs.“We send out more letters than we have slots, initially, said Harris. “We dohave to send out more to get 100 percent response.’’As of Wednesday, 326 undergraduates had picked up referrals for jobsthrough Work/Study, according to Harris. Once 416 jobs are filled, no moreWork/Study positions will be available, and any student requesting a referralfrom Career Counseling, whether he has a prospective job or not, will be turnedaway.Students will also be turned away jobless if the Work/Study funds run out,which might be catastrophic if such an event were not expected already.The Office of Career Counseling not only expects funds to run out before allstudents get referrals, but plans the program that way. It prefers seeing stu¬dents walk out without jobs over seeing Work/Study money left over. (Surelythere would be a few more jobs to sponsor with left-over funds.)At the same time, it is very surprising that when so many students are look¬ing for jobs, only 326 out of 700 to 800 students have actually gone in to receivereferrals from Career Counseling.If more students would follow through on getting Work/Study jobs, perhapstheir requests would be taken more seriously.Dumb Dum RaTo the editor:Last Friday I watched the Homecomingfestivities at Bartlett Field expecting to becheered and entertained. Instead I leftseething because the Dum Ra Band sang anugly, ugly song in which the most frequentrefrain was “I WANNA BE A RICH JEW.”It was dedicated to ‘‘New York Jews” andwas presumably inspired by a satiric col¬umn by David Brooks which appeared in theMaroon of 12 October.While Mr. Brooks’ contribution was har¬mless, good-natured satire, there was noth¬ing at all light or witty about Dum Ra’s com¬position. It was an example of mindless, butnevertheless vicious, anti-semitism of thesame brand that is responsible for the dese¬cration of Jewish cemeteries and the defa¬cement of synagogues.I left Bartlett Field shortly after the of¬fending song began, not wishing to stand byand thus tacitly condone the contents and in¬tent of the lyrics. It is tragic that the otherspectators remained oblivious to the mes¬sage of hate that was being broadcast.I don’t expect that, upon reading this let¬ter, any member of the Dum Ra troop willproffer an apology, since such an act pre¬supposes the existence of a modicum ofhuman sensitivity. Instead I am hoping thatthe campus community, especially its un¬dergraduates, will express its collective dis¬may and demonstrate its social conscienceby avoiding all events in which the Dum RaBand is scheduled to play.Michael K. Diamondgraduate student in thedepartment of anthropologyBillings billingTo the editor:Further clarification may well be neededregarding the billing for the Student HealthFee and the University’s supplementaryhospitalization plan, Blue Cross/BlueShield.All statements for Autumn, 1982 charges,which were sent in August to students in theCollege, the Graduate Schools of Business,Law and Medicine, included a $33 assess¬ment for the Autumn Student Health fee.Charges for participation in BlueCross/Blue Shield, on the other hand, wasdeliberately not included in the August bills.Participation in Blue Cross/Blue Shield isbased on a signed application from the par¬ticipant. Applications to participate or towaive participation are part of the registra¬tion process, and, therefore, were not avail¬ able for entering undergraduates and forgraduate students at the time of the Augustbilling. Undergraduate students who pre¬registered last Spring might have beenbilled in August for Blue Cross/Blue Shield,but since only 29 percent of that group hadelected to participate in Blue Cross/BlueShield last year, the Billing Committee de¬cided to exclude the charge from the Augustbill for all students and to bill it later only tothose students who applied to participate., It may be worth noting too that lettersfrom the Bursar of the University sent inMay to new and returning students and inAugust with the early bill referred to a sub¬sequent bill. The reverse of the statementalso refers to an adjustment bill.Finally, any student who received a bill inOctober showing only the charge for the Stu¬dent Health fee was not in the August billingpopulation and received no August bill atall.Maxine H. SullivanUniversity RegistrarSupport Model UN. .To the editor:I, like John Egan, see a need for a ModelUnited Nations (MUN) project to be held oncampus. I too attended the registrationmeeting last spring. The meeting was heldon May 20, 1982. It is now the end of October.Five months have passed and the prospectof a MUN project on campus seems nocloser now than last May.If the organizers of the initial meeting arehaving difficulty in making progress towardthe goal of a MUN project perhaps theyshould be replaced.The Maroon could possibly use its influ¬ence to get the ball moving in the right di¬rection. The MUN is indeed too worthy aproject to be allowed to slip away.David Bergman,third year student in the College. . .but who caresTo the editor:I could not agree with Mr. Egan’s letteiabout the Model United Nations (MUN)more. He gets all the main points right. Thereal question, however, is not who’s toblame, but rather: why bother? It is ob¬viously another one of those great ideaswhich always pop up at the U of C whichnever get implemented. I for one would rec¬ommend to Mr. Egan that he simply forgetabout it — I’m sure that the Administrationdid a long time ago.Theodore B. SchaeferClass of ’826—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, October 22, 1982 "AWATo\A txw otto?! , .1— Z, MH r T*U) DJT0f| ?! rH ***'-*>' !>7/ 'foP, AFTee '{do eft'eM,T74eVa feoM tA£ Zoof W°-Yfeao* lUAboMen-tobe at HtftdifrsLettersUnregistered and unlovedTo the editor:I am one of the students affected by thenew policy that unregistered graduate stu¬dents must pay staff or alumni rates for anathletic facilities pass. Your article(Maroon, Fri. Oct. 15) states that the deci¬sion by the Athletic Board was made in thespring, but there was no announcement ofthe change in policy made in advance of thefirst week of this quarter. To the best of myknowledge, the change in policy has neverbeen stated in writing. I was told about itverbally when I went in to buy a new pass. Iwas shocked to learn that I was expected topay an overwhelming 333% ($65) more thanI had budgeted for ($15). This is extremelyinconsiderate for those of us (probably all ofus) who live on a tight budget.In your article, Mary Jean Mulvaney isquoted as saying “The logical category fornon-registered students is alumni.” I am agraduate student in good standing in my de¬partment. As the graduate program in mydepartment is designed, I am expected tospend some time as a non-registered but ac¬tive student: three years (registered)course work, followed by field research,then a period (unregistered) of writing thedissertation. I am presently in the lastphase. I have not been “hanging around” for ten years or five years or even two yearsusing U of C facilities at student rates. Ihave been writing for ten months only.The issue is that non-registered graduatestudents have absolutely no institutionally-recognized standing in this university, eventhough it claims to be primarily a graduateand research institution. I cannot get healthinsurance through the University; I cannotuse student health; I cannot borrow librarybooks; I cannot attend events or purchasestudent tickets requiring UCID, I do not geta personal computing account, and now Icannot get a student gym pass. Yet, 1 am agraduate student. I am not staff, nor shouldI be categorized as an alumni (even thoughtechnically I am) because I am an activestudent. It is insulting that the Athletic of¬fice does not even give non-registered stu¬dents a separate category on their list. Theysaid, “You’re staff.” I am not staff. It seemsto me that a separate category for non-reg¬istered students, paying a fee of, say doublethe registered student rate ($30) would havebeen reasonable. Perhaps in the long run,the University is working against itself. Theway I feel today, I will think twice beforeevery giving the University any money, andI know others who feel the same.Mary Ayresdepartment of anthropologyTerm paper ad disturbingTo the editor:I am writing in reference to the advertise¬ment for a term paper service which youprinted in your October 8 issue. Given ournational and local tradition of freedom ofthe press and the fact that the service adver¬tised is quite legal, you have every right toprint such an advertisement; and I wouldnot for a moment suggest otherwise. Never¬theless, the advertisement is disturbing.Any student who would avail himself or her¬self of the service advertised would be en¬gaging in a serious breach of our academiccode; and, if caught, he or she would be sub¬ject to disciplinary action, possibly expul¬sion from the University. More to the point,the service advertised is a profound affrontto the University, since it undercuts thebasic mutual trust and responsibility be¬tween students and Faculty on which thevery operation of the University depends.We are not set up to police our students; but,more important than that, the very life ofthe University requires that we all trusteach other to be honest in our mutual deal¬ings. An institution and a community devot¬ed to the life of the mind — to the discovery,transmission, and appreciation of knowl¬ edge in all its forms — has no legitimate usefor a service which invites students to buyother people’s work and pass it off as theirown. At the very least, such an advertise¬ment must raise serious questions of morali¬ty and responsibility within the University. Ilook forward to your reflections on this mat¬ter.Herman SinaikoDean of Students in the CollegeEditor’s note: Our running of the termpaper advertisement was not meant as aneditorial statement nor was it meant to of¬fend anyone. We neither support nor con¬done such a service. We believe, though,that the students at this university are re¬sponsible enough to decide for themselveswhat they will do with such a service.However, we understand the points raisedby Mr. Sinaiko and Mr. Williams (see letterin Maroon, 10/15), and we do not wish tocause any further offense. We cancelled twoadditional runs of the ad scheduled for lastFriday and today. The Maroon regrets anyoffnse that might have been taken as a re¬sult of the ad.ViewpointsDemocrats in the 80s: new ideas for progressby David EichenthalIn a recent Viewpoints column in theMaroon, I was somewhat disturbed to findthe criticism that the Democratic Party isbeing bogged down in a “quagmire of liber¬alism.’’ The column attacked the Demo¬crats as a party controlled by radical ele¬ments, and contended that the partypresently, “lacks a clear and consistent phi¬losophy to meet the challenge of contem¬porary times.’’ The purpose of this columnis not to refute the points made in Mr.Powell’s column on a point by point basis.To do so would be of little value for thereader. Instead, I seek to take another lookat the Democratic Party in the 1980s. It is aparty which maintains its basic principles,yet is willing to create new policies for newtimes. There can only be great excitementover the new Democratic Party. It is a partywhich remains committed to the workingman and it has now become the party fornew ideas for progress and social justice inthe 1980s.When discussing the Democratic Party, itis important to recognize the broad consti¬tuency which is included within. The Demo¬cratic Party has been the majority party inthe United States for most of this century. Itis a broad based party which encompassescitizens and political leaders of many dif¬ ferent ideologies. It is perhaps the only asso¬ciation which can claim the membership ofboth the small businessman in Mississippiand the senior citizen in New York. Its politi¬cal leadership is just as diverse. There is agreat ideological spectrum which separatesa Russell Long or a John Stennis from a TedKennedy or an Alan Cranston. Yet all foursit on the Democratic side of the aisle in theUnited States Senate.One result of the diverse Democratic baseis an extraordinary amount of internal de¬bate within the party. The DemocraticParty offers a voice for virtually any rea¬sonable political view. It is this debate with¬in the party. The Democratic Party offers avoice for virtually any reasonable politicalview. It is this debate which has producedsome of the most promising ideas for the fu¬ture of the nation.While the party continues to debate thesenew ideas, it also remains united by certaincommon beliefs. At the recent DemocraticMidterm Conference in Philadelphia, Sena¬tor Gary Hart (D-Colorado) proclaimedthese basic convictions in his speech beforethe conferees.♦That this nation exists for all individuals —and not just the wealthy;♦That the primary motivation of our societyis justice — not greed;LettersPolitical Sophistry?To the editor: anyone who has studied the Middle East atWe can be grateful to Scott Powell for pro¬viding us with a convenient list of the “radi¬cal” sins of the Democratic Party in his re¬view of the “Chicago Democrat.” No longerneed we worry that the Democrats, who lastyear either openly endorsed or provided noreal alternative to Reagan’s economic pro¬gram, who supported virtually all of Rea¬gan’s unprecedented increases in the mili¬tary budget, and who, this year, outdid eventhe Republicans in endorsing Israeli geno¬cide in Lebanon, are getting too conserva¬tive. No, the Democrats’ problem, accord¬ing to Mr. Powell, is that they are too“radical.” In fact, I am so grateful to Mr.Powell for his pithy comments on currentevents that I suggest he quit graduate schoolimmediately, since I’m sure he will be theobvious choice next year for the VillageVoice’s annual Irving Kristol Honorary Doc¬torate in Political Sophistry. Why study withso many facile cliches ready at hand?It would be both boring and fruitless toreply to every one of Mr. Powell’s asser¬tions, for what can you say to somebody whosuggests that the lesson to be learned from20 years of US military intervention in Iranis that we need a draft so that we can repeatthe exercise in other countries, or that theERA was defeated not by conservative statelegislatures which didn’t rpresent their con¬stituencies, but by the “radical fringe” inthe women’s movement? As for attemptingto discredit MERIP Reports by reference totheir political endorsements, don’t bother: all knows that the magazine has an exem¬plary reputation because of its Marxist ori¬entation, not in spite of it.But don’t get me wrong: I’m not trying todefend either the “Chicago Democrat” orthe Democratic Party. I was most im¬pressed by the anti-working class point ofview of the magazine’s lead article, whichargued for a new model of business-labor“cooperation” as the panacea for thiscountry’s economic crisis. As the ChryslerCo. workers have recently realized, all suchcalls for cooperation are just a means ofasking labor to pay for what business is un¬willing (not unable) to pay for: productiveinvestment which employs people andcreates goods and services. Nor does Mr.Powell’s view that government regulationhas choked off productive investment get usvery far: business has plenty of capital forinvestment, it would just rather use it forspeculating on the stock market, buying upcompetitors through lucrative mergers, andother kinds of profitable but totally unpro¬ductive activities. Why this is so has a lotmore to do with the falling rate of profit inUS industry and other heretical notions thanit does with either a lack of business-laborcooperation or government over-regulation.But if we believed this, we couldn’t supporteither the Democrats or the Republicans,and then, oh my, what would we do?Omar Dahbour•graduate student in thedepartment of history ♦That privilege and influence are to be re¬sisted ;♦And that power belongs to the many — notthe few.These words express the basic ideals thatDemocrats have held to for the past fiftyyears since the election of Franklin Roose¬velt. They are the words which the NewDeal, the Fair Deal, the New Frontier, andthe Great Society were developed to fulfill.Now in the 1980s, the Democrats once againare striving to create new policies whichwill realize these beliefs.The issues pertaining to economic condi¬tions continue to be the centerpiece of anynew Democratic agenda. With unemploy¬ment at 10.1 percent there is little questionthat our economy is in a grave condition.Democrats have started to address theeconomy in a more comprehensive mannerthan ever before. Policies are being formu¬lated to simultaneously confront the prob¬lems of umemployment, inflation, and highinterest rates. Unemployment clearly willnot be reduced without reductions in the in¬terest rates. The only way to lower interestrates without triggering increases in infla¬tion, is through a reduction of the budgetdeficit. The same presient who constantlyspeaks in favor of a balanced budget amend¬ment offers little in terms of policies to re¬duce his own budget deficit. Democrats do.The Democratic Party has taken the fiscallysound position of calling for reductions inthe projected increases in the defense bud¬get.Cutting the budget in non-domestic pro¬gram areas is clearly not the only solution toour current economic woes. There is a needfor a restructuring of a significant part ofour fiscal system — taxation. Senator BillBradley of New Jersey and CongressmanRichard Gephardt have introduced legisla¬tion calling for a sliding scale flat rate tax.The effect of this legislation would be a mas¬sive reform of the tax system. Virtually alldeductions, particularly those employed bythe upper half of the income scale would beremoved from the tax code. Taxes wouldthen be based on flat rate percentages of in¬come, with the rates differing by incomecategory. Under the flat-rate tax, the taxsystem would become both more redistribu¬tive and less complicated. In addition, theclosing down of several popular tax shelterswould almost certainly create additionalrevenue which could be used to close the def¬icit gap.The mere cutting of expenditures will nothave a long term impact upon our nation’sunemployment problem. As a result offoreign competition, inefficient manage¬ment, and a lack of government concern,our great industrial base has shown realsigns of decay. No matter how low interestrates become, investors will not pour moneyinto collapsing industries. However, there isone industry which is far from collapse. Thefuture of the high technology industries ap¬pears extraordinarily bright. Thus, it mustbe the goal of the government to maintainwhatever can be salvaged from our industri¬al base and to move forward in adjusting our economy to the high tech future. Demo¬crats have already started to advance poli¬cies to achieve this. While he was a memberof the Senate, Adlai Stevenson authored leg¬islation which created a blueprint for stateaction in encouraging high technology in¬dustry. Recently in New York State, Gover¬nor Hugh Carey led the fight for the estab¬lishment of the New York State Center forIndustrial Innovation at Rensellaer Poly¬technic Institute. The current Democraticcandidate for governor of New York, MarioCuomo has made the issues of technologyand training the cornerstone of his policy foreconomic development. In the United StatesSenate, both Senator Gary Hart and SenatorJohn Glenn have introduced legislation tocreate a partnership between government,education, and high technology. Both piecesof legislation call for an increased role forhigh technology in our economy. The Demo¬crats have clearly developed a clear andconsistent policy for high technology andour economy.Democrats continue to advocate a strongpolicy in the field of education. When stu¬dent aid faced budget cuts, the Democratsin Congress mobilized the opposition. Thefight against the cuts on the floor of theHouse of Representatives was led by Con¬gressman Peter Peyser, Democrat fromNew York. Democrats continue to believe ineducation as a right for every American andin government’s role to provide an equal op¬portunity for all.On the issue of strategic arms control, theDemocrats again speak with a clear voice.Democrats throughout the country are sup¬porting the nuclear arms freeze which wasintroduced in the United States Senate bySenator Edward Kennedy. The call for a nu¬clear arms freeze renews a Democraticcommitment to arms control which has ex¬isted since the first test ban treaty was nego¬tiated during the presidency of Jahn F. Ken¬nedy.The Democratic Party of the 1980s clearlyoffers the hope of the future. It is producingthe ideas of today which will be the policiesof tomorrow. In addition, this new Demo¬cratic Party is producing concerned and in¬telligent leadership for the times ahead.Senators such as Gary Hart, Bill Bradley,and Paul Tsongas, congressmen such asRichard Gephardt and Timothy W’irth andprospective governors such as MarioCuomo, Adlai Stevenson, and Bill Clinton inArkansas offer new ideas and new hope tothe people.Another great Democrat, Robert F. Ken¬nedy was fond of quoting the words ofAlfred, Lord Tennyson;Come, my friends, tis not too late toseek a newer world.Within these words, one can find hopes andideas of the Democratic Party of the 1980sDavid Eichenthal is a third year student inthe college majoring in public affairs. He isa 1982 Truman Scholar and a member of theUniversity of Chicago Democrats.ARE YOUR CAREER GOALSCOMPATIBLE WITHYOUR PERSONALITY* Learn the career fields that best suit your personality* Direct your academic efforts efficiently* Prepare for the career offering greatest self-gratification* Avoid time-wasting attempts to become what you are not* Learn the personality traits to work on to achieve your goalsBy comparing your personality profile with the personality profiles ofthousands of successful men and women in a variety of career fields.PERSONAMETRIX can determine the extent to which your personality issuited for a specific careerSimply complete our 60-mmute self-administered personality inventory inthe privacy of your home and return it to us. We will assess your personaldata professionally and return a comprehensive report describing yourpersonality profile and the extent to which your profile resembles the pro¬files of those who have achieved success in career fields that interest youSend your name, address and $25 00 |check or money order) to:PERSONAMETRIX9171 WrlsOire Blvd. Suite 300. Beverly Hills, CA 90210 Special Back-to-School OfferFREE DELIVERY*(Ground floor only)Used Desks, Chairs, File Cabinets•Many chairs priced at s500•Wood Desks at s5000 & up* Minimum purchase for free delivery $10000BRANDEQUIPMENT 8560 S. ChicagoRE 4-2111Open Daily 8:30-5The Chicago Maroon—Friday, October 22, 1982—7THE VISITING FELLOWS COMMITTEEpresentsmary McCarthyreading from her worksWEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 3:30 P.M. SWIFT HALL - THIRD FLOOR LECTURE ROOMThe C[ntocr8itg of ChicagoTHE DEPARTMENT OF BIOLOGYpresentsTHE KATHERINE S. W. BARNES MEMORIAL LECTURESynthesis and Structureof the PhycobiliproteinsDR. ROBERT F. TROXLERDepartment of BiochemistryBoston UniversityMedical SchoolBoston, MAMONDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1982.ERMAN BIOLOGY CENTER, ROOM 1061103 East 57th Street4:00 PM.Tea will be served in EBC 207 at 5:00 P.M. 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 19808—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, October 22, 1982GREY CITY JOURNAL22 October 1982 • 15th YearDennis Altman has been one of the leadingfigures in the Gay Liberation movementsince its origins after Stonewall. He is theauthor of Homosexual: Opression and Lib¬eration, Coming Out in the Seventies, andmost recently, The Homosexualization ofAmerica, The Americanization of the Homo¬sexual. One of the special values of his lastbook is his combination of readable journa¬listic sociology with a culturally informedapproach to historical changes in sexuality.Altman was in Chicago recently for the GayAcademic Union conference, and also spokewith GALA at the U of C about future direc¬tions for gay and lesbian politics. This inter¬view was conducted after Altman's talk atthe Gay Caucus of the Democratic Socialistsof America.Ken Wissoker: One of the things which youtalked aboout a lot tonight and Thursdaynight is this desire for validation, this ques¬tion of how much gay people want to showthat they're the same as everyone else andhow much they want to preserve the other¬ness, and the contradictions between doingthose two things. You also talked someabout parallels with the Civil Rights Move¬ment where it seems like there are a lot ofthe same problems between Black Nationalism in the one extreme and "Uncle Tom-ism" in the other extreme, that is, sayingthat blacks are not like everyone else or thatthey are like everyone else. It seemed like alot of the questions about politics are verytied to that — how much gay people want acertain kind of validation from Americansociety at large, to say, this is o.k. — andyou seem to think that that's somewhat fu¬tile in some ways... maybe you could talkabout that.Dennis Altman: Well, I think that there aretwo separate questions involved. First, thequestion of how far one wants to create aseparation, and the other, how far one wantsto be recognized by other institutions. I don'tthink that the two are exctly the same.There's a whole American tradition ofgroups having separate identities, and atthe same time winning recognition as legiti¬mate minority groups — that's in a sense thebasisof American pluralism. And in a way itis no more inconsistent for homosexuals towant to do that, than it is, say for Jews tosupport Israel by and large, and be goodAmericans. The other question of legitimation and validation is more complicated.That is: In order to win certain aims, theGay Movement has to try to prove that it'sterribly respectable, and I think that oftenthat is done at the expense of denying somerealities. So that you find, for example, agreat deal of weight placed on winning sup¬port of, say, main stream church spokes¬men, when basically I would argue Chris¬tian churches are hostile to sexuality fromthe start. So basically we can't win that sortof recognition. And that, I think, is a muchbigger problem — I think that too many peo¬ple in the gay movement are being too con¬cerned about what the outside experts haveto say about us, and really not being suffi¬ciently self-confident about ourselves to say,this is how we see things and you have to ac¬cept this in our terms.KW: In what ways do you think that it's rea¬sonable for homosexuals to present them¬selves like an ethnic group? Or, more exact¬ly, what does it mean to say "like an ethnicgroup?" In what ways do you think thatthere is this similarity with, say ItalianAmericans or Jewish Americans? And inwhat ways do you think there's a dif¬ference?DA: Well, I don't think inherently thatthere's much similarity. One is not born as amember of a sexual identity like one is bornto a family of Italian origin, or even moremarkedly of Black, or Hispanic, or Indianorigin. But sociologically there are enor¬mous similarities. Over the last ten yearshomosexuals have made out of this sexualidentity a whole basis for certain sorts ofcommunal identity, and to that extent I suppose the ethnic model is perfectly valid. Ithink there's often a difference betweenwhat's psychologically true and what's so¬ciologically true. That's a complicated thing to talk about, it's probably easier to writeabout — you have to constantly be balancingtwo things that seem contradictory. But, ul¬timately, I think it can be reconciled.KW: One of the things you talked about lastThursday is the way homophobia as a reac¬tion to homosexuals has changed a lot in theperiod since Stonewall, and has been forcedto, as you say, come out of the closet.DA: Well, I think basically when there wasno visible Gay presence (certainly whenthere was no visible Gay Movement) therewas no real need for a political homophobia;homophobia was just something that wastaken for granted and was shared by thegreat majority of homosexuals, who oftenwould express extremely homophobic re¬marks in order to camouflage who theywere. Now when this began to change andhomosexuals started asserting themselves,suddenly all sorts of things that were certainbecame problematic and the whole set of so¬cial values about homosexuality were underthreat. Certain institutions started tochange their positions under pressure fromthe Gay Movement; The American Psychia¬tric Association, for example, changed theirwhole definition of sexual normality. Giventhat, people who felt a vested interest in thetraditional values had to organize. In thatsense, homosexuality became politicized be¬cause both homosexuals and anti-homosex¬uals were taking it into the political arena,and one of the side effects, I guess, has beenan increasing violence against homosexualsbecause we're more and more visible, we'reinsufficiently hidden. Teenage gangs, peo-by Jim GoodkindDennis Altman, the gay Australian authorof the recently published The Homosexuali¬zation of America, was in town last week tospeak before the Democratic Socialists ofAmerica's Gay Caucus, the Gay AcademicUnion Conference, the University of Chicago's Gay and Lesbian Alliance, and Bob andBetty Sanders."Every time I've told people that I'll be onthe Bob and Betty radio show, I get a sort ofroar of surprised laughter," Altman quizi-cally remarked in his nasal Aussie accent.Altman thought that his publicist at St. Mar¬tin's Press should have put him on the StudsTerkel show."I don't know who Bob and Betty are, butI'm starting to get a bit nervous about it all,actually."Though they describe themselves as ahusband and wife news team, Bob and Bettyare best known to their listeners for theircall-in quiz segments, their features on theweek's fresh produce ("Produce MarketReport") and new recipes ("In The Kitchen"), and their personally produced "Family Forum" series ("which offers timely ad¬vice on family living, better homemaking,nutriton, and raising pets," according to aWBBM press release). pie, know where to go and beat us up. Now,pretty well any teenager of even routine in¬telligence, living in the Chicago area, canfind that area of Chicago where there arelots of gay bars. We've become to that ex¬tent a much more visible and obvious tar¬get.KW: This is a two part question. When youtalk about Northern European countries, oreven England — why in America specif¬ically is there such opposition to homosex¬uality compared to other countries, becauseafter all Puritanism didn't start in the Unit¬ed States, it started in Europe. The otherpart is, what makes American gays pecu¬liarly American.DA: When you say Puritanism is NorthernEuropean, that's true. But there is a partic¬ular sort of fundamentalism which is muchmore alive in the United States today than itis in Europe. And that's been the basi.s for alot of antihomosexual rhetoric from thechurches. There's a much greater degree ofreligiosity in the United States than there isin Europe. And there's always been a tradi¬tion in the United States, I guess, of sort ofpopulist authoritarianism. Not the sort theKu Klux represents. I think it has to do withthe whole openness of American society, thelack of traditional hierarchies, the lack oftraditional institutions. I think if one readTocqueville carefully one could see a lot ofthe reasons, understand more about what itis in American society that accounts forboth the development of such a large gaycommunity, a visible gay community, andon the other hand what it is that accounts forThe program coordinator at WBBM forthe show was reasonably certain that Boband Betty had never had an on-the-air chatwith a gay socialist before.On the day of the interview, at precisely12:55 p.m. as scheduled, Altman arrives atthe WBBM McClure Court station and isushered into the studio where Bob, Betty,and news-announcer Dick Helton are broad¬casting. The flow of the news patter takingplace in the studio would seem odd to any¬one not familiar with the News Radio for¬mat:"(Dick:)...and an official of a group ofIranians living in Israel says reports areprobably true that an Iranian Jew has beenexecuted on charges of spying for Israel andthe United States. (Bob:) In all probabilityit will be Forsch for the Cardinals and Caldwell for the Brewers as they begin the WorldSeries in St. Louis tomorrow night."During a pre taped segment, the Sandersand Helton greet Altman and direct him tosit with them at what must be called theMaster Control Table. The circular table isabout the only piece of furniture in thebrightly lit, over-sized studio. Each of theparticipants around the table, including Alt-continued on page 5 such virulent homophobia. I've forgottenthe second question.KW: What makes American gays peculiarlyAmerican?DA: I think what makes them peculiarlyAmerican is precisely the fact that they areAmerican. That your identity as an Ameri¬can, your national identity, is tremendouslyimportant — people grow up in a culture.—that's particularly true in this countrywhere being American is something thathad to be invented; it is defined essentiallyby adherence to certain values. You can'timagine somebody being called un-Frenchthe way they would be branded un-Ameri¬can — the whole set of institutions in theUnited States, such as the schools, themedia, in many ways the churches, devel¬oped quite specifically so as to turn a wholemass of immigrants from all over the worldinto good Americans. There is no way thatany group is going to be immune fromthis.It is much more surprising in a way howAmerican blacks have been — that throughtwo world wars blacks were prepared to bedrafted and to go off to fight for the UnitedStates in armies that were segregated. So itshould be no surprise that homosexuals,who by and large probably experience lessday to day discrimination, are good Ameri¬cans. But if the question you're asking me ishow does it show itself, all you have to do isgo to a performance of any gay chorus orgay marching band, which will almost in¬variably start with a rendition of "Stars andStripes Forever" or something like that.There is an enormous American patriotism,and I think that as a non-American I alwaysfind it comic in the extreme —KW: So do many Americans.DA: Well I think very few do. At least — Iknow of some people who do, but by andlarge it is very deeply ingrained, I think, inthis culture, much more than most othercultures. When I was at the Gay Olympics inSan Francisco, I'd never heard a nationalanthem played as frequently. Only on oneoccasion did I notice anyone refusing tostand for it. This group of women at the bas¬ketball game, thank God, refused to standfor yet another playing of the "Star Span¬gled Banner." But I think this partly goesback to what you were asking about valida¬tion. One of the ways the gay movementseeks to validate itself is by proving justhow American it is.KW: This direction toward "Americaniza¬tion" didn't seem as likely ten years ago,when the movement seemed more directedat the subversion of the "normal" values.DA: I think one has to remember that thegay movement has grown enormously andso it obviously is going to become moremainstream. It would be unrealistic to ex¬pect it not to. The second thing to rememberis that the country as a whole has changed.That the country was much more receptiveto radicalism ten years ago, twelve yearsago, than it is now, and I think that there arecomplicated things that went on.There has been a real trend among gaymen to somehow adopt macho styles as away of proving, asserting, that a homosex¬ual can also be a real man. To that extent Ithink the macho trend is unfortunate be¬cause I don't think real men are that desir¬able. Well in some ways they're extremelydesirable but I don't think that as a modelfor behavior real masculinity as it has tradi¬tionally been defined in this country is some¬thing we want to emulate.It's been different for women — I think thereason it's been different for women is theimportance of feminism, which provided awhole extra space for gay women. I thinkone of the things that is often forgotten whenpeople make comparisons between gay menand gay women is that gay women oftenhave the luxury of not coming out and yetbeing able to be part of the movement by ineffect coming out as feminist, which is muchless threatening.KW: In some ways...DA: I think in all ways. I think if you'regoing to start telling me that it's harder tobe out as a feminist than out as a gay mancontinued on page 4Handsome, meJEFF <:UCCe/Sfu' ~~~i*fr—'*eks tStUnn,n9 Marto meet strugqf.m ILJIV>ndsome slennr Possible fhJn**’ 398 20‘27'have much to re<ati°nshjp»le BRIDOE9p|a*re *"»’ • "eek or once 724-2800. Ant c—Ro9ers <212)Wayne 12121 Ail . ,nter**tedRo^ i—T —-ESBianPis uci n''n3»5««™,.,HELP(nonsAyi.^i . Mnonai 1 317) S3BOB AND BETTY MEET GAY MANKingstonMines Hey, look - Weare now open at2543 N. 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Tonight at 7:15 and 9:45: Hugh Hudson’s critically acclaimed movie,starring Ben Cross, Sir John Gielgud, Ian Charleson, and Ian Holm,that won the Academy Award for best picture: CHARIOTS OF FIRE.Tomorrow at 7:00 a well deserved repeat showing of:CHARIOTS OF FIRE.Then at 9:30 and Midnight: The side of Western Civilization that KarlWeintraub does not teach; featuring Black Flag, Catholic Discipline,Fear, The Circle Jacks, and X: THE DECLINE OF WESTERNCIVILIZATION. (Rated R, no one under 17 admitted). Sep. Adm.SUNDAY — the regenerative powers of nature are the theme. At 7:15:Jean Renoir”s masterpiece THE RIVER. Then at 9:00 RobertoRossellini’s VOYAGE TO ITALY.A I I I 1 I I HI I I 1 I I I ITT\DOC FILMS'W,7,7Avr*i =i i, j 172—FRIDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1982—THE GREY CITY JOURNALThe major exhibit at the Art Institute entitled,"France in the Golden Age," is on view throughNovember 28. Don't let the grandiose title scareyou away. This exhibit of 507 French oil paintingsfrom the seventeenth century fully deserves itsintimidating title. It was organized by Pierre Ro¬senberg, Conservateur des peintures at theLouvre. The exhibit is composed entirely ofworks from American collections ranging in re¬pute from obscure galleries to nationally ac¬claimed museums. Even though the "best" or,rather, the most famous works of this period arein French collections, Mr. Rosenberg has assem¬bled an awesome and representative view ofFrench art during the seventeenth century.Some of the more famous artists represented inthis exhibit include Nicolas Poussin, Georges dela Tour, Louis le Nain and Simon Vouet. Frenchpainting of this period can be simplistically divid¬ed into three manners; Italianate, Classical andRealist. De la Tour, an Italianate painter, isfamous for his exquisite contrasting of light anddark, a technique called chiaroscuro. His paint¬ings most frequently include an external sourceof light such as an open window or a candle whichserves to spotlight his subject. Perhaps the mostinfluential proponent of Classica art during thisperiod is Nicolas Poussin. Poussin was obsessedwith Rome and its ruins. Practically every one ofhis paintings is set in a background of Romanruins. His work is characteristically concernedwithh ideal form and detail. Louis le Nain is per¬haps the most influential member of the Realistschool of this period. His paintings of domesticscenes and farm life are some of the most fre¬quently reproduced and evocative works of thisperiod.During the seventeenth century, art in Franceassumed a much more important role than it pre-vtously had. Cardinal Richelieu was appointedPrime Minister of France in 1624. Richelieu setabout glorifying France by bringing art under the Holy Family; Nicholas Poussin, 1650patronage of the Crown. Richelieu's effortscaused French art to flower under the auspices ofthe King. In 1648 the Academie royale de peintureet de sculpture was founded. Again, originatedand maintained by the King, it served as the firstfine arts organization in Europe to be subsidizedby the government. Previously, French art hadbeen limited to the nobility and to the royalty be¬cause artists made their livings by appeasingtheir patrons. During the seventeenth centuryhowever, the fine arts in France were broughtunder the umbrella of the Crown, a move whichpermitted more freedom and accessibility bothfor artists and for art.In conjunction with this exhibit, the Art Insti¬tute's departments of European Painting andSculpture and of Museum Education are sponsor¬ing a day-long symposium on French painting ofthe seventeenth century. The symposium willtake place in the Columbus Drive Auditoriumfrom 10:30 to 4 on Oct. 30. It will feature curatorsand scholars from Europe and the United States.For further information call 443-3680.—Sabrina FarberARTEva Hesse: A Retrospective of theDrawings This exhibition is devoted tothe drawings of influential sculptorHesse, a leading exponent of "Post-Minimal" or "Antiform" art. Theshow runs through Nov. 7. At TheBergman Gallery of the RenaissanceSociety, located on the fourth floor ofCobb Hall, 5811 Ellis Ave. Open 10 am.to 5 pm., daily. Free.Tulips, Arabesques, and Turbans: Decorative Arts from the Ottoman Empire.Smart Gallery, 5550 S. Greenwood.Open 10 am to 4 pm Tuesday throughSaturday. Noon to 4 pm. Sunday.Free.Paul LaMantia A Review: 1967-1982.Paintings. Through 6 November at theHyde Park Art Center, 1701 East 53rd.Tuesday-Saturday, 11-5. 324-5520.Free.Opening New Doors Painting, sculpture,installation, and video by 30 Chicagoartists. Through 3 December at Ran¬dolph Street Gallery, 756 North Mil¬waukee. Tuesday-Saturday, 11-5.666 7737. Free; performance of"Mass: Instant Theology for Post-In¬dustrial Society" by the Post-Industri¬al Noise ensemble, tonight at 9, $3.The Lake Series Medium-sized exhibit ofblack and white photographs of LakeMichigan by Steven Foster, a youngMilwaukee teacher and artist. Allderive from two and one-quartersquare negatives; not a few are col¬lages of horizontal strips or printsfrom different negatives. No doubt theartist is sincere in his belief that "thestraight photographs were not enoughto properly express the complexity ofmy experience"; the evidence con¬firms something of the sort. But themanipulation adds nothing to theviewer's understanding of how thelake or these views of it are an appropriate expression of the artist's innerself. Instead they make even more for¬mal a body of work already significantly distanced from its signified(taking this, as the artist does, to bethe artist, not the lake). One prefersthe less ambitious and more competent straight images. Through 21 No¬vember at The Art Institute of Chicago, Michigan at Adams.Monday -Wednesday, Friday,10:30 4:30; Thursday, 10:30-8; Satur¬day, 10-5; Sunday, noon-5. 443 3500. Ad¬mission discretionary. — DMTHEATERYou Never Can Tell Court Theatre opensthis season with one of George Bernard Shaw's "Plays Pleasant." Thiscomedy is a modern romance set inEngland at the turn of the century, andtells the story of a "romantic" dentisttrying to win the attentions of a "rational" young woman. Through October31. Court Theatre is located at 5706 S.University. Tickets are available atthe Reynolds Club box office; or call962-7300 for single night tickets,962 7272 for season subscriptions.Private Meetings in Public Places, aplay by Melanie Villines, directed byRuss Tutterow, is the first play inPLAYFEST, a series of three originalplays which will be performed at theChicago Dramatists Workshop. CDWis a repertory company of play¬wrights, directors, and actors with theobjective of developing new materialfor the stage. In existence since thefall of 1979, CDW has been showcasingnew scripts at staged readings open tothe public. Full production of selectedscripts which have been developedthrough the workshop process is anoutgrowth of the developmentalprocess. PLAYFEST marks the cul maination of three years of selectingand developing new scripts for thestage. Private Meetings in PublicPlaces opens Fri. Oct. 22 at 8:30 pm.Shows are Friday and Saturday at 8:30pm., and Sunday at 7:30 pm., throughNovember 7. Chicago DramatistsWorkshop, 3315 N. Clark St. Ticketsare $5; call 871-8180 for reservationsand information.Jack Helbig, U of C graduate will perform his comedy routine — Mr. Dr.Jenkin Smith PHB, the archetypicalpompous poet — tonight at the Roxy.Helbig, "with the grace of a Volkswagen missing one tire," will also dothe worst song and dance routine everseen in Chicago. Although U of C is bet¬ter known for it's Nobel prize winner,U of C comedians are also prominent.The Vaudville Show includes TomAngland, a folk singer, and "What aPair," a promising Chicago comedyduo. Fri. Oct. 22, The Roxy Bar andRestaurant, 1157 Wrightwood Ave, at 8pm. —JAFILMChariots of Fire (Hugh Hudson, 1981) Afilm about two sprinters, which examines the spirit and motivations behindcompetition, anti semitism, and Chris¬tian religiosity. Fri. Oct. 22 at 7:15 and9:45 pm.; Sat. Oct. 23 at 7 pm. Doc.$2.The Decline of Western Civilization(Penelope Spheeris, 1981) This film isa part serious, part humorous look atthe passing phenomenon we called"punk rock". The twist here is that allthe footage was shot on the Wes*Coast, limiting the vision to the all toopredictable California Cool. Is thiswhat happened to little surfer girl? Is that her writhing on the grungy, beercovered floor of the nightclub, tram¬pled beneath pointy toed boots and sti¬letto heels? One of the most interestingaspects of this film is the documentstion of this crowd's unique appearance; from multi-colored hair to safe¬ty pins through flesh and on to evendeeper visual statements. The film isloosely based on live performances bypunk bands ranging from dismal to dynamic, including a fairly long, indepth section with the band "X", whouse their interview time to tattoo oneanother. Their female vocalist, Exene,sports what was then the latest inpunk chic hair and clothing styles, andgives a voluable, if incomprehensiblelive performance. "Black Flag", aGerman pop punk band also makes anappearance, although it is nearly im¬possible to see them through the excessively violent slam-dancing that goeson in nearly every scene. Watch forCrash Darby, whose self-destructionand tiger claw T-shirt are equally ascharming. Though the band footageleft a little to be desired, some of theinterviews with local punks and punkettes are interesting in their culturalblankness and kid gone wrong quality.These are shot in bare bulb black andwhite, and create a startling contrastto the rest of the film, which is in gorycolor. Although this particular periodof punk has pretty much gone over, themore stylized, more sophisticated outgrowth is still happening out there ingranola land. And the original avantgarde? They're probably sporting theBurberry look and listening to Sinatra,if they survived the shooting of thisfilm. Doc. Sat. Oct. 23 at 9:30 pm. andmidnight. $2. —Mrs. MovieOn the Waterfront (Elia Kazan, 1954)This picture about graft and resistance amongst New York dock unionsreceived 8 Academy Awards. Whilesuch renown merely demonstrates thefilm industry's penchant for trite social themes, "reality" in celluloid, bigstars depicting small people, and itsneed to reward successful capital investment. On The Waterfront still remains a powerful film even if its unflinching attitude toward violence andcorruption has been eclipsed ahundred times over by a plethora of"shockingly realistic" films. The pleasure of watching this film can be attributed to its thinly veiled reactionarystance, a strong performance by Brando and the Brando cult, and Kauf man's striking cinematography, all ofwhich work to somewhat outbalanceKarl Malden, whose presence, eitheron the screen or the tube, is always un¬pleasant. With Rod Steiger, Eva MarieSaint, and Lee J. Cobb. Sat. Oct. 23 at7:15 8. 9:30 pm. and Sun. Oct. 24 at 8:30pm. LSF. $2. —Mr. Movie.The River (Jean Renoir, 1951) Set in postWorld War II India, this melodramaabout the lives of a British mercantilefamily appears at first to concentrateon the narrator's initiation into wornanhood and maturity. But unlike hisearlier films, Renoir is less interestedin people as individuals than he is anx¬ious to express their universal relationship with time and the regenerating creativity of nature. While theimage of the river, the garden, and rituals of initiation occasionally mediatebetween subtle expression and blatantsymbolism, overall the film presents awarm and touching view of people de¬spite differences in age or culture.Yet, with his extremely romantic con¬ception of humanity (that love is loveregardless of the particular culturaland pblitical conditions under which itis engendered) Renoir ignores thecomplexity which the question of a uni¬versal human existence demands.Thus, the Anglo Saxon merchant fig¬ure is presented as a benevolent chapwho is in business simply because heloves the texture of Jute; the commonIndians are regarded paternalisticallylike so many pets; and the generalview of women borders on a Victoreanideology which claims that the femalebody was ideally constructed for childbirth. Doc. Sun. Oct. 24 at 7:15 pm. $2.—Mr. MovieVoyage to Italy (Roberto Rosselini,1953) This film by the Italian Neo-Re¬alist emphasizes the romantic possibi¬lities held within an environment, asthe director chronicles an English coupie's decision to divorce, fear of theemptiness their move will leave them,and finally, rejuvenation of weakenedvalues. Sun. Oct. 24 at 9 pm. Doc. $2.She Wore A Yellow Ribbon (John Ford,1949) The second film in what is sometimes referred to as Ford's CavalryTrilogy (the other two being FortApache, 1948 and Rio Grande, 1950)Yellow Ribbon stars John Wayne as acavalry officer who leads a group ofyoung soldiers in pursuit of rebelliousIndians. Unseen by this reviewer. Doc.Mon. Oct. 25 at 8 pm. $2. —embarassingly, Mr. Movie. MUSICZe Inner Urge Jazz Society A group ofmusicians dedicated to the advancement of jazz as a modern art form,who perform regularly at the BlueGargoyle, Crossroads, and other locations around the city, will appear inthe International House AssemblyHall at a Jazz Nightclub on SaturdayOct. 23, from 9 pm. to 1 am. 1414 E. 59St. Admission $2; beverages includ¬ed.A Harpsichord Weekend Bradley Brookshire will give a concert on the U of CDepartment of Music's new harpsichord built by David A. Sutherland.Fri. Oct. 22 at 8 pm., in Goodspeed Recital Hall. Free. Gustav Leonardt willgive a second harpsichord concert,performing works by A. L. Couperin,Pancrace Royer, W.F. Bach, and J.S.Bach on the A.W. Schlik harpsichord.Sun. Oct. 24 at 8 pm., in Mandel Hall.Tickets available at the Reynolds Clubbox office.Sara Gonzalez Female vocalist and com¬poser from Cuba, Gonzalez is a leaderof the New Song Movement (La NuevaTrova). Initially influenced by NorthAmerican protest singers of the latesixties, the New Song Movement hasincreasingly incorporated traditionalCuban sounds, Latin Americanrhythms, and experimental musicforms to become one of the leadingmusical forces in Latin America. Gonzalez's performance is part of a na¬tional tour in celebration of the fifthanniversary of the Antonio Maceo Bri¬gade, the first group of Cubans livingoutside of Cuba to visit their homelandsince the Revolution, and is a contin¬uation of cultural exchanges amongstCuban youths supported by the Brigade. Wed. Oct. 27 at 8 and 10 pm.Crosscurrents, 3206 N. Wilton.472 7788 Tickets in advance at selected retail stores, $5; at the door, $7.50.MISCDemonstration at Great Lakes in protestof the growing U.S. intervention in ElSalvador and throughout CentralAmerica, a peaceful rally and marchwill be held at the Great Lakes NavalTraining Center in North Chicago.Also at issue will be draft registrationand budgetary priorities which favormilitarism over human needs. Saturday Oct. 23, beginning at noon. Persons leaving from Hyde Park shouldmeet at Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59thSt., at 10 am. on Saturday morning; abus will depart at 10:30 am. sharp;round trip fare is $5. —CSThe Artist and Television An interactivesatellite conference on the arts andmass media will be broadcast live atthe School of the Art Institute of Chi¬cago. Focusing on issues which surround video art and mass media — forexample, where, if at all, does onedraw the line between technology andart medium, an art medium and a performance, performance for the homeor in 3 museum — the teleconferencewill interconnect museum curators,educators, critics, media spokespersons, and artists in Los Angeles, IowaCity, and Manhattan. A wide range ofvideo and television art will also beperformed during the teleconference.The first time "teleconference" hasbeen used to present an art panel to awide audience (it has thus tar beenused for business), this "Landmark"is only to be broadcast on variouscable TV stations and available "hookup" locations. The School of the Art in¬stitute, in conjunction with Centel Vi¬deopath, Inc., is hooking up, andpresenting the teleconference live, tothe public, for free. Fri. Oct. 22 from 12to 3 pm. Columbus Drive and JacksonBoulevard. 443 3710.Alicia Ostriker, author of A WomanUnder the Surface, a collection ofpoems, (see page 5 of the Grey City)will be on campus for a reading of herpoetry on Tues. Oct. 26, in the EastLouge of Ida Noyes, at 4 pm.Dennis Brutus exiled South African poetand scholar (see page 7 of the GreyCity) will be appearing at the University of Chicago's Reynolds Club FirstFloor Theater, 57th and University,Tuesday October 26, at 8:00 pm. Suggested donation $2.00. Presented byPocket Poetics.Grey City Journal 10/22/82Staff: Abigail Asher, Nina Berman, Curtis Black, Pat Cannon,Pat Finegan, Keith Fleming, Sarah Herndon, Michael Honigsberg, Richard Kaye, Madeleine Levin, Marla Martin, RichardMartin, Mr. and Mrs. Movie, Pat O'Connell, Paul O'Donnell,Sharon Peshkin, Abby Scher, Rachel Shtier, Cassandra Smithies,Cate Wiley, Ken Wissoker.Fiction and Poetry Coordinator: Judith Silverstein.Editorial Board: John Andrew, Lisa Frusztajer.Production: Nadine McGann, David Miller.Editor: Nadine McGann.THE GREY CITY JOU R N AL—F R I DAY, OCTOBER 22, 1982-3DENNIS ALTMANcontinued from page lthat it is just not true. Feminists by andlarge — feminists really are not riskingtheir lives by walking around on thestreets.KW: Well as women they often are, but any¬way... Somebody had an article in the Na¬tive earlier last summer and said that themost underseen element of gay culture wasin fact non-political lesbians.DA: I wrote that.KW: You wrote that.DA: Yeah.KW: So I'm surprised to hear you saying —You know, in Hyde Park, which is a prettypolitical place, where there's access 1o ideasand women's organizations, a lot of the les¬bians I know are a political lesbians. Theydidn't become lesbians through feminist pol¬itics, though some are concerned with itnow. So I'm surprised to hear you generalizethat Lesbians have an easier time than gaymen.DA: No no. I think the sort of space that fe¬minism has made available goes beyondanything specifically political. I'm sur¬prised, actually. I would have thought thatin a community like Hyde Park most gaywomen would have had some sort of femin¬ ist consciousness at this point. It's inter¬esting that you say it's not the case. I thinkoverall it's certainly not the case. What I'msaying is that among the minority of the gaypeople who are political, and I think by andlarge that more gay women than gay menare political, gay women have a choice thatgay men do not have. That is, for a gay manto be political and not be totally closeted, hehas to come out as a gay man. Lesbians canbe political and work in the feminist move¬ment and not really have to come out as les¬bians. And yes, I think it's a valid criticism.I think it's valid to criticize it becausethere's constantly this attack from womensaying men dominate the gay movement,but I think in all honesty a lot of men areconfused because so many lesbians are notprepared to say they are lesbians. There's aclassic case in the New York Times BookReview this week where a woman is review¬ing a gay book and not declaring, not beingidentified in any way as a lesbian. She is alesbian. But she's identified — public image— as someone who's a feminist. Now that isa luxury that gay men do not have.KW: In what way do you think gays do rep¬resent a threat to the established order?DA: I think there is a whole range of wayswhich probably taken together somehow domake us a real threat. And I think ultimate¬ly the conservatives are going to be proved wrong in assuming we can be as respectableas anybody else, and I think it's because ofthe nature of the way we organize our sexu¬ality — the way we organize our emotions isin ways which cannot easily be slotted intoby the society as structured. I want to stressthis is something that I think*a threat — thegreat similarity between gay women andgay men is that our primary emotional rela¬tionships are not regarded as valid and le¬gitimate by the society at large. I thinkbeyond that we are seen, to some extentquite rightly, as being much more likely toengage in sex purely for fun and pleasure —though I guess this has become more true inthe society at large and to that extent this isless of a threat. I suppose ultimately it is thefact that we stand outside the accepted re¬spectable family structures of the society.Even though gay people do have meaningfuland lasting relationships that do form closeunits of two, or three or four or howevermany people. Many gay people do have chil¬dren, many more than is recognized. De¬spite all these things it's true that we are tosome extent outside the mainstream socialexpectations and that discomforts people,and makes us, in a way, harder to co-optthan other groups. I'm not sure anymorethat we won't be co-opted like everybodyelse.KW: I get the impression that ten years ago you saw more of a connection between so¬cialism and gay issues and feminism, andnow these connections seem more problem¬atic to you.DA: I think that's certainly true. I think sobecause I'm a product of the times like ev¬erybody else. It doesn't seem like I alone inthe world would be immune.In don't think, by the way, that it has to dowith being ten years older — and I am tenyears older — I don't think that that's thefactor. It's the overall social context whichis more problematic now than I think it ap¬peared to me then, partly because the gaymovement has been somewhat successful.On the other hand, one should never forgethow vulnerable that success is and I wonderwhether in ten years time things will appearworse. I really don't know, and I think theseare the sort of questions we've got to now beasking. I think the problem with the gaymovement is that we've gotten a bit carriedaway with short term success. People aretoo easily impressed with every crumb ofrespectability that gets thrown our way. Soit's very unpopular to raise these sorts ofquestions, to ask — and I think it's legitima¬tely important to ask — how far can we getgeneral acceptance in this society withoutfundamental changes. I no longer would becertain of the answer to that, but we certain¬ly need to ask the question.RIDE THE GARGOYLE EXPRESSThe quickest and most convenient way to get downtown. Pick up a scheduleat Reynolds Club, 1-House, Ida Noyes or the Shoreland. Sponsored by SG.suNDAY LUTHERAN CAMPUS MINISTRYAugustona Lutheran Church5500 S. Woodlown Ave.8:30 a.m. — Sermon 8 Eucharist9:30 o.m. — Sunday School 8 Adult Forum:“Living More With Less"10:45 o.m. — Sermon 8 Eucharist6:00 p.m. — Campus Ministry Supper ($2/person)You're Invited!SHAWGeorge Bernard Shaw’sYOU NEVERCAN TELL...a witty skirmish inthe war of modern romanceMow — October 31Wednesday-Saturday, 8:00Sunday, 2:30 & 7:30962-7300VISA MCDining Disc mints at allot \'s Restaurant“(JC students just S3 ith ‘Student Rush’COIRT^THKVTRKUniversity of Chicago 5535 S. Ellis Avenue Capitol's low fares"What a break!”Wherever we fly, we have the lowestunrestricted fares. That means no advancepurchase, no minimum stay We’re alwaysglad to see you, even at the last minute.Make up your mind today — and by tomor¬row, you’re on your way!For reservations and information, callyour Travel Agent or Capitol Air at 212-883-0750 in New York City, 312-347-0230 inChicago, 213-986-8445 in Los Angeles, 415-956-8111 in San Francisco or 305-372-8000in Miami. Outside these areas, please call800-227-4865 (8-O-O-C-A-P-l-T-O-L).SERVING THE PUBLIC FOR 36 YEARSSan Francisco^Los Angeles ★ Chicago ★ Boston ★ Brussels★Frankfurt★ ZurichMiami ^Puerto Platan -fcsanjuanSCHEDULED AIRLINE SERVICE? THE LOWEST FARE5 ★ ★★★★★★ ★★★★★★★*★ A4S4—FRIDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1982—THE GREY CITY JOURNALA FEMINIST UNDER THE SURFACEby Maddy PaxmanA Woman Under the Surface, a new an¬thology of poems by Alicia Ostriker, bristleswith images of women — mothers, daugh¬ters, sisters; women in love; women wast¬ing away in the illusory intimacy of mar¬riage; crazy women; goddesses. Many arestruggling to escape the confines of their fe¬male existence, yet this is no mere diatribeagainst sexual and social injustice; the poet¬ry contains an incredible sense of energy,the energy under the surface, which can bereleased as a source of power and love if welet it. The collection begins "To the Reader— Roll up your sleeve. There are the veins."The blood, the life force, is there within themost frail of human forms. Interestingly,the first poem shows women rejecting theircommon bonds as females in the face of the(male) medical establishment, and choos¬ing to fear alone: "We think of our breastsand cervixes/ We glance, shading our eye¬lids, at each other." She wonders, "Shouldwe sit more closely, ladies?" For women, inOstriker's perception, are very much alone— stifled and denied the right to fulfillment,isolated even in their moments of greatestintimacy with a lover, as "Without a sound,the raven of death/ Passes between us as ablack, serrated wing." They live like theglassy-eyed fish of 'Fisherman/ hopelesslywaiting "like courteous phrases in a deadlanguage."Mother-daughter relationships play alarge role amongst the Images of women;the former, identified closely with the forceof nature, fears for her daughter yet is pow¬erless to intervene; the latter is alone andfrail, unable to tear away from "hermother, and all her mother stood for/ Stern¬ly, like a hard magnet, drawing herback," yet is incapable of total union withthis separate being to whom she clings with"the black hunger of daughterlove." Onceagain there is the impossibility of fusionwith others, the disclosure of the soul whichhappens "Rarely with those you love, whoare smeared with fear./ Rarely between aman and wife?/ Rarely between parentsand grown children?." 'Moon and Earth'draws an analogy between the relationship of daughter to mother, and the separate, yetsatellite, planets. "Of one substance, of one/Matter, they have cruelly/broken apart,"yet "What divides them/ Will always be in¬visible as glass." Ostriker's own motherembodies both this shadowy relationship,and also, in 'Like an Orphan/ the dependentwoman who finally, after the death of herhusband and the end of a sterile liaison,"Like a royal tree after a storm and deadcalm ... began to dance."But it would be a mistake to represent Os¬triker's poetry as uniquely concerned withthe state of woman — she has a far morecosmic awareness of the conflicts of exis¬tence. Nature and the universe figure largely in her perception of the world, and areclosely allied to the human struggle. Weboth strive towards oneness with this natu¬ral world — "All month I strained to be¬come/ Luminous and transparent as theleaves" — and are ranked against it in en¬mity. The weather is more than a backdropto our world — it becomes part of the fabricof our emotional selves, is personified.This patient circling, this great vapor¬ous wheelThis tedium, of a ghostly self obscene¬lyThrusting, in April, its itching, sensi¬tive fingersWet, pulpy, hopeful.The sun, the dusty heat of summer, is attimes a soothing repose, at times an unalle¬viated oppressiveness that immobilizes us.If nothing happensHe will grow to assumeThe air of broken stalksand their smokeless fume.Winter is an end and a beginning, exhilarat¬ing in its crisp promise of 'The Pure Unk¬nown.' "This lush and gorgeous foliage I havadmired / is about to burn and die, yet hap¬piness / Makes my step brisk."Images of water recur again and againthroughout the collection — sometimes theserene millpond of calm, but far more often the turmoil of stormy waters hiding myste¬rious secrets. The women in 'After the Ship¬wreck' search for sight of land but see"nothing / But the beauty of ocean,/ Num¬berless waves like living, hysterica! heads."The ocean is devouring; "how / She moansshe would rape the earth masterfully /Groans she would feed on us, " the stars arewatery reflections on the earth. The womengive themselves to the water — shadowydream-figures cloaked in seaweed, the sleekindependence of the diver: "this cold,/Sweet privacy, the instantaneous/ Loss ofher -name." Drowning is an ever-presentthreat, but water holds freedom and detach¬ment, a cleansing.United against the cosmos are the vio¬lence and destruction of mankind. Many ofthe poems of Part II are political in inspira¬tion — the quest for peace, the inhumanityof man to man. I use 'man' deliberatelyhere, for the force behind this betrayal is un¬doubtedly masculine in these poems, bothon a global and personal level: from thewarmongers and the builders of railroadswho both, in their own way, destroy the bal¬ance of nature, to the silent suppression ofwoman's spirit in 'Those who know do notspeak, those who speak do not know;' "Hesuggested that personal anger was / Seldomvalid. She sat on the tub and agreed." Thepresentation of men is on the whole unsym¬pathetic; the husband who fails to under¬stand, the father who suppresses both wifeand daughter and "In due time...,wouldmake his heart clot," the young boy self-conscious in the bathtub as "Father, thehairy bear, immodestly stands andprances."What makes Ostriker's poetry so access¬ible, so relevant, is the concreteness of theexperiences which inspire her. Her workhas almost a narrative quality, beginningwith the simple, day-to-day event or obser¬vation before sliding into a whole field ofmental Images, meditations and cosmic in¬terpretations. All of these poems have a pro¬gression, none is static — a flowing from thepersonal to the universal, from the real tothe metaphysical, with quite stunning in¬sight and compassion. The poems contain awealth of imagery and some fairly detailed description, particularly of human appear¬ance (hair, clothes) and of nature — but Os¬triker is right there in her poems both as ob¬server and in the first person (other'characters' are largely anonymous — 'theman/ A and Z, She), disclosing her soul inan intensely personal way.The third section of the anthology seemsalmost to display self-conscious erudition.The topics range from classical mythologythrough Homer, Dante and the Impression¬ist painters. Perhaps the key to this quite de¬liberate grouping of 'intellctual' topics liesin the fact that they deal largely with menand the male perception of the world. Thelast poem in the section, adapted from aRilke sonnet 'For the daughters/ begins "Agod can do it. But how, answer me, shall / Awoman follow him through the narrowlyre?" How indeed shall women become ac¬cepted in a literary world so utterly male-dominated? What advice will they receive?Surely it should not be "This isn't it, younggirl, your love, even / if your voice explodesyour mouth — learn / To forget all you sangout." Alicia Ostriker has published a collec¬tion of essays on the topic of Woman Writ¬ing, and as a woman poet this must be aproblem close to her heart. In 'The Runner,'a woman symbolizes the Olympic torch run¬ning "possibly for love,/ For truth, fordeath, and her feet are sweltering." Perhaps Ostriker sees herself, and other womenartists, as a torchbearer to other women —in the poem, the runner "becomes herself atorch, she is writing in fire / Rejoice wehave triumphed."Alicia Ostriker speaks for the experienceof all people, but especially for that ofwomen in this moving anthology — her com¬passion, combined with irony and an acuteperception of the workings of the spirit, ex¬hort us to scratch under the surface anddraw out our full, energetic potential ashumans.Alicia Ostriker will give a reading of her po¬etry and discuss her new book on TuesdayOctober 26 at 4 pm., in the East Lounge ofIda Noyes. Sponsored by the Women'sUnion.continued from page lman, has his own desk top panel, completewith an array of lit buttons, assortedswitches, mounted telephone receivers, anddigital timers, and clocks. To add to this Dr.Strangelove interior design, the wall behindthe control center is a ceiling to-floor, wall-to-wall panoramic photograph of the Loopas seen from the lake. Sitting at the controltable, looking at the Magnificent Panorama,while listening in the acoustically-tiled roomto the ticking of the wire service machineand the various CBS reports from aroundthe world, any guest would be intimidatedinto believing that this must be the center ofinformation for the Midwest, if not the Uni¬verse. And Altman, like other gay spoke-speople who only recently have begun tostep before the microphones of the main¬stream "straight" electronic news media,seems no less intimidated.At 1:10 Bob and Betty began to skimthrough the St. Martin's press sheet and thedust jacket of Altman's latest book. The in¬terview began at 1:16, after the weather re¬port at 1:14 and Sports at 1:15.At one point, Bob, his large, rotund bodytucked into a smart, two-piece gray suit,with a sea captain's weathered face andbushy, walrus moustache, peered at Altmanand asked, "What do homosexuals in Ameri¬ca and homosexuals over the world want?What is your goal?"Altman, his boyish stature in casual if notdowdy collegiate-type slacks and sweater,peered back through his glasses and self-as-suredly told Bob, "The short term goal is ac¬ceptance...and the recognition that therecan be diversity of sexual behavior andBOB AND BETTY emotion, and that this is not the basis onwhich to discriminate against people." Alt¬man went on to mention the long-range goalof abolishing the common stereotypes peo¬ple harbor about homosexuals, and Bobclosed out the segment telling his audience,"We'll pause here for just a moment and getright back to Dennis Altman..." Immediate¬ly, Betty chimed in, "Isn't it time that youand your family were able to enjoy the plea¬sure and luxury of a bathtub that looks andlasts like new? Well, now you can, and at aprice that will please you..."For several minutes the studio engineerran another pre-taped segment and thethree participants had a chance to talk off-the-air. Betty, dressed in pointy, black highheels, a striped dress and gold hoop ear¬rings, her reading spectacles resting on herfair face, looked rather like a suburban li¬brarian. She noticed that Dennis's pen wasbent-shaped. Turning to Bob, she laughed, "I want you to note that not even his pen isstraight. Isn't that marvelous?" Dennissmiled, but said defensively, "That's unfair.This is my chiropractor's pen, it's not a gaypen, it's..." Betty interrupted, again laugh¬ing. "It's not a 'gay' pen?"Right before the final portion of the Alt¬man interview began, a taped advertise¬ment came on the air for a Connie Stevens-Ken Berry movie on WLS-TV thatafternoon: "Together they're in an officewhere chasing it is as much fun as getting it.The plain truth is, Every Man Needs One,today at 3 p.m. on Channel 7." It seemedthat throughout the interview, heterosexua¬lity had an odd way of reasserting itself dur¬ing commercial break-time.The interview drew towards a close withBetty remarking to Dennis that "thereseems to be a lot of violence among themembers of the gay community, withintheir own group." Altman, looking aston¬ished at this, asked Betty what her evidencewas. Betty had difficulty responding, touch¬ing off this exchange:Betty: Well, I base it on a...I remember astory several weeks ago about a murder tak¬ing place in an apartment house which wasknown to be an apartment house inhabitedby gays, and I think a lot of people, uh...ldon't know why you're laughing...Dennis: I'm laughing because of howmany murders take place in Chicago eachyear.Betty: Well, 1 know...true, you're right...Dennis: You're thinking of one murderout of what...500, 600, 1000?Betty: Well, of course we don't know howmany of these have other...Dennis: I could say, 'My God, there are an gawful lot of heterosexual murders in Chica- £go/ and I have more facts on my side to $back that up. I wouldn't say that because ^MEET GAY MAN ! that's ridiculous.Betty: So what we're saying, though, isthat you don't think there is violence amonggays in their own community?Dennis: My hunch is that there is probably less. I think there is a lot of violencedirected against homosexuals...Before this exchange got too heated, Bobbroke in announcing, "I'm sorry. Time!"and thanked Altman for being on the show.Outside the station after the show, DennisAltman appeared very pleased. "Perhapsgay activists should appear less fearful ofcommunicating our message over thestraight media." Though he thought Boband Betty's questions exposed their naivete,he felt they were sincerely trying to understand."I didn't detect any hostility from them atall. I'll tell you, they definitely aren't on mytop-ten list of worst interviewers."THE GREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1982-5.f r\D^y th£DENNIS BRUTUS: POETICAL ACTIVISTAnd SO. . .I send these fragments,random pebbles I pick upfrom the landscape of my ownexperience. . .Letters to Martha 1964Every poet reflects his landscape. My land¬scape in South Africa was dominated by po¬litical issues.Interview, 1982by Les Brown and Jeff CohenIn January of 1982 Judge Irving Schwartzruled that Dennis Brutus was deportablefrom the U.S. to Zimbabwe for failure to ex¬tend a temporary visa. The Zimbabweangovernment had said they would welcomeBrutus into their country but could not guar¬antee his safety from South African agentsactive in Zimbabwe. In February Brutusfiled for political asylum in the U.S. By law,Assistant Secretary of State Elliott Avramswas to have issued an advisory decision. Todate no decision has been issued. Brutus hasreceived letters of support from 20 U.S. Sen¬ators, 50 Representatives, letters from thePresident of Notre Dame University andfrom Archbishop Bernadin of Chicago. "Ihave to suspect that the Reagan administra¬tion has something to do with my deporta¬tion," says Brutus.• • •Dennis Brutus was born in 1924 in Salis¬bury, Southern Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe).In 1926 his family moved to Port Elizabeth,South Africa, where he attended a "col¬ored" (i.e., mixed race) school. He went onto study at Ft. Hare University, where he re¬ceived a double Bachelors Degree in psy¬chology and English, with distinction, in1947. He served as a social worker for twoyears, then began teaching at PatersonHigh School. He was to continue teachinghigh school until his arrest in May of 1963.In 1958 Brutus aided in the formation ofthe South African Sports Association(SASA). This was the most serious step hehad taken in the anti-apartheid movementup to that point. Brutus' involvement inSASA is characteristic of his later activism;exclusion of white South African athleticteams from international competition, ac¬cording to Brutus, strikes at the heart ofwhite South African pride and isolates SouthAfrica from the world community.In 1960, Brutus received his first warningthat he was "liable for dismissal because of(his) political activities." As a result of hisrole in the Colored National Convention of1961, he was served with banning orders for¬bidding him from attending any public gath¬erings or political meetings for five years,and he was suspended from teaching at gov¬ernment-funded schools. He formed theSouth African Non-Racial Olympic Commit¬tee (SAN ROC) in October, 1962, whileteaching at a privately-funded high school.Following his election as president of SAN-ROC in January, 1963, he was placed underhouse arrest. Four months later Brutus wasarrested at the SAN ROC offices on chargesof violating his banning orders by attendingpolitical meetings. While on probation, hefled to Swaziland, from where he attemptedto attend the meeting of the InternationalOlympic Committee in West Germany.While travelling through Mozambique, hewas captured by Portuguese secret policeand turned over to South African agents atthe border. While awaiting trial in Johan¬nesburg, Brutus attempted to escape andwas shot in the back. In the hospital he at¬tempted another escape and again was un¬successful. Brutus was sentenced to 18months hard labor at Robben Island, aSouth African prison for political offend¬ers.Following his release from prison, Brutuswas placed under a five-year house arrest inPort Elizabeth. Though South African authorities denied his initial request for a passport, they eventually issued Brutus an exitvisa that stipulated he would be imprisonedshould he return to South Africa. Brutus ar¬rived in London in 1966 and lived there until1971, when he was invited to NorthwesternUniversity as a visiting professor. He wasgiven tenure in 1972, and remains theretoday as a member of the English Depart¬ment. If, as Brutus says, "a poet reflects hislandscape," is there any wonder that the po¬etry of Dennis Brutus is political in nature?For much of his career in South Africa,Brutus was forbidden to write poetry; thewriting of poetry became a political act inand of itself. (In fact, only one volume of hiswork has appeared legally in South Africa.Thoughts from Abroad, published under thepseudonym John Bruin, appeared for ashort time after its publication in 1970.) AtRobben Island, he smuggled his poems outof prison in the guise of letters to his sister-in-law. These poems were published in 1968as Letters to Martha.These are not images to cheer you —except that you may see in thesesmall actssome evidence of my thought and car¬ing:but still I do not fear their power towound. . .These poems are filled with accounts of ho¬mosexuality, violence and inhumanity in thesetting of day-to-day prison life. Thoughnever particularly religious, Brutus foundhimself talking to God "in the grey silenceof the empty afternoons." The poems of Let¬ters to Martha, his second volume, areharsher in tone than those of his first collec¬tion, Sirens Knuckles Boots, and less formalin style.Sirens Knuckles Boots was written beforeBrutus' prison term. The poems in this col¬lection are more varied and inventive intheir use of meter and sound. In "A trouba¬dour, I traverse all my land" Brutus' stresstechnique is reminiscent of Gerard ManleyHopkins':A troubadour, I traverse all my landexploring all her wide-flung partswith zestprobing in motion sweeter far thanresther secret thickets with an amoroushand...In "Mirror Sermon II" his repetition ofsounds is further evidence of his willingnessto experiment:Ghoulsbloodless, bodiless, unsouledthese wraiths unfold,grotesque,in writhing arabesquesBrutus appears to be searching for a stylehe can call his own by sounding out various conventional and unconventional styles.In Letters to Martha his style begins tostabilize: his verse takes on a less-ornaterhythm and word order. This style is furtherrefined in Poems from Algiers, and hismovement towards what he calls "economicverse" is evident:In the sunlightin the roads along the seathey sell the pale-green streaked andpatterned watermelonwith its smooth and tepid skin. . .Although this verse is not as compact asthose of the later China Poems, the depth ofthe image has already begun to take prece¬dence over descriptions of actions. In ChinaPoems Brutus compresses a poem into oneor two simple images:The lust of the eyesis a cobra, hooded;in prison the serpent drowses."Even before my trip to China I had begunto work toward more economical verse. Myexposure to haiku and their even tighterChinese ancestors, the cheuh chu, impelledme further. The trick is to say little (thenearer to nothing, the better) and to suggestas much as possible. The weight of meaninghovers around the words. . ."Brutus' allegiance to his "economicalverse" has continued through his most re¬cent work, Stubborn Hope, and evidentlywill be a guiding influence in his futureworks. His works in progress include threesets of haiku. Among the topics of theseworks will be "the political question of es¬sential corruptness in America — the cor¬ruption of the elite," and "the nature of nar-cissim."• • •Brutus' anti-apartheid activism by nomeans came to an end with his expulsionfrom South Africa, nor with his eventual ar¬ rival in the United States.One of his greatest successes was the expulsion of the South African Olympic Teamfrom the 1968 Mexico City Olympics. Threeyears later he was arrested at Wimbledonduring a demonstration against racism insport, and was acquitted upon appeal to theHouse of Lords. In America, during his firstmonth at Northwestern, he led what he de¬scribes as a takeover of a lecture there bySouth African Member of ParliamentKathryn Taylor:(Ms. Taylor) was advised to go backto South Africa and report on theviews expressed (at the lecture). Itcaused a great furor, widely coveredin the South African press. I'm de¬lighted to think it made it quite clearto South Africans who thought I hadopted for the fieshpots of Americathat I was still being active politicallyand I do not feel any restraint on mypolitical activity in this country.In 1972, Brutus, with very little cooperationfrom the members of SAN-ROC and evensome opposition from past allies, succeededin having Rhodesia expelled from the Mun¬ich Olympics. Today he is still President ofSAN ROC and continues to travel extensively to speak out against apartheid. He has re¬cently spoken at the United Nations on thequestion of an international boycott of SouthAfrican sport and culture, and has travelledas close to home as Zaire and Tanzania.Brutus has read poetry at Edinburgh(where he read with W. H. Auden and Ste¬phen Spender in 1970), throughout continen¬tal Europe, New Zealand, Algiers, China,and of course, much of the United States.• • •Oppression and racism in South Africaare the most important themes throughoutthe poetry of Dennis Brutus. He has dedicat¬ed his life to this issue, and for him, avoid¬ance of this in his poetry would constitute abetrayal of his duties as a poet and as aSouth African. Brutus refuses to differen¬tiate between politics and poetry and brist¬les when his readers attempt to divorce thetwo. Complacency and apathy appall him;he chastises all who passively "endure/theoccasional accusatory voice." Brutus sayshe is a "single individual who functions intwo forms, poetry and political activism.Dennis Brutus will be appearing at the Uni¬versity of Chicago's Reynolds Club FirstFloor Theater, 57th and University, Tues¬day October 26, at 8:00 pm. Suggested dona¬tion $2.00. Presented by Pocket Poetics.M HER DAUGHTER'S ROOMToward noon, when she is alone,she feels as catm as an editoramong manuscripts. She likesto fold the clothes scatteredon the floor, to place eachin its drawer as someone elsemight like to rearrangethe words in a sentence*When she hesitates before the windowshe wishes the tulips were blooming.The buds seem to her like fistsor birds and she wonders whether other people thinkthe way she does. Lately,she keeps remembering the same things:the dream where she was readinga paperback, circling the wordsshe recognized; the wayher daughter’s foot fit snuglyinto her boot; the carewith which she fastens each clasp.At times, she feels that she can separateemotion from her lifeas easily as she could tearalong a perforation. At others,she feels like a page, collectingletters which mean more than she knows.Arm KeniaionTHE GREY CITY JOURNAL—FR IDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1982-7THREE LESSONS IN FEARThree Stages of Women, Edvard Munchby Keith FlemingFor some of us fear is the greatest teach¬er. Nothing else quite gets to us with thesame power, gets in us, like poisonous flow¬ers blossoming inside the hollow meat of us.Fear keeps us up in the air, high up, in thechilly altitudes of gods. The demands offear! No wonder we can't endure it long. Infear we are tiny naked children meetingsomething greater then ourselves. Fear isan eye opening on terrible truths...danger¬ous possibilities. Fear—it turns out—is ourhighest moment, the time our soul isstretched out to the new.FIRST LESSONYou strip in the goose bump winds at theend of the pier. I can't believe you're doingthis, that we're standing out on this pier jut¬ting dangerousy far into the lake—into thenight sky it seems. Outer space has fright¬ening depths up here in the North Woods,stars falling back behind stars, every starsucking, sucking, sucking at my head, try¬ing to pull me loose from the cold suctioncups of gravity on the bottoms of my barefeet:Quickly, you dive a vulnerable white dive.An unthinkable dive, into the black polishedwater. Not warm. The water must be shockwave cold. The water did not accept you,friendly, foamy-rich warm blue like poolwater...No, this water slapped at you—thentook you into its ink.You're the only person could have coaxedme out here. To get here we had to walk anarrow catwalk alongside the inland chan¬nel, keeping to the channel until we reachedthe beach, the lake...the pier. A harrowinglong way along that catwalk, tightrope-walker high in the winds which I felt surewould topple me over the steep side and intothe drowning-deep channel. I was careful, Ibalanced so careful up there in the dark, butby Rachel ShtierThe School For Wives, the premiere prod¬uction at Beacon Street Playhouse, is a live¬ly, fluid performance rendered with a pro-fessionality not often seen in small theatrecompanies. If the presentation of Frenchfarce sets a standard, then Playhouse's firstseason is off to a fine start."We chose The School For Wives becausewe wanted to start off the season with aspectacle," said co-director Bill Norris, whoadded that he wanted to preserve the absurdconfusion of Moliere's play as well as makeit accessible to contemporary audiences.Whether he has succeeded or not, Norrisand his associate Doug Schutz have done afine job capturing the mood of this classic.According to Schutz, Beacon Street's rendi¬tion was adapted from several differenttexts in order to attract modern audiences.The sets, the lighting, and the costumeshave been simplified and softened to createa "technicolor cartoon" atmosphere, whichNorris feels highlights the play.Unlike the original, the Beacon Street ad¬aptation takes place in a setting which is en¬tirely out-of-doors, because Norris believesthat comedy is more conducive in an opensetting.The play opens as M. Arnolphe (alias DeLa Souche) reveals his plot to marry hisbeautiful but dumb ward Agnes, whom hehas isolated from the world in order to pre¬serve her ignorance. Arnolphe fears humili¬ation and deceit, and reasons that a stupidwife cannot outsmart him.The crafty guardian returns from a ten-day vacation to find that not-so-innocentAgnes has been admitting a young dandynamed Horace into the house, and has evenkissed him.Arnolphe befriends Horace, who is un¬aware that the former is Agnes' guardian.Unwittingly, Horace reveals the entire storyof his amorous affair to the scheming Ar¬nolphe, including even his plans to marryAgnes.In Act II, Arnolphe instructs his serventsto kill Horace, but the plot backfires whenHorace eludes them and elopes with hislove. However, Horace falls into a trap byentrusting Agnes to Arnolphe's care whilehe goes to beg his father for permission tomarry. still I had to lift one foot in front the other,tottering for an instant on one leg which Icouldn't even see in the darkness spreadingtunnel-long ahead of me out to the pier andthe start of the sky.Now I'm sitting cross-legged, teeth-chat-tering alone at the end of the pier. My bot¬tom sinks down through the seat of mypants to numb itself stuck to the splashedcement. Your white crumpled blouse besideme looks widowed. The buoy-clanging nightwater all around me sounds empty, nothrashing live arms of you, just the risingArnolphe's plans to spirit Agnes away arethwarted by the arrival of Horace's father,and his Uncle Henrique, who is discoveredto be Agnes long-lost parent. After somelast-minute confusion, the couple is happilyunited, and Arnolphe is left by himself.For the most part, the acting was profes¬sional and competent, with especially good gasp of your dropped-down disappearance.You dropped straight down. I know. Hotflesh soles of your feet melting the way foryou, slipping you through the black gem ofthe lake's under waters.And now a big rocking pleasure boat-monster big, with beautiful green stream¬ing lights—steamrolls the water, sealingyou under.Right beside the pier your head explodesthe water: the bursting of a body hurled upat air by a mouth ferocious for oxygen. Youlet yourself bob there, blinking, making meperformances given by the leads. Arnolphe,played by Matt Decaro, convinces the audi¬ence of his chauvanistic foolishness, and de¬livered his sarcastic philosophies aboutwomen with perfect sincerity. Agnes isacted by Joyce O'Brien, who conveyed anappropriate measure of stupidity withoutbeing unbelievable. Joseph Guzaldo asHorace embellished a weak role with his ex¬pressive facial twitches, and carried him¬self with the assurance a dandy should have.The supporting roles, however, were lessimpressive. Although the servants providedample diversion from the main plot, theyseemed to be unsure of the reality of theirperformances, and overacted the foolishqualities of their roles.Good use is made of the limited stagespace, and the characters seemed comfort¬able interacting with the audience. Both theset and the costumes were tasteful withoutbeing ostentatious, and the styles and mate¬rials complemented the characters.Despite the fact that the plot fails to ad¬here strictly to Moliere's version, theplayers delivered a casual rendition usingmodern dialect, and gave the play a com¬fortable feeling. If School for Wives is a hintof Beacon Street's future, theater goersshould look forward to a promising season. feel foolish trying to talk to you. How could Iexpect you to talk about things only youdareto survive? Gripping the pier's edge, youhoist a slippery knee up onto its slickedysurface and belly-flop your flung-out bodyskidding along its slimy-mossed safeness.Still you don't spea6, you never do. Onlyhug yourself dry against my clothes. Thisstrange shivering need you have of me, andI of you, now you've soaked your wetnessthrough me and who's drying whom? Myhands believe somehow that under the ice-fish flesh of your back is the only thingwarm around among water, sky, and windi¬ness.SECOND LESSON"What if I were a man?" you ask me.We've been lying for hours in the trimwhite washed back bedroom of your sum¬mer house. The lamp light has relaxed no-ticebly now that we've turned it on againafter such successful sex on the thick floorrugs. Beds are for talking. And we'd beenhaving a wonderful talk under the llamahair blanekt, way down together on thesand-peppered sheets, the air so crisp andwide-awake on my face, the late night faraway and keeping to itself outside the whitebattened-down blinds.But I guess I'm ripe—for your dangerousquestions—now that I'm feeling so fit, andwas so happy in the sweet clean of yourlake-water arms. "I'd still be the same,"you go on, "only I'd have this big dick...tofuck you with."And I can't join you now, / can't. I justcan't enter the playful devil of your eyes.It's you, I know, it's still you, but it's likeyou've dashed into the early April lake andmy feet just can't pound after you over thebruising-heel stones washed up in the surf.So you're out there now with them, the superior others, the ones who can live waist-deepwith you in the bone-squeezing water. Theones like gods who don't mind if it's water¬sucking openings or floppy chilled organstheir legs are thrusting through the waves.The ones who can frolic in ice water becauseyou've all shrieked right out your skins, be¬come your commingled laughter, floating inthe warmer air above the lake. You seepyourselves thick as honey out your pores,and mix it up together with the messy gen¬erosity of joy.But I'll never get near the lake. The wateralways stabs me, the me I store high-pres¬sured in my bones, the me I guess I'll nevernever never let them spring. I'll stand herein the sand forever, immured from you all,my arms hugging shoulder-hunching tightthe miserable passionate boy in me.THIRD LESSONAll I could hear on the phone was the ex¬haled breath of your impatience, sniffed outwearily through your nose. Just think: onlya minute ago I thought I was calling up mylover. I called you up, saying only "Hi," myvoice special, that special drawn out gentle¬ness sparkling with sly excitement—thatlow voice insinuating and confident that all Ihave to say is "Hi" and we'll be intimate astwo faces a breath apart on a pillow.O, you know the way I look at it now, it'slike we were two kids used to rendevous atnight in a roomy drainpipe. Except onenight I arrived late, and ducking creepinginto the drainpipe dark and whirling andwaiting with your presence, I breathed outthat special "Hi", taming the darkness,making space a bedroom not a drainpipe—but no one answered. Silence. Worse than si¬lence. The shameful after-buzz of my voicein cold fluted tin.I hung up. Useless to talk to you in thismood, this mood that's made you a stranger. But if moods can make us different peopie, what's happened to the two of us we lostin the cold sugar of the night sand? If wewanted could we ever find them again, stillwalking pants-rolled-up together in the bathwater-warm surf? And if you really are acrowd of moods and people, who's to say I'llever meet again the only one who loves me,the only one who gives me hot cider-sloppykisses on the white peeling bench under thelittle lamp and light-crazed moths?I have to admit there's a pure saintlinessto this dread I feel, looking out the windowfrom by blueing bedroom: I see cars' headlights coming twinkling and chrystalinenow: and way out west, in the farthest twilight, it's getting misty like, well, like opensea—just like open sea.WV%.‘V<. V<.\\A\ Vt \\V -V- \MOLIERE'S SCHOOL FOR WIVES8—FRIDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1982—THE GREY CITY JOURNALwHYDE PARK UNION CHURCH5600 S. Wood I awn Ava.Church School (aH ages) 9:45 a.m.Worship Nursery Prorid»d 11:00 a.m.W. Kenneth Williams, MinisterSusan Johnson, Baptist Campus MinisterCome, Worship, Study, Serve 312/643-5007 CHA MBER ENSEMBLETRIO CON BRIOFLUTE • OBOE • VIOLAPut the postin yourfuture!Thoroughly renovated apartments offer the convenienceof contemporary living space combined with all the best elementsof vintage design. Park and lakefront provide a natural setting foraffordable elegance with dramatic views.—All new kitchens and appliances — Community room—Wall - to - wall carpeting — Resident manager—Air conditioning — Round-the-clock security— Optional indoor or outdoor — Laundry facilities onparking each floorStudios, One, Two and Three Bedroom apartments.One bedroom from 8480 — Two Bedroom from 8660Rent includes heat, cooking gas, and master TV antenna.Call for information and appointment — 643-1406oi4se1642 East 56th StreetIn Hyde Park, across the park fromThe Museum of Science and Industry>Equal Housing Opportunity Managed hv Metroplex, Inc.COPIES 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 • 8'? * 11 or Legal SizeFast, sharp, economical copies from anything handwritten, typed, or printed size for-size. or in anyreduction ratio on your choice of colored or whitebond paper'XEROX® COPYINGtE per copy . —0 per copy8V x 11"20# White BondHARPER COURT COPY CENTER5210 S. HARPER288 2233 Plu* COMPLETECOMMERCIALOFFSETPRINTINGSERVICE Hi I lei Lecturesv\r i . JJCreation and evolutionDP C I T Professor* EmerHuS DeptAKrofessor 6ol lax of ^op^y^XFriday, October, 22iictg2 Bnai Brith Hillei Foundation8.30 P. r\. 571? WoodlaWn Ave., ChicagoOnly the BESTis good enough * V.At 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. You can feel confident of their expertise, and of your hair.You can expect the best from the Hair Performers--we do!$5.00 OFF COMPLETE SHAPING and STYLINGMENreg. $15 NOW$10 WOMEN reg *20 NOW$15or 50% OFF PERMSreg $3O$50 NOW $15-S25Offer good for first time clients withr this ad only.Thehair performers1621 East 55th Street241-7778The Chicago Maroon—Friday, October 22, 1982—17jFootballUndergraduateBreckinridge 13 Fiibey 6Chamberlin 47 Dudley 6Psi Upsilon 29 Team Huber 2GraduateBok’s Rocks 6 Res Ipsa Loquitur 0Bovver Boys 44 Disequilibrium 0Dean and the Crewcuts 48. Med I Trauma Team 0Liquidators 18 Rejects 6VolleyballGraduate Men’s LeagueBroadview (by forfeit) Cinema FaceInternational House 2 Spiked Capsules 0International House (by forfeit) Cinema FaceUndergraduate Women’sBreckinridge (by forfeit) DeweyBlackstone 2 Snell 0Blackstone 2 Breckinridge 0Snell (by forfeit) DeweyCompton 2 Shorey 1Hale 2 Lower Wallace 1Compton 2 Lower Wallace 0Hale 2 Shorey 1VolleyballGraduate Men’s LeagueInternational House 2 0Broadview 2 0The Supply Spider 1 1Spiked Capsules 1 1Cinema Face 0 4Mixed Women’s LeagueBetablockers 2 0Delta Sigma 1 1Coulter 0 2GSB—Women 0 2IM FootballUndergraduate Top Ten1. Chamberlin 6. Psi Upsilon2. N.U.T.S. 7. Compton3. FIJI 8. Hale4. Henderson 9. Hitchcock5. Breckinridge 10. Michelson FootballUndergraduate IndependentLeagueRed DivisionFIJIDelta SmegmaSeagram SevenHit and RunWhite DivisionCommutersN.U.T.S.'Psi UpsilonTeam HuberGames to WatchSaturday, Oct. 23, 2:15 p.m. Thompson vs.Compton. This match-up, though early inthe season, could decide the White DivisionChampionship. In its first two games,Compton has scored 99 points while shuttingout the opposition. Thompson has playedonly one game, defeating Blackstone 12-8.No other team in this division seems to beequal to these two, hence the winner of thisgame should coast to the White Divisiontitle.Friday, Oct. 22, 3:45 p.m. Greenwood vs.Fishbein. These two teams are currentlytied with Hitchcock for first place in theGreen Division with a record of 1-0. Green¬wood beat Dodd/Mead 12-2 while Fishbeinalso beat Dodd/Mead 33-6. The winner ofthis game could beat Hitchcock for the divi¬sion title as Hitchcock has lost quarterbackPeter Juhn.Saturday, Oct. 23, 10 a.m., Barney’s MeatMarket vs. Liquidators. This matchupshould show how good these two teams are.Liquidators has lost to Dean and the Crew-cuts, perhaps the best University team, by ascore of 27-0, while Barney’s Meat Marketbeat the Med I Trauma Team by a score of21-7. The winner of this game, while perhapsnot being able to overtake Dean and theCrewcuts for the division title, should be astrong contender for the playoffs. 2 01 11 10 11 01 01 10 2for 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^ St. & fyfafyxeD667-2000 University of Judaism, Los Angelesis recruiting nowforGraduate ProgramsinGeneral Judaica, Jewish Education,Rabbinic Program, Public Administrationmeet Dee HelfgottOctober 26 — 1:00 to 4:00 p.m.Call 752-1127 to make appointmentNew and RebuiltTypewriters,Calculators,Dictators, AddersCasioHewlett PackardTexas InstrumentCanon REPAIRSPECIALISTSon IBM, SCM,Olympia, etc.FREE repairestimatesSharp RENTALSavailable withU.ofC.I.D.The University of Chicago BookstoreTypewriter & Calculator Department970 East 58th Street 2nd Floor753-330318—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, October 22, 1982Tennis closeswith a winby Caren GauvreauLast week, the University of Chicagotennis team completed this fall season on ahigh note. It won two of three dual meets.On Oct. 13 the Maroons took on the BeloitBuccaneers in a tournament which resem¬bled a marathon moe than a tennis match.The meet began at 3 p.m. on the Inglesidetennis courts, and ended at 8:10 p.m. on thelighted Varsity Courts located on theQuads.After the six singles matches had beenplayed the Maroons had a lead of 4-2 teampoints. Only one of the three doubles teamsneeded to win in order for the Maroons toclinch the meet. Unfortunately, this was notan easy task as the second and third doublesteams both lost. It was left up to the numberone doubles team of Jane Look and Eliza¬beth Fama to win. After splitting sets in atiebreaker, they went on to win the third set6-2. U of C triumphed over Beloit 5-4. Beloithad previously been undefeated in theNCAA Midwest Conference of which theMaroons will officially become membersnext fall.The Maroons’ meet against WashingtonUniversity (St. Louis) was also a “mara¬thon meet.” Interrupted by rain once, it wasconcluded at 9:30 p.m. on the lighted courts.Many of the matches were close as therewere several tie-breakers and three-setmatches. It took Washington six and onehalf hours to defeat the Maroons 7-2.The final meet of the fall season for the1982 women’s varsity tennis team wasagainst Grinnell College (Iowa) on Oct. 16.Grinnell is also a member of the NCAA Mid¬west Conference. The Maroons handedGrinnell its second loss of the weekend byshutting out with a score of 9-0. The U of Cplayers dominated in every match. What away for the tennis team to finish its seasonon U of C’s Homecoming Weekend! SportsHockey splits two close gamesSports CalendarFootballOct. 23 — Ripon College, 1:30 p.m. StaggFieldVolleyballOct. 22 — Coe College, 7:30 p.m. FieldHouseOct. 23 — Cornell College, 10 a m., IowaWesleyan University, 12 p.m., awayCross CountryOct. 23 — at Carthage College InvitationalSoccerOct. 23 — DePaul University, 10 a.m., StaggFieldOct. 24 — Washington University of St.Louis, 1 p.m., Stagg FieldField HockeyOct. 23-24 — at Lake Forest Tournament By Jane LookThe U of C’s women’s field hockey teamtravelled to Valparaiso University lastThursday in a match-up between two well-balanced teams. Valparaiso won 3-1, asHelen Straus scored Chicago’s only goal inthe first half.Despite the balance of the game — Val¬paraiso attempted 13 shots on goal to Chica¬go’s 12 — Valparaiso was able to capitalizeon its offensive chances, something U of Cwas not able to do despite its offensive op¬portunities in the circle. Coach Linda Whi¬tehead felt )hat the team played well, andthat goalie Maureen Breen was particularlyoutstanding in collecting 24 saves.Last Tuesday, U of C travelled to Concor¬dia College to face Concordia for the secondtime this season. U of C beat Concordia ear¬lier this season 4-0, and was again able toclaim a victory with a winning score of 1-0.Concordia was ready for the rematch, andkept the pressure on U of C for the duration of the game. Trish Briscoe scored the onlygoal of the game in the first half of the play.Despite Concordia’s continual pressure andhard-nosed play, U of C hung on for the vic¬tory.The team hosted Wheaton Thursday for arematch. U of C had earlier defeated Whea¬ton 4-3 in a thrilling double overtime-shoo¬tout game. Coach Whitehead said, “Bothteams will definitely be up for this game.”Results were unavailable at press time.The Maroons now with a record of 7 wins,5 losses, and 1 tie, are gearing up for theLake Forest Hockey Tournament this week¬end. Saturday, the team will again play Val¬paraiso at 9 a m., then play Eastern IllinoisUniversity at 3 p.m. Sunday. Chicago facesGrinnell College for a 9 a.m. game and Uni¬versity of Wisconsin-Stevens Point for a 11a.m. game. The match against StevensPoint will be an extremely tough one for Chi¬cago because Stevens Point is highly re¬garded in NCAA Division II hockey.Soccer team losing streak extends to fourBy Frank LubyA goal on a quick counterattack 15 min¬utes into the second half deflated a Chicagorally and helped the Lake Forest Forestersto a 5-1 triumph over the Maroons varsitysoccer team Wednesday afternoon at LakeForest.Trailing 3-0 at the half, the Maroonsplayed, for the first fifteen minutes of thesecond half, what coach Barry DeSilvacalled their best soccer of the season. Theytrimmed the lead to 3-1 on a goal by NjellNyborg, and continued to apply consider¬able pressure on the Forester goal. Manyopportunities, including two by John Assadiand one by Jay Aragones, failed to producegoals, and the Foresters squelched the rally with their sudden goal with thirty minutesleft to play.A miskick and a defensive lapse led to theForesters’ first goal. A shot from the top ofthe penalty box hit the post, and a LakeForest player knocked the ball in when Chi¬cago failed to clear away the rebound.The Maroons would have tied the score atone soon after, but Assadi’s goal on a shotfrom 20 yards out was disallowed. The offi¬cials ruled that a whistle blown on an adja¬cent practice field had interfered withplay.The Foresters managed two goals beforethe half, and added their final tally late inthe second half. Joe Mario and Brian Sulli¬ van each played a half in goal for theMaroons.The Illinois Institute of Technology (IIT)defeated the Maroons 1-0 Saturday morningin the Homecoming contest. Loose defensiveplay early in the second half allowed an IITplayer to break free and score the game’slone goal.Friday afternoon, Carleton Collegedowned Chicago, also by a 1-0 score.The Maroons, now 3-7, have dropped fourstraight games, producing only one goal inthat span. They face DePaul University to¬morrow at 10 p.m. and take on Division IIIpower Washington University of St. Louis at1 p.m. Both games are at Staff Field.GUSTAVLEONHARDTIN A PROGRAM of WORKS BY:^ Couperin * 'T’ottcracc ♦ TV'.J^'BachMANDEL HALL ♦ 57tK lr UNIVERSITY ♦ SPMSUNDAY,OCTOBER ZA , 19&Z•> * VC Student, *5 *> all 5eat5 reserved •>Ticket information at Department of Mueu: Concert Office ,5(345 Etlw Ave.,4>Os37; 9&2-&06& SAO's ,THEATRE . nilADT[;DDISCOUNTS/ QUARTER/VICTORY GARDEN THEATRE/Old Times▼ 2257 N. LINCOLN1 BLOCK SOUTH OF FULLERTON -TAKE THE GARGOYLE EXPRESSONLY $5.00by Harold Pinter NOV. 5th, 8 PMTICKETS ON SALE THRU OCT 29Cinderella AUDITORIUM THEATRE50 E. CONGRESS PARKWAY ‘• • • • OPENING NIGHT • • • •Chicago City Ballet4 NOV. 19th, 8 PMDRESS CIRCLE - $12.50LOWER BALCONY - $6.80TICKETS ON SALE THRU NOV. TOON SALE NOW - RM. 210IDA NOYES HALLNO PHONE RESERVATIONSSTUDENTS HAVE FIRST PRIORITYFOR INFO: 753-3592ANOTHER SERVICE FROM THE STUDENT ACTIVITIES OFFICE!The Chicago Maroon—Friday, October 22, 1982—192861‘22Jaqopo‘A'epuj—uooaBjvogBDiqoam—02 AasjapMdu‘uoiaouurj‘uojnun ueudtsAqejdnesse/vpaejs/u/jv siAJBpeiqjuAo aojAjas sno(6!|ayXijSjaAiun UJBU uojuniuujOQAjohjo aojAjasleomaujnog UJB6 jadeiQ J9||aja>poHZ&91-Z9Z SZC€’fr99 mss*3iozi spjooeupeso liespueAngom 009SI*2• jo°umoi“ispjgeasssi pauouoyspuvojipaxjxotmu 6uvju.ndddxf OS'-Z-OS'-01youruqfivpuns ll-*lxauuiQ•*(-jiuoayounj '96’8$?t>pdoudfyqvuosvdy •?»auddnod poo/pui/dyi]jodoCug uidoiot0S:9 Ja/jnyfimuaagfi.vpsj.nyx UI'B0g:6S3DTAJ3SubXuij^ jiBisdnurasr-eS3DIAJ3Sqieqqesxopoqjjo:l9U?H Uid9J3UUTQ?3jpa•SpBOiSSOiQ E£IM33u*'BII..aoapnNuoisoidxgaig SuiApnis.,u!ll°0®3.ioaQrajnpaq:"jdaQsoisAqg 00fii‘396a-UB^qi M8N-uidgllaIueJJaAaNnoA'3-t5B9qxvn<>3 2$uimjoiipny [ooqagMBqurd0€:6^5RJuoj/jaiB^aqiuo:iSl 'ui'B2iurd0€:6aotjBZfifAiQujajsa^joauipaQ aqi-Z%11«Hqq°D'«“'dLastjjosiouaqjtamudaoQ •urdo£;lAbqsiuajeg—uodiy'a3jon:g*qv»oj PJ31J32b->s'utb01inBd»aSA01°n:J033OS Avaanxvs'98miAVpuooas{nejaa pue88qiJMpay>jooi5faBdmijomsb‘spiod t-SqqMpaiqi>{ooiqo?qMluiB3}aqipopa -punoaaipuBHsiuBp‘Xuua>iauiBaaoq88:61 joauiijeqqMqpaoassbmuBtupageaaaq -ayjoiuasasanoaaquiaaaqiaqiaojLS'Lljo auaijbqjiMpuoaaspaasjd‘papnpaBaXpay b‘asogBSBdigsipouopauiaBpSuBiai pugaa-^aBdqiaofsjaqiuiuiBaiubuiom3aij bpaaajuaqnpXapnoossoaaspauiOMaqx qdiopuBHsiSSbimAg ppmunisjdfjJBf-i HNIa3unoqiSBgtud£gu^aay^••SH'HVW saAoN Bpjuid9-fr8uiiaai\:qiqobjbjb^iuBaqo^oqs •pAjgqjBjapAga0011mB0e;0I..uisiBpnfpus sisAjBUBoqaAsd‘pnajj:uoisnqjubjoqjedaqx.. 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HBpaiaaAUODjjsaaBM?bjjpqXjjaainoDj^ 5Jubhpub‘iqSiaMiaBOXpuBs‘uoiXbiapg XqsaaoDsuopBajauiiijjBqo-8iubdnijinq suooaBjvaqiaSajpojbuoiibnisuibSv '9*91MJBdupouiqpjaaMod01 SuiMoqpuBo-XIuiSjainoSuiiinqs‘pua^aaM ISBdsiqisauisSpauiBuanoxXqSngeaavuioojodubosaXojsjBpiaqiui uid08^91BsXBpujpuBsXBpuoiMuospaui IIBuiBXiSnsoaifoqspubsaapuBSaippa XqpaqDBODsiqrqoapaBH3jonom siuaui -Buanois.asaXixauuiuiBaiuaqaaddn s.qnpaqi01pssbubuiiqa^Buihimuiaoj luagaoxasiqpus‘naqUMoaq01papuioadXj -luaoaasbmaagiqDSliaqaidandbsbaaaaBD siqjjoSuiddBD‘uoiiipduioo(suiaoj)bibj( ipqaidandqSnoaqiMoqaXaqiuiaDBjdisaij uomaagiqDS5jaBiM‘sipqaaMOjaqiaoj qnppapoipap puBqSnoibsbuoipindaasp^BDiqooiSuip -ps‘SuiaasdsipqiiaopuiaoBjdpuooasi(ooi >{aoaguaaubaPBh‘uoisiAipspauiaqiui uosuqofuaansiqaqaidandpun‘XaaBiM bujisuh‘ipmxbimaipnpupidBOaaaM saaquiauauiBaxXqdoaiaDBidisaijbauioq 5fooiospuiBaiSuiaasdss.uauiOMaqx uoisiAipipq5{DBiqaqiuiauijiisaij aqiaojSujiaduioDqjoqaaaMoqMuauiOM OMiaqiaojSuiMoqsjuagaoxaub‘aDB[dpuo -oas5joojXDaBiMBUijsiaHpuB‘diqsuoiduiBqD (SuiaaBds)ajiumsigaq5pBiqs.uauiOMaqi qiiMjjo5gBM01saapuajuoDjoppijguoajs bpaqipmxbjmaipnfspuoaasomipuB saDBidisaijomjqjiMjjoauiBapussuiBaiomj pusspnpiAipuiuaAappaaajua0jon uosipsivpuisuodsimjoXjisaaAiunoqjP 6'POPPqluauiBuanoipuoiSaauoippossv apaBHuBdBfaqipSuiMoqsSuoaisbuipd qnioapaBMoSBDiqojoXiisaaAiufjaqx qnioaieiexqBin o§BDiq3omijpqiiqdssaa88naaqi‘agagoo puoipMjoSuiqsBaqioi-fr2eqji^o§b5{aaM auouoseasaqi3uiuadoaaijyoppaqosgnj auiBSiqSpsguilasisisbjb01jjosiqnio ipqioojXqSngogBDiqojoXgsaaAiufiaqx JdAaqDooguqofXg eejmisjij10omiujMsjoBBny snodgInterviewNovelist R. K.a passage toBy Michael EkstractR. K. Narayan “is generally consideredthe finest Indian writer writing in English,and is famous for inventing the town of Mal-gudi, ” according to U of C English Profes¬sor Richard Stern. Narayan’s works includeThe Bachelor of Arts, The Financial Expert,and Malgudi Days. His latest novel, entitledA Tiger for Malgudi, will be released nextSpring by Viking Press.Narayan visited the University of Chicagolast week to present the William VaughnMoody Lecture, arranged by KennethNorthcott, professor of Germanic lan¬guages. The following is an interview withNarayan conducted by Michael Ekstractalong with Joan Erdman of the South AsiaOutreach Educational Project.Maroon: Mr. Narayan, as you are fromIndia and write in English, what is the rela¬tionship of English to your writing?Narayan: English is very widespread inIndia — a well established language. Partic¬ularly, English literature is more known inIndia than in England today. In England,they’ve forgotten most of their literary ori¬gins. They don’t care very much. But manyeducated Indians can talk of English liter¬ary matters with authority. In England, Ifound that they’ve lost touch with their ownliterary traditions.Sometimes I find them asking, except peo¬ple in academic circles, “you mean to sayyou read such and such nowadays?”Erdman: Do you think it’s because ofTV?Narayan: Also TV, and the modern meth¬od of commercial publishing, which hasruined literacy. Commerce has gotten like acancer.Erdman: You mean a commercial pub¬lisher will publish what will sell, not what isnecessarily good literature?Narayan: Yes, and the material they carefor is so different from what is really worth¬while. Particularly in this country, they’veruined the world of letters completely by bigR. K. Narayan photo by joan erdmanbusiness coming in and paying enormousadvances to some writers. Then they put thewriter through high pressure promotion.And then they almost computerized fictionwriting. The word processor is very much inevidence working to a formula of sensation,sex, and violence, putting out an enormousquantity of pages of a nov^l. And then a bookclub promoting it in the loudest voice poss¬ible and then a feeling is created in thebookbuyer that he ought to have it. It may be the‘in’ thing, you know, to talk about it. So allthis has ruined the literary outlook.I like my Viking Press because they stilltraditionally value writing for its own sake;whereas, other big commercial publishers,they have a burden of multinational in¬dustry concerns, controlling half the world.Probably they manufacture some medicinaldrugs and market them in some part of the Narayan:Indiaworld, also invest’ that money in publishingsomewhere else, and at the back of big pub¬lishers they are the financiers. And so, allthat has created a situation where a bookhas become a commodity. It’s no better thana brick. With all that, some of the writerswho are successful have some talent, butthey’re not putting forth their best talent.They write too much; too much researchmaterials used today narrate about this, an¬other day narrate about something else. Allthis kind of acquired knowledge, it’s not awriter’s instinct but facts, acquired facts,which are being put to use by computer, fedthrough a computer and used in so manypages. So they throw in a lot of knowledgeand research, but not necessarily any liter¬ary value. The book is readable because,with all this handicap, the writer — the writ¬er of even a best seller — has some talent.And also he may not have it; he may havejust an idea, but the editorial help in verybig publishers practically uses the name ofthe writer and rewrites the whole book.Almost a writer need not be literate. Theyrewrite line by line the whole thing.Erdman: So it’s not even really his bookwhen it comes out?Narayan: No, his name is on it. So, I’mafraid that this country is particularly suf¬fering from over-commercialized publish¬ing.Maroon: Is there any other system? Howelse would a writer get a book published?Narayan: The commercial publishers areon the scene and what’s the use of any re¬medy? Nothing. You can’t do anythingabout it. The hope would be in universitypresses, let us say, like the University ofChicago Press, who have a certain commer¬cial side but also ideals in publishing. Thiskind of thing is hope.Maroon: Will you ever write about Ameri¬ca? You’ve written about America in thepast.Narayan: Dateless DiariesMaroon: Will that be the limit?Narayan: Essentially, the American fam¬ily and the American individual remain thesame as far as I’m concerned. They are notchanged. There are probably different gad¬gets at home, and they travel more, andprobably do with this maybe more than everbefore, but human beings don’t changemuch, their surroundings change, circum¬stances change, and probably their aimsmay also be different. But essentially, Imean, their home remains very much whatI used to know.Maroon: What is your favorite place in theUnited States?Narayan: In the US, I love New Yorkmore than any other place.Erdman: You said you lived in the Chel¬sea Hotel. Why is the Chelsea Hotel such ahaven for artists?Narayan: They used to encourage andtake a great pride in having writers, artists,painters, and dramatists, and sometimesthe manager would accept a painting in¬stead of payment for a bill and hang itaround this sort of thing. They were veryproud of having artists since the days ofTom Wolfe.Maroon: Since you love New York, such alarge city, I wondered why you don’t writemuch about large cities — urban life.Narayan: It’s not for writing; it’s for liv¬ing in.Maroon: Do you ever write politicalworks?Narayan: No, I’m not interested in poli¬tics.Maroon: Who are your favorite writers?Narayan: None... well... Shakespeare, letus say.Maroon: Have any writers influenced yougreatly?Narayan: No, I resist all influence.Maroon: To someone who doesn’t reallyknow your works — maybe hasn’t read anyof your books, what book of yours would yourecommend as a best introduction?Narayan: I can’t tell this to you. I’d saymaybe if you have not read my books for solong, don’t read them. Keep up your readinghabit as it is unchanged. CLASSIFIEDADVERTISINGClassified advertising in the Chicago Maroon isSI 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 oft;ce 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.SPACESpacious sunny unfrnshd 1-bdrm apt avtb Nov1 5528 Hyde Pk Blvd-Hirise sec bldg w laundry,on campus & city bus; rent $375; call Monica orTim at 752-7552 or 962-7420 (leave message)Spacious sunny 2-bdrm furnished apt avlb Nov1 5242 Hyde Pk Blvd-hirise sec bldg w Indry; oncmps/city bus; $665 or best offer; call Tim orMonica 752-7552or 962-7420 (Ive message)WALK TO CAMPUS mod apt 2 br 2 ba profsnldecor parking AC drapes rug pool nr trainshops bus rent 660/mo 947-95975100 S. Cornell Chicago Beach Apts. Studio + 1bedroom apts. $260-$360. Immed. occupancy.Students welcomed. Call 493-2525 or 643-7896Hyd Pk nr UC Ige 6 rm apt also studio reas finebldg 288-071852nd and Woodlawn studio apartments. Par¬tially furnished. Heat, cooking gas included inrent. $2l0-$255 when available. Student dis¬count. 6-12 month lease. Call 684-5030 before8:30 a.m. or eves.Prefer female grad, non-smoker to share roomin our house. Full kitchen, washer + dryer 55th4- Ellis, $150 per mo. Call Mike 288-5248Attractive 4 rms co-op apt. for sale $13,000 At78th st. on the lake see to appreciate call even¬ings 324-6218.FURNISHED 2Va rm. Large, 5482 Greenwood,rent $317 phone 955-0664 or 241-7995 days (?)eves after 6.EFFICIENCY APT 260/mo incl util kitchen,wk in closet, 5442 S. Harper phone 241-7995 or955-0664 eve.56th & Harper. Avail. NOW. 2 bdrms. Beautif.hdwd. firs., A/C, All mod. appl., walking dist.to U. of C., I.C. & shopping. Rent includes hotwater and heat. $550. After 7 p.m., Ray 890-9390.FREE ROOM in faculty home near campus inexchange for after school care for 7 and 9 yr oldchildren. Call 643-1118 eves. 962-7443dyRailroad flat-3 bed 2 bath. Unfurnished. Heat+ water incl. On B & D routes. Near grocery +laundromat. 53rd 4 Kenwood-Ph 288-07183 Bdrm.-2 Bath Apt. 3rd Floor WBFP, Balcony-Hyde Park area-Call after 5:30 pm 643-4253Lrg. 1 br apt. for rent. 55th4Lake. 2 lakeviews.Lrg. closets. W/W carpet. Secure bldg, easyparking. On Shoreland, campus bus rtes. AvI:11/1. Rent P$438. Call X5-4023, 643 7415.Roommate wanted to share lg 2-br apt.212.50/mo. Call Pam days 753-4225; eve 955-0405.East Hyde Park - beautifully decorated 2 bravailable 12/1. Sunny excellent condition.Parking available. Good security $625/mo.Call 667-8265 (69pm).1 br avlb immediately in beautiful 3 br co-opMust be a student Your share is $300 and rent is$1224elec For further info call 643-1419HYDE PARK STUDIOS, 1 & 2 BEDROOMSNOW AVAILABLE $282 $525 CALL 684 2333WEEKDAYS.Large 2 bd, 3 bl from Reg; bale. Indry, own gasfurnace. $425. Also 3 bd on bus rt, mod kit, oakfl, quiet. $650 Call Keith 643-4562.1 bdr apt for sublet immediate occupancy orarrangement for November 5454 S. Everett$355/mo CALL 643-2824 or Mr. Kosic 667-6132 orMickey and Poague 363-6200.PEOPLE WANTEDOVERSEAS JOBS - Summer/year roundEurope S. Amer., Australia, Asia, All fields,$500 $1200 monthly. Sightseeing. Free into. Classified AdsWrite IJC Box 52-1L5 Corona Del Mar, CA92625.Paid subject needed for experiments onmemory, perception and language processing.Research conducted by students and faculty inthe Committee on Cognition and Communication, Department of Behavioral Sciences.Phone 962-8859.Paid subjects wanted for research on attitudestoward everyday social behavior. Call 753-3341or 274 8074.Housekeeper/Babysitter for infant and 3 yr.old. Full time, some flexibility. Need responseble loving involved person. Begin Dec. 2 wk,full time in Jan. Call 924-3806.Male research subjects needed to participatein a study on some effects of a commonly usedrecreational drug. Volunteers will be testedonce weekly for two weeks, and must remain inhospital overnight (5:30 PM - 8:30 AM) foreach test session. For information call Lee:947 6984.Non-smoker to do errands tor confined person.Approx 10 hrs/wkdays. Flexible hrs. Call Betty782-7855 days or 493-3888 eves.Party band needs bass player w/own equipment. Play blues/R4B/Rock. David 324-0919evenings.Project Assistant: ARTFUL, natural languagedata base. Programming skills. Familiaritywith AMDAHL. Some knowledge of Frenchhelpful workstudy status desirable. Call 962-8481.MORRY'S DELIPART-TIME JOBSTop dollar. Hours 7 am to 11 am or 11 am to1:30 pm. Students should apply in person, bet¬ween the hours of 3 and 4 pm, at Morry's cam¬pus deli. Univ. bookstore, 1st fl.FOR SALEPASSPORT PHOTOS WHILE YOU WAIT!Model Camera 1342 E 55th 493-6700APT. SALE-Complete brm set 6 pc. $450-shelves (Book/display) $50-Thomasville endtable $45 2 rugs $80&$50-FM/AM stereoreceiver cassette + record player, 2 speakers$210-Hitachi TV 21“ (color) $250-women sclothing (petite) -t-more phone 624-3039 even¬ings preferred.OLYMPUS XA $129.95This is another special price limited to stock onhand!•'•MODELCAMERA 1342 E. 55th St.***TYPEWRITER Brand New Smith CoronaElectric 2200 $320 (Bookstore price $400). CallBill at 947-8345 or 962 8272 (leavename/number)1973 Dodge Polara transmission rebuilt newbrake recent tune up $700/best otter call 643-2824 best time 7-11:30 pmMINOLTA LENSCLOSEOUTS28m/2.8 $99.0050m/3.5 $159.0085m/2.0 $149.00135/3.5 $79.00100 200/5.6 $139.0075-150/4.0 $159.9575 200/4.5 $189.95Prices limited to stock on hand. MODELCAME RA 1342 E . 55th St. 493-6700Ilf. MemberAmerican Optometnc AssociationDR. M.R. MASLOVOPTOMETRIST• EYE EXAMINATIONS• FASHION EYEWEAR• All TYPES OFCONTACT LENSESASK ABOUT OUK ANNUALSERVICE AGREEMENTLOCATED INTHE HYDE PARKSHOPPING COfTER1510 E. 55th363-6100The Chicago Maroon—Friday, October 22, 1982—21Classified AdsCANON LENSCLOSEOUTS28m2.8 $89.0035m/2.8 .. .$84.0050m/3.5 $150.0085m/1.8 $159.00135m/3.5 $89.00135m/2.8 $129.00Prices limited to stock on hand. MODELCAME RA 1324 E. 55th St. 493-6700COUNSE LING-Psycholanalytic therapy.Reasonable rates. Hyde Park office-Call 643-2057.PROFESSIONAL TYPING-reasonable rates,684 6882.TWO GREAT BUYS: 1-Hedstrom baby car¬riage, hardly used $40; 2-mens Down Jacket, abit used, $20. Call Mark 962-7431. Leavemessage it out.Condo 10% assumable mortgage 3 br, GBFPL,architect designed kitchen, strippedwoodwork-excellent neighborhood, Rayschool, walk to campus, low assessment, ask¬ing 79.500 972-4029 days 363-3995 after 5:00 p. m.77 Chevette4 spd. ex. cond. $1500-call 288-4317.Magnetic Tapes 2400' 3200' $3.00 each Stuart231 Hrs. 10:00 am 3:00 pm M-F All In FineShape.75 Olds Station Wgn Very Good $1200 667 2312.FLUTE - Armstrong Emeritus, solid silver,exc. cond. S500/best ofr. 241-5544.Bausch and Lomb “Galen" microscope. Oneyear old. excellent condition. Call Mark at 753-3990.Sears washer -t- dryer, double bed, bunk bedsgold carpet Call evenings 684-4395 or 799-9549.74 Volvo 4 door auto. AM/FM high mileage butlots of life left $900 947-0362 after 6 pm.For Sale: Dining Room Set-Butcher Block toptable w/one leaf, 4 Brewer chairs, VGC - $200.Lge. bkcse w/pull down work space, GC - $45.Call after 6pm 288-4285.Elect Guitars: Les Paul $400, Gibson LS Deluxe $275, Telecaster $300. Also a MM Amp947 0813.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.Weddings and Portraits photographed. CallLeslie at 536-1626 or 955-2775.JAMES BONE, EDITOR-TYPIST, 363-0522.TYPING. Term papers, theses, etc. IBM Cor¬recting Selectric. All Projects welcome. 791 -1674Discount Moving and Hauling Low Prices AndFree Estimates Seven Days a Week Day andEvening References Available Call Tom 8-10am or After 6pm 375-6247DATA CONSULTANT AVAILABLE FOR:DATA ENTRY, ANALYSIS, AND FOR¬MATING CALL: 241-6784General and legal typing services. Promptpick up and delivery. Contact Victoria Gordon.(783-1345).FIREWOOD - Free Delivery in Hyde Park 742-1762.Finally a Uniform store in Hyde Park,sickroom supplies and also a visiting Nursesservice phone 667-3433 address 1011 E. 53rd st.COLLEGE STUDENTS! Are you writing ex¬cellent ideas although your papers are still ear¬ning low grades? Perhaps you could use arefresher in mechanics and stylistics to aidyour communication. For free info, send SASEto Writer's Improvement, 7627 S. Euclid Ave.Chicago II 60649.SCENESFREE! INCREASE YOUR READINGSPEED ON THE SPOT WITH A FREEEVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS INTRODUCTORY LESSON! WELL ALSOH ■\A PRICE YOU CAN AFFORD and below marketfinancing. This sunny one bedroom third floor unitwith full dining room may be just what you’re lookingfor. Tenants converted this building and are proudof their strong condo association. Super location —close to the University, transportation and shopping.This is a lovely courtyard building and the price isright. $40’s.UNDER $30,000. You can own this studio condo forless than rental price. 9*/»% financing makes this anexceptional buy. This unit faces north with a cityview. Building facilities include pool, exercise room,master T.V. antenna and garage. Minutes to shopping,U of C campus and transportation.LIGHT. CHARM, SOUTHERN EXPOSURE ... allreflect the feeling you get in this one bedroom (orconvertible two) condo south of 55th Street. As aformer model apartment, this unit also has a modernkitchen and bath. Mid $60’s.MADISON PARK GRACIOUS . . . completely refurbished. Clean as a pin. This lovely, light and airy4 bedroom, 2 V* bath Victorian town home has beenlovingly restored and appropriately modernized withnew kitchen, storms, tuckpointing, modern electric,central air and much more. A real buy at $155,000 andin such completely up-graded condition. THIS SUPER DELUXE El TOWNHOUSE won’t laston the market! It’s an end unit with a woodburningfireplace, central air and beautifully decorated. Lot’sof extras! 3 bedrooms, 2V» baths. $137,000. Call todayfor an appointment.CHARMING CO-OP apartment located close to U of Ccampus, in a well-maintained building. Natural wood¬work, sunporch, and 3 bedrooms make this a real buyat $28,500.BLACKSTONE AVENUE CONDOMINIUM - 2bedroom, lovely open balcony, natural wood built-inbookshelves, eat-in kitchen. This is the location everyone is looking for. Tree-lined street near campus.Near shopping and transportation too. Upper $60’s.HERE IS YOUR OPPORTUNITY to own a 2 bedroom.2 bath home in an elegant highrise with a lake view.Beautifully refinished hardwood floors. Large wellarranged rooms that allow for maximum privacy.U of C campus bus stops at the door. $60’s.EXCELLENT ASSUMABLE MORTGAGE, 24 hoursecurity, and adjacent parking combine to make aspecial home. This one bedroom in the Hampton Househas been completely modernized, is spotless, and haslovely views of park and lake. $50’s.COMPLETELY REMODELED studio apartment.New walls, kitchen, bath, carpeting. It Sparkles.Conveniently located in central Hyde Park. It’s abuy. $20’s.IN THE GOLDEN TRIANGLE; this two bedroom,one and one half bath condo is very special Wouldyou believe, woodburning fireplace, leaded glasswindows, bright sun porch, lots of sun and wonderfulyard for children, birdwatchers and others? Upper$60’s.MIES VAN DER ROHE designed this renownedco-op building for living in. Its broad expanse ofwindows highlight a spacious living room — diningroom area. Two bedrooms, 2 baths and a truly functional gourmet kitchen with natural lighting makesthis an exceptional home for $59,500.HILD REALTY GROUP1365 E. 53rd St.355-180022—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, October 22, 1982 SHOW YOU HOW IT'S POSSIBLE TO READAND STUDY 3-TO-lO TIMES FASTER! GETBETTER GRADES, HAVE MORE FREETIME. FIND OUT HOW...SEE OUR LARGEAD ELSEWHERE IN THIS PAPER!Writers workshop PLaza 2-8377.DENNIS BRUTUS, So. African poet & scholar,at Reynolds Club 1st Fir. Thtr. Tues. 10/26 8PM.DISCOUNT TICKETS - Old Times “byHAROLD PINTER FRI Nov 5 8pm only $5 call753-3591 thru Oct 29th.DISCOUNT TICKETS-watch"CINDERELLA" performed by Chicago CityBallet only $12.50 & $6.80 call 753-3591 thru Nov.10. INTRODUCTORYSELF-HYPNOSISSEMINARSpecial intro, seminar for UC students & af¬filiates begins Mon Oct 25th 8-10 p.m. 6 sessions$75. Learn basic hypnotic skills and theory toassist you in achieving your specific goals. Im¬prove effectiveness in studies, work, sports,habit change, communication. Taught by Dob-bi Kerman M.A. a UC graduate who has train¬ing in both clinical and Eriksonian hypnosis &is in private practive as a psychotherapist.Call 667 4176or 664-6650.STUDYCELLOWITHACHICAGO SYMPHONYCELLISTU of C Student's wives indoor activities for tod¬dlers lot's of fun and experience call 493-7993 or363 5875.Cold Kegs of Bud at Phi Delt 753-3990.Environmental activists! Illinois Friends ofthe Earth needs you. Gary, 324-9450.“Android", starring Klaus Kinski and withscore by Mother of Invention, chartermember, will be part of Doc Films' anniver¬sary celebration on Thursday, October 28. ASci-fi thriller by Doc alumnus Aaron Lipstadt.Les Beaux Parleurs, the French club, meets atIda Noyes Sat. a 7. Next meeting Nov. 13. Formore information, call George at 753-3990.UNIVERSITY OF JUDAISM (sponsored bythe conservative movement) will be recruitingon campus for its graduate programs. On Oc¬tober 26, between 1:00 & 4:00 p.m.. DeeHeltgott will interview persons interested ingraduate programs in General Judaica,Jewish Education, Rabbinic Program & PublicAdministration in the Jewish community. Call752-1127 tor an appointment.WANTEDA Good Home For 2 Male White Mice. CON¬TACT : Tricia 684-0604.RIDESRIDE NEEDED: Help! From Oak Park to UCdaily. Will share expenses. Mark 753-4089.RIDE AVAIL. TO PHILA. 10/28 ret. 10/31. 7525033.QUESTION?Can a company who rents to little old ladies ina nursing home be that unreliable? We re ICEBOXER and we rent 8000 refrigeratorsstatewide to campuses just like U of C. So foras low as $29* dollars you can join your fellowcomrades and avoid paying megabucks. Calleither 676-1902 or 815-756-9237. Toll calls toDeKalb will be credited to your rental. Delv.by appt. *Plus refundable security deposit.ATTENTION INVESTORS91.5 acre estate in Dunes area. Doubles ashome and investment. Forty-five minutes fromLoop near 194,190. and 1180. Very liberal terms.Shown by appointment only. Harley Snyder Co.After 6pm call 219 926 5529or 219 759-5131.SIMPLY GOODSG (Simply Good) Food Coop seeks newmembers we meet in Hyde Park UnionChurch, 56 +Woodlawn each Tues eve, 6pm formore info 947-9720 CarolTAiSAmvmCHINESE-AMERICAN RESTAURANTSpecializing in Cantoneseand American dishes.Open Daily 11 A.-8:30 P.M.Closed Monday1318 E, 63rd MU 4-1062G.W. OPTICIANS1519 E. 55thTel. 947-9335Iy*i *imM mi Cmtwcl Immi fitted byreft ft* red OftMMtiktt.Specidifls m teaftty tyewear «t RmsomMcPrices.Lab on premises for fast-'service framesreplaced, lenses duplicated and prescriptions filled Don Moline offers private lessons, beginners toadvanced, all ages. S25/hr. 281-3257, leavemessage.WHAT'S IN A NAME?The Divine William and Julie knew. Do you?Come to the NEW Pub and find out just howgood beer prices, Medici Pizza, Ig Screen TV,and convivial comsumption can really be.World Series games. 21 and over only.CONDOMINIUMFOR SALE2 Bdrm, 2nd fl. 56th + Kimbark. Full dr + pan¬try, Sunny + Pleasant View. Court YardBuilding Convenient Location; $69,000 Call 876-3512.HOW IS YOUR LIFE?Take an opportunity to focus on self, life, work,& relationship. Learn a structured process ofcontemplating, experiencing & com¬municating using questions productive for lifedevelopment. The AWARENESS WORKSHOPbegins Thurs. Oct. 28th 8:30-10 pm 5527 S Dor¬chester. 7 sessions $50. Facilitated by DobbiKerman M.A., a graduate of the U of C inprivate practice as a psychotherapist in H.P.Pre-register 667-4176,664-6650.CINDERELLASAO has discount tickets to opening night ofChicago City Ballet's CINDERELLA Nov 19th$12.50 & $6.80 see guest artist Suzanne Farrelllive! .'Ticketson sale in rm 210 thru Nov.FIELD MUSEUMSAO has 20 discount memberships to the FieldMuseum buy now & enjoy all the benefits ofmembership come to Rm 210 Ida Noves.POLARITY 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 TOSUPERWYLBURCollect, edit, and format text. Submit batchjobs to the Amdahl 470. You can do all this andmore with SUPERWYLBUR. The Computation 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.MALLORY'S AT CCEMallory's Dining Room at CCE, 1307 E. 60th St.is offering free wine with any meal. Presentyour faculty, staff, or sfudent ID. Call 753-4470for reservation.5234 S. Dorchester Ave.Walk to museums, parks, the lakeSTUDIO APARTMENTSFurnished and unfurnishedutilities included•Laundry roomSundeck • Secure buildingCampus bus at our doorCall 9-5 for appointment324-0200IClassified AdsTEXT FORMATTINGTREATISE and SCRIPT are programsavailable through the Computation Center'scomputers for formatting theses, disserta¬tions, seminar papers, books, etc. Learn how toformat your dissertation with TREATISE byattending the Computation Center seminar,Monday and Wednesday, October 25, and 27,from 3:30 - 5:00 p.m. in Classics 10. A seminaron SCRIPT, which provide further formattingcapabilities, will be held Tuesday and Thurs¬day, November 2 and 4, also in Classics 10 from3:30 - 5:00 p.m. These seminars are free andeveryone is welcome. No previous computerexperience is necessary.SCSSSCSS is a conversational statistical analysisprogram on the Computation Center's DEC-20and Amdahl computers. Learn how to use it ina free seminar open to all on Friday, October29, 3:30 - 5:00 p.m. in Harper 406-408.RESEARCH SUBJECTSNEEDEDEarn $215. for participating in a drugpreference study for 9 weeks. Involves onlycommonly-prescribed, non-experimentaldrugs. Minimal time required. If you are bet¬ween 21 and 35, or 40 and 55 and in good health,call 947-6348ofr further information.RESEARCH SUBJECTSEarn extra money for participation in a drugpreference study, for either 6 or 9 weeks. In¬volves only commonly-prescribed, non-experimental drugs. Minimal time required. Ifyou are between 21 and 35 or between 40 and 55years of age and in good health, call for futherinformation. 947-6348 or 947-1211.FREE DISSERATIONPREPARATION CLASSHas typing, erasing, changing and retypingyour dissertation got you down? Have you hadit with trying to space footnotes properly or in¬sert equations in your text? Or are you plann¬ing a dissertation which would involve you inthese chores? If you answer yes to any of thesequestions then come to the FREE SEMINARoffered by the Computation Center on Mondayand Wednesday, October 25 and 27 in Classics10 from 3:30 - 5:00 p.m. We'll teach you how touse the University's AMDAHL computer andthe TREATISE program to prepare a finaldraft of your dissertation. No computer ex¬perience is necessary and everyone iswelcome.THE BUSINESSOFMEDICINEHow will today's economic and social situationaffect the way medicine is practiced? Join usas we explore the myriad of factors influencingthe nature of fhe medical profession. Come to"The Facts of Medical Life," an informalpanel discussion, sponsored by the MedicalAlumni Association, Wednesday, November 3,6:30 p.m., in Billings Auditorium - P117. Formore information, call 947-5443.ELSALVADORThere will be a demonstration tomorrow, Sat.Oct. 23, at Great Lakes Naval Training Center,to protest the growing US involvement in ElSalvador. Buses leave from Ida Noyes 10:30Sat. morning. Call Andy 667-6512 or John 363-4961 for tickets.PARTYThe Asian students Association is sponsoring aparty open to all University students on Fri¬day, Oct. 22 in the Cloister Club of Ida NoyesHall. The party will run from 8 p.m. to mid¬night and will feature live bands.Refreshments will be served.. - *9marian realty,inc.mREALTORStudio and 1 BedroomApartments Available— Students Welcome —On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-5400 GARGOYLESWant to get out of Hyde Park on the weekend?Ride the SG Gargoyle Express - the fastest andmost convenient way to get to the Loop andNorth Side. Pick up a schedule at one of theticket sales points: Reynolds Club, 1-House, ortheShoreland.BASKETBALLANDBADMINTONEntires due Oct. 27. INH 203 for entry formsand information about intramural activities.SUPPORT GROUPHomosexual support group for rpen andwomen interested in talking to peers who sharethe common difficulties of sexuality and self¬esteem will meet on Monday 9:00 pm in Room301 Ida Noyes. Confidential.THEATRE DISCOUNTSAO HAS 20 DISCOUNT TICKETS TO THEVICTORY GARDENS PRODUCTION "OLDTIMES" BY HAROLD PINTER 8PM FRINOV 5 ONLY $5 TICKETS ON SALE THRUOCT 29 RM 210 IDA NOYES.LESBIAN OKTOBERFESTThe annual Lesbian Oktoberfest will take placethis Saturday (Oct. 23). Please call the GALAoffice (753-3274) for more details.G.A.L.A.-MONDAYThere will be the usual business meeting thisMonday at 7:00 pm in the GALA office. Therewill be a coffeehouse in the Library at 8:00p.m. all are welcome.DELTA SIGMACome to meeting Mon., Oct. 25th 9:30 pm atIda. and vote on new meeting time. Also, comeplay volleyball for Delta Sigma Oct 22 at 6:30pm.IT'S SNOWING NOWSo come to the SKI TEAM organization/info,meeting Fri. 10/22 (Today) 4pm 5481 S. EllisTonic or Limes Optional 667-6947.GOOD FOOD WANTED?Try the New Pub's liverwurst and sausagesandwiches. Drink at our 8 tap fount. Try ourbottled imports and new wines. In vino/beeroveritas. 21 and over only.COMPUTER GRAPH ICSYou need to generate a pie chart, bar chart, orline chart, but don't know how or where? Cometo Computation Center's free computergraphics seminars: Introduction to TELL-A-GRAF, Tuesday, October 26, 3:30 - 5:30 p.m..Harper 406-408; Introduction to Charts andGraphs on the CALCOMP Plotter, Thursday,October 28, 3:30 - 5:00 p.m., Harper 406-408;and Introduction to DISSPLA, Monday,November 1 and Wednesday, November 3, 3:30- 5:00 p.m., Harper 406-408. For further in¬formation, pick up a class schedule at theCenter's Business Office (962-7158).$30FACTORYREBATE!A once in o lifetime opportunity on the feature-packedOLYMPUS i @with Olympus lensw/ .50 mm/f 1.8Now with these breakthrough featuresa Off-the-film (OTF) "exposure automation plus Full Exposure Controlu Viewfinder LEDS signal shutter speed, flash charge andexposure confirmationa Audio-visual self-timer and battery condition signalsa In chrome or black, or FC Quartz model with digital data back189.95- 30.00 rebate159.95 Veer reelcost!model camera1342 I. 55th St.493-6700 HAPPY BIRTHDAY DOCDoc Films will celebrate its 50th birthday withthe world premiere of a sci-fi thriller by itsalumnus, Aaron Lipstadt. "Android" starsKlaus Kinski and has music scored by Motherof Invention member, Don Preston. Varietyhas already called it a cult classic" Show time:7:15 & 9:15 on Thurs. Oct. 28, Mandei; admis¬sion: S2.50.SCI-FI HALLOWEENOn Thursday Oct. 28, Doc Films will screen"Android" by its alumnus Aaron Lipstadt.This sci-fi takes place on a space station wherescientist Klaus Kinski makes androids for funand games. Funny, scary, destined to be a cultclassic in the tradition of "Halloween" 7:15 &9:15 at Mandei; $2.50 director Lipstadt will beon hand to answer questions.HOTLINEWhy not talk about it? University can get com¬plicated you don't have to deal with it alone.We've got information, references: and we'vegot the ears. Give us a call at 753-1777 between7 pm and 7 am.GOING SOMEWHERE?Get a ride or share (the cost of) the one you'vegot. Rideline 753-1777 between 7 pm and 7am.BUFFETDINNERCROSSROADS. 5621 S. Blackstone. Home-cooked meal no reservation necessary. 6:00pm cost $3.00.COUPLESCouples needed for a study of campus values$10 per couple, 1 hours call 324-3784 6-10FORTRANPROGRAMMINGLearn 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. 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.ORIENTAL CARPETSMy name is David Bradley, I am a Phd studentat the University. Previous to my studies I wasan educator in Saudi Arabia. Liberal vacationand financial benefits allowed me to visit manycountries where oriental carpets are made. Ipersonally chose one-of-a-kind carpets on thetrail and from small villages. Each carpet I of¬fer, whether new or antique, is perfect in condi¬tion, rich in color and unique in design. Sizesrange from 3' x 5' to 2' x 18'. Low overheadassures prices lower than elsewhere in theMidwest. Impeccable references from over fif¬ty University faculty members. It is easy foryou to arrange an appointment. Simply call meat 288-0524.MOONDANCE '82Jon Assadi Manuel Chaknis Roni DersovitzJackie Hardy Tina Hone Kathy Kelly AmyLaird Dan Laurence Henry Lee Mimi Lee DonLindgren John Marangonare Mike NobleDavid S Hannon Sub Shenikien Jon TubmanEvan Wieher Barry Waterman Nicki WillseyDan Yarden THANKS!!!'.IN THE HEARTOF HYDE PARKBeautiful 1 brm + studio apt. for rent. Agent onpremiss. 5424 Cornell Ave. 324-1800IDEAL SOUTHSHORE LOC.Studio's and 1 bedrooms available in idealSouth Shore Loc. Excellent transportation andconvenient to shopping area. All apts arecarpeted -+- All Utilities Are Included In Rentfor more information call Charlotte 643-0160.Cfiaztotte ^VihtzomczReal Eitate Co. We are co-operating brokersMember National Association of Realtors. ChicagoReal Estate Boards. /Knots Association ol Realtors493-0666 • CALL ANYTIMEYou’re Invited...Open House5844 S. HarperIncredible low assessments - in¬credible low interest rates setup until Dec. See for yourself.Model-like six room, “neweverything’’ condo. Sunday, October 242-4 pm•Near 58th St. & Woodlawn: 15 rooms-house•Near 58th St. & Kimbark: 7 rooms-house•Near 57th St. & Kenwood: 6 (small) rooms - condo Lovely garden, $64,000•Near 56th St. & Kenwood: 5 rooms - condo Real fireplace & views $68,500.Suburb in the City58th & Woodlawn*15 rooms* Large garden* Panelled rec room*All new countrykitchen* Beautiful woodworkthroughoutThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, October 22, 1982—23Schedule of FREE LESSONSTHE CHICAGOTHEOLOGICAL SEMINARY5757 S. UNIVERSITY AVE.(ON 58th ST. 2 BLOCKS EASTOF ADMINISTRATION BUILDING)□ EVELYN WOOD REAPING DYNAMICSFRIDAY, OCT. 22 NOON 2:30 PM 5 PMSATURDAY, OCT. 23 10 AM 12:30 PM SEATING IS LIMITEDSO PLEASE PLANON ATTENDINGTHE EARLIESTPOSSIBLE LESSON!? '978 Evelyn WoodBeading Dynamics IncCOLLEGE SURVIVALTHERE'S GOT TO BE A,.BETTER WAY! jgfc*~ <&!*&** xA,the DECLINE AND ; AFALL OF THE •HOLY ROMAN EMPIREThere is. One free Evelyn Wood ReadingDynamics lesson will prove it to you. Today takethe free Reading Dynamics lesson and you candramatically increase your reading speed in thatone free lesson.Why let the responsibilities that collegedemands deprive you of enjoying the college life?With Reading Dynamics you can handle both— all the reading you're expected to do and know,plus still have time to do what you want to do.Today you can increase your reading speed,dramatically at the free Reading Dynamicslesson. You’ve got nothing to lose but a lot ofcramming and sleepless nights. Reading Dynamics.Now you know there is a better way. Take thefree lesson and kiss your "No-Snooze" goodbye.