TAKE PICTURES-Grey City Journal Illinois Election Coveragepage five —The Chicago MaroonVolume 92, No. 16 The University of Chicago ©Copyright 1982 The Chicago Maroon Friday, October 29, 1982Report on College organizationcalls for unifying faculty councilBy Steve ShandorThe Committee on the Organiza¬tion of the College, appointed lastfall by President Gray, released itsrecommendations this week onhow the College might be governedto effect more unity of approach ineducation among the Collegiate Di¬visions.Gray appointed the committeechaired by History ProfessorBarry Karl, “to define and locatethe faculty’s responsibility for un¬dergraduate education and for dis¬cussing and thinking about the Col¬lege’s program as a whole.”Chief among the Karl Commit¬tee’s recommendations is “the cre¬ation of a college-wide facultycouncil consisting of the GoverningCommittees of the Collegiate Divi¬sions and members appointed torepresent cross-disciplinary andinterdivisional interests.” Such acouncil would help to integrate thework of the two separate governingbodies which currently set the cur¬ricular requirements of students.The types of courses taken by theaverage U of C student in his firsttwo years are currently deter¬mined on the Divisional level. Asthe Committee report explains,“The (Divisional) Masters and theGoverning Committees of the Col¬legiate Divisions have tended tofocus their attention on problemsinvolved in the. staffing of corecourses (and) on the coursesknown as the ‘second quartet’ ...”The Divisions also set the mathe¬matics and language requirementswhich most students fulfill by theend of their second year.The course requirements of the last two years of an undergradu¬ate’s education are currently de¬termined independently by eachdepartment. While this system hasnot yet led to any conflicts with theprinciple of general education, itmight lead to the fractionalizationof the curriculum. In order to fore¬stall this possibility, the Commit¬tee suggests that the “approving ofconcentration requirements” bethe work of the Collegiate Divi¬sions.With more Divisional controlover the last two years of under¬graduate education, the Commit¬tee argues, it will be possible tohave College-wide control over thefirst two years of study and ensurea more broad-based, general edu¬cation. The key to this is a reorgan¬ization of the faculty governingbodies.On the Divisional level, the Com¬mittee recommends the formationof a Governing Committee for eachof the divisions. Each GoverningCommittee would be composed ofthree representatives of generaleducation curricula (to be appoint¬ed by the Divisional Master), threeconcentration heads (to be select¬ed by the Divisional Dean in con¬sultation with the Master), and“three members of the CollegiateDivisional faculty elected by thefaculty.”Along with four Dean-appointedrepresentatives of interdivisionalprograms, the Governing Commit¬tees as a body will “constitute thecollege-wide faculty council.” Thisbody is expected to give a widerange of input into such topics asadmissions, the curriculum, and the intellectual life of the College.Of this last point the Committeereports, “The intellectual life ofthe College extends now into theresidential houses where such pro¬grams as the Woodward Court Lec¬tures and the Visiting Fellows Pro¬gram have made significantcontributions.” Presumably thefaculty representatives could workclosely with the resident mastersin developing more extra-curricu¬lar activities of this kind.According to the Dean of the Col¬lege Donald Levine, the main pur¬pose of the proposed faculty coun¬ cil is “to economize or simplifythings into a single governingstructure.”In addition, Levine said that thenew council should “make it easierfor the faculty to take responsibili¬ty for all functions,” including cur¬riculum changes if that is what thefaculty desires.With the faculty of the CollegiateDivisions being “more active asgoverning bodies,” Levine said,the same faculty members whoteach the undergraduate coursescould decide what courses shouldbe offered.Continued on page 25 Barry Karl, chair of the com¬mittee on the organization ofthe College.Hotline,Inquiry funding uncertainBy Anna FeldmanTwo student-run organizations,Inquiry and Hotline, both deniedfunding by the Student Govern¬ment Finance Committee (SGFC)Monday, are seeking sources offunds.Inquiry, a journal publishedtwice a year, prints academicpapers written by undergraduates,and chosen by an editorial board asoutstanding and suitable for publi¬cation.Editor Ted Zang had requested$405.25 from SGFC, half of the ex¬penses of publishing its autumnquarter issue, but was denied onthe basis that Inquiry has pre¬viously received funding from TheDean of the College Office and thatit is “too academic,” said Zang.Inquiry was funded by SGFCuntil last April, when the commit¬tee decided that the magazine was not eligible to receive funds fromthe Student Activities Fee becauseonly undergraduates were in¬volved in its publication.“We received funding last springfrom the dean of the College,” saidZang, “but that was only tempo¬rary.” This year, Dean of the Col¬lege Donald Levine has agreed toput up half of the funding if SGFCcomes up with the other half.Zang argued before the SG Asse¬mbly Wednesday night that Inqui¬ry is a journalistic organization.“Our staff reads papers, decideswhat to publish, and edits them,”he said. “We’re not really academ¬ic. We’re trying to bridge the gapbetween academics and the out¬side world,” he said.Nevertheless, the Assemblyupheld the Finance Committee'sdecision to deny funding, by a voteof two in favor of the decision (byPercy addresses arms issue at /-HousePHOTO BY BILL CUNNINGHAMCOURTESY OF I HOUSESen. Charles Percy spoke atInternational House Wednes¬day night. By Eric GoodheartSen. Charles H. Percy (R-Ill.),chairman of the Senate ForeignRelations Committee, spoke out oninternational arms controlWednesday night at a dinner mark¬ing the 50th anniversary of Inter¬national House at the University ofChicago.Percy himself received his BA atU of C in 1941. While he was never amember of International House, heattended discussions and otherevents there which helped sparkhis interest in international affairs.He has been a U of C trustee for 33years and has spoken here on nu¬merous occasions. Two years ago,he gave a lecture at WoodwardCourt.In his latest speech, Percy com¬mented briefly on some politicalhot spots around the world. He con¬demned martial law in Poland as“a cruel crackdown on farmersand workers” whose support he said is essential in the rehabilita¬tion of that country.He was cautiously optimisticabout the rebuilding that is takingplace in Lebanon, but was evenmore positive about the current sit¬uation in Israel. It offers “thewhole world” the chance to “watchhow a great democracy works,” hesaid.He called Secretary of StateGeorge Schultz’s peace plan “oneof the most brilliant peace plans in30 years.” He added that Schultz’spresence in foreign affairs bodeswell for the future. Schultz is also agraduate of the University of Chi¬cago.The main thrust of his messageconcerned “the nuclear issue,”which he said is “of paramount in¬terest to mankind.”“W ar is too important an issue tobe left to soldiers and politicians,”he said. This premise, he said, ac¬counts for the large grassrootspeace movement. According to Percy, the concernover this issue is entirely justifi¬able. He said that since the incep¬tion of the A-Bomb, there has beenan increase in global tension. Ev¬erything tends towards the possi¬bility of “global catastrophe,” hesaid, adding that US influcence inworld affairs has been greatly re¬duced as a result of these develop¬ment,” so that arms control ismore important than ever before.Percy was most concerned aboutthe danger of proliferation, he saidthat after India detonated a bomb,everyone feared that Pakistanwould not be able to live withoutone. To prevent this, the govern¬ment has alienated Pakistan sev¬eral times in its efforts to containproliferation, he said.Pointing to this example, he at¬tempted to underscore the dangersthat proliferation poses. A citycould be held hostage with a singlebomb, he said.Continued on page 25 Liz Cassanos, SGFC chair, and JoeWalsh, SG vice-president), threeagainst the decision (by Mark Con¬treras, Keungsuk Kim, SG secre¬tary, and Tom Powers) and one ab-stained (Jeff Woolf) SGtreasurer).“To play political handball withan organization with deadlines,”Zang said, “is not being responsi¬ble.” He said he hopes that discus¬sions over who should fund thejournal will result in some sort ofguidelines on student organizationfunding in general, and who is re¬sponsible for each group's funds.To lower Inquiry’s cost for theyear, Zang said that only twoissues will be published, an au¬tumn and a winter/spring. He said,however, that if a decision is notmade soon to fund Inquire, it maynot meet the deadlines for havingthe autumn issue typeset.Hotline, which was also deniedSGFC funding this week, consistsof a group of students who receivestudent calls for information, com¬plaints, or just to talk, from 7 p m.to 7 a m. nightly. The students aretrained to deal with persons withminor emotional problems.Hotline, as a University service,has been funded by the Office ofthe Dean of Students in the Univer¬sity, and by the dean of RockefellerChapel. The by-laws of the FinanceCommittee state that only extra¬curricular activities, and not ser¬vices to students, may be fundedwith Student Activities Fee reve¬nue, according to Alan Granger,SG president.Granger cited as an example theextended hours of the library’ dur¬ing finals week last winter andspring, and said that Hotline, asworthy of funding as any service,is still ineligible for funding bySGFC.“We appreciate the service andhow important it is to the commu¬nity,” said Granger. He added thathe is sorry to see Student Govern¬ment put in the position of havingto turn Hotline down.At the Phoenix...THE POLYGRAM THREE-IN -ONE SALETHREE WAYS TO SAVE12.3 %off all Polygram Single Albums*10 % off Doubles and Boxed SetsIncludes all Classical, Jazz,and Pop albums.All $6.98 (list price) PolygramClassical Series are ON SALE for$3.75 EACH. Includes: London Jubilee,DG Privilege, DG Concours, DGResonance, Philips Sequenza, andPhilips Festivo SeriesThe LONDON TREASURY SERIESwill remain ON SALE for $2.75 EACH.2 for $5.25. Many titles, many artists.♦Rounded off. Excludes albums on sale alreadyCome to the Phoenix and Save On Music!Check Us First...We re the PhoenixFRIDAY, OCTOBER 29TIL FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 5Basement, Reynolds Club • 5706 S. University • 962-85612—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, October 29, 1982News in briefMore fed aid toll of CThe University will receive more federalfunds than tentatively allocated earlier thisyear for the Work/Study program, the Sup¬plementary Education Opportunity Grant(SEOG) and the National Direct StudentLoan (NDSL) program, according to Deanof Students in The University Charles D.O’Connell.The total increase of $388,754 resultedlargely from the overriding in Congress of aFifteen candidates are running unopposedand nine seats are without candidates innext weeks Student Government (SG) Asse¬mbly and Student/Faculty/Administration(SFA) Court election. Only 34 students sub¬mitted petitions for the 45 Assembly and sixSFA Court seats.In only six areas are there more candi¬dates than representative seats. The biggestrace is for the Shoreland seats. Six candi¬dates — Susan Chung, John Kendzior,Wayne Klein, Mark Hollmann, Cezar Si¬meon, and Nikki Willsey — are competingfor only two seats.Seven freshmen are running for the fivefreshmen seats. They are Mike Fuller, MikeFrenkel, Jeff Haferman, Nathan Hart,Chris Hill, Jon King, and Kathryn Klei-man.Mark Blocker and Urban Larson arevying for the lone Woodward Court seat. A1Sierkowski and Jay Vogel are competing forthe one Pierce Tower seat. Katsumi Tanakaand Mike Aronson are running for the oneseat representing Breckinridge/Black-stone/Greenwood.Joe Suchy, Dan Stetzel, and MatthewGruber are running for the two Other Col¬lege seats. All other candidates are runningunopposed in their respective races. TereseSzesny and Rick Szesny are running for thetwo Burton-Judson seats. Fred Jubitz is run- Presidential veto.O’Connell said that the SEOG is open onlyto undergraduates, so students in the Col¬lege will benefit. O’Connell’s office is nowexamining where the money is neededmost.SEOG funds are up from $433,482 to$555,567, an increase of $122,085.Work/Study is up from $589,437 to $647,467,an increase of $58,030. NDSL is up from$421,965 to $630,604, an increase of $208,639.All final totals are still below last year’slevels.ning for the Fraternity seat. Mike Griffin isthe sole candidate for the Commuter seat.Only three graduate students have sub¬mitted petitions for the election: Steve Levi-ton for the business school; Tom McGarryfor the Biological Sciences Division; andRobert Blake for Public Policy. No candi¬dates are running for the Library Scienceseat, the two divinity school seats, theSchool of Social Service Administrationseat, the five Social Sciences Division seats,the two Physical Sciences Division seats,the three Humanities seats, the three lawschool seats, and the two medical schoolseats.The remaining four business school seatsand one Biological Sciences Division seatalso have no candidates.The six candidates for the SFA Court posi¬tions are Rita Walter, Dan Staley, Tim Ba-chenberg, Tim Wong, Geoff Dunaway, andGreg O’Neal.The fall elections will be held Wednesdayand Thursday next week. Balloting will beat the following areas: Wednesday, Nov. 3:Cobb in the morning; Reynolds Club, B-School and Med School during the lunchhour; Shoreland, Burton-Judson, WoodwardCourt, and Pierce Tower during the eve¬ning. Thursday, Nov. 4; Reynolds Club andCobb during the midday. See the Maroonnext Tuesday for exact times. Reagan economics‘a gimmickStiglerUniversity of Chicago Professor GeorgeStigler, this year’s Nobel Prize winner ineconomics, said Wednesday during a visit toWashington that the United States is cur¬rently in a depression and that supply-sideeconomics are “a gimmick,” and ‘‘a slogan,used to package certain ideas.”He remarked that the “gimmick” had agreat deal of common sense, however, andthat much of Reagan’s economic policyrated approval. He said that if grading thePresident he would not give him an “A,” but“maybe an incomplete.”Stigler made these comments at a pressbriefing just after meeting with Reagan inthe Oval Office. His comments apparentlysurprised White House aides, who quicklycut him off and led him out of the briefingroom.Stigler said the President told him that the Administration would push for an evenlarger rollback on government regulationsnext year. Stigler predicted that the econ¬omy will improve soon.He said there was too much of a “crashprogram” to apply Reagan’s economic poli¬cies early in the year, and that it would havebeen better to effect a slower, more gradualplan instead, over about 18 months.Stigler said he wished that Reagan placedmore emphasis on deregulation, andwarned against short-term protectionistmeasures Jo bail out industry.Schorsch to speakProfessor Ismar Schorsch, provost of theJewish Theological Seminary of America,will deliver three speeches at the Universitythis weekend.Friday he will speak on “The Emergenceof Historical Consciousness in Modern Ju¬daism” at the Divinity School. The time hasnot yet been announced. That evening at8:30 he will speak at Hillel on the topic “Re¬ligious Trust as Metaphor.”He will also preach in Rockefeller Chapelthis Sunday at 11 a.m.Schorsch holds a Master’s Degree and aPhD from Columbia University. He hastaught Jewish History since 1964 at variousuniversities, and has published extensivelyin that field.Halloween funHalloween fans are invited to visit Kaba-la’s Tomb at 5655 S. University Ave. in TheBlue Gargoyle. Tours will be available forchildren and youths Friday, Oct. 29, 7 p.m.to 10 p.m., Saturday, Oct. 30, 6 p.m. to 10p.m., and Sunday, Oct. 31, 4 p.m. to 5:30p.m. and 6 p.m. to 10 p.m.The Haunted House is sponsored by SeniorScout Troop #1281, University Church YouthFellowship, and Blue Gargoyle partici¬pants. A 75 cent admission fee will be col¬lected on behalf of UNICEF. For more infor¬mation, call 955-4108.Most SG candidates running unopposed.Jk. Lox& Bagel BrunchAn Elizabethan Evensong Orange Juice, Coffee,and Concert of Early Tea, Tomatoes, andEnglish Anthems Onions, Too.Sunday, October 31, 4 PMAdmission is free Every SundayChurch of St. Paul and the 11 am - 1:00 pmRedeemer (Episcopal) Hillel4945 South Dorchester Foundation(at 50th Street) 624-3185 5715 Woodlawn Ave.MORRY’SRIDAY, OCTOBER 29 SPECIAL3:00 -4:30 PM ONLYBBQ RIB TIPS served on LouisianaHot spiced rice, topped with ourown special BBQ sauce.Great ^ ygGreatMeal! ONLY1 Snack!HOT DOGSPASTRAMI 39c 1/4 LB CHEESEBURGERS ....1.59 Good everv dav o.no «MORRY’S DELIUniversity Bookstore 30 pm BEER SPECIAL OFTHE WEEKAUGSBURGER I98Light 6 packor Dark 4 - 6 pack limit — COUPON —CINZANOASTI 069SPUMANTI O750 mlFrom Italy Limit 1 couponExp. 11-4-82 2 bottlesi FI 169COKE « 1TAB „ 6 P°ck■ **** 12 oz. cansSPRITE Case of 246.69 — COUPON —GIACC0BAZZI 198WINES 1 750 mlLambruscoBianco Limit 1 couponRose 2 bottlesExp. 11-4-82CANADIAN LAGER BEERl69■ 6 packCase of 24 7.49 From FranceCOTE DE BEAUNE 098VILLAGES O750 mlReg. 5.98From GermanyERIKA £29UEBFRAUMILCH 31.5 liter Wine TastingSaturday, October 30CANEI WINE 2*’White or 750 mlRoseReg. 3.29Sale Items We reserveSerl LINCOLN LIQUORS E2Ssto*.Hours 1516 E. 53rd St. """""s""**' Phone 752-4238 sale itemsSun 12 noon - mkj . r IIUlIC IOC. *4CO O noticed.The Chicago Maroon—Friday, October 29. 1982—3How do you createan environmentfor people who createthe future?You do it by recognizing the power of ingenuity. Encouraging it.and Rewarding it.That’s how Bendix grew in annual sales from $2.7 billion to over$4 billion in only 5 years. It’s also how we develop strong managersand attract talented people. To work in diversified businessesaround the world.That’s why Bendix is a leader in creating the future of theaerospace-electronics, industrial and automotive markets. Workingwith NASA as partners in space. Developing new technologiesfor the factory of the future. And helping to make the Americanautomobile more fuel-efficient.There’s no limit to where we’re going. And no limit to a careerat Bendix.The powerof ingenuityServing Automotive,Aerospace-Electronicsand Industrial MarketsThe Bendix Corporation,Executive Offices,Bendix Center, P.O. Box 5060,Southfield, Michigan 48037 The Bendix Corporation willbe recruiting MBA’s oncampus November 10,1982.Please contact the PlacementOffice for furtherinformation.4—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, October 29, 1982Election ‘82Local incumbent Democrats face easy racesBy William Rauchand Darrel WuDunnRepublican incumbent James Thompsonand Democratic candidate Adlai StevensonIII will fight for the Illinois gubernatorialseat in the Nov. 2 election, and included onthe ballot is a referendum calling for a US-Soviet freeze on nuclear weapons testing,production, and deployment. Two Demo¬cratic incumbents will square off againstGOP opponents and two other Democratsare running unopposed as the 1st congres¬sional district seat, the 25th and 26th staterepresentative seats, and the 13th state sen¬atorial seat go up for grabs.Harold Washington, the Democratic in¬cumbent from the 1st Congressional Dis¬trict, which includes Hyde Park, is runningfor his second term against GOP candidateCharles Taliaferro. Before serving on Capi¬tol Hill, Washington was an Illinois staterepresentative and state senator. He alsochaired the Illinois House Judiciary Com¬mittee.In a survey conducted by the League ofWomen Voters published in the Chicago Tri¬bune, Washington said that the major prob¬lems in the 1st congressional district are“unemployment and lack of economic de¬velopment.” His aide Sid Ordower told theMaroon that one of the “many ways” inwhich Washington hopes to improve localeconomic conditions is to “shore up smallcompanies through the opportunities open tothem.” In particular, Ordower said thatWashington has been involved in helpingsmall companies seek and retain govern¬ment contracts.Ordower said that Washington is not infavor of a “defense build-up” but that theCongressman thinks that small companies “should have the right to bid for defensecontracts.”Ordower said that Washington supportsthe freeze referendum. He said that Wash¬ington is one of the co-sponsors of a nuclearfreeze bill.Ordower said that Washington supportsStevenson for governor.Ordower said that there is “no questionabout it” that the Reagan administrationseconomic programs will hurt the Republi¬can candidates in this election.Washington is also considering runningfor mayor of Chicago.Taliaferro is a materials control supervi¬sor. He holds a BS in political science.Taliaferro said that he does not think thatReagonomics will hinder the Republicans’election chances. He said that “Reagan is onthe right track” and that “by the spring of1983 the nation will see a turnaround.”Taliaferro told the Tribune that “unem¬ployment is the major problem in the 1stcongressional.” He told the Maroon that“the main thing is to get industry to bring injobs.”Taliaferro said that he supports a freezeon nuclear weapons development but that hedoes not “want to see imbalances” in USand Soviet weaponry. He said that the“powers would have to be equal before hewould back a freeze.The 25th district includes parts of HydePark and Woodlawn and most of the areabounded by 79th St. on the north, 87th St. onthe south, King Drive on the west and Com¬mercial Ave. on the east.Carol Moseley Braun, the Democratic in¬cumbent for the district state representa¬tive seat, is running for her third term.Braun is a former assistant US attorney. Braun said that she would support Rich¬ard Daley, Jr. for mayor if he were to runagainst Jane Byrne. However, she said shewould support Washington if he entered themayoral race.Braun backs Stevenson for governor.Braun said that she “wholeheartedly”supports the freeze referendum.She said that she “hopes” the Reagan ad¬ministration’s economic policies will proveto be an obstacle to GOP candidates. Whenasked if Governor Thompson’s economicprograms will affect Republican candi¬dates, Braun said that the coming election“should be a referendum on the Thompsonprograms.”Braun said that her priorities for the nexttwo years should she be re-elected include“funding essential services in light of the de¬clining tax base,” “job-creating activity bythe state,” funding education and keepingIllinois out of bankruptcy.Republican Owen Pulver, Braun’s oppo¬nent, said that he backs Thompson in the gu¬bernatorial race. He said that he is undecid¬ed as to who to support for mayor.Pulver is the president of a marketingsupport company. He attended the City Uni¬versity of New York for three years and theUniversity of Illinois.Pulver said that if elected he would bringin more social programs, “stabilize thearea,.” and “encourage stores and indus¬tries to open in the area” to bring in morejobs.Braun told a League of Women Voters’survey in the Tribune that the “most impor¬tant component” of her plan “to address thefiscal problems of Illinois” is to increase thestate income tax rates. Pulver said that he favors limiting state spending to meet thestate’s financial problems.Barbara Flynn Currie, the Democratic in¬cumbent for the 26th district, is running un¬opposed. She is seeking her third term.The 26th district includes part of Ken¬wood, Hyde Park from Cottage Grove on thewest to Stony Island on the east, part ofWoodlawn, and extends south to 83rd St.Currie told the League of Women Votersthat “Ensuring our continued capacity toprovide essential state services in the faceof deep federal budget cuts and laggingstate revenues” is her top legislative priori¬ty.She also told the League of Women Votersthat “freezing the phase-out schedule on thesales tax on manufacturing equipment andfarm machinery” is her best proposal formeeting the state’s fiscal difficulties.The 13th senatorial district is made up ofthe 25th and 26th representative districts.Democratic incumbent Richard Newhouseis running unopposed for his seat. He hasserved 15Lyears in the Illinois legislature.NewsExiled Brutus discusses his ‘criminal’poetryBy Jeanne ChapmanIn the first of this year’s series, PocketPoetics presented a reading by DennisBrutus, the exiled South African poet andscholar, on Oct. 26 in Reynolds Club. Thepoet emphasized his creative works but alsospoke on political issues.Dennis Brutus was born in South Africaand is currently seeking political asylum inthe US. He is in self-imposed exile to opposethe government’s policy of apartheid.Brutus was arrested in 1963 in South Afri¬ca because of his political activities. Whileawaiting trial in Johannesburg, Brutus at¬tempted to escape and was shot in the back.Afterwards, he served 18 months on RobinIsland, a South African prison for politicaloffenders. He fled to Great Britain in 1966.“Every poet works a part of his nativelandscape,” said Brutus in his introduction.“Mine was South Africa, a country full ofharshness and brutality. If I didn’t expressthis reality, I would feel I was suppressingthe facts.”His poetry, according to Brutus, has threedistinct phases of evolvement. The earlyworks written prior to his prison term, areheavily ornate and embroidered. “At thattime,” said Brutus, “I was heavily in¬fluenced by the great English authors likeChaucer, Yeats and Browning.”The second phase, termed “prison poet¬ry,” was written during and immediatelyfollowing his 18 month hard labor sentenceon Robin Island. According to Brutus, it ismuch more simple and direct than his earli¬er works. “I wanted to break all form,rhyme, metaphor and imagery and insteadwork on direct communication,” he ex¬plained.The third and present phase of Brutus’ po¬etry is verse composed in exile. “Thisphase,” said Brutus, “is a blending of earli¬er forms.”In most of Brutus’ works, political oppres¬sion and racism in South Africa are the dom¬inant themes. “In South Africa,” saidBrutus, “people are denied that they are human. Dissent causes imprisonment forhigh treason and is punishable by hanging.South Africa has the greatest number ofhangings per year in the world.”Brutus said that during his time in prison,“I was amazed at the number of people will¬ing to die for freedom” (in opposition to theapartheid system). The need for freedom isa basic human appetite” said Brutus, “andPHCfO BY DAN BRESLAUSouth African exile Dennis Brutus. in Pretoria the government is trying to driveAfricans back to the 19th century. Africansare becoming suspicious of their own cul¬ture because it is being used by politicalleaders against them.”In South Africa, poetry writing is consi¬dered a criminal act, according to Brutus.Merely reading, quoting, possessing orhearing the poetry of Dennis Brutus is pun¬ishable by a prison sentence.“In the eyes of Pretoria,” said Brutus,“you (the audience) are all criminals.”In response to the question, “What hasbeen your audience when writing poetry?,”Brutus replied, “Sometimes I write to manyand sometimes only to one, but I am satis¬fied as long as someone hears me.”His poetry is inventive and rich in mean¬ing. In “A troubadour, I traverse my land,”is the phrase “No mistress favor adorns mybreast/only the shadow of an arrow brand.”The arrow brand is a reference to the uni¬form of the military police in South Africa.His poetry was well received by the audi¬ ence, as were the tales reminiscent of expe¬riences in South Africa, Europe and theUS.Brutus is still awaiting final word on hisapplication for political asylum in America.“I appreciate the support I have received,”said Brutus in reference to the many letterswritten by various elected officials and aca¬demic colleagues to the State Departmentsupporting his application.Brutus is currently a faculty member ofthe English department at NorthwesternUniversity. A graduate in both English andpsychology from Fort Hare University,Brutus has also taught at the University ofDenver and the University of Texas at Aus¬tin. He is the former president of ThirdWorld Energy Resources Institute, a formerUnited Nations representative, a formerdirector of World Campaign for Release ofSouth African Political Prisoners, andformer president of South African Non-Ra-cial Olympic Committee. He has also auth¬ored several books of poetry.Dean of the College leads sunrise hike“To celebrate having an hour more sun¬light in the morning, and the migration of upto 10 species of ducks,” the Dean of the Col¬lege Office is sponsoring a “Sunrise Excur¬sion” next week. Dean of the College DonaldLevine and several other deans will leadearly morning walks to Wooded Island.Wooded Island is “a lovely little woodedisland about 10 minutes walk east of Inter¬national House,” Levine said. “There aresix dozen different species of shrubs andtrees and a Japanese garden. Migratingbirds are very fond of it,” he said.The excursions will begin at 6:45 a m. andwill end in time for students to attend their8:30 a.m. classes. Groups of joggers will beled by students. In addition, Doug Anderson,a Hyde Park naturalist, will conduct a tourof the island.Levine and Associate Dean of the College Richard Taub will lead Monday ’s excursion.Students should meet them on the MidwayPlaisance just across from InternationalHouse. Tuesday, Levine will lead the walk,which will also leave from the Midwayacross from I-House.Herman Sinaiko, dean of students in theCollege, and James Teeri. master of the Bio¬logical Sciences Collegiate Division, willlead the walk Wednesday morning. Studentsshould meet them on the Midway acrossfrom the President's House (UniversityAve.) or at the Shoreland.Fall backThe Maroon would like to remind readersto set their clocks back one hour this Sundayat 2 a.m. Central Standard Time.The Chicago Maroon—Friday, October 29, 1982—5EditorialsOur choices for IllinoisWe urge all registered voters in the University community to cast their ballotin next week’s rather lackluster state-wide elections. The races are perhaps notterribly exciting or controversial, but they nevertheless are important and di¬rectly affect the way each student, faculty member, and community residentlives.The gubernatorial race boils down to a battle between incumbent, moderatelyconservative Republican James Thompson and former senator Adlai Stevenson,a moderately liberal Democrat. Unfortunately the campaigns have skirtedsome of the real issues that affect Illinois residents, such as unemployment andthe state budget woes. Instead, it has been a debate of styles and of leadershippotential. Stevenson has the programs but no flash and Thompson is forceful buthas few ideas.Both candidates agree that the Illinois economy has the highest priority. How¬ever, the two differ on how to approach the present fiscal problems. Thompsonurges tax reform and economic development through several proposed pro¬grams. Stevenson presents a complicated, comprehensive economic strategy,stating that the economic structure of Illinois is too complex to be mended byjust a few programs.While we believe that Thompson is the more dynamic leader, we believe thatStevenson has a more realistic understanding of the economic and educationalproblems and that he has a more effective strategy to attack them. We alsobelieve that Stevenson has the intelligence to handle the many complexities andintricacies of the governorship.We therefore support Stevenson for governor.In other races, the choices are clearer and the results are easier to predict.Harold Washington, the incumbent Democrat, is our choice to represent the 1stCongressional District. While he has one of the worst attendance records in theHouse, his support of women’s and minorities’ rights, and his support forstronger, federally-funded job programs for his economically diverse districtmake him the better candidate for the district. His opponent, Charles Taliaferro,opposes the right of choice for abortion and supports weaker, state-funded socialprograms.We endorse Washington but hope that someone buys him an appointment cal¬endar.Carol Moseley Braun, the Democratic incumbent in the 25th State Representa¬tive District, is, in our opinion, the far better choice in her re-election raceagainst Republican Owen Pulver. Braun has always been a strong, capable le¬gislator and staunchly advocates increases in spending for all levels of educa¬tion. She has our complete support.Barbara Flynn Currie, having won a bitter duel for the Democratic nomina¬tion, is running unopposed in her re-election bid to represent the 26th State Rep¬resentative District. We endorsed her in the primary and we endorse her now inthe election.In the race for state senator for the 13th district, incumbent RichardNewhouse is running unopposed. We give him our full support for another two-year term.The most controversial item on the Nov. 2 ballot will be the nuclear freezereferendum. There are arguments on both sides of the ideological fence. Mostmaintain that the wording and intent of the measure are too simplistic. While theMaroon agrees that issues surrounding strategic weaponry are extremely com¬plex, we feel that the referendum is not meant to operate as a blueprint for poli¬cy.The sentence-long referendum question aims at sending an important mes¬sage to the government that current policies of deterrence and escalation arenot supported by the people of the United States. A message, clear and simple —we do not want nuclear war — is what will be heard if the measure is supported.The longer, the louder, and the more frequently the message is broadcast, themore chance there is of stopping what can only be a race to destruction.We strongly urge persons to vote yes in the referendum for the US-Soviet nu¬clear weapons freeze, not as a statement of policy but as a message to Washing¬ton.Don’t cut fundingAfter the funding denials of two vital campus organizations, Hotline and Inqui¬ry, many wonder who will contribute the necessary support for their continua¬tion.Neither the Office of the Dean of Students in the University nor Student Gov¬ernment should let these groups dry up because of lack of funding. There is noquestion as to the validity and importance of either as a student group or ser¬vice.For a student service such as Hotline, which operates for the good not only ofall students in the University but for people in the surrounding community aswell, the Office of the Dean of Students in the University should be financiallyresponsible. Like the student mental health clinic and the student ombudsman’soffice, Hotline is a service to be sponsored by the University, not by moniescollected for student activities on campus. The Dean of Students office shouldnot have dropped the financial responsibility into SGFC’s lap.Similarly, we see the proper channel for funding of Inquiry not in the dispersalof Student Activities Fees, but in the Office of the Dean of the College. It is strict¬ly an academic venture, meant to provide a medium for College students toshare outstanding scholastic writings with other College students.Because Inquiry did recieve SGFC funding previously, however, the responsi¬bility for its continued support lies with SGFC as well. SGFC should not have justdropped the financial responsibility into the Dean of the College’s lap.We do not intend only to point a finger and declare who should pay for whatactivity. Student leaders and administrative representatives must reach mutualagreements in deciding what groups are eligible for which funds. After such anagreement is reached, student groups such as Hotline and Inquiry will not haveto halt all activity while they wait for someone to rescue them with financial sup¬port.6—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, October 29, 1982 orro'iJuAxcAA ~Oo^' && -rUt MAu-otoego ~?a!— C-TTTV » .. — 7 PrpfEncETS^Af> A T>eHQ*J lQO^ (*> A 6-MoJ<-)wTS I Pernod A/2r A FgiepQ !AfriAtMZc hop !WUAVb fotL LcPC ATHeVfce (yoip' oXtefc t^u. I Q tp 7Ae^T-^r iklo y/tA'&OCX i. »( *SpUCK!Sew he uP sejDTriTU&E'* po ipret,-utrexjt LifeCi iiiJkZF A uJfiAr 7'>-yLettersA DUMB RAbuttleDear Mr. Diamond,Your letter of Oct. 22 has elicited a varietyof responses from myself and the friendsand members of DUMB RA (proper spell¬ing). Some have been prompted to laugh, oreven become violently angry at you, but Iam somewhat sad.You see, Mr. Diamond, I am the leadsinger and lyricist for DUMB RA, and I ama Jew. My parents, while not rich, keep aKosher home, and while I have chosen not tobe religious, I have had over twelve years ofHebrew school, have been Bar Mitzvah’d,and I have been to Israel. I am not anti-Semitic. But this information is rather su¬perfluous to the real problems at hand.The problem comes not from an act ofanti-Semitism, but from your reaction towhat you suppose to be an act of anti-Semi¬tism. You reacted in a harsh and rash man¬ner. You did not find out the facts. Perhapsif you had spoken with some of the other“tragic spectators,” if you had listened tothe whole lyric of the song, or even waiteduntil our show was over to come speak tome, your fears might have been abated. Thefact is, the song “Church Song” is firstabout myself, and the phrase “rich jew” is,more importantly, a metaphor for the ste¬reotypes and racisms, the categories andboundaries of the world and its people as awhole. Mr. Diamond, you did not wait to findout the facts. Instead you “left...shortlyafter the offending song began.” How couldyou know that the lyrics are really askingfor an end to the divisions among people,that I, too, hope for a truly free world? Yourletter was chock-full of many big words, ob¬viously you had spent some time in compos¬ing it. Would that you had spent some of thattime talking to me. You heard the word“Jew” and you ran crying to Mama.I do know how you feel. I have been thesubject of many anti-Semitic references andattacks in my life, and I have had manyfights because of them. I know what it is liketo overhear the word “Jew,” and wonder ifthe person saying it would participate in anew Nazi state, or even ‘tacitly condone’one. It scares me that there persists such ahatred against a group of people simply be¬cause their set of myth, ritual, and culturediffer from that of another group. I haveseen your same reaction many times. Thereis an importance in “investigation before in¬ dignation,” especially when dealing with athing as intangible as words. Especially inthe United States of America, where we areall innocent before proven guilty. As you arean anthropologist, (and a graduate studentat that), I was tempted to laugh off your ob¬viously unresearched accusations, but as Isaid, I understand your feelings, your confu¬sion, and your reaction.Mr. Diamond, the real problem is not onesupposed act of anti-Semitism. The realproblem is the fostering of a limitedanti-racism. That is, attacking a part, andignoring the whole. Would you have been si¬milarly offended if I had sung “I wanna beBlack” or an “ooh baby baby” lyric? Proba¬bly not. It is my position that, by concentrat¬ing only on the type of racism that most af¬fects you, you are ‘tacitly condoning’ theacts of racism imposed upon others. I saythis limited anti-racism is a form of racism.Racism must be dealt with and deterioratedas a whole, until no one is discriminatedagainst, and no one wishes to discriminate.Admittedly, this Utopia isn’t going to hap¬pen tomorrow, but there are small steps wecan take.I regret that “Church song” does not seemas harmless, good-natured, and satirical asMr. Brooks’ article did seem to you, but Isuggest that is perhaps because he still hashis curly hair while I have shaved mine off.The song was written some time before thearticle appeared, and was not meant to beequated in ideology. My reference was onlyto acknowledge an affinity, myself beingfrom New Jersey, which is only a wish awayfrom New York.I am sorry we didn’t cheer and entertainyou, as that is a goal of ours; this campusbeing as unfriendly and defensive as it couldpossibly get already. We believe that DUMBRA is a fun, intelligent, original, and in¬creasingly professional band, and we wouldlike people to support us. I assure you that Ihave never desecrated a cemetery, or pil¬laged a church or a synagogue, nor would Istand idly by or run home to my typewriterif in the presence of such acts of depravity. Iam a moral person, Mr. Diamond, and I tryto be a good person, and DUMB RA and my¬self are sorry we have upset you. We wouldlike anyone and everyone, yourself includ¬ed, to come hear us, dance with us, and loo¬sen up with us, as we all have classes, too.Larry Cohen,vocalist for DUMB RAand student in the CollegeEditorialsMake your mark on SGStudent Government (SG), elections take place this week and if we didn’tknow better, we would suggest that all students get out this time and vote.But considering the anemic response SG usually gets at the polls, we cannotsay that our urging will move anyone to vote. Only 35 students have submittedpetitions. Nine seats are without candidates. Only six of the 45 seats open willhave a race. If so few want to run, why would anyone want to vote? And whywould anyone need to .’ The vast majority of the candidates are running unop¬posed.On the other hand, students should be more responsive. It w’ould seem thateither they do not know that an election is taking place or they are apathetic. Butstudents here are too bright to let any elections go unnoticed, and they are tooopinionated not to care one way or the other.So read your Maroon for places and times of ballotting and go vote. Just govote.LettersWhat’s up Doc?To the editor:Last Saturday a friend and I decided tosee Chariots of Fire which was being shownby Doc Films. We went half an hour earlyand took our place behind about thirty peo¬ple. Fifteen minutes later the crowd arrivedand was organized (?) into five lines: pas-sholders, ticketholders, people trying to getinto the ticketholder line, people trying tobuy tickets, and people trying to get into theticket purchasing line. It was a mess and wewondered why it had to be. Why couldn’t wepurchase the tickets when we got there?Why couldn’t we go in once we had them?The mystery was solved and my annoyancewas increased when the doors were opened(about ten minutes past the scheduled roll¬ing time) to allow passholders to enter first.I appreciate the opportunity to see first-ratefilms for only a couple of dollars, but theprice is too high when I have to arrive earlyin order to suffocate waiting for a lousy seatbecause Doc Films wants to privilege pas¬sholders. They already get a good deal. If Iwere a passholder I would rather go insidewhen I arrived then roast in a crowded cor¬ridor, and I certainly would not be comfort¬able cutting in front of people who deemedthe film worth waiting for.Ted HarrisonDivinity School studentGet the facts rightTo the editor:It is a pity that at the home of the Nobelprize winning economist for 1982, graduatestudent of history Omar Dahbour feels ade¬quate to give the campus a lesson in eco¬nomics on the pages of the Maroon(10/22/82).One may forget for the moment that hedismisses both sides of the American politi¬cal debate as not even worth discussion. Butwhen he makes snap economic statements like calling mergers “priofitable but totallyunproductive activities,” he is playing fastand loose with the truth. The fact is that bybuying companies, corporations can in¬crease efficiency and productivity, and byusing their expertise, help otherwise mar¬ginal enterprises stay afloat. The best re¬search done quantitatively on this subject isby University of Chicago professor YaleBrozen, who I admire in my readings fornever making statements without real,quantitative facts behind him.So I suggest that, unless your politics for¬bid you, you attempt to get the facts. Afterall, you might be offended if I claimed in theMaroon that the Civil War never tookplace.Steven Kingfirst year studentin the Graduate School of BusinessIn-SecurityTo the editor:On Oct. 20 at about 2:30 a.m. the campuspolice were alerted that a car was beingvandalized on Blackstone in front of Inter¬national House. The police took a good whileto arrive, not at the scene, but at Interna¬tional House where they asked, “Who re¬ported a car being stolen?” Twenty minuteslater the assailant, unsuccessful the firsttime, was seen breaking into the car againby shattering the window. The police werecalled again but failed to show up. Whenasked why, they claimed they had been atthe scene but were unable to catch the van¬dal, who fled with the T-roofs of the blueFirebird. When this writer called to find outwhy they were unable to react fast enoughwhen the campus police knew that the carand area was targeted their response wasthat there are ‘‘other calls in Hyde Park.”They must be awfully busy or awfully slow;certainly they aren’t very good.Student in theGraduate School of Businessname withheld upon requestH LecturesProfessor Ismar SckorsckPforest OJid. Professor of Jewish. HistoryJeuusk Tktoloyital Seminary of Amenta.Author: “Jewish Reaction to German Ant -Semihsm wo-Wi Kadanoff praisedTo the editor:On Monday, Oct. 18, the Nobel Committeeannounced that Kenneth G. Wilson of Cor¬nell University will receive the 1982 prize forPhysics. The next morning the achieve¬ments of a member of the University of Chi¬cago faculty, Leo Kadanoff, was recognizedin a front page article in The New YorkTimes in conjunction with that prize. The ar¬ticle, in quoting Wilson, expressed surpriseand dismay that the Nobel Committee hadfailed to name Leo Kadanoff and MichaelFisher (of Cornell University) as co-recipi¬ents. All three had shared the highly regard¬ed Wolf Prize two years before for the samework. 'We would like to extend our congratula¬tions to Professor Kadanoff for his impor¬tant contributions to theoretical physics.The University of Chicago is proud to havesuch a distinguished member of the scientif¬ic community on its faculty. We regret thatthis pride was not reflected in the pages ofthe Maroon.Nitza OhanaDavid Slutzgraduate students in the social sciencesWilliams offendedTo the editor:I am not certain which depresses memore, your running the advertisement for aterm paper service or your response to myand Professor Sinaiko’s letters objecting toit. A small point first: W’hen you say you nei¬ther ‘‘support nor condone” such a service,did you mean condemn rather than con¬done? And how can you claim not to supportit? You ran an ad for it.More to the point, you seem to havemissed our point entirely. The problem hereis not whether you have “offended” anyone.Do you really think that if no one were “of¬fended” by such an ad, no issue of intellectu¬ al or scholarly integrity would exist? And fi¬nally, if you are going to start retractingthings because you are worried that some¬one might be offended by them, I stronglyurge you to resign in favor of someone whois ready to offend every person on thiscampus if an issue should require that.Joseph M. Williamsprofessor in the department of EnglishFor a Model UN hereTo the editor:Having read the previous letter to the edi¬tor regarding a Model UN, I would like toexpress a sincere interest in seeing a ModelUN established on this campus. Along with alarge number of other students, I believesuch an organization would contributegreatly to life at this university. I find itvery hard to understand why a universitywhich prides itself on academic excellencehas failed to provide such an excellent op¬portunity for learning. It would be a greatservice if we were told why there is noModel UN.Mark Woostudent in the collegeCorrectionIn the Oct. 19 article on sculpture in andaround campus, the sculpture incorrectlyidentified as Pulcinella II is actually the SunDial at Henry Hinds Laboratory for the Geo¬physical Sciences. Pulcinella II is instorage. The Maroon regrets any confusioncaused by the error.The caption on a photo on Tuesday’s frontpage incorrectly named the members of theBaker Commission who met with studentsMonday. The members pictured were (fromleft to right): Chairman Keith Baker, RalphNicholas, Susanne Rudolph, Stephen Toul-min, Wayne Booth, and Harold Wechsler.The Maroon regrets the error.The Department of ChemistryThe University of ChicagoandJ. T. Baker Chemical Co.presentthe fifth of theNobel Laureate Lecture SeriesPerspectives for the Future"Molecular Biology in the Studyof Light-Transduction"to be given byH. Gobind KhoranaRecipient of the 1968 Nobel Awardin Physiology/Medicine5:30 p.m.Monday, November 8, 1982Mandel Hall57th Street and University AvenueThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, October 29. 1982—7Contacts for Sale!What Is A Bargain?The 4 questions most frequently asked about contact lenses are:1 How Much Are Your Lenses92 How Much Are Your Lenses73 How Much Are Your Lenses74 How Much Are Your Lenses7What is really more important, the lowest price, or the best fit¬ting lenses? We think the 4 questions should be:1. Is the doctor really a contact lense specialist7(or is he an eyeglass salesman ?)2 Can I expect professional service and care7(or will I be handled by inept, non-professional salespeople?)3 Are the quality of lenses the best available7(or are they off-brands and seconds?)4 The question is, not how much are your lenses, butwill I receive the best care, the best quality and thebest price.We at CONTACT LENSES UNLIMITED meet all the above crite¬ria of CARE, SERVICE, QUALITY’ AND PRICE.TRY TO BEAT THESE VALUES!SUPER-WET BAUSCH&LOMBFLEXIBLE SOFLENSONLY $29.00 B,N,F,J SERIESSuper-thin highly wet- only$33.75table lens specifically Basic series of lensesdesigned to correct that Bausch & Lombthose patients who built their reputationwere previous hardcontact lens failures on.• NEW SUPER SOFT HIGH OXYGEN TRANSFER ULTRATHIN - $43.75New super-soft highly oxygen transferable lenses used to correctthose patients who were previous soft lens failures• SUPER WET TORIC CORRECTING FOR ASTIGMATISM -5100.00The same remarkable material as the super-wet flexible lenses but spe¬cifically designed to our exact specifications to correct for difficult as¬tigmatism• SOFT LENSES CORRECTING FOR ASTIGMATISM (TORIC) - *160.00If you have ever been told that you couldn t wear soft lens due to astig¬matism now you probably can• EXTENDED WEAR LENSES - $ 160.00The ones you sleep with, no more cleaning, sterilizing nightly no moredaily Insertation and Removal, wake up in the morning and seeLimit 1 pair per patientProfessional fee additional(includes - Eye Examination. 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IL 60201(above County Seat)864-44418—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, October 29, 1982 THE HEDWIG LOED FELLOWSHIPFOR UNDERGRADUATERESEARCH IN THE COLLEGEResearch Proposals Now Being Accepted for theWinter and Spring Quarters of 1983.Submit Proposals to: Dean of the CollegeHarper 241Deadline: November 19, 1982Proposals must contain a description of the projectand research method, on estimated budget indicatingthe quarter it is to be used, and a letter evaluatingthe proposal from a member of the Faculty.For research that requires use of a University facility(e.g., laboratory), a letter agreeing to this use must besubmitted by an appropriate member of the Faculty.Awards may range up to $600.00*5*" Annual AwardSophomores with strong academic recordand experience in government and/orpoliticsBecome a Truman ScholarTHE SCHOLARSHIPPROGRAMHarry S. Truman Scholarships,which honor the thirty-third Presi¬dent of the United States, areawarded on the basis of merit tostudents who will be collegejuniors in the forthcomingacademic year and who have anoutstanding potential for leader¬ship in any phase of government.Each scholarship covers eligibleexpenses of tuition, fees, books,and room and board, to a maximumof $5,000 annually for up to fouryears.HOW TO APPLYColleges and universitiesnominate students for TrumanScholarships. Obtain informationfrom the Truman ScholarshipFaculty Representative on yourcampus, *or inquire at the Presi¬dent’s office.DEADLINEOfficial nominations must be sub¬mitted postmarked on or beforeDecember 1.CONTACT(Mrs.) Nancy O’ConnorHarper 261-962-8623BEFORE NOVEMBER 10 ELIGIBILITYTo be considered for nomination, astudent must:• be a sophomore pursuing abachelor’s degree on a full-timebasis. A student in a two-year col¬lege who plans to transfer to a bac-calaureate program may benominated.• have an average of at least B and bein the upper fourth of his or herclass.• be a U.S. citizen or a U.S. national.• have selected a major that will per¬mit admission to a graduate pro¬gram leading to a career ingovernment.• have a demonstrated interest in acarrer in government at the federal,state, or local level.• be nominated by his or her collegeor university on the officialnominating materials provided bythe Harry S. Truman ScholarshipFoundation.SELECTIONApplicants will be judged on theirsubmitted credentials. Semi¬finalists will be personally inter¬viewed by Regional ReviewPanels.SPONSORThe Harry S. Truman ScholarshipFoundation, 712 Jackson PlaceNW, Washington, DC 20006.k i* k < (») l i + > lViewpointsAdlai Stevenson IIIBy Tom Powers andGretchen WinterThe most important race for Illinois in the upcoming election is therace for governor. Voters will be able to indicate their preferences inthe gubernatorial race on both ideological and practical grounds. Gov¬ernor Thompson’s political beliefs as well as his ability to lead Illinoisgovernment have been clearly demonstrated during his many years ofpublic service and make him the only choice in the race. His major op¬ponent, Adlai Stevenson, the Democratic candidate, is notable only forhis lack of any understandable set of political values and his failure toperform while in public office.While Thompson sees his own role as governor as that of an innova¬tive leader, his view of state government combines a belief in effectiveand responsible management of resources and programs with compas¬sion for the individual. Thompson’s record here is the best indication ofthis dual commitment.Keeping with his desire to bring order and sound management to Illi¬nois government, Thompson has held fast to his effort to check govern¬ment spending. The overall result has been to reduce the tax burden onIllinois residents without jeopardizing vital public services. In No¬vember, 1980 the governor ordered a freeze on state hiring, and sincethat time the number of state employees has been reduced by more than3000. The Governor Cost Control Task Force, made up of top Illinoisbusiness executives, found over $410 million of waste in the state bud¬get, and Thompson took immediate steps to cut out those funds. More¬over, no general tax increases have been approved since Thompsontook office. He has also promoted and signed into law a 50 percent re¬duction in the state sales tax on food and drugs, tax exemptions on farmmachinery and equipment, and tax exemptions on certain business ma¬chinery and equipment. Testimony to Thompson’s sound fiscal manage¬ment is the fact that Illinois is one of only two industrial states with aAAA bond rating (only eight states in all have this rating).While Thompson strives to keep the state budget as light a burden tothe citizens as possible, he has consistently worked to see to the needs ofthe poor, the unemployed, the elderly, and women. Public aid is avail¬able to those who need it while welfare fraud is being more successfullycountered. Having worked to get labor and business to cooperate,Thompson has helped save thousands of jobs, while jobs have beencrested by the new and renewed tax incentives for Illinois industry.Governor Thompson acknowledges the need to give the labor force vo¬cational training and has been committed to attracting new businessinvestment to Illinois as a means of decreasing unemployment and thestate’s obligation to provide welfare. Thompson’s commitment to theneeds of elderly citizens is evident in unprecedented tax relief and assis¬tance in paying utility bills. Under Thompson, Illinois has the nation’sforemost in-home health care program and has expanded the number ofnutrition centers across the state.A long-time supporter of the Equal Rights Amendment, GovernorThompson has implemented many programs which will help guaranteewomen’s rightful position in society. He has seen to the funding of thefirst domestic violence centers (27 in all) in Illinois. He drafted, sup¬ported and signed legislation making it illegal to deny housing, credit,or employment on the basis of sex. He has also strengthened child sup¬port laws for women, prohibited discrimination against women in hisadministration and repealed unfair inheritance taxes. By extending“Class X” anti-crime legislation to include rapists, and through therape shield law, Governor Thompson helped in the effort to aid rapevictims and keep rapists off the streets.In addition, the state government’s role extends into education, agri¬culture, and law enforcement. With clear vision the Thompson Adminis¬tration has addressed the needs of the state in each of these areas.Governor Thompson is a strong supporter of high quality educationfor all and has taken steps to secure assistance to those who pursuehigher education. Though enrollment in elementary and secondaryschools has declined 19 percent during Thompson’s six-year tenure, ed¬ucational funds have increased by 37 percent. While the federal govern¬ment is cutting back on aid to higher education, the Thompson adminis¬tration has built a state student financial aid program which is second inthe nation in aid granted to college students. The governor has alsosigned into law the creation of a new loan authority which will provideup to $200 million in low-cost loans to Illinois students.To provide vital aid to farmers, Thompson worked for legislation de¬creasing the assessment of agricultural property and removed the statesales tax from farm machinery and equipment. He has also instituted aprogram to control soil erosion and has, by executive order, protectedprime farmland from undesired development. He has pushed for newmarkets for Illinois agricultural products by opening export offices inEurope, Asia and South America. His administration also created theIllinois Food Expo, which has drawn the attention of other states to Illi¬nois agriculture.As US Attorney for Chicago, Thompson gained valuable insights intoquestions of criminal justice. As governor, he has instituted a policy ofgetting habitual and violent criminals off the streets and into peniten-taries. He instituted the “Class X’’ anti-crime policy which requires im¬prisonment for felony convictions and carries mandatory sentencing.He has also increased prison space in the state to ensure that lack ofroom does not hamper the state’s ability to punish criminals and keepthem out of society. Today 78 percent of the inmates of Illinois prisonsare violent criminals — this figure is the second highest percentage ofincarcerated violent offenders in the nation.While Governor Thompson has dedicated the past dozen years to serv¬ing the citizens of Illinois well and with vigor, his major opponent, AdlaiStevenson, has played the political game successfully without accom¬plishing anything of lasting importance. During his two terms as a USsenator, Stevenson acted neither as a statesman concerned with nation¬al issues nor as a spokesman for his constituents. He voluntarily left theSenate, decrying the lack of leadership in his own party. Returning toIllinois, Stevenson has been embroiled in intra-party politics and is for¬mally allied with the backers of Richard Daley, Jr. The Byrne-DaleyContinued on page 25 James ThompsonBy BUI SullivanWhen the voters go to the pools this Tuesday, Nov. 2, they will be facedwith a striking choice of candidates. They will be faced with a choicebetween a governor who has plunged one of the nations most promisingstates more deeply into economic depression than any other, and a can¬didate who proposes to turn Illinois around.Democrat Adlai Stevenson, a born and bred Illinois politician, hasrisen to prominence with a reputation as an intelligent, devoted, andhard-working public servant. Stevenson has served Illinois well in thelegislature, state treasurer’s office, and in his two distinguished termsas a United States Senator. Finding a start with his family name, Ste¬venson has gone on to earn his own reputation. His record far outlaststhat of his opponent, Republican James Thompson, who, after steppinginto office with no political experience, except his work as a prosecutorfor the US Attorney’s Office, has managed to lead Illinois to the bottomof the nation’s economic charts.Illinois, currently leading the nation in unemployment, also leads thenation in business failures and housing problems. But there are otherproblems as well. Though it possesses a great abundance of human andnatural resources, Illinois has failed to capitalize on any of the recentspurs of economic development. Over the last decade, none of the fifty,fastest growing companies in the nation have been located in Illinois. Ofthe country’s one hundred largest “entrepreneurial” firms, only threeare to be found in Illinois. None of these three are less than fifteen yearsold, which dates them long before Thompson. Saddest of all, 95 percentof Illinois’ venture capital leaves the state, to say nothing of the fact that85 percent of the engineering PhD graduates from the University of Illi¬nois leave the state as well. Illinois is facing enough economic problemsas it is.Under the Thompson Administration, our prospects for redevelop¬ment — our young people and our economic assets — are going to otherstates. Thompson calls himself a “Tough Leader for Tough Times.”That times are tough seems quite apparent. What is not so obvious is thepresence of a leader.Adlai Stevenson, former state legislator and two-term US Senator,has long since recognized these problems for Illinois, and is now theDemocratic candidate for governor. Thompson, whose campaign fo¬cuses more on his superficial image than the condition of the state,promises to continue the status quo. But Stevenson has stepped forwardto address these serious issues. Stevenson has put his depth, his intelli¬gence, and above all, his experience, into the formulation of the Steven¬son Strategy.Stevenson realizes that in order for Illinois to emerge from the statusit has attained under Thompson, it must become competitive with othereconomically active states such as California, Florida, and Texas. Illi¬nois has the resources. The only thing that can account for its actualperformance, says Stevenson, is a “paralysis of its politics.” Stevensonoutlines a nine-point strategy.Stevenson will begin, as he always does, with careful planning. Hisnew Economic Development Commission will analyze the prospects forcompetition and will propose the steps necessary to attain it. As he didwhile chairing the Select committee, which streamlined the Senate, Ste¬venson will work to relax regulations on business as a means of cuttingcosts. His plan also calls for the renovation of the state’s outdated bank¬ing laws that make it more difficult for Illinois residents and businessesto transact between counties than out of state.Stevenson will additionally address the problem by the creation of anew, modern Electronic Funds Transfer System (ETS) and a statewidebanking authority, coordinate inner and interstate banking transac¬tions, as well as encouraging a foreign market in Illinois.The banking policy is also important with relation to other parts of theStevenson Strategy. Stevenson sees the development of technology as akey to developing business. Himself a graduate of Harvard law school,Stevenson feels the need for education to improve the quality of the na¬tion’s work force. In the Senate, Stevenson has supervised most of thenation’s technological ventures, including development of the spaceshuttle. The Stevenson-Wydler Act will spur cooperation between pri¬vate industry and colleges to advance technology.Small business, exports, and basic state infrastructures, industrialwaste disposal, and transportation, will be stimulated by improvementin the banking laws. Illinois’ housing problems will receive a boost fromStevenson’s property tax reform proposals and his plan to revert theflow of new capital from pension funds.But the most appealing aspect of Stevenson’s plan is the cost. Steven¬son offers no quick-fix solutions, no lucky-strike Republican tax cuts,and is not asking for an increase in revenues beyond his infrastructureprograms. What he does propose is to make better use of existing gov¬ernment resources. Stevenson sees government as a catalyst in the newwave of prosperity that he will help to create. Once prosperity has beenrealized, Stevenson forsees a role as a coordinator between labor, man¬agement, and government.There has been much discussion within the Chicago Tribune with re¬gards to the image of each candidate. Thompson is portrayed as tough,while Stevenson is left as a “wimp.” For all of the superficiality of thisdiscussion, these images can be examined in light of actual policy. TheAlexander Grant Company has recently published a survey ranking Illi¬nois among the least desirable states with which to do business. WhileThompson concentrates a great deal upon his own image, he seems tohave done little for the image of the state.But Stevenson feels that the state should play an important role in itsown economic development. He is a realist; he sees that Illinois mustcompete with other states in order to prosper. In contrast to the statusquo, Stevenson intends to bring about a more effective use of state gov¬ernment. His plans are bright and imaginative, yet realistic. They aretempered by his years of experience in serving Illinois as a legislatorand senator. Stevenson realizes the potential role for state governmentin meeting its own economic problems. Stevenson will seize that oppor¬tunity for Illinois on Nov. 2.Bill Sullivan is a third year undergraduate in political science. He is amember of the U of C Democrats.The Chicago Maroon—Friday, October 29, 1982—9The Chicago Maroon- -Friday October 29,1982JGREY CITY JOURNAL29 October 1982 • 15th YearFor 23 years Allen Grossman has been aprofessor of English at Brandeis University,and, I'm told by one of his colleagues, he is afavorite among undergraduates there. Hehas published four books of poetry, A Har¬lot's Sire ('61), The Recluse ('65), And TheDew Lay All Night Upon My Branch ('73),and most recently, A Woman on the Bridgeover the Chicago River ('79), as well asAgainst Our Vanishing ('81), a book of con¬versations about the meaning of poetry withcolleague Mark Halliday. His work has ap¬peared in a variety of publications, includ¬ing The New Republic, the Paris Review,Partisan Review, Ploughshares, and Poet¬ry. On October 21st he gave a reading inHarper 130, and I interviewed him the nextday.He spoke, even in his small quarters in theQuad Club, in a stentorian voice. Hi,sthoughtfully chosen words pointed to a life¬time of thinking, speaking, and writing onthe subjects of our discussion, and his fre¬quent interjections of a sound halfway be¬tween a laugh and a snort formed a com¬mentary of constant qualification. He wasserious, at times almost tortured, and,though he was not without a sense of humorthat day, his dryness ran to bitterness. Lis¬tening to him, one is struck by the impres¬sion that life for Allen Grossman must be avery painful proposition. This, perhaps, istoo bad for Allen Grossman, but it has beenunquestionably fortunate for poetry.— Judith SilversteinPoetry then & nowJS: I want to start off by asking you aboutyour theory of poetry: what it's for and howthat has changed historically.AG: What poetry was for long ago is not li¬kely to be the same as what it's for at thepresent time. Long ago it carried what thehuman community had discovered aboutthe world across time, and there was noother means for doing that, or few othermeans.JS: So it was a kind of journalism.AG: No. Journalism has as its subject thenews — that is to say, the impermanentfacts about the world. Long ago, the functionof poetry was to transmit the permanentfacts about the world across time. Scripturewould be an example of the preservation ofthe permanent facts of the world, the irre¬futable discoveries of the human communi¬ty about the terms of its existence. At thesame time that it transmitted the basic factsof the human world, the fundamentalstories, it also functioned to do honor to thedead, to make it possible to remember thegreat actions of persons. At the present timethere is an enormous quantity of techniquesfor conserving the discoveries of the humancommunity. Through publication of allsorts, through the transmission of imageselectronically, the facts of the world andimages of the present and past are nowtransmitted and exchanged. But since poet¬ry no longer functions as the exclusive medi¬um for conserving the central stories of theculture, it has become specialized towardthe conservation of the evidence of the valuebearing life of the person, the business ofmaking presence. That is to say, of, not somuch remembering, but making present tomind the fact that there is or had been some¬one in the world. Because poetry is now al¬most exclusively lyric, and lyric rotates onthe axis of the first person singular, the I,and the I is always the person speaking thesentence, poetry at present by and large at¬tempts to give persuasive evidence of thevalue bearing existence of the person.JS: Value bearing existence?AG: Value bearing existence. That is to say,it is one thing to know there are persons inthe world; it is another thing to know thatthey are precious. The two do not immedi¬ately, ahem, coincide. It is a peculiar fact ofWestern civilization that the existence ofthings and their value or meaning are notborn at the same moment. The child is notborn, not baptized, a citizen, is not born an object, even, of love, as we see in the disputeabout abortion. That is to say, not everyfetus is a person. The business of assigningpersonhood and therefore value bearingprivilege is something that the culture does.Poetry now is specialized toward this busi¬ness of the assignment of the value of theperson to the biological facts of being.JS: And novels and movies, other art forms,are not involved in this business?AG: Some of them are. But poetry is specia¬lized toward this function, whereas thenovel, for example, does a great many otherthings. You can test this by asking yourselfwhether you are, for instance, entertainedby novels — on the whole, you are — andwhether you are entertained by poetry. Ithink the term is inappropriate.JS: The entertainment factor.AG: The entertainment factor. Poetry doesone hard thing. It is not entertaining. I thinkthe novel does a great many things. It mayalso do this thing, but poetry strikes me as amore realistic form of writing. It arises outThe RunnerThe man was thinkingAnd about the moon. of the necessities, the inevitabilities, of aspeaking self engaged in the business of es¬tablishing its own precious being in theworld.Poetry and politics: feminismJS: That ties in with the recent trends in fe¬minist and gay poetry.AG: For the feminist, poetry has becomethe scene of the search for the voice of thewoman as it is distinguishable from thevoice of the man. This is not inconsistentwith what I was saying before, since the fe¬minist, the gay, the black, and others arepersons the value of whose nature as theperson they are is not acknowledged by thegreater culture.JS: So in the sense of giving value bearingpresence to people who it wasn't acknow¬ledged held it, poetry has political implica¬tions.AG: That's right. Insofar as poetry is thescene in which the person assigns or re¬ceives acknowledgment of his presence, his,about his mother ah, value status, poetry is extremely impor¬tant to persons and groups of persons whoregard themselves as being deprived of thefull status of the person, and this, lament¬able, includes women and, on the whole,most of the people in the world. So it's thevalue asserting function of poetry, onceagain, that becomes central; it's the reasonwhy the feminists are concerned with it. Thequestion arises, and I'm not sure whetherit's soluable at present, or soluable at all, asto whether the poetic culture, which is over¬whelmingly patriarchal in its history, pro¬vides any access for women to the power oftheir nature, that is to say, whether there'sany presence it can confer.JS: I have a teacher who said that the move¬ment has opened up "a rich new source ofpoetry."AG: Well, I don't know. Maybe it has. Haveyou seen the poetry? Does it really moveyou?JS: Well, I've seen more poetry of late bywomen, good poetry, but the question of itsrelationship to the feminist movement is acomplicated one.AG: Yes. Whether if you listen you can hearthe woman's voice, the woman's voice as extricated from the overtones of the, ah, maledominant speaker, I do not know. If anyonehas done anything in this line, it is AdrienneRich. But I am very much in doubt whetherI can hear that, though much literary criti¬cism is concerned with the woman's voiceand its extrication.The voice of the poet & the eye of themotherJS: Well, let's change the subject to yourvoice. You're not a woman.AG: No, I'm not. My business is first of allthe central business of the poet, the disclo¬sure of a voice capable of commanding therespect appropriate to a person.JS: So your personal experience enters yourwork?AG: My personal experience is the only sub¬ject that I have for my work, since it wouldnot be consistent with my project of provid¬ing one example of a person if I used any¬thing else. It provides the only facts of theworld that I know for sure. My problem, thepoetic problem as I address it, is to discoverthe facts of my world and then to discoverthat they are honorable. It is one thing to lieabout the facts of one's being in the interestof some kind of dignity not properly one'sown, not authentically one's own, it's an¬other thing to discover in an unashamedway, in a clear-sighted fashion, the facts ofmy world, and to find in those facts honorand dignity.JS: May I intrude just a little bit on thatworld to ask you about your mother? She ap¬pears quite a bit in your work.AG: She is important in my work. You findit in Of the Great House, in the poem called"Bowspirit," a id in "Woman on the Bridgeover the Chicago River."JS: And in "The Runner."AG: And in "The Runner."JS: Can you explain what she is or what sherepresents to you?AG: Well, from my mother's body, like ev¬eryone else in the world, I came.JS: (laughs) Other than the fact of your ex¬istence.AG: Since I am interested in how people become capable of acknowledgment, andsince it is the eye of the mother who firstawakens the child's sense of personhood,and since there is some sense in my own ex¬perience of privation, or inadequate ac¬knowledgment, I am engaged almostalways in one way or another with the busi¬ness of trying to search out this first glance,and attempting to become conscious of thenuances of that glance, to find the initial pri¬vation or the initial abundance and repeatwhat was in it that brought me into being.JS: That privation, then, is the source ofyour poetic identity?continued on page 4it was a mild night.He was running under the stars. The moonHad not risen,but he did not doubt it wouldRise as he ran.Smaii things crossed the roadOr turned uneasily on it. His motherWas far away, like a cloud on a mountainWith ra*ny breasts. The man was not a runnerBut he ran with strength.After a while, the moonDid rise among the undiminished stars.And he read as he ran the stone night*$criptureOf the moon by its own light.Then his motherCame and ran beside him, smelling of rain;And they ran on all night, together,Like a man and his shadow.From The Woman on the Bridgeover the Chicago Riverby permission of the author.New Directions, 1979AN INTERVIEW WITH ALLEN GROSSMANTHE • FALCON • INN1603-05 East 53rd St. • Just East of the 1C tracks10:30 AM-2 AM•5 Draft Beers . *A Full Range(Old Style, Miller Light, of MixedStroh’s, Augsburger DrinksDark&MIchelob) •Kitchen open(Fine hamburgers &•3 Draft Wines assorted sandwiches•On “B” busroute - 53rd &Cornell •Juke Box &Video Games(Including Pac-Man, Ms.Pac-Man, Donkey Kong& Centipede)The Falcon Inn is proud to restore toHyde Park the magnificent antique barand fixtures from The Eagle. Come in tovisit these old friends, and sample HydePark’s newest tavern.NEWSSTANDS ]3000 DIFFERENT U.S. AND FOREIGN PERIODICALS |OUT-OF-TOWN SUNDAY NEWSPAPERS ■3000 DISTINCTIVE GREETING CARDS 1POSTERS - POSTCARDS - PAPERBACKS |3 LOCATIONS ALL OPEN 11L MIDNIGHTHYDE PARK LINCOLN PARK ROGERS PARK51$T & LAKE PARK CLARK AT DIVERSEY DEVON & BROADWAY684-5100 883-1123 743-1444We Bring The Whole World....TO YOU2—FRIDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1982-THE GREY CITY JOURNAL KingstonMinesFri. & Sat.Oct. 29 & 30Lonnie BrooksBlues Showfamous recordingartist ofAlligator RecordsSun., Oct. 31 Big Time Sarah's Halloween PartyCome on down & join the funMon., Nov. 1 JamTues., Nov. 2 Big Time Sarah Blues BandWed., Nov. 3 Mark Hannon Blues ShowThurs., Nov. 4 Valerie Wellington Show$1 off admission with current college I.D.TEE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO COLLEGIUM MUSICUM PRESENTSMUSIC OF5€ V€NT€€NTH-C€NTU RYGERMANY€ ICHT£€NTH'CfNTURY& FRANCEJSBACH6CHUTZ'DORN€l'RAMFAU'60TfFRSTHE COLLtGICM MUSICUMMARY SPRINGFELS DIRECTORFRIDAY' 2 9 OCTOB6R ' 1982EIGHT P-M-CUDDSreeD RECITALHALL FRCC AND OPENTO THE PUBLIC/\ Mi1111 i i 11 i i i rrr \- Saturday at 2:30: A landmark in animation. A movie that capturesthe full irony and bitter tradegy of George Orwell’s vision of theRussian Revolution: ANIMAL FARM.Then at 7:15 and 9:30: Louis Malle’s highly acclaimed film, that capturesa conversation between Wallace Shawn and Andre GregoryMY DINNER WITH ANDRE, (sep. adm.)Sunday at 7:30: Kenji Mizoguchi’s serenely beautiful film with a strongfeminist consciousness: PRINCESS YANG KWEIFET. Followedby a talk by noted Japanese film expert and translator of Kurosawa'sautobiography AUDIE BOCK.A1I Films in Cobb HallQ*/J^DOC FTT MS\ -k/vyVj X lJL/iTiOJ1 III Ill \ i ) ul -r* 7MlROTDuring the summer of 1981 Chicago artist John Kim-mich took a 2Va format camera on a tripod into the Hum¬boldt Park area of Chicago, placed it between himselfand the environment, and shot over 70 rolls of film. Heencourtered the people, the buildings, the spaces ofHumboldt Park; the primarily hispanic and black work¬ing class residents, the small children, the restless teens,the adults; the rows of worn brick bungalows, the apart¬ment buildings with multi-storied wooden backporches,the local grocery, diner, barber, machine shop, withsigns misspelt or in Spanish; the backalleyways, over¬grown like prairies with long grasses, dotted with litter;the heedless graftitti of energetic youth, scrawled hereand there. The black and white photographs as recordsof his experiences are part of a larger documentary proj¬ect originally funded by a Neighborhood Arts Projects grant from the Chicago Council on Fine Arts.Kimmich could not help but be a conscious, deliberatepresence in the community. All the photographs of peopie are composed portraits. But these, as well as the unpeopled shots, represent not so much Kimmich's intrusion into the community, as his not-unqualif ied inclusionWe can sense Kimmich’s presence in the gaze of his subjects; we can feel their reservations and apprehensionsThe buildings and streets of the neighborhood are presented in a sometimes formalistic architectural perspective, yet always with an almost reverent respect.Approximately sixty of John Kimmich's photographswill be on exhibit through November 13 in the East Gal¬lery, first floor, of the Chicago Public Cultural Center, 78E. Washington St. Admission is free. —8/VIMISCGidon Gottlieb, An expert in international law and diplomacy will give a talkentitled “Have we 'lost' WesternEurope," on Tues. Nov. 2nd at 7:30pm., in the International House ho¬meroom, 1414 E. 59th St.CLR Hallowe'en Happening will featurea fun fraternizing reception, live jazz,and readings (at least one of them toeerie musical accompaniment). Apartfrom being a blast, this happeninghopes to prove that the U of C studentbody is not creatively dead, and thatpublic presentation of student art ispossible (regularly, successfully).Anyone interested in a livlier campusshould catch the spirit tonight, Friday,at 7:00 pm. in the Reynolds Club firstfloor theater. — KFFILMBeauty and the Beast (Jean Cocteau1946) Fri., Oct. 29 at 7:30 and 9:30 p.m.1-House Films, 1414 E. 59th St. Resi¬dents of I House $1, General Admis¬sion $2.Animal Farm (John Halas & Joy Batchelor, 1954) “All animals are equal,but some animals are more equal thanothers." Seventy artists collaboratedon Halas & Batchelor Studio's faithful(notwithstanding a somewhat revisedfinal episode), but disappointingly un¬imaginative animated version of Or¬well's political satire. Not that theiranimation wasn't superb. The artistscontributed over 750 scenes and 300,000independent drawings. But the rigorous, and, under the circumstances(this was Britain's first full-length car¬toon venture), understandable adher¬ence to conventional animation stylesdiluted Orwell's full satiric flavor. Aclassic nonetheless. Sat., Oct. 30 at2:30 p.m. Doc. $2 — PFMy Dinner With Andre (Louis Malle,1981) Sat., Oct. 30 at 7:15 and 9:30 pm.Doc. $2.Princess Yang Kwei Fei (Kenji Mizogu-chi, 1955) Sun., Oct. 31 at 7:30 pm. Fol¬lowed by a talk by Audi Bock. Doc.$2.Bride of Frankenstein (James Whale,1936) Bride is probably the most wide¬ly acclaimed early gothic horror film— it was certainly James Whale'smost successful (the same directorbrought us Frankenstein, InvisibleMan, and Man In The Iron Mask).Franz Waxman's score, Whale's wry,gentle sense of humor, and the finallaboratory sequence in which Pre-torius and Frankenstein concoct amate for Karloff (ala Elsa Lanchester) have each become horror-filmclassics — admired, copied, or lampooned by nearly every subsequentdirector in the genre. Still the bestscene, however, occurs when the Mon¬ster learns the pleasures of food,drink, music, friendship, and a goodcigar in the sanctuary of a blind fid¬dler's hut. Only one reservation: theMonster speaks. As Karloff laterwrote, "If the Monster had any impactor charm, it was because he was inar¬ticulate ... The moment he spoke, theymight just as well have played itstraight." Sun., Oct. 31 at 8:30 pm.LSF. $2 — PFRio Grande, John Ford's 1950 film aboutcolonel York (John Wayne), his wife(Maureen O'Hara), and their son(Claude Jarman) — estranged sincethe Civil War — centers around theprocess of assimilation. This processis revealed, on a sociological level,through the interrogation of the basi¬cally agrarian Southern culture (as re¬presented by Mrs. York's submissionto her Yankee husband) into the moreurban and bureaucratic Northern cul¬ture (as represented by the U.S. Cal valry, especially the "John Wayne"character). On the psychological level(and Rio Grande is probably Ford'smost psychologically complex work ofthis period) the process of assimilationis much more violent. Through subtlereferences — references both withinthe film text itself, and outside the textto his earlier film, especially FortApache — Ford draws an analogy be¬tween the savage Indians (i.e. the vitalforces which remain unassimilableinto civilization: in psychologicalterms, the Id) and the innocence ofchildhood/youth. Thus, when near thefilms conclusion a group of childrenare kidnapped by the Indians, it is nec¬essary for the calvalry — commandedby the father figure — to slaughter the"savages" in the process, thereby sav¬ing the children from both the Indiansand the savages within themselves.Seen within the Ford oeuvre, or takenas an individual text, Rio Grande re¬mains an interesting and complexwork, directed by a man who, faced with a world changing radically andwith alarming rapidity, turned from adeveloping community to an unchang¬ing military for the embodiment of hisideal. Mon., Nov. 1 at 8 pm. Doc. $1.50— RMLittle Shop of Horrors, the I960 ultra lowbudget horror movie will kick off thisweekend's Halloween Film Fest atFacets Multimedia, Inc., located at1517 W. Fullerton Ave. Little Shop ofHorrors was made in ridiculously littletime (2'/z days) by Roger Corman, thefounder and head of New World Pic¬tures and once one of the most interesting and influential operators in Hoilywood: in addition to producing anddirecting over 40 films within the pasttwenty years, he has also sponsoredsuch new talents as Coppola, Bogdanovich, and Scorsese. Although thismovie is a rather clumsy and visuallybanal account of a florist employeewho develops and nurtures a new species of plant life by feeding it humanflesh, it has gained somewhat of a pri¬vileged position among film cultistsand cinephiles. This limited popularityis partly due to the movie's vulgar pulpish shine, and partly because it's a"Corman" movie (some critics haveeven ushered in Eliade in order to ex¬plain the unique schtickisms of Cor-man's oeuvre). While Little Shop ofHorrors is certainly not the pick of theCorman litter and is itself somethingof a "hybrid," a cannibalization infact, of Corman's earlier and more in¬teresting movie A Bucket of Blood, it isstill an unpretentiously horrible flick,most m-' iiacal and enjoyable when itis mostly gratuitous and absurb. With Jack Nicholson. Showing Sat. andSun., Oct. 30-31 at 4 and 10 pm.Gerges Franju's Eyes Without A Faceis a horror film about a mad plasticsurgeon who, after disfiguring hisdaughter, kidnaps young girls in orderto restore her beauty. French directorFranju has been working steadily inthe cinema since the late forties, in¬sisting, as David Thompson says, "onthe throb of surrealism in the matter-of-fact." Judex (1963) is probably hismost balanced and best known work.Eyes will be screened Sat. and Sun. at5:30 pm.Nosferatu, W.F. Murnau’s 1922 filmabout the Dracula legend, is consi¬dered a classic of the horror film genreand is one of the few surviving films ofthis talented German born director.While Murnau's art transcends genre,and while ultimately he was wastinghis talent on so direct a horror film,Nosferatu effectively conveys Mur¬nau's concerns with urbanization, sex¬ual expression, and unconscioushuman motivations. Max Schreckstars as Count Dracula, the aristocrat¬ic vampire who threatens to disruptboth the harmony of a young couple'smarriage and the city's communalorder, until the film's conclusionwhen, with quintessentially Germannarrative finality, love and the socialfabric are restored. Showing Sat. andSun. at 7:15 pm.Jacques Tourneaur's I Walked With aZombie is, as Movie critic Robin Woodhas pointed out, probably one of theearliest works in the horror genre tointelligently and creatively incorporate a critique of Western civiliza¬Grey City Journal 10/29/82Staff: Abigail Asher, Nina Berman, Curtis Black, Pat Cannon, Pat Fin-egan, Keith Fleming, Sarah Herndon, Michael Honigsberg, Richard Kaye,Madeleine Levin, Marla Martin, Richard Martin, Beth Miller, Mr. andMrs. Movie, Pat O'Connell, Paul O'Donnell, Maddy Paxman, 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: Steve Diamond, Nadine McGann, David Miller.Editor: Nadine McGann. 4tion's bsic infrastructures: the family,capitalism, racism, repression, etc. —concerns which appear later and morefrantically in the films of Carpenter,Romero, and Depalma. Set in theWest Indies, Zombie relates the storyof a nurse who arrives at the plantation of a wealthy Englishman to carefor his catatonic (i.e. possessed) wife.With a running time of only about 75minutes, this movie, though modest,cheap, and quick, still radiates narrative imagination and visual invention.Zombie also demonstrates Tourneur'sadept ability to reveal the horror in theeverday. Showtimes are Sat. and Sun.at 8:45 pm.To get to Facets take the North boundHoward El to Fullerton, then take the#74 Fullerton Bus west about 6 blocks.Facets will be on your left. Allow aboutone hour for travelling. Admission toall shows is $3. For further information call 281-4114. — RMWim Wenders Retrospective A completeretrospective of the work of this German filmmaker, tracing Wender's career, will run from Fri. Oct. 29 throughThurs. Nov. 11 at Facets Multimedia,1517 W. Fullerton Av. Admission $3, $2for Facets members. For a completeschedule call 281 4114.THEATERYou 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 "ratio¬nal" 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.The Merry Wives of Windsor The FreeShakespeare Company is re-openingShakespeare's comedy about Falstaffin love, on Friday October 29. Directedby Jeff Watkin. Performances are Fridays and Saturdays at 11 pm., throughNov. 13. Piper's Alley Theatre, 1608 N.Wells. Tickets $4; for reservations andinformation call 337 1025.The Hostage The DePaul/GoodmanSchool of Drama's 1982-83 seasonopens with this Brendan Behan playabout the I.R.A.'s seizure of a Britishhostage and occupation of a Dublinhouse. Opening night Thurs. Nov. 4 at 8pm., with previews Nov. 1-3, also at 8pm. Performances Tues.-Sun. at 8pm., with additional matinees Sundayat 2:30 pm. DePaul PerformanceCenter on the Lincoln Park Campus.Tickets $5, $4.50 for students. For in¬formation call 321 8455.Company The American Conservatory'sPerformance Department opens the1982-83 season with Steven Sondheim'smusical about a single man studyingthe lives of his married friends.Directed by Ted Liss and, Dennis Mae,with Melissa Shiffles as music director. Opening night Fri. Oct. 29 at 8 pm.Performances Fridays and Saturdaysat 8 pm., through Nov. 13, in CollinsHall, 116 S. Michigan Ave. Tickets $6,$5 for students. For reservations andfurther information call 263 4161.ARTThis weekend, if you want to see superb collections of modern art, stop bysome North Side galleries. The paintings and sculpture at the RichardGray Gallery and Frumkin and StruveGallery, both at 620 North Michigan,are outrageously priced, but definitelyworth the visit. Richard Gray is openTuesday through Saturday from 10 to5:30. It has an impressive modern collection including works by: Jean Arp,Alexander Calder, Henri Matisse,Robert Motherwell, Arshile Gorky, Al¬berto Giacometti, Jean Dubuffet, Milton Avery, Paul Klee, Louise Nevelson, David Smith, Sam Francis,Wilhelm deKooning, Hans Hofmannand Claes Oldenberg as well as several less well-known artists. The settingis posh to the point of sterility and theproprietors are far from friendly toimpecunious college students, but barring that, it has a lot to offer. The mostvaluable pieces in the collection, acontinued on page aTHE GREY CITY JOURNAL-FRIDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1982-3. ' • i ' i > . • i *«#.,! i I t k , t ■} C l * / » I > - V-continued from page 3Calder mobile and an Avery waterCol-or, are prominently displayed.Frumkin and Struve, also at 620North Michigan, is open Tuesdaythrough Friday from 10 to 5:30 andSaturday from 10 to 5. This gallery issimilar to Richard Gray in that it spe¬cializes in modern art. The collectionis perhaps less "impressive,” thanRichard Gray's, but includes quite agood photography collection, as wellas the works of many dynamic, unk¬nown artists.The Richard H. Love Gallery andthe Circle Gallery are across thestreet from each other at the intersec¬tion of Michigan and Ohio. The LoveGallery specializes in 18th and 19thcentury American oil paintings, butthey also have an impressive moderncollection. This gallery is devoted en¬tirely to oil paintings and reminds oneof rambling through a few wings of theArt Institute. The proprietors aremuch friendlier than at Richard Grayor Frumkin and Struve. They aremore relaxed and casual; perhapsthis is so because the gallery issmaller and privately owned andoperated. The owner is an unassum¬ing, jovial man of about fifty who isquite gregarious and open to questionsand comments. He isn't at all conde¬scending or obnoxious, like those atGray and Frunkin and Struve. Thecombination of a fantastic collectionand a pleasant atmosphere, makesthis gallery particularly appealing.Directly opposite from the LoveGallery is the Circle Gallery, wherethe atmosphere is similar to that ofFrumkin and Struve and RichardGray. The Circle Gallery's spacious,high tech design gives one a cold andalmost uninviting feeling. Their col¬lection, however, is the best of the pre¬ceding three because it is both wide-ranging and well chosen. They havenot only oil paintings and watercolors,but also sculpture, blown glass andlithographs. They have especiallygood collections of works by Agam,Erte and Chagall, as well as NormanRockwell lithographs and original Coining soon to the Riviera: Richard BuTler/Psyc. Frs.Walt Disney cartoons. They also carrylimited edition posters and litho¬graphs which are priced from ten dol¬lars.The art these galleries have to offeris both eclectic and superb, so even ifyou don't have a few grand to spare,it's fun just to look. —Sabrina FarberEva Hesse: A Retrospective of theDrawings This exhibition is devoted tothe drawings of influential sculptorHesse, a leading exponent of "Post-Minimal" or "Antiform" art. 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: Deco¬rative Arts from the Ottoman Empire.An exhibition of over 200 works of ce¬ramics, metalware, textiles, paint¬ings, and calligraphy from the 16thand 17th centuries. The show runsthrough December 5. At the David andAlfred Smart Gallery, 5550 S. Green¬wood. Open 10 am to 4 pm Tuesdaythrough Saturday. Noon to 4 pm. Sun¬day. Free.Andrea Blum: Recent Drawings, andElyn Zimmerman: New Work An ex¬hibit of recent work by these two ar¬tists currently living and working in New York. Blum, formerly of Chicago,presents us with mixed media draw¬ings, mostly serial drawings com¬prised of 6 to 10 units. The works dealwith her continuing exploration of pitinstallations. Zimmerman's drawingsare photo emulsion and graphite onmylar in plexiglass boxes. MarianneDeson Gallery, 340 W. Huron. 787 0005.Gallery Hours: Tues.-Fri. 10-5:30; Sat.11-5.Hung Jury An exhibition juried by theartists that entered. Opening Fro. Oct.29, at 5 pm. Through Nov. 27. NAB Gal¬lery, 331 South Peoria. 733 0886. Gal¬lery hours: Tues.-Sat., 11:30 4:30. The Graveyard Show Opening receptionSun. Oct. 31 at 5 pm. Whitehead Studi¬os, 210 S. Clinton, 7th Floor. 559 0898.MUSICThe Visitors An up and coming RockBand that has played at a variety ofclubs on the North Side and in 'deburbs. Repertoire includes New Wave,Rock, and original material. SpecialHalloween Tunes on Sat. Oct. 30 at 9pm., $3. Refreshments and prizes,especially for 'Valley Girl' imitations.I House, 1414 E. 59th St. —RGGROSSMANcontinued from page 1AG: I am perfectly assured that, had theglance of the mother been a look which filledme without doubt with a sense of my ownbeing, I would not be a poetic speaker. It isthe privation of that look that pitches meinto speaking and hearing. There is a cer¬tain bitterness about the paradox that findsthe motive to—JS: That she gave by not giving—AG: In some sense, yes. She did not give mewhat a mother can give, a fully creationalglance; at the same time, she set me thetask of recovering what was not received bymeans through which it can only be reco¬vered imperfectly.The peculiar thing about artJS: In other words, you can't make up forwhat she didn't do, but you can producework of value in the continual attempt.AG: Well, presumably one is continually at¬tempting to compensate the absence of thatinitial creational glance, and I think it's per¬fectly clear that the symbolic means whichlanguage affords is incompetent of compen¬sating that glance, so that something istaken away and its recovery is granted oneon the terms of the execution of a task, butthere seems no manner in which that taskcan be performed which is finally capable of fulfilling its motive. The peculiar thingabout art is that it is not organized to bringabout the goal which is its motive.JS: Art is always inadequate to its ideals?AG: To its motives, to its purposes.JS: What are those purposes?AG: Well an artist is always full of pur¬poses. The radical wishes to wake every¬body up, the value centered poet such as Idescribe myself is concerned with confer¬ring what mothers may have withheld uponhis audience, the romantic poet is concernedwith governing the world, the Yeatsian poetwith the transformation of the natural intothe supernatural — and none of these thingsare effected. They cannot get done. There isan enormous dissonance between the goalsof art and evidence of the outcome of the ex¬istence of art in the world. The poet is setupon on an errand which is necessary to lifebut which he does not have the means to per¬form. That irony must account in the pres¬ent age for a lot of the frustration which peo¬ple experience in the presence of poetry.Poetry promises a great deal more than itfulfills. That may be deep in its nature.JS: Is there more frustration now than inthe past with poetry?AG: In the present decade poetry seems tobe an utterly unmanifest power. Its audi¬ences are audiences found in universities,they're very artifical audiences. Reader-ship is very small. The practice of poetry ismore widely honored than its reception.There are more people who write than there are who read.The Future of PoetryJS: What's the future of poetry?AG: Poetry requires that there arise poetsof strength. We do not have any major poetsin America at the present time, though wehave quite a number of very good ones. Weneed two things with roughly, um, equal ur¬gency as a practical matter. We need poetswho have the courage of the high style andthe strength of poetry, poets with voices thatare not muted or timid. We need strongpoets committed to the art, and we need per¬sons capable of judging the difference be¬tween good and bad poems. There is no crit¬ic in the contemporary world whosejudgement means anything to me whatso¬ever.JS: Well, you're a critic.AG: I'm not, strictly speaking, a critic. In¬sofar as I do academic work I'm a philosopher, or a world describer, or a poem de¬scribes but I do not set myself up as aperson who makes judgements—JS: Are the standards obsolete? What's theproblem with these critics?AG: Well there are no standards for poetryat the present time. The business of the crit¬ic is to make judgements, ah, the history ofwhich constitute the basis for inferring stan¬dards. At present, as I say, there is no person making judgements about poetry whosejudgement makes a difference. This is a peculiarity of the present last decade or two. The High Modern Period was founded onpoet-critics whose judgements made largecultural sense. At present, we have theoristsbusy constructing the fundamental parameters of existence, and we have a diffuseworld of poets, all whom are fleeing the ma¬jority of one sort or another, and in-betweenwe have a kind of demi rnonde of persons between scholars and criticism.TeachingJS: Here's a U of C question: what placedoes poetry have in a liberal arts curricu¬lum? What can a poet bring us?AG: Well, the rock-bottom thing that a poetbrings to the curriculum is his craft knowl¬edge. Since the passion to write poetry is aperennial motive of the young, there mustbe present someone who has the craftknowledge to facilitate the actualization ofthis motive. To have poetry writing taughtby persons who have never written a poemof stature is absurd.JS: How do you teach poetry?AG: Teaching is a ceremony of access. Iteach poetry by attempting to make clearand transmissible sense out qf it, and thenby following my procedures for makingsense out of it back into the nature of at¬tempting to communicate. Above all, theteacher is supposed, and this teacher under¬takes, to provide the example of one personfor whom poetry has made some sort of ben¬eficial sense. The teacher is a paradigmaticreader.4— FRI DAY^aCTtDBE1987-ATHC’GREY, C<TX JOURNA1*’G , V‘‘’'SjPfR)**'SCHLITZ'S GUESTSIN TORONTOFOR THE LASTPERFORMANCE OFTHE WHO'S 1982NORTH AMERICAN TOUR.This may be your last chance to see inperson one of the world's great rocklegends. Be there.Schlitz will send 2 winning couples (winner plusa friend) to Toronto. You’ll receive airfare, hotelaccommodations in Toronto for 2 nights, ticketsto THE WHO concert, dinner both nights insuperb Toronto restaurants, a souvenir album,limousine service to and from the concert and spending money."THE WHO" 1982 TOUR SWEEPSTAKES OFFICIAL RULES. NO PURCHASE NECESSARY1. To enter, hand print your name and address on the official entry form or on a 3 x 5" piece of paper and mail to:THE WHO 1982 Tour Sweepstakes. PO Box 4290. Libertyville, Illinois 60048 ENTRIES MUST BE RECEIVED BYNOVEMBER 30.19822. No purchase required Enter as often as you wish, but each entry must be mailed separately.3. Winners will be selected in a random drawing conducted by H Olsen & Co . an independent |udgmg organization,whose decisions will be final Grand prize winners will be notified by December 10th. all others will be notified byJanuary 31,1983 All 552 prizes, worth approximately $16,000 00. will be awarded Limit one 111 prize per householdOdds of winning determined by the number of qualified entries received4 Sweepstakes limited to residents of the USA. except employees and their immediate families of Stroh BreweryCo., its affiliated companies, advertising and promotional agencies, and H Olsen & Co . other suppliers andwholesale and retail alcoholic beverage licensees and their families Sweepstakes void where prohibited orrestricted by law Entrants must be of legal drinking age in their state of residence at time of entry. Any taxes are thesole responsibility of the prize winners5 All entries become the property of the Stroh Brewery Co , and none will be returned Winners will be notified bymail No substitution of prizes Taxes on prizes are the responsibility of the winners• The geographic area covered by THE WH01982 Tour Sweepstakes is nation, ide with approximately 5.000 retailoutlets participating For a list of Grand and First Prize winners available after January 31.1983. send a separateself addressed stamped envelope to THE WHO" 1982 TOUR SWEEPSTAKE' WINNERS UoT. PO Box 4290^ 1 personal portablecassette playerH with a cassette of• “It’s Hard: THE1 WHO’s latestrelease.• 500 Second PrizeWinners receive THE ^XTIO’s latestalbum, “It’s Hard,” plus a Schlitz WHOtour T-shirt.Schlitz is back with the taste that’s rockingAmerica. Try the clean refreshing taste ofSchlitz... or pour yourself the new SchlitzLight, brewed light to stay light all night long.I 1THE WHO 1982 TOUR SWEEPSTAKESBox 4290Libertyville, IL 60048Name(please pnntlAddress.City State.. Phone No.self addressed stamped envelopeLibertyville. Illinois 60048 ENTRIES MUST BE RECEIVED BY NOVEMBER 30th. 1982TO BE ELIGIBLE©1962 JOS SCHLITZ BREWING COMPANY MILWAUKEE Wlm, —THE GREY CITY. JOURNAL~.FR I DAY, OCTOBER 29, 1982—5MINISTRYPROGRAM-JOINTDEGREEPROGRAMINSOCIALWORK RABBINICAL SCHOOL-GRADUATE SCHOOL-SEMINARY COLLEGE OF JEWISH STUDIES-CANTORSJEWISH STUDIES IAT ANY LEVEL IIN JERUSALEM—IN NEW YORK |Visit for a semester with credit *nor enroll in a degree program. £Open to all academically qualified "students. For information on opportunities ”call or write. "rCONSUMCD PROFESSOR ISMAR SCHORSCH, Provost and Professor of JewishHistory at the Jewish Theological Seminary will be speaking at theHillel House on Friday, October 29, at 8:30 P.M. If you wish to speakto him about a Jewish Studies Program come to the lecture and makean appointment.THE JEWISH THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY OF AMERICA3080 BROADWAY, NEW YORK, NY 10027(212) 678-8832 m§C/3X2cC/3n1C/3c22msosnoioma-NOiiviLLsiNiwav toohds avq ni INVMDOHd-WIAVTVHSna3A 13HS3HaDN-STOOHDSSHAWGeorge Bernard Shaw’sYOU NEVERCAN TELL...a witty skirmish inthe war of modern romanceNow—October 31Wednesday-Saturday, 8:00Sunday, 2:30 & 7:30962-7300VISA MCDining Discounts at Gallon 's Restaurant“(JC students just $3 with ‘Student Rush’COURT^THEATREUniversity of Chicago 5535 S. Ellis Avenuest. gRegoRg op nyssalatbeRan paRi'sbat the uniuGRsity of ChicagoWorshipping in Traditionaland Modern FormsSundays at 10:00 a.m.Graham Taylor Chapel5757 S. University Ave.Please join us forMartin Luther'sdecitscbe messefestiual of the nefonmotionOctober 31 by John AndrewMost of us were lured to the Uni¬versity of Chicago by the promiseof a unique experience in generaleducation. When and if weemerged from the College, wewould be armed with an integratedarsenal of knowledge with whichwe could attack any problem in the"real world." After all, as all of thecollege brochures tell us, the Uni¬versity of Chicago is not an ivorytower but an intellectural fortwhich merges into the real ghettoworld surrounding the quadran¬gles. Yet after struggling throughthe first year of requirements,many students realize that the bat¬tle is not only in the "real world,"but also in the college itself: how tosurvive the muddle of seeminglyfoolish and useless courses we needin order to get a B.A.The College curriculum appearsas unalterable as the stone of theAdministration Building and as oldas the Greeks. But what studentsand even faculty often do not real¬ize is that small changes in curricu¬lum and faculty occur daily. Thesetransient changes occur within anadministrative structure which de¬fines the rules of the game. The ad¬ministrative structure is reorgan¬ized rarely: William RaineyHarper set the foundation in the1890's and Robert Hutchins and Ed¬ward Levi shook that foundation inthe 30's and 60's, respectively.Now, in 1982, Hannah Gray, underthe guidance of a committeechaired by Barry Karl, is again'reopening the debate on the organ¬izational structure of the College. Ifthe College is reorganized accord¬ing to the plan proposed by the KarlCommittee Report, the core andthe entire College curriculum couldeventually undergo dramaticchanges.On November 19, 1981, Graywrote a letter to the committeeasking its members "to define andlocate the faculty's responsibilityfor undergraduate education" andto think "about the college's pro¬gram as a whole." Further, theywere "to review and evaluate theadministrative structure of the col¬lege" and to make "recommenda¬tions on the organization of the Col¬lege." The Karl committedproduced a 21 page report thatcalls for a far-reaching reorganiza¬tion of the divisional governingcommittees and the creation, fromthese committees, of a college¬wide faculty council which can ef¬fectively legislate changes in thecollege. "The central principle" asstated in the Karl Report, "is tobring direct faculty governance tothe College, to make such gov¬ernance as taken for granted (inthe College Council) as in the De¬partments." Ultimately, this pro¬posed shift in power will allow theCollege Council to redesign thecore and college curriculum and tolay the basis for a more coherentgeneral education than what theCollege of the University of Chica¬go has offered in the past.This implies that, in the past, theU of C's general education has beenlacking coherence. To see what hasbeen and still is incoherent aboutthe College curriculum and to un¬derstand why the Karl Commit¬tee's proposed redistribution ofpower is groundshaking it is neces¬sary to look at the last reorganiza¬tion of the University under Levi. In 1965 Levi, who was Provost ofthe University, became the actingDean of the College after DeanAlan Simpson resigned to becomethe president of Vassar College. Atthat time the College of the U of Chad a separate faculty, of about 300members, which taught exclusive¬ly in the college. Part of Levi's planwas to integrate the College andUniversity faculties. He wanted tobreak the college into five differentcollegiate divisions, each under itsown master. By this reorganiza¬tion, he hoped to lure professorswho previously had taught only ingraduate courses into accepting ajoint appointment in both the Col¬lege and the University. His firstnotion was to set up separate col¬leges based on the integrated (Col¬lege and University) divisions sothat the entering students wouldtake courses in a College in Artsand Literature, College in PublicAffairs, and Colleges in theSciences.With help from a faculty Com¬mittee, Levi found a new dean ofthe College — Wayne Booth. Boothand Levi then appointed masters ofthe new collegiate divisions and together they designed a new curric¬ulum which would integrate thespecialized instruction the gradu¬ate professors offered with the gen¬eral education offered in the Col¬lege. Booth and the mastersdevised a further plan which wouldrequire students to take a coursecalled Liberal Arts I in their firstyear, Liberal Arts II, the second,and so on. This plan fit in withLevi's desire for students to haveat least a year in common, so thatall students shared a common coreof experiences.The College Council debated overLevi and Booth's proposed changesfor several months. Finally, aftermuch feuding among the faculty,although no consensus had beenreached it was necessary to com¬promise so that the course descrip¬tion booklets and orientation pam¬ phlets coulstudents,changes wlege was ddivision —left essentcided to rthe followiNow, 16CommitteeThe Karlplauds thelege andgiving pnments butThe revthat re<mainedimportation offacultygoverniilege-wicprovide*lege wituency trate bocreplacethe gov<the coliethe direand theits comiand its sworkingother (itAt the samization enlCollege toUniversityed and neaCouncil's <renovate tHence, thegeneral edCurriculi16 years H6—FRIDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1982—THE GREY CITY JOURNAL1 1 V r TV 1 if -V \y2 m. s 1 tL r f niHjgffl i i| p J; m J a¥ hKmbl jIFE OF THE BLIND> could be printed and sent tonts. Levi's organizationalles were instituted — the Col-i/as divided into the collegiateon — but the curriculum wasisentially unaltered. They de-to review the compromiseMowing year./, 16 years later, the Karllittee has begun that review.Carl Committee report ap-; the integration of the Col-md University faculties byprofessors joint appoint-but protests thatrevolution produced byreorganization has re-ned incomplete in a veryortant sense. The aboli-of the separate Collegeilty did not replace that?rning body with a col-wide counterpart thatMded the Dean of the Col-with a faculty consti-cy to lead. The two sepa-bodies that did, in fact,ace the College faculty —governing committees of(ollegiate divisions under(direction of the Masters(the College Council with(orr.mittee of the Council(its spokesman — have no(/ng relation to one an-(-fitalics mine).(ametime that the reorgan(enlarged the faculty of the(to include almost all of the(ity's professors, it restrict(lenrly abolished the CollegeH's ability to integrate and(g the College Curriculum,■the lack of coherence in our■ education.Hiulum changes for the past■s have been made a1 the level of departments, and althoughin theory the College Council hasthe power to review and veto cur¬riculum changes, in practice — be¬cause its constituency does not rep¬resent the variety of departments— it often is completely unaware ofcurriculum discussions in the de¬partments. The College Councilhas dealt only with larger issues,such as approving new concentra¬tion programs — HIPPS, the Com¬mittee on Public Affairs andASHUM — and approving the drop¬ping of concentrations in the divi¬sions. But it has been difficult forthe College Council to promote newcourses in the divisions or createinterdisciplinary courses across di¬visional boundaries. The CollegeCouncil has been an amorphousand uninfluential body.For example, five or six yearsago, several faculty memberswanted to create the Human Beingand Citizen sequence, but ther wasno procedure for dealing with acourse which integrated two divi¬sions. So the governing committeesof the Humanities and SocialScience Division held meetings atthe same place and the same timeand simultaneously ratified thenew course. It seems absurd thatthe idea for this course was not in¬troduced, debated and then imple¬mented by the College Council, buta realistic view of the Councilshows that it does not have the au¬thority to initiate questions aboutcross-divisional courses.The Karl Committee Report pro¬poses to rehabilitate the CollegeCouncil by two organizationalchanges. First, the Report sug¬gests reorganizing the constituen¬cies of the Governing Committeesof the Divisions so that they “rep¬ resent not only the Collegiate Divi¬sional Faculties, but also the curri¬cular interests of the College andthe Departments." The Master willselect three individuals who teachin General Education courses, theDean will appoint three individualsto represent the concentrations,and the Divisional Faculty willelect three additional members.Second, these Governing Commit¬tees will represent the faculty on acollege-wide council with the addi¬tion of four individuals appointedby the Dean, who will represent in-terdivisional programs.The Karl Committee then states:“After consultation with the facul¬ties of the Collegiate Divisions, theCouncil should have the authorityto alter core requirements, autho¬rize concentrations, and set re¬quirements and educational rulesbinding and affecting all stu¬dents."If this reogranization plan isadopted, the College Council willundoubtedly emerge as a strongbody which could force radicalchanges in the core and in otherareas of the College curriculum.The Council could serve as a focalpoint at which disparate parts ofour curriculum could be broughttogether. The Council could moreclearly define paths the studentcould take through the curriculumwhich are better suited to her/hisabilities and interests. Possibly theHumanities major could takescience sequences which are moreimmediately connected to her/hisinterest. The Physical Sciencemajor could take Social Sciencecourses wnich examine social phe¬nomena vchich are connected to thestudy of geology or physics. TheCouncil — better informed on col¬ lege curriculum issues and inter¬ests — could also oversee the orga¬nization of, and increase theavailability and diversity of, con¬centration courses throughout thedepartments. In short, a powerfulCollege Council could make ourgeneral education relevant to ourspecific interests.Unfortunately, the report is am¬biguous about how much authoritywill be lodged in the DivisionalGoverning Committees as opposedto the College Council. Which bodywill be able to veto or accept pro¬posals over the other? Will recom¬mendations of the Council prevailover the objections of the Divi¬sions? Clearly, some facultymembers will want to retain theautonomy of the Divisions, al¬though the report strongly suggeststhat the College Council will be theultimate sculpters of the CollegeCurriculum.This suggestion is implied in theKarl Committee's recommenda¬tion “that the responsibilities of theDean of the College be extended,and his authority confirmed, inseveral crucial areas." The Com¬mittee asks that the Dean of theCollege have “administrative re¬sponsibility," for the Masters ofthe Collegiate Divisions, the Deanof Students, and the Dean of Col¬lege Admissions and Aid. “TheDean should also participate" ac¬cording to the Committee, "in theestablishment of priorities for fac¬ulty hiring and promotion. TheDean should be given “specificbudget accounts that would enablethe College to pay for the instruc¬tion time it receives, to support De¬partments in meeting their obliga¬tions to the College and to aidfaculty who take part in what is inthis institution, a labor-intensiveforum of undergraduate instruc¬tion."If the Dean is granted the lasttwo powers, he or she will havegreat control over who teaches inthe College. The Dean could push for tenure for professors who arenot spear heading research in aspecialized field, but who are sim¬ply good college teachers, devotedto the needs and concerns of under¬graduates. If the Dean were pro¬vided with specific budget acounts,it might be possible (although thereport is very vague about this) forthe Dean to encourage more of thefaculty to teach the time-consum¬ing core courses. Overall, the Deanof the College could function in amanner similar to the way the Pro¬vost functions over the entire Uni¬versity.What is conspicuously absentfrom the Karl Committee Report isany mention of student views oropinions. Currently the most effec¬tive student voice is heard throughthe course evaluations with whichwe end each quarter. Surely stu¬dents have valuable opinions aboutcourses, their departments, andthe curriculum as a whole that thefaculty should hear before the stu¬dents are finished with the courses.But for students to be able to intelli¬gently discuss issues such as thereorganization of the College Ad¬ministration and the contest of theCollege curriculum they must firstbe informed. And the most effective and most democratic way toinform students is to create, withinthe reorganization of the Collegeadministration, an integrated stu¬dent-faculty body.When I began this article, / intended simply to discover what our twonew Deans — Levine and Sinaiko —thought about political and organ¬izational problems that l perceivedin the college. It became, much tomy surprise, an analysis of theKarl Report. A forthcoming arti¬cle, which will attempt to find outwhat is really going on, will furtherexplore the curricular implicationsof the Karl Report and will incorpo¬rate Dean Levine and Dean Sinai-ko's views on the College curricu¬lum.*THE GREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1982-7Rockefeller9 amEcumenical Service 'of Holy Communion11 amUniversity ReligiousServiceIsmar SchorschPresident & Dean of the Jewish•Theological School, New York CityTheOrganization of BlackStudentspresentsHALLOWEEN,part raLights & Music By-Sting Ray-Free RefreshmentsOnly $1.50 in advance;$2.00 at the doorSaturday, October 308:30 pm Until ?Ida Noyes Hall Theatre1212 E. 59th Stfunded by SGFC n%HR American Optometnc AssociationDR. IM.lt. MASLOVOPTOMETRIST• EYE EXAMINATIONS• FASHION EYEWEAR• ALL TYPES OFCONTACT LENSESASK ABOUT OUR ANNUALSERVICE AGREEMENTLOCATED INTHE HYDE PARKSHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th363-6100 FarSastKlfcbto 1654 E. 53rd955-2200Weekly LuncheonSpecial:Sweet & SourBBQPork,Fried rice, soup& Tea11 am - 2:30 pmTues-Sat *2.39 Trysomethingdifferent:•Sa Dea Chicken•Duck & Noodles•Sea Food Chop Suey•Szechuan ChickenVie accept major credit cards.Ilow to lake tlu» plungewithout taking a hath.Most people, when they decide to get engaged, feel like they're inover their heads! Especially when it comes time to pick out a diamond.If that's how you feel, S.A. Peck & Co. is the perfect lifesaver! First,S.A. Peck sells only the finest diamond rings, using diamonds that havemet rigid standards for quality and appearance. So you can be sure, fromthe start, you are getting a quality diamond ring.Secondly, we offer a guarantee. Should you want to return yourring, within fifteen days, for any reason at all, you'll receive a completerefund, no questions asked.Finally, the S.A. Peck system eliminates the middleman, meaning youbuy your diamond ring for approximately 50% of what you would pay forthe same ring at competitive jewelry stores. And at a time like this, thatkind of value is a comforting thought!Send for our free 44 page color catalogtoday. It has full color pictures of over 300wedding and engagement rings all avail¬able to you at savings up to 50%!Or, visit our diamond showrooms at 55 EastWashington Street, Chicago. It'll makeyou feel a lotless jumpyabouttakingtheplunge!SAFeck&CaPlease send my free catalog and buytrs card.NameAddress .City. _ State ZipSchoolVisit the S.A.Peck & Co. Showroomat 55 E. Wellington St., Chicago, IL 60602312/977-0300fc—PR I DAY,' OCTOBER 29; 19821—THE GREY CITY 'JOURNALWOMEN: A CALENDAR OF EVENTS■ BaBaBSaaaaaBBaa .....••••••■•••••■••■•••••••••■•II■•■■■■•■■•■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■Il|IBaBiaiaaaaaaaaBaaaaaaaaa■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa mini■ 29thLesbian Community Center Hal¬loween Dance at the Second UnitarianChurch, 656 W. Barry; 8 pm. to 2 am.S3 in costume, $4 in advance, $5 at thedoor.S 30thPicket of the Bulls first home game atChicago Stadium: 6:30 pm. For moreinfo, call 726-3803 before 3 pm. or262-7638 after 3 pm.mumWomen of Color Month: Tuesdaynight programs at Women and Chil¬dren First, 922 W. Armitage. For info,call 871-7417.W 3rdWomen Sponsored Worship at Gra¬ham Taylor Hall, Chicago TheologicalSeminary, 5757 S. University at 1:15pm. I" 5thHolly Near in Concert at the GranadaTheater, 427 N. Sheridan Rd. at 8 pm.Tickets are available at Women andChildren First, 871-7417.d 6thDrama, dance, writing and musiccreated and performed by women ofcolor. All women welcome. JaneAddams Bookstore, 410 S. MichiganAve., 2nd floor; from 4-6 pm.S 7thThird anniversary sale/potluck atWomen and Children First, 922 W. Ar¬mitage. For info, call 871-7417.M 8thSack lunch with Susan Henking whowill talk on "Misogynism and Secular¬ly: Van Herrick on Freud," in Room200 of Swift Hall at noon. Sponsored bythe Women's Caucus of the DivinitySchool.T 11thWomen's Union Coffeehouse: Music,poetry, refreshments created and per¬formed by women. Any women whowish to contribute by performingshou d not hesitate to call Sally at684 8650. It takes place in the Libraryof Ida Noyes Hall at 8 pm. All womenwelcome.Brown bag seminar: Ironing, a filmbased on the short story by TillieOlsen, at Northeastern Illinois Univer¬sity, 5500 N. St. Louis Ave., Roomcc-217 at 12:30 pm. r 12thWomen's N ight at Luxor Baths. A benefit for Chimera, from 8:30-12:00. $15.For info, call 332 5540.S 13thWomen Employed 1982 Annual Con¬ference. This conference will exploreorganizing, litigation and politicalstrategies for the future of theWomen's Movement, featuring speak¬ers and workshops. At the AmericanaCongress Hotel, 520 S. Michigan Ave.,from 10 am.-6:30 pm.; $10 in advance,$15 at the door. For info, call782 3902.Until She Talks, a film by Mary Lamp-son about a woman trapped in theGrand Jury System. At the School ofthe Art Institute Film Center (Colum¬bus Dr. and Jackson Blvd.) at 5:30, 7,and 9 pm.; $3 donation.Forum on Grand Jury Abuse withMarilyn Katz and Lew Meyers. At theArt Institute Film Center, (ColumbusDr. and Jackson Blvd.) at 8 pm."Looking at the Life Cycle for Profes¬sional Women...and Their Partners"A seminar which will identify and ex¬amine problems experienced bywomen facing major transitions intheir personal and professional lives.Sponsored by the Program on Womenand the Graduate Program in Coun¬seling Psychology of NorthwesternUniversity; at Anderson Hail, 2003Sheridan Rd., Evanston, from 9 am. to2 pm., $35. For info, call 492-7360.Carole Etzler will perform her musicat Graham Taylor Hall, Chicago Theo¬logical Seminary, 5757 S. University.Tickets are $2. For info, and ticketscall 643 4468. d 14thKate Clinton, a feminist humorist, willperform at Cross Currents, 3204 N.Wilton at 8 pm., $3.50 (plus a two drinkminimum).I 16thFeminist Study Group: Women inElective Politics, at the Women's Stu¬dies Program Resource Center ofNortheastern Illinois University, 5500N. St. Louis Ave. at 6 pm.w 17thFeminist Writer's Guild will give areading at the Artemnisia Gallery, 9W. Hubbard St. at 7 pm.■ 19thFerron in Concert: a Canadian musician, she will perform at Stages MusicHall, 3730 N. Clark St. at 8 pm. Ticketsare available at Women and ChildrenFirst, 871-7417.S 20thPuppeteer Elizabeth Goldsmith Con¬ley will give a puppet show adaptedfrom traditional fairy tales at JaneAddams Bookstore, 410 S. MichiganAve., 2nd floor at 2 pm.M 22ndSack lunch with Paula Barker whowill speak on "Motherhood of GodImages in Julian of Norwich," inRoom 200 of Swift Hall at noon. Spon¬sored by the Women's Caucus of theDivinity School. ■•■■■••■■■■•■■■■a■aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaMitiantiaiaiiM■ saiMitaaBaMiai■•••■■■••■•■■••■a•aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaeaasaeaeeaaaeeaeaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa*aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaMBHMMMH•••••ajaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaThis calendar was compiled by Kathy Hudson and Madeleine Levin of theWomen's Union. All women are welcome at our meetings, held every Wednes¬ day at 7 pm; library hours are Wed. 5-7 and Thurs. 7-9. Drop by, or call 753-2481.Our office is in Ida Noyes Hall. aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa IIaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaMMlaatiMMi"aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaajjiii jiiaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaBeaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaeaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaeaaaaaaaaiiiii jiiiiiiSi jjii jiigiiiaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaBaaaaaaaaaaaaaBaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaBaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaanaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaBaaaaaaaaaiii iiiiiaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaraaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaBBaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaBaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaeaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaiaaaaaaa aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa aaaaaaaaaa aaaaaa aaaaaaaaaaaaeaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaBaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaBaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaeaaaaaaaaaaeaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaeaaaaaaaaaaaa aaaaaaaaaaaaaa aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaiaaa aaaaaaaaaaaaa aaaaaaaaaaa aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaBaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaBaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaiaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaanaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaeaaaa aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaeaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaiaaaaBaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaiaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaBaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa■ aaaaaaaaaaa a a aaaaaaaaaa aaaaaaaaaa aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaiaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaeaaaaaaBaaaaaaaaaaaaaa aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaMY COLLEAGUE, YOU DENOUNCE US WHO HAVE NO VISIONbut 1 would tell you of my dream,where Basho kneels by my feetat the bank of the Monongahela,and whispers, “O Riverteach me to stop laughingat my own loneliness.**IN SLEEP, LINES CAMEI have stopped seeingmy love & started perceiving her:it is early autumn in the seasons.In sleep lines came:A woman and meis a woman and me and me— POETRY IS NOT POWERto bloomthat turks-cap lilyleft of myfront step,mottled leaves curledon themselves — that delicatetouch of petal on stem, butwhen I read you that love poemwhere I dive into myselfand surface with white kisses,ending with the iine, wl singto you of breathlessness.”—our roomwas flooded with petalsand buds, some unfolding, a fewsettling in our hair.POEMS BY JOHN SCHULMANGITY JOUftNAl^-F^ipAV-, OCTOBER 1982—9JAZZ: AROUND TOWN AND ON THE AIRDouglas Ewartby Marc MosesAllen Eager was not a name which struckme as at all familiar when I saw that he wasbeing featured at the Jazz Showcase a fewweeks ago, but then again the ad read"Tenor Sax Legend (1st Time 30 yrs)." Ashort article in the same issue of the Readerintrigued me enough that I decided to go seehim on Saturday night. When I arrived atthe Blackstone Hotel, where Joe Segal'sJazz Showcase is now located, I found that itno longer occupied the main ballroom whereit had been situated for the last couple ofyears. The Showcase now resides in therather spacious bar/lounge of the Black-stone. This new setting is quite pleasant,though the atmosphere is much closer tothat of a posh nightclub than the formeropenness of the ballroom of which l wasrather fond.Eager was appearing with the Lou Levytrio, a group of which I later learned hadbegun playing together the previous day.Levy, on piano, was accompanied by twolocal musicians, Larry Gray on bass andWilbur Campbell on drums. From the mo¬ment that the three of them began the sec¬ond set it was apparent that this was not thekind of rhythm section in front of which justany saxophone player would look good. Thetrio proceeded to play a number of tunes, cmoving through them at a comfortable ostride; yet there was also an intensity which gmanifested itself in their solos. Gray gener- £ally drew the loudest response from the au qdience, displaying an amazing technical andmusical virtuosity on the bass. Campbellwas by contrast quite restrained, consider¬ing that on other occasions I have seen himclose to dismantling his drum set.This was not a background against whichEager stood out. Rather, he stood quite stilland watched the room move around him ashe played. It was, in every regard, just thesort of stance one would expect from some¬one who has spent part of his life as a racingecar driver. It was not hard to see how hemust have looked behind the wheel of a rac¬ ing car, in calm control of the action. Listen¬ing to him play, however, it was clear thathe was at least as comfortable holding asaxophone as a steering wheel. In fact, theonly actual indication that this was, for him,a return to playing iazz was his collection ofcharts to which he would occasionalyrefer.His playing was spectacular, yet it wasimpressive without being at all flashy. Therichness and clarity of his tone betrayed a natural ability with the instrument whichhad clearly not decayed over the years. Hisplaying had a very West coast sound, butwithout a lot of the fireworks that often ac¬company that style. His sound was at timesreminiscent of Art Pepper, without beingquite so spicy. I asked him afterwards if hewas now playing seriously or whether thiswas only a special appearance. "I'm try¬ing," he responded, "I'm trying." Fortuna¬tely, I think he'll succeed.ALBUMS: ALIENATION, ROMANCE, AND A BLASTLove Over GoldDire StraitsWarner Bros. RecordsTimes are tough for would-be romantics— just listen to Love Over Gold, the newalbum from Dire Straits. On Making Mov¬ies, the band's 1980 effort, the irrepressible,almost calculated, romanticism of singer-songwriter-guitarist Mark Knopfler reju¬venated a hackneyed world of mysteriouswomen, carnival locales, and lost loves. 1982finds Knopfler singing with romance in hisheart, but no money in his pockets. WhileMaking Movies was animated and unifiedby its own timeless romanticism, Love OverGold is almost torn apart by the clash be¬tween Knopfler's misty romanticism and1982's stark materialism. Love Over Gold isan album of antagonisms — the antagonismbetween those with a heart and those with abankbook, the antagonism between love andgold."Telegraph Road," the opening track, isfilled with the lyrical and musical tensionswhich characterize the entire album. AsKnopfler's lyrics move from the frontier vi¬tality of the past to the economic failures ofthe present, his guitar, paced by PickWithers' drums, races ahead toward an ex¬ultant finale. Hard times may have robbedKnopfler's lyrics of their customary ro¬mance, but hope manages to live on in thebombast of a guitar solo. Hope is conspi¬cuously absent from "Industrial Disease";when even "Jesus gets industrial disease,"cynicism is all that remains. Yet, Knopflerencases his bitter sarcasm in an irresistiblepop hook; economic ruin has never soundedlike so much fun. The tension between musicand lyric is once again apparent in thealbum's best song, "Private Investiga¬tions." As Knopfler returns to a world ofmystery and romance — the world of a pri¬vate detective — John lllsley's insistentbass line forebodes imminent evil, an evilwhich the song's final, obliterating guitarchords eventually deliver. Love Over Gold is fascinating in its ownschizophrenia, in its musical battle betweenthe romantics and the realists. But, in theend, there are no doubts as to where MarkKnopfler's sympathies lie:It takes love over goldand mind over matterto do what you do that you mustwhen the things that you holdcan fall and be shatteredor run through your fingers like dust.Once a romantic, always a romantic.Over There, Live at the Venue LondonThe BlastersSlash/Warner Bros. RecordsOver There, the new album from TheBlasters, is a bewildering disappointment.On this live, six-song EP, The Blasters re¬verentially, but for no apparent reason,pound out a batch of rock 'n' roll classics.Sure, "High School Confidential" is a greatJerry Lee Lewis song but, that's the point —it's a great Jerry Lee Lewis song, not agreat Blasters song. The same is true forRoy Orbison's "Go, Go, Go" and EdwinBruce's "Rock Boppin' Baby." None ofthese cover versions is bad, there's just nopoint in releasing an album of cover ver¬sions that sound just like the originals. Ifyou want Jerry Lee Lewis, put Jerry LeeLewis on the turntable.But, if you want The Blasters, play TheBlasters. On their debut album of last year,the brainy lyrics of Dave Alvin, the mourn¬ful crooning of his brother Phil, and the en¬ergetic accompaniment of a band of veteranrock and rollers managed to bring rock-a-billy into the 1980s. Conversely, Over Thereoffers nothing but nostalgia. The Blastersare more than just another rock-a-billy band— they are originals. So why release analbum that is anything but original? Saveyour dancing shoes and your money for thenext real Blasters album. The EnvoyWarren ZevonAsylum RecordsWarren Zevon still covers the same terri¬tory — the political, emotional, and oftensudden violence of everyday life — but he'snot shouting about it anymore. WhileZevon's previous albums, the classic Excit¬able Boy and the mediocre Bad Luck StreakIn Dancing School, were propelled by theirown threatening bravado. The Envoy, as thetitle implies, is a more diplomatic offering.Warren Zevon hasn't calmed down, but hehas taken his finger off the trigger. As a re¬sult, The Envoy, while not as nervously ex¬plosive as Excitable Boy, manages to comeacross as Zevon's most compassionate andmost sincere album.It's the love songs, not the tales of para¬noia, which make The Envoy a memorablealbum. From the hilarious pathos of the jilt¬ed vacationer in "The Hula Hula Boys"I didn't have to come to MauiTo be treated like a jerkHow do you think I feelWhen I see the bellboys smirk?to the overwhelming sentimentality of "LetNothing Come Between You," The Envoycontains some of Zevon's most convincinglove songs. The album's final track, "NeverToo Late For Love," is filled with the shad¬owy optimism which pervades The Envoy:Things go wrongThe days are longYou think you've had enoughYou feel discouragedRest assuredIt's never too late for love.On "Ain't That Pretty At All," Zevonshouts that he'd "rather feel bad than feelnothing at all." The Envoy hints that, one ofthese days, Warren Zevon might just startfeeling good. — Bruce King The following evening I attended a performance by Douglas Ewart at the SouthsideCommunity Art Center where I heard, ormore accurately experienced, a very dif¬ferent approach to jazz. The differences between these two performances were sogreat that any comparisons would be mean¬ingless, and yet one might choose to de¬scribe this performance, as well as Eager's,in terms of motion. In Eager's performance,the music seemed to have a motion of itsown as the musicians themselves remainedfixed. Ewart's performance, accompaniedonly by Hamid Hank Drake on percussion,was in striking contrast to Eager's becauseit was a performance which was, itself, inmotion. The music that they created trav¬elled far beyond the walls of the small roomin which they were playing, but it was theforce with which they played, rather thanthe music itself, that carried them bothalong. As they continued to play, the audi¬ence as well was transported by the energy,no longer merely listening to the music, butmoving with it.Ewart and Drake employed a vast arrayof instruments, often moving from one in¬strument to the next in the midst of theircompositions. Drake played percussion on awide variety of instruments which werespread before him, while Ewart playedvarious wind instruments including altosaxophone, flute, bassoon, and an assort¬ment of whistles. After a short break, however, they began the second set with a longpiece. Drake played only his conga drum asEwart played his saxophone continuouslyfor what seemed at least fifteen minutesuntil he paused, toward the end, just longenough to chorus with the bells that weretied to his leg. It was difficult to say just howthings had changed, but by the end of theperformance one was left with the feelingthat often accompanies one's return fromvacation. There was the sense that one'ssurroundings were somehow different.All of the pieces which they performedwere composed either by Ewart himself orby both Ewart and Drake. The two of themfirst met in 1972 when they were both play¬ing in Fred Anderson's band here in Chica¬go. Although Douglas Ewart was born inKingston Jamica, it was in Chicago that hebegan to develop his musical abilities. Whilehe has recorded with a number of impressive musicians, Ewart has not yet releasedany albums under his own name. Over thepast summer, however, Ewart performed acomposition of his own for clarinet quartetat the New Music America Festival in Chi¬cago, and he anticipates that a recording ofit will be available this coming year.Ewart and Drake will be performingalong with two other musicians at Interna¬tional House on the 13th of November. Fu¬ture concerts at the Southside CommunityArt Center, located at 3831 S. Michigan, in¬clude the Vandy Harris Ensemble on No¬vember 14 and the AACM Big Band on De¬cember 12. Also in November, the WorldSaxophone Quartet, which consists of DavidMurray, Oliver Lake, Julius Hemphill andHamiet Bluiett, will be appearing at theJazz showcase. These are, however, only afew of the many locations around the citywhere one can go to hear some of the bestjazz that is played anywhere in the country.Another locale worth mentioning is ChancesR, right here in Harper Court, where LarrySmith hosts a jazz show every Saturdaynight.One alternative to hearing jazz in theclubs is listening to it on the radio. Fortun¬ately for those of us on the South side,WHPK at 88.3 FM has some of the best non¬commercial jazz programming on the air.Thursday nights are a personal favoritesince I get to run the show from 10:30 till1:00, but on both Monday and Thursdaynights the jazz starts at 8:00 and goes till3:30 with a special blues show, opposite myown, on Mondays. On Tuesdays, the jazzbegins at 5:00 in the afternoon and continuesuntil 6:30 the next morning. Over the week¬end, there is jazz every Saturday morningtill one in the afternoon and Sunday eve¬nings from six until midnight.The station is currently in the slow butsure process of converting to 100 watts.Those interested in working with the stationare, of course, welcome as are all sugges¬tions and requests which can be made bycalling the staion at 962 8424. Incidentally, ifyou are at a loss for something to do thisweekend it is worth noting that Johnny Grif¬fin is playing at the Showcase today throughSunday.10—FRIDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1982—THE GREY CITY JOURNAL■'I for 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^StA%Ap*Z)667-2000Only the BESTis good enoughAt the Hair Performers? we know there is no substitute for a great permand shaping. We make sure every styling is great by making sure everydesigner is great. Our designers are constantly educated in the latesttechniques. 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 STYLINGMEN reg. *15 NOW $10 WOMEN reg. *20 NOW $15or 50% OFF PERMSreg $30-$50 NOW$15-$25Offer good for first time clients with this ad only.The[ hair performers1621 East 55th Street241-7778 The Dean of the CollegeCordially Invites You to a SunriseExcursion to the Wooded IslandIn Jackson ParkCOME CELEBRATE:— having an hour more daylight in the morning— Autumn foliage on the island’s remarkablecollection of trees and shrubs— the migration of up to ten species of ducks,including the red-breasted merganserPROGRAM:6:45 A.M. Jog or brisk walk from campus toWooded Island;7:00 A.M. Walk around Island and Japanese Garden,guided by noted Hyde Park naturalist,Doug Anderson, of the ChicagoOrnithological Society;7:45 A.M. Return to campus.GROUPS:WoodwardMONDAY Breckinridge(11/1/82) BlackstoneCommutersPierceTUESDAY Fraternities(11/1/82) Apartment-DwellersBurton-JudsonWEDNESDAY Snell-Hitchcock(11/3/82) GreenwoodShorelandApartment-DwellersCommuters DEPARTURE POINT6:45 A M., SH ARP: EXCURSION LEADERS:Midway, Opposite Richard Taub, Assoc. Dean of theInternational House College (Walkers)Bob Fisher, Lower Rickert (Joggers IMidway, Opposite Donald N. Levine. Dean of theInternational House College (Walkers)Susan Snow, Tufts (Joggers)Midway, Opposite Herman Sinaiko, Deanof Students inPresident’s House the College (Walkers)Bruce Anderson, Chamberlin House (Joggers*In front of James Teeri, Master of the BiologicalShoreland Sciences Collegiate Division (Walkers)Hector Matienzo. Commuters (Joggers*If you miss your day because of rain, or nat¬ural or personal disasters, you are welcometo join the regular bird-watching tours ledby Doug Anderson on Friday, 7:00-8:30A.M., or Saturday, 8:00-10:00 A.M., depart¬ing from the Clarence Darrow bridge at thenorth end of the Wooded Island.THE GREY CITY JOU RN AL—F RI DAY, OCTOBER 29, 1982—11 (Laura Bennett, Tina MacKenzie, and Jean Harvey: not BananaramaTHIS BOOKSTINKSMemory and DesireJustine HarloweWarner Books, 1982. 432 pages. $15.95.by Abigail AsherThe last lines of Memory and Desire are"My darling Jennie . . . It's never too late.You must believe me." It may not be toolate for Jennie, but it's definitely too late forauthor Justine Harlowe: this book reallybites.Perhaps Memory and Desire caught youreye in the bookstore — black and shiny andripe among the scholarly tomes, it suspi¬ciously resembles Scruples — and perhapsyou considered it for study-break reading. Ifyou enjoy over-rich prose, flat and improba¬ble characters, poor grammar and othergross editorial errors, then this is indeed thebook for you."Justine Harlowe" is a pen name chosenby the one British and two American womenwho collaborated in writing this novel. "Three heads are better than one," they arequoted as saying in a press release; but per¬haps they were thinking of wiser heads thantheir own. For example, they continuallymisuse the word "contrasting" when de¬scribing clothing — they seem to think it is asynonym for "matching."Every possible effect of opulence and ad¬venture is dragged into the story, as if these could lend a spark to the uninspired work.Russian princess, West Indian plantationowner, fiery mulatto servant girl, tragicscion of a decayed Southern dynasty — all ofthese pedigrees fail to produce impressivecharacters. They are all adorned by the au¬thors with beauty, they are generally richbeyond reason, but they are without sub¬stance. They even have horrible names — like the dashing Key Dangerfield, or the En¬glish aristocrat, who is stereotypicallynamed Sebastian Trevelyan. These peoplesay nothing amusing or unexpected; theydon't think; they do fall in love, and thenthey invariably have superlative sexual in¬terludes that leave one wondering just howacrobatic, and how ecstatic, humans canbe.Probably one-third of this hefty book con¬sists of minute, name-dropping descriptionsof the accessories of the rich. A womanstays in the drawing room only long enoughto slip off the jacket of her Chanel suit, takea cigarette from a Faberge box, and gazeunseeingly at a Picasso and other obietsd'art; then she crosses the Persian carpetand drifts into her bedroom "heavy with thescent of roses," also stuffed to the rafterswith previous rarities. Stifling — readingMemory and Desire is like eating a pound offudge in an overheated room. And as if thenarrative descriptions aren't enough, thecharacters are forced to contribute: in con¬versation, they stiffly enumerate details ofdress, or list menus while they eat.This book may be deeper than I think; forinstance, it may be a matter of form that theauthors repeat themselves so frequently.Chapter One begins: "The city of Katmandulay like a golden illusion" and Chapter Two:"The village of Sidi Bou Said lay blindinglywhite." A fountain is described twice withinseven pages as muting the talk of thediners; and so on. Is this Incremental Repe¬tition, as in the Odyssey? No, here it is justslipshod writing.The public loves to read about the rich andunhappy, and the publishers of Memory andDesire seem to count on that to sweep thisbook onto the bestseller lists. Apparently theeditor, if there was one for this book, justskimmed the adjectives — delicious wordslike "exquisite" and "savage" and "gossamer" — and sent the manuscript straightto the printer.The structure of the novel is developed bya narrative which leaps back and forth intime between 1934 and 1973; unfortunatelythis is too much for the writers to handle. In1961, two men begin an affair; 170 pageslater — but back in 1959 — one of them isthrown out by his lover for having this otherliaison — which he hasn't yet had.An editor might also have cleared upLinda's identity problem in this para¬graph:"Yes, I can just make it out," saidLinda, leaning over to peer out of thewindow of the plane. "I neverdreamed it would be so beautiful."She sighed, leaning back on the seat."Oh, Linda, I slept better last night inBarbados than I have in months."The world of Memory and Desire is one ofinconsistent people, illogical situations, andunlikely events. I read it to the end only toget to what ought to have been the climacticinstant of bitter reunion; when it came, itdissipated into a flaccid weekendful of luke¬warm emotion. It was not worth fourhundred and thirty-two pages of tooth-grit¬ting frustration.ERSTE MANDELSTAMTISCHREDEby Kevin J. TuiteA young man named Kaverin once ap¬proached Osip Mandelstam with somepoems that he had written. With a dead-earnest intensity, Mandelstam adjured his in¬terlocutor to never write another poem. Hewas not motivated by nastiness or pride, asone might suspect. It is my contention thatMandelstam realized that those who writebad verse, and attempt to make it public, doso out of ignorance and lack of respect forthe great poets of the past, and for poetryitself. To take art seriously in the vast ma¬jority of cases means to face the awarenessthat one is not an artist of significant propor¬tions, and to act responsibly in keeping withthat awareness. This takes on a particularurgency in the case of literature: in theory,any user of language can be a poet or prose-writer (I would prefer to substitute "pro-sist" for prose-writer, since illiteracy is nobarrier to the artistic use of language. See J.Rothenberg's Technicians of the Sacred forsome striking examples). A certain amountof skill and preparation are necessary before one can sculpt badly or design buildingsbadly. No such obstacles deter the would bewriter of bad verse. If his or her own artistic sensibilities are too flaccid to exert the nec¬essary restraint, then others must assumethat responsibility.I do not hereby equate myself with Man¬delstam, one of the towering figures in Rus¬sian literature. I do not write verse, anddoubt that I ever will. I will certainly neversubmit any for publication. The very imper¬fect knowledge I have of the dedication, preparation, intense self-criticism, and, yes,sacrifice that has been required of great ar¬tists is sufficient to hold back my limply de¬veloped poetic urges. If I am not willing tosubmit myself to the devotional rigors artrequires and face the very real possibilitythat my devotion, sweat and self-denial maystill leave me far short of my goal of beingan artist who can justifiably inflict his artupon others, then I must by no means attempt to reap an artist's reward.The Grey City Journal and the ChicagoLiterary Review have published unconscionable quantities of bad poetry in the twoyears that I have been at the University of Chicago. Presumably this is a tradition oflong standing. Most of this execrable stuffshows signs of belonging to what I wouldstyle the "loose-sphincter" school of versifi¬cation. Briefly put, the loose sphincter poetexercises little if any editorial restraintupon his/her output; form is not fitted tocontent, and ttie content itself is insignifi¬cant, or has been better expressed else¬where. A bartender in Detroit once re¬marked to me that just as the unexaminedlife is not worth living, so, the unlived life isnot worth examining. We have been subject¬ed to simply too many university poets whohave absolutely nothing of interest to relateto a circle wider than that which includestheir mother and their analyst. To be madeprivy to the versified efflatus of these humidbrains is annoying, embarrassing, or both.I will conclude this manifesto with the fol¬lowing four assertions: First, to have writ¬ten or published a poem is not in itself a goodthing. As I hope I have made clear above,such behavior may well prove to be objec tionable. Second, to publish a poem is, ipsofacto, to make the claim that said poem isworthy of consideration by strangers out¬side of the writer's own circle. Thesereaders, who have no personal stake in thetender psyche of the poet, are unquestion¬ably justified in airing their appraisal of thepoem in whatever terms they consider appropriate. Third, the art-consuming publichas been simply too timid in its responses towhat it deems bad art. There is absolutelynothing wrong with a heated, passionate,barroom-style brawl over the merits of awork of art, and much that is worthwhile.Great art will always survive its critics; it ishigh time we take off our kid gloves, rouseourselves from apathetic stupor, and refuseto cravenly submit to "art by intimidation."The mere fact of being heard at a concert orseen in print does not, by a long shot, make awork significant. Fourth, it is my honesthope that enough of my readers take art suf¬ficiently seriously to be genuinely incited bymy assertions and to respond with appro¬priate fury. Sincere outrage is infinitelypreferable to tepid acquiescence. Earnestcontention may be impolite, but it is not un¬healthy.12—FRIDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1982—THE GREY CITY JOURNALv312/643-5007 CHAMBER ENSEMBLETRIO CON BRIOFLUTE • OBOE • VIOLAG.W. OPTICIANS1519 E. 55thTel. 947-9335Eyes hmM mi Cmtmt Lmhi fitted byregistered Oytentiisti.SfeeWiets m OeeCty lyeereer et teesoeeblePrices.Lab on premises for fast service framesreplaced, lenses duplicated and pre¬scriptions filled. marian realty,inc.isREALTORStudio and 1 BedroomApartments Available— Students Welcome —On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-5400FREE!SAVE‘1.79WITH THE PURCHASE of1 lb. or MORE of LOXI DOZENBAGELSwhile quantities last.SUNDAY, OCT. 31, 1982MORRY'S DELI5500 S. CORNELL IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHyde Park Hair Designers, Ltd.Redken SalonAs the weather turns colder, you want a little more, a bitfuller hair. We have the perm to give you what you need -soft natural curls, feminine looks.•ALL HAIR CUTS $15.00 (Reg. 20" and up),«500 0FF AN ALL PERMSOffer good for first time clients withthis ad. Saturday excluded.1620 East 53rd St. • 288-29 SENATORGARY HARTwill speak onNUCLEAR ARMS CONTROLas the closing speaker forThe Conference, Solutions toThe Nuclear Arms RaceProgram: Opening — Jerome Weisner, former scienceadvisor to Pres. Kennedy & former president ofM.I.T.Debates on No First-Use and Nuclear Freeze includeJohn Steinbrunne of the Brookings Institute and RandyKehler, the National Coordinator of the Nuclear FreezeCampaign, opponents will be announced.THURSDAY, NOV. 11th 12:30-6 P.M. Mandel HallOpening address: Dr. Helen Caldicott, president ofPhysicians for Social Responsibility, Nov. 10, 7:30 P.M.C.C.E. auditoriumWorkshops — Nov. 11th and 12thFor more info: Mike — 363-5225Ralph - 363-1320The Dean of the Collegeand theStaff of "Human Being and Citizen"presentCollegiate Lectures in the Liberal Artson books, themes, and questionsconsidered in the Common CoreFall Quarter, 1982Tuesday, November 2Thursday, November 11Tuesday, November 30 James RedfieldClifford Orwin(Harvard University)Allan Bloom "The Iliad on War""The Problem of Justice inThucydides: The Speech ofThe Athenians at Sparta'On Plato's Republic"SWIFT LECTURE HALL8 P.M.Refreshments and Discussion Following the LectureThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, October 29, 1982—23* —No Tricks - Only TreatsMidnight Madness Returns to Spin-ItFriday October 299 pm - 2 amEverything is on sale THECLASHl imit IT HIM k24 % offon everything in store M.regular pricesBRUCE SPRMGSTEENNEBRASKA*»c*u0*ngJohnny 99 Slate TrooperOpen AN Night Atiantc C«ySaturday October 3010 am - 8:30 pmSpin-It presentsThe Morning after12% off regular priceson everything in store 5.68Friday Night6.58Saturday Night5.68 Friday Night6.58 Saturday NightBILLY JOELTHE NYLON CURTAINSee our lull page formore examples.Cash VISA Master Card Check(w/U.C. I.D. or proper I.D.) 5.68Friday Night6.58Saturday NightDAN FOG E LB ERGGREATEST HITSiw»ngMlSOTfl *CHi LOV* Su> Lon<rHard To Say Laadn OSpin-It1444 E. 57th St.684-1505 Spin-It now, Spin-It later, but Spinit!5.68 Friday Night6.58 Saturday NightTHE INTERNATIONAL HOUSEHAUOVEEW mrtWELCOMESSATURDAYOCTOBER 309:00 PM -1:00 AMINTERNATIONAL HOUSE1414 EAST 59th STADMISSION - $3.00INCLUDES REFRESHMENTSPRIZES FOR THE BEST, MOST DISGUSTING ANDMOST ESOTERIC COSTUMES, MALE ANDFEMALE CATEGORIES.SPECIAL PRIZE FOR THE BEST ‘VALLEYGIRL’ IMITATION suMDAY LUTHERAN CAMPUS MINISTRYAugustono Lutheran Church5500 S. Woodlawn Ave.8:30 a.m. — Sermon & Eucharist9:30 o.m. — Sunday School 6 Adult Forum:“Living More With Less ”10:45 a.m. — Sermon b Eucharist6:00 p.m. — Campus Ministry Supper ($2/person)You're Invited!Put the pastin 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 view’s.— All newr kitchens and appliances-Wall-to-wall carpeting—Air conditioning— Optional indoor or outdoorparking — Community room— Resident manager— Round-the-clock security— Laundry facilities oneach floorStudios, One, Two and Three Bedroom apartments.One bednx)m from 8480 — Two Bedroom from 8660Rent includes heat, cooking gas, and master TV antenna.Call for information and appointment — 643-1406onse1642 East 56th StreepIn Hyde Park, across the park fromThe Museum of Science and IndustryEqual Housing Opportunity Managed by Metroplex, Inc.Special Back-to-School OfferFREE DELIVERY*(Ground floor only)Used Desks, Chairs, File Cabinets•Many chairs priced at s500•Wood Desks at s50°° & up* Minimum purchase for free delivery *10000BRANDEQUIPMENT 8560 S. ChicagoRE 4-2111Open Daily 8:30-524—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, October 29, 1982 * IKarl ReportContinued from page oneIn addition to the formation of this CollegeCouncil, the Committee recommends thatthe dean of the College be made “respons¬ible for the full range of undergraduate ad¬ministration in the University” with thepowers necessary for such a task. The sym¬bol of College unity, the office of the Dean ofthe College should work closely with the Di¬visional Masters, the Dean of Students, andshould even have administrative responsi¬bility for the Dean of College Admissionsand College Aid.According to the report, this increase inpowers of the Dean of the College has al¬ready begun. When Levine asumed office inSeptember, he brought the Dean of Studentsin the College, the Divisional Masters, andCollege Aid and Admissions offices directlyunder him. “I think the changes alreadytaking place are consistent with the spirit ofthe report,” Levine said.The Committee also suggests “that effortsbe made to move the College budget towardresource levels that reflect its real goals.”Without the necessary funding, of course, Newsthe College can never expect to maintain itshigh standards of general education and its“labor intensive” approach to teaching. TheCommittee points out as well that the Col¬lege must deal with a decrease in diversityamong its students which could result fromprolonged cutbacks in student aid.Now that the Karl Committee has issuedits report, the next step is for the presentCollege Council to consider it, according toLevine. Next week the College Council willinitiate discussion of the report. Within thecoming months, the Committee of the Coun¬cil will present legislation to the full Councilbased on the recommendations of the KarlReport.If the members of the College Counciladopts the recommendation of a new facul¬ty-wide council, they will “put themselvesout of business,” said Levine, and be re¬placed with the newly structured council.While Levine reserved expressing judg¬ment on the specifics of the Karl Report, hesaid that the general proposal of simplifyingthe governing structure of the College is“terribly important.”“I will make my views known as the de¬bate goes on,” he said. “I have an open mindand I will wait for debate on the particularissues,” he said.Hotline, Inquiry fundingContinued from page one“No one understands the consequencesbetter than the Soviet Union,” said Percy.“During WWII, they lost 22,000,000 people toconventional weapons.”“What is most hopeful is that the US andthe Soviet Union are seriously sitting downnot just to have a freeze, which would givethe Soviets (an edge), but to have a one-third reduction of all nuclear weapons,” hesaid.Percy pointed to the need to keep interna¬tional debate depoliticized for the purposesof arms control. He was especially criticalof attempts to isolate Israel, particularlythe recent move to expel that country fromthe UN. “This move, which was almost suc¬cessful, could have been catastrophic, butwe (the US) stood firm,” he said.Percy also discussed the importance ofthe Nuclear Nonproliferation Act, which heand John Glenn signed. The creation of asingle office to administer the act was agood step, he said. This office has been ad-minstered by Gerry Van Guorcum, who wasan under-secretary of state at the time theact was passed.Percy condemned what he feels have beenattempts to justify proliferation. He reject¬ed the premise that “if they don’t buy (armsand plutonium) from us, they’ll buy themfrom someone else.” Under this premise, hesaid there was an attempt to sell arms toSouth Africa.He also discussed plans to use plutoniumto augment the supply of fissionable fuel,plans which he dismissed as being danger¬ous and unnecessary. Percy said that by thetime the supply has been expended, hehopes something better will have beenfound. Moreover, implementation of theseplans would increase the chances of proli¬feration. “I simply cannot accept tnat rationale.The risk of theft or loss is one we should nottake,” he said.Percy proposed that International Househas a role to play in the struggle to halt thearms race. “There is a need to increase par¬ticipation and maintain a sense of urgency,”he said.“You represent many nations. I hope thismessage goes to you.... This war is too dan¬gerous for our children,” he said.“We simple must think ahead, not of theimmediately urgent, but of the ultimatelyimportant,” he said.“I think that the victory in Geneva wouldbe a hollow victory indeed if the nations ofthe world took this route (towards prolifera¬tion and destruction),” he said.Youth SundayThe Kenwood Community Baptist Church,5757 S. University Ave., will present a pro¬gram of music and other activities at itsfirst annual Youth Sunday. Sunday Oct. 31,at 12:15 in the afternoon, the church youthand young adults under the direction ofRenee Jackson will provide the worship ser¬vice.Music will be featured throughout theYouth Day activities. “Just having ouryoung people work so hard to arrange andpresent this program is a tribute to youtheverywhere,” Jackson said.Terrace Jackson, a student at Universityof Illinois is a featured baritone soloist.The DuSable High School Male Chorusunder the direction of Sara Dickens, will bethe guest choir.Immediately after services, during thecoffee hour, the Youth will feature theJimmy Ellis Jazz worship. Several of thechurch youth who study with Ellis’s youthjazz workshop will also perform with Ellis.Our qualitycan’t be copied.Our computerized Xerox duplicatorsare the latest word in copying technology.Add that to personalized service and ourlow, base price of 5C a copy and you aresure to be pleased with the results.HARPER COURT COPY CENTER5210 S. Harper Avenue • 288-2233collating • reductions • stapling • selection of papers A tale of tworestaurantsBy David Ackermanand Sho-Ann HungThe summer opening of Casa Segunda inHarper Court held out the possibility thatexciting cuisine was at least returning toHyde Park. No longer would the hapless stu¬dent have to travel an hour in sub-zeroweather in order to sample food that is spi¬cier than oatmeal. (Those fiery green pep¬pers at Morry’s are a noble but isolated ex¬periment). Finally, there would be arestaurant in Hyde Park that we could writeabout. The fire that temporarily delayedCasa Segunda’s opening heightened our in¬terest. We will compare it with a similarrestaurant in the Near North that we hadstumbled upon about a year ago, El Ran¬cho.The first thing we noticed upon enteringCasa Segunda was that it was definitely pos¬sible to have an enjoyable evening there.The decor was very charming and no juke¬box could be heard. It is a surprisingly nicerestaurant for its price range. A large selec¬tion of Mexican beers and the guacamole($3.50 and $4) are also very good.Our major criticism of this restaurantconcerns the rest of the menu. The food isgenerally unadventurous and bland. Enchi¬ladas ($4.75) and flautas ($4.50 to $5) tend tobe soggy messes. They always come to thetable covered with a tasteless sauce. Theeggs with chorizo sausage ($3.50), though,are good and are in fact our favorite entreeon the menu. Other items on the menu usevery familiar sauces on more expensive in¬gredients such as steak and fish.We do not want to give the wrong impres¬sion. Casa Segunda is a good restaurant, butits efforts have been more on ambience thanon food. It is a small step for Chicago and agiant leap for Hyde Park.StevensonContinued from page ninefight will have a great impact on political al¬liances in Springfield and no governor(especially in the Democratic Party) wouldbe prudent to become involved in that battleif he or she has a hope of promoting anypackage of legislative initiatives.Finally, it should be noted that the Demo¬cratic candidate for lieutenant governor,Grace Mary Stern, has little knowledge ofstate government while the Republican can¬didate, George Ryan, is able and experi¬enced. Stern, though politically powerful inher own party (she is a member of the Dem¬ocratic National Committee), has only li¬mited experience in Illinois government;she has served as clerk of Lake County andassitant supervisor of Deerfield Township.Ryan, on the other hand, is the speaker ofthe Illinois House of Representatives andknows the workings of Illinois government.Experience is the key requirement for this GetawayEl Rancho, by contrast, is not a place thatwould lure people off of the sidewalk! It hasa jukebox. The food, however, is flavorfuland the menu has a bewildering variety ofselections. The soft tacos and tostadas aredelicious and cheap ($1 to $1.75). One tosta-da can fill you up.Dinners at this restaurant all come withthe ubiguitous rice and refried beans. Thevariety ranges from steamed beef tongue($4.50) to shrimp in garlic sauce ($5.50).Soups are also interesting to try. For the ad¬venturous, there is tripe soup with oregano,lemon and tortillas ($3 and $5).A description of El Rancho would not becomplete without a mention of the colorfulclientele. People with blue mohawks, brief¬cases, and paper bags all patronize it. It isnot a quiet place, but the food is authentic.El Rancho is located at 6 East ChestnutStreet, two and a half blocks west of Water-tower Place.Visiting Fellow Mary McCarthy readfrom her works Wednesday at Swift Hall.Viewpointsoffice since the lieutenant governor actsoften as a liaison between the governor andinterest groups and the bureaucracy and thelegislature.In his six years as governor and in histerm as US attorney, Thompson has workedto bring good, sensible government to Illi¬nois. True to his beliefs, he has been an ef¬fective, innovative and bipartisan leader.He has fought to make state governmentwork for the citizens of Illinois and his re¬cord shows his ability. Illinois, like thecountry as a whole, is in the midst of eco¬nomic uncertainty and troubles. A knowl¬edgeable, capable and forceful leader in thegovernor’s office is vital for promoting thestate’s welfare. Governor Thompson hasprovided that leadership for Illinois and de¬serves your vote of confidence this comingTuesday.Tom Powers is a fourth year undergradu¬ate in political science. Gretchen Winter is athird year student in the law school.BEAT THE LUNCH RUSHAT1 MORRY’S DELIANDSAVE SAVE SAVEFROM9:15T010:30 AM DAILYBUY 4 SANDWICHES GETAdditionalSandwich FREEBuy 3 SANDWICHES GET FREE POP & CHIPSGood only 9:15 to 10:30 am DailyMORRY’S DELIUniversity BookstoreSportsHockey takes 2 in tough tourneyBy Jane LookThe University of Chicago field hockeyteam faced some of its toughest opponentsthis year in the Lake Forest Tournamentlast weekend. The Maroons pulled out twovictories in the four games they played.Saturday, Chicago faced Valparaiso Uni¬versity, a Division II school. Earlier in theseason Chicago lost to the team 3-1, but U ofC was ready this time and dominated the ac-By Mike PetulakThe University of Chicago rugby teamcontinued its punishing ways by overwhelm¬ing a bigger, more experienced DeKalbteam 22-0.Under new coach Doug McTaggart, theMaroons upped their record to 3-1 andgained their second shutout in threegames.The first half was dominated by theMaroons’ back line but each time theMaroons knocked on the door, DeKalb camefighting back. Finally after several frustrat¬ing surges, Chicago got on the board with a28-yard penalty kick by Pat Waresk to makeit 3-0. That is how the half ended as DeKalbnever really came close to scoring.After a few fundamental changes byCoach McTaggart, the Maroon ruggerswent berserk in the first 15 minutes of thesecond half. Sandy Cartwright pounced on aWaresk penalty kick that had hit the uprightand bounced into the end zone to give theMaroons a 7-0 lead. After a Waresk penaltykick had extended the lead to 10-0, JohnGolden scooped up a loose ball and sprinted tion, attempting 32 shots on goal to Val¬paraiso’s 19. The first half ended scoreless,but the Maroons came out storming in thesecond half and scored three unansweredgoals.Trish Briscoe opened the scoring on a passfrom Alison Duffy. Duffy then added a goalof her own on an assist by Meg Malloy. Cap¬tain Helen Straus rounded out the scoringwith a goal on a penalty stroke.55 yards for a score. Waresk’s conversionupped the lead to 16-0.Two minutes later Ed Rumble, Chicago’snumber eight, blasted over from five yardsout and Waresk rounded out the scoring con¬verting the points after to make the finalscore 22-0.With time, the Maroons are forming one ofthe better teams in recent Chicago rugbyhistory. The scrum, led by Steve Hutt andPete Layton, has been often outsized, butrarely outplayed. The backs have been in¬spired by play from Hank McGuire, CyOggins, and Tom Guarineri. In essence, theteam is solid, and the new players are stead¬ily improving (as evidenced by the B team’sdominance in a 4-4 tie with the DeKalb B).Perhaps outside center Mike Troy summedup the team’s performance best: “Thisyear, we’re tougher than a woodpecker’slips.”The next game is this Saturday versusLincoln Park, the only team to defeat theMaroons this year. The game is at LincolnPark and should be exciting as the Maroonshave vastly improved since the previous en¬counter, a 14-6 Lincoln Park win. Chicago also met University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point Saturday. Stevens Point jus¬tified its ninth ranking in Division III nation¬ally by taking 47 shots on goal while Chicagocould only manage eight. Maroon goalieMaureen Breen played an excellent game,collecting 37 saves.Stevens Point also had 22 penalty cornerscompared to U of C’s four. Despite the in¬balance, Chicago trailed only 1-0 at the endof the first half. The Maroons were not ableto keep up the pace, though, and eventuallylost 4-0. Coach Linda Whitehead said thatStevens Point was just physically strongerand “we wore out.”Sunday U of C squared off against Grin-nell College in an evenly matched affair.Chicago attempted 15 shots on goal whileGrinnell attempted 14. Goalie DanielaBroucher collected 10 saves.The first half finished in a 1-1 tie. U of Cwas able to garner one more goal in the sec¬ond half to snatch the victory, 2-1. Meg Mul-cahy and Helen Straus scored the Maroongoals, both on penalty corners.The final game of the weekend was playedagainst powerful Eastern Illinois, a DivisionI school.Eastern Illinois dominated first half, scor¬ing four goals on 22 shots. Chicago played amuch stronger second half, holding EasternIllinois scoreless and only seven attemptedshots. Chicago though could not score andthe game ended 4-0.Coach Whitehead said, “They were physi¬cally stronger and we were not ready to playwith that kind of intensity.”The hockey team, now with a record of 10wins, seven losses, and one tie, finished theseason yesterday against Lake Forest Col¬lege at Stagg Field. Results were unavail¬able at press time.Ruggers hammer DeKalb 22-0The UniversityOf ChicagoThe Center for Urban StudiesThe Public Affairs Programinvite you to a talk"RebuildingChicago:City Plans, Policiesand Public Works"byIra J. BachMayor Byrne'sDirector of City ProjectsTuesday, November 2,19824:30 p.m.Pick Lounge MORRY’S DELIA Great Place For Breakfast!Donuts, Pancakes, Muffins, & Egg Mac Morry’sBUY4 DONUTSGET ACUP OFCOFFEE FREENOW SERVING LOX & BAGEL WITHFREE CUP OF COFFEE ONLY 2.15 eachOffers good from 7:00 am -10:30 amMORRY’S DELIUniversity BookstoreTHE FLAMINGO APARTMENTS5500 South Shore DriveSTUDIOS & ONE-BEDROOMS• Unfurnished and furnished• U. of C. Bus Stop• Free Pool Membership• Carpeting and Drapes Included• Secure Building• University Subsidy for Students & Staff• Delicatessen • Beauty Shop• Barber Shop • T.J.’s Restaurant• Dentist • Valet ShopFREE PARKING.MRS. HARRIS 752-380026—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, October 29, 1982 COURTESY OF ROSIE RESCHRandi Wagner spikes as Helen Gem-mill, Sue Fortunato, Wendy Pietrzak,and Karen Kitchen prepare to receive ablocked ball.Volleyballers keeprecord even at 6-6By Kittie WyneThe women’s varsity volleyball teamupped its record to 6-6 with victories overNorth Park, Iowa Wesleyan and losses atCoe and Cornell last week.North Park was a well-skilled and highlycompetitive team. The Maroons had a toughtime controlling the court play. Althoughthey played inconsistently, the Maroons’ tal¬ent came through and they pulled off a winby a narrow margin at home last Thurs¬day.Last Friday at Coe, the Maroons burst outof the gate by winning the first four points,but then proceeded to put forth a mediocreeffort on which Coe, although not as skilledas the Maroons, capitalized. Coe won thematch in three games.Continued on page 28HYDE PARK UNION CHURCH5600 S. Woodlewn Are.Church School (all ages) 9:45 a m.Worship Nursery Provided 11:00 a.m.W. Kenneth Williams, MinisterSusan Johnson, Baptist Campus MinisterCome, Worship, Study, ServeWe Buy and SellUsed Records1701 E. 55th684-3375262-1593Dr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist(53 Kimbark Plaza)1200 E. 53rd St.493-8372Intelligent people know thedifference between advertisedcheap glasses or contact lensesand competent professionalservice with quality material.Beware of bait advertisingEye ExaminationsFashion Eye WearContact Lenses/SportsPHOTO BY ARA JELALIANIM Football actionIM ScoreboardVOLLEYBALLUndergraduate Men’sHale 2Thompson 2Thompson 2Hale 2Bishop (forfeit)Lower Flint 2Phi Delta Theta (by forfeit)Lower Flint (by forfeit) Dudley 1Vincent 0Dudley 0Vincent 1Compton B (forfeit)... Phi Delta Theta lBishopCompton BGraduate Men’sBroadview 2 International House 1International House 2 The Supply Spider 0The Supply Spider 2Undergraduate Women’sTufts (forfeit)Blackstone 2Upper Flint (by forfeit)Blackstone (by forfeit)Snell (by forfeit)Snell 2Breckinridge (by forfeit)Dudley 2Dudley 2 .Spiked Capsules 0Dewey (forfeit)Upper Flint 0DeweyTuftsLower Flint...Upper Wallace 1Lower FlintBradbury 0Three’s A Crowd 0 IM Football action winding downMany of the IM races are now in mid-sea¬son form. While most of these races havemany games left on the schedule, someseem to have already been decided.Last week, in a game the Maroon termeda “game to watch,” the Liquidators defeat¬ed Barney’s Meat Market by a score of12-07. The victory left the Liquidators at 2-1,while Barney’s Meat Market fell to 1-1.Liquidators have now beaten the Rejectsand Barney’s Meat Market, with their onlyloss to Dean and the Crewcuts, the favoritefor the University championship. Liquidato¬rs now has only to beat the hapless Med ITrauma Team to capture a playoff spot.Barney’s Meat Market could have an out¬side chance at the playoffs if it can beat Re¬jects and Dean and the Crewcuts, but this isa longshot at best. Rejects has played onlyone game, so perhaps they could move up inthe division.In another “game to watch,” Greenwoodbeat Fishbein by a score of 24-7. Greenwoodis now 2-0, and seems to be the only teamwhich can compete with Hitchcock for thedivision title.Meanwhile in the White division, Comptondefeated Thompson by a score of 35-0 in an¬other “game to watch.” Compton has yet toFOOTBALLUndergraduateChamberlin 35 Tufts 2Breckinridge 44 Tufts 6Lower Flint Blackstone 6Thompson 27 Upper Flint 4Fallers 14 Shorey 2Alpha Delta Phi 18 Vincent/Salisbury 13Hit and Run 13 Seagram Seven 0N.U.T.S. (by forfeit) Team HuberN.U.T.S. (by forfeit) CommutersGraduateRes Ipsa Loquitur 24 Disequilibrium 0 be scored on this year while scoring 134points on the opposition. At 3-0, and with justone game left against a non-contendingUpper Flint team, Compton should win thisdivision title. Thompson could take secondplace if it can get by Lower Flint.Another sure winner seems to be theBovver Boys in the Graduate Red division.Bovver Boys are 3-0 with just one game left,but that game is against Bok’s Rocks, whichis the only team who can take the divisiontitle from Bovver Boys. Bok’s Rocks beatRes Ipsa Loquitur by a score of 6-0 in its onlygame.In undergraduate men’s volleyball, thetop teams seem to be Upper Rickert,Thompson, Compton A, Hitchcock A, andLower Flint. Upper Rickert and Thompsonare currently tied for the lead in the Red di¬vision with identical 3-0 records. Hale is inthird in that division with a record of 3-2,while Chamberlin has yet to begin play.Hitchcock A and Compton A are tied forthe lead in the Maroon division, both with 3-0records. At this point, no team seems closeto these two in that division.Lower Flint is off to a 4-0 start and has aone game lead on Phi Delta Theta in theWhite division. Henderson leads the Blue di¬vision with a 2-0 record.The top three teams in the graduateleagues appear to be Broadview, Over-the-Hill-Gang, and International House. Broad¬view has won the graduate men’s leagueand International House took second whileThe Supply Spider finished third. Over-the-Hill-Gang seemed to be a shoo-in for themixed men’s league title until an injury to akey player occurred. Other contenders inthe mixed men’s league are Dinkleberries2nd Edition at 1-0, and Wankers at 2-1.Wankers loss came to Over-the-Hill-Gang.In women’s undergraduate volleyball, Hale is off to a 2-0 start and is top rankedamong undergraduate teams. Shorey andCompton along with Thompson should com¬pete with Hale for the White division title.Shorey and Compton are 1-1, while Thomp¬son has not begun play yet.Blackstone and Upper Flint are on top ofthe Red division; Blackstone is 3-0, whileUpper Flint, with victories over Lower Flintand last year’s undergraduate champion,Upper Wallace, is 2-0. Despite its loss toUpper Flint, Upper Wallace is sure to be astrong contender for the Red division title,as is Snell at 1-1.In the mixed women’s league, Betab-lockers seems to have clinched the divisiontitle by default — only one match has beenplayed in the entire schedule, while the restwere either forfeits or double forfeits. In theonly played match, Betablockers defeatedDelta Sigma.Finally, in ultimate frisbee, the top threeteams at this point are Henderson, Hitch¬cock, and Chamberlin. Chamberlin recentlylost to Hitchcock. More teams will maketheir presence known as the season pro¬gresses.PUBLIC POLICY LECTURE SERIESAnthony Solomon(President, Federal Reserve Bank of New York)THE OUTLOOK FORINTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL DEVELOPMENTWednesday, November 310:30 - 11:30Wieboldt 303Students, faculty, and the general public are invited.^OTn^VUA^in Jffa//jNow Featuring:* Homemade Fruit salad* Homemade Soup* French-dip Beef*Hot Spiced Cider 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 197 *“The ultimate in pizza!" — New 1 ork Times. January 1980The Chicago Maroon—Friday, October 29, 1982—27SportsVolleyball teamContinued from page 26Saturday, the Maroons met Iowa Wes¬leyan and Cornell at Cornell for a best-of-three-game matches, beating Wesleyan inthree games and falling to Cornell in two.The Maroons dominated Wesleyan in thefirst game and during most of the second.Despite the Maroons’ considerable lead inthe second game, Wesleyan staged an excel¬lent comeback which forced a third game,which the Maroons controlled.Two hours later, the Maroons met a moreformidable Cornell. Cornell had excellentteamwork and well-skilled hitters and set¬ters. In the first game, Cornell took controland easily beat the Maroons. The secondgame was the Maroons best of the weekend.They played their own game but lost 16-14.The Maroons are a highly talented team,one of the best in recent years, yet they areoften their own worst enemy. Their team¬work varies from excellent to mediocre. Attimes they appear to be thinking more thanplaying.Chicago’s next match is tomorrow againstKnox College at 1 p.m. in Henry Crown Field COURTESY OF ROSIE RESCHBev Davis jumps high for the hit asKaren Kitchen, Randi Wagner, andWendy Pietrzak set for the return.House. With an away match at ConcordiaCollege Tuesday, Chicago will be tuning upfor the U of C Invitational Tournament nextweekend.The Chicago MaroonThe Chicago Maroon is the official newspaper of the University of Chicago. It ispublished twice a week, Tuesdays and Fridays. Editorial and business offices arelocated on the third floor of Ida Noyes, 1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, 60637. Telephone753-3263.Darrell WuDunn Margo HablutzelEditor Features Editor Nadine McGann Aarne EliasGrey City Journal Editor Operations ManagerAnna FeldmanManaging EditorRobin KirkNews EditorWilliam RauchCopy Editor Cliff GrammichSports EditorDavid BrooksViewpoints EditorWally DabrowskiProduction Manager Keith FlemingChicago Literary ReviewEditorPaul O’DonnellChicago Literary ReviewEditorAra JelalianPhotography Editor Steve BrittBusiness ManagerJay McKenzieAdvertising ManagerBrian CloseOffice ManagerAssociate Editor: Jeffrey TaylorStaff: Mark Bauer, Dan Breslau, John Collins, Kahane Corn, Tom Elden, Pat Fin-egan, Caren Gauvreau, Eric Goodheart, Elisse Gottlieb, Jesse Halvorsen, Joe Holtz,Keith Horvath, Marc Kramer, Linda Lee, Jane Look, Frank Luby, Yousuf Sayeed,Steve Shandor, Andy Wrobel, Kittie Wyne. IM FOOTBALLGraduateWhite DivisionDean and the CrewcutsLiquidatorsBarney’s Meat MarketRejectsMed I Trauma TeamRed DivisionBovver BoysBok’s RocksRes Ipsa LoquiturDonutsDisequilibriumBlue DivisionCinema FaceExtra Strength TylenolAcetominophin RemovedMalice Aforethought Dewey BBlackstone RangersBreckinridgeMaroon Division2 0 Hitchcock A2 1 Compton A1 1 Dewey A0 1 Dodd/Mead0 2 Hitchcock BFishbein3 o Fallers1 01 2o 2 Mixed Women’s LeagueBetablockersj o Delta Sigma, o Coulterj j GSB — Women0 2 00033101003100IM VOLLEYBALLGraduate Men’s LeagueMen’sBroadview 4International House 3The Supply Spider 2Spiked Capsules 2Cinema Face 0Mixed Men’sOver-the-Hill-Gang 1Dinkleberries 2nd Edition 1Wankers 2First Place 0GI 0FIJI oUndergraduate Men’s LeagueRed DivisionUpper Rickert 3Thompson 3Hale 3Chamberlin oDudley 2Bradbury oVincent oWhite DivisionLower Flint 3Phi Delta Theta 3Shorey 2Bishop 1Upper Flint 1Compton B 0Blue DivisionHenderson 2Tufts 1Michelson 1 Undergradute Women’sResidence LeagueRed Division0 Blackstone1 Upper Flint2 Upper Wallace2 Lower Flint4 BreckinridgeSnell0 Tufts0 Deweyi White Division1 Hale3 Shorey3 ComptonThree’s a CrowdThompsonDudley0 Bradbury0 Lower Wallace25 Volleyball Top Five3 1. Hale3 2. Blackstone3. Upper Flinto 4. Upper Wallace1 5. Snell2 Honorable Mention:3 Thompson, Compton4Ultimate Frisbee Top Threeo l. Henderson1 2. Hitchcock1 3. Chamberlin oo2oo1o32202240011112201100002COMMUTING STUDENTS ASSOCIATIONPresents Its FALL LUNCHEONTODAY — 11:30 AM — GATES-BLAKE 1New and RebuiltTypewriters,Calculator^,Dictators, AddersCasioHewlett PackardTexas Instrument REPAIRSPECIALISTSon IBM, SCM,Olympia, etc.FREE repairestimatesCanonSharp RENTALSavailable withU. of C. I D.The University of Chicago BookstoreTypewriter & Calculator Department970 East 58th Street 2nd Floor753-3303 INTERESTED IN A MASTERS DEGREE INACCOUNTING?BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION?PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION?Discover Rice University'sJesse H. Jones Graduate School of AdministrationA Representative will be on Campus onDATE: October 29,1982 (FRIDAY)TIME: 10:00 - 12:00 noonFor Further Information Contact:PLACEMENT OFFICEPlease send an application and a brochure aboutRice University’s JONES GRADUATE SCHOOL to:NAME (Please print)•ADDRESSCITY STATE ZIPCOLLEGERICE UNIVERSITY DEGREE DATEJONES GRADUATE SCHOOL OF ADMINISTRATIONP.O. BOX 1892HOUSTON, TEXAS 770011713) 572-4893Rice University is an equal opportunity/affirmative action institution.29—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, October 29, 1982CLASSIFIEDADVERTISINGClassified 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 office is in Ida Noyes, rm 304.Deadlines: Wednesday noon for the Fridaypaper, Fri. noon for the Tuesday paper. In caseof errors for which the Chicago Maroon isresponsible, adjustments will be made or cor¬rections run only if the business office isnotified WITHIN ONE CALENDAR WEEK ofthe original publication. The Maroon is notliable for any error.SPACE56th & 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.Spacious sunny unfrnshd 1-bdrm apt avlb Nov1 5528 Hyde Pk Blvd-Hirise sec bldg w laundry;on campus & city bus; rent $375, call Monica orTim at 752-7552or 962-7420 (leave message)Spacious sunny 2-bdrm furnished apt avlb Nov1 5242 Hyde Pk Blvd-hirise sec bldg w Indry; oncmps/city bus; $630 or best offer; call Tim orMonica 752-7552 or 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 947-9597 SPACE WANTEDWanted space for two with dog for month ofNovember. Call 493-1996 or call Rafael Sorkin301-577-3408 (Collect)Need apt for 13 days (12/1 to 12/13). Call 373-4230.PEOPLE WANTEDOVERSEAS JOBS - Summer/year round.Europe S. Amer., Australia, Asia, All fields,S500-$1200 monthly. Sightseeing. Free info.Write 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 Communica¬tion, Department of Behavioral Sciences.Phone 962-8859.The Medici is looking for a full-time assistantmanager. Please apply in person M-W 9 AM-3PM.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.Responsible, good-natured student wanted foroccasional child-sitting evenings. Call 667-4220after 4p.m. MGB '67 Classic British Sports Car 95%restored $3500 or best offer 947-8488 dinner timebest.FILE CABINET 4drwr letter $50 Bill 643-7258.DEPENDABLE ! 75 Dodge Dart, slant 6; auto,pwr str new Sears battery, air shocks, rr wdwdefog, clean $1500, 753-0334 or 753-2270 and Iv *1976 AMC Matador 6100 mi. AC/Radio powersteering, brakes V8 engine snow tires no rustgood student car $700 firm 752-1150 922-9410 ext.466 Dave.Single manual harpsicord, based on 18th cen¬tury Italian models. 5 octave compass 363-8174.Slide projector Kodak 760 H. Autofocus w/102mm f2.8 EKtC. 1 year old $145 call 373-4230.Apt Sale Sat 10/30 10-2 1451 E 55th *1025:Bookshelves, Dishes, Household goods 667-6695Classical Guitar $125 obo Ray 753-0499.1979 VW DASHER, 4 dr hatchback, automatic,frt-wheel dr, good condition, low mileage, bestoffer. Call 493-5555.AIRPLANE TICKET Chicago to Denver orBoise on Nov. 23. Also Ig. women's clothes 643-4468.AGFACHROME 2 0 0 SLIDEFILM HALF PRICE Limited to four rollsper customer. This is a ONE TIME ONLY OF¬FER!Model Camera 1344 E. 55th St. 493-6700 Classified AdsDiscount Moving and Hauling Low Prices AndFree Estimates Seven Days a Week Day andEvening References Available Call Tom 8-10am or After 6pm 375-6247TYPING. Term papers, theses, etc. IBM Cor¬recting Selectric. All Projects welcome. 791-1674CATERING. Custom menus for all occasions.Chinese, Thai, Indian, Middle East, French,many other specialWendy Gerick 538-1324.Photo Greeting Cards...NOW S THE TIME!Model Camera 1344 E. 55th St. 493-6700.WE COPY OLD PHOTOS...While You Wait!Model Camera 1344 E. 55th St. 493-6700.SCENESWriters workshop PLaza 2-8377.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.HYDE PARK ARTISANS GALLERY presentsa new exhibit Nov 6-Dec 3 FEATURINGdecorative and functional fabric works byAlberta Smith Johnson and Susanna Moroz.Plus painting, pottery, weaving, stained glass& more. 57th & Woodlawn at the UnitarianChurch. Reception Nov 6 from 12 to 4 pm.Hyd 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. S210-S255 when available. Student dis¬count. 6-12 month lease. Call 684-5030 before8:30 a.m. or eves.Railroad flat-3 bed 2 bath. Unfurnished. Heat+ water incl. On B & D routes. Near grocery -+-laundromat. 53rd -I- Kenwood-Ph 288-0718Lrg. 1 br apt. for rent. 55th + Lake. 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 Ig 2-br apt.212.50/mo. Call Pam days 753-4225; eve 955-0405.HYDE PARK-STUDIOS, 1 & 2 BEDROOMSNOW AVAILABLE S282-S525 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.Student Government publishes a list of OFF-CAMPUS HOUSING. Call 753-3273 or come toIda Noyes 306, MWF 11:30-2:30; TTH 11,30-1:30.DELUXE one bed room CUSTOM DRAPESMIRROR walls high floor in 4800 S. Lake ShoreCondo 495 per month call Mr. Sal off 262-1972res 373-7958FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED Small roomin 3-bdrm apt. 56th & University Avail Dec/Jan646 2454.5100 S. Cornell Chicago Beach Apts. Studio -+- lbedroom apts. S260-S360. Immed. occupancy.Students welcomed. Call 493-2525 or 643-7896.Ifou arc dvtcLcMyHy'Vi&it'TTiepwo 1rpudimm s r2 lUnlrinmn. Irom month5200 Bl.ACKSTONE2 Bedrooms from $463 month1 block west of Harper SquareMon.-Fri. y to 6. Sat.-Sun. 12 to 5661-86661 Bedroom with den also availableASK ABOUT RISCMO SECURITY DEPOSIT CHEERLEADING TRYOUTS. Meeting Fri.Nov. 5, Mult. Purp. Room, Field House, 5:30.Exp Babysitting. 15 mo. My home M 11-6 684-1330.BABYSITTING NEEDED FOR INFANT, 8.30am to 5:00 pm, Monday through Friday, begin¬ning ca. December 1. Your house or ours.References, please. Call 288-0191 evenings.BABYSITTER WANTED full time for 4children call 955-6322.Project Assistant: ARTFUL natural languagedata base. Programming skills. Familiaritywith AMDAHL.-Some knowledge of Frenchhelptul workstudy status desirable. Call 962-8481.Volunteers Needed for Blue Gargoyle cafeteria1 hr. of work for a meai. Contact Catherine at955-4109.FOR SALEPASSPORT PHOTOS WHILE YOU WAIT!Model Camera 1342 E 55th 493-6700.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 offer call 643-2824 best time 7-11:30 pmCondo 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.Sears washer + dryer, double bed, bunk bedsgold carpet Call evenings 684-4395 or 799-9549.EVERYTHING INPRINTINGThe Southsides largest and mostgomplete print shop letterpressand offset plus art departmentfor design and layout assistancePHOTO COMPOSITIONOVER 100 TYPESTYLESFOR BROCHURES, BOOKSALL YOUR PRINTING NEEDS!"Calling Card to CatalogWe Print Them All"HOT STAMPING • EMBOSSINGSaddle and Perfect BindingThe Bonkers Print, Inc.5832 So. Green • HU 7-3142 CELESTRON 20X80 BINOCULARS....Ya gottasee them to believe them!Model Camera 493-6700BOOKSHELVES...BOOKCASES...BOOKSHELVES Help us make room for a new photostudio. Buy our BOOKCASES (these are largewall units) Wealsohavea ridiculously LARGEDESK. We would like to be rid of!Model Camera 1344 E. 55th St. 493-6700VW BEETLE, 1974, excel, cond., only 60Kmiles, very dependable, $2200. Call 752-3904after 7 pm.SERVICESJUDITH TYPES-and has a memory. Phone955-4417.COUNSELING-Psycholanalytic therapy.Reasonable rates. Hyde Park off ice-Ca 11 643-2057.PROFESSIONAL TYPING-reasonable rates,684 6882.Weddings and Portraits photographed. CallLeslie at 536-1626 or 955-2775.JAMES BONE, EDITOR-TYPIST, 363-0522.General and legal typing services. Promptpick up and delivery. Contact Victoria Gordon.(783-1345).FIREWOOD - Free Delivery in Hyde Park 742-1762.LOYOLA UNIVERSITYCPA REVIEW COURSECompare to other reviews:• Current success: Two Loyola reviewcandidates received Elijah Watt Sellsawards for the May, 1981, examinationand one for the May, 1982, examination.These candidates wrote solutions amongthe best in the U S.• Long-standing success: The Loyolaprogram began in 1927.• Instruction is live by professionaleducators, all of whom are CPA’s• Tuition is a reasonable $575.• Classes begin in January for theMay, 1983, examination.• For a brochure and applicationsform call 670-3144 or write:Loyola University of ChicagoCPA Review Course820 N. Michigan Ave.Chicago, IL 60611Loyola University is an equal opportunityeducator and employer CHEERLEADING TRYOUTS. For more infocall Laurel 947-0036 or leva 947-0138.CAROLE ETZLER CONCERT Nov. 13, 8 PMTICKETS $2 Graham Taylor Hall, CTS. 5757 S.University. For info. Call 643 4468.Burrito Supreme now available at The BlueGargoyle Cafeteria. Lunch served M-F 11:00-2:00 Blue Gargoyle5655 So. Univ.DELTA SIGMA: new meeting time 6:30, Mon,Nov 1, Better be thereThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, October 29. 1982—29Classified AdsJUGGLERS!MIMES!KNIFE-THROWERS!WANPERINGMINSTRELSiApply in person at Morry's Deli in the Univer¬sity Bookstore. Between the hours ot 3 and 4pm.RIDESOttered to COLUMBUS OH, ATHENS OH, IN-Dl. IN. leave 11/4 Ray-753-0499 (or 753-2270 torRm 1103)LOST AND FOUNDFOUND: Black and white cat on Quads Call643-5441FOUND: Labrador puppy found Oct 25 outsideLab School. 493-7148.JEAN JACKET “LOST" at party-hasCLASH/XTC buttons & my keys, PLEASEreturn keys (At least) to Ida Noyes-1212 E. 59thc/o Kym Spring.SPSSXThe new extended version of SPSS (SPSSX) isnow available on the Computation Center'sAmdahl 470 computer. If you are an experienc¬ed SPSS user and want to learn how to use thenew system, a free, 2 part seminar will be con¬ducted Tuesday and Thursday, November 9and 11, in Harper 406-408, 3:30-5:00 p.m. Thereis no charge, but the seminar is intended forexperienced SPSS users only.\MALLORY'S AT CCEMallory's Dining Room at CCE, 130? E. 60th St.is offering free wine with any meal. Presentyour faculty, staff, or student ID. Call 753-4470for reservation. SYSTEM 1022System 1022 is a database management systemon the DECSYSTEM-20. Learn how to use it byattending the Computation Center's seminaron 1022, Monday and Wednesday, November 8and 10 in Harper 406-408 from 3:30 - 5:00 p.m.There is no charge and all are welcome.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.STUDY CELLO WITH ACHICAGO SYMPHONYCELLISTDon Moline offers private lessons, beginners toadvanced, all ages. $25/hr. 281-3257, leavemessage.CONDOMINIUMFOR SALE2 Bdrm, 2nd fl. 56th + Kimbark. Full dr -t- pan¬try, Sunny -I- Pleasant View. Court YardBuilding Convenient Location; $69,000 Call 876-3512.CINDERELLASAO has discount tickets to opening night ofChicago City Ballet's CINDERELLA Nov 19th$12.50 & $6.80 see guest artist Suzanne Farrelllive! iTicketson sale in rm 210 thru Nov.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.Capitol's low fares"What a break!”Wherever we fty 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 Aogeles# Chicago if BostonMiami#.,Puerto Plata# # San Juan -★ Brussels★ Frankfurt★ Zurich#################### 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 12' 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.THE BUSINESSOFMEDICINEHow will today's economic and social situationaffect the way medicine is practiced? Join usas we explore the myriad of factors influencingfhe 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.MUSICIANSMusicians wanted for newly forming U of CJAZZ ENSEMBLE. For info., call Steve at 947-0930.IDEAL 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.IN THE HEARTOF HYDE PARKBeautiful 1 brm + studio apt. for rent. Agent onpremiss. 5424 Cornell Ave. 324-1800Cfiaz(otte c~Ul^dzomcReat Ed ate Co.BEAUTY IS REAL OAK FLOORSBEAUTY IS SPACIOUS AIRY ROOMSBEAUTY IS ON THE LAKEFRONTYour beauty is eight big rooms,four baths - a whole private wingnear 73rd - South Shore - All for$44,500. Come - Take a look!IMPECCABLE, TRI LEVELBrick in garden setting. Eightrooms - balcony off dining room -central air - central vacuumsystem - Near Mercy & MichaelReese - Minutes from our campusor Downtown. Qualifies for12'/*% VA or FHA Act beforethings change. $124,000(negotiable).CLOSEST CONDO THERE IS TO CAMPUSRight on 57th Street nearWoodlawn. Seven rooms. Priceslashed to unbelievable $67,500.OWNER MUST SELL.493-0666Call Anytime MEDICIFREE CUP OF HYDE PARK'S BEST COF-FEE WHEN YOU COME FOR BREAKFASTAT THE MEDICI 7AM-11:30AM M-F OFFERGOOD THRU NOVEMBER 5.SICK PICTURESShow you care help repair a sick picture fromthe Shapiro collection for more info come toRm 210 Ida Noyes Hall.FOLKDANCE FESTIVALThe U of C 20th International Folk Festivaltakes place Nov. 5, 6, and 7 at Ida Noyes.Dance workshops feature internationallyknown instructors Pece Atanasovsky(Macedonian), Dick Crum (Balkan), andJerry Helt (American Squares). Concert andparty on campus or call John Kuo 324-1247 orTom Barrett 363-5214.ADVANCED WORDPROCESSINGProducing a final draft of a seminar paper,monograph, book, or other text can be atedious, time-consuming chore. Let the Com¬putation Center teach you how to use a com¬puter (the AMDAHL) to prepare these texts ina FREE SEMINAR on Tuesday and Thursday,November 2 and 4, from 3:30 - 5:00 p.m. inClassics 10. This seminar will teach youSCRIPT which is a very flexible and powerfultext formatting program. No computer ex¬perience is required and everyone is welcome.ATTENTION TMMEDITATORSGroup meditation and video tape Weds. Nov. 3,12:30-1:30 Bring sack lunch. Come + Enjoy!ARTISANS WANTEDAre you a closet artisan? HYDE PARK AR¬TISANS wants you! We are a cooperativegallery located at 57th & Woodlawn in theUnitarian Church. For entry work will bejuried. All forms of visual art are welcome.Call Alberta Smith Johnson at 842-0706or Roza-ly Levin at 363-8610 for details. Eves till 10.ARE YOU IN YOURRIGHT (OR LEFT) MIND?Men & women, right & left handers needed toparticipate in interesting and profitablestudies on how the two sides of the brain thinkdifferently. Call 962 8846M-F, 9-5.HALLOWEEN PARTYThe best Halloween Party in Hyde Park!Saturday, 8:30 until IDA NOYES HALL. Freerefreshments and prizes for the best costumessponsored by OBS.ADVERTISING MANAGERFOCUS! Doc Film Group's quarterly filmmagazine is looking for a part-time advertisingmanager to handle local displays advertising.Drama -+■ comm, and DOC privileges. Carhelpful. Contact Aarne Elias at 962-8574 or 752-5877 for appt.5234 S. Dorchester Ave.Walk to museums, parks, the lakeSTUDIO APARTMENTSFurnished and unfurnishedutilities includedLaundry roomSundeck • Secure buildingCampus bus at our doorCall 9-5 for appointment324-0200wmmmmmmmmmmmU30—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, October 29, 1982Classified Ads CalendarPOT-LUCK DINNERSaturday, October 30. Crossroads. 5621 S.Blackstone. Free it you bring drink, dish, etc. 6pm.BHARTANATYAClassical Dance of India. Weekly classes atCrossroads. 5621 S. Blackstone. Instructor:Madhumatihi Manjun. $10 Donation toCrossroads per month. Call 684-6060 for details.GREEKSTUDENTSAll new and returning Greek students are in¬vited to an organizational meeting Sunday Oc¬tober 31. At 12 noon. Coffee tea donuts andravani will be served. Meeting at 5649 Dor¬chester. Call Yannis Manuelides ahead to con¬firm if you can. At 752-8361.PLAY LACROSSEOrganizational mtg. Tues. Nov. 9 at PSI U. 5639S. University at 7 p.m. Call Tim or Phil at 288-9870. COUPLES...Couples wanted for a study of campus values.$10 per couple, 1 Vj hours. Cali 324-3784 6 to 10.ASHUMASHUM Student Meeting Monday Nov. 1 IdaNoyes East Lounge 7:30 p.m.SUPPORT GROUPHomosexual support for men and women in¬terested in talking to peers who share the com¬mon difticulties ot sexuality and self-esteemwill meet on Monday 9:00 pm in Room 301 IdaNoyes. Confidential.ON PURPOSE OR NOTJEAN JACKET with CLASH/XTC buttons wastaken trom a party Sat (Oct 23) I need my keys(at least) DESPARATELY. Please return toIda Noyes 1212 E. 59th c/o Kym Spring.HALLOWEEN PARTYFeaturing new wave-rock band THEVISITORS. Sat. Oct. 30. I House 3 bucks in¬cludes refreshments and prizes 9pm-lam.PRODUCTIONSis available to make Your next party a suc¬cess! DJing lights and other servicesavailable. Call Mike Conte at 241-6438 for info. PERSONALSllleva and Lynn- Let's check out the hourlyrates across the midway at CCE MattTo my favorite brown eyed vampire: Wannacome over for lunch and have my neck fordessert?M. "The Coed" I danced with you Sat. at Dor¬chester party and talked with you at PocketPoetics Tues. Now how can I tind you? L. IN218THE PAPER CHASEThis Friday night in Quantrell Auditorium, at7:00, 9:15, 11:30. Only $2.00 tor a great show. To B, a great pioneer in the field of MoralDetective work-HAPPY BDAY-AII DueRespect, M.The Continental Staff of M+B sends, with alldue respect. Best Wishes to B on Nov. 1.IF YOU'RE SO SMART...Then how come you haven't registered yet torthe U of C College Bowl Tournament, Nov. 8-14? All students are eligible. Come to the Stu¬dent Activities Office (Ida Noyes 210) for in¬formation and entry forms.SWIM COACHAss't swimming coach needed for U. C. men &women swim tean. Nov. thru Mar. from 3pm to6pm daily. Competitive swim exp. or coachingreq. Call coach All Pell 962-8783 at BartlettGym. Time To Be Serious, Time To Be Sad I'm GoingTo Keep On Loving And I'm Going To Be GladReg(3): Compare Lady MacBeth with certaindark librarians? Banquo's Ghost?MetropolitanCommunity Churchof the Resurrection5638 So. Woodlawn 528-2858Outreach to the Gay CommunityWorship - Sunday 3 pmJoin Us Now!Medical SchoolApplicantsWe have placed hundreds of students into the bestEnglish speaking foreign medical schools...including StGeorge's University in Grenada, world's highest ECFMGaverage English speaking school. Personal, professionalCaribbean specialists since 1975. Pay only on acceptanceCall or write for our 1982 Bulletin describing how we canhelp you obtain a quality medical education.MedicalEducationalCorporationFlorida office: 2119 Embassy Drive, West Palm Beach FI 33401New York office: 117-01 Park Lane South. Kew Gardens N Y 11418(305)683-6222 (212) 441-7074YOUR CHANCE TO COME TO LONDONJunior-yoar programs. Postgraduate diplomas. Ona-year Master'sdagraas and Research opportunities in the social sciences are offeredat the London School of Economics and Political Science.The wide ronge ol subjects includesAccounting & Finance Actuarial Science Anthropology Business Studies.Economics. Econometrics. Economic History. Europeon Studies. Geography.Government, industrial Relations International History, InternationalRelations. Low, Management Science Operational Research. Philosophy.Planning Studies. Population Studies. Politics, Seo Use Policy. SocialAdministration. Sociol Work Sociology Sociol Psychology. Statistical ondMathematical Sciences, Systems Analysis.AppJtcotton blank*A^wiiilow If iitftr, LSI How^hfon Str##t, London WC2 inf landHmm lfat« wJwtKar Junior y#ar or poatydoofvLSE London School of Economics and Rotiticai Science FRIDAYMusic Dept.: Collegium Musicum 8 p.m . GoodspeedHall free.Talking Pictures: Beauty and the Beast 7:30 & 9:30p.m. I-House $2.00 Free popcorn.Court Theatre: You Never Can Tell 8 p.m. NewTheatre 962-7300Humanities Division: Lecture: Dr. Lucy Der Man-uelian “Lost Treasures of Armenian Architecture’’7:30 p.m. JRL A-llIntervarsity Christian Fellowship: Meeting 7:30INHCenter for Middle Eastern Studies: Symposium onIslamic Criminal Justice System CCE thru Sunday.Info 782-4654. Arabic Circle: Lecture: Ibrahim al-Singilaw “Observations on Ibn Fadlan’s Journey toNortheast Europe” 3:30 p.m. Pick 218Crossroads: English Classes. Beg. 10 a.m.-12 p.m.;Int. 10:45 a.m.-12:45 p.m. Yoga Class 3-5 p.m. Pump¬kin Carving Party 7 p.m.Hillel: Sundown — Yavneh Sabbath Services, 6:30p.m. Adat Shalom Cooperative Sabbath Dinner,$3.00; 8:30 p.m. Lecture: Ismar Schorsch “ReligiousTruth As Metaphor: An Explication of the Hymn ofGlory”Geophysics Dept: Seminar: John C. Jamieson “LetHe Among You Who Is Without Synchrotron Castthe First Stone” 3 p.m. HGS 101. Colloquium: DavidRowley “Collage Tectonics in the Northern Appala¬chians: Implications for Diachroneity of theTaconicOrogeny” HGS Auditorium 1:30 p.m.SATURDAYVolleyball: U of C vs. Knox 1 p.m. Field HouseInternational House: Halloween Party 9 p.m.753-2270Doc Films: Animal Farm2:30 p.m. My Dinner WithAndrel.lb & 9:30 p.m. Cobb Hall $2.00Court Theatre: You Never Can Tell 8 p.m. NewTheatre 962-7300Calvert House: Mass at noon and 5 p.m.; Sacramentof Reconciliation 4:30 p.m.Physics Dept.: Lecture: George Gollin “ElectronicSnap Decisions and Interfaces 11 a.m. Eck 133Hillel: Orthodox Sabbath Services 9:15 a.m.; Up¬stairs Minyan 9:30 a.m.Crossroads: Pot Luck Dinner 6 p.m.SUNDAYDoc Films: Princess Yang Kwei Fei 7:30 followed bya talk by Audie Bock. Cobb Hall $2.00LSF: Bride of Frankenstein 8:30 p.m. Law SchoolAuditorium $2.00Oriental Institute: Member’s Day Open House 12p.m.-4 p.m. 753-2389 Oriental Institute Films: Iraq: Stairway to the Gods2 p.m. Breasted HallCourt Theatre: You Never Can Tell 2:30 & 7:30 p.m.New Theatre 962-7300Hillel: Lox and Bagel Brunch 11 a.m. $1.75 per sand¬wichMARRS: Meeting INH 4 p.m.Greek Student Association: Meeting 5649 S. Dor¬chester 12 p.m.Hyde Park Neighborhood Club: “Pee Wee” 3 p.m.5480 S. Kenwood $3.50Chuch of St. Paul and the Redeemer: BenjaminLane, Organist and Choirmaster 4945 S. Dorchester.Elizabethian Evensong 4 p.m.Rockefeller Chapel: Chancel Choir Rehearsal 8:30p.m.; Ecumenial Serive of the Holy Communion 9a.m.; Discussion Class 10 a.m.; University ReligiousService, Ismar Schorch, University Memorial Sun¬day.Metropolitan Community Church of the Resurrec¬tion: Outreach to the Gay Community 3 p.m. 5638 S.WoodlawnFolkdancing: Beginning and intermediate teaching 8p.m.; Request dancing 9:30 p.m. INHMONDAYDOC Films: Rio Grande 8 p.m. Cobb $1.50Christian Science Organization: Meeting 5:45 HE688Du Sable Museum: Book Festival thru Friday 10a.m. to noon.Committee on Social Thought: Seminar: “NaturalLaw and the Laws of Human Nature” 3:30 p.m. SS302Hillel: Beginning Yiddish 6 p.m.; Class in “Sayingsof the Fathers” 7 p.m.; Israeli Folk Dancing, BlueGargoyle 8 p.m. 75*Chemistry Dept.: Lecture: Claude Woods “Mi¬crowave Spectroscopy of Ions” 4 p.m. Kent 107Folkdancing: Beginning and intermediate teaching 8p.m.; Request dancing 9:30 p.m. INHCrossroads: Beg. Spanish Class 7 p.m.Tfti SAm vonCHINESE-AMERICAN RESTAURANTSpecializing in Cantoneseand American dishesOpen Daily 11 A.-8:30 P.M.Closed Monday1318 1. 63rd MU 4-1062EXCITING LISTINGS EXCITINGWHERE YOU WANT TO BE. Kimbark south of 55th St. 3bdrm condo in beautiful (truly) condition. Designer kitchen.Recessed lighting in the hall. Working gas fireplace. And theassessments are $98.00/month. $76,000. Don Tillery.OVERLOOKS PARK on 54th St. One bdrm condo with thespace of a two bdrm. Full formal dnrm. New kitchen and bath.Mantel in lvrm has been stripped & is gorgeous. Only $49,900.TWO-FLAT AT 55TH & HYDE PARK BLVD. Originally abrick Victorian rowhouse & can be easily deconverted to a4 bdrm home. Presently the 1st fir apt has 1 bdrm, 1 bath;the 2nd fir has 2 bdrms, 1 bath. Both have formal dnrms. Nicebackyard with 1-car garage plus 1 pkg space. New furnaces.$124,500. Vern Monigal.TALK TO THE COOK & WATCH TV TOO!! The presentowners took out the pantry & maid’s room to make a countrykitchen/famiiy room but still have 3 bdrms and a formal dnrm.Off-street parking. Well priced at $62,000. Martha Benson.Kennedy, Ryan, Monigal & Associates667-6666 • 5508 S. Lake Park Ave. j$The Chicago Maroon—Friday, October 29, 1982—31ITHE WHOIT'S HARDIncludes AthenaWhy Did I Fall For That It's Your Turnjr i fTM& NaAkDAYLIGHT AGAININCLUDESWASTED ON THE WAYTURN YOUR BACK ON LOVESOUTHERN CROSS Mike RutherfordActing Very StrangetINCLUDES rut.MAXINE/HALFWAY THEREDON HENLEYI Can’t Stand Still32—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, October 29, 1982 STEPHANIE MILLSSa/i/ff/ijizy/// CAo/• PETER GABRIELSECURITYIncludesShock The Monkey/I Hove The TouchYour Hands On Me/WallflowerNo Tricks - Only TreatsMidnight Madness Returns toSpin-ItFriday October 29th 1982Everything is on Sale!9 p.m. - 2 a.m. Save 24% off our regular priceson everything in the store.Saturday October 30, 1982Spin-it presents the Morning after.All day Saturday Save 12% offour regular prices1 0 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. everything in the storeis on saleHere's an example of the savings:5.76 Friday Night6.67 Saturday Night5.76 Friday Night6.67 Saturday Night 5.76 Friday Night6.67 Saturday Night 5.76 Friday Night6.67 Saturday Night 5.76 Friday Night6.67 Saturday Night 5.76 Friday Night6.67 Saturday NightCash, Visa, MastercardCheck (W/U.C.I.D. or proper I.D.)CASSETTE5.76 Friday Night6.67 Saturday Night5.76 Friday Night6.67 Saturday Night 5.76 Friday Night6.67 Saturday Night 5.76 Friday Night6.67 Saturday Night 5.76 Friday Night6.67 Saturday Night 5.68 Friday Night6.58 Saturday NightSpin-it1444 E. 57th St.684-1505 5.76 Friday Night6.67 Saturday Night y Prizes each hour Friday for best costume5.68 Friday Night6.58 Saturday Night 3.78 Friday Night4.38 Saturday Night Give the giftof music.