Striking Out FeaturesDear Penthouse Forum The Secret is outpage five centerspreadThe Chicago MaroonVolume 92, No. 17 The University of Chicago ©Copyright 1982 The Chicago Maroon Tuesday, November 2, 1982Levine to finance Inquiry;Hotline funding assuredBy Anna FeldmanThe Office of the Dean of the Col¬lege will fund this quarter’s issueof Inquiry, the publication of Col¬lege student’s papers deemed out¬standing by a student editorialboard.In a decision announced Friday,Donald Levine, dean of the Col¬lege, said that his office wouldsponsor the magazine’s autumnissue, according to Richard Taub,associate dean of the College.“The dean of the College hasmade the decision to fund Inquiryfor this quarter,” Taub said, “andwill review the situation for therest of the year.”Taub said that the dean’s fund¬ing of Inquiry this quarter was “anemergency response to Inquiry’ssituation.” Scheduled to go to pressthis week, Inquiry needed $810.50for its autumn issue, and had beenturned down for funding by the Stu¬dent Government Finance Com¬ mittee (SGFC) early last week.Decisions whether to fund thefollowing issues will be made in “amore measured time,” said Taub.Inquiry editor Ted Zang is “opti¬mistic” on future funding, andhopes that in time, the StudentGovernment and the dean’s officewill be able “to get together anddecide who funds which organiza¬tions.”Zang added, “I really appreciatethe efforts that the dean has madeto keep Inquiry alive and able topublish.”Another organization deniedfunding last week by SGFC, butwhose budget now appears to beunconditionally funded, is Hotline.Hotline is a group of students whoreceive calls from other studentsfor information, complaints, orjust to talk, from 7 p.m. to 7 a.m.nightly. Hotline volunteers are alsotrained to deal with persons with minor emotional problems.Charles O’Connell, dean of stu¬dents in the University, said thathe told students on Hotline lastsummer that he would fund thegroup for this year, but that theyshould go to Bernard Brown, deanof Rockefeller Chapel, and to Stu¬dent Government to seek furtherfunding, and then to report back tohim.Dean of Students in the CollegeHerman Sinaiko said that fundingfor Hotline, to his understanding,was not “an emergency,” as wasthe immediate funding for Inquiry.Sinaiko said that SGFC’s argu¬ment that Hotline is a Universityservice, and that it should there¬fore not be funded by SGFC out ofthe Student Activities Fee, “isquite persuasive to us.” Sinaikoadded that Hotline “is an extreme¬ly useful and important service tothe University.”Negotiations on wage increasesfor RNs go to arbitration boardILLUSTRATION COURTESY OF BANTAM BOOKSThe Secret: A Treasure Hunt just recently released, de¬scribes the Fair People of the New World, mythological charac¬ters that have made America their home. The book featuresclues for finding hidden treasures buried throughout the contin¬ental USA and Canada. Above is an illustration of the WestGhost: “invisible when viewed through sunglasses... The WestGhost is rilly, rilly, like, into his California life-style, y’know ”See feature story on page six. of the International Association ofMachinists and AerospaceWorkers represent the 30 instru¬ment designers and makers in theresearch institutes, radiology andbiophysics laboratories, as well asother scientific laboratories.A two-year contract for the reg¬istered nurses was reached lastyear between the University andINA, however wage increaseswere only settled for the first yearof the contract. Both sides agreedto re-open salary negotiations inthe second year. Last year, thenurses received an overall in¬crease of 13.4 percent.Both University officials andINA representatives were instruct¬ed by the arbitration board not todiscuss negotiations publicly, how¬ever, Edward Coleman, Universitydirector of employee/labor rela¬tions said that a settlement shouldbe reached soon, possibly in a weekor two.Due to a severe shortage of reg¬istered nurses throughout thecountry, the University nurses wonfairly substantial wage increaseslast year. The University mayhave to concede similar increasesthis year.A tentative agreement has beenreached with the off-campus prop¬erty maintenance workers union.Members of the bargaining unit,who are employed by the Universi¬ty Real Estate Operations, willvote on the proposed contract laterthis week.Negotiations with Lodge 113 forthe instrument designers andmakers are still in preliminary stages.The University has also recentlyreached agreements with twoother unions on new contracts forits employees. The Licensed Prac¬tical Nurses Association (LPNA)of Illinois and Local 321 of SEI bothsigned contracts with the Universi¬ty-• The two-year contract withLPNA provides wage increases of33 to 64 cents per hour in the firstyear for the 143 licensed practicalnurses employed by the Universi¬ty. Wages for the second year ofthe contract will be negotiated nextyear.According to Coleman, the nego¬tiations with the LPNA concerned“primarily wages” with some dis¬cussion on benefits.The one-year contract with Local321 provides increases of 42 to 87cents per hour for the 320 membersof the union, most of whom are em¬ployed in the University’s physicalplant department. Membershipalso includes skilled maintenanceworkers in the UCHC and in Inter¬national House, storeroom employ¬ees in UCHC and in the laboratorysupply rooms of the BiologicalSciences Division, and lockerroomattendants and athletic aides in thephysical education department.While wages were the main issueof negotiation,^ for the first timethese employees are entitled toshort term accident and disabilityinsurance, according to Coleman.Negotiations with the LPNA andwith the Local 321 lasted “at least amonth in both cases,” said Cole¬man.By Darrell WuDunnNegotiations between the Uni¬versity and the Illinois Nurses’ As¬sociation (INA) on salary in¬creases for the approximately 560registered nurses in the Universityof Chicago Hospitals and Clinics(UCHC) have now been broughtbefore an arbitration board.Representatives of the Universi¬ty are still negotiating new con¬tracts with two other unions. Local321 of Service Employees Interna¬tional (SEI) represents the ap¬proximately 15 skilled mainte¬nance workers in Universityoff-campus properties. Lodge 113Washington considers mayoral bidas supporters begin petition driveWhile Harold Washington will al¬most certainly be re-elected toCongress today, his supporters arecurrently engaged in a petitiondrive to gather enough signaturesfor Washington to run in the Demo¬cratic mayoral primary, accord¬ing to a source in Hyde Park poli¬tics.Washington has reportedly notyet decided on a mayoral bid, buthe is to meet this week with poten¬tial financial supporters to deter¬mine if a mayoral bid would be fin¬ancially feasible. The presentpetition drive will also serve to in¬dicate how much voter strength aWasington mayoral bid wouldhave.Washington represents the 1st Congressional District which in¬cludes Hyde Park and Kenwood.Some leaders in the black com¬munity have been sympathetictowards a potential mayoral bid byCook County State’s AttorneyRichard M. Daley. The black com¬munity’s disenchantment with cur¬rent mayor, Jane M. Byrne, wouldhelp a Daley mayoral bid. Howev¬er, a Washington mayoral bidwould probably have the support ofmost members of the black com¬munity, including those who wouldfavor Daley in a race betweenDaley and Byrne. Thus, a Wash¬ington mayoral candidacy wouldprobably create a close three-wayrace between Byrne, Daley, andWashington. Harold Washington1*LGSALE DATESNOV 3 - 66V2 oz. CANSTARKISTTUNA 79 11.328 oz. CANHUNT'STOMATOSAUCE32 oz.REALEMON 3/89 cReg. 38cLEMON 119JUICE I25 oz.MOTT'SAPPLESAUCE 79 Reg. 1.1115V? oz.NORTH PACIFICROYALP NK SALMONGRADE AEAGLE'S PRIDEMIXEDFRYER PARTS2 lb.MAXWELL HOUSEALL GRINDSCOFFEE 189Reg. 2.03453 lb.9932 oz.| HEINZKETCHUP1 lb. PACKAGEFRESH 1 19MUSHROOMS'/2 GALLONASS'T FLAVORSSEAL TESTICECREAMFRESHBANANAS5 lb. BogG&WSUGAR5 lb. BagFLORIDA WHITEGRAPEFRUIT Reg. 1.7515?10918*.14999cFINER FOODSSERVING53rd PRAIRIE SHORESKIMBARK PLA2A 2911 VERNONWhere You Are A Stranger But Once1 THE SCHOOL OF PUBLIC AFFAIRSat the University of Maryland, College Parkis Recruiting Students for aMASTER OF PUBLIC MANAGEMENTProfessional Education for careers in• Federal, state and local government agencies• Public affairs units in private corporations• Private nonprofit organizations and associationsFINANCIAL AID AVAILABLERecruiter: Dr. Peyton YoungDate: Monday, November 8Time: 1:00-2:00 P.M.Place. Career Counseling & Placement Centermarian realty,inc.mREALTORStudio and 1 BedroomApartments Available— Students Welcome —On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-54002—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, November 2, 1982Orfield to speakGary Orfield, professor of politicalscience at the University, will give a lectureon the subject of school desegregation atFreedom Hall, 410 Lakewood Blvd., in ParkForest, Nov. 4.Orfield is a noted expert on the implemen¬tation of programs for school desegregation.He served a year as scholar-in-residencewith the US Commission on Civil Rights,and he has authored four books on the sub¬ject of school desegregation, including MustWe Bus?The lecture will culminate a Fair HousingPractices Seminar. It also marks the initialphase of a major research project by theHousing Center to determine the impact ofracial steering and discrimination on schooldistricts. Admission to the lecture is free.Costly chickenGoing out to Harold’s can cost you morethan $3. Four University of Chicago studentswere robbed on their way home from thegourmet shack on Oct. 30 at about 8:30p.m.Two men, claiming to have a gun con¬cealed in a coat pocket, stopped the group onthe 5600 block of Kimbark Ave. The studentshanded them between $40 to $50 and the menran away, without any chicken.Student spousesupport group meetsA support group for student spouses willmeet this Thursday at 7 p.m. in Ida NoyesHall. The group was started last year to helpcombat the particular problems which stu¬dent spouses face.The group distributed a letter in orienta¬tion packets and to departments acrosscampus describing some of the problemsstudent spouses encounter. The problems in¬clude feeling lonely and abandoned, not hav¬ing enough money, not spending enoughtime with one's spouse because he or shestudies all the time, lacking a social life, andhaving trouble finding a decent job. The group is also a place for meeting newfriends, sharing information, and askingquestions about the University or the city.The group is also conducting a survey to findout what services are offered to studentspouses nationwide.The group meets the first Thursday ofeach month until 9 p.m. For more informa¬tion, call the Student Activities Office at753-3591.1C time changeA new timetable for the Illinois CentralGulf (IC) Railroad was put into effect thispast Sunday. While most commuter trainsare either unchanged, or changed by only afew minutes, persons who ride the IC late atnight should be aware of one major change.The train which previously departed fromRandolph St. at 12:30 a.m. now departs at12:50 a.m.Schedule information is available at sta¬tions or by calling the Regional Transporta¬tion Authority at 836-7000.Colloquium on theMexican revolutionThe Chicago Colloquium on Latin Ameri¬ca is sponsoring a discussion on “Mexico:The Interrupted Revolution?” Wednesday,Nov. 3 from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. in the New¬berry Library on 60 W. Walton. Panelists in¬clude U of C Professor Friedrich Katz, Pro¬fessor Adolfo Gilly from the UniversidadNacional Autonoma de Mexico, ProfessorMay Kay Vaughan from Circle Campus,Keith Haynes, and U of C graduate studentRichard Estrada. The panel will considerthe nature and consequences of the forceswhich shaped the Mexican Revolution of1910 to 1923.Free transportation from the ReynoldsClub to the library is available for those in¬terested in attending. A bus will leavecampus at 7 p.m. and return at 10 p.m. Tomake a reservation, call the Center forLatin American Studies at 962-8420 or comeby Social Science 204. However, reserva¬tions are not necessaryLUTHERAN CAMPUS MINISTRYAugustono Lutheran Church5500 S. Woodlawn Ave.Tues., 5:30 p.m. — Eucharist6:00 p.m. — Pizza Supper ($2/person)/DiscussionTonight: “Charismatic Renewal & Religious Experience’Fr. Louis RoggeThurs., 7:30 a.m. — Morning Prayer and Breakfast2445 N. Lincoln Ave. Chicago, ill. 60614 Open da.ly noon tc 10:50Near the Fullerton ‘L’ stop • north of the Blograph theatre 548*11/0 News in briefJames Redfield‘The Iliad on War’Professor James Redfield will discuss“The Iliad on War” in tonight’s CollegiateLecture in the Liberal Arts. Redfield is aprofessor in the Committee on SocialThought, the department of Classical Lan¬guages and Literature, the Committee onGeneral Studies in the Humanities, and theCollege. He is also the master of the Human¬ities Collegiate Division.Redfield, author of Nature and Culture inthe Illiad, will explore Homer’s work for thepurpose of illuminating the subject of war.The lecture will be held in the Swift LectureRoom at 8 p.m., with discussion to follow.Quotation of the weekMade in a Chicago Tribune editorial onNov. l in reference to Nobel Prize winnerGeorge Stigler’s recent (and brief) Wash¬ington press conference:“Obviously the (Reagan) administrationhas had little experience dealing with aca¬demics, a generally ornery lot, or with Uni¬versity of Chicago professors, who tend tobe more ornery than most. ” HP polling placesMembers of the University communitywho have registered to vote in Illinois cancast their ballots today at polling placesaround Hyde Park. Below is a listing of polllocations for residents of the fourth and fifthwards. (Residents of Burton-Judson Courtare in the 20th ward, and are to vote at 6145S. Ingleside.)Fourth wardPrecinct Polling place28 5401 S. Ellis Ave.30 1649 E. 59th St.32 1330 E. 50th St.34 810 E. 51st St.38 5100 S. Cornell Ave.42 5330 S. Harper Ave.44 5130 S. Kenwood Ave.46 5052 S. Ellis Ave.48 5000 S. Cornell Ave.52 5120 S. Harper Ave.53 5480 S. Kenwood Ave.54 936 E. 54th St.55 1000 E. 53rd St.56 5325 S. Cottage Grove Ave.57 5335 S. Kenwood Ave.58 5427 S. Dorchester Ave.59 1448 E. 53rd St.60 936 E. 54th St.61 1150 E. 55th St.Fifth wardPrecinct Polling place8 1556 E. 56th St.11 5027 S. Cornell Ave.12 1701 E. 53rd St.13 5475 S. Everett Ave.14 1701 E. 53rd St.15 5346 S. Cornell Ave.24 1700 E. 56th St.26 5715 S. Drexel Ave.27 5631 S. Kimbark Ave.30 5631 S. Kimbark Ave.33 5631 S. Kimbark Ave.35 1642 E. 56th St.37 5541 S. Everett Ave.38 5500 S. Shore Drive39 5844 S. Stony Island Ave.41 5805 S. Dorchester Ave.43 5631 S. Kimbark Ave.46 6040 S. Harper Ave.MORRY'SHAPPY HOUR IS BACKEveryday from 3 pm to 4:30 pmMorry’s Campus Restaurant -Bookstore (1st Floor)GREAT FOOD AT INCREDIBLYLOW. LOW PRICES• HOI DOGSALL THE TRIMMINGS ONLY39*Reg. 79C Save 40CJUMBO. HOT ONLY• PASTRAMI SANDWICH S f s»Reg. 1.89 Save 30CJUMBO• % lb. CHEESEBURGERALL THE TRIMMINGSReg. ONLY€each1.29 Save 30CBUY 4 HOT DOCS!GET 1 ADDITIONAL FREE!jThe Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, November 2, 1982 -3mSCHOOL OF MEDICINE• CIFAS UNIVERSITY •“CLASSES TAUGHT IN ENGLISH”The University is located in Santo Domingo,Dominican Republic. Our Medical Program is tailoredafter the traditional U.S. Model of Medical Educationand is fully accredited.OPENINGS AVAILABLE“Our Medical School is WHO Listed And ApprovedFor V.A. Benefits.”For More Information and Application Form please write toCIFAS UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF MEDICINEDEAN OF ADMISSIONS12820 WHITTIER BLVD.. SUITE 28 . WHITTIER, CALIF 90602THE HEDWIG LOEB FELLOWSHIPFOR UNDERGRADUATERESEARCH IN THE COLLEGEResearch Proposals How Being Accepted for theWinter ond 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 q 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 on appropriate member of the Faculty.Awards may range up to $600.00New York UniversityVisits Your Campusto Answer Questions onthe M.B. A. ProgramLocated in the heart of the Wall Street area. New York University’sGraduate School of Business Administration has trained students forexecutive positions for over 60 years. A recent survey by Standard &Poor’s ranked New York University number 2 nationwide as the sourceof graduate education for chief executives in major companies. OnWednesday, November 3, an admissions officerwill be on campus to discuss the quality and flexibility of the graduatebusiness program. Check withthe Office of Career Develop¬ment for sign-up schedule andfurther information.New York University is an affirmativeaction/equal opportunity institution. 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 AvenueINTERNATIONALHOUSESpeaker SeriespresentsGIDON GOTTLIEBInternational Law and Diplomacy Expert“HAVE WE ‘LOST’WESTERN EUROPE?”HomeroomTuesday, November 27:30 pmInternational House1414 East 59th Street♦—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, November 2, 1982Striking Out / David BrooksDear Penthouse ForumDear Penthouse Forum,I am a senior at an elite university on thesouth side of Chicago. I must admit, I’venever been a fan of your Forum column. Upuntil recently, I was convinced that all theletters were phoney. But as I am now forcedto eat crow, I’d like to share an experienceof mine with your readers.Last Saturday night I decided to pass timeby wandering around the university library,browsing for books on Byzantine culture.While walking in the stacks on the fourthfloor I spotted two young women sprawledat the base of the B239-B568 bookshelf. Thegirls, who I’ll call Candy and Seka, were notparticularly good looking — Candy is one ofthe few women who wears a goatee andSeka has the unsavory habit of sucking onthe tip of her nose — but even from a dis¬tance of thirty feet, I could not help feastingmy eyes on their well-formed intuitivepowers.They were lying with their backs to me,and their baggy chinos and soiled flannelshirts revealed two sets of lusciously firmNeo-Wittgensteinian ideological systems.As I snuck up behind them, I noticed theywere sharing a copy of Stanley Cavell’sMust We Mean What We Say? and fromtheir nervous giggles and heavy breathing, Icould tell they were turned on by what theywere reading.“The skeptic,’’ Seka panted, “has a par¬ticular philosophic view which positions hisworlds oddly, whereas the ordinary lan¬guage critic makes use only of what any un¬prejudiced man can see to be straighttruth.’’ I gasped when Seka bared her epis-temic conditionals but luckily, the girlswere too involved with each other to noticemy presence.“But this is partial,” Candy breathed,“because it assumes that the skeptic neednot be counted among those who can seethat their words are in apparent conflictwith what is ordinarily said ” She was de¬nuding Seka of her rhetorical drapery andprobing for her ontology.“Oooh!,” Seka moaned, “Yourperipetetic extension is so big!”By now I was in a frenzy of desire. “Thepartiality of this idea shows in two ways!,” Iblurted out, unable to control myself. Thegirls, stunned for a moment, turned and ac¬tively sought my presence. They openedtheir apophantics and I entered the melee.“They assume the skeptic is a less perfectmaster of English than his critic,” I contin¬ued.“Oooh!” Seka moaned, “Your peripeteticextension is so big!”Candy sat quietly for a second, fondlingmy assertions and working herself towardsome more profound climax. “These con¬cessions seem forced, or empty,” she said,dangling her compound propositions in myface. Seka tended to her friend’s objections:“To prove this you must show that a masterof English, who knows everything you know,has no real use for them.” I ran my eyesalong the contour of her universified suppo¬sition. It was trim and smooth, with themusky aroma of Platonism.“I still can’t quite grasp his point,” Candysaid, frustrated with her critical posture.“Why don’t you perform a little reductioad absurdum Seka whispered in my ear.I blushed. I must admit, I am too inhibitedfor that. I guess I’m still a bit Victorian, lo¬gically.I ran my eyes along the contourof her universified supposition. Itwas trim and smooth, with themusky aroma of Platonism.“Relax,” I urged instead, “and imagine anonjudgemental skepticism.” She seizedmy oxymoron and took it all in.“In the philosophy which proceeds ordi¬nary language,” Seka groaned, “under¬standing from the inside is methodologicallyfundamental. ’Candy was now adapting to the rhythm ofthe argument. She turned around and gaveme a sly grin, “I’ve never done it a post¬eriori before.”I nibbled roughly on her premises. I couldhear Seka pondering my clarifications. To¬gether, the three of us rode wave upon waveof transcendental deductions. I felt mycorpus collosom overflowing with hyperra-tional intuitions. All was madness until thatmoment of pure epiphany when, in unison,we pulsated to the inescapable conclusion:what the critic wants, or needs, is a posses¬sion of data and descriptions so clear andcommon that apart from them neitheragreement or disagreement would be poss¬ible — not as if the problem is for opposedpositions to be reconciled, but for the halvesof the mind to go back together.We lay exhausted between the stacks. Ipulled out a pack of Gitanes and passed itaround. We used Candy’s beret as an ash¬tray. When I could gather strength, I bid thegirls good-bye, and they gave me a finalpeek at their ratiocinatives. I went back tomy room, took a shower, and fell asleep.When I woke up I felt kind of low. Sure, ithad been a logical confrontation filled withecstacy. And sure, the girls did give goodbrain. But something was missing. Were wejust three postmodern subsystems passingin the night? Where were the blissful mo¬ments of quiet empiricism? Where was thestrain of the ideological uncertainty? Wherewas the dizzy gamble with the torture of arejected conditional? It all seemed so shal¬low. I don’t know, maybe I’m getting de¬pressed over nothing. Maybe I just think toomuch.Name and address withheldThe Chicago MaroonThe Chicago Maroon is the official newspaper of the University of Chicago. It ispublished twice a week, Tuesdays and Fridays. Editorial and business offices arelocated on the third floor of Ida Noyes, 1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, 60637. Telephone753-3263.Darrell WuDunneditor Margo HablutzelFeatures Editor Nadine McGannGrey City Journal Editor Aame EliasOperations ManagerAnna FeldmanManaging Editor Cliff GrammichSports Editor Keith Fleming Steve BrittChicago Literary Review Business ManagerEditorRobin KirkNews EditorWilliam RauchCopy Editor David BrooksViewpoints EditorWally DabrowskiProduction Manager Paul O’DonnellChicago Literary ReviewEditorAra JelalianPhotography Editor Jay McKenzieAdvertising ManagerBrian Closerffice ManagerAssociate Editor: Jeffrey TaylorStaff: Mark Bauer, Dan Breslau, John Collins, Kahane Corn, Tom Elden, Pit Fin-egan, Caren Gauvreau, Eric Goodheart, Elisse Gottlieb, Jesse Halvorsen, Joe Holtz,Keith Horvath, Marc Kramer, Linda Lee, Jane Look, Frank Luby, Yousuf Saveed,Steve Shandor, Andy Wrobel, Kittie Wyne. fZfe*rtmentofylusk,'' presents *Thursday, November 4 — Noontime Concert12:15 p.m., Goodspeed Recital HallLorene Richardson, contraltoMusic of Barber, Brahms, Mendelssohn and WoodAssisting are Robert Morrison, piano; MarkHohnstreiter and Elizabeth Lombardi, violins;David Budil, viola; John Edwards, Cello,admission FREESunday, November 7 —New Music Ensemble Concert8:00 p.m., Goodspeed Recital HallMusic of Janacek, Del Tredici, Milhaud, Sollberger,Chou and others,admission FREEFriday, November 12MUSIC FROM MARLBORO — 7 of the bestmusicians trained at the Marlboro Music Festivalfor this program in Mandel Hall at 8:00 p.m. (Thefirst concert in the UC Chamber Music Series.)Tickets and information — UC Concert Office —962-8068. \SOLUTIONS TO THENUCLEAR ARMS RACE CONFERENCENovember 11 12:30 to 5 pmOPENING: Jerome Weisner, former Science Advisor toPresident Kennedy and former President, MITNUCLEAR FREEZE DEBATE: Randy Kehler, NationalCoordinator of the Nuclear Freeze Campaign vs. JohnKwapisz, American Security CouncilNO FIRST-USE DEBATE: Advocate John Steinbruner,Brookings Institution vs. John Mearsheimer, U. of C.CLOSING SPEECH: Senator Gary Hart (D-Col.) memberof Senate Armed Services Committee. Exacttime to be announced.Dr. Helen Caldicott, President of Physicians forSocial Responsibility, will speak at TheCenter for Continuing Education, 7:30 pm,November 10.6 Workshops available. Call 241-7088Sponsored by U. ofC. C.A.C.D.The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, November 2, 1982—5FeaturesThe Secret: America’s irreverent new mythologyby Margo HablutzelThe Geodesic Gnome, Handimanticore,Frigidaredevils, Torontogre, andEnergenii are not the winners of one oflast weekend’s costume parties: they aresome of the descendants of the Old World’sFair People (Brownies, Pixies, Sidhe,Loup Garous, Hadas, etc). According toThe Secret: A Treasure Hunt, written byByron Priess, Ted Mann, and Sean Kellyand recently published by Bantam Books,when the Old World became overpopulatedthe Fair People went into hiding and whenthe mortal inhabitants fled to the NewWorld the Fair People also made thevoyage, bringing their talents andtreasures with them.PHOTO COURTESY OF BANTAM BOOKSTypographic Terrors: these “magical,dadaist dwarves... hail, naturally, fromGuttenberg country Germany.” Theyare known for “misdirecting typists’fingers, distracting proofreaders, andspreading dyslexia among publishers.”Typographical Terrors “thrive on the al¬coholic fluid of Liquid Paper.”Most of the attention given the book hasbeen concentrated on the treasure,especially in light of last year’s unearthingof the Masquerade treasure. Preiss saidthat it was the popularity of Masqueradethat helped the creators decide upon whatthe exact nature of the hunt would be.“We wanted people to find something,”he explained in a recent interview. “Atfirst we thought it would be (the sculpturesof) the creatures. Then Masquerade cameout, and people seemed enamored withhunting for the treasure. We weren’t surethat we wanted people fo find (anything),then Masquerade tipped the scales.”Masquerade, written and illustrated byKit Williams, is a complicated“children’s” book which tells the story ofa person’s travels in a slightly unreal world. Hidden within the words andpaintings were clues to the burial place ofa fantastic rabbit-shaped treasure wroughtby Williams. (Preiss commented that as aresult of the years of searching for thetreasure, “England has become one bigpothole.”)In The Secret, the treasure is the twelvejewels of the Fair People: garnet,emerald, sapphire, turquoise, amethyst,opal, topaz, peridot, ruby, diamond,aquarmarine, and pearl. A story at thebeginning of the book tells of the FairPeople’s flight from the Old World andhow the jewels were hidden along with theFair People when they went into hiding inthe New World during the 1500s. Now thetreasure is being offered to mortals as apeace-offering in the hope that bothnations can live together in harmony.Lucite boxes have been hidden in twelveplaces across the continental United Statesand Canada, each containing anelaborately carved and hand-paintedcasque, the sides of which depict theoriginal twelve tribes whose jewels are thereward. Displayed on top of each cosque isthe Fair People’s greatest treasure, adragon. None of the boxes are buried morethan three and one-half feet underground,and the book is careful to note and Preissstressed that none of the casques havebeen hidden in cemeteries, flower beds, orany life-threatening location “such as adangerous highway embankment, acontaminated area, or active railwaytrack.”Because the casques were buried in totalsecrecy, a task which took Preiss ninemonths to complete, some awkwardsituations did occur. Once airport securitypolice would not let Preiss board a planebecause of the six-foot shovel he wascarrying until he explained that he was ahorticulturist going to a convention and heneeded the shovel to dig up tulips. Anothertime Preiss had to throw the shovel into apit and “dive for cover” as a police carpassed near one of the sites. Most of theburials, done at night or in isolated areas,did go fairly smoothly, though.Should you find one of the casques, youonly have to send the troll-shaped keyinside it and a form from the back of TheSecret to Byron Preiss Visual Publications,Inc. describing the site and how youdeduced the location, and you will receivethe appropriate treasure. If you feel thatyou are sure of the site of a casque but areunable to go there yourself, or if the sitehas become a parking lot since the casquewas buried, you can still send in the formand receive the jewel (but not the casque,which is only for those who actuallyexcavate the site). Of course, the jewelsare distributed on afirst-correct-answer-received basis.The Secret does not make finding thecasques easy. The book contains afull-color, full-page painting of each of thejewels. Each painting corresponds to oneof twelve verses to tell exactly where thecasques are buried — but the reader has to decide which verse goes with whichpainting. Preiss said that the clues aregiven in ascending order of difficulty, butstill worries that they are too easy forpeople to figure out.“I expect the first (casque) to be foundwithin thirty days of publication,” he said,and gave a hint to those who want to lookfor it. “It’s like looking at stars: look longenough and (the sky) becomes familiar,then patterns emerge. You have to figureout what’s different about the pictures,look for patterns.“I’m afraid that if people at a campuslike this (where students come from allover the United States) team up, we’ll bein trouble.”Despite garnering most of the publicity,“The Tale, Simply Told” of how the FairPeople migrated to the New World and theclues to the treasure constitute less thanone-quarter of the book. The rest of TheSecret is taken up by “A Field Guide to theFair People in the New World.” TheseFair People are the intermarried andadopted descendants of the original,purebred Fair People of the Old World.The contents page of “The Field Guide”divides the descendants into nine groups —social, household, cultural, personal,political, environmental, regional,informational, and economic — while analphabetical list at the back gives the OldWorld origins and New World geographicaldistributions of each of the descendants.Each description is written up in themanner of Peterson’s Field Guide, givingthe range, habits, and history of the FairPeople, spotters’ tips, and at least onesketch or photograph of a life-likesculpture of a descendant in its naturalhabitat.How did those involved with The Secretcome to see the supposedly invisibledescendants? After beginning to explainabout going through the Fair People’sagent, Preiss confessed that “since manyof us worked on The National Lampoon,(the descendants) felt we would besympathetic to their plight, and sentemissaries to us.”About half of the descendants arerepresented by sketches, such as FreudianSylphs (. . .the more delicate the situation,the more likely her materialization”), ElfS. Presley (“. . .present backstagewherever tickets are being scalped outfront. . .His biggest pleasure isencouraging the popularity of dead rockstars over live ones”), Tupperwerewolves(related to Ready-to-Were wolves),Glitches (who “insist that wecommunicate with them exclusively bymeans of their own incomprehensiblelingo”), and the unusually kindKinderguardians (despite the fact that“the statistical chances of any infantreaching the age of maturity are nil. ..thanks to the tireless efforts of theKinderguardians, some make it — despitea slapstick situation of terrifyingnear-misses”).The other half are represented by photographs of lifelike sculptures, createdby the talented JoEllen Trilling, eachfigure taking one to two and one-halfweeks to make. The sculptures werecarefully set in each descendant’s habitatand photographed. Some of these creaturesare the Saucier’s Apprentices (advice tothose who think one inhabits their kitchen :“Send out for Chinese”), Devil Dogs (“. .the spirits of junk food”), Djinn Rummy(“one of the easiest of fairy folk to spot inprivate. . .at the bottom of one’s thirdbottle of domestic off-brand port”), theDixie Pixie (“. . .responsible for everyYankee’s twin misconception about theSouth”), and the Gnome Enclature (“. .the spirit of language. . .who sees to itthat there are sufficient synonymns so thattwo persons may discuss the same topicwithout understanding one another”).Photographing the descendants was noless interesting than burying the casques,according to Preiss. The day afterphotographing the Night Mayor on onestreet, a dead female was discovered inthe next-door alley. Two anecdotes cameout of the Small Businessman’s photosession: first, a drunk who was watchingthe proceedings was convinced that thesculpture was a real, very small man. .until the crew allowed him to touch it.Later, the creators of The Secretdiscovered that a lawyer who worked inthe building in front of which they hadbeen filming looked exactly like the SmallBusinessman — only larger.It was actually the descendants and thelegend of their ancesters’ travels whichhad originally interested Preiss and theothers. As Preiss said, “All great countrieshave mythologies, so why doesn’t anot-so-great country like our own? Mostcountries have mythologies to representtheir values and aspirations, why doesn’tthe United States?”In the end, he and co-writers Mann andKelly (who is working on a book entitledIrish Folk Tales and Fairy Tales) began towork on an American mythology.Preiss noted: “It had to reflect ourcountry, so we decided (the newmythology) had to be a) irreverent,b) rebellious, and c) a melting pot.”For a year Preiss, Mann, and Kelly —joined by Trilling, illustrators JohnPalencar, John Pierard, and OvertonLoyd, and photographer Ben Asen “amelting pot of contributors,” worked onThe Secret in their spare time. After thatfirst year they sold the idea to BantamBooks, which gave them a sufficently largeadvance to purchase the jewels andcomplete the project.The book still has not been finished,however, and Preiss didn’t think that itever would be. While there are no plans tobegin another treasure hunt when alltwelve casques are unearthed (“I’m goingto rest up from this one” Preiss said) theField Guide is an ongoing concern, andreaders are invited to send in text,sketches, or photographs of their ownsightings of the Fair People’s descendants. An ilverses.Preiss hGuide, 4readerspopularPreissand biofthe updj“I feeThe Blue Gargoyle Cafeteria5655 S. Universityin University Church Dining RoomCome try some ofour homestyle cookingSoups, salads, sandwiches,sunflower seed burgers,baked chicken, plus much more.Monday thru Friday11:30 am til 2:30 pm CHICAGO CHILDREN’S CHOIR5650 S WOODLAWN CHICAGO IL 60637 (312)324-83005th AnnualAUCTIONSATURDAY, NOV. 6th, 1982FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH, 5650 SO. WOODLAWN5:00 WINE AND CHEESE PARTY and AUCTION PREVIEWWHITE ELEPHANT TABLE$3.00 in advance$3.50 at door6:30 GENERAL VIEWING - FREE ADMISSION’%Z°,vv 6:45 CHOIR SERENADE7:00 AUCTIONprofessional auctioneer BOB HALEY ofH&H AUCTION SERVICEPHONE 643-1881 .tpy6—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, November 2, 1982Featuresillustration courtesy of BANTAM book,lustration from The Secret, one of twelve which, in conjunction with twelvet form the clues to the locations of the treasure casques.lopes to publish an updated Field‘replacing these creatures with’ sightings. I want it to be amythology.”s also hopes to print photgraphsgraphies of the casque-finders inates.;1 that finding the treasure is something special,” he said. ‘‘The(finders’) photos and stories should be partof the mythology and legends.‘‘This is a new type of fantasy book, witha climax that’s part of reality, instead ofbeing entirely fantasy. It’s an enticingthought. Someone who gets into this bookcan really have fun.”vue vO offerfilm processing!Bring in your KODACOLOR HRDisc Film today, and get qualitycolor processing by Kodak forgreat looking color prints.ask fobCOLORPROCESSINGer Kodak The U of C Drama Club:Practice makes actorsActing is the response to an imaginary stim¬ulus as though real.— Lee StrasbergFictions surround the actor — he must re¬gard them as though they were true, a livingreality.— I. RapoportIf the person sitting next to you in thelibrary begins to grimace and hunch over,or if your roommate suddenly takes a deepinterest in the way you brush your teeth,don’t be alarmed. The person may just bedoing a special type of homework.For the first time in over a decade, thereis a drama club at the University ofChicago, and the above assignments —mobility exercises and observation studies— are just two of the techniques themembers study. The club was begun byJim Keeney, a biology major who haddone some acting in high school but foundno satisfactory way to pursue it at theUniversity.‘‘With Court Theater, Court Studio, andBlackfriars, the main purpose isperforming,” he said. “For example,Court Studio tries to do one performanceper quarter, and when you add thepressures of school there’s very little timeto learn.”Keeney pointed out that the existingon-campus groups assume acting (and inthe case of Blackfriars, singing) ability,and for those with little experience therewas no way to learn, especially as theUniversity of Chicago has no real Dramamajor.“The purpose of the Drama Club is to fillthis void,” he said.When he went to form the club this year,after enlisting Kenneth Northcott asfaculty advisor, Keeney realized that thegroup needed “someone with a lot ofexperience teaching drama” who would“take the club in hand and know reallywhat to do with it.” To this end, he calledthe Goodman Theater and asked for a listof possible acting teachers. The first onehe contacted was Steve Merle, who now,with input from the members, directs theclub.Merle is a freelance actor who receiveda masters degree in acting from ColumbiaUniversity, after starting out as anelectrical engineering major at IllinoisCollege “until I hit calculus.” Six yearsago he and his wife were trying to decidewhere to begin their careers, and decidedto stop for a while in Chicago beforeheading for New York. They’ve been hereever since.The last theatrical work Merle did wasin the Oak Park Shakespeare Festival twosummers ago, as Orlando in As You LikeIt, but he has done a number of5234 S. Dorchester Ave.Walk to museums, parks, the lakeSTUDIO APARTMENTSFurnished and unfurnishedutilities includedLaundry roomSundeck • Secure buildingCampus bus at our doorCall 9-5 for appointment324-0200 commercials and industrial films. Whenasked why he moved into commercialwork, Merle explained that it pays betterthan theater.I act best when my heart is warm andmy head is cool.— Joseph JeffersonAfter discussing the goals of the clubwith the members, Merle began toestablish a routine of relaxation andmobility exercises with which they willbegin every class. Then they moved to anobservation exercise, divided into twogroups which took turns observing eachother, before discussing different persons’thoughts about acting.Merle plans to give the membersassignments to observe people, and alsointends to assign scenes for the membersto work out and then present at meetings.With occasional instances ofimprovisation, the club has become moreof a workshop for students who wish tolearn more about acting.Of the students who came to the firstmeeting, most had had some experience intheater, mostly production or tech workfor or acting in high school or local plays.A few had taken classes or attendedworkshops, but some admitted to noexperience at all. One, Eduardo Gomez,said frankly that he had come to themeeting simply because he “likestheater.”When asked by Merle what sort ofexperiences they had had, one studentrecalled a movie he had made as a juniorin high school while another mentionedthat she had a wide range of theaterexperience in every area except acting;another had given up acting to become aproducer/director. Many had had smallroles in high school or community playsand wanted to be able to continue whatthey had done. All shared Keeney’s hopesthat the Drama Club would be such aplace.The final object of an actor and hisperformance is to convey to the spectatora real person, or at least a person whocould conceivably exist in reality. But atthe same time, all the while he is creatingthis image, the actor none the less remainsa live, organically whole self. Hence, thecreation of the image must be effected notby mere mechanical portrayal of qualitiesalien to him, but by the subjugation andadaptation of the qualities innate in him.—V.I. PudovkinThe Drama Club meets Wednesday nightat 7:30 p.m. in the theater on the thirdfloor of Ida Noyes Hall.The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, November 2, 1982—7—.SportsBarney’s upsets Crewcuts; Chamberlin, Hitchcock rollBy Cliff GrammichWith playoffs for fall intramural sportsscheduled to begin this week, most of the di¬vision titles and playoff spots for thesesports have been determined.In football, Chamberlin should win the Un¬dergraduate Red division title by virtue ofits win over Michelson. Chamberlin scoredthe game’s only^points on the first play ofthe game as the Michelson cornerbackslipped and the Chamberlin receiver scoredon a 45-yard touchdown pass on an out pat¬tern. The rest of the game was marked byhighly physical and emotional defensiveplaying. This was particularly highlightedlate in the second half, when Michelson hada first-and-goal on the Chamberlin 1 after a pass interference call against Chamberlinin the end zone. Michelson failed to score,and Chamberlin controlled the ball for therest of the game to preserve its 7-0 victory.In another game which could decide a di¬vision championship, Hitchcock beat Fish-bein by a score of 19-13. At the end of thefirst half, Hitchcock held a 12-6 lead. Earlyin the second half, Hitchcock stretched thislead to 19-6, and Fishbein scored very late inthe game to make the final score 19-13. Withthe victory, Hitchcock should take theGreen division title.In the Blue division, Dewey stunned Haleby a score of 12-0. This result has put theBlue division into somewhat of a turmoil.The Hale quarterback was thrown out of the game in the first half, and his replacementwas unable to get Hale’s offense moving.The game was filled with high emotions andrather poor sportsmanship. Hale received a3.125 sportsmanship rating in the game. Ifthe rating had been a three or below, Halewould not be going to the playoffs, which itshould do no matter how this race finallyends.In the White division, Compton earned avictory by forfeit over Upper Flint and com¬pleted its season with a 4-0 record. Thomp¬son edged Lower Flint by a score of 25-24 totake second place in the White division witha 3-1 record. Lower Flint finished at 2-2.In what was perhaps the best graduategame of the season, Barney’s Meat MarketSports CalendarVolleyball \ rNov. 2 — at Concordia College, 7 p.m.SoccerNov. 3 — Aurora College, Stagg Field, 2p.m. V-ballers keep record evenRedman wins 3-milerFourth year student Rebecca Redmantook first place with a personal best of 19:09in the three mile run in Washington ParkSaturday. Despite her performance, howev¬er, the U of C women’s cross country clublost overall to a stronger DePaul Universityteam 34-21.Maggie Randolph by Kittie WyneThe women’s varsity volleyball team splitits last two matches, falling to Lake ForestThursday and beating Knox Saturday. Theteam’s record stands at 7-7 with a week ofplay remaining in the season.The Maroons opened Thursday’s matchby winning the first game 15-12. Theydropped the next two games 9-15 and 12-15,but in the fourth game won 15 straight pointsafter being down 0-8. The Maroons fell 13-15in a tough, well fought fifth game to lose thematch. Lake Forest always gives theMaroons problems, and in this match theMaroons could not maintain their usualstandard of play during the two-hour longmatch.Capitol's low fares"What a break!”Wherever we fly, we have the lowestunrestricted fares. That means no advancepurchase, no minimum stay. We’re alwaysglad to see you, even at the last minute.Make up your mind today—and by tomor¬row, you’re on your way!For reservations and information, callyour Travel Agent or Capitol Air at 212-883-0750 in New York City, 312-347-0230 inChicago, 213-986-8445 in Los Angeles, 415-956-8111 in San Francisco or 305-372-8000in Miami. Outside these areas, please call800-227-4865 (8-O-O-C-A-P-l-T-O-L).SERVING THE PUBLIC FOR 36 YEARSSan Francisco*Los Angeles* ir Boston -★ Brussels* Frankfurt★ ZurichMiami *Puerto Plata* -'*SanJuanSCHEDULED AIRLINE SERVICE~ THE LOWEST FARE Saturday, the Maroons survived anothermarathon. They won the first game againstKnox 15-3, and held them off in the second15-10. In the third and fourth games, Knoxtriumphed 13-15 and 7-15, but the Maroonsslammed the door in the fifth game, winning15-12 to take the match.Freshman saw a lot of action in bothmatches. Coach Rosie Resch was pleasedwith her first look at rookies Lynn Birczakand Maja Jaede, who turned in fine defen¬sive performances Thursday and Saturday.Resch made many lineup changes and sub¬stitutions in both matches, moves whichmade for less smooth team play than usual.Overall, however, the Maroons look betterthan they did at the start of the season.The season ends this week with a matchtonight at Concordia, a perennially strongteam. Friday night, the Maroons meet Mon¬mouth at 7:30 p.m. in the Henry CrownFieldhouse.The season finale is the U of C InvitationalTournament, to be held Saturday in theFieldhouse. The Maroons square off againstNorth Park (whom they beat during the reg¬ular season) at 10 a.m., take on Millikan(who beat them earlier) at 11:15 a.m., faceMonmouth at 2:15 p.m., and close againstWheaton (who also beat them) at 3:30 p.m.The tournament was set up as an eight teammeet, but U of C’s switch from the IAIAW tothe NCAA this year led to scheduling diffi¬culties.GRAFF & CHECKReal Estate1617 E. 55th St.1W-2W-4 room & 6 roomapartments. Immediate occupancy.Based on AvailabilityBU 8-5566A vailable to all comers upset previously undefeated Dean and theCrewcuts. The game featured excellent de¬fenses, and neither offense was able to getrolling. Since Barney’s Meat Market is un¬defeated, it must now be considered the fa¬vorite for the University Championship. TheLiquidators and Dean and the Crewcuts tiedfor second in the Graduate White divisionwith identical 3-1 records.In what was perhaps the worst display ofsportsmanship by any IM team this season,Lower Rickert and Upper Rickert played ina game which saw one team receive asportsmanship rating of 0 while the other re¬ceived a two. The two teams seemed to bemore interested in wreaking violence oneach other than in playing the game. Twoplayers were thrown out of the game for analtercation which nearly started a fight be¬tween the teams.In volleyball, the GSB-Women, after for¬feiting four games, upset the Betablockersin three games in a match played last week.GSB-Women pulled off the upset with onlyfive members of the team present. This re¬sult could signal an open race in the MixedWomen’s Volleyball League, if any teamsscheduled to play show up for the matches.The GSB-Women vs. Beta¬blockers match was only the second matchplayed in that league this year, the other re¬sults have either been forfeits or double for¬feits.Chamberlin, which had been considered astrong contender in the UndergraduateMen’s Volleyball League, lost to undefeatedUpper Rickert in a Red division game. Theco-ed volleyball leagues begin today.In other IM news, tennis action is windingdown. Tom Jilly, last year’s champion, isstill alive in the tournament, and should beconsidered the favorite to win the champion¬ship again this year. The swimming meetresults have still not been posted but resultswill be published in the Maroon when theyare released. The IFC has not released theofficial final results from the Home Run,those results will also be published in theMaroon when they are released. The TurkeyTrot will be held next Tuesday, and the bas¬ketball season begins next week. In Frisbee,Hitchcock lost to Henderson, and Chamber¬lin beat Compton; Chamberlin did not loseto Hitchcock as reported in the Maroon lastFriday. In women’s frisbee, Compton andThree’s A Crowd appear to be the teams towatch. Finally, the playoff schedules for fallsports should appear this week.HYDE PARK UNION CHURCH5600 S. Woodl&wn Ava.Church School (all ages) 9:45 a.m.Worship Nursory Provided 11:00 a.m.W. Kenneth Williams, MinisterSusan Johnson, Baptist Campus MinisterCome, Worship, Study, ServeCOPIES COPIES COPIES (COPIES COPIES COPIES (COPIES COPIES COPIES (Copies The Way You Want Them!• Same Size or Reduced • Colored Papers• 1 or 2 Sided • Card Stocks• Collated or Sorted • Fine Stationary• Plastic Spiral Binding • 8V: x 11 or Legal SizeFast, sharp, economical copies . . . from anything hand¬written. typed, or printed size-for-size. or in anyreduction ratio on your choice of colored or whitebond paper!XEROX® COPYINGCJ per copyr per copy8'/j” x 11”20# White BondHARPER COURT COPY CENTER5210 S. HARPER288 2233 Plus COMPLETECOMMERCIALOFFSETPRINTINGSERVICE8—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, November 2, 1982SportsHarriers place fourth at U of C Invitational 4 mile runThe University of Chicago cross countryteam placed fourth in the seven team fieldat the University of Chicago InvitationalCross Country Run held Saturday on a four-mile course in Washington Park.North Central College dominated themeet, taking the first five places and sevenof the first nine for a score of 15 points.Wheaton College finished second with 58 points, while Illinois Benedictine Collegetook third with 93 points. Chicago finishedfourth with 117 points, ahead of fifth-placeBeloit which had 125 points.Chicago had to run without the help of oneof its top runners, Aaron Rourke, who wason a weekend Geology field trip. The Chica¬go scorers were Phil McGoff (19th overall),Bob Fisher (20th), Mike Rabieh (21st),Gridders trampled 54-0By Cliff GrammichThe Chicago Maroons closed their Mid¬west Conference football season last Satur¬day in Appleton, Wisconsin with a humiliat¬ing 54-0 loss to defending MidwestConference champion Lawrence Universi¬ty.The loss left the Maroons’ final confer¬ence report at a dismal 0-4, and their overallrecord at 0-8. Lawrence has lost only oncethis year and remains undefeated in the con¬ference.The defeat was the worst the Maroonshave suffered in at least three years. Fur¬thermore, the Maroons have failed to win aroad game in at least three years. Last year,Chicago’s two victories were both at home,while its sole victory in 1980 was also athome. Including a loss in Chicago’s finalelast year, the Maroons have now droppednine straight games.Saturday’s game was completely domi¬nated by Lawrence. Lawrence gained 346yards rushing, while the Maroons gained ex¬actly 0. Lawrence’s passing game gained147 yards, while the Maroons gained 70yards through the air. As a result,Lawrence’s total offense amassed 493yards, while Chicgago gained just 70 yardson 63 plays. The Maroons were penalized 7times for 59 yards, while Lawrence suffered5 penalties for 49 yards.Thursday Evening Buffet5:30 to 10 pmEnjoy all the fine foodyou can eat.Reasonably priced at $8.95.Luncheon 11-4 • Dinner 4-11Sunday brunch 10:30 - 2:30free parkingmajor credit cards honored1525 E. 53rd St., 10th FloorHyde Park • 241 5600OVER 500Student Financial SourcesImproving your financial position dependson accurate information on existing incomesources Our service can provide you withdetails on current income opportunitiescompatible to your ' student" situationFor complete Information writ*ArvInCross Research505 Fifth Avenue Now York, NY 10017 The Maroons finish their season Saturdayat Principia. Principia is 4-4 on the year.Last Saturday, Principia lost to Southwest¬ern of Tennessee by a score of 49-24. For theyear, Principia has scored 148 points whilegiving up 140. Chicago has scored 81 pointswhile giving up 226.Soccer edges Beloiton Schaefer’s goalBy Frank LubyGreg Schaefer’s goal with 20 minutes leftin the game gave the University of Chicagosoccer team a 1-0 victory over the BeloitBuccaneers last Wednesday at Beloit.Schaefer dribbled to the top of the penaltyarea and fired a high hard shot pass the Buc¬caneer goalkeeper, for his first goal of theseason.Beloit had several scoring opportunities,- but failed to capitalize. The closest it cameto scoring against Chicago keeper Joe Mariowas on a shot that hit the post in the secondhalf.The Maroons, now 5-8 on the year, finishthe season tomorrow against Aurora Col¬lege at Stagg Field.The 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 Dave Raskin (26th), Paul Ulrich (31st), DanMcGee (32nd), and Adam Vodraska (35th).Twenty-one members of the Chicago squadparticipated in the race.PHOTO BY ARA JELALIANAn eight-man team of Fisher, McGoff,Rourke, Raskin, Rabieh, Ulrich, McGee,and Vodraska will compete in the MidwestConference Championships at Northfield,Minnesota next Saturday. Against all com¬petition, Chicago is 42-20 this year. TheMaroons have also beaten all the conferenceteams they have met this season althoughthey have not run against Cornell, Coe, or Carleton. Carleton, a perennial power in theMidwest Conference, and defending cham¬pion, will be the favorite to retain the cham¬pionship in its last appearance in crosscountry in the Midwest Conference. ChicagoCoach Ted Haydon believes that a good per¬formance by Chicago should earn theMaroons second or third place, and that anoutside possibility exists of Chicago upset¬ting Carleton, which lost some of its top run¬ners last year to graduation.Individual performances for Chicago runners atthe University of Chicago Invitational CrossCountry RunPlace i Runner Time25 Phil McGoff 21:1526 Bob Fisher 21:1931 Mike Rabieh 21:3638 Dave Raskin 21:5344 Paul Ulrich 22:0945 Dan McGee 22:1848 Adam Vodraska 22:28. 56 Pete DiTeresa 22:5157 Mark Gif fen 22:5258 Jeremy Fein 23:0259 Steve Eick 23:1660 Pete Guardino 23:2563 Maan Hashem 23:3366 Carl Stocking 23:5672 Joshua Kans 24:5673 Andy Warriner 24:5874 Fernando Cavero 25:1475 Eric Oshiro 25:4978 Dan Monteith 26:3879 Stuart Lichtenthal 27:5980 Joel Zand 29:00The meet was won by Ray Krauss of North CentralCollege in a time of 19 :54Team scores: North Central College, 15; WheatonCollege, 58; Illinois Benedictine College, 93; Uni¬versity of Chicago, 117; Beloit College, 125; NorthPark College. 136; Elmhurst College, 163STUDENTGOVERNMENTELECTIONSPOLLING PLACESWednesday, November 3Cobb 9:15 am - 10:30 amReynolds Club 1 1:00 am - 1:30 pmB-School 1 1:00 am - 1:00 pmMed School 1 1:30 am - 1:30 pmShoreland 6:30 pm - 8:30 pmBJ; WWCt; Pierce 5:00 pm - 7:00 pmLaw School 1 1:30 am - 1 2:30 pmThursday, November 4Reynolds Club 1 1:00 am - 1:30 pmCobb 10:00 am - 1 2:00 pmAll assembly seats & Student -Faculty - Administration Court positionswill be on the ballot.The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, November 2, 1982—9The Medical Alumni Associationpresents a special seminarThe Business of Medicine“THE FACTS OF MEDICAL LIFE”An Informal Panel DiscussionWednesday, November 3, 6:30 p.m.Frank Billings Auditorium - P117Panel participants include:Richard W. Foster, Ph.D. - Assistant Professor of Health Administration, Graduate Schoolof Business, and Associate Director of the Graduate Program in Hospital AdministrationDouglas E. Hough, Ph.D. - Director, Department of Health Resources Analysis, Centerfor Health Policy Research, The American Medical AssociationRandolph W. Seed, M.D., Ph.D. - General Surgeon in Private PracticeAn informal reception will follow.Open to the PublicYou are invited to spend anevening with noted underwaterfilmmaker Stan Waterman whowill narrate his latest films.The Sea of Cortez, whichdocuments encounters withschools of hammerheadsharks and giant manta rays, andThe Last of the RightWhales, an examination ofthe desolate South Atlanticcoast of Argentina whereendangered right whales cometo mate and calve each yearWatermanShowJohn G. SheddAquariumThursday. November 47 00 PMTickets $8 00A reception will followthe film programCall939-2426, ext 362for reservationsTHE PHOTO DEPT.FILMPROCESSINGRENTALSBATTERIESRADIOSFRAMES k CAMERASPHOTO ALBUMSDARKROOM EQ.CASSETTE TAPERECORDERSVIDEO TAPEUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOBOOKSTORE970 EAST 58 TH ST. « 753i3317 Classified AdsCLASSIFIEDADVERTISINGClassified 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.SPACELrg. 1 br apt. for rent. 55th-rLake. 2 lakeviews.Lrg. closets. W/W carpet. Secure bldg, easyparking. On Shoreland, campus bus rtes. AvI:11/1. Rent PS438. 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.Student Government publishes a list ot OFF-CAMPUS HOUSING. Call 753-3273 or come toIda Noyes 306, MWF 11:30-2:30, TTH 11,30-1:30.FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED Small roomin 3 bdrm apt. 56th & University Avail Dec/Jan643-2454.5100 S. Cornell Chicago Beach Apts. Studio -t- 1bedroom apts. S260-S360. Immed. occupancy.Students welcomed. Call 493-2525 or 643-7896.One bedroom apartments. Immediate oc¬cupancy. $360. Call 643-6428 or Parker-Holsman Co. 493-2525Spacious 2 bdrrrvapt lor sublet Dec 1, S375/moKimbar.k near 57th. 684 5717, keep trying.1 rm in 3br apt, very near campus. $135Washer-dryer, many other conv. Call 288-2145SPACE WANTEDNeed 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-S1200 monthly. Sightseeing. Free info.Write IJC Box 52-1L5 Corona Del Mar, CA92625.Paid subiect 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.Responsible goodmatured student wanted foroccasional child-sitting evenings. Call 667-4220after 4 p.m. CHEERLEADING TRYOUTS. Meeting Fri.Nov. 5, Mult. Purp. Room, Field House, 5:30.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 Frenchhelpful workstudy status desirable. Call 962-848).Stuff envelopes for GUARANTEED$1.15/envelope! Serious offer. Need many peo¬ple. For details send $2.00 to Sasson, 323Franklin Bldg., South, Suite 804/Dept. S-264,Chicago, 11.60606-7096Part time workers needed for on call staff ofcatering service on campus. We need reliablepeople for day and evening hours Catering ex¬perience helpful Call Susan 753-2369.FOR SALEPASSPORT PHOTOS WHILE YOU WAIT!Model Camera 1342 E 55th 493-6700.Condo 10% assumable mortgage 3 br, GBFPL,architect designed kitchen, strippedwoodwork-excellent neighborhood, Rayschool, walk to campus, low assessment, ask¬ing 79,500 972-4029 days 363-3995 after 5:00 p.m.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 nSlide projector Kodak 760 H. Autofocus w/102mm f2.8 E KtC. 1 year old $145 call 373-4230.1979 VW DASHER, 4 dr hatchback, automatic,frt wheel dr, good condition, low mileage, bestoffer. Call 493-5555.BOOKSHELVES... BOOKCASE S...BOOKSHELVES Help us make room for a new photostudio. Buy our BOOKCASES (these are largewall units) We also have a ridiculously LARGEDESK. We would like to be rid of!Model Camera 1344 E. 55th St. 493-6700Eight boards most 6x12'' |ust right forbrick/board bookshelf call evenings 955-0993.TYPEWRITER Smifh Corona Electric 220Brand New $295 Call 947-8345 (Keep Trying)Affectionate all white make kitten free to goodhome. I would love to keep him, but my petbirds won't let me. Call 241-5660.Classical Guitar $125 or best offer. Ray 753-0499.SERVICESJUDITH TYPES-and has a memory. Phone955 4417.PROFESSIONAL T YPI NG-reasonable rates,684 6882.For your dental needs... The Lutheran & Episcopal MinistriesInvite You toDr. George L. Walker, A 6HARED EUCHARI6TD.D.S., P.C.General Dentistry FOR1623 East 55th Street ALL THE752-3832 SAINTS&Office HoursBy Appointment SERVANTSTuesday. November 2. 198^Courtesy discount 5-30 p.m.extended to students AUCU6TANA LUTHERAN CHURCHth & Wood lawn10—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, November 2, 1982.Classified AdsWeddings 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).F IREWOOD - Free Delivery in Hyde Park 742-1762.Discount Moving and Hauling Low Prices AndFree Estimates Seven Days a Week Day andEvening References Available Call Tom 8-10am or After 6pm 375-6247CATERING. Custom menus for all occasions.Chinese, Thai, Indian, Middle Easf, French,many other specialties. Wendy 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.THESE SHOULD BE GOOD YEARS: ex¬perienced secondary school teacher believesyour child can be having a more positive learn¬ing experience now. Tutoring for the troubled;enrichment for the advanced student.ENGLISH, HISTORY/SOCIAL SCIENCE,LANGUAGES, PAPER-WRITING, RESEAR¬CH RESOURCES + TECHNIQUES,ENLIVENING DRILL. Each student toreceive the challenge + support he/she needs.AGES 12-19 inclusive. THESE SHOULD BEGOOD YEARS. You are encouraged to call(mornings before 10/eveningsatter 6) 752-7387.The above applies to university freshmen ■+■sophomores too. 752-7387.PAINTING-references and free estimate-Johnat 493-6216.SCENESWriters workshop PLaza 2-8377.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.CHEERLEADING TRYOUTS. For more infocall Laurel 947-0036 or leva 947-0138.CAROLE ETZLER CONCERT Nov. 13, 8 PMTICKETS S2 Graham Taylor Hall, CTS, 5757 S.University. For info. Call 643-4468.TUESDAYDoc Films: The Wings of Eagles 8 p.m. Cobb$1.50Morris Dancers: Ritual English Dancing 7 p.m.INHAKIDO Club: Meeting 6:30 HCFHMicrobiology Dept.: Lecture: Dr. Rochelle Esposi¬to “Genes That Control Meiotic Recombinationand Chromosome Segregation” 4 p.m. CLSC 1117GSB: Lecture and discussion by James Hoge, Chi¬cago Sun-Times, 12:30 p..m. Stu 102Center for Urban Studies: Lecture: Ira Bach “Re¬building Chicago: City Plans, Policies, and PublicWorks” 4:30 p.m. Pick LoungeChemistry Dept.: Lecture: Dr. E. Poliak “Adiaba¬tic Infinite Order Sudden Transition StateTheory”Inter-varsity Christian Fellowship: Lecture: OsGuinness “Secularization of the Church” 7 p.m. I-HouseCalvert House: Lecture: Michael Murrin “Inves¬tigation into Catholicism-Genesis” 7 p.m.HBC: Lecture: James Redfieid "The Iliad onWar” 8 p.m. Swift Lecture HallCrossroads: Bharata Natya Class (ClassicalDance of India) 7 p.m.Libertarians: meeting 8 p.m. INHWEDNESDAYRockefeller: Holy Communion followed by break¬fast 8 a.m.Public Policy Lecture: Anthony Solomon "TheOutlook for International Financial Development10:30 a.m. Wb 303Doc Films: Attack! 8 p.m. Cobb $1.50LSF: A Night at the Opera 8:30 p.m. Law SchoolAuditorium $2.00Biochemistry Dept.: Seminar: Richard Axel“Genes, Peptides, and Behavior” 4 p.m. CLSC101U of C Animal Welfare Group: meeting 7:30 p.m.INH Les Beaux Parleurs, UC French club, meetsNov. 11. More plans later. Call George (753-3990)LOSTAND FOUNDFOUND: Labrador puppy found Oct 25 outsideLab School. 493-7148.JEAN JACKET ''LOST'' at party-hasCLASH/XTC buttons 8. my keys, PLEASEreturn keys (At least) to Ida Noyes-1212 E. 59thc/o Kym Spring.CINDERELLASAO has discount tickets to opening night ofChicago City Ballet's CINDERELLA Nov 19thS12.50 & $6.80 see guest artist Suzanne Farrelllive! ITicketson sale in rm 210 thru Nov.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-Fstudio apt. for rent. Agent onpremiss. 5424 Cornell Ave. 324-1800FOLKDANCE 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 Computation 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.COUPLES...Couples wanted for a study of campus values.S10 per couple, IV2 hours. Call 324-37846 to 10.Badminton Club: meeting 7:30 p.m.INH GymHillel: Students for Israel 7:30 p.m.Shotokan: Karate meeting 12:30 p.m. INHWomen’s Union: meeting 7 p.m. INHCountry Dancers: Folk Dances of America andEnglish 8 p.m. INHCrossroads: English Classes: All levels 2 p.m.; So¬cial Hour 3:30 p.m.; Beg. French 6:30 p.m.; Beg.Arabic 7:30 p.m.; Adv. Spanish 7 p.m.; Adv. Span¬ish 7 p.m.THURSDAYRockefeller Chapel: Choral Vespers Service 5:15;Choral Choir Rehearsal 5:45 p.m.; Light Supper 6p.m; Bible Study 6:30 p.m.Doc Films: Mouchette 8 p.m. Cobb $2.00LSF: Mutiny on the Bounty (1936) Law School Au¬ditorium 8:30 p.m. $2.00Talking Pictures: Lost Horizon 7:30 p.m. I-HouseAssembly Hall $2 free popcornCommittee Assembled to Unite in Solidarity withEl Salvador (CAUSE): 7 p.m. meeting INHRockefeller Chapel: Chancel Choir Rehearsal 4:15p.m.; Choral Vespers 5:15 p.m.; Chancel Choir Re¬hearsal 5:56 p.m.; Light Supper 6 p.m.; BibleStudy 6:30 p.m.Biochemistry Dept.: Seminar: Dr. Raymond J.MacDonald “Pancreatic Serine Proteases: ProteinStructure and Gene Organization” 2:30 p.m. CLSC101Physics Dept.: Lecture: Michael S. Turner “TheInflationary Universe: Birth, Death, and Transfi¬guration” 4:30 p.m. Eck 133Episcopal Campus Ministry: Holy Communion 12p.m. Bond ChapelMusic Dept.: Noontime Concert: Lorene Richard¬son, contralto, 12:15 GoodspeedUnited Methodist Foundation: Lecture: RobinLovin “Religion and American Public Life" 10a.m. 5745 S. BlackstoneWHPK: 88.3 Fm Fat Freddy's Cat 6:30 a.m. ATTENTION TMMEDITATORSGroup meditation and video tape Weds. Nov. 3,12:30-1:30 Bring sack lunch. Come -F 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 8, women, right 8, left handers needed toparticipate in interesting and profitablestudies on how the two sides of the brain thinkdifferently. Call 962-8846M-F, 9-5.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.BHARTANATYAClassical Dance of India. Weekly classes atCrossroads. 5621 S. Blackstone. Instructor:Madhumatihi Manjun. $10 Donation toCrossroads per month. Call 684-6060 for details.THINK YOU'RE SMART?Then how come you haven't registered yet forthe 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.The Wings of Eagles (John Ford, 1957)Wings is director John Ford and actor JohnWayne’s sentimental tribute to CommanderFrank (Spig) Wead, the brilliant pioneernaval aviator whose flying career endedwith accident and paralysis, but who con¬quered mental debilitation by becoming oneof Hollywood’s most prominentscreenwriters. Like most favorable screenbiographies, there are obligatory interludesof merriment — Wayne hedgehopping in anearly biplane; W’ayne and Navy friends de¬molishing an Army banquet; the Army re¬turning favor. And obligatory moments ofmelodrama — Wayne’s wife (MaureenO’Hara) belting the bottle and neglectingthe kids (one dies, and Wayne falls down¬stairs and breaks his neck). But most of thepicture concerns Wayne’s crusade againstparalysis, and his efforts to restore self-dig¬nity through writing. As one studio execu¬tive put it, “$2,600,000 worth of hearts andflowers.” Tues., Nov. 2 at 8 p.m. Doc. $1.50-PFA Night at the Opera (Sam Wood, 1935)Screenwriters George Kaufman and MorrieRyskind take II Trovatore and the MarxBrothers out to the ball game, by havingGroucho interest Margaret Dumont in anopera company. Drawing upon MGM’s su¬perior screenwriting talent (the MarxBrothers first five films — Cocoanuts, An¬imal Crackers, Monkey Business, HorseFeathers, and Duck Soup — were producedby Paramount), A Night at the Opera tran¬scends the team’s persona as ruthless prac¬tical jokers, presenting Harpo, Chico, andeven Groucho as sympathetic, abused do-gooders, whose earnest efforts to promotean unknown singer’s career wreak havocupon everyone they encounter. Tested andrevised at 100 West Coast stage locations be¬fore filming, A Night at the Opera remainsthe most endearing of the Marx Brothers’comedies. Wed., Nov. 3 at 8:30 p.m. LSF. $2—PFAttack! (Robert Aldrich, 1956) Attack! isAldrich’s film noir war-movie, in which theBattle of the Bulge plays second fiddle to theemotional difficulties that torment Jack Pa-lance and Eddie Albert. When a town is cap¬tured by a hard-pressed American infantrycompany, the problem facing the GIs is not SWIM COACHAss t swimming coach need tor U.C. men 8,women swim team. Nov. thru Mar. from 3pmto 6pm daily. Competitive swim exp. orcoaching req. Call coach Al Pell 962-8783 atBartlett Gym.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.MUSICIANSMusicians wanted for U of C Blues Band. 1, oc¬casionally 2 times/week. Nick 684-5639.BUDDHIST SYMPOSIUMA CALM AND CLEAR MIND Public talk ontranscending anxiety and confusion. Presentedby KHENPO KARTHAR RINPOCHE, TibetanBuddhist scholar and meditation master. Con¬rad Hilton Hotel, 720 S. Michigan Fri Nov 5 7:30pm $4 Ph 743-6247.THE HEART OF MINDFULNESS A medita¬tion seminar offered by KHENPO KARTHARRINPOCHE, Abbot of Karma Triyana Dhar-machakra Monastery. Blackstone Hotel 636 S.Michigan. Sat 81 Sun Nov 68<7 9:30 am to 5pm.Donation $20. Phone 743-6247.ALAS BABYLON?Come-hear Ben Frankel speak on the NuclearFreeze 8. Theories of Deterrance. 6:30 PM onThursday, Cobb 119. Sponsored by NOMOR(Nuclear Overkill Moratorium).REDLIGHTPRODUCTIONSis available to make Your next party a suc¬cess! DJing lights and other servicesavailable. Call Mike Conte at 241-6438 for info.CORRECTIONJoe Suchy is running for Commuter Rep. notother college as reported last week.whether the town can be held but what to dowth the maniac of a captain (Albert whocould be more dangerous than the Nazis.Also starring Lee Marvin and Buddy Ebsen.Wed., Nov. 3 at 8 p.m. Doc. $1.50.Mouchette (Robert Bresson, 1966) This isthe drama of a young peasant girl who livesamidst ignorance and squalor in an isolatedsmall village. Extremely sensitive, shefinds herself unable to communicate withthe people around her, and, although poten¬tially introspective, she lacks the spiritualvocabulary even to bring thought into being.Thurs., Nov. 4 at 8 p.m. Doc. $2.Mutiny on the Bounty (Frank Lloyd, 1935)“I’ll live to see all of you hanged from thehighest yardarm in England.” Trevor How¬ard take heed. Charles Laughton recreatesthe definitive Bligh — a magnificent sailorand sadistic disciplinarian, set adrift for hisatrocities against crew. Whether keelhaul¬ing a thirsty sailor who exceeded his ra¬tions, ordering a sick sailor to join the tow-line, or compelling the master-at-arms tocontinue flogging an already-dead offender,Laughton personifies brutality. W’hat Thal-berg’s $2 million adaptation lacks in bal¬ance, polish, or direction (several stretchesborder on the interminable), it compensateswith photography (Arthur Edeson) andcasting (including Clark Gable as FletcherChristian, Franchot Tone as Byam, andDudley Diggs as the ship’s doctor). A superbstory handsomely told. Thurs., Nov. 4 at8:30 p.m. LSF. $2 —PFLost Horizon (Frank Capra, 1937) RonaldColeman shines as the global troubleshooterand dreamer who finds love, peace, and wis¬dom in the far off mountains of Tibet, only tolose them again out of concern for his short¬sighted brother. Perfect casting (Colemanas Conway, H.B. Warner as Chang, and SamJaffe as the High Lama), expert direction,spectacular visuals, and Dimitri Diomkin’sscore make this version of Hilton’s roman¬tic-isolationist fantasy an evening in Shan¬gri-La. Not to be confused with the abysmal1973 musical remake that kept this one outof circulation. Thurs., Nov. 4 at 7:30 p.m I-House $2 ($1 for residents) — PFCalendar Campus FilmsThe Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, November 2, 1982—11IF YOU’RE THINKING OF JOININGA HEALTH MAINTENANCE ORGANIZATION,THINK FIRST OF HMO ILLINOIS’HEALTH ASSURANCE PLAN (HAP)(OFFERED BY THE HYDE PARK-KENWOOD COMMUNITY HEALTH CENTER)YEARLY ENROLLMENT THROUGH YOUR EMPLOYER IS JUST AROUNDTHE CORNER. CHECK THE OFFICE WHERE YOU WORK FOR DATES.MORE THAN 1000 UNIVERSITY OFCHICAGO FAMILY MEMBERS AREENROLLED AT HYDE PARKTHROUGH HAP. JOIN THEM NOW.As a member of HAP throughthe Hyde Park-Kenwood Com¬munity Health Center, you paya set monthly fee for all yourfamily's health care needs.Office visits, hospital care,even specialist services arecovered.Care is provided by membersof the Center's highly regard¬ed medical staff withprivileges at: Chicago Lying-In, Michael Reese, Chicago Osteopathic Hospital or WylerChildren's Hospital. Amember of the Center'smedical staff, chosen by you,will become your personalphysician. He or she will coor¬dinate all your care: medical,hospital and health educationservices.And you will have another bigplus--the Blue Cross and BlueShield card for your use whenentering a hospital and whentravelling outside the HMO Il¬linois* service area. It is ac¬cepted by hospitals and doc¬tors all across the country. Very probably a number ofyour fellow-workers aremembers of HAP through theHyde Park-Kenwood Com¬munity Health Center. Talk tothem about the Center'smedical group. About the per¬sonal touch that makes ourservices exceptional. Wethink you'll hear a lot of goodreasons for deciding on thecomplete care that's yours atHyde Park-Kenwood throughthe Health Assurance Plan.* HMO Illinois, Inc. is a Federally Qualifiedhealth maintenance organization whichunderwrites the Health Assurance Plan(HAP) offered by 51 facilities throughoutIllinois.HYDE PARK-KENWOOD COMMUNITY HEALTH CENTER1515 East 52nd Place, Chicago, II. 60615