- Grey CHy JournalPUBLIC IMAGEGCJ Page five InterviewProfessor on stagepage 19—The Chicago MaroonVolume 92, No. 18 The University of Chicago ©Copyright 1982 The Chicago Maroon Friday, November 5, 1982Trial over boy’s death settled out of court;UCHC, La Rabida to pay parents $400,000David Shopiro, owner ofOrly’s restaurant at 55th St. andHyde Park Boulevard. By Robin Kirkand Darrell WuDunnThe University of Chicago Hospi¬tals and Clinics (UCHC) and LaRabida Children’s Hospital,charged in a malpractice suit withthe wrongful death of a 14-year-oldasthma patient, have agreed topay the parents $400,000 in an out-of-court settlement.The settlement was reached yes¬terday after the Wyler Children’sHospital, also charged in the suit,was found not negligent in its treat¬ment of Daniel Burton who died on March 30,1978. Wyler’s and La Ra¬bida hospitals are both part of theUCHC.Daniel died six days after he hadinhaled large doses of the drug Me-cholyl in a test often prescribed forrespiratory patients. The test pro¬duced spasms and loss of breath¬ing. The boy’s condition graduallydeclined into convulsions, coma,and death.In the trial that began on Sept.29, the boy’s parents charged thatthe test at La Rabida was unneces¬sary and caused his death; thatOrly’s retains its liquor licenseAlcohol ban liftedBy William RauchOrly’s owner David Shopiro wonhis year and a half long fight to ob¬tain a liquor license last Tuesdaywhen residents of the one-blockprecinct in which the restaurant islocated voted to rescind a 26-year-old ban prohibiting establishmentsin the precinct from serving alco¬hol.The proposition asked voterswhether the ban should be contin¬ued. Shopiro said that 75 percent ofthe voters opposed the ban. A sim¬ple majority would have decidedthe issue.Shopiro said that because of theproposition’s wording, he distribut¬ed around the precinct sample bal¬lots and leaflets explaining thatsupporters of Orly’s should vote“no.”Shopiro said that a resident ofthe building in which Orly’s is lo¬cated distributed flyers around the neighborhood Monday urging resi¬dents to vote “yes” on the proposi¬tion. Shopiro said that the resident,who he said had never eaten atOrly’s, “thinks that the placeshould be gotten rid of.”Shopiro said that he stood infront of the polling place for 13hours and talked to voters aboutthe liquor proposition. He said thatthe building’s resident did thesame.Shopiro said that the prohibitionwas passed in order to put a“tacky, seedy bar” in the precinctout of business. He said that the in¬tention of the residents of the pre¬cinct at the time the ban waspassed was not to prevent all es¬tablishments in the neighborhoodwhich serve liquor from operat¬ing.Shopiro said that if he thought hewould not have been able to get aliquor license he would not haveopened the restaurant. He said that he would not have been able to getbank loans if obtaining a licensewere not a possibility.Shopiro learned in January of1981 that the precinct was dry, butby that time had already taken outa loan, signed a lease, and begunwork on the restaurant. However,before he signed the lease Shopirowas told by the city’s Revenue De¬partment that he would have noproblem obtaining a license.Shopiro filed for a license and re¬ceived one on March 30, a week be¬fore Orly’s was due to open. Thecity moved to revoke the license,but on Apr. 3, the day of the open¬ing, a judge Anthony Scotillo is¬sued a temporary injunction allow¬ing the restaurant to serve drinks.On May 11, Scotillo extended theinjunction. On Aug. 24, Shopirowon a year long extension of the li¬cense, which was to last until a zon¬ing referendum could be votedupon in this election. Daniel was removed from a re¬spirator before he was dead andagainst their wishes; and that thepersonnel at Wyler Children’s Hos¬pital, where Daniel was placed onthe respirator, told the Burtins onMarch 29 that he was dead, then onMarch 30 that he was alive.The parents are seeking $10 mil¬lion in damages in their suit.According the John Cassidy, oneof the hospital’s attorneys, Wylepersonnel were found not respons¬ible for Daniel’s death and thatDaniel’s treatment followed ac¬ceptable medical prcedures.“We felt that the decision wasclearly in favor of the University,”he said. “After that there was noth¬ing left to prove. The document bywhich the case was settled is not anadmission of fault. It was just acompromise,” he said. Wyler Children’s Hospital wasnot involved in the out-of-court set¬tlement. The agreement with theBurtins was reached with UCHC,La Rabida Hospital and three phy¬sicians from UCHC.During the trial, Cassidy saidthat the boy had lost all brain func¬tions due to respiratory arrest, andthat “the removal of the ventilatoron March 30 no longer affected thisboy...he was already dead.”During the week of March 24,Daniel had received massive dosesof Mecholyl, Demerol, Valium andanticonvulsants. On March 26,after he revived from cardiac ar¬rest, Daniel was transferred fromLa Rabida to Wyler for a CATscan. The scan showed that the boymay have had an abnormal brainstem which caused the drugs tosuppress his brain activity.Continued on page sixU of C hosts 3-dayarms conferenceBy Steve ShandorIn the wake of overwhelmingsupport (78 support) for a nuclearfreeze referendum in Chicago, theU of C Committee on Arms Controland Disarmament is sponsoring athree-day conference on the histo¬ry and future of the nuclear armsrace Nov. 10-12.In attendance will be leading fig¬ures on both sides of the arms con¬troversy including Helen'Caldicott,John’ Steinbrunner and SenatorGary Hart. The conference pro-Gray to ‘speculate’ on Natural Law SundayBy Maeve Dwyer“If they were to look around thepresent day world, would the old,natural lawyers have anything tosay?” asks Charles Gray, profes¬sor of history and the College. AtSunday’s Woodward Court lectureentitled “Natural Law,” Gray willspeculate on the reactions thesescholars might have today.“I’d like to fool around withsome ideas in a slightly light vein,”he said. “When Professor Wirszup(Woodward Court Resident Mas¬ter) asked me to give this lecture, Ithought it might be kind of fun totalk about some things that don’tcome up in the course.”Gray is referring to his class,also entitled “Natural Law,”which is essentially a “greatbooks” program where the worksof Aristotle, Hobbes and Ciceroprovide insight into the body ofthought called natural law.But Gray intends to avoid themore philosphical aspects of the subject in his lecture Sunday. In¬stead, he will discuss the more gen¬eral “speculative” and “whimsi¬cal” sides of a theory whosedifferent interpreters are nu¬merous.Gray says he will not debate“whether or not there is anythingto the idea of natural law, or aboutneo-natural law.” Rather, he willlook at natural law as a set of“moral propositions,” or “rulesabout how to behave that are ac¬cessible to everyone.”It is the interaction of the ancientidea of natural law with the mod¬ern mode of thinking that intriguesGray. “A lot of people wouldn’tknow what you were talking abouttoday,” he said. “In the 17th centu¬ry, natural law was taken forgranted.” He wants to examine“how the tradition of natural lawthinking fits in with contemporarythinking,” while “playing aroundwith the relationship to these olderpeople.” Gray’s interest in natural lawstems from his concentration inthe fields of history of law and oflegal theory. His class in naturallaw is a study of evolution of legaltheory from the Greeks to 17th cen¬tury natural lawyers.Gray welcomes the chance pro¬vided by the Woodward Courtforum to explore natural law froma less academic viewpoint. Be¬cause of the diversity of his audi¬ence, the subject matter will bepresented in a way that is neithercondescending nor confusing.Gray’s approach is “intended to belight in spirit” though serious innature.The lecture will be given at 8:30p.m. Sunday in the Woodward caf¬eteria. It will be followed by a re¬ception in the apartment of theWoodward Resident Masters.President Hanna Gray will attendboth the lecture and the recep¬tion PHOTO BV ARA JELALIANHistory Professor CharlesGray speaks Sunday at Wood¬ward Court. gram will include films, speechesand workshops designed to raisethe concerns of those present aboutthe dangers of the arms race. Twodebates on nuclear-arms-relatedquestions will also be held.The conference will begin at 10a.m. Wednesday with a day-longprogram of films and cartoons, allof which represent views againstthe proliferation of nuclear weap¬ons. The films, which will be shownin the Law School Auditorium until5:30 p.m., include footage of thebombing of Hiroshima and filmedcoverage of a conference spon¬sored by Physicians for Social Re¬sponsibility. The film program willculminate in the showing of TheDay after Trinity which traces thelife of J. Robert Oppenheimer andhighlights his ultimate unease withthe technology he helped tocreate.At 7:30 p.m. Helen Caldicott, thehighly visible leader of Physiciansfor Social Responsibility, will de¬liver the opening address of theconference in the auditorium of theCenter for Continuing Education.Caldicott has been a leader in themovement to organize health pro¬fessionals to inform the publicabout the dangers of nuclear war.Dr. Caldicott will emphasize themedical effects of a nuclear war inher address.Jerome Wiesner, presidentemeritus of MIT and the scienceadvisor to President Kennedy willpresent the Keynote AddressThursday at 12:30 p.m. in the Man-del Hall.'Continued on page sixy Q/ W yf U g1!1.BRING YOUR WARESTO THE UC ANNUALCRAFT FAIRdec.9,10&1111am - 6 pmsign up now for this 3 day event-as space is limited.registration/reservation formscan be picked up in IDA NOYESRm 210CALL 753-3591 for informationo Student Activities Office serviceCONFERENCE ONSOLUTIONS TO THENUCLEAR ARMS RACENovember 11 12:30 to 5 pmOPENING: Jerome Wiesner, 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, 7:30 pm.Dr. Helen Caldicott, President of Physicians forSocial Responsibility, will speak at TheCenter for Continuing Education, 7:30 pm,November 10.Sponsored by U. of C. C.A.C.D. Dr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist(53 Kimbark Plaza)1200 6.53rd St.493-8372Intelligent people know thedifference between advertisedcheap glasses or contact lensesand competent professionalservice with quality material.Beware of bait advertising.Eye ExaminationsFashion Eye WearContact Lenses T)y6e PxrU AtmsQxcceryNEW EXHIBITOPEN HOUSENovembers 4 12 • 4 pmGO}/featuring Decorative &Functional Fabric Worksby Alberta Smith-Johnsonand Susanna MorozNovember 6 - December 357th & Woodlawnat the First Unitarian ChurchGallery hours: Thur 12-3; Fri 12-3: Sat 12-4; Sun 10-1University of Chicago Folk Dancers 20th International •FOLKFESTIVALNovember 5, 6, 71982Folk Dance Workshops:Friday—8pmSat. & Sun.—9am12:30pm3:30pmat Ida Noyes Hall1212 East 59th StreetFolk Concert:Saturday, November 6, 8pmat Mandel Hall1131 East 57th StreetPopovich Brothers Tamburitza OrchestraPece AtanasovskiAmerican Heritage DancersClub Czarny DunaecBilly Mitchell Scottish Pipe BandCaledonian Dancersand Others...For advance tickets enclose a sell-addressed,stamped envelope with full payment to:U of C Folk Dancers1212 East 59th StreetChicago, Illinois 60637 withPece Atanasovski (Macedonian)Dick Crum (Balkan)Jerry Helt (American Squares)Post-Concert Party:Saturday, 10pm at Ida Noyes Hallwith live music featuringthe Orchestra Balkan of MilwaukeeTickets: General Studentper workshop $4 $3.50weekend $29 $25Sat. only $15 $13concert $5 $4post-concert party $2 $1Details on back For further information,call John at 324-1247 or 493-2201,or Tom at 752-6527THE FLAMINGO APARTMENTS5500 South Shore DriveSTUDIOS & ONE-BEDROOMS• Unfurnished and furnished• U. of C. Bus Stop• Free Pool Membership• Carpeting and Drapes Included• Secure Building• University Subsidy for Students & Staff• Delicatessen • Beauty Shop• Barber Shop • T.J.’s Restaurant• Dentist • Valet ShopFREE PARKINGMRS. HARRIS 752t38QO2—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, November 5, 1982■mTNews in briefHP burglaries down,muggings to riseThe number of burglaries in Hyde Parkhas significantly decreased, according toRobert Mason of the South East ChicagoCommission.Citing several recent arrests and an in¬crease in police activity, Mason said, “HydePark is a little bit hot for burglars.”One of the more spectacular burglary-related cases is due in Judge McEUigott’scourt Dec. 8. Michael Baker, 20, of 4457 Bu-chenwald, who admitted to eight area bur¬glaries as of Oct. 7, will have his first hear¬ing.The recent mugging of four male studentsby two unidentified youths in the 5600 blockof Kimbark Ave. remains unsolved.Mason added that Hyde Parkers shouldexercise more caution while walking be¬cause of the winter time change. “There arefewer people on the streets during travelhours,” he said. He suggested that night¬time travel should be done in groups andrecommended an increase in the use of um¬brella coverage.Organ recitalWolfgang Rubsam, Rockefeller Chapel or¬ganist, will give an organ recital in theChapel on Sunday, Nov. 7, at 8 p.m. The pro¬gram will include works of Bach, Buxte¬hude, Mendelssohn, and Rheinberger, aswell as works for two organs with W. Thom¬as Jones. Admission is: general, $4.; AGOmembers, $3; students/seniors, $2. Ticketswill be on sale at the door.Films on contrastingviews in El SalvadorThe Committee Assembled to Unite in Sol¬idarity with El Salvador (CAUSE) will inau¬gurate its Sunday evening film series onCentral America this weekend by pres¬ enting two films on the issue of Americanmilitary intervention in El Salvador.The films represent the contrasting viewson the issue. The first, Attack on the Ameri¬cas featuring UN Ambassador Jean Kirkpa¬trick and President Reagan, is distributedby the American Security Council Founda¬tion. The second film, Americas in Transi¬tion, narrated by actor Ed Asner, has beenshown on network television. According tofilm series organizers, the purpose of thispresentation is enable the viewers to seeboth sides of the issue of American militaryintervention in order to formulate their ownpositions.The films will be shown Sunday, Nov. 7 inIda Noyes 2nd Floor East Lounge at 7:30p.m.The presentation is the first in a series offilms being shown by CAUSE. Upcomingfilms include the documentary on Nicara¬gua, From the Ashes and another film on ElSalvador, Decision to Win.CorrectionIn Tuesday’s article about The Secret: ATreasure Hunt, one sentence was altered. Inthe last paragraph of the second column, thesecond sentence should have read: “Thebook contains twelve full-color, full-pagepaintings, each of which contains one of thejewels.” The Maroon regrets any confusionarising from the error.Judge Mikva to speakJudge Abner J. Mikva of the US Court ofAppeals for the District of Columbia will dis¬cuss the ways in which law and lawyers canserve the public interest Monday, Nov. 8.Mikva, a 1951 graduate of the Universityof Chicago Law School, served five terms asa represenative in the Illinois Assembly andfive terms in the US House of Representa¬tives. He represented Hyde Park in Con¬gress from 1968 to 1972. He was appointed tothe bench in 1979.Mikva’s lecture is sponsored by the Chi¬cago Law Foundation. Mikva will speak at12:30 p.m. in Classroom II of the Law Schoolbuilding. Khorana to give Nobel Laureate lectureNobel prize winner H. Gobind Khorana, abiochemist involved in research on DNA,will give the fifth annual Nobel Laureatelecture at 5:30 p.m. Nov. 18 in MandelHall.Khorana, who won the 1968 Nobel in physi¬ology and medicine for his work in devising test-tube techniques for constructing genes,will speak on “Molecular Biology in theStudy of Light-Transduction.”He will also describe his work on gene cod¬ing in vision molecules.The lecture is sponsored by the J.T. BakerChemical Company.Key Issues Lecture Series onworld economics system beginsBy Amy RichmondThe U of C Gradudfce School of Businessand the Graduate School of Economics willsponsor the first lecture of this academicyear’s five-part International Telephoneand Telegraph (ITT) Key Issues LectureSeries on “The World Economic System:Performance and Prospects, “ Monday,Nov. 8.ITT began supporting the lecture series in1973 at the University of Chicago. Sincethen, ITT has brought over 280 economists,social scientists, and business leaders to 22colleges and universities.This year, ITT provided a $25,000 grant tothe University for organizing the lectureseries. Two U of C professors, Jacob Fren¬kel, the David Rockefeller Professor of In¬ternational Economy in the department ofeconomics, and Michael Mussa, the WilliamH. Abbot Professor of International Busi¬ness in the Graduate School of Business, de¬signed the format of the series.Each of the five speaker? will highlight adifferent aspect of the world economy froma different perspective. Frenkel said, “Wechose speakers to include the entire spec¬trum — conservative to liberal. This seriesnot only enables us to bring to campusprominent economists, but to expose stu¬dents to various views.”Richard N. Cooper, the Mauritz C. BoazProfessor of International Economics at Harvard, will begin the series with his lec¬ture on “The United States’ Role in theWorld Economy.”Cooper did his graduate studies at theLondon School of Economics and receivedhis PhD from Harvard. Previously, heserved as undersecretary for economic af¬fairs in the State Department during theCarter administration, and before that wasprovost at Yale. He is currently a fellow ofthe American Academy of Arts andSciences.A prolific writer, Cooper is probably bestknown for his book, The Economics of Inter¬dependence, in which he argues that theworld is composed of interdependent unitsand that economic policies should take theserelationships into account. The special roleof the United States in the world economy, arole which gives the United States specialburdens, will be the subject of his lecture.Upon completion of this year’s lectures,Frenkel and Mussa will edit and compile abook on the series.The second lecture will be held on Nov.30, to be given by Rudiger Dornbusch, pro¬fessor of economics at the MassachusettsInstitute of Technology.All lectures are scheduled for 4 p.m. in theSocial Sciences Research Building, room122. The lectures are free to all faculty, stu¬dents, and staff. At the end of each lecturequestions from the audience will be taken.CAPTAINS’ BEDS I AIIDC Many, many styles avail-LAlVlr O able at special pricesLimited quantities availableFloor LampOffset Hi Lo^ Ht: 47"-58" ad).Finish: BrassSoft pleat shadeReg $49.99AH single beds are:• 75” long• 131/4" high and come in the following widths:• 30”•33”•36”• 39” twin sizeWith Student I.D.FREE FINISH - You Save $40.00. Mattress Available SolidPonderosaPineWith round cornersUnfinished$16000 twin size 100 Watts(\Jt listed Reg $49.99•340*Come visit our showroom for a complete selectionof custom or ready made furnishings.We build to your specifications in wood.of yourchoice, expert formica finish also availableMotterCordCUSTOM MADE FURNITUREWE DELIVERBirch, Elm, Oak,Teak are selectedplywood veneers.Not particle board! CABINETS: Wall Units. Record Cabinets. Chests.Bookcases & WardrobesBEDS: Platform. Captain’s. Trundle. Murphy, Loft.Storage, Bunk & Sofa TABLES: Parson’s. Extension & Drop LeafDESKS: Compact. Traditional. Pigeon-Hole. ExpandedDrop Leaf & U-Shaped sjGuaranteed Delivery from 2 to 4 Weeksgothiccraftcorp.MAIN STORE HYDE PARK NORTHWEST FACTORY EVANSTON2701 N. CLARK 1619 E. 55th St. 4862 W. IRVING PK 2601 W. ARMITAGE 1011 W DAVIS248-5551 667-5400 545-4901 772-2434 864-0360Mon & Thurs 11-9 Vton & Thun. 11-8 Mon & Thurs 11 -8Tue>..Wed & Fn 11-7 Tuev, Wed , Fa, 11-6 Tues Wed A Fn. 11-6Sat. 10-6 Sun 12-5 Sat 10-5 Sun 12-4 Sat 10-5 Closed Sun Mon -Sat 8-3:30 Mon & Thurs 11 -8Tues . Wed & Fn 11 -fcSat 10-5 Sun 12-aThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, November 5. 1982—3Editorials.Start bus service earlierfor increased securityThe clocks have been turned back, and night falls an hour sooner. With theonset of winter, we are concerned about the schedule of the mini-buses thatleave Regenstein Library every half hour.Right now, buses begin their evening runs at 6 p.m. and make the last depar¬ture from the library at 1 a.m. Our suggestion to the Office of Plant Services,which runs the buses, is to begin nightly runs 30 minutes to an hour earlier.Such a change in the bus schedule would be advantageous in several aspects.First, as a security measure, buses might effect a change in the winter trend ofincreasing crime in Hyde Park. Muggings in particular increase during thewinter months, according to a spokesman from the Southeast Chicago Commis¬sion. With classes in session, more potential victims are on the street and thethreat of cold weather moved potential muggers to take desperate measures toprotect themselves from a harsh winter. Also important to consider is that moststudents on campus will not sacrifice time to wait for a 6 p.m. bus, even if it is atthe expense of walking home in the dark only an hour earlier, muggings occurmost often during the evening hours, not late at night.A second benefit of an extended schedule would be the convenience to thoseleaving campus between 5 and 6 p.m. Many students and administrators work¬ing on campus get off at 5 p.m., and few are likely to wait until 6 p.m. for a bus.Students heading to the dorms for dinner, which is served from 4:45 until 6:30p.m., would certainly appreciate having a ride back. The walk from Reg toWoodward or to B-J may be only a short distance, but when it’s cold and dark,it’s too far.We recommend an earlier run of the mini-buses both as a welcomed conven¬ience and as an added measure of security.LettersDahbour responds to responseTo the editor:It is regrettable that a graduate student atthis or any other institution can tell the dif¬ference between facts and theories as poorlyas Steven King, in his comment on my letterto the Maroon. Please note that a fact is “apiece of information presented as having ob¬jective reality,” while a theory is “a hypoth¬esis assumed for the sake of agrument or in¬vestigation,” (Webster’s New CollegiateDictionary). The notion that corporatemergers increase efficiency and productivi¬ty is, as Professor Brozen himself acknowl¬edges in at least one book, a theory, and acontroversial one at that.But Mr. King misses the point of my letterin any case. Even if corporate mergers re¬sult in greater efficiency (a theory, not afact, remember), this does not deny thatcapital which business uses to buy and sellproperty (whether other businesses, stocks,real estate, or whatever) is not being used toproduce goods and services, and, more im¬portantly, to employ workers. In fact, effi¬ciency and productivity are often termsused by business to justify layoffs and fir¬ings of workers (and speedups for those who still have jobs). And if greater efficiencydoes eventually result in more productionand jobs, when will this occur — next year?in 10 years? ever?If Mr. King were not so busy justifying thebehavior of big business, he might also notethat the problem of lack of productive in¬vestment is one acknowledged by both sidesof the political debate which I supposedlydismiss. As for that dismissal, I never con¬tended that Democratic or Republican ideaswere not worthy of discussion, merely theapparently scandalous notion that therewere other ideas around which need just asmuch consideration, even if they don’t hap¬pen to be espoused by either of these politi¬cal parties.But then for someone who thinks his pro¬fessors’ theories are “facts,” it must be in¬conceivable that we might not want to be¬lieve what our politicians (or corporationpresidents) tell us. Why, we might have tostart thinking for ourselves. As for the CivilWar, I’m a firm believer.Omar DahbourGraduate student in thedepartment of history LettersKarl Committee Report gets an IncompleteTo the editor:The recent “Report on the Organization ofthe College” is incomplete. It fails to ad¬dress the role of students. The report states,“Chief among these weaknesses is the ab¬sence of faculty governing bodies capable ofreflecting the concerns of the faculty as awhole,” (italics ours).It should read, “Chief among these weak¬nesses is the absence of student governingbodies capable of reflecting the concerns ofthe students as a whole.” We would be inter¬ ested in learning what are Student AdvisoryCommittees, who is “chosen,” what aretheir responsibilities, and what powers dothey have. There seems to be an elitist ‘oldboy-girl’ system to the choice for student ad¬visory positions. A university is comprisedof both faculty and students. In order to un¬derstand how the College is organized it isfundamental to have student input and con¬cerns as well. Sho-ann HungDavid AckermanStudents in the CollegeResents Prof. Williams' letterTo the editor:I wish to express my deep resentment ofthe overly argumentative content of Profes¬sor Joseph Williams latest letter to you. Theletter concerned the appearance in thepaper of an advertisement for a term paperservice.It was not, it seems to me, the Maroon’sintention to ignore, miss, or bypass his andDean Sinaiko’s “point” of the existence ofan alleged breach of scholarly integrity, itwas their intention to address his obvious of¬fense at the ad. The Maroon responded to hisperception of a breach of integrity by print¬ing both of his letters for all to see andjudge. It further responded to his offense byprinting a generous apology, stating thatthey neither “support” nor “condone” sucha service.Williams asks how the Maroon can claimnot to support it since the paper ran an adfor it, and stresses that the paper did not“condemn” the service as he does (imply¬ing that he thinks they should have).I address the remainder of my letter toProfessor Williams.In the first place, a publication, college-af¬filiated or otherwise, is not to be understoodas necessarily supporting something be¬cause it ran an ad for it. Would you say, forexample, that the Tribune supports porno¬graphic movies because they run ads forthem? The Tribune is paid to run such ads.More importantly, it is not required byany rules of newspaper etiquette for theMaroon to condemn a term paper service, itis required for the paper to print condemna¬tions if they come from a legitimate source;it is not the Maroon’s proclivity to argueethics with you on the editorial page; it is certainly not the responsibility of the editorto submit himself to your point of view.It is the editor’s responsibility to overseethe printing of facts, and correct them whenin error, to write editorials about what hechooses, to make, with the aid of his staff,his own ethical and financial decisions aboutwhich ads to run.Your outrageous call for the editor’s res¬ignation, however carefully qualified it mayhave been, offended me as a student and asa reporter. The editor’s retraction, sir, wasout of respect to your (and Dean Sinaiko’s)offense and arguments. If this is your atti¬tude toward such respect, I wish sincerelythat the retraction had been withheld.The Maroon is a student newspaper, affi¬liated with a college of the highest academicrepute. This does not imply, however, thatthe Maroon endorses every company, busi¬ness, or service that advertises within itspages.I personally find a term paper service asmorally reprehensible as do you and DeanSinaiko. For students at this University touse such a service is a travesty of educationand ethically sickening. I was truly startledwhen I saw the advertisement in the pagesof the Maroon, and would have advisedagainst its printing had I been asked.But, with all due respect, your methods ofredress are uncalled for. If you have objec¬tions, write an argumentative essay dis¬claiming term paper services instead of bul¬lying the Maroon editor. I am quite surethat, in all fairness, the Maroon will chooseto print such an argument, as it has printedboth of your rather agitated letters.Jeffrey K. TaylorThird year student in the CollegePRESENTS A VIDEO DANCE CONCERTBOARD • Friday, Nov. 12 9 p.m. -1 a.m.• At International House • Featuring Live Music And A Large-screen Video Show• $3 Admission At The Door For All UC Students• $4 For All Others With UC I.D.LUTHERAN CAMPUS MINISTRYAugustono Lutheran Church5500 S. Woodlawn Ave.8:30 a.m. — Sermon (j EucharistU 9:30 a.m. — Sunday School 6 Adult Forum:M “Living More With Less”A 10:45 a.m. — Sermon & EucharistY 6:00 p.m. — Campus Ministry Supper ($2/person)You're Invited! Public LectureVICTOR TURNERAnthropology, Univ. of VirginiaBRAIN, BODY, AND CULTURE INHUMAN GENRES OF PERFORMANCEResponding: e Eugene d’Aquili, U. of Pennsylvania• Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi, Uof Chicagoe Mary Douglas, Northwestern U.Breasted Hall Friday, 12 November 8 p.m.4—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, November 5, 1982ViewpointsThe US in search of peace in the Nuclear AgeBy Scott PowellArms control in the nuclear age is a global imperative,yet all too often the debate precludes the essential moralpolitical questions, while emphasizing the technical aspectsand the emotional content of the nuclear issue. While theUniversity of Chicago Committee for Arms Control and Dis¬armament should be commended for seeking to educate thepublic through the Nov. 11 conference at Mandel Hall, itshould be remembered that no such “consciousness-rais¬ing” or peace demonstrations are taking place within theSoviet bloc. Last spring, when a small group of Russian citi¬zens who had organized an independent peace movementattempted to demonstrate their concern over the dangers ofnuclear war in Moscow, they were arrested in short order.We know all too well about independent trade unions withinPoland and the Soviet response to the world-wide condem¬nation of their intervention in Afghanistan. So let us have noillusions about magic formulas or quick fixes when it comesto arms control relations with the Soviet Union.The peddling of nuclear fear has gone far enough. We allknow that nuclear war is “bad for our health” and that itsdestructive power is “unthinkable.” The Nov. 11 forumshould not bt ised to whip up the fear of nuclear holocaust.Deterrence a function of public morale as well as techni¬cal capabilities and military power. Thus, exploiting Amer¬icans’ legitimate fears about nuclear war only serves toweaken the deterrence capability of the United States rela¬tive to that oi the Soviet Union, which allows not one iota ofintimidation of the public will. Besides, the public deservesmore if it is to contribute to the debate on defense and ques¬tion the manner in which its leaders exercise the awesomeresponsibility of nuclear defense. The two most importantquestions that should be addressed at the outset of any dis¬cussion of the nuclear dilemma are: 1) How did we get towhere we are? and 2) Where should we go from here?Today people feel anxiety for two basic reasons, onebased on fact, the other based on emotion. Because of a su¬periority in both nuclear megatonnage and conventionalforces, the Soviet threat is simply not an overreaction or amyth trumped up by the Defense Department. While theUnited States decreased its defense expenditures as a per¬centage of its GNP during the years of “detente,” the SovietUnion increased its production of conventional military andnuclear armaments both absolutely and relative to GNP. Inthe past decade the Soviet Union has exceeded the UnitedStates in defense expenditures by 710 billion dollars whileintroducing 12 new or substantially upgraded strategic sys¬tems. During this same period, in the spirit of “detente” theUS deferred the modernization of its nuclear deterrentforces, hoping for restraint on the part of the Soviets, andreposing trust in the arms control process to obviate theneed for costly upgrading of weapons and systems. The re¬sults of this “good faith” period have been sadly disappoint¬ing. Since the signing of the SALT I Treaty in 1972, there hasbeen a major shift in the balance of power in the world. Thisshift has clearly not been to the advantage of the UnitedStates, and it increasingly threatens world peace.Even if there is disagreement among experts about theassessment of data regarding military and technologicalcapabilities of the United States and the Soviet Union (orNATO and Warsaw Pact), there is a general perceptionthat the nuclear balance is less stable today than it was tenyears ago or even two years ago. Few people doubt that de¬clining world security is unrelated to increased Sovietpower.In response to this perception, many have considered the“freeze” as a viable stop-gap measure. Freeze advocatescommonly hold the position that it is unnecessary to in¬crease nuclear armaments when we already have suffi¬cient nuclear power to totally wipe out our Soviet adversar¬ies. Moreover, if each side possesses thousands of nuclear warheads, does it really matter that the Soviets may beahead? The conventional talk on nuclear overkill soundsprofound and sophisticiated, but in reality it circumventsthe critical issue. It is not the size of the stockpiles of nu¬clear arms that threatens security, but rather the currentimbalance that undermines deterrence and hency jeopar¬dizes peace. Relative strength is the essence of a nucleardefense strategy based on deterrence.4The distinguished theologian and advocate of peace,Reinhold Niebuhr once said:There has never been a scheme of justice in historywhich did not have a balance of power at its founda¬tion. If the Democratic nations fail, their failure mustbe partly attributed to the faulty strategy of idealistswho have too many illusions when they face realistswho have too little conscience.In this regard the freeze is likely to perpetuate the veryproblem that we are trying to solve. Perceptions of the bal¬ance of power, based on respective forces, both convention¬al and nuclear, affect the psychological attitudes and the diplomatic capabilities of both American and Soviet lead¬ers.A freeze on current levels and systems of nuclear arma¬ments would be detrimental in five ways: 1) It would per¬petuate instability and thus encourage a continuation of So¬viet aggressiveness; 2) It would prevent the modernizationof already deployed US nuclear defense systems whichwould improve deterrence; 3) It would signal a lack of de¬termination on the part of the United States to provide forgreater security and a reluctance to redress the balance ofpower. Thus the freeze would discourage the Soviets fromnegotiating in good faith regarding future arms agree¬ments; 4) The freeze would provide absolutely no incentivefor the Soviets to reduce their nuclear arsenal because it isto their advantage to freeze at current levels of superiority,whether real or only perceived. After all, by maintainingthe status quo the Soviet leadership can be assured ofgreater leverage in all geo-political negotiations. For nu¬clear weapons to have political effects — to generate fearand induce compliance — they need never be fired. And 5)The freeze would undermine the Reagan Administration’sbold START and Zero Option proposals to bring about mu¬tual reduction in nuclear forces.The fifth point evokes some startling questions for freezeadvocates. At least it should cause some self-reflection.Isn’t it peculiar that the debate centers on the freeze pro¬posal, which has the endorsement of Soviet PresidentBreshnev, when President Reagan’s arms contol proposalsactually go much farther in reducing nuclear arsenals andtheir accompanying fears.The START proposal is directed at reducing intercontin¬ental ballistic missiles to at least one-half their currentlevels, and the Zero Option would eliminate all intermedi¬ate range land-based nuclear missiles. My question is whyshould any American citizen sincerely concerned aboutarms control advocate a position endorsed by the Soviet Po¬litburo before he goes to bat for the better proposal of theUnited States government?If your answer is that President Reagan’s plan is too sim¬plistic or that he is not sincere, then my response is: sowould you rather trust Mr. Breshnev? Freeze advocatesoften argue that their proposal is at least a first step towardgreater security because it halts the arms race. However, itis only restoring the balance of power by improving West¬ern defense capabilities, or reducing armaments to lowerand equal levels that promises greater security. The freezeaccomplishes neither of these.Let us hope that those who participate in the Nov. 11 nu¬clear conference will have the courage to question their po¬sitions, the maturity to see beyond labels of “hawks” and“doves,” and the sobriety to apply the lessons of history inassessing the current world situation. The real bottleneckof nuclear arms agreements is largely rooted in the natureof the Soviet system which has kept its borders closed to theinternational community. Never before has so much rawpower rested in the hands of so few who seem little con¬strained by public opinion, international law, or ethicalprinciples.In conclusion, the nuclear debate cannot be approachedfrom merely technical and military considerations or parti¬san attitudes. It requires a serious moral consideration ofworld politics and the responsibility that America must ful¬fill. If the United States is to be the instrument for peacethat it can be, we need to create a mature patriotism — onethat is not stridently jingoistic in its sense of an Americanmission in the world, but also one that does not seek to with¬draw from the world, overwhelmed with guilt of nationalshortcomings.Scott Powell is a graduate student at the University.1982 WOMEN EMPLOYED CONFERENCESaturday, November 13Americana Congress Hotel • 520 S. Michigan10:00 a.m. to 6:30 p.m.Workshops on Reaganomics, barriers to economic equality,the future for women in politics, litigation issues, the myth ofequal opportunity, the wage gap, the office of the future,strategies for the ’80’s. Featuring nationally recognizedeconomic experts, political strategists, and activists. Plus a“Rally for Women’s Equality.”Tickets: $10 in advance, $15 at the door. Sponsored byWomen Employed, a national advocacy organization forworking women. For more information, call 782-3902. SPECIALS FROM FRANCESALE DATES: November 5th thru November 11thMAITRE d’ ESTOURNEL1981Blanc. From Prat Freres. 750 ml. Recentlyacclained by many of the major winewritersRegularly *5.19....NOW 2.99BEAU SOLEILNon-Vintage.Red or White. YOUR CHOICE 1.5 liters.Regularly *5.98 ... NOW 3.99FRENCH BRIENOW 2.99 CHALET COUPON5/'■ww w e«wk ajs_P b6 C ' ~ ' = 4 N C EReg. *5.98. Limit 12Without coupon 3.99 PRINCE HENRYVINMOUSSEUXBrutBlanc de Blancs2.99Valid thru 11/11/821 coupon/customerRegularly *4.98 lb.WE OFFER FREE CONSULTATION OFDEPARTMENT OR PERSONAL PAR¬TIES. FOR THE LATEST INFOR¬MATION ON WINE OR CHEESE,PHONE DEAN GOLD, STOREMANAGER 324-5000QUANTITIES SUBJECTTO AVAILABILITYUMCtCHHSf JHOP1525 EAST 53rd ST.HYDE PARK324-5000The Chicago Maroon—Friday, November 5, 1982—5NewsSymposium celebrates 40 yearsof Common Core course fSoc 2’By Elisse Gottlieb Levine said that many distinguishedThe 40th birthday of a campus perennial American social scientists credit “Soc 2”will be celebrated next weekend by some ofthe most distinguished professors from thisand other universities. “Soc. 2,” the coursewhich has since evolved into “Self, Culture,and Society” will be the honored guest at thesymposium sponsored by the Collegiate Di¬vision of the Social Sciences Nov. 12 -14.Originally, “Soc 2” was formulated be¬cause of a general dissatisfaction with thesocial science courses of the 1930s. The in¬novative sequence centered around“Themes” and “Problems,” an alternativeto the “survey” approach.The successful history of “Soc. 2” repre¬sents an experiment in educational methodwhich has had, say supporters, quite posi¬tive results.The symposium sessions, free and open tothe public, will deal with topics related toeducation as well as to the social sciences.Some of the subjects which will be consi¬dered are tenison between undergraduateand graduate education, the moral bases ofgeneral education, and the universality ofbasic social science concepts.“It is rare that an institution has the op¬portunity to celebrate what is best about it¬self,” said Dean of the College, Donald Le¬vine, himself a past chairman of theprogram. “The November symposium willbe a special occasion of reflection on thepast and future of general education both atChicago and nationwide. The course has hada truly national impact.”College Ventureopportunities forTaking time off from school and the op¬portunities available through the CollegeVenture Program will be the topic of twomeetings open to students Monday, Nov. 8and Tuesday, Nov. 9. Venture ProgramDirector Susan Stroud, U of C Program Con¬tact Brucie Harvey, and former U of C Ven¬ture participants will talk about Venturework experiences, job opportunities, and ap¬plication procedures. The meetings will beat 4 p.m. Monday and 12 noon Tuesday, inthe Career Library, Reynolds Club 201.Faced with the pressures of academicstudy, rising college expenses and the tight¬ening job market, many students decide totake time off at some point during their edu¬cation. Some leave to earn money, some toacquire valuable work experience, whileothers want to experience independence, orto clarify personal direction. The CollegeVenture Program, sponsored by a consor¬tium of 10 liberal arts colleges, headquar¬tered at Brown University, attempts to meetthese needs, offering potentially career-oriented employment to students on leave ofabsence.The Venture Job Bank includes ever 100positions and is updated weekly. Studentscan take from one quarter to one year’sleave of absence to participate in the Ven¬ture Program. Most positions are paid, orprovide at least room and board. The workavailable through the Program ranges fromjobs in business, editing, scientific research,to jobs in the arts, public interest work,teaching and social service.Don Laackman, a PERL major, partici¬pated in College Venture from September1981 to May 1982, after his second year in theCollege. Laackman was interested both spe¬cifically in political work experience, and intaking time off from school to clarify hisgoals.At that time, “I wasn’t sure exactly what Iwas doing at the U of C,” he said, and leftwith the question: “..did I want to continuehere at all?”Laackman landed a position in Washing¬ton, DC as a legislative assistant for the Na¬tional Coalition to Ban Handguns. His re¬sponsibilities included writing-up of courttestimony, and lobbying as primary lobbyistfor Maryland, and assistant in four other6—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, November for decisive effects on their intellectual for¬mations while they were students or instruc¬tors in the course. “Some of the most influ¬ential writings in contemporary socialscience were inspired by the course, and ithas been the model for educational innova¬tions at numerous other institutions,” hesaid.The specific aim of “Soc 2” has been to in¬vestigate whether the fundamental similar¬ities and differences of societies are reflec¬tions of a universal nature or whether thereare as many human natures as there arecultures.Featured at the symposium will be essaysby distinguished former faculty involved inthe program as well as sessions with currehtfaculty, alumni, and students.The symposium will open with an intro¬duction by President Hanna Gray, Levine,and Susan Rudolph, professor of politicalscience. The first speaker, Joseph Gusfield,from the University of California at SanDiego, will speak on the tension betweengraduate and undergraduate study. Theevening panel discussion will include com¬ments by Chicago professors Milton Singer,David Orlinsky, Bertram Cohler, and RalphNicholas.Saturday, there will be four speakers andan evening panel for group discussion.The symposium will close Sunday withfour lecturers, including Levine and DanielBell, a professor of sociology at Harvard.offers variousleave-takersstates. For the last two months of his place¬ment he acted as federal liaison to Congressfor the Coalition.Talking about his eight month experiencein Washington, Laackman described a newsense of security in himself, and in his abili¬ty to find good employment. He now workspart-time downtown as Issues Coordinatorfor Common Cause in Chicago, a job he feelshe was able to get because of his experiencein Washington. When he returned to U of Che found that he was much less grade con¬scious, and knew “what I wanted to get outof classes, and how to approach them.”He said, “I gained a lot of confidence inthe liberal arts system after being out in thereal world.”Ernest Grove, a linguistics major, is par¬ticipating in the Program this fall, afterthree years in the college. Grove was specif¬ically seeking work experience because“previous work experience is a very impor¬tant consideration when you’re going outinto the real world,” he said. He works indowntown Chicago, for Chicagoland RadioInformation Services (CRIS), a radio newsprogram for the blind and “print handi¬capped.” Responsible for most aspects ofthe afternoon production, he organizes andedits material for the show, arrangesreaders, and does some reading on the air.He said that Venture “provides useful andinteresting work experiences” for studentsstill in college.Other U of C placements have included po¬sitions as a worker in a social service orga¬nization in a St. Louis ghetto, a designer ap¬prentice in a graphic design firm in NewYork City, a production assistant in a well-known New York City theatre company, anenvironmental education intern in NewHampshire and in Minnesota, a program as¬sistant in the National Organization ofWomen in Chicago, and an intern in the Pub¬lic Defenders Office.The venture program welcomes studentswith or without specific career goals andwho are interested primarily in an experi¬ence outside of the academic environment.The program aims to give students the op¬portunity to acquire the work experiencethat can be an invaluable resource in futureemployment searches.5, 1982 Suit settledContinued from page oneOn March 28, Daniel was not respondingto pain. Dr. Howard Schneider, a resident ofWyler, testified that he was issued an orderthat if the boy’s heart stopped, it was not tobe restarted.On March 30, Schneider and Daniel’s at¬tending physician, Dr. Barbara Kirschner,agreed that he was “brain dead.” Kirschnertestified that she had had trouble reachingDaniel’s family, but spoke to his mother thatday, and Mrs. Burtin requested thatKirschner speak to her husband before tak¬ing Daniel off the respirator.Kirschner admitted that she was not ableto contact Walter Burtin.At 8:20 p.m., Schneider pronounced Dan¬iel dead, and ordered a nurse to take him offthe respirator. Schneider testitified that theboy conformed to Harvard Criteria for braindeath, and had done so for at least 24hours.Judge Walter Kowalski agreed that thecriteria for removal of the respirator equip¬ment and the procedures taken by Wylerpersonnel followed acceptable medicalpractice.Arms conferenceContinued from page oneTwo debates on nuclear arms relatedquestions will follow Wiesner’s address. At 1p.m. John Steinbruner of the Brookings In¬stitution will debate John Kwapisc of theAmerican Security Council on the resolu¬tion: The US should adopt a policy of not ini¬tiating the use of nuclear weapons. At 2:45p.m. Randy Keller, the coordinator of theNational Freeze movement which put thefreeze referendum on ballots throughout thecountry, will debate U of C Professor JohnMearsheimer on the issue of a mutuallyverifiable freeze on the development, test¬ing and deployment of all nuclear weapons.Mearsheimer is a professor of politicalscience specializing in European MilitaryStrategy.At 7:30 p.m. in Rockefeller Chapel, Sena¬tor Gary Hart of Coloado, whom many con¬sider to be a possible contender for the 1984Democratic presidential nomination, willdeliver the closing address which will pres¬ent “a new agenda for arms control.”In addition, six workshops to be heldThursday and Friday will examine the eco¬nomic, philosophical, medical, cultural andstrategic implications of the nuclear armsrace. Students and faculty are invited to at¬tend these workshops as well as the otherprograms in the conference. All programswill be free of charge.Thursday morning, Stephen Daggett, pro¬gram co-ordinator for the Coalition for aNew Foreign and Military Policy and NancyMyers, executive secretary for BusinessExecutive Moves will hold a workshop on“Military Spending: Deficits and Jobs. J.Montmarquet, professor of Philosophy atChicago State College will run the secondworkshop on “Can a Nuclear War be a JustWar?”Two workshops will be held Thursday eve¬ning beginning with “The Spread of NuclearWeapons Beyond the Super Powers” withWilliam A. Strauss, chief counsel and staffdirector for the Senate Subcommittee onEnergy and Nucelar Proliferation. Univer¬ sity of Illinois Professor James Cracraft, Uof C History Professor Richard Hellie, andU of C Anthropology Professor Gail Klig-man will be present at the other workshop,“Demythologizing Defense: Cultural Dy¬namics of the Arms Race.”The last two workshops will be held Fri¬day afternoon. J. Mearsheimer will againappear at “Strategy and the Balance ofPower.” Dr. Quentin Young of the Physi¬cians for Social Responsibility will run theworkshop on “Medical Aspects of NuclearWar.”ProgramWednesday, Nov. 1010 a.m.-5:30 p.m. — Program of films on nu¬clear weapons and the arms race. LawSchool Auditorium.7:30 p.m. — Opening Address. Helen Caldi-cott, President, Physicians for Social Re¬sponsibility. Center for Continuing Educa¬tion Auditorium.Thursday, Nov. 119:30-11 a.m. — Workshops: Military Spend¬ing: Deficits and Jobs Can a Nuclear Warbe a Just War? Ida Noyes Hall.12:30 p.m. — Keynote Address. JeromeWiesner, President Emeritus, M.I.T.Mandel Hall1 p.m. — Debate on no first strike policy.Mandel Hall.2:45 p.m. — Debate on nuclear weaponsfreeze. Mandel Hall.4:36-6 p.m. — Workshops: The Spread of Nu¬clear Weapons beyond the Super Powers.Demythologizing Defense: Cultural Dy¬namics of the Arms Race. Cobb 101, 106.7:30 p.m. — Closing Address: Gary Hart,Democratic senator from Colorado. Rock¬efeller Chapel:Friday, Nov. 124-5:30 p.m. — Workshop: Medical Aspects ofNuclear War. Ida Noyes Library.4:30-6 p.m. — Workshop: Strategy and theBalance of Power. Cobb 102.The Chicago MaroonThe Chicago Maroon is the official student newspaper of the University of Chicago It ispublished twice a week, on Tuesdays and Fridays. Editorial and business offices arelocated on the third floor of Ida Noyes, 1212 E 59th St. Chicago. 60637 Telephone753-3263Darrell WuDunnEditorAnna FeldmanManaging EditorRobin KirkNews Editor Margo HablutzelFeatures EditorCliff GrammichSports EditorDavid BrooksViewpoints EditorWally DabrowskiProduction Manager Nadine McGannGrey City Journal EditorKeith FlemingChicago Literary ReviewEditorPaul O’DonnellChicago Literary ReviewEditorAra JeialianPhotography Editor Aame EliasOperations ManagerSteve BrittBusiness ManagerJay McKenzieAdvertising ManagerBrian CloseOffice ManagerWilliam RauchCopy EditorAssociate 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.Contacts for Sale!What Is A Bargain?The 4 questions most frequently asked about contact lenses are:1 How Much Are Your Lenses72 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 salespeople7)3 Are the quality of lenses the best available7(or are they off-brands and seconds7)4 The question is, not how much are your lenses, butwill I receive the best care, the best quality and thebest price.Wc 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 - $100.00The 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) - 8160.00If 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. Training Wearing Instructions and Carrying Case)OUR PROMISE TO YOU:If you aren t pleased with your lenses after 60 days cost of the lenses will be re¬funded All contact lens fitting done by our Contact Lens Specialists.Dr S C Fostiak and Dr John S SchusterWe can replace your lost or broken lenses in 4 hours or less!IF YOU WANT THE BEST COME TO THE BEST'CONTACT LENSES UNLIMITED2566 N. Clark St.. Chicago. IL 606J4880-54001724 Sherman Ave., Evanston, IL 60201(above County Seat!864-4441 The War in Lebanon:An Israeli ViewCol. (Res.) Tzi El-PelegMilitary Governor — Gaza 1956Military Governor — Nablus 1967Military Governor — Suez Canal District 1973Commander of I.D.F. Civilian Aid in LebanonUniversity of Tel AvivMiddle East Research (Shiloah) CenterTuesday, November 9,19827:30 P.M.Hillel House5715 S. Woodlawn AvenueSponsored by Students for IsraelIMPORTED BEERSPECIALSKR0MBACHER 6 pack 2MYUKON GOLD 6 pack 199BIG BEN 6 pack 229 BEER SPECIALOF THE WEEKIMPORTED *%OQBECK'S 3LIGHT OR DARK 6 packFROM PORTUGALMATEUS J98ROSE “OR 1.5 literBIANCO Reg. 7.29 IMPORTEDBLUE NUNLIEBFRAUMILCH1.5 literReg. 7.98FROM FRANCEALEXIS LICHINEROSE or ANJOUREG 4984.98 #7V« 750 ml PAUL MASSON WINESRHINE 15UTERCHABLIS #>OQROSEBURGUNDY WLIGHT CHABLIS 3 for 10“IMPORTEDCANADIANCLUB 1 CMREG. 18.98 1 «# 1.75 liter IMPORTEDJ & B SCOTCH,M 159821.19 ■ 1.75 literSale Items We reserve;:X,. LINCOLN LIQUORS XSS,Storehdui, 1516 E. 53rd St. pr.nt.ngerrors.HsHL ' Phone 752-4238The Chicago Maroon—Friday, November 5, 1982—7rIsraeliFolkDancingMondayEvenings 8 pmBlue Gargoyle —Second Floor5655 S. University Ave.Cost: 75c per eveningSponsored by the Hillel Foundation ODDS & ENDSCHAIR SALE*5°° .0 *10°° eachBRANDEQUIPMENT 8560 S. ChicagoRE 4-2111Open Daily 8:30-5Sat 9-2 ii MemberAmerican Optometric AssociationDR. MJyMSLOVOPTOMETRIST• EYE EXAMINATIONS• FASHION EYEWEAR• AIL TYPES OFCONTACT LENSESASK ABOUT OUR ANNUALSERVICE AGREEMENTLOCATED INTHE HYDE PARKSHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th363-6100RockefellerChapelEcumenical Serviceof Holy CommunionUniversity MemorialService11 amUniversity ReligiousServiceEdward W. RosenheimDavid B. and Clara E. Stem Professorin the Dept, of English Languageand Literature and the College.Walk to museums, parks, the lakeSTUDIO APARTMENTSFurnished and unfurnishedutilities includedLaundry roomSundeck • Secure buildingCampus bus at our doorCall 9-5 for appointment324-0200 The finest beer brewed and bottled in Canada. Imported by Martlet Importing Co., Inc., Great Neck, N.Y. © I9828—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, November 5, 1982GREY CITY JOURNAL5 November 1982 • 15th Year'ELEVEN IN ONE SPOT PLUS ONE' BY JOHN PROBESKingston ©Mines w Hey, look - Weare now open at2548 N. Halsted549-1250/477 4646Open until 4am.Sat. til 5am.Fri. & Sat. Jimmy Johnson Blues ShowNov. 5 & 6 with special guest Valerie WellingtonSun., Nov. 7 Robert Covington Blues Showwith special guest Zor3 YoungMon., Nov. 8 JamTues., Nov. 9 Big Time Sarah Blues BandWed., Nov. 10 Mark Hannon Blues ShowThurs., Nov. 11 Valerie Wellington Show$1 off admission with current college I.D.WHAT IS BOB’SNEWSSTAND?It’s newspapers from all of America’s great cities. It’s 3,000different periodicals imported from everywhere—all over theworld—just for you; Fashion, art, technology, sports, news,comics! It's a dozen political viewpoints: Arab magazinesnext to Israeli magazines: French next to English. Left, right,center, whatever—all in one frenzy of pictures, print andideas to pique your interest and perhaps broaden your per¬ceptions. Is Bob's political? We believe in a free press.Bob's is greeting cards—3,000 different, unconventionalcards. 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THE AZTEC MUMMY.Tomorrow at 7:15 and 9:30: Costa-Gravas’ highly acclaimed politicalthriller starring Sissy Spacek, Jack Lemmon and John Shea:MISSING.Sunday at 2:30: an additional screening of POLTERGEIST.Sunday at 7:30: A VERY SPECIAL EVENTThe director of Conan the Barbarian and The Wind and the Lion, andscreenwriter lor Apocalypse Now, JOHN MILIUS will speak afterhis film BIG WEDNESDAY.All Films in Cobh Hall.111111 DOC FILMSmr.y.y/v.fw .*! ii > ts2-FRI.DAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1982-.-THE GREY CITY JOURNAL>> * * . I » < * - M * l * i e I * 4-v I . t * 1 5309 S. Blackstone * 947-0200OUR FAMOUS STUFFED PIZZA IN THE PANIS NOW AVAILABLE IN HYDE PARKOPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK • 11 AM T012 MIDNIGHTCocktails • Pleasant DiningPick-Up“Chicago’s best pizza!” — Chicago Magazine, March 1977“The ultimate in pizza!” — New York Times, January 1980Studio Theatreof theUnivers'ty of ChicagopresentsHOME FREEbyLanford WilsonDirected byJonathan Shamis 8 pm —Reynolds Club Theatre (Third Floor)November 4, 5, 6, 7,11,12,13,14$2.00 Gen’l Adm.$1.50 Students & Senior CitizensDANCEPublic Dances/Private Lives by JanBartoszek, presented by Dancycle onNov, 5, 6, 7, 12, 13, 14 at 8:30 p.m. atMorning Dance and Arts Center, 1034West Barry (472-9894).Hubbard Street Dance Co. An autobio¬graphical song and dance piecechoreographed by Lynne Taylor-Cor-bett, and a selection of new works andold favorites. From Tues. Nov. 9th-Sat. Nov. 20th (except Mondays).Goodman Theatre, 200 S. ColumbusDrive. For ticket and schedule infor¬mation call 443 3800.ARTSculptor Nancy Metz WhiteDoalty, Sarah, and Bridget are stu¬dents in a "hedge school" in the townland of Baile Beag (Ballybeg), CountyDonegal, Ireland. The year is 1833. Inthe old bar that serves as schoolhousethey receive a rigorous liberal educa¬tion, studying mathematics and threeclassical languages and literatures:Greek, Latin, and Gaelic. These aredead languages for us, but for thecharacters in Brian Friers play,Translations, now in its Chicago pre¬miere at the Body Politic, a languagelives as long as it is spoken. Greek andLatin are not just recited as dry oldbones are gnawed and regnawed forcompany's sake: some of the Irishpeasants in this extraordinary playare close comrades and even lovers ofthe greatest among the Greeks andRomans. When the old man JimmyJack, who hopes to marry the goddessAthena, reminisces with the schoolmaster Hugh about an uprising in 1796,he is reminded of how they marchedoff with picks on their shoulders andThe Aeneid in their pockets — finecompany for any warrior of any generation. And as for Gaelic, which themodern American imagination largelyforgets in relation to Joyce, these nine¬teenth century Irish still speak it astheir native tongue and national Ianguage. But as the play opens, aware ness is beginning to dawn on them thattheir language is a fading thing.Translations, when it is not about romance, poetry, or politics, is about thisdying language. Gaelic is the tragichero of this play, earning our pity andadmiration, but fated, we know, to anignoble encf. When the play opens theBritish have recently arrived inCounty Donegan to begin a mappingand renaming project. In addition, aprogram of public education has beeninstituted in which all courses aretaught in "the king's good English" —as opposed to Gaelic, "the queen's archaic tongue." In short, the Irish tongue is under siege. Essentially theproblem is this: the Irish language andtherefore the Irish people are unableto communicate or compete with theworld of the English, the so calledworld of progress and modernity. Thepeople of Ireland are worried thattheir culture may have become impri¬soned within a "linguistic landscape"that no longer "matches the fact." AsHugh, in a philosophical mood, suggests, "It is not the literal past, the'facts' of history that shape us, butimages of the past embodied in Ianguage. If we cease to renew thoseimages, we are fossilized." At thesame time the "backward" Irish peacontinued on page 4*1•o>*OPart of Patch Works seen through part of "Con: Cave and Vex"Eva Hesse: A Retrospective of theDrawings Fab show approachinglimit. See it today or tomorrow, 10-4, orSunday, noon-4 in The Renaissance So¬ciety Bergman Gallery, fourth floorCobb. 962 8670. Free.Magdalena Abakanowicz: One of Po¬land's most important artists and aninternationally acclaimed sculptor.Abakanowiez herself has executed twoinstallations of her monumental three-dimensional fiber sculpture for thepremier showing of the first majortraveling retrospective of her work.Her earliest pieces, Abakans, namedby critics after the artist, are coarselywoven 16-foot hanging constructions,dating from the mid 1960's to the early1970's, and will be presented in thefourth-floor Exhibition Hall at TheCultural Center (at the Chicago PublicLibrary at Michigan and Randolph). Aseries of fiber sculpture based on thehuman figure, entitled Alterations,and including Heads, Backs, SeatedFigures and Embryology, will beshown at the Museum of Contem¬porary Art (237 E. Ontario), and rangein date from the 1970's to the present.The show has been organized by theMCA, and is its largest exhibition todate. A definitive monograph, co¬published by the MCA and AbbevillePress, NY, is available. The retrospec¬tive opens November 6 and will runthrough January 2, before it travels tofour other U.S. locations, Canada, andJapan. —BMPatch Works and Works on Paper byJudy Hartle and Merle Temkin, re¬spectively. The former, colorful anddelicate formal abstractions; the lat¬ter, sequins arranged mosaically onmaps. In the center: "Con: Cave andVex" by Temkin, a large, open ovi¬form sculpture constructed from dou¬ble-sided plexiglas mirror strips.Opening tonight, 5-8 al Artemisia Gal¬lery, 9 w. Hubbard. Through 27 Nov.:Tue.-Sat., 11-5. 751-2016. Free.Wall Reliefs and Paintings by MicheleCorazzo and Debra Yoo, respectively.Former contrasts line to space, paint¬ing to scul&ure; still lifes by latter.Raw art ("ufe Size: A Series of Sculp¬tural Drawings," installation by De¬borah Vidaver Cohen) unavailable forparticipatory viewing Tuesday; surelyready for tonight's opening, 5-8 at ArcGallery, 6 W. Hubbard. Through 27Nov.: Tue.-Sat., 11-5. 266 7607. Free.Industrial Icons by Nancy Metz White.Large-scale sculpture, constructed ofthe grey pipes and accordion-likeducts ordinarily used in constructionof heating and ventilating systems,will be on exhibit at Midway StudioGallery Monday November 8th,through November 19th. A receptionfor this Milwaukee area artist will beheld from 3 to 5 pm this Sunday. Thegallery is open 9 to 5 Monday throughFriday.Helmut Newton: Photographs 1980-1982Medium-sized exhibit of large blackand white prints from Newton's recentbook, Big Nudes. Really sayin' what? Clue: in how many pictures do themodel's eyes directly engage the cam¬era/photographer/viewer? I countfour (side-by-side at the southern endof the eastern most wall) and evenwith these exposure allows ambiguity.Newton is not (artistically) stupid, sowhat place can this fact take in an ex¬planation of this show's powerful andunsubtle effect? Is Newton's an en¬lightening way of seeing, or is it moreproperly called a way of being seen?What does seeing have to do withpower, who has the power here, andfor what is it being used? How arethese photographs poor? Through 24Nov. at Collumbia College Gallery, 600S. Michigan. Mon.-Fri. 10-5; Sat.,noon 5. 663 1600 ext 104. Free. — D/VI"Botticelli and the Problem of Under¬standing Humanist Patronage ofPainting" Lecture by Charles Demp¬sey, Johns Hopkins University. ThisWed., 10 Nov. at 4 in Cochrane WoodsLecture Hall, 5540 Greenwood. Free.Rita F. Price Etchings and lithographsinspired by the Israeli environment.Opens Sunday, 6-8 in the Younger Gal¬lery, 1428 E. 53rd. Through 27 Nov.:Mon. Fri., 12-9; Sat., 10-6; Sun., 12-6.752-2020. Free.Paul LaMantia A Review: 1967-1982Paintings; closes tomorrow. HydePark Art Center, 1701 E. 53rd, 11-5.324-5520. Free.MISCIndian Holy Man Sri Chinmoy's poetrywill be read to flute and guitar accom¬paniment tonight. This reading prom¬ises to be weird, different, and (whoknows?) enlightening. It's free, andthere will be refreshments. Friday at 8pm., Reynolds Club, North Lounge. Sponsored by the Chicago Literary Re¬view. — KFOpen Mike Coffee House, featuring localartists and foreign coffee. All perform¬ers welcome. Fri. Nov. 5th, 9:30 mid¬night at International House. Admis¬sion free.Women's Union Coffee House Music,food, entertainment and a chance tomeet friends. All women welcome,Thurs. Nov. 11th at 8 p.m. in the li¬brary of Ida Noyes.MUSICU of C New Music Ensemble will presentits first concert of the 1982 83 season,including works by Janacek, Soll-berger, Milhaud, Blackwood, Rugglesand others on Sun. Nov. 7th at 8 pm inGoodspeed Recital Hall. Admissionfree.University of Chicago Symphonic WindEnsemble Noontime concert, Thurs.Nov. 11th at 12:15 pm. Goodspeed Re¬cital Hall. Admission free.Preservation Jassfest Society A week¬end festival in honor of saxaphonistEddy Miller. A full program includingappearances by several well-knownlocal bands. Fri. Nov. 5th through Sun.Nov. 7th at the Holiday InnO'Hare/Kennedy, Rosemont, Illinois.For further information call the 24hour Festival Hot Line: 975-0770.Rita Warford will perform "Woman-song", a tribute to women jazz vocalists every Monday night in November.Performances at 8:00 pm, Nov. 8, 15,22, 29. Admission $3. Cross Currents,3204 N. Wilton, 472 7884.Fansisco Godino A Cuban pianist celebrates 50 years of performing with aconcert including works by Schumann,Scarlatti, Cervantes and others. Sun.Nov. 7th at 5:30 p.m. in Collins Hall ofthe American Conservatory of Music,116 S. Michigan Ave. Admission $4 students (S8 general).Kingston Mines Blues Center A BenefitBlues Concert for Circle Pines Centre,with the Kingston Mines All Stars.Sun. Nov. 7th at 8:30 p.m. 2548 N.Halsted. $3 donation at door.THEATERTranslations Jimmy Jack, Maire,Grey City Journal 11/5/82Staff: Abigail Asher, Nina Berman, Curtis Black, Pat Cannon, John ConIon, Pat Finegan, Keith Fleming, Sarah Herndon, Michael Honigsberg,Richard Kaye, Bruce King, Madeleine Levin, Marla Martin, Richard Mar¬tin, Beth Miller, Mr. and Mrs. Movie, Pat O'Connell, Paul O'Donnell,Maddy Paxman, Sharon Peshkin, John Probes, 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.Hi; ill! i!ii| iiiiiiiiiiiiii iipi iiiijj! j iiiiiiTHE GREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1982—3■««•••1*•1!Brian Friel's Translations, at the Body Politic Theatrecontinued from page 3sants are torn: they seem to share anintimacy with tradition and historythat the English soldiers obviously cannot fathom. Again and again Frielwonders if the Irish became mod¬ernized at the price of their culturalidentity.Translations is currently being per¬formed at the Body Politic Theatre,2261 North Lincoln, through Sun. Nov.21. The production, under the artisticdirection of James O'Reilly, is excel¬lent and highly recommended. Call348 7901 for reservations.Little Me A musical comedy by NeilSimon which tells the story of BellePoitrine's progress from an Illinoisbackwater to culture, wealth and So¬cial status through her marriage toNoble Eggleston. Opens Nov. 9th, eves8 pm, mats (Wed, Sat and Sun) 2 and2:30 pm. For information call266 0500.A Solo Song: for DOC A play by City Lit.Theater Co. opens Nov. 7th at StuartHall, 10 W. 13th Street (Illinois Insti¬tute of Technology).FILMPoltergeist (1982, dir.: Tobe Hooper) Al¬though Hooper, who directed TheTexas Chainsaw Masacre, was givendirectorial credit for this high budgethorror picture, it possesses all thetrademarks and conventions charac¬teristic of its producer, Steven Speil-berg. Most glaring are the narrativedeficiencies and creeping jingoismwhich inform Speilberg's most recentfilms. As with Raiders of the Lost Arkand E.T. Poltergeist introduces theviewer to a fairly stable yet precariousstructure, spends most of its time de¬picting its near destruction, and thentidies everything up by eliminating thegiven threat and re-establishing andstrengthening the original status quowith little or no ambiguity. In this casethe central structure is an averageAmerican family headed by a rathernegligent, pot-smoking couple. Theirexisting order is drastically disruptedwhen spirits enter their home (via thet.v. set) and kidnap their youngestdaughter, a blond-hair and blue-eyed 5yr. old quintessential cutie. (A longerand closer analysis of the film might infact demonstrate that Speitbergand/or Hooper played up the daughtercharacter's appeal through imageryhedging on the "pornographic.") All inall Poltergeist is treading on thin iceon almost all accounts, covering up itsdeficiencies and inconsistenciesthrough an overkill of special effects.Yet, it was a very popular film and hasa happy ending. Doc. Fri. Nov. 5 at7:15 and 9 pm and Sun. at 2:30 pm. $2— RM.City Lights (Charles Chaplin, 1931) Cha¬plin's last silent film (Chaplin refusedto make this a talkie after two years ofshooting) may well be his best — it iscertainly his most eloquent. The filmtells the simple tale of the littletramp's love for a blind flower girl(Virginia Cherrill), his hot and-coldfriendship with a drunken millionaire(Harry Myers), and his bittersweet efforts to finance an operation to restorethe blind girl's sight. Although thecomedy occasionally lapses, the sol¬emn unveiling of the Statue of Pros¬perity, the magnificently choreo¬graphed boxing match, and the tragicclosing close-up of the cured girl offer¬ing the tramp a coin, reveal the mas¬ter's brilliance sublimely. Littlewonder that Lenin remarked on his death-bed: "The one man in the worldI'd like to meet is Chaplin." Fri., Nov.5 at 7:30 8. 9:30 pm. 1-House. $2 ($1 forresidents) — PFThe Wrestling Women versus the AztecMummy (1964) Fri. Nov. 5 at mid¬night, Doc. $2.Missing (Constantine Costa Gavras,1981) Sat. Nov. 6 at 7:15 and 9:30 pm.Doc. $2.Singin' in the Rain (Stanley Donen &Gene Kelly, 1952) Unblushingly auda¬cious, joyously exuberant — it rankseasily among the wittiest, liveliest,and best Hollywood musicals evermade. Favorite touch: the title. "Sing¬ing' " dates back to the very first Hol¬lywood Revue (1929), a random pot¬pourri of songs, dances, elocutions,and vaudeville skits tossed together byMGM during the frenzied days of si-lents-to sound transition. The picturewas unabashedly looted ("I love you, Ilove you, I L O V E you"), and Com-den 8. Green discovered in it the kernelof one of Jean Hagen's most delightfuldiscoveries: "I can't make love to abush!" Sat., Nov. 6 at 7:15 8. 9:30 pm.LSF. $2 — PFBig Wednesday (John Milius, 1979) Sun.Nov. 7 at 7:30 pm. Followed by a talkby John Milius. Doc. $2.Attack on the Americas (Sandra Wen¬tworth Bradley, 1982) Attack on theAmericas presents the Reagan Admin¬istration's view of communist aggres¬sion in the Caribbean Basin area.Made by the conservative AmericanSecurity Council Foundation, this filmfeatures U.N. Ambassador Jean Kirk¬patrick, former Secretary of StateHenry Kissinger, General WallaceNutting (U.S. Southern Commanderfor Central and South America), andPresident Reagan himself, in a bitterattack on-Latin American revolutiona¬ry movements.Americas in Transition (Obie Benz,1981) Narrated by Ed Asner, Americasin Transition was originally made as aresponse to Attack on the Americas,and the two films will be shown to¬gether. While Attack on the Americastreats revolutions as controled by theSoviet Union, Americas in Transitionfocuses on social conditions in LatinAmerica, and argues that revolutiona¬ry movements are indigenous. Bothfilms are showing Sun., Nov. 7 at 7:30pm in Ida Noyes Hall, 2nd floor, EastLounge. Sponsored by CAUSE andSGFC. -JCDecember 7th (John Ford and Gregg To-land, 1943) Mon. Nov. 8 at 7:15 pm.Doc. $1.50; double-billed with the fol¬lowing film:They Were Expendable (John Ford,1945) Mon. Nov. 8 at 8 pm. Doc. $1.50;showing with December 7th.Monsignor A priest fighting his "humanweaknesses" while trying to save theVatican from financial ruin followingthe second World War is the premise ofFrank Yablan's new movie (which isnot to be confused with a film, whichimplies art). Monsignor StarringChristopher "I'm not Superman I'man actor" Reeve as Father Flaherty, aCatholic priest with catholic morals.Monsignor, tries to combine the poli¬tics of the Vatican, the mechanics ofthe mob and the pitfalls of passion.Very badly. The story is banal, the dia¬logue is insipid and if there were anyacting to comment on, it would proba¬bly follow suit. With all the scandalcurrently plaguing the Vatican bank(accusations of illegal purchasing ofbank-shares, political financing andarms trafficking) you'd do much bet¬ter to read the papers and give your$5.00 to the church. At Watertower..-PO by Ken Wissoker Why are you here?I saw Public Image once before, now? What kind ofabout three years age at the Palladi- you here to see?um in New York City, on the tour As it turned out, 1which followec the release of Metal Public image c(Box. The concert started out "nor thought I'd see, ancmally" but John Lydon gradually they probably thodestroyed the relationship between never do. Mostly, tperformer and audience, and even from the first altually destroyed the show itself. A played them well, cfew songs into the set, during "Fod the sheer normalnederstompf," he held the microphone distrubing. Why v\out to the various people in the front wouldn't stand $tiof the audience (including Johnny play songs sets, ev<Thunders) to sing the repeated even play full sorchorus "He only wanted to be most normal pos:loved." Lydon then began to call at- their material? Antention to his own use of lyric sheets, playing materia! io<and later called members of the au- an old historical medience on to the stage to read/sing were they not movifrom some of them. Eventually he were moving backvleft two such participants with the But the questionlyrics and walked off the stage. The where are you now,rest of the band kept playing, did an- past future referentother song, tnen looked around ana album was a transidecided that the concert must be explosion of the Se;over. Then they left the stage too. It post-apocalyptic dewas over, but it was fantastic. cal openness whicIn May of 1981, Public Image took Metal Box. Does tftheir challenge to the audience one the once electronic <step further — as tar as i1 could go. which developed fBy then down to three members, the and Joy Divisiongroup haa agreed on two days notice aground, found its vto fill a date left by a Bow Wow Wow pop? Are they takircancellation at the Ritz in New York, transition so we caThey played from behind a large the first time we li\video screen, where their actions ap dy, are we now gcpeared greatly enlarged. Reportedly farce?they mostly improvised, playing PiL left one majionly fragments of PiL songs. The weren't really tryirclub was very hot, the show had been ventional show — tvery late in starting, and the audi¬ence wasn't interested in the idea of Lydon Johnny Rottenan anti-performance performance,"Are you going to get your money'sworth?' John jeered at them, as hewould throughout the next 20 minutes.' ‘Are you getting rippedoff?...This is what rock and roll is allabout.' " (NY Rocker, Sept. 1981;'PiL's T.V.O.D.’) In the end the Ritz . ' %. ' %cut off the show and t.he audiencemore or less rioted. ji¬lt's hard to say what I would havefelt or thought had I been there, but vfrom a safe distance I saw this con vcert as the reduction, the logical conelusion, of the Palladium show. Theperformers as complete image; the Kperformance not as an escape froman alienated world, but as a replication of it, the structure of tne perfor xmance no longer a planned, fixed, ■series of songs, but improvisational, * j&LlC; •jF*creating and reacting to an evolving Jlsituation, songs no longer maintaintheir integrity as whole works, butare broken aown. The audiences expectation of coming to see the performer is both denied and fulfilled inan exagerated way — the interpolation of the video screen shows extreme close ups of the band as itblocks the audience from seeingthem directly.Two weeks ago Public image returned to Chicago to play the Granada Theatre. They opened with anew song, a great one, which sentJohn Lydon prowling around theedge of the stage singing "Where areyou? Where are you? Where are younow’" Questioning the audience butasking them what? Not where wereyou (say, at the time of the Sex Pistols) but where are you now — in theaudience at a Public image concert. hBHHHMi4—FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1982—THE GREY CITY JOURNAL) very close to that,of what they were' thirds of the wayicerf they playedfrom the first> songs later theyIt's hard to figurelo the song, but thevo sides to everyy: had to stopsame as when Igame of Monopo-'Yoti got what youWC image..." Theex Pistols riffs andrented the d ifhe Sex Pistols and/ playing the songis^-sign to indicateonaiity of the per-on the surface. Byway the song also?rf*as a whole: thiscant rived image,ou wanted.Drmances the banded the performionship to a pointich tne audiencelowing this direcimpossible. So thisi a solution to thee to go next. Thes Gbdard has said,0/ i y don has been:ero several times,whiere to go fromie transition piece,albeit a barely de- lowing a trend rather than settingone. The Human League, Yaz, ABC,even the Gang of Four all seem to bestanding on the line between whatappears genuine, and what ironically undercuts itself to bring 'genu¬ineness' in pop songs into question.They do this by stringing togetherpop cliches, but in such a way as toleave gaps, contradiction, or othersigns which clue the listener into acertain kind of belief/disbelief ambivalence. The pop cliches take holdon the mind even as the songs tell usthey are only pop ciiches.This stylistic position has its ori¬gins in the early middle sixties. Invisual art Andy Warhoi and especially Roy Lichtenstein representedconsumer culture artifacts andturned them into pop icons. Lichtenstein's paintings of enlarged comicstrip panels of romantic yearningare not that far from the HumanLeague's "Don't you want me baby"— the presentation of pop cliche pos¬ing a not as realism, but as popcliche.Within pop music a similar aesthetic arose at the roughly sametime in England among the Mods.This was reflected not so much in themusic as in their clothes. The Standard mod uniform came very closeto being 'proper' and acceptable tothe adult world, but certain details(a collar turned up, a tie knotted'wrong') were always off -- signs ofdifference, a knowing parody of sty¬listic conventions. While the parodyof empty forms in the artistic exam¬ple is characteristic of PublicImage, the pop form is not — theystill do not have any kind of 'massproduced,' sleek pop surface to theirsound — not even the parody (eg.Blondie) of such a surface. Rather,like the Mods, they are dressed upfor serious music; they played ex¬tremely well, but there were tell talesigns around the collar.Standing around on the streetafter the concert, I ran into an ex-roomate, James, who I hadn't seenin about a year. He was in the B-school then, but more into 'newwave' than mqst people I knew, andhe brougnt the same pleasantly cynical attitude to the music that he usedas much as possible in regarding theworld. I asked' him whaThe thoughtof the show, and ne replied "I liked ita lot — ! thought i was going to hateit, after what you said about thatshow in New York. But they playedall my favorite songs. They playedthem iust like on the record. Ithought it was great."While I enjoyed the concert, i wasdisappointed. I want to give PiL thebenefit of the doubt, because theyhave always had a good artistic understanding of what they weredoing. While I see reasons why theymight have had to play the kind ofconcert they did, I am somewhat ata loss for how it is an artistically defensible development, given theirown view — and to that extent I amdisappointed. mam floor.‘Around me were a surprisingly large number of people,mostly male, dressed in skinheadstyle. They all wore flat soled heavywork boots, army camouflage pants,with too large, long, lined olive drabarmy jackets. All had their hair cutvery short. One was wearing a blackfelt derby, another a red beret. Theyhad a different way of dancing whichwas distinct from the range of ^ostpunk styles: wide swinging of thearms, kicking the legs out in front, insome sort of casual pattern. Whilethere were a fairly large number of people in leather, these people wereclearly distinguished from the otherhardcore fans by the differences indress and dance. The styles appeared to have already reached astable form, fully realized in a highdegree of uniformity.If these people were in England,we would call them skinheads. Afterreading Dick Hebdiges Subculture,we could say something about theirclass and status background, andtheir tendency toward racist poli¬tics. Now, were these people at PiLharacore fans who simply saw a British style unclaimed in Americaand moved in to fill the void in thesystem? Did they like the English Oimusic and simply initiate the style ofits artists and fans’ Do they belongto a place in the American class systern which would correspond to theclass position of British skinheads?Do they share the racist and Neo-fascist tendencies of the British fans?Why here and now? Anyone withspeculations on or answers to thesequestions please write the YouthSubcultures Desk, Grey City Journal.Rotten Johnny LydonAmerican Youth Subculture note:Opening the show was the Chicagohardcore band The Effigies, andthey were quite good. During theirset I was standing in the aisle on theTHE GREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1982—5THE PROBLEM WITH SANITYby Keith FlemingSarita wants to be neurotic. She developedthis hankering last Christmas Break whenshe came home from school and discoveredher mother had turned her bedroom into awaiting room. You see, the Dragonwood'sflat is very tiny (two rooms, bathroom,kitchenette). Mrs. Dragonwood, a therapistwith a struggling private practice, had for¬merly made her patients wait out on theback porch with the garbage. Now, with thenew arrangement, there was really nothingfor Mrs. Dragonwood to do but put a sheeton the waiting room couch and kiss SaritaGood Night.Sarita (you really can't imagine a girlmore normal) couldn't get to sleep for thelongest time that night, staring at the watercooler where her dresser had stood, the Mr.Coffee on her desk, the mottoes and daisieson the walls. She felt, well, uncomfortablesleeping in a waiting room (a yellow Kleen¬ex arching out of its box, waiting there to beplucked, seemed to symbolize the new air oftranscience and public service her room hadacquired).She was awakened by a cold touch at hertemple, and what seemed to be the peacefuldainty breathing of a cat. It was hermother's 7 a.m. patient, Taylor. Taylor lift¬ed his ear from Sarita's temple and blinkedhis eyes rapidly with naive good will. An an¬cient child, Taylor wore his grey hair in aponytail and held his head cocked in an atti¬tude of permanent befuddled wonder."I was luh-luh-listening to your dreams,"Taylor said with his engaging stutter,"about numbers, right? Luh-luh-luh-likeone. There's something — I don't know —special about number one, don't you thinkso, Sarita?"Taylor pottered off to his appointment andSarita dozed off.The sheer presence of her mother's 8o'clock patient awakened her again.Mildred Hickey. Mildred Hickey stood ex¬pressionless by the Mr. Coffee, handsome asa pasha with her huge shaved head and redvelvet headband. "Hi, how's school?" sheasked blandly. Years of letting her appear¬ance alone make her seem outrageous hadleft Mildred with a pleasant, if lackluster,actual personality.Mrs. Dragonwood herself awoke Sarita at9. "That figures," said Mrs. Dragonwood."Beasley's eternally late for his appoint¬ments. His 'passive-aggressive protest' Ilike to call it." Mrs. Dragonwood laughed. She apparently had no idea how put out herdaughter felt trying to sleep in a waitingroom.This being her first day back, Sarita de¬cided to be polite and chide her mother obli¬quely. "I seem to be so tired this morning,"she told her mother, though Mrs. Dragon¬wood, for all her nodding (her "active listen¬ing" technique) did not seem to be listening.Sarita tried again. "I guess it's 'cause Icouldn't get to sleep for the longest time lastnight.""Leroy still giving you fits?" Mrs. Drag¬onwood asked with the easy indiscretion ofthe therapist (who forgets that instantaccess to everyone's private life is notalways her privilege in real life)."Mother! I told you a month ago I'm notseeing Leroy anymore.""Mmmm, good honey," Mrs. Dragon¬wood murmurred with the absent-minded¬ness of a therapist taking a break from lis¬tening to problems for pay. "Listen honey,"she went on, "I'm just running out for ciga¬rettes, but don't you tell Beasley that. I'll fixhis wagon! Make a little passive-aggressiveprotest of my own."Sarita giggled with her mother. Being adutiful daughter, she asked: "But mother,what if he thinks you've really left andstarts to leave himself?""Let him leave. He'll be back soonenough." Mrs. Dragonwood spoke from ex¬perience. Beasley was her most loyal anddeeply disturbed patient, and though theyhad had quite a few rows throughout his de¬cade of treatment, this was to be expected ina relationship more intimate than any mar¬riage."Oh Mom, I want to go out with you,"Sarita said, bounding to the closet where hermother had hidden a way her suitcase."There's all this stuff I have to tell you.""Honey...Beasely can't very well be leftringing the bell downstairs. And besides,you and I have a date tomorrow night.""Oh but mother, it's right before yourgroup therapy and you know how it is witheveryone calling up and coming overearly."Mrs. Dragonwood exhaled a short, piquedbreath. "I don't think it's fair of you to belaying these guilt trips on me all the time."Mrs. Dragonwood spoke with the self-right-eouness of people who've forgotten a certainemotion still exists — genuine guilt."Mother, I am not laying a guilt trip onyou. I just need...well, you see it's about Emmett. I've written him twice since he'sleft school, but he—""It's your life, not mine, babe. I can't liveit for you.""But mother, it's your business to solvepeople's problems...especially when it'syour own daughter.""People solve their own problems," Mrs.Dragonwood answered evasively, but see¬ing her daughter had turned to the wall in ahuff, she added, "You've always managedto take care of yourself. These people I help,honey, they're really sick people. You knowthat I've always told you you're the most to¬gether person I know. You're our Rock ofGilbraltor, babe." And with her daughternow facing her again, she blew her a kiss."Peace," she said enigmatically, and leftthe room.Shortly after, Beasley limped (a favoritegame of his) into the waiting room, hisslender calves flushed red with cold beneathhis blue jean bermudas. "What! You here?Has it come to this, Sarita? I hope yourmother at least gives you a discount.""Beasley," Sarita protested wearily."My God, you do look suicidal! But just aminute^ now...if you think just because youneed some emergency session you're goingto preempt my hour...What is this anyway?What are you, my new therapist? What areyou doing here!""Beasley!" Sarita protested lovingly.Beailey felt pleased. He'd learned nothingbroke ^he ice better with shy or sulky peoplethan a steady stream of mock-petulance. "Imean what are you doing here, Sarita? Isthis supposed to be some new kind of shocktreatment? Where is your mother!""Beasley...just calm down. She went outfor a minute."."Out for a minute! This woman has gotserious problems."Beasley scowled with a kind of adorablequerulousness and said, "And look at you.Standing here in your nightgown! Whatwould people think! What are you doing inhere with me, anyway?""Beasley, where else am I going to sleep?This used to be my room, you know."A tender half-smile transformed Beas¬ley's thickly freckled little face and he nowlooked like an alert and sympathetic seal.His whole manner changed. Hesmelled pain(and the chance to weasel into the privatelife of his therapist and her daughter) andhis voice grew soothing and solicitous."Awww. What's happened? Is it you'rephotograph by Duane Michals, from Real Dreams upset because she took away your room?""Oh Beasley, it's not that so muchas...as...well, she just doesn't seem to thinkabout my feelings at all anymore. I reallyalmost don't think she cares about me, or atleast she doesn't seem to very much." Sari¬ta plucked the Kleenex that had been offer¬ing itself all night and told him how hermother wouldn't even help her with her Em¬mett problem."Darling...darling," Beasley said, aboutto comfort her until he realized he neededfree movement for the soliloquy he wasabout to deliver. "Darling, you must starttrying to make yourself mo re...captivating.Say something out of the ordinary and yourmother will perk right up, believe me. Wespoil her. Really, we do! Her patients allspoil her because, honestly, who's more co¬lorful and exhilerating than the mentallydisturbed? I mean, let's face it, healthy peo¬ple are all pretty much alike. All over thecountry today people are probably wonder¬ing when old Emmett's going to write.You've got to give your problems more of atwist, dear. Your mother's like an editorwith too many stories on her desk. Unlessyou come up with something fresh, new, out¬rageous, you better forget it, honey, yougoing to the bottom of the pile!""Look," Beasley tried a more tender key."If’s not going to be easy but I think we can'instruct' you a bit in neurosis. It's hard tosupply you with rules (since the very es¬sence of neurosis is a kind of skittish origi¬nality), but I think it's safe to say that Inver¬sion and the Sick Twist are both reliablestrategems. Take your problem with Em-rr|ett...Tell your mother you're not sad butglad that Emmett's not writing. Tell heryou've been waiting forever to experiencethe drama of rejection, the bittersweetmusic of self-pity...Tell her you enjoy theideal freedom of writing to someone whonever replies; that you feel he's the perfectreader: he never interrupts the flow of thenovel which, letter by letter, you're compos¬ing for him."Or if that seems too sunny, use the SickTwist on her. Tell her you're heartbrokenEmmett's not writing...but (and here's theSick Twist) only because this means you'llhave to go ahead and write the history ofyour romance with Emmett which you pro¬mised your agent you'd do when you brokeup with him. Except the story of your love'sso skimpy-looking, and you really do wishEmmett could have allowed you a few morechapters together."Sarita, of course, presented countlesscommonplace objections to Beasley's ad¬vice: it didn't "feel right", she didn't havean agent, etc., etc. Finally they reached anagreement: Sarita would develop insomniaand ambivalent emotions.But Sarita lacked flair. She couldn't seemto acquire the shame and self-doubt whichturns the neurotic into an actor perpetuallyinventing new characters for fear that herreal self (if discovered) would make peoplegasp. Sarita was gifted with none of the self-consciousness neurotics pick up from a life¬time of scrutinizing themselves, trying tofind what's gone wrong. She had no guile, inother words. And so the phone would ring,and Mrs. Dragonwood announce that it wasEmmett, and Sarita would run to talk tohim, forgetting in her thoughtless glee that agolden opportunity had presented itself inwhich she could have acted strange and con¬flicted and said: "I just can't face Emmetttoday. And I don't know why." Even in¬somnia was beyond her. The same dearth offlamboyance which kept her from carryingout Beasley's plan that she wear a kimonoand scoop out toilet water with a tea cup inbetween seducing patients on the waitingroom couch, failed her here too. She'dscarcely been pacing for five minutes lateone night outside her mother's door (talkingto non-existent people as Beasley had sug¬gested) before an instinctive considerate¬ness silenced her (she might wake hermother!)The night time lights up insomniacs: thenight air is all theirs, only theirs, and feedstheir flames. But Sarita had no obsessions tooccupy her and she felt dull and lonely as thestreet lamp she kept looking at out in thealley. She possessed none of an insomniac'sstamina. She kept going to her room "torest" for a minute...and then would snoretill morning. One morning, when her motherfound her sleeping for the fifth consecutivetime, Sarita realized she needed help."Mother," she said, "is there some placewhere they can, you know, give normal peo¬ple some more energy, some more ideas?"6—FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1982—THE GREY CITY JOURNAL—TAlCHINESE-AMERICAN RESTAURANTSpecializing in Cantoneseand American dishesOpen Daily 11 A.-8:30 P.M.Closed Monday1318 E. 63rd MU 4-1062>AMY0CI We Buy and SellUsed Records1701 E. 55th684-3375262-1593New and RebuiltTypewriters,Calculators,Dictators, AddersCasioHewlett Packard REPAIRSPECIALISTSon IBM, SCM,Olympia, etc.FREE repairestimatesTexas InstrumentCanonSharp RENTALSavailable withThe University of Chicago BookstoreTypewriter & Calculator Department970 East 58th Street 2nd Floor753-3303 C.I.D. BLACKFRIARS PRESENTSOOOOOOOGOCOOOOOCCOl cmufiis lcoooooooocccocooooMusic Sc Lyrics byf DAND LCDSSEDDirected byDDIC NELSCNMusical DirectorsDAN SIEIZELREYNOLDS CLUB NEW THEATRENOVEMBER 12,13,14 & 19.20.21 8:OOpmTICKETS ON SALE AT REYNOLDS CLUB & COBB HALLGENERAL $3.50 STUDENTS $3.00 GROUPS $2.50FUNDED BY SGFC f, , JhlE, GKEY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY,. NOVEMBER 5, 1982 —7luxury most general circula¬tion magazines can't afford.I am glad to see that in twocases, Bruce liked the re¬cords he assigned himself toreview. Next time, I hope hecan harness his enthusiasmfor more constructive ends.Paul MollicaStudent in the CollegeTo the Editor:The distinction of the intel¬lectual "ivory tower" fromthe "real world" has alwaysfigured largely in the lan¬guage of anti-intellectualism:it professes a utilitarian con¬ception of education, de¬mands palpable results, dis¬counts thought in favor of aprogram of action in the so¬cial world, which is presumedto be more "real" than the in¬tellectual world. Against thisconception, the idea of liberaleducation asserts the value ofa developed mind purely forits own sake, and the inherentvalue of the various liberaldisciplines independent of,and superior to, any use towhich they might be put. Thisis the educational ideal pur¬sued (successfully or unsuc¬cessfully) by general educa¬tion programs like that of theCollege, and, unfortunately, itis the object of John Andrew'sunthinking criticisms in"Life of the blind" (The GreyCity Journal, 10/29/82).Using the "ivory tower"metaphor as his verbal blud¬geon, Andrew challenges the"muddle of seemingly foolishand useless courses we needto get a B.A.," and protests that general education mustadapt to a student's own pref¬erences: "Possibly the Hu¬manities major could takescience sequences which aremore immediately connectedto his/her interest. The Physi¬cal Science major could takecourses which examine socialphenomena which are con¬nected to the study of geologyor physics." General educa¬tion should be "relevant toour specific interests."These are, of course, laugh¬able suggestions, but they re¬veal an altogether disheart¬ening misconception ofgeneral education and its pur¬pose. General education restson an assumption not that theseveral disciplines have some"real" use or a "relevance"to each other, but that eachdiscipline has a necessaryconnection to ourselves asthinking beings, that physicsand literature have distinctbut equal claims on the atten¬tion of an inquiring mind; anintellectual enterprise whichcannot look beyond the limitsof its specific approachscarcely merits the name,and thus even our individualspecialisms have meaningonly in their contribution toSUNDAY 1230►Dear Editor of GCJ:In your Oct. 29th issue, yourcurrent popular music critic,Bruce King, took two stepsbackwards from the level ofcriticism I would hope to seein our paper.First, he didn't talk aboutmusic. Lyrical themes arefine, but the record buyers Iknow are mostly interested inhow the vinyl is going tosound when the needle glidesacross it. And since most popmusician's lyrics rarelyascend beyond high-schoolprosey — this is especiallytrue of Mark Knopfler — con¬centrating on them does a dis¬service to the record.Second, he chose to reviewthree records that have al¬ready been hashed over insuch critical rags as Creemand Rolling Stone. Why notselect some less conspicuousdiscs, like the Peripheral Vi¬sion LP or Maureen Tucker'sPlaying Possum — both ofwhich can be heard on thecampus radio station? Afterall, reviewing fresh talentand independent records is a the collective human task ofinquiry. When the historiansincerely attempts to under¬stand the work of the physicalscientist, he affirms the par¬ticipation of both in some¬thing higher than the particu¬lar work of either, thecommitment of both to ashared purpose among diver¬gent pursuits.One of our chief duties as educated persons, then, is awillingness to study, purelyfor their own sake, subjectswhich may be of no immedi¬ate concern to us; we studythem for their compelling rel¬evance to our life as an intel¬lectual community, regard¬less of their apparentirrelevance to our specific in¬terests. In other words, theaim of a general curriculumis to correct the narrownessof our interests, not to cater toit, and the reluctance of stu¬dents like John Andrew totake "irrelevant" coursesmerely attests to the wisdomof the College in requiringthem. Robert DiSalle,graduate student inthe Humanitiesing experiences but(bartenders in Detroit no¬twithstanding) that onlyserves to broaden his/her ex¬posure — it is not some typeof legitimizing processwhereby she/he now has the"right" to publish, etc.No, the critic has no placein evaluating the dignity ofart — only to evaluate its aes¬thetic merit. The critics roleis to criticize, for better orworse, not to censor. In theideal world all art could bedisseminated as widely aspossible for each individual tojudge as he/she sees fit. How¬ever in a world of scarce re¬sources (primarily time) thatis not possible and the criticsteers us towards art wewould probably find most pal¬atable and aestheticallypleasing. The critic is the me¬dium between the artist andsociety at large serving as afilter, suggesting in criticalappraisal, what the audiencewill find meritorious. Thecritic should never be the si¬lencer of any artist. The in¬alienable right of free speechholds in a political context,and in the context of the hu¬manities there must alsoexist the inalienable right offree expression (in an artisticsense) in a free society. It isultimately up to the audienceto evaluate the merit of theartist's work, or whether toevaluate it at all. The criticcan only serve as the guide,not omnipotent arbiter; to as¬sume otherwise is quite elitistindeed. Steven L. Huin1st year graduate studentto the Editor,In the last paragraph ofKevin J. Tuite's "Erste Man-delstamtischrede" (GreyCity Journal, 10/29/82) theauthor encouraged individu¬als to exercise their criticalfaculties and express theiroutrage at art they foundlacking in aesthetic value.Well if criticism is an art myreaction to Mr. Tuite's essayis outrage. It is utterly pomp¬ous to suggest that those whocompose, paint, sculpt, write"bad" art should be censored(either self-or otherwise)from expressing themselves.This pretentiousness wouldgive the critics the power todetermine, rather than evalu¬ate, who is a "good" artistand who is not. It is ironic thatthe same issue of the GreyCity that prints an article on Dennis Brutus — a refugeefrom artistic repression onpolitical grounds — would ad¬vocate the repression of arton aesthetic grounds.Without getting too political("Marxist"/"capital-ist"/"whatever-ist" art), artis the most democratic formof human expression. Thereare no discriminating qualifi¬cations to becoming an artist,except the ability to commu¬nicate with your audiencealong the common thread ofhumanity. Art can be simpleand concise, art can be re¬fined and complex; if you'vepaid your dues or if you'rejust starting out, as long asyou communicate along somelevel of human experience,then you are an artist. An ar¬tist can go through many sti¬mulating and many tribulat-SKYBRUNCH8—FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1982—THE GREY CITY JOURNALCHICAGO CHILDREN’S CHOIR5650 S. WOODLAWN CHICAGO IL 60637 (312)324-8300ft* 5th 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 ADMISSION6:45 CHOIR SERENADE7:00 AUCTIONSis, professional auctioneer BOB HALEY ofH&H AUCTION SERVICEPHONE 643-1881• Turtle Soup • Shrimp Bisque• J9||919l|G0a 9|||MI9j9 SJ8]SAfl * SCHOOL 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 IVIore Information and Application Form please write toCIFAS UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF MEDICINEDEAN OF ADMISSIONS12820 WHITTIER BLVD.. SUITE 28 • WHITTIER, CALIF. 90602The 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 Avenue(tn , ytJJjNow Featuring:* Homemade Fruit salad* Homemade Soup* French-dip Beef* Hot Spiced CiderThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, November 5, 1982—17We KnowYou’re Out There!If you were unable totake advantage of ourPOLYGRAM THREE-INONE SALE due to theonset of bothersomeweather(or midterms for thatmatter)It’s Still Here!The sale will continue throughSaturday, November 12To refresh your memory:123 12.3 %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 Series gnThe LONDON TREASURY SERIESwill remain ON SALE for $2.75 EACH.2 for $5.25. Many titles, many artists.'Rounded off. 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CORNELL18—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, November 5,1982InterviewNorthcott: double billing as professor and actorBy David BrooksKenneth Northcott is a professor in the de¬partment of Germanic Language and Liter¬ature and the Committees of ComparativeStudies in Literature and the General Stu¬dies in the Humanities, and the College. Herecently played the head waiter in CourtTheater’s outstanding production of YouNever Can Tell.Maroon: First of all, how long have youbeen in the theater and how did you get intoit?Northcott: I’ve been in it since I was about13. My first role was that of a woman in aplay called Outward Bound. I went to aboys’ school, you know, so we didn’t havegirls to play women’s parts, and I’ve beeninterested in acting ever since.I’ve never done any formal training oranything, but I did have the good fortune inEngland to work six years with a very, verygood amateur dramatic society, in whichthere were a number of former profession¬als. It was a country thing and a number ofthe actresses were women who’d marriedand left the stage. The man who ran it wascalled Eldugard Peach who did quite a lot offilmmaking in the early days of that, and didabout 400 radio dramas in the early days ofBBC in the twenties. He had more or less re¬tired to this village in Darbyshire, where hebought some old lead-crushing plant whichturned out to have marvelous acoustics. Itheld 264 people and we used to rehearsethree weeks and perform three weeks threetimes a year. We’d always be sold out beforewe began rehearsing with a waiting list ofabout 2000 people. And that was reallywhere I got my training.And then when I came here in ‘61, I start¬ed doing things here. The university theaterwas split at that time. There was a thingcalled Actor’s Company and the first thing Idid here was the Merry Wives of Windsor inMandell Hall back in 1962. And then I got in¬volved with the Hull House company in themid-sixties. At that time there wasn’t thisterrific proliferation of acting groups whichthey have up on the north side now. HullHouse, apart from the Goodman Theaterand various university groups was one of thefew independent actors’ groups. There wasone here in Hyde Park called the Last Stage,which used to perform on top of an old A&P.There were quite a lot of university peopleattached to that.I was very interested in Pinter and did oneof the very first productions of The Dumb¬waiter that was done in this country here inthe Reynold’s Club, and the Hull House atthat time was all really in avante garde the¬ater. They didn’t do anything before Beck¬ett. And we did The Dumbwaiter on televi¬sion in 1965. They were doing a series withthirteen repertory companies on one of thenational networks and there was no reperto¬ry company in Chicago, so they came to HullHouse as the next best thing.It’s very important to me personally be¬cause I teach drama and I find that the ac¬tion involved in drama helps me with ques¬tions of interpretation and approach to theinner structure of the work. I’m not going tosay that no one should teach drama becausethey don’t perform in it, but it gives you adifferent point of view just as I’m sure peo¬ple who are performers in music have a dif¬ferent view of what they are doing and how awork is structured from those who comemerely from the outside, or look at it fromthe outside inwards.I enjoy acting very much, but I also re¬gard it, for me personally, as somethingwhich very much helps me in my teaching.Maroon: It was never an ambition of yoursto be an actor full time?Northcott: No. I much prefer doing this theway I do it because I can then do the things Iwant to do and I don’t have to rush aroundauditioning and doing commercials, and if Iwant to take a year off from acting, I can doit. From this point of view, I would not liketo be a professional actor.On the other hand I don’t like this sort ofranking as a professional or amatuer. Idon’t think that means anything. When I’macting I take the job just as seriously as any¬one who is a “professional.” Perhaps evenmore so, since I have that sense, “well youhave got to be as disciplined and devoted as a professional if you are not a professionalyourself.” The difference between the ama¬teur and the professional should only referto whether you spend you life making yourliving that way or not.Maroon: So if somebody walked up to youand said, “Kenneth Northcott I’m going tomake you a star,” you wouldn’t trade pro¬fessions?Northcott: No. If I were to give up my posi¬tion at the University, I think I’d give up alot of freedom. The other think that I likeabout the theater is that it is my form ofcreativity. I’m very fortunate. I think I havetwo major activities in my life that fit in to¬gether which I am flexible enough to be ableto do both.Maroon: Do you notice similarities betweenacting in front of an audience and “perform¬ing” in front of a class?Northcott: I think it certainly helps. It’s dif¬ferent, particularly in my common coreclasses, because there you’re really tryingto do something different from what you’redoing in the theater. You don’t want that au¬dience just to sit there. If you’ve got a dis¬pirited class — it’s a bad Monday or they’veall been having astrophysics exams — to beable to sort of put on an act to enliven thewhole classroom activity is somethingwhich is very important because I thinkwith teaching, like the didactic theater,Brecht says, the first think you’ve got to dois make people happy, and then you canteach them. You cannot teach a class suc¬cessfully unless there is a sort of liveliness,and you’ve got to be able to bring in humorand the thing which will stimulate the classinto really listening to what you’re saying.There are some really dull teachers.Maroon: Every teacher must see boredfaces, no matter what he does.Northcott: Oh yes. Just as you see boredfaces in the theater from time to time. Oneof the dangers of acting is that when you’renot getting the effect you want is that youSG election resultsBy Tom EldenThe results of Wednesday’s Student Gov¬ernment elections were characterized bylow voter turnout, unfilled seats, and ties.For Graduate representative races, most ofthe races were one vote ties.Undergraduate representatives are as fol¬lows: for Freshman representatives, win¬ners are Chris Hill (103 votes), KathrynKleimen (97), Jon King (83), Mike Frenkel(83), and Mike Fuller (63). From Burton-Judson, representatives are Rick andTerese Szesny (13 votes each). Urban Lar¬son (17) beat Mark Blocker (16) by one voteto represent Woodward Court, and A1 Sier-kowski (25) beat Jay Vogel (20) to representPierce Tower.Michael Aronson (23) won the race forBreckinridge/Blackstone/Greenwood rep¬resentative, and John Arbolan (5) won in theSnell/Hitchcock race. Fred Jubitz (10) wonBy David BrooksStatistically, there is little difference be¬tween the college class of 1986 and the classof 1985. Average SAT across for the class of1986 were 612 verbal and 641 math comparedto 618 and 641 for the preceding class. Forty-nine percent of the class of 1986 ranked inthe top five percent of their high schoolclass. Forty-seven percent of the class of1985 ranked in that percentile.For its part, the University accepted 77.7percent of the applicants to the college lastyear, as compared to 77.6 percent the yearbefore and 81.3 percent for the class of 1984.Of those who were admitted, 33.6 percentmatriculated, five points lower than theyear before and seven points lower than theyear before that.Members of the class of 1986 come from566 secondary schools in the United Statesand five foreign countries. These include 403 try too hard to get it and that produces theopposite effect. And I think you can do thatin teaching.Maroon: I’m reminded of a story somefriends told me about a very witty professorwho gave lectures chock-full of one linersand epigrams, and one day he came intoclass and gave the exact same lecture hehad given the previous session with thesame one-liners in the same places with thesame pauses. Do you think there is a bit ofteaching which is repeating lines?Northcott: I personally don’t. I tend not tolecture from notes. And with every year thatpasses I have something new to bring to mymaterial. In my own teaching it tends to bemuch more, I suppose you could say, impro¬visation, in the sense that when I preparethe material I think about the major lines Iwant the discussion to follow, but I don’t usenotes. I find notes an inhibition. Particularlywhen you’re trying to get a discussion going.I think that when you’re engaged in any crit¬ical function, whether it be literature, histo¬ry, philosophy, whatever it may be, I hopethat the teacher is constantly absorbing,through his researches or whatever it is he’sworking on... In fact, I just finished thistranslation of The Sociology of Art, I thinkthat has brought a great many changes ismy own view of the function of literature insociety, which, five years ago, I wouldn’thave had.Maroon: I noticed that you decided to gointo Germanic studies immediately afterWorld War II when you were working in theBritish intelligence corps. That seemed tome a curious conjunction; that after fight¬ing the Germans you would make their lan¬guage your life’s work.Northcott: No, it’s really very practical. Ispent a year and a half in Germany doingdenazification, talking German all day long.I knew I wanted to study something in thehumanities. I was pretty well bilingual inGerman, and so I thought, “why not studyover Curt Schafer (9) by one vote for Frater¬nities Representative. Mark Hollman (42)won one of the Shoreland Representativeseats and Ceza Moya Simeon (32) andWayne Andrew Klein (32) tied for the sec¬ond seat.There was no candidate for Other Univer¬sity Housing (such as Row Houses and LittlePierce). Dan Stetzel (27) and MatthewGruber (25) won an uncontested race forOther College Representatives For Com¬muter Representative, Joe Suchy (6) beatMichael Griffin (5). The winners of the un¬contested race for Student-Faculty-Admin¬istration Court were Greg O’Neal (58),Geoff Dunaway (46), Timothy Wong (63),Tim Bachenberg (50), Dan Staley (47), andRita Walter (50).In the Graduate Divisions, there was nocandidates for Library, Divinity, Social Ser¬vices Administration, and PhysicalSciences representatives. Robert Blake (1)is Public Policy Representative. BeckyChurch (1) and Michelle Barris (1) filledpublic, 106 private, and 57 parochialschools.Forty-eight states are represented in thefreshman class. Illinois has the highest re¬presentation, with New York, Michigan,Massachussetts, New Jersey, Wisconsin,Florida, California, Maryland and Pennsyl¬vania following behind. Illinois residentsmade up 30.1 percent of the entering class.One hundred thirty-seven members of theclass have alumni affiliation to the Universi¬ty. Of those, 78 have one or both parents whoare alumni and 59 who have a sibling orother relative who attended Chicago.The class of 1986 includes 96 minority stu¬dents, which represents a decline from 103in the class of 1985 and 128 in the class of1984. 21 of those 96 are black, 55 are Asian, 19are hispanic and there is one American Indi- German?”When you have the experience of seeing acountry which is down, and is growing upagain, it stirs your interest. I was interestedalso in what was it that let the Germans gettaken in by Hitler.Then when I got to the University I hap¬pened to have a professor I was very fond ofwho was a medievalist, and so I really went,initially, into medieval German.Maroon: I thought it was curious because Iassumed there was a real antipathy towardGermany in England during the secondworld war, and that might have prejudicedyou away from German studies.Northcott: There was certainly an antipa¬thy toward the Nazis. There are still aspectsof German culture of which I don’t approve.I just find that I’m interested in the study ofanother culture because I find it reflectsback on your own culture. There are certainthings today where a German would re¬spond quite differently than an American oran Englishman would to a situation. For in¬stance, if you go out on the streets at twoo’clock in the morning you wll see peoplewaiting at the Don’t Walk signs even thoughthe streets are completely deserted.I would say, also, that I think my interestin acting did feed into my enjoyment inspeaking a foreign language. It is a sort ofplay-acting. If you begin to think in a foreignlanguage, there are modes of thought whichare different. That’s one of the difficulties intranslating. The better you know a lan¬guage, the harder it is to translate. Youdon’t need to translate, because you goalong on that rail and suddenly you’ve got toswitch tracks and it’s very hard.I could have studied French. I’m sure thatif I’d been in France for a year and a half Iwould say, “Well, I’ll do French.” It was adesire to specialize in a modern Europeanlanguage, and look at a sort of alien culture,and it happened that German was the thingclosest to home.two of five positions for Social Sciences. Forthe three positions in Humanities, there wasa four way tie among Dlmady Haidar, PollyHoover, Pablo Conrad, and Jennifer Jen¬kins, each have one vote. McGarry (3) andHonathan Kens (1) won the uncontestedrace for Biology Representatives.For the Business School, Steve Levitan (5)filled one of five spots with a five way tie forthe other four places among Lori Forman.Keith Hampton, Bernie Gorerman. PaulZaromen, and Scott Slader, each with a sin¬gle vote. Vincent Hillery (4), Jeff Krauss(5), and John Tones (4) won the Law Schoolrace and for the Medical School, SteveZeichner (2) won one seat with a three wav-tie for the second position among LarryOzeran (1), Alan Segal (1), and Stan Friedel(1).the new Student Government Assemblywill meet Tuesday Nov. 9 at 7 p.m. in Stuart101 to make appointments to the Assemblyfor unfilled positions and to the FinanceCommittee, and to settle ties.oneoffered admission applied for financial aid.Of those offered admission 56 percent did. infact, receive aid either from the Committeeon College Aid or from an outside source.Using criteria established by the faculty,145 students received credit for the equiva¬lent of 192 year-long courses based on Ad¬vanced Placement Examination grades.This is roughly equivalent to the placementperformance of the preceding two classes.One out of five first year students placedinto Math 152 or higher, a slightly lower fig¬ure than in the class of 1985.One hundred eighteen students took theoptional placement test in biology of which12.7 percent placed out of common core biol¬ogy.There are 720 members of the class of1986, which represents a decrease of 28 stu¬dents from the preceding class.an.Four out of every five students who wasThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, November 5, 1982—19NewsEntering class similar to previousSportsBarney’s, Chamberlin, NUTS favored in playoffsBy Cliff GrammichWith the IM football schedules finishingthis week, the playoff competition for berthsin the Hanna Bowl for the University cham¬pionship is on. As of early Thursday after¬noon, most of the spots for the playoffs hadbeen claimed, except for the playoff berthsin the graduate leagues.The playoffs for the championship of theundergraduate residence league begin thisafternoon. At 3:30 p.m., Greenwood willface Lower Rickert. Greenwood tied forfirst in the Green Division with a 3-1 record,while Lower Rickert’s 3-1 record was goodenough for second in the Maroon Division.The winner of this game will play Chamber¬lin, 5-0 and Red Division champion, Satur¬day at 1 p.m. Greenwood should get byLower Rickert, but will be no match in thequarterfinal game against Chamberlin, asChamberlin, last year’s undergraduatechampion, rolls to the semifinals.In another Friday afternoon game, Mi-chelson, 2-3 and third in the Red Division,will probably meet Bradbury, 2-2 and sec¬ond in the Blue Division at 3:30. Bradbury’splayoff status had not been determined as ofpresstime. The winner will play Compton,4-0, the White Division champion Saturdayat 1 p.m. Despite being 2-3, Michelson hasplayed some fine football this year, mostnotably in its 7-0 loss to Chamberlin. Michel¬son has lost some players on its team, butshould get by Bradbury, which compiled itsrecord in an exceptionally weak division.The Michelson-Compton quarterfinalgame should be a true game to watch.Compton is 4-0, and has routed all its oppo¬nents, but it has played low caliber oppo¬nents. Compton has played in a weak divi¬sion. Nevertheless, its record should not be overlooked. If Michelson plays its best, thiscould be one of the better games this year.The winner of this game will probably faceChamberlin in the semifinals.In the lower brackets, Thompson, whichfinished second to Compton in the White Di¬vision with a 3-1 record, will play Breck¬inridge, 4-1 and a second-place finisher toChamberlin in the Red Division. As notedabove, the White Division is weak, andThompson may be undeserving of a 3-1 re¬cord. Breckinridge’s only loss has come toChamberlin, and it should be able to get pastThompson. If Breckinridge does win thisgame, it will face hale, which finished firstin the Blue Division with a 3-1 record. ABreckinridge-Hale quarterfinal would fea¬ture two seemingly well-matched teams andshould be the best quarterfinal. That quar¬terfinal game will be Saturday at 2:15 p.m.The fourth first-round game will pit Hitch-1cock against Dewey. Dewey finished 2-3 andthird in the Blue Division. Hitchcockseemed certain to finish undefeated until itplayed previously winless Dodd/Mead Mon¬day. Dodd/Mead combined inclementweather, strong defense with an effectiverush, a good secondary, and a scramblingquarterback who connected twice for touch¬down passes to stun Hitchcock 12-0. Withthis humbling result still fresh in its minds,Hitchcock should roll over Dewey. It wouldthen face Henderson, which finished unde¬feated with a 4-0 record and a first place fin¬ish in the Maroon Division. The winner ofthat quarterfinal will play either Hale orBreckinridge in the other semifinal.The teams to watch in the undergraduateresidence playoffs:Chamberlin: Last year’s champion hasrolled over everybody and should easilv eetCapitol's low fares"What a break!"Whe r ever 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 YEARS20—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, November 5, 1982 into the semifinals.Michelson: A dark horse at 2-3, it couldget into the semifinals with its best effortsand possibly upset Chamberlin in a re¬match.Compton: Despite playing in a weak divi¬sion, Compton has been very impressive inrolling up its 4-0 record and shooting 133points while shutting out the opposition.Breckrinridge: It did lose big to Chamber¬lin, but it will not have to face Chamberlinuntil the final, and Breckinridge has han¬dled all other opposition.Hale: Despite somehow managing to loseto Dewey, Hale did look impressive at timesduring the season, and when it is organizedand plays well, which it should do in theplayoffs, they have just as good as a chanceas anybody to reach the semifinals.Hitchcock: Hitchcock in its third gamebeat Fishbein by just six, and it lost to hap¬less Dodd/Mead in its final game, as men¬tioned earlier. It should roll over Dewey, butthere may be some question as to how well itcan play without original quarterback PeterJuhn.Henderson: Henderson is undefeated, andif it faces probable opponent Hitchcock inthe semifinals, perhaps it could exploitwhatever weaknesses Dodd/Mead found inits game against Hitchcock and roll to thesemifinals.The Undergraduate Independent Leagueplayoffs also start this afternoon, with theeventual champion facing the undergradu¬ate residence champion for a berth in theHanna Bowl. All six playoff spots for the un¬dergraduate independent playoffs havebeen determined.Saturday, at 10 a.m. Psi Upsilon, 1-1, willface Hit and Run, 1-2. Psi Upsilon has showntalent but no organization this year. Never¬theless, it should roll over Hit and Run. Thewinner of that game will face FIJI, 3-0 andthe Red Division champion Tuesday at 3:30p.m.In the lower bracket, Delta Smegma, 2-1,will meet Team Huber, 0-3 Saturday at 11:15a.m. Delta Smegma should be able to get byTeam Huber. The final first round game hasN.U.T.S. meeting Seagram Seven. N.U.T.S is 3-0 and the White Division Champion. Sea¬gram Seven is 0-3. N.U.T.S. should roll pastSeagram Seven and Delta Smegma to reachthe independent league finals.In the graduate leagues, only four playoffspots had been determined by early Thurs¬day afternoon. In the upper bracket, Bar¬ney’s Meat Market, the current favorite towin the Hanna Bowl, has drawn a bye. In thelower bracket, Res Ipsa Loquitur will play awild-card team. Dean and the Crewcuts hasdrawn a first-round bye. The Liquidatorswill face a yet-to-be-determined opponent.The undefeated Bovver Boys are sure tomake the playoffs. If the Liquidators wintheir first round game, they will face Deanand the Crewcuts in a quarterfinal game.The winner of that game could roll to thefinals against possible opponent Barney’sMeat Market.Football is not the only sport where theplayoffs are beginning.In women’s ultimate Frisbee, Dudley willmeet Three’s A Crowd tomorrow at 12:30p.m. The winner plays Divine Wind for thewomen’s championship. In men’s ultimatefrisbee, the quarter finals will be held to¬morrow. Chamberlin has drawn a bye. Hen¬derson will play Dodd/Mead at 9:30 a.m.,with the winner facing the winner of theLower Flint-Compton game. Lower Flintwill play Compton at 10:30 a.m. Hitchcockwill play Bermoulli’s Disciples at 11:30a.m., with the winner facing Chamberlin. Inundergraduate independent playoffs,S.O.M.F. will play Flying CircusCo-ed IM VolleyballDodd/Mead 2 Vincent 1Salisbury 2 Lower Flint 0Dodd/Mead 2 .-. Salisbury 0Vincent 2 Lower Flint 0Dudley 2 Fallers 0Compton A 2 Fallers oHale A 2 Dudley 1Tufts (by forfeit) Commuter LoungeBreckinridge (by forfeit) Commuter LoungeThompson 2 Tufts 0Thompson 2 Breckinridge 0N.U.T.S. 2 Aspo in Exile 0For the Sport of It (by forfeit) CrerarPHOTOS BY ARA JELALIANWednesday afternoon the Universityof Chicago soccer team was shut out byAurora College by a socre of 3-0. Theloss was the last game of the season forChicago and left its final record at 5-9. Inthe Midwest Conference, Chicago’s 2-3conference record was good for fourthplace in the North Division.Sports CalendarFootballNov. 6 — at Principia College, 1:30 p.m.312/643-5007 CHAMBER ENSEMBLETRIO CON BRIOFLUTE • OBOE • VIOLAMetropolitanCommunity Churchof the Resurrection5638 So. Woodlawn 528*2858Outreach to the Gay CommunityWorship - Sunday 3 pmJoin Us Now! VolleyballNov. 5 — Monmouth College, 7:30 p.m.,Field HouseNov. 6 — University of Chicago Invitational,Field HouseCross CountryNov. 6 — at Midwest Conference CrossCountry ChampionshipsHYDE PARK UNION CHURCH5600 S. Woodlawn Avo.Church School (aN apes) 9:45 a.m.Worship Nursery Provided 11 OO a.m.W. Kenneth Williams. MinisterSusan Johnson, Baptist Campus MinisterCome, Worship, Study, ServeSportsPut the pastin your future!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 new kitchens and appliances — Community room—Wall - to -wall carpeting — Resident manager—Air conditioning — Round-the-clock security'— Optional indoor or outdoor — Laundry' facilities onparking each floorStudios, One. Two and Three Bedroom apartments.One bedroom from 8480 — Two Bedroom from 8660Rent includes heat, cooking gas, and master TVr antenna.Call for information and appointment — 643-1406(JVmdermm^toMse16^2 East 56th Street^In Hyde Park across the park fromThe Museum of Science and IndustryEqual Housing Opportunity Managed by Metnoplex. Inc53^ St. &667-2000for 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, 1980 had impressive statistics with her five goalsand a team-leading eight assists for 13 com¬bined points. Duffy added four goals andfour assists. A notable performance wasgiven by fourth-year student Diana Kaspicwho, in her first year on the team, contribut¬ed one goal and three assists.In defense, goalie Maureen Breen had asuperb season, collecting 174 saves (break- PHOTO BY ARA JELALI ANing her own 1981 record of 157 saves) and re¬corded seven shut-outs (also a school re¬cord).First year student Carrie Thomas led theteam with 10 saves, tying the current schoolrecord.Despite the upcoming graduation of Ka¬spic, Briscoe, and others, the team can lookforward to another good year in 1983.Field hockey drops final game4-1by Jane LookThe women’s field hockey team closed outthe 1982 season with a 4-1 loss to NCAA Divi¬sion III opponent Lake Forest College lastThursday. Earlier in the season, theMaroons fell 7-2 to the superior team. Chi¬cago’s only goal was scored by second-yearstudent Alison Duffy.Despite this loss, the hockey team enjoyeda successful season. The team finished withan overall record of 10-7-1, and closed 8-6against NCAA opponents.The team’s statistics emphasize the factthat Chicago was able to hold its ownagainst its opponents. Two of the team’sseven losses were to Division I schools NotreDame and Eastern Illinois. Another defeatcame at the hands of Division II ValparaisoUniversity, yet U of C was victoriousagainst them when they met again at LakeForest. The Maroons also fell to the Univer¬sity of Wisconsin at Stevens Point, rankedninth nationally in Division III.The team’s ability to play evenly with al¬most any opponent was demonstrated byoverall team statistics. Both U of C and itsopponents scored 35 goals for the season.The Maroons attempted 402 shots on goal ascompared to its opponents’ 419. U of C col¬ lected 218 saves to the oppositions’ 210.U of C clearly dominated the penaltycorner and penalty stroke statistics, theMaroons scored on 46 percent of the at¬tempted penalty corners compared to 26percent for their opponents. 55 percent ofthe time penalty strokes were won by U of Ccompared to the opponents 33 percent.Though all team members contributedgreatly to the success of the team, therewere several extraordinary individual ef¬forts. Third-year student and team captainHelen Straus led the squad in goals scoredwith 17 and in combined points with 22, aschool record. Straus also contibuted fiveassists and four defensive saves.Fourth-year student Trish Briscoe alsoSaturday, the University of Chicago vol¬leyball team will host its own invitationaltournament. Teams competing includeMonmouth, Wheaton, North Park, Millikin,and Chicago. At 10 a.m., Monmouth opposesWheaton and North Park faces Chicago. At11:15, Chicago plays Millikin and NorthPark plays Wheaton. At 12:30 p.m., Mon¬mouth meets North Park and Wheaton playsMillikin. At 2:15, North Park opposes Milli¬kin and Monmouth meets Chicago. At 3:30,the day’s final matches pit Wheaton againstChicago and Monmouth against Millikin.Volleyball tourney * *PHOTO BY ARA JELALI ANThe U of C field hockey team ended its1982 season by losing to Lake Forest4-1.The Chicago Maroon—Friday, November 5, 1982—21JAMES BONE, EDITOR-TYPIST,363 0522.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 tor 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.SPACEHYDE PARK-STUDIOS. 1 & 2 BEDROOMSNOW AVAILABLE $282-5525 CALL 684-2333WEEKDAYS.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.FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED Small roomin 3-bdrm apt. 56th & University Avail Dec/Jan643 2454.5100 S. Cornell Chicago Beach Apts. Studio ■+■ 1bedroom apts. $260-5360. Immed. occupancy.Students welcomed. Call 493-2525 or 643-7896.Spacious 2 bdrm apt for sublet Dec 1, $375/moKimbark near 57th. 684-5717, keep trying. 4 bedroom house across from lake with viewtor-rent now thru June $300 per month contactWalter Fried 942-2354 or 433-3244 evenings.5218-28 S. Woodlawn. One bedroom apart¬ments. Immediate occupancy. $360. Call 643-6428 or Parker-Holsman Co. 493-2525.Studio's and 1 bedrooms available in idealSouth Shore Loc. Excellent transportation andconvenient to shopping area. All apts arecarpeted 4- All Utilities Are Included In Rentfor more information call Charlotte 643-0160.Beautiful 1 brm+studio apt. for rent. Agent onpremiss. 5424 Cornell Ave. 324-1800SPACE WANTEDAre you leaving for thfe month of December?Can I borrow your apartment-after 12/6 for asmall fee for a European guest? Phone 947-9604.PHD stud seeks apt to SUBLET/rent. 947-0217.PEOPLE WANTEDPaid subject needed for experiments onmemory, perception and language processing.Research conducted by students and faculty inthe Committee on Cognition and Communica¬tion, Department of Behavioral Sciences.Phone 962-8859.Stuff envelopes for GUARANTEED$l.i5/envelope! Serious offer. Need many peo¬ple. For details send $2.00 to Sasson, 323Franklin Bldg., South, Suite 804/Dept. S-264,Chicago, 11.60606-7096SOUTH SHORE 1 Br. Furnished Lake/CondoApt. Int. Designer decor., saunas, exerciserm., beauty salon, commissary, laundry-cleaners. 5 mins, from U of C-15 mins fromLoop. Great trans. 1C 1 blk. Heated garage.Available Dec 1 $500/mo. For appt. call 374-6526. Part 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 753-2369.5, 7 & 10 yr old right handed boys wanted forstudy on Depth Perception and Brain Develop¬ment. Pay is $3 per hour. Call 962-8846.ELEGANT, SPACIOUS 6 ROOM WALK-UP.Wood floors, sunporch, large kitchenw/dishwasher. Great Hyde Park location.Day. 324-5200eve.: 684-3405.Fully-furnished condo for rent while owners onsabbatical, Jan 1 - June 30. Sunny, spacious, 2bedrooms, Ig. den/study with sofa-bed, mod.kitchen, wbfpl, leaded-glass windows. Verynear campus $550 inc. heat. 753-3933 days, 955-2321 eves. "VIDEOGAME THAT PAYS YOU" IS BACK!Make some $ in a learning study. Try once -+-option for more. Native Eng-speakers grad orundergr. No video experience nec. Call Young752-7590 eves.Paid subjects needed for psychology ex¬periments on prediction and judgement. $5 for1.5 hours. Call John at 962-6025.RESEARCH SUBJECTS NEEDED. Earn $215Large bdrm in 2 bdrm luxury apt. Furnished.Windemere Bldg. Separate bath, entrance.$350 or best offer. Call 876-1000 x463 days.'Zfou art Cordiailq ^aoittcC'Vi&itI mm 1¥|L71 flPflBTflEIITS12 ItnlriHuns from month5200 BLACKSTONF2 Bedrooms from $463 monthl block west of Harper SquareMon.-Fri 9 to 6. Sat.-Sun. 12 to 5681-8666l Bedroom with den also availableASK ABOUT RISCNO SECURITY DEPOSITmarian realty,inc.IBREALTORStudio and 1 BedroomApartments Available— Students Welcome —On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-5400 for participation in a 9-week study involvingcommonly used drugs. Involves little time oreffort. Must be between 21 and 35 and in goodhealth. For more information call 947-1211 bet¬ween 10 AM and noon, weekdays.GRAD STUD./grad stud, wife to babysit for 6mos. old. 4-5 morning/wk. (Approx. 20hrs.) inmy home. 752-3449.CalendarFRIDAYCollege Bowl: Deadline for Intramural TournamentRegistration. Rm 210 INHVolleyball: U of C vs. Monmounth 7:30 pm. HCFHU of C Folkdancers: 20th International Folk Festi¬val 8 p.m. INH 962-7300 Info & TicketsMidway Studios: Opening—“Nancy Metz-White,Wisconsin Sculptor” 9-5 p.m. M-F thru Nov. 20FreeTalking Pictures: City Lights 7:30 & 9:30 p.m. I-House $2.00 Free PopcornDoc Film: Poltergeist 7:15 & 9:30 p.m. Cobb $2.00 &The Wrestling Women vs. The Aztec Mummy 12a.m. $2.00Crossroads: English Class: Beg. 10 a.m.-noon; Int.10:45 a.m.-12:45 p.m.I-Houae: Coffeehouse with John Ralyea, Mr. T, RayGude, Thom Davis...9:30 p.m. 753-2274Philosophy Dept.: Lecture: Dan Herwitz “On theTheoretical Distinction Between Form and Contentin Music” 4 p.m. Harper 103Intervarsity Christian Fellowship: Meeting 7:30p.m. INHHillel: Reform Progressive Sabbath Service 5 p.m.;Orthodox Sabbath Service Sundown; Women’s Min-yan 6 p.m.; Adat Shalom Sabbath Dinner 6:30 p.m.$3.00; Hillel-Jewish Highschool Shabbaton 8:30p.m.Sociology Dept.: Talcott Parsons Memorial Lecture:Neil Smelser “The Mind of Talcott Parsons” 4 p.m.Special Collections, Regenstein LibraryGeophysics Dept.: Lecture: Ralph J. Cicerone “TheStratospheric Photochemical System” 1:30 p.m.Hinds Auditorium. Minerology/Petrology Seminar:Robert C. Newton “The Point Sal, California, andOther Ophiolites” 3 p.m. HGS 101Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Arabic Circle:Lecture and Discussion in Arabic 3:30 p.m. Pick218-4Mvert House: Leave for Catholic Worker House 3p.m.22—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, November 5, 1982 FOR SALEDEPENDABLE! 75 Dodge Dart, slant 6; auto,pwr str new Sears battery, air shocks, rr wdwdefog, clean $1500, 753-0334 or 753-2270 and Iv $TYPEWRITER Smith Corona Electric 220Brand New $295 Call 947-8345 (Keep Trying)1972 Volkswagen Beetle. Body old. Engine runswell. $400 ONO Call 288-8177.1975 White Pinto gd condition but needs engwork. Will make fair Deal. Call Ann 472-3422eves after 8 p.m.For Sale '69 Toyota Corona $300 Call 752-5461.APT. SALE Sat. Nov. 6, 1982 10:00-2:00 5218 S.Kimbark Furniture, Washer + dryer.MUSTANG '79, 29000 miles, 4 cylinders,Automatic, AM/FM/Cass, $2900, call 924-0125.AGFACHROME SLIDE SALEFour Rolls for the Price of Three!!!MODEL CAMERA493-6700FUJICOLOR SALE2 Rolls of FUJICOLOR 36X FilmGets you a FREE Dustoff!!!MODEL CAMERA 1344 E. 55th St. 493-6700OLYMPUS XA....$129.95MODEL CAMERA 1344 E. 5th St.493-670035mm CAME RA...$49.95!! !...NEW!!! .MODEL CAME RA 1344 E. 55th St. 493-6700135mm F2.8 LENS FOR CANON...S59.95MODEL CAMERA 1344 E.55th St. 493-6700Sale of items necessary and unnecessary to agood life, Nov. 7, 10-4, 5466 S. Everett, 3s, comebrowse.SERVICESJUDITH TYPES-and has a memory. Phone955-4417.PROFESSIONAL TYPING-reasonable rates,684-6882.Weddings and Portraits photographed. CallLeslie at 536-1626or 955-2775.Discount Moving and Hauling Low Prices AndFree Estimates Seven Days a Week Day andEvening References Available Call Tom 8-10am or After 6pm 375-6247Older grad student will care for house/petsduring Thanksgiving break call 753-0288.For Professionally Typed Work At Unprofes¬sional Rates Call: B. Watson at 955-0875.COUNSELING AND PSYCHOTHERAPY.Gestalt-oriented. Hyde Park Area. SlidingScale. Cecelia H. Bethe, PhD. 752-5692.SATURDAYVolleyball: U of C Invitational. All Day. HCFCSmart Gallery Films: “Baba” (The Father) 1 p.m.CWAC FreeU of C Folkdancers: 20th Internatonal Folk FestivalWorkshops start 9 a.m. INH. Concert 8 p.m. MandelHall. Post Concert Party 10 p.m. INH 962-7300 fortickets.Doc Films: Missing 7:16 & 9:30 p.m. Law School Au¬ditorium $2.00Physics Dept.: Compton Lecture: George Gollin“From Magnetic Tape to Physical Review” 11 a.m.133 EckHillel: Orthodox Sabbath Services 9:15 a.m.; TheUpstairs Minyan Sabbath Services 9:30 a.m.Calvert House: Sacrament of Reconciliation 4:30p.m.Crossroads: Regular Buffet Dinner. 6 p.m. No reser¬vation necessary.SUNDAYSmart Gallery Film: Kamur (The HunchbackedWoman) 1 p.m. CWAC FreeWoodward Court Lecture: Prof. Charles Gray —"Natural Law” 8:30 p.m. Woodward Cafeteria. Re¬ception followingOriental Institute Film: The Human Adventure 2p.m. Breasted Hall. FreeHillel: Bagels & Lox Brunch 11 a.m. $1.75 752-1127for infoMusic Dept.: New Music Ensemble 8 p.m. Good-speed Hall FreeRockefeller Chapel: University Memorial Sunday:Service 11 a.m. Edward W. Rosenheim Preacher;Organ Concert by Wolfgang Rubsam 8 p.m. $2, $3, $4753-3383 for infoDoc Films: Poltergeist 2:30 p.m. Cobb $2 & BigWednesday 7:30 p.m. followed by a talk by directorJohn Milius Cobb $2 THESE SHOULD BE GOOD YEARS: ex¬perienced teacher believes you can be having amore positive learning experience now. Tutor¬ing for the troubled; enrichment tor the ad-vanced student. ENGLISH,history/social science, languages,PAPER-WRITING, RESEARCHRESOURCES. Each student to receive thechallenge + support he/she needs. AGES 12-19inclusive. EXAM REVIEW/COLLEGEESSAYS. CALL (mornings before 10/eveningsafter 6) 752-7387.The above applies to university freshmen -+-sophomores. Get unstuck. CALL 752-7387.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.CAROLE ETZLER CONCERT Nov. 13, 8 PMTICKETS $2 Graham Taylor Hall, CTS, 5757 S.University. For info. Call 643-4468.DELTA SIGMA: New Meeting Time!! Mon¬day, Nov 8 at 6:30 in Ida Noyes. All U of CWomen welcome.SAO has 50 student subscriptions to the Or¬chestra of Illinois Spring Classic Series at 40%savings. Tickets are $48, $36 & $24 for 4 con¬certs. Come to RM 210 Ida Noyes.CINDERELLASAO has discount tickets to opening night ofChicago City Ballet's CINDERELLA Nov 19th$12.50 & $6.80 see guest artist Suzanne Farrelllive! !Ticketson sale in rm 210 thru Nov.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 arLare welcome.Call Alberta Smith Johnson at 842-0706or Roza-ly Levin at 363-8610 for details. Eves till 10.BOOK LOVERS, UNITEand get lined up for a spectacular book sale.Coming soon.BIBLIOMANIAAT U OF CYes, Book Lovers, It's ONLY Two WeeksAway. See banner in the Quads for details.Episcopal Campus Ministry: Service, Holy Commu¬nion, & Supper 5:30 Brent House, 5540 WoodlawnCom. Assembled to Unite in Solidarity with El Sal¬vador (CAUSE): Opposing films on El Salvador 1)Attack on the Americans and 2) Americans in Tran¬sition 7:30 INHMediaeval & Renaissance Re-Creation Society(MARRS): Meeting INH 4 p.m.Metropolitan Community Church of the Resurrec¬tion: Outreach to the Gay Community 3 p.m., 5638 S.WoodlawnCalvert House: Lecture: Langdon Gilkey “PoliticalTheology and Christian Praxis” 7:16 p.m.Crossroads: Yoga Class 3-5 p.m.MONDAYUnited Methodist Church: “A Conversation with MartinMarty" 7 p.m. 363-7080 for infoCollege Bowl: Intramural Tournament 6-11 p.m. runs thruNov. 14 Watch posters for location.6th G.T. Baker Nobel Laureate Lecture: H Gobind Khorana1968 Nobel Laureate in Physiology/Medicine — “MolecularBiology in the Study of Light-Transduction” 6:30 p.m. Man-del Hall FreeDoc Film: Tobacco Road 8 p.m. Cobb $1.50Women’s Indoor Varsity Track and Field: OrganizationalMeeting 4 p.m. HCFH classroomLaw School: Lecture: Abner J. Mikva “Lawyers and Servingthe Public Interest” 12:30 p.m. Classroom 2Committee on Social Thought: Seminar: Mogens Blegvad“Explanatory Patterns' Evolution and Function" 3:30 p.m.SS 302Hillel: Israeli Folk Dancing, 8 p.m. Blue Gargoyle 76*Christian Science Organization: Meeting 6:45 Harper E 688Committee on the Conceptual Foundations of Science: Lec¬ture: Mary Wiiiaims “The Structure of EvolutionaryTheory" 8 p.m. Cobb 107Croesroads: English Classes: Beg. 10 a.m.-noon; Int. 10:45a.m.-12:46 p.m.; Beg. Spanish 7-9 p.m.Classified AdsREFORM SERVICEThere will be a Reform Jewish Service at Hilleltonight, at 5 p.m. All interested students arewelcome.PERSONALSM: Men are like impressionist pain¬tings—vivid and intriguing from afar, but ac¬tually just a confused mess of stupid dots.—SDainties Beware! The Stupid Animals are onthe prowl!Hail THE VISITORS and a new addition to thefamily—Black and white is beautiful!!!Roommates are funny things! How far can ubounce a ruler off ur tummy? - Plastic nolessT.O. eats ten meals a day and has great calfmuscles. Thatsallish! Anonymous...Eight years in Hyde Park, six years in a stalebeer smelling basement...on to the fresh air ofnorthern California. 'Old' Pub regulars are in¬vited to help celebrate Sat. night at Sonny-t-Rob's. -bye JohnTODAY: ATOM AGEBIRTHDAY PARTY PREPQauker House, 5615 S. Woodlawn-7pm, Friday,Nov 5, planning for appropriate celebration ofNUC AGE, born U C Dec 2, 1942SPSSXThe 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 usersonly.CLUB LACROSSEFirst mtg. Tues. Nov. 9 at 7:15 p.m. at PS I U5639 S. University Call 288-9870 for more info.FRENCH CLUBMEETINGLes Beaux Parleurs meet Thursday Nov 11 atIda Noyes, 9-10 PM. Monsieur Honigsblum willgive a short talk in French. Ily aura assi descroissants et du cafe.HOUSE CLEANINGF irst class cleaning lady $10 ph. 947-9604.G.W. OPTICIANS1 519 E. 55thTel. 947-9335Eyes exaiMMd md Comtmct Unset fitted byregistered OyfentrUlt.Specialists m OnAty Eyewear et ReasonablePrices.Lab on premises for fast service framesreplaced, lenses duplicated and pre¬scriptions filled ARE YOU IN YOURRIGHT (OR LEFT) MIND?Men 8i women, right & left handers needed toparticipate in interesting and profitablestudies on how the two sides of the brain thinkdifferently. Call 962-8846 M-F, 9-5.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.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.1977 CAMAROEX condition p/s p/b a/c small V8 low mileageS2850.00 Call wk days 8 to 3:30 753-3093 after6pm 282-0335.REPUBLICANSRegular meeting of the UC CollegeRepublicans will be held Tuesday, Nov. 9 at7:00pm in Ida Noyes. Nominations for officerswill be taken and dues will be collected.OPEN MIKECOFFEE HOUSEInternational Coffee House featuring localmusicians. Everyone welcome. Come Jam andSip Java—1-House Friday Nov. 5, 9:30p.m.—more to midnite FREES.G. MEETINGSThe Nov. 9th & Nov. 23rd SG Assemblymeeting will be held in Stuart 101.Lox& Bagel BrunchOrange Juice, Coffee,Tea, Tomatoes, andOnions, Too.Sunday N.Y. Times &Chicago papers availableEvery Sunday11 am - 1:00 pmHillelFoundation5715 Woodlawn Ave.model camera7 342 E. 55th St. • 493-6700 DO YOU KNOW THEWAY TO SAN JOSE?I do! Goodbye Hyde Park, -John-SUPPORT GROUPHomosexual support for men and women in¬terested in talking to peers who share the com¬mon difficulties of sexuality and self-esteemwill meet on Monday 9:00pm in Rm 301 IdaNoyes. Confidential.HEY BABIESWant a ride? Got one you want to share? CallRideline. 753-1777 between 7pm and 10pm.NEEDATYPIST?Excellent work done in my home. Reasonablerates. Tel. 536-7167.PIANO LESSONSBeginners-Advanced. Teacher with DoctoralDegree from Juilliard School, NY, Tel. 536-7167.FESTIVALOFTHE ARTS-FOTACOME to our 1st FOTA meeting-in IDANOYES rm 218-TUES Nov 9 at 7:30PM.TASTE AND SEEWisconsin Elegance in Hyde Park? See thenew Wisconsin Oak booze booths in the PUB.Check our great beer, wine, Medici pizza,liverwurst and smoked sausage sandwichprices. 21 and over only.ATTN: SECOND-YEARCOLLEGE STUDENTS$500 Truman Scholarship. Must be planning oncareer in government. Contact Nancy O’Con¬nor (Harper 261,962-8623) before Nov. 10th. DISCOUNTSUBSCRIPTIONSSAO has 50 student subscriptions to the Or¬chestra ot Illinois Spring Classic Senes at a40% saving. Tickets are $48, $36 & $24 tor 4 con¬certs. Come to Rm 210 Ida Noyes.HOTLINEIt's midterms and life here isn't easy. If thereis anything bothering you or that you'd like toknow about, take advantage of us. Calls areconfidential.BUFFETDINNERHome-cooked meal. All students welcome.Saturday at Crossroads 5621 S. Biackstone6p.m.GREAT JOBSAVAILABLEThrough College Venture, for students takingleave from college. Information meetings onMonday, 11/8 at 4:00, and Tuesday, 11/9 at12:00 noon, in Reynolds Club 201.TAKINGTIME OFFGood Jobs for college students on leave ofabsence through College Venture. Informationmeetings on Monday, 11/8 at 4:00, and Tuesday11/9 at 12:00 noon, in Reynolds Club 201.LEARN TO INCREASEINTELLIGENCE,CREATIVITY+ ENERGY:Begin the Transcendental Meditation Pro¬gram. Free intro lecture Weds. Nov. 10, 4:00 or8:30pm Ida Noyes Hall-East Lounge Info 947-0463.FREE BOOKS?!!Beautiful, brand-new books—FREE to thelucky winners. Details to follow.CfiazCotte <rVil?itzomczRea( Estate Co. We are co-operating cMempei Netiooa/Assoc»t<ot> of Realtors Clue *goRati Ester# Boa'ds 'Ornys A siocmt’Or or Realtors493-0666 • CALL ANYTIMEESTATE SALE$65,000Three bedroom co-operativetwo story brick townhouse.Unfinished basement. Smallprivate patio, large commonarea includes garden, picnicspot and play yard.Near 54th Place & BiackstoneSMALL STUDIO, SMALL PRICEin lovely three story garden setting near 59th & Harper.Assessments including taxes under 10000/mo. Nice appliances.Couldn’t be handier! $15,000.IDEAL BLACKSTONE & 58th SPOTspacious six room condo has cozy woodburning fireplaceFloor plan also ideal since LR and DR are side-by-side across the frontFIVE ROOMS FOR $40,000if you can move by January 1. This condo has a deadline.A good buy near 54th & Cornell.The Chicago Maroon—Friday, November 5, 1982—23How 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.