- University History SportsThe Blackfriars 11 IM Football Playoffs jj *centerspread —i 1 page 13The Chicago MaroonVolume 92, No. 19 The Chicago Maroon ©Copyright 1982 The University of Chicago Tuesday, November 9, 1982TARGET DEFICITS FOR THE UNRESTRICTED EUDGET University budget deficitreduced to $2 million1979-80 1980-81 1981-82 1982-83604020 - REVENUES FROM TUITION AND FEESFiscal year ended June 30 59.749.944.3 ipjp >40.8 iltilili1137.1 i < n m $ simlilliiil iifitti ium.mui '(*?% ft? ;1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 By Jeff TaylorThe University’s unrestrict¬ed budget for the 1981-82 fiscalyear showed a deficit of $2 mil¬lion, $200,000 less than tentati¬vely projected last Spring, anda continued movement towardthe Board of Trustees’ 1979goal of “Financial Equilibri¬um.”A report released to theBoard last Thursday called theconcept of equilibrium “cen¬tral to the financial soundnessof the University,” and rei¬terated the University’s inten¬tion to erase the budget deficitby June, 1983 despite Federalaid cutbacks.Financial Equilibrium restsupon the execution of fourideals: balancing the annualoperating budget, protectingthe real value of the Universi¬ty’s endowment over time,maintaining physical propertyon campus, and assuring thatthe growth rates of expendi¬tures and revenues are approx¬imately even.The operating budget re¬ceives revenue from tuition,federal grants, gifts, endow-Funding source securedfor WHPK power increaseBy Anna FeldmanWHPK, the University’s stu¬dent-run radio station, has se¬cured a source of funding forits imminent power increasefrom 10 to 100 watts.The increase in power wouldaffect both the listening radiusof the station and the listeningquality. While it would not nec¬essarily increase the listeningradius significantly, it wouldmake the station’s broadcast¬ing audible over two thirds ofthe South Side, according toStation Manager Tom Uhl.Dean of Students in the Uni¬versity Charles O’Connell andthe Visiting Committee on Stu¬dent Programs and Facilitiesplan to raise two dollars forevery dollar raised by the sta¬tion itself, according to anagreement reached over thesummer. O’Connell and theCommittee are aiming for asum of $15,000, the projectedamount necessary to fund thepower increase. WHPK willprovide approximately $5000 ofthis sum.Publication NoteThis issue of The ChicagoMaroon has been printed in alarger, 16-inch depth format inorder to accommodate the in¬serted Newsweek On Campus.Publication in the usual 14-inchdepth format will resume Fri¬day.The Maroon would also liketo announce that the autumnpublication schedule has beenchanged. The Nov. 30 Maroonand Dec. 3 Maroon/Grey CityJournal have been cancelled.The publication date of the Chi¬cago Literary Review has beenmnvpd up Der 3 from Der10. Irene Conley, director of theStudent Activities Office, ex¬pressed her excitement overthe agreement, saying that“this is the first really positivething we can point to.” Conleysaid the Committee’s work thissummer on developing thematching fund campaign “hasnot been very much in the pub¬lic eye. The station needs an in¬flux of support right now, in theform of dollars.”According to a memoran¬dum from O’Connell to Uhl, theVisiting Committee “revieweda number of student-relatedprojects last Spring and chosethe conversion of Radio StationWHPK to 100 watts as its spe¬cial project for 1982-83.”The Visiting Committee, oneof 16 such committees in theUniversity, is a group of alum¬ni and community members“who take a special interest infine or another academic unitor special area of interest with¬in the University,” accordingto O’Connell’s memo. Conleysaid that these committeesoffer additional support to ac¬tivities on campus, “usuallyadvisory, sometimes finan¬cial.”Uhl said that he is veryhappy about the decision tohelp the station. “I am verygrateful that the Administra¬tion has decided that they’dlike to help us out,” he said.According to Uhl, WHPK is“well on the way” to reachingthe $5000 goal. Most of thefunds that the station has col¬lected so far, said Uhl, arefrom station membership duesand sponsorships.Membership dues at WHPKare $7 a quarter, or $20 a yearSponsorships have come in to the station from local busin¬esses, a photography store, theHyde Park Hilton, a recordstore, and the Chicago Journal.The station also receives “oc¬casional income” fromcharges for taping and otherservices.Continued on page six ment income and auxiliary en¬terprises. Last year’s operat¬ing results showed surplus of$2.5 million, with tuition consti¬tuting approximately one thirdof all non-hospital-orientedrevenues.Expenditures on instructionand research at the Universityincreased 11 percent from theyear before totaling $66.4 mil¬lion, while tuition revenues in¬creased 20 percent to $59 mil¬lion. U of C students thereforeshouldered more of the overallcost of operation in 1981-82.Expenditures on student aidincreased by $2 million (29 per¬cent). This is one way the Uni¬versity is responding to declin¬ing outside support, the reportsaid.Fund raising, which includesnew gifts, pledges and livingtrusts, declined $3.2 millionfrom last year to $43.9 million.Unrestricted Budget, distin¬guished from Operating Bud¬get, is supported by all reve¬nues not specified by donorsfor particular uses. Ideally,this budget should have no de¬ficit, as indicated by a tenet ofFinancial Equilibrium. Thegoal established by the Boardof Trustees after the 1978-79school year called for reduc¬tion of the University’s deficitto $3.7 million in ‘79-80. $3.5million in ‘80-81 and $2 millionin ‘81-82. The budget is to becompletely balanced by theend of this year.The University has met orsurpassed these goals in eachof the first three years, the re¬port said, in spite of severe out¬side pressures such as federalaid cutbacks.The University’s total conso¬ lidated budget for 1981-82 was$388 million, excluding the bud¬get for the Argonne NationalLaboratory, which the U of Coperates but which the Depart¬ment of Energy funds.The report stated that manyother elements of the Universi¬ty’s finances improved lastyear. Auxiliary enterprisesshowed a surplus of $217,000after large deficits in each ofthe preceding years, and Uni¬versity Hospitals and Clinicsspent $12 million less than theyear before, a total reductionof nine percent.Management of U of C’s En¬dowment assets yielded $34.9million, but the real value ofthe assets declined by almostone percent in a year of “poorfinancial markets,” the reportsaid. The endowment’s marketvalue is now $394.2 million.An extra $1.5 million wasplaced in a special fund for ren¬ewal of the physical plant tosupplement its annual alloca¬tion of $7 million. The reportnoted the completion of plansfor the Crerar Science labora¬tory and the Physics TeachingCenter. Renovations of IdaNoyes Hall and Kent Laborato¬ry are also planned.$7.6 million in new studentloan funds were made avail¬able, and students borrowedanother $12.6 million inguaranteed loans from banksand other commercial sources.The overall number of studentloans increased by nine per¬cent.The concepts of equilibriumemphasize an awareness of theUniversity’s long-term finan¬cial health. “For example,”Continued on page threeWashington to announcehis candidacy for mayorBy Cliff GrammichIllinois representativeHarold Washington, a HydePark resident, will announceWednesday his decision to runfor Mayor of Chicago in 1983,according to Fifth Ward Com¬mitteeman Alan Dobry.Washington will join State’sAttorney Richard M. Daley aschallengers for Mayor JaneByrne’s office. Many politicalanalysts also expect AldermanRoman Pucinski of the 41stWard to announce his inten¬tions to run for Mayor afterWashington confirms that heindeed will run.Washington won re-electionlast week as representative ofthe 1st congressional district,collecting 98 percent of thevotes.Dobry and Fifth Ward Aider-man Lawrence S. Bloom haveboth said that they will supportWashington’s mayoral bid.While the South Side Indepen¬dent movement as a whole isexpected to support Washing¬ton for mayor, several NorthSide Independents and some-timp allies of Dobry and Bloom, including AldermanMarty Oberman of the 43rdWard and State Senator DawnClark Netsch, are expected tosupport Daley. Some black in¬dependent leaders, such as Al¬derman Allen Streeter and Al¬derwoman Marion Volini whohave been somewhat suppor¬tive of Daley, may switch theirallegiances to Washingtonafter he declares his candi¬dacy.Renault Robinson, a Bvrne-Harold Washington appointed member of the Chi¬cago Housing Authority boardand executive director of theAfro-American Police League,will direct Washington’s cam¬paign.In a four-way race betweenMayor Byrne, Daley, Pucinski,and Washington, Daley wouldbe expected to take the South¬west side and whatever Inde¬pendent votes he can muster.Pucinski would try to capital¬ize on the city’s “ethnic” votes,most notably those of Chica¬go’s large Polish community.Washington would take thevotes of the black communityand also have several liberalindependent supporters, whileByrne would use the powers ofincumbency and the probablesupport of the Regular Demo¬cratic Organization in an at¬tempt to gain re-election.The Democratic mayoralprimary will be held on Feb.22, 1983, the same day as thefirst round of the non-partisanaldermanic elections. Themayoral general election andthe run-off round of the aider-manic elections will be held inApril.SOLUTIONS TOTHE NUCLEAR ARMS RACEA Conference Sponsored byThe University of Chicago Committee on Arms Control and DisarmamentFor information, call 363-5225 or 324-2574.Wednesday, November 1010:00 am - 5:30 pm — Program of FILMS on Nuclear Weapons and the Arms Race.Law School Auditorium, 1111 E. 60th St.(See schedule below).7:30 pm - OPENING ADDRESS by Dr. Helen Caldicott,President of Physicians for Social Responsibility.CCE Auditorium, 1307 E. 60th St.Thursday, Nov. 11:9:30am -11:00 am — WORKSHOPS (See Schedule Below).12:30 pm - KEYNOTE by Jerome Wiesner, President Emeritus of MIT andformer Science Advisor to President Kennedy. Mandel Hall,University Ave. at 57th St.1:00 pm -DEBATE: “Should the U.S. Declare that It Will Not Use NuclearWeapons First ?”yes: John Steinbruner, Director of Foreign Policy Studies, TheBrookings Institution; no: John Mearsheimer, Prof, of Political Science,The Univ. of Chicago. Mandel Hall.2:45 pm -DEBATE: “Should the U.S. Move Toward an Immediate, Bilateral,Mutually-Verifiable Freeze in the Development, Testing, Productionand Deployment of Nuclear Weaponry ? ”yes: Randall Kehler, National Coordinator of the Nuclear FreezeCampaign; no: John Kwapisz, American Security Council.Mandel Hall.4:30 -6:00 pm - WORKSHOPS (See Schedule Below).7:30 pm -“A New Agenda for Arms Control.” Sen. Gary Hart(D., CO). Rockefeller Chapel, 1156 E. 59th St.Friday, November 12:4:00 - 6:00 - WORKSHOPS (See Schedule Below).FILMSAll films will be shown at the Law SchoolAuditorium, 1111E. 60th St., and are freeand open to the public.Wednesday, November 10:10:00 am Fable Safe. An allegory.No First use. A Union of ConcernedScientists look at American militarypolicy in 1982.The Lost Generation: Japanesere-examination of the wartimebombing of Hiroshima.11:15 am The Hat. War in the modern world.The War Game. What would a nuclearattack to to Great Britain12:25 pm Repeat of 10:00 am films)1:30 pm The Hole: Another view of war in themodern world.The War Game, (repeat of 11:15 amfilm) 2:45 pm The Last Epidemic: The medical andecological effects of nuclearexplosions.War Without Winners. American andSoviet Citizens talk about the threatof a nuclear holocaust.4:00 pm The Day After Trinity. The life ofJ. Robert Oppenheimer, who directedthe Manhattan Project during WorldWar II.WORKSHOPSThursday Morning, 9:30-11:00 am —“Military Spending, Deficits and Jobs.”Stephen Daggett, Program Coordinator,Coalition for a New Foreign and MilitaryPolicy; Nancy Myers, Chicago BusinessExecutives Move. Ida Noyes Library, 1stfloor, 1212 E. 59th St.“Can a Nuclear War be a Just War 9”./. Montmarguet, Prof, of Philosophy,Chicago State College. Ida Noves 217.1212 E. 59th St. Thursday Afternoon, 4:30-6:00 pm —“The Spread of Nuclear W eapons Beyondthe Superpowers." William A. Strauss,Chief Counsel and Staff Director, SenateSubcommittee on Energy and NuclearProliferation. Cobb 101, 5811 Ellis Ave.“Demythologizing Defense: CulturalDynamics of the Arms Race.” JamesCracraft, Prof, of History, Univ. of Illinois;Richard Hellie, Prof, of History, Univ.of Chicago; Gail Kligman, Prof, ofAnthropology, Univ. of Chicago. Cobb 102,5811 Ellis Ave.Friday Afternoon, 4:00-6:00 pm —“Strategy and the Balance of Power.”John Mearsheimer, Prof, of PoliticalScience, Univ. of Chicago. Cobb 102,5811 Ellis Ave.Medical Aspects of a Nuclear W ar.” Dr.Quentin Young. Physicians for SocialResponsibility. Ida Noyes Library. 1st floor.1212 E. 59th St. Ii The Chicago Maroon Tuosrtay \'«*v«*.»nber !#, !News in briefSG election recountThe Student Government (SG) Elec¬tion and Rules Committee yesterdaycompleted a recount of last week’selection results, and the following arechanges of the results published in Fri¬day’s Maroon.In the race for Woodward Court rep¬resentative, Urban Larson (15) lost toMark Blocker (18).For Shoreland representative,Wayne Klein and Mark Hollmann tiedfor first place with 40 votes each, tak¬ing both Shoreland seats in the SG As¬sembly.Mary Jensen, 67Mary Collette Jensen, the wife of U ofC cancer researcher Dr. Elwood Jen¬sen, died Saturday in Billings Hospitalafter suffering an apparent heart at¬tack. She s 67. toionizing atomic transitions.Fano is also well known for the Fano-Lichtin mechanism for ion-atom colli¬sions and for important contributionsto Racah algebra, an area of mathe¬matical physics. He is presently inve-tigating electron correlations in excit¬ed orbits and quantum defect theory.Fano joined the University in 1966.Before then, he worked at the CarnegieInstitute and the National Bureau ofStandards. He is a member of the Na¬tional Academy of Sciences and a fel¬low of the American Academy of Artsand Sciences and the American Physi¬cal Society.The symposium opens at 9 a.m.Thursday at the Law School Auditori¬um. Five lectures will be held through¬out the day Thursday and three morelectures will be given Friday morning.Tickets to lunch and dinner Thursdaycan be purchased from Virginia Addle-man, Research Institutes 348 at962-7185.Mrs. Jei n was a member of Fort¬nightly of ( '«v^ago and the Art Institute . . ...of Chicago md supported the Chicago Pf/ZG-WlfinfflCf fllftlSymphony (/’'chestra and the U of C’s 9Renaissan Society.Dr. Jensen is the director of the BenMay Laboratory for cancer research inBillings.Mrs. Jensen is survived by her hus¬band, a daughter, Dr. Karen Jensenwho is a resident in the radiologydepartment at Billings, and a son,Thomas.Symposium honorsphysicist FanoA symposium honoring U of C physi¬cist Ugo Fano will be held this weekNov. 11-12 at which his colleagues willdeliver eight addresses devoted toareas in which he has made importantcontributions. The symposium marksProfessor Fano’s 70th birthday and of¬ficial retirement.Fano is considered to be one of themost influential theoretical atomicphysicists in the country. He is bestknown for his 1961 paper on what arenow called Fano line shapes, theshapes of spectral lines created in au- makes Chicago debutHillel will present two showings ofthe Chicago premiere of the film“Now....After All These Years,”Thursday at 7:30 and 9 p.m. Admissionis $1.50 for Hillel affiliates and $2.50 forthe general public.The film received the 1981 AdolfGrimme prize for the best documen¬tary by the West German television in¬dustry, and is produced by Germanfilmmakers Harold Judens and PavelSchnabel.The film tells the story of a Prussianvillage, Rhina, where once half of the600-citizen population was Jewish.Years after the Jews of Rhina havebeen taken to concentration camps,villagers speak warmly of the old com¬munity.Women as LaityThe second annual Vesper/Auden-shaw Lecture on the Laity will be heldat the Lutheran School of Theology(LSTC) Nov. 12 at 7 p.m. in the chap¬el/auditorium. Abigail McCarthy, dis¬ tinguished Roman Catholic laywoman,writer, and lecturer will speak on thetopic, “Women as Laity.”McCarthy is the autnor of Circles: AWashington Story, a novel published in1978, and Private Faces: PublicPlaces, a volume of autobiographiespublished in 1972. She is also the authorof many newspaper articles.The lecture is free of charge and opento the public. It will be preceded by areception at 5 p.m. and dinner at 6 p.m.at LSTC. Reservations are required forthe reception and dinner ($8) by Nov. 7.Reservations can be made with theLSTC switchboard operator(312/667-3500).‘Jewish Women inAmerican Fiction’The Hyde Park Jewish CommunityCenter, as part of Jewish Book Month,is sponsoring a lecture by MarianNeudel on “Jewish Women inAmerican Fiction: from Hester Streetto Fear of Flying’ tonight at 7:30 p.m.The center is located at 1100 E. HydePark Blvd*Neudel, who is an attorney, author,feminist, musician, and teacher, willdiscuss the image of the Jewish womanas part of the immigrant experience,her role in the creation of the AmericanJewish middle class, and her struggleto define herself through Jewishwomen authors of the sixties andseventies.For more information, call RobertaSiegel at 269-4600.Israeli colonelto speak at HillelIsraeli Colonel in the Reserves TzviEl-Peleg will speak at 7:30 tonight atthe U of C Hillel on “The Overall Lookof the War in Lebanon from a Militaryand Humanitarian Point of View.”El-Peleg served in Lebanon as Com¬mander of the Israeli Defense Force Ci¬vilian Ordinance Units. He was alsomilitary governor of the Suez Canal in1973, military governor of Nablus in 1967, and military governor of the GazaDistrict in 1956.Currently, El-Peleg is a researcherat the Shiloach Institute of the Tel AvivUniversity Middle East Center.The lecture is free and open to thepublic, and will be followed by an opendiscussion period. Hillel is located at5715 S. Woodlawn.Thucydides Lecture“The Problem of Justice in Thucy¬dides: The Speech of the Athenians atSparta” is the topic of the CollegiateLecture in the Liberal Arts this Thurs¬day.Clifford Orwin, visiting professor ofgovernment at Harvard University,will deliver the lecture in Swift LectureHall at 8 p.m. A discussion will follow.UC budgetContinued from page onethe report stated, “the University can¬not afford to meet operating needs byspending from endowment principal ata rate that would reduce the real valueof the endowment.” This would resultin a downward spiral in operating in¬come from endowment year after year,the report said.In addition, the report said that fi¬nancial equilibrium cannot be reacheduntil the growth rates for revenues andexpenses are equal. The 1981-82 Unres¬tricted Budget showed a growth rate of14.3 percent for revenue and 12.3 per¬cent for expenditures, however, thiswas due primarily to several increasesin revenue which may not recur in sub¬sequent years, the report said. Longterm projections show' that expendi¬tures and revenue growth rates beingbrought into balance by 1985-1986.The $2 million deficit in the Unres¬tricted Budget was covered by trans¬ferring the amount from funds func¬tioning as endowment to the currentunrestricted fund.The provost will present a tentativebudget for 1983-84 later this year.55th and Hyde Park Boulevard643-5500Dog-tired froman eveningat Regenstein?Let Orly’s nutyou backon your feetLunch: Tues.-Sat. 11:30-2:30Dinner: Mon.-Thurs. 5:00-10:30Fri.-Sat. 5:00-12.00Sunday 5:00-9:00Sunday Brunch: 10:30-2:30 —After Studying Special—s2.95 pitchers of beer,appetizers, light sandwiches,& desserts.After 8:30 p.m. Sunday thru ThursdayThe Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, November 9. 1982—3GRAFF & CHECKReal Estate1617 E. 55th St.1 %-2V4-4 room & 6 roomapartments. Immediate occupancy.Based on A vailabilityBU 8-5566A vailable to all comers HYDE PARK UNION CHURCH5600 S. Woodliwn An.Church School (all ages) 9:45 a.mWorship Nursiry Provided 11:OOa.m.W. Kenneth Williams, MinisterSusan Johnson, Baptist Campus MinisterCome, Worship, Study, Serve o AmericanHeartAssociation-WE'RE FIGHTING FOR VOUR LIFE -Lecture:“THE WAR IN LEBANONAN ISRAELI VIEW”Col (Res.) Tzi El-PelegTuesday, November 9 7:30 pmHillel Foundation — 5715 Woodlawnsponsored by Students for Israel PREPARE FOR:MCAT • SAT • LSAT • GMAT • GREsmn. TO LAW SCHOOLORE PSYCH • GRE BIO • OCATVAT • NUT • SSAT • PSATDAT • ACHIEVEMENTS • ACTTOEFL • MSKP • NMB I, II. IllECFMG • FLEX • VQE • RH BOSNOB I. II • NPB I • ESICPA • SPEED READINGMPtfMwe* Any Center And See for Youroeifwny we Ateee The DtnerenceSpeed «eed*ng Course featuresfree Dome LessonCf for Day* A T,mes 1HIOHLANO PARK CINTRIere eiNTtui. avinui{31B)°437^aBSO** (318)433-7410. . » UtDMNfl(318) 784-81 B1 LA iu.bi. IL mommm(318) 388-8840SPRING SUMMER FALL, INTENSIVEClasses StartingTHIS MONTHGMAT 1* WK/LSAT.. .SAT...SPEED READING. 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BAGFLORIDA JUICEORANGES12 OZ.OSCAR MAYERBOLOGNACERTI-SAVER1 GALLON JUGPUREXBLEACH I392°?3"159rr19969*19913999c24914915949°FINER FOODSSERVING53rd PRAIRIE SHORESKIMBARK PLAZA 2911 VERNONWhere You Are A Stranger But Once’4—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, November 9 19R9Striking Out / David Brookslam notawimpieShortly after he announced his candi¬dacy for mayor, Chicago’s favorite sonconsented to an interview with theMaroon. Chicago wants to knowwhether his candidacy will offer morethan the old cliches which have hall¬marked past campaigns. Well, Chicagocan relax. As the following interviewclearly shows, the voters of this citywill not be troubled by the issues in thenear future. The favorite son is the manfor them.“What are you doing here today?”“I’m throwing my hat in the ring.”“What sort of campaign will it be?”“A whirlwind campaign. A barn¬stormer.”“What are you going to startdoing?”“Pressing the flesh.”“Where?”“On the stump.”“Anywhere else?”“The hustings. Also the campaigntrail.”“Is this just a campaign?”“No. It’s a crusade.”“What for?”“For decent, honest government.”“Who will you remember?”“The forgotten man.”“And who will you represent.”“The people. Also the man in thestreet, the common man, John Q. Pub¬lic, the little people.”“Anybody else?”“No. That about covers it.”Richard Daley“Will it be rough?”“It’ll be a dogfight.”“What will the mayor sling?”“Mud.”“What will you be playing?”“Hardball.”“And what won’t you be wearing.”“The kid gloves.”“What kind of campaign will yourun?”“A campaign of ideas. We’re going toaddress the issues.”“Where are you going to sendthem?”“As far away as possible.”“Who will support you?”“The faithful.”“Anybody else?”“The rank and file.” “Who will oppose you?”“The interests.”“Any interesting interests?”“No comment.”“What does this make you?”“The man of the people.”“And your party?”“The party of the people.”“What about their party?”“It’s the party of privilege.”“But what won’t you be singing?”“The party line.”“What will you offer the voters?”“A choice, not an echo.”“And what do you notice under yourfeet?”“A groundswell.”“Anything else?”“Grassroots support.”“Why are you running?”“The job seeks the man.”“Are you offering us anythingnew?”“Yes. A new deal, a new nationalism,a new federalism, a new freedom, anew nation, a new order, a new begin¬ning, a new Chicago, a new spirit, anew broom and a new American revo¬lution.”“Nothing else new?”“A new departure, a new economics,a new face, a new left, a new right, anew look, a new politics, a new tradi¬tion, a new departure and a newYork.”“What do you want voters to lookat?”“The record.”“What will happen if the mayor is re¬elected?”“Grass will grow in the streets.”“What does the mayor offer?”“Business as usual.”“So what time is it?”“Time for a change.”“And what will you do for us?”“I will bring Chicago together. I willmake people proud again.”“Will you be more specific?”“I have no intention.”“What do you oppose.”“Crime, corruption, fraud, evil, andother bad things.”“Does the mayor support thosethings?”“No comment.”“Where will the mayor sit?”“On the fence.”“And what will she spread?”“The gospel of hate.”“Is there anything you’d like tocut?”“Red tape.”“Is there anything you’d like totrim?”“Bureaucratic waste.”“What did your father teach you?”“L’etat, c’est moi.”“How do you disguise your lack of in¬telligence?”“I tell them I got street smarts.”“What will you do about patronage inChicago?”“Patronage has never existed in Chi¬cago.”(gagging noises)The Interviewer was unable to carry onafter this point. He hopes that you getthe idea. And may God help us all.The Chicago MaroonThe Chicago Maroon is the official student newspaper of the University of Chicago. Itis published twice a week, on Tuesdays and Fridays. Editorial and business officesare located on the third floor of Ida Noyes, 1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, 60637. Telephone753-3263.Darrell WuDunn Margo HablutzelEditor Features Editor Nadine McGann Aame EliasGrey City Journal Editor Operations ManagerAnna FeldmanManaging EditorRobin KirkNews EditorWilliam RauchCopy Editor Cliff GrammichSporfs EditorDavid BrooksViewpoints EditorWally DabrowskiProduction Manager Keith FlemingChicago Literary ReviewEditorPaul O’DonnellChicago Literary ReviewEditorAra JelalianPhotography Editor Steve BrittBusiness ManagerJay McKenzieAdvertising ManagerBrian CloseOffice ManagerAssociate Editor: Jeffrey TaylorStaff: Mark Bauer, Dan Breslau, John Collins, Kahane Com, 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. Amv RichmondYousut sayeed, Steve Shandor, Andy Wrobel, Kittie Wyne. 3?¥-rtmentv£ji{usic[^ ‘Presents 'CrThursday, November 11 — Noontime Concert12:15 p.m., Goodspeed Recital HallUC Symphonic Wind EnsembleFarobag Cooper, directorChamber Music of the Baroque, Classical andRomantic Erasadmission FREEFriday, November 12 — Music From Marlboro8:00 p.m., Mandel HallMitchell Stern and Todd Phillips, violin; Sarah Clarke andMatthias Buchholz, viola; Judith Serkin, cello; MarcMarder, bass; Robin Graham, horn. (The first concertin the UC Chamber Music Series)Music by Mozart, Beethoven, and Dvorak.$9; UC students, $6. (Series price is $33; UC fac/staff$30; UC student $22). Tickets and information —UC Concert Office — 962-8068.Sunday, November 14 — The Friends of Mozart Society8:00 p.m., Mandel HallMark Prentiss, conductor; David Sanders, cello; Sixteenmember chamber orchestra drawn almost exclusivelyfrom the Chicago Symphony OrchestraVivaldi: G. minor ’cello concerto, P. 369Mozart: Divertimento No. 17 in D major, K. 334admission FREE&rUpcomina UventsSaturday, November 20UNIVERSITY CHAMBER ORCHESTRAconductor.8:00 p.m., Goodspeed Recital Hall,admission FREE Peter Jaffe.The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, November 9, 1982—5SICNewsCharlton Heston next Visiting FellowBy David BrooksCharlton Heston will be coming tocampus Nov. 22-23 as this quarter’ssecond Visiting Fellow. Heston willstay at Pierce Hall during his visit andwill deliver a multi-media presentationin the Law School Auditorium Tuesday,Nov. 23 at 3:30 p.m. Heston will show afilm compilation of his various roles,and will follow the screening with a dis¬cussion of his career.Superficially, Heston is an odd choicefor a visiting fellow. Few of his films,which include, The Greatest Show onEarth. The Ten Commandments. TheBig Country. The Agony and The Ec-stacy, Ei Cid. Khartoum, Airport ‘75,and Ben Hur, are rife with political andintellectual inquiry.His screen persona, in fact, com¬pletely ignores the contemplative lifeof the mind. Laurence Olivier hascalled Heston the only truly heroicAmerican actor of his generation. Hehimself protests that he has been “bur¬dened by six feet three inches and abroken nose.”But behind his brawny, epic, forma¬listic roles, Heston is a subtle and intel¬lectually ambitious actor. He has tack¬led Macbeth five times and Henry VIIIonce. He has directed film versions ofJulius Caesar. Anthony and Cleopatra,and performed in A Man for All Sea¬sons and Long Day's Journey intoNight. Dissatisfied with his profession¬al imbalance toward screen epics andaway from the more challenging theat¬rical classics, Heston once wrote in hisjournal, “It’s about time I found a filmthat will offer me something besidessuccess.”During his career, Heston has devel¬oped an obsession for historical accura¬cy. “Look,” he once told his son,screenwriter Frase^Heston, “I wasfinished with school before I figured outthat history is not only the most impor¬tant subject, it is the only subject.”He reads history seriously, poringover literature on the dead Sea Scrollsfor example, before the filming of The Ten Commandments. While filmingThe Agony and the Ecstacy he shovedplastic up his nose, so that his profilemight approximate Michelangelo’s. Helearned to drive a chariot for the film¬ing of Ben Hur and to fly a 747 jumbo jetfor Airport ‘75.Of his own personality, Heston says,"My perception of me is that I remain ashy person. I have learned to be a pub¬lic actor because I’ve been doing it solong. In reality, I dislike meeting newpeople, and am much happier in thecompany of people I’ve known a longtime.”In 1961 he joined the Screen Actors Guild and served an unprecedented sixterms as its president, a position Ron¬ald Reagan once held.Following his tenure at the guild,Heston served a seven year term on theNational Art’s Council and as chair¬man of the board at the American FilmInstitute. In 1981 President Reagan ap¬pointed Heston U of C president andHanna Gray as co-chairman of thePresident’s Council on the Humani¬ties.While Heston's popularity as an actormay be in decline, his political star isclearly rising.Charlton Heston is coming to campus as the next visiting fellow,and is expected to arrive by Nov. 22, traffic-permitting.Hillel Cinema"NOW... AFTER ALLTHESE YEARS"IN GERMAN AND ENGLISH — WITH SUBTITLESAwarded the 1981 Adolf Grimme prize for the bestdocumentary by the West Germany TV industry. Itis the story of Rhina, a small Prussian village half ofwhose 600 citizens were Jews. By 1939, the Jews weregone (to Auschwitz and Dachau), no sign left but adesecrated cemetery. NOW AFTER ALL THESEYEARS, the people of Rhina speak warmly of the oldJewish community, deplore the atrocities "committedby outsiders”, claim not to know what happened tohalf their town. The film moves to WashingtonHeights in New York City where the survivors live.The elderly living Jews of Rhina tell their story.TWO SHOWINGS:THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 11,1982at 7:30 PJM. and 9:00 P.M.Cost:Hillel Members and Contributors:$1.50; Others: $2.50HILLEL FOUNDATION5715 WOODLAWN AVENUE752-1127 11 am - 2:30 pmTues-Sat *2.39FarSastfcltcfienWeekly LuncheonSpecial:Chicken withChinese Vegetables,Fried rice, soup,& Tea WHPK p werincreaseContinued from page oi.jO’Connell said that the students’ ini¬tiative at the station was a great factorin the Visiting Committee’s choice totake it on as a special project. He es¬timated that WHPK has $2700 collectedon its own, and said that the Committeewas positive about supporting a groupthat had gotten that far through its ownefforts.At this point, the University hassigned the application to the FederalCommunications Commission (FCC)for granting the station permission toincrease the power to 100 watts; thepermission from the FCC, however,has not yet come through. “We’re as¬suming we’ll get a positive response,”said Conley, who added that she hopes— and expects — to get a “fast and pos¬itive response.”Uhl said that he also expects to get anokay on the 100-watt application. “Theway the plan is set up now, I don’t seewhy we wouldn’t,” he said.O’Connell estimated that the stationwill hear from the FCC within two tothree months.According to Uhl, “Everyone in HydePark and Kenwood will get a good qual¬ity stereo signal from us,” and headded that people would get very goodreception as far south as 95th and as farnorth as Cermak.O’Connell said that a ten-fold in¬crease in wattage “does not increasethe listening radius ten times,” but thatit would provide a much clearer recep¬tion. People who hear it now wouldhear it better under increased power,he said, but the increase is “not muchmore significant than that.”Should the FCC reject WHPK’spower increase, the radio staion wouldbe designated as a “secondary-statusstation” whose license is much less se¬cure than that of a 100-watt station.Furthermore, as a 10-watt station,WHPK might be “squeezed off” the airby higher powered stations.1654 E. 53rd955-2200Trysomethingdifferent:•Sa Dea Chicken•Duck& Noodles•Sea Food Chop Suey•Szechuan ChickenWe accept major credit cards.MBAVanderbiltConsider a Masters in Business AdministrationVanderbilt University’s Graduate School of Management Offers:■ an opportunity to study at a prestigiousmajor university■ a challenging two year, full time MBAprogram for tomorrow's business leaders■ concentrated study and practical experi¬ence m accounting, finance, marketing,organizational behavior, operations man¬agement, and management informationsystems■ high starting salaries and outstandingplacement opportunities with major cor¬porations throughout the U S■ scholarships for proven academic achiev¬ers ■ financial assistance for students demon¬strating need■ an opportunity to live and study in a thriv¬ing business, entertainment, and culturalcenter of the mid-SouthFor information and an application write orphoneOffice of Admission, Room 600Owen Graduate School ofManagementVanderbilt UniversityNashville, Tennessee 37203S (615) 322-6469Please send me information concerning Vanderbilt’s Graduate School of Management.NameAddress—CityTelephone ( )_____Undergraduate College or University. State. Zip.. Graduation Date.6 The Chicago Maroon Tuesday, N'oveiwbei 9,* CULTURE & FREEDOM * CHARACTER & SOCIETY*SELF,CULTURE&SOCIETY*SOC.2*SELF,CULTURE&SOCIETY*n^GerteraHEducationintheSocialSciences:Reflectionson40YearsofSocialSciences2”ASymposiumSponsoredByTheDeanoftheCollege•TheForumforLiberalLearningTheUniversityofChicago•November12-14,1982ScheduleofEventsFriday,November12Saturday,November13»9:00a.m.WelcomeandIntroductiontotheSymposiumSpeakers:HannaGray(President,Univ.ofChicago)DonaldLevine(DeanoftheCollege,Chicago)Chairman:SusanneRudolph(PoliticalScienceandtheCollege,Chicago):r111*■i—...QuantrellAuditoriumSession:ModesofInquiry,ModesofLearningSpeaker:“TheScholarlyTension:GraduateCraftandUndergraduateImagination"JosephGusfield(Sociology,Califomia-SanDiego)Respondents:KeithBaker*(History'andtheCollege,Chicago)DanielBell(Sociology,Harvard)Chairman:JohnMacAloon(SocialSciences,theCollege,Chicago)QiuintrellAuditorium-....I,Session:ValuesinGeneralEducationSpeaker:“ReminiscencesandReflections”PhilipRieff(Sociology,Pennsylvania)Respondents:J.DavidGreenstone(PoliticalScienceandtheCollege.Chicago)HaroldWechsler(EducationandtheCollege,Chicago)Chairman:PeterHomans(DivinityandtheCollege,Chicago)QuantrellAuditorium8:00p.m.PanelDiscussion:AxestoGrindandOxentoGore:MythsandHistoriesofSoc.2Panelists:MiltonSinger(AnthropologyandtheCollege.Chicago)DavidOrlinsky(BehavioralSciencesandtheCollege.Chicago)BertramCohler(BehavioralSciencesandtheCollege.Chicago)RalphNicholas(AnthropologyandtheCollege,Chicago)Chairman:SusanneRudolph(PoliticalScienceandtheCollege,Chicago)4~—••SwiftLectureRoom 10:00a.m.2:00p.m.AllSymposiumEventsAreFreeandOpentothePublicPresentandFormerSoc.2StudentsandFacultyAreEspeciallyEncouragedtoAttendThisSymposiumismadepossiblebyagrantfromMauriceF.FultonandMurielG.FultonQuantrellAuditorium,CobbHall.5811EllisAvenueSwiftLectureRoom,SwiftHall,1025E.58thStreet9:00a.m.Session:PolioandTheoryinGeneralEducationCoursesSpeakers:“PrivatePainandPublicPolicy"DavidBakan(Psychology,York)“ThePortableS<x\2.or.WhattoDoUntiltheDoctrineComes"MareGalanter(Law.Wisconsin-Madison)Respondents:IraKipnis(SocialSciences,theCollege.Chicago)JacobGetzels(EducationandtheCollege.Chicago)Chairman:RichardTaub(SocialSciences,theCollege.Chicago)SwiftLectureRoom2:00p.m.Session:ConceptsandContextsofSocialScienceSpeakers:"AlternativeSocialSciences"McKimMarriott(AnthmpologyandtheCollege,Chicago)"S<vialScienceandHistoricalCultures"SylviaThrupp(History.Michigan)Respondents:HarryHamotunian(HistoryandtheCollege,Chicago).RalphNicholas(AnthropologyandtheCollege,Chicago)Chairman:RaymondFogelson(AnthropologyandtheCollege.Chicago)SwiftlectureHall8:00p.m.PanelDiscussion:GeneralEducationintheSocialSciences:TheI*egac>forLifePanelists:Soc.2andCollegeAlumniSwiftLectureRoomSunday,November149:00a.m.Session:TheFutureof(GeneralEducationintheSocialSciencesSpeakers:“ReflectionsontheSymposiumfromtheNationalPerspective”LewisCoser(Sociology,SUNY-Stonybnxik)DanielBell(Sociology.Harvard)"ReflectionsontheSymposiumfromtheChicagoPerspective"WendyOlmsted(Director,FominforLiberallearning.Chicago)DonaldLevine(DeanoftheCollege,Chicago)SwiftLectureRoom/SELF,CULTURE,&SOCIETY*SOC.SCI.2*SELF,CULTURE&SOCIETY CTER&SOCIETY*CULTURE&FREEDOM*FeaturesBy Margo HablutzelSometime in the coming year, youmay discover that you are seized withan uncontrollable desire to pretendthat you are somebody else — to dressup in strange costumes, to caperabout, singing strange, meaninglesssongs and make an utter fool ofyourself. This sort of behavior isslowly becoming accepted in placeslike Regenstein Library’s secondfloor, but only in certain seasons.Fortunately for you, there is a placeon campus where these antics are notonly tolerated but sought after, askedfor. required.Join Blackfriars.—from the program of a BlackfriarsO-ShowBlackfriars is the oldest studentorganization on campus. Despite abreak during and following World W'arII, it is now in its 79th year. Manypeople have heard about the origins ofthe Order of Blackfriars — studentscollaborating in 1904 on an originalmusical comedy production — butthere is more to the story thandetermination and greasepaint.Although the Order of Blackfriarswas formally created in 1904, it beganfive years earlier. In 1898, theUniversity of Chicago SettlementFund was short of cash, and a groupof professors, influenced by theUniversity of Wisconsin’s HaresfootClub, decided that one way to raisemoney would be to put on a theatricalproduction.In the spring of 1899, a group ofstudents and faculty, all male,produced and performed “TheDeceitful Dean’’ in the University’sgymnasium. Among those in the castwere Henry Gordon Gale, a notedscientist, professor (later Dean)Henry Pratt Judson, and Amos AlonzoStagg, a young football coach who hadbeen given a role in the hopes thatfootball alumni would attend.Although the musical netted $1,600 forthe Settlement Fund, legend has itthat after the performance PresidentWilliam Rainey Harper told Stagg,“Amos, if you go back to football, I’llbuild you a whole new stadium.’’Because the first production hadgone so well, and because theSettlement Fund again needed money,a second student-faculty show wasperformed in 1902. This show, titled“The Academic Alchemist,’’ raised$1,800 for the Settlement Fund.The next year an undergraduatenamed Frank R. Adams decided toform a student musical comedy groupon campus, and so the Order ofBlackfriars was born with a four-manboard of directors, six friars, and fourlay brothers.At first the fledging group’sconstitution was rejected by theUniversity administration becauseonly three of the charter memberswere academically eligible. Once thisproblem was straightened out, thegroup became a recognized studentorganization and began to plan itsfirst production. Adams was the first“abbot,” as Blackfriars call theirpresident, with Halbert B. Blakely as“prior” (vice-president), Walter L.Gregory as “Scribe” (secretary), andOvid R. Sellers as “Hospitaller”(treasurer). Several years later, afifth position on the Board of The score from “So Long Susan,” a1924 musical in which a disheartenedstudent drinks a magical elixir and trav¬els back through time.Directors was created, called“praecentor,’’which was changed firstto “chandler” and then“chamberlain” after World War II,when the title of “hospitaller” waschanged to “keeper of the jewels.”In the spring of 1904, the firstBlackfriars show was produced, “ThePassing of Pahli Khan.” It waswritten by Frank B. Hutchinson andWalter Gregory, with music byHalbert Blakely, and ran for threeshows. In keeping with the two showsbenefiting the Settlement Fund, allthese associated with “The Passing ofPahli Khan” were male, although foradvice on costumes and makeup forthose cast in female roles, theBlackfriars had turned to their“mothers, sisters, and ‘best girls.’ ”This production set the tone for laterBlackfriars shows with purned names,a convoluted love story, and anabsurd plot. It was also somewhattopical, a fact true of most of theBlackfrairs shows which followed,both before and after World War II.In the program for that firstproduction a notice appeared whichwas to be quoted or paraphased formany years.Acting on the belief that theworld likes to be amused,building on the principle thatpeople would rather laugh thanmourn, rather enjoy than mope,men in the University of Chicagohave organized “TheBlackfriars,” a comic operaclub.The Blackfriars have no aimbut to make and present comicoperas just for the sake ofmaking and presenting them.The Blackfriars live for joy, notfor money, and they are willingto be serious long enough toremember that the surest way ofgetting joy is by dispensing alittle joy to others.Although their first show barelybroke even, which the Blackfriarsblamed on the failure of their matineeperformance and people’s uncertaintyabout what to expect from such anuntried show and players, the groupforged ahead, doing a new, entirely original show every spring for thenext 37 years. The first decadeproduced a number of burlesques,such as “Sure Enough Segregation,”centered on University policy in itsearly days of segregating male andfemale undergraduates, “ThePseudo-Suffragettes,” set in 1930about a movement by Miss SamathaJinks to expell all men from theUniversity, and “The Pranks ofPaprika,” a complicated story of loveand intrigue about two U of C loversset in Spain.Not every show went smoothly,however. In its early days, theBlackfriars were required to submit alist of possible production staff andcast members to the Administrationfor approval. Any member who wasacademically ineligible was removedfrom the list. In 1910, Blackfriars ranafoul of the Administration over twoproposed shows. One was approvedalthough it lacked a song with aUniversity of Chicago theme, but theother was rejected. The Blackfriarspreferred the latter however, and soafter extensive rewriting, “ThePseudo-Suffragettes” was performed.“Capturing Calypso,” the one whichthe Administration had approved, wasperformed the following year. women were very important to thegroup as patronesses. Mrs. William RHarper, Mr. Harry P. Judson, andMrs. Charles L. Hutchinson allcontributed support.In 1914, Blackfriars hired a man tohelp them produce their show,beginning the next era in Blackfriarshistory. The shows lost much of theirrough charm and became morepolished and professional. Until the1920’s, Hamilton Coleman led TheBlackfriars through what was laterterms their “Classical Period.”This appellation refers to more thanjust the staging of Blackfriars shows.Many of the plots included charactersfrom medieval, classical, and ancienthistory. “A Night of Knights” in 1915began with an unhappy student authorfalling asleep on stage and“dreaming” of medieval knights andladies. Upon “awakening,” theexcited playwright races to tell hisbrothers of the dream and they decideto use it as the basis of their show.Two years later “A Myth inMandel” moved from “1917 A.D.,Mandel Hall, University of Chicagocampus” to “1917 B.C., campus of theUniversity of Athens,” and includedWaldo Wadsworth Emerson as aUniversity of Chicago “Freshman writijthis renoujwritecollejgoingIn ]showbut tlshowfilm,situaiwhos<Play,unpridirecshowthe clunha]way IaftermeetgiveswhiclShakParti“Kat th<and cthe s]discoChief“WalThe Blackfriars: veneiIn 1911, a proposal was made forchanges in Mandel Hall. For anestimated cost of $800, of whichBlackfriars would pay $600 if theUniversity paid the balance, theproduction of shows would becomeeasier and would keep them fromviolating Fire Departmentregulations.In this decade, The Blackfriarsbegan to have the scores of theirshows printed, bound, and sold duringintermission. One of the University’smost beautiful and popular girls waschosen to be a “Score Girl” in chargeof the sales, the only official role anyfemale held in Blackfriars until the1950s.Although they were not permitted tobe members of The Blackfriars,ARTHUR“Arthur,” which gave a musical viewof the “Love Generation” and flowerchildren, was one of the last originalshows produced by Blackfriars. Grind” while Ulysses and Caesarwere students of Socrates, who wasthen dean of a university which hadHelen of Troy as dean of women.Cleopatra appeared in this productionas “a Hula-Hula dancer.”During World W’ar I, questionsarose about the acceptability of aBlackfriars show. After some debate,it was decided that the proceeds formthe 1917 show, “A Myth In Mandel,”would be given to the American RedCross Society for relief work.Although they had consideredeliminating the show entirely (as theydid the next year), the Blackfriars feltthat more could be gained by makingthe show a benefit. Over two-thirds ofthe chorus were active in thereserves.When Blackfriars productionsresumed in 1919, the authors had beenhelped by former students who hadgraduated during the 1890’s for a showtitled “The Naughty Nineties.” Setduring the Columbian Exposition (inthe show called “the World’s Fair”),the show had a complicated plotfeaturing lovers, leavers, detectives,and Arabs, with a number ofcharacters taking on at least onedisguise and almost everyoneregistering at the University.. In theend, all was untangled and everyonelived happily ever after.Beginning in 1920, as the Jazz Ageswept the nation, it also affectedBlackfriars. The show that year was“Barbara, Behave!” the only onewhich, due to illness HamiltonColeman did not produce and directduring his affiliation with Blackfriars.This show was about Prohibition,jazz, and “college youth in its whirl.”The program also rather noted withamazement “one of (the) so-calledauthors of ‘Barbara, Behave!’ wasborn, actually born, with the notion of royala barfratebelontellsovenshowTh<Blaclperiothe BColleAfrot“Piori(wastonrJazz CoffeehousefeaturingThe Music Level* Friday, November 12, 9 pm - 12 amCloister Club / Ida Noyes Hall /1212 E. 59th StreetAdmission: $1.50 with UCID; $2.00 withoutsponsored by OBS & SGFCa LUTHERAN CAMPUS MINISTRY MINORITY OPPORTUNITIES COMMITTEEAugustono Lutheran Church of the▼ 5500 S. Woodlown Avt. University of Texas School of LawTues., 5:30 p.m. — Eucharist6:00 p.m. — Pizza Supper ($2/person)/Discussion will be recruiting prospective studentsTonight: “Religious Experience and Human Transformation’’ Monday, November 15 • 9 to 11 amRobin Scroggs; New Testament, CTS Reynolds ClubThurs., 7:30 a.m. — Morning Prayer and Breakfast Contact Will Snyder at 753-3291 for info. c6\8—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, November 9, 1982writing a Blackfriars play.” Althoughthis may have been an unusual case,enough authors found the urge towrite a Blackfriars play during theircollege career to keep the societygoing strong.In 1923, the subject of the annualshow was the Blackfriars once again,but this time the Order was taking ashow to Hollywood to be made into afilm. This led to an interestingsituation for their “female lead”whose real name was Horace! In thisplay, Coleman made anunprecedented cameo as himself,directing the Blackfriarsshow-within-the-show. The next yearthe classics made their return as anunhappy University student, on hisway to drown himself in Botany Pondafter being jilted by his girlfriend,meets “Herr Tonic.” The kindly Herrgives the students a magic elixirwhich sends him back toShakespeare’s time and to theParthenon Hotel.“Haiti from Haiti” in 1925 poked funat the United States in the South Seasand contained a seance scene to raisethe spirits of America’s Vikingdiscoverers, who had moved to theChicago area before they died.“Wallie Watch-Out” poked fun atroyalty and fraternities, as the king ofa bankrupt kingdom pledged at thefraternity his former prime ministerbelonged to, and “Plastered in Paris”tells everything about Americansoverseas in its title. It was the lastshow with Hamilton Coleman.The Jazz (or Syncopation, as someBlackfriars historians termed it)period lasted until 1933. At this timethe Blackfriars were a member of theCollege Musical Comedy League, which consisted of “the six oldest andforemost college musical comedyclubs of American”: Harvard’s HastyPudding Club, Princeton’s TriangleClub, the University of Wisconsin’sHaresfoot Club, the University ofPennsylvanian’s Mask and Wig Club,the University of Michigan’s Mimes,and Blackfriars.The director who succeededHamiton Coleman was DonaldMacDonald III, who was withBlackfriars from “Mr. Cinderella” in1929 through the mid-1930’s.Reviewers said, “No Blackfriars showexcept “The Naughty Nineties’ hasbeen a success without a scene infront of Cobb Hall and luckily (Mr.Cinderella) not only has Cobb Hall,but Bond Chapel, and Wieboldt andClassics for good measure.”During Mr. MacDonald’s time theirbudget ranged from $7,000 to wellover $11,000. In 1930, PresidentHutchins said, “The Order ofBlackfriars is no longer anorganization — it is an institutionsupported by traditions of pleasureand colorful entertainment.” It wasalso supported by enoughtheater-goers, patrons, andadvertisers to remain well in theblack despite the Depression.In 1932, Time magazine calledBlackfriars one of the three greatestcollege musical comedy groups in thecountry. The next year, in “Gypped inEgypt,” the Blackfriars sang a songwhich was to become their theme,“Blackfriars Time Again.”We’re all in step, with lots ofpep,Come on! let’s start the show.The gang’s all set to go.AFVtW THINGhappenedONTWEWllOW-roRVMW*CTtl>I l U t IVH ' »l-4&CA collection of posters and programsfrom Blackfriars shows of the 1970s.“Publish or Perish” (center right), anoriginal show first performed in 1976,was revived last year. “All’s Fair” (bot¬tom center) was presented last spring, ALL PHOTOS BY ARA JELALIANthe first original show in five years. Inthe bottom left, with a button from “Any¬thing Goes,” is the program cover for“Guys and Dolls,” Blackfriars’ presentproduction.SPECIAL THANKS TO THE U OF C ARCHIVES ANOBLACKFRAIRS We greet you!With nimble feet, with snappybeat,With tunes both “hot” and slow,With fun, and song, and danceWe’ll treat you!For it’s Blackfriars Time Again.It’s the glorious springtime whenFellows take their girls to theBlackfriars showFor it’s sure to be a good datethey know.Yes, its Blackfriars time so gay,In the loveliest month of May,For that is the time when all theworld’s okay.When it’s Blackfriars timeagain.In 1934, Blackfriars produced“Merger for Millions,” and urgedpeople to make mail-in ticket ordersto “support President Hutchins’campaign for dragging the countryout of the dregs of despair by fillingout the coupon below.” The followingyear, the program for “In Brains WeTrust,” the authors noted, “So wedecided to satirize the Brain Trust. Sohad everyone else.” With their usualtwist and penchant for academia,Blackfriars, ended up poking fun at“The Chicago Tribune’s idea ofprofessors in Washington,” havingthem declare in the title song: “We’vea corner on cranial capacity/A patenton brainial audacity/A monopoly onall mentality/. . .In brains we trust.”In 1936, “Fascist and Furious” told ofthe reasons why the janitors oncampus suddenly outnumbered thestudents as the Fascists andCommunists fought for control of theAdministration.At the end of the 1930’s, afterMacDonald ended his association withBlackfriars, the group began to pickdirectors on a par with its budget.Men such as William Shepherd, DavidBennett, Gerhard Schild, Ben Young,William M. Randall, and John Prattcame from Hollywood and Broadwayfor spring shows. The size of theseproductions is evident from theadvertising for “Lover Over TheLine” in 1939: along with theassurance that in the show “Everylady is a perfect gentlemen,” theflyers noted that it was “Not a mereamateur show, but a $10,000production.” Tickets, at this time,ranged in price from 35 cents to $2.20.Such extravagance was not to last.When the United States entered WorldWar II, the Order of Blackfriars wasdisbanded so that the members couldenter the army. The last trueBlackfriars show was held in thespring of 1941, although in 1942“Include Me Out,”a combinedBlackfriars-Mirror (another campustheatrical group) production, wasperformed.Today as in 1981, war hasprevented a Blackfriarsproduction after a string of 24consecutive triumphs. This yearwould have seen the 39thproduction of Blackfriars andthe 19th year of Mirror. Since wefelt the University communitycould not support two shows thisyear, we have produced a showcharacteristic of bothBlackfriars and Mirror. Features“Plastered in Paris” told of a tooth¬pick magnate and his family, Americansabroad. It was written by a student whohad spent the previous summer inParis.The Blackfriars did not return untilthe 1950’s. After a failed attempt atreorganization in 1952, a lengthyseries of skits was performed at the1956 Beaux Arts Ball. The next yearthe Blackfriars returned with theMaroon noting that they had “aninnovation which may well haveshocked and saddened staunchBlackfriars alumni who rememberedthe days when the all-male chorus linehad more campus prestige than theChancellor. That innovation: girls.”The revived Blackfriars followed inits predecessor’s footsteps, with anoriginal show produced every spring.In 1960 “Silver Bells and CockleShells” told of the disruption whichoccurred when a real witch was givena role in a modern version of“Sleeping Beauty.” 1962’s “Sing OutSweet Rock”chronicled the “ruthlessrise and furious fall” of rock starRock Monas in a production whichKen Davidson, that year’s abbot,called “the start of the ‘NewBlackfriars.’ ” Monas, who had tobattle a group called the “Back toBachers,” was not a rock star manypeople today would be familiar with,but was of the same mold as BuddyHolly and The Big Bopper. Instead oftoday’s satin and chains, Monas woretweed.“Aside From All That,” in 1963, hada cast consisting of frequentlystereotyped characters: hero, heroine,aristocrats, the working class, artists(“Including one New York Jew”),and policepersons (“Knitters andchess players especially suitable”). Anote at the bottom of the cast listcalled for “Tech people. Lots and lots.Must like cast parties and enjoy hardwork.”In 1969 an unprecedentedprofessional play was done byBlackfriars, “The Fantasticks.” andthe first Fall Show ever produced.This began string of professionalshows during the fall quarter andoriginal shows in the spring. Some ofthe shows done in the followingsprings were “The Charge of theContinued on page 11of Illinois6 West Randolph. Chicago. Illinois 60601 Discount Subscriptions to the Spring ClassicSeries — 3 Concerts For $48, $36, or $24. (Reg. $72, $56, $40}Friday, March 25 Friday, April 29 Friday, June 3David Zinman, Cal Stewart Kellogg, Guido Ajmune-Marson,conductor conductor conductorAll Brahms Program Bruckner, Chopin, Dvorak Franck, Jan Bach, DebussyFREE with subscription• $3.00 gift certificate from Laury’s Records• Dec. 19 Holiday Pops Concert tickets• Dining Discounts Deadline:November 30,1982Subscription forms available in Room 210, Ida Noyes HallThe Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, November 9, 1982—9THE VISITINGFELLOWS COMMITTEEinvites nominations forFUTUREVISITING FELLOWSIPast participants in the progratn have been:i, I• t /’ John Paul Stevens\ J. William FulbrightAdlai E. Stevenson IIIJoseph A. Califano, Jr.Michael S. Dukakis >Coleman YoungHans A. Bethe Meg GreenfieldDixy Lee RayLeonard WoodcockFrank PressKingman Brewster, Jr.Walter WristonMary McCarthyThe members of theVisiting Fellows Committee are:Philip C. Hoffman, Chairman753-3939Peter F. Dembowski962-8480David Haselkorn288-5359Ann Keniston324-1189Keungsuk Kim753-3751Sean Mahoney363-8431Lloyd I. Rudolph962-8056Robert M. Wald962-7765Charles E. Cohen, ex officio753-3895F. Gregory Campbell, ex officio962-8808 SAO presents♦♦Wednesday November 10Reynolds Club North Lounge12 noonZe Inner Urge Jazz Society:A Mainstream Jazz EnsemblePerforming in the best traditions ofCharlie Parker, Duke Ellington,Thelonius Monk & Joe HendersonPrevious performances include: Jazz Workshops at theBlue Gargoyle, Cross Currents, the South Side CommunityArt Center, Crossroads International Student Center...Capitol's lour fares"What a break!"Whe rever we fly, we have the lowestunrestricted fares. That means no advancepurchase, no minimum stay We’re alwaysglad to see you, even at the last minute.Make up your mind today—and by tomor¬row, you’re on your way!For reservations and information, callyour Travel Agent or Capitol Air at 212-883-0750 in New York City, 312-347-0230 inChicago, 213-986-8445 in Los Angeles, 415-956-8111 in San Francisco or 305-372-8000in Miami. Outside these areas, please call800-227-4865 (8-O-O-C-A-P-l-T-O-L).SERVING THE PUBLIC FOR 36 YEARSSan Francisco*Los Aogeles* Chicago it Boston * Brussels* Frankfurt* Zurich/Kl! Puerto Plata* "*SanJuanSCHEDULED AIRLINE SERVICEnr THE LOWEST FARE★★******************10—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday. November » i<w?FeatureThe Blackfriars: venerable and versatileContinued from page 9Numidian Cavalry: A musical dramabased on Tolstoy’s life,” “SweetLife,” a rock musical based on “TheMarriage of Figaro,” and “TheDemocratic Way,” which had to beslightly rewritten a few days before itopened to accommodate the leadingman’s broken leg.Early in the 1970’s, Blackfriarsbegan to appear at times other thantheir biannual shows. Now thebest-known of these occasions is theO-Show, but at first they appeared atsuch functions as the Annual PhysicalSciences Dinner (with a revue of oldsongs titled “The Scholar’s Progress:Beginning a History of a Quest forTrue Love and Happiness on theMidway”) and what came to be calledPub Shows, so named because most ofthe performances (consisting of songsloosely strung on a plot) took place inthe Pub. After the drinking age was.,raised, making most Blackfriars too:young to enter the Pub, the PubShows became a thing of the past.Speaking of the past, that waswhere Blackfriars went in the Springof 1972 for its show. The revived “TheDeceitful Dean” in its entirety, withthe only changes being the casting offemales in female roles and theaddition of a Glee Club song from the1890’s entitled “$3,000,000,” writtenabout John D. Rockefeller. As theshow opens, students are complainingabout the elaborateness of theirsuppers and the lack of enough timeto study. . .study. . .study, as well astariffs such as “Changing youropinion under an assistant(professor): $10 fine. Changing youropinion under a head professor: $5reward.”The 1973 spring show, “StrugglingUpward,” was based upon the HoratioAlger story “Luke Larkin’s Luck.” Arevue performed the next year,“Harper’s Folly,” began as a termpaper for a humanities class studyingmystery stories. Based upon the styleof Dorothy L. Sayers and rewritten tofit the Blackfriars, the show contained“$3,000,000,” “Nobel Winners Song,” ,“Here’s How You Tell a FraternityMan,” and the “ConvocationPrayer:” Training as the Field Mice.During this time Blackfriars beganto do stock shows almost exclusivelyfor its fall and spring productions.These have included “AnythingGoes,” “A Funny Thing Happened onthe Way to the Forum,” “Once Upona Mattress,” “Sweet Charity,”“You’re a Good Man Charlie Brown,”“Man of La Mancha,” “Pippin,” andA playbill from the 1972 revival of “TheDeceitful Dean,” the first production bya group of students and faculty who (afew years later) came to be known as“The Order of Blackfriars.” “Godspell.” Their present production,beginning this Friday night, is theclassic “Guys and Dolls.”Despite the successes of the stockshows, Blackfriars still wanted toreturn to the original shows whichthey had done in the past. In 1979 theyannounced a contest for originalscripts, offering to match up authorsnd composers where necessary,hough little came of this, a similarl )motion two year’s later, while theywere reviving “Publish or Perish,” anoriginal show from 1976, broughtabout last spring’s production of“All’s Fair,” the first originalproduction in over half a decade. Dueto the success of both “Publish orPerish” and “All’s Fair,” theBlackfriars are hoping that someonewill write an original script for theirspring show.Today’s Blackfriars are verydifferent from those of nearly eightyyears ago. Females are on an equalfooting with males now, no longerrelegated to selling scores and givingadvice about costumes. At least twoshows and one revue are performedeach year, as opposed to oneextravaganza in the spring. All showsare produced and acted entirely bystudents (except for such roles asthen-Dean of Students Lorna Straus’cameo in “Publish or Perish”). Themembership is no longer limited totwenty-five, and the initiation dinner died out when Blackfriars wasdisbanded during World War Two.Today, anyone who helps out on ashow, whether onstage.or in atechnical capacity, is considered to bea Blackfriar.One thing still remains, however;Blackfriars are still dedicated to thespreading of joy, to the “making andpresenting of musical comedies.” Asit was said in many of their earlierprograms:The jovial friars Full of glee,Troop forth from dullmonastery;And, doffing cowl and gown,essayTo be the downs in sportiveplay.From Novice Friar to Abbotsage,Each monk appears upon thestage.The curtain’s up, the sport’sbegun;Gay laughter tells of mirth andfun!The first production of Blackfriars’79th season, “Guys and Dolls,” beginsthis Friday night at 8 p.m. in the NewTheater in Reynolds Club. It runs fortwo consecutive weekends, November12-13-14 and 19-20-21. Tickets are onsale now and will be available at thedoor. •* ' % :Prerequisite forCanadian Majors.Our Rockefeller, who art in NewYork, •Hallowed be thy name.Thy cashier’s check come,Thy will foget none,Neither us nor our posterity.Give us this day, our dailystipend,And forgive us our deficitspending,As we forget those who apply foraid,And lead us not into taxation,But deliver us from assessment,For thine is the kingdom,And the power,And the money!Forever and forever — Amen.As the 1970’s continued, only thePub Shows and O-Shows were at alloriginal. The O-Shows are skitsperformed during Student ActivitiesNight of Orientation Week, but oneBlackfriar in 1977 said that “We call itthe O-Show because every year whenwe explain why we call it the O-Showsomeone says ‘Oh.’ ” Rarely assophisticated as a full show, theO-Shows are revues satirizing theUniversity and all involved, while thePub Shows satirized just aboutanything.Some of the more notable revueswere “The South Side Story,” “OnceMore, With Meaning,” and “TheHistory of Musical Comedy: From(Victor) Herbert to ‘Hair’,” whichincluded such famous tunes as “GiveMy Regards to Broadway,”“Swanee,” “Tea For Two,” “You’rethe Top,” “Doin’ What ComesNaturally,” “Sit, Down, You’reRocking the Boat,” “Wouldn’t it beLoverly,” “Try to Remember,” and“Aquarius.” Another winter showwhich was not a revue was a musicalversion of The Wind in the Willows,with members of the ChicagoChildren’s Choir Concert Unit in Molson Golden. That’s CanadianThe finest beer brewed and bottled in Canada Imported by Martlet Importing Co., Inc., Great Neck, N Y * tQ82The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, November 9. 1982—11SportsVolleyballers finish third in U of C tourneyBy Kittie WyneThe women’s volleyball team fin¬ished in a three-way tie for third in lastSaturday’s University of Chicago Invi¬tational Tournament at the FieldHouse. Wheaton won the tournament,coming in at 4-0. It was followed by Mil¬likan at 3-1, and North Park, Mon¬mouth and U of C shared third placewith 1-3 records.The Maroons prepared for the tour¬nament by defeating Monmouth Friday15-9, 4-15, 15-10, 5-15, 15-11. Monmouthrecently won the MACW championshipby defeating Cornell and Coe, teamswhom the Maroons lost this season.Monmouth is a strong team with espe¬cially noteworthy serving. Two of itsservers gave the Maroons problemsthroughout Friday’s match. In the sec¬ond game, one server scored 10 pointsand in the fourth another racked upseven. Despite serve-reception errors,the Maroons played a solid matchagainst an extremely competitiveteam. The Maroons opened Saturday’stournament by defeating North Park9-15, 15-12, 15-9. Although this was theMaroon’s only win of the day it was nottheir best showing. The Maroons thenlost two tough games to Millikan 13-15,8-15. Monmouth picked up its only vic¬tory of the tournament by dropping theMaroon’s 4-15, 15-8, 10-15. In the lastmatch, the Maroons showed their abili-Colleen Thorne spikes against NorthPark College Saturday. ty by taking a game from Wheaton,which had lost only three games allseason prior to the tournament. Whea¬ton won the match 15-10, 10-15, 7-15.The tournament was marked by ex¬cellent, high quality volleyball. Thefive entrants were for the most partcomparable, though Wheaton had anedge. Traditionally, Wheaton has beena strong team.The Maroon’s offense has improvednotably since the beginning of the sea¬son. They are more aggressive thanthey were at the season’s start, and areputting up a complex, diverse attack.The new offense created some com¬munication problems, especially ingames the Maroons lost. Despite prob¬lems with the flow on the court, CoachRosie Resch said that the team as awhole played very well. The outcomewas disappointing considering the ex¬citing play.Sue Fortunato is the only graduatingfour-year letterwoman, so next year’steam will have a strong, experienced core. This year’s juniors, Karen Kitch¬en, Karin Van Steenlandt, Bev Davis,and Randi Wagner, have improvedconsiderably over their last threeyears. All season the team dependedheavily on three freshmen, whose expe¬rience will prove valuable next season.With twenty players, the team haddepth.The Maroons finished the season at9-11. Against the MACW, the NCAA Di¬vision III conference which theMaroons hope to enter, they closed at3-3.U of C InvitationalWheaton d. Monmouth, 15-6, 4-15, 15-7.North Park d. Monmouth, 15-7, 7-15, 15-13.Millikan d. North Park, 15-12, 15-7.Wheaton d. North Park, 15-3, 15-1.Wheaton d. Millikan, 13-15, 15-13, 15-7.Millikan d. Monmouth, 13-15, 15-3, 15-8.Harriers place 5th in championshipsBy Cliff GrammichLast Saturday the U of C varsitycross country team placed fifth in theMidwest Conference Championships atCarleton College in Northfield, Minne¬sota. Carleton dominated the ten teammeet with a low score of 19 points.The competition for the secondthrough sixth team places was close,with only eighteen points seperatingthe second place team from the sixthplace team. Lawrence University fin¬ished second with a score of 110, CoeCollege was third with 114, St. Norbert,a new conference team, placed fourthwith 116, Chicago was fifth with 119,and Grinnell finished sixth with 128.This close finish of the secondthrough sixth teams should provide foran exciting championship next year, asCarleton’s cross country team is leav¬ ing the Midwest Conference this year tojoin a new conference.Bob Fisher led the Maroons’ perfor¬mance by placing tenth over the 8000-meter course with a time of 26:55. Thiswas good for all-conference honors andwas a significant improvement over his25th place finish last year. Phil McGofffinished 19th with a time of 27:37;Aaron Rourke finished 26th with a timeof 27:49; Dave Raskin was 30th with28:05; Paul Ulrich was 37th with 28:24;Dan McGee was 38th with 28:26, MikeRabieh was 39th with 28:27, Adam Vo-draska was 43rd with 28:45.Coach Ted Haydon noted that the“team ran very well and made a gal¬lant effort to place well. We missed thefirst and fifth place finishes of MikeAxinn and Art Knight last year.” Haydon added that he did not believethat the team was adversely affectedby the three hour delay the team expe¬rienced in getting to Carleton Fridaynight when its rented van suffered abreakdown. Senior Phil McGoff waselected the team captain after theteam’s final meet.Team Scores:1 — Carleton College, 192 — Lawrence University, 1103 — Coe College, 1144 — St. Norbert, 1165 — University of Chicago, 1196 — Grinnell College, 1287 — Monmouth College, 1668 — Cornell College, 1789 — Beloit College, 20010 — Knox College, 310 PHOTO BY ARA JELALIANKaren Kitchen sets up for a hit.Seniors...Graduating in Autumn,Winter & Spring QuartersTo get your portrait in the 1982 Universityof Chicago Yearbook, make anappointment for the week ofNovember 29th in the Student ActivitiesOffice (Room 210, Ida Noyes Hall.)This is the only way to get yourportrait in the yearbook.12—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, November 9, 1982SportsDivision champions advance to semifinalsBy Andy WrobelThe football playoffs this past week¬end, as the undergraduate residenceand independent leagues now facesemifinal action, while the graduateleagues are down to the quarterfinals.Chamberlin was the first team to ad¬vance to the semifinals, as it trouncedLower Rickert 19-0. Lower Rickert hadadvanced to the quarterfinals by eli¬minating Greenwood by a score of 12-6.In the semifinals, Chamberlin will faceCompton, who advanced by tramplingDewey 19-0. In that game, Compton,which has suffered relatively few pen¬alties all year, had five touchdownscalled back. Dewey had reached thequarterfinals by upsetting Michelson6-0.The Chamberlin-Compton game wllprobably be won in the trenches, as theChamberlin line of Paul Carlisle, ElliotRobbins, and Kirk Mattison battles the Compton line of Paul Carlisle, ElliotRobbins, and Kirk Mattison battles theCompton line of Nick Lynn, Drew De-makis, and Tim Munn. Chamberlin’ssecondary is strong, expecially on theleft side, as is Compton’s. Chamber¬lin’s quarterback Neil Cannon isamong the best around. While Comptonmay provide a good battle for Cham¬berlin, Chamberlin should win. Cham¬berlin is favored by 14.In the other semifinal, Hendersonwill clash with Hale. Henderson ad¬vanced by crushing Hitchcock 13-7.Hitchcock had beaten Bradbury 23-0 toface Henderson. Hale advanced bysquashing Breckinridge 20-0, who hadadvanced to the quarterfinals by beat¬ing Thompson 24-6. This semifinalshould be a high scoring game althoughboth teams have good defensiverushes. Hale’s Sid Singh is a fine passerwhile Henderson’s quarterback is bothPHOTO BY ARA JELALIANAction from the Lower Rickert-Green wood playoff game. a good passer and a good scrambler. IfHenderson can stop the Sid Singh-to-Rob Boland connection, it could wineasily, while if Hale can stop Hender¬son’s quarterback and get its offenserolling, it could win. Otherwise, look fora high-scoring game, which the biggerHenderson team favored to win by 7.In the undergraduate independentsemifinals, FIJI will face Psi Upsilon,and N.U.T.S. will oppose Delta Smeg¬ma. Psi Upsilon advanced by edgingHit and Run 14-10. Psi U has shown tal¬ent and good execution lately, andshould get by the good FIJI team by 7.N.U.T.S., perhaps the best undergradu¬ate team, should roll over Delta Smeg¬ma, whose excuse for being in the semi¬finals is a forfeit over the hapless TeamHuber.In the graduate leagues, only one game has been played. Nine teamsqualified for the playoffs, and sevenreached byes. The two that did not, theLiquidators and the Rejects, met lastSaturday, with Liquidators winning aphysical game by an 8-6 score. In quar¬terfinal action yesterday, Bovver Boysmet Acetominophin Removed, Bar¬ney’s Meat Market, the Hanna Bowl fa¬vorite, took on Extra Strength Tylenol,and Cinema Face opposed Bok’sRocks, Dean and the Crewcuts also metthe Liquidators in a game that willprobably see the winner go to the finalsof the graduate leagues.In other IM news, Henderson willplay Compton, and Hitchcock will op¬pose Chamberlin in undergraduate res¬idence ultimate frisbee semifinals. Thevolleyball playoffs for men and womenwill start this week.Gridders finish season winless;drop finale to Principia 36-13By Cliff GrammichThe University of Chicago footballteam completed one of its worst sea¬sons in history Saturday by losing itsfinal game of the season to Principia bya score of 36-13. The loss dropped Chi¬cago’s record a winless 0-9, andstretched its losing streak, dating backto the last game of the 1981 season, toten games.Chicago has finished at 2-6-1, 1-8-0,and 2-6-0 in the last three years.Principia dominated the game bothon the scoreboard and in other statis¬tics. Principia gained 246 yards rushingto the Maroons’ 150, and Principia’spassing attack gained 62 yards to Chi¬cago’s 51. The Maroons were forced topunt 10 times in the game, and they lostthree fumbles.Maroon quarterback Hoffman, play¬ing in Don Haslam’s position in thefinal game, completed nine passes in 25attempts, and threw two interceptions. Oros led the Maroon rushers with 65yards and one touchdown. Jankovichgained 51 yards, and McCann gained 34yards and scored one touchdown.For the year, McCann led theMaroons in rushing with 382 yards.Dickey was second on the team with 194yards. Haslam’s passing totals overeight games showed 89 completions in201 attempts, for 951 yards. Vucovichled the Maroons receiving corps with 32catches for 513 yards. Ellefsen had 22catches for 221 yards. The team’s lead¬ing scorers were McCann and Vuco¬vich, each with 18 points.As a team, Chicago’s rushing gamedid not match that of its opponents.The Maroons gained 580 yards on theground compared to the opposition's1807. The Maroons passing attack wasa bit more comparable to their oppo¬nents, gaining 1006 yards to the opposi¬tion’s 1172. The Maroons were out-scored over the season, 94-262.The American Friends Service Committee andthe Center for Middle East Studies atThe University of ChicagopresentERIC ROULEAUMiddle East Correspondentfor Le MondeTHE POLITICAL ANDDIPLOMATIC ASPECTS OFTHE WAR IN LEBANONThursday, November 117:30-9:30 pmBreasted Hall,Oriental Institute1155 E. 58th St. BLACKFRIARS PRESENTSooooooo-oCOOOCOC00l eiH&DCLlS lOOOOOOOOOCCCCC COO1-Hu sic & lyrics byf DANE HtMttDirected byI DIC NELSONMusical Director:DAN SILT EELREYNOLDS CLUB NEW THEATRENOVEMBER 12.13.14 & 19.20.21 8:00 pm \TICKETS ON SALE AT REYNOLDS CLUB & COBB H ALLGENERAL $3.50 STUDENTS $3.00 GROUPS $2.50FUNDED BY SGFCThe Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, November 9, 1982—13Campus FilmsTobacco Road (John Ford, 1941) For yearsHollywood shied away from Jack Kirkland’slong-running Broadway drama (eightyears, when filming began) about dirt,squalor, and moral decay among back-woods-Georgia sharecroppers. But success¬ful laundering of Steinbeck’s Grapes ofWrath in 1940 emboldened procucer DarrylZanuck to buy the rights for $200,000-plus-royalty, put his Grapes of Wrath crew on theproject (screenwriter Nunnally Johnsonand director Ford), takes his chances withthe Hays office, and audition Charles Gra-pewin (alias Grandpa Joad) for the role ofJeeter Lester — the slovenly, bearded headof the Lester hovel. The result: Kirkland’ssavage, often tragic comedy has been swee¬tened and softened beyond recognition, intoa broad, sentimental, yet surprisingly ar¬resting and unusual folk comedy. Tues.,Nov. 9 at 8 p.m. Doc. $1.50 — PFThe Bridge on the River Kwai (David Lean,1957) A tattered battalion of British POWs ismarched into a Japanese prison camp deepin the steamy jungles of Burma to help theJapanese build a bridge linking the Rangoonto Bangkok. Alec Guiness plays Colonel Ni¬cholson, a stiff-upper-lip commander in thegreat tradition of British officers — unflag-gingly loyal, magnificently courageous,sublimely short-sighted, and obsessed at alltimes with establishing moral superiorityover the enemy. The climax is a horror ofbifurcated motives — three commandos(William Holden, Jack Hawkins, and Geof¬frey Horne) intent on destroying the para¬gon of British ingenuity, Guiness crazedlydetermined to stop them. Both a powerfuladventure story and a curious satire of thefutility and cross purposes of war, Bridge onthe River Kwai derives most of its strengthfrom its cast (including Sessue Hayakawa,as the camp’s ruthless commander), andthe Oscar-winning cinematography of JackHildyard. A triumph of suspense and excite¬ment. Wed., Nov. 10 at 8:30 p.m. LSF. $2 —PFSome Came Running (Vincente Minnelli,1958) Hollywood shrinks James From Hereto Eternity) Jones’ insufferably long best¬seller about small-town claustrophobia into136 minutes of sensitive, intelligent roman¬tic drama. Of course, Sinatra doesn’t reallyring true as the disillusioned author who re¬turns home to his Indiana birthplace after 16years absence, no matter how many worksof Faulkner and Fitzgerald pour out of hisduffel bag. But Minnelli successfully under¬plays Sinatra’s profession. And Shirley Ma-cLaine compensates perfectly, as the pixie¬like waif on the lam from her spurnedChicago lower. Still, I’m not sure whetherMinnelli set out to lampoon or glorify theoriginal author’s assumptions, (small townsare places in which respected people leadsecret lives of shocking depravity, men arenot men if they can't hold their liquor, pros¬titutes have hearts of gold, teachers arefrigid, culture is bunk, Hemingway andCalendar Faulkner were the world’s greatest intel¬lects, and so on). One of Minnelli’s finer non¬musical romances. Wed., Nov. 10 at 8 p.m.Doc. $1.50 — PFRashomom (Akira Kurosawa, 1952) Rasho-mon opens in a ruined eighth century temp¬le, where a woodcutter and Buddhist priest,taking shelter from a lashing rain, ponder abewildering crime that has shaken theirfaith in mankind. Flashbacks picture thetestimony at trial, the contradictory storiesof each participant — a bandit (Toshiro Mi¬fune), a woman (Machiko Kyo), and her sa¬murai husband (Masayuki Mori) — and theaccount of the bystanding woodcutter, whoconfirms enough of the preceding versionsto make each participant seem equally culp¬able. Though the bulk of the film repeats thesame scene four different ways, Kurosawamanipulates camera and action so deftlythat his story never really seems repeti¬tious. Instead, Kurosawa strips lust, fear,selfishness, pride, vanity and cruelty to thecore — reconstructing from the four ver¬sions neither the crime nor the culprit, onlythe terrible unknowability of truth. Minorreservations: Matsuyama’s ill-placed west¬ern score (borrowed from Ravel’s “Bo¬lero”) and the compassionate, saving-graceending. Thurs., Nov. 11 at 7:30 p.m. I-House.$2 ($1 for residents) — PFEasy Rider (Dennis Hopper 1969) Flushfrom the profits of a dope deal, two cyclistscast off across the California desert to NewOrleans. The cyclists (Peter Fonda andDennis Hopper) carom from ranch to com¬mune to jail (where they team up with JackNicholson, the alcoholic civil rights lawyerwho springs them) to Mardi Gras, in an al¬ternately acute and naive odyssey into aworld of violence, bigotry, and moral bank¬ruptcy. Nicholson aside, Easy Rider’s fresh¬ness and authenticity derive not from itsprofessionals but its amateurs — from cin¬ematographer Laszlo Kovaks’ harrowinggallery of mindless teenagers, rednecktruckers, and assorted American primi¬tives. Easy Rider is not, as it first seems, amisguided myth about innocence. It is a bru¬tally pessimistic saga about the wanton de¬struction of harmlessness, driven home bywhat we ourselves know of our hate-ridden,trigger-happy heritage. Like Dylan says,“It’s alright Ma ... I’m only bleeding.”Thurs, Nov. 11 at 8:30 p.m. LSF. $2 — PFUne Femme Douce (Robert Bresson, 1969)The second of Bresson’s three Dostoevskyinspired works, this is also his first film incolor. Updating the novella A Gentle Crea¬ture by setting the film in contemporaryParis, the film explores a failed marriagevia flashback, placing the recollectionswithin the framework of the aftermath ofthe wife’s suicide by defenestration. What isrevealed is an oppressive relationship con¬trolled by a petty tyrant of a husband — animprisonment from which suicide seems theonly liberating step. Thurs., Nov. 11 at 8p.m. Doc. $1.50.TUESDAYTalking Pictures: Rashoman 7:30 I-House $2.00 FreePopcornDoc Films: Tobacco Road 8 p.m. Cobb $1.50Hillel: Lecture: Col (Res.) Tzi El-Peleg “The War inLebanon: An Israeli View" 7:30 p.m.Akido Club: 6:30-8:30 p.m. HCFHMorris Dancers: Ritual English dance 7 p.m. INHCrossroads: Classical Indian Dance Class 7 p.m.Microbiology Dept.: Lecture: Dr. Joseph D. Locker“Gene Structure and RNA Processing in Yeast Mi¬tochondria’’ 4 p.m. 1117 CLSCMedieval-Renaissance Colloquim: Lecture: ThomasLuxon "Walter Ong’s Theory of an ‘Auditory Shiftin Conciousness’ and the First Printed EnglishBibles.” 7:30 p.m. Wb 408. Admission $1.50 Free tomembers.Libertarians: meeting 8 p.m. INHCalvert House: Sacrament of Reconciliation 11:30a.m.; Investigation into Catholicism, the Book ofExodus 7 p.m.WEDNESDAYCrossroads: English Class: Beg. Int./Adv. and dis¬cussion 2 p.m.; Social Hour 3:30 p.m.; Adv. Spanish7 p.m.Art History Dept, and Visiting Comm, for the Visu¬al Arts: Robert B. Mayer Lecture Series: CharlesDempsey “Botticelli and the Problems of Under¬standing Humanistic Patronage of Painting” 4 p.m.CWACNOMOR Films: Fable Safe & No First Use & LostGeneration 10 a.m.-11 a m. (reshowing 12:25-1:25p.m ); The Hat & The War Game 11:15 a.m.-12:20p.m.; The Hole & The War Game 1:30-2:35; WarWithout Winners &. The Last Epidemic 2:45-3:50p.m.; Day After Trinity: J. Robert Oppenheimer andthe Atomic Bomb 4-5:30 p.m. All FreeBiochemist Dept.: Seminar: Dr. Gunther Blobel:“Mechanism of Protein Translocation Across andIntegration Into Membranes” 4 p.m. CLSC 101Physics Dept.: Lecture: Franco A. Gianturco "VeryAccurate Atom-Molecule Interactions from the In¬terplay of Theory and Experiments” 12 p.m. Kent111Badminton Club: 7:30-11:00 p.m. INH GymHillel: Students for Israel 7:30 p.m.Shotokan Karate:Women's Union: meeting 7 P.M. INHCountry Dancers: Folk Dances of England andAmerica 8 p.m. INHRockefeller Chapel: Service of the Holy Communionfollowed by Breakfast 8 a.m.; Carillon Recital 12:15p.m.U of C Democrats: Alderman Larry Bloom “The De¬pendence and Independence of Chicago Politics”7:30 p.m. INH SAO: Last Day to Buy Discount Tickets for ChicagoCity Ballets CINDERELLA Nov. 19th $12.50 & $6.80Rm 210 INH; Noontime Concert — Ze Inner UrgeJazz Society 12 p.m. Reynolds clubDoc Films: Some Came Running 8 p.m. Cobb $1.50LSF: The Bridge on the River Kwai 8:30 p.m. LawSchool Auditorium $2.00Committee on Arms Control & Disarmament Con¬ference: Opening Address: Dr. Helen Calidcott,Physicians for Social Responsibility; 7:30 p.m.CCETHURSDAYHillel: Faculty Luncheon: Mrs. Nava Y. DanonS.J.D. “The Impact of Jewish Law on Israeli Stat¬utes & Court Decisions” 12 p.m. $3 752-1127 info;Now After All These Years 7;30 & 9 p.m. $2.50Music Dept.: Members of the U of C SymphonicWind Ensemble 12:15 p.m. Goodspeed FreeDoc Films: Une Femme Douce 8 p.m. Cobb $2LSF: Easy Rider 8:30 p.m. Law School AuditoriumRockefeller Chapel: Chancel Choir Rehearsal 4:15p.m.; Choral Vespers Services 5:15 p.m.; ChancelChoir Rehearsal 5:45 p.m.; Light Supper 6 p.m.;Bible Study 6:30 p.m.Committee on Genetics: Colloquim: Alan Roter“Coordinated Gene Regulation During Differentia¬tion of Drosophilia Epidermal Cells" 12 p.m. Zoolo¬gy 14Collegiate Lectures in the Liberal Arts: CliffordOwin “The Problem of Justice in Thucydides: TheSpeech of the Athenians at Sparta” 8 p.m. SwiftLecture Hall.Physics Dept.: Lecture: Johnathon Rosner "Statusof Unified Theories of the Weak. Electromagneticand Strong Interactions” 4:30 p.m. Eck 133Symposium in Honor of Professor Ugo Fano: Intro¬ductory Remarks, Stuart A. Rice 9 a.m.; lecture:J.W. Boag "Contributions of Physics to Radiologyand Radiobiology" 9:15 a.m.; R.W. Zwanzig "FromClassical Dynamics to Random Walks” 11 a.m.;F.H. Read “Experimental Evidence ConcerningElectron Motion on the Wannier Ridge” 1:30 p.m.;J.H. Macek “Electron Correlation in Atoms” 2:45p.m.; A.R.P Rau "Scientific Life With Fano In Chi¬cago” 4:30 p.m. All in Law School AuditoriumWHPK 88.3 FM: 6:30-9 a.m. Fat Freddy’s CatCenter for Middle Eastern Studies: Lecture: EricRouleau of La Monde "The Political and DiplomaticAspects of the War in Lebanon” 7:30 p.m. BreastedHall, Oriental InstituteU of C Judo Club: Practice 6 p m. BartlettCommittee on Arms Control & Disarmament Con¬ference: Workshops and debates detailed on Displayad.Committee on the Present Danger: "Detente and theSoviet Weapons Build-up: Down the Garden PathAgain?” 8 p.m. INHEpiscopal Campus Ministry: Holy Communion 12p.m. Bond Chapel.14—Tiie Chicago Mai uon—l uesaay, November 9, 1982 Classified AdsCLASSIFIEDADVERTISINGClassified advertising in the Chicago Maroon isSI per 45 character line. Ads are not acceptedover the phone, and they must be paid in advance. Submit all ads in person or by mail toThe Chicago Maroon, 1212 E. 59th St., Chicago,II 60637. Our office is in Ida Noyes, rm 304.Deadlines: Wednesday noon for the Fridaypaper, Fri. noon for the Tuesday paper. In caseof errors for which the Chicago Maroon isresponsible, adjustments will be made or cor¬rections run only if the business office isnotified WITHIN ONE CALENDAR WEEK otthe original publication. The Maroon is notliable for any error.SPACEHYDE PARK STUDIOS, 1 & 2 BEDROOMSNOW AVAILABLE S282-S525 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. S260-S360. Immed. occupancy.Students welcomed. Call 493 2525 or 643-7896.Spacious 2 bdrm apt for sublet Dec 1, S375/moKimbark near 57th. 684 5717, keep trying.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, 9552321 eves.5234 S. Dorchester Ave.Walk to museums, parks, the lakeSTUDIO APARTMENTSFurnished and unfurnishedutilities includedLaundry roomSundeck • Secure buildingCampus bus at our doorCall 9-5 for appointment324-0200■ i Large bdrm tn 2 bdrm luxury apt. Furnished.Windemere Bldg. Separate bath, entrance.S350 or best offer. Call 876-1000 x463 days.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 6436428 or Parker-Holsman Co. 493-2525.Female wanted to share 2bdrm. apt. $220 permo. Call 373-4837 after 6 p.m.IDEAL SOUTHSHORE LOC.Studio's and 1 bedrooms available in idealSouth Shore Loc. Excellent transportation andconvenient to shopping area. All apts arecarpeted + All Utilities Are Included In Rentfor more information call Charlotte 643-0160.IN THE HEARTOF HYDE PARKBeautiful 1 brm + studio apt. for rent. Agent onpremiss. 5424 Cornell Ave. 324-1800SPACE WANTEDPHD stud seeks apt to SUBLET/rent. 947-0217.PEOPLE WANTEDPaid subject needed tor experiments onmemory, perception and language processing.Research conducted by students and faculty inthe Committee on Cognition and Commumcation. Department of Behavioral Sciences.Phone 962 8859.5, 7 & 10 yr old right handed boys wanted forstudy on Depth Perception and Brain Development. Pay is $3 per hour. Call 962-8846.“VIDEOGAME THAT PAYS YOU” IS BACK!Make some $ in a learning study. Try once -rNEED k PAPERTO BE TYPED?(or a Resume, an Essay, or any report)UNDERLINING AND BOLDFACINGCALL CALL CALL CALLEASY WRITECOMPUTERIZED WORDPROCESSING SERVICEFAST SERVICE, LOW PRICES,NO PROBLEM TO RETYPEWe can easily, if requested, store yourcomplete document for an immediaterecall for printing and for modificationat any time in the future.GALL624/4524 • • • 624/4524 • • • 624/4524SER VICING THE HYDE PARK AREA ^Dignity/Chicago549-26337 to 10 PM Mon.-Fri.MASS EVERY SUNDAYat 7PM824 West WellingtonChicago, IllinoisCOFFEE HOUR A SUPPORTIVECOMMUNITY OFGAY & LESBIANCATHOLICSVALUABLE COUPONFreebee OfferSave 20% on KODAKC ^Photo-Greeting Cards*I ’Bring in this coupon by DECEMBER 1,‘82andsave 20% on your orderI Christmas. Chanukah or Navidad designs intwo stylesMade from your favorite color print, color slideor KODACOLOR Film negative and processedby KodakOrders accepted through December 1, 1982OFFER AVAILABLE ONLY AT :THE PHOTO DEPT.UNIV. OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE970 E. 58th ST 962-7558 COLORPROCESSING► KodakVALUABLE COUPONClassified Adsoplion 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 $215for 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.THE LEARNING CONNECTION - Teach askill, lead an activity, share a hobby, programproposals now being considered. Meetingspace available. A Hyde Park Co-op memberoperated activity. 374-3548.Full-Time or Part-Time Clerk-Typist to assista research professor. Send resume to ISBP,5741 S. Drexel, Chicago, II 60637.WANTED - One good mother with a child ortwo who needs a Helping Hand - MorningHours by an experienced reliable child-caretaker with excellent references CALL 955 4554.FOR SALE1972 Volkswagen Beetle. Body old. Engine runswell. S400ONO Call 288-8177.For Sale '69 Toyota Corona S300 Call 752-5461.AGFACHROME SLIDE SALEFour Rolls for the Price of Three!!!MODE L CAME RA 493-6700FUJICOLORSALE2 Rollsof FUJICOLOR 36X FilmGets you a FREE Dustoff!!!MODEL CAMERA 1344 E. 55th St. 493 6700OLYMPUS XA....S129.95MODEL CAMERA 1344 E. 5th St. 493-670035mm CAMERA...S49.95!!! ...NEW!!!MODEL CAMERA 1344 E. 55th St. 493 6700135mm F2.8 LENS FOR CANON...S59.95MODEL CAMERA 1344 E. 55th St. 493-6700Condo 10°. assumable mortgage 3 br, GBF PL,architect designed kitchen, strippedwoodwork-excellent neighborhood, Rayschool, walk to campus, low assessment, asking 79,500 972-4029 days 363-3995 after 5:00 p.m.FOR SALE. Bookcase, endtables, smallcabinet. For more info call 288 4662 anytime.1972 AU DI 100LS two door $250 ph 363 5877.SERVICESJUDITH TYPES-and has a memory. Phone955 4417.Weddings and Portraits photographed. CallLesl ie at 536-1626 or 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 375-6247COUNSELING AND PSYCHOTHERAPY.Gestalt-oriented. Hyde Park Area. SlidingScale. Cecelia H. Bethe, PhD. 752 5692.JAMES BONE, EDITOR-TYPIST, 363-0522.THESE SHOULD BE GOOD YEARS: ex¬perienced teacher believes you can be having amore positive learning experience now. Tutormg for the troubled; enrichment tor the ad-vanced student. ENGLISH,HISTORY/SOCIAL SCIENCE, LANGUAGES,PAPE R-WR I TlNG , RESEARCHRESOURCES. Each student to receive thechallenge -t- support he/she needs. AGES 12 19inclusive. EXAM REVIEW/COLLEGEESSAYS. CALL (mornings before 10/evenmgsafter 6) 752-7387.The above applies to university freshmen -t-sophomores. Get unstuck. CALL 752 7387.F IREWOOD—Free Hyde Park Delivery - 742-1762.CARPENTRY AND CABINETRY, Call David684 2289. 1000 Name & Address Labels with zip code for$2 plus 45 for postage. Please print name, ad¬dress, city, state and zip code. Send to: Smith,P.O. Box 17345, Chicago, III. 60617.SCENESWriters workshop PLaza 2-8377.CAROLE ETZLER CONCERT Nov. 13, 8 PMTICKETS $2 Graham Taylor Hall, CTS, 5757 S.University. For info. Call 643-4468.SAO has 50 student subscriptions to the Orchestra of Illinois Spring Classic Series at 40%savings. Tickets are $48, $36 & $24 for 4 concerts. Come to RM 210 Ida Noyes.FAT FREDDY'S CAT will lick your nose, nib¬ble your ears, wishing you GOOD MORNING.Thursdays, 6:30-9AM on WHPK 88.3 FM turn iton and wake up.SWING! with Country Dancers, Wednesdaynight in Ida Noyes. British and New Englanddances taught, beginners are welcome.Refreshments follow dancing. Join us! Intor:241-6738. Free.Les Beaux parleurs, our UC French club,meets Thursday 9-10 PM. Someone will give ashort talk in French. Aussi, croissants et cafe.Place: Ida Noyes. Need more? Georges, 753-3990.See "Guys and Dolls" for Free! How? Usher!Call Margo, 753-2249, leave name and phone n.LOST AND FOUNDFOUND Female Dog on 11/2 along by 47th St.black with tan paws. Is she yours? Call 667-4663.CINDERELLASAO has discount tickets to opening night ofChicago City Ballet's CINDERELLA Nov 19thS12.50 & 56.80 see guest artist Suzanne Farrelllive! iTicketson sale in rm 210 thru Nov.CLUB LACROSSEFirst mtg. Tues. Nov. 9 at 7:15 p.m. at PSI U5639 S. University Call 288-9870 for more info.ARE YOU IN YOURRIGHT (OR LEFT) MIND?Men & women, right & left handers needed toparticipate in interesting and profitablestudies on how the two sides ot the brain thinkdifferently. Call 962-8846M-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.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.marian realty,inc.REALTORStudio and 1 BedroomApartments Available— Students Welcome —On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-5400THE PHOTO DEPT.FILMPROCESSINGRENTALSBATTERIESRADIOSFRAMES CAMERASPHOTO ALBUMSDARKROOM EQ.CASSETTE TAPERECORDERSVIDEO TAPEUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOBOOKSTORE970 EAST 58 TH ST. « 753i3317 S.G. MEETINGSThe Nov. 9th & Nov. 23rd SG Assemblymeeting will be held in Stuart 101.NEEDATYPIST?Excellent work done in my home. Reasonablerates. Tel. 536-7167.PIANO LESSONSBeginners-Advanced. Teacher with DoctoralDegree from Juilliard School, NY, Tel. 5367167.ATTN: SECOND-YEARCOLLEGE STUDENTSS500 Truman Scholarship. Must be planning oncareer in government. Contact Nancy O'Connor (Harper 261, 962-8623) before Nov. 10th.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.DISCOUNTSUBSCRIPTIONSSAO has 50 student subscriptions to the Orchestra of Illinois Spring Classic Series at a40% savings. Tickets are $48, $36 & $24 for 4concerts. Come to Rm 210 Ida Noyes.LEARN TO INCREASEINTELLIGENCE/CREATIVITY+ ENERGY:Begin the Transcendental Meditation Program. Free intro lecture Weds. Nov. 10 4.00 or8:30pm Ida Noyes Hall-East Lounge Info 9470463.SUMMER JOBSStudent Meeting Thur. Nov. 11, 12:00 noon.North Lounge of Reynolds Club. Informationon |obs/intern programs. Resources to helpyou get ahead start on applying.B.G.B.G.Fabulous Blue Grass group Green Eggs andHam |Oin post-folkie John Shibley for an evening of fun and music at the Blue Gargoyle cotfeehouse Thursday Nov. 11. Show starts 8:30.$1 Admission. Great food. BG at 57 and Univ.Wanna play BG? Call Karen 955-4108.ATTN. GRADSTUDENTSDoes Graduate Education Need Changes? WillThe Baker Report Affect YOU? Attend firstmeeting of The Student Association onGraduate Education (SAGE), Tues, Nov 16 at12:00 in SS122.FESTIVAL OF THEARTS-FOTAThe 1st FOTA meeting this year is tonight a*7:30PM-in rm 218-lda Noyes Hall.model cameraVALUABLE COUPONSALE!Wallet sizecolor photos• 2Vi x 3Vz color prints• Made from any colorprintOffer expires 11-23-82This coupon must accompany ordermodel camera1342 E. 55th St.493-6700 TURKEY TROTRun today at Washington Park, 3:30 p.m.GRADUATESOF"SELFTORTURE & ANXIETY"Why did they do it to you? Three days of ex¬planations, November 12-14. Full Scheduleelsewhere in this issue.IS GENERAL EDUCATIONREALLY GOOD FOR YOU?College alumnae in many walks of life arecoming to campus to tell you the truth. Hear iton Saturday, November 13, at 8:00 p.m. in theSwift Hall Lecture Room.TIREDFEET?Experience the energizing and relaxing effectsof a deep, firm foot massage. Bob 324 7530.SEXSEXSEXHave midterms left you high and dry? Comesee an X-rated pair of films that will leave youWET. Thurs. Nov. 18th, 6:30, 8:45, 11:00ECKHART 133.BOOKS, BOOKS, BOOKSFrom African studies to Zoology, including ahistory of the American automobile, a smatter¬ing of works in psychology, economics, history,feminist studies, law and education, a groundbreaking work in gay history; PLUS TheBread Ovens of Quebec, The Folktales ofHungary, and Statistical Mechanics—all thisand so much more at the U of C PRESSWAREHOUSE SALE. Ida Noyes Gym,November 19-21, 11 to 7.BEAUTIFUL BOOKSIllustrated works on Turner, Italian drawing,the mushrooms of Canada, and Hyde Parkhouses—iust to name a few—all on sale at verylow prices. The UC PRESS WAREHOUSECLEARANCE SALE —Friday, Saturday, Sunday, November 19-21. Ida Noyes Gym. 11 to 7FREE BOOKS?!!Some of our best loved and most famous bookswill be given a way free—the latest edition ofTHE CHICAGO MANUAL OF STYLE, Norman Maclean's A RIVER RUN THROUGH IT,and one set of THE LISLE LETTE RS-m dailydrawings at the UC PRESS WAREHOUSECLEARANCE SALE. November 19-21 in IdaNoyes Gym. 11 to 7.PERSONALSI have become Death, Destroyer of Squirrels!USHERSWANTEDfor Nov. 12-13-14-19-20-21 shows of "Guys andDolls." Leave name, phone a for Margo 7532249.IN THE GOLDEN TRIANGLE this two bedroom,one and one half bath condo is very special Wouldyou beheve, woodburning fireplace, leaded glasswindows, bright sun porch, lots of sun andwonderful yard for children, birdwatchersand others? Upper $60's.MADISON PARK GRACIOUS, completely re¬furbished Clean as a pm. This lovely, light andairy 4 bedroom. 2'/j bath Victorian townhome hasbeen lovingly restored and appropriately modern¬ized with new kitchen, storms, tuckpointing,modern electric, central air and much more. A realbuy at $155.000 and in such completely up-gradedcondition.K1MBARK CROSSING! One of Hyde Parks finercondominium conversions One of the few resalesis now listed with Hild Realty Group Huge countrykitchen. 7 rooms A great buy in the $60's.SPECTACULAR LIGHT' Six room condo, completely-redone - new walls, new windows, new baths, newkitchen, new electric, new . . . It's at 56th andHarper and its only $69,500' This one won't last'Call today!A PRICE YOU CAN AFFORD and below markelfinancing. This sunnv one bedroom third floor unitwith full dining room may be just what you're look¬ing for. Tenants converted this building and areproud of their strong condo association. Superjocation - close to the University, transportationand shopping This is a lovely courtyard buildingand the price is right $40's.THE MEWS. Lovely. lovely building. This 1 bedroomplus study has natural woodword. beamed ceilingand a woodburning fireplace. A super buy! Upper$50's.Call to be put on our mailinglist for the Autumn HomeReview Guide.HILD REALTY GROUP1365 E. 53rd St.955-18DOThe Chicago Maroon—Tuesday. Novembt ls8 15IF YOU’RE THINKING OF JOININGA HEALTH MAINTENANCE ORGANIZATION,THINK FIRST OF HMO ILLINOIS’HEALTH ASSURANCE PLAN (HAP)(OFFERED BY THE HYDE PARK-KENWOOD COMMUNITY HEALTH CENTER)YEARLY ENROLLMENT THROUGH YOUR EMPLOYER IS JUST AROUNDTHE CORNER. CHECK THE OFFICE WHERE YOU WORK FOR DATES.MORE THAN 10Bt UNIVERSITY OFCHICAGO FAMILY MEMBERS AREENROLLED AT HYDE PARKTHROUGH HAP. JOIN THEM NOW.As a member of HAP throughthe Hyde Pork-Kenwood Com¬munity Health Center, you paya set monthly fee for all yourfamily's health care needs.Office visits, hospital care,even specialist services arecovered.Care is provided by membersof the Center's highly regard¬ed medical staff withprivileges at: Chicago Lying-In, Michael Reese, Chicago Osteopathic Hospital or WylerChildren's Hospital. Amember of the Center'smedical staff, chosen by you,will become your personalphysician. He or she will coor¬dinate all your care: medical,hospital and health educationservices.And you will have another bigplus--the Blue Cross and BlueShield card for your use whenentering a hospital and whentravelling outside the HMO Il¬linois* service area. It is ac¬cepted by hospitals and doc¬tors all across the country. Very probably a number ofyour fellow-workers aremembers of HAP through theHyde Park-Kenwood Com¬munity Health Center. Talk tothem about the Center'smedical group. About the per¬sonal touch that makes ourservices exceptional. Wethink you'll hear a lot of goodreasons for deciding on thecomplete care that's yours atHyde Park-Kenwood throughthe Health Assurance Plan.* HMO Illinois. Inc. is a Federally Qualifiedhealth maintenance organization whichunderwrites the Health Assurance Plan(HAP) offered by 51 facilities throughoutIllinois.HYDE PARK-KENWOOD COMMUNITY HEALTH CENTER1515 East 52nd Place, Chicago, II. 60615I