PHMMMNBMMMMI Striking Out FeaturesArt for Arthur Sakepage five 2 Famous Chicago ArchitectscenterspreadThe Chicago MaroonVolume 92, No. 34 The University of Chicago ©Copyright 1983 The Chicago Maroon Tuesday, February 8, 1983Aldermanic candidatesdebate at 5th Ward forumBy Cliff GrammichLast Thursday, the eight candi¬dates for 5th Ward Alderman —Josie Childs, Lindbergh Norris, 7thWard Alderman Joseph Bertrand,Robert Moon, incumbent Aider-man Larry Bloom, Richard Le-Vert, Frank Bacon, and ElliotMatthews — met in a forum at theH-yde Park Union Church. Eachcandidate made an opening state¬ment, then responded to eightquestions selected from those sub¬mitted by members of the audi¬ence. All candidates issued a clos¬ing statement at the end of theforum.Childs, in her opening statement,stressed her involvement in all ofthe communities of the 5th Wardthrough “years of religious, civic,and political involvement.” Childssaid that she was an independentand that she believed that shecould better represent the entireward that Bloom could.Norris prefaced his opening re¬marks by telling of his experiencein the ward as a businessman inthe South Shore neighborhood. Hesaid that the 5th Ward needs jobsand said that there are now only 60patronage jobs in the 5th Ward. Healso said that media reports indi¬cate that 20 percent of all city jobsare held by residents of the 11th,18th, 19th, and 23rd wards. (Thosefigures were presented by MayorJane Byrne while attacking alliesof Richard Daley. These wards aresuspecuted Daley strongholds.Daley supprters denied the accusa¬tions in 1980 and 1983, and haveasked the mayor for evidence ofher statements.) Norris blastedBertrand and Bloom for not bring¬ing more of these jobs to their con¬stituencies. He promised to bringmore city jobs to the 5th Ward ifelected. In his opening statement, Ber¬trand mentioned his opposition tothe ward re-map. He said that hewould have favored a redistrictingplan which would have placedHyde Park and Kenwood in the 5thWard and Woodlawn and SouthShore in the 7th Ward. However, hesaid he is the candidate most ableto serve both communities. As evi¬dence, he mentioned his SouthShore residence, his ranking of13th among 50 alderman by the In¬dependent Voters of Illinois-Independent Precinct Organiza¬tion, (a political group powerful inHyde Park), and his ability to workwith the Regular Democratic Or¬ganization, as demonstrated by hiswork as 7th Ward Committeeman.He said that the 5th and 7th wardsneed black aldermen for adequaterepresentation, but race should notbe the only criterion for judgingthe candidates.Moon, in his opening statement,told of a “crisis” that the city, na¬tion, and world are undergoing. Hesaid that the biggest threat facingcities is nuclear obliteration. As al¬derman, Moon said he would workto bring education into the commu¬nity by working with everymember of the community. Hesaid the two most important goalsto work for in the community weresufficient income for all residentsand the right to life from concep¬tion to death.Bloom made his case for re-elec¬tion in his opening remarks by re¬ferring to his record. He noted sev¬eral accomplishments of hisaldermanic tenure. In answeringcriticisms of under-employment inthe 5th Ward, Bloom said he worksfor employment for all, and notjust those politically favorable tohim. Bloom also said he obtainedcity services for his ward as goodPHOTO BY ARA JELALIANFifth Ward aldermanic candidates at forum: (from left to right)Elliott Matthews, Frank Bacon, Richard Julius LeVert, LarryBloom, David Axelrod (Tribune political writer and debate mo-deratore), Joseph Bertrand, Lindbergh Norris, Josie Childs,Robert Moon. as, if not better, than servicesother wards received.In his opening statement, LeVertpromised to work for “representa¬tion for all in the political arena.”He vowed to work with all politicalorganizations within the 5th Wardto employ the ward’s residents andhe vowed to “utilize all resources”of the ward to guarantee each resi¬dent a higher standard of living.He further pledged to avoid furtheralienation of mayoral administra¬tions, and to use his skills as an en¬gineer to map revamping of the71st St. business district in SouthShore.Continued on page four Robie House, at 58th St. and Woodlawn Ave.. was designed byFrank Lloyd Wright and is considered a national landmark. Formore on Wright and Mies van der Rohe, another famous archi¬tect, turn to the centerspread.Administrators testify at aid hearingBy William Rauchand Jeff TaylorThe National Commission onStudent Financial Assistance Sub¬committee on Sources of Fundsmet all day yesterday in Ida NoyesLibrary, addressing the question ofthe effect of Federal aid programson students “access and choice.”Dean of Students Charles D.O’Connell and Dean of College Ad¬missions and Financial Aid DanHall testified before the Commis¬sion.The Commission was created bythe 1980 Higher Education Amend¬ments to propose guidelines forCongress in forming student aidprograms. The Commission willhold a series of public hearings oneducational issues before submit¬ting its final report in July.In a report prepared for theCommission, John Lee, director ofthe Division of Human Resourcesat the Applied Systems Institute,Inc., said the aid “participationrate” for students aged 18-24 wasincreased in the period 1974-81. Therate increases were higher for stu¬dents over 24. According to the re¬port, the participation rate for stu¬dents dependent on familiesearning under $7500 “fell moresharply than any other incomegroup.” Athough enrollment forblacks was up, the participationrate for whites was higher, the re¬port said. Lee said enrollmentamong women has gone up since1974, while enrollment among men“was roughly the same as it was in1974.”Lee said “the probability of thelowest income students receivingan award has not changed appreci¬ably since 1974. Higher incomegroups, however, showed an in¬creased probability of receiving anaward.” The size of the award low-income students would probablyreceive was smaller in 1981 than in1974, but students in income brack¬ets over $12,500 stood a betterchance of getting a larger award in1981 than they would have receivedin 1974. While black students were morelikely to receive awards in 1981than white students were, “the pro¬portion aided among white stu¬dents increased at a rate 5.5 timesthe increases for blacks,” the re¬port said. Blacks “were more like¬ly to receive a small award in 1981than they were in 1974.” while theopposite was true for whites.Women had a greater share of stu¬dent aid in 1981 than men did, thereport said.Lee said that “the impact of in¬creasing aid on student access isdifficult to interpret. Participationrates of dependent studentsdropped overall between 1969 and1974. That trend was reversed be¬tween 1974 and 1981. Much of the decline from 1969 to 1974 can be at¬tributed to the decline in the partic¬ipation rates of males following theend of the draft. The continuing de¬cline in the participation rate oflow income students may be attri¬buted to the erosion of awardsgoing to the lowest income popula¬tion, while awards to every otherincome group increased.”Lee said that aid “possibly” af¬fects a student’s choice of schools.“The relationship between pat¬terns of enrollment in public andprivate institutions and the chang¬ing availability of aid reported inthe data suggest that aid influ¬ences choice,” he said.Continued on page eightU of C to host nat’lstudent conferenceBy Guy WardThe fifth annual American Asso¬ciation of University Students(AAUS) conference, scheduled forApr. 6-10 on campus, will be high¬lighted by workshops and lecturesto focus on student related issues.Over 200 delegates from the 61member schools w ill participate.AAUS assistant director MarkSchneider sees the conference as a“student think tank.” “We encour¬age and try to improve student ac¬tivities on school campuses,” hesaid.In its first four years, the confer¬ence has been on the east coast atIvy League schools. This year'smove to Chicago will make it easi¬er for delegates from the Midwestand West to attend. The AAUS ex¬ecutive committee selected U of Cbecause of its central geographicalposition and because of theschool’s response to the bid ques-tionaire which was sent to eachmember school last fall. Schneiderstated, “They sent us a wonderfuleight-page reply which indicated student and administrative sup¬port for the conference.”Responsible for that reply is SGvice president Joe Walsh. After at¬tending a regional .AAUS confer¬ence last year, he discussed thepossibility of bringing the confer¬ence to the U of C with them SGpresident Clarke Campbell. “He(Campbell) did the pre-footworkand we carried on with it this yearwith a formal proposal. I am veryhappy we got selected.” Walshsaid.Walsh now has the job of organiz¬ing the four-day event. He willmeet Friday with AAUS directorJeff Katz to set the details. Walshhas already reserved Mandel Hallfor one night, and now must findsuitable speakers to address dele¬gates. Possibilities include Univer¬sity President Hanna Gray and na¬tional and local political figures.The delegates must also have hous¬ing while they are on campus.Walsh hopes many can stay withstudents in the dorms.Continued on page eightWHOLE WHEAT $1.09CHINESE NEW YEAR!SUPERIORSOYSAUCE8 OZ.BAMBOOSHOOTSKOON CHUNHOISIN-BEAN-PLUMSAUCESCHEESE Of THE WEEK SPECIAL1 LB./REG. $3.98 LB.IARLSBERGSWISS2V* OZ. TINLIBBY'S SLICEDPEACHES46 OZ.HAWAIIANPUNCH8 OZ.WISHBONEORESSING7 OZ. RED CROSS 0 /AflpSPAGHEni VoJfIE SHORESVERNONBut Once’ INTERESTED IN A CAREER INPRIVATE SCHOOL TEACHING?Carolyn Burk of Independent Educational Serviceswill be visiting the campus on Wednesday, February 16to interview students.Education courses, practice teaching and certificationare not necessarily pre-requisites.IES is a non-profit teacher placement organization,funded by dues and fees paid by candidates and, inmost cases, by schools.Contact Will Snyder in Career Counseling/Placementfor time, location and individual appointments.THEUNIVERSITYOF CHICAGOOrganization ofBlack StudentsPresents Its Annual Choir ConcertFeaturing:* Northwestern Community Choral Ensemble* Operation PUSH Choir* Trinity UCC Sanctuary Choir* Voices in Jubilation* Rosalyn Pickens - SoloistA free eventAin't that good news . . .Friday, 7:30 p.m.February 11, 1983Rockefeller Memorial Chapel5850 South Woodlawn AvenueFinanced by SGFCthe Chicago Federalist SocietypresentsCongressmanHENRYHYDE(cosponsor, the Human Life Bill)SPEAKING ONREAGANOMICS, ABORTIONANDTHESTATE OF THE UNIONFriday, Feb. 11, 12:30. Law School Classroom IV ADULTS/STUDENTSSTAY FIT WITHHYDE PARK JEWISH COMMUNITY CENTER1100 E. Hyde Park Blvd.DANCE AEROBICS—Instructor fromJan Surles Productions, Inc.A.M. Mon/Wed/FriBeginning &Advanced.P.M. Tues/ThursBeginning &Advanced.YOGA—Instructor from the HimalayanInstitute. P.M. Thursday.EXERCISE WITH ROSALINDE andBELLY DANCING—Instructor Rosalinde Vorne.P.M. MondayGRADUAL EXERCISE—Instructor Renee Lubell.A.M. Tues/ThursSWIM AT MICHAEL REESE POOLSun/Mon/Tues & Wed P.M.(Learn Scuba Diving)WATCH FOR SPRING DANCECLASSES, JAZZ AND BALLET, *Insturctor from Hubbard St. Dance Co.Classes run 6 weeks. New termbegins February 14. For informationcall Sonya Burns, 268-4600.Do you wantSUMMER EMPLOYMENTHIGHER EXAMINATION SCORESI 1983 SUMMER EMPLOYMENT —Many suggestions and addresses of 154 corporations, 41federal agencies and 19 state governments with openingsfor summer employment or internships. Order nowPublication date February 15,1983$5.00II BASIC TIPS TO IMPROVE YOURSCORE ON THE GRADUATE RECORDEXAMINATION —Proven strategies to increase your score. Many samplequestions from previous exams. 228 pages$5.00III INSIDERS GUIDE TO AN M.B.A.: IM¬PORTANT HINTS ON ADMISSIONPROCEDURES AND THEGRADUATE MANAGEMENT ADMIS¬SION EXAMINATION —This guide will help! It lists schools that accept part-timestudents, C + students, those without accounting and thevery selective ones. 190 pages. Bookstore price will be$9 95$7.00IV BASIC TIPS TO IMPROVE YOUR SCOREON THE LAW SCHOOL ADMISSION TEST(Multistate Bar Examination) —Written by an attorney. Actual questions from past examsMany hints, 144 pages$7.00V HOW TO PREPARE FOR THE MEDICALCOLLEGE ADMISSION TESTS —The best in the field. Don’t take the M C A without thishelp 340 pages$10.00Mail your order to:University Research ServicesDepartment 28P.O. Box 7739Phoenix, Arizona 85011Order by number Enclose cash, money order or acheck (Checks require 14 days additional to clear.(Add $1 00 for postage If you order two or more items,we will pay all mailing chargesSend me items III III IV V (Circle your choice)Price of booksAddress PostageCfty State Zip Total2—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 8, 1983News BriefsWar on carnationsAlthough St. Valentine’s Day is supposedto be a day of love and friendship, an unoffi¬cial war has been declared by one of twohouses selling carnations to be delivered onthat day. In the past, Upper Wallace hasbeen the sole purveyor of carnations (inthree colors), as well as small paper valen¬tine cards and packets of candy. This year,Shorey decided to make some money byselling carnations, listing the meaning ofeach color on its posters and delivering any¬where in Hyde Park instead of just to dormi¬tories. This week, in an attempt to undercutUpper Wallace’s sales, Shorey is selling car¬nations for 99* each, as opposed to its pre¬vious price of $1.25 for the first flower and99* for each flower after that. Upper Wal¬lace’s prices are remaining steady at $1 foreach flower. Those who have already boughtShorey’s flowers will probably not be able toobtain a 26-cent refund.Dwight M. Cochran,78, U of C life trusteeDwight M. Cochran, a life trustee of theUniversity, died Thursday. He was 78.Cochran was president and chief execu¬tive officer of Kern County Land Companyin San Francisco. A native of Lexington, Illi¬nois, he received his BS degree from theUniversity in 1927. Cochran joined White,Weld & Company after graduation thenworked at the First Old Colony Corporation.He joined the Kroger Company in 1931, andwas manufacturing and marketing vicepresident and director of Safeway Stores,Inc. from 1943 to 1956. In 1956, he began hisassociation with Kern County Land Com¬pany.Cochran was the director of the LockheedAircraft Corporation, the United CaliforniaBank, Fireman’s Fund Insurance Company,Montgomery Ward & Co., the J.I. Case Com¬pany Walker Manufacturing Company, andWatkins-Johnson Company. Cochran was also director of the Califor¬nia State Chamber of Commerce, and amember of the Advisory Council of the Uni¬versity of Chicago Graduate School of Busi¬ness.Rudolph to speakon women in IndiaSusanne Rudolph, director of the SouthAsian Language and Area Center and pro¬fessor of political science, will speak tonighton “Women at Court and Noble Houses inPrincely India’’ at 8 p.m. in Harper 284. Ru¬dolph’s talk is part of the Forum for LiberalLearning/Women’s Union seminar series.Readings are on reserve in Regenstein Li¬brary. B-School student’sessay in finalsUniversity of Chicago graduate studentDavid Glenn Muller is one of six finalists ina nationwide contest for the best studentpaper on international business, the Insti¬tute of International Education (HE) hasannounced. Muller’s paper on “The Devel¬oping Countries and the Unification of Inter¬national Sales Law” is entered in the Stu¬dent Conference on International Businesssponsored by HE for the Chicago WorldTrade Conference Award. The winningpaper will be discussed as part of the confer¬ence on April 18-19 in Chicago.Talk on Poland 1983A talk on “Poland 1983: Totalitarian Re¬pression Versus Human Rights” will begiven tonight by Kazimierz Lukomski of thePolish American Conference in the I-HouseHome Room. Lukomski’s talk is part of theI-House Speaker Series.Volunteers neededfor Jewish appealThe University of Chicago United JewishAppeal-Jewish United Fund (UJA-JUF)Campus Campaign is looking for volunteersto help plan and run this year’s campaign.UJA-JUF is a social welfare organizationwhich seeks to help Jewish communitiesthroughout the world. Contributions to theorganization go strictly towards social wel¬fare agencies, including hospitals, old agehomes, schools, training centers and to im¬migrant absorption centers in both the USand Israel.Last year’s student campaign at the U ofC raised $11,000. The goal for 1983 is$14,000.Funds help recipients in the US, Israel, and throughout the world, including Sovietemigres, families in Eastern Europe, andJews in Arab countries and North Africa.Beneficiaries in the Chicago area includethe Council for Jewish Elderly and MichaelReese Hospital, among many others.Students are needed to help out with solic¬iting, planning for receptions and lectures,and general office work. For more informa¬tion or to volunteer, call David Blaszkowskyat 493-7651.Israel-Diasporarelations symposiumII an Halperin of the Israel Aliy ah Centerand Daniel Leifer, rabbi at the U of C HillelFoundation, will discuss Israel-Diaspora re¬lations Wedensday at 7:30 p.m., at Hillel,5715 S. Woodlawn.The symposium, sponsored by U of C Stu¬dents for Israel, is free and open to the pub¬lic.Cantor on Hamlet“Hamlet: The Cosmopolitan Prince” isthe title of Wednesday’s Collegiate Lecturein the Liberal Arts, to be given by Paul Can¬tor, associate professor of English at theUniversity of Virginia. The lecture will beheld in Swift Lecture Hall at 8 p.m. with dis¬cussion to follow.Extracurricularprizes awardedMark Bauer and Joan M. Spoerl have wonMorton Murphy Prizes for Fall Quarter 1982in recognition of their “outstanding leader¬ship in some area of the extracurriculum.”Bauer was honored for his contributions onthe Major Activities Board, Student SchoolsCommittee, Inter-fraternity Council, andCollege Orientation. Spoerl was honored forcontributions to the Circle K, Student Gov¬ernment Election and Rules Committee,and Calvert House Ministry Group.NZs&SrsV/r0i Sreurt. (wtsf Sp*.■pAVJLl)tKUMfK,/vyWDrt Hall11 8From the School of Music &Program of African Studies atNorthwestern Performingthe Music of Zimbabwe andBeyond.Tickets will be available Exclusively for students - 2/14, 2/152 tickets per UCID; General sales will be made from2/16 to time of concert at Reynolds Club Box Office$5 UCID - $15 other.The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 8, 1983—3News5th Ward Aldermanic candidatesContinued from page oneBacon opened his comments by sayingthat the theme of his campaign is “change,growth, and expansion.” He said thatchange is needed in the ward’s representa¬tion, and he attacked Bloom for taking cred¬it for Ward improvements. Bacon said thatthese improvements are really a result ofthe city budgets proposed by Byrne.Matthews concluded the round of openingstatements by noting that while the “aider-man is not omnipotent,” he is prepared toserve the ward. As evidence, he noted hisservice as a bodyguard for 8th Ward Aider-man Humes. In that job, Matthews said thathe was exposed to many City Council pro¬ceedings, and as a result he knows how theCity Council operates. Matthews promisedto bring equality of service to the ward.Following tihe statements, the candidateswere asked to state their positions on eightdifferent issues, making comments neededto clarify these positions.Childs said that she was for handgun con¬trol. Norris, noting he is a member of theNational Rifle Association, said he support¬ed some type of control on handgun manu¬facturers. Bertrand voiced his opposition toa prohibition on handguns, saying that whenhandguns are outlawed, criminals will havethe vast majority of guns. Bertrand com¬pared handgun prohibition to the prohibitionof liquor. Moon said that the best type ofhandgun control is spiritual or moral con¬trol, since the problem is spiritual andmoral. Bloom said that he was for handguncontrol, and noted his support for Byrne’shandgun control ordinance introduced to theCity Council. LeVert voice opposition tohandgun control, saying he believes that thepart of society that possesses the majorityof available guns is unemployed, and thattherefore its guns should not be taken awayas a further deprivation. Bacon, noting he isa retired military man, favored some “mid¬dle ground” of handgun control. He said hesupports stricter controls that now exist, butnot total prohibition. Matthews favored a li¬censing program for handgun owners,which would ensure, that only qualified per¬sons use handguns.Norris said that he does not completelyendorse the “Renters’ Bill of Rights,” a CityCouncil proposal favored by mayoral candi¬dates Richard Daley and Harold Washing¬ton. He expressed fears that repairs onbuildings would not meet zoning require¬ments. Norris did express support for a rentcontrol panel. Bertrand expressed supportfor the bill of rights, saying that tenantshave often been shortchanged by landlordsand the city government. Bertrand said hesupports a rent control commission in a mo¬dified form. Moon said that caution must betaken when dealing with such a bill. Bloomsaid that he supports the proposal, since it isneeded. LeVert said he would support a billof rights proposal and some sort of rent con¬ trol. Bacon stated that he would supportsome form of a bill of rights for tenants, buthe said caution should be taken in creatingsuch an ordinance. Norris expressed his.support for tenants’ rights and said he wouldseek some method to uphold tenants’ rights.Childs said she supports the bill of rights.The candidates were asked how theywould control rate hikes for CommonwealthEdison and other utilities. Bertrand statedthat the Council cannot do much about theproblem, but pressure must be put on staterepresentatives to control rate hikes, sincethey would be the most effective group infighting rate increases. Moon advocated theuse of nuclear energy by CommonwealthEdison to control rates. Bloom said that anew mayor is needed in part to combat theproblem, since utility taxes have undergonerapid increases under Byrne. Bloom also fa¬vored the reduction of utility taxes and theimplementation of a citizens’ utility board,as called for in the advisory referendum atthe last November election. LeVert said hewould work for a reduction in city utilitytaxes and work to prevent rate increases.Bacon advocated bills aimed at the develop¬ment of nuclear energy and said that votersshould be careful in tselecting their staterepresentatives and senators, since these of¬ficials hve more of an impact on rate in¬creases through their control of the IllinoisCommerce Commission than city officials.Matthews took a similar stance, saying thatvoters must elect state representatives towork for consumers. Childs spoke for a re¬duction in city utility taxes and pressure onthe ICC to fight rate increases. Norris saidthat the Council should do what is in itspower to fight rate increases and also workwith the General Assembly to preventthem.Concerning the financial condition of theBoard of Education, Moon said that he fa¬vored a partnership between the church, thehome, and the school to educate the child.Moon said this cooperation would help re¬duce the costs of education. Bloom againcalled for a change in the mayor’s officesaying that such a mayor should work withthe state legislature to bring more statefunds for the schools. He attacked themayor’s failure to do this and noted the le¬gislature’s constitutional duty to provide foreducational funding. Bloom also said thatthe “mayor’s office must be taken out of theBoard of Education.” LeVert promised towork to reduce the Board’s administrativestaff and to ask the state legislature formore funds. Bacon said that increased reve¬nue for the Board of Education is a responsi¬bility that lies with the state legislature andthat the mayor could not be blamed for afailure to gain increased revenue. Matthewsvowed to work with the state legislaturemore closely and also said that a new mayoris needed to guide the city’s efforts in work¬ing with the state on this problem. Childs said the revenue for the Board of Educationis primarily the state’s responsibility, butthe Board could help its own cause by eli¬minating waste. Norris said increased reve¬nue for the Board is a responsibility whichlies chiefly with the state, but the mayor’soffice could work to develop a closer rela¬tionship with the state in working for morefunds. Bertrand said an elected schoolboard would be more responsive to citizensand would best work for increased revenuesand in eliminating waste.Each candidate was asked his opinionabout extending the Jackson Park elevatedline to 63rd St and Stony Island Ave. Bloomsaid he supported the mayor’s proposal toextend the el to Dorchester, saying it wouldbe cheaper than extending the line to StonyIsland and that Dorchester Ave. could be aseffective a stop as Stony Island in terms ofconnections with other CTA lines. LeVertsaid as alderman he would work with all inthe community to see what transportationset-up would best suit the community.Bacon said that the el should not go only to63rd and Stony Island, but down Stony Is¬land to 75th and east on 75th to the lake.Matthews said the costs of transportationplans must be considered before their im¬plementation. Childs said the el should ex¬tend to Stony Island to alleviate what shesays are the overcrowded means of trans¬portation in the 5th Ward. Norris favoredthe extension of the el to Stony Island, butsaid that no funds exist for its extensiondown Stony Island, so that such an extensionshould not be done at this time. Bertrand, at¬tacking Bloom for “not understanding SouthShore”, said he favors the extension of the elto Stony Island. Moon favored a plan extend¬ing the el to Stony Island then south on StonyIsland to 95th St.Each candidate was asked to comment onpossible increases in the city’s tax revenue.LeVert said that as alderman he would in¬crease taxes if needed, but only after a thor¬ough review of revenue spending. Bacon ad¬vocated no increase in city taxes unlessabslutely necessary. Matthews said hewould not support increase in city taxes,since a hike would be bad for the city. Childsalso said she would not favor increasedtaxes and also promised that if elected shewould start a citizens’ committee to meetwith her to determine citizens’ opinions onsuch matters. Norris said he advocates aceiling on taxes and would determine whattype of taxes are needed. Bertrand said hewould work for better efficiency and opera¬tion in city government instead of favoringincreased taxes, and if taxes were needed,he would favor taxes on alcohol or tobacco.He noted his record in the Council of beingopposed to most tax increases. Moon op¬posed tax increases since they would givemanufacturing industries incentive to leavethe city. Bloom attacked Byrne for increas¬ing city taxes too much and said that he ad- debatevocated Washington’s program of cuttingwaste from the city budget.Each candidate was also asked about thepresent status of development among 71stSt. in South Shore. Bacon said that he did notknow what the status of the developmentplans were, but he believed that the moniesallocated for such projects are well-spentand that they help eliminate urban blight.Matthews also agreed that such funds arewell-spent. Childs stated that she was notsure of the status of the funds. Norris said hebelieves the development is moving alongsuccessfully, while Bertrand criticized thers-development as “slow-going.” Moon ex¬pressed his opinion that no substantive butonly “cosmetic changes” were being madeon 71st St. Bloom said he believes develop¬ment of 71st Street is speeding along, andhe backed this up by saying that the 5thWard receives more community develop¬ment funds than most other wards do. Le¬Vert also said that community developmentfunds used for 71st St. are used effectively.The final question asked the aldermaniccandidates concerned their choices formayor. Of those candidates who did endorsea mayoral candidate, all endorsed candi¬dates on the Democratic mayoral primaryballot. Matthews endorsed Washington, ashe said Washington is “viable, intelligent,forthright” and will spur blacks to a recordvoter — turnout election day. He also en¬dorsed Washington since “his flesh is thesame as mine.” Childs made no endorse¬ment, saying she would support that candi¬date who would be most beneficial to the 5thWard. Norris also declined to make amayoral endorsement, saying he wouldwork with the mayor who brings jobs to theward. Bertrand endorsed Washington, say¬ing Washington is a “high caliber” candi¬date who will represent all Chicagoans. Ber¬trand said he supports Washington despitehis endorsing Bloom for the 5th Ward seat.Moon endorsed Sheila Jones, saying she wasthe only candidate to deal with the realissues facing the city. Bloom endorsedWashington, saying Washington is “themost qualified candidate” and that he wouldbe beneficial for city government. Bloomalso took pride in Washington’s endorse¬ment of him for the 5th Ward seat. LeVertalso endorsed Washington, and noted his ef¬forts for his campaign. Bacon endorsedByrne, although he mentioned his support ofWashington’s other campaigns. Bacon at¬tacked Washington for inconsistency in hispolitics, saying that while he expected no en¬dorsement from Washington, Washingtonshould have endorsed Childs.In their closing statements, each candi¬date set forth basic themes of his or hercampaign. Childs expressed her support for5th Ward independence, and questionedBloom’s effectiveness in serving the ward,implying that Bloom is seen as a Hyde Parkalderman. Norris said the 5th Ward needs astrong alderman, and he vowed to bring pa¬tronage jobs to the ward. Bertrand said thatHyde Park was no longer in control of the5th Ward. He said that since Hyde Park willalways have strength as a community, thealderman should be a South Shore resident,but also said that the alderman must alsowork closely with Hyde Park residents.Moon said that he had the qualifications toserve on the Council during this time of“crisis” since Chicago faces the threat ofnuclear obliteration and an energy crisis.Bloom again made his case for re-electionby saying he “can still deliver the goods,”and said that he represents all of the ward,saying to have gotten more money for SouthShore than any other neighborhood of theWard. LeVert promised to be “an availablealderman” in dealing with 5th Ward resi¬dents’ needs. Bacon attacked Bloom, sayingthat money for South Shore really camefrom Byrne’s budget, and noting that sevengroups of candidates and supporters feltthat the 5th Ward needed a change. He pro¬mised to give “full citizenship for all” resi¬dents of the 5th Ward. Matthews said that nomore ethnic representation was needed inthe city. He encouraged the crowd to electone of the six black candidates for aider-man, who he believes would be more effec¬tive in representing the black majority pop¬ulation of the ward.Hither and YonHave you ever heard of a fellowship notto write? That may be the first prize in anew competition sponsored by the San Jose(Calif.) State University’s EnglishDepartment. The contest, entitled theBulwar-Lytton Fiction Contest, is designedto discover the writer of the worst openingsentence of a novel, and was inspired bythe first line of 19th-century novellistEdward Bulwar-Lytton’s novel PaulClifford. So far, several hundred entrieshave been received, and the contest’sfounder, English professor Scott Rice,feels that while the prize will most likelybe “consistent with the (English)department’s generosity,” the ideal prizewould be “a fellowship not to write, just asyou give the good writer a fellowship towrite.”* * *What has been termed a “computer andcommunications foulup” between theHospital of the University of Pennsylvaniaand the University of PennsylvaniaStudent Health Service has resulted in anumber of students receiving bills forconfidential tests at their homes. Thecharges for the tests, which includepregnancy and veneral disease tests aswell as drug screens, are usually billed to4—The Chicago'Marbdn—Tue^dk^, ^ebrii&fy 8‘, the Student Health Service. While onestudent received a bill for a test she didnot have, another said “I was annoyedbecause I was under the impression thatthere was no charge.” School officials saidthat they were “terribly upset because wereally believe in preservingconfidentiality.”♦ * *About 10,000 of the 13,500 copies of theUniversity of Alabama’s studentnewspaper, the Crimson White,disappeared from distribution points onJanuary 24, which the editors feel is due toan article it ran accusing one of thecandidates for SG president of having“sold his soul” to the Machine, anexclusive organization which nominatesand supports candidates for SG offices.Sixteen fraternities and eight sororities aremembers of the Machine. The accuser saidthat he had reliable evidence that thecandidate had been vice-president of theMachine, and predicted that the accusedwoul deny the charge. He did.* * *Wheaton College’s security force has anew name: Wheaton College Public Safety.Since students now write parking tickets,1983 the two full-time members of thedepartment and ten officers now constitute“an emergency response team,” with CPRand first-aid training. According to thecollege’s chief of public safety, the namereflects the department’s “growing andchanging duties,” from night watchmen toinvestigator of crimes totalling $32,000 inone semester. While the department stillchecks doors and buildings, they alsorespond to calls ranging from burglaryand fire to indecent exposure.A Northern University chemistrylecturer who arrived late because he wasgrading midterm exams was declared thewinner of NU’s Faculty Pie in the FaceContest. The prize: A well-aimedwhipped-cream pie. The professor was oneof six candidates in the contest, which wasdesigned to raise money for the school’sDance Maraton. Students pledged a pennya vote, and the faculty member with themost votes would receive the pie betweenshowings of “The Return of the PinkPanther” in Tech Auditorium. The studentwho threw the pie had his name drawnfrom a hat, and slowly crept up on theprofessor, pie at ready, as the audiencecheered.Striking Out/ David BrooksArt for Arthur SakeI’m sure you’ve all heard about Capt.Charles B. Johnson, the US Marine in Le¬banon who stopped three Israeli tanks sing-lehandedly. The tanks rumbled up to withina foot of where Johnson was blocking theroad. The driver of the lead tank climbedout and asked, “Excuse me, could you getout of the way so we can drive through?”Johnson grabbed the driver by the throat,shoved a gun in his face, and shouted, “Overmy dead body, buddy!”The driver laughed and drove away.Needless to say, Johnson has become ahero. Commended by Reagan and DeputySecretary of State Kenneth Dam (whoknows machismo when he sees it — re¬member, he worked for Hanna Gray), John¬son has been featured on the front page ofevery American newspaper and has becomea folk hero in Lebanon. That’s the kind ofrecognition that every 100 percent Ameri-I was in the Pub last night when somebodytried to get past me to the Pac-Man game.“Over my dead body, buddy! ” I screamedat him, waving a beer mug in his face. Hewalked away.I strutted up to the bar and the nice guywho works back there asked me if he couldget me a beer.“Over my dead body, buddy!” Iscreamed, waving a few- bucks in his face.Then a pale, dissolute academic pansytype (a sheep in sheep’s clothing) came upto me and tapped me on the shoulder, “Ex¬cuse me, could I introduce myself?” hesaid.He entered the Universityof Chicago with the covetedLeopold and Loeb Scholar¬ship Award.“Over my dead body, buddy!” He didn’twalk away.“My name is Arthur Sake,” said thepansy, “but my friends call me Art.”I’d never seen the guy before in my lifeand I told him so.“Have you ever heard of the phrase, artfor Art Sake?” he asked.I had.“Can 1 ask you what that phrase means toyou?” he asked.“Over my dead body, buddy!” Iscreamed, waving a tortilla chip in hisface“What does that phrase mean to you?” “It means to me what it meant to WaltWhitman: it’s a horrible blasphemy, a badsmelling apostasy.”“I thought you’d say that. I’ve beenwatching you. I would have said the samething at your age. But I’ve gone through atransformation. The story of my transfor¬mation might be of some interest to you.”“Over my dead body, buddy!”He was an All-Americanboy, an eagle scout at ageeight, Altar boy at nine, andpresident of B'nai B'rith ateleven.“I was born an all-American boy. I was aneagle scout at age six, an altar boy at ageeight, and president of B’nai B’rith at ageeleven. I sold Grit newspapers door to doorand graduated valedictorian from my driv¬ing school. I entered the University of Chi¬cago with the coveted Leopold and LoebScholarship award, and after college Iworked in a firm pioneering the interioruses of aluminum siding. I was macho likeyou. A young man in a hurry. A man of ac¬tion. I was out to change the world and tofight for America.“One day, somebody asked me to visit theArt Institute. ‘Over my dead body, buddy!’ Ishouted at him, waving an aluminum sidingpillowcase in his face.“But time wore on, and I got married andsettled down. I got fat. I got pale. I’d stoppedfighting and lost my drive. I was stagnating.Then I stumbled into the Museum of ModernArt and I discovered the Cult of Art. A youngwoman came up to me and offered me a newlife Needless to say, I grabbed at it. Imoved in with a couple of muses to a build¬ing called the Citadel of the Creative Spirit— it’s over on 53rd next to Cardinal Berna-din’s new Catholic cathedral, the Church ofthe Holy Nuclear Freeze.Now I manage the place. It’s a home formodern artists. They stay there for up to 200years. You see, modern artists can’t passfrom this world, never having been in it. Iprovide them with their own phony artworld and meanwhile, we try to rehabilitatethem — to reintroduce them to reality and tomake them people again. In return, theycreate art for me — art for Art Sake.”I looked at him skeptically.“You’re looking at me skeptically. I guessyou don’t believe me. Well, 1 can prove it.Here’s a letter from one of our older inmatesthat I’m supposed to mail.”He handed me a slip of paper, whichread:Dear Theo,My furniture classes are not goingwell. I made a chair last week but de¬cided it only needed two legs, onetwice the length of the other, in orderto suggest the imbalance of man andthe nearness of the fall from grace.The teacher, rancid with bourgeoisideals, gave me an F. He also failedme for my couch, which I made en¬tirely from rubber bands to evoke thefluidity of ecstacy. Please sendmoney.With a handshake,Vincent.“As you can see, the process of rehabilita¬tion is a slow one. Maybe someday you'dlike to do your art in my citadel?”“Over my dead body, buddy!”“Well, the time will come when you’ll de¬teriorate into the world of modern art.You’ll have nothing of substance left to say.All you’ll be able to think about is your medi¬um. When that day comes, I hope you’llcome to us.”“Over my dead body, buddy!” Iscreamed, waving a gun in his face. Thursday, February 10 — Noontime Concert12:15 p.m., Goodspeed Recital HallNancy Simmons, soprano; Nancy Newman, piano.Songs by Schumann and Schubert.Admission is FREEFriday, February 11 — Bruce Tammen, baritone8:00 p.m., Goodspeed Recital HallAccompanied by Kit Bridges, piano.Works by Schumann, Grieg, Faure and Poulenc.Admission FREESaturday and Sunday, February 12 & 13 — I liftInternational String Quartet Workshop *Includes master classes, coaching sessions, open rehearsals, andprivate lessons at part of the Quartet’s 1982-83 Chicago residencycosponsored by Mostly Music, Inc., Chamber Music America, and theAtlantic Richfield Foundation Open to chamber ensembles and soloparticipants Auditors welcome. For information call Barbara Schubert,Director of Instrumental Music at 962-7628Saturday, February 12 — Kuijken Trio8:00 p.m., Mandel HallBarthold Kuijken, baroque flute; Wieland Kuijken. viola da gamba;and Robert Kohnen. harpsichord.Telemann, Trio sonata in a: Marais, Suite in d; J S Bach, Flutesonata in e; Abel, Five pieces in d; Rameau, Deuxieme concert:and Leclair, Trio sonata.Admission is $ 10 (UC students, $6.50). iTickets and information at Department of Music Concert Office f |V^(5845 S Ellis - 962-8068) and at the Mandel Hall Ticket Center962-7300Tickets and information: 962-8068.The University of ChicagoAlumni AssociationpresentsLIFE AFTER GRADUATIONOutward Bound from the ChicagoSchool: Careers for the Futurean informal discussion of careers ineconomics for interested studentsGUESTSThomas AlrichEconomic ConsultantEvans Economics, Inc.Jeanne GoetzFinancial AnalystStandard OilRobert LucasJohn Dewey Distinguished Service Prof.Vice-Chairman,Department of Economics12 noon, Wednesday, February 9, 1983Robie House, 5757 Woodlawn AvenueBring your own lunch (Beverages provided)The Chicagp Maroon—Tuesday, February 8,1983—5By Corey MerkesOn the corner of 58th Street andWoodlawn Avenue lies a horizontallylayered house unlike any building oncampus. The residence, firstcommissioned and inhabited by FrederickRobie in 1906, is one of 11 South Sidehouses erected by America’s best-knownarchitect, Frank Lloyd Wright.Born in Richland Center, Wisconsin, in1869, Wright came to Chicago at the age of18, at which time he immediately found ajob in the architectural offices of J.L.Silsbee. His ambition and initiative,however, soon drove him to the firm ofAdler and Sullivan, Chicago’s finestarchitects at the time, where he spentseven years learning and working under“the master,” Louis Sullivan. By 1893,after the period with Adler and Sullivanhad come to a close, Wright had his firstjob on his own, the Winslow House In RiverForest, Illinois.Wright’s reputation grew instantly asthat house became an attraction. Hisinnovations included everything from culmination of those directional qualitiesin Wright’s design which had been growingsince the 1890’s. Signed Giedion, in Space,Time and Architecture, calls it “the mostfar reaching of his works,” and the onewhich “brought the new Americanarchitecture to Europe in 1911.” Purchasedfor $35,(MX) by Robie, a 17-year-oldmanufacturer, the house is situated were itis so that Mrs. Robie, a graduate of theUniversity, could still enjoy the campusand social life of Hyde Park.The Robies only lived there for two anda half years, however, before it was sold tothe W. Taylor family and then shortlyafter that to Marshall Wilber, who lived inthe house for 15 years. Then in 1926 theChicago Theological Seminary bought thehouse from the Wilbers for $1006,000 andused it variously as a women’s dormitory,a classroom building, a refectory and aconference center until 1957In that year, Webb and Knapp, who hadthe contract as the redeveloper for theRobie House from the southeast, showing the building’s strongly horizontal aspect.using the human scale as a definite basisof measurement to creating flat roofs fordwellings with projectings eaves. His stylewas most notable for his rejection of thehigh, jumbled house and for hisfree-flowing living areas. In addition, heachieved plasticity (connectedness) inseveral unique ways, including carryingthe surface of the ceiling of many of hishouses down the walls to the window tops.Wright opened his own office in Chicago,in the Schiller Building, and soon clientswho had recognized the beauty andsimplicity of the Winslow house began togravitate toward him. Those earlycommissions are now landmarks of tiutAmerican architecture, and include theFrancis Apartments, the Husser andHeller homes, Lexington Terrace, WolffLake Resort, and others.But Robie House, it has been said, is the Hyde Park urban renewal project, boughtRobie House for $102,060 to use asconstruction headquarters. This followed aprotested announcement that the Seminarywould raze the building to provide part ofa site for married students' housing.Fortunately, the Seminary was able toacquire the land just north of Robie Housewhich provided the necessary space.In 1962 Webb and Knapp offered todonate the house to any agency willing toundertake the costly job of restoring andrepairing it. The University accepted thatresponsibility the following year providedthe money for repair would be raised bythose who wanted it preserved.An international eommitte was formedin 1963 to raise $250,000 for the restoration.Within two years $63,000 had teencollected and Taliesin AssociatesArchitects, who had been named as design anarchitects for the restoration in 1964,repaired the roof and added new gasheating electrical wiring before the fundsran out.The house is notable for its strongflowing lines, its overhanging roofs toshade windows and balconies, its indoorrecreation spaces and its free-flowinginterior spaces, all of which forecastedtrends in house design for the next 50years. The house is innovative in almostevery area of architecture, from its use o:controlled lighting to its free-flowingrooms and its curtain-iess windows. Therecently-restored stained-glass windowsthe house feature a design of lines,squares, and triangles accenting the longlines of the house an the sloping lines ofthe roofs as well as presentingabstractions of forms in nature. One otRobie’s original request* was that neithercurtains nor shades were to be used overthe windows ; so originally Wright hadcolored glass sparkling tn geometricpatterns from ail of them.Wright also gave the bouse the sense ofbeing a series of planes in space bvutilizing hovering roofs, projectingbalconies and horizontal limestone sillEach element—roof, wall, andbase—seems to be floating with nothingbetween to hold them apart but one strong]vertical element, the broad chimney massWright once described the house himselby saying, that “it is virtually a one-floorarrangement, raised a low story heightabout the level of the ground. Sleepingrooms are added where necessary inanother story. There is no excavation forthis type, except for heating purposes. T!ground floor provides billiard rooms orplayrooms for children. This plan raisedthe living room well off the ground.”The most striking distinction of RobieHouse is the long, narrow. Roman-sizebrick used which Wright made a specialtrip to St. Louis to order. In addition,Wright designed special furnishings tocoordinate with the architecture. In 1957Robie House was selected by a pnael ofleading architects and art historians asone of two outstanding houses built in theUnited States in this century.Today, after successive residencies bythe Adlai Stevenson Institute forInternational Affairs and the Office ofUniversity Development, the Office ofUniversity Alumni Affairs and theUniversity Alumni Association occupy thehouse. One of the more recent tributescame in April 1964 when the Secretary ofthe Interior presented Robie House with abronze plaque certifying it to be a UnitedStates Registered National HistoricalLandmark, the first such landmark in thecity of Chicago.Concrete GothicTheaterpresentsVKffiFEB. 4, 5, 71 & 128 PMREYNOLDS CLUBFunded by SGFC $3.00 GENERAL$2.50v*/STUDENTIDTICKETS AT THE DOOR6—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 8, 1983 Congratulations to theFall Quarter 1982MORTON-MURPHYAWARD WINNERSJOAN M. SPOERLCircle KSG Election & Rules Comm.Calvert House Ministry Group MARK BAUERMajor Activities BoardStudent Schools Comm.IFC RepresentativeCollege Orientationthe construction materials by using brickplacement and steel beams for decoration.Van der Rohe’s Hyde Park worksinclude the Algonquin Apartments on HydePark Blvd. and the PromontoryApartments on South Shore Drive. ThePromontory Building is a light coloredbrick structure with a glassed-in lobby.The style of the building is not veryremarkable today.One of his later projects, finished in 1965,was the design of the Social ServiceAdministration for the U of C. located at969 East 60th Street. This was the firstbuilding built for the division since itsincorporation in the University. The cost ofthe building ran to $1,060,000; donationsfrom alumni and trustees, as well as fromprivate donors, covered the cost.When the building was designed therewas no regulation that buildings had to beaccessible to wheelchairs. Legand has itthat at the time of the opening of the SSA,van der Rohe, who was then confined to awheelchair, could not enter his ownnd structure facades, insisting that form followfunction, unlike previous designphilosophies. Instead of relying on facadesfor decor, his buildings emphasize thebeauty of construction materials such assteel and glass.Although he built many smallerstructures, van der Rohe made his largestcontribution to architecture in his skyscrapers. His larger buildings use theonce-revolutionary technique ofcantilevered floors, the technique ofsuspending the Boors from a central pointwhich coincided with the structural core ofthe building. In traditional buildings, thickwalls bad to carry their weight andprovide support for the floors.Cantilevereing Internalizes the supportsystem and creates nonload-bearing walls.Walls can then be made entirely ofwindows to create a “curtain of glass.”Besides creating an ambiquity between theindoors and outdoors, such thin wallsmaximize the floor space of a building.These qualities of the cantilevered buildingare valuable in urban architecture;explaining their predominance in theskylines of major cities.From the time of his immigration to theUS until the time of his death, van derRohe built thirty-two buildings in Chicagoalone. Seventeen of those constitute thecampus of the Illinois institute ofTechnology.The campus was his largest and pehapsmost famous work, taking 20 years tocomplete and consisting of a series oflow-lying buildings posed on opposite sidesof a corridor of connecting plazas. Thelight brick and extremely geometricalshapes are reminiscent of urban renewal:in fact, many urban renewal projects weredesigned in a van der Rohe style. All of theBy Laurel M. PoeMies van der Rohe was born in theRhine Providence of Germany in 1886.Although he received no formal training inarchitecture, he learned stone masonryfrom his father. After an apprenticeship toa local builder, van der Rohe moved toBerlin. There he learned the design ofpopular Neo-Classic buildings from variousteachers.Two years later van der Rohe struck outon his own and built his first house. Whileit was critically acclaimed, van der Rohedid not care for it because it was built mthe fashion of the day After drafting aseries of highly original buildings van derRohe became the vanguard of theBerlin-based interntionai designmovement. However, when the Nazi’scame to power and squelched the newmovement, many of Germany’s architectsleft the country.Van der Rohe emmigrated to the US in1938. He was appointed director ofarchitecture at the E. Cooper ArmourInstitute (now the Illinois Institute ofTechnology; in Chicago. He established anarchitectural firm in the city where heworked until his death in 1969.In reaction against the Neo-Classic andGothic styles of architecture that were sopopular in Europe during hisapprenticeship, van der Rohe invented anew style early in his career. Before histime, building support systems weretreated like naked bodies; they had to becovered ih the fashions of the day.Van der Rohe described his building as“skin and bones construction. ” He paredaway all ornamentation and stylizedmost; use of5 oi(either! overadnogstrongf mass,(imself-floorIIT buildings reflect his basic respect forOne of the two Mies van der Rohebuildings at 900-910 North Lake ShoreDrive,building for the tour. Whether this is trueor not, it is certain that he did not attendthe opening.Mies van der Rohe’s construction anddesign has become a much-copied cliche inarchitecture, espcialiy in highriseconstruction. This style is marked by glasslobbies, surrounded by plazas butotherwise exposed to the street, and theuse of steel beams on the exterior of thebuilding. The buildings have no facadesand look the same from ail angles.This style is easily overlooked todaywhen so many buildings are glass andsteel rectangles. However, this was vander Rohe's ingenious solution to a myriadof urban problems, such as maximizingactual space and creating the illusion ofspaciousness within the building.The Social Service Administration building at 969 East 60th StRardTimre->n OUR QUALITYCAN T BE COPIEDCopies The Way You Want Them!• Same Size or Reduced • Colored Papers• 1 or 2 Sided • Card Stocks• Collated or Sorted • Fine Stationery• Plastic Spiral Binding • SVi x 11 or Legal SizeFast, sharp, economical copies .. from anything handwritten, typed, or printed... size for size, or in any reduc¬tion ratio ... on your choice of colored or white bondpaperHARPER COURT COPY CENTER5210 S. HARPER 288 2233 per copyH'/z" x 1 1”20 Lb. White Bond(VOLl ME mscoi NTS)Plus COMPLETECOMMERCIALOFFSETPRINTINGSERVICE PHOTOGRAPHIC & OFFICEFILM MACHINE DEPTPROCESSINGRENTALSBATTERIESRADIOSFRAMES CAMERASPHOTO ALBUMSDARKROOM EQCASSETTE TAPERECORDERSVIDEO TAPEUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOBOOKSTORE970 EAST 58TH ST. 962<7558The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 8, 1983—7NewsAdministrators testify at hearingContinued from page oneLee concluded that aid has little to do withthe increasing enrollment of women andolder students. He said that “low incomestudents did less well in 1981 than they did in1974“ in terms of receiving aid and that theirparticipation rate declined. The participa¬tion rates for other students increased inthat period, Lee said. According to the re¬port, “overall participation rates for privatecolleges have increased relative to publiccolleges, due to the increased availability offederal funds for student assistance.”Dean O’Connell, in a prepared testimony,responded to the findings of Lee's studywhile making his own general comments onfederal aid programs. According to O’Con¬nell, the study was “straining at gnats’’ inmaking distinctions between participationrates of families earning less than $5,999 andthose of families earning between $6000 and$12,500. He said an important point, omittedby Lee, was that “Half the funds in the larg-Student govContinued from page oneThe theme of this year’s conference is Stu¬dent Government. “We will discuss how tomake it more effective, more viable,”Schneider noted. “This will be done throughworkshops, and discussion sections. Thoseschools with very effective SG programswill explain those programs to the asse¬mbly.”The national AAUS will offer the asse¬mbly the raw data from a nationwide SG re¬search project they are working on. The est federal grant program, the Peil Grants,went to students whose family incomes wereunder $9000 a year.”O’Connell said the government has failedto keep pace with inflation in its studentgrant programs, and “the substitution onstudent loans for grants over the past de¬cade...has quite simply limited choice whilecontinuing to guarantee access. We have de¬serted what was once a pluralistic and di¬verse system of loans and fellowship sup¬port for graduate education for a virtualdependence on loans alone.” This trendtends to deter students “who might other¬wise embark on the path to the PhD,” hesaid.O’Connell concluded that the governmentmust begin to take the “long” or “counter¬cyclical” view in designing its aid pro¬grams, and encourage “the most able andthe most motivated” to pursue education inan environment that offers the greatestchallenges.t conferenceAAUS will gather this data from a 17-pagesurvey recently sent to each memberschool. They will put out a book based onthis data in May.Although the theme is Student Govern¬ment, Walsh does not want only SG peopleon the U of C delegation. “We will try tobring people in from other groups includingfraternities and minority groups,” he said.“That way the conference will be more suc¬cessful.”The conference will not limit itself entire¬ly to student government, however. Impor¬tant issues such as financial aid, education¬al programs, and draft registration will alsobe discussed.“I hope that we will be doing something tocontribute to student life on your campus aswell as other campuses.” Schneider said.“It is Chicago’s conference; I hope studentsget enthusiastic and involved.”HYDE PARK UNION CHURCH5600 S. Woodiawn Ave.Church School (all ages) 9:45a.m.Worship Nursery Provided 11:00 a.m.W. Kenneth Williams, MinisterSusan Johnson, Baptist Campus MinisterCome, Worship, Study, Servebract ash the Diaspora-*Vital ^ of %latiOfishlp?A a>i<mposiumfeaturingWr, Hit) Halporin~ Israel JUufih Centofbbtf Mel X Ui jer~iic muWdt)C*d*x, flbriurv 9th«m. Hiifof founoatumS715 VsWUwnSponsored Stuoents jpr Israel' * r i f . ti n if { I1 fc ) 0 > 5 j’8—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 8, 1983 Other speakers also noted the failure offederal aid programs to match inflation in¬creases. President John Porter of EasternMichigan University said costs for attend¬ing colleges and universities have risengreatly during the past two years, while fed¬eral revenue to student aid programs “hasremained virtually unchanged.” In refer¬ence to his own university, he added “ourstudents have had to absorb a ‘real’ dollarcut in assistance of about 40 percent.”Joseph Russo, University of Notre Damedirector of Financial Aid, recommended re¬scinding several aspects of the Higher Edu¬cation Amendments of 1980. “We must nowremove loop holes which allow SEOG andPell recipients to go from one institution toanother forever receiving these funds,” hesaid. To accomplish this, Russo recom¬mended termination of student eligibilityafter a set amount of time.Russo called for “much stricter self sup¬porting guidelines for all undergraduate stu¬dents” and “across the board GSL needs.test on all family income levels.” He alsorecommended that Congress “incorporate aself-help component up front for all federalstudent grant consideration.”Testifying before the Commission wererepresentatives from DePaul University,Boston University, the Chicago Board of Ed¬ucation, the American Council on Educa¬tion, Marquette University, the Illinois StateScholarship Commission and the Federationof Independent Illinois Colleges and Univer¬sities —-Washington to speakon the future of cityCongressman Harold Washington (D-lll.),candidate for the Democratic nominationfor mayor of Chicago, will speak on “TheFuture of Chicago” Thursday at noon.Washington’s talk is part of the U of C Pub¬lic Policy Lecture Series. The two othermajor Democratic mayoral candidates,Jane Byrne and Richard Daley, spoke in theseries last month.The lecture will be held in Breasted hall inthe Oriental Institute, 1155 E. 58th St. Thepublic is invited.IM ScoreboardWomen’s BasketballFull Court Press 32The Fun Girls (by forfeit)Tufts 63Efficient Mockettes 26To be Announced 31Tufts 58The Fun Girls 34Hale 34Snell 27Breckinridge (by forfeit)..Three’s A Crowd 25 Efficient Mockettes 18MedfliesUpper W'allace 10Medflies 14SPAM 24Snell 26Medflies 14Thompson 21Breckinridge 15BradburyThompson 15Men’s BasketballNELC (by forfeit) Scutt BoysSouth Side Jazz 55 Feel Lucky Punk? 49Debonairs 63 Malice 2 38Bishop (by forfeit) Fallers BDodd/Mead 39 Bishop 25Henderson 45 Bradbury 16Pulse 51 N.U.T.S. 43Jenny’s Jets 43 The Rookies 32Res Ipsa Loquitur 35 ...Confederacy of Dexters 33Fishbein (by forfeit) Lower RickertToo Swift 57 Cliff's Divers 41Thompson 43 The Cutting Edge 29Greenwood Celtics 51 Michelson Luxes 22Hitchcock A 54 Breckinridge 38Upper Rickert 41 Dudley 35FIJI 60 FIJI Goon Squad 21Greenwood Celtics 54 The Cutting Edge 16 Phi Delta Theta 42 Tufts 29Salisbury/Vincent 34 Upper Flint 29R-Nobs 59 The Rookies 32HiTops 47 International House 41Confederacy of Dexters 47 Scutt Boys 41Dewey 37 Hale Falcons 32Cliff’s Divers 46 NELC 44Breckinridge 35 Salisbury/Vincent 27Dudley (by forfeit) Upper Flint BThe Cutting Edge (by forfeit) MichelsonFishbein 36 Fallers A 29Henderson 49 Upper Flint 41Dodd/Mead (by forfeit) FIJI Goon SquadFIJI 55 Bradbury 26Hitchcock 63 Upper Rickert 31Pulse 58 The Rookies 52Sports CalendarMen’s Indoor TrackFeb. 10 — DePaul University North CentralCollege, UICC, Elmhurst Col¬lege, Beloit College, 7 p.m., FieldHouse.Men’s BasketballFeb. 10 - at Lake Forest College, 7:30 p.m.American HeartAssociation Women’s BasketballFeb. 9 — North Park College, 7:30 p.m.,Field House.WrestlingFeb. 8 — Valparaiso University, 7 p.m.,Field HouseINTERNATIONAL HOUSESPEAKER SERIES PRESENTSKAZIMIERZ LUKOMSKIVICE-PRESIDENT, POLISH-AMERICANCONGRESS; CHAIRMAN, POLISHAFFAIRS COMMITTEEPOLAND 1983:TOTALITARIAN REPRESSIONVS HUMAN RIGHTSTUESDAY,FEB 87:30 PMHOMEROOMINTERNATIONAL HOUSE1414 EAST 59th ST.SportsWomen edge Coe after losing squeaker to CornellBy Craig RosenbaumThe women’s basketball team managed asplit in a crucial two-game series last week¬end, falling to Cornell 64-63 Friday night anddropping Coe 62-60 Saturday. Both gameswere at the Field House.With two minutes remaining in Saturday’sgame, Beverly Davis connected from 20 feetto put the Maroons ahead 55-54. At the :35second mark, Coe’s Joanie Reynolds con¬verted on a 10 foot jump shot to cut the Chi¬cago lead to 57-56. With : 20 remaining, Chi¬cago’s Karen Walsh was fouled, and wasable to convert on one of her free throws toincrease the Maroon lead to 58-56. AfterWalsh missed her second shot, BeverlyDavis grabbed the rebound and was fouledin the act of shooting. Davis missed both ofher free throws, but Gretchen Gates re¬bounded and was aiso fouled while shooting.Gates converted on both free throws tomake the score 60-56 in favor of thePHOTO BY ZLATKO BATISTICHKaren Walsh drives against Cornell Fri¬day. Maroons.Coe struck back as Kathy McGuire hit afive-foot bank shot to narrow the gap to60-58. With 11 seconds remaining, Julie Gib¬son of Coe fouled Walsh. Walsh made bothfree throws to put the Maroons ahead forgood, 62-58.In the first half, the Maroons jumped off toan 8-2 lead, and held a 34-27 lead at the half.However, in the second half, Coe made itsmove as Lorri Eberhard tied the game 40-40with a shot under the basket at the 14:30mark. Coe then took the lead 42-40 on its nextpossession as Mary Mueth hit on a 15-footjump shot. During the remainder of the half,both teams exchanged leads several times.Gretchen Gates led the Maroons in scor¬ing with 24 points. She also grabbed 17 re¬bounds and shot 61 percent from the field.By John VispoelOn Wednesday the Varsity Track Teamparticipated in a meet against ValparaisoUniversity and North Park College at theHenry Crown Field House. The team turnedin an outstanding performance, outscoringboth Valparaiso and North Park.Against North Park College, members ofthe Varsity Team took first place in allevents except the 60-yard high hurdles andthe 50-meter dash, in which University ofChicago runners placed second and third.The team was led by Curt Schafer who fin¬ished first in the long jump, triple jump, andthe high jump. Aaron Rourke outran hiscompetitors in the mile run and the 1000-yard run, finishing first in both events.Other first place performances wereachieved by Mike Marietti in the shot-put,Pete Juhn in the 400-meter run, Gary Petersin the pole vault, John Seykora in the 600-yard run, Mark giffen in the 800-meter run,Brian Waldman in the 300-yard run, ArtKnight in the 2-mile run, and the 1600-meterrelay team of pete Juhn, Guy Yasko, ReggieMills, and John Seykora. As a team, the Uni¬versity of Chicago track members accumu¬lated 99 points as compared to North Park’s26 points.Compared to that of Valparaiso Universi- Friday night against Cornell, however,the Maroons were not as fortunate. TheMaroons and the Rams played the gametight until midway through the first halfwhen the Maroons experienced offensiveand defensive lapses. They never fully reco¬vered and eventually lost a squeaker.With a split o\^r the weekend, theMaroons are now 6-3 in the conference and10-5 overall. They trail Cornell and Coe byone game in the loss column.The Maroons will play North Park Collegetomorrow night at the Field House at 7:30p.m. Coach Dianne Nestel described NorthPark as a “strong” team. North Park is ledby point guard Becky Johnson, post playerKaren Hansen, and forward Debbie Groot.The game will be broadcast on WHPK(FM 88.3).ty, the University of Chicago performanceswere successful, scoring 66 points to Val¬paraiso’s 63. Curt Schaffer’s performanceswere enough to finish first against Valparai¬so as were the races run by Aaron Rourke,Mark Giffen, and Art Knight. Maroon per¬formances were good enough to finish eitherfirst or second in every event except the 50-meter run and the 300 Yard Run.On Feb. 5, the University of ChicagoTrack Club participated in a triple dualmeet at the University of Wisconsin againstthe University of Minnesota and a toughUniversity of Wisconsin team. The TrackClub gave a strong effort finishing second inoverall points to University of Wisconsin.First place performances were turned in byJeff Braun in the shot put, Gerald Jacksonin the 60-yard dash, Greg Haynie in the HighJump, and the relay team of Jim Brown,Mark Winzenreid, Doug Morris, and JimDocherty in the 2-Mile Run. PHOTO BY BATISTICHWendy Pietrzak takes a shot as Gret¬chen Gates watches.Midwest Conference Standings(Men)Conference OverallNorth Division W LPct. W LPct.Beloit 8 l .889 13 . 4 765Lake Forest 4 4 .500 8 8 .500Ripon 3 5 .375 5 12 287Chicago 3 6 333 7 7 500Lawrence 2 5 .286 6 9 400South DivisionMonmouth 8 1 889 11 5 688Knox 5 4 .556 7 10 .412Carleton 6 5 .545 8 10 .444Coe 5 5 .500 7 11 389Grinnell 3 5 .375 4 11 .267Cornell 2 7 .222 5 12 .287liar Eastfcitcfjen 1654 E. 53rd955-2200We acceptmajor credit cardsMen’s track team tops twoLUTHERAN CAMPUS MINISTRYAugustono Lutheran Church5500 S. Woodlawn Av#.Tues., 5:30 p.m. — Eucharist6:00 p.m. — Pizza Supper ($2/person)/Oiscussion“The Dialogue Between Science and Theology”Denny Clark, Lutheran Campus PastorThurs., 7 :30 a.m. — Morning Prayer and BreakfastPUBLIC POLICYLECTURE SERIESHarold Washington(United States Congressman,Illinois First Congressional District)THE FUTURE OF CHICAGOThursday, February 10, 12:00-1:00Breasted Hall, Oriental Institute1155 East 58th StreetStudents, faculty, and general public are invited. Weekly Luncheon SpecialBeef Fried Rice, Egg Foo Yung,Fried Rice, Soup, & Tea11 am -2:30 pmTues. Sat.I )HOTLINE TRAININGThe U of C Hotline will be conducting a trainingprogram for new staff during spring quarter. If youare a graduate or undergraduate student who isplanning on being here next year and are interestedin finding out more about becoming a member ofour staff, please attend one of the followingmeetings:Wednesday, Feb. 9, Ida Noyes Hall, East LoungeThursday, Feb. 17, 8 p.m., Ida Noyes Hall, LibraryFor further information please call 753-1777 between 7 pm and 11 pm.The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 8. 1983 —9Campus Films Classified AdsDestry Rides Again (George Marshall, 1939)This tragi-comic western was based on MaxBrand’s story of the different hero who final¬ly buckles on his guns. This is the classicversion of a film which has been copied sev¬eral times. Starring James Stewart andMarlene Dietrich. Wed., Feb. 9 at 8:30 p.mLSF $2Touch of Evil (Orson Wells, 1957) CharltonHeston plays a special narcotics investiga¬tor who, along with his newlywed wife(Janet Leigh) wander into a seedy Mexican-American border town to investigate thetown boss’ murder. The two soon fall underthe spell of the town’s corrupt sheriff,played by Orson Wells. Thurs., Feb. 10 at8:30 p.m. LSF. $2.Red Desert (Michelangelo Antonioni, 1964)Thurs., Feb. 10 at 7:30 p.m. I-House. $2.The Paradine Case (Alfred Hitchcock, 1947)Gregory Peck is a talented and promisingbarrister who all but forfeits his marriageand career upon becoming infatuated withenigmatic client Alida Valli, who has beencharged with murdering her husband out oflove for stable-hand Louis Jordan. The le¬cherous judge (Charles Laughton) in turnlusts after Peck’s wife, Ann Todd. Tues.,Feb. 8 at 8 p.m. Doc. $2.Lilith (Robert Rossen, 1964) This is the storyof an idealistic war-veteran (WarrenBeatty) who falls in love with a dementedbeauty in the posh mental hospital for whichhe works as an occupational therapist. Al¬though seemingly an angel of love, Jean Se-berg is the spell-weaving, nymphomaniacal,bisexual witch who destroys all who comeunder her control. Wed., Feb. 9 at 8 p.m.Doc. $2.Red Beard (Akira Kurasawa, 1965) Thisfilm is about the moral education of a young physician in the Tokugawa period — from aselfish, insincere young intern to a patientand courageous doctor. His teacher is anolder doctor nicknamed Red Beard whoruns a public clinic populated by victims ofpoverty, neglect, and exhaustion. RedBeard offers them hope as well as medicaltreatment. Thurs., Feb. 10 at 8 p.m. Doc.$2.Not A Love Story is the outstanding filmessay on pornography made by the NationalFilm Board of Canada. Though not attempt¬ing to be an objective view of pornography,the film addresses itstioxious subject withan admirable amount of journalistic integri¬ty. It is at its strongest when interviewingpeople directly involved in the porn industry— strippers, film stars, and peep show girls— and at its weakest when interviewing theso-called experts, who seem incredibly dis¬tanced from their subject. The film provesthat pornography is a dehumanizing form ofentertainment but, disappointingly, merelyassumes that dehumanization in the fantasyland of pornography leads to dehumaniza¬tion of women outside that world. Nor do weget to see interviews with intelligent patronsof pornography explaining why they go toporn films and how it makes them feel.Some of the examples of hard core porno¬graphy, are indeed shocking, and not for theweak of stomach. This film, which has beenattacked by feminists, civil libertarians andpornographers alike, may provoke you tomobilize against pornography or it maymake you never want to see porn again. Re¬gardless, you’ll never be able to walk past arack of porn magazines with that same feel¬ing of apathy again. Hyde Park Theater.-DBCalendarTUESDAYMen's Wrestling: U.C. vs. Valparaiso 7 p.m.HCFHDOC: The Paradine Case 8 p.m. Cobb $1.50I-House: Lecture: Kazimierz Lukomski on “Po¬land 1983: Totalitarian Repression vs. HumanRights’’ 7:30 p.m.Mediaeval and Renaissance Colloquium: Lecture:Mike Nussbaum on "Melville’s Use of Marvell’sPoetry in Billy Budd” 7:30 p.m. Wieboldt 408 $1.50donation.Crossroads: International Cusine-Cooking Demo10 a.m.; Indian Dance 7 p.m.; Chinese 7 D.mWEDNESDAYRockefeller: Service of Holy Communion followedby Breakfast 8 a.m.TM Club: Group meditation 12:30 p.m. INHAerobic Dance: Free classes 5 p.m. INH Call LilyLi 753-2249 for infoBridge Club: Duplicate Bridge Tournament 7 p.m.INHBadminton Club: 7:30 p.m. INH GymCrossroads: English Classes. All levels 2 p.m.; So¬cial Hour 3:30 p.m.; Beg. French 7:30 p.m.; Beg.Arabic 7:30 p.m.; Beg. German 7 p.m.Calvert House: Hunger Concern Group 8 p.m.SAO Noontime Concert: Eddy Mason — Percus¬sionist Reynold’s Club No. Lounge. Free.Women's Basketball: U.C. vs. North Park 7:30p.m. HCFHDOC: Lilith 8 p.m. Cobb $1.50LSF: Destry Rides Again 8:30 p.m. Law Sch. Aud.$2Biochem. Dept.: Seminar: Dr. Alexander Rich on“The Biological Roles of Left Handed zDNA” 4p.m. CLSC 101U.C. Democrats: meeting 7 p.m. INHEducation & Career Int. Resource Conf.: Meeting 7:15 p.m. Reynold's Club 201Collegiate Lectures in the Liberal Arts: Paul Can¬tor on “Hamlet: The Cosmopolitan Prince” 8 p.m.3rd FI. SwiftAlumni Aaso.: Life After Graduation: RobertLucas, Thomas Alrich, and Jeanne Goetz on “Ou¬tward Bound from the Chicago School: Careers forthe Future” 12 p.m. Robie HouseHillel: Symposium: Ilan Halperin and RabbiLeifer “Israel and the Diaspora: What kind of Re¬lationship?” 7:30 p.m.THURSDAYRockefeller Chapel: Choral Vesper Service 5:15p.m.; Chancel Choir Rehearsal 5:45 p.m.Christian Science Organization: Meeting 7 p.m.INHBrent House: Episcopal Eucharist 12 p.m. BondChapelU.C. Judo Club: Practice 6 p.m. BartlettCalvert House: Prayer Group 8 p.m.Women’s Basketball: U.C. vs. Valparaiso 7:30p.m. HCFHDOC: Double Suicide 8 p.m. Cobb $2LSF: Captain Horatio Hornblower 8:30 p.m. LawSchool $2Talking Pictures: Bob, Carol, Ted & Alice 7:30p.m. I-House $2. Free Popcorn!Noontime Concert: Nancy Simmons, soprano;Nancy Newman, piano. Songs by Schubert andSchumann. 12:15 p.m. Goodspeed Hall. Free.Physics Dept.: Colloquium: Curtis G. Callan on“Magnetic Monopoles and Protein Decay: HiddenConnections”4:30 p.m. Eck. 133Hillel: Faculty Lunch: Emanuel Zippori on “Polit¬ical Democracy and the West Bank” 12 p.m. $3.U. of C. Apple Users Group: First meeting, 8:00p.m., Ida Noyes Hall. Call Walter Reinhaus(752-8486) for more information.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 WuDunnEditorAnna FeldmanManaging EditorJeffrey TaylorNews EditorWilliam RauchNews Editor Margo HablutzelFeatures EditorCliff GrammichSports EditorDavid BrooksViewpoints EditorAra JelalianPhotography Editor Nadine McGannGrey City Journal EditorKeith FlemingChicago Literary ReviewEditorPaul O’DonnellChicago Literary ReviewEditorSteve ShandorCopy Editor Wally DabrowskiProduction ManagerSteve BrittBusiness ManagerJay McKenzieAdvertising ManagerBrian CloseOffice ManagerStaff: Edward Achuck, Mark Bauer, Dan Breslau, Jeanne Chapman, John Collins,Kahane Corn, Purnima Dubey, Maeve Dwyer, Tom Elden, Pat Finegan, CarenGauvreau, Eric Goodheart, Elisse Gottlieb, Jesse Halvorsen, Joe Holtz, Keith Hor¬vath, Jim Jozefowicz, Mark Kramer, Linda Lee, Kathleen Lindenberger, Jane Look,Frank Luby, Nick Lynn, Bill Mudge, Jack Ponomarev, Amy Richmond, Craig Rosen¬baum, Yousef Sayeed, Koyin Shih, Nick Varsam, John Vispoel, Guy Ward, GeorgeWoodbury, Andy Wrobel, Kittie Wyne. CLASSIFIEDADVERTISINGClassified advertising in the Chicago Maroon is$2 for the first line and $1 for each additionalline. Lines are 45 characters long INCLUDINGspaces and punctuation. Special headings are20 character lines at $2 per line. Ads are not ac¬cepted over the phone, and they must be paidin advance. Submit all ads in person or by mailto The Chicago Maroon, 1212 E. 59th St.,Chicago, III. 60637 ATTN: Classified Ads. Ouroffice is in Ida Noyes Rm. 304. Deadlines:Wednesday noon for the Friday issue, Fridaynoon for the Tuesday issue. Absolutely no ex¬ceptions will be made! In case of errors forwhich the Maroon is responsible, adjustmentswill be made or corrections run only if thebusiness office is notified WITHIN ONECALENDAR WEEK of the original publica¬tion. The Maroon is not liable for any errors.SPACE Room in spacious 3rd fir. apt. avail. Mar. 1Near transp., shopping. $132+ dep. 684-8024 7-8pm.Furnished room near campus. $125/mo. 324-0654.APT. FOR RENT - HYDE PARKA tine 1 bedroom apt. in Hyde Park. One Halfblock from all your shopping needs and 4'/2blocks from U of C. Rent $360 + up. Call forstudent + senior citizen discouns. 52nd +Woodlawn. For inspection call 643-6428 or 493-2525.5114 BlackstoneLarge 2 bedroom apt. I'/a baths. $500. Call MikeMisura 268-3384 or Parker-Holsman Co. 493-2525.APT FOR RENT6101 S. GreenwoodOne months rent will move you in. No securitydeposit required. Best credit application willbe accepted. Call 731-0303, 8am-8pm or 493-2525.2 rooms, w/lots of restored wood plus Balconykit, walk-in closet. 58th & Blackstone. Non-smokers. 684-7248 after 4 p.m.1745 E. 55th St. 4 room 1 bedroom$400 month Call Andy 363-78575515 Everett #2E 4 room 1 bedroom$400 month Call Carl 684-89005519 Everett #3N 3Vi room 1 bedroom$350 month Call Carl 684-89005525 E verett #2W 5 room 2 bedroom$475 month Call Carl 684-89005529 E verett 03W 4 room 1 bedroom$375 month Call Carl 684 89003 bedrooms condominiums for sale 55th streetand Everett. Call 357-7926 evenings 979-6091days.Looking for housing? Check InternationalHouse, for grad, students and for scholarsvisiting Chicago. 753-2270, 2280.Clean quiet building 1 Va & 2'/2 studioapts newlydecorated included all utilities and appliances225.00 to 270.00 mth. 493-6250.GRAFF &CHECK1617 E. 55th St.APARTMENTSFOR RENTLarge2V2,4 & 6 rm.apts.OccupancyBU8-5566 KIMBARK-IN HYDE PARKLimited TimeOnlyThree bedrooms, 2 baths, Vi block from shopp¬ing center, 4 blocks from the U of C. Studentdiscount will be considered. Apartmentavailable immed. Remodeled throughout. $650.Call Parker-Holsman Co. 493-2525CHICAGO BEACH APTS.5001 S. Cornell Ave.One bedroom + studio apts for rent. Manyw/fine view of the lake + skyline. One blockfrom all your shopping needs + within walkingdistance of the U of C campus. Rents are $260for studios and $370 for 1 bedrooms. Rents in¬clude heat + utilities. Call 493-2525 for studentand senior citizen discount. Ask for Mr. War¬dian.Females wanted to share a very nice twobedroom apt located just two blocks from cam¬pus. Call 241-7461.3 BR ranch on 2 lots in completely private set¬ting in Beverely Shores, Ind. 45 min. from U ofC by car or train. Cent, air attached 3 cargarage. Alum, siding. 5 appliances. $67500 CallRenard at Callahan Realty. 219-926-4298.Extra Ige. studio; carpet, appls, heat incl.dinette, kitchen, brt., clean. 57th + Dorch.avail. 3/$; sec. dep. req. $330 mth. 643-1350.IN THE HEARTOF HYDE PARKBeautiful studio apt. for rent. Agent onpremises. 5424 Cornell Ave. 324-1800.SPACE WANTEDNeed an efficiency apt. or furnished room nearUniversity March 1 thru July 31. Have appoint¬ment at Bar Center. Write or call Don Lan-don.Box 10064. Springfield, Mo. 65808. Phone(417) 883-7869.2 bd, 3 blk. to Reg. $410 + heat. Lndry, bale +rear porch. 3 br. condo $650 52 + Dorch. 6434562.AUDITIONSThe WALT DISNEY WORLD Co. (Orlando,Florida) and DISNEYLAND (Anaheim,Californio) will be in CHICAGOauditioning professional dancers (anddancers who sing) and singers (who canmove) for both summer and year-round employment.Wednesday, February 16,198310:00 a.m. - Men2:00 p.m. • WomenCurtis HallFine Arts Building10th Floor410 S. MichiganChicagoPREPARE TWO VOCAL SELECTIONS AND BRING DANCE ATTIRE, ACCOMPANIST PROVIDEDFor further information, coll Talent Booking (305) 824 5478©WALT DISNEY PRODUCTIONSAN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYERTuesday, February 15,198310:00 o.m. - Women2:00 p.m. - Men10—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 8, 1983.3PEOPLE WANTEDPaid subjects needed for experiments onmemory, perception and language processing.Research conducted by students and faculty inthe Committee on Cognition and Communica¬tion, Department of Behavioral SciencesPhone 962-8859.RIGHT HANDED SUBJECTS needed forstudies on brain functions and perception$3/hr.962-8846.OVERSEAS JOBS - Summer/year round.Europe, S. Amer., Australia, Asia. All Fields.$500-51200 monthly. Sightseeing. Free info.Write IJC Box 52 14-5 Corona Del Mar, CA92625Volunteers to help unload vans deliveringdonated foods to the Community Food Pantryin Hyde Park. Call Liz Hollander 373 6780(eve).FOR SALEPASSPORT PHOTOS WHILE YOU WAIT!Model Camera 1342 E 55th 493-6700.51st & Kenwood. For sale by owner, completelyremodeled 1+bdrm condo, eat-in kitchen, gasfireplace, off street parking, sauna & exerciseroom. $49,000. Call Rod 955 4203.TAPE SPECIAL!'.... TDK SAC-90 $2.99MODEL CAMERA 1342 E. 55th.PORTRAITS.... We Do Portraits!!!! MODELCAMERA 493-6700JVCVHSSALE!T-120 Videotape $9.95MODEL CAMERA 1342 E. 55th 593-6700Baby furniture: crib, mattress, chifforobe,bike seat, carseat. stoller. 324-9533.LOVELY STUDENT Car Pontiac Astre '75 std.p/s h/b 58,000m-milky white $1200 753-038810pm.SLIDESPrints from slides 3 for $109!!MODEL CAMERA 1342 E. 55thSERVICESJUDITH TYPES-and has a memory. Phone955-4417.JAMES BONE, EDITOR-TYPIST, 363-0522.PROFESSIONAL TYPING-reasonable rates,684-6882.Exp. Typist Turabian Phd Masters theses.Term papers Rough Drafts. 924-1152.Typing. Term papers, theses, etc. IBM Correcfive Selectric. All projects welcome. 791-1674.Passport photos while you wait. On Campus.Other photo services available. 962-6263.RESUMES TYPESET at LOW RATES byBiggs Press of Hyde Park. Also typesettingand design of flyers, ads, programs, etc. Call268-0289.SCENESWriters workshop PL 2-8377Softball Organizational Meeting on Wednes¬day, February 9, 1983 at 4:00 p.m. in the HenryCrown Field House Classroom.HCS meeting-Wed. Feb. 9 at 7:00 in Ida NoyesAll members must attend.marian realty,inc.REALTORStudio and 1 BedroomApartments Available— Students Welcome —On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-5400 Hyde Park Artisans Valentine Open HouseFebruary 12 12pm-4pm Jewlery Prints Drawings Batik and more. Beautiful Gifts at Sen¬sible pries. 57th + Woodlawn at the UnitarianChurch 12-3 Fri. Sat. 12-4 Sun. 10-1.Tkts. still available for Feb. 15 7:30pm Comedyof Errors$10.50 Rm. 210 Ida Noyes 753-3591.SPRING BREAK VACATIONS! 1) DaytonaDrive for $125. 2) Ft. Lauderdale: Drive for$167. 3) Bahamas: 7 nights Hotel & Airfare for$369. 4) Ski Steamboat, Colo, for $215 incls: 7nights deluxe condo & 5 day lifts. Call Sun &Ski Adventures: 871-1070.PERSONALSHey, Vic—Did you get to see anything besidesyour hotel room?PROGRESS REPORT: Favorite Brother toadd 16th notch to belt tomorrow. Good work,Shrimp.What's gray, not red, and doesn't pay?PIZZAOn Fridays at the Blue Gargoyle. 11:00-2:00pm5655 University. Catty corner from ReynoldsClub.STEP TUTORINGHelp a child feel bright and intelligent.Volunteer to tutor elementary or high schoolstudents for two hours a week. Contact Mike at241-6394 (evenings) for more information.DELAYED MAIL SERVICE$l/letter $5 for 20 send letters along with dateto be mailed to: P.O. Box 53352, Chicago, iL60653.PENTHOUSEAPARTMENT4 BEDROOM 4 BATH COOP ON LAKEMICHIGAN AT 73RD ST. $59,900!Nearly 4400 Square Feet with 3 Outside PatiosFireplace, Sunken Living Room, PrivateElevator, Circular Gallery Entryway. The En¬tire Top Floor!Call Mr. Brinnick 346-1500Sheldon Good + Company RealtorsSWEDISH MASSAGEValentines Day is almost here. A great gift fora loved one, or treat yourself. Certified, licens¬ed masseur with 20 yrs. experience. Appoint¬ments - Great Lake Hot Tubs. Ph. 527-1312 or955-1973. Private tubs available. Gift cer¬tificates! !REDLIGHTSPRODUCTIONSis available to make your next party a Success.DJing, lights, other services available. CallMike Conte at 241-6438 for info and rates.DAWNin the South Atlantic... Suddenly a Harrier flysover and there is the sound of shells. The British Invasion has begun! This is ''The FalklandsWar," not some cheap quickie design, but a detailed simulation of the battle based on top levelBritish sources, including participants in the battie Every plane, ship and troop used by both sidesare in this simulation. Also included: a large threecolor map, over 100 counters, charts, rules andplayers' notes in an attractive bookshelf box. Thefight for the wind-swept islands is on! $14.00 plus$1 for postage and handling to CLOSE SIMULATIONS, P.O. Box 2247, Northbrook, II. 60062.JOIN OUR FEET FEAT!WANTED: Planning Committee Members for1983 HYDE PARK WALK WITH ISRAEL. Formore info call: 268-4600 days, 324-5727 SunThurs. eves.NEED A TYPISTExcellent Work - Reasonable Rates Tel. 536-7167.HOTLINE TRAININGThe U. of C. hotline will be conducting a train¬ing program for new staff members duringspring quarter. If you are a graduate orundergrad, student who is planning on beinghere next year and are interested in finding outmore about becoming a member of our staff,please attend one of the following informationsessions: Feb. 9th Ida Noyes E. Lounge; Feb.17 Ida Noyes Library. For info call 753-1777.ZAP-BANG!!!HOVERTANK — the Newest and Most ExcitingSciencefiction Wargame in Years. Just Out byCLOSE SIMULATIONS. Eight geomorphic maps,over 100 counters, 16 Scenarios for two or moreplayers, based on a clean simultaneous movementsystem. Try combat in the 21 st century: $16.00plus $1 for postage and handling to CLOSESIMULATIONS, P.O. Box 2247, Northbrook, II.60062.FREES E M IN A R ON S PSSXSPSSX is the new extended version of thepopular SPSS statistical package available onthe Amdahl 470 computer. A two-part freeseminar will be offered by the ComputationCenter for those experienced SPSS users whowould like to learn the new system. Theseminar will be held on Tuesday and Thurs¬day, February 9 and 10 in Harper 406, 3:30 -5:00p.m. This seminar is NOT an introduction toSPSS or to data analysis.UN IV. OF ROCHESTERAlumni. Social/Cultural Group. Grad Students8, Faculty welcome. Call Steve Ross 440-5035(days) or Pat Yuzawa 288-8139.FEATURESWRiTERSIf you're one of the regulars or would like to be,come to the Maroon office TONIGHT at 7:30for a meeting and new assignments. If youcan't make it, come to the general meetingSunday at 8:00pm or call and leave your name,phone number, and best times to call. Margo.THETHRILLOF FLYINGWe're a modern Air Force in a modern world.We fly the most sophisticated aircraft avail¬able, and right now we're looking for naviga¬tors—people who can think quick and makedecisionsToday's technology requires a navigator to not onlydirect his aircraft to its destination with pinpoint ac¬curacy, but also to apply strategic and defensive warfareskills.To quality for navigator training you must be:• A college graduate.• 20-26V2 years old.• Physically, mentally, and morallyqualified for an Air Force commission.• US. citizen.For more information about a challenging and rewarding future asas Air Force navigator, call:Andy Stochmal536 S. Clark St. Rm 352Chicago, IL 60605(312) 663-1642 « jYjA qreut way of life Classified AdsPOLAND 1983:Kazimier Lukomski, vice-president of thePolish-American Congress speaks on Totali-arian Representation vs. Human Rights. Tues¬day, 7:30pm, International House, Homeroom,1414 E. 59th Street.HOTLINEDo you ever find you've got something to saybut no one to listen? WHAT EVER THE PRO¬BLEM there is someone to listen to you in con¬fidence at 753-1777 from 7pm-7am.HSC MEMBERSWant to do something new and exciting? Cometo the meeting this Wed. Feb. 9 in Ida NoyesOBS GENERALMEETINGOBS General meeting will be held ThursdayFebruary 14th at 7:30pm in Ida Noyes.FLAMENCOGUITARISTTickets for Carlos Montoya Feb 9 $5 Rm 210IDA NOYES 753-3592.POLARITYBALANCINGTension and blocked energy restrict both yourcreative potential and relaxation. PolarityBalancing, though manipulation and exer¬cises, helps you release blocks in your naturalhealing energies so you may use them more ef¬fectively. Non-sexual. Call Bob Rueter at 324-7530 for information or appointment.BALLET FOLCLORICONACIONAL MEXICO-A breathtaking performance March 6 2pm $11.25, $9.75. $6.75 tktson sale until Feb. 15 Rm 210 Ida Noyes 753-3591.DEMAND-92 VIDEO DATAMANAGEMENT CLASSDemand-92 is an easy-to-use video datamanagement system available on theDECSYSTEM-20 computer. Learn how to useit in a FREE seminar taught by the Computa¬tion Center on Friday, February 11, 3:30 - 5:00p.m. in Harper 406. All are welcome, but aknowledge of rudimentary functions and com¬mands of the DEC-20 is assumed.VALUABLE COUPONPrintsfrom Slides• Kodak, Fuji or 3Mcolor slides• 110. 126 or 135 sizefilm• Get beautiful border¬less printsOffer Expires 2-22-83This coupon must accompany orderThe Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 8, 1983—11Informational MeetingAboutTHE ASHUM PROGRAMWILL BE HELD ON•Wednesday, Feb. 9, 4 PMin Harper 284There will also be a discussion of the new Human Biology concentration,which is designed for College students with a wide range of interests and aparticular interest in the biology of human beings. This undergraduate pro¬gram will focus on the development and function of the human organism, aswell as the nature of the interactions between individuals and their social andcultural environments. All students intrigued by this subject mat¬ter-regardless of their field of interest—are encouraged to attend.Applications available inHarper 587,Fast Tower *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 .i . i i Tii1 PREPARE FORMCAT ★ SAT ★ LSAT * GMAT * GREINTRODUCTION TO LAW SCHOOLGRE PSYCH ★ GRE BIO ★ OCATVAT * MAT * SSAT ★ PSATDAT A ACHIEVEMENTS * ACTTOEFL ★ MSKP ★ NMB 1. 11. 111ECFMG A FLEX ★ VQE ★ RN BDSNDB 1,11* NPB 1 * ESLCPA Hr SPEED READING oFT44111TftfFie»it»«e Progra-r✓i»«! Any Cent*' And See Fo* YourieMWhy We Make The DifferenceSpeed Reeding Course FeaturesF 'ee Demo t —%ct'Ceil *of r>ny9 & GmesAHt 1NGTON HEMJHTS CENTFR202SS AHIINGTON HEIGHTS RCAHARLINGTON HEIGHTS »l *0005(312) 437-6650CHICAGO CEN16H6216 N CLARK STCHICAGO It 60660(312) 764-5151 1 Stanley HKAPLANEDUCATIONALCENTERHIGHLAND PARK CENTfR474 CENTRA, AvFNUEHIGHLAND PARK li 60C35(312) 433-7410l A GRANGE Cf NfrR19 S LA GRANGEt A GRANGE It 60525(312) 352 5840SPRING, SUMMER, FALL. INTENSIVEClasses StartingTHIS MONTH | NEXT MONTH4WK/GMAT.. GRE.ACT MCAT.. DAT SAT 4WK/MCAT.SPEED READING... ESLLou'tes C y updaiedNY Stele Only CALL TOil FREE 86-1ifer« .ri Mich US Citei Puedo f!«.'■> tnO TyoEXPERT MECHANICAL SERVICEFOREIGN & DOMESTIC CARSTUNE-UP • BRAKE JOBS • ELECTRICALSHOCK ABSORBERS • OIL CHANGES • LUBESBATTERIES • MUFFLERS • AIR CONDITIONINGENCLOSED, SECURE, AND REASONABLY PRICEDPARKING FACILITIES — AN ALTERNATIVE TOPARKING ON THE STREETS THIS WINTERHYDE PARK GARAGE5508 SOUTH LAKE PARK • 241 -622010% DISCOUNT ON MECHANICAL WORKWITH THIS COUPONPICK UP & DELIVERY AVAILABLEsingers, groups,dance, performance,mimes, comics, etc.selected single acts will receive $200,groups will receive MOOAUDITION DATE: FEB. 14CALL SAO 753-3592