- grey city journalINTERNATIONAL WOMEN’S DAY:THE BLURBpage three- - grey city journalWOMEN FOR NUCLEAR-FREEENGLANDpage eight -The Chicago MaroonVolume 92, No. 41 The University of Chicago ©Copyright 1983 The Chicago Maroon Friday, March 4, 1983Landlord may force Mediciout after 3-yr lease expiresPHOTO BY ARA JELALIANSign in Staver Booksellers’ window indicating loss oflease. Staver loses leaseBy Margo HablutzelTwo establishments whichhave been Hyde Park institu¬tions for two decades are beingforced to close because theirleases will not be renewed.Medici Pan Pizza on 57thStreet will close when its leaseexpires in three years. PaulKovatchis, who owns all of thebuildings on the north side ofthat block, says that he wantsto “make better” by “puttingsomeone else” in the area.According to Hans Mors-bach, owner of the Medici, Ko¬vatchis recently bought theIHC averts disbandmentBy Guy WardMembers of the Inter-HouseCouncil (IHC) voted down byjust two votes a motion to dis¬band their organization Tues¬day night.A tally of the votes cast byIHC representatives on a mo¬tion to disband appeared in ananonymous notice posted oncampus bulletin boardsWednesday.According to the notice, amajority of representativesvoted to disband and turn overIHC’s responsibilities to IHCofficers and President Gray’sadvisory subcommittee onhousing. But the majority fellshort of a two-thirds margin re¬quired to amend the IHC con¬stitution. The motion failed20-13.“Do you want to know howyour representative voted onthe motion to disband?” the no¬tice asks. “Check it out and seeif your representative’s votereflects the will of your house...if not, perhaps it is time to geta new representative.At an officers’ meetingThursday, President Bruce An¬derson called the notice “inter¬esting” and said, “It justpoints out what the truth is.”Anderson and the other IHC of¬ficers said they did not knowwho was responsible.IHC has debated whether todisband for the past two weeks.On Tuesday, the chair of theadvisory subcommittee, StuartShapira, addressed the asse¬mbly before the final vote. Headvised against immediate dis¬bandment primarily becauseof IHC’s plans to host a MonteCarlo Night this spring. “Peo¬ple are anticipating this MonteCarlo night,” he said, “and itwill be the best damn MonteCarlo night that this universityhas ever seen.”However, Shapira suggestedPublication noticeThis is the last regular issueof The Chicago Maroon andGrey City Journal for WinterQuarter 1983. The Chicago Lit¬erary Review will appear Fri¬day, Mar. 11. Regular publica¬tion of the Maroon will resumenext quarter on Apr. 1. that a proposed Round Tableorganization could eventuallyreplace IHC. The Round Tablewould have only 11 members,and would remedy the prob¬lems of unmanagable size andfactions which plague IHC, heexplained. The new organiza¬tion would also control a bud¬get of $15,000 to finance Inter-House activities.“I couldn’t believe what Iwas hearing,” Anderson saidin response to that amount. Hestill plans to “listen to Sha¬piro’s ideas” but favors IHCover the Round Table. Ander¬son has stated on several occa¬sions that the large size of IHCis not a problem but a blessing.“Democracy has never beeneasy,” he said. “We are theonly truly representativegroup on this campus. Housesthat don’t participate are miss¬ing out. I would think the stu¬dents who aren’t representedwould be upset.”After the motion to disbandIHC failed, Fallers representa¬tive Craig Johnson moved un¬successfully to recall Vice-Presdient Michael Aronson.Johnson cited the negativestatements Aronson made in arecent Maroon article. He alsoobjected to what he describedas Aronson’s propensity to doother people’s work for them.Only five representativesvoted to recall.Aronson has now essentiallyreversed his earlier position onIHC and plans to “give it mybest shot.” He hopes that rep¬resentatives who attendedTuesday’s meeting solely tovote to disband will keep com¬ing in the future. He believesthe shake-up at IHC will help toget members “on the ball.”Anderson says he will still beable to work with Aronson.“I’m going to try to put asidewhat happened,” he said.According to Secretary Rob¬ert Kester, IHC will not slideback to “business as usual”now that the threat is past. “Acommittee was formed to lookinto major charges in the con¬stitution,” he said. ‘‘It’salways possible to improvesomething to make it better.It’s wrong to disband withoutattempting any reforms.” “We really have to decidewhether we want to be an ac¬tivities group or a problemsolving group” Anderson said.“I’m glad to see that the Uni¬versity wants to put money intoactivities. I’m interested inhearing their suggestions.” building housing the Mediciand the Christian ScienceReading Room for “a veryhigh amount,” over the fairmarket price, and the incomedoes not support the cost. Also,Morsbach said, Kovatchisowns the Salonika Restaurantand views the Medici as com¬petition.Kovatchis said that the Medi¬ci pays only $300 rent and hepays all else, but Morsbachsaid that the rent is $325 andthe owners have stopped pay¬ing for heat. Morsbach addedthat he would like to buy thebuilding, but Kovatchis wouldnot agree, and had tried unsuc¬cessfully to terminate the Me¬dici’s lease when he bought thebuilding.Morsbach said that he doesnot want to leave his present lo¬cation, having been there since1962. He will probably reopen ifhe can find a good location,“although it is too early totell.”A few blocks west, StaverBooksellerts is being forced to conduct a liquidation sale be¬cause the landlord, DevereuxBowly, has refused to extendthe lease past Apr. 30. HelaineStaver, the proprietor, saidthat she has no plans to reopenat another location. The book¬store has been on the corner of57th Str. and Kimbark Ave. for19 years, the longest of any re¬tail bookstore in Hyde Park.Last Saturday, Staver wasforced by Bowly to removefrom her window a sign thatshe had posted on Friday after¬noon. The signs reproduced aletter that Bowly had sent toStaver informing her that thelease would not be renewed.Staver said she does not under¬stand why the signs had to beremoved.“I put the signs (now dis¬played inside the bookstore) upso that people would not thinkwe were bankrupt,” she ex¬plained. “When you say ‘liqui¬dation sale’ that’s usually whatpeople think.”Bowly could not be reachedfor comment.University using ‘union-busting’tactics, Lab School teachers sayBy Jeff TaylorIn the latest tack of contractnegotiations that began lastMay, a spokesman for the Uni¬versity of Chicago LaboratorySchool teachers’ union chargedyesterday that University ne¬gotiators, ultimately responsi¬ble to the provost, have em¬ployed “union-busting” tacticsin an attempt to “gain the rightto make decisions without ac¬countability to the faculty.”Former union president EarlBell, saying his comments rep¬resent the sentiments of a ma¬jority of Lab School facultymembers, said the Universi¬ty’s latest package contains anumber of provisions designedto remove faculty participationfrom the administrativeprocess.Assistant Provost MargaretFallers refused to comment onthe charges, saying “it’s myunderstanding that neither side is allowed to talk beforethe negotiations are over.”Bell said the University’snew proposals include elimina¬tion of the Lab Schools’ presentsystem of tenure for those notalready tenured, an increase ofrequired work hours, establish¬ment of a new “supercommit¬tee” to replace departmentalinput into administrative deci¬sions, and what he called an“insubordination clause” thatprohibits teachers from “de¬meaning or disparaging” theschool. The new contract alsooffers a 5.65 percent pay in-crcr'se.Retroactive payments of thisincrease for the period sincenegotiations began are offeredonly if the union ratifies thecontract as it stands If the con¬tract is rejected, the Universi¬ty has threatened to “imposean impasse and begin to imple¬ment policies unilaterally,” inV u £, PHOTO BY ARA JELALIANClass in session at the U of C Laboratory School. addition to eliminating the re¬troactive pay increases, Bellsaid.The University also wantsthe right to assign teachers upto 10 hours per week in lunch¬room and club supervision.Bell said, “changing to thistype of structure will mean asignificant loss of student-teacher contact time.”According to Bell, the “insu¬bordination clause” was imple¬mented because of one teach-er’s criticism ofadministration policy. Theunion has sent a petition to theprovost’s office saying theclause restricts the faculty’sFirst Amendment rights.“This is the first timethey’ve really gone after thewhole ball of wax,” Bell said.“They figure times are hardand it’s a good time to see theschool restructured like theywant it.”The University administra¬tion, Bell said, wants to elimi¬nate current channels for fac¬ulty input because they “takeup too much time,” thoughonly two faculty grievanceshave gone through the admin¬istrative system in the pastthree years.He said some facultymembers will vote for approv¬al of the new contract becausethey are afraid of losing retro¬active pay increases, and theUniversity intends to “split, di¬vide and conquer” on thispoint.“When this contract issigned,” he concluded, “the ex¬isting union ceases to be credi¬ble. This will drive faculty intothe arms of a more confronta¬tional kind of union, like theteamsters.”MAKELATE NIGHTSGREAT NIGHTSATMORRY’SDELIFROM 7:00 PM - 10 PM fHot, jumbo < 59Pastrami sandwiches XHot, jumboRoast beef -| 59sandwiches X PASSOVER* <SEDER WORKSHOPS ■NLearn how to make your own Seder. Learn thehistory and traditions of Passover, the structureand content of the Haggadah. How to set thetable, what ritual foods you need, w'hat kind ofa meal to serve.TWO SESSIONS - EACH A COMPLETE WORKSHOPTaught by Rabbi Daniel I. LeiferWEDNESDAY - MARCH 2 - 8:00 -10:00 P.M.TUESDAY - MARCH 22 - 8:00 -10:00 P.M.Free — No Need to Register — J ust ComeHILLEL HOUSE - 5715WOODLAWN - 752-1127J G.W. OPTICIANS1519 E. 55thTel. 947-9335[yet examined and Contact lentet fitted byregistered Optometrists.Specialists in Quality Eyewear at ReasonablePrices.Lab on premises for fast service - framesreplaced, lenses duplicated and pre¬scriptions filled.I enjoy my contactLenses made byDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometristKimbark Plaza1200 E. 53rd St.493-8372'' / ■ ;Jumbo TurkeysandwichesJumbo ItalianSausage sandwiches 491 09■—JkCORNED Incredible \^0-iCORNED IncredibleBEEF LOVERS BuySPECIAL Save $$$<rMin. purchaselibl/\ANCOME TO MORRY’S• Great Food• Incredible low prices• Fantastic savings• Friendly serviceMORRY’S LATENIGHT SPECIAL“BEST BUY IN TOWN”MORRY’S DELI5500 S. Cornell Prerequisite forCanadian Majors.Molson Golden.That’s Canadian2—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, March 4, 1983 The finest beer brewed and bottled in Canada. Imported by Martlet Importing Co., Inc., Great Neck, N. V. © 1982.News12 to appear onBy Margo HablutzelTwelve groups and soloists from theUniversity of Chicago have been cho¬sen to appear in a new, weekly cableTV show entitled “Coming On!”The show will feature performersfrom 24 universities across the UnitedStates, focusing on the talent at one uni¬versity each week. Other schools in¬clude the University of Southern Cali¬fornia, University of Illinois,Northwestern, Kent State, Texas A&M,and Tulane.The 12 were selected from 30 whotried out Feb. 14. A final tryout for theproducer, Jack Linkletter, will be heldMar. 8, and the show will be taped Mar.9. Everyone from the University is wel¬come to attend the taping.“Coming On!” is similar to Linklet-ter’s show “Hootenanny,” which randuring the 1960s. It is owned by the Dis¬ney Cable Channel, wrhich will be avail¬able to cable companies in 30 states, 16hours every day. The channel wil con¬sist of old and new Disney programs,primarily variety shows.Cindy Kurtz, a staff member at Link-letter Productions, said that the aim of“Coming On!” is to showcase the dif¬ferent schools and their talented stu¬dents. Each episode of “Coming On!”will be hosted by a prominent memberof the university’s community; at theUniversity of Pittsburgh this is DanMarino, a probable first round pro foot¬ball draft pick.“We want to give a sense of theschool in each show,” she said.Kurtz added that Linkletter chose theschools that were approached, basedon his knowledge of their music depart¬ments He focused on larger schools, sothat there would be a larger talent poolto draw from.The University of Chicago groupschosen include the bands Cairo (rock),Gallica (folk), Tensor Tympani(choral), and Dumb Ra (rock). Threepairs were chosen: Sharon Peshkin and Disney Channel.Vince Michael, mimes; Dan Brumbergand Dan Friedrich, who do comic im¬provisation; and Keith Fleming andJamie Graff, jazz piano and poetry.Solists include singers Gordy Wil¬liams and Angela Marie Turner, mod¬ern dancer Chris Earl, and comics CarlDolan and Jeremiah Bosgang. Dolanperforms juggling and balancing, andBosgang does pantomime.The taping will be at 7 p.m. Mar. 9 inReynolds Club. All are invited.Program on CubaThe anti-interventionist groupCAUSE will be sponsoring a programon Cuba this Sunday, at 7:30 p.m. in IdaNoyes Hall. The program will featurecontrasting views on this controversialnation.Pat Gleason, from the Chicago CubaCommittee, will give a slide presenta¬tion, and talk about her experienceswhile traveling in Cuba. Juan Lopez, agraduate student in political science,will comment on Gleason’s presenta¬tion, and give a more critical perspec¬tive.Lopez was born in Cuba, left in 1967,and has been following events thereclosely since then. The Chicago CubaCommittee works to emphasize posi¬tive aspects of Revolutionary Cubawhich it believes are glossed over bythe American press.Woman, girl rapedA woman in her 30s and a 16-year-oldgirl were raped in their bedroom in the5400 block of Everett Ave. during theearly morning hours of Saturday, Feb.19, according to Chicago police.The rapist, who was armed with aknife, entered the bedroom between 4and 6 a.m. through a first-floor windowwhich was closed but not locked, policesaid. He was described as a fat black man aged 30-35, 5’6” tall, with darkcomplexion, bulging eyes and a short,full beard.The two victims were treated and re¬leased from Billings Hospital.The case is under investigation byArea One Violent Crimes detectives.Harper open 24 hrsFollowing the success of last year’sexperiment, Harper Library will beopen 24 hours throughout finals week.Starting Monday, Mar. 14, the librarywill operate under extended hours andwill remain open until Friday, Mar 18at 8 a.m., according to Larry Heller,coordinator of the program.In addition, buses will run nightlyfrom 2 a.m. to 8 a.m. and will follow adifferent route every half hour startingwith the A route. Weiss Coffee Shop willalso be open during the extended li¬brary hours.Half the estimated costs will be fund¬ed by Donald Levine, dean of the Col¬lege. The library was open for 24 hoursduring exam periods of last winter andspring quarters, and “there is sometalk about institutionalizing it,” ac¬cording to Heller. Extended libraryhours were not implemented FallQuarter because of the two day readingperiod.Blood bank fillsfaster this yearDuring January and February. 524units of whole blood were collected atthe University of Chicago Blood Bank,375 more units than collected duringthe same time period last year.A total of 725 people were inter¬viewed. Some were temporarily de¬ferred because of colds, low hemoglo¬bin, or too high or too low bloodpressure.The Blood Bank hopes to double thenumber of units collected last year,from 1422 to at least 3000 this year. Thatmeans attracting 250 donors a month. The University Medical Center usesabout 120 units of blood per day.Residents of the Shoreland helpedgreatly to increase the number ofdonors this year. A highly successfuldrive, sponsored by the ShorelandCouncil netted 135 units. A friendlycompetition between houses brought anenthusiastic response, with Fishbein asthe winning house.Many Shoreland donors wrere first¬time donors. Healthy donors may do¬nate blood every eight weeks.In addition to seeking whole blooddonors, the Blood Bank is looking forapheresis donors, from whom a highconcentration of platelets and whitecells is extracted for leukemia pa¬tients. The platelets have a short lifeand must be transferred to a patientwithin 24 hours.Fifty apheresis donations were madeduring this period. Thirty-eight individ¬uals were pre-screened and theirnames placed on a list of availabledonors. The Blood Bank is trying to ex¬pand its current list of eligible aphere¬sis donors. Ail types are needed, espe¬cially 0- and 0-KOther groups who sponsored blooddrives during January and Februarywere the Seminary Cluster (includingCatholic Theological Seminary, Chica¬go Theological Seminary, McCormick,Meadville Lombard Theological Semi¬nary and Lutheran School of Theolo¬gy), employees of the medical center,the law school, Phi Gamma Delta, andseveral Hyde Park churches.During March the Blood Bank wishesto encourage University employees,students, and community members todonate blood. Any department or orga¬nization wishing to sponsor a blooddrive may contact Gail Borchers, blooddonor recruiter, at 962-6247. Individualsare invited to bring a friend when theydonate.The Blood Bank is located in BillingsHospital, room M-133. For an appoint¬ment, call 962-6247 or 947-7155. Thehours have been extended to 8:30 a.m.to 8 p.m. weekdays, and Saturdays 8a.m. to 3 p.m.PRESENT* ZN CONCERTU.C. Students $3.00 * Others $5.002 tickets per UCID/2 UCID per personTICKETS STILL AVAILABLEUse your Visa or Mastercard - call 962-730QNo photographic or recording equipment 8PMTONIGHT!CLOISTER CLUBIDA NOYESHALLOPENING ACT:HARTSFIELDANDJORDAN,The Chicago Maroon—Friday, March 4, 1983—3News AnalysisSuit may profoundly affect classroom photocopyingBy George WoodburyA lawsuit currently before the Sec¬ond District Court of New York couldhave far-reaching effects on photo¬copying for classroom use, accordingto Sheldon Steinbach, general councilat the American Council on Educa¬tion.The Association of American Pub¬lishers is coordinating the suit on be¬half of nine major publishing houses,including Random House, Macmillan,and Simon and Schuster. The suitcharges New York University (NYU),nine of its professors, and a local copy¬ing service with “unauthorized and un¬lawful reproduction, anthologizing, dis¬tribution, and sale of plaintiff’scopyrighted works.’’ The publishersare asking for an unspecified award ofdamages, and an injunction againstwhat they perceive as illegal photo¬copying.The suit stems from the professors’use of multiple photocopies of a varietyof books in the social sciences and hu¬manities for courses at NYU. CarolRisher, copyright director of the pub¬lishers’ association, argues that theprofessors have been using the worksin anthologies “year after year” with¬out requesting permission from thecopyright holders. Included in the suitare such popular books as The FinalDays by Bob Woodward and Carl Bern¬stein, Jean Renoir by Andre Bazin, andtexts such as Fundamentals of Counsel¬ing and Social Work.At issue is the question of what con¬stitutes “fair use” in the photoduplica¬tion of educational works. The Copy¬right Act of 1976 gives the owner of thecopyright the exclusive right to repro¬ duce and distribute the materials inquestion. However, the act also limitsthese rights to allow “reproduction incopies and phonorecords. . .for pur¬poses such as criticism, comment,news reporting, teaching (includingmultiple copies for classroom use),scholarship, or research. And the actprovides foru standards describing fairuse: the length of the copy, the purposeand character of use, the nature of thework, and the effect onthe marketvalue.The Copyright Act became fully ef¬fective in January of 1978. The publicrecord also includes the 1976 Agree¬ment on Guidelines for ClassroomCopying in Not-for-Profit EducationalInstitutions. The Guidelines defineminimum standards for “fair use,”and were drawn up by the publishingindustry and 38 institutions of highereducation, and thereafter adopted by aCongressional Conference Committeein 1978.Douglas Baird, an assistant profes¬sor in the U of C Law School whoteaches the course on copyright law,explained the significance of the Guide¬lines as sort of a balancing tool for de¬termination of “fair use.” He said, “theguidelines function as a ‘safe haven’explaining what constitutes fair copy¬ing; they form part of the legislativehistory, and are of some import. It isclear that professors teaching in uni¬versities must follow some limits incopying.”The guidelines set forth rules for bothsingle copies for research and multiplecopies for the classroom. While ateacher may make a single copy of achapter, an article, or a short story on *his own without permission, if the use isin conjunction with the class it mustfulfill tests of spontaneity, brevity, andlimited effect. Furthermore, the copiesmust include a notice of copyright.Specific procedures set forth by theGuidelines for multiple copying includerestriction to 250 words for a poem, 2500words for prose, and one chart or dia¬gram per periodical. Furthermore, un¬less the instructor makes the decisionto use the material in a course spontan¬eously, he must receive the permissionof the copyright owner, and perhapspay a royalty. Among the other re¬quirements is the limitation to onecopying per author per class term.Because the suit is pending, the par¬ties from NYU are issuing very littlepublic response to the charges. Accord¬ing to Helen Horowitz, an official of theNYU Press Office, “we cannot say any¬thing because the legal services hereare keeping their views pretty confi¬dential. We will comment only whenthe problem has been worked out.”On the other hand, officials of the As¬sociation of American photoduplica¬tion. Allan Wittman, chairman of theAAP copyright committee, abuses ineducation have been “widespread, fla¬grant, and egregious.” And CarolRisher, the association’s director ofcopyright, defined fair use as “mini¬mal and nonrecurring, isolated photo¬copying.”In order to determine whether theUniversity of Chicago has a policy con¬cerning copying, the Maroon sent re¬porters to the photoduplication depart¬ment at Regenstein Library and theCopy Center. The photoduplication de¬partment essentially follows the provi¬ sions of the 1976 Guidelines forClassroom Copying. According to theUC Library Manual, “requests for ex¬ceptions to this library guideline mustbe referred to the associate director forpublic services who may seek advicefrom the University’s Office of LegalCounsel.”Samuel Golden of the office of legalcounsel said, “we basically tell peopleto follow the law. As far as I know,there has never been a complaintagainst the University for infringementof copyright.”The reporter at the Copy Centerasked if he could make multiple copiesof a workbook for distribution to stu¬dents in precalculus tutorial, a caseclearly prohibited by the 1976 Guide¬lines in the absence of permission. Theemployees merely described the pricesfor such copying, and explained when itcould be performed.Stacy Palmer, a staff writer for theChronicle of Higher Education who hasbeen studying the suit, said that an outof court settlement may be reachedwithin the next several weeks. She citeslawsuits against the American Cyana-mid Corporation and Squibb for relatedcopyright infringements, both of whichhave recently been settled out ofcourt.Several sources in higher educationhave speculated that the publicity gen¬erated by this suit has been one of thepublishers’ aims in encouraging futurecompliance with the minimum stan¬dards. George Burnell, assistant to thepresident of Villanova University, saidthat this suit will “frighten other (insti¬tutions) into reconsidering their proce¬dures.”NewsOmbudsman cites problems insexual harassment investigationhad done so, her department chairmantold her that he would order the regrad¬ing only if she withdrew her complaint.“Confused and upset” by the chai-man’s ultimatum, the report stated,the student went to talk to a former ad¬visor, who referred her to a dean of stu-dets. According to the ombudsman’sreport, “only the timely intervention ofthat dean forced the chairman to orderan unconditional regrading.” Thechairman was also convinced to re¬move a personal friend of the accusedprofessor from the regrading commit¬tee.The Office of the Provost, which is ul¬timately reponsible for sexually haras-ment investigation, intervened. It con¬cluded that, although the accusedprofessor had indeed sexually harassedthe student, he had not graded herexam improperly. The professor, whoadmitted to the harassment was“strongly reprimanded” by the Officeof the Provost and a letter about inci¬dent was placed in the professor’s per¬manent file. At the same time, thegraduate department “redesigned thecurve,” according to Auslander, andthe student’s grade was raised to a“pass.” The department maintainsthat her grade was raised for technicalreasons independent of the harassmentinvestigation.Auslander evaluated that “this caseindicates that the policy may notalways be treated with sufficient re¬spect at the level of an academic deanwhere investigations are normally tobe conducted.” He continued that “theOffice of the Provost...should superviseall investigative process academicdeans until the Provost is satisfied thatthe investigative process is understoodand has been taken serioulsy by all ac-cademic deans.”Continued on page 18Armenian lectureLucy Der Manuelian from Rensel-laer Polytechnic Institute will deliver alecture on “Ani, The Fabled Capital ofArmenia” Friday, Mar. 11. The lecturewill begin at 7:30 p.m. and will be heldin Cochrane-Woods 157.Senator Gary Hart announced todaythat students on 103 campuses in 33states and the District of Columbiahave formed committees to work on be¬half of his presidential candidacy.At a news conference this morning atthe Downtown Hyatt Regency, Joe Wil¬kins, Illinois state coordinator of theFriends of Gary Hart, joined with stu¬dent leaders from throughout Illinois toannounce the formation of Illinois Stu¬dents for Hart.In a statement before students today in Amherst, Massachusetts, at the Uni¬versity of Massachusetts, Hart saidstudents will be a vital art of the grassroots campaign he intends to run.“This campaign will be a vehicle toexplore change, to educate, to engagethe wealth of current and future Ameri¬can talent in the development of alter¬native policies and proposals,” Hartsaid. “I hope to involve students inevery aspect of the campaign and to en¬gage them in the political process.”Hart, 45, started his political involve¬ ment as a student volunteer in John F.Kennedy’s presidential campaign. Heis a strong supporter of federal collegeaid programs and is the author of therecently introduced American DefenseEducation Act.•» In Illinois, students from the Univer¬sity of Illinois-Chicago Circle, North¬western University, and the Universityo{ Chicago joined together to announcethe formation of Chicago Area Studentsfor Hart.4—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, March 4, 1983Chicago students for Hart By Kahane ComThe quarterly report of the Office ofthe Student Ombudsman, issued Feb.25, reported a total of 67 cases for theAutumn Quarter 1982. Mark Auslander,student ombudsman, focused his reporton cases which “either have no easy so¬lution or which point to wider issues inthe University,” including sexualharassment, Billings Hospital Emer¬gency room procedures, and studentemployment.Considered in detail was a formal al¬legation of sexual harassment broughtby a female graduate student against afaculty member. The investigation ofthis case employed, for the first time,the University’s revised sexual harass¬ment policy which was adopted in April1982. The amended policy states that“the academic dean of a college or ofthe appropriate division or school...isthe University official responsible forinvestigating the complaint of sexualharassment.” However, according toAuslander, “the system did not workautomatically and that on several occa¬sions outside intervention was re¬quired.”In this case, the student had refusedthe sexual advances of a professor whowas one of the graders of her compre¬hensive exam. Upon learning that shehad failed, she requested a regradingby a new faculty committee. Consi¬deration of her request was refuseduntil she submitted a formal charge ofsexual harassment. However, once sheorganizePHOTO BY ARA JELALIANAn unpaved path has been beaten across the lawn be¬tween the Varsity Tennis Courts and Ryerson.Keep off the campus grass!A subcommittee of the FacultyCampus Planning Committee asks stu¬dents to “avoid the temptation to takeshortcuts across the lawns, particular¬ly when the ground is soft.” The sub¬committee has become concerned withthe increasing number of paths whichcan be found making their way throughthe quadrangles and has suggested thatfences and signs be erected to protectthe lawns from heavy pedestrian traf¬ fic. The subcommittee advises that“the wire barriers that will be erectedon the specific sites on the centralQuadrangles are not intended to chal¬lenge (students’) athletic abilities, butto serve as a reminder” to keep off thegrass.The purpose of these efforts to keeppeople off the campus lawns is to allowthe soil to become fertile again for thespring grass.NewsSG Assembly discusses quarter system changesBy Maeve DwyerThe main topic of Tuesday night’sStudent Government (SG) meeting wasthe proposed restructuring of the cur¬rent quarter system. Although the As¬sembly did not issue a definitive state¬ment on the proposals of the CollegeCouncil, it voted to have the Chair ofthe Election and Rules Committee, JoeWalsh, and the Chair of the AcademicAffairs Committee, Susan Gallagher,consult on putting some question con¬cerning the proposals on the spring bal¬lot.Gallagher, whose Academic AffairsCommittee has been working with theCommittee of the College Council as aliaison to the student body, delivered areport on the standings of the proposedchanges in the quarter system. TheCollege Committee is composed of 40members and directs matters withinthe College. A steering committee isnow considering ways of reducing thestress level in the College through reor¬ganizing the present system.Before giving her report, Gallaghercautioned the Assembly to “bear inmind” that the “proposals as theystand are just that, proposals.” Theproposals “have a long way to go be¬fore they’re passed,” she said, forthere is still much discussion and“great polarization” among the facul¬ty-The Committee is “concerned with two issues: stress and effective learn¬ing,” Gallagher said. Some facultymembers feel the pressure and inten¬sity of the University of Chicago learn-'ing experience is placing too muchstress on students and causing learningto become “schematic.” The AcademicAffairs Committee is primarily con¬cerned with the question of effectivelearning and whether the present sys¬tem hinders actual learning of materialor forces superficial knowledge of asubject.Gallagher urged the SG Assembly todefine the term “stress’ in its consi¬deration of the effects of stress on stu¬dents.Potential solutions under considera¬tion by the Committee of the CollegeCouncil include a reduction from 10 tonine weeks of instruction in eachquarter. Students would still attendschool for 11 weeks, but which would in¬clude a week-long reading period at theend of each quarter and possibly ashort mid-quarter break.“It is not an amputation, as manypeople see it,” Gallagher explained.Having nine weeks of instructionmeans foregoing three hours of classtime in each course per quarter. Gal¬lagher suggested a possible benefit ofthis solution might be that professorswould be forced to rethink and revisetheir courses to “see what is most im¬portant.”Other proposals include acceptingCanadian pianist to performcabaret concert at Mandei HallThe Renaissance Society, in colla¬boration with the Canadian ConsulateGeneral, is bringing to Chicago Cana¬da’s world famous pianist ElyakimTaussig in his one-man cabaret con¬cert, “My Friend Ludwig.” The perfor¬mance, now in its first US tour, is “myattempt to catch Beethoven in his mostintimate, everyday life,” the founder ofStratford Summer Music says.Unlike most of his concert stage col¬leagues, Taussig enjoys playing bothactor and pianist in the style of a VictorBorge or a P.D.Q. Bach. Following theperformance there will be a cham¬pagne reception to meet the artist.The cabaret concert will appear atMandei Hall, 5706 S. University Avenueat the University of Chicago campusSunday, Mar. 27 at 3 p.m. The receptionto meet Taussig will be held at the Ren¬aissance Society, 5811 S. Ellis immedi¬ately following the performance. Tick¬ets are $20, including the reception.Student tickets, for the performanceonly, are $10. Telephone the box officeat Mandei Hall at 962-7300. Canadian pianist Elyakim TaussigMedical School reject losessuit charging sex discriminationBy Koyin ShihA 47-year old Northbrook woman hasbeen refused further help with her suitagainst the medical schools at U of Cand Northwestern University by the USSupreme Court last Monday. GeraldineCannon had charged both schools withsex discrimination.Cannon applied to the U of C PritzkerSchool of Medicine and NorthwesternUniversity Medical School in 1975 andwas denied admission to both schools.She was a surgical nurse at that time.Both schools said they had rejectedmany other applicants with better aca¬demic records than hers. Joseph Ceith-aml, dean of students and admissionsof the Pritzker said, “We had hundredsof applicants with far better qualifica¬tions. It would have been grossly unfairif we had selected someone like herover someone with better credentials...the courts recognized this.”Cannon’s case received national at¬tention in 1979 when the Supreme Courtfirst ruled that individuals and govern¬ment agencies could sue under the 1972Title IX law that bans sex discrimina¬tion by schools which receive federalfunds. She had won some favorable rul¬ings until Judge Julius J. Hoffman ofthe US District Court here said that “she had failed to charge that any al¬leged discrimination against her wasintentional.” She said only that the un¬iversities’ policies had the effect of dis¬crimination against women becausehistorically, more women interrupttheir higher education to pursue forfamily life.Cannon then wanted to change hersuit to charges that the bias againstwomen was intentional, but the lowercourts refused to allow her to do that.Ceithaml said that Cannon had appliedto other medical schools with lower ac¬ademic ratings that U of C and was stilldenied admission.“We pointed out that she didn’t fulfillour academic criteria. Age and sex hadnothing to do with the admission’s com¬mittee’s decision. Our first greeting (atU of C) is based on academic abilities.”Both universities discourage appli¬cants over the age of 30. Northwesterneven prohibits admission for anyoneover the age of 35 and lacking and ad¬vanced degree. wCannon is presenting working as asurgical nurse at Skokie Valley Com¬munity Hospital. The Supreme Court’s •>decision to refuse her further help hasended her eight-year struggle to entermedical school. ijiore Advanced Placement credit to in¬directly reduce the number of requiredcourses, abolishing Friday afternoonclases to make weekends “longer,”synchronizing exams and papersamong divisions to avoid coincidingtests, and increasing the number ofpass/fail options to encourage diver¬sity in schedules.Reducing the number of requiredcourses or switching to the semestersystem are not considered viable or de¬sirable options by the Council. Therehas been little discussion of “weightingcourses” because of a reluctance to“tamper with the Core,” Gallaghersaid.Following the report, SG PresidentAlan Granger addressed the Assembly,praising the report but questioning thewisdom and feasibility of the Assemblymaking a recommendation on the pro¬posals “at this time.” He said, “Thisproposal is not detailed yet. It maychange before it goes to the CollegeCouncil. We cannot make a recommen¬dation on a proposal we don’t have be¬fore us.”Granger went on to question the cred¬ibility of the Assembly itself as repre¬sentatives of the student body as so fewCollege students participated in theelections which awarded the memberstheir seats. Before yielding the floor toAssembly members, Granger conclud¬ed, “We hold ourselves open to ridiculeif we vote on a proposal at this time.”In the discussion which followed, As¬sembly members expressed concernover “cramming” 10 weeks work intonine. According to Gallagher, the com¬mittee “hasn’t gotten to that point” andhas not yet discussed exactly how thecourses will be restructured. Theoreti¬cally, professors would adjust theircourse outlines so as to need only nineweeks to cover the most pertinent ma¬terial and not try to cover 10 week’sworth of information in nine weeks.Several SG members doubted whether the faculty would actually put thistheory into practice.Questions were also raised on thelack of consideration of switching to se¬mesters or weighting courses. Gal¬lagher said that switching to the semes¬ter system would involve the entireUniversity and would take 10 years anda large expenditure of funds. Weightingcourses would entail a complicated ma¬trix of students deciding how manycredits they want each course to beworth and faculty members devisingdifferent requirements for differentcredit weights.Assembly members wondered howsuccessful a mid-quarter break and ashorter period of instruction would bein reducing stress. As one membercommented, stress at the University ofChicago is a daily phenomenon and notone that can be easily assuaged by oneor two days of holiday. The Assemblydid, however, seem to encourage theidea of a two or more day readingperiod. The administration has alreadynoted the success of last quarter’sreading period.Vice President and Chair of the Elec¬tion and Rules Committee Joe Walsh,proposed that a referendum be addedto the ballot in order to get studentopinion on the issue. Earlier, Gallagherhad said the Dean of the College hasplans for a questionaire to be distribut¬ed to students, and a compromise mo¬tion suggesting that the two chairs con¬sult on posing the questions on theballot was passed by the Assembly.Throughout the discussion, Gal¬lagher emphasized the proposals are“tenuous” and subject to great revi¬sion. Consequently, the Academic Af¬fairs Committee could not “make anyrecommendation because it’s not atthat stage yet.” The Assembly followedthe example of the Academic AffairsCommittee and made no formal recom¬mendation on the proposed changes inthe quarter system.Put the pastin yourfuture!LIVE IN AN HISTORIC LANDMARKThoroughly renovated apartments offer the convenience ofcontemporary living space combined with all the best elementsof vintage design. Park and lakefront provide a natural settingfor affordable elegance with dramatic views.— All new kitchens and appliances — Community room-Wall-to-wall carpeting— Air conditioning— Optional indcxir or outdoorparking — Resident manager— Round-the clock security— Laundry facilities oneach floorStudios, One. Two and Three Bedroom apartments.One Bedroom from $-480 — Two Bedrcxim from $660Rent includes heat. ctx)king gas. and master IV antenna.CfCtoewKie/foMse1642 East 56th Street^In Hyde Park, across the park fromV)e Museum of Science and ItidustryEqual Housing Opportunity Managed bv Metroplex. IncThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, March 4, 1983—5LettersIHC Prez calls for reformTo the editor:During the past three weeks, the pur¬pose and future of IHC have been thetopics of heated debate. The time hascome for political maneuvering, namecalling and innuendo to be set aside,and the reform of this needed organiza¬tion to begin.Over the years, IHC perhaps hasbeen less than totally efficient. But itremains the only student organizationon campus that directly and propor¬tionately represents the residents ofthe University Housing System. It hasbeen suggested that the elevenmember Council of House Presidentstake over the affairs of IHC. Such asuggestion overlooks the fact that, onthe Council of House Presidents, largecomplexes such as Burton-Judson andWoodward Court have only a singlerepresentative, the same as smallerunits like Greenwood or Breckinridge.Disenfranchising students for the sakeof efficiency is not in the best interestsof anyone.Any possible alternatives to IHCwhich would seek to be truly represen¬tative would, of necessity, be large andfall prey to the same criticisms of inef¬ficiency and diffusiveness that havebeen leveled at IHC these past weeks.Representative, democratic govern¬ment has always been somewhat more deliberate and less efficient than small,elitist bodies. But most people, whengiven the choice, would rather have theopen debate of issues and the consensusfor action that representative govern¬ment affords, than the possibility arbi¬trary decisions reached by an howeverbenign elite.Because IHC is the most representa¬tive service organization on campus, itis in all of our interest to preserve itand increase its effectiveness. As withany other democratic organization,IHC is only as good as the representa¬tives elected by the various livingunits, and valid charges have beenraised that some representatives aregiving IHC less than their best efforts.Rather than condemn an organizationwhich exists to give all students a voicein the activities of this diverse campus,is it not more logical to recall those rep¬resentatives who have proven unable torepresent their constituents?All of the residents of the HousingSystem deserve the best possible repre¬sentation and should settle for no less.Any true reform of IHC must start witheach house representative. To destroyIHC because of the ineptness of a fewwould do the entire university commu¬nity a disservice.Bruce D. AndersonPresident of IHC LettersGet involved in Nat’l Student ConferenceTo the,editor:As many of you may know, the Stu¬dent Government is hosting the FifthRational Conference of the AmericanAssociation of University Studentsfrom April 6-10.The purpose of the AAUS includespromoting research and communica¬tion among students as a means of fos¬tering cooperation, spreading of inno¬vative and effective programs, andenhancing students capability of work¬ing with administrators and facultytowards preserving and improving thequality of higher education in Ameri¬ca.The theme of the conference is “Uni¬versity in the 80s.” A series of work¬shops and forums will be presentedconcerning effective and innovativeprograms at the various schools. Therewill also be an array of political and ed¬ucational speakers.You can get involved in a variety ofways. If you would like to host a stu¬dent (250-300 students will be coming),make a suggestion about speaker/s orworkshop/s or generally help the Com¬mittee please contact Cynthia Crooks-Garcia (Snell) or Joe Walsh (Shore-land) or leave a message at the StudentGovernment office. If you would like tobe a delegate, please read on. Our delegation to the conference willconsist of 10-15 people. If interested youshould submit an application includingthe following information: name, ad¬dress, phone number, year and schoolin the University, and a page describ¬ing your interests, involvement withcampus activities etc. — essentially a“Why I should be a delegate” essay.This is open to both undergraduatesand graduate students.Turn the application in at either thestudent activities office or the SG officeby March 30 (Wednesday - first week).There will also probably be an inter¬view as well as part of the applica¬tion.Without re-evaluation of our own pro¬grams going on — the Baker report,the Karl report, College Council rec¬ommendations — communication withother University students can only fur¬ther the success and thoroughness ofour own efforts.All in all, it promises to be an excit¬ing and rewarding four days. Please doget involved.Joe Walsh, co-chairCynthia Crooks-Garcia, co-chairJohn RadkeJoan SpoerlPatricia VidalTimmv Wone Michael AronsonChris GomezLarry HellerWavnp KleinSuffering From....Cluster - Phobia?Computer Terminal Blues?Tired of waiting for a computer terminal?Tired of having 8 people looking over your shoulder whenyou do get one? Tired of getting bumped off a terminaljust before you find the treasure?Why not own your own?For only $599 you can own a ZenithZT-1 Desk Top Terminal.Explore the colassal caves or the depths of SPSS, writeyour dissertation or blast the Klingons in your own livingroom or anywhere you have a telephone jack. And youcan access any of the commerical information servicessuch as CompuServe or Dow Jones.This package includes:•A full size, typewriter-style keyboard,•A 12” green phosphor monitor,•Automatic dial-up and log on,•Memory for 26 phone numbers•Functions as an electric typewriter *As a special introductory offer, for orders,placed before March 9, we will throw ina free subscription to CompuServe, including5 free hours of connect time.For more information or a demonstration,call (evenings)241-6155 (Natalie)548-1755 (Mike)MasterchargeA/isa accepted. 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Ellis Avenue6—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, March 4, 1983The Washington nomination: a goldenBy Jacques MorialThe nomination of CongressmanHarold Washington as the Demoncraticcandidate for mayor is indeed signifi¬cant as news commentators all overtown have told us for the past ten days.Many political pundits, including theMaroon’s David Brooks, (Friday, Feb.25, News Analysis), approach an analy¬sis of the F?b. 22 Democratic Primarywith a erroneous repertoie of assump¬tions. Many of these analysts saw thenomination of Congressman Washing¬ton (or any other black candidate in1983) as an implausible outcome of theelection until vote tallies began to rollin.The closing weeks of the primarycampaign and the post primary flurryof activity demonstrate some of theissues that bind the Washington coali¬tion.The systematic disenfranchisementof tens of thousands of South Sidevoters by the Machine controlled Boardof Election Commissioners only a fewweeks before the primary is a ne¬farious tactic more often employed inthe South, but just as in the notoriousSouth, the voters who had the legitima¬cy of their registration challenged weredisproportionately black. In order tomaintain the cherished constitutionally insured right to vote, a challengedvoter had to make a trip downtown dur¬ing business hours within a few days of,receiving the challenge.The fear peddling and race-baitingemployed by supporters of the Con¬gressman’s opponents genuinely back¬fired in a city where many people maysincerely want to live together inpeace, but unfortunately haven’t beentaught how to by their so-called com¬munity leaders. Many fear the unk¬nown and few political leaders on theSouthwest and Northwest sides, andthe fifth floor of City Hall for that mat¬ter, have done anything to allay the un¬founded fears.The slanderous invective launchedby Police Superintendent RichardBrzocezek less than 18 hours after thepolls had closed against Renault Robin¬son and Howard Saffold (who Mr.Brooks might consider “successfulmiddle class blacks’’) is only one ex¬ample of the divisive and deceptiveantics that have embarrassed Chicagofor decades. Brzecezek’s assertion that“this town ain’t ready for reform” is aneven more offensive affront to the in¬tegrity of all Chicagoans. When, Mr.Brzecezek, will Chicago be ready forreform?To claim unequivocally that the Slack people Mr. Brooks saw at Con¬gressman Washington’s election nightcelebration have more in common withwhite middle class Chicagoans thanless affluent blacks is to deny not onlysome of the more ignonomous pages ofthe campaign and years of machinesubjugation of Chicago’s black commu¬nities but also the vehement oppositionto open housing and intergrated schoolsby many of Chicago’s aldermen, com¬mitteemen and other politicians.Mr. Brooks’ assertion that “In thehearts and minds of successful blacks,Washington’s victory represented thefinal hurdle toward equality. . .” couldnot be farther from the truth. Washing¬ton’s victory is probably one of the firsthurdles, for the race is just beginningin earnest.Racism and sexism are both stillalive and kicking in America and these“successful blacks” are more likely toencounter more sophisticated and frus¬trating forms of racism in America’scorporate world.To hundreds of thousands of Chica¬goans, Congressman Washington willbe more than a politician. His forth¬right approach to the massive prob¬lems facing Chicago will be refreshingto many and disturbing to the old politi¬cal order. It definitely will not be “busi- Viewpointsopportunityness as usual” at City Hall. It is indeedthe dawn of a new era, contrary to Mr.Brooks’ claim. And CongressmanWashington is a saviour of sorts, savingChicago’s black communities from“Plantation Politics” and saving theentire city from cynicism and lies ithad heard so often that many Chica¬goans began to believe them.And though it may not be obvious toMr. Brooks or many others, the nomin¬ation of Congressman Washington is infact the beginning of a shift in a shareof the power from the machine and itsward committeeman to the people whohave been left out for so long.In other major cities that have elect¬ed black mayors, stability and a coop¬erative environment have paved theway for unprecedented development,not chaos and mayhem as some ana¬lysts would have us believe. The nomin¬ation of Harold Washington representsa golden opportunity for Chicago tocast aside ancient prejudices and fearsand step into the second half of thetwentieth century.Jacques Morial, a fourth year studentin the College, has worked in successfulmayoral campaigns in New Orleans,Washington and Chicago.Washington victoryanalysis ‘simplistic’To the editor:Apparently David Brooks has in¬herited his grandfather’s simplisticmisunderstanding of black class rela¬tionships and black consciousness. In¬deed his “analysis” of Harold Wash¬ington’s victory in last Tuesday’sprimary displays a near complete lackof experience of black culture and poli¬tics in general.Few blacks look upon their commu¬nity as a social or political monolith.But the crude social classification that Mr. Brooks proposes is naive and in¬sulting. The monolith is neatly split intwo. There are those of us who can af¬ford at least one Giorgio Armani jacketand a pair of fine two tone shoes andthen there are those who pick up andserve drinks to their more fortunatebrethren — nothing in between andnever the twain shall meet. Well Mr.Brooks it may come as a shock but itsjust not that simple. Let’s not forgetthat racism is an attitude built on triteassumptions about a particular groupregardless of the bigot’s purported po¬litical orientation.Black professionals — educators,lawyers, ministers and, yes, politicians— have been at the front of the civil rights struggle, working with and forthe large black community at leastsince grandfather Brooks discoveredthem in Baltimore. This is not to saythat some blacks have not tried to denytheir heritage once they have achievedfinancial security but they are not typi¬cal as David Brooks’ dichotomizing ofblacks into haves and have-nots im¬plies.It is precisely because Harold Wa-shinton and every successful blackman and woman is black, “is one ofthem” that they share a common bondbased on a continuing struggle to gainaccess to basic civil rights and politicalpower. The educated and successfulblacks that I know (and I would wagerthat my unscientific survey is more re¬liable than Mr. Brooks' night at theMcCormick) would never assume thatthe election of a black mayor in Chica¬go in a three way race is the final hurd¬le toward equality. Still, such anachievement is nothing short of mo¬mentous for black people. It is a sign ofincreasing black power that all sectorsof the black community have worked tobring about.The notion that only black people arequalified to comment on events withinand affecting the black community isabsurd. Nonetheless Mr. Brooks' pre¬sumptuousness is appalling. I suggestthat the next time he decides to com¬ment on a topic of such concern toblacks that a search for the “heartsand minds” not of “successful” blacksbut of black people period might bemore fruitful.Hampton SmithGraduate student inInternational RelationsThe 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 ReviewEditor Wally DabrowskiProduction ManagerSteve BrittBusiness ManagerJay McKenzieAdvertising ManagerBrian CloseOffice ManagerSteve ShandorCopy EditorStaff: Edward Achuck, Zlatko Batistich, Mark Bauer, Dan Breslau, Jeanne Chap¬man, John Collins, Kahane Corn, Purnima Dubey, Maeve Dwyer, Tom Elden, Mi¬chael Elliott, Pat Finegan, Paul Flood, Sue Fortunato, Lisa Frusztajer, CarenGauvreau, Eric Goodheart, Elisse Gottlieb, Jesse Halvorsen, Joe Holtz, Keith Hor¬vath, Jim Jozefowicz, Marc Kramer, Sondra Krueger, Linda Lee, Kathleen Linden-berger, Jane Look, Frank Luby, Nick Lynn, Bill Mudge, Jack Ponomarev, Amy Rich¬mond, Craig Rosenbaum, Yousuf Sayeed, Koyin Shih, Suzanne Sloan, Nick Varsam,John Vispoei, Guy Ward, George Woodbury, Andy Wrobel, Kittie Wyne.Crossroads internationalStudent Center andU.c. Women s unionannounceA PARTY FORINTERNATIONALWOMEN S DAYFRIDAY • MARCH 48 p.m. -12:30 a.m.CROSSROADS5621 S. BlackstoneALL WELCOME!Childcare available 5309 S. Blackstone • 947-0200OUR FAMOUS STUFFED PIZZA IN THE PAN IS NOWAVAILABLE IN HYDE PARKOPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK • 11 AM TO 12 MIDNIGHTCocktails • Pleasant Dining • Pick-Up"Chicago’s best pizza!” — Chicago Magazine, March 1977"The ultimate in pizza!” — Now York Times, January 1980 LettersOpen considerationTo the editor:David Brooks’ “Harold Washington:Not a saviour, just a politician” is adangerously imperceptive and irre¬sponsible commentary. At this time ofmajor social, political, and ideologicalchange in Chicago, the media mustserve as forum for thoughtful evalua¬tion, not glib kneejerk reactions.Mr. Brooks’ description of electionnight suggests that he was actually atBryne’s Ambassador East or Daley’sHyatt Regency affair. We arrived atMcCormick Inn with the IndependentPolitical Organization of the Near Westside, a coalition of working class La¬tinos, blacks and whites. What wefound was not “a black version of Rea¬gan's inaugural ball,” but thousands ofvolunteers celebrating the triumph ofgrass roots popular mobilization overmegabucks machine manipulation, ofhope for a new future over cynicismthat Chicago needs a machine, of heal¬ing and unifying over destructive rac¬ism.We would not bother writing if themoment did not call for a dispassionateself-analysis of a city that has beenweaned on subliminal racism for fartoo long. David Brooks and all Chica¬goans should use this opportunity totranscend their cultural prejudices andopenly consider the progressive pro¬posals of the independent movementbehind Harold Washington.Raul Hinojosa OjedaJuan Mora-TorresCassandra SmithiesStudents in the UniversityCONTINENTALBREAKFAST•Fresh-baked croissant•100% fresh-groundColumbian Coffee•Fresh-squeezedorange juice$2.00Now open at 6:30 am53^St &667-2000The Chicago Maroon—F riday, March 4, 15*83—71tContacts for SaleJWhat Is A Bargain?The 4 questions most frequently asked about contact lenses are:1. How Much Are Your Lenses?2. How Much Are Your Lenses?3. How Much Are Your Lenses?4. How Much Are Your Lenses?What is really more important, the lowest price, or the best fit¬ting lenses? We think the 4 questions should be:1. Is the doctor really a contact lense specialist?(or is he an eyeglass salesman?)2. Can I expect professional service and care?(or will I be handled by Inept, non-professional salespeople?)3. 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The HAIR PERFORMERS. 19831 BEER SPECIAL OF THE WEEK!MOLSONGLODEN ALE $279NOT ICED 6 PACKERIKA FROM FRANCELIEBFRAUMILCHOR NECTAROSEMOSEL BLOEMCHENREG. $398$5.69 750 ML REG. $029$3.39 mam 750 MLMARTINI & ROSSI SMIRNOFFVERMOUTH 80° VODKAEXTRA DRY OR SWEETREG. $319$3.99 750 ML REG. $859$11.19 1.75 LITERANDRE FROM ITALYCHAMPAGNE BEL AGIOWHITE,:r $i98COLD ■ wWDUCK * 750 ML $939■■ 750 MLREG. $3.69REG. $2.98 SOFT LIGHT WINELINCOLN LIQUORS HEsto*.-our, 1516 E. 53rd St. printing™,,Mon-Fri 7 am Mids^T'.JS.nfSU Phone 752-4238GREY CITY JOURNALby Richard MartinIn his study entitled Genre, StephenNeale sights a crucial element under¬pinning the discourse engaged in thehorror film:it is women’s sexuality, thatwhich renders them desirable—but also threatening—to men,which constitutes the real prob¬lem that the horror cinemaexists to explore, and which con¬stitutes also and ultimately thatwhich is really monstrous.(P-61).Thus, although most horror films iden¬tify the monster as male (male in sofar as it is women who become themonster’s primary victim), it is the fe¬male presence—both as sexual objectand active sexual agent—which in¬spires the monster’s destructive-nessand in turn the viewer’s attentive¬ness. But the horror film does not sim¬ply serve to contain the female pre¬sence. What is also at stake is sexualidentity, what male is and what fe¬male is. In the horror film the catego¬ry of ‘the human’ is inscribed as a ho¬mogenous one, while ‘the monstrous’is inscribed as Other by virtue of itsheterogeneity, not only by dan¬gerously mixing the categories ofhuman and nonhuman, but also bydangerously exceeding and/or mixingthe categories of masculine and femi¬nine.This dangerous mixture of mascu¬line and feminine is precisely what in¬forms the definition of ‘the mon¬strous’ in Videodrome, a recentlyreleased horror film directed byDavid Cronenberg (Scanners, TheyCame From Within). As with Cronen¬berg’s previous films, Videodromedoes not present a monster in the con¬ventional sense, but rather a protag-'onist who though initially ‘normal’(homogeneous) becomes monstrous(heterogeneous) after exposure to ahazardous form of technology. In thiscase the technology which inducesMax Renn’s (James Woods) metamor¬phosis is a video tape, appropriatelyentitled “Videodrome,” that simplypresents two masked men torturingand beating a woman to death. Be¬cause of its explicit violence, thissnuff video opens the brain path¬ways—“the moral flood gates”—andinduces a brain tumor in the viewerwho in turn suffers from phantasma¬goric and terrifying hallucinations.“Videodrome,” we eventually learn,was created by a mysterious group ofcorporate types who plan to use it toeliminate those who are destroyingthe moral fabric of North America: theproducers and patrons of porno¬graphy. It is the ultimate weapon ofcorporate reactionists.Not surprisingly, given this pre¬mise, Videodrome explicitly raises,within its diegisis, the issue of porno¬graphy/violence and its effects upona mass audience. For instance, theprotagonist Max is the owner of an in¬dependent t.v. station in Toronto thatbroadcasts soft porn and violent fea¬tures. He discovers “Videodrome”while looking for “something tough,something that will break through.”Max’s role as a producer of porno¬graphy is challenged, at least superfi¬cially, during a scene in which he ap¬pears on a t.v. talk show. Defendinghis philosophy, essentially that of aninsensitive capitalist, he remarks:“Better on t.v. than on the streets.”This scene concludes with Max pickingup his opponent, Nicki (DeborahHarry), a radio psychologist who op¬poses pornography because it expli¬citly subjugates women.That Videodrome confronts theissue of the exploitation of women ona fictional level partly accounts for itsambiguous presentation and ultima¬tely its ambiguous containment of thefemale presence. For it could be main¬tained that the film implicitly criti¬cizes the cultural construction of ‘femi¬ninity,’ a projection from men whichclaims that it really emanates fromwomen. In order to privilege this ar¬gument we must examine the processthrough which we potentially identifywith the film’s protagonist since heprovides the dramatic viewpoint ofthe entire action. As noted, Max as¬sumes an insensitive, almost apathet¬ic, attitude toward tne mgniy contro¬ MALE-CONSTRUCTED FEMALE PRESENCE9 DECONSTRUCTS MALE NARRATIVE □versial issue of pornography. Wemay, depending of course on our indi¬vidual orientations, sense the moralweakness of his disengaged attitude.We probably do not like him or takewhat he says as the truth. Or if we do,only with massive adjustments. Inshort, he is an anti-hero: a protago¬nist with whom we do not positivelyidentify, but through whom we under¬stand and evaluate the action.Max’s function as dramatic referentbecomes increasingly crucial to Video¬drome as the discourse progresses,subjugating the conventions of plotand narrative closure in order to priv¬ilege the protagonist’s perspective.That is, as Max begins to experiencethe effects of his brain tumor as hallu¬cinations, these phantasmagoric vi¬sions so dominate the screen that bythe film’s mid-point the viewer is hardpressed to distinguish between the‘real’ (i.e. the story which apparentlyproceeds from nowhere, taking its‘truth’ from ‘the real world’) and thehallucinatory (i.e. the protagonist’sindividual ‘consciousness’, his interi-ority vis-a-vis this fictional ‘real’).This process implicitly questions thelegitimacy of the protagonist’s per¬spective and is directly related to thebroader issue of the female presence,a relationship worth exploring in Vi¬deodrome’s most explicit sex scene.As this scene begins we learn thatMax’s lover, the former psuedo-fem-minist Nicki, is into S and M whileMax is apparently disgusted/excitedby her sexuality. They sit in Max’sapartment watching “Videodrome”on the t.v. Max says that it is sick andmoves to turn it off, but Nicki stopshim by saying that it turns her on. Wethen see them “making love” while“Videodrome” plays on the t.v.screen behind them. Max is fuckingNicki from behind (anally?) while hepierces her ears with a long sharpneedle, an activity from which she ob¬viously derives pain/pleasure. Thescene ends with them being momen¬tarily transported into the “Video¬drome” torture room.The question as to this scene'smeaning(s) is not easily resolved, al¬though two reflections come to mind:the entire scene as Max's hallucina¬tion thus implicating the maid" who byprojecting fundamental fears aboutgender constructs women as enjoyingpain and subjugation; Nicki as seduc¬tress/whore/witch who by enticinghim sexually leads the man to damna¬tion, torture, and ultimately destruc¬tion. Yet this scene, considered eitherindependently or as it relates to the entire film, should not simply be limit¬ed to two polar interpretations; norshould these two reflections be consi¬dered mutually exclusive. Indeed,this scene is ambiguous precisely be¬cause it refuses to close the contradic¬tions which underpin the pleasure ofwatching, because, in a sense, itchooses not to choose. Keeping in mind this hesitancy to fix on a singleinterpretation, let us examine Video¬drome' s narrative ‘progression’, fo¬cusing on how the text—through de¬terminate absences—sustains thefemale presence.Most re-views of Videodrome havetaken the film to task for its lack of aContinued on page 4A PEASANT LUNCHFrench Onion Soup AuGratin served with Cheddarand Swiss Cheese andCrisp, Fresh Apple Wedges.French Bread from ourmorning oven—and a glassof house wine of yourchoice.*3.9553^ St & ^{aAjaS)667-2000 GOLDCITY INNGiven"☆☆☆☆"by the MaroonOpen DailyFrom 11:30 a.m.to 9:00 p.m.5228 Harper 493-2559Eat more for lessA Gold Mine Of Good FoodStudent Discount:10% for table service5% for take homeHyde Park's Best Cantonese FoodPotato Hot Breads ° SaucePlus the bountiful Freshtastiks Food BarGood thru March 15, 1983We now have all you can eat Breakfast BuffetSat. & Sun. Adults $4.50 - Children $2.505239 Cottage Grove In Concert:Yale UniversityRussian ChorusSponsored byThe Orthodox Campus Ministry& St. Stephen’s House affiliatedwith the University of ChicagoWednesday, March 97:30 p.m.Lutheran School of Theology1100 E. 55th StreetChicago, IllinoisRev. Cyril Lukashonak, OCF-U of C 423-2441Secretary-St. Stephen’s House 924-4520Proceeds to benefit Orthodox Christian Fellowship, St. Stephen’sHouse and the new St. Michael’s Church, Burbank, Illinois.All contributions tax deductible/IMimilllllll ITTDoc is proud to present a PARANOID COMEDY WEEKEND:two (maybe three) cinematic looks at the seamy underbelly ofAmerican society, designed to make you laugh and feeluncomfortable at the same time!FRIDAY at 7:15 and 9:30: Kurt Russell fights for the AmericanDream with every weapon at his disposal, includin^ sposal, including strippers,intense microwave radiation, ana out-and-out lies in theoutrageous (and pretty sleazy) comedy, USED CARS.SATURDAY. A brief respite from paranoia with the animatedadventure THE SECRET OF NIMH at 2:30 and 7:00.Respite.. Maybe not. Those talking rats just may be out to getus all! And at 8:30 and 10:30, the quintessential film ofAmerican paranioa - the movie they tried to stop - WilliamRichert’s wild-eyed comedy-thriller, WINTER KILLS, withJeff Bridges and John Huston.SUNDAY: An evening of French New Wave Maoist-Structuralist cinema-Jean-Luc Godard and Jean-PierreForin’s TOUT VABIEN (7:30) and LETTER TO JANE (9:15),both starring Jane Fonda. Only in America, eh .All films In Cobb Hall, 5811 S EllisSeparate Admission is $2.00. As “Us¬ed Cars” and “Winter Kills” bothdeal with the American Drearn, theycontain scenes of sex, violence, andprofanity that garner an “R" rating-no one under 17 admitted For moreinfo, call our 24 hour filmline90-8575i»ii i r e JL jCkW DOC FILMS The Blue Gargoyle Cafeteria5655 S. Universityin University Church Dining RoomCome try some ofour homestyle cookingSoups, salads, sandwiches,sunflower seed burgers,baked chicken, plus much more.V a Monday thru Friday11:30 am til 2:30 pm10—The Chirapo Marnnn—FriHav March 4. !9R?Janet Cooling, “Atomic Birth” (1982)MISCInternational Women’s Day To celebrateInternational Women’s Day,Crossroads and the U of C Women'sUnion are sponsoring an evening ofdiscussion and festivities. All menand women are invited. Women fromother countries (and American Indi¬an women) will talk about their livesand the status of women in theirhome states. A reception and partywill follow.International Women’s Day, March8, honors women’s struggles for so¬cial, political, and economic equality.Historically, it has been a day whenwomen express their political de¬mands. American socialist women or¬ganized the first Women’s Day in1907, when women demonstratedacross the country for women’s suf¬frage. Women’s Day became Inter¬national Women’s Day in 1910, whenthe Conference of Socialist Womenand the Second International Social¬ist Conference called for an annualdemonstration to fight for women'svoting rights.As the years passed, women de¬monstrated on IWD for issues be¬sides suffrage. In 1917, Americanwomen protested the world war.Later they protested in support ofmill strikers. Russia’s February Rev¬olution was sparked by women de¬monstrating on IWD. The first IWD inAustria in 1911 brought a crowd of30,000 to the streets.Americans stopped celebratingIWD during the Depression althoughEuropeans continued to do so. Ameri¬can feminists revived the holidayhere in the early seventies. With itsrebirth IWD lost some of its socialistovertones and is celebrated bywomen and men of almost every po¬litical orientation across the countryand around the world. Tonight,8-12:30 at Crossroads, 5621 Black-stone 684-6060. Free. —ASWomen In Myth Gail Hindick and KayRead, both of the U of C DivinitySchool, discuss female deities wor¬shipped throughout the ages. WedMar 9 at 6:30 at the American Li¬brary Association, 50 East Huron.491-1049. $3.FILMUsed Cars (Robert Zemeckis, 1980) To¬night at 7:15 and 9:30. Doc. $2.The Secret Of NIMH (Don Bluth, 1982)Tomorrow at 7:15 and 9:30. LSF.$2.The Graduate (Mike Nichols, 1967) Dus¬tin Hoffman plays a guy who gradu¬ates from college, sleeps with olderwomen, tans in his back yard, andtries to drive that horrible Simonand Garfunkel music out of his head.At least he’s cute. — KKThe Graduate Go see this movie.Dustin Hoffman graduates from a re¬spectable Eastern college and re¬turns to southern California to learnwhat suburbia is really like. Direct¬ed by ex-U of C student Nichols, withenough wit and style to earn him anOscar. With wonderfully appro¬priate Simon and Garfunkel songs.And it’s funny, too. —GPTomorrow at 7:15 and 9:30. LSF.$2.Winter Kills (William Richert, 1979) To¬morrow at 8:30 and 10:30. Doc. $2.Tout va bien (Everything’s OK) Thisfilm, jointly directed by Jean-PierreGorin and Jean-Luc Godard in 1972,investigates the effects of May '68on the concepts of subjectivity andpolitics in France, concentrating onthe problem of the relation betweenintellectuals and the revolution.“Change everything. But where doyou start? Everywhere at once.”These words, which express not onlydespair of the left’s state of totalbankruptcy but also hope in the pos¬sibility of starting anew, are spokenby Jane Fonda. Yet we do not seeFonda, who plays an American re¬porter working in Paris, speak thesewords. Instead we hear them recitedas We watch a group of young mili¬tants ransack a huge supermarket.This juxtaposition is crucial to ourunderstanding of the text and forthe directors' radical search for newforms for both politics and cinema.Yet there remains — and there willalways remain for the spectator — aset of juxtapositions contained bythe institution of cinema: the pro-fil¬ mic event, the events which informth^ experiences on the set or on loca¬tion. The directors have attemptedto re-trace these events by privileg¬ing montage in every moment ofshooting: “Montage before shoot¬ing, montage during shooting andmontage after the shooting.” Thusinstead of having factory workers inthe role of workers at the Salumiplant where Fonda and Yves Mon¬tand are held for 24 hours during afactory occupation, unemployed andunknown actors were employed.This juxtaposition between starsand actors on the economic breadlinewas used to create jealousy andenvy so as to both provide raw ma¬terial which would escape any unifi¬cation by the script and by directionand which, at the same time, wouldreproduce some of the tensionswhich exist between militantworkers and radical intellectuals.The proof is in the panning. Sun 6Mar at 7:30. Doc. $2. —RMLetter to Jane (52 minutes. 16 mm.Production: Jean-Luc Godard andJean-Pierre Gorin, 1972) This filmtakes the form of a spoken letter,addressed to Jane Fonda, followingher role in Tout va bien. The’writers’ of the letter question the' way in which the film star allows herimage (specifically, a photograph ofher talking to a group of Vietcong)to be appropriated by the media.Because the film is presented as anexplicit discourse (precisely, a let¬ter, addressed and signed) we can¬not ‘enter the text,’ we cannot giveit coherence by becoming the subjectof the enunciation as we can with theclassic narrative film where,through the suppression of an au¬thorial discourse, the enunciatingsubject reigns in absence as a vacantspace within the text. Thus Letterrenders itself problematic as ideo¬logy by constituting a subject out¬side the text: Jane is invited to re¬spond personally: we are forced intoa critical position because we areidentified as spectating subject. Adidactic form of Brechtian distancingfrom the text with Henry Fonda,John Wayne, an unfocused image ofa Vietcong man, Richard Nixon, andLillian Gish. Sun 6 Mar at 9:15. Doc.$2. -RMFamily Plot (Alfred Hitchcock, 1976)Tue Mar 8 at 8. Doc. $2.The Thin Man Goes Home (RichardThorpe, 1944) William Powell andMyrna Loy star in this well-madescrewball comedy. Later on, it turnsout to be a detective movie, in whichbig city detective Nick Charles goesback to his home town to find goodcooking, relaxation, and a dead manon his doorstep. For a sequel, thisfilm is amazing. It ain’t bad for aregular movie, either. Wed Mar 9 at8:30. LSF. $2. —GPIkiru (Akira Kurosawa, 1952) Some¬times Kurosawa's stills are beauti¬ful to the point of distraction (thekind Fellini might build a filmaround), but the director does not letus pause, sighing, but marches us re¬lentlessly on to sustain our sympa¬thy for his subject. Forget Japanesesilk screens — there’s nothing deli¬cate about Kurosawa’s compositionsand the cafes, night clubs, and gov¬ernment offices where the cancer-stricken Ikiru struggles to live lifefor the first and last time. He wantstwo things — friendship, and to dogood. But both goals are apparentlynear impossible in Kurosawa'sTokyo. What develops is a bitter in¬dictment of a selfish mechanistic so¬ciety and its snarled, callous bureau¬cracy. The director's sound effectsand pathetic protagonist stab us un¬ceasingly like the pain crampingIkiru's cancerous stomach, but hedoesn't let up long enough so thatwe can still feel at the end. Thur 10Mar at 7:30. IHTP. $2. — SSThe Sin Of Harold Diddlebock (PrestonSturges, 1947) Thur Mar 10 at 8:30.LSF. $2.ARTComfort Performance by KathleenMaltese, tonight at 8 at MidwayStudios, 6016 Ingleside 753-4821.$2.50; students, $1.50.Emerging Paintings by young Chicagoartists anonymously recommendedfor showing by various members ofthe city's arts establishment. OpensSun 6 Mar, 5-7 at The RenaissanceSociety, 4th floor Cobb. Through 30Mar: Tue-Sat, 10-4; Sun, noon-4. 962-8670. Free.Medieval and Renaissance Ceramicsfrom the Kassebaum Collection.Opens Tue 8 Mar, 5-7 at the SmartGailery, 5550 Greenwood. Through24 Apr: Tue-Sat, 10-4; Sun, noon-4.753-2123. Free.Fantastic Visions Painting and sculp¬ture by six young local artists: BillBenway, Susan Bloch, Tony Kaz-lauckas, Ellen Levin, Jim Lutes, andChristine ' O’Connor. Opens Sun 6Mar, 5-8 at the Hyde Park ArtCenter, 1701 E 53rd. Through 9 Apr:Tue-Sat, 11-5. 324-5520. Free.Watercolors and collograph prints byRebecca Gieschen through 15 Apr atMallory’s Restaurant, 1525 E 53rd.Art of the Avant-Garde in Russia Through13 Mar at the Museum of Contem¬porary Art, 237 E Ontario. Tue-Sat,10-5; Sun, noon-5. 280-2660. $2 ex¬cept Tue, free.Woman Is Watching You Janet Cooling'swell-crafted paintings express apo¬calyptic visions. A wasted planet(Three Mile Island, B-52s, and toxicwaste drums) is juxtaposed with itsorigins (dinosaurs) and its dying re¬mains (hunted bloody wildlife andthe human heart). Her colors con¬trast so powerfully that the acrylicon board appears at first to be lu¬minescent paint on black velvet. Theboard itself is irregularly shapedlike its corrosive subject. In most,large glamorous heads stick theirnecks through the murk of the socie¬tal bog, joining and separating theelements of the painting — at oncecreators and victims of the surround¬ing destruction. A hot show.John Hulls' “The Last Full Measureof Devotion" is similar to Cooling'swork in its theme — destruction —but the works bear no resemblancein execution. Hall is nineteenth cen¬tury in style. His brushwork is im¬pressionistic while his lighting is un¬iformly murky The effect resemblesa paint-by-number piece, althoughhis skill is obvious. The show is actu¬ally two sub-shows, the “Penitant”series and the “Vietnam or Dien BienPhu” series. The first apparently de¬picts the rituals of a religious groupin New Mexico while the second dis¬plays open combat in SoutheastAsia. What is remarkable about theexhibit is that it is difficult to tell thetwo apart. In one, the subjects bleedfrom self-flagellation and crucific-tion; and Ifi the oftler, they bleedfrom gun wounds. But both mergebecause they are of human ex¬tremes. The dramas takp, place in hi¬deously bleak environments with acolor spectrum limited to the rangeof a World War II camouflage uni¬form. Brutal realism.Both through 23 Mar at Nancy Lurie Gallery, 1632 N LaSalle. Tue-Sat, 11-5. 337-2882. Free. —SSPhoto/transformation This small showof altered photos by eight SAIC gradstudents evinces a strong connectionto painting and drawing, particular¬ly in works by Andy Roski and BillHerman. The former's seem of thetwo more like photos, but aredrawn-on, in warmer brown tones,and this juxtaposition with the (pho¬tographic) cold, black tones providesthe basis tor their biting, sarcasticsense. One is called “Slander is aLoving Tongue.” Herman’s look lesslike anything one would normallycall photographic than they look likewhat Art in America currently callsThe New Expressionism: large, dis¬cursive, peopled spaces directly heldtogether by their subjects’ pre¬sences, indirectly by their presenta¬tions; foregrounded, almost flat per¬spectives; incompletely articulateddetail; and soft but awkward color¬ation, Clever titles help make thepoint: "Are Purple Shorts Helpful onthe Path to Self-realization?”Through 12 Mar at the School of theArt Institute, Columbus and Jackson.Mon-Wed. Fri, Sat, 10:30-4:30; Thur,10:30-7:30; Sun, noon-4:30.443-3710. Free. —DMPaintings, Paper Works, The former byUrsula Kavanagh, the latter by FernSamuels. Installation: “How to Builda Boat in Your Basement” by DainaShobrys. Opens tonight, 5-8 at ARCGallery, 6 W Hubbard. Through 2Apr: Tue-Sat. 11-5. 266-7607. FreePhotographers Invite Photographers Both the photographers and thosethey invited are represented. Thetwenty artists from around thecountry are as varied as their geo¬graphical origins. The exhibit dem¬onstrates novelty and regionalism— a number of artists make playfuluse of qualities peculiar to theirarea. For instance, Carolyn Tucker,from Seattle, paints and photo¬graphs her own version of the Wash¬ington Park Service interpretivemaps; she also displays a biting ver¬sion of Boeing’s graphic demonstra¬tions of military hardware RobertFichter, from Tallahassee, showseclectic still-lifes comprised of robustfish, tourist knick knacks, and littletacky items — all formally composedon a grandiose scale. Ellen Brooks ofSan Francisco has a similar flair forthe incongruous. Her little clay peo¬ple in their bright little toy-house en¬vironments assume postures of ten¬sion and loneliness, or merely sitexpressionless among their me¬diocre home furnishings. Worth see¬ing. Through 2 Apr at NAME Gallery,9 W Hubbard. Tue-Sat, 11-5.467-6550. Free. —SSPortmanteau Altered photos by 12local artists. Opens tomorrow atRandolph Street Gallery, 756 N Mil¬waukee. Through 2 Apr: Tue-Sat,11-5 . 243-7717. Free Also, KunstKocks. performance tomorrow at 9,$4.MUSICChicago Chamber Brass Tonight at 8 atthe United Church of Hyde Park,1448 E 53rd. 461-1929. $5.Ethnic Heritage Ensemble Several ten¬dencies exist within contemporaryjazz. Some musicians, like AnthonyBraxton and Le Smith, treat impro¬visatory music with classical ab¬straction. Chicago's South Side, longa stronghold of cultural nationalism,has spawned many musicians who in¬fuse creative music with its Africanroots. Foremost among these is theEthnic Heritage Ensemble, led byKahil El Zabar, a percussionist withamazing technique, who is joined bytwo strong reed players, Hanah JonTaylor and Edward Wilkerson. Thescope of a single perfoftnance is pan¬oramic: sweet gentle melodies withKahil on thumb piano might developinto funky, down-home riffs, andfrom there into wild, spiralling vor¬texes of freedom. Kahils complexbut solid rhythmic foundationalways brings it back to earth. Eth¬nic Heritage appears at Ida Noyestomorrow at 8. $2 with UCID, $2.50without. The group leaves shortlyfor a Scandinavian tour — give thema good send-off. —CBChicago Soundings A three-memberstring ensemble plays tomorrow atl-House at 8. $2Music of 16th-Century France The Colle¬gium Musicum Motet Choir and In¬strumental Ensemble will performsacred and secular music from themanuscripts Uppsala 76b and 76c.This concert will feature the firstmodern performance of a newly dis¬covered mass setting by Jean Mou-ton (C1459-1522). Music by Ga¬scogne, Forestier and Josquin willalso be performed. Directed byguest conductor Thomas MacCrack-en, Fri Mar 4 at 8 in Bond Chapel.Free.The University Symphony Orchestra willperform its Winter Concert thisweekend. Under the direction of con¬ductor Barbara Schubert, the USOwill play Barber's Second Essay forOrchestra, Ravel's Sheherezade:Trois poemes pour chant et orchestre(Suzanne Scherr soprano), andMahler’s Symphony No. 1 in D(“Titan”). Sun Mar 6 at 8 in MandelHall. Free.Harpist Phyllis Adams will perform onthe next concert of the NoontimeConcert Series Ms. Adams will per¬form works by Albeniz, de Falla,Britten and Grandjany. Thur Mar 10at 12:16 pm in Goodspeed RecitalHall. Free.Grey City Journal 3/4/83Staff: John Andrew, Abigail Asher, Nina Berman, Curtis Black, Pat Can¬non, John Conlon, Steven Diamond, Keith Fleming, Steve Haydon, SarahHerndon, Michael Honigsberg, Kathy Kelly, Lorraine Kenny, Bruce King,Madeleine Levin, Shawn Magee, Marla Martin, Richard Martin, BethMiller, Mr. and Mrs. Movie, Pat O'Connell, Paul O’Donnell, Maddy Pax-man, Sharon Peshkin, Geoff Potter, John Probes, Abby Scher, RachelShtier, Cassandra Smithies, Susan Subak, Beth Sutter, Barry Water¬man.Fiction and Poetry Coordinator: Judith Silverstein.Editorial Board: Stephanie Bacon, Leah Mayes, Vince Michael, Ken Wis-soker.Production: David Miller, Beth Miller.Editor: Nadine McGann.THE GREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY, MARCH 4. 1983—3WilliamWhitehurstRalph Concepcion and Celeate Janu in SavedSAVED: NO ESCAPE IN ENDby Rachel ShteirSaved, Edward Bond’s controversialplay, appears to relate a message con¬trary to the one intended by the author. Ifthe title were meant ironically, Bond's con¬ception of the play would be more consis¬tent with the play itself. In an author’snote, however, he states that Saved is “al¬most irresponsibly optimistic.” Bond at¬tempts to prove this by comparing a de¬structive act committed during the firsthalf of the play with a non-destructive actat the end.This concept fails because Bond attemptsto equate two unequal acts; stoning an in¬fant to death and mending a chair. Morethan a story about hope, Saved is about afrustrated lower class that is unable tocommunicate, and therefore resorts to actsof physical and emotional violence in orderto negate its loneliness.Despite the inconsistency within thescript, the Huron Theatre Troupe havedone a superb job portraying the colorlesslife of the impoverished. Though obviouslylittle money was spent on the sets andlighting, their seedy presence adds to theatmosphere.Pam (Celeste Janu) is a restless teenagerwho picks up men and brings them home toseduce them. Despite her efforts to appeartough and knowledgeable, her tricks areboth amateurish and naive. She meets Len(Ralph Concepcion), a straightforwardyoung man also trying to escape his back¬ground. Len falls in love with Pam andmoves into her house as a boarder, whichis the beginning of his disfavor with Pam.Pam sees Len as a road which will lead herto the type of marriage her parents havefostered.Pam's parents are apathetic about mar¬riage and life. No longer talking to eachother, their lives have become stale. Yetthey hang onto each other because they donot want to face the world alone.Fearing a marriage like her parents',Pam shuns Len. Instead, she has an affairwith Fred (Michael Fosberg), a streetwise tough who cares only for his own mentalcomfort. Fred has escaped poverty, but re¬tains the attitudes of the lower class. Hebelieves that unless he is the user, he willbe used, and he treats Pam accordingly.To respond, Pam alternately yells andpleads, which drives Fred further into hisown shell. While he grows colder, Pam be¬comes increasingly dependent on him, andher misery is so intense that Len is drivento asking Fred if he will take Pam back.After Pam has Fred’s child, it is Len, notFred, who helps her care for it. Fred, whohas now realized that he wants nothing todo with a bitchy woman and child, blatant¬ly refuses to see Pam.The first act climaxes when Fred and hisstreetgang stone the infant to death. Thisepitomizes the frustration which the lowerclass feels and illustrates the idea thatthey are only able to express their bore¬dom in a negative way. Out of stifled hos¬tility, the gang begins to pull the child’shair. As they discover no retributions willbe made, they pinch the child, torture it,and finally stone it to death.During the entire execution, Lenny re¬mains hidden in a tree watching Fred. Heonly reveals that he saw the killing of thebaby after Fred is safely in jail. Len hasthe decency to testify against Fred, but notthe courage to stop the execution.The second act stresses the desperationwith which these people live. Fred is re¬leased from jail and drops Pam for an¬other woman. Pam continues to shun Len,who refuses to leave the house. The atmo¬sphere is one of doom, because the charac¬ters refuse to strive for better lives.In the last scene, Len is seen fixing achair. Although his desire to mend a bro¬ken object displays his willingness to go onliving, it can hardly be called the positiveequal of killing one’s own child. The lastscene emphasizes the deep sense of hope¬lessness which life holds for Len. For himthere is no escape; he can only plod on¬ward. A GOOD DAY, LATE FEBRUARYBiking up your street in this continent of haze,lying in your bed, its white walls and lamp,you recite your dream: playing near your housewith a dog and child, the sun a flashlight in blue dust,dreaming I’d arrived and slept beside your bodywhich you present to me like a moon. A cool dayin February, the grass yeilowing, breeze over blankets,your lips groping toward mine, fog all around.THE TAILOR'S DAUGHTEREvening.The Russian tailor greets his daughteron a river bridge of stone.Distantlowmountains.He is in love with her,their kiss is passionate,she pushes him back,beginning a coy dance to the edge of stone,her obese body wriggling.He pleads with her not to jump,and though she totters facing white,something pulls her back,she faints.Sun finally pierces clouds:a white beam on the tailor’s facelights his tears.—John SchulmanVIDEO-FEMALEContinued from page 1story, for its incoherent narrative.For example, Gene Siskel in his re¬view of the film (Tribune, 7 Feb. 1983)writes that ‘‘The credibility of storygoes out the window, and you get thefeeling that Cronenberg is simply try¬ing to mask an incomplete story withshock after shock.” While admitedlyVideodrome ‘meanders’ narratively,Siskel’s criticism is—as are most criti¬cism in the popular press and in aca¬demia-informed by a search for a to¬tality, a completeness, in a text: acertain relation which links the partsand thus makes them into a whole.Such criteria serve to delimit a prioriany potential rethinking of dominantideologies which may initiate with at¬tention to the gaps, silences, and con¬tradictions which the text is there toresolve. In the case of Videodrome,the gaps and contradictions which failto cohere as story are, so to speak,the depositories for the femaie pre¬sence. That is, as all the facilities ofcinematic truckage, tricks, special ef¬fects and so on are exhaustively dis¬played—apparently at the expenseof narrative consistency—the femalefigures crucially to propel the protag¬onist to the point of self-destruction.The effects which the female charac¬ters have on the protagonist aremapped out according to their posses¬sion of or identification with techno¬logy. The crucial example is evident inthe transformation undergone byNicki. Initially she functions as a char¬acter in the conventional sense asMax’s lover. Later she appears exclu¬sively as so many images on t.v.screens, serving simultaneously as ahallucination in the fiction and as apart of cinematic display. In this sensethe women function as part and parcelof the very process which destroysthe protagonist and which usurps thenarrative: special effects/technology.While this function is not immediatelyevident—hence our earlier hesitancyto define the extent to which Video-dfome criticizes the cultural construc¬tion of ‘femininity’—it becomes moreso as the film fixes upon resolution.And what must be resolved is the fate of Max who is inscribed as Otherby virtue of the dangerous mixing ofthe categories of masculinity and fem¬ininity, an inscription which is auda¬ciously exhibited upon his body in theform of a large slit, a vagina-likeopening that appears on his abdo¬men.In horror films the narrativeprocess tends to be marked by asearch for a specialized form ofknowledge which will enable thehuman characters to comprehend andto control that which simultaneouslyembodies and causes their trouble.Because ‘unnatural’ acts, ‘impossible’metamorphoses of physicality, and‘supernatural’ happenings which defythe principles of common sense and ofscience so predominate Videodrome’sdiscourse, meaning is given a ‘reli¬gious’ rather than a scientific charac¬ter. Hence it is not surprising that thecorporate males, those who present alogical explanation, to the charactersas well as the spectators, of the ‘‘Vi¬deodrome” effects, figure only andultimately in a peripheral manner inregard to Max’s destruction. For it isthe female presence, that which thetext has defined as the irrational ele¬ment within technology—its mysticalcomponent—which initiates and con¬cretises the disruption, the creation ofthe monstrous. This is most explicit inthe film’s ending when Max, follow¬ing the instructions which Nicki recitesfrom a t.v. screen, raises a pistol tohis head and blows his brains out.Finally, the function of the femalepresence in Videodrome must not beconsidered simply within this singletext, or simply within the horrorgenre. What we must realize is the ex¬tent to which, to quote Christian Metz,‘‘every film shows us the cinema, andis also its death.” Thus, individualgenre texts cannot simply be regard¬ed as separate entities—as healthyexamples of diversity. Rather theymust be understood as regulatedforms of excess and display of the cin¬ematic institution, as privileged mech¬anisms which work to deny the legiti¬macy of alternative and oppositionalideologies while constructing—out oftheir own contradictions—a consen¬sual ideology that will be valid for allmembers of society.4—FRIDAY march 4, 1983—THE GREY CITY JOURNALDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist(53 Kimberk Plaza)1200 E. 53rd St.*93-8372Intelligent people know thedifference between advertisedcheap glasses or contact lensesand competent professionalservice with quality material.Beware of bait advertising.Eye ExaminationsFashion Eye WearContact Lenses 1701E.55TH 11-7 EVERYDAY684-3375 262-1593New and Rebuilt REPAIRTypewriters, SPECIALISTSCalculators, on IBM, SCM,Dictators, Adders Olympia, etc.CasioHewlett PackardTexas InstrumentCanon FREE repairestimatesSharp RENTALSavailable withU.ofC.I.D.The University of Chicago BookstoreOffice Machines & Photographic Dept.970 East 58th Street 2nd Floor962-7558 • 5-4364 (ON CAMPUS) F&PCHICKENSPECIALHickory-Smoked ChickenDinner:Buy 1 for $2.45 andget one free!Friday*March 4*After 5 pmSaturday*March 5®All dayTHE FROGAND PEACHIda Noyes Hall* 1st fl.Student Activities Office Hosts“COMING ON”A live taping of a national cableTV program for the Disney ChannelCome cheer on UC Students who will beperforming in this nationwide talent show.Audience participation will also be featured.GET IN THE SPOTLIGHT!WEDNESDAY, MARCH 9DOORS OPEN 7 PM -TAPING 7:30-9:30 PMAdmission free. For more info call 753-3592THE GREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY, MARCH 4, 1983—5B.A. Program inHISTORY, PHILOSOPHY,AND SOCIAL STUDIES OFSCIENCE AND MEDICINEInformational MeetingPick Hall LoungeMonday • March 7*4 pmRefreshm en ts servedAll present & prospective students are invited Did you getyour HillelPassover Mailing?Reservations for the Sedersand meal reservationsmust be made before youleave for spring break.Come toThe Hillel Foundation5715 Woodlawn AvenueUgly .DucklingRENT-A-CAR1608 E. 53rd Street$14.50 per day 200 Free MilesBetween 1C Track«. _ - _and Cornell 60#1 American Heart^AssociationRockefellerChapelof Holy Communion10 amReligious InstructionFor Children11 amUniversity Religious ServiceBernard O. BrownDean of the Chapel CUSTOMER INFORMATION FROM GENERAL MOTORSHOWTOSTOP DRUNK DRIVING.TOUGH LAWS MAY HELP, BUT WE ALSO NEED TO CHANGE OUR ATTITUDES.Do you know anyonewho’s in favor of drunkdriving? Not likely. And yetmany people have driven whenunder the influence of alcohol,or will do it at least once.Take a look at some| chilling statistics. One out of| every two of us will be in-! volved in an alcohol-related! accident sometime during ourj lives. Last year alone, more; than 25,000 people died inI such accidents; an additionali 1.5 million were injured. Adisproportionate number ofthose killed were under 25years old.The cost of drunk-driving; accidents amounts to over $24| billion every year in propertydamage, loss of wages, medicaland legal fees. Not to mentionthe emotional pain to the vic¬tims’ families and friends.What is being doneabout it? Over the years,many different approacheshave been tried: mandatoryjail sentences, stiff fines,license suspensions, alcohol-rehabilitation programs, andhigher drinking-age laws.No single countermeas¬ure seems to do the job byitself. Tough laws, unless theyare supported by equally toughenforcement and the certaintyof punishment, don’t seem to work over the long run. Evenwith all three, probably themost effective single thing wecould do is to examine ourown attitudes about drinkingand driving.How much do you reallyknow about the effects ofalcohol? The facts may sur¬prise you. For example, a lotof people believe that beerand wine are less intoxicat¬ing than other drinks. Infact, a can of beer, a glassof wine, or a l^-ounce drinkof 86-proof liquor are allabout equally intoxicating.A lot of factors deter¬mine how quickly you’ll getdrunk. Your body weight, howmuch you’ve had to eat, andthe number of dfinks you haveover a specified time all makea difference. That’s why it’sso hard to know when you’vehad too much.A common legal defini¬tion of intoxication is .10 per¬cent blood-alcohol level. Fora 160 lb. person, it takes aboutfour or five drinks in the firsttwo hours on an empty stom¬ach to reach the legal limit,compared with three or fourdrinks in the first two hoursfor someone who weighs 120lbs. Of course, your judgmentand reaction time will beimpaired well before you reachthe legal limit.At General Motors, we’revery concerned about theeffects of drinking on driv¬ing. Over a decade ago, wedeveloped a device that testsa (Jpver’s reflexes and motorresponses before starting the car. The Department of Trans¬portation is now field-testingthat device.We also strongly favorall efforts that focus attentionon the problem such as thePresidential Commission onDrunk Driving. Make sureyour friends and family knowthe facts about mixing alco¬hol and driving. Drunk driv¬ing will only stop when weall decide it isn’t sociallyacceptable. Be self-confidentenough to admit when you’vehad too much to drink to drivesafely.Meanwhile, seat beltsare still your best protec¬tion against drunk drivers.They can’t prevent an acci¬dent, but they will help saveyour life during a seriouscrash— whatever the cause.This advertisement is part ofour continuing effort to givecustomers useful informationabout their cars and trucks andthe company that builds them.MARK OF EXCELLENCEChevrolet • PontiacOldsmobile • BuickCadillac • GMC TruckC—FRIDAY, MARCH 4, CHfcY CITY JOURNALDISSECTING RAOULBy Sharon PeshkinThis is not a review — it’s a dissection.But don’t worry; I can’t spoil this movie bygiving anything away because it containsnothing subtle, suspenseful or in any waypredictable. In fact, that’s part of thepoint. Just as the swingers of Californiahave taken all the allure out of sex bytheir unabashed, viper-like advances atanything that moves, this movie is whollylacking any teasing, flirting or other de¬vices to capture and titillate the audience.We are kept very much aware that we arewatching a movie and that these are justactors. Eating Raoul is a whore of a filmthat never pretends to be more than a sillyflick.What is so brilliant about Eating Raoul isthe way it makes use of our most sacredcultural metaphor — eating. Consumingfood is the act of incorporation, the accep¬tance of once foreign matter into oneselfand as a part of oneself. On a social level,eating with someone is a significant act ofacceptance; when we break bread to¬gether we have formed a social bond. Eat¬ing fulfills our most basic needs: nourish¬ment (biological), tactile pleasure(physical), and the establishing and main¬taining of relationships (social). Only oneother activity satisfies all of these urges —sex. And the things two (or more) peopleshare when they are thoroughly “athome’’ with one another (i.e. in marriageor communal arrangements) are theirmeals and their beds.Hollywood: fabled land of sensual plea¬sures. Land of the swinger, a creature sohungry that all rules of social decorumbreak down in the face of rampantly ex¬pressed sexuality. The images of food andsex are so intertwined that it has becomeimpossible to tell from advertisementswhich is the product and which is the prop.The plot of Eating Raoul revolves around acouple of weeks in the life of Mary andPaul Bland, the last monogamous couple on earth. Far from fitting into the swingerlifestyle, they are disgusted by sex and itsconstant encroachments upon their idyllicprepubescence. Their dream, as they sleepin their separate beds, is to open Paul andMary’s Country Kitchen, a family restau¬rant which Paul swears will not serve thelikes of the swingers. The problem is thatthey must raise a $25,000 down paymentin two weeks. The solution comes whenthey realize that the swingers, by theirvery intrusive nature, are their greatestfinancial resource. By luring swingers in with promises of fulfilling their sexual fan¬tasies and then by killing them and takingtheir money, Mary and Paul are on theirway to their domestic dream.The progress of the plot is one of gradu¬al decay. Not of the characters — Maryand Paul never change (this is not anotherRocky Horror) — but of the social ritualwhich they enact. The film begins with adinner party and ends with a dinner party,but the sense in which a guest is served hastaken on new meaning by the final scene.Stage one: the dinner party. A simple so¬ cial ritual in which a guest is invited in,fed, business is transacted while eating,and the guest is escorted out.Stage two: the invasive swinger. Hecomes in uninvited, tries to have his sexualhunger satisfied, has no business beingthere, and is evicted out.Stage three: the invasive swinger re¬turns. He enters uninvited, attacks hisguests to satisfy his hunger, still has nobusiness doing this but proves so offensivethat he is murdered and incinerated.Stage four: the scheme. Swingers are in¬vited, but as soon as they try to get satis¬faction they are killed in spite of their offi¬cial business being there, and they aredisposed of.Stage five: enter Raoul. Having just in¬stalled the Blands’ locks, he invades theirhome in order to burglarize, he is caughtby them, a business partnership is estab¬lished, and he is escorted to the door.Stage six: scheme is perfected. Thebodies are now carried off by Raoul andmade into dog food.Stage seven: sex invades a business re¬lationship. Raoul makes a sexual invasioninto Mary and Paul’s home. He cannot berepulsed, nor can this situation be a stableone.Stage eight: return to the dinner party.This time, however, Mary, Paul and theirguest are eating Raoul.What occurs, then, is a gradual perver¬sion of entrance/invasion, satisfaction ofhunger (for sex or food), transaction ofbusiness, and leave-taking/disposal. Whathas begun as the most civilized of socialrituals has by the end decayed into canni¬balism. Hollywood’s confusion of sex andfood has led to a situation in which peopletruly eat one another, and Mary and Paulachieve their ultimate satisfaction by at¬taining a food establishment.What a silly movie. Bon Appetit!Eating Raoul, directed by Paul Bartel, isplaying at the Sandburg theater, 1206 N.Dearborn.LIANNA: AN HONEST TELLINGby Russel ForsterI guess I always like to root for the un¬derdog. That’s why I got really emotional¬ly involved watching John Sayles’s newfilm Lianna — it was heartening to seesome “naive’’ romantic people beat theodds. At the end of the movie I cheered fortwo: for Lianna, who put herself on the lineby telling her family and friends of her ho¬mosexuality, and for director and writerSayles, who put himself on the line bymaking this truly controversial film.Lianna was a long time coming forSayles. He kept the idea for it on the backburner for four years, waiting for the timeand money to work on it. In the meantime,he kept himself alive by writing screen¬plays for exploitation movies like Alliga¬tor and The Howling. He did manage tofind some time in between these sex andviolence extravanganzas, though, to writeand direct The Return of the SecaucusSeven, a movie closer to his heart andmore fitting to his own pocketbook. Madeon an unbelievable $60,000 budget (onefive-hundredth the cost of recent sprawl¬ing odysseys like Superman and StarTrek), Secaucus Seven had to rely onsnappy dialog rather than special effectsto hold attention.For Sayles himself, though, SecaucusSeven was just a flex of his celluloid mus¬cles in anticipation of Lianna. It was a wayfor him to hone his dialog-writing skillsand to build his directorial skills. He put alot of care into it but not nearly as much ashe saved tor Liannna.Lianna was Inspired by the trauma-filledtales of Sayles’s lesbian friends, who en¬countered nothing but troubles living in a disapproving world. Sayles felt that thestory of their plight was not getting told(at least not honestly — Hollywood can’tseem to deal with homosexuality withouteither scandalizing or trivializing it), andhe felt that it was important for him to tryto tell it.So he wrote an honest and straightfor¬ward screenplay and submitted it every¬where he could for approval. Not surpris¬ingly, Hollywood couldn’t handle his story,so after the inevitable rejections Saylesresolved to make the film independently(insert David versus Goliath metaphorhere). By hustling up his rich friends andacquaintances he managed to scrape to¬gether $300,000 on his own, and he set outto work on his labor of love.It’s that love which makes Lianna so spe¬cial. Not Officer and a Gentleman Hol¬lywood approved stylized pseudo-love,but the love you feel for a close friendwho’s forced to make some tough decisionsand who is suffering some terrible hard¬ships. Having felt this love myself for afriend who is uncannily like Lianna, I wasdeeply affected by the movie. Confusedconversations I had had all of a suddenbegan to make sense. Everything aboutthe movie rang true.The mechanics of the film hardly per¬meated my consciousness, which is rare forme, because I tend to dwell on them when Iget bored. The graininess, the occasionalbad camera angle, the reliance on close-ups of faces, the jerky panning didn’t dimthe effect of the film on me at all. The"shocking” bedroom scenes (woman mak¬ing love to women!) reminded me of expla¬nations my friend used to give me that I never understood, and they were enlight¬ening for me — not replusive at all. Thecritics are right when they point out thatthe dialog is awkward in spots and thatthere are a few loose ends in the plot, butnone of these flaws made any differenceto me at all. The film’s strengths over¬whelmed me.The strengths of Lianna lie in Sayles’sbeautifully crafted script and in the cast’s passionate rendering of that script. Emo¬tions — anger, jealousy, loneliness, fear,love — are depicted honestly and reallyfeel right. It’s refreshing to see lesbiansdepicted as people — not as heroes or vil¬lains, but just as humans with problemsand quirks and needs just like anyone else.Compassion is what makes Lianna a trulyoutstanding movie.PRESSES up to 25158^...Fast print to 22x28The southsides largest andmost complete print shopOffset & letterpressLAYOUT & ARTPHOTO COMPOSITIONOver 100 tvpestyles forbrochures, books, ad books- all your printing needsComplete Bindery includesgang stitching, perfectbinding, plastic binding, diecutting, embossing hotstamping, eyeletting, tinningPRINTHU 7-31425832 So. Green UNIONLABELJ THE FLAMINGO APARTMENTS5500 South Shore DriveSTUDIOS & ONE BEDROOMS• Unfurnished and furnished•U. of C. Bus Stop•Free Pool Membership•Carpeting and Drapes Included•Secure Building - Emily's Dress Shop• University Subsidy for Students & Staff• Delicatessen • Beauty Shop*BarberShop •T.J.'s Restaurant• Dentist • Valet ShopFREE PARKING752-3800 Mr. Keller MARCH SPECIALSheboygan Bratwurston a home-bakedFrench Roll,withfresh fruit & aglass ofAugsburger(on tap)*2.95667-2000THE GREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY. MARCH 4, 1983—7DavidMiller by Maddy PaxmanOn December 12th 1982, thirty thousandwomen came from ail over England to theprospective CRUISE missile base at Green-ham common, in the heart of the Englishcountryside. They had been asked by de¬monstration organizers to bring thingswith which to adorn the 9-mile perimeterfence of the base, and this they did — fami¬ly photographs, children’s clothes, jour¬nals, slogans and peace symbols, balloons,tampons dipped in red, webs of wool. Nota yard of the fence was left bare. Then thewomen joined hands and ‘embraced thebase,’ linked into an enormous chain thatstretched right around the fence. Thatnight they lit candles and sang songsaround campfires, and the next day about2000 women organized a successful block¬ade of the main gate of the base, allowingno staff in or out. They were eventually re¬moved by police.This was the high point of a tirelesspeace campaign by the Greenham^Women’s Peace Camp. The camp began in oSeptember 1981 when, almost ignored by 5press and public, about 40 women set up Jj‘home’ on the common. They stayed Ethrough the winter of that year, one of the £coldest in British history, and on throughthe summer and winter of 1982. Somewomen left, but others always arrived totake their place. A women’s culture hasgrown up around the camp — painters,writers, musicians. Conditions are hard —no modern comforts close at hand, the va¬garies of the English weather to contendwith — but the spirit of unity is strong.Women at the camp are both heterosexualand lesbian, and range from radical femin¬ists to liberal Christians. They are of allages. What they have in common is a com¬mitment to non-violent action for peace,centered in particular around the installa¬tion of American CRUISE missiles at Green-ham.It was in December 1979 that NATOmade its secret decision to site ‘battle¬field’ nuclear missiles in various parts ofEurope — CRUISE in Britain, PERSHING II inHolland and Germany. Nobody asked thepeople of these countries how they feltabout becoming a possiole battlefield be¬tween the USA and Russia in the event of aso-called ‘strategic’ war. When the newsgot out, there was a burst of frustration,not untinged with nationalistic feelings, atour fate being thus decided. Many whohad previously been indifferent to thethreat of nuclear war found a new commit¬ment to peace — the British peace move- January 1, 1983: Women cross the fence on their way into the Greenham Common AmericanAir Force basement mushroomed (if you’ll excuse theterm). Membership of the Campaign forNuclear Disarmament (CND) grew in oneyear from 3000 to 30,000. Ten monthsafter the decision, 80,000 people marchedin London in protest against CRUISE, and inthe summer of 1982 a similar giant demon¬stration was held.The Women’s Peace Camp started inde¬pendently of CND and other peace organi¬zations. CND is committed to a policy ofunilateral disarmament, believing that forBritain to possess any nuclear weapons atall is a greater threat to our safety than itwould be a protection. It works partlywithin the parliamentary system, havingthe support of much of the Labour party,and does a good job of organizing mass pe¬titions, rallies and conferences. But it isstill a traditional bureaucratic structure,largely male-dominated, in which theredoes not seem to be much support for moreradical or creative individual protest.This is illustrated by the fact that theWomen’s Peace Camp had been in exis¬tence for nearly a year before it even hitthe newspapers — when 23 women went toprison for occupying a sentry box and ob-WOMEN LINK FOR PEACEstructing work on a sewage system at thebase. Their trial took on overtones of thesuffragettes’ struggle. At the Decemberrally, the police kept a low profile, butagain on January 1st of this year they ar¬rested 44 women who raided the base. Thewomen scaled the 40-foot high fence usinglightweight ladders, crossed Va mile ofopen ground and climbed on top of thehalf-built missile silos, where they stayedfor an hour, dancing and singing, beforethe police arrived. They are at present fac¬ing trial, ironically on the charge of“breach of the peace” (creating a publicdisturbance) which they are, of course,denying.The British women’s movement has anuneasy relationship with the Peace Womenof Greenham. Many feminists are amongtheir most ardent supporters, marching,fund-raising and camping along with therest. Spare Rib writes that “the nuclearworld we live in is a nightmare — thatwomen are uniting to challenge it is a posi¬tive and moving development.” A lot ofthe women at the camp state that they areinvolved because of their children (thereare some living at the camp and manywere at the rally). Thus the focus onwomen as a ‘natural’ force for peacecenters very much around our traditionalrole as mothers and nurturers — an orien¬tation to which many feminists are op¬ posed. The irony of the situation is thatmany women have left behind husbandsand children in order to become involvedin the camp. Men who come to the campand the rally are given the supportive roleof child-care, food distribution etc., and donot participate in policy making.There are undoubtedly problems, fromthe feminist viewpoint, with the organiza¬tion of the camp, which is not much in accor¬dance with feminist/democratic principles.Most of the decisions tend to be made by asmall group of women, some of whom donot even live at the camp at all, but live 60miles away in London. Change in the struc¬ture of organization is hampered by thediversity of political styles of the womeninvolved. However, there are clear movestowards a more general involvement inpolicy making — the publicity for the De¬cember 12th rally consisted mainly of aseries of ‘chain letters’ sent by the individ¬ual women to friends and contacts.The question also arises as to how muchof its energy the women’s movementshould devote to the struggle for peace,when there are so many other pressingissues in women’s lives. Nuclear weaponsare an extreme expression of the patriar¬chy, but many feel that it is more impor¬tant to tackle everday problems of health,work and violence. Others say that sincethe peace movement is concerned with thesurvival of the species, it should be our pri¬ority.As with all non-violent protest, theWomen’s Peace Camp has its limitations,but it is now beginning to explore subtlelines of action. At the start, the spirit wasvery much one of ‘passive’ resistance inthe face of the violence of military ar¬moury. Even brutality by the police or thebase's security guards was met with aturn-the-other-cheek philosophy, andwomen who fought back or attemptedmore ‘active’ resistance were frownedupon as betraying the peaceful nature ofthe protest. But the recent blockade and inparticular the New Year raid into the campshow more the spirit of ‘military precision’in their planning — tactics are definitelybecome more ‘direct’ and, consequently,more dangerous for the women involved.More such ‘events’ are planned for Marchand April as well as mass lobbying ofMembers of Parliament. IThe December rally was perhaps the’strongest expression of the peace move¬ment so far, and should be an inspirationto peace campaigners all over the world.Time is running out for Britain — the firstmissiles are due to arrive at Greenham atthe end of this year. If the strength of themass movement and the persistence of thePeace Women proves sufficient to preventtheir installation, then a major victory willhave been won in the fight for peace.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 Our qualitycan’t be copied.Our computerized Xerox duplicatorsare the latest word in copying technology.Add that to personalized service and ourlow, base price of 5C a copy and you aresure to be pleased with the results.HARPER COURT COPY CENTER5210 S. Harper Avenue • 288-2233collating • reductions • stapling • selection of papers I DOZENBAGELS FREE!SA Vt‘1.79WITH THE PURCHASE of1 lb. on MORE of LOXwhile quonhhes lost.SUNDAY, MARCH 6, 1983MORRY'S DELI5500 S. CORNELLr„pr(Dav> MARCH 4, 1983 THE GREY CITY JOURNAL-marian realty,inc.REALTORStudio and 1 BedroomApartments Available— Students Welcome —On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-5400 |lllllkM*mb*r| jp| American Oprometric AssociationDR. M.R. MASLOVofToemnsT• EYE EXAMINATIONS• FASHION EYEWEAR .• ALL TYPES OFCONTACT LENSESASK ABOUT OUR ANNUALSERVICE AGREEMENTLOCATED INTHE HYDE PARKSHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th363-6100LET THE ARMY HELP YOUTHROUGH MEDICAL SCHOOLThe U.S. Army Health ProfessionsScholarship Program offers a uniqueopportunity for financial support to anumber of students or potentialstudents of medicine or osteopathy.Financial support in the scholarship in¬cludes approximately $8,000.00 peryear. In addition, tuition, books, andcertain other expenses required of allstudents in a particular course of studywill also be paid by the government.For more information concerningeligibility criteria, pay, service obliga¬tion, and application procedures, con¬tact your Army Medical DepartmentPersonnel Counselor:Captain Hiluard G. RogersBuilding 142, Room 345Fort Sheridan, Illinois 60037Call collect: (312) 926*2040/2147/2313ARMY. BE ALL YOU CAN BE.SERVE IN APPALACHIAmmPSl!MaV 21 - 27. 1983July 23 - 29 1983August 6*12, 1983NEEDED: I'.itholu men jo w* nk with the (ilonmary Home Missioned, a society ofCatholic priests ami Brothers serving the poor of Appalachia* I'ksiM* Neiui information about eoui summer volunteer programs■ I’lease send mlorm.it ion about t Henman, s work w ith rural people of Appalachia andReverend John GarveyGlenmary Home Missioners Room 93Box 46404Cincinnati. Ohio 45246NameAddressCity AgeState Zip Hem* to take the plungewithout taking a bath.Most people, when they decide to get engaged, feel like they're inover their heads! Especially when it comes time to pick out a diamond.If that's how you feel, S.A. Peck &Co- is the perfect lifesaver! First,S.A. Peck sells only the finest diamond rings, using diamonds that havemet rigid standards for quality and appearance. So you can be sure, fromthe start, you are getting a quality diamond ring.Secondly, we offer a guarantee. Should you want to return yourring, within fifteen days, for any reason at all, you'll receive a completerefund, no questions asked.Finally, the S.A. Peck system eliminates the middleman, meaning youbuy your diamond ring for approximately 50% of what you would pay forthe same ring at competitive jewelry stores. And at a time like this, thatkind of value is a comforting thought!Send for our free 44 page color catalogtoday. It has full color pictures of over 300wedding and engagement rings all avail¬able to you at savings up to 50%!Or, visit our diamond showrooms at 55 EastWashington Street, Chicago. It'll makeyou feel a lotless jumpyabouttakingtheplunge!SAFeck&Co.Please send my free catalog and buyers card.NameAddress.CitySchool_ State . Zip.Visit the S.A.Peck & Co. Showroomat 55 E. Washington St., Chicago, IL 60602312/977-0300CO turtle Soup • Shrimp Bisqueitlaple Cree 3nnin3</)itfi®C®aOoO)COOEu*>®*</>oCOoJ9||8|9)|80H 13PU9!flThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, March 4, 1983—17NewsOmbudsman cites harassment problemsContinued from page fourAnother case investigated a studentwho received medical care at the Bill¬ings Emergency Room. The student,who had a broken arm, received treat¬ment and was released with a prescrip¬tion tor pain medication. The student,however, had no money with him at thetime and the Billings Pharmacy re¬fused to give him the medication oncredit. Consequently, he spent the nightin “severe pain,” Auslander said. Thereport explained that “had the studentbeen better informed or less trauma¬tized, he could have made use of sever¬al resources. University Security couldhave notified the duty dean on call forthe night, who could have come to thehospital and lent the student the neededcash. Or the student could have calledthe University Health Service physi¬cian-on-call, who could have advancedthe student the money or made otherarrangements.”Auslander suggested that a systembe devised that would ensure that stu¬dents are provided complete and im¬mediate medical care and that the Bill¬ings Pharmacy be instucted to notifythe UHS physician-on-call in such casesso that the physician could authorizethe disbursement of the medication ormake arrangements for payment.Several cases illustrated the diffi¬culty encountered by graduate stu¬dents, who have completed their coursework but not a dissertation in establish¬ing defined student status. A number ofnon-registered graduate students in¬quired why they were required to pay$65 for an athletic facilities pass. Inpast years, students of the same status who were certified by their departmentas being in “good standing” had beenallowed to purchase facilities passes atthe registered student rate of $12. Thispractice, in actuality, ran counter to es¬tablished policy but had gone unno¬ticed, thus the University Board of Ath¬letics and Recreational Sportsreaffirmed the policy that non-regis¬tered students would no longer becharged and reduced rate for regis¬tered students.New graduate school tuition struc¬tures are being planned. A fee for non-registered students is being consi¬dered. Auslander suggested thatduring the planning several issues bekept in mind. In the Physical and Bio¬logical Sciences Divisions, students arePHOTO BY ARA JELALIANMark Auslander usualfy funded by grants and fellow¬ships and continue to register for onecourse a quarter, thus retaining “FullTime Certified” (FTC) student status.In the Humanities, Social Sciences, andDivinity School, however, the fundingsituation is much more bleak and manystudents cannot continue to pay theFTC fee, the report explained. Manyadvanced students cannot afford to beregistered, and thus are not entitled toregistered-student priviledges.Other concerns of the Ombudsman’soffice included the correction of ambi¬guously-worded financial aid awardletters to students and the establish¬ment of a new schedule for the Reyn¬olds Club Practice Rooms. This allowsspecial times for electric and non-elec-tric music so that their sounds do notconflict with each other through theroom which “are not acoustically sepa¬rate.”Share a rideStudent Government is compiling a rideslist of both riders and drivers for studentswho w ant to share a ride home spring break.Either students needing a ride or offering aride to others are encouraged to contact theSG office.Those interested may call 753-3273 Mon¬days from 11 a m. to 2 p.m. or Wednesdaythrough Friday, 12 p.m to 3 p.m., or leave anote in Ida Noyes Hall room 306.The compiling of the rides list is funded bythe SG Finance Committee.Cabaret auditionsAuditions for a May 5 opening of “Caba¬ret” at the University of Chicago Court Stu¬dio Theater will be held Mar. 6 at 2:30 p.m.and Mar. 7 at 6:30 p.m. at the ReynoldsClub, 5307 S. University. Singers, dancers. actors, musicians and technical staff areneeded.“Cabaret” is being done under the aus¬pices of the Hyde Park Jewish CommunityCenter (HPJCC), Director Michael Hilde¬brand and Musical Director Anita Green¬berg. For information call Sonya Burns at268-4600. The HPJCC is an affiliate of theJewish Federation of Metropolitan Chica¬go.Apply for BA nowSeniors in the College who intend to gradu¬ate at the end of next quarter must apply fortheir degree by the end of this quarter, theDean of Students Office has announced. Thisis a new deadline for degree applications.Spring Quarter graduates should com¬plete a very brief application form availableat the reception desk at Harper 280. Thedeadline is Mar. 18.Furthermore, changes in Spring Quarterregistration can be made between Mar. 7and Apr. 15.Meeting of HPAmnesty Internat’lThe University/Hyde Park Unit 18 ofAmnesty International (AI) will holdits monthly meeting Monday eveningat 7:15 p.m. at Crossroads Center, 5621Blackstone Ave. New members andsupporters are invited to participate.Last month AI announced the releaseof two more “prisoners of conscience,”Cuban poet Armando Perez, and SouthKorean Kim Dae Jung. In conjunctionwith International Women’s Day, Mar.8, AI will be sending appeals on behalfof women prisoners, especially those inPakistan, Ethiopia, Latin America,and Turkey.Student Ombudsman Report for Autumn Quarter 1982(The following is an abridged version of theAutumn. 1982 Report of the Student Om¬budsman. The full report will be printed inthe University Record, or may be obtainedfrom the Office of the Ombudsman.)The Office of the Student Ombudsmanhandled a total of 67 cases during the Au¬tumn, 1982 quarter. In this report, I discussseveral of the more complicated cases facedby our office during the quarter. These arecases which either have no easy solution orwhich point to wider issues or problemswithin the University.Sexual HarassmentDuring Fall, 1982 the Office of the Om¬budsman followed the investigation of a for¬mal allegation of sexual harassmentbrought by a female graduate studentagainst a faculty member. This complaintwas the first to be handled under the Univer¬sity’s revised sexual harassment policy,adopted in April, 1982. As such, I felt that itwarranted special scrutiny.The policy states “the academic dean ofthe college or of the appropriate division orSchool ... is the University official respons¬ible for investigating the complaint of sex¬ual harassment.” The student who feelsthat he or she has been a victim of sexualharassment brings a formal complaint tohis or her divisional academic dean, whomust then conduct a formal investigation. Inthe case under consideration here, I believethat the responsible academic dean and thechairman of the department in which the in¬cident occurred were not familiar with anddid not take as seriously as they should therecently adopted guidelines for investigat¬ing charges of sexual harassment.The student had refused the sexual ad¬vances of a professor who was one of thegraders of her comprehensive exam. Shelater learned that she had failed the exam,and requested that her exam be regraded bya new faculty committee. Her department,however, refused to consider such a regard¬ing until the student had done so, her depart¬ment chairman told her that he wduld ordera regrading of the exam only if she with¬drew her formal complaint of harassment.Confused and upset by the chairman’s ulti¬matum, the student went to talk to a formeradviser, who referred her to a dean of stu¬dents outside her division. Only the timelyintervention of that dean forced the chair¬man to order an unconditional regrading.The dean also successfully urged the chair¬man to remove a personal friend of the ac¬cused professor from the regrading commit¬tee.The Office of the Provost, which is ultima¬tely responsible for sexual harassment in¬vestigations, then intervened. The Provost’sOffice concluded that, although the accusedprofessor had indeed sexually harassed thestudent, he had not graded her exam impro¬perly. The professor, who admitted that hehad harassed the student, was called intothe Provost’s Office and strongly repri¬manded for his misconduct. The Provost placed a letter expressing the University’soutrage over the incident in the Professor’spermanent file. According to the Office ofthe Provost, this is the first time in its mem¬ory that such serious steps have been takenin response to a sexual harassment case.The Provost also wrote to the student, apolo¬gizing on behalf of the University for the in¬cident and urging her to remain in the pro¬gram. The department eventually raisedthe student’s grade to a “pass.”The student, it should be noted, remainsbitter over the resolution of the case. She be¬lieves that the professor should have beenmore severely punished. She did not receiveapologies from either the professor in ques¬tion or from the department chairman. Noris she satisfied that the initial grading of theexam was fair. The department maintainsthat her grade was raised for technical rea¬sons independent of the harassment inves¬tigation.How well, then, did the new policy andprocedures function? On one level, the sys¬tem “worked;” an investigation was con¬ducted and, when it was concluded that thecharge was accurate, the offending profes¬sor was disciplined. On the other hand, itshould be noted that the system did not workautomatically and that on several occasionsoutside intervention was required. The de¬partment chairman acted irresponsibly inpressuring the student to withdraw the for¬mal harassment charges. The dean of stu¬dents who spoke with the department chair¬man is to be commended for his integrityand prompt response, but his involvement inthe case was a virtual accident. By the sametoken, the Office of the Provost performedadmirably, yet its intervention should alsonot have been required. The academic deanresponsible for the investigation shouldhave been aware of the details of the newprocedure, treated the complaint with theseriousness it deserved, and more closelymonitored the regrading process.Even the best of policies is only as effec¬tive as the individuals responsible for its im¬plementation. This case indicates that thepolicy may not always be treated with suffi¬cient respect at the level of an academicdean where investigations are normally tobe conducted. I thus believe that the Officeof the Provost, as a matter of course, shouldsupervise all investigations by academicdeans until the Provost is satisfied that theinvestigative process is understood and hasbeen taken seriously by all academic deans.In addition, students should be made awarethat if they are dissatisfied with the conductof a harassment investigation, they shouldcontact the Office of the Provost. The SexualHarassment Policy is printed in the StudentInformation Manual. Guidelines for filingformal complaints of sexual harassment areavailable for the Office of the Student Om¬budsman, the academic deans, the areadeans of students, and the dean of studentsin the University. Advanced Graduate StatusMany students came to our office to dis¬cuss the recommendations of the May, 1982Report of the Committee on Graduate Edu¬cation. As part of its proposed reforms ofgraduate education, the Report suggested anew tuition payment structure. Students indoctoral programs would pay relativelyhigh tuition during their first two years ofcourse work, and would pay a lesser amountduring their third year of classes. Studentswould then pay a “nominal” quarterly feeand register continuously until they wereawarded their PhD. The fee would allow stu¬dents access to library and athletic facili¬ties, permit them to borrow and defer pay¬ments on past loans. In sum, it wouldreplace the present one-course tuition(FTC) requirement and give the advanceddoctoral candidate all the rights of a regis¬tered student. The Committee proposed ahost of other reforms to ease the plight of ad¬vanced graduate students and to hasten thecompletion of their dissertations. A stream¬lining of the 27 course requirement wasurged, as the establishment of Research In¬stitutes and more coordination between de¬partments.During Fall quarter, however, the issue ofthe proposed continuous registration fee be¬came a major focus of student response tothe Baker Report. Many students arguedthat the estimated quarterly fee of $500 wasexcessive. Students were also skepticalabout administration suggestions that a con¬tinued registration fee would encourage stu¬dents to finish their work more quickly.Some administrators and some facultyhave dismissed student concern over theproposed continuous registration fee as“overreaction” or “misplaced anxiety.”They have pointed out that the continuousregistration fee is only one aspect of a com¬plex restructuring of graduate educationand tuition schedules, and that in any casethe new tuition plan will not apply to stu¬dents currently enrolled in doctoral pro¬grams. However, it must be rememberedthat for students the only visible result thusfar of the Baker Report has been the publicdiscussion of a “$500 fee.” Meanwhile, theother recommendations of the Baker Com¬mittee are being less publicly considered. Inmany cases, departments are resisting theproposed reforms. Students should there¬fore not be faulted for their fears that a con¬tinuous fee, envisioned as part of a muchlarger package of educational reforms,might be instituted without the attendantstructural changes proposed in the BakerReport.Several issues should be kept in mind asnew graduate student tuition structures areplanned. The financial hardships faced bygradual students, especially by those in the' Humanities and Social Sciences, are severe.Teaching assistantships at the University ofChicago are few and far between. Tradition¬ally, many students who had completedtheir course work were able to get tempo¬ rary teaching jobs at local colleges and un¬iversities. Current economic conditionshave made those positions subject to fiercecompetition by individuals who have al¬ready received their PhDs. It should also beremembered that a number of advancedgraduate students have taken full or part-time union jobs on campus in order to sup¬port themselves while writing their disser¬tations. These jobs are by regulation closedto registered students. A requirement thatall advanced students be registered woulddeny this important source of employmentto a number of students.Billings Emergency Room and PharmacyOne night during Autumn quarter, a stu¬dent was taken to the Billings EmergencyRoom with a broken arm. After the studentwas treated, he was released from the ERwith a prescription for pain medication. Thestudent, however, had no money with him.The Billings Pharmacy refused to give himthe medication on credit, and the student re¬turned home, spending the night in severepain.Had the student been better informed orless traumatized, he could have made use ofseveral resources. University Securitycould have notified the duty dean on call forthe night, who could have come to the hospi¬tal and lent the student the needed cash. Orthe student could have called the UniversityHealth Service physician-on-call, who couldhave advanced the student the money ormade other arrangements to help.It may be unreasonable, however, to ex¬pect a student in severe pain or under theeffects of medication to pursue these ave¬nues of help on his or her own. A systemshould be devised that ensures that studentsare provided complete and immediate med¬ical care. The Billings Pharmacy should beinstructed to notify the UHS physician-on-call in such cases, and the physician could inturn authorize the disbursement of the med¬ication or arrange for payment.Appendix: Statistics, Autumn, 1982Academic AffairsGrade Appeals 5Other 11Sexual Harassment 2Student AffairsAthletics 7Housing and Commons 9Hospitals and Clinics 2Student Activities 1Administrative AffairsFinancial Aid 9Facilities and Security 4Registrar and Bursar 4Library 4MiscellaneousTOTAL CASES18—The Chicago Maroon—Friday March 4 1983IGet your ticketsfor HMS PinaforeThe Gilbert and Sullivan Opera Com¬pany will perform H.M.S. Pinafore inMandel Hall at 8 p.m. Friday, Mar. 11and Saturday, Mar. 12, and at 2 p.m.Sunday, Mar. 13. Tickets are availableat the Reynolds Club Box Office andcost $7 each for the Friday and Satur¬day shows and $4 for the Sundayshow.H.M.S. Pinafore is presented by Ad¬ventures in the Arts, a project of theParents’ Association of the U of C Lab¬oratory School.Interest classesThe spring program of adult interestclasses begins the week of Mar. 14.Registrations are being accepted at theNeighborhood Club, 5480 S. Kenwood,643-4062. New classes scheduled this spring in¬clude advance dog obedience, journalwriting, and knitting. For health ^andfitness, new classes are offered in bellydancing and women’s self defense.Classes also include lessons in batikdesigns, creative reading and writing,a course in researching family histo¬ries, photography critique, and pot¬tery.Other courses are an aerobic danceclass, body building, and yoga. Bothmen and women are also encouraged tojoin in Tuesday night volleyball andWednesday night basketball.Camp Info DayThe Hyde Park Jewish CommunityCenter, 1100 E. Hyde Park Blvd., ishaving a Camp Reunion/InformationDay Mar. 13, from 2:30 to 4 p.m. Therewill be time for questions and answerson each different camp program forchildren ages three through thirteen. Parents and kids are invited to attendthe Information Day together. Live en¬tertainment and Bob Hoffman’s “Ani¬mal Show” featuring a performance bylive, exotic animals, will be included inthe program.This program is free. To reserve aspace, calll before Mar. 11.Neighborhood Clubpasses the batonHave you ever dreamed of conduct¬ing an orchestra? You might get thechance by coming to the Hyde ParkNeighborhood Club’s Talent and Ser¬vice Auction Saturday, Mar. 12, wherean opportunity to conduct the U of CChamber Orchestra is up for auction.Other valuable items and servicesbeing donated by friends of the Club in¬clude a new kitchen design, Aerobicdance lessons, five-hours worth of News in briefmending, a relaxing weekend in an In¬diana Cottage or a family tour of acandy factory.The Auction will be held at the HydePark Neighborhood Club, 5480 S. Ken¬wood, at 7:30 p.m. The admissioncharge of $5 will count towards winningbids. Any item or service offered is wel¬come. Call Fay Isenberg 643-4062 forfurther information.Bagpipe championrecitalThe Midwest Pipe Band Associationwill present a bagpipe recital by PipeMajor Robert Worrall of Toronto, On¬tario, Canada, at Judd Auditorium Sat¬urday, Mar. 5 at 8 p.m. Worrall hastaken the supreme championship ofNorth America for 11 of the past 12years and has competed successfully inScotland. The donation at the door is$5.CalendarFRIDAYWomen’s Indoor Track: Midwest Athletic Confer¬ence for Women's Invitational Meet 7 p.m. HCFH.Collegium Musicum: 16th Century Sacred Music,Tom MacCracken, guest conductor 8 p.m. BondChapel. Free.DOC: Used Cars 7:15 & 9:30 p.m. Cobb $2.U.C. Asian Christian Fellowship: Weekly meeting7:30 p.m. Augustana Lutheran Church 55th & Wood-lawn Info.: 288-5274.Center for Latin American Studies: Lecture: CreuzaMaciel and Reverend Jeanette Good on “Women'sMovements and Social Change in ContemporaryBrazil” 3 p.m. SS 122.Minerology-Petrology Seminar. Frank M. Richteron “Thermal Evolution II” Hinds 101 3 p.m.Rockefeller: Lenten Services 12:15 p.m.U.S. Ski Team: Meeting and Movie 7 p.m. INH.Hillel: Reform-Progressive Sabbath Services 5 p.m.;Adat Shalom Sabbath Dinner 6 p.m. $3.Physics Coloquium: George H. Lander on "The In¬tense Pulsed Neutron Source at Argonne NationalLaboratory: New Opportunities for condensed Mat¬ter Research” 4:30 p.m. Eck 133.Brown Bag Lecture: Michael Goldfield on “TheWeakness of U.S. Trade Unions with Unions inOther Developed Countries” 12-2 p.m. Wilder House5811 S. Kenwood. Free. Sponsored by Center on Ad¬vanced Industrial Societies Arabic Circle: Fred Donner on “A Recent Trip toBeirut” 3:30 p.m. Pick 218; Sherry Hour 4:30 p.m.Kelly 413.Brent House: Open House and Social Hour 5-6:30p.m. 5540 S. Woodlawn.SATURDAYMen's Indoor Track: Midwest Collegiate AthleticConference Indoor Championships 11 a.m. HCFH.DOC: the Secret of NIMH 2:30 & 7 p.m.; Winter Kills8:30 & 10:30 p.m. Cobb $2.LSF: The Graduate 7:15 & 9:30 p.m. Law Sch. Aud.$2.Hillel: Orthodox Sabbath Services 9:15 a m.; Up¬stairs Minyan Sabbath Services 9:30 a.m.BAGPIPE RECITAL: By Robert Worrall of Toron¬to, Canada 8 p.m. Judd Auditorium. Donation $5.SUNDAYU.C. Symphony: Barber, Ravel, and GUSTAVMAHLER Barbara Shubert Conductor. 8 p.m. Man-del Hall. Free.Oriental Institute Films: The Archaeologist andHow He Works 2 p.m. Museum Aud. Free.Music Dept.: PROKOFIEV, Ibert, Beethoven pro¬gram Joanne Galler, Flute 3 p.m. Goodspeed Hall.Free.LUTHERAN CAMPUS MINISTRYAugustana Lutheran Church5500 S. Woodlawn Ave.8:30 a.m. — Sermon 6 EucharistU 9:30 a.m. — Sunday School 8 Adult Forum:g 'The Liturgy"A 10:45 a.m. — Sermon 8 EucharistY 6:00 p.m. — Campus Ministry Supper ($2/person)Does the End ofthe Term Mean theEnd of Your HospitalInsurance Protection?Short Term Hospital plan providesfast low cost “interim" coverage ifyou're in between jobs, or recentlygraduated.It offers a choice of 60, 90, 120,or 180 day protection. Comprehen¬sive coverage. Low rates. And thepolicy can be issued on the spot.That quick.Let me tell you the details of thisquick coverage plan.Lord & RogersInsurance Agency4747 West Peterson Avenue Suite 400Chicago, Illinois 60646282-6900 HOLLY NEAR &RONNIEIn ConcertTogetherwith JEFFLANGLEYSUSAN FREUNDLICHSIGN LANGUAGE ARTIST fFriday, April 8 • 7:30 & 10:30pmPeoples Church of Chicago941 W LawrenceTickets: $10 50 & $9 00 Reserved Seating($7.50 disabled, under 12 A over 60)Informdtion, Childcare reservation A ticket mail order(SASE by 3/28) Midwest Women's Music Dist 1420Emerson St Beloit, Wl 53511 608/362-3222 Also atTicketmaster outlets 312/559-1212 ESWatch tor Weavers reunion film "Wasn t That A TimeIon PBS/WTTW-11. 3/16 & 3/19fiscd desks,chairs, files,and sofasBRANDEQUIPMENT . - • * wcr -i8560 S. ChicagoRE 4-21'! 1 *Open Daily 8:3V b.-' ,Jj Sal 9-2 .;. DOC: Toute va Bien 7:30 p.m. Letter to Jane 9:15p.m. Cobb Hall $2.Mediaeval & Renaissance Re-Creation Soc.: meeting4 p.m. INH.Folkdancers: International Folkdancing; teaching 8p.m.; request dancing 10 p.m.St. Paul and the Redeemer; Handel: The Passion ofChrist Choral Evensong with Orchestra 4 p.m. 4945S. Dorchester. Free.H.P. J.C.C.: Caberet Casting 2:30-7:30 p.m Reyn¬olds' ClubHillel: Lox and Bagel Brunch 11 a.m. $1.75 per sand¬wich.Brent House; Episcopal Eucharist 5:30 p.m.; LentenSupper 6:15 p.m. $2 Speaker Michael Obith-Owino“A Uganda Perspective on the Person of Jesus”.5540 S. Woodlawn.Rockefeller Chapel; Ecumenical Service of HolyCommunion 9 a.m.; Religious Instruction for Chil¬dren 10 a.m.; University Religious Service, BernardjO. Brown, 11 a.m.CAUSE: Slide Show by Chicago Cuba Comm.; Com¬mentary by Juan Lopez; Two Views on Cuba withOpen Discussion 7:30 p.m. INH.MONDAYFolkdancers: Beginning and Int. levels. Teaching 8p.m.; Request Dancing 10 a.m INH. Conceptual Foundation of Science Colloquium; IanMueller on “Some Ancient Conceptions of Place andSpace” 8 p.m. Cobb 107.Hillel: Israeli Folk Dancing, 8 p.m. Blue Gargoyle $1per evening.Chemistry Dept.: Lecture: J. C. Martin on "FrozenTransition States: Pentavalent Carbon, Et Al.” 4p.m. Kent 107.U.C. Judo Club: Practice 6 p.m. Bartlett.mIIIIIIIIIIIIII SCHOOL OF MEDICINE• UTESA •“CLASSES TAUGHT IN ENGLISH”The Medical program of Universidad Tecnologica DeSantiago (UTESA) in Santo Domingo, DominicanRepublic is tailored after the traditional U.S. model ofMedical Education and is fully accredited.OPENINGS AVAILABLEOur Medical School is WHO listed.We qualify for the ECFMG Exam.For more information and Application Form please write to:UTESA SCHOOL OF MEDICINEFOREIGN STUDENT ADVISOR (SUITE 23)12820 WHITTIER BLVD., • WHITTIER, CA 90602ftBOOK SIZESTUDENT COMPUTER SYSTEM- LEl<3 Featuring ExtendedBasic, and optionalintegrated Printer/MicrocassetteRecorderPC1250 Pocket Computer- $80CE125 Printer/Cassette-$ 130• Continuous Memory• 24 D'git Thermai Pnnter• AC or Rechargeable batterypower• Tape counter and StandardCassette Controls• V.nyl carrying case• Tutorial instruction handbookincludes 20 application programs.CALL TOLL FREE 800 621 1269 EXCEFTDlinois. Alaska, HawaiiAccessories discounted too Mastercard or Visa 0 mail or phone Mail Cashier s Check Money Ora. Pers Check (2 wks to drSorry noCODs Add $4 00 1st item (Alt HI. P 3 Canada addM 00‘irst Hem! $100 « add l slw & hand! Shots to II addressaddfc3' tax Prices su0| to change WP;TE (no calls) or tree catalogALL ELEK-TEk MDSE 'S BRAND NEA 1ST QUAl AND COMPLETEsteaDSdslaiiaBsioaelBMIsitriticEoiaaieicsasao 'kr Blkl• Advanced Slide RuleFunctions• CMOS 8 Bit CPU for fastprocessing• Features Extended BasicLanguage• 18 User Definable Keys• 22K RAM.24K ROM• 24 Digit LCD DisplayPrinter/Microcassette recorderELEK-TEK.inc4557 N. Lincoln Ava.. Chlcooo II40445(400)421 1144 (512)477 7440The Chicago Maroon—Friday, March 4, 1983—19Ti *■SportsTufts women take undergraduateTufts (dark) defend against Three’s A Crowd inwomen’s undergraduate finals. By Nick Lynn• and Andy WrobelWith ninth week concluding, thesemifinals for this season’s basketballcompetition have been cleared.By the end of next week, the winnerswill be parading around in fresh newUCIM t-shirts. And the losers. . .well,there’s always exams to look forwardto.In women’s undergraduate basket¬ball, Tufts beat Upper Wallace 37-28and Three’s A Crowd edged Hale 26-23to advance to the finals. There, Tuftsout shot Three’s A Crowd to win thegame 21-15. It is a tribute to the play ofThree’s A Crowd that Tufts, who hadbeen scoring in the 50s, was held tosuch a low score. Tufts will meet grad¬uate winner Efficient Mockettes, whobeat the Medflies 19-15 for that title, inthe All-University Championshipmatch.In a couple of blowout games, Fallersdestroyed Henderson 49-33 and Cham¬berlin crushed Salisbury/Vincent 43-29in men’s undergraduate basketballsemifinal action. Chamberlin is a veryheavy favorite in the finals, but Fallershas surprised the league in theplayoffs, and Chamberlin must be onits guard.No BS and Too Swift will meet in thegraduate men’s final.Mark Epstein upset the dynamicMark Richardson in men’s undergrad¬uate residence racquetball, with a sur¬prising win in two games of 21-6 and21-11. Epstein goes on to play the inde¬pendent champion Tim Heidinger, andthe winner of that match will advanceto the All-University Championshipmatch with graduate champion BillWeber.Henderson’s Richardson/Yoon teamhad an unsurprising win over Bha-gat/Cavero of Hitchcock to win the un- IM titledergraduate title in men’s doublestable tennis. The Henderson duo willplay Giblon/Nord, the independentteam, for the All-University title nextweek.Bishop House’s pride and joy, EricSiegel, has made it to the finals ofmen’s undergraduate residence bil¬liards. Eric goes up against SteveChantelois from Henderson sometimebetween now and noon Monday.Unseasonable weather has given theend of this usually depressing quarter agreat boost, and in response, the play¬ing fields scattered around the Univer¬sity are packed with teams warming uptheir soccer skills and swinging softballbats. Try to tear yourself away fromthe books, get out there and run in thesun, and enjoy the first days ofspring.Yah of the Week — This Week’s Yahis on the people who advised the writersof this column on the ranking of themen’s basketball teams. Especially,this yah is a tribute to the enthusiasticmen of Fallers House, who no onethought capable of unseating the favor¬ites. Good luck in the finals to all theteams who have struggled through thisvery long season. Play ball!Sports CalendarWomen’s Indoor TrackMarch 4 — Midwest Athletic Confer¬ence for Women Invitational Meet, 7p.m., Field HouseMen’s Indoor TrackMarch 5 — Midwest Collegiate AthleticConference Indoor Championships, 11a.m., Field HouseMen’s SwimmingMarch 4 and 5 — at Midwest CollegiateAthletic Conference ChampionshipsLettersWashington analysisTo the editor:Concerning the news analysis byDavid Brooks printed Friday, Feb. 25,we, the concerned, submit this letter tothe editor. The subject of this analysisby Brooks was Harold Washington, theDemocratic mayoral candidate, andhis victory rally held at McCormickInn. In our opinion and the opinion ofseveral other people who read the ar¬ticle, this was a blatant attempt to dis¬credit Washington and to cause distrustamong his supporters. The analysiscontains many stereotypes and preju¬dices with severe racist undertones.Furthermore, Brooks’ interpretation ofblack people and their culture is utterlypretentious. He is addressing a subjectof which he obviously knows very lit¬tle.Brooks begins his news analysis bytrying to belittle Harold Washington’svictory rally. He claimed it “had ele¬ments of a crusade, of a cocktail party,of a New Year’s Eve celebration, butnot a political movement.” This is ob¬viously an observation made out of ig¬norance. All the victory rallies we’veobserved had all these same elements;it never “bodes poorly” for the candi¬date and the city of Chicago. If JaneByrne had won, or perhaps Daley,would not their victory rallies have hadthese same elements? Or is it just be¬cause Harold Washington is black withbasically a majority of black support¬ers that the rally took on the tone “of acrusade, of a cocktail party, of a NewYear’s Eve celebration, but not a politi¬cal movement.” This type of attitudeseems to suggest that blacks are not po¬litically aware and are only gropingblindly for ‘divine’ guidance in HaroldWashington. Brooks’ underlying pre¬mise seems to be to expound on stereo¬types of blacks in general, their beliefs,their relationships with each other, andtheir relationships with politicians.Brooks talks about a young blackwoman who is supposed to be “typical”of the type of Harold Washington sup¬porter who would attend the (crusade) raly. (Typical is just a ‘cop-out’ wordfor stereotypical). Everything fromher designer clothes to the relaxedmanner of her hair is obviously a bla¬tant stereotype. I grant you that thereare some black women who dress thisway, probably professional woman;however, all the women present atMcCormick Inn were not as Brooks de¬scribed them. A similar kind of stereo¬type is made about her alleged boy¬friend around whom she has her armdraped.Brooks’ intepretation of the gesturesof the black power salute, and the sing¬ing of “We Shall Overcome” are incor¬rect in as much as Brooks does not andcannot understand the significance ofthese gestures in terms of showingblack unity and strength. These typesof gestures are a showing of under¬standing among one another, and sym¬bolize a long-standing bond betweenblacks.Brooks stereotypes the type of blacksthat would be present at the rally by de¬scribing those blacks that would be ex¬cluded because of their socio-economicstatus. Brooks tries to imply thatHarold Washington is more interestedin blacks who are ‘upper-middle class,’than in the improvement of all blacks,whether rich or poor. In this same vein,Brooks seems to be suggesting thatthere is something wrong with blacksbeing affluent. Why should blackAmericans be any less entitled towealth and the ‘good’ things of Ameri¬can life, than any other homosapien inthis country? Is it just the fact that weare black which prevents us from get¬ting our equal share?This brings us to another point.Every chance Brooks gets he seems touse words and phrases to depict a nega¬tive image of the Harold Washingtonrally. For instance, the ballroom was‘oppressively hot,” not just hot (as itwould be at any other rally where therewas no air conditioning). Why is it that“the crowd chanted” and “kissed each-other in jubilation”? Is it again thatthese people are black? These wordsand phrases are reminiscent of slavery times which has little to do with thepurpose of the victory rally. WasBrooks’ purpose to ease the mind of hiswhite comrades that blacks we still liv¬ing in those 19th century times?Brooks continues with his misconcep¬tions. A blatant one is that the feelingsof those blacks present at the rally canbe embodied in one or a few black lead¬ers. Brooks makes another overwhelm¬ing mistake by assuming that blackshave lost their perspective on the pur¬pose of the rally, and in some way haveturned it into a revival meeting, or per¬haps a scene from civil rights revisit¬ed.It will not come as a shock to Wash¬ington’s most ardent supporters that heis not the spiritual savior, because theynever regarded him as such. Washing¬ton’s supporters are politically aware;these are people who have come of agepolitically and not merely “saviorseekers.” Brooks makes the unfoundedassumption that blacks voted for Wash¬ington simply because he is black, andwere not politically mature enough toweigh his qualifications and by virtueof them vote for him. It will not “comeas a shock to the poor blacks whoformed the mass of his support” (this isa contradiction by Brooks, who in para¬graph nine claimed that the affluentblacks of Chicago were the basis ofWashington’s support) to find that his(Washington’s) black skin does notmake him one of them.” Poor blackswill never find this out because it is nottrue. There has been no evidence thatWashington is out to help only ‘uppermiddle class’ blacks. He has based hiswhole political career on aiding andsupporting people in need regardless ofrace, creed, or color, as should be thecase. Blacks in Chicago voted forWashington because of his record ofsupporting their interests which are thesame as-any other voter’s — to live aprosperous life in a prosperous city.We understand that David Brooksusually does a feature article “StrikingOut” which is an attempt at satire inthe tradition of journalists like MikeRoyko and Art Buchwald, but this ar¬ ticle is very clearly (labeled) a NewsAnalysis. We are concerned that some¬thing in our university newspapershould be labeled as factual and con¬tain so many opinions that boarder onprejudice and racism. Is this indicativeof the opinions of the newspaper? Foran editor to allow such an article to gointo print, is to condone it.Lisa PickensCurtis MillerYvette BaptisteStudents in the CollegeJT'here are but1. a few thingsleft in life that canguarantee as manyhappy returns asconsistently as the onesyou’ll get with U.S.Savings Bonds.Like guaranteedinterest return.Guaranteed tax benefits.And all hacked by themost solid guarantee ofall. America.So when y ou’relooking to get out morethan you put in, take alook at U.S. SavingsBonds. You’ll be happierwith the returns. Manytimes over.20—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, March 4. 1983SportsWomen’s track team taking great stridesBy Susan AaronThe women’s varsity track team willbe making a bit of sports history oncampus tonight. At 7 p.m. the Maroonswill host their first conference indoortrack meet at the Fieldhouse.As a new member of the MidwestAthletic Conference for Women(MACW), the team is eager to competewith member schools, including Grin¬ned, Cornell, Beloit, Monmouth andKnox. Conference members hope thatthis unofficial championship will exhib¬it a healthy Division III interest inwomen’s indoor track, and prepare theway for an official indoor conferencechampionship as early as 1984.Maroon coach Linda Whitehead wasclear about the significance of a cham¬pionship meet. “Traditionally, confer¬ence membership and championshipparticipation have been importantgoals for our men’s teams,” she said. ‘We see a championship meet as an ex¬citing addition to our women’s pro¬gram, providing additional competi¬tion with colleges having similaracademic and athletic philosophies andobjectives. As a Division III school, theoverall quality of the educational expe¬rience is a high priority, in line with ourofficial NCAA statement of philosophy.Any sports program at Chicago has tobe well integrated with academic ob¬jectives, and should provide a mean¬ingful experience for the participants,”she said.Asked to speculate on the nature ofan official championship meet, White-head said, “This year for the first timethe men’s and women’s National In¬door Championships are being held to¬gether. Being governed by the NCAA,the women’s rules are now nearly iden¬tical to the men’s. In the future we willsee more coed meets, from duels toBasketball team drops finaleBy Craig RosenbaumIn a game which was close to the end,the Maroons lost their final game of theyear to Valparaiso, 63-61 at the HenryCrown Field House last Thursdaynight.Despite and overall record of 15-6,and a conference record of 9-3, theMaroons did not qualify for the NCAADivision III playoffs. U of C finishedthird in its conference behind Coe(11-1) and Cornell (10-2).With the lead see-sawing back andforth, the Maroons cut the Valparaisolead to 55-54 on Karen Welsh’s 15-footjump shot at the 5:32 mark. Valparaisowas then able to convert on offense tomake the score 57-54. With 4:33 left,Wendy Pietrzak was fouled while shewas shooting. After making the first,and missing the second, Pietrzak re¬trieved her rebound and converted a 15-foot perimeter shot to tie the score at57-57.However, Kathy Weisen struck backwith a jump shot to put Valparaisoahead 59-57. Valparaiso then expandedits lead to 61-57 on Kathy Weisen’s 12foot jump shot.After the Maroons squandered manyopportunities, Gretchen Gates finallycut the lead with 1:20 left to 61-59. WithValparaiso in possession of the ball, atraveling violation was called againstWeisen at the 1:03 mark to give the ballto Chicago. With :40 left, Gates con¬verted from ten feet to tie the game upat 61-61.Valparaiso stormed backed as SallyPeterson’s 13-footer put them back inthe lead, 63-61. With :10 left, the^Maroons called a time out. They set upa play which called for Gates to take aturn around six footer. With :06 left,Gates missed her shot. After HelenStrauss grabbed the offense rebound,with :04 left, she was tied up by Val¬paraiso. The ball was tapped by Strausto Karen Walsh, who missed a straightaway jumper from 17 feet. GretchenGates then retrieved the rebound andmissed a five footer at the buzzer. Despite Valparaiso’s 63-61 victory,several Maroons had an outstandingevening. Gretchen Gates led theMaroons in scoring and reboundingwith 16 in both columns. Meanwhile,Sue Fortunato also racked up 16 pointswhile Beverly Davis and Wendy Pietr¬zak each had 13 points.Even though the Maroons did notmake the playoffs, it was a banneryear. The Maroons won the mostgames ever, 15, in the history of Uni¬versity of Chicago women’s basketball.Gretchen Gates, the freshman sensa¬tion, virtually rewrote the recordbooks. Her new records include mostpoints scored in a game and a seasonmost field goals made in a season, thebest scoring average for a Maroonplayer at 21.8 points per game, and themost rebounds in a season. Other re¬cords were broken by Dana Howd in¬cluding most assists in a season with78, and in a game with 11.Coach Diann Nestel said, “Sure I amdisappointed that we did not make theplayoffs. However, only 32 teams in thenation can qualify for the tournament,and although 15-6 is a respectable re¬cord, it was not good enough for theplayoffs.”Coach Nestel added, “the reason whywe had such a successful season wasbecause of our defense. We were able toapply pressure on both the perimeterand the post. Another big difference be¬tween the success of this year’s teamand last years was our field goal per¬centage. We were able to increase itfrom 34 percent to 42 percent. Althoughthe addition of Gretchen Gates andDana Howd have been beneficial, theydid not turn this team around all bythemselves. It was a team effort inwhich the veterans, by playing unsel¬fish ball, were able to mesh with ouryounger talent. This successful seasonwas certainly a team effort.”TAisamvonCHINESE-AMERICAN RESTAURANTSpecializing in Cantoneseand American dishesOpen Daily 11 A.-8 30 P.M.Closed Monday1318 E. 63rd MU 4-1062 HYDE PARK UNION CHURCH5600 S. Wood lawn Ave.Church School (all ages) 9:45 a.m.Worship Nursery Provided 11:00 a.m.W. Kenneth Williams, MinisterSusan Johnson, Baptist Campus MinisterCome, Worship, Study, ServeMetropolitanCommunity Churchof the Resurrection5638 So. Woodlawn 528-2858Outreach to the Gay CommunityWorship - Sunday 3 pmJoin Us Now!LES BEAUX PARLEURSIMPORTANT MEETING!To Plan Spring Quarter Activities-This DeterminesWhether UC French Club Survives ‘Til the End of the Year!Monday, March 7, • Ida Noyes 1st fir. • 9 PMMichel 753-8342 #904 championships, and they’ll be run to¬gether for financial as well as practicalreasons.”Whatever the long-range implica¬tions of tonight’s meet, the immediateresults promise to be quite interesting.Twelve teams from Iowa, Wisconsin,and Illinois have been invited to parti¬cipate. By the Autumn of 1983 alltwelve teams will be official membersof the Midwest Athletic Conference forWomen (MACW). Many of the teamshave never met before, and Chicago’sinvitational will be the first preview offuture conference quality.No one will make predictions abouttonight’s meet, but an undefeated re¬cord this year indicates that Chicagomay well be the team to watch. Thevarsity women have won all five oftheir indoor meets this season and haveset twelve new school records in theprocess.The majority of those new recordsare held by promising freshmen ath¬letes, which bodes well for the future ofwomen’s track here. What is more aus¬picious, a number of those records setstandards well above those of formeryears. Freshman Kathy Waters, for ex¬ample, holds the new shot put record at34’ 9” — a full four and a half inchesbetter than the old record. BipasaBose, another freshman, holds the newmile record at 5 19.6, which is 17 sec¬onds faster than the previous time.In addition to these record-breakingfeats, the Maroons have had strongperformances in the hurdles and highjump from freshman Shauna Smith,and in the long jump and sprints fromfreshman Linda Kinney. Senior BeckyRedman has set school records in the400-, 600-, and 800-meter races this sea¬son, while sophomore Natalie Williamshas contributed considerably with up¬dating sprint and relay records.Though Chicago will be counting onthe individual performances of thesekey women in tonight’s meet, coach Whitehead emphasized that outstand¬ing individual performances are sim¬ply not the whole story. This year the40-member Chicago team has benefitedfrom a well-rounded team showing andincreased depth in all events.Whitehead’s remarks may be of in¬terest to many women students. At atime when increased student interestand budgetary restrictions are forcingother varsity teams to limit member¬ship, the women’s track team still hasroom for beginners. The team is com¬posed of women of varying levels ofcommitment and ability. “We welcomeany dedicated and determined individ¬uals,” said Whitehead. “Participationis part of our philosophy,” she said.That philosophy seems to haveworked supremely well this indoor sea¬son. When the Maroons move outdoorsnext quarter they’ll gain added depthfrom women coming out from otherwinter sports, among them heptathleteHelen Straus.For many dedicated athletes in trackand field, the outdoor season repre¬sents the culmination of a training pro¬gram begun during the autumn crosscountry season and continued duringwinter* quarter through indoor track.An individual and team goal will be toqualify athletes for the NCAA nationalchampionships by the end of the out¬door season. For the first time, lastyear the Maroons sent two women tothe nationals — sprinter Natalie Wil¬liams and heptathlete Helen Straus.This year it is possible that theMaroons may qualify several individu¬als and a relay team or two, and per¬haps even score points for our firstteam standing at the National level.“However, realizing those goals,”cautions Whitehead, “depends in largepart on the amount and quality of train¬ing our athletes will be putting in overthe next six weeks. The indoor seasonhas given us a strong and promisingstart.”Gymnasts squeeze out victoryBy Rob BolandDespite the loss of one of the top all-around competitors, the University of Chi¬cago Men’s Gymnastics Club managed tosqueeze out a victory over its opponentsfrom Miami University of Ohio by the slimmargin of 106.6 points to 105.65.Dennis Sadowski, who was expected to bea strong contender for the all-around title inthe meet, broke his ankle while warming upfor the floor exercise competition. U of C’sChris Haynam, a former Miami Universityundergrad, stepped in to capture first placein the pommel horse, rings, and all-aroundevents. Haynam’s scores were supported byDavid Halperin’s performance in the floorexercises and rings, and by the efforts ofPaul Silver and David Landon on the vault and floor exercises. Ed Brown, Jim Bror-son, and John Coni on rounded out the Uni¬versity of Chicago men’s teamIn the women's competition, Beth Zim¬merman captured first place in every event(floor exercise, balance beam, and unevenparallel bars) except the vault on her way tothe women’s all-around title. She was fol¬lowed by strong performances by StephanieSmythe on the uneven bars and floor exer¬cise, and Lynn Hastieiter and KristinSchleich. Despite its efforts, the women’steam was overpowered by its Miami com¬petitors and lost, 91.0 to 73.95.The University of Chicago’s next gymnas¬tic meet will be Saturday, Mar. 5, at 2 p.m.in Bartlett Gymnasium against NotreDame.HARVARDthis summerHarvard Summer School the nations oldest summer ses¬sion features open enrollment in nearly 250 day and eve¬ning liberal arts courses and pre-professional programs Thediverse cirriculum includes courses appropriate tor fulfillingcollege degree requirements as well as programs designed torcareer and professional development The international stu¬dent body has access to the University's outstandinglibraries museums, athletic facilities, and cultural activitieswith the additional benefits of Cambridge and nearby Bos¬ton. Housing is available in Harvard s histone residencesLiberal ArtsUndergraduate and graduate courses in more than 30 liberalarts fields are ottered at convenient hours. Intensive foreignlanguage and writing programs are available Among themany areas represented are Anthropology, Computer Sci¬ences Fine Arts. Mathematics. Psychology. Music andVisual and Environmental StudiesPre-Professionaland EducationThe Summer School offers all basic courses necessary torpre-medical preparation. Of interest to pre-law students areclasses in government and economics Business coursesinclude computer programming, financial accounting, sta¬tistics. and a business writing workshop Non-credit review-courses tor the GMAT, CRE and MCAT are ottered Grad¬uate level courses in education and in management theorydirt application are also availableSpecial ProgramsThese include the Harvard Summer Dance Center DramaPrograrp, Expository and Creative Writing ProgramEnglish as a Foreign Language and the Ukrainian SummerInstitute The Harvard Health Professions Program is torethnic minorities and economically disadvantaged students interested in the health professions A special introductorycollege program for qualified high school |umors and seniorsis also offeredAcademic CalendarJUNE 27-AUGUST 19, 1983For further information return the coupon below or calli6171 495-2921 information<617/ 495-2494 24-hour cataloguerequest liner Please send a Harvard Summer School catalogue andapplication tor:Arts & Sciences & EducationEnglish as a Foreign Language1 Dance Center _ DramaSecondary School Student ProgramHealth Professions WritingNameStreetCity-State Zip.Harvard Summer School20 Garden St Dept 1J0Cambridge MA 02138The Chicago Maroon—Friday, March 4, 1983—21*/*> Classified AdsCLASSIFIEDADVERTISINGClassified 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. DeadlinesWednesday noon for the Friday issue, Fridaynoon for the Tuesday issue. Absolutely no exceptions 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 publication The Maroon is not liable for any errors.SPACEAPT. FOR RENT-HYDEPARKFern roommate wanted for 3 bed apt. 54th &Ellis. Partly furnished sunny bedroom, onminibus routes sl75/mo call 947-0360 after 6p.m.Looking for housing? Check InternationalHouse, for grad, students and for scholarsvisiting Chicago. 753-2270, 2280.2 br in 4 br APARTMENT AVAILABLE 53rdand Dorchester S150 or 160/mo call 667-4251. ROOMMATE WANTED huge apt near 53rd 8.Dorchester $150/mo. on campus bus routes.Call 667 4251.RIDGEWOOD CT. NEW LISTING-Sunny thirdfloor seven room apartment in a modernized 3flat that's convenient to campus, shopping &transportation PLUS is great for kids! Just568,500—taxes & asses 5131/month! URBANSEARCH 337-2400.Will pay $75 to student to take over univ. housing contract. Call 667 1138 before 8 30 a m58th & Harper Condo. Eleg. newly remod. 3 bd.rms., V 2 baths, w/study, Irge liv. & din. Rms.br kitch., w/all mod. appls. New hrdwd firs.Indiv. unit contr. cen. air, heat, humid. & aircl. Over 1,500 sq. ft. Wlk dist. to U of C, I.C. &shop S84.400. Mort assm. st 10% Avail. AprilRay 890 9390att. 9 p.m.Male room mates wanted to share spacious 3bedroom semi furnished apt w 2 cats at 54th &Ingleside beginning spring quarter. To see call962 8184 9am 5pmAttn, professors. Must rent: Gracious 3 bdrm.3 bath apt., East Hyde Pk., lake view. Conve¬nience, security, parking. Call Day/Eve. 643-1935.6100 S. Dorchester, 2 BR apts for rent, 1 & 2bath, cptd., stove & refrig., all electric, securi¬ty buzzer, 1 yr. lease, 1 mo. sec. dept., no pets,$435 S450. CALL Sharon at 369 8484 for appt. &SPECIAL rent rebate offer good till 3/31/83.2 rooms w/lots of restored wood plus Balconykit, walk-in closet. 58th & Blackstone. Nonsmokers. 684-7248 after 4 p.m.Clean quiet building 1’ 2 & 2’ 2 studio apts New¬ly decorated included all utilities and Appliances. 225.00 to 270.00 mth. 493-6250Will pay 575 to student to take over univ. housing contract. Call 667-1138 before 8:30 AM.5515 Everett5521 Everett5525 Everett1745 E 55th St5529 Everett1026 Hyde Park5113 Kimbark5212 Cornell5218 Cornell5220 Cornell1163 E 52nd St #2E 4 room#2S 31 2 room# 1W 5 room#3W 4 room#2E 4 room#2S 4 room#2R 4 room#305 2 room#2E 3>/2 room#2E 4 room#3 4 room 400 per month350 per month500 per month400 per month375 per month400 per month360 per month280 per month365 per month375 per month360 per monthFor More Information on theAbove ApartmentsCall SAC K Realty Co. 1459 E. Hyde Park Blvd684-8900CONDO FOR SALE1450 E. 55th StreetOne bedroom unit in move-in condition. Ownerleaving country. Must sell! Pool. Indoor Parking. Health Club. 24 Hour Security.Call Olga or A! 334-0010MATANKY & ASSOC.HPK Studio a/c lakeview 300mo NOW 285-1835dys 363-0889 eve. Free SecurityProfessional fern, nonsmoker 30-f- seeks sameto share Irg sunny apt near lake, grad std OKrunner would be great. $215+ util 324 5669 Studio April 1 5539 S. Kimbark, main room,dining rm., kit., walk in closet. Sunny quiet.5300-CALL N Devetak, 667 4008, 8 + 05, or leavemessage.Studios $225. Hild Realty Group 955-1200.Sublet $680/mo. 3 bedroom. Lease good thruJuly and renewable with owner at that time.Call Dan at 968 8196 or 579 3642.INTHE HEARTOF HYDE PARKBeautiful studio apt. for rent. Agent onpremises. 5424 Cornell Ave. 324 1800.FOR SALEPASSPORT PHOTOS WHILE YOU WAIT!Model Camera 1342 E 55th 493 6700.DAX Poster Frames 20% OFF! MODELCAMERA 1342 E 55th St. 493-6700.Pre INVENTORY LENS SALE!!! Red HOTValues!! Kiron, etc. MODEL CAMERA 1342 E55th St. 493 6700.TDK SA 90 TAPES 10 for $29.90!SONY UCXS TAPES 10 for $34.90!!Air conditioner, 9000 BTU, $75; Tandem Bike575; call 955-5987, evenings.1974 CHEVY CAPRICE Excellent drive train.Good body & interior, 112,000 miles; primarilyon highway. VERY carefully maintained. EXTREMELY RELIABLE. $650. 955-6708 untilten.493-0666 • CALL ANYTIMEFEATURE OF THE WEEKcalled “Professor’s house.” By Mann, MacNeille architects in 1903.Wonderful brick 3 story residence on a nostalgic Greenwood Avenue.Three-car Brick garage. Big yard. 2 working fireplaces. Leaded &stained glass windows. Bookcases. Six bedrooms. Spacious gracioushome. $187,500.SUMMER IS A-COMIN!Spend it on a great back porch in this newly listed 2 bedroom condoon 56th. New kitchen, new bath. $59,500.$145 ASSESSMENT INCLUDES HEAT AND TAXES:800-plus sq. feet. 1 bedroom co-op, 55th & Woodlawn. $27,000.Board approval required.JUST LISTEDCall Ken. Two flat on Ridgewood Court. Excellent condition.Owner’s apartment is 2-story. New kitchen. $114,000.REHABBERS TAKE NOTE!Built in 1890. Architect Sprague. This wonderful brick 5,000 sq. ft.residence in Kenwood calls out to you for restoration. 11 rooms. Elec¬trical and heating are less than 10 years old. Your choice of manyfunctioning fireplaces. Discover original woodwork under paint. An¬tique leaded windows. Low price—$128,000. We even have a separate2-car, brick garage. Call Ken.NEAR BILLINGSFree-standing row house, 2 car garage. Pocket doors, built in buffet. 4bedroom stone Victorian. $92,500.WE MAKE HOUSE CALLS--493-0666 For sale HONDA '80 Accord, 4 dr. 5 sp, ps, am-fm stereo, rstprf, polyglct, garage-kept mintcond.S5750. Laura days 962 6338eve: 348 1711.BUICK CENTURY 1975 in good condition-mustsell. CALL Eric 667-8293.IInexpensive elegance! Large bamboo arm¬chair, $15, Nest of mahogany end tables, $25,Double bed mattress, $25. Book case. $5. 6672507 Weekday afternoons, 753 2194.PEOPLE 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 Sciences.Phone 962 8859RIGHT HANDED SUBJECTS needed forstudies on brain functions and perception$3/hr. 962-8846.OFFICE MANAGER, 15-40 hrs /wk at 55 7/hr.Typing, Administrative Experience Required.Send 2 pg resume to 322 Social Sciences, 1126 E59th St. Chicago.Undergrad or grad student in behavioralsciences to assist research professor part-time. Experience in data processing required.Send resume to ISBP, 5741 S. Drexel, Chicago,IL.60637Night Desk Clerk midnite 'til 8:00am Mon.Tues. Wed Thurs. 1 or 2 students DO NOT apply unless you plan to stay thru summer theQuadrangle Club 1155 East 57th StreetSmall Loop publishing firm needs part-timetypist. Must be competent on word processoror an excellent typist willing to learn. Flexiblehours in afternoon + evening. Near publictransportation from Hyde Park. Call CarolynBresnahan,853 0166Tutor to assist high school student withbiology. Cal! 667-1381.CRUISE SHIP JOBS! Great income potential,all occupations. For information call 602-837-3401 Ext. 843.SERVICESJUDITH TYPES and has a memory. Phone955 4417. Discount Moving and Hauling ReasonableRates and Free Estimates Seven Days a WeekDay and Evening References Available. CallTom 8-10 am 6 to 10 pm at 375-6247.YOUR PAPER STINKS. But I'll make it lookgreat. Just $1.25/p. IBM Selectric. 684-2559.Toddler Childcare Available. Experiencedcaregiver, small group, all day. 684-2820.SCENESWriters workshop PL 2-8377Gilbert & Sullivan's H.M.S. Pinafore,presented in Mandel Hall, 57th & University,March 11th & 12 at 8pm, March 13th at 2pmTickets at Mandel Hall box office, 962 7300.COOKING CLASSES. Chinese and International series. Wendy Gerick 538 1324.Painting classes for all levels. Wed. evenings6:30 to 9.30 instructed by experienced artist,teacher, lecturer, BFA, MFA. Art Institute,and Univ. of Chicago, $140 for ten weeks artiststudio. 546 W. Washington limited enrollment.930 9317 or 446-7181.Quiche! Made of all butter crust and variety ofnovel fillings. Hyde Park Cafes 667-3000THAI COOKING CLASSES. For informationcall Wendy Gerick's Cooking School. 538 1324.RIDESGoing to Denver March 16 need riders 752-3029.LOSTAND FOUNDLost: Silver Jewish star pendant. If found,please call Mindy at 493-2231.PERSONALSMyer in honor of your birthday I'll give you 20points for 21 dollars.EBIBON, Happy Birthday! We love you. H &YWHOSAGONNA take a big blonde refugeefrom the party Saturday night?May 4: Okay, I'll admit it. Dinner was lovelyand I do miss you. Won't you PLEASE find ajob in Chicago? Your mother.JAMES BONE, EDITOR TYPIST, 363 0522.PROFESSIONAL TYPING reasonable rates,684 6882. K.S. and V.P. and loves her! ILMQNEEMBEWARE, SAKI (the Wicked Witchwrote)—Cat Quiche Day is coming.MOVING AND HAULING Discount Prices onall moving and hauling free packing servicefree estimates references courteous Bill 4939122. If no ans keep trying!Passport photos while you wait. On Campus.Other photo services available. 962-6263.Psychologist forming therapy group in HydePark to change women's longstanding struggles with uncontrolled eating. RosalindCharney, Ph D 538 7022.PROFESSIONAL TYPING. Large or smalljobs. Competitive prices. 324 5943, 667-4285CATERING. Custom menus for all occasions.Wendy Gerick 538-1324. Get on your knees and hear the pinhead prayer(whatever that means).ISRAELI FOLKDANCINGMondays 8 00 p.m Blue Gargoyle 5565 S.University, 2nd floor DONATIONS: $1.00Teacher: Dalla Paludis. Sponsored by HillelFoundations.WE NEED YOUUJA needs you! Our spring campaign needsyour participation. UJA helps Jews and Jewishcommunities in Chicago, Tel Aviv, Moscow,and around the world. Help our 1983 U. ofChicago United Jewish Appeal Campaign - callDave, at 493 7651.Sticks & StuffCOLLECTIBLES • ANTIQUES • USED FURNITURE •CLOCKS • LAMPS • ALL WOOL INDIAN RUGSAND A VARIETY OF KNICK-KNACKS ATREASONABLE PRICES1749 E. 55th St. Hours 667-1610Tues-Fri Noon - 7 pmSat & Sun 10 am - 5 pmmodel camera1342 East 55th • 493-6700r? 22—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, March 4, 1983ARTISANSWELCOMEAre you an artist or craftsperson interested ina sales outlet? HYDE PARK ARTISANSwelcomes artists or craftspersons who work inall mediums. We are a cooperative gallerylocated at 57th and Woodlawn in the UnitarianChurch. For entry all work will be reviewedFor details call Alberts Smith-Johnson at 8420706 or Laura Kracke at 288-6455.ZAP-BANG!!!HOVERTANK — the Newest and Most Ex¬citing Sciencefiction Wargame in Years. JustOut by CLOSE SIMULATIONS. Eight geomor-phic maps, over 100 counters, 16 Scenarios fortwo or more players, based on a cleansimultaneous movement system. Try combatin the 21st century: S16.00 (III. residents pleaseadd 96c tax) plus $1 for postage and handlingto CLOSE SIMULATIONS, P.O. Box 2247, Nor-thb'ook, II 60062.GILBERT&SULLIVANH M.S. Pinafore at Mandel Hall, 57th & University, Friday, March 11th & Saturday, March12th at 8 PM, tickets $7; and Sunday, March13th at 2 PM, tickets $4. Tickets at Mandel Hallbox office 962-7300DAWNin the South Atlantic... Suddenly a Harrier flysover and there is the sound of shells. The BritishInvasion has begun! This is "The FalklandsWar," not some cheap quickie design, but a detail¬ed 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 (III.residents please add 84c tax) plus $1 for postageand handling to CLOSE SIMULATIONS, P.O Box2247, Northbrook, 11.60062.EAST HYDE PARK CONDOWill sell lovely 3 bedroom 2 bath condo. $739.00includes parking, new kitchen, large formaldining rm, and other xtras of condos pricedmuch higher. Low asses. 684 5030 bef. 8:30pm.FRENCH FUNLes Beaux Parleurs, the UC French Club,meets Monday March 7, Ida Noyes 1st fir. 9 pmto discuss activities for next quartre. If youwant to join the fun, be there! George, 643-5449.APARTMENTSAVAILABLEStudios, one, two + 3 bedrms some Lake viewsnear 1C, CTA + U of C shuttle, laundryfacilities, parking available heat + water in¬cluded. 5% Discounts for Students HerbertRealty 684 2333 9 4:30 Mon. Fri.PDP-11 PROGRAMERSkilled in FORTRAN, MACRO-11 Assemblylanguage, and the Rt-11 operation system,needed urgently to write/modify programs forthe analysis of digitized speech waveforms. Noprior knowledge of speech analysis necessary,but prior experience of real time programming of advantage. Will pay well for a high-levelof skill; the programs must be within 2 - 3 months. Phone Professor S. Monsell (Dept, ofBehavioral Sciences) at 962 8834, or leavemessage at 962 8859.$$SUBJECTSNEEDED$$We pay $123. for your participation in a 6 weekdrug preference study. Involves only commonly pre scribed, non-experimental drugs. If youare between 21 and 35 and in good health, call962 1537 for further information.C.G. THEATREMEETINGConcrete Gothuc Theatre is holding an openmeeting. Anyone interested in student theatreand our organization is welcomed Mon. Mar. 77pm at Ida Noyes Hall, 3rd floor.TALENT SHOWCome cheer on UC students who will bevideotaped for the Disney Cable TV Channelsome audience participation posible. Wed.March 9 Reynolds' Club North Lounge 7pmFREE!!LANGUAGECOURSESThrough Chicago Cluster of TheologicalSchools at the Lutheran School of Theology (on55th St.) Professional instruction by experienc¬ed teachers and/or native speakers in FRENCH/GERMAN/LATIN/SPANISH. Fees rangefrom $80 for 10 hours of instruction per quarterto $220 for 50 hours. SEE BELOW FORSPEC IF ICS or CALL CCTS: 667 3500. ext. 266FRENCH COURSESThrough CCTS at LSTC, Rm. 206 Beg March30, 7 9 Fee. $110. for info/reg call CCTS 6673500 x 266 or M. SCHNE IDE R 947 8176GERMAN COURSESThrough CCTS at!.FTC Rm 2031Two quarter com se (2nd otr), beg March 2983 II ADVANCED READING. Beginning March31, 1983. Wed. 7:30-9:30, fee SI 10III 16 WEEK INTENSIVE (Iwkbreak) Beg.March 28, 83 M/Th. 7:30-9:30; feeS220.IV CONVERSATION FOR STUDENTS WITHREADING KNOWLEDGE. By appointment.For infor/reg. call G.F. Miller, PhD. (nativespeaker) 363-1384 or CCTS 667 3500 x 266.ILATIN COURSEThrough CCTS at LSTC by appointment. CallFather Zborowski 324 2626 or CCTS 667 3500 x266.SPANISH COURSESI Beginning Spanish: Mo. 5:30-7:00 Rm 206 Fee$80. Beg. March 28 for info/reg call instr. C.Rosario 288-8289 or CCTS 667 3500 x 266II INTERMEDIATE SPANISH. Tue 6-7:30Rm 206 Fee $80. Beg. March 28. For info/reg.call instr. K Beekie 947-0203or CCTS 667-3500 x266.HEY GAY BOYSAND GIRLSGuess what? The GROUP is back, so if you'rejust coming out, already out, or a bona fide actvist, come to our weekly meeting for a mix ofsocializing politics, and friends hip. We willmeet every Tuesday at 8.00pm at 5446 S. Kimbark. All are welcome. Love Johnathon.BE ON TVCome cheer on US students who will be videotaped for the Disney Cable TV channel. Someaudience participation possible Wed. March 9Reynolds Club North Lounge 7pm FREE!!WANTED: ARTISTS ANDCRAFTSPERSONSArtisans 21 the gallery run by the artists, 5225 S.Harper, in Harper Court has a few openings forartists-craftspeople. For infor call 288 7450.Weekdays 12 6 Sat. 12-5 Sun. 1-4.LAST BRUNCH OFTHE QUARTERLast brunch of the quarter March 6 at HillelFoundation. First Brunch of Spring QuarterApril 10.POLARITYBALANCINGTo release tension and to re align you with thenatural healing energies. Non sexual P/2 hourmassage $13. Call Bob Reuter at 324-7530 for information or an appointment. Thank you. Classified AdsTALENT SHOWCome cheer on UC students who will bevideotaped for the Disney Cable TV channel.Some audience participation possible. Wed.Marcfi 9 Reynolds Club North Lounge 7pmFREE!!GRADUATE STUDENTSWANTEDGraduate students are needed to judge the Na¬tional Parliamentary Debate Championships.They will be held at U of Chicago on April 8 9.Help: We will pay $5 per round (there will be 6rounds). No experience is necessary, we willtrain. If interested, call Vincent Hillery-24l-7488, Ralph Casale-752 2240 (ext. 1601) or LisaBeckerman 753-2233 (ext. 315).AN EVENINGOF JAZZThe Ethnic Heritage Ensemble March 5 Saturday in Ida Noyes Hall Cost $2.00 w/UCID $2.50w/o.HELP FOR MONEY!If you are a Graduate Student, we will pay you$5 per round to judge at the AmericanParliamentary Debate Charmpionships. It willbe held on April 8-9 at the U of Chicago Therewill be 6 rounds of debate, so you could earn upto $30 for listening. At U. of C., you do thatanyway, so anyone is qualified! If interested,call Vincent Hillery, 241-7488, Ralph Casale753-2240 (ext. 1601) or Lisa Beckerman 753-2233(ext.315).BE ON TV!Come cheer on UC students who will bevideotaped for the Disney Cable TV channel.Some audience participation possible Wed.March 9 Reynolds Club North Lounge 7pmFREE!!!CERAMICSMediaeval and Renaissance Ceramics fromthe Kassebaum Collection Pre View Reception! Wednesaday, March 9, 5-7 p.m. SmartGallery 5550 S. Greenwood Art at its best.HOTLINETalk it over. Dial 753-1777 from 7am-7pm.</) HI2*5W<-OHDCHI Ui-So-00O<ccoco.</>>UiZQ<>£OCX<HdlLo5°-a<zc/>-<uj 5"5^O hiX cc QC<Uicc _u_3(0 U.ozou-OoHI h* H”(0<WUjO>XO<l-Jl57TH & BLACKSTONE FIND 1893 3-story, 10-room townhouse PLUSpleasure of a huge modern kitahenwith sliding glass doors onto deckoverlooking yard! Six bedrooms,three baths, four fireplaces!• 58TH & DORCHESTER BARGAINParticularly sunny & bright; couldbe a stunning home just steps fromcampus! Four bedrooms on secondfloor—huge room with bath on thirdmakes fantastic library! Only$140,000!BLACKSTONE & 56TH TUDORRemarkable 4 bedroom, 4 bathresidence. Enjoy 1st-floor den &powder room, 3rd-floor loft familyroom/study! Dining room Frenchdoors open to lovely yard! CAMPUS PRAIRE SCHOOL Nodetail was missed during restora¬tion! Central air, new systems, roof& storms. Three fireplaces, stainedglass, marble sinks, period wood¬work retained! BETWEEN 55thAND THE MIDWAY...LOW, LOW' PRICE - low, lowassessment. Protect yourself from ris¬ing rents by buying a 4 roomcooperative apartment - living room,dining room, bedroom and kitchen allfor under $25,000. Location is superb -walk to campus, transportation, parks,and museum. Carrying charges in¬cluding heat, water, taxes, etc. forunder $140 per monthUNDER $30,000. You can own thisstudio condo for less than rental price.9'/2% financing makes this an excep¬tional buy. This unit faces north with acity view. Building facilities includepool, exercise room, master TV anten¬na and garage. Minutes to shopping. Uof C campus and transportation.UNIVERSITY PARK SPECIAL -lovely color coordinated levelor blinds,carpeting, and walls make this 1bedroom unit delightful. Indoor park¬ing space is included in the price! Ex¬cellent security, swimming pool andexercise room. Mid $40’s.LOCATION - LOCATION - LOCA¬TION - in the circle, this 2 bedroomand 2 studies condo is an ideal campushome. This unit has a lovely yard,modem kitchen, and super space forstudy. Price reduced - $50’s.BLACKSTONE AVENUE CON¬DOMINIUM - 2 bedroom, lovelyopen balcony, natural wood built-inbookshelves, eat-in kitchen. This is thelocation everyone is looking for. Tree-lined street near campus. Near shop¬ping and transportation too. Upper$60’s.SPACIOUS STUDIO - 2 large roomsin this walk-to campus building arepriced right for the single home buyer.Large closets, oak floors, lots ofsunlight, and excellent campus locationmake this a good buy. Low 530's.56th AND BLACKSTONE. Freshlydecorated. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, leadedglass. In the $70’s. Exceptional 9%owner financing.SPECTACULAR LIGHT! 6 roomcondo, completely redone — newwalls, new windows, new baths, newkitchen, new electric, new . . . It's at56th and Harper and it's only $69,500!Call today!THE MEW'S . . . lovely, lovelybuilding. This 1 bedroom plus studyhas natural woodwork, beamed ceiling,and a woodbuming fireplace. A superbuy! S50's.CONVENIENCE GALORE. Close toeverything in Easy Hyde Park and theUniversity bus. 2 large bedrooms, fulldining room with lovely built-ins andlots of light. Call. Only $53,000.THE OWNER WILL HELP YOUMAKE a deal on this 1 bedroom withdining room in The Inns of Court. Awoodburning fireplace, great associa¬tion. and location make this a must tosee. Hardwood floors and modem kit¬chen make this courtyard moredesirable. Mid $50's.LARGE. LARGE 1 bedroom with fulldining room. There are 2 porches and amodernized kitchen and bath. Thefloors are beautiful hardwood and thebuilding is very well maintained. Loca¬tion on Cornell Avenue is convenient toeverything. $50's.A GREAT BUY, super location. 4rooms with French doors and naturalwoodwork. $47,500.WALK TO CAMPUS, shopping andtransportation from this 1 bedroomcondo on quiet tree-lined street. Spaceto study and entertain. Priced right -$40’s.HILD REALTY GROUP1365 E. 53rd St.955-iSOQJThe Chicago Maroon—Fridav March 4. 1963—23Would YouBuy An AlbumFrom this Man?Of course, youwouldn’t, neither would we!But then again, HEwouldn’t sell you one...WE WOULD!So, don’t you think you shouldbuy an album from us-the more,the merrier-just on principle?*WE’RETHE PHOENIX!Possible EnticementsDThe SLASH BIN, at the far end of the store,where you will find an ever-increasing arrayof imports, classical, pop & jazz albums atprices very near our cost.2)Orders are beginning to trickle into thestore at an ever-increasing rate...If youdidn’t find it last time, check us again.3)We’re still the cheapest game in town!•This desperate attempt at logic was brought to you by theequally desperate record manager.Check UsFirst...We’rethe Phoenix!(Basement-Reynolds Club) Medievaland Renaissance Ceramicsfrom theKassebaum CollectionMarch 10 - April 24,1983Please join us at a PreviewReception on WednesdayMarch 9, from 5 to 7 pm.The David and Alfred Smart Gallery5550 South Greenwood AvenueHours: Tues.-Sat. 10-4Sun., noon-4LASTCHANCETO APPL Y FORASHUM1983 - 84 ACADEMIC YEARSMaster's Program in the Liberal Artsand Sciences Basic to Human Biologyand MedicineInformation and Applications inHarper 587, East Tower24—The Chicago Maroon—Friday. March 4. 1983