——The Chicago MaroonVolume 93, No. 44 The University of Chicago ©Copyright 1984 The Chicago Maroon Friday, April 6, 1984Students to vote on H ARCBy Burt RosenResidents of student housingwill vote Monday on a referen¬dum to increase the room billsby $2 per quarter, a proposalbrought forward by the Hous¬ing Activities Resource Coun¬cil (HARO.HARC was established for atrial period beginning autumnquarter 1983 and continuingthrough two quarters. It wasestablished for the purpose ofcreating more inter-dorm/inter-house social activities byfinancing a maximum of 50percent of the cost of any so¬cial event involving two or more dorms or houses. Fund¬ing during the trial periodcame from the Office of Stu¬dent Housing and the Inter-House Council. HARC wasgiven a total of $2540 to contri¬bute to inter-dorm/inter-houseevents.Since its inception, HARChas co-sponsored social eventsinvolving nearly 2000 housingresidents. These include bothgraduate and undergraduateevents, and HARC is planningto co-sponsor four more eventsduring the first few weeks ofthis quarter.HARC is composed of a chairman, who is necessarilythe vice-president of the IHC,and one representative fromeach dorm, including the com¬muter center and the NewGraduate Residence Hall. Thegroup reviews each request forfunding and decides whether tosponsor it.The council has drawn criti¬cism from some students, butit also has a considerableamount of support. Before thereferendum was introduced,HARC distributed a statementto all dorm councils askingthem to vote on the following:continued on page fourteenGraduate fee structure disputedBy Michael ElliottAccording to unofficialsources, the March 6 FacultySenate meeting overwhelming¬ly approved in a non-binding‘straw’ vote proposals to res¬tructure graduate fees and tu¬ition.As previously reported, theproposals are a three-tieredsystem that would require allgraduate students to registerfor two years of ‘scholastic res¬idence’ during which graduatecoursework would be complet¬ed, followed by two years of‘research residence,’ duringwhich a student would pay aProject’84By Frank LubyThis article is the second in aseries designed to report theprogress of the 11 task forceswhich comprise Project 1984,the pioneer project of theCenter for Curricular Thought.The task forces met through¬out the winter to evaluate thestate of the College and discusspossible changes. From April9-20 the task forces will holdmeetings open to students andfaculty to allow more input tothese discussions, which mayultimately lead to changes inthe structure of the College ofthe University of Chicago.When John MacAloon andJonathan Z. Smith, co-chair¬men of the Center for Curricu¬lar Thought, launched Project1984, they envisioned whatSmith described as “a no-holds-barred discussion ofwhat we’re doing...a chance tosit back and talk.” MacAloonadded, ‘‘We hope these reports(due from each task force inSeptember) will contributeimaginative proposals forchange. Whether the taskforces choose to translate their lowered rate of tuition untilcompleting a degree.If a student does not gradu¬ate by the end of four years, hewould become an ‘advancedresident,’ during which hemust be registered for classesor remain registered at alowered rate of tuition untilcompleting his degree. Thesame unofficial source saidthat this ‘tuition’ might amountto $350 per quarter.Deputy Provost Ralph Ni¬cholas declined comment onthe report, saying “the meet¬ing was confidential.” He didsay, however, that he hadunfocusedideas into legislation is up tothem.” This ambiguity andlack of concreteness, however,have caused at least two Proj¬ect 1984 task force members towonder where all this talk willlead, and why the Project evenexists.“When we started weweren’t sure what it was wewere supposed to be doing,”said Dan Garber, associateprofessor and director of grad¬uate studies in philosophy, andmember of the Historical andCultural Studies task force.“There was some uncertaintyabout the question of whetherwe’d continue to meet,” hesaid, and added “The questionof the task forces’ role in theCollege is not cleared up.We’re not sure what the re¬ports will be used for.”Bernard Cohn, chairman ofthe same task force, describedhimself as “very aggressiveand angry” when ampliyfingGarber’s point. “We (the taskforce members) have strongfeelings about Project 1984 as apublic relations operation,”continued on page nine talked about the proposals withconcerned graduate studentsas well as Student GovernmentPresident Joe Walsh.Though some of thesechanges have been consideredfor several years, the adminis¬tration based much of this pro¬posal on the Baker Report ongraduate education, whichfound as one of its many con¬clusions that graduate studentsoften become isolated from theintellectual life of the Universi¬ty after the first few years oftheir work.Said Jean Komaroff, profes-continued on page elevenBernard S. CohnEvans failsBy Cliff GrammichTimothy C. Evans failedMonday in a surprise challengeto the re-election of Edward R.Vrdolyak as chairman of theCook County DemocraticParty. Evans, the 4th Ward al¬derman and committeeman,lost the weighted vote cast byeach committeeman by a 2 to 1margin.Washington allies, includingEvans, had tried to enticeformer party chairman GeorgeDunne, former party chairmanand Cook County board presi¬dent, into challenging Vrdo¬lyak, the 10th Ward aldermanand committeeman. Washing¬ton allies thought a Dunne bidcould generate support fromallies of Cook County State’sAttorney Richard M. Daley,whom Dunne supported in the1983 mayoral primary.When most of the so-calledDaley faction, however, failedto back Dunne, the countyboard president declined tochallenge Vrdolyak. Washing¬ton allies then decided to run acandidate “from which reformmeasures could be offered,”according to Evans.Evans said one of the chiefmeasures of reform theInsjdeJacksondebatescontinue JesseJacksonLetters page fiveWhere’s Meryl?Grey City page seven StudentsBy Victor KingA group of students began aweek-long protest yesterday infront of the Laboratory Schoolto show their disapproval ofthe administration’s decisionto let go of practical arts teach¬er Leonard Wisniewski.The handful of picketers arepart of a student and parent or¬ganization formed to urge re¬taining Wisniewski as an in¬structor. The group wasformed without Wisniewski’sknowledge, and acts indepen¬dently of him and of the officialparent and student groups oncampus. Earlier in the year,the coalition mailed 400 lettersto parents of LaboratorySchool households asking forsupport. About 150 positive re¬sponses were received.Wisniewski is an engineeringand design teacher at theschool. Students there call himin surprisemayor’s allies supported wasthe establishment of a commit¬tee system to review theparty’s structure and fi¬nances.“The chairman himselfagreed we were entitled to es¬tablish a committee system,”Evans said.Of particular concern toEvans and Washington allies isthe expenditure of partymoney for slated candidates inprimaries, or “huge expendi¬tures for candidates the entireparty doesn’t solidly support,”Evans said.During last year’s mayoralcampaign, Jane Byrne, thecandidate endorsed by a ma¬jority of the city’s Democraticcommitteemen, was able touse nearly $800,000 of partyfunds for her unsuccessful bidfor renomination.Allies of the mayor havethreatened to run a third-partyslate in fall elections forcounty-wide offices, shouldthey fail in their attempts tochange party leadership orrules. Evans said Washingtonsupporters will await newly-formed committees’ decisionsbefore deciding on such aslate. picket“The Wiz.” Protestor PeterBrown said, “I like him. He’s anice guy and I talk to him alot.”Social science teacher andunion leader Ed Bersteinadded, “The general attitudeis that he is well-liked.”When asked why Wisniewskiwas being dismissed. Bersteinspeculated, “It’s not clear.He’s a shop teacher, andthere’s been talk that the pro¬gram is going to be stopped.Another reason may be be¬cause if his contract is re¬newed, it would be tantamountto granting him tenure.”Currently, Wisniewski is atthe end of his three-vear pro-bational contract. If given an¬other contract, he would be¬come a senior teacher andallowed to stay three moreyears.continued on page fourteenchallengeHe expressed confidence forsuccess of Washington-backedmeasures. Lynn Williams,New Trier Township commit¬teeman, will oversee somecommittee work, as Evans be¬lieves Williams is a “reform-minded individual.”Evans was dismayed,though, that Vrdolyak was ableto dictate much of the commit¬tees’ structure, for he fears thechairman could force changesto be voted down. Evans ex¬pected Washington supportersto await future decisions be¬fore bolting from party ranks,though.If such a third-party slate isformed, Judge R. Eugene Pin-cham would likely run for CookCounty state’s attorney,against Daley and RichardBrzeczek, the Republican can¬didate and former police su¬perintendent under JaneByrne.Evans said he believes Pin-cham is a better lawyer thanBrzeczek or Daley, and has ac¬complished more in legalwork.Daley has taken an aloofstance in the party infighting,failing to side either with thecontinued on page fourteenpssis: aggggggniTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOJOHN M. OLIN CENTERpresentsMICHAEL WALZERProfessor of Social Science, Institutefor Advanced StudiesLIBERALISM AND THEART OF SEPARATIONThursday, April 12,19844:00 p.m.Social Science 1221126 E. 59th StreetThe Chicago Debating Societypresents theFinal Roundof theChicago ParliamentaryDebating TournamentFinalists will be chosen after sixpreliminary debates from teamsincluding: Toronto, Navy,Fordham, Wabash, Wooster...The Law SchoolWeymouth Kirkland CourtroomSATURDAY, APRIL 75:45 p.m.-SGFCFUNDED - THE COUNCIL ON RELIGIONAND INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRSinvites you to attend the third in its series ofEthics and Foreign Policy discussionswithDWIGHT PERKINSH. H. Burbank ProfessorDirector, Institute for International DevelopmentHarvard UniversityECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT INASIA: THE ROLE OF VALUESThursday, April 12,1984 - 5:00 PMSocial Science Research Building, Room 1221126 East 59th StreetHosts: The Committee on Public Policy Studies& The Center for Ethics and Public Affairs(312)962-8400THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO DEPARTMENT OF MUSICPRESENTSThe Gilbert & SullivanOpera Co.inPRINCESS IDAmsMANDEL HALL, 57TH STREET & UNIVERSITY AVENUEThursday, April 5 (Patrons' Gala) at 8 P.M.Friday, April 6 at 8 P.M Evenings: $8Saturday, April 7 at 8 P.M. Matinee: $4Sunday, April 8 at 2 P.M. All Seats ReservedTickets on sale at Mandel Hall Box Office: 962-7300or by mall: University of Chicago Dept, of MusicGoodspeed Hall 310/GAS5845 S. Ellis AvenueChicago, IL 60637Enclose self-addressed stamped envelope924-5422Free Parking adjacent to Regenstein Library - Enter from 56th St.2—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 6,1984Tabletalk ’84 kickoffThe kickoff for Tabletalk ’84, an in¬novative and exciting program to en¬hance student-faculty interaction, willbe held Monday. Beginning at 11:30a.m., students can join faculty and ad¬ministrators in the North Lounge ofReynolds Club for casual lunch andconversation. All attending will receivea coupon which will entitle them to a 10percent discount off any item atMorry’s in Hutch. All are welcome andencouraged to participate in the twoweeks of Tabletalk ’84.Quantrell letters dueRecommendations for the QuantrellAward are due in the Dean of the Col¬lege’s office April 20. The award isgiven to several faculty members eachyear, and includes a cash stipend alongwith recognition at spring convoca¬tion.Student nominations are an impor¬tant part of the selection criteria, andDean Levine encourages students towrite recommendations for their fa¬vorite teachers.On gay awarenessThe Gay and Lesbian Alliance(GALA), in conjunction with othercampus groups throughout the state,will sponsor a Lesbian and Gay Aware¬ness Fortnight April 8-21. Programsthroughout the two weeks will includefilms, seminars and a discussion withauthor Aaron Fricke. On April 13-14 theIllinois Lesbian and Gay StudentCaucus will be holding its statewideconference at Northwestern Universi¬ty. For more information call GALA at962-9734.Stendhal at KAMKrister Stendahl, former Dean andnow Professor of Divinity at HarvardDivinity School, will be the Weinstein-Levin Scholar-in-Residence thisweekend at KAM Isaiah Israel.Stendahl will speak “On Judaism andChristianity” at 8:15 p.m. tonight, 4:30 p.m. Saturday, and 10:30 a.m. Sunday.Stendahl chairs the Consultation on theChurches, and is a Fellow of theAmerican Academy of Arts andSciences.The talks are free and open to thepublic.Stigler at WoodwardGeorge J. Stigler, Charles R. Wal¬green Distinguished Service ProfessorEmeritus, Department of Economicsand Graduate School of Business, willtalk about “Economics — The ImperialScience” Tuesday at 8:30 p. m. in Wood-ward Court.Stigler, winner of the Nobel in Eco¬nomics in 1982 and editor of the Journalof Political Economy, will touch upon abroad range of economic issues such ashow government regulation and a mar¬ket economy work. Questions raisedwill be: do people marry for rationalreasons? and does the law affect howresources are used? Richter Trust fundUndergraduates working on individ¬ual research projects will have moremoney in the future. The Richter Trustis giving $27,000 a year for the nextthree years to underwrite Richter Re¬search Fellowships.The money will be distributed as sti¬pends to cover expenses incurred whileworking on research projects. As manyas 30 or 40 awards may be given eachyear.The Exxon Education Foundationhas also given a grant of $48,000 for thepurpose of publishing materials used inthe Practical Discourse Sequence of¬fered by the PERL program.Grad lectors neededApplications are now being acceptedfor lectors for next year’s Little RedSchoolhouse class. Lectors must bePhD candidates, but need not beEnglish majors. Duties include readingweekly papers, discussing them withthe students, and creatingassignments Lectors must also attendGeorge Stigler PH0T0 BY J0HN VA,LHe will also discuss attempts of econ¬omists to work in law, history and polit¬ical science.This first of the Woodward Court Lec¬ture Series for the spring will be open toall students, faculty members andalumni. A reception will follow the lec¬ture. a weekly seminar fall quarter toprepare for the winter quarter course.Lectors will receive at least $750, inaddition to gaining valuable writing ex¬perience. Applications are due May 1,and for more information and applica¬tion materials, contact Jo Ann Baum,Gates-Blake 324, 962-7092.Laumann appointedEdward O. Laumann has been ap¬pointed Dean of the Social Sciences andwill assume his duties Oct. 1. Laumannwill succeed William H. Kruskal, whois returning to full-time teaching andresearch after serving two terms asDean.Laumann has been on the facultysince 1973 and has been Chairman ofthe Department of Sociology since1981. His special research interests in¬clude the processes by which individu¬als and groups seeks to influence na¬tional policy. He is the author orco-author of six books, including Chica¬go Lawyers: the Social Structure of theBar, and has been editor of the Ameri¬can Journal of Sociology since 1978.Professors Moore, Schopf dieJames H. Moore, 37, a tenured asso¬ciate professor of Music, died March 13in Venice, Italy, where he was doing re¬search. He was an expert on 16th and17th century Venetian music and li¬turgy.He received a PhD from UCLA,where he taught for two years beforejoining the Chicago faculty in 1976. Hebecame an associate professor in 1983.“Mr. Moore was a great force in theDepartment and very treasured by stu¬dents,” said department chairmanPhillip Gossett. He was also known forhis popular History of Music course.He is survived by his parents, Dr.and Mrs. Bernard J. Moore of VanNuys, California; two brothers; and asister.Thomas Schopf, 44, professor in thegeophysical sciences department, died March 18 while leading a field trip with11 U of C students in Texas.Schopf received his PhD from Ohio'State and then joined the Chicago facul-jty in 1969. He was on the Committee ofEvolutionary Biology and a research!associate at the Field Museum of Natu¬ral History.He authored Paleoceanography andModels in Paleobiology and foundedthe journal Paleobiology in 1974. He;also won the Schuchert Award given bythe Paleontological Society to an out-istanding researcher under 40 yearsold.His work combined biology and geol-jogy by tracing the evolution of livingorganisms through molecular gene¬tics.He is survived by two sons, Kennethand Carl; a daughter, Jennifer; abrother, J. William; and his mother,Esther.The Visiting Fellows CommitteepresentsMARVIN L. GOLDBERGERPresident, California Institute of Technologyspeaking on“Science, Technology, andNational Security”- Questions /Answers to Follow -Thursday, April 12 Eckhart 1334:30 p.m.The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 6, 1984—3HARC: who votes there?Housing residents face Tuesday a referendum which “is to assess res¬ident students’ opinion of a $2 per quarter per resident fee to be added toeach resident student’s room and board charges beginning AutumnQuarter 1984. The sum of the fees would be used to subsidize the cost ofinter-Hall and inter-House social activities, and would be administeredby a central and representative student organization.” While the refer¬endum’s introduction calls for a central organization, the vote itselfsimply calls for the $2 per quarter fee, which we support.Currently, a budget has been given to the Housing and Activities Re¬source Council (HARC), which is representative of an organizationwhich would handle the budget allowed by the new fees. Despite theefforts HARC has tried to make for inter-dorm/inter-house social life,some legitimate complaints have been raised about its representation ofdorm residents.BY KEITH HORVATHA defense of JacksonTo the editor:I am writing this letter to the editorsof the Maroon in response to a letter byMr. Miller. His comment on the effortsof a group of dedicated people to bringthe Jesse Jackson campaign to campuswas indicative of someone ignorant ofthe issues. Hopefully, he is uncharac¬teristic of the student body as a whole.However, one issue raised by Mr. Mill¬er does need to be addressed. Mr. Mill¬er seems to be trying to foster the no¬tion that Rev. Jesse Jackson and hissupporters are anti-semitic and anti-Israel (not necessarily the same thing)by referring to Rev. Jackson’s embrac¬ing of PLO leader Yasser Arafat.Most people familiar with the recenthistory of the Middle-East will affirm•that before 1948 the present nation ofIsrael was a British protectoratenamed Palestine; and the people wholived there were (guess who?) Pales¬tinians and a rapidly growing Jewishpopulation that had been immigratinginto the region since the turn of the cen¬tury to escape the harsh anti-semiticrealities of both Eastern and WesternEurope.After decades of hostilities betweenPalestinians and Jewish freedomfighters (terrorists?) towards the Brit¬ish authority, the United Nations man¬dated the partitioning of Palestine intotwo nations: one Jewish, the other Pa¬lestinian. Obviously, neither Jews, whodid not get as large a land mass as de¬sired, nor Palestinians, who suddenlylost half their land to the new Jewishstate, were happy. Hostilities contin¬ued of necessity. Thus, Israel in defend¬ ing its new found nation was able to mi¬litarily acquire the rest of Palestine inthe next 20 years; and by 1973 Israelcontrolled the Gaza strip and the WestBank of the Jordan River.So, there is now another people with¬out a homeland: Palestinians. In Israeland the occupied areas these peopleare, simply stated, second class citi¬zens under Israeli law. The PalestinianLiberation Organization, a group thatis recognized by the United Nations asthe official representative of Palestin¬ian people, has been waging both a dip¬lomatic and military campaign to gainstatehood since the 1950’s. Unfortunate¬ly, they have sometimes utilized veryviolent methods to achieve their end.However, let us not forget the July 22,1947 bombing of the King David Hotelby the Irgun led by Menachem Begin(it helps to read your history books). Iremind the reader of Begin’s revolu¬tionary tactics only to compare, not tojustify.What Rev. Jackson recognizes is thatwhere there is no freedom, there can beno peace. Given that the Palestiniansare presently being denied their rightto self-determination, there can be nopeace if the PLO is not included in thepeace-making process; for the onlyother alternative is to extinguish allwho desire a Palestine for themselves.As a humanitarian concerned with allpeople, Rev. Jackson would rather seePalestinians included in peace negotia¬tions than see them vanquished in theface of overwhelming militarystrength.Harry E. Douglas IVRacist headlines?To the editor:At last, I must protest! The Maroonhas outdone the Spectator and BernardEpton in one stroke. While I had gri¬maced in silence at the Spectator’scharacterizations of the black SouthSide in its article on Hyde Park’s masstransit connections, the headline of theMaroon’s special “April Fools Day”edition literally made me blush.Insensitivity to racism certainly isnot uncommon at the University of Chi¬cago, where orientation lectures beginwith instruction not to cross 61st Street,but this tasteless reference to culinarystereotypes of blacks is extreme, to saythe least. Without a doubt many of those who wore the Epton Campaign’s“watermelon” buttons also consideredtheir indelicacy as a cute joke. In lastyear’s mayoral election, one of the can¬didates distinguished himself by cam¬paigning against segregation in what isperhaps the most racially-divided cityin the United States. When the editorsof the Maroon learn a greater sense ofreponsibility for the exercise of thepower of the press, perhaps they willfind as well a better appreciation ofgood humor.Andrew HowardGraduate StudentDepartment of SociologyThe Chicago MaroonThe Chicago Maroon is the official student newspaper of the University of Chicago. It ispublished twice per week, on Tuesdays and Fridays. The offices of the Maroon are in IdaNoyes Hall, rooms 303 and 304. Phone 962-9555.Anna HupertEditorJeffrey TaylorManaging EditorCliff GrammichNews EditorMichael ElliottNews EditorSondra KruegerFeatures Editor Frank LubySports EditorJesse HalvorsenGrey City Journal EditorBrian MulliganGrey City Journal EditorArthur U. EllisPhotography EditorKC MorrisPhotography Editor Chris ScottAdvertising ManagerRobin TotmanOffice ManagerJoshua SalisburyBusiness ManagerLinda LeeProduction ManagerCampbell McGrathChicago Literary Review EditorAssociate Editors: Rosemarv Blinn. Hilarv TillContributors: Leslie Bierman, “J.E. Cartwood,” Anthony Cashman, Dennis Chansky,Don Haslam, Keith Horvath, Victor King, John Kotz, Jane Look, Fiora Pizzo, Burt Rosen,Leah Schlesinger, Geoff Sherry.4—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 6, 1984*•-'» '■'V- > For example, Shoreland, as one campus residence hall, has just one ofthe ten HARC representatives, despite the fact it has nearly one-third ofdorm residents. A dorm such as Breckinridge, however, with far fewerstudents, has equal representation with Shoreland. Shoreland Councilofficials note that because of resulting inaccessibility of the sole HARCrepresentative, only one Shoreland house has received any HARC ben¬efits.The referendum, though, is for the $2 per quarter fee, and not an en¬dorsement of any governing structure. Although we express reserva¬tions at the lack of a fair and representative body to distribute the fundsfrom fees, we support its assessment and urge housing officials and theInter-House Council to devise a more fair and equitable way thanHARC’s current representation to distribute the fees. This, we believe,will help improve the quality of campus social life.No apologies for JacksonTo the editor:In a recent letter, Alex Pezon ex¬coriated me for my comments aboutJesse Jackson and demanded an apolo¬gy. It seems odd that a supporter ofJesse Jackson, a man who lied contin¬uously for two weeks before acknow¬ledging his “Hymie” remark, wouldexpect such a prompt apology, but Iwill gladly clarify my remarks.Mr. Pezon begins his letter by mis¬quoting me, (Don’t feel too bad Alex —of the four people who have quoted methis year, not one has done so correct¬ly.) and then offers his naive defense ofRev. Jackson. Mr. Pezon asserts “Rev¬erend Jackson gained the quick andspeedy release of Lt. Goodman.” WhileI might go so far as to call Goodman’s release quick, speedy, rapid, and evensupersonic, I must dispel the myth thatit was Jackson who secured it. Lt.Goodman was released for one reason:Hafez Assad, the Syrian tyrant,thought it was politically expedient todo so. Can Mr. Pezon really be so blindas not to see what Assad did? Believe itor not, some governments, includingAssad’s, are even more guileful thanwhat Jackson calls the “repressive re¬gime” of Ronald Reagan.This is not to say that I totally dis¬agree with Mr. Pezon. He says that apicture of President Reagan with aslash through it is “an excellent sym¬bol” for Jackson’s campaign, and Iagree; it demonstrates the barbarianinstincts that motivate Jackson and hisfollowers.What would happen, though, if I post¬ed a picture of Rev. Jackson with aslash through it? The answer, ofcourse, is that Pezon and companywould label me a racist. The irony isthat the people rebuking me would bethe very ones who back a candidatesolely because of his race. Does anyonereally believe that Jackson would haveany support if he were white? I’m surethat many eloquent denials of this willbe offered, but it’s the truth.Mr. Pezon’s attempt to separateJackson from the Arab League contri¬bution is unconvincing and misleading.Jackson, after all, defended the dona¬tion saying that if it’s okay for a can¬didate to accept money from Jewishgroups, it should be okay for a candi¬date to accept money from Arabgroups. Jackson forgets that the Jew¬ish groups are comprised of law-abid¬ing Americans, while the Arab Leagueis made up of hostile foreigners.April Fool’s Day edition ofThe MaroonMinorities?To the editor:If views we hold of ourselves also canbe entertaining as well as informative,I find it interesting to try to read Steph¬anie Bacon’s letter and the statementsattributed to Dan Hall in DavidLanchner’s article, “College applicantnumbers down” (both in the March 2Maroon) as if in discourse. While botharticles accept the existence of the con¬cept of a “UC type,” Bacon seems toimply that the nature of this stereotypeis influenced, or at least perpetuated,through what she feels to be the Admis¬sions Office’s poor efforts to recruit(certain) “minorities.”Yet if, as Hall claims, “Ivy Leaguecontinued on psge six Mr. Pezon goes on to say that mycharges are “irrelevant.” Is it reallyirrelevant to criticize Jackson for mak¬ing ethnic slurs? If President Reaganused the term “nigger,” would Mr.Pezon say this was irrelevant? Ofcourse, Mr. Reagan would never makesuch a remark because unlike Jackson,he isn’t obsessed with race. Jackson’sobsession undermines Dr. King’sdream of a colorblind society morethan anything President Reagan hasdone.Mr. Pezon concludes by asking mewhen I will apologize to Jackson andhis supporters. My answer is simple: Iwill apologize after I say somethingabout them which isn’t true.Russ MillerStudent in the CollegeThe Murdoch MaroonMAYOR HEIR “TO FRIED CHICKENWin bucks daily! ry& f°r^*«*.*;„„v # t,vX.;. v ;X; x. iiiiiiiiiiaii vxVx-S* :;X; X;:;X XvXvlvX vX vXvlVAVAvX'XDemocrats need ethnic appeal on all levels_ By Cliff Grammich ^ * If . finnol nomA/^ro fp ’ fn cimv\AV«f imrlnvin/f nf InvnKIBy Cliff GrammichConsidering the Chicago Democratic Party, manyanalysts perceive a racial drift as the city’s whiteethnics and the black voters become increasinglyalienated over the municipal power struggle. Yet oneiocal white ethnic Democratic leader believes thecity s ethnics may be defecting from the party be-cause of its national leaders’ positions on many so¬cial issues, and because the national Democratshave not made an effort to appeal to ethnics, a keycomponent in Democratic coalitions since FranklinRoosevelt’s New Deal.The national Democratic Party has not made astrong case to appeal to the ethnics, who have beentraditionally Democratic voters,” US Rep. William0. Lipinski says. Lipinski, who is Democratic com¬mitteeman for the Southwest Side’s 23rd Ward, be¬lieves “many ethnic Americans have been driftingaway. The party is being perceived as for special in¬terest groups. The national Democrats haven’t beenable to articulate to ethnics that they are concernedwith ethnics’ problems.”Democratic organizations have become aware ofthe problem and are taking steps to address it. Li¬pinski and US Rep. Frank Annunzio (D-ll), a North¬west Side Congressman, are among the members ofthe newly formed Democratic Council on EthnicAmericans. Lipinski, Aid. Edward Vrdolyak (10th),Cook County party chairman, and State Sen. Jere¬miah Joyce (D-Chicago), are among those on a simi¬lar panel sponsored by the Cook County RegularDemocratic Organization.The local panel, which will begin its hearings to¬morrow on the Southwest Side, will report to the na¬tional panel in May. The national panel is preparinga report for the party’s convention in July.Lipinski is well-suited to consider the problem ofethnic drift. In Congress, Lipinski has a solid Demo¬cratic voting record, though he often defects on so¬cial issues. He represents a district solidly Demo¬cratic and ethnic. Locally, he is respected by Aid. Edward Vrdolyak, Cook County party chairman;Richard M. Daley, whom Lipinski supported in cam¬paigns for state’s attorney and mayor; and MayorHarold Washington, who has contemplated support¬ing Lipinski for either county party chairman or cityparks chief.The problem Lipinski and Democrats face may notbe defection as opposed to erosion from the ticket. InLipinski’s ward, for example, overall Democraticdefection is not noticeable, as his ward organization,through increasing community and precinct work,has increased Democratic majorities.Erosion, though, is evident. In the 1982 election, theDemocratic candidate for the low-visibility post ofcomptroller received 77 percent of the vote in the23rd Ward. The Democratic candidate for governor,though, received just 52 percent of the 23rd Wardvote. In 1980, Jimmy Carter received just 49 percentof the vote against Ronald Reagan and John Ander¬son.Lipinski believes the erosion among ethnic votersis due to their perception of the Democratic Party asbeing “extremely liberal.” Citing abortion and othersocial issues, Lipinski said, “Many of the issues thatare almost a loyalty test for people to belong to thenational Democratic Party are issues that the vastmajority of white ethnic voters are opposed to.”Lipinski does not call for the Democrats to aban¬don liberal social stands, although he fears nationalDemocrats may be “looking down” upon ethnics whoare conservative socially, but are otherwise Demo¬cratic.Lipinski fears this could lead to further erosionaway from the Democratic Party in contests for low-level state offices and on local levels.He sees economic issues as keeping ethnics in theDemocratic Party, but believes Democrats havemissed opportunities to strengthen ties to ethnicshere. Lipinski particularly laments the failure of na¬ tional Democrats’ to support indexing of taxable in¬come.Many believe Reagan Republicanism, with conser¬vative social stands is tailored to court ethnic voters.One worker in the Northwest Side 41st Ward told ofhow Reagan’s hawkish stand and conservative socialstands appeal to the Catholic Slavs in that ward.Republicans have also been gaining ground locallyin precinct work. In the recent primaries, 71 candi¬dates, the most ever, sought Republican committee¬man posts.While Republicans may be making solid achieve¬ments in precinct work, Lipinski still believes Demo¬crats can win ethnics on economic issues.“As far as I can see, Reaganomics has done almostnothing” for the working-class ethnics of his district,Lipinski said. He believes ethnic erosion can be“slowed down by reminding ethnics who Reagan’sprograms have helped and who they have hurt.”A former high-ranking Republican official wrote inthe Chicago Sun-Times that Reagan’s administrationis incapable of understanding urban and ethnic con¬cerns: “Reagan’s Californians demonstrate little ap¬preciation for neighborhood concerns. The adminis¬tration has a Western, Sun Belt orientation, and nourban policy at a time when most ethnics still live inNortheastern and Middle Western cities. Under Rea¬gan, the GOP is still perceived as essentially white,Anglo-Saxon, Protestant, affluent, and anti-labor. Ifthe economy falters, Reagan could be in trouble”with ethnic voters.The struggle, then, is one of the Democrats tailor¬ing social issue rhetoric to ethnics (perhaps not animpossible task, as discussed by Richard Scammonand Ben Wattenberg in their 1970 work, The Real Ma¬jority). Republicans must demonstrate their concernfor ethnic economic and urban concerns, to win eth¬nic voters. The results of this struggle will have a fargreater impact on Chicago’s entire electorate longafter Harold Washington and Edward Vrdolyak be¬come faded memories.HARC needs ‘real incentive’ for feasible planBy Michael RabiehAnd they said it couldn’t be done.Last year a coalition of graduate and undergradu¬ate students led by Stuart Shapiro, notably of the Stu¬dent Advisory Committee to the President, reached— after exhaustive research, one hastens to add —the momentous conclusion that social life in thedorms is not quite up to par. Whatever one thinks ofthis conclusion, other groups, as well as individualstudents, professors, administrators, etc., have beensaying the same thing for years. But this group wasdifferent. Its members actually wanted to do some¬thing to improve campus social life. And so they for¬mulated a Plan, a panacea to purge the U of C of itsterrible social disease — or at least one of its symp¬toms. They peddled their nostrum right under stu¬dents’ noses last year, and students hardly reacted,despite the apparent ease with which this medicinecan be taken. After all, the only thing students mustdo to reap the benefits of this remedy is pay for it....the method which they hit uponfor accomplishing their self-ap¬pointed task is not nearly asworthwhile.The deceptively beneficial Plan, which reached afruition of sorts in the Housing Activities ResourceCouncil (HARC), has simple roots. What Mr. Sha¬piro and company decided after considering person¬al observations and reading housing surveys (the ex¬haustive research) was that students suffered froman appalling lack of inter-house and particularlyinter-dorm social contact in the housing system. Thesurvey respondents complained that while theyknew their fellow house members intimately, theyknew few other students well. A complaint frequent¬ly voiced, this criticism does, I think, highlight a de¬fect in the housing system; since social energies arefocused on individual house activities, residentsoften lack the energy — and the desire — to venturebeyond the confines of their houses. Or so implied thesurveys. Well, the Shapiro committee decided to cor¬rect this glaring defect in the housing system. Aworthwhile goal. But the method which they hit uponfor accomplishing their self-appointed task is notnearly as worthwhile.The Plan revolves around the old principle ofcreating incentives. What Mr. Shapiro and hisfriends envisioned was the creation of a matching-funds organization — HARC — which would help fi¬nance social activities involving two or more housesfrom different dorms. Whenever houses wanted tothrow a party together or go downtown together, ordo anything which costs money together, this organi¬zation would match their expenditures dollar for dol¬lar. (There is currently some uncertainty over theexact matching ratio which HARC will use if it sur¬vives this year.) The idea, of course, is that all thoselonely students who can’t find each other will sud¬denly leap into each other’s arms once they can do soat half-price. Voila! The U of C becomes a partyschoolBut the Shapiro committee had a slight problem toovercome before it could implement the Plan: what money could be used to finance HARC? The problemwas met for this year by acquiring about $2500 fromthe Inter-House Council and the Office of StudentHousing. But what about the future? Evidently, itwas decided that these sources of funding could notbe relied upon in the future; either no money wouldbe available from the IHC and Housing or availablemonies would be insufficient — I don’t know. At anyrate, it was decided to find other sources of funding.Now, if the administration chose to finance HARC bysay, cutting the Reg’s budget and turning over themoney thus saved to HARC, or if Student Govern¬ment turned over funds earmarked for, say, GALA,then I for one would have no quarrel with HARC pro¬ponents. But neither of these eventualities is likely.Besides, the bottom line is that all of SG’s revenuesand much of the administration’s budget come fromstudents. So why not go straight to the source? Andso it is to students that Mr. Shapiro and companyhave turned.Their plea is embodied in the referendum on whichstudents will vote on April 9th. This referendumoffers housing residents the rare opportunity to ap¬prove an increase in their room rates. If studentstake advantage of this opportunity, and if Housingbelieves that a “significant majority” of housing res¬idents support the referendum, then room rates willrise by $2 per quarter, and the approximately $13,000thereby generated will be given to HARC. HARC canthen use student funds to finance student parties. (Ifyou’re thinking, “Why not vote yes? It’s only sixbucks,” then I know of a certain mailbox which couldeasily accommodate the money which seems to beburdening you.)The principle around which HARC will really re¬volve if the referendum passes (“significantly”) isthe hostage principle. HARC will take money fromhousing residents, and if the students ever want tosee their money again, well, they’re just going tohave to buckle down and throw a party. Then HARCwill return their money, provided that they spendmore money to finance the party, all in the name offun. Of course, students as a whole will not get alltheir money back. There are bound to be a fewoperating expenses to absorb some money, not tomention ever-present waste — the farther moneytravels, the greater the loss.Now, some houses will make a profit on this deal.Ideally, each house would recover all of its loss. Butsome houses, which are very active socially, will en¬gage in lots of inter-dorm activity and skim morefrom HARC than they put in. And the corollary tothis is that other, less socially active houses, whichare supposed to benefit the most from HARC be¬cause their social activity will supposedly increasesubstantially — these houses will lose money. Thus,the rich (socially) will take from the poor.Some students might be thinking, “We already fi¬nance the Major Activities Board. There’s no dif¬ference between financing HARC and financingMAB.” But there is. If MAB didn’t exist, studentsworking together outside official channels could notassume MAB’s functions. They could not just pooltheir money on a whim and invite the Fleshtones toplay on campus. Only an official student organiza¬tion with a large budget — MAB — could stage con¬ certs and the like. But HARC will not provide stu¬dents with a single service, other than the dubiousone of holding their money hostage. Students do notneed HARC to throw parties. They can do so on theirown, whenever they want to. If some do not want to,they should not be forced to finance the fun of otherstudents, who should be responsible for their own so¬cial affairs. After all, students will have to be respon¬sible for their own social affairs even if the HARCreferendum does pass — HARC won’t organize any¬thing for them.My argument against the HARC referendum is notbased solely on principle. There are several practi¬cal grounds for opposing the referendum. First, itisn’t so clear that HARC will be that great a boon tocampus social life — or at least so great that itshould be funded to the expensive tune of $13,000.Second, I want to reiterate the entirely practicalpoint that HARC will not provide a cornucopia of re¬sources with which to finance social activity. Itsmoney, if the referendum passes, will come directlyfrom students. Therefore, students already have theresources necessary to attain HARC’s aim of im¬proved inter-dorm relations. Third, it certainly doesnot seem that HARC needs $13,000. According toHARC chairman Michael Aronson, HARC has fin¬anced 100 percent of every budget request it has re¬ceived except for one — and HARC did finance itsregular share (50 percent) of the event for which thatrequest was submitted. (It was only because the re¬quest overestimated expenses that HARC did not fi¬nance the entire request.) But even with this freeflow of money, HARC will have trouble dispensingall of its allotted $2500. Just what will HARC do withfive times as much money? Fourth, if the referen¬dum is defeated, the administration might decide tofinance HARC anyway — it has been known to aidstudents occasionally. If HARC can be funded forone year without turning to students for money, thenit should be possible to fund it for another year with¬out turning to students....it isn’t so clear that HARC willbe that great a boon to campus so-cial life.One hopes that students will defeat the referen¬dum. But if students do approve it for some reason, itisn’t clear that inter-dorm social activity will dra¬matically increase (at least, not as dramatically asHARC funding). Houses have invited other houses toparties — even in pre-HARC days — for which theinvitees paid absolutely nothing, and the inviteeshave often failed to show up. Therefore, in the inter¬est of improving campus life, I have another propos¬al to submit for student approval. If HARC does sur¬vive the year — which it could do even if thereferendum fails — I suggest merging HARC with aproven success: IM’s. Houses could receive IMpoints — on a pro-rated basis, of course — accordingto the amount of money they snatch from HARC’spurse. There’s nothing like a real incentive to enticeChicago students into action.Michael Rabieh is a second-year student in the Col¬lege.The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 6, 1984—5Tabletalk:build communityTo the editor:I want to discuss something whichconcerns all of us and which is espe¬cially close to my fat, I mean heart, namely food.I’m not referring to tfte SG food Com¬mittee, but rather the SG TabtotaNtprogram.Tabletalk is not an Orwellian termfor lunch, nor is it an expensive way tobrownnose. Stated in general terms,the program is meant to foster interac¬tion among students, faculty, and ad¬ministrators. The “idea” is to make asmall attempt to go beyond the formalacademic or administrative frame¬work of which each of us is accus¬tomed. The attempt is to underscorethe community aspect of the Universi¬ty.Of course, having lunch with a pro¬fessor doesn’t mean that we shall allgrasp hands in unity (as our Pilgrimforefathers) and make this a “campuson a hill.” However, each of us can ben¬efit from communicating with eachother. In one sense we gain a certainperspective from dealing with others ini differing circumstances. Also, we may discover interesting aspects of our pro¬fessors regarding academic interests,general interests etc (perhaps itemsusable for blackmail).Further conceptualization belaborsfee obvious benefits of personal in¬teraction and increased mutual under¬standing. It is important, however,that everyone be aware of how Table-talk actually operates and that peopletake advantage of it. Professors andadministrators have been contacted al¬ready so you may find your teacherasking the class out. In any case pleasedon’t be shy about approaching profes¬sors and administrators — they don’tbite, though they may eat with you. Topromote interaction we have arrangeddiscounts at many of the local restau¬rants and such. Students can pick upcoupons for these discounts at theReynolds Club box office, SAO, or theDean’s office. Remember to presentthe coupon before ordering.We hope you take advantage of thisopportunity to meet informally withyour teachers and administrators.Joe WalshSG PresidentA vote for Hill, SzesnyTo the editor:Before the upcoming SG elections Iwould like to express my wholeheartedsupport for the CARE party, especiallyits candidates for President and Fi¬nance Chair. In my experience as aformer SG committee chairman, theseare the two most important positions inthe executive council, positions whichcan be filled adequately only by ChrisHill and Rick Szesny.Chris Hill, current secretary of Stu¬dent Government, is a candidate forpresident with a proven record of ac¬tion and dedication. In his service assecretary, he continually acted aboveand beyond the call of duty, chairing adhoc committees and framing amend¬ments to the constitution. The estab¬lishment of the sorely needed GraduateAffairs Committee represents just oneof his many accomplishments. Clearly,only this candidate possesses the ad¬ministrative skill and personal dedica¬tion needed to fill the post of SG presi¬dent. I urge my fellow students tosupport Chris Hill.Another candidate of proven skill anddedication is Rick Szesny, who is seek¬ing re-election as Finance CommitteeChairman. My confidence in this can¬didate’s ability to manage the six- member Finance Committee is basedupon personal experience from my ten¬ure as Activities Chairman. Like othergroups, SGAC programs enduredseemingly drastic budget cuts. I, too,complained that Mr. Szesny had led hiscommittee to capricious and/or biaseddecisions. In reality, I knew that he hadnot. There has never been a FinanceChairman more dedicated, determinedor fair than Rick Szesny. He and hiscommittee work long into the nightevery Monday considering budget re¬quests. Of course some of the commit¬tee’s decisions were unpopular. Howev¬er, let us remember these budgetdecisions are the entire committee’sdecisions, not the Chairman’s alone.Furthermore, these decisions arebased upon a strict but even-handed in¬terpretation of SG by-laws and it is onlysuch an interpretation that ensuresfairness to all student groups.I have complete confidence in RickSzesny as SG Finance Chairman. I sin¬cerely hope that the student body willconsider his dedication and even-han¬dedness in the upcoming election. Onlya candidate with these qualificationscan fill this post and only Rick Szesnypossesses them.Martina Hone Don’t exaggerate Soviet menaceTo the editor:Daniel Batterman’s critique ofJapan’s defense policy is another ex¬ample of the kind of exaggeration of theSoviet menace thaf has spawned thecurrent five-year $1.6 trillfea dollar USdefense buildup. In fact the' US canmaintain naval superiority in the re¬gion with or without increases in Japa¬nese defense spending.While the numerical strength of theSoviet Pacific Fleet may seem impres¬sive, they are still lagging in their abili¬ty to project power in the region. Mostof their surface fleet consists of smallcoastal patrol vessels. Their logisticsupport and training time both lag be¬hind those of US naval forces. Their Pa¬cific naval bases are terribly con¬strained, both by the difficult wintersat Petropavlosk and the narrow straitsthat limit egress from their Vladivos¬tok base on the Sea of Japan. They havevirtually no amphibious assault capa¬bility. And while their air power hasshown considerable improvement inthe region lately, it nonetheless tookthem 2xk hours to intercept a 747 overone of their most sensitive military in¬stallations — and they probably had notidentified it correctly when they finallymanaged to shoot it down.US Pacific forces are superior inanti-submarine warfare (ASW) capa¬bility, naval airpower, and amphibiousassault forces. US P-3C ASW aircraftbased in Japan are among the mostelectronically sophisticated planes inthe world. They are rivalled in sophisti¬cation only by US AW ACS planes. 3 ofwhich are also based in Japan. Threeor four of the thirteen US big-deck air-Minoritiescontinued from page fourschools... possess a social prestigewhich the University of Chicagodoesn’t” and if the UC draws “a dispro¬portionate number of students... whocome from university towns” andgiven that the black and hispanic expe¬riences in America have predominate¬ly been those of economic disadvan¬tage, then one can also say that it is nottoo surprising if in general fewerblacks and hispanics seek an educationat the UC when they have “a lot of op¬tions” which would presumably offermore economically rewarding futuresthan that of an academic.Thus, the resultant lower number ofthese minority students here (for thosewho must be concerned about students’racial backgrounds) would have less todo with “racist policies” by the Univer¬sity than with those reasons that “aca- craft carriers are always in the Pacif¬ic; the Soviets have no comparableships. The US bases 24,000 Marines onOkinawa. Total Soviet amphibioustroops number only 12,000, and they arenot equipped tft trained to do what thetrUS counterparts can do. The US has atotal of 48,000 military personnel inJapan. 70 US F-15 fighters are based onOkinawa, and 48 nuclear capable F-16swill be deployed in Japan by 1986. Bycomparison, the much-touted Sovietbuildup on the Kurile islands amountsto about twenty planes and 14,000troops.And what about those tightwad Japa¬nese? What Mr. Batterman calls a“virtually nonexistent” defense buil¬dup includes a planned acquisition of155 F-15s, 75 P-3C ASW aircraft, and 8E-2C early warning planes. About athird of these planes are already de¬ployed. They are building 12 new des¬troyers and 850 new tanks, and they al¬ready pay a third of the cost ofmaintaining the US forces on their soil,which amounts to over a billion dollarspaid annually to the US.Mr. Batterman wistfully recalls thedays of a global US ‘defense’ network“centered upon American economicand military supremacy.” A return tothis kind of global hegemony wouldseem to be the ignoble end of currentUS defense policy. The government ofJapan ought to be commended for theextent to which they have not joined insuch a wasteful and dangerous ven¬ture.Ted StromCommittee on Arms Control andDisarmamentdeme” as a value in itself is less ap¬pealing to those minorities. Needless tosay, not all blacks and hispanics arepoor and there are exceptions to thisgeneral scenario, but as far as general¬izations go, I feel it may reveal some¬thing which Bacon’s letter conceals. Atany rate, it need not necessarily beread as racist as Bacon’s suggestionthat the University pursue a policy inwhich race would be a primary factorin recruiting students!In fact, it is the very elitism implicitin her concluding sentence that Bacon,who admits to not herself feeling to be a“UC type,” diverges farthest fromHall’s statement that the “idea of a so¬cial elite is anti-thetical to the educa¬tional ideals of the University of Chica¬go.” Indeed, what I wonder is ifBacon’s concern is not truly more withthe “prestigious” than with “educa¬tion.”Craig EzringFormer MAB member speaks of clean slateTo the editor:I was greatly disheartened to readthe two Maroon articles published lastquarter about the Major ActivitiesBoard. As a former Board member, un¬involved with current Student Govern¬ment squabbles, perhaps I can shednew light on the allegations.In 1976, campus social life was dis¬mal. Student Government received atiny fraction of the money it now re¬ceives. A group of highly motivated un¬dergraduates approached Dean of Stu¬dents Charles O’Connell, and askedpermission to form a group that wouldattempt to produce major entertain¬ment events on campus. Edward Levi,then president of the University, pre¬sented this fledgling Major ActivitiesBoard with a one-time grant of $15,000.After enormously successful first year,students overwhelmingly voted togrant MAB permanent status and tofund it through the Student ActivitiesFee.I have often heard students complainthat MAB does not get really big nameentertainment to campus on a regularbasis. It becomes a matter of econom¬ics. We are very proud of attending asmall university, but small schools areterrible places to produce concerts.Mandel Hall, though a superb facility,reaches capacity at about 900. Whenone considers that a band one has bare¬ly heard of commands a fee of close to$15,000, one can understand why MAB6—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 6, 1984 concerts need to be subsidized. Despitethe problems of size, MAB manages tobring to campus most of the same per¬formers that play Northwestern, a un-ivesity that is easily twice our size. Youmight be interested to know that North¬western’s budget for concerts is aboutfive times MAB’s budget. Further¬more, concerts up in Evanston areusually in an 8,000 seat “theater.”One wonders how MAB can pull thisoff. Quite simply, it is due to an enor¬mous amount of dedication, as well asMAB’s operating procedures. This is,in part, a result of how MAB is select¬ed. Board members are chosen on thebasis of enthusiasm, new ideas, and ex¬perience, by a committee consisting ofthe associate dean of students, thedirector of Student Activities, amember of the Faculty-Student Adviso¬ry Committee on Campus Student Life(FSACCSL), the Student GovernmentFinance Chairman, and up to threegraduating members of MAB. To ac¬cuse such a group of having “personalvendettas,” as Mr. Taylor alleges in hisarticles, is ridiculous. In MAB’s histo¬ry, only two people have been denied asecond term on the Board. Both caseswere for failure of those members toget along with fellow Board members,or the University administration.A term on the Board often means for¬feiting much of your personal life andformer GPA. In a typical week, theaverage MAB member works between seven and twenty five hours makingphone calls, putting up posters, readingcontracts, arranging for delivery ofequipment, making budgets, etc. In thetypical week before a concert, theseven MAB members may spend everywaking hour working on a concert. Theday of a concert is a thirty-six-hournightmare starting with arrangingseats and ending with cleaning up thepotato chips left under seats. MAB isnot secretive, it is simply tired! Unlikewriters for the Maroon, MABmembers, and the volunteer securityguards and ushers, receive no mone¬tary compensation for their efforts.The only reward is the good feeling ofknowing that you gave 900 people somevery pleasant memories.The finances of MAB are watchedvery carefully by the Student ActivitiesOffice. Someone from that office at¬tends every meeting. Every pennymust be guarded so that between nineand twelve concerts may be produced.Checks pay for almost all costs, ver>little cash is necessary, and all receiptsare presented to SAO. The claim thatMAB bought cocaine is ridiculous anddetrimental. I was a member of MABat the time and know that such a trans¬action never occurred. The thoughtthat $700, or even as little as $25 couldjust disappear, unaccounted for, is ri¬diculous.Any examination of a strong organi¬zation such as MAB should be wel¬ comed. MAB has existed for sevenyears without any major changes. Buttry to remember not to fix what is notbroken. If SGFC Chairman Szesny is soconcerned about MAB, why has he notbothered to attend a single MAB meet¬ing? After all, the MAB by-laws accordhim that right. But imagine if MAB wascontrolled by SGFC. Imagine a harriedbooking agent being told that the pricehe was requesting was different fromthe one cleared by SGFC so anotherweek would be necessary (the nextSGFC meeting) before the deal couldbe closed. Under such a system, no con¬certs would be produced. MAB fre¬quently places advertisements in theMaroon to ask for volunteers. To allwho perceive MAB to be a closed orga¬nization take advantage of theseoffers.MAB should welcome any positivesuggestions it receives. However, forth? Maroon to print unsubstantiatedstories with no purpose other than toget people to read the paper, servesonly to degrade the Maroon, as well asMAB. Try to make it the “MurdochMaroon” only once a year. WithoutMAB, the University of Chicago wouldbe a much gloomier place.Mark D. BauerAB ’83Former member of the Major Activi¬ties BoardNEWS | i...JI : 111!!!National Mid-East peace tour favors return of landBy Michael RabiehA former Palestinian mayor and anIsraeli Labor Party official broughttheir campaign for peace in the MiddleEast to the University of Chicago lastweek. Speaking before a PBS film crewand an audience of about 100 peoplecrowded into the East Lounge of IdaNoyes Hall, Mohammed Milhem andMordechai Baron lectured on and an¬swered questions about their ideas fora resolution of the Israeli-Palestinianconflict. Their stop here, sponsored inpart by a campus organization calledProgressive Friends of Peace Now,was part of a national goodwill tour.Both Milhem and Baron advocated atwo-state solution as the necessary endof a successful resolution of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Milhem, themayor of the West Bank town of Hal-houl from 1976 until the Israeli govern¬ment expelled him from the West Bankin 1980, said Israel “should recognizethe rights of the Palestinians for self-determination in a two-state solution.”Baron, a member of the Labor Party’sCentral Council, said Israel “should beable to give up all the achievements ofthe war of ’67,” referring to 1967’s SixDay War, in which Israel conqueredthe West Bank and Gaza Strip, as wellas the Golan Heights.Both speakers favor an autonomousPalestinian state in the currently occu¬pied West Bank and Gaza Strip. At thesame time, they believe Israel has theright to live peacefully within secure,pre-1967 borders.Neither speaker offered proposalsfor specific aspects of a two-state solu¬tion. Each said that details of an Israe¬li-Palestinian rapprochement must beworked out during negotiations be¬tween parties representing the legiti¬mate interests of each nation. But themethod by which these negotiators areselected is crucial to the success of anynegotiations which might occur, ac¬cording to Milhem.“In no case.” he said, “should any¬one be allowed to speak on behalf of thePalestinians (or) the Israelis.” Eachnation must choose its own representa¬tives freely, without coercion from out¬side forces.Speaking for the right of Palestiniansto choose their own representatives, Milhem said the Palestinians “haveenough qualified people...and theyknow who their representatives are/’He labeled the members of the WestBank village leagues whom the Israeligovernment chose during the CampDavid peace process to represent Pa¬lestinians “quislings” and “traitors”because they were chosen by “an occu¬pation authority” rather than by theirown people.Although Baron did not discuss spe¬cifically who should represent theIsraelis or the Palestinians in peace ne¬gotiations, his comments strongly im¬plied that Israel must accept who¬mever the Palestinians choose torepresent themselves, including thePalestine Liberation Organization. In¬deed, he noted the creation of the PLOin 1964 was, at least in part, a positivehistorical development because it was“the self-assertion of a nation.” An or¬ganization was created which could,under the right circumstances, speakon behalf of Palestinians to Israel.Both Milhem and Baron stressedtheir capacities as private individuals,affirming that they did not representtheir nations. For this reason, they arenot using their tour of the United Statesto set forth an agenda for negotia¬tions.Rather, they see the value of theirtour as largely symbolic. Milhemcalled the tour “a landmark event.”Baron said, “We both came to thiscountry above anything else...to sym¬bolize the fact that an Israeli and a Pa¬lestinian — therefore the Israelis andthe Palestinians — can talk to eachother...We are experimenting...in thistour of ours...At this stage we are notyet negotiating.” Through their effortsMilhem and Baron hope to help createa climate in which Israeli-Palestiniannegotiations can occur.Milhem’s 20-minute address focusedlargely on clearing up misconceptionsabout the Israeli-Palestinian conflictand on criticizing those who expect toolittle peace initiative from Israel andtoo much from the Palestinians. “It isnot true,” he said, “that the Palestin¬ians are terrorists or that PLO...is ter¬rorist organization.”He noted that northern Israel, for whose security Israel ostensibly invad¬ed Lebanon in 1982, was free from at¬tack during the 12 months prior to theIsraeli invasion. Of the Palestiniansdispersed throughout the Middle East,Milhem said they “aspire for nothingbut peace and security in theirhomes.” However, “we are hungry forpeace but not at any cost,” he said.Milhem laid the burden for promot¬ing negotiations squarely on Israel. Hebelieves too much of the burden hasbeen laid on the Palestinians in thepast.“Those organizations who supportIsrael blindly” question the failure ofPalestinians to recognize Israel for¬mally, said Milhem. “But no one evercared that Israel...should recognize therights of the Palestinians.” He saidthat “Arab rulers are willing to recog¬nize a two-state solution.” He pointedout that the Palestine National Councilin 1981 and 1983 advocated as the basisfor a solution the Brezhnev initiative,whose sixth item, he said, recognizesIsrael.“What else do you want from thePLO?...(The Israelis, who have) themost powerful army in the MiddleEast, who have all the land of Pales¬tine...you don’t ask them to concedeanything...Be fair. Be even-handed.”Milhem urged that Israel must workfor peace now while it is “at the peak”of its power, else it will find itselfweaker and still surrounded by hostileArab countries. “Speak peace whenyou are powerful,” he said in responseto a question.Speaking after Milhem, Baron em¬phasized the need for Israelis and Pa¬lestinians to understand and accepteach other. Citing examples from hisown life, he said that all Israelis andPalestinians have images of the suffer¬ing of both friends and enemies “whichprick their eyes.” Therefore, “themain work to be done at this moment,at least on the non-politicallevel...must be an educationalwork...of erasing pictures, of trying tobuild up new ones.” Each side must“see the enemy as our friend,” hesaid.Baron pointed out that it is now poss¬ible to attain a peaceful resolution ofthe Israeli-Palestinian conflict. He sees 1967 as a watershed year, forIsrael then “acquired land that it couldhave traded for peace” and “the Pales¬tinians came into their own around thattime.” He said that each side must now“create an atmosphere that will be¬come credible to the other side.” Be¬cause Israel is a powerful nation, hebelieves that it has a moral obligationto move first in creating such an atmo¬sphere. However, he pointed out thatother Israelis must be persuaded toshare his belief. It would certainly helpthe cause of peace, he said, if the Pa¬lestinians made their intentions “clearand credible.” “I do believe,” he said,“that the PLO has...forgotten” itsearly stated goal of destroying thestate of Israel. But other Israelis mustbe convinced of this change, accordingto Baron. He ended on an optimisticnote, saying that Israelis and Palestin¬ians have “a growing understanding”of each other.Earlier, Milhem told the audiencethat in order to promote Middle East¬ern peace concerned individuals must“ask...Arab and Jewish organiza¬tions...how could you do something toeliminate the sufferings of the peoplethere and to push for the cause of thepeace.” As organizations to contact inChicago, he mentioned the PalestineHuman Rights Campaign and the spon¬sors of Thursday night s discussion. Inaddition to the Progressive Friends ofPeace Now, the discussion was spon¬sored by the New Jewish Agenda andthe Social Action Committee of KAM-Isaiah Israel Congregation. The na¬tional tour is being sponsored by theAmerican Friends Service Commit¬tee.Mohammed Milhem lives inAmman, Jordan. Elected mayor ofrialhoul in 1976, he was deported fromthe West Bank by Israeli military au¬thorities in 1980 after an Israeli settlerwas killed. After the assailant was cap¬tured, Milhem was denied the right toreturn to the West Bank.Mordechai Baron lives in Jerusalem.He is a faculty member in the Depart¬ment of International Affairs at He¬brew University in Jerusalem, as wellas a member of the Central Council ofthe Labor Party. He is also active inthe Peace Now movement.Shoreland Council questions HARC referendumTo the editor:The Shoreland Council was ap¬proached March 29 by John Vail, presi¬dent of the Inter-House Council (IHC),and Michael Aronson, vice-president ofIHC and chairman of the Housing Ac¬tivities Resource Council (HARC) toelicit endorsement for a statementwhich reads:“We, the Council support the contin¬uation of the Housing Activities Re¬source Council (HARC) and its effortsto promote and enhance inter-dorm/inter-house contact, thereby im¬proving the quality of life in the Hous¬ing System.To the editor:We are fully in favor of the goals ofHARC and the proposed two dollars perperson, per quarter, increase in theroom bill to support HARC’s activities.Essentially, HARC exists becausethere are perceived shortcomings incampus social life — people are dissat¬isfied with the limited variety of socialactivities available.However, we are concerned thatHARC has, in the past, and may contin¬ue in the future, fund large scale beerblasts that have marginal appeal formost students. While we feel that suchparties do have a place, we do feelstrongly that they should not be theonly events sponsored by HARC. Wepropose, therefore, that:I)HARC should support a vari¬ety of social activities — oncampus and off. both for smalland large groups. “We endorse the passage of the refer¬endum to establish a two dollar ($2) perQuarter fee per resident to supportHARC.”This letter is the Shoreland Council’sresponse to the effort of HARC to gainour endorsement for the statement.As a Council which represents over600 academically as well as socially ac¬tive students in the College, we whole¬heartedly endorse efforts to encourageinter-house/inter-dorm social activi¬ties. The Council itself distributes mostof its funds for activities among housesin the Shoreland as well as for dorm¬wide events which encourage and af¬fect participation from students2) Large parties sponsored byHARC should be legitimateinter-house parties, not intra-house parties with an outsidehouse appended merely toqualify for HARC funds.3) HARC’s composition shouldremain as it is at present.As a criteria for funding, HARC represntatives should ask two simplequestions: Is the proposed activity pos¬sible without HARC funding? Is theevent in keeping with HARC’s primedirective — to promote the social lifebetween houses?HARC’s present goals are laudable.But we feel that it is necessary to es¬tablish a set of clear guidelines to as¬sure responsible allocation of $13,500.00during the 1984-85 school year.Tom Ramsey, presidentDaniel Abrams, IHC representativeand the Blackstone House Council campus-wide as well. Despite our real¬ization that inter-house/inter-dorm ac¬tivities are distinctly lacking in the Col¬lege House system, we cannot endorseHARC as a viable means towards theend of promoting these activities.First, the accessibility of individualhouses to HARC is limited as a result ofits structure. For the Shoreland, onerepresentative for ten houses meansthat the individual houses have nodirect contact with or knowledge of thebody that distributes the money. As ev¬idence of this, we note that the onlyhouse in the Shoreland to take advan¬tage of HARC in the past two quarterswas the house in which the Shoreland’sHARC representative resides. We feelthis hindrance could easily be over¬come by a combination of increased re¬presentation and a reorganization ofthe administration responsible for thedistribution of funds.Further, we feel that proper atten¬tion has not been given to legitimateconcerns about the structure of HARC.Repeatedly, the Council’s attempts tomeet with HARC to discuss our con¬cerns were frustrated by the fact fortwo successive weeks, no HARCmembers, except its chairman, attend¬ed their scheduled meetings, of whichmembers were not notified by theirchairman. The Council thus feels thatour efforts to contribute to a more ef¬fective administration of HARC’s rolewere ignored.With a budget of over $10,000 at stakein an upcoming referendum, we feelthat all students should be given the op¬portunity to give meaningful input con¬cerning the manner in which the moneywill be distributed.Throughout this year of HARC’s trialexistence, little has been done to dem¬ onstrate HARC’s actual ability to per¬form its assigned role. As demonstrat¬ed by the sparse use of HARC byhouses, we feel that HARC’s structurehas failed to serve the needs of housesseeking to produce inter-house activi¬ties. Furthermore, $10,000 is too muchmoney to give ten representatives ofthe Housing System whose organiza¬tion does not even publish minutes of itsmeetings.We, as a Council, feel that the stu¬dents we represent are forced into fac¬ing an unfair dilemma. A “no” vote onMonday’s referendum erroneously im¬plies that a student is opposed to inter-house/inter-dorm activity. A “yes”vote, however, endorses a committeestructured in such a manner that ahuge sum of money will be inefficientlyand unfairly distributed. We feel athird alternative in the referendumshould be a vote encouraging inter-house/inter-dorm activity, but througha more responsibly and responsivelystructured administration.The Shoreland CouncilR Daniel Mackay,Christopher RuprightSecretariesTheChicagoMaroonStadcat Newspaper of theUnlrerrity of ChicagoNew criteria for HARCThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 6. 1984—7Rockefeller Chapel Choir and Orchestraof3. £. BachHenry Hunt, Evangelist Myron Myers, JesusRodney Wynkoop, Conductor3:00 P.M., Sunday, April 8, 1984Rockefeller Memorial Chapel5850 South Woodlawn AvenueTickets: 962-7300 THE FORUM FORFEMINIST SCHOLARSHIPAnnouncesA Lecture ByNATALIE ZEMONDAVISHenry Charles Lea Professor of HistoryPrinceton UniversityAuthor ofThe Return of Martin Guerre“THE SACRED ANDCONJUGAL SEXUALITY IN16th CENTURY FRANCE”SWIFT LECTURE HALLTHURSDAY, APRIL 127:30 p.m.A Reception Will FollowFunded by the University of Chicago Women’s Board^°o,A >XCB.afro-caribbean dance- nM*cfcbeginning aerobic exercisebelly dancingarmonicaJAPANESE MASRegistration: March 26 through April 13Room 210. Ida Noyes Hall 962-9554uS.A.O. S MINI COURSESCLASSES BEGIN APRIL 9th!8—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 6, 1984NEWSProject ’84continued from page onesaid Cohn, professor of anthropologyand history. He said that the taskforces have not addressed “the realissues,” namely the “politics” of howactual changes in the College structureoccur, and exactly how the Collegeevolved to its present state.“The whole thing (Project 1984) is afraud,” he said. “It’s one thing for Ma-cAloon and Smith to say this, that, orthe other...(but) the real issues are notbeing addressed.”Smith and MacAloon, in their initialdiscussions of the scope of the taskforces, likened them to groups at¬tempting to create a college, and plan¬ning what that college “ought to belike.”“We don’t want a premature rush toconcreteness,” said Smith. “If we lookpractically, we don’t get anywhere.”The initial design of Project 1984, ac¬cording to Smith and MacAloon, de¬manded a separation from legislation,apparently to generate as muchthought on the various aspects of theCollege without the consequences ofpotential change and practicality af¬fecting the discussions. “Institutionsperiodically need to pause and talkabout themselves,” said Smith.Changing PerspectivesIn compliance with this format, theHistorical and Cultural Committee didreach some conclusions about the stateof historical and cultural studies atChicago, according to Garber. “Theactual mechanics of it goes beyond ourmandate, beyond our ability,” saidGarber, when asked how one might re¬medy the problems they cited.“We all agree that students, whenthey come to the College, bring withthem a lot of unexamined assumptionsof the world, and ways they weretaught to think about the world,” saidGarber, calling the students’ perspec¬tive “very tied up with being young, atthis particular time.”Garber suggested that the corecourses “ought to be rethought so thatat least students in hum and soc get ex¬posed to cross cultural perspectives intheir first years.” Garber also pointedout that currently “it’s very easy to put together six quarters of courses (inhum and soc) without having to con¬front those issues.”The committee disagreed on how tointroduce cross cultural studies to thecore, but Garber said “we view this notas making changes, by making sugges¬tions as to where and how it might go,”another indication of the committee’suncertainty of the course its sugges¬tions will take once it logs its report.“Some favor taking the present coreand asking those who teach it thatsome sort of historical, cross culturalcomponent be introduced,” saidGarber, “and others want units thatdeal specifically with that.“College should take the student outof his own present cultural context toshow him how other people in othertimes have lived,” said Garber,“and...too often it isn’t happening.” Headded that “it’s not that anyone is try¬ing to get around any requirements.Maybe students are not encouragedenough to take advantage of opportuni¬ties the U of C provides (such as West¬ern and non-Western civ., and studyabroad).”The open meeting for the task forcetakes place Tuesday, and Garberdoesn’t exactly expect a stampede ofpeople. “Given the fact that studentshaven’t been tremendously interested,I’m not overly optimistic about gettingpeople who will come out and shareideas.“Undergrads aren’t tremendouslyinterested in what’s going on aroundhere,” he added, “and I think it’s ashame. I’m not sure what we can dothat hasn’t already been done.”Cohn agreed with many of Garber’sstatements, but refused to elaborate.Student ResearchMartha McClintock chairs the Stu¬dent Research task force, and she saysthat even if nothing concrete comesfrom her task force’s report, “it willserve to describe the status quo betterthan before.” The work the group hasdone so far has given her “a muchclearer idea of what it (student re¬search) is,” and arriving at such a def¬inition formed one of the two majortopics of the task force during thewinter.McClintock said the task force fo¬cused on developing “a conceptual def¬inition of research to hold across the di-marian realty,inc.APARTMENTSFOR RENTGRAFF &CHECK1617 E. 55th St.Spacious, newly-decorated l’/j, 2’/j,studios & 1 bedroomapartments in a quietwell-maintained buildingBU8-5566 ill1 . REALTORStudio and 1 BedroomApartments Available— Students Welcome —On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-54005311 S. Blackstone • 947-0200OUR FAMOUS STUFFED PIZZA IN THE PAN IS NOWAVAILABLE IN HYDE PARKOPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK • 11 AM T012 MIDNIGHTCocktails • Pleasant Dining • Pick-Up"Chicago's best pizza!" - Chicago Mogozlno, March 1977“The ultimate in pizza!" - Now York Tlmot, January 1980 visions,” and “a means of facilitatingstudent involvement.”The task force members disagreedabout the necessity of individual re¬search, and McClintock used history asan example. “History requires a re¬search paper of all students,” she said,“and we didn’t want to advocate that.We want to facilitate opportunities, butnot make it necessary.”As a model for a centralizing re¬search opportunities, McClintock’sgroup examined UROP, the programat MIT which McClintock called the“most clearly thought through” ofsuch programs. “It centralizes infor¬mation about opportunities, (and pro¬vides) a lot of ways for students to co¬operate.” She said that at Chicago“there is no way for a student to findout a professor who needs help, or aprofessor to say he needs help.”The task force agreed student re¬search “is not for everybody, and(sometimes) is not worth student/fac¬uity time.”McClintock said that the students onher task force have written proposalsfor the centralization of research infor¬mation which will be presented at theopen meeting, and concerning the taskforce’s report, McClintock commented“It will be interesting to see what con¬sequences it has.”Student Research has its open meet¬ing April 18, at noon. gram offered by the math andstatistics department, interviewedpeople from the department of educa¬tion, and talked extensively with IzaakWirszup, who studied the Russianschool system in detail.Cowan has “been mildly surprised”by the opinions of the limited numberof students who have involved them¬selves in the task force meetings. All ofthem favor strengthening or increas¬ing the requirement, and some of thetask forces other proposals includemaking calculus mandatory for all stu¬dents (80 percent of those in the Collegecurrently take it anyway), or requiringone year of calculus plus an additionaltwo quarters of work drawn from com¬puter science or statistics.“Students should be able to writecomputer programs, have some mathfamiliarity, and be able to analyze sta¬tistical data,” said Cowan.Cowan doesn’t know what to expectfrom the open meeting, but hopes forsome increased student input.A word common to all of the taskforce discussions so far is requirement,and Cohn said “there has been an over-specification of requirements,” imply¬ing that the discussions should focus onhow the changes in requirements andstructure will occur, instead of simplyrethinking each requirement in eachdiscipline.Math for Everyone?The Mathematics and QuantitativeStudies task force, formed almost 18months ago, presently nears the com¬pletion of its report.“There is a consensus,” said chair¬man Jack Cowan, “that we should re¬quire someone to take three coursesdrawn from these areas (calculus,computer science, and statistics), butwe haven’t decided on the mix, or whatshould be required.” Cowan referred tothe real issue as “should we require allstudents to have some calculus, statis¬tics, and computing.”The task force began at the sugges¬tion of Donald Levine, dean of the col¬lege, and has examined the entire pro- Social Research Inst.The Society for Social Research willhold its annual Spring Institute April 6and 7. In addition to sessions onPolitical Sociology, Gender, Organiza¬tions, and Intellectual Craftsmanship,the second annual Student Follies willbe presented. The keynote address willbe delivered by Amos Hawley, Pro¬fessor Emeritus at the University ofNorth Carolina, April 7 at 8 p.m. on thethird floor of Ida Noyes. His topic willbe “Urban Sociology: the New verusthe Old.”For further details, check the Calen¬dar of Events.TIRED OF STUDYING?YOUR READINGSKILLS CAN BEIMPROVED!DISCOVERHOW...FREE!RAPID READINGAND TEST TAKING SKILLS•FREE Reading Skills Demonstration ClassDr. Florence Schale is an acknowledged expert in reading research. Hermethods have been proven with thousands of students. This free demonstrationwill prove that she can help you read faster, comprehend better.Fri., April 6,500-600 p.m.Sat., April 7,11:00 a m.-Noon FREE•MINI RAPID READINGTwo day workshop aimed at developing faster and more critical readingabilities on standard materials $90.00•REINFORCED READING Develop Speed with Comprehension.Keep pace with expanding knowledge by learning to read multilevel materialsfaster with deeper levels of comprehension... also learn to relax tensioninhibiting recall under pressure of test-taking $200.00Classes are held In the HYDE PARK CO-OP FEDERAL CREDITUNION training room. Lower Level. Hyde Park CO-OP, 55th & Lake ParkREGISTRATIONTo register, return this form with money or check payable to Dr Florence Schale %HYDE PARKCO OP FEDERAL CREDIT UNION. 1526 E 55th St.. Chicago. II 60615 Check CourseMINI RAPID READING _2 Saturdays. 4/14 & 4 21. 900am NoonRAPID READING 7 Saturdays. 4/14 5/26. 900am NoonPlease fill in Name: ——AddressTel: For further information, call Dr Florence Schale. 288 0336Call for student orCredit Union Member DISCOUNT!The Chicago Maroon—Friday. April 6, 1984—9Spectacular Spring• NEWSUPER-SOFTHIGH OXYGENTRANSFER ULTRATHINNew super-soft highly oxygen transferable lenses used tocorrect those patients who were previous soft lens failures.*43.75 • SUPER WET FLEXIBLE-ONLY *29.95Super-thin highly wettable lens specifically designed to correctthose patients who were previous hard contact lens failures.AND FOR ONLY $9Q00THE NEW 30-DAY EXTENDED WEAR The ones you sleep with; no more cleaning or sterilizingf^OKFTAT'T T TTKFCPC nightly, no more daily insertion and removal; wake up ;nv»Un lfiVi 1 L*^l^ the morning and see.or,THE NEW GLAMOROUS TINTED Aquamarine, sapphire, topaz, emerald and cocoa. For thatSOFT LENSES new glamorous you—add sparkle to your eyes!or,THE NEW ASTIGMATISM If you ever have been told that you couldn’t wear softCORRECTING SOFT LENSES lenses due to astigmatism, now you probably can....and last but not least,THE VERY LATEST GAS PERMEABLE The lens that breathes.SILICON ACRYLATE LENS FORSUPER VISION & SUPER COMFORTIf you want the very best, come to die very best!Contact Lenses & SpecsUnlimitedNow at three convenient locations:1051N. Rush St., Chicago • 642-EYESAt State/Ccdar/Rush, above Solomon Cooper Drugs2566 N. Clark St, Chicago • 880-54001724 Sherman Ave~ Evanston • 864-4441 Our Promise to You;•We will continue to providethe highest standard of professional careto you, our patient•To continue to provide you with only thefinest name brand contacts, lenses & framesavailable, and to personally back them withour money-back guarantee.All contact lens fitting by our contact lens specialists,Dr. S. C. Fostiak, Optometrist, and associates.Lwnn IJpgrnlinliMl fa. .diW—aJ(ru»rW).(Include*: eye rumination, training, wearing inarruclroru and carrying am)Maroon Friday, April 6, 1984Crown Space Theater opensLeyden on VentureEleanor Leyden, College VentureProgram representative, will be oncampus April 9-11 to discuss the Ven¬ture program with interested students.Meetings will be held April 9 at noonin the Career Library, in ReynoldsClub; BJ Masters’ apartment at 5p.m.; and Blackstone lobby at 7:30p.m. April 10 meetings will be at Wood¬ward Court #3317 at 7 p.m., andShoreland masters’ apartment at 9p.m. Leyden will be in the CommuterLounge April 11 at 1 p.m.For more information, or to set up anindividual appointment with Leyden,call 962-7042.Nicholas appointed Eleanor Leyden The Crown Space Center, a $10 mil¬lion addition that will house a space ex¬hibit and “Omnimax” theater, will bebuilt at the Museum of Science and In¬dustry.Victor J. Danilov, president anddirector of the Museum, said, “Thenew facility will be the largest andmost significant expansion of the Muse¬um since its opening in 1933.” TheCrown family has made a lead giftwhich will make the construction poss¬ible.The Space Center will be located in aseparate 31,000-square foot building onthe east side of the Museum, near theU-505 submarine and locomotive on dis¬play outdoors. It will have two major parts: a hall for space artifacts and a320-seat Omnimax theater with a 76-foot diameter projection dome. Therewill also be an outdoor exhibit area.Target date for completion ismid-1986.The Omnimax projection system“will take viewers into space, undersea, and into other unforgettable expe¬riences in a way that is not possiblewith other projection systems,” saidDanilov. The exhibition hall will makeuse of space equipment, models, graph¬ics, and participatory techniques to de¬scribe the past, present, and future ofthe space program. There will also besimulated space experiences — includ¬ing a simulated spaceship journey.Ralph Nicholas has been appointedDirector of the Center for InternationalStudies. Nicholas, who will continue asdeputy provost and professor in anthrapology, succeeds Chauncy D. Harris,who is retiring at the end of winterquarter after 41 years on the faculty.Nicholas joined the faculty in 1971,and his research has focused on the re¬ligious life of people living in theGanges River Delta.Interseminary conf.“Weaving a New Creation” is thetheme of the 12th Annual Women’s In¬terseminary Conference to be held thisweekend. Hosted by the Hyde ParkCluster of Theological Schools and theCommission on Women in Ministry ofthe National Council of Churches, theconference will include two keynote ad¬dresses, 33 workshops, and special in¬terest caucuses dealing with concernsof women in ministry. Tours of the citywill be also available for the 300 womenfrom the US, Canada, and Puerto Rico.Pre-registration is advised, and thefee is $40. For further information, callJean Bozeman at the Lutheran Schoolof Theology, 753-0726. Grad Feescontinued from page onesor of anthropology and member of theFaculty Senate, “It’s concerned withspreading the load of graduate educa¬tion, especially in the later years ofregistration.”Noting that this was a touchy sub¬ject, she added that some thought theload could be reduced by streamliningand making uniform graduate educa¬tion in the University, while othersthought that just the opposite would re¬sult.It was certainly a touchy subject forseveral graduate students, who werealternately angry and fearful that ‘theopposite would result.’ One studentwas thankful that the proposals “are arecognition that graduate students areoften shut out of the University at amost critical time in their academiccareer.”But she criticized the confidentialitysurrounding the proposals, saying“after the Baker Report and SAGE (anorganization of graduate students con¬cerned with the proposals described inthe Baker report),” the AdministrationWhenHe'sSich,tWastecome toIf you or a member of your family needsimmediate medical care, try the con¬venient alternative to expensive emer¬gency room visits or waiting for adoctor’s appointment.IT'S CONVENIENT: You'll be cared forright away with no appointment neces¬sary. Open 8am to 8pm, seven days aweek for a basic charge of $25. Park¬ing is provided at 53rd St. & Ellis Ave.IT'S COMPLETE: Much more than anemergency center, QuickCare is backedby a major teaching hospital with 35different medical specialties. For moreinformation, call 947-4300.ChicagoOsteopathicMedical Center1000 E. 53rd StreetYou Owe It To Your Whole Self does not want to bother with studentinput, preferring to “present us withthe finished product on a platter, for usto take or leave.”She also criticized the attempt to“apply the proposals across theboard.” Physical science studentsoften spend less time working for theirdoctorates than social science of hu¬manities students, and have access tomore private and governmental grantsas well as more departmental money.As an example of this difference,“anthropology students must do field¬work for their degree, which oftenmeans spending two years in a radical¬ly different culture, learning an ob¬scure language, and adjusting after re¬turning,” said this student, adding that“it takes 8V2 years for the average an¬thropology graduate student to receivehis doctorate.”Another student did note that, in cer¬tain cases, the financial benefits ac¬crued from being a registered studentwould outweigh the cost. If the regis¬tration fee is $350 per quarter, studentswith outstanding loans in excess of$20,000 would be better off maintainingtheir interest-free status as registeredstudents. Also, some student housing is effectively subsidized, since it is of¬fered at below-market prices.However, for students not in thesesituations, one graduate student com¬plained “this will stop ambitious proj¬ects in all disciplines by penalizing stu¬dents who do not finish in fouryears.”Student Govenment will soon be tak¬ing up this matter; its graduate stu¬dent committee is preparing a presen¬tation for fourth week of spring quarter(April 16-21, after the SG elections) todiscuss graduate fees and registration,graduate fellowships, and graduate ed¬ucation in general.“We’re looking at graduate educa¬tion in the wake of the Baker Report,”said Walsh. Asked if he thought Stu¬dent Government could have any effecton this decision, he responded, “That’sa tough question. We had some effecton the discussion about plus/minusgrading, both in pointing out its advan¬tages and disadvantages. The hope isthat we can have some effect here — itdepends on how graduate studentsreact.”TABLETALK ’84APRIL 9-APRIL 22Faculty and students can share a mealat one of the following fine Hyde Parkrestaurants, and receive the followingdiscount off the total bill:THE AGORA 15% MELLOW YELLOW 15%BLUE GARCOYLE 10% MORRY’S IN HUTCH 10%FAR EAST KITCHEN 15% MORRY’S IN‘C’SHOP 10%HARPER SQUARE 15% CHEZ MORRAY’S 15%HEMINGWAY’S 15% ORLY’S 10%HOUSE OF ENG 15% THE PUB 15%IDA’S CAFE 15% SALONICA 10%MALLORY’S 10% THAI 55th 10%MEDICI on 57th 15% TIPSUDA 15%MEDICI on HARPER 20%To receive the discount, just present a coupon to thewaiter or cashier before you pay. Coupons may bepicked up at: Student Activities Office (INH 210),Dean of Students Office (Admn 219), Adviser’s Desk(Harper 280) and Reynolds Club Box Office“TALK IS CHEAP”- sponsored by Student Government -The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 6, 1984—11ICELANDAIR IS STILLYOUR BEST VALUETO EUROPE.ALSO LOW COST SERVICE TO PARIS, FRANKFURT AND NICE.REMEMBER. ONLY ICELANDAIR FLIES YOU TO THE BREATHTAKINGBEAUTY OF ICELAND. AND INCLUDES ALL THESE EXTRAS:■ Free deluxe motorcoach from Luxembourg to select cities inGermany, Belgium and Holland. ■ Bargain train fares to Switzerlandand France. ■ Super Saver car rentals from $69'week inLuxembourg. ■ Free wine with dinner, cognac after.Super APEX Fares. May 1-June 9, 1984. 7-60 day stay, 14 day advance purchase required.Icelandair to Luxembourg. Luxair connecting service to other destinations. Purchase ticketsin U S. .All fares subject to change and government approval. See your travel agent or call800/555-1212 for the toll-free Icelandair number in your area.ICELANDAIRNOW MOM THAN MR YOUR US11MUM TO EUROFt Dear Neighbors and PatientsI would like to introduceDr. Brian Oswald who hasbecome associated withme. As you know I havebeen serving the HydePark-Kenwood communityfor over 40 years.Dr. Oswald is highly experienced in all phases of optometricservice, including pediatric eye care for your young familymembers. I hope and know that when you meet Dr. Oswald youwill agree with my choice and be pleased with his service.Cordially:Dr. Kurt RosenbaumDr. Brian OswaldOptometristKimbark Plaza 1200 E. 53rd StreetChicago 60615Phone: 493-8372752-1523Hours: Monday & Thursday: 10:00 a.m. - 7:30 p.m.Tuesday, Wednesday & Friday: 10:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m.Saturday: 9:00 a.m. - 3:30 p.m.~INTRODUCTIONSPECIAL$20 00 °"COMPLETE PAIR OF GLASSESDr. Kurt RosenbaumDr. Brian Oswald1200 E. 53rd in Kimbark Plaza 493-8372m 752-1253FACULTY-STUDENT ADVISORY COMMITTEEON CAMPUS STUDENT LIFE(FSACCSL, pronounced “facsul”)ELECTIONS 1984-85In May, students throughout the University will have an opportunity to elect eightof their fellows to the Faculty-Student Advisory Committee on Campus Student Life(FSACCSL). These eight will meet with selected faculty and the Dean of Students inthe University to advise the latter on the range of non-academic functions that areperformed by his office. All students in the College, Divisions and Schools interestedin serving on FSACCSL are urged to consult the Dean of Students Office(Administration 219) for nominating petitions and further instructions.Over the past few years, FSACCSL has discussed such topics as the structure ofstudent fees at the University, the governance of MAB, and the renovation of IdaNoyes; other significant discussions have revolved around University policy on theuse of alcohol and the University’s response to the new regulations relating to draftregistration and financial aid. In addition to its substantive discussions, FSACCSLserves also as a “committee on committees” recommending student members forvarious other faculty-student committees.To qualify for candidacy, one must be a registered degree candidate in goodstanding who will also be registered in the University during the 1984-85 academicyear. A student must file for candidacy from the academic constituency in which heor she will be a student in 1984-85.Nominating petitions are available now in Administration 219. A candidate shouldhave his nominating petition endorsed by the signatures of at least 30 students in theelectoral constituency in which he or she will be registered in 1984-85.Nominating petitions must be returned to the Office of the Dean of Students nolater than 4:00 p.m. on Friday, April 27th.12—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 6, 1984hair performers)LSale begins March 15 - Ends May 30OPEN 7 DAYS1621 E^55th St.,241 -7778 aIsn’t it about timeyou and your computerreally got to knoweach other?Wiley Self-Teaching Guides.We’re great at introductions.BASIC FOR HOME COMPUTERSBy Bob Albrecht, LeRoy Finkel, & Jerald R. Brown ;“A sensible and complete beginning guide to BASIC. Takesyou from knowing almost nothing to knowing almosteverything.. ."—Kilobaud 336 pp. $10.95Over 250,000 copies sold!TRS-80® BASICBy Bob Albrecht, Don Inman & Ramon Zamora"If you’re a rank beginner.. .your novice status won't lastlong. TRS-80 BASIC leads you by the hand through the mazeof programming the computer to perform both entertainingand useful tasks”—Interface Age 251pp. $10.95Over 400,000 copies sold!ATARI® BASICBy Bob Albrecht, LeRoy Finkel, & Jerald R. Brown"Albrecht et al have produced what may be the finestintroduction to BASIC programming I have everseen '.'—Microcomputing 333 pp. $10.95TRS-80® COLOR BASICBy Bob AlbrechtLoads of games, experiments, and programming puzzles letyou get the most from your TRS-80 Color Computer—andlearn the fundamentals of BASIC programming while youhave fun. 384 pp. $9.95USING CP/M®Byjudi N. Fernandez & Ruth Ashley“A must for any nonprofessional programmer using CP/M"^Kilobaud Microcomputing 243 pp. $ 14.95THE GENIE IN THE COMPUTERBASIC Programming on the TRS-80"By Rachel Kohl, Laura Karp, & Ethan SignerGreat for teens, preteens, and technophobics of all ages. TheGenie teaches you BASIC functions and commands by usingyour TRS-80's graphics. Each new skill you learn makes theGenie come to life—moving, talking, even starring in amovie—all at your bidding! 192 pp. $12.95BASIC FOR THE APPLE" IIBy Jerald R. Brown, LeRoy Finkel, & Bob AlbrechtA complete, friendly, and virtually guaranteed introduction toBASIC programming on the Apple II—from the authors whosebooks have taught more than half a million micro users how toprogram in BASIC. 416 pp. $12.95ATARI® SOUND AND GRAPHICSBy Herb Moore, Judy Lower, & Bob AlbrechtThis unique self-paced manual takes you step by step througheasy-to-learn techniques for creating sounds and graphics-melodies, cartoons, games, even combinations of sound andanimation—on the ATARI 400 and ATARI 800. 234 pp $9 95Wiley Self-Teaching Guides can also introduce you to data fileprogramming, COBOL, assembly language, and otherimportant skills. They’re the friendly paperbacks that alreadyhave taught more than a million and a half people to use.program, and enjoy their microcomputers. Come getacquainted!Apple* is a registered trademark of Apple Computer, IncATARI * is a registered trademark of Atari, IncCP/M * is a registered trademark of Digital ResearchTRS-80 * is a registered trademark of Tandy CorpThe university of Chicago BookstoreGeneral Book Department970 East 58th Street962-7712The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 6. 1984—13Election resultsAid. Lawrence Bloom (5th) failed inhis March 20 Democratic primary bidto oust incumbent Cook County State’sAttorney Richard M. Daley. Daley wonnearly 65 percent of the vote coun¬tywide in crushing Bloom’s challenge.Bloom fared slightly better in Chica¬go precincts, winning nearly 40 percentof the vote. Bloom, who had the en¬dorsement of Mayor Harold Washing¬ton, won the city’s black vote by a 2 to 1margin.The local alderman fared much bet¬ter in the Hyde Park and Kenwoodareas, winning the 4th Ward with over71 percent of the vote, and his home 5thWard with 81 percent of the vote.In the Senate primaries, RolandBurris carried both the 4th and 5thwards in his unsuccessful bid againstnominee US Rep. Paul Simon. Burriscarried a plurality of wards in the cityas he also won the city-wide vote in thefour-way race.Participation in the Republican pri¬mary was miniscule compared to thatof the Democratic, but incumbent Charles Percy carried every ward inChicago in his easy win over US Rep.Thomas Corcoran for that party’s Sen¬ate nomination.Jesse Jackson, a 5th Ward voter, eas¬ily carried his home Ward and theneighboring 4th ward in the Presi¬dential primary. Walter Mondale beatJackson by nearly 40,000 votes in cityresults for the Democratic Presi¬dential primary.Charles Hayes won 83 percent of thevote in his successful renominationcampaign for 1st District Congressio¬nal representative. State Sen. RichardNewhouse (D-13), State Rep. BarbaraFlynn Currie (D-26), and State Rep.Carol Moseley Braun (D-25) were un¬opposed in their quests for renomina¬tions.Alan Dobry was reelected 5th WardDemocratic committeeman, althoughDonald Pamon staged a write-in cam¬paign. 5th Ward Republican commit¬teeman Owen Pulver was also reelect¬ed.Washington allies reportedly wereset to back Lipinski, but the SouthwestSide Congressman reiterated his sup¬port for Vrdolyak. Washington endedhopes of an alliance with Rostenkowskiby supporting Louis Guiterrez, a Hi¬spanic political unknown, againstheavily-favored Rostenkowski.Evans warned Daley’s support iscurrently soft, and he may not farewell against Brzeczek, as many Demo¬cratic committeemen who supportedByrne last year will support Byrne’sformer police superintendent in thegeneral election.The city’s black voters, who usuallyvote in overwhelming Democratic ma¬jorities, did defect from the party tosupport the Republican candidate forstate’s attorney in 1972. In that elec¬tion, Bernard Carey ousted EdwardHanrahan, who had stirred ill-will inthe black community by a raid onBlack Panther headquarters in whichseveral Black Panther leaders werekilled.The 4th Ward committeeman doesnot know if Brzeczek, who has been aconstant critic of Washington, couldget black support, but Evans believesprecedent for black Democratic defec¬tion in the state’s attorney’s race couldhurt Democrat Daley.Evans also criticized Vrdolyak’s forblack candidates slated by the Demo¬cratic central committee. He noted that Charles Freeman, one of the fewblacks slated by the central committeein the primary, lost his bid for nomina¬tion to the state’s Appellate Court.Freeman lost in a 5-way race toformer mayor Michael Bilandic, whowon Vrdolyak’s 10th Ward. Evans ex¬pressed doubt Vrdolyak worked forFreeman’s election, although he had“endorsed” him.While Bilandic, who was the city’sonly Croatian mayor, may have helpedin the 10th Ward with its large Croatianpopulation, Evans blasted VrdolyakJor failing to carry even his home pre¬cinct for Freeman. Bilandic beat Free¬man by a 2 to 1 margin in that precinct,Evans said.When all seventeen black commit¬teemen voted for Evans, it marked aradical shift in voting patterns forparty chairman since 1982. In the 1982election, all black committeemen ex¬cept John Stroger of the 8th Ward sup¬ported Vrdolyak.Several newly elected, anti-Vrdolyakblack committeemen helped eliminateVrdolyak’s black support. Evans saidthe others, including himself, turnedagainst Vrdolyak’s “duplications” re¬cord.“In 1982, Vrdolyak made promises ofhelping minorities in the party,”Evans said. “This year, we could lookat his duplications record and see thathis performance didn’t match hispromises.”Republicans on upswingport group continued, “All the teachersover 55 have been offered a year’s payif they retire — a teacher told me so.”She wants to bring attention to her be¬lief that the administration is not ad¬mitting that the Laboratory Schoolsare being reorganized secretly and;slowly.“We formed this ad-hoc parentscommittee because we know for a factseveral other people will be dis¬missed,” the parent explained. “And Ithink it’s important to know that thestudents have mobilized. As of lastcount, we have had 600 signatures onpetitions.”When questioned, Van Amburg re-<peated, “No program is at issue. Thisis a specific incident of not grantingtenure.” Evanscontinued from page onemayor or Vrdolyak. Some Daley allieshave openly opposed Vrdolyak, includ¬ing 43rd Ward Committeeman Ann Ste¬pan, and Michael Kreloff, whom Daleysupported in an unsuccessful bid for49th ward committeeman.Other Daley allies, though, includingthe state’s attorney’s brother John,who is 11th ward committeeman, haveconsistently sided with Vrdolyak in thestruggle. Evans said such support mayindicate a lack of fairness on Daley’spart.“There are some Daley allies whohave very strong bases,” Evans said.“These people do not necessarily haveto cross a racial line and antagonizetheir constituents, but support what isfair for the party and the people.”On WHPK-FM’s “South SideForum” last month, Evans had saidWashington allies may be successful indumping Vrdolyak if they could field acandidate whom most committeemencould support without making manycross a line separating the racially po¬larized factions. As possible candi¬dates, Evans mentioned US Rep. Wil¬liam O. Lipinski (D-5), 23rd Wardcommitteeman, US Rep. Daniel Ros¬tenkowski (D-8), 32nd Ward commit¬teeman, and Dunne. All three havebeen Daley allies.PHOTO BY CLIFF GRAMMICHUS Rep. Paul Simon By Cliff GrammichWhile city Democrats continuedtheir internecine warfare as TimothyEvans challenged Edward Vrdolyak, abattle with increasing, but still secon¬dary, media coverage was takingplace: control for the RepublicanParty of Chicago and Cook County.Renewed interest in the local Repub¬lican Party arose with BernardEpton’s mayoral bid in April, 1983. Inthe recent primaries, a record 71 can¬didates sought Republican committee¬man posts in Chicago’s 50 wards.Owen Pulver, 5th Ward Republicancommitteeman, believes the renewedinterest could spark a renaissance ofRepublican power in Chicago.In the recent battle for Republicancity chairman, 30th Ward committee¬man Louis Kasper was able to gain re-election, but received a two-year terminstead of four years, as he had pre¬viously.“The term was shortened to givecommitteemen more control of thechairmanship, and as a way to havethe chairman more responsible,”Pulver said. “The issue wasn’t LouKasper, but control over the chairman¬ship.”Several Republicans had hinted theymight support John McLeon, 49thWard committeeman, for the post ofcity chairman. Most of the oppositionto Kasper had come from independentRepublicans and “New Republicans,”those who became Republican duringthe last municipal campaign.When the term was shortened,though, Kasper was unanimously re¬elected, Pulver said. J. Robert Barr, the county Republican chairman, andother Republican party chairmen andtheir Democratic counterparts havealways had two-year terms, Pulveradded.Concerning the right over termlength, Pulver said, “there’s nothingwrong with a family feud to get someblood going, and Lou Kasper’s bloodwas going.”In the upcoming general elections,Pulver said he would support a thirdparty bid by Epton for the US Senate.Charles Percy is the Republican no¬minee seeking re-election, while USRep. Paul Simon (D-22), carries theDemocratic banner.Epton, who was portrayed as a mod-erate-to-liberal Republican when hewas a state representative from HydePark, supported conservative US Rep.Tom Corcoran (R-14) in his unsuccess¬ful bid for the Republican nomination.“Epton could win, and a lot of peoplehave asked him to run,” Pulver said.“He’d have six months to organize acampaign, instead of 60 days like hehad last time. If he’s going to do this,he’s going to make sure it’s done prop¬erly.”Epton’s campaign had receivedscant publicity or help before the Feb¬ruary 22, 1983 mayoral primaries, butbecame deluged with publicity and vol¬unteers before the April 12,1983 munic¬ipal general election.In the Republican Senate primary,Percy, despite opposition from Eptonand former Republican Cook CountyState’s Attorney Bernard Carey, car¬ried every Chicago ward and everyCook County township.HARCcontinued from page one“We the council support thecontinuation of the Housing ActivitiesResource Council (HARC) and its ef¬forts to promote and enhance inter-dorm/inter-house contact, thereby im¬proving the quality of life in thehousing system. We endorse the pas¬sage of the referendum to establish atwo dollar per quarter fee per residentto support HARC...” The statementwas ratified by the Inter-House Counciland six of eight of the dorm councilswhich had voted as of this writing.The Shoreland Council supports the$2 increase, hut not the structure ofHARC, inasmuch as they believe thereis no guarantee of future accountabili-14—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 6, ty. Instead, they advocate a third alter¬native to the referendum’s issue: ap¬proving the increase withoutnecessarily endorsing any other ele¬ment of HARC’s current structure.Michael Aronson, HARC chairman,identifies two-interacting issues in thisdebate, the first being the question“should students pay?” and the secondbeing the structure of HARC. Accord¬ing to Aronson, if a majority of the stu¬dents vote yes on the referendum, thenan organization, not necessarilyHARC, will come into existence. HARCis a prototype of a student organizationaimed at improving the social life ofthe housing system.Polling places will be in the lobby ofeach hall and will be open from 4 to 8p.m. The Shoreland will have addition¬al polling hours of 7:30 to 9:30 a.m.Lab Schoolcontinued from page one“1 can understand that students areunhappy, as can happen in any tenurecase. But this was strictly a specifictenure case,” stressed LaboratorySchool Director James Van Amburg.“This is not a budget matter. This isnot a program matter. The programwill continue and another teacher willreplace Mr. Wisniewski in the same po¬sition.”However, there is strong disagree¬ment with the administration. An anon¬ymous member of the parent and stu¬dent group in support of Wisniewskisees a grand plan in action. She said,“We are frustrated because we are notgetting a straight answer.”“He is not the only teacher not beinggranted tenure. I’ve been told that fiveor six others are in the same situation.The school is involved in some majorhousecleaning.”The students seem to agree with thisinterpretation of the events. They feelthat the practical arts program isbeing de-emphasized and that Wis¬niewski’s dismissal is an indication ofthe trend.The source from the Wisniewski-sup-The Chicago Maroonannounces the election of a Maroon editor-in-chief for 1984-85, to be held jpiTUESDAY, APRIL 10, at O p.m.The following are members-in-good-standing*eligible to vote:Edward AchuckJamie AllenMichael AronsonAbigail AsherStephanie BaconRosemary BlinnMark BlockerPhil CafaroAnthony CashmanMaxwell ChiShong ChowWally DabrowskiMichael ElliottArthur U. EllisPat FineganPaul FloodRussel ForsterJoel GeffinPhilip GlistCliff Grammich "Audrey GuzikJesse HalvorsenDon HaslamEdward HernstadtKeith HorvathAnna B. HupertAra JelalianJonathan KatzBruce KingVictor King Michael KotzeSondra KruegerJoy LangstonLinda LeeCathy LeTourneauMike LevinFrank LubyRainer MackJeffrey MakosNadine McGannCampbell McGrathDennis MiserKC MorrisBrian MulliganRavi RajmaneBurt RosenDan SakuraJoshua SalisburyLeah SchlesingerNathan SchoppaGeoff SherryCassandra SmithiesJohanna StoyvaEllyn StreedDovid SullivanJeffrey TaylorJim ThompsonHilary TillBob TravisWilliam WeaverDinner, on the Maroon, wilmeeting. follow Tuesday's electionThere will also be a meeting to discuss the MaroonConstitution SUNDAY, APRIL 15, at 8:00 p.m. (timesubject to change). Those listed above are stronglyurged to attend.*To be a member-in-good-standing, one must be o REGISTERED STUDENT. Names listed above will be check¬ed before the time of the election.-BUT IFIT DOES......protectyourselfwith oneof our...Clipper Mist Zip-lined sqqsoTrenchcoats regular $120 April priced Cw...and take advantage of our early bird spring specials...Dacron and Wool 1 O50Hopsack Blazers regular $140 April priced XXtf‘39 50Dacron and WoolTrousers regular $48.50 April pricedShort Sleeve Dress Shirts g50by Manhattan regular up to $24 April priced XU$2500 off any suit1502 E. 55th Street, in the HydePresent this coupon and save$25.00 on any one of our newspring suits during the month of April MAJORACTIVITIESSONNYROLLINSSunday aprilis8pm, mandel hall5706south universitytickets available at theREYNOLDS CLUBBOX OFFICE12$ on saleapril 97$ students(u.c.Ld.)on sale apri!5CHARGE VISA or MASTERCARD962-7300The Chicago Maroon—Friday. April 6, 1984—15K-SWISSREEBOKDUOFOLDLIFAThis map shows locations of crimesreported in Hyde Park from March 22though March 28. Data is taken from the “Police Blotter” in the Hyde ParkHerald (4/4/84).These data are based on initial crime reports only, and not on any follow-upinvestigations. FRIDAYMusic Dept.: Gilbert & Sullivan Opera Co., PrincessIda, 8pm, Mandel Hall. Tickets at RC Box Office,$8.Hillel: At Candlelighting Time — Traditional Egali¬tarian Shabbat Service at Sundown — OrthodoxShabbat Service. 6:00pm Adat Shabbat Service.Crossroads: Spring Festival. Childrens Fair, 3pm.International Food Buffet. 4pm. Kasbah Cafe, 9pm.Square Dancing: 7pm, Ida Noyes Hall.Philosophy Department: Identification and Whole¬heartedness, 4pm. HM Library.Hillel: Kadima Shabbat Dinner, 6:30 pm.Sociology Spring Institute: Political Sociology I, So¬cial Theory, 1pm. Sociology of Culture, Organiza¬tions, 3pm. Ida Noyes Hall.SAO: Ikebana Exhibition, RC North Lounge.12-4pm. Free.I-House Coffeehouse: 9pm, I-House.SATURDAYSociology Spring Institute: Gender, Communities10:30am. Intellectural Craftmanship in Grad School,lpm. Sociology of Science, 3pm. Keynote Address,Professor Amos Havley, 8pm. Ida Noyes Hall.Hillel: Women’s Tefilah, 9:15am. Kadoma Discus¬sion: Tefilor and the Reform Prayer Book, 5pm. Or¬thodox Shabbat Service, 9:15am. ConservativeShabbat Service, 9:30am.Music Dept.: Gilbert & Sullivan Opera Co., PrincessIda, 8pm. Mandel Hall. Tickets at RC Box Office,$8.Music Dept.: Collegium Musicum, 8pm. Bond Chap¬el. Free.SUNDAYGALA: Lesbian Potluck Supper, 5:30pm, Ida NoyesHall.Rockefeller Memorial Chapel: St. Matthew Passion,Rockefeller Chapel Choir and Orchestra, 3pm.Music Dept: Gilbert & Sullivan Opera Co.: PrincessIda, 2pm. Mandel Hall. Tickets at RC Box Office,$4.Rockefeller Chapel: Ecumenical Service of HolyCommunion, 9am. Religious Education classes, 10 &11am. University Religious Services, 11am. CarillonRecital and Tower Tour , 12:15pm. Lenten discus¬sion, preceeded by potluck supper, 6pm.International Folkdancing: 8pm, Ida Noyes.MONDAYInternational Folk Dancing: 8pm. Ida Noyes.Crossroads: Beginning English, 10am. IntermediateEnglish, 10:45. Intermediate French, 7pm. Begin¬ning Arabic, 7pm.Turkish Circle: The Cinema in Turkish Life, Pick218, 3:30pm.Chemistry Department: Infrared Spectroscopy ofMolecular Ions, HGS 101. 4pm.Chess Club: 7pm, Ida Noyes Hall.Committee on Human Nutrition and Nutritional Bi¬ology: Apolipoprotein B and Synthetic Models,4:30pm. J-135 Brain Research Inst.AMSA Noontime Lecture: Staying Healthy DespiteStress, Billings P-117.Lecture: The Archeological Excavations at Mycen¬ae: Recent Findings, 7:30pm, Cobb 403.NIKE TIGER SUB-4JWS c/MSPRING SPECIALSGOOD THRU SUN 4-8-84NEW BALANCEM&lv'< s V770 - 75*? - 59"700 - 6298 _ 5499660 - 569» _ 4799410-3S99_3499ADIDAS NIKEODYSSEY 7699 - 6499PEGASUS 46!9 - 4499TERRA TNGR 5999 - 49*9TRANSIT 3999 - 3599SAUCONYMARATHON 449» - 399»TNGERNEW YORK 4999-4499OREGON 4499 - 3999VisaM/CAmEx FREEDOM 6499-4999TRNGDIXON 6999 - 4999JAZZ 4699 _ 4499ALL SINGLETS &RUNNING SHORTS1 0% OFFJWtffi jmi'1527 E. 55th St.363-2700 OpenSundays0IN013 3SH3ANOO S>IOOUa 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 •BeautyShop•Barber Shop •T.J.'s Restaurant•Dentist •Valet ShopFREE PARKINGMr. Keller 7S2-3SOORELIGION 3ND TH6ECONOMIC ORDERHISTORICAL RELATIONS AND THE NORMATIVE TASKAPRIL 9-11Monday, April 9Keynote Address‘7.30 p.m.FREEDOM AND ECONOMIC ORDERA FORWARD TO RELIGIOUS EVALUATION - Franklin I. Gamwell9 p.m. ReceptionTuesday, April 10•10:00a.m."CHRISTIAN SOCIAL THOUGHTAND THE ORIGNATION OF THE ECONOMIC ORDER - Paul Heyne1:00 p.m.‘ECONOMICS AND THE MORAL ORDERIMAGES OF PEASANT SOCIETY - Kay Warren3:00 p.m.‘CONTRIBUTIONS OF MAINSTREAMECONOMICS TO ETHICAL REFLECTION - Don FinnWednesday, April 119:00 a.m.‘CAPITALISM WITH FEWER TEARS - Robert Benne10:30 M.‘TOWARD A NEW SOCIAL COVENANTFROM COMMODITY TO COMMONWEALTH Douglas Sturn1:30 p.m. A CLOSING PANEL - All participantsall sessions held atSWIFT LECTURE HALL1025 E. 50th St.Admission Is free and open to the public.16—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 6, 1984Harvard this summerAcademic Calendar: June 25 — August 17,1984arvard Summer School, the nation’s oldest summer session,offers open enrollment in nearly 250 day and eveningcourses and pre-professional programs in more than 40liberal arts fields. 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The tourney, hosted by the Uni¬versity of Wisconsin (Oshkosh), fea¬tured a head-to-head single eliminationdual match format. Chicago faced atough tournament field which consist¬ed of Marquette University, DuPage,UW-Milwaukee, UW-Green Bay, UW-Oshkosh, Northern Michigan, and UW-Whitewater. The Maroons managed asecond place finish in the consolationbracket.In the first round of tournament play,Chicago faced UW-Whitewater, astrong squad with many matches al¬ready under its belt. Whitewaterproved too tough for Chicago, as theMaroons went down in defeat, 8-1.First-year sensation Jay Woldenberggarnered Chicago’s only victory bysnatching the first singles position, 7-5,7-6 (9-7).Thus the Maroons squad droppedinto the consolation bracket of thedraw, and faced Northern Michigan, a9-0 loser to UW-Oshkosh. Chicago over¬powered them and swept every posi¬tion. Notching victories in singles wereWoldenberg (6-2, 7-6 (9-7), senior andnumber two Mike Vail (6-3, 6-3), seniornumber three player Pete Kang (6-0,6-1), and second-year fourth singlesplayer Henry Lujan (6-1, 6-0). Also,freshman number five player CliffordKo won his match (6-1, 6-1), as did sec¬ond-year, number six player Rich Chin(6-4, 7-6 (8-6).Chicago’s doubles team proved astough as the singles. Woldenberg and undefeatedKang teamed up to win easily thenumber one doubles by 6-1, 6-1 scores.Vail and Ko successfully partnered atnumber two (6-1, 6-2), and Lujan andChin captured the third doubles slot(7-6, 4-6, 6-4).With the victory, Chicago advancedto the finals of the consolation bracketagainst DuPage, who earlier had lostto the eventual tournament championMarquette Warriors by a close score of5-4. DuPage overwhelmed Chicago,8-1. Again, freshman phenom Wolden¬berg managed the only victory for theMaroons, capturing the first singlesspot by a score of 6-4, 7-6 (8-6).Chicago opened its season with a lessthan auspicious showing against atough field of opponents, and theMaroons’ lack of match toughnessshowed, but will be remedied once theMaroons have more matches to theircredit. Also, the team is without theservices of junior Phil Mowery, stillnursing a back injury, and freshmanFabio Rossi, out with an ankle injury.Coach Bill Simms said, “We havehad some injuries and it may takesome time before the squad is at fullstrength. The most important meet isof course the Midwest ConferenceChampionships (May 4-5) and we wanteveryone healthy for that. This teamhas tremendous potential and if every¬one is healthy, I look for a strong show¬ing in the conference.”The team resumes its schedule byhosting a conference triangular meetagainst Lawrence and Cornell, April 7at 10 a.m. at Ingleside Courts. Theteam then will travel to the Universityof Illinois (Chicago) April 9 for a dualmatch. Sports CalendarSoftball — Friday, April 6, at Beloit (2), and Saturday, April 7, vs. Northeas¬tern Illinois University (2), 10 a.m., at North FieldMen’s Tennis — Friday, April 6 and Saturday, April 7, Conference Quad Meetwith Lawrence, Monmouth, and Cornell, 3 p.m., Ingleside Courts.Women’s Outdoor Track — Friday, April 6, at Chicagoland IntercollegiateChampionshipsRugby — Saturday, April 7, matches against Northwestern and NIU, startingat 10 a.m., Stagg Field.Straus leads women’s trackBy Geoff SherryThe University of Chicago women’strack team travels to North CentralCollege today for the Chicagoland In¬tercollegiate Championships. With 13letter winners returning, the Maroonshope to duplicate last year’s successfulseason and retain their 1982-83 MACWconference crown.Chicago finished this year’s indoorseason on a high note by placing secondin the conference meet held here inearly March. Outstanding perfor¬mances were turned in across theboard with the Maroons’ placing in allbut two events. Senior Helen Strausturned in a particularly noteworthy ef¬fort, as she placed in three events andqualified for the NCAA Division III Na¬tional Championships with a triplejump of 10.32 meters. “I certainlydidn’t expect this,” commentedStraus. “I practiced one day for theevent with the help of coach (LindaWhitehead) and the triple jumper fromthe men’s team.” The event was justadded this year, and Straus said “thequalifying standards are low because itis a new event.”The U of C opened the outdoor seasonwith a strong performance in the LadyViking Spring Open held March 31 atAugustana College. “The meet is just awarm-up for the season; it gets every¬one back into the swing of it,” said Whi¬tehead. “I was very pleased with theteam’s performance,” she added.Straus led the Maroons with a first in the javelin, a second in the heptathlon,and a fourth in the 400-m hurdles. Jun¬ior Beth Lasky added a third in the jav¬elin, a fifth in the heptathlon, and asixth in the discus.Although the team will continue tolook to the veterans for leadership,many new faces have cropped up and itis apparent that they will be a strongforce in this year’s squad. FreshmanMaria Del Favero has opened someeyes, as she set a new school recordwith a discus throw of 109-7 at last Sat¬urday’s Spring Open. The throw topsthe old record of 107-2 held by Straus,and Straus observed, “Maria has a lotof talent. She will improve a lot and Iwouldn’t be surprised if she threw 130feet by the end of the year.” Del Fa¬vero has thrown 115-4 in high schooland she added, “I feel optimistic aboutthe season and attribute my progressto weight training and a strong condi¬tioning program outlined by coachWhitehead.”Freshmen Romnee Clark, Myra La-Venue, and Rachel Vinkey have al¬ready proven their talents in the indoorseason and will be looked to for help inthe outdoor season as well. Strausadded, “We have a lot of talentedfreshmen, and they will help the teamimmensely.”Whitehead concluded, “Our indoorteam was hampered a bit by injuries(Ann Reed, Shauna Smith), but we arefor the most part healthy and I am veryoptimistic about this year’s team.”Universitv of Illinois at ChicagoGRADUATE PROGRAM INPUBLIC ADMINISTRATION• A master's-level program designed to train studentsfor careers in public management and to upgrade theskills of working professionals• Evening courses for part-time students• Financial aid available for qualified full-time applicantsFor program information and fall 1984 application matenalscall:(312)996-3109Universitv of Illinois at ChicagoP.O. Box 4348, Chicago, Illinois 60680THE FILMMAKING DEPARTMENT OFTHE SCHOOLOF THEART INSTITUTEOF CHICAGO■ 1983-1984Visiting Filmmaker SeriesTuesday Evenings 7:00 PMSAIC AuditoriumFESTIVALOFNEWEXPERIMENTALCINEMATwo evenings of films by the ‘‘new undergroundstars,” chosen by a poll of America’s best-knownexperimental filmmakers.Admission $3.00, Students 504Columbus Dr. & Jackson Blvd.For more information call 443-3710.April 10th& 17th GaIIerx of HomesSANTEFORT COWING, REALTORS®Relocation Service Center, 1032 Sterling Avenue, Flossmoor, IL 60422(312) 957-0600If you are considering suburban living as analternative to Hyde Park, please call for infor¬mation on housing, schools, transportation,and various communities. University ofChicago recommendations available from thisskilled professional with U. of C, affiliation.CALL BARBARA STEELE at 957-0600FABULOUS 3-STORY FLOSSMOOR RESIDENCETudor in absolutely top condition. Magnificent newkitchen features oak cabinets, built-in microwave,Jenn-Aire range. Screened porch overlooks big,beautiful yard. Easy walk to train.Amenities galore! $195,000Chicago's southern suburbs offer a wide array ofcondominiums and townhouses priced from $40,000 to$150,000 and homes from modest manses to comfortableresidences to elegant estates in all price ranges. Our diversehousing market provides something to appeal to all stylesand pocketbooks.18—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 6, 1984OfTthelffwir*Sri*/1’ 1'..The spring sports season begins tomorrow with soccer on the Midway, anchthere are several upcoming deadlines for entries to the other sports leagues.Entries for softball (men’s, women’s, coed) are due April 9, and the men’s,women’s, and coed entry forms for archery and horseshoes are due on April 11.In the open recreation league, men’s and women’s singles tennis entries must bereceived by April 12, and off in the distant future lies the photo contest deadline(May 30).Rescheduling for soccer can take place only on Saturdays, and each teammust apply a week hi advance for a particular game. Officials from each teamshould already be informed of Tule changes in soccer for mis season.* * *The basketball playoffs closed Sunday with the crowning of two All-Universitychampions. All Day Long swept out of the men’s graduate league and crushedCharley’s Deep Sea Divers, 71-46, to take the men’s All-U title. On the women’sside, Out of Season outdueled Medflies, 29-26, to take the title.All Day Long’s toughest battle came semifinal round of the graduate leagueplayoffs, when they edged Too Swift 62-52. Too Swift had reached the semifinalsvia a bye, while All Day Long destroyed the Bovver Boys, 71-47, in their openinground matchup.On the othe slate, Boxing Oscar slipped by Hi Tops, one of the favorites, 49-46,but lost to Crimes Against Nature in the next round by a 36-26 score. All DayLong then had no trouble in the graduate finals, crushing Crimes 58-35.In the women’s graduate competition, Medflies defeated the Divinity School36-30 and earned a berth in the women’s All-U finals against the undergradchampion. Out of Season, viewed as the team to beat in women’s basketball,took an automatic spot in the undergrad finals by viture of winning the indepen¬dent league. In the undergrad finals the Out of Season squad — made up mostlyof off season varsity athletes — beat Tufts, the residence champion, 36-23. Tuftshad won the residence title by narrowly defeating Upper Wallace, 44-39.The most extensive play came in the men’s undergrad residence league,which had eight teams entered. In the opening round Salisbury surprised un¬defeated Shorey, 44-35, and Commuters downed Henderson A by a 48-41 score.Commuters then reached the residence finals by handily beating Salisbury,55-42. In the other bracket, Fishbein cruised by Thompson in a low-scoringgame, 33-22, and Hitchcock beat Dodd-Mead by a 60-53 count. Fishbein then beatHitchcock to reach the finals and set up a rematch between them and Commut¬ers, their division rival during the season. Oscar Oboza’s team edged the Shore-land house by 40-39 score, to enter the undergrad finals.The Commuter’s opponent in the finals, Charley’s Deep Sea Divers, had notrouble dispatching the C-Men, 63-45, to win the independent bracket. They hadno problem with the Commuters either, as their 55-38 victory indicates,y Frank LubyJ Rugby opens vs. NU, NIUIM ScoreboardMen's Undergraduate35 wmCommuters 48, Henderson A 41Hitchcock 50, Dodd/Mead 53Fishbein 33, Thompson 22Semifinals (residence)Fishbein 48, Hitchcock 40Commuters 55, Salisbury 42Finals (residence)Charley’s 63, OMen 45Finals <undergraduate)Charley’s 55, Commuters 38 Men’s GraduateQuarterfinalsCrimes Against Nature (bye)Boxing Oscar 49, Hi Tops 46All Bay Long 71, Bower Boys 47Too Swift (bye)SemifinalsCrimes Against Nature 36, BoxingOscar 26All Day Long 62, Too Swift 52FinalsAll Day Long 58, Crimes 35Men’s All UniversityAll Day Long 71, Charley’s 46 By J.E. CartwoodThe U of C rugby team, the defending1983 Midwest Collegiate Champions,opens its season Saturday with a dualmeet against Northwestern and North¬ern Illinois. The winner of this meetwin travel ta. Bowling Green to com¬pete in this year’s Midwest collegiatetournament, so in order for the U of C todefend its crown, it must first get bythese two tough opponents.Unlike last year’s tournament, whichhad no restrictions on the number ofgraduate students eligible to compete,this year’s tournament will allow onlytwo graduate students per team. Thiscould pose quite a problem for Chicago,since its first side is made up primarilyof graduate students. But this year’steam also has something unique, com¬pared to past U of C teams — a largenumber of very talented yet inex¬perienced undergraduates. Theseplayers, like Craig Park, John Nuss-baum, Todd Sandstrom, Steve Kapo-tas, Brian Cole, and Andy Valvano areexcellent athletes, display an unusualaptitude for the game, and are extre¬mely enthusiastic. These and other ta¬lented undergrads will make up thebulk of Saturday’s first team. Withplayers of this caliber taking the field,the U of C will field a formidable, com¬petitive side indeed.During the rest of the season, thegraduate student limitation does notapply, so the team will be able to put itsbest 15 players on the field. And what ateam it should be. Every position willbe filled by either an experienced vet¬Women’s Undergraduate (res.)SemifinalsUpper Wallace 34, Hale 23Tufts 32, Lynt 10FinalsTufts 44, Upper Wallace 39Undergraduate finalsOut of Season 36, Tufts 23Women’s graduate finalsMedflies 36, Divinity School 30Women’s All UniversityOut of Season 29, Medflies 26Softball boasts speed, new lookBy Frank LubyThe University of Chicago softballteam opens its schedule tomorrow onthe road against Beloit College, beforereturning home for a doubleheaderagainst Northeastern Illinois Universi¬ty beginning at 10 a.m. at NorthField.First-year coach Cheryl Kennedybrings an aggressive attitude to theMaroons this season. “We’re going torun, and we’re going to bunt,” she said.“I like to be aggressive, and the teamhas picked up on it.”Leading Kennedy’s rapid offensiveattack is third baseman and leadoff hit¬ter Dana Howd. Howd, a junior co-cap¬tain, achieved national ranking lastseason in stolen bases. “Her aggressi¬veness and team leadership at a greatdeal to the team,” said Kennedy. Ken¬nedy also puts her team’s speed to usein the outfield, today where she willstart sophomore Patty Owen, fresh¬man Paige Thompson, and sophomoreLynn Bircsak.The team has almost as much youthas it does speed. Co-captain KarenKitchen, the starting pitcher this after¬noon against Beloit, and nationallyranked RBI producer is the only seniorin the starting lineup as it presentlystands. That lineup also includes threefreshman and Bircsak, who is in herfirst season playing softball.Madelyn Detloff and Arzou Ahsanwill hit fifth and third in the battingorder. Detloff will catch, and Kennedydescribed her as having “an aggres¬sive bat and outstanding speed on thebasepaths.” Ahsan, the shortstop, canplay several other positions as well. Inthe outfield Kennedy gives Thompsonthe edge over the other freshmen —Laura Edwards, Pamina Haddock,and Kathleen Lively — due to herspeed and throwing arm.Rounding out today’s starting lineupare sophomore Helen Gemmill and junior Kate O’Connell. Gemmill makesthe transition from outfield to firstbase this year, and saw duty as DH lastseason, too. O’Connell, nursing an inju¬ry, gets the nod at second for the timebeing over junior Karen Walsh andsophomore Stephanie Grossman.“Each one has different abilities,”said Kennedy, “so it will come down towhoever hits the ball.” O’Connell alsoprovides the Maroon lineup its onlylefthanded bat, as she is a switch hit¬ter.Kennedy took the coaching job late inthe spring of ’83, so she could not workmuch on recruiting for the present sea¬son. However, she said “I couldn’t behappier with this year’s freshmanclass.” Kennedy feels the club’s youthwill provide the nucleus for a strongteam in the years ahead, as well as thisyear. For recruiting this year Kennedywill take advantage of her work as anumpire for high school and summersoftball games. “It’s still a problem,”she pointd out. “I hae to see kids duringtheir junior years (because of the Col¬lege’s early application deadlines.)The only seniors I can look at are thosewho have been accepted and are com¬mitted to us,” she added.Problems facing this year’s squad in¬clude some academic conflicts. Ken¬nedy has three or four players who willtake the MCATs’in April, the weekafter the team’s busy swing throughthe conference schedule. Having tostart practice following finals week ofwinter quarter, when players finallyreturn from out-of-town, would nor¬mally cause additional problems, butKennedy took her team to Florida withthe varsity baseball club over springbreak to practice and spend some timetogether, concentrating on softball.“I don’t care how much money itcost,” she said. “It (the trip) wasworth it.” She pointed out that theteam came together as a group inFlorida thanks to the practice sessions eran or one of the hard-nosed rookiesfighting for a spot. The “pack” is led bysome very experienced players fromlast year’s championship squad, likeMark Keller, Steve Hutt, Kevin Tram¬mel, and Brooks Dexter. The backsalso have their share of experience, *chiding players like team captainSandy Cartwright, Pat Waresk, andJohn-Paul McCarthy. The season in¬cludes many very tough opponents.from the Chicago area — the ChicagoLions, Lincoln Park, Elgin Rugby Club,and the University of Notre Dame, justto name a few. However, the team’s ex¬perience, spirit, and excellent physicalcondition (brought on by Cartwright’sintense practice sessions), give theMaroons a great chance to overcomethese tough opponents.Saturday’s games against Northwes¬tern and NIU are as follows:9:30 — UC first side vs. NIU10:30 — UC second side vs. NU sec¬ond side12:10 — NU first side vs. NIU1:30 — UC third side vs. NU thirdside3:00 — UC first side vs. NU firstside.All games are on Stagg Field. Every¬one is welcome and encouraged tocome. Admission is free and refresh¬ments will be provided courtesy of theteam.in the morning and intrasquad scrim¬mages in the afternoons, and thatwould not have happened had theplayers gone their separate ways at theend of winter quarter, and returned tobegin practice this quarter.Mary Ishii rounds out the eight newplayers on the team. A freshman, sheplays the infield, but is presently re¬covering from a foot injury. Among theveterans are Mary Choldin, who Ken¬nedy says “will develop into a finepitcher in our program’s future.”Colleen Doody, a senior, will com¬pete for an outfield position, as willsophomore Wendy Parshall. Parshallis also a prospective catcher “and is afine building block for our future.”Following this weekend’s double-header against NIU, the team will hostWheaton College at 3 p.m. on Monday.The heart of the schedule falls on April19-21, when the Maroons make theircharge for the conference crown byplaying home twinbills on each of thosedays, against St. Norbert, Ripon, andLawrence, respectively.7he Closer You Get The Better We Ixwk!Hyde Park's Completely Sen-Apartment ResidenceA Short Walk From The lake And:Harper Ct. • University of ChicagoThe l. C. • RestaurantsIncludes• Master T.V. Antenna • Sen Ceramic Tile• Ind. Control Heat • Sew Appliances• Mall to Mall Carpeting • Sight Doormen* Central Air ConditioningI Bedroom from $405 - 2 Bedroom from $5255200S. BLACKSTOSEAVE.I BLOCK WEST OF HARPER COURTion.-Fri. 9-6 Sat. 12-6 Sun. 12-5 684-8666^ INTERNATIONALCAREER?A representativewill be on the campusTHURSDAY,APRIL 5, 1984to discuss qualifications foradvanced study atAMERICANGRADUATE SCHOOLand job opportunitiesin the field ofINTERNATIONA! MANAGEMENTInterviews may be scheduled atCAREER COUNSELINGREYNOLDS CLUB/ROOM 200AMERICAN GRADUATE SCHOOLOF INTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENTThunderbird CampusGlendale, Arizona 85306ParentCooperativefor Early LearningOPEN HOCSESUNDAY APRIL 8th 1-4p.m;Comprehensive PreschoolFully professionally staffedDiverse, flexible curriculumOpen year round, 7.30 a.m — 6.00 p.mAges 24 months — kindergarten5300 S bhore Orve CHtcago Illinois 60615 PN-oV*)The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 6, 1984—19The Third String, National League previewMaybe Pete Rozelle should have been named Com¬missioner of Baseball, since the National League hasnearly reached the parity he has long sought after inthe NFL. In the eastern division, the Mets and theCubs are only a year away from making it a six-teamrace. In the west, any one of the top five teams couldwin it this year. This is not necessarily good news,since it means that it is very unlikely that a team willemerge to dominate and capture attention the waythe inferior, i.e. junior league’s Brewers did in ’82and their White Sox did in ’83. (Maybe the seniorleague should import some fat, hairy slobs to changethis around).I doubt very much that the NL could maintain itsuncontested superiority if it produces another pair ofho-hum division winners this season, as it did in ’83.But if there is anything worth taking out of lastyear’s Phillies-Dodgers playoff it is that we NL en¬thusiasts who are not registered or who do not live inprimary states know how Democratic voters mustfeel this year.Here beginneth a humble and not-so-certain analy¬sis of the National League this year.Eastern DivisionPittsburgh — The Pirates are built around twocliches, that pitching is 80 percent of the game, andthat Chuck Tanner is the best manager on baseball.Since both these cliches are fairly accurate, thePirates should win the division. This team standsseven deep in starting pitchers. With the exception ofD. Robinson, who was injured, and J. Tudor, who is alefty who pitched in Fenway Park, not one of thestarters had an ERA above 3.65 (L. Tunnell’s) in ’83.The rest of the staff, namely J. Candelaria, L.McWilliams, R. Rhoden, and J. De Leon, were situ¬ated around the 2.80-3.20 mark. The bullpen consistsof the least of the starters, the coveted K. Tekulveand the impressive C. Guante.This pitching depth will allow Tanner to get rid ofthe unhappy Candelaria, thus preserving the unityand happiness of his team. Tanner’s ability to keephis clubhouse and those who dwell within it full ofproductive good is the reason he is considered base¬ball’s best manager.The Pirates get incredibly consistent righthandedproduction out of B. Madlock and T. Pena. Yet, theextent to which the lefthanded power of J. Thompsonand rookie Doug Frobel materializes will determinewhether Pittsburgh will merely contend it, win, oreven dominate the eastern division.Montreal — Until proven otherwise, the Expos re¬main the team that destiny loves to torment. Toatone for whatever in their past makes them stinkonce the season starts, they sacrificed M. Trillo andA. Oliver. The Expos decided that with these two ta¬lented non-winners they weren’t going anywhere. Sonow they have the once-talented winner P. Rose totake up Oliver’s spot in the lineup, although he willplay left field. In doing so, Rose risks looking foolishand fond in his 43rd year, to be spent on the hard, fastoutfield in Montreal. Yet, if he pulls it off, the Exposwill have their first model of a player who prefers towin, rather than to look graceful, usually in defeat.One less emotional, more practical advantage tounloading Oliver is that now G. Carter can rest hisweary body at first base from time to time. If Cartercontinues to catch 150 games a season, he will go theway of J. Bench, only without all the World Seriesinnings. Only by switching off to first once in a whilecan he make the comeback necessary if the Exposare finally to win something.St. Louis — This third serious contender for theeastern title finds its clear strength in the quality ofits regular lineup. With the exception of 0. Smith, themost talented defensive shortstop since L. Aparicio,no regular can be expected to hit below .275 or so.The outfield of L. Smith (.330), W. McGee (an incred¬ible 75 RBI for someone who rarely hits the ball outof the infield), and D. Green (a potential big star),excels in almost every category. G. Hendrick shouldhave another excellent year at the plate while play¬ing a new position, first base. A Van Slyke (also aprobable big star) will be at third, giving the Cardi¬nals the punch that has long been missing from thattraditional power spot.If Green and Van Slyke live up to their 20 HR, 90RBI potential, it could cushion the awful pitchingstaff enough to keep the Cardinals strongly in the race. If J. Andujar and B. Sutter do not make amaz¬ing comebacks the St. Louis might never be in it.Maybe the pitching would be better if Whitey Herzogcould decide who will start and who will relieve, andleave it at that.Philadelphia — These Phillies seem to draw all thegood luck the Expos are denied. Last year, luckbrought them to the World Series, and then desertedthem, causing much embarrassment to their league.Although their names and ages have changed, luckwill play a major role in any Phillie success in ’84.Besides the superhuman contribution from M.Schmidt and S. Carlton, the Phillies will need greatproduction from rookies Len Matusek and Juan Sa¬muel. Both these prospects had excellent minorleague stats, yet, they both played in the PacificCoast League, where recent tradition has been forprospects to betray their minor league training oncethey get to the majors.But clearly, if Philadelphia is to win the divisionagain in ’84, V. Hayes must be the luckiest man onthe team, if not in the world. Not only will be need theluck to avoid serious injury, which he lacked in ’83,but also he will need luck enough to become the nextT. Williams, as once he was described. BarringHayes’ transfiguration and the continued mystifica¬tion of the Expos, the Phillies should finish in the sec¬ond division.Chicago — The Cubs have a lot of offense. Unfor¬tunately, the factors of Wrigley Field, poor defense,and poor starting pitching dictate that they have amegaoffense. The Cubs are so shaky defensively thatthey are willing to bench two of three strong hitters(K. Moreland, M. Hall, or B. Buckner) in order toplay a competent and excessively speedy center-fielder who managed to hit only .231 on hard astro-truf (B. Dernier).What the Cubs really need besides pitching, istheir super-prospect Shawon Dunston, who, whencombined with R. Sandberg, will give the Cubs phe¬nomenal defense up the middle of the infield. Dun¬ston, who hit .700 on high school, will also add to themega-offense. Yet, Dunston is still some time awayfrom the majors.The Cubs tried to improve their pitching by pick¬ing up S. Sanderson, but who knows what he will beable to do. The Cubs will thrive as much as theirpitching permits and their offensive figures.New York — There is not much to say about theMets’ chances for a running season in ’84 except thatthey have none. The big story here is how well theirgreat prospects will justify their hope for ’84 — 90. If,by the end of the season you can identify D. Straw¬berry, R. Darling, D. Gooden, S. Fernandez, T.Leary, J. Orosco and J. Gibbons by their full firstnames, it might have been a losing year for the Mets,but not a long one. Prediction: the longest period oftime for Mets’ fans to pass will be the Winter of’86.Western DivisionSan Diego — It’s a big risk predicting the Padres todo well, no matter how much talent they accumu¬late.Against the pacifying backdrop of Jack MurphyStadium, the only indoor stadium located outdoors,Jerry Kapstein’s boys, S. Garvey, G. Nettles, and R.“G.” Gossage will try to inflame their new team theway they did their old ones, who happened to meetthree times in five years in the World Series.Beside production from rookie outfielders Carme-lo Martinez and Kevin McReynolds, the Padres arerelying on a better pitching than in ’83 where D. Dra-vecky’s 3.58 ERA was the best in the starting rota¬tion. The bullpen will be much better with Gossagethan without him, although he needs to shed his newnickname of “old-tie-em-up-and-win-it” which cameafter he precipitated the need to get 13 wins in relief.He will be ably assisted in the bullpen by the erraticyet often-impressive L. DeLeon.If the Padres are to win they must get good pitch¬ing and presence of mind from their newly acquiredveterans. Yet they should win, since their majorcompetition in the west got merely older and not bet¬ter over the winter.Los Angeles — There is no serious question thatthe Dodgers have the pitching necessary to win thedivision. Yet there are serious questions about theiroutfield offense and infield defense. The only ques¬tions about the pitching are whether R. HoneycuttBy Anthony CashmanThe U of C fencing team finishedtheir season with positive signs for nextyear. On March 17, the U of C fencersparticipated in the Great Lakes cham¬pionship in Michigan.The combined team, men andwomen, placed 10th of 15 teams whilethe men’s team captured 8th.Individually, Albert Schultz, captainof the foil, managed a berth in thequarter finals. Schultz, sabre captainBen Wolf, and Brian Selby of the epeeail fenced sufficiently well to qualifyfor the regional championship at20—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 6,1984 Fencers finish strongcan get his 5.77 National League ERA down to size,whether F. Valenzuela can reverse his personaltrend toward higher ERA and fewer wins, andwhether despite these questions, the Dodgers stillhave one of baseball’s best staffs.In the outfield, the boring K. Landreaux will besurrounded byXo^st League Star Candy Maldanadoand a platoori^f ^he respectable M. Marshall andformer Japarij|serLeague great, T. Whitfield. It re¬mains to be se^ii Whether this combination can pro¬duce like a pennant-winning outfield must.On the infield, B. Russell takes his rotten reflexesto shortstop and S. Sax takes his mental block to sec¬ond base once again in ’84. Senor Strangeglove of the103 RBI’s moves over to first base this year. Tryingto keep the Coast League Phantom Award in the or¬ganization (G. Brock, recipient in ’83) the Dodgersturn third base over to rookie German Rivera.Yet, the Dodgers have never, for one second,lacked character as an organization (although theyall should be gassed for leaving Brooklyn).Atlanta — Over the winter, actually last autumn,the Braves decided upon the changes to be made inthe ’84 team. B Horner would travel with an armedescort, L. Barker would become the ace of the staff,and Brad Komminsk would get his shot to hit 30 HR’sin Atlanta. Who can blame them for the first deci¬sion? As for the third decision, do they really needmore power to go with the best clutch-hitting trio inbaseball of D. Murphy, B. Horner, and C. Chamb¬liss?For even with P. Niekro and P. Perez, the teamneeds pitchers. But Niekro got chased and Perez gotcaught. Atlanta needs figurative comebacks from T.Forster and G. Garber in the bullpen and L. Barkerin the rotation, and literal “comebacks” fromNiekro and Perez, neither of which is very likely.The Braves should be able to finish third in a divisionwhere they will be all bunched up.San Francisco — Frank Robinson manages like heplayed, i.e., spikes first and hard. If his old-fash¬ioned methods can finally wring some winning base¬ball out of Trillo and Oliver, the Giants can contend.Not all of the Giants’ acquisitions were losers. Theyfinally got D. Baker to join them, which adds to theirtrademark since time immemorial, outfield depth.Yet, another Giant tradition is affirmed in thisyear’s team, no catcher and no third baseman.Considering that they have no field marshal, i.e.,catcher, the pitching is rather good all around, butespecially in the bullpen where G. Minton and G. La-velle evenly split 42 saves from opposite sides of themound. But the club’s great weapon remains thegreat Frank Robinson, and if his new players re¬spond to him (as well as his “old” players like J.Clark and C. Davis) the Giants will surprise in theWest.Houston — The Astros were so confident abouttheir team of ’83 that they made not one majorchange for ’84. Some of their confidence was not un¬founded since the team made up 21 wins over the sea¬son after starting 0-9. Also, many young playersplayed outstandingly, especially late in the season.Yet, despite the impressiveness of D. Thon and B.Doran (perhaps the Trammell and Whitaker of theNational League) and the fine relief work of F. De-Pino and B. Dawley, the team will not have enoughto seriously contend this season because it is older atsome key positions. P. Garner and J. Cruz are bothpast the age when one’s best seasons are consideredhistory. N. Ryan will be 37 and J. Niekro will counterwith a 40-year old fastball when his knuckler doesn’tget over. Also, the .201 average and 35 passed balls ofthe composite catcher have not been remedied. Itcould be a frustrating season in the Dome if theAstros show their age, young and old alike.Cincinnati — Who cares? Certainly the Reds don’t.They hired Vern Rapp, the near-unanimous choicefor the worst manager in baseball, did they not?They got back T. Perez, the one player they nevershould have traded, eight years too late, did theynot? They paid good currency for D. Parker, did theynot? They denied desperately needed mid-seasonsurgery to D. Concepcion, their royal and talentedshortstop in ’83, did they not?Yet, despite their best efforts, the Reds have somegood players. M. Soto’s fastball is “franchise” mate¬rial. G. Redus showed some flashes of brilliance inhis belated rookie season. Yet, when talking aboutthe Reds, there is little to hold one’s attention.Dennis ChanskyNorthwestern the following day.At the regionals, “none of them dis¬graced themselves,” according tocoach Graeme Jennings. In fact, Selbyeven came within one touch of qualifyi¬ng for the national championships atPrinceton University in New Jersey ashe lost his final bout in a la belle situa¬tion (tied 4-4) 5-4.“I was very pleasantly surprised,”stated Jennings. ‘I didn’t even expectthem to make the regionals.”Under coach Jennings, the men’sfencing team appears to be coming out of the woods. Jennings, however, pointsout that much of the success of thisyear’s team must be attributed toformer coach Bob Ostrowski whocoached at the U of C for 15 years. “Themainstays were his guys,” explainsJennings. Nevertheless, Jennings is inthe process of building a respectableprogram. The team graduates onlyBrian Selby this year. “It’s unfortunatewe’re losing Brian,” stated Jennings,“but it looks like we’ll be getting afreshman that has had some good fenc¬ing background ” Prospective studentTim Stuhldreyer studied under Jen¬nings in Pittsburgh. Stuhldreyer is also the recipient of an academic scholar¬ship to the college.Spring training sessions begin onWednesday, April 18th at Henry CrownField House with an organizationalmeeting at 3 p m. Coach Jennings espe¬cially encourages beginners to attendinstructional sessions which he willlead every Wednesday from 3:00 to5:00. There will be training without thecoach on Fridays at the same time.“Everyone will be made welcome, menand women.” Jennings would “like toget some depth into the program,” andspring training provides this opportuni¬ty.CLASSIFIEDADVERTISINGClassified advertising in the Chicago Maroon is$2 for the first line and $1 for each additionalline. Lines are 45 characters long INCLUDINGspaces and punctuation. Special headings are20 character lines at $2 per line. Ads are not accepted over the phone, and they must be paidin advance. Submit all ads in person or by mailto The Chicago Maroon, 1212 E. 59th St.,Chicago, III. 60637 ATTN Classified Ads. Ouroffice is in Ida Noyes Rm. 304. Deadlines:Wednesday noon for the Friday issue, Fridaynoon for the Tuesday issue. Absolutely no 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 publica¬tion. The Maroon is not liable for any errors. 3 BR tri-level in private setting near Lake inBeverly Shores, Ind. 45 min. from U of C by caror train. Basement, C. air. $70,000. Call RenardAt Callahan Realty 219 962-4298.Lg 1 bdrm apt avail June 1 for sum or 1 yr. w/cptg, new ktchn, nt doorman. 53rd 8. Hyde Pk,$440/mo. 962-7953 (day) 363-6509(eve).1 br. in 3br apt. 54th & Kimbark. Laundry inbldg., close to Mr G, sunporch. Util. June 15624 3145.BEVERLY SHORES, IN. Lake Front Home 4yr old-Bilevel 3 bdrm. Keck Arch.ANN CARLSON REAL ESTATE(219) 872-4636 or (21V) 872-4811Lg. Sunny bedroom/pvt bath in pvt. apt58th/Dorchester. Pref. Grad student/profes¬sional. $235 month. Call after 5: 643-3344. Availnow.SPACESPACIOUS CONDO. 3br lVa ba. Huge Ir & mstrbr, wdbng frpl, totally remodeled kitch &baths. Open house Sun 12-5 5525 Blackstone 2885775.Airy Spacious Condo for Sale 2 Bedrooms 2Baths Lakeview Woodparquet Floors Well-maintained Building Call 947-4085 or 955-4560E Hyde Pk Lg deluxe 3 bd 2 b condo fireplacegarage possible financing 493-2179Accepting app. for studios avail beg. May 1.Quiet, non-smoking grad stud pref. 241-6875leave mess. 667-5153. 3:00 to 8:00pm.CONDO FOR SALE BY OWNER. Ideal forstudents or faculty. 3 BR 54th & Greenwood onUC mini bus route. Bldg well managed $52,400.241-7208.For Sale By Owner: Spacious One BedroomCondo 3rd fl-very sunny 3 blks to UC Call 947-9208STUDIO available in JUNE Large w/newkitch secure bldg Indry 57 & BLKSTN call 2417280PLEASE!!! Sublet my large 4rm apt onEverett $4l0/mo avail immed! Call MaureenHome 643 5642 work 962-1700Summer Sublet: 5462 S Woodlawn/2bedroom/Safe building/Dishwasher/Washer &Dryer/Rent negotiable°Call 493 3104 Hyde Park Coop: 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, den/extra bedroom, patio, garden, play area, offstreet parking, member meeting-social room,laundry fac. Price: $31,392. Appt. call: (eve)288-7321 (weekend) 667-5434.CONDO FOR SALE by owner. Ideal forstudents or faculty. 3BR 54th & Greenwood, onUC minibus route. Bldg, well-managed.$52,400. 241-7208.ROOM AVAIL NOW in huge 4 bdrm., 2 bathcondo new CLEAN kitch & baths $169/mo. INCL. HEAT 53rd & Dorchester. Call 667 4251 or664 3641.Can Be 2 Or 3 Bdrm.56th & Kimbark, Oak Firs., Sunny Well KeptBldg. Full DR, $60,000. Call 876-3512 OR 9479432.Fern rmmte to share beaut frnshd apt close tocampus $275 Avail anytime in April CallMiriam 667 0445 or leave message 263-1889 or674-3715.2 br UofC faculty apt Assume lease which runsto end of Sept w/possible renewal One block frcampus, good sunny exposure & a view Avail 1June Call evenings 324 4329.SELLOR RENTHyde Park Condo Newly remodeled 2 BR 2 BAw den, fpl. w/w cpt., mdrn appl/BA, dshw.,skylt, sunny south wind. Well secured bid wlaund. fac or neg for ours. Good assoc, lowasses., 1 blk from shopping/buses. Avail May1.82,000 or 750/mo 962-1292/288-5732.ELEGANT 2 BEDROOM CONDOEnd unit, lots of Sun, Lg. rooms and closets,Exposed wood, Levolor blinds. Washer &Dryer, Secure parking, 52nd & Greenwood,Avail. July $62,500. Phone Tom 962 7292( D) 643-3011.(E) 5th roommate to share lg coed apt. Nonsmoking grad/professional only. Priv rm, sharecooking, near D bus stop. $154 inc ht. 493-5245.Room w priv bath, hall, & walk-in Mad Pk 3BR$159 (225.02) -t-30 inc in Auq (40 02). 268-2028.Gmugc.Ir~r~i JTlI *mmi®KENNEDY RYAN, MONIGAL A ASSOC.5508 South Lake Park667-6666ACOME CELEBRATE SPRING WITH USAT OUROPEN HOUSESSUNDAY, APRIL 81 - 3:00 PM4921 DORCHESTER AVENUETerrific 12 room Victorian home for active family. Beautifulstripped woodwork.5125 ELLIS AVENUEElegant 5 bedroom coop apartment with garage. Customeddesigned, eat-in kitchen. Modestly priced at $71,900.5236 WOODLAWN AVENUEFamily-sized modern townhouse. Protected common play areafor children. Off-street parking. MUST SEE! $91,900.5304 CORNELL AVENUESpacious 3 bedroom, 2 bath condo in well-run building.“House-like” layout. Excellent condition.5410 KIMBARK AVENUEVictorian greystone starter home. 4 bedrooms. Across frompark with tennis courts and playground. $122,000.5429 CORNELL AVENUEYour own private backporch for summer relaxing - plus 1700sq. ft. of totally renovated space. Great kitchen. $76,900.5429-2/3 BLACKSTONE AVENUEUnique 4 bedroom, 2 bath duplex condo. Large backyard.MUST SEE. $69,500.5705 BLACKSTONE AVENUEAttractive ON CAMPUS condo with woodbuming fireplace.Great building, great neighbors, great price. ($79,500) SUMMER SUBLET-2 bedrooms available, 9:00 am Mon - Fri. Ref. Req. 643 5109$180/month, one block away from 1C and onJeffrey express, furnished, call 752-3521. Graduate students for occasional babysittingthrough summer. Two nice kids 324-9533.SPACE WANTEDSerious, quiet mature grad student seekingspace in apartment with similarly minded per¬sons. Prefer year lease starting summerquarter I need a large room in a place withstorage space Call collect 319-351-7684Grad Stu seeks room in quiet private home Kitpriv optional Craig M-Sa 5-10 962-9631.Prof, seeks 3-4 bdrm. house/apt. Hyde Parkacad yr. '84-5. Call Gene collect 415-524-5589eves, or 415-642-4670 days.FOR SALECokin Special Effects Filters Pro SeriesTwo for One SaleModel Camera 1342 E 55th St. 493 670021" Romic racing bike; Campy, Avocet, etc.$500 Call evenings, 955-1136.75 VW DASHER. 75,000 Miles. Good runningcondition. $600 or best. 288-6844 hm, 962-7553wk.1983 DODGE SHELBY CHARGER Sunroof,rust proofed, 9300 mi. Excellent. $8300 (eves)955 9474.72 Nova 2 door good condition 6 cylinder call288-5295after 6 p.m. or weekends.YARD SALE Bookcase, set of dishes, electriccurlers, tape recorder, humidifier, yogurtmaker, housewares, clothes, books. Sat. 9 3,5631 S. Maryland. April 1MOVING SALE! mattress, c/tv, crpt,bookshlvs, ktchn tble, drssr, stereo cmpnts,am/fm-tape alrm elk, eletr heater, applncs,ktchn items, baby stuff. VERY GOOD CONDI¬TION! REASONABLE PRICES. Sunday 4/8from 10 to 7 hrs. Tel 643 5008.DATSUN '79 210 Wagon 4-spd stk, am/fm,rear def, radials, exc maint, one owner, norust, 39,000 mi, $2600. Call 363-5508 evesBARGAINS GALORE Desks BookcasesTables Trunks Dishes Clothes Books etc 10-2Sat Sun Apr 7&8 4827 S. KenwoodDodge Van for sale. Slantsix (cylinder), 15-20mpg, with ladder rack. Good engine, goodtransmission, good tires. $600. Bill 493-9122PEOPLE WANTEDNeed Babysitter for twin girls age 7. 6 30 am to TEST YOURSELF. Can you manage your timeproductively? Work 2-4 hrs/wk consistently?Are you success-oriented? Self-motivated?Marketing position available on campus. 1-800-243 6679.Teacher to begin Sept. '84: Hyde Park UnionChurch Nursery School. Experience and train¬ing preferred. Morning class with possiblep.m. option. For info, call Jane Katch, 363 6063.Experienced Babysitter Wanted to care fortwo small children. One morning a week plusoccasional days and evenings. 324-7890.Experienced Babysitter Wanted to care fortwo small children. One morning a week plusoccasional days and evenings 324-7890Needed: a C language programmer experienced in the UNIX environment for a conversionproject - must be able to start immediately.For information call 962-1898.The Food Pantry requests volunteers to interview clients, to assess each client's need Yourhelp is wanted. Call 955-4108.HELP WANTED/WAIT PEOPLEMellow Yellow, 1508 E. 53rd, now hiring full &pt time waitstatf tor its busy season. We offergood pay & training in exchange for highenergy & a positive, prof, approach to yourwork. Apply Eliz.M F 9-11 p.m.SERVICESJUDITH TYPES-and has a memory. Phone955-4417.JAMES BONE Processor/Typist/Editor: 3630522Moving and Hauling Discount prices to staffand students from $12/hr. With van, or helpersfor trucks. Free cartons delivered N/C Packing ar.d Loading services. Many other services References. Bill 493 9122.Passport photos while you wait. On Campus.Other photo services available 962-6263.HYDE PARK PSYCHOTHERAPYASSOCIATES: We work together to offer helpfor a wide range of problems. Most of our of¬fices are in the university area. Answering svc.288 2244TYPING Experienced Secretary typesReports, Dissertations, Tables - All Material,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 prov ide a natural settingfor affordable elegance with dramatic v iews.— .All new kitchens and appliances— Wall-towall carpeting— .Air conditioning— Optional indoor or outdtxirparking — Community rexim— Resident manager— Round the-clock security— Laundry facilities oneach fkx>rStudios. One. Two and Three Bednxim apartmentsOne Bedroom from S505 — Two Bedroom from $7(X)Rent includes heat, ax iking gas. and master TV antennaCall for information and appointment — 643 NO6f|CW)emiete#foMse1642 East 56th Street^In Hyde Park across the park fromThe Museum of Science and IndustryEqual Housing (Jpponunih Managed by Metruplcv IncThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 6, 1984—21■>*MADISON PARK ATRIUMTOWNHOUSE. The best of Y.C.Wong design. This lovely centrallyair-conditioned home surrounds avery pleasant flowered court foryour own private pleasure.CHECK IT OUT!SPRING BARGAIN! 2 bedroom,1 bath condo in secure courtyardbuilding. Track lighting,carpeting, and more! Centrallylocated. Walk to campus,transportation, shopping! Can’t bebeat for $55,000.OWNER WILL CONSIDER ANYREASONABLE OFFER! 3bedroom co-op, close to theuniversity. Lovely natural wood,large living room and dining room.Also, an enclosed sunporch. How'about renting with an option topurchase? Asking $28,500!BEAUTIFUL - CLEAN - ALLELECTRIC KITCHEN. Make thisnewly listed 1 bedroom co-op thehome for you. Lovely stainedwood. Cozy sunroom, electricfireplace. Call today for an ap¬pointment. Low $30’s.JUST LISTED! Just $38,000 buysthis cozy 1 bedroom with spaciousliving room and kitchenette. Ter¬rific location and assumable mor¬tgage makes this condo an af¬fordable home for you!JUST LISTED! Bright, spacious,2 bedroom with oak floors, eat-inkitchen. Large rooms plus sun-porch. $50’sRENOVATED RESIDENCE INTHE PARK - 3 bedroom, 2 bath isnow available for your personalpurchase. New kitchen and in¬sulated sunporch for casual dining,formal dining room with stainedglass panelled and lighted hutchfor more elegant meals. Lots ofspace for entertaining. Only$76,600!!BRAND NEW LISTING! This co¬op residence is fresh, bright andbeautiful. 2 bedrooms, exceptionalcloset space, immaculate kitchenwith pass-through to dining area.Very large living area with view ofpark and lakefront. Convenient totransportation. Parking available.Excellent co-op with excellentreserve. Call for more information- ask about assessments? Buy thisfor $45,000!!IF YOU WANT A NICE,CLEAN, BRIGHT place to liveand want to buy inexpensively, this3rd floor I bedroom, 4 room co-opapartment is just right! Roll out ofbed and into class: The U of C LawSchool is a block away. Steal it for$18,900!LOCATION RIGHT - SPACEBRIGHT. This 2 bedroom in theheart of campus has southeasternexposures and a woodburningfireplace. $60’s.THIS BRIGHT, MODERN,CLEAN, SECURE 2 bedroom, 2bath condominium is in the rightlocation at a great price: $61,500.All systems are excellent. Andthere’s a pool and health club, too.Come take a look and then stay toenjoy the beautiful springflowers!!HILO REALTY GROUP1365 E. 53rd St.986-1800BRIGHT MOVE-IN CONDI¬TION - l bedroom co-op in conve¬nient location for campus as wellas downtown. The lake and parkare added features of this im¬maculate residence. All for only$25,800 - so call now for an ap¬pointment.NEW DUPLEX LISTING INJACKSON TOWERS! 4bedrooms, 4 baths plus large denin one of Hyde Park’s finestmanaged buildings. Vaulted ceilingin living room with balcony andstained glass windows, overlook¬ing park. And, priced at only5185,000. Call now for an appoint¬ment. Grammar Corrected. 1 Day Service MostCases. 667 8657.Typing — fair priced, rush jobs, editing. Alsoby dictaphone/phone dictation. English,French and Hebrew. Call 667 0956.VIDEOTAPE RENTALS VHSonlyAsk about our Introductory SpecialsMODELCAMERA 1342 E 55thRoosevelt Univ LSAT GMAT Prep-Loop 8.Suburbs, Free Sample Class at RU 6:30 LSAT5/17, GMAT 5/16. 341 3660.WEDDING Photography & InvitationsYour Wedding Day should be special. It's atime of gathering and celebration with yourfriends and relatives. Good professional portraiture and documentation of this specialevent lasts forever. Visit with us.The BETTER IMAGE 1344 E. 55th 643-6262We Have The Lowest Airfares To Europe AndAcross America! For Free Color Brochure,Write to: Campus Travel-Box 11387 St Louis,Mo. 63105.Professional Word Processor (IBM) 363 0522.Passport Photos while U wait.Model Camera, 1342 E 55th. 493-6700FAST FRIENDLY TYPING - Resumes,papers, all materials. Pick-up & delivery. Call924 4449.GOLDEN EAGLE MOVINGHousehold Commercial PianosILL. CC 54807 MC-C Insured 594-2086MOVING SERVICE. LOWEST RATES,reliable for furniture, boxes, etc. call LARRY743-1353.SCENESU.C. Democrats!! meetings at 5400 S. HarperWednesday, April 11 at 7:30 on B Bus rt. buzzer*36.SSCD-SAC members: remember to get yourcourse summaries in today!You May Be Missing The BEST BREAKFASTIN Hyde Park. The Medici on 57th Street is nowserving breakfast. We serve breakfast from7:30 to 11:30 every weekday. Hot-from theoven Croissants, Omlets, Waffles, PancakesEggsetera - and our incredible coffee, ofcourse. We look forward to making yourbreakfast. Tasty One!!!CHEERLEADING TRYOUTS tomorrow April7 at 1:00 p.m. in the Fieldhouse multipurposeroom call Laurel 947-0036 or Marissa 753 8342x 1134.PERSONALSWEINTRAUB LOVER: you will never makeHISTORY changing majors; a major is a major is a...SWF looking for nice warm SWM 18-22 not tootall or too short, sent pic & * to Maroon Box 2SWM Needs compassionate SWF; Above willnot do must be warm, sweet, loving, caring, 1822, 5'-5'9", 100 150 lb, gpa over 1.5. Send pic & -Maroon Box 4.4TH YEARUNDERGRADUATESEarn $4.00 in less that 30 minutes by par¬ticipating in a study on long term memory.Call 962 8859, after 1pm.FESTIVALCrossroads Spring Festival, Saturday April 7.5621 S Blackstone. Children's Fair 3 6, International Buffet 4-7, Kasbah Cafe-live entertainment, food & drinks 9-. Auction, Gift ShopCasino and more! $2.00 Adults 50 children.BUCKS FOR BRAINS!People needed for studies on how the twohalves of the brain work. Simple memory andperceptual tasks. Pays cash, Right & left¬handers call 962 8846, 9 5. NOT FEELINGAS HOT AS THEWEATHER YET?Has the coming of Spring left you behind in thecold of winter? Is there a problem you thoughtwould go away over break that didn't? Afraidto come out of winter hibernation? Call us atthe Hotline if you want to talk. You can call usseven days a week, 7pm-7am at 753-1777.WANT TO LEARN TOUSE COMPUTERS?ATTEND THE COMPUTATION CENTERCLASSES FOR SPRING QUARTER. TheComputation Center is once again offering aseries of free non-credit seminars and low costnon credit courses on computing lopics for theUniversity community during spring quarter.These classes begin on April 6 and continuethrough May.A schedule and description of these seminarsand courses is available from the Center at thefollowing locations: Usite Business Office(Wieboldt 310), from 9:00 to 4:00, Monday-Friday; Main Business Office (Merriam 164,1313 E. 60th), from 8:30 to 4:30, Monday - Fri¬day at the Staff Office Building (5737 S. Univer¬sity), 8:30 to 5:00, Monday Friday, Copies ofthe schedule may also be obtained from theSocial Science Advisor in Pick 123, the Pro¬gram Advisor at Usite and the Terminal Atten¬dant at Usite.The seminars offer introductions and overviews to topics of general computing interest:computer concepts, fundamentals of com¬puting, computerized text processing,microcomputing, and database architecture.Our seminars also discuss how to use specificsoftware on the DEC-20 computers; introduc¬tion to the DEC-20's, Edit/Runoff text editingand formatting, SED full screen text editing,Teli a graf and Cuechart graphics, NCPcalcspreadsheet, SCSS statistical analysis, andhow to use the DEC-20's as personal com¬puters. Finally, the seminars discuss specificsoftware available on the IBM computersystem: the MVS operating system, Super-wylbur, the ACF2 security program, IBM textprocessing (TREATISE, SCRIPT, GML), andSAS/GRAPH.In addition to the seminars we teach a five partcourse on the MUSE word processing systemavailable on the DEC 20's (the fee for thiscourse has been waived for spring quarter)and a six-part course on using SPSSX on theIBM system (the cost is $30.00, which includescomputer time).To register for the MUSE course, call YvonneMcNear at 962-7173. Registration for theSPSSX course is handled at the Usite BusinessOffice in Wieboldt 310. Some of our seminarsalso require phone-in registration; see thecomplete schedule of classes for further in¬formation.If you have questions about the classes offered(e g. content and intended audience) contactthe Center's Educational Coordinator, DonCrabb, at 962-7173 or via DEC-20 MM toSTAFF. DONCRABB.ANXIOUS?SEEKING TREATMENT?Selected volunteers will receive free anxietytreatment at the University Medical Center inreturn for participation in a 3 week evaluationof drug preference. Participants will alsoreceive $60.00 in return for their participationin the evaluation. Participants must be 21years of age. Involves only commonlyprescribed drugs at therapeutic doses. Call962-3560 for information or to volunteer. Mon-Fri, lG:30am-3:00pm.KASBAH CAFECrossroads, Saturday April 7, 9:00 on. an even¬ing of live entertainment in Middle Eastern at¬mosphere. Music food and drink $2.KUNDALINI YOGAStrengthen your nerves focus your mind upliftyour spirit Ida Noyes E Lounge Tu & Th 5pm.THE MIKADOTicket discounts available for The Mikado withRegents parkIN HYDE PARK ON THE LAKE• Complete computer roomwith Modem connection toDEC 20 computer on , ,1campus• Shuttle bus at door toUniversity of Chicago &Michael Reese Hospital• 24 hour doorman/imaintenance/c• Convenient shour Market-in-t• Enclosed supegarageMODEL • Marinas nearby• Nine minutes to Loopting/Dishwasherr/Valet Service24-hour Servicelubprivate roof-topbus at door to5050*5020 South Lake Shore Drive Chicago, IL 60615By.The Clinton Company22—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 6, 1984 the London Savoyards on Saturday, April 14.$17, $13.50, & $9 (a 25% savings). Ticketsavailable in SAO, room 210 Ida Noyes Hall.TWO BEAUTIFUL LARGEORIENTAL RUGSWe have just received two absolutely gorgeousroom size c. 1930 Persian carpets: a 10-10 x 12-10 Baktiari (all over compartment design) andan 8-6 x 10-6 Heriz (central medallion). Bothcarpets are in excellent condition with thick,lusterous pile; rich colors-dark blues, greens,browns, burgundy, ivory. The unusual style ofboth carpets falls between geometric andfloral. These carpets won't remain here forvery long, so call now. We also have a rare,very elegant camel-color, open-field Persianrunner (3x10) and a fine ivory and rust Turkishfloral rug (6x9). Our selection of tribal prayerrugs and Bokhara carpets, as always, issuperb - and reasonable priced. To see thesewonderful carpets, call 288-0524.LASTCHANCE IThis is your last chance to submit your bestwritten coursework for the Spring edition of In¬quiry Magazine. Deadline Friday, April 6 inthe Ida Noyes Cloakroom.ELECTICEDRegister for Electic Ed classes in Message,Jazz Dance, Belly Dance, Aerobics, Blues Har¬monica, Afro-Caribbean Dance, Ikebana,Ballroom Dance and Yoga. Classes begin nextweek: For complete brochure, and to register,come to SAO, room 210 Ida Noyes Hall.LIBERAL?CHRISTIAN?Can one be both? "Liveration & the LiberalChristian Lifestyle": Discussion with RebeccaChopp, the Divinity School; Sunday, April 8.Eucharist 5:30; Supper 6:30; Program 7:00Brent House, 5540 South Woodlawn Avenue.FICTION WRITINGWORKSHOP. Will release your creativeenergy. Satisfaction guaranteed. Sat or Sunnoon. Call Shouri Daniels (Molly Ramanujan)eves. 667 0673BRIGHTON BEACHMEMOIRSLast chance to get discount tickets for Thursday, April 5 performance. $15 (a 15°;. savings)available in room 210, Ida Noyes Hall.IKEBANALearn the art of Japanese flower arrangement.Basic emphasis is placed on linear perfection,color harmony, space, form and naturalism.Student will complete and take home an ar¬rangement each week. Thursdays startingApril 12. $20 for 8 sessions ($5 material fee).Sign up in room 210, Ida Noyes Hall.PASUThe first meeting of the Polish-American Stu¬dent Union this quarter will be on Wed. April 4at 8:00pm in Ida Noyes Library (1st floor).Come and help plan our activities for thisquarter.A CO-OP FRATERNITYis a great place to live Delta U., 5714Woodlawn, is looking for new members. Cheaprooms for summer next year. All interestedare invited to our weekly study breaks, Wed10:30.FOTAAll students interested in participating in theFestival of the Arts attend a FOTA meetingThursday, April 5 in room 218, Ida Noyes Hall.JAZZ DANCEThis class will introduce the lively steps of thisdance form. Emphasis will be placed onrhythmic basis of movement accompanied bylive jazz music. Wednesdays & Fridays starting April 11. $50 for 16 sessions. Sign up inroom 210, Ida Noyes Hall.IYENGAR STYLEHATHA YOGAThis spring session will focus on stretching andstrengthening for runners and other athletes.Individualized instruction is provided to eachstudent to help nurture and maintain posturaland muscular balance. Wednesdays startingApril 11. $40 for 8 sessions. Sign up in room 210,Ida Noyes Hall.KADIMAwill hold its 1st Erev Shabbat Service andPotluck Supper or the quarter this Friday,April 6th 6:00pm, at Ben's and Nancy's 1367 E.52nd tt. To sign up, call or drop by Hillel, 5715S. Woodlawn, 752-1127 or call Rebecca, 288-8032, or Lori 782 1477.STEP TUTORINGMonthly meeting this Thur, April 5, 7-9pm inIda Noyes Hall. Call 962-9554 for more info.LESBIAN? GAY?GALA holds a Discussion/Coffeehouse everyTue. at 9pm at 5615 S Woodlawn Fri«»nd« fondconversation in unpressured setting 962 9734.IKEBANAEXHIBITION TODAYikebana Exhibition (the art of Japanese flowerarrangement) will take place today in theNorth Lounge of Reynolds Club. 12 noon to 4p.m. Free!!JEWISH PHOTO-DOCUMENTARY GROUPLearn to create your own photos and help docu¬ment the Jewish community through themedia of photography. April 10, 8:00 p.m.HilleL House, 5715 South Woodlawn. 324 9009.COMPUTATION CENTERTOURSOFUSITEThe Computation Center will offer tours of theUSITE computer facility again this quarter -from Monday, April 2 through Thursday April19. The tours will be offered according to thefollowing schedule:MONDAY & TUESDAY ~ 12 noonWEDNESDAY & THURSDAY - 4:40 p.m.Each tour lasts approximately 20 minutes andcovers the various equipment and facilitiesavailable to computer users at USITE. Thetours will begin in USITE at the bust of WaltWhiteman.VIDEOCOMPUTERCLASSESEach month the Computer Center makesavailable to its customers several kinds ofcomputer courses on videotape (which are sup¬plemented by written materials). Thesecourses are either supplied by an outside vendor (DELTAK) and are available at low cost($10.00 per course module) or are produced bythe Center and are available at no charge.The following video courses are available foruse at the USITE Self-Study Facility in Weibolt310. Further information on course rental anduse is available from the USITE business of¬fice and the USITE terminal attendant. DuringApril we have the following DELTAK coursesfor rental ($10.00 each):THE FORTRAN PROGRAMMINGLANGUAGE SERIES(modules 14)-Introduction to FORTRAN- The Basic FORTRAN Program-FORTRAN Input/Output Techniques-Selection Structures in FORTRANTHE PASCAL PROGRAMMING LANGUAGESERIES(modules 14)-Getting Started With Pascal-Think of a Number- Doing Arithmetic-Being ChooseyWe also have available (for no charge)videotaped Center seminars:THE FUNDAMENTALS OF COMPUTING (3,90 minute videos)INTRODUCTION TO MICROCOMPUTINGAT THE U. OF C. (3, 90 minute videos)Finally, we also have a Center produced videoon "GETTING STARTED AT USITE"available. For more information on any ofthese courses contact the Center's EducationalCoordinator, Don Crabb, at 962-7173 or viaDEC 20 MM to STAFF. DONCRABB.PIED PIPERAUDITIONS for Hyde Park NeighborhoodClub's PIED PIPER Apr. 9, 7:30 pm. Interna¬tional House Performance May 19th. Tall,medium & short adults who sing, welcome.D.E.M.O.N.Woo, Asner, Yasko and Pittner are DEMONSthat demand your vote for Student Govern¬ment.JEWS FOR TAIWANJ.F.T. supports the D.E.M.O.N. party in theS.G. elections: Mark Woo-Pres., MarcusAsner V.P., Guy Yasko SGFC Chair and MaryJo Pittner for Sec. Vote DEMON!!A CO-EDFRATERNITYis a great place to live. Delta U., 5714Woodlawn, is looking for new members. Cheaprooms for summer, next year. All interestedare invited to our weekly study breaks, Wed.10:30.LESBIAN POTLUCKKick off Lesbian and Gay Awareness Weeks ata women's potluck dinner, Sunday Apr. 8 at5:30 PM in Ida Noyes Hall. Come out for goodfood, friends, (and chance to see who else is)info. 962 9734. 'GAMES DAYOn Saturday, April 14, relax and enjoy yourself at the Games Day at Ida Noyes Hall. PlayTrivial Pursuit, Dungeons and Dragons, Risk,Runequest, Monopoly, Diplomacy, Traveller,and many other boardgames, role-playinggames, and wargames. If you own a game thafyou want to play, bring it along! Some gameswill be there already. Novices are welcome.Sponsored by SGFC and the Fantasy GamersClub.Everyone is welcome to play ULTIMATE withthe UC ULTIMATE CLUB Tues, Thurs at 4:00Sat, Sun at noon on the midway in front of IdaNoyes. ANXIOUS ABOUTEXAMS?The Dean of Students Office in the College is of¬fering a workshop for undergraduates whohave a problem with exam anxiety and whowould like to resolve it. For more informationcontact your College Advisor.LONELY OR UPSET?Are you angry about what a friend has toldyou? Mad at your boyfriend or girlfriend forbreaking up? Got something on your mind thatyou don't want a friend to know about? TheHotline is here if you want someone to listenand share. You can call us seven days a week,between 7pm & 7am. 753-1777.as/odfe 'fah/so/n&ea/ (oiAz/e493-0666 • CALL ANYTIMENOSTALGIA AVENUE:HARPER AVENUE SOUTH OF 57thYes! Two loving family housesnow yours! Eight rooms -unusually large yard - spaceto build your own garage.$153,000- or -Nine room stucco facing small park -(not much yard of your own) Junepossession. $135,000 near 57th Street.1528 E. 59th StreetTWO BEDROOM CO-OP, LOVELY WOODWORK.INSIDE PARKING! BOARD APPROVAL. $54,900."GOLDEN CIRCLE" - not a railroad, but squarefloor plan. Three bedrooms, formal dining room,handsome space; even an extra sun roomsuitable for a den, sitting room, or conservatory.THIS IS THE AREA YOU'VE WANTED - NEAR56th & DORCHESTER $77,500.NEAR MUSEUM - YOIJJ2LANTS (andyou) WILL LOVE TM£ «N*1INE FILL¬ED front roomsand-oh-tliSflfr«aJfmoakfloors. Backporch is yc^extra summer "patio" -$72,500.56th and KIM BARK -11 % %fixed interest. 4 rooms, pricereduced - $41,000COPYING &PRINTINGHi-speed & quality Xerox Duplicators gearedto Student/Faculty needs. Low Prices we'refast. Quant. Disct.Copyworks 5210 S. Harper 288-2233 * SG PETITIONS DUENominating petitions for next week's SG election are due tomorrow 4/7 at noon in Ida 306.ULTIMATE Canon'Si —WVv '•Shutter priority auto exposure!•Lightweight & compactw “]«Sensitive siliconexposure meteringj^"^%1•Manual exposure-^CanonSURE SHOT•Automatic focus•Automaticexposure*•Automatic winding•Built-in pop-up flash•Motorized rewindCanonT3•Programmed automation•Automatic film loadingand built-in power/winder•Optional Cannon Speedlite224T automatically^setsibest of threedifferent apertures|*Uses more than 50 CandorFD lensesALL CAMERAS INCLUDECANNON U.S.A., INC.ONE-YEAR LIMITEDWARRANTY/REGISTRATIONCARD.FILM PROCESSINGSPECIALOne free 24 exposure film witheach roll of color film broughtin for processing & printing,with this coupon only. Doesnot include disc film.OFFER EXPIRES 4/13/84model camera1342 E. 55th493-6700The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 6, 1984—23The MAROON EXPRESSRIDES AGAINThe MAROON EXPRESS, our weekend coach service to the Loop and North Side, continues to provideaffordable, dependable, and comfortable transportation for University of Chicago students, resumingFriday, March 30. The service will run for 9 weekends, ending on Saturday, May 26.IT'S EARLY ENOUGH IN THE QUARTER TO SPEND THE WEEKEND DOWNTOWN ...LET THE MAROON EXPRESS HELP YOU GET THERE CHEAPLY AND CONVENIENTLY!. . . see “Terms of Endearment” again and “Racing with the Moon” at the Water TowerTheatre. . . see Henrey Mazer, Conductor at the University Night Series at Orchestra Hall SaturdayNight - call 435-6666 for ticket information - held a block south of Art Institute. . . see the “Israel Ballet" Saturday night at the Auditorium Theatre - call 922-2110 for ticketinformation - a couple of blocks south of the Art Institute. . . see “Romancing the Stone” at the Esquire TheatreTickets for the Maroon Express can be purchased with a U of C student ID at the Ida Noyes informationdesk, Reynolds Club box office, or any Residence Hall front desk. Individual one-way tickets cost h.25and can be purchased in lots of 10 or more for *1.00 each.Ida NoyesShoreiandArt InstituteWater Tower Place‘Inner Lake Shore Drive4 Division (1200 N)‘Clark & LaSalle(1700 N)Grant Hospital(Webster A Lincoln)Diversey 4 dark Schedule for Maroon ExpressNorthbound6:30 pm 8:30 pm 10:30 pm8:40 pm 10:40 pm8:55 pm —6:40 pm6:55 pm7:10 pm 9:10 pm7:30 pm 9:30 pm7:45 pm 9:45 pm 11:15 pm 1:45 am‘Courtesy drop-otf Sop: by request only Note- No pick-up at this location Diversey 4 ClarkGrant Hospital(Webster 4 Lincoln)Water Tower Place(1. Magrdn)Art InstituteShoreiandIda Noyes Southbound7:45 pm 9:45 pm 11:45 pm 1:45 am— — Midnight 2:00 am— — 12:15 am 2:15 am— 10:00 pm 12:30 am 2:30 am« *8:30 pm 10:30 pm‘Drop-offs throughout Hyde Park, including Shoreiand and Ida NoyesTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOTHE COLLEGECENTER FOR CURRICULAR THOUGHTOPEN MEETINGS of the PROJECT 1984 TASK FORCESCollege Writing Thursday, April 19, 3:00 pm G-B 428Course Electives Thursday, April 19, 2:30 pm G-B 414Creative Arts Wednesday, April 11,3:00 pm ... G-B 428Foreign Language Studies Friday, April 20,10:30 am G-B 428Freshman Year Wednesday, April 18,3:00 pm ... G-B 414Historical & Cultural Studies Tuesday, April 10,4:30 pm G-B 428Mathematical & Quantitative Studies Thursday, April 19,1:30 pm G-B 116Physical Education Monday, April 16,10:30 am G-B 428Registration & Accreditation Monday, April 9, 3:00 pm G-B 428Senior Year Wednesday, April 18,4:00 pm ... G-B 428Student Research Wednesday, April 18,12:00 pm .. G-B 428All interested students and faculty are cordially invited tohear progress reports and to contribute to the deliberationsof the task forces.April 6, 1984 • 16th Yearby Franklin SoultsMarvin Gaye was born in Washington,D.C. where he grew up singing in the choirat the church where his father preached.While in his teens, he moved to Detroit andbecame a member of the local group theRainbows, which led eventually to a posi¬tion drumming and singing for the Moong-lows, a fairly popular act of the day. Itwas there that Berry Gordy, founder,owner and principal creative force behindthe Motown record label, discovered himin 1961. In that year, Gordy signed Gayeto a contract with his fledgling record com¬pany, starting the singer/musician off as adrummer behind some of Gordy’s mainacts, including Smokey Robinson and theMiracles, on whose early hits Gaye can beheard providing a steady, accented beat.Within a year, Gaye had marriedGordy’s sister Anna and gained recogni¬tion for his smooth but driving gospelderived singing. This recognition earnedhim performer status for the label, whichin turn quickly led ,to the release of hisfirst hit, “Stubborn Kind of Fellow”. Gayefollowed that hit in 1963 with the classics,“Hitchhike” and “Can I Get a Witness”,thus beginning a career in which he placedwell over two dozen singles in the top 40over the decade in which he remainedunder Gordy’s direction.Gaye continually perfected his vocal de¬livery and production efforts at Motown,keeping up with the rapid innovations instyle and technology of the sixties. Thisstyle shows in the 1965 hit “Aint That Pe¬culiar”, a thin, smooth song that was driv¬en by an up-tempo beat and whose femalecall and response chorus was a modifica¬tion of the technique used in gospel songs.The tune was light and controlled, but itsstructure fully captured and propelled anurgent hook line that made it exciting andimmediately memorable. It was, like somany other songs out of Motown, a per¬fect, compulsive hit, one that clearly dis¬played Gaye’s talents as one of the bestsoul artists of the sixties.But Marvin Gaye's gifts went beyondthe ability to make well conceived pophits. In 1968, he released a number onesingle with the empasstoned, hauntinglybeautiful song, “Heard It Through theGrapevine”. Freed from earlier limita¬tions in production by advances in studiotechnology, Gaye had crafted a mournful,hollow sound for the strings and backingkeyboards that complimented his singing.His voice in this tune sounded as if it werebeing pressed from him by the weight ofhis anguish and sense of betrayal. It was apowerful song which has shown no signs ofdating since its release sixteen years ago,and which in fact often undergoes a smallrevival on radio stations and sales chartsacross the country. With this song, Gayepresaged the changes in black music thatwere to be made both stylistically andlyrically in the early 70’s, changes whichGaye himself anteceded with his 1971album, What’s Going On. As rock criticGreil Marcus put it, Motown’s strategy ofchange was always incremental, releasingsongs that mostly copied the style of pre¬vious hits with a mild variation in struc¬ture and embellishments.With that record, Marvin Gaye took fullartistic control of his product for the firsttime and created music that was bothmore frankly political, and more stylisti¬cally loose and openly emotive than any¬thing else that had ever come out of thatlabel. The title of the album was both astatement about the political truths setforth within the record’s lyrics, and a des¬perate question, posed most poignantly in the album’s title track, about the mean¬ing of the current world situation. Thattitle track was meant to raise blacks’ po¬litical consciousness; it was the first in adeluge of black records which intended todo the same thing, and which showed thatwithin the tight corporate structure of re¬cord companies and radio stations, therecould exist artistic voices for true, furiosopposition. Though within a couple ofyears most of the stark political and socialawareness in black music “drifted backinto something like a parallel of the mostconventional black reality,” as Marcussays, the most important parentheticalexceptions to this trend were “StevieWonder and Marvin Gaye, who just kepton moving.”In the 70’s, Gaye’s music was marked bymellifluous tunes, often just barely hintingat any true melody, slung over sensuousundulating rhythms that were so basicthat one song was called “voodoo music”by Gaye’s own guitarist. But the smooth¬ness of the music itself never hid the ach¬ing vocals or the open, naked, poetics ofthe lyrics from such songs as the astutelypolitical “Inner City Blues” and “Mercy,Mercy Me”, or from the frankly sexual“Let’s Get It On” and more the recent "Sexual Healing”. These last two songsshow how during the seventies and eight¬ies the changes which Gaye made in his po¬litical music were followed by formalisti-cally equivalent changes in his love songs."Let’s Get It On” marked a full turn fromthe early rock tradition, which Motownfollowed closely, of euphemism and coymetaphor in sexual matters, and yet thatsong, as well as the album of the samename and the 1982 smash “Sexual Heal¬ing”, are, inspite of their unabasheddirectness, arguably some of the most sen¬sual and even romantic pop tunes of thelast thirty years.Between “Let’s Get It On” in 1973 and“Sexual Healing” in 1982, however,Gaye’s commercial and artistic successeswere spotty. He found himself in financialdifficulties and was forced to declarebankruptcy, in the mid-seventies (just likethe equally talented and important SlyStone) and eventually had to leave thecountry to escape his financial and tax tro¬ubles. In 1976, Gaye had divorced his wifeAnna, Berry Gordy’s sister, and two yearslater he released the long, bitter album,Here, My Dear which dealt with the brea¬kup as openly as he had dealt with politicsand sexuality. The record was not a suc¬ cess, however, and Gaye established resi¬dence in London, breaking his ties withMotown, which had by that time relocatedfrom Detroit to Los Angeles, a city hecalled a “psychological hell-hole”. In Eng¬land he became interested with the newEnglish discovery of synthesizers as a toolfor pop music (as opposed to its longstanding “art-rock” popularity) and heused them extensively in his one-man-show album Midnight Love, which con¬tained “Sexual Healing ”, the song thatpropelled him back to the center of thepop music stage.After Midnight Love’s success, Gayemoved back to Los Angeles to live with hisparents, and it was there that he was mur¬dered last Sunday by his father, who hadstarted him off on his musical career, sing¬ing in the Sunday choir, so many yearsago.Undoubtedly, the horrible, captivatingdetails of Marvin Gaye's murder will fillthe front page of supermarket tabloidsand the gore filled back pages of mostmajor newspapers for weeks to come. In anation filled with senseless violence, thissenseless death which touched millions ofpeople, will naturally receive special at¬tention. But as one more case of family vi¬olence, it is really no more special than thehundreds upon hundreds of deaths thatshatter American families every year. Itsparticular horror rests in its contradic¬tions: the story is all too familiar, it hap¬pens everyday and as news it leaves usunmoved from our numbness; but that itshould occur as a result of a fight betweena minister and his very religious son, whosang despairingly of political atrocitiesand so movingly of the power of physicaland spiritual love, makes it unbearable.The DJ on BMX, the only station in all ofChicago that I could find which had the sen¬sitivity to immediately broadcast a decenttribute, kept on repeating after everythird or fourth joyous song. “Marvin Gayeis dead. Shot to death by his own father,”as if he had to repeat it because he couldhardly believe it himself.Sam Cooke, the wonderful songwriterand sweet-voiced singer whose musicforms a cornerstone in the foundations ofmodern soul, died in a hotel room in 1964,somewhere in the black regions of theSouth, his skull bludgeoned in and hisbody riddled with bullets. John Lennonmet his death from the muzzle of a gunheld by a pathetic, lonely schizophrenic.Their deaths, like Marvin Gaye’s, are partof a great American tragedy. But theirdeaths changed nothing, and neither willGaye’s. (In a suburb of Chicago, a resolu¬tion restricting the sale of handguns wentunpassed this week, despite some peo¬ple’s pleas in the town meeting that Mar¬vin Gaye's death might have been avoid¬ed if only such a law had existed in L.A.).Instead, Marvin Gaye’s importance lies,just like Sam Cooke’s and John Lennon’s, inwhat he affected during his lifetime.In an interview given to Musician maga¬zine in August of last year, he said, “Itseems to me I have to do some soul search¬ing to see what I want to say...maybe wecan come up witn a more spiritual socialstatement to give people food forthought...I am not concerned with what myrole should be. I am only concerned withcompleting my mission here on earth.”Gaye’s “role” as pop performer gave ussome of the most well crafted popularmusic of the last twenty years; his missionled him to open up that music and createpersonal, honest records whose influenceand importance will surely be felt as longas black music has a voice it can call itsown.rvrv-i /fL-v».>KSvSeminary Coop Brtksto#5757 S. UNIVERSITY 752-4301MON-FRI 9!30-6:(MAT10:00-5D0 SUNIZOOSOOSPRING SALEApril 6 & 720 - 40% Offon entire stockHELENA SZEPE BOOKSOld, Rare and Scholarly Books in all fields.1525 E. 53rd Street(Hyde Park Bank Building)Suite 902PRO & SAT: 11*5 • 493-4470BANDS, BOAS, VIDEO & MORE!Yes, it s that bi-annual event:TheLasciviousCostume/Bail!Planning meetingMonday, April 9 • 8:00 p.m.Reynolds Club North LoungeBe there!2—FRIDAY, APRIL 6, 1984-THE GREY CITY JOURNAL rNopain, nogainEVERY ATHLETE KNOWS IT. YOU CAN'T COUNTON MUSCLE THAT IS UNTRIED AND UNTRAINED.THE SPIRIT NEEDS EXERCISE, TOO.GET THE LEAD OUT AND GET INTO LENTJOIN US FOR THE WORKOUTThe Episcopal Church at the University of ChicagoTHURSDAYS AT NOONBOND CHAPELON THE QUADS SUNDAYS AT 5:30 PMBRENT HOUSE5540 WOOOLAWN AVENUECONGRATULATIONSto Steve Gnatz& Aileen Hayeson theirWedding Day4-7-84|3fLnIS? ■o3-• OoCDpi) oCT•<tOCT>Gay Amp Lesbian Awareness Fd*tnx&ht Rpr.il fc-2.0 ■|BHMNITHEGREYCITYJOURNAL—FRIDAY,APRIL6,1984HUMAcAMUSICLPrincessIdaGenuineVictorianweird¬ ness,courtesyoftheGilbertandSul¬ livanOperaCompany.Academics, professionals,andstudentsmixitupinasinging' anddancin'spoofof Britishmannersandmorality, 1880’sstyle.Theplotrevolves aroundawomen'suniversityand ragingimperialistwarmongers,so whatareyouwaitingfor?Friday andSaturdayat8PM,Sundayat2 PM,MandelHall,$4-$8—MK ChicagoSymphonyOrchestraTwoChi¬ cagopremieresMozart'sSymphony No30andSibelius'Lemminkainene andtheMaidensoltheIslandDig thenewBreed!FriApril6at2and Satat8(UniversityNight).Orches¬ traHall.435-8121.—8K TheRochesVocalharmonies,witty lyrics,nobugsFriApril6at8:30 anc11:00.ParkWest.929-5559.— BK JohnnyWinterandtheFabulousThun- debtrdsHisfirstalbumonAlligator recordsisentitledGuitarSllnger ancfeaturesJohnnyathisbluesiest. TheTexas-bredguitarherowillper¬ formonFriApril6atTheEmbassy BaIroom,3950jWFullerton. $1200/S12.50.21andover.—BK Liberaceinanall-newSpectacularat theArieCrownTheatre."Visually, Liberaceisresplendentinjewelen¬ crustedcapes...andsuchstunning fursasaNorwegianbluefoxcape with16foottrain,insuredfor $30<1,000andblackdiamondcoat linedwith40.000brilliantAustrian rhinestones.''Abignightforthe bourgeoisieFriApril6-Sunat8— BK GrpeeOnRedThenewpsychedeliais allherageinLALuckyforus,we liveinChicagoSatApril7at9:30 McGreevy's,2680WGolfRoad, Glelview729-1662—BKTheWayMoves"Risingtechno-pop darcestars.”CubbyBear,Clarkand Addison.327-1662. DoyleLawsonandQuicksilverBlue- grassSatApril7at8and10:30 TheOldTownSchoolofFolkMusic, 909WArmitage.425-7793.—BK NewEnglandPianoQuartetteAyoung group(foundedin1980)performs worksbyBeethoven,Torkanowsky, ancBrahmsMonApril9at8atthe WorldPlayhouse,410SMichigan—BKAnEveningWithDieterSchnebelOneof Germany’sleadingcomposerswill presentalecture/demonstrationof hisownworkandaperformance drawnfromhislatestworkLaut- Gesten-Lauten.NorthwesternUni¬ versity,Pick-StaigerConcertHall. FriApril6at8PM.$3(availableat thedoor).492-5441.—BM MidnightOilAnotherbandfromAus¬ tralia.“ThePowerandthePassion” istheircurrent,likablehit.Tues April10.ParkWest.Only$3.— BK FILMGreyCityJournal6April84 Staff:JamieAllen,RussForster,DJGoldsmith,JoelGinsberg,Jonath¬anKatz,IrwinKeller,BruceKing,JoyLangston,MichaelKotze,Rainer Mack,JeffreyMakos,NadineMcGann,CampbellMcGrath,DavidMiller, DennisMiser,JohnProbes,DanSakura,CAScott,CassandraSmithies, JohannaStoyva,DavidSullivan,JefferyTaylor,BobTravis,William Weaver,KenWissoker Production:AbigailAsher,BrianMulligan AssociateEditors:AbigailAsher,StephanieBacon EditorsJesseHalvorsen.BrianMulligan8ESnowWhite(WaltDisney,1937)The classicGrimmstory,completewith beautifulprincess,handsomeprince, andevilstepmother.Disney'sfirst featurelengthfilm,SnowWhite tookthreeyearstocomplete,wona specialAcademyAwardrecognizingitasasignificantscreeninnovation, andturnedouttobethesecond-larg¬ estmoney-makingfilmofthethir¬ ties.Ironically,someofDisney’scol¬ leagueshadurgedhimnottomake SnowWhite,arguingthatitwas suretobelessprofitablethanhis MickeyMouseseries.Disneycap¬ turesthedarkersideoftheGrimm storyinSnowWhite,andmany adultsstillrememberbeingterrified aschildrenbythewickedstep¬ mother.Yetintheend.SnowWhite’s princedoescome;throughthe dwarves’anticsandtheperfect happyendingDisneyagaincreates anupliftingandoptimisticfilm.Won¬ derfulforadultsaswellaschildren; worthseeingagainforititsbrilliant animation,excellentmusicalscore, andthepervasiveFreudiansymbol¬ ismyouprobablymissedwhenyou wereten.LSF.FriApril6at7:30and 9:30PM.$2.50—ADTheSting,(GeorgeRoyHill,1973) DirectorGeorgeRoyHillreunitedhis ButchCassidystarsRedfordand Newmanforawittyandengaging rompthroughdepressioneraChica¬ go.Thefilmexploresthemysterious bondsofmalecameraderieinthe contextofaudaciouschicanery.Red fordandNewmanplayapairoftwo- bitconmenplayingforgrander stakesastheyattempttoflimflam mobsterRobertShawforahalfmil¬ liondollarsShawisnottheonlyconNvictiminTheSting;theaudienceis keptoffbalancebyfeintsandplot twistsastheyaresetupforthecli¬ macticswindleatthefilm'sclose. Hill'snostalgicstyle,utilizinghori¬ zontalandverticalswipes,irisesin andout,andflippingscenes,isre¬ miniscentoftheclassicsofthe 1930's.ThesuperbactingandScott Joplin’sdazzlingscorealsocontri¬ butetothefilm’ssenseofwarmth andgoodfun.SatApril7at7& 9:45,LSF.$2.50—DJG NeverSayNeverAgain(IrvinKershner, 1983):Bondisback,andwhenIsay Bond,ImeanSeanConnery,notthat Moorefellow.Thisisprobablythe bestBondadventuresinceFromRus¬ siaWithLove;thankslargelytothe just-too-coolperformanceofKlaus MariaBrandauer(Mephisto)as 007’svillainousnemesis.Barbara CarreraandKimBasingerarealong fortheride,andMaxvonSydowde¬ positsanotherbigcheckinhisSwiss bankaccountforhisamusingthrow¬ awayportrayalofSPECTREchief Blofeld.FriApril6at6:30,9& 11:30.DOC.$2.50—MK CitizenKane(OrsonWelles,1941)and TheLadyfromShanghai(Orson Welles,1948):Idon'tneedtotell anyonehowgreatKaneis,butafew wordsonthedeepperversityof Ladymaybeinorder:it’sabizarre commentaryonhisfailedmarriagetoRitaHayworth,whohecastsin theroleofthemostfatalefemmefa¬ taleevertoburnupthescreen,play¬ ingoppositeWelles'not-so-innocent innocentabroad.Awickedlyba¬ roquethriller,LadyfromShanghaiisanotherbrushwithgreatnessin Welles'oddlyvariablecareer.Doc$250FriApril7Ckat8:15;LFSat 6:30and10:30.—MK AdlosGuatemala(1983)isaneffective. 20minutesdocumentaryoftherefu¬ geesfromGuatemalalivinginscores ofcampsalongthesouthernborder ofMexico.GermanfilmmakersMe- lineaneWeldyTonandTillmann SchollprovideanEnglishnarration, accurateifdense,ofconditionslead¬ ingtotheexodus:oilandnickelin¬ terests,peasantryandoligarchy, andthemissionofthreemilitaryre¬ gimes"todraintheseainwhichthe fish—theguerrilla—swim.”The scenesarestark,richencounters withtheseMayansurvivorsofthe ensuinggenocide;interspersedIsa gooddealofbriefingastocondi¬ tionsinsideGuatemalaandout.The film,infact,endsalittleoutof breath,butaspeakerwillbeon handtoleaddiscussionafterwards Thisshowingisfree,sponsoredby theCenterforLatinAmericanStu¬ dies,atthenorthloungeoftheReyn¬ oldsClub,Sunday,April8th,7:30 pm.—JenaCamp Sunday,BloodySunday(JohnScghle- singer,1971):PeterFinch,GlendaJackson,andMurrayHeadinanun¬ usuallovetriangle,unusualatleast byearlySeventiesHollywoodstan¬ dards,withFinchandJacksonvying fortheromanticattentionsofHead.Ahighlyeffectivedramawithanas¬ tonishingperformancefromJack- son.Presentedinco-operationwith GALA.DOC,SunApril8at2PM, $2. ThreeBrothers(FrancescoRosi,1982) SunApril8at7and9:15DOC$2. Hell’sHinges(WilliamS.Hart,1916)A western.MonApril9at7:15.DOC $2. Undercurrent(VincenteMinelli,1946) WithKatherineHephurnandRobert Mitchum.MonApril9at8:30.DOC $2. PeepingTom(MichaelPowell,1959) Oneofthetrulystunningmoviesof thepost-warera.ForgetTaxi Driver,thisisthemovieaboutthe romantic/possiblypsychoticoutsid¬ er.CarlBoehmstarsasasensitive youngmanwhorecordsimagesof beautifulwomenatthemomentthey dieathishands.PeepingTomisare¬ markableparableofthefilmmakerastheultimatevoyeur.SunApril8 at3and5PMSchooloftheArtIn¬ stitute,ColumbusDr.andJackson Blvd.—BM THEATERLongDay'sJourneyintoNight(written byEugeneO’Neill,directedbyNi¬ cholasRudall)O'Neill’sautobio¬ graphicalaccountofhisrelationship withhisfamily.PaulineBrailsford, JoeVanSlykeandIngridBlekysare notinthisproduction.Wehereat GCJhaveourfingerscrossed.Court Theatre.Previewperformances April7-11,opensApril12.Tickets are$10-13($7forpreviews)witha $2discountforstudentsandseniors. 753-4472.—BM Volunteers(writtenbyBrianFriel, directedbyPaulineBrailsford)The BodyPoliticTheatrewillbegiving theAmericanpremiereofFriers (Ireland'sleadingplaywright)play aboutpoliticalprisonerswho”volT unteer”toassistinanarchaeologi¬ caldig.BodyPoliticdidaproduction ofTranslations,alsobyFriel,two yearsagowhichwasoneofthebest eveningsoftheatreIhaveseenin Chicago.Chancesarethisproduction willrepeatthatsuccess.BodyPoli¬ tic,2261NLincolnOpensWednes¬ day,April11,previewsApril6-9. Ticketsrangefrom$10-14. 348-7903-BM ManofDestinyGeorgeBernardShaw onNapoleon.Notagreatplay,but thekindofShawworthreviving(un¬ likeArmsandtheMan).Thisprod¬ uctionisdescribedasthefirstina seriesoflatenightGBS.FreeShake¬ speareCo.1608NWellsMonat8 PM;FriandSatat11PM$510D 11ASheherazade(byMarishaChamber- lain,directedbyDennisZacek)A modernstoryofpsychologicalma¬ nipulationusedagainstapotential rapistandmurderer.VictoryGar¬ densTheater,2257NLincoln.Tue thruFriat8,Satat6and9:30,and Sun3.549-5788.ThruMay6.$8- $13.TheTimeofYourLife(writtenbyWil¬ liamSaroyan,directedbyDonald Moffett)Saroyan’s1939Pulitzer Prize-winningplayisbeingdoneby theRemainsTheatreEnsembleat theGoodmanTheatre.Finalweek¬ end.Fri-Sunat8PM.Goodman Theatre,200ColumbusDr.Tickets rangefrom$13-21.Formoreinfor¬ mationcall443-3800.—BM ART7ChicagoPhotographersStrong,large, excitingandallphotography.Dan Zaitz'sworkislistedfirstforarea¬ son;hisworkisverydramaticand hasalottosayaboutphotography12andvisualperceptioningeneral.All ofhispiecesinthisshowarefrom the“PlacesI’veDreamedOf”series. Theyaretype-CEktacolor,F78 colorpaper,20”X24”.Hisuseof colormakesalmosteveryimage alienfromoursenseofrealityyet thepictureheprovidesseemsatthe sametimemorerealthanwhatwe areusedtofromconventionalphoto¬ graphy.Thecolorsthatappearare morestellarthanneonbutinany caseseemtoprojecttheirownlight ratherthanreflectit.KathyNeely’s workisstagedout,effective.He worksareB&Winfra-redprintedon 16”X20”paper.StevenGross workingon11”X14”silvergelatin printscreatesstarkportraitswhich managetobebothpersonalandab¬ stract.PeterRosenbaumspoofsand imitatesthefashionphotography stylewithhis26’X26”oilonsilver prints.Hispastelaccentsexagger¬ atethe"Classic”aspirationsof workssuchas"FromTheHarlequin AndGargoyleSeriesII”.CaroleHar- melcreatesquietandscarynarra¬ tiveswithhertwoseriesoffivepho¬ tographs.These11"X74”selenium JohnnyWinterandhissingingtattoos.tonedprintsshowaroomslowly transformedastheyfillupwithnat¬ uralobjects.JaneCalvinusingpola- color2withimagesvaryingfromre¬ allysmalltoalmost8”X10” createsdarkanddenselypopulated stilllifeswhoseelementsprojecta tenseifhardtodeciphersemiotic system.Todayandtomorrowatthe HydeParkArtCenter,1701E53rd, from11-5andfree.Amustsee.— JHTheMeditativeSurfaceFinally,just paintings.Someverystrong,one couldsayseminalworks.CyTwo- mbly’s"Untitled”(1956)catchesmo¬ nochromatictexturedsurfacework atacriticalpoint.BriceMarden’s "Passing”(1970)andJoelShapiro’s "Untitled"(1977)bothexposethe surfaceastheinter-activepointbe¬ tweenviewerandtext.Otherar¬ tistsinclude;RalphHumphrey, SusanRothenberg,JasperJohns, andthemanyoulovetohate,Julian Schnabel.ThroughMay16atThe RennaissanceSociety,4thfloorCobb Hall.Tue-Sat;10-4,Sun;12-4.Free.-JH VisionsofBeautyPhotographerPeggy StevensPresentsherwork—high- contrastKodalithprints,posteriza- tionsandothermanipulatedimages—Saturdaytotheaccompanimentof wineandcheese.AttheArtisans21 GalleryinHarperCourt.288-7450. Free. AprilExhibitionAtRandolphStreet GalleryOpenstomorrowfrom6-9. MicheleHemsoththefamouspainter andsculptorMichaelMcGowanare atGalleryII.SusanneDoremus, MaryStraseviciusandStephen ReynoldsopenatGalleryI.Through April28atTheRandolphStreetGal¬ lery,756NMilwaukee.Tue-Sat, 11-5.Free. DANCELarLubovitchisnotallowinghisDance Companytoperformhisnewworkin Chicago.Instead,theChicagoReper¬ toryDanceEnsemblewillperform "BigShoulders,”Chicago-bornLubo- vitch’stributetothearchitectureof thiscity.Otherpiecesonthepro¬ gramwillbeperformedbyhisown Company.Isawthecompanyyears agobutcertainstrikingimagesre¬ mainburnedinmymemory.Aprom¬ isingshow.April11thru15,pre¬ viewApril10.GoodmanTheatre, 200SColumbusDr.443-3800.$14- $18—AA JoelHallDancershavejustmadeasuc¬ cessfulNewYorkdebutandarenow backhomeinChicago.Performing withNanaShineflugandtheChicago MovingCompanyonApril13thru 15.FrancisParkerTheatre,330W WebsterSt.559-1212.$10and$12, anddiscountsavailable1LEFFUSIVE ENERGIES AT CSOby Jamie AllenWatching Garcia Navarro conduct an or¬chestra is like watching a romantic paint¬er, whose every brush stroke is full ofboundless energy, at work. The romanticpainter strives to depict a scene not onlyby creating beautiful and recognizableimages but also by using vivid detail andexpression that make the painting comealive, and perhaps make the observer feelshe or he is an integral part of the experi¬ence. This is exactly where Maestro Na¬varro is most successful. From the momenthe begins to conduct a piece that evokesspecific images, the stage is transformed.One can actually see the hagglers eager to sell their trinkets in a busy marketplace,or the dancing of animals and blooming offlowers in a world bursting with Spring, oreven smell the melange of fragranceswafting their way through the byways ofa small Iberian town. It is in this type ofimage painting — using music to exciteseveral senses at once — that Maestro Na¬varro truly finds his forte, making him anideal conductor for works by such compos¬ers as Berlioz, Grieg, Saint-saens, and (aswas seen last weekend) Debussy — i.e.composers who lean heavily towards pro¬grammatic, rather than absolute, music.He simply prefers programmatic music— that is, music that has an extra-musical association, such as opera (to which Maes¬tro Navarro devotes a great deal of hisenergy). The obvious excitment and enjoy¬ment protrayed by his effusive glances atthe strings, his bubbly bouncing aroundthe podium as if the music was inside himand yearning to get out, and his deep kneebends that made it seem as if he were get¬ting underneath the music in order to lift itup, were just not as prevalent in the Stra¬vinsky and the Glazunov as they were inDebussy’s Images pour Orchestre. This isnot to say that Stravinsky’s Symphony inC and Glazunov’s Fourth Symphony did notreceive the masterful execution one wouldexpect from an award-winning SpanishMaestro, but it was the Debussy that wasclearly the high point of the evening.Stravinsky’s Symphony in C was com¬missioned by the CSO on the occasion of its50th anniversary in 1940 and represents an intensification of the composer’s neo-classicist period. The reasons for this shiftin style have been attributed to every¬thing from the death of his daughter to hisrecent move to America, but it is clear thatthis is no longer the Stravinsky of The RiteOf Spring, and that the importance andthe challenge of symphonic forms has be¬come very real to him. The genius of thispiece can be found in its tremendous econ¬omy. From just a 3-note motif (BCG) Stra¬vinsky builds a 4 movement symphony,complete with contrasting themes, com¬plex rhythms, and flowing, lyrical melo¬dies. But the music is absolute, and ismeant to be appreciated abstractly (asone might appreciate most of Beethoven’ssymphonies), which proved to be one of itsdownfalls under this conductor.The entire symphony employs a series ofcontinued on page 7MANICby Jeffrey MakosThis Is Spinal Tap is a HEAVY movie,which is not to say that it’s some Bergman-oid doo-dah about sensitive Swedish in¬terns but that this is a fake “rockumen-tary” about the most inept group of heavymetal rock stars ever to grace the arenaof the performance arts, which is also notto say that it stars Vito Acconci. SpinalTap is the brain-child of the not-so-well-brained Rob Reiner, the overweight son of50’s comedymeister Carl Reiner, late ofthe non-lamented All In The Family, andsome other L.A. goons such as the tallblonde from “Lenny and Squiggy’’ as wellas Harry Shearer, whose bulbous nose wsfeatured on some of the late-and-not-so-great Saturday Night Live's as well as theworst NASA-based parts of The RightStuff. Besides which, whatever happenedto Larraine Newman? Her graceless skin-&-bone personality would have been per¬fect for the role of some backstage grou¬pie type personage for the Taps to dealwith, but unfortunately the makers of Spi¬nal Tap dared to tread upon the possibili¬ties inherent in the featuring of REAL ElLay has-beens as perfect visual dopple-gangers to these buncha guambo squonksthe Spinals if you know what I mean as LeeMichaels once said, which rockin* Rob ob¬viously didn’t, since This Is Spinal Tap islong on concept but short on execution,that all-important creative move which isnecessary to all great art and even to thebest episodes of Lenny and Squiggy forthat matter, even though I never ever sawthe show myself although I did see the LouGrant which featured a real-life JesseJackson telling a fake-life set of “stu¬dents" to get their acts together and be“right on,” which is a fab concept butstrange with Ed Asner's gelatinous yapshootin’ atcha from the video screen, anexploration of the base/superstructure Uninspired comedy makes for a terrorist attack on this reviewer’s sensibilities.theory known to all students of Sociologyand Sports even but obviously not to Rev.Jesse, who was lost in the “Is it Me-morex?" realm of “Lou Grant’s” neo-real-ist aesthetic, a “this-is-fake-but-it-looks-so-real-so-you-the-audience-can-experience-real-life-in-your-homes”sortof alienation effect, something Spinal Tapdoesn’t quite understand, although Ed Asner would. Albert Brooks too. LarraineNewman too.So these rockin' dudes go on tour, andthe camera follows all their rockin’ revelsas they go from semi-obscurity to total de¬cline (meaning that they are a bomb ev¬erywhere except Japan) and along theway featuring interviews with a lead gui¬tarist whose amps go up to eleven instead of ten on the dials because, like, it’s “likeone more,” a lead singer whose “lady”(their term, not mine) ends up running theband based on her astrological predic¬tions, and a short bass player who com¬pares his two confreres to Byron and Shel¬ley, especially poetic on their soon-to-bereleased album “Smell the Glove.” Youget the picture. If you like this sort ofthing, a good time will be had by all, andyour faithful cinema servant here doesn'tmind admitting that a major chuckle wasenjoyed when the Taps break into their hit"Stonehenge,” which begins with a per¬fect send-up of the mystico-psychedelic-rave-up heard on most Moody Bluesalbums and which so graces the Eurythmicsbrand of schlock as the singer intones thatthe Druids will “live on in history" eventhough “no one knew who they were, orwhat they were doin’.” Guess you had tobe there, which is a lot of the problem inthis minimal-budget farce, ‘cause I bet areal documentary about any number ofreal heavy metal bands (Uriah Heep,Krokus, Iron Maiden, Quiet Riot, MotleyCrue, Judas Priest, Mott the Hoople backin their glory days, 38 Special, even VanHalen although those guys are cool, BillyIdol, Iggy Pop, Johnny Winter (how'd heget in here?), Grand Funk, Black Sabbath,Jukin’ Bone, Brewer & Shipley even, CarlySimon even) would be twice as funny ashalf the price as This Is Spinal Tap, sinceyou could think up a dozen or three rou¬tines which would be just as funny as any¬thing in Spinal Tap about the excesses ofrock “musicians” on the road in America,which is fine for you and me but we’re notthe ones with the cash to make a major mo¬tion picture like this piece of celuloid non¬excess, so I guess we’ll have to wait ourturn, and if you want to see this film in themeantime go ahead but DON’T BE DE¬CEIVED BY INFERIOR MERCHANDISE. Un¬less you want to be, which in this case isalright by me since it’s only rock androll.DEATH NOT DYINGby Paul ReubensIt is said that the Eskimoes shipped theirelderly out on ice floes and sent them downsouth. Some tribes in the Africa of a fewcenturies ago supposedly dragged theirold into the jungle to. be devoured by thewild animals. This same sort of thinking iswhat prevails within The Ballad ofNarayama, a beautiful, yet sometimesbarbaric movie from Japan, that wasscreened last weekend at the Film Centerof the Art Institute.So much has already been written aboutthis film in the local press, that it almostseems a waste of time to say any moreabout it here. It is such a good movie, how¬ever, that it certainly deserves all the re¬dundant attention. Why? I’ll tell you; thisis a movie that is primarily about Death, asubject that any one of our large numberof mortality-obsessed citizenry can imme¬diately relate to.Certainly, any student who took GreekThought and Literature worth her or hissalt will remember the dumb story Solon inHerodotus’ Histories told about peoplebeing happy: the only way to tell whethera person has lived a happy life is to deter¬mine whether he has gone to his death con¬tentedly having done noble and finethings. Such'is the principle and basic mes¬sage of this movie: one wants to lead a fulllife; and die with a feeling of satisfiedcompletion.The Ballad of Narayama takes place in asmall Japanese village about a hundredyears ago. It is a happy community; anearthy community, and all the inhabitantsare all oh-so-satisfied with their littlelives. They are a poor people, and in theirpoverty they have been forced to takestern measures: at age seventy, each citi¬zen must ascend the mountains of Naraya¬ma (to which community legend states thesoul must eventually return) to die. Thismakes room for the younger generation inthe village, and maintains the establishedsocial order.The movie is concerned with the every¬day lives of these villagers: they till, theyharvest, they cook, and they couple —they couple a lot: sex seems to be one ofthe accepted tenets centra! to the s»mpie,yet contented existence that these people lead, and they desire little more to makethem happy. And then, at age seventy,they ascend the mountain, carried on theirson’s backs.There are a large number of carefullydelineated characters in this film: Tatsu-hei, the strong-willed, yet slightly coward¬ly young man who worries whether he willhave the strength to commit matricide, orthe young widow who was asked on herhusband’s death-bed to redeem his soul bysleeping with every man in the town, aretwo of the most interesting examples. Themajor character, and central hinge-pin ofthe whole works, however, is Grand¬mother Orin (Sumiko Sakamoto), a sixty-nine year old woman who expects, and in¬deed, looks forward, to the eventual dayof her demise. Her last deeds on this Earthare selfless ones; those which assure herthat the life of the villge, and of her fami¬ly, will continue unhampered in her ab¬sence. She finds a wife capable of doing allof the mother’s chores for one son, finds awoman willing to have sex with the replu-sive other one, and oversees the involun¬tary entombment of a neighboring familyof thieves, for example. All these finalacts done, she happily awaits her trip upthe mountain, well contented that she willnot be missed. The very thought seems todelight her: in one emotional (and brutal)scene she pounds her mouth against astone well, to knock her own teeth out, andnot be able to eat so much of the foodwhich keeps the other, more usefulmembers of the family alive (“Fah! Onlytwo!” she spits through a mouthful ofblood).The performances are in general, allvery good, achieving a sort of balance be¬tween the primative savagery of the ruralJapan of a hundred years ago, and thefolksy gentleness of village life. KenOgata as Orin’s eldest son, the man who,after the old woman dies, will inherit theentire family, in the suitably Japanesefeudal manner, is especially good, but thereal “star” of the piece is Sumiko Sakamo¬to’s amazing portrayal of Orln. Sakamoto,an obviously accomplished actress, is ableto circumvent the obvious cliches and con¬tradictions of ner rote with ease: she canbe both tired and strong at the same time, stubborn and yet vulnerably attractive,consumed by thoughts of death, and yetvery much concerned with the world. It is arole which on paper sounds rather nasty,but on the screen, as acted by Sakamoto,and directed by Shohei Imamura, it works,it works and works well.Shohei Imamura is obviously a directorof great talent, with a taste for showingthe earthy, childlike side of humanity. Thisis sometimes his cure: the difference be¬tween the characterizations of young andold are sometimes so great, that it is al¬most hard to believe that the young even-ually will grow into the old themselves;they seem like just so many children — butperhaps this is one of Imamura’s ownpoints. In any case, capably flanked by cin¬ematographer Masao Tashigawa, and edi¬tor Hajime Okaiasu, imamura creates analmost constant series of attractiveimages; many of the things we see come across in the way that Brueghal and Rem¬brandt would have shown them, had theybeen oriental: the only thing that doesn'twork is the predilection Imamura seems tohave for interspersing certain scenes,those of carnality or violence, with shots ofanimals and insects rutting or devouringeach other in the fields. It is ugly, over¬done, cliched and causes the audience tobreak out into that sort of uncontrollablelaughter that is death to any sort of dra¬matic tension. The music, by Shin’incheroIkebe, although suitably eerie for thosescenes which involved death, is yet an¬other anachronistic synthesizer “zoop-zoop-bop” score. It doesn't work.But these are trivial details: smallpoints, when compared to the overwhelm¬ing majority of things that just make thisinto a fine movie — it is about death, but itis about death in a way we are not accus¬tomed to thinking of it.4—FRIDAY, APRIL 6, 1984-THE GREY CITY JOURNALLow-Priced PreviewsApril 7-11Sat/Tues/Wed 8:00 pm,Sun 7:30 pmv Call 753-4472Visa/MC/AmexEugene O’Neill UC students only$3 with Student Rush!(Rush tickets strictlysubject to availability.Call for details.)Court TheatreThe University of Chicago5535 S. Ellis Avenue Studios, 1 & 2 BedroomApartments AvailableSome Nice Lake ViewsGood LocationHeat IncludedParking AvailableCALLHERBERT REALTY684-23335 % Student Discounts9:00 A. M.-4:30 P.M.Monday thru FridayCHINESE-MCAN RESTAURANTSpecie .ig in Cantoneseand American dishesOpen Daily 11 A.-8:30 P.M.Closed Monday1318 t. 63rd MU 4-1062DOS EQUISC CERVECERIA MOCTE2UMA S A RockefellerChapelSUNDAYApril 8,19849 a.m.Ecumenical Serviceof Holy Communion10 a.m. & 11 a.m.Religious Education Classes11 a.m.University Religious Service:BERNARDO. BROWNDean of Rockefeller Memorial Chapelpreaching12:15 p.m.Carillon recitaland tower tour.IMAROON -Ir--—862-95551/ \DR. M. R. MASLOVoPTOurnttST• EYE EXAMINATIONS• FASHION EYEWEAR• ALL TYPES OFCONTACT LENSES• CONTACT SUPPLIESTHE HYDE PARKSHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th363-6100V Arencjn Opisnetnc AsocMorJ5254 S. Dorchester Ave.Walk to museums, parks, the lakeSTUDIO APARTMENTSFurnished and unfurnishedutilities includedLaundry roomSundeck • Secure buildingCampus bus at our doorCall y-5 for appointment324-0200THE GREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY, APRIL 6, 1984—5You’ll get an additional pairof speakers absolutely freeBuy a pair of Jensen J13656"x9" Triax* Speakers byMay 5th,1984.Jensen and Triax are the registered trademarks of International Jensen, Inc , an Esmark Company© 1984 International Jensen, Inc, Buy a pair of our fabulousJ1365 6"x9'' Triax Speakers, andwe’ll send you a pair of JensenHigh Power Dual Cone Speakersabsolutely free. Take your choiceof the J1350 31/2" size or the J14354"x6" speakers. You’ll get up to a$37.95 value, free! (Manufacturer’ssuggested list price.)Here’s all you do! Just save yourproof of purchase from the J13656" x9" Triax Speaker box and a copyof your sales receipt from anyJensen dealer. Then send themalong with«he coupon providedto receive your free High PowerDual Cone Speakers.When it’s the sound that movesyou, make your move to Jensenspeakers.Jensen products can be purchased at:International Sound2911 N. ClarkChicago, ILInternational Sound4550 N. Harlem AveHarwood Heights. ILChicago Lincoln Stereo5984 N. Lincoln AveChicago, ILWarehouse Club7420 N. Lehigh AveNiles. ILCentury Auto Radio5037 W. Diversey AveChicago, ILOak Supply & Furniture711 W. Jackson Blvd.Chicago, IL First Merchandise3310 W. LawrenceChicago, ILCar Audio Center700 E. Northwest Hwy.Arlington Heights, ILRay s Tools & Electronics910 W. Irving Park Rd.Itasca, ILWood ham Radio Service7200 W. Archer Ave.Summit, ILYour Electronics Store874 N. Lake StAurora. IL Campus AudioOne Riverside RoadSuite 212Riverside, ILPlus all locations:Service MerchandiseMcDade Catalog ShowroomW. Bell & Co.Western AutoAlan s Creative StereoMusicraftPacific StereoMontgomery Ward Enclosed is my proof of purchase from a box of Jenserf*J13656"x9" Tnaxs' Speakers.Send me my choice of Jensen High Power Dual ConeSpeakers, absolutely free:J1350 31/2w □ OR J1435 4" x6" □Allow 4 to 6 weeks for delivery.NameAddress-City -State- -Zip-Send along with proof of purchase and sales receipt, datedon or before May 5th, to:Jensen Car Audio, Department 5004136 N. United Parkway, Schiller Park, IL 60176Coupon must be postmarked by May 19th, 1984.JENSENCA* AT DmWhen it's the sound that moves you. chi 12.8—FRIDAY, APRIL 6, 1984—THE GREY OITY JOURNALHalf Woman aooka whole man.by Michael KotzeIt’s Spring, 1984. Look around you.What do you see? Movies, that’s what.And they’re all at a theater near you. Butlook closer. They’re all movies, sure, butwhat’s going on? They have titles like TheDresser, Greystoke, Reuben, Reuben, andThis is Spina/ Tap. They star people withnames like Kevin Bacon, Nicholas Cage,Daryl Hannah, and Rob Lowe. What isgoing on? Who are these people? What arethese movies? Where’s Barbra? Where’sBurt? And for goodness’ sake, where’sMeryl? I mean, it gets kind of embarassingwhen you’re telling people about a movie,and they ask, “who’s in it?” and you haveto reply, “Urn, Rob Reiner...you know, theson from All in the Family.” They smileblandly and walk away, branding you... alightweight. Lightweight: that’s the wordthat best sums up this spring’s movie of¬ferings. Most of the films that didn’t an¬nounce themselves as mindless entertain¬ment turned out to be pretty lousy,leaving little for would-be movie pseudo¬sophisticates to praise effusively on thecocktail conversation circuit.Imagine the position in which I found my¬self over the recent spring break. I had de¬cided to stay in Chicago, to catch up on myreading, or so I told myself. Well, I neednever have taken the books off the shelf.Came Thursday, and my final exam, sec¬tion two of the new Reader beckoned se¬ductively. As I glanced through the moviepages, I had little idea of the fate thatawaited me; I didn’t know at that pointjust how many of those movies I would ac¬tually see. Like Splash. If you had told methen that within the week I would seeSplash, I would have laughed in your face;no such trashy escapistic fare for me! Youwouldn’t have liked it, but the last laughwould be on me, because I would seeSplash, and sillier titles as well. And,heaven help me, I would enjoy them.What this spring’s movies lacked in starappeal and elevated themes they made upfor in sheer trash curiosity value, especial¬ly to one with the morbid fascination withcinematic excess that I have. Imagine!Jodie Foster and Nastassia Kinski trappedin the twisted fantasy world of John Irv¬ing! Jeff Bridges as Robert Mitchum andJames Woods as Kirk Douglas in adoomed-to-failure remake of the greatestfilm noir ever made! Martin Sheen’s son ina movie about punk automobile reposses¬sors from outer space! Too weird! Twoother factors contributed to my harrowingweek of movie madness — first, theweather was really terrible. What can youdo? Second, there were discount tickets.You feel a little less put out after seeing aturkey when you see it for half price. Soput those important novels back on theshelf, grab some Plitt tickets, and don’tforget the umbrella. C’mon kids — we’regoing to THE MOVIES!!Against All Odds: It’s a remake of theclassic 1947 noir, Out of the Past, fortun¬ ately, it avoids trying to imitate the senseor sensibility of the original, opting for amore contemporary view of corruption,and emerges as a pretty respectable noirfor the Eighties. Phil Collins sings thetheme song, but doesn’t appear; luckilyfor us, the great James Woods (Video¬drome) treats us to his own version of thefamed Collins hairstyle.The Dresser: So bad. Albert Finney goes“BoomIBoom!,” Tom Courtenay goes“SqueakiSqueak!,” Britain struggles inpredictably valiant fashion against theforeign foe, and Shakespeare turns in hisgrave in this screen adaptation of the pop¬ular stageplay. Rarely has such bad actionbeen so little fun: the film’s raging self-im¬portance spoils whatever camp fun thatmight have been had. Too bad — Al andTom might have made a great slapstickcomedy team, an upscale Laurel andHardy, bashing away at King Lear withseltzer bottles and whoopie cushions.Maybe that’s what they were doing, and Ijust didn’t get the joke.Entre Nous: Holy schizophrenic tastebacklash! If my favorite movie of thewinter was Scarface, my favorite of thespring is Entre Nous, a French dramadirected by Diane Kurys that features nogratuitous gunplay, chainsaw humor, discomusic, or Al Pacino. Instead, it’s the storyof two women who meet in post-WW IfFrance, whose friendship takes themthrough good times and, you guessed it,bad times. The various domestic crises thatdot the film are presented with a genuineunderstanding, the period detail is mar¬velous, and refreshingly, we’re not askedto like the characters, who are nonethelessall tellingly and sympatheically por¬trayed. There are, no heroes and no vil¬lains, only remarkably real people, caughtup in compelling human problems. All this,and it’s in Cinemascope!Footloose: I haven’t seen it. A friend de¬scribed it as being ‘‘Like Flashdance, butwithout all the excitement.” Now, I didn’tlike Flashdance, so I’m willing to give thisone a chance, especially since it featuresthat wacky John Lithgow, and was direct¬ed by Herbert Ross, who brought us thebest musical of the Eighties so far, thevastly underrated Pennies From Heagen.Greystoke: The television commercialsounds great, but then, I’ve always had aweakness for Holst’s “The Planets.” It’s anupwardly mobile Tarzan movie directedby Hugh Hudson, who did Chariots of Fire,an upwardly mobile jock movie. Can hebring it off again? Then again, did hebring it off the first time?Hotel New Hampshire: Forget about it.The fact that HNH is hated by such wildlydiffering personalities as my olderbrother and the co-editor of the GCJ canmean only one thing: that Hotel NewHampshire is a movie for no one. DirectorTony Richardson continues his long losingstreak, as does Nastassia (whoops, sorry,Nastassja) Kinski, who spends a good part of the movie in a bear suit. As we say onthe bus, “transfer please!”Liquid Sky: For sheer oddball mise-en-scene (there, I used it), Liquid Sky, with itsevocation of what purports to be the NewYork punk scene, is hard to beat. Too badthey tried to pull of a hat trick by introduc¬ing characters and a story: it’s on thesecounts that the movie fails miserably. Ilike the idea — space aliens come to NewYork looking for heroin — but the onlything in the movie that works beyond itsavant-garde fashion magazine graphics isthe appearance of a befuddled Germanscientist, who seems to have wandered infrom a Wim Wenders movie. Otherwise,it’s just more fashionable nihilism, some¬thing a little stronger for the Rocky Horrorcrowd.Repo Man: I could kick myself for miss¬ing this one: LA punks, space aliens, auto¬mobile repossession, thrills, laughs, andHarry Dean Stanton. Maybe it’s just a low-rider version of Liquid Sky, but it soundstoo weird to resist. When it comes back, I’llbe there.James Woods wonders whatever happenedto Debbie Harry.Reuben, Reuben: This movie has got a lotgoing for it: a good screenplay based on aPeter De Vries story, and a terrific perfor¬mance by Tom Conti as a drunken, indolentWelsh poet on a lecture tour (or, as some¬one calls it, “lecher tour”) of New England,making a play for every woman in sight,only to lose his heart, his teeth, andhis...no, I won’t give away the ending —people are still mad at me for spilling thebeans on Terms of Endearment. I thinkwhat made me dislike this movie is thatwe’re supposed to love Conti’s character,and say, “Oh, what a charming eccentric!”Well, / just thought he was obnoxious, andas he contemplated suicide, I was mutter¬ing under my breath, “Do it! Do it!” All Ican say now is, Thank God for sheep¬dogs!”Racing with the Moon: I really liked thismovie — is this just another expression ofmy creeping retro tastes? Racing with theMoon is an old-fashioned love story with avengeance; roller skates, moonlight tears,long walks in the woods: the whole bit.Perhaps it’s the fact that this movie daresto take the emotions of its teenage charac¬ters seriously, without drowning them in aZeffirellian sentimental bath, that makesit so appealing. Also key to the movie’sappeal are the wonderful performancesby its three principals, Sean Penn, Eliza¬beth McGovern, and Nicholas Cage, eachfull of convincing emotion and naturalcharm. Low-key and extremely likeable,Racing with the Moon is the second featuredirected by Richard Benjamin, bouncingback from the all-too-conventional senti¬mentality of My Favorite Year, and show¬ing a real directorial flair for set pieces,particularly in the hilarious and nail-bit-ingly suspenseful pool hustling sequence.Splash: The quintessential Spring 1984movie: silly, not entirely satisfying, but nonetheless well-acted, well-directed, andvery entertaining. Yes, it’s a mermaid pic¬ture, but wonder of wonders, the romanceworks, and the laughs do too. The latter ismostly thanks to SCTV’s John Candy as thehero’s irresponsible brother, a party ani¬mal who chainsmokes while playing rac-quetball, and provides the film with itsmoral center. The former is the work ofDaryl Hannah, who is nothing short of ma¬gical as the mermaid, in or out of thewater. I saw Splash at a Saturday mati¬nee, in a theater full of small children, andthey loved it. The kids were great: theywere good laughers, they didn’t smoke, orblock my view, and they accepted themushy parts with good grace; if I ever seeHotel New Hampshire, it will only be undersimilar conditions.This is Spinal Tap: A “rockumentary,”detailing the last American tour of SpinalTap, the world’s loudest heavy-metalband, creators of such hits as “Smell theGlove” and “Sex Farm.” This hilarious sat¬ire is, of course, essentially gutless, as itattacks one of the most immobile sittingducks of the entertainment world, but it isvery funny, so I am willing to overlook itscomic cowardice. The concert footage, withits beiow-the-belt camera work, sicklylighting, and ersatz documentary raw¬ness, is right on target. As one of the Tapsongs asks, “Why waste good music on abra’-a’-a’-a’-in?”Terms of Endearment: Still playing afterall these months, Terms of Endearment isthe ET of warmth and sensitivity, and I stillhaven’t seen it. No great loss, because Iknow how it ends. I don’t want to spoil itfor anyone, but let's just say that if theyJungle Man ayes typeface with Ignorantloathing.ever make -e Terms of Endearment II,Debra Winger probably won't be in it. Bythe way, congratulations are in order toDebra for her Academy Award nominationfor “Best Actress in a Mortally III Role in aFilm That Starts Like It’s Goind To Be AComedy And Then Gets All Serious In TheFinal Reel.”Well, that’s all for now, kids. It was afairly undistinguished crop of movies, I’lladmit, but for the most part pretty pain¬less; I had a good time. But better moviesare on the horizon, at least I hope so, in¬cluding Jonathan Demme's Swing Shift.with Goldie Hawn and Kurt Russell, Fran¬cois Truffaut’s Confidentially Yours withFanny Ardant, Federico Fellino’s And theShip Sails On, with the usual crew of Fellin-ian grotesques, although sadly no Marcel¬lo Mastroianni, Walter Hill’s Streets ofFire, a punk-futuristic musical thrillerfilmed in Chicago, and the re-release ofAlfred Hitchcock’s Rope, a reworking ofthe infamous University of Chicago Leo¬pold and Loeb murder case. I can hardlywait.continued from page 4rhythmically difficult passages, with nu¬merous entrances occurring on the off¬beat, that pose substantial problems forany conductor, and often result in a gener¬al sluggishness in the timing. Unfortunate¬ly, Mr. Navarro was no exception. Butother aspects of the symphony came offquite well. The second movement, for ex¬ample, is a good case in point. This, themost melodic movement of the piece, is theonly one with a real sense of arrival. Theothers often successfully build an atmo¬sphere rich with tension but then fan to goanywhere with it — which becomes even more interesting when one takes into ac¬count that the second movement was theonly one of the four written while Stra¬vinsky was registered in an insane asy¬lum! In any case, it seems that with a clear¬ly defined direction and a sustainedmelodic line Mr. Navarro was able tocreate the magic that was presentthroughout the Debussy, while the moreabstract movements lacked the sameamount of emotional content.The Debussy itself was a festival of cre¬ative orchestration. Violin sections wouldsuddenly turn into a chorus of banjos, oreven mandolins, when the need arose;oboes and clarinets were made to soundlike strings; and solo instruments wouldunabashedly interject their own little dit¬ties from time to time, giving the wholepiece an irresistible sense of character. It is also of interest to note that this piece,too, manifestes a great deal of economyby shaping every melodic idea around adescending minor third, an interval whichwe often associate with a goading child ashe sings "na-na-na-na-na”.The final piece of the concert was by avery capable composer — one who wasgreatly admired in his day, at the turn ofthe century — but one who was never des¬tined tor greatness because of his resis¬tance to taking chances with his art. Alex¬ander Glazunov had studied underRimsky-Korsakov, and was often praisedfor his remarkable ear and fantastic mem¬ory, but was never considered to be at theforefront of Russian musical scene becausehis music lacked that uniaue exoressive-ness that characterized the members ofthe famous Russian Five (Rimsky-Korsa¬ kov, Borodin, Mussorgsky, Ciu and Bla-kirev). But all the same, he could spin abeautiful melody with the best of them,and Maestro Navarro intelligently tookadvantage of this in his interpretation ofthe Fourth Symphony by making the me¬lodic line stand out in all its possibleglory.Just as pitchers in baseball each havetheir own special throw that they are thestrongest in, it is not surprising to findthat conductors, too, have their strongerand weaker points. I certainly hope thatthe young Mr. Garcia Navarro makes fre¬quent reappearances on the Chicago musicscene in the near future and would unhesi¬tatingly recommend all paramours of bothimagistir symphnir music ar*p oper3 tCmake every effort to see him.THE GREY CITY JOURNAL-FRIDAY, APRIL 6, 1984—7mm* Saturday Night Specialv if god gives life so easily, why does he take it so slowly?My lover spends her last days on the bed trying to sit upShe does not know who I amShe remembers nothing of the last sixty years with meHer mind is gone, as they say— - - - m %jm >wwiww—■»*.* 3* w.My legs hurt me, until I think that I can’t stand it any moreI cannot take care of herWhat are we going to do until we die? She can’t even play bridgeShe is a stranger and so am I.What were we like before?I bought a gun for protection against timeThe man who sold it to me didn’t even ask what it was forWhat could an 84 year-old man do with a gun?Bang, Bang. -■One We Called "UnderweatherHowever uncertain we takelittle steps to reconcilethe divisions we tookto be inconvertable,of withstanding weatheringhas become itself twhich we project pwhile behind the stStill smiling reassu“It will be alright, a lightdrizzle that will pass, surelyit will”, though the night’sshadows cross our tired bodiesin the sleeper we tipped for.So certain it was a phasewe were passing throughwe hoisted the battered caseswith their slippery stickersand as a game namedthe towns we past beturvwe knew their real names.On these slick rails drivingus forward over spongy groundsometimes the names we giveturn out to be their own. Steven Amsterdammjk* ■■ <' V* ViSTi ' i*. Vgesturefesters-/V;> \1 ■ y ! ssiimm wMDavid Sullivan■S.8—FRIDAY, APRIL 6, 1984—THE GREY CITY JOURNAL