The Chicago MaroonVolume 94, No. 27 The University of Chicago Tuesday, January 22, 1985Students complain as budget changes bursar’s scheduleBy Brian NichiporukThe recent shortening ofthe bursar’s office hours dueto budget cuts has resulted ina huge number of studentcomplaints to the StudentOmbudsman. According tothe student ombudsmanMark Hughes, fifteen percentof the student complaints hereceived last quarter con¬cerned the shortened hours atthe bursar’s office, and hecontinues to receive com¬plaints at this time.On October 15, the Office ofthe Bursar shortened itshours from a 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.to a 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. schedule.This policy has been in placeever since.Hughes commented thatmost of the Bursar com¬plaints indicated that stu¬dents believed their interestshad not been considered inthis policy decision. Hughes said most of the complain-tants thought this decisionwas “another case of a largebureaucracy making a deci¬sion which affected themgreatly without consideringtheir interests,” and headded, “frankly, they mightbe right. I think the hoursshould have remained thesame.” He claimed that whenthe Administration consi¬dered the issue, they did notgive it the weight it de¬serves.William Hogan, the Comp¬troller of the University, ex¬plained the rationale behindthe decision to shorten hours.He contended that the cost ofrunning the University of Chi¬cago is steadily increasing, soin order to maintain sufficientfunding for teaching and re¬search, the University neededto make some budget cuts.Hogan said that Bursar’sVThe Smart Gallery is currently celebrating its anniversaryDecorative art at SmartBy Christopher SpeckThe David and AlfredSmart Gallery is celebratingits tenth anniversary with thecollection “Concentrations inthe Collection: European andAmerican Decorative Arts.”Decorative arts are primarilyfunctional objects adornedwith varying degrees of orna¬mentation. Drawn exclusive¬ly from the permanent collec¬tion, it presents an overviewof the Gallery’s extensive col¬lection of the decorativearts.In conjunction with this ex¬hibition, the gallery is offer¬ing a free workshop entitled“Don’t Let Your PossessionsPossess You.” This workshopwill be offered to the publicFebruary 23 at 2 pm. in theSmart Gallery. The workshopwill be led by Pamela Pierre-pont Bardo, a former muse¬um curator who now headsher own appraisal company.She intends to center on thepracticalities of ownership ofdecorative arts.The current exhibits runthrough March 17.During the remainder ofthe year, the Gallery is plan¬ning three major exhibitions.In an exhibit that will runfrom March 14 to April 21,they will present “The Art ofthe Insane: Selected Workfrom the Prinzhorn Collec¬tion.” This exhibit containsmore than 300 works done bythe mentally ill. The collec¬tion consists of works donespontaneously by mental pa¬tients and later collected forhelp in diagnosis of mental disorders. In conjunction withthis, the Gallery is planning amajor symposium on April20th, in which five nationallyknown specialists will speakon related topics.Following this will be an ex¬hibition on “Alumni Who Col¬lect II: Sculpture from 1600 tothe Present.” Running fromApril 18 to June 18, this exhib¬ition celebrates the commit¬ment to the arts that the Uni¬versity and its alumni haveshown.Finally, the Smart Galleryplans the “1985 M.F.A. Show”for July 11 to September 1,1985. This exhibition will fea¬ture works of graduatingMasters of Fine Arts studentsfrom the University’s Mid¬way Studio.The Smart Gallery servesas both a teaching and re¬search facility as well as acenter for the enjoyment ofthe fine arts. The gallery hasa permanent collection of-over 4000 works, which circu¬lates in exhibition.The Smart Gallery is opento all members of the Univer¬sity and Chicago community.Currently, eighteen percentof its members are students,a figure that has been risingahd hopefully will continue torise. Anyone interested inmembership should stop bythe Smart Gallery at 5550 S.Greenwod Ave. or call753-2123. The Gallery is openTuesdays thru Saturdaysfrom 10 am. to 4 p.m., Sun¬days from 12 p.m. to 4 p.m.,and is closed Mondays andholiday!*. office check cashing serviceswere not absolutely neces¬sary because of the introduc¬tion of automatic teller ma¬chines on campus, as well asthe proximity of neighbor¬hood banks. Instead of elimin¬ating check cashing com¬pletely, however, theComptroller’s Office opted tolimit the period that this ser¬vice would be available inorder to allow Bursar em¬ployees to spend more timeon other functions such asbilling, or collection of stu¬dent fees and tuition. Also,four full-time positions werecut from the staff of the Officeof the Bursar to bring the of¬fice down to a minimum stafflevel. Hogan noted that theplan had worked well, andstated that the check cashingproblem was being alleviated because, “...ninety percent ofthe students who opened newaccounts at the Hyde ParkBank during Fall Quarter ob¬tained a card for the automat¬ic teller machines.” He alsopromised there were no fur¬ther cuts planned in the bud¬get for the Office of the Bur¬sar.During the Fall Quarter,the Office of the Ombudsmandiscussed the new policy withthe Administration. Hughesremarked that during thesediscussions he had attemptedto convince the Administra¬tion that there was indeed aproblem in retaining the cur¬rent 9 to 1 schedule for the Of¬fice of the Bursar. Noneth¬eless, the decision to shortenthe hours was made beforeJuly 1 and was approved bothby the Vice-President for Business and Finance and theUniversity Budget Commit¬tee. The Administration alsodecided not to implement theshortened hours until twoweeks after the beginning ofthe Fall Quarter.In the course of thisquarter, the Student Ombuds¬man planned to remain incontact with the Administra¬tion on this issue, and lookedforward to some positive ac¬tion on the subject in the up¬coming weeks. Mr. Hoganalso indicated a willingness todiscuss the bursar’s officehours with a representative ofthe student body. Anyone whowishes to file a complaintwith the Ombudsman on thissubject can go to his office at204 Renolds Club or call962-8422.SG forms impeachment groupBy Thomas CoxIn action last Thursday theStudent Government Asse¬mbly created a Committee ofSpecial Investigations (CSI)with the power to recommendthe impeachment ofmembers of Student Govern¬ment. The CSI is investigat¬ing the theft of between $70and $95 in student moneyfrom SG’s Ida Noyes officelast Thanksgiving. It was thefirst Assembly meeting sincenews of the theft became pub¬lic.The CSI is also expected toinvestigate SG PresidentChris Hill and other membersof SG who knew of the theftbut failed to report it. Hill ad¬mitted to the Maroon that hewas aware of the loss as earlyas Thanksgiving but neitherthe treasurer of SG nor theStudent Government FinanceCommittee (SGFC) were tolduntil three wreeks later. BradSmith, SG Vice President, fi¬nally told both parties of theincident at that time.Last Thursday’s meetingbegan smoothly. The Asse¬ mbly agreed to pass up oldbusiness from the previousmeeting and move directly toconsider new business: thecreation of the CSI. Under theoriginal proposal by a bloc ofSGFC members the CSIwould have investigated thePresident and Vice Presidentfor their role in withholdingknowledge of the theft. Smithsuggested an amendment toallow the CSI to look into pos¬sible negligence on the part ofthe Treasurer and the SGFCin not properly monitoringthe money. Those parties ob¬jected. with some saying itmade no sense to investigateinnocent parties. The Asse¬mbly was divided but accept¬ed the amendment in an 11 to9 vote, with one abstention.A second amendment wasproposed to again alter theCSI’s scope of investigation.This nonpartisan amendmentstruck out all mention of indi¬vidual members of SG, andallowed the CSI to generically“investigate and report onthe alledged irregularities in safeguarding and reportingthe missing money from theBook Exchange.” Thisamendment was approved 22to 2. and the twice amendedmotion carried unanimously.The CSI was created two anda half hours after the Asse¬mbly began.The Committee of SpecialInvestigations consists of stu¬dents Starley Shade. LarryStein, and Dan Eads. Its re¬port. recommending whetherthe Assembly should impeachany members of SG, is due atthe Assembly's next meeting.Thursday. January 31st.It is technically out of orderunder parliamentary law foranyone to chair a meetingwhen the meeting is consider¬ing a motion that affects thatperson. The Assembly usual¬ly ignores this rule, and Hillretained his gavel throughoutThursday's meeting withoutobjections from either side.The CSI is empowered to ap¬point a special prosecutor torun any impeachment trialthat may occur.Future looks bright for computersBy Hilary TillUntil 1983 the University ofChicago was the only majoruniversity in the countrywithout a department of com¬puter science. This unfortu¬nate state of affairs was re¬medied in 1983 when theComputer Science (CS) De¬partment was founded. Theyear old department has along way to go before it willbe competitive with other topflight computer science de¬partments. But, it should beadded, both Hollywood and Uof C’s computer science facul¬ty are optimistic about the de¬partment’s future prospects.In the recent movie, 2010,we learn that a University ofChicago professor is the cre¬ator of HAL, the tempermen-tal computer of “2001” fame.According to professors here,the University of Chicagomay soon be on the leadingedge of scholary work in arti¬ficial intelligence and mayproduce a real HAL computerby 2001.Such a prospect is certainlyin line with the department’slong-range goals. The aim ofthe department is not only tobe competitive with otherschools in CS, “but, in duecourse, to lead” the field inmany areas of computer re¬search, stated Stuart Kurtz, an assistant professor in theCS department. “Within a de¬cade (we would like tobe)...at least in the top ten.”continued Kurtz, who is alsothe CS departmental counsel¬or.The department presentlyhas neither a PhD nor an un¬dergraduate program; it onlyhas a master program. Therequirements for a student inthe masters program are totake nine courses, which ful¬fill certain distribution guide¬lines. and then to pass a com¬prehensive examination. Thisyear there are five students enrolled in the program. “Asfar as I can tell,” observedKurtz, the masters program“has been successful.”The major goal of the de¬partment over the next fiveyears is to assemble a moreexperienced and diverse fac¬ulty. “Our main problem isputting a faculty together. Wehave good people now, but wehave a long way to go,” saidthe assistant professor. Forexample, “we want to have atop-flight systems group,”stated Kurtz. Also, “there is alot of interest in the Universi-continued on page twoINSIDEMAB concert photosBlues spread on page 17A look at theU of C policeSee centerspread-By MiLite in the College may begin tochange in the near future. The adminis-c tration is currently mulling over theNews Analysisproposals made by the Task Forces ofProject 1984 and results may soon fol¬low. Students with a stake in the futureof the College would do well to voicetheir opinions now before changes arelegislated (as was the case with the 47-grading system). 1984 reports contain surprises, disappointments1:r When the Task Forces were con¬vened, they were charged with the dutyof creating the best possible discussionof curricular issues- They were told notto “presume the present landscape”but to think in terms of an Ideal College(echoes of Plato, Plato, Plato). CertainTask Forces succeeded in opening cre¬ative discussion, such as the TaskForce on the Senior Year. Others failedand some miserably, such as the TaskForce on Historical and Cultural Stu¬dies,Reasearch was once active...It is not strictly accurate to say thatthe University did not have a CS de¬partment before 1983. As a matter offact for about a decade prior to 1974,computer research and teaching wasconducted by the now defunct Commit¬tee on Information Sciences.The Committee was like a depart¬ment in that it had a faculty and itgranted degrees. The Committee of¬fered “graduate science.” according tothe 1973-1975 U of C graduate catalog.The research conducted by the Com¬mittee went beyond computers andalso included the study of librarysciences, psychology, and cognitiveissues.The 1973-75 graduate catalog showshow substantial the work of the Com¬mittee once was. The current CS de¬partment offers a bare fraction of whatthe Committee offered in CS ten yearsago. One area of computer science thatthe present department will probablynever do research in that the Commit¬tee did do work in is hardware architec¬ture.In its ten-year existence, the Com¬mute was strongly associated with theInstitute for Computer Research (d.1978). One of the accomplishments ofthe Institute was to build a computer.MANIAC III, according to Robert Ashenhurst, who was Chairman andDirector of both the Committee and theInstitute and who is now a professor inthe Graduate School of Business. Theinstitute also laid the groundwork forcomputer networking on campus,added Ashenhurst.The Committee granted twelvePhD’s and a large number of mastersdegrees during its brief existence. In1973, it offered seven undergraduateclasses. The current president of theAssociation for Computing Machinery.Adelle Goldberg, received her PhDfrom the Committee. Another personwho received a PhD from the Commit¬tee is Michael J. Potel, an assistantprofessor in the Department of Molecu¬lar Graphics and Cell Biology.The Committee was formally termin¬ated in 1974. At that time the study ofcomputers was not regarded as inde¬pendent research discipline by much ofthe faculty. The faculty of the PhysicalScience Division voted for its termina¬tion. which was then ratified by theUniversity Senate and the Board ofTrustees. The Mathematics depart¬ment was then given the responsibilityfor the study of theoretical computerscience. Without the Committee, the In¬stitute for Computer Research fizzledand died four years later .—Hilary TillComputers originally resistedOne may wonder why a CS depart¬ment was not formed here until lastyear. This can be chalked up to thelarge amount of negative pressure atthis University against its formation.One negative pressure was the resultof a misunderstanding of the nature ofcomputer science and its role in a liber¬al arts education. Apparently, it wasclaimed that computer science is notan intellectually viable discipline.For example, some individuals tend¬ed to reduce computer science to allthat one could learn from reading aFortran manual in three weeks. Com¬puter science was generally perceivedin this uni versity as a trade and not as apractieeable research discipline.It would almost seem as if a NewYork Times reporter was thinking ofthe University of Chicago when hewrote, “educators are concerned thatas curriculums are stretched to includecomputer courses, the trend awavcontinued from page onety community in Artificial Intelligence(All.” In the main, the expertise of thefuture CS faculty probably will be intheory, systems, and AI. These threeareas “take in about two-thirds” ofwhat is referred to as computerscience, stated Kurtz.After a diverse, fully tenured facultyis assembled, the department will es¬tablish a PhD program. A few yearsafter that the department will set up anundergraduate major.But what if you are in the college nowand are interested in computerscience? There is and has been a “defacto” computer science major on theundergraduate level for quite sometime. Students interested in CS havemajored in applied math or statisticsand have taken just about all of theirelectives in computer science. “Atleast a dozen students in the past threeyears” have taken this route, assertedKurtz.The situation for undergraduate CSstudents may imp row in the near««! tter I tiations on from the liberal arts and toward earlyspecialization is being accelerated,”(NY Times, 1-14-85)A second significant pressure againstthe formation of the department wasmoney. “(There) just is not a lot ofmoney floating around the Universi¬ty,” said one CS professor. The newcomputer science department presentsan additional financial burden on theUniversity.In viewing these two stumblingblocks, one third-year statistics stu¬dents asserted last year, “It is amazingthat the computer science departmentwas (even) started.” But increasedstudent interest in computers, the mat¬uration of computer science, and theneed to attract highly qualified mathe¬matical graduate students made thenecessity of a computer science depart¬ment evident. Thus the birth of a com¬puter science department here in 1983,-Hilary Tillments are “very, very preliminary.”The status of the negotiations are basi¬cally that “(we have) agreed to speakto one another about the issue.” relatedKurtz.For students strongly interested incomputer science, Kurtz envisioned amath or statistics degree in whichthere would be some formal acknowl¬edgement of the CS component of thestudent’s education. For such a degree,perhaps some high-level courses in thehost department would be replaced byhigh-level courses in the CS depart¬ment, Kurtz suggested. He hoped thatany future agreements on this subjectbetween the CS department and theMath and Statistics departments wouldbe more than a formalization of thestatus quo. He added that he did notwant to bind the Math or Statistics de¬partment though to anything that wehave only just begun to talk about.For students who are in the collegenow and want to get a good educationin computer science, Kurtz recom¬mended the “de facto” CS major ap-proach. He said that interested stu¬dents should talk to the programadvisors in the .Math and Statistics de¬n-commended the math and statisticsrelatively high9MBI. •'Mt?. v. . : ■: V. ;' ' The Task Force on the Senior Year,chaired by Nathan Tarcov, did an ex¬cellent job in defining the needs andwants of seniors and proposed somebroad-minded means of fulfilling these.They began by asking the questionsevery senior asks of him or herself.“What has been accomplished?”,“What comes next?” and “What do 1face the Future with?”, Beyond this,the Task Force pinpointed some of thecurrent problems of the Senior Year.Seniors feel insecure in the value ofwhat they know, they lack any specialeducational experience as seniors, andthey are running out of peers and lack asense of class consciousness. Seniorsalso would be the natural resource ofcampus leaders, but they tend to liveoff-campus and lack opportunities toexercise such leadership.In response to these problems, theTask Force first detailed the qualitiesthat a U of C graduate should have, allnecessary elements in being one of theBest and the Brightest. They followedthis list with the proposal of an exten¬sive Senior Tutorial program whichmight enhance and individualize eachsenior’s experience here. Finally theTask Force attached an appendixwhich gives some good suggestions onhow the already-improving CareerPlacement Office might still be im¬proved.On the other end of the spectrum, thereport from the Task Force on Histori¬cal and Cultural studies, chaired byBernard Cohn, proved to be very disap¬pointing. The disappointment is furtherdramatized considering the personnelcomprising the Task Force, includingsuch Social Science celebrities as KarlWeintraub. Jean Comaroff, and JohnCoats worth. The thrust of their reportis that all students should be exposed toother historical and cultural perspec¬tives than their own. Considering therapid advances in telecommunicationsthat are bringing more parts of theworld into more frequent contact, thisassertion seems to be self-evident. Thereal question is how is this to bedone?The response of the Task Force isthat the Common Core should be changed to incorporate a more histori¬cal perspective. They propose onemodel in which the present sequenceswould change and new ones would beformed under the following headings 1)Literature and Philosophy 2) Historicaland cultural studies 3) Social Sciences(e,g. sociology, econ, geography, psy¬chology). Fine, but that is as far as itgoes. They were supposed to presentsome ideas that could be discussed,considered, and possibly turned intolegislation. As it stands now, the reportis so general it is useless.Perhaps the most disappointingaspect of this report is the treatment ofthe Western Civ sequence. It is only dis¬cussed insofar as the staffing problemthat has become acute in the last fewcontinued on page 19CAUSE debateThe Center for Latin American Stu¬dies and the student group CAUSE willsponsor a program entitled “CentralAmerica: an Introduction to Contem¬porary Political Issues,” this Thurs¬day. Professors John Coatsworth andTerry Turner will be among the speak¬ers discussing the unfolding crises inthe region.The program will include two after¬noon sessions and an evening session.Professor Coatsworth of the HistoryDepartment, and Susan Gzesh, of theNational Lawyers’ Guild, will examineUS policy towards Nicaragua at 1 p.m,in Social Science 122, Gzesh traveled toNicaragua in October to observe thatcountry’s presidential campaign.Professor Turner, of the anthropolo¬gy department, and Fernando Rodri¬guez. a representative of exiled Salva¬doran trade union activists, will talkabout the crisis in El Salvador at 3p.m., also in Social Science 122.In the evening session, Victor Rubio,a spokesperson for the FDR/FMLN.will discuss “Prospects for Peace inthe Region.”at 8 p.m. in the Ida NoyesCloister Club. Questions and answerswill follow each session. Admission isfree.[jifiosicnosic* nosicQ THE DEPARTMENT OF MUSICpresents:Thursday, January 24 - Noontime Concert Series12:15 p.m. Goodspeed Recital HallAndrew Schultze, bass/baritone; Lisa Waitches. harpsichord.Mary Springfels. gamba.Music by Schulz, Monteverdi, and Purcell,Admission is free.<r>De♦y UPCOMING CONCERTSThursday, January 31 - Noontime Concert Series12:15 p.m., Goodspeed Recital HallGail Gillispie and Marc Southard, lutes.A program of Sixteenth and Seventeenth Century Englishana Italian Lute Duets.Admission is free.Friday, February 1 - Zeffieri Dolci, Recorder Ensemble7:30 p.m., Goodspeed Recital Hall^Baritone Robert Trautvetter as soloist in the Purcellcantata ‘‘When night her purple veil”.Also featured: Kaye Clements and Karen Trinkle, recorders;Kathleen Viglietta, harpsichord.Music from Vecchi to Vaughan Williams.Admission is free.Saturday, February 2 - Bruce Tammen, baritone;Kit Bridges, piano8:00 p.m., Goodspeed Recital Hall.Music by Ravel, Grieg, Wolf, Strauss, Ives, and Hindemith.Admission is freeFriday, February 8 - Guarneri String Quartet8:00 p.m., Mandel Hall.Arnold Steinhardt and John Dailey, violins; Michael Tree, viola;David Soyer, cello; and assisting artist, John Bruce Yeh,clarinet.Haydn: Quartet in D, op.76 no.5; Brahams: Quintet in b minor,op.115 for Clarinet and String Quartet; Ravel: Quartet in FAdmission: $12 (UC student, $7.50) Tickets and information atDepartment of Music Concert Office Goodspeed Hall 310962-8068N.B. The concert scheduled for Saturday, Febraury 9th has beenipntisic-nusic-fKJsirMlIMft ■H —To Our Hyde ParkNeighbors and FriendsIt has been almost 4years since ORLY’Sopened in Hyde Park. Ithas been a successful,enjoyable period andwe owe it all to you. Beginning Thursday,January 24th, ORLY’Swill have a new menu,new chefs and a freshcommitment to servingyou with freshness andcreativity. We are excited aboutthe changes. Come onin, take advantage ofthe 3-day reducedprices, and try us out.You’re going to reallylike it!During the past 15months, since we open¬ed our new restaurant inPrinters Row, we haveheard some complaintsof inconsistency in foodand service here inHyde Park. Join us as we beginanew; for 3 consecutivenights, Thursday,Friday and Saturday,the 24th, 25th and 26th. Respectfully Yours,David ShapiroRobert O’BrienWe want you to knowwe’re not neglectingyou or taking you forgranted. We have heardyour complaints anddecided to make somechanges. For these 3 nights WEWILL ROLL BACK OURDINNER PRICES TO$6.95 (average you paidwhen ORLY’S firstopened in Pre-inflation1981).55th & Hyde Park Boulevard Z 643-5500600 So. Dearborn Avenue Z 939-66009STARTERS Let us cater your private party or business meeting.,serving up to 200 people ... on or off premises.wIeflkSV «v©»SV- <v©«*5V wteWiW w®«SV <v«@«<s>u <«■»• wXeW-V w<e»v3W.-ENTREE SPECIALSSauteed Artichoke Hearts Guacamole NachosTender artichoke hearts rolled in seasonedbread crumbs delicately fried sauteed ingarlic butter, then finished with sherry & asqueeze of lemon 25Portuguese Bean-Sausage SoupA thick and chunky Mediterranean soup,tomato based and filled with vegetables andspicy sausage »2 25 A plateful of our crisp tortilla chips smothered with melted Cheddar and Monterey Jackcheese Served with guacamole and spicedrefried beans 00Old Fashioned Cabbage SoupA recipe from The Old Country featuringgently steamed cabbage in our mild sweetand sour broth with tender beef chunks*1.95CREATIONSStuffed Oyster Chowder Chicken Tarragon FettuciniFresh oysters diced & cooked in a rich thickand creamy chowder ladled into our freshlybaked round caraway loaf *4 00Crab CarlosA healthy creation from South of the BorderA potpourri of Romaine and leaf lettuce anda variety of fresh garden vegetables toppedwith shredded Jack and Cheddar cheese,crab meat salad and guacamole All stuffedopen faced into a large crisp tortilla with yourchoice of salad dressing *0 g0Chili Mignon Cold spinach pasta mixed with chunks offresh chicken breast Bermuda onion,zucchini & carrots, and lightly seasoned witha tarragon vinegretteBBQ Chicken SandwichA large boneless chicken breast marinatedin our honey hickory BBQ sauce then charbroiled topped with crunchy bean sproutsand served on a toasted onion roll, with ourcottage fried potatoes and a slice of freshme'on *4.95 We prepare ALL of our foodfrom scratch, fresh daily,using the absolutelyfreshest ingredients available.«*fi#k3V<w<e>*K9Vwffi«<sK>«<eXkSVI ORLY’S ;\ BAKERY ;§ Early every morning our tjt pastry chefs will bake a |* variety of fresh, homemade *j cakes, tortes. breads &4 cheesecakes. We will bring *5 out a sample tray after ?^ your meal.£ Succumb . . you 11 love 5> yourself for it! flJ<*9#^ 7^Fruit Plate CreationAn array of juicy fresh fruit chunks servedon a pineapple ring with cubes of MontereyJack cheese and cashews *2 25A spicy Texas chili filled with taco beef andtenderloin chunks, served in a crisp tortillashell and topped with Jack and Cheddarcheese, tomatoes, sour cream and scallions*4.75BBQ Beef Brisket SandwichSliced brisket of beef, slowly steamed withonions in our honey hickory BBQ sauce andpiled on an onion roll served with our owncottage fried potatoes and corn on the cob Light Combo Orly’s Ice Cream CakeA sheet of rich fudge sandwiched betweentwo thick layers of different ice cream flavors(we ll tell you the flavors daily), which areplaced atop a chocolate creme cookie crustwith a hint of banana All this is topped withour brandied hot fudge whipped cceam anda cherry*2.95*4.95Jumbo Kosher KnackwurstA thick spicy knackwurst blanketed in a bedof onions sauteed in sherry and soy sauceServed with cottage fried potatoes & freshmelon *3.75Mexi-PlatterTwo large flour tortillas, stuffed with tacobeef, graled Cheddar and Monterey Jackcheese in a jalapeno pepper sauce (a kind ofMexican egg roll) They are served withspiced refried beans, guacamole. wild ricepilaf diced tomatoes, crispy corn chips sourcream and salsa *0 BEVERAGESDraft BeetImported. Bottled BeetCoffeeBrewed DecafSoft DrinksMilkHot or Iced TeaFruit Juice '165'1 95.*.75*75*75.’75*75'85 ’ Nous* multi vegetable va*ad ar*3 <Hickory BBQ RibsMeaty, succulent ribs first hickory smoked, then basted with our own honeyhickory BBQ sauce and charbroiled Served with our double baked potato andcorn on the cob.Full Slab g0 Half SlabHickory BBQ ChickenA juicy plateful of chicken, first hickory smoked then charbroiled in our ownhoney hickory BBQ sauce Served with our double baked potato and corn onthe cobCombination Half Ribs & BBQ ChickenPaneed Veal and FettuciniCajun style pan fried veal scallops served with spinach fettucini in a Romanocheese sauce and a fresh vegetable of the day •7.95*7.95*9.95‘9.95Louisiana CatfishSweet and delicate filet fried in a spicy cornmeal batter and served with ourdouble baked potato and a fresh vegetable of the dayOrly’s Tempura •9.95Jumbo shrimp ar tender chunks of boneless filet of chicken breast dippedin our beer based batter and fried to a light crispness Served over a bed ofwild rice pilaf with both sweet and sour sauce and our honey hickory BBQsauceChicken ‘9.95 ComboFor those light eaters having difficultydeciding, choose two of the followingCaesar Salad Quiche du JourPortuguese Bean Sausage SoupOld Fashioned Cabbage Soup*5.25Hawaiian Chicken SaladA carved out pineapple boat filled with avariety of fresh fruit chunks and a mound ofdiced boneless chicken breast mixed withpineapple raisins and cashews in a creamy,spiced sauce «0 00One Heluva BurgerA giant gourmet burger charbroiled to orderWe pile on guacamole bean sprouts andsauteed onions, serve it with either ourhoney hickory BBQ sauce or Tenyaki sauceAnd top it all with either mild cheddar Swiss,or Monterey Jack cheeses Choose from anonion roll, sesame bun. or black Bavarianbread Served with cottage fried potatoes•4.95*evsmar. •Msmer* *'»£>■«* amt> i-j ShrimpChicken VeracruzA tender half pound of boneless chicken breast, charbroiled and topped withour salsa and melted Cheddar and Monterey Jack cheese Served withguScamole. sour cream, and wild rice pilaf ,‘8.957.95Polynesian KabobsOur Polynesian special features two skewers filled with large cubes of eitherbeef tenderloin or boneless filet of chicken breast, marinated in Orly s blendof our Teriyaki sauce pineapple, cherry and lemon juice Both skewers are thencharbroiled. each with chunks of green pepper pineapple, tomato. Bermudaonion and zucchini Served with wild rice pilafChicken %-j g0 Beef »g g0 Combo tBar-B-Q Skirt SteakTender skirt steak marinated in our honey hickory BBQ sauce and then charbroiled Served with our double baked potato and corn on the cob 8.95*8.95wffiMSV MMki uOm(SK> wOmSW- w<¥**5W.-Daily Fresh SpecialsOur Chefs offer a daily selection of fresh seafood meat and fowl accordingto availability season and absolute freshness *MarKctThe Chicago Maroon—Tuesday. January 22, 1985—3 '-syuvjje.•MSVeSk’s"'sy'wriW.-USistswyea-t»W•MS'***'*-'V**SVThe movie “1984”: Keeping politics alive today?By Jeff SmithMichael Kauiord s new film versionof 1984 is an interesting filmmakingstunt. It was shot in and around Londonlast spring — in other words, in thesame place and time as the events de¬picted in the novel. In other respects aswell it is a straightforward and faithfuladaptation of the book. But it fails, asany film will, to reproduce the book’selaborate play of ideas, and what intel-letcual strength it does have owes toOrwell rather than the filmmakers. Itsprincipal value, therefore, is that itdrives us once more to the novel, as theyear ends and as 1984's relevance to1984 becomes possible to assess.Orwell’s narrative has routinelybeen misread as a warning raisedagainst one sort of totalitarian politicalsystem or other. Commentators acrossthe political spectrum have been ableto point to their opponents as incipientexamples of what Orwell was writingabout, or, contrarily, to look about andsmugly conclude that the warning wasmisplaced: 1984 arrived chronological¬ly but not politically.In fact, though, Orwell’s vision is notof any particular political system somuch as it is a defense of politics itself.It is also a polemic against totalitarian¬ism, but mainly because totalitariani¬sm is a system devoted to annihilatingpolitics, to erasing the possibility thatprivate concerns or interests will in¬sert themselves contentiously into thepublic sphere. What is “conservative”and anti-Marxist in Orwell is less someimplicit criticism of Communism thanit is 1984's thesis that the end of politicswould be dystopian. where as Marxists(like many on the Right) have tendedto see it as their utopian goal.Seen this way, the novel addresses it¬self directly to contemporary Ameri¬can sentiment. Politics is on the defen¬sive in America — perhaps always so,but especially today. The massive vic¬tory for Reagan was in part a denialand rejection of politics itself by muchof the voting public. It was delivered bypeople like the counter-protestor Chris¬topher Hitchens encountered at theSouth African embassy in Washington.“I’m completely unpolitical.” Hit¬chens quotes the man as saying, and “avery strong Reagan supporter.” Hit¬chens is correct to add that “these twostatements are perhaps not as ill-matched as they sound at first.” Rea¬gan plays with the brilliance of an Idiotsavant to a deep American antipathytoward politics. Partly through him,the Right has for the moment becomethe party of hope for an apolitical so¬cial order, as the Left has been in otherperiods. In the Right’s case this hope isfor a Christian commonwealth whereeveryone follows the same rules, whilefor the Left it is hope for somethingelse — a land of equality and brother¬hood. perhaps — but the principle is thesame. Reagan adroitly aligned himselfwith the hoarse cries of “USA! USA!”and their unspoken presumption that“USA” denotes a unitary, unproblema¬tic entity whose meaning and directionare not the subject of debate. He wasthus able to paint even mild-mannered,concensus-oriented Walter Mondale asthe candidate of “bad news,” of divi¬sion and disagreement, of “politics” inthe pejorative sense. Reagan’s effort toget the country “feeling good” was aparticulary successful example of thecommon incumbent’s strategy of ris¬ing above politics. A large part of theLeft’s problem today is that, by con¬trast, it has been (politically) maneu¬vered into arguing for more politics, while an important strain of Americanopinion has always yearned for less.The desire to see politics come to anend leads to the kind of self-reinforce¬ment at the ballot box which obviouslyhelped along Reagan’s victory. Once itseemed his re-election was likely any¬way, people indulged the belief that noother president was possible. Reaganbecame self-confirming. Since theelection this attitude has taken theform of a remark which I’ve heardphrased in different ways but whichalways amounts to: Fifty million peo¬ple can’t be wrong. “If Reagan got allthose votes, doesn’t that show he mustbe right?" Stupid as this idea is, it ap¬pears to be widespread, and it certain¬ly figures conveniently in the Ameri¬can antipolitical calculus. It seemsrelated to an idea put forward by someblack leaders, both in Cook County andnationally, in calling on blacks to startturning Republican so as not to be “leftout.’ (As though there were not somereason they had declined to sign up inthe first place.) This is a kind of “endof ideology” thinking very convenientfor those already in power. If the InnerParty is where the action is then let’sjoin up, whatever Big Brother actuallystands for.Indeed, ruling elites, as always,would like to believe that not just ideo¬logy but history itself has ended: Thereare no great political struggles left.Even with all the injustices that haveerupted into public concern and politi¬cal activity in the last 30 years, thereappear to be numbers of even well-in¬formed people today who do believejust this. Maybe union or civil-rightsmovements were once worthwhile andnecessary, but today everyone finallyhas “opportunity” (a crucial Reaganbuzzword). Today things have arrivedat their cosmically preordained places,and no further work can be done.Therefore (as I heard it argued recent¬ly), it is “insulting” to, say, the pink-collar, low-wage workforce to offer avision of a better lot in life. That work¬force and its current lot did not ariseout of political decisions in favor of cer¬tain ecnomic arrangements andagainst others. They just are. Let thembe; don’t torment them with remindersof how boring it is to spend one’s dayskeypunching or slinging French fries.As this account of it suggests, histo-ry-has-ended thinking tends to be pa¬ternalistic. This is another obviouspoint of contact with 1984 and its notionof the totalitarian leader as “BigBrother.” Orwell saw that totalitari¬anism is the reductio ad absurdum ofthe very common tendency to think ofsociety as a family. What characteri¬zes the family is that its hierarchiesare natural, or at least arguably morenatural than the hierarchies estab¬lished in society. In the family you sub¬mit because you’re younger orsmaller, and you are protected in turn.The family seems God-given, and thedriveto give an impersonal society theappearance of familial bonding is partof a drive to make the existing socialand economic order seem equally God-given, equally not the product of histo¬ry. But what such a drive depends uponis reversing the tendency people haveto express their wishes and desires.Such contention is politics. Big Brothermust defeat this tendency by makinghimself the focus of all desire. This iswhy, under totalitarianism, one’s in¬nermost thoughts and impulses aresubject to public control. One’s lovesbecome, not the basis of one’s politicalclaims on the rest of society, but ratherThe Chicago Maroon is the official student newspaper of the University of Chicago.It is published twice weekly, on Tuesdays and Fridays. The offices of the Maroon arein Ida Noyes Hall, rooms 303 and 304, 1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, Illinois, 60637. Phone962-9555Craig FarberCopy EditorWally DabrowskiProduction ManagerBruce KingGrey City Journal EditorStephanie BaconGrey City Journal EditorLisa CypraAdvertising ManagerDennis ChanskySports EditorJulie WeissmanFeatures EditorThomas CoxAssociate EditorAlexandra ConroyAssociate EditorPhil PollardPhotography Editor Tina EllerbeeBusiness ManagerJaimie WeihrichOffice ManagerLeslie RigbyChicago Literary Review EditorDavid SullivanChicago Literary Review EditorFrank LubyEditor in-chiefMichael ElliottNews EditorDavid LanchnerNews EditorFrank ConnollyAssociate News EditorRobert BarlingViewpoints EditorStaff: Karen E. Anderson, Paul Beattie, Scott Bernard, Rosemary Blinn, MarkBlocker, David Burke, Mike Carroll, Anthony Cashman, Arthur U. Ellis, KathyEvans, Paul Flood, Ben Forest, John Gasiewski, Jessie Goodwin, Cliff Grammich,Peter Grivas, Gussie, Keith Horvath, Jim Jozefowicz, Larry Kavanagh, A1 Knapp,Marcia Lehmberg, Amy Lesemann, Armin Lilienfeld, Jane Look, Mike Lotus, L.D.Lurvey, Helen Markey, Melissa Mayer, Raj Nanda, Karin Nelson, Ciaran Obroin,Ravi Rajmane, Matt Schaefer, Geoff Sherry, Frank Singer, Brad Smith, Jeff Smith,Steve Sorensen, Rick Stabile, Adena Svingos, Jim Thompson, Hilary Till, Bob Travis,Terry Trojanek.Contributors: Antonia Donovan, Charles W. Hayes, Carolyn Mancuso, Stephen J.McConnell. Brian Nichoporuk, James Ralston, Christopher Speck.4—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, January 22, 1985 something the rest of society politicallyrequires of you. The crime that undoesWinston Smith in 1984 is his pursuit of aprivate love, and the Party’s responseis to force him to betray that love andto redirect it to Big Brother instead.What has passed most easily into col¬lective wisdom from Orwell’s novel arethe concepts of “newspeak” and“doublethink’,” concepts that make1984 the classic satire on intellectual di¬shonesty. The Party is quite blatantabout trying to minipulate language inorder to re-create reality. If the Partycan create reality (which it does in the novel by crushing all disbeliei towardits tawdry vision of reality), then it canmake itself natural and God-given. Itcan remove itself from history andbegin to create history as it wills. To¬talitarianism is a vast exercise in cir¬cular self-justification. Ultimately thereason it must deny politics any exis¬tence is that permitting politics meanspermitting a certain skepticism, anopenness to differences of opinion, re¬garding ultimate Truth. Skepticism orbeing choosy about what one believes,is the intellectual attitude that corre-continued on page fiveSG Book Exchange a successTo the editor:Because of certain controversy sur¬rounding the Autumn Quarter BookExchange, I am writing to report thatthe Student Government Student Ser¬vices Committee conducted the WinterQuarter Book Exchange successfullyand without incident. The Book Ex¬change remains a very useful and se¬cure means for students to buy and sellused books.The Book Exchange serves a benefi¬cial function for the student body be¬cause the used book stores on campusdo not sell text books. The Book Ex¬change offers students the most con¬venient way to sell or buy used textbooks, and students often find hard¬bound texts at significant savings.Most students brought in betweenfive and ten books each, to averageabout $15 per person. But many peoplebrought far larger quantities of books.One person made $153 through the saleof his books, and another person made$69.25.The Book Exchange program allowsstudents to leave books on display attheir chosen prices. For each book, thestudent must fill out a separate formindicating his set price. After each book is given a code number and re¬corded, the student is given receiptsfor his books. He must exchange thesereceipts on the collection day at the endof the week for his money and/or un¬sold books.Even more importantly, we havetaken a number of measures to ensurethat student money from the exchangewill be kept absolutely secure. Allmoney not claimed on the official col¬lection day (January 11) is being keptunder lock and key in the Student Ac¬tivities Office and may be claimed be¬fore January 25 by calling the StudentGovernment Office (Ida Noyes 306,(tel.) 962-9732) and leaving your name,telephone number, and code numbers.The call will be returned and a timewill be arranged for the owner to cometo the Student Government Office, atwhich time a committee member willdisburse the money and return unsoldbooks.The Book Exchange will continue tobe a quarterly event. The SpringQuarter Book Exchange will run be¬tween April 1-5 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. inthe Reynolds Club North Lounge.Rose LeeStudent Services ChairOpus Degrog By Li D-LurveyOn December 22, a man named Bern-hard Goetz singlehandedly pulledcrime off the list it had been on withweather, that of things people alwaystalk about but never do anything about.Goetz shot four disreputable youthswho had been harassing him, and thewave of hysteria spread from the BigApple to the entire basket. People ex¬alted this Cooperish hero who had stoodoff the evil meanies at high noon. EvenChicago’s own anti-gun protagonist,Mike Royko, came out to say, in effect,that the youths had gotten what theydeserved.Solid citizens everywhere seem to befeeling frustration in law-enforce¬ment’s marginal ability to protect us.While frustration may be justified, thetype of reverence being given to Goetzis entirely undue. Let’s take a closelook at this man and see if he is “stuffof which heroes are made.”Goetz shot four youths who had askedhim for money (real heroes like Goetzknow charity begins at home), then hehelped an old lady back to her seat (allheroes have this basic boy scout na¬ture), and finally he fled into the dis¬tance (an element of mystery is crucialto the modern hero). After revealinghimself later to the police (real heroescan’t hide forever), Goetz said that hewished he had “gouged the youths eyesout with his car keys” (all good boyscouts are always prepared with theirtrusty car keys).All I can say is that this guy has got tobe fun at parties.“Oh, excuse me Bernhard, I was justtrying to get to the punch bowl.”“I’m out of bullets right now, or I’dblow your head off and gouge your eyesout for stepping on my foot.”What is truly intriguing about Goetzis that he seems to have touched off anational fad of mid-70’s disco propor¬tions. Popular greetings have gonefrom “Have a nice day” to “Go ahead,make my day”. There’s a killing to behad (no pun intended) in producingshirts that say, “You’ve picked thewrong guy, buddy.”Thursday was a good day for “Goetz-mania”: an elderly gentleman shot an18-year old punk who had tried to robhim. The man, probably in his 60’s,then picked up his groceries, and pro¬ceeded down the street. It’s almost likestopping to tie one’s shoes. Later thatnight, a 76-year old gentleman was forced to knife a disguised woman whoheld a knife to him while he waited for abus to gp home.The 76-vear old, Carl Hamby, unlikeGoetz and the still-unidentified grocerycarrier, does not show the signs of areal hero. One, he went immediately tothe police, showing no ability to buildan element of mystery. Two, he proba¬bly won’t have any charges pressedagainst him because in using reason¬able self-defense, he didn’t do anythingwrong — that ruins my chance of mar¬tyrdom. Three, his assailant was, afterall, a woman, and everyone knows thatreal heroes don’t knife women, theysubdue them and remove them to theirhotel rooms later. Finally, Hamby hadno idea how to handle the press. In¬stead of a gutsy press release (or“leak”, as the newspapers like to callit to imply that they got something theyshouldn’t have) like Goetz’s “I shouldhave gouged their eyes out,” Hambysaid “All I wanted to do was go home.”Real heroes don’t whine like that.Meanwhile, back at the old Universi¬ty of Chicago, the “shoot ’em up fun”seems to be another good fad that’sbeen totally ignored. Friday’s Marooncarried the story of yet another studentmugged at a Howard El stop. Did thestudent blow the three assailantsaway? It would be great if the wholecampus could rally behind a student’sheroic infliction of brain damage to therobbers when the student had resource¬fully used his physical chemistry textto bash their heads in. Wouldn’t theUniversity student body just cheer atthe ingenuity involved in the student’squick rewiring of his calculator to ad¬minister life-threatening pulses of elec¬tric charge to those vile slimes? But,alas, the student did none of theseheroic things; he just got mugged. Af¬terwards he said that the Howard “istoo convenient to stop using,” meaninghe almost assuredly will encounter tro¬uble again.Sigh.Sad is a boy without a hero. Eversince Charleton Heston’s career inepoch movies ended, I’ve been search¬ing for someone to fill that void. So,until some brave, respectable studentgoes down to the Howard stop andblows away the first minors he sees. I’lljust sit here miserable... with my .45... and my car kevs. . . waiting. . . forsomeone to ask me for five dollars.1% 'The benefits of an ROTC program outweigh the drawbacksBy Scott MartinFor those who accept that the USneeds a standing military in this worldof conflict, there are good reasons tosupport ROTC at the University of Chi¬cago.The most important reason is tomaintain the close relationship andtrust between civilian and soldier.More than half of all officers enter ourmilitary by way of ROTC, receivingtheir college education in a relativelyopen, non-military environment wherethey may be exposed to a wide range ofcritical views regarding politico-mili¬tary matters. In this way, ROTC helpsstrengthen the grasp of American civilsociety on its military. Without ROTCthe military would become extremely'dependent on graduates of service aca¬demies to fulfill officer quotas. A criticwary of excessive martial zeal or in¬doctrination in the armed forces andinterested in the continued subordina¬tion of the military to civilian leader¬ship, should thus be concerned to pro¬mote the “civilianizing” influence ofROTC.The University of Chicago, like simi¬lar schools such as Stanford, North¬western, Duke, Harvard, Princeton,and Cornell (which have ROTC), canplay a significant role in this civilianinfluence. This is a private school witha fairly “liberal” atmosphere and canprovide for the military some of thewell-educated, free-thinking officers italways needs. At the same time, be¬cause many students here come from amiddle or upper class family, ROTCcould attract some of them and therebymake for a military more representa¬tive of American society at large.Moreover, since the University of Chi¬cago does not offer purely technical de¬grees, e g., electrical engineering, itsROTC graduates may help give a sore¬ly needed intellectual balance to a per¬haps overly technocratic militaryworld.Another important reason is thatROTC financially benefits both theUniversity of Chicago and its studentswithout threatening to militarize theQuads. ROTC offers qualified under¬graduates almost $9000 annually and thus, at the same time, makes a careeror stint in the military more practicalfor those who sincerely want to “servetheir country” and also gain valuablework experience. Of course, each dol¬lar that the government gives a studentoften saves the University money byrelieving requests for financial assis¬tance. And while the number of stu¬dents interested in ROTC here is prob¬ably small, in time it might grow andthereby come to save the University aconsiderable sum. It is highly unlikelythat the number of cadets will becomeastronomical (it hasn’t at any of thecampuses mentioned above) and, sinceno permanent ROTC office will bebased here, the increasing visibility ofuniformed cadets will be negligible.In the end, perhaps the strongest rea-“1984”continued irom page foursponds to the emotional attitude ofbeing choosy and stinting with one’slove. The Party attempts to replacethese attitudes with new intellectualand linguistic habits that obliteratesthe self. In this way it causes “history”as a chronicle of various wars and five-year plans to terminate in one unceas¬ing war and one unending five-yearplan.Certainly politics still thrives in theWestern world far beyond the role itplays in Orwell’s Oceania. But the anti¬political tendency is at work rightunder our noses, especially in the elec¬tion held in Orwell’s year. Presumablythis is true for some of the same rea¬sons totalitarianism arose in this cen¬tury. The modern world is complex andconfusing, history is big and trouble¬some, etcetera, etcetera. People turnto the paternalistic and self-justifyingParty or state when they feel they can’tget a grasp of these things. In a smallway the people who say “Fifty millionvoters can’t be wrong” are expressingthis sort of desire for some flexibility inthe nature of things, for a Truth thatcan be enacted instead of having to bepainstakingly discovered. Similarlythe blacks who urge their fellows toturn Republicans express not merely a son against promoting ROTC at theUniversity of Chicago was suggestedby Wayne Scott in a Maroon article(Jan. 18, “Rights of Homosexualsshould enter into ROTC debate”). Mr.Scott is correct that the US militarydoes not permit homosexuals in itsranks. However, it is argued that thispolicy is necessary given the uniquefunction of the services. It is necessarybecause homosexuals could conceiv¬ably disrupt the ability of a group toperform in certain stressful, wartimesituations. In part for the same reason,women do not fill potential combat po¬sitions where they might, for example,develop an intimacy with a fellow tankcrew mate. Consider the following situ¬ation: two months on a very crampedsubmarine sleeping as a group in alarge communal room. Almost by defi-justifiable trustration with the Demo¬crats, but also a trustration at recenthistory itself. They know there’s stillracism out there but they can’t quiteput their fingers on it as easily as theycould in the Selma days. So there’s anew turning toward existing powers tosolve things, in spite of the fact thatthose powers currently flow in andaround one whose political career hasbeen propelled all along by the anti-civil-rights backlash. (We saw thesame frustration a few years ago dur¬ing the Atlanta murders. Suddenly allthat pent-up civil-rights energy found afocus and broke into view, even thoughmarches do little to catch a killer.)The upshot of the current pressureswould be to make Reagan into aComrade Chairman, the head of a Sovi¬et-style “democracy from the groundup” where internecine Party struggleswould replace the messy play of publicdispute. No political forces would con¬tend for control from outside the gov¬ernment, let alone from outside soci¬ety’s big. happy, homey consensus.Even if not fully achieved, this ten¬dency further dispirits the whole politi¬cal process. And the final question 1984poses for us is what we should make ofour dispirited condition. This questionarises when, for instance, one readssuch recent cultural criticism as Chris- nition, homosexuals’ presence couldeasily lead to a very strong bond be*tween particular seamen and then, tojealousy, favoritism, distraction, etc.In short, there is arguably a soundpractical justification for this officialdiscrimination against homosexuals.Only if the University opposes allforms of discrimination should ROTCbe disallowed. To be so consistent alsorequires that the University end affir¬mative action programs (despite theirpractical justification) and cease re¬ceipt of all defense department fundingfor research because of the depart¬ment’s direct perpetuation of this dis¬crimination. Maybe even most stateand federal government funds shouldbe discontinued due to an indirect per-continued on page sixtopher Lasch’s new book The MinimalSelf. Is it possible for the politicalprocess simply to break down underthe cultural pressures already at work,with each step in its disintegration en¬couraging the next in a dynamic thatspirals downward — if not toward 1984.then toward something as bad in itsown way? Or is there, as WinstonSmith believed, “something calledhuman nature which will be outraged”and which will assert itself in the faceof any such breakdown? Can we trustthat the situation people create forthemselves does tend on the whole tobe the right one? Or, if not that, thatparties of opposition, at least smallones, will always arise against anysuch situation? Lasch's assumption,like 1984's thesis, appears to be, no.-men are infinitely malleable, as Win¬ston Smith finally learns. Thereforethe human condition can become ter¬minal. This answer may be right, butthat just means we must consciouslywork all the harder to keep politicsalive and vigorous, at least for the timebeing. Heaven may indeed be a realmof unforced love, where no parties existand where Big Brother really is thesource of all reality. But facing earthlyfacts means being grateful for what di¬sharmony we’ve still got.There will be a meeting of all Maroon staffwriters and editors onTuesday, jan. 22nd at 7:30 p.m.in room 303 of Ida NoyesWe will discuss:• the first four issues of the quarter• design changes• story organization• assignmentsNew writers are welcome.Bring questions and ideas.The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, January 22, 1985—5SG should serve us, not themselvesTo the Editor:I am so glad to see Rick Szesny is outof the hospital and has hit the Maroon’spages again. When Rick didn’t have acomment for the Maroon article on theStudent Government Book Exchangetheft, I suspected that he was up tosomething. Really now, when was thelast time Rick didn’t have a commenton anything?The student body elected both ChrisHill and Rick Szesny not to serve them¬selves, but to serve us. While Chris’sjudgement in handling the Book Ex¬change affair may have been question¬able, I commend Chris on not allowingthe accusations and innuendos to inter¬fere with his effort to run Student Gov¬ernment effectively for students. Thisquarter he continues to work on a daycare survey and other projects as wellas organizing committees that aredoing more than those of previousyears.is Rick really that bent out of shapeabout a $90 theft or the principles in¬volved in handling the affair? Thisseems to be an ongoing power strugglebetween the Finance Committee andthe rest of the Assembly, or at least thePresident. The struggle is not new, ithas only escalated. As a student in theCollege for four years and a SG rep thisfall, I saw Rick disrupt Assemblymeetings often for matters of proce¬dure, but seldom for matters of sub¬stance. Rick and the Finance Commit¬tee are opposed to anything that woulddilute their power. Rick’s complaint isnot that the theft wasn’t reported to Uof C Security, but that it was not report¬ed to the Finance Committee. Chrishas been accused of being a sleuth, butwhat was the Finance Committee plan¬ning to do with the information?I further contend that the passage ofthe proposed fall dance was hotly con¬tested, not on any merits of the dancebut instead because Chris steppedwhere the Finance Committee pre¬sumed it had sole power. Chris told theFinance Committee it was wrong. Noone tells the wizard he’s wrong, at leastnot without his wrath. The Finance Committee first voted down the dance.Then it was appealed to the Assembly.On the floor of the Assembly the dancefailed again, but one should note thatno more than three members of the as¬sembly who weren’t on the FinanceCommittee voted against it.Although Rick was careful never toopenly admit it, it also seems to methat he was for the passage of the Stu¬dent Activities Fee increase (whichgives the Finance Committee moremoney) but against rebating part ofthat money back to graduate divisions.Does he want all the money for the Fi¬nance Committee?Rick is very effective, and moreoverhe is an excellent Finance Chairman.His input into the decisions on groupfunding is usually well placed, alwayswell argued, and often he can see hisway through difficult situations. This iswhat Rick was elected to do, and in thiscapacity he serves the student bodywell. But Rick should accept the factthat the presidency carries somepower and that the powers of the Fi¬nance Committee are not limitless. Heshould help Chris make SG effectivefor the students instead of trying todrag Chris down with unsubstantiatedclaims and harmful remarks. He isonly diverting attention from the usefulprojects that SG is now involved in andshould continue to undertake.Seth SandersROTCcontinued from page fivepetuation. The University can hardlyafford to be absolutely consistent.In conclusion, it is too idealistic to ex¬pect complete consistency. ROTCshould not be singled out because it dis¬criminates against the few homosex¬uals in the University who might be in¬terested in the armed forces. The goodreasons to promote ROTC at the Uni¬versity of Chicago outweigh the badones.Scott Martin, currently a student inthe Divinity School, completed anROTC program at Northwestern Uni¬versity.ilBiiSSilSSlSSIllIRECONCEIVING BIOLOGY:WOMEN, REPRODUCTION AND THE LIFE CYCLETHE FORUM FOR FEMINIST SCHOLARSHIPWINTER QUARTER LECTURE SERIES888888BB8Ga8a8S888888B888SB88888Sffiaaffi93EBSBaS^B9ffi888a888888888888S'THE ADOLESCENT BODY: ANTHROPOLOGICALAND PSYCHOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES"A PANEL DISCUSSIONANDREW BOXER, SUZANNE MCNEiLi, MARYSE RICHARDSCOMMITTS ON HUMAN DEVELOPMENT, UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOJOYCE CANAANDEPT OF ANTHROPOLOGY. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOTHURSDAY JANUARY 24"SOCIAL AND PSYCHOLOGICAL REGULATIONOF THE MENSTRUAL CYCLE"MARTHA MCCUNTOCKASSOCIATE PROFESSOR. DEPT OF BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOTUESDAY FEBRUARY 5"ON THE USES AND MISUSES OF GENDER-RELATEDPSYCHOBIOLOGY: PSYCHIATRIC IMPLICATIONS"JEAN HAMILTONASSSTANT PROFESSOR. DEPT OF BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOTHURSOAV FEBRUARY 21'TAKING THE MEN OUT OF MENOPAUSE"PAULINE BARTASSOCIATE PROFESSOR. DEPT OF SOCIOLOGY, UNIVERSITY OF LUNOttMONDAY MARCH 4ALL LECTURES WILL BE IN HARPER 130 AT 4:30 PMFUNDED BY THE WOMEN'S BOARD Of THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO HILLEL CINEMAREVOLT OF JOBWEDNESDAY, JANUARY 23,1985 7:30 P.M.Second Showing at 9:30 P.M.$000ADMISSION Hillel Members and contributorsOTHERS $050Hungarian film, English subtitles recently releasednominated for an Academy Award as the best foreignlanguage film of 1984.Original story of childhood of Director/Writer Imre Gyongyossy.Get d FREEEnlargementOrder any twosame-size,same-finishKodak colorenlargements.Get a thirdenlargementfree, fromKodak’sown lab.your favoriteKODACOLORFilm negatives,color slides, orcolor prints*for breathtaking enlargements from8" x 10" to 16" x 24". Ask for detailsHurry, specialoffer endsFebruary 27, 1985.'Slides, Mm negatives, or printscannot De combined m the sameorder ;o QualityUniversity of ChicagoBookstorePhotography Department970 East 58th StreetPhone number 962-77126— The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, January zz, judoThe University of Chicago Folklore SocietyPresentsthe 25th AnnualFOLK FESTIVALThis Friday, Saturday and SundayNEW LOST CITY RAMBLERS - John Cohen,Mike Seeaer, Tracy Schwarz< Photo: Stephen CordonFeaturing a reunion of The New Lost City Ramblers, Mike Seeger,Tracy Schwarz, Sukay, Kenny Baker, Eddie Taylor, the WhitstierBros., the Maxwell St. Klezner Band, the Explosonic Roders, andmore.Concerts in Mandel HallFriday, 8:15 p.m. Ticket prices $5.00, $7.00Saturday, 3:15 p.m. $5.00 ($3.50 w/student I.D.,child and senior citizen discount)Saturday, 8:15 p.m. $6.00, $8.50Sunday, 7:30p.m. $5.00, $7.00Free Workshops and Jam Sessions in Ida Noyes HallSaturday 10 a.m. - 3 p.m.Sunday 10 a.m. - 6 p.m.(Bring your instruments)Tickets are on sale at Reynolds Club Box OfficeFOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 962-7300OR CALL THE FOLKLORE SOCIETY AT 962-9793IThe Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, January 22. 1985—7THE STUDENT ACTIVITIESOFFICE PRESENTS COURSESINECLECTIC EDBASIC PHOTOGRAPHY John ProbesThis class will teach you to think beforeyou shoot: not firearms, but cameras. Ex¬posure control, Black and White develop¬ment and printing will be taught.DAYS: Mondays (first class only)TIME: 7:00-9:00 p.m.COST: $50 for 7 sessionsSTAINED GLASS Harry & Doris BostrumThis is a basic course teaching Old Euro¬pean techniques of glass cutting andsoldering. Students will complete a 12” x12” leaded glass panel.DAYS: WednesdaysDATE: Jan.23-Feb.27TIME: 6:00-8:00 p.m.LOCATION: Ida Noyes, Room 217 BALLROOM DANCE Auturo Perez-ReyesFred & Ginger 101 & 102 ,.♦Fred and Ginger 101 covers the basics ofSwing, Waltz, Fox Trot and many otherpopular styles. Fred & Giner 102 coversmore complex styles and steps.DAYS: MondaysTIME: Fred & Ginger 101: 6:00-7:30 p.m.9:00-10:30 p.m.Fred & Ginger 102: 7:30-9:00 p.m.LOCATION: Ida Noyes 3rd Floor TheatreCOST: $25/person for 5 sessions JAZZ DANCE Barbara DressierBELLY DANCING Rosalinde VorneThe Yemenite step, figure eight, Nubianwalk and more challenging techniques willtrim and tone your body. All classes willfeature Middle Eastern music andancedotes from the instructor’s dance ex¬periences in Turkey, Egypt and Greece.DAYS: TuesdaysDATE: January 22 - March 12TIME: Beginners: 5:30 - 6:45 p.m.Intermediates: 6:45 - 8:00 p.m.LOCATION: Ida Noyes Dance RoomCOST: $25 for 8 sessionsEARLY MORNINGAEROBIC EXERCISE Lisa Douglas AFRO-CARRIBEAN DANCE Harry DetryThis deadly and bogged-down aerobicclass will tire you out for the rest of theday! The class consists of a warm-up, floorsweepng, 20 minutes aerobic workout, andcryogenic cool-down; all to the latestboogie-woogie.DAYS: Mondays, Wednesdays, and FridaysDATE: January 21 - March 15TIME: 7:30-8:30 a.m.LOCATION: Ida Noyes GymCOST $40 for 24 sessions Learn the naturally aerobic dancemovements of the Caribbean. This classwill emphasize the conditioning necessaryin performing the dance step of Afro-Caribbean. Features live percussionaccompanists.DAYS: Tuesdays and ThursdaysDATE: January 22 - February 28TIME: 6:30-8:00 p.m.LOCATION: Ida Noyes Third Floor TheatreCOST: $30 for 12 sessions This lively dance class begins with athorough warm-up, focusing on bodyalignment in motion, strengthening exer¬cises, Yoga style stretching and rythmicpatterns in preparation for a wide range ofexuberant dance combinations.DAYS: Mondays and WednesdaysDATE: January 21 - March 13TIME: Jazz I: 5:30-7:00 p.m.Jazz II: 7:00 - 8:30 p.m.LOCATION: Ida Noyes Dance Room/Cloister ClubHATHA YOGA WITHINTHE IYENGAR TRADITION Kathleen WrightThe benefits integrated into this asanapractice include development of strength,flexibility, breath awareness and relaxa¬tion. Individualized instruction is providedto each student to help nurture and main¬tain postural and muscular balance.DAYS: WednesdaysDATE: January 23 - March 13TIME: Advanced Beginners: 6:00-7:30p.m.Beginners: 7:30-9:00 p.m.LOCATION: Ida Noyes East LoungeCOST: $40 for 8 sessionsECLECTIC EDALL CLASSES BEGIN THE WEEKOF JANUARY 21stSIGN-UP IN THE STUDENTACTIVITIES OFFICE,IDA NOYES HALLROOM 210STUDENT GOVERNMENTPresentsOPEN UNIVERSITYWinter 1985Sk „ (ru/i ■ le//. Ancient Indian Concepts and Thought:Their Basis and Yoga- idam' ley/H/sc/ An Introduction to Star Trek. ffu/uu’/. IL/rrt//, George and His DragonISSUES IN CURRENT U.S. FOREIGN POLICYA Lecture Series/ianar</QWic/er “U.S. Foreign Policy and The Middle East”. -Horton. 9fy>/asi “Dealing With the Russians”(xKti&ioort/i “Central America: Domino or Quagmire?”_ llea/viAeisri£f “American Military Policy and Europe”.Ao/Aon, .Tanrw “The Principle of Reagan’s Foreign Policy”All courses are free and non-credit. Registration will be heldin Cobb from January 22-23 (Tuesday and Wednesday).Classes will always be held in the evenings.8—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, January 22, 1985Ramblers to highlight25th folk festival special Saturday, January 26Cloister Club Library10 a.m. “Folk Music Survival: Collection andRevival” with John Cohen, TracySchwarz and Mike Seeger11 a.m. Mandlin Workshopwith Yank Rachell, Mike Seeger, Whit-stein Bros., Trefoil12 noon Vocal Workshopwith Sillouettes of Sound, the WhitsteinBros. & members of Trefoil Films by John Cohen“The High Lonesome Sound”& A Film on the Musicof the Andes1 p.m. Blues Workshopwith Eddie Taylor, Yank Rachell &Erwin HeiferSunday, January 27Cloister Club Library11 a.m. South American Music W'orkshop withJohn Cohen & Members of Sukay12 noon Fiddle Workshop with Kenny Baker,Yevegny Feilder. Tracy Schwarz andMark Gunther Films By John Cohen“the High Lonesome Sound"& A Film on Peruvian Music1 p.m. Banjo Workshopwith John Cohen. Linda Higgenbotha.Mark Ritchie. Bob Black Jan Vader ofTrefoil2 p.m.3 p.m. Open TimeBarn Dancewith the Chicago Barndance Co. Open Microphonewith Mark BiggsBy C.W. HayesThis coming weekend the U of C’sFolklore Society will celebrate itstwenty-fifth year with a special, SilverAnniversary edition of its annual folkfestival. In honor of the Folklore Soci¬ety’s quarter-century of music the NewLost City Ramblers have agreed toplay a reunion set on Sunday. TheRamblers, a trio consisting of MikeSeeger, Tracy Schwarz and JohnCohen, were active as a band from 1958to 1979 and were instrumental in the re¬vival of popular interest in authenticAmerican music.“This year’s festival is real special,”said Laura Gloger, an eighteen-yearveteran of the Folklore Society, “we’vegot the Ramblers playing for us to¬gether for old time’s sake.” Accordingto Ms. Gloger, who was called “the‘lore’ in the Folklore Society”by Soci¬ety co-president Jim Gunther becauseof her long association with the group,the New Lost City Ramblers were im¬portant to the U of C Folk Festival in itsearly years, and the two’s associationover the years helped each to attain itsdeserved reputation.As usual, the Festival will showcasemusic and artists from all over theUnited States representing a broadrange of musical genres and perfor¬mance styles. This year the bill of fareincludes concerts by Sukay, a SouthAmerican folk band featuring themusic of the indigenous Andean cul¬tures, and performances by The Explo-sonic Rockers, an all-Chicago champi¬onship breakdance group.In addition to the formal concerts,which include solo performances byMike Seeger and Tracy Schwarz of theRamblers, there will be two full days oflectures, workshops and jam-sessionsin Ida Noyes Hall. Also featured will betwo films about folk music made by theRamblers’ John Cohen, including afeature length documentary aboutPeruvian music and musical culture.The Festival is comprised of four for¬ mal shows, each ticketed individually,on Friday night, Saturday afternoonand evening, and Sunday night. Allshows will be presented in MandelHall, on the corner of East 57th Streetand South University Avenue. All otherevents — films, lectures, workshopsand jam-sessions and concessions —will be held in Ida Noyes Hall, 1212East 59th Street, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.on Saturday and from 10 a m. to 6 p.m.on Sunday.The Folklore Society’s annual festi¬val does indeed have a reputation. It’sconsidered one of the city’s preeminent— folk affairs — except in Hyde Park,where it is rarely noticed. “We (theFolklore Society) definitely have apublic-image problem here oncampus,” said Society co-presidentGunther. Ms. Golger added that usual¬ly seventy-five percent of the festival’saudience come from outside the Uni¬versity and Hyde Park altogether.The main reason for the Folklore So¬ciety’s lack of recognition on campus isthat its efforts are focused solely onthis yearly event. In years past the So¬ciety has sponsored fall concerts andan occasional performance by a“name” group or individual, but in re¬cent times the only other event besidesthe Festival has been a Spring quarterFiddle contest held in HutchinsonCourt.As demanded by tradition, GeorgeArmstrong’s Scottish bagpipe musicwill open the events.Tickets for all shows are available atthe Reynold’s Club Box-Office thisweek between 11 a.m. and 6 p.m., Mon¬day through Friday; 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. onSaturday and before all shows. Ticketsare also available by mail from: Folk¬lore Society, c/o Ticket Center, 5706 S.University Ave.. Chicago, IL 60637. Besure to include a self-addressed,stamped envelope, or your tickets willbe held for you at the Box-Office.For more information, call 962-7300or 962-8787. Who to look for at the festival:Sukay: This South American bandplays a fascinating mix of Indian andearly Anglo-Indian music from the in¬digenous Andean culture. A first forthe U of C.The New Lost City Ramblers: MikeSeeger, Tracy Schwarz and JohnCohen formed one of the most influen¬tial and most scholarly of young, urbanfolk groups during their twenty yearstogether. This reunion is a historic, notto be repeated event. Mike Seeger andTracy Schwarz are featured in solo- concerts and John Cohen will be lectur¬ing and showing films about folk musichere in the United States and in Peru.Mama Yancy and Erwin Heifer: At89. Mama Yancy is one of the most au¬thoritative and vibrant vocalists inblues today. Erwin Heifer is an accom¬plished blues pianist who has recordedwith Mama Yancy for the Red Beanslabel.The Explosonic Rockers: This cham¬pionship breakdance team is folk cul¬ture in action.CENTRALAMERICAan introduction to contemporary political issuesTHURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 1985at the University of ChicagoAfternoon Session1:00 NICARAGUA 3:00 EL SALVADOR(location: Social Sciences Building 122 (location: Social Sciences 122)1126 59th and University Ave.) Professor Terri TurnerProfessor John Coatsworth Professor of Anthropology, University of ChicagoProfessor of History, University of Chicago Mr. Fernando RodriguezMs. Susan Gzesh Salvadorean RefugeeNational Lawyers' GuildEvening Session8:00 PROSPECTS FOR PEACE IN THE REGION (location:Cloister Club, Ida Noyes Hall, 59th and Woodlawn)Mr. Victor RubioSpokesperson for the FDR/FMLN (the military andpolitical branches of the Salvadorean rebels)Question and answer sessions will follow all presentationsSponsored by The Center for Latin American Studies andCAUSE.The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, January 22, 1985—9LECTURE NOTESMichael Anania, author of The RedMenaceJanuary 22, 5:30 p.m.Newberry LibraryAnania will read from his book anddiscuss its development and publica¬tion at the meeting of the Society ofMidland Authors. There will be a wineand cheese reception as part of themeeting. Admission is $4 for membersand $5 for non-members. Free parkingis available.BRIEFLYHillel Foundation Presents themovie, The Revolt of Job on Wednes¬day, January 23, at 7:30 pm. The film,recently released from Hungary, is thestory of a Jewish couple who want topreserve their family line during theHolocaust by adopting a non-Jewishchild. The movie captures much of theHungarian farm culture. The dialogueis in Hungarian, with English subtitles.Admission is $2 for Hillel members and$3.50 for the general public.• • •The Chicago Debating Society andthe Pro-Life Association will present apanel discussion and a debate on abor¬tion. The panel will consist of threeUniversity professors, Cass Sunstein,Peter Browning, and Dr. Chase Kim¬ball. This will be held January 24, in So¬cial Sciences 122. The following Thurs¬day there will be a debate, presentedby Dr. Sandra Mahkorn and Ruth Os¬good with Douglas Baird moderating.Question and answer periods will fol¬low each presentation.CALENDARJanuary 22: Lecture. “Lake MichiganStudies’’ at the Chicago Academy ofScience, 2001 North Clark Street.January 22: “The Adolescent Body:Anthropological and PhychologicalPerspectives,” lecture by Andrew Boxer and Susanne Kavrell, commit¬tee on human development. 4:30,Harper 130.January 23: James L. Kugel, Prof, ofNear Eastern Languages and Civiliza¬tions, Harvard presents, “In Mrs. Po-tiphar’s Bedroom, a Study of EarlyBiblical Exegisis.” 4 p.m., Swift Lec¬ture hall.January 23: Biochemistry lecture,“RNA Plymerase II TranscripeionSystem: a Biochemical Approach.”Dr. Danny Reinberg, Rockefeller Uni¬versity. 4 p.m. CLSC 101.January 24: Chamber Music Chicago.Concert featuring Gidon Kremer, Dan¬iel Phillips, Kim Kashkashian, andYo-yo Ma These. 8 pm. at the CivicTheater, 20 N. Wacker Drive.January 26, 27: “Side by Side by Sond¬heim,” JCC Theatre Co. 8:30 Sat. and3:30 and 8 p.m. Sun. at 1100 E. HydePk. Blvd.January 23: “In Mrs. Potipar’s Bed¬room : a study of Early Biblical Exege¬sis,’’given by James L. Kugel, Prof.Near Eastern Languages and Civiliza¬tions, Harvard. Swift Lecture Hall, 4p.m.January 23: “Organizing a Jewish Stu¬dies Program,” with James L. Kugle,Harper 155, 1 pm.★ ★★The U of C Student Government willsponsor Tabletalk ’85 to foster more in¬teraction between students and facul¬ty. Tabletalk ’85 will run from January21-February 2 at participating restau¬rants in Hyde Park. In order to partici¬pate, students or faculty members/ad¬ministrators must fill out a coupon andpresent the coupon to the waiter orcashier before ordering.Participating restaurants will honora pre-determined discount for the stu¬dent-faculty group(s).The Tabletalk will begin with a kick¬ off which will be held in the northlounge of Reynolds Club. Meals may bepurchased at Morry’s and taken to theNorth Lounge. Faculty members andadministrators will be mailed two cou¬pons each with an explanatory letter.Students may pick up coupons at theStudent Government Office, StudentActivities Office, Reynolds Club BoxOffice, and the advisors’ receptionistdesk. The list of participating restau¬rants will be printed in an advertise¬ment placed in the Maroon on January22 and on posters which will be distri¬buted throughout the campus. More in¬formation will be given with the Jan¬uary 22 issue of the Maroon.FILMSBus Stop (Joshua Logan, 1956)No, it is not another sexist pun. Thisis more like a wrangler’s rendition of‘Whither the West?’ (the AmericanWest and its emotionally paralyzedwanderers). Great spaces, great emp¬tiness. Forces beyond their controlplant the characters in a roadside cafe,where Bo Decker (Don Murray) —with the help of his guide Virgil (Ar¬thur O’Connell) — plies his woodencharms upon Cherie (Marily Monroe).Will they settle down together? Moreinterestingly, why did no other picturedisclose Monroe’s marvelous actingtalent? (She had, after all, made thefinal cut into Strassberg’s dramaclass.) Josh Logan allowed Monroe’smoving vulnerability to surface, with¬out indulging in psychobabble cliches.Stanley Cavell was right when hepinned our complexity of response toMM on her body and its paces, butequally on “the compassion that waslost and confusing within it and a ca¬pacity for wit and laughter one wouldgive one’s soul to elicit and satisfy.”Truman Capote was also right when hetold MM she was a “beautiful child.”LSF, Thursday at 8:30. $2. —SJMThe Greatest Show on Earth (Cecil B.DeMille, 1952)DeMille captures the visual extrava¬ganza usually provided by the RinglingBrothers and Barnum and Bailey circus, as Charlton Heston stars as acircus director practically born to thebigtop. Betty Hutton plays his girl¬friend, an acrobat with the circus, andJimmy Stewart plays a mysteriousclown, never seen without full makeup.The Greatest Show on Earth was one ofthe biggest box office draws of theyear, and DeMille won an Oscar forbest director for his efforts. DeMille’sproduction is lush; he even adds a trainwreck for good measure (scatteringcircus animals, apparatus, and per¬formers across the screen). Tues. Jan.22 8:30 $2 LSF —AMDThe Thin Man (W.S. Van Dyke II,1934)This version of Dashiell Hammett’sThe Thin Man takes on the best charac¬teristics of a drawing room comedy:fast pace and witty dialogue balancedby a studied informality. WilliamPowell plays Nick, the sophisticatedformer detective who must clear an ec¬centric inventor of murder. With hisdroll wife, Nora, played by Myrna Loy,Nick reels onto leads and finallythrows a party for all the suspects toflush out the real murderer. Powelland Loy are a class act; their charac¬ters’ boisterous domestic life makesone long for the day when martiniswere the drug of choice. Wed. Jan. 238:30 LSF —BAH• • •Kameradschaft (G.W. Pabst, 1931)Banned by the Nazis as “undesirableand unhealthy,” this film depicts thefellowship that united both Germanand French miners caught up in a 1906mine disaster. “This is one of Pabst’sbest films and one of the few films inthe West during the thirties that por¬trayed truthfully the lives of thousandsof ordinary workers.” — Georges Sa-doul, Dictionary of Films. Thursday,Jan. 24 at 8:30 p.m. InternationalHouse. $2. — Bob Travis• • •HOW TO SOLVETHE MINORITYRECRUITMENTPanelists:Gary Orfield,Prof, of Poli. Sci., U. oAndre Bell,Northwestern U. Dir. oDan HaHU. of C. Dean of College Admis. & AidDeborah SummersAsst. Dean of Students in the Univ.Tuesday, January 228:00-10:00 P.M.Swift Lecture HailRefreshments to FollowModerated by Robert J. Richards, Dir. of HIPPSFunded by SA.F.PROBLEMfC.f Admis. & Aid10—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, January 22, 1985BLOOM COUNTY by Berke BreathedLyndon LaRouche residing inVirginia countrysideSecurity guards carrying semi-auto¬matic weapons patrol the 13-roomGeorgian mansion which occupies theWoodbum estate in Loudoun County,Va. Sandbags, cement barriers, andmetal spikes adorn the outside of themansion. Inside the mansion lives Lyn¬don H. LaRouche Jr., currently a right-wing politician, who has shifted fromone end of the political spectrum to an¬other in his numerous presidentialcampaigns.LaRouche, who fears assassinationby groups that he frequetly speaks outagainst, such as the Lybians, the Sovi¬ets, the queen of England, and narcot¬ics pushers, has moved himself andmany of his associates to this rural su¬burb because he feels safe there, andhe can commute easily to WashingtonD.C.The people of Loudoun county areambivalent about their new neighbors.Although LaRouche and his associatescould boost the county’s economy bybuying over 1 million dollars worth ofproperty and creating up to 200 jobs,people fear the controversary thattheir extreme political views couldstir. ..IS THAT CLEAR ?no more sacrifices ofKITCHEN APPLIANCES7D'THE GREAT HNP WISEGOPS OF THE MIGHTY NOBOPY IN THIS FIGPUMB BOX IS A OOP 'THEY CONTROL NOTHING 'THEY INFLUENCE NOBOPY'THEY...PO YOU HAVEA COMMENTON TOPAY'STOPIC OF"MOPERNHAREMS"? YES.YOURS, THERE.SEEMS A BYTFRUMPY, O'GREAT ONE.T~\LEAVING US TV LEANINTO OUR PAINFULPESVNIES... FARTHERANP FARTHER...\(Take out your favorite faculty member/administrator/student atsignificant discounts!)TABLETAEK ’85JANUARY 21 -FEBRUARY 2COUPONS AVAILABLE AT:PARTICIPATING RESTAURANTSStudent Activities Office(Ida Noyes 210)Orly’s (10%)Agora (10%)Tipsuda (20%)Mallory’s (10%)Ida’s Cafe (15%)Mellow Yellow (15%)Thai on 55th (15%)Far East Kitchen (15%)Medici on Harper (20%)Morry’s at 5500 S. Cornell (Buy 3 sandwiches, get 1 free)Student Government Office(Ida Noyes 306)Reynolds Club Box OfficeAdvisors Receptionist Desk(Harper 280)KICK-OFF: REYNOLDS CLUB NORTH LOUNGEWEDNESDAY, JANUARY 2311:OOA.M.-1:30 P.M.The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, January 22. 1985—11By Karen E. Anderson“It’s a routine job.’’ “They justdrive around in those white cars.”These are ways someone unfamiliarwith police work might characterizethe duties of a University of Chicagopolice officer. However, this viewoverlooks the daily stress and skillinvolved in security patrolling. It alsofails to take into account the jeopardyan officer may suddenly find himselfin when a “routine” procedurebecomes a deadly game of seek andfind, with unknown consequences forthe officer involved.One such case occurred in thesummer of 1983, when most studentswere mentally and bodily removedfrom the University. On Friday,August 12, the University SecurityDepartment received a report of asuspicious person at 1501 East 56th.Officer Steven Mitchell, 33, andRichard Dwyer, 53, a Chicago policecaptain who worked part time for theUniversity, were dispatched toinvestigate. The two men had littleidea of what to expect, as is often thecase in police work.When the two officers arrived at theaddress, a neighbor told them that thesuspect had gone into the house.According to newspaper accounts,Dwyer went to check out the back ofthe house, while Mitchell knocked onthe front door. As Mitchell turned towalk away, Lorenzo Turner, a42-year-old Vietnam vet, flung openthe door and assaulted Mitchell with aknife. One witness later told policeTurner was “pumping away” with the18 inch knife, stabbing Mitchellrepeatedly. When Dwyer appeared atthe front of the house. Turner shothim with Mitchell’s service revolver.Dwyer managed to fire back,wounding Turner.The Chicago Police, who monitor allIniversity Security calls, arrived onthe scene minutes afterward andfound Turner standing in front of the U of C Security force maintains ahouse holding a baseball bat and thebloodied knife. The three men weretaken to Billings Hospital. Turner whoclaims that his combat experiencesleft him mentally ill, would recoverfrom gunshot wounds in the leg andback. Dwyer had three quarters of hisliver removed-and suffered kidneydamage, but was eventually able toreturn to work. Officer Mitchell,however, became the first Universityof Chicago police officer to be killedin the line of duty.Security Director David O’Leary’svoice still wavers when he relates thestory. He has photographs ofMitchell’s funeral, the somber lines ofpolice officers carrying the coffintoward the bone whiteness ofRockefeller Chapel while their fulldress uniforms droop withpersperation. “It’s something policelike to do; they honor their dead in analmost military way,” explainedO’Leary.Leaning forward in his desk,O’Leary, a thin, articulate man whoappears to have a lot of sympathyhidden behind his precise businesssuit, explained that Mitchell had beenwith the department for six years andwas a valuable member of the force,a role model for many youngerofficers. “Nothing in the history of thedepartment ever hit quite like this.The department has been scarred bythis, especially those who were onduty that night.”O'Leary said the incident was alsohard on the department because ofthe extremely professional attitudethe officers have toward their work.“They are superconscious of theirduties; they feel upset when anoffender gets away, because it’s likethey’ve let down the people they serveand protect.” JAMES RALSTONDavid O’Leary, director of the Uni¬versity of Chicago police forceStressing the fact that thedepartment tries to promote thissense of professionalism, O’Learysaid that new' recruits are trained tobe what he calls the “completeofficer.” This begins with anextremely selective hiring procedure.Every year the departmentinterviews 30-40 applicants to fill 3 or4 openings. “We try to avoid thosewho are super-aggressive, or displayfalse bravado. W’e want people whoplan on making a career out of policework. We’re trying to keep the force blended, hiring people with a collegebackground, and also those who havea lot of actual experience.” Thedepartment tries to make certainofficers are not like the bumbling,rough mouthed incompetents you seeon television. Communication skillsare greatly emphasized. O’Learyremarked, ‘Verbal skills are veryimportant here (on a universitycampus). Police officers have to knowhow to ask the right questions; theyhave to go beyond the simple yes/noones.”Applicants who are selected tobecome part of the UniversitySecurity Department are given athree month orientation program.O’Leary said this familiarizes themwith what the University communityis like, and howr they are expected toserve it. “We make certain theyunderstand that we are U of Cemployees. We are not the same asmunicipal police officers.”Next, recruits go on duty withveteran officers. They are givenfirearms training, and learn how’department procedure operates.Depending on howr well they do, in afew weeks the recruits are assignedindoor areas to patrol and accompanyexperienced officers in squad cars.Finally, the recruit is sent to anIllinois police academy. “Theyreceive 10 weeks of training — about400 hours,” said O’Leary. “It’s thesame sort of training all policeofficers get.” The recruit is then amember of the security department.However, the training doesn’t everend for an officer. Officers arecontinually given in-service trainingon gun safety and driving techniques.They are also required to attendannual classes on issues relevant toofficers in the Chicago area. O’Learycited multi-racial awareness as anThe Visiting Fellows CommitteepresentsARTHUR B. LAFFERa Marjorie Kovler Fellow, speaking onTHE FLAT-RATE TAX: THE ROAD TO PROSPERITYTuesday, January 22, 1985, 3:30 P.M.Swift Hall, Third-Floor Lecture Room12—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, January 22, 1985professional, profile in Hyde Parkimportant issue. “For example,” heexplained, “we don’t let them stoppeople in the street unless they feelthey have a good reason to do so. Thisprevents misunderstandings.”O’Leary said that in the past, manyminorities, especially blacks, feltpolice were harassing them bydetaining them for no apparentreason.You may have noticed U of C squadcards patrolling the entire HydePark-Kenwood neighborhood. O’Learyproudly stated that this is a servicenot usually offered by universitysecurity operations. “We patrol incooperation with the Chicago Police— it works very well.”I asked O’Leary what patterns thedepartment noticed concerning crimein Hyde Park. He said that auto theftsare the major problem, adding thatmost security problems are caused bypeople who are not part of theUniversity community intruding oncampus. “We don't usually have a lotof problems with students.”What are these people in the niftywhite squad cards really like? How dothey feel about their work? What dothey think of the students? What arethe affects of the strain their jobs cancause?Requesting permission toaccompany an officer in a sqaud caron patrol, I was told this could not bedone because it would not complywith security procedure. I also couldnot interview officers while they wereon duty indoors. However, I was ableto interview some officers as theycame off duty — if I was willing tofollow a few restrictions.O’Leary picked out three officersfor me to interview that represented a cross-section of the department. Icould not use the names of anyofficers, or describe them in anygreat detail. Certain information,such as the number of people in thedepartment, could not be published,and no tactical information would begiven out. I agreed, realizing that thesecurity department really doesprotect everything, including itselffrom reporters.1 returned to the brick securitybuilding at 7:30 a.m. on a grey Fridaymorning, about a wreek after I hadfirst spoken with O’Leary. Weedingmy way through the rows of patrolcars flanking it, I struggled with itsiron doors and made my way into alounge area where officers relax afterthey come off duty.The first officer I wras to interviewhad arrived. A smiling face behindhis impersonal uniform, the officerwas in his middle thirties. Heannounced that he had been with thedepartment for over six years. “Iapplied for this job mainly because Ilived in the neighborhood. I’ve stayedbecause I like working for a college. Ilike the small scale, it’s morepersonal.”* tHe seemed to have a very highregard for the student body. “I thinkthe average student has a lot ofrespect for us. The students on thiscampus are here to learn. We don’tget called in to break up big fightslike they have on some campuses.There are loud parties, though.” Theofficer grinned, “Once I was sent tolook in on a really noisy party. I gotinvited in, and drinks were shoved atme.” If nothing else, U of C studentsseem to be diplomatic when they dealwith security.The officer said he has learned overthe years that you have to have a sense of fairness and an even temperto do well at police work. “You can’tjust jump into things and startjudging people on the spot. You’ve gotto be objective.”He also believesstrongly that officers acquire a sort of“sixth sense” which aids them indetecting crime. He described it as afeeling based on many small things anonprofessional would fail to notice.They tell an officer when there issomething suspicious about asituation. “You develop it afteryou’ve been at the job for a while.”he added.Although all three officers Iinterviewed mentioned Mitchell’sdeath, the first one seemed mostaffected by it. “He was my bestfriend. I went blank at the time. Iguess before I never thought thingslike that could happen.” He said hecertainly doesn’t think about theincident every time he is sent tocheck out a call, but that it does cometo mind w-hen he encounterssomething unusual while on duty.“There are times when you have towalk into a situation you’re not quitesure about. It’s part of the job.”The second officer entered theroom. He was a few years younger,and seemed a bit more nervous aboutbeing interviewed. He said he joinedthe force a year ago because he likedthe atmosphere at the U of C, “It’sreally nice, you deal with a differentkind of people — they’recosmopolitan.” His open friendlinessapparently was not diminished by thefact that he had just finished an eighthour night shift. No. patrolling atnight doesn’t bother him. “Peoplethink I’m crazy, but I like it,” helaughed.“There is some stress here andthere,” he continued. “You neverreally know what you are getting into — things could break loose at anyminute. It’s totally different fromwhat they teach you at school. Youjust have to learn to use yourcommon sense and a lot of caution.”He said that although he was not withthe force when Mitchell was killed, hedoes think about it, “You can see itstill affects people here, but as timegoes on, it gets to be less and less.”At my request, O’Leary arrangedan interview' with one of the femaleofficers in the department. She was inher middle twenties, and seemed likesomeone used to giving orders. Wehad been talking for only a couple ofminutes when she jumped up,stomped into the other room, and toldsome colleague that she did notappreciate their loud commentsduring the interview. Returning, shesaid. “There are problems with beinga woman in this line of work. Peoplehave to get used to seeing a woman inuniform. Fitting in with the peopleyou work with can be hard. I thinkit’s harder for a woman to beauthoritative.”Stating that she has had fewproblems w ith the students, she saidshe feels most of them respect her asmuch as they do the men on the force.“I like the mix of people on campus.It’s more personal than working for abig city. The reason we’re here is toserve the students.”While she said she doesn’t thinkHyde Park is a particularlydangerous place to work, the officersaid she does think about Mitchell’sdeath at times. “You just have to staycalm, no matter what you’re goinginto. You really learn to make a lot otindependent decisions, and you learnto make them fast.”The University police officers goabout their duties virtually unnoticedby most students. They are usuallyperceived as a uniform standing byan entrance, or a white car drivingdown the street. You probably won'tnotice them until you need them. Butthis too is part of theirprofessionalism.Men and women who wouldn’t think otpointing a loaded gun at a tellow humanbeing, think nothing of drinking and drivingDrinking turns a ear into a lethal weapon. And drunk drivers kill more than 25.(MMIpeople eaeh year A person under theintluenee should never be allowed behindthe wheel. Let’s not meet by accident.American College ofEm ergency I \\ ysicians ITALIANDINNER afINTERNATIONAL HOUSE1414 E. 59th St.WED. MENU INCLUDES:Soup Florentine MinestroneSpaghetti w/ Bolognese SauceSpaghetti all BologneseSteak w/ Pizzaiola SauceBistecche alia PizzaiolaChicken Saute Cacciatora Hunter SauceSpezzatino di Polla alia CacciatoraFried Sole ItalianaSogliola Fritta All'ltalianaRissottoFried ZucchiniZucchine alia VenetaJAN. 235:00 • 7:00 p.m.Featuring live musical entertainment &complimentary beveragesThe Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, January 22. 1985—13U of C’s Blood Bank relies heavilyon student donationsPatricia Wilson holds her son Walter, who relied on the U of C bloodbank after he was born 31/2 months premature.By Kathy EvansU of C students are “dedicated”blood donors, comprising 52 percentof the U of C Blood Bank’s donations,says Marilin Lord, donor recruiter forthe bank. These much neededdonations are helping the Blood Bankreach its goal of 4000 units.A unit of blood, which is separatedinto plasma, red blood cells, andplatelets, can benefit as many asthree different recipients. Amongpossible recipients are pregnantwomen, patients who have cancer,anemia, or bone and jointabnormalities, burn victims, surgerypatients, fracture and traumavictims, and patients with heart, lung,gastrointestinal, liver, or kidneydisease. Over 45,000 such patientsreceive volunteer blood each day.Not only does volunteer blood saveor prolong these patients’ lives, but italso greatly reduces the Blood Bank’soperating expenses and, ultimately,the cost to the patient. Each unit ofblood donated to the Blood Bank,roughly one pint, saves about $50. Thebank imports 20 percent of the bloodit needs at a cost of $80 per unit, whileprocessing blood from local donorscosts only about $30.Despite the benefits of giving blood,which include free juice and cookies,many people are afraid to donate.Some believe the needle will bepainful or carry a disease, some don’tthink that they can spare the blood,especially its iron, and others fear areaction such as fainting. In actuality,less than half of one percent of alldonors react in any way. The BloodBank, aware of common fears aboutgiving blood, does everything in itspower to help donors overcome theirfears and insure their safety.Before giving blood, donors undergoa “mini-physical” which includes ablood pressure reading and ahemoglobin count to make sure thedonor has enough iron. A sterileneedle is used to draw the blood, andeach needle is disposed of after eachuse. And although the needle stays inthe donor’s arm for 5-10 minutes, the donor feels only a prick of pain whenit is injected.Mark Goebl, a U of C student whodonates blood because “it’s the rightthing to do,” affirms that it isvirtually painless. “You could fallasleep if you were tired,” he states. Mark has given over two gallons ofblood through whole blood andapheresis donations.Apheresis is a special process ofdonating blood in which whole bloodis drawn from one arm and separtedin a centrifuge. The platelets are retained for transfusion while the redCells, white cells, and plasma arereturned to the donor through theother arm. This process is especiallyimportant for patients such asleukemia victims who requiremultiple transfusions of platelets.The Blood Bank has a very realneed for both apheresis and wholeblood donations. In the words ofPatricia Wilson, whose baby Walterreceived several blood transfusions,“More people should be involved ifthey are able; these people areactually helping to save lives.”Wilson feels grateful to the BloodBank and the donors who areresponsible for Walter’s health.Walter, who she calls “the miraclebaby,” was born 3V2 monthspremature at 2 lbs., 1M> oz. Becausehe was so unhealthy, doctors wouldnot permit Mrs. Wilson even to holdhim for the first month of his life.Now 10 months old, Walter weighs 14lbs. and is in good health.If you are interested in givingblood, the Blood Bank is open fordonations Mon.-Fri. from 8:30-5 on awalk-in basis and Saturday and someevenings by appointment. Wholeblood donations take about 40 minutesand apheresis donations take 2xk to 3hours. Donors should be healthy,between the ages of 17-65, and over110 lbs., although the bank doesaccept donations of less than 1 pintfrom donors between 100 and 110 lbs.The Blood Bank is located in MitchellHospital, which connects with BillingsHospital. If you have any questionsabout donating blood or wish to makean appointment, the phone number ofthe Blood Bank is 962-6827.In addition to this, the Shorelandwill be holding its annual blood drive,between January 21 and February 1to encourage students to give blood.The Shoreland house with the mostactual donations during this periodwill win a prize, and all Shorelandresidents are urged to participate.Other residence halls will be holdingsimilar drives later in the year.ALLGREETINGCARDSPRICEevery day of the year.No minimum purchase—buy 1 or loo—same deal!BOB’S NEWSSTAND5100 S. LAKE PARK • 684-5100Monday thru Friday 7 am to 8 pmSaturday 7 am to 11 pmSunday 5:30 am to 8 pmWe bring downthe high cost of greeting! Response to the Arab-lsraeliconflict on FilmJanuary 24, “Field Diary.” Israeli, 1983January 31, “The Fertile Memory.” Palestinian, 1983February 7, “An Arab and An Israeli.” PBS, 1984February 14, “Peace Now, the West Bank—A Challenge to DiasporaJewry.” USA, 1983All showings at International House, in theHome Room.Sponsored by: The Center for Middle EastStudies Student Association. Funded byS.A.O.The Committee on Public Policy Studiesannounces a lecturebyElizabeth HollanderCommissioner of PlanningCity of Chicago“Coping in the New Chicago:A Planning Perspective”Thursday, January 24,1985at 4:00 p.m.Wieboldt Hall, Room 30314—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, January 22, 1985rijMliiiiUiJMiiiggiwi A presentation bySalomon Brothers Incto discussCareers inQuantitative Analysis&TechnologySalomon Brothers Inc is a major international investment banking andmarket making corporation. We are leaders in the use of advanced quan¬titative techniques to enhance all phases of our business activity. Toassist issuers and investors in meeting the challenges of fundamentaleconomic changes, volatile securities markets and new investment pro¬ducts, we are expanding our technology capabilities. If your career in¬terests are to be part of a dynamic organization and to use your quan¬titative skills in a business that is becoming increasingly more analytical,then please meet with us.We are looking for individuals with backgrounds in:— Operations Research— Computer Science— Engineering— Mathematics— Related Quantitiative DisciplinesWednesday, January23,19854:00 p.m.North Lounge — Reynolds ClubReception to followThe Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, January 22, 1985—15SURVIVAL IN THE VOIDbyJohn BuckleyA brilliant and original approach to the pro¬blems of our time and a clear and bold ex¬pression of the changes necessary for solu¬tions, this book is addressed to a smallminority, concerned young adults. It willnot be sold in bookstores, but is being of¬fered in a limited edition to interestedstudents at selected universities.$ <s $ $ <« $Published in hardcovers at $10.50, plus$2.00 handling and postage, it is availableprepaid with check or money order onlyfrom:PASSKEY DISTRIBUTORP.O. BOX 1026DEKALB, IL. 60115 DISNEY AUDITION TOUR ’85 ^TWo exciting entertainment employment opportunities.1. The WALT DISNEY WORLD® Vacation Kingdom, nearOrlando, Florida, is seeking professional Dancers, Singersand Musical Theatre Actors/Actresses. Most positions arefor full, one-year contracts with some summer seasonalemployment also available. Sorry, no professional instrumen¬talist auditions.2. The WALT DISNEY WORLD Vacation Kingdom and DISNEY¬LAND® (located in Anaheim, California) are auditioning for theAll American College Marching Band for each Park, plus,the All American College Orchestra to perform at EPCOTCenter. These positions are for summerlong employment,beginning June 3 and concluding on August 17.Audition Requirements:Talent: Must be 18 years of age by June 1,1985.College: Must be 18 years old/full-time college Freshman,Sophomore, or Junior.Audition Sites:Chicago, ILTALENT AUDITION:January 27,1985Columbia CollegeTheatre/Music Center“11th Street Theatre”62 E. 11th StreetAudition Call: Female 10 a.m.Male 2 p.m.For additional audition requirements and/or furtherinformation, please call Disney Audition Tour ’85.(305) 824-5478. EST. COLLEGE MUSICIANS:February 2-3,1985DePaul UniversityFine Arts Building804 W. BeldenAudition Call: 9 a.m. - 5 p.m.Statistical and Reporting Softwarefor IBM PC/XT and AT*SPSS/PC is the most comprehensive statisticalpackage available for performing simple or complextasks, regardless of data size. It maintains featureand language compatibility with mainframe SPSS,®while optimizing for the PC environment.Designed to maximize your productivity, SPSS/PCoffers three-letter truncation of commands; the ability tobatch process commands; save and enter commandsin groups; receive on-line help; redirect input and outputto screen, disk and/or printers and more.Statistics range from simple descriptive to complexmultivariate, including Multiple Regression, ANOVA,Factor and Cluster analysis. Loglinear and nonpara-metric procedures are also included.Simple facilities allow transfer of files betweenSPSS/PC and programs lit e Lotus 1-2-3, dBase II andSAS. A complete Report Writer, plotting facilitiesand communications program for mainframes roundout a fully integrated product.For more information, contact our MarketingDepartment at:SPSS Inc., 444 N. Michigan Avenue,Chicago, IL 60611.312/329-3500.In Europe: SPSS Benelux B.V., P.O. Box 115,4200 AC Gorinchem, The Netherlands.Phone: +31183036711. TWX: 21019.VISA, MasterCard and American Express accepted.PRODUCTIVITY RAISED TO THE HIGHEST POWER"‘SPSS/PC runs or the IBM PC/XT with 320K memory and a hard disk, and IBM PC/AT with hard disk An 8087 co-processor is recommended Contact SPSS Inc lor other. compatiNe computers IBM PC/XT and PC/AT are trademarks of International Business Machines Corporation dBase II is a trademark of Ashton Tate 1-2-3 is a trademark ofLotus Development Corporation SAS is a registered trademark of SAS Institute, Inc SPSS and SPSS/PC are trademarks of SPSS Inc for its proprietary computer software< Copyright 1985. SPSS Incir—The Chicago Maroon Tuesday, January 22, 1085mab bluesclockwise from top: KokoTaylor, her grandson,Koko again, LonnieBrooks, and Albert Collinsby James RalstonThe Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, January 22, 1985—17• .-VDon’t settle for a mere ^career,”opt for the extraordinaryat the heart of the most fascinating businessin the world.and get ready for higher achievementMerrill Lynch&Co.lnc.Merrill Lynch is an Equal EmploymentOpportunity Employer.18—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, January 22, 1985New Republic editor givesOlin Center LectureBy Terry TrojanekThe nature of the politically and so¬cially influential Jew in America hasdiverged from a traditional emphasison the temporally educated to the se¬cularly inclined and educated. Thiswas the theme of a lecture on religionand politics given by Martin Peretz,editor of The New Republic. The lec¬ture was the first in this quarter’sseries of lectures on religion and poli¬tics presented by the John M. OlinCenter. Last quarter’s series had aChristian focus, this quarter’s will befrom a Jewish perspective.Traditionally influential Jews werethose educated in Judaica. Formerly,enormous value was placed on learnedmen in the Jewish community. Creden¬tials of learning were important, andthere was an “obsession” with learn¬ing as an index of worth. Peretz feelsthat this is not America today, and thatwhile examples of this emphasis can be“touching”, they do not speak to thisworld.The American Jewish communityfaces another break with tradition.Paradoxically the Jewish community has always strongly emphasized com¬munal attachements and obligationswhile at the same time undercuttingthat unity with an emphasis on plura¬lism and state social measures that re¬place communal obligations. Accord¬ing to Peretz, Jews have tried to hedgeby enhancing the state yet seeking toperserve their community and institu¬tions. Peretz did not go into exactlyhow these policies were contradic¬tory.The pluralism adopted by AmericanJews was meant to serve as a buffer oftoleration. This pluralism was en¬hanced by the immigrant nature of so¬ciety and butressed by statute. Yetpluralism was a vital part of the tradi¬tional Jewish national makeup as thescattered nature of the Jews entailed.In spite of this, the Jews maintained apattern of solidarity that gave meaningto the idea of nation.Peretz cited the rescue of EthiopianJews as an example of the moral im¬peratives of community felt by theJews. What was considered importantwas that there were Jews in dangerand the rescue missions were merelyan axiomatic response. a ■ ■ COURTESY OF UNIVERSITY NEWSAward winnerHarrie A. Vanderstappen, a professor in the University’s art depart¬ment, has won the College Art Association’s Distinguished TeachingAward for the history of art. Past winners include H.W. Janson, of theInstitute of Fine Arts at New York University, and Robert L. Herbert of YaleProject 1984continued from page twoyears. There is no discussion of per¬haps rethinking the sequence or atleast adding options to fulfill the re¬quirement. Instead the Task Force ismore concerned with the 35 percent of1983’s graduates that escaped withouttaking a Western or Non-western Civsequence.To find out what action will be takenon these and the other Task Force Re¬ports watch the coming issues of theMaroon. S3A minute ago,your babystopped breathing.Would you know what to do’How to get him breathing again1*Red Cross will teach you what you need to knowabout life saving. Call us.We ll help. Will you?American Red Cross tJfpReading from his poetryDavid Ferry"In the hesitations of [his] verse, its tentative proceedings and qualifyings,and in the quietlv superb selection of individual words . . . can be foundsome reasons why Ferry's voice is so gripping, investing its always'ordinary' materials with more than ordinary feeling."— William H. Pritchard, The Hudson ReviewThursday, January 24th, 4:00 PMHarper 103A reception will follow at the University of Chicago Press,Administration Building, fourth floor.Mr. Ferry will sign copies of his recent collection, Strangers, publishedby the University of Chicago Press ($5.95 paper, $12.95 cloth).Sponsored by the Press and the Department of English. Grossman receives humanities grantBy Terry TrojanekJames Grossman, Assistant Profes¬sor in the Dept, of History, has re¬ceived a National Endowment for theHumanities Grant to finish work on abook on the migration of black south¬erners to Chicago during World War I.The grant will pay his salary and freehim from teaching next year to workon the book. When finished, the bookwill be published by the University ofChicago Press.The book’s focus will be on blacksoutherner’s experience and percep¬tion of migration and adaption to urbanlife. Examined will be how well blacksadapted from the natural rhythms of life in the rural south to mechanizedurban life. Key to the book will be theblack perspective: how they perceivedthis experience. An example of this ishow they interpreted northern discrim¬ination, whether they were being dis¬criminated as a class or a race.James Grossman received his B.S inIndustrial Labor Relations from Cor¬nell. He got his masters and Ph.D fromBerkely in American History. He didpost-doctoral work at the University ofCincinnati and then taught for a year atthe University of California, SanDiego. He has been at the University ofChicago since September.The Chicago MaroonAdvertising Departmenthas a part-time positionavailable for a reliable,conscientious, creativeindividual.Applicants must be able towork Monday and/orThursday evenings, andpreferably should havetheir own car.Applicants need onlyapply in person,Monday-Thursday, from 2-5.No Phone Calls Please!!The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, January 22, 1985—19Hobbled wrestlers triumphantly head to HCFHBy Paul SongDuring this past weekend, MaroonHead Wrestling Coach Leo Kocher tookhis injury riddled team to Elmhurst, Il¬linois to compete in the Elmhurst Tour¬nament. This tournament was an ex¬tremely competitive one in which thecaliber of entrants was very high. Yetdespite the fact that four starters werenot available due to injury, theMaroons managed to do the best theycould with what they had. They rose tothe occasion and the final result was afourth place finish out of 18 teams.This is quite an accomplishment con¬sidering the fact that missing from theMaroons’ starting lineup are All-Amer¬ican Gene Shin, Mike Perz, QuentinPaquette, and Dan Lerner, all of whomare out indefinitely.Coach Kocher noted that the injurieshave indeed slowed down the team’sprogress, but he felt that this shouldnot overshadow the outstanding perfor¬mances that were turned in at Elm¬hurst. He went on further to say that hewas very pleased with all who wrestledand felt that his team did an excellentjob considering that they had onlyseven wrestlers to fill ten spots.As it turned out. the Maroons man¬aged to send three wrestlers to thefinals. This was the most by any teamexcept for ninth ranked Olivet of Michi¬gan who, incidentally, won the entiretournament. The three Maroons whomade it to the finals were All-Ameri¬can Karl Lietzan, George Dupper, andJoe Bochenski.Lietzan. wrestling at 167 lbs., provedagain to be simply awesome as he con¬tinued to live up to his All-Americanhonors. He dominated even match,and his closest match was one in whichhe won by a score of 14-5. In the finals,he proceeded to crush his opponent andwin on a technical fall. A technical fallis a match called due to one opponentslaughtering the other by more than 15points. Lietzan was winning 17-2 whenthis took place. Lietzan is still unde¬feated in the 167 lbs. class and hasamassed a total record of 18-2, with the two losses coming in the higher 177 lbs.class.Dupper, wrestling at 134, continuedhis success and has proven to be one ofKocher’s most consistent wrestlersthis season. He collected falls all theway to the finals but dropped a tough2-1 decision there, and had to settle forsecond.Bochenski, wrestling at 126, provedto be the darkhorse of the entire meet.He was unranked yet managed to beatboth the second and third seeds on hisThe thoroughbred racing season isfar away, as witnessed by the nega¬tive 85 degree temperature recordedon 19 January. But another triplecrown is up for grabs. Dave Stogel hasthe opportunity to become indepen¬dent league champion in tennis, rac-quetball. and ping pong. Stogel has al¬ready captured the first leg of thetriple crown, namely tennis, andneeds to win only two more games inboth racquetball and ping pong tocomplete the tri-partite diadem. Sto¬gel (and his partner Geoff “I knowJeff Sherry” Sherry) won their firstping pong game convincingly 21-5,21-11.* * *The IM swimming meet createdmuch campus excitement this pastweek. Woodward Court created thebiggest stir, as houses from Wood¬ward captured both the Undergradu¬ate Men’s and Women’s titles. UpperRickert scored 43 point in easily out¬distancing their nearest competition.Finishing behind the Rickerteerswere Chamberlin, Hitchcock andLower Rickert, each with 18 points.Upper Wallace also won quite hand¬ily, scoring 62 points to Lower Wal¬lace’s 40 points. Henderson House’sScheele was the top individual per¬former, winning the 40 yd. freestyleand the 40 yd. breastroke. Hitchcock’sCiaron O'Broin won the 100 yd. frees¬tyle and the 40 yd. backstroke. Upper way to the finals. There, he too, had tosettle for a second. Coach Kocher saidof Bochenski’s performance, “Joe dida tremendous job for us. Anytime youhave an unranked wrestler make it tothe finals, he should be commended.”In addition to these three wrestlers,Coach Kocher also singled out LandallCormier as wrestling well. Cormier, afreshman, placed sixth in the 118weight class.The Maroons next two matches willbe at the HCFH, tonight against Con-Rickert won the 80 yd. sweatshirtrelay and the 160 yd. freestyle relayon its road to the title.The Miami Dolphin’s defense isknown as the Killer B’s, but afterwatching Upper Wallace score 13 ofits points in the 40 yd. breastroke, noone will claim bees can’t fly whenwet. Benson, Bohn and Burd finished1, 2, 3 in the event allowing UpperWallace to take a commanding lead.Upper also won two of the three relayevents.BasketballUndergrad Residence Men’sTues.-Sat.Vincent 2-0- Tufts 2-0Bishop 1-1Michelson 1-1Dewey 0-2Dodd/Mead B 0-2Thurs.-Fri.Henderson 2-0Fallers 1-0Blackstone B 1-1Bradbury 1-1Thompson 1-1Psi-U (bagsquad) 0-3 cordia College and Thursday againstOlivet Nazerene. Concordia Collegeplaced fifth, right behind the Maroons,in the Elmhurst tournament and CoachKocher said “this will be a very toughmeet for us in that Concordia will prob¬ably have almost their entire startinglineup healthy while our injury statusis still uncertain.” In any case, themeet should prove to be exciting and agood chance to see Chicago’s national¬ly ranked team in action.In basketball, Fiji B (the GoonSquad) led by the Kapotas brothers,romped over Lower Flint. Fiji brokethe game wide open when two benchtechnicals were assessed on LowerFlint by Jim “One More Word” Bone-brake. Fiji B’s Doug McNelis was alsoslapped a technical by yours truly inthe game. Some had pleaded (namelya girl in orange University of Illinoissweats) for the referees to give theadvantage in calls to Flint. Apparent¬ly this suggesstion was not gamblingmotivated—Matt SchaeferStandingsMon.-Wed.Blackstone A 2-0Shorey 2-01215 2-0Henderson B 0-2Upper Rickert B 0-2Fishbein 0-2Fri.-Sat.Lower Rickert A 1-0Hitchcock A 1-0Upper Rickert A 1-0Compton 1-1Hale 0-1Hitchcock B 0-2continued on page 21Off the IM wire Woodward makes the biggest splashThe Student Activities OfficeSKATE ON THEMIDWAY! History, Philosophy andSocial Studies ofScience and MedicineHIPSSAm s T r. l on am iA pud Gekh&andum Schacen. m.dclxvThe Program in History, Philisophy and Social Studies of Science andMedicine (HIPSS) invite* interested student* to an informal lecture byProfessor Jean Comaroff (Anthropology) on “Knowledge and Context:Some Anthropological Consideration*."The meeting will be held on Wednesday, January 23rd at 4:00 p.m. inSocial Science* Building 224. Refre*hment* of a wonderful kind will be*erved after Profe**or Comaroff* talk.20 The Chicago Maroon Tuesday, January 22, 1985Men’s basketball team whips Illinois College and KnoxLibert hurt in Saturday’s blowoutBy Frank LubyUniversity of Chicago assistantmen’s basketball coach Jim Harge-sheimer said that one key to winningthe conference title “is beating the me¬diocre teams,” and the Maroons didjust that in their weekend double-header at Henry Crown Field House.Snapping a five-game losing streak,the Maroons received strong outsideshooting to complement 23 points byKeith Libert on route to a 79-64 victoryover Knox College Friday evening, be¬fore rebounding Saturday afternoon tocrush Illinois College, 76-48.Coupled with weekend losses by Be¬loit and Ripon, the Maroons’ victoriespush Chicago into third in the northerndivision and renew hopes of title con¬tention. The title chase suffered a set¬back Saturday, though, when Chicagolost Libert — a three-time All-Confer¬ence center — with an injuredshoulder. Libert collided with the Blue-boys’ Brad Losch after scoring a fastbreak basket in the first half and didnot return to action. Trainer Bob Car¬penter said “it’s not clear whether he’llbe ready for Friday” when theMaroons travel to Iowa for a Friday-Saturday doubleheader against Grin¬ned and Coe.Chicago controlled the entire 40 min¬utes against both the Siwash and theBlueboys, and easily handled the fasterstyle of basketball played by the ma¬jority of southern division squads. Todo that the Maroons departed fromtheir usual offensive style — workingthe ball in low to Libert, Dave Witt, andTom Redburg — and unveiled somelong range artillery. Sophomore guardMike Clifford hit a pair of bombs toboost Chicago to a 9-0 start in the open¬ing four minutes, and Rob Omiecinskicame off the bench and went 5-for-5from the 17-foot range in the closingseven minutes to give the Maroons a39-30 halftime advantage.The Maroons then broke the gamewide-open in the second half with a re¬turn to an inside offense. A 12-2 spurtduring which Libert had six points and two assists gave Chicago a 51-32 leadwith 15:53 left in the game. The Siwashcut the lead to 10 points, 55-45, beforeOmiecinski reprised his long rangeshooting show and hit three morejumpers to put the Maroons ahead63-45 with just over eight minutes re¬maining.Keith Schilling and Dave Gardnerled the Siwash with 18 and 17 points,while Omiecinski had 16 and Witt had10. Clifford finished with eight.The Maroons traditionally have tro¬uble when they must follow a Fridaynight game with another on Saturdayafternoon. But Illinois College, whichhad played the frenetic Lake ForestForesters in a 100-85 game the night be¬fore, offered little resistance Saturday,as the Maroons racked up a season-high 23 team assists and destroyed theBlueboys to raise the overall season re¬cord to 6-7. Libert’s injury came with 13:08 re¬maining in the first half when he took afeed from Clifford and scored on a 2-on-1 fast break. Losch cut in front ofhim and both fell to the floor, but Libertlanded on his shoulder and could notcontinue to play.Dave Witt came off the bench to com¬plete Libert’s three-point play, thenlater scored another hoop to give Chi¬cago a 21-6 lead with 12 minutes re¬maining in the first half.The Blueboys’ only impressive run ofthe day came during the next four min¬utes, when they trimmed the lead to21-16 on a basket by Clarence Briggityand six free throws. The Maroons, how¬ever, countered with a fast-paced 19-1scoring spree over the ensuing six min¬utes to take a commanding 40-17 leadwith 2:11 still left in the opening half.Witt, playing his strongest game ofthe year despite an illness, had six points in the stretch, as did Nick Merig-gioli, while Redburg led the team withseven of his game-high 13. Witt finishedthe afternoon with 13 points also, to gowith seven rebounds and three blockedshots in place of Libert.Chicago’s domination showed in therebounding statistics as well, for theylimited the Blueboys to three total re¬bounds in the opening 20 minutes. TheMaroons led at the half, 44-22.Maroon head coach John Angelusplayed his bench for most of the secondhalf, and freshman Mike Wadmanscored six points while seeing his larg¬est chunk of playing time this season.Clifford had 12 points and four assistsfor the Maroons, while Meriggioli fin¬ished the game with nine.Chicago returns to action on the roadthis weekend against Grinnell and Coe.then returns home for a Tuesday gameagainst Trinity Christian.Looking tired, women's b-ball splits weekend pairBy Geoffrey SherryThe University of Chicago’s women’sbasketball team split a pair of homeconference games this past weekendwith a 76-46 manhandling of Illinois Col¬lege on Friday, a 68-65 heartbreakingloss to Lake Forest on Saturday after¬noon. Head coach Kevin McCarthy wasnot pleased with the weekend’s results.“We should have won both games. Wewere the better team in both cases, butwe played like it in just one. I guess it’sjust those day-after-a-night-gameblues.”The Maroons epitomized perfectionin Friday night’s win, as they dominat¬ed every component of the game. Illi¬nois College, 3-1 in the conference, fellbehind early at 41-22 by half-time. Chi¬cago’s press proved too tough for IC, asChicago forced them into making sev¬eral turnovers and costly mistakes.Coach McCarthy was in fact pleasedwith these results. “We just played agood game. It was a total team effort,”commented McCarthy.HILLEL SHABBAT GUESTFriday, January 25, 8:30 P.M.Professor Gordon Tucker,Rabbi and Prof of Philosophy; Dean of TheRabbinical School Jewish TheologicalSeminary of America, New York City willspeak at Hillel onMONOTHEISM AND PLURALISM:OVERCOMING THE CONTRADICTION.Prof Tucker’s visit is made possible by Ometz: The Center for Conservative Judaismon Campus. Ometz is a project of the Jewish Theological Seminary, The Federationof Jewish Men’s Clubs, Unitec Synagogue of America, and the University ofJudaism.THE UNIVERSITY OFCHICAGO HOUSE SYSTEMCALL FOR RESIDENCE STAFFAPPLICATIONSApplications for the position of Resident Head on the staff of the University HouseSystem for the 1985-86 academic year are now being invited from faculty, ad¬ministrative staff, and advanced graduate students working toward the Ph D. or aprofessional degree. Applications for the position of Assistant Resident Head areinvited from full-time graduate and undergraduate students.Candidates for Resident Head should be at least 25 years of age. Applicationsare welcomed from both married couples and single people. Assistant ResidentHead positions are open to students who are single and at least 20 years of age.Members of the Housing Staff live in the University Houses. They provide infor¬mal guidance to residents and work with students to promote a variety of cultural,social, and athletic programs to enhance the role of the Houses as communitiessupportive of the educational process.Persons interested in applying for staff positions may obtain additional informa¬tion from the Director of Student Housing, Administration 232. The selection pro¬cess will include a series of personal interviews in the Winter and SpringQuarters. Applications must be submitted before the deadline of March 1. Earlyapplications are encouraged. Gates threw home 15 points. “We weregetting the ball inside in the first halfand running our offense well, but thatall broke down after we came out of thelocker room.” added McCarthy.Broke down is not quite the rightphrasing. Disappeared is closer to thetruth. Lake Forest effectively cloggedup the middle and held Gates to a meretwo points in the entire second half.“We seemed to have lost our edgethat we had in the first couple of weeksof the quarter. We played like we wererun down.” concluded McCarthy.Chicago hopes to recover this comingweekend with two more conferencehome games versus Beloit College andLawrence University.Varsity SchedulesWrestlingWendy PietrzakThree Maroons reached double fig¬ures. Gretchen Gates led the way with24 points, while Wendy Pietrzak added18 and Madelyn Detloff, continuing herstring of outstanding games, chipped in12. Gates skyed for 10 rebounds, whileKaren Walsh controlled the tempo withher 8 assists.Freshman Kathy Fitzpatrick playeda major role in the 30 point victory bykeeping nationally recognized CarolJohnson of IC off the boards. McCarthyobserved, “Although her stats don'tshow it, she played an integral role. Wetold her before the game to do every¬thing she could to control Johnson.”Fitzpatrick responded and Johnsonwas held to 6 points and 6 rebounds.The success of Friday’s contest didnot carry over into Saturday’s. LakeForest, a perennial MWAC weakling,scrapped their way to a three point vic¬tory over Chicago. Commenting on histeam’s lackadaisical performance,McCarthy said. “I take nothing awayfrom Lake Forest. They came out inthe second half and wanted it morethan we did. But we are the betterteam.”Lake Forest iced the game by mak¬ing both ends of a 1-and-l with 11 sec¬onds left in the game. At one point inthe first half Lake Forest held a 13-4lead over Chicago, but the Maroonscame back to lead 36-28 at the half. TheMaroons dominated the first half as Jan. 22 Tues—ConcordiaCollegeJan. 24 Thurs.—OlivetNazareneMen’s BasketballJan. 25 Fri.—GrinnellJan. 26 Sat.—Coe CollegeMen’s SwimmingJan. 24 Thurs.—IIT andLoyolaJan. 25 Fri.—Lake ForestWomen’s SwimmingJan. 25 Fri.—Lake ForestFencingJan. 26 Sat.—Tri-StateUniv., Univ.of Wise.Men’s Indoor TrackJan. 23 Wed.— Frosh-Sophsand Junior CollegeRelaysJan. 27 Sun.—Bally IndoorGames at Rose-mont Horizon Home7 pmHome7 pmAway7:30 pmAway3 pmA wavA wavA wavAwavHome6 pmcontinued from page 20Tues.-Thurs.Dodd/Mead A 2-0Filbey 2-0Fiji A 1-1Fiji B 1-1Dudley 0-2Lower Flint 0-2Mon.-Sat.Breckenridge 2-0Coulter/Salisbury 1-1Linn 1-1Lower Rickert B 1-1Chamberlin A 1-1Chamberlin B 0-2Sat.-Sun.Catholics and a Jew 2-0Psi-U A 2-0Commuters 1-1Sublimation 1-1 Alpha Del 0-2Mrs. Fogels 0-2UndergradTop 4 Residence Women’s(Teams with at least two wins orundefeated)Dodd/Salisburv 2-0Tufts 1-0 *Hale 1-0Upper Wallace 2-1Sw im Meet team championsUR (M)—Upper RickertUR (W )—Upper WallaceGrad (M)—ER CowboysGrad (W) —Med FirstUR (Coed)—tie. Dewey and Breck¬enridgeGrad (Coed>—Medical MayhemUi (Coed1 Adam GreenUI (W)—Out of SeasonThe Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, January 22. 1985—21EVE OVEDCome see us at our new location in Harper CourtCome see the new KAYPRO 16 (IBM-compatible)Come see why CP/M and KAYPRO are still the best choicefor those of us who write, research or run a business.POMERLEAU COMPUTINGSYSTEMS of Hyde Pork5211 S. Harper 667-2075Studios, 1, 2, & 3 BedroomApartments AvailableSome Nice Lake ViewsGood LocationHeat IncludedParking AvailableCALLHERBERT REALTY684-23335 % Student Discounts9:00 A.M. -4:30 PM.Monday thru Friday9:00 A.M.-2 P.M.Saturday YOUR ON-CAMPUSPHOTOHEADQUARTERSSales-Repair-Supplies• Rentals by day - week - month:Cameras, projectors, screens, recorders(w/valid U. of C. I.D. only)• Prompt quality photo processing byKodak and other discount processorsAuthorized dealer sales for: Canon • Kodak • Nikon • Olympus• Pentax • Polaroid • Panasonic • Sony • Vivitar and others.- Batteries - Film- Darkroom accessories - Video tapes- Cassette tapes - Chemicals- RadiosThe University of Chicago BookstorePhotographic & Office Machine Department970 E. 58th St. 2nd Floor962-7558I.B.X. 5-4364Give Blood.Give life.■WII HdpWillVbu?YOU'VE GOT TO PLAYHEflDS-UP BALLWHEN IT COMES TO YOUR CAREERTHAT'S WHYNSA OFFERSYOU THESEEXCITINGCAREEROPPORTUNITIES Firstlatt/u' UnitarianChurchGARDEN ROOM5650 South Woodlawn324-4100Jan. 25 Red Cooper'sSharps & FlatsfeaturingLucius Bell &Sonny CovingtonFeb. 1 Frank Hooks QuintetFeb. 8 Wilber CampbellQuintetFriday Nights 8:30 P.M.JAZZ AT THE FIRSTDonation RefreshmentsTAlSkvWlCHINESE-AMERICAN RESTAURANTSpecializing in Cantoneseand American dishesOpen Daily 11 A -8:30 P.MClosed Monday1318 E. 63rd MU 4-1062ELECTRONICENGINEERINGThere are opportunities ina variety of research anddevelopment projectsranging from individualequipments to verycomplex interactivesystems involving largenumbers ofmicroprocessors, mini¬computers and computergraphics. Professionalgrowth is enhancedthrough interaction withhighly experienced NSAprofessionals and throughcontacts in the industrialand academic worlds.Facilities for engineeringanalysis and designautomation are among thebest available.MATHEMATICSYou'll work on diverseagency problems applyinga variety of mathematicaldisciplines. Specificassignments might includesolving communications-related problems,performing long-rangemathematical research orevaluating new techniquesfor communicationssecurity. COMPUTERSCIENCEAt NSA you'll discover oneof the largest computerinstallations in the worldwith almost every majorvendor of computerequipment represented.NSA careers providemixtures of such disciplinesas systems analysis anddesign, scientificapplications programming,data base managementsystems, operatingsystems, computernetworking/security, andgraphics. LINGUISTSNSA offers a wide rangeof challenging assignmentsfor Slavic, Near Easternand Asian language majorsinvolving translation,transcription and analysis/reporting. Newly-hiredlinguists can count onreceiving advanced trainingin their primary language(s)and can plan on manyyears of continuedprofessional growth.Fort George G. Meade, Maryland 20755An Equal Opportunity Employer, U.S. Citizenship Required.On-Campus Recruiting dates:February 5, 1985 THE REWARDSAT NSANSA offers a salary andbenefit program that'struly competitive withprivate industry. There areassignments for those whowish to travel andabundant good living in theBaltimore-Washington areafor those who wish to stayclose to home.Countless cultural,historical, recreational andeducational opportunitiesare just minutes awayfrom NSA's convenientsuburban location.To find out moreabout NSA careeropportunities,schedule an interviewthrough your collegeplacement office. Foradditional informationon the NationalSecurity Agency,write to NationalSecurity Agency,Attn: M322, FortGeorge G. Meade,Maryland 20755. 6 I PREPARE FOR:TEST PflERMMTION SPECIALISTS SWCE 1036Call Days. Eves & WeekendsDIAL-A-TEST-HOTUNE(312)608-0106ARLINGTON HEIGHTS 437-6660OIK AGO CENTER 764 SIMHIGHLAND PARK 433-7410LA GRANGE CENTER 3JS2-SH40PtfMMM CMMn M TkM lit u INt MrimRUis iim iim cemanOUTSIM N Y STATE CAU !0U Mil SOS HI 1712in H*. Sun. » M*jf![«v<jiwwCemt»llC22—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, January 22, 1985CLASSIFIEDSSPACEStudios, one, two & 3 bedrms some lake viewsnear 1C, CTA, U of C shuttle. Laundryfacilities, parking available, heat & water in¬cluded. 5% discounts available for students.Herbert Realty 684-23339-4:30 Mon. - Fri.Graduate or professional student wanted torent room in coach house on 57th andWoodlawn reasonable rent. Call 947-8420 even¬ings.ROOM AVAILABLE in 4-bdrm house fireplacegrand piano backyard front porch 69th &Euclid 5 blocks east stoney Isl. 200/mo + Util667-3372.IN DIANA OGDEN DUNESDelightful community on Lake Michigan 1 hr.by So. Shore train at gate to loop 5 min from ex¬pressway & toll road. 3 brm brick & cedar fam.rm. deck att. gar. $92,500 5% down 735 mo.Phipps Inc. 219-947-2502 Sally 219-762-4100.Bedroom/private bath in spacious 2 bdrm.apartment. Reasonable rent, on campusbusline. 538-4815.CLASSIC BLDG. ON DRIVE in SS by lake, 1bdrm apt, top security, cptd, mini blinds clean& prvt, heated, Idry, stove, refrig, best forsingle, by bus & 1C, newly decorated, quiet,responsible only, $335., 221-6606, AM best.Single room open in Psi U. It's cheap, warmcomfortable, and very close to campus. Cost is$136 per month for room & $136 per month forten meals a week. 5639 S. University. Call Karlat 947 8680, 288-9870, or 947-9729.PEOPLE WANTEDPeople needed to participate in studies onmemory, perception, and language process¬ing. Learn something about how you carry outthese processes and earn some money at thesame time! Call the Committee on Cognitionand Communication, afternoons at 962-8859.GOVERNMENT JOBS. $16,599-$50,553/year.Now Hiring. Your Area. Call 1-805-687-6000 Ext.R 4534Secretarial Position Available. 19 hrs/wkafternoons. Contact G.L. Greene, Ben MayLaboratory for Cancer Research, 962-6964.People needed to write copy for the 84-85 Year¬book. Please contack Abby Persky at 955-1690.for more information. Leave message.Part time Lead teacher/admin. Asst. HydePark Preschool 3.00-6:00PM for informationcall: Jill Droge667-7269.Experienced babysitter wanted for our livelytwo year old daughter in our on-campus apart¬ment. Hours Tues 9-1:30 and Fri. 12-5 preferredbut times flexible. Rate $4.00 hourly. Pleasecall 962 7375 daytime.SERVICESJUDITH TYPES-and has a memory. Phone955 4417.Moving and Hauling. Discount prices to staffand students from $12/hour with van, orhelpers for trucks free cartons delivered N/CPacking and Loading Services. Many otherservices. References Bill 493-9122.PASSPORT PHOTOS WHILE-U-WAIT ModelCamera 1342 E. 55th St. 493-6700Weddings and other celebrations photograph¬ed. Call Leslie at 536-1626.CARPENTRY—20% discount on all work doneJan-March. Custom bookcases, interiorcarpentry of all kinds, free estimates. CallDavid, 684 2286.TYPIST Exp. Turabian PhD Masters ThesesTerm papers Rough Drafts. 924-1152.Childcare Exp. Mother w/Background in Edand Child Devel. Campus Loc. Ref. avail. 493-4086.Typist Exp. IBM Correcting Selectric493-4086.Tutor for schoolchildren grades 4-12. Advancedcourses for interested 8, bright students, orhelp for those having difficulty. I'm experienc¬ed in teaching both adults and children. $6 perhour. Call Jim 643-8325.James Bone, editor-wordprocessor-typist,$15/hr. Call 363-0522 for more details.MOVING SERVICE. LOWEST RATES FURNITURE, BOXES, BAGGAGE. Call LARRY743 1353.FOR SALEU of C antique china plates mint $45 ea.Goodman-753 8342-rm-516.Nova runs great $495 288 5295/962-1987 (RAM)IBM Selectric 1, recently cleaned & serviced;works great. $280. SCM 2200 4- carrying case:$75. Call 947 8895.SCENESClothesline school of Fiction writing for begin¬ners Wed 7 pm Call 667-0673."Missions in Thailand," Todd Abrogast. Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, Friday, 7:30, IdaNoyes, Jan. 25 LOST AND FOUNDFOUND Grey Cat 12 Jan UC Bookstore area.Call 363-4399 and Describe.*Reward of $30 for 8 keys on ring $15 for beigedown coat lost at Psi U party Jan 12. Call 643-7244 leave message please.AUTO FOR SALEOlds-76 Omega, 4 dr, 6 cyl, gar kept, 40 mi,ps/pb, ac, gd cond, 1 owner n tires&brks. $1500,363-4570PIANO FOR SALEBaldwin studio upright (Hamilton) walnut-3yrs old rarely used $2400 363-4570.THE MEDICI DELIVERSDaily from 4 pm call 667-7394.GRADUATING SENIORSIt's time to take your senior pictures. January21-25. Make your appointment now at SAO orcall 962-9554.ORIENTAL CARPETSBeautiful and unique designs (geometric,floral), warm and pure colors, superb wools,all sizes, fair prices. For appointment, call 288-0524 (evenings and weekends).SENIOR PICTURESJanuary 21-25 make your appointment now tohave your picture in the yearbook. At SAO orcall 962-9554.BUDDHIST MEDITATIONPractical instruction offered this quarter inBuddhist Vipassana. Meditation by student ofAsian Religions. For more information CallMichael at 624-1345.MINIWASHER-DRYERSThe AVANTI miniwashing machine, importedfrom Italy, is the only PORTABLE washer-dryer available today. It operates on regularhouse current at a cost of about ten cents perhour. Ideal for daily wash items and perfect fordorm rooms and small apartments, it easilyhooks up to any tap and uses the sink for drain¬ing. It can wash and rinse about 5 pounds anddry about 2V2 pounds of clothes at one time. Itweighs 19*/2 pounds and its size is 18"xl8"x22".Limited one-year warranty. Price only$ 170(plus tax). For more information orbrochure, call evenings/weekends: 288-0524.(U. of C. student, State-registered distributor.)FOLK FESTIVAL!Catch blues, bluegrass, barbershop, andean,old-time, cajun and breakdance music andmuch more at the 25th annual U of C FolkFestival Jan 25,26, and 27. Tickets now on saleat Reynold's Club box office. Call 962-9793 formore information.DO YOU HAVE AUSFCU APPOINTMENT?PLEASE REMEMBER TO COME TO THEUSFCU OFFICE TO OPEN YOUR ACCOUNT!VOLLEYBALLThe U. of C. Volleyball Club is looking for ex¬perienced male players for its Winter/Spring1985 Competition "A" Team. Hitters areespecially welcome. For info call PeterSprudzs at 643-7671 or come practice with usFriday evenings at 7:30 in Ida Noyes Gym.BLUESANDBLUEGRASSThe U of C Folk Festival has it all! Concertsand free workshops are coming up theweekend of 25, 26, and 27. Buy tickets now atthe Reynold's Club box office or call theFolklore Society at 962-9793 for more info.WANT TO LEARN TOUSE COMPUTERS?ATTEND THE COMPUTATION CENTERCLASSES FOR WINTER QUARTER. Thecomputation center is once again offering aseries of no-cost non credit seminars and lowcost non credit courses for the University community during winter quarter. These classesbegin on January 21 and continue throughFebruary.Free copies of the Curriculum Guide and thetime schedules which describe the classes andlist their dates and times are available atseveral campus locations, including theCenter's Usite Business Office (Wieboldt 310),from 9:00 to 4:00, Monday-Friday Copies ofthese publications may also be obtained fromthe Social Science Advisor in Pick 123, the Program Advisor at Usite and the Cluster Atten¬dant at Usite. The Seminars offer infroductions and over¬views to topics of general computing interest:e.g., computer concepts and facilities, com¬puterized text processing, microcomputing(for which fhere is a $20.00 charge), magnetictape usage, and electronic mail (for whichthere is a $5.00 charge). Our seminars alsodiscuss how to use specific software on theDEC-20 computers: introduction to the DEC-20's, MUSE word processing, and EMACS fullscreen editing. We're also teaching a introduc¬tion to the PYRAMID 90x computer. Finally,the seminars discuss specific softwareavailable on the IBM 3081D computer system:e.g., SUPERWYLBUR, IBM text processing(TREATISE, SCRIPT, and XSET), andSAS/GRAPH.In addition to the seminars, we teach a fourpart course on the SAS statistical package onthe IBM 3081D computer (the fee for thiscourse is $20.00) and a six-part course onSPSSX on the IBM 3081D (the fee for thiscourse is 30.00). Both courses include com¬putertime.To register for the SAS and SPSS courses, orthe microcomputing and electronic Mailseminars stop by the Usite Business Office inWieboldt 310. Some of our seminars also re¬quire phone-in registration; see the completeschedule of classes for further information.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.THERAPY GROUPSFOR WOMENTwo established women's therapy groupsEach has an opening, HPK Early evening.Group one is composed of graduate stu¬dent/professional women. Second group, focuson problems of separation, divorce, singleparenting, career problems. Screening inter¬view N/C M. Hallowitz MSW, CSW ACSW 947-0154.UPPER FLINT82-83Upper Flint Reunion. Call Anne 493-9739. Fordetails.WORKSHOPSBring your instruments and play folk music atthe 25th annual UofC Folk Festival! Panels,fi'ms, jam sessions, etc. are free and open forall Jan 26th and 27th at Ida Noyes. For more in¬formation call Folklore Society at 962-9793.INTERESTED INCULTURAL EXCHANGE?Japanese Graduate Divinity Student seeksChristian family to board with for academicyear Non-smoker. Please call 753-0410.INTL STUDENT ORGTalk with the other foreign students over cof¬fee and cookies at 1-House, Fri 1-25 4-6pm.Spouses and Americans welcome.BABYSITTER WANTED2 mornings or afternoons/week and occasionalevenings for baby girl 667-8347.KOREAN COURSESKorean crs Weds 7pm Crossroad Call 684 6060.COLLEGE REPUBLICANSCollege Republicans will be having a socialhour and meeting Thurs. Jan 24th at 7:30 in IdaNoyes 2nd fir. Mem. rm. For CR info callKathy at 684 2603 or Phillip at 241-5139.INDIAN FOOD IN COBBVegetarian & Nofc-vegetarian INDIAN FOODserved, daily in the COBB HALLCOFFEESHOP 11:30 2pm.DISCOUNT TRAVELFly for FREE or 50% offDiscounted COURIER FlightsCHICAGOTONEWARK S15.00O/WCHICAGO TO LOS ANGELES $90.00 O/WNEW YORK TO PARIS $350.00 R/TCall (213) 215-3537 or (213) 215-1953 24 Hours.TENSE NERVOUSANXIOUS?If so, you may qualify to receive treatment foryour anxiety at the University of ChicagoMedical Center. Treatment will be free ofcharge in return for participating in a 3-weekevaluation of medication preference The pur¬pose of this study is to examine the effectsvarious drugs on mood and determine whichdrugs people choose to take. The evaluation in¬volves only commonly prescribed drugs.Following participation in the experiment,subjects will receive 6 weeks of a non-experimental treatment will be made on aclinical basis by an experienced therapist. Formore information or to volunteer CALL 962-3560 weekday mornings between 9 and 12 Subjects must be 21 years of age.GERMANICLITERARY REVIEWContribufe to this new Magazine! Students andnative speakers of German, Norwegian,Swedish. We meet Thursday, Jan 24, 7:30 pm inIda Noyes. M.CSale Dates 1/24 >1/26FROZENCOUNTRY DELIGHTVEGETABLESi6 02. 69<GROCERIESSARA LEEPOUND CAKE10 oz. $1.59IMPERIALSOFT MARGARINE16 oz.WHITE CLOUD 99$1.09TASTER’S CHOICEDECAFFINATED COFFEE4 oz. $2.99HEINZKETCHUP32 oz.CARNATIONHOT COCOA12 env. $1.39$1.29PROGRESSO SOUPBEEF MINESTRONEBEEF VEGETABLE19 oz.SACRAMENTOTOMATO JUICE46 oz. 9979sxippyPEANUT BUTTER18 oz. $1.59KRAFTMACARONI AND CHEESE7.25 oz. 39*MEATU.S.D.A. CHOICERIB ROASTib. $2.59CHEESEJARLSBERGib. $2.99PRODUCELOOSE SPINACHIb. 79GREEN ONIONS4/$1.00FINER FOODSSERVING53rd PRAIRIE SHORESKIMBARk PL A/A 29H VERNONlNhen lot An A But One*-The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday. January 22. 1985—23 1- <%- —The Student Activities Office Presents4From the highly acclaimedTV series “Barney Miller”Appearing with Steve Landesberg issinger, songwriter & blues pianistCorky SiegelSATURDAY, FEBRUARY 2Mandel Hall • 8:00 p.m.$5 UC Students / $8 Non-StudentsTickets on sale at Reynolds Club Box OfficeI...Coming Spring Quarter, April 20 Rich Hall