The Chicago MaroonVolume 94, No. 33 The university of Chicago Tuesday. b ebruary 12, 1985Hanna speaks on historic interpretationBy Karen E. Anderson“We are told that this is the*200th Woodward Court Lec¬ture, and I suppose that wehave to believe it... Noneth¬eless, I am reminded of theclaim made by Sam Goldwinthat he could always pinpointprecisely an approximatething.” With these words,Hanna Holborn Gray, Presi¬dent of the University, beganthe 200th lecture in the ongo¬ing Woodward Court series.President Gray spoke be¬fore a large audience of stu¬dents, faculty, and alumniSunday evening at 8:30 in theWoodward Court CentralUnit. She commended thecurrent resident masters ofWoodward Court, ProfessorIzaak and Pera Wirszup, forthe tremendous amount oftime and patience they haveput into the lecture seriessince they began it twelveyears ago. President Grayasked the audience to reflecton the. $200 diners, 200 recep¬ tions- an extraordinarynumber of occasions,” whichthe Wirszups have arrangedalong with the actual lec¬tures. She added that anIzaak and Pera Wirzsup En¬dowment has been estab¬lished in their honor to sup¬port future programs atWoodward Court.In her lecture, entitled“Lux Veritatis,” PresidentGray spoke on how historyhas been interpreted as ameans to explain the future.Focusing on the Renaissance,her area of special interest,President Gray first com¬mented on how humanisticRenaissance scholars viewedwritten history as a teacher,“History thus written and or¬ganized represented a sourceof lessons and applicationsthat would be of use to and inthe present.” Pursuing theconcept of history as a valu¬able example, PresidentGray continued, “Historymight, for example, be treat¬ed as a kind of instant re-Beverly Sills to visitBeverly Sills, the generaldirector of the New York CityOpera, will arrive on campusWednesday as w interquarter’s second Visiting Fel¬low. Her three-day stay inChicago culminates Fridayafternoon with “An Afternoonwith Beverly Sills.” whichtakes place in the Law SchoolAuditorium.The Visiting Fellows Com¬mittee brings up to fourprominent personalities tocampus each academic yearto meet with students formal¬ly and informally. Sills' ex¬tensive schedule includesvisits to classes in the musicBeverly Sillsdepartment and an afternoonwith the students of Burton-Judsn, but the Friday after¬noon discussion is the onlyevent open to the public.Sills catapulted to interna¬tional super-stardom follow¬ing her 1966 success in Han¬del’s Julius Caeser at the NewYork City Opera, and hassince compiled an impressivediscography to complementher varied roles on stage. Shehas sng with 37 differentopera companies on threecontinents, has starred ineight full-length operas onPBC, and has won a GrammyAward and an Emmy Awardin her career.Sills announced in 1978. thesame year she earned thetitle “Woman of the Year”from the Harvard Hasty Pud¬ding Club, that she would re¬tire fom singing to become co¬director of the new York City Opera with Julius Rudel.When Rudel retired Sills be¬came the sole director. In hercontrol of the New York CityOpera she plans “to stayaway from the Metropolitan'srepertory as much as possi¬ble.” She added that “wewon’t be competing with theMet.” and indicated how ri¬diculous such overlap andcompetition w'ould be — espe¬cially due to escalatingcosts—with an opera com¬pany only the distance of Lin¬coln Center Plaza away.She has also planed on mak¬ing the New York City Operathe “home” of young Ameri¬can singers, who traditionallytravel to Europe to gain expe¬rience early in their careers.Eventually she desires that 95percent of the company’s ar¬tists at any given time willconsist of Americans. Whilethis does not preclude the op¬portunity of bringing in majorforeign talent. Sills insiststhat the repertory will not beplanned around them merelybecause of their stellar statusabroad.Sills’ activities range farbeyond her job as director.She serves as national chair¬man of the March of DimesMothers’ March on Birth De¬fects, and has helped raiseover $70 million since she ac¬cepted the position 12 yearsago. She is also a presidentialappointee to the President’sTask Force on the Arts, andin 1980 she received the Presi¬dential Medal of Freedom.Sills will arrive on campusWednesday afternoon anddine with the William BentonFellow's and staff members ofthe Maroon at the QuadrangleClub. Later that afternoonshe will speak with 50 stu¬dents from the GraduateSchool of Business and theCommittee on Public Policy.On Thursday she will lead aclosed discussion with agroup of students selected fortheir interests in music andthe arts, and she will spendthe afternoon and evening atvarious activities and recep¬tions in Burton-Judson as theguest of Resident MastersHarold and Marlene Rich-man. Hanna Gray spoke to a large crowd at the 200th WoodwardCourt lectureplay...History might be thegame plan, to be analyzed,examined, and run back inslow motion. Monda morningquarterbacks and coachescould point out how to emmu-late the good players, or man¬age successful plays.”Citing the works of the Ren¬aissance writer and states¬man Machiavelli as an exam¬ple of how' history was used toderive universal laws whichwould govern the way peopleacted, President Gray said,“Machiavelli said in all hismajor works that history andexperience constituted thesource of all significantknowledge. He believed thathuman nature is constantthrough-the ages, and thathistory is full of useful teach¬ings.”Having said a few words inpraise of brevity, PresidentGray concluded the half hourspeech by stating, “It is veryeasy to misapply historicalprecedent, but the humancondition includes the pursuitcampusFriday she will have a dis¬cussion with students in thedepartment of music, beforemaking her public speakingengagement in the law schoolauditorium. Televisionscreens will be set up in anauxiliary auditorium shouldthe crowd exceed the 475 ca¬pacity of the law school’smain auditorium.Sills leaves Friday eve¬ning. of history’s rea. truth the .1-lumination of reality that w 11make the past a source of co¬herent understanding for thepresent, even when we be¬lieve simultaneously in theirincompatibility.”At a reception in the Wirs¬zup apartment following thelecture. President Gray said.“I am honored to be involvedin this series of speakers. I'mhappy to be here. I havealways been interested in theway ancient texts are takenup and interpreted. It was aRenaissance phenomena torevive the past. Machiavellidoes this.”Karl Studtmann. a senior inthe College, commented.“Her lecture fits in very wellwith her husband’s 'Profes¬sor Charles M. Gray) class.That’s why I was interested.I'm really interested to see if they will agree on their per¬spective of the Renaissancewhen he talks about it inclass.”Paul Song, a second yearstudent in the College, re¬marked enthusiastically, “Iwas really excited to seePresident Gray. This is thefirst time I’ve seen her.”Commenting on the lectureseries. Professor Wirszupcalled it an overwhelming ef¬fort. he said that from thestart his wife Pera's role inorganizing the events hasbeen more demanding, sincehis lectures around thecountry and his work with theUniversity of Chicago Mathe¬matics Project have taken upmuch of his time. “She hasspent many sleepless nightsplanning,” he commented.continued on page eightshort on facultyPoli SciBy Terry TrojanekThe Political Science De¬partment has come under firefrom students for erraticscheduling and extensive can¬cellation of classes. Becauseof faculty “raids” on the de¬partment during the past sev¬eral years, five out of ninecourses listed for this quarterwere cancelled.The problem has become sosevere that two politicalscience students. GregoryBowling and Mathew Kling.have sent a letter of com¬plaint to the deans in the Col¬lege. According to Bowlingand Kling only two of eightclasses offered at preregis¬tration last year are going tobe available to undergradu¬ates. Out of the eight classesoffered at preregistration,four were cancelled outright.One was closed to undergrad¬uates. and then opened againafter protest. One was acci¬dentally listed as cancelledwhen in fact it was being of¬fered.Other complaints in the let¬ter are concerned with thenumbered spaces in classeslost to cancellation and thefact that no information wasgiven on classes that wereadded.Bernard Silberman, Chair¬man of the Political ScienceDepartment, attributed theproblems to an unfortunateseries of events. Silbermansaid that he “sympathizes”with the students and laidblame on himself for notbeing “meticulous” enough.He attributed the problems ot faculty loss mainly to seriousraids conducted upon the De¬partment by other universi¬ties and institutions. Silber-man says that thedepartment should have 27-30people, but its presentstrength is just over 20. Healso stated that facultymembers in the departmentare often on leave and thatthe department has to contri¬bute heavily to the corecourses.In fact, the Departmentcontributes few or no facultyto the core courses.Herman Sinaiko. dean ofstudents in the college,termed the problems of classrestrictions a “quality of lifeissue.” He found the changesin scheduling “arbitrary”and "disruptive''. Sinaiko felt courses that it offers in prere¬gistration.But these problems are notconfined to this quarter alone.Last Winter Quarter, half ofthe courses offered in Politi¬cal Science at preregistrationwere cancelled. Last Springthere were two additionalcancellations. Since Autumnquarter '83 the PoliticalScience Department has hadonly two fewer cancellationsthan the Behavioral Science,Economics and History De¬partments combined in spiteof the fact that those depart¬ments have more than threetimes as many concentratorsas Political Science. Some¬times as few as only sixcourses were offered in a pro¬gram that has 143 concentra¬tors and is the second biggestthat it was important for the in its division,univesity to provide the continued on page eightINSIDE4 SG warring continues9 Student Schools Committee profiled13 B-ball nips Ripon 89-70 in final gamenusionusiorcosionueic2iThe Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 12, 1985THE VISITING FELLOWS COMMITEEpresents“AN AFTERNOON WITH BEVERLY SILLS"A MARJORIE KOVLER FELLOWLAW SCHOOL AUDITORIUMFRIDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 3:30P.M.If nosic-nosic* musicTHE DEPARTMENT OF MUSICpresents:Thursday, February 14 - Gilbert & Sullivan’sMikado Preview12:15 p.m., Goodspeed Recital HallHighlights from the upcoming Gilbert & Sullivan OperaCompany production; celebrating the 100th anniversary ofthe Mikado and the 25th anniversary of the opera company.Admission is free.Friday, February 15 - New Music Ensemble8:00 p.m., Goodspeed Recital HallBarbara Schubert, director; Christopher Coleman, assistantdirector. Stravinsky: Danses Concertantes; Davies:Antechrist; Perle: Six Etudes for Piano; and works by Fried¬man, Loman, Elliott and Trachtenberg.Admission is free.UPCOMING CONCERTSThursday, February 21 - ContemporaryChamber Players ofThe University of Chicago8:00 p.m., Mandel HallRalph Shapey, music directorALL-BERG program: Early Songs (Elsa Charlston, soprano);Pieces for Clarinet and Piano; String Quartet, op.3;Chamber Concerto (guest soloists are Charles Rosen,piano and Rolf Shulte, violin.)Admission is freeSaturday, February 23 - University Chorus f*)and Motet Choir *8:00 p.m., ST. THOMAS THE APOSTLE **CATHOLIC CHURCH CORNER OF 55THSTREET AND WOODLAWN AVE. >s(please note change of location)Bruce Tammen, conductorBach: “Komm. Jesu, Komm”; selections from theRachmaninov Vigil. kHHAdmission is free.MPnusionusiomifiifE&jJG55D -vy-Hi/M frmnarjmespresents a symposium onPHYSICIANS FOR THE TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY:THE G.P.E.P, REPORT*on TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 19858 P.M. in Social Science 122Participants:• Norman Provost of the University, Tiffany and Margaret BlakeBradburn Distinguished Service Professor Behavioral Science,Professor Graduate School of Business and the College,and Member Committee on Public Policy Studies.• joseph Dean of Students Division of Biological Science andCeithaml Pritzker School of Medicine and Professor Department ofBiochemistry and Molecular Biology.• Clifford W.Gurney — Addie Clark Harding Professor Department of Medicine inthe College.• Mark Siegler — M.D. Associate Professor Department of Medicine.• GodfreyGetz — m.d., ashum Co-ordinator, ModeratorALL INTERESTED PERSONS AREINVITED TO ATTEND.The G.P.E.P. Report is the result of the deliberations of a panel appointed by theAssociation of American Medical Colleges to assess current approaches to the generalprofessional education of the physician and college preparation for medicinePOLLING PLACESFEB 13 (WED)10-2 COBB11-1 REYNOLDS11-1 MEDSCH11-1 STUART11-1 SWIFT11-1 LAWSCHFEB 12(TUES)10-2 COBB11-1 REYNOLDS6 - 8 SHORELAND5-7 B.J.5 - 7 WOODWARD5 - 7 PIERCEStudy AbroadBy Rosemary BlinnThere is still a chance for studentswho want to study abroad this year tospend the spring in Lisieux, France.This Thursday is the application dead¬line for this quarter-long program opento students who have taken twoquarters of first-year French.While this is not a new program, thefrench department is formalizing it.This year, six or seven students will beaccepted to study in Lisieux which islocated in the province of Normandy,about 150 miles away from Paris.A striking aspect of the program isthat it emphasizes spoken French -participants must agree not to speakEnglish after the first week. Studentslearn French by staying with Frenchfamilies and taking classes at theFrench American Study Center(FASC) which organizes the program.Gerald Honigsblum, senior lecturerfor the department of Romance Lan¬guages and Literature, oversees firstand second-year french classes andnow advises students interested in theLisieux program. He expects to orga¬nize students for the University ofParis program for second year stu¬dents as well.Honigsblum said of the springquarter program. “The great thingabout the Lisieux program is that itfeatures a pact of french speakingonly.” He called it “total immersion”since students are exposed to frenchfor at least 15 hours a day and aretherefore most likely to learn it quick¬ly. Honigsblum also said that studentsin this program often come back toplace out of French 103-201-202. Somestudents also place out of 203 or all ofsecond-year french.Students in the Lisieux programstudy grammar, phonetics, history,composition, conversation and com¬prehension. Students are in class sixhours a day and take exams at the endof the nine-week course. Grades arebased on American standards. A cafe in Lisieux, FranceUnlike most of the U of C’s year-longstudy abroad programs which nowgive credit for the time a student stu¬dies, students on the Lisieux programmust take a proficiency exam whenthey return. In other words, credit isnot guaranteed before the student inLisieux leaves.Honigsblum said that eventually hewould like to formalize the program sostudents can count on the credit andcan transfer their financial aid to theLisieux stay. That would mean thatstudents would no longer declare them¬selves out of residency as they donow.The Lisieux program costs $1766 forroom, board, and the academic pro¬grams. There are also optional tennislessons, cooking classes and travel foradditional money. Students will need topay their plane fare, and will needabout $100 spending money includingmoney for lunch on class days.Honigsblum said “The community ofLisieux itself has grown to be very in¬terested in the program.” and resi¬dents often help the students learnfrench by keeping their no-Englishpact. Sometimes residents will evengood-naturedly phone FASC’s directorif they overhear students speaking En¬glish.Information and applications areavailable in Cobb 130 from Gerald Hon-STUDENT GOVERNMENTWINTER ELECTIONSFEBRUARY 12 AND 13SEATS AVAILABLE:INDEPENDENT HOUSINGSOC SCIPHY SCILIB SCISOC SER ADMPUB POLCOMMUTER HUM DIVBUS SCHDIV SCHLAW SCHSHORELANDFRATERNITYSG. SECRETARY News 3Baraka to read poetry FridayBy Michael CarrollFriday, February 15, at 5 p.m. inSwift Lecture Hall, poet, playwrightand political activist, Tmamu AmiriBaraka will give a reading. The read¬ing is sponsored by the Organization ofBlack Students in commemoration ofBlack History Month.Baraka, born Everett LeRoi Jones,has had one of the most highly prolificcareers of any contemporary Ameri¬can writer. After graduating fromHoward University, then serving in theAir Force. Baraka/Jones moved fromhis native Newark to Greenwich Vil¬lage where he became the darling ofthe American Beats in the late 1950’s.He was involved in a series of literaryventures as well as promoting suchavant-garde jazz musicians as OrnetteColeman and Don Cherry. In 1965 he won an Obie award for hisplay Dutchman. Shortly after the closeof the play, he left the Village, his wifeand two daughters and moved to Har¬lem where he conducted the Black ArtsRepertory Theater/School (BART/S).Although BART/S was short-lived, it issaid by some to have been the begin¬ning of the Black Renaissance of thelate 1960’s. After BART/S closed,Baraka moved back to Newark wherehe became embroiled in a fight againstlocal mafia-owned politicians, and hehelped get Newark’s first black mayorelected.From the time Baraka left the Vil¬lage, his writings became almost sole¬ly concerned with establishing a valuesystem for Black Nationalism and hishatred for whites, particularly liberalcontinued on page eightCollege plans fee allocationIn a meeting last Thursday “held todetermine what kind of governing bodywill distribute the College's portion ofthe Student Activities Fee,” between 25and 30 students voted to include sixchoices on today’s SG election ballot.The choices focus on whether or not allmembers of the committee chosen toallocate the $23,000 should be elected orwhether some should be appointed, andwhether this committee should writeits own by-laws.Included on the ballot are also twoadditional “advisory” questions, forthe new selected committee to consideronce it is functioning: Should 30 per¬cent of the money automatically be al¬located to HARC and should this com¬mittee solely allocate funds or should italso program events?The most heated question that cameup at the meeting, and which studentswill decide today, is whether any of thecommittee members should be ap¬pointed. Jim Dunlop, who sits on Stu¬ dent Government, opposed having anyappointments. According to Dunlop,“since it is the student’s money, thestudents should decide who allocatesit.” According to SG President ChrisHill, on the other hand. “Many quali¬fied people do not want to go throughthe hassles of an election.” Although amajority of the body should be elected,they could "miss good people if the en¬tire body were elected.”Members of the Dean’s Student Advi¬sory Committee (DASC) also showedup to air their views. Chaired by BethZimmerly. the DASC proposed that ei¬ther four out of seven, or five out ofnine of the members be elected, andthat the DASC themselves appoint theremaining seats. The advantages, ac¬cording to Zimmerly of having theDASC do the appointing, is that DASCmembers, since they advise Dean Le¬vine on matters of college life, knowcontinued on page eightKU VIASUN GNERKIIIAnnounces An Art ContestFor College StudentsWorks Of Art May Bo In Any Medium Expressing A “Winter” Theme$ $ cash prizes $ $Entries Due No Later ThanFRIDAY, FEBRUARY 15,2:00 P.M.HARPER 264Winners will be announcedSUNDAY, February 17,11:30 a.m.at the PAJAMA BRUNCH. Ida Noyes HallArt Works Will Be ExhibitedHarper College CentermKUVIASUNGNERK lll-KUVIASUNGNERK IlhKUVIASUNGNERK IlhKUVIASUNGNERK IIPKUVIASUNGNERK IIIKUVIASUNGNERK IIIAnnounces A Literary ContestENTRIES MAY BEPOEMS, ESSAYS, OR SHORTSTORIES ON A “WINTER” THEME.Entries will be judged for their creativityCONTEST OPEN TO ALL COLLEGE STUDENTSEntries due not later thanFRIDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 2:00HARPER 264Winners will be announcedSunday, February 17.11 30 a mat the PAJAMA BRUNCH. Ida Noyes HallCASH PRIZES!KUVIASUNGNERK IlhKUVIASUNGNERK HbKUVIASUNGNERK IIHKUVIASUNGNERK lll'KUVIASUNGNERK IIIGeoly is up in armsTo the Editor:Larry Kavanagh's and CiaronObroin’s article on Rick Szesny’s resig¬nation and a subsequent interview withPresident Chris Hill contained anumber of gross mischaracterizationsto which I would like to respond. Firstof all, the president intimated that, inhis learned opinion, Robert's Rules ofOrder (which decide the question sincethe constitution is silent) did not re¬quire the Assembly to accept a resigna¬tion for it to be valid. The presidentshould read the rules a little more care¬fully next time before making so silly acomment to the press:“If a member who has acceptedan office, committee assignment,or other duty finds that he is un¬able to perform it, he should sub¬mit his resignation...to the ap¬pointing power. By doing so he is,in effect, requesting to be excusedfrom a duty. The chair, on read¬ing or announcing the resigna¬tion, can assume a motion to ac¬cept it, or a member can move“that the resignation be accept¬ed.”The duties of a position mustnot be abandoned until a resigna¬tion has been accepted and be¬comes effective, or at least untilthere has been reasonable oppor¬tunity for it to be accepted.”Roberts Rules of Order, Xewlv Re¬vised. (32; See also (34 (referring to ir¬revocability “When a resignation hasbeen acted upon..."). Rick Szesny notonly remains chairman of the FinanceCommittee until his resignation is ac¬cepted. but he is fully capable of revok¬ing it right up until the very last mo¬ment before the vote to accept it istaken.Secondly, President Hill assertedthat the move to impeach him was “acounter-attack” to his attempt to de¬crease the Finance Committee’spowers. This is preposterous. As thesponsor of the amendment calling foran impeachment (a trial, not a findingof guilt), I can state rather simply whatmotivated me: I believe that the presi¬dent did not report the theft of fundsfrom the S.G. office because he was in¬tentionally shielding the suspect fromscrutiny. I believe that his claim thathe could not contact the individual forthree weeks was itself a blatant andcalous lie. I believe that the presidentowed a fiduciary duty to the assembly(See Constitution, By-Laws. Art. XII,(1); a duty he violated by telling thatgroup a willful lie.My call for an impeachment was achallenge to the assembly to live andact by its own rules: “Malfeasance inoffice is defined as a wrong doing by anelected member of Student Govern¬ment.” Constitution, By-Laws. Art.XII. (2,b.) If a willful lie is not a wrongdoing, I don’t know what is. I simplytold the Assembly that I thought I couldprove my allegations and that, so longas the allegations were based on a rea¬sonable interpretation of the facts, theAssembly had a duty to conduct a trialso that the truth could be determined.The President’s desire to reduce thenumber of votes required to overturnFinance Committee decisions was noteven remotely a factor in my decisionto attempt to uncover what I believe The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 12. 1985,and continue to believe was a heinousact.As long as we are talking about mo¬tives, let us examine the motives of apresident who would trivialize a veryserious breach of duty on his part bysaying “I didn’t handle things brilliant¬ly...” Of course he is going to try to ob¬fuscate the affair by dredging up theHill-Szesny feud and implying that it,and not his horrendous conduct, wasthe cause. Consider, for example,statements like “Szesny blew thiswhole thing out of proportion.” In fact,every time any member of the FinanceCommittee has objected to anythingthat the president wanted (eg. Autumn-jerk, the dance that never was) he hasattempted to cloud the merits of the de¬bate by crying about big bad “Darth”and his “piggy-bank.” Grow up. Mr.President, and face the music.Finally, the president thinks he isgoing to change the Finance Commit¬tee appeals process. Now this looks likecounter-attack, or at least retributionfor all the embarrassment that we“rebels” (See Maroon editorial of Jan.25. 1985) have caused. Will the Maroon,that vanguard of truth, bother to solabel it? Probably not; they weren’teven concerned enough with accuracyto report what my charges in the Asse¬mbly actually were, or to confirmstatements concerning Rick Szesnv'sresignation with Rick Szesny himself.A terrible thing has happened. Therehas been a grave wrong doing (badenough in and of itself) and. worse,those lied to seem not to care. I hopethat all those who think that inquiriesinto the president’s truthfulness are“just a crock of ****,” and “dilatory”will be happy to apply the same stan¬dard when it is the Finance Committeethat “forgets” to report the “misplace¬ment” of funds, and continues to forgetfor a period of weeks. When electedrepresentatives are willing to entertaina lie as though it were the truth, thennone of us may expect a fair and prin¬cipled hearing from them.James GeolyThird year studentin the Law SchoolHill wants peaceafter SG warringTo the editor:Last Friday’s highly successful“Winterslunk” video dance was an ex¬cellent demonstration that an organ¬ized and serious Student Governmentcan effectively serve the students ofthis campus. Kudos to David Feige andJanelle Montgomery, Activities Com¬mittee Co-Chairs and the movingforces behind the event.**#I have spent three years in StudentGovernment because I know that theorganization, despite its often bad rep¬utation on campus, can indeed providevaluable services and activities ofwhich Winterslunk is only one examp¬le. Unfortunately, productive activityhas been the exception rather than therule in SG these past few weeks, as wehave all seemed very willing to live up(or rather, down) to our general repu¬tation as a bunch of squabbling juniorpoliticos with few, if any, socially-redeeming qualities. Valuable projectsand initiatives—the things we set out toachieve last Fall with so much energyand optimism—are now being sloweddown if not stalled by petty power struggles, parliamentary hair-split¬ting, and other forms of intramuralwarfare conducted on the floor of theAssembly and the pages of this news¬paper.If this pattern continues, it will comeas no surprise to me if the student bodygives up on SG altogether and puts it inthe hands of some “silly party” thisSpring. Why shouldn’t they put jokersin charge of what seems like one bigjoke?It is high time that we in SG, suppo¬sedly representing the “average U of Cstudent”, realize that the average stu¬dent doesn’t give a hoot in hell aboutSG power plays, Robert’s Rules ofOrder, or cases in the SFA Court.These Lilliputian attempts at intriguedo absolutely nothing to further hiswelfare on campus or improve hisk so¬cial life, and for that reason ought notto be happening at all. Student Govern¬ment can only justify its existence if itworks to serve the students of the Uni¬versity of Chicago—period. If SG is toconcentrate on such service, thisquarter’s escalating cycle of nonsensehas got to stop NOW!I would like to propose the firststep.Rick Szesny now wants to revoke theresignation that he made during thelast Assembly meeting, and I shallurge at the next Assembly meetingthat the Assembly affirm his right to dojust that. I realize that some may havereservations about this course of ac¬tion, but I urge them to accept it be¬cause it is the fastest and only sure wayto put all the bullshit behind us and getSG’s focus back where it should be: onserving the interests of U of C students.Moreover. Rick is better qualified thananyone else in SG to guide the FinanceCommittee in its current difficulties (ithas less than $30,000 left to disburse inthe remaining 1 1/2 quarters due to un¬precedented increases in requests).At the same time, I call on Rick andhis “allies” to adopt a more coopera¬tive and constructive approach thanthey have sometimes demonstrated inthe past. Fault for the previous antago¬nisms rests with all sides, and all sidesmust agree to do better in the future.Finally, I call on all members of SGto put previous differences behind usand redouble our efforts on the variousprojects in the SG committees, such asthe child day care study, Springnerk,substance abuse assistance programs,and a coffee shop for Crerar—thingswhich ought to be completed for thebenefit of the student body and com¬pleted WITHOUT any more Assemblyfloor fights, mean-spirited letters tothe editor, or make-believe litigation.We all have much better things to dowith our time.Chris HillStudent GovernmentPresidentGraffiti’s not prettyTo the editor:Recently, some misguided personhas found it interesting to write crudemessages or limericks, the sort thatare usually reserved for restroommurals, on the rotating boards of theKent 107 lecture hall. Because of thenature of the blackboards, the messagelies hidden until one of the originallower boards is sifted. This done, thebrilliant wit is dramatically unveiled tothe appreciative chuckles of the Chem¬istry 106 class.For several episodes the professorhas taken this in stride: acknowledgingthe disturbance, applying an eraserand continuing. The first time, I’lladmit, I was amused. Now I think it’sridiculous. A joke that’s funny oncedies with repetition. Aside from bad co¬medians, children of 2 or 3 are the onlyones who don’t realize the hazards ofoverkill. The whole situation is remini¬scent of a pre-school prank. If the in¬stigator is frustated with the course orthe professor, he should seriously con¬sider talking to an advisor. If he is justamusing himself, he should seriouslyconsider talking to a psychiatrist abouthis regressive behavior and imma¬turity.Alexandria ConroyStudent in the CollegeThe 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 Phone962-9555.Frank LubyEditor in-chiefMichael ElliottNews EditorDavid LanchnerNews EditorFrank ConnollyAssociate News EditorRobert BarlingViewpoints Editor Dennis ChanskySports EditorJulie WeissmanFeatures EditorAlexandra ConroyAssociate EditorPhil PollardPhotography EditorCraig FarberCopy Editor Wally DabrowskiProduction ManagerBruce KingGrey City Journal EditorStephanie BaconGrey City Journal EditorLisa CypraAdvertising ManagerTina EllerbeeBusiness Manager Jaimie WeihrichOffice ManagerLeslie RigbyChicago Literary Review EditorDavid SullivanChicago Literary Review EditorStaff: Karen E. Anderson, Paul Beattie, Tony Berkley, Scott Bernard, RosemaryBlinn, Mark Blocker, David Burke, Mike Carroll, Anthony Cashman. Arthur U. Ellis,Kathy Evans, Paul Flood, Ben Forest, John Gasiewski, Jessie Goodwin, Cliff Gram-mich, Peter Grivas, Gussie, Keith Horvath. Jim Jozefowicz, Larry Kavanagh, A1Knapp, Marcia Lehmberg, Amy Lesemann, Armin Lilienfeld, Jane Look, Mike Lotus,L D. Lurvey, Carolyn M. Mancuso, Helen Markey, Melissa Mayer, Raj Nanda, KarinNelson, Ciaran Obroin, Ravi Rajmane, James Ralston. Max Rhee, Paul Rohr, MattSchaefer, Geoff Sherry, Frank Singer, Brad Smith, Jeff Smith, Stan Smith, PaulSong, Steve Sorensen, Rick Stabile, Adena Svingos, Jim Thompson, Hilary Till, BobTravis, Terry Trojanek. Letters 4No compromise onSouth African apartheidTo the editor:“It is important to act on the basis ofwhat is just and right,” said ReverendWilliam Alberts as he was being putinto a Boston police car. “There are op¬pressed people in South Africa — it’s aracist regime, and our governmentmust stop supporting it.” With that, hewas driven to police headquarters, tobe charged with trespassing.Reverend Alberts was one of manywrho have been arrested for protestingagainst South African apartheid overthe past three months. Similar sceneshave taken place in over a dozen citiesthroughout the United States, as theSouth African Embassy in Washington,DC, and South African Consulatesacross the country have been the sitefor protests since November of lastyear. And the protesters have vowed tokeep up the demonstrations until theirdemands are met.Representative Walter Fauntroy (D-DC) summarized the goals of the pro¬tests this way: “First, South Africamust release all political prisoners ithss taken during 1984, which numberabout two hundred. Second, the long¬term political prisoners, like NelsonMandela, who have been imprisonedfor over twenty years, must also befreed. Third, the South African govern¬ment must enter good-faith negotia¬tions with the legitimate representa¬tives of the black majority in SouthAfrica, with the aim being the elimina¬tion of apartheid and the introductionof democratic majority rule. Finally,we urge the Reagan administration toabandon its policy of ‘constructive en¬gagement’ towards South Africa,which it has followed for four years.”In addition to the goals outlined byRep. Fauntroy, oganizers hope to initi¬ate legislation banning the sale of theSouth African gold coin, the Kruger¬rand, and to widen the campaign forcorporate divestment from the aparth¬eid state.“The diyestment campaign contin¬ues at the university level, and it hasbeen particularly active at the level ofcities and states,” said Jennifer Davis,an exiled South African economist whois the executive director of the Ameri¬can Committee on Africa, which hasorganized the protests outside theSouth African Consulate in New York.“There are now five states whichhave some form of legislation prevent¬ing the investment of state funds inAmerican corporations that continue toprofit from apartheid. These states areMichigan, Massachusettes, Nebraska,Maryland, and Connecticut,” she said.“In addition, Washington, DC, Phila¬delphia, Newark, and Boston have allbegun the divestment process,” shecontinued.Organizers indicated a general satis¬faction with the growth of the cam¬paign against apartheid. As an indica¬tion of how strong that campaign hasbecome, thirty-five conservative con¬gressmen called for an end to the “con¬structive engagement” policies of theReagan administration in early De¬cember. They sent a clear message toSouth Africa that they do not supportapartheid. Newt Gingrich, a leader ofHouse conservatives, said that “no onein South Africa should see the currentdemonstrations as the workings of theBlack Caucus of the American left.There’s a strong feeling in this countryfor a change” in South Africa’s aparth¬eid system of government.continued on page eight»The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 12, 1985i 5MORRY’SIN ’ " tHUTCH COMMONSGREAT FOOD AT AFFORDABLE LOW PRICESALL DAY LONG99* BREAKFAST SPECIALSEGG MacMORRYEgg Omelet, pastrami,salami and americancheese on a heated QQC the best buybagel FREE COFFEE! 33 on campusBAGEL & CREAMCHEESE FREE COFFEE! 99® GREATOFFER!LOX, BAGEL &CREAM CHEESE FREE COFFEE! $1.50 IT’SINCREDIBLE$2.99 LUNCHCOMPLETE LUNCH SPECIALSTHE HOUSESPECIAL!1/2 lb. jumbosteakburger, Frenchfries, & salad FREE10 OZ.PEPSI $2.99 THE BEST BUYON CAMPUSMORRY’S SPECIALChar-broiled bonelesschicken breast onsesame seed bun,french fries, and salad FREE10 OZ.PEPSI $2.99 A COMPLETEMEAL AT AGREAT PRICETHE BIGGEST REDHOT YOU’VE EVEREATEN!V2 jumbo char-broiledkosher hot dog toppedwith all the trimmingsand served with frenchfries and salad FREE10 OZ.PEPSI $2.99 A COMPLETEMEAL AT AGREAT PRICEA TASTE FROM THEORIENT!Char-broiled chickenTeriaki served withrice, vegetable, andsalad FREE TEA $2.99 A COMPLETEMEAL AT AGREAT PRICE39* HAPPY HOUR SPECIALSHAPPY HOUR SPECIALS $2.99 DINNERCOMPLETE DINNER SPECIALSALL OUR DINNERS ARE SERVED WITH FRENCH FRIES,BBQ BEANS, AND SALAD1/2 Jumbo BBQ ChickenDinner FREE 10 OZ. PEPSI $2.99Morry’s special 1/2 lb. SteakDinner FREE 10 OZ. PEPSI $3.29Jumbo BBQ Rib Tip Dinner FREE 10 OZ. PEPSI $3.29Beef Brochette Dinner FREE 10 OZ. PEPSI $3.19Brook Trout Dinner FREE 10 OZ. PEPSI $3.29Jumbo 1/2 lb SteakburgerDinner FREE 10 OZ. PEPSI $2.99Chicken Teriyaki Dinner .... FREE TEA $2.99Jumbo BBQ Turkey LegDinner FREE 10 OZ. PEPSI $1.99Morry’s Special Chicken &Rib Tip Combination Dinner FREE 10 OZ. PEPSI $2.99Moiry’s Original Thai Buffet FREE TEA $3.89LATE NIGHT SPECIALS(From 8:00pm to 10:00pm Monday Thru Friday)Great for Study Breaks!1/2 lb. Jumbo FREESteakburger, French 10 OZ. $2.47 "incorfefeIleFries, and Salad PEPSIHot Jumbo Pastrami FREESandwich and French 10 OZ. Cl QQ Can ity I ■09 Really be trueFries PEPSI in Morry’s 2nd annual“The BestMuffin, Cookie, orCake at the U of C”ContestRULES: Bring your sample of your bestmuffin, cookie or cake, alongwifh your recipe and cost toMorry’s in Hutch ComonsMonday through Friday, Feb.18th to Feb. 22 between the hour*of 2 p.m. and 4 p.m.Six finalists will be chosen Monday, Feb.25th and contacted by phone. All win¬ners will be chosen based on taste,creativity, and cost. Each finalist willreceive 550 and be asked to bake a se¬cond sample directly in Morry’s kitchenin Hutch Commons. All baking will besupervised by our own kitchen staff. Thewinner will be announced in theMAROON Tuesday, March 5th and willwin an additional $200 in cash in ex¬change for the right to reproduce andsell the award winning recipe in all theMorry’s stores.MORRY’S SPECIAL!Our 39* Hot Dogs/with all the trimmings Still only1/4 lb Char broiled Hamburger/all the trimmings1/4 lb. Cheeseburger/all the trimmings1/4 lb. Mushroom Burger/all the trimmings1/4 lb. Swiss Mushroom Burger/all the trimmingsDouble f/2 lb Burger/all the trimmingsDouble 1/2 lb Cheeseburger/all the trimmingsTriple 3/4 lb. Burger/all the trimmingsTriple 3/4 lb. Cheeseburger/all the trimmings 39*99*$1.17$1.59$1.82$1.82$2.17$2.69$2.69 SPECIAL “LATE NITE”FRIDAY NITE SPECIALGood only Friday Nite from 8 00pm to 10:00pmFREE JUMBO ICE CREAM CONE with every$3.00 purchaseChoice of Morry’s special biend Ice CreamOVER 100 DIFFERENT SANDWICHESTO CHOOSE FROM DAILYMORRY S IS OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK FOR YOUR CONVENIENCEMAKE MORRY S YOUR WEEKEND DORMITORY ALTERNATIVE One entry per person please. All entriesand recipes are final and upon submis¬sion become the property of Morry’sDelis, Inc.OFFICIAL ENTRY BLANKNAMEPHONEADDRESS□ COOKIE □CAKE □MUFFINHutch Commons 1131 E. 57thHours: M-F 7:00 a.m. to 10:00 p.m.Sat. & Sun. 11:00 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. NAME OFPRODUCT6iThe Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 12, 1985iKUVIASUN GNERK IIIannounces the arrival ofGriffin, an ice mascot,on Thursday, February 14th.The Wagner Ice Service, whichbrings us Griffin will also offerinstruction in ice sculpturing. Ifyou would like to participate onThursday, February 14th, stopby Harper 280 in order to signup and receive a number.Enrollment is limited. FOR BRITISH UNDERGRADUATES,THE BEST EDUCATIONIS IN OXFORD & CAMBRIDGEFOR AMERICANS,IT’S IN CANTERBURY & LONDONThe Institute for American Universities now offers 3 study-abroad op¬tions in Great Britain: King’s College of the University of London, TheInstitute’s British Studies Centre in Canterbury, and Royal HollowayCollege (also of the University of London). Each combines a first-rateacademic programme with the opportunity to live and travel inEurope.For details concerning the Institute’s programmes, write to us at 73Castle Street, Canterbury CT1 2QD, England, or see your campusstudy-abroad advisor.1601 and 1603 E. 55th StreetChicago, IL 60637Phoae: 684-6514Chiles Relleno'sTwo Mexican style chile peppers stuffed with chichuachuacheese, then pan fried to perfection, with tomato sauceover peppers. Served with rice and beans. A must $5.99MilanesaSkirt steak seasoned with spices and flour, then lightly panfried to a crispy, golden taste Served with fries and beans$5.99Caldo Deres (available in dining room only)Mexican style beef soup. Delicious $2.99Come in and try our new specials availableFriday through SundayFORMER AUSTRIAN CHANCELLORBRUNO KREISKY“THE CRITICAL STAGE IN EAST-WEST RELATIONS”QUANTRELL AUDITORIUMCOBB HALL4:30 P.M.FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 15,1985A SPECIAL PUBLIC LECTURESPONSORED BY THE COMMITTEE ON WESTERN EUROPEAN STUDIESNewsTraffic’s a problemwhen you’re lostTo the editor of the Maroon:I am a graduate student, who hasbeen attending the University of Chica¬go for the past three >ears. During thelast year, I have been deeply troubledby the traffic crossing at East 58thStreet and University Avenue. This isan extremely busy pedestrian thor¬oughfare. Many vehicles pass by East58th Street and University Avenue,where there is a high frequency ofspeeding. Although there is a stop signat the crossing in front of RegensteinLibrary and a speed limit just before it,warning drivers not to exceed the limitof 20 M.P.H., there is none at East 58thStreet and University Avenue, whereThe Quadrangle, The Reynolds Club,The Blue Gargoyle and Bartlett Gym¬nasium meet.I strongly believe that the Universityof Chicago has an obligation to placetwo stop signs at East 58th Street inboth directions of traffic, before a trag¬edy occurs. We need not imitate theFederal Aviation Agency whose poli¬cies always seem to be formulatedafter a major disaster has transpired.This would entail a minor expenditurefor an extremely worthwhile cause andwould save the University great em¬barrassment and adverse publicity,along with the potential incurment oflegal expenses.Youssef RahmeEd. note: This is a valid point but TheQuadrangle, The Reynolds Club, TheBlue gargoyle and Bartlett meet at57th and University.South African apartheidcontinued from page fourThe Reagan administration has ar¬gued that quiet diplomacy, or “con¬structive engagement, would stand abetter chance of changing South Afri- The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 12, 1985«The Adventures of Regman bv Skip and JoelNjk AO&$\ 15 XT A MIanJ?Alo«iK( CoRTP.i&jteRSMY KlAME IS J. R, andP'BUEVE' IM TM£"COMMOU CaR^UBEPALAKfirkJT LMNEPV, r KuV*SijMGH£RK,*/- &RA&IN/S, HIKES IN 7h£A..TIVIT/£5 FEE' vtftL/MT/e/s// WRdsca’s racial policy than would publiccriticism of apartheid by the U.S. gov¬ernment. However, many have arguedthat “constructive engagement” ismerely a rhetorical cover for whatamounts to closer relations than everbetween Washington and Pretoria.“Reagan’s policy of ‘constructive en¬gagement’ with South Africa has en¬couraged increased brutality” on thepart of the South African government,asserted Representative Howard Ber¬man (D-CA) on December 28. On thatday, Berman, Rep. Julian Dixon (D-CA) and Annapolis Mayor RichardHeilman were arrested in front of theSouth African Embassy in Washington.“Instead of acquiescing in apartheid,we should be doing everything possiblein our power to bring about negotia¬tions between the South African gov¬ernment and genuinely representativeblack South African leaders,” Bermansaid.Although the willingness of publicfigures to be arrested has undoubtedlycontributed to the media coverage theprotests have received, organizers as¬sert that they will continue their de¬monstrations even when they no longerdraw media attention. For the timebeing, though, there seem to be plentyof volunteers willing to be arrested.After a while, it was clear that theTextbook DepartmentUniversity of Chicago Bookstore970 E. 58th St.962-7116Textbook Orders forSpring QuarterFebruary 22nd is thedeadline for Spring 85textbook orders.If you are teaching nextquarter, please send us yourorder today. xs xt a Hale man/ ?14LSo Believe W everythingThe MY Times ANt> Time hasaZ/MT■SA ABOUT THE UC, EVEN ShoFTeRhours For The Bursar, That Themail Room H/S TRANEThFReynolds Club imTo The .socialCenter of the Mo...TT,5JuSTAM)ThA7 HAMU GRAY SECRETLYTHAT Wt HAD A semester SYSTEM, Anc> That THE WHY SUfi £5Till L/VN& iM SPIRITAMD tS SCHCAMMGNtefcKOTF /vfcXMOPE> /J7H3USRT tfJUSAfoTHAT TUEAbHGSIOfiEANt>7MECoxHOHCcmEHIMnews media were only interested inwhich celebrity was to be arrested on aparticular day. The t.v. crews would-show up, read the press release givenout by the sponsoring organization, andeither stay or leave, depending on whowas to be arrested that day. Clealy themedia would just as soon not get in¬volved in the main issue — the racistand dehumanizing system of govern¬ment known as apartheid, the contin¬ued existence of which necessitated thedemonstrations in the first place.Some things in particular stand outabout the protests. First, they havebeen racially mixed. America is so ra¬cially polarized that it was uplifting tosee blacks and whites marching off tojail side by side for what they believe.In Boston. New York, and Washington,several “yuppies” joined the protest,leather satchels in hand. Apparentlythey had not lost their desire for a morejust social order in this world.Finally, as I was leaving the demon¬stration in front of the South AfricanEmbassy one night, I heard the follow¬ing chant: “No guns, no aid. no arms,no trade.” It reflected my outlook per¬fectly: there can be no compromisewith apartheid — it must be isolatedand left to wither and die. like a weeddeprived of soil.John P. EganJohn P Egan is a graduate student inPolitical Science; he visted the anti- ThE b"IHK5SJ&LEII.SB* HMToapartheid protests in Washington. NewYork, and Boston during Decemberand Januarv.Video dance offendswomenTo the editor,Although we enjoyed last Friday’svideo dance, we have one major objec¬tion. There was one particular videowe felt should not have been shown. Wedon’t know the name of this song by agroup called Dominatrix. but everyonewho was there should know which onewe mean. This video, which flashedback and forth between an almost nudewoman and a whip was offensive anddisgusting.It is not the sex or the violence specif¬ically that we mind, but the combina¬tion of the two in this video was degrad¬ing to women or anyone who caresabout women. We hope to see morevideo dances in the future, but with amore responsible choice of videos.Carla P. RabinowitzA. BriceB BreetzJamie BeerbaurSito CollantesOpus Degrog By L. D. LurveyMikey always seems to know whenI’m restless. Maybe it’s the way I standon my head while eating dinner or thatcleverly annoying habit of mine whereI run the needle back and forth across agood Van Halen tune and spell myname out in scratches.“Listen.” Mikey said since I usuallyignore him when he talks, “you’ve gotto get out of the room more.”“And go where...” I mumbled deeplyengrossed in my book ”101 Uses For aDead Roommate”.“Why not stop by Winterschnook? Itsays on the poster they’ll be havingsome food, music and lectures featur¬ing Hanna Gray, The Lord Almighty,and Dean Sinaiko.“Wow, Dean Sinaiko. Let’s go.”Dressed casually in two ski parkasand an outer layer of thermals. Iwalked to Ida Noyes Hall where mostof the festivities were.Mikey was already there and so itseemed was everyone else. There werepeople just everywhere. The band thatMAB hired. “Kimbv Sweatlove and theMeat Innards” was pretty good. I wentinto the gymnasium where they wereplaying and I saw why they were sogood. That wasn’t Kimby playing tasany fool should know since the Innardsconcerts are noted for their strongbacon smells from the large hog that isbarbequed at every performance.)MAB had been fooling us. they'd goneout and hired the Rolling Stones.Those crazy kids.Mick launched into a never beforeheard rendition of “I can’t get no satis¬faction', titled, “I’m so satisfied I couldexplode at any moment”. 10.000 bal¬loons fell from the ceiling as DanRather announced over the PA that thechampagne was chilled An exact rep¬lica of Buckingham fountain was rolledin as a man handed out antique silverdollars to toss in with wishes.“Mikey, Mikey” I screamed as 1caught up with mv roommate, “canvou believe all this?” “No. You know they've got MichaelJackson playing downstairs?”"Where’d they get all the cash forthis?”“I guess student government got that90S back.”“Are you sure this is Winterschnnok.Mikey. Maybe we crashed someone'sparty-like Queen Elizabeth.”“Nah this is it. They still have kangi-ko and all that stuff, except now it’staught by Chuck Norris. Oh. and thatsunrise walk to the point, they’ve re¬placed that. Now you board a heli¬copter to Meigs Field where charteredyachts wisk you south along the coast¬line. And it’s not at sunrise anymore,you can go whenever you get up.”“You shoud go in there and dance,Mikey. Brooke Shields is in there witha sign on that says “Please ask me todance. I’m desperate. At first I thoughtsomeone had stuck it on her as a jokeand she just hadn't noticed, but then Irealized how could she not notice a signon her forehead.”Mickey who always liked womenwho looked exactly like and are namedBrooke Shields ran off to dance leavingme alone on the staircase.“How do you like the party so far?”Dean Levine said placing his arm onmy shoulder and startling me com¬pletely.“Well 1 don't know what to say. Whopays for this0 This is going to raise ourtuition isn't it? When did they put inthat waterfall from the third floor?”“I thought you didn't know what tosay”, Don Levine interrupted, “any¬way you're missing the point. The ideais to have fun and stop worrying aboutall those trivial things that you stu¬dents always fret over.” Dean Levinethen walked a'vav in his sparklingwhite suit to talk io his friend HerveVillachez.I went back to the dance ignoring thefact th^t the whole situation was ludi-crious and wondering what Wintersch¬nook 8b would be like.News 8iThe Chicago Maroon—Tuesday. February 12. 1985,Hannacontinued from page oneProfessor Wirszup said that he andMrs. Wirszup began the WoodwardCourt lecture series because they areboth survivors of the holocaust. As hesaid in a speech made last Saturdayconcerning the lectures. “When I re¬mained alive, the sole survivor of avery large family. I had to confirm inmy own conscious and before the mem¬ory of all my dear ones that I was doingsomething valuable, something trulygood, and doing it to the best of myabilities, with a life that had beenspared me completely by chance.”Professer Wirszup said that he hopestheir work has helped students at theUniversity to overcome what he callsthe “lonely crowd.” He further ex¬plained, “We believe it has been notjust our professional function as educa¬ tors but our vocation to offer studentslove, friendship, encouragement, andguidance. We have tried, in our way, tohelp them grow socially as well as in¬tellectually.”Stating that he was grateful to theUniversity for the opportunities it hasgiven him. Professor Wirszup said thathe and his wife will be resigning as res¬ident masters of Woodward Court. “Wehaven’t made any definite decisions onwhere we are going. We would haveleft sooner, but we wanted to be herefor the 200th lecture.”CorrectionIn the February 8 issue of theMaroon an article on LyndonLaRouche contained an incorrect spell¬ing of a student’s name. The studentquoted in the story is Michael Cher-mak. not Cermak, as originally report¬ed. The Maroon regrets the error. Fee allocationthe college well. She stressed that ap¬plicants for the appointed seats neednot be SAC members, but simply willbe screened by them.Hill hoped that however this commit¬tee is chosen, it will be “not just an al¬location group but a leadershipgroup...which will not just dole outmoney but organize types of eventsthat students feel are needed. ” The dis¬cussion tended to digress and get out ofhand when the students, beset with allthese issues and possible permuta¬tions, could not limit themselves to thefive choices that SG had originally al¬lowed them to put on the ballot.Poli SciTo ameliorate the problems causedby understaffing the Department iscurrently recruiting new faculty. Sil-berman was unable to say when thestaff would be at full strength. Whenasked what sort of effort the Universitymakes to retain members of the facul¬ty who receive offers from other insti¬tutions, Silberman said that a seriouseffort is made, but refused to give spe¬cifics.The letter sent by Bowling and Klingalso contained four recommendationsthat have been to some extent adoptedby the Political Science Department.They included offering more courses,communicating class changes to stu¬dents, making available course de¬scriptions of classes to be added, andforming a student advisory committee.The Department opened two graduateclasses to undergraduates this quarter,and sent information about the classesto students through the studentmailroom.Grumbling has been widespeadamong the students, but the Depart¬ment does seem committed at this timeto correcting the problems that haveplauged it over the past few years. February 19: International cooking de¬monstration at 10 a.m. Menu to be an¬nounced. Crossroads Student Center.February 20: “The World’s Fair andits impact on Chicago,” lecture byJohn Kramer, general manager, Chi¬cago World’s Fair. Old St. PatricksChurch, 718 W. Adams St., 7 p.m. A li¬turgy st 5:30 and light supper at 6 willprecede the talk.CALENDARFebruary 20: Charles Schutt, Universi¬ty of Molecular Biology, Cambridge,England. The lecture will be on “TheNature and Structure of Actin.” Heldin CLSC 101 at 4 p.m.February 20: Lecture on “The Philli-pines,” sponsored by the ChicagoCouncil on Foreign Relations. Horsd’oeuvres at 5:30, talk at 6 p.m. at theWestin Hotel, 909 N. Michigan Ave.Members $6, non-Members $8.Baraka to readwhites, and Jews grew correspond¬ingly vehement. For approximatelyten years he waged a furious war onwhite, middle class America until heembraced Marxism in the early 1970’s.His writings then took a fairly dogmat¬ic Marxist-Leninist turn which has be¬come less dogmatic as of late. Whilehis thinking has changed erraticallyduring his career, his writings have allshown a sense of what can only be de¬scribed by the unfortunate and hereoverwhelmingly ironic idiom, blackhumor.While Baraka has been relativelydormant (for him) in the last fiveyears, his more recent accomplish¬ments include the highly acclaimedalbum New Music New Poetry of poet¬ry read to jazz and The Autobiographyof LeRoi Jones. The source for much ofthe information in this article wastaken from. From LeRoi Jones toAmiri Baraka by Theodore R. Hud¬son.UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOORGANIZATION OF BLACK STUDENTSLeRoi Jones )playwright, essayist, "the father of modern black poetry'FRIDAY FEBRUARY 15, 1985 SWIFT LECTURE HALL5:00p.m. 1025 E’ 5810 stre,tfunded by SGPC and Danforth-Compton Fund Friday Hillel ForumTHE ECONOMY OFISRAEL:CRISES AND PROSPECTSProf. Jacob A. FrenkelDavid Rockefeller Prof., Dept, ofEconomics and the CollegeFriday, February 15, 8:30 P.M.Hillel House, 5715 S. Woodlawn,752-1127A ZIONIST CRITIQUEOF THE JEWISH DIASPORAA videotaped interview with Israeliauthor, social critic and political activistAmos OzJoin us for a short film and a provocative discussionwith Ron Ziv, Hobonim Sholiach in Chicago andDanny Leifer, Rabbi, University of Chicago Hillel.WEDNESDAY, FEB. 13th 8:00 p.m. Hillel House5715 S. Woodlawn 752-1127Refreshments will be served - Admission free.Co-sponsored by U.C. Hillel and Students for kraplFeatures 9Dr. Fred Schwartz, Chairman of thedepartment of family medicine. Chica¬go College of Osteopathic Medicine.February 17, 7:30 p.m.Hyde Park JCC, 1100 E. Hvde ParkBlvd.The topic will be “Sex Among theMudpies (Middle-aged Urban Disen¬chanted Professionals)’’ and will coverchange in male/female performanceand needs and desires through aging:things that stay the same and thingsthat change; and living through sexand medical problems. The lecture willbe followed by a wine and cheese so¬cial. Members, $4 and non-members,$7. * * * *The University of Chicago Circle KClub will be holding a raffle to Save theChildren, an organization which helpsneedy children through community de¬velopment. Club members will be sell¬ing tickets from February 6-20. Ticketsare 25c each or 5 for $1. Prizes include a$20 gift certificate from Hair Pe-formers and a large Medici Garbagepizza with beverages. Winners will benotified by phone. The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 12, 1985*Bunny HAS A RealPROBLEM, LOOK ATHER I All SHE EVERDoes is Sit o,in front of «%/vThE Tv. v And what’sWRONfc WITHthat7\ is it7 well Then i take ityouvetell KIC WHAT X NEVER SEENCAN MAiCf OF bO MINUTES ORMAYBERRY RFD . IN SEARCH OF7OR « IS E- r'VvfT1' ' ^ ^NOULH , THAT A JAjI CAN PoSSiB-V' ^lY use in my 1EVERYDAYL FE BY JIM JOZEFOUICZ.yeah.well A- hmnim, ThereSide from that Must 9e a way1 still Think Bun- To profit fr0MMY True destiny HAS BEEN RE¬PEALED TO HE. I WANT TO 0E HEY, 1 Could MAKE Millions 5ElliW4, SAl-VATioN TO SRAnDMoThERS And Dcinl FaiTHHEAUnLS So HOw A§o^X, F^TITiNL MEA FEW /Bucks f & \ / v~ Ei C,woT UNTiiTO LET (H >-J fy x WinStarted what7' oo You Think You-free numbers,Choirs,And prayer Cloths ARE free7C'MOW, X NEED MONEY' (YivtStudent Schools Committee boosts U of C recruitmentBy Kathy EvansThe Student Schools Committee(SSC) acts as a liaison between theUniversity and between 700 and 800perspective students each year. Be¬cause it is comprised of current stu¬dents, who best know what life at the Uof C is like, this “really important’’ or¬ganization is the “key giving the truepicture’’ of the U of C. These studentsprovide housing, telephone prospies,give tours, and are responsible forvarious student publications.SSC, in addition to informing pro¬spies about the University, informs theOffice of Admissions about the feelingsand wants of the prospies. In fulfillingthis dual function. SSC is “invaluableto the admissions department,” in thewords of Assistant Director of Admis¬sions Jeffrey Makos. The Office of Ad¬missions uses the information provided by SSC to make the University’s imagemore attractive to prospective stu¬dents.SSC publishes “The Prospective’sGuide to the College” and “The WholeCollege Catalogue.” The former is aself-guided tour w'hich includes expla¬nations of classes, while the latteroffers information about the College,Hyde Park, and Chicago.The tours given by SSC members,w'hich run for about an hour, start fromthe Office of Admissions at 12:30 Mon.-Fri. and at 11:30 on Saturdays. Pro¬spies and their parents are show'nHarper Library, Cobb Hall, the quads,Regenstein Library, Woodward Court,Ida Noyes, and Rockefeller Chapel. Onthe average, each tour group consistsof about 4 or 5 people. SSC is a “fun group” which requires“as much or as little time as you wouldlike.” says Co-ordinator Mick Bever.w'ho stresses the advantages andrewards of being a member of SSC.Beyer and other SSC members enjovhelping prospies decide whether the Uof C is right for them.The group, which has over 200members, has doubled in size since lastyear and has successfully instituted arepresentative board comprised of oneperson from each house on campus.Board members co-ordinate their re¬spective houses and encourage housemembers to provide prospies withlodging. Because more prospies visitthe University each year. SSC alwaysneeds housing volunteers.SSC is most active in the Spring, when about 400 prospies participate inthe April Weekends. Once a prospie de¬cides to visit, the SSC Housing Co-or¬dinators find students to host them andsend both the prospie and the host in¬formation about each other. SSC alsoorganizes Saturday brunches for theprospies, greets them at the Admis¬sions Office, and increases the numberof tours they give from one a day to oneeach hour. It is because of these AprilWeekends, according to Housing Co-or¬dinator John Napiewocki. that manyprospective students decide to attend Uof C. The weekends not only provideprospies with information about theUniversity, but they also bring the pro¬spies into contact with current stu¬dents. who are one of the main factorsin determining the decisions of the pro¬spies.Individual & Team CompetitionsBroomball on IceCapture The FlagIce HockeyIce Sculpturing Tug-O-War on IceAutomobile Push(aka “Wanna Give The Dean a Shove?”)Figure Skating LessonsSpeed SkatingCross-Country SkiingCHECK YOUR REYNOLDS CLUBMAIL FOLDER FOR MOREINFORMATION AND WINTEROLYMPICS REGISTRATION FORMTEAM REGISTRATION DUETUESDAY, FEBRUARY 12INDIVIDUAL REGISTRATIONS DUETHURSDAY, FEBRUARY 14[The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 12, 1985|Teaching OpportunitiesWinter 1985-Spring 1986The ProgramEach quarter the University Office of ContinuingEducation (UOCE) offers to the public a broadprogram of non-credit courses in liberal educa¬tion. Courses are offered in all disciplines, andeach course is designed to present its subjectin the most effective way. A course may haveone instructor or several, and the format mayvary from a one-, two, or three-day seminar to afive-to-ten session course meeting once perweek.The StudentsAdult students come to The University ofChicago because they are interested in seriousstudy at the university level. Most hold at least abachelor’s degree, and many have also earnedadvanced academic or professional degrees.These students are motivated by a real interestin the subject matter rather than the pursuit ofcredit or degrees. The come to the university tolearn and appreciate good teaching.The TeachersThose who teach in the UOCE’s Liberal Educa¬tion Division are current faculty members,emeritus faculty, professional staff, Ph.D.,M.F.A., J.D., M.D., or M.B.A. candidates, andthose who have recently completed these ad¬vanced degrees at the University.The BenefitsFor the PhD., M.F.A., J.D., M.D., or M.B.A. can¬didate or recent graduate, the program pro¬vides the opportunity to gain valuable teachingexperience at The University of Chicago. Theseadvanced degree candidates receive supervis¬ed curriculum design experience. They begin todevelop methods for integrating their reserach,writing, and teaching in preparation for a pro¬ductive academic career. For each advanceddegree candidate, a file is kept which traces thesupervised development of the initial proposalinto an effecitve curriculum. Students’ reviewsof the course are also kept on file. The teachingfile provides a good basis for assessment ofteaching capabilities and recommendationsfrom the Divisional Director. The file is alsoopen to relevant department chairmen anddissertation supervisors. For faculty members and researchers, the OpenPrograms provide an excellent opportunity topresent current work to a sophisticated groupof adults. Whether the offering is directed at aparticular professional audience or to a morediverse group, the level of discussion and thepertinence of questions asked help the instruc¬tor to refine thoughts for an article or book orrefresh perspectives for further inquiry.•All who teach are, of course, compensated fortheir work.ProposalsTo be considered for teaching in the Univer¬sity’s Open Programs, Ph.D., M.F.A., J.D.,M.D., or M.B.A. candidates and recentgraduates should send a curriculum vitae with acourse proposal or cover letter briefly describ¬ing some of the topics they are best qualified toteach.Current faculty members and emeritus facultymay write or call to discuss their interest (962-1722).Proposals should be mailed to:Joyce Feucht-HaviarDirector, Liberal Education DivisionUniversity Office of Continuing Education5835 South Kimbark AvenueChicago, Illinois 60637(Faculty Exchange: Judd 205)DeadlinesProposals are considered on an ongoing basis.For general reference, the deadlines are:May 15— for Fall QuarterOctober 1 — for Winter QuarterDecember 15— for Spring QuarterFebruary 22— for Summer QuarterNOTE: Proposals submitted after thesedeadlines may be considered for thefollowing quarter.The Office of Continuing EducationThe University of Chicago962-1722February 14: “A Closer Look,” chartsthe course of weatherman Harry Volk-man at 8:30 p m. on TV-38.* $February 14: ‘‘Peace Now,” an illus¬trated lecture. The InternationalHouse at 7:15 p.m.* *February 15: the Joel Spencer Groupat the Lemon Grass, 5909 N. LincolnAve.* *February 15: Arabic Circle. Topic andspeaker to be announced. Social Hour,Kelly 413, 4:30 p.m.February 16: Dessert and Coffee, $1 at7:30 and four short comic movies at 8p.m. Crossroads Student Center.* ❖CALENDARFebruary 16: ‘‘Traditional China” tourat the Field Museum of Natural Histo¬ry. Two p.m.* sjeFebruary 17: Treasures from theTotem Forest tour. Visit the world ofIndians of Southeast Alaska and Brit¬ish Columbia. Two p.m.*<! ❖February 17: First in a series of con¬certs at St. Paul the Redeemer Episco¬pal Church, 4945 S. Dorchester, at 4p.m. For information, call EllenFischer, 624-3185.* *February 17: Lecture at the ChicagoAcademy of Sciences, 2001 N. ClarkAve. Talk will be given by Jim Rowanon “Midwest Wanderings” at 2:30.February 17: American-Arab Anti-dis¬crimination Committee meeting. Mar¬riott Hotel Ballroom, Salon A, 1401 W.22nd St., 3 p.m. with Dr. Omar Kader,ADC direcor.February 18: Janos Simon. Penn StateUniversity, a lecture on “Communica¬tion Complexity.” Ryerson 276, 2:30p.m.* * Comics 11BLOOM COUNTY■The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 12, 1985by Berke Breathedme Me'i...t have wFACE THIS'WHAT ARETHEY GONNAwe Me v RELAX.VIGILANTISMIS BIG STUhrWITH THt PUBLICRIGHT NOW. 1THINK WC CANCUT A PEAL. THIS MORNING, APRUG-CRAZEP "HELL'S ANGEL"Are my mattress wh/lcwe WERE ALL POWNSTAIRSWATCHING THE HOMOSEXUALGANG WAR IN THEWEIGHT ROOM. NICE.GOT ACELLMATET TER. HESAYS HE"STRANGLEP0AKLANP." MUST BE G&m\AN OLP SPORTS (Of ftexppessioNft/tffjf V*/':OKAY. MR. OPUS,PLEASE TELL THECOURT WHAT EXCUSEHAPPENEP0N- ME,STEVE..I 1 HAVE ASTATEMENTTO MAKE FIRST. THE JUSTICE SYSTEM IS ASCANPAL. MIMES ANP MURDER¬ERS ARE COPPLEP. VICTIMSARE A&USEP. AS A VIGILANTE,1 CAN MAKE ONLY ONECONCLUSION...COLLEGIATE LECTURE SERIESJONATHAN Z. SMITHRobert O. Anderson Distinguished ServiceProfessor of the HumanitiesWHAT'S NEW WITH THE OLD?:PAUL IN THE WIDER WORLD OF LATEANTIQUE RELIGIONTHURSDAY, FEBRUARY 14HARPER 1308:00 pmSponsored by Fundamentals: Issues & TextsNew Collegiate DivisionAll students in the College are cordially invited. THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOJOHN M. OLIN CENTERpresentsIra KatznelsonDean of the Graduate Faculty,New School for Social Research, New YorkonRELIGION AND POLITICSWednesday, February 13,19854:00 p.m.Social Science Research BuildingRoom 122, 1126 E. 59th Street*"12 SportsrfThe Chicago Maroon—Tuesday. February 12, 1985iWrestlers prime for nat’ls with 5th at WheatonBy Paul SongLast weekend. Maroon’s head wres¬tling coach Leo Kocher, took his squadto Wheaton, Illinois, to compete in whathe viewed as the toughest tournamentthat his team had yet to enter, theWheaton Invitational. Prior to the tour¬nament. Kocher stated that he wouldlike to see his team finish in the topfive. Out of the eighteen teams thatwere there, two were Division I teams,and several were nationally ranked Di¬vision III teams. Yet despite the veryhigh caliber and competitiveness of thetournament, the Maroon's earnedthemselves a fifth place finish andlived up to Kocher’s expectations.Placing for Chicago were All-Ameri¬can Karl Lietzan. All-American GeneShin. Joe Bochenski, and Don Elsen-heimer. The two All-Americans, Leit-zan and Shin, wrestled well, but some¬what below their usual excellence asthey both were upset. Lietzan, the sec¬ond seed at 167 lbs., was upset in thequarterfinals and had to settle for athird place finish. Shin, wrestling at 190lbs., was upset twice. He lost in the match. Shin, who was also seeded sec¬ond, had to settle for a fifth. Kochersaid of his two All-Americans “Geneand Karl lost matches that theyshouldn't have, but I’m not too con¬cerned about their performances. I feelthat we have plenty of time to work onconditioning and I hope to see everyonebounce right back for the conferenceand national competitions.”The other two Maroons who placedwere Joe Bochenski and Don Elsen-heimer. Bochenski. wrestling at 126lbs., has continued to do an outstandingjob as he placed fourth. Elsenheimer.wrestling at 158 lbs., was not seeded atall. but he managed to provide theMaroons with their best effort of thetournament. He v)n two very toughand exciting overtime matches andplaced fifth. Kocher said of Elsen¬heimer “Don has been wrestling well oflate and he gave us one great perfor¬mance. I am very pleased with his ef¬fort and I feel that he is wrestling up tohis potential.”Kocher went as far as comparing theWheaton tournament to the Division IIIvarsity SchedulesMen’s BasketballFeb. 15 Fri.—Lawrence UniversityFeb. 16 Sat.—St. Norbert’s CollegeFeb. 18 Mon.—Lake Forest College AwayAwayAway A7:30 p.m3 p.m.7:30 p.m.Women’s BasketballFeb. 15 Fri.—Lawrence UniversityFeb. 16 Sat.—St. Norbert’s College AwayAway 5 p.m.1 p.m.Women’s SwimmingFeb. 14-16 Thurs.-Sat.—Women’s Stateat Wheaton AwayMen’s SwimmingFeb. 15-16 Fri..Sat.—Private CollegeChampionships AwayMen’s Indoor TrackFeb. 14 Thurs —Wabash. Wheaton andV Beloit Home 6 P > just a step below the National tourna¬ment. He also stated that he felt thathi« team could have scored a few morepoints at Wheaton. Kocher summed upthe tournament by saying “this tourna¬ment was a good indication that we stillneed some work and it should serve as a good take off point for conference andnational competition.” W’ith the confer¬ence championship in two weeks (Feb.23, at Monmouth, Illinois), the Man onswill be working very hard in hopes ofbringing the conference crown back toChicago.Co-ed Swimmers sweep BeloitBy Doug ShapiroTwo team victories and one personalvictory in a coed meet at Beloit Collegeon Saturday marked the last dualmeets of the season for the U of C men’sand women’s swim teams. First, bothChicago teams defeated their Beloit op¬ponents by comfortable margins, hard¬ly missing the absence of additionally-scheduled opponent Ripon College.Second, Maroon butterflyer Tina Eller-bee succeeded in qualifying for theNCAA Division III Nationals.Ellerbee took first in her 100yd. but¬terfly event during the meet, but al¬though she left her Beloit opponent be¬hind more than 15 seconds, her time of1:02.11 was still shy of the requiredqualifying time for Nationals. She wasgiven one more chance, however, whena special qualifying heat was an¬nounced at the end of the meet. Thistime, with both teams cheering her on,she finished in 1:01.49...exactly thequalifying limit, to the hundredth of asecond. Ellerbee swam uncontested inthis heat, which simply granted “offi¬cial time” status to her race. The Na¬tionals, to be held at Emory Universityin Georgia in mid-March, will be thefirst such Championships for the Juniortransfer student. Ellerbee first swamfor the Maroons last year, when herbest time for the event was a full 3.5seconds slower than Saturday’s. Eller¬bee is the first Maroon swimmer thisyear to qualify.The men swam to a sound thrashingof the smaller Beloit team, and theirfinal score of 80-31 marked a last deci¬ sive move towards a winning season.The victory brought their dual meet re¬cord just up to par at 3-3 for the season.They have the Illinois Private CollegeChampionships and their conferencechampionship meets still to swim in thenext three weeks before the end of theirseason.Virtually uncontested in the strokeand distance events, the men took firstplace in every event of the meet exceptthe two freestyle sprints. In thoseevents the Maroons were without theassistance of senior sprinter AlexPound, but freshman Mike Mulrowfilled in admirably with some of hisbest times of the year alongside MikeRuddat.The Maroons scored an easy win inthe medley relay to begin the meet, andfollowed it with 1-2 finishes in five of thenext nine events. Doug Cipriano andAndy Forsaith topped out the field inthe 1000yd. freestyle, and Bob Denbyand Ben Forest followed suit in the200vd. freestyle. Forest went on to asecond place in the 200vd. butterfly be¬hind his teammate Ray Cullom’s first,while Mark Schleinitz and JonathanEvans finished 1-2 in the 200 yd. back-stroke. Finally, Everett Lee and DougCipriano repeated the feat one last timein the 500vd. freestyle.The men continued their dominationof the meet with Duane Caneva’s vic¬tories in both of the 1-meter divingevents, and a close victory in the finalfreestyle relay.1309 E. 57th STREETPHONE* 6 43*2424OPEN 7 DAYSMON.-THURS8AM-9PM FRI.-SAT. SUNDAY8AM-6PM * 11AM-5PM NEW TRIPLE COCONUTHANGING PLANTERThree genuine coconuts, nestled in fine rattan frame aresuspended by strands of choice sea shells from the Cebu SeaCenter strand of sea shells adorns underside.Lovely creation from the Philippines adds beauty to home orgarden. Add flowers, either fresh or artificial, to create dramaticdecorator accent Bring life and color to any area Groupseveral Triple Planters together for even more beauty. New1Just arrived from Philippines. Get yours now to add gardenbeauty to your homePlease send set/s of triple hanging coconut planter At $12 95ea Plus $1.50 for shipping and handling enclosed is $_Mail to.D.W. NORENBERG approximately 3 feet6010 OAKWOOD DR. by 15 inch diameterLISLE, ILL 60532Allow approx. 3 weeks for delivery.[HYDE PARK’SNEWEST ADDRESSOFDISTINCTIONCORNELL PLACE5346 South CornellYou must see our tastefullyrenovated high-rise in EastHyde Park. This classicbuilding has the traditionalelegance of a distinguishedHyde Park residence, yet theclean, refreshed interior of anew building. Each spaciousapartment features amplecloset room, modern ap¬pliances, wall to wallcarpeting, ceramic tile, in¬dividually controlled heat andbeautiful views overlooking thelovely surroundings of the HydePark Community or the Lake.We offer studios and onebedroom units with varyingfloor plans starting at $325.Parking available. Ask aboutour student and facultydisount.667-8776 S3A minute ago,yourbabystopped breathing.Would you know what to do’How to net him breathing again’Red Cross will teach you what you need to knowabout life saving Call usWe ll help. Will you?American Red CrossPREPARE FOR:V KAPLANi EDUCATIONALCENTERTEST PWEHAPATION SPECIALISTS SINCECall Days F ves & WeekerulsDIAL-A-TEST HOTLINEARLINGTON HEIGHTSCHICAGO CENTFRHIGHLAND PARKLAGRANGE CENTER (312) 508-0106437 66507645151433-/410352-5840’’•.lOM'M UMWI M M«, I*. ,n u , Clfc>l ^‘* ’"‘“"'•‘■I* •*•*! MM. [|WIOUTSlOt N r Sltll CAM T041 FNtl Mu ?»1 i r*»In he* Too ,|,iii Mauley H x.ipt.ui I J|H I enlei 11013 Sports pcontinued from page 12The women finished the meet with asomewhat lesser victory, scoring 68points to Beloit’s 43, but their final sea¬son’s record more than makes up for it:they are now 5-2 in dual meets, withonly their state and conference cham¬pionship meets still to swim.The women’s victory Saturday, likethe men’s, included first place finishes in both the medley and the freestylerelays. Scoring first places in individu¬al events were Lesley Ham in the 50yd.freestyle and Erika Braun in the 200yd.I-M. Rose Kivens placed first in the 1-meter required dives, and Esta Spal-dins finished first in the 100yd. back-stroke.Seniors graduate in styleBy Frank LubyFour University of Chicago seniorsspent Saturday afternoon closing outtheir home varsity basketball careers,but in the final seconds senior tri-cap¬tain Frank Caeser earned the lastword.Caeser’s breakaway, two-handedjam in the final seconds capped theMaroons’ most explosive offensive con¬test of the season and boosted them toan 89-70 victory over the Ripon red-men. The victory keeps Chicago’s slimtitle hopes alive, and also avengesRipon’s 17-point victory over Chicagoearlier in the season.All four graduating seniors —Caeser. Nick Meriggioli, Adam Green,and Keith Libert — received extensiveplaying time, and took advantage oftheir opportunity. Libert, playing whatassistant head coach Jim Harge-sheimer called “his best game sincehis injury,” chipped in 20 points and 6rebounds, while Meriggioli “took theball to the hole really well” and tallied20 points to go with a game-high 9 re¬bounds.Green “played extremely well defen¬sively,” said Hargesheimer, whoadded that “he was tough on theboards.” Green, a forward from NewYork, grabbed seven rebounds to gowith eight points.Caeser didn’t produce big numbersoffensively, but made his contributionsdefensively by guarding Ripon forwardTom Reader.' one of the top scorers inthe conference. Though Reader fin¬ished with a game-high 24 points, “he got a few garbage baskets late in thegame,” according to Hargesheimer.“He had to earn every basket he got,”said Hargesheimer, referring toReader’s play against Caeser on thewings. “Caeser was really houndinghim.”The Maroons led at halftime, 37-26.but started rebounding better in thesecond half and began to score on thefast break. ‘Rob (Omiecinski), Nick(Meriggioli) and Mike (Clifford) beatthem up the court in the second half,and we beat them (Ripon) on theboards in the second half.” Harge¬sheimer commented.Had it not been for two close lossesduring the first two weeks of January,the four seniors would have closedtheir home careers as leaders in theMidwest Conference’s northern divi¬sion with an 8-3 record. But thanks to a65-61 loss to St. Norbert in overtimeand a 48-46 last second loss to the front¬running Beloit Buccaneers, Chicagofinds itself at 6-5, two games behind Be¬loit with three games remaining.Chicago must play Lawrence on Fri¬day, St. Norbert on Saturday, and LakeForest on Monday, and all of thosegames are on the road, so finishingwith three victories would take a tre¬mendous effort. Beloit, whichsqueaked by last-place Lawrence 58-56on Saturday, has to play Ripon andLake Forest before the end of the sea¬son, so anything can happen. Potential¬ly, the Maroons could tie with St. Nor¬bert, Beloit, and Lake Forest for thetitle. The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday February 12, 1985IFour seniors’final gameKeith Libert...20 points, 6 reboundsAdam Green...eight points, sevenreboundsi...20 points, 9bounds onFrank Caeser...strongRipon’s top scorerOff the IM WireAs the basketball season heads intothe home stretch, most of the divisionleaders have ample grasp on theirdestinies. The remainder of the fieldis basically playing to maintain theirpride.Recent games, however, have pro¬duced close scores. Some divisionleaders have been taking their lessercompetition a little bit too lightly. Inthe Fri.-Sat. league, the Upper Rick-ert “A” team (5-0) failed to cover thespread in their 5-point victory overCompton. And in the Mon.-Wed.imm.m.wwwwwwwwwm.wwwm'M.±m.wm.wm league, undefeated Shorey House nar¬rowly defeated the cellar-dwellingUpper Rickert “B” team. 58-56In the graduate league. Seven Cath¬olics and a Jew are maintaning theirlead. Meanwhile the White Dwarfsmight consider alternative methodsof amusement or perhaps join the labschool league with their 0-5 recordWith Kuviasugnerk rolling aroundthe corner. Houses have the opportu¬nity to pick up more than intramuralpoints...S50 prizes will be awarded towinning participants in the dreadedscarf knitting contest.— Michael Hagan and Raj NandaYOUR ONE CHANCE TO WIN□INNER FOR TWOAT ONE OF THESE RESTAURANTSARNIE'S RESTAURANTCAFE ANGELOCLUB LAGOGI NO'S EASTGORDON GUADALA HARRY'SHOUSE OF BERTINIHUNAN PALACEJOVANLAS PLUMAS MORTON'S RESTAURANTTHE PARTHENONTHE PINNACLESZECHWAN HOUSET.J.'Swinning names will be drawn at thePAJAMA BRUNCHSunday, Feb. 17, 11:30 amIdc. Noyes HallIn order to be eligible, return the entry form*to Harper 280 or to the mailroom dropboxbefore Feb. 15 , or at the Pajama Brunch.* check your mail folderjSl..finrmcmiiiilll14rfThe Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 12, 1985iK.A.M. ISAIAHISRAEL RELIGIOUS SCHOOLSEEKS TEACHERS FOR1985-86 SCHOOL YEAR.ALL LEVELS ANDSUBJECTS NEEDED.CANDIDATES WITH ASTRONG BACKGROUNDIN JUDAICA, HEBREW,TEACHING, ARTS,YOUTH WORK AREENCOURAGED TOAPPLY.ALAN GORR, Ph.D., PRINCIPALK.A.M. 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Ask for details.Hurry, specialoffer ends| February 27, 1985.'Slides t#n negatives, or print^cannot be combined n the same* order to auaiifv 1Ask for j PROCESSING BV>ME KodakThe University of Chicago BookstorePhotographic Department2nd Floor962-7558IBX 5-4364 $10,000 CASH SCHOLARSHIPSCIENCE MAJORSThe ALPHA OMEGA RESEARCHFOUNDATION, Inc., a governmentapproved, not for profit public foundation,is offering a scholarship of $10,000 to anygraduate or undergraduate student whodisproves any equation or physical conceptin the book, The New Physics ofSymmetrical Energy Structures, and it’saddendum.Wc believe we have unified gravity,electricity, magnetic and the weakforces by equating each to the other.This contest ends on May 1, 1985. Thewinner for the best attempt, will beannounced to the press on June 1, 1985. Forregistration and further instructions sendyour Name, Address, School and Student-status to,ALPHA OMEGA FOUNDATION, BOX 3038PALM BEACH, FL 33480This summer you can getmore than a tan.University of Pennsylvania>—*—.1985Summer SessionsOn Campus□ Pre-Mud□ Liberal Arts□ Foreign Languages□ English as a ForeignLanguage□ Nursing□ Business□ EngineeringTwo sessions:May 21-June 28July 1-August 9Please send memore information: Around the World□ Theatre in London□ Frenc h in Tours□ Italian and Art History inFlorence□ Archaeology in Greece,Israel and China□ Spanish in Spain andArgentinaLj Business in Franc e andHolland□ Chinese in Taiwan□ Portuguese in Brazil□ German in Freiburg□ Film Festivals inCannes andY'eniceNameAddressCity State Zip.Mail to: Summer SessionsUniversity of Pennsylvania210 Logan Hall CNPhiladelphia, PA 19104 or Call: (215) 898-7326CHAIN ALARMSTOPS CROOKS COLDStrong chain prevents entry. Alarm blasts piercing shriekthat alerts you and sends crooks running. 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Return in 7 days forfull refund if not satisfied.——— —-i*»o*aiAu6£midxuvawni S180HS3!HIV8dP<C9 9N1AH3S SQOOiH3Nld 6t 6SQlS301VW01 03N3dld3NIA QlnoDDoya HS3dd 3Dnao«d 6SH$•Qld338do aidxyoHs 3DIOHDvasn 68H$q' SdOHD83ainOHS awvi 3DIOHD*va*s*n S1V3W 66■zorotSVZZId S.ONIiOl 65H$sjpq-zo*/iS-fr Sdvaiinad 3100 NSZOiJd 6£t$08 yvaa3HDddVHs asaaddHSjjvdd 6SH$20” 3S33HD39V1J.OD iH9l13QS.AdlNnOD auivq 66zo6l d3GMOHDWV1D OSS3dDOdd 6S‘l$«iinainNV3d AddIXS 6S*t$IOV,!l NOW1VSXNId xjoauviiid >662051 9NINOSV3SI1IHD HDHId03dd3d >68/5•zoa SV3ddONdOD 'SNV38N33d9 1NVI9N33d9 •20*9 66*1.$ 3DinrAdd3adsva-NvaD do3DinrAdd38NVd3 AVddSNV330 4830089 9l./5-et/5sajea3|es D*W SLloooQoooooooooooooooooooaooooooooooaooooeNJOooapoDooooope S9C*-S'X'H'I•8SS1*596 JOOIJpuzISM>8S3016 luauiuedaQauitpe^aaijjQaiqdpjaojuq^ ajoisojoogo8eDiq3jo/tysja/uuftaqjL soipey-sjdpjooayayassBO- SIB0IUJ9q0■S&dBl9U&SSBQ- S9dBl09PIA-S9UOBS90DBUJOOJifJBQ- ai\u*S9U9UBG- sjaiyjopuejbiim/\•Auos•oiuoseueg•pioje/o^•xe;ueg• 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