The Chicago MaroonVolume 94, No. 35 The University of Chicago Tuesday. February 19, 1985Sills speaks on careerBy Ingrid GouldBeverly Sills, though re¬tired from operatic perfor¬mance since 1980, has not lostany of her stage presence norhas her audience lost any oftheir admiration. On Fridayafternoon Sills, now generaldirector of the New York Cit'Opera, spoke to a receptivecrowd in the Law School Au¬ditorium about what wentinto the making of her operat¬ic career.After assuring her audiencethat she was not going to sing,and later remarking thatsince retiring she had sung“Happy Birthday” to IsaacStern and Joan Fontaine and“Jingle Bells” at the WhiteHouse at the President’s re¬quest, she noted that herbeing a “compulsive talker”helped her qualify her for thelecture circuit. Her wit andher vast store of anecdotestestifying to her experiencequalify her as well. Duringher hour-long talk, she spokewith humor, intelligence, andhope, never denying her tal¬ent or belittling her accom¬plishments. Born in Brooklyn into avery traditional Europeanhousehold, where her motherboasted that her husband didnot know the color of thekitchen because he never en¬tered it, Sills grew up in the“Era of the Kiddie Show”when Shirley Temple was ev¬erybody’s darling and all‘nice’ girls learned to sing,tap dance, and play the piano.Sills took these lessons andlearned arias from the 78’sher mother played on the Vic-trola. Between these talentsand her precocious conversa¬tion, she found her way onto“Uncle Ben’s RainbowHouse,” a Saturday morningradio broadcast, and lateronto “Capital Family Hour.”The latter program’s hostsuggested that Sills find asinging teacher and she audi¬tioned for one who hadcoached great stars and wasundisputedly New York’smost expensive. Sills maderadio’s first singing commer¬cial for Rinso White to fi¬nance the purchase of a pianoand worked for severalAbove are the remains of a University Security car afterheavy action Friday morning. The driver was slightly in¬jured.Blaze ruinsapartment in ment’s resident. MacNa-mara, who is almost totallyblind, was listed yesterday infair condition at Bernard Mit¬chell Hospital, which admit¬ted him for smoke inhala¬tion.University of Chicagospokesman Jonathan Klein-bard said that although“there is no official report ofthe cause of the fire, we weretold that the resident ap¬parently lit a match anddropped it on a plastic tableU of C hotelA fire early Monday morn-ig destroyed an apartmentl the Plaisance Motel, 1545!. 60th Street, and injuredvo DeoDle. The blaze, result-use of matches” according tobuilding manager Paul Huck¬leberry, broke out at 7:45a m., but was confined to oneapartment on the seventhfloor.Hurt in the fire was JosephMacNamara, 76, the apart¬ had the fire under control inhalf an hour, according toKleinbard, with major dam¬age concentrated in MacNa-mar’s apartment and waterdamage to apartmentsbelow.Continued on page three in opera Run D.M.C.Run D.M.C. played to an enthusiastic crowd Friday nightin Mandel Hall. D.M.C., above, is one of the group’s tworappers.months on a soap opera to fi¬nance singing lessons.Because skipping gradeswas allowed. Sills was able tofinish high school at age fif¬teen and began to tour with alight opera company underSchubert’s aegis. Hermother, bravely defying herhusband, signed the parentalconsent form required forminors and found a lovingchaperone “with two weak¬nesses,” Sills noted. “One forgin and one for airline pilots.”Sills performed Gilbert & Sul¬livan in the suburbs of smallNebraska cities and othermemorable spots before shereunited with her father, whowas visiting relatives in De¬troit while her companytoured in Michigan. They re¬conciled and agreed that hewould pay for her lessons ifshe would drop the operettafluff and concentrate on “theserious stuff.”Not long after, her fatherdied and she continued to sup¬port her lessons by singing inkey clubs. A scholarship tounderstudy and be coachedby an important impresariotook her to San Francisco. though this benefactor diedthe night before she arrived,she began work with the com¬pany.In 1966, the MetropolitanOpera Company opened theirseason with a Barber opera intheir new building. Criticsfrom all over the world flocked to New7 York to re¬view' the acoustics and new7hall on opening night. Thesethey lauded, but the opera it¬self they did not. Many criticstook the opportunity to see“Anthony and Cleopatra,”Continued on page threeHigh-speed chase results ininjured Security officer, destroyed autoBy Thomas CoxA high-speed chase throughHyde Park last Friday leftthree people injured, includ¬ing one University securityofficer, and totalled a lT of Cpatrol car.A man driving a stolen carled Chicago Police on a high¬speed chase around 1:40 a.m.Friday morning. As the mani raced south on Woodlawn Av¬enue, University of ChicagoPolice Officer Dennis Barnes1 was crossing Woodlaum on: 57th Street. The fugitive ranthe red light at 57th and crashed into the rear ofBarnes’ patrol car. The stolencar spun on down Woodlawn afew- hundred feet.Which Chicago police ar¬rived on the scene momentslater, they found a femalepassenger in the stolen car,injured, but the driver hadfled on foot. He was capturednearby, attempting to hide.He was also slightly injured nthe collision.Officer Barnes was treatedand released from BernardMitchell Hospital for bruisesand head injuries. He will be off active duty for a while, ac¬cording to University Securi¬ty Director David O’Leary.The still-unidentified driverwas charged with unlawfuluse of a weapon and eighttraffic violations, accordingto Bob Mason of the SouthEast Chicago Commission.He was unable to elaborate.Chicago police departmentofficers were on holiday Mon¬day, and further informationon the case was unavailableat press timeC-bus driver not fired, not drunkBy Michael CarrollContrary to the article inthe Chicago Spectator, thedriver of the C bus on Thurs¬day, January was not firedbecause he was not drunk.According to an unnameddriver for the Universitybuses, bus ?8806 was leakingcarbon monoxide from the ex¬haust system into the ventila¬tion system. The combinationof overexposure to thesefumes and the flu caused thedriver’s condition.How' long bus f8806 wasleaking the noxious fumes be¬fore the incident is not known,but both the regular C-busdriver and another substitutedriver suffered nausea fromdriving the bus, after the in¬cident. On Thursday, Febru¬ary 7, the substitute driversent the bus back to RobinsonBus Company because thebus had not been repaired.The bus was sent back tocampus the following day,having supposedly beenfixed, but this reporter wasable to detect a fair trace ofexhaust fumes in tl * bus. Thefollowing day, S; urday the9th, the bus was not sent to campus and was supposedlyreceiving repairs.As of this writing the bus isallegedly repaired. The Ro¬binson Bus Company was un¬willing to confirm or deny re¬ports of carbon monoxide leaks or the firing of thedriver. They claim that thecase is under investigtion,pending the testimony of theShoreland residents involvedand the Shoreland securityguard.2The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 19, 1985nosic-nosic* musicTHE DEPARTMENT OF MUSICpresents:Thursday-Sunday, February 21-24 -InternationalConference on the Music of Alban BergProfessor Robert P. Morgan, program director.Sessions and concerts to be held in various locations.For information call the Concert Office, 962-8068Thursday, Februrary 21 - Contemporary ChamberPlayers of The University of Chicago8:00 p.m., Mandel HallALL-BERG PROGRAM: Early Songs (Elsa Charlston, soprano);Pieces for Clarinet and Piano; String Quartet, op 3; ChamberConcerto (guest soloists are Charles Rosen, piano, and RolfShulte, violin).Admission is free.Friday, February 22 - Vermeer String Quartet8:15 p.m., Mandel HallShmuel Ashkenasi and Pierre Menard, viol'ns; Bernard Zaslav,viola; Marc Johnson, cello.George Perte, composer and internationally knownauthority on Berg's music, will speak to ticket holdersabout the Lyric Suite immediately preceding the concert at7:30 p.m.Berg; Lyric Suite (guest soloist, BETHANY BEARDSLEE, soprano);Beethoven: Quartet in B-flat, op. 127Admission: $10 (UC student $6) Tickets and information atDepartment of Music Concert Office, Goodspeed Hall 310,962-8068.Saturday, February 23 - University Chorus andMotet Choir8:00 p.m., St. Thomas the Apostle CatholicChurch55th Street and Woodlawn AvenueBruce Tammen, conductorJ. S. Bach: “Komm, Jesu, Komm”; selections from theRachmaninov Vigil (songs of the Church); and selections fromthe contemporary American sacred tradition.Admission is free.UPCOMING CONCERTSaturday, March 3 - University Chamber Orchestra8:00 p.m., Goodspeed Recital HallElaine Scott Banks, conductorJ.S. Bach. Orchestral Suite No. 2 in B minor (Lyon Leifer, flute);Mozart: Piano Concerto No. 17 in G Major (Deborah Sobol, piano);Handel: Water MusicAdmission is free. TlsO55DE♦9EG355EThe University of ChicagoDEPARTMENT OFANATOMYPRESENTSLECTURES ON THESTRUCTUREOF LIFEJAMES HOPSONSpeaking on..."In Warm Blood:The Fossil Evidence forthe Origin of Mammals"THE LECTURE IS INTENDED FOR GENERALAUDIENCES AND WILL BEHELD IN ANATOMY 104AT 8:00 P.M. ON TUESDAY FEBRUARY 26 A Response to the Arab-lsraeliConflict on FilmFe ' • / m NARROW MILES";AEL THE RIGHT TO BE". national House, Home Room, 7:30 p.m.- ^ast59th St.frfo. die eastern Studies Film seriesFeb. 26 ¥OL '1983 Cannes Award WinnerDirected by Yilmaz Guneyin Turkish w/English subtitlesMarch 5 “KHALLl BALAK MIN ZUZU"Starring Su 3d Husniin Arabic w/ English subtitlesBoth Shows TV Room, international House7:30 p.m.Sponsored by: THE MIDDLE EASTERN STUDIES STUDENT ASSOCIATIONThe B5CD Student Advisory Committeecordially invites you to aSTUDENT-FACULTYGET-TOGETHERWednesday, February 20,1985,4:30 P.M.Harper 103"HOW EYES AND DRAINS DRAIN"Dr. Ramesh C. Tripathi, Prof. Ophthalmology & the CollegeandDr. Brenda J. Tripathi, Research Associate (Assoc. Prof)Ophthalmology, Professorial Lecturer in the CollegeReception following in Harper 284<; k k \ t iM i> i. \ ^ sSills Kangeiko craziness news•The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 19.Continued from page threein which Sills starred at the New YorkCity Opera. Their praise made Sills anovernight success and brought her in¬vitations from every major opera com¬pany.Sills, at age thirty-seven, and herhusband agreed they wanted “ten ortwelve exciting years instead of twentybland ones,’’ hired nannies and tutorsfor their five children, and began pur¬suing her “crazy career” with the un¬derstanding that she would retire atage fifty. “I wanted to do what I did, doit as best I could, and get out while Iwas still on top, ” Sills said. They endedup postponing her retirement one yearwhile she awaited the completion of anopera she had agreed to perform. Ather final performance, her metaphori¬cal request to “go out with balloons andconfetti” was taken literally.From performing Sills went rightinto directing without even a momentto catch her breath. She had praise forthe devoted and talented young Ameri¬can singers, directors, producers, andartists of all kinds who work at the NewYork City Opera. And as director andlecturer, she has maintained the oppor¬tunity to champion one of her petcuases, the plight of the American ar¬tist.FireContinued from page threeThe building was not completely eva¬cuated, according to Kleinbard.The University of Chicago owns thePlaisance Hotel, and uses the first floorof the building for its purchasing andtypewriter repair departments. Mostof the building’s residents are students,University staff, and retired Universi¬ty staff. Hordes of escapees from the third annual Kangeiko trek lemminglike toward their rendevous with destiny (and IDean Levine) at the Point.lost,” said Persky. “I’d like to give thisevent back to the University before Igraduate.”Ball revives old traditionBy Michael ElliottResurrecting a six-decade-old tradi¬tion lost to the ’60’s revolution, the Uni¬versity fraternities will hold an Inter-Fraternity Ball March 1st at theKnickerbocker Hotel, 163 E. Walton(just north of the Loop), from 9 p.m. toTHE COMMITTEE ON PUBLIC POLICY STUDIESpresents a lecturebyLESTER D. LAVEProfessor of Economics and Urban AffairsCarnegie-Mellon University"SOCIAL RISK MANAGEMENT"1 hursday, February 21,19854:00 p.m., Wieboldt Hall, Room 303For more information call 962-8401—iCenter for Middle Eastern StudiesThe University of Chicagopresentsa lecture byDr. Roger M. Savory (Trinity College, University of Toronto)entitled•Religion and Politics in Classical Islam: Theory and Practice"Wednesday, February 204:15 p.m.Social Science 107anda lecture byor. Paul walker (Executive Director, American Research Center in Egypt)entitled"The Doctrine of Metempsychosis in Islam"Monday, February 254:00 p.m.Pick 218 1 a.m. The Ball, whose original incar¬nation spawned the Lascivious Cos¬tume Ball as a spoof, will feature theDon Cagen Orchestra and a cash barfor those twenty-one and older. TheMaroon Express will transport ball -goers back to Hyde Park for free.The Ball was initially scheduled forlast Quarter in the McCormick Inn. butthe organizers of the event “wanted tohave it downtown so that we wouldhave a greater selection of restaurants(to dine at before the ball).” accordingto Jonathan Persky, treasurer of theInter-Fraternity Council. “The Knick¬erbocker conveys the atmosphere wewanted better than the McCormick Inn— very elegant, rather than classy,”said Persky.Organized by Persky, Mike Marietti.and Chris Ruggerio, along with theirUniversity liaison Ralph Hamilton, theInter-Fraternity Ball was a tradition atthe University from the early part ofthe century to the 1960's, when it was“rendered a little bit passe.” accord¬ing to Persky. “The Lascivious Cos¬tume Ball was originally a spoof on theInter-Fraternity Ball.’’said Persky,“and the crowning of Mr. and Mrs. U ofC is a spoof on the crowning of the kingand queen of the Ball.” Persky notedthat this year's revival will not have acrowning of a king and queen.Persky emphasized that “the ball isby no means for fraternity membersonly.” Since at the University of Chica¬go, both frat members and non-fratmembers know each other, the Ball istrying to attract non-fraternitymembers as well. Persky also said thatalumni are welcome to attend.The evening will be black-tie option¬al. and the cost will be $10 per person.Persky described the Don Cagen Or¬chestra as “top notch’’ and “well-known throughout Chicago,” and thatit “plays ‘swing for today’, 40’s through80’s music”.The Ball was “one of the events theUniversity was known for and it was Clinic to moveBy Peter GrivasStudents who have to visit the stu¬dent health clinic next quarter shouldfind the lines and waiting greatly re¬duced from current levels. On March18. the clinic will move to the third floorof the Chicago Lying-In Hospital, addtwo registration windows to its currentfour, and add two nurses to the currentfour. The changes are expected to re¬duce the lines for which the clinic isknown. Floor space will be doubled to10.000 square feet, and the new areawill include triage preparation rooms,facilities for skin surgery and orthope¬dic casting, and an audiovisual roomfor health-related movies and video¬tapes. A psychiatric social worker willjoin the staff, working one-half day perweek.According to Robin Schneider, assis¬tant director of the University HealthService, the moves are part of a long-range effort to expand the health ser¬vices offered by the U.C. hospitals.Since *he summer of 1981. when the stu¬dent-only “health services program”absorbed the “faculty staff clinic,” andits patrons, the health program facili¬ties have been growing overcrowdedThe problem was compounded by thecreation of an insurance-like "Univer¬sity Health Plan” in March of 1984,which made the Health Services pro¬gram more accessible to the relativesof U.C. staff, and further growth wasstimi^d.With the new space, the health ser¬vice plans to continue its expansion.Two new doctors will be added in Juneof this year, and federal paperwork ispending which will allow the Universi¬ty to operate on HMO—like programfor its alumi and other university-affi¬liated groups which are not currentlyeligible for subsidized treatmentRemember the Murdoch Maroon ?Well, its that time of year again. Come tothe Maroon offices in Ida Noyes 303Tuesday, March 5th, if you want to bein on the fun.Refreshments ?4 viewpoints■The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 19,1985Kreisky: never let the diBy Peter KutscheraThe international, political worldtoday is one of growing national inter¬ests and of increasing intolerancetowards countries of different politicalconvictions. Economic expediency andmilitary supremacy seem to becomemore and more dominant over the con¬cepts of mutual economic assistanceand military relaxation. It is an inter¬national development ihat has beengoing on for 40 years since the end ofWorld War II. The Cold War has seenthe severity of the early 50’s during theMcCarthy era to raise public aware¬ness about the potential dangers con¬cerning world peace, especially con¬cerning world peace for democracy.The tensions between opposing politi¬cal ideologies have been growingstronger with many military clashesthat mark the history of the East-Westconflict:OPUS&GROG In the 50’s, Hungary ;;ea; inthe GO’S, Cuba, Berlin, aiiu Czechoslo¬vakia; in the 70’s, Vietnam; and in the80’s, Poland, Afghanistan, and Grena¬da. S'* where are we today? What willhappen next in international politics?Is th _ mg generation willing to trustthe current leadership? Are we head¬ing in the right direction for a world ofpeace?Bruno Kreisky, the chancellor ofAustria from 1970-83, represents a poli¬cy of international relaxation of ten¬sions through strong negotiation but atthe same time with a considerate open¬ness towards compromise on every po¬litical issue. Kreisky spoke on Fridayafternoon in Quantrell and on Saturdayafternoon in a two-hour seminar forgraduate students of history. The cen¬tral theme, which he carried through¬out his lectures, was his firm beliefthat the time is always right for amovement of detente, i.e. the potential\What Happened...The Maroon’s respected columnOpus Degrog has been discontinuedindefinitely. Following theMaroon’s longstanding policy of“We print anything”, Pulitzer Prizewinning Opus has been replaced bya sleezy gossip column. L.D. Lur-vey, the much maligned author ofthe deceased column was unavail¬able for comment but his attorneywas quoted as saying, “This is atragedy of tragic proportions. I seea lawsuit in this.” ...McDonald cor¬poration officials deny L.D. is cook¬ing fries at a franchise outlet inGainesville, Florida...Star TracksEarly reports that Suzanne Somerswill be coming to Chicago to pro¬mote her latest T.V. venture “Hol¬lywood Wives” are, of course,being denied. ING. hears she maystop in to visit her former sweety,nobel-prize winner Sam PeltzmanPeltzman, maintaining the cloak ofsecrecy, responded, “What?” to re¬peated questions about his dog’sbreeding habits. Pretty sneakySammy...When and if Somerscomes to town, she may or may notstay at the prestigious Hyde ParkHilton, which lately has been host toquite a few big names. For instanceGeorge Andapapaolopapaolouskin-eske stayed there last week. Nah,ING’s just joking with you, actuallyING sources (a parking lot atten¬dant) report seeing such mega-cele¬brities as Connie Francis, “LoveBoat’s” LaurenTewes, and Fernan¬do Lamas. When questioned aboutthe fact that Fernando Lamas wasin fact dead, ING sources reportthat the person in question may ormay not have been Mick Jagger. ING. hears...The real reason there is a languagerequirement at the University ofChicago is so that students will takean interest in foreign countries,learn their cuisine, and then cookmassive feasts for the administra¬tion members. Administrator Her-* man Sinaiko reports, “I like Chin¬ese food, myself”...The Universitycontinues to offer partial tuition re¬mission for those students willing tosell themselves into slavery...Stu¬dent Government maybe seeing anend to its problems shortly. RickSzesny and Chris Hill are both sche¬duled for execution at dawn thisThursday for their involvement inthe “Where’d the $90 go?” scandal.The shooting will take place at theflag pole in the main quadrangleand tickets are available fromReynold’s. Club box-office...Lastweek’s Auto Show at McCormickPlace was such a success that asimilar event is being planned forthe U of C physical plant depart¬ment. “Oh we’ll show our new snowblowers and maybe have somedancing girls”, said Frank Hedge,the new head of the department, “Ifno one shows up we’ll just go homeand watch Different Strokes.”Gray Day...Talk about town is that one un¬named prestigious university presi¬dent was said to be seeing a 12-year-old boy on a non-professional basis.ING. feels this may or may not betrue since ING. made the wholething up...Charles Gray, Hanna’ssteady beau, enjoys waterskiing,skateboarding, and church choir. “Ilike beer too”, Charles adds ha¬plessly.The cast of ABC’s new sitcom “Chicago and Hollywood Doctors andTheir Wives”, based on the University of Chicago’s lifesaving emergencyluggage delivery. In the first episode, the doctors lose two Samsonites butthen find them in O.R. , -We Get Letters...My mother said she is fine and en¬joying her vacation in Geor-g*a ..Obert Papowski said, “youreditorials lack professionalism orany semblance of truth”. That’s notvery nice, Obert. I bet you got a lotof kidding in school for having sucha stupid name... INGIings...John Riggins won’t be here nextweek...neither will Clara Barton ormost of Phoenix...The U of C astron¬omy department will be holding a“Night of 100 Stars”. You go to theAdler Planetarium, count stars upto the number 100, then go home.Refreshments will be served... cease between West and Eastfor successful relief of every politicaltension between opposing parties bycontinually negotiating the reasons be¬hind the conflict. Kreisky believes incontinuing to talk with every leader ofevery political group in every contro¬versial situation. Violence and venge¬ful counter-violence will never bringabout relief but only inevitably moreviolence. Political negotiation must re¬sume always in order to arrive at apeaceful resolution that satisfies allsides.Ex-Bundeskanzler Kreisky refutesthe doubts that negotiations never leadto any real, constructive changes be¬tween opposing parties by citing theexample of postwar Austria. Austriandiplomats negotiated for 10 years,from 1945-55, in 350 meetings with thefour Allied powers that were occupyingall of Austria. The result of the talks:On October 22, 1955, the AustrianState’s Treaty was signed declaring itspermanent neutrality and national sov¬ereignty as an independent country.All four occupying military forces, theUnited States, France, Great Britain,and Russia, withdrew from the Aus¬trian territory and returned it to the po¬litical boundaries of 1938 before theAnschluss. Austria has been neutralever since with no foreign power everattempting to cross its borders by mili¬tary force. Also, Austria has becomeeconomically very competitive amongEuropean countries and it has been able to build up a solid social democra¬cy.Kreisky’s message is very frank:Never stop talking with your oppo¬nents. Always negotiate to arrive atpeaceful resolutions. But what does itlook like today between East andWest? Herr Kreisky presents consider¬able concern about the international,political situation of 1985. Criticizingboth the West and the East, he pro¬claims: “Never before has the world ofpolitics seen such a maneuvering of se¬mantics as we have it today...” Oncethe direct communication between theopposing parties stops, the possibilityof misunderstanding increases hazar¬dously to an extent that could freeze allnegotiations and end in complete dis¬trust.Kreisky believes that the current USadministration indicated a shift (fourand a half years ago) in ideologicalforeign policy that moved the worlddangerously far away from the possi¬bility of successful detente. Wheretowill this political direction lead us? Toanother military conflict that couldescalate to unimaginable devastation?Kreisky hopes that the superpowerscan learn from such a modest exampleas the Austrian State’s Treaty, andmany members of the young genera¬tion hope with him for a peaceful futuredominated by an active preparation forpeace and not by an ever increasingpreparation for war.‘Pro-lifers’convince by coercionTo the Editor:After my 2c editorial was publishedin the Feb. 8th issue of the Maroon stat¬ing my pro-choice stance on the issueof abortion I received a harrassingphone call from one of the petitionerswho originally signed the publisheddocument in an even earlier issue ofthe Maroon. The caller identified him¬self (I’ll spare him the grandiose wishfulfillment/humiliation) and then pro¬ceeded to give his rap on my misin¬formed and incorrect understanding ofthe issues! In no uncertain terms, I in¬formed the caller that I found his tac¬tics intrusive and that the entire 2cworth of my statement was that abor¬tion is a personal decision (often basedon one’s faith) and that is was not anissue of the state. It is a personal rightto choose whether to bear children ornot. MY WOMB IS NOT A WARD OFTHE STATE! I promptly terminatedthe conversation and was further in¬convenienced during the weekend withother nuisance callers.What I find appalling is the extent towhich “pro-lifers” are rigidly organ¬ized, well-funded and aggressive incompelling conformity to their views.While I doubt very much that thosewho support CHOICE are nearly sopassionate, I can hardly conceive ofthe organization it would involve to si¬milarly harrass the 1,200 signers to thepetition. I call on the Maroon to reprintthe petition and the lists of its signersso that the pro-choice constituency inHyde Park can similarly contact andconvert them by informing them oftheir “misinformed” and “incorrect”understanding of the CHOICE issue.Phone, write, converse with thesigners of the ANTI-CHOICE petitionand poll them on whether they wouldsign it again given another chance to reconsider their “privileged” commit¬ment to the issue.The strategies and tactics of those in¬volved in the orgaized ANTI-CHOICEmovement reveal a hidden agenda ofANTI-democratic ideals. Not only arethose who dissent from the popularswell of right-wing conservatism de¬nied the right to privacy but asked to“convert” to a “correct” understand¬ing. It’s not only my womb they wantlegal authority over; it’s my politicalviews as well. This is no longer just anissue of abortion but one of political ex¬tremism. The ANTI-CHOICE move¬ment has yielded an enormous amountof political activity in the last year;they have bombed, boycotted, and bul¬lied those abortion center employeesand patients who exercise their consti¬tutional right. Last year there wereover 30 arson cases in clinics offeringabortion services. More than one deaththreat has been revealed to the 98thCongress in their proceedings and de¬bates on the issue. All this is doneunder the banner of a “pro-life” slo¬gan!The liberties of all Americans, notmerely the liberty to abort or not, arethreatened by such demanding confor¬mity to a self-righteous “moral” mi¬nority who happens to wield morepower than those less privileged by ed¬ucation level, class, race, or sex.American democracy can only be se¬cure when there is mutual and masssupport for the respect of diversity,human dignity and civil tolerance,especially with regards to issues forwhich there is no, nor ever will be, pub¬lic consensus.Two more cents worth from a toughSwede,Jill SwensonThe Chicago Maroon is the official student newspaper of the University of ChicagoIt 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 EditorKoberl BarlingI'wpoints Editor Dennis ChanskySports EditorJulie WelssmanFeatures EditorAlexandra ConroyAssociate EditorPhil PollardPhotography EditorCraig FarberCopy Editor Wally DabrowskiProduction ManagerBruce KingGrey City Journal EditorStephanie BaconGrey City Journal EditorLisa CypraAdvertising ManagerTina EllerbeeBusiness Manager Jaimie W eihrichOffice ManagerLeslie RigbyChicago Literary Review EditsDavid SullivanChicago L terary Review EditaStaff: Karen E. Anderson. Paul Beattie, Tony Berkley. Scott Bernard RosemaryBlinn, Mark Blocker, David Burke, Mike Carroll, Anthony Cashman Arthur U EllisKathy Evans. Paul Flood, Ben Forest, John Gasiewski. Jessie Goodwin CHff Grammich. Peter Grivas, Gussie, Keith Horvath, Jim Jozetowirz. Harry Kavanaeh AlKnapp, Marcia Uhmber*. Amy Usemann. Armin Ulienfehl. Jane link. Mike LotusL.D. Lurvey, ( arolyn M Mancuso, Helen Markey, Melissa Maver Rai Nanda KarinNelson, Ciaran Obroin, Ravi Rajmane. James Ralston. Max Rheo Paul Rohr MatSchaefer, Geoff Sherry. Frank Singer. Brad Smith. Jeff Smith Stan Smdh PaulSv^l'ry TrSkl“'k Tiunupson. Il.larv Till lint,Smith responds to criticsTo the editor:Not one of those who claimed to re¬spond to my critirisms of the leaders ofthe Right-to-Lite Movement addressedmy central points. We can only con¬clude, then, that they implicitly agreewith what I wrote. They just object to itbeing said. Not one of the writers eventried to show the leaders of the Right-to-Life movement support women’srights or human rights.Not one of them mentioned a singleword of concern for the hundreds if notthousands of women who would die ifabortions became illegal again.Not one said a word addressing thefact that illegalizing abortion will notstop abortions. Millions will have abor¬tions whether it is legal or not. Whythen make it illegal? Why make it dan¬gerous? Not one word was said aboutthat.Why should we not then concludethat the Right-to-Life movement wantsto make abortion illegal, not because itwill end abortions, but because theright to do so is central to the strugglefor women’s equality? And to them, adangerous illegal abortion is betterthan a safe legal one.If abortion becomes illegal, how dothey plan to enforce it? What would bethe crime for having an abortion? If azygote is a human life, as they assert,then abortion is murder. W'hat is thepenalty for murder? Right-to-Lifersare at one and the same time “pro-life”and pro death penalty. Will we see theday when a woman who has an illegalabortion is convicted of murder andgiven the death penalty, murdered bythe state in the name of life? This may sound absurd, but it’s not. It’s no* to theRight-to-Life movement. As Right-to-Lifers take increasing control of thefederal government perhaps we ’"naysee some woman, probably tiia<„. orHispanic and poor, sentenced to deathfor having an abortion.The very logic of anti-abortionistthinking would lead to this conclusion.But this won’t be in their ads.I grant that not all opposed to theright to abortion share the views of theleaders of the Right-to-Life movement.I never said that.1 said the leaders of this movementare not pro real human life nor are theyreally anti-abortion. W'hat lies behindtheir “pro-life” disguise is the desire,not to “save innocent babies”, but totake away the most far-reaching ad¬vance won by the women’s movementin decades: the right of women to de¬cide whether, when, and how manychildren to bear. The right of women tocontrol their own bodies - should thestate tell you what you can and cannotdo with your body?They oppose abortion solely for thereason that the right to abortion is socentral to women's rights. Not for anyother reason. To attain their end theywant to, in effect, make a woman’swomb the property of the state. They,in effect, want to prosecute women whohave abortions for premediatedmurder.The signers of the anti-abortion ad inthe Maroon give these people aid andcomfort whether that is their intentionor not. Anyone actively opposing theright to abortion is supporting thisrightwing movement whether that istheir intention or not. That is theissue.Stan Smith letters 5The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 19. 1985Second Annual Book FairU.C. Hillel Foundation and the Hyde Park-Kenwood Council of Jewish Organizationsinvites you toA JEWISH BOOK FAIRSunday, February 24,19851:30-4:30 p.m.Reynolds Club-North Lounge-57th & university AvenueAdmission is freeJewish Books for SaleEnglish & Hebrew Adults & Children's Titles New & UsedBOOKSELLERS:Ma’Ayan Book Fairs of BostonPowell’sSeminary Co-opSpertus Museum StoreComputers in Jewish Life EXHIBITS:Chicago Jewish Historical SocietyAmerican Jewish CongressAnti-Defamation leaguePhillip H. Cohn institute for visuallyHandicapped-Rodfei ZedekBOOK BINDER:Marcia Katz CALLIGRAPHERS:Rose Ann ChasmanDarryl Rotman KuperstockBring a friend, bring your family!Sponsoring Organizations: Members of the HydePark-Kenwood Council of Jewish OrganizationsAkiba-Schechter Day School Hyde Park Jewish Community CenterB nai B’rith Hillel Foundation k.a.m. - Isaiah IsraelChicago Sinai Congregation South Side Senior Adult Jewish CenterCongregation Rodfei zedekPut your degreeto workwhere it can doa world of good.Degrees and Aptitudes neededin: Math, Biology, Physics,Chenis t rv, Education,Spanish f, French Your first job after graduationshould offer more than just apaycheck. <If you're graduating this year,look into a unique opportunityto put your degree to workwhere it can do a world of good.Look into the Peace Corps.Filn Seminar Wednesday,February 20th NorthLounge Reynolds Club he touches! job- of i! ever Icve ►“Og8Interviews March 7th Career Placementcomicsi The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday,Concrete BungleConcrete Bungle is a humorous, nar¬rative account of the life of sophomoreJeff Jones and his compatriots, includ¬ing the Perpetual Student who livesunder the stairs in the Reg and a Beat¬nik rat who does a lot of drugs. Jell isby no means ordinary — then againwho is — but he lives closer to themainstream than the other characters,who inhabit the peripheries of the U ofC experience. I hope you will find Jeff’sgood-natured and naive outlook on lifeas endearing as I do. Any story sugges¬tions would be appreciated and shouldbe sent to the Maroon office. MichaelCarrollEn+er -Ws, Sopf>o more cxfrbnjimin*<n He worsf of hft wcrst- yc*rtXT's He /p/UUM o-f f/eQt.d I Ye 3®/)*? fa ro cGssesand doneOo tea6 /n<j.Of] S?C Wkjfc old6u?l+, GuflfP jj1 V x.(k-4[\\—Gw The HU ^‘>Th •+There >’$ ho problemN cm net trm «««/•from. ^ February 19, 1985BLOOM COUNTY by Berke Breathedm mUME <>H£Y,P/P YOU LECTURE THEMon m shame OFtETT1NG THE GUILTYcmm YAOCK THEAMERICAN COURTS ?VinBACK. MOP'ANP THEYFOUNP YOU.. ...eurrrmo...guilty. mr/mrrLi pon'ttellme.. ..pismissepON A ON, IMINOR PO LOURtechnicality, trc.^ X03AYOU ARB A FINS ANPMmmeR anpYOUR 50N cm3 YOUmmJday.w ^S7 I HAP AN ANXIETYATTACK. WHAT IFYOU P/EP mtbHTANP 1 HAPN'T NAPE SUREYOU KNEW OUST HOWMUCH YOU MEAN TO ME ?:Cd) 501 WENT OUT ANPBOUGHT YOU A TOKENGIFT.. A SYMBOLICGESTURE TO REASSUREYOU OF YOUR SON'SETERNAL LOVE.CRON...JUST ONEHINT/1 WON'T TELL/15 IT BIGGER THANA BREAP BOX ? NO\ COMMENT'^ < mtr...LEMME GUESS..IS IT THEPENTAGON'S NOLAUNPRY ? COMMENT/* "BAMPY BABESANP LUSTY LASSES". THERE'SNOT MUCHOPEN ATrNASA LOVES TO PLAYvGUESS WHAT WE'RESHIRPING UP IN THE NEXTSECRET SHUTTLE FLIGHT"/O*m IS IT'THE LENNONSISTERS*?XRegman in hellrm'.W3m&-fbe Studentsftui kEemmdFKmummaijmiMmiMImwk&i' ' •i*all' "7/ to-' Jaid you can . ■in HARPER LmzY-■p^rp-p- Pcr55> ^rtytrz ruow. joeo# morrV.Ifa&JWkfhJ jl .OUTOF PUL Rlob/ 'Mwin 'OoTOFPULml #iwinwfTo^HyHi If 1TTOIndMUlBL Aib team Acnurties muFflMRBALL(or Hie fyrdcft Ihtdr) jR/WMCME< speed Sony)Rock fight(oo-*icl4>d»kxy)Live The bowA M-'«b(on Harper Tapers fajr^WeJ1^Experience inprofessional writingavailable dailyatfTV| • T%/f1 he Chicago Maroon962-9555features 7Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 19, 1985 m—mmmmmmRowley seeks cause of cancer in ‘broken’ genesJanet Rowley: on the trail of malfunctioning genes that cause leukemia. Without the development of specia¬lized banding techniques made in thelate 60’s these discoveries would nothave been possible. The more recentwork has been made possible by theuse of special recombinant DNA tech¬niques. The current work profits fromthe close collaboration of Dr. HarveyColomb, a hematologist at the U of Cwho directs the treatment of patients,and Dr. James Vardiman from the de¬partment of pathology, who has identi¬fied the types of leukemia involvingthese phenomena. Also collaboratingare Dr. Michelle LeBeau. working onthe inversion of chromosome 16, andDr. Manuel Diaz, working on identify¬ing genes right at the break point.“There is no question that the prob¬lem will be solved,’’ said Rowley. With-; in 5 to 10 years treatment will be able touse the information gained from thisresearch. A future problem in this de¬velopment, though, involves treatingmalignant cells without affecting nor¬mal cells.Rowley’s future research will inves¬tigate the nature of genes involved inchromosome material rearrangement.She hopes to find out if there is a switchgene involved in these phenomena andwhat exactly constitutes the nature ofthe switching of DNA material. An¬other question that is sought to be an¬swered concerns how these genes mayfall into growth advantage categories.By Rolando BranlyThe study of gene abnormalitiesdominates the main areas of today’sbae,n cancer research. Dr. Janet D.p ..iey, one of the ; rim^ry tvmtribu-ors in this field and a m .I geneti¬cist of the U of C Medical School, cur¬rently leads, with her colleagues, heUniversity’s research efforts into thecause of cancer.They have proven, contrary to pastbeliefs, that gene abnormalities arenon-random events in cancer. Thoseabnormalities currently under majorinvestigation * include translocation,which involves the exchange of partsbetween two chromosomes, inversionof segments within one chromosome,and apparent losses or gain of chromo¬somal material.In 1972 Rowley’s research encom¬passed a major breakthrough. By dis¬covering translocation in malignantcells she laid down the groundwork forfuture research. The chromosomechanges discovered were found to beassociated with particular types of leu¬kemia.The focus of the lab centers on thestudy of patients with leukemia. In ex¬plaining the recurrence of abnormali¬ties found, Rowley said that it “in¬volved a. change in the genes that arelocated at the chromosome break¬points, and that these changes provid¬ed the cells with some kind of growthadvantage.” Rowley further indicates“that this is seen in patients that havenot been treated.”The breaks and rearrangements un¬doubtedly change the function of thecells. Rowley points out that their morerecent work “tries to identify the genesthat are present in the breaks, and to see how their function is altered by thechromosome breaks.” An article com¬ing out in Nature magazine explainswork on the break metallothioneingene cluster on chromosome 16. Row-ley assumes that this gene acts as theswitch element in inversions of chro¬mosomal material. The inversions occur in chromosome16, while the translocations involvechromosome 9 and 22. In the phenome¬non of translocation chromosome 22loses DNA to chromosome 9 but gains asmall piece of 9 in return. Transloca¬tion has also been found in other chro¬mosomes. Currently other universities in theUnited States and abroad are also re¬searching this field. The University ofChicago, as one of the leaders, receivesmost of its funding from the govern¬ment, the National Cancer Institute,the Department of Energy, and theUniversity of Chicago Cancer Re¬search Foundation.RABBINICAL SCHOOL-GRADUATE SCHOOL-SEMINARY COLLEGE OE JEWISH STL DIES-CANTORSRabbi Morris Allen will be at Hillel House5715 S. Woodlawn 752-1127 3JEWISH STUDIES \AT ANY LEVEL IIN JERUSALEM —IN NEW YORK \Visit for a semester with credit ^or enroll in a degree program. *Open to all academically qualified fstudents. For information on opportunities =call or write. rzsnoi The Jewish Theological Seminary of America3080 BROADWAY. NEW YORK. NY 10027 f.(212) 678-8832 £Wednesday, February 20 llra.m to 1:50 p.m. jTITTM -NOIIVUISINUMIV TOOIOs AVG M WVHOOMd'WIAVTVHSflMA 13HS3HUII\ ' STOOH3SSHANAH PROGRAMA YEAR OF'JEWISH STUDIES c *•ATVESHlOA UNIVERSITY IN NEW YORK CITYIF YOU ARE INTERESTEDCALL 752-1127AND MAKE AN APPOINTMENT TO TALK WITH, RABBI BARRY FREUNDELOF YESHIVA UNIVERSITYONTHURSDAY. FEBRUARY 2112:00-3:00 P.M.AT HILLEL HOUSE5715 S. WOODLAWN MEDICAL ETHICS ANDJEWISH LAWWHAT DOES THE JEWISH TRADITION SAY ABOUTORGAN TRANSPLANTSGENETIC ENGINEERINGTHE “BABY FAE” CASECONVERSATION WITHRABBI BARRY FREUNDELOF YESHIVA UNIVERSITYTHURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21 4:00 P.M.HILLEL HOUSE5715 S, WOODLAWNcyi year you'll take vrtthyou for lifeJewish Study and Jewish Livingin Jerusalemfor College Students and GraduatesIntensive study of classical Jew ish texts, alsoHebrew language, Jewish philosophy andIsraeli society. Equal access to learning tormen and women.• Full and part-time programs • College credit• Housing and meal options • Educational toursThe Jewish Theological Seminary of America3080 Broadway, N.Y., N.Y. 10027Telephone (212) 678-8832—£MIDF(ESHET cYERUSHALAYIM-8 featuresThe Chicago Maroon - Tuesday, February 19, 1985BRIEFLYKangeiko Tee Shirts are in. The 200 un¬dergraduates who earned this dubiousmark of distinction may pick up theirtrophies from Sonia Jacobson, or JeanTreese. Their offices are on the secondfloor of Harper.This year’s glorious tee shirts areblack with a white emblem featuring aSamurai warrior in full battle dress.* * *College job-hunters will soon get ahand landing entry-level positions. TheU of C is one of 150 campuses where se¬niors will soon be able to reachhundreds of companies with their re¬sumes. ENTRYLINK/USA provides adata-base of thousands of graduates,filed and cross-referenced by majorand job . skill. Companies includeExxon, Bankers Trust Co., Dean Wit¬ter Reynolds. W R Grace & Co., andBloomingdale’s Inc. are trying to fillover 28.000 entry-level positions, andthey are using the new service to helpthem do so.The ENTRYLINK candidate profileis deeper than standard resumes. Be¬cause ENTRYUNK places only entrylevel jobs, and students generally haveless job experience than other job¬hunters, the profile covers work/envi¬ronment preferences, to indicate howwell a candidate would adapt to a givenorganization, personality traits, and anpersonal statement of career objec¬tives and strengths.ENTRYLINK was created becausecompanies that spend thousands of dol¬lars on campus recruiting visits stillonly see a limited selection of candi¬dates. and many others can’t afford re¬cruiting visits at all. ENTRYLINKpresident Richard Jaffee said his sys¬tem “gives both job-hunters and com¬panies the broadest exposure at a mi-mimum effort and cost.* * * The University of Virginia is diggingup Thomas Jefferson. They want yourhelp.The University of Virginia (UVA)and the Thomas Jefferson MemorialFoundation are accepting applicationsfor a three- to six-week archaeologicalfield school at Monticello. Jefferson’shome, during the summer of 1985. Stu¬dents will learn the method arid theoryof fieldwork in American historical ar¬chaeology and practice excavation andrecording techniques.Students tuition will be paid by theFoundation, and room and board canbe had through UVA at a modest price.The three week course is worth threecredit hours, and students who stay sixweeks earn six credits.Information and applications areavailable from Robert S, Fulcher, Uni¬versity of Virginia. Division of Continu¬ing Education. P O Box 3697, Charlot¬tesville. VA 22903. The deadline is April12, 1985.* * *As student federal aid threatens toevaporate, private sources of graduateand undergraduate funds are becom¬ing more important. A firm called theGreat Potentials Resource Centeroffers a service to help students fundtheir educations.For a nominal fee the Center willmatch a student against the half¬million private grant, loan, and schol¬arship programs they have on file. Thestudent will receive information onprograms he qualifies for, some ofwhich he might otherwise never haveheard of.Private contributions to higher edu¬cation last year totalled over $3 bil¬lion.Students should write to Great Po¬tentials Resource Center, 2529 N. Rich¬mond Street. Chicago, IL 60647 for afree information packet.* $ * . Carmen Jones (Preminger-1954) — Doyou ever feel that this is the era of theCarmen Renaissance? The people atDoc sure do. and up they hop onto Mr.Bandwagon, presenting Uncle Otto’sclassic version of the tragic story aboutthe fiery and beautiful girl who will notbe dominated by any man. The musicof Bizet is discarded, as is the Spanishearly-centurv location; Preminger opt¬ing, instead, to set his story in theSouth of the Second World War. with anall-black cast. An impressive versionof an often-told story. DQC-Feb. 19, 8p.m.. $2.00. —P.R.Winter Light (Bergman-1962) — A dis¬illusioned priest fails to provide moralcomfort for the citizens of a small fish¬ing village. Oh, Uncle Ingmar, you canbe so sad. With Max von Sydow andBergman regulars Gunnel Lindblomand Ingrid Thulin. Doc, Feb. 20,8 p.m.,$2.The World of Henry Orient (Hill-1964)— A delightfully sophisticated andslightly bittersweet comedy. PeterSellers is a lecherous, avant-gardepianist in New York, who becomes amatinee idol for two young schoolgirls,one wealthy, one poor. When the twosweet things, following Mr. Sellersabout town, and driving the poor manto distraction, discover that he is hav¬ing an affair with the rich girl’smother, it becomes a very sticky situa¬tion indeed, A truly New York-ishmovie, it captures the urb^n cosmopo-litia and cultural railleau that is thecity, while it deals with genuinelyamusing people. At its comedic best,Orient deals with the innocence andtrendiness of the two friends. At itscynical, bittersweet best, it effectivelydecries the stupidity and of ignoranceof faithless adults. With Angela Lans-bury as Naughty Mom, and Tom Bos¬ley as cuckolded Dad. Doc, Feb. 21, 8,S2.0O. — P.R. Hail the Conquering Hero < PrestonSturges, 1944)Sturges, a native Chicagoan, revita¬lized the American comic tradition inthe forties by marrying Mack Sennett’smethod of broad visual technique toCapraesque plot devices (without thenaivete). It’s like Mr. Deeds Goes toTown projected at double-speed. Inthis, the director’s favorite film. Woo¬drow Lafayette Pershing Truesmith(Eddie Bracken) is discharged fromthe Marines for hay-fever. He is foistedoff on his hometown as a hero. Thefolks want to elect him mayor. Whatfollows is one of Hollywood’s most so¬phisticated and daring satires. WilliamDemarest (you’ll remember him asUncle Charlie from My Three Sons)turns in a hilarious supporting perfor¬mance, Wed. at 8:30, LSF. $1. — SJM.Inherit the Wind (Stanley Kramer,I960)Too many of Kramer’s pictures reekof treacle-ridden liberalism. Theydemonstrate propositions that all real¬ly swell people — like us — know al¬ready. In Ship of Fools and Judgementat Nuremberg he had the temerity tosay that Nazism was bad. Bigotry, ac¬cording to The Defiant Ones and GuessWho’s Coming to Dinner, is not nice ei¬ther. Inherit the Wind is about toler¬ance, writ large. But Kramer’s heavy-handedness cannot obscure thetragic-comic dimensions of the Scopes“monkey” trial. The Darrow ( SpencerTracy) — Bryant <Fredric March)confrontation shoots out sparks. Thenagain. Gene Kelly is astonishinglyawful as the Mencken character, andthe ending is a sellout. Still, that won’tstop you if you are really open-minded.Thursday at 8:30, LSF. $2. — SJM.1309 E.■PHONEOPENFRI.-SAT. SUNDAY8AM-6PM * 11AM-5PMm :.. O WHICH OF THE FOLLOWING IS GUARANTEED TO CHANGEYOUR WAY OF THINKING?1. Studying at King's College in London f2. Studying at Royal Holloway College in London3. Studying at The British Studies Centre in Canterbury.A .ANY OF THE ABOVE iThe Institute for American Universities now offers 3 study-abroadoptions in Great Britain: King’s College of the University ofLondon, The Institute’s British Studies Centre in Canterbury, andRoyal Holloway College (also of the University of London). Eachcombines a first-rate academic programme with the opportunity Ito Hve and travel in EuropeFor details concerning the Institute’s programmes, write to us at73 Castle Street, Canterbury CT1 2QD, England, or see your jcampus study-abroad advisorFor Far-Out Far East Tour Bargainscall the ORIENT SPECIALIST1-800-221-1081 Cultural visits to Japan’s historicalshrines and sites. Factory tours andindustrial seminars - for you tocombine business with pleasure!14 days - JAPAN-8EIJING TOUR only S2 192*Your chance to see the newlyopened China!14 days - JAPAN-HONG KONG TOUR only $2,076’Have the shopping spree of your life infabulous Hong Kong1‘from Chicago or New York. All pricesinclude round trip air fare on Japan Air Linesand first class hotel accomodations (basedon double occupancy)jOCO PACIFICO CREATIVE SERVICE, INC / ?\n/i 225 North Michigan Ave Suit, 1?08 Chicago IL 60601 U4sports 9Men’s basketball wins two roadgames despite hostile crowds The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 19, 1985By Frank LubyThough they’ll probably finish theseason tied for second place, the Uni¬versity of Chicago men’s varsity bas¬ketball team played like potentialchampions over the weekend. Afterstruggling to defeat Lawrence Univer¬sity on Friday, 51-45, the Maroonsfought off their usual day-after letdownand crushed St. Norbert, 66-53, before alarge Parents Day crowd in DuPere,Wisconsin.“We’re as good a small college teamas there is in the country,” declaredMaroon head coach John Angelus,whose team has won eight of its last tenball games. Had the Maroons won twoclose games early in January they’dalso be Midwest Conference northerndivision champions, but unless Beloitloses to Lawrence this week, Chicagowill only finish tied for second with fivelosses, one game behind the Bucca¬neers.Nick Meriggioli, a senior tri-captain,led the team in scoring in the St. Nor¬bert game, and three other Maroonsfinished in double figures. “They (St.Norbert) were still alive, and they hada big Parents Day crowd,” said Ange¬lus, who added that “they were allkeyed up to rub us out, but we played avery strong game.” Chicago’s match¬up zone defense and its easy handlingof St. Norbert’s man-to-man pressureallowed the Maroons to establish a leadas high as 20 points in the second half,and hold St. Norbert to a mere 42 pointsuntil the final three minutes of thegame.Senior Keith Libert, junior RobOmiecinski, and sophomore Dave Wittalso hit double figures for Chicago.The Maroons also received stronghelp off the bench from Tom Lepp,Adam Green, and Frank Caeser. What the Maroons victory does isconfuse the Midwest Conference titlerace even more. Because Ripon upsetBeloit, 62-60, on Saturday, Beloit mustwin its final game (against Lawrence)or else create a three-way tie for firstplace, should St. Norbert and Chicagowin their final games. If th-. trin¬spires, the decision on first place willgo to the conference commissioner, be¬cause Beloit has the season seriesagainst Chicago, Chicago has the sea¬son series over St. Norbet, but St. Nor¬bert won its season series with Beloit.On Friday evening Chicago played abox-and-one on Lawrence’s leadingscorer, Jeff Wilcox, and succeeded inshutting him down. But until the Vik¬ings tried to press late in the game,Chicago failed to break things open.Angelus, reviewing the season, said“there are only two games I regret.”Those games, of course, are the Jan¬uary losses to St. Norbert (65-61 inovertime) and Beloit (48-46 at thebuzzer) which separate Chicago from a12-3 record and a division title.“But what displeases me most,” An¬gelus remarked, “is that this year wehad the best team we’ve had in a longtime and we didn’t get the kind of sup¬port we should’ve been getting (fromthe fans here).” Angelus continued,saying that “it’s tough to get a team upfor every game. I don’t have the rea¬son, but for some reason we didn’t getthe support which would have made adifference.”Angelus said that at St. Norbert thefans cheered almost the entire gameuntil Chicago pulled way ahead in thesecond half, and that’s the kind ofhome support he notices when theMaroons play on the road.“We got compliments from DivisionI and Division II schools whom we played on the road,” he said. “Thescore doesn’t really matter. What mat¬ters is we didn’t fold up; we gave ev¬erybody a game.”Angelus also cited mid-season inju¬ries to Keith Libert and Rob Omiecins¬ki as factors in the team’s perfor-By Doug ShapiroThe U of C women’s swim teamturned out its second Nationals quali¬fier on Saturday at the end of a longweekend of intense competition forboth the men’s and women’s swimteams. While the men were hittingsome of their best times of the year inthe two-day Illinois private collegechampionships at Illinois BenedictineCollege, junior diver Rose Kivens washelping the women to a strong finish atthe three-day women’s State meet atWheaton College. Kivens catapultedherself off the three-meter divingboard clear into the NCAA Division IIINational Championships, where shewill join teammate Tina Ellerbee, whoqualified last week in the 100 yd. but¬terfly.“It was completely unexpected/’commented coach Bill Bean afterKivens topped her previous best scoreby over 60 points to qualify. “It’s veryunusual for a diver to be better atthree-meters than at one, and Rose hasbeen practicing almost entirely at onemeter,” said Bean. But after placingjust fifth in the one-meter board com¬petition on Friday, Kivens bouncedback on Saturday to capture second inthe three-meter event with 389 pointsfor 11 dives. That score was 16 pointsabove the qualifying mark, and willsend the junior transfer-student to herfirst national competition. This is herfirst year diving for the Maroons, whostill have one more meet, the MCACchampionships this weekend at LakeForest, before the Nationals in mid-March.The women’s team as a whole didquite well at Wheaton, finishing fifth ina tough field of 11 teams. Bean saw themany personal best times at the meetas a promising sign for conference thisweek, where he hopes to take fourthplace or better against, “a lot of tradi¬tionally quick teams who have beenhurt by injuries this year.” TheMaroons are looking pretty quickthemselves, however, even only half¬way through their end-of-the-seasontraining period.Women’s b-ballto honor 4By Geoffrey SherryAfter about splitting a weekend roadtrip with a 60-52 win over LawrenceUniversity on Friday and a 62-41 loss topowerhouse St. Norbert’s on Saturday,the 11-9 Maroons return home Thurs¬day night to face Beloit College in thefinal game of the year.Chicago defeated Beloit at Beloitearlier this year, but Head CoachKevin McCarthy is not chalking thisone up quite yet.“They run a flex offense and arevery quick. We’ll play our tall lineup asthey do not have much height...wearen’t taking anything for granted,” hesaid.Thursday’s game will feature thelast performance of four Chicago se¬niors. Karen Walsh, Sheila Dugan,Beth Laskey and Wendy Pietrzak willtake the floor for the final time asMaroons. Special ceremonies havebeen planned to honor these membersof the class of ’85.Also featured will be n’.T.thc instal¬lation of the Great Chicago ''tout, abrainchild of the women’s basketballprogram in which prizes are awardedto fans who compete in various con¬tests. These contests include pickingthe half-time score, a hot-shot competi¬tion, and the much heralded $100 half¬court shot.The events will begin at 7:30 atHenry Crown. mance. “We missed Keith for fourgames, and Robbie was 100 percent forabout a third of the season,” Angelussaid, “and that alone, in a tight race, isenough.”Chicago finished its season last nightagainst Lake Forest.The 400 yd. medley relay team set anew school record for the second timethis year, and the 400 yd. freestylerelay team swam its best time of theseason as well.Nationals bound butterflyer Ellerbeeset a new school record in the 200 yd.butterfly.The men’s meet was equally suc¬cessful. Although they were still in themidst of their toughest workouts, theMaroons placed fifth overall in a fieldof 12 teams. Included in the field werestrong teams from IIT, Augustana andWheaton. The men have their confer¬ence meet in two weeks.The Maroons did remarkably well intwo “debut” events which had not beenpart of their previous meets this year.One of these, the 400 yd. individualmedley, turned out to be their highest-scoring event of the meet, as EverettLee and Mark Schleinitz teamed up totake second and third place respective¬ly. Also, Doug Cipriano scored an im¬pressive victory in the 1650 yd. frees¬tyle, his usual distance being 1000yards.Varsity SchedulesWomen’s Basketball*Feb. 21 Thurs.—BeloitCollege Home7 : 30p.m.Women’s TrackFeb. 19 Tues.—U Wisconsin-Whitewater Home6 pmMen’s TrackFeb. 19 Tues.—U Wisconsin-Whitewater Home6 pmWomen SwimmingFeb.22. Fri., Sat.—Confer-23 ence Meet atLake Forest Away* to be broadcast on WHPKOff the IM WireCrash those boards,Mrs. SujimotoProfessional hockey has beenmarred by excessive violence andprofessional football has been dimin¬ished by questionable officiating(e.g., the Super Bowl — No fumbleFreddie Solomon, get a clue). But U ofC intramurals have been rocked byboth. Compton has been kicked out ofthe undergrad residence league fortheir “poor court behavior.” Mean¬while, Upper Rickert A has beenplaced on probation for sometimes be¬coming delirious on the court andpracticing Daniel Boone bearhugs ontheir opponents. Even Keenan Wynnwouldn't go to such extremes to getback at the Ewings. Because of theirprobation. Rickert has dropped out ofthe UPI Coaches Poll and has beenbarred from anymore lucrative tele¬vision er?af ^meuts for the rest of theyear.And as for the officiating...wellBobby (Knight), here’s to you. Comp¬ton and Rickert each entered pleas ofnot guilty by reason of insanity. Theinsanity, psycniatric experts havetestified, was due to the pos)l-choke-on-the-whistie-referee syndromeThis insanity often leads u> such in ."mecries as, “Crash those board:; Mrs.Sujimoto!”Enough is enough. As for basketballitself, Seven Catholics and a Jew con¬tinue to dominate the undergrad inde¬pendent league, carrving a 7-0 re¬cordFriday, February 22,1985ALL UNIVERSITY"HOT MIX''PARTYfeaturingKenny ‘Jammin’ JasonandRalphi ‘Rockin’ RosarioOfWBMXTime: 9 PM. -1 AM.Place: International HouseAssembly HallAdmission: $3 UCID*4 w/outRefreshmentsPRESENTED BY THE ORGANIZATION OF BLACK STUDENTS A Nationals qualifier asswimmers score at Wheatonio| The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday. February 19, 1985K.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. ISAIAH ISRAELRELIGIOUS SCHOOL1100 E. HYDE PARK BLVD.CHICAGO, IL 60615924-1254 W KAPLAN1 EDUCATIONALCENTERTEST PHEWLHATION SPECIAUSTS S4NCt 1930Call Days Eves & WeekendsDIAL-A-TEST HOTLINE (312) 508-0106ARLINGTON HEIGHTS 437-6650CHICAGO CENTER 764-5151HIGHLAND PARK 433-7410LA GRANGE CENTER 352-5840P«rm»n«n< C«ni*a m More Tn«n 120 *U|<» U S Cldcs A AArucdfoi mtofmcliofl other centersOUTSIDE N Y STATE CAU T0U FREE SOU ??3 1712In Ne* York Sidle Sl.stikfy H Kaplan I lut-dbo.idi (-enlei l 10—TA> sam you—CHINESE-AMERICAN RESTAURANTSpecializing in Canioneseand American dishes.Open Daily 11 A -8:30 P.M.Closed Monday1318 E. 63rd MU 4-1062Get a FREEEnlargementOrder any twosame-size,.same-finishKodak colorenlargements.Get a thirdenlargementfree, fromKodak’sown lab.Just bring inyour favoriteKODACOLORFilm negatives,color slides, orcolor prints*for breathtaking enlargements from8" x 10" to 16" x 24". Ask for details.Hurry, specialoffer endsFebruary 27, 1985,Min negates or pen'sD£ con^ned n *se sa^^o'Sef toauai fv JAsk for a PROCESSING BYIKbdakhVjThe University of Chicago BookstorePhotographic Departaeitr~yc\ 2nd Floor ^■■1MasterCard] 962-7558 MSI*9MHHB International Housein conjunction withthe Organization ofBlack StudentspresentsMUNTUDANCETHEATREPerforming contemporary interpretations oftraditional African Dance from Senegal and West Africa.Tickets:General Admission:$5.00Students andSenior Citizens$3.00(available at International House)Saturday, February 238:00 P.M.1414 E. 59th StreetThis program is funded in part by the Illinois Arts Council - a State agency.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- flatter/#* - Film- Darkroom accessories - Video tapes- Cassette tapes - Chemicals- RadiosThe University of Chicago BookstorePhotographic & Office Machine Department. 970 E. 58th St. 2nd FloorWB* ! 962-7558I.B.X. 5-4364 \MoCvCordfriday hillel forumThe New P.L.O. After Amman:Prospects for PeaceProf. Marvin ZonisDept. Behavioral Sciences and the Collegefriday, february 22,8:30 p.m.Hillel House, 5715 S. Woodlawn752-1127CLASSIFIEDS The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 19, 1985CLASSIFIEDADVERTISINGClassified advertising in the Chicago Maroon is$2 for the first line and $1 for each additionalline Lines are 45 characters long INCLUDINGspaces and punctuation. Special headings are?*character lines at $2 per line Ads are not accepted over the phone, and they must be paidin advance. Submit all ads in person or by mailto The Chicago Maroon, 1212 E. 59ih St.,Chicago, III. 60637 ATTN Classified Ads Ouroffice is in Ida Noyes Rm. 304 Deadlines:Wednesday noon for the Friday issue, Fridaynoon for the Tuesday issue Absolutely no exceptions will be made! In case of errors forwhich the Maroon is responsible, adjustmentswill be made or corrections run only if thebusiness office is notified WITHIN ONECALENDAR WEEK of the original publication The Maroon is not liable for anv errors.SPACEApts avail soon Grad, student pref For moreinfo pis Call Mrs. Irvinq 667 5153SPACE WANTEDAPARTMENT WANTED seeking 1 BR apt .Univ Chic. area. Furnished preferred but notnecessary. Must have before 2/25 Inquiresphone collect (606) 885 5157, 5 8pm CSTStudent writing PhD seeks quiet room nearcampus for Spring quarter. Call 665 4144PEOPLE WANTEDPeople needed to participate in studies onmemory, perception, and language processing. Learn something about how you carry outthese processes and earn some money at thesame time! Call the Committee on Cognitionand Communication, afternoons at 962 8401 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 photographed. Call Leslie at 536 1626CARPENTRY —20°o discount on all work doneJen-March. Custom bookcases, interiorcarpentry of all kinds, free estimates CallDavid, 684 2286.TYPIST Exp Turaoian PhD Masters ThesesTerm papers Rough Drafts. 924 1 152James Bone* editor wordprocessor typist,$15/hr Call 363 0522 for more detailsBEHAVIORAL WEIGHT LOSS GROUP FORWOMEN STUDENTS University Health Services Are you between 20 to 40lbs overweightand willing to work hard to take weight off andkeep it off? If interested and you can meet 3:30Thursdays call Carol Southard 962 6757 orKaren Horton 753 2334Childcare Exp. Mother w/Background in Edand Child Devel Campus Loc Ref Avail 4934086SCENESWRITERS WORKSHOP (PL2 8377)FOR SALEVictorian House on Harper near 59th $275,000PL2 8377Scan Furniture is looking for part time helpthrough summer Duties include sales andother store related duties Apply in person 5201S. HarperPt time desk attendant needed Study at work!Must be flexible, avail, to work mornings $4 hrCall 752 8990 mornings BEFORE 7:00am oreveninqs AFTER 11pm No calls during dayBabysitter needed 20hrs per week 4 00 perhour In my Hyde Park home. Must be warmcaring person to sit with my 3 yr old One yrcommitment necessary. 624 3459 If no ans624 2809The Homework Center is a program which provides young people in the community withhomework help It is housed in the BlueGargoyle Youth Center 5655 University Aveand operates on Tues and Thurs. 3 15 until4:15 We need tutors for reading and especiallyHigh school math If interested call 955 4108Educational Therapist Assistant part timeafternoons and Saturdays. Apply in personMon Thurs 10 30 6:30 Sat 9 5 at Chicago Clinicfor Child Development 1525 E. 53rd St Suite1003.WANTED Depl'l Sec. 37.5 hrs./week C 9 levelMust have good secretarial skills 962 8401CARING? SENSITIVE?Are you interested in helping other students?Listening to their problems and learning aboutthe resources available to them in the University and greater Chicago? The U of CHOTLINE trains committed volunteers inreflective listening and provides a comprehensive program to acquaint them with the different issues that confront our listeners. If youwould like to learn more about HOTLINE andSpring training, come to our informationmeeting tonight at 7pm in Ida Noyes SunParlorMACINTOSH OWNERS!Macstation $75 00 Great deals on all hardwareand software! Yes, we do custom programming! Golden Rule, Inc. 929 2592HYDE 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 VINTAGE CLOTHING SALE A BRATIONEverylhing half- price This month open twoweekends to better accommodate youFebruary 16, 17 + 23, 24 12noon 6pm We cleanout you clean up at HEAVEN 6981 N SheridanConover Grand $500 (752 8377)MABSURVEYSYour opinion is important! Please return yourMAB surveys today to any of the faculty exchange mailboxes around campus, ReynoldsClub box office, SAO in room 210 Ida Noyes orthe front desk of your dorm.WINTER BLUES?Regain your sense of humor Come see ANEVENINGOF ONE ACTS by G.B SHAW Produced by Concrete Gothic Theatre TH S Feb21 23 W S Feb 27 Mar2 1st floor Reynolds ClubTheatre. Tickets at door $3 Curtain 8omGAY? LESBIAN? B8?GALA holds its weekly meetings at 9 00 pmevery Tuesday at 5615 S. Woodlawn Meetingswill be followed by a social hour withrefreshments.THE MEDICI DELIVERSDaily from 4 pm call 667 7394.ISR FELLOWSHIPISR is a prestigious consulting firm specializing in employee and management attitudesurveys. Clients are typically ma|or multinational corporations. ISR is headquartered inChicago, with offices in London and TokyoThe candidate should possess the following• Ph D candidate in the Behavioral Sciences•Exceptional Interpersonal skills.•Proficiency In making presentations.•Business experience desirable•Multi lingual skills desirableAvailability to work in our downtown headquarters and travel is a requirementMinimum of 12 hours a weekResumes to: Director of OperationsInternational Survey Research, Inc.303 E OhioChicago, IL 60611COMING OUT?GALA holds a smail informal meeting for peopie who have never come to a meeting beforeWe discuss what it means to be gay and theproblems and possibilities that follow this op♦ ion Tuesday at 8pm, 5615 S WoodlawnPERSONALSMy husband and I are interested in adopting aninfant, If you know of anyone who is considermg placing a child for adoption please call collect 312 848 7971.Studios, 1, 2, & 3 BedroomApartments AvailableSome Nice Lake ViewsGood LocationHeat IncludedParking AvailableCALLHERBERT REALTY684-23335% Student Discounts9:00 A M -4:30 P.M.Monday thru Friday9:00 A.M.-2 P.M.Saturday LOX! BAGELS!SUNDAY!Hillel has Brunch Every Sunday From 11 tolpm Only $2 For A Lox & Bagel Sandwichincludes Coffee or Tea, Danish, OJ & al! theNew York Times You Can ReadHIGH FRONTIER"ABM Defense and the Star Wars Myth '—filmand lecture by Ralph Westberg of High Frontier. Time: March 3rd, 7 30 pm LocationWest Lounge, Ida Noyes, 1212 E. 59th St Sponsored by Students Against Nuclear War (SANsWAR ) Further information call 684 8024WORDPROCESSORNORC, a not for profit survey research centeraffiliated with the University of Chicago, is anational leader in the design and conduct ofsocial research surveys, and the analysis ofsurvey data We are looking for a word processor to t ype a variety of materials of averageand above average difficulty Assignmentswould include questionaire and manuscriptsprimarily, and statistical tables and chartsOne year of NBI experience is required NBIsystem 6400 experience is a plus Some collegepreferred Minor editing skills and excellentspelling required Experience in manuscriptand statistical typing also helpful Artisticsense of layout work and excellent typing skillsdesirable Knowledge of Spanish an assetSalary range $12,000 15,000 Fulltime CallFrances at 962 8953.PRE LAW STUDENTSThe true story of life as a J D Coming March 1and 2 to a theater near yc ». Tickets in the lawschool lounqe, lunchtimesTENSE 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 purpose of this study is to examine the effectsvarious drugs have on mood and determinewhich drugs people choose to take The evaluation involves only commonly prescribed drugsFollowing participation in the experiment,subjects will receive 6 weeks of a nonexperimental treatment which will be made ona clinical basis by an experienced therapistFor more information or to volunteer CALL962 3560 weekday mornings between 9 and 12Sub|ects must be 21 years of ageETHNOGRAPHIC FILMAcademy Award winning film NUMBER OURDAYS from book by B Myerhoff on aging andethnicity in America Thurs Feb 21 at 7 00 IdaNoyes W Lounge E FG funded by SFGCPC GOODIESEducation Sec'y Bennett says, "Divest!”LOTUS 12 3 Still factory wrapped $300 LATTICE C Rtl $500 New, but open $250 HAYES1200 Ext'l Modem. Never used $450MUTIMATE Like Wang ded WP $200 Call ifyou have a question, or make an offer Eveninqs best. Tom 493 2735RESEARCH JOBResearch coordinator needed in the Department of Psychiatry, University of ChicagoDuties include subject recruiting and screening, administering research protocols, anddata preparation 20 hours per week, mostlymornings. Bachelor's degree and strong interpersonal skills required Salary accordingto qualifications. For further information,CALL Joe Pieterri, 9 a m 12 M F, 962 3560HAVE FUN!EARN MONEY!Needed Third and sixth grade boys and girlsfor fun study on art, Earn money! Call Wendyat 962 1548 and leave your name and numberCONDOS FOR RENT53rd and Kimbark6 Rooms 3 bedrooms, 2 baths Modern kitchenOak cabinets F loors refinished $700 Mo5 Rooms 2 bedrooms, 1 bath Open sunporchModern bath and kitchen $575/Mo Call Nancyor SteveParker Holsman Company 493 2525STANLEY H. KAPLANEDUCATIONAL CENTERFebruary Cium«SAT- ACC ORE. OMATSPEED READING4WK. GMAT ISATMarch CHUMSAT. MCAT OAT.SPEED READING ESC.4WK MCATPREPARE FORMCAT • SAT * LSAT * GMAT • GREGRE PSVCH • GRE BK> • OCAT * VAT • MATINTRODUCTION TO LAW SCHOOLSPEEO READING * SSAT • PSAT • ACT * CPADAT ACHIEVEMENTS • TOEFL * MSKPNk»6 1, 11. Ill * FLEX * N-CLEX * CGFNSFMGEMS * NP0 1 * ESL • NCB <SPANG SUNK* FILL ItfTENSfVESCourses constantly updated nex'txeprogram* and hours Vi*t any came' andsee *or y Our sen «*tiy make t^edifference Speed Read'og Course'eeiLies free Demo esson- -Can 'o*das 4 times dial a test HOTLINE»t*i soeoioeIro» -ft.vARLINGTON HEIGHTSCHICAGO CENTERHIGHLAND PARKLA GRANGE CENTER 312,312312 437-6650764-5151... 433-7410312 352-5640NV iuee ON cm To. f,m ioOZZ) !T*iCeMwsxMwo. U S Puenc *oc T<yor*> Ceneoa MCSale Dates Feb. 20-23MEATU.S.D.A CHOICEPORTERHOUSE STEAK•b. $309U.S.D.A. CHOICESIRLOIN STEAKlb. $189PRODUCEROMAINE LETTUCElb.LEMONSlb.DAIRYKRAFT SOFTMAXI PARKAYlb.KRAFT SOFTPHILADELPHIACREAM CHEESE8 oz. 49<49<89*99*GROCERYCANFIELD S DIETCHOCOLATE FUDGE6 pk. $169BASMATIRICE.b 79*SUPERIORSOY SAUCE21 oz. $109CARRS TABLEWATER CRACKERS41/* oz. 99*STEWART’SCOFFEEReg.26 oz. $497DEL MONTEPITTED PRUNES12 oz. 99*KEEBLER SOFTBATCH COOKIES12 oz. $139MRS GRASSNOODLES16 oz 79*CHEESEPORT SALUT $299BRIE $259, FINER FOODSSERVING53r<J PRAIRIFKIMBARK PLAZA 2911 VfRNONWhere You Are A Stranger But Once12i The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 19, 1985/ • v\ 7 \ MORRY’SINHUTCH COMMONSGREAT FOOD AT AFFORDABLE LOW PRICES' '■ * •*»:& ■. *<% /ALL DAY LONG99* BREAKFAST SPECIALSlEGG MacMORRYJEgg Omelet, pastrami,Isalami and americanIcheese on a heatedlbagel FREE COFFEE!. 99e THE BEST BUYBAGEL & CREAM AAeCHEESE FREE COFFEE! 5757vILOX, BAGEL &| CREAM CHEESE FREE COFFEE! $1.50 ON CAMPUSGREATOFFER!ITSINCREDIBLE$2.99 LUNCHCOMPLETE LUNCH SPECIALSTHE HOUSESPECIAL!lb. jumbosteakburger, Frenchfries, & salad FREE10 OZ.PEPSIMORRY’S SPECIALChar-broiled bonelesschicken breast onsesame seed bun,french fries, and salad FREE10 OZ.PEPSITHE BIGGEST REDHOT YOU’VE EVEREATEN!1/i jumbo char-broiledkosher hot dog toppedwith all the trimmingsand served with frenchfries and salad FREE10 OZ.PEPSIA TASTE FROM THEORIENT!Char-broiled chickenTenaki served withrice, vegetable, andsalad FREE TEA $2.99$2.99$2.99 A COMPLETEMEAL AT AGREAT PRICE$2 A COMPLETEQQ MEAL AT A.5757 GREAT PRICE|39< HAPPY HOUR SPECIALSHAPPY HOUR SPECIALSI MORRY’S SPECIAL!| Our 39* Hot Dogs/with all the trimmings Still only JS 't/4 lb. Char broiled Hamburger/all the trimmings ... 99c[ 1/4 lb. Cheeseburger/all the trimmings ....: $1.171/4 lb. Mushroom Burger/all the trimmings $1.591/4 lb. Swiss Mushroom Burger/all the trimmings $1.82Double 1/2 lb. Burger/all the trimmings $1.82Double 1/2 lb. Cheeseburger/all the trimmings :... $2.17Triple 3/41Lurger/ali the trimmings $2.69Triple 3/4 lb. Cheeseburger/all the trimmings $2.69 $2.99 DINNERCOMPLETE DINNER SPECIALSALL OUR DINNERS ARE SERVED WITH FRENCH FRIES,BBQ BEANS, AND SALADTHE BEST BUYON CAMPUSA COMPLETEMEAL AT AGREAT PRICE 1/2 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 $2.99Morry’s Original Thai Buffet FREE TEA $3.89LATE NIGHT SPECIALS(From 8:00pm to 10:00pm Monday Thru Friday)Great for Study Breaks!Vi lb. Jumbo FREESteakburger, French 10 OZ.Fries, and Salad PEPSIHot Jumbo Pastrami FREESandwich and French 10 OZ.Fries PEPSI ‘‘INCREDIBLE’OFFER“Can itReally be true’’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 blend Ice CreamOVER 100 DIFFERENT SANDWICHESTO CHOOSE FROM DAILYMORRY’S IS OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK FOR YOUR CONVENIENCEMAKE MORRY’S YOUR WEEKEND DORMITORY ALTERNATIVEHutch 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. WIN$250in Morry’s 2nd annual“The BestMuffin, Cookie, orCake at the U of C”ContestRULES: Bring your sample of your bestmuffin, cookie or cake, alongwith 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 $50 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.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 OCAKE □ MUFFINNAME OFPRODUCT