INSIDE:The heat'son Kleinbardpage 4 Summer sports scoresfor softball and tennispage 14 0 0 0 0 0 0000000oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo.pooo oo oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooThe Chicago MaroonVolume 95, No. 6 ©Copyright 1985 The University of Chicago Friday, AugustFriday, August 9, 1985University stallson Agora lease13-year tenant wantslong-term lease to renovateThe Agora will undergo renovation if the owner, Dino Alexopoulos, is able to obtain along-term lease from the University.Dorchester foes view optionsBy Ciaran OBroinLease negotiations betweenthe University and the Agorarestaurant are at a standstill.The University has not yet re¬sponded to the Agora’s at¬tempts to renew its lease twomonths ago, saying only thatit is talking with other possi¬ble tenants.The Agora has resided in aUniversity-owned building onthe corner of 57th and Ken¬wood for thirteen years. It as¬sumed the remainder of a fif¬teen year lease fromBaumy’s restaurant in 1972.The Agora’s owner DinoAlexopoulos said he has of¬fered to spend between$150,000 and $225,000 to remo¬del the restaurant, providingthat the University wouldgive him a lease of similarlength. “I would need at least10 to 15 years to recover thatkind of money.” Without theguarantee of a long-termlease, Alexopoulos said hewould not invest the money.Other businesses on Uni¬versity property have hesitat¬ed to renovate because of theuncertainty of obtaining fu¬ture leases from the Universi¬ty. For example, CampusFoods recently renovatedonly the half of the store thatit owned and not the halfowned by the University.Alexopoulos does not under¬stand how the Universitycould be dissatisfied with theAgora, considering the res¬ taurant’s thriving business.“Our menu attracts the stu¬dents, professors, local resi¬dents, even University Secu¬rity. It tells you somethingwhen people are willing towalk from campus for ourfood. This restaurant is goodfor the neighborhood.” Headded “with the money I planto spend on renovations Icould open a restaurant onthe North Side, but I wouldrather stay here. This is myfirst business and it is myhome.”Agora clientele are knownfor their loyalty to the restau¬rant. One graduate studentstrongly expressed his dissat¬isfaction with the situation.“It would be a disservice tothe University community tokick out the Agora. I havebeen coming here for thirteenyears and I’ve seen how Dinohas improved the place. Heserves a large variety of goodfood at an affordable price.Why mess with a goodthing?”Other patrons are reportedto be organizing a “Save theAgora” petition, althoughAlexopoulos thinks that mightbe premature.Jonathan Kleinbard, Vice-President for UniversityNews and Community Af¬fairs, said he would not com¬ment on the lease negotia¬tions, adding “We are notabout to argue the Agora’slease in the Maroon.” By Larry KavanaghWhile there is a temporarypause in the emotion-chargedstorm surrounding Wil-FredDevelopment’s plans to builda small mall on the empty lotsat the corner of 53rd and Dor¬chester, much larger cloudsare already gathering on thehorizon.Fred Levy, president of theHyde Park Chamber of Com¬merce (formerly known asthe Business and ProfessionalAssociation) sent out a letterlast week to the group’s mem¬bership asking them to affirmtheir support for the commer¬cial/retail development of va¬cant lots on the neighbor¬ hood’s business streets and“especially on 53rd street.”Levy explained in an inter¬view that the purpose of hisletter is to show developmentboards like the Hyde Park-Kenwood Conservation Com¬munity Council that there issupport for development inHyde Park.“We (businessmen and pro¬fessionals) are an integralpart of the community andour views and positionsshould be known to the com¬munity.”Response to the letter willalso be used to counterbal¬ance what Levy feels is agrowing “negative attitude towards commercial build¬ing.” As of Tuesday, he hadreceived about 30 written and“many more” verbal re¬sponses from the 280-strongmembership.It appears, though, thatnegative feelings in the com¬munity are only going to in¬crease in the near future.Legal experts, however, haveinformed the Maroon thatwhether or not the city’s cor¬poration counsel reaches theopinion that the CCC has ju¬risdiction over the north loton 53rd and Dorchester, acourt would probably decidethat Wil-Fred has the right tocontinued on page 13Fate ofBy Paul GreenbergThe future of the Depart¬ment of Geography is cur¬rently being debated by anadhoc faculty committeeappointed spring quarter byEdward Laumann, dean ofthe Division of SocialSciences. Committee chair¬man Charles Bidwell saidthe question being ad¬dressed is how, if at all,“modern work in the field ofgeography is to be repre¬sented and carried forwardat the University of Chica¬go.”The primary stimulus forthe review was the depart¬ment’s pressing need fornew faculty appointments.Not only has the departmentlost a number of senior fac¬ulty in the last decade, butthree of its remaining fivefull time faculty are oversixty years of age.Bidwell said the questionof whether to make new ap¬pointments is complicated Geography Department uncertainby the department’s need toexpand its research into themore quantitative areas.While quantitative researchhas always been included inthe department’s focus,(such as that currentlybeing conducted by Profes¬sor Jim Meyers), BidwellFriwarri l mimann said the department’s pri¬mary concern was the “so¬cial, humanistic, and histor¬ical aspects of geography,with its major resourcesbeing the library and thefield.”However, according toBidwell and Laumann, ex¬pansion into quantitativeareas of geography such asresource management, in¬frared sensing, or electroniccartogrophy via satellitewould require engineeringand computer equipmentand a substantial infusion offunding.Although geography de¬partment chairman MarvinMikesell declined comment,other sources said this ex¬pansion could be accom¬plished more gradually andneed not bring the viabilityof the department intodoubt. They also questionedwhether the departmentshouldn’t remain at the con¬ ceptual rather than thetechnical end of the field.The committee may rec¬ommend maintaining thedepartment at its currentlevel, abolishing it alto¬gether, or restructuring itCharles Bidwell While Laumann was un¬sure of how a committee ongeography would be struc¬tured, he said that such analteration would not imply adrop in the field’s status atthe University.At this point, however,Bidwell said, “the commit¬tee was not precluding athing.”To prepare themselvesfor the task of reviewing thedepartment and its place inthe current course of the ge¬ography field, the commit¬tee members heard testimo¬ny from the faculty in earlyspring quarter. They havealso read faculty work andconsulted with scholarsfrom other universities.The committee’s report isto be finished early in Au¬tumn quarter, at which timea final decision on the statusof the department will bemade.yjfc* i. hmn 11 j.j iUMMERSUNDAYSi1 Jv-i: *i"Y;OCKEFELLERt\ .K J> J> J1 ■ J> hHAPEL»j y J jilJJ J Jl. ^£-J IJ71 jgl59th&WOODLAWNAVE-Sunday, August 119:30 a.m. Ecumenical Service of Holy Communionwith SermonBernard O. Brown, Dean of the Chapel, preaching6:00 p.m. Carillon Concert on the LawnThomas S. Reif, Carillonneur6:45 p.m. Organ PreludeJeffrey Smith, Associate Organist7:00 p.m. Choral VespersWith the Rockefeller Memorial Chapel ChoirVictor B. Weber,Director of Chapel Music, speakingMG STUDENTDISCOUNTSPSYOiOlOGY T004T1 yr. RSI $12.97Whether you wont to reducetensions between people andnations or better understandthe world around you, you IIentay Psytholfy Todwy.ite ¥>* V#*:'# •* &»»*#■ tttomROLLING STOW131**. 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Nil $9.75Provocative perspectives onnotional ond internationalaffairs and the notable eventsof business, science andentertainmentTV GUIDE I yr.TY1 $19.40Complete weakly listings ofcommercial, coble ond PISprogramming Also interviews,movie reviews, ond previewsof thmgs to comeMOOBWeCjPHOTOGRAPHYgpra*TO ORDER: Just enter the magazine codes below (e.g. NE1). Circle "R" if you'rerenewing and enclose the most recent address lobel.If renewing more than one magazine, please indicate which label is which.Enclosed $ Bill me □(payable to PMSS, please) Sign here□ Visa □ MasterCard (Interbank NumberCard # Good thruMAIL SUBSCRIPTION TO:NAME _ADDRESSCITY STATE. ZIP„Year of Grad..School nameRatws good f<y WudwnU & educators only Allow &—12 wweks for nww subscnpWom ta start.PublisKws rates subcect In chong* Rates ore in U S t ond are good only m ifte U SMAIL COUPON TO: PMSS, 500 Third Ave. W„ Seattle, WA 98119 HILLEL HIGH HOLY DAY SERVICES1985 5746SLICHOT SERVICES,SEPT. 7 - 12:00 a.m. - Conservative (Upstairs Minyan) at HillelSAT. 12:30 a.m. - Orthodox (Yavneh) at HillelROSH HASH AN AH,SEPT. 15 -6:30 p.m. - Orthodox (Yavneh) at Hillel (1st floor)SUN. 8:00 p.m. - Conservative (Upstairs Minyan) Ida Noyes (Cloister Club)8:30 p.m. - Reform (Kadima) at Hillel (3rd floor)SEPT. 16 -8:30 p.m. - Orthodox (Yavneh) at HillelMON. 8:30 a.m.- Conservative (Upstairs Minyan) at Ida Noyes (Cloister Club)10:30 a.m. - Reform (Kadima) at Hillel (3rd floor)6:30 p.m. - Orthodox (Yavneh) at Hillel8:30 p. m. - Conservative (Upstairs Minyan) at Ida Noyes (Cloister Club)SEPT. 17 -8:30 a.m. - Orthodox (Yavneh) at HillelTUES 8:30 a.m. - Conservative (Upstairs Minyan) at Ida Noyes (Cloister Club)YOM KIPPURSEPT. 24 -2:30 p.m. - Orthodox (Yavneh) Mincha at Hillel (1st floor)TUES. 6:00 p.m. - Orthodox (Yavneh) Kol Nidre at Hillel (1st floor)6:00 p.m. - Traditional-Egalitarian at Hillel (3rd floor)6:00 p.m. - Conservative (Upstairs Minyan) at Ida Noyes (Cloister Club)8:00 p.m. - Reform (Kadima) at Ida Noyes (3rd floor theatre)SEPT. 25 -8:30 a.m. - Orthodox (Yavneh) at HillelWED. 9:30 a.m. - Conservative (Upstairs Minyan) at Ida Noyes (Cloister Club)10:30 a.m. - Reform (Kadima) at Ida Noyes (East Lounge-2nd floor)If there are any registration conflicts with High Holidays please call Hillel House.Includes Canon U S A Incone-year limited warranty/registration card CanonzHU-E,PROGRAMProgrammed AutomationPlus Shutter-Priority Sophistication.System Integration.The Canon AE-1 PROGRAM is the sophisticated SLR camera that'sfocus-and-shoot simple to use! 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A andMotor Drive MA availablefor rapid sequence shooting• Speedlite 188A sets speedand aperture for fully automatic flash photography• Accepts all Canon FD lensesfor AE operationThe University of Chicago BookstorePhotographic ft Office Machine Department970 E. 58th St. 2nd Floor962*7558I.B.X. 5-43642—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, August 9, 1985DARP head leaves - program may relocateBy Kim ShivelyDr. Edward C. Senay, professor inthe Department of Psychiatry, is leav¬ing his position as director of the DrugAbuse Rehabilitation Program(DARP) in September. Although theprogram will continue, the site of its fu¬ture operation remains uncertain.The Maroon received an anonymousletter dated July 24 which said that“the Methadone Maintenance Clinic(part of DARP) will close permanentlydue to the Medical Director’s leavingto take a position in Europe.”Senay affirmed that he was leavingfor Europe but denied that the clinic orthe program was closing. He said thatthe State — the Illinois Department ofAlcohol and Substance Abuse (DASA)— will take responsibility in finding anew director and will continue to fi¬nance the operation of the program asit has since its founding in 1967.“The original agreement was thatthe University of Chicago’s Depart¬ment of Psychiatry would open andoperate the Drug Abuse RehabilitationProgram” said Senay. “This programwas the first of its kind in Illinois, andnow there are many such programs.The Department of Psychiatry hasbuilt the state system of these clinics,but these are State and not Universityprograms.”Senay was, in fact, the foundingdirector of the original program, whichis located at 5737 Drexel Ave. ThisDARP is not for University students,employees or their families, but ratherfor members of the Hyde Park commu¬nity who suffer from heroin addiction.Senay knew of no comparable pro¬grams for University students who suf¬fer from this problem.The details of the change in leader¬ship will not be finalized until later thismonth. No new director has been ap¬pointed and the future location ofDARP has not yet been established.According to Senay, the programmay or may not remain at its presentlocation. Once a new director is ap¬pointed, the decision will be made as towhether it continues to operate onDrexel or somewhere else, possibly aspart of a similar program on the southside.For the Hyde Park communityaround the hospital, the relocation of DARP may be welcome. “I thinkthere’s been a lot of community opposi¬tion to the fact that the drug rehabilita¬tion clinic has been so close to the hos¬pital,” said Senay. “I think they’ll beglad to see it move.”The author of the anonymous letteralso expressed concern for the futureof the employees at DARP. “All that isneeded for the clinic to remain open isfor an able physician on the Universi¬ty’s staff to step in and takeover...there are several very capableworkers that will soon be unemployedif no one steps in before September 15,1985.”By Paul GreenbergWith its pilot year almost complete,the early entry program at the Gradu¬ate School of Business has been enthu¬siastically received by its administra¬tors and students.The program’s purpose was to en¬courage liberal arts and science stu¬dents to consider business careers. Itgave them a full tuition scholarship forthe summer quarter, and guaranteedthem admission to the business schoolfor two years after graduation. Thestudents were juniors who had beenrecommended from selection commit¬tees at each of the 12 colleges in theprogram.Among students and administratorsthe issue of greatest concern was thestudents adjusting to the Businessschool’s “quantitative reputation.”Joanne Riotte, who heads the oncampus MBA program, said that manyof the students had to work harder to“learn the math end of things beforedealing with the concepts.”Kathy Chen, an English major fromthe College, said “she did not expect asmuch quantitative emphasis” andfound it necessary to “work harder toadjust to a different mindset.” De¬borah Porter, an English major fromMiddleburg, said that many studentstook two classes instead of the usualthree as a way to “ease into the quanti¬tative business school world.”Some of the early entry students Senay assured that a new directorwill, in fact, take over, but the positionwill probably not be filled by a physi¬cian from the University.Futhermore, Senay denied that anyjobs are being threatened. “I’ve gottenpersonal assurance from the directorof the agency (of DASA) who is incharge of the appointment that no jobswill be lost,” he said. “He knows thatthere is a concern about this and willsee that everyone will continue (withthe program).”Senay also remarked that all con¬cerned individuals have been madefound that adjusting to classes filledwith students with more extensivebusiness experience was not a prob¬lem, however John Narcross, an eco¬nomics major from Kenyon, said theyasked more pointed questions, but didnot make him feel “less prepared in aclassroom setting.” Chen said her ex¬perienced peers were more informa¬tive than intimidating.Proving that there is more to a busi¬ness education than strict academics,the early entry program also conduct¬ed a weekly non-credit managementseminar. According to Riotte, it wasdesigned to “give the students a frame¬work to use and see more clearly theimportance of what they are learningin class.”Faculty members and guest speak¬ers from various parts of the businessworld lead informal discussions onvarious topics from management con¬sulting to marketing and advertising.Business cases prepared by the stu¬dents for each meeting formed the coreof the discussions.The seminar was viewed favorablyby most students. Porter felt “it wasmore worthwhile than some of herclasses.” Narcross said it “gave him agood opportunity to apply some of thetheory, while Laurel Andrew, a Ger¬man major from Kenyon, said it pro¬vided “a taste of the different things todo with an MBA.” She did feel that aware of his resignation. The patients,staff and administration connectedwith the program know of the upcom¬ing changes, and no problems have ari¬sen.Present patients at the Drexel DARPwill continue treatment either at thenew clinic or at another such program,Substance Abuse Services Inc., whichSenay established at St. Bernard’sHospital several years ago.“Roughly speaking, the patients willget the kind of treatment they alwayshave,” he said. “The only difference isthat someone else will be leading ”there should be more guest speakers,though.The mentor program was designedto take this practical side a step fur¬ther. Small groups of students were as¬signed to B-school alumni responsiblefor providing a first hand view of thebusiness world. Riotte said that specialefforts had been made to pick mentorsthat had liberal arts backgrounds.However, despite being regarded as“good in theory,” the program was notvery successful in application. Somestudents, such as Porter, said theirmentor went out of his way to showthem the intricacies of their businessas well as offer some advice on “whichteachers were good and which werenot.” Others, such as Nadine Niel, achemistry major from Kenyon, men¬tioned that they had not talked to theirmentor since beginning of the quarter.Porter also felt that students shouldhave access to more than one mentorin order, for this would give them awider view of business career options.Other criticisms of the programwere voiced over the shortness of theorientation period, and the fact that sti¬pends for room and board were not pro¬vided.The 24 students, most of whom ex-presed an interest in returning to finishup their MBA’s, came from Beloit, Co¬lorado College, Dennison, DePauw,Grinnell, Kenyon, St. Mary’s, LakeForest, Middleburg, Reed, and the Col¬lege.GSB early entry program laudedThe Chicago Maroonwould like to thankits summer staff:Susie BradyStephanie DestPaul GreenbergLarry Kavanagh Marcia LehmbergJean LyonsLauren MurphyCiaran OBroinKim Shively Bob TravisCarrie VeachGrey City JournalEditors & ManagersCome to an end-of-the-quarter barbecueMonday, August 12th at 6 p.m.at 5454 S* Woodlawn1 • »••••••••••••»•»•*• a * * • * * * ** * iAAHi.ii.1 j- t t t 1! *... • !.! t. ,f 1.1 f t,«JL.1 lilt . *-*■ ■* * *.^.*.^-*~J*-^ ******** *-*-*- Ult *-.ttThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, August 9, 1985—3The ChiStudent aroonHands off the Agora!The number of good restaurants within walking distance of the Uni¬versity can be counted on one hand. The Agora is certainly near thetop of that list, and we really don’t see how any good can come frominterfering with its long-established service. Its location, prices, andatmosphere are well suited to needs of a diverse University commu¬nity.We urge the University to not only retain the Agora as a tenant butalso give its owner the long-term lease he needs to feel secure enoughto invest in improvements of his establishment. While one-year leasescertainly give the University important influence in the community,they can also deter tenants from making improvements beneficial tothe University and the entire neighborhood. In this case, the resultwould clearly be the latter.If you too would like to see the Agora continue to enhance its ser¬vices in the neighborhood, send your regards to Jonathan Kleinbardat 5801 S. Ellis, Chicago, 60637.Bring back SG housing listStudent activities get pretty laid back over the summer, with somany people out of town. But those responsible for the Student Gov¬ernment Housing List have gotten a little too laid back, and have fum¬bled an important service to the University community.The Housing List is a free weekly listing of available apartmentsand other living space in the Hyde Park area. It has been organizedand published by Student Government for many years now, and SGadministrators traditionally make sure that even if SG does littleelse, the Housing list comes out regularly and reliably — it is a simplebut invaluable service to the many people hunting for affordablespace in Hyde Park.This summer, however, the Housing List has virtually ceased to beavailable. SG officers say that they have put out one or two issues, butthe fact of the matter is that most people who have come to the SGoffice in search of housing infor this summer have come away empty-handed. We know, because many of them come to the Maroon officedown the hall to inquire about the list, and we ourselves have not seena list posted since the middle of June.Now we understand that much of SG’s manpower is out of town, butfor those who are around, the Housing List must be a top priority.We are particularly concerned that as the Maroon ends its summerpublication with this issue, the Housing List will become the only cur¬rent and centralized source of housing info on campus. It is thus allthe more important that SG get its act together as quickly as possible.SG members are once again pledging that the Housing List will re¬turn, and we hope to be able to report in the Fall that they have kepttheir word.This sign went up two weeks ago outside the SG office with no visibleresults. A new sign put up this week says the list will be out Friday.The Chicago MaroonThe Chicago Maroon is published each Friday during the summer quarter. TheMaroon welcomes letters and other contributions from students, faculty, staff andothers. Anyone interested in doing writing, photography, or other work for theMaroon should stop by our office, Ida Noyes Hall rooms 303 and 304, 1212 E. 59thStreet, Chicago, Illinois, 60637. Phone 962-9555.Rosemary BlinnEditor in-chiefChris HillManaging EditorMike KellyPhotography Editor Stephanie BaconGrey City Journal EditorLisa CypraAdvertising ManagerBrad SmithAdvertising Manager Joe BamoskyBusiness ManagerJaimie WeihrichOffice ManagerStaff: Susie Brady, Stephanie Dest, Paul Greenberg, Larry Kavanagh, Marcia Lehm-berg, Jean Lyons, Lauren Murphy, Ciaran OBroin, Kim Shively, Bob Travis CarrieVeach. University should leadcompromise on DorchesterAlthough the dispute over the proposed 53rd & Dorchester develop¬ment already seems to be evolving into a court case, it would stillseem that a better resolution for all parties involved could be ob¬tained out of court if cooler, compromising heads could prevail.Compromise begins with the realization by all parties that somecommercial development of the northeastern lot is both desirable andinevitable. No reasonable person can maintain that it is in long-terminterest of the community for the land to remain a vacant weed gar¬den, and we agree with Hyde Park Chamber of Commerce presidentFred Levy that in order for Hyde Park to continue its recent move¬ment toward greater economic vitality and diversity, there must bemore commercial-retail space made available in the 53rd Street cor¬ridor. The disputed property is one of the few areas left that can pro¬vide such space.Moreover, Wil-Freds Development does have a right to reasonableuse of its property, which is zoned for the sort of development it isproposing. The developer’s basic property rights will weigh heavilyin any judicial resolution of the case, urban renewal designation no¬twithstanding, and it is looking even more like the developer willsue—and win—if the CCC and the community try to* block the develop¬ment altogether.We do not deny that the community has a number of legitimatecomplaints about Wil-Fred's current plans, but only suggest that at¬tempting to block development altogether is probably not an effectiveway to make the development more compatable with the neighbor¬hood. We agree that any late-night establishment is absolutely unac¬ceptable. So should Wil-Freds. It would also be hoped that the currentplans could be altered to make the development more aestheticallypleasing; a simple shopping strip with all the architectural eleganceof another Kimbark Plaza should be avoided if possible. Some in¬creased traffic along Dorchester—as along other streets opening on53rd—seems unavoidable, but disruption of the neighborhood couldperhaps be minimized through careful design of parking space(which should indeed include the entire south lot) to channel trafficaway from Dorchester and directly onto 53rd.Overall then, we submit that total community opposition to Wil-Fred’s development is much less likely to get important than somehard but reasonable bargaining. Wil-Fred’s in turn should realizethat simply proceeding “as planned,” without adequately addressingreasonable concerns of the neighborhood, is a foolish and potentiallycostly way to kick off a long-term relationship with the surroundingcommunity—even if it is within the developer’s legal rights.We would also like to see the University take a more active role inmediating a compromise. Since the U of C was instrumental in tear¬ing down the old YMCA and bringing in Wil-Fred’s in the first place, itshould now use its substantial influence to bring about compromise.We’re not sure the protagonists can—or want to—do it themselvesany more.Maroon Editorial PolicyAll letters and viewpoints must be submitted to the Maroonoffice, room 303 in Ida Noyes.Letters and viewpoints must be typed and double spaced.The Maroon reserves the right to decide what material to pub¬lish.All letters and viewpoints are subject to standard editing forgrammar, length, clarity, and libelous content. Letters andviewpoints should be no longer than 300 words. All letters mustbe signed by the author and contain the author’s address andphone number for verification. The name of the author may bewithheld upon request.Signed editorials and commentaries represent the opinionsof the author. Unsigned editorials represent the concensus ofthe editorial board.The Chicago Maroonwantsyouto help with ourOrientation IssueWe need writers, photographers,graphic artists, and peopleto cheer us on.Leave a message for Chris at 962-95554—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, August 9, 1985Summer calendarBye Bye to Bob's NewstandBob Katzman, owner of the well-known Hyde Park newstand that bears his name, permanently closed hisestablishment Monday, July 29. The business had been encountering financial difficulties for several“There is something in the wind” Fridayand Saturday, August 9 and 10, when theFree Shakespeare Company present*? “AComedy of Errors” in The University ofChicago’s Hutchinson Court, 57th and Uni¬versity Avenue.Performances begin at 8 p.m. each eve¬ning.There will be music under the stars everyweekend at the University through August17, with space and facilities for picnics aswell. Lawn chairs can be rented for 50 cents.Ice cream, snacks, and box suppers can beordered in advance by calling 493-2808.In case of rain, performances will be heldin the Mandel Hall, adjacent to HutchinsonCourt.Tickets are $6, $5 for students and seniorcitizens. For ticket and other information,call 753-4472.August 10 — Chicago’s Lakeshore 5K,race sponsored by the Recreational SportsDepartment of the U of C, will start at 8:30am! There is no entrance fee. The racestarts and finishes near Promonitory Pointon lakefront (55th street).August 11 — from 4:45 P.M. to 9:30 P.M.,enjoy Chicago’s past and present musicalheritage with the Chicago Historical Societyand the Grant Park Symphony Orchestrafeaturing Chicago folk and blues artistCorky Siegel.Space for the event is limited and reserva¬tions are required. Everything is providedfor in the $12.00 fee for members and $15.00fee for non-members. For further informa¬tion, call 642-4600.August 12 — Career and Placement Ser¬vices will offer a resume writing workshopincluding tips on types of resumes, content,style, and how to polish your draft. Theworkshop will be held at noon in ReynoldsClub 201. Call 962-7042 for more informa¬tion.August 17 — from 8:45 A M. to 6:45 P.M.the Chicago Historical Society is sponsoringa bus trip to Peoria to see a traveling exhib¬ition of “The World of Grandma Moses” atthe Lakeview Museum and to visit the his¬toric Pettengil-Morron House.Space for the event is limited and reserva¬tions are required. All costs for the event in¬cluding a box lunch are provided for in the$30.00 fee for members and the $35.00 fee fornon-members. For further information, call642-4600. years.Aug 21 “Infant Gender: Help and Supportto Black Single Mothers” is a lecture givenby Beverly Sweny, Committee on HumanDevelopment, University of Chicago. Swenyis conducting research on black single mothers from Chicago’s southside. Resultsthus far include the intriguing finding thatpatterns of help and support to singlemothers vary with the gender of the child.Sweny will explore the effects of culture. adult socialization, and sex differences ininfant temperament in an effort to explainher results.The lecture will be in Ida Noyes Hall Li¬brary at 7:30 p.m.“Superior Coffees at Superior Prices"Price per poundColombian Supremo (water decaf.) 6.30Espresso [water decaf.)French Roast (water decaf.)Cafe CinnamonDutch ChocolateJamoca AlmondEmerald CreamMocha Java BlendViennese BlendEspressoFrench RoastColombian SupremoBrazil SantosKenyaGuatamalan AntiquaRoyal Kona HawaiiCosto RicanPort Royal JamaicanEthiopian HarrarSumatra EDITORIALASSISTANTPublications office seekspermanent 20-hour-per-weekeditorial assistant to write, edit,and oversee production ofbrochures, booklets, flyers,posters, and other materials forinternal and external audiences.Need industrious individual,enthusiastic about working in achallenging academicenvironment. Must be able to writeeffectively for high school andcollege students. Bachelor’sdegree and excellent command ofEnglish language skills necessary.Some graduate work and/orexperience in journalism,publishing, printing production, orstudent recruitment preferred.Salary range: $8,700,$9,600, withfull range of staff benefits. Sendnon-returnable writing sample andresume, by August 30, to: CollegeDean’s office, 1116 East 59th,room 241.The Chicago Maroon—Friday, August 9. 1985—56.306.304.954.954.955.504.953.953.953.953.953.955.304.758.504.956.304.805.50Live inHyde Park's renovatediakefront aristocratfor as little as$290 per month.An intricate terra-cotta relief sculpture of the Indian chiefTecumseh—just one of Del Prado's architectural nuances.Stepping through Del Prado's entryway takes youback to tne subtle elegance of yesteryear. Intricatemouldings and ornate cornice-work highlights thisrecently revitalized landmark.Our high-ceilinged one-bedroom apartments arefully carpeted with functional floor plans, individually-controlled heating and air conditioning and modernkitchens that feature all-new appliances and cabinetry.The Del Prado is perfectly situated to take advantageof the neighborhood's nearby parks (one right acrossthe street!) schools, beaches ana shopping. And accessto the Loop is convenient with CTA and 1C commutingat the corner.Prices start at only $290 for students & $395 for 1bedrooms making the Del Prado Chicago's trulyaffordable grande dame. Call or stop and see ourmodels today.c£hCQEPrado Daily 11-5Baird & WarnerHyde Park Bldv. at 53rd Street285-1855 19855746An Open Invitationto UnaffiliatedSTUDENTSINTERNS and RESIDENTS(At Southside Hospitals)You are Cordially Invited to JoinUs as Our Guests* for High HolidayServices atA Jewish Congregation in Hyde ParkChicago Sinai Congregation (Reform)5350 South Shore Drive288-1600Congregation Rodfei Zedek (Conservative)5200 S. Hyde ParkBlvd.752-2770K.A.M. Isaiah Israel Congregation(Reform)1100 East Hyde Park Blvd.924-1234University of ChicagoB’nai Brith Hillel Foundation (Orthodox5715 S. Woodlawn Conservative752-1127 Reform)*We ask only that you call the Temple of your choice for a service scheduleso that we may reserve seats for you.There will be no charges or solicitations.This our way of welcoming you to theHyde Park-Kenwood Jewish Community.EYEGLASSESOUR REGULAR PRICE• COMPLETEsingle v isiondesigner glasses$33?5Offer expires 8/16/85Contacts & SpecsUnlimitedGLASSES AT OURGOLD COAST LOCATION ONLY!1051 N. Rush St. • 642-EYES(At State/Cedar/Rush, above Solomon Cooper Drugs) \ CONTACTLENSESOUR REGULAR PRICE30 da\ extendedwear lenses$33?5SOU MATE AM) BAl SC H AM)EOMB ONLY. PROFESSIONAL EKEADDITIONAL REQl IREI).Offer expires 8/16/85Contact LensesUnlimitedEVANSTON1724 Sherman Ave.864-4441 NEWTOWN2566 N. Clark St.880-5400 GOLD COAST1051 N. Rush St.(At State/Cedar/Rush,above Solomon Cooper Drugs)642-EYES j6—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, August 9. 19850 0 0 0 * 0Red SonjaBrigitte Nielson, in her film debut,doesn’t resemble the young Hepburn somuch as capture her spirit with a fiestyathleticism that is well matched with co-star Schwarzenegger’s gap-toothed grin.Sonja fights to save the world in a blaze ofNordic-wide-screen-techno-color thatwould have Nja! drooling and calling forItalian film crews. The movie is so rife withpointless sexual imagery (big swords,caves, horses, the green orb only womencan touch) that sorting out its attitudesabout sex roles quickly becomes a night¬mare. What can be said is that the film suc¬ceeds on its own Saturday-morning-Homeric terms. Non-actors swap epicbanalities in Pidgin English while wavingswords at each other. Childishly sophisti¬cated? Sophisticated^ childish? Only theNords know for sure. — Rachel SaltzSt. Elmo’s FireYuck. — John Porter and Rachel SaltzCoccoonThis summer’s candidate for most benignand amusing film would have to be Coc¬coon, the newest feature from directorRon ‘Splash’ Howard. Cast in the Spielber-gian mold of humanist Sci-Fi, the movieshows the madcap exploits of a band ofFlorida retirement home residents who en¬counter aliens and a life rejuvenatingforce. Most of the movie is, alas, predict¬able with the necessary and marketableyoung romantic couple and a child identifi¬cation figure thrown in for good mea¬sure.What saves Coccoon from insufferablecoyness and formulaity is the terrific en¬semble acting of the elderly couples.Wilfred Brimley and the inevitable HumeCromyn and Jessica Tandy stand out in thisgroup of bored and dissatisfied oldsterswho suddenly rediscover youthfulness andthat old joi de vivre. It is a refreshing andwelcome surprise to see older characterstake center stage in these days of endlessteen oriented pictures. The enthusiasmand infectious glee which radiates fromthe retirees must be due in a large part tothe actors’ glee in no longer playinggrandparents and invalids in the back¬ground.Although marred by an ending liftedstraight from Close Encounters Of TheThird Kind, Coccoon pulls through as a hu¬morous sentimental picture which firmlyestablishes Ron Howard as a director witha future. — John PorterE.T.This is what Freud called the ‘puppetstage.’ Kiddie porn in any language, thiswarm little sci-fi/fantasy suggests thatkids are wiser than their parents andaliens are wisest of all. O.K., so grown-upsmake war and nuclear bombs, but do theyhave to make movies like this? Boycottthis film; it’s the least you can do. — Ra¬chel SaltzBack To The FutureSteven Spielberg has moved from au-terist to mogul, preferring to exert his cre¬ative control over films in the role of pro¬ducer. He is not above abandoningprojects that seem doomed to failure, how¬ever, or prominently attaching a “StevenSpielberg Presents’’ tag to those thatpromise box office success. The latest ofthe latter category is the much discussed August 9, 1985 • 18th YearEager fans wait in block-long lines for the opening night of Red Sonja.and overrated Back To The Future.Blessed with all the elements of a highspeed summer film including plenty of upto date jokes (Libyans and DeLoreans),trendy TV stars (Christopher Lloyd fromTaxi and Michael J. Fox from Family Ties)and a plot that pretends to be clever andintricate but which is painfully predict¬able, it is not hard to see why this film hasbeen so successful.The storyline is essentially that youngFox, with the help of mad scientist Lloydgoes back in time 30 years and messes uphis parents’ first meeting. Before he canreturn he must ensure that they do indeedfall in love or he will cease to exist. This isthe stuff of which countless sci-fi pulpstories have been made since, oh, 1955.The film contains some promise in the en¬counters between Fox and his eager youngmum. The young actor has a definite flairfor comic timing and eyes that tend tobulge at appropriately amusing moments.Unfortunately the Oedipal mess is lightlydiscarded in favour of a not-so slam bangfinale.To be fair, Back To The Future is a consis¬tently amusing film. But, it lacks theweight and polish of more accomplishedcomedies and is probably better suited forhome tv viewing. — John Porter Schwarzenegger seen here sharing a tender moment with Grace Jones, before that home-wrecker Red Sonja appeared on the scene!iOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO» 0 0 0 9* o o o o|ooooo[ooooo_ —fcfcoo,00000000000000000000^^^^^ oooooooooooooooooooooooooooby Paul ReubensI read a screenplay a few years ago os¬tensibly about the Whiffenpoofs (the fivemember choral group that performs regu¬larly at Yale University), and how theyeventually became a co-ed organization.Really, though, the work was a sensitiveand effective consideration of the heart¬less nature of the young classism, andbrashness: in one particular scene, I re¬member, after one character goes cn adate with a girl the other Whiffenpoofsfeel is “far below his station", he is forcedinto defending himself with a laughablypretentious “Well, we Ivy League folk arepermitted by divine right to rape and pil¬lage whomever we please from stateschools.” The eventual awakening toadulthood and maturity was moving inthis work; the whole naive “we are betterthan the rest of civilization, because, well. we are above it” idea, changing into “weare constructive members of society”,would have made rather compelling cine¬ma, I thought then, and I would gladlyshell out my five bucks to see it on thescreen. Sadly, though, the screenplay wasdiscarded, and vanished back into theaether from which it came. Then, a whileago, I finally read about the new colle¬giate-kid fest St. Elmos Fire, and, sight un¬seen, I was happy. Surely, I thought fromreading the summaries that appeared inthe popular press, this could be every bitas good as the similar script I once read;for St. Elmo's Fire takes place in the samesort of social sphere as I was looking for,adds onto it a whole new dimension ofpost-graduate insecurity which everyonewho ever has been to college knows about,and starts that wacky new troupe ofyounq actors we have dubbed the “hrat pack.”Goodness, was I wrong. Never before inthe eighties (and in true oblivious St.Elmo's Fire style, I say that no other de¬cade matters) has such a bunch of the“bright young things” materialized in thesame place, and at the same time, andbeen able to emote under the same aus¬pices. And emote they do; with the mostunspeakably unmoving results. Can youimagine a half dozen sensitivity-crazedtwenty-two year olds yammering andwailing about their own unhappiness, allthe time cut off from the sufferings ofthose around them by their own alienatingpersonalities? Are you still comfortable?Youthful intensity, at last, has its ownname, and its name is St. Elmo's Fire. Butwhat an awful mess they make of it; andwhat an awful light they cast the modernynuth in imprint questions to consider: St. Elmo’s Fire is supposed to reflect a typ¬ical group of kids passing through that tu¬multuous ’n’ traumatic post-graduate ex¬perience that we students must endure orhave endured or are enduring. Are we allsuch self-obsessed shits about it, though?All people are sensitive tc criticism in oneway or another. Do we all run about with“angst” tatooed to our foreheads, “suf¬fering” stapled in red letters to oursleeves, and “vita est supplicium”strapped tc our so-in-vogue Emilio Este-vez-esque red suspenders? Of course not,for although St. Elmo's Fire may be a filmabout kids, it is still the quintessentialscreenplay written by fat movie execu¬tives for young audiences, about some¬thing they don’t quite remember, or, ifthey do, Holy Alex Trebek, have they everperverted the sentiments and times.Or is the falseness the fault of the highlyromanticized Brat Pack itself? We lovethem, we like watching them, we are notthem, but we identify with them. In St.Elmo’s Fire, however, they are supposedcontinued on page 47THE CHICAGO MAROONIS CURRENTLY ACCEPTINGAPPLICATIONS FOR THE POSITIONS OF:Advertising ManagerResponsibilities— oversight of all aspects of advertisingproduction and sales— management of all advertising personnel— establishing & promoting excellent rapportwith clientsAdvertising RepresentativesResponsibilities— maintaining constant contact with clientswithin our territory— designing advertising campaignsFor applications and more informationContact Brad Smith or Lisa Cypraat 962-9555, 1212 E. 59th St., room 304 APARTMENTSFOR RENTGRAFF &CHECK1617 E. 55th St.1 ’/j. 2Vi, studios,1 bedroom and 3 bedroomapartments in a quiet,well-maintained building.Immediate OccupancyAny questions, call283-5566 IIIiffIlf!*!»illtiS!$ Fall Quarter at Spertus CollegeHISTORY OF IEWISH MYSTICISMNARRATIVE ART IN THE BIBLEBIBLICAL AND MODERN HEBREWDay and Evening Courses inJudaic Studies - Begin Sept. 23For complete schedule:SPERTUS COLLEGEOF JUDAICA618 S. Michigan Ave.Chicago, IL 60605922-9012New and RebuiltTypewriters,Calculators,Dictators, Adders REPAIRSPECIALISTSon IBM, SCM,Olympia, etc.FREE repairCasioHewlett PackardTexas InstrumentCanonSharp estimatesRENTALSavailable withU.ofC LD._We alsocarrydiskettesand diskettesfilesThe University of Chicago BookstoreOffice Machines & Photographic Dept.970 East 58th Street 2nd Floor962-7558 • 5-4364 (OH CAMPUS)fummet A/lahiiA COMEDY OF ERRORSBYTHE FREE SHAKESPEARECOMPANYAUGUST 9 AND 10“There is something in the wind”...Antiphous of Syracuse searching for his ionglost brother begins to meet strangers whorecognize him. Is he bewitched?Two pairs of twins make for monumentalconfusion in this lively early comedy ofShakespeare.$6.00 General Admission$5.00 Students and Senior CitizensPerformances at Hutch Commons, 8:00 p.m.6:30 p.m. picnicsFor more information, please contactCourt Theater at 753-4472 J2—FRIDAY, AUGUST 9, 1985-GREY CITY JOURNALGwendolyn Brooks Illinois poetlaureate Brooks will read—she is apersonable lecturer and excellentreader of her fine works—a popularspeaker among children and adultsThurs at 12:15 p.m., at the CulturalCenter, 78 e Washington, PrestonBradley Hall. Free.The Thing (Carpenter, 1982) Ugly, in¬herently gloppy remake of a 1950’sclassic, in turn based on a rathernasty short story by John Campbellabout a space-alien unearthed aftermany years in Antarctica, whicheats people, and then takes theirshape. “A difference that makes nodifference is no difference”, is howthe saying goes, but Kur; Russell, ascientist stationed with a group atthe North Pole, doesn’t seem to care:he busily goes about slaughteringfriends, sled dogs, and aliens alike.The walls just bleed okra. Yuck,yuck, yucko. Soq, Fri. Aug 9, 7 and 9.$2.50My Brilliant Career (Armstrong, 1980)Judy Davis stars as a brave andpassionate would-be writer. In spec¬tacular Australian color. Interna¬tional House, Sunday, Aug 11 at 8p.m. $2Topkapi (Dassin, 1964) Istanbul andstolen treasure, adventure and luridsixties technicolor. At LSF, ThursdayAug. 15, 8:30. $2A Slave of Love (Mikhalkor, 1978) Setin Russia just after the BolshevikRevolution, this movie portrays thefilming of a romantic melodramaaborted as the turmoil of revolutionapproaches. I-House, Sunday Aug.18, 8 p.m. $2 Hamilton S. Smith, Pension Building from The Black Photographer: An American View at the Cultural Center.James Brown He’s called The Godfa¬ther of Soul for a reason—it’s aname he’s earned for his 25 plusyears of making remarkable, rockhard records. He’s also called TheHardest Working Man in Show Busi¬ness for a reason—it’s a name he’searned for his 25 plus years of mak¬ing remarkable rock hard concerts.In short, his first title tells why hematters for history, his second tellswhy he matters tonight. If he knowsabout the two serious competitorsfor his second title playing in thistown this evening, he may evendeign to put out a little more thanusual. Tonight at 7:30/11 pm, ParkWest, 322 W Armitage, 929-5959.Tickets $17.50. 21 and over.—FSB.B. King This wonderful showmanplays the blues as a life affirmingcelebration, and he more than getsaway with it. I mean, who else couldtake a form filled with tales of per¬sonal turmoil and shame and turn itall into a medium for public commu¬nion? (Well, see the next listing). To¬night with Bo Diddley, tomorrownight with Betty Carter, The Vic The¬ater, Belmont and Sheffield,472-0366. 21 and over —FSBruce Springsteen The greatest rock’n’ roller in the world today. Myguess is a lot of GCJ readers arefrowning on the idea (although Bornin the USA did win our end of theyear music poll), but I don’t makethe claim as a loose challenge or ex¬cited exaltation, but rather as avery deeply felt matter of criticalfaith. Springsteen is the last of acertain kind of rocker that was bornwith Chuck Berry and Elvis andpretty much died by the time theSex Pistols arrived. That position initself is not ultimately crucial, but itearned him the adulation of a lot ofcultural reactionnaries who do notshare Springsteen’s outlook, andyet whose adulation understand¬ably turned off a lot of hardenedcultural progressives to both theman and his music. What Spring¬steen is, what his albums and toursand persona reach for, was wellstated by Robert Christgau who lastsummer wrote in the Village Voice,‘‘It seems a simple thing—articulat¬ing the contradictions of freedom and powerlessness in America bothfor teenagers who still believethey’re born to run and adults whoknow where they end up. But thoughmany have set out to do it, nobodyelse has ever succeeded before cyni¬cism or foolishness struck.” ThatSpringsteen has succeeded is asplain to me as the lyric sheet to Bornin the USA and as rousing as his re¬cords Oi one of his concerts. I can’thelp feeling that people who denyhis achievements, for whatever rea¬son, somehow simply aren’t listen¬ing. This concert is sold out, ofcourse, but reasonably priced tick¬ets shouldn’t be that hard to comeby. Tonight at 7:30, Soldier Field,425 E McFetridge. Dr.—FSNeil Young In this decade Neil Younghas doggedly tried to make a namefor himself by cutting a new andvery different album every year orso, but thus far his stylistic shiftshave only succeeded in confusingpeople. Now, they say, he’s goneback to the country music that in thepast has served his popularity sowell, but before you roll your eyes,consider this: in the seventies the“country” inspired some of Young’smost painful, searching work, workwhich displayed a craft that remainsalmost unmatched in the history ofrock for the hard emotive profun¬dity of its easy melodic and lyricalcombinations. The brilliance of thoseperformances in musical dialecticsled some critics to call him a genius,and whereas so much seventiesmusic had turned to dross over theyears, the way his music has stoodup shows that a genius, among otherthings, is what he is. He’s also one ofthe two or three performers who canbe so damn good live its worth shell¬ing out the money for a concert boot¬leg, not to mention a concert ticket.Sat Aug 10 at 8 pm, UIC Pavilion,1150 W Harrison, 996-0460. Tickets$15—FSGil Scot-Heron For over a decade thisradical poet turned musician hasbeen honing his second craft until hehas by now completely turned hisreadings into singing and his perfor¬mances into concerts. Together withhis fine back up band he puts on ajazzy, gospel tinged show thatshould shore up your righteous in¬dignation and encourage your opti¬mism in these, the darkest days ofReaganism. Sat Aug 10, Cubby Bear Lounge, Clark and Addison,327-1662 — FSWilly Dixon, Long John Baldry andothers Many others, so I’m told. Thisis a one night blues test at the Caba¬ret Metro featuring great blueswriter Dixon (“Back Door Man”,“Smokestack Lightnin' ”, amongothers) and outrageous perform erBaldry who themselves would makea decent bill, but the more the blue-sier, right? Sun Aug 11, CabaretMetro, 3730 N Clark, 549-0203 —FSNina Haagen She’s not exactly punk;she's more just plain grotesque. Butthere’s a central place for the gro¬tesque in punk that she wierdly fills,and some people admire this over-the-hill German vocal contortionistlike I admire Husker Du. And then,of course, there's her new single,which is really, really good in a verynormal way. You choose; you sufferthe consequences. Thurs Aug 15, Bis-mark Theater, Randolph and La¬Salle, 559-1212.-FSAs this is the last summer GCJ andhence the last summer calendar (andmy last calendar forever), I’m listingthese r.ert six national acts as thebig time pop highlights from the endof next week until mid-September.For the next month and a half, untilwe begin our fall run, it’ll be up toyou to find out about the smaller na¬tional and regional acts that happenin this city every week, and I sug¬gest starting with the Readerand/or calling the Cubby Bear, theWest End and The Cabaret Metrowhere most of the good, affordableaction is happening.—FSBlack Uhuru I believe this small, En¬glish reggae band’s last album wascalled Anthem, which is great, be¬cause everything I’ve heard off itlives up to that name. Sly Dunbarand Robbie Shakespeare are thefamous members, but the group isworth seeing for the unity they ex¬press, not for the renowned techni¬cal prowess of its individualmembers. And there’s a lesson inthere somewhere too. Fri Aug 16,7:30/11 pm, Park West, 322 W Armi¬tage, 929-5959. Tickets $15. 21 andover.Fishbone Six black L.A. teenagerswhose anti-jingoism semi-hit "Partyat Ground Zero” sounds a bit likethe Specials and a bit like SpikeJones. Supposedly the rest of theirdebut EP is just as off the cuff jazzyand well-rehearsed crazy, so itmakes good sense that they areplaying at a Cabaret Metro videodance party (for no extra covercharge, mind you) Fri Aug 16, Caba¬ret Metro, 3730 N Clark, 549-3604.Tickets $6 21 and over.Willie Nelson His biggest fault is thathe seems to want to make a duetwith every living person on thisearth, but aside from that he can bean excellent country songwriterand, thanks to his mellifluous voice, an equally first rate country inter¬preter. - In fact, next to GeorgeJones’ voice, Nelson’s is justifiablyconsidered to be the greatest instru¬ment in country music. He makesokay movies too. Mon Sept 2, Pop¬lar Creek Music Theater, Rts 59 and72 at the Northwest Tollway, Hoff¬man Estates, 426-1580.Squeeze Remember these guys? Well,guess what. After breaking up theband on the heel of their biggestselling album, East Side Story, co¬writers Difford and Tillbrook putout a pretty bad solo album thatdidn't do too well commercially ei¬ther. Since these guys’ pure pop for¬mula is historically linked to theequation of artistic with commercialsuccess, I guess they figured they’dbetter try it the old way and see ifthe commercial promise of reuniondidn’t lead to the artistic money aswell. Historically it’s never worked,but what the hell. Fri Sept 6, PoplarCreek Music Theater, Rts 59 and 72at the Northwest Tollway, HoffmanEstates, 426-1580Steel Pulse Another English reggaeband, born with the punk movementand sharing its ideals yet with amuch sounder sociocultural contexton which to base them. However, asEnglish punk dissipated this bandlost some of its all-important mili¬tant edge, as is demonstrated bylast year’s so-so Earth Crisis, and in1984 Linton Kwesi Johnson sang amore cruical song (see PabloConrad’s fine GCJ piece from lastfall on English reggae). I wouldn'tdismiss them yet, but let’s hope thatlike LKJ they start listening to BlackBriton in times of silence as well asturmoil. Sat Sept 7, AragonBallroom, 1106 W Lawrence Ave,561-9500.Tina Turner This woman’s concertshould be about triumph, a celebra¬tion of her comeback, and she’s suchan ecstatic showperson I bet she canmake it seem fresh and importantevery night of her tour And it is, itis. Wed Sept 11, Rosemont Horizon,6920 Mannheim Rd, Rosemont,635-6600 Tickets $17/$15.50.The Comedy of Errors The Free Shake¬speare Company brings the Bard'sfirst comedy to the familiar confinesof Hutch Court (57th and University)tonight and Saturday night at 8$6/$5 students.Akron A surrealistic comedy about thelast day in the life of an Elvis imper¬sonator, set against the eerie back¬ground of the once great, nowblighted Rubber Capital of theWorld. Organic Lab Theater, 3321 NClark, 327-5321; Th-Sat at 8, Sun at3. Thru Aug. 25. $6.Play It By Ear Three Wrigleyville resi¬dents; a phone sex madame, an opera singer, and a peanut vendor,are brought together by their loveof the Cubs. Stage Left Theater Co.,3244 N Clark, 883-8830 Th-Sat at8, Sun at 7:30. Thru Sept. 1, $10-$12Poppie Nongens Obie-winning play de¬picting the trials and tribulations of40 years in the lives of a Black fami¬ly living in South Africa. Briar St.Theater, 3133 N Halstead,348-4000; Tues-Th at 7:30, Fri, Satat 8, Sun at 3 and 7:30. Thru Sept. 1.$17-SI 8.50.The 1985 MFA Show Showing concur¬rently is Victors and Victims: ArtistsResponses to War from Antiquitythrough the Vietnam War Era, curat¬ed by students of the Art History De¬partment. Thru Sept. 1 at the SmartGallery, 5550 S. Greenwood. Tues-Fri. 10-4, Sat 12-4Inside/Outside: Works by Virginio Fer¬rari ‘One witnesses the distance be¬tween proposal and execution, andthe difference in significance of apiece as it grows in size.” (GCJ, 7/19)Thru Sept. 7 at the Cultural Center,78 E. Washington. 744-8928.Gordon Matta-Clark: A Retrospective“The presence in this retrospective(of a relatively brief career) ofdrawings, paper sculpture, film, awalk-thru installation in a dump¬ster, documentation of a great vari¬ety of projects and performances in¬cluding the cuttings and a series ofsubterranean diggings, all attest toMatta-Clark’s incredible diversityof talent and his dedication tobreaking down the limiting bounda¬ries between art and architecture,performance and gallery presenta¬tion, conceptual and “tangible”(permanent?) art ...” (GCJ, 7/19)Thru Aug 18 at the Museum of Con¬temporary Art, 237 E. Ontario.289-2660Summer Fare A mixed media exhib¬ition of the works of 5 Chicago ar¬tists: Barbara Aubin, Carol Block,Sonia Katz, Loiss Rubin, and BettyWeiss. Thru Aug. 31 at Artemisia,341 W. Superior. Tues-Sat, 11-5.Master Drawings From Budapest A col¬lection that almost never travels in¬cluding art gods Durer, da Vinci, Ra¬phael, Carraci, Correggio,Rembrandt, Watteau and van Gogh.Thru Sept. 22 at the Art Institute,Michigan at Adams. 443-3624The Black Photographer: An AmericanView Over 200 vintage works, theoldest dating back to the 1840's. in¬cluding many rarely seen works. Theexhibit, called the most ambitious ofits kind ever undertaken, is present¬ed in cooperation with Black WomenCollaborative. Inc. Opens Saturday,and runs thru Oct. 10 at the CulturalCenter, 78 E Washington.744-8928Grey City Journal 9 August 85Staff: Michele Bonnarens, Suzanne Buchannon, Carole Byrd, GideonD’Arcangelo, Irwin Keller, Bruce King, Michael Kotze, Nadine McGann,David Miller, Patrick Moxey, Brian Mulligan, Susan Pawloski, JohnPorter, Ravi Rajmane, Max Renn, Paul Reubens, Laura Saltz, RachelSaltz, Ann Schaefer, Wayne Scott, Franklin Soults, Mark Toma, BobTravis, Ken Wissoker, Rick WojcikProduction: Stephanie Bacon, Laura Saltz.Editor: Stephanie Bacon.GREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY, AUGUST 9, 1985-3by Franklin SoultsIf things go well you might be browsingin some shopping mall bookstore a fewyears from now, absentmindedly flippingthrough the pages of Rolling Stone at themagazine rack, and suddenly you’ll comeupon a half page article raving about thisnew four piece garage band from Chicagocalled The Rhythm Method. If you do,you’ll undoubtedly stop and stare at thearticle, recalling instantly from the nameand photo that these guys are not justfrom Chicago, they're from our very ownHyde Park: in fact, they’re the band thatused to play at Jimmy’s on Sunday nightsand at all those frat parties during fallquarter. Hopefully, you’ll also rememberreading this article in the GCJ predictingthis would happen, because consideringhow good the group is, it damn wellshould.Why Rolling Stone? Why a shoppingmall? Why the Rhythm Method? Simple.Not only are The Rhythm Method one ofthe four or three or two unsigned bandsI’ve seen in my life good enough to imme¬diately deserve a record contract, they'realso melodious enough to breach theshores of big time pop celebrity, which isthe only kind of musical success that everreaches the ears of the suburban middleclass. That’s no put down, mind you; it’smeant as a compliment to their hook-craft.They have the rare kind of knowledge of how to string together open chord harmon¬ies with rising guitar figures and lowerkey bridges (plus a lot of other stuff Idon’t have a name for) necessary to earnthem the devotion of your average bright,progressive, fucked-up suburban teen¬ager who just survives on the marginalsounds and meanings available to thematfarthest lends of their information dials. Ifthey didn’t have Rolling Stone or the mild¬ly adventurous State college radio sta¬tion, they’d be up the creek. And TheRhythm Method is the kind of band thatwould be available to them, if just barely.Not only would corporate execs thinkthey’re worth the programming risk, theyalso make the kind of music whose signifi¬cance needs no translation: hear ’em onceand your hooked. The combined melod¬ic/rhythmic ease and tonal/lyrical weltsch-merz punch of their music grab your bodyas quickly and definatively as the firstfew REM records did.Ah yes, REM. If so far it feels like that’swho I’ve been writing about, then you'reon to my main point. While listening to TheRhythm Method's demo tape broadcastduring a WHPK interview recently, I wasso struck by the REM analogy that I cameupon the brilliant idea of writing an arti¬cle about the very noticeable trend ofAmerican bands to share the same aes¬thetic project as the one initiated by theband from Athens, Georgia. My examples from the world of radio would be easy —Tommy Keene, Lets Active, maybe D is forDumptruck — my examples from the see¬dling world of new, unsigned bands rest¬ing on a band from my hometown of Syra¬cuse, New York, made up of some of myclosest friends and (temporarily) calledDogs Outside, and of course, The RhythmMethod. I see these bands as all sharing acommitment to sound — especially jangly,long tone, folk-rock type sound — that out¬strips their commitment to direct lyricalmeaning. Its a project that centers aroundthe punk influenced mistrust of arenabombast and the prepunk romantic faithin the emotional varieties of pop forma¬lism. In a way, they share a startling be¬lief in the magic of radio that their newwave elders had long given up on. Forthem, not knowing the words and lovingthe song anyway is the early experiencethat formed the direction their songwrit¬ing would take. I mean, Dogs Outside has ahalf dozen great tunes with a heart quick¬ening sound, but not one of them has acompleted lyric.But this generalization, while true in away, mostly didn’t hold up when I went tose the Rhythm Method live. REM just be¬came one reference point in a dozen, andthe kind of tricks lead singer/guitaristLarry Dahl pulls off tells you he has proba¬bly studied dozens more. Sure you’veheard about his guitar work (is it Tom Ver¬ laine or is it Larry?) but he’s also a morethan adequate singer, and Martha Few’s(Fen’s?) bass and Ned Markey’s drumsprovide the kind of solid bottom a lot ofbands work years for and never achieve.Markey’s drums also pushed the bandharder, cleaner and faster than any otherpostpunk/folk-rock/romantic band I’veever seen. In fact, the material they pre¬sented the night I saw them at the Club950 suggests a blues influence even morethan a folk-rock one. It shredded my anal¬ogy and left my article hanging by a thinthread, but what the hell — more power tothem.This is a band with the skill and talent togo far, and I don’t see much reason why itshouldn’t happen. Dahl’s attitude on stageneeds a lot of sharpening, true (he’s hard¬ly the passion wracked outcast he tends toportray. To jump back to the REM compari¬son, we hardly need another MichaelStipe), but my guess is it’s a problem he’llquickly get over, 'cause, again, theredoesn’t seem to be any reason not to. Mysuggestion is get out and see this bandnow and experience the sensation ofknowing that someday this band aregonna make it — when I saw them youcould almost taste it — and also see thebest thing the U of C has put out in a hell ofa long time. They won’t be around forev¬er; the teens and post-teens of America’ssuburbs are calling.WHININGcontinued from page 1to be us, this impulsive young Emilio Este¬vez, this idealistic Judd Nelson, this shyMare Winningham, this wacky-but-lovableDemi Moore, this sensitive AndrewMcCarthy, this flaky Rob Lowe, these arethe faces of our generation — they aresupposed to reflect our views 'n' hopes ’n’fears just as their exteriors are supposedto mirror our lifestyles. They don’t, andcannot even come close to real life — St.Elmo’s Fire purports to be about us, andthe germs of pertinent characterizationare there, but the film creates an unspeak¬able image from it all: even as the majorproblems of the young adult years aretrivialized, so are the trivial ones madeinto life-threatening crises.But how to point out the particular of¬fensiveness of the film? The scenario of St.Elmo’s Fire's creation is simple enough toimagine: string together a plot about neatkids from those problems and matterswhich are important to their real life coun¬terparts. And what is important to them?Think a moment, let’s see, there is sex,and there is the need to find employmentwithout selling out, and there is the needfor capital L — love. If a film were writtenfrom just these ideas, perhaps we wouldhave had sensitive cinema; frankly, manya fine movie has, from the same frame¬work: Reckless and Baby It’s You, for ex¬ample; St. Elmo’s Fire perverts and dis¬torts this framework, takes it into awrong direction emotionally, and coverseverything with a nasty layer of histrionic— not unlike what happens when onetakes a nice, crispy Ritz cracker, andcovers it with a happy dose of pure lard.One can say that the youthful stars ofsaid film are those responsible for torpe¬doing it, simply because it seems likelythat the keening histrionics and vapidmelodrama are the result of their inter¬ pretation of the roles, or at least, theinput they had. Another fault is the greatfragmentation of the script itself, in whichabout five subplots are rather unsubtlyand unevenly woven together. A summa¬ry; plot one: Andrew McCarthy, idealisticwriter, falls in love with the girl-friend ofone his best pals, and bitterly and voci¬ferously renounces love, until he can gethis hands on her. P'ot two: a young couple(Ally Sheedy and Judd Nelson) worriesabout marriage and the betrayal of idealswhen he is offered a high paying job witha Republican congressman. Plot three: anidealistic young social worker (Mare Win-ingham) frets about losing her virginitywhile trying both to feed the poor and con¬solidate her father's greeting card for¬tune. Plot four: sensitive, but flaky DemiMoore pouts about growing up and matu¬rity to an equally-erratic Rob Lowe. Plotfive, and the most unreal: young law stu¬dent Emilio Estevez obsessively falls inlove with an attractive med-student, andfollows her everywhere The link for allthese tales, is that the kids are all goodpals, and they come together to whine toeach other about their sundry miserablelives at a college campus bar, the St.Elmo’s Bar (it’s probably pretty easy tofigure out the significance of the title; Ihate patronizing my readers).Now, all this would be fine and good if itwere performed as a cute, awkward,fluffy teen comedy: a sort of Love Boatmeets Sixteen Candles, with hormones. In¬stead, though, saddled with the GraveYoung Stars, we are forced to take theproceedings seriously; and with such silli¬ness, no one really wants to do that.Where we should laugh, we are suppliedplatefuls of anguished sufferings: perhapsthe problems would be more bearable if,as the filmakers no doubt intended, theywere more realistic. We have a bunch ofkids here who are supposed to representreal youth, but the ways they resolvetheir problems are just off the deep end,Some kids have real problems — not like the Brat Pack! and too improbable; normally this sort ofthing would never cloud the proper enjoy¬ment of a movie, but not only do the youngactors destroy any wackiness, the fil¬makers also plainly believe that these res¬olutions are the ways the kids would re¬solve them, not that they are emotionallyabnormal and extraordinary. What a cyni¬cal, nasty dangerous movie this is, thatpeople could actually leave the theaterbelieving that this is normal!The use of the ’’Brat Pack” is an attemptto create a verisimilitude which thescreenplay does so much to twist, that webelieve that not only is it good to mopeand moan, but that method is actually aquick and easy way to attain one’s desiresand goals. Can’t get the girl? Whine ather, like Andrew McCarthy does, andshe’ll go to bed with you. Your good friendisn’t treating you quite like a human?Whine at him, like Demi Moore does, cry“you’re breaking my heart, but thenagain, you break everyone’s heart,” and,presto, instant gratifying sensitivity is yours! Everyone has a “scene” in thismovie, in true Brat Pack style, and achance to emote: this is the most cynicalidea of all — surely the sort of moviewhere one sits about in one’s chair won¬dering when one’s favorite actor’s “bigscene” is, should be shunned entirely. “Ibet Emilio is going to start wailing now,”we say, and sure enough, he does; they alldo at one point or another: I suffer, yousuffer, he or she suffers, we suffer, you(pi.) suffer, they suffer. This sort of fata¬lism is sad, really; it trivializes legitimatetrevails and problems into a drab, non¬drama.I think it was Charles’s cousin in Bride-shead Revisited, who noted sagely thatwe spend our first year at college tryingto make friends, and the rest, trying toget rid of them. A similar pruning mighthave helped this movie, but, I feel, thefault lies more with the horrible film exec¬utives who put the whole thing together.They are the ones who should have beenpruned.CanonPROGRAMMED AUTOMATIONAUTOMATIC FILM TRANSPORTThe Canon T50 is the simplest-to-use Canon 35mm single¬lens reflex camera ever! All you do is focus and shoot forgreat quality pictures automatically. And the price is great too!Speedlite244Tshownoptional• Programmed auto¬mation, nothing toset!• Automatic film load¬ing and built-in powerwinder• Optional CanonSpeedlite 244T auto¬matically sets best ofthree different aper¬tures depending onflash-to-subjectdistance • Uses more than 50Canon FD wide-an¬gle, telephoto andzoom lenses• Includes CanonU S A , Inc one-yearlimited warranty/registration cardv tji \J 1 \/I1ACQ\J v ^Photographic & Office Machine Department970 E. 58th St. 2nd Floor —962-7558I.B.X. 5-4364 V4—FRIDAY, AUGUST 9, 1985—GREY CITY JOIJRNAIJIE(CODE£or cocktailsSUNDAY, MONDAY TUESDAY AND FRtDAY 60 02. PITCHERS FOR ONLY $3.00WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY, AND SATURDAY ALL IMPORTED BEER $1.2$ (12 02.)MUSIC SUNDAY NIGHT!The John Johnstone Quartetfeaturing Robert Lee8:00-11:00No cover, no minimum•ANNOUNCING BUDWEISER PREMIUM BEER ON TAP•HUGE 45” MITSUBISHI SCREEN FOR SPORTS AND OTHER SPECIALS•FREE POPCORN AFTER 4 PMOne of the top ten jazz juke boxes in Chicagoland-CHICAGO TRIBUNE1750 E. 55th St. 684-1013ON C-BUS ROUTE A CLASSIC RESIDENCEINACLASSIC LOCATIONFIFTY-TWO HUNDREDSOUTH BLACKSTONETHE BLACKWOODLuxury, high rise apartmentbuilding in the Hyde Parle area nowoffering a limited selsction of oneand two bedroom apartments.Situated near the Illinois Central,University of Chicago, HarperCourt and only a short walk fromthe lake, our apartments feature cen¬tral air conditioning, individuallycontrolled heat, ceramic tile, securi¬ty intercom, new appliances andwall to wall carpeting. Onebedrooms from only $430, twobedrooms from '550. Ask about ourstudent and faculty discount.684-8666 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.SaturdayHYDE PARK’SNEWEST ADDRESSOFDISTINCTIONCORNELL PLACE5346 Sooth 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 facultydisonnt.667-8776Some rent just an apartmentOthers... a Lifestyle!' i ^ /r'a. i r-A r''r"54**r.S'Lakefront rental residences and...Year around Resort Club • Gourmet MarketPanoramic Views • Nationally-acclaimed GardenClubs and activities • Artists-In-ResidenceStudio-3 bedroom apartments • 2 bedrooms from $6555050 South Lake Shore Drive Chicago, Illinois 60615288-5050A lifestyle designed for you...The Clinton Company Put the pastin yourfuture!LIVE IN AN HISTORIC LANDMARKThoroughly renovated apartments offer generous floor space com¬bined with old-fashioned high ceilings. Park and lakefront providea natural setting for affordable elegance with dramatic views.—All new kitchens and appliances—Wall-to-wall carpeting—Air conditioning—Optional indoor oroutdoor parking—Piccolo Mondo European —Resident manager—Round-the-clock security—Laundry facilities oneach floorgourmet food shop and cafeStudios. One-, Two- and Three-Bedroom ApartmentsOne-bedroom from $545 • Two-bedroom from $755Rent includes heat, cooking gas and master TV antennaIn Hyde Park, across the park fromThe Museum of Science and IndustryEqual Housing Opportunity Managed by Metrorlex, Inc.The Chicago Maroon—Friday, August 9. 1985—11Ida Noyes Hall renovation now in full swingROSEMARY BUNN Ida Noyes renovation is cur¬rently in phase two. Projectsin this phase include convert¬ing the gym to a theater —workmen are shown here car¬rying debris out of the gymarea. The pool area is alsobeing renovated.An elevator will also be in¬stalled — its shaft is shown inthe middle picture on theleft.LAUREN MURPHY ROSEMARY BLINNROSEMARY BLINNROSEMARY BUNNSummer Calendar—August 25 — Victos B. Weber will directthe Rockefeller Chapel Choir and Soloists inJephte, an oratorio by Giacomo Carissimiat 7 pm.Sept. 5 — “Urban Poverty and UrbanHealth Care: An Ecological Analysis” is alecture given by Rodney Taylor, Depart¬ment of Sociology, University of Chicago,and Department of Research, AmericanAcademy of Pediatrics.Some have argued that corporatization ofhealth care has made the system increas¬ingly unresponsive to the needs of the unem¬ployed and uninsured, at the same time thatfederal programs are being cut back. Tay¬lor takes a critical look at the impact of re¬cent developments in the American healthcare delivery system on urban poor. He willconsider both hospital and ambulatorycare, including Community Health Centersand HMOs. Taylor has had extensive pro¬fessional experience with urban medicalcare in Chicago and Newark.The lecture will be in Wilder House, 5811S. Kenwood Ave. at 7:30 p.m.Sept. 19 — “Race, Class, and Teenage Pregnancy” is a lecture given by NaomiFarber, Social Services Administration,University of Chicago.Farber will report on her ongoing qualita¬tive research on the interaction of race andclass in young women’s decisions about sex¬uality and parenthood and about the alter¬natives (for instance, marriage or abortion)to unwed motherhood. She is interviewingblack and white, middle-class and welfare-dependent teenage mothers and their fami¬lies in the Chicjago area. Farber workedlast year on an evaluation study of a publicwelfare program for teenage mothers onAFDC.The lecture will be in Wilder House, 5811S. Kenwood Ave. at 7:30 p.m.September 8 — The Hyde Park Neighbor¬hood Club will repeat its flea market from 8AM to 5 PM. The sale will again be held inthe parking lot of the Hyde Park Bank andTrust Company at 53rd and Lake Park Ave¬nue.Everyone is invited to come and have funand to buy, sell, swap, trade and haggleprice. Call 1-800-SWAP SHOP (Illinoiscallers) Monday through Friday 9 AM to 4 PM or 774-3900 anytime from anywhere formore information or to reserve a sellingspace. Call the club at 643-4062 to donateitems for the sale. All donations are tax de¬ductible.The University of Chicago’s CourtTheatre will make its Ravinia Festivaldebut in September with its upcoming prod¬uction of Heartbreak House, George Ber¬nard Shaw’s witty, articulate, and apoca¬lyptically powerful comedy set in anEnglish country house on the eve of “TheGreat War.”Heartbreak House will be presented in theRavinia Festival’s Murray Theatre Sep¬tember 10-14. The September 10 perfor¬mance will be a preview; the show will openon Wednesday, September 11, and will closeon Saturday, September 14. All perfor¬mances will begin at 8 p.m.Hand carved elephant prods, “solapith”flowers, and lost wax castings are a few ex¬amples of the exotic wares available in theMuseum of Science and Industry’s “IndiaMarket” during the “India: A Festival ofScience” exhibition now through Sept. 2. ONGOINGOn September 12, 1985, Field Museum ofNatural History, in cooperation with MiRaza Arts Consortium (MIRA) unveils theworks of Agustin Victor Casasola, a re¬markable photojournalist who captured andportrayed the turbulent revolutionary era ofMexican history.“The World of Agustin Victor Casasola —Mexico: 1900-1938” is a dramatic exhibitionof 152 historical photographs, interpretivebi-lingual text and photo muralsThe Auxiliary of the Evanston and Glen-brook Hospitals in Evanston, Illinois andCarol Sedestrom Associates, Inc. of NewYork City recently announced their jointsponsorship of the first annual AmericanCraft Exposition to be held September 12-15,1985, at McGaw Hall, Welsh-Ryan Arena,Northwestern University Campus, Evan¬ston, IL.The American Craft Exposition opens tothe public at 10:00 a.m. Friday, September13 and is open 10:00-6:00 p.m. on Friday andSaturday and 12:00-5:00 p.m. on Sunday.I ickets are $5.00/person at the door.12—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, August 9, 1985CalendarIllinois Arts Week, sponsored by the Illi¬nois Arts Council is September 27-October 61985. Save the date, in celebration of the artsacross the State of Illinois and the nationIllinois Arts Week coincides with NationalArts Week, sponsored by the National En¬dowment for the Arts, in commemoration ofthe Endowment’s twentieth anniversaryNational Arts Week will be celebrated theweek of September 23, 1985.Sharing Traditions: Five Black Artists inNineteenth-Century America, From theCollections of the National Museum ofAmerican Art, Smithsonian Institution, anexhibition of forty-three works, opens atThe Art Institute of Chicago August 10. Theexhibition, which includes paintings andsculpture, will be on view in the Ward Gal¬lery-through September 29, 1985. Featuredare works by five artists who were ac¬claimed in their time and participated in themainstream of American Art.International House FilmMy Brilliant Career (Gillian Armstrong,1980) Some consider this film the best of therecent wave of Australian cinema and it ishard to find another so delicately drawn, soevenly paced, and so genuinely portrayed.The plot centers around the risks a young,self-assured woman from the back countrytakes to fulfill her ambition — that of be¬coming a writer of consequence. Winner of 6Australian Academy Awards, includingBest Picture. Sunday, August 11 at 8 p.m.International House. $2. — BTCHINESE-AMERICAN RESTAURANTSpecializing in Cantonasaand Amarlcan dl*h«sOpen Doily 11 A -8 30 P.M.Closed Mondoy1311 I. 63r4 MU 4-1062 Dorchestercontinued from page onebuild on the site.Thus if the corporation counsel is ofthe opinion that the CCC has jurisdic¬tion over the land in question and — onthe basis of this opinion — Wil-Fred isdenied a building permit, it seems verylikely that Wil-Fred would take thematter to court.On the other hand, those in the com¬munity who oppose the proposed con¬struction seem equally willing, thoughit might be a futile battle, to sue if abuilding permit were issued to the de¬velopment company.One option open to the CCC is con¬demnation of the land upon which Wil-Fred wants to build. However, in mat¬ters of condemnation the CCC has onlythe power to advise the Housing Com¬mission, which in turn advises the CitvCouncil.George Stone, acting Housing Com¬missioner, stated that it is unlikely thathis commission will recommend con¬demnation. He explained, “If you’retalking about spending hundreds ofthousands to buy out Wil-Fred ratherthan use available money to put up low-income housing in another part of thecity, that is not a very practical thing.”Stone added that since he has not beenasked to advise the City Council, no de¬KIMBARK LIQUORS 8 WINE SHOPPE SAlEAT™851214 East SJrd Street • In Kimbark Plata 493*3355BEAT THE HEATBEERSIGNATURE OLD STYLE MOOSEHEAD AUGSBURGER6-7 oz. No Ret Btls 24 12 oz CANS 6-12 oz. No Ret Btls 6-12 oz No Ret Btls2/*3 $799 3/$10 2/*5WARM ONLY WARM ONLY WARM ONLY WARM ONLYWINERIUNITEWINES 750 ml.SEAGRAMWINE COOLERS-12 oz. Btlj.TREFETHENfotg ESCHCOL KD oe WHITS 750 ml1,i!uFARINA SOAVE 750 mi 2/$53/$10$459$299 CELIA CADORO750 ml !/$5DOMAINSDE GOURGAZAUD $399750 mlMENDOCINO VINYARDSCABERNETSAUVIGON4 LITER $799SPARKLING WINEPIPER’SCHAMPAGNE750 ml$12*9 FREIXENETCORDON NEGRO750 ml.$249WITH $150 REBATE COUPON CODORNIU750 ml$559SPIRITSDEWAR’S kWHITE LABEL jj750 ml. #2$8” I ABSOLUT trfL VODKA i1 750 ml\ $999 1 MYER’S ISRUM j£^|j $799 gWILD idTURKEY 101° »7S0 ml. tjB$999 § SEAGRAM'S **GIN M! $4” 1 MARTELL V.S. 3i COGNAC Jjl* 750 mlI $ii99KJPERRIER RWATER / \LEMON. LIME, L , \ORANGE. MINERAL23 oz89* te JACK 1DANIELS Mj $799 £ AM A RETTCDl SARONN^ 7yO .nl 1W« ruefve tfie right to limit quontitwt and mo* hr. I am I <w. Fn So* Ion 2 am Sun Noon MxtmgMcorrect printing arrort Sole items not <ed w» occapi Vito Mo»ie»cwd & cheils cision has been made by the HousingCommission yet.Many of those who oppose Wil-Fredhave claimed that they will try to havethe area which includes the developersland declared a “dry” precinctthrough referendum. Such a declara¬ tion would prohibit any sale of alcoholin the precinct. It is not known if thiswould force Perry Drugs, the anchor ofthe proposed shopping center and fre¬quent carrier of a 24-hour liquor department, to withdraw from the proj¬ect.' ' * .'J. . ' u\ ridBy Larry KavanaghIn the early 1960’s, as part of theHyde Park-Kenwood urban renewalplan, several pieces of land in HydePark were “designated” for use otherthan what the city had originally zoned dents are concerned about an increasein truck traffic on narrow DorchesterStreet, a street already burdened bylarge University of Chicago buses. Inaddition, the WU-Fred plan for thenorth and south lots provided only 36them for. The Hyde Park-KenwoodConservation Community Council(CCC) was created out of the urbanrenewal plan to oversee the plan’s pro¬gress in the community, and was giventhe power to change the designation ofsuch pieces of land. The Council’smembership consists of local commu¬nity residents appointed by theMayor,The two lots on the north and southside of 53rd and Dorchester upon whichWil-Freds wants to build shoppingcenters were originally zoned for com¬mercial/retail use, but were designat¬ed in the urban renewal plan for insti¬tutional use. A hospital is an exampleof an institutional use of land. AVMCA, another institutional use. waspresent on the north lot at the time ofthe urban renewal plan. The YMCAlater bought the south lot from the cityand made it into a parking lot. WU-Freds bought both pieces of land in 1982as part of a larger land deal, and toredown the old boarded-up YMCA.Wil-Freds unsuccessfully tried tochange the lands designation last year.The company’s latest request for rede¬signation was rejected (see 7-26-85Maroon) for many of the same reasonsthat the 1984 request was denied. Resi- parking spaces for a new shoppingcenter which would house at least fivebusinesses. This amount of parkingspace, roughly equivalent to what isnow present at the 53rd Street McDon¬alds. was believed to be inadequate. Fi¬nally. the anchor store of the proposeddevelopment is an 11,000 square footdrug store to be operated by PerryDrugs. Perry has 24-hour liquor de¬partments in some of its other Chicagostores, and both area residents and theCCC express concern over who woulduse this convenience. Sidney WilliamsJr who lives near the proposed build¬ing summed up this concern by stating.“The type of person who frequents anall-night liquor store at 4 AM is not aHyde-Parker.”After the CCC vote refusing redesig¬nation, a representative of Wil-Freddeclared that since the city has neverowned the north lot, the original zoningsupersedes the urban renewal designa¬tion, and that the CCC approval of theplan is necessary for construction onthat site. The representative said thatconstruction would begin in mid-Sep¬tember. The CCC has requested anopinion from the city’s corporationcounsel on their jurisdiction over thenorth lot.®j| FUJI FILMOn Your Summer FunCome in and buy two rolls of Fujicolor HR Film and Fuji will mail youits exclusive Summer Fun Value Pak containing over $150 in money-savingtravel and vacation offers from some of the biggest names in American travel.What’s more, you'll beentered automatically intoFuji's Summer Fun Sweep-stakes, offeringanAmerican Motors JeepLaredo plus 10 excitingAmerican AirlinesHawaii vacations andover 1100 other prizes.Hurry in for details today!No purchase required to entersweepstakes. . _ .The University of Chicago BookstorePhotographic & Office Machine Department970 E. 58th St. 2nd Floor962-7558I.B.X. 5-4364The Chicago Maroon—Friday, August 9, 1985—13Summer recreational IM softball st. andii igsCoed 16-inch w L Men’s 16-inch w ° LMon-Wed division Mon-Wed division1. Agora 10 0 1) Metal Nuts 9 22. B.S. Hitters 8 2 2) Jimmy’s 8 33. Naughty Sweeties 6 4 3) Strohs Bro’s 5 64. Aspo in Exile 4 6 4) Raiders 0 115. Whaling Whales 2 96. Scott issues 1 10 Tues-Thu divisionTues-Thu division 1. Stat’s Rats2 Medici 9A 021) Nads 9 1 3. See Your Food 6 22) Poly-Sci 5 4 4. Fujita’s Friends 6 43) Development 2 7 5. Highway Voodoo 4 74) Intox 2 8 6. Fat City Wine 2 8■ ' • " 4 7. Gomes 0 1012-inch W L1. Cove 10 1 Men’s 16” softball playoffs will take place on Wednesday, August 14 and2. Buttones 6 3 Thursday August 15 at 6pm, Stagg Field.3. Bovver Boys 4 5 Coed softball playoffs will be Monday August 12 and Tuesday August 13 at4. M-L-C 4 5 6 pm at Stagg field.5. Madonna Men 3 7 Twelve-inch playoffs will be Wednesday, August 14 at 6 pm at the North6. Free Basers 2 8 field.Walley beats BankerU of C Open results VINTAGE HI-RISE• Large Studios & One-bedrooms• Furnished & Unfurnished• Heated Swimming Pool• From $346/month752-3800 Mr. HigginsThe University’s Open Recreationsingles tennis final was concluded onTuesday, August 6. In the best of threematch, undergraduate Keith Walleydefeated part-time graduate studentSam Banker in straight sets by a scoreof 6-4, 7-5.In both sets, Banker’s clever use ofunderspin and accurate placementearned him early leads, as he led in thefirst set at one time with four games totwo, and in the second he led five tothree.But at those crucial stages of thematch, Walley managed to turn the si- tuaton around with his forceful playingstyle, which was based largely on histopspin strokes from both sides and hisoccasional penetrating service.To Walley, Banker’s strategy ap¬peared to be “to keep the opponent onthe run all over the court to prevent theopponent’s ever getting off a strongshot.” This was indeed an effectiveplan for Banker at some stages in thematch and probably contributed to histwo earlier round victories, but whenWalley’s shots were “on,” they provedto be somewhat overpowering evenagainst Banker’s defensive game. EAST PARKTOWERSCharming, vintage building inEast Hyde Park now has alimited selection of lake andpark view apartments. Situatednear the I.C., we offer studios,one and two bedroom unitswith heat included in rent. Askabout our student and facultydiscount.324-6100HYDIE PARK i pCOMPUTERS INC."MAC DISKS: *24”,box of 10 withrebate coupon* Software Specials:Word Perfect 4.0, Nota Bene,Managing Your Money, andall Microsoft products onsale now!* PRICEBREAKTHROUGH ONPRINTERS:Either 12 cpsdaisywheel letter quality, or100 cps dot matrix for drafts- both ire full featured,durab , and have a 1 yearwarrar y: $24900SPECIALISTS INACADEMICMICROCOMPUTINGON THE CORNER OF 53RD ANDHARPER • 288-5971 CLASSIFIEDSSPACEGOVERNMENT HOMES from SI.(U repair). Also delinquent tax property. Call805-687-6000 Ext. GH-4534 for info.APARTMENTS AVAILABLEStudios, one, two & 3 bedrms some lake viewsnear IC, CTA, & U of C shuttle, laundry,facilities, parking available, heat & water in¬cluded. 5% discounts for students. HerbertRealty 684-23339-4:30 Mon. Fri. 9-2 on Sat.Deluxe studio condo for rent University Parknr UC full amenities w/heat pool parking 8/15or 9/1 Lynn 393-1034 leave message if not in.7 Room Apt. 3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths. QuietBuilding Near 52nd and Greenwood $700 moMr. Kay 288-8995.GRADUATE STUDENTES3 bedrooms, 2 bath apartments. TiledW/shower. Partially furnished. Laundryfacilities in bsmt. Lge backyard W/stone patio.$850.00/Mo.Contact Mr. Wardian 493-2525.Lge scenic, 1 bdrm. penthse. condo avail. 11-1.Ideal for 2 people. Good credit rating req. Piscall Mrs. Irving 667-5153 after 6:oopm.Famale professional or graduate studentwanted to share two bedroom two bath apart¬ment in Regents Park. Spacious kitchen andliving room, great view, health club and swim¬ming pool in building. Non smokers only.Available Sept. 1 Please Call 643-7993.54th Dorchester-Hyde Park Condo for rent. 2bedrooms, dishwasher, sunlight $735.00 heatincl. Avail-Now Call Julian at 245-3751 or 288-2001 pm.Secure-2bdrm deluxe new bath, kit. appl. w/wcrpt sauna health club $530. Call 955-0454 after5pm.Studio apt for rent at 5845 S. Blackstone CallJan Midgley 337-2400.LARGE STUDIO APT Hyde Park area for salekitchen bath dressing room lake view healthclub swimming pool indoor parking 24 hoursecurity 285-2352.ROMMATE WANTEDMBA is looking for female nonsmoker to share2 bdrm. apt. in Regents Park-Sept 85 Call Col¬lect Kellly 901-642-7581 or 642-7190.1 or 2 mature non-smoking grads/professionalswanted to share 6 rm furnished apt at 5711 S.Kimbark $550 total rent incld. heat AvailableSept. Call Minna at 667-7611 or 371-5170.4 bedrooms 2 bath Condo at 53ru & Dorchester.2nd fir. in 3-story building, big living room,sunny porch, washer & dryer. Sell by owner.$56,000. Call Lena 2 8856 day 493 8107 eve.1 or 2 spacious Rms in large House. Long orshort Term. 924-8822.Charlotte <rVihtzomczReal Estate Co.493-06661638 EAST 55thDOUBLE FEATURE OF THE WEEKHYDE PARK S MOST ELEGANTLAKEFRONT PROPERTYThe Powhatan• Never before offered• Central air• Over 4,000 sq. ft.• Woodbuming travertine fireplace• Spectacular views• Doorman & elevator attended• Parking• Fall occupancy*225,000UNATTACHED BRICK HOUSE,YARD & BRICK GARAGEON CAMPUS-Mth & KIMBARK• Eight rooms• 1895 stone & brick• Rebuilt completely: systems,walls, floors in 1978.• Immaculate, tasteful decor• 2 fireplaces*345,000t- w*f m# NEAR55thANDBLACKSTONE14—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, August 9, 1985 Fur Rm/Apt Util Inc Kit & LR no smo 363 3458.CLASSIFIEDSQuiet Sunny Spacious IBdrm Apt In E.HydePk. 1 Blk From Lake Beg Sep 1 For 395/MO684-1551.For rent or purchase: spacious 3br 2bath con¬do.East Hyde Park spectacular lake and cityviews period features. Purchase: $76,000 rent:$775/mo (heat incl.) on bus route convenient toshopping, transportation phone: 643-3526 (eve)962-8401 (day ask for Steve).FEMALE/NONSMOK. GRAD WANTS TOSHARE APT WITH SAME. SEPT 1 MOVE-INPAULA 241-7669/256-2795.Room in house. Babysitting and $50/mo. rent.Nonsmoker, references. Call 493-1382/684-3308SPACE WANTEDUniv grad student desires room w/kltch. priv.in safe area, prefer 55th-59th St. Private housepreferred. Needed immediately. Excellentreferences. 753-0355 in evenings.PEOPLE WANTEDPreschool teacher wanted for morning class atSinai Nursery School in Sept. 288-1603.GOVERNMENT JOBS. $15,000-$50,000/yr.possible. All occupations. Call 805-687-6000 Ext.R-4534 to find out how."Super Mom” Needed Prof, couple seeks fulltime childcare for 15 month son in our E. HydePk. home; llte housekeeping too. If you arereliable, energetic, loving, creative, matureand a non-smoker, you may qualify. 7:45am to5:45pm, M-F, beginning Wed. 8/7. Must pro¬vide own transp.; Hyde Pk. resident preferred.Recent ref. required; early childhood devbackground a plus. Call 947-0477,6-9pm.Part-time Cierk/Typist for Research Pro¬fessor Bookkeeping, Wordprocessing skills(IBM-PC) desirable. Please call 753-2347.MELLOW YELLOW needs fresh energeticwaitstaff. Apply 1508 E. 53rd, M-F, 9-1 lam.Administrative Assistant to Dean of Profes¬sional School: mature, self-motivated,organized, friendly, flexible person needed totake on complex, public relations oriented of¬fice; good communication skills required; Fulltime; salary competitive; good benefits; af¬filiated with University of Chicago; minoritiesencouraaed to apply; call 9am-noon: 753-3178.Wanted, Persons Fluent in Korean/English towork as interpreters with senior citizens atcamp setting Sept26-Sept28, salary paid. CallUnited Charities Camping Services at 461-0800.Ask for Sue Marohl or Karen Weiss.Wanted person who has typed thesis on superwylber/treatise only U of C graduates. $5.00 prhr for typing PhD dissertation call 667-0673eves.WRITE R/EDITOR/PROOFREADER/OPERATOR EXXON WORD PROCESSOR FULL¬TIME IN THE LOOP. $19-21,000 P/YR PLUSBENEFIT PACKAGE. 1-2 YRS EX¬PERIENCE WITH WORD PROCESSINGEQUIPMENT NECESSARY (WILL TRAINON EXXON EQUIPMENT. EXCELLENTGRAMMAR, WRITING, 8. TYPING SKILLS AMUST. EDIT, FORMAT, PROOFREAD, ANDCOMPOSE SPEECHES, PROPOSALS, ANDCORRESPONDENCE FOR PRESIDENTAND OTHERS IN FAST GROWING COMPANY IN THE COMMUNICATIONSBUSINESS. RESPONSIBLE FOR MONTHLYMAILINGS & UPKEEP OF MAILING LISTS.WORD PROCESSING EQUIPMENTAVAILABLE TO YOU IN OFF-HOURS FORDISSERTATION WORK. WE ARE FLEXI¬BLE (JOB SHARING POSSIBLE. SENDRESUME & BRIEF WRITING SAMPLE TO:IMTI, 150 N. MICHIGAN AVE., STE. 3930,CHICAGO 60637.Left-handers needed for simple psychology ex-periement. Takes only 20 min. of your time.Will be reimbursed. Leave message at 962-7591.Campus Sales Rep. Salary + Comm Exp.Pref. Call KINKO'S COPIES. 643-2424 M-F^RESEARCH SUBJECTSNEEDEDEarn $300 for participating in a study on the ef¬fects of recreational drugs on mood andbehavior. Involves two evenings per week forsix weeks. Volunteers must be between 18 and35 years old and in good health. For more in¬formation call 962 3560 weekdays between9a.m. and noon. Refer to study Cl.SERVICESJUDITH TYPES-and has a memory. Phone955-4417.FAST FRIENDLY TYPING-resumes, papers,all materials. Arlene at 924-4449.JUDITH TYPES. And has a memory. NowIBM compatible. 955-4417.Trio Con Brio: Classical and light pop musicfor weddings, other occasions. Call 643-5007.Exper. Typing: Student papers, etc. 684-6882.PASSPORT PHOTOS WHILE U-WAIT ModelCamera 1342 E. 55th St. 493-6700.WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHYThe Better Image 643-6262Hyde Park Movers household moving discountprices to staff & students from 12/hour freecartons del'd n/c many other services. 493-9122.LARRY'S MOVING & DELIVERY. Furnitureand boxes. Household moves. Cartons, tape,padding, dolly available. 743-1353.UNIVERSITY TYPING SERVICEWordprocessing and EditingOne block from Regenstein LibraryJames Bone, 363-0522Enhance your KAYPRO II: Replace 1 diskdrive with 2 quad density half-height drives.782K per disk with complete compatibility. Only $487 call POMERLEAU COMPUTINGSYSTEMS.5222 S. Harper 667-2075Childcare Avail-Exp Mother w/Background inEd and Child Dev Campus Loc Exc Refs 4934086. FOR SALE2 br 2 ba corner unit Univ Park Condo. Oakparquet floors, levelor blinds all 14 windows,remodeled kitchen. By owner. 288-1474 $51,000.Garcia grand concert guitar. Conn strobotunerST-11 (electronical piano tuner). 947-0720.Chevette 1977 2 door hatchback good condition59,000 miles $750 Call 363-0132 evenings.Lg. 1-bdrm.condo. Formal dnrm. Four Ig. clos.Newly dec. Sanded oak firs. Sunny, well-keptbldg. E. 56th. Near campus and Ray School. Byowner asking $47,000 (low assmts.) Call 493-9149.Dance Party-Friday Aug. 9-Cloister Club IdaNoyes Hall 9pm-lam. Featuring Scott"Smokin!" Silz (former WBMX radio DJ).$5.00 admission includes refreshments. Cometo the best party of the summer! Meet studentsfrom other campuses. Win door prizes! 21 andover I.D. required. BGF sponsored.PARTY for Haymarket. Have a wild time andsupport Hyde Park's progressive news mon¬thly. Tonight, 9:00-2:oo, 5513 S. Cornell Aot 1 $2at door.FEELING DOWN & BLUE...If so, you may qualify to participate in a studyto evaluate drug preference. Earn $150 foryour participation i n this 4 week study. In¬volves only commonly prescribed drugs. If youare between 21 and 35 years old and in goodhealth, call 962-3560 between 9 a.m. and 12 noonfor further information. Refer to study X4.$$$& FUNPeople needed to participate in studies oflanguage processing, reasoning and memory.Will be paid $4-5 per session. Call 962-8861 bet¬ween 8:30 and noon to register. If you were onour list last school year, please call again so wecan update our list for the summer.KIDS EARN MONEY2nd through 7th graders. Earn money the easyway! Be in a fun study especially for kids. CallMs. Heller, 9-5, 962-9712.SCENESKIMBARK&55thTWO BEDROOMAvailable at once, classic Hyde Park style vin¬tage two bedroom with full dining room isspacious for two; big enough for three!$785/mo-a best bet!URBAN SEARCH 337-2400SSAT-PSATSAT ACT OUTACHKVUSJTTSSM lSAT RATCM HO T«Fl |swpmx putam rcat iat■dot Ml! 1 3m rw mMFRCfBS CSfIS 1■ c* ictn *»■,smmum m ilE& REVKW Ail I 2 3 ■MT1I0 TO LAM KNOB, cuasses forming nowCall Days, Eves & WeekendsDiAL-A-TEST HOTLINE (312) 508*0106ARLINGTON HEIGHTS 437-6650CHICAGO CENTER 764-5151HIGHLAND PARK 433-7410LA GRANGE CENTER 352-5840■MCATKMUt. canaR LTD. BLUE GARGOYLE OPENTitillate your tastebuds with our new summermenu. Salad bar, veggie hotdogs. ice tea, andall new deli sandwiches. Open 11-2, kitty cornerfrom Reynold's Club on University Ave. Greatfood at Great prices! Hope to see you there.DANCE PARTY"Top 40 Band", RUMOR7 will perform at I-House at 10pm on Aug. 10, Saturday evening.Admission is $3 and refreshments will be serv¬ed. Call Program Office, 753-2274, for more in-,0 FEELINGTENSE,ANXIOUS...If so, you may qualify to receive 6 weeks oftreatment for your anxiety at the University ofChicago Medical Center. Treatment will befree of charge in return for participation in a 3week study to evaluate medication preference.Participants will also receive $60. Involves on¬ly commonly prescribed drugs. If you are bet¬ween 21 8. 55 years old and in good health, call962-3560 for further information.HYDE PARK MOVERSHousehold moving discount prices to staff &students from 12/hr free cartons del'd n/cmany other services. 493-9122.AAACINTOSH512K UPGRADE <299Upgrade your 128K Macintosh for only $299.Full 90 day warranty on parts & labor. Freepick-up & delivery in Hyde Park area. To orderplease call 363-5082.Cybersystems, Inc.Developers of computer hardware & softwareTHE MEDICI DELIVERSDaily from 4pm call 667-7394.COMPUTERPROGRAMMERHighly motivated, creative, independent in¬dividual needed. Part time, flexible hours.Must be proficient in Pascal. Access to IBMP.C. Highly desirable. Call 493-6298.DINNERPlease join us August 9th and August 23rd forthe final two Adat Shalom dinners this sum¬mer. Enjoy a traditional Shabbat dinner in awonderful atmosphere. 7:30pm at H il lei. 5715S. Woodlawn. $5.DancePartyFriday August 9Ida Noyes HallBEST VANCE PARTV OF THE SUMMER/1212 East 59th 9 pm- lamAdmission - $5Include* Drink* & Door Prize*Dll* Scoll"Smokin’SilzNoOm Under 21 AdmittedBmmnmumHmmmnmmua CONDO FOR SALEUnique 2 bedrm, beautiful hrdwd firs 8. builtinsthru-out; close to campus, great backyard, lowassess. $65,000. 752-3449.DESK WANTEDLooking for a good-sized used desk with lots ofdrawer space and a typewriter stand. If youhave such an animal please call Joe at 962 9555.ONE BEDROOM FOR SALETraditional Elegance Is Timeless....A rare east tower, lakeview, one bedroomopportunity is now offered for late Septoccupancy at THE PARKSHORE COOPERATIVE.LOCATIONE. Hyde Park, at the park and lakebeach.1765 East 55th Street, U/C bus at door.Convenient to Coop Mall, 1C, and Campus.AFFORDABLE ELEGANCEIdeal for faculty or grad coupleMorning sunshine and three lake views.Monthly charge is $611 which includestaxes, heat, water, and all assessments.$5400 yearly tax deduction, NO MORTGAGE,fireplace, refrigerator, and stove.(W/l) closets, W/W carpeting, large rooms.SAFETYClosed circuit tv camera security sys.,24 hr doorman-guard, laundry in build.Free parking in lot across the street.VALUESelling price $6250 firm, by owner.Serious Inquiries Only, 8-8pm. 684-7895.RAVINIATRIPBus will leave I-House at 6pm, Wed, Aug 14 forElia Fitzgerald/Oscar Peterson concert.Round trip: $3. Lawn seat: $5. Call 753-2274.BABYSITTINGPh D student's wife (mother of two) withreferences and experience would like to takecare of your child, full or parttime; a hugepark and playground. Call : 285-0889.CARPENTRYCarpentry and custom bookcases, call 684 2286.SEARN EXTRA MONEYSSelected volunteers will receive $190 for par¬ticipating in a 6 to 7 week drug preferencestudy. Involves only commonly prescribed,non-experimental drugs. Minimum time re¬quired. Volunteers must be between 21 and 35years old and in good health. Call 962-3560 bet¬ween 9a.m. and 12 noon. Refer to study X7.5254 S. Dorchester Ave.Walk to museums, parks, the lakeSTUDIO APARTMENTSFurnished and unfurnishedutilities includedLaundry roomSundeck • Secure buildingCampus bus at our doorCall 9-5 for appointment324-0200ANNIVERSARYPERM SALEFor Our New As Well As Established ClientsCUSTOM PERMSNOW $15- $30Reg. $30- $60Hairshaping & styling not included1621 EAST 55th STREETCHICAGO 241-7778 Now you can tanwithout the sun....at your nearbyWolff SystemTanning Center• Tan without painful sunburns.• Tan in spite of the weather• Keep your tan all year long. 10 VISITS$30°°The Chicago Maroon—Friday. August 9. 1985- 15Fri, Aug 9 - Pub Dance Night w/ DJSat , Aug 10 - 60's Dance Night w/ DJFri. Aug 16 - Pub Dance Night w/ DJSat , Aug 17 - 60’s Dance Night w/DJFri , Aug 23 - Pub Dance Night w/ DJSat . Aug 24 - LIVE BAND - TUMBLING DICE $Fri . Aug 30 - PUB CLOSING PARTY- dancing & FREE Nachos21 8c- OverMembers &> GuestsBasement — Ida Noyes Hall PURSUED BY YOURACADEMIC PURSUITS?Relax. Take a break.Come to an ice cream socialSponsored by TheCollege Student AssemblyWednesday, August 14Noon-2:00 p.m.Hutch CourtFree with U.C. College ID CardFILMS:Fri 8/9: The Thing 7:00 & 9:00 p.m.Sat 8/10: The Passenger 7:00 & 11:25 p.m.Wed 8/14: Unfaithfully Yours 8:00 p.m.Fri 8/16: Repulsion 7:00 & 11:00 p.m. & The Tenant 9:00 p.m.Sat 8/17: Amarcord 7:00 & 9:15 p.m.Wed 8/21: China Syndrome 8:00 p.m.Fri 8/23: Octopussy 7:00 & 9:15 p.m.Sat 8/24: Breaker Morant 7:00 & 9:00 p.m.All films shown in air-conditioned Quantreii Auditorium, Cobb Hall. $2.50NOONTIME CONCERTS:Tue 8/13: The Blues BlowersThu 8/15: Kathy O’Hara & Diane LaffeyAll concerts held in Hutch Court (in case of rain,North Lounge Reynolds Club) 12:00 noon until 1:00p.m. FREEHSponsored by the Student Activities OfficeSponsored by the Student Activities Officet