Lathrop joins Independentattack of Chicago budget“hoax” on city taxpayers Fewer courses, large class sizesstir poli sci student complaintsPolitical science chairman Susanne Rudolph commenting onshortages in the department: “We just don’t have enough bodies.”(Photo by Philip Grew)By Steven D. BrownFifth Ward alderman RossLathrop and two other independentaldermen have launched a cam¬paign against Mayor Bilandic’sproposed $1.3 billion 1978 budget.Lathrop, Marty Oberman (43rd)and Dick Simpson (44th) an¬nounced their opposition at a pressconference Sunday, callingChicago’s current budget-makingFifth Ward alderman RossLathrop: budget-making process“a cruel hoax on the taxpayers.” process “a cruel hoax on thetaxpayers of this city. ”' They charged that the City’spresent budget-auditing firm,Bansley and Keiner, is “im¬properly close” to the DemocraticParty organization. An in¬dependent audit, they claimed,would save the city “at least $100million.”Contacted by phone Tuesday,Lathrop said that although currentauditing practices “meet theminimum requirements of thelaw,” the audit “does not provideinformation” needed by thealdermen or the public. -Lathrop called the budgetprocess as it now exists “ab¬solutely atrocious,” adding thatthe City Council will have “only 48hours to study a 200,000 linebudget” before the FinanceCommittee begins its hearings.The Committee’s schedule,detailing the order in whichvarious sections of the budget willbe discussed, was not given toLathrop until two days before theopening of the hearings.To combat the present budget“charade,” Lathrop, Oberman,and Simpson plan to reintroduce acomprehensive reform ordinancethat failed last year. The ordinanceBudget challenge to 3 By Richard BiemackiThe political science departmentthis year has faced a cutback incourse offerings and classes farmore crowded than at comparableuniversities, causing students tocomplain that the department isnot as good as it once was and thatsome important subfields, in¬cluding American politics, are notadequately taught.Graduate students charge thatclasses are overcrowded, whileundergraduates complain thatthere are too few course offerings.Although political science is thesecond largest undergraduate areaof concentration after economics,its 128 students must choose amongonly four courses offered thisquarter.In the graduate division, thereare 13 courses offered this quarter,down from last year’s average of17 per quarter.Figures released by registrarAlbert Hayes this week indicatethat graduate political scienceclasses have a median size of 23students. The Maroon has foundthat, excluding independentreading and research classes, themedian at Harvard this autumn iseight, at Northwestern 10, and atthe University of Michigan 12.“What bothers me most,” saidLee Bailey, an outgoing member ofthe political science studentsteering committee, “is to have tosit in a class with 30 or 40 people.Real seminars don’t exist. It’s not a question of faculty versusstudents, because I’m notsuggesting the faculty doesn’twork. There just aren’t enough ofthem.”Another outgoing steeringcommittee member, Kathy Gille,said she thinks first year graduatestudents were especially disap¬pointed with offerings. “We seethem come to Chicago, one of thebest places, and see them open thetime schedules and feel outraged.They say things like ‘nothing herefor me. ’ we find ourselves trying todefend the department by tellingthem this quarter is a fluke. ”Offerings declined this quarter because there is an-overall shor¬tage of teachers and because overhalf of the department's facultyare not teaching political sciencecourses.Political science professorKenneth Prewitt told The Maroonthat though he is not teaching aformal course this quarter. “Mvteaching load is very heavy if youadd up contact hours. Studentsknow we spend lots of time oninformal disseration. M.A., andreading programs, ’’ he said.Poll sci to 2Faces p_roblermNCD lacks leadership, studentsBy Lynn SaltzmanThe New Collegiate Division(NCD), the only College divisionnot directly associated with agraduate area is facing seriousorganizational problems.Founded in 1966, the division,which is devoted to the pursuit ofliberal edMcation through in¬terdisciplinary study, offers fourprograms: analysis of ideas andthe study of methods, civilizationstudies: Dolitics. economics,rhetoric and law: liberal arts ofthe practical (PERL); andtutorial studies, which involves athree year independent studyproject.Recently, enrollment in thedivision has dropped, andbecause it now has no full-timemaster, NCD faces an unsurefuture in leadership and thedevelopment of new programsthat transcend the traditionaldivisional boundaries of theCollege educationThree years ago, 90 studentswere enrolled in the NCD, but thisyear enrollment is down to 60students, according to DavidSmigelskis, associate professorin the NCD. The once thrivingtutorial studies program hasdwindled to one student andenrollment in Ideas and Methodshas dropped to a sparse eightstudents. Enrollment in the prognlargest it nas ever been, ac¬cording to former NCD masterCharles Wegener.The increased number ofPERL students may be at¬tributed to a growing pre¬professionalism — although thefaculty stresses that this is not a“pre-law” program — and thefact that PERL is the moststructured of the four.Ideas and Methods chairmanCharles Wegener: ‘“Rie divisionhas not been able to give enoughthought to new programs. ” “There is a concern amongstudents that interdisciplinarystudies would be inappropriateand impractical,” said KatieNash, advisor to NCD students.Another dilemma in the NCD isthe absence of a full-time master.Charles Wegener resigned asmaster in the spring of 1976 and isreplaced by acting masterNCD to 3Booth:is im-English“An innovativeportant to the NCD. ”(Photos by Sharon Poilack) Preliminary report urgesnew Harper Fellow termBy Jon MeyersohnA preliminary report submittedWednesday to the Committee ofthe College Council has recom¬mended that the Harper Fellowprogram be continued for anotherthree year term.The Harper Fellow program,instituted in 1974, with fundingfrom the Lily Foundation, wasdesigned to aid staffing problemsin the College, and expires thisyear College dean Jonathan Z.Smith created a committee inSeptember to evaluate' theprogram and to recommendwhether or not to extend it.Smith, who has said that hefavors continuing the program,told The Maroon in September thathe would take the committee’srecommendations “very seri¬ously.” The committee’s approvalincluded five suggestions for thenext term, including someguidelines for hiring.The members of the evaluatingcommittee — John Boyer,assistant professor of history;Phillip Gossett, associateprofessor of pharmacology; DavidOrlinsky, associate professor ofpsychology; and Peter Van-dervoort, associate professor ofastrophysics — would not com¬ment to The Maroon about theirpositive recommendation“because the suggestion must beformally considered by the Committee of the College Coun¬cil,” said Boyer.“The green light has beengiven,” said Smith, “but there aredetails yet to be worked out ” TheCommittee of the College Councilwill now examine the recom¬mendation and act on it, “I amhopeful by next week,” said Smith.“We would like this thingwrapped up soon, ” he addedAlthough the program wasoriginally seen as a temporarysolution to a shortage of teachingstaff in the College, it is generallyconsidered to have been a successPresident Wilson last week, in hisState of the University addressasked that the “Harper FellowProgram might now stand on itsown merit and not as a solution of aCollege teaching problem. ”Faculty members admit that ifthe program did not continue, theCollege would have to make majorreorganizational moves, becausethe College, particularly inHarper Fellows to 2InsideEditorial p. 4GCJ p. 5Calender p. 19Sports p. 20Poli sci from 1Rudolph told The Maroon that the numberof offerings “is not a scandal, but notenough, either. If we just had three morefaculty members, the picture would lookmuch better.”Americanist shortageShe explained that seven faculty mem¬bers have been diverted from politicalscience courses to teach general educationfor foreign civilization undergraduatecourses. “We just don’t have enoughbodies, ” she addedRudolph said that last year the depart¬ment made job bids to seven scholars atother schools in an all-out effort to recruitnew faculty. Four rejected those offers, andone of those who accepted took an ap¬pointment for autumn quarter only, ac¬cording to Rudolph.Students contacted by The Maroon allcomplained of a lack of American politicscourses. Rudolph agreed that “in that field,we are desperately understaffed.” Per¬manent teachers of American politics werenot secured by the recruitment drive, shesaid, because last year other top-rankedschools were competing to fill their ownshortages in that field.Despite the surplus of PhD’s in theacademic marketplace, Rudolph said thereis still a shortage of scholars who cancombine creative interpretations ofAmerican politics with mathematicalmodels.“There are lots and lots of people who areordinary. The very best are all hooked up atother places. You especially don’t findsenior faculty with good publishing recordswho are floating loose,” she said.Gass size largeThe enrollment figures released by Hayesshow that crowding in political scienceclasses is most severe in the College. Themedian size of undergraduate politicalscience classes this quarter is 32, even aftertaking into account some classes’ separatesections. This is an increase over 1976-77median of 25, and over the median of 23 in1971-72, when faculty staffing was near itsThe chairman of the political scienceconcentration program, Ira Katznelson,said undergraduate course offerings will be strengthened next quarter “by three newfaculty members coming on board. ”Tutorial bentPrewitt argued that official coursestatistics are a poor gauge of the attentiongraduate students receive at Chicago. Hesaid that to prove their competence inpolitical science, most University studentselect to write research papers rather thantake field exams. “As a consequence,”Prewitt said, “we have an intensiveresearch-tutorial program. An enormousamount of teaching goes on in informalcourses. If more students took the examoption, we would give more formal courses.Grumbling always comes from first andsecond year students, understandably. Butby their third and fourth years here,students writing research papers like it. ”He concluded that increasing the numberof official courses would increase com¬plaints from third and fourth year studentsbecause professors would spend less time ontutorial work.PhD candidate Rick Foglesong said hethought Prewitt’s argument is biasedbecause Prewitt works at NORC withstudents.“I think political science students doingwork at NORC tend to be apprentices morethan the rest of us,” he said. Foglesongestimated that he took two hours of facultytime to discuss his research papers.PhD candidate Amy Bridges said that thetutorial program is inefficient. “I neverlearned in a reading course what I couldn’thave learned just as well with 15 otherstudents,” she said.Graduate students contacted by TheMaroon said the department’s emphasis oninformal teaching forces students to bemore self-reliant.Gille said the informal format gives extraattention to aggressive students or thosewho have already proven themselves.Bridges agreed that “you have to demandattention and you have to nag.”Several students who were writing theirPhD dissertations grimly referred tothemselves as “the survivors ” Bridgesexplained: “This department subscribes tothe lake theory of education — if you want tolearn how to swim, go jump in the lake. It’sa tough department for people who needmoraJ support or orientation to the field. ”WHY? The reason is simple. Your hair, likeyour eyes, is a reflection of your total personality.For noticeable hair, open vour eves to THE HAIRPEOPLE PERFORMERS.50% Off with this ad ONLY3428 W. 63rd Street476-12002 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, November 18,1977i •i it1 mlPWiV *'feV *•* m*T The department’s small size and em¬phasis on informal teaching also makesgraduate students’ studies more vulnerableto disruption if a faculty member takes aleave of residency.“Some students come here to study withparticular persons who suddenly take aleave to do research elsewhere,” said BruceConforto, chairman of the student steeringcommittee. “The prospective student slipsthrough the catalog and sees big guns, buthow many of those names are going to behere when they come? We didn’t knowPeterson, for example, was leaving untilspring, after students were accepted.”Several students recommended that thedepartment coordinate faculty leaves toprotect important subfields from beingstripped of all their teachers at once.However, Rudolph argued that if thedepartment wants to attract top politicalscientists, it needs a liberal faculty leavepolicy to offset its salaries, which arelagging behind those of other top schools.Bailey concluded that the lack of centralcontrol over faculty members’ decisions totake leave or to teach courses ensuresperiodic breakdowns in the number ofcourses offered. “The faculty says ‘Oh well,’one bad quarter doesn’t wreck a student’swhole program. The problem is built intothe system.”Harper Fellows from 1the common core, has become dependent onthe Fellows.Because of a nationwide lack of hiring atuniversities, the College has been able tohire highly qualified and experienced non¬tenure-track Harper Fellows to fulfill theirteaching needs.“The Harper Fellows are better than anygroup of junior faculty we’ve ever broughtin,” Smith told The Maroon earlier thisquarter.The decision on whether to continue theHarper Fellow program for another threeyears now rests with the Committee of theCouncil and Dean Smith. Though Smith mayhave favored continuation, the evaluatingcommittee “was never under any pressureto recommend positively,” said Gossett. “Itwas never a foregone conclusion that theprogram would continue.” South AfricameetingThere will be a meeting of the ActionCommittee on South Africa on Sunday Nov.20 at 3 pm in Reynolds Club Lounge. Themeeting will discuss methods of getting theUniversity to divest its holdings in cor¬porations that invest in South Africa.Peter Vandervoort, associate professor ofastronomy and astrophysics, and threeother committee members this wee*recommended to Dean Smith that theHarper Fellow program be continued.(Photo by Ben Davis)fhe amazing newMG-Iloudspeakerit fits anywhere youwould like superb soundThe new Magneplanar MG-I isa smaller version of rhefamous MG-II speaker. Itsprice is appreciably less.The large bi-polar radiating areacreates the illusion of a live performance.It's neither a cone type or electrostaticspeaker. It consists of a large area(planar) permanent magnetic field witha very thin film diaphram stretchedover it.Barely thick enough for a decentdressing screen - just thick enough forsuperb sound.priced under $500 per pair.& Victor's Stereo8 E Erie. Chicago. III. 60611 312-642-63495701 W Dempster, Morion Grove, III 60053 312-966-5590J—JKSocial Thought professor James Redfield: “Leadership is' needed to monitor andscreen the NCD programs and activities. ”Budget challenge from 1would open up the process to closer publicscrutiny beginning next year.Lathrop also stated that the city shouldchange its fiscal year, v hich now runs fromJan. 1 to Dec :il to match either the statefiscal year, beginning July 1, or the federalfiscal year, beginning Oct. 1. The presentsetup, Lathrop said, is “irrational”.Lathrop’s third major complaint focuseson what he called “the fat in the budget it¬self.” Lathrop feels that millions of dollarsare wasted each year, but that if reformswere made, such as combining overlappingcity departments and getting rid of excessmanagement and lower level appointeeswhose jobs are directly tied to the patronagesystem, there would be no need for Bilan-dic’s proposed hike in parking fares andbuilding licensing fees.The independent bloc will again submit anamendment to repeal the head tax when theCouncil debates the revenue raising sectionsof the budget.Reform suggestions this year, like inyears past, said Lathrop, will probably beignored. What the minority bloc hopes for isthat Bilandic and the regulars will quietlyincorporate their suggestions, albeit withoutacknowledgement, in next year’s budgetmaking process.NCD from 1Jonathan Z. Smith, who is also the dean ofthe College and the acting master of thehumanities division.According to Wegener, the division hassuffered from its lack of formal leadership.“Although the NCD has absorbed most ofthe shock of losing its master, the divisionhas not been able to give enough thought tonew programs next year,” he said.“A master is necessary to give thedivision a sense of direction as a whole,”added Wegener.NCD professor James Redfield, also of theCommittee on Social Thought, expressedconcern over the lack of a unified focus.“Leadership is needed to monitor andscreen the programs and activities of theNCD,” he said. Wayne Booth, a professor in Ideas andMethods, echoed Redfield’s call for a newmaster. “An innovative master is importantto the NCD because the master mustenergize the faculty into working with theprograms,” he said. “Most of the NCD faculty is persuaded bythe master to teach in the NCD - only twofaculty members have been specificallyhired bv the NCD.” he addedBut, Smith said he does not plan to appointa new master. “If I appointed a new master in the present position of the NCD, I’d haveto appoint either a messiah or a caretaker ”Instead, Smith said he wants plans toappoint a “corporate committee” to leadthe NCD from which a master “might grow.”“The NCD can not be a reflection of oneperson’s fantasies, it must be a corporatedivision responding to real problems,” hesaid.However, the acting dean and the com¬mittee of chairmen have not been able todevelop any new programs this year. Ac¬cording to Booth, “certain courses are notwell-organized and nobody is developingnew programs.”Smith agreed, saying, “The NCD willatrophy if it does not find something to do. ”One problem with establishing newprograms is that other divisions are usur¬ping the function of the NCD, according toSmith. New interdisciplinary programs thatwould formerly have been developed in theNCD are appearing within other traditionaldivisions. For example, the AppliedSciences and Humanities program(ASHUM), a new program that is clearlyinterdisciplinary, is being developed in thehumanities division.Smith believes that the focus of the NCDshould shift to new directions The NCDshould develop programs based oneducational issues related to existingtraditional studies that the other divisionsdo not explore, he said. But the divisionshould also continue to provide “a haven forundeveloped areas of education and con¬tinue to function as a campus gadlfy,” saidSmith.According to Booth, the NCD “attempts toprovide the best possible liberal educationby recombining traditional methods andsubject matter in innovative ways.”The future of this innovative divisiondepends on the continuation of these idealsNCD faculty members are hopeful that witha leading committee or iflaster that isformulated by an active faculty, theCollege's youngest division can continue todevelop new programs and attract newstudents. If it does not, the division faces thelong-range possibility of folding, thoughSmith said he “would never let that happenin my term as dean. ’ ’Elections shall be held November 29 and 30, 1977, for thefollowing offices:Vice President - open to and to be voted on by all registered studentsin the University;Secretary - open to and to be voted on by all registered students inthe University;One (1) Court Seat - open to and to be voted on by all registeredstudents in the University; andFive (5) Representatives from the Social Science Division,Two (2) Representatives from the Biology Division,One (1) Representative from the Humanities Division,Two (2) Representatives from the Law School,Two (2) Representatives from Social Service Administration, andOne (1) Representative from the Public Policy Committee.Nominating petitions will be available in the Student Activities Officeon the second floor of Ida Noyes Hall as of November 18 and must bereturned to that office by November 25 at 1 500 hr (3 PM). Petitions forVice President and Secretary require the signatures of fifty (50)registered students. Petitions for the Representatives or Court requirethe signatures of ten (10) registered students.For information regarding the election call the Student Governmentoffice at 753-3273 or Jon Winkelried. Chairperson Election and RulesCommittee at 753-2240.Four standing committees of Student Government are open to allstudents without election. These are Academic Affairs, Student Ser¬vices University Services and Community Relations. Much of the workof Student Government is done by these committees. We need yourhelp and suggestions. For information call 753 3273. Lord Chesterfield Recommends'Classic Poetry —“I knew a gentleman who was so good a managerof his time that he would not even lose that smallportion of it which the calls of nature obligedhim to pass in the necessary-house. . . He bought,for example, a common edition of Horace, ofwhich he tore off gradually a couple of pages,carried them with him to that necessary place,read them first, and then sent them down as asacrifice to Cloacina, and I recommend you tofollow his example.”If you decide to take up this practice, you maystart with one of our large selections of OxfordClassical Texts, Loeb Classical Library editions,or translations of classical literature.SEMINARY COOPERATIVE BOOKSTORE INC5757 S. University Ave.Hours: Mon-Fri 9:30-4:00Sat 11:00-4:00Tho Chirann Marnnn — Prirt^y, November 18, 1977 2EditorialReflections on WilsonThough the content of President Wilson’s guardedcomments at his recent press conference came aslittle surprise, the tenor, delivery and intelligentthoughtfulness he displayed lead us to believe that ashe prepares to leave office next spring, Wilson mayactually have grown into his job. This last editorial ofthe quarter is probably also the last to be writtenbefore a new president is chosen. Though we cannot besure what type of person our next president will be —whether male or female, scholar or administrator,insider or outsider, inovator or budget-balancer — thisis a good time to offer a more historic reflection on thepresidency of John Wilson.So far this year has probably been his most suc¬cessful. Chosen as a last resort, this “private man”did not want the job, but accepted it because theUniversity had no other real option. Over the pastthree years Wilson has certainly adapted, thoughslowly, to his position. What was once an un¬comfortable and even callous public speaker has nowbecome a more relaxed and open figure filling a dif¬ficult and unfortunately much needed task for theUniversity: the selfless fundraiser. While fundraisingefforts are still moving slowly, the Campaign forChicago has helped increase the University's en¬dowment. We are no longer dipping into those funds aswe did a couple of years ago, and the University is ableto ride the crest of a national boom in fundraising.But Wilson’s strong point is not his ability as afundraiser, it is his ability to balance the budget,which he has successfully accomplished for twoconsecutive years. Though this required University¬wide belt-tightening in the form of reduced aid, in¬creased tuition and continued “no growth” faculty,Wilson and his administration — particularly ProvostD. Gale Johnson — deserve praise for alleviating whatwas six years ago a $6 million debt.Because the University is again solvent, the nextquestion must be, what sort of year has this been, andthus, what sort of autumn, Wilson’s last autumn, havewe had.There have been no Nobel prizes this year, thoughtwo notables have visited campus. One visit wasoverplanned and the other was unannounced. It hasbeen a fairly calm autumn, filled with dedications,anniversaries, and the prospects of once again having8,000 students on the quads. The ripples came from faraway, from the implications at home of rumblingsfrom a repressive government on another continent.From Washington came trouble in the form ofcapitation funds and a bill that could exempt ourtenured faculty from mandatory retirement at age 65.But more important than the attempt to solve theseDroblems, Wilson was able to make actual im¬provements during a time of fiscal austerity. Onecannot hold the president responsible for fewer facultyhirings and increased tuition, but we can praise himfor physical improvements made during his ad¬ministration. Primarily, athletics has been restored tothis campus in the form of a renovated Field House,new tennis courts, and even the euphemistic“Gatehouse” at Stagg Field to aid full-bladderedathletes.These changes, however small they may seem,mark the University’s concerted effort to improvecampus life while saving money. President Wilson isto be commended for keeping the University on anascending track while much around him seems to bedeclining. In particular, the last year alone has leftWilson without deans of the College, the medicalschool, and the School of Social Service Ad¬ministration.To combat those sudden departures, the Universityhas chosen an excellent new College dean, but has asof yet failed to find someone to heal the emotionalwounds left in the medical school by Daniel Tosteson’ssudden departure for Harvard one year ago.Nevertheless, for the first time in four years, thereseems to be no real lack of leadership in the Univer¬sity. Wilson has dealt with all of these uncertaintiesand administrative difficulties very well, and in hisfinal two quarters as president, we hope he will be ableto continue to do the job the justice he has so far thisyear.The Chicago MaroonThe Chicago Maroon is the student newspaper of theUniversity of Chicago, published Tuesdays and Fridaysduring the regular academic year. The Maroon office islocated at 1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, Illinois 60637. Thetelephone number is 753-3263. Letters to the EditorShaw nuffTo the Editor:Perhaps you might give a deeperdimension to the current controversyabout the University’s money comingfrom corporations which invest inSouth Africa by printing this excerptfrom Shaw’s Preface to Major Bar¬bara:(He’s talking about the economicdeadlock of the Salvation Army inaccepting money from a whiskeydistiller and a maker of ar¬maments.)“On the point that the Army oughtnot to take such money, itsjustification is obvious. It must takethe money because it cannot existwithout money, and there is no othermoney to be had. Practically all thespare money in the country consists ofa mass of rent, interest, and profit,every penny of which is bound up withcrime, drink, prostitution, disease,and all the evil fruits of poverty, asinextricably as with enterprise,wealth, commercial probity, andnational prosperity. The notion thatyou can earmark certain coins astainted is an unpractical individualistsuperstition. None the less the factthat all our money is tainted gives avery severe shock to earnest youngsouls when some dramatic instance ofthe taint first makes them consciousof it. When an enthusiastic youngclergyman of the Established Churchfirst realizes that the EcclestiasticalCommissioners receive the rents ofsporting public houses, brothels, andsweating dens; or that the mostgenerous contributor at his lastcharity sermon was an employertrading in female labor cheapened byrestitution as unscrupulously as aotel keeper trades in waiters’ laborcheapened by tips, or com¬missionaires’ labor cheapened bypensions; or that the only patron whocan afford to rebuild his church or hisschools or give his boys’ brigade agymnasium or a library is the son-in-law of a Chicago meat King, thatyoung clergyman has, like Barbara, avery bad quarter hour But he cannothelp himself by refusing to acceptmoney from anybody except sweet oldladies with independent incomes andgentle and lovely ways of life. He hasonly to follow up the income of thesweet ladies to its industrial source,and there he will find Mrs. Warren’sprofession and the poisonous cannedmeat and all the rest of it. His ownstipend has the same root. He musteither share the world’s guilt or go toanother planet. He must save theworld’s honor if he is to save his own.”(Peguined., pp. 26-7)Shaw wrote this 70 years ago, but Idon’t believe the current debate haseven come up to this point, let aloneprogressed beyond itMark AshinProfessor of EnglishMoral manTo the Editor:As I was editing the copy for lastweek’s GCJ I ran across a statementthat I thought might be relevant to thecurrent controversy over SouthAfrica. It is a quote made by MarcelOphuls in an interview on the subjectof his new film“The wholesome way to react toresponsibility is to stop dividing ourprivate lives and public lives. Thewalls people try to erect not to see orfeel are reactionary by definition.That’s how great crimes are able tofunction. Because people turn off.”Ophuls is not an unintelligent manand I do not find this an unintelligentquote.Mark NeustadtEditor, Grey City Journal New rolesTo the Editor :I would like to comment on twostatements made by Jeanne Dufort inher article on Ginni Clemmens(Friday, Nov. 11).First, her statement, “should youhappen to be a white male,. . . or anupwardly mobile executive, you mayfind yourself cast in the role of op¬pressor, without having done a thingto deserve the demotion.” Mostfeminists will point out that malebehavior or role playing is the methodby which women are oppressed. Nospecial act of agression againstwomen is necessary to oppress. Sex-role stereotyping has accomplishedthis already. It does require con¬scious, significant disassociation withmale roles to free oneself from theoppressor class.Secondly, the statement, “Inmobilizing to support women. . .feminists have often moved pastopenness to create their own systemof elitism based on consciousness orbirthright.” I assume Ms Dufort isreferring to the attitude held by somefeminists that they are: 1) by virtueof being women, “Better” than men;2) “more liberated” than manywomen and are therefore “better”.Perhaps this elitism does exist in theminds of some, but I think it is unfairto label all feminists as elitists. Inorder to change the inequities in thepower structure between men andwomen, we must redefine homanrelationships. To substitutemale/female power roles forfemale/female, rich/ poor,black/white is no progress at all Ibelieve most feminists are aware ofthis and try to deal with it in theirrelationships. I recomment Ti-GraceAtkinson’s book Amazon Odessey(Links Books, 1974) for a developmentof feminist political theories men¬tioned here.I’d like to thank Jeanne Dufort formaking the campus more aware ofthe wealth of talent available to themin women’s music.Charlotte MehrtensBad investmentTo the Editor:Let me join the outcry againstUniversity investments in companiesthat invest in South Affirca. It is onething to grow fat on the sweat andblood of oppressed workers. It is stillworse to allow our ivory towermentality to blind us to the true issuesat stake.At the University of Chicago, wehave a sacred obligation to continuethe pursuit of knowledge wherever itmay lead us. In this case, theUniversity is neglecting thatobligation. It is indirectly investing ina field of knowledge in which it has notachieved anything approaching itsachievements in other fields. In fact,no major institution of higher learningin the free world yet recognizes thebenefits of a theoretical approach inthis area The value of such an ap¬proach to study in such fields aspolitical science, history, andeconomics is enormous and, yet, it isas always dwarfed by that derivedfrom the quality of being furtherpursuit of knowledge. The Universityhas a duty to break ground in thislargely unexplored areaRecognizing this negligence on thepart of the administration, we muststand up and demand a suitablereturn from our investments. Bloodmoney is simply not enough We mustalso draw on the great minds in thisfield to complement the great mindsalready here. While investment inSouth Africa can never generate areturn, either in capital or ideas, thatwill allow the establishment of aSchool of Repression truly worthy ofthis campus, this can be achieved byinvestment in the truly advanced institutions in the field. Many U. S.firms already do invest in the SovietUnion, not to mention states whichare, while less advanced than theSoveit school, still more advancedthan South Africa. Indeed, whileSouth Africa’s backwardness in thisarea does preclude investment there,we should invest in at least some ofthese lesser lights, e.g., Yugoslavia,Uganda, or Mozabique, and we shouldcertainly be in the vanguard of thosetrying to learn from the Chineseschool. Only with a varied samplingfrom all of the world’s greatresearchers can we understand themost advanced theory and methods.When Rockefeller invested hismillions, they were rewarded with theestablishment of one of the truly greatUniversities in the world. In fairnessto that tradition, we must terminateour investments in South Africa.When we invest in anything, weshould get our money’s worthMichael ElzufonOutragedTo the Editor:The only reaction that one can havetowards the revelations concerningthe University’s tacit support for theSouth African regime is outrage.That the University’s morals prohibitit from investing in liquor, gamblingor Las Vegas but allow it to profit offof South African jails can only beregarded as being grossly misplacedNot only has the University willinglyinvested in South African connectedcorporations, it has refused to speakout against these investments atstockholder’s meetings. TheUniversity tries “to keep investmentdecisions politically neutral,” theysay. What sort of neutrality is it thatsells to the same police which shootdown blacks in search of equal rights?I, for one, cry “Foul'”Considering that the Universityrequires all of its’ students to carryidentification “papers” and con¬sidering that black students caughtwithout their “papers” may facesudden deportation (as reported in the“Maroon” a few weeks ago) the of¬ficial link with aparthied is not sur¬prising. What is surprising is that U.C. students let this happen! Thestudent “Government” refuses toinvolve itself in non-U. C. matters — isit not a U. C. matter for what uses thestudents’ tuition money is beingspentv It’s about time that “studentapathy” ceased to be a campusmetaphor It’s about time U. C.students stood up to “highly placedUniversity officers” (read John T.Wilson) and the Board of Trustees.It’s time to end racism in Hyde Park,and to stop supporting the openlyracist regime in South Africa.Thomas M. C. FosterPresentableTo the Editor:According to the October 18thedition of The Maroon, Prince Charleswas to be presented with “JonathanSmith, dean of the College, and hiswife...a block of graphite...anda...copy of “The Idea of the Univer¬sity of Chicago ” The October 21stedition of The Maroon informs us thatDean Smith is still on campusalthough the Prince has left. Thisraises a number of questions that TheMaroon fails to answer:1) Was only Dean Smith left behind ordid we also get to keep his wife, theblock of graphite and the book’’2) Why is Dean Smith still here’’ Didthe University demand his return, ordid the Prince simply not accept him’’3) Why hasn’t The Maroon given theseevents the coverage they deserve?A concerned student4 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, November 18,1977The Chicago Maroon's Weekly Magaiine of Criticism and the ArtsThe GCJ plugs in to new fall records (p.12)■—^^^fc i ■ —————————Two bright spots ofthe Film Festival (p.7) 77ie 4th Annual LesbianWriters Convention (p. 9)The forms of literature take a hundred shapes. Poets,novelistswriters of short stories, playwrights, and af/easf one iournalist came together last weekend to tryto find some common ground on which to ponder thisart of writing.The finest Polish restaurantin the Loop (p.15)......The University of Chicago TaiChi Chu’an Club invites you toparticipate in an introductoryclass of Tai Chi Ch'uan or Kung-Fu.Tai Chi Ch’uan is a systemof soft, flowing, balleticmovements which com¬prise one of the mostefficient exercise systemsever.We study all aspects ofTai Chi Ch'uan including themedicinal, spiritual, emo¬tional, physical, meditative,therapeutic, philosophicaland the martial.Instructors:Paul HannahBob AndersonDebbie PetroStan Walerczyk TAI CHI CH’UAN &KUNG-FUTai ChiWednesdays 7.-30pmBlue Gargoyle5655 S. UniversityorSundays 7:30pm4945 Dorchester(enter on 50th)Kung-FuSundays 6:30pm4945 S. Dorchester(enter on 50th)If you’re consideringa Mercedes280E,drive a Peugeot604.Like the Mercedes 280 E, the Peugeot 604 SL has four-wheelindependent suspension, a resonsive six-cylinder engine {ours is aV-6), power steering (ours is rack and pinion), a unitized bodyheld together with thousands of welds, power windows, fullyreclining front bucket seats, tinted glass, and meticulous atten¬tion to detail.The Peugeuot 604 has alsobeen engineered for asuperior level ofcomfort. Withoversized shockabsorbers, large coil_springs, a floating differential, andseats that are actually tuned to the suspension system.But comfort isn’t the only thing that sets the 604 apart from theMercedes. There’s also the price. Which starts at about$11,000.* And which may be its most comforting feature of all.m!^ Inc.Sales / Leasing / Parts / Service2347 So. Michigan Ave. Chicago 326-2550*Manufacturer’s suggested retail price. Delivery, optional equip¬ment, license, title, taxes, dealer preparation not included.Page 6 STUDY ABROAD THIS SUMMERwith SYRACUSE UNIVERSITYEAST AFRICAGeography. Social Science ITALYArchitecture, Art History, Studio Art,Environmental Art. PsychologySWITZERLANDMusic AUSTRIA ISRAELGerman Language/Culture ReligionGREAT BRITIANEducation, Cinema/Film Making, Costume Design,Textile Arts, Geology. Law, Fine ArtsFall ’78 semester programs available in England, Italy, Russia,France, Mexico, Spain, the NetherlandsWrite for more information:Division of International Programs AbroadSyracuse Univ. 335 Comstock Ave. Room NSyracuse, N.Y. 13210Phone(315)423-3471iOfl- HOLIDAY RECORDER SALEThe 1 Come in and save 20% on all our Kungrecorders during the holidays. You’llfind rosewood, bubinga, ebony, and manyother unusual woods. All offer a beautifultone and ease of playing that will delightFret 'Ss you.Shop5210 S. Harper \ You’ll also find many other gift ideas to]] make this a joyous musical season."in llar/irr C.ourl"NO 7-1060 JANNEBANCROFT SHIRLEYMacLAINEThe generations change.But the choices remain the same.TWENTIETH CENTURY FOX A HERBERT ROSS FILMANNEBANCROn SHIRLEY MacLAINE ~THE TURNING POINT TOM SKERRITTfni-roauc/riffMIKHAIL BARYSHNIKOV •%* LESLIE BROWNE jMARTHA SCOTT • MARSHALL THOMPSONANTHONY ZERBE • AMERICAN BALLET THEATREtNORA KAYE >*,«,.», ARTHUR LAURENTS *,*>„*/HERBERT ROSS ^ ARTHUR l AURENTS(wwfc, HERBERT ROSS PRINTS BY DE LUXE' NOW IN PAPERBACK FROM SIGNETMUSIC FROM THE MOTION PICTURE:r PGl nKJHU UMNCt SKOSTO *£&•)- «r« mmi ON 20TH CENTURY RECORDS AND TAPES ANow Playing ummWUSH .it OAK I Exclusive Chicago ShowingThe Grey City Journal‘A . • * k I * < I » 4 ‘lift V'l into*K.v* V« ■• *Two from the festivalOne Sings, The Other Doesn’tThe Man WhoLoved WomenBy Karen HellerWomen are the objects of The Man Who Loved Women.They are the objects of desire, of conquest, of the af¬firmation of masculinity, of a full successful life. TorBertrand (Charles Denner), Francois Truffaut'sprotagonist, the fascination of these objects are legs.Bertrand loves for legs, fights for legs, and dies for them.Although legs are no more an object than any otherprominent feature of a female physique, women have lesscontrol over their size and shape than over most other partsof their bodies. Legs, like the women who are the objects ofBertrand's undying passion, have a greater relation to whatall women naturally possess than to what each individualwoman is. Bertrand loves no woman but all women, statingthat once he knows a woman she is no longer of any interest.He loves the feminine mystique not the understanding ofone of its kind.During the day, Bertrand works at an airplane researchcenter in Montpelier. His job, never adequately described,involves testing model airplanes in extreme situations. Hehas no male friends and few solely platonic relationshipswith women. A strong friendship would require love.Bertrand is unable to give to one when he can have (or atleast attempt to have) all. These efforts he records in abook which shares the title of the movie. His editor (BrigitteFossey) offers him friendship and understanding but heresists such a commitment. “If you have nothing better todo, remember that I have no plans for Christmas," she tellshim. Instead he calls a young woman he picked up at a carrental office and, when this fails, goes cruising for a pair ofthin, shapely legs.Besides women, Bertrand has a deep interest in books.Like women, he can pick one up, become passionatelyinvolved, and then place it on his shelf in his large collection. He blames both passions on his mother who neverloved him or understood his reading. While his motherentertained her lovers, he immersed himself in his booksuntil he was old enough to immerse himself in women.One evening in Paris, Bertrand accidentally meets Vera(Leslie Caron). He is visibly upset b' this and later tellsGenvieve, his editor, that he must re' ise his book which isready to go to press. He confesses that he wrote the book forone woman yet he didn't even mention her in passing.Bertrand never discloses the nature of his relationship withVera and she is never seen again. His great love is forgottenas easily as his pick-ups, the singularity of one womanbeing of no lasting importance. He loves the plurality ofwomen in their similar, yet distinguishable form. He lovesbooks the same way, mentioning no one favorite author,period or genre.Bertrand is buried by the women he collectively loved.Each one is interesting and unique. Many have slightlychanged through his suggestions, perhaps a new pair ofglasses or a different hairstyle. Yet they are no worse,perhaps a bit better, for him. They have carried on withoutmuch alteration.On the surface, Bertrand might appear a simplewomanizer, a man who dislikes women along the lines of aDon Juan or a Casanova. But he is quickly revealed to betruly unique. His overwhelming passion is complicated andconsumate. He is amazing because he does everything withsuch serious conviction and dedication, as though, as onewoman remarks, his life depended on it. Such fiercedetermination is enough to make any (and most) womencome running.Charles Denner portrays Bertrand as a man capable ofsuccumbing to his passion at the slightest provocation andyet resisting until after office hours when his life is private.Attractive but not handsome, he appears inocuous in onescene, striking in the next. Most of all, Denner makesBertrand as attractive to the viewer as he is to the womenin the film. The viewer shares perception, restraining fromhard, haste judgment.The Man Who Loved Women is a remarkable film. Whatis even more remarkable is that it is the work of FrancoisTruffaut. The amazing thing about Truffaut is his ability todo so many things so well. It is hard to believe that onedirector can make The Story of Adele H, then Small Changeand now The Man Who Loved Women in such rapdi suc¬cession. Each is unique and successful. Truffaut'sprolificacy has not detracted from his brilliance; he is themost versatile director working today and one of thegreatest and most versatile directors of all time. The slick,quick pace of this film is reminiscent of neither of the twoprevious films but of Day For Night, the film whichpreceeded them. Like Day For Night, a great deal is shownin the film and told by its narrator but much more issuggested.Friday, November 18, 1977 By Karen HellerIn the epilogue of Agnes Varda's new film, the directordescribes her two heroines: "You see, they are very different; one sings, the other doesn't." The disparities between the two women are, naturally, much greater thanthis. But Varda's comment is hopeful, not ironic,suggesting the similarities rather than the differences. Inthe end, which is the promise of a bright long future, bothwomen are leading happy, fulfilled existences. They arecloser, more alike than ever. Perception and an un¬derstanding of being a woman and a future based on thismakes the differences simple and tangible.Pauline, at age 17, is independent, free spirited, yetunaware of her womanhood. One day she passes a windowfilled with photographs of women. The look in their faces issingular — abandoned, isolated, vacant. One of the subjectsshe recognizes as an old friend, Suzanne. She enters thestudio and discovers that Suzanne and the photographer,Jerome are lovers. The only result of their relationship istwo children. They are the only pleasure in her life, butsadly for a woman of 22, they are her sole and total occupation.Suzanne and Pauline renew their friendship. Suzanne,who crys all the time without care or direct provocation, ispregnant again. Pauline raises money for her abortion,partially through a fabricated story told to her middle classparents. Upon their discovery of her lie, she leaves ratherthan be rejected, drops out of school and pursues singingprofessionally. Suzanne's tormented lover, Jerome, killshimself and she departs to her parents' small farm.Ten years later, the two women meet at an abortion rally.Pauline has become Pomme (Apple) — a more appropriatename for this bright, full-cheeked, red haired woman. Nowa songwriter and a singer with an all woman group,Pomme writes of women, pregnancy, abortion and the pill.She sings with conviction and sensitivity but her lyrics(actually Varda's) are good humored and often silly,(about pregnancy: "I am a balloon, a large ovule")Pomme's greater love is Darius, an Iranian economistwhom she lives with and later marries after they havemoved to Iran.Suzanne's babies have grown with her. They are hergreatest delight but now not her only. Since leaving Paris,she has worked in a factory, as a medical secretary and as the director of a family planning center in a small city inthe south of France.Frustrated and bored in Iran, Pomme returns to Franceand music. She gives birth to a son and gives him to Dariuswho will not leave his native country. In love with him butdedicated to her chosen lifestyle, she asks him for anotherchild. He leaves her tearful, yet hopeful and pregnant.Suzanne, "passionate and patient” as ever, has fallen inlove with a pediatrician and finally marries him.In the films' prologue, Varda states that her film is aboutwomen, friendship, love, life, children, and much more.One Sings,...fulfills this large promise. Pomme andSuzanne's lives are rich, full and very different. Theirfriendship reflects each woman's vitality and at¬tractiveness. The film presents an acceptable, digestablekind of feminism.This feminism is personal and pursues individuallyrather than as political feminism practiced in a group. Thewomen reunite at an abortion rally, a demonstration for theright to control one's body and choose when to be a mother.Both women want men in their lives but prove that they canflourish without them. And motherhood, the subject ofmuch of the film, is the greatest wonder and glory ofwomanhood. Pomme becomes a mother when she hasfinally cast off her youthful extravagances and is totallyaccepting of her womanhood and maturity. AllowingDarius to take her son if he leaves her with another child, isnot a continuation of her youthful impetuousness but ratherthe commitment of a confident woman. Suzanne marriesfor true love with the knowledge that sKe can finally fullyshare her life without giving up herself.As Pauline/Pomme, Valerie Mairesse successfullydisplays youthful exuberance and unaffability. She standsnaked before Jerome's camera appearing as though shehas nothing to hide but, actually, holding in much more thatthe camera's and Jerome's eyes can see She confuses himand delights the viewer with this ability to appear open yetrich and complex in character.Therese Liotard is amazing as the sensitive Suzanne.Asthe youthful, burdened mother yet child, she has a quiet yetaching despair. Later, she exhibits a admirable independence and softness. The combinations of thesequalities in each woman presents a strong friendship andan enjoyable film, not because they are remarkable butbecause they are recognizable and understood.Brigitte Fossey and Charles Denner in a scene from Francois Truffaut's "The Man Who Loved Women Page 7a$ XJfau^noGbjtycjMruj -frajndtL'J& C&J7U/&&0&Gmvucoj. f—Mei.O0YMM.ER ) My dfacjJlovtbQj CAjits'■ILADELPHI amletih• ••••• MMM* •* ••••• 31*CL'#••• ^ • ••••*HAMSNTA5HSYhPQSIUM ,7^Uafmoderator: prof Howard L aronson * sio.^. • r v. ^ iaNc*ooucKe»)participants. 0 9philip gossett (music) ^irving kaplansky (ma.themafc»csj ^'e'^^Sv' *kenneth kaye (educatiorv) 3%<\> ralbert madansky (.business) ^ ^ %yVjames d mecawly (jin«jo\^ttcs ^ '“jar eastern Ioa^^. CavjI)AT IDA NOYES HALL 1112 £ 5VTUES. NOV 'XL ~?:30 PM.ELECTRIFYING.(x'&lsMux'rdj QrdXxojunut,)-My timesDifferent(jRiSHJJL (SMCoQMitmAoT>you/coSULQJNFLorya^/ JLSEJuj j£—DAVID BROMQERtj■91*'SI GUNA\ mUkUtuK rug DAVID BROMBERG BANDh FANTASY Re CORO CAHDTAPB) F-^40 PR0Pt/Cft> QY J/M PRicg~F/ZOM£4CO ~T7wfyiUA&A-rfejn^ioAadowd uome^vFrom Cinema 5STARTS TODAYIIIOttKAI’H SSK* LincolnReduced parking-Aetna Bank lot (enter on Halsted, rear of theatre) 4 hrs./$1 SENIORSJoin VISTA and share yourLiberal Arts experience withAmerica's urban & rural poor.Your degree in EDUCATION, SOCIALSCIENCE, HEALTH BUSINESS ADMIN.PHYS. ED, or RECREATION can helpsolve social, human and environ¬mental problems of low-incomecommunities. Sign up at PlacementOffice for a talk with formerVISTA volunteer on campus:21 22MON TUES NOVThe Grey City Journal -.Toward a new genreValerie Taylor: The "Lesbian Grandmother' Photos by Jeanne DufortWhether life influences literature orvice versa is unclear.At any rate, the closet door began toopen for lesbians in the United States atabout the same time that lesbianliterature foundits way into print in the 1950’s.By Jeanne Dufort"There is a need for a new literature. Women want toread about themselves. Hamlet is not about us." /Alma Routsong, Keynote speakerOne hundred women gathered at the Blue Gargoyle lastweekend for the fourth Lesbian Writers Conference. Thetopic was writing, naturally and politics and sexuality andmoney and...Because writing reflects life, creates life,expands upon life, distorts life, it must encompass all ofthese. It is no more — and no less than — the world.Women have always written, but they have not alwaysbeen published. Aphra Behn, the first woman to earn anindependent living in the theatre, wrote during the male-dominated seventeenth century. Emily Dickinson, theBrontes, Jane Austen — women writers from past eras doexist in print, but compare their number to that of malewriters from those eras. Lesbian writers have remainedalmost totally unpublished until this century.In 1924, Radclyffe Hall's The Well of Loneliness brokethe barrier. In light of later lesbian works, it is a terriblebook — the literary style is bad, the concept ofhomosexuality as sexual inversion which has beenrejected in most quarters, pervades. Few lesbians todaywould consider themselves men in women's bodies — asdoes the heroine, Stephen Gordon. And yet it is a land¬mark, because Radclyffe Hall was the first to stand upand askfor acceptance for the lesbian.Gertrude Stein once remarked that when an artistcreates something new it is never beautiful because it isstill taking shape. Later it becomes beautiful — but then itis no longer new. Pioneering is lonely business.Until the 1950's, lesbian literature did not become asignificant literary genre, primarily because those fewworks actually in print were not available to the generalpublic. Traditionally, and still today, women writers haverelied on private printings and small presses for thepublication of their work.A Kinsey librarian wrote Sex Variant Women inLiterature in the 1950's. Jeannette Foster, with access tohuge amounts of material, surveyed lesbian writing and,particularly, the appearance of lesbians in the great bodyof otherwise non lesbian writings. Originally published ather own expense, the book was reprinted in paperback byDiana Press in 1975.Whether life influences literature or vice versa is un¬clear. At any rate, the closet door began to open forlesbians in the United States at about the time that lesbianliterature found its way into print in the 1950's. TheDaughters of Bilitis, the first national lesbianorganization, began publishing The Ladder in 1956. TheLadder carried fiction and essays on homosexual topicsand some of its contributors have since made names forthemselves in the writing world. Lorraine Hansbury,whose Raisin in the Sun became a Broadway hit, was anearly contributor and founding member of the New YorkDOB. Rita Mae Brown, Jeannette Foster, Jane Rule,Valerie Taylor, and Alma Routsong (under herpseudonym Isabel Miller) all wrote for The Ladder, whichsuspended publication in 1972.In light of the general taboo on lesbian literature, thewealth of works that has survived is amazing. One featureof the Lesbian Writer's Conference was a display roomjammed to the gills with offerings from Midwest feministbookstores. The Jane Addams Bookstore specializes in outof print and hard to locate feminist books. Many feministpresses (and a few larger ones like Norton) are reprintingearly novels by lesbian and feminist writers thatoriginally appeared in only a limited press run.Several works by Gertrude Stein were on display at theconference, as well as the complete Virginia Woolf andDoris Lessing works. Kate Millett and Simone deBeauvoir books were displayed prominently, along withR ita Mae Brown's three books. Brown's Rubyfruit Jungle,All Beethoven RecitalbyGILBERT FISCHERPIANISTSonata Op. 27, no. 2(“Moonlight )Sonata Op. 57 (“.Appasionata")Sonata Op. 110SUNDAY, NOV. 20 3:30 PMKAM Isaiah Israel Temple51st and GreenwoodAdmission FreeFridtry,‘Niyp*mlter'18,"1977 sometimes dubbed the feminist version of Huck Finn, hasrecently been issued by Bantam Paperbacks. The bookwas originally published by Daughters Press, a smalleastern feminist press, and sold some 70,000 copiesdespite Daughters limited distribution network.Alma Routsong, keynote speaker for the conference,noted that several establishment publishers are "readingthrough the night in search of the great lesbian novel."Bantam apparently thinks it has found a winner inRubyfruit Jungle, the story of a feisty young girl whogrows up gay and quite enjoys it. Bantam's initial pressrun of a quarter of a million copies is unprecedented inlesbian literature.Hundreds of titles were on display at the conference.The New Alexandria Library of Lesbian/Wimmin, housedalong with the Chicago Lesbian Feminist Center at 707West Wrightwood, is the only community lending libraryin the country specializing in lesbian and feminist books. NALLW owns close to 1000 volumes, including I950'snovels, early feminist and historical books, and mostcurrent lesbian, black women, and feminist books. Thereference section includes periodicals, bibliographies,non circulating volumes, guides, and catalogues.The availability of the NALLW eases one majorproblem for a student of lesbian literature: Money Booksprinted on small presses necessarily cost more per copy topurchase tnan mass produced volumes, and yet feministliterature is aimed primarily at a group of readers thathas limited financial resources.An old saying says that before you find a prince, youhave to kiss a great many toads; in literature, you have toread a lot of bad books before you stumble upon the greatAmerican novel. Partly because lesbian novels are notwidely circulated, critical appraisals of them tend to bespotty at best. Standards to which lesbian writers can(continued on p.lO)PIZZAPLATTER14MK.IMFAST DELIVERYAND PICKUPONE PAIR OFNS1000 SPEAKERSPLAYED JUST 4 MO.544-2041/493-9426$785 pr ATTENTIONMedical School ApplicantsAll students who plan to apply NEXT YEAR to enter medicalschool in Fall, 1979 should attend a meeting to discuss thenew MCAT and other details preliminary to submitting appli¬cations. The meeting will be heldTUESDAY NOV. 22nd4:30pmClassics 10Page •9(continued from p.9)*aspire are not clearly delineated.In the early stages of anything new, the mere fact of itsexistence satisfies the market. Such was the case whenwomen's sports first were popularized; such is the casewith lesbian literature. Fortunately, women writers arereaching beyond merely setting words upon paper and arebeginning to master the craft of writing. Even though theideas may be new and enticing for their newness, one canread a very limited number of badly written books beforethe newness wears off and the message fails to transcendits poorly crafted form.My test for a well written book lies in the way that wordsare strung together. I feel cheated when reading a bookthat fails to live up to its promise of being well crafted,particularly when poorly written books come to my attention masqued as feminist literature. Such a joy it is,then, to discover May Sarton's Mrs. Stevens Hears TheMermaids Singing or Kate Millett's Sita. Neither areflawless books, but each contains sentences that stoppedme in my tracks. To marvel over a few words, read,reread, roll them about on my tongue, savor them as onewould a delicious fruit is a rare pleasure: So many words,so many thoughts, the beauty of a union of words thatclearly sets forth an idea in a truly delightful fashion.The crafters of such sentences are to be much admired.I am at once grateful and jealous and awed. Such a power,to be a good writer: To cause someone to stop and ponderyour thought; to weave words together like an intricatetapestry, creating a wondrous whole out of ordinaryparts!One hundred women writers gathered at the conferenceto share in this craft. The weekend was a constantdialogue; strange in a way because all the participantswere far more used to thinking their thoughts with ink andpaper than speaking and creating ideas collectively. Theforms of literature take a hundred shapes; poets,novelists, writers of short stories, playwrights, and atleast one journalist tried to find some common ground onwhich to ponder this art of writing.Marie Kuda of Womanpress founded the LesbianWriters Conference in 1974, as a natural outgrowth of herown interest in lesbian literature and what she perceivedas a growing phenomenom. "Women are writing all overthe country, but we are not particularly visible to thepublic or to each other. This conference creates an im¬portant dialogue between women; Beth Hodges saidduring last years keynote that, in 1976, speaking to womenmight be the ultimate political action. That is why thisconference has to happen."Sharing works in progress was a key feature of theconference. One group of women in Chicago meet weeklyto share their work and critiques. Lucina Kathmann,whose life's work is actually concentrated in dance/theatre rather than writing, read several short storiesthat portrayed feisty women of all sorts. One recountedthe story of an ancient aunt who "is a dyke, not par¬ticularly in a sexual sense, but really in the way she is."The aunt is one of those persons who would wear shorts inhot weather even without a good figure and is not par¬ticularly conscious of self in any social sense.Kathmann said she developed her style in letters tohome. She obviously was d teller of tales; the details ofher stories are not half so important as the way she tellsthem."Humor in feminist literature may be one way ofshowing warts without giving fodder to the enemy," saidone woman in a workshop on politics and literature.Clearly no way of life is without blemishes; and one faultof lesbian/feminist writing may be a tendency to glossover the blemishes and not tell the whole story. Routsongnoted that "We don't want to talk about it (problems),because we may cause rejoicing in the streets of DadeCounty." But the genre is not complete without the totalpicture.The political workshop discussed many of the rlcurrent problems in lesbian literature, such as lack of humor,perpetuating stereotypes, and classism. The typicallesbian protagonist is a young WASP, observed poetMartha Shelly, and rarely jewish, third world, or old. Notso very different from the great mass of "straight"literature, but one use in creating a new genre is to movebeyond problems of existing work."All of us got this dream, including me," Shelley observed, "that we're going to write a book that will makeenough money so that we don't have to eat dog food whenwe're old ladies." The problem with dreams is thatsometimes the compromises necessary to realize themare not worth the reward. The market for lesbianliterature is untested, but clearly only certain types ofbooks have traditionally grossed fortunes. Whether towrite for the mass market — make a fortune — or pullaway from the merely saleable to create some new formor foster some new message is a problem for all writers.The discussion turned to major publishing houses andthe responsibility of lesbian writers to small feministpresses. Obviously Bantam will distribute RubyfruitJungle in places Daughters never could. As one womanobserved, "If I had read Rubyfruit when I was fourteen,my life might have been incredibly changed." Bantamcan bring lesbian literature to the masses. On the otherhand, if every saleable lesbian novel is snatched up by thelarge presses, leaving only the most experimental to thesmall presses, the small presses will not survive finan¬cially.They are already struggling. Vandals recently brokeinto Diana Press in California and effectively destroyedfive years of work. Not a simple case of theft, the presseswere ruined, ink spilled on manuscripts, and acid pouredon the plates. The crime was a blatent attempt to still atleast one lesbian/feminist voice. Valerie Taylor, a 64 yearold poet-novelist billed affectionately as the LesbianGrandmother, noted that "Fascist and reactionary forcesignore you when you're weak; that they are hitting hard isa sign of our growing strength."Taylor led a discussion on the lesbian novel, recountingmuch of the history of the genre and noting that "we areliving in very interesting times." She questioned thenotion that lesbian writing had to be purely political,wondering aloud "who owns the rest of the world if we can't deal with love, nature, and all the rest." Taylorherself specializes in erotic love novels and notes "|'||never pretend that my books (of the fifties) are classics,but at least they didn't have a woman — size 44 bust andblack underwear — who snarls 'I am the man' as sheplunges her arm into her girl friends vagina up to herelbow." Some books, written by men about lesbians, hadsuch scenes she recalls. Women should write anythingthey feel like, Taylor asserts, and that may includewriting positive things about men. "You may not want togo to bed with a man," she says, "but at least admitthey're human.Each woman in Taylor's workshop wrote a short note onher own current work. Some themes recurred con¬sistently; motherhood, politics, friendship betweenwomen. "We could have a whole movement with thetwenty people in this room," Taylor noted. That is at oncea frightening and exciting thought."The movement is strong and serious. The womengathered at the conference represented only a smallportion of women writing throughout the country.Studying women's literature is a hard task — most of whatwomen have written has not found its way into even thesmall presses and so remains buried in journals, letters,and private manuscripts. It is futile to mark some greattrend in women's literature, because only a highlyselected body of work is available. Probably most of thewomen at the conference will never see their writing inprint, unless each manages to tap some great financialreservoir to arrange a private printing. But the NewAlexandria Library for Lesbian/Wimmin does have athousand volumes and new feminist works are uncoveredall the time. Diana Press, Daughters, and the Naiad Pressare all churning out feminist books as fast as their smallpresses allow. Clearly the movement is making headway.Against odds, women writers are being heard. VirginiaWoolf wrote that women can never join the ranks of greatwriters until they have money and a room of their ownExperience fosters thought, but thoughts cannot berecorded without time and energy to write. More andmore, women are making time and making their voicesheard. Holly Near wrote a song that speaks to all womenwhen it declares "You can't just take my dreams away."Women writers are making those dreams materialize.Alma Routsongm ^ ALLfovbigf CIGARETTESThe best newsstand in the world K Calso has 2000 magazines for you!J A PACK51st and Lake Park Chicago 11.60615 (312) 684-5100 ** DOROTHY SMITHBEAUTY SALON5841 S. BLACKST0NEHY3-1069Call for appts.7 A.M.-7 P.M.Monday thru Friday,closed SaturdayHair Styling • PermanentsTinting-Facials-Skin Care j EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURTROSENBAUMOptometrist(53 Kimbark Plaza)1200 East 53rd Street493-8372—« * : A ,.4 , VERSAILLES5254 S. DorchesterWELL MAINTAINEDBLILDIMAttractive 1V2 and2V-Z Room Studiosf'lirnhlitil or 1 nfiirtiLlied8149 to 8248Ihised on AvailabilityAll Clilitie* includedAt (.ainpus Hus StopFA t-0200 Mrs. CroakOrson Welles'TOUCH OF EVILL Fri., Nov. 186:30 8:30 & 10:45 pmCobb Hall $1.50Past..IQ *» »V The Grey City Journal■> V-l * '* 4 h‘.»« O Vl , a i>V \Epic-kitchentheaterBy John LanahanBrecht called it culinary theatre; Paddy Chayefskycalled it kitchen drama; by any other name, domesticmelodrama is here to stay. It has, in fact, seen quite arevival in American theater in the last five years, with suchworks as David Rabe's Sticks and Bones, Megan Terry'sHothouse, and is found in well over half the currenttelevision plays. The trend now is to set the domesticmelodrama in the past, sometime within the last 75 years,so that one can have one's culinary theater and comment onit too — a kind of "Epic kitchen drama."The current production of Kevin O'Morrison's LadyhouseBlues at the Wisdom Bridge falls perfectly into this con¬temporary pattern. Set in south St. Louis in the summer of1919, the play chronicles the interweaving lives of fourdaughters and their mother. It attempts to placate theBrechtians in the audience by making each character adifferent social type: one’is a positive mental attitudesocial reformer; one a disillusioned and world weary socialclimber; another a workoholic consumptive, etc. But theplay is no epic drama, since its main concern is theemotional interaction and interpersonal bonds in thisfamily of widely divergent social types in a period of rapidand radical cultural change.The director, Robert Falls, wisely chose to focus on theemotional interplay of the characters, and let the historicalsocial comment of the work take care of itself. Mr. Fallsattempted to transcend the literalism of the piece'sstructure, with occasional uses of stylized blocking, lightingeffects, and songs. Although these moments were ar¬tistically the most satisfying, they were not integratedstylistically with the rest of the production. Mr. Falls wassuggesting, in my opinion, a more lyrical, subtle, and poeticform, but one that the play, as an "Epic-kitchen drama",could not sustain.This show required close and intense ensemble work, andreceived it. A few cast members let their mannerisms getin their way, most notably Irene Schweyer, whose Eyliemoved a little too jerkily for even the impatient sixteenyear old that was her character; and Kathleen Melvin asHelen, the consumptive daughter, whose hysterical despairseldom penetrated below flailing arms and head in hands.Charlotte Booker as Terry, an optimistic Suffragette andlabor organizer, had a PMA that would put Major Barbaraand W. Clement Stone to shame. Janice St. John waslanguid, beautiful, and wistfully despairing as Dot, adisillusioned socialite visiting her family while pregnantwith her second child. The focus of the play was held,controlled, and contoured by Joan Spatafora as Liz, motherof the women, in a role that might be described as MotherCourage meets Tugboat Annie. Ms. Spatafora nevershortcutted, but perfectly coordinated the other playerswith the accuracy and emotional precision of her responses. She, perhaps more than the director, was responsiblefor the impact of this show.The set, designed by David Emmons, was an accuratebut very playable rendition of a tenement dining room andkitchen, and worked well with Wisdom Bridge's oddlyshaped stage and bizarre sightlines. The lighting, by MaryBadger, was excellent, both atmospheric and realistic, andnever distracted or called attention to itself. The costumes,designed by Julie Nagel, provided a nice historical backdrop, and managed to comment, better than the script, onthe different social types of the characters. 'The sound, byGerald Fisher, consisted of street cries or songs supposedlysung by the other tenants; but they were recorded, and thusadded a jarring and artificial note to the lyrical ambienceof the rest of the production.As you may have guessed by now, I liked this show, but Ido not like the play. It was no innovation, in my opinion, tomove Chekov from the living room, dining room, andveranda into the kitchen. More greatness emanates fromTennessee Williams's lyrical and Jacobean bedrooms thanany kitchen; and the domestic melodrama form of the '50'sdoes not deal with Brecht's impact in the '60's on Americantheatre merely by setting the play sixty years in the past. Iconfess that the only domestic melodramas that evergripped me were written by O'Neill — but that may besaying more about my own life than I care to admit in print.For those of you not so obsessed with dramaturgy,however, who want to see some fine acting and occasionalmoments of directorial brilliance, Ladyhouse Blues playsThursdays Sundays at 1559 W. Howard, in a neighborhood, Iam told, which reminds long term Hyde Parkers that 55thStreet was not all the artistic mecca it was reputed to be inthe '50's. Reservations are necessary, as the house isconsistently sold out. CAPA vouchers are accepted. Call743 6442 for ticket information and show times.Friday, November 18, 1977 GRADUATESTUDY INSCIENTIFICMANAGEMENTTECHNIQUESCase Western Reserve UniversityDept, of Operations ResearchIf you have a bachelors degree and an ability to work with quantitative toolsand/or computers, you may wish to broaden your horizons by learning scientificmethods which are useful in solving management decision problems in business,industrial and governmental organizations. Employment opportunities for graduatesare excellent.CLASSES IN EVENING AND DAYTIME AREAS INCLUDING• Mathematical Programming• Data Processing and Computers• Decision Theory• Production/Inventory Control• Operations Management• Computer Simulation • Dynamic Programming• Computer Programming• Applied Statistics• R & D Management• Systems Analysis• Mathematical InvestingLEADING TO: M S. in Operations Research (1-2 years)Ph.D. in Operations Research (3-5 years)Apply Now for Spring or Fall SemesterClasses Begin January 16 or August 28, 1978For complete information and application forms contact by mail or call:Department of Operations ResearchCase Western Reserve University • Cleveland, Ohio 44106(216) 368-4140NAMEADDRESS PHONECITY STATE ZIP IIIIJCheck what the snowflakes inMichigan are up to now. Call toll-free.Michigan is fun with white frosting.It's a piece of cake. Way's clear. Snow's here, you're near. Get a group together.come in spares or pairs. Come for day and night skiing — downhill and crosscountry for beginners, intermediates and experts. Snowmobiling and apres skiactivities, too. Call for the latest road and snow conditions.Michigan. For all there is to see and do,no*other state comes close. MichiganTravel CommissionOf*Q*•> .Heroes Lust For Life What A Long Strange Trip It's BeenDavid Bowie iggy Pop The Best Of The Grateful DeadRCA AFL 1-2522 RCA AFL 1-2488 Warner Bros. 2W3091These two albums are Inseparable. Bowieplays Apollo to Iggy's Dionysus, infusing"Lust For Life" with a unity missing inearlier Stooges records, while the Ig's styleof raw power is used as the basis for most of"Heroes". Both albums are fascinating.Iggy, the tortured king of Detroit's latesixties proto-punk rockpile, has kicked themalaise of his earlier "The Idiot" to charge"Lust" with his revitalized vocal powers.Bowie's production sets a perfect, sparsemusical stage for the Pop's unique brand ofrock poetics. The haunting, shaky vocalsseem more directed, more full, than before.And self destructive Iggy's new lust for lifehas enabled him to present drug-crazedvisions like "Turn Blue"*and also a positivesong like "Fall In Love With You" and makeboth work. The Pop is back on top.Bowie is moving towards the bottom -consciously. "Heroes", like his previousefforts, "Low", is a move away fromcommercial sounds towards avant-gardeexperimentation. British art-rockers Enoand Robert Fripp assist Bowie in producinga musical one two punch: the first sidepresents dense variations on the "YoungAmericans" disco Bowie, while the secondside is mostly instrumentals in a cold,Germanic vein. Both sides are equally in¬teresting, with the instrumentals sur¬prisingly stronger than the vocal tracks.Bowie sings in a wider range than everbefore, utilizing his early cockney accent,his recent Sinatra cool, and some highlyimitative Iggy impressions. All of whichmakes up his best album since "Station toStation." If you don't like the Dead this album won'tdo a thing for you. If you do like the Dead(there seems to be no middle ground) youprobably have all the albums from whichthis "Best Of" album was compiled. Thenwhy is this album out? Simply: money. Nowthat the Dead have signed to Arista, War¬ners is going to market old material tocompete with the groups new, and lesser,material, and make the band regret thatthey ever switched labels. What a long,strange trip, indeed ...Enigmatic OceanJean-Luc PontyAtlantic Records SD19110After playing in jazz rock bands underFrank Zappa and John McLaughlin, frenchviolinist Jean-Luc Ponty stepped out on thefusion music trail with his own band. This,his fourth solo effort for Atlantic, findsPonty musically mired in the tired ascen¬ding and descending scales which pass formelodies in the electric jazz scene. ButPonty's surging violin work, backed by acapable ex Mahavishnu Orchestra rhythmsection, at least makes those cliches intointeresting, if not challenging, music. Un¬fortunately, me tight group sound heard onshorter cuts like "Trans-Love Express"loses its energy when sprawled over ex¬tended epics like "The Struggle of the Turtleto the Sea." "Enigmatic Ocean" makes forenjoyable listening, but Ponty too often getsswamped in a sea of musical excess. By Jeff MakosTom WaitsForeign AffairsTom WaitsAsylum 7E 1117Writer Ross MacDonald's description ofmystery writer Raymond Chandler fits TomWaits perfectly: "He wrote like a slummingangel and invested the sun-blinded streets ofLos Angeles with a romantic presence."Waits broke into national attention withthe success of his live "Nighthawks at theDiner," but that album's stress on hisGinsberg/Kerouac Beat generation poeticraps overshadowed the man's more musicalstyle. The excess of last year's "SmallChange" has been removed and Waits is back to the lonely piano-bar sounds of hisearlier albums. "Foreign Affairs" is hisstrongest album since "The Heart Of ASaturday Night" back in 1974.The poetic patter is still heard in "Jackand Neil" (an ode to Kerouac and Cassidy)and in the longer "Potter's Fiefd" but theywork within the context of shorter, moreheartfelt songs. Teaming up with BetteMidler and her Billie Holiday imitationgives Waits' increasingly rough voice achance to shine in contrast to another vocalstyle, and his Springsteen like command ofthe sad emotions of the street shows in theexquisite "Burma Shave," a retelling of the"Petrified Forest" story. Waits isn't easylistening, but this excursion into the nocturnal haunts of the penny arcade losers isone foreign trip worth taking.COMPAREandCONTRASTTHE BOTTOM-LINE_ORIENTEDSOCIETY OF THEWITHTHE HUMAN SURVIVAL SOCIETYOF THE THIRD WORLD.DISCUSS WITH FORMER PEACE CORPS ANDVISTA VOLUNTEERS ON CAMPUS: NOV.21-22PEACE CORPS and VISTA..alive and workingSign-up for Placement Office interview. Used Desks, Chairs,Files, Drawing Tables( BRAND ) EQUIPMENT&SUPPLY CO.8600 Commercial Ave.Open Mon.-Sat. 8:30 5:00RE 4-2111HYDE PARK PIPE RND TOBRCCO SHOP1552 E. 53rd - Under IC tracksStudents under 30 get 10% offask for “Big Jim”Mon. - Sat. 9 - 8; Sun. 12 - 5PipesPipe Tobaccos Imported Cigarettes Cigars*•.*•+* CONTEMPORARYCRISESFACINGAMERICANJEWRY :A JDL PERSPECTIVEAT HIU.6L 5?l5T WOODLALJ/VFRl. NOV. 18 8=30 PM# •* ♦ Page 12 ♦ t The Grey City JournalLittle CriminalsRandy NewmanWarner Bros. BSK3079Randy Newman is one of the mostoutrageous writers in Rock. Anybody whocan pull off a song like "Rider In The Rain,"featuring the Eagles as backup vocalists,with lyrics that parody the kind ofdesperado that the Eagles always write<OS about is a genius. "Little Criminals" isNewman's best assembled album, a popmasterpiece whose subtle arrangementsand orchestrations carry even songs like"Sigmund Freud's Impersonation of AlbertEinstein in America" and "Short People"("Short people got no reason to live.") It'sbeen three years since Newman's last disk,^ but the wait has been worth it.Say it in PrivateSteve GoodmanAsylum 7E -1118It has to be said in public: Steve shouldhave said this one in private. If Goodman isthe best singer - songwriter that Chicagohas, then on the basis of this album we are adead town. The only decent song is writtenby Hank Williams, and Goodman's "I'mAttracted To You" only makes it if you tryto blot out the vocal and listen to the lushJames Taylor-like arrangement. Ain'tnobody gonna care about someone whorhymes "working man's pal" with the "DeLa Salle." With possibly the worst cover artof the year - an imitation of David's Death ofMarat. Avoid at all costs.Steve Goodman Brahms, The Four Symphonies Karl Bohmconducts the Vienna Philharmonic. Deutsche Grammophon 2711017, four discs.Congratulations must be extended to KarlBohm and the Vienna Philharmonic forwhat must be one of the finest record setsever made of the four Brahms symphonies.Throughout all four symphonies, it seems asif Mr. Bohm's mind is completely attuned towhat the composer heard as he blackenedhis music paper with notes and markings. Itall comes across as completely natural,never giving the impression of heavyhandedness pf pomposity. Although Brahms' music is weighty, a sweetness pervadeshis symphonies and the musicians on theserecordings, by allowing the music tobreathe and speak for itself, allow thesweetness to shine through.I have never heard a more sensitiverendition of the Second Symphony than Mr.Bohm's. The tempos throughout the workare nearly perfect- just slightly held back tobring out the power that underlies the piece.This is true for the other symphonies, aswell. All of them are very lyrical, and thelong winded phrases are thus given achance to sing out with the conductor'shandling of their pace.The Vienna Philharmonic is a very expressive, sensitive group, and they achievea consistently rich, mellow soundthroughout the recordings. They understandthe most subtle changes of mood in themusic, and their treatment of dynamicschanges is consistently excellent. The orchestra pours forth the emotion within themusic, without being effusive about it.The symphonies themselves are amongthe greatest ever written, very reminiscentof Beethoven's music. After listening tothem, one wonders why Brahms was solacking in confidence about them, and whyhe waited until the age of 43 to finish hisFirst Symphony. We know better...I feel as strongly about the engineering ofthe recordings as I do about the recordingsthemselves it's just great.V Favorite Beethoven Sonatas: "Moonlight,"Appassionata" and "Pathetique.Vladimir Horowitz, pianist. Columbia M34509.There is no better way to prove you are amaster of the piano than to tackle the threepieces performed on this album. AndHorowitz goes way beyond just conqueringthe pieces — he commands them to sing outto their utmost limits.Horowitz's performance of the "Appassionata" (Sonata No. 23 in F Minor,Op.57) stands out from the rest. It is one ofthe roughest of the Beethoven pianosonatas, with impossibly fast arpeggios notto mention the rapid, almost schizophrenicchanges of mood. He puts in a performanceworthy of the nickname given to the piece.At one moment his playing is demonic, fullof Beethovian wit, and at the next momenthe glides through a serene passage, makingthe piano ring like a bell. Horowitz's playingis impeccable, and his use of rubato issuperb. Furthermore, he is one of the fewpianists who can bring out the feeling in theslow second movement. The piece itself isnot in a class with the first movement, but itdoes deserve proper attention.For those who attended the Daniel Adnipiano recital in Mandel Hall recently, youmust listen to Vladimir Horowitz's renditionof the "Moonlight" Sonata (Sonata No. 14 inC Sharp Minor, Op.27, No. 2) if you want tohear how it should sound. Although thepianist's playing is a little reserved in thefirst movement, the whole performance iswonderfully delicate and his excellentphrase articulation brings the music out inall its detail. The "Pathetique" (Sonata No.8 in C Minor, Op.13) is also beautifullyrendered.The fact that these Beethoven PianoSonatas are very popular doesn't orWouldn't belittle their importance. Theyare among the composer's better works,and no one should ever tire of hearing a goodperformance of them. By Richard BrownBeethoven, The Five Piano Concertos-Artur Rubinstein, pianist. Daniel Barenboim conducts the London PhilharmonicOrchestra. RCA Red Seal CRL5 1415, fivediscs.If I were told that Elliot Gould was thepianist on these recordings, I might not beso surprised, given the mediocre level atwhich he usually performs. However, withArtur Rubinstein on piano and Barenboimconducting one would expect somethingmore than just a lukewarm performance.Unfortunately, this does not materialize.All the concerti are done at slower temposthan are usual for these works, and so theybecome a little bit too long and heavy for mytaste. I will even go so far as to say thatRubinstein's treatment of the EmperorConcerto (Number Five) ruined my enjoyment of that piece, which is my favoritepiano concerto, bar none. What surprisesme about Rubinstein's performance is thathis playing is often dry and overly self-conscious. That is to say, he avoids thesustain pedal too much and separates thenotes almost mechanically, where a legatoeffect would be more appropriate. The drypatches in the Emperor Concerto areespecially disturbing, since the material isgenerally warm and optomistic and does notlend itself to such an introspective treat¬ment. The Third Concerto, especially thewitty third movement, stands up muchbetter to Rubinstein's approach and comesacross better than the rest of the concerti,but the performance still isn't worthy of agreat pianist.Another problem with this record set isthat the balance is somewhat imperfect.This is most noticeable when the pianoaccompanies a delicate string part thestrings are frequently overshadowed.I still prefer Vladimir Ashkenazy'sBeethoven Piano Concertos set (LondonCSA 2404) to others that I have heard,although Serkin's recently re-releasedversion of the Third Concerto, on ColumbiaOdyssey, is my favorite of that one. JVENETIAN MUSIC OF THERENAISSANCE BYj4c(mnWILLAERTGiovanni& GAJJ]\TELIUniversityof ChicagoCollegiumMusicum Bond ChapelTuesday22 November 19778:30 pm- IDEAL CONTRACTS AVAILABLEFor Winter and Spring Qtrs.Alpha Delta Phi5747 University Ave.$275/qtr. 10meals/wk.Contact Amy Mashberg753-3257 PREPARE FOR:MCAT • OAT • LSAT • GMATGRE • OCAT • VAT • SATNMB I. II. III-ECFMG-FLEX-VQEFleiibl* Program* 1 Hour*There IS a difference!!!1 -HNeDUC»TIO«*l CENTfRTtsr PREPARATIONspecialists since 1*1*For Information Piease Call2050 W DevonChicago, III. 60645(312) 764 5151SPRING, SUMMER, VINTER COMPACTSMOST CLASSES START EIGHT WEEKSPRIOR TC THE EXAMSTARTING SOON:LSAT-SAT-GREOTHER CENTERS CALL TOLL FREE 800 223 1782Centers in MatorUS Cities Toronto, Puerto Pico and Lugano SutherlandNATL DENTAL BOARDS • NURSING BOARDSSaturday November 19 ✓ Sunday, November 20Eric Rohmer's s' Yasujiro Ozu'sTHE MARQUISE OF 0. / OHAYOat 7:15 and 9:30 ^ at 7:15 and 9:15Doc Cobb $1.50Friday, November 18, 1977 A3A CONCERT OFTHANKSGIVING and AMERICAN MUSICTUES. NOV. 22, at 12 NoonReynolds Club LoungePresented by the Student Activities Office Learn How ToMake Prints FromColor Negatives!You’re invited to see alive Beseler color print¬ing demonstration atour store. By watchingyou’ll learn how to makebeautiful prints fromcolor negatives in justtwo easy chemicalsteps.Beseler 2-Step Chem¬istry makes color printingas easy as black-and-white!Come to our demo andsee all the excitingnew Beseler products,including everything youneed to set up your owncolor darkroom!Antic,(desi fues & Collectablesis, bookcases, chairs, tables)5455 S. BlackstoneFirst Floor12-6 p.m. daily)l»RNOW SHOWING!ESQUIRE,ChicagoFri: 5:15, 7 45.10:10Sat 2:30. 5 15. 7 45,10:10.12:30. A MSun 2 30. 5:15.7:45 & 10 10 OLDORCHARD,SkokieFri: 4 45. 7:30. & 10:00Sat &Sun: 2 00, 4 45,7:30 & 10:00 GOLFMILL,NilesFri: 5:00. 7:30 & 10:00Sat 4Sun: 2:30. 5:007:30 & 10:00NORRIDGE,NorridgeFri: 5 00 7 30 & 10 00Sat 4Sun 2:30. 5:00,7:30410:00 WOODFIELD,SchaumburgFri. & Sun 2:00 4 30.7:00 4 9:30Sat 2:30, 5:00.7:30 & 10 00 YORKTOWN,LombardFri., Sat &Sun: 2:20, 4 45.7:20 & 9 55ORLAND EVERGREEN, RIVER RIDGEsquare, psn™ oaks,Orland Park Sun. 2.30,5.00. Calumet CityFri.. Sat. 4 7:30.4 10:00 Fri., Sat., 4Sun: 2 15, 4:45. Sun 2 30, 5 00.7:1549 45 7 304 10:00 PLAZA,Gary, IndFri , Sat 4Sun: 2:00. 4 30.7:00 4 9 30Page 14 Fri. & Sat.Nov. 18th & 19thMODELCAMERA1342 E. 55th St.493-6700Young Designs byELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERS1620 E. 53rd St.286-2900(Test Preparation ForLow School Admission TostGrad. Management Adm. TestGraduate Record ExaminationMedical College Adm. TestDental Aptitude TestWE MAKE THE DIFFERENCE782-21857 S. DEARBORN-CHICAGO6560 N. SHERIDAN RD.a / T 4 s V { )3 SALES with IV* service is ourBUSINESS nREPAIR specialistson IBM, SCM, §e Olympia 4 othersFree Estimate >X Ask about ourRENTAL with Un option to buyNew 4 Rebuilt AK TypewritersCalculators <UJ DictatorsAddersUV U. of C. Bookstore5750 S. Ellis Ave. YY 753-3303MASTER CHARGE oo6 BANKAMERICARD Vo £ 6 C * “ * ± + Get your ThanksgivingPIES and BREADS 8at the |IDA NOYES BAKERY 8lOam-IOpmMon- Wed Fri & Sat%oooMoeooooDDDsoo«oocooooosoooccoooSCYNICAL?Cynical enough to convert four yearsof academic training into a one or twoyear volunteer experience?Take this simple CynicTest for a post¬graduation day preview:You are most likely to heed the follow¬ing advice from Uncle Harvey:(Circle only one)A) Remember, Son, it’s the bottom-line that counts.B) Don’t forget, Fella, it’s a jungleout there.C) It’s the do-gooders in this societywho come in last.D) There’s big bucks in business.If you find it difficult to choose, thenmaybe you should talk with formerpeace corps and vista volunteers inter¬viewing at the placement office: Nov.21-22.The Grey City JournalOld Polonia:Cuisine in thewastelandBy Tom FlanniganSmall children are often told that if they dig deep enoughthey will eventually reach China. Enterprising studentswho are willing to explore the caverns of Chicago's Loopwill discover a Polish Restaurant in a most unlikely setting.The Old Polonia, located at 10 North Clark Street, can befound in the basement on an ancient office building,surrounded by BLT shops, adult book stores and swarms ofbankers with gold in their teeth and diamonds in their eyes.The immense First National Bank complex is virtuallyacross the street but most of the restaurant's patrons looklike unlikely candidates for employment at the bank.Polish food has received very little exposure outside ofthe local ethnic community. A fellow named Wojinowski ismore likely to be found eating a pizza, bagel or egg roll thana Rossi, Feldman or Wong sampling a pierogi. The relativeisolation of Polish food seems to be the result of ethnic andsocial cleavages that are difficult to verify. The Old Poloniais an atypical representative of Polish restaurants since alarge percentage of its customers are not of Polish descent.With the Christmas season fast approaching even confirmed Loop haters are often forced to journey downtown insearch of gifts for friends and family. The Old Poloniacaters exclusively to the Loop crowd bent on shoppingbreaks or quick lunches and is clearly one of the best budgetrestaurants in the center of the city. It is open from ten totwo thirty Monday through Friday and can be maddeninglycrowded around the noon hour.Greek entrepreneurs recently took control of the oldPolonia, and the restaurant has cleaned up its act considerably. Whereas the ambience of the place used to bedrab enough to depress even a tolerant truck driver, recentredecoration has been successful enough to dispel theimpression that you are eating in an abandoned basement.The new owners have added a Greek salad to the limitedmenu but the cuisine and staff have remained distinctlyPolish.With the Christmas season fast ap¬proaching even confirmed Loop-hatersare often forced to journey downtown.The Old Polonia caters exclusively tothe Loop crowd bent on shoppingbreaks or quick lunches and is clearlyone of the best budget restaurants in thecenter of the city.The best day to visit the Old Polonia is on Friday. This isthe day the restaurant really unveils its ethnic colors.Potato pancakes, pierogi and blintzes are all offered onFriday, whereas there is often only one special per dayduring the rest of the week. The prices at the restaurant areincredibly cheap when you consider the Loop location. It isalmost impossible to spend over $3.50 unless you join theboisterous mob of janitors and blue collar workers at thebar. The Polish sausage dinner has remained at $1.50 forover two years and can be almost impossible to finish if youare in a hurry. The dinner includes two side dishes (usuallypotatoes and sauerkraut) bread and butter and two largesausages. It beats almost anything else in the Loop forvalue. Another highly recommended item is the Czarnina(sweet duck blood soup with plums). The description ofCzarnina is enough to make many people nauseous but itcan be habit forming if you have the proper attitude. Thecost is .65, somewhat high when you consider that thequality is lower than at the Polish restaurants outside of thedowntown area, but it is the only place in the region thatoffers it.Many of the items that are offered on a daily basis areconventional American dishes. Pepper steak or chicken isoften available and is of a consistently good quality. Thestuffed cabbage at the restaurant is not as good as can befound in Logan Square but the long El ride is a strongdeterrent to many ethnic enthusiasts. Desserts aregenerally a disappointment; kolacky is rarely availableand the American substitutes are scarcely worth mentioning. Stock up on the meat and starches and save yoursweet tooth for later.Food is served cafeteria style. Visitors enter, take a trayand eye the long menu near the hot table. The Old Poloniacontains many tables and a long bar, belying its origin as awatering hole rather than a mecca for haute cuisine. Apersistent gripe is the wet floors. They can be very slippery,particularly during the winter months.The Old Polonia ranks up there with the Berghoff,Giovanetti's, Mailers Building Cafeteria and Lan's VietNam for authentic cuisine at reasonable prices in the LoopSince it is the only Polish restaurant in the vicinity, it isdefinitely worth a try on your next trip downtown. Italianfood can be sampled in almost any neighborhood, but Polishrestaurants are fast disappearing from the Chicago landscapeFriday, November 18, 1917 li§IIi A PRIVATE MIXTUREfrom Where you can findImported CigarettesImported CigarsImported PipesImported dry cigarsImported Pipe Tobacco& Other Accessories(312) 288-51515225 S. HARPERCHICAGO,.ILL. 60615>»x yam: yam yarn yam, yamyamyam>amxm, yamxm, yam. yam, xmym yam yam yam. /m yam am am amRockefeller Memorial Chapel5850 South Woodlawn AvenueSunday, November 20.19779 A.M.Services of Holy CommunionCelebrant: Donald JudsonSponsor: Episcoapl Church Council11 A.M.University Religious ServiceBARBARA BROWN ZikmundAssistant Professor of Church HistoryChicago Theological Seminary“The Power of Place” SENIORSConvert your experience in academiato work in Upper Volta, Chad, Mali,Belize, Togo, Rwanda, Bahrain,Tonga, and sixty other nations wherepeople will benefit from your effortsin: Education, Business, Social Work,Math/Science. Health.Sign up today at the Placement Officefor a talk with former Peace Corpsvolunteers on campus: Mon.-Tues.,Nov. 21-22.EARNTHEMRAWUHANOUTSTANDINGGRADUATEFACULTY ATRUTGERS“One of America’stop Graduate Schools ofBusiness Administration.”From A Guide to Executive Educationin Business Weeh MagazineRutgers, The State University,offers you an opportunity tostudy with one of the nation'smost distinguished faculties inmanagement education —whether as a full-time or part-time student. The RutgersMBA program is one of threein the N.Y. Metropolitan Areaaccredited by the American As¬sembly of Collegiate Schools ofBusiness.Trimester study program.Full-time admissions June andSeptember. Part-time admis¬sions September and February.Convenient locations on our NewarkCampus and in the New Brunswick Area. STUDY WITH THE LEADERS.Richard D. Marshall, L.L B— Howard University.Former Corporate Officerof the GovernmentNational MortgageAssociation. Consultantand Advisor in HousingDevelopment andMunicipal Management.Teacher of Rea! EstateFinance and Land Use.Professor of BusinessAdministration. Buckner A. WallingfordII, Ph.D — University ofMichigan. Teacher.Researcher and Consultantin Corporation Finance,Securities Markets,investment Analysis, andPortfolio Selection andBalance. Author. AssociateProfessor of BusinessAdministrationDavid K Whitcomb. Ph.D.— Columbia University.Specialist in IndustrialEconomics and SecurityMarket Operations andInvestments. Author.Teacher and Researcherin Finance and EconomicsAssociate Professor ofFinance. Philip C. Shaak, D.B A —Harvard UniversityInternationally-knownManagement Develop¬ment Specialist %AuthorTeacher and Consultantin General Management.Organizational Behaviourand Production. Professorof Business AdministrationRUTGERSRUTGERS UNIVERSITYGraduate School of Business Administration92 New Street, Newark. N.J. 07102Please send me full information on yourMBA programName-Address..Citv -State-ZipPage 15imd aHT oe e * ooT& t ■am'yam«•1703 E. 55th 667-9745MODELCAMERAFri. & Sat. Nov. 18 & 19Stop in andsee the new1 35m fronIf comeswith a zoom Lens!'DEMO SPECIALRijicaST605TEXTBOOKS!Eliminate the bookstore'SAVE $$'Buy and sett books of anytype with students fromacross the country. Forfree details write to:Carrick EnterprisesP.O. Box 2203Dept. AMWaterloo, Iowa 50705Please rush me free details.NameAddressCityState Zip If you can’t fly Continental,you may have to stay after school.Let us take you away with our economical discount fares.It doesn’t take a course in economicsto know that Continental is the way to gofor the holidays. Because we're pioneers inthe area of discount fares.Like our Night Coach prices? Fly atnight and save a full 20% off the cost ofa regular Day Coach ticket.Or, if you're off to Los Angeles, you 11save a bundle with our Super Coach fare —just S99one way—and no restrictions!And only Continental has EconomyFares everywhere we fly—save 10% just byskipping a meal. USA —north, south, east or west — we've gota great schedule and a discount fare to fityour budget. And you'll still get the kind ofservice Continental is famous for.For more information about our money¬saving discount fares, call your campus rep.travel agent, or Continental at 686-6500, else¬where in Illinois Toll Free at (800) 972-78%.And remember, if you can't fly Continental,try to have a nice trip anyway.*NightCoach Faresgtxxlonlyon flights designated by Continentalleaving between 9:00 PM and 7:00 AM.No matter where you fly in ContinentalsWe really move our tail for you. jjCONTINENTAL.The Proud Bird with the Golden Tail.I til if t I i«n ns♦pnwrtifsA Night of Musicals November 187:30pm KISMET9:30pm MEET MEAdmission: Residents, $1International House Assembly Hall 1414 E, 59th St SAINT LOUIS■Residents, $1.50tt%* * occoscoon a^ui A)at/-—/l/to Cnvz tvzu? £t/X4 /U&nf /otAt/-.ptf~ .■■(A’^A/c'C'cGrey GapTHANKSGIVING IN THE CITYThe streets look like a photographof a different time, in shades of greyand brown. Sparrows play betweenhuge industrial structuresfound in the overcast twilight.The street signs repeat a dumb threatto call the law and children paythe rent with leaves while their olderbrothers banter about cars and money.You can walk strange miles of warehousesand deserted railroad tracks and listenfor some popular thing in the Sunday silence,bright with the reasons for labor.Oh the songs you learn to singin the spare, huge corridorswhich lead pastthe broken down houses and green paintof neighborhoods you do not call your own.The police ride by as the second generationintroduces the third to a Northern storm.The women in old print dresses and the menstill in suspenders. They celebrate with drinksand suspicion, good food and laughter.The commentary from a football game rattleson in the small living room where the picturesof relatives and saints look at each otheron the mantlepiece.Cold November in a city of industry,work and crime fade for a day,the streets are almost empty.The older children say helloto their aunts and uncles in one languageand yearn for the stars in another.Awkward and beautiful, the families gatheruntil the new moon and the lateness of the hoursees them heading for their cars in the frozenurban darkness. They turn and look at their sleepingchildren and each other, the light from the streetlamps flickers across their faces.They move out on to the stark expressway, carefully,through light fog and cold wind.George D. DruryGeorge D Drury is a poet whose poems have been published in both the UnitedStates and Canada. He was recently accepted for listing in the next Directory ofAmerican Poets and appeared in a film earlier this year.University Symphony OrchestraThe University Symphony Orchestra willpresent its Fall concert Saturday night inMandel Hall. Barbara Schubert will lead theorchestra in its performance of Mendelssohn's Overture "Die Hebriden",Vaughan Williams' Pastoral Symphony andPage 18 Rachmaninioff's Symphony No. 2 in Eminor.Admission to the concert is free. It willbegin at 8 30. Mandel Hall is located at 57thSt. and South University Ave. Leroy JenkinsLeroy Jenkins will perform a solo concerttonight in Ida Noyes Hall at 8 pm.Jenkins first came into the public eye as amember of the Anthony Braxton trio withBraxton and Leo Smith. Since then he hascontributed to many of the most importantjazz sessions of the late 60's - early 70's,among them the CCC concert (recorded onMuse) and the landmark Archie SheppParis sessions. (Fantasy, BYGetc.)Jenkins is currently a member of theRevolutionary Ensemble which played aconcert last year in Mandel Hall. The ensemble is a tightly knit trio whose improvisational abilities have been praised bysuch diverse critics as Robert Palmer andWhitney Balliett.On his chosen instruments, violin andviola, Jenkins is without peer in the jazzworld. Like a handful of greats his playingtranscends his medium. He is endowed witha lyrical voice perhaps only comparable toOrnette Coleman's (on sax, not violin).Jenkins released a solo album at the endof the summer on I ndiaf Navigation recordswhich was well received by both the publicand critics.Friday night is a unique opportunity tohear this great musician in the intimatesetting of Ida Noyes hall. Jenkins is anAACM alumnus, but in recent times hiswork has mainly been confined to NewYork, and the next chance to hear him livemay not be for a while.Ida Noyes Hall is located at 1212 E. 59thSt. The concert begins at 8 pm. Donation is$3 for students with ID, $3.50 for others. Theconcert is sponsored by the Chicago Frontfor Jazz. This is the second in their series offive concerts planned for this year. Art for saleWorks by Calder, Picasso, and Chagall,along with 3500 other works of art, will be forsale on campus at the 31st Annual ART FORYOUNG COLLECTOR'S SALE which opensSunday, November 20, at the RenaissanceSociety Gallery.The sale includes posters, sculpture,jewelry, photography, antiques,lithographs, and drawings by contemporaryChicago artists and international figures.Also for sale is a large selection of Japanesewoodblock prints, African masks, andOcenic weavings. Prices range from $5 to$5,000, with modestly priced works of highquality available to the student and thecollector alike.The Renaissance Society is one of theoldest galleries in the Chicago area. A nonprofit organization, it was founded in 1915 inorder to "advance the understanding andappreciation of art in all its forms." It hascontinued to present the public with anexciting variety of innovative programs andexhibitions. In the 1920's, it displayed worksof Picasso, Mattisse, Roualt, and Lipchitz.In the 1930's, Calder, Albers, and Seuratheld one man shows there. More recentyears have brought the works of MarkTobey and Albert Bloch, along with lecturesby the leading art critics, 25 galleries, andprivate collections. Traditionally, it hashelped to offset one third of the society'sannual exhibition expenses.The Renaissance Society is located inGoodspeed Hall, 1010 E. 59th Street, on theUniversity of Chicago Campus. The saleruns from November 20th throughDecember 11, daily from 11 AM to 4 PM, and11 A, to 8 PM Mondays and Thursdays.Additional garage parking is available twoblocks west on 59th Street. For more information, call Suzanne Ghez, 753 2886.Dogon Granary Door on sale at the RenaissanceSocietyThe SorcererNext Spring will bring the Centennial ofone of the great institutions of the English-speaking world, Gilbert & Sullivan'sPinafore. But this Fall has brought the 100thanniversary of Pinafore's immediatepredecessor, a work most people have neverheard. That work is The Sorcerer, whichreceives a commemorative production thisweekend and next in the Reynolds ClubTheatre.How to explain Sorcerer's present obscurity? The show was a solid success itsfirst time out (or Pinafore would never havebeen written), and D'Oyly Carte revived itmore than once to keep the Savoy Theatrefilled when business fell off at one of thelater G&S productions. The music is good,with some unusually ingratiating pieces forseveral voices and an Act 1 Finale of extraordinary dramatic intensity and musicalquality. The theme — universal blissthrough chemistry — is at least as timelynow as in 1877.One who is familiar with The Sorcerer canonly speculate. Perhaps it isn't quite exoticor silly enough. The action takes place in aconventional English village, in which theonly odd note comes from outside: theSorcerer with his love potion. No corps ofendowed bridesmaids, no incompetentvillage executioner, no cradle switchingnurse, no hero born on February 29th.Musically, The Sorcerer may, once again, be a little special for today's audi ?n :es. Thesound leans toward Mozart or Handel, withthe former's high wit well blended with thelatter's high seriousness. Sullivan, theLennie Bernstein of his day, could write inany style, and the rollicking tone he foundfor Trial by Jury and used again in Pinaforeis now more saleable than the more deadpancomic opera mode he employed in TheYeomen of the Guard, lolanthe, Ruddigoreor, for the first time, in The Sorcerer.The current production differs in important respects from the original. In 1877,musicians and singers were plentiful andcheap, and even this rather risky productionwas mounted with 30 in the pit and a chorusof 40, numbers that are seldom found noweven at New York's Winter Garden Theatre.The production today will have a chorus of12 and a chamber orchestra of seven in atheatre seating — at most — 170. But whilescaling down the production, the G & SOpera Co. seeks to retain the importantqualities of the original work, while bringingit to new audiences in the intimate setting ofthe Reynolds Club Theatre.Sorcerer performances begin at 8:30 onNovember 17 (the actual 100th anniversary), 18, 19, 25 and 26, and at 2:00 pmon November 27th. Tickets are now on salein the Reynolds Club corridor, priced at $2for students and senior citizens, $3 forothers.The Grey City JournalFilmBy Karen HellerAdmission to the Tuesday Doc films is$1.00. Admission to the Hitchcock Housepresentation and all other Doc films is $1.50.Admission to the China U.S. Friendship filmis $2.00. All films will be shown in Quantrellauditorium in Cobb Hall.Touch of Evil (1958), directed by OrsonWelles. (Hitchcock House) A gripping,beautifully photographed film by one of thegreat American masters. Ramon Vargas(Charlton Heston), an indignant Mexicansleuth, takes his young bride (Janet Leigh)north of the border for a quiet honeymoon inthe toughest little town in Texas. FanaticHank Quinlan (Welles), the town's top copfor thirty years, frames a Mexican youth formurder. Vargas, being the sleuth that he is,calls Quinlan's bluff and must suffer theconsequences. Meanwhile a vengefulnarcotics gang is menacing Vargas's wife.In a brief appearance, Marlene Dietrichwisely advises Quinlan to "lay off the candybars." Recommended.The Marquise of O (1976), directed byEric Rohmer. (Doc) A lyrically beautifulversion of the Heinrich von Kleist novella.During the Napoleon campaigns, a RussianCount saves the life of a widowednoblewoman. Shortly thereafter, shebecomes pregnant even though she knowsshe has remained virtuous. Her fatherdoubts her sincerity and banishes her to acountry home. The Marquise places anadvertisement in the local paper announcing that she will marry the man whorendered her pregnant if he will step forward. Rohmer's films is replete withhistorical accuracy, charm and poise. EdithClever is excellent as the swan-likeMarquise. Recommended. Saturday at 7:15and 9:30.The East is Red (1965), under thesupervision of Chou En Lai. (China U.S.Friendship Committee) A filmed version ofthe epic cultural production first presentedin 1965 in the Cultural Palace in Peking.Incorporating music played on Chinese folkand western traditional instruments,narration, and dance, culminating folkdances, ballet, the martial arts and gymnasties, The East is Red is a cultural interpretation of the history of the newdemocratic revolution 1911-1949. The film isdivided into six sections: "Dawn in theEast," initial revolts against imperialismand feudalism; "A Single Spark Starts aPrairie Fire," the struggle against ChiangKai-Shek and the Nanching and AutumnHarvest Uprising; "Crossing Thousands ofMountains and Rivers," the Long March of1922; "The War Against JapaneseAgression," the struggle with China'seastern neighbor beginning September 21,1935; "Bury the Chiang Dynasty," foundations of a new government, 1945 1949; and"The Chinese People Stand Up," theestablishment of the modern ChineseCommunist state. The dance opera is afascinating view of how China culturallyviews its recent history and ideology. Approximately 3,000 people perform in thismammoth production. Recommended.Sunday at 2 pm.Ohayo (Good Morning, 1959), directed byYasujiro Ozu. (Doc) A study of middle classneighbors in the suburbs of Tokyo. Only onehouse in the community has a television andfavorite pastime of the boys in the housingdevelopment is to gather there and watchwrestling matches. Frustrated by attemptsto have their parents buy a television, two brothers go on a silence strike, which offends their courtesy conscious neighbors.The neighbors blame the parents for theboy's behavior. Sunday at 7:15 and 9:15.Hatari (1962), directed by Howard Hawks*!(Doc) The Momella Game Farm inTanganyika is world famous as a source ofwild animals. When the owner is killed by arhinocerous, his French born daughterdecides to carry on her father's work.Assisting her are Sean Mercer (JohnWayne), an American game catcher embittered by a previous unsuccessfulromance; a veteran hunter; a former autoracer from Germany; a former cabbie fromBrooklyn; a woman photographer; and aFrench playboy. An odd melange ofcharacters with even more bizarre names —Indian, Pockets, Dallas, Brandy and Chip.Very strange. With'Elsa Martinelli as thephotographer with a penchant for babyelephants. Tuesday at 8:00.Quinn WilsonhonoredChicago jazzmen will honor one of theirown on Monday, November 21, at theCrystal Ballroom of the Blackstone Hotelwhen more than 50 musicians join in amassive jazz band ball in celebration ofQuinn Wilson's half-century of musicmaking. Among those who will appear at "ASalute to Quinn Wilson" are Bill Reinhart,Art Hodes, Barrett Deems, Edith Wilsonand Little Brother Montgomery.The four hour nonstop session, sponsoredby the Jazz Institute of Chicago, begins at 7p.m. Minimum donation is $3. All proceedswill be used to defray the veteranmusician's medical expenses. Because ofserious illness, he is unable to play.Wilson, 69, was born in Chicago andstarted his professional career in the 1920'son the south side. The recordings he madewith Jelly Roll Morton's Red Hot Peppers in1926 are historical landmarks. (He is theonly musician still alive who recorded withMorton in the pianist's classic period.)During most of the 1930's, Wilson was thebassist with Earl Hine's big band at theGrand Terrace Ballroom. He also wrotemany of the band's arrangements during itslong residence at the famous south sidenightclub. The Hines band was the mostimportant big band to develop in Chicagoduring the swing era.The Jazz Institute of Chicago is a not forprofit, volunteer organization and has morethan 800 members. In the last year, JIC haspresented several concerts and establishedin Jazz Hotline (421 6394), a public servicerecorded message that gives informationabout appearances by jazz groups in theChicago area.the Gray City JournalEditor: Mark NeustadtStaff:Karen Hornick, Karen Heller, JeanneDufort, John Lanahan, Anne Glusker, JeffMakos, Richard Brown, Tom Flannigan,Patrick Will, George Drury, The Rum-proller, Tracy Springer, Peter Cohn. CalendarFridayDepartment of Economics: Public Lecture -"Taxation, Welfare, and Economic Ac¬tivity,’’ Victor Canto, 1:30 pm, SocialSciences 402; Workshop - "The BritishFactory Acts: Causes and Consequences,”Clark Nardinelli, 3:30 pm, Social Sciences106.Modern Language Association: What is theMLA? What can it do for us? Planningsession of the graduate student caucus of theModern Language Association, 2 pm, 5733 S.Dorchester (just off campus).Political Science Dept. — Public LawSeminar: "The Federal Judicial System:What Provides the Glue?” J. WoodfordHoward, John Hopkins University, 2 pm,Pick 118.Geophysical Sciences Colloquium: "TheDensity of States in Iron and Potassium andits Application to the Earth’s Core,” M.Bukowinski, UCLA, 1:30 pm, HindsAuditorium.The Muslim Studies Subcommittee of theCommittee on Southern AsianStudies: ‘‘Constitutional Crisis inPakistan,” Justice Qadeeruddin, Judge ofthe Punjab High Court and member ofPakistan’s Delegation to the UN, 2:30 pm,Foster 105.Early Greek Studies Project: "The Im-completeness of Thucydides,” AnthonyAndrews, Oxford University, 4:30 pm,Classics 10.Hillel: Adat Shalom Dinner, 5:45 pm; Lecture- "Contemporary Crises Facing AmericanJewry: A Jewish Defense League Per¬spective, 8:30 pm, Hillel.Baha’i Club: Informal talk by Lynne Butler,8 pm, Ida Noyes East Lounge. Free literatureand refreshments.Crossroads: Panel Discussion - ‘‘In¬ternational Perspectives on Marriage”’ 8 pm,5621 S. Blackstone.Armenian Cultured History: "The Rise of theBagratid Dynasty,” Krikor Maksoudian,Columbia University, 8:00 pm, Regenstein A-11.Christian Forum: "Star Wars. A ModernMorality Play?” 8 pm, Brent House.ARTSMidway Studios: Opening Reception - DebBright, Photography, 6 pm, Midway Studios.Blaekfriars: "A Funny Thing Happened onthe Way to the Forum,” 8:00 pm, Ida NoyesHall.Hitchcock-Snell Movies: "Touch of Evil,”6:30, 8:30 & 10:45 pm. Cobb Hall.Chicago Front: Music: LeRoy Jenkins, solo,8 pm, Ida Noyes Hall.MAB Concert: John Fahey and MeganMcDonough, 8 pm, Hutchinson Commons.Court Studio Theatre: "Sorcerer,” 8:30 pm,Reynolds Club Theatre.Winter Court Theatre: "Butley,” 8:30 pm.New Theatre - Reynolds Club.SaturdayChanging Ringing: Handbells, 10 - 11 am;tower bells 11 am - 1 pm, Mitchell TowerRinging Room.Compton Lecture Series: “The NuclearOption: 35 Years Old,” 11 am, Eckhart 133.Crossroads: Tour of Robie House, 10:45 pm(meet at Crossroads): French Dinner - in placeof the regular Saturday night Dinner. Sorry -the 40 people quota is filled. Please call ifthere is a cancellation, 6 pm, Crossroads.India Association: Satyajit Ray’s Film,"Kanchenjunga,” 7:15 pm, Ida NoyesLibrary. Refreshments, 6:30 pm. College of Complexes: "Was Ireland EverChristian?” John Kearney, 9 pm, 105 W.Grand Ave.ARTSPhotography Exhibition: Photographs byJames Orlikoff, during business hours atHyde Park Federal Savings, 5250 S. LakePark.Blackfriars: "A Funny Thing Happened onthe Way to the Forum,” 2:30 & 7:30 pm, IdaNoyes Hall.DOC Film: "The Marquise of O,” 7:15 & 9:30pm, Cobb Hall.Court Studio Theatre: "The Sorcerer,” 8:30pm, Reynolds Club Theatre.Winter Court Theatre: "Butley,” 8:30 pm,Reynolds Club New Theatre.University Symphony Orchestra: VaughanWilliams’ "Symphony No. 3 Pastoral” andRachmaninoff’s "Symphony No 2 in E minor,op 27;” Conductor - Barbara Schubert, 8:30pm, Mandel Hall.SundayHillel: Lox and Bagel Brunch, 11 am, Hillel.The Roundtable for African-AmericanHistory: meeting and lecture, 2:30 pm,Washington Park YMCA, 5000 S. Indiana.Crossroads: bridge, 3 pm, 5621 S.Blackstone.Free Vegetarian Festival: 5:30 pm. HareKrishna Temple, 1014 Emerson St., Evan¬ston.Tai Chi Chuan: class, 6:30 pm, 4945 S.Dorchester.ARTSK.A.M. Isaiah Israel: All-Beethoven pianorecital by Gilbert Fischer, 3:30 pip, 1100 HydePark Blvd.Chinese Students Association: Film - “TheEast is Red,” 2 pm, Cobb Hall.Crossroads: Film - "Money on the Land,” 8pm, 5621 S. Blackstone.Blackfriars: "A Funny Thing Happened onthe Way to the Forum,” 7 pm, Ida Noyes Hall.DOC Film: "Ohayo,” 7:15 & 9:15 pm, CobbHall.Winter Court Theatre: "Butley,” 8:30 pm,Reynolds Club New Theatre.MondayDepartment of Biochemistry and SCOR onAtherosclerosis Seminar: "Essential FattyAcids, Nutrition and Metabolism.” RalphHolman, Hormel Institute, University ofMinnesota, 2:30 pm, Cummings Life ScienceCenter, 11th Floor.Microbiology and Training Program in In¬fectious Diseases: "Genetic Analysis ofRepeating DMA Sequences,” 3:30 pm,Cummings 11th floor.Department of Slavic Languages andLiterature: "The City and the Swamp: St.Petersburg in Russian Literature.” SidneyMonas, 4 pm. Classics 21.Department of Chemistry: "BiostructuralStudies with Resonance Raman andResonance CARS Spectroscopy,” ThomalSpiro, Princeton University, 4 pm, Kent 103.Ki-Aikido: workout, 6 pm, Bartlett Gymwrestling mats.Chess Club: meeting, 7 pm, Ida Noyes Hall.Sailing Club: Race team meeting. 7 pm, IdaNoyes rm 217.Workers League — Young Socialists: "InDissence of the Palestenian Revolution,” 7pm. Blue Gargoyle.Women's Rap Group: meeting & discussion,7:30 pm. Blue Gargoyle.the 100th anniversary*of the original performanceby W. S. Gilbert A Arthur Sullivan November 17* 18, 19, 25 & 26 at8:30 p.m. Reynolds Chib TheatreTickets on sale atReynolds Club Box OfficeInformation: 753-3581General Admission: $3.00Students & Seniors: $2.00Page 19Friday, November 18, 1977From the pressboxAthletic competition: The Chicago schoolBy Rory RohdeBack when I was a senior in high school,deciding where to go to college, severalstories about the University of Chicagofiltered out to Oregon. Besides the praise forthe academics and the horror stories aboutthe neighborhood (“Did you know all theprofessors have been mugged at leastonce?”), I also heard that Chicago had avery good intramural program. Althoughthat wasn’t a deciding factor in choosingChicago over Reed or some other school, itwas important. It fit in with my whole imageof Chicago, of ivory tower athletics and the Chicago education.Like most of the information I got aboutChicago, from the University or othersources, it turned out to be a littlemisleading. Nonetheless, IM’s provided mewith what I was looking for, a chance toparticipate in athletics in a structured,competitive basis. So I dropped my ideals ofChicago athletic competition.I was reminded of it again after reading aChicago Tribune column by Jack Mableyabout competition and sportsmanship.While one may not agree with Mabley’sviews, he raised some interesting points.Mabley went from pro sports with the then recent American League playoffs, downthrough college and little league sports,lamenting the over-emphasis on winningand lack of emphasis on sportsmanship andon sports as training for life. Chicago, alongwith Northwestern, were named asexamples of schools that faced (or face) theproblem of having a competitive footballteam while keeping high academic stan¬dards.Chicago, after being a power in the Big 10for several years, faded away and droppedfootball in' 1939, withdrawing from theconference entirely four years later.Now, 30 years later, we are having what/ vMWAC meets to discuss Chicago's fateBy R. W. RohdeThe annual meeting of the MidwestAthletic Conference representatives willbe held this weekend, with Dr. RobertReplogle representing Chicago. Itemnumber one on the agenda is the status ofthe University of Chicago.Chicago was taken into the conferencetwo years ago on an experimental basis,with a final decision to be made at thisyear’s meeting. Chicago was not made afull member due to a conference rulestating that none of the member schoolsmay offer athletic scholarships, and thecontention that the University’s Staggscholarship program is an athleticscholarship program The conference repswere divided on the question of the Staggscholarships, and decided to try Chicagofor two years to see if the Stagg-fortifiedMaroons would run over the conference.Chicago hasn’t, in football or any othersport. In an all-sports rankings systemdevised by the conference, somewhat akinto the all-year intramural point system,the Maroons placed eleventh out of eleventeams. Chicago appears to be a goodthreat for the eleventh spot again this yearwith an eighth place finish in football and atenth place finish in soccer. Still, someconference opposition to Chicago remains,and the Stagg program is the objection.The Stagg program, named after foot¬ball Pioneer Amos Alonzo Stagg, is a four year full-tuition scholarship given to threehigh school seniors each year. Thescholarship is based solely on the pastacademic and athletic performance, withno future obligations except minimalacademic performance. The program isvaluable to the University and the athleticdepartment not only for the three potentialathletes it brings in every year, but alsofor the many more students who don’tmake and decide to come here anyway.Despite the no obligation’ phrase, acouple schools object to the Maroonsremaining in the conference. While ‘noobligation’ can mean very little someplaces, it means what it says at Chicago,as evidenced by the occasional Staggscholar who has gone through theUniversity without playing any Varsitysport. That, coupled with the Maroonsprevious conference showings, should betestimony enough to get them in theconference A few schools don’t see thingsthat way. Perhaps they think that One onOne was based on Chicago, that thoseStaggs that don’t play are constantlyharrassed, and that the University alsohas a large contingent of super-athleteshidden away who will be brought out whenthe Maroons officially enter the con¬ference.In any case, Athletic Director JeffMetcalf, who will also be attending themeeting, is quite optimistic about Chicago’s chances. If things should go theother way, it is quite clear that theUniversity would not give up the Staggprogram to get into the conference.After the representatives have decided if‘no obligation’ scholarships are athleticscholarships for MWAC purposes, theywill move on the agenda to a few moreinteresting items.The first one is football scheduling. Forthe next two seasons, the football divisionswill be split according to ability and not byrecord. Chicago would stay with Beloit(tenth) and Lake Forest (sixth), andwould also add Carleton (eleventh) andGrinell (seventh), while conferencechamp Ripon and number three Lawrencewould go to the other division. The top twoteams from each division will play-off forthe championship. Lawrence, before thissystem has even been tried, has made amotion to go back to more-or-lessgeographically based divisions in 1980.The other item of interest is one thatwould allow MWAC coaches to recruithighschool students on the road. TheUniversity is in favor of this because it willput MWAC schools on an even level withother NCAA schools when competing forstudents, an increasingly scarce com¬modity. Whether this passes will probablybe related to whether the Stagg scholar¬ships pass, but if they don’t pass it doesn’treally matter anyway.>Wabuno Bay Bucswin IM football titleBy Howard SulsThe Wabuno Bay Buccaneers held off theupstart Walloo’s Wacks 19-6 to win theUniversity intramural football title. On acold and windy 37° day, marked by badfooting and dropped passes, the high-powered Buc offense managed to score only19 points against the Wacks, their lowesttotal of the season. Buc quarterback AlanBums hit Bill Cerbin to take a quick 6-0 lead,then hit Jim Brown to make it 13-0.Threatening again with less than a minuteremaining in the half, the Bucs had a 4thdown pass blocked in the end zone by KeithMillikan20 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, biovemlr tii' Play was sloppy in the first half, andplayers from both teams admitted that thegame was anticlimatic after their Wed¬nesday wins, the Bucs over the Sugar Bears20-19, and the Wack upset of Psi U inovertimeIn the second half John “Hands” Wilsonpart-time bartender at Jimmy’s, snared aBums pass to make it 19-0, then left to go towork The Wacks tightened things up with a50 yard Joe Cullen to Millikan TD pass, thentwo key Cullen defensive efforts gave theball back to the Wacks The Wacks narrowlyincompleted two long bombs to lose controlof the ball, and had a last minutedesperation pass intercepted to end thegameer18,1977 What was the mystique of intramuralsthat brought both players and spectators outon such a wintry day? “It makes schoolinteresting, We’re all taking off work orclass.” Alan Burns, Buccaneer quarterback“If there’s one thing I want to leave thisschool with, it’s one of those championshipT-shirts.” Mike LeBlanc, Wack receiver,who didn’t get his wish this time.In Women’s Badminton Snell’s Fultondefeated Upper Wallace’s Rosselt for theundergraduate title.In Undergraduate wrestling DudleyHouse won the team title with 100 points,followed by Fishbein with 95, Greenwoodwith 90, and Alpha Delta Phi with 85. Dudleytook individual championships by Feldmanat 132, Jones at 149 and by Meade in theheavyweight class. Fishbein’s Lynch tookthe 140 class, Filbey’s Wartelle won at 159,Alpha Delta Phi’s Matt O’Hara took the 169class, and Independent Costello won at 179.Holiday basketball started this week Dueto a lack of facilities the tournament hasbeen reduced to single elimination. Noresults were available as of press time™ of '»■ Dean O’Connell termed a renaissance inathletics, with the renovation of the FieldHouse and the new tennis courts, not tomention other facilities in the planningstages.After reading Mabley’s article and withthe ‘renaissance’, I began to wonder aboutthe emphasis on athletics, and what placeathletic competition has at ChicagoO’Connell, at the recent Field Houserededication ceremony, talked about thetremendous demand for the facility, statingthat the completion of the renovation’’...hashad the most fervent prayers of thanks ofany new facility on campus, includingRegenstien Library.President Wilson, who, as an avidswimmer is the most athletically inclinedPresident this University has had, gave amore philosophical view when he spoke.Wilson said that athletics led to a symetricaland well-balance life. Athletic Director JeffMetcalf restated Wilson’s view in a recentinterview, going on to talk about sports asan educational experience.Roger Hildebrand, Physics Professor andHead of the University Board of Athletic andRecreational sports, was more practical. “Idon’t want to get into that lofty stuff, thereare not a lot of recreational facilities inHyde Park, and athletics is a substitute. Weprovide for a demand. Mainly they’re forfun, a lively athletic program improves thegeneral spirit around campus.”Finally, to go back to the source, I askedIM director Dan Tepke what he thought thepurpose of intramurals is at Chicago, andhow close they are to that purpose. “In¬tramurals should be for fun and the mereenjoyment of participating It is veryeducational both in learning the sport itselfand learning to cooperate with other people,organize efforts, and learning how to suc¬ceed as a group. Some of it is extremelyintense and competitive. Winning shouldn’tbe verv imDortant, but it is.”“All in all it’s a good outlet for Universityof Chicago students,” he said.Atmencs are ooviousiy popular atChicago, whatever the reason. People enjoythem, though you wouldn’t know it watchingsome losers come off the court But theykeep coming back.It would be nice to see a renaissance’ ofthe competitor’s attitude to go along withthe University’s renaissance’. Instead ofthe Freddie Patek syndrome’, it mightbe better to see scenes like Roger Angelldescribed in The Summer Game, thedramatic sixth game of the 1975 world serieswhen Pete Rose, at the plate, turned toCarlton Fisk and said, “This is some game,isn’t it.”Perhaps the ideal attitude is given byTimothy Gallwey in Inner Tennis (RandomHouse, 1975, 173pp.) “The real value inplaying anv game lies in the fact that it is asimulation of life...it is because of the make-believe nature of games that they areperfect learning situations, for they arethe individual to experiment and exercisehis capabilities without really worrying reabout losing anything...The confusion.*),,comes when one gets lost in the game andstarts thinking that winning this simulationof life is really important...(that’s when)grown men become depressed for weeksafter losing a challenge match.”Competition does not have a zero-sumoutcome. Both sides profit. Gallweyillustrates this by simplifying competitiondown to the level of a struggle between yourtwo hands. If one pushes his hands together,with each hand attempting to push the otherback, both hands benefit, even if the righthand wins all the time. “But what wouldhappen if the left hand said, “I don’t believein competition; it’s just an ego trip”...thenthe right hand would benefit easily, andneither hand will benefit. In other words,competition is essentially a form ofcooperation in which each side benefits bymaking an effort to oppose the other.” Itsounds almost like free-market economictheory, the Chicago school.“...If we can remember our real motivefor playing in the first place, we can go allout to win while in the match, yet never foolourselves that winning is more than a make-believe goal. Such a player can be happywhile winning crucial points, and feel hisadrenaline flow when his back is against thewall; but he never forgets that the game isonly a simulation of real life.”Jin-* '.^1 rtbii-l ncoifiM . «!TGrinell ends Maroons’ miseryChicago finishes season with 2-6 record,8th in MWAC standingsBy Mark Pennington with Jacob RachlinStories about Maroon varsity athleticstend to have a standard lead: “The Maroonslost last week, but...” Well, the Universityof Chicago football team finished its seasonlast week with a 36-13 loss to the GrinnellCollege Pioneers. No buts, no excuses, and 'no rationalizations.The game can be described quickly,because it was remarkably similar to thetwo previous games. Chicago played their opponents approximately even tor the firsthalf, trailing 13-7 when they went to thedressing room.In the third quarter, Grinnell’s superiorbench strength and the pain of the batteredChicago players both took their totals andthe home team dropped further behind.Chicago never could get a really effectivedrive mounted. For example, the Maroonstook the opening kick off, picked up a firstdown, were held and punted. The Grinnelldeep man fumbled the ball on his own 34REQMEfc***#**Hm’•umftv si*,}-**, * ■ *■ <***‘•*‘*-•9** p+f&fQtfcMark Ramirez, shown here in a game against Ripon, had the third best per-carryaverage in the MWAC. (Photo by David Jaffe) yard line. The Maroons couldn’t gainanother first down.The Pioneers took over on their own 25yard line, ran one play, and were ahead 6-0.Quarterback Randy Reavis faked a hand offto his halfback going to the left, bootleggedto the right, and lofted a pass to widereceiver Phil Cebuhar who had slippedbehind the Maroon defensive backs.Cebuhar tucked the ball away and raced tothe end zone.Chicago immediately answered with ascore of their own Apparently held firstdownless after the sort of poor first downgain, this one of one yard, which plagued theMaroons all day, Chicago got new life whenpunter Byron Trott was roughed.Given the first down after the penalty,fullback Mark Ramirez took a handoff fromQuarterback Mark Meier, bounced offtacklers at the line of scrimmage, and thenraced untouched for 68 yards and a touch¬down, on his way to a 148 yard day. ScottJansen!s kick was good and Chicago led 7-6Grinnell struck right back, and for a fewminutes it looked like there was going to beno defense from either team. Fourpossessions between the two teams andthree touchdownsThis time the Pioneers were moremethodical, using their tricky winged-Toffense to perfection Sweeps by 200-poundfullback Fred McDougal set up counter tplays by halfback Chuck McKinnon. The7winged-T uses deception, fakes, andtrickery in order to allow the linemen to setoptional blocks.It took 11 plays, all on the ground, beforeMcDougal bulled over from the 1 andGrinnell was ahead to stay.Neither team scored for the rest of thehalf, despite Nick Filippo s 50-yard longgainer for ChicagoFor the first time in a while, the Maroonsfailed to give up a touchdown immediatelyafter kicking off in the second half Even a Dale Friar is tackled by a host of Grinellplayers. Grinell beat Chicago 36-13 to endthe Maroon’s season (Photo by DavidJaffe)successful faked punt, which advanced theball 30 yards on a run by punter Mike Mc-Curry, didn’t lead to a Pioneer score In¬stead McDougal fumbled the ball on thenext play.Chicago took over inside its own 10 andgambled on the option play. Meier’s at¬tempted pitch to halfback Dale Friar wasbehind the Maroon back and all Friar coulddo was fall on the ball in the endzone for asafety.Chicago had to kick off. and the Pioneersmarched from their own 33 to the Maroonendzone again, with McDougal scoring fromthe 8. Once again, the opening fhinutes of thethird quarter had been a time of troubles forthe beleagured Maroons.Chicago made signs of getting into thingstoward the end of the quarter. First,defensive back Scott Jansen (also a widereceiver, punter, and place kicker, to giveyou some idea of the tremendous Maroondepth) shot through the blockers and bustedup an attempted Grinnell reverse Thenlinebacker Mark Kosminskas intercepted aReavis pass. Next the offense came un-Football to 22The Maroons placedSpikers repeat as fourth at stateAugustana at 11 a m The vikings provedeven less of a threat to the Maroons asChicago dominated 15-0,15-6As a result of their performance againstSt Xavier and Augustana, the womenqualified for the regualr eight team single¬elimination tournament. Chicago wasseeded second at the beginning of thequarterfinal action Friday night. TheMaroons started at 8 p.m against St.Francis, and more than two hours laterChicago came out on top 7-15, 15-13, 15-4, 10-15.15-10.Coach Rosalie Resch credited TeresaFriend with a major role in the victory “Webeat them on her serve,” she said, “It was adevastating one.”The next day, however, the tired teamfared worse They opened play at 10:30 a magainst Lewis college, and lost 4-15, 11-15, 5-15. “The scores don’t indicate how close thematch really was said Resch, "We weretired, and had a few minor injuries, but stillplayed well ”In the next match, for third place, theMaroons faced the Kittens of ConcordiaThey dropped the match 6-15,9-15,15-12,8-15and finished fourth in the tournev.“It was a well played tournament,” saidResch. “Anytime you can break your seed,as we did, you've done well. ”George Williams took the championshipfor the third straight year. Resch explainedthat GW has historically been gearedtoward physical education GW started as aschool for training YMCA instructors, andconsistently does well in small collegeathletics. The Indians went through thetournament without losing a single gameResch is optimistic about next year.Although she is losing co-captains BarbBrink and Paula Markowitz to graduation,both who starred for the team.’ the coachfeels freshmen Melody Frazier and NadynShmavonian will help fill the void.The Chic Ann Harvilla and Teresa Friend go up toreject an opponent’s volley Friend playeda crucial role in a tournament win forChicago (Photo by Jeanne Dufort)) Maroon Friday, November 18,1977 — 21By John PomidorThe women’s volleyball team travelledsouth to Principia College last weekend totake part in the small college statevolleyball tournament, where they finishedfourth behind George Williams, Lewis, andConcordia.The sixth-seeded Maroons started playFriday morning at 9 a m, against third- seeded St. Xavier, and beat the Cougars 15-7, 15-6. The victory was especially pleasingto Chicago because they finished second toSt. Xavier in their division play during theregular season The cougars were un¬defeated in conference play, and had beatenthe Maroons in their previous meeting infour games.There was little time for the spikers toenjoy their revenge, as they took onJanet Sullivan goes up for a spike as Janet Torrey watches,fourth in the small-college state tournament last weekend22 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, November 18,1977Photo by David JaffeSports ShortsrFootball notesChicago finished eighth in the con¬ference overall, while Ripon took theconference crown by beating Cornell 10-7.The Maroons were eighth in total offensewith a 248-per-conference-game average,and were last in total defense, giving up473 yards per game.Dale Friar and Mark Ramirez were tiedfor eleventh in best per-game-average onthe ground with 59.4 yard average. JimDegan of Beloit topped that departmentwith a 112.8 average, while his teamaveraged a total of only 98 yds. per gameon the ground.Unofficially, Ramirez had the third bestper-carry average with 6.3 yards per run,while Friar was sixth with a 5.4 average.Ramirez and Meier were part of a five¬way tie for tenth in league scoring with 24points each.Ruggers blastedThe Chicago ruggers were roughed upby Eastern Illinois last weekend, droppingtheir A-side match 30-7. The ruggers camek back in the B-side match with an 11-6victory.The team was expecting a closer match,and the game started out that way.Eastern scored only 10 points in the firsthalf, while Chicago got all seven of theirpoints by virtue of a Steve Church kick anda try scored by Marty Simon when he fellon a loose ball in the endzoneThe game was hard hitting and looselycalled, deteriorating as the matchprogressed, according to co-captains SteveHolopeter and Bill Patterson. Easternshutout Chicago in the second half whilescoring 20 points. “We were not too happywith our play,” said Patterson.Dick O’Brien and Mark Aschilmanscored trys in the B-side triumph.The ruggers are 3-3 on the season. Theytravel to Naperville tomorrow for theirtraditional ‘snowball’ match against theAmoco B’s.Women’s trackAnyone interested in participating inwomen’s varsity track should talk to coachDelores Larkin sometime in the nearfuture. Larkin’s office is in Ida Noyes 206. - Football from 21tracked and marched 41 yards. Ramirez gota first down on three carries, Meier hit DanCermak for a picture perfect pass com-letion to the Grinnell 15, Friar carried theall twice for 10 yards, and Meier kept fromthe five yard line for the touchdownChicago went for two and failed, butseemed to have momentum. Things lookedeven better when a penalty after the ensuingkick off left Grinnell deep in their own turfBut McDougal kept the drive alive, going offtackle for a crucial first down on third andfive.The Pioneers went all the way to anothertouchdown and Chicago was on the way totCross Countryruns at nationalThe cross country team placed 50th of 52division III teams entered in the NCAAcross country championships in Clevelandlast Saturday. ^Coach Ted Haydon described runningconditions as sloppy, caused by a blizzardFriday night that coated the ground beforethe run. Several runners, he said, slippedand fell on the muddy course.The competition, nowever, was muchbetter than the turf, as the best division IIIschools in the NCAA were represented.Pete Smith was the top Maroon finisher,placing 245 out of a 400-plus field of run¬ners. Haydon was not upset by the results,due to the high quality of competition.Next week, the Maroons will run in the10,000 meter cross country AAU cham¬pionships, at one p.m. in Washington Park. dropping their fifth straight game. The finalscore of the game came when back upGrinnell quarterback Don Petrich kept foran 89 yard touchdown run on the lastPioneer possession. It was a footrace thatthe exhausted Maroon backs just werenever in.The ever dwindling band of healthyMaroons fought the good fight, playing avaliant season as they watched their ranksdepleted by injuries. By the end of theseason, it seemed that if you knew 16 names,you knew the Maroon regular lineup.The team’s final record was 2-6 overall, 1-4 in the conference. They finished fourth inthe Midwest Conference’s Eastern Division,one up from last yearPhoto by Jeanne Dufort JVALHALLA PUB1515 E. 53rd St.Jazz SpecialsSunday November 20 and 27WRIGHT-ON TRIOfeaturingCarl WrightalsoGuillermo KnightYou may not recognize the name of the band - hut you’llrecognize the players and the music, (and that’s JAZZ!)Come see for yourself! [)on ] 59VALHALLA•Congenial Atmosphere *Jazz classic jukebox•Pitchers of Beer•Always free hot butter popcornStudent discountsIn the Heart of Cottnutpolilan Hyde ParkJoin us for cocktail hour 4 p.m. to 2 a.in. GRANDOPENINGKIMBARKCROSSINGCONDOMINIUMModel Apt.1225 Hyde Park Blvd.open Sat. and Sun.noon to 4 p.m.3 and 4 Bedroom Apts.. 2 bathsExclusive Agents1467 E. 57th 667-6666CLASSIFIED ADS PAN PIZZADELIVERED DOG FOUNDSPACE SCENESHouse in Beverly Shores IN on twofenced lots 3 blocks from Lake. 3bedrooms, l'/j baths, part basement,attached garage. ALL furnishings ineluded. Immediate possession. FutureNational Park Leaseback possible.Call Renard at Callahan Realty.219 926 4298.STORAGE AREA NEEDED. Do youhave a spare room (or less)? I wouldlike to rent it for IV2 years to store myhousehold goods while I do disser¬tation research in West Africa. CallLarry Martin at 324 9238 anytime.Roommate wanted to share largetownhouse style apt. Only $83 & 1/3util. Morf OK. Call Juan or Gary 5482426 after 6:30 p.m.I need a living situation which I canmake noise and not hear noise Paul955 9211.4 BEDROOM basic turn. 5508 Cornell 3bath $400 Wilson-Hall.Hyde Park woman seeks quiet room inhouse or apt. 493 2040.5420 S. Cornell, Studio Apt. ModernBldg. Central A.C. You control heat.Pkg. space. We pay utilities exceptelecric $185/mo. lease. No Pets K&GManagement. 263-6693.Spacious studio spts - lakefront bldgshort, long term rentals - turn or unfur- rest, deli, pool bdrm. apt. also avail.752-3800.5 rm. remodld apt. near Wrigley Field.Bright, comfortable, spacious. Avail.Dec. 1. $250/mo. Call Beth 3-4884 days,327 5306 eve.Any UC student, not on univ housing,intersted in moving in Broadview Hallor any other univ housing for thewinter and spring quarter, pleasecontact Rodney (643-4259) or Alla (493-2174) from 6-11 p.m. We will offer you abetter dealRoommate needed to share 4 bdrm.apt. $75/mo. 493 7804.PEOPLE WANTEDAddressers Wanted Immediately!Work at home--no experiencenecessary-excellent pay. WriteAmerican Service, 8350 Park LaneSuite 269, Dallas, TX 75231.Secretary needed in a researchlaboratory. 15 hrs/wk. Time flexible.Typing, ordering laboratory suppliesand budget supervision. Please call753-2702 for interview.Help wanted TV attendant, part time.Hospital in area. Excellent pay. Gradstudent preferred. No TV knowledgenecessary. Contact Mr Eastmen,676 2226.Subjects wanted for neurophyslogicalstudy, pay $7.50/hr. For further par-tlculars, call Dr. Crayton, 947-6415.Harper Square Child Car CTR full daychild development program forchildren. V/2 kdgtn. Call 538-4041.Subjects wanted for PsycholinguisticsExperiments. Will be paid. To registercall 753-4718.The Chicago Counseling andPsychotherapy Center, 5711 S.Woodlawn, needs people who are will¬ing to talk about their personalproblems and feelings for 10 sessionswith a psychotherapist - in-training.Participation should not be seen aspsychotherapy or as a substitute forpsychotherapy, although participantsmay find it a useful experience.Participants will neither be paid orcharged for their sessions. Call 684-1800.Windermere Restaurant Waitress orwaiters, full time or part time callFA4 6000Full time saleswoman needed. Ex¬perience preferred. Kimberly Lee 1529E. 53rd. 493 8363ARE YOU A NORMAL HEALTHYADULT? Volunteer for research! Wewill pay $25 to attend an interview, fillout a questionaire, and push a button.Total time required is 5 hours.Volunteers must be healthy, haveadvanced degrees and be between 35 &65 years of age. For further info call947-6983M W F9a.m.to4p.m.PEOPLE FOR SALESkilled Seamstress needs extramoney, what do YOU need? I doalmost anything: hemming, mending,alterations and production of campinggear clothes and toys. Janet 643 9158French native coll tchr offers tutoring-all levels-exp with lang reqs,class forkids being organized Ph 324 8054TYPING SERVICE/HYDE PARK538 6066 after 5 p.m.For Experienced Piano Teacher of alllevels. Call 947 9746ARTWORK Illustration of all kinds,lettering, hand addressing for invita-tions, etc. Noel Price, 493 2399.RESEARCHERS - Free lance artistspecializes in just the type of graphicwork you need. Noel Price, 493-2399.U of C Faculty member's wife wishesto babysit on regular basis at their aptMon Fri 324 3219GERMAN READING EXAM betterluck next time pass it with my experthelp yrs of experience high successrate native German PhD Call 493 The University Symphony Orchestrawill present its first concert of theseason on Saturday, Nov. 19, at 8:30pm in Mandel Hall. Under the direction of Conductor Barbara Schubert,the orchestra will perform works byMendelssohn, Vaughan Williams, andRachmaninoff. Admission is withoutticket and without charge.CHICAGO FRONT: Music - LeRoyJenkins, solo violinist, Nov. 18, 8 p.m.Ida Noyes.FOR SALEWill pay $30 to anyone who will takeover my univ housing contract phone324 5217.Passport Photos -MODEL CAMERA493-6700. While U Wait.1342 E 55 thAsk for our catalogue MODELCAMERA 1342 E. 55th. 493 6700,QUALITY XEROX COPIES, 8c each.1st Unit Ch 5650 Woodlawn. Hrs.9-5,7-10 daily.Sat., Nov. 19 rear 5428 Blkstone 11-2Grt variety from Eastlake bkcases 300pair - 25 cents items: Singer electricconsole sewing mach, GE stm ironboards 10 misc chrs, 2 round 1 rect.mirrors, fine maple bkcase coffee tbl,excl. walnut desk, table french empcandlab, perfum bottle coll $100 more!Strings Xmas lites, slide projec 8,screen paper knife new welch cabinet$100, blue jeans 25 cents $1 - lots ofgoods!For sale 74 Toyota Corolla great ongas. Easy to park. Needs bodywork.$800 or best offer. 493 4336 eves.Dreams in Stone prints on sale inReynolds Club, Monday and Tuesday,11 to 1. Now only $5 for set of 4 and wemail them anywhere Makes a greatgift!FOTA will mail a set of Dreams inStone prints for only $5. Send theperfect holiday gift to friends 8.relatives. Place orders with FOTA inIda Noyes.Spinet piano in perfect condition $650o.n.o. Call 241-6779.Clothing of the 1920's 50's. Bought outNorthside shop. Nov. 18, 12:00 - 6:00Blue Gargoyle.I'll pay $25 to anyone who will takeover my housing contract. If you are afull time grad or undergrad 8. want tolive anywhere in the universityhousing system call Marilyn 753-3486day. 752 8019 nite.PERSONALSFOUND The Medici Delivers from 5-10:30weekdays, 5-11:30 weekends, 667-7394Save 60 cents if you pick it up yourself.LITERARYMAGAZINEPrimavera is on sale in most HydePark stores 8, Bob's Newsstand. Weneed women to join the editorial staff.Call 752-5655 if you can help out. Female miniature collie, found 11/7 invicinity of^58th 8. Ellis. Call: 753 8155days; 375-4447 eves.GERMAN EXAMTake April Wilson's German Coursethis winter and high pass the springlanguage exam: Classes meet MWFfrom 12-1 or from 7 8 p.m., from Jan. 9to April 29., Limited enrollment. $110To register, call: 667 3038RAP GROUP FUJI DEMOA Women's Rap group will meet everyMonday at 7:30 p.m. on the 3rd floor ofThe Blue Gargoyle. For more info.752 5655.MEDICI FOOTBALLSPECIAL20% off on delivered pizza 8-10:30Mon. night. Mention this ad when plac¬ing order 667 7394.BBB&PPDon't forget: Bio Beer Bash 8. Punchparty tonite at 8 in Reynolds club northlounge. Its academic with Bio Profsbring questions 8, answers. Pretzels!LOX ANDBAGEL BRUNCHSunday, November 20. 11 a m., $1 00per sandwich. Last brunch of FallQuarter.BUTLEY DISCOUNTSFOR STUDENTSSunday nights only!! Arrive 7 8 p.m. 2for the price ot one with UCID.EAR$-RELAXEDSETTINGOpportunity for person who enjoyschildren to care for boy age 5 and girlage 8 in Kenwood home between 11:15a.m. and 6:45 p.m. on Tuesday andThursday. Meal preparation and ocaslight housekeeping. Begin now at $30per week. To apply call Mrs. Thompson at 346-1900 between 10 and 4. Fri & Sat Nov 18th & 19th. Stop in andsee the new FUJI AZ-1 35mm camerawith a standard zoom lens! Many Fujispecials!1342 E . 55th 493 6700MODEL CAMERABESELERCOLORPRINTING DEMOFri 8. Sat Nov. 18th & 19th. Colorprinting is easier than you think! Letus prove it to you! 1342 E 55th St. 4936700. MODEL CAMERASCHOLARSHIPTo do Harry S. proud, TrumanScholarship offers $500/year.Sophomores with political ambitions,interest in govt, public service, seePatrick Hall before Nov. 23. Makeappointment in Harper 280BUTLEY DISCOUNTSFOR STUDENTSSunday nights only!! Arrive 7 8 p.m. 2for the price of one with UCID.Get It Done...Use MaroonClassifiedsMegan McDonoughJohn FaheyNov. 188 p.m. and 10 p.m.Hutch CommonsPregnant Troubled? Call 233 0305 10am-1 pm. M F and 7 9pm Thurs eve.Lifesaving help. Free test Ref.PREGNANCY TESTS SATURDAY10-1 Augustana Church, 5500 Swoodlawn. Bring 1st morning urinesample. $1.50 donation. SouthsideWomen's Health. 324 6794.Writers' WorkshopPL 2 8377"EXECUTIVE & PROFESSIONAL"LOANS BY MAIL. $5000 to 35,000signature only. No advance fees ac¬cepted. M.D.'s, Dentists, ResidentsSenior Medical Students, College 8.University Educators, Federal, State& Municipal Employees, GS-12 orhigher, Corporate Employees making$20,000 or higher. Send brief resume toChatham Financial ConsultantsDepartment UCM PL Box 21406Chicago, IL. 60621Two cats/two kittens desperately needgood home at least thru June.Guaranteed best cats in the world!Kurt, 752-1000 rm 607 (Iv message).Akren • We going to celebrate atChristmas? How about at the noodle?Place your order now, and have someclass ourdubs.Come to the Bio beer bash & punchparty 8 p.m. in Reynolds Club NorthLounge.CALCULATORSSTEREO HI-FILOWEST PRICES (10 40% OFF) AllNew, Fully Guaranteed. FeaturingHP, Tl and name brand stereo. CallJohn: 241-5775after7p.m.AUTO FOR SALE69 Pontiac Bonneville exclt mech andbody, best offer. $650 Work 269 6811 or363 6466.MEDICICONTINENTALBREAKFASTCome to the Medici Sunday morningfrom 9:30 1 and enjoy Sunday papers,fresh orange juice, homemadesweetrolls, fresh fruit, homemadeyogurt and coffee All you can eat for$1 95 ALL TOGETHERAt One LocationTO SAVE YOU MORE!SPECIALDISCOUNT PRICESfor all STUDENTS andFACULTY MEMBERSJu$t present your University ofChic090 Identification Card.As Students or Focufty Membersof the University of Chicogo youare entitled to special money sav¬ing Discounts on Volkswogen &Chevrolet Parts, Accessories andany new or used Volkswogen orChevrolet you buy from Volks¬wogen South Shore or MeritChevrolet Inc.SALES & SERVICEALL AT ONEGREAT LOCATIONWoman's gold watch near Biologygate. Call Sharon 493 5245 CHEVROLETVOLKSWAGENSOUTH SHORE7234 Stony IslandPhone: 684*0400Open D*#y 9-9 PM./ Sat. »-5 P.MPart* Opan Saturday tl 12 MoonJ. »■ jil iwnMn ■ Itl.li i. KENNEDY, RYAN, M0NKAI & JBXMKS.MCDirectory of ValuesWe Know Hyde ParkReal Estate Inside OutHOUSES FOR SALEPREVIEWOFFERINGFourteen town homes will bebuilt this winter at 49th andDorchester, designed by V C.Wong. Preliminary plans areavailable for your inspectionat our office. Call 667-6666. LIKE NEWTOWNHOUSETry low S50's — this 3 BR, IVabath, central A/C townhouseis a great starter home.PLUS finished rec. rm., park¬ing available. For appoint¬ment call J. Edward LaVelle,667-6666ERAOF ELEGANCEThree story brick! Evidenceof beautiful living abounds ingracious large Hyde ParkBoulevard residence.Butternut-panelled livingroom with curved bay-windows, high fireplace.Study adjacent, largemodern kitchen for gourmetcook, spacious bedrooms on 2floors above. All systems ex¬cellent - back yard andprivate parking. $165,000.Call Charlotte Vikstrom. A FAMILY HOMERaise your kids in coziness &warmth. 5 BRs, 3V2 baths,bay windows, fireplaces,solarium. A great frontporch. Lots of land & a reallive resident bunny. A cityhome w/country feeling.Move-in condition. Asking$157,500. To see, call Mrs.Haines, 667-6666FRIENDLY FAMILY HOMESUBURBINCITYGracious, spacious home insetting rivaling any suburb.Mahogany woodwork, 3fireplaces, library on firstfloor, solarium, patio,breakfast room. Upstairsalso solarium, 5 bedrooms, 3baths. Excellent systemselectrical and heating.Beautifully maintainedgrounds. Side drive, new 2-car brick garage. $198,500.Near 50th & Greenwood. Forappointment, call CharlotteVikstrom, 667-6666. In Jackson Park Highlands. 4plus BRs, 3V2 baths and roomto expand. Screened porch,large eat-in kitchen. Sidedrive to 2-car garage. Largefamily room and LR w/wood-burning fireplace. $77,500 Tosee, call Eleanor Coe667-6666.REASONABLE PRICED6-Room townhouse W/IV2baths and panelled rec. room,private patio, parking inrear, all appliances, incl.Asking $73,900. Call Mrs.Ridlon, 667-6666.APARTMENTS FOR SALECONVENIENCE PLUS1 bedroom co-op in welllocated, well-managed HydePark building. Off-streetparking. Board, approval re¬quired. To see call GeorgeBilger, 667 6666.55TH& UNIVERSITY HIS & HER KITCHENThe couple that cookstogether, stays together — ifthey have separate workingareas! Modern kitchen w/2stoves, dishwasher & good,good space. 4 BRs, 2V2 baths,washer, dryer. Off-streetparking. $59,500 To see, cal!Mrs. Haines, 667-66662 BR co-op home w/wood bur¬ning fireplace. Oak floors.Hook-up for washer & dryerin modernized kitchen.Assmt. $126 incl. taxes.Owner can otter immed.possession to qualified buyer.Bd. approval required.$21,500. To see, call Mrs.Haines, 667-6666.LUXURYONA BUDGETThis fine aDartment buildingcontains tour rental unitsplus a deluxe owner's apart¬ment. Probably the mostelegant 8 room apt. in HydePark. Rents pay all operatingcosts. $195,000. Call FrankGoldschmidt. 667 6666. NEAR 59TH AND HARPERAiry, light 4 rm. Co-op.Beautiful kitchen and bath.French windows, open to theMidway view. Full DR, kingsize bedroom, storm win¬dows, air conditioners. Asking $25,000. Includes insideparking. Call CharlotteVikstrom, 667-6666.2 BEDROOMS & A STUDYThis light bright 3 BR 2 bathcondo has modern kitchen,wood-burning fireplace,beautiful floors & more. Tosee, call Richard E. Hiid667-6666 (res. 752-5384).MOVE NORTH(JUST A LITTLE)Sample the privacy of EatonPlace. Discover the naturalbeauty and spacious rooms ofa fully restored 4 bedroom, 2bath turn-of-the-century condominium home. Availablefor immediate possession. On48th St. near Kenwood.$49,500 Call 667-6666.8 BRIGHT ROOMSOVERLOOKINGTHECITYEnjoy the view of the loopand lake beach facilities,game rooms, off- street parking. Gracious living in thiswell established old COOPapt. at S. Shore Dr & 73rd St.$25,000; to see, call RichardE. Hild at 667 6666 (res.752-5384). THEOPENINGOFKIMBARKCROSSINGIS GRANDYou're invited this weekendto the grand opening of Kim-bark Crossing. Three andfour bedroom, 2 bath con¬dominium apartments withmany, many specialfeatures. See our modelapartment at 1225 Hyde ParkBlvd. Saturday and Sunday,Noon to 4 P.M.THE GREAT ESCAPETO PRIVACYQuite modern secludedelevator condominium bldgon Harper Ave near Co-op.private parking Twoapartments - each onebedroom - are offered forquick sale. Electric heat, lowassessment. Call 667 6666.1461 East 57th Street.' Chicago. Illinois 60637667-6666Daily 9 to 5 Sat 9 to Y, Or call 64? 6646 Anytime-•.tTha Chicago Maroon,-r -Riiciay,.November 18,1977 — 23 |24 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, November 18,1977 ThkMAJOR ACTIVITIES BOARDPRESENTSOne of the conn try's finest (and strangest) guitaristsJMIN fAltEYwithWell-known Chicago folk singerME* ANHMinpTONIGHTin HUTCH COMMONS-• r * ' * ' /■:* v •8 and lO p.m.$2, MAB; $3, generalrefreshments on saleTickets still available at Reynolds Cluba*. X.