Vot. 88, No. 12 The University of Chicago V The Crucago Maroon 1978 Friday, October 13, 1978Crimes mark year’s start;area crime rate goes downPhoto by Carol StudenmundOne of the University’s 100-man security force. By Nancy ClevelandCriminals assaulted more thantwenty University students withina few blocks of campus during thefirst three weeks of autumnquarter according to RichardRoyse, assistant dean of students.The week before school started onestudent and a University researchtechnician were raped.“Were having a flurry ofcrime,’’ said Royse, who called thebeginning of the academic year atraditional peak crime period.Royse predicted that “by mid¬quarter, things will be very tame.’’The Hyde Park crime rate con¬tinues to drop each year, and “thissummer was the quietest in fiveyears,” Royse said.Three rapes occurred in the 21stpolice district, which includesHyde Park, between Ssptember 15and 24 according to Chicago police.No arrests have been made in thetwo University-related rapes.The third rape involved a non-University student who knew herattackers, said police.The attack on the University stu¬dent took place at about 8:30 p.m.on Sunday, September 17 at the55th St. Illinois Central railroadplatform.Only two days before, on a Fri¬ day morning, a Universityresearch technician was draggedfrom the lakefront jogging pathand raped near the 4200 block ofLake Shore Drive.“Women should jog and bicyclein twos and threes along the lake,”said Royse. A student bicyclingalone was raped at the lake lastspring, but women in pairs havenot been molested, he said.Three students have had theirpurses snatched in the last threeweeks, and, in two separate in¬cidents, six students have beenheld up and robbed on 62nd St.,while on their way back from TaiSam Yon, a 63rd St. Chineserestaurant.At least eight groups of studentswere robbed last year on their wayto or from the restaurant, ac¬cording to Royse. Universitysecurity cars do not patrol south of61st St., which marks theWoodlawn-Hyde Park boundary,and there are no security phonesoutside of Hyde Park.Royse tells students not to gosouth of 60th m., especially afterdark. He advises students who use woman student was assaulted andher purse snatched at the JacksonPark el stop at 55th St. last Thurs¬day night.“If you are accosted give themwhat they want,” said Royse.“Then after the robbers have turn¬ed to flee, blow your whistle. Butdon’t puli out your whistle untilthey are no longer interested inyou.”There are no patterns to crime inHyde Park, said Royse. and nogangs or “one man crime waves.”However, two of three youths ar¬rested last Thursday and chargedwith the robbery of two Universitystudents have been linked withassaults committed earlier thisyear.The South East Chicago Com¬mission (SECC) provides freelegal service to anyone in HydePark who is the victim of a crime.University security and theChicago Police notify the SECC ifthe victim signs a consent form. AnSECC lawyer will accompany thevictim to court, plead the victim'scase, and guide the victim throughthe complex criminal court pro-First South Africa meeting heldthe el to take the 55th St. bus to the cess.Jackson Park-Howard or Dan The University housing officeRvan el stops, rather then walk to sponsors talks on security in Hydethe 63rd St. stations. However, a Park in each University dor¬mitory. Royse: Paul Ausick. assis¬tant dear, of students; PaulThiboutot. assistant director of stu¬dent housing; Edward Turkington.By Curtis BlackThe Action Committee on SouthAfrica announci d plans to increasetheir activity on campus and to be¬come more involved in the nation¬wide divestiture movement at anorientation forum last Thursday,October 5th.The forum, which included talksby exiled South African poetDennis Brutus and former Maroonreporter Richard Biernacki as wellas a showing of the film “LastGrave at Dimbaza,” was attendedby about 80 people, many of themnew students.Brutus, now a professor atNorthwestern University and alocal leader of the divestmentmovement, spoke on recent devel¬opments of the Soweto student re¬volt. Eleven leaders of the 1976 de¬monstrations now face the deathpenalty for their part in the upris¬ing. Brutus said that the South Af¬rican people were continuing theirprotests in the face of the trials,saying that “continuing protestand organization, to the point ofarmed confrontation,” was developing.Brutus mentioned three other developments related to the South African issue. First, he said that h<feared the results of the election oformer defense minister PieteiBotha as the new South Africarprime minister. Calling Botha’.4predecessor John Vorster “a monster of brutality and ruthlessness,’Brutus warned that Botha is areven more staunch supporter olthe apartheid systemBrutus said that Botha is knownamong his fellow National Partymembers as “Weapons” Botha be¬cause of his preference for the useof military force in conflict situa¬ tions. Brutus attributed the SouthAfrican invasion of Angola toBotha’s hardline efforts.Secondly, Brutus said that bygranting a visa to RhodesianPrime Minister Ian Smith, in viola¬tion of United Nations diplomaticsanctions, the State Departmentwas “recognizing an illegal gov¬ernment.” Brutus said that hehoped that Smith’s United Statesvisit would “meet w'th massiveand sustained protests.”The third development Brutusspoke of was a series of regionalorganizational events, linking to¬gether divestment movements onvarious campuses. There will beconferences in November in Cali¬fornia. at New York University,and at Duke University. Brutus is asponsor of the Midwest Conferenceat Northwestern University sche¬duled for October 20 through 22.Brutus said students at almostevery university in the conferencehad met with “dodges, devious tac¬tics and stalling” on the part of uni¬versity administrations.Olympic protestAsked about his own historv. Brutus told of being arrested fordiscovering and protesting that theall-white South African OlympicTeam was in violation of the Olym¬pic Charter which prohibits racialdiscrimination. His protest led tothe banning of South Africa fromthe Olympic Games. He escaped toMozambique, where he was cap¬tured and brought back to SouthAfrica. Shot “at point blankrange” in a secord escape at¬tempt. and forced to walk till hecollapsed, he said, “lying on thesidewalk in a pool of blood." Afterserving eighteen months splittingrocks in an island prison. Brutussaid he was issued an exit permitstamped “cancelled.” tantamountto being exiled.Richard Biernacki reviewed theseries of disclosures he reported inThe Maroon last year Sixtv-fivemillion of the University’s invest¬ments. about a quarter of its totalendowment, are in corporationswith assets in South Africa, hesaid. The University Board ofTrustees has more members onboards of corporations making money in South Africa than anyother school in the U.S., Biernackisaid. University President HannaHolborn Gray sits on the board ofMorgan Guaranty Trust, whichmakes loans to South African gov¬ernment agencies, he revealedEllmore C. Patterson, chairman ofMorgan Guaranty, is a trustee ofthe University.IBM. Mobil and ExxonAmong corporations the Univer¬sity owns stock in. IBM supplieshalf of the South African computermarket, and supplies computersfor weapons research and to re-Cord South Africa to 5 director of student housing; andDavid O'Leary, director of theSecurity Department, have beengiving advice on personal safety.The administrators tell students tocall university security for um¬brella coverage when they arewalking alone at night, and advisethem to buy. use and respond towhistles as part of theWhistleSTOP programEither Royse. Ausick. orThiboutot is on duty 24 hours a day.taking emergency calls involvingUniversity student They will ac¬company students to the Emergen¬cy Room at Billings Hospital, orthe 21st District station house tofile complaints.Ola politicalproblems marSG sessionA protest last year called by the Action Committee on South Africa. By David Burtonand Abbe Fieuncu;Student Government ^Gpresident Steven Kehoe an¬nounced that SG can expect toopen a canteen in Regenstein Li¬brary within six weeks. SG hasalready set up a refrigerator ren¬tal service and has received a$350 grant to study the housingsituation in Hyde ParkBut Monday’s assembly meet¬ing was spent largely on politicalsquabbling and not on productivebusinessA project to distribute cards tostudents giving them discounts atlocal businesses backfired, lead¬ ing to accusations of “financialmalfeasance” and calls forKehoe’s resignationL & B Marketing, the firm thatwas setting up the buying card,received a letter on introductionfrom Kehoe before the projectwas formally approved by theUniversity administration Al¬though Kehoe had told the firmnot to collect any money fromlocal businesses, it began enlist¬ing Hyde Park merchants intothe program.On August 8 L & B Marketingfiled for bankruptcy in U S. Dis¬trict Court in Brooklyn, NewYork. SG to dDOC FILMSJean-Charles Tachella’sCOUSIN, COUSINEFriday, Oct. 13 6:30,8:30 & 10:30Dave Fleischer’sGULLIVER’S TRAVELSSaturday, October 14 2:00 Only2 by Josef von Sternberg:THE BLUE ANGEL7:00 & 10:45THE SCARLET EMPRESSCarlos Savra’sCRIA!Sunday, October 15 - 7:30 & 9:30All Films $1.50 Cobb Hall to smartest move...John Phillips, PaintingsBergman Galleryi4th floor Cobb HallThere will be a reception in the Gallery to meet Mr. Phillips today, Fridaythe 13th, from 5 - 8 P.M.Mr. Phillips is a graduate of the University and formerly also taught here.2 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, October %t;1978' C'.v*rAV/.v»v.v.*.w.v.w.*.r.^.w.».fj»fr »*» # t • * #•< *•* •**■*» »•** *rrr» r'Fellow program changes meet problemsBy Chris BrownA number of changes in the Harper FellowProgram have been initiated to smooth outseveral problems encountered by the firstparticipants in the program.Most changes were designed to better in¬tegrate the Fellows into the College faculty.They include:•eliminating the post of director of theprogram,•making two year, rather than three year,appointments.•giving Fellows the option to do researchfor one quarter rather than teaching, and•publishing a brochure describing the pro¬gram to prospective employers of outgoingFellows.The program was controversial from itsinception. Jonathan Z. Smith, dean of theCollege said last fall that there were ques¬tions about whether the program woulddiscourage other faculty memoers fromteaching Core courses, about whether theadministration or the faculty should run theprogram, and about whether the Fellowsare simply “glorified graduate students.”Many of these controversies have beenresolved as the position of the HarperFellows in the University has been betterdefined through the first “cycle” of the pro¬gram.The Harper Fellow Program wasestablished in 1974 in response to a need formore instructors in the humanities andsocial science Common Core courses. TheCollege hired 14 post-doctoral fellows, sevenin the humanities and seven in the socialsciences, to teach Core courses and someadvanced undergraduate classes.The status of Harper Fellows was still anopen question when the changes were im¬plemented this fall. Many faculty membersand students thought the program wasnothing more than w'hat Smith last yearcalled a “fancy ‘TA’-ship.”“Too many people felt the program was afancy way of sneaking teaching assistants inthe back door,” Smith told The Maroon.Several of the first group of Fellows com¬plained that their position at the Universitywas never clearly defined. Some were an¬noyed by the fact that in some instances theFellows had faculty privileges and in othersonly those of staff members.Fellows were dissatisfied because of alack of integration into the College and intothe departments, contending that theywould have benefitted if they had had somekind of departmental affiliation.The original provisions of the programstated that “Fellows will join members ofthe College and University community in aCollege Colloquium on teaching andundergraduate education.” But Fellowshave called this aspect of the program “Im¬poverished,” “not the big Moment,” and “adinnerparty.”Further inadequacies of the programcited by former Fellows were the inflexibleand heavy teaching load, and the ineffec¬tiveness of William Veeder, the Program'sformer director. New PoliciesSmith agreed with most of the complaintsand felt that more should have been donesooner, but he felt that because the programwas new. much that was done was “made upas we went along.”One of this year’s Fellows familiar withlast year’s program praised the College’s ef¬forts to integrate the Fellows into the Col¬lege. saying he liked that the college hadstopped trying to make the program appear“like something special.”In an effort to publicize both the programand the Fellows the College is preparing aRules issued in June by the Federal Com¬munications Commission (FCC) may forcemajor changes in the operation of WHPK,the University’s 10-watt student-operatedradio station. The new regulations could re¬quire WHPK to raise its signal strength,move to another frequency, or leave the air.The ruling came in response to pressurefrom the Corporation for Public Broad¬casting to make room for more public radiostations by forcing some of the small 10-w attstations off the air.Although the final effects of the ruling arestill unclear, the new regulations willeliminate 10-watt stations which broadcaston the noncommercial section of the radiodial, according to WHPK station managerFrank Mazza. Many of these, like WHPK,are student radio stations.Noncommercial stations that operate with10 watts of power will have to increase theirpower to 100 watts or move to a frquency inthe commercial band if they wish to remainon the air. Under the new rules, WHPK mustchoose one of these options by the time itscurrent license expires in 1980. However, atechnicality in a treaty with Canada govern¬ing radio stations 250 miles on either side of brochure to be sent to various graduateschools across the country. It is hoped thatthis will attract more applicants to the pro¬gram and also make it easier for outgoingFellows to get positions at other univer¬sities.In addition the current group of Fellowswill have the option of teaching two coursesof their own choosing in the second year ortaking a quarter off to do research.Besides shortening the program fromthree years to two. the hiring in the programwill be staggered. Rather than hire 14Fellows this year, the College hired only 10.the U.S. - Canadian border may prevent therules from taking effect until 1982.Mazza said that WHPK is responding tothe ruling in two ways. It will work withother small radio stations to persuade theFCC to modify its ruling, and will, at thesame time, move to increase its power to 100watts “as quickly as possible.” A 100-watttransmitter would provide WHPK listenerswith a stronger and better signal. However,because of the large number of 10-watt sta¬tions in Chicago, there would not be room onthe noncommercial part of the dial for themall to increase their signal to 100 watts. Maz¬za said.There are very few frequencies in thecommercial band that 10-watt stations couldmove to if they were unable to increase theirpower. Mazza commented that “this is thekind of situation you really don’t want,”because the 10-watt stations will be in com¬petition to increase their power to 100 wattsbefore all the available space is taken.Station managers from small radio sta¬tions will meet at Loyola University inNovember to discuss the ruling. They mayconsider asking the FCC to exempt largecities from the rules because, in Mazza’s Smith believes the College will hire betweensix and 10 new Fellows next year. Under thisnew policy of staggered hiring, it is hopedthe older Fellows will pass on their ex¬perience to the newer Fellows and providesome continuity not present in the previouscycle.Smith is satisfied with the solutions thathave been implemented and predicts thatwhatever problems the Fellows may havethis year, they will be “problems of in¬dividuals. not problems of Harper Fellows.”“The Harper Fellow Program is no longeran issue at this School;4’ he said.words, “there is not enough room for all off hese stations” to broadcast with 100 watts.With 10 watts of power, WHPK reachesonly the South Side, but if it broadcasts with100 watts, its signal would reach most ofChicago and might interfere with stations inother parts of the city. Mazza said he hopesthat some kind of “dispensation” for con¬gested areas like Chicago can be arrangedto avoid forcing some stations off the air.If WHPK is granted permission to broad¬cast with 100 watts, it would have to replaceits present transmitter at a cost of $5000 -$10,000 WHPK presently operates on an an¬nual budget of roughly $5000, appropriatedby the SG Finance Committee. Mazza saidthat larger stations may donate old equip¬ment to WHPK. but that it is unlikely thatWHPK will be given all the equipment itneeds to increase its wattage.According to Riley Davis, director of Stu¬dent Activities, the WHPK governing boardmust formally request money from theFinance Committee before it can consideraiding WHPK. Davis added that he believesthe University, which holds WHPK’slicense, is concerned that WHPK stay on theair and that the University w ill work to pro¬tect the station. AMetcalfe rites set for weekendFuneral services for CongressmanRalph H. Metcalfe, who died of a heart at¬tack late Monday night at the age of 68,will be held tomorrow morning at the HolyAngels Roman Catholic Church.Visitation hours begin at the church. 607E. Oakwood. at 9:00 am Saturday and areopen to the public. The funeral mass isscheduled for 11:00 am.Metcalfe, who represented Illinois’s 1stCongressional District for eight years, willbe buried immediately after the funeralmass at the Holy Sepulchre Cemetery. 6001W. 111th St. in Worth Township.Visitation hours are also scheduled atthe Unity Funeral Parlors. 4114 S.Michigan Ave.. today until 11 pm. Familymembers will be at the funeral parlor from 11 am to noon. 4 to 6 pm. and 7 to 9 pmMetcalfe was a life-long Democrat whobroke with Mayor Richard J. Daley overthe issue of police brutality. In 1976 he wonre-election to Congress and to his post as3rd Ward Democratic committeemandespite opposition from challengers sup¬ported by Daley. This year he received thesupport of regular Chicago Democrats inhis campaign for a fifth term in Congress.Mayor Michael Bilandic joined publicleaders throughout the city praising theCongressman after his death.The District's ten ward committeemenwill meet early next week to choose Met¬calfe's successor as Democratic nomineeto Congress. JFCC ruling may silence WHPKBy Dave GlocknerBOOKS!New Shipment ofSocial Science andHumanities titleshas just arrivedStudent Co-opReynolds Club Basement9:30-6:00 Weekdays, 10-5 Sat. Photo by Tim Bok*rDisc jockey Brian RobertsEditorialA more perfect Union?It happens every year. Student Government(SG) holds the first of many long, tedious, unpro¬ductive meetings that eventually alienate mostparticipants. Somehow, perhaps naively, wehoped that this year might be different.Not that we expected much. SG has been a dis¬mal failure in getting much of anything done forthe last few years; often they have not even beenable to get quorums at meetings. At most wehoped that the assembly might be comprised ofpeople who are interested in student affairs andwould work to achieve some small improve¬ments in student life.The assembly last spring gave us some hope.The election was competitive, with candidatesfrom several specially-organized parties in therunning along with a number of independents.High turnouts at the two meetings held duringthe spring indicated that president Steven Kehoemight be able to lead an effective body.But the political infighting that has dogged SGresurfaced. Kehoe got himself into a bind when L& G Marketing, a firm with which he was nego¬tiating to produce cards giving students dis¬counts at local businesses, went bankrupt. AllanWind and Gerry Mildner, two of last spring’shopefuls, jumped at this chance to threatenKehoe’s leadership.Wind and Mildner have charged Kehoe with ev¬erything from violation of the Student Code tocontract fraud. While Kehoe will almost certainlybe cleared of any wrongdoing and will remain inoffice.Wind and Mildner have succeeded in hold¬ing up almost any productive work SG mighthave started on this fall.Since early summer, Wind has been sendingletters to SG members on “Student Union” sta¬tionary. Now we find that Student Union is to be anew improved student association headed byWind and Mildner.Student Union is an interesting concept. Mostsignificantly, according to Mildner, StudentUnion will attempt to reach and involve largenumbers of students. Meetings (or “rap ses¬sions”) will be held at different campus locationsto encourage wide-ranging participation.Not a bad idea. One of the major problems SGhas had is that it tends to be a closed group ofpeople with few outsiders (or insiders for thatmatter) on the various SG committees.But it is absurd to think that this political abor¬tion, the Student Union , can succeed whereSG has failed. What SG needs is an end to politi¬cal bickering. As long as there are two compet¬ing student associations, neither will gain the re¬spect, much less the support, of the studentbody.We hope that SG will overcome the problems itfaces with Student Union and with the L & G#Marketing affair. For once we would like to seean active and effective SG.And although we hope SG will draw some les¬sons from the more enlightened ideas of thesplinter group, we wish Student Union wouldquietly vanish.Editor: AbbeFletmanManaging editor: Nancy CrillyNews editor: Eric Von der PortenFeatures editor : Claudia MagatPhotography editor: Carol StudenmundSports editor: R. W. RohdeContributing editor : Carl LavinCopyeditor: AndrewPatnerLiterary editor: Peter EngBusiness manager: Suzanne FarrandOffice manager: Leslie WickStaff: George Bailey, Curtis Black, Chris Brown. David Bur¬ton, Nancy Cleveland, Dave Glockner. Michael Gorman,Carol Klapper. Jake Levine, Bruce Lewenstein. Dan Loube,Andrew Magidson. Bobbye Middendorf, Howard Suls, CarolSwanson. Nancy Tordai, Mark Wallach, John Wrigl4 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, October 13, 1978t - nn' V >*'• '’oo-’CiV ov' >uO Letters to the Editor***_Of signs,squirrels,and imbecilesTo the Editor:This is about the Sign between theTrees -1 make them. Long ago, thebold and glorified Squirrels and Icame to an understanding, namely:I would announce my ascent of theTrees properly, by laying the Lad¬der on gently: they in turn would re¬frain from chewing on the ropesuntil they ran out of nuts on thecampus.These signs are the best way of in¬forming about coming events. Thematerials are very expensive and donot leave very much to pay for theefforts to make them. They meet theUniversity’s requirements as setforth: 1) Safety. 2) Brief and inter¬esting copy, 3) Taste. Each sign goesup with the hope that the Elementsand the Kreiselwind will be kind.People have come to trust them:this, I believe. Lately, some Lunatictook it on himself to wait for eachnew sign and then slash at it in theexact spot and with the same instru¬ment. Then there are the two-leggedSquirrels. Recently, several men?,using the Quads as a shortcut fromJimmy's, got as far as Classics.Here they were turned around,marched back and had to shimmythe trees and tie the sign in itsformer place.Last weekend the sign was againcarried away and hidden. By sava¬gely cutting the ropes and with littleregard for the much needed mes¬sage on the other side, it becamevandalism, pure, and washed awaythe garbage about it being A littleJoke, etc. The above is written not somuch with thoughts of Bitterness butin distress that those with lunatic in¬clinations and imbecilic behaviorshould be among us.Walter JeschkeOriginal lookat ChinaTo the Editor:Dan Loube’s recent report, Imageof China in the Tuesday column ofthe October 3. 1978 issue of theMaroon was certainly an originallook at China. The objectivity he sofinds lacking in the regular press re¬ports on China (or as he refers to itRed China) would be a welcomeprospect. Mr. Loube’s implication isthat he is able and about to give suchan unbiased report. Perhaps thebrevity of his visit and the limitedarea of his examination would seemto excuse him for some of his conclu¬sions but that is debatableThat he saw ho tractors leads him to conclude that there are no trac¬tors in the sprawling rice fieldsabout Canton. He is mistaken. Wehave seen them.That he saw no sprinkler systemsand no irrigation pipes merely indi¬cates that water-rich Kwangtungdnes not need them.He says that. Canton workersmove from factory jobs to smallflats, in constant stupor. In the firstplace it is hard to imagine them inthis constant stupor as they bicyclethe active streets of Canton. Whilethe average Cantonese on the streetdoes not look as apprehensive andintense as an urban American on thestreet he is the same sort who makeup the silent crowds (standing) byexamining our cameras, hair, jewel¬ry, and clothing. They are as awareof their surroundings as westerners.Can it be that to Mr. Loube theworkers appeared listless for an¬other reason? When we were therelast June the temperature was 110degrees fahrenheit. That is the mostsympathetic interpretation I canconsider.It further reflects bias to suggestthat the crowds examine cameras,hair, jewelry, and clothing only. Oneof the striking experiences for anyvisitor to China is the unabashed cu¬riosity in the open stares into one’sface. What so often follows is a shysmile to our equal interest in them.One must question the Hong Kongsources that report that each Chin¬ese citizen has one pair of pants, oneshirt, and a few pairs of underwear.Does the image of millions of Chin¬ese sitting around in their altogetherwaiting for the laundry to dry cometo the mind’s eye? Other sourceshave reported that the average per¬son can buy one full set of clothing ayear. That is not luxurious but atleast double what Mr. Loube’s HongKong sources report.The concluding thought that Chinashould be visited before its doorsclose again, is general enough tomake the closing of its doors asbeing imminent or not to happen forsome time yet. Nevertheless to raisethe suggestion of it is to indicatesome urgency would be in order torespond to his suggestion. Nothing inthe developments in China since thedeath of Mao Tse-tung lead anywestern analysts to come to this con¬clusion. In fact China’s contacts withthe United States and the rest of thewestern world are only on the in¬crease.The private information Mr.Loube revealed, that college admis¬sions are now on the basis of merit,is much publicized. It is very much apart of the official cant to explain thesmashing of the gang of four.Running through the entire piecemay be the most curious conclusionof all: that contrary to the west: theChinese are very money conscious,very conscious of cameras, jew'elryand clothing, very conscious of west¬ern machines and comforts. There isan evident deemphasis on politicalideology, but it is a long leap to con¬clude that the constant stupor re¬sults from a preoccupation withmoney. I must argue that my ownfirst person contact is more typical .What more do I need? I have ourapartment My wife is comfortable.My children are in school. I have twosuits. I have a bicycle.The most surprising development,to my mind, is one evident tonon-visitors to China. That Chinafeels secure from corruption of prin¬ciples to the degree that she has sentthousands of students to studyabroad is remarkable.Responding to this image of Chinain objection to what I consider to bedistortions seemed only fair. Myown interest and that of the group I assembled to take to China is ingraphic communication and not poli¬tics. So I am surprised to find myselfmoved to these comments. But apiece that descries reports taintedby pro- or anti-communist biases,containing so many biased aspectscridi out for it.Finally, it is amusing that it be¬came necessary to refer to menwearing green pajamas (which indi¬cates past or present military ser¬vice). Yes, soldiers on occasion maywear loose fitting trousers but w'henthe fit is right they resemble westerncotton trousers. I have seen soldierswearing mismatched outfits, that is;blue trousers. What distinguishes asoldier is his green jacket.Robert Borja“New classicconflict”To the Editor:Many thanks for your sensible andsupportive editorial Friday, October6, concerning Chicago’s latest ver¬sion of a new classic conflict, FirstDay of Classes versus Rosh HaShan-ah. I hope that the Powers-that-Bewill take an example from the wisesages of our past and find anothersolution. It shouldn’t be too tough forthem to be a little bit more sensitivefor a change.Lucy Y. SteinitzLecturer in the School ofSocial Service AdministrationFolkloreSocietyTo the Editor:In the Maroon's Orientation IssueI was distressed to find not only aninaccurate description of the Uni¬versity of Chicago Folklore Society,but no mention whatsoever of its an¬nual Folk Festival (Student activi¬ties: no man is an island; September29). Far from being a club with ac¬tivities for its members alone, theFolklore Society grows in size eachJanuary from a small group of dedi¬cated planners to probably the larg¬est student organization on campus.Well over 100 students work to¬gether to produce the University ofChicago Folk Festival, now in its19th year, and nationally acclaimedas the finest event of its kind. In ad¬dition. the Society sponsors other re¬lated events, including the now-annual Old-Time Music Conventioneach spring, in collaboration withFestival of the Arts.With the exception of the Conven¬tion. the Folklore Society receivesabsolutely no financial support fromthe University or its students. Wehave no trouble attracting the atten¬tion of major local and nationalmedia, but go unrecognized by theMaroon February 2-4. 1979 will bethe 19th Annual University of Chica¬go Folk Festival; there will be a 20thand a 23th. but for there to be a 50th,we must have the moral support ofour own campus.Anyone interested in any aspect ofthe Folklore Society or any of itsevents is encouraged to drop a line to«Box 7. Faculty Exchange, or to callthis year s president. Ben Davis, at753-3444.Carol EicherPast PresidentUniversity of ChicagoFolklore SocietyOLAS demonstration focuses on UC gradBy Curtis BlackChilean Finance Minister Sergio deCastre, who received his doctorate in eco¬nomics from the University of Chicago inthe 1950’s, was back in Chicago last week,accompanied by Agriculture Minister Alfon¬so Marques, seeking American corporate in¬vestment in Chile.About 50 people, including Chilean refu¬gees and several University students fromthe Organization of Latin American Stu¬dents (OLAS), picketed a luncheon meetingof de Castro and Marques, hosted by Wil¬liam McDonough of First National Bank, onFriday, October 6 at the Mid-American Clubin the Chicago Bank of Commerce. Theywere protesting what they called theeconomic shock treatment policy of themilitary government of Major GeneralAugusto Pinochet, and the violation ofhuman rights in fascist Chile.The Chicago Citizens Committee to SaveLives in Chile, which organized the picketline along with Chile Democratico of Chica¬go, called de Castro a fine example of the‘Chicago boys’ who have run the Chileaneconomy since the military coup of 1973.The economic policy of restoring freemarket conditions and opening the Chileaneconomy to the world market was initiatedin 1975, following meetings with Universityprofessors Milton Friedman and ArnoldHarberger, which drew campus protests atthe time.The Citizens Committee described the pol¬icy as successfully cutting inflation at theexpense of most social programs, includingfree health care, while incurring wide¬spread unemployment. Through its massiveincrease of food exports and shift to prod¬uction of exportable food products, Commit¬tee members said, the policy caused wide¬spread malnutrition.Harberger. chairman of the Universityeconomics department said that what iscalled ‘shock treatment’ is really the reduc¬tion of the rate of monetary expansion. Har¬ berger said he felt the government had noplausible alternative.UnemploymentThe Citizens Committee reported an un¬employment rate of about 15 percent, withanother 15 percent working at wages belowpoverty level.While unemployment is presently stillhigh, nonetheless, employment today as afraction of the population is as high as it wasin 1970, Harberger said. The Citizens Com¬mittee said that hundreds of thousands ofwomen, whose family income is insufficient,have joined the labor force. According toHarberger, the number of excess familymembers seeking employment is goingdown, and will continue to go down as con-omic recovery proceeds.The ‘shock treatment’ policy. . . controlswages but lets prices rise without restraint,according to the Citizens Committee. Har¬berger said that real wages have gone updramatically in the past year, a counterpartof the decline in the rate of inflation, hesaid.A Chilean government publication de¬scribed an important shift of land use awayfrom traditionally subsidized crops (wheat,the major component of the average Chi¬lean’s diet, was heavily subsidized under Al-lende) to more profitable activities, a six¬fold increase in food exports between 1973and 1977, and a decrease in food imports, aspart of the economic policy of the govern¬ment.The Chilean government estimates that17.8 percent of all Chilean children under sixsuffer from malnutrition, and other esti¬mates place that figure at greater than onequarter. The Catholic Church is raisingmoney around the world for free milk dis¬tribution in Santiago, said John Coatsworthchairman of the Committee on Latin Ameri¬can Studies.Food distributionAccording to Coatsworth massive shifts inincome distribution have changed patternsof food distribution.had characterized as “a resurgence of stu¬dent activity,” from its start following theSoweto student demonstrations in Spring of1976. The University of Wisconsin, Universi¬ty of Massachusetts. University of Oregon,South Africafrom 1passbook laws, which average 2,000 a day,Biernacki said. He said that nine-tenths of Miami university of Ohio, Hampshire Col-s black employees in South Africa are te Smith Collge, and Antioch Collegein a]16 k0ti°m threeJ°^ categories. have agreed to begin the divestmentMobil, Exxon, and Texaco provide South process “The movement will continue toAfrica, which must import 90 percent of its grow » R0sen said• oil, with one third of its oil needs. Mobil and Qn the ^ay following the forum, about 20Exxon are helping South Africa to stockpile SfUCjents picketed the presidential inaugura-oil, in case of a total economic embargo in tjon pr0CesSi0n 0f Hanna Holborn Gray atthe future, and Exxon provides South Africa R0Ckefener Chapel, calling for the Universi-with uranium, which it is also stockpiling, ^ t divest of its holdings in corporationsaccording to Biernacki. South Africa is th doing business in South Africa,only African nation with nuclear bomb ca¬pability.Continental Illinois, where the Universitymaintains an account of $24 million andkeeps its main payroll account, makes loansto South African government agencies. U ofC trustee Robert Anderson, Chairman ofContinental Illinois, is ‘‘personally respons¬ible for Continental Illinois’ loan policy” ac¬cording to vice-presidents of the bank withwhom Biernacki has spoken.The National Council of Churchs lastmonth withdrew its $40,000 savings fromContinental Illinois, saying the bank acts asa ‘‘financial lifeline to the apartheid govern¬ment” by having loaned over $82 million toSouth Africa. Five out of 20 board membersof Continental Illinois are University trust¬ees, including Robert Reneker, chairman ofthe University's Board of Trustees.Petition driveKatie Touart, of the Action Committee, de¬scribed the activities of the group last year,including a petition drive which collected2,400 signatures in support of divestment,and three demonstrations. She announcedplans for an armband day on October 12,U.N. dav of solidarity with political prison¬ers, protesting the Soweto trials, and takingpart in a city-wide demonstration at theSouth African consulate on October 20,which is U.N. Anti-Apartheid Day. The Ac¬tion Committee will be sending students toprograms at the Midwest Conference on Oc¬tober 20 through 22. she said.Seth Rosen, also an Action Committeemember, traced the nationwide divestmentmovement, which he said Time magazine from 1It is unclear how many businesses gave L& B a $295 fee for their services. Kehoe saidhe knows of only three, but Allan W’ind,chairman of Student Union, an SG splintergroup, said that as many as eleven did. Onlyafter bankruptcy hearing are held in NewYork will this become clear.As news of the affair spread, a number ofSG members—notably Wind and GerryMildner, former University services chair¬man-blamed Kehoe for the buying cardfailure. According to Kehoe. however. Uni¬versity staff lawyers said neither the Uni¬versity nor SG were responsible for themonies lost.At Kehoe's request, a fact-findingcommittee chaired by Greg Samorajski, an SG as¬sembly memeber, was formed to investi¬gate the matter and report its findings to theassembly.Also Monday night. Jeff Leavell. FinanceCommittee chairman, reported on its allo¬cations between July 1 and October 4.These include a $6,000 loan for the Regen-stein canteen project and $8,800 granted and$6,800 loaned to student organizations. Thismeans that $15,6000 of the yearly $30,000 Fi¬nance Committee budget has already beenspent.Elections for first-year college studentsare to be held October 30 and 31. In additionto the four first-year seats available, manyother assembly positions are open. Hmoerger said, It is my feeling, on thebasis of data I have seen and direct impres¬sions. that the overall food availability is ’now comparable to the period of 1965through 1970, and less than 1972-1973.Coatsworth said, The Allende governmentfelt it could not reduce government spend¬ing in areas of social programs and the stateenterprises. They felt they could stand ahigh rate of inflation for a short period.The Allende government was on a cheapfood binge, said Harberger. The Chileaneconomy overall is in incredibly bettershape than in the Allende years.The Citizens Committee has accused theChilean government of selling out the econ¬omy to multimationals. Normal trade pro¬tections for domestic businesses have beendropped, in the government’s at¬tempt to attract foreign capital. Accordingto de Castro, the most important aspect ofthe regime’s economic policy is to open upthe economy to foreign trade.Speaking before corporation executivesand bankers at a conference sponsored bythe International Trade Conference at thePalmer House last Thursday, de Castro of¬fered 10-year tax-free government guaran¬tees on foreign investments in his country.Coatsworth, after attending the conference,questioned the stability of the present Chi¬lean government, and the viability of long¬term guarantees in this light.Student protestsA reappearance of student demonstra¬tions and trade union activities in Chile,which are still illegal under the dictatorship,for the first time since Pinochet seizeapower in 1973, has been reported in the lastfew months. According to Coatsworth. thestate of siege decree put into effect at thetime of the coup, which deposed PresidentSalvadore Allende five months after his co¬alition had made gains in congressionalelections, was renewed this summer. Coats¬worth said U S. corporations are largely notinvesting in Chile, because of doubts of thestability of the military government. The U.S. government has withdrawn sup¬port from Pinochet’s government in the pasttwo years, suspending economic and mili¬tary aid, due to massive violations of humanrights.A spokesman for OLAS said. The varietyof economic restructuring of the Chileaneconomy advocated by Professors Fried¬man and Harberger would be impossible toaccomplish without drawing massive oppo¬sition, and requires the political repressionof the sectors that it effects most drastically— workers, peasants, and small busi¬nessmen.Between 15 and 30 thousand Chileans havebeen killed by Pinochet’s forces, and about100,000 Chileans have been imprisoned,Coatsworth estimated. About 2,000 politicalprisoners were reported missing and werelegally presumed dead by the governmentfollowing a three week hunger strike by theCommittee of Relatives of DisappearedPrisoners in May.De Castro said that human rights arebeing restored in Chile, and pointed to theadmission of the U.N. human rights teaminto Chile in May, after their requests hadbeen denied for three years. The head of theU.N. team reported last month in Genevathat he was skeptical of the government’sclaims of economic recovery, and that hehad found continuing evidence of systematicviolation of human rights by security forces,Coatsworth said.Coatsworth added that the Chilean regimewas noteworthy among dictatorships for notrelaxing its repressive force after establish¬ing power, as indicated by the renewal of thestate of siege.Harberger was unhappy to be involved ina debating contest. Coatsworth said. Afterthe C.I.A., the University of Chicago is theAmerican institution most closely associat¬ed with the Chilean regime in people'sminds. He said this was unfortunate, and re¬gretted that the diversity of opinion on thiscampus has not been adequately represent¬ed in the press.mm°f c«oTAI Oil CLUBThe University of Chicago Tai Chi Clubmeets every Wednesday atThe Blue Gargoyle5655 S. Universitv7:30and every Sunday at4945 S. Dorchester(Enter on 50th Street)6:30We encourage everybody to participate in one of ourclasses of Tai Chi Ch’uan or Kung-Fu. We study the men¬tal, philosophic, therapeutic as well as the martial aspectsof these arts. Please come and try a class.The Chicago Maroon — Friday, October 13, 1978 — 5SEVEN CHAPTERSOF PHtOSOPHYFOR TOMORROW AND AROCK CONCERT TONIGHTTOUCAN DOIT!It gets down to what you want to do and what youhave to do. Take the free Evelyn Wood ReadingDynamics lesson and you can do it—handle all thework college demands and still have time to enjoycollege life.You can dramatically increase your reading speedtoday and that’s just the start. Think of the time,the freedom you'd have to do the things you wantto do. For twenty years the ones who get ahead have used Reading Dynamics. It’s the way to readfor today s active world—fast, smooth, efficient.Don’t get left behind because there was too muchto read. Take the free Evelyn Wood ReadingDynamics lesson today. You can dramaticallyincrease your reading speed and learn aboutadvanced study techniques in that one freelesson. Make the college life the good life. WithReading Dynamics you can do it.SCHEDULE OF FREE LESSONSMONDAY CHICAGO THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY5757 University Ave.Room 133October 16 4:30 & 7:30TUESDAY October 17 4:30 & 7:30WEDNESDAY October 18 4:30 & 7:30THURSDAY October 19 4:30 & 7:30FRIDAY October 20 4:30 & 7:300 EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICSTHEirit cuyJOURNAlAL TMAN / DYLANMaster Misanthropespg 3,5If you’re consideringa Mercedes 280E,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 coilsprings, a floating differential,seats 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. HARVARD UNIVERSITYLaw? Business? or Public Policy?Which graduate program offers the best preparationfor a career in public service?On Thursday, October 19, Greg Lipscomb, a representa¬tive of the John F. Kennedy School of Government atHarvard University, will be on campus to discuss theSchool’s program in public policy. Students from all majorsare invited.Contact Career Counseling and Placement, ReynoldsClub, Room 200,753-3291.Inc.Sales / Leasing / Parts / Service2347 So. Michigan Ave. Chicago 326-25501*Manufacturer's suggested retail price. Delivery, optional equip¬ment, license, title, taxes, dealer preparation not included. fROST YOUV, CRRVfSRMD KOQL T0UR M0PSu/UA, You can keep a complete supply of snacks and refresh¬ments, including milk, fresh fruits and other perishables,right in your dorm room with the help of RENT-.A-FRIG.And the convenience of a mini-refrigerator can be yours forjust pennies a day.•COMPACT-yetspacious • HANDSOME - walnut trimstyling•FREE PICKUP and DELIVERY• VERSATILE - makes ice • INEXPENSIVE - Especial-cubes, doubles as end table ly if you split the cost with aroommate.• You can apply 75% of rent and 100% of deposit toward ourlow purchase price. (§)A(312) 433-6162 UsedBrand New 35.0040.00 Plus 10.00 depositPlus 10.00 deposit 3 quarters3 quarters (on avail.)Delivery Fri., Sat., Sun.,** ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★(BOOK BUYERS SPECIAL:!! FINAL DAYSOur special sale will end tomorrow (Saturday,October 14), so there’s still time to stock up ona wide variety of art books,.cook books, andgift books at low prices. There are also bar¬gains on some titles from our own stock —come in and browse, but don’t delay.And don’t forget, we’re open Saturdaysuntil 5:00.University of Chicago BookstoreGeneral Books (first floor)We accept Visa and Mastercharge****♦**jf**♦**jf******♦******♦***if*jfjfjfjfjfjfjf *jfjf i♦♦fjfjfjfjfjfjffjfjfjfjffjfJf!jfjf ijfjfjf |jfJfjfJfJfcn? hit iBy John PodhoretzA Wedding concerns not the joining of twopeople whom none can bring asunder, butrather the joining of their families, a calam¬itous occurrence from which neither thenewlyweds nor the families will ever recov¬er. The action of A Wedding takes place onthe wedding day of Muffin Brenner and DinoCorelli; the film's focus is on the reception,where skeletons like you wouldn't believepop out of closets once thought permanentlyclosed.The Brenners, a lower middle-class fami¬ly which has recently come into the money,just cannot seem to get along with the Corel¬lis, a family comprised of an Italian businessman with Mafia connections and hischic patrician wife. Their assorted relativesdo not mix well, and a microscosmic classstruggle ensues. Altman forces one to makecomparisons with Jean Renoir's great blackcomedy about microcosmic class warfare,Rules of the Game, but all the comparisonsare unfavorable. Renoir's film madewith grace and tact, whereas Alt,man's isunremittingly crude and cruei. Renoir'sfilm climaxes with a hunt in which the char¬acters start shooting one another; Altman'sfilm is set up like a shooting gallery, inwhich the characters are the targets andAltman is the man with the gun. He takes hisaim, shoots, and emits a triumphant laughas he nails each and every one.In A Wedding, Altman presents us with: abride who wears braces, a sister of the bridewho is pregnant by the groom, a best manwho rapes the groom, a lesbian weddingcoordinator who attempts to seduce thebride, an epileptic brother of the bride (whohas a fit on screen), a pothead sister of thegroom, and a mother of the groom who is amorphine addict. The morphine addict's sis¬ter is having an affair with the black butler.The groom's grandmother lies dead up¬stairs, and no one downstairs is informed.Altman weaves all these details masterfullythrough the film, until, at the end, we seethese families for what they are: hypocriti¬cal frauds clinging desperately to customswhich give them no solace and which onlygive the lie to their existence. Of course, weknow that Altman is not only talking aboutthese two families, we know from previousexperience that Altman loves to make state¬ments about our diseased society. No, Alt¬man is, of course, referring to the Americanfamily in general. The film's title is clearly ironis — A Wedding is The Wedding, Theoverture to the life of a family, an institutionwhich Altman sees as malignant.Altman plays dirty in order to make hispoint — he shows us no virtues. If Altmanhad to make his characters resemble realpeople, his manipulation of them would bemore difficult than he might like. Each relative (there are forty-eight) is worse than theother: either a fool, or a hypocrite or a gos¬sip monger and most times all three. Theonly remotely sympathetic character to befound in the film is, of course, the Corelli'sbutler, a distinguished black who has eonsmore class than his employer. He is thefilms totally "good" character, in markedcontrast to all the other totally "bad" ones.It is no wonder that A Wedding resembles alive cartoon.Altman is an old hand at this kind of caricaturing; he used it in Nashville, (the film towhich A Wedding owes everything) focusingbn twenty-four of the most ridiculous char¬acters ever to grace the screen. A few of hisearlier films, such as M*A*S*H and Brew¬ster McCloud, are also full of cartoon char¬ family is a cancerous, hypocritical and self¬destructive institution, whereas Nashville,Buffalo Bill and 3 Women tell us that theAmerican way of life is cancerous, hypo¬critical and self destructive. Altman, how¬ever, has been so "brilliant" that he hasseen these depressing phenomena and istherefore immune from their malignancy.And Altman, in inviting people to laugh longwith him at his Americans and his foibles isalso excluding those who agree with himfrom his unswerving gaze. Altman, his buddies and his sycophants can be married andhave families, can be "good" Americans,because they know better and because theyare better.Altman's overall message is that thosewho live in the "sticks" (Nashville, DodgeCity, Ariz., the location of 3 Women, theMidwest, the location of A Wedding) are agroup of racist, provincial yahoos. This narrow-mindedness shows one that Altman isthe true provincial. For a fleeting momentin Nashville, Elliot Gould and Julie Christie(both members of Altman's repertory company) appear as themselves, and they areAltman’s film is set up like a shooting gallery, in which the charactersare the targets and Altman is the man with the gun.acters masquerading as human beings.There are times when this device pays off:in Nashville there was the brilliant conception of Karen Black's Connie White, the "ni¬cest lady in country music" on-stage, andthe bitchiest when the public isn't watching.In A Wedding, Altman succeeds triumphantly with Mia Farrow's Buffy, the innocent-iooking sister of the bride whose feeblenature is an effective cover for her whorishness. In M*A*S*H, all the military officersare superbly ridiculous. But these cases areexceptions: Altman's films are almost unpleasantly cruel to their characters, makingthe experience of seeing an Altman film anunpleasant one as well.When Altman does succeed, as he does inM*A*S*H, McCabe L Mrs. Miller and Cali¬fornia Split, one sees that there is anotherside to him besides the vicious, crude one wesee in Nashville, Buffalo Bill and the Indi¬ans and A Wedding. What distinguishes thegood Altman from the bad is the pious moralizing which culminates every bad Altmanfilm. These movies always have some sternmessage with which to zing us as they fadeout: A Wedding tells us that the American very charming and very witty . . . And no¬body knows who they are. Gould and Chris¬tie leave, visibly disgusted, having given usa glimpse in the midst of all this unpleas¬antness of the "good people". They are cer¬tainly not among these yokels. In Altman's 3Women, we are given two girls from Texaswho try to live in a metropolitan fashion andfail, to Altman’s unmasked scorn. When oneof these hickish girls, mistakenly believingherself to be popular, tells someone that shewill be unable to attend his party, he says."Gee, what a shame," and we are on hisside, not our heroine's. And in true Hot¬ly wood radical provincial form, the onlycharacters in his films he exempts from hiswrath are those which come from minoritygroups (the black butler of A Wedding, theblack activist of Nashville, the Indian Sit¬ting Bull in Buffalo Bill). And through all ofthis Altman’s superior position can never bein doubt.Altman's elitist attitude has fostered anessential misanthropy in him and in hisfilms. His "us. vs. them" philosophy can beseen throughout his early films, in whichtwo or three non conformists try to resist the ruinous pressures of society (M*A*S*H,Thieves Like Us, McCabe and Mrs. Miller,The Long Goodbye, Images). His later filmspresent us with a world gone completely andfoully awry such that everyone is worthlessNashville, Buffalo Bill, 3 Women, A Wedding). A Wedding is the wildest expressionof his misanthropy so far, and there is goodreason for it. Altman took over the positionof Hollywood's Head Misanthrope whenBilly Wilder went stale and held that posi¬tion almost unchallenged from M*A*S*H toNashville. But after Nashville, pretendersto his throne began to appear, such as BrianDePalma (Carrie and The Fury), MartinScorcese (Taxi Driver), John Schlesinger(Day of the Locust and Marathon Man), William Friedkin (Sorcerer), among others.Altman found himself in the position of hav¬ing to maintain his throne in the face of allthose attempting to divest him of it, and sohis films began to get truly outrageous. Buf¬falo Bill, the film that directly followedNashville, shows us even more corrupted,more racist America than Nashville's, aworld in which the true noble man (the Indi¬an Sitting Bull) is killed by the false nobleman (Buffalo Bill). 3 Women ends with themurder of the philandering husband of oneof the three women, which for Altman signals "the end of the male breed" which hethen says is "OK with me." No single outrageous detail of A Wedding matches the outrageousness of the end of 3 Women, but theformer film does surpass the latter becauseof the staggering number of misanthropicobservations. The bride of A Wedding stumbles into a bathroom and sees her husbandin the throes of a homosexual act and shedoes not know it is a rape, in this scenealone Altman far outstrips any contenderfor his crown (for whatever it is worth).I find Altman's misanthropy distressing,for he is clearly a man of talent, energy andvitality, and he uses these qualities to discredit other men. He is sure of his elevatedposition, his elitism and provinciality leadshim not to study the human condition butrather to ridicule it. This is what robs Alt¬man of the opportunity of being a majorfilmmaker and social critic — he sees theworld only in terms of his regal position. Thebrilliant distastefulness of his movies leadone always to cons dc- him seriously, butalways in a highly unfavorable light R :>bertAltman is the He N ui i,. ^,es.4 >v tt f U T 4 iV 4 T. % y.-i't A >v 4 -w* 4 v ,4 *. \v 4 > ' .4 * *.V > >V 4 V- 4 > » * crt» cm j.4 *> -,V v ♦. v 4 v* 4 t. >V * *,v 4 v V * > v »s 4 v A v OH t* A A t A v4 til) fill V* A_Let a TI calculator help you make more efficient use of your timeThis semester... and for years to come.Now, more affordablethan ever! —lowprice:time a*5.'”’ rebatewith the purchase,L of a TI-57. rTheTI Programma- ^ble 57 is a powerful ^slide rule calculator ^with statistics and de¬cision making capabil¬ities to help solve repetitive problems...quickly and r T Taccurately.Powerful program memory stores 50 fully-mergedsteps for up to 150 keystrokes. Computer-like func¬tions include editing, branching, subroutines, andmore. Slide rule capabilities include functions of x,as well as log, trig, and statistical functions. 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Shows you how to apply thepower of your MBA to business and financialdecisionmaking. r-t0At its new, low price, the MBA Jpresents an exceptional value to xJrjX'the business student. See it today. \jUse this coupon to obtain your $5.00 rebate.Texas Instruments will rebate $5 00 of your original TI-57 purchase price when you(1) Return this completed coupon, including serial number. (2) along with yourcompleted TI-57 customer information card (packed in box), and (3) a dated copyof proof ot your purchase, verifying purchase between August 15 and October 311978 Your coupon customer intormition cert, and dated copy of proof of pur¬chase must be postmarked on or before Nevember 7. 1971 to quality tor thisspecial otterSend toTI-57 Rebate Otter. P.0. Box 53 Lubbock Texas 79408US suggested retail priceTI-57 SERIAL NUMBER(trom back ot calculator)Please allow 30 days for delivery' Otter void where prohibited by law Otter good mU S only © 1978 >us instruments incwpouled *5601mwnoJTT novwti nttyim an eto rim presentationA JOflN PMDOVKNE AND RIOVK& GOOOWfl PRODUCTION A JOHN GUMERniN flLTIPCTMUSTWCV JANE NOUN lOUCrtttS 0ETTC&4VIS HIAfAPWO*JON fJKtl OLMA flUSSET GEORGE KENNEBT ANGELA LAN5WTT SIDON rUX CORKHMLEMvtwvtft rwocc snrrn ms ®*deh in agatha cnmiTfs"OEATn ON THE NLC'flTfl flARPT ANDREWS15. JOHAR HVJIC COTVOSCb 51 UNO ROTAKREENPLATWANTnONTSttAnTR PIOCNGEDCfTJOHNWWDOGRNEANDRICTWRDGOODfItWRECTED NT JOHN GMMERTYN A WMnOMNT ■ ETO PIOVREPC rwerw suomq suoasrw OJ NOW SHOWING L_lJMRC OLD ORCHARD CtliTURTHoff r»>.in l st.itfSNORRIDQE RflNNNRSTQINEnflMf ProspectTORKTOWN ORLflNb SQUAREEVERQREEN RlbQE PL ftlftRIVER OAK5C.tlurrinr fif,BISHOP BRENT HOUSE5540 Woodlawn Ave.753-3392The campus ministries of the Episcopal andLutheran ChurchesSundayForum on Evangelism 9:30Eucharist 5 pm (Rockefeller Chapel)Supper 6 pmMonday to Friday worshipMorning prayer 9:00Evening prayer 5:00Eucharist 5:15Wed.Book Review onThe Road of Science and The Ways to God 7:30-8:30Stanley L. Jaki (The Gifford Lectures)FridayGemutlichkeit (Sherry hour) 5-6 APL SEMINARTwo sessions introduction toAPLSF on the DEC-20 computerwill be held Tuesday and Thursday,October 17 and 19, 4:00-5:30, Cobb102. No charge - all welcome.HYDE PRRK PIPE FIND TOBRCCO SHOP1552 E. 53rd - Under IC tracksStudents under 30 get 10% offask for “Big Jim”Mon. - Sat. 9 - 8; Sun. 12-5PipesPipe Tobaccos Today's Hair FashionsbyELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERSImported Cigarettes Cigars 1620 E. 53rd St.288-2900NameAddressCity _ . __State 2<P.TI-57N1gjHw £3 & d3 13 ftprice: ioomi i y? j w - ■ $60.°£ Uioo _Qi i : S^ | -BCjai _ jrir b •» w _r plus %' ^for a limited z £p| X X XO ■ 1-It's All Wrong, Ma (He’s only boring)As Dylan prepares to assault the Stadium this coming week,the GREY CITY JOURNAL feels it is important to re-reviewhis latest work STREET-LEGALBy Jared GellertDylan's Street Legal is as bad as the crit¬ics have been saying. Dylan's phrasing isawful; the singing is overdone, one-coloredand monotonous. Dylan's use of backupsingers is terrible, the band (except for“Senor”) sounds uninspired at best, and themixing is incompetent. Above all, there arethe lyrics that say nothing, that are oftenthere just because they rhyme — lyrics thatone desperately wants to be profound, butare empty, empty, empty.However, this is a Dylan album, with theconsequent expectations we bring to it, andthus we must look to see whether somethingelse is happening. We know that Dylan hasalways been a masterful and interestingphraser, that he has used to great advan¬tage many different techniques and voicesin delivering his songs in what he has madeinto precisely the right way: no one doesDylan better than Dylan. With a remarkableconsistency, Dylan in the past combined hisvocal work with music which matched andsupported his lyrics, and sometimes evencarried the song. Dylan has never been apoet for the eye, but always for the ear: hisnaked lyrics stripped of their musical set¬ting and vocal delivery are often significant¬ly poorer than the meaning he gives them insong.This meaning has always been at theheart of Dylan's importance because Dylanhas understood so many different aspects ofour world and has had so much to say aboutthem. If we wanted to know about politics,love, adolescence, the loner looking in, theloner going his own way, the gentle, the ironic and the angry man — to know about thesethings and to understand ourselves betterwe turned to Dylan. Sometimes he told youwhat you needed to know right off: whenDylan sang “Now all my fathers, they'egone down/ True love they've been without it./ But all their daughters put me down/'Cause I don't think about it," he told yousomething that you grasped immediately, ifyou grasped it at all. Other lines, othersongs required a great deal of thought inorder to at all understand Dylan's insights.And the work almost always paid off, forDylan had some great things to say.No, Street Legal is just too wretched for itnot to be deliberately bad. “Baby PleaseStop Cryin" is so blatantly overdone, yetDylan has shown that he knows how to do asmall tune in a fitting manner. The barelyrics to “True Love Tends to Forget" showthat it's meant to be an ironical song, but thevocal is without a trace of irony; and Dylanwas always the master of the ironical vocal.Dylan delivers these two songs as he doesevery other song on the rest of the album(except “Senor”), using a certain “harsh"style that makes all of the lyrics sound ofequal importance and thus making lineswhich should be vital such as the end of“Where are you Tonight," utterly incon-vincing. Dylan's proven abilities and thelack of an obvious reason for his vocals as hepresents them certainly suggests that hissinging is meant to be bad.Then there are those awful lyrics whichare mostly comprised of lines taken fromprevious Dylan songs, lines which Dylancombines in such a way that it sounds likebad pastiche, a parody that only jars andfails to be funny. There's the bad man whocould never get clean but is really good, thequestion of whether the woman can cook orsew, of “where we're headin/ LincolnCounty road or armaggedon," the manwho'll take a risk and fall in love, and more.The two big songs, the ones that aren'tthrowaways, on side one particularly dem¬onstrate this and also illuminate what Dylanmay be doing. “Changing of the Guard" is the albumopener, and the song doesn't make anysense the first few listenings. But staring atthe lyrics often enough leads one to see thatDylan is saying that he's going to get back atsome group of people, even if all the songsays in its confusing, meandering and un¬convincing way, is that these people havestripped other people of their innocence andthat they should be prepared for “the chang¬ing of the guard.” But far more than thissimple interpretation, what Dylan is doingin this song is writing lines which are paro¬dies of previous lines of his, lines with triviallyrics and lots of pretentious words, lineswhich don't make any sense no matter howlong you stare at them, like “renegadepriests/ have treacherous young witches/the handing out the flowers that I give toyou.”“No Time to Think” is an even better ex¬ample, for the lyrics to this song don't evenadd up to anything at all. The lyrics of therefrains are completely absurd, tossingaround hip words without any connection,e.g. “Mercury, reality, nobility, humility.”Combined with music that sounds like across between an organ grinder and whatpasses in Hollywood for bad Italian weddingmusic, the entire song seems devoid ofmeaning.But that is precisely the point: peoplekeep uttering these nonsensical nothingslike “duality” or "betrayed by a kiss on acool night of bliss/ in the valley of the miss¬ing link” leaving, as the song tells us “notime to think.” The song is a savage, funnyand bitter attack on "China dolls" and “highsociety" — all the sort of people who go tohip, chic parties where they jabber on aboutDylan and other myriad topics without say¬ing anything at all.It seems that Dylan thinks that just abouteveryone is like that, or at least that he'sonly concerned with these sort of people onthis album. Dylan then is sitting back andreaping a cynical, grim and perverse satis¬faction, as these jerks do indeed do act as hemust know they will. Why Dylan finds satis¬faction in this is just not talked about onStreet Legal, suggesting that perhaps Dylanis blind to the motives of his own actions.There may well be an element of maso¬chism here; the hip people who snort cokeare epitomized by Dylan's neighbors in Ma¬libu, and Dylan may be seeing himself inthem; his messy divorce may have trig¬gered a self-hatred which is given full voiceon Street Legal, but this is all mere specula¬tion for Dylan does not provide us withenough information to understand why hehas made the album as he hasWhatever te origin of this desire for thissatisfaction, it's probably also met by seeing how much he can get away with i.e. howbad an album Dylan can make and still keephis reputation intact and still have it sell because his name is Dylan. And so he throwstogether an album that sounds like a badparody of himself and then goes on tour spe¬cifically to push it. To see whether the soci¬ety from which he has always stood on theoutside is as stupid as it has sometimesseemed to him. But whereas songs like “It'sAlright Ma" or “The Drifter's Escape”taught us something about this society, oursociety, Street Legal tells us nothing aboutit. For Dylan's neighbors are but a highlyvisible periphery; Street Legal may tell ussomething about them, but it says nothingabout society's real masters, the way itworks, what it does to people and how todeal with it. This is the most depressingthing about this record. A man who can tellus something about or world and thus aboutourselves, a man who can help us to forge away to live, tells us nothing an insults or ig¬nores us instead.I, i*i*A*i’' ' ' , 'iVMViVi'iViViV fr r f 1 « 1>>»>!♦»> ♦> f||> tII* »THE LUTHERANCHURCH IN HYDE PARKAUGUSTANA LUTHERAN CHURCH OFHYDE PARK5500 S. Woodlawn Ave.Larry Hofer, PastorSunday - 8:30 a.m. Sermon and Eucharist9:30 a m. Sunday Church School9:30a.m. Adult Forum (BishopBrent House,5540 S. Woodlawn Ave.)10:45 a .m. Sermon and EucharistTuesday - 7:00 a m. Spoken EucharistST. GREGORY OF HYSSALUTHERAN CHURCH5757 S. University Ave.Boyd Faust, David Meier, PastorsSunday -10:00 a m. Coffee and Preparation10:30a.m. EucharistLUTHERAN CAMPUS MINISTRYBishop Brent House5540 S. Woodlawn Ave.Richard Jurgensen, Campus PastorSunday Supper-6:00p.m. Bishop Brent HouseMonday-Friday 9:00a.m. Morning Prayer5:00 p.m. Evening PrayerWednesday -7:30 p.m. Book Review - ‘The Road ofScience and the Ways of God”by Stanley L. Jaki (TheGifford Lectures)Friday -5:00-6:00p.m. Sherry Hour (Bishop BrentHouse)THE LUTHERAN SCHOOL OF THEOLOGY1100 E. 55th StreetWilliam Lesher, PresidentWednesday - 10:00a.m. Sermon and Eucharist•AXParamount Pictures PresentsA Lou Adler ProductionammfUjjiMjmo Q******* gjiummlWam iomry momYm&t&wrjv mzswuxsAM 5*1 'TfOHMOmrrrunmUM MOM am MUMMUiUxroncM a> lOUJtDUfiAM LQtHOSlMJtW)ouutrtor/ LQH JWL-LfiNOW SHOWINGAt a Theatre or Drive-In Near You! BASIC CLASS jLearn to program injBASIC on the DEC-201computer. Register atlComputation Center!before October 20 for 6|session course beginninglOctober 24. No charge,!but establish a DEC-20|account to do exercises.jFor more information,!call 753-8400. II ROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPEL5850 South Woodlawn AvenueSunday • October 1511 A.M.University Religious ServiceJOSEPH C. HOUGH, JR.Dean of the School of Theologyat Claremont, California“THE LAND AND THE PEOPLE’’5 P.M.SERVICE OF THE HOLY EUCHARISTCelebrant: The Rev. Charles D. BrownCo-sponsored by the Episcopal ChurchCouncil (Anglican).BUILD YOUR OWNBIG SCREEN COLOR TVSporting Events Arc An Experience /1s Exciting As Being There!Movies Arc Seen The Way They Were Meant To Be Seen!Pong And Other Video (lames Arc More Exiting Than Ever!Can lie Used With Video Tape Playback Equipment!Simululrit I \ Ih cfi’tionIt’s Like Having a “Movie Theater” in Your Home!AMAZING $90.00 PROJECTOR KIT now only $29.95Imagine inviting friends to sec TV Specials. Movies, Sports, on your Theater Size TV! IT* like viewing on a moviescreen! Everything takes on a whole new dimension . . . almost makes you feel like you're in the action! Can alsobe used outdoors, converting your back yard into an open-air Outdoor Theater! This new invention, gives sharpbrilliant TV reception comparable to commercial projector systems costing $2,500 or more. Absolutely SAFE touse. No electrical or mechanical connections to TV. Removes in seconds for regular size viewing. No special aerialrequired. Projects up to 5 x 6 foot pictures (7Vi Ft. diagonal) on wall or screen, even in the smallest rooms orapartments. Best of all. this amazing Projector is really simple and inexpensive to build yourself. Even a 12-year oldcan do it quickly. Enclosed Kit comes complete with unbreakable lifetime guaranteed Precision Lens System,11“ x 17“ illustrated Plans and Specifications and EASY ASSEMBLY instructions. All you supply is only somes#«|board or wood for the simple cabinet. This Projector can be used with ANY Portable TV set 7” to 25”. and will""FnTarge pictures in either Color or Black & White. If you wish, here’s an easy way to make money in your .sparetime.Simply assemble and sell these TV Projectors to your friends, neighbors, relatives, etc. Everyone with a TelevisionSet will gladly pay you up to $90.00 for each Projector you build. Make up to $70.00 on each easy sale. Your cost,one kit $29.95. two kits - $19.95. five kits - $99.95.SALES MARKETING Dept. NP 7P.O Box 2646Merced. California 95340Enclosed is $Name for Postpaid complete TV PROJECTOR KITSAddressCity/Slate ZipOffer expires October JH l!>7.s€111 CIIY 4)i ttli *'i i >Classical Music =By Michael E. Kerpan Jr.Johannes Brahms. Symphony #2 in D, Op.73.Chicago Symphony Orchestra. James Le¬vine, Conductor.RCA. . .ARLI-2864There are two main schools ot interpreta¬tion in the Brahms symphonies — the Slow,exemplified by Furtwangler and Walter,and the Fast, headed by Toscanini. Levine isclearly an exponent of the latter approach.Some have criticized his Brahms perfor¬mances as being too rushed. Such criticswould seem to be listening more to the me¬tronome than to the actual musical flow ofLevine's performances. In point of fact, Le¬vine never seems to lose the pulse ofBrahms's music. The orchestra always isunder full control. The Second Symphony'smixture of humor and drama is brought outfully. The lyrical quality of the music isnever lost. James Levine performs themusic of many composers well, but heseems to have a special affinity for that ofBrahms. Few conductors infuse Brahms'smusic with such feeling or make it seem soconvincing. The Fast approach to Brahms isinherently dangerous; most practitionerswreak musical havoc. Levine, like Tosca¬nini, shows that when used intelligently, itseffect can be overpowering.The Chicago Symphony Orchestra re¬sponds magnificently. They seem to do ev¬erything right, both technically and inerpre-tatively. RCA's engineering is superb. Bythe way, RCA has abandoned all its ill-fatedCampus RimBy George BaileyAdmission to all Law School, NAM, andweekend Doc films is $1.50. NAM and Docfilms are shown in Quantrell Auditorium,Cobb Hall, 5811 S. Ellis Ave. Law Schoolfilms are screened in the Law School Audito¬rium, 1111 E. 60th St.Cousin, Cousine (1975), directed by Jean-Charles Tachella. (Doc) Ludovich,(VictorLanoux), and Marthe, (Marie-ChristineBarrault), meet at a wedding while theirspouses, Marie-Frances Pisier and GuyMarchand, are somewhere off in the woodstogether. Meeting again, a few weeks laterat another family afair, they become closefriends, so close thaf they deliberatelyimply that they sleep together without doingso. Although once everyone believes thatthey are, they do. The film is cynical and su¬perficial. The spouses are empty stereo¬types, playing the heavies just so the audi¬ence can morally justify Marthe's andLudovich's exclusive friendship. The rest ofthe family is treated as an inane group; amember's character may be totally depict¬ed in a close-up of him slobbering spaghetfi.The hero and heroine are only trying to bethemselves, but Tachella does not givemany other characters even the opportunityto try, so the audience is forced to sympa¬thize with them (if it is to sympathize, atall). However, this struggle for individualityis a fraud since when Marthe and Ludovichdo something different, they decide to do sobased on the reaction it will get from thefamily. Skip it, it's not even interesting forits manipulative tools. Friday at 6:30, 8:30,and 10:30.Gulliver's Travels (1939), directed byDave Fleischer. (Doc) Max and DaveFleischer left nothing of Jonathan Swift'ssatire except a man named Gulliver and acouple of warring islands with little peopleon them. To give you an idea of how sugarythe film is, the war arose because the kingsargued over what song should be sung attheir children's wedding; the problemseems to be is that Max and Dave felt that inorder for kids to understand a simple mes¬sage, its delivery must be simple (as opposed to straightforward). The first half offhe film sets up this problem, the lastquarter solves it, not leaving much time fordevelopina a story. The animation is far less "innovations" as to disc manufacturing,such as "Dynagroove" and "Dynaflex."While RCA's pressings are hardly uniformlyperfect, the overall quality of their newpressings generally compares very favor¬ably with all other American record compa¬nies.This recording does not represent the onlypossible "correct" reading of the BrahmsSecond Symphony, but it is both fully validand compelling. Highly recommended.Antonio Vivaldi. Orlando Furioso.Soloists: Marilyn Horne, Victoria de los An¬geles, Lucia Valentini-Terrani, CarmenGonzales, Lajos Kozma, Sesto Bruscan-tini, Nicola Zaccaria.I Solisti Veneti. Claudio Scimone, Conduc¬tor.3 RCA . . . ARL3-2869Vivaldi devoted a quarter of a century tothe composition of operas, ultimately writ¬ing more than ninety of them. Until now, re¬cording companies have wholly ignored thisside of Vivaldi's output. An examination ofthe Schwann catalog reveals hundreds ofconcerto recordings and a smattering of re¬ligious music, and that is all. This recordingreveals that, musically, this neglect of Vi¬valdi's operatic side is unwarranted. Orlan¬do Furioso contains numerous lovely melo¬dies and consistently interestinginstrumentation of the musical numbers. Itgenerally consists of dramatic recitative in¬ terspersed with solo arias. Somewhat dis¬tressingly, the opera has a general shortageof non-solo numbers, containing only oneduet and a couple of choruses. But this isonly a minor quibble, all the music Vivaldidid include is lovely. Dramatically, theopera seemed a little static, sounding morenoble than exciting. While this might be anobstacle to frequent live performances, itshould be no bar at all to phonographic en¬joyment of the work.The performance is first-rate. MarilynHorne, is the title role, wrings out every pos¬sible ounce of drama in the music. Her por¬trayal of the troubled knight is powerful andconvincing. Sesto Bruscantini's appearanceas Ruggiero is also particularly welcome.To my mind, he is one of the finest and mostinteresting of Italian baritones and the rari¬ty with which he turns up in recordings isinexplicable. His performance here is excel¬lent. All other soloists are thoroughly credit¬able. In its few, brief appearances, theAmici della Polifonia Chorus sings impres¬sively. Claudio Scimone and I Solisti Veneti,presumably taking a short break from theirmammoth task of recording all of Vivaldi'sinstrumental music, are simply superb. Thepacing of the music is effective and the or¬chestral playing is uniformly beautiful.Orlando Furioso should be a must for alllovers of Baroque music, both for its intrin¬sic beauty and for the fascinating new lightit throws on Vivaldi's musical gifts. This re¬cording is an excellent introduction to whatwas until now musical "terra incognita."imaginative than it is in their Popeye andBetty Boop cartoons, their most creativecartooning which stretched and mocked therestrictions of physical reality. Gulliver'sTravels resigns itself to those restrictions.Saturday at 2.The Scarlet Empress (1934), directed byJosef von Sternberg. (Doc) Marlene Die¬trich is Catherine the Great, who comes toRussia - apparently the quintessence of nai-vity - to marry the Czar, an impotent morondominated by his mother and played by SamJaffe. With a verile future governor of Con¬necticut, John Lodge, standing by, Cath¬erine learns how to effectively use sex ingaining political power. An erotic and exoticfilm, typical of Sternberg: his ornate and bi¬zarre scenery takes the audience into aworld where the characters are only setpieces, where the issues of morality and jus¬tice do not exist. How good or bad the char¬acters are depends on their ability to reachtheir goals, regardless of what the goals are.Sternberg's cinema, however, reveals moreabout those abilities than does the action;his camera manipulates the momentary behavior of characters to uncover their truequalities. As young Catherine plays on aswing, for example, her latent sexuality isemphasized by Sternberg pointing the cam¬era up her dress, establishing the audience'svoyeuristic tendencies as well as her sexualcontrol over its mefnbers. Go see it. Satur¬day at 8:45.The Blue Angel (1930), directed by Josefvon Sternberg. (Doc) Professor Unrat, EmilJannings, moralizes to his class, himselfnever having discovered sin. Then he meetsLola-Lola, the singer at The Blue Angelnightclub, and it's all downhill from there.He falls more and more in love with her, butshe is indifferent to an individual's love, dedicated to love in general. As can be expected in a Sternberg film, morality is lack¬ing.Love is a sexual obsession rather than aneed tor emotional satisfaction, thus depict¬ing the power of sex that is without direc¬tion. This is the film that established Die¬trich and Sternberg and international stars.Friday at 7 and 10:45.Crla! (1976), directed by Carlos Saura.(Doc) Saura looks at two stages of awosn*n',s life ,as,a pine year old, when she loses both parents and claims to have kiI leaone, and as an adult. The childhood inci¬dents are juxtaposed with the adult's laterfeelings about them, commenting on the lossof youth and the restrictions on perceptionimposed by maturity. Sunday at 7:30 and9:30.Stage Door (1937), directed by GregoryLaCava. (LSF) LaCava's adaptation of theGeorge S. Kaufamn-Edna Ferber play. Agroup of stagestruck girls, forming an unof¬ficial sorority, compete for parts using thestandard movie methods: dedication, sex,hope, etc. LaCava reveals how underhandedand viscious this competition is and how it isimposed on them while maintaining a fa¬cade of superficiality similar to that of thegirls. With Ginger Rogers, Katherine Hep¬burn, Adolphe Menjou, Lucille Ball, andEve Arden. Sunday at 8:30.Je t'aime, je t'aime (1968), directed byAlain Resnais. (NAM) Attempted suicideRidder becomes part of a time travel ex¬periment, the goal being to get him to relivesome moment of his life. Something goeswrong though, and he flashes between pastevents and into the present. These eventsare taken from an intense, romantic rela¬tionship that had recently ended. They arenot presented chronologically, in fact, somerecur many times. As the film progresses,fthe presentation of events increasingly re¬sembles memory processes. We becomeaware that Ridder is unconsciously search¬ing for something to reconcile his confusionabout the relationship, but his examinationonly increases the confusion and further en¬traps him.Resnais' emphasis on editing and disre¬gard for temporal continuity is perfect forrelating this feeling. A subliminal continuitybetween incidents is created through simi¬lar placement of seemingly unimportant objects in the frame. This smooth movementexists even though'any pair of events maydeal with emotional extremes. A collectionof motifs is established early, and itsmembers referred to throughout the film,weaving the incidents together into a com¬plex set of relationships and engrossing theaudience in the confusion Ridder feels. A fascinating psychological study and depiction.Monday at 7:15 and 9:30«11> 4ll> I"Jarrett’s Solo Concerts: The word incredible is anunderstatement here ...” — nbfat''jarrett transcends jazz or any other pigeonhole; he hasredefined the role of the piano in contemporary music...”— LEONARD FEATHER. L A TIMES FIRSTCHICAGO SOLO PERFORMANCEOCTOBER 17th -8:00 P.M.'AUDITORIUMTHEATREBox Seats. Orchestra Parquet $10.30;Dress Circle, Front Balcony $9.50;Middle Balcony -$8.50;Upper Balcony - 750;Gallery $6.50Tickets AvailableAUDITORIUM THEATRE BOX OFFICES12 922 2110) and TICKETRON locations includinqail Sears andvlomqomerv Wards (313 454*777 for nearest outlet iCAFE ENRICO1411 E. 53rd. St.BEERBEERBEER Enjoy ourdeliciousgourmetsandwichesand freshfish entrees*1.7565 oz. pitcherwith this ad(no limit)The Center for Decision Researchof theGraduate School of Businesswill hold an Open Lecture onMonday, October 16, 1978The speaker will beProfessor AMOS TVERSKY, Department ofPsychology, Stanford University -TOPIC: "The Psychology of Risky Choice"TIME: 1:30-3:00PLACE: Swift Hall, Room 106ADMISSION: No ChargefROst rov*c**V£sAMD K<70l TOUR MOPSU/Mt/% - You can keep a complete supply of snacks and refresn-ments. including milk, fresh fruits and other perishables,right in your dorm room with the help of RENT-.A-FRIG.And the convenience of a mini-refrigerator can be yours forjust pennies a day.•COMPACT - yet spacious •HANDSOME - walnut trimstyling•FREE PICKUP and DELIVERY• VERSATILE - makes ice • INEXPENSIVE - Especialcubes, doubles as end table ly if you split the cost with aroommate.• You can apply 75% of rent and 100% of deposit toward ourlow purchase price 0RENT -A- FRIG(312)433-6162 UsedBrand New 35.0040.00 Plus 10.00 depositPlus 10.00 deposit 3 quarters3 quarters (on avail.)Delivery Fri., Sat., Sun Wonder what to expect at UC? Or wantto find a friend from last year? All isrevealed at Jimmy's.Must visit in person. No phone calls,please.JIMMY'S AND THEUNIVERSITY ROOMAPPRENTICESHIP IN THE FAR EASTSENIORS, GRADUATE STUDENTSLUCE SCHOLARS PROGRAMA major expression of the Luce Foundations interest in im¬proving East-West understanding is the Luce ScholarsProgram. Through this program fifteen young Americansof outstanding promise are sent annually to the Far Eastfor profesional apprenticeships under the guidance ofleading Asians in their fields. The distinguishing feature ofthis program is that it is not directed to Asian specialistsand assumes no knowledge of an Asian language. On thecontrary, students of Asian studies or international affairsare specifically excluded in favor of young men and womenwith professional interest that range anywhere from ar¬chitecture to zoology.The Luce Scholars Program is experiential rather thanacademic in nature. No academic credit is involved and theparticipants normally do not enroll in academic in¬stitutions. The heart of the program lies, rather, in the in¬ternships and job placements that are arranged for eachScholar on the basis of his or her inidivdual expressedcareer interest, experience, training, and generalbackground. The Foundation is looking for people withleadership potential and clearly defined career interests.If you are interested in the program, request a facultymember who knows you to nominate you to the Chairmanof the Luce Committee, Susanne H. Rudolph, Pick 422. Youshould then pick up the preliminary application at the Of¬fice of International Student Services, Administration 223,complete and return to International Student Services byOctober 20,1978.Congratulations and Appreciationand Best Wishes AlwaystoDAVID P. JAMESforten years of continual service, devotion,posters and good cheer.What would Doc Films do without you?The Documentary Film Group(P.S. We love your brochure!)( ID CVALUABLE COUPONt THREEf FOR THE PRICE| OFTWCBig color picturesfrom little color picturesmake great giftsBring us your colorprints, color slidesor color negativesfrom instant orconventionalcameras, and we IIhave Kodak make8x10 KODAKColor EnlargementsOrder threeenlargements ofany same-sizeoriginal, and we llgive you three forthe price of twoBring in thiscoupon and ask usfor details Offer \good untilNovember 3, 1978 ..... 10 'COLORPROCESSING ^ 1model camera -Kodak1324 E. 55th Street493-6700 [Winter Court Theatre is seekingProposals for Winter QuarterStudio Productionsbv November 10Proposals for Staged Readings ofplays accepted at any time.Proposal forms and informationavailable in Reynolds Club 304,or phone 753-3581.1701 E. 55thVALUABLE COUPON—CUT OUT miKEEP CHICAGOELECTIONS CLEANEARN UP TO $45Democrats Call:752-8415Republicans Call:684-4761 VERSAILLES5254 S. DorchesterWELL MAINTAINEDBUILDINGAttractive \l/z and2V2 Room StudiosFurnished or Unfurnished$171 to $266Based on AvailabilityAll Utilities includedAt Campus Bus Stop324-0200 Mrs. Groak FLAMINGO APTS5500 S. Shore DriveStudio and One BedrmApts. Furn. & llnfumShort & Long Term RentalsParking, pool, restaurant,drycleaning, valet, deli.24 hr. switchboard, U of Cshuttle bus 'h blk. away.Full carpeting & drapesincl. Special UniversityRates Avail.752-3800 WANTEDIntelligent, aware, ethically committedreaders with an open mind, a wry senseof humor and 75C.Invest it in a copy ofthe Christian CENTURY,a liberal ecumenical weeklywith a strong social/politicalcommitment.Features a regular column by U/Cprofessor Martin E. Marty analyzingissues great and small, sublime andabsurd.Now available by single copy.Ask at your local newsstand or bookstore.nmryd a ^a^~fl'fl,B'rrtr{rp~tnrrgTnrgTYy'o~o'o~a~5"aTnrTrinrrvTrrrrrTrrrBTT'>r^~r5TWTmnnnrfl'a'3TTnr8~8'e1| HEAR AGAIN STEREO> sells guaranteed used and demo stereo componentsat 40% to 70% off Regular prices. We feature com¬plete name brand systems from $75 to $750 - Watchthis space every week for specials like:The University of Chicago Divinity SchoolpresentsFour Public LecturesbyJuan Luis Segundo, S.J.Director, Peter Faber Center. Montevideo, UruguayonFAITH AND IDEOLOGIESOctober 18November 1November 15November 294:00 p.m.Swift HallThird floor Lecture Hall Pioneer SX 535 $110.00Yamaha CR 450 $225.00Dynaco SCA 80q $110.00Pioneer 9500 $225.00Dual 1229 complete $ 99.00BIC Formula 6 $135.00 eachBSR 310 $ 29.00EPI Microtowers $ 35.00 eachFisher XP 7 $ 59.00eachAnd Much Much More.HEAR AGAIN STEREO 7002 N. California338-7737 Open 7 days a week.f /A 7 ■/ > f *By RW RohdeChicago’s cross-country team, newly for¬tified with a strong crop of freshman, isalready looking strong after two meets.The Maroons began their official seasonlast Saturday with a four-way invitationalmeet at Spring Arbor College. Chicago plac¬ed third with 58 points behind NorthwoodCollege and the host school who had 41 and56 points respectively. While it was not agreat showing for the team, several in¬dividuals showed promise. Veterans PeteSmith and Dave Green placed in the top tenalong with first-year man Mike Axinn. alltaking home individual awards.Back home this Tuesday, the thincladsambushed Bradley University, beating thevisitors 38-21. The Maroons captured sevenof the top ten spots on their way to victory.Smith and Axxin tied for first, going fivemiles in 26:27. They were followed byGreen. Freshmen Vern Francissen. DanBrown, and Tom Matisky, and up¬perclassman Marshall Schmitt.To give some indication of the teams im¬provement over last year, two facts shouldbe remembered. First, Bradley swept theMaroons in last year’s dual meet, taking thefirst eight places. Second. Smith and Ax-inn's times were six seconds faster thanSmith s time at conference last year, whenhe placed ninth in a field of 54 and led theteam to fifth place. And this is only after a Milton prevails 23-19Time runsBy Mark WallachIt’s probably the best game we’ve playedin the three years I’ve been here. Coach BobLombardi said, after the Maroons had near¬ly stunned Division III power Milton Col¬lege. As it was, the 23-19 loss was not decid¬ed until the last disputed pass play, thrownby a Maroon freshmen. Do Kim. making hisfirst collegiate start at quarterback.Actually, it appeared as though therewere two football games played last Satur¬day night at Milton College. The first halfbelonged to Milton, and the second, to theMaroons.After a Dale Friar burst culminated afew weeks of practice as a team.Needless to say. Coach Ted Haydon islooking forward to a good season. “We havea better team than last year by a long shot,these freshman are good. We should be pret¬ty good by conference.’’ The Maroons gettheir next test this Saturday when they meetWheaton and North Central in WashingtonPark at 11 a.m. short Maroon TD drive midway through the1st quarter. Milton took the offensive. Theywent on two long, time-consuming scoringdrives, repeatedly picking up sizeable yard¬age on the ground.Following a booming 37-yard Scott Jansenfield goal that closed the gap to 13-10, Miltonresumed its attack, scoring on another well-executed. grind-it-out drive, this one ofabout 65 yards. Only a costly Chicago pen¬alty. after the Wildcat’s progress had ap¬parently been stopped, allowed Milton tokeep the drive alive. An added field goalmade it 23-10 Milton at the half, and left theWildcats poised to repeat last year’s 35-14drubbing of the Maroons.But this is a different Maroon team. Theycame out and took control of the game in thesecond half. The Maroon defensive line stif¬fened and the secondary continued its excel¬lent play. Offensively, Chicago went on along drive, highlighted by a 40 yard pass completion from Do Kim to wide receiverJim Jacobsen. The ubiquitous Friar scoredthe TD from the one. In all. Friar carriedthe ball 33 times for 84 hard-earned yards.Still, late in the fourth quarter, theMaroons trailed 23-17. They began a drivefor the Milton goal line but were stopped 30yards short. Milton took over on downs,needing only a first down to run out theclock. Instead of getting one. the fired-upMaroon defense pushed Milton back 15yards.Worried about punting from deep in theirown territory. Milton purposely took a safe¬ty. using up time and hoping the ensuingpunt would pin the Maroons deep in theirown territory. The plan worked as an added15 yard penalty put the Maroons at their own25 yard line with less than a minute toplay.Do Kim hooked up with Mark Daniels (for-nv rlv Mark Ramirez) on a sideline passDale Friar, shown scoring against St. Ambrose, had to touchdowns in last week’sloss to Milton. Then came a pass interference call on a ballintended for Jeff Foreman and suddenly theMaroons were on the Milton 20 yard linewith one last chance to score a TD and abrilliant comeback victory.Under heavy pressure. Kim scrambled,then found Daniels inside the Milton 20 — ex¬cept that the ball fell incomplete. Danielshad appeared to be hit by a Milton defenderas the ball was in the air. However, no callwas made and the game was over. If thepass interference call had been made, theMaroons would have had the ball inside theMilton 20, with one last play due them, sincea game cannot end on a penalty.Everyone thought it was interference ex¬cept the officials. Coach Lombardi said.Why the ref didn’t call it I'll never know. Butas I told the players, you never want to getyourself in a situation like that, especiallyon the road. You have to have the game al¬ready won . . . But it’s too bad to end thegame on a questionable call, after we foughtback like we did.By Dave WilkinsonThe Maroons soccer team scored twoshutouts in a week, trashing Trinity Chris¬tian College 7-0 last Thursday and downingthe previously undefeated Loyola Universi¬ty team 2-0 this Wednesday. The team uppedtheir record to 2-0-1,While not much can be said about theTrinity game, the Loyola game deserves acloser lookIn trying to find out why the Maroons won.one can not readily point to a single outstan¬ding player or a massive offensiveonslaught The essence of the Maroonsgame seemed to be in the use of their defen¬sive section and the coordination of the twoother groups of players, the midfield and theforwards, with this defense Throughout thesecond half, the defense started the attack.Even though the midfielders were frequent¬ly required to help the defense in stoppingsignificant Loyola thrusts. Chicago attacksusually were started by their defenders asthey orderly and smoothly fed the ball to themidfield players.Though not completely fluid. Chicago’ssmooth interaction between midfielddefense was still consistent. In contrast theoposing squads defensive play seemed to bea separate fragment of their game.;■ tt wasn’t only the Maroon’s defense that!* beat .Loyola Loyola’s coach said that histeam beat themselves The visitors puttogether some good offensn < driv^ bate in! ■ . minutes left in the game Loyola showed thatthey were worn out. Immediately after whatwas to be their last offensive drive a Loyolaplayer deliberately put up his hand to stop aforward volley from one of the ever-presentMaroon defenders. Soon after a Loyoladefender carelessly fouled a Maroon for¬ward. The ensuing free kick by Dean Carpenter rocketed through Loyola’shuman wall into the goal, ensuring victoryfor Chicago.Chicago took an undefeated record toLake Forest yesterday in their first con¬ference meet. The Maroons have anotherconference meet tomorrow at 1 p.m. onStagg Field. Even so, no official could take away thefact of the Maroons startling turn-aroundfrom a thoroughly outplayed team in thefirst half to a team that entertained upsethopes right up until the final gun. In the firsthalf. Lombardi pointed out. the defensiveline had not been playing a team defenseand lacked the disciplined approach andconcentration it needs to play well. In thesecond half, the line adjusted. Not much tac¬tically, Lombardi said, we just executedbetter. The result was that Milton did notscore a point in the second half.Offensively, the team was hampered byFootball to 17Split pairSpikers stay toughBy Rich McGinnisThe University of Chicago volleyball teamgot their home season off to a flying startlast Saturday, as a sparse crowd watchedthem down the Augustana Augies 15-2, 15-5,and 15-8.The new talent that Coach Rosalie Reschremarked about last week made itspresence felt on the court, as freshmanEllen Markovitz notched seven winningspikes. Even so, this match clearly belongedto the established players, and mostly tothird-year player Janet Sullivan.Sullivan slammed home a total of ninewinning spikes, but they were all in the firsttwo games. In the third she was too busyserving up the last nine points of the game,including the match’s only two service aces.This string of serves was aided by blocksfrom Nadya Shmavonian and good front linesupport from Markovitz, Shmavonian andJanet Torrey.In other action over the last week, GeorgeWilliams ollege defeated the Maroons inthree straight games. That match was atGeorge Williams on October 5. Williams haswon the league championship the last fouryears.On Tuesday, October 10 at Elmhurst Col¬lege, Chicago came out on the short end by ascore of 15-12, 9-15,16-14, and 18-16.Edged 3-2 This week promises even more action,with three matches at the Crown FieldHouse. On Saturday, Marquette Universityand Aurora College will meet the theMaroons at 1 pm for a three way set, and onTuesday the 17th, St. Xavier College willplay here at 7:30 p.m.Next month the University of Chicago willhost the Illinois Small College championshipseries, at the field house on November 9,10,and 11.Last night’s home match against NorthPark College began after presstime, so itsresults will be carried in next Friday’sMaroon.Top TenPointsWabuno Bay Buccaneers (3) 48Sugar Bears (2) 47The Wack is Back 37Psi Upsilon 36Laughlin 29Harper Hall 24Upper Rickert 19Matthews 14Talking Heads 8Quad Dogs 6Votes: Greenwood, Breckinridge, LowerRickert, Fishbein, Shoreland -8 Hitch¬cock, Alpha Delta Phi.F-Hockey drops openerBy RW RohdeIn their first game of the year under theirnew coach Marianne Crawford, thewomen’s field hockey team equaled theirentire offensive output of last season andcame close to winning their first game inover a year. Although the Maroons lost toNorthern Iowa 3-2 last Saturday, the teamshowed much future promise and got somestrong performances from some oddsources.Chicago scored the first goal of the gamewhen Trish Briscoe knocked in Alice Zino.Iowa came back with three goals before theMaroons scored the final goal of the gamewhen Elise Bloom knocked in Emily Bloom¬field’s penalty corner shot.Bloom, a senior, has been a varsityathlete in tennis and track, but this is thefirst year she has played college level fieldhockev. Another plaver who has been awayfrom the game for awhile is Gail Ell-ingwood. Ellingwood, a junior, played forthe Maroons before, but she took some time out from School. When she returned, shefound herself in the goalie box for the firsttime in her life. Although she gave up threescores, she had 11 saves, a good per¬formance for a rookie goalie.Despite a relatively good showing,Crawford was not totally pleased with herteam’s play. “We fell asleep in the middlewhen we gave up those three goals. It wasour first game under a new system and wemade several errors.” Iowa had severalgames under their belts and it was probablytheir experience that beat the Maroons.Chicago has a young team. Five of sixfreshman members are on the startingeleven, and except for Bloom, the other 10women are sophmores and juniors. All thisshould help the Maroons build a strong teamover the next couple years.Chicago played yesterday at Valparaisoand travels to Lake Forest tomorrow. Theywill play their first home match Wednesdayagainst Northwestern at 4 p.m. on StaggField.Carolyn LaGrange (left) and Rosemary Safranek (right) will team up asChicago’s number one doubles team at State this weekend. Cheryl Flynn is backand playing number one singles, while Ann Zielinski will play second singles andBeth Hahn and Lee Badgett will team up in number two doubles (Photo by RRodhe) Becky Chase and Janet Sullivan watch as Janet Torey takes a shot in last Satur¬day’s meet. (Photo by J. Wright)Football from 16the loss of Mark Meier, who had injured hisankle the previous week against St. Am¬brose and had trouble running on it. Fresh¬man Do Kim stepped into the breech, butstarted shakily. His dropbacks weren’tquick enough or deep enough. Lombardi ob¬served. Consequently, Kim was under heavypressure and was throwing off-balance. ButKim and the entire offense seemed to gainconfidence as the game continued, and inthe second half, Kim completed 5 of his 10tosses as opposed to 2-11 in the first half. Inall, the Maroons gained 177 yards throughthe air.This Saturday, the Maroons travel to LakeForest College to open their conferenceschedule against the defending MidwestConference champions. Mark Meier is aquestionable starter and tight end Joe 01-chefske is out with a bruised thigh.Last year Lake Forest buried the Maroons42-6. This year they picked this game astheir homecoming, Coach Lombardi said.They probably thought it was an easy win. Milton may not be the only Chicago oppo¬nent who’s in for a surprise this year.MCAC Blue DivisionLake ForestBeloitCHICAGOGrinellCarletonLast weeks scores: W11000Lake Forest 20, at Carleton 14Beloit 7, at Grinell 2Chicago 19, at Milton 23 (non-conf)Nxt weeksTomorrow’s games:Chicago at Lake ForestCarleton at BeloitSt. Ambrose at Grinell (non-conf)SIR LEW GRADE PresentsA PRODUCER CIRCLE PRODUCTIONGREGORY LAURENCEPECK ■'nd OLIVIERA FRANKLIN |. SCHAFFNER FILMr«». ifcIN. * « ' THEBOYSFROMBRAZILif they survive...will we?and starring LILLI PALMERTHE BOYS FROM BRAZIL Executive Producer ROBERT FRYERMusk by |ERRY GOLDSMITH Screenplay by HEYWOOD GOULDFrom the novel by IRA LEVIN Produced by MARTIN RICHARDSand STANLEY O TOOLE Directed by FRANKLIN |. SCHAFTNERR ■ «%T«ICT|0 Original Soundttack Recording Available on \K M Records and TapesMur re Home Swm| t>» LfcaJrte P*t|fNOW PLAYING at these theatres t*• EVTUrttWMWe n -FORD CITY ( INF* \ • W YTKR TOWER • LINCOLN M ALL • NORKIIH.F75Ct S Cicero 845 N Michigan Matteson NomageOLD ORCH VKD • WOODFIF.I.D • YORhTOW NSchaumburg N StartingI Fr« Oct 13 RIDGE PLAZAGary ln<5" VCalendar:idayn .With the Shah! Downs Hillel: Lox and Bagel Brunch. ,11:00 amRichard Kayeup of five lectures.The series was established by Izaak andPera Wirszup resident masters of Wood¬ward Court in order to encourage informalcontact between students ltnd faculty out¬side of the classroom, and they have provento be a welcome tradition among studentsinterested in serious conversationfWg > ear's series begins w ith a lecture by,Albert V Crewe. 0$ tljfc--dlyj-sion ofPh\siCU| Sciences, entitled Atoms jn JjJoRtion The lecture will be gi\en Sunday, Oc-tober 15 in the Resident Master’s apartmentat Woodward Court. All students, facultymembers, and alumni are invited to attendthe lectures. wbriph will all begin at 8:30pncivFuture lectures include: • Emoffems,Emotional^ Behavior. and Emotional Con-Ihi drvprofessor m the deparlment of p?y*• I m\ ersity Medical Centers Academicvice-president of the Medical Center ^ndbcte m*Screerpfcjy Oy JOHN HERMAN SHANE R & At RAMRUSarxJ CHARLES SK*&&AANVANDE. •' Story by JOHN HERMAN SHANE R & At RAM PUSProduced by HA{W GfTTES ord HAROLD SCHNEIDERDrectedbyJACXNOOSON APoromounrPictureiHl•Ej.n^crGDI'Jak e»*»n s-ivil by-Martin Maikfi Oary 1n<JThe Chicago Maroon — Friday, October 13/1978V ** / s-V/ i » - 7A - f, ’"jiVy*:fY<sv-in. 7 ,10 pm.it_\ Hv> roir Cnuu' (AiltT. Hlumn: Party at Swp pfe $f$ Ird floor of:^ihj.yian'dudiirt>o. ^ ■ %I :■ J . SAfunbAY " :Computation Ceiiter ‘Seminar; Tntrodiuction to Spea- ’ - * '' t t • n v ,, , ,nftn , . .. M<ajrST¥Aikn . e tenm? Club: Meets iOjOO am - 1 pm in Ida Vnw-’ “v • * A* ’ r ,v ' Hall. 3rd floor. « • 7^Committee-oil Western Europe; Manuel A7amirate. • 1 1 >, . * % A . _ . ’ _ & « *secretary tor International Affairs of the Coromtmist .... Compton Lecture Ser.ea: from Blettrons to Space: AnParty of Spain and edrtor of the Neustra He will speak • f'^PePhSetltat History . 11.00 am. Etkhert 133.013 Eurocommunism at Pick 596. 4:00 pm, \ ‘Women’s Union: Meeting 5:00 pm in Ida Noyes, abovethe Frog and Peach, ,Women's Athletic Association; Hotdng and Marshmal¬low roast Tor all member^ and freshman athletes atfe'00 in Ida Noyes Library.Hflieh Reform-Liberal Services, 6:15 pm.DOC Films: ‘Cousin. Cousine" 6:30, -8:36 and fCobb..IfC Karate dub: Meets in the dance room of Ida NoyesHillel: Shabbat- Dinner. Bayu. 5458 S Everett. 7:00 pmSign up in advance.Blackfriars: Open membership meeting. Ida Noyes Li¬brary 7:30 — all welcomeChristian Forum: First Paper On Forgiving and Not For¬giving Criminal Offenders. Brent House, 8:00 pm U of C Dames Club: Luncheon at the Quadrangle Club.11:16. am Call, 4i9‘3-54,02 for information-reserva¬tions. iiWomen’s Volleyball: U C Vi Marquette 1:00 FieldHouse .. ■-Soccer: U C vs Ripon 1:00 S'tagg FieldDOC Films (iulit\er’s Travels" 2.00 matinee. Cobb.‘„•» "The Blue Angel" 7:00 and 10:45 pm.CobK - ._ '■"The Scarlet Empress" 8:45 pm. Cobb.Baroque Festival: Organ; Michel Chapuis performingon the newly built Rockefeller Chapel Organ. 59th andWoodiaWn. Program; Couperin. Bohm. Reincken. de-Grignv, Dandriey. 8:00 pm.SUNDAYRockefeller Chapel: University Religious Services.Preacher. Joseph C. Hough, Jr. Dean of the School ofTheology at Claremont. Calif. 11:00 am; Cricket-Game: 12 noon at Stagg Field. Students,, facul¬ty invited to participate. ' .* , |K A;-«Rockefeller Chapel: Edward Mondffillo. I'mv.-rsitv Organist in recital, 4:45 pm. Service of the -itoly fa? ,• charist. Celebrant: The Rev. Charles D, Brown.' p«, : / _ . ' ■«■*;77;-*-‘ DOC Films: "Cria!" 7:30 and 9:30 at Cobb. ,v ^ *Hillel: Adat Shalom dinner in Hillel Sukkah. 7;0Q pm.Folkdancers: General level w-ith teaching, Ida-NoyesCloister Club. 8:00 - 11:30 pm. ' , v 4$".Law School Films: "Stage Door", 8:30 pm. Law School,Auditorium 7 ■ A'.Woodward Court Lectures: "Atoms In Motion’’ Albert V.CreWe. William K. Wrather speakers. 8:30 pm. Res!- ’dent Master's Apt, Woodward Court.Baroque Festival: Organ and Trumpet: Michel Chapuisand Maurice Andre' performing. Program: Handel. Pnr-celf. and Albinoni. 8:00 pm. . .Tai Chi Club: Meets 4945 S. Dorchester (enter on 50thf6:30 pm.MONDAYChemistry Department Lecture: "Instant Endor in Bio^logical Materials Using Electron Spin Echoes", Dr,W.B. Mims speaker, 4:00 pm. Kent 103.Yoga Classes; Begin at Gargoyle 5:45 - 7:15 pm. Mas¬sage Workshop begins 7:30 pm - 9:00 pm. •" -i; j'"''*Chess Club: Meetings 7:00 pm. USCF-rated Swiss tour¬nament 7:30 pm. Ida Noyes Hall Memorial .Room.Karate 'Club: Meets 7:00 - 9:00 pm in the dance room ofIda Noyes.NAM Film: "Je T’Aime, Je T’Aime" Cobb 7:15, 9:30pm. v ’ • 'Women’s Rap Group: Meets at the Blue Gargoyle inWomen’s Center, 3rd floor, 7:30 pm.U C Folklore Society: Planning Meeting for 19th annual'Folk Festival, 7:30 pm at 5714 Woodlawn, Call955-3820.Folkdancers: Beginning level with instruction, IdaNoyes Cloister Club, 8:00 • 11:30 pm.Woodward Court Lectures.The Woodward Court Informal Lecture Students are advised that however seriousSeries, described by a former University of the lectures may sound, the conversation af-Chicago president as one of.the great events terwards will be lively and interesting.CLASSIFIED ADSSPACEE. Hyde Park Lg. 2 bedrm. condo forsale.493-3822.Grad wanted to share house w/3 gradsSlOO-mtll. 643-7258.3rd roommate wanted, M or F to share3+bedrm. apt. with grad students.Must like a cat. 3300 N., 1000 W. $108per month + util. 472-1445.1 bdrm. $210 close to campus UC staffprefer. 955-6812. After 6.1 bedroom apt. 56 ? Cornell near UCand trans. 678-5503. $375.Rm. + bath to rent in private home Fgrad stud, preferred, laun. + kit. facil.$120. 667 1565. Aft. 6.Free rent for babysitting + kitchenchores. 2 rm. private suite/w/bath. 51and Dorchester. 268 1356.Room/board in return for childcareLarge Hyde Park apt. Ownroom/bath. Children 7, 10, 12. Ref.Req. Call 643 3792.PEOPLE WANTEDAddressers Wanted Immediately!Work at home - no experiencenecessary - excellent pay. WriteAmerican Service, 8350 Park Lane,Suite 127, Dallas, TX 75231.Good driver with dependable car needed to work approx. 1 hr./day, Mon thruFri. anywhere from 7-8:30 a m. Excellent pay call Mrs. Chaney 266-4555(9-5 p.m.).Fast efficient typist to type 200 pagemanuscript in 2 weeks. Deadline isweek of October 16. Will pay handsomely. Call 667-5620 before 9 a m. orafter 5.Experienced jazz pianist for gig Oct.27 Bebop, Standards Call Barry692-9494 NOWOVERSEAS JOBS - Summer/fulltime, Europe, S. America, Australia,Asia, etc. All fieids, $500-$1200 monthly, expenses paid, sightseeing. Freeinfo Write. International Job Center,Box 4490 11 Berkeley, CA 94704.Preschool teacher wanted; Part-timeafternoons. Experience required,684-6363.Temporary for one week ony.Distribution of posters and flyers oncampus. $3.50 per hour. Call Sharon at236-1996. Evelyn Wood ReadingDynamics.Room/board in return for child care.Large Hyde Park apt. Ownroom/bath. Children 7,10,12. Ref. req.call 643-3792 TEACHERS — Hundreds of openings.Foreign and Domestic teachers. Box1063 Vancouver, Wa 98666The Navy offers unique and challenging careers for women officers. Mustbe 26 or under with an undergraduatedegree to apply. Call CAROL Mc-CLEAN for more information 657-2171or 657 2234. MOVING MUST SELL! Selling fur¬niture from LR, Bedrm., and Kit.493 4336.Back yard Sat (10-14) 5750 S.Maryland 10-2, plants, toys, turn.,clothing, sony stereo, tape rec., etcCash only pleaseBeverly Shores Indiana Executivehome. 1700 sq. ft. 3 bedrms., 2 baths, 2family rooms, 2 fireplaces, 2 heatingplants, basement on 2 lot 4 blocks fromLake Michigan Beach. Many extras. 6appliances. Immediate possessionNational Park Lease bank expectedWORK SATURDAYS - Earn $$$ andhelp the fight against pollution. Highenergy work outdoors supporting thebattle for a healthy environment. CallDale after 2.00 p.m. Tue4sday-Friday.at 939-1987. ty.2!9 926 4298.Hide a-bed couch, lg. chest of drawers,dining set, 2 desks, 1 desk chair, 2 easychairs, lamps and bookcase. Oct. 15,noon to six. 5474 S. Harper 2B.Antiques. Quilt top, ladder back chairand rocker, leaded glass shade, cherryside table, blanket chest, childclothes, toys, dresser, matenity andother clothes, etc. Sun. Oct. 14, 11-4,5484 Everett rear 363 2519.Subjects wanted for psycholinguisticsexperiments. Will be paid. To register,call 753-4718Part time help with van pick up or station wagon. 753-8342 ext. 2516.Chicago Symphony Orchestra needsUshers for youth concerts. For moredetails call 435 8143. NOW 1972 Pinto some body rust, but a goodeconomical car. Stick shift. $450.324-7663.The U. of C. Folkdancers need peopleto work for their November festival onNov. 3, 4, 5. Will pay. If interested, call241-6910 and ask for Ellen, or come to ameeting on Fri., Oct. 13th at 7:30 p.m.in Iday Noyes. SCENESBALLET Begining and intermed. atIda Noyes on Tues. and Fri. From5:30-p.m. Call 752-2551.BECOME A PUB MEMBER-TODAY- RADIO FREE ILLINOIS. This Satur¬day night at the Pub, another reasonsto become a Pub member.PEOPLE FOR SALETyping of manuscripts and their revi¬sion; personalized form letters; tape UC Folklore Society; Folk festivalplanning meeting Oct. 16 at 5714Woodlawn, 7:30 p.m. Call 955 3820 forinformation.transcription and more-on word pro¬cessing "selectric" typewriter. NancyCohen - 378-5774. "Ski Steamboat Springs", Jan. 2-7Z7-2.$150. Lifts, lodging, breakfast 5 days, 5nights. Students and faculty. SpaceDISSERTATION TYPIST Evanston.Long exp. Selectric. 328-8705. limited; going fast. Write RainbowSki, 421 N. Post Oatc Lane H, Houston,TX, 77024 or phone 713 681-2741.WHPK 88 3 FM presents Radio FreeIllinois Live from the Pub SAT., Oct.14 at 10 p.m.Carpentry work. Steve 955-3245.For experiences piano teacher of alllevels call 947-9746.ting job M F 7:30-4 p.m. Excellent UCreferences. Call 767 5644 or 241-6129 or753 2735.COOKING CLASSES International orChinese series. Full participationDay/eves, max 6 students per class.WENDY GERICK KE8-1324.All titles 10% Off No Post Charges;Dissertations and Papers Expertlytyped and Edited Call QUIDLIBET at383-0276. Leave message. RESEARCHSUBJECTS WANTEDEarn up to $300 as a research subjectin psychotropic drug studies in theDepartment of Psychiatry. Minimaltime required. Must be between 21-35and in good health. Call Ron. Between9-10a m. Mon.-Thurs. at 947-1794. TAI CHI CH'UANAND KUNG-FUThe UC Tai Chi Club is going into itssixth year offering a full program ofexercise and self defense classes TaiChi Ch'uan is a soft, flowing. Balleticsystem of exercising. We study thespiritual, mental, medicinal as well asthe martial aspects of Tai Chi. We alsostudy Northern Shaolin Kung Fu. Thisis a fast moving, low sitting, high kick¬ing style which builds tremendous en¬durance. Tai Chi is at the BlueGargoyle every Wednesday at 7 30p.m., 5655 S. University and every Sun¬day at 4946 S. Dorchester. (Enter on50th Street) at 7:30. Kung-Fu is everySunday at 6:30 p.m., same place. Ourclasses are an alternative to jogging tokeep in shape Many women chooseour system for learning self-defense.We encourage everyone to take a freetrial class. Experience Tai Ch'uan foryourself. It could be the calming ac¬tivity you need to get you thru thequarter. We are an open system, allare welcomeFOOD CO-OPThe Hyde Park Distribution is a co-opselling quality fruits, vegetables,grains, flours, nuts, dairy products,meats, cheese, and more. Our nextdistribution is Tues. Oct. 17, 5-7 nextmembers hip meeting is Wed., Oct. 18,8 p.m., both in the Blue Gargoyle 5655S. University.HEY CHEAPIESSave a nickel on each friend thisChristmas. GARRAPHICS postcardsfor Christmas come in packs of 12 niftydesigns for cheap to mail cheap Send$1.00 plus 25 cents postage to FARRAPHICS 1369 E. Hyde Pk. Blvd , Box408, Chicago 60615.BACKPORCHSALESat. Oct. 14 12 noon - 5 p.m. Cheap!Queen mattress, infant needs, plantsgalore, dresser, kitchen articles 412misses patterns. Backyard 912 East61st St. 493-1997.CORNELL BAPTISTCome study the parables of Jesus. 9:45am Worship 11 am. 5001 EllisTransp., Cheryl 684-7747.FOR SALEFOR SALE: Mahogany dining roomtable and four chairs $99, white finishrattan headboard (double) and twonight tables $75 . 667 4607 eves, orweekends.YOGA,andART OFMASSAGEHealth, Vitality, Wellbeing, Anintegral part of the mind.Workshops in Yoga & The Artof Massage begin on campusMonday, Oct. 16 at the Gargoyle, 5655 S. Univer¬sity.Yoga includes the practice of Yoga postures,breath control, energization, deep relaxationand meditation.Massage, based on Downing’s The MassageBook, includes the demonstration and exchangeof the techniques of total body massage.Yoga meets from 5:45 to 7:15 P.M.Massage from 7:30 to 9:00 P.MClasses will be taught by Dobbie Kerman, M.A.,who has been teaching for the U. of C. communitysince 1971.Wear comfortable clothes and bring a blanket.7 sessions: Yoga $30, Massage $45, Both save$10.Register at the first session. Information and res¬ervations call 288-3706, 787-89853 answeringservice. PROFESSIONAL TREESERVICE221-0918fully insuredUsed Oak Desks$25°° and „pUSED 4 drawer file cabinets$2500 AND UPBring your own trailerEQUIPMENT&SUPPLY CO.8600 Commercial Ave.Open Mon.- Sat. 8:30- 5:00RE 4-2111 WHPK NEWSIf you are inferested in joining theWHPK news dept contact Dave Kahnat 753-3558 or at 753-8342 ext. 1010.Grad Students in the Mid, Law andDividity schools contact Mark Friedman at 753 3585 about a Monday afternoon professional sch. reportCOMEDYIt's funny but you don't need collegefor success but you do need "successwithout college" humorous comedy onWHPK, Sat. 4-5.TRAGEDYIt's funny but an improvisationaltragedy troupe will perform at UCTune in WHPK Sat. between 4 p.m.and 5p m. for Info.TUTORINGAVAILABLE4th Year student has had experienceteaching children reading, Math,spelling, etc. 324-5696.PARTYINGPlanning a party? The Pub sells kegsof beer to members. You must orderone week in advance For more in¬formation drop by the Pub in IdaNoyes.WORLD SERIESWatch the YANKEES battle theDODGERS at the Pub Eight tapBeers The Pub is in the basement ofIda Noyes. Another reason to becomea Pub Member900Can 900 U of C types be wrong? Jointhem, join the Pub. Eight tap beers,wine, munchies. The Pub is in thebasement of Ida Noyes Hall memberships available from the office of Stu¬dent Activities Rm 209 or at the doorBECOME A MEMBER TODAY!tW-SAM-MWCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANT* Specializing InC ANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A.M. TO 8:30 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 8:30 P.M.Orders to Take Out1318 Ea?t 63rd MU 4-1062 I•Eye Examinations•Contact Lenses (Soft & Hord)•Prescriptions FilledDR. MORTON R. MASLOVOPTOMETRISTSHyde Park Shopping Center1510 E. 55th363-6363 WOMEN'SRAP GROUPA women's rap group meets everyMonday night at 7 30 p.m. on the 3rdfloor of the Blue Gargoyle. For info.,call 752 5655MEDICALSECRETARY/TRANSCRIBER2 full-time positions available immediately in small children's hospital.Must be able to type 45-55 WPM.Prefer medical terminologybackground Previous general officeexperience with dictaphone requiredWe offer an excellent starting salaryand fringe benefits. Beautifullakefront location. Please call or sendresume toPersonnel CoordinatorLa Rabida Children'sHospital andResearch CenterEast 65th St. at Lake MichiganChicago III 60649363-6700 ext. 233FOLKDANCINGJoin us in Ida Noyes Hall every Sunday and Monday for internationalfolkdancing Beginning level MonGeneral level Sun. with teaching bothnights Good exercise and good fun!BEERLOVERSEIGHT beers ontap. Become a Pubmember today.Membershipsavailable at thedoor or from theOffice of StudentActivities, Rm.209 in Ida NoyesHall. The Pub is inthe basement.Asian Arts Series PresentsSouth Indian V irtuosoDr. L. SubramaniamAccompanied on the Mridangamby V. RaghavanSaturday, October 14th at 8 P.M.Law School Auditorium$4 (students with ID $3)Tickets at Mandel Hall Box Office.Foster Hall 209/212the concert.NAM IF T'AIMF IF T'AII IAE Cobb HallJE 1 fillvIE/ JE 1 nil1 HH ■ ■ ■ ■ 0^ m IvIE Mon., Oct. 16 IFILIvlb Alain Resnais 7:15-9:30The Chicago Maroon - Friday, October 13, 1978 — 19ON DISPLAYUNTIL MONDAY'S DISTRIBUTION4:00 P.M.*250 to students and staffwith I.D.IDA NOYES HALLRental period untilTues., December 5th Next Tuesday at 7:30p.m., The Maroon in¬vites all prospectivewriters to attend awriting seminar forfeatures and news.Also, an investigativereporting project willbe discussed.Join usin the Maroon office,3rd floor, Ida NoyesHall. The program willlast about an hour.Tickets Now on SaleMAB Proudly PresentsSTANLEY TURRENTINEandRICHIE HAVENSOct. 14th 8:30Mandel Hall iTickets: 2.50/3.50 (U.C. undergraduatesand MAB fee payers)6.00/7.00 (non-MAB fee payers)Graduate Students pay the MAB fee (4.00 per quarterand Receive Reduced ticket prices))