wThe University of ChicagoWoodlawn Children HealthCenter will close Dec. 31The Chicago Maroon 1978 Friday, November 3, 1978Photo by Eric Von der PortenPolitical candidates gathered at the Woodlawn Child Health CenterWednesday. By Eric Von der PortenThe Woodlawn Child HealthCenter (WCHCJ, operated by theUniversity department ofpediatrics and the Pritzker Schoolof Medicine, has been ordered toclose by December 31.Rose Bates, vice-chairman of theWCHC community board, an¬nounced at a press conferenceMonday that the Chicago Board ofHealth has cut off the funds -thathave supported the WCHC since itsinception in 1967.Representatives from the WCHCand from the University will meetMonday with Dr. Murray Brown,commissioner of the Board, to pro¬test the withdrawal of support.News analysisFundraising increases expectedByAbbeFletman,with research by Donald LinkOver $132 million, 87.5 percent ofthe University’s total income spenton academics, must be raisedanew each year, according to Pro¬vost D. Gale Johnson’s annualbudget message released to thefaculties two weeks ago. Thisamount includes tuition dollars,government funds, and grantsfrom corporations, foundations,and private individuals.It is well-known that, because ofinflation, the real value of theUniversity’s endowment and in¬come from investments have re¬mained relatively constant. Tui¬tion levels have risen, but theyhave done so at a rate only slightlyhigher than the rate of inflation.Maintenance, heating, and renova¬tion costs as well as salaries andother expenses have risen, leadingJohnson to conclude that “(the U-niversity's) capacity to maintainour present quality and to under¬take selected new initiativesdepends upon a higher level of(fundraising) activity than existedWore the recent capital funddrive.” (This drive was Known asthe Campaign for Chicago, an ef¬fort whose second part began inOctober 1974 and was halted inJune, still over $100 million short ofits goal.)In July, during President Gray’sfirst press conference as theUniversity’s chief executive, shesaid what the University needs is acontinuing development effort, nota series of five- or ten-year cam¬paigns.That permanent development ef¬fort is being planned now, largelyy a man who has spent less thanl.W0 months in Hyde Park,onathan Fanton, the new vice-president for academic resources^pointed in early August,Wedly is working 14-hour days, ilnd out how the University’s.upraising efforts have operatedthp Past’ lo establish goals fornext five years, and to devise a“^ued operating plan for each segment of the University’sdevelopment office.Fundraising increase possibleThere are some indications thatan increase in the University’s fun¬draising base is possible, eventhough at first glance it may seemthat, given the economic situationas outlined above, individualdonors might be less willing to partwith their money, and that cor¬porations, foundations, and thegovernment might be in no positionto dole out the same level of fun¬ding as in the past.“It is my own feeling,” said Fan-ton last Friday, “that there is nodirect correlation between infla¬tion and the capacity to raisefunds.”According to The Chronicle ofHigher Education, donations to in¬stitutions of higher learning frombusinesses, alumni, friends,religious groups, foundations, andother sources rose 10.8 percent in1976-77.Government support for highereducation peaked in the late 1960’sand federal dollars to highereducation are now dispensed at alower level than in 1961, accordingto Johnson, although support toundergraduates is still increasing.Government dollars, however,often have been accompanied byregulation, causing higher educa¬tion officials to look upon suchfunds as a mixed blessing.Gray has said there are in¬stances when the University willnot accept government fundsbecause the accompanying regula¬tions would compromise the in¬stitution’s right to make its owndecisions on matters of admissipnsand faculty hiring.The University was rankedfourth in 1976-77 in soliciting giftsand bequests, as compared to 20larger colleges and universities,to 3 Photo by Nancy ClevelandVice-president for academicresources Jonathan Fanton The WCHC, located at 950 E. 61stSt., provides comprehensive out¬patient health and social servicesto approximately 10,000 childrenunder age 19. Hospitalization andsupplementary medical care areprovided by the University ofChicago Hospitals and Clinics(UCHC).The University, The WoodlawnOrganization (TWO), and othercommunity groups founded theWCHC in 1967. It is staffed by sixUniversity-affiliated pediatriciansin addition to an audiologist, an op¬tometrist, social workers, nurses,nutritionists, and students fromthe University’s medical schooland School of Social Service Ad¬ministration.The WCHC is designed to be a“well child” health center, ac¬cording to one source. Contact ismaintained with patients on anongoing basis, not just whenchildren are sick. Attempts arealso made to ensure that staffmembers become familiar withpatients’ histories so that the quali¬ty of care can be maximized.HEW fundsApproximately two-thirds of thefunds for the WCHC are from theBoard. Those funds originate withthe U.S. Department of Health,Education, and Welfare (HEW)and are funnelled through the stategovernment to the Board.Fees collected by the IllinoisDepartment of Public Aid make upthe bulk of the remainder of thebudget.According to Brown, “the onlyreason we had to close (the WCHC)is because (Governor) Thompsonvetoed the funding.”After the Clinic received verbalapproval for its budget in June,Thompson vetoed $750,000 of theBoard’s appropriation for mater¬ nal and child health care. TheBoard decided to absorb that cutby closing the WCHC.The WCHC was scheduled toreceive $721,600 from the Board forthe 1978 fiscal year.Brown said “the duplicativenature of services” at the WCHCallows for the Center to be closedwithout detracting from the quali¬ty of health care in Woodlawn. TheWoodlawn Neighborhood HealthCenter at 63rd St. and WoodlawnAve. is operated by the Board andprovides better and more com¬prehensive care, according toBrown.The Neighborhood Center, in¬cluding an adjacent mental healthclinic and dental facilities, pro¬vides a full range of child and adultoutpatient health care.The Board has been underpressure from HEW for some timeto eliminate the duplication of ser¬vices in Woodlawn, according toBrown. He said the Board“couldn’t cut the whole city”because Social Security Ad¬ministration regulations prohibitcuts in needed services. He ex¬pressed confidence that “we dohave the capacity in the otherclinic” to lake on the additionalburden created by the closing ofthe WCHC.Brown also said the WCHC couldbe kept open if the Illinoislegislature overrides Thompson’sveto when the legislaturereconvenes for a veto session Nov.15. He said he considers the over¬ride a likely possibility and is“committed to keeping it open ifthat happens.”Bates: ‘no duplicate’to 3Graduate student housingranges in size and qualityBy Michael Gorman, withresearch by Anne SilberbergThe 1970’s is the decade of thesingle graduate student. But theUniversity, when it comes tograduate student housing, is stillHousing seriesPart IIliving in the shadow of the 1960’s.Responding to demographicpredictions of an increase in thenumbers of married graduatestudents, the University in the195u’s and 1960’s created one of thelargest married student housingsystems in the country. Thatsystem retains its name, but with aprecipitious fall in the number ofmarried students, it has changedin fact from married student hous¬ing to general student housing.This year, rooms in theShoreland Hotel originally assign¬ ed to graduate students werereassigned to accommodate thelarge entering College class. Moresingle graduate students are com¬ing to the University, while thepercentage choosing to live in stu¬dent housing continues to hoveraround 30 percent. The Universityhas responded to increased hous¬ing demand by undergraduatesand single graduate students byslowly shuffling graduate studentsinto married student housing.Two hundred ninety-three singlegraduate students will live in mar¬ried student housing this yearalong with 696 wedded couples. Asfar as many of the single studentsin married student housing areconcerned, the move is a welcomeone. In many instances, they havegiven up small, ordinary rooms forvery comfortable and well-furnished apartments. Of course,the qualitv of married studenthousing like every other sort of stu¬dent housing at the University,varies. If some married student housingis on the upper end of the qualityscale, the Ellis Apartments,located at 5529 Ellis Ave. and va¬cant for the past year and a half,were considered to have been themost wretched accommodationpossible. The turnover rate therewas over 100 percent annually.Director of student housing Ed¬ward Turkington said the apart¬ments. which held 90 students,were the worst in the housingsystem.The Ellis Apartments have re¬mained boarded up for the pastyear and a half. No decision hasbeen reached yet on the future ofthe structure although it is ex¬pected that it w ill be renovated andreopened as offices.“It couldn’t be used again ashousing unless w e spent a substan¬tial amount to renovate it.” saidTurkington. “The money might bebetter spent elsew here.”Election ‘78: Hyde Park politicsBy Kendall ChristiansenHyde Park voters are in for an intellectualchallenge this year, similar to the popularcryptograms often found in newspapers.Not only must we unscramble the confusedand contorted state of political events, butthere’s a second part of a cryptogram : mak¬ing sense of it. That we must do Tuesday,November 7, in a more serious game — elec¬tion of district representatives and countyofficials. This article attempts to lead a paththrough the maze, enlightening yourunderstanding of the local political scene.Congressional District looked like no con¬test. Incumbent independent DemocratRalph Metcalfe was expected to have littletrouble gaining his fifth term in Congress.But Metcalfe’s unexpected death threw theDistrict and its party organizations into atizzy, even before Metcalfe’s eulogy wasdelivered.Formerly aligned with the Democraticorganization, Metcalfe broke with them in1972 over the issue of police brutalityagainst blacks. The party, anxious to regaincontrol of the 1st District, acted quicklyafter Metcalfe’s death to slate 21st WardAlderman Bennett Stewart against the then-Republican candidate Jackie Brown, apolitical unknown running his first race.Imitating baseball managers who switchrelief pitchers so as to prey on their oppo¬nent’s weaknesses, the Republicansregrouped and chose to remove Brown fromthe ticket. A. A. “Sammy” Rayner is theirnew choice, a switch rejected by the StateBoard of Elections, but approved by thecourts. Republicans hope to capitalize onwidespread disenchantment with theDemocrats’ choice of Stewart, whichangered many black and white in¬dependents, Metcalfe’s strongest sup¬porters.While Brown was still on the ballot, in¬dependents began to organize a write-incampaign for Metcalfe. Even though dead,Metcalfe’s “election” would force a specialelection next year and have the effect ofopening up the process to those closed out ofit by the secretive actions of the past fewweeks.With Rayner on* the ballot independentshave decided to drop the write-in bid andwork for his election. He is more of a knownquantity than 27-year-old Brown. Rayner, aformer 6th ward Alderman, has also receiv¬ed the endorsement of the IndependentVoters of Illinois. Time has not permittedany issues other than that of the politicalprocess to emerge.Don’t think the puzzle is finished justbecause you may have figured out the Con¬gressional race picture. Unfortunately, thestate representative contest is just as con¬voluted and requires another deep breathbefore jumping in.Hyde Park lies in the 24th legislativeDistrict. In Illinois each district has threedelegates in the House of Representatives,elected every two years, and one StateSenator, elected every four years. Only therepresentative seats in the 24th District areup this time around.The ballot shows seven candidates forrepresentative rather than the usual four.“Why” is what requires the explanation.Illinois law provides for a unique systemof cumulative voting for state represen¬tatives. Each party usually slates two can¬didates for the three positions. Voters aregiven three votes to split between them andcan choose to divide them in one of threeways. Options are casting a “bullet” — giv¬ing all three votes to one candidate, splittingthem equally between three candidates, orgiving one-and-a-half votes to each of twocandidates (the result of a straight nartvvote). The reasoning behind this compli¬cated method is to ensure the eieriictti/i?,, 2minority party candidate and help preservethe two-party system, especially in heavilyone-party areas.The confusion is caused by the entry onthe ballot of the Lewis A. H. Caldwell Party,named for its founder and major candidate.Caldwell, an incumbent Democrat, lost thatparty’s primary, but chose to take ad¬vantage of a quirk in state election laws toget back on the ballot Caldwell’s stunt jeopardizes the fate ofRepublican State Representative BernardEpton, a University alumnus, generally con¬sidered an excellent incumbent. In the citytwo Democrats usually are elected fromeach district; the third seat would normallygo to a Republican. But Epton may lose hisseat because of the third-party slate ofCaldwell, Claude Hopewell, and EssieTyler. Hopewell and Tyler are admittedlyon the ballot simply to fill the ticket; as isEpton’s running mate Republican HenryClark.The legitimate Democratic candidatesare primary winners Barbara Flynn Currieand Carol Mosely Braun. Both aregraduates of the University and active inlocal organizations. Currie supportseconomic development help for cities andprocedural reforms in government. Braunidentifies with quality education, collectivebargaining for public employees, and con¬sumer protection.So here’s the picture: four serious can¬didates for three state representative seats.Epton, Currie, Braun, and Caldwell allfavor the Equal Rights Amendment (thoughCaldwell’s claim to fame is sabotaging itspassage by abstaining on a crucial vote).The first three have received the endorse¬ment oi ine Independent Voters of Illinois(IVI). Currie and Braun are expected to winhandily; Epton and Caldwell to run a closerace for the third seat.The State Board of Elections is expectedto rule before the election on whether or notto allow candidates Clark, Hopewell, andTyler to withdraw from the race. Thatwould clear up the ballot and make it a con¬test between the serious candidates.)So ends the “unscramble the Hyde Parkpolitical scene” game. How did you score?Fortunately, the educational level of thisdistrict is high enough to alleviate one worryof local political analysts that the sheer con¬fusion will be enough to keep some votersaway.The major Cook County races are muchmore clearly defined as they simply containthe classic match-ups between oneDemocrat and one Republican. Democratsusually carry a significantly greater ad¬vantage in city voting while Republicansnormally carry the suburbs.The County race with the highest visibilityis that for Sheriff. Democratic incumbentRichard Elrod is generally considered tohave performed admirably in that job. But he has received a significant amount ofcriticism for the inhumane, poorly run con¬dition of the Cook County Jail. It has anescape record envied only by inmates ofother jails. That criticism has come fromseveral responsible parties but probablywon’t be enough to catapult challengerRepublican Donald Mulack into the position.Mulack, an assistant in the State AttorneyGeneral’s office, takes a “good govern¬ment” approach to sheriff. While an ad¬mirable stance, it also has the effect ofangering his party cronies who look to thesheriff’s office for patronage powers, asdoes Elrod.The Sheriff’s race is in the limelight, too,because it’s earmarked as a “target” raceby the Confederation of Police. The Con¬federation is urging the city’s 12,000 policeofficers to vote for Mulack againstDemocrat Elrod to send a message toMayor Michael Bilandic. That message:grant police and firefighters collectivebargaining power. The Sheriff’s race waschosen for its closeness with the targetingexpected to generate as many of 50,000 votesfor Mulack.For County Clerk, it’s Democrat StanleyKusper attempting to retain his job againstRepublican Virginia Hay ter, President ofHoffman Estates. Kusper has generally per¬formed well and is expected to have littletrouble against his less-experiencedchallenger though Hayter won the IVI’s en¬dorsement.Closely matched races for Cook CountyAssessor and Treasurer seem determined toyield good results regardless of whom iselected.For Assessor, President of the IllinoisSenate, Democrat Thomas Hynes, facesRepublican insurance broker Terrel Clarke.Hynes compiled an excellent record ofleadership in the legislature, particularly inproperty tax issues, and is generallyfavored over the also well-qualified Clarke.For Treasurer, Democratic incumbentEdward Rosewell is likely to weather astrong challenge from Republican EdwardGjertsen. Both seem well-prepared to wise¬ly invest Cook County’s money making thisrace tough to pick.The membership of the Cook CountyBoard of Commissioners is also up for elec¬tion. The legislative body of the County, itssixteen members include ten from Chicago.Of the twenty candidates (ten Republicans,ten Democrats), the ten incumbents — all Democrats — are seeking reelects Imost prominent of them is current d T|*President George Dunne, consider!an overwhelming favorite over Z?, **Joseph Woods. ^engRepublican candidate for rSuperintendent of Schools Dr. Anthres has a novel approach to the <5Tor'lseeks - he wants it eventually aboS^ ,respected professional educator t Asimply thinks the need for it no lonpists. Incumbent Democrat Richarn »,exwick thinks that it is still importantma„c°entlnUehiSgenerallyl^Also on the ballot in this election arefor three seats for Metropolitan San?District Commissioners, two for Boa h '(real estate assessment) Appeals Com* •sioners, one for Appellate Court SZthree to fill vacancies on the Cook Coin'judicial circuit, and one for Circuit c2Judge. Twenty-four judges are also runZfor retention as Supreme, Appellate ore,cuit Court judges in another uniqueb JUnois process. )There is special interest in theMetropolitan Sanitary District raceRepublican Deloris Foster has distinguished herself from the pack by her reputationas a strong internal critic. She’s seekingelection to the post to which she was a& Ipointed by Governor Thompson. Joanne!Alter, like Foster and Linda Huff, is endors^ed by the IVI, though she’s lost some of thestrong support from independents which shehad once claimed.The Appellate Court race has generatedunusual attention, too. Republicans haveput together a “blue-ribbon slate” in CalvinSawyier, Brian Duff, and Jon Waltz, the1first Republican challenge to theDemocratic incumbents. In Illinois’ strangemethod of “matching” judicial contests,Sawyier, a University alum, faces DomRiz-zi, generally considered an excellent judgeby court observers.More information than space provides)here can be found in the October 15 ChicagoTribune League of Women Voter’s Non |partisan Voter’s Guide. Another goodsource is the Independent Voters of Illinois.Polls will be open between 6 a m. and 6p.m. Tuesday. Call the Board of ElectionCommissioners at 269-7900 to find out whereyou vote.Rockefeller dean search underwayBy Andrew PatnerAs Rockefeller Memorial Chapel entersits second fifty years, a search committeefor a new dean is “not anywhere near” asingle candidate, according to a member ofthe committee.E. Spencer Parsons, dean of the Chapelsince 1965 and professor in the divinityschool, will leave the University on July 1,1979 to become the New England represen¬tative of a Kansas City based health ser¬vices group. Health Resources, Inc. wasfounded by a former student of Parsons andis involved in physician placement inunderserved areas. The group also works toestablish medical cooperatives and com¬munity organizations. Parsons will move toWeymouth, Massachusetts and will alsoserve as a field representative for the divini¬ty school through 1980.The search committee is chaired by Dr.Chase Kimball, professor of psychiatry, andincludes Wayne Booth, George M. PullmanDistinguished Service Professor in theDepartment of English and the College;Chris Gay resident head of ChamberlinHouse; Joseph Kitagawa, dean of the divini¬ty school: and Edward Rosenheim, pro¬fessor of English. Charles M. Gray, pro¬fessor of history, is a consultant to the com¬mittee.The committee has been meeting sinceMarch and is now doing so on a weeklybasis, according to Kimball. He said thatthere are now a “number of leading in¬dividuals in mind” but that many more can¬didates will be interviewed before thesearch is narrowed downKimball also said the committee is look¬ ing outside of the University as well as at thefaculty. “The University should always lookoutside first in a search of this nature,” hesaid.The prospective dean must meet two“rough requirements,” Kimball said. Hemust “first fit in to the academic nature ofthe University in terms of teaching andresearch ” As such, the dean would mostlikely be affiliated with the divinity school,the College, or one of the interdisciplinarvcommittees.The second quality the committee is look¬ing for is “a potentiality as a symbolicleader of the ministries in the community.”Booth said that the deanship “has beenand should continue to be one of the most im¬portant positions in the University.” He alsoemphasized the involvement the dean musthave with the community, what he called“the cathedral role of the Chapel.”Gay said that she “would like to seesomeone who would be an exciting moralleader for students and would involve themin the activities of the chapel more so thanthey are being now.”Admitting that it was unusual for a resi¬dent head to sit on a University searchcommittee, Gay said that she probablyreceived the appointment because “I am awoman, I attend Chapel, and I am involvedwith students.” Gay also does research inbiochemistry at Billings Hospital.Historically, the dean has been a Protes¬tant. However, most members of the com¬mittee said that Protestantism was not anecessity. Some said it might not even bedesirable.“We are looking for someone who is acombination of Jesus Christ, Mahatma Gandhi, and a top-notch administrator,’Kitagawa said. “There are not too many]like that who are available.“Normally it has been a Protestant, |Katagawa continued. “But we are not looking for an exclusive Protestant. We want]someone with an openness to all religionsand a strong humanist tradition.”Rosenheim, the only Jew on the commit¬tee, said “I think he should be a Protes¬tant.”The committee has interviewed whitemale Protestants for the most part. Oneminority candidate has been interviewedand at least two women will speak to thecommittee. “We have pledged to look atvarious types of candidates,” Kitagawasaid.‘Light and FireWhile the search for a new dean could goon indefinitely, the Chapel’s new stainedglass window will be completed and install¬ed by May of 1979.The new cinquefoil (five-leaf) window isproceeding according to schedule, ac¬cording to Dean E. Spencer Parsons^Designed by Harold Haydon,art emeritus and art critic for the ChicagSun-Times, the window will be located in tnNorth Window above the altar. Twelve teeacross, it is based on the dual themes oLight and Fire suggested by Parsons.Haydon described the window as “a spirgalaxy in the center which resolves mtongues of flame and then into the jpetals or leaves of the cinquefoil on a digreen background.”7 — The Chicaoo Maroon — Friday. November t 1978Graduate student housing varies in qualityfrom 1 Laughlin HallOnlv a few steps lower than the EIlisAnartments on the scale of decrepitude,iluehlin Hall stands out as the mostIhvsically unappealing dormitory still open-f” its doors. The building, a low brick struc¬ture is located at 55th St. and BlackstoneAve Inside, narrow hallways, hardly widepnough to walk two abreast, lead past rows. equally narrow cubicles, each filled by aj5edMa desk, a chair, and a closet-sizedbathroom.Although Laughlin, compared to otherctudent housing, presents a sorry picture,the students who live there, most of whomattend the Graduate School of Business,seem surprisingly cheerful. In spite of abuilding most agree is falling down —residents cite faulty doors, crumbling ceil¬ings and loose floorboards - and in spite ofthe absence of kitchen facilities, forcingmost to take their meals at Pierce Tower,Laughlin apparently possesses a communi¬ty spirit that residents truly appreciate. Ac¬cording to residents, students help oneanother a great deal with work and inter¬views. Residents even elect their own resi¬dent head. Turkington: ‘not proud’The problems with Laughlin have notescaped the attention of the student housingoffice. “The places I am not proud of,” saidTurkington, “are Laughlin and Harper.”But because of lack of money and a pro¬jected decline in enrollment, Laughlin, fornow, will continue to house students. The other building Turkington mentioned,Harper Hall, does not leave nearly so bad animpression as Laughlin. Located on HarperAve., near 54th St., Harper’s major ad¬vantages, according to residents, are itsconvenient location near shopping, and itskitchen facilities. “It’s very simple to livehere,” said Lelon Bohne, a second year GSBstudent. “For students who will only be heretwo years, why bother looking for an apart¬ment?” she added.About 60 students live at Harper. Thesingle rooms are more spacious thanLaughlin and well furnished, and its ap¬pearance is reminiscent of an old hotel.“There’s a strong community,” saidLanette Fostestad, first year GSB student,much of it revolving around the basementkitchen. “You meet people in the kitchen,”she said. “They’re very quick to introducethemselves.”The social life of Broadview Hall, anothergraduate residence on Hyde Park Blvd.near 56th St. also revolves round its kitchenand dining room.“This is the social spot of the campus,”said one political science stuaeni. “There’sa community spirit, and the ambience isless that of a dorm than of a student runapartment building.” With about 190residents, Broadview is a good deal largerthan either Laughlin or Harper. The highceilings and large common rooms convey aspaciousness that the other two lack.Like the Shoreland, the principle problemwith Broadview is its distance from cam¬pus. But complaints about the illtimed ar¬ rivals of campus buses are the only com¬plaints heard there. Said a second year GSBstudent, “It’s the best place to live.”I-HouseInternational House accommodates 500graduate students, more than any othergraduate residence. It has its drawbacks,according to residents. The rooms aresmall, the roaches numerous, and studentsare required to purchase linen andtelephone services. According to LesliePeet, a graduate art history student who liv¬ed at International House three years, “Ihad one of the larger rooms, and it was stilllike living in a closet. There is a certain lackof privacy.”However, the food is among the best oncampus. Residents pay $145 per quarter forthe food service, which entitles them to buymeals at reduced rates.Despite its name, only 30 percent of itsresidents are from foreign nations.However, this proportion is sufficent to giveInternational House a flavor unlike otherdormitories. Residents attest that thelounge, library, and dining hall are centersof social activity.The overwhelming majority of graduate students in student housing are first yearstudents. One explanation for this is thatmost students who anticipate a long stay atChicago find the search for an apartmentworthwhile. Shorter programs, such asthose of GSB and even the Law School,make the relative ease of obtaining studenthousing look very good indeed.The strength and the weakness of the stu¬dent housing system is variety. Varietymeans on the one hand a large spectrum ofdifferent living situations from which tochoose, and consequently a better chance ofsatisfying different tastes. But variety alsomeans variation in quality. When comparedto Broadview, the narrow corridors andcloset-sized rooms of Laughlin Hall cannothelp but appear inferior.The students who live in graduate studenthousing have good reason to. Academicdemands can make it hard to find time forcontact with other people. Student housingmakes that contact easy, even inescapable.By opting for student housing, one avoidsthe inconvenience and frustration of apart¬ment hunting and apartment living. As oneBroadview resident put it, “At least I knowthey’re going to turn on the heat.”Fundraising to increaseChild center to closefrom 1According to Bates, however, “there areno other facilities in the Woooiawn area thatcould duplicate or absorb this service.”Neighborhood Clinic director WillyeWhite said the Clinic currently treats ap¬proximately 5000 cases per month, includingadults. But several sources indicated theNeighborhood Clinic may not see that manypatients and questioned its capacity to treatthe WCHC patients as well. In addition theClinic does not maintain an ongoing rela¬tionship with its patients and does not havethe advantage of being closely tied to a ma¬jor medical center such as the UCHC.Barbara Flynn Currie, candidate for staterepresentative in the 24th district, toldrepresentatives of the press Monday thecutoff of funds is a political matter. “Browndecided to cut here because of (the WCHC’s)independent status,” she said.The WCHC is administered by the Univer¬sity, the community board, and the director.It is therefore not subject to control by theboard and it cannot be used as a source ofpatronage jobs.Candidates attendOver 200 parents, children, and electedpublic officials attended Monday’s pressconference. In addition to Currie, 24th District candidates Carol Mosley Braun,Bernard Epton, and Lewis Caldwell spoke insupport of the WCHC.Epton said he spoke to Thompson Mondaymorning. Thompson assured him that “thishealth center will remain open,” Eptonsaid.State Senator Richard Newhouse was alsopresent, as were representatives from Con¬gressional candidate A. A. “Sammy”,, Rayner, Representative Robert Mann,Department of Human Services Commis¬sioner Cecil Partee, Operation PUSH, andthe District 14 office of the Chicago Board ofHealth.Both Leon Finney, director of TheWoodlawn Organization, and Rev. BasilFoley, of the Woodlawn AME Church, spokein support of the Center and offered toorganize a demonstration in support of theWCHC.At least two representatives from theUniversity, two members of the WCHC com¬munity board, and WCHC director Dr. AliceStratigos will meet with Brown, Monday at10:30 am at the Chicago Civic Center. *The community board decided luesuaynight not to organize a demonstration at thistime however, Stratigos said Wednesday. from 1according to The Chronicle of HigherEducation (July 10, 1978). The Universityraised $33,134,000 as compared to $26,614,000in 1975-76. Only Harvard and StanfordUniversities, and the University of SouthernCalifornia led the University in gifts and be¬quests.The University has always done well in at¬tracting gifts from area philanthropists(known by development officials as“friends”). A study by the Donors Forum,an association of Chicago area grantmakers, showed the University received thegreatest amount in 1976 grants from Illinoisdonors, totalling over $4 million.Alumni funds lackingThe area where the University tradi¬tionally has fallen short of comparable in¬stitutions is in its ability to attract alumnifunds. Universities such as Yale and Har¬vard have raised more than $20 million eachlast year from alumni alone.The University raised about $7.2 millionfrom alumni in the fiscal year ending onJune 30, 1978. Close to $1.5 million of thesemonies were unrestricted. About one fourthof the alumni give to some area of theUniversity, and 20 percent, over 10,500alumni, give unrestricted donations to thealumni fund. The fund solicites four times ayear from College graduates and alumnifrom the graduate divisions, the libraryschool, and the divinity school. Other profes¬sional school alumni receive mailings fromtheir respective sections of the University.At Yale, 40 percent of the alurnni bodycontributes to the institution, and at theDraft resistance rising in South AfricaBy Curtis BlackCalling the South African Defense Force(SADF) the “backbone of apartheid,” SouthAfrican exile Michael Morgan discussed the“small but significant and growing” whiteresistance to military service in the SADFat a program sponsored by the Action Com¬mittee on South Africa last Friday.Appearing in the United States to appealto the anti-war constituency and thedivestiture movement, Morgan said UnitedStates “political, economic, and militaryaid is vital to strengthen the militarybackbone of apartheid.”Morgan is a co-founder of the SouthAfrican War Resisters (SAWR) formed inCondon last July.SAWR is trying to build a support base fora resistance movement outside SouthAfrica, from which to reach back into SouthAfrica, Morgan said. “It’s difficult tooperate a resistance movement in a fascistcountry.”Morgan is co-editor of SAWR’snewspaper. Omkeer (“About Face”), which>s published in London and smuggled into South Africa. Morgan said 800 copies of thefirst issue brought about 20 men out of thecountry, and 1,800 copies of the second issuewere reportedly being photocopied andpassed around by students and soldiers.Morgan said 4,000 men refused militaryservice in 1976, and 4.000 more refused in1977, of whom about 500 were imprisoned.SADF drafts 70,000 men a year for two-yearterms of duty, Morgan said. Refusal toserve carries a ten-year prison sentence,and conscientious objector status is notrecognized.Don Morton, a South African exile since1971, who is coordinator of the South AfricanMilitary Refugee Aid Fund (SAMRAF)said, “There is every reason to believe thatthe U.S. will send troops to South Africa.”American interests are stronger in SouthAfrica than they were in Vietnam, he said.National Security Director ZbigniewBrzezinski has spoken of the possibility ofsending U.S. troops to southern Africa tostem the “threat of Communism.”Ultimately. South African war resistersand American students can only support the black groups “who will fight the battle andwin the victory themselves.” Morton said.SAWR also channels military informationon the South African army to liberationmovements there, according to Morgan.War resister Morgan fled to London afterbeing recalled to military service in the warzone in Namibia (South West Africa) fourmonths after being discharged from his firsttour of duty. South Africa lost the U.N. man¬date to rule Namibia in 1966, but still main¬tains 50,000 troops there, against the guer¬rilla war for independence being mountedby the South West African People’sOrganization.Morgan told of atrocities he witnessedwhile serving in Namibia, in which hun¬dreds of women and children were killed inrefugee camps in Zambia and Angola by theSADF, which claimed they had struckSWAPO bases. He described the widespreadeffects of the raids on the morale of troops:soldiers “who had been keen on the border’began asking, ‘How am 1 going to get out ofhere?”Morgan said he fled South Africa because“I refused to fight serving the apartheid University of Pennsylvania, 30 percent ofthe graduates give.Columbia, Cornell, Dartmouth, Harvard,the Massachusetts Institute of Technology,Princeton, and Stanford University all rais¬ed more from their alumni last year thandid the University according to the directorof alumni giving at the University of Penn¬sylvania. Of the ten universities or collegesthat share fundraising information with U ofP, only Brown, with a total of $3.7 million,raised fewer funds from alumni than did theUniversity.Fanton said, “It is my impression that thebase of alumni giving is lower than it couldbe. I look upon that as an opportunity.”It is expected that the University’s permanent fundraising effort will concentrate ontightening the tie between alumni and theUniversity by offering more programs to en¬courage them to return to campus, such asthe successful Alumni College, and possiblyby sending out more mailings soliciting forfunds each year.Goals too highIn April, 1978, before the Campaign forChicago closed down, then vice-presidentfor academic resources Chauncy Harrissaid, “Chicago set too high a goal. We weretoo ambitious to increase the financial baseof the University.”Fanton said it is important to set realisticgoals. To accomplish this, he is orderingfeasibility studies to determine income fromcorporations, foundations, and private in¬dividuals.Planning, however, is faking place duringwhat traditionally is the-busiest time forfundraisers. Most funds ^re received in theperiod between September and the beginn¬ing of the next year.Fanton said there is usually “a naturalletdown” after the close of a campaign, buta higher goal is being set for this year thanfor last year. And according to Fanton,funds from corporations and foundationsare about the same this year as last year,partially, said Fanton. because having anew Dresident has encouraged donors.A participant in setting the University'sbudget as well as the prime planner of itsfundraising activities, Fanton is possiblythe third most important administrator oncampus, after the president and the provost.He said he sees himself as a planner and aguide to provide a point of connection bet¬ween the President’s office and the develop¬ment office.The development office is presentlyorganized in three sections. One handle*foundations; another, corporations; and thethird deals with private donors Fanton saidthe office will continue to be divided in thismanner instead of by academic area.system, which was abhorent to me " He saidhe came to oppose apartheid after “w itnessing it up front in Namibia in the army.”“There is no hell worse than exile.”Morgan saidEditorialGet out and vote!When Congressman Ralph H. Metcalfe diedsuddenly on October 10, Chicago’s black and in¬dependent communities lost one of their mostrespected leaders and the City Hall Machine lostone of its most outspoken critics. With haste notseen since the Daley years, Mayor Bilandic, hispatronage boss Tom Donavon, and Democraticparty chief George Dunne, moved to replaceMetcalfe’s name on the ballot with one theycould stomach more easily. They tapped 21stWard Alderman Bennett Stewart and in the pro¬cess squashed the hopes of independents whowould have preferred a special election where anindependent challenge could have been mount¬ed.Stewart is a machine hack of the lowest sort.The owner of numerous apartment houses con¬stantly plagued with building code violations,Stewart has said that he is “proud to be a part ofthe Machine, because that’s where the actionis.” When Chicago Tribune columnist JackMabley characterized Stewart as an “Amosand Andy” character, Stewart said he is “proudto be like the Kingfish.”Voters have the opportunity to say no to theshenanigans of the Bilandic-Donavon-Dunnemachine by choosing Republican A.A. (Sammy)Rayner Jr. A former 6th Ward Alderman,Rayner has been a long-time independent andactivist in the civil rights and peace movements.We endorse him heartily.In the other important local race, for the Il¬linois House, three excellent candidates, allUniversity alumni, are embroiled in a complexbattle. In an election usually decided in theMarch primary, this race is clouded by ineffec¬tive incumbent Lewis A. H. Caldwell who is tak¬ing advantage of a legal loophole to run as athird-party candidate. The most striking exam¬ple of Caldwell’s lack of qualification for this of¬fice was his leadership of five black legislatorswho sat out a roll call and allowed the EqualRights Amendment (o be defeated because of anunrelated political dispute. Caldwell wasdefeated in the March primary and shouldreceive the same message from voters in Tues¬day’s election.The candidate with the best chance of losing asa result of Caldwell’s challenge is incumbentRepublican Bernard E. Epton. Epton is a finelegislator and assistant minority leader in Spr¬ingfield. The two independent Democrats, CarolMoseley Braun and Barbara Flynn Currie, willcarry on the tradition of independence set byAbner Mikva and outgoing RepresentativeRobert E. Mann. We recommend one vote eachfor Epton, Braun, and Currie.Political experts are forecasting a very lowturnout at the polls. Whether or not you agreewith our endorsements, what is important is thatyou vote.Editor: Abbe FletmanNews editor: Eric Von der PortenFeatures editor: Claudia MagatPhotography editor: Carol StudenmundSports editor : R. W. RohdeAssociate editors: Andrew Patner, Jacob LevineLiterary Review editor: Peter EngBusiness manager: Suzanne FarrandAd manager : An j ali KumarOffice manager : Leslie WickProduction: David MillerStaff: George Bailey, Tim Baker, Curtis Black, ChrisBrown, David Burton, Nancy Cleveland, Dave Glockner, Mi¬chael Gorman, Chris Isidore, Richard Kaye, Carol Klammer,Bruce Levenstein, Dan Loube, Bobbye Middendorf, VickiP'aut. Margot Slauson, Howard Suls, Carol Swanson, NancvTordai, John Wright.The Chicago Maroon — Pridav. November 3. 197« Letters to the Editor‘Dishonestyand deceit’To the Editor:Those of us who were forced tomove out of our rooms in theShoreland on short notice in the mid¬dle of winter quarter last year arenot at all surprised to learn of thetotal mismanagement of the renova¬tions. At that time an entire wing ofthe building was emptied and manystudents were greatly inconven¬ienced so that work could begin onthe Resident Master’s apartment.The people running student housingdemonstrated a total lack of concernfor students’ needs. Ail of their deal¬ings with us were characterized bydeceit and dishonesty.Now that a luxurious apartmentfor the resident masters has beencompleted and all of the residentassistants have moved into thenicest student apartments I wouldn’tbe at all surprised if work on thebuilding stops completely.Robert BurasJob security?To the Editor:I have an item to relate whichshould be of some special interestwith the union representationreferendum coming up in about twoweeks.I was employed as a deliveryper-son by the University of ChicagoBookstore from June, 1976 untilAugust 4, 1978, when I was fired for“dishonesty”. My “dishonesty” ap¬parently consisted of the followingactions:On August 2, I was passingthrough the second floor sales areaof the Bookstore on my way to makesome deliveries to the photo andtypewriter departments. I noticedon display a red plastic rain ponchodesigned for three to seven year oldchildren which bore a Mickey Mousedecal on the front. It occurred to methat it would be an amusing sight tosee me wearing this item, and I putit on to amuse some of theemployees in the departments towhich 1 was bringing the deliveries.The people in these departmentswere amused, someone made a com¬ment about how impressed theywere that everything I wore was soflattering, and it was clear toeveryone that I had put the ponchoon simply for the comic effect.On my way back through the storeto fetch some more items for thesetwo departments, I was told by asales clerk who was filling in for so¬meone else for a few days and conse¬quently did not know who I was, thatif I did not want to purchase the pon¬cho, I would have to return it towhere I had found it. I replied toberthat I was not interested in purchas¬ing it, and I returned it to the salescounter. That evening, a heavy rainchanged my mind, and I purchaseda poncho in order to get homerelatively dry. I paid about two andone-half dollars for it.Two days later, on the morning ofAugust 4,1 was called in to the officeof the general manager of theBookstore, who informed me that Iwas suspended indefinitely withoutpay while an investigation was car¬ried out to determine whether I hadbeen involved in an attempt to steal.That afternoon, he called me at myhome and informed me that it hadbeen decided that it clearly had beenmy “intent” to steal that poncho,and that I was no longer employed atthe Bookstore. I set out right away to see whatcould be done to rectify the wrongwhich I felt that I had been done.That same afternoon, I spoke withan officer of the personnel depart¬ment, who presented me with twcoptions. I could offer my resignationretroactively, neither claiming in¬nocence nor admitting guilt withregard to the poncho incident, a laNixon, or I could request that theDirector of Personnel investigatethe incident to see if he, as a higherauthority, felt that my terminationwas warranted. I did not like eitherof these options too much, so Ipostponed a decision while Igathered more information aboutwhat course of action was open tome.During the next twenty-five days,I found out that virtually no othercourse of action was available. I con¬sulted with four lawyers and a fewgovernment agencies, and two ques¬tions I was routinely asked werewhether I belonged to a union, andwhether I could show that I had beendiscriminated against because ofmy race, color or religion. I couldonly answer no to these questions,and I was told that as an emppoyeeof a private institution, I really didnot have much to fall back on unlessone or the other of these criteriacould be met. It seems that there isnothing in the law to keep a privateemployer from dismissingemployees on a whim, as long as hedoes not discriminate openly, anddoes not have to deal with a union.After much thought, and muchprompting from friends and others, Ifiled a grievance with the director ofpersonnel. In the meantime, I foundanother job at better pay than what Ihad received at the Bookstore, andwhen I spoke to him later about hisinvestigation, and was informed thathe had found the termination to beunwarranted, I declined to be placedin another position at the University.When I inquired about receivingback pay to cover the time that I hadbeen out of work due to this unwar¬ranted firing, he told me thatalthough firing had been unwar¬ranted, a lengthy suspension wouldnot have been unwarranted, andsince I had been given my accruedvacation pay when 1 was fired(another discrepancy, since a per¬son who is fired is supposed to loseall vacation pay), I was not entitledto any backpay.This letter is not a full-fledged en¬dorsement of unions, nor do I claimthat if a union is not voted in, largenumbers of people will suffer thesame fate that I did. Unions havetheir drawbacks as well as theirbenefits, and if my eyes had not beenopened to some harsh realities, Iprobably would have more reserva¬tions about the desirability of beingin a union than I do now. The fact is,that something like what happenedto me is not very likely to happen toanyone else, but if it does happen,and one has no union or comparablegroup to take one’s side, one mayvary well find that very little can bedone to rectify the injustice whichwas done them.It is indeed unfortunate that if isnecessary to go to such extremes asvoting in a union to have somemeasure of job security, but it seemsto be that this is indeed the situation.And if this is so, then support ofunion representation is somethingwhich ought to be given some veryserious thought by those who will beaffected by it.Juan Luco Electthe GreatestThe Maroon has received a copy ofthis letter to Sun-Times columnistMike Royko.Dear Mr. Royko:I don’t know whether 21 years ofresidence in Chicago entitles me togiving advice on Chicago politics-but some sixty years of observingpolitics in various regions entitlesme to comment.The slating of a comparativelyunknown candidate to succeedRalph Metcalfe is a typical exampleof organization activity. Those whoare devoted to Metcalfe’s memoryare justly indignant. Yet for somestrange reason there seems to be areluctance to convert this indigna¬tion into action, by naming a write-incandidate strong enough to make arace of it, and possibly able to win.The only such name suggested isthat of the late Congressmanhimself; since the fact of tthe Con¬gressman’s death is well known, theElection Commissioners wouldalmost certainly disregard suchwrite-ins and the courts would pro¬bably sustain them. What is neededis a candidate strong enough andwell known enough to draw people tothe polls with the one purpose ofwriting in his name; if they vote inother races, so much the better.I therefore suggest that thosedissatisfied with the slated can¬didates write in the name of the Hon.Muhammad Ali, a resident of HydePark, in Mr. Metcalfe’s district. Heis as well known as any other resi¬dent of Chicago, not excluding themayor and the current candidatesfor other public office. He is widelytraveled, sensitive to human con¬siderations, willing to speak hismind; and he has already shownthat he is ready to challenge theestablished order. His statements onvarious issues show an intelligenceat least as great as that of theaverage Congressman; and we haveample precedent in such sportsfigures as former trustee of theUniversity of Illinois, Red Grange,Congressmen Mizell and JackKemp, senatorial candidate BillBradley, and ex-senator, Gene Tun-ney, son of a heavyweight champion.Why not a champion hemself?Lest people object to the difficultyof a write-in campaign, there isanother precedent, from SouthCarolina* where according toChicago journalists is is muchharder to buck the organization. In1954 when Senator Maybank died,the organization slated the lateEdgar Bown, perhaps the mostknowledgeable politician in SouthCarolina in the past fifty years, butlabeled as a machine candidate.Those who disliked the machineorganized support for ex-GovernorStrom Thurmond as a write-in can¬didate: he won decisively and is stillin office, though still unpopular withthe machine.Nothing in my 21 years ofresidence in Chicago suggests thateither of the slated candidates is asable or as well known as Mr. Brownwas in South Carolina in 1954, or thatMr. Ali is any whit less popular thanMr. Thurmond was in thatsenatorial race. If those who dislikemachine politics support Mr. Ali,they will have a winner who willnever need machine endorsement. Ifthey don’t support him, they are en¬titled to any kind of hack that maybe slated in their district.Raven I. McDavid, Jr.Professor EmeritusDepartment of EnglishAlternatives to condos needed: Ad Hoc TenantsBy Florence Hamlish Levinsohnparly in its history, Hyde Park was an ultra-Servative community with a vigilante committee to^ vent the invasion of such undesirables as Jews,foreigners, colored folks, and other such unclean elementswho might try to move in. Over the years, the vigilantessuccumbed to the outlawing of restrictive covenants andLduallv the community became highly cosmopolitan.81 ofm-p fronts and lofts for artists, inexpensiveor writers and a variety of bohemians.. not provide much student housing andwhat there was, was governed by the standard rules of thetime that limited students lives so that they tended to takerooms and apartments off campus which were plentifuland cheap. Faculty and a variety of professionals withtheir families lived alongside a great mix of people, white-collar and blue-collar workers, storekeepers, ana studentsand artists. Aside from an occasional mugging by a localthug who was hostile to students and artists, the communi¬ty was a peaceful one. It was also exciting — art galleries,exotic shops, jazz clubs were in abundance.Into this idyllic scene moved, from across CottageGrove Ave., blacks in search of better housing. Therewas panic in the streets. The crime rate rose. The peachwas disturbed. The University tried to close its eyes to thechanges but when they were finally forced to see, theythought about moving — to Denver, to the suburbs. In¬stead, the administration, in concert with the federal andcity governments, initiated the first large scale urbanrenewal plan. Poor blacks and white were forced out bythe massive destruction of low-rent buildings. A largenumber of middle-income townhouses and high-riseapartments were built to house those who were displacedby urban renewal and who could afford the higher but notintolerable costs of the new housing.The art colony was gone along with the other low-income people. But there remained plenty of rentalbuildings where moderate-income people could live.Gradually, once again, the community stabilized It wasno longer the exciting place it had been but it was a stableinterracial community which attracted or held many peo¬ple of very different backgrounds and Hyde Park wasstill, despite the great disruptions, a highly cosmopolitancommunity.>re WcIC *all apartments i,T_.\,orcitV did Once again, however, the community is going through adestabilization, though there are those who believe thatcondo conversions have a stabilizing effect. The stabilitythey speak of is the kind the early residents sought — ahomogenous community. The struggle between the AdHoc Tenants Committee and the Hyde Park Federal Sav¬ings and Loan (HPFS), represented by its president, PaulBerger, is between those diverse elements in the com¬munity who seek to maintain the economic mix that hasprevailed here all these years and has made for itscosmopolitanism, and those who seek to make the com¬munity one almost entirely of home owners, home ownerswho can afford the enormous prices of today’s inflatedreal estate market.What the Ad Hoc Tenants Committee has urged on thecommunity and particularly on the savings and loanassociation is an effort to find means to retain a portion ofthe housing for those moderate-income people who arebeing forced out of the community as low-income peoplewere forced out by urban renewal. We have carefully in¬vestigated alternatives to condo conversions for buildingsthat are deteriorated, alternatives that were spelled out indetail in a recent issue of the Chicago Journal. We believeit is imperative, for the welfare of the community and forthose whose lives are disrupted by condo conversions, thatalternatives be used.We hope, as a result of a conference held among thedisputants, and as as a result of all the pressure we haveput on HPFS, that we can yet prevent the exodus fromHyde Park of those people who have contributed so long toits special blend of intellectual alacrity, politicalliberalism, and varying life styles. We hope that we canforestall the development of a community composedprimarily of wealthy ex-suburbanites who once said tothose who lived here, “How can you live there?” for it isprimarily those people who are buying the high-pricedcondos for sale in the community these days. For HydePark, now that it has become one of the safest areas inwhich to live in Chicago, and because it has all thephysical amenities it has, has become a chic communityin which to buy.It will depend on whether the greed for profits that canbe made in condos can be overcome by concern for theretention of the community as it has been, by a love for a cosmopolitan community in which to live and raise kids.Unfortunately for those of us who want to retain the oldqualities of the neighborhood, enormous profits — asmuch as 250 percent — can be made from condo conver¬sions, while only small profits can be made from any ofthe alternatives we propose. While Paul Berger justifieshis history of condo conversions as “defensive actions .. .to prevent further deterioration in the community,” hefails to reveal how much profit has been made on theseconversions. But in a column in the Hyde Park Heraldsome months back, he quoted his developer, Winston Ken¬nedy, as saying that the average profit made from a con¬version was 40 percent. A simple computation of thefigures involved in any of the recent conversions in theneighborhood reveal that that estimate was a modest oneindeed.But evidence of the Ad Hoc Committee is that feeling inthe community is strongly behind us. Perhaps the will ofthe community will prevail. Perhaps the local developerswill be able to settle for profits already made and bend tothe will of the community and use some of the othervarious means to restore old buildings and retain their oc¬cupants and not return Hyde Park to its “good olddays.”Florence Hamlish Levinsohn is co-chairman of theAd Hoc Tenants Group, one of the buildings recently con¬verted by HPFS. Ms. Levinsohn is also managing editor ofSchool Review, published by the University of ChicagoPress and the Department of Education.Important:All Maroon staff members are urgedto attend a meetingTuesday, November 7 at 7:30 pmon the third floor of Ida Noyes Hall.Awards for writing and reportingwill be announced.nnr>God willingThe Right ReverendJames Winchester MontgomeryThe Bishop of Chicagowill instituteThe Reverend Charles Howard Dunlap Brownas Episcopal Chaplainat The University of Chicagoon Sunday, November 5,1978 at 5 p.m.in Rockefeller Memorial ChapelFifty-ninth Street andSouth Woodlawn AvenueFollowing the celebrationof the Holy EucharistThe Episcopal Church Councilat The University of Chicagowill host a reception atBishop Brent House5540 South Woodlawn AvenueYour prayers and presence are cordially requested BISHOP BRENT HOUSE5540 SOUTH WOODLAWN AVENUECHICAGO. ILLINOIS 60637BOOK REVIEWS ON SCIENCE AND RELIGION7:30-8:30 p.m. Wednesday, November 8RELIGIOUS ORIGINS OF MODERN SCIENCE, byEugene M. KlaarenHORIZONS OF SCIENCE, byCarl F.H. HenryConference and WorkshoponTHE CHURCH’S RESPONSE TOTHE NUCLEAR ARMS RACEFeatured speaker: Richard J. BarnetArms control expert;.Author of GlobalReach and The Giants: Russia and theUnited States;Director of Institute for Policy Studies,Washington.Saturday, Nov. 4,9a.m.-3:30p.m.Center for Continuing Education1307 E. 60th St.Registration Fee: $5; ($3 students) run ouurvo «■NAMFILMS VIDAS SECUSNelson Pereira dos SantosBrazil Cobb Hall7:15 & 9:301.50The Chicago Maroon — Friday. November 3, 1978 — 5RE-ELECTBERNARD E. EPTONSTATE REPRESENTATIVE - 24TH DISTRICTONNOVEMBER 7,1978We ask your support of an effective and concerned legislator who has served you well for ten years inSpringfield. He is a lifelong resident of South Shore and Hyde Park, a graduate of O’Keefe GrammarSchool, Hyde Park High School and the University of Chicago. For 40 years BERNARD E. EPTON hasbeen active in community, civic and religious organizations in the 24th District.As your representative in Springfield he has: defended renters from abuse from condominium developers;supported gun control legislation; vigorously and consistently fought for ERA; co-sponsored legislationopposing the airport in the lake; passed legislation protecting consumers from redlining practices andinsurance abuse.Those who know his work in Springfield say:“Bernie Epton is a good humanitarian and all aroundgood legislator!’(Representative Robert E. Mann (D), 24th District)“Bernard Epton is an out-spoken and outstanding advo¬cate for the rights of women and minorities!’(Representative Susan Catania (R), 22nd District)“Representative Epton is essential in his position ofleadership in the House!’(Governor James R. Thompson)Endorsed by Chicago Sun-Times“Bernard E. Epton is a Progressive Member of the GOPLeadership Team!’Endorsed by Chicago Tribune“We urge a Three-Vote Bullet for Republican IncumbentBernard Epton V He has been endorsed by:INDEPENDENT VOTERS OF ILLINOISUNITED AUTO WORKERSAFL-CIOILLINOIS EDUCATION ASSOCIATIONILLINOIS FEDERATION OF TEACHERSMlSERVICE WORKERS UNIONERA POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEECOOK COUNTY SPANISH SPEAKINGCITIZENS COMMITTEEILLINOIS STATE CHAMBER OF COMMERCEPle«se join with your neighbors and friends who are already supporting Bernard E. Epton.John D Adachi Sadye Cohen Abe Goldberg Joanne Laffer Mr. ft Mrs. Nicholas J. Pappas Ethel M. SmithMrs Simon Adler Stephen M. Colby Susan Goldhamer Joseph Landy Ken Pelletier Or. Richard SnowMartha Ackerman Edwin F. Comertord Betty GoMiamond Aid. Ross W. Lathrop Rev. Emery A. PerceH Rosemary SnowHon. Sam Ackerman Edwin H. Conger Or. Israel Gokkamood Dr. Chas H. Lawrence Rabbi Hayim Perelmuter Larry SormamakerA T Anderson Gilbert A. Cornfield David Green Elise L. Lawrence Louamer Peters Dr. Jack StemWarren H. Bacon Mrs. Gilbert A. Cornfield Edith Greenberg Jules Levenstem Eleanor Petersen Mildred StemSidney Bars** Syfvia Cotton Herbert J. Greenberg Ruth Levenstem Rita T. Picken Scott StewartWinfred Benade Barbara G. Cramer Judith C. Greene Dr. Robert Lippert Robert F Picker Nancy M. StewartHarold Berk Elizabeth Oavey Peter H. Greene Estelle Loeb Art Pratt Stanley K. StewartPearl Berk Freda Daveson Robert C. Greene Hamilton M. Loeb. Jr. Alice M. Przybyl Sherwin SwartzAnne L. Bmyon Charlotte Oes Jardms Frances Grossman Rev. C. Harvey Lord Raymond T. Przybyl, Jr. John SzymanskiCharles G. Bloom Aid. ft Mrs. Leon Oespres William Hamilton May Lord Raymond T. Przybyl, Sr. Genevieve G. TateLawrence S Bloom/Ruth W. Bloom Ida Dray Samuel R. Hardwick. Jr. Ginger Mack Ruth M. Przybyl Stanley W. TateMary Jane Bohhng Harold Oray Vivian Hedrick June Mattick Or. Wilfred Reid Dr. Dennis ThompsonOr Preston Bradley Juergen OroegemuHer lleneH Herst Majorie T McCarthy Baddona RemgoW Mr. and Mrs. Harold C. ThompsonPhilip S Brail Lydia Droegemulter Herbert Ho Dr. Kermit T. Mehlinger Alan Roin Richard B. TruittBlanche Brail James East Helen Horton Saul Mendetson GeraidS. Rose Leonard VanceHenry Broch Ralph H. Eisendrath William B. Ireland Jennie Mendetson Mr. ft Mrs. Norbert Rosenthal Zeida WatohakMr ft Mrs Wm Y. Browne Peg Ensmmger Mary E. Irons Kathryn R. Meshenberg Calvin Sawyier Ina WalkerSonja Bums Edna Seian Epstein Meyer W. Isenbern Micn36i j. wesnenoerg Rulus Scarborough Eve WeinbergDaveS. Canter Wolfgang Epstein Angela H. Jacobi Margaret M. Michaiski Mrs. Y. A. Schub Norman WeinbergMiriam G. Canter Nancy Erickson Julian Johnson Grady C. MiUer Anne Schutzberger Paul L. ft Evelyn R. Weft manPaul L Carson Chauncy Eskridge Leota Johnson Eugene Mietowitz Hank h. benwao Seth W. ft Jacqueline M. WhartonHon Susan Catania Jacob Feldman Jamce Junndo Seymour Mietowitz FranklrS Schwerin Mr. ft Mrs. Jay WiicoxanMarian Chapin Morris Feldman Muriel KaHick Stanley Mishina Steven L. Schwieger Greg A. WilliamsJohn J. Chapin Bernice Fi*e»man Winston E. Kennedy Or. Robert J Moon Donald Segal Helen WilliamsBUm Check Chris Fourkas Dr. Alfred 0. Klinger Jack Mosoff Frances R. Seidraan Kale WilliamsJoseph Check Or Ben; J. Gans Mr. ft Mrs. David Krevitz Mr. ft Mrs. Herschei Nader Mr. ft Mrs. Joseph Semper Oscar WilliamsJames W Clement Dorothy M Gans Professor Maynard C. Krueger Nanette H.Naisbitt WMHamC. Siegrist, Jr. Clarences. WHson. Jr.Joe M. Cut* Henry Garcia Rabbi Vernon Kurtz Harold R. Nelson Rabbi Ralph Simon Maynard I.WishnerOr ft Mrs Benjamin F Codie. Jr. Marvin Gittler Hon. Jewel Lafontant Sam Newborger EthwdL. Singleton Della O H. WylieOr Helen A Cohen Carol Gittler Waiter B. Laffer If Ronna Page Richard Smigiel wnma wynnDr. Quentin D. YoungPAID FOR BY EPTON CAMPAIGN FUND, 1638 E. 55th Street, Chicago, Illinois4 — Th* Chicago Maroofl*— Friday, Novomb?r i 1978The Grey City JournalNative Son in Chicagoby Matthew McNeeledgeWhen Richard Wright’s Native Son was publishedin 1940, the criticism ranged from “one of the finestnovels ever written by an American”, to “a disgraceto Negroes because it labels them as killers”. Despitethe political rumblings was the undisputed praise:“This man can write.”The “shocking brutality, with insight, with a vividlanguage, and strong characterization” of the bookwas brought to stage by Orson Welles in 1941.Gregory Mosher’s production of The Chicago-basedNative Son is the first professional attempt since thattime then.When the curtain rises, the audience is confrontedwith white three tiered scaffolding. Chain link fenc¬ing surrounds the state and seems to extend out intothe audience. Actors and audience are imprisoned.Everyone is waiting for trial.A rich Hyde Park family, the Daltons, give BiggerThomas a ‘chance’, and hire him as a chauffeur. Onhis first assignment he drives their Communist sym¬pathetic daughter, Mary Dalton, on a drunken nighton the town with her boyfriend. She passes out, andBigger takes her to bed. The blind Mrs. Dalton inter¬rupts, and Bigger places a pillow over Mary’s head tokeep her quiet.In this instant, Bigger releases all of his feelings ofanger and oppression. He suffocates Mary stuffs herbody into the furnace, and goes off to plot his escape. Bigger is befriended by his defense attorney, Mr.Max. Mike Nussbaum fits perfectly into the role ofthe bleeding heart liberal defending a cause. Maxuses the opportunity to question society’s prejudices,aided by often heard yet potent arguments. The ac¬cusations of injustice associated with slavery and op¬pression of the black race thunder out to the jury andaudience. His impassioned summary puts the respon¬sibility of Bigger’s actions flatly on society, and con¬vincingly challenges its view towards black/whiterelations. His pleas are answered with the Goodmanaudience’s hard won applause.Max’s counterpart, the State’s Attorney, played byColin Stinton portrays Bigger, and all blacks as athreat to society’s values. A strong segregationist, hebelieves that the only use for blacks is in quickcapital convictions that look good in the newspaper.His role is crucial; he represents a part of people’smentality that makes this 1941 play current in 1978.The long winded rascist speeches win no applaus, andlose much of the audience’s attention.Mesach Taylor, seen last season in Streamers,commands the role of Bigger. The fact action requiresquick changes in personality and mood. JosepnNieminsky’s setting turns an apartment into a poolhall, a restaurant into a house or a jail into a cour¬troom within seconds. Taylor proves himself byadapting quickly and convincingly to the character needs of the scene. He is the bitter black, and thegrinning servant, but it is not until he is chased thathis strength and identity hardens inside him.Taylor’s domination and forcefulness on the stagemake Wright’s message hit hard, and often.Despite Taylor’s performance, the direction of themurder scenes made the audience laugh. Mary’s suf¬focation is a critical point in the play, and Taylorlooked like a robot programmed to kill. The scene iscontrived, stiff, and farcical. Bigger’s murder of hisgirlfriend was worse; it. confused the audience. Thedirection was so unclear that it was not until the se¬cond act that the audience knew what had takenplace.With the exception of these two scenes, and the in¬terminable courtroom battle, the flexibility of the ac¬tors, setting, and lighting made the show fast pacedand tight. Often, only a shift to another part of thestage and the changing of one central prop, such as apool table or bed, wi.s necessary to convey to the au¬dience a clear idea of the action.The Goodman is off to a fast start; Mosher, in hisfirst year as artistic direction offers a promisingseason of Dickens, Isben and Mamet to name a few.Native Son will be playing at the Goodman throughNovember 12. Rush tuckets are available for studentswith identification on weeknights. Call 443-3811 forinformation.Happy Birthdaydear Pub!H*l|» us celebrate Sat. Nov. ASpecials all Day long...Live Music by Filipo & Mark Daniels.If 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, andseats that are actually tuned to the suspension system.But comfort isn’t the only thing that sets the 604 apart from theMercedes. There’s also the price. Which starts at about$11,000.* And which may be its most comforting feature of all.Inc.Sates / leasing / Parts /2347 So. Michigan Ave. Chicago 326-25501*Manufacturer’s suggested retail price. Delivery, optional equip¬ment, license, title, taxes, dealer preparation not included.8 — Friday, November 3, 1978 WHPK PRESENTSRED HOLT’S Unlimited Jazz BandFrom Valhalla10 PM -1 AM SAT. NOV. 4'■ /WHPK-FM 88.3-STEREO•lye Examinations•Contact Lenses (Soft A Hard)•Prescriptions FilledDR. MORTON R. MASLOVOPTOMETRISTSHyde Park Shopping Center1510 E. 55th363-6363 HYDE PARK PIPE RND TOBRCCO SHOP1552 E. 53rd - Under IC tracksStudents under 30 get 10% offask for “Big Jim’’Mon. - Sat. 9-8; Sun. 12-5PipesPipe Tobaccos Imported Cigarettes Cigars.A 10 DAY SEMINARIN ISRAELSpecially planned forSeminary FacultyDeparture Date: Dec. 30, 1978Price: $649.00Includes airfare hotels,and all accomodationsFor further information contactRabbi Chaim PlotzkerAmerican Zionist Federation515 Park AvenueNew York. N Y. 10022(212) 371 7750 Today's Hair FashionsbyELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERSl< \ !>V 1620 E. 53rd St.■.^r 288-2900hyde park’s no. 1 jazz spotFRI. OCT. 27ANDSUN. NOV. 5 A Phenomenal TalentALIEN GANGUniversal Sounds of Love From Near and FarSAT.OCT. 28 - The Fantastic Sounds ofGHALLIB GHALLABQUINTETSUN.NOV. 29 The Incredible Sounds ofNewtown’s OwnMIKE FINNERTY andThe Heat MerchantsFRI. & SAT.NOV. 3 & 4EVERYMON.NIGHT COMINGThe FantasticRED HOLTUNLIMITEDAn Evening With sl(IRA ROGERS "imkikFolk Songs - Suitar - DramaEVERYWED.NIGHTMUSICCHARGE THE HYDE PARK JAZZ WORKSHOPA Jam Session - FeaturingHANNAH-JON TAYLORTHE ALTIER JAZZ QUINTETAnd Many Others$1.50EVERY TUES.IS LADIESNIGHT-50%OFF ON ALLREGULARDRINKS YalfjaUa ^^0muAfIN THE HEART OF COSMOPOLITAN HYDE PARKJAZZ 9-2 PM 1515 EAST 53 ST.HYDE FARK-CHGO. STUDENTDISCOUNTFREE POPCORNPITCHERS OFBEER. MUSICCHARGE VARIES241-6827phoneNewby Peter EngPerson/Planet by Theodore Roszak (Anchor,510.95) Subtitled The Creative Disintegration of In¬dustrial Society, Roszak’s new book extends the“humanistic” ideas he had a lot to do with spreadingin the 1960’s with his now-classic The Making of aCounter-Culture. The book harps on all the familiarevils of modern industrial society: its overwhelminglargeness; the pollution and waste of its cities; theobsession with technological advance, and proposesall the familiar solutions: “personalistic” values;deurbanization; and small-scale, communitarianeconomics. Of some interest, however, is thatRoszak’s point of reference for utopia is the monasticcommunal order of the Middle Ages.The People’s Almanac #2 by David Wallenchinskyand Irving Wallace (Morrow hardbound, $19.95; Ban¬tam paperback, $9.95) Wallace and son Wallenchin¬sky cite Hamlet: ‘There are more things in heavenand earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in yourphilosophy.” And indeed there are, packed into 1,440pages, composed of 25,000 entries submitted by 225published writers from around the world. The com¬pilers set out in 1971 to produce something they feltsorely lacking, an almanac “for the common man.”Their first volume, which appeared in 1975, was abland rehash of the standard odd-facta collections.This new edition is, by marvelous contrast, well-conceived, well-edited, well-designed, and more oftenthan not, engagingly well-written. It’s impossible togive even a fair idea of the topics covered, but thebook is interesting throughout, both informative andpleasurable to read. from the pressesIrwin Shaw’s Short Stories: Five Decades(Delacorte, $12.95) 63 stories from a long anddistinguished writing career. Critics agree that one ofthe most notable characteristics of Shaw’s shortstories is their power of first impression; these arestories which, “once read, stay with you for the restof your life.”The Stories of John Cheever (Knopf, $15.00) 61stories from another long and distinguished writingcareer, these written over three decades. Thepopularity of Falconer has, I think, finally doneCheever justice. Few writers can capture as well asCheever the feelings of personal bewilderment andrevelation in so few words. Even the early stories inthis collection are lyrical and mythic, yet broughtclose to heart by a strong and clear moral vision.In Paperback:Six Men by Alistair Cooke (Berkeley, $2.25) Glimp¬ses into Cooke’s friendships with Charles Chaplin,H. L. Mencken, Humphrey Bogart, Adlai Stevenson,Bertrand Russell, and Edward VIII. Even if theauthor were not perceptive, which he is, this bookwould be interesting for its set of eccentriccharacters.Robert F. Kennedy: A Memoir by Jack Newfield(Berkeley, $2.50) Newfield writes for the VillageVoice, and this book shows the publication’s ear¬marks: careful research, an eye for fine detail, and anoften-engaging conversational tone. In the chaptersthat I have read, Newfield steers clear of weakly sen¬timentality and, in fact, documents, rather than givesan impression, of Kennedy’s character. It could havebeen more smoothly written, though.Robert Kennedy in an early 1968 appearance at theUniversity.OF RICHARD WRIGHTOF PINK FLOYD.A NEW SOLO ALBUMON COLUMBIA RECORDSAND TAPES..* . sRODUCED BY RICHARD WRIGHT Columbia'.' are trademarks of CBS Inc. C 1978 CBS IncF^bracadabta.I sit on his knee.Presto chango.and now he is me.Hocus pocus,we take her to bedMagic is fun;we re dead.MACKA TERRIFYING LOVE STORYJOSEPH E LEVINE PRESENTSMAGICANTHONY HOPKINS ANN-MARGRETBURGESS MEREDITH EDLAUTEREXECUTIVE PRODUCER CO ERICKSONMUSIC BY JERRY GOLDSMITHSCREENPLAY BY WILLIAM GOLDMAN,BASED UPON HIS NOVELPRODUCED BY JOSEPH E. LEVINEAND RICHARD P LEVINEDIRECTED BY RICHARD ATTENBOROUGHPRINTS BY DE LUXE TECHNICOLOR' jar :STARTS FRIDAY. NO/EMBER 10TH AT A THEATER NEAR YOUCHECK LOCAL NEWSPAPERS FOR THEATER LISTINGSFriday, November 3, 1978 — 9Silent Days ofby Steven FeldmanDays of Heaven is a film hardly in need of words —it is a modern silent movie. Director Terrence Malickmust share much of the credit for the film withcinematographer Nestor Almendros, and withHaskell Wexler, who did additional photography.Days of Heaven is one of the most purely visual filmsin years, and easily one of the most beautiful (onlyBertolucci’s 1900 and The Conformist outclass it).Nominally about two men who love the samewoman, the film’s main concerns are even more basic.This is an elemental movie whose real subjects arefire, earth, water, and air. The film repeatedly con¬trasts the characters with majestic shots of vast,golden wheatfields, dancing flames, constant winds,and rolling rivers. The point, though certainly notnew, is still a powerful one: man and his doings willsoon pass, erased by the powers of nature.The film’s style is set in the first scene, which takesplace in a Chicago steel factory in 1916. Outlinedagainst a huge, roaring furnace, a worker and aforeman fight. The foreman is knocked down and theworker must flee. The scene is brief, clear, and donealmost without a word between the two. The factoryworker (Richard Gere), his 12 year old sister (LindaManz), and his lover (Brooke Adams) posing as hissister, escape to Texas. They work as harvesters for ayoung landowner (playwright Sam Shepard). The lan¬downer takes a fancy to the woman, who returns thefavor by marrying him. With Gere staying on to workthe land, matters lead to complications.But the land itself is of more interest. Thecharacters are almost consistently dwarfed by thesky and fields. Man can do little more than supplicateto nature (one early shot shows the workers prayingbefore the harvest); he is ruled by the cycle of Heavenharvest, planting, growth, and then harvest again. Inthe film’s most sustained and powerful scene, locustsswoop down on the fields, destroying the fresh wheat,Farmlands try desperately to smoke them out only tostart a ravaging fire. It is almost a Biblical scene —punishment by plague, destruction by fire — and. asshot by Almendros, it could be straight out of Dante’sInferno.lt is the highlight of the movie and it is allvisual, done without a word.The film fails its characters when they are notgiven depth or motivation. Malick had the same trou¬ble in his first work, Badlands, but there it was not acrucial problem because the emptiness of theprotagonists went well with the landscape. Coupledhere with the scanty plot, it becomes a majordrawback. Not given much reason to care about thepeople on screen, the audience concentrates on thestunning work Almendros and Wexler have done.They steal the movie; it’s one gorgeous shot afteranother, with glowing yellow fields, rich dark browninteriors, and electric blue skies following each otherwithout pause. The lack of good characterizationshurts the actors most of all. Richard Gere, whoplayed Diane Keaton’s live-wire boyfriend inLooking for Mr. Goodbar, is especially constrained— he has little chance to use his pent-up energies.Days of Heaven is worth seeing for its visual beau¬ty and its lesson in how to tell a story simply bycinematic means (much of the dialogue and narrationare unnecessary at best, and ludicrous at worst). tsutit is also a lesson in the limits of those techniques.Without a good story and believable, humancharacters, no amount of style and beauty can keep amovie from eventually evaporating in the viewer’smind.Thick Paint!VI Tfo,' 1 V ■ ' iL . w w^m wwm*, w&mThe Renaissance Society’s current exhibit, ThickPaint features nine artists whose paintings arerepresentative of almost sensory painting style.In “Nine Young Painters,’’ a commentary on thisexhibit, New York Times art critic Carter Ratcliffsays that although “no group of stylistically linkedthick-paint painters’’ has appeared,” it is a “newstyle” that has its basis in everything from Williamde Kooning’s action paintings of the 1950’s to GermanExpressionism and the art of 16th century Venice.Commenting on how viewing this exhibit differsfrom that of much recent contemporary art, Ratcliffsays: “Art critics often talk about the viewer’s eye,the faculty employed in a discriminating look at anartwork. The viewer’s eye is not so much an organ asa batch of expectations, habits, preferences andjudgmental categories. The viewer’s eyes are quite10 — Friday, November 3, 1976 different. They make no distinction, for example, bet¬ween abstract and representational form, betweengood taste and bad, between the modernistmainstream and its tributaries. The paintings in thisexhibit offer much to the critical eye, but they ad¬dress themselves to the eyes first of all. The eyes areinvited to luxuriate in textures, hues and forms thatlink vision with touch and other senses. Nodetachable esthetic issues are taken up. Nor are thesepainters self-expressive in familiar ways. They areconcerned to find images that exemplify . .. the quali¬ty or nature or style of the artist’s self when it is intouch with — sometimes literally touching — itsmedium.“Looking at these paintings is chiefly a matter ofpermitting one’s critical eye, as well as one’s eyes, towork uninhibitedly in that sensory mode which Photo by Rolf Achillesreveals the artist’s own presence as indubitably asthe presence of this or that color. I’m not talkingabout a direct, “pre-mental” kind of perception,which is unimaginable in any case. Rather, I’m sug¬gesting that the thick paint of these artists en¬courages a shift away from conceptualized, categoriz¬ing, “issue-oriented,” public modes of seeing toprivate modes in which meaning is conveyed byassociation.”These artists reject the public modes of seeing call¬ed for by the reductionist school of the 1960’s, and inso doing, “they respect the elusiveness of each in¬dividual’s presence, and hope the objects they makecan somehow equal it.”The Renaissance Society is located at 1010 E. 59thSt., Goodspeed Hall 108. Hours are 9-4, Monday-Saturday. The show will close November 8.Runner StumblesBy Steven FeldmanThe Runner Stumbles, Milan Stitt’s play based onturn-of-the-century trial of a priest for the murder8f nun. is the season’s first production at theWisdom Bridge Theatre, 1559 W. Howard. It is anauspicious beginning for the company’s fifth year.The play is t^ie story °* Father Rivard and SisterRita, a priest and a nun in a small backwoodsMichigan town in 1911. Father Rivard is an intellec¬tual. an unemotional man who is a great believer inchurch law and custom. Sister Rita is his opposite —.full of feeling and innovation. Father Rivard is atfirst confused with the sister (at one point he saysthat she sometimes sounds like a Protestant); he thenbecomes more and more angry at her for her in¬sistence that people can get close to God in manyways, even if those ways do not always have theChurch’s blessing.As the play unfolds, we begin to see another aspectof the relationship between these two people. FatherRivard becomes attracted to Sister’Rita’s caring andhappy energy, while the sister is drawn to FatherRivard’s learning and dedication. Being a priest anda nun, the two cannot acknowledge their feelingstowards one another.If badly done, the play could easily turn FatherRivard and Sister Rita into cardboard characters,with the father standing for a cold, intellectual,customary approach to religion, and the sisterrepresenting a more human viewpoint. That this doesnot happen is a tribute to the two lead actors, GregVinkler and Janice St. John.Vinkler portrays Father Rivard as a passionateman, but one who, through fear of being hurt, hascarefully clamped down on his emotions. Rivard is aman who has seen most of his family ravaged by»disease, and his faith in the Church is his onlydefense to the horrors of life. Vinkler conveys effec¬tively the father’s deep unease at having his viewsshaken, first by Sister Rita, and then by his own lovefor her. As the sister, Janice St. John looks beautiful even as her black, lifeless habit practically envelopesher; her clothes cannot contain her spirit. At onepoint, she says that she’s tired of being called“sister” all the time; for once she would like to becalled “her.” The Runner Stumbles works becauseVinkler and St. John have the audience caring aboutFather Rivard and Sister Rita as people.The entire production is a powerful and moving oneand much of the credit must go to Robert Falls’ direc¬tion. The play is set during the murder trial but usesnumerous flashbacks to unfold the relationship bet¬ween Father Rivard and Sister Rita, to describe theevents during a climactic fire in which Sister Rita isfound murdered, and finally, to reveal the gruesomedetails of the killing.Falls has the play moving crisply between the jailcell, Father Rivard’s rectory and the courtroom, andhe does not let the many changes in time and placeconfuse the audience.Gary Baugh’s sparse stage design allows the many shifts to take place on different parts of the set, andMary Badger’s lighting follows it all closely. Baughhas also created stained-glass backdrop consisting offigures in outline. Joseph Reiser’s music, rangingfrom the happy singing of schoolchildren toponderous Gregorian chants, draws attention when ithas to and is unobtrusive when it doesn’t.Among the supporting cast, Joan Spatafora (whoplays Father Rivard’s devoted, dull-mindedhousekeeper), Ron Hirsen (as Rivard’s thoroughlyunlikeable church superior), and Donald Flayton(who keeps his folksy defense lawyer character fromslipping into simplistic musings), should be singledout.Wisdom Bridge is one of the important factors inthe current flowering of Chicago theater. That alonewould make it worthy of support, but with its fineproduction of The Runner Stumbles, Southsidershave an especially good reason to make the long tripup to Howard Street.Interview with RunnerGreg Vinkler, who plays the lead role in The Run¬ner Stumbles, is a Chicagoan who has returned hereafter receiving a Fine Arts degree this past spring atOhio University. He has been lucky so far, he says,because he’s been appearing in plays ever since then.He played Macbeth at Court Theatre during the sum¬mer, and also had a major role in Court’s productionof The Winter’s Tale. In addition to his current workin The Runner Stumbles, Vinkler has been appearingin “Lake Shore Live,” the noontime soap operaparody at the Carnegie Theater.Vinkler’s work on “Lake Shore Live” has providedhim with not only a very welcome second acting job,but the comic role has also help offset some of thepressures that build up in his work as Father Rivard.Vinkler spends a great deal of time thinking about hisroles, and stresses that an actor must respond to thatpart of the character that is within himself. He thinksof The Runner Stumbles as not so much a play aboutfaith or the Church, but rather as the story of the con¬flicting emotions of two people. Vinkler first got interested in acting as a form ofrelease, as a means to bring his own thoughts andemotions to the surface. He says he still cannot act infront of people he is only acquainted with; they musteither be very close friends or part of an anonymouscrowd.Acting is exhausting work and Vinkler is not cer¬tain why he enjoys doing it, other than as a form oftherapy. He feels strongly that an actor must use hisown feelings in playing a part and does not want tosimply imitate other people’s views on a particularcharacter.Though he admires many actors, Vinkler does notwant to pattern himself any one of them, preferring todevelop his own style.Vinkler would eventually like to do some directing,but will stick with acting for the foreseeable future.He has auditioned for roles in some upcoming pro¬ductions but has nothing definite yet. Based on thepower he brings to his role in The Runner Stumbles,Vinkler is likely to appear often, and local audienceswill be in for a treat.Tickets StillAvailable ForM.A.B. COFFEEHOUSETHE ANTHONY BRAXTON TRIOONNovember 3,1978Hutch CommonsTickets: 2.50 (MAB fee payees)4.50 (all others)Coffee, Tea, Hot Apple Cider andDoughnuts will be served.Shows at 3:30 and 10:30DON'T MISSOREGON Nov 18th* VAN APPEAL FROM VETERANSFOR PEACETO U.C. STUDENTS, FACULTY & STAFFAt the very last moment, despite every effort of a corrupt, racistpolitical machine to keep him off the ballot, our Commander, A.A."Sammy'' Rayner, Jr. is the Republican candidate for Congress from the1st District. "Sammy'' Rayner, one of the first black pilots in the AirForce, stuck his neck out to become commander of Vets for Peace in1966 when no other prominent vet in the city had the guts and hispolitical advisers told him it was suicide to demand immediate with¬drawal from Vietnam. Vets for Peace in turn was able to put poll wat¬chers into many precincts as "Sammy” won a seat in the City Counciland tried twice for Congress. We saw such things as a precinct inwhich a State Representative, now a State Senator, who wasn't even ajudge in the precinct, went behind the machines and called off a wholeseries of bond issues as 300-0 in favor of 303 voters using themachines when the actual vote ranged around 100-50.If you want a brave, honest leader representing you in Congress, aman who will fight against military domination of policy and thenational budget that are the REAL root of the terrible inflation we aresuffering; if you want a man who sees the real security of America ina strong economy and national policies that will make our nation ad¬mired, not feared, to be YOUR Congressman, here's what you can do:IF YOU ARE A REGISTERED VOTER IN THEFIRST CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT, PULL 10-B,THE FREEDOM KEY, FIRST TOVOTE FOR A.A.//SAMMY" RAYNEREndorsed by Independent Voters of IllinoisIF YOU ARE A REGISTERED VOTERANYWHERE IN COOK COUNTY, HELPTUEDAY TO PREVENT VOTE FRAUD -P0LLWATCH FOR A. A."SAMMY" RAYNERCall 493-0911 to volunteer as a pollwatcher and stop fraudn this election. If you have not pollwatched before inChicago, classes will be held in Room 359 of the Del PradoHotel, 5307 S. Hyde Park Blvd. as follows:Saturday, Nov. 4, 4 P.M.Sunday, Nov. 5, 2 P.M.Monday, Nov. 6, 6:30 P.M.CALL 493-0911ANYTIME CALL 493-0911ANYTIMEThis ad paid for by Veterans for Peoce, 542 S. Dearborn. Suite 510,Chicago, Illinois 60605 Tel. 922-0065 Pierce Tower Public Affairs SeriesEdward R. VrdolyakAlderman, Chicago Tenth Wardand well known Democratic Party leader“Chicago Politics. 5 JPierce Tower Sunday Nov. 5,7:30P.M.A NICE PLACE TOSKATE A DATEOR MEET ONEROLLER RINK4150 W. 55th St.767-1800Three Blocks West of Pulaski*DISCO EXPLOSIONFRIDAY andSATURDAY NITES•t — -rioay November 3, 1973Barry HannahThere were no empty seats in Harper 130 on Tues¬day night when Barry Hannah, the highly praisednew writer, read from his short stories for the firstWilliam Vaughn Moody lecture of the year.English professor Richard Stern, the man repons-ible for Hannah’s appearance, introduced Hannahby saying that Airships, a collection of Hannah’sshort stories published last spring, was in instantsuccess and was immediately recognized by influen¬tial writers and critics.Wearing a three-piece suit and flaunting a ciga¬rette while reading, Hannah spoke with an air ofinformality, pausing at times to savour desired re¬sponses from his audience. Jazz in HutchThe Anthony Braxton Trio will appear at HutchCommons this Friday, November 3, in an 8:30 and10:30 show. Braxton is a highly regarded “multi-in-stumentalist whose performances have been earn¬ing him a long list of awards and critical plaudits.Last year the Chicago-born saxophonist was de¬scribed by New Times magazine as a man who “maybe the most important, and certainly the most pro¬vocative” of our contemporary jazz players.A former student of the Chicago Musical College,Braxton went to Paris in 1969 to study with some ofthe established innovators in creative music. Heshared a concert with composer-multi-instrumenta-lidi ornette Coleman, and became a member of theco-operative group, "The Creative ConstructionCompany,” along with Leo Smith, Leroy Jenkins,and Steve McCall. From 1970 to 1971 Braxton touredthe United States with the ensemble, “Musica Elec¬tronics Viva,” which was one of the first ensemblesto explore the possibilities of live electronic musicand instrumental improvisation.Before the reading, Hannah suggested the kind ofhumor often found in his work when he began notby reading, but rather by playing the trumpet todemonstrate that “my real talent is writing.” Theaudience couldn't help but agree.Stern later stated that he was pleased with theturnout. He described Hannah as a “terrific charac¬ter,” and said his reading at the University was adebut for Hannah comparable to that of DylanThomas some twenty-odd years ago.Baroque CalligraphyGo For Baroque, the current exhibition at theBergman Gallery on the fourth floor of Cobb Hall, isa light-hearted part of the campus-wide BaroqueCelebration which has been coordinated by the Uni¬versity Extension. The exhibit is a brief look atsome of the wonderfully fanciful calligraphic letterforms, ornaments, and figures which evolved duringthe Baroque period.Modern calligraphy began in Renaissance Italywith a style called Chancery cursive. During the six¬teenth century, this writing style was stabilized bythe publication of a number of books of writingsamples. The seventeenth century brought an evenlarger number of these engraved books which dis¬played a developed Baroque form of the Chancerycursive hand. The works in the exhibit are largely ofthis style.Most of the items in the exhibit are reproductionsof the originals. In addition, the scale of the origi¬nals has often been changed. Small portions of orig¬inally small border elements have been enlarged many hundreds of times. A frog which was once aninch high is over two feet tall; an owl is enlargedfrom half an inch to eighteen. This enlargement en¬ables the amazing detail of the handwork to beclearly seen. This kind of omamation of borders forprinted works is foreign to us today with our quick¬ly and uniformly type set books and our computerprint outs.Baroque calligraphy was actually designed to befunctional. It is decorated (overly perhaps as all Ba¬roque things now seem to be over decorated) but itis functional. Before typewriters, xerox machines,and computers, business correspondence and let¬ters and accounts had to be kept laboriously byhand. Handwriting was important in a way that isunimaginable today. Handwriting exercises andtechniques were the concern of business men whogoverned trading empires; handwriting was not theexclusive province of first grade teachers. Severalof the account ledgers in the exhibit show how theBaroque hand was actually used. It is functional. Since 1970, Braxton has given lectures and classesthroughout America and Europe, and has been anartist in residence at San Jose University and An¬tioch College among others. Braxton was also amember of the musical co-operative “Circle” withDave Holland, Chick Corea, and Barry Altschul.Braxton made his concert debut in New York in 1972at Town Hall, where he performed duet, trio, andquintet, followed by a solo saxophone concert atCarnegie Recital Hall. Braxton was a main partici¬pant in the “New York Musicians Jazz Festival,”under the direction of composer Sam Rivers. TheFestival was one of the first festivals of its kindsince the breakup of the Jazz Composers in the mid¬sixties.Braxton has scored two-2-record sets, “For Alto.”which won the Gold-Disc Award from the Japanesemusic critics. He has also made two films, “ParisStreets,” and “Un Coup de Dix Francs,” with PhillipCardenu.The Braxton Trio’s concert is sponsored by theMajor Activities Board. Tickets are 2.50 for MAB Feepayees, and 4.50 for all others, and are on sale now.Coffee, tea, hot apple cider and doughnuts will beserved.Anthony BraxtonThe exhibit is of necessity too brief. RegensteinLibrary owns further examples of Baroque calli¬graphy. Hopefully, those who enjoyed the show willbe able to see more in the Library, where they cansit down to examine the texts.The exhibit will be on display through November17.DOC FILMSVictor Fleming’sTHE WIZARD OF OZFriday November 3 6:45,8:45 & 10:45Clint Eastwood’sTHE GAUNTLETSaturday November 4 7:15 & 9:30Louis Malle’sMURMUR OF THE HEARTSunday Novembers 7:00 & 9:30All Films $1.50 Cobb Hall The IOWA MBAThe Master of Business Administration degree program is of particu¬lar interest to those with undergradate or graduate preparation inany field who aspire to administrative careers in the business or publicsector. For information, please write:Graduate ProgramsCollege of BusinessAdministrationUniversity of IowaIowa City, IA 52242 NameStreetCity State ZipInformation about other graduate programs( ) Ph D. in Business( ) Ph.D. In Economics( ) Professional AccountingFriday, November 3. 197S — nBOBBY HUTCHERSONyou M _ RAWLSLIVEincludm*Thi* Sor*9 WillLas! Fof«v#fS«*'touWhr'I G«! Th#r«. Send inl Th« ClownsI You M N*verI-md Aoott»«* ^433S-i» LL,TEmidnightmadnesswith ebs RECORDSspin-ifWe’ve got every record...on every label on SALE...FRI. NOV.3... 9 PM to 2 AM... at 40% OFF the manufacturer'ssuggested list price. We re featuring the entire CBS familyof artists likeLIST OUR FRI7.98 5.48 4.797.98 6.99 5.9913.98 8.99 8.39cO'11444 E. 57thFRI. NOV. 39 P.M. to 2 A.M. FENIQNOVEMBER IS ASPECIAL MONTHAT KAFFENIOEVERY NIGHT WE OFFERDELICIOUS DINNERAND WINE SPECIALS— DUCK A L’ORANGE— ROAST PRIME RIB OF BEEF— CHATEAUBRIAND FOR TWO— SAUTEED SEA SCALLOPS— POACHED RED SNAPPER♦PLUS MANY MORE*All specials include soup du jour,Kaffenio salad, potatoes, and fresh vegetables.CABERNET SAUVIGNON, MOUTONCADET, ZELLER SWARTZ KATZ,BROLIO CHIANTI,.. .to mention a few.IN A SEATING OF CASUAL ELEGANCEWE SERVE A WIDE VARIETY OF LIGHTLUNCHES, PERFECT FOR THE GUESTSIN A HURRY.SUNDAY BRUNCH — A CLASSICMEDITERRANEAN FEAST -10:30-3:00.KAFFENIO1550 E. 55th St.Chicago, Ill. 60615For information or reservations call: 643-2240r.H v/, NO\"v 3, 1078Center for Decision Researchthe Graduate School of BusinessiU hold an open lecture|0n Monday- Nov. 6,1978rhe speaker will be,r0fessor Kenneth VI. Hammond,irector of the Center for Researchi Judgment and Policy,epartment of Psychology,niversity of Colorado at Boulder.jpic: “The Psychologist as aPolicy Consultant.”me: 1:30-3:00ace: Rosenwald Hall, Room 11DMISSION: No chargeROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPEL5850 South Woodlawn AvenueSUNDAY • NOVEMBER 5,197811 a.m.UNIVERSITY MEMORIAL SERVICEE. SPENCER PARSONSDean of the Chapel“The Measure of a University”4:30 p.m.CARILLON RECITALROBERT LODINE, University Carillonneur5 p.m.iSERVICE OF THE HOLY EUCHARISTi institution of Charles D. Brown as Episcopalplain by the Bishop of Chicago, The Rt. Rev.|iesW. Montgomery.i-sponsored by the Episcopal Church Councilglican) of Chicago.Cnduitc School of Busines • The University of ChicagoFour Lectures on Keynes byDON PATINKINFord Foundation V wiring Research Professorin the department of Economics and theCraduate School of BusinessProfessor of Economics at the HehmcUniversity of Jerusalemanticipations of the general theory?MoihUv, November 6 "The Problem Defined"Wednesday, November 8 ' "The Scandinavian School”Monday, November 13 "Michal Kalecki"IINAHON of KEYNES THEORY OF EFFECTIVE DEMANDWednesday, November 1530Pm in Stuart Hall (formerly Business East), Room lOljEmission is without ticket and without charge If you want to get into nuclear engineering, start by get¬ting into the Nuclear Navy.The Navy operates more than half the reactors inAmerica. Our nuclear training is the most comprehensive.You start by earning your commission as a Navy Officer.Then we give you a year of advanced nuclear training.During your career, you’ll get practical, hands-on experi¬ence with our nuclear powered fleet.If that sounds like the kind of responsibility you’relooking for, speak to:Your Navy Officer Representatives will be on camp¬us on Tuesday, Nov. 7. They will be located in theStudent Center.Dollars & Sense Resale Shop1312 E. 53rd St.Special 4 hour Sale:’Open 10:30 a.m. Nov. 5 Sunday ICome and see our fine clothing,accessoriesand jewelry. Also miscellaneous householdgoods, dishes, lamps and small appliances.Open 11:00 to 4:30 Mon.-Fri.HEAR AGAINis Chicago’s used and demo stereospecialists featuring the best buys inguaranteed used, demo and closeoutstereo components.This week’s specials: -KLH 300 Speakers New $ 85.00pairSansui 210 $ 80.00Crown IC150 $175.00Philips/Calleroauto turntable $ 54.95Sherwood 7110 $125.00Dual 1215 - complete $ 59.00ADS 700 $ 99.00eachSherwood 8900A $199.00J.V.C. Reel to Reel $ 99.00B.I.C.980 $ 85.00Complete systems from $75.00 to $750.0060 day trade back privilege.HEAR AGAIN 7002 N. California Chicago338-7737 %CONTACTLENSESHARD LENSES SOFT LENSES*35, *95,WEAR YOUR CONTACTS HOMETHE SAME DAYWe stock over 4000 diflerent prescriptions and can dis¬pense your contacts on your initial visit.*These are the very same contact lenses that are selling for 3or 4 times our price. 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TO HELP AS A PEACECORPS OR VISTA VOLUNTEER.Sign-up at Placement Office for InterviewsWed.-Thurs.,Nov.8-9(j#RPS VISTAFriday, November 3. 1978 — 15CLOSELY BOUNDby George BaileyAdmission to all NAM, Law School and weekendDoc films is $1.50. It costs $2 to get into the movies atthe Baroque Festival, but they have lectures anddiscussions, too. NAM and Doc films can be seen inQuantrell Auditorium, Cobb Hall, 5811 S. Ellis Ave.The Baroque movies are screened in InternationalHouse auditorium, 1414 E. 59th St., and you can seethe Law School’s films in the Law SchoolAuditorium, 1111 E. 60th St.Lola Montes <1955), directed by Max Ophuls. (BF)This is simply the greatest movie ever made inCinemaScope. It is the story of the famed courtesan,how she acquired and lost political influence, told asshe sits on display in a circus tent. Lola rises by pass¬ing from lover to lover and falls when she glimpseslove. Through this Ophuls shows the futility of anyattempt to achieve emotional contentment. However,once one tries to attain this satisfaction he cannotstop until he realizes the attempt’s furtility. Thecharacters are never allowed to escape the camera;the long takes trap them in spacial and temporal con¬tinuity and the tracks surround them by voyeuristicaudiences (those of the circus and of the movietheater). The image of the circle around Lola is con¬sistently brought up, emphasizing her entrapment byher own emotions and her distinctiveness from thecrowd around her. The screen is constantly filled withall types of motion, each with its own significance.But it is also a distraction, for the characters from thestatic emotions driving them. Ophuls does not try todescribe the love that caused Lola’s downfall, rise,and final degradation; instead he treats the audienceas passing voyeurs. Its members can never unders¬tand the emotions of a woman who continues only torelive her past nightly. If you miss this one, you’re areal sucker. Friday at 7.The Wizard of Oz (1939), directed by Victor Flem¬ing. (Doc) So you say you’ve never seen The Wizardof Oz on the silver screen, not even on a white sheet insome slimy basement apartment at 5 a.m. Well, its 20times better on screen than on TV and about 60 timesmore surreal. The color is out of control, the plot hascontinuity, and the munchkins are incredibly short.This will be one of the most outrageous experiences ofyour life. For sure, go see it. Friday at 6:45, 8:45, and10:45.Cabaret (1972), directed by Bob Fosse. (LSF) LizaMinnelli is a charming little lapper in Berlin duringHitler’s rise. The town is really decadent and themusic in the Kit Kat Klub, where Liza works,graciously points this out. Despite this awful at¬mosphere, Liza loves Michael York, and he loves her.A Baron comes along and makes love to both of them.The relationship falls apart and with the heavy hand¬ed editing, so does the film. Saturday at 7 and 9:30.The Gauntlet (1977), directed by Clint Eastwood.(Doc) Cop Eastwood is sent to Las Vegas to bringhooker and “nothing witness’’ Sondra Locke back toPhoenix for a “nothing trial”. Still, the odds are 75 to1 against him as he evades mobsters and cops who tryto kill the pair. The film is a great parody on theEastwood image. We have all the standard cameraangles of big man Clint, but instead of looking toughand under control, his hair is greasy and he’s suckingon any convenient bottle of Jack Daniels. Theviolence is excessive, but comic, and Eastwood’sresourcefulness has him make effective use ofludicrous tools. Go see it. Saturday at 7:15 and 9:30.The Tarnished Angels (1958), directed by DouglasSirk. (BF) Reporter Rock Hudson falls in with a fly¬ing circus. Robert Stack is a pilot who wants to tem¬porarily trade his wife, Dorothy Malone, for a plane.Sirk’s films are among the subtlest in which formmocks content. His extremely lush interiors andover-emphasis of standard symbolism ridiculesmelodramatic conventions while strictly stayingwit1”'" ftw'm This is one of his best works. Based onThe Grey City JournalEditor: Nancy CrillyAssociate editor: Melinda CoreyLiterary editor: Peter EngStaff:George Bailey, Steven-Feldman. Barry Hof-fstaeder, Richard Kaye, MatthewMcNeeledge, Dan Newman. Tom Rukavina.Stuart Ryder. Faulkner’s Pylon. Go see it. Saturday at 7.Murmur of the Heart (1971), directed by LouisMalle. (Doc) 15 year old Renzo is having a rough timewith sex. For example, his brothers take him to awhorehouse, as any responsible older brother woulddo, and they humiliate him (c’mon, you can’t expectme to give away the juicy parts). However, there isone person he can turn to, a boy’s real best friend.That’s right: Mom. Renzo has all the fun Oedipus didand can still see. Mom knew then that he was trulywell adjusted. A cutesy film. Sunday at 7 and 9:30.Last Year at Marienbad (1961), directed by AlainResnais. (BF) A man, X, meets a woman in a spa andthe two have an affair. The man convinces her thatthe affair began a year before, but now she wants tocontinue her relationship with M, the man she is liv¬ing with. X fears the impending loneliness and sobecomes desperate and follows her around. As in Jet’aime, je t’aime, Resnais examines the impact ofemotions on individuals and the resultant percep¬tions of time. Monday at 7. Photo by Barney HoffstaederMusicBaroque Recital, vocal and instrumental music, iieluding Buxtehude’s Solo Cantata #1, “SingetdeiHerrn and Ciacona in a minor for organ, TelemannDie Landluft, Handel’s Flammende Rose and SustStille, arias from Bach’s Cantatas 039, 058.Kaffee Kantate, and Bach’s Sonata in E-flat for flu!and clavier. Saturday, November 4, 8pmAugustana Lutheran Church, 5500 S. WoodlawnAvTheaterThe Birthday Party by Harold Pinter at CoiTheater, Mandel Hall, 5706 S. University Ave. op«November 8 with preview, and every Thursday. I*cept Thanksgiving) Friday, Saturday (8:30 pmi*Sunday (7:30 pm) through December 10. OnePinter’s best plays. S2.00-S2.50 students. $4.0044all others. Call 753-3581 for reservations.16 Friday, Novemoer 3, 1978CLOSELY BOUNDThis week in the arts-cityLyric Opera all at 20 N. Wacker Drive. Call 346-6111[more information.Neither by Jules Massenet with Alfredo Kraus aslerther. Friday, November 3, 7:30 pm.pagliacci by Leoncavallo, opens Saturday,Lvember 4,7:30 pm.dadarn Butterfly, by Puccini, Monday, November/:30pm.Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Orchestra Hall, 220[Michigan Ave. Call 435-8122 for more information.Chicago Symphony Subscription Concerts:lonard Slatkin, conductor, Claudine Carlson,ezzo-soprano. Program includes works by Mozart,elius, Bernstein and Chavez. Thursday, Nov. 9,115 pm.[Jackie MaClean and Ira Sullivan at the Jazzfiowcase, 901 N. Rush, through Sunday, NovemberShows at 9 pm, 11 pm, and 1 am. Two drinkjinimum and cover charge. Call 337-1000 for more in-Irmation.14th Annual Chicago International Film Festival,tonsored by Cinema Chicago begins Nov. 3. Screen-|gs at Village, 1548 N. Clark; Biograph, 2433 N. Lin-|ln; Bismarck, LaSalle at Randolph. Highlights:iday: Rembrandt 1669, 9:15, Village; Watershipawn, 8:30, Bismarck; Saturday, Nov. 4: Halloween,lidnight, Village; Sunday: Unfinished Score for aI'ano Player, 6pm, Village. Single tickets are1.50.[Women in Love, Three Penny Cinema, 2424 N Lin-Ae., directed by Ken Russell, this adaptation of!D.H. Lawrence novel, this film is worth seeing ifpu like watching Glenda Jackson scamper about in* forest qr Oliver Reed and Alan Bates wrestling toove their masculinity heavy-handed. Even lessparding is the 2nd half of the double bill, Russell’se Music Lovers. An anti-human defamation of the!of Tschiakofsky, it is without a single redeemingature.Roma' 400 Theatre, 6746 N. Sheridan Rd. Directedederico Fellini, Roma is the Italian director’sjjage to the city. With it is Satyricon.| essiah, Film Center of the Art Institute. This lastir ^at^er kalian neo-realism, Robertose mi, Messiah will be the final presentation ofReason at the Film Center. Photo by Barney HoffstaederColumbian exposition exhibit at Chicago Architecture CenterTheaterEmigres, bizarre comedy about two immigrants,AA and XX, the revolutionary and the peasant, in abasement room. They drink and smoke, the electrici¬ty goes off, talk about sexual fantasies and class con¬sciousness, and in one memorable scene, the peasantopens a can of dog food with an axe for dinner,(sounds familiar?) Through Sunday. Ticket pricesvary. Goodman II, Latin School, Clark and NorthAvenue. 443-3822.Fifth of July. This play could teach St. Vitus howto dance, although it went over well in New York.Cast of hyperkinetic characters includes junkie coun¬try music singer and her husband/manager; nasty ex¬revolutionary and her over-developed illegitimatedaughter; embittered crippled Vietnam vet and hisgay gardener friend (one of the two likeable people inthis play) and batty old woman carrying around herhusband’s ashes (the other likeable one). Two hoursof incessant screaming and running around.At St. Nicholas Theater. 2851 N. Halsted. ThroughSunday, November 5. Call 281-1202 for ticket in¬formation.The Glass Menagerie, opens this Friday,November 3 for this weekend and next weekend only.Niles College Theater Company, 7135 N. Harlem.Tickets: $2.50, $3.00. Performances Friday and Satur¬day at 8:30 pm, Sunday 7:30 pm. Call 631-1017.The Homecoming by Haorld Pinter. VictoryGardens Theater 3730 N. Clark. Thursday throughSunday, ticket prices vary. Call 549-5788.Native Son Goodman Theater (see article thisissue). Art Galleries:The Art Institute of Chicago, Michigan Ave. atAdams St., Pompeii AD 79, through November 12;Works on Paper: 77th Exhibition by Artists ofChicago and Vicinity, an exhibition including draw¬ings, watercolors, collages, and paperworks, throughDec. 3: Rembrandt: Nudes, Landscapes andMythology, including selections from the permanentcollection and several on loan from the Norton SimonMuseum of Art, through December; Photography:Smile for the Birdie, including photographs by 17Chicago-area artists, indefinite run. Museum hours:Mon. - Wed. and Friday: 10:30 a.m, - 4:30 p.m.Sat., Sun., holidays -10:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.Thursday: 10:30 a.m. - 8:00 p.m.Admission variesMuseum of Contemporary Art, 237 E. Ontario St.,Buildings Reborn: New Uses, Old Places, an exhibi¬tion on architectural preservation in the U.S.,through Nov. 12; Adolf Wolfli: A Retrospective, astudy of the Swiss schizophrenic Dadaist based onthe colored drawings from his autobiography. Fromthe Cradle to the Grave, indefinite run. Hours, Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m. - 5 p.m., Sun. 12 - 5 p.m. Admission $1.00.ARC Artists, Residents of Chicago, 6 W. HubbardSt., Spatial Illusions of Abstraction and Realism, anexhibition of pastel pencil abstractions by CarolHaliday McQueen and realistic still lifes by JanMiller, from Nov. 7 - Nov. 9. Gallery hours: Tues -Sat.: 11-5.DanceModern Dance Performance by Chicago MovingCompany, the city’s only repertory dance companywill perform For Betty, a revival, set to Vivaldi’sConcerto Qrosso in G major. Also performed will beSeiche, Compendium, Chicago and Re:play: at MoMing, 1034 W. Barry, Friday and Saturday at 8 pm.and Sunday at 7:30 pm. Tickets $3.00 student, $4.00others. Call 929-7419.MiscellaneousArch. Center, 310 S. Michigan Ave., 2nd floor.Chicago Architecture Foundation, 1800 S. PrairieAve. The Chicago World’s Columbian Exposition of1893, a showing of rare plantinum-print photographsof the Columbian Exposition taken by the Fair’s of¬ficial photographer, Charles Dudley Arnold. Spon¬sored by the Chicago Architecture Foundation.Through November 11.Chicago Radio Theatre, WFMT, 98.7FM, 1450 AMNovember 6. Bret Harte's The Outcasts of PokerFlat, 8:00 p.m.Laurie Metcalf and Jeff Perry in St. Nicholas’ Fifth <vJulyFriday, November 3, 1978 17TM□A FULL WEEKEND OF THE BESTillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllliillllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllilllllllllllllllilllllllllilllillllllllllllllin'IllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllSlillllllllllLIVE ROCKEVER RECORDEDGet the best seat in thehouse at 94.7 FM for someof the greatest rock concertmusic ever recorded.All weekend long WDAIwill be playing cuts from thebest live rock albums.And you’ll have a chance towin some of them along withtickets to your favorite up¬coming concerts./■:>rjsf.V;' •vv.■sc**: * \illllllllllllllillllllilllllllllllllllllllli''1mX'Chicago’s best rock. iVinSJ-r'A.* •:.* • • ■c 1978 American Broadcasting Companies. IncThe Baroque and FilmA Series of Films, Lectures and DiscussionsSponsored byThe University of Chicago Extensionat 7 P.M.International House, 1414 East 59th StreetTickets: Single - $2.Tickets on sale at Mandel Hall Box Office57th and Universityby mail: The University of Chicago Extension1307 East 60th StreetChicago, Illinois 60637and at the door on the evening of the filmsif tickets remain.Information: 753-3137November 3: Lola MontesLecturer: David Bordwell, Professor ofFilm at The University of Wisconsin,Madison. Professor Bordwell has receiv¬ed numerous grants and awards for hiswork in Film, is on the Editorial Board ofQuarterly Review of Film Studies, and isthe author of numerous articles, amongthem: “Camera Movement, the Coming0( Sound and the Classical HollywoodStyle,” Film: Historical-TheoreticalSpeculations: “Imploded Space: FilmStyle in ‘The Passion of Jeanne d’Arc’,”Purdue Film Studies; ’“Problems ofCamera Movement, ” Cine-Tracts 1.November 5: Amulf Rainer, StandardTime and History LessonsLecturer: Bruce Jenkins, PhD. can¬didate in Film at NortherwesternUniversity, Lecturer in the Fine Arts,The University of Chicago Extension. Inaddition to his current work in film, Mr.Jenkins has served on the faculty ofMundelein College, co-edited FilmReader and is the author of several ar¬ticles including: “Is There Lfe on Earth?(Dusan Makavejev’s Sweet Movie).“Velvet Light Trap; ” Hollis-Frampton:Approaching the Infinite Cinema, ’’1976Film Studies Annual; FramptonUnstructured,” Wide Angle. November 4: The Tarnished AngelsLecturer: William Horrigan, Ph D. can¬didate in Film, Northwestern Universityand Lecturer in the Fine Arts, TheUniversity of Chicago Extension. Mr.Horrigan has won several scholarshiopefor his work in Film, has served as editorfor Film Reader and is the author ofmany articles including: “Krazy OurContemporary,” Cartoon Animation: ACritical Anthology; “An Afterword Noteto Jean-Loup Bourget’s Article,” FilmReader; “Dying Without Death,’ TheClassic American Novel and the Movies.November 6: Last Year at MarienbadLecturer: Bruce Archer Morrissette,Bernard E. and Ellen Sunny Distinguish¬ed Service Professor, Department ofRomance Languages and Literaturesand the College, The University ofChicago. Professor Morissotte has longbeen regarded as one of the foremostcritical figures on Robbe-Grillet, beginn¬ing with an early book entiteld, LesRomans de Robbe-Grillet (Minuit) toTextual Assemblages in Robbe-Grillet:From Topology to the Golden Triangle.which will soon appear through YorkPress.Blackfriars PresentsMCEUPON Z*Y *directed byDRSEMANDEL HA IMEMBER 1Q.11.&12 8-005-$ 1.50/ Students$2.00/ Non-studentstickets go on sale November 3 set Ike iimnlfor 9 p.m. Fri. Nov. 3...for ourWARNER...ELEKTRA...ATLANTICSALE##* all records 40% off themanufacturer's suggested list price.STORE WIDE SALERREFALLOUUVSTRANGE"**SWEET AND SOU*AQUARIANr FANTASY mROumcJjMSSome tortrROSf HovetStrikes AgainInclude# F *r»t Come First ServeI m In Love l And I Love The Feeling)Love Don t Live Here AnymoreThat % What * Wronq With Me PSiPa| INCLUDES Miss TOURESPECT**.! BEAST QE BURDENbefore the rainGARY BURTONTimes SquareLIST OURS FRI.7.98 5.48 4.799.98 6.59 5.99 wEvery Record In The Store40% off manufacturer'ssuggested list pricee* WEAR YOUR BATHING SUITAND SAVE AN EXTRA 1 JOLesspiiHt1444 E. 57th Friday, Nov. 39 p.m. to 2 a.m.The Chiraao Marnon — Frirlav. November y 1070 _ ioCarleton knocks hootersPhoto by RW RohdeGridders grind GrinellBy RW RohdeIf you want to know, Chicago beat Grinelllast week 34-20 in a rather wild game lastweek. But everything probably would havebeen better if the game had ended athalftime. By then, the Maroons had stakedthemselves to a 25-13 lead and Dale Friarhad already rushed for 130 yards, less than50 yards shy of the magic 1000 yard mark forthe season.69 of those yards came on the second playfrom scrimmage, as Friar broke away for atouchdown and an early Chicago lead.Grinell came right back, capping their sus¬tained drive with a 16 yard run. TheMaroons did not take long to regain the lead,as Friar scored his tenth touchdown of theseason on a one-yard run that cappedChicago’s own sustained drive. Grinell wasdetected offsides on the conversion attempt,and in the ensuing play quarterback MarkMeier ran the ball across to give Chicago a15-7 lead.Grinell was on their way to another one ofthose sustained drives when Carl Herzogfoiled their plans, picking off a pass and run¬ning it back into Grinell territory. That setup a 38-yard field goal by Scott Jansen, hislongest of the year. Grinell came back withan interception of their own, as one of thedefensive linemdn batted a Mark Meierthrow into the air, picked it off andlumbered 38 yards into the endzone. Theconversion failed, and Chicago led 18-13.The Maroons then came back withanother drive, this one of 60 yards, with thefinal touches being put on by Meier and backNick Fillipo in a two-yard pass play. Jansenbooted the conversion, and the Maroons tooktheir lead into the lockerroom at halftime.Chicago would have been better off ifFriar and Doug Sibery, one of the teamspremier defensive players, had stayed there.Early in the second half, Meier ran the op¬tion left, pitching to the trailing Friar.“Everything looked clear in front of me, andthen a defensive back suddenly came up”Friar said. Friar planted his left leg to cutright when the back hit him in the rightshoulder. “The field was really bad and mycleats just dug in.” The hit spun Friararound, twisting his leg and putting him outfor the game.Friar was on crutches early in the week,but was off them by Wednesday night. Hewas scheduled to go in for X-rays this morn¬ing, at which time he will find out if he canplay tomorrow. Both he and Coach Lom¬bardi would like Friar to see enough playingtime to pick up 48 more yards if the car-tiladge isn’t torn. For now, both Friar andSibery, who was injured around the sametime, are doubtful starters.If there are any bright spots to such an in¬jury, one is the fact that the Maroons heldtogether, putting on a balanced attack andspring another touchdown on Meier’s five-yard run. Meier passed for 91 yards on theday, while Filippo and Mark Daniels pickedup some of the slack in the rushing game,gaining 74 yards in 18 attempts betweenthem. The defense held tough too, giving uponly their second toughdown of the day inthe fourth quarter. Even that they atonedfor somewhat, when Brian Roberts tackledGrinell’s quarterback in the endzone for asafety and the last score of the game. 'Chicago takes a 3-4 record into what Lom¬bardi sees as an important game againstCarleton tomorrow. At stake will be a .500record and third place in the Blue division ofHarriers to conferenceBy Robert TompkinsIn anticipation of Mid-Western conferenceand N.C.A.A. Division III meets coming inthe next few weeks, the Maroon Cross-Country team showed its strength lastSaturday in a home open meet. Coming in atthree wins and three losses, the teamboosted their record by picking up two vic¬tories and registering one defeat. Chicagobeat Wheaton and North Park and wasdefeated by North Central. Individually, ittook a Washington Park course record by aWheaton runner to deny first-year Mike Ax-inn a first place finish. The second Chicagofinisher, Pete Smith held on for fifth andMarshall Schmitt took tenth for theMaroons. All in all 24 strong Chicago run¬ners completed the course.Ted Haydon, Maroon track and Cross¬country coach for 28 years, believes that the1978 Maroon team is the strongest in overten years. The last team that possessed thecaliber of this years talent was the 1965-1966team, which included the All-American PeteHildebrand. Coach Haydon stressed that inthose twelve years competition has becomemuch more intense. Remaining competitivethis year has rested on the shoulders of20 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, November 3, 1978underclassmen. Of the top six runners forChicago, only one is a senior and two arefreshmen. Haydon is impressed by thequality of his young team.Experience has been the key to theseason. Each meet the new runners havefinished higher and higher. But the biggestquestion for the Maroons this season iswhether thev are experienced and strongenough for tomorrow’s Mid-Western con¬ference championship meet. Coach Haydonseems to feel his team is ready and shoulddo quite well, stating that the Maroons havethe talent to finish in the top of the con¬ference and at least improve on their fifthplace finish of a year ago. Battling Chicagofor the top this year will be Beloit andCarlton.Wrestlers neededAnyone interested in trying out forwrestling should contact Coach Maleshinin the varsity lockerroom at the CrownField House any weekday between 4 and6.Pre-season workouts are being held foran hour each weekday at 4:30. By Andy RothmanFor all intents and purposes the Maroonsoccer season ended with last Friday’s 2-0loss to Carleton at Stagg Field. The loss costthe team their division title in the Mid-WestConference.The Maroons came into Friday’s gameneeding a win or a tie to clinch the title. Chi¬cago was 4-0 in conference play, while Car¬leton came down to the windy city with a2-0-1 mark. The Maroons were also comingoff the heartbreaking, 4-3 double-overtimeloss to Notre Dame. Chicago came out flat inthe first half, and were thoroughly out¬played by Carleton. Carleton had comedown from Minnesota to play games hereand at Lake Forest on Saturday. Carleton’sDave Tolley broke through for both of thevisitor’s scores in the first half.Chicago’s coach Barry DeSilva couldn’tbelieve Tolley’s first goal, “...they guy justdribbled around us...I guess we had 11 morespectators on the field.”The Maroons came out fired up in the sec¬ond half. They had several excellent scoringopportunities, but were unable to make upany of the two goal deficit.Afterwards, DeSilva explained, “Weplayed today the way we played in the sec¬ond half against Notre Dame, no long passeson the wings...we had only three all game.When we got our three goals against Notre Dame they came off long passeswings.” t0 theEven with the loss, Chicago still haarlitrlntrkM f H ^ ^ §}]Q|at their division title. Carleton mnv^to Lake Forest on Saturday. A Laker11win could have given the MaroonsThe game was played to a 1-1 u” mdivision standings showed Carleton inalm 3-0-2; Chicago, 4-1; and Lake ^Though his team had come a lone ..year only to fall short of its primaivJDeSilva and his crew had much to h/ng°aof. ProudThe Maroons won their final game olseason Wednesday, a non-conference 7against IIT, 2-1. Dean Carpenter and An?Satin picked up the two Chicago scores t?victory gave Chicago an 8-2-1 reriHoverall, the best since soccer began in lTThe team also scored four shutouts arecord, and notched the longest MmSstreak of any Maroon soccer team with SI?seven game run. e rChicago will be back next year. Ourofthu21 players on the team, DeSilva loses sev?to graduation this year, and only four .Jthose were starters. The entire group of (kfensive backs were freshmen this year d*Silva remarked, “With some good recroking we’U have excellent teams from here onin. University of Chicago varsity soccer is ateam to look for in the future.Sportsthe MCAC. The Maroons have made strongshowings in their other seven games, andwould like tomorrow to be no exception, hop¬ing to end the season with a pair of victories.The Carls are also 1-2 in conference play,dropping tough games to Beloit and LakeForest while edging Grinell 14-12 two weeksago. Carleton brings a strong line and anagressive defense along with a decent runn¬ing and passing game to Stagg Field tomor¬row at 1:30. The Maroons will have all theycan handle on their hands, especiallywithout Friar, Sibery, and Joel Olchefske,another doubtful starter who was injuredfour weeks ago.As for Friar, even if he doesn’t play he canbe content to know he broke his own modernrecord for season rushing yardage, and isbreaking the modem career yardage recordwith every run. Whether he is setting schoolrecords is not known, nobody seems to knowif they exist. Either way, he and the rest ofthe squad have little to be ashamed of thisyear. Photo by J WrightFootball playoffs beginBy Howard SulsAs playoffs begin this week, a few raceswere undecided by press time. The biggame was the Bucs- Bears game, won by theBucs by virtue of two Alan Burns to Bill Cer-bin TD passes, Burns hitting a formerMaroon basketball center for a third, as theBucs held off the Bears 20-13 in a rematch oflast year’s game, also won by the Bucs.However, the Bucs were diqualified for in-elgible players due to an ambiguity in therules.The Wack is Back, held on to the #3 spot,trouncing White Punks on Dope 26-0 as KeithMillikan connected to Mike Lustik for threeTD passes and Ed Connelly for a fourth. TheWack then held off Talking Heads 7-6 behindthe strong defensive play of Milikan and AraGuekguezian. Psi U, #4, edged Tufts 12-7,while Breckinridge, #5, trounced Bradbury33-6 and beat Dodd-Mead 27-14. Red Dotmoved up to #6, crushing the Profits 31-6.Medical School beat Laughlin 16-0, GoonSquad nipped Jihad 12-6, and Harper halleedged Quad Dogs 6-0. Talking Heads, #10,lost to White Punks on Dope 6-0, but heldtheir own against the Wacks.Filbey, lost to Upper Rickert 13-0 after besting Upper Flint and Greenwood byscores of 21-6 and 25-7. This necessitated aplavoff held after press time, with the winner facing Henderson, who beat Fishbein40-20 in their playoff game. In other playoffsPsi U must face Breckinridge for the otherspot in the undergrad residence final.A reminder that Turkey/Trot entriesclose Monday.Intramural top 10Top Ten (SPI)1. Wabuno Bay Buccaneers (5)2. Sugar Bears3. The Wack Is Back4. Psi Upsilon5. Breckinridge6. Red Dot7. Medical School8. Goon Squad9. Harper HalltieTalking HeadsVotes: Filbey, Upper Rickert, HendersonChic II, Cliff’s Clones, Bradburypoints50433736342321163CLOSELY BOUNDpikers go two and fourBy Rich McGinnis_ volleyball squad kept aM^ns /over the last twotwo games and losing four,the Maroons volleyballC allover the Illinois Institute of;Sleam 15-2 and 15-5 in a matchthe0'tlSm^Chicago took commandas Becky Chase put the first“,e S fuP wHh serves that IIT could^ rhTcaeo led 11-0 when IIT drewSinS but good play all around byout the game away quickly.Knnd game started somewhatChicago working hard to post athat point Coach Rosalie ReschPhoto by J Wright inserted Diane Skafca into the game toserve. This unusual move turned out sur¬prisingly well. Skafca’s deceptive serve wasnot handlea well by IIT, and with help fromspikes by Chase and Janet Sullivan, shestretched the Maroons’ lead to 10-2. AfterIIT rallied to 10-5, Sullivan and NadyaShmavonian used their always tough servesto finish the game, while IIT missed twomore chances to score.Tuesday the Maroons travelled to NorthCentral College, and lost 15-13, 15-3 and 15-10. Two days later, Wheaton Collegedefeated Chicago 16-14, 15-12 and 15-4, atWheaton.Last Saturday’s match against LakeForest at the Crown Field House started outwell, as the Maroons took the first game 15-7. Things started getting tense, when LakeForest took the second game by the samescore. Both teams knew that they neededthe third game, or they would be in a verybad position to win the match. The gamereflected this, as the lead shifted from oneside to the other. Then, when Chicago led 16-15, Lake Forest put on a sudden surge andwon the game 18-16. This gave them themomentum to take the fourth game with arelatively easy 15-6 to win the match.Tuesday night the Maroons split in athree-way match. First they downed OlivetNazarene 12-15, 15-4, and 15-6. In the secondmatch, Concordia Teachers’ College knock¬ed off Chicago 15-6 and 15-0.Last night the Maroons closed out theregular season with matches against St.Francis and Mundelein at the Field House.Women's trackAnyone interested in the winter orspring season’s of women’s track shouldattend the meeting to be held by CoachMarianne Crawford next Monday at 5:30in the Crown Field House. To selection tourneyStick women end seasonChicago’s Field Hockey team closed outtheir regular season with a pair of losses totwo superior teams.The Maroons put up a tough fight atWheaton last Thurdsay, but were on thedefensive most of lthe first half. Wheatononly managed one goal in the period, butthen scored early in the second half beforeChicago seized the initiative. The Maroonscame right back and scored on a fast breakthat culminated in a Monica Jones goal offan Elise Bloom pass. Chicago kept thepressure on, but could not score again, andlost 2-1. Coach Marianne Crawford was im¬pressed with her teams play, citing An-namaria Molinaro as MVP for the game. Things were not quite so good Tuesday.While Barb Bochnovic played a good gamein her first start and Elise Bloom played oneof her best games of the season, the rest ofthe squad was overwhelmed by the Nor¬thern Illinois hosts, dropping a 7-0 decision.The season does not have to end on a badnote. Chicago travels to the United StatesField Hockey Association regional selectiontournament tomorrow, where the Maroonswill compete with players from five otherarea teams for the 22 spots on the North Cen¬tral area all-star team. Maroon players willshow their skills in games against Con¬cordia, U of Wisconsin - Whitewater, andValparaiso.Winter Court Theatre presentsTHE BIRTHDAY PARTYby Harold PinterDirected by Nicholas Rudall and Peter SyvertsenThursdays through Sundays, Nov. 9-Dec. 10 (except Thanksgiving Day)8:30 P.M., Sundays at 7:30 P.M.$4 and $4.50; $2 and $2.50 students & senior citizensThe New Theatre, 57th & University753-3581SPECIAL PREVIEW Wed. Nov. 8 at 8:30 P.M.ONLY $1.00ATTENTION GRADUATE STUDENTSEADING FRENCH READING GERMANPreparatory Courses forThe Foreign Language Reading Examination(raduate students who wish to prepare for the Foreign Languageeading Exams scheduled in Spring, 1979, can now register for anurse especially designed to meet their need.he University Extension, in cooperation with the Departments ofomance Languages and Literatures and Germanic Languagesid Literatures, is offering on campus two NON-CREDIT courses,ich equivalent to a two-quarter sequence — spanning a 15-weekiriod:FH106 Reading French for Graduate StudentsMWF 8:30-10:00 AM, Jan. 8 to Apr. 27*;meets in Wieboldt 130.GH106 Reading German for Graduate StudentsM-Th 8:30-9:30 AM, Jan. 15 to May 4*;meets in Cobb 119.fa is $150 for the 15-week course. NO REFUNDS AFTERIRST WEEK. There will be a one-week break during interimrcek of March 26).B. University of Chicago student aid funds cannot be used forin-credit courses.Kfses must have a minimum enrollment of 15 students. Pre-g!stration is, therefore, essential. Absolutely no auditors.CCE 1307 E. 60th St. Rm 121M-F Between 9 AM and 5 PM (753-3137)adline for registration is December 8,1978.examinations will be given by the Test Administration on Monday,in French, and Monday, May 7, in German. Classes have been arrangedo»d conflict with regularly scheduled classes, and to end immediately prior towading Exam for optimal results. For further information concerning Read-n,fan!nat‘ons’ consult Soring Quarter Time Schedules, or call Test Adminis-tl0n-BC 201,3-3283. $ht Cntocrsitp of ChicagoROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPEL5850 SOUTH WOODLAWN AVENUE . CHICAGO, ILLINOISbyJelix MendelssohnRICHARD VIKSTROM, DirectorTHE ROCKEFELLER CHAPEL CHOIRAND ORCHESTRAJANICE HUTSON, SopranoPHYLLIS UNOSAWA, Contralto WILLIAM DIANA, BaritoneHENRY HUNT, TenorSunday • November 12, 1973 • 4:00 p.m.|Ticket*: Reserved $6.00 * General Admission $5.00Students (with I.D.) $2.50Available at: Mandel Hall Box Office, 5706 S. University AvenueCooley's Corner, 5211 S. Harper AvenueTHt CHAPEL BOX OFFICE OPENS AT 3 O’CLOCK, 1 HOUR BEFORE THE PERFORMANCE.The Chicago Maroon — Friday, November 3, 1976 — 21CalendarFRIDAYPerspectives: Topic: “Treatment of Asthma”, Guests:Richard Newcomb, Roger E. C. Altounyan. 6:30 am,Channel 7.Geophysical Sciences Colloquium: “Metapredictability-Numerical Weather Forecasting in Theory and in Prac¬tice.” 1:30 pm, Hinds Lab Auditorium.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Special Lecture.“Paradise Gardens of Islam”, 2:00 pm, Breasted Hall.Arabic Circle: “The Moment of Enthusiasm Revisited”,(discussion in Arabic), 3:30 pm, Pick 218.Computation Center Seminar: Introduction to CRESCAT.R.I. 480, 3:30-5:00 pm.Women’s Union: Meets 5:00 pm in Ida Noyes Hall, abovethe Frog and Peach.Hillel: Reform-Liberal Services, 5:15 pm.Folkdance Workshop: 6:00 pm, Ida Noyes Hall.DOC Films: "The Wizard of Oz”, 6:45, 8:45, and 10:45 pm,Cobb.Hillel: Shabbat Dinner at the Bayit, 5458 Everett, 6:45pm.Karate Club: Meets 7:00-9:00 pm in the dance roomofIda Noyes Hall.Baroque Festival: Film/lecture series, “Lola Montes”,lecture with the showing by David Bordwell, 7:00 pm,International House.Concert: Anthony Braxton Trio, 8:30 and 10:30 pm, HutchCommons. Refreshments served. 3rd floor.Overeaters Anonymous: Meets 10:30 am in the Wash¬ington Park Field House.Eighth Compton Lecture Series: “A Normal Star-The Sunand Its Spots”, 11:00 am, Eckhert 133.Liturgical Dance Choir: Registration, 12:30, Workshop,1:00, at the Blue Gargoyle.Football: UC vs Carleton, 1:30 pm, Stagg Field. Will bebroadcast by WHPK.WHPK: “Success Without College: humorous Comedy”,4:00-5:00 pm. “Fine Women and Song”, 6:00-6:00 pm.Law School Films: “Cabaret”, 7:00 and 9:30 pm, LawSchool Auditorium.Baroque Festival: Film/lecture series, "TarnishedAngels”, Discussion after the showing by David Bord¬well, Regina Cornwell and Bruce Jenkins, 7:00 pm, In¬ternational House.DOC Films: "The Gauntlet”, 7:15 and 9:30, Cobb.Pub: Live Music: Nick Filipo and Mark Daniels, Live atthe Pub’s Fourth Birthday, 9:00 pm.Crossroads: Slide presentation and discussion on “Mar¬tial Law and The Philippines in 1978”, 7:00 pm.Crossroads: Sign up in Advance to see Ringling Bros,and Barnum and Bailey Circus on Nov. 8.SUNDAYRockefeller Chapel: University Memorial Service, E.Spencer Parsons, preacher, 11:00 am.Hillel: Lox and Bagel Brunch, 11:00 am.Crossroads: Japanese Culture Day, 2 films and music byMr. Keiichiro Hiyama, on the bamboo flute, 8:00 pm.SATURDAYFolkdancers: Workshops, 9:00 am, Ida Noyes. CultureSession, 4:00-5:00 pm, Ida Noyes. Concert, 8:00 pm, Man-del Hall, tickets at Reynolds Club.Table Tennis Club: Practices 10:00 am-l:00 pm, Ida Noyes77 The Chifflqo Maroon — Friday November 3, 1978 Overeaters Anonymous: Meets at 3:00 pm, Illinois Cen¬tral Hospital, 5800 S. Stoney Island, 4th floor.Rockefeller Chapel: Carillon Recital: Robert Lodine,University Carilloneur, 4:30 pm.Tai Chi Club: Meets 6:30 pm, 4945 S Dorchester (enter on50th and Dorchester.)DOC Films: “Murmur of the Heart” 7:00 and 9:30 pm,Cobb.YES! It Is True,of 33 differentbrands of Beer,There STILLis no BudweiseratJimmys G-W-OPTICIANSLiberal Discountsto University StudentsGlasses Replacedin 2 hours if stockedContact LensesHard & SoftExaminations by Reg¬istered Optometrists1519 E. 55th St.947-9335 Public Affairs Scries: Lecture: speaker, Edlyak, 7:30 pm, Pierce Tower. War!*Folkdancers: General Level dancing8:00-11:30 pm, Ida Noyes Cloister Club % ^ 11Liberal Religious Student Fellowship- c„iTemperance Day 6:00 pm, center room of jjjMONDAYPerspectives: Topic: “Chicago’s Futurft „Guests: Kenneth Hines, Pierre Davise. 6 30 °P'1am, 1Committee on Genetics: Thesis Defensesnism of Action of Nalidixic Acid inK-12”, Kenneth Kreuzer, 1:00 pm, Cummi^Hillel: Class in Zohar, 1:30 pm.Department of Chemistry: “Molecular Desi®mical Agents: Estrogen Receptor Affinity \ lTumor Localizing Agents”, 4:00 pm, KenuoaWHPK: Special-" An Interview with BobGrrwWho Calls Himself A Reporter”, 4:35Shain and Jaan Elias. ’ WI“Hillel: Class in Humash, 5:00 pm. Class indish, 6:00 pm.Karate Club: Meets 7:00-9:00 pm, in theIda Noyes.Chess Club: Meets 7:00 pm, Ida Noyes MemoriaCalvert House: Bible Study (Gospel of John), 7-Women’s Center: Meets 7:30-10:00 pm, Blue fi3rd floor. Phone: 684-3189.Hillel: Class in Advanced Yiddish, 7:30 pm.Clasilosophy and Halacha, 7:30 pm.Baptist Student Union: Meets 7:37 pm inLounge of Ida Noyes.Folkdancers: Beginning level with teaching,pm, Ida Noyes Cloister Club.Crossroads: English classes for all foreign womenoon.LOOKING FOR SOMETHING BETTE!We will have several apartments availableLease in the verv near future.2 to 3% room 1 bedroom apts.Starting at $225.Security and one-year Lease required.We have a lot to offer. Come see us.MAYFAIR APARTMENTS. 5496 So. Hyde ParkinCLASSIFIED adsFor experienced piano teacher of alllevels call 947-9744.DISSERTATION TYPIST Evanston.Long exp. Turabian. Selectric.3288705.SCENESat-rX^Aot Some furniture, 21 Parking, 9th fl. View,BlWi/c5hPN«ar Coof3' MA0/mOheat mrluded. 684-0923._—^^eaTincloded Immedpliability call 955-4577.rr^Town In 5 room apt. inFurTr building 1 block from campusfSSSS%*»ry. Cal. 324-7104rr^TTn large condo close to U.BCall Jean: 947-8498.-rrrZZTTrooms $290.00. Availalejl/Tidti and Harper. Adults no petsrul493.TTZiZfor sublet, immediately 53 andr«nwoo? SlS/rno. Close to shopping,S^tc. Call 752-3393.nTnon smoker wanted tor 2BR 54 &^130 Betsy 955-5909.congenial straight emaleJS student or working), in sunnySi blks from campus. Nonsmoker,pets, cleaning a must. S100 mo.tfi-StH-Grad wanted to share house: own rnrwish/dryer, working fireplace. GoodI5C HOP plus util. 643 7258.PEOPLE WANTED Writer's Workshop (Plaza 2-8377).Preschool teacher wanted; Part- timeifternoons. Experience required,6M-6363.WANTED Volunteers 21 or older forepproved drug study. 4 dayshospitalization required. Payment$100 Contact. Dr. H. Schnelr at>47-5533.Child care workers (20 hrs/wk) at aleading child' care Institution near toUC. Use all of your creative humanskills and knowledge with boys 6-14.Apply now, 624-7443.Full time sales lady wanted Kimberlyand Lee 493-8303 Julie 1529 E. 53rd St.Chicago.Subjects wanted for psycholinguisticsexperiments. Will be paid. To register,call 753-4718.Wanted: Part time Secretary-4 hoursper day-flexible 4 to 5 days per week.Typing, filing and answeringtelephone. If interested contact NormaMorrow, Billings Hospital. 947-5646.FOR SALE1974 Honda Civic for sale. Good condi¬tion. $1700 or best offer. Call 643-4259.Condo Hyde Park-1 bdrm Ivg rm- kit 8iextra. Lg rm & 2 bale. 56th & Cornell.678-5503. $40's.69 Dodge Dart 4 dr. 5 cyl autom. radioA/C new tires good gas mileage, 1owner x 3442 or 955-1942.Sofa in good condition. Veryreasonable. Tel 667-6222.Don't miss the continuing sale onNonesuch, RCA, and Odyssey recordsat the Student Co-op, basement ofReynolds Club.t xl2 shag carpet with padding inbrown-oatmeal tweed *50. Gold-whitefloral plush easy chair *50. Call955-3829 evenings.1974 AAercury Bobcat wagon, 4 speedtrans. runs well. *2900.268-2059.Mercury Comet (1962) in excellentcondition. 1969 engine, new muffler,suspension best offer. Call Peter,947-8059 (eves) 643-2240 (days).PEOPLE FOR SALEFrench native prof, offers Frenchtutoring all levels: Lang. Reqs. Lit,children PH 268-9262.«IWORK of all kinds-drawing, II-•wtration, hand-addressing of Invlta-***.etc. Noel Vovovlch. 493 2399..^jrlenced medical transcriberdictaphone typing work at homew weekends Reasonable rates. Call«l at: 483 9596 between 10 am and]:00pm,I^n3: Student term papers, etc.campus pickup and delivery or by ar-angement. Please call 684-6882.EXAMINATIONS^shion eyewearCONTACT LENSESDR. KURTRosenbaumOptometrist(53 Kimbark Plaza)1200 East 53rd Street NORTH SUBURBAN VOTERS!Remember Election Day is Nov. 7.Help re-elect Abner Mikva. For In¬formation call Mary Smith 363-2675.PREGNANCY TESTS SATURDAYS10-1. Augustana Church, 5500 S.Woodlawn. Bring 1st mornings urinesample. *1.50 donation. SouthwideWomen's Health 667 5505.LOST: A small UC personal tannotebook. Leave in Lost and Found Inthe Ad. Building.Pregnant? Troubled? Call 233-0305 forhelp free test ref.PROGRAMMER/ANALYSTThe Graduate School of Businessneeds a full time programmer/analystto serve as consultant to faculty andstudents on programming problemsand use of program packages. Positionalso involves maintenance anddocumentation of software, programconversion, program development,and date transfer. Candidates musthave math/stats background and ex¬perience with math/stats packages,both batch and interactive; and mustbe skilled in FORTRAN and BASIC.Experience in DEC-20 environmenthighly desirable. Good communicationskills necessary. Position availableimmediately. Salary range *15K-S22K,plus University of Chicago benefits, in¬cluding partial tuition remission. Ifqualified, contact Faye Citron,753-4290. The university of Chicago isan Equal Opportunity Affirmative Ac¬tion employer.WANTEDI need a double-burner (or single)hotplate In good working condition.Can't pay much, but would vastly appredate It. 955 2721.PROGRAMMER/ANALYSTThe Center for Research in SecurityPrices in the Graduate School ofBusiness needs a full-time program¬mer/analyst to develop and maintaindata bases and assist In the overallresearch effort. Applicants shouldhave experience with IBM 370/168(OS/VS or VM) knowledge of PL/1 orFORTRAN, and prior training in (orwillingness to learn) finance andstatistics. Familiarity with 370Assembler desirable. Good communications skills essential. Position available immediately. Salary rangeS1SK-822K, plus University of Chicagobenefits, Including partial tuitionremission. Position offers con¬siderable flexibility, responsibility,challenge, end opportunities forgrowth. If interested end qualified,contact William Spangler, 753-4793.The University of Chicago is an EqualOpportunity/Affirmative Actionemployer.The Chicago Counseling & Psychotherapy Center has several openingsin a long-term group. Meets Thursdayevenings 8-10pm Fee: *35.00/month,first two months payable in advance.Preliminary interview required. Call684-1800. Leave message for Dan.Liturgical dance: "Spirit Movementand the Word Made Flesh" Sat. Nov. 4workshop-1:00 Per(ormance-3:00University Church/The BlueGargoyle. *5/$3.Live music at the Pub tomorrow byNick Filipo and Mark Daniels (Coun¬try and Folk music). NO COVER.MEMEBERSHIPS REQUIRED.Meher Baba Special Events Nov. 4- 2Peter Townsend films 3pm, 600 S.Michigan Rm 921. Talk by DarwinShaw, longtime disciple. 7:30 pm 410 S.Michigan rm 603. Infor 684-3845 Free.EIGHT ENCOUNTER EVENINGS,Free workshop-Learn ways to makebetter contact with people and formcloser relationships. Call Dick,548-3040, evenings.PERSONALSPASSPORT PHOTOS While-U Wait.MODEL CAMERA 1344 E. 55th St.493 6700. FOLKDANCINGThe 16th Annual International FolkDance Festival Is coming up Nov 3, 4,and 5 at Ida Noyes. Sat. and Sun. 9a.m. - 5 p.m. Workshops In Balkan,Greek, and Polish dance with DickCrum, David Henry, and AdaDzlewanowska. Folk concert 8 p.m.Sat. Mandel Hall.HEYCHEAPIESSave a nickel on each friend thisChristmas. GARRAPHICS postcardsfor Christmas come in packs of 12 niftydesigns for cheap to mail cheap. GAR¬RAPHICS 1369 E. Hyde Pk. Blvd. Box408 Chicago 60615.ANTHONYBRAXTONHutch Commons Nov 3 8:30 and 10:30Tickets *2.50 MAB/4.50 all others.Tickets on sale R.C. box office.WOMEN'S UNIONMeeting every Friday at 5:00 in IdaNoyes, Above the Frog and Peach.PARKINGNEEDEDU of C student would like to contactstudent living in Regent's Park to renta parking space there. Could help withtransportation - call 955-3559. PHOTOCONTESTThe College Public Information officeand Student Activities will awardsome (400 in prizes this year. Anyphotographs taken since June 1, 1978are eligible. Separate prizes will begiven for black and white, and color.Contest It open to any amatures(students) in the University communi¬ty-The theme is college life-all photosmust illustrate some aspect of life inthe College. Landscapes, portraits,candids. action shots, etc. all are OK.Details on entering, judging etc. willappear in the Maroon Keep watching.In the meantime get those camerasclicking. Tues. Ida Noyes Hall 3rd floor 8 pmsponsored by UC Gay and LesbianAlliance for more Infor call 753-3274 orstop by Ida Noyes 301 Sun. Thurs 8-10pm.WHPKSPORTSPresents live play-by-play coverage ofthe U of C vs Carleton football gamebeginning at 1:20 pm this Saturdaywith the pre game show.In the future live coverage of all U of CVarsity Basketball home games. GAY ANDLESBIANUCGALA Business meeting Fri Nov10, Blue Gargoyle, 8:00 pm.Gay and Lesbian coffee house. FriNov. 10, Blue Gargoyle. 57th andUniversity, 8:45 pm. Everyonewelcome.WHPKNEWS FREE CATSKI CLUB loinma 1WHPK news dept, contact Dave Kahnat 753 3588 or at 753 8342 ext. 1010.JOIN SKI CLUB 7.50 gets you allthediscounts, clinics, parties and funcal 1955-9646 for Info.MEDICICONTINENTALBREAKFASTCome to the Medici Sunday morningfrom 9:30 to 1 and enjoy. Sundaypapers, fresh orange juice, homemadesweetrolls, fresh fruit, homemadeyogurt and coffee. All you can eat for*2.50.FOLKDANCING WOMEN'S TRACKAND FIELDAll women interested in indoor andoutdoor track meet upstairs in theField House Mon. Nov. 6, 5:30pm. Late model •••hite male, Hsebrkn, well-mannered, exterior gd, motor runswell. Mark, 3-8122, 955 3290.BABYSITDRINK Who lives in neighborhood of 56 Dor¬chester, loves children, and wants toearn some money We're looking forbabysitter for two little dutch children,mainly tor evening time. Call 241 6065.Join us in Ida Noyes Hall every Sun¬day and Monday for Internationalfolkdancing. Beginning level Mon.general level Sun. with teaching bothnights. Good exercise and fun.WOMEN'SMAGAZINEPUB Prlmavera, a women's literarymagazine, is on sale in many Chicagobookstores. We need new staffmembers. For Infor, call 752-5655.This Sat. the Pub in the basement ofIda Noyes Hall will be celebrating Its _ . _ _ _AI, _Fourth birthday. Specials all day long. RAP GROUPLive Music.MEMBERSHIPS ARE AMUST! SEXUALITY RAP GROUP every a toast in honor of World TemperanceDay Sunday, Nov. 5, at 6:00 pm in thecenter room at Jimmy's. LiberalReligious Student Fellowship open toany and all religious liberals (sponsored by the Unitarian Universalists)-meet every Sunday at 6:00 pm at Jim¬my's for dinner and good times. Noreservation needed.RACQUETBALLCLUBMeeting, Tues. Nov. 7, 5:15 pm. IdaNoyes 3rd floor. New members andbeginning players welcome.BOBGREENEThis Monday at 4:35 pm on WHPKhear an "Interview With Bob Greene:A Man Who Calls Himself AReporter". INQUIRYUndergraduate Journal INQUIRYseeks student essays. Submit essays atIda Noyes cloakroom. Deadline forsubmissions is next Friday, Nov. 10.Any questions, call Jlntae at 753-3777.MATTRESSBlackfrlars Presents: Once Upon AMattress, directed by Libby Morse,Nov. 10. 11, and 12 in Mandel Hall at8:00. Tickets are *1.50/students andS2.00/Non studentsMIKVA!All Mikva supporters: Ab Mikva needsyour vote. Vote absentee now, or inperson Tuesday November 27.JACKSON HOLEJoin UCSKI at Jackson Hole WinterBreak. 5 nights (1/1-1/5) condos; 5days Cl/2-1/6) 4139 vert, feet plus allthe parties of Nat. Collegiate SkiWeek, total price (159. Due 11/11, $75dep. due now. Call 955-9646 for info.ELECTIONSHELP RE ELECT CONGRESSMANABNER MIKVA! Election dayworkers are needed. Contact MarySmith 363-2675 evenings.FOOSBALLDo you enjoy football? (Table Soccer)The Pub is having a foosbali tourna¬ment. Pub members only - sign up atthe Pub.Deadline for entries Mon. Nov. 6.Prizes for tops in undergrad, and grad.SKINNY,AFFECTIONATE *CAT FOUNDGolden, brown and black small femalecat who recently had kittens, foundcorner 57th and Ellis, Fri. Oct. 20. Toclaim, or if you want her call 241-5996or leave message at 753-3265. 0° ' DON'T GAMBLE WITH YOUR EYES . . . CONTACT PROFESSIONALWhy wear ^eyeglasses?CONTACT LENSESONLYA PAIRCHINESEAMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing InCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN OISHESOPEN DAILY11 AJA.TO 8:30 PJM,SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS1210 8:30 PM.Orders to Take Out1318 East 83rd MU 4-1082 HIGHEST QUALITY ANYWHERE!These are the same highesl quality hard lenses that originally cost hundreds of dollarsmore. All tiffin, i>, adjustments, wearing instructions, training, orientation, follow-upvisits, carrying • and start up care kit included at NO ADDITIONAL CHARGE!(DOCTOR ALWAYS IN ATTENDANCE!)Doctor s Exanuntitiif necessary, S10READ FLAMINGO APTS.Wlm. F. Buckley's 5500 S. Shore DriveA HYMNAL Studio and One BedrmHoward Fast's Apts. Furn. & UnfurnSECOND GENERATlOh Short & Long Term RentalsThomas Hoving s $200 - $400TUTANKHAMUN Parking, pool, restaurant,drveleaning. valet, deli.and many i*iore from U of C shuttle Inis 14 blk.NARPER LIBRARY'S awav.POPULAR READING Full carpeting & drapesCOLLECTION ■"•I- 752-.1800 i,i .tout t.« m<*iPROFESStONM CARt11 SERVICES PROGM* NEWRevolutionaryGasPermeable*59? SOFTLENSESNo boilingquiredre*89 99 Office Hours9-9 weekdaysSat HI 5PROFESSIONALCONTACT LENS PROGRAMS520 N. RMdtigan. 15th floor329-9750Don't gomble with your eye* . . . contact PROFESSIONAL[Stop-by or CALL NOW for A NO-OBLIGATION APPOINTMENT!!wtTni-wi-jTinmsniMILE WITH YOUR EYThn Chicaqo Maroon — Pridav. November 3, 1978 DON'TGAMBLEWITHYOUREYES...CONTACTPROFESSIONAL...329-»7S0L model camerai PHOTO SHOWE ONE DAY ONLY- NOVEMBER 4 9AM-5PMThe Minolta110 Zoom SLR.Special ShowKodak CAROUSEL Projectors• Whisper-quiet operation• Dependable gravity feed operation• Remote control—forward and reverse• Choose from many modelsNIKON FMSpecial Show Price Special Show PriceSpecial Show PriceCanonOLYMPUS OM-135mm SLR SYSTEM CAMERA AND LENSESSpecial Show PricePolaroid’s Pronto! SONAR OneStepMORE THAN ONE DOZEN MAJORMANUFACTURERS WILL BEREPRESENTEDIN THIS PHOTO SPECTACULAR!OUR LAST SALE BEFORE CHRISTMASDOZENS OF CLOSE-OUTS ANDSPECIAL PRICES!1342 EAST 55th STREET 493-6700