' neunicago iviaroon‘ * University of Chicago t Thpcrtif^onMjmnn 1070 Friday, NovemberThe Chicago Maroon 1978 Friday, November 10, 1978University students livingin Hyde Park shows riseA challenge grant will be announced within the month, said Deanof the College Jonathan Z. Smith.College funding forcetargets financial aidBy Jaan EliasThe funding task force of the Col¬lege will try to raise up to a milliondollars during the coming year inorder to establish an endowmentfund for student aid. According toDean of the College Jonathan Z.Smith, the endowment would sup¬plement money that has alreadybeen pledged to financial aid andwould substantially increase theability of the College to providemore attractive aid packages.x ne task force is expected to an¬nounce a challenge grant from acorporation, foundation or privateindividual within the monthNegotioations are presently under¬way to secure the grant, Smithsaid.Although the endowment fund ispart of a new emphasis to improve student life in the College, themoney will go to students on finan¬cial aid. The level of student aid af¬fects campus life said Smith,because students who are freedfrom financial constraints aremore able to participate in collegelife.“A substantial difference can bemade in student life with some in¬creased funding.” Smith said. “Ibelieve we have a fine academicprogram and should now concen¬trate on the student side of life.”Increased funding in academicsdoes not substantially alter thequality of those programs, he said.Attracting more students to theCollege and inducing the ones whoalready are here to stay is the goalof the increased funding. ‘‘What’sthe use of enrolling a recordto 3 By Chris Isidore,with research by Laura GallantThe number of Universitystudents in Hyde Park apartmentshas risen by 41 percent in the lastfive years, despite a rapid conver¬sion of rental apartment units tocondominium units.Housing seriesPartIVIn 1973, 250 undergraduates and608 graduate students lived inHyde Park apartments. Last yearthose figures had increased to 336undergraduate and 874 graduates.While the student body hasgrown over the past five years, thenumber of students in Hyde Parkhas gone up at a higher rate. In1973, 12 percent of Universitystudents lived in Hyde Park apart¬ments, while 16 percent of lastyear’s University students foundapartments there.The impression still pervadesthat students are being forced outof Hyde Park. This may bebecause apartments have becomemuch more difficult to find. Asmentioned on Tuesday, the vacan¬cy rate in the area has droppedfrom 30 percent five years ago tounder one percent today.Also, students are living in dif¬ferent sections of Hyde Park In1973, 101 undergraduates and 183graduates lived in the ‘‘GoldenRectangle,” the part of Hyde Parknext to the campus itself. Lastyear, that figure had dropped to 23undergraduates, and 61 graduatestudents, or from four percent ofCongress clears student aid bill;University students gain fundsBy Abbe FletmanMembers of Congress pulled anall-nighter last month and passed aplan to aid middle-income familiesin meeting rising tuition costs.During a 34 hour session lastinguntil late Sunday, October 16, Con¬gress also approved record ap¬propriations for higher educationprograms administered by theDepartment of Health, Education,and Welfare. It failed to act on aCarter-backed bill to create aseparate Cabinet-level Depart¬ment of Education, and rejected aplan to give families income taxcredits towards tuition.The major provisions of themiddle-income bill include:• a $1.3 billion annual expansionof existing student-aid programs,• an increase in eligibility formiddle-income students to BasicEducational Opportunity Grants(BEOG),• an expansion of SupplementalEducational Opportunity GrantsISEOG) and-College Work Studyprograms, and •• tbe abolition of incomequalifications for interest sub¬ sidies on Guaranteed StudentLoans.Dean of Students Charles O’Con¬nell called this legislation ‘‘themost significant addition to federalstudent aid funds in~ the lastdecade.”The expanded program w ill havea measurable effect on the Univer¬sity, according to O’Connell. His“ball park” estimate is thatUniversity students will receive$100,000 - $200,000 more in federalsupport next year than this year.O’Connell said he hopes the grantand loan increases to Universitystudents eventually will total aquarter million dollars per year.But there will be no reduction inthe amount the University budgetsfor student aid. O’Connell said.The legislation has the most \m-• pact oh students with family in¬comes between $15,000 and $25,000.Under the new program. they areeligible to receive up to $1,800 ingovernment grants. The formermaximum grant allowance was$1,600 and the income cutoff foreligibility- was $15,000.Students from families with in¬comes below $15,000 also benefit the entire student body to one per¬cent.Condos not the causeTo blame condominiums for thisshift would be an over¬simplification of the problem. Con¬dominiums have appeared evenlyin all sections of Hyde Park.“There is no one area of concentra¬tion,” said Helaine Billings ofthe South East Chicago Commis¬sion. While there has been a strongconcentration of condominiums inthe Golden Rectangle, it would bedifficult to blame a 70 percent dropin student residents directly onconversions.Condominiums have displacedsome non-University tenants aswell, forcing them to enter the ren¬tal market once again. Thesedisplaced tenants have contributedto the exclusion of students fromthe Golden Rectangle. And whilesome of these students have movedto South Shore or the North Side,WCHC update most have gone to other sections ofHyde Park. The area directlynorth of the campus and theGolden Rectangle, from CottageGrove Ave. to the IC tracks, andfrom 51st to 55th Sts., has seen anincrease of 404 students between1973 and 1977, from 394 to 798.These students may have evendisplaced many of the lower-income previously living there.It is more expensive for thesestudents to live in Hyde Park to¬day, but realtors feel the increasehas not been that much greaterthan inflation. Heating andmaintenance costs have increasedmore than inflation during theseyears, and the cost of housing hasincreased nationally during thisperiod.WTiy costs go upIn the process of convertingbuilding to condominiums, the costof living in the building units oftengoes up There is much disagree¬ment on the cause of this increase.to 3Officials encouragedfrom the legislation because theywill receive additional aid fromSEOG.Guaranteed loansNow that the government willpay interest on guaranteed studentloans regardless of the borrower’sincome, paperwork for graduatestudents is diminished. They nolonger will have to fill out financialneed forms if they receive only-guaranteed loans. Becauseundergraduates here are awardedfinancial aid solely on need, theywill still be required to completeneed analysis forms.The new Guaranteed StudentLoan policy probably will go intoeffect in January 1979, while theother provisions of the legislationwill not be enacted until nextSeptember.The middle-income bill waspushed through by the Carter ad¬ministration in reaction to bills in¬stituting tuition tax credits. Thesebills would have provided a max¬imum of $250 of income*tax credit,to parents who contribute to theirchildrens’ education.to 3 By Eric Von der PortenRepresentatives from theUniversity-operated WoodlawnChild Health Clinic (WCHC) were“encouraged” by a Mondaymeeting with Chicago Board ofHealth representatives concerningthe late of the Clinic, according toWCHC director Dr. Alice Stratigos.The Board has withdrawn fun¬ding from the WCHC, an outpatienthealth and social service centerlocated at 950 E. 61st St., effectiveJan. 1,1979.Stratigos said “We’re sort of innegotiations at this point” butdeclined to elaborate.Board commissioner Dr. Murray-Brown stated last week that theClinic must close because of cutsmade by Governor Thompson inthe Board’s budget. He reiteratedthat position Wednesday but sug¬gested the state “might have someway of getting more money .”According to Jeff Goldsmith.University Medical Center direc¬tor of health policy analysis, “Wegot an explanation of the fiscal plight of the city’s health pro¬grams” at Monday’s meeting. “Wegot the impression that they don’tw ant to close the Clinic but need toget more money from the state,”he said.Goldsmith was one of twoUniversity hospital administratorsat the meeting. Representativesfrom the WCHC community boardand the WCHC staff were also pre¬sent.The fate of the WCHC probablydepends on the success of lobbyingefforts by the Board and by theUniversity with Thompson's office,sources indicated. Those effortsare aimed at ootaining increasedfunding for the Board.The Board has no obligation tofund the WCHC if additional moneybecomes available. But Brownsaid Wednesday, “I’m pledged tokeep it open if we get the money.”The Illinois legislature couldoverride Thompson’s decision inits Nov. 15 veto session but it isquestionable whether ChicagoDemocrats can rally enough sup¬port for such an override.Photo by Carol KlammerWoodlawn Child Health CentersapNICE PLACE TOrac •isg.vtv*v .=•'■ -• j„•■ . ; _ • . !$. - , •• \£ ? •. •’SKATE A DATEOR MEET ONE *blachfriarsPresentsP# ROLLER RINKjjr 4150 W. 55th St.767-1800Three Blocks West of PulaskiDISCO EXPLOSIONFRIDAY andSATURDAY NITESdirected byLike 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, fullyredining front bucket seats, tinted glass, and meticulous atten¬tion to detail. #superior level ofcomfort. Withoversized shockabsorbers, large coilsprings, a floating differential, andBJfseats that are actually tuned to the suspension system.But comfort isn’t the only thing that sets the 604 apart from theMercedes. 'Hiere’s also the price. Which starts at about$11,000.* And which may be its most comforting feature of all. Libby MorseNovember 10,11, & 12MANDEL HALLStudents2347 So. Michigan Ave. Chicago♦Manufacturer’s suggested retail price Delivment, license title, taxes; dealer preparation i TICKETS AVAILABLE AT REYNOLDS CLUB BOX OFFICEFriday. November 10, 19781 - ■: - ■ : .. - - : ■’ ’ci’/ssnZS' ■> -VIf you’re consideringa Mercedes 280E,drive a Peugeot604. —* -^8 cEg- - « m 4* 9 - —v«• » ^'V V 1. .• • - -- •^ 9 • •fromSG to distributenew buying cardBy Wendy GlabmanStudent Government (SG) plans to passout a Student Buying Card beginning nextweek, according to SG President StevenKehoe. These free buying cards enable stu¬dents to receive discounts in twelve stores inthe University area.Among the discounts provided by the cardare free 8 x 10 color enlargements with de¬velopment and printing of five rolls of colorfilm at Able Camera Stores, Inc., 10 percentoff on all merchandise at J’s Pipe Shop and10 percent off on most items at the House ofGandhi.During the past year many complicationshave prevented the development of the buy¬ing card program. The original companysponsoring the cards, L & B Marketing Co.,collected $295 each from several stores to fi¬nance the program. This company wentbankrupt and was unable to fulfill its con¬tract. Metro Marketing took over this de¬partment of L & B to make the cardsavailable to students.The cards will be distributed in Universitystudent housing beginning Monday, No¬vember 13. Congress passes aid billPhoto by Jeanne DufortStudents soon will be able to get discounts atthe House of Ghandi and some other localstores.Housing seriesStudents in rental units upfrom 1Opponents of condominiums say the rise isdue greatly to the profit which thedevelopers are making on the conversion.Developers and other proponents say the in¬crease comes from the cost of renovatingrun-down housing. Both arguments hold agreat deal of truth.The conversion of a rental unit to con¬dominium does not cause a major increasein itself. What the conversion means is thatthe tenants buy their units outright, insteadof paying rent to the owner. They make thispurchase by taking out a mortgage from thebank, which after an initial down payment,they pay in monthly installments. But sincethis is a mortgage, they are allowed todeduct a portion of the monthly paymentsfrom their income tax, something they can¬not do with their rent. Therefore the cost ofliving in a condominium unit is often nearlyequal to the cost of living in a comparablerental unit.There is an increase in cost due to the pro¬fit made by the developer. But what hasdriven up costs the most is that developers,in an effort to increase their profits haveTask forcefrom 1treshman class when a substantial numberof students drop out in between theirfreshman and sophomore years.” Smithsaid.Smith said potential donors probably willbe more willing to give money for studentaid than for academic programs. “Academ¬ic programs change and alumni find it diffi¬cult to determine what is good, but studentaid is something of which everyone can un¬derstand the importance.”The College task force is a group ofvolunteers who solicit funding directly forthe College. The task force was created dur¬ing the Campaign for Chicago, theUniversity-wide fund raising effort whichclosed down June 30. The task force,however, has become a permanent fixture.Smith said details on how’ to divide thefinancial aid funds the endowment will pro¬vide have not been finalized. The financialaid office will ‘’strive for flexibility” andpossibly will create a revolving loan fund,he said. upgraded their units before selling them ascondominiums. In buildings that have gonecondominium with little or no renovation,the large majority of the tenants have beenable to stay. But many developers makerenovations not because they are needed,but because they want more profit from sell¬ing the more expensive unit.. Cost for condominium units are com¬parable to a private home. According toBillings, costs run from $15,000 to $20,000 forstudio units, from $20,000 to $45,000 for onebedroom, from $28,000 to $65,000 for twobedrooms, from $35,000 to $80,000 for threebedrooms, and from $40,000 and up forlarger units. Prices vary due to location,condition of the building, and whether or notit is a walk-up. At these prices, the con¬dominiums are attracting the same buyersthat suburban homes are.The conversions have not greatly affectedsenior faculty members. They have safe,paying jobs and can get mortgages for con¬dominiums. Hyde Park Federal Savingsand Loan, which has received muchcriticism for giving mortgages to con¬dominium dwellers, told The Maroon it hasbeen giving mortgages to numerous Univer¬sity faculty members, and even to somegraduate students.Mortgage problemThe difficulty which the conversions havecaused for students and for junior facultymembers is the problem of obtaining a mor¬tgage. Before it will give a mortgage, thebank must have a sizeable down payment,and it must see some sort of steady incomeon the part of the applicant. Most studentsand junior faculty members either do nothave these or do not want to make the finan¬cial commitment. This is what is stoppingthem from buying the condominiums, notthe problem of having to sell them in a fewyears when they move.It is generally not at all difficult to sellcondominium units on today’s market, andtheir value is increasing so much that evenpeople owning them for a short time couldmake a sizeable profit from their sale.It is true that the condominiums have nothelped the average student’s chances of get¬ting an off-campus apartment, but theapartments are there, and in greaternumbers than rumors would indicate. Whatcondominiums have done, proponentsclaim, is to help strengthen theneighborhood. from 1Vice-president for Business and FinanceWilliam B. Cannon said, ‘‘I haven’t done thecalculations, but I am certain” students willreceive more money from the middle-income law than from tuition tax credits.Because the tuition tax measure wouldhave been a tangible refund that could havegiven members of Congress constituent sup¬port from middle-income parents andstudents, the bill was considered politicallysound. But it was denounced by the Carteradministration and others as bad policy.Critics said because the measure did no*differentiate between income levels, thebenefits of a tuition tax credit would goprimarily to upper-income families. Othersfeared the policy would set a precedent sothat other interest groups would push forcredits in areas other than education.President Carter announced that he wouldhave vetoed a tax credit bill, although lob¬byists, members of Congress, and highereducation officials feared Congress wouldenact both the tuition tax credit legislationand the middle-income student aid pro¬gram.O’Connell said he believes appropriationsfor higher education would not have increas¬ed as drastically as they did if the Carter ad¬ministration had not been attempting tothwart tax credit bills.Tax credits were also killed becausemembers of Congress could not agree on theissue of tax credits for the parents ofchildren in private elementary and secon¬dary schools. Dept, of EducationAlthough no action was taken on a bill tocreate a separate Department of Education,Vice-President Mondale promised last weekthat the Carter Administration will tryagain, according to The Chronicle of HigherEducation.The educational community is split on theestablishment of such a department. Somebelieve it will complicate the applicationprocess institutions go through to receivefederal funds. Assistant Dean of StudentsRichard Royse said he would oppose thedepartment’s creation if it did not overseeeducational foundations such as the Na¬tional Science Foundation and the NationalEndowment for the Humanities.Supporters of the legislation believe allloan and grant programs should be con¬solidated under a single bureaucratic office.“In concept,” said Cannon, *‘I think aDepartment of Education is essential.” Can¬non stressed the potential symbolic im¬portance of emphasizing education thesame way ‘‘almost every other countrydoes.”Cannon said however he fears the Depart¬ment may be operated by state school of¬ficials who do not represent the interests ofall educational institutions.“If the Department does go through,”said Cannon, “it will be a major step inpolicy, but will not solve the problems of ef¬ficiency.”Cannon was chief of the Education, Man¬power, and Science Division of the U S.Bureau of the Budget from 1965-1967.Photo by Jackie HarchCondominium conversions have forced some students out of the “Golden Rectangle.’“Certainly, when someone is going tocommit a number of dollars to the placewhere he lives, he’s going to care a lot moreabout the area around him,” said Billings. “Today you can go to every corner of HydePark and find them (condominiums) dottedall over. And that demonstrates a strengthof the community as a whole.”DOC FILMS Miklos Jancso'sThe Red And The WhiteFriday. Nov. 107:15&9:3o IT., 11,, ,, Sunday. Nov. 127:30&9:30Cobb Hall Both films $1.50George Lucas'sAmerican GraffitiThe Chicago Maroon — Friday, November 10, 1978 — 3't * i V"t * • *»•< v * » '• S A .V|F% EditorialA good union,but not the best&I For over 25 years, attempts to unionize clericalworkers at the University have been mountedand have failed. Finally, with the unionizationdrive initiated by the Hospital Employees LaborProgram (HELP), an amalgamation ofTeamsters Local 743 and Service EmployeesLocal 73, collective bargaining for clericalworkers here seems within their grasp. We hopethis union will be approved.A union is necessary to ensure job security,proper working conditions, grievance pro¬cedures, and fair wages. Though incidentshopefully are rare, University clerical workers,unrepresented oy a union, are too oiten suDjecito the caprice of their supervisors. Clericals maybe fired, transferred, assigned additionalresponsibilities, and given schedules withoutadequate guarantees that the rights of theworkers will be respected. In addition, clericalscurrently have practically no means to protestinadequate salary increases.We urge clericals to carefully consider the con¬sequences of union representation in general,and of Teamster representation in particular,before casting their ballots next week. A unioninevitably will raise the issues of workers’,schedules and working conditions. Although it iscertain conflicts will arise that might never havesurfaced without a union to back the workers,some of these conflicts will be healthy.The economic consequences of union represen¬tation must also be considered. The Teamstersundoubtedly will be able to increase theclericals’ wage scale, particularly becauseUniversity service workers are alreadyrepresented by the Teamsters, and the unionwould therefore have a virtual stranglehold onthe University in contract negotiations witheither union. These increases are certain to ap¬pear both in higher bills for hospital care and intuition hikes.The Teamsters hardly have an admirablereputation. Graft and strong-arm tactics aretrademarks of the national organization.Remember the infamous Central States PensionFund? Clerical workers will be given the choiceof depositing their money in the Central Statesfund or of retaining the University pension planif the union is approved.Local 743 is, however, the most liberalTeamsters local in the nation. It has negotiated,without doubt, fine contracts both for clericalworkers at Michael Reese Hospital and forUniversity service workers.We believe the union should be approved,despite the reservations we have expressed.However, most of all we hope every clericalworker will carefully consider the question andvote.Not so graySeveral students and a staff member havepointed out that since Hanna Gray took office aspresident, the weather on campus has been beau¬tiful. We do not credit Gray for the wonderfulweather we have been enjoying; neither will wedamn her for the winter months.Regardless of its source, we hope students,faculty members, and staff are enjoying thecrisp autumn days from anywhere except the in¬side of a library. Letters to the EditorIf elected...The Maroon received the followingnote and letter Wednesday.Can you print this in Friday’sissue of The Maroon directed to all Uof C clerical employees? Since youare printing other items about thisattempted union takeover, it wouldbe nice if you could give this a placeof prominence in your paper. Be¬cause of the fear of union reprisal,we can not sign our names. Person¬nel Department is aware of this let¬ter, as a matter of fact, it was theywho suggested we contact you.Dear fellow employe:The union is busy* selling you the“advantages” of union membership.Are there any disadvantages? Yes,there are! Here are some.1. You can be sure that if the unionis elected, their first demand willbe for a “union shop” clausewhich would require all clericalemployees to join the union and-continue paying dues in order tokeep their jobs. They tell us the-dues are $9.00 per month. Theyalso tell us that 1,920 employeesare eligible to vote. That meansthey will be taking in at least$17,280 PER MONTH of OUTmoney. However, they don’t tellus that dues can be raised BYTHEM at any time and you havenothing to say about it.2. You may have to pay special as¬sessments without having any-voice in determining how much—or why.3. Union-management relations in¬evitably result in rules, rules, andmore rules to regulate everythingyou do.4. In the event of a strike, you will beprevented from working and youwill lose pay, even though you Drawing by Chris Persansmay personally disagree thatthere is any reason for a strike,i. You can no longer speak for your¬self on any matter affecting yourwork. Unions jealously guardtheir right to speak for you in allmatters of your wages, yourhours, and your working condi¬tions.5. The union can punish you by finesand in other ways if you fail toabide by union rules. Have theyever shown you their rules whichyou would be forced to live by?7. Don’t be misled into thinking thatyou can get a union on a “trialbasis”. Once you elect a union andthey begin receiving your dues,they are not about to walk awaybecause you change your mind orsuddenly realize you have made amistake. Many have tried andvery few have succeeded.Think about it!Concerned Clericals Committee.S. Remember, this will be a se¬cret ballot election and no onewill ever know how you voted.You are absolutely free to vote“NO” even though you signed aunion card.Women’s Union seeks balanceTo the Editor:The Women’s Union has beenevaluating the College curriculumand finds its scope narrow andunreflective of changes occurring inour society. Our particular concernfocuses on the exclusion of womenfrom every aspect of academia;from individual achievements totheir overall influence throughouthistory. At the University we aretaught the art of objective inquiry inthe Chicago style. As we reevaluateit we can not escape the conclusionthat it springs from a subjectivebias. We do not study the develop¬ment of our culture from a trulyscholarly (i.e., objective) point ofview. Our conception of Westernthought has been molded by and is inthe interest of a select few — theelite that is Western, white andmale.Although we feel that sexist andracist values are reinforced in muchof the curriculum, they are typifiedin the course that claims to present“our” history — the History ofWestern Civilization. It is a rare ex¬ception to come across a professorwho believes there is a woman,somewhere between Thuycididesand Freud, worthy of inclusion. Weare aware of the ever present con¬straint time imposes on the selectionof the course readings and discus¬sion topics. However, we do not ac¬cept it as an excuse for the completeabsence of women as a force in history; the impact of which willcontinue to be skimmed over unlessthere is a concerted effort tolegitimize women in studies and givethem the full recognition theydeserve.The University must realize thatthe traditional general education ofwhich the College is so proud is aresult of the absolute prejudiceunder which scholarly education hasdeveloped. If the deliberate exclu¬sion of women as well as any minori¬ty is continued the University willfind that its favorite defense (itsrefusal to stoop to the level of con¬forming to an academic fad sweep¬ing the nation) is obsolete.Regardless of how one may feelabout women’s studies per se,women are not and never will bea fad. We are entering every fieldof_ higher education in manycapacities. We, therefore, will not besubjected to the small mindednessthat expects us to see our emergenceand interest in our past — the historyof our foremothers — as a passingphase. It is an insult to our integrityand to our intelligence.It is for these reasons that WesternCity, as well as the Common Core isa primary target of our efforts towiden the scope of the curriculum sothat it will serve the needs of an in¬creasingly diverse student body.Therefore, our approach is not indirect retaliation as it has been atmany universities. It is our goal to ‘No free lunch’To the Editor:This letter is in response to theLetter from the Spartacus YouthLeague on 20 Oct. 78. It was so full ofleftist propaganda that I had toanswer. I have one of those“slavelabor student jobs,” A unionwould not “upgrade” my job,whatever that means, but it maycost me the opportunity to hold it.A simple principle of economicswill tell you that the money foranything, especially in a privateuniversity, has to come fromsomewhere. A university likeChicago has a limited supply of in¬come. Some coming from thestudents and some from benefactorsof the University. Also, investmentsmay provide another source. Butwherever the money is coming from,it comes in limited amounts. This isnot a university that can go to thelegislature and ask for more moneyto be taken from the people of thestate.If the union suceeds in raising theoverall level of wages in the Univer¬sity, the money will have to comefrom somewhere. Additional wagescan be gotten through sacrificing byanother section of the University, orperhaps by raising tuitionpayments, or probably most likely,by getting rid of some of the frills.Let’s face it, student jobs are adefinite frill. They serve a functionbut they are not essential.So when the union comestriuphantly in to “help” the“capitalist exploited workers”, Ibite the bullet.Another thing that I foundhumorous, if that’s the right word touse, was the idea that nationaliza¬tion of UC would bring the Universi¬ty under “worker/student/teachercontrol”. Anyone that could possiblyclaim that must have been living in avacuum for the last 30 years.There’s no better way to removecontrol than to give it to the govern¬ment.“There’s no such thing as afree lunch.” A union won’t changethat.George Hershtotally integrate the experiences andthe perspectives of women, whicheven now at UC remain unrep¬resented.Towards this end we have beenmeeting with various ad¬ministrators and faculty, for opi¬nions and suggestions. Although wehave not had any opposition to ourstated goal within the departments,such a complicated task, with farreaching implications, requiresmore than sympathetic lip service.So far, the responsibility of securingresources and selecting pertinentmaterial has been placed onWomen’s Union. If the finalblueprint depends on the research ofthe students in Women’s Union wehave a very long road ahead of us.But any substantial change inacademia must come from theacademics. As we coordinate adetailed method for collectingmaterial to present to the depart¬ments we are sponsoring a bi¬quarterly speaker series, in the in¬terests of students, staff, and facul¬ty. The series will focus on currentresearch at other institutions per¬taining to issues especially relevantto women and women’s studies. It isour hope that in the near future thetopics to which these women havedevoted their time and energy willfind a place in the UC college cur¬riculum.The Women’s Union4 _ The Chicago Maroon — Friday, November 10, 1978Viewpoint ~University director of personnel argues against unionBy Edward ColemanNLRB electionOn November 16 and 17, 1978, a secret ballot electionwill be conducted by the NLRB (National Labor RelationsBoard). The University has attempted to present all rele¬vant facts so you can make the decision that will benefityou the most when the time comes to vote. The outcomewill be determined by a majority of the ballots cast. Inother words, if only 200 employes vote, and 101 of thesevote in favor of the Teamster-SEIU, it will become thecertified representative for the 1900 hourly-paid clericalstaff, including all those who vote ”NO” and those who didnot vote at all. The Teamsters-SEIU would then have theright to demand a ’’Union Shop” contract which would re¬quire all clerical employees to join and to pay union dues(currently $108 per year) and special assessments inorder to keep their jobs at The University of Chicago.(Clerical staff hired after September 17, 1978 would alsohave to pay a $50.00 initiation fee.) The Teamsters-SEIUwould also have exclusive right to represent you in bar¬gaining and grievances whether you vote for or againstthe Union or don’t vote.Given these circumstances, it is important that you de¬termine for yourself how you wish to vote and that youactually cast your ballot. You should be convinced that thedecision you make is the best on for you.The UnionThe Hospital Employees Labor Program is actually or¬ganized and operated by two unions : Teamsters Local 743and Local 73 of the Service Employees InternationalUnion (SEIU). The constitution and by-laws of HELP!states it is organized “for the purpose of assisting in serv¬ing the interests of hospital and related health careemployees exclusively... ”Not only was HELP! organized exclusively to representhospital employees (and not specifically clerical employ¬ees) it has no experience in representing University cleri¬cal staff members. It seeks to develop such experience atyour expense and against its own constitution.What the union is afterBy their own admission, the Teamsters and SEIU havespent thousands of dollars in their attempt to organize TheUniversity of Chicago clerical staff. Many staff membershave asked why? The reason is obviously economic, theUnion can expect a return of at least $220,000.00 from yourpaycheck during the first year. The Union has investedsubstantial sums for the production and distribution of ex¬pensive campaign literature.The Union’s PromisesIn their literature, the Union speaks of substantial gainsHELP! and/or the Teamsters have won for employeesthrough the collective bargaining process. Naturally, theytell only half the story, saying nothing about what theyhave bargained away. The Other HalfAt Michael Reese Hospital,the Union bargained awaythe employee’s sick leavedays to the extent that cler¬ical employees are not paidfor the first 2 days off forany illness, during theirfirst 3 years of employ¬ment.The so-called cost-of-livingadjustment wiljl onlyamount to from 0 to 5t(maximum) per hour, onetime, effective November13, 1978. A maximum of 5%over the term of the twoyear agreement, (far lessthan the employee’s out-of-pocket cost for dues andfees).In one recent statement the Union, rather apologetical¬ly, speaks of what you would buy for the $9 per month duesthey currently charge. They claim, among other things,you pay for “professionals” to help the Union bargain forTeamster saysBy Donald Peters“My chief goal... was to try to better the conditions oflife for the common people of America through sound col¬lective bargaining and improved labor-management rela¬tions.” . . . Paul H. Douglas (1892-1976), Professor ofEconomics, University of Chicago; United States Senatorfrom Illinois (1949-1966).No one could state better the purpose of HELP! in rela¬tion to the clerical employees of the University of Chicago.There is no dispute that the University of Chicago is oneof the world’s great institutions of education and research.Surely, people associated with the University shouldderive some benefit in the form of prestige. That’s fine forpersons whose work brings prizes and publicity to theUniversity.For the University’s clerical employees, prestige is notlegal tender at the supermarket, for the landlord, for thebus driver, for the doctor or for the tax collector. TheUniversity, as employer, has pointed to its long-termsystem of pay improvements through re-evaluation. Wehave demonstrated that few clerical employees reach themaximum pay for their job classifications. There is noprovision for appeal of the University’s setting of a wagefor specific work.The University's pay system is for the long-term and theemployees' needs are for the short-term (immediate in¬creases and regular cost-of-living adjustments to helpmeet the drain on their income because of inflation). you. A flyer accompanying that statement showed howtheir “professional” assistance works. Someone evidentlytook pavroll figures from University files without authori¬ty. The Union mistated payroll information regarding se¬cretaries in an attempt to answer the University’s priorstatement that University clericals without a union nave ahigher potential than those at other institutions like Mi-cael Reese where HELP! has bargaining rights.The Union claims only 19 secretaries without shorthandand 5 with shorthand are at the relatively high maximumrates of their ranges. The facts are that 60 secretaries inpositons not requiring shorthand were brought up to themaximum rate at their last annual review date, as were 24secretaries in positions requiring shorthand, a total of 84secretaries out of 671 Undoubtedly, the outside profes¬sionals could not understand that all clerical staff do notreceive their merit increases within the first two monthsof the fiscal year. Further at September 17, 1978, 24% ofThe University’s secretaries received a salary level ex¬ceeding the maximum rates for comparable positions inthe HELP! bargaining unit at Michael Reese Hospital.The University of Chicago is an institution where de¬monstrated performance is recognized and rewarded.Edward Colman is University director of personnel.vote for HELPHELP! has made no promises to the employees exceptto provide the best possible representation to assist themin achieving their own goals. There are many problems ofemployees which have been reported to HELP! staff andmembers of the employees’ own HELP! Organizing Com¬mittee. The most effective way to resolve these issues isthrough collective bargaining leading to a contract thatwill spell out the rights and responsibilities of theemployees and management. Sound grievance procedureincluding binding arbitration has operated well in hun¬dreds of firms under contract with the two unions sponsor¬ing HELP!HELP! offers employees a voice and a vote in their pay,benefits and conditions. There is no initiation fee foremployees eligible to vote in the election. There will be nodues to be paid until there is a contract ratified by secretballot of the University’s clerical employees in theBargaining.Unit.A vote YES for HELP! on November 16 and 17 will be agiant step forward in achieving the goal so well stated bythe late Professor-Senator Douglas.Donald Peters has been president of the InternationalBrotherhood of Teamsters Local 743 (Chicago > since 1945and was one of the founders of that local in 1939. He is alsopresident of HELP and serves on the board of trustees ofRoosevelt University. In 1968. he was the Chicago UrbanLeague’s Man of the Year.Union AchievementsAt Michael Reese Hospitaland elsewhere, they bar¬gained for short-term dis¬ability, that is, $90.00 pay aweek for extended ill¬nesses. (Statistics reveal,unless there is anepdemic,less than 2% of a workforceutilize this benefit in anyone year.)The Union claims it “won”a Cost-of-Living Allowanceat Michael Reese Hospital.Nov. 18‘Oregon’s range of musical referents is unusually broad. The band is equally at home with baroquecounterpoint, Indian raga, harmonically advanced improvising, rock rhythms, and contemporary clas¬sicism. Such electicism is nothing new, but the skill and intelligence the Oregon musicians display setsthem apart from the run of ‘bold new fusions’ and other musical shotgun weddings.”- Bob Palmer, Rolling Stone8:30-Mandel Hall Tickets at R.C. Box Office$2.50/$3.50 MAB , $5.50/$6.50 Non-MABGOLD CITY INNgiven * * * *by the MAROONOpen DollyFrom 11:30 a.m.to 9HH) p.m.5228 Harper 493-2559(amt Hor|>«r Court)Eat more for less.(Try our convenient take-out orders.)A Gold Mine Of Good FoodStudent Discount:10% for table service5% for take homeHyde Park's Best Cantonese Food ROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPEL5850 South Woodlawn AvenueSUNDAY e NOVEMBER 12,197811 A.M.UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICERABBI SAMUEL E. KARFFCongregation Beth IsraelHouston, Texas“WHERE ARE YOU’’3:30 P.M.Carillon RecitalRobert Lodine, University Carilonneur4 P.M.Mendelssohn’sELIJAHBox office opens at 3 p.m .,one hour before performancemubracadabra.I sit on his knee.Presto chango,and now he is meHocus pocus,we take her to bedMagic is fun;we re dead.MAGICA TERRIFYING LOVE STORYJOSEPH ELEVINE PRESENTSMAGICANTHONY HOPKINS ANN-MARGRETBURGESS MEREDITH EDLAUTEREXECUTIVE PRODUCER CO. ERICKSONMUSIC BY JERRY GOLDSMITHSCREENPLAY BY WILLIAM GOLDMAN,BASED UPON HIS NOVELPRODUCED BY JOSEPH E LEVINE AND RICHARD P LEVINEDIRECTED BY RICHARD ATTENBOROUGHPRffTS BY 0E LUXE' TECHMCOLOR* R -tUr*t£-STARTS FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10TH AT A THEATER NEAR *XJCHECK LOCAL NEWSPAPERS FOR THEATER LISTINGS rCONTACTLENSESHARD LENSES SOFT LENSES*35, *95,WEAR YOUR CONTACTS HOMETHE SAME DAYWe stock over 4000 difterent prescription* 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. All tints, fittings, adjustments, training,orientation, carrying case and start-up kit included at no ad¬ditional charge.WE ARE PROVIDING THOUSANDS OF LENSES PERMONTH TO PEOPLE CONCERNED ABOUT THEIRCOMFORT & APPEARANCE—WHY NOT YOU?Forino-obiigatton « oqoooppointmont, coil: O*r0"dIO4iaWFMpeytoncontact lensassociates, inc. 36 S. Wabash10th floor, Suite 1000Chicago* In most cases ©Payton Contact Lens Associates, Inc. 1978FOREIGN STUDENTS, FACULTY VISITORSAND YOUR FAMILIESWOULD YOU LIKE TO SPEND THANKSGIVINGWEEKEND IN A HOME IN A SMALL ILLINOISCOMMUNITY?BUSES LEA VE INTERNA TIONAL HOUSEWEDNESDA Y, NOVEMBER 22And SUNDA Y, NOVEMBER 26FOR INFORMATION CALL:753-2275 10-4ALL EXPENSES PAID 955-7382 4-8 p.m.TO ~-—"SPECIALDISCOUNT PRICESfor all STUDENTS andFACULTY MEMBERSJuft present your University o»Chkogo Identification Card.As Students er Foe why Membersof tfie University of Chicago you oreentitled to special money—savingDiicounlt on Volkswogen AChevrolet Parts, Accessories and anynew or used Volkswagen orChevrolet you buy from VolkswogenSouth Shore or Merit Chevrolet Inc.. SAifS A SfRWCIALL AT ONi GUAT LOCATION yi)IAl-VIV.% laMERITChevroletA VOLKSWAGENSOUTH SHORE72r.d & Stony Island*>©«#: AM-0400Oew.(Mrf.e w t-s-mmtmt . * N*m ft4 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, November 10, 1978r.W iwSgSfc,The Grey CityJ ournal 7a6/e o/* contents:Hannah Arendt p. 9Ivan Albright p. 10‘Two Clunkers'p. 11Interiors:‘so slow, so still9 and so uncomfortable9by Harry DoakesInteriors,, a film written and directed by WoodyAllen.Woody Allen has often said that tragedy is moreimportant than comedy. Starting out with an idea likethat, it’s not surprising that Allen's “serious” film,Interiors, is so tragic. He really wanted it to be soslow, so still, and at times so uncomfortable to watch.He certainly intended it to be a succession of imagesand ideas well above the usual intellectual level ofmovie fare, too.But after all — what’s the difference betweentragedy and comedy? In Shakespeare, the rule ofthumb is to count bodies: It’s a tragedy if nearlyeveryone is dead at the end of the last scene. ForWoody Allen, it’s a comedy if the audience laughs.Until this year, of course, that was the only kind offilm he made — people laughed: they were comedies.The trouble with comedy, of course, is that, whilepeople are laughing, they don’t feel pain or tension orthe stuff of which great drama is made. Woody Allenhas always been a writer of wit, with a sharp edgethat he often turns back on himself. It’s that wit thatprovides most of the laughs for his comedies — andwatching Interiors it soon becomes clear that, sincethe wit gets laughs, it’s the first thing that has to go ina serious film.What’s left? A film that plods along on its lethargicway, with hardly a hint of the sharpness or clarity ofAllen’s wit, for most of its length — and then, even atthe end, remains blunt. Surely enough: at Interiorsthe audience doesn’t laugh. It’s a tragedy, all right —but whether tragedy is more important than comedyor not, this isn’t the film that’s going to mark WoodyAllen's debut as an important director.We have here a paradox: all the elements of whatshould be a significant or intellectual or at least achallenging film. There are themes of life and death:themes of success and failure: change, adaptation,and collapse; fear and hope; sophistication andnaivete. The focus is on America’s favorite institu¬tion, the crumbling nuclear family. The characters are literate; most of the time, at least, the writer is ar¬ticulate; the photography is beautiful.So what’s missing? What's wrong?I think back to What’s Up, Tiger Lily. Rememberit? An exercise in silliness: Woody Allen providing acomic soundtrack to a Japanese spy movie. That’sthe key to a. Woody Allen comedy: the soundtrack, astring of one-liners, puns, and extended routinesfeaturing that self-depreciating humor. In his othercomedies, the visuals are part of that same stream ofjokes: sight gags, nothing more than an extension ofthe soundtrack. Sometimes it’s genuinely ingenious,the way Allen can maintain a comic monologue forthe running time of a feature film.Unfortunately, the soundtrack — that stream ofjokes — is also the key to Interiors. The gags are gonehere — remember, no laughs, folks. They've beenreplaced by those serious themes that seem to markthe film as intelligent, sophisticated entertainment.Instead of jokes, these are arguments — serious,heavy arguments. Interiors is another monologue —but this time it’s philosophy, not comedy, and thistime there’s no on-screen Woody Allen to do the talk¬ing.Instead, there’s Geraldine Page, E. G. Marshall.Marybeth Hurt, Maureen Stapleton and. of course.Diane Keaton, to present most of the ideas, with SamWaterston, Kristin Griffith, and Richard Jordanchiming in from time to time.The film’s plot is simple. There's a family — or,rather a Family, since these are archetypes, notcharacters: a Father, a Mother, three Daughters, oneBrother-in-Law, and a Boyfriend. Father announcesthat he wants a separation. Mother, suffering from anervous breakdown, looks to the Daughters for sup¬port. Father remarries, Mother comits suicide, andthe Daughter who tried to save her is in turn rescuedby the new Mother.There are embellishments, of course. In fact, on topof this simple framework is built a veritable tinkertoyset of fine ideas, multicolored arguments that all fittogether at the joints. It’s complex — no one couldargue that Interiors has a simple logical construction.But everything connects to itself, ultimately; thearguments are rigid, and the logic is circular.Nor could anyone claim that these are cardboardcharacters. Papier-mache, perhaps, but not card¬board: they also are too complicated for that. Theneuroses are designed into the archetypes: there’s aNervous, Sensitive Artistic Woman; a Successful Ar¬tist Who Cannot Relate; a Young Artist Trying ToFind Her Way In The World; a Politically ActiveNon-Artist . . . The list goes on, straight through thecast: eight characters with no insides and no out¬sides, and nothing to go on but an argument. None ofthese characters has any relationship to the worldbeyond this small group. There are no minorcharacters in Interiors — only peripheral arguments.Like the logic, this is a circular world whereeverything turns in on itself.Except that there's nothing inside, either — noguts, no stuffing, nothing at all. These argumentsare here just to serve the argument, and that’s allthey’re allowed to do. Woody Allen is an iron-fisteddirector; no windmills or rotating parts have beenadded to his careful, mechanical construction, nomatter how hard the actors try to slip them in.Nothing moves in this movie. The characters are in¬animate, and the plot, the symbols and the ideasare rigid.It’s a tragedy, all right — Allen probably doesn’trealize what a tragedy it is. There's no inspirationhere — no wit of any kind. It’s a formula picture, andnothing more; a tinker^v plot and a papier-machefamily, a constructed tale full of stillness and frus¬tration. ' *How do you criticize a film that isn't reallyfa film after all, but an essay? As a film, it has its technicalproblems. The characters speak in monologues andpseudo-dialogues, with ideas that never go any¬where or come to completion. Everyone on cameraseems to sit and talk, even when they’re moving.The film is full of posturings and talking heads. Thesound and camera work are the very opposite of ec¬centric: they seem to be running according to a com¬puter printout that automatically varies the sharp¬ness or fuzziness of sounds and pictures. There’s noacting to speak of.But that’s the wrong approach anyway. This is afilm that wants to be an essay, a series of argu¬ments and formulas. You might complain that it’scalled a movie, but that’s an arbitrary distinction:Plato didn’t write novels, and DeSade didn't writeplays, they wrote philosophy.As a philosophical essay, Interiors is a self-indulgent circle of banalities. There’s nothing to it —no wit to cut through the inanities of life and no depthto give it weight. The ideas are repeated withoutembellishment so many times that it soon becomesclear Woody Allen intends to do nothing new withthem. He doesn't even bother to suggest new jux¬tapositions — it’s the same old tale, without the ad¬vantage of being a tale at all.It’s a failure as a film. It’s a failure as an essay, too— not because it tries to achieve too much, butbecause it does not try anything at all. It’s even afailure as a monologue: wit is the soul of philosophy,the core of anything meaningful and serious. To makean important film. Woody Allen decided to abandonhis wit. the one thing that could have provided himwith something serious to say.Now that’s a tragedy.•»\y i»f isomt-vo*! — ncn'lsM ?r*. -i PTAKE THE FEAR OUTOF CITY LIVINGwith the "Paraiyzer'persona! security device.• The “Paraiyzer" has been editorializedon ABC, NBC, and CBS television,major newspapers and nationalmagazines, as a precision protectiveinstrument that will stop even a 300lb. mart up to twenty minutes includingindividuals under the influence of.al cohol and/or narcotics.• Active ingredient: chemicalCS, sometimes referred toas super- tear gas becauseof its superior potency. • Safe to use, will not causepermanent injury. Extensivelytested by independentlaboratories.• Fires 50, one second blasts. • No marksmanship necessary.• 5 (five) year guarantee.If not completely satisfied, return within thirtydays for full refund.GK&A, Incoporated, Dept. IICU, Box 660, Highland Park, IL 60035Please rush me the following :( ) 1 Pocket Unit at $4.95 each $( ) 2 Pocket Units at $4.45 each $( ) 3 Pocket Units at $3.95 each $( ) Genuine leather cases at $4.00 each $Add $1.50 for postage and handling $1.50Total Enclosed $( ) Please send me free information about a “paraiyzer”distributorship. ZENTHE WAY OF EVERYDAY LIFEA talk by Dr. Tetsugen Glass man. Sensei. A monksince 1970, Tetsugen Sensei is the first Dharma suc¬cessor of Zen Master Hakuyu Taizan Maezumi,Roshi, who is director and president of the Zen cen¬ter of Los Angeles and the Institute for Trans-cultural Studies. Sensei will offer private inter¬views after his talk.8:00p.m., Unity ChurchCentral Street, Evanston$2.00 donation. For information call 869-8265EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURTROSENBAUMOptometrist(53 Kimbark Plata)1200 East 53rd Street HYDE PARK PIPE AND TOBACCO SHOP1552 E. 53rd'Under l(Students under 30 getask for ‘‘Big JimMon.-Sat. 9-8; Sun. 1PipesPipe Tobaccos </Imported Cigarettes Cigars,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 AccountingSOCIAL SERVICEADMINISTRATIONPROFESSIONAL OPTIONADMISSIONS MEETINGWEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 154:00-6:OOP.M.HARPER 284The professional option program provides opportunity forqualified students to begin professional study at SSA duringtheir final year in the College. The work completed duringthis common year counts toward the master’s degree andthe bachelor’s degree as well; During the Social Hour onNovember 15, SSA faculty will discuss programs of study atthe School. Now is the time to plan for applications forautumn 1979.8 — The Grey City Journal, November 10, 1978 *New from the Pressesby Peter EngThe Arts of David Levine (Knopf, $25) Levine isarguably one of the two or three best caricaturists inrecent history. Those who have followed his work, ap¬pearing predominately in the pages of Esquire andThe New York Review of Books, can appreciate thedistinctive flavor a Levine sketch adds to a magazine.I think Levine tends to use more strokes than he ac¬tually needs; coupled with the sharp contours of hispen, this tendency often makes the sketches look too-busy and overdone. In this way he often diverts theviewers’ attention from the “simple” core ofcaricature — the condensation (and interpretation) ofcharacter. Still, what elevates Levine above many ofhis contemporary craftsmen is his equal concernwith, and generally, equal excellence in, the portrayalof both inner personality and outer, facial features.My favorites in this volume are the Charlie Chaplin,inviting michief with that crackly half-smile; theAlbert Einstein, those inquisitive eyes peering fromthat remarkably humble face; and most of all, theWilliam F Buckley, captured on the verge of utteringthe proverbial. Some of the sketches are less endear¬ing, especially that of Susan Sontag looking like a 9-to-5 housewife.Much less known is that Levine is also a highlyregarded water-colorist; Levine in fact considershimself “a painter supported by a hobby — satiricaldrawings.” In these paintings the urban landscapesand carnival facades are more inviting than the por¬traits, which strike me as being rather dull incharacterization. At any rate, the reproductions andthe overall design of this collection are of the highquality one expects from an Knopf art book.For those who plan to be in the New York area, amajor exhibition of Levine’s work will be on view atthe Forum Gallery from November 9th to the 25th.The Jew As Pariah by Hannah Arendt edited andwith an introduction by Ron H. Feldman (GrovePress, $12.50) Hannah Arendt was vastly out of favorwith the Jewish intellectual community when shedied three years ago; the essays collected in thisvolume are at once an “explanation” for thatdisfavor and a clarification of her life work, whichhas been somewhat obscured by the controversy. It isquestionable whether these essays on “The Pariah asRebel” and “Zionism and the Jewish State” have ac¬tually been, as Feldman claims, “for the most partneglected and forgotten.” If they were, it would bedifficult to understand the intensity of the criticismthat had persisted up to Arendt’s death. In any case,these essays have up until now been scattered invarious scholarly journals; they are grouped togetherhere under a conception that informs almost all of Arendt’s writings on modern Jewish history.Arendt saw herself as “a conscious pariah”, whoembraced both her Jewish heritage and her right to ageneral European life. This status granted her a uni¬que outlook, fully developed in The Origins ofTotalitarianism, (1951) in which the modern Jewishand European histories were inextricably bound. Shewas highly critical of the modern Jewish“worldlessness”, the Jews’ ignorance of anddisinterest in effective participation in Europeanpolitics. Even the Jewish bankers, whose wealthallowed them easier access to political power, con¬tented themselves in their indiscrimate financing ofstates and maintaining their privileged positionwithin (but not outside of) the Jewish community.The result was that the Jews were confused by the an¬tisemitism that surfaced in the Dreyfus Affair andwere, without political power, in the worst position tobe so. What Arendt set out to do in Totalitarianismand later in Eichmann in Jerusalem (1963) was essen¬tially to show that political apathy allows, evenforces, the penetration of evil; the Jews must thusshare the burden of responsibility for the fate thatawaited them. “Worldlessness, alas, is always a formof barbarism,” she wrote in Men in Dark Times. Andcharacteristic of her “conscious pariah” stance,Arendt warned that this barbarism was threateningto become a generalized European condition. Byfocusing on this concept of “the conscious pariah,”Feldman’s capable introduction does justice to the in¬tegrative power of Arendt’s political theory.The most interesting aspect of this volume is thecontrast between two letters Arendt wrote inresponse to two critics of her Eichmann. The firstcritic, who attacked what he considered the book’soverstress on the weaknesses of the Jews, Arendtdealt with (one is tempted to say, dispensed with) bycareful, level-headed arguments. One gets the impres¬sion that Arendt’s sharp reactions to her critics atthis time were understandable, since many of thecriticisms directed against her were not. Still, theresentment surfaces with little control in the secondletter, which Arendt wrote in response to, amongother things, the charge that she was not particularlyqualified to cover the Eichmann trial. Arendt’sresponse is long and digressive, and harsh and unfairin its judgements. It is somewhat disconcerting to seeher thus groping in her “dark times” for support; sheseems too frail a human being here, and for thosestunned by the power of Totalitarianism and The Lifeof the Mind, (1977) that is the very last thing which wewould like to remember her as.But we must b^ careful not to read that letter (andmany of her other writings in this book) in the wrongway. Arendt was a pariah in active rebellion not Hannah Arendt in 1963, when sheserved as Professor in the Committee onSocial Thought at the University.because she thought little of the people whose apathyshe criticized, but much to the contrary, because shecared so much about humanity that she saw all tooclearly what it had become. But the empathy neverobscured the vision; when a Jewish critic castigatedher for forsaking her people in writing Eichmann,Arendt replied that she was never in the fold, thatpeople as collectivities mattered little to her, that theonly kind of love she believed in was “the love of per¬sons.”What Arendt wanted to teach above all else wasquite simply that history is what we make of it. Sherejected both collective guilt and collective in¬nocence: in neither case could anyone be made clearlyresponsible for his actions. But to pin all the respon¬sibility on an Eichmann was to burden him beyondhis due. Beyond the histrionics of the courtroom,there were other people on trial — other Germans,other Western countries, and even the Jews. Thisdeep concern for human integrity is the kind floweredby years of sedulous study, reflection, and toil. Andwhen you think about it, there really is no greaterlove.Once Upon A Mattress to Open FridayReview and Photograph byCarol KlannerOnce Upon a Mattress is the first major productionby the Blackfriars this year.The play is a musical version of The Princess andthe Pea, a tale in which a complaining queen (DawnBrennan), who, because of her elusive idea of whatmakes a “real live” princess, cannot find a wife forher awkward son Prince Dauntless (Joel Elliot).Three of ‘the funniest characters are the King,Jester, and Minstrel (played by Randy Solomon,Mike Taylor and JimGrobel, respectively). They suc¬cessfully conspire against the queen when a promis¬ing princess (Tammy Ravitts) is found. In the end,the prince gets the prinpess and the king gets back atthe queen.Libby Morse directs the comedy at a good pace,and the set (designed by Jacob AUerdice and PeteMostovoy) and costumes add a professional touch.Blackfriars is one of the oldest student groups on campus, and have been presenting productions likethis one since the 1890’s.Once Upon a Mattress will be presented at 8 p.m.this Friday, Saturday, and Sunday. Nov. 10, 11, and12. Tickets are on sale at the Reynolds Club box of¬fice and in Cobb Hall.Braxton at Hutchby Mark HalpernAnthony Braxton, the most popular and commer¬cially successful member of the AACM, gave twowell-attended, well-appreciated concerts at Hut¬chison Commons last Friday night. Braxton, onclarinet and alto and soprano saxophones, was ac¬companied by Ray Anderson on trombone andRichard Teitlebaum on synthesizer. Their music wasreadily accessible, provoking thought when con¬sidered by itself and in the context of Braxton’s workas a whole.Braxton played thin, darting lines on the sopranosaxophone while as a foil Anderson’s muted trom¬bone produced rich, broad sounds of more brevitywhile Teitlebaum contributed simple statements inthe lower register on the synthesizer.A sense of structure and balance pervades Brax¬ton’s music. He carefully organizes his work, beingunusually interested in composition and notatedmusic for one considered to be a “jazz musician”. By avoiding the standard theme-improvisation format,Braxton retains greater control over his music, beingable to easier explore specific areas of texturethrough use of notation. The shapes of sound produc¬ed are marked by their warmth and proportion. Brax¬ton's pieces have a secular, this-worldly quality tothem.The concerts gave excellent examples of this well-ordered sensibility. Generally the trio played inunison, but more solos were heard in the second set.Teitlebaum took a subordinate role for most of theevening, with the horns, Braxton in particular, on topand in control of matters. Braxton himself was in fineform, especially on clarinet and alto, where his play¬ing was both very flui<j and sonorous. Anderson’strombone proved to be a good counterpart to Brax¬ton’s reeds, though his solos perhaps could have donewith a greater fullness.Stability characterized the music, maybe even toomuch stability. The sense of building and tension,usually present with Braxton, was lacking Fridaynight. Between musicians, the interaction seemed tobe mostly one-way, particularly when compared withBraxton's previous work, such as his album ThreeCompositions and his duets with Dave Holland.Anderson and Teitlebaum did not have the distinc¬tiveness or inventiveness possessed by other musi¬cians who have worked with Braxton.Those intrigued by the music Friday night shouldconsult, besides the music already cited, Braxton'salbums Creative Orchestra Music 1976, The Mon-treux/Berlin Concerts, or For Aito.The M AB concertwas among the best-attended here given by peopleplaying in the new music. Hopefully similar eventswill receive as much attention.The Grey City Journal. November 10. 197t — ♦ArtA Portrait of Grotesqueryby Neurine WigginShocking paintings are on display at the Art In¬stitute now through Dec. 10. The works are by IvanAlbright, the man who competed with his twinbrother, Marvin, to create “The Picture of DorianGrey” for the M.G.M. movie, and won. (The dreadcanvas greets your first glance at the exhibit; everydoor, wall, chair, clock and piece of flesh burstingwith interior rot.) He is also the painter who, unlikehis artist-father of the “country boys” success, hasexhibited an almost lifetime preoccupation with thegrey-green tones of decaying flesh.Why? Although Albright is eloquent, he refuses totell. The man who spends years on one painting, ex¬ecutes fleshy details meticulously (sometimes withthe aid of a magnifying glass and a one-bristlebrush), and persists in saying that the body is ourtomb, or “without a body we might be men,” seemsdeliberately obfuscating.Encompassing statements, though, are difficult tomake because the very essence of Albright’s appeal isin his details. Yards of crocheted lace, gauze, nettinghave been scattered through his paintings as if hewere obsessed by its texture or lulled by its repetitivecreation. Body hair, like little twisting worms sud¬denly exposed to the light, squirms on his subjects.He is a master at drawing shattered eyes; the skinaround them crumpled like tissue paper. The hands “Portrait of Mary Block” of Albright’s subjects are often arranged before themas if laid out in the coffin or floating, dismemberedamong artifacts, always showing the signs of a hardlife but innocent in a way, like the faces in his earlierpaintings, incredulous, refusing disillusionment. In“Poor Room” the remembrances of one life tumbletogether in a house without gravity. “The Door”casts countless small sentiments over a funeral cof¬fin. In “Wherefore Now Ariseth the Illusion of aThird Dimension” the depth of a love relationship isridiculed through the small details of a flirtatiousevening.Even as late as 1977, Jan Van de Marck, whoorganized an exhibition of Albright’s works at Dart¬mouth College, was calling him a local Midwest ar¬tist. He did grow up in Harvey, Illinois, went to NewTrier, Northwestern, and the Art Institute, but tosuggest that his subject matter and appeal is of localinterest is to perhaps suggest something else. Is hetrying to account for Albright’s lack of widespreadrecognition, after over fifty years of painting and twonear misses with fame? Albright’s rendering of thehuman condition is poetic and stylistically his own (aiustification in its own right). Yet, though “TheVermonter” (1966-77) has a certain phosphorescentquality of paint; though the fan in “Pray for the LittleOnes” (1977) seems to be fluttering beside glowingroses, are these really the new work of an artist wrho isgrowing or memories of his past achievements? It is aquestion worth asking in person as you stand in thelower Southeast wing of the Art Institue, con¬templating Albright in the flesh.For a No-drama:To not to be or to be: That isn’t the question!STUDENT CO-OPHELP! HELP! WE NEED BYOUR USED BOOK TO OFILL OUR RAPIDLY OEMPTYING SHELVES. KBEST PRICES IN HYDE SPARK. DONT MISS THE TFINAL DAYS OF OUR ONONESUCH, RCA & RODYSSEY CLASSICAL ESALE.DOWNSTAIRS ATREYNOLDS CLUB9:30-6:00 WEEKDAYS, 10-5 SAT. . ,15 Ph<”<^acrarne ^at Hie VOV Gallery in theFirst Unitarian Church onthe NiV corner of 57th andLL/oodlawn (enter from 57th St)in Hyde R*rK onThursdacjs and^^ Fridays 1130 to/C \ 330 on Saturdays10 to 2 and onSundays 13 to 2 The Birthday Party.Thurs - SundaysNew TheatreTickets at Mandel Box OfficeBlackfriars presentsOnce Upon A MattressDirected by Libby Morse Tickets still availableat Reynolds Club Box Office Nov. 10,11,12Mandel Hall, 8p.m.$1.*50/Students$2.00/Non-Studentsto — The Grey City Journal, November 10, 1978Eihn Two Clunkers: The Big Fixand Comes A Horsemanby Steven FeldmanRichard Dreyfuss is cute. Richard Dreyfuss is verycute. Richard Dreyfuss is very, very cute. RichardDreyfuss is a jerk.As private investigator Moses Wine in The Big Fix,Richard Dreyfuss in The Big Fix Dreyfuss takes his kids and his elderly aunt along oncases. Cute. He breaks his arm in karate class; plays“Clue” by himself “to perfect my craft;” jams acrayon into the barrel of his gun — the cuteness neverends. A bumper sticker on his car reads, “SupportWomen’s Liberation: Make Him Sleep on the WetSpot.” See what I mean? Cute, but a jerk.Dreyfuss plays a former 60s radical who has beendrifting ever since the good old days of campusunrest and protest marches. An old friend fromBerkeley (Susan Anspach) shows up and convinceshim to help her on a political campaign she’s workingon. Her candidate is being smeared and made to lookas if he has the support of the radical undergroundand Dreyfuss is hired to expose whoever is behind theplot.The trouble with The Big Fix is that it can’t makeup its mind whether it wants to be a comedy about anoff-beat detective, a romance between Dreyfuss andAnspach, or a thriller about political dirty tricks. Itwinds up botching all three. It is ingratiatingly cuteinstead of a comedy, the romance is embarrassing(“You should have seen her at Berkeley, man, shewas so beautiful,” is as romantic as the movie gets);and the thrills are on the level of a Mission:Impossible rerun.The Big Fix wants to capture some of the idealismand fervor of the 60s; instead, it preserves some of theworst aspects of that period. A radical lawyer lec¬tures his class, “Labor law is nothing but the oppres¬sion of one class by another.” This is the kind ofidiocy, that discredits progressive politics in thiscountry.There is an important film to be made about whathappened during the 60s and how those changes af¬fect our own times. Based only on The Big Fix, onewould think all the activity of a decade ago was mere¬ly the mischief of spoiled middle-class kids. Avoid itunless you enjoy watching Richard Dreyfuss smirkfor two hours. Jane Fonda in Comes a HorsemanAnother movie worth skipping is Comes AHorseman, which is nothing more than a boringtelevision show projected on a large screen. Jane Fon¬da is a tough broad fighting evil cattle rancher JasonRobards and big-money oil interests. James Caancomes along to help her out and, though they havesome trouble adjusting to each other at first (wouldn'tyou know it?), they fall in love.There's a wizened old cowpoke to cackle along withthem, spraying folksy sayings all over the place. Andthat dialogue. (Cattle buyer talking to Caan aboutFonda: “She was tough in the old days, but the twoof you together are just plain awful”.)Not even Gordon Willis’s fine photography of Mon¬tana’s harsh mountains and sloping graze land canshake off the film's stupor.UC SKI CLUBPARTYSATURDAY NIGHT 9 p.m.iSee our newsletter in yesterday’sjjmail for details & location or cal*[1955-9646. Refreshments by PabstSKI 1ACKSOKJAN. 1-JAN. 6Only $159 for 5 nights, condos andj5 days skiingplus lots more. Call955-9646 immediatelyfor details. HEAR AGAIN STEREOChicago’s used and demo stereo spe¬cialists. Save 40% to 70% off com¬parable new prices. Every priceguaranteed like One of a kind UsedSpecials:J.B.L.30 $110.00 eachMarantz 2275 w/case $299.00Pioneer 939 $219.00Marantz Imp. 6 $ 79.00 eachSansui5000 $159.00Sherwood 7100 A $110.00Dual 1214 $ 59.00Fisher SR 110dolby cass. $110.00Berta gni U-60 $ 85.00 eachYamaha CR 450 $199.00•+ Much, Much More!!!Complete systems from $75 to $750.HEAR AGAIN STEREO7002 N. California Chicago 338-7737 Graduate School of Business • The University of ChicagoFour Lectures or. Keynes b>DON PATINKINFord Foundation tinting Research Professorin the Pepartnient of f.rimomu s and theGraduate School oj Business •Professor of Economics at the HchrcuUniversity of JerusalemANTICIPATIONS OF THE CEXERAL THEORY?Mondav November 6 The Problem Defined"Wednesdav, November 8 "The Scandinavian School"Mondas. November 13 Michal KaleckfA RE-EXAMINATION OF KEYNES THEORY OF EFTECTIVE DEMANDWednesdav, November 15All lectures 4 00-5 30 pm in Stuart Hall < formerly Business East >. Room 101Admission is without ticket and without chargeNAMFILMS IN THE REALM OFTHE SENSES ,Nogiso Oshima Cobb HallSat. Nov. II T6:00, 8:00, 10:00 jThe Grey City Journal, November 10, 1971 — 11» I *is Week in The Arts: CityArtThe Art Institute of Chicago, Michigan Ave. atAdams St.New Exhibitions: Viewmakers: 19th CenturyPhotographs, views of the Middle East, China,Europe, and America featuring cities, landscapes, ar¬chaeological sites, and world exhibitions. Nov. 11 -Jan. 14;Continuing exhibitions: Pompeii AD 79 will be ex¬tended through Nov. 19; Drawings 1900-1976 Ac¬quired in 20 Years, drawings of important 20th cen¬tury artists, including Dine, Oldenburg Christo, andMarisol; Contemporary Japanese Prints andCeramics from the Collection of Oliver Statler, aselection of sosaku hanga (Japanese creative prints)and 20th century stoneware from Statler’s collection;Ivan Albright, featuring paintings, drawings andsculptures (see article), through Dec. 10.Hours: Mon., Tues., Wed,, Fri.: 10:30 - 4:30, Sat.,Sun., holidays: 10:00 - 5:00, Thurs.: 10:30 - 8:00.Admission prices vary.Museum of Contemporary Art, 237 E. Ontario St,Continuing Exhibitions: Buildings Reborn: NewUses, Old Places, through Nov. 12. Hours: Mon. -Sat.: 10 - 5; Sun: 12 - 5. General Admission: $1,students: 50c.ArchiCenter, 310 S. Michigan Ave., 2nd floorCornell Architects in Chicago, works by the alumniof Cornell’s School of Architecture who are practic¬ing in Chicago. Included will be projects by architectsNathaniel Owings, Tom Beeby, Lawrence Perkins,Stuart Cohen, Ronald Dahlquist and Phillip Will.Nov. 14 - Dec. 9. Operated by the Chicago Architec¬ture Foundation. Free.Photoworks, Ltd., 2848 N. Clark St.Home Brew: A Collection of Cyanotype and Van-Dyke Brown Prints and Wall Pieces, an exhibition oftwo and three dimensional mixed media pieces and aphoto quilt done with these antique tinting processes.Through Nov. 30Hours: Mon. - Thurs.: 3:30 - 7:00; Sat.: 10 - 6; Sun.: 1 -6. Free.N.A.M.E. Gallery, 9 W. Hubbard.Dee Axelrod/Farrell Brickhouse - Sculpture andPainting, an exhibition of Axelrod’s architecturalsculpture-paintings’ and Brickhouse’s oil paintingson wooden panels. Nov. 10 - Dec. 2. Free. Somebody Else’s Troubles, 2470 Lincoln Ave.Don Lange and Betsy Kaske, Nov. 10, 11, 12. 9 and 11p.m.The Earl of Old Town, 1615 N. Wells StFred Holstein and Scott Alarik, Nov. 10 and 11, 9 and11 p.m.Jazz Hotline: 666-1881TheatreGoodman Theatre, 200 S. Columbus Dr.Richard Wright’s Native Son, through Nov. 12.Goodman School of DramaRoyal Gambit, a play about Henry VIII, by HermannGressieker, Nov. 9-19. Performances at 2324 N. Fre¬mont, on DePaul University’s East Lincoln Parkcampus. St. Nicholas Theater Company, 2851 N. Halsted.Ibsen’s Little Eyolf, previews Nov. 10 at 8:30 p.m.,Nov. 11 at 6:30 and 10 p.m., Nov. 12 at 3 p.m., Nov, 14at 8 p.m. Opening date is Nov. 15.Jacques Brel is Alive and Living in Paris, presentedby the Northwest End, Inc., Nov. 10, 11, 12, at St.Luke’s Church, 2649 N. Francisco. Curtain on Fridayand Saturday: 8 p.m.; Sunday: 7:30.MiscellaneousChicago Radio Theatre, WFMT, 98.7 FM, 1450 AM,The Misanthrope by Moliere, featuring Diana Rigg, 8p.m.FilmChicago Filmmakers, 6 West Hubbard.Home for Life, by Kartemquin Films, a film abouttwo people spending their first month at a home forthe aged, Sat. Nov. 11, 8 p.m., $2.Lectures, Readings, TalksToo Much of a Good Thing, a lecture on Victorian ar¬chitecture, By David Durant, British historian andjournalist, Thurs., Nov. 16, 6 p.m., in PriceAuditorium of the Art Institute of Chicago.Les Blank — In Person, a talk by the documentaryfilmmaker with “the richest rural sense of any film¬maker working now,” Tues., Nov. 14, 8 p.m., $2.Presented by Chicago Filmmakers, 6 W. Hubbard.Jerome Sala and Beluga: Poetry and Performance,readings by the two artists. Sala is a Chicago-bredpoet whose “humor and writing demonstrates abilityfar beyond the punk pose;” Beluga is “neither punknor drag oriented, but rather suggests a HelmutNewton photograph come to life and afflicted withParkinson’s Disease,” Fri., Nov. 10, 8 p.m., $2.Presented by Chicago Filmmakers.MusicChicago Symphony Orchestra, Orchestra Hall, 220 S.Michigan Ave, Sir Georg Solti conducts the orches¬tra in a concert featuring works of Beethoven, andStravinsky. Guest: Itzhak Perlman, violin. Thursday,Nov. 16, 2:00 p.m.I Musici, celebrating the tricentennial of Vivaldi’sbirth. Sunday, Nov. 12 at 8:00 in Orchestra Hall.Lyric Opera, 20 Wacker Dr.Jules Massenet's Werther, Nov, 10, 13.Auditorium Theatre, Congress at Wabash Ave. En¬glish Chamber Orchestra, Vladimir Ashkenazy, con-,ductor/pianist, Saturday, Nov. 11 at 8:00..Old Town School of Folk Music, 909 W. Armitage.Roulette will present works by five composers usingelectronic and instrumental media and dance, Nov.12. 7 and 9 p.m., $2.12 — The Grey CPy Journal, November 10,1970. W * i jl # <*/:' ■ t s'j mV vm * i ». .'M. 1,-j m-ii i—- M *t*'4>i.***!»*t yitZi Collection of the Art Institute of Chicago, gift }f Mr. and Mrs. Leigh BlockRevenge, Voyeurismand Mickey Mouse at the Film Festby Harry DoakesThe hallmarks of the Chicago International FilmFestival have always been that it’s Big (more filmsthan you’d ever want to see in 2Vi weeks) and Distant(by Hyde Park standards, anyway). This year is noexception. There are more than 60 feature films onthe schedule, and almost as many shorts — and if youexpect to see reviews of them here (in addition tothe Tribune’s reviews, the Sun-Times’ reviews, theReader’s reviews, and the babblings of movie-glut¬ted CTA riders) — maybe you’ve seen a few too manyyourself.As usual, too, the geographic center of the festivalis in the vicinity of Lincoln Park — not exactly conve¬nient for most U of C students. Most of the films areshowif at the Village (corner of North and Clark) orthe Biograph (at Lincoln, Halsted, and Fullerton).There’s also a week of films at the Varsity theaterbeginning today, and a special program* of films atNorthwestern University — that’s all in Evanston,even farther from Hyde Park. That’s a long way to go for a movie, to be sure; it’sa long way to go for an* entire day of movies. Butthere are a few things to keep in mind: once you’vepaid the admission, unless you’re thrown out forsmoking or getting rowdy, you can stay until thelast film is over (some nights that’s more than 6hours). You’ll probably see a lot more than you ex¬pected; many of the short films aren’t on the print¬ed schedule, and some are very pleasant sur¬prises.Most of the films begin well after their scheduledstarting times, so you can afford to be a little late —but not much. It takes a little more than an hour to getto the north side by CTA rapid transit, or IC and abus — and just about as long to drive upland find aparking place (yes, the Lincoln Park Pirates will stilltow you for parking on private property — and the feeranges from $35 to $60). For most programs, the ad¬mission price is $3.50, and complete schedules for theday or week, are published in the daily newspapersand the Reader.continued on the next page• T V»V*»»This Week in The Arts: CampusHerewith, a highly selective sampling of somehighlights of the 14th Chicago Film Fest: CITIZENKANE (tonight, November 10th, 9:15 pm, Varsity). Ifyou’re not an Orson Welles fan, a Bernard Herrmannfan, or a William Randolph Hearst fan — you shouldstill see CITIZEN KANE uninterrupted and on a bigscreen. Contrary to popular belief, it’s not the bestfilm ever made, but it’s one of the most consistentlyentertaining.If you are a Welles fan, you’ll be spending yourafternoons at Norris Student Center on the North¬western campus. They’re running a series of hisfilms every afternoon this week; each program beginsat 2pm. The schedule: Monday, THE STRANGER:Tuesday, LADY FROM SHANGHAI; Wednesday,MACBETH; Thursday, TOUCH OF EVIL and THETRAIL; Friday, IMMORTAL STORY. If you haven’tgot a car, remember that it takes two hours to get toEvanston by public transportation; plan to leavearound noon.A QUITE ORDINARY LIFE (Sunday, November12th, 2 pm; Varsity) Drama meets documentary: thisbiography of a 74-year-old Hungarian woman,Veronika Kiss, bypasses the usual heavy-handednessof this kind of movie. Veronika is a witty old lady,and this is a witty and inventive film, one thatdoesn’t apologize for its subject — and doesn’t haveto.ORCHESTRA REHEARSAL (Thursday,November 16th, 9:15 pm at the Varsity; Saturday,November 18th, 7 pm at the Village) Who’s not asucker for a world premiere? This is FedericoFellini’s new film about — surprise! — an orchestrarehearsal. From all accounts, it’s all Fellini.FEDORA (Saturday, November 18th, 9:30 pm;Village) William Holden is a director trying to lure“the world’s greatest film star,” out of retirement inthis story about where legends come from.This one’s a U.S. premiere, with a ticket price of $5;nobody seems to know if it’s worth it, since BillyWilder can be either the best or the worst of directors.REMEMBER MY NAME (Saturday, November11th, 9:15 pm at the Varsity; Monday, November13th, 7 pm at the Biograph) Remember those greatwomen’s melodramas of the '40’s? This is the samegeneral idea; Geraldine Chaplin, Tony Perkins, andBerry Berenson form the triangle with the womanbent, as usual, on revenge, revenge, revenge...Also worth noting: a Bizarre Romance double¬feature at the Village (Sunday, November 12th, begin¬ning at 6 pm) with IT’S NEVER TOO LATE(Voyeurism, pregnancy, and senility) and HIDDENPASSIONS (an obsessive triangle). Who couldresist?Among the programs of short films:FLOOR SHOW and other experimental films (Sun¬day, November 12th, 9 pm; Biograph) “All of thelatest techniques”, which is what they said aboutCITIZEN KANE in 1941.HAPPY BIRTHDAY MICKEY MOUSE! (Wednes¬day, November 15th; 7 pm at the Biograph; 9:15 pm atthe Varsity) Rodent Madness. This is part of theDisney Studios’ celebration of Mickey’s 50th, in¬cluding snips from FANTASIA and the SILLY SYM¬PHONIES cartoons, and comments by animatorswho worked on them. Word has it that Mickey willalso put in a personal appearance. Ahem. .. EXTRAORDINARY ANIMATION FESTIVAL(Monday, November 13th, 9:15 pm at the Biograph;Thursday, November 16th, 6:30 pm at the Varsity) Atthis writing, I have no idea what's in it, but I alreadyknow this will be, minute for minutes, the mostworthwhile show of the festival. These are recentanimated films, something to show you how far we’vecome since the golden age of cartoons.TV COMMERCIALS (Tuesday, November 14th,9:15 pm; Biograph) It’s usually one of the mostpopular programs of the Festival, and it's nothingyou haven’t seen on your tv. These are commercialsthe way they were never intended to be — uninter¬rupted by inane sitcoms and hokey dramas, pureAmericana in film.. . . And for those with low budgets and a streak ofmasochism, there’s the BEST OF THE FESTIVALprogram (Sunday, November 19th, 7 pm; Village). $6for 5 hours, it’s a marathon of short films and onefeature-length movie, which — if your eyes can stillfocus when it’s all over — comprise “the finest pro¬ductions of 1978”. And a good thing, too: after 5 hoursof this, you won't want to go near a theater formonths. MusicThe Contemporary Chamber Players will presentBarbara Haffner, cellist, in a recital on Monday,Nov. 13, at 8 p.m. in Mandel Hall, 5706 S. UniversityAve. Free.TheatreThe Birthday Party by Harold Pinter at CourtTheatre, Mandel Hall. Runs every Thursday (exceptThanksgiving), Friday, and Saturday (8:30 p.m.) andSunday (7:30 p.m.). One of Pinter's best plays. $2.00 -$2.50, students; $4.00 - $4.50 all others. Call 753-3581for reservations.Filmby George BaileyAdmission to all NAM and weekend Doc films is$1.50. Both groups will show their movies in Quan-trell Auditorium, Cobb Hall, 5811 S. Ellis Ave.American Graffiti (1973), directed by GeorgeLucas. (Doc) We follow four recent high school gradsthrough one night in 1962 as they go through theperiod’s cliched motions: making the sock hop, ham¬burger joint, and strip social scenes, catching sub¬marine races, drag racing, etc. What makes the filmso impressive is that they don’t seem cliched. Lucasdoes not isolate the incident in his narrative; unlikemore standard vehicles about the 50’s, like Grease, aunifying theme is developed as the scenes progress.The problem facing the characters is one of maturing.In that one night, each main character must make asingle decision regarding his fantasies of self-importance which will determine whether he fullymatures or grows into two-dimensional orhypocritical adulthood, as have the older folkspresented. In this way, Lucas isn’t at all condescen¬ding. Simply because they face .their illusions aboutthemselves, they are the most mature and respectablecharacters in the film. The movie is episodic, but within an episode each character separately dealswith whatever issue is facing them all. Lucas movesfrom one character to the next, he introduceselements of the next problem, thereby providing acontinuous transition between episodes. Basically,it’s a good movie and fun, too. This is the print withthe recently added 10 minutes. With Ron Howard,Richard Dreyfuss, Cindy Williams, Charlie MartinSmith, Paul LeMat, and Harrison Ford. Friday at7:15 and 9:30.In the Realm of the Senses (1975), directed byNagisa Oshima, (NAM) Well it’s finally happened,Oshima has examined the politics of lovemaking. Thestory is about Kichiyo, w’ho, along with his wife, runsa geisha house, and Sada, one of his employees. Thetwo develop a sexual relationship with increasingopenness. Oshima shows that the lovers are essential¬ly equals; dominance freely moves from one to theother. They revel in their lovemaking because theyfind equality in it, while outside a militaristic societyis constructed. Meanwhile, the audience wonderswhy Oshima also revels in their fun past where hemakes this point. For the audience’s revelling, NAMis showing this in 35mm. Saturday at 6. 8. and 10.The Red and the White (19680, directed by MiklosJancso. (Doc) Set during the Russian Revolution. TheRed and the White depicts war as absurd, but also asunstoppable and all-consuming. The battle movesfrom a monastery to a hospital, where nurses tryingto save soldiers in both armies must keep one’s pre¬sence secret from the other. Domains shift, reshift,and shift again; rape, massacres, and general bar¬barism are depicted in glorious CinemaScope. Sun¬day at 7:30 and 9:30.Le joil mai (1962). directed by Chris Marker. (NAM)A documentary on Paris during May 1962. themonth in which the Algerian War ended and the firsttime since 1939 that France was at peace. Marker’sfilms are simple and straightforward. They are madeas though he is a visitor, recording his impressions ofsome foreign place. In Le joli mai, he looks at the per¬sonal ambitions of the people of Paris and their rela¬tionships to one another. Monday at 7:15 and 9:30.The Grey City Journal, November 10, 1978 — 13Photo by B. Herman HoffstaederEflwDAI weekend devoted to Chicago’s^B^^favorite album rock... played atyour request. All weekendour studio telephone lines will be open tomap out a great rock weekend from thesongs you want to hear.FRIDAY, NOV 10Chicago’s best rock.© 1978 American Broadcasting Companies IncCALL £8)13040- .Hk'k.s vc-'TV *»nT #h.ch'i• r * y*ttr.Maroon loss ends exciting season; Friar hits 1004Carleton edgesgridders 15-13By Mark WallachSometime in the cold months ahead, whenthe Maroons are reflecting on their 1978 foot¬ball season, they can look back on the finalgame against Carleton College and unders¬tand, in a nutshell, many of the things thatthey did right and also, many of the thingsthat went astray and that finally undidthem.For starters, they followed their usualpattern of falling behind, making a furiouscomeback, and finally losing because of onecrucial mistake too many, in this case, a 4thquarter safety for Carleton that broke a 13-13 deadlock.The game also showcased two Maroonswho had exceptional seasons. Dale Friar, ofcourse, playing on a knee injured theprevious week, ran his season’s yardagetotal to 1,004 before retiring in the secondquarter. Scott Jansen too. the most valuablefoot this side of the soccer team, had aseason that would have made a Division Ikicker proud. Jansen converted 15 of 16 ex¬tra point attempts, 8 of 9 field goals, andaveraged 40.6 yards per punt. All that, andhe played defense too.The game began inauspiciously whenquarterback Mark Meier was belted in thehead on the second play of the game. Takento Billings Hospital as a precaution, he wasstill awaiting treatment when the game end¬ed, as auto accident injuries took priority tohis.Carleton scored first on a 31-yard run byquarterback Tim Franz, who eludedtacklers as he scooted around right endafter the Maroons had gang-tackled a phan¬tom ball carrier Dale Friar’s 43-yard runand a 61-yard Do Kim to Mark Daniels con¬nection set up two short Jansen field goals.The Maroons trailed 7-6 at the half.The Midwaymen’s big-play offense con¬tinued in the third quarter as Jim Jacobsenslipped behind the Carleton secondary,caught a perfectly thrown Do Kim aerialwithout breaking stride, and raced 75 yardsfor the go-ahead touchdown.But alas, the Maroons were unable tostand prosperity. Before the game was over,they had literally let victory and a .500season slip through their fingers. On thevery next series, Carleton shredded theMaroon defense as if the Knights thoughtthat they had suddenly become the DallasCowboys. Midway through Carleton’s longmarch, the Maroons thought that they hadcorrected their problem of picking up onCarleton’s option play. But the Knightsstruck paydirt unimpeded. Their missed ex¬tra point left the score knotted at 13.And then the critical mistake happened,the kind that has lost ballgames for Chicagoall season. Do Kim, who has a flair for thedramatic, let a Carleton punt slip throughhis usually sure hands. Kim and Carletonplayer raced desperately after the ball as itbumped into the Maroon end zone. Unknownto Kim, the Carleton player had slipped andKim could have easily fell on the ball for atouchback. Instead, fearing the Carletonman might fall on the ball for a touchdown,Kim batted it out of the back of the end zone.The confused, beleaguered officials final¬ly ruled correctly that it was a safety. “Theywere confused and I was trying to add totheir confusion,” said Coach Lombardi ofhis part in the discussion.After that, the Maroons had severalchances to win. Late in the fourth quarter,they went on an excruciating drive, twiceconverting third downs, and twice fourthdowns into first downs. Finally, however,Kim was intercepted near the goal line. Thedefense held and after a Carleton punt and abrief Maroon drive, Jansen attempted a 42-yard field goal against the wind with 1:36 re¬maining. It became his first field goal missof the year as it was just barely wide to theright and possibly a little short.• With less than a minute to play, thedefense again stopped Carleton and 4he of¬fense got the ball on their own 20. Kim pulledone more big play out of his repertoire, as% Byron Trott made a spectacular over-the-head catch to put the Maroon on theCarleton 37 yard line. But that was all, asCarleton intercepted Kim’s final despera- 42-yard burst putsinjured back overBy Mark WallachFriar to 17The Chicago Maroon — Friday, November 10, 1978 — 1^. J Photo by RW Rohdetion heave with 2 seconds leu 10 uck.In fact, with Friar injured, Kim spentmost of the afternoon firing footballsthrough the chilly, autumn air — with spec¬tacularly uneven results. He completed 12 of29 tosses for 246 yards, including comple¬ Dale Friar burst into the Carletonbackfield last Saturday with somethingresembling his customary speed. With anopen field ahead, his injured knee began toact up and he limped down field for a 43-yard gain before the Carleton defenderscaught up to him. That’s when the celebra¬tion of the first 1000-yard runner in Universi¬ty of Chicago history began. Friar’s team¬mates swarmed around him and exchangedhand slaps with each other. The Marooncheerleaders also raced to the scene. Theywere followed closely by Athletic DirectorJeff Metcalf. Finally, 1935 Chicago Heismantrophy winner Jay Berwanger presented theball to Friar. “I hadn’t even thought of it(the 1000 yards>,” Friar said, “when ail of asudden my teammates swamped me.”But he was delighted his teammates tooksuch pleasure in sharing in his accomplish¬ment.the reaction of Friar’s teammates to hisaccomplishment was not surprising,because Friar considers the football teamalmost as a family. “The greatest thingabout the football team is the closeness ofthe guys on the team. Every guy is acceptedfor himself. We understand each other. Weenjoy the role of underdog and of overcom¬ing the odds.“After the first game, a bunch of us weredrinking at Jimmy’s. Joe Pierri, one of ourdefensive guards, who had played highschool football at St. Lawrence, was there.He had had all the big-time football atLawrence; they were state champions. HeSportstions of 43, 61, and 75 yards. On the otherhand, he was intercepted four times.As typical as the Carleton game was of thekind of mistakes and letdowns that bedevil¬ed the Maroons all season, no one reallyquestions that the football program is thehealthiest it has been since being re¬instituted in 1969. Last spring, with the teamdown to 19 players, Coach Lombardi ques¬tioned whether the team could continue toexist. In a recent interview, Lombardi sum¬med up the season and the present state ofthe team.“It was a year of weird happenings. TheCarleton game culminated the type of yearit was. Frustrating. Successful in manyways. There wasn’t much on the won-lostside of the ledger. We could have been 8-0 in¬stead of 3-5. But you make your own breaks.We didn’t quite believe enough in ourselves.We were so used to things going wrong thatif you wait around long enough, they will.But we’re enthusiastic and we learned a lot.If we can get some incoming freshmen, it’llgive us more depth. Next year is probablythe first time we have a shot at winning allof our games — not just saying it, but reallybelieveing in ourselves.” said. ‘You know, it was never this close onthe (high school) football team.’ ”Unsurprisingly, as the team's star runn¬ing back, Friar has received more publicitythan anyone else on the team, especiallysince the highly-publicized homecominggame. At first, Friar wondered if the team’sother running backs, Nick Filippo and MarkDaniels would resent Friar’s role as chiefball carrier.“Nick’s a lot better blocker and Mark s alot better receiver than me. But their at¬titude is that if I can do the job, let me carrythe ball.”Perhaps one of the reasons for Friar’sfeelings about the football team is that hehas been such a major part of the presentfootball program, instituted when CoachBob Lombardi came here three years ago.The first year the team was 4-4 but that is amisleading figure because the followingyear, the Maroons dropped three of theweaker teams they had beaten from theirschedule, including Marquette which playedfootball only on a club levelLast year, the team was 2-6. They were inover their heads in the Midwest Conference,often playing against much larger squadsDiscouragement, debilitating injuries andhumiliating losses followed. “The Universi¬ty’s attitude was, ‘Just go out and have fun pnoto by J. Wrightguys,’ but it’s hard to have fun when you getyour butt kicked 46-0, Friar said. At the endof last year, with the Maroons down to 19players. Friar considered leaving to pursuehis planned career in chiropractics.Last summer, after several telephoneconversations with Coach Lombardi. Friarbecame convinced that to leave might beone of those decisions that he’d look back onwith regret for the rest of his life. He alsorealized how much some of the playerscared about the team. This year, with asquad of 38, the Maroons were in the weakerdivision of the Midwest Conference. Theywere competitive in every game and foot¬ball became much more fun. “The gamesmean something.” Friar said. “We haveguys that cry after losses.”Friar grew up in Vermillion. Ohio, a har¬bor town of 10,000 with steel mills,shipyards, and a General Motors factory Tosome of the town’s young people. Friar, aStagg Scholar, has become an example ofone who escaped from small town doldrums."The (high school) coach wanted to put apicture of me in the locker room. He wantedto give the kids the message that athleticscould be a means to an education, that theycould do something with their life.”At first, Friar had a difficult time ad¬justing to the difference between Chicagoand Vermillion. But he knew that Chicagohad things to offer him that Vermillion couldnot. Besides that, he found the Staggscholarship program very attractive.A biology major, Friar struggles to copewith the University’s demands-much likeanyone else. “Autumn quarter is real tough.After a game, when you’ve carried maybethirty-eight times, and you have aches andbruises, it’s tough to sit down and study.”But he added that winter and springquarters, by comparison, are easy.Friar’s athletic career is related to hiscareer interest in chiropractics. When hewas a small boy, he got into a serious autoaccident, injuring his back He re-injuredthe back while long jumping in junior highand also found himself unable to move hisleg. After his regular doctors were unable todo anything for him but prescribe drugs, hewent to two chiropractors, both close friendsof the family. They not only cured hisphysical ailments but also got him in¬terested in a career in chiropractics.For now though. Friar seems eager toplay football for one more year. He has kepthis relative celebrity in perspective, taking*the opportunity to praise teammates,coaches, and the team’s trainer, LarryBriand. Although deeply frustrated anddisappointed by the series of tough lossesthis year, five in all, by a total of 13 points.Friar feels sure the team will turn thoselosses around next year. He also is pleasedThinclads place thirdAt Conference meetockey team places oneVolley bailers host tourneyBy Rich McGinnisAfter losing a non-divisional match lastThursday, the Chicago volleyball teamcame back to defeat Mundelein College infour games of the most exciting volleyballseen at the Crown Field House yet this sea¬son.Thursday also marked the return to theMaroons’ line up of Ann Harvilla, who hasbeen out most of the season with an ankleinjury. Harvilla, Janet Sullivan and EllenMarkovitz provided most of the offensivepunch, especially in the first game of thelast match.In the second and fourth games, however,the Maroons’ defensive talent was the decid¬ing factor. There were bodies all over thefloor on the Chicago side, making saves ofmost of Mundelein’s apparent winners. Thebodies on the floor most often belonged toBecky Chase, Nadya, Shmavonian (who is usually a more offensively minded player),and Audrey Light, whose defense has beensteady all year.That win sent Chicago into this week’sstate championship tournament on the rightfoot.Preliminary matches played yesterdayeliminated four teams out of a field oftwelve. The remaining eight will play in thequarterfinals beginning at noon today, andadvance to the semifinals starting at 7:30p.m. The third place match will be at noontomorrow, followed at 2:30 by the finals.The Maroons’ matches yesterday wereagainst Illinois Wesleyan University andConcordia Teachers’ College. No resultsfrom these or any other preliminarymatches were available at press time.The second floor of Crown will be closed toall other activities during tournamentplay.Tankers ready for seasonBy Robert TompkinsAt the University of Chicago, there is across-country team because its memberslove to run, but this year there is anotherreason for a team — to win. The MCAC meetlast Saturday ended with somewhat surpris¬ing results. The first and second finisherswere the perennial champions, Carleton andBeloit. Third place was conquered by theMaroons. In a single year the Maroonsjumped from fifth to third due to the experi¬ence of their upperclassmen and valuablefreshmen additions. The two All-MCACBy RW RohdeChicago’s field hockey team ended theirseason on an upbeat note last weekend asthey traveled to the Central region selectiontourney at Concordia last weekend wherethey placed one player on the regional teamwhile holding their own against three op¬ponents.The Maroons only bad game came at 8:15on Saturday morning, when the squadreportedly played as if they were stillasleep. Elise Bloom proved that at least oneChicago player was awake quite early, asshe scored the first goal of the game in thefirst ten minutes. Concordia came back a lit¬tle later and scored and both teams might aswell have gone back to bed after that. Thegame ended in a 1-1 tie.Chicago’s loss came against a tough teamfrom Whitewater, and was the Maroon’sseventh one-point loss of the year. Bothteams played tough defense, but Chicagowas unable to get the ball through to a scor¬ing position while Whitewater managed asecond half goal that provided the edge.The Maroon’s final game came againstValparaiso. Chicago controlled the ball forthe majority of the game, but it was thesmall minority that hurt them. While AliceZino’was scoring her seventh and eighthgoals of the season, the defense had a shortlapse of concentration where they letthrough a pair of goals. The Maroons con¬tinued to control the ball, but were unable toscore again.While only freshman Anne Begin deMologue was selected to advance to theMidwest selection tourney (as a member ofthe “B” squard) this weekend, that is onemore player than last year. Chicago’s lastsuccessful selection tourney was two yearsago when they placed three players on theteams including Helen Harrison, a fieldhockey nationalist.The Maroons are working on buildingthemselves up to such possibilities. WhileChicago did not have a winning season,Coach Crawford was pleased with theteam’s overall performance in the season cross-country runners were Pete Smith andMike Axium. Smith, a senior, finished in thesixth spot; Axium, a speedy freshman, fin¬ished in thirteenth. Of the first sevenMaroons to finish the race, only the first-place finisher was a senior, the bulk of teamstrength being provided by the youngermembers.The young Maroon team travels to Pello,Iowa tomorrow for the NCAA Division IIIqualifying meet. The requirements to quali¬fy for NCAA competition are either to beamong the five top-placed teams or to haverunners among the top-placed six individu¬als who are not members of the five teams.Each team will take seven runners to NCAAcompetition. The six runners-at-large willmake a total of 41 runners who will go to theNCAA championship in Augustana. From200-600 candidates will participate in thequalifying meet. Thre are six regional quali¬fying meets for the NCAA finals.by C. Studenmundselectedand in the tourney, citing Donna Cioffi andMissy Caudill as well as Mologue as tourneyMVP’s.The squad is young, and will lose onlyBloom to graduation. Crawford stressed thefact that she had to teach many basics andstress position play to a team which had on¬ly four starters with previous team ex¬perience. Still, the Maroons got their firstwin in two years along with a few ties andmany one-goal losses, and managed to uptheir point total from 2 to 17 while playing ina basically defensive formation. If the teamkeeps improving like that, they can look for¬ward to some good seasons.photo by J. Wright Coach Ted Haydon feels that the Maroonsbest bets are Smith and Axium, but he isalso scheduling a home meet on the date ofthe NCAA championships in case the teamdoes not place in the coming qualifyingmeet. On November 19, a non-qualifying Di¬vision III consolation race will be held.Coach Haydon also has scheduled the Cen¬tral AAU championship on the same day, 90minutes after the Division III races. Both photo by C. Studenmundwill be at Washington Park and the double-header begins at 12:00 noon. Smith, Axium,and Dave Taylor should all have strongshowings, so Chicago is expected to comeaway with individual and team honors.For /M titlePsi-U meets Sugar BearsBy Howard SulsGraduate champions Sugar Bears meetPsi U today to decide the University footballchampion. The Bears reached this game bycrushing Red Dot 45-6 and rolling over Medi¬cal School (victors over Goon Squad 38-12)by 34-13 behind quarterback Rob Johns. PsiU, last years residence league champions,had a tougher road, first overcoming Breck¬inridge 22-12, then Henderson 33-7. Hender¬son first beat Fishbein 40-20 for the divisiontitle, then beat Upper Rickert, victor overFilbey 13-7 for their division title, by a scoreof 38-0.Psi U then had to face last year’s defend¬ing undergraduate champions The Wack IsBack, who beat Psi U in overtime by incheslast year. This grudge match was decidedby a 13-6 score in a purely defensive strug-16 — The-Chicago,Maroon gle, as there were 9 interceptions, seem¬ingly more than the number of completions.The Wacks failed twice to score from insidethe two, Psi U taking a 7-0 lead on a PaulHarris interception return and a Pete Rea-ven PAT. They then staked this out to a 13-0lead on a Bob Kusyck interception return.The Wacks finally scored on a Kurt JansenInterception, his third of the day. Mike Lus-tik had two interceptions for the Wacks,while Paul Harris had two for Psi U. Theworst thing about the game was the medioc¬rity of the officials, the IM office seeminglynot wanting to schedule good referees forimportant games.Today, the question is whether the Psi Udefense can hold off the high-powered at¬tack of the Sugar Bears; they will have theirhands full. By Michael Rabin and Bette LeashIf you’ve seen any tired-looking wetheadson campus lately, you can be sure theyweren’t caught in the rain running betweenclasses. Instead, they are the approximate¬ly 25 members of the mens’ and womens’varsity swim teams who are already train¬ing for their 1978-79 season, which begins onNovember 1.Any one of them would agree that thepain of swim training causes far more dis¬comfort than being doused by even a goodChicago rain on the Quads. Under the sea¬soned eye and tough direction of new swimcoach Tom Schweer, most of the swimmersare already averaging between 3000 and6000 yards a day, or 2 to 3.5 miles. The oftengrueling yardage is accomplished in a vari¬ety of ways: practices are a mixture of long¬distance swims, shorter sprints on timed in¬tervals, and specific exercises to strengthenthe arms (pulling) and the legs (kicking).Wofkouts are held daily from 7 to 9:30A M. and from 3:30 to 5:30 P.M., and for thefirst time in recent varsity history, a group of hard-core swimmers attends both ses¬sions. In addition, some of the swimmersare already following the tailor-madeweight lifting programs, and CoachSchweer is also trying to enforce severaldietary rules. Even the skinniest woman onthe team is overweight according to thecoach.Schweer and the swimmers them¬selves feel that the season holds nothing butpromise. There are several reasons for thetankers’ optimism. First, Schweer is an ac¬complished swimmer and coach; he was a3-time All American swimmer at WesternIllinois University and has achieved a 118and 22 won-lost record over the past fiveyears. Second, a large number of talentedfreshmen and transfer students have re¬plenished the ranks of both teams. Finally, ageneral excitement about prospects for the1978-79 season has gripped even the veteranChicago swimmers. All told, a new spirit,new suits, and even team hats far outweighthe physical pain involved in the process ofbuilding winning teams.Friday, November 10, 1978BtffckJiKriMMikiOfcitiirr <*m.., .^cvsatt "gnnnmMr wrMwW « i mr» -•• "" ‘*<^‘—• 'me******M&-*»i*n*'**-**»**~'x**j*a*vnMme;.-.>•<. : •*6fW' -j-ui'IH<I> ill >» .).•-,;• f .4 *•>.•- • '••;Basketball top 10points1. Business (1) 452. Jerimaih Joyce, 19th Ward (2) 443. Stop Killing Lizards (1) 414. BMBA (1) 395. Montana’s Wildhacks 286. The Droogs 237. Med II 208. Strategic Air Command 189. Behavioral Science Bucketmen 710. Filbey 4Also receiving votes: Laughlin, Psi U,Fibres, Bogus Bongers, Phi Gam Intramural top 10Points1. Wabuno Bay Buccaneers (5) 502. Sugar Bears 433. Psi Upsilon 404. The Wack is Back 355. Breckinridge 326. Medical School 247. Henderson 208. Goon Squad 14• 9. Red Dot 810. Harper Hall 3Votes: Upper Rickert, Fishbein, Talk¬ing Heads, White Punks on Dope, Filbey,Cliff’s Clones. CHIMESE-AMEKICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A.M. TO 8:30 P JR.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 8:30 PM.Orders to Take Out1311 East 63rd MU 4-1062Friar from 15that the student body and the administrationare starting to rally behind the team.“Homecoming finally showed that theplayers weren’t the only ones who cared,’’Friar saidAbout a month ago, assistant coach DanTepke promised Friar a keg of beer if hereached the 1,000 yard mark. Sometimesoon, Friar’s teammates will gather atFriar’s Shoreland apartment to help himdrink the keg. Next year, however, Friar hopes the Maroons will be drinking to amuch more significant accomplishment: anundefeated season and a Midwest Con¬ference Championship. JUST ARRIVED!Richard Condon’sDEATH OF APOLITICIANChristina Crawford’sMOMMIE DEARESTBob Thomas’sJOAN CRAWFORDINHARPER LIBRARY’SPOPULAR READINGCOLLECTIONToday's Hair FashionsbyELIZABETH GORDONhair designers{MV * 1620 E. 53rd St.\r . 288-2900Richard BrautiqanJUNE 30,TUNE30’ Brautigan's most intimate book, June 30th,June 30th deals with his first trip to Japan in theih spring of 1976 and explores with wit and com¬passion the day-to-day realities of the humanheart An excerpt from his book of poetryA Small Boat on the Voyage ol ArchaeologyA warm thunder and lightning stormtonight in Tokyo with lots of rain and umbrellasaround 10 PMThis is a small detail right nowbut it could be very importanta million years from now when archaeologistssift through our ruins, trying to figure usoutDREAMING OF BABYLON It isearly 1942 You are in SanFrancisco, and you need aprivate eye When you hire C.Card, the hero of Brautigan’seighth novel, you have scrapedthe bottom of the private eyebanel But you won’t be bored Because whenC. Card finds some bullets for his gun, youwill be in for some fast, funny, slam-bangprivate eye adventures. Unless, of course,C.Card starts dreaming of Babylon. I*he starts dreaming of Babvion,all bets are off 1 A masterfulcomedy."—BooklistDelta Books, S3 95Deiacorte Press/Seymour Lawrencehardcover $7 95Other Richard B'autigan books available inDelta paperback are Trout Fishing in America InWatermelon Sugar The Pill Versus the Sprmghill MmeDisaster and Pommel Drives on Deep into Egypt Delta Books, S3 95Deiacorte PressSeymour Lawrencehardcover, $6 95DJiEAyJMQ liPDELTA BOOKS Dell Publishing Co., Inc245 East 47 StreetNew York, New York 10017 AnnouncingThe HARRY S. TRUMANSCHOLARSHIPCOMPETITIONwith an annual award of $5000Sophomores with a strong academic recordand some experience in politicsand/or governmentContact Patrick Hall, Harper 271,753-3235LOOKING FOR SOMETHING BETTER?We will have several apartments available forLease in the very near future.2 to 3*6 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 Park Bivd.The Center for Decision Researchof the Graduate School of Businesswill hold an open lecture on Monday,November 13,1978.The speaker will beProfessor Clyde H. Coombs,Department of Psychology,University of Michigan.Topic: “Studies in Risk Research”Time: 1:30-3:00Place: Rosenwald HallRoom 11ADMISSION: No Charge Used Oak Desks$25°° „USED 4 drawer file cabinefs$0(ooA3 and upBring your own trailerBRAND JEQUIPMENT&SUPPLY CO.8600 Commercial Ave.Open Mon.- Sat. 8:30- 5:00RE 4- 2111The University jof Chicago jFolklore Society Ipresents an jevening of |Traditional Irish MusicfeaturingNora McDonogh, Jimmy Keane jMarty Fahey, Liz Carroll,jTerry Teahan, Keven Henry, jEleanor Neary, Noel Rice,Brige Malone, John Cleland, Mary IMcDonogh, Maureen & Johnny JHarling, Kathleen Rice, MaidajSugrue, Una McGlewFriday, Nov. 10,8:00 pm JCloister Club Ida Noyes jHall 1212 E. 59th St. jAdmission FreeL...—The Chicago Maroon -«- Friday, November 10, 1978 —17CalendarFRIDAYPerspectives: Topic: “Games: Something Old andSomething New”, guests: Sam L. Savage and Peter Pic*cione, Channel 7, 6:30 am.Dept. Of Economics Workshop: “An Analysis of the Ef¬fects of Accounting Practices: The Case of RegulatedEnterprise”, Speaker Thomas L. Stober, Room 301,10:30-12:0U.Undergraduate Physics Journal Club: “Einstein-Rosen*Podolsky. Paradox”, speaker, Charles Whitmer,Eckhart 208,12:30 pm, free hamburgers.Geonhvsical Sciences Colloquium: “Environment ofDeposition of the Sedimentary Phosphorite in theUpwelling Zone off Peru and Chile”, Speaker, WilliamC. Burnett, 1L30 pm, Hinds Laboratory Auditorium.Dept, of Economics Workshop: “The Gold Standard inCalifornia During the Greenback Era and the Origins ofthe Specific Contract Act”, Speaker Donald Jones, SS106, 3:30-5:00 pm.Women’s Union: Meets 5:00 pm in Ida Noyes above theFrog and the Peach.Hillel: Adat Shalom Shabbat Dinner, 6:00 pm.Karate Club: Meets 7:00-9:00 pm in the dance room of IdaNoyes.DOC Films: "American Graffiti”, 7:15 and 9:30, Cobb.Folklore Society: Presents “A Festival of TraditionalIrish Music and Dance,” 8:00 pm in Ida Noyes. Free.Christian Forum: Paper: “Evaluating Different Types ofCivil Religion From a Christian Perspective”, 8:00 pm,Brent House.U of C Christian Fellowship: “The Silence of God”,speaker, Erwin Lutzer, 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes East Lounge.Student Union: Will sponsor a party at 9:00 pm in the Regent’s Park South penthouse on 51st and Hyde ParkBlvd. All are invited, Radio Free Illinois performing.SATURDAYOvereaters Anonymous: Meets at 10:30 am, WashingtonPark Field House.Table Tennis Club: Practices 10:00 am-l:00 pm in IdaNoyes Hall 3rd floor.Eighth Compton Lecture Series: “Compact Stars-Xrayand Gamma Ray Objects”, 11:00 am, Eckhart 133.WHPK: “Success Without College: Humorous Com¬edy”, 4:00-5:00 pm. “Fine Women and Song”, 5:00-6-00p.m.NAM Film: “In the Realm of the Senses", 6:00, 8:00, and10:00 pm, Cobb.Country Dancers: “In the Hey”, Annual Fall Party. Livemusic, 8:00-11:00 pm, Ida Noyes Cloister Club.Refreshments.SUNDAYRockefeller Chapel: University Religious Services, Rab¬bi Samuel E. Karff Sermon: “Where Are You?” 11:00 am.Hillel: Lox and Bagel Brunch Group, 11:00 am.Students International Meditation Society: AdvancedLecture for all practitioners of Transcendental (Medita-tion, 3:00 pm, Ida Noyes Library.Overeaters Anonymous: Meets 3:00 pm, Illinois CentralHospital, 5800 S. Stoney Island, 4th floor.Crossroads: Council Panel Discussion: “Ethical Issuesin the Modern World”, 3:30 pm, 5621 S. Blackstone.Rockefeller Chapel: Carillon Recital by Robert Lodine,3:30 pm.Rockefeller Chapel: Felix Mendelssohn’s “Elijah”, 4:00pm. Box office opens at 3:00 pm. Tai Chi Club: Meets 6:30 pm, 4945 S. Dorchester (enter on50th a d Dorchester).DOC Films: “The Red and the White”, 7:30 and 9:30 pm,Cobb.Folkdancers: general level with teaching. 8:00-11:30 pm,Ida Noyes Cloister Club.Woodward Court Lecture Series: “Religion: Civil, Un¬civil, Incivil, and Anticivil”, Speaker, Martin E. Marty,8:30 pm, Resident Master’s Apt.MONDAYPerspectives: Topic: “The History of Technology”,Guests: Edward Daub, Frederick P. Ferre, and W. DavidLewis, 6:30 am, Channel 7.Dept, of Chemistry Lecture: “New Chemistry Related toNitrogen Fixation”, speaker Prof. Joseph Chatt, F.R.S.,4:00 pm, Kent 103.Child Development Colloquium: “Early Development ofMental Incompetence-A Longitudinal Study”, 4:00 pm,Judd 110.Hillel: Class in Beginning Yiddish, 6:00 pm. Class in Ad¬vanced Yiddish, 7:30 pm. Class in Philosophy andHalacha, 7:30 pm.Chess Club: Meets 7:00 pm, Ida Noyes Memorial Room.Karate Club: Meets 7:00-9:00 pm in the dance room of IdaNoyes.NAM Film: “Le Joli Mai”, 7:15 and 9:30 pm, Cobb.Women’s Center: Is open from 7:30-10:00 pm. BlueGargoyle 3rd floor.Baptist Student Union: Meets 7:37 pm in the 2nd floorEast Lounge of Ida Noyes.Folkdancers: Beginning level with teaching, 8:00-11:30pm, Ida Noyes Cloister Club.£hc CJnitmitB of ChicagoROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPEL5850 SOUTH WOODLAWN AVENUE . CHICAGO, ILLINOISElijahbyJftlix MendelssohnRICHARD VIKSTROM, Director|f>THE ROCKEFELLER CHAPEL CHOIRAND ORCHESTRAJANICE HUTSON, Sopfno WILLIAM DIANA, BaritonePHYLLIS UNOSAWA, Contralto HENRY HUNT, TenorSunday • November 12, 1978 • 4:00 p.m,[Tickets.- Reserved $6.00 • General Admission $5.00Students (with I.D.) $2.50Available at: Mandel Hall Bo* Office, 5706 S. University AvenueCooley's Corner, 5211 S. Harper AvenueTHE CHAPEL BOX OFFiCE OPENS AT 3 O'CLOCK, 1 HOUR BEFORE THE PERFORMANCE.18 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, November 10, 1978 IMPORTANT MEETINGFORSTUDENTS IN THE COLLEGEINTERESTED INGraduate Workin EducationEDUCATIONAL PSYCHOLOGYSOCIOLOGY OF EDUCATIONECONOMICS OF EDUCATION MEASUREMENT AND EVALUATIONEDUCATIONAL ADMINISTRATIONCURRICULUM AND INSTRUCTIONHIGHER EDUCATIONTEACHING: PRIMARY AND SECONDARY7:30-9 PM TUESDAY, NOV. 14Judd Hall Commons1st Floor, 5835 S. KimbarkThe Department of Education 753-382]CLASSIFIED ADSSPACEOwn room in large condo close to U.*160. Call Jean: 947 8498.Grad wanted to share house: own rm.wash/dryer, working fireplace GoodlOC. *100 plus util. 643-7258.Studio for sublet. Immediately 53 andKenwood. *160/mo. Close to shopping,laundry, etc. Call 752-3393.2 1/2-4 rm apts. NR UC-tile showerwell kept Bldg Ige rms BU8^)718.UC campus, location - 3 br. condo -minium for sale in Victorian 3 flatbuilding. Remodeled kit. oak floors,fireplace Ig. backyard. Low monthlyassessments Mid *60's. 947-0377.Room mate wanted. *75/mo. 54th andEllis. Call Jim or Dan 955 7931,Fern, non-smoker wanted for 2 br. 54and S. Harper *130. Betsy 955-9232.Near North Sunny large studio withsep. kitchen and dining areas. *205Call Mrs. Reynolds644 0218.Large Furn. Studio In well kept Univ.owned bldg. Available for Win-Qtr. Myrent is *210. Will rent for *125. Call363-3996 eves.PEOPLE WANTEDWanted: Part time Secretary-4 hoursper day-flexible 4 to 5 days per weekMorrow, Billings Hospital, 947 5646.Part-time administrative assistant ata legislative commission. Typing re¬quired. Thur & Fri. *5 per hr. Call Cin¬dy Cycon at 793 2080.Subjects wanted for psycholinguisticsexperiments. Will be paid. To register,call 753-4718.Bookkeeper/typist 10-15 hrs per week.Duties include bookkeeping and typing. Hrs. flexible *4.00 per hour con¬tact Blue Gargoyle. 955-4108.Typist - for general office work 15hours/week. Choose your hours. Near55th and HP Blvd. *5.00/hr. Leavemessage at 493 2364.Student to work around HP house, ex¬perience with rakes, shovels, broomsand like machinery desirable. 10 hoursor more a week *3.00/hr. Call-leavemessage anytime. 493-2364.Male/female to attend bar at privateparty on November 18 from 8 00-1 00Phone Luc Pols at 467 5500 days;643-6330 eveningsNEEDMONEY FOR CHRISTMAS?Good appearance and outgoing manner will earn you extra cash workingpart-time. Call Craig at 674 8299 between 5-7 p.m.FRENCH TRANSLATOR Prefer student. French first language 10-20hrs./wk. Good salary. Community &Family Study Ctr. Contact Hoff,7532518CFSC still has opemngs for two student MANUSCRIPT TYPISTS 10 20hrs./wk., 55 WPM, low error rate.Good pay, pleasant working condition.Contact George Rumsey, 753 2518MEDIA ASSISTANT Video exp req.Some Audio, Film & Print 12-20hrs./wk. *4 25/hr. Contact MichaelFOR SALEMercury Comet (1962) In excellentcondition. 1969 engine, new muffler,suspension best offer. Call1 Peter,947-0059 (eves) 643 2240 (days).11 guide Leroy set complete *125.00.Model AB airbrush-paasche *125.00Model V Paasche airbrush 35.00 Dl/4horse power Paasche comp *100 00Call 493 5051 All brand new69 Dodge Dart 4 dr 6 cyl. autom. radioA/C new tires good gas mileage 1owner. x3442or 955 1942PEOPLE FOR SALEARTWORK of all kinds-drawing, IIlustration, hand addressing of invitations, etc. Noel Yovovich. 493 2399For experienced piano teacher of alllevels call 947-9746DISSERTATION TYPIST EvanstonLong exp. Turabian Selectric.328 8705Lovely, loving Irish lady seeksbabysitting job M-F 7:30 4:00 pm. Call241-6129 or 767 5644FLAMINGO APTS.5500 S. Shore DriveStudio and One BedrmApts. Furn & llnfurnShort & Long Term Rentals$200 - $400Parking, pool, restaurant,dryeleaning, valet, deli.U of C shuttle bus Vi hlk.away.Full eaqteting & drapes752-3800 I am a professional recorder player,an experienced teacher and per¬former, just moved here from NYC. Iam now taking serious studentswhether beginning or advanced.Reasonable rates. Call before 9:00 pmplease. 684 6585.SCENESLine drawings by Hyde Park artistSheila Shocket are being shown at TheGreat Frame-Up 1428 E. 53rd St. Opening Frl. Nov. 105:00 8 00p.m.On Sun., Nov. 12 from 9:30 - 3:00 atauditorium theater the RosicrucianOrder (AMORC) presents a seminaron mysteries of the mind. Topics in¬clude ESP, human aura, healing,visualization and much more. Tickets*10 at door call 384 8627 for informa¬tion.THE PLACE to shop for family gifts:Akiba Schechter's pre-holiday bazaar,Sun. Nov. 19, 2-6 p.m. at 522 S. HydePark Blvd. Books, handmade goods,toys, plants, apparel, bargains galore!Deli snacks, fun for kids!The Chicago Counseling andPsychotherapy Center, 5711 S.Woodlawn and 6354 North Broadway,needs people who are willing to talkabout their personal problems andfeelings for 10 sessions with apsychotherapist-in-training Par¬ticipation should not be seen aspsychotherapy or as a substitute forpsychotherapy, although participantsmay find it a useful experience. Par¬ticipants will neither be paid norcharged for their sessions. Call Pat at684 1800.PERSONALSPASSPORT PHOTOS WHile-U Wait,MODEL CAMERA 1344 E 55th St.493 6700.Writer's Workshop (Plaza 2-8377).ABORTION ASSISTANCEFamily planning service for yourarea; Dial 1 800 523 5101 (toll free).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 refMATTRESSBlackfriars Presents: Once Upon AMattress, directed by Libby Morse,Nov. 10, 11 and 12 in Mandel Hall at8:00 Tickets are *1.50/students and$2.00/Non-students.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.PHOTO CONTESTThe 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 is open to any amateurs(students) in the University communi¬tyThe theme is college life all photosmust illustrate some aspect of life inthe College. Lanscapes, portraits, can-dids, action shots, etc all are OK.Details on entering, judging etc. willappear in the Maroon Keep watching,in the meantime get those camerasclickingPROGRAMMER/ANALYSTThe Graduate School of Businessneeds a full time programmer/analystto serve as consultant to faculty andTAKING THELSAT?Join thousands oflaw school applicantsnationwide inAmity's LSATReview SeminarsCALL TOLL-FREE FORDETAILS AND LOCALSCHEDULE ^FORMATION:800-243-4767 Ext 761 students on programming problemsand use of program packages. Positionalso involves maintenance anddocumentation of software, programconversion, program development,snd date transfer. Candidates mustlave math/stats background and ex¬perience with math/stats packages,Doth batch and interactive, and mustbe skilled in FORTRAN and BASICExperience in DEC 20 environmenthighly desirable. Good communicationskills necessary. Position availableimmediately. Salary range *15K-*22K,plus University of Chicago benefits, ineluding partial tuition remission. Ifqualified, contact Faye Citron,753-4290. The University of Chicago isan Equal Opportunity Affirmative Action employer.SKINNY,AFFECTIONATECAT 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.HEY CHEAPIESSave a nickel on each friend thisChristmas GARRAPHICS postcardsfor Christmas come in packs of 12 nittydesigns for cheap to mail cheap. GAR¬RAPHICS 1369 E. Hyde Pk. Blvd Box408 Chicago 60615.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 com¬munications skills essential. Positionavailable immediately. Salary range*15K-*22K, plus University of Chicagobenefits, including partial tuitionremission. Position offers considerabie flexibility, responsibility,challenge, and opportunities forgrowth If interested and qualified,contact William Spangler, 753-4793.The University of Chicago is an EqualOpportunity/Affirmative ActionemployerWOMEN'S UNIONMeeting every Friday at 5:00 in IdaNoyes Above the Frog and Peach.SKICLUBJOIN SKI CLUB 7 50 gets you allthe discounts, 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.FOLKDANCINGJoin us in Ida Noyes Hall every Sun¬day and Monday for Internationalfolkdar.cing. Beginning level Mongeneral level Sun. with teaching bothnights. Good exercise and funWOMEN'SMAGAZINEPrimavera, a women's literarymagazine, is on sale in many Chicagobookstores We need new staffG-W-OPTICIANSLiberal Discountsto University StudentsGlasses Replacedin 2 hours if stockedContact LensesHard & SoftExaminations by Reg¬istered Optometrists1519 E. 55th St.947-9335 RAP GROUPSEXUALITY RAP GROUP everyTues. 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.MUSICIANSWanted for Woodward Coffee HouseFri., Nov. 17: 753-2249 x3t04or 3207,DISTRIBUTORSMake big bucks in your spare time.Lucrative opportunity to distributepresold self-defense product for in¬dustry leading manufacturer. No fran¬chise fee required For further in¬formation, write GK&A, Incorporated.Dept. 11, 1960 North Lincoln ParkWest, Suite 2609, Chicago, Illinois60614.SOME PARTY!Party and Dance with RADIO FREEILLINOIS at Regent's Park Southpenthouse. Take B minibus to 51st St.and Hyde Park Blvd. Beer and otherlibations. Sponosred by STUDENTUN ION 9 pm FRI.TABLE TENNISTOURNAMENTTable tennis tournament on Sat.Nov./II Ida Noyes 3rd floor 3 events;Novice, Open and Women's. Prizes inall events. Sign up Sat. prior to thetournament. Entry fee: *1.00 perevent.THE POWER OF GODCome to a lecture about the Power ofGod Wed. Nov. 15, 4:30 ReynoldsClub North Lounge Sponsored by theChristian Science Organization.L.P.N.95 bed children's hospital has an im¬mediate opening for our 10:45 p.m. -7:15 a.m. shift. 40 hour week everyother weekend off.We are affiliated with the Universityof Chicago and located on beautifulLake Michigan. We offer a com¬petitive salary and fringe benefits. Forfurther information call:Personnel CoordinatorLa Rabida Children's Hospitaland Research CenterEast 65th St. at Lake MichiganChicago, III. 60649363 6 700 Ext. 233The Institute ofPublic PolicyStudiesat the Universityof Michiganis recruitingstudents forgraduate studyFriday, Nov. 10,2:30 pmCareer Counseling andPlacement Office5706 University, Rm 200 An Equal Opportunity EmployerENTERTAINMENTOnce Upon a Mattress is not a X Ratedmovie (but it's going to be just asgood). Come see what it's really like tosleep on a pea Nov. 10. 11 and 12 inMandel Hallat8:00p.m. A BlackfriarsProduction (where else can you find agood show for only *1.50 Students and*2.00 for Non Students?)FOUNDFound on Oct. 5 Native American In¬ dian necklace call and identify.753 1514. Found on Campus.BLACKFRIARSOnce Upon A Mattress, this weekendin Mandel Hall at 8:00 p.m. Only* 1.50/students and *2.00 for nonstudents. Don't miss it.FOTAFestival of The Arts meeting Sat. Nov11, 1:30a.m. We know it's early in themorning, but this is important! IdaNoyes, Rm. 218.Anyone with informationabout clerical union organizingor worker treatmentshould contact Nancy Clevelandat 753-3263.Confidentiality will be maintained.•Eye Eiaminetions•Contact Lwises (Soft l Hard)•Prescriptions fittedDR. MORTON R. MASLOVOPTOMETRISTSHyde Pork Shopping Center1510 E. 55th363-6363 FUTURE CPA’SLET US HELP YOUBECOME A CPAOUR SUCCESSFUL STUDENTSREPRESENT1/3 of USATHEMICHELINGLIDEMISSEDJIMMY’SAND THEUNIVERSITYROOMDon't You? CHICAGO 312-263-4952Bioe Island 312 229-5523Des Pluns 312 229-5523CLASSES BEGIN NOV 27mtelsCPAREVIEWGET INVOLVEDFind Out What’s Happening at U.C.: SubscribetoTHECHICAGO1 MAROONAnnual :$9.00The Chicago Maroon — Friday, November 10, 1978 — 19A short course inBonded Bourbon.First lesson:Bonded Bourbon is sounique that it took anact of Congress (in 1897)to establish thestandards forOld Grand-Dadand other Bondedwhiskeys. 100 is perfect.Bonded Bourbonmust be 100 proof.No more. No less.Final exam.You need only onesip to recognizethe clearly superiorquality and taste ofOld Grand-Dad.Cheers!Old Grand-Bonded is authenticKentucky sour-mashBourbon, made withpure limestone water,the finest grains,and aged in newcharred-oak barrels.Kentucky Straight Bourljon Whiskey. 100 proof.Old Grand-Dad Distillery Co., FrahVf^t. Ky. 40601.Only Bondedwhiskeys have a greentax stamp..It's your guar-"aritee that the whiskey isat least four years old.Old Grand-Dad Bonded isalways aged longer