New fund drive couldBy Jaan EliasAs the University’s CourtTheatre opens its 25th anniversaryseason this weekend, threats of itsclosing may be alleviated.If $600,000 can be raised for theTheatre by October 1. then con¬struction on a theater buildingnear campus may become a reali-ty.According to Nicholas Rudall,Court Theatre director, the pro¬posed theater would be a 250 seatauditorium with lobby, scene shop,and dressing rooms. The adminis¬trative offices of Court Theatrewould however remain in theReynolds Club.“The new plan will make senseto donors,” according to ClydeWatkins, the director of develop¬ment. Watkins said that his office will solicit large contributionswhile a committee of CourtTheatre members headed by Ru-dall will solicit funds for namedchairs in the new auditorium at$1,000 apiece.No site for the new building hasbeen selected yet, though anumber of sites in Hyde Park areunder consideration, according toRudall.“We are very optimistic,” Ru¬dall said.Last summer the talk was not sooptimistic, as many members ofthe theater staff threatened to re¬sign if the University did not comeup with a proposal for the construc¬tion of a new theater building.During the past school year, theUniversity considered and reject¬ed many proposals to accommo- save Courtdate the company. At the end ofSpring quarter, this proposal wasformulated and accepted by Presi¬dent Gray.“If the funds are raised we canstart a resident company,” Rudallsaid. Watkins said that $600,000 isthe minimum figure that the devel¬opment office and the theater mustraise. During the summer theyalso hope to raise as much as 1.1million dollars so that an endowr-ment can be established for thestaff of the theater to meet itsoperating expenses.The Theatre won three citationsfor a non-Equity company whenlast month’s annual Jeffersonawards were announced, includingone for 25 years of excellence.The Chicago MaroonVol. 89, No. 1 The University of Chicago © Copyright 1979 The Chicago Maroon Friday, July 6, 1979$5500 thefts from Bursar’s:inside job; investigation onBursar’s office: where money was By Jaan Elias andAndrew PatnerReports that $4500 to $5500 dol¬lars in student payments to theUniversity had disappeared fromthe Bursar’s office were confirmedlast week by Harold Bell. Universi¬ty vice-president and comptroller.The irregularities are being in¬vestigated by the Comptroller’s of¬fice of internal audit and the Uni¬versity legal counsel. Polygraphtests have been administered to anumber of employees in the Bur¬sar's office.No employees have been dis¬missed or transferred. Bell said.At least six checks ranging inDan Newman) vajue lrorn $600 to $1200 dollarsManteno lawsuit droppedBy Jacob Levineand Jaan EliasCook County Public GuardianPatrick Murphy withdrew a law¬suit filed against the Universityand the Illinois Department ofMental Health (IDMH) Mondayafter IDMH agreed to issue a newset of guidelines for monitoring re¬search done using mental pa¬tients.The suit charged that adrenalec¬tomies and drug research wereperformed on patients from Man¬teno State Hospital by Universitydoctors without proper consentbeing given on behalf of the pa¬tients. Both the University and theIDMH have denied that the re¬search was improper or done with¬out “informed consent” on behalfof the patients.The compromise was reachedafter Circuit Court Judge MarjanStaniec urged the three parties tomeet to resolve their argumentsout of court. Negotiations beganearly in June in Staniec’schambers and agreement wasreached after what Staniec saidwere seven “’vitriolic” sessions.Staniec has authority to monitorthe enforcement of the regulationsuntil January 8, 1980. University “disappointed”Vice-President for Public AffairsD.J.R. Bruckner declined to makea statement concerning the com¬promise although he told the Sun-Times that the University was“disappointed” that it would not beable to respond to Murphy’scharges in a trial. He said thatPresident Gray may make a state¬ment to the faculty concerning theallegations.Dr. John Crayton, professor inthe department of psychiatry andmedical supervisor of the ClinicalInvestigations Unit (CIU) at Man¬teno said he agreed with the Uni¬versity’s position, adding that“The allegations by Murphy are ri¬diculous. They were based on un¬substantiated claims that therewere abuses” at Manteno. “Sincethere was no trial, none of theseclaims could be answered,” Cray¬ton said.Dr. Daniel X. Freedman, chair¬man of the department of psychia¬try said. “It is too bad that neitherresponsible journalism nor thechances for a public trial have of¬fered the opportunity to put thiswhole sorry episode into perspec¬tive.“All University personnel in¬ volved have a superb record of eth¬ical concern for the care of pa¬tients as well as for the gains ontheir behalf from new knowledge,”Freedman said.Dr. Crayton said the new guide¬lines “will add a few steps in theprocess (of carrying out research)that may or may not be valuable.Once the mechanisms are workedout they won’t mean much for theprogress of research or patientcare.”Murphy said he was ’’satisfied”with the outcome of the negotia¬tions. Obtaining the guidelinesfrom IDMH was “about what I setou' to get” said Murphy.“While the new regulation doesnot go as far in protecting therights of mentally ill and retardedhuman beings as we would wish,we do believe that the implementa¬tion of this regulation meets consti¬tutional standards,” Murphy said“This regulation will protect pa¬tients where non-FDA approveddrugs are to be used or potential ir¬reversible harm may result by em¬ploying neutral third parties, suchas the State's Human Rights Au¬thority. the Mental Health Associa¬tions and members of the pa¬tient’s family to assist in theTurn to Page 5 were either hand delivered or sentby mail to the Bursar's office. Thechecks were then sent unendorsedto Continental Bank (the Universi¬ty’s bank) but the student accountswere not credited. Equal amountsof cash were then withdrawn byone or more Bursar employees.The thefts came to light afterstudents complained that their tu¬ition accounts were not being cre¬dited with checks they had given tothe Bursar s office.The payments have since beencreditedInvestigators spoke with a largenumber of employees in the Bur¬sar's office. Bell said the participa¬tion in the polygraph tests whichoccurred on June 5th and 22nd w asvoluntary.Authorizing the polygraph testswas done “with considerable reluc¬tance” Bell said. Though not acommon procedure in internal in¬vestigations, Bell said, they hadbeen used before.Bell said tuition statements,functioned as an “internal controlfeature” of the billing system andallowed the University to correcterrors in billing.une student whose check wasmissing said that Phyllis Parsons,assistant to the Bursar, accusedhim of stealing money. “She sug¬gested to my mother that maybe Ihad stolen the money,” the studentsaid, “They never told me in theend what had happened to themoney. It was very bizzare.”The same student’s father saidthat the Bursar's office was “realdifficult to deal with. Michael Ko-celko (assistant Bursar) pooh-poohed it. He said that w’e were try¬ing to pull the wool over his eyes Itwould have never been straight¬ened out if it had not been for ourlocal bank. The whole thing wasn’thandled very well.”Parsons said that she “did nothave enough information to com¬ment “ Kocelko referred all calls toRaymond Busch of the legal coun¬sel's office. Busch had no commenton any aspect of the investigation.Bell said that he was not awareof any specific conflicts between students and employees in the Bur¬sar's office and added “one of theprimary functions of the Bursar’soffice is to serve students as wellas possible.”Bell said that the amount ofmoney involved with the thefts wasminor compared to the 50 to 60 mil¬lion dollars that the Bursar's officehandles annually.The amount of check traffic han¬dled by Continental Bank from theUniversity may also be the reasonunendorsed checks were creditedto the University’s account withoutquestion. Collin Knisley. the personin charge of the University’s ac¬count at Continental, said checkswithout endorsements are routine¬ly deposited in the Univesity’s ac¬count.One of the primary objectives ofthe investigation. Bell said, was todiscover the method by which themoney was taken in order to haltTurn to page 5Late bulletinPresident Gray has namedeight faculty members to the Ad¬visory Faculty Committee onUniversity Awards and Prizes.The Maroon iearned Thursday af¬ternoon.Dr. Irwin H. Rosenberg, pro¬fessor of medicine, will chair thecommittee.The other members are:• Alfred T. Anderson, Jr., asso¬ciate professor of geophysicalsciences;• Bernards Cohn, professor ofanthropology;• Ralph Lemer, professor ofsocial sciences in the College;• Wendy O'Flaherty, professorin the Divinity School;• Paul E. Peterson, professorof political science;• Harry V Roberts, professorin the Graduate School of Busi¬ness; and• Geoffrey R Stone, professorin the Law SchoolA HUNDRED RAGES OFPSYCH TOMORROWANDA DRESS REHEARSALTONGHT.YOU CAN DO IT!It gets down to what you want to do and what youhave to do. Take the free Evelyn Wood ReadingDynamics lesson and you can do it—handle all thework college demands and still have time to enjoycollege life.You can dramatically increase your reading speedtoday and that’s just the start. Think of the time,the freedom you'd have to do the things you wantto do For twenty years the ones who get ahead have used Reading Dynamics. It s the way to readfor today s active world—fast, smooth, efficient.Don’t get left behind because there was too muchto read. Take the free Evelyn Wood ReadingDynamics lesson today. You can dramaticallyincrease your reading speed and learn aboutadvanced study techniques in that one freelesson. Make the college life the good life. WithReading Dynamics you can do it.SCHEDULE OF FREE LESSONSChicago Theological Seminary5757 UniversityMonday July 9Tuesday July 10Wednesday July 11Thursday July 12Friday July 13 3:30 PM & 7:00 PM3:30 PM & 7:00 PM3:30 PM & 7:00 PM3:30 PM & 7:00 PM3:30 PM only□ EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS2 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, July 6, 1979BriefsQuantrellwinnersFour faculty members were presentedwith Quantrell Awards for excellence inundergraduate teaching, at the Spring Con¬vocation, June 16.David Bevington, professor, departmentof English and the humanities collegiatedivision; Clifford Gurney, professor,department of medicine and the biologicalsciences collegiate division; Peter Wyllie,professor, department of geophysicalsciences and the physical sciences col¬legiate division; and Marvin Zonis,associate professor, department ofbehavioral sciences; each received the$2500 prize.There is no stipulated number of Quan¬trell winners, according to Dean of the Col¬lege Jonathan Smith, they are chosen strict¬ly on their applicability to the prize. Lastyear there were only two winners after along tradition of three winners annually.Marvin ZcnisNew career headJulie Monson has been named director ofcareer counseling and placement. Monsonheld a similar position at Pomona CollegeinClaremont, California.Monson said that the office of careercounseling and placement serves as “thelink between academia and the outsideworld. We provide students with informa¬tion about graduate school, jobs, andemployers while at the same time providingemployers with information aboutacademia.’’Monson succeeds Marlene Richmon whobecame acting director after the death ofAnita Sandke.The office of career counseling and place¬ment is located on the second floor of theReynolds Club. David BevingtonTenants unionformedThree community tenants’ groups havebanded together in the past month to formthe Hyde Park Tenants Union (HPTU). The5400 South Harper Tenants Association, theFourth Corner Tenants Association, and theHyde Park Ad-Hoc Tenants Committee metthree times in June to plan a community¬wide tenant strategy.“There is a need for a community tenantsunion to deal with all tenant issues,” saidHPTU spokesman Ralph Scott. “The realestate industry and our lawmakers havecreated a housing crisis in Chicago. In HydePark, this crisis takes the form of a severerental shortage that lets landlords get awaywith poor building maintenance, high rentincreases, and condo conversions againstthe desires of building tenants.”HPTU is available to help other HydePark tenants organize to solve their pro¬blems. Tenants who want help in organizingtheir buildings can call HPTU members at288-6304, 684-5478, or 752-1974. Pro-choice rally heldBy Curtis BlackCINCINNATI — A contingent from theUniversity Women’s Union was amongsome 1,500 people who demonstrated forabortion rights in Cincinnati on Saturday,June 23. Afterwards fifty demonstratorspicketed the annual convention of the Na¬tional Right to Life Committee just outsideCincinnati.After a colorful and noisy march throughdowntown Cincinnati, the demonstratorsrallied by the Ohio River where the women,along with supporters and children, listenedto speeches and sang along with feministsingers, including Therese Edell.Rhonda Copelon, an attorney from theCenter for Constitutional Rights, spoke ofthe court fight to challenge the constitu¬tionality of the Hyde Amendment to theDepartment of Health. Education andWelfare budget, w'hich outlaws medical fun¬ding for most abortions. She also discussedthe constitutional amendment being soughtby anti-abortion activists outlawing abor¬tions. Copelon said the real effect of such anamendment would not be to save lives but“to make criminals out of women and doc¬tors” and to jeopardize the lives of women inillegal abortions while entrapping manyothers in unwanted pregnancy.According to Copelon. the “Right to Life”slogan of the anti-abortionists is misleading.“What they don’t talk very much about isthat many of them want to execute womenfor having abortions,” she said of the “Rightto Lifers” meeting across the river.The Supreme Court in 1973 upheld thatabortion is a private decision for a womanand her doctor, Copelon said, “because wewere strong, we were organized, we were inthe streets.” “Right to Life” movementcame in response to the women's rightsmovement, she said, and called on thewomen’s movement to “meet thischallenge.”Hyde AmendmentMargaret Willis of the Ohio WelfareRights Organization said that attacks onabortion rights have concentrated on poor,minority, and young women. She called forthe repeal of the Hyde Amendment, legisla¬tors and lobbyists, “Keep your laws off mybody!”Ellen Frankfort, author of RosieJimanez: Investigation of a Wrongful Deathtold the story of Jimanez, a poor Mexican-American woman who died following an il¬legal abortion after Medicaid funds forabortions were cut off by the passage of theHyde Amendment in 1977. “Rosie died withher college scholarship papers in herpocketbook.” she said. Frankfort called forthe restoration of Medicaid funding forabortions, to insure safe and legal choices for poor women, “who must have the op¬portunity to choose between aspiration andpregnancy.”Helen Mulholland of the Religious Coali¬tion for Abortion Rights said the anti¬abortion movement was a threat to FirstAmendment guarantees of freedom ofreligion and to the separation of church andstate. “Thirty-eight major religiousdenominations define life as starting atbirth,” she said, and a majority ofAmericans, including a majority ofCatholics, support a woman’s right tochoose to have an abortion, according toMulholland. She said “the so-called Rightto Life’ movement, which I prefer to call the‘mandatory pregnancy’ movement,” is ableto exert influence beyond its actual numbersbecause it is well-financed and vocal.Therese Edell sang about support she hadfound among women’s and lesbian groups.One song was written for her niece and hersister “who had a baby when she wantedto”: “I long to see you unfold, youngwoman/to be assured of your own clearwoman's voice/to find the music that youneed, young woman/ and only then youmake your choice,” she sang.ConfrontationsFollowing the rally a car caravan drovedemonstrators ten miles over the OhioRiver and across the Kentucky border to theRight to Life convention. The conventionwas reportedly attended by some 5,000 peo¬ple, including prominent ERA opponentPhyllis Schlafely. There the demonstratorspicketed and presented Right to Life con¬ventioneers with dozens of coat hangers,representing unsafe illegal abortions whichthe picketers maintained restrictions onabortions lead to.The conventioners engaged the picketersin verbal exchanges before the televisioncameras. Some held up color photographs offetuses, while Right to Life staff memberstook photos of the picketers. “We want tokeep track of all you leftists,” oneohotographer told the demonstrators. Apriest, in an impromptu debate with con¬traceptive rights activist Bill Baird, admit¬ted that he advocated the death penalty forwomen who use an interuterine device(IUD) for contraception.Early Saturday morning. 25 members ofthe Cincinnati Abortions Rights Committeedefended a local planned parenthood clinicfrom disruption by Right to Life conven¬tioneers. Armed w ith two aborted fetuses inbottles, the Right to Lifers had come to har-rass clients and personnel of the clinic. Suchdisruption is a common activity of anti¬abortion activists, the Chicago Sun-Timeshas reported, and ranges from picketingand harrassment to fire-bombing. In thepast few years, 17 abortion clinics have beenfirebombed.PuusalMatterSpokesmen Bicycle Shop Plate103-1800-460 E 53rd STS301 Hyde Park Blvd.Selling Quality ImportedBikes.Raliegh, Peugeot, Fuii,Motobecane, WindsorAnd a fall inventoryof MOPEDSOpen 10-7 M-P, 10-5 Sat.11-4 Sun Rollerskates tor684-3737 SaleorRent. • Eye Examinations• Contact Lenses(Soft & Hard)• Prescriptions FilledDR. MORTON R.MASLOVOPTOMETRISTSContact lensesand SuppliesHyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th363-6363 marian realty, incREAiTOPStudio and 1 BedroomApartments Available-Students Welcome-On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-5400The Chicago Maroon — Friday, July 6, 1979 — 3Editorial The Chicago MaroonReviewing the disgraceSummer is a traditional time for recollection,review and renewal for those of us on the aca¬demic calendar. We look back at the successesand follies of the last year and vow to do better inthe coming one. This summer is no exception.The Pick Award has been given (to RobertMcNamara, it still sounds unbelievable), theprotests and arrests have been made. As webegin to review what happened and try to deter¬mine what long-term response is appropriate, alook at the University’s past and some guide forthe future would seem necessary. For those twinpurposes, the two letters that appear on this pageare instructive.The first, from one of the expelled students ofthe 1969 sit-in, points to the errors of the past,errors that have over the last ten or 15 yearsbeen compounded into a tradition. In an inter¬view with The Maroon on May 21, PresidentGray said that “responsible dissent is a part of the tradition of this place.’’ But if that has beenthe tradition of the responsible members of thecommunity, the tradition of the Administrationis that of intolerance of such dissent. By secrecyand stonewalling, by simply ignoring the protestin the hopes that it would go away, the Adminis¬trations of Edward Levi and Hanna Gray ren¬dered civil dissent ineffective. Their irresponsi¬bility closed the door on discourse andtransformed the nature of responsibility.The second letter, from Professor Marmor,suggests a radical reformation of the irresponsi¬ble element. Nothing short of this call for a rep¬resentative review committee meeting openly,hearing from all, and reporting publicly can beaccepted by the University community. With thesmoke cleared and the television lights absent,the Administration must come out with the restof us and help fashion morality out of the sham¬bles that it made. Editor: Andrew PatnerManaging Editor: Jacob LevineGrey City Journal Editor: David MillerCampus Editor: Jaan EliasCommunity Editor: Nancy ClevelandFeatures Editor: Mark WallachContributing Editor: Claudia MagatLiterary Review Editor; Richard KayeSports Editor: James Allen FillGraphics: Chris PersansBusiness Manager: Frank ByersAd and Office Manager: Leslie Wick *Staff: Curtis Black, Dan Newman, BruceShapiroThe Chicago Maroon is the student news¬paper of the University of Chicago, pub¬lished on Fridays during the SummerQuarter. Editorial and business offices arelocated or. the third floor of Ida Noyes Hall,1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, 60637. Telephone:753-3263.We welcome letters and comment. Corre¬spondence should be addressed to the Editorand should be typed and triple-spaced. Let¬ters must be signed and the writer shouldidentify his or her connection with the Uni¬versity or the community. Names will bewithheld at the writers’ request.Letters to the EditorThen and nowThe Maroon has received a copy ofthe following letter:An Open Letter to the University ofChicago Community:Thank you for your courageousoposition to the University’s Awardfor “outstanding contribution to in¬ternational understanding” to Rob¬ert McNamara. McNamara de¬serves such an award about as muchas Henry Kissinger deserved theNobel Peace Prize.Perhaps you all already know thatthe University was the site of thefirst student sit-in against the draft,in May, 1966. And that, as a result ofthat demonstration, the Universityadded a clause to its admission let¬ters to entering students, spellingout clearly “no troublemakers needapply.” And that, in early 1969, theUniversity suspended or expelledover 220 students protesting the fir¬ing of a respected activist womanprofessor, Marlene Dixon. And thatthe University of Chicago placedmore officers in Nixon’s cabinet than any other University.And perhaps you know that theUniversity received national recog¬nition in 1969 for its ‘ handling” ofstudent dissent — kicking people outwas considered far more humanethan bringing in the police to club us.This “Chicago Plan” was touted as asuccessful way to cut down studentdissent without bringing upon theUniversity charges of brutality. ThePlan also had the effect of eliminat¬ing from campus almot every acti¬vist student leader — and thus ofseeming to buy “perennial calm” oncampus.As one of those expelled, I washeartened to see that the tradition ofspirited criticism of the University’sclose connections to those who haverained war and destruction on Viet¬nam, and subserrvience on manycountries, has survived. You havemy support in your fight for genuinehuman rights and freedom aroundthe world. I only hope to be able toread more about what you do in thefuture.Jeff BlumPresidentUC Student Government1967-68An open reviewTo the Editor:Now that the Pick Award hasbeen given, the anger and distressof faculty and students is liable tobe dissipated while waiting for acommittee to report on proceduresfor making awards in the future. Itwould be a shame if public discus¬sion were truncated, with too littleclarity about precisely what wentwrong.One issue is whether, once theaward was offered McNamara,there was any defensible way to re¬scind it. The Maroon quotes oneCouncil member asserting that theUniversity “had to go through withit,” with President Gray “frankly”telling the Council that the “awardwas a fait accompli” more than aweek before it was officially to begiven. But why should this be so? Amistaken decision is a prime can¬didate for reversal. The embarrassment of rescinding a choice surelymust be balanced against thegreater embarrassment of honor¬ing a career that has contributedas much to international hostilityas understanding. In a curiousway, the failure to regard the Pick award as a mistake serious enoughto risk embarrassment for rude¬ness is instructive. Such a view isan example of moral obtusenesscritics attribute to McNamara’spost-Vietnam reluctance to admitpublicly a serious wrong. Andthere are precedents for rescindi¬ng university honors. When OxfordUniversity set out to give an honor¬ary degree to a controversial polit¬ical figure some years ago, the fac¬ulty voted to rescind the award.Surely it is possible to do so re¬sponsibly; in the McNamara con¬troversy, it would have indicated acapacity for reflective judgementwhich the committee’s decision inthe first instance did not express.Debate has focussed thus far onthe secrecy and haste of the Com¬mittee’s procedures and the angerabout McNamara himself. Morepertinent is the Committee’s judg¬ment. McNamara cannot beblamed for being selected for anaward he does not merit. But theCommittee can. No matter howopen the procedures, a choice ofRobert McNamara for an award inimproving international under¬standing seems indefensible. Thedefenses of the choice by the Com¬mittee seem strikingly lame. Onemember describes McNamara as a choice she “could live with.” ACouncil member is reported tohave said that the list of nomineesincluded persons even more inap¬propriate than McNamara. Stillothers blame haste for theirchoice. With reasons like these thequestion of the judges’ competencearises starkly. A group whichcould not find more compelling no¬minees than McNamara standscharged with imaginative poverty.When the Pick Foundation officialsstated they “support the Universi¬ty’s choice if the committee standsbehind their decision,” they seizedprecisely the right point. In light ofthe controversy, how could thecommittee defend their choicewell? If they could not, they (andthe Council) should have rescindedit, not hidden behind the claim that“while nobody was very happywith the choice, any alternate togiving the award would have beenworse.” It is difficult to think ofsomething worse than proceedingto give an indefensible award andthen compounding the error bymaking Mr. McNamara come be¬fore criticism which those whochose to honor him could not rebut.Surely good manners and more im¬portantly good sense would dictateadmission of a mistake and thechoice not to go ahead with theaward.Further, there is the question ofwhat precisely makes McNamaraan inappropriate choice for thePick Award. Here, critics haveemployed an argument that con¬ fuses more than clarifies the rea¬sons for recision. By claiming thethe World Bank has harmed theThird World, dissenters have re¬lied on an arguable view ratherthan one that would commandagreement. The ground for reject¬ing Mcnamara is his participationin the Vietnam War. Any postwarefforts by him should be thought ofas expiation, not deeds warrantinga university’s honor. His role in theWorld Bank will have defendersand detractors, but is clearly argu¬able. Few such considerationsmuddy the case of Vietnam. Onlythose who have a “post 1968” per¬spective could think otherwise. Butthey are confused about whatawards like the Pick Foundations’smean. They are not like Most Valu¬able Player of the Year designa¬tions, judgements of a period, butof a career. And it is precisely thefailure to think seriously about thatwhich makes the Pick Commit¬tee’s decision so blameworthy.While McNamara does not deserethe Pick Award, he is blamelessfor its being awarded. It is theCommittee we have to blame forthat initial instance of moral andintellectual bankruptcy.Finally, we have to consider thenew committee chosen to reviewthe McNamara controversy anduniversity policy regardingawards. Setting up a committee ofinquiry is, of course, the time-hon¬ored way of doing nothing whilegiving the illusion of action. But inthis case it is even worse: the cre¬ ation of a committee, whosemembers are hand-picked by thePresident, who are to confer in se¬cret, and who are to issue a reportto the President which she may-then act on or not as she pleases.This is an exemplification of theexisting problem rather than astep towards its solution. Any com¬mittee of inquiry, to be worth tak¬ing seriously, should representheavily those who dissociatedthemselves publicly from the Pickaward, should invite testimonyfrom all who wish to give it, shouldconfer in public, and should issue areport addressed to the universitycommunity as a whole. It shouldtry to establish exactly what hap¬pened this time as well as makingrecomendatins for next time. Itmay be said that this is to politicizethe university; but the universityhas already been politiczed by theaward itself. The question is how toensure that such events not happenagain.On paper, the constitution of theuniversity is roughly similar tothat of France at the time of LouisXIV. This kink of formal autocracyis bearable (to the extent it evercan be) if the university’s real con¬stitution diverges sharply from itspaper constitution, so that deci¬sions are made by consensus andafter widespread consultation. Byfailing to respect the massive dis¬sent of the faculty and studentsfrom the proposal to give the PickAward to McNamara, Mrs. Grayhas violated the unwritten consti¬tution and raised doubts about bothher moral sensitivity and her polit¬ical judgment. How will she re¬spond to the enormous blow to herauthority represented by theMcNamara fiasco? Will it be herBay of Pigs or her Vietnam.T.R. MarmorAssociate ProfessorCommittee on Public Policy Stu¬diesand Social Service AdministrationP.S. President Gray’s observa¬tions on the events of May 22, re¬ceived after this letter was draft¬ed, offer hopeful signs that she isseriously interested in communi¬cating with the university commu¬nity. If the political lesson of theBay of Pigs was dissatisfactionwith standard operating proce¬dures, the analogous lesson of thisepisode would be the merit of newways to deal with serious disagree¬ments within the university com¬munity.4 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, July 6, 1979FeatureCampus Shock: A doomsayer’s reportBy Richard Kaye“The students themselves regarded mewarily at first — as one more outsider cometo examine the psychology of the inmates. Iremember one senior at the University ofChicago sitting in icy silence, defying myevery effort to draw her out. Yet little by lit¬tle, they would open up, revealing in dis¬jointed fragments their pain and confu¬sion ... The shocks came in cumulativebursts of candor from the students — in mydawning realization that so many of themviewed their lives and selves with contempt,that so few of them found their college expe¬rience enriching or pleasureable. Theysensed the shallowness of their careeristaims, and plunged blindly ahead.”From Campus Shock by Lansing LamontThere are a good number of these rising,ominous crescendos in the new book,Campus Shock: A Firsthand Report on Col¬lege Life Today (Dutton; $8.95), but whenthe author Lansing Lamont lays off theheavy orchestration and resists his ten¬dency to convict by exaggerated over-kill,he writes a merciless and rather importantattack on the present state of the Americancollege. Lamont’s study claims to be a lookinto “the dark side of college life in the1970’s” which deals with the “significant mi¬nority of students who were unable to copewith the relentless academic and socialpressures of the decade.” Its author, aformer Time correspondent (and his dismalstyle never lets us forget it) believes thatcollege campuses are not the idyllic placeswhich mommy and daddy back home imag¬ sures us, he is “a reporter”, not a man withprescriptions.First off. let me invite the wrath of everylocal bookstore clerk by saying that you canlook up all of the anecdotes about the Uni¬versity by spending a few- minutes with thebook in a store without buying it. What’sparticularly interesting about CampusShock is that everyone in it is a doomsayer.The teachers and administrators quoted byLamont sound suspiciously pessimistic in away one rarely hears. (Students are predict¬ably gloomy about their own educations.)And so one may be surprised to see DeanLorna Straus quoted as saying she is re¬lieved there is no honor code here “becauseif there were, it would be falling apart.” An¬other University dean, this one unnamed,told Lamont that for every case judged be¬fore the school’s disciplinary committee,she had heard of at least three other cases inwhich professors had accused a student ofcheating.But then the parents of college students atChicago are apparently no better than theiroffspring; Lamont writes that “Before taxchecks were instituted, nearly a fifth of theparents at the University of Chicago weremisrepresenting their income by $1,000 ormore.” Dean Jonathan Z. Smith makes acameo appearance to be somewhat patron¬izingly worried that college women suffer“the terror of freedom” when they are awayfrom home, and there’s a chaplain oncampus who bemoans the fact that Chicagostudents are a bunch of geriatric cases.“They’re twenty-one going on sixty,” sayshe. “They’ve forgotten how to laugh.” But=*-■-■ ■ - " —=One may be surprised to see Dean Lorna Straus quoted assaying she is relieved there is no honor code here "becauseif there were, it would be falling apart."ine them to be. The campus tranquilityhides far more sinister matters than studentrevolutions or ever anti-intellectualism, ac¬cording to Lamont. He thinks that rampantcareerism has become the new. cynical es¬prit de corps among university students,and that cheating, emotional and sexual in¬stability, a confused sense of ethical respon¬sibility, and a loss of ordinary civility arepart of the accepted state of affairs on cam¬puses today. After visiting a dozen cam¬puses — the Ivy League schools, Michigan,California, Stanford, and the University —and condu ting more than 675 interview's,Lamont concluded that the future for col¬leges and universities will be a bleak seriesof crises of violence and financial ruin un¬less “solutions” are found. And Lamont islamentably lacking in solutions to the bigquestions he likes to raise. But then, he as¬ the most priceless remark in Campus Shockcomes from a Chicago student, who is quot¬ed in the chapter “Sexual Anarchy”.“You’re living next door to the boy you sleptwith the night before, and this weekend he’sdating another girl,” she broods. “It’s a lotrougher emotionally than waving a placardfor some cause.”It was at that point in Lamont’s book that Ibecame a trifle uncertain as to CampusShock's authenticity. Sexual anarchy at theUniversity of Chicago? W’ell, at least thatnew's is a sign of some life on campus. It’scertainly more encouraging than the 1976report from the University’s mental healthclinic which Lamont quotes. The clinic citedthe “striking absence of zest” among Chica¬go students and referred to the lack of “thatelasticity which we associate with youth.”According to this source, there was an in¬ crease in the number of interviews at theclinic that year along with a 33 percent riseover a one year period in the number of hos¬pitalizations due to psychiatric problemsand suicidal depression.And, of course, the University takescenter stage in the chapter “Crime At theGates”, where we are told that crime statis¬tics for 1975 — 1,165 robberies, 458 assaultsand 86 rapes — make the area encompass¬ing the university nothing less than “a garri-son under siege.” Lamont includes one story don’t believe it’s because of the crime. Forthat answer one must turn to the chapter en¬titled “Grade Frenzy”.In this chapter, Lamont turns to the mostextreme, unrepresentative examples inproving his case against the colleges. Whatpurpose is served by Lamont solemnly men¬tioning cases such as that of a group of stu¬dents from an unnamed college who tailed agarbage truck from campus to city dump inorder to dip up scores of inky exams9 Orthat if you take a math exam at Cornell and"University students are twenty-one going on sixty," saysa campus chaplain. "They've forgotten how to laugh."about a campus kidnapping, and quotes thechaplain (presumably the same one) whothinks students are afraid to venture offcampus because “they think they’re takingtheir lives in their hands.” Students areafraid to venture off-campus all right, but I happen to drop your pencil there will be arush of students to kick it down the aisle sothat you will lose precious seconds retriev¬ing it? lamont writes about some wonderfulpre-exam nightmares which students haveat major colleges. (Where else but at Har¬vard would a student dream he is King Rich¬ard in Ivanhoe, “doomed to a perpetualspear-throwing contest in which he alwayshad to outdistance his opponents or sufferdeath”?) But it is when he goes beyondcheap over-statement that he is effective.When Lamont writes of the failures of moraland social conscience in students and uni¬versity leaders his argument becomes pow¬erful, his quotes devastating.For Lamont writes well (or rather, quoteswell) in describing the passionless and apo¬litical students he sees as the college anduniversity majority. W’hen an authority-such as Harvard president Derek Bok cansay, as he did in 1978, that “We have littlereason to believe that Harvard does much topromote moral reasoning, let alone moralconduct,” one senses that the situation inhigher education is not good. Stanford presi¬dent Richard Lyman came very- close to de¬scribing a large part of the decade’s moodwhen he termed student inertia in the face ofmajor issues “an unearned cynicism.” Butthen, as Lamont points out. the universitiesthemselves are not exactly great bastions ofethical conduct (i.e. the South Africa issue).“We lack the language to discuss right andwrong.” an unnamed Chicago professorbroods in Campus Shock.It should be said that the Universitycomes out as somewhat better than mostschools dealt with in Lamont’s book, and heseems to think it’s due to the college com¬mon core program and its reduction of con¬fusion and pressure over choice of studies.But in a study which sometimes reads likethe notes of a Red Cross worker just out of aWarsaw ghetto, that isn't saying very much.For all its inadequacies. Campus Shock de¬serves a place on Hanna Gray’s night tablefor her amusement and edification.Tenants win jury trialBy Bruce ShapiroJury trials will be ordered for six of thestriking tenants of 5400 South Harper Ave..in suits brought by the building’s manage¬ment. Dalton Management Co., for posses¬sion of the apartments. Thirty-one of thebuilding’s seventy tenants, members of the5400 South Harper Tenants’ Association,have been withholding rents totalling about$13,500 since May. claiming that inadequatemaintenance has reduced the value of theproperty and that the building’s owner,Marvin Lustbader and Co., has violated hislegal obligations to the tenants.The trials w ere approved at hearings June27 and 28 by Forcible Entry and DetainerCourt (eviction court) Judge Mary Hooton,at the request of Edward Voci, attorney forthe Association. “We'd like to have ordinary-people decide whether or not the value of theproperty has been reduced by conditions ofthe building.” Voci told The Maroon. I hesummons of a seventh tenant was quashedfor being improperly served, and four othertenants have been summoned to appear incourt next week The eviction suits are the most recent in aseries of legal actions following death of onetenant and the hospitalization of severalothers after a faulty boiler leaked carbonmonoxide throughout the thirteen-storystructure March 15. 1979. The Cook County-medical Examiner called the death of San¬dra Robinson “negligent homicide.” TheState’s Attorney’s office is investigating,though no indictments have been handeddow-n in the case, on June 19. thirty one otthe building’s tenants tall part of the rentstrike) filed a lawsuit in Chancery Courtseeking $10.000 each for carbon monoxidepoisoning and repayment from Dalton Man¬agement of half of all the rents paid by eachsince the mid-1970’s. Earlier. Dalton Man¬agement had offered each tenant the equiv¬alent of three days rent to compensate for“inconveniences” cause by the carbon mon¬oxide poisoning; the offer was rejected by-most tenants. The four tenants who requiredhospitalization in atmospheric pressurechambers for severe poisoning will be filingan additional suit next week.After Robinson’s death Citv housing in¬ spectors inspected the building severaltimes and discovered seventy-nine viola¬tions of the Chicago building code. On July-10 the building w ill be examined again. Ten¬ants’ Association chairman Nancy Cleve¬land expects “several dozen” more viola¬tions to be added to the list. The CriminalHousing Court suit between the City Cor¬poration Counsel and Marvin Lustbader &Co. based on the violations will be heardagain Wednesday in the Daley Center, room1107 at 10:30 a.m The case has previously-been continued six times at the request ofLustbader & Co s attorney. Fity-onemembers of the Association are entered asparties to the suit.Some repairs have been made on thebuilding since the Criminal Housing hear¬ings. including tuckpointing, tarring theroof, scraping and repainting the fireescape, and re-plastering some interiorwalls. Code violatins in the building's two el¬evators were corrected in May. but bothbroke down within twenty-four hours of therepairs, according to tenants.In a meeting in April representatives ofDalton refused to negotiate with the Associ¬ation According to Cleveland, however, theAssociation will soon present a list of de¬mands at the request of the management's attorney. “We still hope to negotiate.” shesaid.BursarContinued from Page 1any future thefts. Law enforcement of¬ficials have not been notified, he said.The thefts and the resulting investigationare not in any way connected to the changein the billing system which will take placenext year. Bell said. Under the new system,students will send their tuition and other feechecks directly to Continental bankLory Weaver. Jr., the bursar, was una¬vailable for comment.MantenoContinued from Page 1monitory process.Murphy said he will not file any new suitsconcerning research done at Manteno al¬though he will file suit on what he chargeswere improper lobotomies performed thereIn addition, he plans to file a suit concerningpatient treatment in general at Manteno.particularly the “overuse of psychotropicdrugs.”The Chicago Maroon — Friday, July 6, 197V — aa college writing (w/art) updateCap and Gown 1979 (vol. 63)edited by Bobbye Middendorf$10 at the Student Activities officeby Claudia MagatIf a yearbook has two goals: to provide solidevidence of an institution, and to become a tremulouslink with the past, then the 1979 U of C Cap andGown — like most yearbooks — is only partly suc¬cessful. Memory is, after all, a highly personal sense.A yearbook usually lends us recollection withoutemotion, without untying the knots: You or I or wewere this way at that time in that place, and this iswhat it looked like. But a yearbook rarely exploreshow we felt and how and where we changed.Looking through Cap and Gown, I gained a strongsense of the utter timelessness of this institution;the expressions of first-year women in Snell Hall,sleeping students in Regenstein Library, the facadeof Mitchell Tower. That certainly is the way it was,but on the other hand, that is the way it always willbe. Not surprisingly, I gained no sense of myself ormy education at Chicago, or any of the dense, inter¬rupted histories I’ve had here.Yearbooks fail to elicit articulate, genuine feelingfor the past because, as Paul Valery wrote, “The ex¬pression of true sentiment is always banal,’’ and ifanyone remembers the U of C—or any placewhere he spent four years —it will be silenty, inmemory that cannot be discussed or photographed orexpressed in any way without becoming banal. This iswhy the loud voices of yearbooks are universally sil¬ly, always embarrassing. Phrases like, “We can't goback...A feeling...joyful heartache...To recordthe changes....” Appear in Cap and Gown. We know,we know. And everything that tangibly matters hereis pictured: the Woodlawn Tap, The Point, theQuadrangles...These places are by all means the in-evitablecontexts of any‘U of C experience’ but in Capand Gown they become unreal, clinched, PR shots. Ifwe want to remember, we look into our hearts; that iswhere the experience lives: not a yearbook, not in theinstitution. And if the experience is truly capturedwith all its dark questions and answers, it will surfaceeffortlessly in five of ten or twenty years, in otherplaces, with certain songs or seasons; or in a fewminutes when I get up and stand in the doorway andknow that sunlight always flickers this way across awooden floor at the beginning of summer.If we accept that this yearbook cannot hope to cap¬ture the consuming factors of intimancy and aliena¬tion which seem to characterize, in different ways,each ‘U of C experience’, then Cap and Gown lookswonderful. The book is well conceived and pro¬duced: photographs are clear and thoughtfully posi¬tioned on pages, and there is a good balance be¬tween University buildings and people (cf. DreamsInquiry # 4edited by Jane Epperson, Rachel Flick, KarenKapner, Bruce Majors, Jerome Marcus, Jintae Lee,and Adam Schulmanfree at Harper Library, Reynolds Club, and IdaNoyesby Richie GoldsteinFor students in the College, discussion of scholarlyissues is too often limited by how many people havetaken a particular class or have read a particulartext. Since many have read Aristotle or Marx orFreud, debates on these authors and their ideas canreach a broad and well-informed audience. Howev¬er, endless debates r ver Truth, the Dialectic, or theUnconscious can lend themselves to a certain lack ofdiversity in college writing. It is this problem thatthe editors of Inquiry have attempted to circumventand in this issue they are making progress.All too often, previous Inquiry articles read likeprivate dialogues between a professor and one ofhis students. The current issue steers away from aca¬demic specificity and toward a broader analysis ofcontemporary academic, social, and artistic issues.Papers by William Goldbeck and Mark Neustadtavoid the problems of past Inquiry pieces as seen inthe choice of subject as well as in the language.Thus, the current issue is interesting, informative,and conducive to the kind of “interdisciplinary in¬quiry” that the editors hope to encourage.Mark Neustadt’s “Aspects of Reggae”, a well-re-searched and informative exploration of the historyand musical foundations of reggae, represents themajor step forward for Inquiry. The publication ofan article on popular music is an imaginative inclu¬sion for this issue. Furthermore, the article avoidsbeing either too simplistic and not explanatory ofanything or being too technical and thus incompre¬hensible to anyone but an expert. Neustadt hasmanaged to set a straight course between thesedangers, leaving the reader with an intelligent andthoughtfully written piece.Neustadt probes into the form and content of reg¬gae, describing its features as a hybrid of Jamaican,native African, and American or western music. Theintroductory nature of the article has forced Neu- in Stone, a book whose very title presents both anamazing physical feat and regretful institutionaldoctrine). But above all, many of the photographs inCap and Gown are either very pretty or slightly un¬settling, which is fine in that way they convey theparadox of the institution: its alternate opressive-ness and exhilarating beauty.The thirteen sections of Cap and Gown bear thetitles of “The Comedies of Shakespeare,” and some ofthe titles stick. Under A Winter's Tale are severalfunny and beautiful shots of the community duringand after January’s great blizzard. The Taming of theShrew addresses the age-old U of C themes of“Apathy,” "Pressure” and “Exam Week" withphotographs that are right on target: cluttered rooms,a worried face, tangled thoughts at an open window.Cap and Gown is about the U of C as we would likeit to be: anxiety relieved by a good game of tennis orthe hilarity of a pillow fight or the warmth of a kiss;the weight of winter forgotten with the absolute aban¬don of a leap into a snowbank. This teaches us a bit¬tersweet truth: we survive here each by creating hisown fragile romance from the explosion, confusionand erosion. These individual romances are notrevealed in Cap and Gown, but the generalframework the essentia trappings are there foranyone who is having a rough time resolving emo¬tional issues of his years here. I do not mean thisnastily; it is simply that Cap and Gown provides apanacea for all wounds incurred in battle, and that isthe true test of a great yearbook. It is pretty, it coversall bases, it tells us what we want to hear about the in¬stitution. It necessarily tells us little aboutoverselves.Illinois Poet Laureate Gwendolyn Brooks (left), oncampus recently to present the tenth Poet LaureateAwards to fifteen Illinois schoolchildren, and LisaWilliamson, one of three winners from KenwoodAcademy, pose for Lisa’s father. “Poetry is still inthe world,” Brooks remarked, “and children are col¬liding with some of it.” The University hosts theceremony and poetry reading annually.stadt to deal superficially with the subject, but heraises many questions about the rhythmic and lyri¬cal mechanics of reggae. Why, for example, does thewestern audience find reggae so appealing whenthe 2-4 rhythmic structure of reggae contradicts thefamiliar 1-3 beat of rock and swing? The answer tothis may lie in the audience-performer interactionprevalent in the blues and gospel origins of reggaeor in the commonality of political and social oppres¬sion expressed in the lyrics of many songs. I likedthis article and it has prompted some of my friendsto listen a lot more closely to their reggaealbums.William Goldbeck’s ‘The Life of the Mind: PoliticalAgitation in Contemporary Soviet Society” has asomewhat misleading title. It is not about AndreiSakharov, Soviet Jewry, or political dissent. It con¬cerns the pedagogic dilemmas of a government thattries to instill a strong respect for authority in chil¬dren and yet attempts to train those children to be¬come a talented and creataive managerial elite.Goldbeck notices that revolutionary zeal has de¬creased in recent years and thus argues that the So¬viet citizen has begun to insulate himself from polit¬ical agitation.Patrick Maloney’s “The Moral Truth of Beauty: Po¬etry and Philosophy in Lucretius” is a well-writtenand carefully structured paper. As in his previous In¬quiry article (“The Role of Virtue in the AmericanFounding”) Maloney demonstrates his ability towrite critically on a variety of subjects in the besttradition of common core, line-by-line analysis.Nevertheless, because the article can be studiedonly in conjunction with the approximate text of Lu¬cretius, Maloney obscures a clear understanding ofhis argument. It is sufficiently complex and strainedto prevent one from either contesting or agreeingwith his conclusions. This is not to say his article is abad one; only that it is too arcane to judge fairly.On the whole, this is a good issue of Inquiry.Given the type of writing encouraged in many firstand second year classes and the lack of time avail¬able to college students, the editors (and there cer¬tainly are a lot of them) have succeeded in discov¬ering some diverse and entertaining articles andfurthering the cause of interdisciplinary inquiry. a poetry magazine (w/art) # 7edited by Nancy GaleSI at U. of C. Bookstoreby Bobbye MiddendorfThere is a standing joke, funny despite its incom¬plete truth, that U of C people are theoreticians:thinkers, not doers. It thus seemed out of place thatsomeone would see a gap and attempt to fill it. Twoyears ago, Neil Alers noted a lack of outlets for cre¬ative writers on campus. To rectify the situation hebegan a poetry magazine (w/art). Whatever argu¬ments one has with Alers or his poetry, he must becommended for trying to remedy the problem. Asfounder and editor, Alers has nursed poetry(w/art) through two years and hails of criticism.Now the helm has been turned over to NancyGale.Poetry (w/art) was criticized that it was called“(w/art)” without a stitch of art visible. In thisissue, the art is some of the most impressive work. Itwas criticized for being the Neil Alers Journal, yetthis is the first issue in which Alers is the featuredpoet. And it was criticized for the quality of work itincluded; yet while the quality remains uneven inthis issue, there are some genuine bright spots.Molly McQuade is the most polished and most con¬sistent writer included in issue #7. Her images areunusual and thoughtful, and she combines them togreat effect: the poem “Nose,” for example, if abrilliant new love song which ensures that that fa¬cial protrusion will not be relegated to its previoushumdrum existence. But another of Ms. McQuade’spoems exemplifies the stronger, more substantiveaspects of this issue: “The Rain,” in whichMcQuade’s craft is evident in a precise use of lan¬guage, creating “the exactitude of bridges,” “thegreat wharfs of the slums,” and “flowers of news¬print.” And when read aloud, one realizes that theintricacies of sound have been used consciouslyhere.Eleanor Leyden, too, is a poet to watch. Her “-Rob¬ert Creeley Makes the Present Tense-” won firstprize in the John Billings Fiske poetry competitionthis past spring. Each stanza is crammed with clean,unusual imagery: “unhitched by the bull and cow¬catcher of syntax.” Yet though I like the sound ofthe poem, I do not know what it means; perhaps myown illiteracy gets in the way, and maybe it is timeto read Robert Creeley again.Other worthy lines and images exist aplenty inthis issue of poetry w/art: Does Mort Shallman re¬alize how many existences he aptly describes whenhe says “I majored in indecision at college”? DanielScott tantalizes the imagination in his “ameri-ca(ka)”: Why, indeed, would one want to be a set ofmatched luggage? John Rossheim mourns “Now mylife is strung in arcs Between opportunities missed.”And Candlin Dobbs’ sinister dressing table metaphorin “(She dressed early. . .)” evokes images offemmes fatales, of medusas — even at UC. Brilliant.Tom Dunn, the artist whose photographs repre¬sent the (w/art) in this issue, is still another artistworth following. His four images indicate a widerange of photographic interests. The first is theweakest of those included here. It is a typical urbanlandscape, yet if it had not been subjected to an in¬ferior reproduction process, muddying the blacksand greying the whites, it might well have been amore impressive photograph. In the second paoto-graph Dunn acts as a social critic in the style of Rob¬ert Frank. Again, the reproduction has lessened thequality of the photograph, yet the blank face of themodel, surrounded by the accoutrements of leisureliving, still makes a powerful statement. The lasttwo photographs are body landscapes, the second ofwhich is the most striking in the collection. Twoknees outlined with shadows, appear like two per¬fect but abstract sand dunes. I was all set to be dis¬appointed with the art in this issue, yet in Tom Dunnthere is variety and freshness which are not disap¬pointing in the least.Neil Alers is featured for the first time in poetry(w/art). If one reads this sometimes difficult and in¬comprehensible poet very carefully, one can seepromising things. His image of “pianos sunbathingon the beach” or “fever blankets on a concrete bed”are some of the most striking, while “a tiger cross¬ing/flat dawn” conjures up strange possibilities ofmeaning. And those familiar with Alers’ previouspoetry will recognize that these poems use less vio¬lent images; yet Alers’ unusual punctuation and lay¬out bother me, perhaps because I do not always seehis reason for using them. He does make serious at¬tempts to express more with less: “a bird (and trian¬gular) flowers/blue/against blue background”;but for me Alers’ poetry is still not quite “there.”Thera were too many typographical errors in thisissue, unless the writers were out to coin new wordsat every turn. I doubt it. Yet typos are a technicalproblem: annoying, certainly, but a problem whichcan easily be remedied in the future. In the end,they do not negate the excellent verse and promiseof this issue. 999 lead vocali999 at GaspiThere was a constant wimotion spilling over the amat Gaspars as Nine-Nin<(999), one of England’s finesbands, made its second Clappearance in two monthsTuesday and Wednesday nThe four sets played werefast, furious, exciting, and pto perfection. The audiencemore time off its feet than <a chain reaction of pogo-daworked its way throughcrowd all night long, not sing itself until the final notbeen played. Still, the audcould not possibly keep pacethe band, whose actionsmore suggestive of four ithon runners in training thfour clean-cut musicians pring the crispest rock to bethis side of the Atlantic 0And there was no end of cpleasing in the show. Onbest-known numbers, “Fcide,” “Emergency,” and ‘Face It,” lead singer Nickhanded over the micrphoithe audience during the choihe jumped off-stage ta joiitightly-packed crowd for a <during one of the final jsolos; and, after already piclose to three hours of spelight rock, the band still maito pull off a twenty minutcore set. The whole effectMoviesComa: When a friend doesn’through minor surgery, a doctoivieve Bujold) gets suspicioubegins to investigate. She uncopattern involving similar comatitients and her troubles only begchael Crichton directed this Ibut doesn't explain why Bujocurious before Blue Cross did. IJuly 6 at 7:15 and 9:30. Quantrell-S.W.Silent Movie: Mel Brooks' filloften comedic undertakings inlished genres; eg., the Westermonster movie. In Silent Mo\parody becomes even less oblihe makes a silent movie about ra silent movie. Although it cslittle of the grace that the physimedians (Keaton, Chaplin) usedlarious effect, it is sometime:funny. Saturday, July 7 at 1:9:30. Quantrell; $1.50 — S W.The Prisoner of Zenda (1937) Dby John Cromwell. Five versiAnthony Hope's novel havefilmed — a tribute to Hollywood’:nality — but this (the second) is vdoubt the best of the bunch. 1Colman is a commoner who is foisubstitute for his lookalike coiRuritanian monarch threatenerassassination: but Ronnie sereIrealist Nick Cash sings with audience: “Take it or leave it/Resign to it.”parst wave of; audienceNine-Nineinest rocki Chicago>nths lastiy nights,vere long,nd played;nce spentlan on, as:o-dancingough theiot spend-note hadaudiencepace withons were>ur mara-g than ofs produc-be heardic Ocean,of crowd-On their“Homi-nd “Let’slick Cash■phone tochoruses;> join thera danceal guitary playingspeed-of-managedlinute en-ffect was splendidly invigorating and leftmost of the onlookers disapoint-ed that they hadn’t gotten tick¬ets for all four shows.The scene of all this excitementwas Gaspars Pub at the corner ofBelmont and Southport on theNorth Side. In less than sixmonths, Gaspars had establisheditself as the center of live New¬Wave and Punk entertainment inChicago. The New Wave could askfor no better home. Liquor pricesare the lowest in Chicago amongnightclubs offering the samequality of entertainment (Ga¬spars more than halves the pricesof the Park West). There is fur¬thermore never any fear of over¬crowding at Gaspars, not evenwhen the shows are sold out.With ticket sales kept to a max¬imum of 175 per show, its 1000 +square feet of auditorium spaceinsure that everybody will have agood view of the band withouthaving to worry about becomingthe victim of their overzealousneighbors. Anyone who has expe¬rienced the discomfort of concert¬viewing at the Aragon or at B.Ginnings will appreciate the spa¬ciousness of Gaspars. The stage isset right at the front of the view¬ing space, suspended at hip’sheight above the floor. This notonly allows, but actually encour¬ages the kind of personal interac¬tion between band and audiencethat took place at the Nine-Nine-Nine concert. If you’re into it, you can almost always push your wayto the front of the crowd to kissthe feet of your favorite rockstar. The 30und system and ac-coustics are well-suited to theperformance of electric rock. Fi¬nally, the modest, but well-kept,furnishings and decor show atleast a little respect for the tasteof the patrons. You will neverfind yourself questioning in whatcentury or on what planet you’reliving in the midst of a Gasparsconcert. You are permitted toconcentrate on the music at hand,which, if it’s being performed atGaspars, is likely to be good.From a New Wave point ofview the lineup of summer week¬end concerts at Gaspars is prettyimpressive. This Saturday JohnCale will be performing. Theformer organ, viola, and bassplayer for the Velvet Under¬ground is reputed to put on a hellof a show. On the 13th and 14th ofJuly Jonathan Richman, formerlyof the Modern Lovers, will makehis appearance at Gaspars. Thenext weekend, the Cramps, a re¬latively unknown, but totallyunique, New York Rockabillyband, will be seeking the atten¬tion they deserve. And, finally,to top off a month of diverse acts,Richard Hell and the Voidoids willarrive at Gaspars on the lastweekend in July. If you like anyof these, you should see what’scoming from England in Sep¬tember. - James JonesNames, Dates 8- Placesoesn’t pulloctor (Gen-icious anduncovers ajmatose pa-begin. Mi-his thrillerBujold gotlid. Friday,itrell; $1.50. the plan by falling in love with theking’s fiancee Madeleine Carroll. Thesupporting cast, including DouglasFairbanks, Jr. and Raymond Massey,sparkles in the classic that virtuallycreated the ‘‘Ruritanian romance”genre. Lots of fun, and highly recom¬mended, especially since this is onegreat oldie that isn't shown much onTV. Wednesday July 11 at 8:00. Quan-trell; $1.50 - E.E.films ares in estab-estern, theMovie hisoblique asout makingit captures(hysical co¬used to hi-times veryit 7:15 andV.7) Directedprersions ofhave beenood’s origi-1 is withoutch. Ronaldis forced to! cousin, aU-ned withscrews up MusicThis Week at Ravinia: July 6: The Chi¬cago Symphony Orchestra performsMahler’s Symphony #8 in E-flat. Con¬ductor Levine and the CSO have a spe¬cial affinity for Mahler, so this shouldbe an exciting, if not inspiring concert.8:30 July 7: The CSO performs Strauss'sDon Quixote — Fantastic Variations forCello and Rachmaninoff’s Piano Con¬certo 02 in C. Piano soloist Watt’s su¬perb command of technique ought tomake up for hh usual lack of feeling ina piece which demands more of theformer than the latter. 8:30. July 8:The CSO; Mozart's Piano Concerto No.25 in C. Neither Conductor Levine norpiano soloist Schub is a particularlygood Mozart interpreter, but a Mozartpiano concerto is worth hearing any¬time. Also. Mahler's Das Lied von der Erde: Nprman and McCoy are soloists.7:30. July 11: Schubert s G-flat Im¬promptu. Sonata in A (Block soloes);and Sonata In C, “Grand Duo” (Brendeland Levine are soloists). Even thoughnone of the soloists is an especiallygood Schubert interpreter, the perfor¬mance of the seldom-heard “GrandDuo" sonata may make the eveningworthwhile. In the Murray Theater.8:30.Prices for pavilion seating range from$10 to $16; lawn admission from $4 to$5. Murray Theater admission is $8 Allconcerts take place in the main pavil¬ion, unless otherwise noted. For moreinformation, call 273-3500. —T.S.the grey city journalThe Grey City Journal is edited byDavid Miller and Bruce Shapiro; at pre¬sent contributors are Ethan Edwards,Richie Goldstein, Karen Hornick,James Jones. Claudia Magat, RoryMcGahn, Molly McQuade. BobbyeMiddendorf, David Shute. Ted Shen.and Susan Wagner. Everyone iswelcome to participate in the GCJ:writers, artists, and photographers areeagerly sought. Comments and sugges¬tions — from any source — are alwayswelcome. Call 753-3265 and ask forDavid or Bruce. St. Rogerby Rory McGahanWith Saint Jack Roger Corman has tried to im¬prove the image of his New World Pictures. Corman,the legendary B-movie producer, has providedthrough New World a starting place for young direc¬tors, writers, and photographers in cheap exploita¬tion films — the sort that one encounters only atdrive-ins in the summer. In spite of the fact thatthese productions generally showed more interestand energy in their execution than most Hollywoodproducts, the bottom has dropped out of the exploi¬tation market. Since then, Corman has tried tomove New World into the art market by distributingsuch films as Amarcord and Autumn Sonata. SaintJack is Corman’s first new-styled American produc¬tion aimed at the Fellini-Bergman crowd.The first ingredient in Corman’s venture is the ma¬terial with which he begins — a novel by PaulTheroux. Apparently huge chunks of Therouvian dia¬logue have been transposed into the film un¬changed. This makes Saint Jack more than a littlestatic and hard to follow. I cannot judge the adapta¬tion, not having read the novel; but the themes andconflicts are strictly literary (as is proper for an’art” film); the evils of capitalist exploitation; theanti-hero vs. army/government/money; imperi¬alists who have “no job, no reason to live: they liveworse than the coolies”.Saint Jack concerns an American ex-adventurer.Jack Flowers (played by Ben Gazzara, divested ofself-centered, indulgent Actor’s Studio manner¬isms), a Singapore pimp. As the plot progressesFlowers gradually looses almost everything: hishigh-class bordello, his self-respect, and his bestfriend — a Walter Mittyish accountant played by Brit¬ish actor Denholm ElliotCorman has put this little moral adventure in thehands of clean-cut perpetual film-student, PeterBogdanovich, a graduate of the Roger CormanSchool for Filmmakers. In the ten years or so sincehe received the Corman diploma (with his inventiveif not profound Targets) he has moved into therealm of ambitious allegory and busy borrowing,sometimes for better (The Last Picture Show), some¬times for much worse (Nickelodeon). At their worsthis earlier films have been cold, empty exercises inhumorous exaggeration (the desert/street with enough tumbleweeds for seventeen Republic west¬ern in The Last Picture Show) and meaningless hom¬age (every other idea in What's Up, Doc? seems to beborrowed from a different movie). After his most re¬cent overblown disasters, Nickelodeon, Daisy Mill¬er, At Long Last Love, Bogdanovich finally recovershis artistic sense with Saint Jack: for him nearly aone-finger exercise in unselfconscious narration.Gazzara and Elliot play out a choreographed duetof friendship. Gazzara swaggers his way throughBogdanovich’s four-square frame with confidenceand security while Elliot drifts away from the centerof action. While Gazzara dominates the narrowstreets, cafes, and bars in his Hawaiian print shirtand gestures generously with his cigar, Elliot mere¬ly shambles after him, always threatening to disap¬pear behind a corner.Bogdanovich draws his camera’s eye-level dolly¬ing around Gazzara’s pushing and pulling within theframe and Elliot's sliding off away from the center.In almost Premingerian fashion, Bogdanovich setshimself the task of drawing the basic dichotomies inthe acting, characters, themes, and settings intobalance through the camera’s presence. The openingpan defines the film’s central conflict, moving slow¬ly from the wooden fishing boats sitting in tne nar-bor to the imported filth and noise of Western busesand high-ries. By the time the film has finished, Bog¬danovich has dollied, trucked, panned, and zoomedhis vision into a network of cooly observed moral re¬lations.Meanwhile Bogdanovich focuses (courtesy of thedrifting attentions of Robby Mueller’s impresionis-tic photography) the sequences around space-defin¬ing gestures and actions: the actors lay claim to ap¬propriate spaces with their gestures and walks,giving the conflict a concrete basis in action.Saint Jack is not sustained, but there are manyfascinating moments within the limping episodicstructure: a parody of the title sequence from Gold-finger; Gazzara trying to hide his pain and embar¬rassment from Elliot as he is being tattooed; Gaz-zara s sunglasses at Elliot’s funeral, linking throughtheir glances the funeral inside the chapel with anOriental one outside; Gazzara and his Ceylonesegirl friend fooling around, Louis Armstrong in thebackground. With these moments Saint Jack turnsaway from the art-house intentions of producer Cor¬man, allowing the life and ingenuity of his minor-league productions to intrude.Freund and Chicago in pas de deuxby Molly McQuadeLast week, Chicago balletomane Geraldine Freundassembled eighteen internationally known dancers,and bombarded Chicago, in five short days, withmore than twenty ballets. Packed into three-and four-hour programs, the dances included ten premieresand the debuts of six dancers. Everything spec¬tacular, intensive, and expert, might have beenFreund’s motto when she began preparing for theevent sixteen months ago.Despite problems last year, this time Freund’sfestival succeeded, and seemed to convince Chicagoaudiences that her enterprise is indeed unique. Ratherthan engage a single company, saddled with standardrepertory and all-too-homogeneous style, Freundpicks and chooses from among many troupes. Shemasterminds partnerships, introduces new works,revives obscure ones, and supports overhaul onlongtime favorites—once annually.For example, this season Freund presented the Na¬tional Ballet of Canada, with featured soloists, inErik Bruhn’s new production of Swan Lake. Shecoaxed the legendary Jean Babilee back to Chicagoafter a twenty-eight-year absence. She paired NataliaMakarova, of American Ballet Theater, with PeterMartins, a Balanchine convert. She brought brilliantPatrick Dupond back for a return visit from the ParisOpera. In perhaps her greatest coup, Freund engagedBaryshnikov, not just to dance but to dance in a newwork commissioned expressly by him for the festival.It was a magical week.To match the performances, Freund planned equal¬ly novel performance schedules. On four of the fivenights, dancing began at six, paused to allow dinnerat 7:15, and then continued until 10:30. On mostnights, Swan Lake was offered, with a selection ofshorter pieces. On only one night was it omitted.Most of the dances performed on this swanlessnight were pas de deux —intriguing variations onballet’s preoccupation with courtship. The LaSylphide, Don Quixote, and Tarantella pas de deuxall followed romantic convention. In Sylphide. gauzesmothered the female dancer’s legs, creating the illu¬sion that she did not dance. She hedged from dancingand from revealing herself. Every move eluded theeye, suggesting her delicacy and need of support.By contrast, Sylphide's male dancer exhibited allhis strength. He danced with felicity and confidence.It was his nature to invite challenges and overcomeproblems. The dancer’s development was vitally,perfectly called-for.The Don Quixote pas de deux was more about con¬trolling movement than about moving, with theballerina as tyrannical monument. Led by the male, she affected difficult balances, passive exhibitions.He displayed her, and permitted her moments ofautonomy.Tarantella, a coquettish pas de deux, wasdominated by Baryshnikov and Heather Watts, (ofthe New York City Ballet). Though not the best rolefor Watts, whose icy, long-legged sensuality has over¬whelmed audiences before, Baryshnikov was in hiselement. He skimmed above the stage like waterescaping. By antagonizing Watts, he urged her intoplayful competition. Yet for once, Watts seemed en¬cumbered by her legs, and unable to act the properfoil to Baryshnikov’s charms. She couldn’t be bewit¬ched or seem to earn the attention given her.Unlike these three, other ballets on the program ex¬panded the possibilities of pas de deux. Least originalwas Maurice Bejart’s Life. Despite brilliant dancingby Babilee and Elisabeth Platel, the ballet’s sen¬timental moments weakened it.Frederick Ashton's Montones II, however, ex¬perimented adventurously. Three dancers, dresseddazzlingly in white, navigated the stage. Despite ten¬sions among them, the customary coyness andgamesmanship of many pas de deux was entirelyavoided. An egalitarian energy moved the men andthe woman.Even more original was Other Dances,choreographed by Jerome Robbins, and exquisitelydanced by Natalia Makarova and Peter Martins.Though clearly dancing together, both dancers sub¬mitted themselves to music rather than to social rites.They became selfless agents of beauty in a ballet thatinsisted on a self-effacing love.Among the remaining dances and dancers, severalstood out. Patrick Dupond triumphed with every stephe took Masterful mimic and comedian as well asdancer, Dupond radiated freedom and youth. NaomiSorkin, on the other hand, couldn't salvageChristophene, a solo handicapped by cliches, slitskirts and whirling hair.The only real disappointment of the night, however,was the new work commissioned by Baryshnikov.The music and choreography of Eatin' Raindrops inSpace rivalled the title in pretentiousness. A“prepared” piano gave out twangs and creaks, whenpressed, while Baryshnikov and Watts wasted talentand energy over pelvic thrusts and other bloodless,graceless displays.Low points aside, Freund deserves the city’sthanks. After a year and a half’s intercontinentalnegotiations, to say nothing of financial sacrifice, shehas brought real, if brief, cultural excitement toConvention City.IM Summer League opens softball seasonBy Jim FillThe 1979 summer softball season openedlast week and the first four coed games ofthe summer included a tie game, a tripleplay, a thriller in which the lead changedhands five times, and a forfeit.On Monday the Maroon’s team, Un-the-Spot News, scored over Drink Like Fish intheir Division B (coed) White Leagueopener. Drink failed to appear, and theNews was awarded a 7-0 forfeit.Cocaine certainly showed up for their firstgame. They showed off, too, executing athird-inning triple play en route to a 15-1snuffing of the White Soxratics.The Harder They Come and the MellowYellow Sox engaged in an exercise in oscil¬lation, but the Sox prevailed, 12-11, when,with one out in the bottom of the seventh.Dan Schafer’s fielder’s choice drove in LisaDoane from third with the winning run. Soxmanager Jim Fill suffered a pulled musclein the second inning of the game and maymiss a few games for the injury-riddledSox.There were no losers in the only other Di¬vision B White League opener Monday.There weren’t any winners either, however,the ABA Bar Stools and the B. S. Hitters bat¬tled to a 5-5 tie after one inning and wereknotted again 10-10 when five innings, andalso the time allotted for the game, expired.The game will be replayed at the end of theseason if it affects the final standings.The Division A (men’s) White Leagueopened its season eight days ago. DiamondHead’s Steve Shoelson, Division A Player ofthe Week, went 4-for-4, scoring three runsand driving in five to lead his team to a 21-9drubbing of the Welfare Bums. NedStarieles smacked two home runs and team¬mates Lyle Burns and “Tiny” Vollen addedone each to power Jimmy’s to a 17-2 liquida¬tion of the Megabyters. Raymond Graham.Bruce Perham. and Tony Smith each had three hits for the Hyde Park Saints, whonumbed the Nattering Nabobs of Negati¬vism 14-2. The Harder They Come routedthe Research Rats 13-7.The men’s Maroon league featured theABA Bar Stools versus the Vice Squad (theMedici team), Biohazards versus theDroogs, the Chicago Institute for the Mellowversus Fat City Nine, the Dead Popesversus the rival Divinity Dogmatics, and thePenguins versus Stats, Rats, Groups, andNuts (formerly known as Bob’s Butlers).Tuesday’s Division B Maroon Leaguepairings were Clonal Deletions and SSA,Complete Greek Tragedies and the Spores,the Divinity Dogmatics and Spam, the Pen¬guins and Pork Belly Futures.Summer softball league games are playedMonday through Thursday at North Field(adjacent to the Henry Crown Field House)and Stagg Field (at 56th and CottageGrove). Division A Maroon games areplayed on Wednesdays; White, on Thurs¬days. Division B Maroon games are sche¬duled for Tuesdays, with White games onMondays. Division C, the “lower caliber”recreational league, has its games on vary¬ing days.Teams in Division A and B will play sevengames each to seed positions for a single¬elimination playoff, while Division C teamswill play eight or nine contests each with noplayoffs.SUMMER SOFTBALL(Complete through games of Monday, July 2.) Results of Thursday, June 28Welfare BumsDiamond Head(6 innings, time limit)The Harder They ComeResearch RatsNattering Nabobs of NegativismHyde Park SaintsMegabytersJimmy's .(6*innings, slaughter rule)Maroon LeaguePlay began Wednesday.Division B (Coed)White League 022 041541 155 921420 232 0 13005 110 0 • 7101 000 0 - 2521 114 x - 14002 000 - 2220 427 - 17 Drink Like Fish 0 1 .000 1The Harder They Come 0 1 .000 1White Soxratics 0 1 .000 1Monday's resultsABA Bar Stools 510 40 - 10B S. Hitters(5 innings, time limit) 504 01 - 10Cocaine 742 20 - 15White Soxratics(5 innings, time limit) 000 01 - 1On-the—Spot LNews - 7Drink Like Fish(forfeit) - 0The Harder They Come 210 053 0 - 11Mellow Yellow Sox 133 031 1 - 12CocaineMellow Yellow SoxOn the-Spot NewsABA Bar StoolsB. S. Hitters W11100 Pet. GB1.000 -1.000 -1.000 -'/2'/2 (One out when winning run scored.)Maroon LeaguePlay began Tuesday.Division C (Lower caliber coed)Monday's resultsAction Potentials, 9; Random Pack, 8.Lower Caliber, 7; Nybblers, 0 (fofeit).Only games scheduledDivision A (Men)White LeagueW LDiamond Head 1 0 Pet. GB1.000 -The Harder They Come 1 0 1.000Hyde Park Saints 1 0 1.000 -Jimmy's 1 0 1.000 -Megabyters 0 1 .000 1Nattering Nabobs ofNegativism 0 1 .000 1Research Rats 0 1 .000 1Welfare Bums 0 1 .000 1BISHOP BRENT HOUSEThe Oratory of St. Mary and St. JohnThe Episcopal (Anglican) Center atThe University of ChicagoSUMMER WORSHIPWednesday 5:30pm Sung Eucharistat Bishop Brent HouseThursday noon Eucharistat Bond Chapel5540 South Woodlawn Avenue TelephoneChicago. Illinois 60637 (312) 753-3392 GOLDEN POODLESALONPROFESSIONAL DOG GROOMING)ALL BREEDS2841 W. 63rd St.Appointment Calls Accepted From7 A.M. to 10 P.M.Pick up and Delivery 778-8871P THE STUDENTCO-OPWILL BE OPEN THE ENTIRE SUMMER, lOA.M. TO 5 P.M. WEEKDAYS, FOR YOURCONVENIENCE. WE WILL BE CLOSEDSATURDA YS AND SUNDAYS.VISIT US FOR THE BEST SELECTION OFBUDGET-PRICED CLASSICAL JAZZ, POP,AND FOLK RECORDS IN HYDE PARK. ALLNEW LP'S DISCOUNTED 35-40%. SEE ADELSEWHERE IN MAROON FOR INFO ONOUR NONESUCH SALE, NOW INPROGRESS.WE WILL CONTINUE TO BUY YOUR UN¬WANTED BOOKS THROUGHOUT THESUMMER AT PREMIUM PRICES.CLEARANCE SALE ON GOTHICS,ROMANCES, ETC. 25 CENTS APIECEFOR ALL TITLES. GREAT SUMMERTIMERELAXATION!DOWNSTAIRS AT REYNOLDS CLUB. COURT ThCATRC5706 S University Chicago Illinois 60637 (312) 753-3583/tickets - 753-358125thAnniversarySeasonHamletOpens Thursday July 5thRosencrantz and Guildensternare DeadOpens Friday July 6thThe Way of the WorldOpens Wednesday July 11thRunning in rotating reperatorv Wednesdaythrough Sunday evenings at 8:30, Sundaymatinee at 3July 5 through September 2Series tickets still availablefor information call 753-3581Chicago’s oldest outdoor summer theatre HEAR AGAIN STEREOSells guaranteed name brand usedand demo stereo components at 40%to 70% off regular prices.SPECIAL SPRING CLEARANCE SALESTOREWIDE SAVINGS INCLUDINGEQUIPMENT LIKEPIONEER SX626 $125.00MARANTZ 105 85.00DUAL 1237 99.00KENWOOD KA5500 135.00SANSUI 210 75.00FISHER XP7 Ea. 59.00SCOTT 443 99.00RABCO ST7 175.00NIKKO Gamma 1 185.00SHERWOOD S7110 119.00Complete systems from $75 to $750.60 day trade back privilege. Namebrand components for limited bud¬gets. PLUS MUCH. MUCH MORE.HEAR AGAIN STEREO7002 N. California 338-7737We GiveCASHFor UsedRecords1701 E. 55th684-3375USED FILES2, 3, 4 and 5 drawerletter, leaal and lateralBRAND I tQUTtMTSUPPLY CO.8600 Commercial Ave.Open Mon.- Fri. 8:30- 5:00RE 4- 2111& I he Chicago MaroonNONESUCH CLASSICS$4.96 LIST NOW $2.55SUPER SPECIAL - 5 For Only $12STUDENT COOPReynolds Club BasementSongf bij *Ira & George Gei/raTo Our Friends inthe Community:International HouseFood ServiceSummer Hours:Breakfast 7:00 - 9:00Lunch 11:30-1:00Monday — Friday1414 E. 59th Street**********Need Housing? We have a limitednumber of single dormitory rooms for$8.00 per person per night during thesummer quarter.International House THE DEVIL’S TRILL&Other ianh-Cenrurv Virtuoso ionatistor Volin 4 ContinueWoris tn Tartini Cnabran 4 Saihinivrpu Lucal'jrtun fV'fjrfn vtob* bnws Kwfmarloan .Morrismtsssi .(r.'William RolumiTwo baseball books lead off summer reading• • •Jerome Holtzman has assembled an an¬thology of baseball fiction called Fielder’sChoice. Holtzman. the venerable baseballwriter for the Chicago Sun-Times, alsoworked with former major league umpireBill Klem on Klem’s autobiography, and afew years ago. in a fascinating volumecalled No Cheering in the Pressbox, inter¬viewed sportswriters who worked from the1920’s through the 1950’s.In his introduction to Fielder’s Choice,Holtzman notes the distinction betweenthose who write about the game, and thosewho play it. “So wide is the chasm betweenamateur and professional player that fewwriters made the team, or even came close.Inevitably, the reader is the winner.’’ Thosewho can do. Those who can’t write aboutit.The stories Holtzman has put togetheroffer as many unusual characters as thegame itself. All-stars, minor leaguers, base¬ball widows, hangers-on, and Little Lea¬guers populate the stories of such writers asBernard Malamud, Ring Lardner, PhilipRoth. Damon Runyon, Hoke Norris. PaulGalileo, P. G. Wodenouse. and others. Thebook opens with a send-off to fantasyland:the first chapter of Robert Coover’s Univer¬sal Baseball Association. Inc. J. HenryWaugh, the league's proprietor, livesthrough the players and teams he creates.Some classC stories are included, such asJames Thurbe -’s “You Could Look It Up.”the tale of a midget sent to bat. The midget.Pearl du Monville. has been identified bysome as the inspiration for Bill Veeck's hir¬ing of Eddie Gaedel to bat for the Browns.The stories are not about classic ninth in¬ning heroics by ballplayers, nor do they au¬tomatically cast ballplayers as heroes.Holtzman has chosen an excellent lineup forFielder’s Choice: the stories are as vivid asthe photographs in The Image of TheirGreatness.The Image of Their GreatnessBy Lawrence S. Ritter and Donald HonigNew York: Crown Publishers, Inc.$15.95Fielder’s ChoiceEdited by Jerome HoltzmanNew York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich$12.95By Jacob LevineThese two baseball books, by seasonedveterans, offer White Sox fans some muchneeded diversion. By September, Cub fansshould be enjoying them too.Ritter and Honig’s book, subtitled “An Il¬lustrated History of Baseball from 1900 tothe Present” is indeed loaded with photo¬graphs, most of them of players in classicbaseball-card poses. Ritter’s previous book,The Glory of Their Times, was an enor¬mously successful record of baseball in thefirst decade of this century , as told by thosewho played it. As The Glory of Their Timesbrought early baseball and its players to lifefrom the memories and anecdotes of theplayers, The Image of Their Greatnessbrings life to baseball through its photo¬graphs. Although not as novel as Glory,Image is no less successful.Ty Cobb photographed sliding into thirdbase, teeth gritted, spikes, dirt, and thirdbaseman flying. The text tells us that “fromthe evidence, Cobb was mean, selfish, bigot¬ed, arrogant, and cold as ice. His drive toexcel, to win, to be number one, verged onthe psychotic, leaving no room for kindness,compassion, or friendship.” The photoleaves no doubt of Cobb’s determination towin. No dispute of Cobb’s excellence can befound in the text, either. “He is generallyacknowledged to be one of the greatest base¬ball players who ever lived, if not the grea¬test.”A photo of Honus Wagner, the legendaryPirate shortstop, chocked halfway up thebat and looking contemplative, is matchedwith the more favorable description, “Thosewho saw them all are divided as to whetherTy Cobb, Babe Ruth, or Honus Wagner is the ■A * GN ‘'.VTy Cobb slides into third against the Highlandersgreatest player who ever lived ... in temper¬ament and personality, Wagner was the op¬posite of Cobb: modest to a fault, generous,sociable, and cuddly as a teddy bear, all 200pounds of him. He was popular with team-mates and opponents alike, and loved notonly by fans in Pittsburgh, but in every cityin the league.”Some of baseball’s offbeat moments arerecorded too. There are photographs of PeteGray, the one-armed outfielder for the St.Louis Brown in 1944, and Eddie Gaedel, themidget who Bill Veeck sent to bat, also for the Browns, to liven up the particularly bad1951 Browns’ season.The book also covers modern stars:Johnny Bench, Rod Carew, Pete Rose. JoeMorgan, Carl Y’astrzemski, Jim Palmer,Tom Seaver. Do they belong in the samebook with Ruth, Cobb, and Wagner? “Arethe stars of the seventies as good, as dura¬ble, as exciting as those of generationspast?” Ritter and Honig ask. “Of coursethey are.”The Chicago Maroon — Friday, July 6, 1979 — 9CalendarFRIDAYCrossroads: Free English classes for foreign women,10:00am-noon.Environmental Biology: “Establishment and utilizationof Lymphoblastoid Lines from Individuals with Chromo-som Breakage Syndromes;” speaker Dr. Earl Hender¬son, 12:00 noon, Cummings 11th floor Seminar Room.Women’s Union: 1st meeting of summer quarter. All arewelcome. 5:30 pm, Ida Noyes.Student Activities Office: Film - “Coma” 7:15 and 9:30pm, Cobb.Court Theatre: “Rosencrantz and Guidenstern AreDead” 8:30 pm, Mandel Hal.SATURDAYCrossroads: Saturday Night Dinner, 6:00. 6:45 pm — Mod¬ern and Classical Music, Brass Ensemble of University ofChicago.Student Activities Office: Film- “Silent Movie”, 7:15 and9:30 pm, Cobb.Court Theatre: “Hamlet” 8:30 pm, Mandel Hall.SUNDAYCrossroads: Foreign Students invited to picnic, privatesummer home, Ind. Register by Friday, July 6.Rockefeller Chapel: University Religious Service-Preacher: Robin W. Lovin, Sermon: “Readiness and Reti¬cence”, 11:00 am.Rockefeller Chapel: Carillon Recital, Robert Lodine,University Carillonneur, 4:00 p.m.Court Theatre: Rosencrantz and Guilnedstern AreDead” 8:30 pm, Mandel Hall. MONDAYComputation Center: Seminar - “Introduction to Super-Wylbur" 3:30-5:00 pm, Research Institute 180.Committee on the Study of Women’ Will hold its firstsummer meeting at 5:00 pm, Ida Noyes Hall, 2ndfloor.TUESDAYNoontime Concert: Chicago Opera Repertory, noon,Hutch Court.Computation Center: Seminar - “Introduction to theDEC-System 20” 3:30-5:00 pm, Cobb 107Student Activities Office: Arson, Fiery Home-GrownRock,7:00 pm, HitchcockWEDNESDAYStudent Activities Office: Film “Prisoner of Zenda” 8:00pm, Cobb.Court Theatre: “Way of the World” 8:30 pm, MandelHall.THURSDAYYoga Classes: 5:30-7:00 pm at the Blue Gargoyle.Holistic Health: Designing and Implementing your ownprogram, 7:00-8:30 pm, at the Blue Gargoyle.Rockefeller Chapel: Carillon Recital, Robert Lodine,University Carillonneur, 7:30 pm.Massage Workshop: 8:30-10:00 pm, at the Blue Gar¬goyle.Court Theatre: “Way of the World” 8:30 pm MandelHall.THE LEHNHOFF STUDIOSOF MUSIC AND DANCE.Will hold a special Workshop for Parents of veryyoung children who are not yet ready for a formalclass setting. What can be done at home and howwill be discussed, and demonstrated. Classes limitedin size, will be held July 18 and 25 at 7:30 P.M.For information call 288-3500. Young Designs bys>ELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERS1 1620 E. 53rd St.288*2900 POWILL'S BOOKS I POWftH- S ■OOK5TOHK -OWEttCASH FOR BOOKSNEW ARRIVALS:Medieval & AncientHistory, Psychologyand Science FictionPowell’s Bookstore1501 E. 57th St.955-77809 A.M.- II P.M.EVERYDAYPowell’s BookstoreWarehouse1020 S. Wabash. 8th floor241-074810:30 A.M.-5:00 P.M.THURS.-SAT.Take IC to 12thM'.UWl1 --41 7* - - Rockefeller Rlemorial ChapelSUMMER CARILLON RECITALSWithout ticket and without chargeJulyJulyAugust 512192681522295121926 Thursdays at 7:30 P.M,VERNON STUDT, Director of Music, Hyde Park Union ChurchROBERT LODINEROBERT LODINEVERNON STUDTSundays at 4:00 P.M.ROBERT LODINEROBERT LODINEWYLIE CRAWFORD, Assistant Univeisity CarillonneurROBERT LODINEJAMES R. LAWSON, Carillonneur, Riverside Church, New York CityWYLIE CRAWFORDTHOMAS REIF, Student Carillonneur, Unive sity of ChicagoWYLIE CRAWFORDAnyone wishing to hear the recital from the Clavier Room should be in the ChapelOffice no later than 15 minutes before the beginning of the recital. the frog& the peach1212 East 59th Street • Ida Noyes Hall • First FloorSUMMER HOURS11:30 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. M-FSat., Noon to 6:00 p.m.Sun., 1:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m.10 The Chicago Maroon — Friday, July 6, 1979CLASSIFIED ADS BALLET CLASSES Intermed levelbut ambitious beginners welcomeTues/Fri 5:30-7, Ida Noyes Hall. Call752 2551.SPACEFor Sale: University Park onebedroom. Walk to UC, iC, CTA, shopping, lake. Amenities: Pool, spa, TVsecurity, indoor parking, sun deck,more! Call Charles Sherman, jr.684-8510/667-6313/834-7750.Furnished-Aug. or Sept, sublet 56thand Dorchester. Beautiful old house,marvelous restoration, perfect forfamily. 5 bdrms, 2 baths, play roomsfor children. Dream kitchen, 1200 sq.ft. per floor. Garage great backyard955-8908.Experienced nurse's aide-UC studentneeds a room in Hyde Park, near UCcampus. Willing to trade sm amtbabysitting or care of elderly for someof expenses. Lakme Stanford 281 8523.R6om desired tor academic yearbeginning September or October288-5143, Molly.For rent Fully turn, house. Summera/o Full yr. 4 bdrms, garage. 2 hi. frJRL, Clinics. Call 947-0706 or 753-26i3.Large l bedroom apartment in HydePark. Excellent location. Close to U ofChicago campus. $268. AvailableAugust 1st. 947-0540/753-2525.Female Grad Student desires roomand bath w/kit. priv in Hyde Pk orKenwood home 684-2184. Part time help wanted on campus.$3.50 Hr. Next week only. Call 236-1996.Wanted: a baby-sitter to fake care of a3 yr old girl at our place in Hyde ParkMo-Fr 7:30-5:00 pm. Attractive com¬pensation; call 285 2978 after 7 pm oniy-UNLIMITED EARNINGS from yourhome stuffing envelopes. Guaranteed.FREE SUPPLIES, SEND $2.00 cashand a self addressed, stampedenvelope for a beginners kit. C.A.Enterprises, P.O. Box 7785, Chicago111.60680.R 8. L handed people wanted for ex¬periment on hemispheric specializetion. $2.50 hr. Call 7-6256 or 3-4708.SECRETARY/RECEPTIONISTFUll-time, permanent position. Dutiesinclude routine typing, filing andduplicating, light bookkeeping,telephone, general reception. Previoussecretarial or campus ministry ex¬perience useful. Contact: John Hurley,Calvert House, 5735 S. University288-2311. LOST ANDFOUNDPERSONALSFOR SALEFurnished rooms and Apts. Clean,quiet non-smokers. 363-3458 or955-7083.For August: ' bedroom in UniversityPark. S3o. Rugs and curtainsavailable 363 3458 or 955-7083.Furnished, 7-room, 3-bedroom apart¬ment on Hyde Park Blvd ; one block'rom lake in city and campus busroutes, 8rct Harte school district,Sept to June. Fam'lv or responsiblegrad students preferred. Rent 3575Call 684-2835.Man will share 7 3R house in Indian--!Dunes Park Huge private room andentrance. Complete kitchen-iaundrv.Linens, ail utilities and phone are in¬cluded. S45/week. 1219)926-4298.Sunny one-bedroom, East Hyde Park,available August 15. $235. Cali667-5638 241-6055 Sleep on a queen size extra firm mat¬tress and box spring $90, eat at 42"r ound table that opens to seat 8, $40formica top, stand on a PakistaniBokhara carpet 4' x 6' $500. Call Susandays 753-8263, 667-0634 nights.FOR SALE Typewriters (Standardund portable), fiat couch w/ mattressand pillow, travel bag, opera glasses,alarm clocks, roasting pan, swim tinsand chalk board. Call FA4-2371.Bobby Mac car safety seat. NewbornO40 lbs. $20. 493 0935.Apt. sale. Couch, 87", $105; dbl. bed,795, white shag carpet, $80; chairs,much more. Call 548 3806Garage sale July 7/8 10-6 5522 S. Kimbark. Furniture, appliances, lots ofgood stuffAIR CONOI~;GNER cOR SALF.Emerson quier kooI. 8,000 btus. Usedonly one month !ast summer- like new!Call Janet 667 3965 (evenings).°EOPLE FOR SALE Mir-Happy 23! We survived more thanthe blizzard of 79. Many more. Love,RebEric- We can make the most out ofyour summer in Chicago. How can Ireach you? It couldn't hurt to go outfor Chinese food. Denise.YOGA,HOLISTIC HEALTH,MASSAGETruly revitalize with a summer pro¬gram of yoga, holistic health andmassage beginning this week Thurs.July 12th on campus at the Gargoyle.5:30-7:00 reenergize with yogapostures, breathing, and meditation,then from 7:00-8:30 learn aboutHolistic health and design and implement your own program, finally from3:30-10:00 learn to give a completeEsalen massage based on Downing'sTHE MASSAGE BOOK with some ac-cupressure and energy work. Complete Program $75, a $20 savings.Alone, yoga $20, Holistic Health $35,Massage $40. To reserve space, callDobbi 929 7713 or 337 8100 ans serv.CAMPINGEQUIPMENT MISSING: One large, tan cat from5700 University. If seen call 753 3257ask for Lori.THE PUBISOPENSALE: tents back packs, bags used excond. outfitter ciose-out. BLAIR383-2385.SORRYMAROONS! JAMESThat is, I apologize publicly ro myfellow teammates and to "On the SpotNews" for our (Drink Like Fish’forfeiture Monday. If the yellow oresswould hke, we will schedule a gamefor practice just to see how it wouldhave turned out. Thanks to James for servicesrendered.Deluxe Large Studio Lux. Bldg, 4800 S.Lake 'Shore Drive, S/E Lake View-Heat Inch w/air Marc Realty 649-9425.Get out of Hyde Park for a month thissummer Rent our architect-designedcountry house Swim in our pond 8acres 3 becTooms Ail conveniencesNear beautiful recreation area Oncommuter line if you must go >n 2weeks, $500, month. $1000 M F363-3315. Avail. July 23 Aug. 19.Student -oorns avai'able for the sum¬mer quarter to registered Universityof Chicago students at DisciplesDivinity House, 1156 E SHh St. Centrallocation, $320 00 per quarter Pleasecall 643-4411. Rates can be pro ratedPEOPLE WANTEDRESEARCH SUBJECT5: S4.00 Derhour plus bonus for completion of ses¬sions. Talk to a graduate student forone hour per day. Up to 20 sessions re¬quired. Call 947-6537 for further in¬formation. TYPING Term papers, etc. Convenient to the U. of C. Pickup anddelivery by arrangement. Reasonablerates Please call 684-6882.I will type on IBM Selectric theses,papers, etc. Leave message at 721-’169-Therese.Computerized Word Processing toMeet All of Your Typing NeedsPerfect for: *ables/forms/statisticalwork 'dictation/repetitive t y ping/manuscripts that will need revision. Reasonable rates! For info orappt Nancy Cohen 378 5774. POSITIONAVAILABLESCENES Interesting Secretarial positionavailable at professional associationheadquarters. Requires typing (60w.p.m.) and use of word processingequipment (will train if necessarv).Position involves handling classifiedadvertisements, billing, answering thetelephone, and working with membership committees. A small amount oftravel is necessary. North MichiganAvenue location, 35 hour week, goodbenefits, salary range $9,300 S12,600Contact Or, Jul>e Virgo 944 6780 Ext.284.Are you a shrimp7 Do people alwayspick on you? Now is your chance to getback aT them! The University ofChicago needs coxwains (male orfemale'. Call: 677-0960.Do you .van* to get in shape this summer? Join the University of ChicagoCrew club. Ca11: 667 0960. TENNISLESSONSFrom former UC Varsity piaye1-Elementary or advanced. Match playtoo Brad Lyttle 324 0654. SVMrkWMIIIBHEALTH FOODS20%o OFFON ALL VITAMINSYES WE HAVEHAAGEN- DAZSICECREAM15210 S. HARPER(In Harper Court)363-1600M-F 1 1 -6:30 Sa*. 1 0-6:00|nSTANLEY H. KAPLANFor Over 40 Years The Standard ofExcellence In Test Preparation ]prepare forf MCAT* DAT * LSATl6RE • 6RE PSYCH • GRE BIO • GMATPCAT • 0CAT • VAT • MAT • SATNATIONAL MEDICAL BOARDS ■ VQE • ECFMGFLEX-NAT’l DENTAL BOARDSPODIATRY BOARDS • NURSING BOARDSFlexible Program* and Hour*KAPLAN Visit Any Center And Saa f orYivrttll Wky VI* Mtki Th* OttlenncaUacittoMl C«atorMS Madtaon Am1 SLY. 10022 (nr S4 at; TE»T PREPARATIONSPECIALISTS SINCE 111*Centm « WU,o< US Crtttv fwtti© **o.Toronto ConodJ l lugooo SwitzerlandI CHICAGO CENTER6236 N. CLARKCHICAGO, ILLINOIS60660032)764-53 51 SPRING, SUMMER !FALL INTENSIVE! |S. W. SUBURBAN19 S. LACHANCE HD.SUITE 203LACHANCE, ILLINOIS60525(332)352-5640For irtoffYiotiofi About Other C#i COURSES STARTIN'!THIS MONTH: IIIIIIIIOUTSIDE N.Y. STATE CALL TOLL FREE: 800-2^W2^|SUMMER CHS LSAT4 WK/DAT—MCATNEXT MONTH:4 WK/MCAT VtCRE CM AT 5 A! In the Heat ofreading;DfW(ESTrD<£> ATIE &3DIR- (DtHFCEDFW AxIUL §0)(E>v2>CEBITS 9(DxyjR- SfEQ-lE<LTra<t3^ OOPcr_ flPCHOjTrcDC.aJtPVO WCF A, (La a.c it a ie<5 9CD CD Q2- (LCD - (D CPiE.CR_Axiri3 V IF .tHlEIM IB^IR-SO^OIP CPU-Acid . . .Ct>-CP 8eoKSTORC5757 DNIVECVTY• f-ri 5?r-ja> * 5 •4,(15 FORTRANCLASSLearn to program in Fortran. 10 Ses¬sion class begins July 9. Cost $30. Com¬puter time provided. Come to Computation Center before July 5 toregister Call 753-8400 for more in¬formation. RESEARCHSUBJECTSWANTEDMonday thru Friday 4 pm-midnightEight great tap beers. Located in thebasement of IDA NOYES HALL.AVAILABLEIMMEDIATELYInteresting Administrative Assistantposition at professional associationheadquarters available for intelligent,self motivated person Requires goodtyping skills (60 w.p.m ), ability towork independently and with in¬itiative Position involves dealing withassociation members, maintainingsimple accounting records, makingtravel arrangements, managing amembership promotion program, andassisting the Director of the office on avariety of tasks. A small amount oftravel is necessary. North MichiganAvenue location, 35 hour week, goodbenefits, salary range $10,332 $ 13,836.Contact Julie Virgo, 944 6780 Ext. 284COMP CENTERCLASSESSummer Quarter schedule available.Class in Fortran, seminars are in¬troduction to Superwylbur and DEC20. For more information, Come tomain Computation Center, R.l. C B27or Business Office, 5737 University orcall 753-8400. SLEEPLABWanted for sleep study: people whosleep well and remember theirdreams. Payment will be $15.00 anight, for three consecutive nights. Ap¬ply to sleep lab, 5743 S. Drexel, rm 302.No phone calls, please.SAILINGLESSONSIn Lake Michigan. Individual instruc¬tion. For information: Brad Lyttle324-0654.DRINK LIKE FISHThe Pub's Co-ed softball team there isa game Monday July 9th at 6:30 pm onNorth Field,SUMMERCOMEDY Earn up to $165 as a research subjectin psychotropic drug studies in theDept of Psychiatry. Studies will beginimmediately. Minimal time requiredMust be 21-55 and in good health. CaliKarl on Tues., Thurs., Fri. 10:00^1:00am 947-1794.U.OFC.BOOKSTOREPHOTO DEPT,2ND FLOOR.753-3317.NIKON EM w/50mm f 1 8 $249 95OLYMPUS OM 10—Now in stock.POLAROID ONE STEP $29 95 plusspecial limited time rebate on film.SAWYER 570RI 110/220V slide projec-tor. $109.95.VIDEO TAPE CASSETTES (BataVHS, 3°4 IN STOCKMAXELL, SONY, 3MM, TDKCASSETTES IN STOCK.FOR RENT/FOR SALE Overheadprojectors. Opaque projectors, filmstrip projectors.Writers, actors and actresses areneeded tor the summer edition of"Success Without College", WHPK'sradio comedy program. If interested,please call Allen at 324 8486.STEPTUTORINGVolunteer tutors needed- nc previousexperience necessary. Most of ourtutoring requests are for reading. Hyou are at all interested, or you warnmore information, caM Charlie Carpatiat 753 3562 days or 752-5860 after 5. VERSAILLES5254 S. DorchesterWELL MAINTAINEDBUILDINGAttractive 1 V? and2 V2 Room StudiosFurnished or \ nfurnishni$192 - $2ylBased on AvailabilityAti Utilities includedAt Campus Bus Stop324-0200 Mrs Croaktf Ruby's MeHt CHevrolerSPECIALDISCOUNT PRICESfor oil STUDENTS antiFACULTY MEMBERSJust present your University ofChicago Identification CardAs Students or Faculty Memoersof the University of Chicago you areentitled to special money-savingDISCOUNTS on Chevrolet Parts,Accessories and any new or usedChevrolet you buy from Merit Chev¬rolet Inc.Wt GM QUALITYJS'I SERV1C€ PAflTS U ’ A<r/i Thu; (GW hrk tihGXNE&Al MOTORS RhRTS DIVISION Lt.U l\t(, \l Hu 4: 42 ik mmMER •5CHEVROLI ET72nd & Stony Island 684-0400Open Daily 9-9, Sat. 9-5 Part* open Sat. 'til Noon)•••••••••••••••••i72nd & Stony Island 684-0400Open Daily 9-9 Sot 9-5 Parti open Sat. 'til Noon••«•••••••••••••9The Chicago Maroon — Friday, July 6 1979 — 11m VOLKSWAGENSOUTH SHORE f■ ;7 :'■ ■- - •• .**„ . .vI.'V1 ittjr■ f’YK’v'. 1979 tlpfkffcllfc tllcmmiiil L'lupd5850 South Wopdlgwn AvenueSUMMER QUARTER SUNDAY SERVICESn a.m.UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICESJULY 8 ROBIN W. LO’VIN, Assistant Professor of Ethics and Society,Divinity School, Sermon: "Readiness and Reticence"IS- LARRY L. GREENFIELD, Dean of Students and AssistantProfessor of Christian Theology, Divinity School: 22 KENNETH D. HARVEY, Minister of The McCracken MemorialPresbyterian Church, Bel'fast, Northern Ireland29 BERNARD O. BROWN, Dean of the ChapelAUGUST UNION SERVICESAUGUST 5 COERT J. RYLAARSDAM, Professor Emeritus of Old Testament,Divinity School,and Professor of Bible at Marquette University12 JOSEPH SITTLER, Professor Emeritus of Christian Theology,Divinity School,and Professor of Theology, Lutheran School ofTheology19 BERNARD O. BROWN26 CLYDE STECKEL, Professor of Pastoral Theology at UnitedSeminary of the Twin Cities, MinnesotaNURSERY CAREEach Sunday during the 11 a.m. services, children under seven years of age arecared for in the childcare facilities at the foot of the stairs in the Undercroft of theChapel.CARILLON TOUREach Sunday immediately following the 11 a.m. services, there will be a Carillon CHOICE 56th STREET & UNIVERSITY CO-OP. Real fireplace, separate pri¬vate study. 2 bedrooms, oversize comb, living room dining (overlooks sunnygorgeous garden) $46,500. Charlotte57th & KIMBARK. 4 bright rooms, country kitchen, lovely built-in natural oakbuffet $44,000. Charlotte.VICTORIAN MANSION in Hyde Park with gorgeous yard. 3rd floor apartmentfor in-laws. You must see! $215.000. Call Kathy.INVESTORS!! A RARE BIRD IN HYDE PARK. Perfect rental 7-apt. building nr55th Cornell. All systems excellent! Ask Kathy about owner financing.$225,000.AS BIG AS A HOUSE! Almost 3000 sq. ft. And priced to sell! Families willlove the 10 big rooms and the 3 fu'l baths, all in super condition. Well main¬tained bldg. Nice neighbors. Nr 51st Greenwood. $79,500. Kathy.COTTAGE ARRANGEMENT 53rd Cornell. Owner wants to sell now' Sixrooms and 2 baths newly decorated plus sun porch. Kitchen modern. $60’s.Call Kathy.TRI-LEVEL BRICK near 56th & Harper. Central air. 8 rooms. 2V? baths.$130,000 Immediate possession.LARGE RESIDENCE, 2% stories, nr 54th Ridgewood Ct. 2 fireplaces, patiow/floodlighting. Ex. cond. $115,000. (currently two apartments). Charlotte „LUXURY HI-RISE CONDO. Narragansett at 50th & Chicago Beach. TraditionalBeauty. Apt has own formal reception hall with beautiful beamed ceilings.Views are spectacular from high floor in all directions. Cozy woodburningfireplace. In truly excellent condition. Priced in $70’s. Charlotte.OLD OAK TREE OUT FRONT. 56th and Cornell. 3 bedroom plus den. 2M?bath condo, near Bret Harte, very good location, with many “goodies” ... wash¬er, dryer, dishwasher, air conditioning. $79,500. CharlotteCharlotte VikstromSales Associate. Kathy Ballard 493-0666SUMMER ON THE QUADS - SOQ - SUMMER ON THE QUADS - SOQ - SUMMER ON5L44MIK CN IIITHIS WEEKnasciis NOONHUTCH COURT7 PMHITCHCOCK COURT CHICAGO REPERTORYTHEATRE: Favorite AriasARSON: Fiery Home-Grown RockFRI. July 6SAT. July 7 ComaSilent Movie 7:1 5 & 9:30 PMWED. July 11 Prisoner of Zenda 8:00 PM Only10 AM-8 PM M-FIDA NOYES HALL Bx Libkis MON.-THURS. 6:00-11:00 PMFRI. CLOSEDSAT. & SUN. 12:00 Noon-5:00 PMA LEVEL - REGENSTEIN LIBRARYTuesday, July 17 8 PM Hutch CourtTHE CHICAGO SYMPHONY STRING QUARTETthe Reynolds Cluboos