Athletic scholarships are endedby Eli SeamanThe Amos Alonz< Stagg scholar¬ship can no longer be used to at¬tract prospective athletes to theUniversity because of newly writ¬ten National Collegiate AthleticAssociation (NCAA) regulationsfor Division III schools. The regu¬lations prohibit the mention of ath¬letics as a criterion for financialawards to students.According to Harold R. (Jeff)Metcalf, director of athletics andassistant dean of students, “Thereis no longer any doubt that, with re¬gard to the department of athlet¬ics, the program as we have knownit is finished.”In order to comply with some un¬tested sections of the Division IIIcode, the form of the scholarshipwas changed once before. The1978-79 Staggs, unlike their full-tu¬ition predecessors, had to be basedon the financial needs of the recipi¬ents. That change was also an at¬ tempt to mollify members of theMidwest Collegiate Athletic Con¬ference (MCAC), many of whomhad expressed disapproval of theStagg program. But, to the finalsatisfaction of the MCAC schools,the 1979 rules were rewritten to ex¬pressly prohibit any such scholar¬ship.“I don’t think that the new legis¬lation was aimed at us,” said Met¬calf. “This move is in line with theintent of Division III to be the‘Simon pure’ division of theNCAA.”Metcalf said he approved of thechange as one in keeping with theconcept of amateur athletics. Met¬calf added that the Universitywould honor its committment tothose who had already received theaward.An ad hoc committee appointedby Dean of Students Charles D.O’Connell met Tuesday to discussthe future of the Stagg fund. Met¬calf, who chairs the committee, said, “The consensus is that wecontinue the Stagg program strict¬ly as a merit scholarship based onneed. The fund will be adminis¬tered by the office of financialaid.”The Stagg Scholarship and itsmore recent counterpart forwomen, the Gertrude DudleyScholarship, were established toattract outstanding high schoolathletes who, because of the finan¬cial options available elsewhere,might not otherwise consider theUniversity. According to Metcalf,the future of the Dudley programwould be much the same.“The governing body of women’sathletics (the Women’s AthleticAssociation or WAA) is just now inthe process of grouping itself intodivisions. There is every indicationthat their bylaws will be nothingmore than a copy of current NCAArules.”Metcalf said that he did not. how-Turo to Page 3 Jeff Metcalf: No more StaggsVol. 89, No. 5 The University of Chicago Copyright 1979 The Chicago Maroon Frida/, August 3, 1979New management fortroubled5400buildingBy Bruce Shapiro expected. Union contract talks beginby Nancy ClevelandThe 5400 S. Harper Ave. Buildinghas been placed under new man¬agement. On August 1, Realty andMortgage Co., a North side firm,assumed control of the buildingfrom Dalton Management Co. .Dalton is involved in a number ofcivic and criminal court actionsstemming from March 5, when oneperson died and twenty were madeill from a carbon monoxide leak inthe building. Subsequent inspec¬tions revealed 79 multiple viola¬tions of the building code. Tenantsfrom twenty-one apartments havewithheld rent since May and nowface eviction trials.Tenants in the building receivedundated letters from Dalton andRealty and Mortgage informingthem of the changeover on Thurs¬day, July 26. two days after Daltonhad agreed to negotiate a settle¬ment with the building’s TenantsAssociation. The change was notForty women met last Tuesdayat the Hyde Park NeighborhoodClub to begin work towardestablishing a rape victim ad¬vocacy program at BillingsHospital and other South sidehospitals. As rape is the violentcrime with the highest rate of in¬crease, up 35 percent in the lastyear in Chicago, “women face anincreasing chance of being raped,”said Anne Lahiff of the UniversityWomen’s Union. “Women have gotto get together in our communityand deal with our common pro¬blem.”The meeting was convened bythe Women’s Union and the Na¬tional Alliance of Black Feminists.Several board members of RapeVictim Advocates (RVA), a groupbased on the North side, de¬scribed iheir four-year-old pro-hL.mngs now uus rape counseling Harold Rider, president of Real¬ty and Mortgage, said his company“was asked” to take over manage¬ment, but he was “not at liberty”to say by whom, whether Dalton,the owners, whose identities areshielded by a trust, or some otherparty.Realty and Mortgage currentlymanages no other properties inHyde Park. It is also assumingcontrol of another Dalton building,a series of courtyard apartmentson the east side of the 5300 block ofHarper.Rider said Realty & Mortgagetook over the building “on short no¬tice” and that he was “not toomuch aware” of the situation atthe building. He said his under¬standing is that the main problemin the past was “a lack of commun¬ication between management andtenants,” and that “a good share”of the physical problems in theTurn to Page 3by divinity students in a trainingprogram under the hospitalschaplaincy. Chaplains areavailable on a 24 hozr basis to helprape victims. But, Lahiff noted,most chaplains are men, and can¬not accompany the victim throughher medical examination, which isoften the most traumatic ex¬perience of the crisis, she said. Andthe Billings program has a recordof little follow-up counseling, ac¬cording to Lahiff.“The trauma and shock of rapeoften comes days and weeks afterthe attack,” Lahiff said. She saidvictims also need continuingcounseling with legal procedures.At Billings the follow-up referralservice is optional, and left up tothe victim. “Chaplains can be con¬tacted, but rarely are,” Lahiffsaid. “Perhaps this is because theyare men.”“The chaplaincy program isgood, but it’s not enough, ” said oneWomen's Union member, who said Contract talks between the Uni¬versity administration and thenewly organized 1900 Universityclerical workers represented byInternational Brotherhood ofTeamsters Local 743 entered theirsecond month, with both sidesagreeing only that a final agree¬ment won’t be ready for approvaluntil at least late this month.The talks, which began May 18when the union negotiators pre¬sented the University with a list of43 proposals, are still coveringsuch basic issues as grievance pro¬cedures, seniority rights and jobbidding and posting. Salaries andjob descriptions, the two most con¬troversial issues during the pre¬election union certification cam¬paign, have not been discussed atany of the meetings held to date,according to union negotiator Re¬gina Pope.Pope, who joined the union cam¬paign a year ago, will representinitial approaches to the chaplainsabout expanding the program hadproduced responses that “were notaltogether positive,” she said.Billings gets rape victims frommuch of the South side, accordingto Susan Iridian of RVA. sincepolice will take victims to a largerhospital.“You have to start small,” shesaid, describing RVA’s growthfrom serving one hospital fouryears ago to six today. “By nowRVA has a good reputation, goodcontacts, and strong recommenda¬tions,” she said, adding. “Thehospital administrations arebehind us 100 percent.”Rape victim advocates need noqualifications beside concern andwillingness to offer help to rapevictims, Iridian said. In the Northside program, some advocateshave been rape victims and othershave not. They undergo five week¬ly 3'/2 hour training sessions whichTurn to Page 3 the campus clericals as businessagent once a contract is signed.Robert Simpson, who now handlesthe 900 member University Hospi¬tals and Clinics service and main¬tenance workers unit for Local 743,will represent the hospital cleri¬cals.An interim grievance procedure,overseen by the two negotiatingteams, was set up in mid-June tohandle employee complaints dur¬ing the negotiating period. Only"five or so” complaints have beenbrought to the grievance processsince then, according to Edward C.Coleman, director of personnel. Hecalls the number “average for thetime period.”“The situation (on campus) islow key now” said Pope. “There isan adjustment process going on aspeople realize that the union is in,and the deans realize that theycannot run their departments justthe way they want to. alone.”But Coleman differed with thisview, “I still believe, as I did inSeptember (during the campaign)that a union would be another au¬thority, and we don’t really needan additional authority oncampus,” said Coleman.But both Coleman and Popeagree that the talks are goingsmoothly so far. “We’re not at thereal dog-eyed stage yet,” saidPope.The next negotiating session isset for today, Friday, August 3,and at least two meetings are sche¬duled each week for the nextmonth.Because the final vote was soclose (only 15 votes separated the“yes” from “no” total) union lead¬ers have expressed concern thatthe clericals might be polarized. Atearly demands meetings held inMay, some clericals spoke for anopen shop contract. But accordingto Pope, the 21 clerical negotiatorselected from the University atlarge, have “decided that their ob¬ligation is to do the most for thosepeople they represent,” includingdropping any consideration of anopen shopAnd the union leaders concernabout polarization has abated in part, because “people we haveidentified who are not of a unionpersuasion have come to us withproblems, on-the-job conflicts, ask¬ing us to help, and have told us theychanged their minds about theunion,” Pope said.During the certification cam¬paign last fall, some clericals com¬plained that if the union won, meritsalary raises w-ould be abolishedby the University, in favor of a con¬tract-negotiated minimum wagebase rate.“A union contract guarantees aliveable wage for a particularjob,” said Pope. “And if the Uni¬versity chooses to reward some ofits employees, for merit, abovethat, please let them. We certainlydon’t oppose it.”Coleman doubts that the Univer¬sity will continue the merit raisesystem, however.Union negotiator must now eval¬uate each of the 1900 job descrip¬tions and attempt to define thenumber of job categories. The ne¬gotiating committee has beenmeeting with clericals acrosscampus, getting written descrip¬tions of job duties and pay scalesfrom them and now must present acomprehensive plan to the Univer¬sity negotiators, according toPope.“That’s a heck of a lot of work. Iknow, because we’ve been doing itfor years,” said Coleman He ex¬pects that the union negotiators’proposals will differ from the de¬scriptions used by the University,“because anytime you discuss jobsemployees have different views(than administators.)”The University team, ratherthan responding to the list of pro¬posals with a list of counter-pro¬posals, “is going step by step”towards an agreement, Colemansaid.“One thing we are finding is thatwe don’t have general agreementanywhere, not even in our owncommittee,” he said. “We haveour own meetings to discuss whatis best for the University, andthere are quite a few diverse opin¬ions. The chief negotiator (Univer¬sity labor attorney RichardMarcus) listens more than hetalks.”Rape advocacy program plannedBy Curtis BlackSTANLEY H. KAPLANFor Over 40 Years The Standard ofExcellence In Test Preparation\ MOAT- DAT- LSATl1 6RE • 6RE PSYCH • 6RE BIO • 6MATPC AT • OCAT • VAT • MAT • SATNATIONAL MEDICAL BOARDS • VQE * ECFMGFLEX-NAT! 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SUBURBANLAGRANGE RD.SUITE 201LAGRANGE, ILLINOIS60525(312)352-5340ROCKEFELLERMEMORIAL CHAPEL5850 South Woodlawn AvenueSunday • August 5 • 11 AM.University Religious ServiceJ.COERTRYLAARSDAMProfessor Emeritus ofChristian Theology, Divinity SchoolProfessor of Bible,Marquette University,Milwaukee, WI“THE MYSTERY,AND RENEWAL” ( Ruby's Merit ChevroletSPECIALDISCOUNT PRICESfor all STUDENTS andFACULTY MEMBERS iJust present your University ofChicago Identification Card.As Students or Faculty Membersof 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 In:.GM QUALITYSERVICE PARTSGEN ERAJL MOTORS RAfiTS DIVISION (>t.A I hut (irvtitC\l MinnU lth V’\•tw,uCM Parts"72nd & Stony Island 684-0400Open Daily 9-9, Saf. 9-5 Parts open Sat. 'til Noon1 ,’Sm VOLKSWAGENSOUTH SHORE72nd & Stony IslandOpen Daily 9-9, Sol. 9-5 Part* open Sat. 'til Noon Ex tQhriiiSaturday, August 4th is the lastday Ex Libris, the RegensteinCoffeeshop, will be open thissummer.Ex Libris will reopenon Saturday,October 6 at 12:00 noon.you thru!PPPPPPPJPPPPPPPPPPPCourt Theatre PresentsThe Chicago OperaTheater Production"COSI FAN TUTTE"Aug. 4th8:00 p.m.HUTCH COURT$7.50 Gen. adm./$5.50 Stud. & Sr. Cit.753-3581Spokesmen Bicycle Shop501 Hyde Park Blvd.Selling Quality ImportedBikes.Raliegh, Peugeot, Fuii,Motobecane, WindsorAnd a fall inventoryof MOPEDSOpen 10-7 M-F, 10-5 Sat.11-4 Sun Rollerskates for684-3737 Sale or Rent. WOMEN'S UNION COFFEEHOUSEWed. August 8, 8:00 p.m.Ida Noyes West CourtyardFOOD MUSICfWomen and their friends welcomeIn case of rain: libraryLAST CHANCE TO JOIN OUR SAILING CLASSFinal Session of the U. of C. Sailing Club Summer Lessons:Four hours once a week for six weeks beginning August 11 th and12th. Come to Ida Noyes Tuesday August 7th at 7:30 p.m. tosecure your place. Preference given to those who pay then.$10 membership plus $ 40 class fee2—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, August 3, 1979By Rebecca LillianThe Ancient .Greeks used the inconsistentelements as gods; modern Americans usetechnology. While both gods are essential tolife as we know it, at times they are alsodeadly. We live with constant contradic¬tions.Chicago’s Museum of Science and In¬dustry epitomizes these contradictions. Thereplica of Ancient Greece that was thePalace of Fine Arts at the World’s ColumbiaExposition in 1893 now houses 14 acres oftechnological achievements — evoking atonce admiration and cynicism.A walk-in model of a pulsating humanheart, phone calls to Donald Duck, and ahuge rotating washing machine are amongmy more vivid childhood memories. As Irv¬ing Paley, University alumnus and directorof public relations for the Museum says, theMuseum is one of those places people neverforget. But, when I returned recently for atleast the fiftieth time, my childhood teacherof the wonders of science seemed to bemerely a series of goodwill advertisementsby big business and government. It was sortof like discovering that a favorite campcounselor hates sing-alongs. There isalways something new to learn there,though.I began my visit with a stroll through“Philosopher’s Park’”, part of ContinentalBank’s “Money Center.” It was like walkingonto a mechanized page of The WorldlyPhilosphers. While turning cranks and pull¬ing levers, I learned some interesting triviaabout Marx, Smith, Ricardo, and Keynes.Yet none of them were as exciting aswatching small children, too young to read,being encouraged to push and spin in aworld where we are too often warned, “Donot touch.”Still, the children were hardly aware thatthey were seeing biased exhibits. A recent50-page report by Howard Lerner of theCenter for Science in the Public Interest ac¬cused the Museum of being “a veritablesupermarket of corporate logos.” Perhapsif someone other than the corporationsthemselves presented the material, moreobjective explanations could be provided.Technological advancement demands thatwe rationally weigh our priorities. Thiscan’t occur if the people with power andmoney are tipping the scales.Standard Oil’s exhibit “Petroleum”features plastic chairs that move along aconveyor belt through a dark tunnel. Abooming Big Brother voice explained thatmost of the things associated with the GoodLife depend on an abundant supply of cheapenergy. He went on to say that “men of vi¬sion” created our magnificent free enter¬prise system and democratic society.(Women of vision apparently did not exist.)ScholarshipsContinued from Page 1ever, ex¬pect any devastating effect on varsitysports. “Our applicant pool has always beennarrowed by our reputation as a ‘bringmind, leave body’ type of institution,” saidMetcalf, who noted that several sehools hadfound it ironic that the University offeredand fought for a full athletic scholarship.“My hope is that the intervening yearshave helped to undo that prejudice,” hesaid.5400Continued from Page 1buildinghave been solved. He said he intends to con¬tinue and add to the repairs initiated by Dal¬ton “as soon as we get our feet wet.” Dal¬ton’s repairs had included plastering,plumbing, and a $39,000 contract for work onthe electrical system, which required sub¬stantial re-wiring.In his letter to the tenants Rider said “Weare aware many of you have expressed yourdissatisfaction with the manner in which thebuilding has been operated in the past...Wewill be most happy to confer with you re¬garding any complaints or suggestions youmay have” about the operation of the prop¬erty.Rider said the company has spoken withabout twenty tenants, and that he has per¬sonally spoken with five or six. He has notyet met with the Tenants Association, whichrepresents the striking tenants and about 20 -featureIn gods we trust?“Child of the pure unclouded brow David AAi,lerand dreaming eyes of wonder,” — Lewis CarrollHow ironic that a motorized sideshow isused to convince us to conserve energy.Some Museum exhibits, Yesterday’s MainStreet, for example, have remained fun foryears. The block-long brick street is filledwith relics of Old Chicago, circa 1920.1 spot¬ted only one inconsistency here: the nickelo¬deon, showing silent films now costs a dime.I forget what the Money Center points to asthe cause of inflation, but I still enjoyCharlies Chaplin.It’s not surprising, in this disco decade,that the Museum has resorted to using neonand glitter for its newer exhibits. I am sur¬prised, though, that they appear in theChicago Bicentennial Committee’s two yearold exhibit called “Chicago.” It was disap¬pointing to see this no-frills town beingdescribed in such a flashy, superficial man¬ner. Whatever I may think of the late MayorDaley, to whose memory this presentation isthe cause of inflation, but I still enjoy Char¬lie Chaplin.Then I found it: the exhibit that totallyredeemed the Museum in my eyes, that con¬vinced me to be wary of unreflectivecynicism. An odd little, very old exhibit call¬ed “Civilization Through Tools” seemed toembody all that can be good about theMuseum of Science and Industry.One small wall was filled with actual andmodel tools, displayed in chronologicalorder. Prehistoric knives, Early Americanaxes, and modern tool and die machines ly¬ing side by side, enabled me to put technology’s fragmented history together.No corporation can patent these roots of ourmechanical gods, because they exist in theminds of every inventor and user ofmachines.In and of themselves, tools are naked, un¬commercial. Yet it is crucial to determinewhere Science ends and Industry begins. Anall-purpose axe can complete an entire task,whereas a piece of industrial machinery cancomplete only an alienating fraction" of atask. At the “Civilization” exhibit, they ex¬ist together, and propaganda is un¬necessary. Our gods sell themselves, forthey are part of us.The military, on the other hand, worksvery hard to persuade us that it, too, is agod. To help do so, the Army Corps ofEngineers provides an explanation of theecology of water that is at once complex andcondescending. I have nothing against locksand dams, but this time I could only feelanger at the Corps and nostalgia for NewBurlington, Ohio. The Engineers omittedthe story of that tiny village, which theyturned into a recreational lake in the earlySeventies. Homes, schools and stores weredrowned, and hundreds of people weredisplaced. “. . . The Museum collaborateswith industrial, governmental, and otherrepresentatives to develop the most suitablepresentation of subject matter. . .”(FACTS/1979 by Museum of Science and In¬dustry).I began to wonder if Museum officials use any discretion at all, or if, like so manytechnocrats, they believe that machines aremore than simply the results of humangenius, decisions, and errors. A visit to thepublic relations office seemed in order.Irv Paley was witty and charming. He ex¬plained that officials have refused exhibitsfrom tobacco and soft drink companies, aswell as some that they considered purelypromotional. When erroneous exhibits arespotted, officials request that they be cor¬rected. Apparently, the CommonwealthEdison exhibit on nuclear energy, which lastyear was the cause of numerous complaints,criticisms, and demonstrations by variousantinuclear groups, is being updated.The conversation with Paley left merefreshed, and ready to join him on a tour ofthe Energy Lab. Some of the U.S. Depart¬ment of Energy’s presentation is poweredby 5,769 photovoltaic solar cells, mounted onthe Museum’s roof. The solar fountainfascinated me, but I was down there to seeChicago Pile-1.C.P.-l, as it is known in the business, wasbuilt under West Stagg Field. There, onDecember 2,1942, Enrico Fermi’s graduatestudents held the rods that supported thematerials of the Manhattan Project. Occa-tionally, I used to wonder if C.P.-l still layradioactive under Regenstein. I alwaysthought twice when I drank coffee from A-level.As I left the Museum, I glanced at thebeautiful lagoon and recalled the wonderful3-D description of mitosis, the interestingtrivia at I.B.M.’s “Mathematica,” the luciddiscussions of diabetes, cancer and heartdiseases. Yet the same Museum offersinexcusably little on labor-intensivetechnologies, enables the Army Corps ofEngineers to forget the former citizens of aruined town, and allows CommonwealthEdison, even after the Three Mile Islanddisaster, to call nuclear energy a “gentlegiant.”The Museum of Science and Industry isconfusing. Fire and water are dissected andexplained there, and the modern deities ofthe laboratory are demystified. But remov¬ing mystery in a subjective manner can beworse than leaving things unexplained.Creators of technologies have a responsibili¬ty to show the messy, unholy side of levers,buttons, and machines.We all create technologies. We’re givenchemistry sets as children, and required toattend physics labs in college. At an earlyage, we learn that we must figure out forourselves which buttons are safe to push,and we trust our teachers, out utility com¬panies. and our museums to help us. Wew orship automation, but close our eyes to itssource. And we are blessed — and cursed —with electric lights and pencillin...with asse¬mbly lines and the atom bomb.others.He said he has only dealt with one tenantsunion in the past. “I generally have not felt aneed for tenants unions,” he said.Rider is secretary of the Chicago Board ofRealtors and a member of the Mayor’s com¬mission to rewrite the Building Code. In thepast he has been on the Finance Committeeand board of directors of Chicago Real Es¬tate Board and on the legislative committeeof the Illinois Association of Realtors.The impact of the changeover on the evic¬tion trials and negotiations is not known. Sixtenants were scheduled to appear in evictioncourt yesterday, but all six cases were con¬tinued until next Thursday by agreementbetween the tenants’ attorney Edward Voci,and Dalton’s attorney, Joseph Ginsburg.Voci believes that it is possible the six casesmay never come to court. “The negotiationssession (scheduled for Tuesday, August 7between the new management company andthe tenants) may end everything,” he said.Neither representatives of Dalton northeir attorney were available for com¬ment.Rape-Continued from Page 1 ——are mostly informational,covering medical, legal and police pro¬cedures. They also take part in role playing,to prepare them for possible situations, andlearn empathic listening techniques.The role of the rape victim advocate is toaccompany the victim through the entire medical and police procedure, explainingwhat is going on. advising her of her options,and telling her what to expect next. “It’s im¬portant for her to know that there’s awoman there, on a continuous basis, whobelieves her,” Iridian said.The advocate monitors the collection ofcorroborative evidence, Iridian said.“Many cases get thrown out because of pro¬blems with the evidence,” she said.Iridian said RVA is apolitical, “becausewe offer help to all kinds of victims.” Advo¬cates will not pressure a victim to prose¬cute, she said, but will advise a victim of heroptions.Advocates help the victim “regain controlover her life,” Iridian said, “and by helpingher to readjust to her normal routine at herown rate.” They will help with housingneeds, problems with interactions with ahusband or friend, emotional problems, andproblems with court procedures in thefollowing months.“The victim needs to be able to find outwhere and when the trial will be, and the ad¬vocate will know who to contact,” Iridiansaid.Iridian described the Illinois Rape VictimEmergency Treatment Act, which requireshospitals which treat rape victims to submita plan to the state, which must include ap¬propriate counseling in the emergencyroom.“The State Act says explicitly thatvolunteer groups can meet this require¬ment,” Iridian said. The South side womenat the meeting would be “offering hospitals a free service they would normally have topay for.” she said. The hospital can be reim¬bursed for rape victim treatment, thoughthis is not publicly known and rape victimsare generally billed for their treatment. Iri¬dian said.The group will meet again this Tuesday at7:30 pm at the Hyde Park NeighborhoodClub. 5480 S. Kenwood Ave.Ex Libris, the coffeeshop on the A level ofRegenstein, will close tomorrow for the restof the Summer Quarter. Riley Davis, direc¬tor of student activities, said the shop wasclosed because students were not using thelibrary during the evening hours and there¬fore the coffeeshop was operating at a loss.Davis also said the Frog and the Peach, acampus eatery in Ida Noyes Hall, would beclosed on Sundays for the rest of the Quarteralso because of lack of customers.The Chicago Maroon—Friday, August 3, 1979—iEditorialThe tenants of 5400For students and others on a fixed, low, or even middleincome, living in Hyde Park can be precarious at best.Between the developers out to turn a fast profit throughcondominium conversion and the many landlords andmanagers of rental properties who combine high rentswith low maintenance, those who rent apartments in ourcommunity often find themselves unwanted, unhappy,and unsafe.For the tenants at 5400 S. Harper Ave., the problems oftenancy have been magnified to tragic proportions. Whennegligence by the building’s owners and management ledto the death of one tenant, the hospitalization of fourothers, and 79 multiple violations of the Building Code,the tenants chose to take action.They formed a tenants association and began to with¬hold rent and to make claims for back rent which they felthad been paid in excess of a reasonable rent for such abuilding. They also demanded continued inspection of thebuilding to assure compliance with the Building Code.Now the tenants are faced with eviction proceedings.Rather than receiving support from government agen¬cies designed to protect tenants from abusive landlords,the tenants have found that these agencies are a part of a-Letters toto any promises Dalton may have.Over thirty tenants, then, are stillfacing eviction. The 5400 HarperTenants’ Association has been themajor impetus behind the continu¬ing investigation of Dalton by boththe Building Dept, and the State’sAttorney. If these concerned ten¬ants are evicted, there will be noone left at 5400 Harper to force Dal¬ton to account for their role in lastwinter’s tragedy, in which the livesof all residents were endangered,and one life lost.As long as such negligence goesuncorrected in our community, thepossibility of future fatal accidentsremains. The investigation of thecause of the March 5th carbonmonoxide leak at 5400 Harper mustbe continued, and the existingbuilding code violations in thisbuilding repaired. The eviction ofthe tenants who have been workingto bring about such investigationand repair is both vindictive andself-serving, on the part of whoev¬er is managing this building. It isironic that punitive action can betaken against victimized tenants,by the agents responsible for en¬dangering their lives. The tenantsof Hyde Park have the right to livein their apartments without fear ofhazardous conditions, or landlordretaliation. As a community, wehave the obligation to see that rightprotected.Susan Griffingraduate studentin English—The Chicago Maroon—Editor: Andrew PatnerManaging Editor: Jacob LevineGrey City Journal Editor: David MillerCampus Editor: Jaan EliasCommunity Editor: Nancy ClevelandFeatures Editor: Mark WallachLiterary Review Editor: Richard KayeSummer Sports Editor-: James Allen FillBusiness Manager: Frank ByersAd and Office Manager: Leslie WickGraphics: Chris PersansJustice For All: Curtis BlackStaff: Rebecca Lillian, Dan Newman, Scott Rauland, Eli Seaman,Bruce Shapiro, David YufitThe Chicago Maroon is the student newspaper of the University ofChicgo, published on Fridays during the Summer Quarter, Editorialand business offices are located on the third floor of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212E. 59th St., Chicago, 60637. Telephone: 753-3263.We welcome letters and comment. Correspondence should be ad¬dressed to the Editor and should be typed and triple-spaced. Lettersmust be signed and the writer should identify his or her connection withthe University or the community. Names will be withheld at the writer’srequest. All letters become the property of The Maroon.4 —The Chicago Maroon—Friday, August 3, 1979Headline apologyTo the Editor :I was shocked and dismayed atyour sensationalist headline “LabSchool teachers may strike.” No¬where in the article do you provideany substantiation for such aclaim. Furthermore, those of us onthe faculty who are sensitive to thesituation do not see it in such blackand white terms. These are com¬plex negotiations in which ourunion is involved. Sensationalismof this sort is of no service to eitherside and merely clouds the realissues. Yours is a shockingly sim¬plistic view.Susan H. ShapiroSocial Studies Dept.Laboratory SchoolsMember, Faculty Assn.The Editor Replies:The choice of that headline wasindeed unfortunate and I apologizeto our readers and to the writer ofthe story.Support thetenantsTo the Editor :I would like to point out that thecrisis at 5400 S. Harper is not over.As of August 1st, the building willbe managed by the Realty andMortgage Co., who cannot be held larger system that defends the owners. For demandingthe right to a buildng that is a habitable place to live in, aright protected by state law and city ordinance, the ten¬ants have been told that they have no right to live in thebuilding at all.Reform of the system that allows for such neglect andmaltreatment and a correction of the abuses in this spe¬cific case are both needed. Chicago needs rent controllegislation and tougher enforcement of the Building Code.The city also needs laws that would curtail the excessiveconversion of rental apartments to condominiums. (Per¬haps if Paul Berger and the Hyde Park Federal Savingsand Loan were really concerned with “stabilizing theneighborhood,” they could buy the 5400 Building andbring it up to code.)Immediately, however, the tenants need financial andpractical assistance in their legal struggles. Public pres¬sure is needed to force building inspectors and the state’sattorney’s office to perform thorough investigations. Andwe urge all to attend this Sunday’s block party at thebuilding from 1 pm to dusk. The tenants have been fight¬ing a taxing battle, but it is a battle for all our communi¬ty.the EditorTenant busterTo the Editor:On March 5, one person died andfour others were hospitalized dueto carbon monoxide poisoningfrom a defective gas boiler at 5400S. Harper. Today, the tenants ofthis building, still fighting to maketheir building safe, face possibleeviction. The latest tactic of thebuilding’s owner has been to turnover the management of the build¬ing to a realtor who specializes inbreaking tenant organizations.Why has the landlord, in thewake of such a tragedy, respondedto the tenants with all-out resis¬tance rather than with coopera¬tion? It is because the landlordknows that what is really at stakeat 5400 S. Harper is whether or nothe can protect the whole system bywhich landlords run the city’shousing for big profits without ac¬cepting responsibility for the con¬sequences of how they manage thishousing.I hope the people of Hyde Parkwill realize that the 5400 S. Harpercase affects us all and respond byjoining these tenants in their de¬mand for safe and decent housingfor everyone.Ralph ScottHyde Park Tenants’ Union5400 plightTo the Editor:Since the death of a woman bycarbon monoxide poisoning from adefective gas boiler at 5400 S.Harper last March 5th, the tenantsof this building have been involved in a time-consuming and expensivestruggle to make their buildingsafe.First, the tenants organized andtried to negotiate with their land¬lord about getting crucial repairsdone and getting independent veri¬fication of the safety of their boiler.Their landlord refused to negotiatewith them.Next, the tenants joined theCity’s suit against the landlord,seeking correction of more thanseventy building code violationsthat were found by inspectors fol¬lowing the death. Numerous con¬tinuances have enabled the land¬lord’s lawyers to block this caseindefinitely.Finally, the tenants began rentwithholding and filed a separatesuit seeking repayment of rentspaid in excess of what tenants saytheir apartments are worth. Inturn, the landlord has sued to evictthirty tenants for non-payment ofrent.By the time this letter appears inprint, the eviction trials will havestarted. Judge Sullivan has ruledthat in their eviction trials, the ten¬ants cannot present evidence intheir defense about the death, thehospitalizations, or the condition ofthe building. This suggests that thetenants of 5400 S. Harper will beseriously handicapped in gettingproper protection from the courts.Their legal rights are uncertain,and the court appears to favor thelandlord.There are serious issues at stakefor these and for all tenants in ourcommunity. The public must indi¬cate its insistence that the griev¬ances involved be redressed! Youcan aid the persons immediatelyinvolved by:1.) giving time and other re¬sources to help the 5400 HarperTenants Association in its fund¬raising block party on August 5th,1 pm until dusk.2.) urging the State’s Attorney’soffice to vigorously pursue its in¬vestigation of the death at 5400 S.Harper.3.) accompanying the tenants atcourt appearances and at times ofbuilding inspection. (Nancy Cleve¬land, 684-5478, will know times andplaces.)4.) Find occasion in pulpit andpress to protest the unjust situationin which these tenants find them¬selves.Harvey LordMinisterUniversity Church Fred Baker and the Jamaica Dancers wereone of many groups performing last Sundayin Chinatown.New Yorkerreformedby Suzanne MernykIt was a gorgeous day, a clear blue skylighted my eyes and a warm, soft breeze gent¬ly tossed my hair. It was too perfect; too per¬fect, that is, for Chicago. Chicago, you see isonly meant to be windy, and coming fromNew York City I saw its sole purpose in keep¬ing up that reputation. I vividly rememberthe fall of 1978: packing my trunks for school,and picturing myself getting blown off myfeet as I walked out of the Chicago airport.Surprisingly, it didn't happen; and I alsodidn't see corn fields growing next to thefamed Sears Tower. I was surprised at manythings, such as deep dish pizza, which I'dnever heard of; and getting replies from wai¬tresses saying ''vanilla, chocolate, and straw¬berry'' when I asked what kinds of soda wereserved. In my part of the country, soda isusually found in the form of Coke, Pepsi, or7-Up.With small grudges like these still on mymind, I went to Mayor Byrne's ''Summertimein Chicago'' festival in Chinatown last Sun¬day. I was miraculously reformed. Therewere loads of people all slowly making theirway from one table to another, buying eitherdelicious Chinese food or gifts, just like inNew York!!! As I moved along with thecrowd, I saw smiling faces instead of thetired, anxious ones I see downtown duringrush hour. All the people were there for hav¬ing fun, and for the first time I realized thatChicagoans are humans too.There are many ways of having fun, and forme eating is fun. Happily, I found many foodstands lining the streets serving an overallmenu of delicious egg rolls, skewered beef,fried wantons, dumplings, fried rice, and myfavorite, almond cookies. To my immensepleasure, there was even free popcorn, compliments of the YMCA. After my stomach in¬formed my eyes that it had reached its limit, Iheaded for the stage which sat in front of thebeautifully carved archway. A popular rockstation supplied music to walk and have funby. There was also a large supply of live en¬tertainment: singers, bands, and an impres¬sive Jamaican Dance company all crossedthe stage.My New York snobbery slowly disintegrat¬ed as I continued down the streets. Before arriving at the festival, I didn't think therewould be much to it. But the combination ofan incredible sense of togetherness and happiness among the people, the sensationalaromas of food, great entertainment, and abeautiful day to top it off, all left me with anew feeling of optimism about Chicago.. Viva PrimaveraaPrimavera Vol. V, 1979.by Ron GagnonThe latest volume of Primavera, happily, iscrammed with all the vitality and jubilant en¬ergy one hopes to find in the work of new writ¬ers. But there is a curious, unexpected* ele-| ment of maturity and pride as well, a deepstrength of experience uncommon in first cre¬ative efforts. The poems and short stories0 share a subtle tone of tempered youthfulness,of patient growing and living with other» things and other people.A portrait drawn by Penny Simmons-Sholl,H set in the opening pages, seems to gaze quiet-I ly over the contributors' work, to capture thisR collective mood. It is the face of an old woman5 sketched sparingly in charcoal over a feature-X less grey background. A knowing, almost sadft half-smile betrays age, devoted years of fami-| ly and children, watching in heavy-liddedp eyes.The woman is mother, grandmother, aunt,neighbor, friend — any of the women writingor written of in the pages that follow. She isnot a voice of the "me generation," nor is shea feminist cliche. Far from bitter self-exile orobsessive, anxious introspection, she is athome in her many worlds, and a competentobserver and capable teacher of its manyaspects. She speaks not of the promise ofsome elusive, submerged center of miracu¬lous individuality, but of the discovery of new| terms of trust and new meanings of depen-dence in her relations with others.Friederike Nelson's short poem "Mother"is exemplary. In four progressively intimatestanzas she reworks an ageless relationshipin a metaphor of startling, sustained original¬ity: "I am your image in the sand, /the sisteryou never had/removed by one wavebeat oftime." Nelson comes to empathize with her**Drug Stabbing Time**by Old JulesI bought more of the same dope, which might havej been a mistake since it no longer seems that excep-1 tional in taste. I think this is a pretty normal reac¬tion for people whose relations with dope are serially monagamous — rather than an open marriage,(you need a lot of friends with different sources), or' a fulfilment of harem fantasies, (I bought this inf 1976 and it grooves like a dream . .).Out of space last time, the following disclaimer> got lost: The following (all this) purports to be con-; sumer advice for those forced to use drugs. The GC J, does not support Drug Abuse. This is not an endorse-. merit of any particular dope or dealer; it is not in¬tended to make anyone upset, so cool out. Well, per¬haps some parts may be intended to offend some' people, but they will not deal with drugs. Samplesi for review may be submitted; non return is guaran-i teed.i* Even without this solicitation, I received one com¬munication last week. Sadly it contained no samplesf for review, but rather this on—the—scene report:"AH my acid trips have been like Woody Allenmovies," remarked Anne, as she, Debbie, and Iwere kicked out of another North Clark street bar.- Anne is seventeen, and gorgeous — but beauty with-' out an ID gets you nowhere. She and Debbie werer discussing their 'Heavy Experiences' ... All my1 'Heavies' were quite dated, tied to back then And» now the eighties approach us — or so they say. That'was then, this is whatever."Perhaps we could have a whole series of such vi-* gnettes: "Shooting-up with you always makes thesebathrooms more romantic Jim," she said, "and thisf is pretty clean stuff." "Shut up," he said, overcomeby nausea.' Anyway, I know that this is "whatever", and I in-j tend to deal not only with drugs, but the 'stabbingI time' also; with politics, music, and the Hyde Parklife, as all associated with dope. Many of us feel the' contradictions of being a student here, of having' both drugs and Regenstein, of learning Greek and; going to the Tiki. As students, especially in the sum¬mer, out of school, we are marginal members of twocommunities, the largely black urban community,| and the University establishment. We are really ac-» ' ceptable to neither group, nor are they completely’acceptable to us.After spending the afternoon, thinking about howadvertising draws in even the most reluctant vic¬tims of capitalism, I went to the north side for dinnerwith some friends. As we were in this black fiat con-I vertible, top down, the four of us getting high whilewe drove downtown, I realized how necessary it wasthat this was our "own unit"; the same value heldby all the commuters I think should be taking publics transportation. More contradictions.But we were there, escaping the pressure of an¬other Hyde Park summer, our friend mugged goingto a party, people being busted for dope on the CTA• and at the point, or worse being shot . . . But us—J high, the cool clammy wind blowing in our faces. Pei versely beautiful weather. We felt free, like we hadescaped. mother as she recognizes the futility of tryingto disassociate herself from her own cultur¬al and sexual inheritance. The poem is anacceptance of her mother's struggles andhopes as her own: "and my hands fill withfrail skeletons/of small seacreatures—/yourstranded dreams."Nelson's poem is weakened by a lack of bal¬ance and symmetry, and by imagery thatdoes not maintain the precision of its first fewlines. Like much of the work in Primavera, itpreserves a clarity and power within writingof less than consistent workmanship. Such isthe case with Cynde Gregory's "he spokethrough me," which departs from its artfulbrevity — "why won't he eat said/aunt lilyand grandmama and even/our own mim saidwhy/won't he eat..." — to stumble throughawkward syntactical problems. Martha Sher-word's whimsical interpretation of weekdayroutine is also a study in contrasts, exhibitingthe quality product of honest labor side byside with easy and cheap cliche: "On theBoard/on the wagon/on the make/Friday."On the other hand, Marion Blanton's dis¬turbing short story "Options" is polished andquite well executed. Blanton's first publishedwork, "Options" is rich with invention, anddisplays a remarkable attention to detail. An¬other short story, Shouri Daniels' "Picasso's Chicago," is a major disappointment. Danielsshows an unfortunate lack of restraint in heroverbearing narration, and with virtually nodialogue the characters mark time withdreary caricatures of each other. Whathumor relieves the otherwise bloated serious¬ness comes from unintentional neologismsand such awful earfuls as "That soberedSarah some."Strangely enough, in his year's Primaverathere are a good number of writers like Dan¬iels who have been previously published, somany that one wonders if Primavera's com¬mitment to "encouraging new writers andartists by publishing their work" is not beingcompromised. Among these more establishedwriters, those deserving of praise are Mar¬guerite Bouvard, Jane Nitzsche, BrigetteFrase, and R. E. Sebenthall. Sebenthall takesan aggressive stance toward long-standinghypocrisy in "The Serpent's Corner," a sassy,irreverent reappraisal of sacred male myths.Sadly, it is one of Sebenthall's final works:she died last January. The poem's last linesexpress a hope for reconciliation betweenmen and the women like Sebenthall who havecarved an area of personal expression apartfrom that of men, that now "we trade...afew/clumsy words of each other's lan¬guage." Riteof passageby Ted ShenIn the past few weeks, two young musicians— one, a pianist, and the other, a conductor —made their Ravinia debuts with differing re¬sults. The pianist Peter Orth, winner of theKapell-Naumberg Prize, played the BrahmsD-Minor Concerto July 19; and the conductorSimon Rattle led the CSO in two concerts July26 and 28 featuring Sibelius Symphony #5.Orth's choice was a wise and challenging one,for the Brahms is an ideal vehicle for a youngpianist to demonstrate his technical expertiseand musical sophistication. Orth, under theguidance of veteran conductor Kiri! Kondra-shin, met the challenge with mixed success.He and the orchestra performed the firstmovement admirably, conveying beautifullythe exuberance and heroic scope of the move¬ment. His playing was vigorous and clear; thedifficult passages were handled with ease andelan. The adagio movement was also welldone. Yet it was marred by Orth's inability tostress the yearning suspensions so critical tothe contemplative character of the move¬ment. It was in the rondo movement when theperformance began to falter. To begin with,the tempo was too slow, thereby making themore lyrical passages sound absolutely-leth¬argic. I suspect it was done to accommodateOrth. Even then, some of Orth’s stamina andconcentration did give away. Wrong andmissed notes were clearly noticeable, al¬though not distracting. But this affected thebalance between orchestra and piano and re¬duced the tension between the two. The movement, as a whole was not as taut and demonicas it should have been. Overall, the perfor¬mance was a fine one. Orth managed to daz¬zle, in several places, with his command oftechnique and to show, notably in the firstmovement, a keen musical sense. His was nota great Brahms First, but it was a respect¬able one. Part of the credit, however, must goto Kondrashin for providing the seasoned mu¬sical framework for Orth to work with. Hewas the necessary elder to Orth's initiate inthis musical rite of passage.Rite of passage of a different sort was instore for Simon Rattle. The Ravinia concertsmarked his conducting debut with a majorAmerican orchestra. Rattle is a very youngman (24) in a profession which often demandsage as a proof of experience. The center-pieces of his concerts, the Sibelius and Mahlersymphonies, are works of great emotional in¬tensity: pieces which are challenges even forseasoned veterans. The concert I heard had,in addition to the Mahler, Berlioz's "Cor-saire" Overture and Ravel's "Scheherazade"Song Cycle. Rattle conducted the Berlioz withmuch spirit, rightly emphasizing the crudityof the piece. The Ravel is of the category oflight French music which yearns for thespiritual by simulating the exotic. SopranoMary Burgess, under Rattle's direction, did afine job. She and the orchestra brought out theFrench flavor of the piece nicely. The realtesting ground for Rattle's talent, however,was the Mahler Symphony #4. Of all theMahler symphonies, this is perhaps the mostconcise one. Unlike the others, it does not con¬tain musical ideas or emotions carried to ex¬treme length. Its blend of pathos and bliss is afine one; one that is difficult to convey suc¬cessfully. Yet Rattle succeeded in doing so.By taking unusual liberty with the dynamicsand tempo of the piece, he made it extremelyexpressive and soulful. The only weaknesswas in the last movement when Mary Burgessfailed to bring out the child like quality of thesong. Her voice was adequate and even elo¬quent, but it simply lacked the innocent quali¬ty required for the song. The performance ofthe symphony, this minor flaw notwithstand¬ing, was a memorable one, proving once forall that conducting genius, unlike wine, doesnot necessarily depend on age.The real gem of these debut concerts, how¬ever, was Kondrashin's interpretation ofTchaikovsky Symphony #5 which followedOrth's Brahms. It was a superb one: loud,brilliant, proud, emotional and wild, just theway a Tchaikovsky symphony should be per¬formed. The orchestra was simply wonderful.For once, the often subdued string sectionmanaged to counterbalance the dominantbrass section. And both played with beautiful,rich sound. Coming after the Brahms, itdemonstrated amply the promise of a musicaladulthood.Stop & shopphoto: David YufitFree performance art nightly at the Murray School courts,54th and Ridgewood.MoviesA Face In The Crowd (U.S.1957) Directed by Elia Kazan. Pa¬tricia Neal discovers Andy Griffithand turns him into a TV star. WhenGriffith starts getting active inright-wing politics, Neal gets evenfor his dumping her for a batontwirler.The story line and plot twists arefamiliar after Network and itscousins. A Face In The Crowd issuccessful not for its antifascistmessage, but because its excellentcast, with Lee Remick and WalterMatthau in supporting roles, giveslife to the provocative theme. Aninteresting film; in fact, as I re¬call, Tom Paul Glazer wrote someof the country songs for Griffith.Friday, August 4, at 7:15 and 9:30Quantrell; $1.50 - R.B.The Passenger (Italy1975) Directed by MichelangeloAntonioni. Jack Nicholson starswith Maria Schneider in an incom¬prehensible melodrama about analienated TV journalist who ex¬changes identities with an English¬man found dead in an African hotelroom. I found the film boring;others say it's Antonioni's mostbrilliant work. Saturday, August 9,at 7:15 and 9:30 Quantrell; $1.50 -R.B.Roman Holiday (U.S.1953) Directed by William Wyler.Audrey Hepburn won an Oscar inher first American film as a prin¬cess playing hooky for one day inRome. Her short-lived romancewith Gregory Peck, an Americannwspaperman, gets her into sever¬al adventures along the way. Thislight, breezy romantic comedymakes you want to run away toRome. Hepburn is charming, asusual, and Greg is appropriatelynoble. Just the right thing for asummer day. Wednesday, August8, at 8:00. Quantrell; $1.50 - R.B.MusicChicagofest: Music, music & moremusic; last year's was fabulous.Eats, reasonably priced, frommany Chicago (and suburban —boo!) restaurants. Chicagofest's24 hour hotline — which can handle3,000 calls at once — is 936 1111.Begins tonight, closes August 12.Navy Pier, 600 E. Grand at theLake. $5, $3.50 in advance.Cosi Fan Tutte: (or, "They All DoIt.") Who are "they" and what is"it?" Well, that's what this sublime Mozart opera is all about, andlike all great works of art, it defiessimple description. Its story is hu¬mane, its orchestration superb;besides, it's great entertainment.Bring your loved one(s), and findthe grey city journal out why "happy is the man who ac¬cepts life as it really is." This Chi¬cago Opera Theater productionwill be sung in English. August 4and 8. Court Theater. 753-3581.$7.50 -T.S.Grant Park: Real-life dancersKirk Peterson and RebeccaWright will pas de deux severalpieces of incidental music. AkiraEndo conducts. August 4 and 5. Co¬lumbus and Jackson. 7 pm.294 2420. Free. — T.S.Jim and Vivian Craig: Long-timelocal (Hyde Park) folkies. Theyare good, and the atmosphere inthe courtyard is very pleasant.This Sunday, August 5. McKinlockCourtyard of the Art Institute, Michigan at Adams. 1:30 and 3 pm.443 3600. Free. Call for more info.Exhibits- EventPhotographs from the Julien LevyCollection: Back in the netherreaches of the Art Institute (Gallery 106, to be precise) there is anexcellent exhibit of photographs from the early masters, from thecollection of Julien Levy. (Notours.) There are nine Atgets onone wall. (Why are foreign streetscenes inherently more interestingthan indigenous ones?) There is amarvelous photograph of a back,shadow rippling the muscles, byCunningham. Cartier Bresson,Brassai, Moholy Nagy, Kertesz,and more. One of the most impressive exhibits of classic photo¬graphy. Once you see the pictures,there can be little doubt as to whythese folks are the well remem¬bered pioneers of photography.Excellent! Through September 9.The Art Institute of Chicago,Michigan at Adams.Monday Wednesday, Friday,10:30 4:30, Thursday, 10.30 8, Sat¬urday, Sunday, and holidays, noonto 5. 443 3500. $2, $1.50 students;Thursdays free. — 8.M.Harper Avenue Block Fair: TheLonnie Brooks Blues Band, HydePark Jazz Quintet, ChicagoCountry Barn Dance Company,and folk musicians Michael Gor¬man and Christie and Dave areamong performers scheduled. Artists, jugglers, clowns, carnivalgames for chldren, a raffle, food,and even fortune telling. This Sunday, August 5. 5400 S. Harperblock. 1 pm to dusk. Contributionsare SI; 50« for children; all moneyraised will go to the legal expensesof the tenants at 5400 S. Harper.Rain date August 12We are Gary Beberman, Curtis Black, Randy Block, Bill Brant, LauraCottingham, Ron Gagnon, Sandy Harris, Karen Hornick, Old Jules,Richard Kaye, Rebecca Lillian, Mary Mankowski, Suzanne Mernyck,Bobbye Middendorf, David Miller, Chuck Schilke, David Shute, TedShen, Bruce Shapiro, David Sueme, Wayne Tack, Ken Wissoker, andDavid Yufit. Our number is 753 3265, please call and add your voice toours.Teams chase playoff spotsBy Jim FillThe Complete Greek Tragedies, rebound¬ing from a 15-0 early closing by Pork BellyFutures one week earlier, registered a 5-2upset victory over the Penguins a week agoTuesday. The summer softball loss was thePenguins’ first and dropped them to secondplace in the Division B (coed) MaroonLeague, one-half game behind undefeatedSpam.The Tragedies broke a 1-1 deadlock in thetop of the fifth with a four-run rally. Two sin¬gles and a walk loaded the bases with oneout. Chris Green singled to right to score thego-ahead run, and the bases remained load¬ed for Patti Burdett. Burdett returned thefavor with a single to short center field, giv¬ing the Tragedies a 3-1 lead. Tom Tollefson’ssingle up the middle scored two more. Tra¬gedies 5-1.The Greeks had little chance to savortheir uprising. A right-field double byGeorge Oates, a walk to Annette Meyer (oneof five surrendered by the Tragedies), and a single to left by Lucy Anick loaded the baseswith no outs in the Penguins’ fifth. RonZamov drew a walk to force in Oates, andJoe Weber stepped to the plate representingthe lead run for the Penguins. But Weberfouled off a pitch for strike three, andGeorge Kast ended the threat by groundinginto the last of five double plays executed bythe two teams’ exceptional defenses.The Tragedies are now 2-1, tied with PorkBelly and Clonal Deletions for third place.The slugging of Ann Harvilla and RosieResch highlighted Spam’s 9-6 victory overthe Spores and consequent ascension to theleague’s top spot. Pork Belly was about tomove into a second-place tie with the Pen¬guins when a rain shower wiped out theirfourth-inning 7-1 lead over plonal Deletionsand nullified homers by the Deletions’ RichD’Ottavio and Pork Belly’s “Yogi” Yovo-vich. The contest will be replayed in its en¬tirety today at 6:30 p.m. on Stagg Field(South end). In the remaining coed MaroonLeague game last week, the Divinity Dog¬ matics whipped SSA 12-5 for their firstwin. Harder Stops HittersWinning for the third consecutive weekafter two losses, The Harder They Comedragged the B.S. Hitters down to third placein the coed White League with an 11-8triumph Monday. Lee Hess and Rick (“Iasked for it, and I got it. Toyota!”) Scanlonrocketed solo homers for the winners in thesecond inning, after which Harder led 5-0. A10-0 margin after five innings was enough towithstand eight runs tallied by the Hitters inthe sixth and seventh.The Hitters’ demise was timely for theABA Bar Stools, who assumed undisputedpossession of first place in the Division BWhite League by censoring On-the-SpotNews 10-0. The Mellow Yellow Sox sawdouble — they hit five two-baggers — asthey bleached the White Sockratics 12-3 toclimb into second place, one-half game be¬hind ABA. And guess who forfeited again?Uh-huh, Drink Like Fish, this time (theirthird such embarrassment) to Cocaine. Jimmy’s Stops Diamond HeadA tremendous two-run center-field homerun by Ron Warren gave Diamond Head a2-0 lead over Jimmy’s after one inning aweek ago Thursday. But Head was neverahead again. (“When is a Head not ahead?”“When it’s behind.”) Jimmy’s took overwith three in the second and four (sparkedby “Hefty” Spitzner’s leadoff homer) in thefourth and rolled to a 19-2 six-inning slaugh¬ter. Now 4-1 and tied with Jimmy’s for sec¬ond place in the Division A (men’s) WhiteLeague, Head will probably lose to TheHarder They Come and possibly also to theHyde Park Saints in its final two battles.Harder came from behind 3-1 after fourinnings to crush the Saints 13-3 and assumecontrol of the men’s White League. At 5-0,Harder’s record is the best of all 41 summersoftball teams. Division A Player of theWeek Charles McKinnon went 3-for-3 to leadthe Nattering Nabobs of Negativism to a12-9 conquest of the Welfare Bums, and theResearch Rats kept pace by overcoming thewinless Megabyters 11-7.CalendarFRIDAYCrossroads: English classes for foreignwomen, 10:00 a.m.Gymnastics Club: Meets 5:30 pm, Bartlettgym.Women’s Union: Meets 5:30 pm, Ida NoyesHall.Student Activities Office: Film - “A Face inthe Crowd” 7:15 and 9:30 pm, Cobb.Concert: Vassar Clements, 8:00 pm, HutchCourt.SATURDAYMobilization for Survival: March and rallyfor the 34th Anniversary of Hiroshima bomb¬ing, 11:00 am, Michigan and Randolph. Infocall Andy Kerr 427-2533.Crossroads: Last Saturday dinner of theseason. Music — Renaissance - by “Espritde Corps” 6:00 pm. SUNDAYRockefeller Chapel: University ReligiousService, 11:00 am, J. Coert Rylaarsdam, ser¬mon: “The Mystery, and Renewal”.Mobilization Committee: Block Party/ArtFair to raise money for legal fees 5400 S.Harper Tenants Assoc, noon to dusk, 5400 S.Harper.Court Theatre: “Hamlet” and “Rosencrantzand Guildenstern are Dead” Marathon, 3:00pm.Crossroads: Bridge, 3:00 pm.Rockefeller Chapel: Carillon Recital-JamesR. Lawson, Carillonneur. 4:00 pm.MONDAYCrossroads: Enlish classes for foreignwomen, 10:00am.Gymnastics Club: Meets 5:30 pm, Bartlettgym.Calvert House: Vietnamese ResettlementCommittee meets 5:30 pm. Miss Kim TienPran of Catholic Charities speaking.TUESDAYStudent Activities Office: Film - “The Pas- Hyde Park Tenants Union: Demonstration tosenger” 7:15 and 9:30 pm, Cobb. support the 5400 S. Harper tenants to coin-Court Theatre: “Rosencrantz and Guilden- cide with their building inspection, 10:00 am,stern are Dead” 8:30 pm. 5400 S. Harper.Introducing:“Hyde Park’s newest, most unique restaurant” 1) Finally - a place to eat and drink thatoffers a basic menu but maintains quality,consistency, and reasonable prices.Heineken and Schlitzon tapHours^Tam^npmDa^ Original HouseDrinksPhone 241-65926—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, August 3, 1979 Noontime Concert: Mike Jordan, 12:00 noon,Hutch Court.Gymnastics Club: Meets 5:30 pm, Bartlettgym.Mobilization Committee: Biweekly generalmeeting, 7:00 pm, Ida Noyes.Concert: Opera Repertory Theater, 7:00 pm,Hitchcock. cloister of Ida Noyes Hall. Beginners arewelcome, all dances are taught and called,8:00 pm.Women’s Union: Coffeehouse, 8:00 pm, IdaNoyes West Courtyard.Student Activities Office: Film - “RomanHoliday” 8:00 pm, Cobb.Court Theatre: “Rosencrantz and Guilden-WEDNESDAYCrossroads: Enlish Classes for foreignwomen, 2:00 pm.Gymnastics Club: Meets 5:30 pm, Bartlettgym. At 6:00 pm, gymnastics club is holding abeginners class, also in Bartlett.Country Dancers: Dance traditional Britishand American folkdances outside in the stern are Dead” 8:30 pm.THURSDAYWHPK: Conversions at Large — J. Heggles-mith interviews Joe X. Price, author of“Redd Foxx B.S.” 4:00 pm.Gymnastics Club: Meets 5:30 pm, Bartlettgym.Court Theatre: “Way of the World” 8:30Sfyectl Sau312 / 493-066656th STREET - A CONDO - 56th STREET - A CO-OP - 56th STREET - AHOUSE... We’ve got ’em all - some being offered for the first time.ONE BEDROOM CONDO - All natural wood (never painted in the first place).Modern kitchen, formal dining, stone and Tudor fireplace (ornamental) in L.R.Handsome Tudor building, well-lighted & landscaped near 56th Blackstone.$50,000. Charlotte.STUDY, 2 BEDROOMS, large comb. LR-DR, real fireplace. Bright southernlight - near 56th University. Choice ... choice. Only $42,500. Ask for Ken.NEAR 56th HARPER - Over 2400 sq. feet - eight room modern townhouse.Central air (new). Like a model - move-in condition. Owner anxious. Makeoffer. $128,000. Charlotte.NEAR 57th BLACKSTONE - Comfortable family living in gracious historicnine room brick home. Library - formal dining - large living room has bay win¬dows, natural fireplace. 5 BR upstairs. Professionally landscaped front & backgarden. Charlotte.A GOLDEN ERA HOUSE IN A GOLDEN AREA. Near 57th Blackstone. Ninerooms as lovely as they were in 1896. Library, woodburning fireplace in livingroom. Window bays - interesting contours everywhere. . .and all in modelhome condition. Enjoy an immaculate Japanese garden. You can move rightin. Price and appointment by calling Charlotte.A SLICE OF THE PIE IN THE SKY. One bedroom, but a view of the world.5401 Hyde Park Blvd. High floor, perfect for singles. $48,500. Charlotte. SEENOW.LUXURY HI-RISE 5 ROOM CONDO. Narragansett at 50th & Chicago Beach.Traditional beauty. Apt. has own formal reception hall with beautiful beamedceilings. Views are spectacular from high floor in all directions. Woodburning.fireplace. In the $70’s.56th & HARPER - $128,000. Eight room TRI-LEVEL BRICK. New central air,patio. Excellent move-in condition. Charlotte.ELEVEN ROOM VICTORIAN FRAME RESIDENCE. 54th & Ridgewood Court.Systems excellent. Two working fireplaces. Sunny, friendly house with sunnyfriendly neighbors. $115,000. Charlotte.WOULDN’T YOU RATHER HAVE A HOUSE? A six room apartment can benice but a whole little house in the same price range can be a joy! All systemsare excellent, a huge country kitchen. Near campus at 55th-Ridgewood Ct(between Dorchester & Kenwood). $79,500.NEAR HYDE PARK BLVD. & DREXEL, 2nd FLOOR CONDO. New furnace,wiring, roof, kitchen, baths, windows, etc. 6 rooms, 2 baths. $48,000. Couldclose quickly. Ken or Kathy.ON THE LAKEFRONT Near 73 & Drive. A well cared-for co-op - seven room,three baths. Can you believe only $3£,0G0. Charlotte.For Sales Information, Call...CHARLOTTE VIKSTROM, BROKER493-0666CLASSIFIED ADSSPACERESPONSIBLE ROOMMATE sought.Male grad student in his 30's offers fur¬nished bedroom/study in 2 bdrm. apt.Laundry fac. in bldg. $135/mo. +utilities. Prefer male non-smoker. CallJohn early morning or evening493-6291 or 753-2905.Female undergrad plans to graduateDec. '79. Needs place to live in HydePark from Sept. 24 to Dec. 19, '79.Room in house or Apt. okay. Preferturn, kitch. priv up to $150 rent. Quiet,non-smoker, likes mammals. CallBecky 667-4933.Room open in 4 br. apt. on 57th St. bet¬ween Kenwood and Kimbark. $100 permo. starting 8/15.947-8184.Hyde Park and doing it up in style. 1Bdr. Apt. for rent in modern luxurycondominium Bldg. Furnished in con¬temporary natural wood and cane,wall to wall carpets, cityscape view,air conditioning. Bldg, has health club,TV security, laundry, prompt repairservices. Hyde Park Co-Op, 1C, CTAall within one block. $420/month.Avail. Sept. 10.241-7009.Mature male grad student needs un¬furnished 1-bedroom apt. starting 15Aug.-l Sept. $160-$200/mo., withinshort walk of 57 Woodlawn. Call collectafter 9 p.m. 1 -313-434-2826.LOOKING for a garage to rent in HydePark. If you can help please call Brianat 324-1536.Female roomate Ig. apt. 57th and Kim¬bark $115 mo. Call Minna at 667-7611 or721-8767.VILLA POND SOLD BY OWNER.Charming house, ideally located inCentral Hyde Park, 3 BRs, LR, Kl,study/family rm„ full bsment., laun¬dry fac., 2 full baths, 2 wdbrngfireplaces, parquet floors, modernplmbg and elec., new furnace. Newlypainted inside, out. Attractively land¬scaped front, back yards. Ideal blockfor children, warm neighborhood.Move in condition. $130,000. 324-2418.3Vt rooms co-op apartment for sale byowner 26400 furnished wall-wallcarpet, low assessment. Very close tocampus available September 1. Tomas947-5689 or 752-0174 (eves).Spacious 1 bdrm. CO-OP APT, newlyremodeled, safe well-maintainedbldg., low assess., good location.$30,000. Call Paula 947-0277, 753-2719.What a deal! Leaving the country,must sell condo 1 bedrm. Hyde ParkNewport bldg. Call 268 5046.Very large aptmnt. - 8V2 rooms - newrehab. - 1 block from SS country club -1C - CTA • library. Call 324-2700. SECRETARY/RECEPTIONIST:Full-time, permanent position. Dutiesinclude routine typing, filing andduplicating. Light bookkeeping,telephone, general reception. Previoussecretarial experience useful. Con¬tact: John Hurley, Calvert House, 5735S. University, 288-2311.Is your job Interfering with yourschool work? Reporter writing articleinterested in information, stories,gripes or ecstatically happy tales ofwhat it means to have to work while at¬tending school. Please call RichardKaye between 11 a.m. and 1 p.m.753-3265.BABYSITTER from mid-September.Mon.-Fri. 2-5 p.m. for 5 year old boyand 8 year old girl. Please phone after7p.m. 288-5674.Business and Advertising Manager forthe 1979-1980 yearbook. FinancialBenefits. Call 753-3563 days, 241-5391evenings. Ask for Laura. Keep trying.Full-time clerk-typist in publicationoffice. Some work may be done athome. Experience in non-Englishlanguages useful. Accuracy essential.Call 947-9418 from 9 to 5 for moredetails. Ask for Mr. Peltz or MissDickerson.RIGHT-HANDED MEN wanted forperception experiment. $2.50/hr. Call753-4735.The Graduate School of Business hasopenings for faculty secretaries, finan¬cial clerks, typists, and admissions of¬fice staff. Excellent typing and com¬munication skills required. Call753-4299 for an appointment withPeggy Rampersad. An Equal Op¬portunity Employer.FOR SALEHitachi compact- stereo systemphono., cassette deck, AM/FMreceiver. No speakers. 2 years old.$75.00 Call 241-5647. £1972 VW BUG, Excellent mechanics,body (reconditioned engine, clutch).New tires, brakes, muffler. Good ongas. Radio, defroster. $1600. HydePark. 363-0281 eves/wkends.Drapes: Univ. Park Condos 3 and 4window rooms. 753-2946.KING SIZE BED. Includes mattress,box spring, frame. Excellent condi¬tion, reasonable price. Call 241-6828.Complete darkroom. $300. 241-5314.Women's designer and regularclothes, coats, sz. 6-18, jewelry,leather purses, antiques, collectables,household goods, linen, etc. 955-3886.5482 S. Greenwood, Apt. 210.PEOPLE WANTEDEarn money this Summer-Subjectsneeded for experiments on memoryand language processing. Studies con¬ducted by faculty and grad students inBehavioral Sciences, Committee onCognition and Communication.Hours flexible, evenings and weekendsgenerally OK. Call 753-4718, 8 am-5pm.R or L handed subjects wanted forhemispheric lateralization studies atthe dept, of Beh. Sciences. Call753-4718 or 753-4708. Will be paid.Need a full or part time job? In¬terested in caring for children? Callthe Child Care Task Force - a referralservice 288-8392.Needed. A+ and B-(- males betweenthe ages of 18 and 30 years as blooddonors for research program. ContactRose Scott, Monday thru Friday,8:30-5.00 at 947-5033. We pay $20.00 apint.FLAMINGO APTS.AND CABANA CLUB5500 S. Shore Drive• Studio and 1 Bedroom•Furnished and Unfurnished•U. of C. bus stop•Outdoor Pool and Gardens•Carpeting and Drapes Inel.•Seruritv•University Subsidy forStudents and StaffM.Snvder-. PL 2-3800 PEOPLE FOR SALEComputerized Word Processing toMeet All of Your Typing Needs.Perfect for: tables/forms/statisticalwork/dictation/repetitive typ¬ing/manuscripts that will need revi¬sion. Reasonable rates! For info orappt. Nancy Cohen 378-5774.FRENCH TUTOR. All levels. Ex-perience in U of C reading prep. Call684-3131 early am or late pm.Looking for child care? We can helpyou find day care homes, centers, orsitters, full or part time. Call the ChildCare Task Force, 288-8391, MWF9:30-1.TENNIS LESSONS: Former UC Var¬sity player. Match play too. Brad Lyt-tle 324-0654.SAILING LESSONS individual in¬struction Brad Lyttle, 324-0654.Typing done on IBM by college grad;pica type. Term papers, theses,VERSAILLES5254 S. DorchesterWELL MAINTAINEDBUILDINGAttractive IV2 and2V2 Room StudiosFurnished or Unfurnished$192 - $291Based on AvailabilityAll Utilities includedAt Campus Bus Stop324-0200 Mrs. GroakBISHOP BRENT HOUSErniymmj The Oratory of St Mary and St JohnV I / The Episcopal (Anglican) Center atThe University of ChicagoSUMMER WORSHIP5:30pm Sung Eucharistat Bishop Brent Housenoon Eucharistat Bond Chapel5540 South Woodlawn Avenue TelephoneChicago, Illinois 60637 (312) 753-3392WednesdayThu rs d ay manuscripts, resumes, etc. LincolnPark West. 248-1478.FRENCH native college teacher offersfrench tutorials, classes all levels. Ph.268-9262.HARDWOOD FLOOR SANDING ANDREFINISHINGS. Free estimates!288-0564 Weekdays 8:00a m -9:00a m.Experienced programmer will dospecific job in Fortran or Cobol.288 1831.Experienced painter available for Int.or Ext. work. Call 324-0733 after 6 p.m.Efficient, fast, reliable housecleaning.738-3988 x 233.Be good to yourself. Melt tensionsaway. Energizing, revitalizing,musuclar message in the privacy ofyour home or office. 783-3988, x 233.SCENESRegister now for art classes at theHyde Park Art Center, 5236 SouthBlackstone Ave. Aduits and Children'sclasses will be offered during August.For more information, call 947-9656.VEG. INDIAN DINNER Sat. Aug. 11and 18 4 p.m. to7.30 p.m. Cost $2.50, In-cl. pulav, veg. curry, roti or nan.Pickles cooking lesson at 11 a m. to 2p.m., cost $5. Wellington church. 615W. Wellington near Broadway, sameday. 721-7517.INDIAN COOKING LESSON cost $5.Sat., Aug. 11 and 18 Info call 721-7517.RESEARCHSUBJECTSWANTED:Earn up to $165 as a research subjectin psychotropic drug studies in theDept, of Psychiatry. Studies will beginimmediately. Minimal time required.Must be 21-35 and in good health. CallKart on Tues., Thurs., and Fri.10:00-11:00 a.m. 947-1794.I'M NOTRESPONSIBLEIf friends come before roller disco,where does Life fit in. Anotherquotable from Jane.YARD SALESat., Aug. 4 (rain date, Aug. 5) 5718 S.Dorchester. Quality clothing, toys, kit¬chenware, records, furniture, misc.10-6.ARTISTS*CRAFTSPEOPLEArtisans 21 is looking for newmembers to share gallery space andupcoming show. For info on joiningcall Chris 493-3290 days or eves. U OF C. BOOKSTORE MOVING TOPHOTO DEPT. 2NDFLOOR. 753-3317.POLAROID ONE-STEP $29.95 plusspecial limited time rebate on film.SAWYER 570RI U0/220V slide projec-tor. $109.95.VIDEO TAPE CASSETTES (Bata,VHS, 3/4 IN STOCK.MAXELL, SONY, 3MM, TDKCASSETTES IN STOCK.FOR RENT/FOR SALE. Overheadprojectors. Opaque projectors, filmstrip projectors.KODAK Colorburst 100 list $48.50,special $34.95. BOSTON?If you're moving to Boston thisweekend and would like to share truckor would simply like somthing movedthere. Call Rand 241-5021.STUDENT CO-OPCome check out the new record andbook stock at the Co-op. Many new ar¬rivals 10-5 wkdys downstairs atReynolds Club.WANNA DIRECTOFF-BROADWAY..KODAK Colorburst 200 list $59 95,special $42.95.KODAK Colorburst 300 list $82.95,special $62.95.EXPERTS SOUGHTLooking for a knowledgeable, en¬thusiastic individual to teach a coursein Wine Appreciation as pari of the Uof C's first Program in Non CurricularCourses. Call 753-3598.If you can't tell the difference betweena Bordeaux and a Burgundy, can youfix a 10-speed? Qualified instructorsought to teach a course in Bicyclerepair. Call 753-3598.So you can't tune a bike, how about aguitar.. Instructor needed for BasicFolk Guitar course. Call 753-3598If you're not qualified to teach any ofthe above, you're qualified for studentstatus in at least three of the coursesoffered in this fall's program in NonCurriculum Courses. Other courses tobe offered include Photography, AutoMechanics, Urban Survival... Proposals for Autumn Court Studioplays due before 14 August. For moreinfo, call 3-3583.Lost: Male Spitz dog, long white hair,pink nose, answers to Kafy. Lost July27 near 51 and Woodlawn. Child's pet.If found, please call 373-0989 7-8 am or1-3pm. Urgent! Reward!CHILDCAREStimulating, educational environmentfor toddlers and Pre Schoolers.Former Fre-school Director, piagettrained with Masters degree in EarlyChildhood Education is looking forsmall group of children. Setting isspacious, conducive to developmentalactivities, including art, music, cook¬ ing and free choice, (tax creditable).Call 493-8195.CONVENIENTLYLOCATEDCOLLEGE CREDITCOURSESThe Department of Education andTraining of the U. of C. is sponsoringLoop College courses for employeesand community residents. Classes of¬fered this term are: Biology 101,Business 269 Principles of Manage¬ment, Economics 210-Principles ofEconomics, English 101 -Composition.Registration will be held July 27 - Aug10 from 8.30 till 4 p.m. at 5724 S. Ellis,Room 33. Tuition: $15.00 per credithour. For additional information callSelma Mayo, 947-5820. Classes startAugust 24,1979.* Eye Examinations* Contact Lenses(Soft & Hard)* Prescriptions FilledDR. MORTON R.MASLOV,OPTOMETRISTSContact lensesand SuppliesHyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th363-6363marian realty, inc.KODAK E-K 4 list $53.50, super special$26.95.KODAK E-K 6 list $69.50, super¬special. $34.95.Now in stock Polaroid 600 SE list$525.00, special $399.95.COLORBLIND?Color Blind subjects needed to finishexperiment in visual perception. $2.50per hour, variable hours. We need newsubjects as well as any who have work¬ed with us before. Please call 947-6081. OBITUARYDrink Like Fish. Last known residencethe Pub in Ida Noyes. Cause of death -chronic apathy or the fatal effects ofalcoholism. A distant cousin to theDrink Like Fish of the spring and asibling of TOM'S DLF of the previousyear. Left are no known survivors. Noservices will be held. Donations andflowers should be sent to Illinois Foun¬dation Against Apathy. If you care.Alas poor fish, we knew you well.LOST AD FOUNDYoung Designs byELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERS1620 E. 53rd St.288- 2900We GiveCASHFor UsedRecords1701 E. 55th684-3375USED FILES2, 3, 4 and 5 drawerletter, legal and latenBRAND EQUIPMENT&SUPPLY CO.8600 Commercial Ave.Open Mon.- Fri. 8:30- 5:00RE 4-2111 REALTORStudio and 1 BedroomApartments Available-Students Welcome-On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-5400HEAR AGAIN STEREOSells guaranteed name brand usedand demo stereo components at 40%to 70% off regular prices.SPECIAL SPRING CLEARANCE SALESTOREWIDE SAVINGS INCLUDINGEQUIPMENT LIKE .GARRARD 440 M Demo 49.95ONKYO TX1500-II Demo 179.95PIONEER SX450 110.00DYNACO SCA80 85.00SANSUIAU101 49.95KENWOOD KR6600 219.00ADVENT-SMALLER Ea. 55.00ROTEL RA312 AMP Demo 99.00GRAFYX SP10 Demo Ea. 105.00SUPEREX PR0914 Headphones ... 24.95Complete 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 338-7737The Chicago Maroon—Friday, August 3, 1979—7i...& VA//or element/Friday, August 38P.M. in Hutch Court(if rain in Mandel Hall)opening act: Ron Cricktickets at Reynolds ClubBox Off ice-$5/350 studentsPRESENTED BY COURT THEATRE ANDSTUDENT ACTIVITIES MSIanRECALLWith the Great KODAK Instant Camera.... THE HANDLE™.• Automatic exposure• No need to focus. You're infocus from 4 feet to infinityautomatically.• Low-light signal tells youwhen to use flipflash.• Takes flash pictures from4 feet to 8 feet.• Easy drop-in cartridgeloading.Special Price!SUMMER ON THE QUADS - SOQ - SUMMER ON THE QUADS - SOQ - SUMMER ONIUMER ON IHE CUADSTHIS WEEKIHIDATCCNCIKIi.1 NOON MIKE JORDANHUTCH COURT Singer-Songwriter7 PM CHICAGO OPERA REPERTORYIDA NOYES HALL THEATRE: AAenotti's "The Old Maidand the Thief"FRI.AUG. 3 A Face in the Crowd 7:15 & 9:30 pmSAT. AUG. 4 The Passenger 7:15 & 9:30 pmWED. AUG. 8 Roman Holiday 8:00 pm OnlyllltCMINCEVENES TUES.AUG. 14,8:00 p.m.HUTCH COURT JAZZantiqueA rare blending of"Renaissanceimprovisations .— tickets atReynolds Club Box Office NOWTHE FROG AND PEACH IS OPEN ON WEEKENDS SAT. Noon - 6 pmSUN. 1 pm - 7 pm |Enter from Parking Lot Door. Mno mwwns - oos - savno ih± no uiwwns - oos - savno ihi no mwwnsh:«'• - yi , THEQUADS-SOQ-SUMMERONTHEQUADS