Vol. 89, NO. 7 The University of Chicago Copyright 1979 The Chicago Maroon Friday, August 17, 1979Police arrest rape suspectBy Nancy Clevelandand Jaan EliasActing on a tip from a quickthinking rape victim, Chicago po¬lice arrested a 22 year-old HydePark man Wednesday who hassince confessed to four rapes, fivearmed robberies and a burglary inHyde Park in the past five months,and may yet be linked to othercrimes, according to police spokes¬men.Eddie Lewis, of 851 E. 53rd St.,had bonds set at $200,000 at a pre¬liminary hearing in Violence Courtyesterday. His case was continueduntil August 30.The four rapes Lewis is chargedwith occurred April 1, June 2, July27, and August 14, and the armedrobberies all involved the rape vic¬ tims, and in one case a friend of thevictim’s boyfriend.Lewis was identified followingthe August 14 rape, which occurredin an apartment on E. MadisonPark at 10:50 pm. The victim elicit¬ed her assailant’s name, during thecourse of the rape and then calledpolice. Chicago police officerschecked University Security stop-cards (cards listing people stoppedand questioned by University Secu¬rity for suspicious activities) anddiscovered Lewis’s name, and ad¬dress. Lewis had been questionedafter complaints about “peepingtoms.”Homicide/Sexual Assault Inves¬tigator David O'Callaghan led ateam of Chicago police to Lewis’sapartment, where he confessed to the Madison Park rape, early onAugut 15. Later in the day, he wasidentified in line-ups by severalrape victims and witnesses. Thatafternoon, he led police to a cacheof stolen goods, and a gun that wasprobably used in the rapes and rob¬beries, according to police. Lewisalso gave statements to the policewhich police sources say impli¬cates him in the other three rapesand in several burglaries.According to O’Callaghan, all ofthe attacks followed the same pat¬tern. “He watched people’s apart¬ments to discover when they werein and when the women werealone, then he would enter theapartment through a window- andforce or bind the victims at gun orknifepoint,” he said.Crime Statistics: August 19 TheftPurse Auto FromBeat Robbery Snatch Burglary Theft Auto2131 2 4 5 2 12132 1 0 1 4 32133 1 0 1 2 22134 1 0 4 1 02136 0 1 3 2 12141 0 1 3 0 12142 0 0 2 0 02143 0 0 1 0 02144 0 0 0 0 02145 2 0 0 0 22146 2 0 0 0 J New theater to be built for CourtRape, murder upBy Nancy ClevelandFive homicides and seven rapeswere reported in the eleven HydePark-Kenwood beats of the 21st Po¬lice District between July 7 andAugust 14, according to official po¬lice records, more than triple thenumber reported during the lastpolice reporting period.A suspect was arrested at thescene of a murder on August 6, anda killing on July 15 was declared ajustifiable homicide. One suspectwas arrested Wednesday for two ofthe rapes, and for two others whichoccurred earlier this year in HydePark.Tommie Lee Johnson, 28, wasfound shot in the courtyard of hisbuilding, at 4838 V2 S. Drexel on Au¬gust 11 at 6:30 am. Johnson was inhis pajamas, with his keys besidehim, and the rear door to his apart¬ment open, according to police,who do not suspect burglary as amotive for the crime.“The victim returned home atapproximately 1 pm, according totestimony from witnesses, wno re¬call hearing what sounded like agunshot at approximately 2 am,” apolice spokesmen said. Johnsonwas shot in the head and chest. Nosuspects have been named.A 25 year-old University of Chi¬cago graduate student was raped,robbed and beaten under the 59thSt. Illinois Central Railroad via¬duct August 14 at 9:30 pm as shewas walking back from the StonyIsland bus stop. Again, no suspectshave been apprehended.There were three rapes in HydePark on August 8. The first was at 4:30 am at 800 E. 55th Street. Thevictim was walking on the street,and the assailant pulled her into analley. At 6:30 pm a young girl waspulled off the street into a basement in East View Park and mo¬lested. And at 10 pm a woman wasraped at 54th St. and RidgewoodCt. No arrests have been made inany of these cases.Turn to Page 3 By Andrew PatnerA decision to build a new CourtTheatre building is all but final ac¬cording to C. Ranlet Lincoln, deanof University Extension.Lincoln said the “final go-ahead” will depend on the successof a major fundraising effort toraise $600,000 by October 1.“There is a very real hope for asubstantial challenge grant,” Lin¬coln said. The challenge would bemet by one other “substantial” giftand by national and local fundrais¬ing committees, according to Lin¬coln.The new building will be locatedon the 5500 block of GreenwoodAve. near the Smart Gallery. How¬ever, architectural plans have notbeen completed. Sources close tothe theatre project speculated thatthe building might not be complet¬ed tor 18 months to two years.As previously reported in The Maroon, the building will house a250-seat auditorium with lobby,scene shop, and dressing rooms,with the Theatre’s administrativeoffices remaining in the ReynoldsClub.Before arriving at this decision.University and Theatre adminis¬trators discussed the remodellingof several buildings on the campusand in Hyde Park. “But we decidedthat none of them would work.”Lincoln said.Rudall pleased“We are much more optimisticthan at any other time,” said D. Ni¬cholas Rudall, director of CourtTheatre.Rudall said that efforts will alsobe made to raise an additional$400,000 to endow a resident com¬pany. The company would start offwith five or six actors “of a betterage range than we have now,” ac¬cording to Rudall.The involvement of local actorsand the possibility of affiliating with the Actors Equity are issuesthat have not been resolved, Ru¬dall said.The next two Court seasons willbe “slightly curtailed,” accordingto Rudall. “We will be preparingfor the building and conducting au¬ditions for the new company.”The 1980 Winter season willbegin with a play by Ibsen, Shaw,or a modern American playwright,and will include a production ofMarat/Sade in cooperation withthe Goethe Institute of Chicago.Rudall said the Court Studioproductions, the amateur arm ofthe Theatre, “will continue in fullswing.”The national committee will beresponsible for gifts of $10,000 ormore and is steered by Hope Abel-son; Mrs. Glen A. Lloyd, a Univer¬sity Trustee; Stanley M. Freehl-ing; and Christopher W. Wilson,also a trustee.The local committee is still beingformed and will solicit contribu¬tions of $1000 or less.Med student suspended, will appeal decisionBy Andrew PatnerAaron G. Filler, a graduate stu¬dent in anthropology on leave fromthe Pritzker School of Medicine,has been suspended from the Medi¬cal School by a divisional disciplin¬ary committee for at least twoyears for what the committeecalled “a serious breach of medi¬cal ethics.”Filler had been charged with vio¬lating ethical standards of medi¬cine when on May 9 while workingon a story for the Reader newspa¬per, he brought a free-lance pho¬tographer into the Billings emer¬gency room without theauthorization of the public infor¬mation office.When the story appeared in theMay 25 Reader, however, it con¬tained only authorized photo¬graphs taken at a later date.The charges were made by Dr.Frank J. Baker II, director of thedivision of emergency medicine, ina letter to the Medical School’s committee on promotions andgraduations.In addition to citing the unauth¬orized photography as unethical.Baker made additional charges asto the behavior and state of mindhe said Filler exhibited when hefirst discussed the incident withhim.Baker is on vacation and couldnot be reached for comment.Filler has denied the chargesand will appeal the ruling to Uni¬versity Dean of Students CharlesD. O’Connell.The promotions committee is afaculty committee in the MedicalSchool that evaluates each medicalstudem s progress on a quarterlybasis. The committee considerseach student s academic perfor¬mance as well as other factors thatmight have bearing on a student’seventual performance as a doctor.These factors include a student’sconduct, according to Joseph J.Ceithaml, dean of students in theMedical School and chairman ofthe committee. Aaron FillerThe promotions committee meton June 21 and determined thatthere was a “serious breach ofmedical ethics,” in Filler’s case. The committee also recommendedthe establishment of a divisionaldisciplinary committee.The disciplinary committee, alsochaired by Ceithaml. in a series ofmeetings earlier this month, ruledthat Filler “be denied further reg¬istration’’ for a period of two yearsafter which he could apply for re¬sumption of studies. If accepted.Filler would be on probation for hisfirst year of resumed studies.Filler will begin work on a doc¬torate in biological anthropology atHarvard University and had pre¬viously received a one-year leaveof absence from the MedicalSchool.Attacks ruling"I believe there is no real caseagainst me,” Filler said yester¬day. “Dr. Baker admitted beforethe committee that he had no evi¬dence for many of his allegationsand that some were merely as¬sumptions disproved by the evi¬dence.Turn to Page 3Southwest AMC/JEEP Renault• '• •Two prepaid Plitt theater ticketsjust for stopping in to say Hi! ^Licensed drivers only. 1m Offer expires 9-1-79. . 'Take 55 th St. westto Western Ave.Go South 2 miles toSouthwest AMC/Jeep/RenaultAMC /Jet?.fUNAULTINTRODUCESestimatedmpg *•Better Fuel Economy than Chevy ^•Front Wheel Drive (Renault began ^est ®”ve Car Today!this innovation 18 years ago)•Independent Rear Suspension T.K.O. Deals (Tunney Knockout Deals)•More Comfort at Less Cost Than Most On A Wide Selection of Renaults!Other Small Carsl)<lily «M)(llosod SiindnvIhru I.nbor Dnyw y] I at Tunney’s ;V • ,2442 W. Columbus^OtllllWCSl (SouthwestHighway)AMC/JEEP Renault ." 434-2110— The Chicago Maroon — Friday, August 17, 1979Crews to host regattaThe First Annual Lakefront Festival Re¬gatta, sponsored by the city’s Office of Spe¬cial Events and the University’s Women’sand Men’s Crews, will be held tomorrow onthe East branch of the Chicago River.More than 25 entries from universities andboat clubs in the Midwest and Canada willcompete in the regatta, which will be held ona 2000 meter course. Competition will be inmen’s and women’s eight-oared, four-oared,and single sculling events.Races will begin just east of Lake ShoreDrive, and finish in front of the MerchandiseMart, at the north end of Franklin St. Spec¬ tators can watch the races from overheadon bridges or sidewalks along the river.The women’s crew was founded in Oc¬tober 1975, and was the first women’s crewin Illinois. The women compete in the na¬tion’s top regattas, including the MidwestRowing Championships, the Women’s Na¬tional Championships, and the Head of theCharles in Boston.The men’s team formed in 1976, startedwell but was only able to enter two regattasin 1978, with small teams. They are on therebound and Saturday’s regatta will be theirthird this year.Med studentA 15th Century rennaissance tapestry on loan to the University from the William Wood-Prince Collection was stolen from the south wall of the west transept of RockefellerChapel sometime between July 2 and July 5. The tapestry depicts a mythological sceneand measures eight feet by ten feet. University officials s;.id they will accept the tapestryback at the Chapel office, 5850 S. Woodlawn Ave., without any questions. Continued from Page 1“The committee was not particularly in¬terested in details of fact. The chairman ofthe committee (Ceithaml) was the chair¬man of a committee which found me guiltywhen I had not presented any evidence,”Filler said.CrimeContinued from Page 1The identity of the man who shot Billingsdietician Mike Matusiak on July 20 still hasnot been discovered, and the investigation,which once involved 12 police officers, hasdwindled.The South East Chicago Commission(SECC) yesterday announced a reward of$2000 for information leading to the arrestand conviction of Matusiak’s assailant. Theaward is to be administered by the ChicagoPolice Department and anyone with infor¬mation is asked to call a special 24-hour po¬lice hotline: 744-8381.On July 10 a rape occurred at the 900 blockof East Hyde Park Boulevard. Crime Statistics: July 1 - August 1 TheftPurse Auto FromBeat Robbery Snatch Burglary Theft Auto2131 5 3 8 6 112132 3 0 5 5 62133 2 1 1 11 62134 2 1 2 3 32136 1 0 3 2 22141 4 1 6 3 22142 4 1 5 2 22143 1 0 0 2 22144 1 0 1 2 22145 1 0 3 3 82146 However, Ceithaml said yesterday that‘‘there were no questions at all in my mindor the other members of the committee thatthere would be fairness regardless of whowould be the chairperson.“It was not my personal desire to chairthe hearings,” Ceithaml continued. “But itwas wished and insisted by the othermembers of the committee that I serve.”Ceithaml also said that he did not have avote in the promotions committee.The members of the disciplinary commit¬tee were, in addition to Ceithaml: Dr. Jo¬seph M. Baron, associate professor of medi¬cine; Dr. Mark Siegler, assistant professorof medicine; Dr. Harry Trosman, profes¬sor of psychiatry; D. Joan Balcombe, andJoseph A. Piszczor, fourth-year medicalstudents; and Richard Royse, assistantUniversity dean of students.The students served on the committee atFiller’s request. Royse was the representa¬tive from outside of the division.Ceithaml said he could not say whetherthe decision of the committee was unani¬mous.ConfidentialityManual damper at 5400 faultedBy Bruce ShapiroA manual chimney damper which mayhave caused the backup of carbon monoxidegas (CO) that killed one resident of 5400South Harper on March 5 should have beenremoved ten years ago if standard engineer¬ing and inspection procedures had been fol¬lowed.The damper should have been removed orpermanently fixed in an open position whenthe boiler was converted from a coal firingsystem to a natural gas burner a decadeago, according to what several engineers,including officials of People’s Gas and theChicago Department of Energy and En¬vironmental Control (EEC), which overseesboiler operation, called “standard operatingprocedure” and “common knowledgeamong engineers.”The damper was cut out of the breechingleading from the building’s boiler to thechimney on the afternoon of March 5, afterfour people had been hospitalized for CO poi¬soning but before Sandra Robinson’s bodywas found. The work was done by HollubHeating, a subcontractor to Page Boiler, thebuilding’s repair firm.Company president Michael Hollub saidhe believes the damper somehow closed andblocked off the chimney, forcing exhaustinto the boiler room and building.In coal-burning days, the damper, operat¬ing from a handle extending into the boilerroom, controlled the draft through the fur¬nace and the size of the flame. A natural gasflame burns at a constant rate so no draft isnecessary.According to one EEC official, “under nocircumstances, in no way” should a manualdamper remain. “If that would close,” saidanother EEC engineer, “all your gaseswould back up into the boiler room or build¬ing. It could produce carbon monoxide orthere could be an explosion. It might blowthe breeching off. Under EEC regulations,you’ve got to have a clear chimney.”Several People’s Gas, EEC, and privateboiler company officials said “normal pro¬cedure” for a conversion would be to re¬move the damper or have it immobilized ei¬ther with welding or bolts, and that such an operation would be “mandatory” and com¬mon sense order from an inspector should amanual damper be found during a regularannual inspection.A manual damper is specifically prohi¬bited by several American Gas Companyand People’s Gas and Coke Company regu¬lations. Roy Warmingtonof the EngineeringDepartment of People’s Gas said companypolicy is not to connect a converted boilerwith mobile manual damper.There are no specific references to manu¬al dampers in the Chicago Building Code orin the EEC “Code of Recommended Prac¬tices.” However, Harry McDuff, supervisorof specifications and requirements for EEC,says the absence of specific regulations is“an oversight” and that inclusion is “aproper suggestion.”Records of City inspections by the EECsince 1975, including an inspection heldMarch 5 before Hollub arrived, make nomention of the damper. The March 5 reportsdo describe a number of defects and leakswhich engineers say could have aggravatedthe hazardous condition created by thedamper and provided an outlet for the COgas into the building.One report, filed by Inspector Bieloski,says “Breeching around back of boiler hasVfe” opening around 30” diameter. Breech¬ing on stack has opened on sides and bottom.Stay bolt on front of boiler leaking. No ven¬tilation in boiler room.”Another March 5 report, signed by Inspec¬tor Leo T. Stokes, says, “Gas escaped fromboiler breeching. Field barometric damperwas not adjusted & was sticking.. .Gas com¬pany serviceman added weights to damperto repair temporarily:”A field barometric damper is automaticand serves a different function from a man¬ual damper. A sticking barometric damperwould impair the boiler’s efficiency butcould not cause the production of carbonmonoxide or block the flue.Stokes also noted a six-inch hoie in thebrreching and cited the boiler for having nocurrent certificate of operation. Accordingto records, about two-and-on#half years hadelapsed since the last inspection.Page serviceman Marvin Perdue says he arrived at the building around noon onMarch 5, before the city inspectors. He sayshe found “nothing wrong” except “what thecity found” and called Hollub.Perdue said the damper was operablewhen he arrived, he said it was in the openposition, held there by a piece of wire at¬tached to the wall.According to Perdue, a manual damper isnothing unusual. ‘You see them all thetime,” he said, he said the removal “justhadn’t been done before.” Perdue had “noidea” what caused the carbon monoxide.Officials of People’s Gas and of the De¬partment of Energy and EnvironmentalControl were unavailable for comment.The man who has operated the boiler in5400 S. Harper Ave. for the past six yearshas no license to do so. accordng to City re¬cords.Chicago requires the operator of everyboiler capable of producing pressure in ex¬cess of ten pounds per square inch (psi) tobe licensed as a stationary engineer. A li¬cense applicant must have two years of pre¬vious experience under a license holder andmust pass a standard test. He must alsobring a letter on his employer’s letterheadverifying his experience, the type of boiler,and his employment.The license is to be posted in a conspi¬cuous place in the boiler room. EEC boilerinspectors are responsible for seeing thatthe license is posted and valid at each annu¬al inspection.The boiler in the 5400 Building can pro¬duce up to 15 psi, according to EEC records,but a search by Mike Bruen of the Bureau ofLicense Requirements and Registrationfailed to find a record of a license or applica¬tion for Mate Mulac, who has been the jani¬tor in the building since 1973.Billy Green, an agent for Realty and Mort¬gage said she “never heard of the regula¬tion.”EEC records, including those of inspec¬tions on and after March 5, do not mentionthe breach of regulations. At the August 7building inspection, which did not includethe heating plant itself, no license was visi¬ble in the boiler room. “There is an understanding of confiden¬tiality within the committee,” Ceithamlsaid. “The confidentiality of the hearing isin essence to protect the privacy of the stu¬dent.”But Filler said, “I’m not too hopeful aboutconfidentiality in this. In May, Dr. Bakerhad a ‘wanted poster’ with my photograph,height, and weight printed up, and he passeddozens of them around the hospital.”Filler said he believed the charges weremotivated by what he said is Baker's per¬sonal dislike of him stemming from Filler’srole supervising medical student employ¬ees in the emergency room.“It seems to be considered that if an asso¬ciate professor of medicine (Baker) saysyou are unethical, that is simply accepted assound judgment.“The photography was done in such a wayas to take great care for patient confidentia¬lity and for not interfering with patientcare.“Instead of finding me guilty of specificcharges or citing specific actions they havelabeled me unethical. That is something Iwill wear around my neck the rest of mylife.”Suspensions rareFiller is the first medical student to besuspended for non-academic reasons in“quite some time,” according to Ceithaml,although it happens “quite frequently" thata student is denied promotion for academicreasons.Ceithaml said. “We considered all the evi¬dence we had before us both orally and inwriting and it was determined after longand careful deliberations that Mr. Fillerwould be denied registration.”At the hearing, testimony was offered byboth Filler and Baker, and Filler was pres¬ent during Baker’s testimony. Filler wasalso represented by Jack D. Ohringer. a sec¬ond-year medical student and former stu¬dent ombudsman.Filler graduated from the College in 1977after three years with a double concentra¬tion in human behavior and institutions andbiology. While in the College, he organizedthe referendum that created the Major Ac¬tivities Board (MAB) and was MAB’s chair¬man for its first two years. He was alsochairman of the Festival of the Arts(FOTA).Friday, August 17, 1979 — 3The Chicago MaroonTT he Atlanta Rhythm Section, sche" duled opening night headliners hadcancelled; but I was less than heartbroken since John Prine and MuddyWaters were to fill in at the festival'smainstage.John Prine relied mostly on his goodtimin' country stompers such as"Please Don't Bury Me," "SpanishPipe Dream," and "Pretty Good" tokeep the crowd fired up, although hisslower paced "Illegal Smile" and"Hello in There" were equally well re¬ceived. Jethro Burns's son, John Burns,on lead guitar, highlighted the band'sfine performance, while John Prinesang his poignant lyrics in his charac¬teristically raspy voice.Jane Byrne, who was introduced asthe most beautiful lady in Chicago,came on stage to introduce the next act.The crowd erupted into a deafeningruckus — half were cheering; half jeer¬ing. After a moment the mayor raisedher hands in an attempt to quiet thecrowd, but to no avail. Asking them po¬litely three or four times to be quietdidn't work either, so the mayor even¬tually let out a bellowing, "Shut-up!"Mission accomplished: the crowd wasshocked into silence. From my perch inthe third row I could easily distinguishthe members of the Muddy WatersBand, but to my surprise Mayor Byrneintroduced not the King of Blues, butthe court jesters; the Blues Brothers.John Belushi's voice was adequate,as was Dan Ackroyd's harp — andMuddy's Band was superb, but the realentertainment in the Blues'Brothers'short set was their stage antics. Fromthe Bugaloo to the Funky Chicken, Be-lushi and Ackroyd improvised acrobat¬ic craziness from one end of the stage tothe other. Pandemonium reigned dur¬ing their encore, "Sweet Home Chica¬go."Before the thunderous applause hadsubsided, the real bluesman, MuddyWaters, walked onto the stage and ledhis band into a rousing version of"Hootchie Cootchie Man." The crowd,mostly white suburbanites undertwenty-five, was clapping and singingthroughout Muddy's show. The fortyminute set included such favorites as"Baby Please Don't Go" and "MannishBoy." Muddy soloed once, unleashingsome brutal bottleneck slide licks on hisshowpiece, "My Name is MuddyWaters."— Tim HoltsfordCROWD CONTROL MESSAGE *1THE MAIN STAGE AT CHICAGO-FEST IS FILLED TO CAPACITY.THERE'S NO SEATING AVAILABLEAT THE MAIN STAGE. HOWEVER,IF YOU ARE INTERESTED IN ANYOF THE OTHER 13 STAGES,THERE'S PLENTY OF SEATINGAVAILABLE.ig Ev and I spent a weekend atO ChicagoFest. We loved it. Somepeople don't like crowds. We love them.We'd take a look at the crowd surround¬ing whatever musician we wanted tosee and Big Ev would turn to me andsay, "We're goin' in," and we'd go in.Some people said they didn't like themselling beer at ChicagoFest. We likedthem selling beer. We love beer. Somepeople there said they liked "The Loop"and wore black T-shirts. We didn't wearthe T-shirts. We hate "The Loop." Rocksucks.After we caught some rays andgrooved to Bob Reidy, we went up to thePerrier-WFMT Folkfest. A lot of peopleup there were drinking Perrier. Not us.We hate Perrier. We do like WFMTthough, but we didn't take their bumpersticker.The train rides home each night werefilled with hundreds of screamingCohos. Big Ev killed four and took twoof them home for his sister.Saturday we went over to see RedHolt who was losing his battle with therain. Red used to practice in a garagenear our friend's house and we wereglad to see him here. He played "Soul¬ful Strut," which earned him a gold re¬cord in '69 and the unachieved ambi¬tions that go with fleeting fame. Therain was really coming down and a fatman in the audience started to play atrumpet. The crowd went oh no but wewent oh yeah. The trumpet got louder and louder and Red gave him a solo.The crowd loved it and everone had thesoulful strut. — Andrew PatnerCROWD CONTROL MESSAGE #2THE ENTIRE CHICAGOFESTGROUNDS ARE FILLED TO CAPACI¬TY AT THIS TIME. NO ADDITIONALPEOPLE ARE BEING ADMITTEDBECAUSE OF THE CROWDED CONDITIONS. YOUR TICKET TO CHICA¬GOFEST IS GOOD ON ANY OTHERDAY, SO PLEASE COME BACK AN¬OTHER DAY.arm and muggy. Those in theback cried for those up front to sitdown. In a slow song Lenny Williamstold a story about troubles with money,a woman and a luxury car . . . Wander¬ing past the crafts and fast foods, Iheard a faint blues sound in the air, ana’followed it to a small stage off to theside. Duke Tomato was the performer;his guitar left the audience spellbound.Red pepper hot.Duke has an offbeat sense of humor.He wore a dozen or so funny hats andconstanly threw small things like guitarpicks at the audience. His stage propsincluded two real, live, and somewhatnervous Chicago policemen who dis¬played handcuffs as Duke sang "I TieYou Up." The audience sang thechoruses. Later Duke paraded up anddown the aisles while playing his gui¬tar. It was attached to a miniatureradio transmitter so there was no worryabout fussing with the cord. Duke was called back for two encores.Later, between shows. To the right,the Chicago skyline; straight ahead,Lake Michigan, calm and silent, rip¬pling and reflecting city light. The airwas still, cool. The Scorpions, all theway from Germany, were headlining abigger stage at 9:30. But I decided tostay put. James Cotton's Blues Bandwas next .—Bill BrantCop #1: "We got nowhere to put thesepeople! There's no place for these peo¬ple to go!"Cop #2: "Sure there is."Cop ti 1: "We just don't have enoughpolicemen here."Cop #2: "Aw, yes we do."Cop #3: "That's three strikes,buddy."Cop #4 (to GCJ): "Do you work forMike Royko?" — Rebecca Lillian▼•he sky was overcast, but we de-" cided to go to the Fest anyway. OnOntario Street, we saw many like-mind¬ed people, all milling toward NavyPier. We joined them. Bo Diddley wasworking the crowd into a frenzy at themakeshift main stage. We couldn'tmake up our minds, but luckily we wereswept forward by the traffic towardthe exhibition area. There were lots ofyoung men in brief cutoffs and evenmore younger women in even brieferhalters. As a matter of fact, most peo¬ple there looked young, all sporting thelatest emblems of youth — day glo gymshorts, brand new Adidas, and blar-view of ChicagoFest '79Mayor Byrne behind a table of ChicagoFest ticketsA differentThe idea of ChicagoFestalways seemed good to us;when Mayor Byrne opposedit, we favored it. Maybe westill do. But having seen thisyear's, we're struck by a dis¬parity between what we wereled to believe it would be andwhat it seems to us to havebeen; we'd like to qualify thepublic's conception of its suc¬cess.The notion that Chicago¬Fest unifies the people of Chi¬cago has been central to thisyear's festival from the start.Byrne campaigned under theslogan of "One Chicago,"won two elections, andpromptly cancelled Chicago¬Fest. But she was obligatedto reschedule it when shelearned through the mediathat most everyone was un¬happy with that decision.Yet all Chicagoans did notattend ChicagoFest: Blackswere conspicuously absent.We saw no Hispanics either.Meanwhile, commuterrailroads were filled to ca¬pacity every night with peo¬ple returning to the suburbs.If ChicagoFest '79 unifiedChicagoans, it did so in somemanner more subtle than bybringing them together in thesame place.The partisan nature of thecrowd made the same point.The largest minority presentwas the "Disco Sucks"/"ln-sane Coho Lips" contingent,which was mostly young,mostly obnoxious, and mostlytolerated. One cop dismissedthem all: "They're justkids." But since when are thevalues held by young peopleunimportant, and since whenis it a good idea to toleratesuch gross intolerance fromanybody?Like Byrne, these peoplefollowed the media: withoutWLUP's Steve Dahl theywould not have been suchjerks. And the media told uswhat to expect too: both theTribune and the Sun-Timesprinted glowing reports, dayafter day. An example fromthe August 6 Sun-Times:What is attractingpeople? This year'sfestivities are, as pro¬mised, more divertingthan those of lastyear's initial fest.There's more of ev¬erything — moremusic to hear, morefood to eat, morethings to see and do.The "experience" was praised, just like it was in theads: "ChicagoFest. Where $5buys you the lake, the sun andthe stars." The big dailiesfostered this view, and noweverybody feels good aboutthe whole affair.In one sense they should:Those there obviously enjoyed themselves. But allChicagoans weren't there;and at least one establishedlocal musician barely madeit. This singer, who prefers toremain anonymous, was of¬fered less than $200 to per¬form; he ripped apart hisChicagoFest contract whenhe heard Willie Nelson wasoffered $30,000. The local fel¬low did finally play for $300,one one-hundredth of the re¬puted main stage price. Thedesparity does not point outthe relative musical worth;rather, it relates to some¬thing unconnected withmusic: a big name, hype.Hype is a cornerstone of thenational music industry, andso if we expect to include big-name national acts in Chica¬goFest, we should also expectto pay for them. But an alto¬gether different system ofpriorities would promote local culture more.As the priorities stand, Chi¬cagoFest doesn't serve us all.One official bragged that"It's already bigger than theNewport Jazz Festival. It hasmore people and more acts.It is the biggest music festi¬val in the country." Anotherexplained the carnival ridesweren't included this year be¬cause carnivals attract a dif¬ferent sort of crowd. Therides weren't unpopular oruneconomical last year; butthis year they were simply atodds with the manner inwhich ChicagoFest officialswanted to present Chicago tothe world.Lots of people liked Chica¬goFest this year, and, as theaccompanying vignettes indi¬cate, so did we — some. Butnext year we hope fewerover-priced national acts willbe asked to come. Let's real¬ize that Chicago's responsi¬bility to itself comes beforeits responsibility to WLUPfans from the suburbs, Roll¬ing Stone reporters, or anyother out-of towners. Whenwe satisfy everyone here, wewill have done a good thingfor these others too. ingly loud radios glued to their ears.There was a sprinkling of punkers aswell, with their stardust earrings anddoped smiles.It took us a good part of an hour towalk from one end to the other. Webumped and rubbed many shouldersand God knows what else. Then the odorof the place hit us. It was a mixture ofGyros, hamburgers, stale beer, andhuman sweat.Finally, we arrived at the renovatedportion of the pier. We saw a spacious,comfortable-looking lounge and imme¬diately took refuge in it. Then we no¬ticed the sign, "Senior Citizens' Oasis".We decided we were in the right place— far from the madding crowd. TheChicago Public Library had a stand in afar-off corner. A question was asked:"Who is the patron saint of firemen?"All our years of "Jeapordy" - watchingcouldn't help us with this one. Welooked around. The room was done inhi-tech style: exposed bricks and color¬fully-painted pipes. It was nicely fur¬nished, too. From here, we had a pan¬oramic view of the lakefront. We saw acluster of high-rises far to the south."Hyde-Park," we muttered. Suddenly,someone shouted: "St. Florian!" Aburst of applause followed. The winnergot a book.We decided to look into the history ofthe building. The entire Navy Pier com¬plex was built sometime in the Teens toprovide storage space for the Navy. Itwas in disrepair for awhile until theCity decided to make it into publicspace. The end portion, which nowhouses a music hall on one level andthis lounge on another, underwent ex¬tensive renovation in '75. The renova¬tion effort, done by City Architect JerryButler, was much praised. It's not hardto see why. The music hall, which is es¬sentially an enclosed bandshell, looksstunning. The arched black steel beamswhich support the vaulted ceiling arestudded with double rows of naked lightbulbs. With these bulbs lit, the hallgains the atmosphere of a starry sum¬mer night.Outside there is a terrace aptlynamed "Skyview" from which you cansee most of the lakefront. We were outon the terrace and marvelled at the lowclouds draping the midriff of Big John.All of a sudden, the sky darkened.Mother Nature had decided to upstageMayor Byrne's party. A few thunder¬claps were followed by a tortentialdownpour. The outdoor musical actsfolded their tents, and everyone elseconverged into the building. We wentinto the hall. A very exuberant bandwas playing disco beats to which lots ofcouples danced.It was getting late. We wanted toleave, rain or no rain. But getting to theother side was like running a gantlet.First of all, there was the crowd, nowdoubled in size and all indoors. Thenthere was a rink, right in the middle ofthe hangar, blocking our path. We knewihe rules of the rink — disco steps orroller skating — but didn't know how, sowe had to go outside and dash into thenext entrance. By the door was a raisedbooth with a sign: "LOOP-FM". Therewas a DJ inside demagogically urgingthe crowd surrounding the booth to yell"Disco sucks." We forged ahead.Finally, we reached the gate. The skyhad cleared up by now. Our ears werebuzzing, and our feet were in desperateneed of a podiatrist. A young man nextto us muttered: "Man, that washeavy." We looked back. The affair wasstill going strong. — Ted ShenCROWD CONTROL MESSAGE H3THE ENTIRE CHICAGOFESTGROUNDS ARE FILLED TO CAPACI¬TY AT THIS TIME. NO ADDITIONALPEOPLE ARE BEING ADMITTEDBECAUSE OF THE CROWDED CON¬DITIONS. THESE CONDITIONS ARESUBJECT TO CHANGE AS THE DAYPROGRESSES. PLEASE STAYTUNED TO CHICAGO AREA RADIOSTATIONS FOR FURTHER UP¬DATES. —Official ChicagoFest 1979crowd control messagesthe grey city journal Atby Laura CottiAt a recent visit to tContemporary Art, I wadifferent perspective prworks of two Chicago-atists.Chicago-area artistsand Nancy Davidson atartists in the currentGallery Exhibition, "NeSurface" at the Museuporary Art. While bothpresent innovations in :que—Michod's patterne<and hang like cloth, Ctured, space-specific wccent corners of the galliteract—the real distinworks is the vitalityespecially in comparisotcurrent MCA displays.Davidson's rich,dynamic "Tropos" corwith Sol LeWitt's dulldrawn lines on the bluMCA's Shapiro GallerLeWitt and Michod bewith geometric forms,primary colors, LeWitt':are well-executed Spiroiin comparison to Micpatterned, vibrant "!"Green Frog."Another MCA exhibitiMoviesFM (U.S. 1978) Directed b>Alonzo. A mindless entement about a radio statioiwon't give in to pressure friadvertisers. Good music ivided by Jimmy Buffett anda Ronstadt; Martin Mull cfew good moments, but hiwit is completely wasted orly script. Friday, August7:15 and 9:30 Quantrell; $R.B.Bed And Board (FranceDirected by Francios TruAntoine Doniel reaches hitwenties in this film, andhimself married. LikeChange, Bed And Boaisomething of a picariadventure, throughwilderness of conjugalDon't expect a h £message—this is a light <tainment the whole way, <young couple resists evenexcept temptation. Harlight bedroom farce that wtended to be nothing more tis. Saturday, August 18 aand 9:30. Quantrell; $1.50—The Big Heat (U.S.Directed by Fritz Lang. <Ford plays a honest cop <mined to take apart a bicrime ring; Gloria Grahaithe seedy waitress who helpsurvive. Many critics saythis is Fritz Lang's masteriand I wouldn't take issuethem. Recommended. Weday August 22 at 8. Quan$1.50— R.B.MusicSummer Sounds: YouthLagoon Concert, featuringSwamp Boogie Band ancMarshall High School Band,day, August 19 at the MuseiScience and Industry parkGary Beberman, Curtis Black, Randy Block, Bill Brant, Laura CottingharHoltsford, Karen Hornick, Old Jules, Rebecca Lillian, Mary Mankowski,Miller, Chuck Schilke, Ted Shen, David Sueme, Wayne Tack, and David >Friday, August 1"Tropos" for S.L., 1979by Nancy DavidsonAcrylic, crayon on paper10'2" x 92'10"Currently on display atthe Museum of Contem¬porary Art, ChicagoIrt imitates life and 'other things'•tingham» the Museum ofvas struck by thepresented in thei-area female ar-s Susan Michodare the featured>nt Borg-Warneryew Dimensions-.ieum of Contem-th artist's worksn surface techni-led canvases lookDavidson's tex-work forces adjaallery walls to inlinction of theseity they exude,son with the other, shimmering,rontrasts sharplyull, white chalk-olue walls of thelery. And, whileboth experimentis, repitition, andtt's wall drawingsrograph scribblesAichod's densely-"Sun Run'' or>ition, "Inside Our Homes, Outside Our Windows,"features Jonas Dovydenas'sphotographs of Chicago ethnic com¬munities. Though certainly not withoutlife, the exhibit is limited by thedistance a camera creates betweenphoto and photographer; a distancethat seems greater, at least to thisviewer, than the gap a brush brings bet¬ween artist and canvas. Consequently,though Dovydenas gives us the essenceof Chicago life—the St. Rocco di Sim-bario parade in Bridgeport, the wed¬ding of Gail and Warren Kasztel at thePalmer House, among others—the dif¬ficulty of his medium prevents h:mfrom approachingtheemmotive expression apparent in the works of Davidsonand Michod.It's not emotive expression that'slacking on the third floor of the MCA inthe "Selected Works from the Perma¬nent Collection." Instead, the eccentriceeriness of H.C. Westermann's"Madhouse" or the starkness of Markdi Suvero's "No Title for Sure" lack thewelcomed positivism colorfully ex¬pressed in Michod and Davison.Perhaps attributing the exuberanceof Michod's and Davison's work to theirsex is unfair. Davidson's earlier workdrew on a drabber palette; Michod'slatest work, "Lattice Play" is less live¬ly than her earlier productions. If sex were the only distinguishingcharacteristic to explain the vitality of"New Dimensions: Surface," shouldn'tthat exuberant quality be as consistentthrough the artists's careers as theirsex has been?A more accurate explanation of theexuberant quality attributes in to a dif¬ference in philosophical influence. Thecold, alienated expressions of LeWittand many of the male artists presentedin the "Permanent Collection" distinct¬ly reflect a Western Technological in¬fluence. While the life-filled patternsand colors presented in Michod's andDavidson's works certainly reflect bothThird World and Eastern influences.This explanation is further validatedby today's opening of "AncientRoots/New Vision." According to MCApersonnel, this collection of Hispanicart is so colorful that "New Dimen¬sions; Surface" is drab by comparison.But to this feminist viewer it's notsurprising that the works of Americanfemale artists would have more in com¬mon with the works of Third World ar¬tists than with the works of Westernmale artists. Like the Third World peo¬ples, women have continually dedicat¬ed themselves to the creation and pre¬servation of life. In the mean time,Western men have continually con¬cerned themselves with other things.Be here now & lateri by John.ntertain-ition that? from itsic is pro-and Lin-jll adds at his dry1 on a sil-jst 17 at$1.50—.<e 1970)Truffaut,his latend findsSmalloard isaresqueh theI love,heavy\ enter-as therythingirmlesswas in-: than itat 7:15— R.B.1953)Glenn» deter-ig-cityame isIpshimy thatrpiece,e withednesntrell;JazzIg Thelid the1. Sun¬burn of57th|m, TimDavid'ufit.|17, 1979 St. and Lake Shore Dr. 2:30-4:30pm. Free. If rain, the programwill be held in the Museum'sauditorium.The First Chicago Jazz Festival:If the Fest wasn't enough tosatisfy jazz lovers, Mayor Byrnehas pulled this one out of hermusical hat. With the Jazz In¬stitute of Chicago, the City willbring a welcome combination ofBig Names (Benny Goodman,McCoy Tyner, and Bill Taylor,among others), Local Talent(including Hyde Park's own Lit¬tle Brother Montgomery andWille Pickens), and Expatriates(Muhal Richard Abrams) to the Petrillo Band Shell. August 27-September 3 in Grant Park.Free. Consult local papers forspecifics.—A. P.B.L.U.E.S. Festival continues allmonth, with solid Chicago bluesevery night. Schedules (andprices) change often, so callbefore you go to this nice newclub. It's located at 2519 N.Halsted. 528-1012. S1-S3.Starkissed Tuna Band: Some in¬triguing women comprise thisNew Wave band. Go, dance yourass off, and ignore any lyrics youfind obnoxoius. Tomorrow,August 18 and August 24 at TheGreenleaf, 1770 W. Greenleaf (at Clark St.) 743-9896. $2.TheaterWoody Guthrie with TomTaylor: If you like Woody'srabble-rousing songs and down-to earth, poetic folk tales, you'lllove Tom Taylor's sensitive portrayal of Guthrie. If you're notfamiliar with Woody, you'll learnto love him after this per¬formance. The Travel LightTheatre,1225 W. Belmont.Through September 2. 281 6060.S5-S6, discounts for students andbearers of Union cards. Call fortimes, reservations.** Drug Stabbing Time at the Gates of the West **by Old JulesThe person who has been my closest friend inHyde Park will be leaving for New York soon, to finda place with the space and resources to do what shewants to do. But her departure leaves a great spacein my own life, and an empty seat across from me atMedici. An empty heart is like an empty life.I've been thinking about this lately. A Clash song,from their recent Cost of Living LP, has been on myturntable night after night, because it reflects myown situation. It's titled "Gates of the West"."I would love to be the lucky one/on Chill Ave-nue/who could keep your heart warm/when ice hasturned it blue...I'm looking back for home/an' I cansee the lights./ I should be jumping shouting that Imade it all the way..but just like that we walk on andwe can't escape our fate/Can't you hear the sigh-in'/Eastside Jimmy and Southside Sue both saidthey needed something new./ So I'm standing at theGates of the West/ I burn money at the light of thesign/the city casts a shadow of the perfect crime./I'm standin' at the Gates of the East/ I check mypulse and the pulse of my friends./ The city casts ashadow, will I see you again" — (Strummer/Jones)Riva Music Ltd.My friend, ready to leave, and myself, Checkingmy pulse and the shadow of Hyde Park — still wondering if I will make it at all.This week her roommate is leaving, and the threeof us decided to trip. At first just my friend and I,partaking of the ancient ritual: x acto knives onglass, tongues darting to the sacrament, thick blotter imprinted with bloodred roses. After a while, wetook some more — only to have my parents call. Ispoke lucidly to them for forty five minutes aboutschool, money, responsibility and failings of it — the last things I wanted to think about. Still, I somehowstood my ground, felt loss and sadness, but also thatI had been honest to myself.While I was on the phone, my friend's roommatearrived and took some acid also. We spent much ofthe night watching jars melt, and rugs sway to themusic. In the morning we left the house for the firsttime and walked to the lake. Colors still had a remarkable intensity: deep and clear blues andgreens in sky and trees. TheShoreland rose grandlyover the lake, the gates of the east. The tunnel to thePoint has been filled with Coho graffitti. Disco died.Hendrix lives. Live Dead (St. Stephen!?!) KenwoodHigh. Even the Funkadelics. Got to go Coho.We came out of the tunnel to behold the sun. First,it was intense, huge, and red in a dusty surface ofclouds which looks like a desertscape, then a brightyellow disk centering a line of clouds sitting equidistant from the shimmering water. I sat down by my¬self, just a row of stones above the water. The lakewas offering a varied view for the acid to play off of:deep blue arctic waves, some beaten metallic andgold by the sun; waves that looked etched, dollar billgreen with the dotted black lines that shade an engraving, knots continually twisting and unrav¬elling.I twisted there too, trying to unravel my presentand future. After a while I felt some resolve, somestrength, to face what may come ahead. Walkingback, Hyde Park, still empty of people, looked beautiful — not the oppressive world I have seen, felt,and fought all summer. I felt able to live here.On 53rd street we saw two people, each dragginglarge suitcases, and rushing east, and away. "WhenI saw those thrashers coming, looking almost twolanes wide, I was feeling like my day had justbegun." I'm still standing at the gates of the west. DeGrazia’sBusinessMachinesSale on IBM andRemingtonTypewritersLow prices plus6-monthguarantee6225963• Eye Examinations• Contact Lenses(Soft & Hard)• Prescriptions FilledDR. MORTON R.MASLOVOPTOMETRISTSContact tensesand SuppliesHyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th363-6363 List price is $73^95Vivitar 703Point ’n ShootPocketCamerawithbuilt-inRash andTelephotoLensWhen the moment hasto last forever Get a Vivitar!Special price withthis ad good until Aug 31model camera1342 East 55th St. 493-6700>UAH'LDAN(Bir ou.EDANltimtSQUARED.C NADE'EpRHC!$£cbs,DE plcn/c6:30 PMWE BRING:Barbecue GrillsCharcoalCondimentsIceYOU BRING:Hot DogsGround BeefChickenDrinksRolls Etc. )QSF?EL. .CNADEEDA~EN.QSE QUAfNADESQUARE),IQSECH/RAU OSICE SC)ERAlJ(J AREJHAEtREDAN0JQSE.Credanc_-?AUQSEE SQ>iS£~ ft A JQSEDr.vEDAHCES.QQSLCNADE1*9.s n°ye/ parking lotCeRAuoSe. ^CnC@7 PMmiwESQuARrli£ ech ArUAftfcM EDAucIeDA HDER;*ahce^adeSQUA'iDSIChARED/UQSEC ■ V ^ ^ ^ v-X /-I \ \ k. i,■ERAUQSECiV• ~SQt' •' R ED AKueMct UfllTYBLUEGRfl//BAflDIF RAIN: IDA NOYES HALL eEPAL'ESQii/J\rSEDSEC-h.HCESQL: AADEH’i%C HA.DAHA* ~ ’ .QSECQ d A K AtRC E A r.'E DA A ESQU AR =DAt\CECN AT) fw MI QSE : .'si ADEKA , C S EC ^ AD ER AUQEtue/day, augu/t 21Seeds sown for softball tourneyBy Jim FillHalf the seeds have already been sown;the remaining will be planted by next Mon¬day. 31 summer softball teams will plowtheir way through the championshipplayoffs which began yesterday, but onlyone men’s squad and one coed ensemble willsurvive through Friday, August 31 to reapthe harvest of championship T-shirts.A seeded single-elimination tournamentwill decide each of the four Division A(men’s) and B (coed) league champions.The regular season’s first-place team willmeet the eighth-place team; other first-round matchups are fourth vs. fifth, thirdvs.sixth, and second vs. seventh. In thesemifinals, the first-eighth winner will takeon the fourth-fifth winner, while the third-sixth victor will challenge the second-seventh survivor. The finalists will then viefor the league championship. The divisionalchampionships (for the shirts) will consistof best-of-three series. (Coed: Wednesday,August 29; men’s; Thursday, August 30.Third games, if necessary: Friday, August31.)Ties in the final league standings will bebroken according to winning percentage in head-to-head competition. In the event thatthis criterion does not resolve a tie, numberof losses by forfeit will be examined next.Difficulty of individual schedule is the thirdtie breaker (this applies only to the ten-teammen’s Maroon League). The fates of teamsstill tied after application of all these ruleswill be decided by the toss of a coin.The Harder They Come (7-0) concluded itsunblemished men’s White League season aweek ago Thursday with a 7-2 triumph overDiamond Head (4-3). The Head-ache was in¬duced as Harder retired Head’s last fifteenbatters in succession. Jimmy’s nonplussedthe Nattering Nabobs of Negativism (2-5)21-6, the Megabyters (2-5) displaced theWelfare Bums (0-7) for their second straightwin, and the Research Rats (2-5) forfeited tothe Hyde Park Saints (5-2).Yesterday on Stagg Field Harder battledthe Bums, Head met the Megabyters, Jim¬my’s rendezvoused with the Rats, and theSaints negotiated with the Nabobs in theleague’s quarterfinal round. The semifinals(most likely pitting Harder against Headand the Saints against Jimmy’s) will be heldnext Thursday. The finals are scheduled fora week from Tuesday. Harder is thefavorite, but Jimmy’s is about as qualified;the Saints, though a longshot, cannot be dismissed.Don Logan, Division A Player of theWeek, tallied six hits in eight at-bats, scoredfive runs, and drove in five runs to lead thestreaking Chicago Institute for the Mellow(5-1) to two victories in as many days begin¬ning a week ago Wednesday. A 17-5 shred¬ding of Stats, Rats, Groups, and Nuts (2-4)followed a 22-6 battering of the Biohazards(1-4) and was the Institute’s fifth straightconquest; four of those have been bymargins of ten or more, and the other was aforfeit win.In other Division A Maroon Leaguegames, the undefeated Penguins (6-0) stop¬ped the four-game winning skein of Fat CityNine (4-1) 16-12, the Divinity Dogmatics (1-3) scored 13 runs in the third inning and heldon to dump the Droogs (2-3) 22-17, and theStats spolied Cheapest Cost Avoiders’ Divi¬sion A debut with a three-inning 15-0slaughter. Two rained-out games (theDogmatics versus the Vice Squad (3-1) andthe Droogs against Fat City) were postpon¬ed to today, and two more have beenrescheduled for next Monday. Playoffsbegin next Wednesday.In late-breaking action this Wednesday the Penguins slaughtered the Dogmatics17-0. Ron Zamov led the attack with threedoubles and a single in four at-bats to gatherPlayer of the Week laurels for the secondtime. The Vice Squad vanquished the Insti¬tute 18-8, the Dead Popes finished at 4-3 witha 15-6 victory over the Droogs, and the Bio¬hazards whacked the Stats 21-5.Late results from this Tuesday’s DivisionB Maroon League action: the CompleteGreek Tragedies outslugged Clonal Dele¬tions 29-17, the Divinity Dogmatics edgedthe Spores 9-8, the Penguins slammed Spam11-3, and the Pork Belly Futuresslaughtered SSA 17-0 in three innings. Thefinal standings: 1. Penguins (6-1), 2. PorkBelly (6-1), 3. Tragedies )5-2),4.Spam (4-3),5. Dogmatics (3-4), 6. Deletions (2-5), 7.Spores (1-6), 8. SSA (1-6),. Playoff actioncommences next Tuesday. My pick: PorkBelly.The three remaining ragular-season Divi¬sion B White League games were rained outMonday and rescheduled for today (sametimes and fields). The B. S. Hitters, theMellow Yellow Sox, the ABA Bar Stoos, andThe Harder They Come are all about evenlymatched and should provide fascinatingplayoff action beginning next Monday.CalendarFRIDAYPerspectives: Topic: “Quality of Life Issuesfor Older Persons’’ guests Bernice Neugra-ten, Robert T. Havighurst, and PatriciaFauser, 6:30 am, channel 7.Crossroads: English classes for foreignwomen, 10:00 am-noonWomen’s Union: Meets 5:30 pm, Ida NoyesHall.Gymnastics Club: Meets 5:30 pm, BartlettGym.Student Activities: Film-“F M” 7:15 and 9:30pm, Cobb.Court Theatre: "Way of the World” 8:30pm.SATURDAYStudent Activities: Film-“Bed and Board”7:15 and 9:30 pm, Cobb.Court Theatre: “Hamlet” 8:30 pm.SUNDAYRockefeller Chapel: University ReligiousServices, Bernard O. Brown, Sermon: “Eli¬jah’s Mantle”Court Theatre: “Rosencrantz and Guilden-stern are Dead” 3:00 pm.Rockefeller Chapel: Carillon Recital, 4:00pm.Court Theatre: “Way of the World” 8:30 pm.MONDAYPerspectives: Topic: “The Lengthening LifeSpan and the Future” guests Bernice Neu-graten, Robert Havighurst, and PatriciaFauser, 6:30 am, channel 7.Crossroads: English classes for foreignwomen, 10:00 am.Gymnastics Club: Meets 5:30 pm, Bartlettgym.Mobilization Committee: Biweekly meeting7:00 pm, Ida Noyes Hall.TUESDAYPerspectives: Topic: “The Village and Familyin Contemporary China” guests Susan Jones,and Tang Tsou, 6:30 am, channel 7.Noontime Concert: UC Summer Band, 12:00noon, Hutch Court.WHPK: 3Vi hours of only Frank Zappa music,on the Andy Koppleman show, beginning12:30 pm.Gymnastics Club: Meets 5:30 pm, Bartlettgym.Student Activities: Picnic with Unity Blue-grass Band, 6:30 pm, Ida Noyes Parking lot.WEDNESDAYPerspectives: Topic: “The Family in Contem¬ porary China” guests Susan Jones and TangTsou, 6:30 am, channel 7.Crossroads: English classes for foreignwomen, 2:00 pm.Gymnastics Club: Meets 5:30 pm, Bartlettgym.Country Dancers: Traditional British andAmerican folk dances outside in the cloisterof Ida Noyes Hall, 8:00 pm. Beginners arewelcome, all dances are taught and called.Student Activities: Film-“The Big Heat” 8:00pm, Cobb. Court Theatre: “Way of the World” 8:30pm.THURSDAYPerspectives: Topic: “Agriculture and Laborin Contemporary China” guests Susan Jones,and Tang Tsou, 6:30 am, channel 7.Court Theatre: "Hamlet” 8:30 pm.VERSAILLES5254 S. DorrhesterWELL MAINTAINEDBUILDINGAttractive 112 and2Va Room StudiosFurnished or Unfurnished$192 - S291Based on AvailabilityAll Utilities includedAt Campus Bus Stop324-0200 Mrs. GroakDISCOUNT MAGAZINESStudents, Faculty, Staff are eligible fordiscount rates on major magazines. Upto 70% off newsstand price and 50%off regular subscription prices!Time $1820/yearBusiness Week 1425/yearNew Yorker 1500/yearWriter’s Digest 9°°/yearHarper’s 600/yearEsquire 800/year;Fortune 1500/yearSports Illustrated 1560/yearRolling Stone 900/yearPlayboy 1250/yearSend ORDERS with names and addressto:Subscription BureauP. O. Box A3092Chicago, III. 60690Please enclose payment or indicate“Bill later.” HEAR AGAIN STEREOSells guaranteed name brand usedand demo stereo components at 40%to 70% off regular prices.SPECIAL SPRING CLEARANCE SALESTOREWIDE SAVINGS INCLUDINGEQUIPMENT LIKE :SANSUI 9090DB $359.00SHERWOOD 7110 99.00MARANTZ 2245 225.00TEACA100 110.00PIONEER SX828 189.00GARRARD GT55 99.00YAMAHA CR1000 399.00BIC 1000 165.00DOKORDER 7100 179.00TECHNICS SA5150 115.00Complete systems from $75 to $750.60 day trade back privilege. Namebrand components for limited bud¬gets. PLUS MUCH, MUCH MORE.HEAR AGAIN STEREOAFNT7002IV. California 338-7737 Young Designs byELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERS1620 E. 53rd St.288- 2900 FLAMINGO APTS.AINI) CABANA Cl JIB5500 S. Shore Drive• Studio and 1 Bedroom•Furnished and Unfurnished•U. of C. hus slop•Outdoor Pool and Gardens•Carpeting and Drapes Inel.•Seeuritv•University Subsidy forStudents and StaffM. Snvder-PL 2-3800We GiveCASHFor UsedRecords1701 E. 55th684-3375USED FILES2, 3, 4 and 5 drawerletter, legal and lateraBRANDI E0TEHTSUPPLY CO.8600 Commercial Ave.Open Mon.- Fri. 8:30- 5:00RE 4-21116 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, August 17, 1979CLASSIFIED APSSPACESpacious 1 bdrm. CO OP APT, newlyremodeled, safe well-maintainedbldg., low assess., good location.$30,000. Call Paula 947-0277, 753-2719.Grad student or working person for 1bdrm in 3 bdrm apt 56 and University.Non-smokers preferred. Occup as ear¬ly as Sept. 9. Call 288-3111. Eves 5:30 -7:00.Responsible male student seeks rm. inHyde Pk. Apt., etc. for 79-80 (orlonger). Quiet non-smoker, likes cleanplace, does hsewrk. Can move in9/1-10/15. 752-0796, 947-1923, Kevin S.Beverly Shores, Ind. 2 story duplex 1block from lake. Also useable as 8room, 2 bath dwelling. Basement. 2car garage, immediate possession.National Park leaseback expected.$60,000. Call Renard at CallaghanRealty. 219-926-4298.Lg. condo for rent 9-79 for 1 year. Has"3brms 2 baths 24 hr doorman good loca¬tion. Call 947-6451 days 684-6549 eveweekends.Large third floor apartment in Ken¬wood available in exchange for 25hours babysitting weekly. Children12,10, 6. Bedroom, bath, very large liv¬ing room; kitchen privileges. On cam¬pus bus, mini-bus routes. Ideal forgraduate student couple. Call 548-0017with references.1 bedroom co-op apartment for sale byowner separate living and diningrooms. Wall to wall carpet. Very lowmonthly assesment. Excellent HydePark ioc>sfion available September 1.Call Tomas 947-5571 or 752-0174,ROOM FOR RENT plus share kitchenin 57th and Kimbark large apt. on apart time basis for commuter studentneeding a place to stay for two or threenights per week. Call 241-5062 eves,and weekends for info.5405 Woodlawn - 2 rm. and 2 rm. turn,apts. October. 643-2760, 667-5746 Mrs.Green.Fall sublet Sept. 1 to Jan. 1 share sixroom apartment with one grad, stu¬dent; study and bedroom, 2 blocksfrom Regenstein. $150,000 per monthcall Jane 324 8083.Univ. Park condo one bedroom apt.avail. Sept. 1979. Call Chien 955-7241 or947-6352.Mature, responsible nonsmokingfemale law student without pets withexcellent references seeks house orapartment sitting job, preferably inthe vicinity of Hyde Park. Write Box120, 746 E. 79th St., Chicago, II. 60619. Roommate to share 2 bdrm. apt. at56th and Kenwood. $190/month Sept.1st occupancy. Prefer grad student orworking person. Call Vic at 753-3940(9-5) after August 19.Sunny room in 2 person apartment.$108/month beginning September 1st.Call 684-5478 Nancy or Joy.Looking for person to share 3 bdrm.apt. starting Sept. 1 On 16th fl. ofRegents Park, 5050 S. Lake Shore Dr.Great view of lake, 3 baths, modernclean kitchen, laundry in basement,doorman, regular bus service to cam¬pus. $150/mo. Call Beth eves. 324-5447(days 744-4481).WOMAN STUDENT WANTS ROOM inprivate home close to campus for'79-'80. Can housesit. Leave messagein box 606 at 753-2220 9AM-10PM daily.Ogden Dunes - Writer's Paradise -two bedroom, two bath home. Raisedbeamed ceiling living room, dunetopV/2 acre scenic view, furnished. Leaseand rent negotiable. 45 minutes fromthe 59th Street Stop of the South Shore.312-975-0458. Administrative assistant; mature person for general office work, minimaltyping. Afternoon hours. Call LehnhoffSchool of Music and Dance 288 3500.Clerk-typist full-time or part-time 55wpm. minimum. Part-time hours areflexible. For apts., phone personnelmanager 684-1414. Museum of Scienceand Industry, equal opportunityemployer.To operate video portrait equipment atshopping center. Will train. Big com¬mission. Call 324-5852 eves.Healthy males needed for semendonors. Reimbursement of $25.00 ismade. For more information call947-5364 - Dr. George B. Maroulis or947-1739 - Dr. Richard Blake.The Blue Gargoyle needs a creative,enthusiastic individual to work as kit¬chen manager. 30 hrs. weekly. Senddescription of experience, interest to:Patricia De Jean, 5655 S. University.955-4108.Openings for "Telephone Inter¬viewers" at the National OpinionResearch Center at the University ofChicago, 6030 S. Ellis. Part time $4.00an hour (3 shifts available) Call Pat bCcNEbVance 753-1173. PEOPLE FOR SALETyping done on IBM by college grad;pica type. Term papers, theses,manuscripts, resumes, etc. LincolnPark West. 248-1478.FRENCH native college teacher offersfrench tutorials, classes all levels. Ph.268 9262.FRENCH TUTOR All levels. Ex-perience in U of C reading exam prep.Call 684-3131 early am or late pm.TENNIS LESSONS matches too. BradLyttle 324-0654.Interested in baby-sitting for the next 2months, especially mornings. ContactVeronic it, 288 0994.Spanish lessons grammar, reading,conversation by native speaker. CallJaqueline Lois 363-0027 7 p.m. - 10 p.m.Yoga lessons by experienced teacher.Write Jaqueline Lois, 5407 Hyde ParkBlvd. Specially designed to yourneeds.HYDE PARK.. Deluxe 1 bdrm. apt. _ _new w to w carpetg., new kitchen appl. pOR SALEliv. rm. overlooks the park and lakeutilities free. 24 hr. sec./doorman. Call Complete darkroom. $300.241-5314734-0170 after 6 p.m. $385/mo.A great deal leaving the country mustsell condo. 1 bdrm. Hyde ParkNewport bldg, call 538-2192 or 268-5046.For rent 1 bedrm. apt. in Hyde ParkNewport bldg, call 538-2192 or 268-5046.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.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.RIGHT-HANDED MEN wanted forperception experiment. $2.50/hr. Call753 4735.Participate in decision-making experi¬ment. $15-$20 for five 11/2 sessions.Janet 753-3648.U of COuting ClubCOLORADO TRIPSept. 1-14For information callMark Spieglan753-8122 or 955-3290 U of C collectors plate, panoramicviews of existing bldgs, 9 scenes $100.Goodman, 753-8342.1973 VW BUG: Excellent condition.New brakes, battery and muffler.Radio (AM FM). $2000. 735-2611 eves.Fine Oak End Table 6 mos. old. $25.Call NANCY 324-1820. Eves.Hoover Apt. Washer, $75, bought 1975,used little, irvexcellent condition. CallJeanette days 753-3372, eves. 493-9450.For Sale: 8V2' x 9' shag rug with mat,brown black, and tan $20. Wall unitbook shelves: cabinets, space forstereo and shelves, $30. 6 cinderblocks, FREE. Sears cold spot air con¬ditioner, 11,000 BTU $75: good condi¬tion. Call Jane 324-8083.Moving sale - chairs, dressers, lamps,sofa, coffee table, dining table andmore, priced to sell. Sat. 10-6 at 5730Drexel, apt. 1. For info, call 947-9061.Apartment sale Sat. Aug, 18 10 to 5.5496 S. Hyde Park Blvd. Apt. 507.667-2312.1975 Oldsmobile Vista Cruiser st-wg. 6passengers tan AC, PB, PS, radio.$1800. Call 667-2312.Child's crib and Simmons mattress$60. Girl's 2-wheeler with basket $40.Girls clothing size 2-8 exc. cond. (onlychild). Also misc. books and games.288 1061.A 1971 Chevy Nova for sale. Good con¬dition. 538-2192 or 268 5046 Patterns of sexual response can bechanged. Pre-orgasmic women'sgroup now forming, led by two M.A.'swith special concerns for women'sissues. Call Linda at 338-2163 or996-1467.FREE PLAYSCourt Theatre needs ushers for thenext three weekends. See the plays forfree. Sign-up chart is at the base of thestairs in Reynolds Club.RIDE EASTNEEDEDTo Boston or NYC the first week inSept, or to NYC any time after that.Will share usual. Rebecca 752-2159.FREE PIANOYou only pay moving cost. 70 year oldupright. 493-1218.STANLEY H. KAPLANFor Over 40 Years The Standard ofExcellence In Test PreparationPREPARE FOR! MCAT • DAT • LSATlJ GRE • GRE PSYCH| NATIONAL MEDICAL BOARDS * VQE * ECFMG• GRE BIO • GMAT0CAT • VAT • MAT • SATFLEX * NAT'L DENTAL BOARDSPODIATRY BOARDS • NURSING BOARDSFlexible Program* and Hour*& Visit Any Center Anil See forYourself Why We Mike The Difference(OucetiMil CenterSSS Medteon A*e> M.Y. 10022 (nr. 54 at) TEST PREPARATIONSPECIALISTS SINCE 1*3*Centers »n Mijor US Cities Puerto P«ccToronto C«n«4« 4 lu|«no. StnUtrUndICHICAGO CENTER6216 N. CLARKCHICAGO, ILLINOIS60660(312)764-5151s. w. suauahA*:1$ s. LAGRANGE HD.SUITE 201LAGRANGE, ILLINOIS( 60525i (312)352-5640 SPRING, SUMMERFALL INTENSIVESCOURSES STARTINGTHIS MONTH:4 VK/MCAT DATGRE—GMAT—SATLSATNEXT MONTH:4 WK/LSAT—OCA;VAT—SATfor Into'KwUon About Othti Cttifrt In No,* Tlw e« M*|Ot US OtoM 4 ABroiOOUTSIDE N.Y. STATE CALL TOLL FREE: SOO-223-1782 IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIJ ROCKEFELLERMEMORIAL CHAPEL5850 South Woodlawn AvenueSunday • August 19 • 11 A.M.University Religious ServiceBERNARDO. BROWNDean of the Chapel“ELIJAH’S MANTLE”marianrealty, IncREALTORStudio and 1 BedroomApartments Available- Students Welcome -On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-5400 LOST AND FOUNDLOST: Sliver watch In vie. Regensteinand University Ave. July 30. If found,call 842 8655. Reward.LOST: Steel keyring with steel whistleand nine keys lost (early Aug.)Reward. Call 753 3265 or 684-5478FOUND; A small, male, approx, oneyear old German Shepherd at I.C. on59th St. Ask for Kristi or Dan at753 3257.WANTEDThird year female law student with ex¬cellent credentials desires position astravelling companion, personalsecretary or clerk to attorney(s) at¬tending the World Peace Through LawConference in Madrid in Septemberand on to Vatican. Attendee ManilaConference in 1977 and clerked forSupreme Court Justice. Serious replysonly, please. Box 120, 746 E. 79th St.,Chicago, II. 60619.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. CallKarl on Tues., Thurs., and Fri.10:00-11:00 a.m. 947-1794.CHILDCAREStimulating, educational environmenttor toddlers and Pre Schoolers.Former Pre 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)493-8195. COLORADOJoin the Outing Club backpacking inColorado's Wemlnuche Wilderness,SEPT. 1 to SEPT. 14. For info, callMark Spieglan 753 8122 or 955-3290 bySunday.RIDESNeed someone to drive car to Boston.Aug. 27 to 30. Call 955-3758.SCANFURNITURESCAN is looking for mature, part-timeexperienced salespeople. Good salaryand benefits. Applicants should haveproven track record and desire tomake positive contributions towardcommunity business. Call 324-9010. InHyde Park area.MOVING EASTShare driving, tolls, gas, rental Inreturn for space in 12 ft. truck. Lv.Chicago 9/13 for Wash. D C. Call684-5706.TECHNICALWRITERThe University of Chicago Computa¬tion Center is seeking a TechnicalWriter to work full time in theDocumentation Services group. Thejob is writing program and systemdocumentation for the DEC system-20,which includes using the programsthat you are documenting. Applicantsshould have good oral and writtencommunication skills. Somebackground in computing is extremelydesirable but not essential. If you areinterested In this position, please con¬tact Merri Boylan, Manager ofDocumentation Services, 5737 S.University, 753-8424. The University isan affirmative action equal opportuni¬ty employer.t Ruby's Merit ChevroletSPECIALDISCOUNT PRICESfor all STUDENTS andFACULTY MEMBERS 1Just 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 Inc.Ki't'ft I hut (»r< (ifGM QUALITYSERVICE PARTSGENERAL MOTORS BARTS DIVISION L \I tel lingwithC \l huh72nd & Stony Island 684-0400Open Daily 9-9, Sat. 9-5 Part* open Sat. 'til Noon,'si72nd & Stony Island 684-0400Open Daily 9-9, Sol. 9-5 Part* open Sot. 'til Noonm VOLKSWAGENSOUTH SHORE rThe Chicago Maroon — Friday, August 17, 1979 — 7-SOQ-SUMMERONTHEQUADS-SOQ HYDE PARK’S NEWEST LAKEFRONT CONDO (4800 Chicago Beach).Owner transfer necessitates quick sale of choice high floor 2 bedroom apart¬ment. Panoramic Views. Garage stall assured with apartment. Total package,$79,500.A SLICE OF THE PIE IN THE SKY. One bedroomn, but a view of the world.5401 Hyde Park Blvd. High floor, perfect for singles. $48,500.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. Woodburningfireplace. In the $70’s. Ask about Assessment Rebate plan.KENWOOD AVENUE - VIEW OF CITY AND CAMPUS. Woodburningfireplace, large L.R., tof.C//yyng room, 2 master-size air conditionedbedrooms. Storm windows ... n.^y extras included. $62,500.ATTENTION TRADITIONAL HOME LOVERS 5758 BLACKSTONE. Ninerooms as lovely as they were in 1896. Library, woodburning fireplace in livingroom. Window bays, interesting contours everywhere ... and all in model homecondition. Enjoy an immaculate Japanese garden, professionally kept. Ownermust sell.DREXEL SQUARE! CONDO (51st & Drexel) over 2,000 sq. ft. Designed anddecorated by professionals. Ready-to-move in condition, well establishedbuilding. Two bedrooms plus study kitchen and baths are beautiful. All ap¬pliances. $67,500.ALMOST ONE-HALF ACRE OF LAND with this two-family mansion. Yes. A fullapartment (nice income) on third floor — Graciouysv spacious family living onfirst and second. If you don’t need the huge yard, sell it off. Entire parcel only$215,000.For Sales Information, Call...CHARLOTTE VIKSTROM, BROKER493-0666, Kathy Ballard, Sales Associate (res. 947-0453)Ken Wester, Sales Associate (res. 947-0557) ATTENTIONFaculty and StudentsThe Committee on Public studies is pleasedto announced the first annual ResearchConference on Public Policy Analysis andManagement.The conference will be held October 19 and 20at the Radisson-Chicago Hotel. For furtherinformation on the conference and the call forpapers, see Richard Hagman or AnitaAnderson, Wieboldt 301 (3-1896).Spokesmen Bicycle Shopf~) 8801 Hyde Park Blvd.Selling Quality ImportedBikes.Raliegh, Peugeot, Fuii,Motobecane, WindsorAnd a full inventoryof MOPXDSOpen 10-7 M-P, 10-5 Sat.11-4 Sun Rollerskates for684-3757 sale or Rent.SUMMER ON THE QUADS - SOQ - SUMMER ON THE QUADS - SOQ - SUMMER ONI M UUII CN IHf Cl)AD§THIS WEEKIUi§DATAli€. 14 NOONHUTCH COURT,6:30 P.M.7:00 P.M.IDA NOYES PARKING LOT U.C. SUMMER BANDMarches and a Can-CanPICNICSQUARE DANCE W/THEUNITY BLUEGRASS BANDfiiu§ FRI. AUG. 17SAT. AUG. 18WED. AUG. 22 FM 7:15&9:30pmBed and Board 7:15 & 9:30 pmBig Heat ,8:00 pm onlyID MHI1IiVINI PICNIC &SQUAREDANCEW/THE UNITY BLUEGRASS BANDAUG. 21 6:30 PICNIC We bring7:00 DANCE You bringIDA NOYES PARKING LOT SEE AD THIS ISSUESAT. Noon - 6 pmSUN. 1 pm - 7 pm |Enter from Parking Lot Door. |f)NO HlWWflS - OOS - savno 1H1 NO H1WWIIS - QOS - SQVflO 1HA NO H1WWIISTHE FROG AND PEACH IS OPEN ON WEEKENDS(THE PUB IS OPEN TOO! 4 PM - 12 MIDNIGHT M-F) THEQUADS-SOQ-SUMMERONTHEQUADS