First year students at Orientation Tim Baker 700 enroll in Class of 1983Seven hundred students willmake up the Class of 1983, ac¬cording to Fred R. Brooks, Jr.,director of College admissions. Inaddition, 102 transfer studentshave entered the College.The Class of 1983 is 65 percentmale, and 15 percent are membersof minority groups. The classes of1981 and 1982 were also 65 percentmale. Minorities accounted for 7.4percent of the Class of 1981 and 11percent of the Class of 1982. Thesefigures include black, Latino,Native American, and Americanstudents.“I am very pleased with thisgroup of young people we are ad¬mitting,” said Brooks.Special attempts to recruit minorities and students withspecial talents are made by theUniversity, Brooks said, but“there is no double standard interms of admission. There is oneset of standards for all studentswho are admitted.”Lists with names of qualifiedhigh school students who are musi¬cians, National Merit scholars, orminorities as well as other specialclassifications are prepared by theadmissions office and recruitmentletters are sent out to the identifiedstudents.Women are not recruited as aspecial group although Brooks saidthat the admissions staff wasaware and sentitive to the ques¬tions of prospective female students.“I personally would like to see agreater percentage of women oncampus,” he said. However, otherthan the Budley-W’ilson scholar¬ships (for women athletes), thereare no special recruitment effortstaken to attract qualified femaleapplicants.The admissions office received2815 applications to the College lastyear and sent out 1783 offers of ad¬mission. About 400 students ap¬plied to transfer to the College.Although the applicant pool for theCollege is not large compared toother schools with the same stan¬dards of admission, Brooks said,“the applicants for this school areTurn to Page 3The Chicago Maroon“Solitary, singing in the West, I strike up for a new world.” —Walt WhitmanVol. 89, No. 10 The University of Chicago B Copyright 1979 The Chicago Maroon Friday, October 5, 1979Nancy ClevelandDonald Peters confers with other clerical negotiators87% say noClericals reject offerBy Nancy Cleveland Lab school teachers rallyTim BakerLab School teachers protest 6 percent offerUniversity clerical workersvoted overwhelmingly to reject thefirst proposed contract terms,which w'ere offered in late Sep¬tember by the Unversity negotia¬tors for the 1.800 member bargain¬ing unit. The vote totals,announced last week by Interna¬tional Brotherhood of Teamsterslocal 743, the union representingthe clericals, were 1,174 to rejectthe offer, 168 to accept, and 3 voidballots.Union literature, sent to clericalsfollowing the vote, calls the results“authorization to strike, if neces¬sary.” But director of Universitypersonnel Edward Coleman doesnot foresee a strike in the nearfuture.“I have not heard any talk fromMr. Peters (Donald Peters, presi¬dent of the Teamsters local) in thatregard that we have not heardfrom other union leaders in thepast. . . when we did not have astrike,” he said.“We believe that a strike is ourfinal, absolute weapon,” said oneunion negotiator, “and will onlyuse it if we have no alternatives.”Peters, along with the 222member elected clerical negotiat¬ing committee and several local743 officials, has been meetingevery day since Tuesday in inten¬sive negotiating sessions with Uni¬ versity representatives includingColeman. The meetings are beingheld at the Federal Mediation andConciliation Service’s downtownoffices, under the guidance of Me¬diator Kenneth Kowalski.Negotiations have been going onbetween the Unversity and theunion since May, shortly after theinitial representation election re-Turn to Page 3Probe ofBy Jaan EliasAn investigation into the theft of55,500 in tuition and fee checks hasbeen concluded without actionbeing taken against any employeein the Bursar’s office.Harold Bell, University comp¬troller and vice-president, saidthat despite a “thorough" investi¬gation which included two sepa¬rate sets of polygraph tests, noevi-dence could be found toconclusively link any of the em¬ployees to the disappearance of themoney.At least six checks, ranging invalue from $600 to $1,200, were ei¬ther hand delivered or sent by mailto the Bursar’s office. The checkswere then sent unendorsed by mailto the Continental Illinois Bank(the University’s bank) but the stu¬dent accounts were not credited. Eighty University LaboratorySchool teachers rallied in supportof their Faculty Association on thesteps of Blaine Hall and thenmarched to President HannaGray’s office Tuesday afternoon.There they presented Provost D.Gale Johnson with a petition stat¬ing the Faculty Association’s read¬iness to return to negotiations, ifthe University will “present a rea¬sonable salary offer consistentwith the rate of inflation, whichwill make the further escalation ofthis crisis unnecessary.”Johnson told the teachers therewill be another negotiating session“hopefully very soon.” He said hewas aware of the Association’scondition that the University mustbe prepared to make a new salaryoffer, but had no further com¬ment.At the last negotiating session,on September 18, University nego¬tiators said the University was pre¬pared to make no more than itsprevious September 12 offer of 6percent. Association officers saidthe offer was rejected because it is6 to 10 percent less than current in¬flation in the Chicago area. The As¬sociation’s last offer stands at 13Bursar’sEqual amounts of cash were with¬drawn by one or more employeesof the Bursar’s office.The investigation into the theft ofthe funds was conducted by theComptroller’s office of InternalAudit and the University legalcounsel. Polygraph tests were ad¬ministered to employees on June5th and 22nd.“The investigation appeared tobecome counterproductive,” Bellsaid. Tensions within the Bursar’soffice increased as the investiga¬tion continued and distrust devel¬oped between employees.At least two employees trans¬ferred out of the Bursar’s officeduring the course of the investiga¬tion. One reportedly transferredbecause she was dissatisfied withher job and the other because theemployee was upset with having totake the polygraph tests. percent.“We refuse to negotiate with our¬selves.” said Earl Bell, presidentof the Faculty Association andchairman of University HighSchool’s social studies depart¬ment.The Association announced thatseventh period classes in the Mid¬dle and High Schools will be can¬celled Monday, October 8. to pro-test the University’s“intransigence.” The job action“We tried to make the investiga¬tion as unbiased as possible,” Bellsaid. During the investigation,even the Bursar, Lory Weaver, Jr.,was asked to take a polygraph test,according to Bell, and the volun¬tary’ tests proved to be inconclu¬sive.A source close to the investiga¬tion said that the investigationmay have been improperly han¬dled and that not enough peoplewere asked to participate. Thetheft was never reported to the po¬lice.New systemBell said that one of the primaryobjectives of the investigation wasto determine the method by whichthe money was taken to prevent fu¬ture losses.A new billing system by whichstudents mail their tuition pay- was decided on by the ExecutiveBoard of the Association “on thebasis of a questionnaire recentlydistributed to the faculty.” accord¬ing to an Association statement.The faculty has been carrying onmilder job actions, boycottingmeetings, refusing to chaperoneparties or sponsor activities, boy¬cotting parent Open Houses andpicketing the Lab School and theAdministration Building. TheTurn to Page 3ments directly to Continental Bankhas been instituted, though not as aresult of the investigation. Bellsaid.A review of all procedures in¬volving the handling of cash in theBursar’s office has been institutedas a result of the investigation ofthis theft, according to Bell. The di¬vision of Internal Audit will handlethe review which should take acouple of months, and stricter con¬trols have already been instituted.Student lossesThe thefts came to light afterstudents complained that their tu¬ition accounts had not been credit¬ed with money they had sent to theBursar’s office. At least four of thestudents had their registration res¬tricted for periods of up to a monthbefore their accounts were proper-Tum to Page 3office theft endedWELCOME TO YOURUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTOREServing the Needs ofScholarship and the General ReaderIn addition to a superb literary selection, we maintain the following specialcollections and services:The Reference Shelf (our most recently expanded special book section).University of Chicago Press Books (the University’s own distinguishedproducts in both hard and soft cover).The Psychiatric Book Section (a comprehensive selection of titles in thisvery active area of professional literature).The “Family Affair” (including our Children’s Department and CookBook Section - all deserving your scholarly attention).The Special Order Department (serviced by personnel who specialize inthis work).Hours for bookstore service are:Weekdays 8:00 to 5:00Saturday 9:00 to 5:00We look forward to seeing you soonStuart BrentManager (General Books)2 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, October 5, 1979Campus hotline service staffed by studentsCarol StudenmundMark Golberg, Hotline co-founder beginsBy Jeff CaneThe University of Chicago Hotline(753-1777), a listening and referral servicedeveloped last year, began operation lastFriday. The Hotline was created to fill a per¬ceived gap in such a student service atnight.Hotline telephones are manned by under¬graduate and graduate student volunteersfrom 7 pm until 7 am, seven days a week.Hotline advocates cite both the service’shours and its student staff as major assets.Faculty and students involved in the Hotlinebelieve that many undergraduates andgraduates are afraid to reach out to profes¬sional mental health groups or even to otherstudents.In its first week of operation, with littlepublicity, the Hotline has received roughlyfour calls a night.Charles Carpati, a first-year graduate stu¬dent in the ASHUM (Arts and SciencesBasic to Human Biology and Medicine) pro¬gram and Mark Golberg, a fourth year an¬thropology student, oversee the full opera¬tion of the Hotline, as its coordinators. Theyfirst conceived the idea of a campus hotlinein 1976 and received encouragement fromseveral faculty members, many of whomnow serve on the advisory board to the Hot¬ line, which consists of faculty, administra¬tors and outside professionals. A year later.Golberg and Carpati approached Universityadministrators with the campus hotline pro¬posal. University officials said they wereconcerned about the possible legal respon¬sibilities of a campus hotline and a reportwas prepared by Raymond Kuby of the Uni¬versity’s office of legal consel and deliveredto Dean of Students Charles O’Connell, Jr.After the legal issue was cleared, the ad-ministratin was again approached with thehotline proposal, and officials then voicedthe concern that the hotline might duplicatethe services of the Student Mental HealthClinic. In response, Golberg and Carpaticonducted a written survey of undergradu¬ate and graduate students that affirmed theneed for a University hotline. Last January,O’Connell agreed to the hotline proposal.This past spring, volunteers were publiclyrecruited and trained by members of theAdvisory Board and outside consultants in“listening skills.’’ These skills are the majoremphasis of the program. Volunteers are in¬structed to avoid making judgements andinterpretations, and generally to avoidbeing directive without being “stereotypi-cally passive.”The Hotline is based on those at both TheMassachusetts Institute of Technology andat Harvard University, but the University Hotline’s stress on listening is considered aunique feature by Carpati and Golberg.“We are students,” says Carpati, “thereis no pretense of being professionals and thisis realized in our tactics.”“W’e don’t try to ‘relate.’ We don’t use ‘poppsychology,’ ” says Golberg.Both Golberg and Carpati emphasize thatthe Hotline is non-professional and that stu¬dents are encouraged to use the Hotlineeven for such general information as the lo¬cation of the nearest laundromat. The Hot¬line has an extensive file of both Universityand community referrals for professionalhelp or information.The Hotline is presently funded by theDean of Students and by the Dean of Rock¬efeller Chapel.At the end of the year, the Hotline will beevaluated by Golberg and Carpati and pre¬sented in a report once gain, to O’Connell. Atthat time the Hotline’s permanent statuswill be determined.Calls to the Hotline are taken anonymous¬ly and in confidentiality. The Hotline is runby a team of two, usually male and female,every night. There are two incoming lines,so that one line always remains open.Over 25 students are involved as volun¬teers. The Hotline trains volunteers in thespring, but volunteers are needed now forgeneral staff work.Lab UnionContinued from Page 1series of annual open houses was cancelledthis week by Lab School director R. BruceMcPherson.Association officers say that for the firsttime they are hearing widespread talk of astrike among a faculty considered to be con¬servative. “The University is offering usonly two alternatives: either capitulation orconfrontation,” Bell said. He said the teach¬ers are prepared for a year long battle, butpredicted that “in six months what the Uni¬versity and the teachers agree to will be nodifferent than if we settled today.” Theteachers have been working without a con¬tract since the beginning of the schoolyear.Bell said the Executive Board would notconsider negotiating “until they (the Uni¬versity negotiators) come up into the doubledigits.” At the rally, Bell said,, “There is noBursarContinued from Page 1ly credited.“The whole affair put a lot of pressure onme while I was trying to go to classes,” astudent whose tuition check was not credit¬ed said. In order to lift the restriction, thestudent had to travel to her parent’s bank toget documentation of her claims. “They(the Bursar’s office) had me do all thework,” the student said.Another student whose check was not cre¬dited to his account was initially accused ofstealing the money. “They never told me inthe end what had happened to the money. Itwas very bizarre. ” None of the students con¬tacted by The Maroon whose checks wereinvolved were ever informed about the rea¬son for the restrictions nor did they receiveany apology from the Bursar's office.The Bursar, Lory Weaver, has refused tocomment on the investigation or the theftssince July.lass of 1983Continued from Page 1self-selecting. Chicago has an image of be¬ing a very strong school academically.”Students in the Class of 1983 includegraduates of 500 high schools in 42 differentstates. Washington D C., Puerto Rico, andeight foreign countries. Seventy percent at¬tended public high schools. Nearly a thirdare from Illinois, and 46 percent are fromthe Midwest. New York is the state with thenext greatest representation after Illinois.The average SAT scores for the Classwere 613 in the verbal test — down fourpoints from the last two years — and 644 onthe mathematics test, higher than theprevious two years. way this faculty can afford to absorb an 8 to10 percent loss to the cost of living.”One teacher, who was involved in the firstorganizing drive for the Faculty Associationten years ago, said at the rally that theteachers have lost three to six percent to thecost of living every year, because they ac¬cepted “stories about how the Universitycouldn’t afford to pay us more.”“We’re not asking to keep up with whatwe’ve lost; we’re not even asking to keep upwith this year’s rise” in the cost of living,the teacher said. The Association said itsmost recent offer is three percent below thecost of living increase in Chicago.Bell said the National Labor Relations Actwould force University officials to makeUniversity finances public if they claimedfinancial hardship, and “the Universitydoesn’t want to do that.”Rally speakers compared the 6 percentraise offered teachers to the 14 percent in¬creases in University tuition and rent in Uni¬versity staff housing. Bell estimated thatthe Lab School has spent $220,000 or more onconstruction in the past two years. And Bellsaid, “I’m afraid history will record that inthe sixties and seventies the University fellinto an abyss of budget managers” who hecontrasted with the “educational vision¬aries” of earlier times.According to the Association, Lab Schoolsalaries are $2,000 to $3,000 below those ofChicago public schools and suburbanschools comparable to the Lab School. Atsome levels, spokesmen said, Lab Schoolteachers are making as much as $6,000 to$7,000 less than other Chicago area teach¬ers, despite reductions in staffing and in¬creases in class levels.According to Bell, no recent teachers con¬tracts in the Chicago area have been below8.5 percent, and most have been “in the do¬uble digits.”At the rally Bell read several letters ofsupport from parents of Lab School teach¬ers, and said the Association had receivedfour to five such letters a day since sendinga letter to parents explaining the job actionsin September. Philip Montag, a teacher whohas picketed in front of the school, reportedthat the response of parents to the picketswas “surprised, concerned, and suppor¬tive.”The Lab School administration has ex¬plored possible settlements with their supe¬riors, Bell said, but they “could be more in¬fluential than they seem to be willing to be.”He said the effort was “belated,” and char¬acterized it as “very timid and deferen¬tial.” The University High School student news¬paper, the Midway, reported that McPher¬son announced his resignation as of the endof this year, citing “lack of respect and sup¬port from the faculty for the position ofdirector” among his reasons. McPherson,who has held the post for three years, men¬tioned physical improvements to SunnyGym and Kenwood Mall among major ac¬complishments of his tenure.McPherson is the fourth director since1967.Negotiation sessions broke down at theend of the last school year over a misunder¬standing of a private salary offer made bythe University negotiator in informal negoti¬ation. According to Bell, the Universitywould prefer to reach a private agreementbefore engaging in formal negotiations.“We want to do it all in the open,” he said.“I hope Mrs. Gray doesn't confuse us withContinued from Page 1suits were approved by the NationalLabor Relations Board. This written offer isthe first the University had tendered to theunion bargainers, since then.Coleman stressed that the offer was “nota contract, it was the university’s first offer,it’s initial wage proposal, and the bargain¬ing committee was aware of that.” Severalmembers of the University’s negotiatingteam have said they expected the union tomake a counter proposal, rather than putthe offer to a vote.“They felt we only won by a slim majori¬ty,” said one member of the clerical team.“And they thought this offer would be ac¬cepted by many of the workers.”At the November 1978 election, the uniononly won bargaining rights by a slim mar¬gin, 743 to 722. But union leaders sought andreceived a strong vote of support from theentire clerical staff with this rejectionvote.In the ballot mailing, the union leaflet at¬tached to the election notice last month de¬tailed what the union sought for clericals,and what the university offered None of theunion proposals were met, according to theliterature. They included an across theboard pay raise increasing with the cost ofliving, added vacation and sick days, and asystem under which all clericals would riseto the maximum pay level for their positionin three years, rather than the indefinitepresent merit raise system.Under the present system, clericals needan average of nine years of service beforethey reach their maximum level, and withan average yearly turnover in the clericalstaff of nearly 40 percent at the Unversity,few ever accumulate the seniority to do so.Coleman says that the negotiators are not the lab technicians at Yale,” Bell said.“We’ve been playing this game for a longtime, we have political veterans among us.we know how this school is run, and theheart of the faculty is with us.“In fact, we think she had it easy atYale.” Gray made her reputation as a toughadministrator when she broke a strike by athousand member general service workersunion at Yale in 1976.Teachers belonging to the Faculty Associ¬ation, Local 2063 of the American Federa¬tion of Teachers make up 65 to 70 percent ofthe 160 member faculty, and fifteen teach-have joined the Association since thenegotiations began, Bell said. He added thatten to fifteen more vote with and contributeto the Association regularly. “The facultyhas never been more unified," Bell said, andthe University “is the best recruiter wehave for new union members ”working under any absolute deadline, andbelieves that the talks are making “gradualprogress.” However, until this first contractis worked out in final form. University cleri¬cals will go without their annual pay raise.“Some small merit increases have beenpaid, but there will be no scale adjustmentuntil we know what the contract terms are,”said Coleman. Usually the annual raises aremade at the end of the University’s fiscalyear in July./ : \CorrectionLast week’s article on Hyde Park restau¬rants misquoted the hours of the Medicirestaurant. The correct hours are: Mon¬day through Thursday 11:30 to midnight.Friday and Saturday to 1 am. Sunday(brunch) 9:30 to 11:30 am, (regular menu)11:30 am to midnight.The Maroon regrets the error•Due to editorial negligence, the followingphotographers had their work run withoutcredit in the Orientation Issue:• Tim Baker: Soccer, p. 48;• Phil Borgnes: Studs Terkel. p. 15;• Nancy Cleveland: Jonathan Fanton,p. 7; Rollerskater, p. 37;• Carol Klammer: Harold's, p. 46;• David Miller: Hanna Gray, p. 6;Wright Laundry, p. 41;• David Sueme: O'Gara’s Bookstore,p. 43; and• John Wright: Football, pp. 48-9.The Editor apologizes to each of them.v yClericalsFriday, October 5, 1979 — The Chicago Maroon — 3The Bursar trust bustThe series of in-house thefts from the Bursar’s of¬fice has raised many questions that remainunanswered despite the University’s now-closed in¬vestigation. Chief among these are, of course: Whodid it? How did they do it? Why wasn’t the in¬vestigation turned over to law enforcement au¬thorities or other outside investigators?But for most students, the questions are over¬shadowed by the shabby treatment given to thosestudents whose checks were stolen — treatmentthat included restricted registrations and accusa¬tions of theft.Only the comptroller. Harold Bell, has been opento questions about the investigation and thefts, andonly he has expressed concern over the waySeptember songThe University’s quarter system has more than afew merits. Students have the opportunity toschedule a variety of courses throughout the yearand professors can make time both for teaching andresearch. There are no papers to write, or read,over vacation, and ten weeks has proved itself tomany as a good period for uninterrupted study.But the merits of the quarter system should notbe confused with quirks of the University calendar.New students were not the only ones surprised bythis year's October 3rd opening of classes. Summerhas long since given way to fall and most other students were dealt with. The bursar, Lory Weaver,Jr., has refused to talk about what happened, evento the students and their families.Bell, in commenting on the situation, said that“one of the primary functions of the Bursar’s Officeis to serve students as well as possible.” In thiscase, not only were the interests of students notserved, but a great disservice was done to thosewho became involved simply by paying their bills.As the primary contact most students have withbanking, check cashing, or fee paying, it is impor¬tant that the Bursar’s office be a place that studentscan trust. And it is clear that the Bursar and his of¬fice have failed that trust.schools have been in session for any where from twoweeks to one month.Perhaps the University community might benefitfrom a quarter calendar similar to that at Knox Col¬lege in Galesburg, Illinois where school starts inmid-September and winter break runs fromThanksgiving to January. Such a schedule might in¬terfere with some vacation plans, but it would getthe year rolling a little sooner and could save theUniversity a small bundle on winter heating costs.As one faculty friend pointed out, it’s a lot nicerhere in September than December. The Chicago MaroonEditor: Andrew PatnerManaging Editor: Jacob LevineGrey City Journal Editor: David MillerExecutive Editors: Jaan Elias and Nancy ClevelandFeature Editor: Mark WallachSports Editor: Andy RothmanPhoto Editor: Tim BakerLiterary Review Editor: Richard KayeAssociate Editor: David GlocknerSenior Editors: Abbe Fletman and Claudia Magat *Office Manager: Leslie WickAd Manager: Steve KaszynskiGraphics: Chris PersansStaff: Curtis Black, Jeff Cane, Carol Klammer, RebeccaLillian. Greg Mizera. Dan Newman. Scott Rauland. BruceShapiro. Allen Sowizal. Howard Suls, Calvin ThrillingThe Chicago Maroon is the student newspaper of theUniversity of Chicago, published on Tuesdays and Fri¬days. Editorial and business offices are located on thethird floor of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St., Chicago.60637. Telephone: 753-3263.We welcome letters and comment. Correspondenceshould be addressed to the Editor and should be typed andtriple-spaced. Letters must be signed and the writershould identify his or her connection with the Universityor the community. Names will be withheld at the writer’srequest. All letters become the property of The Maroon.Letters to the EditorO-Issue protestgrumbles, realized, she grumblesbecause everyone else does! We’dTo the Editor:A LETTER TO THE EDITORIN REBUTTAL...(OR, STOP FUCKINGWITH THE FRESHMEN!)This may come as a big shock toour fellow students whose sen¬timents run along the same lines asthe opening article of the Orienta¬tion issue of The Maroon, but thereare at least two students here wholove the University of Chicago!Satire is a form of writing mostof us are familiar with, but in aplace w here too many people seemto grumble too much about how-much they can't stand it here, wecan t help but wonder if all theopening articles for the Orientationissue have been the catalyst forthis grumbling? Shall we tell youhow we felt after reading this mostrecent issue? Depressed andgrumbling, and school hasn't evenstarted yet! I never grumble,fnaive soul that I ami, but this ar¬ticle had me grumbling. I am sickand tired of hearing the Universityknocked. Valencia, who alwaysTo the Editor:On September 18 I took the C.W.Airport Transportation Limousineto O’Hare Airport which left theCenter for Continuing Education at2:10 pm. The driver, a muscularyoung man, was exceedinglyreckless. He went through two redlights and a boulevard stop bet¬ween the Center and the 50th LakeTravel Lodge, drove on the wrongside of the road at times and pass¬ed cars in interactions. On theKennedy Expressway he wentvery fast and made violent swerv¬ing maneuvers that brought pro¬tests from most of the passengers.The driver ignored them. The vehi¬cle, a white van, was in poor condi¬tion. The springs were so bad thatthe rear-seat passengers werehardly able to keep their seats Thespeedometer was stuck on 75 miles4 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, hate to see the people who wrotethat article as recruiters for the Uof C, Telling unsuspecting highschool seniors what to expect here:muggings, W-3, suicides, depres¬sion, apathy, and a generaldegradation of character and in¬tellect.First impressions are lasting im¬pressions. Why not present apositive view of our esteemed andhallowed halls, since after all. thisis one of the most well respectedand prestigous universities in thenation? We can afford to makesatirical comments amongstourselves, as we did in our year¬book. but to approach the incomingfreshman class the same way isunfair. One must be familiar withthe subject of a satirical essay toappreciate it. The difference bet¬ween the yearbook and the articleunder criticism is, the yearbookwas read by people to whom theUniversity has become a home forthe body as well as the mind. Thosewho have Shared the complete ex¬perience of this university, the upsper hour. The 44 add oil” warninglight was on continuouslythroughout the trip.At the airport, I and some of theother passengers asked forreceipts. The driver had none, butsigned some C. W. Companyleaflets “William” in printedcapitals. I asked if he was “Mr.Williams.” He nodded. I asked“What are your initials, Mr.Williams?” He made no reply.I don’t want to repeat this scaryexperience. I will not take the C.WAirport Limousine again until Ihave some assurance that:A) The C.W. Company has fixedtheir vehicles. ■ , '■B) They’ve gotten some betterdrivers than “William,”, A ProfessorDept, of the Geophysical Sciences(Name withheld by request) and the downs, me joys and thesorrows, are in a position to ap¬preciate satire about the U of C,Why not give freshmen a chance toform their own opinions? That’s alarge part of what college is sup¬posed to be all about, isn’t it? Peo¬ple learning about themselves andestablishing some sort of in¬dividuality. This idea of the U of Cstudent being a depressed andmasochistic nurd is, we feel, thewrong impression to givefreshmen. We would like to seeeveryone welcoming freshmenwith open arms and minds, and sayto them life here will be what youmake it. Forget about thestereotypically depressed U of Cstudent, you will be that way only ifyou choose, and if you listen to con¬tagious grumbling. This is not tosay life here will be a bed of roses,(it isn’t like that anywhere) butthere are pleasures to be had here.It is much easier to get an educa¬tion here if one appreciates whatone has. The U of C offers amongother things, a beautiful campus, ageneral feeling of a push towardsexcellence, and a competent,helpful, and solicitous staff in¬cluding, Ed Turkington, DeanStraus, Bill Borchert, SheilaPutzel, and Dean O’Connell just toname a few, (we could go onforever, but you know who youare). This is not to say our love isblind, certainly there arecriticisms to be made, for in¬stance, the University’s policy onZimbabwe (sic) its attitude towardthe surrounding Black community,and the choice of recipient for theAlbert Pick award. These areissues to be dealt with, but theyshould not color what we are hereto do. We are here to get an educa¬tion, if one wants to counter theseissues in an effective way, thenplease do. After you have finishedyour education here you will bevery well equipped to do so. We arenot suggesting students dose theireyes to the University’s shortcom¬ings. There are organizations oncampus that deal with these issuesOctober 5, 1979 Draft conflictTo the Editor:I was just informed today by afriend on campus that the PoliticalForum has announced a Con¬ference on “Alternatives to theDraft” to take place Oct. 19 and 20,in which the featured speakers willbe Rep. Paul McCloskey (R.f Cal.)and a Professor Marcos of North¬western University.Strangely enough, this happensto be the same weekend for whichthe Coalition Against Registrationand the Draft (CARD) has beenplanning a midwest ConferenceAgainst the Draft. The first an¬nouncement and preliminary callwas distributed throughout Chica¬go campuses the last week of Au¬gust.A call to the phone listed on thePolitical Forum flyer elicited theinformation that the “conference”was set up by a student in one ofProf. Morris Janowitz’s classes,evidently relying heavily on the ad¬vice of Janowitz in the choice of thesubject and participants.It is no secret that Janowtiz is apolitical consultant for the Pen¬tagon. On March 20, a rather longinterview with Janowitz appearedon the front page of the ChicagoTribune. The thrust of Janowitz’position was that because publicin the context of a college educa¬tion. Those that allow a negativeviewpoint to be the singular waythey view this institution, defeattheir purpose for being here.We will grant you, we are older,returning, independent studentswho are grateful to get an excellenteducation. We have seen enough ofthe hardships of life without adegree or marketable skills to tru¬ly appreciate our school, but weare also optimists. We are surethere are others at the Universitywho feel as we do. and we feel thisside should be heard from too. Assomeone once said, it’s easier to bean optimist than a pessimist.Marienne ColemanValencia Powell opinion maae an outright return ofthe draft politically impossible,another approach was necessaryto meet the country’s “defenseneeds.” His proposal was “com¬pulsory and universal national ser¬vice” McCloskey, who wonhimself something of a reputationas a “dove” ten years ago, hasvery conveniently stepped into thebreach for the Pentagon by spon¬soring just such a bili in the Houseof Representatives. The bill hasbeen denounced as simply “open¬ing the back door to the militarydraft”.About the same time thatJanowitz* article appeared in theTribune, Inquiry magazine carriedan article charging that the Pen¬tagon brass, with vast publicityfacilities at its disposal, and withpowerful friends in the electronicand print media and in certaineducational and other institutionscooperating, was ready to invadecollege and high school campuseswith a flood of propaganda for themilitary draft, or at least a “na¬tional service” bill.Professor Janowitz, who is ap¬parently so anxious to bringenlightenment on these issues tothe campus, has proved to be veryreticent to engage in publicdebate; I know of at least three in¬vitations he has turned down todebate either myself or SidneyLens, another member of C ARD.The very wording of the title ofJanowtiz’ “conference” raises in¬teresting questions, because itassumes some sort of militarycrisis that requires a choice nowbetween the draft and an “alter¬native.”Considering that what could beinvolved in this question could benothing less than the lives (orseveral years of involuntary ser¬vitude) for hundreds of U of Cstudents, it would seem ap¬propriate to direct some verysharp questions at the PoliticalForum and Morris Janowitz.John RossenCoordinator for Chicago CARDImperialist hullaballoo” on Soviet troops in CubaMaroon graphic by Chris Hersansall the speeches about “deterrence,” themissile gap” and the “need for security,”“imperialistdisarmament schemes are apropaganaa smokescreen behind which thecapitalists’ war machine grinds exceedinglyfast.Our opposition to the war drive of theAmerican ruling class is not that of pacifistliberals. We recognize that the USSR, basedon a collectivized economy, is, despite itsoppressive Stalinist bureaucracy, a greathistoric gain for the workers of the world.We defend the Soviet Union against im¬perialist militarism and support its havingwhatever weapons are necessary for thatpurpose. At the same time we fight for aTrotskyist party to lead a political revolu¬tion to oust the Stalinist bureaucracy andestablish workers’ democracy.Blustering about “Russian aggression”coming from the people who launched theBay of Pigs invasion and spun endlessbizarre plots to assassinate Castro is the height of imperialist arrogance. Irritated bythe presence of the Cuban deformedworkers state, the sabre-rattling senatorswant to turn the Caribbean back into an“American Lake.” Ultimately, reconquestof all the degenerated/deformed workersstates, most crucially the USSR, is the goalof all sections of the American bourgeoisie.As Trotskyists we will never back downfrom the revolutionary duty of defense ofthese states.However, the former Trotskyists of the re¬formist Socialist Workers Party (SWP) andits youth group, the Young Socialist Alliance(YSA), hail uncritically the Stalinist bu¬reaucracy in Havana. Yet, the inveterateopportunists of the YSA remain silent on themuch more critical (and unpopular!) ques¬tion of defense of the gains of the Russianrevolution.Joining a voice to the current anti-sovietcampaign are the Maoists of the Revolu¬tionary Communist Party/RevolutionaryCommunist Youth Brigade (RCP/RCYB).While everything was fine in 1971 when Maotoasted war criminal Nixon during theChristmas bombing of Hanoi, now theRCP/RCYB maintains that the ascendancyof the Hua-Teng faction to the ForbiddenPalace has led to fascism (!) in China. Ifthat isn’t enough evidence of the fact thatthe RCYB has gone off the deep end, theirattack on the Chinese embassy, armed withlittle red books, during Teng’s U.S. visit, isan act worthy of Kuomintang reactionari¬es.In the face of the renewed Cold Warrhetoric coming out of Washington, we insistthat Cuba has the right and duty to take allnecessary measures — including Soviettroops, planes, missiles and anything else itcan get its hands on — to defend itselfagainst bloodthirsty U.S. imperialism. U.S.out of Guantanamo! For unconditionaldefense of the deformed workers statesagainst imperialism! Down with SALT!All students interested in discussing theissue of Soviet troops in Cuba are encourag¬ed to come to the Spartacus Youth Leagueinformal discussion Wednesday, October 10,6-7:30 p.m.. second floor Ida Noyes Hall andthe SYL’s forum “Hate Carter. HateCapitalism,” Friday. October 19, 7:30 p.m.,Reynolds Club Lounge.Marsh and van Buitenen deadBy the Spartacus Youth LeagueThe blow-up over Washington’s“discovery” of a 2000/3000 strong Soviet“combat brigade” in Cuba is the biggestoutburst of manufactured imperialisthysteria since Lyndon Johnson’s Gulf ofTonkin red herring greased the skids forfull-scale U.S. involvement in the VietnamWar. Yahoo senators introduce resolutionsabout enforcing the Monroe Doctrine with abig stick. Others call for a return to the dayswhen Kennedy “stood eyeball to eyeball”with the Russkies in the Cuban missilecrisis, “and they blinked first.” Dosomething about those Russian troops “orelse,” the State Department blustered (notvery convincingly) to Havana.The sudden storm of protest is in largepart a smokescreen for opposition to theSALT II “arms control” treaty — not byhawkish Republicans, who have alreadydisavowed it, but by Democrats who see thisissue as a way to back off from supportingthe increasingly unpopular pact. DemocratsRichard Stone of Florida (with a largegusano constituency) and liberal FrankChurch of Idaho, both in tough re-electionswith conservative opponents, dropped the“bombshell.” They also put Carter on noticethat they have no intention of going downwith his rapidly sinking ship unless he “getstough” with the Russians real quick.Worried about his own right flank, Carterafter a brief hesitation decided to jump onthe bandwagon. The “revelation” was ob¬viously timed to embarrass the Castroregime just as it was hosting a conference of“non-aligned nations,” as the Soviet andCuban press quickly pointed out. And sinceCarter’s hijacking/kidnapping of anAeroflot jet at JFK airport in New York hadflopped, maybe the hard-pressed ad¬ministration could use this incident to shoreup its sagging ratings for “decisive leader¬ship.” Thus, Carter, in his nationallytelevised speech of October 1st announcedthat he would establish a task force to“monitor” the Caribbean and the StateDepartment leaked that 1500 Marines and2000 sailors would be sent to GuantanamoBay for “maneuvers.” Harking back to theglory days of 17 years ago, Carter quoted,not from the Bible this time but from a 1963Professorsby Andrew PatnerRobert Marsh, professor of English and inthe College, died last month after a protract¬ed illness. vThe author of Four Dialectical Theories ofPoetry: An aspect of English neo-classicalcriticism, Marsh was a part of the “secondgeneration of the Chicago school critics,”according to Wayne C. Booth, George M.Pullman Distinguished service professor ofEnglish.Described by colleagues and students asboth a critical thinker and teacher, Marshwas remembered for his attention to detailand his sensitive ear.Marsh came to the University relativelylate in life, said Booth, after his training inphilosophy interested him in the criticalschool of thought headed by University pro¬fessors R.S. Crane, Elder Olson, and Rich¬ard McKeon.“His book. Four Theories, presented justthat,” Booth said. “As a cultural pluralist,he didn’t try to choose one theory above an¬other, but he discussed the merits ofeach.”To his students, he was “a most remark¬able person in the way that he taught,” onestudent said. “He never told anyone whathis opinion was but he was phenomenallyacute about what to read to form your ownopinion. He was absolutely honest, anddidn’t concede to the graduate studentego.”Richard Strier, assistant professor of En¬glish, praised his “intellectual integrity...He had a precision of mind and an interest intrying to get things right - not half right, orpartly right, but right. He was very interest¬ed in seeing minds in action. He combinedwork of the formalists with that of the his¬torical school. His intellectual carefulnessand integrity were the basis for his beliefthat if you could work hard, you could getthings right.” declaration of that “apostle” of democracyand “non-intervention,” John Kennedy.“(We) would not permit any troops fromCuba to move off the island of Cuba in anyoffensive action against any neighboringcountries.”This is outrageous imperialist hypocrisy!Besides, who are they kidding? Who is itthat has a genuine foreign military base onCuban soil? The Americans, of course, atGuantanamo Bay. In 1965, it was Johnsonwho sent marines and paratroopers to SantoDomingo to quash an insurrectionary situa¬tion and prop up the pro-American junta. Itwas U. S. imperialism which saturated Viet¬nam with terror bombing raids until thecountry looked like a crater-pockedmoonscape.Half of Carter’s speech was a plea forSALT II and “continued peace in our time.”SALT is a phony! The arms buildup will con¬tinue as before. Both “doves” and “hawks”agree to step-up war “preparedness.” ForJ. A. B. (Hans) van Buitenen, one of theworld's leading Sanskrit scholars and theGeorge V. Bobrinskoy Distinguished Ser¬vice Professor of South Asian Languagesand Civilizations, died September 21. Hewas 51.The author and translator of numerouscommentaries and original Sanskrit texts,van Buitenen was working on the first com¬plete translation of the epic Mahabharata atthe time of his death. He had been workingon the project for ten years and had com¬pleted the third of what was to be seven vol¬umes.“It is a monstrous work, and he was doingit all by himself,” said Edward C. Dimock,Jr., chairman of the South Asian depart¬ment. “He didn’t believe in a committeetype of translation and when that was sug¬gested to him he repeated the storv thatSunday, October 7, Rockefeller MemorialChapel will hold a full-day celebration inhonor of the new academic year and thebeginning of Bernard O. Brown’s term asDean of Rockefeller Memorial Chapel.The day will open with an EcumenicalService of Holy Communion at 9 am. presid¬ed over by Mr. Brown and several of thecampus ministers.At 9:45 am there will be a brunch and in¬troduction to the Chapel program for theyear.The preacher at the University religiousservice at 11 am will be James Barr. RegiusProfessor of Hebrew at the University of Ox¬ford. His sermon topic will be “Man Amongthe Trees of the Garden of Eden.”A carillon and brass concert may be heard there has been only one successful commit¬tee translation, that of the King James edi¬tion of the Bible, and that was with divineassistance.”“As a scholar,” Dimock said, “he was oneof a kind. He was one of the finest Sanskritscholars that there has ever been, one of twoor three alive today.”Although scholarship and translation oc¬cupied a major part of van Buitenen’s aca¬demic life, he not only found time for teach¬ing, but delighted In it as well. In aninterview with Eric Von der Porten in theChicago Literary Review last year, van Bui¬tenen recalled how in teaching first yearSanskrit he would see “all those unspoiledfaces which eventually become groovedwith the rigors of Sanskrit.”Joan Erdman, who taught an Indian Civi¬lization course with van Buitenen last year.at a lawn festival on the Chapel grounds at5850 Woodlawn Avenue at 12:15 pm togetherwith a performance by the Marodna FolkDancers. A carillon tour will also be con¬ducted.The public is invited to participate in aCommunity Choral Sing in the chancel at2:30 pm. which will be directed by JamesMack, Director of the University Chorus,with an accompaniment by EdwardMondello, University Organist. It is an op¬portunity for those attending to sing some ofthe choruses in the oratorio repertoire:"And the Glory of the Lord” and “Hallelu¬jah” from Messiah: “He Watching OverIsrael” and “Thanks be to God” from Eli¬jah: and from Brahm’s German Requiem,“How Lovely is Thy Dwelling Place.” remembered that “He knew his subject pro¬foundly and he conveyed it to the students.”And Milton B. Singer, professor emeritus ofanthropology who worked with van Buiten¬en since he came to the University 20 yearsago, commented, “He is finally recognizedas a great Sanskrit scholar, but we are veryfortunate that he worked here for twentyyears in the South Asia program. Althoughhe was trained in the European philologicaltradition, his approach was not at all pedan¬tic. He loved Sanskrit and liked to teach itnot as a dead language, but as the meaningand culture of an entire civilization. His fa¬miliarity with the Greek and European civi¬lizations made his approach and mannerimmensely illuminating to students and col¬leagues alike. In that respect he was ex¬traordinary in bridging the gap between anexotic, specialized scholarship and liberaleducation.”At 3:30 pm. members of Court Theatrewill present a reading of Edward Albee’sZoo Story, one of the three one-act-playsscheduled for production at Court Theatre,Thursdays through Sundays, from October4-14.A choir, organ, and brass concert will beconducted by Richard Vikstrom. Director ofChapel Music, at 4:30 pm. The RockefellerChapel Choir, the Chicago Brass Ensemble,and Edward Mondello will join in the one-hour program, which will be immediatelyfollowed by Evensong with the RightReverend Quentin Primo. Suffragan Bishopof the Episcopal Diocense of Chicago.All the events are open to the public andare without charge.Friday, October 5, 1979 — The Chicago Maroon — 5New chapel dean honoredBy Greg MizeraOne paradox about Hyde Park is thatwhile many people can discuss SALT II andZimbabwe Rhodesia intelligently and atgreat length, many of these same people aretotally ignorant of the events in their ownneighborhood. Perhaps because most stu¬dents live in the community only three orfour years, they don’t concern themselveswith the everyday workings of local andstate government. Everyone’s heard ofJane Byrne, but how many students canname their state representatives?The decisions made in City Hall and inSpringfield often affect our lives more di¬rectly than those made in Washington andGeneva. Witness the raising of the legaldrinking age to twenty-one by state legisla¬tors earlier this year or the city council'scurrent debate on restricting condominiumconversions. Both issues demand more at¬tention from the student body than theyhave received,So. whether you’re a newcomer from an¬other state or a life-long Hyde Parker whohas never bothered to ask about your repre¬sentatives, here are five people you ought toknow better.Lawrence S. Bloom, riitn ward Aider-man: The Fifth Ward encompasses the ter¬ritory between Hyde Park Boulevard (5100south) and ?lst Street, with its westernboundary in Hyde Park at Cottage GroveAvenue. It is one of fifty wards in Chicago,each of which elects an alderman to repre¬sent it in the city council.Traditionally, the alderman’s office hasbeen the focus point for the most basicneighborhood problems. When sidewalksneed repair or streetlights aren’t working,the alderman is usually the first official no¬tified. The incumbent’s success is oftenmeasured by how quickly and effectively heor she gets someone at City Hall to fix thesituation. As Bloom describes it, the alder¬man’s office is “a conduit to city agen¬cies.”Bloom has no official party affiliations, afact which he feels gives him freedom to re¬sist political pressure to betray the interestsof his constituents. In most “regular”wards, a Democratic strongman, usuallythe alderman or ward committeeman, isgiven patronage jobs in city agencies suchas the Department of Streets and Sanitationto distribute among loyal party workers,thus perpetuating the Democratic “ma¬chine” through a spoils system. As an inde¬pendent, Bloom receives no patronage jobsfrom City Hall to reward his followers. In¬stead, he says, he offers “representationwhich is not compromised by the need to ob¬tain jobs or curry favor with anybody.”In the heyday of the Democratic machineunder the late Mayor Richard J. Daley, anindependent or Republican ward might suf¬fer a lack of basic services, such as street-cleaning. Bloom says he has not felt any dis¬crimination against the Fifth Ward andcredits Mayor Byrne with halting the prac¬tice of using city services as political weap¬ons. Besides fielding complaints about dirtystreets and potholes, Bloom has enlisted agroup of volunteer “inspectors” who reportproblems before citizens come knocking onhis office door.In the legislative arena, housing and ten¬ant rights have been among Bloom’s priori¬ties. On Wednesday a City Council commit¬tee examined a bill hammered out by Bloomand other independent aldermen designed torestrict the conversion of rented apartmentbuildings into condominiums. The bill stipu¬lates that forty percent of a buildings ten¬ants must approve the conversion before itcan proceed. Also, prospective developersmust consult the Chicago Plan Commissionto find if equivalent housing in the sameprice range is available nearby to displacedtenants. Developers in designated “neigh- *borhood strategy areas” would be freed ofthese restrictions in the hope that condomin¬iums will lure more middle and upper-classoccupants into these communities. The onlysuch area in the fifth ward lies between 67thand 71st streets, Stony Island and the lake.Bloom has also proposed the creation of aFair Rent Commission to review complaintsof unwarranted rent increases. If the com¬mission, which would be made up of bothlandlords and tenants, decides an increaseis unnecessary , it would be empowered toset a reasonable rent. Bloom says the pro¬posal, now in committee, would be prefera¬ble to “arbitrary and unfair" rent control.6 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, October 5, 1979Independents highlight local politicsNancy ClevelandLawrence BloomBut Bloom cites as his proudest acnieve-ment a legislative deal which he and severalindependent allies struck with Mayor Byrnethis past summer. Byrne had set before thecity council a $200,000,000 revenue bond to fi¬nance construction of housing for affluentyoung couples in the west Loop. Concernedthat too much money was being funnelledinto downtown renovation at the expense ofoutlying areas, the independents offeredByrne a counter proposal. They supportedher bond in return for her support of a simi¬lar bond to finance neighborhood redevelop¬ment. Both bonds were approved by largemargins.Bloom admits that the mayor could proba¬bly have pushed her bond through the coun¬cil without the independents’ approval. Yethe notes with satisfaction that the consi¬deration she showed to their idea w’ouldhave been “almost unheard of” as recentlyas a year ago.While maintaining that he is not inflexiblyanti-Democratic, Bloom has found morethan enough to criticize in the present ad¬ministration. “The election of Jane Byrnegave voters their first taste of political free¬dom. For the first time they could vote con¬trary to their precinct captains’ wisheswithout having to worry about losing theirwelfare checks.” But he adds that “to alarge extent she’s playing a lot of the oldgames with new faces ... I think she wantsto build a machine of her own.”Bloom demonstrated his dislike of ma¬chine politics in the council chamber lastweek by asking the city not to appeal the de¬cision of Judge Nicholas Bua in the recentShakman case. Bua’s ruling effectively out¬lawed the hiring of city employees on thebasis of political loyalty. If upheld, the deci¬sion could hasten the end of the Democraticparty’s stranglehold on Chicago voters.Bloom’s motion was tabled and MayorByrne later announced she would supportthe Democrats’ attempt to have Shakmanoverturned.Despite dozens of setbacks like this Bloombelieves that vigorous debate of all issues isbeneficial to city government. His outspo¬kenness has earned him the respect of manynon-aligned political observers, includingPaul Birnberg, head of the local chapter ofthe powerful Independent Voters of Illinois-Independent Precinct Organization (IVI-IPO). Birnberg says his group, which sup¬ports progressive legislators of both majorparties, is “very happy so far” with Bloom’sperformance, especially on the condomin¬ium issue.However James Williams, president ofthe Fifth Ward Democratic organization,believes an alderman can accomplish moreby working within the system. He claimsthat Bloom is ignoring the practical needs ofmany fifth ward residents in his “idealistic”battles with City Hall .“Not everybody goes to the University ofChicago or lives in high-rises . . . There arepeople who need a strong alderman, thereare people who need patronage jobs ... In the vernacular of the streets, he (Bloom)can’t crush a grape.”Williams says Bloom benefits from “theold independent syndrome — if he’a an inde¬pendent, people think he must be good.” Ac¬cording to Williams, a policy of co-operationwith City Hall can improve services and re¬vitalize decaying commercial strips inWoodlawn and Hyde Park. As it stands, “his(Bloom’s) rhetoric has changed nothing.”In the aldermanic election last Februarymachine candidate Peter Stodder, who wasbacked by Williams, finished a distant thirdbehind Bloom and then incumbent Ross W.Lathrop, another independent. It appearsunlikely that the regular Democrats willcapture the fifth ward in the foreseeable fu¬ture. Meanwhile Bloom remains confidentthat he is serving his constituents best byspeaking his own mind — and loudly.The 24th state congressional district of Il¬linois, which includes Hyde Park, Wood-lawn, and South Shore, is an amalgam ofwealthy and poor, black and white, stableand unstable communities. Like the otherfifty-eight districts in the state, it electsthree representatives and one senator to thegeneral assembly in Springfield. In the pastrepresentatives have served two-yearterms, but starting in 1980 their terms willlast four years. Senatorial terms are fouryears long.Besides having two women among itsstate legislators (representatives Carol Mo-sely Braun and Barbara Flynn Currie), the24th district is also unusual in that it has twoindependent Democratic legislators (Braunand Currie). Both are serving their firstterms. Along with Republican representa¬tive Bernard Epton, who has been a Housemember for 12 years, they were elected in1978 and have announced plans to run againnext year. Democrat Richard Newhouse hasserved as senator since 1967.Barbara Flynn Currie, State Representa¬tive, 24th District: Before her election to theTim BakerBarbara Flynn CurrieIllinois general assembly Barbara FlynnCurrie served as vice-president of the Chi¬cago League of Women Voters and partici¬pated in various independent campaigns.When she was asked to enter the race forstate representative last year she chose toadvertise herself as an “independent Demo¬crat.” Says Currie, “I’m not at all close toChicago style Democratic politics , . . but Iam a liberal. I feel quite comfortable withtraditional Democratic policies."Yet the freshman legislator has made hermark most noticeably in the area of tax re¬lief. Currie was a member of the HouseDemocratic Task Force on taxes which pro¬posed a far-reaching relief program this past session. The heart of the program is abill to eliminate the state’s five percent foodand medicine sales tax. The bill passed bothhouses, the first such measure to do so inforty years, only to be vetoed by Republicangovernor James R. Thompson. The gover¬nor in turn proposed a gradual phase-out ofthe tax over five years. Under his plan thelegislature could remove one penny a year ifthey determined that the state did not needthe additional revenue.Like many other Democrats in bothhouses. Currie has refused to accept thecompromise. “It’s a sell-out. It looks rea¬sonable but it isn’t,” she says, pointing tothe state's $400 million surplus. “If tax reliefdoesnt come now it will never come.”For over two months she spent her week¬ends in supermarkets, collecting signatureson a petition in favor of the Democrats’ bill.The bill will come before the legislatureagain this fall and Currie is “hopeful but notcertain” that enough Republicans will de¬sert the governor to achieve the two-thirdsmajority needed to override his veto (Demo¬crats hold a 32-27 edge in the Senate and an89-88 edge in the House).Currie is also the principal sponsor of a“Truth in Taxation” bill. The idea is to re¬quire local governments to make public an¬nouncements w henever they intend to raisetaxes and explain their reasoning. She feelsthe measure will encourage citizens to ques¬tion the necessity of tax increases and makeelected officials more responsive to dollar-conscious voters.On the other hand, Currie sponsored a suc¬cessful motion to add $2 million to the state’semergency aid fund. Another part of her billsets performance standards for the Depart¬ment of Public Aid’s response to emergencyaid requests. The department must now re¬spond within one day in extreme emergen¬cies and within five days for other legiti¬mate applications.Throughout her first term Currie has re¬mained unimpressed with Governor Thomp¬son and she criticized the Thompson-Byrnetransportation package on several occa¬sions, claiming that it takes unfair advan¬tage of Cook County residents. The package,drawn up this summer amid loud public pro¬test, replaced the state gasoline tax, whichhad been used to maintain public transpor¬tation services, with an increase in the CookCounty sales tax. In effect, says Currie,Cook County residents are being forced tosubsidize road improvements for down-staters, wrho get away scot-free.Among Currie’s plans for the assembly’snext session is a proposal to extend theShakman ruling to state agencies. In thepresent system, if a local party worker pres¬ents a letter of recommendation from a pow¬erful party official, he or she is almost cer¬tain of receiving a job in state governmentno matter howr poorly qualified the applicantmay be. Currie says she does not know howlarge the state patronage army is, butothers describe it as “immense.” In its finalform, Currie’s bill may require the immedi¬ate dismissal of public employers foundguilty of political bias in hiring (or firing)workers. A second possibility is to allowparty officials to recommend individuals tostate agencies, but to insist that all such rec¬ommendations be published so that votersand taxpayers can tell who is playing poli¬tics with the public payrolls.Carol Mosely Braun, State Representa¬tive, 24th District: Carol Mosely Braun, likeCurrie, refers to herself as an independentDemocrat. Like Currie, she has developedinto something of a crusader in her firststint as state representative, though forsome different causes. “I consider myselffiscally responsible,” she says, “but wherebasic human services are concerned, theyare my priorities.”Braun believes that many downstate le¬gislators do not always share her concernfor urban problems. “They think of us (Chi¬cago) as a Sodom and Gomorrah on thelake,” she says. One question occupyingBraun at the moment is how to convince su¬burban and rural lawmakers to save CookCounty Hospital, which is running $37 mil¬lion in the red, from bankruptcy. “The prob¬lem is that many people think Cook Countyin a machine cityHospital is being ruined by welfare cheatswho don’t pay their bills ... but actually itsthe working poor . . . who are going to suffer(if the hospital closes).” Braun has filed abill to allocate four “impaction grants” topublic hospitals which serve large numbersof poor people.Braun achieved several major legislativevictories in her unusually active first year.She succeeded in getting a five-percent an¬nual cost-of-living increase for welfare re¬cipients aDDroved, as well as funds formulti-lingual education in public schools.After serving on the Democrats’ EducationTask Force, she introduced legislation toprohibit interference with children on their 24th District: Asked recently to assess hismajor achievements in Springfield, Repub¬lican Bernard Epton replied, “I’ve helpedstop some bad bills.” A critic of free spend¬ing and excessive government regulations,Epton says, “I don’t think this legislaturehas accomplished much — which is a plus. .it seems every time we pass orte bill we haveto pass two more bills to correct it.”As the 24th district’s more conservativespokesman, Epton is skeptical of govern¬ment funded job programs and subsidies tobusinesses in economically disadvantagedareas. He believes that bringing inflationunder control should be the number one pri¬ority of the general assembly and of Con¬way to school. This last law could becomecrucial to the safety of school children if theDepartment of Health, Education and Wel¬fare (HEW) implements its plan to bus over100,000 Chicago students next fall, a movewhich may spark violent protest as similarplans did in Boston.One measure whose failure Braun espe¬cially regrets is her plan to institute a com¬munity development finance corporation toassist in the economic revitalization of de¬pressed areas. Her aim was to subsidizenew businesses in these areas which em¬ployed local residents. She is disturbed that“right now there are no state programs todeal with the whole issue of community re¬habilitation,” and she would like to raise theissue again in the near future.Braun has addressed the House on a broadrange of humanitarian and social reforms inthe past few months. She asked for a mora¬torium on capital punishment w-hich, shesays, “degrades civilization and our govern¬ment.” Braun has also called for restrictionof “deadly force” on the part of police of¬ficers to cases where their own safety or thesafety of others is threatened. As a vocalsupporter of the Equal Rights Amendment(ERA), she tried unsuccessfully to lower thethree-fifths consensus of both houses neededto approve constitutional amendments. Inaddition, Braun has made a personal cru¬sade to convince the general assembly to di¬vest state funds from firms with businessties to the South African government.Braun supports wholeheartedly the Dem¬ocrats’ movement to overrule GovernorThompson’s veto of the food and medicinetax bill. She calls the governor’s claim thatthe state can't afford the tax cut at this time“hogwash. We have a ten percent growthrate in this state . . . inflation increases ourtax intake even more in terms of real dollars... plus there’s the corporate personal prop¬erty tax (passed earlier this year) to re¬place funds.” She is optimistic about thechances of the override’s success.Bernard Epton, State Representative, gress. “We could bring jobs to the districtfrom other places. But we cannot prosper ifthe rest of the state is suffering ... if we gainjobs this way it means someone else is los¬ing them.” Epton recommends a balancedbudget and reductions in government spend¬ing as the tried-and-true paths to lastingeconomic health.Oddly enough, Epton is the only legislatorfrom the 24th district who hasn’t openly ad¬vocated the abolition of the food and medi-Richard Newhouse Last year Braun, Currie, and Bernard EptonCenter fought to save the Woodlaw-n Child HealthCarol Moseley Braun cine tax. The first time the bill came up hevoted against it. Now he says he is undecid¬ed whether to heip override the governor’svote. Though he considers the tax “regres¬sive” in that it fails to distinguish betweenrich and poor (as opposed to an income tax),Epton is not sure if estimates of the state’sTim Baker surplus money are accurate. The estimatesrange from $100 million to $670 million.Epton calls the latter figure “clearly pre¬posterous” and says he needs more time tostudy the issue before reaching a conclu¬sion.Epton’s refusal to endorse the eliminationof the tax immediately has drawn criticismfrom many concerned citizens. IVI-IPOpresident Bimberg, for instance, saysEpton’s support among independents maybe seriously eroded if he doesn’t vote yes onthe bill in the override session.Difficult decisions are nothing new toEpton. however. In August he resolved tosupport the Thompson-Bvrne transportationpackage only after he was convinced thatraising the Cook County sales tax one centwas the only way to avoid a large increase inCTA fares. As he described the situation, themayor and governor forced him to choosebetween supporting the package or saddlingCTA riders with a forty cent fare increase.(Epton says his voting record shows that heopposed the one-cent sales tax increase be¬cause a fellow legislator, fearing the politi¬cal consequences for Epton of a “yes" vote,pushed the representative's “no” buttonwhen the bill came before the House. >Epton is the author of a unique bill, now-awaiting action by the governor, whichwould establish an Illinois Insurance Com¬pany. The company would operate very-much like Lloyd’s of London. It would con¬tract to insure people, property, and almostanything that conventional insurance agen¬cies would not dare to cover. Epton says thebill takes advantage of the fact that Illinoisis the only state in the union with no insur¬ance rate regulation and he claims that thecompany could bring up to $5 million intothe state, as well as create new jobs. Hesays he has already received inquiries fromas far away as China.If all this doesn’t make Epton sound like atypical conservative, it’s because he isn’t.He has consistently supported the ERA andeven won the I Vi’s Best Legislator awardseveral years ago. Yet during twelve yearsin the legislature he has introduced relative¬ly little new legislation, a fact which headmits freely. He says he has learned that,in general, “the best bills are the ones wenever pass ... and the less government getsFriday, involved in our lives, the better off weare.”Richard Newhouse, State Senator, 24thDistrict: Senator Newhouse. a Democratwith strong support in black neighborhoodsof the district, says he is happy that the mostliberal elements of the Illinois senate are fi¬nally playing a sizeable role in how theupper house is run. At a recent public forumNewhouse said that over the past few yearsa coalition of independents and sympatheticdownstaters has made substantial progresspossible. He feels that “liberals now haveconsiderable leverage” to promote legisla¬tion in the areas of minority employment,welfare reform, and health care.Still, like representative Braun. New¬house senses hostility among many rurallegislators for urban liberals and theircauses. New-house helped lead the fight inthe Senate to allocate emergency funds tokeep Cook County Hospital afloat. Thoughthe funding was only enough to “postponethe day of reckoning” for the beleagueredhospital, Newhouse says he met strong op¬position from downstate senators whoseemed to regard any aid given to public in¬stitutions in Chicago as money thrownaway.Towards this end, Newhouse has spon¬sored and supported legislation aimed atoutlawing discriminatory hiring practicesA new bill of his is designed especially tohelp blacks and other minorities win jobs inthe building industries. The bill providesthat (a) the state will set up an apprentice¬ship training council to teach basic buildingskills to disadvantaged youths. (b > oncethese apprentices become journeymen,local firms will be required to hire a certainnumber of them, and (c) the state will re¬quire minority participation at all levels ofthe building trade, administrative and man¬ual alike.As chairman of the senate Legislative Ad¬visory Committee on Public Aid. Newhouseis also spearheading a struggle to make theDepartment of Public Aid more responsiveto the needs of those it serves. Until recent¬ly. he says, the department has concerneditselt too much with chasing down suspectedwelfare cheaters. The senator wants to“place the emphasis on welfare and socialservices, where it belongs ” Says New¬house, “we want to reduce the (welfare)role respectfully.”Newhouse sees efficient organization asthe key to saving communities swamped byurban blight. “VVe must use our politicalpower to make friends of our employers,”he advises. “It’s time we restored dignity toour neighbors.”October 5, 1979 — The Chicago Maroon — 7DOC FILMSSteve Rash'sTHE BUDDY HOLLY STORYFriday, Oct. 5 7:00, 9:15,11:30Luchino Visconti’sTHE INNOCENTSaturday, Oct. 6 7:00,9:30 and MidnightKenji Mizoguchi’sA GEISHASunday, Oct. 7 7:15 and 9:30AH the above films: $1.50Monday, October 8 — $1.25James Craze’sWASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND7:30D. W. Griffith’sA ROMANCE OF HAPPY VALLEY9:00All Films in Cobb HallThe Friends of the Symphony 8c Music Department presentthe first in a series of five concerts featuringTHE CHICAGO SYMPHONY WINDSin music ofMOZARTSUNDAY, OCTOBER 21,8:00 p.m.MAN DEL HALLProgram Highlights:Quintet for Piano and Winds in E-Flat K.452(John Perry, piano)Music from DON GIOVANNIRECEPTION FOLLOWINGTICKETS AT REYNOLDS CLUB BOX OFFICE:Series Prices: General Public $25, Faculty/Start $20, U.C. Students $15.00Single Concert Prices: General Public $6.50, Faculty/Staff $5.50,U.C. students $4.50For further information call 753-3580 or 753-2612 LARGE REFRIGERATORSONLY $50SMALL REFRIGERATORSONLY $30(PLUS $10 DEPOSIT)AVAILABLE THROUGHTHE STUDENTGOVERNMENT OFFICE,306 IDA NOYES HALL753-3273Open House-Oct. 5-6Come Visit the Hyde Park AddressThat's Been Attracting Smart Home-buyers Since Its Recent Grand OpeningCondominium Green u wd ut 51 ndBeautifully restored walk-up homes offering the verybest in value and design with features like:• Spacious, sunny rooms• Modern country kitchen w/oak cabinetry• Ceramic tiled bath• Generous closet space• Energy-conserving design• Individual laundry rooms• Off-street parkingTwo 8c three-bedroom homes available. Prices from$48,500. Models open noon to 5 pm, daily. For appoint¬ment call 667-6666.Kennedy, Ryan, Monigal & Associates5508 South Lake Park Avenue, ChicagoExclusive Sales Agent8 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, October 5, 1979the grey city journalMad?— orjust crazy?Sitting at my house's discussion ofJoseph Cropsey's Aims of EducationAddress, I was hoping the conversa¬tion would get away from talk of strik¬ing balances between contempt forand overdependence on experience. Ifound the issue too poorly stated, andbesides, to me, balances reek with thetension of arbitrarity.Soon .though, I saw a chance tosmash through the garbled rhetoricby using Mr. Cropsey's own exampleof the sunrise being a misleading ex¬perience. About the sunrise he said,“We know perfectly well that the sundoesn't rise. Something happenswhich gives us that illusion.” Evident¬ly, Mr. Cropsey used this example tofurther the point that education couldhelp rid us of the deceptions of ex¬perience. I thought it was time for theidea of reality being an illusion toundergo some dialectical marauding.Getting the floor I said that it is astrue to say that the universe revolvesaround the Earth as it is to say thatthe Earth rotates within the Universe.To explain: for the Earth to be saidto rotate it must be said that from apoint of view of a point in space (likethe sun for instance), a point on Earth(Chicago, say) would appear to rotateeasterly around the Earth's axis. Butfrom the point of view of Chicago, anygiven point (like the sun) would ap¬ pear to rotate around the Earth's axis 1in a westerly manner. Since, as Eins-| tein theorizes, no reference point canbe said to be the best, both “theUniverse revolves around the Earth"and "the Earth rotates within the 1Universe" are accurate descriptionsof the ongoing event that gives us the"illusion" of the sun rising.Among those who followed my 1amument I saw two groups: those ;who agreed with me and those who jcouldn't. I believe some peoplecouldn't agree because the notion ofthe Earth rotating within theUniverse is ingrained in them. Theyseemed unable to think without usingabsolute, objective reference points ;— even though such thinking is bogus ;in physics.The thought came to me that my ;slight knowledge of physics would ;cause me to be judged insane by asociety which believed in absolute, ob¬jective reference points — because a :madman, I think, cannot be shown to ;| be anything but a person who does notshare basic ingrained beliefs with hisculture.With that thought came a personal jrevelation: one of my aims of educa- jtion should be insanity. I don't want !my awareness to be stunted like that jof those who believe in absolute, ob- jjective physical reference points. I don't want my awareness to be justthat of a Midwesterner or of anAmerican or of a member of Westernsociety — I want it to be that of a human being. I want to rise above myroots, to stand pure, to see as far as Ican see. I want to go crazy.— Kurt KeefnerMarching on the nightA week ago tonight, several thou¬sand women and men gathered in theLoop to protest violence againstwomen. The following is one woman'saccount of the march:We met in the Loop at 7 pm: youngwomen, old women, housewives withchildren, business women in three-piece suits and some men.We joined to take back the night, toreclaim it from the muggers and therapists and the murderers, to recap¬ture it from the more subtle op¬pressors, to parade on the streets onwhich we would never wander alone.We gathered at the Daley Centerand listened to speeches, poems andplays. We marched down Clark Streetto Jackson Boulevard to Michigan Av¬enue and back to the Daley Center.Then we went home.And the streets were no safer andthe laws were no stricter. Being awoman still meant being an easy tar¬get.But we, the marchers, were some¬how relieved.Because as similar as this marchwas to all others — with theirspeeches and poems and plays — thisone was different.Not only were the speeches livelierand the poems and plays more liter¬ate than usual, this march reached afervor rarely seen in these reportedlyapathetic times.We knew we would not diminish vio¬lence by our rally and march. But nei¬ther would we accept it. Violence maybe a part of city life or a part of life in general, but we were saying it shouldnot be that way.On the surface, there's nothing extraordinary about this declaration.1 But among some, hitting a womanisn't considered "violence." Neitheris harassing a woman on the street. Marching that night, I thought ofthe daily walks to and from work thissummer, walks during which I washarassed day after day.I thought about a friend of mine whowas finger fucked in junior highschool in a white Jewish neighbor- I hood.I thought about my sister's room¬mate who was attacked and draggedtowards a beach house during a runalong a beach in California. She decid¬ed it would be better to die than to sub¬mit, so she fought. What she didn'tknow is that the man she fought offhad already dragged several otherwomen into beach houses and hadraped and killed them.I remembered thinking at the timethat my sister's roommate was lucky;she got away with her life.Now that the march is over, I nolonger think her lucky. She shouldnever have had to risk her life thatway. None of us should.Violence is not really a problem oflighting or policing or law. It is a prob¬lem of expectation — what others ex¬pect of women, how we mold our¬selves to those expectations, and whatwe ourselves expect.We are making inroads in changingwhat is expected of women. Themyths that all women secretly hope tobe raped and that they enjoy beingsubmisive have largely been explod¬ed.But many women still accept vio¬lence as a given, and it was this thatwe fought last week.Last week, for one night, we tookthe city by siege. But the most impor¬tant thing we did was to examine ourexpectations. The consensus was thatwe will not accept anything less thana safe society. -Abbe Fletman1327 E. 57th St.Your friendlyneighborhood groceryt SINCE 1950j Service Meats Quality ProduceU';u u A,Jk*1V-i. 'ON 55thPrints and ISolid Blousesoriginally*27 to *44 jhNow *19 to $2W .JS!«i Stripe andH-T-if P'Ti *1 ^olid Sweaters*17 to *27ow *12 to *22lolid Skirts*31 to *36w *24 to *2 Wool and AllW eather CoatsNM25H OffIttHyde Park Shopping Center The Dean'sForro THE DEAN9 SSTUDENT TASK FOR-CE ON EDUCATION tNTHE COLLEGE IS ASTUDENT ORGANIZ¬ATION SPONSOREDBY THE DEAN OFTHE COLLEGEw II / C H H A SDEDICATED ITSELFTO THE IN¬VESTIGATION OFTHE ACADEMICEDUCATION OFFER¬ED IIY THE COLLEGEIN TERMS OF ITSIDEALS. ITS PRAC¬TICES AND OF THERELATIONS OF THETWO.THE FIRST TASKFORCE MEETINGWILL RE WED¬NESDAY. OCTOBERUK AT 8 PM.. IN THETASK LOUNGE OFIDA NOYES HALL.ALL INTERESTEDSTUDENTS AREWELCOME.THE DEAN’S STUDENT TASK FORCE ON EDUCATION IN THE COLLEGE- GATES-BLAKE 416-onONTHEVMTARCOMPLETE LIGHTVivitarModel 283plus Model FA-2Lens/ Filter Adapters7995+ 10 Buy the Vivitar 283Electronic Flash...get the Lens/Filter Discover the exciting worldAdantprfnr/fJVfy of creative flash photogra-ftaapier wruniLJ phy wjfh the Vivitar 283“System” Flash. The easy-to-use, automatic flash.Vtvttar 283•Most popular Vivitar “sys¬tem” auto electronic flash•Accepts system acces¬sories for creative flashphotography•Tilting flash head for soft/bounce lighting•Removable sensor for re¬mote sensing capability•Thyristor circuitry for conserving battery po wer and faster recycling.•Choice of four automatic settings for depth of field controlVivitar Lens/Filter Adapter•Attaches to 283 flash head•Accepts Vivitar Flash Filter Kits. Fo r special effects lighting.•Accepts Vivitar Variable Angle Lens Kit. Changes angle of illumination to matchdifferent lenses.1* Sate Ends 10-31-T9.MGuKrtaSi*efe,iitc.1519 East 53rd Street 752-3030159th & Oak Park Avenue (Bremertowne Mall) 429-6464Mt Greenwood 3205 W tilth St 238-64642—the grey city journal, Friday, October 5, 1979All dressed up & no place to go?(then please read on ...) You are cordially invited to attend the first official fall meeting of the greycity journal staff, to be held this afternoon at 4 o'clock in our spacious suite,Ida Noyes 303. Participation in this joyous event is, like everything, optional,but will enable you and us to raise our collective consciousness. Gourmet horsd'oeuvres will be served, and formal attire is always relative. RSVP by show¬ing up, but if you cannot, and wish you could, call us at 753-3265. — R.L.MoviesThe Buddy Holly Story: SteveRash (1978). The script and direc¬tion of this incredibly cliched filmbio are strictly made for-T.V. —but who cares? The film is GaryBusey's tensed-up, energy riddenperformance as Holly. Mean¬while it is happily accompaniedby the inspiredly professionalperformances of Don Stroud andCharles Martin Smith as theCrickets, and a goodly number offairly authentic performances ofHolly's tunes. Doc Films, tonightat 7, 9:15 and 11:30.The Innocent: Luchino Visconti(1976). This story is from a novelby Italian playwright GabrielleD'Annunzio, and concerns thetwo loves of sadistic aristocratGiancarlo Giannini (with fakeybeard): his homey wife (LauraAntonelli) and his mistress (Jen¬nifer O'Neill). The decor and cos¬tumes are wonderful, but the filmitself crawls at a snail's pacefrom one static set-up to another.If you hang around to the lastthird, though, you can see whyMs. Antonelli and her body havemade themselves Art House sen¬sations. Doc Films, Saturday, Oc¬tober 6, at 7, 9:30 and midnight.You Can't Take It WithYou: Frank Capra (1938).Capra and Riskin scripted thisone from the Kaufmann Hartplay. It concerns a family of richcrazies — and some new addi¬tions — who give up business andbucks for the harmonica. In spiteof loads of platitudinous materialon the spiritual poverty of therich versus the wealth of thepoor's hearts, there are JamesStewart, Edward Arnold, JeanArthur, and Mischa Auer (fromOmsk) to enliven things. Thisfilm has been unavailable forover ten years. Law SchoolFilms, Saturday, October 6 at 7and 9:30.The Man With The GoldenGun: Guy Hamilton (1974).James Bond in decline. RogerMoore is better here than he wasin Live and Let Die, and not asgood as in the Bonds since — buthe has never been in Sean Con¬nery's league. In this fairly unin¬spired one he chases after Oriental villain Christopher Lee, whoplans on taking over the world —or something like that. Lee is anexcellent hammy villain as usual,there are lots of amphibious vehi¬cles moving across the Phillippine terrain, and at least one fair¬ly fun scene with Bond at awomen's karate school. I HouseFilms, Saturday, October 6 at 7and 9:30.A Geisha: Kenji Mizoguchi(1953). A masterpiece. The storyof two geisha — an aspiringyoung girl and a hardened veter¬an — who get themselves lockedout of work when they refuse togo all the way so a customer cancomplete a business deal. It istold by Mizoguchi in classic fashion: carefully paced, richly composed, lyrically characterized.Doc Film, Sunday, October 7 at7:15 and 9:30.Washington Merry-Go-Round: James Cruze (1932).Fast paced and tightly constructed, this little comedy is far lessflabby and sentimental thanFrank Capra's later remake,the grey city journalGary Beberman, Curtis Black, Melanie Deal, Abbe Fletman, Karen Hornick, OldJules, Kurt Keefner, Lori Keehn, John Kim, Rebecca Lillian, Philip Maher, MaryMankowski, Rory McGahan, David Miller, Danny Schulman, Ted Shen, SusanWagner and Wayne Tack. October 5, 1979Mister Smith Goes To Washing¬ton. Lee Tracy plays the film'shero, Button Gwinnett Brown,and his performance should be alesson to Spencer. Cruze's direc¬tion is direct and functional andthere is a full chorus of carefullyobserved faces and voices in thebackground. The bizarre plotconcerns Tracy's vigilante victo¬ry over the forces of capitalistevil with the help of an army ofunemployed veterans. DocFilms, Monday, October 8 at7:30.The Struggle: D. W. Griffith(1931). This film supposedlyended Griffith's career. An earlytalkie, it is a grittily realisticanti prohibition drama about theeffects of home-made alcohol onthe bums forced to resort to it.Using authentic New York loca¬tions and accents, the film's ap¬proach was too modern for theproducers — and it didn't catchon too well with audiences either.Still, it sounds well worth seeing,and you can bet I'll be there. DocFilms, Monday, October 8 at 9.Note: The previously scheduledRomance Of Happy Valley will beshown at a later date.All Doc Films are shown inCobb Hall's Quantrell Auditori¬um, 5811 S. Ellis Ave,; all LawSchool Films are shown in theLaw School Auditorium, 1111 E.60th St. This week's 1-House filmwill be shown in their auditorium,1414 E. 59th St. Tickets to thisweekend's films are SI.50 each.— Rory McGahanMusicFrom Bach to Gospel: The Uni¬versity Church is providing fivedays' worth of free noontimemusic next week. Performancesare: Monday: Julie Ryan, "BachSonatas for Unaccompanied Vio PoetryDlin"; Tuesday: Judith Mitchell(soprano), "Traditional Southernand Applachian ReligiousTunes"; Wednesday: CurtisBlack (trumpet) and CarolBrowning (piano), "Songs of theOld and New World"; Thursday:C. B. Clinton (voice and guitar),"Songs of the Journey"; and Fri¬day: Roderick Rhodes (voice and alloon Flight" is from "Fotografia Polska," an exhibit of300 Polish photographs from 1839 to the present. This ex¬hibit includes many kinds of photographs made by manyphotographers, and stresses the context in which the work originallyappeared. Many of these photographs have not been outside Poland be¬fore, and when this travelling exhibit ends, they won't be allowed outagain. From the short look I had on Wednesday, it's clear to me thateveryone would enjoy seeing this exhibit before it closes on Dec. 2. TheMuseum of Contemporary Art, 237 East Ontario. Tue-Sat, 10-5; Sun,noon-5 280-2660. $1.50; students, $.75. — D.M.writers. This Songfest, featuringFred Holstein, Chris Farrel, andmany others, is sponsored by theIllinois Labor Historical Society."Don't mourn — organize!" Sun.,Oct. 7, at Park College, Fosterand Kedzie. S2. — B S.Association for the Advancementof Creative Musicians: see arti¬cle by Curtis Black on p. 15Van Morrison: Morrison can¬celled out last year, but hopefullyhe'll try harder this time. Hisnewest album is reportedly veryworthwhile. Tickets now avail¬able. Mon. and Tues., Oct. 15 and16 at 7:30 pm. Park West, 322 W.Armitage. 929-5959. S10.50 plustwo drink minimum.Old Town School of Folk MusicChicago Fire Party: The Schoolpulls this all-nighter every yearas a fund raiser. Jim Hirsch,Wayne Hochberg, and dozens ofother entertainers will celebratewith beer, refreshments, beer,non stop music, and beer. Everyfolkie in the city should stop by atsome point during the bash,which lasts till dawn. Begins Sat.,Oct. 6, at 8:30 pm. 909 W. Armi¬tage. 525 7793. $2.50. All proceedsbenefit the not for profit school.Erwin Heifer Band: The CornellLounge is gone, but it's worth thetrip north to hear these blues. Theband, especially bassist Big TimeSarah, is terrific. A good excuseto check out the club, too. Sat.,Oct. 6. B.L.U.E.S., 2519 N. Halst-ed. 528 1012. SI.50.Ekklus, Messenger of MusicBlack Arts Celebration: This reggae program is part of the Celebration. Tues., Oct. 9, 7:30 pm.1020 S. Wabash, second floor.663 5580 Call for prices and moreinformation.the greyob Christman and Sandra Maupin in Court Theatre's producti¬on of Chekhov's The Celebration, through Oct. 14 in the Reyn¬olds Club Theatre. Thu-Sat, 8:30; Sun, 7:30. 753-3581. $2.50; stu¬dents, $1.50.piano), "Inspirational Gospel."Performances are in the sanctuary at noon. One more reason toeat lunch at the Blue Gargoyle.55th and University. Free.Joe Hill Centennial Songfest:Sunday marks the one hundredthbirthday of the great IndustrialWorkers of the World songwriterand organizer Joe Hill, who wasframed on a murder charge andexecuted by the state of Utah in1915. His stirring and vital songs- like "Pie in the Sky" and"Casey Jones" — have been aprofound and enduring influenceon folksingers and topical song May Swenson reads her poetry:We haven't read her work, but wehear that it is excellent. The Academy of American Poets thinks itis, and has awarded May Swen¬son it's 1979 Fellowship. Judgefor yourself tonight, in BurrillHall at the Episcopal ChurchCenter, 65 E. Huron. 8 pm.281-0075. Student admission, $2;others, $3. Sponsored by the Poet¬ry Center at the Museum of Con¬temporary Art.ArtAbtract Experssionism: A Trib¬ute to Harold Rosenberg. Thetitle of this show speaks for itself.The works in the exhibition byPollock, Gorky, DeKooning,Rothko, Guston, Baziotes, Kline,Gottlieb and Mitchell — artistswhom Rosenberg intelligently in¬troduced to America in the earlyfifties — are all from Chicago col¬lections. The only three privatelyowned Barnett Newman's in thecity will be shown together for thefirst time. Opening reception onWednesday, October 10 from 5 to7 pm. The show runs throughNov. 11. The Smart Gallery,Cochrane Woods Art Center. 5550S. Greenwood. Tues. - Sat. 10-4,Sun. noon-4. 753-2121 — D.S.New Gallery Space Opening:When the Young Hoffman Gal¬lery opens its doors with a showof paintings by Ron Gorchov, itwill be the largest gallery spacein Chicago. The "space" is NewYork style, ala SoHo, and Gor-chov's paintings are simple andbeautiful. 215 W. Superior. Open¬ing reception Tues. and Wed.,Oct. 9 and 10, 5-7 pm. Call 951-8828for hours and duration of theshow. — D.S.Roman Drawings of the 16th Cen¬tury from the Louvre. For any¬body interested in drawings, thisshow will be heaven-on-walls.For the uninitiated, it will be akey to the strange rapture of thedrawing connoiseur. Art Instituteof Chicago. Michigan at Adams.Both shows open on October 4.Toulouse-Lautrec runs throughDecember 2 and the drawingshow through January 6. — D.S.DanceStrangers in the Night — DanceWorks by Charlie Vernon: Ifthese dances — Rat Parade, Fiveand Dime, Snowy Evening Varia¬tions, and Solo — are as intrigu¬ing as their titles sound, andpromo photo looks, then thisdance concert is worth seeing.Very avant-garde. Tonight andtomorrow, also Oct. 12, 13 and 14at MoMing, 1034 W. Barry. 8:30pm. 472-9894. $4, S3 for students.p., o. a c.Stamp Out Police Spying: Thisbenefit to aid the Alliance to EndRepression's lawsuit against po¬lice spying will be filled withmulti media entertainment andedification: a documentary film,"The Intelligence Network,"folksinger Rebecca ArmstrongShepard (daughter of George andGerri), Peggy ("Chalk Talk")Lipscutz, and the ubiquitous politicos — Larry Bloom, CarolMosley Brown, Barbara FlynnCurrie. Sun., Oct. 7 at the FirstUnitarian Church, 57th andWoodlawn. 7:30 pm. $2.50. Contri¬butions are tax-deductible, andthere will be refreshments.city journal, Friday, October 5, 1979 —3STUDENT GOVERNMENTACADEMIC AFFAIRS COMMITTEEannouncesTHE PILOT PROGRAMofTHE OPEN UNIVERSITYThe Open University is an attempt by Student Government and the faculty of theCollege to help fill the presently existing gap in the non-credit academic opportunitiesof the University between course-auditing and self-study.The courses listed below are free, non-credit, academic courses taught by volunteerfaculty members. They are all to a degree interdisciplinary and are appropriate forstudents in any division or discipline.The courses all commence the week of October 15, and run for either three or fivesessions of two to three hours each. Registration for these courses will occur Friday,October 12, starting at 9:30 am, in the lobby of Cobb Lecture Hall.The courses are all seminar in nature and therefore enrollment will be limited. Wesuggest interested students attempt to register as early Friday as possible.THE COURSESS.G.l. Social Banditry as History and MythRalph A. Austen, associate Professor,Dept, of History and the CollegeThis course deals with the concept of rural criminals as agents of legitimatepopular opposition to an unjust social order. The starting point will be Eric Hobshawn's short book, Bandits. Through further reading in both historical and literaryworks from a number of societies throughout the world student will examine the em¬pirical role of rural robber bands in specific situations of social change; the conceptsof social banditry which accompanied these developments; and, finally but notnecessarily decisively, the universal mythic themes expressed in the idea of the socialbandit.Wednesdays, 11:30 am, Pick 203. 5 sessions, limit 10 students.S.G.2. The Anthropology of MonstersRaymond D. Fogelson, Professor Depts. Anthropologyand Behavioral Sciences and the CollegeThis course is a cross cultural attempt to discover a general notion of monster, bothanimal and human and the functions that they play in human thinking. We will consider the history of ideas and beliefs about monsters in their various formal and structural aspects. The text for the course is Leslie Fiedlers Freaks, Myths, and Images ofthe Secret SelfWednesdays, 4:00 pm, Cobb 110. 3 sessions, limit 10 students.S.G.3. Stress, Emotions, and IllnessChase P. Kimball. M.D. Professor Depts.Psychiatry, and Medicine and in the College.This course will address theory, research, and practical applications of mind,brain, and body relationships. Discussions will focus on the relationship of stress to ilIness onset and concepts of coping and adaptation, and on therapeutic.Wednesdays, 5:00 pm, Billings B130. 5 sessions, limit 12S.G.4. An Intricate Poem: Shakespears 129th SonnetLawrence A. Rosenwald, William Rainey Harper Fellow,the CollegeA Leisurely discussion of the particular poem, and of the reading of dense, com¬plicated, elaborate poems in generai. To make things more complicated still, areading of the essay on the Sonnet by Roman Jakobsen. To discuss such poems instandard classes is almost impossible; perhaps it will be more feasible here.S.G.5. Castaneda'sTheTeachingsof Don JuanJonathan Z. Smith, Dean of the College andWilliam Benton Professor of Religion and Human Sciences in the College andProf. Divinity School and Dept. New Testament and Early Christian Literature.The Teachings of Don Juan: A Close reading of Castenada's text as a modernclassic with particular attention to an understanding of the world view embodied inthe text and the philosophical questions it raises. Some attention will be given toparallel materials and the controversies surrounding Castaneda's work, but primari¬ly we will explore howto read the book.Mondays 4 pm, Place TBA. 5 sessions, limit 10. Trip toA short story,by Philip Maher My home was the city; I was an orphan by choice.At sixteen running away came naturally. I hadmends, a job, a girl, and my folks were a drag. What cana boy do?Being young and bold and convinced of a land of milkand honey, I resolved to foresake this evil city. To departon my eighteenth birthday; by age a man, I wouldsearch the world until I found that better place.Well, I have to admit, my reasons were not all thatnoble. Breaking up with my girlfriend had strengthenedmy resolution: I found it too hard to face familiar streetswithout her.No signs, no omens arose to check or alter my flight.And now cruel winter nipped at our heels. The calendarread Nov. 4. My last night in town.^|j|#ell, do you want some?” I looked up; Jack's faceWw thrust in mine, grey eyes glowering, beard allgrizzle and spike. His snarled mane quivered and shooklike black hemp over his shoulders. He pierced me withhis gaze and did not let up."Urn”, I stalled, casting for help from Colleen, Jack'sgentle half. Her crystal blue eyes opened wide and aslow smile spread over her face. She stroked the purringcat on her lap. I said, "Sure, why not?”"That's the spirit!” he exploded, pushing back thetable. Colleen held on to the cat as Jack flew from theroom. I grinned nervously at Colleen; she read mymind."Don't worry Billy, he just wants to send you off right.You don't have to get dead drunk or anything.” She lit acigarette for emphasis; I nodded.Jack burst back, "Champagne!” he shouted. Pow! thecork; whoosh, came the foam, and we held our glassesunder the flood.I raised mine then and said, "Well, Here's to theroad.”Colleen raised hers, "Here's to you, Billy.”Jack raised his high, "Here's to sweet home Chica¬go!”We drank, and we drank. In no time the bottle wasdead, and we grew restless."Well Bill,” growled Jack, "Since this is your lastnight here I think we should really do the town.” I ac¬cepted his challenge, wondering what he had in mind."Oh yes,” said Colleen, "We can go to MaxwellStreet.”"Yes," bellowed Jack, "We'll go everywhere! Butfirst,” he glared at his watch, "We can still catch the lastset at Birdland.”"O.K.!" Our chairs screeched and the cat boundedaway.We dashed about the house, pulling on socks, shoes,jackets and hats. Confusion tugged at my sleeve, clarityscreamed. The teapot chuckled and the cat frowned.I was hovering breathless, on the brink, when suddenly diamonds shattered; the lights went out. Colleen, tookmy hand and a door swung open. A hallway, a preamble,a clatter of cluttering feet. We were off and running.And I do mean running. Birdland was swinging; weslipped in and pushed up to the bar. No champagne, but1hey did have whiskey. Jack ordered me shots, Colleenhad wine. We laughed and drank and time whirled awayin clouds of light ana smoke and sound."Closing time!” cried the bartender, "Last call!”"Let's go,” shouted Jack, and we were off and running, and I still mean runninq.Pimps and narcs and small-time hustlers lined thestreets, preying on each other, waiting for theirmarks. Each and every one of them pried into our eyesas we walked by — sizing us up, considering what kind ofthreesome we were, and what we might do, and for whatprice.A black man in a white suit with a diamond earringstrode majestically towards us. Trailing him were twohigh class hookers: one black with a white afro, theother white with a black afro. Both wore hotpants, plat¬forms, and sequins.Lone male hustlers sidled by, lean and aloof: tightpants, tight jackets, close shorn hair and beards. A manwinked at me from a doorway; I moved closer to Col¬leen.We escaped with our skins. We broke out of the sleazeinto the void; soon we entered the singles strip of RushStreet. Brassy middle aged white people pressedagainst each other like cattle, spilling out onto thestreets, looking at us and looking away.A drunken man in the crowd pawed at Colleen, "Heybaby," but Jack pushed him back. The man persisted,then Jack punched him in the face. The man fell, specta¬tors with drinks in their hands gasped. The scene frozefor an instant; a woman laughed; the man threw up. Col¬leen and I tugged at Jack's arms and we slipped awayinto the crowd.Jack cursed and muttered, wild eyed; Colleen soothedhim, hugging and stroking his arms. I kept looking back,but no one pursued.The crowd eventually thinned and Jack cooled off. Wewalked in silence a while then laughed about it. Colleenand I thanked him; Jack rubbed his fist.unkin' Donutsi loomed before us like an oasis inthe desert. "Ah,” we sighed in unison and beelinedfor the door. Pink and white plastic hit like a pie in the4—the grey city journal, Friday, October 5, 1979-the Heart of the Cityface. On the walls in big vertical stripes. On the counterin polka dots. Pink and white tiles, pink and whitebooths, pink and white donuts, even a pink and whitewaitress. We sat humorously at the counter and waitedpatiently for her to come our way.Just then she had been withstanding the verbal bru¬talities of a drunk punk with acne, who sniggered to hispunk friends about the pig waitress. They ground outcigarettes, gulped coffee, and guffawed among themselves.But she stood firm, tending her coffee pots, she was abrick. Finally she strolled over. "Mm?" she asked.I requested one cinnamon donut and one french donut.Jack ordered three chocolate donuts with an OrangeCrush, Colleen had one french donut and coffee.We three sat quite subdued — I don't know if it was hermonolithic presence, or the bright light and plastic —but the atmosphere felt very much like a police sta¬tion's.We endured it though. If she could do it, so could we.We ate right there, exchanging filthy glances with thepunks at the other end of the counter, and ogling the wai¬tress when she turned her back. She had tremendouspink legs.I became enamoured of her. She has guts, I thought,she could face anything, working in an all night Dunkin'Donuts. I wondered if I would ever see her again; probably not, l thought, and then again it was "Let's go!"Full of donuts, we were appeased. We padded out liketranquil animals, leaving her a big tip for she certainlydeserved it.We headed north half a block until I gasped, "Stop!"Dead halt. Silence except the dull hum of the city whichnever stops. Jack and Colleen stared at me.I paused, appreciating the silence I was appointed tobreak. "We're going north," I said, "We want to gosouth"."You're right Billy," said Jack. Colleen nodded a sol¬emn yes, we turned and simply strolled. Our footstepsclacked and scuffed on the pavement. Streetlights hungabove like crystalline moons. The night air glittered andcrackled with electricity.omehow it had become obvious that we wouldwalk to Maxwell Street. This unspoken, but under¬stood knowledge was expressed in our unflatering steps.We marched and marched, soaking in the city scenes. Isaw the towering buildrigs of downtown approach as Ihad never seen them before, incredible things, and Iwondered if the rest of the world could be as glorious.Now we entered the loop, pulse of the city by day buteerily until at night. A million ghosts stirred in thestreets but not a physical soul, save us. A lone patrol carslowed; the cops inside eyed us but then peeled away in asqueal of rubber.We never wavered, we held a steady gait, bearing duesouth. Our footsteps echoed in the darkest corridors ofthe city, those before the wasteland began.5th Street, 6th Street, 7th Street...We passed occasion¬al winos asleep in doorways but met no one. I felt eyeswatching us, but saw nothing.We picked our way over broken glass and trash as the sidewalk degenerated southward. 10th Street, 11th,12th...We had ceased speaking at 5th. Six more blocks toMaxwell Street.Every alley, any noise made us jump. We walked closetogether, kept our heads low and our hands in our pock¬ets, straining to blend with the night; knowing perfectlywell though that our face shone like beacons. Still thestreets remained empty as we neared Maxwell Street.A fire’flickered in the distance. "Do you see that?" Iwhispered. Colleen nodded rapidly. I had never seen herso scared; her eyes wide open and her teeth clenchedtight. She hung back but Jack and I swept her up between us."Can't stop now," muttered Jack, even his voice toneddown to a whisper.We trudged on, step by step through the crumblingcity. Vacant lots stretched in every direction, desolateflats of broken bricks, rubble, and scurrying rats. Nowalls to skulk against. The fire grew in size.Our inflamed spirits had cooled by now — we had beenwalking for hours — but still our minds flew. High,scared, and trembling, we crept forward.The chill of false dawn stirred the air; birds sangsomewhere. Where? I wondered. We drew closer to the fire.We stared amazed at the street sign: MaxwellStreet.Jjk trash fire sputtered and sparked on the sidewalk,black shapes huddled around it. Voices murmeredand mingled with snatches of a blues harp — an occa¬sional shout, a laugh, a curse.All at once they stopped. Only the fire moved. Westood stock-still. Adrenalin rushed when a voice criedout, "Hey brothers! You cold? Come set by the fire aspell."Ah! The tension of the last eighteen blocks expelled ina single breath, we practically collapsed in a heap by thefire. We were drawn into the circle; a bottle passed, andas the warm rush of whiskey burned my throat l heardthe harp strike up again. Blues. One man played them,another stoked the fire. The man beside me, missing halfhis teeth, turned and grinned. "What the hell you doingdown here't this hour, white boy?" And oh, I laughed, Ilaughed so hard it filled the night and echoed in thestreet."Man, I came to see you!" I cried and we put our armsaround each other and roared till the sun came up. Wfcif iiiUffMiMR. LEE(Winner of 7 6 Trophiesfis now atPIERRE ANDRECOIFFURESTrained by Mr. Kennethand Vidal Sassoon.Expert inRestyling, Blow Cuts,for the busy UniversityWoman & ^ ^ ManPIERRE ANDRE COIFFURES5242 S. Hyde Park Blvd. 363-0727 COURT TlKATRO5706 S Universitv Avenue Chic ago. Illmoi' W1617 75 V 1581Court Studio Theatre presentsan evening of one-art plavs:Chekov's THE CELEBR ATIONA1 bee's ZOO STORYBeckett’s FROM AN ABANDONED WORKThur - Sun. Oct 4 - I t8:30 pm. 7:30 on Sun.82.50 (.eneral admission.81.50 Studentn/seniorsReynolds Club Theutre57th \ Univendtv753-3581 ATTENTIONFaculty and StudentsThe Committee on Public Policy Studiesis pleased to announce the first annualResearch Conference on Public PolicyAnalysis and Management.The conference will be heldOctober 19 and 20 at theRadisson-Chicago Hotel.For further information on the conferenceand registration, seeAnita Anderson, Wieboldt 301 (3-1896).the grey city journal, Friday, October 5, 1979—5VALUABLE COUPONValuable Coupon!COLORPROCESSING•- Kodak SIN^y The 4th is Freewhen you pay for 3Bring in your favorite color slideswith this coupon and we’ll haveKodak make four same-size KODAKColor Prints for the price of three.You get one FREE. Hurry, this offerexpires November 14, 1979. Stop intoday for details.model camera1342 East 55th St. 493-6700VALUABLE COUPON-CUT OUTCASIO*FA-lTHE FX-502P COUPLEDWITH THE FA-l ALLOWSCONNECTION TO ATAPE RECORDER ANDSAVES DATA ORPROGRAMS FOR FUTUREUSE.IT TAKES ABOUT II TO I6SECONDS TO STOREPROGRAMS ON MAGNETICTAPE AND RESTORETHEM TO THE CALCULATOR SI [9 0 J3 3aaaiii a i a aa a § a edFX-502PTHE LATEST POCKETSIZED PROGRAMMABLESCIENTIFICCALCULATOR FROMCASIO.• 256 PROGRAM STEPS• 22 MEMORY REGISTERS•10 LEVELS OF PARENTHESES• TRUE ALGEBRAIC LOGIC•51 BUILT IN FUNCTIONS•PROGRAM AND MEMORYPROTECTION WHILEPOWER OFF.• LIQUID CRYSTAL DISPLAYOnly $39.95 Only $129.95AT CASIO;MIRACLES NEVER CEASE.University of Chicago Bookstore5750 S. Ellis AvenueCalculator Dept., 2nd Floor753-3303MASTERCHARGE & VISA ACCEPTED O'Dee# IM<whw in 8<e►Come in to see our fine selec¬tion of Quality Brand-NameUniforms for Professional Menand Women►Coordinating Tops, Skirts, andPants as well as Dresses, Suits,Lab Coats, etc.►White Shoes - Clinic and Nursemates/Daylites17 H. Stole -Slem't BMg.- Iltk himOn display at Ida Noyes Hall October 4-94:30-10:30Distribution Tuesday October 9,4:00 p.m.$3.00 to students and staff with ID call 753-3591Cental period until Tuesday, Decmeber 116—the grey city journal, Friday, October 5, 1979”''au « an.sTs assemDie tor "Just a Closer Walk with Thee" on the last day of thefestival.Good acousticsby Rebecca LillianBread and Roses is a California based or¬ganization that brings live music to prisons,hospitals and other places where peopleusually can't hear it. Bread and Roses wasrecorded live at the first Bread and RosesFestival of Acoustic Music, and brings backsome of the energy that acoustic musicbrought to the major folk festivals in the Six¬ties. The sound of the album, which is consistently good, is reminiscent of a time whenthe concept of non electric music was itselfa political statement, as an alternative tothe polished, mechanized music industry.Folk-singer Mimi Farina, founder ofBread and Roses, still feels this way, sayingof the Festival and record aibum, "... thereare people who are a little more civilizedthan what rock and roll has come to repre¬sent, who enjoy listening to lyrics ..." Thatattitude in music is no longer a given,though; many strong political statementsare made by New Wave rock artists, not folkmusicians. Farina's comment is also ques¬tionable because folk music has never reallybeen "civilized" in the sense that opera andchamber music are. Folk values havealways been quite pedestrian. Despite thisself righteousness, Bread and Roses is amarvelous 2-LP album.Some of the cuts are predictable: the lateMelvina Reynolds singing "Little Boxes,"and Tom Paxton doing "The Last Thing onMy Mind." But they are classics, and de¬serve a place in this type of collection. Othercuts are pleasant surprises, such as ToniBown's "Beginning Tomorrow," sung herewith Terry Garthwaite; and the JohnHerald Band's cute tribute to Ramblin' JackElliot.A few of the choices on the album are simply confusing, in light of how much musicwas presented at the Festival. Why wasPete Seeger's "Sailing Down My GoldenRiver" chosen over everything else he musthave played? Seeger does it well, but this particular song lacks the fervor that hebrings to most pieces in concerts. Why wasHoyt Axton given two cuts on the record,plus his between-number babble thatloses something in the translation to vinyl?Given this selection, the songs are well arranged for a collection of excerpts from alive concert. John Herald's "Ramblin' JackElliot" is followed perfectly by Elliot per¬forming his well-known "San Francisco BayBlues." The three polemical songs on thealbum appear in succession; a sort of hom¬age to an art form that is used rarely today.In some ways this is good; "Universal Sol¬dier" sounds triter now than when BuffySaint Marie first wrote it. But Joan Baezsinging Phil Ochs' "There but for Fortune"uncovers the melancholy frustration thatpermeated the Sixties folk scene. Phil Ochskilled himself because of the politics of thetime, and there remains an underside ofthat which we try to hide and forget. Inmany ways, we failed.Yet the existence of Bread and Roses —the organization, the festival, and the recordalbum — is evidence that the spirit of the po¬litical folk music scene is living, in broader,more basic ways than before. The entireFestival was broadcast live throughout theCalifornia State Prison system. Many pris¬oners heard Richie Havens, not usually as¬sociated with folk music, sing a moving con¬frontation with the powers that be, "WhatAbout Me"? The Persuasions sang directlyto the inmates, and spoke supportively tothem. All of this is captured on the record;you can't listen to it and forget where the in¬spiration came from.Most of the pieces on Bread and Roseshave been recorded elsewhere, but withoutthe power with which they are presentedhere. Proceeds from the album will gotoward the operating budget of Bread andRoses. This music isn't new, but it's per¬formed in its original spirit. And that's beenmissing for a long time. JOIN THE U.C. SKI CLUBINDECEMBER 15-22,1979• Seven nights lodging indeluxe condominiums atthe lifts• Six days all area lift tickets$240.00$100.00 deposit due 10-24First Informational MeetingSaturday, Oct. 67 p.m. Ida NoyesDrama relevant to our timesby Lori KeehnOffering a unique experience to modernday theater goers, The Steppenwolf Theatrecompany has revived Clifford Odets' dra¬matic, impassioned account of the plight ofthe American worker in the mid-1930s. En¬tering the Apollo Theatre, one finds a simu¬lation of a Chicago cabdivers' union hall. Astrike vote is to be taken, but first the audi¬ence is swept into the fervor, joining insongs of labor's struggles.It quickly becomes apparent that all areawaiting the arrival of the strike commit¬tee' chairman, Lefty Costello. After heateddebate, the strike committee must finallyallow the union management to begin themeeting. A series of skits follow: they hadbeen devised by the cabbies to portray theobstacles faced by the working population ofthe depression years. Drawn from actualexperiences, the "workers" become so im¬mersed in their interaction "on stage" thatthey lose the ability to differentiate betweenthe skits they are performing for their fel¬low union members and their everyday ex¬periences. Indeed, this is part of the point:these plays within Waiting for Lefty aren'treally fiction at all — or at least not for thecabbies.Written as an entry to a contest for "one- act plays of social significance," Odetsmanaged to combine a critique of the cor¬porate structure (represented here by theunion management) and its insensitivity toworkers' needs. The actual dialogue leanstoward the rhetorical, but the situationsthese skits attempt to reflect are unset-tlingly similar to those occurring in the livesof working people today: the cost of livingrises faster than paychecks, and work isdone in sometimes unfavorable or hazard¬ous conditions.The performance is powerful, fast pacedand highly engrossing. The SteppenwolfPlayers are to be commended not only foran excellent dramatic rendition, but also forpresenting material that contains depth andsubstance in a time when shallow musicalsand comedies abound.In a bit of historical irony, the programnotes that the lower classes of the Thirtiescould not afford the fifty-cent tickets to seethe play. A glance about the theater duringthis production indicates that the price ofthe tickets and the location of the Apollo hasin fact limited the audience once again. Still,this play is worth the trip to the Northside.Apollo Theatre Center, 2540 North Lincoln.Wed Fri, at 8; Sat at 7 and 10; Sun at 3 and8. Complete information on all our activ-ties for the year.Featuring slides and a film.Memberships available $7.50/yr.Applications for the Vail trip.INTERESTED IN RACING? Check out theSki Team. Our low key approach is de¬signed to improve your skiing while hav¬ing a great time.DON’T MISS THE VAIL TRIPPLAN NOWNeed info call 955-9646the grey city journal, Friday, October 5, 1979—7by Karen Hornick, Susan Wagnerand Lori KeehnIn person, Bernardo Bertolucci appears close tothe stereotype of the Young European Film Direc¬tor — he wears a crumpled suede jacket, a brightscarf in his breast pocket, a side part and ducktail;he speaks broken English. He looks and acts like anItalian Francois Truffaut.Unlike Truffaut, however, Bertolucci is far fromprolific; the five major films he has made in the lastfifteen years have been more thought-provokingthan entertaining. He has always courted con¬troversy and scandal: The Conformist dealt withfascism, Last Tango in Paris with rape and thebreaking of social mores, 1900 with class structure.Bertolucci was born in 1941. The son of a filmcritic and well-known poet, Bertolucci's earlyaspirations were literary ones. His childhood inParma, the birthplace and home of Verdi, producedin him a great love of opera and music that revealsitself in his work. Bertolucci has found a way, aboldness, to incorporate his passion for high culturewith his equally strong passion for radical politics.Luna, his latest film, is less "political” than"cultural." It too confronts contemporary socialproblems, but at the level of the individual: it isabout heroin addiction, the dissolution of the family,and, most predominantly, incest.In Luna, Jill Clayburgh plays Caterina, a famousdiva and mother of Joe (Matthew Barry), a fifteenyear old. After her husband (Fred Gwynne, a.k.a.Herman Munster) dies in the beginning of the film,Caterina takes Joe on tour with her in Italy. Whilethere she discovers his heroin addiction anddiscovers simultaneously the depth and nature ofher love for him. Their relationship becomes sex¬ual, but stops short of sexual intercourse (a development, or lack of develoDment, in plot that hasalready proved problematic for critics). Lunaends, suggestively, on the upbeat when Joe reunitesCaterina with Giuseppe, his real father, whom hehas found in Italy working as a school-teacher, andthe potential destructiveness of his relationshipwith his mother seems diminished.Luna is overly melodramatic and perhaps toolong. But it is beautiful to look at and not withoutmoments of moving intensity. In the following, Ber¬tolucci discusses Luna and his career in generalwith representatives of the grey city journal and DePauL Northwestern, and Loyola newspapers. Theconversation, edited and shortened for publication,took place October 2, 1979 at the Whitehall Hotel inChicago.Luna opens October 19 at the Water TowerTheater.• • •Northwestern: Was making Luna part of a con¬scious decision on your part to get away from epicmovies like 1900 back to a more intimate psychological film?Bernardo Bertolucci: Yes, before deciding tomake Luna, I was supposed to make Red Harvest,the Dashiell Hammett novel. But I found it tooheavy, too expensive, too many actors, too big mov¬ies. And also, I like the idea of jumping from onemovie to another one and trying to surprise myself.And also my audience in a way. After Conformist,which was quite political and existentialist, cameTango, the story of two people trying to realize autopia. But it was a very private story, a utopia ofliving without social identity — to have a relationship without social identity. And then came 1900 andit's completely different and its mainly about poli¬tics — politics as subject matter. So — I don't know,I like change, major changes, and I like changesduring the movie.Susan Wagner: What do you mean by "changesduring the movie?"BB: I mean, there is a script that I've done withmy collaborators — and, in general, I used to writemy own script, by my own, because I come fromliterature so I want to burn away all the literaryways that I bring with me, before making themovie.I used to have the screenplay very well done, wellbuilt and constructed, because it makes me veryfree during the shooting if I'm sure of my back¬ground. During the shooting I can go very far withany improvisation. I can really change major thingsif I'm sure of having a real well done background. Imean, psychologically speaking it's me. I need to besure of what I've done before, so I can change. Noth¬ing is fascinating like the life, the actor, the personthat's in front of the camera. I think this is the mostfascinating thing in a movie. I think that's why mov¬ies are different from theater, different from anyother form of art. You are always filming reality,shooting the reality. That's where many thingscame from in Luna, too — from reality. The story ofthe Parma communist with Fidel. It's a real storythis guy had with Fidel .. . they went fishing. I justheard the story the night before shooting. To me, it'salways like making a documentary — using the in¬strument of the documentary, of the cinema verite,to construct a story that is fiction.8—the grey city journal, Friday, October 5, 1979 Bertoluccilooksto the '80sLoyola: In Last Tango in Paris you used a lot ofthis sort of thing with Brando. Everyone was alwaysvery much aware that this was Brando and therewas a lot of talk that you very intentionally used alot of Brando and his life.BB: Yeah. That's why he felt raped afterwards.NU: Pardon?BB: That's why he felt raped, violated, after¬wards.L: Is that what he said?BB: At the beginning he was quite upset becausehe didn't realize during the shooting how far wewere going. It's passed now, then he was upset —now I think he loves me again.NU: Would you do another film with Brando?BB: Oh, of course, I would — I don't know. If Inever find the right story, then I can't. He was theeasiest actor I ever worked with.Karen Hornick: He was?BB: He's incredible — the opposite of what I hadheard before. I was terrified. And then it was veryeasy.L. Did you write it with him in mind or simply in¬tegrate. . .BB: No, I never have anybody in mind when Iwrite. I prefer not to have anybody in mind becauseyou begin to write a story thinking Jean-Louis Trin-tingant and Dominique Sanda and then you haveMarlon Brando and Maria Schneider, and you thinkto have Liv Ullman and then you have Jill Clay¬burgh. I don't write for a specific actor.L: Jay Cocks refers to the fluidity of your cameramovement and also the very powerful lighting. Howhard do you work to get certain. . .BB: The lighting is Mr. Vittorio Storaro because Idon't know how to do it. Of course we talk a lot be¬fore and I explain to him what I want. Either show¬ing pictures, paintings, bringing him in certainhours of the day to see a certain kind of lighting. Thecamera, it's me — I'm very integrated with thecamera work. That's why I work always with thesame crew because I want the same man thatmoves the dolly truck and the same man as opera¬tor. Because I explain exactly what I want tothem.I think the camera is really a presence, it's notonly a voyeur. To me there is some sexuality incamera movement, but it is very near to music. Ithink that cinema is much nearer to music than totheater, to poetry than to literature.Have you seen the new Time and Newsweek mag¬azine? They reviewed the movie. Time magazine'sreally, incredibly good.NU: Do you know who reviewed it? Was it FrankRich?BB: Frank Rich.SW: What did he say that you liked? BB: Compliments.Jack Kroll in Newsweek — he's in love with JillClayburgh. He has good words for the movie but hesays the beauty of the movie is not enough to savethe movie, to save it from its confusion.This is the really important point of the movie forme. I tried to find a new kind of dramaturgy that isabsolutely the opposite of the classic form of drama¬turgy. It disconcerts the critics sometime. It doesn'tdisturb the audience, I think, the audience beingmuch more innocent, they are ready to receive theemotion I want to give. I want to give emotion in themovie.Also another thing of what I called the new dra¬maturgy is the way that I have switched the per¬spective. . . the optique. . . the vision of what wasgoing on from the son to the mother. Sometimes Joeis looking at her, sometime Caterina is looking atJoe, but I don't say who is looking. It is your way,you have to see it. That is why in the first part she islike a projection of Joe's eyes, a bit — the way she isan intruder, selfish. She is seen by Joe, let's not for¬get that she is seen by Joe. There is a moment whenyou begin to see the movie through her eyes, too:when Joe says to her, "I miss my father, you don'tmiss him." It's like the film is giving her a sense ofguilt. Of course this kid felt deeply that he killed hisfather because one father disappeared, the otherone is dead. He has to feel very guilty. And thenthere is a moment after he dances. Travolta: hegoes home, he is sick and he says "I miss my father,you don't miss my father" — it's very like givingher a sense of guilt.KH: You use the term the "new" dramaturgy butin lots of ways Luna reminded me of much earlierart, like classical tragedy or Shakespeare.BB: But since / can't say "Shakespeare," Iprefer to say "dramaturgy." I absolutely agreewith you. I mean in Shakespeare there is always aswitch from comedy to drama. Also, the same wayyou have the small characters in Racine's tragedyPhaedra — they are without past and without fu¬ture. They are just functional to the story — likeMarina or Eduardo or the communist in Luna. Youdon't know where they come from, you don't knowwhere they go, they are just functional to the mo¬ment, like the characters of tragedy — the confi¬dante, or the guide, or the nurse — they are justfunctional.The critics are disconcerted because this new dra¬maturgy is based on accepting and looking for allthat is considered wrong if you learn cinema inschool. It means inconsistency, incoherence, con¬tradictions — all things that at school they tell youto avoid. I think that life is very inconsistent, life isvery contradictory, life is very incoherent. For ex¬ample, in the middle of a dramatic moment like "The camera, psyiwhen the mother andand she saw him, the cter. First there's thisand then this piano anthere is a kind of furthere is a kind of balldictions. And to me itnew thing, at least in rdisconcerted, manycause they don't haveaudience has. At the sticated enough . . .NU: A lot of critics iand at least one, Paulwriting about Luna, caspects of it contradi*trian or conventional<ly foolish, incongruenBB: Yes. "A work olike better to be that ttdon't know what she iview very weak in a vmentata'.I think Pauline wassaid 'operatic'. Lunamelodrama. I am nopleasure, to give pie.pleasure I don't mearstory. It is not pleas<means to me, emotioithe way it was articulated on the screen is symp¬tomatic of fantasies that women have about theirsons?BB: I think that the fantasy of incest is common toeveryone and not everybody is conscious of that rantasy. Very often it is repressed and censored. But Ithink it is very, very common. Also in this country itis very, very common, especially between fatherand daughter. It's a kind of violence that happens inthe family.SW: And yet when movies like yours touch on it,it's the other way around and it's kind of roman¬tic.BB: Because I was not interested in presenting anincest consummated. Because to me it was inter¬esting, the fantasy of the incest. When the incest be¬comes consummated it becomes a case of perver¬sion or violence or a clinical case. Also, the incest isnot the principal subject. The relationship betweenthe mother and the son and the figure of the absentfather: this is the movie. Incest is one of the thingsyou have to get through.DP: Is Giuseppe a projection of what Joe couldhave been if the incest had been consummated? Inthe beginning of the film he's married to Jill Clay-burgh, and they're living with his mother. And whenJoe finds his real father, he's still living with thesame mother and she's still knitting.BB: On the stage Joe asks Caterina, "Why did youbreak up?" She says many things, and then says,"He was in love with his mother." I think it's astatement — like saying every man is in love withhis mother.It's like making not just the story of Joe, but thestory of many men, many persons. I think that Joeis one step forward in comparison with his father.DP: He's more developed than his father everwas...BB: Yes. His father is someone who lives withchildren.DP: The yarn in those two scenes — the baby(Joe), has the yarn wrapped around him, it's ob¬viously like an umbilical cord, but later his grand¬mother gets caught up in the yarn. I wasn't surewhat you meant...BB: It was like the Madeline in Proust — thepastry, I used to call it a danish pastry: it was aMadeline — he eats and he feels the memories com¬ing up. And then they can't break through and theygo down. He eats another piece of this pastry andlologically speaking, it's me."on go home after he shot upama is interrupted by laugh-nan falling down the stairs,/ing. Very often in the moviey, sudden madness. Reallyof incoherence and contra-very important; it is a veryy movies. But the critics are■itics are disconcerted be-he same innocence that theme time they are not sophisive called your work lyrical,e Kael, called it operatic. Ine critic felt that the lyricaled some of the more pedespects and called it 'sublime-a good poet on a bad day." In a bad poet on a good day. Ially meant. I found this rely, wasn't really well 'argu-rophetic in a way when shes very operatic; Luna is aonger ashamed to look for.ure to others. When I sayPeasant sequence, pleasantit at all, Luna. Pleasure, itto give emotion. The audi¬ ence is really starving, because there is less andless emotion in all this.SW: Is this connected with why Jill Clayburgh, inan interview, said that you wanted a happy ending.That's why the relationship between the mother andthe son was never really consummated? Is this inline with your idea of emotion and pleasure?BB: When I am talking about pleasure it is notrelated with the story, but with the impact. Whatshe is saying I should explain a bit. The young peo¬ple are forced by this system of life, by the power, atleast in my country, at least in Europe, to live avery desperate time, a very desperate moment. It isinstitutionalized, this despair, because it means tocreate a real desert around, all around the youngpeople. Where the old values are destroyed, there isno more of the old values. And the only value stillthere is to buy and to sell, to sell and to buy, to buyand to sell. And in the desert you sell much better allthe beauties, no? I think in a way it was important, apolitical gesture, not to accept this logique of de¬spair. It is imposed.It is not the happy end because it is not indicatedthat the three of them go home and watch t.v. Joewill reconstruct, recompose his own identity and hewill become an adult. And there is a positive indica¬tion that I want to give. To me it is quite importantbecause it is a reaction against this boring positionof despair. I mean one or two young Italians dieevery day of an overdose. And it's not a problem ofone class, of let's say, the very poor milieu. No, itgoes like an arrow through all classes, from the highmiddle class to the lumpen. It's incredible.KH: In the first incest scene, it seems as if JillClayburgh's motivation was a very maternal one. Itwas a very poignant scene. But the next time theopportunity arises her maternal instinct hasseemed to change to lust. And that seemed ratherunsettling.BB: I think she understands that incest is not atherapy, not a good therapy. It becomes destruc¬tive. So, she understands that the only way to avoidthe incest, and this is something that we found outworking, during the work in progress, is this kind oflooking like an obsession, sexual obsession. It's away of creating alienation and confusion in the kid.It's the only way of not making love with him.KH: And Caterina realizes that?BB: I think that yes, in a very animal way. Andshe does very fine immediately afterward when shesays the thing about the real father, which is thereal thing that can help him, the thing that can real¬ly help him, the kid.And the courage of Jill Clayburgh, the actressgoes directly from Jill to Caterina. I said there are The film about to reach its first climax.not many American actors who would do that be¬cause she is quite an institution, I realize, in thiscountry. At the same time she doesn't seem to beupset by giving the public an image of herself, un¬pleasant sometimes. I remember that Hitchcocksaid once that he wanted Cary Grant as the villainand Cary Grant refused. She's very brave and courageous to go into Caterina. It's a part of her thatbecomes an element of Caterina.i_or. kivhii: it seems thatoverall Caterina would be less sympathetic with heraudience as she changed. Did you consider that atall?BB: Yeah, but I don't think one of my majorpreoccupations was to give a sympathetic view. As Isaid before I want to give pleasure to unpleasantthings. For example, if you go so far you're going tooffend somebody. You'll find maybe shockingthings, but it is much more interesting and muchmore poetic.Lori Keehn: Do you think this theme of incest and finally the memory comes up...It's poetic memory— the yarn gives a strong feeling to Joe of when hewas a baby, that he has been there in the past. Andthe audience feels too quite strongly. It's function isto give the feeling of the de'ja' vu.DP: So he knows that is his father there.BB: Yes — it's an emotional confirmation.NU: Are there any American or European directors who helped you, who share your way of thinking?BB: Well, of course in the sixties — there was Go¬dard. It's a long story, talking about all the changesfrom the sixties to the eighties.The seventies were quite boring, I'm very impatient to get to the eighties. I think Luna is alreadymy first movie of the eighties. To me, it's really achange. I.have the impression the sixties were justan illusion — the seventies were square in compari¬son with the sixties.I think we are finished.I should call Jill.the grey city journal, Friday, October 5, 1979—9'»» To get into Medical Schoolyou probably read over 2,000,000 words.Read just 112 more and you may geta full Scholarship.The Armed Forces need physicians. And we rewilling to pay for them. Full tuition. Books. Fees.Necessary equipment. And $400 a month tax free.Once selected for a Health Professions Scholar¬ship - available from the Army, Navy or Air Force-you are commissioned a second lieutenant orensign in the Reserve. Serve a 45-day active dutyperiod annually. And agree to serve on active dutyfor a period dependent on the duration of yourparticipation in the scholarship program.As a fully commissioned officer you receiveexcellent salary and benefits. More importantly,you get the opportunity to work and learn besidededicated professionals.For more information merely mail in the couponKploiMARMED FORCESArmed Forces Scholarships. PO Box C1776. Huntington Station. NY 11746Yes I am interested in Armed Forces Health Professions Scholarship opportunitiesI understand there is no obligation ZCN099C Army C Physician G Veterinary*G Navy G Psychology (PhD) G Podiatry*G Air Force (please print) OptometryName. -Sex □ M GFAddress Apt7ip Phone(RrhooliDearee(Month Year)'Velennary and Podiatry Scholarships not available in Navy Program;Podiatry Scholarships not available in Army Programs FLEA MARKETSATURDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1 0:00 am - 1:00 pmIda Noyes Parking Lot (in case of rain: Ida Noyes Hall)Featuring the world's greatest selection of fleas, not tomention furniture, kitchen equipment, and other relevantimpedimentaANNOUNCINGTHE REOPENING OFEX LIBRISCOFFEESHOPOCT. 612,00 NOONRegular Ex Libris hours:Mon-Thurs 6.30-11.30 p.m.SATURDAY 1.00-8.30 P.M.SUNDAY 1.00-11.30 P.M.REGENSTEIN LIBRARYA LEVEL PART-TIME JOBSON CAMPUSIf you're looking for an unusual job opportunity for thisfall and for the rest of the school year, The University ofChicago Alumni Telefund needs your help.We are now contacting thousands of Chicago alumni bytelephone for their gifts to the University. The programwill run through the entire school year.We'll pay you $4 an hour. Phoning hours run from 6:00p.m. - 10:00 p.m. Monday through Thursday and from 9:30a.m. - 1:00 p.m. on Saturday. We require you to work 2sessions per week.You'll be working as an Alumni Telefund Associate. Theseare people who have a mature presentation and can talkabout the University and its needs. We ll teach you therest. Seniors and graduate students are among thosemost eligible.APPLY NOW!Call Gregory Volk at 753-0888 for a prompt interview orstop by in Cobb Hall (B23).THE CHICAGO41! ALUMNI TELEFUNDX10—the grey city journal, Friday, October 5, 1979rf.a° '$,%o.*aV<*VA>P '<>/>.<>o^^ <S>4.* '>,%’''JT- 9.’as*<r<vW^^CPTVVtf»^*v>$^0*«-£££-S>ir£C*?PS!^*^sX-(?^V^ *fitrt>/»P.<>rSC^^Vcf^?o»>w4v?%V<s>V05QTQPCD3>-> cdg nsx £3*CD S’E<£.A X* c- II%'+%?'%9s >V*<*%.=;”' %%\^Z V*V*< arccrc/3-ft,<5Ov $3C■?•-«<»g-3«?2 G*5?<DS»»*OJ£5^3$wa-3.$cm~.R5^~3CD3a:«<»-—•-«0-3-fBivCTQ3<t>V-MIVX&3,v£ oroa•5g-?*SJ5 X®8T8 ~g3?“oq SSJSfS£T«2033rf5*l*C/3CD?r£#Efg.s^srSct'cd3.3^ T*e2.2T3_. ..mro/#>^BW«<533132.»tor32$s^w5' w‘5w3'2-o>«&<$oCTQ3 r*k<n3r3"J3“CD^oCD ill1 ?<D^aO<-Jr-*O3a? CDaait* iff# &&£$ s££S' &&$$ CD 3rOfbC*O“Asidefromthefactthatitwas- reallyfantastic,IhatetheAragon andIhatecrowds.ButIlearneda lotaboutittoo-becausejuston recordsyoudon’tseealltheir angerortheirforcefulness.Andit 1*"l«PO11Y\” rnoflookThe SAO Mini Course ProgramOffering budget-priced ($10-$25) courses inAuto MechanicsBartending (21 yrs. & older)Bike RepairChinese CookingREGISTRATION: Disco Dancing PhotographyFolk Guitar Stock MarketLeaded Glass Life in the Big CityMagic Tricks Wine Appreciation (21 yrs. Solder)FOR STUDENTS: Wednesday, October 10(Bnn9UC d 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Reynolds Club CorridorThursday, October 1111 a.m.-3 p.m. Reynolds Club CorridorFOR NON-STUDENTS:Friday, October 1211 a.m.-3 p.m. Reynolds Club Corridorand Student Activities OfficeCALVERT HOUSEINVITESTHE UNCHURCHED-THOSE WHO DO NOT BELIEVE, BUT SEBIOUSLYINQUIRE-THOSE WHO DID BELIEVE, BUT ABE NOT SATISFIEDWITH UNBELIEF-THOSE WHO DO BELIEVE, BUT FEEL INSECUBEABOUT WHAT THEY BELIEVE-THOSE WHO WAVER BETWEEN BELIEF AND UNBELIEFTO INVESTIGATE CATHOLICISMA SERIES OF SESSIONS ON THE BASIC TEACHINGSOF THE CATHOLIC RELIGION WILL BEGIN ON TUESDAY,OCTOBER 9th AT 7:30 PM, AT CALVERT HOUSE,5735 UNIVERSITY (288-2311)12—tbe grey city journal, Friday, October 5, 1979Galleries and museums/Dig up your copy of the Orientation Issue to see what we said about this place lastweek — or come by Ida Noyes 303 for another copy.Due to space limitations in last week'sissue, descriptions of the following artmuseums and galleries were deleted. So,please cut out this list and stuff it in yourpocket along with the list we're sure is al¬ready there.We erred last week in another way: theOriental Institute's phone number is753 2475. Also, that museum specializesin Near Eastern, not Far Eastern art, asour description may have implied.— D.M.by Daniel SchulmanThe following five galleries are all at 620N. Michigan:Allan Frumkin Gallery Tues Fri 10-5:30,Sat 12 5 (787 0563) Contemporary worksand 19th and 20th century photographs.Excellent collection.Richard Gray Gallery Mon-Sat 10-5:30(642-8877) Contemporary and 20th centu¬ry American and European. Relaxed ele¬gance; you won't be intimidated.Mongerson Gallery Mon Fri 10-5, Sat 11-5(943 2354) Great collection of 19th and20th century western-American art.Their paintings are the kind you onlyseem to see on trips to Washington, D.C.with your parents.Samuel Stein Fine Arts, Ltd. Mon Fri10 5, Sat 11-5 (337-1782) The title of thisgallery implies its function: selling art tocorporations and chiropractors. Howev¬er, the collection is good and the owner iscongenial.Zaks Gallery Tues-Fri 11-5:30, Sat 12-5(943-8440) Contemporary works frozen inan antiseptic atmosphere.The following three galleries are at 155 E. Ohio:Dart Gallery Phone for hours (787 6366)Contemporary American works onpaper, paintings and sculpture. Good col¬lection.Douglas Kenyon Gallery Tues-Sat 9 5(642-5300) 19th and 20th century masterphotographs, paintings, sculpture andgraphic work. Nice atmosphere.Young Hoffman Gallery (Moving to 215W. Superior) Tues Fri 10-5:30, Sat 11-5:30(644-2350) Contemporary works by Judd,Flavin, LeWitt, Mangold, Tuttle, Leafand Pozzi. The new space on Superiorshould be beautiful. The collection, at¬mosphere and owners are terrific.Highly recommended.Artemesia Gallery 9 West Hubbard Tues-Sat 10-5:30 (751-2016) Non prof it women'sco-op. The space is refreshingly cruddyand the exhibits are always interesting.N.A.M.E. Gallery 9 West Hubbard Tues-Sat 10-5 (467-6550) Non-profit gallery thatinstalls great shows including perfor¬mance, dance and music. Highly recommended.ARC Gallery 6 West Hubbard Tues-Sat 11-5(266 7607) Artists, Residents ofChicago is a women's co operative thatmounts excellent shows. All of the Hub¬bard Street Galleries are important andbetter than just an 'alternative.'Illinoi Arts Council Gallery 111 N. Wa¬bash Mon-Fri 8:30-5:30 (793-6750). Thegallery is good, but the money that thisagency doles out to other non-profit institutions is better.Chicago Public Library Cultural Center.78 E. Washington (269-2820) Mon-Thurs10-8, Fri 10-6, Sat 10-5, Sun 1-5 Just to look at the splendor of the interior of thisbuilding is worth the trip. The exhibitionsare only occasionally interesting,though.Field Museum of Natural History Roosevelt Road at Lake Shore Drive. Call forhours (922 9410) One of the finest museurns of natural history. The main hall isbeautifully pristine and the hairy mammoths charging one another in the center are great. The collection of artifacts isvast and the changing exhibits fascinating.The John G. Shedd Aquarium Acrossfrom the Field Museum at Lake ShoreDrive. Call for hours (939 2426) TheShedd Aquarium is one of the scariestmuseums in the world. It is dark, there'sa lot of water and a lot of sharks and hid¬eous ugly fish. Highly recommended.W72*7 K. roch’s Brentano’sTHE FULL SERVICE BOOKSTORES ™“You’ll remember for a while when itseemed possible to die of love.”— Christopher Lehmann-Haupt, New York TimesENDLESS LUV Eby Scott Spencer, author of Preservation HallSet in Hyde Park in the '60s, Endless Loveis the story of a life ruined by love.David Axelrod is the 17-year-old hero andnarrator. He has been living with his 15-year-old lover, Jade, in her family’s housefor several months when her father ban¬ishes him for a 30-day cooling off period.Unable to bear his loneliness, David pullsa stunt to get the family’s attention. Hesets the porch on fire.The conflagration that results burns downthe house and scatters the family andDavid across the country — David to amental institution, the family into hidingfrom his obsessive attentions. A crazy story? Maybe, but, as ChristopherLehmann-Haupt said in The New YorkTimes, "if you’ve ever been wildly and im-practically in love, you won't stop to lookat it objectively. You’ll soar and sink withDavid, and ache for him ... Reading Mr.Spencer’s novel, you’ll remember for awhile when it seemed possible to die oflove.”"An utterly plausible account of an unbe¬lievable sequence of events propelled byone hopeless yet not unmagnificent ob¬session. . . . The book is an eloquent,impassioned plea.”—Tribune Book World$10.95K roch’s Brentano'sTHE FULL SERVICE BOOKSTORES®’29 South Wabash Avenue, Chicago, IL 60603 • (312) 332-7500Available at all 18 K&B locations by mail or phone.the grey city journal, Friday, October 5, 1979—13♦ Instant academic stardom * Going Greek—or not *Eating like a king on $5 a week * Choosing the rightcourses * Parents and other hassles * Difficult room¬mates—of the same or opposite sex * Cars, bikes andbooze * The best stereo system for the money *Health, summer jobs and the dollar-value of your degree♦ Landlords, professors and graduate assistants *Scholarship smarts * The most useful piece of clothing acollege student can own * Tests and travel, drugs anddating ♦ And much, much more—in the first-and-onlycomplete resource book for every college student, coveringevery academic, social, financial, legal and psychologicaltrauma of college life. Illustrated. A Supersize DoubledayAnchor Original Paperback, $7.95.EVERYTHINGYOU NEED TOKNOW ABOUTEVERYTHINGANCHOR PRESS/DOUBLEDAYBOOK LOVERS, PLEASE NOTE:Beginning today (Friday, Oct. 5) the General BookDepartment will be having ourSPECIAL FALL SALEWe will be featuring a large quantity of speciallyreduced academic paperbacks, manypriced at less than a dollar.In addition, there will be a generous selection of recentpublishers’ remainders, and an assortment of titles fromour regular stock, all at particularly advantageous savings.This sale is for a limited time only, and of course all salesare final. Do stop in and see us.The University of Chicago Bookstore Hours: 8.5MondayGeneral Book Department (1st Floor) 9-5 Saturday753-3311We accept Visa and Master Charge14—the grey city tournal, Friday, October 5, 197914 years of creative music- a celebration!by Curtis BlackThe Association for the Advancement ofCreative Musician is celebrating its four¬teenth year at the frontier of jazz with aseries of concerts, Friday and Saturdaynights and Sunday afternoon and evening at' Thorne Hall, 740 N. Lake Shore Drive.The AACM does not represent a particulardogma or "brand" of musical style. It is anumbrella organization for a wide variety ofvery individual musicians and ensembles.This variety is well represented at the fes¬tival.The Art Ensemble of Chicago (Sunday af¬ternoon) and Air (Friday) are the foremostgroups of the first and second waves ofavant garde jazz coming from Chicago inthe seventies. Air has advanced the innova¬tions of the Art Ensemble in ensemblic im¬provisation: where distinct solos emergefrom the Art Ensemble's musical texture,with all instruments participating morefully in the heightened interplay, the indi¬viduals in the trio Air work as full equals tocreate a single unity. In Air, there is asmuch rhythmic propulsion in Henry Thread-gill's explosive biting alto saxophone asthere is melodic continuity in SteveMcCall's shimmering drumming. Bothgroups are technically virtuostic, and theirmusic is emotionally satisfying, intellec¬tually intriguing and beautiful. These twogroups have brought structure to what wastermed "free jazz," but a structure muchmore varied than that of traditional jazz.Both the Art Ensemble and Air draw theirmaterials from the entire history of blackmusic in America. The Art Ensemble is cap¬able of parody that can be fierce or fond,with a range from minstrel songs to bebop toR & B to calypso. Their latest new album"Nice Guys" on ECM is the first AACMalbum to make the jazz charts. Air came to¬gether as a pit band for a play, performingthe music of Scott Joplin, and have just re¬corded an album featuring the compositionsof Joplin and Jelly Roll Morton, and Thread-gill is a great blues saxophonist as well.Muhal Richard Abrams (Saturday) is thefounder of the AACM, leader of the legen¬dary Experimental Band, and a great pian¬ist. He was prominent in the mainstream ofChicago jazz while developing his ownmusic, and is now a mainstay of the livelynew music community of New York. Muhalwill appear with an all-star quintet. LeoSmith (Friday) was an early exporter of theAACM's music, and has collaborated withAnthony Braxton and Leroy Jenkins. He is anoted composer, working in a classical vein,and a meticulous and restrained trumpetplayer.George Lewis and Douglas Ewart (Satur¬day) came together in the Fred AndersonQuintet, an amazing contingent. (Unfortun¬ately the Fred Anderson Quartet, which nowfeatures Anderson's 20 year partner, trum¬peter William Brimfield, is missing fromthe weekend's program. They went on toform the wind quartet Quadrisect, with bas¬soonist James Johnson and and baritonesaxist Mwata Bowden, which toured inter¬nationally to great acclaim. Lewis andEwart have both been experimenting withthe synthesizer, Ewart more recently —■their duet at last year's festival had Lewiselectronically manipulating Ewart's reedwork. So this should be the AACM's firstfull-fledged foray into electronic music,though both are incredible instrumentalists.Lewis has a wide range of timbral effectswhich he exploits to make his horn talk andsing, and Ewart plays with a soaring melo-dism.Vocalists Iqua Colson and Rita Warfordhave both developed a style of scat singingderived from the instrumental advances oftheir colleagues, but they sing very dif¬ferently. Warford, an early AACM member,sings with a warmth and fullness which re¬minds me of Sarah Vaughn. Her group (Saturday) features the fine compositions andplaying of co leader Mwata Bowden. IquaColson, also brought up through Fred An¬derson's group, sings in a more persona¬lized, introverted style. She sings with UnityTroupe (Friday), led by her husband, pianist Adegoke Steve Colson, and featuringAACM veteran Wallace MacMillan onreeds. Unity Troupe has just returned froma successful European tour, and have recorded an album, yet to be released.The Ethnic Heritage Ensemble (Sundayafternoon) pits Kahil El'Zabar's percussion The AACM All Star Orchestra performs this Sunday at 8 pm in Thorne Hall, 710 North Lake Shore Drivemjg jl— he is outstanding on congas and mbira(thumb piano) — against the reedwork ofEd Wilkerson and Light Henry Huff, tocreate a music that exudes a swingingearthiness. The Intuitive Research Beings(Sunday afternoon), led by reedman VandyHarris, an extroverted and experimentalplayer, will include trumpeter Frank Wal¬ton and Art Ensemble bassist MalachiFavors.The AACM Orchestra (Sunday night) isan offspring of the Experimental Big Bandof Abrams, in which the innovations of the organization were incubated through 1975.Hearing that entourage was a very specialexperience. While it featured the rich andcomplex orchestrations of Abrams, the BigBand has since performed the compositionsof many members. AACM members whohave worked successfully in the big bandmedium include Anthony Braxton, with hisCreative Orchestra Music, Douglas Ewartwith his Orchestral Inventions, and Art En¬semble trumpeter Lester Bowie's incredible80 piece Shaw 'Nuff Orchestra. The work ofArt Ensemble saxophonist Roscoe Mitchell, also a noted composer, may also be featured.The concerts begin at 8 p.m.; the Sundayafternoon set is at 3 p.m. Six dollars a con¬cert is a bargain when you consider that youare hearing three groups; a series ticket isavailable for twenty dollars, and both Sun¬day concerts can be heard for ten dollars.The concerts will be on the very accessiblenear north side, down the street from Rick'sCafe, in Thorne Hall, 740 N. Lake ShoreDrive.★ ★ ★★by Old JulesOver the last week, I have been veryaware of the narrowing scope of my world,and the increasing number of demands onmy time. During the summer, no matterhow much effort a job requires, and howmuch alienation it produces, it at least oc¬cupies a finite period of time. Enough is leftover for eating, sleeping, seeing friends, forgetting high and relaxing. School is morelike a relationship — it fills all the time youhave to give it, and still remains unsatisfied.This is not necessarily because so much isaccomplished, but because the ends are soinfinite in relation to the means.As school takes over your life, the campusbecomes an enclave, that it is quite possibleto never leave, mentally or physically. Iremember long periods in the dorms when Ihad no idea what the date was, because forme it was Tuesday of fifth week, or what theheadlines were, because for me theyscreamed "Protagoras Paper Due Friday!"or "Elementary Forms of Religious Life tobe Read By Morning!"Even living in an apartment, it is a shockto walk into Mr. G's and talk to people whoare totally outside of this closed world. It islike talking to my relatives, what has expanded and filled my entire view is com¬pletely telescoped for them. "Oh, you're atthe College." Life replaced with stereotype.Last week, watching the first yearstudents on campus going through Orientation Week, I remembered how much of atotal immersion the experience is.Everything is new and demands attention,and thus each day seems like a week. This isnot unlike the peak of tripping. Ten minutes Drug Stabbing Timehave gone by, but no other reality everseems to have existed; such is theseparateness from what has gone before,and the depth of the present.Talking to other people who have beenhere a few years, I found a consistentunease at this confrontation with thefreshman experience. "Isn't it disgusting.""It's so sad." I don't think these remarksrepresent any kind of denigrating or condescending attitude toward first-yearstudents, for I have never known that here.That attitude is part of the American idea of"college life," but if it is true anywhere atall, it is not true here.I think that these remarks were kind of rejected nostalgia — a remembrance of thepromise, the idea of what being here wouldbe, which everyone learns OrientationWeek, no matter how much of a cynical at¬titude they succeed in projecting. And nomatter how much of that attitude has nowbecome ingrained in "How disgusting,"there is a real sense of loss, that being hereis not as simple as the promise, even as simpie as the complex and ambivalent promisethat it was.Perhaps we all expect to live thattelescoped vision of college, only to find outthat it is still life: the worst things go wrongat the worst times, get messed up, and theresolution is only partial at best. No worthwhile course is finished without regretover promising books which remain onlypartially read and papers which could havebeen improved if there had only been time.The beginning of every quarter is aminiature of first year experience. Eachcourse starts with a version of the promise; ★ ★ ★★the knowledge you will gain, the acquiringof new methods of inquiry, professors whoconvey a certain specialness — greatpossibilities. These things are rarely onone's mind at the end of the quarter, struggl¬ing to finish three papers and take two ex¬ams in the last week. Somehow, no matterhow hard you work all quarter long, italways seems possible to blow everything inthe last week because instead of studyingfor the final the night before, you stayed upall night finishing a paper, and can barelystay awake through the exam. You try tomake equivications, but some things are in¬evitably just ballast thrown overboard,given up to save what remains.If, however, the promise isn't there fromthe beginning, if the course doesn't holdanything out to you, then it is extremelyhard to put time into it and to motivateyourself to do that work rather than morepromising things.This last problem is at the core of somediscussion which occurred among us a fewof us who wrote in the orientation issue. Wewanted to tell new students what we hadlearned by being here, but also we wereafraid of having removed the promise, athaving made everything seem too closed,the possibilities too few and unprofitable,and that no one would find it worth theenergy to begin at all. And that was not ourpurpose.What I am doing for myself here is nam¬ing the world. I am printing my understan¬ding so that it may help others name thingsfor myself, to know what things really are:so there will be promises, but they will bereasonable ones.the grey city journal, Friday, October 5, 1979—15/?JVS£L 7,.'MtNTS1 TI-50Constant MemoryTl Bu*>ne»s Analyst IIConsraor MemoryModeThe SlimlineBusinessAnalysMI™for businessand finance. The SlimlineTI-50™for scienceand math.Choose the Ifexas Instruments calculatorthat’s right for your major.When you’re working in a specialized field,you need a specialized calculator. That’swhy Texas Instruments designed theSlimline Business Analyst-II™ for busi¬ness and finance . . . and the Slimline TI-50™ for science and math. Each providesthe tailored power and the reliability you’llneed as you learn to solve the problemsyou’ll face as a professional. And each has aprice you’ll appreciate as a student.Slimline Business Analyst-II.Sleek LCD calculator with versatilebusiness capabilities.Solving financial problems with theSlimline Business Analvst-II can makeworking with your old calculator seem likepencil-and-paper arithmetic. The functionsrequired to perform many common busi¬ness, financial and statistical calculationsare built in to help you make quick, accurateevaluations of many complex businesssituations.Special financial keys are used to handletime and money problems such as com¬pound interest, annui- —ty payments, mortgageloans, investment yields,amortization schedulesand more. 999 Computer jrx!Supck-TOlOJvmpt Statistical and linear regression capabili¬ties provide the power you’ll need to boildown data and automatically handle prob¬lems such as sales and earnings forecasts.Profit margin calculations concerningcost, selling price and margin can be per¬formed rapidly when any two of the varia¬bles are known. Other features include afour-function data register with ConstantMemory™ feature that retains its contentseven when the calculator is turned, off. Twominiature batteries provide up to two yearsof operation in normal use. And TI’s APDautomatic power down feature helps pre¬vent accidental battery drain.The Business Analyst-II, with detailedowner’s manual and suede-look vinyl walletwith pockets for notes, $45.00*.The Slimline TI-50 packs 60 power¬ful functions into a handsome,compact package.The pocket-portable Slimline TI-50 is a re¬markably powerful LCD slide-rule calcula¬tor. Yet it’s as thin as a pencil and weighsonly three ounces!Its 60 versatile functions can help youhandle a wide range of college math prob¬lems. Capabilities include common and natural logarithms. Six trigonometric oper¬ations that can be performed in three angu¬lar modes (degrees, radians or grads). Twoconstant memories that retain their con¬tents even when the calculator is turned off.And more.Seven built-in statistical functions sim¬plify the task of boiling down large sets ofdata points so you can perform accurateanalyses and draw reliable conclusions.The power of the Slimline TI-50 is madeeasy to use by TI’s AOS™ algebraic operat¬ing system, which provides 15 sets of pa¬rentheses and accepts up to four pendingoperations. That means you can enter mostproblems just las they’re written, leftto right.Two miniature batteries provide up totwo years of normal operation. And TI’sAPD™ automatic power down featurehelps prevent accidental battery drain.The Slimline TI-50 includes a detailedowner’s manual and a durable vinyl wallet,$40.00*.Make sure your next calculator has thespecialized power to handle the problemsunique to your major. See theBusiness Analyst-II and theSlimline TI-50 at your collegebookstore or other TI dealertoday.Texas Instruments technology—bringing affordable electronics to your fingertips.suggested} Texas In! Texas Instruments1 1979 Texas Instruments Incorporated INCORPORATED2 Drawer Used Files from $45Desks from $303 trailer loads just arrivedBRAND wu'wmntSUPPLY CO.8600 COMMERCIAL AVE.Open Mon.-Fri. 8:30-5:00Open Sat. 8:30-4:00 (Sept. & Oct.)RE 4-2111Bring this ad with you for free delivery ©tPUKBKKlI [FSieiraMA Studio and Gallery ofSilver Jewelryand Weavings,Sunday, October 2,19792-6 p.mEveretthu Court Studio TheatreannouncesOpen Auditions forG B. Shaw’sTHE PHILANDERERDirected by Abbie KatzOct. 6, 7 Noon-5* **Oct. 8, 7:00 - 10:i jReynolds Club57th & University753-358116—the grey city journal, Frid y, October 5, 1979«U of CUTINGCLUBFor InformationPlease call after 5 p.m.Peg Dordal 753-4912,John Hardis 363-5269FALL CALENDARSubject to change7 am Bird Walk. Peg.Meet in front of Regenstein.Oct. 10 7:30 pm Fall Meeting.Ida Noyes Library.Trails UndergroundOct. 13-14 Biking, Wisconsin. John.Oct. 18 Outdoor Cookma Seminar.Ida Noyes. 7.30 pm.Oct. 20 Indiana Dunes Hike Peg.Oct. 25 Outdoor Cookino Seminar.Ida Noyes. 7:30 pmOct. 27-28 Backpacking, Brown Co., Ind. Mark.Nov. 1 7:30 p.m. Outdoor Cooking SeminarIda Noyes.Nov. 4 Biking, Lakefront Path. John.Nov. 22-25 Backpacking, Ozarks. Mark.Dec. 14-20 Winter Camping, X-County Skiing.Court Studio TheatreannouncesAuditions forTHE GOOD DOCTORBy Neil SimonDirected by Ronald FalzoneOct. 6 & 7, noon - 5:00Reynolds Club57th & UniversityCall 667-1241 after 6 p.m.for appointment.YEAR BOOK1 st Staff MeetingMonday Oct. 87:30 p.m.Ida Noyes Rm. 218EVERYONE WELCOMEStudents - AdvanceOrder Your 1979-80YEAR BOOKonly $10 Now(hurry, it may go up)in the YEARBOOK officeor Student Activities office HILLEL STUDY GROUPSBEGINNING CONVERSATIONAL HEBREW TUESDAY, OCT. 9, 5:30-7‘:30 pmINTERMEDIATE CONVERSATIONAL HEBREW TUESDAY, OCT. 9. 7:00-8:30 pmADVANCED CONVERSATIONAL HEBREW TUESDAY, OCT. 9, 8:30-10:00 pm(The order of the above three classes can be switched if the majority ofstudents so desire it after the first meeting)BEGINNING YIDDISH MONDAY, OCT. 15, 6:00-7:30 pmADVANCED YIDDISH & YIDDISH LITERATURE MONDAY, OCT. 15, 7:30-9:00 pmMODERN JEWISH PHILOSOPHYTALMUDWORKSHOP IN HEBREW CALLIGRAPHY(Reading Knowledge of Hebrew Required)SUPPORT GROUP FOR CHILDREN OFHOLOCAUST SURVIVORSCOME IN AND REGISTER AND INDICATE PREFERRED TIME FOR:JEWISH LIFE CYCLEMODERN ISRAELI LITERATURE: POST 1967INTRODUCTION TO JEWISH MYSTICISMKABBALAH READING GROUP5715 WOODLAWN AVENUE - 752-1127TUESDAY, OCT. 9, 7:30 pmTHURSDAY, OCT. 11, 8:00 pmSUNDAY, OCT. 28, 2:00-4:30 pmTUES., OCT. 16, 7:00-9:009 pmLEAFIN' LEDGERS!HP makes professional business calculators students can afford.Great Grinnin Gazookus!Hewlett-Packard has always made sw'ellprofessional business calculators. ’Cept now theymake some just for a student's needs andpocketbook.They call ’em Series E. First is th’ HP-37EBusiness Management for just $75 * Yep. it’syour best bet in a basic financial calculator. Fer’instance it has the HP “cash flow' sign conven¬tion’’ for intuitive problem solving—you don’thave to know all that usual confusin’ calculatorstuff. And get a load of this: the HP-37E solvescomplex time and money problems so importantto business students. Stuff like compoundinterest and growth, investment yield, return oninvestment and much more.Then there’s the HP-38E AdvancedFinancial with Programmability for only $120*If you gotta do the same calculations over andover a couple o’ million times —this is vour babv.Just key in vour program once and it’s ready togo over and over. It’s a breeze.Course the HP-38E has all the power of the HP-37E, plus: Internal Rate of Return andNet Present Value for up to 1,980 cash flows in20 groups; a 2,000-vear calendar; 5 financial and20 user memories: up to 99 program lines.Sufferin' Sunfish! These are some calcula¬tors. So you really oughta see your HP dealerin short order. For the address: CALL TOLLFREE 800-648 4711 except for Alaska or Hawaii.In Nevada call 800-992-5710. And don’t forgetto ask your dealer for a free copy of “A buyer'sguide to HP professional calculators!’ It’ll helpyou in makin’ the right choice Sure as shootin!HEWLETT PACKARDtVp< 1000 N E Cird* Blvd Corvallis OR 97} «) M** II•Suggested rci,nl price excluding applicable state and local taxes —Continental U S A Alaska & HawaiiFriday, October 5, 1979 — The Chicago Maroon — 25ftockcfdlcr Memorial ChapelTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO5850 South Woodlawn AvenueChicago. Illinois 60637CHAPEL DAY OF CELEBRATION ON SUNDAY, OCTOBER 7, 19799:00 a m SERVICE OF HOLY COMMUNION: BERNARD O. BROWN. Dean of the Chapel11:00 a m. UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICE JAMES BARR. Oxford University. Preacher"Adam Amid The Trees Of The Garden Of Eden"12:15 p m. LAWN FESTIVAL Picnic Lunch (tickets available in Chapel office); Carillon and Tower Brass Concert;folk dancing, and a tour of the carillon conducted by Robert Lodine, University Carillonneur. Mr Lodmewill give a group lesson on the carillon (25 visitor limit; call 753-3381 for reservation)In the event of rain, the festival will be held in Ida Noyes Hall.2;30 p.m. COMMUNITY CHORAL SING IN THE CHANCEL. You are invited to sing some of the great choruses of theoratorio repertoire from Messiah. Elijah and the German Requiem.3;30 p.m. PLAY READING IN THE CHANCEL. Members of the University Court Theatre present "Zoo Story" byEdward Albee4:30 p.m. CHAPEL CHOIR. ORGAN AND BRASS CONCERT to be followed immediately by Evensong. Specialprayers for the ministry of the Chapel and tor the University will be offered at Evensong.Lutheran Campus Ministryat the University of ChicagoRichard Jurgensen, Pastor5500 S. WoodlawnOffice, 493-6452Home, 324-1486WORSHIP SERVICES:Augustana Lutheran Church • 493-6451Larrv Hofer, Pastor8:30 & 10:45a.m.5500 S. WoodlawnChicago, IL 60637St. Gregory of Nyssa Lutheran ChurchBoyd Faust & Dave Meiers, Pastors10:30a.m.Graham Taylor Chapel at CTS5757 University Ave.PUBLIC LECTURE SERIESSponsored by the ENRICO FERMI INSTITUTEof theUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOTHE ARTHUR H. COMPTONLECTURESTenth Series byLindsay SchachingerThe Enrico Fermi InstituteSaturdays October 6 through December 15,1979“QUARKSANDSYMMETRIES”First Lecture: Particle Physics: The Huntfor the Elusive Atom of MatterSaturday, October 6,1979, at 11 A.M.Eckhart Hall — Room 133 — 1118 E. 58th St. VERSAILLE5254 S. DorchesterWELL MAINTAINEDBUDDINGAttractive 1 V2 and2V2 Room StudiosFurnished or Unfurnished$192 - $291Based on AvailabilityAll Utilities IncludedAt Campus Bus Stop324-0200 Mrs. GroakL8ATandIGMAIlAmityReview Seminars15 student average class sizaTeam taaching techniqueConvenient weekend classesEXCLUSIVE MATH REFRESHER800-243-4767 . _ Please snip along dotted line and mail today/’ •YOU’RE INVITED TOLONDON1980-81v ri/VJD.iNS?'• Business in the British University System• Drama with the Staff ofthe Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts• Fashion Design and Merchandisingand many other—Traditional Programs at University of London Colleges(e.g. London School of Economics, Queen Mary, Kings)in fully-furnished, centrally-heated accommodationsReservations available for one semester or for a full yearto the long-established, fully-accredited, coed programSTUDY ABROAD, MARYMOUNT COLLEGE,TARRYTOWN, N.Y. 10591 (914-631-3200)HAIR.IF YOU ARE AGE 19 TO 33,YOU CAN STOP LOSING IT-AND START GROWING ITTHANKS TO A REMARKABLEMEDICAL BREAK-THROUGH!ITS NOT DIFFICULT OR COSTLY. .SIMPLY A MATTER OF GETTING STARTED-AND THE SOONER THE BETTERCALL 346-1330PILO-GENIC RESEARCH ASSOCIATES30 N MICHIGAN AVE. SUITE 1628HOURS MON THRU FRI 9 to 5The Center for Decision Research of the GraduateSchool of Business and the Cognitive Science LectureSeries, Department of Behavioral Sciences will hold anopen lecture on Monday, October 8, 1979. Dr. DanielKahneman, Department of Psychology, University ofBritish Columbia will be the speaker.TOPIC: THE PSYCHOLOGY OFPOSSIBLE WORLDSTIME: 4:00-6:00 p.m.PLACE: Social Sciences, Room 1221126 East 59th StreetTuesday October 9th 7:30 p.m. IDA NOYES LIBRARYSTUDENT GOVERNMENT MEETINGOpen to all students in the University26 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, October 5, 1979(nitjrr [A STOP!!worrying about the loss or breakageof your glasses during class or examtime when you need them most....SO!! <"\Record your eye glass or contactsns prescription with us .most cases we will have themeplaced in hours. J/Dr. M. R. MaslovOptometrists \/Hyde Park Shopping Center1510 E. 55th 363-6363( V°STUDENT<P CO-OP BOOKdT STOREBasement Reynolds ClubHours M - F 9:30 - 6:00Sat. 12:00 - 4:30- Used Textbooks for Fall courses- Broad selection of general stock- New Records - ClassicalFolk, Jazz, Blues, Popular- New Stock - we can specialorder at customer's request- Latest in Games, includingDungeons and Dragons, etc.d^L Chamberlin House presents[H an evening#rrtinedailaiammeni[fWv DE VIL IN HERl. w^^MH-6-00, &W,itl:20pmm RU*' INNOCENTVmU coi l FITSHoo\Mp& m f'10 °°l"n?20° V^J^THURSDW.OCT IIQUANTRELL AUO. fCOWV209)uc i n RfQUiRi D - unoik .e nor Awirrun STARTS TODAY AT A THEATRE NEAR YOUA WONDROUSANIMATION SPECTACLEABLAZE WITHADVENTUREWALT DISKEYSTECHNIRAMA^ TECHNICOLOR*©1979 w,h Disnt* Production. Rc-Rctascd b> BI KN\ ' 1ST \ OISTRIBl TION ( O IS(EXPERIENCED 1BANK TELLERSWork in Hyde Park ...... . .in a professional atmosphere without the hassle of the Loop traffic.We have a super salary and benefits package, and excellent location(near I.C., CTA, shopping centers, campus, etc.) If you are bright and ambitious,this is your chance! Call Personnel now! 752-4600Hyde Park Bankand Trust Company1 525 E. 53rd Street/Chicagoequal opportunity employer m f JIn MemoriumJ. A. B. van Buitenen1928-1979The University of Chicago PressiFriday, October 5, 1979 — The Chicago Maroon — 27Northwestern spoils hooter’s openerMaroonbumped byby Andy RothmanIt was one of those days all new coachesgo through. After playing two strong gamesto open the season, Tom Kurucz’s Universi¬ty of Chicago football team was swamped bythe St. Ambrose Bees, 33-12, last Saturday inIowa.When the Maroons have their startinglineup in tact they can play with anybody ontheir schedule. Last weekend their lack ofdepth showed when several players werehurt and some were forced into playing posi¬tions they had never played before.The Bees started a freshman quarterbackwho was playing his first game. All he did inthe first half was complete eight of ninepasses for 172 yards and one touchdown. TheBees’ second string sophomore quarterbackcame out of the backfield to throw a 24 yardhalfback option pass for another score andthe Maroons were down 19-0 at the half.Things did not improve much in the se¬cond half as St. Ambrose scored another 14points before the Maroons got on thescoreboard. In the third quarter, nuarter- elevenSt. Ambroseback Mark Meier, who had dropped to thefourth ranking passer in NCAA Division IIIafter the second week of play, tossed a scor¬ing pass to sophomore end Jeff Foreman.The Maroons actually won the finalquarter, 6-0, though the game’s outcomewas hardly in doubt. Meier scored thegame’s final touchdown on a short run aftertaking a handoff from sophomore Do Kim,who had replaced him at quarterback. Inall, Meier W’ound up 4 of 11 in the air andKim was 6 of 19. The 10 for 30 passing daytotalled only 87 yards, one yard less than theMaroons’ rushing total. Kim was Chicago’sleading runner with 46 yards. Senior co¬captain Nick Filippo ran for 23 more.Senior tight and Joe Olchefske was lost tothe Maroons, most likely for the remainderof the season, with ligament damage to aknee.The Maroons will take their 1-2 recordagainst Milton College on Saturday in a 1:30PM start at Stagg Field. Tomorrow’s non¬conference game can be heard live onWHPK, 88.3 FM, beginning at 1:15 PM. by Andy RothmanWednesday afternoon was supposed to be3 time for Maroon soccer revenge at StaggField. Instead, coach Barry DeSilva’s squadaround up frustrated and upset in droppingthe 1979 season opener for both teams to theNorthwestern Wildcats, 2-0, after nearlytaking the game on forfeit.Last year the Maroons opened by outplay¬ing Northwestern only to settle for a tie, 3-3,on a last minute goal. In a spring exhibitiongame at Evanston, Northwestern scored inthe final seconds to record a 1-1 deadlock.This time, a brief shower dampened StaffField just before the start of the game. Itwas enough to slow down the usually quickMaroons and let the Wildcats use their sizeadvantage to push the Chicagoans around.From the start the Maroons looked appre¬hensive on offense and sloppy on defense.Coach DeSilva said afterward that he,“could not believe it was the same team outthere that had been practicing for twoweeks.” DeSilva wanted the ball played upthe wings on offense but it was continuallysent up the middle.Northwestern scored the only goal theyneeded at 26:31 of the first half off a directkick by Rizos Psyllos that slipped in off thehands of sophomore Chicago goalie DaveEwbanks. With just over 18 minutes remain¬ing in the half, DeSilva benched sweeper CyOggins and both of his 1978 all conferenceplayers (right wing Kim Hong being theother) were sitting because he was nothappy with their play.The Maroons, “played the way we wantedto play for about 15 minutes in the secondhalf,” according to DeSilva. They could notmuster a goal though, even with Oggins andHong back in the game.When the Maroons were awarded a directkick with about 37 minutes remaining, theplayers forming the Northwestern wall infront of their goal refused to stand 10 yardsaway from the ball as ordered by the refer¬ee. Northwestern coach Mike Segiv wasgiven a yellow warning card and eventuallya red ejection card. Then Segiv refused toleave the field and the referee said the gamewas over. DeSilva called the Maroons off thefield but as they were leaving Segiv decidedto abide by the officials decision and thegame resumed. Hong (center) and Suhyun Chin (right)can only watchAllen SowizralJon Glenner scored a late goal with 8:35remaining to close out the scoring and endMaroon comeback hopes. DeSilva plannedto work on tactics and to try and get his clubthinking. He said they were not flat afterSaturday’s impressive 1-0 preseason winover the West Indian Jets but simply thatthe club was not executing its plays. He ex¬pressed confidence that the team wouldcome around. Chicago opens its MidwestConference season this Saturday at 10 amagainst Lawrence at Stagg Field. On Sun¬day the Maroons meet Washington Univer¬sity of St. Louis, the 1978 Division III runner-sup, beginning at 1:00 pm also at StaggField.Meier in 1st game win over PrincipiaJohn Wright From the press boxDear Mr. Condon: Win one for who?by Howard SulsFor those of you who were away just beforeschool started, the football team was thesubject of another one of those inane arti¬cles, this time by the Plato of the sportspages, David Condon. A la Bob Greene, Mr.Condon was ridiculing the Maroons for hav¬ing the audacity to actually win a footballgame. Mr. Condon managed to bring up allthe old cliches, about players having a bet¬ter chance to win a Nobel Prize than a Heis-man Trophy, and how we all should be doingnuclear physics instead of playing football.Picking up where Bob Greene left off, hefabricated a physics professor, as an assis¬tant coach “chortling” about going to theRose Bowl.Well, Mr. Condon, we Tribune readersdown here (both of us) are really quite tiredof this idiocy. We are just “so” upset that wedon’t run a football factory, demoralized bythe fact that we may never reclaim our BigTen seat, losing our chance to regain fameand fortune in the world of big time collegefootball.May we remind you Mr. Condon, that foot¬ball is just a game. Winning isn’t everything, or even the only thing. Winningis a seven letter word, and that’s all it is, Isuppose you and Bob Green will come downfor Homecoming, amidst the TV camerasand major magazines, but don’t expect ahalftime show where the student body formsa DNA helix. Maybe we should all bite theheads off of chickens. Most likely, thestudents will be intellectually active, com¬paring the nitrosamine levels in differentbeers, and sampling brands of bourbon.Yes, Mr. Condon, we are human.Those football players are not looking forpro offers, Heisman trophies, or anythingelse. Oh sure, no one will decline All-Conference honors, and Mark Meier is hav¬ing a great year at quarterback, but that isnot the point. The players have been heresince mid-August practicing three times aday. There were no alumni contributions,like under the table payoffs to subsidizethem. Most of them had to quit their sum¬mer jobs to return to practice, and at aschool where expenses reach over $7000,every working day counts. There are noscholarships here anymore. No cushy sum¬mer jobs. Players don’t drive Riviera’s orLTDs. What motivates them? Why, you mightask, do they do this, with no tangiblerewards in sight. Why? Because they wantto. Their reward is their own satisfaction.Football is just a game, Mr. Condon, andbelieve it or not, smart people know how toplay. Although smaller than most teams,they play tall, with their heads up. The teamshould do well this year, and everyone ispulling for them and the new coach, TomKurucz. These are our friends, our classmates. They don’t take underwaterbasketweaving, they take physics andchemistry, and there are no allowances herefor athletes. Their classmates admire themfor the time it takes to play, trading footballfor studying.Athletics are an activity to round out aperson’s life, contributing to the develop¬ment of the mind and body. These guys playto win, but I think most of them know thesatisfaction that can be obtained from notonly winning, but more importantly playingwell, win or lose. No one likes to lose, Mr.Condon, but losing is not the end of theworld, merely a part of it. See you atHomecoming. Go Maroons!!!!28 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, October 5, 1979Do Kim gets his yardage for the Maroons Photo by John WrightNU goalie leaps to grab shotSports BriefsIM’s to kick offBucs on WHPKSports Saturday, WHPK’s half hoursports program, will feature DougWilliams and Ricky Bell of the undefeatedTampa Bay Buccaneers tomorrow after¬noon. Chicago Bears’ head coach NeillArmstrong can also be heard along with aroundup of Maroon, national collegiateand professional sports. The show will airat 4:00 pm or approximately a half hourafter the completion of the Maroon footballgame on 88.3 FM. The University of Chicago’s new headwrestling coach, Leo Kocher, will hold anorganizational meeting covering theschool’s varsity wrestling program onTuesday, October 9, in Bartlett Gym’sTrophy Room at 7:00 PM. All interestedstudents are invited.Wrestlers readyIntramural men’s touch football teamentries are due in the IM office, with the$10 entry deposit, today, October 5. Gameswill start next Wednesday. Several entrydeadlines are next Thursday, October 11:men’s and women’s tennis (singles),men’s handball (singles) and women’svolleyball. Early season IM football rank¬ing will appear next week. Women's tennis: good startby Andy RothmanBill Simms’ women’s tennis Maroon open¬ed their 1979 autumn campaign with a 6-3win at Northeastern Illinois University lastFriday.After last year’s combined autumn-springseasonal record of 6-6, which included afourth place finish in the Illinois state tour¬nament, Simms said earlier this week he issure his team will improve this year.Simms’ number one player, seniorRosemary Safranak, lost to a United StatesTennis Association ranked player in a threeset match at Northwestern. The team’s se¬cond match, at the University of Illinois-Chicago Circle campus, was called becauseof rain on Tuesday with the Maroonsleading.Simms chose 19 players for this year’steam, but was forced to cut many players. The freshmen completed their tryouts thisweek and Simms said he was very high onfirst year student Inga Smulkstys.Smulkstys’ first match will be on Monday,at Wheaton College. Wheaton is the topranked team in Illinois this season. Beforethat the Maroons will have played scheduledmatches at Trinity College yesterday (toolate for presstime) and at NorthwesternUniversity this afternoon at 3:00 PM. TheMaroons’ next home match, at the InglesideCourts, is next Tuesday, October 9, at 3:00PM against North Park College.Simms explained the reason his team wasonly a .500 club last year was mainlybecause it plays a lot of Division I and IIschools. Three of last year’s losses were toWheaton. Simms’ tennis players are ahungry group with an honest shot at thestate title, which will be decided next spr¬ing.Another Maroon shot repelled Photo by Allen SowizralSaturday was not one of Meier’s better daysFriday, October 5, 1979 — John Wr‘gntThe Chicago Maroon — 29 tCalendarFRIDAYRegenstein Library: Orientation tours 10 am and 2pm. Tours begin on 1st floor near Reference desk.Crossroads: English classes for foreign women,10:00am-noon.Geophysical Sciences Colloquium: “Sedimento-logy of the Backarc Basins of the Western Pacific:Results from the deep sea Drilling Projects” speak¬er George DeVries Klein, 1:30 pm, Hinds Lab Audi¬torium.Hillel: Reform Sabbath Services. 5:30 pm, Hillel.Hillel: Orthodox (Yavneh) and Conservative (Up¬stairs Minyon) services 6:15 pm, Hillel.DOC Films: "The Buddy Holly Story” 7:30, 9:00 and11:30 pm, Cobb.Hillel: First dinner in Hillel Sukkah 7:00 pm, $3.00.SATURDAYHillel: Orthodox (Yavneh) Shabbat Services 9:15am.Hillel: Conservative-Egalitarian (The Upstairs Min-yan) Shabbat Services 9:30 am.Law School Films: "You Can’t Take it With You”7:00 and 9:30 pm. Law Schol Auditorium.International House: “The Man with the GoldenGun” 7:00 and 9:30 pm, I-House.DOC Films: "The Innocent” 7:00 and 9:30 pm,Cobb.Hillel: Adat Shalom Dinner, 7:00 pm, $2.75.SUNDAYRockefeller Chapel: Service of Holy Communion, 9:00 am.Rockefeller Chapel: University Religious Service,11:00 amRockefeller Chapel: Lawn Festival, 12:15 pm. Tick¬ets avail, in Chapel Office. Community Choral Singin the Chancel, 2:30 pm. Play reading in the Chan¬cel, 3:30 pm.Concert: Chapel Choir, Organ and Brass Concert atRockefeller Chapel 4:30 pm.DOC Films: "A Geisha” 7:15 and 9:30 pm, Cobb.MONDAYRegenstein Library: Orientation Tours 10 am and 2pm. Tours begin on 1st floor near Reference Desk.Crossroads: English classes for foreign women10:00 am-noon.Computation Center Seminar: Introduction toComputer concepts 3:30-5:00 pm, Cobb 107.Chemistry Dept.: Lecture - "High Resolution Sti¬mulated Raman Spectroscopy” speaker Dr. Adel-bert Owyoung, 4:00 pm, Kent 103.Cognitive Science Lecture Series: "The Psychologyof Possible Worlds” speaker Daniel Kahneman 4:00pm, Social Science 122.Christian Science Organization: Preliminary meet¬ing 4:30 pm, Gates-Blake 117. Everyone welcome.Chess Club: Meets 7:00 pm, Ida Noyes MemorialRoom.Friends of the Symphony: Organizational meeting7:00 pm, Ida Noyes Library.Amnesty International: will hold its next meetingat 7:15 pm in Crossroads Student Center. For fur¬ther info call Barnett Rubin 667-5226.DOC Films: “Washington Merry-Go-Round” 7:30pm, “A Romance of Happy Valley” 9:00 pm, Cobb orKent.; ■*■■■**v • ■ - •V, ;V-.> r*. .- Vv' •'* . *•:-r.V. ■■■■ ^^•>'4 p I . V - I • .',v• '. -Sight seen Tim BakerT-Shirtsare onsale todayat HutchCourt11-1:30ONLY s4°° today!! ’5“ afterDON'T WAITFOIICINCO DE MAYOto meet the Tecate Trio Bravo.An icy red can of Tecate Beer imported from Mexico,topped with lemon and salt. Bravo!Your big thirst has met its match.Cibco Importing Co . IncDallas, Texas 75229 TEEATE ATTENTIONGRADUATE STUDENTSGERMAN EXAMHigh-pass the German Exam this winter withthe structural translation technique of KarinCramer, Ph.D., native German, years ofteaching experience.Course Starting Oct. 9 (4 hrs/wk.) for 15 weeksCall 753-0516 or 753-0453Mon.-Thurs. 5:00-6:00 p.m.»I KIMBARK HALL| Condominiums| The developers are offering model units forinspection every Sat. and Sun. between 1| and 5 p.m.»36 apts:24- 1 bedroom, 1 bath from 30,350-37,000A 6-2 bedrooms, 1 bath from 37,000-38,850f 6-2 bedrooms, 2 bath from 46,000-46,900| Alt apartments include new kitchens and appliances,» new bathrooms, carpeting and decorating (colors ofA your choice), triple-track storm windows and kitchenI storm doors, modern laundry facilities ond individual| locker space.f Your inspection is invited,| 5126 S. Kimbark Ave. - Phone 643-4489a Harry A. Zisook & Sons, Agts.786-9200 CLASS-YOGAReenergize and harmonize body, mindand spirit. Yoga begins on campusTues. Oct. 23rd and Thurs. Oct 25th atthe Gargoyle, 5:30-7:00 pm. Hathayoga postures, breathing, energizationmeditation and deep relaxation. 7 ses¬sions $40. Call Dobbi 288-3706 or337-8100.VISUALIZATIONI AND HOLISTIC! HEALTHEnjoy high levels of health and well-| being. Participate in the Visualizationf and Holistic Health workshop beginn-i ing Tues. Oct. 23rd on campus at theI Gargoyle. Learn about Holistic Healthand design and Implement your own| program through use of the life style? diary and visualization in a supportive| group. Key texts, Bry's Visualization,I Directing the Movies of your Mind toImprove Your Health, Expand your| Mind, and Achieve Your Life Goals,f and McCamp's Holistic Life Styling:k Keeping Whole In the Twentieth Cen-I tury. 7 sessions $70 Call Dobbi 288-3706or 337-8100.ESCAPEGet out of Hyde Perk—or at least out¬doors. Join the Outing Club, $2 dues.Come to the meeting Wed Oct 10 7:30pm or call Peg Dordal 753-4912, JohnHardis. 363 5269.A Reminder to all incominggraduate and professionalstudents:Please be sure to pick up fromyour Dean of Students yourinvitation to a get-togetherID.in the PuDates and times are differentfor each school and division.Roger Moore as James Bond inThe Man WithThe Gol den Gun7:00&9:30p.m. $1.50Saturday, October 6I-House Films1414 E. 59th St.30 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, October 5, 1979IFIED ADSSPACE2 BR CONDO 2 BLKS FROM UC.Hdwd. firs., new kit. and bath. Avail.Immed. $45,000. 545-1361, 321-0432.Apt. for rent • 7 room, 2 bath, com¬pletely recon. near campus and minibus $600 avail. Oct. 1.947-0787.LAST UNIT LEFT1 br condo In Kenwood - 4726 S. Greenwood. Tastefully renovated $32,000. Byappointment only. Matrix Realty Co.248-6400.Tastefully furnished, carpeted studioapt. in East Hyde Park hl-rise.Available Oct. 1 - June 30. $325/mo.373-4800 days; 643-0493 eves, andwknds.Beverley Shores, Ind. Spectacularwindow-wall view of Lake. Deluxe tri¬level of 2376 sq. ft. plus 792 sq. ft. base¬ment. 3 bedrooms, 3'/j baths. Familyroom. Brick fireplace. Garage withdoor opener. Central air. All new kit¬chen with 3 appliances. Immediatepossession. National Park leasebackexpected. $110,000. Call Renard atCallahan Real Estate. 219—926-4298.Apt. for rent: East Hyde Park highrise. Available Oct. 15. 2 BR, 2 bths.Call 947-6133 days, weekends and even-Ings, 955-3728.CO-OP Apt. Sale - 3 rooms: sm. bdrm.,separate Ivg and dng rms., kit¬chenette, bath. Good location. Safe,well-maintained bldg. Only $73/mo. in-cl. all taxes + heat + gas ONLY$24,500. Call PAULA947-0277/753-2719/684-1716.THE CONDO YOU CAN'T REFUSE.Hedge Row - A lovely two level Pen¬thouse. Brand new, never lived In 6rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. 1736 sq. ft.of living space. Corner penthouse at5400 S. Hyde Park Blvd. The only spotwith a view to the lake, also plenty ofexposure even has a skylight. Hard¬wood firs., large master bedrm.w/dressing area, central air anddehumidifier kitchen fully furnished,even a garbage compactor, plusdishwasher, private free parking,elevator to your unit. A low rise bldg,only five stories high. See HedgeRowthe ultimate in living. By appt. Calleve. 285-5099, $118,000 asking.At dissertation level? Need solitude?Live In the country (1V4 hours trom U.of C.) for price of food and heatingsmall house ($400 approx). Onebedroom, living room, bathroom,Pullman kitchen. Care for owner'spets, minimal other responsibilities.Call Mrs. Nicholson; days 924-2356;eves 493-6844, weekends 616—469-1336.Available Immediately.Mature female professional seeks non¬smoking, clean, quiet, responsibleworking graduate student or profes¬sional to share large condominiumstudio with separate kitchen and bath,in Hyde Park. $150.00 and Vt utilitiesavailable Immediately. Call 783-3988ext. 233 state calling about apt.Female student needed to share twobedroom apt. Excellent location, 57thand Blackstone. Call Sunny 684-4631.2 BDRM 2 BATH student housing rent$311 util. Incl. Call 753-8429/8473 days324-4763 eves.1808 N WELLS TRIANGLE 2 br ACpark. 450 and up mgr. 943-3108.Furnished apt. 2 br view of lake util,parking perfect for 2 grad students orfaculty. 24 hr. security. Call 955-8908.PEOPLE WANTEDWANTED: Experienced driver totransport children at the followingtimes: Wed. 3:30-6:30; Thurs. 4:30.Will provide standard transmissionauto. Salary open. Call 947-8069.Special event catering: Part-timestaff being organized to cater gourmetmeals for special University events.Exciting opportunity, excellent pay,contact Sharon Rosen 753-3527. 1:00p.m. -4:00p.m.BABYSITTER needed for 2 smallchildren 2-3 afternoons a week In ourhome. 924-6198.Mallory's Restaurant is interviewingpeople Interested In learning formallunch and dinner service. Experiencewelcome. Apply in person at 1525 E.53rd St.Female student needed to work fourafternoons per week. Help run ourhouse! Hours/pay flexible. Call Mr.Zonls 3-4549 or 548-4196 eves.Addressers wanted IMMEDIATELY!Work at home—no experiencenecessary—excellent pay. WriteAmerican Service. 8350 Park Lane,Suite 127, Dallas, TX 75231.Child-care person needed to care forseven year old girl afternoons. Oays:791-3978evenings: 947-9873.BABYSITTER WANTED: Facultywife needs a responsible student to sitfor one or two afternoons a week •hours to be arranged. Call 955-6567.Person wanted to do late night clean¬ing for campus area club. Job starts at1:30 a.m., no more than two hours ofwork a night. Call John at 753-35971:30-3:30. Great full time and part-time employ¬ment.WaitressesWaitersCooksDriversMedici Gallery and Coffeehouse 1450E. 57th, 947-8652.Child care for 6 mo. old, at our homeHyde Park, weekday mornings, preferexper. w/infants. 324-3869.SECRETARY—Accurate typist, andtelephone answering, good workingconditions, hours flexbile, excellentpay. South Shore. 375-7080. Al Booth.The Department of BehavioralSciences needs people who want toparticipate as paid subjects inpsycholingulstlc and cognitivepsychology experiments. For furtherinformation call 753-4718.SPANISH TRANSLATOR. Studentpart time. Translate trainingmaterials from English into Spanish.Must have studied Spanish atUniveristy level. Excellent pay. CallIsabel Garcia, Community and Fami¬ly Study Center, 753-2518.Left and Right handed people neededfor study on brain organization. $3.00per hour. Call 753-4735 weekdays.SPANISH MANUSCRIPT TYPIST.Student part time. Translate trainingmaterials from English Into Spanish.Must have studied Spanish at Univer¬sity level. Excellent pay. Call IsabelGarcia, Community and Family StudyCenter, 753-2518.Babysitter wanted. My home on cam¬pus. W/F. 10 hrs./wk. 241-7545.FRENCH MANUSCRIPT TYPIST.Student part time. Prepare copy formonographs and journals. Knowledgeof French grammar essential. Ac¬curacy more important than speed.Excellent pay. Call George Rumsey,Community and Family Study Center,753-2518.Loving babysitter wanted for thirtyhrs/wk. In my home at 55th andBlackstone. Two Girls 6 and 2.955-1696/753-8517.Do you love children and want a part-time job? My boys (ages 4 and 6) need"Big brother/big sister" care 5hrs/wk. Pay $15/week. Additionalwork possible. Near UC. Call 363-2805pm's.FRENCH TRANSLATOR. Studentpart time. Translate trainingmaterials from English Into French.Prefer native of France. Must havestudied French at University level.Excellent pay. Call George Ramsey,Community and Family Study Center,753-2518.OVERSEAS JOBS - Summer/yearround. Europe, S. America, Australia,Asls, Etc. All Fields, $500-81,200 mon¬thly. expenses paid. Sightseeing. Freeinfo- Write: IJC, Box 52-11, Corona DelMar, Ca. 92625.OFFSET PRESS TRAINEE. Studentpart time. Learn multi-color printing,experience In photography or printingdesirable. Prefer person who will beon campus three years or more. Ex¬cellent pay. Call Kurt Robson, 753-2518.MEN! WOMEN! Jobs on ships!American, foreign. No experience re¬quired. Excellent pay. Worldwidetravel. Summer job or career. Send$3.00 for information. SEAFAX, Dept.E-1 Box 2049, Port Angeles,Washington 98362.RADIO-TELEVISION TECHNICIAN.Student part time. Experience inrecording sound and video. Excellentpay. Call Robert Higgins. Communityand Family Study Center, 753-2974.Professor needs a theme-grader.PLaza 2-8377.Physician at med school would likemature grad or prof student (couple orsingle) to live in my home for eveningcompanionship of a teenage boy In ex¬change for room and board. Close toUniversity, on campus bus route. Call332-4418.Babysltter-to care for two boys (ages 7mo. and 5 yrs.) Tues. and Thurs. 1:45-4:15 pm. Near campus. 955-2223.Interested In women's health care?Volunteers needed for pregnancytesting In Hyde Park-Call Kay 667-5505.FOR SALEViolin for sale - % size E.R. Fretz-chner maker with bow and case ex¬cellent condition. 548-4196 eves.Full-size mattress and box spring. $509 x 12 candy-stripe carpet, $20 . 947-8350, evenings.King size bed excel, cond. 3-1960.Dining table: reflnlshed, solid; chairscome with. Good buy. 955-4463. (Keeptrying K JOIN THE KENNEDY BANDWAGONorder your "I'm Ready for Teddy" T-shlrt, 50/50 heatherblue, sizes (S-M-L-XL), $5, includes mailing, cashierscheck or cash only. Wild West Com¬pany, 1400 North Rouse, MT 59715.1974 Maverick 52,000 miles powersteering A/C radio 4 door new battery,muffler very clean. Must see $1,750.Call 241-5753.YARD SALE Sat. Oct. 6 10am-4pm5513 S. Kenwood. Nothing fancy butlots and lots of good stuff.OH WOW I! Formica kitchen table,sideboard, table, 6 drawer dresser andIg. green shag rug, $10-$30.684-0331.Women's 10-speed exc cond orlg $160now $75 752-8865 eve.Yard sale at 5731 S. Blackstone In backyard Saturday October 6 12-5. Desks,chairs and lots of other stuff.RUMMAGE SALE Sat Oct 6 10am-6pm 53rd St. and Harper Ave. tobenefit Phoenix School. Clothes, fur¬niture, household Items, toys, anti¬ques, and more.Participate in Parent Support Net¬work garage sale on Oct 20. Sellchildren's toys, furniture and clotheson consignment. Call Jan Lawrence363-0135.Multifamily frontyard sale Sat. Oct. 610am-4pm 5513 S. Klmbark furniture,dishes, small appliances, clothes, can¬vas stretchers, and much more.PEOPLEFOR SALEProfessional photography for modelcomposites. Call 684-2286.Retired secretary will do typing of stu¬dent papers, etc. Student Rates 821-1868.ARTWORK-posters, illustration,calligraphy, invitations, etc. NoelYovovich 5441 S. Kenwood 493-2399.SCENESModern dance classes Yunl Hoffmandance theatre and school, 627 W. Lake,Chicago. 924-4523, 648-0141.WOMEN PROTECT YOURSELVES!Blue Gargoyle, 57 and University, of¬fers two 6 wk SELF-DEFENSEclasses: Basic and advanced. BeginsOct. 22. 825. Info, call 332-5540.Merriam Center Book Sale. October 8-9. 10 a.m. • 2 p.m. New and used books.Soft and hard cover. Popular fiction toacademic non-fiction. Low prices. 1313E. 60th Street.POTTERY CLASSES begin wk of Oct.8. Adults: Mon. 7:30 - 10 p.m. Wed. 9-11:30 a.m. Children: Wed. 3-5 p.m. Sm.groups. Lots of ind. attention. 624-7568.Groups: a support group for women inthe process of separation or divorceand "Experiential Focusing," atechnique for exploring and clarifyingfeelings developed by Eugene Gendlin.$50. Both meet Tuesday nights. Call684-1800.Women's swim team organizationalmeeting all undergraduate women In¬terested in varsity swimming, pleaseattend meeting at 7:00 pm on Tues.,October 9. Location: 2nd floor IdaNoyes Hall. If unable to attend, con¬tact Jon at 753-0142 or leave messageat 753-3574.ATTENTION: Pre-law women andminority students: Harvard LawSchool recruiter will be on campusDate: Oct. 10th 9am-12 noon. Office ofCareer Counseling 5706 UniversityAve.JEWELRY AND WEAVINGCLASSES days and eves. Begin Oct.9at SHAN I'S 5501 S. Everett. Studio'sOpening Reception Oct. 7 2-6pm/752-5173.PERSONALSHAVE NIGHTGOWN: will travel. Sen¬sitive Hum major looking for hand¬some pre-med. You will meet me whenyou least expect to.LOOK at all the fresh people! Thanksfor taking the library tour. Sorry yougot lost. Welcome to the Regensteinsingle minglet It ain't exactly rollerdisco, but...RegWriters' Workshop PLaza 2-8377.GIRAFFE LADY Congratulations onyour marriage! THIN (?) REDHAIRED JEW.SERVICESIMPROVE YOUR GRADES! Send$1.00 for your 306-page catalog of col¬legiate research. 10,250 topics listed.Box 25097 G., Los Angeles, California,90025. (213 ) 477 8226PRIME MOVERS: Student w/largetruck let me be the efficient cause ofyour move 324-1977.MOVERS GUIDE Is a new referralservice, free through October We helpyou choose the best mover or rentalequipment for your needs. Dally 3 to 9p.m. at 975-9172.PREGNANCY TEST SATURDAY10-1. Augustana Church 5500 S.Woodlawn. Bring 1st mornings urinesample. $1.50 donation. SouthsideWomen's Health 667-5505. WANTEDFRONT AND/OR BACK WHEEL forRaleigh bike Brad Lyttle 324-0654.LOST ANDFOUNDLOST: White, female long-haired cat,no tags, answers to "Fluffy". Lost 54thand Dorchester Sept. 27. Reward. Call752-7198 Larry.LOST: Gray Tabby cat, white spot onforehead (male, neutered) 57th andMaryland, campus area. If found: call548 3076.RESEARCHASSISTANTCollect and tabulate data regardingpsychological functioning of abus¬ed/neglected children. Graduatepsychology student or related fieldpreferred. Experienced with statisticsand research desireable. Hours: flexi¬ble. Approximatley 15 hours per week.Salary $5.50/hr. Available Immediate¬ly. Contact: Dr. Hochstadt 363-6700.Est. 254 La Rabida Children's Hospitaland Research Center East 65th St. atLake Michigan, Chicago, III. 60649Equal Opportunity Employer.CHOIRAUDITIONSAugustana Lutheran Church,Woodlawn and 55th. Open to all in¬terested in singing. Music generallyfrom Ren and Baroque. RehearsalsSunday before and after service. Noweek night rehearsal. Call 493-6451M-F, 8:30-12, 1-4:30.WOMEN'SMAGAZINEPrimavera V is out! On sale in mostlocal bookstores. We need new staffmembers. Call 752-5655 for info.FORTRAN CLASSLearn to program in Fortran. 10 ses¬sion class begins October 15. Cost $30Computer time provided. Come toComputation Center before October 11to register. Call 753-8400 for more in-formatiori.RENT-A-FRIGRent a rerigerator for your room thisyear! Great for snacks and drinks! 2.5cu. ft. only $30. Lowest prices on cam¬pus. Call Student Government.753-3273, or see our booth at ActivitiesNight.ARTISTS ANDCRAFTERSIf you are Interested In sharinggallery-shop space at 57th andWoodlawn from now through theChristmas season call Chris 493-3290.Total dues will be $15. No Commission,but a few hours of work per week willbe required.CHEERLEADINGAT U.C.Be a cheerleader for the LI of CMaroons! Call 3-4681 for info.COMP-CENTERCLASSESFall Quarter class list available. Shortcourses In Fortran and SPSS.Seminars are introductions to: Com¬puter Concepts, DEC-20 Computer,Superwylbur, System 1022, Superwylbur Macro, SCSS, and SCRIPT.Open to all members of the Universitycommunity. For more information(and a copy of the schedule) come tomain Computation Center Rl C-B27 orBusiness Office, 5737 S. University, orcall 753-8400.SPSS CLASSLearn to use SPSS Statistical Packagefor analyzing data. 6 sessions: $25.Computer time provided. Come toComputation Center before October 12to register - call 753-8400 for informa¬tion. Class starts October 16.RESEARCH ONWOMEN ANDFEMALENESSThe Graduate Committee on the Studyof Women Is preparing an Interdepartmental Directory of graduate studentsand faculty Involved in research onwomen or femaleness. To be Includedpick up a form In your divisional Officeor call 288-0826 or 684 5076 for more in¬formation.DECSYSTEM20Learn to use the Computation Center'sDEC-20 computer, accessible from terminals all over campus. A seminarto teach use of the system will be held:Thursday, October 11, 4:00-5:30 pm,Cobb 107. Ail welcome. No charge.LIVE CHEAP!MAB tee payers live cheap! Save up to50% at all MAB events. Buy a fee cardnow at the Mandel Hall Box Office. On¬ly $4 per quarter.GROUP THERAPYThe Chicago Counseling andPsychotherapy Center has severalopenings for women and men 18 andover in a long-term group, starting Oc¬tober 18. Meets Thursday evenings8-10 pm. Fee:$40/month, first twomonths payable in advance.Preliminary interview required. Call684-1800, leave message for Bill.ALL GRADSMAB fee payers live cheap!!! Save upto 50% at all MAB events. Buy a feecard now at the Mandel Hall Box Of¬fice. Only $4 per quarter.MUSICPerform Hindemith, Mozart,Mendelssohn and Respighi. Univ.Chamber Orchestra Auditions Sept.30-Oct. 6. Call 3-2613 for an appoint¬ment.MABMAB payers live cheap!! Save up to50% at all MAB events. Buy a fee cardnow at the Mandel Hall Box Office. On¬ly $4 per quarter.THERAPYTRAININGThe Chicago Counseling andPsychotherapy Center announces aPractlcum In Client-CenteredTherapy, starting October 17 for 8months. Call 684-1800.MUSICIANSTo join a chamber music group withothers of similar musical abilities andinterests, please cali 753-2613 duringworking hours, or come to the musicdepartment. Also opportnlty to play inThursday noon concert series inReynolds Club.FOLK DANCINGThe U of C Folkdancers have twoweekly meetings at Ida Noyes. Sun¬days at 8 00 Int-Adv and Mondays at8:00 Beginners. All are welcomeLESBIAN ANDGAYCoffeehouse. Friday 5 Oct Ida Noyeslibrary (1212 E 59th 1st floor) Welcomenew students! Gay and LesbianAlliance organizational meeting Mon 8Oct 8 pm GALA office (2nd fl Ida).R.N.'SPositions are now available on all 3shifts for staff nurses Interested incare of children with chronic illness.The adolescent and toddler/preschoolunits care for the needs of children Inthe acute phase of Chronicrespiratory, rheumatologic and renaldisease, as well as general pediatrics.Emergency room coverage is alsoavailable. La Rabida is a JCAH approved hospital affiliated with theUniversity of Chicago. Pediatric ex¬perience is preferred. Send resume orcall 363-6700 Ext. 236. Nursing Department La Rabida Children's Hospitaland Research Center, East 65th St. atLake Michigan Chicago III. 60649.ADMINISTRATIVEASSISTANTNORC has part and full time positionsavailable for AdministrativeAssistants. Duties include typing ofletters, forms, reports, financialschedules and budgets, and transcrib¬ing machine dictation. Excellent typIng skills required. 2 years office experlence with minimum of 1 yearsecretarial experience. 2 years of col¬lege or equivalent $9,490-$11,500. Call947 2558. An Equal Opportunity/Af¬firmative Action Employer.YARD SALESaturday October 6. 5522 S. Kimbark10 till sold out. Furniture, rugs,clothing, miscellaneous. FOUR CORNERSMost units in this exciting conversionhave been sold. There are, however, afew choice 1 and 2 bedroom condohomes. Please visit our model at 1226E 54th St. Saturday or Sunday, 1-5 pmor call for an appt. Price from 42,500.KENNEDY, RYAN, MONIGAL5508 S. Lake Park 667 6666FIELD ASSISTANTNORC needs Field Assistants to perform a variety of tasks associated withthe data collection portion of a survey.Duties include editing questionnaires,light typing, and data entry(keypunch). Some college andprevious office experience preferred.37 hrs. Project continues throughMay 1980. $4.00 per hour plus benefits.Call 947-2558. An Equal Opportuni¬ty/Affirmative Action Employer.UC HOTLINEGot a problem? Want to talk? Got aquestion? Need some info? Try callingthe UC Hotline 753-1777, 7 pm-7 am.HOLOCAUSTSUPPORT GROUP1st meeting Tuesday, Oct. 16, 7:00 pm,Hillel, 5715 Woodlawn, to last 6-8weeks. A support group for children ofHolocaust survivors In which wediscuss the effects our parents' ex¬periences had on our lives. Perceptionand Insight will be gained as we learnhow others in our same situation feeland have coped with these feelings.For more information, call 752-1127.WORD PROCESSORNORC will send an excellent typistwho has experience in manuscript andstatistical typing to a one-week ETStraining course on Word Processing.Must type 60-70 WPM, have minorediting ability, excellent spelling, andan artistic sense of layout work to useon questionnaires, forms, charts, andgraphs. Begins Immediately.$8,405-810,000 plus liberal fringebenefits. Call 947-2558. An Equal Op¬portunity/Affirmative ActionEmployer.TRAILSUNDERGROUNDOuting Club program Oct 10 7:30 pmIda Noyes Library on caves and cav¬ing. Trip sign-up and business meetingfollowing.TYPISTExperienced. Work done In my home.Tel 536-7167 Or 548-0663ACHTUNG!LEARN GERMAN THIS FALL! TakeApril Wilson's original fifteen weekcourse and highpass the language ex¬am! MWF 12-1, Starting Oct. 10. $150.To Register, call 667 3038PIANO LESSONSBeginners through advanced-experienced teacher and accompanist.Doctoral degree from Julllard SchoolNY tel 536-7167 or 548-0663.SELF-HYPNOSISSEMINARBeginning Thurs. Oct. 25th, 7:00-9:00Self-Hypnosis Seminar. The purpose ofthe seminar Is to teach the fundamen¬tals of self-hypnosis and to assist partlcipants in developing the skills andtechniques necessary for use. "It hasthe power to transform every area ofyour life "from ..enhancing studyskills and improving health to deepenIng relationships and clarifying andhelping you attain future goals. Testby Dr. Freda Morris, Hypnosis withFriends and Lovers. Ms. Kerman, theleader, Is a graduate of the clinicalhypnotherapy program directed byDr. Morris. 7 sessions. $70. Cali Dobbi288 3706 or 337-8100ART OF MASSAGEEnjoy Receiving seven massages thisquarter, through learning how to giveone Beginning Tues. Oct. 23rd on cam¬pus at the Gargoyle. 9:00 to 10:30.Learn through demonstration and ex¬change to give a complete deeplyrelaxing pleasurable Esalen Messagebased on Downing's The MassageBook with some accupressure andenergy work. 7 sessions $70 Dobbi288-3706 or 337-8100Friday, October 5, 1979 — The Chicago Maroon - 31Tom Waits *Oct. 20MAB Fee Payers 3.50 & 4.50Non Fee Payers 6.00 & 7.00South Side Johnny•Nov. 17MAB fee payers live cheap!!Save up to 50% at allMAB events. Buy a feecard now at the MandelHall Box Office(only $4 per quarter)Major Activities Board±