The Chicago Maroon“Solitary, singing in the West, I strike up for a new world.” —Walt Whitmanvol. 89, No. 16 The University of Chicago Copyright 1979 The Chicago Maroon Friday, October 26, 1979V, - *U ot..w# 13 V- ut’cntJ »tor*-- ,,..,’0^ S*lUin01 TC. —‘■c ‘ -\itiiv2S—■--—iot'. V sVi;* ^w ern°randum^ 'K‘ ""»«<•f*o*• Dir<? fct°r, fnr .***/*cr; Co J00-^969<0,N7^«o . ^*** ' Err513\P c1fc2Oji CY\ic-'-,•ovc;jir.nVo- di Rector,XT)u O.ICCD (100-<53l6)O00-4^gGggjY o-: '^VW^v.^Vc'ccV^U*^ aCOIKTELPno-U-fT'■VrTtvout'A t0JlSYjctvic^ tt‘Sf®4®*V-''°-.%cn'-cc:» s'rJ'ccrt!'J/.<* itveiK&tic prc-thou^Trust"Chi rod J°r the Dureau lsi„ 1 '"cnts of th0 CSh”"e C°P* ofto . aKO Olfi,Enl,:eos Of th- rsityBoard of tC'” in° rurnnc„ ~r‘*<udangers posed Kur,t°es and the ~ °f theannounced the Ne" Uni vo-'f "?ra 1 'f thena loaders. DO tfl i 1e»s;r fcav^'yaa-jIndices of I^’WnD SLACKS ls'RICHARD isc*1^ ^hicaeo Offic/> he Securland 1065 ru „VU“S' 8*“ ? th* sUuject°T Students for aan eIect J'to th^r 10°-«2lS2 *?'endorsed avoir! a Dooocratlc National ' IrWith rnn.r. da"ce of tv. ..5 _Society fsnet -aeeutlvF P;SraUonC*,.“te"?*If *1? t"fI°Sed !nttUsed cannot bewill' “r'° naI line off,Khe DurcauCaut H^*1S basedW11J insure that th* e«c!oscd V h°rizes thnnot k- f mat the m0„, M letter tsttrlbuted to ?s ’ envol°Pes and * 'to the FBI. Ees and ppst. FBI anti-left campaign hadinformant here, faked letterBy Claudia MagatThe Federal Bureau of Investi¬gation’s campaign against NewLeft organizations during the 1960sincluded a fraudulent letter to theUniversity of Chicago Board ofTrustees, and a University infor¬mant on the draft status of Univer¬sity students, according to docu¬ments obtained earlier this yearthrough the Freedom of Informa¬tion Act.The anti-left campaign, COIN-TELPRO (Counter IntelligenceProgram), spied on faculty andstudents who expressed dissentabout the Vietnam War, infiltratedleftist organizations, and harassedindividuals with liberal or radicalpolitical beliefs.The fraudulent letter, which issigned “A Concerned Alumnus,”was prepared by special agents ofthe Chicago FBI office and ap¬proved by J. Edgar Hoover,former director of the FBI. The let¬ter criticized ‘‘recent develop¬ments which have been occurringin our great institutions of learningincluding the University of Chica¬go,” and was sent to the UniversityReproductive rights forum heldBy Ben DavisDawn Manire, a ‘‘DES (diethyl-stilbesterol) daughter,” and Cath¬arine Christeller, a representativeof Women Organized for Repro¬ductive Choice, spoke about dif¬ferent aspects of reproductiverights at a forum, sponsored by theWomen’s Union, Tuesday in IdaNoyes Hall.Manire, whose mother receivedthe synthetic hormone DES in the1950s as part of treatment for mis¬carriage, spoke about the experi¬ences of DES daughters in dealingwith a lack of information and withdeception on the part of some doc¬tors. About two million women inthe U.S. between 1940 and 1970 re¬ceived DES, which was linked tocancer in women in 1971.Christeller talked about thebackground and objectives of the reproductive rights movement.She pointed out that ‘‘reproductiverights doesn’t just mean abortion;we see a whole set of conditions”which affect whether women cancontrol their bodies. Noting thatpoverty can often prevent womenfrom having children if they wantto, Christeller went on to link at¬tacks on the legal right to abortionwith forced sterilization and whatshe termed “high-technology”methods of contraception whichbar women from the control oftheir bodies.Christeller argued that many at¬tacks on reproductive rights havecome from the political right wing,whom she said “don’t care aboutany kind of life. They care aboutpower.”The forum was held as part ofNational Abortion Rights ActionWeek, a nationwide series ofevents focused on defending the right to abortion. Events in Chica¬go conclude with a demonstrationtomorrow, Saturday, at 1 pm inDaley Plaza. Featured speakerswill be 24th district State represen¬tative Carol Moseley Braun andAlice Peurula, head of local 1065 ofthe United Steelworkers. Board of Trustees and the ChicagoTribune.“In this day when the very fabricof our society rests upon the disci¬pline of law, it is tragic to have thisdiscipline threatened by a few fac¬tious individuals who desire to im¬pose their will on our universitiesby inciting students to demon¬strate in protest of manufacturedgrievances,” said the letter. Theletter also criticized assistant pro¬fessor of sociology Richard Flacksfor participating in the New Uni¬versity Conference (NUC), a spin¬off of the Students for a Democrat¬ic Society (SDS). The NUC,according to the letter, “will sup¬port and provide leadership forstudent rebellions.”Flacks, who now teaches at theUniversity of California at SantaBarbara, left the University in 1969after he was attacked and severelybeaten by unidentified assailantsin his office.“Certainly,” said the letter,“every college professor has theright to academic freedom butdoes this give license to instigate astudent rebellion? Is not conduct ofthis type really a betrayal of atrust which the University of Chi¬cago has placed in Mr. Flacks?”In a related memo to Hoover, theChicago bureau noted “The Boardof Trustees is composed of individ¬uals such as JOHN D. ROCKE¬FELLER whose wide interestsmight preclude any knowledge oftheir part of the New UniversityConference. The letter is intendedto stimulate an interest in the pro¬posed activities of the New Univer¬ sity Conference and to prod theBoard of Trustees into some actionagainst the New University Con¬ference and FLACKS.”According to the memo,“FLACKS has publicly endorsedavoidance of the draft and partici¬pated in a meeting with represen¬tatives of North and South Vietnamin Czechoslovakia in September,1967.”In granting permission to mailthe letter. Hoover ordered that“The letter is to be prepared on lo¬cally purchased stationery whichcannot be traced to the Bureau orto the Government. Assure that allother necessary steps are taken toprotect the Bureau as the origina¬tor of the letter.”“Any positive results obtainedshould be promptly furnished bythe Bureau,” Hoover wrote.InformantIn another memo concerning“Suspended Students, Universityof Chicago,” and dated March 5,1969, Chicago special agent M.W.Johnson told United States Attor¬ney Thomas Foran of the Depart¬ment of Justice that “The ChicagoOffice of the Federal Bureau of In¬vestigation is in receipt of informa¬tion from (2E), University of Chi¬cago, Chicago, Illinois, advisingthat more than one hundred stu¬dents of the University, many ofthem male, have been suspendedby the University of Chicago due totheir participation in recent distur¬bances.”Turn to Page 6Midwest draft opponents meetSharon PollackWomen attending reproductive rights forum Sharon Pollack About 200 people attended themidwest Conference Against theDraft held last weekend at NorthMidwest Conference Against theDraft held last weekend at North¬western University. The confer¬ence was resolved to oppose the re-instatement of militaryregistration, the draft and plansfor a national youth service.The conference was sponsoredby the Coalition Against Registra¬tion and the Draft (CARD). CARDdescribes itself as “a coalition ofseveral religious, civic, peace, stu¬dent, community organizationsand concerned individuals who allagree that the draft and registra¬tion must be defeated.”coalition against registration andthe draft (Mid-Card), which wouldorganize and co-ordinate anti¬draft activities among manygroups. Mid-Card will have openmembership, allowing anyorganization to join the coalitionthat will agree to the central prin¬ciples.In addition to the central resolu¬tion of purpose, the conferencepassed numerous other resolu¬tions:•seeking a ban on U.S. militaryintervention which would subor¬dinate the independence of othernations throughout the world toU.S. interests. John WebsterJohn Rossen•opposing all forms of sexualand racial discrimination in themilitary.•urging amnesty for Viet Namveterans, tax resisters, desertersand servicemen who had goneAWOL.Speakers at the conference in¬cluded Sidney Lens, a long-timepeace activist and author of TheMilitary-Industrial Complex; Sister Margret Traxler from theInstitute of Women Today; JohnRossen. an activist since the 30’sand a leader of CARD and the NewPatriot Alliance: Karl Davidson,national secretary of SDS from1964-68; Tom Palmer, thesecretary of CARD who testifiedrecently in Congress against thedraft; Duane Shank, a draftresister and national director ofCARD; and Richard Greenwood,assistant to the president of the In¬ternational Association of Machin¬ists.The conference was held to get“some real in depth analysis” ofthe issue according to conferencecoordinator Mike Loftin.“It was also meant to get peopleto discuss and build some sort ofmidwest organization,” LoftinsaidThe conference was cosponsoredby the Progressive Student Coali¬tion of Northwestern.Rossen said that not enoughminority groups — particularlyblacks, hispanics and pacifieswere represented at the con¬ference. He warned the groups notto repeat the errors made in theSixties' anti-draft fight which an¬tagonized and alienated manyAmericans; instead, he suggestedthat they try to involve as manyAmericans in the fight as possible.IMPORTANTELECTION NOTICE:The deadline for filing nominationpetitions for the upcoming StudentGovernment elections has been ex¬tended to 3:00 P.M. Friday, Oct. 26.The following representative positionsare open for nominations:Freshman - (7)Burton-Judson —(1)Law School - (1)Business School -(2)Social ServicesAdministrator-(2)Public Policy (1)Library School (1)Med School (2)Bio Sci (3)Phy. Sci. (3)Humanities (3)Soc. Sci. (4)Student FacultyAdvisory Court (2)Nomination petitions are available in theStudent Govt. Office, IDA NOYES HALL, Rm. 306 Eye ExaminationsFashion Eye WearContact LensesDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist(53 Kimbark Plaza)1200 E. 53rd St.- 493-8372Intelligent people know the differ¬ence between advertised cheapglasses or contact lenses and com¬petent professional service.Our reputation is your guaranteeof satisfaction.2 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, October 26, 1979Leon Kass at Woodward CourtWhere should we draw the line on science?By Chris IsidorePerhaps one of the most universal preju¬dices of our society is that the longer andmore vigorous that medicine can make aman’s life, the better. That prejudice will bequestioned this Sunday night at 8:30, whenLeon R. Kass, the Henry R. Luce Professorin the College, gives the second WoodwardCourt lecture, entitled “Biology and HumanAffairs: Whether to Wither, and Why.”The lecture will ask the audience to con¬sider questions concerning the cost to soci¬ety of the recent and future advances inscience and technology.“I am concerned about some of the unin¬tended and not necesssarily desirable con¬sequences of the modern scientific project,”said Kass. “We have paid too little attentionto some of the high costs of our very suc¬cesses in science. I don’t mean things thateverybody sort of knows, like pollution, ex¬cessive population growth, or various fur¬ther hazards to health. Those things arefairly well known, and it’s just a matter oftrying to figure out how to curtail thosethings without over regulating ourselves todeath.“I’m concerned about softer matters,about social institutions like family rela¬tions or communities, about what kind ofpeople we become the more we devote mostof our energies merely to longer, healthier,more vigorous lives ... To begin with onehas to re-examine the question, ‘What arewe trying to accomplish with our scientificproject, what are our goals?’ And to ask,secondarily, ‘Are there certain kinds ofbuilt-in, likely costs of success in thosegoals, cost which it would be well worth ourwhile to pay attention to?”’The successes which Kass will be con¬cerned with on Sunday are the advances inbiomedical engineering which will quiteprobably make it possible, within our life¬time, to extend the average lifespan by 20-40years, and to make those years vigorous,vital and healthy. These are usually the ac¬cepted goals of medicine and science. And it Leon Kass Tim Bakeris these goals, and the costs attached tothem, that Kass questions.It is not that Kass emphasizes the advan¬tages of disease or senility. Instead, he feelsthat a society devoted to achieving healthand long life has missed the goals which areworth achieving.“(We should ask) what kinds of lives, andI say that in the plural, somehow do justiceto the kind of being that a human being is.And what kinds of individual and communalarrangements are most conducive to thoselives ... We have opted much too much forcomfort and safety, and paid much too littleattention to appreciation of what is beauti¬ful, (to the) cultivation of certain possibili¬ties of genuine excellence of human beings,to certain kinds of rich relations betweenpeople, such as deep kinds of friendship, tothe possibilities of genuine self-governmentand to the pursuit of wisdom.“One of the very highest human possibili¬ties is to try as much as possible to under¬ stand the way things are in both the world ofnature and in the world of human affairs.This understanding is an end in itself, andcarries with it extraordinary high pleasure,and is somehow separate from the desire tomake oneself master of the world.“The use of science as the tool for the pre¬diction and control of the natural world runsthe risk of reducing the appreciation andperception of that world. To treat humanbeings as things that you can somehow un¬derstand scientifically for the sake of pre¬diction and control is really to ignore someof the most wonderful things about them.”Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World is anexample, Kass feels, of a world wherescience has been used to emphasize thesevalues too much. Kass also raised the ques¬tion “What would make life worth living ifall the external impediments to our happi¬ness were removed?” He feels that thereshould be something for man to work for orto struggle against, to give his live meaning,and that, “There are a small number of peo¬ple who might be richly happy in the Gardenof Eden, but they are precious few.”Kass realizes that even with the new tecn-nologies neither immortality, Eden, noreven the brave new world are necessarilypossible. But he feels this is further reasonnot to strive for such goals. “I am on evenstronger ground when I argue that since wecannot reach (these worlds), it is wrong todirect so much of our energies to reachingthem, thereby ignoring other goals whichare equally important,” Kass says.Kass emphasizes that there is great use¬fulness, no matter what the defects in his ar¬gument, in carefully considering the ques¬tions he raises as a “thought experiment.”“The task at present is primarily a task ofthought,” he says. “I don’t know whetherwhat I argue in this lecture on Sunday isright or not, but I’m fairly confident that I’masking the right kind of questions.”In framing those questions, Kass has beenwell prepared. He received both his bache¬lor’s and medical degrees from the Univer¬ sity after serving a hospital internship,earned a doctorate in biochemistry fromHarvard University in 1967. He then did re¬search in molecular biology at the NationalInstitutes of Health and with the Committeeon Life Sciences and Social Policy of the Na¬tional Academy of Science.Kass worked on fellowships from the Gug¬genheim Foundation and the National En¬dowment for the Humanities and thenturned to teaching, first as a tutor at St.John’s College in Annapolis, Maryland andthen as Kennedy Professor of Bioethics atGeorgetown University.In 1976 Kass returned to the University asa faculty member and has since devotedhimself to teaching undergraduates, offer¬ing courses on Aristotle’s Ethics, Plato’sSymposium, the philosophy of nature, andscience and society. With his wife, Amy, alecturer in the College, and four othermembers of the College faculty, he formedthe Human Being and Citizen course, a com¬bined humanities and social sciences se¬quence in the Common Core.The author of several articles in the areaof medicine and bioethics for journals in¬cluding The Public Interest and Science,Kass is a founding fellow and member of theboard of directors of the Hastings Center, anindependent research institution for thestudy of society, ethics, and the life sciencesat Hastings-on-Hudson, New York.“The task of people who worry about whatI worry about is to apply themselves to lib¬eral education and to teaching, in its fullsense. That is to invite young people to thinkabout the nature and meaning of human life,both for individuals and community, and tounderstand human life in relation to thewhole in which it is embedded.“This means, concretely, the criticalscrutiny of our own opinions on these largematters, seeking for what is true and good, atask greatly aided by the careful study ofthe best works of the greatest minds andrichest hearts of those who have gone be¬fore.Stanley Kaplan coursesGood deal, ripoff, or none of the above?By David GlocknerLast Saturday morning a group of grim¬faced students stood in line outside Quan-trell Auditorium holding blue computer-printed tickets. The tickets were foradmission to a day-long battery of testswhich many of the students were convincedwould affect the rest of their lives.Although these students were taking theGraduate Record Examination (GRE), thescene at Quantrell would have been uncom¬fortably familiar to anyone who has takenany of the many other standardized admis¬sions tests. These tests, like the Sphynx ofGreek mythology, stand ready to hurl thosewho miss too many questions into an abyssof humiliation and despair. Admissions of¬ficers in colleges, graduate schools, and pro¬fessional schools around the country relyheavily on the results of standardized teststo help determine who will be admitted totheir institutions.Student anxiety about the tests is reflect¬ed in the popularity of test coaching schools— institutions whose sole aim is to help theirclients get high scores on the exams. Thelargest, oldest, and best-known chain ofsuch schools is operated by Stanley H. Ka¬plan, who now has more than 80 “education¬al centers” around the country.For a fee of between $275 and $325, Kaplanoffers programs to prepare students to takethe Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT), theMedical College Admissions Test (MCAT),the Law School Admission Test (LSAT), theGRE, and nearly a dozen other nationaltests. Most of Kaplan’s courses include ap¬proximately 50 hours of class time, 100hours of tape* recording, homework books,and innumerable practice tests.But despite the intensive nature of Ka¬plan’s programs, some educators questionwhether his courses are worth the money. The Educational Testing Service and theCollege Board, two sister organizationswhich write most of the national tests, areamong the most vocal critics of test coach¬ing.“Students should know that drill andcramming for the SAT really aren’t likely tohelp raise scores that much,” said CollegeBoard President George Hanford.Miguel Arias, a member of the CollegeBoard’s Council on Access Services and athird-year student in the College, called thetest preparation programs “a last-minuteattempt at learning what 12 years shouldhave taught.”Kaplan denies tfiat his programs are cramcourses, claiming instead that they are“equivalent to a year’s work.” By reviewingtopics covered on tests, encouraging stu¬dents to think creatively, making them fa¬miliar with the tests through repeated prac¬tice, and by teaching test-taking skills,Kaplan believes the courses produce betterstudents.“Our philosophy is that only a better stu¬dent can get an improved score,” he says.“There’s no such thing as an uncoachableexam,” Kaplan added. During the late 1950s,he said, a College Board publication evenrecommended that some students hiretutors to help them review material on theexam and acquire problem-solving skills.A milder but more recent criticism of testpreparation courses is that they do nothing astudent could not do himself by buying oneof the several review books available andspending an hour or two a night studying.Many students do not have the self-disci¬pline necessary to prepare by themselves,however, “They force you to practice.” saidlaw student Henry Schmeltzer, a former Ka¬plan student. Most of the material coveredin the course “I wouldn’t have done on myown,” he said. Kathy Trkla, another former Kaplan stu¬dent, agrees with Schmeltzer: “I probablywouldn’t have prepared that much on myown ... You stick that much money into itand it gives you an incentive to workhard.”Schmeltzer said he thought Kaplan’scourse was more up to date with recentchanges in the tests than those study materi¬als available in bookstores. Some of thequestions on Kaplan’s practice tests were“precisely identical” to questions on theLSAT, he said.First-year student Mark Williams, whoused Kaplan’s course to prepare for the SAT,said the course placed a heavy emphasis onpractice tests. “You take tests all the time,”he said. Kaplan believes the repititionmakes his students familiar with the formand content of the tests.A number of law school admissions repre¬sentatives on campus for a recent lawschool admissions caravan, had sharply dif¬fering opinions about the value of Kaplan’scourses.Knowledge of the test and test procedureswill help anyone,” one admissions officersaid. Since the format of the test neverchanges, people who have preparedthoroughly don’t have to waste time readingdirections or figuring out the form of thetest, he said.One school’s representative was sharplycritical of Kaplan, “I have not met a satis¬fied Stanley Kaplan customer,” she said,charging that Kaplan’s practice tests leadstudents to expect higher scores than theyreceive on the actual tests.Others at the admissions forum wereenthusiastic about Kaplan’s programs. “IfKaplan gives a course to prepare for the LSAT that’s anywhere near as good as hisSAT course,” it’s worth the money, said one.Another Kaplan enthusiast, a recent lawschool graduate, was confident that Ka¬plan’s course had improved his LSAT scoreand given him study skills he was able to usein law school.The Federal Trade Commission (FTC)has not helped students trying to decide iftest coaching courses are worth the money.Last spring, the Boston regional office of theFTC released a study showing that testcoaching may improve the scores of somestudents, particularly those who score poor¬ly on a test, enroll in a coaching school, andthen take the test again.But the same day the Boston office re¬leased its study, the FTC’s Washington of¬fice issued an unusual press release sharplycritical of the Boston study and claimingthat its results were invalid. Critics of theFTC have speculated that it is attempting todiscredit the Boston study because it wantsto avoid the appearance of endorsing testpreparation programs.For most students, the cost of test-coach¬ing programs is a major investment. Ka¬plan, however, claims that “we’ve neverturned down a student because of inabilityto pay ... We have a very extensive scholar¬ship program.” If the financial aid officer ofa school certifies that a student is disadvan¬taged and if other school officials attest to astudent’s motivation, he may be eligible fora scholarship, Kaplan said. Whether or notKaplun's scholarship program is extensive,it is certainly not well-publicized. Literaturehanded out to prospective students containsno mention of financial aid. nor are studentstold of its availability when they sign up fora course.The Chicago Maroon — Friday, October 26, 1979 — 3Gray conflict ■Letters to the EditorTo the Editor:Last May 22, in a letter to the editor, Icalled attention to the “possible conflict ofinterest” possessed by President Gray in“promoting and standing behind” the selec¬tion of Robert McNamara as the first recipi¬ent of the Albert Pick award.I pointed out that while Mrs. Gray waspresident of the University of Chicago, shewas also a director of the Morgan GuarantyTrust Company of New York and a memberof the Banking Examining Committee ofthat bank. I went on to note that “becauseMorgan is highly active in internationalbanking and also trades extensively in gov¬ernment securities, it is very likely that thecompany owns a substantial number andamount of World Bank bonds.”I said that any financial relations betweenthe Morgan Bank and the World Bank wouldcreate a serious conflict of interest for Pres¬ident Gray insofar as she would then “betied to McNamara as a matter of private in¬terest through the Morgan Bank at the sametime as she (stood) behind his selection ‘im¬partially’ in the name of the university.”Finally, I suggested that the “only honestcourse of action for Mrs. Gray in this cir¬cumstance” would be to make full disclo¬sure of any possible holdings in World Bankbonds by the Morgan Bank.As far as I could discern at the time, therewas no public or private response to this let¬ter on the part of President Gray. No effortor intention to disclose any financial rela¬tions between the Morgan bank and theWorld Bank was manifested by her.Accordingly, former investigative report¬er that I am, I began my own research intothe matter. Two months of inquiries pro¬duced the following results:1. Since 1951, the Morgan GuarantyTrust Company has purchased bonds andnotes from the World Bank in the amount of$75 to $100 Million. Otherwise put, the Mor¬gan bank has loaned thesemillionsof dollarsto the World Bank as one of its many invest¬ments. Presumably, Morgan has marketeda portion of these bonds and notes to the pub¬lic at a profit and also retained a portion inthe portfolio of its trust department.2. By virtue of examining numerousprospectuses issued by the World Bank thatindicated the exact dollar amounts of theMorgan Bank’s bond or note purchases, Ialso came across this startling bit of infor¬mation: one of the three “principal pur¬poses” of th World Bank is “to promote pri¬vate foreign investment by guarantees of orparticipations in loans and other invest¬ments made by private investors.”What this statement indicated to me was that the backing of the World Bank could beof great significance to U.S. commercialbanks that engaged in risky overseas loansor investments. To gauge the extent ofWorld Bank participation in private loans, Irecently discussed this matter with an infor¬mation officer of the World Bank in Wash¬ington who requested anonymity. The of¬ficer told me that what I was referring towas called “parallel financing” or “co-fi¬nancing.”He described a typical co-financed projectthis way:“Sometimes we will extend a loan to acountry for a certain amount and also bringin a certain amount of co-financing. Thismeans if we have a viable project in acountry, for example a heavy industrialproject for $1 billion, we may extend $200million for the project and the local govern¬ment may finance $300 million. The remain¬ing amount will be brought in through co-fi¬nancing by private banks.”“The World Bank may participate insearching for a financing partner or the pri¬vate banks may make their interest knownto the government involved. In either case,we provide the banks with an appraisal re¬port on the project itself and the banks maydecide to come in for the differential amountthat’s lacking,” he said.“As part of the package, we arrange foragreements between the commercial banksand the government. Or we may specify inour own agreement with the governmentthat the remaining portion of the financinghas been arranged with such and suchbanks.”“Normally, huge amounts of money areinvolved in these agreements which gener¬ally deal with mining or heavy industry.There is definitely both formal and informalcoordination between the private banks, theWorld Bank, and the local government.”When asked if Morgan Guaranty TrustCompany had participated in such co-fi¬nancing, the officer replied “they do” andalso noted that the Bank of America hadmost recently joined in some heavy industri¬al projects in Australia.The officer went on to detail why the com¬mercial banks liked to participate in over¬seas development projects of the WorldBank:“The thing is that they consider our inter¬vention in the project as a kind of politicalumbrella. We supply teams of experts thatsupervise how the proceeds of the loan areused and make sure that the project goes asplanned.”“This supervision and our representationprovide commercial banks with securityand an implicit guarantee that the borrowerwill be able to repay the loan.”The officer also said that “cross-default”provisions may be inserted in the loan agreements, to indicate that if the borrowerdefaults on one commercial bank, he alsodefault' on all other private banks that par¬ticipated in the financing and on the WorldBank as well.“That’s the kind of cross-protection theylike to see in the package,” he said.The officer concluded this discussion ofthe relations between private commercialbanks and the World Bank by saying “theprivate banks are satisfied that the pre¬sence of the World Bank gives them the se¬curity blanket they’d like to have. By thepresence of the World Bank and the Bank’spresumed leverage, they believe that theirdebt will be serviced and that they run muchless risk of default than if they did italone.”Believing that the documents in my pos¬session and the information I had obtained,indicated a serious conflict of interest forPresident Gray (from which legal conse¬quences might well follow), I supplied thisinformation to several faculty members atthe University of Chicago. I summarized forthem the nature of President Gray’s conflictof interest with the following diagram:CONFLICT OF INTERESTMorgan GuarantyTrust CompanyMrs.HannaGray&% Robert McNamaraThe World Bank//T4?/G\ /The University ofChicagoI would like to offer my personal opinionof the ethical and legal issues implicated byPresident Gray’s conflict of interest. Whileit is not entirely clear that President Graycan be held liable for her conflict of interest,this is one instance where the legal normand the ethical obligation are identical. Thecommunity of the University of Chicago hasa right to expect that when a decision ofgreat importance is made by its president —4 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, Gctobei 26, 1979 Editor: Andrew PatnerGrey City Journal Editor: David MillerManaging Editor: Jaan EliasFeatures Editor: Mark WallachSports Editor: Andy RothmanPhoto Editor: Tim BakerLiterary Review Editors: Richard Kaye and MollyMcQuadeAssociate Editor: David GlocknerContributing Editor: Nancy ClevelandSenior Editors: Abbe Fletman and Claudia MagatFar Flung Correspondent: Bruce ShapiroBusiness Manager: Joel GreenAd Manager: Steve KaszynskiOffice Manager: Leslie WickGraphics: Chris PersansProduction: Jacob Levine and Scott Rc*ulandStaff: Curtis Black, David Blaszkowsky, Doug Braun,Dan Breslau, Jeff Cane, John Dugan, Mark Erwin, WendyGlabman, Jamie Graff, Chris Isidore, John Kim, CarolKlammer, Greg Mizera, Sherrie Negrea, Danila Oder,Sharon Pollack, Kathleen Restifo, David Rubin, AllenSowizral, Adam Spiegel, Howard Suls, Cplvin Thrilling,Darrel WuDunn, John Wright, Phoebe Zerwick. speaking here of the decision to overridewidespread community dissent and presentthe Pick award to Robert McNamara — thatdecision should be made free of any person¬al financial considerations on the presi¬dent’s part.It is to guard against the possibility thatpersonal financial advantage might influ¬ence a decision that the law of fiduciary obli¬gations (which sets forth the duties of of¬ficers and trustees) disregards thefiduciary’s knowledge of his conflict of in¬terest and even his intention to act in goodfaith (Bogert on Trusts, p.345).The law requires a very high standard ofconduct from fiduciaries simply because “itis a well known quality of human nature thatit is extremely difficult, or perhaps imposs¬ible for an individual to act fairly in the in¬terests of others whom he represents and atthe same time to consider his own financialadvantage. In most cases, consciously orunconsciously, he will tend to make a choicewhich is favorable to himself, regardless ofits effect on those for whom he is supposedto be acting” (Bogert on Trusts, p. 344).I should like to conclude this already toolengthy letter by quoting from a recent deci¬sion of the Illinois Appellate Court (PatientCare Services, S.C. v. Segal) that very wellsums up the ethical and legal issues thatbear on President Gray’s conflict of inter¬est:“The duties that an officer or director oweto his corporation are so well established asto need no citation of authority to supportthem. They include the requirement of un¬divided, unselfish, and unqualified loyalty,of unceasing effort never to profit personal¬ly at corporate expense, of unbending dis¬avowal of any oportunity which would per¬mit the fiduciary’s private interests to clashwith those of his corporation. These dutiesare rooted not only in elementary rules ofequity but also in business morality andpublic policy. It therefore follows that an of¬ficer or director who strays from faithful ad¬herence to these precepts...must answer tothe corporation for the injury sustained.”(emphasis added).If this is the standard of business morali¬ty, then surely we can expect no less froman university officer and trustee.Donald G. GrossJ.D., University of ChicagoEditor’s Note: The writer enclosed withhis letter a World Bank prospectus datedDecember 11,1974 in which he had indicatedthat Morgan Guaranty Trust Company ofNew York had purchased from the WorldBank $4,500,000 in Five Year Notes and$3,000,000 in Ten Year Notes. In another pro¬spectus enclosed, dated July 9, 1975 heshowed that Morgan Guaranty Trust hadpurchased $4,275,000 in Five Year Notes and$2,900,000 in Ten Year Notes from the WorldBank.Porn’s neatTo the editor :Dear Mr. Wissoker: I like porno. I thinkit’s neat.Mark Bjerknewstudent in the college... has effectsTo the Editor:Mr. Wissoker,Following your opinion piece on Por¬nography in last Friday’s Maroon, I havedetermined these facts about ChamberlinHouse residents:1. 3 convictions for forceabie rape, 11 ar¬rests for statutorv rane2. Over l/s of the dorm expressed desire tocommit rape in the next 4 years3. Not less than Vz were self-avowed Anti-Semites4. 6 residents said they had participatedin lynchings5. 9 are officials of the KKK6. At least 20 sleep with loaded sawed-offshotguns under their beds7. House money is sent to The Movementto Sink the Boatpeople7%K r VNational service or servitude?8. Along with pornographic films,Chamberlin House often shows Nazi pro¬paganda films.9. All residents agreed that all womenshould be home barefoot and pregnantI hope these figures will prove useful foryour next editorial.Alexander JohnsStudent in the collegePicking giftsTo the Editor:I have just written to the Alumni Office asfollows: and 1 urge all alumni to do likewise.Dear Sirs: I have just mailed a $50.00check to Reed College, my undergraduateschool, as an annual contribution. A similaramount is not forthcoming to the U of C dueto the Albert Pick Award to RobertMcNamara. The secretive procedure forchoosing the recipient and the callous andcavalier attitude of the administrationtowards the feelings of the student body andfaculty preclude making any contributions— ever.Anthony D. ElmendorfPhD 1979 By GregKeranenAfter attending the Forum on Alterna¬tives to the Draft last Friday night, I wasleft with a mixture of astonishment and out¬rage, and a feeling of having been tricked.While I had expected the forum to addressthe ethical problems of military conscrip¬tion within a supposedly “free” society, as itturned out, these kinds of questions werescarcely recognized as being germane to thesubject... and it seemed like the event hadbeen staged instead to convince the audi¬ence of the legitimacy (though not perhapsthe necessity) of a possible return to con¬scription.Although the speakers, Professor CharlesMoskos and Congressman Paul McCloskey,disagreed on whether or not a return tosome form of conscription would be expedi¬ent. they did not appear to differ at all onprinciple. Each of the arguments, for andagainst McCloskey’s “national service”plan, was founded upon the underlying as¬sumption that, given we are told (bywhom?) the magnitude of military forcesnecessary to protect “American interests”,the state has the unquestioned authority toraise such a force by whatever means itdeems appropriate. As McCloskey ex¬plained to one incredulous questioner, indi-Blank checkTo the Editor:It was an ironic coincidence to receive afundraising letter from the University soonafter reading The Maroon’s article on theUniversity’s treatment of Aaron Filler.One of the high points of my College ex¬perience was reading and discussing thetimeless ethicists such as Hume, Kant, andHobbes. I am saddened to see the Universityslip from its commitment to objectivity andjustice through its inappropriate treatmentof Mr. Filler.As an alumna concerned about the exam¬ple set by the University in a world whereprinciples often take a back seat to self-interest, I do not feel able to contribute tothis fund-raising campaign.Reva FreedmanU.C. alumnaChile defenseTo the Editor:Governments, whatever their tendency,come and go like the wind, but what reallyperdure over time are the social progressand living conditions of the people and weshould not be biased when we analyse theseconditions, in order to really improve themand not fool ourselves (and also other peo¬ple).Last week The Maroon reported an ac¬count given by Maryann Mahaffey about thesocial services in Chile. What appeared inThe Maroon was so far away from the realpicture of what is going on with the socialservices in that country, that I am obliged tomake some comments on it.1) Mrs. Mahaffey cited “the near-totalabolition of public social services by the mil¬itary regime”.Let’s see some datas to weight the veraci¬ty of Mahaffey’s statement: the governmentexpenditure in social services as a fractionof total government expenditures has in¬creased from 27.9% in 1973 to 53.8% in 1979;so it almost doubled in real terms in the lastsix years. Does this show a near-total aboli¬tion of public'social services in Chile duringthe military regime?2) She said “Chile has no national healthplan” and afterwards “infant mortality hasrisen to 58% (I hope it is a typing error) and malnutrition was becoming widespreadamong the lower and lower middleclasses”.In Chile special programs of health con¬trol, nutrition, and education of the motherand the child have been drawn. These pro¬grams give special emphasis to the poorchildren under 6 years old, giving milk en¬tirely free to almost 100% of these childrenunder 2 years old; food rich in proteins tothe 85% of the children between 2 and 6years old; and milk for the pregnant andnurses.These policies are giving excellent re¬sults, as suggested in the following table.Mrs. Mahaffey seems unaware of thesefacts.1973 1978General Mortality Rate 8.4% 6.8%Infant Mortality Rate 6.5% 3.9%Milk freely distributed(thousand of Kilos) 20.291 27.1803 About education she said “Chilean edu¬cation, now entirely private, . . . has pre¬vented many children from attending schooly yI don’t see what would be wrong with suchliberal policy. Anyway again the picture isjust the opposite of the one depicted by Mrs.Mahaffey.No elementary school, no high school andno university has been trespassed to the pri¬vate sector. Moreover, in 1975 the ChileanGovernment started giving pre-primary ed¬ucation to 100% of the children through thekindergarten system and the elementaryschools. A free school system for the low andmiddle low incorpe families, having a highpriority among the instruments of social de¬velopment.For the rest of the educational levels < highschool, technical-professional and universi¬ty intruction), the students contribute fi¬nancing part of the expenses of teaching de¬pending on the income of the family group.For the low income families these servicesare also free.This program is reverting a situation inwhich in 1973 52% of the fiscal contributionto the educational system benefited 144,000people (of rather high incomes) while2,004,000 students (of low incomes) receivedonly 33% of the subsidy. The effects of sucha redistributive policy are clear.It has not been my intention to evaluatethe many complexities of the social policy ofthis South American country, nor have I in¬tended to survey the several other inaccura¬cies of Mrs. Mahaffey’s account. These lineshave no other purposes than helping the Uni¬versity of Chicago community for a betterunderstanding of the real situation inChile.Jorge Selumegraduate studentin economics vidual freedom must always bow beforeconsiderations of “national interest.”As a libertarian, I do not accept the viewthat individuals are state property, to beused simply as a means to the accomplish¬ment of some greater “social good.” Everyindividual is an end in and of himself and is,therefore, deserving of the highest respect.Rather than challenge McCloskey’s posi¬tion, however, his “opponent” praised himfor his great insights and instead chose toquibble over minor issues of funding.While McCloskey’ case for national servi¬tude was based primarily on the convictionthat it would be expedient, this aid not stophim from maintaining that it is also thefairest of possible alternatives to the draft.Obviously, if McGoskey were really con¬cerned with being fair he wouldnt be infavor of national servitude and he certainlywouldn’t propose that a minority of the pop¬ulation — young people — shoulder a dispro¬portionate share of the costs of military ser¬vice — namely, their own uncompensatedlabor. But I suppose it wouldn’t be political¬ly expedient to advocate raising taxes toshare costs more equitably.McCloskey was certainly right about onething — you shouldn’t expect politicians tobe honest.Another point upon which Moskos andMcCloskey both agreed was that the freemarket has “failed”, in the case of the vol¬unteer army, to supply the desired levels ofmanpower. (They attempted to “demon¬strate” this contention by an absurd exer¬cise in which people were asked to raisetheir hand if they would be willing to volun¬teer for military service at a given price. Iwonder how many, like myself, did not re¬spond because the conditions of servicewere not specified, or because they simplychose not to vote.) This is equivalent to myclaiming that the free market has “failed”to supply me with all of the records I desire.In fact, the market has not failed in eithercase. If the government wants more man¬power it should be prepared to pay the mar¬ket price for labor like anyone else. NStill another point that both speakers usedto criticize the volunteer system was that itis not “representative” of the racial compo¬sition of the U.S. population as a whole. Un¬less this “unrepresentative” composition is the result of discriminatory hiring practicesit is unclear to me in what way this consti¬tutes a criticism of the voluntary armedforces.McCloskey appeared to use this observa¬tion in two ways: 1) He offered it as evi¬dence to support the claim that the existingquality of personnel in the armed forces issubstandard. Supposedly we are expected tobelieve that minorities — in particular,blacks — are of below-average intelligenceand make poor soldiers. 2) He implied thatit would somehow be more just to have aconscripted force that is “representative”than to permit the racial imbalance in themilitary that results when individuals arefree to direct their own lives. McCloskeyseems to take the view that the poor andminorities are, in some sense, “forced” intomilitary service by “economic conditions”and are therefore not truly volunteers.It is not clear whether McCloskey favorsnational service because he thinks thiswould benefit the poor and illiterate, or sim¬ply because he thinks it would be more“fair” if eveyone shared in their misfor¬tune. While it is possible, as Moskos con¬tends, that a change in the racial balancecould improve morale in the military, it ishighly doubtful that a broader national ser¬vice program would benefit the poor and un¬derskilled.Under national service, those currentlyemployed in low-paying, relatively uns¬killed jobs would have to compete with sub¬sidized or “free” national-service labor andtheir wages would consequently fall. More¬over, the unskilled workers displaced bymore highly-skilled conscripts would nothave the qualifications to fill the jobs vacat¬ed by these conscripts and would often findthemselves out of work entirely, or with farfewer options than they had originally.Congressman McCloskey did not chooseto discuss problems such as these, however,Evidently it is more important to him toensure that, in the event of war, battle fieldswill be covered with a not “unrepresenta¬tive” sample of black, white, yellow, andbrown — not to mention, red — bodies.Greg Keranen is student in the College and amember of the Students for a LibertarianSociety.Radioactive, but proud?By Fred Due a fects could take decades to su:storage of radioactive wastes,half lives ofwhen youtury, nuclear,town.” Iyou geIt sealmisled you1educated andI give Dave Rubin credit for advocatingnuclear fission in his Oct. 19th Maroon opi¬nion piece entitled “Why fission?” It cer¬tainly is not fashionable these days —especially in a college paper. However, Isincerely wish he would have researched theissue before pedagogically espousing hisopinion.To begin by giving a vague and over¬simplified account of the West’s (as he calls .it, I take him to mean the U.S.’s) socio-Jjfo? nuclear fieconomic development, in an attempt tp^ get direct^evoke nationalistic feelings is foolhardy, 1% frlients o 200,000 yet “For theis the 0!helpation^that t]convihe really egocentric and deluded enbelieve that someday these years wiregarded as “history-as-usual” annow enjoy a period relatively frstrife and national hatreds?isue of The Maroon, Vernonident of the National Ur]quoted, describing theblacks as having steadiW wopast 25 years. And thethat tne fate of our preseri^’heightcondition is depenpiic1»iiraBetearis absolutely ludUSome states gpiently rely on nuclsion reactors aft as much as one third^ andwithave,f cen-ame ining whered maybe?could haveWe being theho smajj.alwaj|Jhfis-total ener*more realtion; yetject nisource:seems lilclEven if utilif budget and there af£ miPrese*fe un<ler constI\e Rubin W5rs that we Willfission as a viable jeneiir economic state i^ haiilthough, maybe w* shjpd.'leaned act .a#avesuggests “finin]however, consideare often federallyhardly seem to be an e1there still remains the probpants off” nities;plantss wouldncentive)of low levelradiation (radiation being one of the mostpotent known carcinogens and one whose ef- ong our fellowtides and opinionsand corporationsis the profitabilityof all the people whoted to the radioactive ef-r reactors? I’m talking ofrs. These reactors aren’tin remote areas. Surely theynd of the deal.tter start getting used to the ideatfeUt df'the moment and in the foreseeabletu*§ our energy sources are limited.r than wasting energy through ineffi-nt transportation and poor insulation,ile simultaneously relying on energy pro-tion methods of questionable safety,maybe we ought to concentrate on conserva-tional measures. Technology is not an in¬vincible god, it is foolish to rely on it for amiraculous resolution.Energy shortages have been a problemfor some time now and will continue toague us into the next century. So, ratherhan plodding blindly onward, maybe weought to stop and plan for the future. Solarcollectors may be a more viable alternativethan you profess Dave. Combined withpassive building design it could go far tohelp us achieve energy self sufficiency inthe future. For now. we must all tighten ourbelts (the moral equivalent of war and allthat stuff), trying to conserve as much as wepossibly can, while thoroughly exploringand researching all possible alternativeenergy sources, not just nuclear fission.The Chicago Maroon — Friday, October 26, 1979 — 5FBIContinued from Page 1“2E” is the code name for an informantwhose real name has been blacked out in thememo.The FBI memo quotes “2E” as statingthat “the identities of these students havenot been made public,” and that “due to achange in University policy last year, the in¬stitution does not notify the Selective Ser¬vice System regarding changes in the stu¬dents’ (draft) status.”Following a two week sit-in in the admin¬istration building in February, 1969, 42 stu¬dents were expelled and 120 suspended.Upon expulsion or suspension some malestudents became eligible for the draft.Rather than directly informing the govern¬ment of this eligibility, the memo said theUniversity “provides the student with a let¬ter addressed “To Whom It May Concern”and the student is then morally bound to fur¬nish this letter to his draft board.”The informant was unable to provide thenames of specific students who were now el¬igible for the draft, and therefore in viola¬tion of the Selective Service Act.“2E advised that inasmuch as the Univer¬sity has not identified the suspended stu¬dents, it may be necessary to obtain theiridentities through the issuance of a subpoe¬na directed to the University.”The memo is signed “Very truly yours.M.W. Johnson, Special Agent in Charge.” SEASON FIREWOODv ‘!'' ' '. ■ \ i V' J.-M-*:. - v, f |-■ /■—-+A- *'r '■ - If:WE DELIVER CALL 221-0918Beholdthe grandeur of the Great Hall,Pursuethe Ores with the Riders of Rohan,Bid farewellto Sam and Frodo... KIMBARK HALLCondominiums$2000 DISCOUNT UNTIL JAN. 1980 - 80%MORTGAGE LOANS AT APPROX. 11%AVAILABLEThe developers are offering model units forinspection every Sat. and Sun. between 1and 5 p.m.36 opts:24- 1 bedroom, 1 bath from 30,350-37,0006 - 2 bedrooms, 1 bath from 37,000-38,8506 - 2 bedrooms, 2 bath from 46,000-46,900All apartments include new kitchens and appliances,new bathrooms, carpeting and decorating (colors ofyour choice), triple-track storm windows and kitchenstorm doors, modern laundry facilities and individuallocker space.Your inspection is invited,51 26 S. Kimbark Ave. - Phone 643-4489Harry A. Zisook & Sons, Agts.786-9200All the romance, all theinspiration, all the unforget¬table atmosphere of thegreat trilogy Lord of theRings comes alive through,the vision of artist JoanWyatt. And with an intro¬duction and commentarieson the art by Jessica Yates,Secretary to the TolkienSociety of Great Britain.Thirty original paintings,all in breathtaking full color,await to delight and inviteyou to Middle Earth.A MIDDLE EARTHALBUMPaintings by Joan WyattInspired by Tplkien’sLord of the Rings$7.95 paper; $14.95 clothSimon and Schuster XEROXhas amaster planforMBA’sIt’s really very simple, Xerox provides theopportunity. You provide the talent. We’re anindustry leader and the MBA’s who join us will help.^jsjretain that position. You can expect to developand progress with us as we move into the 80’s.We have opportunities for MBA’s in variousareas of the company.Check with your college placement officefor campus interview dates and schedules.Then talk to our campus representatives.XEROXXerox is jn affirmative action employer (male/female) GOLD CITY INNgiven * * * *by the MAROONOpen DallyFrom 11:30 a.m.to 9t00 p.m.5228 Harper 493-2559(M«r Hmrpmr Court}Eat more for less.(Try our convenient take-out orders.)"A Gold Mine Ov Good Food"Student Discount:10% for table service5% for take homeHyde Park's Best Cantonese FoodROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPEL5850 South Woodlawn AvenueSunday, October 28A.M. Ecumenical Service of Holy CommunionThe Rev. Charles H.D. Brown, EpiscopalChaplain, Celebrant and Preacher10 A.M. Discussion Class, Philip Blackwell,United Methodist Chaplain, leader'America as the New Israel"11 A.M^University Religious ServiceDANIEL JENKINSMinister, Regents Square UnitedReformed Church, London, EnglandREPAIRSPECIALISTSon IBM, SCM.Olympia, etc.FREE repairestimates; repairsby factory-trainedtechnician.RENTALSavailable withU. of C. I D New andRebuiltTypewriters,Calculators,Dictators,AddersU of ChicagoBookstore5750 S. Ellis Ave753-3303DUP Mastercharge and V.sa AcceptedS.G. Office Ida Noyes 306 Call for Info Phone 753-3273Academic AffairsStudent ServicesActivities University ServicesCommunity RelationsStudent Center Graduate AdvisoryGripe Line .Canteen Election & RulesPolitical Affairs BoardMinority AffairsSTUDENT GOVERNMENTCOMMITTEE REGISTRATION THROUGH OCTOBER6 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, October 26, 1979_MargoSlauson the grey city jourJackson came out alone and piayeu a su,prising "Life is Just a Bowl of Cherries,"with only his honky-tonk piano as accompa¬niment.For those who missed this dynamite con¬cert it will be broadcast as a Sunday eveningUnconcert (8 pm.) on WXRT (93 FM) in amonth or so. Watch the grey city calendarfor details, and be sure to tune in. Elvis Cos¬tello may still be king, but Joe Jackson is in¬deed the man.Joe Jacksonradio."Jackson dedicated the first song of thefirst encore to "one of our favorite bands"the Ramones, saying "they have a leadsinger who's actually taller and skinnierthan I am!" This was followed by a versionof Fats Domino's "Ain't That a Shame,"with a wonderful piano solo by Jackson, thatmade Cheap Trick's recent cover of the songseem lackluster. For the second encore,Joe Jackson looks sharpby Melanie DealOkay, it's true that he's not Elvis Costello.But for those who thought Joe Jackson wasa pallid Costello clone, a mere musicallightweight, his show at Park West last Sat¬urday evening proved decidedly otherwise.Though Jackson is from the same AngryYoung Nerd mold as Costello, he has devel¬oped a musical style and personality all hisown. Clever Cynicism is the forte of both,but Jackson's is tempered with more com-pasion and a lighter, less biting, humor.After an opening set by the Reds, a youngand competent but rather unenthusiasticgroup from Philadelphia, Jackson and hisband hit the stage with "Look Sharp!" Talland spindly, in black suit and black andwhite polka-dotted tie, Jackson seemedcharged with a manic energy that producedforceful, dynamic vocals, far out strippingthe bouncy album versions of the song. Withhis gawky body, mile-high forehead, bulgingeyes and disappearing chin, Jackson is noglamorous star with fancy stage moves; in¬stead he must trade on his scrappiness andwit to charm. The audience loved him.Jackson's band is Graham Maby on bass (introduced by Jackson as "a real muscian"), Gary Sanford on guitar and DavHoughton on drums. Jackson plays piancharmonica and melodica. Balancing songfrom his new album, I'm the A/Ian, and hifirst effort, Look Sharp!, Jackson gavehigh-voltage, heavy-pespiration perfoimance that proved he is much more thaiust this year's model.Jackson's new material shows a maturitof viewpoint over that of his first album. Thsinger who envied the "Happy Loving Coufles" and "Fools in Love" now sees behintheir cheerful facade on "Geraldine anJohn," and the poor nerd who wondered "IShe Really Going Out With Him?" can nownot only get a date ("Kinda Kute"), but canwoo another man's date away ("Get ThatGirl"). "It's Different for Girls" seems tobe a reversal of the old axiom that men areonly interested in sex, women in love: thewoman in the song says "Give me all you'vegot but not love." "On Your Radio" is ascathing reply to "ex-friends, ex-lovers andenemies" who used to push the singeraround: "Don't you know you can't get nearme/You can only hope to hear me/On yourWho—or what—is Tom Waits?by Bob LewisTom Waits is one of those mysterioustypes you associate with smoke-filled, some-where-on-the-seamy-side-of- respectabilitybars; you know his name, but you're neverquite sure what he does — somebody toldyou he is a folkie, but he plays blues piano,not guitar, and he does have a band that isrumored to have a distinctly jazzy feel. Youthink you may have heard him on the radioonce or twice, late at night, but you can't re¬call a song. Anyway, you're somehow surethat if skid row had a national anthem, TomWaits would sing it.So you wander into Mandel Hall — whichhas more in common with Carnegie Hallthan it does with a steamy Rush Street bar— sit back and wait. The lights go down, cur¬tain up; a raunchy, mean funky beat, darkstage, and Tom Waits, strutting like MickJagger, lighting a 'stog' and growling out ablues. He comes on hard and mean in a sec¬ond-hand suit and two day old beard, wrig¬gling and contorting, sweating and spitting,looking like he couldn't give a damn. After acouple of complaining, preaching, JuniorWells-style blues about strip-joints andsleazy bars filled with sleazier women, theiights go down, low and mellowed. Waitsstrikes a few melancholy notes on the piano,sings sad and low and suddenly you're sit¬ Tom Waitsting at a bar, your head swaying over abeer, blurry-eyed, and not quite remember¬ing why you're crying inside. The bandcomes in soft and low and jazzy; a songabout making love to a woman you know youwon't see again; then slides into a sentimen¬tal ballad about back-alleys, street-people,small-town boredom, truckers, late-nightwaitresses, and one night stands; burstsinto "When the Saints Go Marching In" andthen back to a ballad that reminds you ofSpringsteen, but is more convincing — a lit¬ tle bit tougher and a whole lot cockier.The show goes on and Waits' songs be¬come more like stories and his motionsmore dramatic. His humor fluctuatessmoothly from rough to grim to tragic. NowWaits is as much an actor and story-teller ashe is a musician — a poet lamenting a lostand lonely people left with nothing to cling tobut dreams that break and crumble beforethey're ever grasped; a people whose livesaren't more than a blur of back-seats, bars,and barren street corners; a people longingto rise up from the garbage heaps of society, put on bright red, rhinestones, glitter andwander out on that tight rope called successbefore fading away back to the streets, thealleys and the switch blades.So the curtain closes, the lights go on, thepeople filter out, and you sit back and askyourself, 'What is Tom Waits?' Well, he'sseveral things. One, he's bluesy, his rhythmsection of guitar, bass and drums plays ajazzy sort of blues that creates a very effec¬tive background for Waits' rough voice andthe smooth runs of his saxophonist. In mel¬lower moods, he can sing in a deep gutturalvoice, reminiscent of older black jazz vocalists (probably his best style) in a grittySpringsteenish voice (also quite good), or ina sad, distinctive, jazz-ballad style used toaccompany 'Humphrey Bogartish' stories.If there was anything I didn't like aboutWaits at Mandel Hall, it was the tendency ofsome of his ballads, especially those inwhich he acted out a story, to become exces¬sively sentimental to the point of being te¬dious and even sappy. Nevertheless, a goodlead by the horn player (on sax and trum¬pet) usually salvaged what otherwise wouldhave been a weak number. All things considered, there were very few faults withWaits' show, and those that were presentwere more than compensated for by the su¬periority of everything else.Vincent Dowling A Wilde Night with Vincent Dowlingby Lisa von Drehle"I have nothing to declare except my genius," Oscar Wilde said on arrivingat the New York Customs House. It was this combination of conceit and con¬stant self advertisement which Vincent Dowling, artistic director of the GreatLakes Shakespeare Festival, tried to convey in his A Wilde Night at the CourtTheatre last Sunday. In a production partially funded by the Chicago CelticCultural Council, the former Abbey actor strung together extracts fromWilde's writing with a biography of his life. Wilde emerged as a brilliant,bitchy and, ultimately, sympathetic character.Dowling's set was simple and his costume was non descript: the spotlightwas on the personality of Wilde. He opened by reading the final passage fromA Picture of Dorian Gray. He was seated at a plain desk, with only a smalllight on his face and shoulders. In a deep and expressive voice he reenactedthe gruesome demise of Dorian Gray, the character who coined the phrase,"The only way to get rid of a temptation is to yield to it."From Dorian Gray Dowling moved to poetry, reciting extracts from TheHarlot's House. This was followed by a combination narration and reenactment of Wilde's childhood and university years. The performance excelled in thissection as Dowling gave meaning to Wilde's statement, "I put all my geniusinto my life, I only put my talent into my works." Dowling, the writer, producer and sole actor of this piece, interwove Wilde's genius and talent to present afull picture of the poet, playwright and bon vivant extraordinaire.A short sketch from An Ideal Husband preceded one from the popular TheImportance of Being Earnest. Dowling acted out the scene where Lady Bracknell interviews Jack Worthing to determine whether he is suitable marriagematerial for her daughter, Gwendoline.The interview is hilarious,dominatedby Lady B's aristocratic ignorance. Jack states that he has lost both parents.Lady B retorts, "To lose one parent, Mr. Worthing, may be regarded as amisfortune: to lose both looks like carelessness."The main weakness in the performance came in Dowling's portrayal ofLady B. Although she is an intrinsically funny character, Dowling did not extract full comic measure from her. His voice was too manly, lacking thehaughtiness with which she is imbued. A similar slight woodenness occasion¬ ally marred other sketches. Other than this, however, there were few lapses inthis excellent show.After the intermission the tone became less buoyant as Dowling read frompoetry and prose.Wilde wrote while in prison.His trial, conviction for sodomy,and two years in prison were explored, Dowling illuminating areas of Wilde'slife which have been largely ignored. His recitation of the poem "ReadingGaol" was particularly moving, bringing a compassion to the witty exterior ofWilde already presented.Dowling ended the evening by reading one of Wilde's fairy tales, "The Self¬ish Giant" from his book The Happy Prince and Other Stories. The story tellsof a giant who prohibited children from playing in his garden. As a result hewas condemned to eternal winter, his garden covered in snow. One day herealizes and repents for his mistake, spring comes, and the giant and the chil¬dren play happily. One of the children is a Christ figure, and a religious note isadded as this child redeems the giant when he dies.This tale hints at Wilde's later conversion to Catholicism. Despite hisamoral stance in life, he gave in to his religious sympathies as he approacheddeath. Dowling related Wilde's conversion, adding a final element of empathyto his character.In conversation after the performance Dowling said, " I like the character ofWilde because he was someone who suffered tremendously and yet retained asense of humor. He did everything in life, tried it all, and learned that some ofhis values would not hold." Wilde died a poor man several years after leavingprison. As a result of his court case he was ostracized by some friends, andlegally prohibited from seeing his children. Yet, he retained his adventurousspirit, a spirit which Dowling, his fellow Irishman, managed to capture andconvey in this excellent performance.After the show there was a further spread of this Irish spirit as Guiness,Harp and Jameson's flowed freely at a reception sponsored by the ChicagoCeltic Cultural Council. A trio played traditional Irish music and Dowlingcame down to mingle, drink and talk with the audience. As the libations andblarney flowed, I imagined that Wilde would have been pleased by such asuitable end to A Wilde Night.pjoog sei^iAiov Jojoi/y9$ V S$ SJ0H*0? £$ sjeAod 9d| avwasi^O x°9 eH* *D ^|ds uo S*3>|DJ1Z JequiaAON Aopjruos llDH |apu©w4SUD4gno >11oj BuipuoiSino\soj uijf ttpjjoM oijojneuo 1441M Buijoepsj&4DOJOLg3 Ao/d a/y\„pUDJ|9 H*ia*uo|/\(Djsny\| AOJdtU|25% OFF SALEGET ACQUAINTED SALE FOR U of CSTUDENTS AND FACULTYBrand name clothing such as H. FREE¬MAN, CHAPS, DONALD BROOKS, MAL¬COLM KENNETH, AQUASCUTUM, LON¬DON FOG, SERO and others at 25% off ofour very low listed prices.This is a special offer for U of C studentsand faculty only. This sale applies Mon -Fri from 3 PM - 6 PM and SAT from 10AM to 4 PM.Your U of C ID card is necessary for ad¬mission to this sale.Slight charge for other than basic alter¬ations.WILLIAM’S TRADITIONALCLOTHING19-S. LaSalle St. - 782-9885(Entrance on Arcade Place) The Folklore SocietypresentsTheRed Clay RamblersTONIGHT AT 8:00At The Cloister Club inIda Noyes HallTickets available at the door$4 or $3 for students, senior citizensand children.O'Vm Uwt&UHto in fkc £eep•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 Nurse-mates/Daylites17 ft. State -Steuew'd BMg.- !!& Ihm2 — the grey city journal, Friday, October 26, 1979MoviesLimelight: Charles Chaplin(1952). This last of Chaplin'sChaplin films is the most reflec¬tive and personal of them all.Here he plays an old music hallcomedian whose career on theboards gives way to the bottle;but Claire Bloom is there to helphim. The most magical momenthowever, is one in which Charliereturns to the stage along withBuster Keaton. Doc Films,tonight at 7 and 9:45 pm.Norma Rae: Martin Ritt (1979).This union tale with toughSouthern textile-worker SallyFields moving with surety bet¬ween family, work, and JewishNorthern union organizer (RonLeibman), starts out promising¬ly. But before long the dramaticholes are plugged with cheap sen¬timent and Beau Bridges. Still,Fields' performance is welldeserving of her ''Best Actress”Award at Cannes — in spite of thefact that director Ritt can't seemto get any shot properly framedor in focus and the dulling effectof John Alonzo's alternatelyyellowy-green or totally bluephotography. Doc Films, Satur¬day at 7:15 and 9:30 pm.The Grateful Dead Movie: JerryGarcia and Leon Gast (1977). Docfilled Mandel with this one lastweekend, so it would seem to bepretty good. But despite itsbrilliant cartoon opening, DeadMovie is neither sustained enter¬tainment (even for Deadheads, Isuspect) nor insightful documen¬tation of this band. The musicmay be great, but the filming istoo conventional for the subject,and the thing gets tiresome abouthalfway through. Still, just show¬ing the thing — especially at mid¬night — is nice on Doc's part, andmaybe it we all show up againDoc'll get the idea we like rockmovies. I'm thinking of going forjust this reason. Saturday at mid¬night. - D.M.An Afternoon With Bugs Bunny:Tex Avery, Chuck Jones, et al.(1940-58). These shorts, the folksat Law School Films assure us,are among the best of the crop —and what a crop it is. The classicWarner Brothers cartoons areamong the least pretentious andmost visually exciting thingsaround; and even at their worst,they're not a total loss. LawSchool Films, Sunday at 2 pm.The Ceremony: Nagisa Oshima(1977). Coldly and brutally for¬malized, Oshima's approach isperfectly adapted to this ritualiz¬ed and ideological family andcultural history of post-warJapan. The images are brilliantand intense, the set ups direct,and the Brechtian dramatics arefor once something Brecht mightbe proud of. Doc Films, Sundayat 7:15 and 9:30 pm.The Lion Has Seven Heads: Glauber Rocha (1970). AnotherBizarre allegory of exploitationand revolution brings Braziliandirector Rocha to the Congo. In¬transigent visually as well aspolitically, Rocha has madeseveral of his earlier efforts,especially Antonio das Mortesstrikingly stylized andfascinatingly individual; but thisone I haven't seen. Doc Films,Monday at 8 pm.All Doc Films are shown inCobb Hall's Q u a n t.r e 11Auditorium. Admission there is$1.50 on Friday, Saturday, andSunday; $1.25 on Monday. AllLaw School Films are shown inthe Law School Auditorium andcost $1.50. —Rory McGahanHalloween. A truly scary movie.It should be seen at least threetimes: the first time, to be totallyfrightened; the second, to find outhow director John Carpentertreats and tricks; and the third,to decide whether it's a classic.Chances are it is. This film is notas disturbing as Psycho, but thenCarpenter's moral vision has yetto achieve the assurance of Hitch¬cocks. Nevertheless, it's hearten¬ing to see the young Carpenterhitching his star to the old Mas¬ter's wagon. The story takesplace in a sleepy Midwesterntown on Halloween day. Here,amidst jack-o-lanterns and fallenleaves, a psychopath (superna¬tional being?) disguised as bogie-man stalks three teenage baby¬sitters — the excessively virtuousJamie Lee Curtis, the flirtatiousNancy Loomis and the energeticP. J. Soles. The suspense is en¬tirely unbearable. To check outyoursplf, check into the neighbor¬hood theaters which will bescreening this re-release startingOct. 26. -T.S.Rock & Roll Film Festival:Facets is presenting a mixed bagof rock and rock-related moviesOct. 27 through Nov. 18. Thisweekend: Ladies & Gentlemen,the Rolling Stones, at 9 on Fri., 6and 10 on Sat., 6 on Sun.; The BigTNT Show, 9 on Fri., 6 and 10 onSat.; Don't Knock the Rock, 7 onFri., 4 and 10 on Sat.; and Grou¬pies, at 7 on Fri., 4 on Sat. andSun. Other selections for the fes¬tival include A Hard Day's Night,Rock Around the Clock, I WannaHold Your Hand and many more.All shows are at Facets Multime¬dia, 1517 W. Fullerton. Call281-4114 for more details and/orpick up a flier at Sounds Good.-M.D.Olivier Times Two. Lord Oliviernever did master the art of film-making, but in some of his films,he did have the help of a greatscript writer. Henry V in one ofthem. In it, Olivier delivers one ofthe definitive Shakespearean per¬formances. Before he became theActor, Olivier endured a brieftenure as a Hollywood matineeidol. As Heathcliff, Olivier wasthe archetypical Gothic romancehero — dark, handsome andsmoldering. The chemistry between him and the exotic MerleOberon makes WutheringHeights a great hokum master¬piece. Both films at the Davis,4614 N. Lincoln, starting Oct. 26.784-0894. —T.S.MusicRed Clay Ramblers: TheRamblers presented a varied andat times hilarious set during the '77 Folk Festival. Combiningbluegrass and country influences(they employ banjos and a violinbesides acoustic guitar and stringbass), the Ramblers not onlyplayed well together, but werealso interesting individually; inparticular, the piano player'sposings (or were they for real?)infatuated me. Get a first rowseat. Tonight in Ida Noyes Hall at8 pm. Tickets are $3 and $4 at thedoor. —D.M.Juilliard String Quartet. If theywere around then, Cole Portercertainly would have added themto the roll call of "You're theTop.” The Ritz of chamber musicgroups comes to campus in thefirst of their only two Chicago ap¬pearances this season. The pro¬gram is a well-balanced one: Mo¬zart's Quartet in A. K.464; Berg'sLyric Suite; and Brahms' Quar¬tet in a, op 51 no. 2. Be sure toshow up and enjoy an evening ofsublime music-making. Satur¬day, October 27 at 8:30 in Mandel.753-2612. Admission is $7; UC stu¬dents $3.50. -T.S.The Billy Band: The Billy Bandplays an exciting sort of jazz thatcombines awareness of the pastwith the eclecticism of the pres¬ent. Tonight, tne Jazz Galleryand Student Activities bring themto Mandel Hall from 8 to 11 pm.Free!Lunchtime Concerts: Why battlethe clatter of the noisy cafeterias,when you can dine to the strainsof vocal duets by Brahms andSchumann? Jennifer Willard andDeborah Malamud perform themThurs., Nov. 1, in Reynolds NorthLounge at 12:15 pm.Meg Christian: Her music is apositive answer to questions sheasks in song: "Can we be likedrops of water falling on thestone? . . . weaker than the stoneby far, but be aware that as timegoes by, the rock will wear away.And the water comes again.”Meg's given much strength andenergy to women's music, and nowomen should miss her. She'llgive two women-only concertsSat., Oct. 27 at Mountain MovingCoffeehouse, 1655 W. School St.$3. —R.C.Joe Heany, perhaps the finest liv¬ing Irish Balladeer, will performat The Old Town School of FolkMusic on Sat., Oct. 27. TheSchool's at 909 W. Armitage, setsat 8 and 10 pm, tickets $3.50.281-4234. —R.S.Corky Siegel, Harry Waller:Corky makes the harmonica andthe piano sing, laugh and cry. Hemanages to play funny blues.Harry speaks to all Hyde Parkerswith his song, "Cockroaches onParade.” Well worth the trip tohear them both, this Fri., Sat. orSun. at The Old Town School ofFolk Music in Evanston, 927Noyes. Show times are 8 and 10pm Fri. and Sat., 8:30 only onSun. 525-7793. $4. (The School is just off the Noyes El stop.)Ellen Mcllwaine: I’ve heard herlive and I own one of her albums,yet I can't classify Ellen's music.Maybe that's why it's so good; amixture of blues, folk, rock andjazz, colored with various ethnicsounds and great lyrics. Sat., Oct.27, she'll be at Gaspar's, 3159 N.Southport. 871 6680. —R.L.Bob Marley and the Wailers:Natty dread hits the Uptown!Reggae is much more popular inEngland than here, and has beena continuing inspiration, bothmusically and politically, to thepunk music movement. Specialguest Betty Wright. Nov. 13, 8pm, Uptown Theatre, 4816 N.Broadway, 561-4410, $9.50 and$10.50, reserved seats. —M.D.TheaterThe Amorous Adventures of DonJuan: Written, produced anddirected by Chicago RadioTheatre's resident artist/radiotheatre genius Yuri Rasovsky,this play leads off the CRT's fifthWFMT season with a bang. It isloosely based on the "Don Juan”of Moliere, and will be airedMon., Oct. 29 at 8 pm. WFMT is at98.7 FM.The Fantasticks: The Court Stu¬dio production of the off Broad-way musical hit opens tonight atthe Reynolds Club Theatre at8:30pm. It runs through Nov. 11, Fri.and Sat. at 8:30, Sun. at 7:30.753-3581. $2.50 for students, $3.50general.Family Holemek: A sitcom witha twist; it is performed silently,and all the actors wear masks. Itplays Fri., Sat. and Sun. throughNov. 18 at Jane Addams HullHouse Theatre, 3212 N. Broad¬way, at 7 and 9 pm. 549-1631.Wings: The Midwest premiere ofArthur Kopit's drama of an elder¬ly woman's attempt to recoverfrom a massive stroke. This production is reportedly ' well worththe adventure of riding the How¬ard El” to the Wisdom BridgeTheatre, 1559 W. Howard. Thurs.-Sat. at 8:30 pm, Sun. at 3 and 7:30pm. 743-6442. $6, $7.Death and the King's Horseman:A vibrant production of a tragicdrama set among the Yorubapeople in Nigeria. At the Goodman, 200 S. Columbus Dr. Wed.-Thurs. at 7:30 pm, Fri.-Sat. at 8.$10 weeknights, $11.50 weekends.ArtPhotography: Laura Volkerdingshows at the Renaissance Soci¬ety, but hurry; the show runsthrough Nov. 9 only. Cobb Hall, 4th floor. Mon.-Sat. 11-4.753-2886.Sculpture All Over The Place:Construct Gallery shows MarkDiSuvero, the SculpTor. The ex¬hibition features his huge worksindoors and out. You will findthem at Buckingham Fountainand at the corners of Wells andLake, Fairbanks Ct. and Ohioand on the Northwestern U.Downtown campus on Lake ShoreDr. and Ontario. Construct, 233E. Ontario St. Call 642-2569 forHours. Through Nov. 24. —D.S.At 226 E. Ontario:Ed Paschke: New paintings atPhyllis Kind Gallery. If you're fa¬miliar with Paschke's work you'lllove his new tack. If you've neverseen his work, hold on to your lipand keep a stiff upper hat.Through October. Tues.-Sat.10-5:30. 642-6302. -D.S.More Sculpture (and Painting):French conceptualist, BernarVenet, squeezes his cool, tightlygraceful arcs onto the walls of thefirst room of Marianne DesonGallery and Garrick Dolberg in¬serts his sculptural units into thewalls of Marianne's smaller,back room. Tues.-Fri. 10-5:30,Sat. 11-5:30. 787-0005. ThroughNov. 22. -D.S."One Against the Other — APrint Show” This show is high¬lighted by staggeringly beautifulprints by Jasper Johns alongsideof those of Lichtenstein andothers. Also new photographs byGary Winogrand. Allan FrumkinGallery Photographs, Inc. 620 N.Michigan Ave. Tues.-Fri., 10:5,Sat. 12-5. 951-6130. -D.S.DanceMangrove, The San FranciscoMen's Performance Collective:They bring their original ap¬proach to modern dance to Chica¬go for the first time. The collec¬tive bases its work on a newdance form called "contact im-provization.” Mangrove will givethree performances at Link'sHall, 3435 N. Sheffield. This Sun.,Oct. 28 and next Fri. and Sat.,Nov. 2 and 3, at 8:30 pm. 281-0824.$3.50.Feld Ballet: Versatile choreo¬grapher Elliot Feld's new balletis like nothing he's attempted be¬fore. Papillon, with a score ofJaques Offenbach, is a humanview of the social life of insects.The rest of the program varies,but Papillon will be performedboth tonight and Sat., Oct. 27, 8pm at the Auditorium Theatre, 70E. Congress. 922-2110.the grey city journalGary Beberman, Curtis Black, Marie Breaux, Laura Cottingham, Melanie Deal,Karen Hornick, Bennett Jacks, Karen Kapner, Kurt Keefner, Katherine Larson,Bob Lewis, Rebecca Lillian, Philip Maher, Mary Mankowski, Rory McGahan,Robin MitchelLSharon Pollack, Renee Saracki, Robert Saska, Danny Schulman,Ted Shen, Margo Slauson, Lisa von Drehle, Ken Wissoker and Phoebe Zerwick.Edited by David Miller.Contributions from Artie DeNoyer, Abbe Fletman, Fred Foote, Tom Hanchett,Lori Keehn, Chuck Schilke, Adam Spiegel, Michael Starenko and Rob Sturm. Special good bye to Bruce Shapiro: you'll be missed, and not just because you writethe best headlines. Friday, October 26, 1979. $3.50 16.50.the grey city journal, Friday, October 26, 1979 — 3SPIN-IT PresentsBOB JAMES&EARLKLUGHONE on ONEThe AfterglowLove Los A Midnight Madness Sale BarbraStreisandWetNo More Tears(Enough Is Enough)(Duet WithDonna Summer INiagaraAfter The BarnWEATHER REPORT8:30 EVERY L.P. IN THESTORE IS ON SALEJEANCARNWHEN I FIND \<)l LOUincludingWhen I Find >ou LoveIntro My Love Don | Come EasyWhat s On Your Mind Give It UpWas Thai AM it Was Save 40% OFF Mfg. Sug. ListONLY ONLY Kenny LoginsKeep The Fireincluding• This Is It Love Has Come Of Age Mr NightWho s Right Who s Wrong Will It Last$7.98L.P.’s $4.79 $8.98L.P.’s $5.39p £ « o^'4&CNHeavy On Your LoveOr op It (An OtdOisguise) Back On The Road AgainOnly The Strong Survive Rock A Ron Music THEOJAYSIDENTIFY YOl RSKI.KincludingSing A Happy Song IdentifyI Want You Here With Me Get On Out Ana Party BOB DYLANSLOW TRAIN COMINGincluding:Gotta Serve SomebodyWhen You Gonna Wake Up} mccwostrINDIVIDUALSFeatumgBob James Weather Report Stanley ClarkeTom Scott Lonme Liston Smith Bitty CobhamPlus 12 Other Top Artists JOHNNY MATHISMATHIS MAGICincludingNo One But The One You LoveN'ght And Day You Saved My LifeMy Body Keeps Changing My MindTo The Ends Of The Earth DEXTER WANSELTime Is Slipping AwayincludingI li Never Forget (My Favorite Disco) Funk Attack «The Sweetest Pam It s Been CoolTime Is Slipping AwayWear Costumes - Prizes Will Be Awarded Each Hour.Don't Miss This Event - It's Been Bun The Last 2 YearsOne Night Only - Friday Oct. 26 9 P.M. - 2 A.M.4 — the grey city iournal, Friday, October 26, 1979And Justice for AIL, no justice forfilmgoersby Abbe FletmanNorman Jewison's film. . . And Justice For All containsa single commendable performance, some frames thatare interesting.visually, and a single truth.On the whole, however, it is so unconvincing and sofraught with violence a la Deer Hunter that on the way outof the theater my companion exclaimed, "I've seen bettermade-for-TV movies.”The film centers around a young lawyer (Al Pacino)who bucks the system even though, in the end, his actionschange nothing. But instead of examining this irony ordelving into Pacino's motivations for choosing idealismover pragmatism, Jewison offers a proliferation ofcharacters and situations to distract viewers from themain story line.And for good reason. The primary action concerns asometime leather-clad sadist (John Forsythe) who alsohappens to be a criminal court judge. When Forsythe isarrested for a brutal rape, Pacino is chosen as his defenselawyer. Pacino is known as a vocal enemy of the judge,and is favored because it is believed Pacino would only de¬fend Fortythe if he were innocent. Pacino is persuaded totake on Forsythe as a client only because a McCarthy-likeethics committee threatens to disbar Pacino, if he refuses,for violating the client-attorney relationship earlier in hiscareer. One of Pacino's clients is Jeff, a young man who is ac¬cused of murdering a prison guard while serving time fora crime he did not commit. Pacino spends a year compil¬ing evidence of Jeff's innocence. But because he is latewith his testimony, Forsythe refuses to consider it. Pacinoblames Forsythe for Jeff's plight, even though the in¬justice began when Jeff was unjustly convicted of thecrime.Although Pacino is ''he idealistic light in this corrupt andvenal world, he hates Forsythe for sticking to the letter ofthe law in a system predicated on deals and comprises,another of the contradictions in Pacino's character that isnever explained.One of the few scenes in the film that works is whenPacino uses his briefcase to smash the car of a colleaguewho filled in for him and botched an almost impossible-to-lose case. This is the only scene where Pacino gets to reactto a situation in a comprehensible and sympathetic way.Pacino cared about this client, so anger and violence werethe only possible responses to his death.The climax of the film comes in a courtroom scene inwhich Pacino spends most of his time screaming at the topof his lungs and making statements that would be inad-missable in any court of law except Jewison's. Viewersare convinced that Pacino has sold out, that he will gothrough with defending Forsythe even though he knows all the evidence proving his innocence is perjured.But after telling the jury how much the prosecuting at¬torney wants "to get” Forsythe, he yells, "But he is notgoing to get him today, because I'm going to get him.”The last time I heard an audience react to a scene withsuch overwhelming applause was at the climax of Rocky.But where Rocky voiced no claim to realism, this film, asits promotional campaign shows, purports to be a seriousconsideration of the court system. It certainly fails here.The film fails at some visual experiments too, the mostmemorable of which is the opening scene in the halls of thecourt building. The camera wanders down the hall, stop¬ping at conversations between lawyers and clients. Butthe couples are so often out-of-focus that the viewer is dis¬couraged from concentrating on them. There is one framewith perfect perspective, however, in which Pacinospeaks with a witness for Forsythe. Pacino is in profile,standing on a sidewalk as the witness sits on his steps. Therow of houses, street, and sidewalk melt into nothingness.Most importantly, by exclusively casting minoritymembers as defendants, the film documents that thesepeople, not middle or even lower class whites, are the oneswho are shafted by the court system. Unfortunately, thismessage is lost among the melodrama and the heavyhanded moralizing about corruption in the United StatesCourt system and in the nation.Rita Warford at the Blue Gargoyle tonightby Curtis BlackThe Rita Warford-Mwata BowdenQuintet, including three long-time AACMmembers and two of the organization'sbrightest new faces, performs tonight at theBlue Gargoyle.Rita Warford was turning up quite fre¬quently in a variety of situations within ashort period this summer. She joined theKen Chaney Experience in its tribute to John Coltrane at the Chicago Jazzfest inGrant Park. There she sang the Coltraneclassic, "My Favorite Things” with herown lyrics. She was very enthusiasticallyreceived by the crowd estimated at 10,000 to15,000. But then, though she sings with artis¬tic integrity, who could deny that her lovelyvoice, given the opportunity would havemass appeal.A few weeks later Warford showed up singing with the AACM Big Band, directedby Vandy Harris, at the Dusable Museum.There her innovations in vocal improvisation could be heard side by side with the in¬strumental styles which they evoke. Hervery personal approach to scat singingderives from the instrumental innovationsof the first AACM experimenters. She hasthe same rhythmic basis, though with somecharacteristics peculiar to the voice — arange of timbral qualities and variety ofphrasing, from broad, warm tones to chop¬py, skittering arcs of melody. She does a lotwith her tongue and throat (while scatsingers of bebop days concentrated theirtechnical mastery in the lips), and she cango off into something like African yodelling.Though her singing was as fast and free asanyone's playing, she provided a melodicanchor to the Big Band, a contingent whichseemed at moments like a high-energy con¬struct about to explode into space in alldirections.Warford also appeared with Bowden atthe Gargoyle in August playing DouglasEwart's "Inventions” in a chamber-like set¬ting. In an interview on WHPK this week,Bowden described the piece as an "ex¬perimentation with small instrumentationsand their subtleties," with the use of thevoice in a more equal role with instruments.With Ewart and Edward Wilkerson, Bowdenalso presented his own compositions forreed duos and trios this summer at theGargoyle, in one of the finest concerts of theyear. Bowden's intricate and inventive ar¬rangements made sensitive use of the threevery lyrical but very different reedists. Theconcert also featured an amazing lone per¬formance, a masterful, soaring virtuosticbaritone sax solo by Bowden.The Sanctuary of the Blue Gargoyle hascome to be known as accoustically bestsuited to smaller groups ("chamber jazz"or whatever), and Bowden says the Quintetwill lean that way tonight, toning down thedrums and restraining, for the most part,the energy level.At the WHPK interview, Bowden was ask¬ed about the individuals in the quintet."Yosef Ben Israel has been playing with thegroup for a while now. He's been on thescene a long time, played with Kahil ElZabar's Ethnic Heritage Ensemble and anumber of other musicians around. Bassplayers are in demand, and he's quite good,so you'll probably see him with a lot of othergroups."Jukube Felton (piano) and ReggieNicholson (drums) are younger brothers,very strong brothers coming on the set now,which is good. Of course I'm older, and looking back it's good to know that there areyounger musicians coming up that arestrong and that are interested in the musicand carrying on the music, so it's a pleasureto play with the two. And it gives us a kind offreshness and openness to new things."The personnel is pretty much stable now.Which is good. The way the music scene isaround the city there will be some flexibili- ARita Warfordty, but the nucleus of the group will remainthe same, thus the group's conception willbe able to develop and grow in a definitedirection."The group features Rita's compositionsand my compositions, and the othermembers will be contributing compositionssoon.”Later he was asked about how Warford fitin with Ewart's reed trio at the AugustGargoyle concert: "The voice is an instru¬ment. Traditionally the voice has been usedin one way, many people have used the voicewith a rhythm section behind it or with pianoaccompaniment, whereas now Douglas hasbeen experimenting with it and so have Ritaand I, using it as another instrument, whichis what it is, you know, just anothercharacter, and she's very good at expressing herself that way."I've been working with Rita for about ayear now, and things are really beginning toclick. She's recorded on several AACMalbums over the years. Rita's been singing,or what do you say, 'been around?' — beenaround for a longTfcrie singing, and it shows,in her maturity, and it shows in her music.Because it takes that amount of time toperfect your art, to get it at the level whereyou have total control and you're able to ex¬press yourself, not only in a so called tradi-tional way, but also you're able to experi¬ment and expand on newer and more ex¬perimental stuff."We'll be using the voice and instrumentsin a context that maybe everyone's notfamiliar with, but again, simply utilizingmore contemporary ideas and ideas thatwould allow us to experiment with sound ofa different nature.”See the Rita Warford Mwata BowdenQuintet tonight at the Blue Gargoyle, 5655 S.University Ave. at 8 p.m.October 26, 1979 — 5Texas InstrumentsSlimline Business Anoly st -11financial calculatorwith statistics andnew Constant memory' feature.INTEREST RATE PER,PERIOD.Enters or computes periodicinterest rates.NUMBER OP PERIODSEnters or computes the numberof compounding periods.PROFIT MARGIN..Compute item cost. sellingprice, and gross profit margin.PRINCIPAL/INTEREST/-Splits a loan payment intoprincipal and interest.MEMORYConvenient, 4-key memory forstorage, recall, sum to memory,and exchange memory withdisplay.Texas InstrumentsINCORPORATED ,MODE.Select financial, statistical orprofit mode as you need.-FIX DECIMAL.Fix decimal position at 0-7places..PRESENT VALUE.Enters or computes the pre¬sent value of an investment.■ FUTURE VALUE.Enters or computes the futurevalue of an investment.'PAYMENT AMOUNT.Enters or computes paymentamounts for a fixed number ofperiods.'STATISTICAL FUNCTIONS.10 in all. The most commonly-used functions tor forecasting,data analysis and other business and financial problem¬solving.A powerful new LCD financial calculatorwith statistics to handle and analyze awide range of business situations.Just *45.00University of Chicago Bookstore5750 S. Ellis AvenueCalculator Dept., 2nd Floor753-3303MASTERCHARGE & VISA ACCEPTEDthe grey city journal, Friday,■STATISTICAL CONSULTINGThe Department of Statistics consulting programprovides statistical research assistance to students,faculty and staff at the University of Chicago.Consulting is done by the graduate students of thedepartment with the assistance of the faculty. Thestaff of the program will provide advice, but will notin general carry out data analyses or statisticalcomputations. There is no fee for this service.The program welcomes questions or problems in¬volving statistics and probability, and it especiallysolicits clients at the design stage of statisticalstudies. Guidance can be provided in the choice ofstatistical computation, and the interpretation ofstatistical output. Seminars will be held oc¬casionally during the noon hour on Tuesdays todiscuss interesting problems.Some short questions (5-10 min.) will be handled,when appropriate, on a walk-in basis in Eckhart 2B(basement of Eckhart Hall) on Monday, Wednesdayand Friday mornings, 9:30-12:30, and on Tuesdayand Thursday afternoon, 12:30-2:30. Appointmentsfor more in-depth consultation can be made by con¬tacting the office during these same hours (phone:3-8083). The office should be called only duringthese hours. It will be staffed during the fall quar¬ter, Oct. 23 through Dec. 7.THE BILLY BANDFriday October 26 8:00PM Mandel HallPRESENTED BY THE STUDENT ACTIVITIES OFFICEAND THE JAZZ GALLERYSupported by a gr,ant fromThe Chicago Council on Fine ArtsREE I < < HIM§Friday October 26 7:00 and 9:45Charles Chaplin’sIlMEIICtlT*■ .1*Saturday October 27 7:15 and 9:30Martin Ritt’sNCRMA 1 11and our special midnight movie isonce againHit <1111111DEAD FI 114Sunday October 28 7:15 and 9:30Nagisa Oshima’sIHf CimtCNYMonday October 29 8:00Glauber Rocha’sFEE FI0N I tl 1 FiFAESAll Films $1.50 in Cobb Hall(Separate admission for DEAD FILM)493-0666South of 57th St. on Kimbark Ave. 5 Rm. remodeled kitchen,-bath, beautifulwoodwork, woodburning fireplace with bookcases stripped to natural.Summer balcony. $55,000.56th & Kimbark Condo. . . garden court building, four lovely sunshiny,airy rooms. Nice oak floors. $39,000. Rent $268. until closing.2 Bdrm. Across From Regenstein Library . 56th & University. Large L.R ,woodburning fireplace, beamed ceiling. Good basics, good association(co-op), low monthly cost, even a garden spot adjacent. $45,000.5000 East End $32,500. (co-op) includes parking. Sacrifice price so ownercan move South. Imagine a stunning high floor living space over 1,000 sqft. Views of lake and city. Dream kitchen - move in mint condition throughout.This is a 2 Bedroom expanded into super large 1 BR. Living room is over 30ft. long. This will go fast. Call Today.REDUCED PRICE $106,000 - 11 RM. Victorian residence in Murray SchoolDist. near 54th Street. Insulated - 2 working fireplaces. Part of house is rent¬able as 4 rm. apt. if desired. All offers will be presented to seller. Home EquityCorp.INVESTORS ATTENTION Just listed. 27 unit brick courtyard building ingood South Shore location. Recently overhauled Herbert converted gas boil¬er. Most units have recently been redecorated. Updated appliances.$207,000.CORPORATION TRANSFER Releases 20th floor condo. 5 rooms all largeViews of city & lake. Excellent service. Sell for appraised value (2 appraisals)$81,500. 4800 Chicago Beach.Condo for rent in luxury Newport: Generous size 2 bedroom. Rent belowcost. May be seen now.NO MONEY WORRIES: Clever owner can arrange special financing to pur¬chase high floor spacious five room condo. Doorman. Traditional architec¬ture. Natural fireplace. Near 50th & Lake. $75,000.ONLY $20,000 (59th near Harper) Excellent co-op building! Third floor studiowith small study. Move in now!For Sales Information, Call...CHARLOTTE VIKSTROM, BROKER493-0666Kathy Ballard, Sales Associate (res. 947-0453)Ken Wester, Sales Associate (res. 947-0557)6 — The grey city lournal, f-noay, October 26, 1979"West Virginia, 1979"I■ Volkerding's American photographsWhatever may have been the case in years gone by,the true use for the imaginative faculty of moderntimes is to give ultimate vivification to facts, toscience, and to common lives, endowing them withthe glow and glories and final illustriousness whichbelong to every real thing, and to real things only.—Walt Whitmanby Michael StarenkoThe photographs of Laura Volkerding, on display at theBergman Gallery until November 9, once again argue forthe consistent good taste of the Renaissance Society. Inbringing to our attention the work of ar. importantmember of our community (Volkerding is an assistantprofessor in the Committee on Art and Design), the Soci¬ety acknowledges the growing preeminence of the Univer¬sity of Chicago as a center for the practice and study ofphotography.Volkerding belongs to what has come to be called "theAmerican School" of photography. Prior to the outbreakof World War l, self-conscious "artistic" photography wascharacterized by the use of coarse printing paper, diffuselighting, and sentimental subject matter. But after thewar a major shift in attitude and technique took place.The soft look was replaced by the hard or "straight" lookwhich utilized glossy printing papers and more "realis-tic" subject matter. While World War I effectively de-sen-timentalized photography (as well as art in general) inboth Europe and America, only in America did it evolveinto a unified, national movement. For European photog¬raphers, the single common denominator was film mon¬tage. This was not the case in America, as Hollywood hadpredisposed many avant-garde photographers againstthat route; and moreover, film's blatant illusionism probably pushed them even more into the area of "realthings." Also paucity of artistic movements in America,caused by the relative (to Europe) isolation of artistsfrom one another, induced the need to create one. And thatis just what American photographers did.Today we attribute to Walker Evans the founding ofsuch an "American" style of photography. In the 1920'sEvans went to Paris as was customary for aspiring artistsand writers. He returned to America shortly thereafter,learned photography, and traveled throughout Americaseeking the "authentic" and the "commonplace". In 1936the Museum of Modern Art gave Evans the first one-per¬son photography show in the museum's history. Out ofEvans, and the curatorial policies of MOMA, have comethe Modernist tradition in American photography.In her book On Photography, Susan Sontag polemicizesagainst this Modernist tradition, calling it a distortion ofWhitman's spiritual mandate. She claims that what mo¬tivates these photographers is a "surrealist consciousness" that takes delight in the "profoundly banal" charac¬ter of roadside America. A better explanation is offeredby the philosopher George Santayana:I suspect that my feelings are secretly shared bymany people in America, natives and foreigners,who may not have the courage or the occasion toexpress them frankly ... In the classical and romantic tradition of Europe, love, of which there wasvery little, was supposed to be kindled by beauty, of which there was a great deal; perhaps moral chemistry may be able to reverse this opeation and in thefuture and in America it my breed beauty out oflove.For the last five years Laura Volkerding has traveledmany thousands of miles across America. Such automo¬bile trips have become a rite of passage for American pho¬tographers in much the same way that the Grand Tourwas for English gentlemen or Mexico was for writers ofmodern fiction. Vet Volkerding has no fetish for thosekinds of road side "attractions" (i.e. motels and truck-stops) immortalized by Edward Hopper, Richard Estes,or California rock music. She avoids these new iconographical objects and structures of the American sociallandscape in favor of more neutral subject matter. Thenshe sets to work composing her pictures — recomposingthe landscapes — to suit her own refined, austere, sense ofvisual design.Nothing is accidental in these intelligent and also wittypictures; her authorial situation within these often deso¬late landscapes is complete and entirely by her own doing.By reforming the small-town mainstreet, the North Dakota campground, or the storefront church, into a beautifulphotographic composition, Volkerding has recast Ameri¬ca into a more resolved, less arbitrary, shape.Loving America seems to cause Volkerding fewer com¬plications than it does most of her contemporaries. This isnot surprising considering the example set by WalkerEvans. Most of the time he used a long focal length lensand a large 8 X 10 view camera to accentuate his dis¬tanced and ironic point of view. The photographer's handi§ nowhere to be seen in the picture; what is seen appears as that which has alone made, and is making, itself. Suchirony — and this is only one of the many ironic tropesavailable to photographers — serves to mask the photog¬rapher's true feeling: we cannot be certain if it is love orhate which is being expressed. Volkerding, in contrast,always uses a very wide-angle lens on her Leica, Wideluxor Hasselblad Super-wide. The Widelux's 150 frame, inparticular, envelops its user and diminishes the possibili¬ty of ironic distance. But Volkerding's photographs arenot without irony. Instead of exploiting the sources ofirony which exist between photographer and subject mat¬ter, she exploits those which exist between phtographerand viewer. In short, she seems to make a case for actual¬ly "seeing" the world from her perspective — if theviewer could share her sense of space, some of the habitu¬al notions surrounding her subjects may break down.While traveling for a Seagram's-sponsored project tophotograph county court houses, Volkerding had occasionto photograph a number of campgrounds. While shoppingcenters and gas stations can be unintentional symbols ofAmerican rootlessness, campgrounds serve only people intransit — they are, for Volkerding, traces of white Ameri¬ca on the move.The campground photographs comprise a major cycleof Volkerding's work; her photographs of black churchesrepresents another more recently begun. The historicaltraces of the spacial and cultural movement of blacksfrom the rural South to the urban North linger on in thehand-painted signs, recycled "white" churches, formerbars now become churches, and hats of old women thatVolkerding photographs. Taken as a whole, but derivedfrom the smallest of facts, these photographs constitute acollective truth told through her beautiful pictures.CSO Winds perform flawlesslyby Robin MitchellThe Chicago Symphony Winds gave asuperb concert of Mozart chambermusic to an enthusiastic audience onSunday in the first of a series of fiveconcerts to be presented during the falland winter quarters.Music from Mozart's opera "Don Gio¬vanni" opened the program, and theSymphony Winds performed almostflawlessly. They were careful to prevent the Overture from becoming over¬ly serious, and the music continuedlively through the finale, which couldbest be described as effervescent.The concert continued with the Adagio in C for English horn, two bassethorns and bassoon, K. 580a, featuringthe rarely heard basset horn. Grover Schlitz, in particular, gave a clear, con¬cise performance on the English horn inthis piece.The Divertimento No. 12 in E-flat for2 oboes, 2 horns and 2 bassoons, K. 252showcased the talents of horn playersDavid Gingrich and Norman Schwei-kert. Earlier, Mandel Hall's pooracoustics had muddied the horns' richtone during "Don Giovanni", but thesmaller ensemble in this work alloweddifferent seating on stage, thus permit¬ting the horns to blend and contrastmore precisely with the other winds.The Divertimento No. 12 was the high¬light of the first half of the concert.After intermission a relaxed yetserious rendition of the DivertimentoNo. 4 in B flat for 2 clarinets and basoon, K. 439b was presented. The final piece, the Quintet in E-flatfor pianoforte and winds, K.452, wasstunning. Accompanied by John Perryon piano, the Symphony Winds camp-tured the beautifully delicate characterof this work. Each soloist was perfect,as was the contrast between the velvetsmooth horn playing of David Gingrichand the lucid oboe of Ray Still. After aprolonged ovation by the audience,which was noticeably lacking in stu¬dents, the Winds performed an encoreof the final movement, Rondo Allegret¬to. Much to the delight of the audience,it was even better the second time.The next performance by the ChicagoSymphony Winds on campus will be onNovember 16, and Sunday's concertwas surely an indication of great musicto come.the grey city journal, Friday, October 26, 1979 — 7J■iby Robert SaskaExperience the fear of music!by Todd JacksonTalking Heads are the leading purveyorsof creative and stimulating New Wavemusic today. Indeed, they have oversteppedthe usual bounds of their musical idiom andhave entered an omniscient stratospherethrough their prescient lyrics, innovativecomposition, and musical derring-do.On the albums '77 and More Songs AboutBuildings and Food, Talking Heads in¬troduced us to gut-wrenching self-appraisalof our lifestyles, our relationships, and ourroles in American society. Their latestrelease, Fear of Music, invokes a feeling ofjust that — fear. Its theme is one of societyslipping out of our control. The song titlesare blunt and speak of concepts thatmotivate Americans with the force of amace and chain.The lyrics of "I Zimbra" read like theprintout of an HP 2000 computer gone mad.The probable doom of mankind surfaces in"Mind," since neither drugs, religion norscience can change us and make thingsclear. A secretary wads up our marriagelicense and slam dunks it into the circularfile on "Paper." "Heaven" tells us of aparty in "a place where nothing ever hap¬pens." "Air" takes us back to Three Mile Is¬land. "Animals," "Drugs," "Cities," "LifeDuring Wartime." Good God! Governmentregulation, career orientation, and self-in¬dulgence have gone too far. This bandscares the hell out of me.But we do not just read Talking Heads. Welisten to them. We hear David Byrne stretchhis voice to such extremes that the lyricsare squeezed into our veins, producing acringing rush as if a fingernail just dragged across the blackboard. We often hearByrne's guitar gripped by mania, as in thestaccato, hurting leads in "Mind" and"Cities."Jerry Harrison flails at rhythm guitar on"Paper" or writhes at the keyboards on"Life During Wartime." Tina Weymouth isvirtue on bass, setting an expert course forthe band's spatial musicianship, as well asproviding a helical refrain on "Air." Drum¬mer Chris Frantz jolts the Richter scalewith each beat, rolling and rumblingthrough each song like a hellhound elevatedtrain marked "Express."Fear of Music is technically perfect. "Thealbum is a lasting thing," said Frantz inBoston this summer. "We work hard on pro¬duction and mixing. It's the only way to putout a good product."In their quest for quality, Talking Headshave again enlisted the support of keyboardimpresario Brian Eno. His mixing, control¬led distortion and synthesized wizardry haveelevated this band to the state of the art ininnovative sound and technical expertise.Tonight Talking Heads, the Cramps andthe A’s play the Aragon Ballroom on theNorthside. I do not propose to all readersthat they will like the show. The music willbe different for most tastes and perhaps toointense. None of these bands observe theworld optimistically; their music is notmeant to be nice.Nor is the Aragon a nice place to see ashow. You will be lined up in a pitted andglass-studded alley. You will be shoved bybouncers wielding hockey sticks. You willsee odious people dressed in leather. Youwill be scared. But that's how life is duringtime; that's the fear of music. Clayton EschlemanEschleman'sVallejo readingby Phoebe ZerwickWednesday, Clayton Eshleman read fromhis translations of the Peruvian poet CesarVallejo. The reading was attended by morethan fifty people.Eshleman's reading brought the poetry alive. His voice, though soft, is strong. Heemphasized the rhythm of the poems with¬out being overdramatic. Eshleman's com¬ments about the poems were minimal; hesaid he would rather read than interpret.Many of Vallejo's poems speak about theneed to live fully. In one poem he says thathe would like to kiss affection and to lovethose who hate him. He embraces life's in¬tensity, even its pain and suffering.Vallejo is a self-aware poet. "This is me,"he exclaims; or "I will die in Paris in a sud¬den shower, a day I can already re¬member." Vallejo's descriptions of theworld almost always refer back to himself,to the way he feels about events or the effecttnat a scene has on him.After reading about ten poems, Eshlemanasked for questions from the audience. Hetalked about the difficulties he encounteredtranslating Vallejo's poetry, which existsmostly in a rough form. When asked aboutthe effect that his long involvement withVallejo's work had on his own poetry, Eshle¬man said that he gained courage, a respectfor contradictions and the need for the poetto work deeply with his own life. He de¬scribed his relationship with Vallejo as anapprenticeship, such as a young craftsmanmight have with a master.He finished the reading with two of hisown poems, on request. One was about theodd relationship that the Victorians had totheir bodies and the other was about his ex¬periences in a fraternity at Indiana Univer¬sity.The reading was sponsored by the Zabelcommittee, the department of RomanceLanguages and the Center for Latin Ameri¬can Studies. The Zabel committee plans fur¬ther readings this year. The next will begiven by Robert Hass, on November 5 at 4pm in Harper 130.$ The 10 scariest bathroomsin the worldCuban «£u3St 5uPPeJt, '"atierr'0°no^VaS Go L n°*'enceBe “i** <WfH3age rt* °'W",roP' <"s S“, by Laura Cottingham and Danny SchulmanIf you think Halloween is scary, you're probably whimpy and the following list of the tenscariest bathrooms will be useless because you're also probably the type who holds it inuntil you get home — even if you're in Europe. However, if you take your morning gargoylesraw, read on. The following list was researched and investigated by two qualified scato-sophes; one an anal Freudian and the other of Jewish descent.1. New Haven, Ct. The Old Heidelburg Restaurant. This beloved eatery of generations ofYalies features a men's room that has shredded, black cloth dividing the stalls.2. Belfast, Northern Ireland. Located in the portalet nearest the British barricadearound the postoffice, this toilet offers the horrors of Brittish gun barrels, I.R.A. graffittiind the ghost of Lord Mountbatten.*3. Las Vegas, Nev. A pawn shop two blocks west from the cowboy who tips his hat hastoilets that tip over.f. Chicago, II. Sorry to burden you with the thought of a notorious bathroom in your ownfront-yard, but the men's room in the basement of the Hyde Park Co-op is coated with agrimy, slimy substance that makes it impossible to keep one's balance.5. New York N.Y. The Gold Rail Restaurant. The restaurant is defunct but the memoryof the men's room lives on. The most threatening New York style graffitti.6. Unnamed city, Southern Ireland. Located at the North-South border 16 miles west ofOmeath. Harriet's eatery, a place that would be classified as a greasy spoon except that►they have no spoons. They also have no indoor bathroom. The outdoor one smells almost asbad as their liver and chips specialty.7. Somewhere in the Southwestern United States. Bates Motel. Only a movie.8. London, England. The woman's room inside the Picadilly tube station has purple toiletpaper and posters that proclaim V.D. profiferation.9. Greyhound busses, U.S.A. When you think you've excaped from the tyranny of theJesus freak sitting next to you, imagine the dismay of finding a group of transvestite medi¬ums holding a seance in the bathroom.10.Dean Smith Speaks. Dean Smith tried to tell us that the scariest bathroom in the worldis located near Don Juan's peyote garden in Mexico. But we don't believe in Yaqui under¬wear.8 — the greyIDecember Graduates..Campus interviews for Texas Instruments,Consumer Products Division, Lubbock.Manufacturing Operations,Management DevelopmentProgramSeeking motivated persons interested incareers in high volume, dynamic, hightechnology business. Managementdevelopment program will offer opportuni¬ties in areas which include manufacturingmanagement, material management,warehouse management, financialplanning and purchasing. You will spend 6months in at least 3 of the above areasbefore being assigned permanent manage¬ment responsibilities. Operations AnalystDevelop financial models for businessentities, prepare short and longtermfinancial forecast, analyze actual perform¬ance to forecast, develop and implementsystems to enhance existing data base andto perform special analysis. 0Interviewing on CampusNov. 6 & 7If unable to interview at this time, sendresume to: Jim Joiner P O. Box 10508,M S. 5841 /Lubbock. TX 79408Texas InstrumentsINCORPORATEDAn equal opportunity employer M/F A79039-0 55.95 FANTASY OF THE SPIRIT AND SWORDBY THE AUTHOR OF PARSIVAlITIE(il>AIL\VAI>RICHARD MONACOParsival takes uphis sword again! iFLAMINGO APTS.AND CABANA CIJ B5500 S. Shore Drive• Studio anil I ReilriHim•Furnished and l nfiirni'heri•l:. of I*u»•Outdoor Pool and Carden*•Car|ieiin" and Drajie* Inrl.•Sreurilv•I nivrr*il\ Sul»*id\ forStudent* and StaffM.Snvder-PI. 2-3800 NEED A LITTLECAN TO MOUTHRESUSCITATION?Call in Tecate Trio Bravo. An icy. red can of TecateBeer imported from Mexico, topped with lemon and salt.It takes your thirst and puts it away!C'tKO Importing Co ln<Dallas Te»as 7S229 TECATEMBKIHN6 REPORTS ON THELATEST DEVELOPMENTS IN ALL THE •SCIENCES. EVERY WEEKThe nation s only weekly sciencenewsmagazine. Reporting up-to-the-minutedevelopments for nearly 60 years.Diverse as the fields It covers. From thegrumbling and grinding of geotectonlcplates to the coiltngs and uncolllngs ofDNA. With a fresh, lively unstufiy style.Concise. Current. Thorough.Authoritative. And In today’s world —essential.Who reads Science Newt? People aliveto possibilities. Students and scientists.Thinkers and dreamers. People like you.Expand your world. Every single week.Subscribe to Science Newt.52 weeks $15.50Call this free number to subscribe:(D-800-247-2160 or mail this coupon. >31 West Center StreetMarion, Ohio 43302Yes! I want to subscribe to Science NewsEnclosed is a check for□ Bill me later □ 1 year. S15 50□ 2 years. $27 00 3 years $37 50(Add $3 a year for Canada and Mexico$4 for all other countries )NameAddressCityStateDO30-4 J Part-time secretary(approximately 20 hrs/week, flexiblehours) for two faculty members,Department of the GeophysicalSciences.Correspondence, manuscript andmiscellaneous typing. Shorthand* not necessary.Private OfficeSee or call Mary RichlikHGS (Hinds) 157-A 753-8104i COURT TbCATRCy \ _ ”570b S UmvrfMtv lh* atfo Minor* t*lb 17 751 JSfilCourt Studio Theatre presents:Schmidt & Jones'THE FANTASTICKSdirected by Ellen MartinOct. 26-Nov. 11 • Fri-Sun • 8:30p.m., 7:30 Sun.$3.50 General admission,$2.50 students/seniorsReynolds Club Theatre57th & University753-3581VERSAILLE5254 S. DorchesterWELL M AINTAINEDBUILDINGAttractive 1 V? and• 2‘/z Room StudiosFurnished or Unfurnished$192-$291Based on AvailabilityAll Utilities IncludedAt Campus Bus Stop324-0200 Mrs. GroakBy PopularRequest.“HAVE ANICE DAY”JIMMYSThe Chicago Maroon — Friday, October 26, 1979 — 15Hiby Robert SaskaExperience the fear of music!by Todd JacksonTalking Heads are the leading purveyorsof creative and stimulating New Wavemusic today. Indeed, they have oversteppedthe usual bounds of their musical idiom andhave entered an omniscient stratospherethrough their prescient lyrics, innovativecomposition, and musical derring-do.On the albums '77 and More Songs AboutBuildings and Food, Talking Heads in¬troduced us to gut-wrenching self-appraisalof our lifestyles, our relationships, and ourroles in American society. Their latestrelease, Fear of Music, invokes a feeling ofjust that — fear. Its theme is one of societyslipping out of our control. The song titlesare blunt and speak of concepts thatmotivate Americans with the force of amace and chain.The lyrics of "I Zimbra" read like theprintout of an HP 2000 computer gone mad.The probable doom of mankind surfaces in"Mind," since neither drugs, religion norscience can change us and make thingsclear. A secretary wads up our marriagelicense and slam dunks it into the circularfile on "Paper." "Heaven" tells us of aparty in "a place where nothing ever hap¬pens." "Air" takes us back to Three Mile Is¬land. "Animals," "Drugs," "Cities," "LifeDuring Wartime." Good God! Governmentregulation, career orientation, and self-in¬dulgence have gone too far. This bandscares the hell out of me.But we do not just read Talking Heads. Welisten to them. We hear David Byrne stretchhis voice to such extremes that the lyricsare squeezed into our veins, producing acringing rush as if a fingernail just dragged across the blackboard. We often hearByrne's guitar gripped by mania, as in thestaccato, hurting leads in "Mind" and"Cities."Jerry Harrison flails at rhythm guitar on"Paper" or writhes at the keyboards on"Life During Wartime." Tina Weymouth isvirtue on bass, setting an expert course forthe band's spatial musicianship, as well asproviding a helical refrain on "Air." Drum¬mer Chris Frantz jolts the Richter scalewith each beat, rolling and rumblingthrough each song like a hellhound elevatedtrain marked "Express."Fear of Music is technically perfect. "Thealbum is a lasting thing," said Frantz inBoston this summer. "We work hard on pro¬duction and mixing. It's the only way to putout a good product."In their quest for quality, Talking Heads*have again enlisted the support of keyboard ~impresario Brian Eno. His mixing, control- £led distortion and synthesized wizardry have Ielevated this band to the state of the art in ginnovative sound and technical expertise.Tonight Talking Heads, the Cramps and *the A's play the Aragon Ballroom on theNorthside. I do not propose to all readersthat they will like the show. The music willbe different for most tastes and perhaps toointense. None of these bands observe theworld optimistically; their music is notmeant to be nice.Nor is the Aragon a nice place to see ashow. You will be lined up in a pitted andglass-studded alley. You will be shoved bybouncers wielding hockey sticks. You willsee odious people dressed in leather. Youwill be scared. But that's how life is duringlime; that's the fear of music. SMHmhBHHHHIm I mBm IiHhRBBIClayton EschlemanEschleman'sVallejo readingby Phoebe ZerwickWednesday, Clayton Eshleman read fromhis translations of the Peruvian poet CesarVallejo. The reading was attended by morethan fifty people.Eshleman's reading brought the poetry alive. His voice, though soft, is strong. Heemphasized the rhythm of the poems with¬out being overdramatic. Eshleman's com¬ments about the poems were minimal; hesaid he would rather read than interpret.Many of Vallejo's poems speak about theneed to live fully. In one poem he says thathe would like to kiss affection and to lovethose who hate him. He embraces life's in¬tensity, even its pain and suffering.Vallejo is a self-aware poet. "This is me,"he exclaims; or "I will die in Paris in a sud¬den shower, a day I can already re¬member." Vallejo's descriptions of theworld almost always refer back to himself,to the way he feels about events or the effectThat a scene has on him.After reading about ten poems, Eshlemanasked for questions from the audience. Hetalked about the difficulties he encounteredtranslating Vallejo's poetry, which existsmostly in a rough form. When asked aboutthe effect that his long involvement withVallejo's work had on his own poetry, Eshle¬man said that he gained courage, a respectfor contradictions and the need for the poetto work deeply with his own life. He de¬scribed his relationship with Vallejo as anapprenticeship, such as a young craftsmanmight have with a master.He finished the reading with two of hisown poems, on request. One was about theodd relationship that the Victorians had totheir bodies and the other was about his ex¬periences in a fraternity at Indiana Univer¬sity.The reading was sponsored by the Zabelcommittee, the department of RomanceLanguages and the Center for Latin Ameri¬can Studies. The Zabel committee plans fur¬ther readings this year. The next will begiven by Robert Hass, on November 5 at 4pm in Harper 130.cV\V The 10 scariest bathroomsin the worlde cut>an r „e" '^''aot^'^’;°rc'eoce '« ™ .. T„e uas-03 f977 C*'caf3Soc'3' y,bera''srn\ ^c»deot' nSupPer %% a 1°U5," " iM n°0'e,1TcP''s' 3° D>es- aPd ’’"f*IK a»°0’caoeP^c^P;^.,^^ p, r;eaiigeC°pKofmea'awaV- 'e3 uoot ot ootco^etreed0(t> ,ne^a5' c\a^- _ on arnP°s C°!^C T^e S«rorient ^'Tnese oP;*reed0aTtne s^ef SuPper c*eCeht These oP^vtvors- see . ssedoor^irtdn't toe,!L aPc by Laura Cottingham and Danny SchulmanIf you think Halloween is scary, you're probably whimpy and the following list of the tenscariest bathrooms will be useless because you're also probably the type who holds it inuntil you get home — even if you're in Europe. However, if you take your morning gargoylesraw, read on. The following list was researched and investigated by two qualified scato-sophes; one an anal Freudian and the other of Jewish descent.1. New Haven, Ct. The Old Heidelburg Restaurant. This beloved eatery of generations ofkYalies features a men's room that has shredded, black cloth dividing the stalls.2. Belfast, Northern Ireland. Located in the portalet nearest the British barricadearound the postoffice, this toilet offers the horrors of Brittish gun barrels, I.R.A. graffitti~ ind the ghost of Lord Mountbatten.*3. Las Vegas, Nev. A pawn shop two blocks west from the cowboy who tips his hat hasfcoilets that tip over.Chicago, II. Sorry to burden you with the thought of a notorious bathroom in your ownfront-yard, but the men's room in the basement of the Hyde Park Co-op is coated with agrimy, slimy substance that makes it impossible to keep one's balance.5. New York N.Y. The Gold Rail Restaurant. The restaurant is defunct but the memoryof the men's room lives on. The most threatening New York style graffitti.6. Unnamed city, Southern Ireland. Located at the North-South border 16 miles west ofOmeath. Harriet's eatery, a place that would be classified as a greasy spoon except that►they have no spoons. They also have no indoor bathroom. The outdoor one smells almost asjDad as their liver and chips specialty.7. Somewhere in the Southwestern United States. Bates Motel. Only a movie.8. London, England. The woman's room inside the Picadilly tube station has purple toiletpaper and posters that proclaim V.D. profiferation.9. Greyhound busses, U.S.A. When you think you've excaped from the tyranny of theJesus freak sitting next to you, imagine the dismay of finding a group of transvestite medi¬ums holding a seance in the bathroom.10. Dean Smith Speaks. Dean Smith tried to tell us that the scariest bathroom in the worldis located near Don Juan's peyote garden in Mexico. But we don't believe in Yaqui underwear.8 — the greyDecember Graduates..,Campus interviews for Texas Instruments,Consumer Products Division, Lubbock.Manufacturing Operations,Management DevelopmentProgramSeeking motivated persons interested incareers in high volume, dynamic, hightechnology business. Managementdevelopment program will offer opportuni¬ties in areas which include manufacturingmanagement, material management,warehouse management, financialplanning and purchasing. You will spend 6months in at least 3 of the above areasbefore being assigned permanent manage¬ment responsibilities. Operations AnalystDevelop financial models for businessentities, prepare short and longtermfinancial forecast, analyze actual perform¬ance to forecast, develop and implementsystems to enhance existing database andto perform special analysisInterviewing on CampusNov. 6 & 7If unable to interview at this time, sendresume to: Jim Joiner/P O. Box 10508.M S. 5841/Lubbock. TX 79408Texas InstrumentsINCORPORATEDAn equal opportunity employer M/FSQEMCENEV6 REPORTS ON THELATEST DEVELOPMENTS IN ALL THESCIENCES. EVERY WEEK.The nations only weekly science . 23J West Center Streetnewsmagazine. Reporting up-to-the-minute I Marion. Ohio 43302developments for nearly 60 years.Diverse as the fields It covers. 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MAINTAINEDBOLDINGAttractive 1V? and• 2Vz Room StudiosFurnished or Unfurnished$192 -$291Based on AvailabilityAll Utilities IncludedAt Campus Bus Stop324-0200 Mrs. Croak•* COURT ThCATRC570b S Un»v**rMtY Avenue Chic 4*0 Illino«*b0b i7 75FJ581Court Studio Theatre presents:Schmidt & )ones’THE FANTASTICKSdirected by Ellen MartinOct. 26-Nov. 11 • Fri-Sun •8:30 p.m., 7:30 Sun.$3.50General admission.$2.50 students/seniorsReynolds Club Theatre57th & University753-3581By PopularRequest.“HAVE ANICE DAY”JIMMYSThe Chicago Maroon — Friday, October 26, 1979 — 15mmUMiMaroons tie Lake Forest in double OTby Allen SowizralThe varsity soccer team played its bestgame in recent weeks but could only man¬age a 2-2 tie with Lake Forest. Although thetie eliminated them from contention for theMidwest Conference Northern Division title,the Maroons have no reason to feel ashamedof their performance on Wednesday after¬noon. It was a well played and excitinggame form all aspects and it clearly showedthe quality of the two teams involved.The Maroons generally dominated thefirst half but faded to score. They had pos¬session of the ball in the offensive zone forthe vast majority of the time but could notconvert any of their numerous scoring op¬portunities. The Maroon defense was alsoplaying quite well and the half ended in ascoreless tie.The tie was broken midway through thesecond half when Lake Forest scored on afluke play. A lack of communication be¬tween Maroon goalkeeper John Condas andhis teammate Cy Oggins resulted in a looseball in front of the goal which Lake Forest’s Tony Mulert easily converted with an assistfrom Larry Dohrs.Several minutes later Todd Silber scoredhis fifth goal of the season assisted by LouSegall, which tied the game for theMaroons. His goal strengthened Silber’s po¬sition as the Maroons leading scorer.With less than ten minutes remaining inthe game Soohyun Chin scored what lookedto be the game winning goal for theMaroons. The ball was loose in front of thegoal mouth with a group of players fromboth teams trying to gain control before Soo-hynun was able to put his shot past the op¬posing keeper.The celebration on the Chicago bench w asshort lived because the game was again tobe tied within only two or three minutes.One of the Maroon defenders tried to clearthe ball out of their defensive zone, butmissed the ball which enabled two LakeForest players to walk in on goal unmolest¬ed and put <the ball past a diving JohnCondas. The goal was credited to Rich Swanwith an assist by Jeff Getz. The rest of regulation time was much thesame as the entire second half; the play wasrather even with good defense by bothteams and several good scoring opportuni¬ties.After the conclusion of regulation time theteams played two ten minute overtimeperiods in hopes of resolving the tie. Theovertime was exciting and tension packedbut neither team could convert on their scor¬ing opportunities. The high level of soccerthat had been played throughout the gamecontinued into the additional period. Thegoalies in particular deserve commendationfor making several difficult saves despitedifficult lighting conditions.Maroon goalie John Condas assessed thegame in this way, “We played better (thanthey did) but they scored on two flukeygoals.” It is both sad and strangely fittingthat the game ended this way. It was anticli-matic to end the game as suddenly as itstarted and with nothing really being re¬solved. It was, however, one of those gamesthat no one really deserved to win because the teams were so well matched and playedso well. Finally this game seemed symbolicof the entire season for the Maroons. Theyplayed so well and fought so valiently butagain came up just a little bit short.The tie clinched the 1979 Northern Divi¬sion championship for Lake Forest, with a4—0—1 record. Chicago, at 2-1-1, now hasone conference game remaining, tomorrowat Ripon. The Beloit game is now unneces- -sary and goes back to a forfeit in favor ofChicago.Midwest ConferenceSoccerNorthern Division<Sports Briefs**********Filippo probable.Detwiler?Senior co-captain and halfback Nick Fi¬lippo was listed as probable for tomor¬row’s final Maroon home football game ofthe year against GrinneU. Filippo missedlast week’s game at Beloit with an ankleinjury suffered two weeks ago in the Ho¬mecoming game against Lake Forest.Halfback Scott Detwiler was still ques¬tionable at mid-week for tomorrow’sgame. Detwiler suffered an off-the-fieldfoot injury and also missed the Beloitgame.Hear BullsAn abbreviated edition of Sports Satur¬day at halftime of tomorrow’s Maroonfootball broadcast will feature ChicagoBulls rookie forward-center David Green¬wood along with coach Jerry Sloan, guardReggie Theus and forward Scott May inaddition to a roundup of all other majorsports activities. The broadcast starts at1:15 PM with the Maroon pregame show onWHPK, 88.3 FM.Tennis endsThe University of Chicago Women’stennis team concluded its fall season byplacing sixth in the IAIAW State Champi¬onships. Augustana College took the 1979state championship.Coach Bill Simms is extremely proud ofseniors Cheryl Flynn and Rosemary Sa-franek. Flynn had the best record of thefall, losing only two matches. One of herlosses came in the semifinal of the statetournament. Safranek lost in the quarter¬finals in both singles and doubles with hersenior partner Carolynne LaGrange.Other Maroon players at the state tour¬nament were Anne Zielinski, Lisa Deane,Lee Badgett, Nancy Thompson and IngaSmulkstys.The club’s record in dual meets was 3-4for the fall season.I J W L' T G GALake Forest 4 0Carleton 2 lChicago 2 1Beloit 1 3Lawrence 1 3Ripon 0 2 1 21 40 7 41 10 40 2 110 3 100 0 10X-men successful at Kenoshaby Sarah BurkeThe University of Wisconsin at Parksidewas the site for the Track and Field Associa¬tion’s United States Championship last Sat¬urday. The University of Chicago TrackClub won the meet by one point over the Uni¬versity of Nevada at Reno while the Maroonvarsity cross country team placed ninth,paced by the performances of Mike Axinn,Art Knight and Dave Taylor.The track club, led by Herb Lindsay,Steve Plasencia and Bill Lundberg, finishedfirst with a combined total of 57 points to Ne-vada-Reno’s 58.Axinn, with a 5:18 average time per mile,finished the five mile course in 26:31, goodenough for 32nd place out of 150 runners en¬tered.The cross country team this year has agood chance to win the Midwest Conferencetitle. Axinn feels that with a concerted effortfrom all the members of the squad they willbe able to overtake last year’s championCarleton and this year’s main competition,Beloit. Coach Ted Haydon expressed somereservations, though, mentioning thestrength and depth of the Beloit Collegeteam. In head to head competition this year, Chi¬cago has beaten all conference foes exceptBeloit. In the 17th annual Beloit CrossCountry Race held two weeks ago, theMaroons out-distanced six of seven schools,finishing a distant second to Beloit, who hadfour finishers within a minute of eachother.A lot of hope is resting on Mike Axinn’sshoulders. Heading into this Saturday’s Uni¬versity of Chicago Invitational CrossCountry Race he is riding a three-race winstreak in the conference and has a good shotat the individual title, but strong perfor¬mances are going to be needed from thewhole team including Dave Green, Knight,Taylor, Rich Heinle and Marshall Schmitt*As the season winds down, the Maroonslook strong and are getting better with expe¬rience. It is a young squad with many fresh¬men and sophomores. As Haydon said, “It’spossible for our young guys to have a reallygreat race and for one of theirs (Beloit) tofalter. One can’t predict what will happen.”Whatever the outcome, the season still hasbeen an extremely fine one for theMaroons.Volleyballers score behind Sullivanby Darrell WuDunn# In a match that saw Janet Sullivan servefifteen straight points, the University of Chi¬cago volleyball team decisively defeatedMundelein College in the Maroons’ final dis¬trict game of the season. This victory evensChicago’s record to 2-2 in the district andlifts their record overall to 6-8.Whether coach Rosie Resch’s squad quali¬fies for the state tournament depends onhow rival Lake Forest fared in their matchagainst Trinity.Chicago faced a relatively weak and inex¬perienced team in traveling to MundeleinCollege on Tuesday and captured the best-of-five match in four games. The Maroons won the opening game by a comfortablemargin, 15-10. The second game was muchcloser, however, as Mundelein edged outChicago 16-14. In the third game, the tideshifted dramatically. Chicago completelyshut out the opponent as senior Janet Sulli¬van served an incredible fifteen consecutivepoints. This was the first time this seasonthe Maroons have been involved in a 15-0rout. With the momentum thus gained, Chi¬cago breezed passed Mundelein in the fourthgame, 15-6, to take their second matchagainst district opponents.Besides Sullivan’s remarkable individualachievement, the team played creditable.The women could have played better but ascoach Resch explains, “it is hard to playwell against a weak team.” Like many teams, Chicago often plays near the level oftheir opponents.With her squad well in control of thematch, coach Resch was able to use her firstyear players. Although the younger playerslack the physical size that the experiencedplayers have to effectively play on the frontline, the freshmen performed quite well onthe back line. This helped relieve the pres¬sure on starter Becky Chase who is just re¬covering from a knee injury.Last night, the women’s volleyball teamhosted a triangular meet in the Field Housewith teams from Wheaton College andAurora College (too late for presstime).Wheaton had already qualified for the statetournament and was expected to give theMaroons a tough contest.16 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, October 26, 1979IM reportVolleyball and footballnear playoffs Stickwomen need offenseby Mark ErwinThe Intramural Men’s Football andWomen’s Volleyball seasons are nearingtheir regular season conclusion, and thereare a number of interesting divisional races.In Mens’ Intramural Football, theWabuno Bay Buccaneers held onto theirnumber one ranking by virtue of a 53-0 shell¬ing of The Department of Chemistry. TheBucs came back later in the week to defeatManifest Destiny, which had been the #6-ranked team. Psi Upsilon retained its’number two ranking, however no score wasavailable on its Tuesday game against TheEmboli. Tufts House moved up to numberthree with a combination of a 22-0 victoryover Fishbein, and the Dead Popes (former¬ly third) lost to We’re All Whores, fifth. MedII defeated The Emboli by a score of 25-0,and moved up to the H position. Ed’s Barand Grill advanced to number seven thisweek after eating Joint Effort 45-6. ManifestIntramural Football Top Ten(First place votes in parentheses)6.Votes: Hooligans, Lower Rickert, Dudley,Henderson, Hung Jury, Hale House.SCOREBOARDMen’s FootballWabuno Bay Buccaneers (7) 93Psi Upsilon (2) 87Tufts (1) 82Med II 69We’re All Whores 56Ed’s Bar and Grill 49Manifest Destiny 45Dead Popes 38Alpha Delta Phi 17Chamberlain 12Buccaneers 53Tufts 22We’re All Whores 13Med II 25Ed’s Bar & Grill 45Manifest Destiny 33Chamberlain 44Lower Rickert 19Lower Flint 14Salisbury 12Henderson 7Upper Rickert 6John Paul III 18Dodd/Mead 15Junkyard Dogs 33Hooligans 23Smegma BreathDepartment of 20Chemistry 0Fishbein 0Dead Popes 7The Emboli 0Joint Effort 6Chicago 7 13Phi Delta Theta 0Thompson 0Vincent 0Greenwood 0Dodd/Mead 6Shorey 0Joint Effort 6Bishop 6Harper Roaches 0Hideous She Demons 0Invisible Hands 0Women’s VolleyballUpper Wallace over Compton 2-15,15-13,15-5BuJo Coho over Tufts 15-11,15-12BuJo Coho over Compton 15-6,15-2Snell over Upper Flint 12-15,15-6,15-0Snell over Alpha Delta Phi by ForfeitUpper Flint over Bishop by ForfeitBuJo Coho over Snell 15-1,16-14BuJo Coho over Bishop by ForfeitMathews over Dudley 15-8,15-7Mathews over Lower Wallace 15-2,15-5Lower Flint over Lower Wallace 15-9,15-3Upper Wallace over Bishop by ForfeitSnell over Upper Wallace 7-15,15-10,15-8Lower Flint over Dudley 15-5,15-7Lower Flint over Salisbury/Dodd 15-8,15-10Delta Upsilon over Salisbury/Dodd 9-15,15-4,15-10Mathews over Lower Flint 15-10,12-15,15-8Mathews over Delta Upsilon 15-4,15-12 Destiny drops to eighth this week despite astrong first half performance against top-ranked Wabuno Bay. Rounding out the TopTen are Alpha Delta Phi ninth, idle thisweek, and Chamberlain, moving into thetenth spot after a 44-0 blanking of Phi DeltaTheta.Taking a look at how the Women’sVolleyball season has progressed up to date,in the Red League, BuJo Coho leads at 4-0.They are closely followed by Snell, whichposts a 3-1 record. Three teams, Tufts, Up¬per Flint, and Compton are each at 1-1. Overin the White Division, Mathews House, look¬ing very good, is at 4-0. Lower Flint is rightbehind at 3-1. Two teams yet to gain a vic¬tory, but who are better than their records’indicate are Dudley and Lower Wallace.Dudley’s team battled hard with only fourplayers in their loss to Lower Flint, andLower Wallace tried valiantly, but bowed toboth Mathews and Lower Flint. by Sarah BurkeWinless in their last five games, one couldexpect the University of Chicago women’sfield hockey team to be disenchanted but, tothe contrary, the team is “looking the bestthey have all season,” according to goalieGail Ellingwood. After losing many keyplayers at the beginning of the season, theyoung team is starting to pull things to-* gether.The Concordia Teacher’s College Kittensprovided the opposition last Thursday andthe Maroons gave it all they had before suc¬cumbing late in the game, 3-1. HalfbackAnna Marie Melinare scored the loneMaroon goal on a pretty scoop over the headof the Concordia goalie. The scoop, requir¬ing the lofting of the ball above the shoulder,is one of the most difficult shots to execute inthe game. The offense on the whole, can becredited with an assist on the goal as theymaintained constant pressure on the goalieleading up to the score.Riding on the enthusiasm generated bythe Concordia contest, the team travelled toLake Forest last weekend for the LakeForest Invitational Tournament. Participat¬ing for the first time in the event, theMaroons were facing three games in twodays, something which would test all theback reserves that September precondition¬ing was intended to provide.The Maroons first game was against Grin-nell College. The squad played well, excell¬ing on defense, yet, somehow, could not gettheir offense on track. Basically they lackedoffensive punch, exhibited in their lack ofaggression in the Grinnell zone. The finalscore, 3-0, did not reflect the fine efforts ofGail Ellingwood and sweeper Donna Cioffi,who performed solidly throughout thematch.The Maroons next foe in the tourney wasRockford College, a perennially strong teamin the district. The Maroons responded tothe challenge by turning one of their bestgames of the season-^ain, a 4-0 loss did notindicate the strong defensive game playedby Chicago. Center halfback Emily Bloom¬field deserved mention as she constantlypressured the Rockford players in their end.The freshmen—laden Maroons also gavesigns of improved communication through¬out the game. ifenae has been the Held hockeystrengthOn Sunday,-plough, it was as if there wasa totally different team on the field. TheMaroons acted as if they had left all theirintensity on their bus as they lost to the Uni¬versity of Wisconsin-Green Bay. The scorewas 3-0. The offense could not get untrackedand it was only a strong defensive gamewhich prevented the final tally from beingmore one-sided.The defense, representing most of the ex¬perience on the squad, again excelled dur¬ing Thuesday’s game versus Wheaton Col¬lege. Though Marie Elaina Malo popped agoal past the Wheaton goalie with only fourseconds left in the game, the stubbornWheaton defense prevented the Maroon of¬fense from sustaining any penetration dur¬ing the contest. Once more, improvementwas apparent in all facets of the Maroons’game.The team is optimistic going into their lasttwo games of the home season. Yesterdaythe young team played Valparaiso, (too latefor presstime), a team they have playedwell against in the past. On Tuesday, LakeForest comes to Stagg Field for theMaroons’ final home contest of the year.a Lombardi student runs to daylightFrom thepressboxChicago of the east? Excuuuuuse Me!!!!by Howard SulsTim Larimer of the Daily Northwesternis the newest member of the University ofChicago Non-Support Club, joining theranks of such notables as Bob Green andDavid Condon of the Chicago Tribune. Inan article entitled “Who’s the real Har¬vard of the Midwest?” Mr. Larimer at¬tempts to do a philosophical study andcomparison of Chicago’s two fine Universi¬ties. Not to say any cheap shots are taken,but next to the article are two photos, oneof Ohio State Stadium with 87,000 people,and one of Stagg Field, with 500 people. Asif the extra 86,500 people make Ohio State abetter place to be. Then again, we wouldn’tknow as well as our brethren at Northwes¬tern, who have the opportunity to travel toColumbus every other year and getstomped on, not to mention places like Wis¬consin, Iowa, East Lansing, and AnnArbor. Maybe attendance at footballgames has a direct relationship to classsize, in which case Ohio State’s freshmanchemistry course probably has 43,000 peo¬ple in it, and, by the same token, North-western’s has 14,000 in theirs.Mr. Larimer moves on from football tosocial aspects of the University, in a seriesof quotes from a freshman that couldn’thave been more suited to what he wantedto hear if he had made them up himself, Mr. Larimer finds out how everyonecomes to football games to laugh, peoplespend all their time in the library, and only“15 or 20” people out of 2000 don’t study allthe time.” Do you really think that aftertwo weeks on campus this girl knew all2000 people (actually 2400), and which onesdid not study?Discussing the aspects that make ourUniversity down here so “academically in¬spired,” Mr. Larimer relates how peoplein the C Shop “read, quietly converse,study and think.” He notes that no onelaughs uproariously, or throws food, ortells off-the-wall jokes. How our librarywalls, “are free of grafitti,” and the side¬walks. “are clean of painted messages.”Mr. Larimer then comes up with anothergreat quote, (where he finds these guys noone knows), “Students are very seriousabout their studies. That is our uniting fac¬tor.”Is this real or what? If Mr. Larimer wereto come to Chicago, again it is hoped thathe talks to someone who knows something.Believe it or not some people like Chicago.The classes are small, real professorsteach and some people (14 or 19) don’teven study all the time. OK, you won’t findmore than a few hundred people at a foot¬ball game, but things here are kept inproper perspective. Chicago plays Divi¬sion III ball, which is where they belong. Quoting Andy Rooney in the Chicago Tri¬bune, October 21, “If the University of Chi¬cago had a football team with Jay Ber-wanger and they played another collegethat actually let the students play, wouldanyone come?” Maybe not. Don’t blamethe students for dropping out of Division I.At least they didn’t have to hire the Chick¬en in order to break even at Homecom¬ing.As far as who is the real Harvard of theMidwest, Northwestern can have it. TheHarvard title is now symbolic of Chicagowith Harvaid returning to the core-typecurriculum that we at the University ofChicago have had since Robert MaynardHutchins. The article could have been re¬titled “Who’s the real University of Chica¬go of the East of the Midwest?” Seems likea good answer to that one would be the Uni¬versity of Chicago.Finally we “elitists”, as Larimer re¬ferred to people at Chicago, were notaware that it was a sign of maturity towrite on library walls, paint sidewalks,and throw food Forgiveour transgressionsand help us better our ways. Perhaps wecould come up to Evanston, home of theWomen’s Christian Temperance Unionwhich is part of the reason why Evanstonis dry, (talk about a fun place to be), andsee how it is done.The Chicago Maroon — Friday, October 26, 1979 — 17CalendarFRIDAY —Perspectives: Topic: ‘‘Air Pollution Over Lake Mi¬chigan: Where Does it Go?” guests Barry Leshy,Bruce Hicks, Robert Kelly, and Paul Franzen 6:30am, Channel 7.Crossroads: English classes for foreign women,10:00 am.Forum for Social Concerns: “The Draft: Where dowe Stand?” speaker Ellen Finkelstein, 12:00 noon.University Church library.Grad. Committee on the Study of Women: “IsGrandparenthood a Maternal Role? Differences Be¬tween Grandmothers and Grandfathers” speakerMary McDonald, 12:00 noon, Ida Noyes.Committee on Genetics: Seminar - “Genetic Anal¬ysis of the Mamalian Cell Cycle” speaker Dr. R. Mi¬chael Liskay, 2:30 pm, Cummings room 1117.Computation Center Seminar: Introduction toSCSS, 3:30-5:00 pm, Pick 124.Dept of Germanic Lang and Lit.: Lecture - ‘ ‘TheodorFontane: or the Art of the Novel” speaker HannsStefan Schultz, 4:30 pm, Classics 21.Women's Union: Meets 5:00 pm, Ida Noyes Hallabove the frog and peach. UC Gymnastics Club: Instruction available be¬tween 5:30-8:00 pm, Bartlett gym, free.Hillel: Reform-Liberal Sabbath Services, 5:30 pm,Hillel.Hillel: Orthodox (Yavneh) Sabbath Services, sun¬down, Hillel.Hillel: Adat Shalom, Sabbath Dinner, Hillel, 6:45pm, $3.00.DOC Films: “Limelight” 7:00 pm, Cobb.Folklore Society: Presents the Red Clay Ramblers,8:00 pm, Ida Noyes. Tickets at the door.Calvert House: Halloween Party, 8:30 pm, CalvertHouse.SATURDAYHillel: Orthodox (Yavneh) Sabbath Services, 9:15am, Hillel.Hillel: Conservative-Egalitarian (The Upstairs Min-yan) 9:30 am, Hillel.Creative Dance and Movement: meets 11:00 am, IdaNoyes dance room.UC Gymnastics Club: Instruction available 2:00-5:00ORGAN RECITALTHOMAS WEISFLOGThe First Unitarian Churchof Chicago57th and WoodlawnSunday, October 284 o’clockOrgan works of J.S. Bach, Buxtehude,Dupre, Vierne, and othersFree-will Offering pm, Bartlett gym, free.Calvert House: Legal Ethics Program-Topic: “Liti¬gation Ethics: Any Limits to Zealous Advocacy?”5:45-8:00 pm.DOC Films: “Norma Rae” 7:15 and 9:30 pm, “TheGrateful Dead Film” midnight, Cobb.Julliard String Quartet: Concert, 8:30 pm, MandelHall. Contact Music Dept, for tickets.UMUNNA: student Association of Nigeria-Party atCrossroads. 9:00 pm, Donation $2.00.SUNDAYRockefeller Chapel: Ecumenical Service of HolyCommunion, 9:00 am. 10:00 am, Discussion Class.Hillel: Lox and Bagel Brunch 11:00 am, Hillel.Rockefeller Chapel: University Religious Service,11AM.LAW School Films: “An Afternoon With BugsBunny” 2:00 pm. Law School Auditorium.Hillel: Workshop in Hebrew Calligraphy, 2:00 pm,Hillel.Tai Chi Club: Meets 7:30 pm, 4945 S. Dorchester(enter on 50th).International House: “China in Transition: June1978” slide show on art and culture in China, 8:00pm.Greek Student Association: Meets 8:00 pm, Inter¬national House Room D.Folkdancers: meets 8:00-11:30 pm, Ida Noyes. In-termed. advan.Woodward Court Lecture Series: “Biology andHuman Affairs: Whether to Whither and Why?"speaker Leon Kass, 8:30 pm, Woodward Court. MONDAYPerspectives: Topic: “The Anniversary of the GreatDepression” guests Barry Karl, Frederick Mishkin,and Antonia Scalia, 6:30 am, channel 7.Salisbury Geography Circle Lecture: “Geomorpho¬logy and the Pleistocene” speaker D.Q. Bowen,3:00 pm, Pick Lounge.Older Students in the College: Meeting for newand returning students, 3:30-5:00 pm. Harper 284.Dept, of Chemistry: "Pulsed Molecular Beam Stu-1 dies of Fundamental Unimolecular and BimolecularProcesses” 4:00 pm. Kent 103.United Front Committee: Planning meeting to pro¬test Navy officer recruiters on campus, 6:30 pm, IdaNoyes Hall library.Career Counseling and Placement: Law School?Business School? Either or Both?” 7:00 pm ReynoldsClub North Lounge.NOMOR: Committee meeting 7:00 pm, Ida NoyesLounge 3rd floor.Progressive Union: General Meeting, 7:30 pm, IdaNoyes Hall.Hillel: Jewish Life Cycle - The Structure of Ritualand Liturgy Class, 7:30 pm, Hillel.Photo Club: Meeting 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes darkroom.$10.Folkdancers: Meet 8:00-11:00 pm, Ida Noyes Hall.BeginnersHistory Department: “Professionalization and En¬glish Society” speaker Professor Harold Perkin,8:00 pm, Regis Room Loyola Univ. 820 N. MichiganAve.LAFFER REAL ESTATE& DEVELOPMENT COMPANYREAL ESTATE BROKERSales • Conversions • DevelopmentsSelling Real Estate is for ProfessionalsWalter B. Laffer IIReal Estate Broker667-5745Your South Side specialist working for you.LAFFER REAL ESTATE& DEVELOPMENT COMPANY HILLEL LECTURE“TO NUMBER OUR DAYS”SUNDAY, OCT. 28, 7:30 P.M.SPEAKER:PROFESSOR BARBARA MYERHOFF,Prof, and Chairman. Dept, of Anthropology, Univ.of Southern California will speak on the subject ofher book about the Elderly Jewish Community inVenice (Lot Angeles area), California and showher award-winning film about the community.Also author of “The Peyote Hunt” and “ChangingImages of the American Family.”5715 WOODLAWN AVENUEASHUM-AMSASeminar Series 1979-80Program in the Arts and Sciences Basic to HumanBiology and MedicineandAmerican Medical Students’ AssociationPresentAnn Dudley GoldblattLecturer and Consultant in Medical Law and Ethicsspeaking on the topicMisconceptions:Legal Images ofMedical PracticeMONDAY, OCTOBER 29, 19797:30 P.M.HARPER HQ The Visiting Committee to The Department of MusicpresentsPerspectives on OperaThree Monday lecturesMonday, October 29Professor Daniel Heartz,The University of California, BerkeleyOpera at the Theatre Italien, Paris, duringthe Eighteenth CenturyMonday, November 12Mr. Winton Dean,Surrey, EnglandHandel and Opera TodayMonday, November 19Professor William C. Holmes,The University of California, Irvine«The Reworking of Giuseppe Verdi’sLa Forza del DestinoAll lectures will be held at 8:00 P.M. inBreasted Hall, The Oriental Institute1155 East 58th StreetAdmission is free and open to the public18 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, October 26, 1979CLASSIFIED ADSAD RATESMaroon classifieds are effective andcheap. Place them in person at theMaroon business office in Ida NoyesHall by mail to the Maroon, Ida NoyesHall room 304, 1212 E. 59th St.,Chicago, 60637. All ads must be paid inadvance. Rates: 60' per line (30spaces) for U of C people, 75' per lineotherwise. SI for special headline.Deadlines. For Tuesday paper, 12noon Friday; for Friday, 12 noonWednesday.Display advertising rates areavailable upon request. 753-3263. Mrs. Katllsn 288-1600.Shopper needed groceries and errands run weekly. Car needed. Call955-0541 anytime.Part-time copy editor for quarterlyscientific journal. Equivalent of 2-3days per quarter; schedule flexible.Possible 3 year term. Contact T.Schopf, 753-8163, or send CV toPALEOBIOLOGY, HGS„ 5734 S. EllisAve.Native Serbo-Croatian speaker to helpgrad student increase fluency Inspoken language at least 1 hr. weekly.Call Masha - 241-6878. The U of C Folkdancers will hold theirannual festival on November 2, 3 and4. There will be a dance party Fridaynight, an ethnic music and dance partySaturday night and workshops Sat.and Sun. beginning at 9 a.m. We willhave 3 superb guest Instructorsteaching Mexican, Bulgarian andMacedonian dance shops for beginners. For Info call Blythe 324-6287.ARTISTS ANDCRAFTERSIf you are interested in sharinggallerv-shop space at 57th andWoodIChrls 493-3290. Total dues will be$15. No commission, but a few hours ofwork per week will be requiredSPACE2 BR CONDO 2 BLKS FROM UC.Hdwd. firs., new kit. and bath. Avail.Immed. $45,000.565-1361,321-0432.LAST UNIT LEFT1 br condo in Kenwood - 4726 S. Greenwood. Tastefully renovated $32,000. Byappointment only. Matrix Realty Co.248-6400.Need an apartment or tenant? Call theStudent Gov't Housing Search Service753-3273. 4-6 weekdays.Large 1 bd. apt. $350.493-3822,493-2179.Condo for sale. E. Hyde Pk„ large 2bd. 493 3822 or 493-2179,Co-op apt. for sale-3 rooms; sm.bdrm., separate Ivg. anddng rms„ kit¬chenette, bath. Good location. Safe,well-maintained bldg. Only $73/mo. in-cl. all taxes and heat and gas. ONLY$20,000. Call PAULA 7S3-2719, 752-4506.Tired of Hyde Park? History grad, stu¬dent has very large 2 bedroom apt InNewtown to share with quiet, indepen¬dent man or woman. Close to lake andL-not a bad commute. $175/mo. CallJohn, 871-4572.Female Roommate to share luxuryapt. In East Hyde Park. Dishwasher,carpet, a/c. Your share $270-must see.643-8975.1st, 2nd yr. Grads. Interested in cheapco-op living come see our house Sun.Oct. 28 4:30 pm. Rents average 65/mo.5621 University, 955-2653 GammaAlpha.Sublet big de luxe studio Apt. 12thfloor Regents Park, sunny w/w carpet,campus bus. From Dec. 1st, $3l4/mo.363-2567/eve.Studio aptmts. for rent avail. Nov. 1and Dec. 1. Nr. University. Pref. gradstudent. 238-7941.1 RM. In 3 RM Apt. 57th and Harper $95month Tel. 241-6981.Roommate wanted: female, non-smoker, for beautiful, airy, lake viewapt. $97 mo. on B and D mini and NSbus routes 48 and Dorchester. Ex¬cellent security, nice people 536-6036pm and weekends.Mature and responsible male needsroom In University/Hvde Park areathrough November. Arr. flexible •work/board exchange or rental basis.Please call 493-2362 or 2361 morningsor evenings.PEOPLE WANTEDThe Department of BehavioralSciences needs people who want toparticipate as paid subjects Inpsychollngulstic and Cognitivepsychology experiments. For furtherinformation call 753-4718.Wanted: Darkroom Technician 15-20hrs/wk. Student with some experiencepreferable. Pay negotiable. On cam-pus. 753-8669.INTERESTED In women's healthcare? Volunteers needed for pregnan¬cy testing In Hyde Park. Call Kay667 5505.Drivers (full or part time) wanted forevening pizza deliveries In Hyde Parkonly. Earnings potential $25-90 pershift. Car required. Call Jim. R.667-7213. Medici, E. 57th St.Wanted: 15-20 hour position availableIn local financial Institution. Light typ¬ing and ability to deal with publicvital. Call Ulana McCoy, 955-4444.Cooks. Fast, hard working people (ex¬perienced or Inexperienced) wantedfor very busy pizza restaurant. Nightsand weekends a must. Full or parttime. Please call Jim. 667-7213 Medici.E. 57th St.Babysitter wanted for 9 mo. old. Max.of 30 hrs/wk. Call 752-7402.Recent college graduate? Consider adifferent tack-home management.S150/wk. and benefits. 40/hrs. flexiblyscheduled. Interesting family. SouthShore home. Cook, clean, care for In¬fant. On-the-|ob training. Call 375-6353anytime.Babysitter wanted: Faculty memberwishes experienced sitter to care tortwo year old daughter. One afternoonper week, Wed. or-Thurs. approx. 12-5p.m. Phone 241 5994, >Chicago Sinai Congregation seeks afull time secretary (40 hrs.) for theRabbi. Excellent typing skills, someshorthand. Available December 1. Call FOR SALEPassport Photos while you wait. ModelCamera, 1342 E. 55th St. Chicago, III.60615. Call 493-670071 DATSUN 510; Excellent Cond.,Engine Rebuilt. $ 1200/Negotiable.Mary, 324-1820.HALF-FARE COUPON for sale. AmAirline. Call 528-3016 eves.1968 Mustang fine mechanically somebody quirks $400. Call 288-S676 after 6pm or before 9 am.Closeout Special! Canon AV-1 with 50mm 1.8 lens now only $209.95! Specialbonus: a Canon hiking case, valued at$30.00 Special good until November 6,1979 or until out of stock. ModelCamera, 1342 E, 55th St.A Good-used Sofa-$15; Spice rack withsplces-$15; Wooden Shelves for8lasses-$10; Mlsc. Plants; Kitchentensils. MUST SELL; am moving.Call Phil from 10/29 on after 9:30pm-288-7260.Half-fare United coupons for sale. Call955-7472, 241-7282, except weekends.Apt. sale - everything from basics toclutter Oct. 27 and 28, 10-4. 5050 S. LakeShore, Apt, 1011.Brown 7-ft. couch, $50; glass-fronthutch, $50; Coldspot refrig. $25.324-1597.Moving sale: Sat., Oct. 27, 9 a.m. • 4p.m. Desk, coffee and end tables,doublebed mattress, carpet (7' x 9'),chairs, snowtlres, dresser, clothes,plants and more. Good buys! 5455 S.Blackstone»6A; Call 324-2563.BMW 1600 $950. David 324-5447.1972 Pontiac LeMans pb., ps., auto.,am-fm. New battery and snow tires.Asking $450. Call 955-3484 from 7p.m.-11:30 p.m.HALF-FARE COUPONS Americanand United Airlines. CALL 753-3511.1975 DODGE DART for sale AC, V8,PS, PB. AM-FM, Mich, radials. Goodcond., Only $1950, best to call 7:30 a.m.Phone 684-4509.PEOPLE FOR SALEProfessional photography for modelcomposites. Call 684-2286.ARTWORK • posters, Illustration,calligraphy. Invitations, etc. NoelYuovovlch, 5441 S. Kenwood 493-2399.AMBITIOUS PEOPLE - Start yourprofitable business. We help. 225-2583.Editorial Services. References:Praxis, KS Hart, McGraw-Hill.Thomas Loesch: 348-2085.Retired secretary will do typing of stu¬dent papers, etc. Student Rates821-1868.Full time openings In toddlerplaygroup. Campus loc. Meals,$55/work week. Call 288-5355.Wife of student available for full orpart time babysitting. Experienced.Call 752-7907.SCENESFun Run Oct. 27, Midway 9am-3ml.COOKING CLASSES. Chinese or In¬ternational. Full participation, smallclasses. 538-1324. Wendy Gerlck.The Folklore Society presents the RedClay Ramblers TONIGHT at 8:00 InIda Noyes. Tickets available at thedoor, $4 or $3 with UCID.Tamil movie Mullum Mararum I-House homeroom Oct. 27, 2 p.m.,admn.$2.PERSONALSWriters' Workshop Plaza 2-8377.Kim- Welcome to Chicago! It is a goodplace for Bears to be together. R.P.Japanese Student wishes to corres¬pond In English with other students.Please write to Mr. Yoshlkazu ljuin-Ino, 1-12-16 Hlgashl-cho, Kichljojl,Musashlno Tokyo 180 Japan.Will exchange open-economyeconomic enlightenment for Instruc¬tion In squash from a folksingingpolyglotPREGNANCY TEST SATURDAY 10-1. Augustana Church 5500 W.Woodlawn. Bring 1st morning urinesample. $1.50 donation. SouthsldeWomen's Health. 667-5505.FOLK DANCEFESTIVAL RUN FORCREWFun run Oct. 27, Midway 9 am 3 ml.NO TIMEFOR LOVE?Filled with gripes or wonderfully hap¬py stories of what it means to workwhile attending school? Maroonreporter writing series on studentswho work and needs to hear what youhave to say. Call Richard at 753-3265.LOST AND FOUNDLOST: Elgin watch near Ad. Bldg.10/15/79. Great sentimental value.Reward. Mrs. Kahn 753-3370.SCIENCEAssoc, for Women In Science meetingMonday, Oct. 29, 7:30-9 p.m. EFI rm480 featuring C. Sachs on "FINAN¬CIAL ESTATE PLANNING''. Formore info:.M. Listvan 3-8670.SKI TEAMDon't think the Midwest hills arechallenging? Challenge the Midwest!Join the UC Ski team. PracticesTuesdays 4:15 pm at Bartlett Gym. In¬fo call Mitch Levine 752-5977.FOLK DANCINGThe U of C Folkdancers have twoweekly meetings at Ida Noyes. Sun¬days at 8:00 Inn - Adv. and Mondays at8:00 beginners. All are welcome.WOMEN'SRAP GROUPWomen's Rap Group meets everyTuesda y at 7:30 p. m. on the 3rd floor ofthe Blue Gargoyle. For Info, call752-5655.COURT STUDIOPLAY PROPOSALSWill be accepted for the winter quarteruntil Oct. 29. See Judy Fink on the 3rdfloor of the Reynolds Club or call753-3583.SINGLESHYDE PARK SINGLES-ChutzpahUnlimited, a singles group for Jewishadults, 25-45, Is holding a Super Sun¬day Brunch, October 28. For more In¬formation, call Ed 324-3686 or Eleanor248-2661.WOMEN'SMAGAZINEPrlmavera V is out! On sale In mostlocal bookstores. We need new staffmentbers. Call 752-5655 for Info.MICHIGANTHREE OAKS TWP. 485' on pictures¬que Gallon River - beautiful two levelcedar home on wooded two acres gent¬ly sloping to the River - 3-4 br. withmany amenities. Call for details!$119,500.THREE OAKS TWP. 25 acres zonedlight Industrial • almost all tillable.Many feet of highway frontage.$57,000. RITTER AND HEINZREALTORS, NEW BUFFALO, Ml.616-469-3950.CHINA IN TRANSITION:JUNE 1978A SLIDE SHOW by Robert Borja onart and culture In China. Mr. Borja,award-winning Illustrator, was oncommission to take pictures for theWorld Book Encyclopedia In June1978. Oct. 28, Sunday, 8 p.m. Interna¬tional House, Home Room, 1414 E 59thSt. Informal talk and refreshmentsfollow.ADVENTURE,GOLDFANTASY GAMES 2 p.m. Saturday,10/29/79, Ida Noyes. D & D, Traveller,etc Beginners welcome! I CONDOS:NEAR U OF C. 2 bedrm., delightw/balcony, mod kit., and bath andgarage. Cali Pat for details. $52,900KENNEDY, RYAN,MONIGAL 4 ASSOCIATES.5508 S Lake Park 667 6666LOVELY CONDO 2 bedrm. onbeautiful residential street. All newkit. and bath, forma! dining rm., Ivg.rm. w/wbfplc. Priced for quick sale at$59,900. Call Diane Partonas.KENNEDY, RYAN,MONIGAL 4 ASSOCIATES5508 S. Lake Park 667 6666NEWPORT CONDO 3 bedrm.. 2 bathcorner unit panoramic view of Lakeand city skyline. $125. Call AveryWilliams.KENNEDY, RYAN,MONIGAL 4 ASSOCIATES5508 S. Lake Park 667-6666CO-OPS ■CO-OP NEAR CAMPUS Lovinglymaintained bldg, wbfplc and beamedcelling In 2 bdrm. with sun parlor. Newkit. and bath. $52,000 for equity callEleanor Coe.KENNEDY, RYAN,MONIGAL 4 ASSOCIATES5508 S. Lake Park 667-6666APT. BUILDINGS (HYDE PARK)CONVERTED MANSION 4 legalspacious apts. w/nat. wdwk. andcoachhouse. Gracious Ivg. and good In¬come Asking $215,000 Call AveryWilliams.KENNEDY, RYAN,MONIGAL 4 ASSOCIATES5508 S. Lake Park 667-6666OPEN HOUSESUNDAY, OCTOBER 28th, 1 to 4 p m4826 S. Kimbark • 5 bdrm. w/wdfplc.$157,000. 1400 E. 54th St. - 4 bdrm. 2Wbath TWNHSE. $126,000. 1156 E. 48thSt. - 3 bdrm., w/fam. rm. TWNHSE.$117,000. Serious Buyers only - Brokercooperation invited.KENNEDY, RYAN.MONIGAL ASSOCIATES5508 S. Lake Park 667-6666PHOTO CLUBColor Course Mon., Oct. 29, 8:00 p.m.Ida Noyes Darkroom $10.CONDUCTEDHOUSE SALESLUXURIOUS HYDE PARKTOWNHOUSE - 5217 University, UnitD. Saturday, Oct. 27, 10 a.m. - 3 p.m.,Sunday Oct. 28,11 a.m. -2 p.m. Profes¬sionally decorated w/Baker consolecabinet; Black/gold nest tables; brasscocktail table, Omni walnut wall unit;ebony/walnut desk, unusual Henredonfrultwood trestle table/4 cane chairs;needlepoint footstool; pedestal;deslgner lamps and accessory pieces;crystal, fine china, cut glass, silver,etc. Moroccan and Oriental rugs andrunner, original oil paintings; stunn¬ing brown velvet sectional, blackleather chair/ottoman; tortoise-shellcocktail table; pr. Paul Mcobb chairs,-striped hide-a bed; numerous bdrm.pieces; vacuum cleaners, firescreen;refrigerator; garden equipment; toomuch to list.AT HOME SALES, 654-4320, 986-0818.UC HOTLINE753-1777From 7 p.m. to 7 a.m. there Is a placeyou can call If you have a Question,need a Referral, or want to Talk — TheUC HOTLINE.KOSHER KITCHEN?A Kosher Cafeteria is now beingorganized for '80-'81. If you would beInterested in buying some of yourmeals there, drop in at Hlllel and leaveyour name.MONTE ITH 4 RANDMr Montelth and Miss Rand seemnothing so much as two Innocentsthreading their way, hand-tn-handamong such hazards as marijuana andcocaine, x-rated photo machines, sexchange operations and extremistpolitics.Reporter: and what do you think of allyour good reviews?Montelth and Rand We though they'dcost us a lot more.Montelth and Rand will be appearingIn Mandel Hall Saturday, Nov. 2.Tickets are now on sale. MAB,BENEFITAUCTIONCome to an auction with dinner anddrinks at Sauer's Restaurant, 311 E.23rd St., to benefit Hyde Park's An¬cona School on Nov. 2nd from 7 p.m.for a $10 donation. New householdequipment, original art works andmany Items making nice holiday giftsare available. Call 924-2356 or 241-6617.PROGRAMMER/ANAYLST The Center for Research In SecurityPrices In the Graduate School ofBusiness needs a full-time program¬mer/analyst to develop and maintainresearch data bases and assist in theoverall research effort. Applicantsshould have experience with IBM370/168 (OS/VS or VM), knowledge ofPL/L or Fortran, (370 ASSEMBLERdesirable also); and prior tralning-orwillingness to learn • finance andstatistics. Good communication skillsessential. Position available Immediately. Salary Range $17K-$21K,plus University of Chicago Benefits,including partial tuition remission.Position offers considerable flexibili¬ty, responsibility, challenge and op¬portunities for growth. If Interestedand qualified, contact ProfessorScholes, 753 3686 The University ofChicago is an Equal Opportunity/Af¬firmative Action Employer.CAMBODIATODAYInformative talk on Cambodia, theFamine, refugee problems, the reliefeffort, and effects on other So. EastAslan Countries. Given by Dr. EdwinSilverman, Director of Governor's In¬fo. Center for Aslan Assistance. Nov.1, Thurs. 7.30 p.m. InternationalHouse, Home Room.PIANO LESSONSProfessional pianist seeks eagerstudents, beginning to advanced. Alsoavailable for accompanying andcoaching. Introductory offer: ONEFREE LESSON (no obligation). Oncampus. Call 955-9337 mornings.NEWYORKTIMES"Their most popular routines Includea conversation with a stoned bug andan encounter between two transexualswho discover they were once marriedto each other ."Jennifer Dunning reporting onMontelth and Rand."A decidedly engaglne and often in¬ventive couple."Walter KerrMontelth and Rand will be appearingin Mandel Hall Saturday, Nov. 2.Tickets are now on sate. MAB.VISUALIZATIONAND HOLISTICHEALTHEnjoy high levels of health and well¬being. Learn about holistic health anddesign and implement your own pro¬gram through use of the life style diaryand visualization in a supportivegroup. Tuesdays at the Gargoyle7-9:00 p.m. Begin this week. Call uobbl288-3706, or 337-8100SELF-HYPNOSIS SEMINAROn campus Thursdays from 7:00-9:00p.m Learn the fundamentals of SelfHypnosis and develop the skill andtechnique necessary for its use. "Ithas the power to help you transformwhatever area of your life you addressIt to from enhancing study skills andimproving health to deepening rela¬tionships and clarifying and helpingyou attain future goals." 7 sessions,$70. Taught by a clinical hypnotherapyprogi am graduate Call Dobbl 288-3706or 337-8100ENJOYComplete a day of study by giving andreceiving a deeply relaxing messagebefore a warm crackling fire Ambientenvironment, friendly people, ex¬cellent Instructor, center of campus.Tues., 9-10.30 p.m., 5655 University. 7sessions $70. Reservations call Dobbi288 3706, or 337-8100YOGAReenergize and harmonize body,mind, and spirit. Begin Yoga this weekat the Gargoyle 5.30-7:00 p.m. Hathapostures, breathing, energization,meditation and deep relaxation. 7 ses¬sions $40 Call Dobbi 288 3706 or337-8100PERSONALSM- Keep drawing and playing andwriting and inviting me over! Yourmusclebound lover with the sixty-inchchest.Writing this Is like talking to yourselfIn the stacks. Why do you go to thelibrary? Send your entry In rightaway! RegLooking for a girl named "Charlie"from New Hampshire LiteraryScience maj. met you at Mr. Kiely's onOct. 19 1 was wearing a long fringejacket Cal! me at 925-8617 before noon.Mike.MAROON PERSONALS, 5 lines orless, are F R E E!! Drop them off at theMaroon office, Ida Noyes room 304.LIKE AUDEN,PLATO, STEINU of C Gay and Lesbian Alliance willhold an office meeting Monday, Oct29th at 8 p.m. and none of those peoplewill be in attendance. Following themeeting at 9:15 p.m. there will be adiscussion group meeting. All arewelcome.SERVICESPRIME MOVE°S: 1 or 2 men w/blgtruck: We'll move your soul (andpossessions) 324-1977.CARPENTER: Shelf-systems. Plat¬form beds. Minor remodeling.Repairs. Give me a call, i'll give you ahand. David 324-5447HEAR AGAIN STEREOSells guaranteed name brand usedand demo stereo components at40% to 70% off regular prices.SPECIAL SPRING CLEARANCE SALESTOREWIDE SAVINGS INCLUDINGEQUIPMENT LIKE :E.S.S. TEMPESTSANSUIS.C. 2002SONY 1130DUAL 1237THORREST.D. 160SHERWOOD 7300SCOTT 636ADVENT 201ROTEL RX-600 (New) ...SONY E.X.-l COMPACTS Ea. $75.00... $135.00... $165.00$75.00$99.00...$145.00... $110.1... $149.1...$149J.. .. $99JComplete systems from $75 to $750. 60 daytrade back privilege. Name brand com¬ponents for limited budgets. PLUSMUCH. MUCH MORE.HEAR AGAIN STEREO7002 N. California 338-7737 .HYDE PRRK PIPE FIND TOBRCCO SHOP1552 E. 53rd - Under 1C tracksStudents under 30 get 10% offask for “Big Jim'Mon. - Sat. 9 -8; Sun. 12-5PipesPipe Tobaccos. Imported Cigarettes CigarsThe Chicago Maroon — Friday, October 26. 1979 - 19CHANCES miL*5 Features a Super Salad Bar...Steak Burgers...Super Sand¬wiches...Soup and Salad Bar...Steak and Salad Bar.Students Don’t Forget us on Sundays. 45225 S. Harperin Hyde ParkTelephone 363-1454 ATTENTION!!The Autumn quarter Student Governmentelections will be held on MON.-TUES., OCT. 29-30.The polling places will be:COBB HALL -8.30-1:30 MON. & TUES.REYNOLDS CLUB -10.00-1.30,4.00-6.00,MON. & TUES.Pollwatchers are needed for all of these times.If you want to work as a pollwatcher, please signup on door of Student Government Office, IDANOYES HALL, Rm. 306.♦It's That Time of Year AgainSpin-lt Presents Midnight MadnessEverything In The Store Is On SaleFRED WESLEY AMOTHE HORNY HORNSIfcalunrg MaceoRarke.SAY BLOW 8'BLOWBACKWARDSr-*ECM*TOFUX«Y» VAtlUtm t. Mv turn l‘wrnl>STEVE MARTINIMeiwiwe fcfeWtU r . FUNKADEUCUncle Jam Wants YouCruel Stlnr*<fn»nThr rud ShncO Includes Freak Of The Weektoot justlKnee Deeo Field ManeuversTHHjr(faff$Comtdv U Not Pretty! § « "TWENNYNINEFeaturingLENNY WHITEBEST OF FRIENDS MFG.40 % OFF XT - 7.98 ip - 4.79 8.98 lp - 5.39This Friday Oct. 26 9 P.M. - 2 A.M.Wear A Costume - Great Prizes each hour for the host one.Bring your friends - this is A SALE you won't want to miss.