Vol. 89 No. 27 ., r n The University of Chicago c, Copyright 1979 The Chicago Maroon Friday, January 18, 1980Dr. Irwin RosenbergFaculty Senate adoptsPick study’s findingsBy Andrew Patner Filler expulsion overruledBy Andrew PatnerThe Council of the Faculty Sen¬ate Tuesday unanimously adoptedthe Rosenberg committee’s reporton awards and prizes.The report, completed last No¬vember, recommended that theCouncil appoint a standing com¬mittee on awards and prizes andthat the University continue tomake the four all-Universityawards that it has given in thepast, including the controversialPick Award.At the December Council meet¬ing. Paul Meier, spokesman of theCommittee of the Council, recom¬mended adoption of the body of theRosenberg report with modifica¬tions of its recommendations.Meier proposed that the report’sspecifications for each award beshelved.But at the same meeting Dr.Irwin Rosenberg, chairman of theprize study committee, objectedthat “the recommendations of the Committee of the Council appearto wreaken” his committee’s re¬port. Rosenberg is also a Councilmember.Between the December and Jan¬uary Council meetings, the Com¬mittee of the Council apparentlydropped their proposed modifica¬tions.“The amendments died a deathof silence,” one Council membersaid.With the faculty adoption of thereport, it will be printed in full inthe University Record. PresidentGray is now moving with the Coun¬cil to appoint the standing commit¬tee on prizes and awards. The Ro¬senberg report recommended thatit be a committee of eight with afaculty member as chairman,three other faculty members, twotrustees, one representative of theAlumni Organization, and one“other member of the Universitycommunity.” Members wouldserve staggered three-year terms.Turn to Page 2 Dean of Students Charles O’Con¬nell has informed graduate studentAaron Filler that he has over¬turned the finding of a divisionaldisciplinary committee that Fillerwas guilty of a “serious breach ofmedical ethics.”“The record before me does notsupport the conclusion that youractions constitute a serious breachof medical ethics,’’ O’Connell saidin a letter to Filler last month.Filler was expelled from thePritzker School of Medicine lastsummer after charges were lodgedagainst him by Dr Frank Baker,director of emergency medicine.Baker charged that Killer hadmade unauthorized photographs ofthe emergency room.Filler had received signed re¬leases from all persons photo¬graphed and had the permission ofthe residents on duty. The pictureswere taken for an article for theReader but were never used. Whenthe article appeared it was accom¬panied by authorized photo¬graphs.O’Connell also ordered Filler'sstatus returned to the leave of ab¬sence he had when he left for Har¬vard to pursue a doctorate in an¬thropology. Filler received hismaster's degree in that subjectSecurity at the 59th St. IC sta¬tion, the site of three rapes in thepast six months, will soon be im¬proved for safety according to Jo¬seph L. Matalone. Regional Trans¬portation Authority security chief.Matalone met yesterday withJonathan Kleinbard, Universityvice-president for community af¬fairs, to discuss the security of ICstations used by the Universitycommunity. In an interview onWednesday, President Gray saidthe university “will try to getevery possible security measure"at the station. Nancy ClevelandAaron Fillerfrom the University of Chicago atthe December convocation.But O'Connell left intact the dis¬ciplinary committee’s conditionthat Filler spend his first yearback at the University on proba¬tion.Filler had objected to the hear¬ing’s findings on a number of pro¬cedural, factual, ethical, and legalgrounds, but O’Connell told Fillerthat he found much of his objec¬tions “without merit.” O'ConnellKleinbard w as to ask for securityguards at the station, as well as,feasibility studies to improve thesafety of shelters on the plat¬formsThe meeting between the RTAand the University comes five daysafter an eighteen year old highschool student was raped at the59th St. station.Since August there have beentwo other rapes at the IC stationwhich students have described aspoorly lit and unguardedPolice feel that the same manw as involved in all three incidents.A composite sketch of the rape sus¬pect was printed in Tuesday’sMaroon said that the committee had appro¬priate jurisdiction and that it exhi¬bited proper procedure and dueprocess in its hearing. He statedthat he found Filler’s actions “co¬vert” and that Filler displayed a“lack of maturity and judgementthat raised justifiable concernabout your functioning in a clinicalsetting."But. O’Connell said, becausethere was no serious breach ofmedical ethics, and “only for thatreason”, he was overturning theexpulsion.Filler, speaking from Cam¬bridge Massachusetts, said thathe and his attorneys, who preparedhis appeal, were still consideringthe letter and still had severalpoints they were discussing withUniversity administrators. JoelW'eisman. one of Filler’s attorneys,said that he has “not ruled out anycourse of action.”A subcommittee of the MedicalStudent Council is considering pro¬posals to spell out the divisionaldisciplinary procedures in moredetail, according to Joseph Ceith-aml. dean of students in the medi¬cal school.Filler’s case has also come up atthe meetings of the American Med¬ical Student Association and theUniversity has drawn protestsfrom the leadership of that organi¬zation.Kleinbard said Wednesday thatthe University feels that shelters,better lighting and a communica¬tion system from the platform topolice are essential to improvingsecurity at IC stations.According to Kleinbard. the Uni¬versity has sought improvementsof the security in the past, but wasturned down by the RTA for finan¬cial reasons.Kleinbard said that there was“no chance” the University wouldaid in financing the security im¬provements. “It will have to comefrom the public sector,” he saidMatalone promised on Wednes¬day that “we are going to try anddo something very quickly.”Chicago, Princeton, Johns Hopkins in political battle for eye in skyU of C, RTA meet on IC securityBy Jeff DavitzBy Zachary RossIn 1983, NASA will launch intoorbit a $500 million telescope thatwill provide an unprecedentedview of the cosmos. On earth,meanwhile, one of the great politi¬cal battles of the decade is shapingup, writh the University of Chicagoat the forefront.The prize in question is the SpaceTelescope Science Institute(STSI), the ground base forNASA’s orbiting telescope. The In¬stitute will be the world’s leadingcenter for observational astron¬omy for decades to come. Competi¬tion for the Institute’s location hasalready narrowed to three groups,and next summer NASA will de¬cide among proposals for a Mary¬land site near John Hopkins Uni¬ versity, a site on the campus ofPrinceton University, and a site atFermilab, 30 miles west of Chica¬go. Although NASA alone willmake the final decision, each of thegroups is aware of the volatile his¬tory of government grants forscience.The F’ermilab site was the win¬ner of a similar compettion in 1966.The prize then was the NationalAccelerator Laboratory, brain¬child of particle physicists hopingto explore the inner structure ofatoms. Before the issue was re¬solved. however, a great politicalbattle was waged over the choiceof a site. Years later, Lyndon John¬son half-seriously recalled that theAccelerator debate had been thesecond most troublesome problemof his presidencyThe competition for the STSI David Schrammpromises to be no less political.The University is making an in¬tense effort to muster support for the Fermilab site. DavidSchramm, Chairman of the As¬tronomy and Astrophysics Depart¬ment, is in almost daily contactwith state and national administra¬tors. The most enthusiastic re¬sponse has come from GovernorThompson who has helped to raiseendowment funds for the Institute.Senator Stevenson also has ex¬pressed interest and recently dis¬cussed the matter with PresidentCarter; few believe however thatCarter will commit himself in anelection year.The University effort is beingwaged to secure the potential ben¬efits of the STSI Although the In¬stitute would be operated by an as¬sociation of 53 universities, knownas The Universities Research As¬sociation. it would be constructedby the University of Chicago, and its director would be a tenuredmember of the University faculty.Hundreds of astronomers fromdozens of countries would flock tothe Chicago area, many of themundoubtedly visiting the Quadran¬gles.Turn to Page 2Staff MeetingThere will be a staff meetingand reception this afternoon at4 pm in The Maroon office. Allstaff members of The MaroonGrey City Journal, and ChicagoLiterary Review are advised toattend There will be a specialguest and refreshments will beservedSG to start food coopBy John ShamisJeff Elton, president of Student Govern¬ment, has announced the establishment of aS.G. sponsored food coop.The coop will be administered by a Boardof Trustees consisting of seven members;three to be appointed by the student govern¬ment, three to be chosen by the studentmembers of the food coop, and one ex-officioof student government. Memberships willbe accepted at the Student government of¬fice, located in Ida Noyes, beginning thisTuesday. •The cost of membership will be deter¬mined by the Board of trustees and is ex¬pected to be between one and five dollars. Atfirst, the coop will be limited to 75-100members. Elton expects one full time em¬ployee will be necessary to run the opera¬tion.Marty Kounitz and Mike Perlin of Mike’sMom’s Granola will oe the purchasingagents for the coop. Produce will be boughtat the South Water Street Market. Cheese,grain, nuts and other health foods will bepurchased thru the Greater Illinois PeoplesCoop. Meat and Dairy Products will be Chris Persansbought at the Fulton Street Market. Accord¬ing to Elton, this will make it possible for theUniversity students to buy food “at thelowest prices on the South Side.”After an individual becomes a member,he may place orders by phoning the studentgovernment office between 1 pm and 6 pmby the Friday of that week.Minimum purchases will be $7.50 althoughmembers will be allowed to pool orders.They will be distributed at Quaker House,located at 5615 Woodlawn Ave. Tuesday eve¬nings. Elton says that the service will be ex¬panded if there is an enthusiastic response. PickContinued from Page 1The report recommends procedures forestablishing, selecting, and reviewing all-University awards. To establish a newaward, a written proposal must first meetwith the approval of the awards committee,and then the president and the Board ofTrustees. If the Board approves the prize,the president could begin the selectionprocess “only after a public announcementof the award to the University communitywith a full text of the charge to the selectioncommittee, and with a statement of the na¬ture of the award and the selectionprocess.”All selection committees would be an¬nounced and appointed by the president inconsultation with awards committee and theCommittee of the Council and the ExecutiveCommittee of the Board of Trustees. Theawards committee would review all the se¬lected recipients. If the committee and theBoard of Trustees approve the award, pub¬lic announcement would be made.In an interview Wednesday, PresidentGray praised the committee and said shewill soon make the appointments to thestanding committee. Gray also said thatwith the inception of the committee and the necessary negotiations to determine how, orif, the Pick Fund wishes to continue to makean award, it could be a year before anotheraward is given for international affairs.Sky eyeContinued from Page 1The greatest potential gain, however, isthat the University’s proximity to the Insti¬tute would give it an inside track on pioneer¬ing work in astronomy. “We will be able tobe involved early in major discoveries,”said Schramm.Such discoveries might answer questionsabout quasars, the formation of galaxies,and the existence of planets orbiting otherstars. Until now, astronomers have had toview the universe through the earth’s atmo¬sphere which distorts and diffuses starlight.The Space Telescopre, far above the atmo¬sphere, will be able to detect objects tentimes more distant than could ground-basedinstruments.“It will literally be true,” said Schramm,“that we will have a thousand ‘new uni¬verses’ to explore, because we will be ableto see a thousand times more space.”Ombudsman issues Autumn reportBruce Lewenstein works to strike a balancebetween efficency and fairness inadministrative decisionsBy Bruce LewensteinStudent OmbudsmanOf the 97 cases handled by the Office of theStudent Ombudsman during the AutumnQuarter, at least half involved conflicts be¬tween efficient operation of the Universityand an ideal standard of fairness. Theseconflicts generally arose when the circum¬stances of an individual student ran afoul ofprocedures designed to handle most of thepeople most of the time.Many cases involving administrativerules require little effort to find solutionswithin normal procedures, such as the caseabove. Some, however, require administra¬tors to make exceptions to established pro¬cedures. At the beginning of the AutumnQuarter, students frequently wish to changethe board contracts they have signed theprevious spring. Several students com¬plained to the Ombudsman's Office duringthe first week of school after secretaries atthe Housing Office told them that the dead¬line for board contract changes hadpassed.The staff of the Housing Office told methat the deadline had indeed passed. Techni¬cally, it had passed as soon as the studentshave signed their contracts. In fact, theHousing Office allows changes for a fewdays at the beginning of the quarter, but hadto impose a cutoff date in order to plan forefficient operation of the food service.To provide a compromise between the es¬tablished procedures and the unfairnessperceived by students, the Housing Officemade an exception to its own policy and pre¬pared a form on which students might re¬quest board contract changes. The HousingOffice attempted to act on those requestswithin a week. I later heard that most of thepeople who had come to the Ombudsman’sOffice received the changes they desired.Procedures are established for good rea¬son: to provide an efficient means for mak¬ing routine decisions in an office. In general,procedures and policies attempt to be fair.An exception to a rule is usually no fairerthan rigid application of a rule. It is certain¬ly not fair to set aside a rule “just becauseI’m a student,” as some students believe.But neither is it fair to treat people asthough they are undeserving of fair proce¬dures precisely because they are students.In one of my major cases this quarter, Ibelieved that a student was denied fair pro¬cedures because he was a student. He hadbeen fired from a job at the University anddiscovered that he had no grievance proce-2—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, January 18, dures available when he wished to protesthis dismissal. The department head ultima¬tely responsible for the dismissal would notdiscuss the matter with him.The department head agreed to meet withme, however, and I investigated the inci¬dents leading to the dismissal. I determinedthat, although there were misunderstand¬ings and perhaps unduly harsh positions onboth sides, the department head had theright to order the dismissal. He may evenhave been justified in doing so.Many people told me during this investi¬gation that the absence of formal grievanceprocedures allows informal procedures tooperate efficiently and solve most job-relat¬ed problems. Several people described theimmediate case as the first major grievancein two or three years.As Ombudsman. I believe my duty is tofairness; my charge from the President isboth to help resolve specific complaints and“to call attention to injustices or abuses ofdiscretion.” While I recognize that the Uni¬versity must operate efficiently, I try to findsolutions which give students fair treat¬ment. I found the absence of grievance pro¬cedures for some student employees un¬fair.The need for elaborate reporting and re¬cord-keeping for formal grievance proce¬dures might obstruct the efficient solution ofmost problems. However, that efficiency be¬comes unfair when the informal procedurescannot cope with strong feelings on bothsides.The Dean of Students, Charles O’Connell,is also concerned by the lack of grievanceprocedures for students employed by theUniversity He is now working with theDirector of Personnel, Edward Coleman, tosee if some relatively simple procedurescan be devised which will take into accountboth the efficiency needed most often andthe formality needed* on occasion for fair¬ness.Sometimes, written procedures becometoo rigid as time passes. Attempting tocreate better systems, administrators aban¬don the written procedures and develop newones. In the interests of efficiency and flex¬ible application, the new procedures maynever be published. But neither are the oldprocedures, now forgotten and ignored bythe administrators, ever explicitly re¬nounced. It is then unfair to continue pres¬enting those obsolete procedures to stu¬dents.For example, a graduate student was ap-1980 Nancy ClevelandBruce Lewensteinpealing his grade of low-pass on a foreignlanguage exam required by his department.He believed he deserved a high-pass. Hebased his appeal on a 1972 publication fromthe Office of Test Administration, whichsaid that the final grade would be deter¬mined by the total point score of a combinedtranslation and vocabulary test.Investigation showed that his grade actu¬ally depended on the scores in the individualparts of the exam. This new system hadevolved over the past seven years, but hadnever been explicitly substituted for the oldsystem. The 1972 guideline continued to becirculated. Although the new system was infact applied more flexibly than the old stan¬dards, the student had been given an unfairexpectation of how his test would be grad¬ed.After several discussions among thegraders, the test administrators, and thestudent’s Dean of Students, the Office ofTest Administration granted the appeal.The student now has a high-pass grade re¬corded. His problem, however, raises bothadministrative issues involving efficiencyand fairness and academic issues regardingthe relative importance of translation andvocabulary on foreign language exams. The hardest problems involving fairnessoccur when an efficient procedure is seen asfair by some and as unfair by others. Thenthere is no right answer. This happened inone of the several cases which were causedby the delayed beginning of the AutumnQuarter.As one result of that delay, some studentsin the Business School were required to reg¬ister before their dormitories officiallyopened. They were charged for an extranight’s lodging. Their Dean of Students, Lu-bosh Hale, made arrangements to reim¬burse the affected students.As with many procedures at the BusinessSchool, the reimbursement operated on themarket principle. Those students concernedabout the cost of the extra night’s lodgingwould find out about, and seek, the reim¬bursement Those students for whom themarginal cost of the lodging was immaterialwould not bother.At least two students, however, wereupset by the extra charge and did not learnabout the reimbursement procedure. Theycame to the Ombudsman’s Office. I agreedwith their analysis that fairness indicatedthat all people affected by the conflict be¬tween registration and housing contractdates should be notified of the available re¬imbursement.I discussed the situation with Mr. Haleand his associate Emma Pitcher. Then, atmy request, the Housing Office identifiedthe affected students and Mrs. Pitcher no¬tified them that they were eligible for the re¬imbursement.Many people will argue that nothing canbe more fair than efficient operation of themarket principle. But in my role as media¬tor between students and complaint-gen¬erating procedures. I recognize that not allpeople believe in that argument. They oe-lieve that other, less pragmatic standards offairness apply.One ultimate standard commonly men¬tioned is the fairness expected amongmembers of a community. Some students,when they perceived the immediate cause oftheir problem as unfair, attributed thatcause to a problem with this ultimate stan¬dard. Several mentioned a “lack of commu¬nity” in their complaints. They thought thatthe administrators involved in their prob¬lem were more concerned with administra¬tive efficiency than with fostering a Univer¬sity community.In the rush to tighten budgets and elimi¬nate waste, administrators are properlyconcerned about efficient operation. But itwould be a mistake for University adminis¬trators to act as though efficiency were thefinal goal. One of the most important partsof the University is the spirit of community.Fairness contributes to that spirit. It is thatspirit which makes the University morethan a place to study, to teach, and to con¬duct research; that spirit makes the Univer¬sity a place to liveNewsbriefsLuxury Hotelto openWe just may see the Hyde Park golf clas¬sic in the late ’90’s. But nothing is plannednow so will just have to settle for a Hilton.Some time in the middle of this month, "aunique, first-class hotel facility” will openat 4900 Lake Shore Drive, the hotel isspread out over approximately 4 acres“with 400 feet of Lake Shore Drive front¬age.”The hotel complex includes a four-storytower and a series of low-rise wings. Ac¬cording to George I Cowell, managingpartner of the Hyde Park Hilton, “the avail¬ability of a quality transient hotel, with afirst-class restaurant, banquet, and meetingroom facilities has historically encouragedfurther commercial development in the sur¬rounding area.”Gregory R. Dillon, senior vice-presidentof the Hilton Hotels corporation said, “thewillingness of Hilton to put its name on thisproperty affirms the resounding success ofthe efforts to redevelop the Hyde Park-Ken-wood community.”The Hilton is being built on the site of thedefunct 50th on the Lake Travelodge. Cambodia Relief meetingRelief group to meet Danila OderCambodia Relief Now, a University andHyde Park Action Group formed by stu¬dents last Quarter, will hold a meeting torenew Indochinese refugee aide efforts, thisMonday at 7:30 at International House.Dr. Edwin Silverman, director of the Gov¬ernors’s Infor mation Center for Asian Assis¬tance, and Hugh Schwartszberg. co-chair¬person of the Emergency Task Force forIndo-Chinese Refugees, will speak at themeeting. Silverman's initial lecture on theCambodian famine at the University lastquarter sparked local relief efforts.Nearly 200 students, faculty and staffmembers have attended previous meetings by the relief group. Last quarter, the reliefgroup conducted door-to-door canvasses inHyde Park, which collected over $7,500 forUnicef, the International Committee of theRed Cross and Oxfam- the three major in¬ternational relief organizations which areaiding Cambodia. More funds came from aSoutheast Asia Cultural Night which netted$2,700 for the relief group. Cambodia ReliefNow is sponsoring three Laotian refugees.Monday’s night meeting will focus on thisquarter’s planned activities including afund-raising party, additional canvassesand a coffee-house. All are welcome to at¬tend. No restrictedpooches“Heel, sit and stay.” Feel like you're athe registrar’s? No. you're really at the dogobedience class being given at the HydePark YMCA this winter. You can learn toteach your dog to behave like a registeringstudent every Tuesday from 7 to 8:15 begin¬ning Jan. 22.VolunteerssoughtThe Student Volunteer Bureau is havingits second orientation meeting of the schoolyear on Jan. 17, at 7:00 in the Blue GargoyleLibrary. 5655 S. University Volunteers whohave been in their positions since the fallquarter will talk about their volunteer expe¬rience at places such as Kozminski school,the Hyde Park Neighborhood club and theAmerican Civil Liberties Union.Myth and Reality at WoodwardMost people make a clear distinction between myth and realityWendy O’Flaherty hopes to change thatWendy O’FlahertyBy Chris IsidoreMost Woodward Court lectures strive tomake an idea, or a concept, clearer in theminds of the audience. This Sunday’s lec¬ture will be one that in many ways strives tomake a concept less clear Most people havea concept of myth and reality in their mindswhich clearly separates the two. However,Wendy O’Flaherty, Sunday’s lecturer, has avision of myth and reality which inter¬weaves the two so well that the differencebetween them almost vanishes. Fittingly,the lecture is entitled “The Elusive Bounda¬ry between Myth and Reality,” and it will beheld at 8:30 this Sunday.The question which the audience will con¬sider is neither “What is the boundary be¬tween myth and reality?”, nor is it “Whereis the boundary?” Instead the question“Why is the boundary between myth and re¬ality an elusive one?”, is the importantpoint for O’Flaherty.“Science and myth aren’t as different asthey look” said O’Flaherty. “Myth is notsomething that needs to be regarded simplyas a personal fantasy, but as something thatdoes express something that is true aboutthe way the universe is, in much the sameway that Newtonian physics tries to expresssomething that is true about the world. Inother words, science is a story some peoplehave made up to tell themselves about theway the world functions, and myth is a storythat is made up under some of the same cri¬teria of validation that scientific theoryuses, (and for many of the same purposes).The human mind applies itself in much thesame way in the making of scientific theoryand the making of some kinds of myths.”In O’Flaherty s view, these two differentperspectives of the world are not contradic¬tory, and can exist together.“What I’m saying is that having the ideathat protons and neutrons exist is useful tohuman beings in much the same way thathaving the idea that munchkins exist is use¬ful to Dorothy (of Wizard of Oz fame). Hav¬ing neutrons and protons enables you tobuild atom bombs, and all that good stuff,and having myths about Oz enables you tobuild other things, which are also useful tohave.“Myths are good to think with in the sameway that protons are. 1m not saying that theland of Oz exists, or indeed that protonsexist, or don’t exist. What 1 am saying is theway that human beings have found it usefulto think that protons exist is not so very dif¬ferent from the way that they have, fromtime to time, found it useful to think thatmunchkins exist.”O’Flaherty has long had an interest in physics and mathematics in addition tomyths. She does not claim that the lattershould or could replace the former, only thatboth have their own place in man’s world. “(I’m) not saying that myths are going toreplace Newton, just that one should takeseriously the claims that myths have thatthey really are giving you a map of territory that is useful to negotiate. It is differentfrom the map that Newtonian physics givesus, but it also allows us to operate over a dif¬ferent territory in a different way. which isalso useful to have. Did you ever see SaulSteinberg's New Yorker cover, which is amap of the world as seen by a New Yorker.(The drawing compresses the world outsideof N.Y., so that the distance from 9th Ave. tothe Hudson River is equal to the distancefrom the Hudson to Asia). Anyone who hasever lived in New York knows that that is atrue map of the world. However, if someonesaid, here you are on 9th Ave. and you wantto get to New Jersey, you would whip outsomething else, this thing with the boroughsand the bridges, and you would say. 'That ofcourse, is also a map of the world.' They areboth true, and they are both mapping thesame physical territory It depends on whatyou actually want to do with one.”O'Flaherty received her bachelor’s de¬gree from Radcliffe in 1962. and her mas¬ters' at Harvard a year later. She earned adoctorate in Sanskrit and Indian studies in1968. also from Harvard. She studied inIndia after she received her masters, andfrom 1966 until she came here a little lessthan two years ago. she taught Sanskrit andIndian religion at Oxford on an intermittentbasis where she received a second doctoratein Oriental Studies in 1973. She held thechair of history and phenomenology of reli¬gions at the Graduate Theological Union, anaffiliate of the University of California. Ber¬keley, when she left to come here to join theDivinity School, the department of SouthAsian Languages and Civilizations, theCommittee on Social Thought and the Col¬lege in July of 1978. She has written and edit¬ed numerous books on Hindu mythology.This Sunday's lecture will be the first offour Woodward court talks this quarter. Thesecond will be “ The Brethren' — The Su¬preme Court Watergate Style” given byPhilip B Kurland on February 3. The thirdwill be “The Devil in Mr Jones: Religion inthe Context of Human Sciences ", given byJonathan Z. Smith. Dean of the College, onFebruary 17. The fourth lecture which willalso be the 150th Woodward Court Lecture,will be “Looking Backward: Civil Rights inthe 1970s”, given by John Hope Franklin onMarch 4. All four lectures begin at 8:30.The Chicago Maroon—Friday, January 18, 1980—3Letters to the EditorAbout those banksTo the Editor:Several weeks ago on this page, I explicat¬ed at some length how President Gray in¬volved herself in a serious conflict of inter¬est by “promoting and standing behind" theselection of Robert McNamara as the firstrecipient of the Albert Pick Award.I noted that while Mrs. Gray was presi¬dent of the University of Chicago, she wasalso a director of the Morgan GuarantyTrust company and a member of its Bank¬ing Examining Committee. I then proceed¬ed to explain how President Gray "was tiedto McNamara as a matter of private inter¬est through the Morgan Bank at the sametime as she stood behind his selection ‘im¬partially ’ in the name of the university."Most notably. I quoted a World Bank in¬formation officer who acknowledged thatMorgan had participated in specific WorldBank projects through "co-financing" ar¬rangements. He said the private commer¬cial banks viewed “co-financing" as an at¬tractive investment opportunity since thepresence of the World Bank, in partially fi¬nancing and supervising the projects, pro¬vided the private banks with "security andan implicit guarantee that the borrower(would) be able to repay the loan.”I would now like to present to the universi¬ty community some of the detailed evidenceupon which my previous letter was based:1. According to Ms, Karen Zachrich, theWorld Bank’s "assistant to the senior advi¬sor for co-financing. ’' the World Bank co-fin-anced sixteen projects with private banks infiscal year 1979 for a total of $550 million.She said the WOrld Bank looked forward to$1.5 billion in co-financing by private banksduring the present fiscal year "since theprogram is picking up and the banks areshowing great interest."Regarding the Morgan Bank, Ms.Zachrich said "they are in here ail the time.We re in constant contact with them andthey know all our programs." She said Mor¬gan had recently joined "in four projects,two as managers, and tw?o as participants.Where they’ve been managers, they’ve or¬ganized the other private investors andthey’ve reaped the benefit of the committ¬ment fees."2, One of the recent W orld Bank projectsthat Morgan has participated in is the Ya-eyreta Hydroelectric Project in Argentina(announced publicly on October 18, 1979 inWorld Bank News Release No. 80/14). Ac¬cording to the release, the World Bank willinitially lend $210 million for the project and$945 million in co-financing will be broughtin from private banks.Ms. Karen Zachrich said that for the Ya-cyreta project, "Morgan Guaranty has aThe ChicagoMaroonEditor-in-Chief : Andrew PatnerEditor: Jaan EliasGrey City Journal Editor: David MillerFeatures Editor: Mark WallachSports Editor: Andy RothmanLiterary Review Editors: Richard Kayeand Molly McQuadeSenior Associate Editor: David GlocknerAssociate Editor: Chris IsidoreSenior Editors: Abbe Fletman and ClaudiaMagatAd Manager: Steven KaszynskiAssistant: Jan BorengasserOffice Manager: Leslie WickBusiness Manager: Joel GreenProduction: Jacob Levine, Scott Rauland,and Karen HomickThe Chicago Maroon is the student news¬paper of the University of Chicago, pub¬lished on Tuesdays and Fridays. Editorialand business offices are located on the thirdfloor of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St., Chi¬cago, 60637. Telephone: 753*3263 We wel¬come all letters and correspondence. Weask that writers limit their letters to 5O0words. We reserve the right to edit lettersfor reason of length or clarity. All lettersmust be signed by an individual and shouldbe typed and triple-spaced. Names will bewithheld upon request. AH letters becomethe property of The Maroon. mandate for around $200 million. Thismeans that the Argentinian government hasissued a statement to the bank that they arein agreement that Mogan will engage in co¬financing for that amount.”, Morgan’s participation in this project wasconfirmed by Mr. Manfredo Linder, theWorld Bank project officer who will super¬vise its financing and construction,*^ ajjj ig-To conclude, I say again:The only honest course of action for Presi¬dent Gray in this circumstance is to discloseto the university community the full extentof financial relations between the MorganBank and the World Bank.Donald G. GrossJ.D., University of ChicagoGo solarTo the Editor:I would like to comment briefly on a letterwhich appeared in last Friday’s MaroonwTitten by Mr. Jonathan Brookner. In thatletter Mr. Brookner very persuasively ar¬gued against the continued expansion ofcoal-fired electrical power plants. He citesmany of the health hazards associated withsuch power plants, and suggests that it ishigh time the American public took aserious look at what has been proposed asthe only viable alternative to nuclear power.I wholeheartedly agree w-ith Mr. Brookner’ssentiment that coal-fired pow’er plants are amanifestly unacceptable substitute, and farfrom increasing the number of these plants,it should be a national goal to eliminate sucha clear and present danger from our envi¬ronment w-ith all deliberate speed.However I cannot, as Mr. Brookner did,accede to the necessity of continuing the de¬velopment of nuclear power plants — albeit,for Mr. Brookner, an unsavory necessity.The health hazards associated with nuclearpower are only now beginning to be docu¬mented: as such, there simply are no factsthat can conclusively confirm or denywhether the fears of many such as myselfare well-founded or not. It is precisely be¬cause of the uncertainty surrounding thesepotential health hazards that the continueddevelopment of nuclear power plants is ab¬solutely unfeasible at this time.While I agree with all of Mr. Brookner’scriticisms regarding the use of coal-firedpower plants, I cannot in good conscienceadvocate the continued development of nu¬clear power plants as an alternative — nomatter how temporary.The choice facing this nation today re¬garding its future energy resources, is notbetween the lesser of two evils — coal or nu¬clear power — as many would have us be¬lieve. It is rather a much more fundamentalchoice than this, involving the very natureof our energy production and distributionsystem This choice, simply put, is whetherthis country shall embark upon a path whichis characterized by the increasing, central¬ization of energy production and distribu¬tion methods in the hands of a few large cor¬porations; or whether instead we shall optfor a choice which promises to lead to thegradual but inevitable decentralization ofour "energy economy", that of the variousrenewable energy sources broadly cate¬gorized as"solar energy".In his letter, Mr. Brookner laments thatthe ability of solar energy to make a sub¬stantial contribution in solving thiscountry's energy problem is still "decadesaway". Nothing could be further from thetruth. The ability (he. technological capabil¬ity) required to begin a careful and studiedintegration of localized solar energy prod¬uction into the national power grid is avail¬able to us today It has been estimated thatif this country w-ere to embark upon a judi¬cious use of various forms of decentralizedsolar energy production, that within 50yearsbetween 50 and 80 percent of this country’sprojected energy requirements could beproduced from these sources.Solar energy technology is not an infantscience in need of many years of careful re¬search and development before any possi¬bility of its application can even be dis¬cussed, but a technology whose time hascome.Michael J Galatigraduate studentpolitical science4—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, January 18, >980 DIRECTORY OF RESEARCHERSON WOMEN AND FEMALENESSnow being compiled by theGRADUATE COMMITTEE ON THE STUDY OF WOMENName Dept.Address Stud: MA PhD Fac_Phone _Area(s) of research or special interest:To be included and/or to help produce the directory,please fill out form below and return to the GraduateCommittee on the study of Women. Box in Ida NoyesHall, Faculty Exchange or 1212 E. 59th St., Chicago.II. 60637Check if interested in helping produce directory l IATTENTION NOW!SUPPORTING A PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE?Anderson? Connally? Kennedy?These candidates have committees on campus already.For information call Student Government at 753-3273 for thecontact persons of these committees.SUPPORTING SOMEONE ELSE?The Political Affairs Board (an independent SG committee)will help you organize. Send your name, address, and phonenumber to the Political Affairs Board, c/o Student Government.Ida Noyes Hall via FAC EX. or call SG at 753-3273. The PABis compiling lists of people interested in supporting othercandidates. The PAB will notify those listed about each other.Information about registering a campaign committee is avail¬able through SG. And the PAB will assist active committeesin bringing their candidates to campus. Write or Cali Now*The Illinois Primary is only two months away'KarenHornick grey city Guitars for hire:pp 6-7(Miller & Saracki)by Karen HornickBooks these days aren't as good asOur Western Heritage insists theyought to be. To misquote a perennialbestseller, something smells rotten inthe state of American publishing. Thefour parties involved — publishers,writers, sellers, and general readers —can't agree on the exact nature orsource of the odor, but lately some ofthem have been doing a lot of sniffing.One concerned party, Lewis H. La-pham, is the editor of Harper's. Thoughthere are as many definitions of "edi¬tor" as there are editors, one assumesthey fall ideologically between the pub¬lisher and the writer. In his "EasyChair" column last June, Laphamchallenged even this assumption. HeA conspicuous display at B. Dalton's on Wa¬bash for The Brethren, which one critic labeled "a worm's eye view of the SupremeCourt." But it is almost certain to becomenumber one — it is the Book-of-the-MonthClub selection for January. The club was re¬cently purchased by Time-Life and the ensu¬ing controversy recalled that surroundingTime-Life's mid-sixties purchase of Little-Brown.takes, with an air of begrudging dis¬taste, the side of the publisher andpocketbook.Lapham depicts the average publisher asa greedy illiterate — yet also as someone wemust presume Lapham feels is immunefrom questions of morality and social responsibility. "I can guess well enough themotives of the authors and the publishers inmaking a market for their goods . . . thequestion remains as to why people buy thestuff."The answer he proposes is manifold: Ithas become impossible to gauge whattoday's reading public is capable of understanding (not very much, Lapham suspects)because we have lost our "theater ofideas"; physicists can no longer speak to lit¬erary critics, literary critics aren't understood by geneticists, and so on. As a result,the writing market has split into two camps,the academic and the popular, there is now"quality lit" and there is "trash." Sincevery few readers can stomach both, veryfew people are well read. Hence they are un WWttAHTZ j Jt>TH KRANTZ j .worm KRANTZ JUDITH KRANTZJUDITH KRANTZPaperback rights to Judith (Scruples) were sold for 3.2 million dollars to a German j hardback. Photographed at Kroch anaKranz's vacuous new novel Princess Daisy publisher — before the book appeared in 1 Brentano's Wabash Street branch.Scruples?likely to come up with original ideas (letalone sustain a theater in which to vauntthem); so, with little understanding of theirworld, they feel threatened. Lapham con¬cludes that, to suit the audience, "The publishers oblige them with the political romances of Theodore White and ArthurSchlesinger, Jr. and with the long lettersfrom summer camp written by such giftedand salacious youths as Philip Roth andJohn Updike." Lapham's cycle comes to fullcompletion; finding weakness all along theway, he ultimately reveals the true BogeyMen in his scheme of things: the individualswho by definition create new thoughts, writers. They're not thinking and looking hardenough, or at best they're failing to maketheir thoughts communicable.Lapham's observations are more validthan his conclusions. When there's a dearthof universal truths, the first thing to determine is what could be hindering their dissemination.It is easier to become a businessman/publisher than a writer. You need littlemore than an MBA, desire, and a profit motlve. You could just as simply sell stocks orsoda pop — and chances are if you end updoing one or the other, you're not terriblydisappointed. There's never a period whenyou're very poor. In contrast, those whowould be writers can't turn from publishersto bankers or manufacturers; it is publishers they must face.Most publishers can't afford to take riskson unpublished writers (especially novelistsand poets) — the fear of losing money ismore deeply engrained in our culture thanthe fear of losing a masterpiece. And sincepublishers can't, or don't, take many risks,even mala writers today have trouble escaping the consuming "impediments" to findthe 'incandescence" Virginia Woolf promised in 1928 to women who obtained 500pounds and rooms of their own.Roger Straus, Jr., of Farrar, Straus, and Giroux on campus Monday explained whybetter writers aren't being published.Straus, a publisher, blames publishers asvehemently, if not quite as eloquently, asLapham blames writers.FSG is a rare publishing house; it has published big selling but ultra minor authors jlike Frances Parkinson Keyes ("She reallythought she was a hell of of a writer," Straussaid) and books like The Best, but moreoften it has published "quality" writers likeIsaac Bashevis Singer, Susan Sontag, andRobert Lowell. Straus boasted it was "typi¬cal" of FSG's practice to support John jMcPhee through twelve ventures before IComing Into the Country made his a big Iname.Stuart Brent, introducing Straus, praised !FSG as "one of the few remaining publishers who . . . quietly and honestly has built a jpublishing firm all of us in the book business jwill agree we don't feel the insidious hand ofMadison Avenue behind . . . the moral mani¬pulators just can't touch it."The merits of FSG aside, it remains one ofthe few independent houses in the business I— it is not owned by any larger and it contains none smaller. When FSG was founded iin 1946, its peers — Knopf, Harcourt, Brace,Doubleday among them — were all independent. Since then many have merged withlarge houses or have been swallowed up bycorporations whose primary businesswasn't necessarily books. "Communications complex" is Straus's word for the likesof ABC, CBS, and Gulf Western — all mediapowers that have acquired publishing concerns in hopes of movie tie ins and biggerprofits.Straus said that although "no publishinghouse I can think of was handed over without the agreement of management," littlegood has come of the trend toward conglomeratization. Houses aligned with communications complexes tend to adopt the mentality and practices of their foster sibling medium; books, a few books, get hard sellson TV — as movies do — and are chosensolely for their potential mass appeal — asTV shows and movies are.Straus said, "Publishers need not be incompetition with one product businesses;books can't be sold like Coke and Arid.Books aren't commodities; they are ;. . theproduct of one writer's imagination. Each isdifferent Some books are not necessarilycreated to sell three million copies."What Straus predicts will result, if conglomeratization continues to spread, seems catastrophic for literature.The increasing amounts of money spenton advertising the ordained, but not yet released, best sellers, will eschew money thatcoulc be spent pushing works considered tohave a more narrow appeal. Publishers trying to follow fads will exert more controlthan ever on their writer ("Science Fictionana virgin novels, last year, incest novels al¬ready here, tomorrow — what? Gnosticnovels?" Straus asked). Bookstore chainswill continue to proliferate and with themtheir policies of determining "how manyinches of space moves how many volumes ofbooks" and by stocking only books theyknow advertising will help them sell mostquickly. "Publishing chains are down theroaa." But the saddest consequence of all,for Straus, is the inevitable oecline in thenumber of workaday writers, those who selljust enough to support themselves solelythrough writing.Although Herbert Mitgang of The NewYork Times reported two Sundays ago that"Federal Government interest in possibleantitrust violations by mergers and acquisitions . . . seems to wane," Straus told his audience a tape of his speech would be playedbefore a Congressional committee at theend of January.The Ford Foundation and National Endowment of the Humanities recently announcec plans tocreate a non profit publishing operation that, according to Books anaArts, "will bring out compact, standardsized editions of the works of great Ameri¬can authors. The new corporation is calledLiterary Classics of the United States, Inc."This may be a harbinger of a turn in the publishing industry similar to that undergoneby television in 1967: the year the government established PBS to serve a "minority"in the populace desiring quality TVTJteetiuy <*£ Student*iu rftl ‘DudeCou* *76e dotteyeInterested in theProgram in theArts and-Sciences Basic toHuman Biology and Medicine(ASHUM)(WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 23, 198012:30 P.M.HARPER 130FACULTY and DEANS representing The University of Chicago’sSCHOOLS OF MEDICINE, PUBLIC POLICY, and SOCIAL SER¬VICE ADMINISTRATION will be present to describe the Programaims, content and relations with other programs. ASHUM studentswill also be available to answer any questions. Freshmen and Sopho¬mores interested in any aspect of human health are especially urgedto attend. LET ME DRAW YOURHOUSE...FOR FRAMING ORPERSONALIZED NOTE PAPER.PORTRAITS ALSO DONE OFYOUR PLACE OF WORK...FOR BUSINESS CARDS,LETTERHEADS, GENERALADVERTISING.GIVE SOMEONE ASPECIAL GIFT...A PORTRAIT OF THEIROWN HOME.FOR MORE DETAILS CALLSARAH WILSON947-03300ctfPh<X><X>uRockefeller memorial Chapel5850 South \Xoo<ilaxxn^ SIMMY. JAM 'ARY 209 \.M. 1 a iimruical Srrvicr of Hol\ < 'ommunionPreacher: PHILIP I.. BLACK WKLL. I niteO Metho.list(Jiaplain10 \.M. DISCI SSION ( LASS. Topic: “ChrMiaiiitx amiCamtetnporarv Literatim*'" Leader: Michael Kiimamoii.\->t. Dean. Disciple;- Divinitx HouseI I \.M. I niversitv Religious Serxiee(’.elehration of the Octave of Christian l nitxI'reaeher: KlfSSKLL C1I ANDR AY PrincipalBangalore Theological College. IndiaS imon: “CRY FOR UNITY”Vi edne-dax. Januarx 238 A.VLSKRYM L OF HOLY COMMUNIONTlmrsdav. Jannarx 2 l5 P.M. FYFMM. PRAYER THEKUNDAUNI YOGASOCIETYPRESENTSTHE STRESS-AWAY YOGA COURSEKUNDALINI Yoga is the yoga of AWARENESS. The techniquesawaken you to your own intuitive wisdom, which enables you tobreak old habit patterns so that you can experience what is trueand what is not • what leads to well being and what does not.The yoga tunes up your body, clears your mind. It fosters thathonesty of seif-relationship which is basic to all true happiness.Kundalini Yoga uses the techniques of asanas (postures),pranaya (breath control), Mantra (universal sound), and medita¬tion. Through these techniques the course will teach you...to relax stay in touch with your spiritheal yourself and others detoxify your bodyfinish what you have begun overcome mental blockslearn to sleep effectively strenghten your nervesbalance your glands relieve stressmultiply your power of concentration prevent depressionThe Kundalini Yoga Society will meet Mondays and Thursdays 5-6:30P.M., Ida Noyes, East Lounge. Free introductory class forthis 7 week introductory course will be held Monday, Jan. 21.Watch for Campus Announcements.This is not a miracle couse, BUT, if you work for them thesetechniques will work for you. Guanranteed!XIVat The PUBthis Sunday Jan. 20thDoors open at 3:30 and closeone hour after end of game.HAPPY HOUR prices in effect THROUGHOUTSpecial give aways if the Rams winas the law requires, you must be 21 years old. Vi M W IR/OI/{/:Restaurant iTenth Floor1525 East 53rd StreetHyde ParkChicago Illinois 60615312 241 5600Breakfast 8:30 to 11:0CLunch 11:00 to 5:00, Dinner5:00 to 11:00, Friday andSaturday until 12:00, Sun¬day Brunch 10:30 to 4:00Security, Parking ! WCLR Welcomes1c$kfer, c/huland effiarynow—2 Shows! Feb. 2 & 3. 8:00 PMARIE CROWN THEATRETickets: $10.50/9.50 ReservedTICKETS on SALE nOW!Available at all Ticketron Outlets& the Arie Crown Box Office.TOR COMPLETE INFORMATION CCC CCC7PHONE THE CONCERT UNE: 000*000 «MUnClANS.-STEP -INTO OURSPOTLIGHTAUDITION FOR THE MOST EXCITINGENTERTAINMENT/EDUCATIONALBAND WORKSHOP PROGRAM IN AMERICADisneyland* / UJaltfl^isney WorldJoin a twenty-piece band, reflecting today's contemporary sounds throughout eachMagic Kingdom Prepare a 3-5 minute performance selection and bring your owninstruments to auditions (trumpet, trombone, french horn, tuba, saxophones—including doubles—and drums). Sight reading material will be providedMinimum Age 18 College Freshmen. Sophomores, and Juniors ONLYIt you are selected, you will receive a scholarship to the Disney Workshop, a grant forhousing costs and a stipend for summer performances. Imagine . all this andMickey too1FOR ALL INFORMATION REGARDING AUDITIONS CONTACT:DISNEYLAND WALT DISNEY WORLD1313 Harbor Blvd. P.0. Box 40Anaheim, CA 92803 Lake Buena Vista, FL 32830(714)999 4008 (305)8244206DO NOT CALL AUDITION LOCATIONLive auditions will be held at the following locations: u,*.vi>,oSat & Sun., Jan. 26 & 27,10 a m.-6 p.m.DE PAUL UNIVERSITY804 W Beldon Ave.. McGaw Library (Downstairs)Chicago. Illinois 606142 — the grey city journal, Friday, January 18, 1980MoviesDays of Heaven [Terrence Malick,1978): Farm workers RichardGere and Brooke Adams pretendto be brother and sister so they canlive together. Dying farmer SamShephard falls for Adams, so thelovers lead him on, conspiring toinherit his property. Malick con¬structs a world in which man'smonuments are intruders. Thebreathtaking photography emphasizes nature's beauty and theidols' obtrusiveness. He carefullyOboist Ray Still shows his colleagues in the Chicago Symphony Winds some fine points in breathing. TheWinds' breathtaking techniques will be in ample evidence tomorrow night when they perform Mozart's en¬chanting wind music. Among the works scheduled are Serenade #11 in Eb, K. 375 and the Divertimenti #3 and#9, both in Bb. 8 in Mandel. $4.50-S6.50. 753-2612.selects images to develop an intri¬cate natural order in which con¬stant regeneration follows inevita¬ble self-consumption. Man'ssociety is only a construct, allow¬ing him to act in a species and sur¬vive in that order. A subtle andcomplex film. Tonight at 6:30,8:30, and 10:15 in Quantrell. SI.50- G.0.Invasion of the Body Snatchers (Phi¬lip Kaufman, 1979): This moviedoesn't remake Don Siegel's 1956"original" as much as it remakesCamus' The Plague (1948), thenovel from which even Siegel'sversion is (indirectly, maybe)taken Siegel changed Camus'Oran to San Francisco; Kaufmanenlarges the sickness to includethe world. The view is grim, butDonald Sutherland's competentacting and Kaufman's tension¬building devices make it all seemreal; so much so that, when thefinal scream is heard, you'll feellike you're the only one left"alive." Anomie at its best. To¬morrow at 7:15 and 9:30 in Quan¬trell. $1.50. — DM.A Night at the Opera (Sam Wood1935): Once more, the MarxBrothers assault high society. Thisis the one in which Groucho pursues Margaret Dumont for hermoney and some nerd with a highvoice falls for a wimpy woman.You know, its got a chase scene ina hotel room after the guys stowaway on a ship. Sound familiar? Itshould. This must be the quintes¬sential Marx Brothers film; some-thing in it parallels each of their Siothers. Since the plots are so simi-lar, what distinguishes each movie ^is how long and how hard you >laugh. This one rates 3>/2 busted «guts. Tomorrow at 7: 30 and 9:30 inthe Law School Auditorium. $1.50.- G.B.Woyzeck [Werner Herzog, 1979):Herzog's adaptation of Buchner'spsychological drama suffers frommuddled social commentaryvague characterization jarringnarrative rhythm, and, worst ofall, arbitrary camera placement.The heart of the drama — Woy-zeck's slaying of his mistress,Marie — lacks intensity: it's al¬most an afterthought. The usualHerzogian penchant for mysticalinsight comes off as fatuous mystification. The actors, however,make do with their parts. KlausKinski, in the title role, looks rightfor the part. And Eva Mattes, asMarie, imparts a refreshinglychildlike innocence. Sunday at7:15 and 9 in Quantrell $1.50. —T.S.The Half Naked Truth (Gregory LaCava, 1932): This thinly clad talerevolves around a carnivalbarker's publicity stunts to propelhis lascivious girlfriend into stardom. The fast talking Lee Tracybarks his orders; and the Mexicanthe grey city journalGary Beberman, Curtis Black,nettjacks, John Kim, Bob Lewis,Mark Neustadt, Danila Oder, SharonDanny Schulman, Ted Shen, RayEdited by David Miller Associate editors:Mary Mankowski Spitfire, Lupe Velez (an earlier incarnation of Charo), supplies thevamp acts. The film looks dated,although bits of impressive montage presage LaCava's later masterpieces A negligible early effort. Monday at 7:15 in Quantrell.$1. - T.SSymphony of Six Million (LaCava.1932): The turgid, rags-to richs torags but spiritually richer EdnaFerber story deserves and gets indifferent treatment from LaCava.Stereotypes abound in this sagaabout a Jewish family in NYtyrant father, overbearingmother, virtuous first son (he becomes a surgeon), wastrelyounger son, etc. With materiallike this, it's no wonder that LaCava failed to deliver the quick witand keen social commentarycharacteristic of his later works.Ricardo Cortez, as the surgeon son, looks numbed; Irene Dunne,as his redemptress, looks pained;and the rest of the cast look eitherhammy or plainly uncomfortable.The title, by the way, doesn't referto the family's orchestrated effortin gaining wealth it's merely amisnomer for the Big Apple. Monday at 8:45 in Quantrell. $1. —T.S.MusicStudent Government Coffeehouse.Seven local musicians perform tonight at the first in a series ofthree coffeehouses scheduled forthis quarter. R&B guitarist Shelton Salley, who was warmly received at two campus performances last fall, starts around 10.Coffee (of course) and other refreshments will be available. Tonight from 8:30 to 1, Ida Noyes Li¬brary.The Blues at Mandell Hall: TonightMAB presents Koko Taylor, Fenton Robinson, and Blind JohnDavis. All three are exceptionalperformers. Koko plays rough androcking blues in the style of MuddyWaters, Fenton is a very talented and very jazzy guitarist, and Johnplays boogie-woogie, jazz andblues on solo piano. Show starts at8:00. S2 MAB members, $3.othersin advance, $3 and $4 at the door.- B.L.Lunchtime concert: This week, Elizabeth Baltas, flute, and MichaelBrown piano, will be performingworks, Schubert and Poulenc.Bring your lunch to ReynoldsNorth Lounge, Thurs., Jan 24 at12:15 pm.French Can Can: The ChicagoOpera Theater is presenting themerry Offenbach operetta, ThePerichole, Jan 18 20 The epnymous heroine, an actual person,was notorious for her frolicsomelife Fortunately, even thoughoperas have their high standardsof decorum, Offenbach slippedenough scandalous can can musicin this one to make the whole affair worthwhile. This productionfeatures soprano Maria Laglosand baritone Robert Orth. Athenaeum Theater. $9 $12. 633 0555. —T.S.Barbershop Harmony: Grandma'sBoys, the Baltimore 8. Ohio Connection and the 139th Street Quartet — three of the best known barMelanie Deal, Ozzie Enders, Sandy Harris, BenRebecca Lillian. Philip Maher, Rory McGahan,Pollack, Martha Rosett, Rene Saracki,Uliassi, Lisa von Drehle, Ken WissokerLaura Cottingham, Karen Hornick,Friday, January 18, 1980 bershop quartets in the country —will perform in the annua! showpresented by the Chicagoland As¬sociation of Barbershop Chapters.Sat., Jan. 19 at the Civic OperaHouse, 20 N. Wacker. 8:15 pm.433 2341. S2.50-S6.ArtMa, Space/Time in Japan: Con¬ceived and designed by the archi¬tect Arata Isozaka and circulatedby the Cooper-Hewitt Museum inNew York, this vast exhibit ex¬plores Ma, the Japanese conceptof time and space as a unifiedidea. Out of some twenty cratescome assorted rocks, a portion of aNoh stage, a Japanese tea house,photographs, paintings and printsfrom contemporary and ancientJapan. The Museum of Contem¬porary Art expands our conceptsof art yet again. 237 E. Ontario.Tues. Sat. 10-5; Sunday, 12-5. Jan.20 March 16. - D.S.Joseph Beuys: Original GraphicWorks: Running independently ofthe fabulous Beuys retrospectiveat the Guggenheim in New Yorkwill be an exhibition of litho¬graphs, silkscreens, photoseries,woodcuts and postcards at theGoethe Institute. Beuys is current¬ly and justifiably the most talkedabout European artist. It is pre¬dictable that these graphic workswill have the impact and uniquen¬ess of the sculptures and drawingsat the Guggenheim. Goethe Insti¬tute. 401 N. Michigan Ave. Mon.and Thurs., 18 pm; Tues., Wed.,Fri., 12-5:30. Jan. 21 Feb. 29.Art for Wear and Tear: If the art fits. . . wear it! An exhibition of wearable artworks by 21 artists fromacross the nation. The public is in¬vited to a fitting tonight from 4:30to 7 pm. Full-length mirrors willbe supplied and the event will bevideo taped. Midway Studios. 6016S. Ingleside Ave. 10-4:30 week¬days. Through Jan. 30. — D.S.TheaterAn Evening of One Acts: Court Stu¬dio's first winter quarter production consists of two one actplays, both student-directed. Steven Scroer directs Beckett's TwoRoughs For Theatre, taken fromhis most recent collection of dra¬matic pieces. Robert Breslodirects Gurney's The GoldenFleece, a humorous reworking ofthe story of Jason and Medea astold by their "old friends." Theyopen tonight, Jan. 18, and run Fri.-Sun through Jan. 27. Curtain Fri.and Sat. is 8:30 and Sun. is 7:30.753-3581. SI.50 students, $2.50 general.Dancing in the Aisles: Steven Ivcichdirects James Weslowski's domestic drama, in which a professor/poet's surviving brotherlearns to cope with death, and withhis own failures. It's part of theReaders Theatre Series, admission is free and discussions withthe director, cast and playwright(when possible) follows. Sat., Jan.19 at the Victory Gardens Theater,3730 N Clark. 549 5788.Timothy Leary: The Harvard manand LSD guru has now become astand up comic. He makes his Chicago debut this weekend atGeorge's, 230 N Kinzie. Shows areat 9 and 11; food and drink areavailable 644 2290.Luv: Mike Nichols directs the original Broadway cast in MurraySchisgal's satire on urban mores.Part of the National RadioTheatre of Chicago's weeklyseries. Mon., Jan. 21 at 8 pm onWFMT, 98.7 FM.the grey city journal, Friday, January 18, 1980 3walk in the dune/A Series of three slide showsbyEmms B. PitcherBIRD BWDFR. FF.KFNI) N \Tl H M IST\M) \M\TF.l RPHOTor.RXPIIFRTuesdays 12:15Jiimian 22 Spring: Mew Fife mi Old HillJamian 2*) Summer: Sami' amiBlazing Field*Felirnart 5 \iitiiiim: ('aIni amiIWpPfan-Flnweis Binl- Tree* Swamp*Bt'aelie* Rii«' Trail' ln»e«1> • Eye Examinations• Contact Lenses• (Soft and Hard)• Fashion Eye Wear• Contact Lens SuppliesDR. M.R. MASLOVOPTOMETRISTSHyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th363-6363Hi|it£|IarkTItpranh iliiliami §*luip1552 E. 53rd - Under IC tracksPipes - Pipe Tobaccos -Imported Cigarettes - CiqarsMon -Sat. 9-8. Sun 1 2-5Students under 30 aet 10% off.ask for “Big Jim" WEEK OF PRAYER FOR CHRISTIAN UNITYSUNDAY. JANUARY 20. 4:00 l».M.PRAYER SERVICETHE CHURCH OF ST. THOM AS THE APOSTLE5472 S. Kimltark VvmiirPirarlirr JOSEPH SITTLER. Visiting Professor.Lutheran Seliool of Theology. and former Professor.Di\ iiiitv Sehool.FRIDAY. JANUARY 25. 7:30 P.M.(The Feast of the Conversion of Si. Paul)EVENSONGTHE CHURCH OF ST. PAUL AND THE REDEEMERDorchester Avenue at 50th StreetOfficiant: BERNARDO. BROWN. Dean. RockefellerMemorial ChafielPreacher: RALPH KIEFER. Professor of Liturgies.Chicago Theological UnionPIZZA PLATTER1460 E. 53rdM13-2800 No deliveryCOFFFF PRUVIDF.I). BRIM; YOI’ROW N I l M'llIda Noyes Libraryi Ruby's Merit ChevroletSPECIALDISCOUNT PRICESfor all STUDENTS andFACULTY MEMBERSJust present your University ofChicago Identification Card.As Students or Faculty Membersof the University of Chicago you areentitled to special money-savingDISCOUNTS on Chevrolet Parts,Accessories and any new or usedChevrolet you buy from Merit Chev¬rolet Inc. JGM QUALITYSBIVlCt PARTS ’ Are/)GW Thut GrrarterUnnnthXNESAX MOTORS MJ2TS DIVISION G AW/UGW/W ifjUA RUBY’SCHEVROLET72nd & Stony Island 684-0400Open Doily 9-9 Sat. 9-5 Part* open Sat. 'til NoonSit) RUBY’SVOLKSWAGEN r72nd & Stony Island 684-0400Open Daily 9-9, Sol. 9-5 Parts open Sot. 'til Noon vjcl a piuuicin ^uivcithat’s solving problems in the real world.The more your courses approach the prob¬lems of the real world, the more you need acalculator that’s already there.These two programmable calculatorsfrom Texas Instruments can take you fromyour engineering courses right into theranks of professionals like the ones whocreated the complex programs to simplifyand speed up scoring at the WinterOlympics.The TI Programmable 58C lets you spendyour time learning concepts instead ofworking problems. $130*.Perhaps your current calculator cansolve advanced engineering problems, butyou’ll probably spend a lot of time doing it.With the TI-58C”s 480 program steps or upto 60 memories, plus 170 keyboard func¬tions and operations, you’ll be amazed atjust how much of the work the TI-58C willdo for you.The TI-58C has a Constant Memory,ufeature that lets you lock a program in themachine — even when it’s turned off. Youcan program the calculator as you learn inclass and use it later to review the conceptand work the problems. You can store re¬sults or data in the calculator, even if youturn it off, for later use.The TI-58C will seem like more than acalculator — its computer-like capabilitieslet you design your own programs or useTexas Instruments unique plug-in SolidState Software1" modules with ready-to- use programs. A Master Library module(included with the calculator) has 25 basicprograms in math, statistics, and otherareas of general interest. Twelve optionallibrary modules include programs on ap¬plied statistics, advanced mathematicalroutines, electrical engineering, businessdecisions, and much more.With all of its capabilities and functionsthe TI-58C is simple to operate using TI’sAOS’" algebraic operating system. TheAOS entry system lets you enter problemsthe way they are written — from left toright—and handles up to 9 levels of paren¬theses in accordance with the rules of alge¬braic hierarchy.With the TI-58C you’ll also get a copy ofPersonal Program¬ming, an owner’smanual that’ll helpget you started inprogramming —even if you’ve neverprogrammed beforeThe TI Programmable 59 goes fromengineering to theWinter Olympics.$300*.The reason theWinter Olympics chose the TI-59 for ver¬ifying scoring results at many events is thesame reason it can help you get all you canfrom your courses—versatility. Up to 960 program steps or up to 100memories plus 4 types of display testing,10 user flags, 72 labels, and 6 levels ofsubroutines let the power of program¬ming help you make short work of com¬plex problems.Even with all the 175 keyboard functionsand operations at your command, the TI-59responds to simple AOS algebraic entrysystem control. 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Fifty YfcarsInnovationTexas Instruments technology - bringing affordable electronics to your fingertips.Texas Instrumentst '90C>««tns!'»tien,s nctypo'afec INC OKPOKATF. D 4569?*4 the grey city journal, Friday, January le, 1980Off the wall and into the wardrobeThe pleasures of materialby Laura CottinghamThe use of the word "material" in the titleof the latest exhibit at the Museum of Contemporary Art is not immaterial to eitherthe physical or the philosophical aspects othe show. Titled Material Pleasures, the ex¬hibit uses material to designate the clothmedium employed by the artists, as well asto illustrate the worldly, un-Art for-Art's-sake intent behind the artists' works.All of the works in the exhibit are productsof The Fabric Workshop, Philadelphia. Es¬tablished in the summer of 1977, the Workshop invites American artists to take uptemporary residency and have full access tosilkscreening tools and various fabrics.While originally funded by federal, state,and local grants, the Workshop has justbegun to support itself through sales of theartists' products.According to Michael A. Quigley, Assis¬tant Director of the Institute of Contem¬porary Art at the University of Pennsylvan¬ia, and Associate Director of the Workshop,works created at The Fabric Workshop re¬flect a changing attitude toward art: "It hasoften been remarked that for some time nowartists have been uniting art and life bymaking art which is deliberately intended tobe something other than the lofty, pedestall-ed, separate object it once was."Rather than lofty or pedestalled, the art inMaterial Pleasures is functional and fashionable It most often takes the form ofclothing, though occasionally appears as acurtain or wall hanging. Material PleasuresMuseum of Contemporary ArtJanuary 11 — March 9"Hairappealing piece in the exhibit. Created ofsilkscreen on pigskin, the shirt looks like aleather football jersey with abundant globsof hair creeping out from the chest and arm-pits. It alludes to the earthy and the saint¬ly.Not as St. Francis of Assisiesque as the"Hair Shirt" is Roy Lichtenstein's shirt, itreminds one of an American-tourist-in-Europe Hawaiin-print shirt, only with a newwave, graphic substitution for the flowers.In silk, it's impracticality is seductively appealing.Karl Wirsum's "Pajamas (A Bird in theHand is Worth Two in the Bus)" is a twopiece outfit of black polished cotton. Unlikesome of the other pieces, this item lookswearable — at least physically, thoughsome might find its shiny purple, green, andorange animalized buses aesthetically offensive.Judith Shea's "Four Continents" utilizesthe association of clothing to fabric withoutpresenting anything that resembles ahuman wearable. A white grid covers black cotton muslin the same way an ink grid cali¬brates a seamstress's layout board. Fourfabric pieces that resemble four parts of apair of pants lie on the grid. Considering thetitle, one wonders about the analogy of pattern pieces to continents, layout boards tomaps?Most of the individual products in the exhibit are less thought provoking. But thetotal exhibit provokes a lot of thoughts.About the relationship between art and fash¬ion, art and craft, art and consumer product. -JitVe ^ *Alexandria Eiva, creator of Wear and Tear , gives two masks a re hearsal -reoro^evgeoroto'eArtists worry a lot about "putting themselves" into their work.Today, from 4:30-7:00, Midway Studios offers the public the opportunityto put themselves into eighteen artists' works.As part of an exhibition of "wearable artworks", mirrors will be in¬stalled so we can see ourselves as we try on the wearables. Entitled 'art'for Wear and Tear, the exhibit focuses on the participation of thewearer-viewer, rather than totally on the objects themselves.According to Alexandra Eiva, Midway Studios Gallery Assistant andcreator of the show, the artists represented in the show were "given theconcept of non preservation and wearability, and then it was up to themto decide what to do." ^rfvvor^o'SM dsNOV°d,QyEye 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 REPAIRSPECIALISTSon IBM. SCM.Olympia, etcFREE repairestimates; repairsby factory-trainedtechnician.RENTALSavailable withU of C I D New andRebuiltTypewriters,Calculators,Dictators,AddersU of ChicagoBookstore5750 S. Ellis Ave753-3303Mastercharge and Visa Acceptedthe grey city journal, Friday, January 18, 1980 — 5Rock Beatby Renee SarackiThe campus radio station, WHPK, had abenefit last Saturday. The party featuredfour student bands, lasted from 8:30 until3:30 am, and turned a $350 profit in the end.Money was needed because an engineeringstudy completed earlier this year cost $1,000more than estimated. The study was part ofan application to change from a modest 10watt broadcast power to 100 watts.To raise the money quickly station manager Brette Manale decided to hold a hugeparty with live bands and refreshments. Sheset out looking for bands that would play forfree. Several decent student bands jumpedat the chance to appear in a miniature battleof the bands.The first group started at around 8:40 andfrom there on things ran smoothly and effi¬ciently. Praise for this should go to themembers of the radio station (a truly dedi¬cated bunch) who volunteered their serviceswith little or no reward.I arrived at the party at the end of the sec¬ond group's set; therefore what l have tosay about the first two groups is part hear¬say, part personal prejudice, and part theopinions of friends. The Pre-Meds startedoff the evening wih a medium-length set,consisting of a good selection of tastefjlrock 'n' roll tune. Some of the songs per¬formed were Elvis Costello's "Alison," TomPetty's "Breakdown," and the by now tradi¬tional Stones' covers. The six-membergroup wore white lab coats with ties andfrom all accounts were fairly non descriptwith the exception of an unsmiling guitarist,Jeff Haas. Drums, guitar, bass saxophone,and piano, when combined in an originalway with a decent sounding p.a., can and didmake for an entertaining set of music.The Pre Meds are a solid little band.Maybe they are a tad too tame or controlledto fanatically win over the notoriously criti¬cal U of C student. Even though those peoplewho came early enough to catch the PreMeds were dancing, there weren't enoughpeople at the party yet to judge the extent ofthe group's popularity.The Pre Meds were followed by The Battling Tops, who from most accounts rippedthrough their five song repertoire highlighted by The Monkees' "Stepping Stone" andthe Pistols' "Submission." The only majorgripe that people had with the group wasthat their vocals were weak. The group,however, has only been together for a coupleof weeks.Visually The Battling Tops were one of themore interesting groups. Guitarist SteveLindgren and bassist Cindy Bankston looklike a slightly warped version of the classicAmerican high school couple. DrummerVance Lyon looked real spiffy in a grey suit;guitarist Mark David shelved his tough pinkpunk look for a new mod look with a pseudo-Nehru jacket and black pants (although hedid have a 'rette hanging from his mouth,Keef style). In the end, they struck this writ¬er as being a very attractive looking groupof young mods who, with a few more gigs, afew more songs, and an attractive singerwith a sense of style, will definitely becomea campus group to reckon with in the fu¬ture.Before I talk about the two main groups at the party I would like to take some spaceand explain the standards I bring to everyconcert I see. First, the music should be ei¬ther lively and danceable or interesting andoriginal. Second, the band must have eithera sense of style (preferably a bit off-the-wall) or a sense of humor. Finally, I'm apunk. What this means is that while I occasionally try to listen to interesting and tax¬ing new bands like The Gang of Four, Maga¬zine, or Joy Division, more often I'll just slipon the first Clash album, some Gene Vin¬cent, or some early Beatles and dance mind¬lessly for hours with the headphones onBecause of these expectations the fourthband, The Brain Police, and I are not amatch made in heaven, and until their gui¬tarist Seth Lipscher becomes a skinheadand starts pogoing to "Homicide," I willprobably never really like this group.Fortunately not everyone shares mytastes and there are many kids who just likea basic hard rock band that looks like a late'60's supergroup. The Brain Police don't dis¬appoint these kids. Songs like "MySharona," "Cocaine," and "Tush" are decent hard rock songs, which make alrightdance numbers. Unfortunately, the BrainPolice have chosen to add an awful bluesnumber to their play-list, which just adds totheir pretentions. If they stick to their basichard rock schtick, cut down on the heavyrock star stage moves, and persuade some¬one else in the band to sing "Tush" (a trulydemeaning song for a talented woman tosing), they'll oe alright. Not to my owntastes perhaps, but to the tastes of some.The third band to play and still the best ofthe U of C bands on campus was The Tro¬uble Boys. The Trouble Boys are constantlyimproving. They now have one less memberthan they had last quarter; six members ina rock 'n' roll dance band is just one toomany. In addition to this cut, the group hascleaned up its sound by alternating gui¬tarists on certain songs. Therefore insteadof the constant blitzkrieg attack of three guitars, the group has decided that two willserve the purpose as well if not better thanthree.The vocals have improved vastly. Everymember of the group sings the songs that fithis musical personality. Put all these ele¬ments together with the fact that The Trouble Boys have no pretentions about theirplace in the history of rock 'n' roll, and youhave a hot little dance band.Saturday night it all came together for thegroup and they not only played very well butthey also looked pretty good (especially theone with the leopard print pants which splitearly in the evening). The hottest tuneswere "Sweet Jane" (always a good numberwhen performed correctly), "Crossroads,"J. Richman's "Roadrunner" (a new addition), and "Satisfaction." The Trouble Boysreally seemed to have fun playing and as aresult were a lot livelier and looser than I'dever seen them. The spirit of fun in whichThe Trouble Boys play was a perfect com¬plement to the rather loose atmosphere inwhich the party was run. After all was saidand done, l came home mindlessly happylying in my Shoreland bed with a rock androll world running through my head. Myapologies to Johansen and Thunders. The Trouble Boys: LarryCohen (bass, vocals), BartGoldberg (guitar, vocals),Mark Erwin (drums,vocals), Mike Haederle(guitar,, vocals), DonnieHedeker (guitar, vocals).Playlist: First set: SweetLittle Sixteen, Crossroads(Robert Johnson), Do YouLove Me? (Contours),Twistin' the Night Away(Sam Cooke), Rock andRoll Hoochie Koo, SecretAgent Man, Under MyThumb, Suffragette City,Sweet Jane. Second set: ItWasn't Me (Chuck Berry),Honky Tonk Woman, AllAlong the Watchtower,Roadrunner (JonathanRichman), Hurricane(Neil Young), BrownSugar, Steppin' Stone(Monkees), Jimpin' JackFlash, Gimmie Shelter,Little Queenie (ChuckBerry), Satisfaction.Contact: Bart or Mark,667-3660.The Brain Police: SethLipscher (guitar), PaulBrenna (bass), Robb Mi¬chael (vocals), Steve Britt(drums), Paul Bartone(keyboards), AgathaPozen (vocals).Playlist: First set: Ramblin'on My Mind (Eric Clap¬ton), Cocaine (J.J Cale),Tush (ZZ Top), MySharona (Knack), Can'tExplain, Going to Jimmy's(original), Like a RollingStone, Suffragette City.Second set: Life duringWartime, Brown Sugar,Train Kept a'Rollin' (Ar-rowsmith), I Need You(Cars), Evil Ways (San¬tana), Good Morning LittleSchoolgirl (Alvin Lee),You Really Got Me.Contact: Robb, 753 2233 #144or Seth, 753 8342 #1027.6 — the grey city journal, Friday, January 18, 1980+Photos by David MillerThe PreMeds: DavidGreunbaum (piano, trom¬bone), Don Lorvig (bass,lead vocals), Marcus Pad¬gett (sax), David Weiss(drums), Jeff Haas (leaaguitar); backgroundvocals: everybody.Playlist: Jumpin' JackFlash, Breakdown (TomPetty), Allison (Elvis Costello), Honky TonkWomen, Evil Ways (San¬tana), Pick Up the Pieces(Average White Band),Sympathy for the Devil.Contact: David, 753 2249#2212 or Don (#2208) or Jeff(#2217).The Battling Tops: SteveLindgren (guitar, vocals),Vance Lyon (drums),Mark David (guitar,vocals), Cindy Bankston(bass, vocals).Playlist: Pipeline (surfinsong), Steppin' Stone(Monkees), Finding a Sky(original). Round andRound (Chuck Berry),Submission (Sex Pistols).Contact: Steve, 753 3751 #231or Cindy (#323).the grey city journal, Friday, January 18, 1980 — 7EyxsxsxssxxxsxxssxxxxxssxssxxsssssaocxssxsxsssssssxsssssxsyThe Friends of the Symphony & Music Departmentpresent the fourth in a seriesof five concerts featuringTheCHICAGOSYMPHONY WINDSin music ofMOZARTSaturday, January 19 8:00 p.m.MANDEL HALLProgram Highlights:—Divertimenti No. 1 in B-flat, K. 439 bNo. 9 in B-flat. K. 240—Serenade No. 11 in E-flat, K. 375—Duets for 2 horns, K. 487TICKETS AT REYNOLDS CLUB BOX OFFICE.Single Concert Prices: General Public $6.50, Faculty/Staff $5.50,U.C. students $4.50For further information call 753-3580 or 753-2612Remaining Series Concert Date :February 22When does thetraining stopthe doing start?At Scotl we believe !ha! the best (rainingwe can give you is experience m putting yourideas to work Since we know that personalgrowth is your goal achievement of that goal isrealized through doing Experience comes fromdoing—putting your ideas to work, enjoying responSibility and accepting accountabilityEacn year as determined committed collegegrads torn us they bring new talents with them WePut these talents to the test immediately and willinglyaccept their challengesBecause we recognize individual differencesOur approach is to build On your existing skills—toenable you 10 start doingWhen does the training stop'5 It neve' doesScott Paper Company is an equal opportunity‘-"pioyer. m/1Contact your placement office fO' informationSCOTT Our waiting for winter isfinally over....come ski with us,U.C. SKI CLUBSteamboatSPRING BREAK MAR. 21-30RT. AMTRAK & TRANSFERS7 nights, condos on the hill,5 days lifts, (incredibleskiing), 6th day to relax.($150 deposit due 1 /21)Information and sign-up meetingsMonday and Thursday, 7:00 p.m.Ida Noyes. Call 955-9646 if youcannot attend.LACROSSE WEEKENDCARNIVAL FEB. 22-24RT TRANSPORTATION, 2NIGHTS LODGING. 2 days lifttickets, dinner Saturday.$7000I w (Members) $25 deposit due 1/24LEARN TO SKI NIGHTSSATURDAY, JAN. 19WEDNESDAY, JAN. 30: FRIDAY, FEB. 15Includes: equipment, lifts, lesson,transportation.s1950 Memberss2400 Non-membersGroup Rates AvailableCROSS COUNTRY “DAY IN THE PARK”FEB. 2(Required sign-up meeting Monday Jan.21 7 p.m. Ida Noyes.)Equipment Rental, 3 hr lesson (beginner& advanced) Hot Lunch & refreshments.All in Jackson Park. “Refund if no snow.Discount if you have your own equipment.”s1800 Memberss2000 Non-membersUC SKI CLUBMembership 750 yearRegular meetings Monday & Thursday,7 p.m. Ida NoyesFor Information Call 955-96468 — the grey city journal, Friday, January 18, 1980Apr6s Vaffaire Derrida"The scene upon the stagecame into being through purposive distortion of the histori¬cal scene or, one is tempted tosay, it was the result of refinedhypocrisy." (S. Freud, Totemand Taboo)by Andrew ParkerThe following is to be construed neitheras a reply to, a critique of, nor an attack onBill Monroe's "Derr/ere Derrida: TheNarrative Conference as a Socio Intellectio Drama (In Three Acts)" published December 7, 1979 in The Chicago Literary Re¬view. If this actually were such a critique,I would concern myself with refutingMonroe's arguments and characterizations or with rectifying what I take to behis patent(ed) inaccuracies. Such a procedure, however, would commit me to a logicof correction with an implicit norm of truthwhich, in this context, it would be far bet¬ter to avoid (or, at least, to postpone).If additional reasons must be producedto account for my reticence to offer an authentic rebuttal, suffice it to say that I amunwilling to debate with an opponent who,for the sake of "dramatic effect," is notabove allowing an appreciation of Derridato be comprehended by a concomitant appreciation of Carlos Castaneda. Must I beforced into replying that such acomparison of these authors as a thinly disuiseddismissal, simply "isn't true"? Must Ienter the scene of debate on these(Monroe's) terms? Thanks, but no thanks.It is much more interesting — and muchmore to my purpose — to shift gears a bit:to reveal Monroe's complicity in the phe¬nomenon he derides; to indicate the waysin which Monroe, much against his own apparent sympathies, is himself a "prophetof deconstruction" — albeit without hisrecognition or permission.Let me begin this experiment by repro¬ducing the context in which Monroe bringshis drama to a close: "In all fairness to M.Derrida," he writes, "I must report that heseems to be a polite and personable man."For Monroe, this "gentle" side of Derri¬da's character is decidedly at odds withanother person named "Derrida," theDerrida who is "the personified apocalypse of literary criticism":It is this domesticated Derri¬da, probably, or the sophisti¬cal Derrida, that makes medoubt the apocalyptic Derridasuggested by the inordinateattention he receives.The "fact" that Derrida is composed ofheterogeneous elements, that his self ismarked by irreconcilable divisions amongfacets of his "personality" as well as be¬tween his "life" and his "work," is thusused by Monroe as a pre text for his(smug) concluding remark: "Derr/ereDerrida le deluge? Somehow, I just don'tthink so."As such, Monroe's conclusion can beviewed as an indictment of Derrida interms of the latter's meconnaissance, ofhis seeming inauthenticity, of his being tinessence) schizoid; as Derrida is discovered to be playing divergent roles, he ischarged with the "crime" of being inherently theatrical. Derrida's very name,in other words, represents for Monroe a"person" who is a multiplicity of warring,contradictory "selves": "Derrida" thusserves to mark the locus of an individualwhose conflicting personalities exceed(and hence undermine) his status as a unified, sovereign subject.Such an attitude, however, participatesin an ideologically-loaded notion of thehuman subject as a unified whole that doesnot admit internal contradictions or divisions, as an integral Ego or Self that is defined as being always in presence to and incontrol of Itself. Derrida's writing (whichmay be described, in part, as an inquisi¬ tion of such notions of "unity") demonstrates how this assumption of a sovereignself has been and continues to be a con¬stant in our metaphysical philosophicaltradition: such a presupposition accountsfor, among other things, our heritage ofAmerican Individualism as well as for acherished literary-critical analogy (as expressed in Norman Holland's formula) —"Unity is to Text as Identity is to Self."This way of thinking about the self, how¬ever, fails to meet the challenge of psychoanalytic inquiry, which posits as itsfundamental tenet the implicit impossibili¬ty of any subject to be (wholly) present toitself. The Unconscious, radically unknowable in its essence and recognizable onlythrough its effects, is that which prohibitsthe full presence of the self to itself as wellas the self's ability to fully control its ownbehavior — despite the fact that a belief inboth presence and control, although illusory, is itself necessary to our functioning ineveryday life.As Lacan and others have indicated,moreover, this subversion of the subjectby the Unconscious is itself a product of anoriginary (Linguistic) division forming abreach between the subject of utteranceand the subject of enunciation, the "I" whospeaks and the "I" represented in speech.The self'is thus constituted in and as thisdifference (and hence is without being, es¬sence, extension, property, etc.): it is (inEugenio Donato's apt phrase) "given to usby language, inasmuch as language is difference," a condition which renders thesubject perpetually in exclusion to itself.The subject, in short, is always already di¬vided by the discourse of the Unconscious,which both insists on the heterogeneity andcontradictions that inhabit the subject aswell as allowing its "existence" to comeinto play.Which is not to say, then, that Monroe iswrong in charging Derrida with Meconnaissance: as I am trying to indicate,rather, the "schizophrenia" attributed toDerrioa by Monroe may be taken as a definition of Derrida's humanity. What I findamusing about Monroe's treatment of thismatter is the implication that the divisionof the subject is, or can be, avoidable inprinciple — and, to this extent, that "badfaith" (in all of its guises as inauthenticity,heterogeneity, theatricality, "phoniness"in general) should be condemned according to a norm of unity and genuineness.Monroe's own writing, presumably, is freefrom the inherent theatricality with whichhe reproaches Derrida.It is at this point that I would like to posewhat may seem, at first, to be a gratuitousquestion: "Who is Bill Monroe"? Now, ofcourse, I know who Bill Monroe "is": wenod to each other in academic hallways allthe time. But notice this: he is identified inthe list of contributors in the issue of TheChicago Literary Review in which his"Derriere Derrida ..." appeared as... a graduate student in theEnglish department and edi¬tor elect of The Chicago Review, a literary journal whichis not associated with the TheChicago Literary Review orthe University of ChicagoPress, but which is availablein bookstores and by subscription.Compare this statement of authorialidentity, however, with the one that appeared in The Chicago Review's Summer1979 issue in which Monroe published apiece entitled "Diagnosing Literary Autism":W F. Monroe, whose concernsinclude literature's influenceon society, is from Texas.What are we to make of that?!!! Notonly is the identity of this author (re)stat ed in completely different terms, but hisname is not even the same! How do weknow that the author of "Derriere Derrida. . . " and the author of "Diagnosing Literary Autism" are "one and the same"? Wedon't: there are no grounds to infer onefrom the other — all we know is that the"author" of both essays is self identified indifferent ways. If someone named "BillMonroe" were actually the author of bothof these pieces, can we not conclude thatthis single "person" is inhabited by conflicting selves, that he is (literally) a divided subject whose structure is meconnais¬sance, that his very name(s) reveal(s) anEgo that overspills and undermines Itsown sovereign integrity?That "Derriere Derrida . . " is presented self-consciously as a drama adds further complications concerning the question of Monroe's authorial identity. For isnot one of the canonical principles of literary criticism the necessity to differentiatea work's "author" from its "narrator"?Moreover, if we were to consider thisdrama as implicitly "autobiographical"(after all, the piece is presented as thewriter's record of his own experiences ashe listened to the speakers' papers andcomments), then shouldn't we bear inmind the distinctly separate status of "BillMonroe" as author from "Bill Monroe" asnarrator from "Bill Monroe" as charac¬ter? And what about (in Wayne Booth'sterminology) the "implied author" of thispiece, for isn't "he" similarly irreducibleto any of these other figures each of whichis named "Bill Monroe"? Our dilemmawidens as we find that the name of a singleindividual marks the locus of a myriad ofcontradictory discursive identities — orcould this problem be resolved by callingcertain (or any, or all) of these separatefigures "W. F. Monroe"?By focusing attention on this proliferation of identically-named selves — a proli¬feration that is an effect of language (or, inDerridean terms, of writing as such) — Ihave attempted to show that "BillMonroe" is "always already” implicatedin. . . the scene of writing. Likeall those who write. And, likeall those who know how towrite, he lets the scene dupli¬cate, repeat, and betray itselfwithin the scene. (J. Derrida,Writing and Difference, p.229)It is, finally, ironic to note that theMonroe Doctrine of the Sovereign Self isboth constructed and undermined withinthis scene, for Monroe himself is unable toavoid the meconnaissance with which Der¬rida had been reproached. As a writer,could Monroe do otherwise? "Somehow, Ijust don't think so." MonroeReplies:I want to thank Andy for providing acomplete bibliography of my literary/critical publications — both of them — with histhoughtful and challenging annotation;(it's not a reply, a critique, or an attack).And I am indebted to him for repeatedlygetting "Bill Monroe" into print; (hemakes it seem so easy). But, my gratitudenotwithstanding, I must say that I am notsurprised, as Andy suggests, to find "my¬self" deconstructed by him, for I've cometo accept the meconnaissance of every"self" and every "text." That is, I acceptthe possibility that, given certain a prioriassumptions and a decidedly deductivemode of inquiry, all identities, both personal and textual, can be deconstructed.Such an inquiry, however, is determinedto discover what it sets out to find — "amyriad of contradictory discursive identi¬ties" — and is therefore self fulfilling aswell as circular. Now there's nothing em¬barrassing about being circular — perhapscircularity is finally unavoidable. ButAndy's remarks, like the Derridean enter¬prise, seems to cram everything within theravenous deconstructionist maw: everytext, every author, is "a divided subjectwhose structure is meconnaissance." Sowhen I poke fun at Derrida and questionhis millenial status, it is not because lthink him "wrong," any more than Andythinks me wrong. I do, however, find thedeconstructionist project reductive and illequipped to account for distinctions which1 find important and wish to maintain.For example: in my text, RichardStrier, a member of the English faculty atUC, was misidentif ied as SanfordSchwartz. Making a distinction betweenthese two named selves and thereby correcting the inaccurate section seems important, worthwhile, necessary. Thus:Richard Strier, after conferringwith another participant during thebreak to confirm that he had heardwhat he thought he had heard alsodenies the uniqueness of Derrida'sanalysis."Professor Derrida taught ussomething about narrative," Striersays. "He was explicating a parable,seeing the terms of the parable asenlightening the text. This is notvery unusual. Professor Derridagave us the point of view of the believer; he is a 'believer' of metafictional texts."Having distinguished Strier fromSchwartz (who was not even at the Narrative Conference), l should also note a con¬fusion between Paul de Man and Derrida:in the photograph, de Man is in the center,Derrida is on his right, and Victor Turner,who seems to be wide awake, is on deMan's left.Such errors, while in this context (perhaps) not pernicious, are nonetheless deplorable. Yet, if I grant that, as a writer, Icould not avoid meconnaissance, that mytext would, of necessity, "duplicate, repeat, and betray itself" then l stand"always already" vindicated of myStrier/Schwartz error. If an author's"authority" — his ability to inspire agreement and his text's to merit belief — is radically undermined by the very nature ofdiscourse ana in the very act of writing,then some'distinctions, distinctions that Iwould have remain, disappear.The loop of deconstruction is a verylarge project indeed, but some of us en-closea within it (and we all are) rue its absence of particularities. If I must be encircled, let it be with Ursula Le Guin's hoopsnake, rather than Derrida's deconstruction. By reducing all, he gives me nothing,and secludes me from the world; whileshe, through her stories, cloisters me upwith what I value and want to cultivate.—Bill MonroeUnassigned Readings and Other Guilty Pleasures Edited by Richard Kaye and Molly McQuade of the Chicago LiteraryReview.the grey city journal, Friday, January 18, 1980 — 9.x\\\ \Vrefreshmentsavailableno cover _ ..w # Enjoy live^ entertainment£ before a roaring fire^ ' with a hot cup of cider*in the Ida Noyes Library8:30 pmTom Davis Sheldon Sallie bagelsMort Shulman Bill Wraga donutsAlfie Cohen Clark Woodward coffeeNancy Goodman cider LANGUAGES ATMIDDLEBURYSI MMER PROGRAMSMASTER (H ARTS .trid DOCTOR OT MODI RN I ANGUAGES. In-service Workshops, continuing Educationand courses lor transfer to other InstitutionsUpper level courses tor Graduate credit in I REN( H,Cil KMAN. 11 A l IAN, RUSSIAN and SPANISH Sisweeks beginning 24 June, t credits per courseOther courses offer intensive instruction in I RENE H.Gl RM AN. II Al IAN and SPANISH Seven weeks beginrung 21 June. 3 credits per courseSpecial courses in CHINESE. JAPANESI and Rf SSIAN Nine weeks beginning 14 June 5 credits per courseSCHOOLS ABROADCiR ADI A 11 programs during academic year in EK ANC l .C.l KM ANY. I E Al Y, the SOY II I UNION and SPAIN -JUNIOR YEAR programs in HORENCE, PARIS,MADRID. MAIN/ and MOSCOW The program in theSOVIE f l NION is tor one semester onlyEor catalogue and application materials write:ADMISSIONS OFFICE, t ANGUAGE SCHOOl SSUNDERLAND I ANGUAGE CENTERMIDDLEBURY COl LEGEMIDDLEBURY. VERMONT 05753I am interesled in Middlebury's programs. Please senda catalog and application.My language interesi —City _ State ZipReturn to: Sunderland Language Center 4Middlebury College. 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JOHN E. WOODSDepts. History, Near EasternLanguages and Civilizationsand the CollegeFRIDAY - JANUARY 18 - 8:30 P.M.Hillel House - 5715 Woodlawnf RW> !/,PM0AYAJI6MT<tfOOP.fi.- *7Thi DfLTA ThCTAI Io of c i.o. Rrouwrbl10 — the arev ritv journal. Friday. January 1R. 1980MAB mourns Mandel;show will go onby Lisa von DrehleEvery undergraduate pays $12 a /ear tothe Major Activities Board (MAB) whichgoes toward providing entertainment, inconversations with several MAB membersrecently I found out what considerationsguide the spending of that money.Howard Nieden, who is in charge of staging and technical arts, told me that "we stayaway from speakers or classical music andtry to get good, live entertainment." Thisusually means concerts, but recently MABhas begun to diversify. Last quarter they arranged an evening of comedy with Monteithand Rand and they are now thinking about amagician or nightclub act.However, most of their $30,000 budget isspent on live music. Vickie Dorgan, thespeaker for MAB, said "we try to get a vari¬ety: jazz, blues, folk, rock. Right now we areconcentrating on getting more rock and rollacts."Bart Lazar is responsible for negotiatingwith the agents to see which acts will cometo the U of C. He says that he has built up apretty good relationship with most of themajor agents through frequent dealingswith them. "We were recently offered theKinks, and almost got the Talking Headslast quarter until JAAA Productions camethrough at the last minute with a biggeroffer." Frustrations such as this are fre¬quent. "We negotiate with agents but whensome groups hear the small size of our audi¬torium (Mandel Hall seats 960) they lose interest."This situation will be exacerbated by therenovation of Mandel, which starts soon andwill last almost a year. With the loss of theirmajor concert facility, changes are aheadfor MAB. Nieden thought that this would lead to smaller acts in a more intimate set¬ting (such as the Cloister Club). LarryCoryell was mentioned as one such possibleact.Lazaar, however, said that "losing Mandel is a real blow." To get around its loss,MAB is organizing a dance concert in thegym. They have reserved all of Ida Noyesfor March 1 and are currently talking withthe managers of the Ramones. Things lookgood because the Ramones are scheduled tobe on tour at that time: keep your fingerscrossed and maybe we'll see some Rock 'nRoli High School in Ida Noyes gym!Another way of compensating for the lossof Mandel is an outdoor concert, which couldoccur sometime in the late Spring Dorgansaid that MAB is setting money aside andworking tov/ards this, but Nieden pointedout some drawbacks: "There are enormousoverheads at such an event. You have to payfor portable lighting and sound systems, security and clean-up. And, there's always thechance of rain . . ."Tonight, MAB is sponsoring a night of theBlues in Mandel. Future events will be debated and decided when all seven membersget together for their weekly meetings.The MAB members are all students, and,in addition to the three interviewed, includeBeth Staehle, Chuck Regan, Ray Uliassi,and Jim Osofsky. Except for some help infinalizing deals from Irene Conley in theStudent Activities Office, MAB is entirelystudent run.By the time new MAB members are selected in the Spring, the group has brokeneven. In the meantime, if you have any suggestions for future programming, or wouldlike to help out, you can call MAB at 753-3563or stop by their office at INH 218.doc Cobb HallAll films $1.50filmsFridaySaturdaySunday January 18 6:30,8:30,10:15Terrence Malick'sDAYS OF HEAVENJanuary 19 7:15 and 9:30Philip Kaufman’sINVASION OF THEBODYSNATCHERSJanuary 20 7:15 and 9:00Werner Herzog’sW0YZECK Little Willie Anderson; guitarist James WheelerCampus bluesDy bod LewisUnless you are a blues fanatic, you probably had never heard of the Little Willie Anderson Blues Band until the posters for lastSaturday's show at Ida Noyes began to appear around campus. No one in the band is aname player. Fred Below, the drummer, isthe most experienced, having been amember of the Three Aces (with Dave andLouis Meyers), a group that has backedboth Little Walter and Junior Wells and hasrecorded with Roosevelt Sykes and OtisSpann.The rest of the band, Jimmy Lee Robinsonon bass, James Wheeler on guitar, and evenband leader, vocalist, and harpist Willie An¬derson are almost unknown. Certainly thereason for their obscurity is that there are alot of other people doing the same thing withmore skill. Robinson provides no more thanthe bare minimum required of a bassplayer, and Wheeler, while moderately goodat what he does, tends to be repetitive.Below is a good blues drummer, but a bandneeds more than drums to be good.Willie, while not as good as Junior Wellsor Billy Branch, is nonetheless a good harpist and vocalist. Unfortunately the remainder of the band tended to drown outWillie. It was also often difficult to see him.The lighting was poor — blues are better inthe dark, but it is nice to see the band — andWillie has a habit of playing off to the side ofthe stage rather than in the better litcenter.The purpose behind Willie's blues is tocreate fun. If you went to the show lookingfor a virtuoso performance you were disapPorter shinesThe Decline and Fall of the Entire VJorid asSeen Through the Eyes of Cole Porterassembled by Ben Bagleydirected by Dean Buttonat the Body Politic Theatre, 871 3000by Rebecca LillianWhile the world declined and fell -through two World Wars, the Depressionand numerous other tragedies — ColePorter retained his unmatchable ability totwist words and music into brilliant, bitingsongs. The Body Politic's company of fourwomen and two men sings and dances itsway through this charming revue of primarily lesser known Porter tunes.Although many eyes — including mostcritics' — turn to beautiful, wide eyed SallyBenoit, the shining woman of the show isDiane Hurley. An audience member mumbled of Hurley, "She doesn't know whetherto be a comic, or Edith Piaf," but she en¬compasses qualities of both, and muchmore. She colors her own style with tracesof Fanny Brice and Beatrice Lilly, oftenplaying tne odd girl out or the eccentric. Herrenditions of Porter's more serious songs,such as "Down in the Depths on the Ninetieth Floor" are rich and soulful, and whenshe belts out, "I've still got my health, sowhat do I care?" ihe audience glows. Morethe grey ci pointed, but if you cared only about having agood time, you got more than you could haveasked for. Both Anderson and Below havetremendously energetic and appealing per¬sonalities. Like any good blues band, theywere able to communicate with the audi¬ence. Anderson invited students on stage toplay harp while he visited the dance floor.All through the show, in fact, Willie wasdancing and Fred was always smiling. With¬in minutes everybody in the house was fol¬lowing their lead.If you like blues that are more complicat¬ed but just as much fun, you might want tovisit Mandel Hall tonight. MAB is pres¬enting three very different, and very goodbluesmen and women. Koko Taylor, thequeen of Chicago Blues, sings a mean,stomping style blues Her version of MuddyWater's classic, "I'm a Man," appropriately retitled, "I'm a Woman," is the gutsiestversion of that song I've heard. Kokos rumbling, gravelly voice threatens to make eventhe meanest of the men sound wimpy. Quitethe opposite of Koko's raw power is FentonRooinson's jazzy, souly, sophisticated bluessound. I saw Fenton several weeks ago andhe put on a dynamite show Both his guitarsolos and his voice are incredibly clean,smooth, and sweet. When he's at his best,Fenton is as good as any guitarist I've seen.In addition, Blind John Davis will play solopiano. I've never heard any of his material,but if what I've read is true, his barrelhouse,boogie woogie, blues, jazz and ragtime is, asone critic put it, "Guaranteed to wear outshoe leather." No matter what style of bluesyou like, you should be satisfiea.at Body Politicthan any otner company member, Hurleycreates three dimensional characters aswell as sings and dances.Sally Benoit is quite competent, as are Roberta Stack and Susanna Weils. Unfortuoately, the male side of the cast is not as strongas the female. Charles E. Gerber is oftenfabulous, and his love of Porter shows in hisnarrations and numbers, but he is not veryversatile. In tongue in cheek songs, like"Thank You So Much, Mrs. Lowsborough —Goodby," which Porter wrote to entertainhis own friends, Gerber is superb He shinesin similar cynical songs, but he can assumefew other roles. This, coupled with the factthat Buddy King is simply a weak performer, is the show's only major flaw. If Gerberstretches his already fine talent, and Kingcomes out of his shell, they can probablyachieve the women's luster.Yet, as in any revue of this nature,Porter's songs are the true stars. All have"that certain thing" that characterizesPorter the perfect rhyme fit to the perfectmelody, creating unique ironic tones Hecould take anything — from New York Cityto high society and oysters, from Katherinethe Great to Victory Gardens — and turn itinto a witty, seductive song. As they say inthe show, Cole Porter saw the world through"wonderful eyes."journal, Friday, January 18, 1980 — 11CalendarFRIDAYPrespectives: Topic - “Problems Facing Inner CityHospitals — Recruiting" guests Dr. Jay Berkel-hamer. Sister Sheila Lyne. and Dr Alfonso Holli¬day. 6:09 am. channel 7.Crossroads: English class for foreign women. 10:00am.Italian Table: Meets 12 noon at the Blue Gargoyleto speak Italian.Smart Gallery: Exhibit - "Vienna Moderne:1898-1918" arts and crafts from turn of the centuryVienna. Jan. 10-Feb. 25.Geophysical Sciences Colloquium: "Inertial Stabili¬ty and Mesoscale Convective Systems" speakerKerry Emanuel. 1:30 pm. Henry Hinds Lab Auditori¬um.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Arabic Circle -"The Question of Traditionalism and Modernism inContemporary Arab Thought" speaker SalehOmar. 3:30 pm. Pick 218.Dept Biology: Seminar - ‘Accurate Transcription ofPurified Eukaryotic Genes by RNA Polymerase IIand III in Reconstituted Systems" speaker RobertToeder, 4:00 pm, Cummings room 101.Hillel: Liberal Progressive Shabbat Services, 5:00pm. Hillel.Women’s Union: Meets 5:00 pm, Ida Noyes above the Frog and Peach.Hillel: Yavneh Shabbat Services, sundown. Hillel.UC Gymnastics Club: Instruction available 5:30-8:00pm, Bartlett gym. free.Hillel: Adat Shalom Shabbat Dinner, 5:45 pm. Hil¬lel.DOC Films: "Days of Heaven” 6:30. 8:30 and 10:15pm. Cobb.Calvert House: "Evening of Reflection for Catechu¬mens and Sponsors" 7:00 pm.UC Karate Club: meets 7:00 pm in the dance roomof Ida Noyes.Hillel: Lecture - "Islam, the Arabs, and History"speaker John Woods. 8:30 pm, Hillel.Students for a Libertarian Society: Meet to discussMilton Friedman - "Free to Choose" at 9:00 pm. Coxlounge, basement of Stuart Hall.SATURDAYTable Tennis Tournament: at 9:00 am. Ida NoyesHall 3rd floor.Rape Victim Assistance: Training session in rapevictim assistance 9:30-4:30 Hyde Park Union Church.5600 Wood lawn.Creative Dance and Movement Group: Meets 12:30pm Ida Noyes Hall.UC Gymnastics: Instruction available 2:00-5:00 pm,Bartlett gym, free. Calvert House: Medical Ethics Program - "Health"Manpower" Distribution and Your Choice" 5:45pm.Crossroads: Saturday night dinner. 6:00 pm. No res¬ervations necessary. $2.DOC Films: "Get Out Your Handkerchiefs" 7:15 and9:30 pm, Cobb.Law School Films: "A Night at the Opera" 7:30 and9:30 pm. Law School Auditorium.Chicago Symphony Winds: Mozart’s Music for WindInstruments. »:uu pm, nuitn commons.SUNDAYRockefeller Chapel: Ecumenical Service of HolyCommunion. 9:00 am.Rockefeller Chapel: Discussion Class - topic "Chris¬tianity and Contemporary Literature" 10:00 am.Hillel: Lox and Bagel Brunch, 11:00 am, Hillel.Rockefeller Chapel: University Religious Service,11:00 am.DOC Films: "Woyzeck" 7:15 and 9:00 pm. Cobb.Tai Chi Ch'uan: Meets 7:30 pm. 4945 S. Dorchester(enter on 50th).Folkdancers: Meet 8:00-11:30 pm, Ida Noyes Hall.Woodward Court Lecture: "The Elusive BoundaryBetween Myth and Reality” speaker Wendy O’Fla¬herty, 8:30 pm. Woodward Court.MONDAY and Ronald Andersen. 6:09 am. channel 7.Crossroads: Free English class for foreign women.10:00 am.Computation Center: Seminar - "Introduction toSuperwylbur" 3:30-5:00 pm, RI 180.Dept of Chemistry: "Pulse Radiolysis of AromaticCations Studied by Optical and Magnetic Reso¬nance Detectors" speaker Gerhard Closs, 4:00 pm.Kent 103.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Illustrated Lec¬ture - "Qusayr Amra: Hunting Palace of theUmayyad Caliphs” speaker Michael Sells, 3:30 pm,Pick 218.Kundalini Yoga: Free introductory class, 5:00-6:30pm, Ida Noyes. Come check us out.UC Gymnastics: Instruction available 5:30-8:00 pm.Bartlett gym, free.UC Judo Club: Meets 6:00-8:30 pm. Bartlett gym. Be¬ginners welcome.UC Karate Club: Meets 7:00 pm. in the dance roomof Ida Noyes Hall.Ski Club Meeting: 7:00 pm. Ida NoyesDOC Films: “The Half-Naked Truth” 7:15 pm, CobbRecreation Society:Hall. Everyone wel-Perspectives: Topic - "The Medically Indigent”guests Joseph Mann, Roger Nauert. Richard Foster, Medieval and Renaissancemeets 7:30 pm, Ida Noyescome.Cambodia Relief Now: “Cambodia: The OngoingCrisis" 7:30 pm, International House.Chess Club: Winter Round Robin tournament 7:30pm, Ida Noyes Memorial Room.Folkdancers: Meet 8:00-11:00 pm. Ida Noyes.The Chicago Maroonis searching forindividuals interestedin doing ad layoutwork for fun and profit.Contact Steveif interested!753-3263 FOR-U CARSERVICE CENTER, Inc.1608 E. 53rd St.667-2800Open 24 hrs. - Attendant Parking - Heated garageAnnual Monthly Parking S540(WAnnual Daily Parking S330(WHand Car Wash s500Do-it-yourself repair s375hr.SOON TO COMEFAST OIL CHANGERENT USED CARS Mum mrROLLEI SPECIAL!(pollei P350AMulti voltage✓ -Interchangeable85 mm f/2.8 lens•Automatic remote-control or manualQQ95starstarburstpricePrice good until January 25,1980model camera1342 East 55th St. 493-6700Tonite8 pmDoors open at 7 pmTickets at the Box OfficeBefore 5 — $2 MAB fee payers/$4 othersAfter 5 — $3 MAB fee payers/$5 othersAll seats general admission Fenton RobinsonMa)or Activities Beard12 — the grey city journal, Friday, January 18, 1980Maroons easily destroy Niles: 81-37By Andy RothmanAfter playing scoreless basketball againstNiles College for 3:26 on Tuesdav night atthe field house, the University o*f Chicagomanaged to produce its highest point outputof the year in an 81-37 win.Jeff Foreman, a sophomore wing, cameoff the bench to ignite the Maroons in thefirst half and wound up leading all scorerswith 15 pointsMaroon coach John Angelus could not findanything wrong with his team’s play onTuesday. “Every time you win it’s a goodgame. We were nice and loose and weplayed real well. They were all worked upbecause they lost Saturday so they were allup to play a ballgame. We took it out onthem (Niles). They happened to be the vic¬tim.”With the teams tied at four and 14:30 re¬maining in the first half. Vlad Gastevichwas able to score two of his 11 points andNiles was called for a foul setting up for apossible rebound. Foreman then went intothe game and immediately converted overNiles' 1-2-2 zone as Chicago kept possession.When Foreman connected the next time Chi¬cago got the ball the Maroons were on theirway. They wound up scoring 14 straightpoints, seven by Gastevich, before Chicagoforward Pete Leinroth was called on a tech¬nical foul for yelling at a referee and sopho¬more guard Tom Bujnowski. who led Nileswith 11. hit the free throw.Later on in the first half the Maroons ranoff another 11 unanswered points to take a35-11 lead. Foreman's jumper from the topof the key at the buzzer made the halftimescore 39-16.Angelus has been pleased with Foreman'sprogress this season and was glad that thefirst year player finally got a chance to ex¬hibit that progress in a game, “I’ve beenbringing Jeff along to play against zones sohe could bomb opponents out of a zone be¬cause he has great range. We would havehad him for Carleton except that he turnedhis ankle — just when he was starting topeak. It took him a while to adjust from foot¬ball and he has got good range. His ball han¬dling was very rough making the transitionand it was just starting to come around andhe turned his ankle. I got him into the Carle-Sports gripeDear Editor :I am writing to call attention to the per¬sistent sexism of your sports pages. Tues¬day’s Maroon furnishes a typical example.Two articles began fairly enough, ”... TheMaroon men’s basketbal team wilted ...”and, “The University of Chicago women’sbasketball squad travelled ...” But whatare the headlines? “Basketballersdowned” versus “Women drop three.” Themen are identified by their actions mostrelevant to the article; the women are notathletes but “only” women. Please: lan¬guage is a powerful weapon for reinforcingor changing underlying values. Let's havesome changes.Sincerely,Pat Michaelsongraduate student in humanitiesEditor's note:To explain the particular example youcite, the women noted in the headline arebeing described as female athletes, not“only” women. This is done as a guide forour readers to help identify what the arti¬cle is about and attract attention. Thesports, after all, are separated.The idea that some of our headlines oracticles have offended readers had nevercrossed our minds before, to be perfectlyhonest. We are sorry if you have been an¬noyed in the past. The sports page is. how¬ever, intended to provide both informationand entertainment to its readers and if asimple clarification like the one you citewill help us to do our job, so much the bet¬terTo cop a cliche, there are no sexistwords, only sexist minds. ton game late but he wasn’t one-hundredpercent. He put one of three down but I couldsee that he was just coming along.” Afternoting Foreman’s range, Angelus addedthat, “As a team we have to bring our rangeout a little further so we can get teams tocome out on us. Then we can go to the hole.Every one of these kids is a great driver.”Chicago, nowr 4-3 overall, opens up a fourgame road trip tomorrow at Lawrence. Allfour games are conference games and An¬gelus is stressing the importance of tomor¬row’s game, “We have to get this one Satur¬day. Saturday’s game, for us, is a real mustgame. It's early in the season to say that,we’ve only played one league game. We’vegot to get this one on the road. If we get intoBy Howard SulsPlayer reaction to the resignation of headfootball coach Tom Kurucz was mostlyshock, anger, and disappointment. Said co¬captain Nick Filippo. “It came as a shock tome. I’m in a daze. We placed a lot of faith inhim because it seemed he was sincere in hisdesire to build a program As far as recruit¬ing goes we are in a lot of trouble.” In as faras applications for the next entering classare already in, team depth will be an impor¬tant concern because not one applicationlists football as an activity, i.e.. no recruits.Tad McGwire was also upset, “I’m reallypissed. He really let us down. A lot of peopledid a lot of things they normally wouldn’thave done in deference to the coach and thehope he would build a winning team. Nextyear will be tough, but come October, we llbe out there.” Second-year starter DavidVacala sums it up best. (Well) “I was intotal shock. I didn’t expect any of this tohappen. We got to start believing in our¬selves. We can’t let this get us down. We the (divisional) battle now we’ll be into thethick of it and then we have all those gamesat the end of the season at home. So we’vegot to play .500 on the road and .750 at home.After this game we have three more on theroad We ll need to get one of those. Then ifwe come home and play .750 ball we could bea very surprising team. I think it’s possi¬ble.” Again, the Maroons will be goingagainst a zone defense. Angelus’ philosophyis simple enough, “If we can get up onLawrence and drive them into a man-to¬man defense we can really blow their doorsoff too.”Lawrence w?on at Lake Forest on Wednes¬day, 82-68 The win brought their conferencerecord to 1-1. Lawrence is 3-5 overall.have to pull together as a team. If nobodywants us we have to want ourselves. Manyof the players are wondering if its worth allthe aggravation, and with next year'srougher schedule are concerned over thepossible lack of depthOnce Upon A Time there were two youngaspiring sportswriters from Duluth or Du¬buque, 1 forget which. One day. the older oithe two approached the younger, who washis editor, with an idea. “Howard, we can tdo that, it will ruin us. Everything we'veworked for. all year, would be destroyed.”“I guess you're right Andy. Look at you.You've molded this motley crew into one ofthe best sportswriting teams in the country,if not the world, through all existing record¬ed human history. You w’ould have so muchto lose. Who knows, today sports on WHPK.tomorrow the world. Why you might evenget to wear Howard Cosell's toupee oneday.”“And you Howie, the senior staff corre¬spondent. The most consistent writer inTurn to Page 18 Wrestlers openseasonBy Cy Oggins“It was the team’s first competitive expe¬rience this season — and it looked like it.”commented new head wrestling coach LeoKocher as the University of Chicago stum¬bled to a disappointing fourth out of fiveteams last Saturday in the Illinois WesleyanTourney, which was won by the host team“It was apparent that the other teams hadspent more time in the wrestling room,”continued Kocher. who was making his Chi¬cago coaching debut. “We need to spendthat time too and to get harder work and bet¬ter conditioning from eveyone on theteam.”The day began eventfullv for the Maroonsas Mark Farwell (126) pinned his first oppo¬nent in 27 seconds, while soon after captainBob Michel (134) came back from a 5-0 defi¬cit to tie his man in regulation and then tobeat him in overtime. From then on, howev¬er, the individual wins were few and concen¬trated mainly on Farwell and Michel as theywrestled into the finals. Once there each hadto settle for second place; Farwell gettingcaught and pinned by David Palmer ofNorth Central, and Michel being beaten 8-0by B Spaits of Illinois Wesleyan. Final re¬sults showed Illinois Wesleyan placing first,followed by Knox. Olivet Nazarene. Fairha-ven. University of Chicago, and North Cen¬tral.With six weeks to the Midwest Conferencechampionships. Kocher sounded optimisticabout the team's chances this season “Al¬though I was disappointed that the teamcouldn’t muster a few wins. Saturday. I didsee a few promising things; among themBob s comeback. Our top form is still aheadof us and by the next few meets w-e should bereally moving.”Some of the team's hopes, however, weredimmed when junior Rich Meade (190» sep¬arated his left shoulder in practice on Mon¬day. It is not know if he will be able to returnto the team in time for the Conferencechampionships. Already Kocher has foundhimself making do with the players he hasleft on the team. Due to injuries and to sev¬eral players quitting the team because of alack of time. The team is susceptible to inju¬ries In many weight classes, for instance,there is only one wrestler. “Time is a valu¬able commodity. It’s just hard to build aprogram when players leave.”The Maroons next meet and their firstdual-meet, is tomorrow at North Park Col¬lege. Meet time is 11:00.Sports clinic growing with Dr. StulbergBy Howard SulsOne of the newrer driving forces behindthe resurgence of athletics at the Universi¬ty is Dr. S. David Stulberg, the director ofthe Sports Medicine Clinic. Dr. Stulberg.an orthopedic surgeon. Harvard ’65, Uni¬versity of Michigan Medical School. ’69,came to the University in 1976 to co-directthe Medical-Surgical Arthritis Unit.While a medical student at Michigan in1968, Dr. Stulberg had the opportunity todo some studies on altitude effects on ourOlympic athletes before the Games inMexico City. Interested in athletics, espe¬cially exercise and its effect on people’shealth (exercise-physiology), Dr. Stulbergoriginally began trying to optimize and co¬ordinate the physical education depart¬ment’s care for intercollegiate sports inju¬ries, while developing his own skills insports medicine.The Sports Medicine Clinic, whichopened last fall was an outgrowth of theclinic for the intercollegiate athletes. Withthe addition of a full time trainer. LarryBriand, care could be expanded to includerehabilitation. Athletes were given physi¬cals, with records kept, and an under¬standing was reached between the HealthService and the physical education depart¬ment. that any student, for any reason,could be referred to the clinic for an athlet¬ically related injury.Appointed to the Athletic Board just lastfall, Dr. Stulberg has acted in conjunctionwith the field house construction in various capacities, such as making sure the boardwas aware of the right type of equipmentfor purchase, and would be able to set upprograms so people could use it correctlyand even examining the optimum temper¬ature for various athletic events. Lastspring a conference was held here with allthe Midwest Conference schools, athleticdirectors and coaches, to make them moreaware of sports medicine, including notonly medicine for injuries, but legalaspects of sports health care.Unfortunately, the clinic is not as readilyaccessible to people as Dr. Stulberg wouldlike, due to the inevitability of channelsand red tape. “The idea of the sports medi¬cine clinic is that there is a danger in doingnothing. The requirements for a personare staying active, and in that respect wemust change our philosophy in approach¬ing it The only way that will happen is ifpeople start beating the doors down at Stu¬dent Health. I’m willing to provide a ser¬vice for people who want advice on a pro¬gram.”At present, the only way for someonewho is not a private patient to be seen atthe clinic is a referral from Student Healthafter an injury. While realizing that thepeople at Student Health have a job to do.Dr. Stulberg was dismayed that his firstcommunication from Student Health was aletter from its Director warning him not totreat students because their insurancewould not cover their visit. “It could be in¬teresting and worthwhile and fun if stu¬ dents had access to information on exer¬cise and sports. It can’t be done yet but Iwould like to find a way.”“My philosophy is. sports, like good the¬ater. like good music, if it’s done well andpromoted right will help the quality of lifearound the University. Students havecome to me to do work and I'm glad to pro¬mote it. Everyone has the capacity of un¬derstanding science to varying degrees Ifthey jean relate mucopolysaccharides toknees rather than organic chemistry, somuch the better." Working with Dr Stul¬berg at present are Mark Meier, formerMaroon quarterback, and Richard Kean, adistance runner, doing studies on collagenin knee ligaments.Dr. Stulberg. who himself runs 50 milesa week and competes in marathons, in¬cluding the ones in New York and Boston,with a top time of around 3:10, recom¬mends a varied program of exercise forfitness. This program should have alter¬nating days of endurance activities andmuscle strengthening, whether weighttraining or isometrics, incorporatingstretching exercises. Two or three days aweek of aerobic exercise, such as running,swimming, or squash, is ideal. However,he emphasizes that the body requires 36-48hours to replenish carbohydrate supplies,so in fact, daily repetitive exercise may bedoing more harm than good. It is only nearfatigue that any benefit is accrued, with acardiopulmonary effect at that limit of fa-Tum to Page lbSportsFrom the pressboxPlayers react to Kuruczmove; Super Bowl picksThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, January 18. 1980—17IM reportBasketball races beginningJ. A. NetosIn an exciting game last Monday betweentwo serious contenders for the Undergradu¬ate championship, Dudley defeated Cham¬berlin 34:30.It was Jim Moskal’s game: The agile Dud¬ley guard turned in his best effort so far thisseason, to make an incredible 8 of 11 shotsfrom the field and to connect on 2 of 2 freethrows. Moskal did more than score 18 ofDudley’s 34 points; he orchestrated Dud¬ley’s effective man-to-man pressure defense(collecting four of Dudley’s nine steals inthe process), to put an extreme pressure onthe quick Chamberlin team, and to limit itsoffense to 10 field goals in 26 attempts —only 38 percent shooting (compared withDudley’s 58 percent).Dudley established its control early in thegame. After Chamberlin’s Don Pasulkascored the first two points (the only timeChamberlin was in the lead), Dudley cameback to lead 13:9 after ten minutes of play¬ing. With one minute left to play in the firsthalf, Dudley increased its lead to 20:14. Twofree throws by Do im and a final shot byMoskal, answered with one shot by CarlKoechlin for Chamberlin, left Dudley with acomfortable eight points lead at the half¬time.Coming into the second half trailing 24:16.Chamberlin changed its defense from man-to-man to zone. The change proved effectivefor about four and a half minutes, duringwhich Chamberlin, relying on shooting byPasulka and Koechlin. was able to score 8points to Dudley’s 2. With the score tied at26, it appeared as if Chamberlin found theway to stop the oiled Dudley machineThe burst was short lived. Regrouping.Dudley came back pounding. More steals byMoskal and Nick Facaros. more shots fromevery conceivable angle by Moskal. and thegame was all but over. With 20 seconds toplay, trailing 34:30, Pasulka missed a freethrow and Dudley, stalling, sealed Cham¬berlin’s fate.In addition to Moskal, Do Kim scored 9points for Dudley, and Facaros scored 7.Chamberlin suffered from an inexplicablylow scoring by the usually excellent KevinGleason. Averaging 55-60 percent a game,Gleason made only 2 of 11 attempts fronmthe field. Don Pasulka, scoring 10 points,could not compensate for Gleason’s weak¬ness. The bright light on the ChamberlinSports Clinictigue. On the question of diet, Dr. Stulbergcomments “As far as I can tell, not being anutritionist, just a doctor interested insports, that except for carbohydrate load¬ing for long-distance runners, diet is notcritical to performance, unless you are amajor athlete. Adequate hydration, for en¬durance, particularly weight lifters, is es¬sential though. I wish someone would getfired up enough to do some work onthis.”“My own general belief is that the way togreatness in athletics at the University ofChicago will not be to build a Rose Bowlteam. The appropriate place is to providethe athletic activities in a setting wherepeople can feel that on a personal levelthey can get the most out of their own par¬ticipation. If we’re going to win anything itwill be because we can scientifically figureout the best way to win.”“Sports can be made a part of someone’slife if they want it to be. If you have a ra¬tional reason to approach an activity, thenyou will do it at 35 for a different reason onan emotional level than you did at 25. Inju¬ries can be taken care of There are a lot oflessons to be learned on health and rehabi¬litation in general. We tend to focus on theinjury and getting the injury well. We haveto start looking at what it is we’re gettingback to when we got hurt.”Dr. Stulbert will be able to answer anyquestions through this column. Please sub¬mit all letters to Dr. Stulberg, c/o theMaroon, Ida Noyes Hall, room 303. team, however, was Carl Koechlin. Makingtwo of two attempts from the field, and con¬necting on four of four free throws. Koechlinscored 8 points. He was particularly valu¬able on rebounds, grabbing six during thegame (rebounds were the only category inwhich Chamberlin outscored Dudley, grab¬bing 12 to Dudley’s 4).With its victory over Chamberlin. Dudleyis now leading the Residence White leaguewith a record of 4 and 0, followed by Cham¬berlin. with a record of 3 and 1.The two teams are going to meet again to¬morrow, Saturday, at 1:30pm. for the begin¬ning of the second round of Undergradgames.Before losing to Dudley, Chamberlin obli¬terated Bishop 85-12 to achieve the highestscore yet this basketball season.Hitchcock continues to reign undefeatedin the Residence Red League, adding a 31:20victory to up its record to 4 and 0. They areclosely followed by Tufts, with a record of 4and 1. Tufts defeated Alpha Delta Phi 54:24,and Psi U 45:38. proving itself still in conten¬tion for a play-off spot. Bill VanderClute andBob McCarthy excelled in relatively easygames.In the Residence Maroon League. Vincentcontinues to lead confidently, with 3 and 0record. Henderson shares first place havingwon one game by a forfeit.In the Independent White League, TheCoho’s established themselves firmly in thelead, with a 4 and 0 record. Particularly im¬pressive was their victory, 33:21, over theLosers. The Losers, featuring track teammembers like Bob Kohut, Jim Read, andChip Pfellar. and natural athletes like SteveWillette, were unable to hold their ownagainst the better organized Coho’s. Master¬minded from the sidelines by Alan Sakamo¬to, the Coho’s benefit from the tenacious de¬fensive play and relentless hustling all overthe court by John Janetos, and from Mike(“Too Tall”) Owens control of the boards.The Coho’s will definitely make it to theplay-offs.In the Independent Red League, DredScott’s Revenge solidified their hold of thefirst place by trouncing Joint Effort 83:29.The Champs, in second position, defeatedThe Gang of Five 48:18.In the Graduate Red League, AlbanianRefugees share first place with the aspiringMr. Bill Show, both with a record of 5 and 0.In its two games since the beginning of thequarter, the Refugees defeated the ManicDefensive 53:19, and destroyed Abbott Sis¬ters 62:22. Mr. Bill Show defeated DivinitySchool 44:30 and The God Squad 43:26. Com¬ing from behind in the Red League are theSnow Bears, at second place with a record of3-1. They defeated the White Lepers 48:38,and outscored Controlled Substance 24:23,in a major upset. Controlled Substance de¬feated Never Too Late 58:30 and the Divin¬ity School team 33:29, and are now in third to developplace, with a 3 and 2 record.Uranus and the 7 Moons continue to leadthe Graduate White League with a record of4 and 0, after defeating My Last Chance46:25 and Dead Popes. They are followed insecond place by four teams: Jimmy Cohnand his pals from the medical school on MedII had an easy victory over ScruffuloBotems, 41:25, and are now 3 and 1. Theyoung team of Willis Reed shares secondplace, with a similar record. Last weekWillis Reed surprised the undefeated Dart osRises Again 32:27, in an upset victory.Reed’s fate seems sealed when Dartosopened a 7 point lead at the beginning of thesecond half. Accurate shooting from the out¬side by Jeff Bond, and aggressive strugglefor every ball by Aaron Stucker, CharlesHeilker. and Bob Sheppard kept Reed in thepicture, and enabled it to gain an edge overthe experienced Dartos in the closing mo¬ments of the game.Despite its loss, Dartos is still in secondplace, after its victory over Frottage (alsodeadlocked in second place), 48:34.The story was repeated for Willis Reed inits game against My Last Chance lastWednesday. Instead of facing Dartos’ Dr.Simon, Dr. Porter, and Dr. Bergenstahl,Reed faced some of their interns and medi¬cal students on Last Chance. Last Chanceopened the game quickly, scoring 8 pointsbefore Reed was able to get on the board.Last Chance dominated the game for mostof the first half, leading Reed by up to 9points with six minutes to play in the half.Excellent shooting by Bond closed the gap totwo points, and the two teams retired for thehalf-time with Chance leading 21:19. The be¬ginning of the second half saw Reed re¬bounding from its two points deficit andgaining control of the game. After 4 minutesof play Reed was in the lead by five points, alead they never again relinquished. Wisetactical play by Bond, Sheppard and Heilkerhelped Reed control the ball for most of theclosing moments, to secure their victory42:39.Basketball Top Ten(First place votes in parenthesis)1. Albanian Refugees (10) 1002. Mr. Bill Show 863. Uranus and the 7 Moons 814. The Champs 705. Dred Scott’s Revenge 686. Hitchcock 507. Dudley 458. Chamberlin 319. Snow Bears 1110. The Coho’s 8Votes: Commuter Magic, Tufts, WillisReed, Vincent, Dartos Rises Again. Pressboxschool history, with only one column missedin three years. Who else could dazzle us withyour brilliance, your wit, your charrh andhumor. You would be willing to risk your al¬most guaranteed election to the yet uncreat¬ed Maroon Hall of Fame? Is it worth it? Imean even if your birthday is today andmine is Sunday, this would be the epitome ofyellow journalism, so well defined by theTribune. Could you face your kids in twentyyears and look them in the eye?“Well, Andy, I guess you’re right.” Thiscould have been written on the men’s roomwall in Harper, but no one would have seenit. The moral of this story is its not who youknow, its where they let you write aboutit.”4: * :1c *Super Bowl Predictions:I know Pittsburgh will kill the Rams,especially because the Rams are suchchokers. Bradshaw should be able to pickapart the Ram defense at will, so theSteelers should be 12 point favorites. Someother notable people disagreed with methough. Here’s their picks:Andrew Patner, Maroon editor: I’ll pre¬dict Pittsburgh because they won theWorld Series, and Mark Lutz is from Gib-sonia, only an hour away from Pittsburgh.This is the first year I know which teamsare in the Super Bowl.Jaan Elias, Maroon managing editor:Just to be different I’ll take the Rams be¬cause they have better tans. Rams bythree.Frank Liberty: I’ll pick the Rams be¬cause LA has more blondes per squaremile than anywhere in the world. Rams by24.Christine Schutt: I’m a blonde, but I’mnot from L.A., so Rams by 3.Mark Lutz, famous Gibsonia resident:I’ll take the Penguins in the Stanley Cup.4-2.Rebecca Lillian, Grey City Journalstaff: Pittsburgh by 14 because my formerroommate's crazy fiancee is from thereand I’ve heard a lot about them. Who arethey playing?Laura Cottingham, associate ed., GreyCity Journal: California Mix over Bee¬featers.David Miller, editor, Grey City Journal:CBS by 18 million.Judah Epstein: Rams by 50 lbs. on thebench press but if Mean Joe Greenedoesn't get his coke and a smile, Steelersby 13.Mark Erwin: Pittsburgh by 17 becausethey’re Trouble Boys.J.A. Netos, an ardent New Englander.Pittsburgh by at least 20; but since the Pa¬triots are out, does it really matter?Andy Rothman, sports editor, Maroon:If the Rams can stay within two scoresearly they may surprise some people. TheRams have also won the last three meet¬ings between the two teams and own an all-time mark of 10-1-1 over Pittsburgh. It istime for Pittsburgh to start improving onthat record; Steelers by 9V2.Grad StandingsREDAlbanian RefugeesMr Bill ShowShoreland ShuffleSnow BearsControlled SubstanceSix PackersDivinity SchoolManic DefensivesAbbott SistersNaussau SeniorGod SquadNever too lateWHITEUranus the 7 MoonsDartos Rises AgainWillis ReedMed IIFrottagePlato’s ExamplarsDead PopesEat my TortsLaughlinMy Last ChanceScruffalo BotemsEstoppel -Assumsit 5-05-03-14-23-23-22-32-31-32-51-40-53-03-13-13-13-12-12-12-12-13-20-30-4 RED Undergrad StandingsWHITE BLUEHitchcock 5-0 Dudley 4-0 Commuter Magic 6-0Tufts 4-1 Chamberlain 4-1 Shorey 3-2Fishbein 3-2 Lower Flint 2-3 Upper Rickert 2-3Brecken’ge 1-5 Salisburhy 2-3 Lower Rickert 2-2Alpha Delta Phi 0-6 Upper Flint 0-6 Dudley B 1-3Hale 1-6MAROON INDEPENDENT INDEPENDENTRED . WHITEHenderson 3-0Vincent 3-0 Dred Scott’s Coho's 4-0Thompson 2-1 Revenge 4-0 Return of ZeroBradbury 2-1 The Champs 3-0 the Hero 3-0Michelson 2-2 Semi-Tufts 2-1 HihowdayadoCompton 0-4 Gang of Five 1-3 II 2-3Filbev 0-5 Joint Effort 1-3 The Losers 1-2UF Outcasts 1-2 GrandCharlie’s Illusion 1-3Cherobs 0-3 Sid’s Kids 0-218—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, January 18, 1980C^A5SIftep AD ~pk6r€AD 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. $1 for special headline.Deadlines: For Tuesday paper, 12noon Friday; for Friday, 12 noonWednesday.Display advertising rates areavailable upon request. 753-3263.SPACEProfessor here Spring quarter onlyseeks nice apartment or house to rent.753-8712.Large Studio in ideal location at 59th &Blackstone beginning Feb. 1st. Rent is$220 a month. Call Jan at 363-5256.Responsible adult seeks room in yourhome in exchange for minimal rentand/or negotiable house/yardmaintenance. Also intersted in house¬sitting. 955-8760 evenings.Roommate needed to share spaciouseast Hyde Pk apt. S150/mo. 288-0327keep trying anytime.FOR RENT: E Hyde Pk large deluxe 1br 325 493-3822, 493-2179.Share house with 3 grad, own room,yard, washer/dryer, dishwasher,roomy on bus route. $125/mo. Non-smoker. Female pref. 643-7258.Looking for a tenant or apartment?Utilize the student govt, house searchnewsletter. 753-3273.CONDO FOR SALE . E. Hyde Pk, 2 brcarpeted financing available. 493-3822.Coachhouse apt. all new. KE6-1662Basement Studio Apartment to sublet.$110/month. Call Rhonda at 643-1268.57 and Drexel. Female roommatewanted for sunny room. $110/month.Available Feb. 1 or earlier. Call493-7681 after 1 p.m.ROOMMATE WANTED: Share large2 br apt. furnished, sun porch, on parkat 57 and Kenwood. 955-2221 p.m.PEOPLE WANTEDCLERK WANTED-part-time, morn¬ings. Call 324-3965 before noon.The Department of BehavioralSciences needs people who want toparticipate as paid subjects inpsycholinguistic and cognitivepsychology experiments. For furtherinformation call 753-4718.DRIVER WANTED-must have owncar and be available early morninghrs. and weekends. Call 324-3965before noon.TUTOR WANTED for STEP TutoringProgram. Volunteer two hours eachweek to help a high school or gradeschool student. STEP is a U. of C. Sfud.Org. Contact Carla at 241-5044 or Dave241-5178.Faculty family seeks univ. student tokeep elementary school age girls com¬pany and prepare simple meal (optionto stay and eat) Tues. and or Thurs.2:30-7:00 p.m. Good pay on campus955-6384 eves.FULL TIME RESEARCH TECHNI-CIAN (or senior research technician)to work in a Virology laboratory. Posi¬tion involves biochemical work andcertain supervisory duties.References required. Call Dr. NizaFrenkel at 753-2702.Free tickets to the Folk Festival in ex¬change for a few hrs. of your time. Avariety of jobs available. For more in¬fo. call Karen 955-9112 or Lee 955-5770.Native speaker of Tamil with deanenunciation in formal and colloquialstyles needed for taping and other ser¬vices. Wnt Spr Qurs. Hrs vary 4-10hrs/wk. $5/hr. Call Prof. J. Lindholmfor appt. 753-4355.Over 270,000 Summer Job. Full refundif you don’t get your choice through us.Send $2.95 to: Collegiate Press Box556, Belleville, Mich. 48111.Permanent part-time secretarywanted, Department of History. 20-30hr. wk. schedule flexible. Good typing(55wpm) 2 years college or equiv. exp.Call Leslie Evans 753-4442.Subjects wanted for study of low-flowoxygen thereapy. 3 hrs. remuneration.Call Dr. Rattenborg. 947-5933.Single mom in need of full-timebabysitter for infant in Feb. Pleasecontact Louise Mayo at 285-4750.Special event catering: Part-timestaff being organized to cater gourmetmeals for special university events.Exciting opportunity, excellent pay.Contact Sharon Rosen 753-35279:00am-4:00pm.Seeking partner with teaching, salesor supervisory exp. age 25 to 45 tooperate substantial income P.T.sideline from home Married. College.667-4339 (5-10p.m.).FOR SALEQueensize Sofa Bed in good condition$200 or best offer Call 363 5256. VW Red 1968 Bug, Excellent radio, Ex-tra heater. $500.493-5774.23 in diag screen BW console TV Picand sound OK. $20. Call 643-7932.SUPER ENTERTAINMENTVALUE!!! Balcony seats at CABCBarbershop Harmony Show, 8:15 pmSat. 1/19/80, Civic Opera House. Fordetails call 433-2341,Antiques: Need some work. Spool legstand, empire mirror. Also sturdy af-tract. Childs dresser. 363-2519.A wonderful pair of Adidas hikingboots. In great condition but no longera match for their owner's big feet.Contact Scott Rauland. 753-2249.Hardwood dresser; end table; easychair. Call 241-6497,Plymouth Van Camper, 75. KE6 1662.PEOPLE FOR SALEWill do professional typing from copy,dictaphone or shorthand. (821-1868).Excellent, accurate typist w/legal ex¬perience will type papers and dissertations or IBM. Reasonable rated.684-7414.ARTWORK- posters, illustration,calligraphy, invitations etc. NoelYovovich 5441 S. Kenwood 493-2399.Thesus, Disert, Manuscripts, LatestIBM Corrective Sel II typewriter,Rates based on Vol and Condition ofdraft. Best Eminence Bond turn. Mrs.Ross. 239-5982.FRENCH native teacher offerstutorials-all levels. 268-9262.PIANO LESSONS CAN BEFUN...with a short cut approach aim¬ed at mastering what you need to beable to play from songbooks. Ifdrudgery made you give up piano as akid, consider a new method whose goalis enjoyment rather thay drytechnicial proficiency. For details,call Alfie a 752-8917 (am or evening).TUTOR-Experienced tutor Chem106-116 Call Paul 493-6761SCENESCorrection: The Chicago LiteraryReview will meet on Wednesday after¬noons at 4:30 in the Maroon office. Allold and new staff are welcome. Wehave an issue to plan!Magazine Workshop for WritersPublication guaranteed Hyde ParkArt Center 5236 Blackstone Fri. 7:30pm. Call 947-9656, 536-1662.Free Swimming Instructions forAdults, Tuesday IHN 7:30-8:30 p.m.WANTEDFemale to watch 2 children (1 and 4)and do light housekeeping as needed,8-12 hrs. per week. Flexible hours to beworked out for 1-2 weekend after¬noons, possible 1 weeknight. $3.25.Must like children. 241-5968.LOST AND FOUNDLOST: Silver-colored watch withmaroon-stripped watchband, has sen¬timental value if found please call684-6566.SERVICESSingle parents grp. recruitingmembers. Meet weekly to talk. Groupfacilitator fee 15.00 mo. Call 363-2519eves.Pregnancy tests Saturdays 10-1Augustana Church. 5500 S. Woodlawn.$1.50 donation. Southside Women'sHealth Service. 667-5505.PERSONALSTHIS is my ONLY authentic personalad. YOU know what that means.Congratulations Sara Lee! To Sara,the cream in our coffee, for finallygrowing up, and to Lee, the applestrudel of our eve, for becoming a realwoman. A happy birthday, and muchlove to two wonderful people, from thefolks in Lower Flint.Bo-Bean sprout consumption can behazardous to your health.Happy Birthday Riley from yourfriends.Kitchen Drudge: Perhaps there will bea role reversal soon. You must admit Imake a pretty mean green beancasserole. Shroud of Gobe,FOUND: German Shepherd pup,female, friendly, partially trained; byReynolds Club. Jan. 11 Will give togood home. Leave message for Cath atcourt Theatre or phone 955-9635.The unicorn is a mythical beast.Dark LadyHey Jay, the oranges are gone and Iquit. See you in court.In past months, 2 people have told methat if you love a person, you shouldset them free-if they don’t come backyou never really had them in the firstplace. So go on - be a hero(ine) I setyou free. Melodramatic, eh? All mylove.To the timorous beastie. giver ofpearls and connosieur of coke; don't let Monte Carlo corrupt you. Mrs.Kohout.I keep magic in my pocket, 1 brush itinto my hair. Every time the sunshines, my head sends magic spells tothe stars.UC HOTLINE 753-1777Got the Winter Quarter blues? If youwant to talk, have a question or need areferral, try the UC Hotline-7 pm-7am.VISUALIZATIONANDHOLISTIC HEALTHEnjoy high levels of health and well¬being. Learn about holistic health anddesign and implement vour own pro¬gram through use of the life style diaryand visualization in a supportivegroup. Thurs. at the Gargoyle,5:30-7:30 beginning Jan. 31. Call Dobbi288 3706, or 337-8100.SELF-HYPNOSISSEMINAROn campus beginning Jan 29 from7:00-9:00pm. Learn the fundamentalsof Self-Hypnosis and develop the skilland technique necessary for its use"It has the power to help youtransform whatever area of your lifeyou address it to from enhancing studyskills and improving health to deepening relationships and clarifying andhelping you attain future goals" 7 ses¬sions, $70. Taught by a clinical hyp¬notherapy program graduate. CallDobbi 288-3706 or 337-8100.ENJOYComplete a day of study by giving andreceiving a deeply relaxing massagebefore a warm crackling fire. Ambientenvironment, friendly people, ex¬cellent instructor, center of campus.Thurs. Jan 31, 7:30-9:30 pm, 5655University. 7 sessions $70. Reserva-tions call Dobbi 288-3706 or 337-8100YOGAReenergize and harmonize body,mind, and spirit. Begin Yoga Jan 29 atthe Gargoyle 5:30-7.00 pm. Hathapostures, breathing, energization,meditation and deep relaxation. 7 ses¬sions $40. Call Dobbi 288-3706 or337-8100.NUTRITIONSEMINARThe Chicago College of OsteopathicMedicine, 1000 East 53rd Street, issponsoring a free community healtheducation seminar entitled, "How theFood You Eat Affects Your Heath," onJanuary 24, 1980 at 7:00 pm. Ward Per¬rin, D O., professor and chairman ofthe CCOM Department of InternalMedicine and Dean of ContinuingMedical Education will speak on"Nutritional Approaches to the KillerDiseases," ana Wendy Rupp, Directorof Food Services at the ChicagoOsteopathic Medical Center, willspeak on "Nutrition in the Super¬market and the Kitchen." Theseminar will be held in the auditoriumof the Chicago Osteopathic FamilyOutpatient Clinic.31 BEERSBottled beers, that is. In addition toour eight great TAP BEERS now atthe Pub „SPACE INVADERSPART TWO NOWATTHEPUBTABLE TENNISTOURNAMENTA Round Robin Table Tennis tournament open to male and female 1Cungergraduates. Saturday Jan. 19,9:00 Ida Noyes Hall, 3rd floor. Top twofinishers in each category will repre¬sent UC in the inter collegiateregionals.BLUES HARMONICAExperienced teacher/performer oncampus. All styles, all skill levels;Serious inquiries only. Call Dan667-7677.PUPPYFor Sale: Labrador pup blk. akc, f, 8 wks. wormed. Shots. $125 negotaible.684-7663.MIME WORKSHOPEF Clown and Co will be holding amime workshop at 3:00 this Saturdayin Ida Noyes, third floor. Anyone in¬terested is welcome to attend. Nocharge.ROSE/PUTT TIXDie. movie theatre tickets at ReynoldsClub Box Office.CAMBODIACAMBODIA. THE ONGOING CRISIS,Monday Jan. 21. 7:30 pm InternationalHouse. SPEAKERS: Hugh Schwart-zberg, Co-Chairman of the EmergencyTask Force for Indochinese Refugeesand Dr. Edwin Silverman, Director ofthe Governer's Information Center forAsian Assistance. Discussion andmobilization to follow. Sponsored byCAMBODIA RELIEF NOW.GET SASIFIEDLearn to use SAS (Stastical AnalysisSystem) and solve your data defini¬tion, statistical analysis, and reportwriting starting January 28. Come tothe Center before January 24 toregister Cost $25. Computer time pro¬vided. Call 753-8400 for more informa¬tion.JOIN CONCERTKeep your embouchure in shapeStudents Fac Alums needed who playcl tpt fbn etc. Rehersals are Sat 1:00pm Cloister Club. Ida Noyes-DoingBrahms, Mussorg undergrad preferred. 288-0571 before9am and after 5pm or 684-4631 after10pm.CODERSNOCR needs people for two types ofjobs demanding high accuracy, con¬centration, and attention to details.One job requires some typing skills.Familiarity with computer terminalshelpful. Begins mid-January throughJune. The second job involves codingcomplex materials for a nationalsurvey. Begins in late January andcontinues through June. Call 753-1121.An Equal Opportunity/AffirmativeAction Employer. ADMINISTRATIVESECRETARYTO $12,500We are looking for a well organized in¬dustrious individual to perform avariety of secretarial and ad¬ministrative tasks for a 4-persondepartment in a large membershiporganization. Typing and dictaphonerequired. Minimun 65-70 wpm. Salarycommensurate with experience. Cam¬pus location. Call 947-2565.TRANSCENDENTALMEDITATIONFor information, call 643-7513.RESEARCH ASST.Full-time position available now.Work involves analysis of court files.Position for abt. six months. Salarynegotiable depending on ed. and exp.of person. Call Dr. Gilboy or sendresume to same at Americn Bar Foun¬dation. 1155 East 60th.SECRETARYNORC needs a person to assisf two ad¬ministrators in a variety of secretarialand clerical tasks. Job includes typingof correspondence, letters, and reportsand other related duties. Typing(50wpm) required. 1 year previoussecretarial experience. Begins im¬mediately. $9,490-512,000 plus benefitsCall 753-1121. An Equal Opportuni¬ty/Affirmative Action Employer. o9VERSAILLES5254 S. DorchesterWELL M AINTAINEDBUILDINGAttractive 1V2 and2V2 Room StudiosFurnished or Unfurnished$192 to $291Based on AvailabilityAH Utilities IncludedAt Campus Bus Stop324-0200 Mrs. GroakSAVE ON MOVIESRose and Plitt theatre discount ticketat Reynolds Club Box Office.KEYLINE/PASTEUPFull time experienced keyline pasteupartist wanted. Must be knowledgabieconcerning printing and typesetting.Design ability desirable. ContactJoseph Alderfer, University ofChicago Press. 753-2576.SUPERBOWL XIVTHE PUB will be open this Sunday forthe SUPERBOWL. Specials during thegame surprise giveways if the RAMSwin! We'll open the doors at 3:30 andclose 1 hour after the game.CLERKTYPISTEntry level positions available at theNational Opinion Research centerPersons needed to assist central officesupervisors in a variety of in officeclerical tasks associated with the datacollection portion of a large scalestudy. Duties include extensive recordkeeping and typing correspondenceAccuracy and attention to detail essen¬tial. typing (45 wpm) requiredPrevious office clerical experienceand some college preferable Projectcontinues through May 1980. 37’/a hourweek. $4.00-54.50 per hour. Call753-1121 or 753-1166. An Equal Opportunity Affirmative ActionEmployer.GARDENAPARTMENTOne bedroom of furnished 2 bedroomgarden apartment, Immediatelyavailable 2 blocks from Regenstein, 1block from 1C laundry restaurantsshopping Female necessary PERSONALSZZZZZZZ-lt's so boring to be the RegThese days only the real Regoholicscome visit. I mean besides the guyswho get high way back in the stacks---you know who you are! RegRACQUETBALLCLUBMtg Wed . Jan. 23, 5:15pm., 3rd floor,Ida Noyes. All levelsof play welcomeTheFLAMINGOand CABAN A CLUB.">500 S. Shore F) rive• Studio ami 1 Bedroom• FurtiLhed and I nfumi-hed• r. of c. i»u< -lop• (lutdoor Pool and (,arden>• ('.arprtiit” and Drape- Inch• Se<’iirit\• l’i»iver«ilv Suli»id\ forStudent- and Staff• Deli<ate«»en• BarU-c Shop• Beaut\ Shop• J.B.D. Restaurant• Dentist• ValetFREE 1* ARKINGM.SnyderPL 2-3800 Cafe Enrico1411 E. 53rd StOur25thAnniversarySpecialAll you can eat menuFried Chicken $3.50Ocean Perch $3.75Lasagne $3.25Rib Tips $4.50with cole slaw and potatoestossed salad. 50C extra7 days a week11:30 am-l:00 amThursday nightBeer Night60 oz pitcheronly$1.75SOLVE YOUR SUMMER JOB WORRIES NOW!SUMMER INTERN PROGRAMIN JEWISH COMMUNAL SERVICEJune 9 through August 8,1980Sponsored by the Jewish Federation of MetropolitanChicago, Hillel-College Age Youth Services, forChicago area undergraduates interested in explor¬ing careers in social work in the Jewish community.An $800.00 stipend is granted to each intern.If interested, contact Jill Weinberg or Joel Poupko,College Age Youth Services, One South FranklinStreet, Room 805, Chicago, Illinois 60606, or call346-6700, ext. 375.The Chicago Maroon—Friday, January 18, 1980—19CHANCESFeatures a Super Salad Bar Steak Burgers . Super Sandwiches Soup and SaladBar Steak and Salad Bar. Carry-outs available 7 days a week. The Michelob is on uswhile you wait to pick up a carry-out order (Sorry, only 1 person can drink free!)Jazz! Sunday evenings 8:005225 S. Harperin Hyde ParkTelephone 363-1454(Good with this ad.)We re swinging Steakburgers 7 days a week Real Estate Company1638 East 55th StreetLOCATION: near 57th KENWOODSIZE: THREE STORY BRICKLOT SIZE: 188’deepPRICE: $2(55,000 (This is a new listing) 493-0666CONDITION: EXCELLENTGARAGE: ATTACHED 2CARAVAILABILITY: ON CLOSINGSPACIOUS (Approximately 3,600 ft. of living space) BOULEVARD BEAUTYNine rooms, excellent condition. 3 baths. Near 54th & Hyde Park. $106,000.OVERLOOK THE MIDWAY AND PARK. Co-op apartment on 59th near Harper.House-style floor plan, 3 bdrms., 2 baths, in a building you’ve admired before.Loads of natural wood throughout, wood burning fireplace, bright and sunny withfrench windows. Lots of storage, newly rewired. $68,500 cash.SINGLES ATTENTION! $39,000 buys condominium overlooking the lake, 1bedroom, new kitchen. Here’s your chance. Other deal fell through.HYDE PARK’S CHOICE CORNER . . . Vacant R-5 parcel. Now 200’ frontage. Willdivide into four 50’ sections each. Expanded residential or multi-family use O K.HISTORIC “PRE-COLUMBIAN EXPO’’ HYDE PARK HOME IN GOLDENAREA NEAR 59TH & BLACKSTONE. Charming library with fireplace, high, highceilings, 11 rooms, 2>2 baths. $250,000.LUXURY 56TH STREET CONDO at penthouse level - right on the lake side, 4bedrooms, 4 baths, approximately 3,000 sq. ft. Imagine, his and hers studies. Mainstudy in rosewood, true luxury. Jackson Towers. 56th & Everett. $163,000.IMAGINE ..6 ROOM CONDO OPEN ON THREE SIDES! On high 15th floor nearthe new Hilton Hotel with a high unobstructed view. Excellent condition! $85,000.NOTE: We also have a nice one bedroom apartment in a high rise on 54th & HydePark Boulevard. $48,500...and lots more. Call."TURN YOUR DOLLARS INTO BETTER QUARTERS"For Sales Information, Call....CHARLOTTE VIKSTROM, BROKER493-0666Kathy Ballard, Sales Associate (res. 947-0453)Ken Wester, Sales Associate (res. 947-0557)o?^£\ thsiNMaTEs) THE KN*Ana *rrstoffencT ■ WWHPK-FM'S883 ANNUAL—BEST OF 79 SHOW JP150 Records to give awaylHCj^SATURDAY JAN. 19 W&6 RM.—12 MIDNITEDominationListen and WIN!All these and moreJOE JACKSONLOOK SHARP!