vol. 89, No. 28 The University of Chicago Copyright 1980 The Chicago Maroon Tuesday, January 22, 1980Fulbright to be Visiting Fellow for WinterJ. William Fulbright, formerU. S. Senator from Arkansas andchairman of the Senate Committeeon Foreign Relations, will be theVisiting Fellow for the WinterQuarter.Fulbright will be staying atWoodward Court from February 19through the 21st and will partici¬pate in classes, group sessions andseminars.Fulbright is best known for hisinterest in international relations.He was a vocal critic of UnitedStates involvement in the VietNam war and sponsored a series ofFSACCSLBy James MarksA mandatory activities fee forboth graduate and undergraduateswill be discussed at the next meet¬ing of the Faculty Student Adviso¬ry Committee on Campus StudentLife (FSACCSL).Student Government (SG) hasalready endorsed the concept ofthe fee and meetings between rep¬resentatives of SG and Major Ac¬tivities Board (MAB) were heldover the weekend.Currently MAB’charges a fee of$12 to undergraduates and gradu¬ate students may subscribe toMAB for the same fee.SG is allocated $30,000 yearly bythe University. The SG financecommittee has received over$75,000 in requests this year, a fig¬ure which increases annually,though the University grant has re¬mained at its current level since1974 according to Finance Commit¬tee Chairman Jeff Leavell.The student fee concept wasunanimously accepted by SG saidLeavell. He added that the conceptwas still open to change.Leavell descirbed SG and MABsponsored student activites asbeing “near-sighted” due to lack ofresources. He suggested that thenew fee could significantly en¬hance the opportunity for studentinvolvement in activities oncampus.Compared to the rest of the na¬tion the SG budget is 300% lowerthan at other schools, according to scholarships to promote the ex¬change of students between coun¬tries.Plans are presently being madeto have Fulbright meet withformer Fulbright scholars duringhis stay here.A committee of four facultymembers and three students madethe selection of Fulbright. He is thesecond person to be invited tocampus under the Visiting Fellowsprogram. Supreme Court Justice,John Paul Stevens was the first Vi¬siting fellow and was on campusfrom October 18th through theweighs feeJames MarkJeff EltonSG President Jeff Elton. “Colum¬bia, for example, has a $120,000budget.“I think the administration issomew'hat concerned about thelevel of funding. They are awarethat student activities are beingcut, but they are under their ownpressures of rising costs and un¬derstandably cannot increase thegrant,” Leavell said.A similar fee increase proposalwas made three yars ago. It failedto be put into effect, however, dueto a low voter turnout in a studentreferendum.The finance committee currentlydistributes the annual SG grant of$30,000 to about 200 clubs andTurn to Page 3 20 th.As during the Stevens visit, Ful¬bright will answer questions dur¬ing a public question and answersession. He will spend the rest ofhis stay discussing various issueswith students in more informal set¬tings.The Visiting Fellows programwas conceived to provide studentswith contact with important publicfigures.President Gray said the purposeof the program is “provide stu¬dents with opportunities for infor¬mal association in small groupswith a variety of interesting peoplewho in different ways are activeparticipants in national and worldaffairs.”The program wras created by agrant from the Women’s Board ofthe Univesity. Committeemembers stress that the programdoes not constitute an award or en¬dorsement of the view's of the fel¬low.Fulbright received his bache¬lor’s degree from the University ofArkansas in 1925. He was a Rhodesscholar and recieved a master’sTurn to Page 3 J. William FulbrightSchlesinger to stump for TeddyBy Jon ShamisArthur Schlesinger Jr., the notedhistorian of the presidency, will beappearing on behalf of Students forKennedy Thursday afternoon at2 pm in Quantrell Auditorium.Schlesinger was a Presidentialassistant from 1961 to 1964. For¬merly teaching at Harvard Univer¬sity, he is now Albert SchweitzerProfessor of Humanities at CityUniversity of New York. His worksinclude the three volumes of TheAge of Roosevelt; The ImperialPresidency; The Age of Jackson;and A Thousand Days: John F.Kennedy in the White House, ofwhich the last two received Pu¬litzer prizes.Aggie Zarkadas. who heads theon-campus movement, expectsthis to be the start of a very event¬ful campaign. Sources close to themovement suggest that there is astrong possibility that Kennedy himself will be speaking oncampus sometime in February.The Anderson for President com¬mittee on campus is headed byTom Powers. Their next organiza¬tional meeting will be held on Tues¬day. January 29. They also have acoffee planned for the 29th at whichseveral guests will appear. Ander¬son wiil be speaking in QuantrellAuditorium on February 8 at 10am. In addition to these meetings,the campaign plans to set up infor¬mation booths in Cobb and Reyn¬olds club in early February.Both Kennedy and Andersongroups, as well as a committeesupporting John Connally are offi¬cially registered with the PoliticalAffairs Board (PAB), an organiza¬tion affiliated with Student Gov¬ernment w hose purpose is to assistsuch groups in bringing presidenti¬al candidates to campus. They arealso working closely with StudentGovernment in an attempt to regis¬ ter university students.Committees to elect GeorgeBush and re-elect Jimmy Carterhave been recently established. Anorganizational meeting for Bushsupporters will take place Thurs¬day evening at 7:30 pm on the thirdfloor of Ida Noyes Hall. PresidentCarter’s supporters will be havinga coffee tonight in the Ida NoyesLibrary at 7:30 pm.The following are campus repre¬sentatives of the various Presi¬dential candidates:Anderson Tom Powers753-2240 - Rm. 1817Baker Brenda Lyons947-6919Bush Doug Markham241-5287Carter Sarah Burke753-3751Connally Mark Robinson753-2240 - Rm. 1801Kennedy Aggie Zarkadas753-2249 - Rm. 3411College BowlBy David GlocknerQ. We all know that HenryJames created Daisy Miller, butwho created Daisy Buchanan?A. Fitzgerald. Ella Fitzgerald.(Chamberlin House College Bowlteam)No team that shouts out an an¬swer like that will go far in thegrim world of college trivia con¬tests. The Chamberlin Houseteam struggled to a 1-1 record inthe University’s recent CollegeBowl competition before losingheart and withdrawing, giving upfor this year their chance to win squad is a contendernational fame and a week-longvacation in Florida.But five more persistent stu¬dents, along with their coach,may go to Florida this spring toparticipate in the national Col¬lege Bowl championships. Thesix are members of the Universi¬ty’s College Bowl “all-star”team, made up of the best playersfrom the 14 teams that enteredthe campus competition held aweek and a half ago.The all-star team returned Sun¬day from a tournament in St.Louis, where they played onlyone match, defeating host schoolWashington University 225-170. The match was played in frontof what team captain Lorin Burtedescribed as “a rather rabid au¬dience,” something Burte sayswill be obvious to anyone who lis¬tens to the match when it isbroadcast on WBBM radio Sun¬day. March 9 at 7:30 p.m Whilethe home crowd of about 150cheered loudly whenever theW ashington University team an¬swered a question, there was no¬ticeably less enthusiasm whenthe Chicago team scored pointsAlthough they played only onematch, the University’s teammay still be invited to the week-Tum to Page 3To get into Medical Schoolyou probably read over 2,000,000 words.Readjust 112 more and you may geta full Scholarship.The Armed Forces need physicians. And we rewilling to pay tor them. Full tuition. Books. Fees.Necessary equipment. And $400 a month tax free.Once selected for a Health Professions Scholar¬ship-available from the Army. Navy or Air Force-you are commissioned a second lieutenant orensign in the Reserve. Serve a 45-day active dutyperiod annually. And agree to serve on active dutyfor a period dependent on the duration of yourparticipation in the scholarship program.As a fully commissioned officer you receiveexcellent salary and benefits. More importantly,you get the opportunity to work and learn besidededicated professionals.For more information merely mail in the couponh^lowARMED FORCESWANTED:PUBLIC SECTOR MANAGERSThe SCHOOL OF URBAN and PUBLIC AFFAIRS atCARNEGIE-MELLON UNIVERSITY offers a twoyear program designed to prepare future leaders forprofessional service in the expanding area ofmanagement of public policy.Career opportunities in this critical area areexpanding faster than in most other fields. They offergreat challanges for innovative approaches to publicsector management using modern quantitativemethods. SUPA#s problem-solving orientation offersdiverse careers to aspiring public managers.*SUPA has had a 100% PLACEMENT RECORDsince its first graduating class in 1972.Rosanne SalernoSchool of Urban & Public AffairsAdmissions OfficeCarnegie-Mellon UniversityMargaret Morrison Bldg., Room 110Pittsburgh, PA 15213FOR MORE INFORMATION, PLEASE FILL OUT AND RETURN THE FOLLOWING COUPONNAME.AODRESS.CITY STATE. ZIP.UNIVERSITY/COLLEGE.MAJOR DEGREE.DATE OF GRADUATION.SOCIAL SECURITY NO Q P.A. STROH A PARTY AT THE PUBThis Saturday night 9:30-1Music by the Pete Baron JazztetPrizes, giveaways and ofcourse ... plenty of coldStroll's Beer.Pub membership required/21 yrs. ageLocal distributor Jos. Triner. Corp.25% OFF SALEGET ACQUAINTED SALE FOR U of CSTUDENTS AND FACULTYBrand name clothing such as H. FREEMAN, CHAPS,DONALD BROOKS, MALCOLM KENNETH, AQUAS-CUTUM, LONDON FOG, SERO and others at 25%off of our very low listed prices.This is a special offer for U of C students and facultyonly. This sale applies Mon - Fri from 3 PM - 6 PM andSAT from 10 AM to 4 PM.Your U of C ID card is necessary for admission tothis sale.Slight charge for other than basic alterations.WILLIAM’S TRADITIONALCLOTHING19-S. LaSalle St. - 782-9885(Entrance on Arcade Place)2 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday. January 22, 1980/No solution reached on IC securityBy Jeff DavitzA long discussion last Thursday betweenofficials of the Regional Transportation Au¬thority (RTA) and University representa¬tives produced no specific agreements, butJonathan Kleinbard, vice-president for com¬munity affairs, remains “hopeful” that se¬curity on the IC Railroad platforms willsoon be improved.Joseph L. Matalone, RTA chief of securi¬ty, and other transit officials plan to be inHyde Park today to review security precau¬tions at the stations. Matalone said Fridaythat improvements “won’t happen over¬night, but they will happen.”Matalone said the meeting covered issuesof lighting, warming sheds and platform re¬pair. According to him, the RTA will be re¬viewing security measures at the 51st, 56thand 59th Street stations. The 59th Street IC station has been the siteof three rapes in the past six months.According to Kleinbard, security mea¬sures at these stations, used heavily bymembers of the University community,dates from the 1920s. Kleinbard said the Uni¬versity has sought improvements in the pastbut has been unsuccessful.Kleinbard said Friday that the Universityis “not going to let go this time. The situa¬tion is so serious we have to press hard.”According to Kleinbard, who is handlingthe negotiations with the RTA, the Universi¬ty is focusing on getting improvements inthe lighting and renovations of the waitingsheds.Kleinbard also said the University is veryinterested in the installation of some kind ofcommunication system from the platform topolice.Kleinbard said access has been a particu¬ lar problem at the 59th Street station. Theembankments and the tracks themselveshave provided easy escape routes for crimi¬nals in the past, he said. Kleinbard said theaccess problem was discussed at the meet¬ing, but is “not easily resolvable.”At the request of the RTA, the Universityreviewed security at the stations and madeseveral recommendations last summer.Kleinbard later said that the RTA could notimplement any of the recommendations be¬cause of the loss of an expected federalgrant.Kleinbard said his view that “things oughtto be done quickly,” has not changed sincethe review of the situation last summer.“I don’t want to say I’m not optimistic,”said Kleinbard in reference to the renewingof the negotiations between the RTA and theUniversity. “I like to think people keep theirword.” Jonathan KleinbardNewsbriefsS.Africa forumThe Progressive Union will present aforum on the topic “Has South AfricaChanged: Three views on Current Condi¬tions.” The Views will be presented byDenis Brutus, an exiled South African poetnow teaching at Northwestern University,Jean Comaroff, assistant professor of an¬thropology, and John Comaroff. assistantprofessor of anthropology and chairman ofthe Committee on African Studies. Theforum takes place this Thursday, January24, at 7:30 pm, in Cobb 106.Jobs, Jobs JobsWinter Quarter Mid-terms may not yet beupon us. but it is already time to start nail¬ing down a summer job. Application dead¬lines for summer scholarship, fellowship,and intern programs arrive very soon. In¬formation on such programs, and applica¬tions may be obtained in the Office of CareerCounseling and Placement, Reynolds Club,Room 202. The following are just several ofthe many programs offered:The Michael Curry Internship Program —sponsored by Governor Thompson, the pro¬gram places selected interns in Illinois stateagencies for a two-month period (June 15 -August 15), with a stipend of $650/month.Applications must be on file by February1st.The Deutscher Akademischer Austausch-dients (DAAD) — the DAAD administersseveral programs of German languagestudy in Germany. These include the follow¬ing: Dissertation Research fellowships for2-6 months at Goethe Institute for undergra-ducates not majoring in German, scholar¬ ships for which include tuition ana tees,room, and partial board; and, the “Hochs-chulferienkurse,” a three-week summercourse in a German university in Germanstudies or language, for both undergradu¬ates and graduate students, including a sti¬pend which covers course fees and partialliving expenses. The deadline for all DAADprogram applications is January 31st.Smith on Genesisand ExodusThe Winter Quarter series of CollegiateLectures in the Liberal Arts begins Thurs¬day night when Jonathan Z. Smith, dean ofthe College, William Benton Professor ofReligion and Human Sciences in the Col¬lege. and professor in the Divinity School,speaks on “Thinking with Stories: Reflec¬tions on Genesis and Exodus.” The lectureseries, sponsored by the dean of the Collegeand the staff of “Human Being and Citizen,”seeks to contribute to the community of dis¬course about books, themes, and questionsconsidered in the Common Core.Lectures later this quarter include Profes-Forum on women andWomen’s Union will hold a forum titled“Women and Nuclear Power” this Thurs¬day. January 24, at 7:30 pm in Cobb 115.Dr. Helen Caldicott, a pediatrician notedfor her research into the effects of radiationon children, will narrate a slide show — “IHave Three Children of My Own.” Dr. Cal¬dicott is the author of Nuclear Madness:What You Can Do. Jonathan Z. Smithsors Lee Yearley of Stanford University onThe Gospel of Matthew and Aristotle'sEthics, Richard Kennington of Catholic Uni¬versity on Descartes, and Allan Bloom ofthe Committee on Social Thought on Rous¬seau.All lectures take place in Harper 130 at 8p.m.. and are followed by refreshments anddiscussion.nukes“Feminist Visions of a Nuclear Free Fu¬ture” will be described by Sidney Spinster,geography student and founding member ofthe Michagamee Feminist Alliance, an anti¬nuclear activist group. Deborah Senn, of theIllinois Public Action Council, will speak on“Women and the Economics of Energy.”An open discussion will follow the slideshow and speakers. Rent panelto meetSouth Side residents will have an opportu¬nity to comment on the proposed Fair RentCommission Ordinance at a communityhearing scheduled for 7:30 pm Wednesday,January 30, at King Community Center, 4314S. Cottage Grove. The hearing is an officialmeeting of a subcommittee of the City Coun¬cil’s Committee on Building and Zoning.The ordinance would create a Fair RentCommission to hear tenant complaints ofexcessive rent increases. Determinationsare made by hearing officers who must takeinto account increases in operating costs,improvements to the building, the history ofrent rates in the building, increases and de¬creases in services and similar factors.Fifth Ward Alderman Lawrence S.Bloom, a co-sponsor of the measure, saidthat this is not a rent control law. “Thiscommission will not set permissible rentlevels or rates of rental increases.” Bloomsaid. “But the commission can roll backrents that are not justified by objective fac¬tors.”“If there were an adequate supply of ren¬tal units unavailable, this ordinance mightnot be needed.” Bloom said. “The fact is,however, that the high demand for apart¬ments has permitted a few unscrupulouslandlords to take advantage of their captivemarket. These are the only ones who haveanything to lose from a Fair Rent Commis¬sion.” Bloom said that this issue will haveimportant implications for students inapartments around the University.Persons wishing more information re¬garding the ordinance or the hearing shouldcontact Bloom at 667-0900.FulbrightContinued from Page 1degree from Oxford in 1931. He took his lawdegree from George Washington Universityin 1934 and then worked for the Departmentof Justice. He has been a law professor andserved as president of the University of Ar¬kansas from 1939 to 1942. He was elected tothe Senate in 1944 after one term in theHouse of Representatives.Fulbright was a member of the Senate Fi¬nance Committee and the Joint EconomicCommittee. He is best know, however, forhis 15 years as chairman of the Foreign Re¬lations Committee.Fulbright is the author of several books onforeign policy, including The Arrogance ofPower in 1966 and The Crippled Giant in1972.Since he was defeated by a 2-1 margin inthe Democratic senate primary by DaleBumpers, Fulbright as been associated withthe Washington law firm of Hogan and Hart-son.A more complete biography of Fulbrightwill appear in later issues of The Maroon. College BowlContinued from Page 1long national championship tourna¬ment to be held this March in Florida, Burtesaid. Under the rules of the St. Louis tour¬nament, any team which won at least twomatches was automatically invited to theFlorida competition. But since not enoughteams won two games to fill the availablespaces at the national tournament, the Chi¬cago team may be invited to participate.Every team invited to the Florida tourna¬ment receives a week-long vacation. TheFlorida matches will be broadcast nation¬wide on the CBS radio network and may betelevised by PBS.“Our status is undetermined as yet. Wehaven’t lost, yet we haven’t won twogames,” Burte said Sunday. Burte hopes tofind out from College Bowl officials in thenext few weeks whether or not his team willget to go to Florida. The University’s teamis also scheduled to play in a separate re¬gional contest, scheduled at Eau Claire,Wisconsin on Feb. 22.Most of the other eight schools represent¬ed at the St. Louis contest were heavily sub¬ sidized by their home schools, a luxuryBurte, Tammy Ravitts, David Rubin, Mi¬chael Dodge. James Gillispie. and coachKate McGregor did not enjoy. While theteam from San Francisco St. Universityflew to St. Louis at their school’s expense.Chicago’s team crowded into Burte’s Novaand paid for their own gas. The College Bowlorganization picked up ther hotel bill, how¬ever.College Bowl competition is serious busi¬ness at some schools, Burte said. The Mar¬shall University squad came with two back¬up teams, two coaches, uniforms, and ahandful of proud parents who wanted towatch their children perform. When theylost their first match, eliminating themfrom the tournament, Marshall’s playersbeggan yelling at each other, trying to fixthe blame for their defeat.While the Chicago team didn’t have uni¬forms. “we had our funny hats,” Burte said.Team members wore a Sherlock Holmeshat. a replica of a knight’s helmet, and ahalo of molecular bonds, among otherpieces of headgear.Many other schools have had CollegeBowl competitions for several years, butthis year was the first time in recent yearsthat there has been a competition on thiscampus. Both Burte and McGregor attend¬ ed the national championships last year asrepresentatives of other schools; they decid¬ed to organize a University of Chicago tour¬nament after they came here last fallThe all-star team has already been cho¬sen. but the final match in the campus tour¬nament will not be played until Thursdaybecause all the questions supplied by Col¬lege Bowl officials were used up during pre¬liminary matches and Burte had to send formore. The final match, between 8‘2 andFirst Flint, is scheduled for 10:00 pm Thurs¬day in Ida Noyes Hall.Although Burte was pleased with the qual¬ity of the teams that entered this year, hebelieves the players will improve over thenext few years With experience. Burtesays, “you sort of understand the cretinswho write these questions.”FSACCSLContinued from Page 1groups on campus, ranging from a Greekstudents organization to WHPK. the Univer¬sity’s FM radio station.Any student fee would have to be ap¬proved by Dean of Students Charles O’Con¬nell who has opposed such measures in thepast.The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, January 22, 1980JEWISH UNITED FUNDCampus C ampaign: Jan. 20-Feb. 3Where \ FAH'l't SfWVicrW\ CHILDCARE.did S \ VOCATIONAL SERVICE NkM \ AN0 OTHER ✓'Vf l SOCIAL WELFARE / \your / \ 16.7%/ Ktr-Jou \ y/**£p°$l.T* \contri- I RESETTLEMENT ANO \ / ^ 1( OVERSEAS 11 HEALTH. Xx CARtOR*^ |butions I £ouc.no* /1 .no wei'utt 1\ *»•«*go? \. ts%Now,more than ever, we are one.J^or more info, call Fran 955-1589Free Paul^»S' 9^'°CHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOpen Daily11 AM to 8:30 PMClosed Monday1318 EAST 63rdMU 4-1062 VERSAILLES5254 S. DorchesterWELL MAINTAINEDBUILDINGAttractive 1 lk and2V2 Room StudiosFurnished or Unfurnished$192 u $291Based on AvailabilityAt Campus Bus Stop324-0200 Mrs. GroakNEW 2-drawer files $59.00NEW 6-ft. folding tables $49.008600 COMMERCIAL AVENUEOPEN MON.-FRI.8:30-5:00SATURDAYSRE 4-21 11 9:00-3:00 IZ31SB. 7iChoose the Tbxas Instruments calculatorthat’s right for your major.When you’re working in a specialized field,you need a specialized calculator. That’swhy Texas Instruments designed theSlimline Business Analyst-II'1 for busi¬ness and finance . . . and the Slimline TI-50111 for science and math. Each providesthe tailored power and the reliability you’llneed as you learn to solve the problemsyou’ll face as a professional. And each has aprice you’ll appreciate as a student.Slimline Business Analyst-11.Sleek LCD calculator with versatilebusiness capabilities.Solving financial problems with theSlimline Business Analyst-II can makeworking with your old calculator seem likepencil-and-paper arithmetic. The functionsrequired to perform many common busi¬ness, financial and statistical calculationsare built in to help you make quick, accurateevaluations of many complex businesssituations.Special financial keys are used to handletime and money problems such as com¬pound interest, annui¬ty payments, mortgageloans, investment yields,amortization schedulesand more. Statistical and linear regression capabili¬ties provide the power you’ll need to boildown data and automatically handle prob¬lems such as sales and earnings forecasts.Profit margin calculations concerningcost, selling price and margin can be per¬formed rapidly when any two of the varia¬bles are known. Other features include afour-function data register with ConstantMemoryfeature that retains its contentseven when the calculator is turned oft. Twominiature batteries provide up to two yearsof operation in normal use. And TI’s API)automatic power down feature helps pre¬vent accidental batten' drain.The Business Analyst-II, with detailedowner’s manual and suede-look vinyl walletwith pockets for notes. $45.00*.The Slimline TI-50 packs HI) power¬ful functions into a handsome,compact package.The pocket-portable Slimline TI -50 is a re¬markably powerful LCD slide-rule calcula¬tor. Yet it’s as thin as a pencil and weighsonly three ounces!Its 60 versatile functions can help youhandle a wide range of college math prob¬lems. Capabilities include common and natural logarithms. Six trigonometric oper¬ations that can be performed in three angu¬lar modes (degrees, radians or grads). Twoconstant memories that retain their eon-tentsercw when the calculator is turned off.And more.Seven built-in statistical functions sim¬plify the task of boiling down large sets ofdata points so you can perform accurateanalyses and draw reliable conclusions.The power of the Slimline TI-50 is madeeasy to use by TI’s AOS '1 algebraic operat¬ing system, which provides 15 sets of pa¬rentheses and accepts up to four pendingoperations. That means you can enter mostproblems just as they're written, leftto right.Two miniature batteries provide up totwo years of normal operation. And TI’sAPI)"’ automatic power down featurehelps prevent accidental battery drain.The Slimline TI-50 includes a detailedowner’s manual and a durable vinvl wallet,$40.00*.Make sure your next calculator has thespecialized power to handlethe problems unique to yourmajor. See the Business Ana-lvst-II and the Slimline TI-50at your college bookstore orother TI dealer today. Fifty YearsofInnovation\Texas Instruments technology—bringing affordable electronics to your fingertips.'U S suggested retail price© 1980 Texas Instruments Incorporated Texas InstrumentsINCORPORATED 45684 AThere are better ways to handle atough semester erf math.-3, I <2- ^-r—The SlimlineBusinessAnalyst-II ™for businessand finance. I.P3S5 - SOTI-50Constant Memory5 TO The Slimline50 “sciencePCL[sum}USMallorysTehtn Fioor'525 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 4:0CSecurity, Parking =1FOR-U CARSERVICE CENTER, Inc.1608 E. 53rd St.Open 24 hrs. - Attendant Parking - Heated garageAnnual Monthly Parking 55400mo.Annual Daily Parking s3300moHand Car Wash s500Do-it-yourself repair S37VSOON TO COMEFAST OIL CHANGERENT USED CARS ******************** THE BIG VOTE!The SAILING CLUB invites all members tovote on the proposed move to JacksonPark Harbor. Only paid members mayvote. This vote will be final, and will beheld Wednesday 23rd of January in IdaNoyes at 7:30 p.m. A short, factualpresentation will precede the decision.Channing HoustonCommodore ********♦****4 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, January 22, 1980 %★★★★★★Dateline:1970-791970January— University suspends 13 students of the Students for aDemocratic Society (SDS) for two quarters after theybarricade Hutchinson Commons entrance, protestingUniversity’s “racist policies.”— A 1000 unit student village proposed; to be built at Cot¬tage Grove and Greenwood.— Police make arrests at Hillel in connection with an abor¬tion service.March— Columnists Evans and Novak claim that a black profes¬sor’s classes are monitored by 2 Black Panthers whowatch for “ideological deviations.”— Upper Flint goes co-ed— The Lascivious Costume Ball draws 1500April— Jimmy’s 30th birthday party. Sehlitz: SI.75.May— Protesters surround Adlai Stevenson Institute for Inter¬national Affairs at Robie House headquarters; steal file;accuse institute of doing repressive research.— Kent and Jackson State tragedies occur.— Students begin two week strike against the war. An es¬timated 75% of students stay home from classes.— Official day off because of Kent State— Harper Library workers strike against the war.September— Resident Masters’ Program instituted.— Regenstein Library opens— Football begins second seasonOctober— Neugarten Report on women sparks debate on discrimi¬nation against women at University.1971January— Jane Fonda denounces Vietnam War in campus visit.— Levi proposes two-year BA degree program.March— Plans to build Pahlavi Center for Middle Eastern studiesabandoned. $2.2 million returned to Shah of Iran.April— Students defeat referendum proposing that Universityhalt all war-related research.— Five hundred black students at University. Peak of6.8%.September— Hanna Gray named to Yale Board of Trustees.November— Radar range and army base removed from The Point.December— Mini-bus service established.1972January— $300,000 proposed for Black Culture Center to improveblack social life. Maroon editorial wonders why blacksshould have a social life when no one else does.February— Incompletes down by 60%. New complex procedures ad¬ding F* are responsible.April— Dwight Ingle debates the SDS on black IQ inferiority.Ingle is shouted down after two hours of heated debate.August— Four UC Track Club men go to Olympics under US coachTed Hayden.1973March— PERL is introduced into NCD.May— Ernie Banks: The Cubs Will Be Home Free in ’73.July .— The Reg fires 6 workers, four who tried to promote aunion. Library strikes.Turn to next page The University:Notes on the 70sBy Mark WallachLess than a week into the new decade, theUniversity suspended 13 students, who, bybarricading the entrance to HutchinsonCommons, were protesting the University’s“racist policies.”It was an episode that matched the era’spolitical temperament. The previouswinter, students had occupied the adminis¬tration building for two weeks in protest of,among other issues, the sociology depart¬ment’s failure to rehire the radical assistantprofessor and feminist Marlene Dixon. In1970, one day after four students were slainat Kent State. University students surround¬ed Robie House, then the headquarters ofthe Adali Stevenson Institute for Interna¬tional Affairs, accusing it of doing researchthat fostered repression. That same week,students began a two-week strike againstthe war. An estimated 75 percent of the stu¬dent body stayed home from classes.Harper Library went on strike in protest ofthe war. On May 18th, the University offi- University President Ed Levi had comment¬ed. “There has never been an apathetic stu¬dent body, (though) any particular studentat any existing time has always thought thatthe rest of the students were apathetic. Thisis the enduring characteristic of our studentbody.”One reason that students became less con¬cerned with social change and more con¬cerned about themselves was the tighteningof the job market. Undergraduate majorsthat increased the most, such as economics,tended to lead onto professional schools. TheUniversity’s own enrollment figures in itsbusiness, law, and medical schools showed acorresponding increase. The Career Coun¬seling office, which had had four boxesworth of jobs concerning social change, hadonly one by decade’s end — and it was littleused. Some argued that post-Watergate cyn¬icism about the workings of government hadmade students despair of effecting changeand more willing to be dumped on. Othersfelt that student concern with social changehad not disappeared but rather taken adaily closed in recognition of the dead atKent State.“There was a feeling of exuberance, ofjoie de vivre on campus,” remembers Leon¬ard Radinsky, now the chairman of theanatomy department. “I felt — and manypeople felt — that there was a real possibili¬ty of changing things on both a small scaleand a large scale.” The large scale, ofcourse, involved the civil rights and anti¬war movements. On a smaller scale, discus¬sion centered on such matters as curricu¬lum, testing procedures, and the idea ofstudents reviewing their deparments. TheNeugarten Report touched off a debate onUniversity discrimination against women.It was, by all accounts, a period of self-ex¬amination by the University.The tradition of protest at the Universityflickered (mostly dimly) throughout the ‘70sfinally erupting last spring in the PickAward demonstration. Perhaps the mostsustained of these movements was thatwhich tried to pressure the University to di¬vest of its $65 million worth of holdings incorporations that provided military and eco¬nomic assistance to South Africa. But theissue was more complex than those whourged simple divesture would admit and themovement died without the University hav¬ing to divest of a single stock. That non-reac¬tion of the University was a considerableimprovement over the outrageous severitythe University had shown in meting out jus¬tice to the perpetrators of the 1969 sit-in.Forty-two students had been expelled andabout 120 suspended.By mid-decade, charges of student apathyhad become recurrent. As early as 1971, more subtle form. Marlene Richman, a ca¬reer counselor at the University, feels that“overtly now there’s less concern. Under¬neath. though, I think there is concern. It’s aquestion of working it through within thesystem.”The job situation also had obvious effectson the University. Undergraduates began toconsider more carefully if they really want¬ed to go on to graduate school, perhaps be¬cause those who did could no longer be cer¬tain of finding suitable jobs afterward,particularly in academia. “It’s an enormousproblem, ’’ says Dean of the College, Jonath¬an Z. Smith. “We re in danger of losing ageneration of young scholars.” Educatorshave devoted considerable effort lately tofinding suitable options for PhD-trained stu¬dents. About the only bright note to theshortage of academic jobs may be the in¬creased selectivity of the University in hir¬ing new faculty. “We haven’t hired manynew people lately,” notes Braxton Ross,master of the humanities collegiate divi¬sion. “But the ones we have hired are abso¬lutely first rate.”By most measures, the quality of under¬graduate life has improved steadily since1970. As little as five years ago, according toDean of Students Lorna Straus, only 63.4percent of entering freshmen went on tograduate from the University. By decade'send. the figure had been bolstered to 75 per¬cent.Perhaps the biggest reason for the im¬proved figures was the changes in the hous¬ing system that took place in 1970.Turn to next pageThe Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, January 22, 19801974April— UPenn political scientist Edward Banfield speaks at Uni¬versity., 13 SDS members, including two University stu¬dents, disrupt speech, charging Banfield with racist be¬liefs; issue of free speech raised.June— University closes downtown center after more than 25years. Center had provided non-credit educationcourses.November— 200 demonstrate against Henry Kissinger campus visit.— $1.3 million Diabetes-Endocrinology Center opens.1975January— Antique jewelry stolen from Oriental Institute. Initial es¬timate of theft: $500,000. Actual theft: about $10,000.February— Senate confirms President Levi as U . S. attorney gener¬al.-- John Wilson named as Acting President.March— Wolfman Jack appears at Bartlett Gym.— Arsonists set 13 fires during Exam Week. 9 at Regen-stein, 4 at Pierce Tower; damage limited to clothing intwo dorm rooms.May— Plans announced to make Snell Hall co-ed in summer.— Mike Royko softball team to play perennial IM champsSee Your Flood. Result unknown.June— Maroon reports on the increase of condo conversions; in¬flux of permanent non-student residents.October— Billings doctor redefines death: equates it with cessationof brain function; amendment signed by GovernorWalker.— Students demonstrate against Milton Friedman’s andHarold Harberger’s involvement with Chilean junta,— Women’s crew begins; 30 answer call.December— John Wilson named as permanent President.— Chicago graduate John Paul Stevens nominated by Fordfor Supreme Court.1976January— Maroon begins to run Doonesbury.February— Writing Competency Exam eliminated as pre-requisitefor graduation.— Tuition crashes $4,000 barrier.March— Wilson inauguratedJuly— The Woodlawn Organization (TWO) announces 20-year,$220 million plan for development of Woodlawn neighbor¬hood south of the University.October— E, Spencer Parsons. Dean of Rockefeller Chapel, lashesCatholic hierarchy on abortion.— Milton Friedman wins Nobel Prize in Economics.— Saul Bellow wins Nobel Prize for Literature.November— Former University President Robert Maynard Hutchinsspeaks in Chicago. Comments: “Generally speaking, theobject of American education today is not comprehen¬sion. but a credential.”1977January— One person killed, 5 injured at 5329-49 Kimbark when car¬bon monoxide leaks into apartments from a faulty gasfurnace.April— Jimmy Wilson, owner of Jimmy’s, comments: “I’ve out¬lasted Hutchins, Kimpton, Beadle, and Levi, and I’ll prob¬ably outlast John Wilson as well.”May— Hutchins dies.July— New core course added: “Human Being and Citizen.”6 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, January 22, 1980 Milton Friedman Saul Bellow Theodore SchultzNotes on the 70’s— Upper Flint became the first co-edHouse. Several other Houses soon followed.— Resident Masters were introduced,making house activities a more importantpart of student life.— Room assignments at Pierce and Wood¬ward were undoubled. Undoubtedly, theopening of Regenstein Library also changedthe social habits of a generation of Chicagostudents, although for better or for worse isdifficult to say.Student participation in activities also in¬creased dramatically in the latter half of the70s, perhaps as an alternative to politicalconcerns. In 1971, a Maroon editorial hadstated, “We find it particularly amusing tonote that Northwestern’s yearbook getsmore money than all of the activities on thiscampus combined.” By mid-decade, an in¬tramural and sports club office had to be es¬tablished to relieve the student activities of¬fice from the crush of participants. Themost significant increases have come in thenumber of students in musical groups, in thenumber of sports clubs, and in the numberof ethnic and national groups.Reflecting national trends, participationin sports at the University grew to recordproportions. Before renovation of the Field-house was begun in 1976, it was used by anestimated 200 persons a day. In 1979, figuresindicated that 1300 people used the Field- house daily with a peak of 2500 per day. Bydecade’s end, the once woebegone varsityfootball team had attained respectabilityand women participating in Universitysports reflected nation-wide increases. Inthe 1980s, the University hopes to build anew natotorium. After 1981-82, the athleticdepartment will also have to replace TedHayden as track coach — who will retireafter more than a quarter of a century ofservice.In some other respects, the University hasbeen a conspicious failure. A special admis¬sions program aimed at recruiting minoritystudents was abandoned after two years in1971 when 55 percent of its participants wereplaced on academic probation. In 1971,black enrollment reached a peak of about500 students or about 6.8 percent of the totalstudent population. This year, in a College of2,700, there are a little more than fiftyblacks. “It’s one of the single greatest frus¬trations I’ve had here,” says Dean of theCollege, Jonathan Z. Smith. Smith feels thatpart of the problem may be that the Univer¬sity has always emphasized its professionalschools least, which is precisely the schoolshe says blacks are most Interested in. Insuggesting that the University recruit moreaggressively, Smith added, “I don’t thinkwe do half enough.”Another problem — again one that re- Protesters surround /fleets a national trenddents have had innon-University housiniresult of the conversioments into condominiiavailable in Hyde Parvalues — which is anotaffordable to most stu<In general, the Univcommitment to acachanged very little innew programs such asand the Committee onquietly added to the ciThe Point Edward Levi,XATlOiVThe Lascivious Costume Balln Wilsond Adlai Stevenson Institute for International Affairs at Robie House; accuse institute of doing repressive researcn.id — is the difficulty stu- Core courses were changed slightly, but noin finding affordablesing in Hyde Park as asion of numerous apart-iniums. Apartments are3ark at current marketaother way of saying un-students.niversity's fundamentalicademic quality hasin the seventies. A fewas ASHUM, and PERL,on Art and Design werej curriculum, and some fundamental changes in curriculum haveoccured. Ted Cohen, professor of philoso¬phy, noted that, “During the seventies, a lotof Universities started introducing mickeymouse courses into the curriculum. ThisUniversity didn’t do that.”In many ways, the life force of this Uni¬versity is the research it produces. Futureissues cf the Maroon will report on currentresearch being conducted in each of the divi¬sions.What next for the Eighties? Certainly,economic frugality. As Braxton Ross noted,Hanna Gray“We really try hard to utilize what we haveas efficiently as possible.” Beyond that, theCollege will have to adjust to an enrollmentthat has increased 30 percent in the last sev¬eral years and hopes to eventually reach3,000 students. One way of adjusting may bethat as graduate enrollment diminishes,faculty will re-adjust their teaching pat¬terns to include more undergraduatecourses.One of the University’s major problems asit heads into the Eighties, says Dean Smith,will be competing for students with stateand community institutions who can offer aliberal arts education at a cheaper pricethan the University. Smith notes that onlyabout 30 percent of all high school graduates(about 50-60,000 students) are interested inreceiving a private education. Currently, allof the University’s recruitment literature isbeing rewritten, especially in its efforts topresent a University education as afford¬able. But the competition against state andcommunity institutions will not be easy,notes Smith. “Some of those schools aredamn good.” RegensteinThe Maroon reports on the increase of condoconversions. A.October— Prince Charles visits, dines at U of C — eats with 230 un¬dergrads.— Saul Bellow sentenced to 10 days in jail for failing to payalimony to his second wife.— U of C students join demonstration at Kent State; are teargassed.— President Gerald Ford makes a surprise visit to Univer¬sity — guest of Levi; lunches, teaches 2 classes at lawschool.— In response to S. Africa divesture suggestions, John Wil¬son says: “The University should not be an agent of politi¬cal change.”November— Renovated Field House re-dedicated.December— Hanna Gray named President — to take over in July.Maroon editorial says, “Hanna Gray is undoubtedly thebest candidate for U of C.”1978January— 200 people attend S. Africa forum.February— Trustees vote unanimously to keep S. Africa holdings.April— Trustee spokesman Allison Dunham tells students. “In¬vestment is really none of your business.”May— 200 students march in support of ERA downtown.— Trustee dissent on S. Africa. Wilson tells them to stay si¬lent.October— Hanna Gray inaugurated.1979January— All area schools close due to snow — all except U of C.— Hanna Gray says, “Divestiture is incompatible with theTrustees fiduciary and legal responsibilities to the Uni¬versity.”March— One woman dies, a dozen others go to hospital because ofcarbon monoxide poisoning, broken boiler at 5400 SHarper.— Drinking age raised to 21; Pub stays open.April— Cook County acting public guardian Patrick Murphycharges that University physicians operated on mentalpatients without consent ; removed adrenal glands for re¬search purposes; possible lobotomies too;— “A Woman Was Raped Here” sprayed at over 50 spotsaround Hyde Park; University scrubs it away; says it’snot true.May— Pick Award to McNamara announced; several facultycriticize it.— Pulitzer Prize winning author David Halberstam on Pickaward to McNamara. “Oh that's really nice. What arethey awarding him for? Increasing international under¬standing with the Vietnamese from 35.000 feet?”— McNamara confirmed; school in uproar.— 5400 tenants begin rent strike.— 1600 protest Pick award; 25 arrested at University Ave.sit-in; dinner guests heckled.July— $5,500 stolen from Bursar's office; inside job suspect¬edAugust— Stagg Scholarship ends.— Decision to build new theatre for Court.October— Lab School teachers rally for pay hike— Theodore Schultz wins Nobel Prize in Economics.November— Edwin Silverman. Director of Governor's InformationCenter for Asian Assistance, makes campus visit Hesays, “Estimates are that unless massive aid begins toarrive in Cambodia almost immediately, as many as 212million people face death by starvation within the nextmonth ”— compiled by Mark Lutz. PhilipMaher. Mark Wallach. andPhoebe ZerwickThe Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, January 22, 1980 — 7U.S.D.A, ChoiceRIB STEAKU.S.D.A. Choice 2 49lbU.S.D.A, Choice ||aqRIB ROAST 2Swift's PremiumFRANKS 1 39MbpkgFresh JonathonAPPLES 793-lb. bagDelicious Ruby RedGRAPEFRUIT 895-lb. bagLand O Lake StickOLEOCountry DelightLo w-Fa tCOTTAGECHEESECertified Red Label 59 cib89 c16 ozM-miea Kea taoei A|oORN OIL 21, Molson.You’ll get a taste ofnearly 200 years of brewing hentage every' time you opena cool green bottle of MOLSON GOLDEN.™North America's oldest brewery got its start backin 1786. John Molson. our founder, wouldn’t recognizeour modem breweries, but he'd be proud of thegood, smooth taste of GOLJDEN.™A taste that says Canada in every refreshing sip.Brewed and bottled in Canada; imported by Martlet Importing Co , Inc . Great Neck N. YNEED CREDIT? send for THE CREDIT GAMEToo young to borrow?New m town/no references?Erase bad debt recordsSlop bills without ruining creditReceive loans within weeks of beginning this programInformation on updated credit laws and legislationYour rights under the Federal Credit Acts SOLVE ALLTHESECREDITPROBLEMSwithTHE CREDIT GAME "Tired of being without credit, or up to your neck in'minimum payments? With this book you will learn howto make the $300 billion credit industry jump at yourcommand."ONLY*$5795(N Y residents add 8% Sales TaxiSend Check orMoney Order to WALL STREET PUBLISHING CO 303 5TH AVE.SUITE 1306NEW YORK, NY 10016 Name .AddressCity __ 3 IS V . Tor. ... BooksState „ - ZipAllow 3 weeks for delivery.8 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, January 22, 1980w. i # !■Chicago Basketball:Zone, fouls stop men at Lawrence... Grapplers lose;home tomorrowBy Darrell WuDunnLast Saturday, coach John Angelus’men’s basketball team travelled toLawrence University to play their secondconference game of the season. In a some¬what frustrating game, the Maroons lost tothe Vikings 64-53.In Lawrence, the Maroons were playing aconsiderably taller team with three startingplayers standing 6’4” and higher, and noMaroon above 6’4”. Viking head coach MikeGallus stresses defense, rebounding andfree throws for his team.At the start of the game, Lawrencejumped to a quick lead and held a slightmargin over Chicago through most of thefirst half. Chicago, however, behind forwardPete Leinroth, managed to stay close. In anunusual move, Lawrence went into a stalloffense with 7:37 left in the half, and withonly a two point lead, 26-24. The Vikes suc¬ceeded in wasting almost two minutes be¬fore they scored. After the Maroons scored,Lawrence again went into a stall. This time.IM basketballGraduate:Snow Bears 42Abbott Sisters 27Mr. Bill Show 42Controlld Substance 23Divinity School 26Six-Packers 20White Lepers/Shoreland Shuffle 42Manic Defensive 21Nassau Senior 38God Squad 36Albanian Refugees 62Never Too Late 28White Lepers 34Abbott Sisters 26Plato's Exemplars 50Eat My Torts 20Uranus and the Seven Moons 35Dead Popes 18Laughlin 50Scruffalo Botems 29Undergraduate:Dudley 37 (game under protest)Chamberlin 36F ishop 23Salisbury 13Dudley 40Lower Flint 10Phi Gam 42Upper Flint 17Dodd/Mead 47Breckinridge 15Alpha Delta Phi 28Fishbein 22Losers 26Grand Illusions 16Return of Zero the Hero 45Hihowdoyado 11 14U.F. Outcasts 45Charlie’s Cherves 12U.F. Outcasts 38Joint Effort 10Dred Scott’s Revenge 70Charlie’s Cherves 20The Champs 46Semi-Tufts 16Boats may moveThe University of Chicago sailing club willdecide whether or not to relocate its boatsfrom their present location at BurnhamPark Harbor to a possible location at Jack-son Park Harbor at its next meeting, tomor¬row night. January 23, at Ida Noyes Hall. however, after three minutes had passed,Chicago forced a turnover and converted abasket to tie the score at 28. With just fourseconds left in the half, Chicago took thelead for the first time and the half ended30-28.Asked later about Lawrence’s strategy,coach Angelus said, “They were doing us afavor. We were in a lot of foul trouble.” Withthe stall Chicago could lay back a little moreand not worry about committing fouls.For the first eight minutes of the secondhalf, Chicago and Lawrence traded basketsas the lead changed four times. Then sud¬denly. for six minutes and 26 seconds, Chi¬cago was unable to score as Lawrenceopened up a 53-41 advantage with 5:30 re¬maining in the game. Despite what Angelusdescribed as an “extraordinary” effort. Chi¬cago could not catch up and eventually fellto defeat.In an interview later, Angelus describedthe Maroons original game plan. Chicagowould try to open up a sizable lead and thenopen up their offense to the four corners.This would bring Lawrense’s defense out ofthe middle and thereby nullify their heightadvantage. Unfortunately, Chicago never got a good lead. “A couple of jumpers fromoutside could have helped,” explained Ange¬lus, “It would have opened up their defense;bring the big men out of the lane so myguards could drive in.”Angelus was not unhappy with the team’sshowing. Although he felt his players neededa little more discipline and more continuity,he said, “We forced them into turnovers, weplayed superb on defense. We scraped likehell. It was just another good game that wedidn’t win.”Foul trouble was a factor in the loss. Thereferees called almost twice as many foulson Chicago as they did on the home team.Also, statistacally, Lawrence had an incred¬ible game The Vikings hit on 63% of theirshots from the field and 78% from the foulline (compared to 43% and 45% respectivelyfor Chicago).Leading the scoring for the Maroons wasPete Leinroth who had 12 points and 10 re¬bounds. Guard Ken Jacobs also had 12 pointswhile forward Vlad Gastovich had 10.Chicago’s record now stands at 4-4 overalland 0-2 in the Midwest Conference. Theirnext game is a conference game scheduledfor this Friday at Cornell College. By Cy OgginsOn paper, only the proverbial ‘hometeam advantage’ is decidedly in favor ofthe University of Chicago’s wrestling teamas they head into tomorrow night’s meetagainst highly rated DePauw, followinglast weekend’s double loss to North Parkand Carthage.“DePauw traditionally has had a toughteam over the years,” commented Maroonhead coach Leo Kocher, “and although ourtop form is still several weeks ahead, I feelthe team has showrn definite improvementboth in executing technique and in condi¬tioning. A victory over DePauw is definite¬ly possible.”Victories were lacking, however, on Sat¬urday, as the Maroons fell to host NorthPark 16-31 and to Carthage 15-29. No wres¬tler was able to win in both of his meets.Against North Park, only 138-pounder BobToole and heavyweight Ed Millea wontheir divisions, while in the other match,captain Bob Michel (134) added a win totwo Carthage forfeits.Tomorrow’s meet against DePauw. orig¬inally scheduled for Thursday night, willstart at 7 pm on the first floor of the HenryCrown Fieldhouse. After tomorrow, theonly other chance to see the Maroons in ac¬tion at home will be on Februarv 6,againstt North Park.Women drop two to bigger schoolsBy Darrell WuDunnIn a very tough week, the Maroonswomen’s basketball team lost both of theirgames last week. After being destroyed byNorthern Illinois on Monday 83-48, coachMarcia Hurt’s team dropped its homeopener on Thursday to Valparaiso Universi¬ty, 61-54. The pair of losses lowers thesquad’s record to 0-5.On Monday, January 14, the Maroonstravelled to Northern Illinois University.Northern Illinois is a superior, Division Iteam and the Maroons were not expecting awin. In fact, coach Hurt considered thegame more as a scrimmage for her players.In the first half, Chicago played extremelywell considering the circumstances. Theteam made few turnovers and held the oppo¬nent’s offense reasonably well. At the half,Chicago was only down 35-24.Afterwards, coach Hurt said that losingby only eleven points at halftime to a Divi¬sion I team showed a lot for her team.In the second half, however. Northern Illi¬nois proved their superiority as they scoredtwice as many points as the Maroons.Matching Chicago’s point total for the gamein the second half, Northern Illinois went onto win 83-48. According to Hurt, the same problemsthat troubled the team in previous games,plagued the Maroons in this game. “There’snot enough shooting,” Hurt explains, “Theyhave to be more aggressive.” Except forcaptain Nadya Shmavonian who collected 24points, not a single player scored in doublefigures. Overall, however, Hurt felt herplayers made a fine effort.On the following Thursday, the Maroonsopened their home season versus Division IIValparaiso University. Chicago startedslowly as Valparaiso jumped to a quick 11-2lead. However, the Maroons recovered andtook the lead 20-18. In sudden shifts of mo¬mentum, Valparaiso then tallied ninestraight points which was immediatelycountered by eight straight points by Chica¬go. The first half ended with Chicago on top,30-29.For the most part of the second half, Chi¬cago traded off baskets with Valparaiso asthe lead constantly changed hands. With thescore tied at 41, Valparaiso scored to takethe lead for good. Gradually, Chicago fellbehind and with under two minutes left werelosing 59-52. Despite some valiant efforts,Chicago was unable to rally back and thegame ended 61-54. Leading the scoring for the Maroons wassophomore Ellen Markovitz. She had herbest game thus far this season as she col¬lected 16 points, including 12 in the first half,and dominated the boards. Nadya Shmavon¬ian. who had been averaging 22.5 points agame, was held to only 10 points, howeverthis might be attributed to a balancedMaroon attack as five players finished witheight points or moreCoach Hurt was not disappointed with herteam’s performance. Although the teamcommitted many turnovers against Val¬paraiso’s full court press, the playersworked hard against a strong Division IIteam. Nor is Hurt overly concerned withChicago’s 0-5 record. With the exception ofQuincy College to whom they only lost byone point, the Maroons have been playingDivision I and II teams who are "supposed”to beat them anyway.After the team's game tonight at IllinoisBenedictine College, the Maroons will playnine consecutive home gamrs in the field-house with the first one against Notre DameUniversity on Thursday. The Thursdaymatch can be heard live on WHPK. 88-3 FM,beginning at 6:15 pm.Swimmers improve but lose to LoyolaBy John CondasThe University of Chicago’s men’s swim¬ming team was defeated by Loyola Univer¬sity 60-45. in a dual meet held last Thursdayat Loyola. According to coach Pete Ander¬son, the meet was much closer than thescore would indicate: unfortunately in thewaning moments of the meet. Loyola, a Di¬vision I school, showed the superiority of itslarger program with several strong fin¬ishes.As was the case in the Illinois Intercolle¬giate Meet held the previous week, severalChicago swimmers turned in strong perfor¬mances for the team in Thursday’s meet.Mike Noble, a freshman, was victorious intwo events, the 500 and 1000 yard free-styles.In the 1000 yd. freestyle, Noble shattered theschool’s record by 11.5 seconds, swimmingthe 1000 yards in 10:46.5. The previous re¬cord time was 10:57 flat. Andy Neff cap¬tured two second place finishes, one in the200 yard individual medley and. with littlerest between races, took second place in the200 yard hack-stroke. Phil Hofmann, bat¬ tling Noble for the distinction of being theteam’s best freshman, placed first in the 200yard butterfly with a winning time of 2:12.6.Hofmann also placed second in the 200 yardfreestyle.Junior captain Steve Frederick swam hisbest time of the season in the 1500 yardfreestyle. His time of 11:03.7 was goodenough for second place in the event. Fre¬derick also won second place in the 500 yardfreestyle. Another swimmer who recordedhis best time of this season was Tim Iida inthe 200 yard breast stroke His time of 2:26 6was encouraging to coach Anderson, as wasIida's sprinting to a second place finish inthe 50 yard free style The 400 yard medleyrelay team of Scott Corey. Tim Iida. AdrianTevino and Andy Neff, also showed promisein setting a season's best time for the teamin this event with a 4:01.5 time.Diving specialist Tad McGwire also con¬tributed much to the team in the meet withfirst place finishes in the one meter requiredand in the one meter optional diving events.McGuire also distinguished himself in the one meter optional dive by setting a newschool record of 191.05 points, breaking hisold record of 187.8.Afterwards, coach Anderson had somecomments about the Loyola match. “Goinginto the meet we felt Loyola was the superi¬or team As the meet progressed, especiallyafter the 1000 yard freestyle, we felt as if wehad a shot to win the meet, and the team’sspirit reflected it. At the end of the 200 yardbutterfly i roughly halfway through themeet > we were only one point behind Loyo¬la. As we progressed throughout the remain¬ing events, we swam well, but Loyola swamthat much better. The guys did a heck of ajob. and even though they felt they shouldhave won, they’ve got nothing to beashamed of They produced a strong ef¬fort.”Coach Anderson hopes the team can pro¬duce another strong effort next weekend atRipon College The Midwest Conference In¬vitational meet is being held there Satur¬day. January 26th, with the meet's startingtime slated at noonThe Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, January 22, 1980 — 9Campus FilmThe Bad and the Beautiful (Vincente Min¬nelli. 1953): Kirk Douglas plays a Hollywoodproducer whose manipulation of othersleads to the loss of his three best friends andco-workers — including Lana Turner. Downand out in the end, he maneuvers to regaintheir support Nice shots, melodramaticpersonal relationships cshow-downscenes", in which the outrageous proposal isultimately adopted, abound) and unevenacting from the stars < Turner, not Douglas ■characterize this film Personally. Idrather read Marx Tonight at 8 in Quantrell$1 Doc —DMBachelor Mother (Kanin; 1939): Kanin re¬velled in poking fun at polite society. But,strangely, his humour tended to be dilutedby his direction. Maybe that’s why he turnedto writing script full time. In this one,Ginger Rogers finds herself with child - nothers. She approaches her predicament gin¬gerly, trying to convince people she is not anunwed mother. Among her first convertersis her boss, David Niven, who falls in lovewith her. Naturally, most of the humourcenters around the misunderstanding. Itwas stuff for scandal then. But in our era ofERA, when some unwed mothers displaytheir status like a badge of honor, this is nolonger laughing matter. For that matter,even though there are some risible momentsin this film, none of them stays in the mind.Rogers, in a non-hoofing role, is surprisinglygood, and Niven, as usual, provides debo¬nair support.Wednesday at 7:15 in Quantrell. $1 DoubleFeature. Doc. — TSMy Favorite Wife (Kanin. 1940): IreneDunne, long lost at sea. returns unexpected¬ly to wreck havoc at her hubby’s (CaryGrant > honeymoon. Battle of the sexesensues. She accuses him of infidelity: he.after finding out that her island-mate was nobookworm, but the virile Randolph Scott, re¬turns her charges. Their sirmishes are dot¬ted with moments of camouflage: hiding be¬hind potted palms, donning Foster Grants,etc The physical humour here, unpardon¬ able. retards the pace of the more cleververbal banters So when the movie comes toits inevitable conclusion, guliaws navegiven way to ennui Grant and Dunne, intheir weakest team effort, still show theirclass The film was to have been remadewith Monroe in the Dunne role, but poorMarilyn...Wednesday at 8:45 in Quantrell.$1 double feature. Doc —TSThe Champagne Murders (Claude Chabrol,1968): A hack job. The usually reliable Cha¬brol, at a crossroads in his career, perpe¬trated this effort. The trite story, somethingto do with vineyards and rich heiresses, hasall the evanescence of an Agatha Christie.Chabrol commits the cardinal sin of mistak¬ing mystery for suspense. He should know'better. Nevertheless, traces of the elegantChabrol style can be detected if you lookhard enough. Stephane Audran and TonyPerkins go through the motions. To no avail.Thursday at 7:15 in Quantrell. $1. Doc. —T.S.Le Boucher (Claude Chabrol, 1970) is ahaunting blend of murder and psychology.Popaul, the chatty butcher in a town inSouthern France, hacks away at slabs ofmeat and speaks a Hemingway-like mono¬logue about the bloody bodies in his war ex¬perience. The dark side of his mind is con¬trasted with Helene, the cheerful, lovingheadmistress at a grade-school. Helene’slove ends, however, with her pupils, for shesays she had an unhappy affair ten yearsago. After the first of two murders occurs, atypical French detective enters the scene tofind the killer. Helene knows nothing, forshe is just as strong when repressing herworst fears as she is with her sexual desires.This is worth seeing for its magnificent sce¬nery, French children, gendarmes, towns¬people and those precious moments of psy¬chological realization that are so deftly tiedtogether. Adequate subtitles. Thursday at9:00 in Quantrell. $1. Doc. —BJThe Scarlet Pimpernel (Harold Young,1934): An actor’s film. Leslie Howard re¬scues French aristocrat’s from the Repub¬lic’s gillotine. His wife, Merle Oberon, issupposedly a traitor to his cause. The de¬praved French Ambassador, RaymondMassey, blackmails her into helping revealthe Pimpernel’s identity. This is like aDIRECTORY OF RESEARCHERSON WOMEN AND FEMALENESSnow being compiled by theGRADUATE COMMITTEE ON THE STUDY OF WOMENTo 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., Chicaqo,II. 60637Name Dept.Address Stud; MA PhD FacPhoneArea(s) of research or special interest:Check if interested in helping produce directory I l Robin Hood story, except that the rich arethe things that are being stolen. There’s notmuch action and Young’s direction is death¬ly austere. The characters rarely show emo¬tions; in close-ups they resemble the statuesbehind them. Young’s stark, static composi¬tions undecut any activity on screen, so thatthe film seems barely to develop. Instead, itplods along with a formulaic narrative. OnlyHoward, Oberon, and Massey’s screen per¬sonae provide some depth. Of course DaffyDuck in the accompanying short, The Scar¬let Pumpernickel, is absolutely brilliant.Thursday at 8:30 in the Law School Auditori¬um. $1.50. -G.B.Exodus (Otto Preminger, 1960): Paul New¬man, Eva Marie Saint, and Peter Lawfordtake you back to those thrilling years of the Hagannah and the Israeli war for indepen¬dence. Look for Menachem Begin and listento Ernest Gold’s schmaltzy score. Funny,they don’t even look Jewish. Based on theLeon Uris novel. Thursday at 7 pm in Kent107. 75*. Hillel —A.P.Dona Flor and Her Two Husbands (JorgeAmado, 1977) I-House. Young widowedSonia Brago only misses her flashy, gam¬bling, no-good husband when she remarriesa respectable businessman who’s no good inbed. She wishes that husband 41 would comeback at crucial moments, which he does; to¬tally naked and only she can see him. Hejoins the newlyweds in bed for a one (notfunny) joke movie. Skip it. Thursday at 8and 10 pm at International House. $1.50 —R.L.CalendarTUESDAYPerspectives: Topic-"Hospital Finance in the InnerCity” guests Joseph Mann, Roger Nauert, RichardFoster, and Ronald Andersen, 6:09 am, channel 7.Women’s Exercise Class: Meets 10:00 am, IdaNoyes.Come, Walk in the Dunes: Spring: Slide lecture byEmma Pitcher, 12:15 pm, Ida Noyes Library, Free.Bring your lunch.UC Gymnastics Club: Instruction available 5:30-8:00pm, Bartlett gym, free.Physical Education: Free swimming instruction7:30-8:30 pm, Ida Noyes.CFS Colloquium: Gary Kahn’s CFS Talk-”Modus Tol-lens meets the Mind: Methodological Problems inCognitive Psychology” 8:00 pm, Eckart 209.Hillel: Israeli Folk Dancing, 8:00 pm, Ida NoyesTheatre.DOC Films: ‘The Bad and The Beautiful” 8:00 pm.Cobb.WEDNESDAY DOC Films: "Bachelor Mother” 7:15 pm, "My Favor¬ite Wife" 8:45 pm. Cobb.Tai Chi: Meets 7:30 pm. Blue Gargoyle.Women’s Rap Group: Meets 7:30 pm. in theWomen’s Center, Blue Gargoyle.Badminton Club: Meets 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes Gymna¬sium.Science Fiction Club: Meets 8:30 pm, Ida Noyes. Ev¬eryone welcome.Country Dancers: Traditional dances of Englan,Scotland, and New England taught. Ida NoyesCloister Club, 8:00 pm, Beginners welcome.THURSDAYPerspectives:Topic-"The American Quest for a Su¬preme Fiction" guests James Miller, and RobertStreeter, 6:09 am, channel 7.Women’s Exercise Class: Meets 10:00 am, IdaNoyes.Noontime Concerts: works for flute and piano bySchubert and Poulenc. 12:15 pm.Computation Center Seminar: Introduction toSCRIPT 3:30-5:00 pm, RI 180.UC Gymnastics Club: Instruction available 4:00-8:00Perspectives: Topic-"Adequacy of Facilities inInner City Hospitals” guests Joseph Mann, RogerNauert, Richard Foster, and Ronald Andersen, 6:09am, channel 7.Women’s Exercise Class: Meets 10:00 am. IdaNoyes.Smart Gallery: “Vienna Moderne: a Non-CaloricAlternative” noontime gallery talkCommuter Co-op: Get-together 12:30 pm, GatesBlake 1. Bring your lunch.ASHUM: Student meeting, 12:30 pm, Harper 130.Workshop in Urban Economics: "The Problem of Ex¬ternality” 1:30 pm, SS 402.Crossroads: English classes for foreign women, 2:00pm.UC Gymnastics Club: Instruction available 5:30-8:00pm, Bartlett gym, free. pm, Bartlett, free.Kundalini Yoga: "Stress-Away” yoga course willmeet 5:00-6:00 pm, Ida Noyes East Lounge.Christian Science Organization: Meets 5:30-6:30pm, Gates-Blake 117.UC Judo Club: Meets 6:00-8:30 pm, Bartlett gym.STEP: Will hold a tutoring workshop 7:00 pm, Resi¬dent Master's apt in Pierce Hall.NOMOR: Committee meeting 7:00 pm, Ida Noyesfirst floor lounge.Hillel: Movie-"Exodus” 7:00 pm, Kent Hall 107.Table Tennis Club: Meets 7:00 pm, Ida Noyes Hall3rd floor.International House: Film-’Dona Flor and Her TwoHusbands” 8 and 10 pm, I-House.Law School Films: "The Scarlet Pimpernel” 8:30 pmLaw School Auditorium.International House 1414 E. 59th St.presentsA SERIES OF FOUR FILMS ONLATIN AMERICAEnglish subtitles)Jan. 24, Thursday (Bruno Barreto-Brazil)DONA FLOR & HER TWO HUSBANDSFeb. 8, FridayTHE LAST SUPPER (Tomas G. Alea-Cuba)Feb. 22, FridayCHUQUIAGO (Antonio Eguino-Bolivia)Mar. 8, SaturdayTHE GREEN WALL (Robi es Godoy-Peru)8 & 10 pm Assembly Hall $1.50 AdmissionMOVIE:EXODUSCo-Sponsored by JIJF Campus Campaign WHERE: KENT HALE 107 (Chemistry)1020 East 58th St.GOST: 75 eentsWHEN: Thursday, January 24, 7:00 pm.and Hillel Foundation ii10 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, January 22, 1980Ci-ASS\^v€t>S WANTED ENJOYAD 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, 1£12 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. International Women's Day will becelebrated this year on 3/8. Meeting toplan festivities today, Jan 22 at BlueGargoyle, 7:30 or call 667-2811. Allwelcome. Female 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.Reader and research assistant. $2.50an hour. Flexible schedule. Call472-8092. After 7 pm. Complete 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. Reservations call Dobbi 288-3706 or 337-8100.YOGASubjects wanted for study of low-flowoxygen thereapy. 3 hrs. remuneration.Call Dr. Rattenborg. 947-5933. LOST AND FOUNDSeeking 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.). LOST: Silver-colored watch withmaroon-stripped watchband, has sen¬timental value if found please call684 6566.SPACE FOR SALE 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. Reenergize 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.Professor here Spring quarter onlyseeks nice apartment or house to rent.753-8712. NUTRITIONSEMINARMaverick '70 reblt trans new/batt ball-jts, $650,784-6052.Responsible adult seeks room in yourhome in exchange for minimal rentand/or negotiable house/yardmaintenance. Also intersted in house¬sitting. 955-8760 evenings. VW Red 1968 Bug, Excellent radio, Ex¬tra heater. $500.493-5774. FOUND: Before Christmas-eyeglasses with black (German-made) frames. Near 57th andBlackstone. Call 493-2944.Roommate needed to share spaciouseast Hyde Pk apt. $150/mo. 288-0327keep trying anytime. 19" Zenith hospital TVs. ChicagoOsteopathic Hospital 5200 S. Ellis. Ex¬cellent condition, as low as $49.95 andup. See Herb Eastman 947-3000. After 6call 676-2226. PERSONALSBlack cat free-spayed, shots. 784 6052.FOR RENT: E Hyde Pk targe deluxe 1br 325 493-3822,493-2179. 71 Toyota Corona. AC, AT New Bath-brakes. Win tires. Runs v. well $650 orbest. 667-5487. Hey-Jay-You were hystericalmorning-you shoulda been there thisShare house with 3 grad, own room,yard, washer/dryer, dishwasher,roomy on bus route. $125/mo. Non-smoker. Female pref. 643-7258. A wonderful pair of Adidas hikingboots. In great condition but no longera match for their owner's big feet.Contact Scott Rauland. 753-2249. HAPPY BIRTHDAY CHRIS!!!!!Your present awaits you.Unicorns are free. -Dark LadyHardwood dresser; end table; easychair. Call 241-6497. Dear David-1 insist you find the manwith the hairy tuxedo. JM. The 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 Perrin, D O., professor and chairman ofthe CCOM Department of InternalMedicine and Dean of ContinuingMedical Education will speak on"Nutritional Approaches to the KillerDiseases," and Wendy Rupp, Directorof Food Services at tne ChicagoOsteopathic Medical Center, willspeak on "Nutrition in the Supermarket and the Kitchen." Theseminar will be held in the auditoriumof the Chicago Osteopathic FamilyOutpatient Clinic.Looking for a tenant or apartment?Utilize the student govt, house searchnewsletter. 753-3273. PEOPLE FOR SALECONDO FOR SALE : E. Hyde Pk, 2 brcarpeted financing available. 493-3822.57 and Drexel. Female roommatewanted for sunny room. $110/month.Available Feb. 1 or earlier. Call493-7681 after 1 p.m. Excellent, accurate typist w/legal ex¬perience will type papers and disserta¬tions or IBM. Reasonable rated.684-7414.ROOMMATE WANTED: Share large2 br apt. furnished, sun porch, on parkat 57 and Kenwood. 955-2221 p.m. ARTWORK- posters, illustration,calligraphy, invitations etc. NoelYovovich 5441 S. Kenwood 493-2399.Grad student needs roommate forapartment on 56 and Woodlawn star¬ting in Feb. or ASAP call Chris H:241-6091 Thesus, Disert, Manuscripts, LatestIBM Corrective Sel II typewriter,Rates based on Vol and Condition ofdraft. Best Eminence Bond turn. Mrs.Ross. 239-5982. UC HOTLINE 753-1777Got the Winter Quarter blues? If youwant to talk, have a question or need areferral, try the U<- Hotline-7 pm-7am. BLUES HARMONICAExperienced teacher/performer oncampus. All styles; all skill levels;Serious inquiries only. Call Dan667-7677.VISUALIZATIONANDHOLISTIC HEALTH PUPPYFor Sale Labrador pup blk. akc, f. 8wks. wormed. Shots. $125 negotaible684-7663.FRENCHtutoriaIs-a I native teacherlevels. 268-9262.PEOPLE WANTEDThe Department of BehavioralSciences needs people who want toparticipate as paid subjects inpsycholinguistic and cognitivepsychology experiments. For furtherinformation call 753-4718. Mature recent Hons Grad editing in¬dexing research writing organizing ex-per. seeks int. part time work. Sometyping if nec. 40 wpm. Call 288-6847Wed. Fri. Enjoy high levels of health and well¬being. Learn about holistic health anddesign and implement your own pro-gram through use of the life style diary0 ers and visualization in a supportivegroup Thurs. at the Gargoyle,5:30-7:30 beginning Jan. 31. Call Dobbi288 3706, or 337-8100. ROSE/PLITT TIXDie. movie theatre tickets at ReynoldsClub Box Office.GET SASIFIEDTUTOR-Experienced tutor106-116 Call Paul 493 6761 Chem BABANDKATYANDJOE AND ALEXFULL 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. SCENES Jason is pure gold and so are you - Con¬gratulations!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 955-9112or Lee955-5770. Spartacist League Forum Hail red ar¬my in Afghanistan!—Why revolu¬tionaries defend the U.S.S.R. FridayJan 25. 7:30 pm Reynolds Club Univer¬sity of Chicago for info 427-0003. SELF-HYPNOSISSEMINARMAKE $40 (NO TAX DEDUCTED) INONE DAY-Interviewers needed forstation WLS, Channel 7 primary elec¬tion day poll in Chicago on March 18.Limited openings. Pick up applica¬tions immediately from Ms. Johnson,Career Counseling and Placement. Professor Elyce Zenoff from GeorgeWashington University Law Schoolwill be at Career Counseling Office fora Recruiting Visit on Friday, January25 beginning at 9 am. Please Come.Free Swimming Instructions forAdults, Tuesday IHN 7:30-8:30p.m.Women's Union Forum: Women andNuclear power Thurs. Jan. 24 7:30,Cobb 115. On campus beginning Jan 29 from7:00-9:00pm. Learn the fundamentalsof Self-Hypnosis and develop the skilland technique necessary for its use"It has tne power to help youtransform whatever area of your lifeyou address it to from enhancing studyskills and improving health to deepen¬ing relationships and clarifying andhelping you attain future goals" 7 ses¬sions, $70. Taught by a clinical hyp¬notherapy program graduate. Cal'Dobbi 288 3706 or 337-8100. SAVE ON MOVIESRARE GUITARS CLERKTYPIST SECRETARYEntry level positions available at theNational Opinion Research center.Persons 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) required.Previous office clerical experienceand some college preferable Projectcontinues through May 1980. 37Vj hourweek. $4.00-$4.50 per hour. Call753-1121 or 753-1166 An Equal Op¬portunity Affirmative ActionEmployer. NORC needs a person to assist two administrators 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-S12,000 plus benefits.Call 753-1121. An Equal Opportuni¬ty/Affirmative Action Employer.RACQUETBALLCLUBMtg Wed., Jan. 23, 5:15 pm., 3rd floor,Ida Noyes. All levels of play welcome.GARDENAPARTMENT CRAFTY PEOPLEOne bedroom of furnished 2 bedroomgarden apartment. Immediatelyavailable 2 blocks from Regenstein, 1block from 1C laundry restaurantsshopping. Female necessaryundergrad preferred. 288-0571 before9am and after 5pm or 684-4631 after10pm. A Singular Group, a creative artscooperative is looking for newmembers to round out its gallery ofarts and crafts. Come visit us at 57thand Woodlawn in the Unitarian Churchor call Chris at 493-3290.FOTA NEWSCODERSNOCR 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. FESTIVAL OF THE ARTS organizetional meeting, Thurs. Jan. 24 at 7:30pm, Ida Noyes Rm. 218 Wanted: freshfaces, creative urges, new ideas for1980 FOTA.BRAZIL'S BIGMOVIE HITRESEARCH ASST. Bruno Barreto's DONA FLOR & HERTWO HUSBANDS playing 1-House Jan24, Thursday. $1.50. 8 pm and 10 pmfilmed in Bahia in wonderful color,with music by the incomparableCHICO BARQUE. A marvellous com¬edy.Full-time position available nowWork involves analysis of court filesPosition for abt. six months. Salarynegotiable depending on ed and expof person Call Dr. Gilboy 667-4700 orsend resume to same at Americn BarFoundation. 1155 East60th. LCBpeopl'helping create this years LasciviousCostume Ball You'll have completecreative freedom. Call Steve Silver753-2240Learn to use SAS (Stastical AnalysisSystem) and solve your data defini¬tion, statistical analysis, and reportwriting problems. The Comp Center isoffering a 6-session course writingstarting January 28 Come tothe Center before January 24 toregister Cost $25. Computer time pro¬vided. Call 753-8400 for more informa¬tion. BECKETT TTErtRose and Plitt theatre discount ticketat Reynolds Club Box Office.GIBSON: 69 Les Paul custom $595;Hummingbird acoustic $585, NORMA40w amp $155. WONG 667-3260. DIRECTS A/VPfiiRr c-re oByri»ft*c*rrrBECKETT. JTRAPP-RICKCi-vchEyKRIPP’S jo-f-E'Q. JEASTTAPE Geo DK/W.studio thcatt^(colv^bus firno ^yAojOT [JES^SON.js.so-46-PX**- :^43-3S<50(Goodman)SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH - UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS ATTHE MEDICAL CENTER. CHICAGOInvites Applications for Degree ProgramsMASTER OF PUBLIC HEALTH (M PH.)MASTER OF SCIENCE IN PUBLIC HEALTH (M S )DOCTOR OF PUBLIC HEALTH (Dr P H.)DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY IN PUBLIC HEALTH (Ph D )Concentrations are offered in Biometry. Epidemiology Environmental andOccupational Health Sciences Industrial Hygiene and Safety Health Sciencesand Community Health Sciences Administration and Health Law Health Education Population Sciences and International HealthFinancial assistance is available through Public Health Traineeships and Research Positions Deadline to apply for M PH Program is February 15 1980Deadline for M S Dr P H and Ph 0 Programs is si* weeks prior to the quarter in which the applicant wishes to enterFor further information, write or telephonelames W WagnerAssistant Dean for Student AffairsUniversity of Illinois at the Medical CenterP 0 Bo* 6998Chicago Illinois 60680(312) 996 6625The School encourages applications from qualified minority studentsThe Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, January 22, 1980 — 11International House FilmsAssembly Hall 1414 E. 59th St.Jan. 24, 8 & 10 p.m.$1.50 AdmissionDona Flor — rousing, resonant film treat“A ROUSING FILM TREAT.”—Rex ReedJORGE AMADO Sand her two husbandsDirected by BRUNO BARRETO Starring Sonia Braga. Jose Wilker andMauro Meodonca Music by Chico BuarqueIn Portuguese, with English subtitles.Filmed in Bahia, Brazil. In color.Studentsctt /4U ‘DiMAiattA o£ @oUeqeInterested 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. Our waiting for winter isfinally over....come ski with us,U.C. SKI CLUBSPRING BREAK MAR. 21-30RT. AMTRAK & TRANSFERS7 nights, condos on the hill,5 days lifts, (incredibleskiing), 6th day to relax.uu(deposits still being accepted)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.$70°°I M (Members) $25 DEPOSIT DUE 1/24LEARN TO SKI NIGHTSWEDNESDAY, JAN. 30: FRIDAY, FEB. 15Includes: equipment, lifts, lesson,transportation.s1950 Memberss2400 Non-membersGroup Rates AvailableSKI TEAMSki your best this year with the UCSki Team. $20.Membership Fee includes coaching, racefees, transportation subsidy, and other extras.Competition and coaching is geared to bothbeginning and advanced racers. Practicesevery Tuesday evening: Meetings. Mondaysat 7 p.m., Ida Noyes. For more info call Mitch752-5977; Robin 752-7705.UC SKI CLUBMembership -750 yearRegular meetings Monday & Thursday,7 p.m. Ida NoyesFor Information Call 955-9646The Chicago Maroon“Solitary, singing in the West, I strike up for a new world.” —Walt WhitmanVol. 89 No. 29 The University of Chicago Copyright 1980 The Chicago Maroon Friday, January 25, 1980Students react to Carter’sBy Jaan Elias withJeff Cane andDave GlocknerThe men and women of Ameri¬can ’s armed forces are on duty to¬night in many parts of the world. Iam proud of the job they are doing,and know you share that pride. Iam convinced that our volunteerforces are adequate for our currentdefense needs. 1 hope that it willnot become necessary to reimposethe draft.However, we must be preparedfor that possibility. For this rea¬son. I have determined that the Se¬lective Service system must nowbe revitalized. 1 will send legisla¬tion and budget proposals to theCongress next month so that wecan begin registration and thenmeet future mobilization needs rapidly if they arise.—President Carter,State of the UnionConfusion and concern were theprimary student reactions to Pres¬ident Carter’s Wednesday nightannouncement of the revitalizationof the selective service system andthe possibility of a draft.Maroon reporters surveyed re¬actions in two dorms, Jimmy’s andover the telephone Wednesdaynight and found that most studentswere resigned to registration dueto the situation in Afghanistan.“I think it was inevitable,” onefourth year student in history said,“If Carter hadn’t done it. Congresswould have.”A sizable minority of studentstook definite stands either for oragainst the registration. Of those who took a definite stand, therewas an even split between thosewho supported registration andthose who opposed it.“If you are for your country, youwill register and you’ll go,” a firstyear student at Woodward Courtsaid.A second year student in the Col¬lege took the opposite stand. “Justa bunch of old men telling us tofight,” he concluded.Most students were not as defi¬nite in their reactions. “I think thatit is a good idea. I mean you haveto fellow tough talk with tough ac¬tion... but after all it is only Afgh¬anistan and not France... but Iguess that’s life.” a third year stu¬dent in the PERL program com¬mented.Others said that they would reg¬ister, but were not sure if theyLeon Despres Nancv ClevelandCarol Moseley BraunDespres letter claims State Rep.Currie is playing to racist appealBy Chris IsidoreA private letter from former 5thWard Alderman Leon Despres toState Rep. Barbara Flynn Currie,accusing her of playing to racistfeelings, has found its way onto theChicago Tribune’s PerspectivePage, and into Currie’s re-electioncampaign.Despres had written a letter toCurrie asking that his name in noway be associated with her cam¬paign for re-election to the 24th le¬gislative district. (Both the 24thdistrict, and Despres’s 5th Wardinclude Hyde Park.) Despres hadbecome upset with Currie whenshe refused to run a united cam¬paign with fellow independentCarol Moseley Braun in the March18 primary. But Despres had leftthe letter unsigned, and stated thathis reasons for doing so were thathe wished the matter of his non¬sponsorship to remain private, andhe did not want to force Currie torespond publicly to his criticism.But someone leaked a copy of theletter to Tribune columnist VeronJarrett and Jarrett detailed thecontroversy in a column that ap¬peared Wednesday, quoting the let¬ter extensively. But he did notmention that Despres wished theletter and the entire controversy toremain a private matter.Despres, Currie, and Braun areall members of a coalition of inde¬ pendents which has directed muchof the area’s politics. The contro¬versy arose from a dispute on howCurrie and Braun should campaignin their re-election efforts in the24th district. The rules of the elec¬tion allow places for two Demo¬crats on the ballot in November. Inthe primary voters can choose be¬tween giving three votes to onecandidate (a procedure called“bulleting”), or split, and give lVfevotes to each of two candidates.Braun, who ran ahead of Curriewhen they ran separate campaignsin the primary two years ago, hadasked Currie to run a united cam¬paign, with the two of them sharingcampaign staff, headquarters, vol¬unteers, and literature, and urgingvoters to vote for both. Currieturned down this offer, a move thatangered Despres. He felt that thiswas not in the best interest of inde¬pendents, and that it was done toappeal to white racist feelings insome parts of the district.Currie is the only white candi¬date running in the primary.Despres fears that the Currie cam¬paign will work in certain whiteprecincts in the district, urgingbullet votes for Currie with an at¬tack on the campaigns of the blackcandidates.Currie’s campaign manager,Forbes Shepherd, denied that thecampaign was urging voters to bul¬let vote for Currie He claimed the decision not to run a united cam¬paign was based upon what theCurrie campaign felt was mostbeneficial to both candidates.Turn to Page 5Relief group:By Rebecca LillianOur country’s efforts to stabilizethe mass famine in Cambodia havenot gained significant momentum,according to a report given Mon¬day by Dr. Edwin Silverman,Director of Governor's Informa¬tion Center for Asian Assistance atCambodia Relief Now’s firstwinter quarter meeting The meet¬ing was held Monday night.Silverman stressed that a largepart of the problem lies in the factthat our foreign policy prohibitsthe shipment of agricultural andindustrial equipment to Cambodia,both of which are crucial to getthat country “back on its feet.” Hewarned the audience that if pres¬ent rates of starvation continue,few Cambodians will be alive byApril.In his conclusion, Silvermanmade it clear that he feels the firststep toward a long-term resolutionof the multiple problems in Indo¬china is to negotiate the establish¬ment of diplomatic relations with proposalwould serve if drafted. Many fa¬vored registration in principle buthope that they could somehowavoid being drafted.Two students questioned op¬posed the draft in principle butsaid that they would volunteer ifthe need arose. “If we needed tofight, I’d volunteer, but I’d ratherhave it up to me,” a third year stu¬dent at Breckenridge said.“Things are just happening toofast,” another student commented.Most students said that while theytrusted the president, they werenot sure about the present action.“I just get more and more con¬fused each day,” a student said inJimmy’s.Graduate students were morecertain about their reactions withmost of them against registration.Turn to Page 5Campaign roundup President CarterMrs. Bush will visitBy Jaan EliasAs the primary campaign heatsup. more political luminaries aremaking their way to the Universitycampus.Barbara Pierce Bush, the wife ofRepublican presidential candidatefor president George Bush, will bemaking a stop at the Reynolds ClubLounge from 8:30 to 10 a m. onThursday, January 31st.Mrs. Bush will give a short talkat about 9 am and organizers of themeeting said that most of the visitwill be informal. Mrs. Bush hastravelled extensively with her hus¬band and is a member of variousvolunteer organizations.Campus organizers for formerCalifornia Governor Ronald Rea¬gan have decided to forego anycampus organization and urge sup-Cambodiansthe Vietnamese government.Hugh Schwartzberg. co-chair¬person of the Emergency TaskForce for Indochinese Refugees,spoke next His impassioned pleasthat America take in every refugeethat is turned away elsewherewere punctuated with assurancesthat this is a “do-able” problem.Quoting Jefferson, that “Libertyrequires eteranl vigilance,”Schwartzberg outlined severalsteps that individuals can take tohelp alleviate the crisis:1) stage mass letter writing cam¬paigns to President Carter, implor¬ing him to “take them in!”2) write to individual senatorsand congressmen, urging them tovote to provide the necessary fund¬ing to absorb and resettle the refu¬gees3) thoroughly question all presi¬dential candidates on their viewsabout the crisis in Indochina.Schwartzberg suggested that theaudience remind politicians thattaking in all of the refugees wouldcost less than the Viet Nam war porters of the ex-governor to workdirectly for the national Reaganorganization.“We think that it will be muchmore useful for students to workdirectly in the main effort,’ Rea¬gan for president organizer TedChristopher saidChristopher can be reached at753-0399 for more information.A short organizational meetingof the Carter/Mondale committeewas held last Tuesday night and at¬tracted about five supporters of theincumbent president. No planswere announced for the Carter oncampus campaign.In the last issue of The Maroonthe spokesman for the Cartercampus organization was misiden-tified as Sarah Burke. SarahRechter is the spokesperson forCarter and we regret the error.still starvingdid, as well as less than long-termmaintanence of refugee campswould. He concluded by sayingthat, despite the magnitude of thecrisis, he remains “hopefulenough ” “American people.” heinsisted, “will no longer be able towatch people die on the living roomtelevision tubes.”Following the guest speakers,several reports on Cambodia Re¬lief Now’s own activities weregiven. The sponsorship committeeis currently sponsoring several ref¬ugees. Along with an ongoing can¬vassing program, the group isplanning special fund-raising ac¬tivities. It has raised over $10,590to date.A party will be held tonight. Jan¬uary 25, at 5210 S. Dorchester *1,beginning at 9 pm Donations ofone dollar or more w ill be request¬ed at the door. Later in the quarter,the group will sponsor a coffee¬houseAll funds raised by CambodiaRelief Now are sent directly toCambodia through establishedchannels.Barbara Flynn CurrieThe Student GovernmentWinter Quarter SpecialElections will be held onFriday, Feb. 1. Nominatingpetitions are available inthe SG Office (Ida Noyes306). The deadline fornominations is 3:00 pm,Wednesday, Jan. 30.The following seats are open: U.C.SKI >5 _SteamboatSPRING BREAK MAR. 21-30Round trip Amtrak & transfers. 7 nights. Condos on the hill, 5days lift tickets (incredible skiing). 6th day to relax.(deposits will beaccepted while space permits)LACROSSE WEEKENDFeb. 22-24. Round trip transportation, 2 nights lodging,2 days lift tickets, dinner Saturday.(members) $25 deposit due 1 /24LEARN TO SKI NIGHTSWednesday, Jan. 30: Friday. Feb. 1 5.Includes: equipment, lifts, lessons, transportation.$ 19.50 Members. $24.00 Non-MembersUC SKI CLUBRegular meetings Monday & Thursday7 p.m . Ida Noyes, for information Call 955-9646PIERCE HALL (1)LAW SCHOOL (1)BUSINESS SCHOOL (4)S.S.A. (1)PUBLIC POLICY (1)LIBRARY (1)MED SCHOOL(2)BIO SCIENCE (3)PHY SCIENCE (3)S0C SCIENCE (4)HUMANITIES (3) DIRECTORY OF RESEARCHERSON WOMEN AND FEMALENESSnow being compiled by theGRADUATE COMMITTEE ON THE STUDY OF WOMENTo 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. 60637Name Dept.Address Stud:. _ MA. _ PhD _ Fac— _ PhoneArea(s) of research or special interest:Check if interested in helping produce directory l I2—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, January 25, 1980Douglas & Hutchins: Friendship in lettersBy Jon ShamisWhen William O. Douglas died last Satur¬day, the country lost one of its most outspo¬ken defenders of individual liberty. Tri¬butes came from his supporters andopponents, those whose causes he hadchampioned and those who sought to im¬peach him. Philip Kurland, William R.Kenan, Jr. Distinguished Service Professor,who was often a strong critic of Douglas’sopinions praised him as “the last of thegreats. He and Hugo L. Black rewrote muchof the constitution.”Douglas served on the Supreme Court for36 years after his appointment by FranklinDelano Roosevelt in 1939, longer than anyother Justice, and it is this aspect of his lifethat is familiar to most Americans. But fewpeople know of Douglas’s correspondenceand friendship with another long-tenuredand controversial figure closer to home:Robert Maynard Hutchins, president of theUniversity of Chicago from 1929 to 1951 andthe man who originally asked Douglas tojoin the faculty of the Yale Law School.Douglas originally taught at ColumbiaLaw School. Shortly after he left Columbiain 1928, he met Hutchins who was the lawdean at Yale. Hutchins offered Douglas aposition on the Yale faculty, and within fouryears, Douglas was promoted to the presti¬gious chair of Sterling Professor of Law.When Hutchins went to Chicago he namedDouglas to the faculty of the Law School as avisiting professor to Yale (for a year). In aletter to Hutchins after that year, Douglaswrote, “the length of time it took me to passin the proposition is only equalled by the stu¬pidity of the final decision. I assure you itgrieved me greatly to decline. The urge toaccept was very great. •“It boiled down to a question of presentexpediency, which could hardly be consi¬dered a decision on the merits. It was part¬ly, though not entirely, a question of embar¬rassment to Charlie (perhaps the dean ofYale Law School). I was not misled intothinking that this great university wouldstagger if I checked out. Experience hasshown that everything I leave flourishes.But there are a number of things I havestarted here which I must spend this nextyear in tying up and completing. I did notfeel I could do them unless I was here. Thatmay sound strange. But that’s the dope.”Douglas was never to come to Chicago toteach. Nonetheless, Hutchins and Douglaswere to remain close friends and maintain aconstant correspondence. The following is acollection of letters between the two whichexhibit the wit, charm, and intelligence thatDouglas brought to the Supreme Court of theUnited States:May 14, 1930President Robert M HutchinsUniversity of ChicagoChicago, IllinoisDear Bob:The offer of 1146 East 59th Street, Inc.,contained in your letter of May 8 is herebyaccepted. The time of the arrival of this in¬digent transient is the last of this month orto be more specific, approximately May 30.He probably will not be with you after May31 unless you decide to emplov him.There is only one request to make and thatis that be billetted in the servant quarters.The reason for this request is that he is notcoming to Chicago purely for intellectualreasons and might disgrace a master bed¬room.I can assure you that the offer was appre¬ciated and that neither you nor your lovelywife will be unduly embarrassed by any¬thing that he may do.Yours faithfully,BillMay 20, 1930Professor William O. DouglasYale UniveritySchool of LawNew Haven, ConnecticutDear Orville:In reply to your generous communicationsof May 13 and 14, the answer to which has been delayed by a serious attack of croupwhich the President of the University of Chi¬cago has been experiencing, I beg to say...Your suggestion that nothing you may dowill embarrass my lovely wife or me is ap¬preciated but is unanimously regarded inChicago merely as a characteristic expres¬sion of your sanguine and optimistic tem¬perament.As ever yours,Robert M. HutchinsJune 30, 1931President Robert M. HutchinsBrioni-in-the AdriaticDear Bob:Your various letters have been received.Your new address sounds like a new collegeyell just recently developed by that mostforward looking institution, operating underthe name of W'hitman College. Both Brioniand the Adriatic are fictions to me. and also,I take it, to Rand and McNally. I should notbe surprised to find out that the place youmention is nothing more than a bayou inJackson Park.Whether it is real or fictitious it sounds tome very much like a Napoleonic stunt. Ishould suggest that you keep your eye on theCorsicans and an Englishman riding a whitehorse.I was just on the verge of leaving for Chi¬cago when you letter arrived, stating that Ishould come at my own expense. I alwaysknew it would be expensive for me to go toChicago, but I never thought you wouldadmit it. I shall be in Chicago sometime inthe next month to greet my wife and preco¬cious child on their return from the hills ofOregon. You may not know it but when I laststayed at your house I walked away with oneof the keys. I hope you left the chair seat inthe hall well filled. If you miss anything onyour return, you can charge it up to theCommittee on Finance.I will send you shortly a copy of my latestbook. If it arrives when you are in Brioni, Iwould suggest that you tie it to the end of along stick and use it with discretion to sup¬press the Brionians.Yours faithfully.Bill July 2. 1931Professor William O. DouglasYale UniversityNew Haven. ConnecticutDear William:You can write to me in care of Swift andCompany. Trieste. I am just another ham.As ever yours,R. M. HutchinsMay 27, 1936Pres. Robert HutchinsUniversity of ChicagoChicago, IllinoisDear Bob:Somebody took me seriously and I am nowscheduled to lecture to your football team onOctober 27th. Should I try to get a clue as towhat I am to talk about or let it be as much amystery to me as to residents of the Mid-dlewest?Yours faithfuilv.BillJune 5. 1936Mr. William O. Douglas. CommissionerSecurities and Exchange CommissionWashington, D.C.Dear Bill:How about “Love Among the MortgageBondholders,” or "Sissies and Securities.”or “My Ten Years at Yale With RobertMaynard Hutchins” or “Governor Landon.Frank Knox, Bert McCormick, Sir Galahad,and the other Knights of the Round Table.”or maybe you would simply like to showsteroptican slides of the securities and soldby members of the Board of Trustees of theUniversity of Chicago during the pasttwenty years. This would be very helpful tome in my work and very stimulating. I amsure, to the audience. If these suggestionsare not adequate, please let me know. I amalways glad to be helpfulAs ever yours.Robert M HutchinsWESTERN UNION TELEGRAM11:10OCTOBER 19. 1936 WILLIAM O. DOUGLAS, COMMISSION¬ERSECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMIS-,SIONWASHINGTON, D C.LISTEN YOU DOPE LET ME KNOW ATONCE WHEN YOU WILL ARRIVE IN CHI¬CAGO AND HOW LONG YOU WILL STAY.BE YOUR AGE.BOBWESTERN UNION DAY LETTER11:30October 21. 1936W'illiam O. Douglas, CommissionerSecurities and Exchange CommissionWashington. D.C.YOUR PROGRAM IS AS FOLLOWS YOUCOME TO MY HOUSE WHEN YOU AREFREE FOR DINNER ALONE WITHMAUDE AND ME. I WILL INTRODUCEYOU PROPERLY AT YOUR LECTUREYOU WILL SPEND THE NIGHT WITH US.AT TWELVE THIRTY OCTOBERTWENTY EIGHTH I WILL GIVE A SMALLLUNCHEON OF STUFFED SHIRTS ATCHICAGO CLUB FOR YOU. PLEASE CON¬FIRM BY WIRE COLLECT.ROBERT M. HUTCHINSWESTERN UNION TELEGRAM2:35OCTOBER 21. 1936ROBERT M. HUTCHINS, PRESIDENTUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOI CONFIRM YOUR PLANS INCLUDINGLUNCHEON WITH FINANCIAL TERMIN-ITIES NEXT WEDNESDAY.BILLNovember 18, 1937William O DouglasSecurities and Exchange CommissionWashington. D.C.Dear Bill:I am sorry I ever met you All the unem¬ployed who know me want to know you Ihave resisted most efforts to get me to in¬troduce them but have finally succumbed tothe charms of one of my female students,possibly because she is not unemployed. Hername is Ester Maree Calkin. She is a tall,hard-boiled damsel who was an excellentstudent at the Yale Law School when I wasthe principal ornament of the faculty. (Thiswas before your appointment.) She has donevery well in practice in Tulsa and has had alarge and varied experience. She will doubt¬less be after you; I recommend that you seeher. You probably need her in your life.There is a very good and very influentialgroup of younger business executives in Chi¬cago called the Commonwealth Club ofwhich I am the principal ornament (Seeabove). I should hate to hear you speak andendorse your verbosity. Could you come outsome day in January and address thesebabies for half an hour or longer at lunch ordinner? I ll guarantee you a large and. whatis more unusual in your case, an enthusias¬tic audience. You will get two hundredbucks in addition to your transportation andregal entertainment at the President'shouse. Let me know about this.As ever vours.BobDec. 8, 1937Robert M. Hutchins. PresidentThe University of ChicagoChicago. IllinoisMy dear Bob:As you well know. I would do practicallyanything for $200.00 and an awful lot morefor regal entertainment in the old Presi¬dential speakeasy at Chicago. And as youalso well know, being a conserv ative fellow.I much prefer words to action. But in spite ofthose inherent weaknesses of mine. I cannotyet definitely tell you definitely that I will bepresent at the Commonwealth Club someday in January. But I will endeavor to giveyou a firm commitment or relieve you veryTurn to Page 5The Chicago Maroon—Friday, January 25, 1980Letters to the EditorChamberlinchampionedTo the Editor:Chamberlin House, whose members inpast years have so significantly contributedto both the intellectual and moral atmo¬sphere at the University, has of late bornethe brunt of The Maroon’s quite pointed, orrather well-honed, wit in Mr. Glockner’s ar¬ticle “College Bowl Squad a Contender.”Aside from the humor underlying “theChamberlin House saga,” the scenario ofthe team’s day at the College Bowl try-outhas no place in such an article. Aside fromthe poignant tale which begins the piece, thestory spoke only of the “all-star” squad andits brilliant triumph in St. Louis, not to theaffairs of the preliminary competition. Noother team is given mention, or for that mat¬ter warrants it; and I might point out thatdespite this comic episode. Chamberlin washardly the lowest rung on the ladder. Mr.Glockner has added insult to injury by fail¬ing to do his homework: for the Chamberlinrecord was 2-1 and not 1-1 as mistakenly re¬ ported.Nor did this record cause the team to"lose heart” and withdraw. For the team tohave continued in competition would havebeen quite inconsiderable to other peoplewho were willing to commit themselveswholeheartedly to the College Bowl. Thishardly constitutes “losing heart”!The Chamberlin House TeamMatthew L. Friedman (in absentia)Timothy J. GayFrancis Palker (in absentia)Jonathan Adam ZimmermanElla, meet AliceTo the Editor:I would like to make it perfectly clear thatthe inane response of the Chamberlin Houseteam was the full fault of team member Ti¬mothy J. Gay. In the course of that bonusquestion. I leaned over to Mr. Gay and toldhim that Daisy Buchanan was in Fitz¬gerald’s The Great Gatsby, because, asteam captain. Mr. Gay was to give the an¬swer. Because of his utter incompetenceabout those things which do not concern HeH + , beam foil, spectroscopy, and loudand senseless music, Mr. Gay associatedthe name Fitzgerald with Ella Fitzgerald.May I take advantage of this public forum totell Mr. Gay that there is more to this worldthan low- energy physics and degeneratemusic, that names like Fitzgerald go deeperthan Ella Fitzgerald. I suppose Mr. Gaywould respond to the question “who wroteThe Last of the Mohicans,” after myprompting him with the name “Cooper,”with the answer “Alice Cooper.”Jonathan Adam ZimmermanThe heightof responsibilityTo the Editor:I would just like to make it clear that cul¬pability for the Chamberlin team’s responserests entirely on team member JonathanZimmerman’s shoulders. This places it ap¬proximately 41 inches from the ground.Timothy J. Gay FSACCSL defendedTo the Editor :On January 11 The Maroon printed a let¬ter from Charles Knight, Vice President ofthe Organization of Black Students and rep¬resentative to the Faculty-Student AdvisoryCommittee on Campus Student Life(FSACCSL). In that letter he made sometelling criticisms of F’SACCSL. These pointsdeserve some amplification, but I also feelthat it is possible to defend the activities ofthat organization, on which I serve as repre¬sentative from the graduate division of thehumanities. First the negative points.1. Charles rightly points out that the uni¬versity at large knows little about the func¬tioning of the FSACCSL. I believe the nameshould be changed to the Advisory Commit¬tee on Campus Student Life (wdth a far morepronounceable acronym — “axle”), indicat¬ing more simply the responsibility of thecommittee to advise the dean of students ofthe University on relevant non-academicmatters.2. The committee was treated to an over-extensive discussion of the expansion ofMandel Hall, a project toward which wecould contribute little. I suggest that a por¬tion of each meeting be reserved for the dis¬cussion of problems of campus student life,and that students, through their representa¬tives, initiate such discussions.3. Charles said that the committee isasked to approve potentially unpopularmeasures, such as a proposed extension ofstudent activity fees to the entire studentbody (graduate students now pay no fee).This is a sore point to me, since most of myconstituents would prefer a decent bar inWest Hyde Park to an expansion of campusactivities (though I invite education on thispoint). However, in this matter the adminis¬tration seems more to be coordinating thearguments of various student groups thaninitiating an unsupported measure.I agree with Charles that the Campus Stu¬dent Life committee could profit fromhigher visibility and more student input atmeetings (you can find your representa¬tive’s name and phone number by callingPaul Ausick at 753-3224). However, as re¬gards the treatment of unpopular measures,from its beginning the committee has hadthe responsibility of listening and advisingrather than initiating and determining.In defense of the Campus Student Lifecommittee, I must say that it permits theadministration to look at student opinion be¬fore it leaps into an unpopular opinion. Thecommittee members exercise no authorityover administrative decisions, but then theorganization is predicated upon cooperationrather than confrontation. (The ombuds¬man’s office, among others, deals with thislatter sphere, i The committee also permitsthe individual members to learn somethingof the workings of the University, and Ihope, contribute to the improvement andsurvival of the institution.Charles B. WordellGraduate Representative toFSACCSL from the HumanitiesWeekend for all?To the Editor,I am writing about the 200 students placedon the waiting list for the Winter Weekend.The Winter Weekend trip is a “part of theon-going Orientation for all entering stu¬dents”. When one reads “all entering stu¬dents” are invited to the Winter Weekendtrip in a letter from the Director of Orienta¬tion, one is led to believe that all first yearstudents can be accommodated. Unfortuna¬tely this is not the case, 200 students havebeen placed on a waiting list without anyknowledge that such a list exists. It was onlyat my urgings that a letter is being consi¬dered to explain the waiting list to the unk¬nowing students.My involvement began on Tuesday when Ifailed to receive a letter about Winter Week¬end. I went to see the Director of Orienta¬tion, Ms. Sonia Jacobson. Ms. Jacobson toldme that I, as well as anyone else who sentThe Chill is onThe juxtaposition of newspaper storiesoften provides good opportunity for con¬templating the events of the day.Wednesday morning's Sun-Times pre¬sented readers with these three headlineson the first page of the “World/nation”section: “Carter seen considering draftplan”, “ ‘Defense fever’ hits Congress”,and “Blacks falling further behind.Urban League charges.”None of these stories comes as a sur¬prise. and all are alarming. Given the in¬creasing adventurism of the Soviets andthe somewhat lame position of Americandomestic economy and our own presenceabroad, a government move towards jin¬goism is probably a wise one in an elec¬tion year. To follow his shelving of theSALT treaty, the article reports, thePresident is considering a return to aDeacetime registration, and the SelectiveService is printing up hundreds ofthousands of draft cards right here in Il¬linois and has “millions of forms” readyshould the President need them.Not to be outdone by the executivebranch, the Congress also is gettingready to flex some military muscle."Afghanistan,” one Capitol 'Hill aidenotes in the story, “saved us from being ado-nothing Congress.” And another aideadds, “You’ve heard of the military-in¬dustrial complex? This is going to be themilitary-industrial Congress.”“It is likely,” the reporter writes, “thatthe massive spending... will be approvedand perhaps even increased.”“Some are predicting a flurry of spend¬ing proposals that may include revival ofthe B-l bomber, the neutron bomb, moreships for the Navy and increases in mili¬tary pay, as well as pet defense projectsrejected in the last session’s mood of fi¬scal austerity.” No price tag is attachedto these developments but another de¬fense item also under Congressional con¬sideration is the MX missile “which willcost an estimated $33 billion.”In addition. Congress may propose amilitary and economic aid package to“shore up” General Zia’s regime in Pa¬kistan. But we needn’t worry about this“massive spending” affecting our econ¬omy because, the article notes: “Thepresident still is committed to balancingthe budget eventually and to keeping thefederal deficit to a minimum as a way ofcutting inflation. None of these moves amounts to muchmore than improving the chances forsome sort of armed conflict, whether on alarge or small scale. We have an armynow and it has a pretty good arsenal at itsdisposal, but neither the Russians nor theIranians have been deterred by thesethings, nor will they be. In the future, theAdministration will have to make eco¬nomic and political moves < as it has) andit will have to make these in a strong andconsistent fashion (as it has not). Mr.Carter was on the right track with thegrain embargo and Olympic boycott. Butthese most recent military proposalswould derail perhaps the only opportuni¬ty to avoid both the hot and cold varietiesof war.It is the third story that is most dis¬turbing. Vernon Jordan, one of the few'political figures, black or white, whospeaks with both authority and sensitivi¬ty, reports that blacks have lost ground towhites economically in the last ten years;that black family income now averages „ only 59 percent of white income; thatmore blacks are in poverty today thanten years ago; and that “black unem¬ployment (11.3 percent) is not only morethan twice as high as white unemploy¬ment, but is actually higher than it was inthe 1960s and much higher than at thestart of the 1970s when it was only 8.2 per¬cent.”The story then notes that Jordan “saidnational security is as much a matter ofdomestic strength as military,” and thenquotes him as saying: “The same peoplewho charged that social problemscouldn’t be solved by throwing money atthem are anxious to try to solve interna¬tional problems by throwing money atthe Pentagon.”As to those social problems. Senate Ma¬jority Leader Robert Byrd says: “I thinkAfghanistan will push other (non-securi¬ty) items onto the back burner.One wonders just what it was that Mr.Byrd had on the front burner in the firstplace.4—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, January 25, 1980their response via Faculty Exchange, hadbeen put on a waiting list. I later learnedthat Faculty Exchange had an enormousmail tie-up earlier that week. I expressedmy disbelief that I was being denied an ac¬tivity I had paid for as part of my Orienta¬tion fee. Ms. Jacobson explained that therewas not enough money to rent an extra bus,and even more important, there were notenough rooms at Green Lake. She expressedher regret that such a situation had arisenbut there was nothing she could do.I then went to the offices of Student Om¬budsman, Lorna Straus, and Faculty Ex¬change. All, except the Student Ombuds¬man, expressed their regret, but offered nosolution. The Student Ombudsman is stilltrying to rectify the situation but, at thispoint, it is doubtful that anything can bedone.I am not writing this letter to attack theadministration, but merely to point out theflaws in the Winter Weekend trip so thatthey can be corrected for future freshmanclasses.Mark Bauera student in the collegeTheChicagoMaroonEditor-in-Chief: Andrew PatnerEditor: Jaan EliasGrey City Journal Editor: David MillerFeatures Editor: Mark WallachSports: Andy RothmanLiterary Review: Richard Kaye and MollyMcQuadeSenior Associate Editor: David GlocknerAssistant Editor: Chris IsidoreSenior Editors: Abbe Fletman and ClaudiaMagatAdvertising: Steve KaszynskiAssistants: Jan Borengasser, Brian Gaff¬neyOffice Manager: Leslie WickBusiness Manager: Joel GreenProduction: Jake Levine, Scott Rauland,Karen HornickThe 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, 1212 E. 59th Street, Chi¬cago, Illinois 60637. Telephone 753-3263.We welcome all letters and corresponden¬ce. We ask that writers limit their letters to500 words. We reserve the right to edit let¬ters for reasons of length or clarity. All let¬ters must be signed by an individual andshould be typed and triple-spaced. Nameswill be withheld upon request. All letters be¬come the property of the Maroon. Registration(and not for school!)Continued from Page 1“I’m against registration,” a law schoolstudent said and did not offer further com¬ment.One of the most frequent responses gar¬nered over the evening was “I’m scared shi¬tless”.Another student described his mood andthat of his fellow students as “ominous fa¬talism”.Students watching the speech in the IdaNoyes initially chuckled at the presidentand then became very silent as he an¬nounced the plans for the revitalization ofselective service.City-wide and national press reporterswho called The Maroon Wednesday nightwere interested in whether students werementioning a Viet Nam-like protest actionand were told that student reaction had notcrystallized yet.Douglas - HutchinsContinued from Page 3soon from the embarrassment in which youmust find yourself. It would not help if youraised the fee to $250.00 as my difficulty isthat I have promised a group of economicroyalists who have incorporated under thename of The Economic Club a shot at them.I am now sorry and am trying to get out of it,as I know that none of your babies will bepresent.Yours faithfully,BillMay 16, 1939Mr. Justice DouglasSupreme Court of the United StatesWashington, D.C.Dear Bill :It seems very odd to see the word Justiceon your letterhead. You must be the justicepeople have in mind when they say “Thereain’t no .”You wait until Old Whiskers goes and I succeed him; you get all the patent cases.Remember me to Felix if you are stillspeaking to him.As always yours,BobApril 9, 1946The Honorable William O. DouglasJustice of the Supreme Court of the UnitedStatesWashington, D.C.Dear Bill:Instead of being in Florida with you I wasin Arizona with my wife.Go east, young man.Ever yours,BobDespres, CurrieContinued from Page 1“There were a number of proposals of¬fered,” said Shepherd. “The one we reject¬ed called for a completely joint campaign,which would have prevented individualheadquarters, etc. That kind of compulsorycampaign is not what we felt was in the bestinterest of either candidate. We have beenco-operating closely with the IVI. (Indepen¬dent Voters of Illinois) campaign, and withthe Braun campaign. People in our officehave been working with and for Carol, andthe two candidates have appeared togetherin the campaign.“We are not urging bulleting. The wordbullet, or bulleting, does not appear on anyof our literature, any of our signs. Thecharge is somewhat ironic, for Carol is urg¬ing bulleting.”Despres attacked that claim, both in hisletter, and in an interview after the letterwas published. “The one who advocates bul¬let mg always accuses the other of it.” hesaid. “I just don’t buy that. (The charge thatBraun was urging bulleting.) I watched thattoo long to believe it. White candidates whoadvocate bulleting always do it by sayingLook at this racist black candidate who isurging bulleting.’ ”Despres’s letter attacked Currie for thisstrategy. “Thus while preparing a princi¬pled antiracism statement which vour moral principles approve,” he wrote,“(your campaign) will cynically make thecandidate (Currie) an accomplice of racistappeal.”Braun also denied this charge. “I don't un-derstanu why Barbara would make thatcharge as a response to the article,” shesaid. “I have all along supported a unitedcampaign. When she (Currie) announcedthat she would run an individual campaign,she knew that would force us to run an indi¬vidual campaign. I don’t want to sound pa¬tronizing, but there is one kind of literaturewhich instructs people about the mechanicsof voting, and there is another type for themore sophisticated voters. I have bothkinds, both bullet and non-bullet literature.But Barbara knew from the beginning thatthat would become necessary if we ran sep¬arate canrmaiens.Braun said that the real issue in Currie’sdecision to run a separate campaign was notbullet ballotting. but rather the future of theindependent movement in the fifth ward andthe congressional district. By running a sep¬arate campaign, Braun claimed that Currieweakened the chances of all independentsrunning in the area.“Barbara has been the one who has scut¬tled a united independent campaign for thisseason. I think she has done damage both tothe independent movement, and to herself.I'm still in favor of a united campaign. I feelthe independents must get together beforethere can be any expansion.”Despres emphasized, though, that he stilladmired Currie, and would still vote for herin the primary. He does not believe that Cur¬rie is a racist. The letter began “This letteris not intended in anyway to convey a dimi¬nution of my regard for you It does conveymy concern.” Instead, he was more upsetwith the people who Currie has allowed tohave final say in the campaign. “You wereclear, and commendably frank in insistingthat your campaign is managed by a smallgroup, that includes you as one member butbinds you by its decisions.” Despres addedin his letter.Despres feels that while the quotes fromthe letter in Jarrett's column were accu¬rate. the conclusions were not. “I like Cur¬rie, and I will vote for her,” he said. “I justdid not want my name on her letterhead. Idon’t know who leaked the letter. It wasmeant to be private, and was not widely cir¬culated. I am not wringing my hands overJarrett's article. I did not intend to make itpublic, but I stand by what is in the let¬ter.”Maroon Classifiedsare cheap and effectivePlace them in person, or by mail, at the Maroon office,third floor, Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St. Chicago 60637Rates: 60 cents per line (30 spaces) for U of C people; 75 cents for othersThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, January 25, 1980—5LIBRARY ASSISTANT &LIBRARY CLERK TYPISTOur national licaltli ran- ur«aiiixaliun i» x-rkiii" two <l«-iailinimlril inilix iilual- to Murk in our It-rhnical >cr> i< <-» <lt‘|>artmrnt.Our lihrarx a»istant |trr|>an*> imlexiri" form-. maintain' rrntnl'ami M'aiw ^elected journal' for artirlo for inih'xin": 'i-anhc' theOCI.C data file and |>ro\id<‘> inforinatioii scni«r> to a dm r'cclientele. Sonic college with two veai> ■idieral office experienceis desirable. I.ihrarx e\|terionce preferred.Our clerk t\|>ist t\|>e» |nirelia>e orders, maintain' order files,and matches and records receipt of ordered materials. I>nli**salso include distributin': mail and photo eo|i\in" materials.High scIhmiI diploma preferred with one year of office ex|>er-ienee. I.ihrarx hack ground a plus.Both positions reipiire accurate t\pin« of 50 % I'M and theability to organize a lar^e xolnine of work. ^ e offer coinpeliiixesalaries and excellent fringe benefits includin': 3 weeks paidvaeatiou.For more information please call:280-6261AMERICANMOSITTM.VSSt X 1\TK )N8 10 V. I.nke Short' l)ri\eI I >|«|N>rnniin I iii|>l""r 'i 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. 1GM QUALITYsave€ PACTS f "XAe«7< ihul (rrinf’G W Minn<t ihZNEfiAl MOTORS BASTS DTV1SJON LtUI\tC 1/ Hath aA RUBY’SCHEVROLET72nd & Stony Island 684-0400Open Daily 9-9. Saf. 9-5 Part* open Sat. 'til NooniXfy RUBY’S^A^VOLKSWAGEN f72nd & Stony Island 684-0400Open Daily 9-9, Sot. 9-5 Part* open Sot. 'til Noon COLLA VOCEpresentsBrahms, Psalms andModem MadrigalsMusic Praising God and LoveCatherine Hall, ConductorSaturday. January 26.1980 Admission: $4.008:00 p.m. Students andAugustana Lutheran Church Senior Citizens: $2.505500 South Woodlawn Information: 288 8729 thejesuitsFor information, without obligation.contact any Jesuitor write Fj. Richard J. Baumann, S.J.Vocation Director for Chicago Province .Jesuits2599 Harvard Road (Jesuit Novitiate)Berkley, Michigan 48072.(313) 399-8132k!*VT ■<* ■ ■ no;t oJ!:*vji p<» £■ o ry2 vo re my; t* B'-iy-n-iyic- muhb•> COO'-UieH vtfV KC3M0K«3T0h ” r>v -3 ji b h o, Be e rr ov 6 ire23 ke vq '‘ n.** beh 11e ^■>? o h :: • y rj n' ■: ■ h er- o a h h k o e v.r-KC.r-b' KOH 0 6 T)B3 T'1 H -VB T)O Be VJt 6 ODTo*?wene\*etpwneoKov v.h'fi-odmn yi*t*H T.I V. 5* h:/H Ku f t OH V* V; V'K' Ter>oTyx>o n ji?■c ?. ?. r'r>«*r,y «q, Ce^o/SHc?8 e 7i e h :t ki •" v o j. o r'm m e c x h ye>f mxdv7 ‘i, iX-mi 'ss fpIf you can easily read the above lines, you may have the kind of language talent that theNational Security Agency needs.Opportunities now exist for candidates skilled in the languages shown, plus certain otherunusual foreign languages as well. Those selected will be able to make valuable contributionsin the production of national defense intelligence.The National Security Agency offers a variety of challenging assignments for language majors. . . translation, transcription, area research projects, to name a few. Newly-hired linguistsreceive advanced training in their primary languages and can plan on many years of continuedprofessional growth.Intellectual challenge is part of NSA’s language, too . . . plus attractive surroundings in oursuburban Maryland headquarters. Salaries start at the GS-7 level for BA degree graduates, plusall the usual benefits of Federal employment.U. S. citizenship is required.Schedule an NSA interview through your College Placement Office. Or call us collect at(301) 796-6161. Mr. Bernard Norvell, College Recruitment Manager, will be happy to talk with you.NATIONAL SECURITY AGENCYAttn: M32RFort George G. Meade, Maryland 20755An Equal Opportunity Employer m, fMilosForman sfilms Friday January 256:308:451 1 :00A special Sound-System willbe employed for this film. Sunday January 27Krzysztof Zanussi sA WOMEN’SDECISION LtAll Films $1.50 Cobb Hall6—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, January 25, 1980Early AmericanPhotography RecoveredAdam Clark Vroman, "The Jojolo Sisters of Isleta," 1900.Photography RediscoveredAmerican photographs, 1900-1930Art Institute, through February 4by David MillerPhotography Rediscovered includeswork by Stieglitz, Weston, Abbott,Strand, Adams, Steichen, Hine, Ray,Evans, and 28 lesser known photogra¬phers. These 241 photographs are valu¬able in their own right, but they havebeen brought together to illustratewhat Art Institute curator DavidTravis recognizes as the rediscovery ofphotography.It may seem odd that an art so new —•only 50 to 75 years old when these pho¬tographs were made — should alreadyhave been "lost." Such, however, is thegeneral course of events Travis de¬scribes in the exhibit catalogue. Photo¬graphy's rediscovery began around1910 with a return to the "straight"style practiced during the medium'searliest years. Yet the new photo¬graphy was not what the old had been:"The medium was rediscovered," saysTravis, "but rediscovered in the termsof the twentieth-century artist."This return to and advance upon nine¬teenth century photography was possiblelargely because of "Pictorialist" photo¬graphy, a movement in its heyday between1895 and 1910. The Pictorialists — Stieglitzand Steichen among them — were reactingagainst the "straight" photography of theprevious half century. Earlier photographers and the general public alike had beenimpressed with the medium's unmediatedappearance. Alexander Gardner claimedthat, in contrast to verbal descriptions,which may or may not bear truth, his photographs of Civil War battlefields would be"accepted by posterity with an undoubtingfaith." Similarly, Oliver Wendell Holmespraised photography's "faithful delinea-ture in his essay, "The Doings of the Sun¬beam."The idea that photography was an objec¬tive art — if an art at all — was widespread,and was reflected in practice. Photogra¬phers tried to make their work resembletheir subjects as much as possible. This involved a straight-on perspective with thecamera pointing neither up nor down, andheld at a distance to permit a panoramicview. "Normal" conditions were sought:bright, sunny days with partial cloud cover.The Pictorialists sought to change theseideas and practices. However, their photography was not, at first, directed against"objectivity." Instead, the Pictorialistsreacted against the "Button Pushers"(Stieglitz's term), the influx of amateurscreated when Kodak introduced the handheld camera in 1888. Kodak's system alsoexcluded photographers from the printingprocess, and older, more serious photographers were correctly reluctant to relinquishthis important privilege to technicians andmachinery. The way was clear for a groupof New York photographers to name themselves Pictorialists and adamantly assertphotography's artfulness.Photography Rediscovered celebrates notPictorialism, but its demise; yet curatorsTravis and Anne Kennedy have chosen to include several dozen representatives of Pictorialist work. The purest ofthese photographs combine several qualities — painterly subjects and composition,diffuse lighting or blurred focus, and a narrow range of either light or dark tones. Anobvious and excellent example is F. HollandDay's "Untitled" (no date), in which a nudeboy poses at the mouth of a hillside cave.Day also used another negative and the dou ble exposure technique to superimpose theprofile of the boy's face lightly across thewhole. The blurry photograph includes onlya narrow range of light tones.Day's print is interesting, not because it isunusually beautiful, but because it takesPictorialism to the extreme. The attempt toeffect a tender emotion through the use of apainterly subject and light, blurred tonesmay have worked w&ll early in this century.The doubled image, otherwise unknown inpre Cubist visual art, gives the work itspower. Yet "Untitled" falls short of thebeauty of both painted and less doctoredphotographic nude studies. It borders onsentimentalism.It seems that to use photography to blurvisual distinctions is also to diminish itsmost basic power: the recasting of form.Such photographs are not necessarily bad,but they do work against one of photography's essential characteristics.Other Pictorialist photographers usedPictorialist values more sparingly. FrancisBenjamin Johnston's "Southern Waterfront" (1899 1900; takes a subject commonin painting — sailboats anchored in front ofa shoreline — but shuns blurriness and anabbreviated tonal range. The balance between sky and water in both area and toneindicates that Johnston composed for aes| thetic effect; yet the print is not overbearI ingly artful. Other examples of isolated Pictorialistqualities occur throughout Photography Rediscovered, and are not restricted to printsmade before 1910. Though the anti Pictori¬alist photographs of Sheeler, Weston,Strand, Steichen, and Margrethe Mather appeal powerfully to the contemporary sympathy toward strong composition, welldefined lines, and interesting use of tone andpattern, the pure examples of this sort are— like those of pure Pictorialism — in theminority. The exhibit consists mainly ofprints incorporating qualities from bothcamps, so it seems that anti Pictorialismwas less a revolution against than an outgrowth of Pictorialism.Alfred Stieglitz's work is an example of ithis gradual change. The difference between his "Flatiron" (1903) and the print hemade from the same negative in the 1930sdemonstrates his departure from Pictorialism: the later print has more contrast. jThe formal characteristics of the original jremain, of course, and the overall dif jference of tone but not subject or form jpoints to the general difference between his jearlier and later work. Stieglitz always jsought out painterly subjects — nudes, land |and cityscapes, clouds. He tended to com ;pose these subjects in a thoughtful way, taking into account the relationship betweenthe frame's edges and internal lines, and the jproportion of forms. Thus his conversion to anti Pictorialism was marked by a broaden¬ing of tone, and in no way involved a repudi¬ation of his earlier vision.The example of Stieglitz also points tophotography's fruitful relation to painting.The imitation of this mature art by Pictori¬alists now seems to have been in poor taste,but if the anti Pictorialists are heros foravoiding exclusively sentimental subjectsand returning to the sharper focus of nineteenth century photography, they are alsoheros for placing an increased emphasisupon composition. This was Stieglitz's forte,and that he learned it at least partly frompainting is likely , he showed more paintingthan photography at his "291" gallery. Thusalthough some may see Pictorialism as a regressive movement, its relation to paintingultimately proved to be a healthy one. It notonly reassured photographers that theirswas an artistic medium, but also led to thestrongly composed work of Weston, Sheeler,Strand and Adams. Stieglitz absorbed thislesson early; given the primacy of composi¬tion to photography, his Pictorialism was latent anti Pictorialism. For the medium ingeneral, the problem was only to find whatin painting was applicable to photography.Works bv Sheeler and Weston are the bestexamples of the pure anti Pictorialist("straight") style. Both artists used a widerange of tones from dark black to lightwhite, and both attended to the interrelationof every detail within the frame. Sheeler's"Untitled" (c. 1928) shows the piping andmachinery on the deck of a ship. In it horizontal lines converge in harmony and intersect vertical bands of light and shadow. Thegrid pattern has clearly been placed with regard for the frame edges. The print also in¬cluded a wide, though not total, range oftones.One need not understand either the techni¬calities of either photography or photographic history to enjoy Photography Rediscovered; 241 prints of such quality make for avery rich show, and thus its chief appeal isits diversity. Hung alongside Man Ray's solarized portraits and photograms and Ed¬ward Steichen's stylish fashion photo¬graphy, even Arnold Genthe's sentimentalPictorialism impresses one with the variability possible within the medium.Photography Rediscovered also excels inpresenting the flip side of diversity: sur¬prise. Ten prints by Adam Clark Vroman,an unknown California photographer working in isolation from the New York avantgarde, assure us that artistic virtue is possible without formal training. Vroman photographed the American Indians of the Southwest in a straight, documentary style, andalthough his prints are not flashy, they areremarkable for their attention to the subjects' integrity.The opposite surprise is in store with 13prints by the most famous documentaryphotographer of all: Walker Evans. Thosefamiliar with his work for the Farm Securi¬ty Administration in the 1930s will be disappointed in the flatness and disorganizedquality of his photographs in PhotographyRediscovered. Only one print ("TheBridge," 1929) captures the strong formalquality of his FSA work Yet Evans, too,learned from those who preceded him; andthis general truth may prove to be Photograhy Rediscovered's most lasting value.CHANCESFeatures 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 TO ALL UNDERGRADUATESThe Dean of the College and the Staff of“Human Being and Citizen”presentCOLLEGIATE LECTURE SERIESIN THE LIBER AL ARTSon books, themes, and questionsconsidered in the Common CoreThurs., Feb. 7 Lee Yearley ‘‘Saviors and Teachers:(Department of Religious Matthew and Aristotle”Studies. Stanford University)Thurs., Feb. 21 Richard Kennington(School of Philosophy,Catholic University) “Descartes and ModernPhilosophical Method’’Thurs , March 6 Allan Bloom “Rousseau’’HARPER 130 -8P.M.After the lecture, there will be refreshments andthen discussion in Harper 284.STUDENTGOV’TMEETI8:00 pmJan. 29 NIda Noyes HallEast Lounge GAll Welcome “THeetituy Students6tt rfCl @olleyeInterested in theProgram in theArts and Sciences Basic toHuman Biology and Medicine(ASHUM)TUESDAY, JANUARY 29, 19805:00 P.M.HARPER 130FACULTY and DEANS representing The University of Chicago’sSCHOOLS OF MEDICINE, PUBLIC POLICY, and SOCIAL SER¬VICE ADMINISTRATION will he 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.2 — the grey city journal, Friday, January 25, 1980N.BMo viesHair (Milos Forman, 1979): For those ofus who were ten years old when hippieswere earnestly protesting, this film isjust good clean fun. John Savage, TreatWilliams and a flock of others sing anddance their way through New York, getting high and crashing out in strangeplaces constantly. When they decide togo someplace they do it with style . . .and lots to gobble and smoke. Theymake a point of disturbing the prettyscenery of upper-class folk and armymen and come close to paying properlyfor their sins. Forman finishes this color-ful flick by showing the inevitableoutcome of war for boys of both the longand short-haired varieties. Tonight at6:30, 8:45 and 11 in Quantrell. SI.50DOC - BJThe Big Sleep (Howard Hawks, 1946):Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacalllight up again. He's a private eye investigating the blackmail of her saucy sis¬ter, Martha Vickers. He takes the jobseriously, solves it, wins her. Six losersdie along the way, and half the fun's figuring out who zaps whom. The otherhalf's the dialogue (sample: Norris thebutler: "Are you attempting to tell memy duties?" Bogart the dick: "No, justhaving a good time trying to figure outwhat they are"). Incomprehensibleplot; great movie. Tomorrow at 7 and9:30 in the Law School Auditorium. LSFSI.50. - D.M.A Woman's Decision (Krzysztof Zanussi,1974): Unseen by four reviewers. Docsays: "One of the most convincingdramas of personal crisis made in re¬cent times. The protagonist is led by aseries of circumstances to take stock ofher own life: should she leave her husband and open herself to new erotic experiences? Her decision isn't as important as the way this fine Polish directordefines his characters." Sunday at 7:15and 9:15 in Quantrell. Doc. $1.50.The Toast of New York (Rowland V.Lee, 1937): A spirited, fast paced storyof how Jim Fiske (Edward Arnold) andhis two partners (Cary Grant, JackOakie) make it rich at the close of theCivil War. After a false start they set upa prestigious looking office and weasletheir way into the Erie Railroad, leav¬ing other businessmen befuddled andangry. Fiske falls in love with an ambi¬tious actress (Frances Farmer) andbuys her an opera house, before settingout to cause national hysteria by buyingall the gold he can get his hands on. AsFiske's will to power heightens, hisclose relationships fall to pieces, leav¬ing Frances Farmer in the arms ofCary Grant. This is a truly funny film,loaded with great acting and terrificscenes, which flies like the wind frombeginning to end. Monday at 8 in Quantrell. $1 DOC - BJThe Marriage of Maria Braun (W. R.Fassbinder, 1979): The economic reconstruction of Germany after 1945, as per¬sonified in an opportunistic woman(played brilliantly by Hanna Schygul¬la). Fassbinder suggests the Germanyof Adenauer was merely the flipside o<Hitler's. The best sets, costumes, andacting seen by this reviewer in 1979.Biograph Theater, 2433 N. Lincoln. 3484123. — K.H.El Super (Leon Ichaso, Orlando JimerezLeal 1979): Facet's Multimedia 1517W. Fullerton. Tonight at 7 and 9, Sat. at4, 6, 8, 10 pm; Sun. at 4, 6, 8 p.m. Sameschedule next weekend. $2.50; $2.00Facets members. 281 4114. See articlep. 7.MusicMusic from the Andes: Los Payas, an outstanding Bolivian folk group, brings itsmagic flutes and other native instruments to the U.S. for the first time. Inaddition, the Bolivian Folkloric Groupof Chicago will demonstrate some tradithe grey city journal The public tried on clothing at last Friday's 'art' for WEAR and TEAR exhibit at Midway Studios. The showruns through Thursday, January 30.tional Bolivian folk dance <teps. A feastof Latin American sounds and rhythms.Sat, Jan 26 in the I House AssemblyHall at 8 pm. Free!The Chicago Ensemble: With such a possessive name, you'd demand that theybe good. Well, they are better thangood, judging by their past two seasons.The opening concert of their third sea¬son features one heavyweight — theMozart 19 Quartet in G Minor, K 478.Other works on the bill include two sel¬dom played Haydn trios — one forFlute, Piano and Cello in G (Hob XV.15) and one for Violin, Piano and Celloin Eb Minor (Hob XV. 31). The ensem¬ble's pianist, Gerald Rizzer, has rearranged the Mozart Andante for Flute inC, k. 315 in a piano quartet accompani¬ment version which will also be performed. Beethoven's delightful Duet forViolin and Cello rounds out the bill.Wednesday at 8 in I House. Student discount — two for the price of one ($3) —is available. Series tickets, rangingfrom $12 to $18, also can be obtained.Regular admission is $4.50. — T.5.Live at the Pub: Tonight, groove to the"schmaltzie fingers of Peter Golemmeon piaao " He'll play from 9:30 12:30.Tomorrow night, the Pete Baron Jazztet will perform at the Stroh's Partyfrom 9:30 12 30. No cover, but youmust be over 21 and a Pub member.Lunchtime concert: This week's programincludes Beethoven's Quartet in Gminor, opus 18- no. 2, as performed byMichael Jinbo and Beth Bistrow, violins; Dan McDonald, viola; and VanBistrow, cello. Thurs, Jan 24 in Rey¬nold's North Lounge at 12:15.Lunchtime, too: David Arenberg will perform original folk music Wed, Jan 30 inReynold's North Lounge at noon.Young Composers Concert: The works offive young composers — all graduatestudents in the Department of Music —will be performed by professional musicians. Included in the program will beRobert Carl's award winning Piano Trio; Beaubien's String Quartet; TheWicked and Unfaithful Son of MarcelDuchamp to His Queen by Austin; andHorst’s Quintet. Sun, Jan 27 at I Houseat 8 pm. Free.Young musicians: Peter Fitch will conduct both the Hyde Park YouthChamber Orchestra and the Hyde ParkJunior Strings. The program will consist of: Dances of Transylvania, Charpenier, and Suite for Strings by Bartok;Mozart's Eine Kleine Nacht Musik(Serenade); and Berger's Elegy Sun,Jan 27 in the Homeroom at 1-House at 3pm. Free.Happy Birthday, Wolfgang: Dieter Koberwill conduct the Chicago Chamber Orchestra in a concert of Mozart's works,in celebration of the 224th anniversaryof the composer's birth. The programwill include Overture in D Major, K106; Adagio for Violin and Orchestra inE Flat Major, K. 261 Fred Spector, violin soloist, Concerto for Clarinet and Three Aces and with Jimmy Dawkins.His varied experience has left a markon his style which combines elements ofsoul, R&B, and iazz in addition to blues.N.A.M.E. Gallery, 9 W. Hubbard, Wed,Jan 30 at 8. $2. 467 6550. - BL.Live Jazz Party: Sax master Nick Brignola and local vocalist Frieda Lee willjoin regulars Ken Prince on piano, Mil-ton Suggs on bass and Robert Shy ondrums Sun, Jan 27 at Chances R ", 5225Harper (Harper Crt.) They'll jam from8:30 pm 1 am. $3 cover.Thom Bishop: Rumor has it that this localsinger songwriter is en route to California type stardom. Catch him before it'stoo late. Tonight and tomorrow night atGeorge's, 230 W. Kinzie. 644 2290. Showtimes, covers vary.Orchestra in A Major, K 622, DavidTuttle, clarinet soloist; and Symphony obiects and Logotypes: Relationships beGary Beberman, Melanie Deal, Sandy Harris, Don Hausler. Bennett Jacks, JohnKim, Bob Lewis, Rebecca Lillian, Philip Maher, Jeff Makos, Rory McGahan,Mark Neustadt, Danila Oder, Sharon Pollack, Martha Rosett, Rene Saracki,Danny Schulman, Ted Shen, Helena Szepe, Ray Uliassi, Lisa von Drehle.Edited by David Miller. Associate editors: Laura Cottingham, Karen Hornick,Mary Mankowski. Fridav. January 25, I960 No. 30 in D Major. K. 202. Sun, Jan 27 atthe Museum of Science and industry at3:30 pm. Free.Chinese music heard and explained: Alecture/demonstration on pluckedstring instruments in Chinese musicwill be given by the Chinese Music Soci¬ety of America. Subsequent lectures inthe series will discuss petcussion andorchestration, if campus support (SGfunding) increases, the society hopes togive a concert on campus next fall. Sat,Jan 26 at International House, 8 pm.Free!Free CSO: The Chicago Symphony StringQuartet will present a program featuring Mozart's String Quartet in D Major,K. 575; Mendelsohn's String Quartet,Opus 81 (Unfinished) and Rozsa'sString Quartet, Opus 22. Victor Aitayand Edgar Muenzer, violins; MiltonPreves, viola; and Frank Miller, cello,comprise this nationally famous stringquartet. Sun, Jan 27 in Preston BradleyHall, The Chicago Public Library Cuttural Center, 78 E. Washington at 3 pmFreejimmy Johnson Blues Band: With Ike AnPerson on bass, Carl Snyder on keyboards, and Dino Alvarez on drums.Johnson began his career in the sixtiesplaying soul. In the seventies, he beganplaying blues, most notably with the tween Minimalist art and corporate design. Art is not business RenaissanceSociety, 4th floor Cobb. Through Feb.23. Daily 11 4. - D.S.Non Naive: Paintings by Deven Goldenand Mike Zieve; sculptures by NancyBowen at the Hyde Park Art Center.5236 S. Blackstone Through Feb 24Tues Sat, 11 4.Outsider Art in Chicago Works by sixChicago artists not formally trained assuch, and who, either through choice orcircumstance, have worked in isolation from the art world. Take a good look.Through Feb 17 at the Museum of Con¬temporary Art, 237 E. Ontario Tues Sat10-5; Sun, 12 5. 280 2660. Students, $1.Aa: Space/Time in Japan: throughMarch 16. MCA, see article on p. 7.TheaterTunes for Twos: through this Sun, Jan 27at Court Studio Theatre. Fri, Sat at 8 30pm, Sun at 7:30 $1.50 2.50. See article onP- 7.A Musical Portrait of Lorraine Hans-berry: Columbia College's Drama Department presents this portrait of thefamous Black author/dramatist to openthe Black Esthetics Celebration, whichwill continue all next week. Next Fri,Feb. 1, at the Museum of Science andIndustry at 10 and 11:30 am Free.Evolution of the Blues. Jon Hendricks hasput together a musical tribute of theblues — and other forms of Black music— that is exhilarating and moving, and-this troupe charges it with talented en¬ergy. It's amazing to watch peoplestamp and clap to "When the Saints GoMarchin' In" in the plush gaudiness ofDrury Lane Theater! Open run at theWater Tower Place theater, Tues Sun,at varying times. 266 0500. $7 15.An Enemy of the People. Greg Mosherdirects Arthur Miller's adaptation ofHenrik Ibsen's classic tale of an individual's struggle to maintain his sense ofrighteousness in the face of strong publie disagreement. Through February 24at the Goodman Theatre, 200 South Columbus Drive, 433 3820. —LJCKrapp's Last Tape: Beckett directed SanQuentin Actor Rick Cluchey in this oneman personification of the existentialdilemma. Through February 9 at theGoodman Theatre, 443 3820. StudentRush tickets available.The Decline ano Fall of the Entire Worldas Seen Through the Eyes of ColePorter: Ben Bagley s musical revue isbrimming with seductive, brilliant ColePorter tunes, and this company knowshow to sing and dance. At the Body Poli¬tic, 2261 N LThcoln, through Feb 24.Wed Fri at 8 pm, Sat at 7 and 10 pm, Sunat 2:30 and 7 pm. 871 3000 $5 8EverythingelseWalk in the Dunes It may be mild, butit's still winter, so cheer up by watchingEmma B. Pitheher's slide show called"Summer: Singing Sands and BlazingFields." Tues, Jan 29 in Ida Noyes Li¬brary at 12 15 pm Coffee provided.The Artaud Project: J. Pat Miller stars asAntonin Artaud in this one manstage/video performance project. Theshow combines media techniques in itsportrayal of the life and works of icon¬oclastic Artaud, who was a major influ¬ence on late 20th century culture andart forms. It premieres tonight, Jan 25and performances continue Wed Sun at8:30 pm at Victory Gardens Theater,3730 No. Clark. 549 5788 $4-6.Diction Dictionary: Performance artistAnn Sargent Wooster will create a landscape using paper, audiotape slidesand humans. Her action will be accompanied by a text, interweaving storiesabout everyday life, semiotics, creationmyths, the dialectics of creativity, theimpossibility of order Sat, Jan 26 atN A M E Gallery 9 W. Hubbard, at 8pm 467 6550. $2.Michael's Lost Angel: Henry ArthurJones' romantic melodrama concerns acelibate Anglican minister who Struggles between heavenly salvation andearthly love when he meets a seductive,wealthy woman. The cast of this radiodrama includes Court Theatre directorNick Rudail. Mon, Jan 28 at 8 pm onWFMT, 98.7 FMCambodia Relief Now The HydePark/UC action group is throwing afund raising party with every centgoing directly to the Cambodia relief effort through proven channels. Lastquarter, the group raised a total of$10,587 but — literally — every centhelps. Mike Ness, magician and physi¬cist, will be performing at the party,which is tonight, Jan 25, at 5210 S. Dor¬chester, Apt. 1. 9 pm ? A donation of atleast $1 is requested, as well as donations of baked goods and liquorCalendar compiled by Rebecca Lillian.the grey city journal, Friday, January 25, 1980 — 3Ben Vereen helps Roy Scheider fantasize his deathAll that Fosse!rAll Thai Jazz Directed by Bob Fosse;screenplay by Fosse and Robert Alan Ar¬thur; photographed by Giusippe Rotunno.With Roy Scheider and Jessica Lange.by Gary BebermanAll That Jazz is schizophrenic, no twoways about it. Critics of the film deploredirector Bob Fosse's narcissism ana self-induloence. Many of its admirers see Fossespilling his guts on screen. Others like it forits Felliniesque qualities: weird, thereforedeep.But whatever reviewers have claimedabout the film, the opposite holds true, too.So, while Fosse centers on himself, he is alsoself-deprecating. He may bare many of hisbad traits, but he neither discovers nor triesto solve these problems in the film; he isthat way and he knows it. The film may appear bizarre; extraordinary scenes occurright and left, but the plot still moves like anAristotelian tragedy.Fosse's schizophenia extends beyond thequalities critics have picked on. Oppositionsdrive his main character and the tension between the artist and his work draws thefilm's conclusion. In other words, it may beschizoid, but it's an aesthetic whole.The movie is about Fosse. His main character, Joe Gideon (Roy Scheider), directsand choreographs plays and movies. Soundfamiliar? Fosse fans may recognize refer¬ences to his other works, as say, the LennyBruce monologue in Joe's film (delivered bythe man who played Bruce in Fosse's stageversion of Lenny). The film's first halfbrings out the parallel.Joe is working himself to death. Operatingon cigarettes and dexedrine, he casts hisnew play, finishes editing his new movie,and then retires to sleep with a castmember, or an editor, or maybe his girl¬friend. Next day, more play work, editing,emotional conflicts, and dexedrine. Midwaythrough the film he is hospitalized for aheart attack.Joe is caught in that old "wants love butwon't love" conflict. At work, people praiseand need him, and he is always conscious ofit. He worries intensely about how appealinghis work is; he depends on the acclaim tomaintain his peace of mind. Any dissentiondestroys that peace. At the same time car¬ing people genuinely love and respect him,but he will not reciprocate. His girlfriendconstantly tells him that she wants to lovehim. His ex wife agonizes over him, as theystill remain close. And when his daughterasks for the time he promised her, he makeshis excuses and calls himself a bad father. He rarely gives of himself directly.However, anything deemed "Felliniesque" cannot be that straightforward. Thestoryline leading to Joe's attack is not verystrong. Instead, it appears as a series of dis¬jointed events in which he is increasinglypressured. Amid the narrative, Fosse injects surreal dialogues between JessicaLange in a wedding dress and Joe. The pairdiscuss his relationship with the other char¬acters, his past, or just him; she's seducinghim, but there is the sense that the seductionis permanent.What makes the film really weird is its ex¬treme self-consciousness; it goes beyondFosse's inserting himself as a character.His hyper kinetic editing and unnaturalcompositions constantly remind gs we arewatching a movie; the conversations withJessica Lange practically scream it out. Butthe self-consciousness becomes most overtduring Joe's hospitalization. Then Fosse de¬clares his presence as director.In one scene he uses Joe to address the au¬dience. Joe, wandering helplessly, looks upto the heavens, directly into the camera,and straight at the audience, and asks,"Don't you like musical comedies?" Whilein the hospital Joe's sense of reality de¬creases, but Fosse's increases. He directlyimplicates Real people, us, as a cause forJoe's suffering (which is also Fosse's.)At one point Fosse comes close to puttinghimself infb the movie as director. WhileJoe has some dying fantasies of his "lovedones," another Joe appears behind a camera, directing the fantasies. We alreadyknow Joe is Fosse incarnate, yet Fosse controls Joe and those around him.There is no way to resolve Joe's compulsion. Since Fosse overtly controls the film,he knows that Joe is genuinely loved. Butsince the movie represents Fosse's vision ofhis life, he is aware that he is loved, too. Ob¬viously, that awareness has not affectedhim, since he still represents himself asJoeIf all of this sounds very dry, you're right.However, unless you are big on plain weirdness, or admire the form of self examina¬tion, you won't get much out of All ThatJazz. The acting is excellent: Scheider ischarismatic and confused; Lange is myste¬rious; and Ann Reinking and Leland Palmeras Joe's girlfriend and ex wife are beautiful¬ly tortured. The musical numbers are richlyshot and staged. The film moves well, pacedto match Fosse's compulsiveness. On onehand it's an entertaining musical; on theother a presentation of pity and fear forone's self.4 — the grey city journal, Friday, January 25, 1980 Wliat’i up,and Anatiby Ted ShenThe eye-catching poster trumpets the announce¬ment: "Doc Films — Autumn 1979." A closer lookreveals an impressive array of film titles — those ofrecent hits, foreign movies, a director's entire opus,and esoteric films. The 80 some films constitute thefilm group's schedule for the entire quarter, whichcomes to about 8 movies a week, or at least oneevery day. At a paltry sum of $9 (for the series), thegroup's film showings provide a main source of en¬tertainment for many on this campus. But, over theyears, Doc Films has assumed a stature evengreater than its status as the prime purveyor of cin¬ematic pleasure for UC people would suggest. Itsslate of movies attracts audience from off-campus;it serves as a forum for discussions on filmtheories; and for some of its members, it has been aspringboard to greater glory in the film world. Anassociate dean pinned down what is perhaps the es¬sence of the group. When asked about campus ac¬tivities recently, he was quoted as saying: "I don'tknow about Doc Films, it seems to have a life of itsown."Doc Films, or more formally Documentary FilmsGroups, is the oldest continuing film society in thiscountry. Or so its members like to boast. But itsright to this distinction has never been verified.Like the dubious past of some nouveau riche, DocFilms' early days are shrouded in mystery. Someclaim the group is approaching its fiftieth year;others argue That it was founded during the waryears (I.E. WW M). But none of the speculationsabout its nebulous past can cloud its present impor¬tance as one of the premier film societies around. Itcertainly offers the heftiest schedule for a school-affiliated group; it definitely has the largest mem¬bership for a non-museum related group. In fact,the group rivals those associated with film schoolsand museums both in the zeal of its members andthe careful planning of its schedule. Many of itsmembers, not surprisingly, take film very serious¬ly. And its schedule, a mixture of the popular andthe esoteric, shows an awareness of the precariousbalance between art and commerce that affectsevery film enterprise.1. Cinema ClubbingThe evolution of Doc Films from an obscure stu¬dent organization into a pervasive one parallels, inmany ways, the slow emergence of film as the artform of the century. The founders of the group, likethe movie pioneers, probably had little inkling ofthe days when movies would become one of themajor arts and a potent social force. Being childrenof the 30's, they probably regarded showing moviesas a somewhat avant-garde social activity. Fewmight have had genuine interest in the artistic po¬tentials of film. But the majority most likely revered only the accepted classics and thought ofmost movies as mere diversions. Yet, this attitudewas decidedly an improvement over the one preva¬lent during the pioneer days of the movies. In cinema's infancy, the mere suggestion that any movieis worth a second look would have caused guffawsamong the more seriously minded. To them tworeelers were for the crowd who frequented thepenny arcades. Cinema was no better than vaude¬ville. Their leisure art was the theatre which, afterall traced its ancestry to the Bard. Besides, movingpictures had no Bernhardt, no II Duse to uplift thespirits. They were incapable of lofty sentiments.Actors who deigned to appear in them for that extraincome were quick to use pseudonyms, lest theirrosy futures in the theatre be tainted by the association. Movies were for two-bit comics.Then came the shock and the realization. In 1915,a technically advanced film about a serious topicappeared. Its director was an ex actor who had decided to keep his real name in his new profession.The film was an immediate and notorious success.For the first time, intellectuals and artists alike re David Millercognized the capabilities of this new mipression. Film became a nascent art forwas being appreciated. The film was, <The Birth of a Nation; and its director, Cfith. Along with the appreciation camclubs. They looked to the cinema's futrthan its past. They set about examininother things, the potential of the new mfirst, most of them had a carefree flavor;were not associated with important cultuitions. Each in its own way, had some inithe course of cinema. Their legacies on filand scholarship depended greatly on thenet and on their cultural settings.Not surprisingly, countries in which filration was keenest together produced mcreative movements in film history. EWar, filmmakers in Russia, Germany, Jaland, the US, and France monopolized thscene. After the War, while Russian an<cinemas declined, the Italian one flourish*survey of film appreciation in each of tttries may not reveal all the complex reascthe ascendency of film, but it probably cafor the existence and appeal of cinemaDoc Films.In post Revolution Russia, film quickly asstatus of people's art. Lenin had recognized i1peal early on and prodded Russian filmmakeploring and exploiting the psychological effect;dium. The State's art schools offered clfilmmaking. They undoubtedly also served a;i Dec! The Case HistoryOmy of a Film Group.w mode of exrt form; and itvas, of course,for, D. W. Grif-came cinema; future rathernining, among■w medium. Atavor; and mostrultural institu-ie influence onon filmmakingn their personh film appreci-?d most of thery. Before theiy, Japan, Eng-ed the creativen and Germanjrished. A briefof those coun¬reasons behind>ly can accountema clubs likedy assumed thezed its mass apimakers into exeffects of the me;d curricula in'ed as gathering places for film enthusiasts. One product of this milieu wasEisenstein, an important practitioner as well as a greattheorist. His pivotal work, Potemkin, released in 1925, de¬monstrated irrefutably the emotional impact of the medi¬um. While the Soviet system churned out filmmakers, theState archive assiduously collected films. It now owns avast collection of films unavailable in the West. But, theSoviets' insistence on Art being subservient to the State,especially during the Stalin era, caused their cinema tostagnate. They, moreover, discouraged appreciation offilms not along the rigid party line. Russian cinema hasyet to regain the glory of its pre-war period.In many ways, the pre Nazi German cinema resembledthe Russian one. Both were obsessed with the psychologyof film, with the manipulative power of the medium. Bothproduced films of lasting importance. Accounts ofWeimar Germany tell of artists' fascination with this newtoy, debates among intellectuals and artists about the possible crossbreeding between film and other arts. ManyGerman filmmakers underwent their conversions to thenew medium around this time. The appreciation of cinema's aesthetic possibilities certainly underlay the ereative efflorescence of the period.The Nazis, aware of the power of film turned the German film industry into a propagandist tool for the government. This blatant interference caused a great exodus offilm artists. Most of them, notably Lang, Sirk and Dietrich, went to Hollywood and invigorated the Americancinema. The Nazis, however they mangled the commercial film scene, did carry the propagandist power of thedocumentary to a new height with the two chillingly effective Leni Riefenstal films. The German cinema, however,did not fully recover from the War until recently. Again,as in Weimer time, interest in film brought about by filmsocieties coupled with government subsidy contributed greatly to the resurgence.While the German cinema was going through its post¬war hiatus, the Italian one, with Neo-realism at its forefront, burst into the world scene. Before the War, Italyhad a feeble industry which was totally lacking in creativity. During the war, however, the tie between filmmakers and journalists blossomed into a new intimacy.Each saw the other as comrade in chronicling sufferingand curing social malaise. The infusion of cinema conscious university students into their ranks furtherenriched the discussions. Thus, immediately after theWar, the Italian cinema became a vital creative force.In Japan, where most Western inventions are taken upwith much enthusiasm, film captivated artists as well asintellectuals quite early. The Japanese cultivated directors above all others. When Chaplin and Sternberg visitedthe country in the '30's, they not only found fan clubsnamed after them; they also met enthusiasts ready to talkcinema at drop of a hat. Two of Japan's greatest directors— Mizoguchi and Ozu — had been in their apprenticedays, members of cinema clubs of one sort or another.The cinema clubs which spawned the older masters produced, after the War, another generation of directors ofwhich Kurosawa is a notable member. Film societies areresponsible for the present crop of young directors aswell. In Japan, cinema clubs, not film schools, provide thenecessary education.In Great Britian of the 30's and 40's, the Hollywooddominance so stifled the local industry that very few noteworthy British films were produced. When a film didsucceed, its director and stars were likely to head for Hoilywood immediate y. Hitchcock and Laughton both became expatriates in this period. In place of commercialcinema, documentaries thrived. John Grierson, much influenced by the great documentary filmmaker Flaherty, headed a team that produced predominantly ethnogra¬phic films with socialist overtones. They saw documentaries as a means to social truth as well as a propagandaweapon. This outlook sat well with the left-leaning stu¬dents who made up the bulk of the film clubs at both Oxford and Cambridge. It allowed them to progress frompassive admiration of Eisenstein and his disciples to ac¬tive participation in affecting world opinion. The clubs,which probably came into existence in the 20's, providedcinematic education for successive generations of Britishfilm people. Ivor Montague, an Eisenstein associate, wasan early member. Critically-minded members of a latergeneration started Sight and Sound, a leading British filmjournal. Lindsay Anderson, the director, as well as mostof the Beyond the Fringe contingent all were associatedwith the clubs.The British clubs might even have inspired the foundersof Doc Films. Given the University's Anglophilic tendencyand a likely leftist sympathy for documentaries amongthe students, it's not hard to imagine the group beingfounded so as to gleam the truth behind documentaries.The name certainly suggests that. While Doc Films' claimto being the oldest may be valid, other film societies —most of them museum affiliated were founded in the 30's.The film society of the Museum of Modern Art, under theaegis of Iris Barry, started its practice of collecting andshowing films around this time. It remains one of the foremost societies today. The great leap forward in the proliferation of film societies and, to a lesser degree, film curricula in the US did not really begin until the late 50's,when Cahier du cinema critics, through their cultivationof old films and rigorous reasoning, gave legitimacy tocinema as art and opened a new perspective in film appreciation and criticism.The people who wrote for Cahier du cinema in the 50'sand 60's certainly were members of the ultimate cinemaclub. Not only was Cahier the most vociferous and influential of all film journals, it also served as training groundfor the New Wave directors who profoundly affected thecontemporary cinema. The Cahier cineastes (as theyliked to call themselves) resurrected neglected Americandirectors; they rediscovered the mystique of certain starpersonalities; they emphasized the importance of miseen scene in direction; and most importantly they assertedthe primacy of the director. In essence, they refashionedcinema.The intellectual ancestors of the Cahier people weredenizens of Parisian cafes of the 20's. Paris, a center of artmovements then, attracted artists and intellectuals withkeen interest in film. In addition, the Sorbonne probablyfostered students who appreciated films. Yet, even then,the distinction between an intellectual cinema and a lesscerebral one divided the cineastes into camps. Renoir, inhis reminiscences, recounted the thrill of being introducedto the physical cinema of Chariot and the disdain amonghis friends for intellectual cinema. He also recalled informal meetings of cineastes as being formative to his cinema.The Occupation precipitated the formal organization offilm clubs in France. The Germans were intent on burningall French films. Patriotic French artists, people likeCarne and Signoret, went to great length to hide films andheld clandestine film showings. The leader of the bandwas Henri Langlois, who, after the War, founded Cinematheque francais, using the war time collection as thebackbone of its archiveIn the late 40's, the infant Cinematheque became a rallying point for French cineastes. People like critic Bazinand a young Truffaut frequented the club. And in no timethey started Cahier to put down in print their thoughtsabout film and films, especially the ones in the Langloiscollection.The influence of the Cahier crowd did much towardsmaking film a primary art form and film criticism a respectable and popular endeavor. By making auteurtheory fashionable, the Cahier critics also initiated seriesof fruitful debates about film. Another of its lasting contributions may have been the example it set for other cinema clubs.The success of film groups like Doc Films must not beattributed solely to an intellectual climate that regardsfilms favorably; there are more prosaic reasons as well.Factors such as better techniques in film preservation,more sophisticated projection facilities, and easier accessto older films, no doubt play their roles. Yet, the basic ingredient of a film club, whether in its lean old days or itsfat new ones, remains the same — love for cinemaThis is the first part of a two part article. The secondpart, dealing solely with Doc Films, will appear in twoweeks.the grey city journal, Friday, January 25, 1980 — 5Monday; January 28th§ 5 f. ' bDak Clevenger, HornCHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRAIn a lecture-demonstrationCHAIR\Greenwood Hallb 8pmAdmission free! TheFLAMINGOand CABANA CLUB5500 S. Shore Drive• Studio and I Bodrnom• Furnislwd ;l»<t I'nfnntishcd• l!. of (.. bus stop• I)iitdoor Pool and (>anl(*n>• ('i»r|M-tin«r and Drapes Inel.• Swiritv• Cniversit\ Stibsi«l\ forStudents and Staff• Delicatessen• Ha rlwr Shop• Meant' Shop• J.B.D. Restaurant• Dentist• ValetFREE PARKINGM. SnyderPL 2-3800Mallory’smmim®ar r nRestaurant 1Tenth Floor1525 East 53rd- StreetHyde ParkChicago. Illinois 60615312 241 5600Breakfast 8:30 to 11:00.Lunch 11:00 to.5:00. Dinner5:00 to 11:00, Friday andSaturday until 12:00, Sun¬day Brunch 10:30 to 4:00Security, Parking NEW 2-drawer files $59.00NEW 6-ft. folding tables $49.008600 COMMERCIAL AVENUE' OPEN MON.-FRI.\ 8:39-5:00SATURDAYSRF 4-2111 9:00-3:00FOR-U CARSERVICE CENTER, Inc.1608 E. 53rd St.Open 24 hrs. - Attendant Parking - Heated garageAnnual Monthly Parking s5400mo.Annual Daily Parking $3300mo.Hand Car Wash s500Do-it-yourself repair ^375hrSOON TO COMEFAST OIL CHANGERENT USED CARS25% OFF SALEGET ACQUAINTED SALE FOR U of CSTUDENTS AND FACULTYBrand name clothing such as H. FREEMAN, CHAPS,DONALD BROOKS, MALCOLM KENNETH, AQUAS-CUTUM, LONDON FOG, SERO and others at 25%off of our very low listed prices.This is a special offer for U of C students and facultyonly. This sale applies Mon - Fri from 3 PM - 6 PM andSAT from 10 AM to 4 PM.Your U of C ID card is necessary for admission tothis sale.Slight charge for other than basic alterations.WILLIAM’S TRADITIONALCLOTHING19-S. LaSalle St. - 782-9885(Entrance on Arcade Place)6 — the grey city journal, Friday, January 25, 1980 /uzdatte' tf/i/zA/xosn/Real Entate CompanyKant 55th Street 493-0666UNIVERSITY AREA - RAY SCHOOL AREA Loacation: near 57th Kenwood,Condition: Excellent Size: Three Story Brick, Garage: Attached 2 car. LotSize: 188 deep, Availability: On Closing Price: $265,000 (This is a newlisting)NONE OTHER WITH THIS SPACE AND GRACE Family living on Ken¬wood’s nicest family block near 49th Kimbark excellent systems -beautifully maintained brick - large rooms $172,500.NEAR 56th HARPER WITH GARAGE $115,000 NEW LISTING Tri-level brick,Central air, favorable financing available.SPACIOUS CONDO. (Approximately 3,600 ft. of living space) BOULEVARDBEAUTY. Nine rooms, excellent condition, 3 baths. Near 54th & HydePark. $106,000SMALL APT - SMALL PRICE! $39,000 buys condominium over looking thelake 1 bedroom new kitchen. Here’s your chance. Other deal fell through,so this is last season’s price.LUXURY 56TH STREET CONDO at penthouse level right on the Lake side.4 bedrooms, 4 baths, approx. 3,000 sq. ft. imagine his and her’s studies.Main study is rosewood, true luxury. Jackson Towers, 56th & everett$163,000.NOTE: We also have a nice one bedroom apartment in a high rise on 54th& Hyde Park Boulevard. $48,000...and lots more. Call.OVERLOOK THE MIDWAY AND PARK Co-op apartment on 59th nearHarper. House-style floor plan, 3 bedrms. 2 baths in a building you’ve ad¬mired before. Loads of natural wood throughout, wood burning fireplace,bright and sunny with french windows. Lots of storaqe, newlv rewired$68,500 cash. yBUILD ON HYDE PARK’S CHOICE CORNER. Vacant R-5 parcel. Now 200’frontage. Will divide into four 50’ sections. $28,000 each. Expandedresidential of multi-family use. O.K.ASK ABOUT A 4 BEDROOM HOUSE FOR RENT with option to buy on asmall lake. New construction-builder worried, can have below cost nearMichigan City, Inc. - 50 minutes drive,CAN IT BE? - 8 rooms for $35,000.00. Lake front co-op apartment 73rd andSouth Shore Dr.El Super:Es una peliculamuy bueno!by Don HauslerEl Super has been misrepresented as acomedy when it is in fact a striking dramadealing with the existence of a man and hisfamily ten years out of Castro's Cuba. Thetitle character has been superintendent ofan apartment building in New York City forten years. He struggles perennially to keephis family the way his memories anddreams tell him a Cuban family should be:cohesive, proud, loving, and strictly moral.Not only do the circumstances of life in NewYork whittle away his dreams but one alsowonders if the life he tries to regain has everexisted.He reminisces about Cuba, the Cuba Cas¬tro stole from him, the Cuba he can't forget,and finally resolves to move to Miami, to"join the large exile community there. Hethrows a big party — a combination birthday party for his wife and going away celebration — but he is anything but happy as hethinks of his two past lives, the one in Cubaand the one in New York, and whether hisCourtBriefsThe Golden FleeceTwo Roughs for Theatreat Reynolds Club Theater through January27by Phoebe ZerwickFriday night Tunes for Twos, an eveningof one act plays, opened at Court StudioTheatre. The Golden Fleece, written by A.R. Gurney and directed by Bob Breslo, starsJoe Spellman and Catherine Wiley as Billana Betty. Bill and Betty are our hosts. Theywalk onto a stage that is bare except for acoatrack. We await Jason (he and Bill wereNavy pals) and Medea (she and Betty havelong conversations in the afternoon afterspending the day throwing pots — actually,Betty does all the talking and Medea lis¬tens) . Jason and Medea have been invited tobring the Golden Fleece for all of us to see.But Jason and Medea never appear. Billgoes off and finds Jason in a motelroom witha beautiful woman. Betty leaves to pick upMedea at her home in the mountains whereshe raises animals, grows vegetables, cansfruits, weaves, and raises children.The play aims to be about men andwomen, about finding fulfillment eitherthrough adventure or the family. The meaning of life is symbolized by the elusive Golden Fleece. It may be dancing naked in amotel room, gazing lustfully at "those bigbazookas"; it may be a dress passed fromone woman to another, symbolizing the continuation of motherhood and the family; itmay be the love between Jason and Medea,or their children.But the play is not really about Jason andMedea at all. Their conflicts are fuel for aconflict between Bill and Betty which arisesbecause each takes a side in the tragedy ofJason and Medea. The play does not succeedbecause the themes it advances are not realized in the conflict we see between Bill andBetty. Both Spellman and Wiley give theirbest performances when they are alone,speaking of their loyalties. With endearingboyishness, Spellman avoids being offensivewhen he recounts his escapades with Jasonand the "beautiful blond" in the motel room.We chuckle when Betty speaks so earnestlyabout throwing pots with Medea and of theirplans to allow men to come to the farm onlyonce a year, in the spring, but Wiley portrays her sympathetically so that we laughnot only at her but also at ourselves for ourown romantic visions of the "simple life."That Spellman and Wiley perform bestwhen alone points, I think, to the major flawin the play: the relationship between Billand Betty is never fully developed. The audience does not become involved in the conflicts between men and women, family and A super scene.new start in Miami will be any better.Several scenes stand out: the long dis¬tance phone call from Cuba when he learnshis mother has died, his ranting to himself inhis little workshop, and the final partyscene. Symbolically central to the movie isthe image of the boiler, evoked severaltimes. The other characters in the film, Ro¬berto's wife, daughter, and several friends,are all played with touching realism. Thefilm tells you about his New York hardships,but without resorting to heavy-handedness.El Super, for all its tragic moments, is at thesame time infused with humor. It is about aman grappling with unfulfilled expectationswho knows that time is growing shorter forhim, but who refuses to resign. This film ismore than just a Cuban ethnic movie, it is afilm that contains universal appeal. MA: a time/space experienceMA, Space/Time in JapanMuseum of Contemporary Art, throughMarch 16by Helena SzepeTry to imagine the concept that time doesnot flow uninterruptedly from the past to thefuture, but exists like space, in terms of intervals. Of course this is hard to understandand to visualize, but an understanding ofthis concept, MA, is basic to Japanesethought, and can open up a better appreciation of Japanese art and culture. "MA,Space Time in Japan" at the Museum ofContemporary Art, explains and illustratesthe subtle and multiple definitions of thisconcept as a point of divergence from Western thought, and gives Westerners a newperspective in viewing Japanese Art.Among the objects exhibited is an abstract sculpture, "Study of Homology," byAiko Miyawaki. Alongside it is the definitionof MA as "the expectant stillness of the mo¬ment attending utsuroi, the moment whennature is transformed, the passage of oneBob Petelle and Joe Fazio in Two Roughs for Theatreambition, continuity and adventure; conflicts that end with Medea slaughtering herchildren. When Bill and Betty are on stagetogether there is a lot of running about, falling down, and hysteria, but nothing develops between them that makes us laugh orcry, remember emotions we have felt, orlong for experiences we have not had. Thereis a talent here that should not have beenwasted on a poorly chosen play.The next two plays, Two Roughs forTheatre (written by Samuel Beckett anddirected by Steve Schroer), speak to theproblem of finding meaning in life by establishing significant human contact."Theatre I" is about a blind violinist,played by Bob Patelle, and a lame man in awheelchair, played by Joe Fazio, who taketurns reaching out to one another, strivingto achieve some human bond. They succeedfor one brief moment when the blind manwheels the lame man across the stage, sobecoming his legs, and the lame man directstheir passage, so becoming the blind man'seyes. But this peace is quickly dispelled andtheir relationship is once again reduced to atrading of cruelty, a cycle of reaching outand rejection. There is violence and crueltyin this play, but it is even and predictable,not seething and tumultuous. What is emphasized is not the depth of emotion thatsomehow makes life worth living, but bluntcruelty and callous rejection. Both Petelleand Fazio portray this callousness brilliantly. Where Fazio could easily have becomeover emotional when he strikes Petelle witha cane, he reduces his movement to a bare minimum and so maintains full control.At one point in "Theatre I" the lame manasks the blina man why he does not simplygive up and die. He responds that he is unhappy, but not unhappy enough to die. InTheatre II, two men try to determinewhether a third man is unhappy enough forthem to let him jump from a window anddie.The two men, again played by Petelle andFazio, are professionals in deciding othermen's fates. Fazio plays a brusk, neat, andannoyingly efficient man He carries a complete dossier on the man by the window, whostands, completely still, with his back to theaudience, for the entire play. The man withthe files reads testimonies aloud about incidents in the life of the potential suicide,while the character played by Petelle I istens. He is more relaxed and casual than theman with the files who seems intent on proving that the life in question is unhappyenough to end. The man played by Petellepresses him to find at leas* one documentthat would indicate some hope for the suicidal man. Although he regards the man bythe window with some compassion, he re¬jects the brusk man who tries to establishsome contact with him beyond the professional. In the end we must question the possibility for true compassion.Two Roughs for Theatre is about what lifelacks, about what makes it seem hollow. Butit is not a rough production. The acting iscontrolled and the movement about thestage is precise. Although it is about wastedlife, this production wastes nothing.the grey ci state to another ... as the shadows cast onwater and the earth." The sculpture has ablack base of rays in four opposite direc¬tions. Mounted on the base are highly reflective brass parallelogram boxes. The dif¬ferent placement of the vertical planescause them to seemingly flow into eachother, but they don't. Reflected light andimages shift suddenly and unexpectedlyfrom plane to plane as one walks around thesculpture. One can indeed feel MA, the"sense of the moment of movement." Thus,although one needs no explanation to enjoythe sculpture, the ability to understand inwords the concept implied in the sculptureelucidates the sculpture itself as the sculp¬ture, in turn, gives a deeper understandingof the concept.The pieces are not all modern art. Includ¬ed in the exhibit are a photographic essay onthe Japanese house, reproductions of rareHiroshige woodblock prints, and a portion ofa Noh stage. An abstraction of a teahouse,next to a half scale model of an actual teahouse elucidates the visual order of thehouse as effectively as the literature revealsthe intellectual order. In fact, one of themost valuable aspects of the exhibit is thiscorrelation of theory and art with a historical perspective.'MA, Space Time in Japan" is the brain¬child of architect/designer Arata Isozaki incollaboration with other Japanese artists.The complexity of the exhibit compels one toview, to think, and to visit again. However,one doesn't have to think if one chooses notto. As a woman in the exhibit sighed, "Thismakes me feel so restful." Time that flowsinterrupted at intervals does seem restful.The exhibit ends March 16.Minimalbusinessby Karen HornickArtists as businessmen, businessmen asartists. Art is a Business; business is Art —real art, art to be hung on gallery walls. Objects and Logotypes — Relationships Between Minimalist Art and Corporate Design. At the Renaissance Society Gallery,fourth floor Cobb, through February 22.Curated by Buzz Spector.What is the connection oetween art andbusiness? Symbols and lines, the things ofart, corporate logos. Paul Rand, LesterBeall, Saul Baas. William Golden and theCBS eye. Rand and IBM. The Weyerhaeuserencompassed tree by Lippincott & Margulies, Inc —a design corporation.Corporations spent thousands in the latefifties, early sixties on trademark logos,icons to order, symbols that represent acompany that wants to be remembered. Fitteen hang on the walls of this show alongsidesix works of Minimalist artists: Carl Andre,Donald Judd, Sol Lewitt. Robert Morris, another Minimalist, refused to have anythingto do with the show, a show easy to interpretas being about the relationship of art andbusiness.But the show isn't about the relationshipbetween art and business, Spector says, it iswhat artists can learn from business logos.To businessmen, the context in which thelogo appears is almost as important as thelogo itself; installation is ultra important. Ifthe decal wrinkles, if the billboard crumbles, so does the company's yearly report.Artists like the Minimalists share a similarconcern: installation is allimportantCarl Andre orders 144 zinc tiles. They areshipped to the buyer. The buyer installsthem, according to Andre's specifications.Andre doesn't necessarily see them. Hehas sold: a contract, a relationship, a workof art. He reserves: the right to demand aparticular arrangment of the tiles. Installation is important.Who needs an object, a thing of art? Pa¬trons want a Pollack, a Warhol. So you sellthem a name. Me artist, you buyer. The corporate mentality. Not messy.ty journal, Friday, January 25, 1980 — 7Parent_Cooperativefor Early Learning5300 S. Shore Dr., Chicago, Ill. 60615Professionally StaffedOpen Year Round7:30 am 6:00 pmHalf or Full-day programAge 24 Months to KindergartenInformation 684-6363anil (Eubarru1552 E. 53rd - Under IC tracksPipes - Pipe Tobaccos -Imported Cigarettes - CigarsMon.-Sat. 9-8. 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Brow it280-6094JKWISH UNITED FUNDFor more info, cull Krnn 1 .>«<>8 — the grey city journal, Friday, January 25, 1980Life in theThe Long RunThe EaglesAsylumby Jeffrey MakosHere's a radical notion: the Eagles areAmerica's best punk band.Actually it's not as radical as it seems.For years, the rock world's "critical" intel-ligensia has belabored the same old partyline about the Eagles: boring country-schlock fodder for the AM gristmill, withcloying harmonies, tepid musical invention,and disturbingly macho lyrics bordering onoffensive misogyny. From a purely culturalstandpoint, the Eagles also supposedly rep¬resent everything that's wrong with thiscountry: mindless overconsumption, over¬weaning narcissism, neurotic romanticism,twisted utopianism. Funny, with a fewword-substitutions — punk-schlock, teengristmill, grating anti harmonies — thiscould begin to sound like a review of theRamones.The truth is, the Eagles have been puttingeveryone on a lot longer and a lot better thanthe Ramones ever did or ever could do. Oneof the worst things about the love and drugsubculture of the Sixties is that it hasspawned a younger generation too screwedup to tell when a good put-on has just passedtheir way. Can anyone with a grammarschool education, or who has heard the Beatles at their joking best, actually believe thatgrown men write songs like "WitchyWoman" in all seriousness? "Take ItEasy," "The Best Of My Love," and "OneOf These Nights" at first seem to be exactlywhat they sound like: boring country-schlock fodder for the AM gristmill, withcloying harmonies, tepid musical invention,and disturbingly macho lyrics. The Eaglesknow nothing if not how to make traditionalAM hits. The specific genius in the Eaglemethod of hitmaking, however, has been toconsistently produce records that combineall the above with outrageously dumbmacho lyrics that are delivered with a completely deadpan vocal style, making musicthat sounds great yet is also a total put-on.Pretty "punk" to me.The Eagles are definitely not a group to betaken seriously, especially on their mostpopular album, Hotel California. Here, afteryears of cranking out the most formulaic LAcountry-rock imaginable — songs like "Des¬perado" — and with everyone seeming to letthem get away with it, the Eagles decided tomake the put-on more obvious and self destructive. The songwriting team of Don Hen¬ley and Glenn Frey came up with ridiculousparodies of the kind of Cocained Californiantypes the Eagles supposedly represented,and the results were hilarious. Songs likeCrown and Thornby Laura CottinghamIf this were the best of all possible worldsthe goodest would get the mostest and thebaddest would get the leastest. But we knowthat the telephone company is the richestand we're not. To rectify this situation, thiscolumn will reward the goodest with crownsand punish the baddest with thorns. Toenthrone or crucify, call 753-3265 on Sundayafter 8 pm and ask for Laura. The weeklybest and worst will get crowned and thornedaccordingly.To David Bevington: for walkingnto the first class meeting of English237 and instead of saying "I'll onlyteach Shakespeare to six of you, theother sixty-six of you should registerfor Chem 469, and not come back herebecause I won't let you" he said "I'llteach two sections."To the Maroon: for the CollegeBowl article which focused on ourlosses rather than our wins and offered a cartoon which depicted us asMickey Mouse, lightbulb brain andthe Ayatollah — when we all know weare Albert Einstein, Beethoven andGod. punk vein: it really blows your mind.The pre-Walsh Eagles: Bernie Leadon, Glenn Frey, Don Henley, Randy Meisner, and DonFelder"Life In The Fast Lane" and "Victim ofLove" contained such amazingly funnylyrics, delivered with such deadly seriousmacho style, that you had to be dead to missthe joke.Where could the Eagles go from there?Having exhausted the humorous possibilities in their own laid-back image, and hav¬ing revealed themselves to be the put-on artists that they always were, The Eaglesretreated into silence for three years, untilthe recent release of The Long Run. Thealbum has been praised as another incisivelook into the dark heart of Hollywood ( Roll¬ing Stones), and damned for not approach¬ing the power and with of Hotel (VillageVoice). Both views miss the point: Henleyand Frey have totally avoided developingnew methaphors to explore seriously, andinstead have continued to cut up in the spiritof Hotel. Of course they don't tell you this;from the mock serious black cover, to thepretentious black and white inner photo ofthe band ("We're the Eagles" it seems tosay, "Love us, we're tortured."), the graphics make a claim to being a clue to the sup¬posedly serious art to be found inside. Thesongs then proceed to laugh in the face ofanyone suckered by those deadpan tricks —The Long Run is the funniest rock sinceRoxy Music's "Love Is The Drug," or IggPop's underrated master piece Lust ForLife.Side one begins with the title song, the obligatory single, catchy Eagles AM gristmade to pay the bills. Next up are the Ringoand George songs, one each by new bassplayer Tim Schmit and "featured artist"Joe Walsh (a cult figure who deserves a re¬view all of his own) who has been a guidingforce in the Eagles' developing propensityfor the put on. So far, nothing any differentfrom other songs from old Eagles albums:pleasant enough, but certainly nothing tojustify the three year layoff.But wait, the Eagles have set us up, be¬cause the next five songs (discounting"Heartbreak Tonight," the single which begins side two) turn out to be the most ri¬diculous, the most bizarre,* and ultimatelythe most hilarious songs the Eagles haveever recorded. "The Disco Strangler" and"King of Hollywood" close side one as partof a fwo song mock epic look at the themesomarcissismand greed which were parodiedon Hotel California, except that here the approach has turned into pure burlesque. Howcan anyone hear Don Henley sing lines like"still his Jacuzi runneth over" and still takeit seriously? "Those Shoes" is almost "LifeIn The Fast Lane, Part Two," with Henleyscreaming at a fast-lane woman "What yougonna do in those shoes?" Here the Eaglescamp it up as they riddle their own supposedmisogyny full of holes, allowing their "social journalism" to degenerate into suchheavyweight insights into the singles barworld as "They give you tablets of love.""Teenage Jail" is the first heavy metalEagles song, an ode to the traumas of adolescence: "So young, so vicious, so frail."Not exactly sung from the heart, it might beadded. The question of whether or not this isproto-punk Eagles is undercut as a burnoutfeedback Ted Nugent esque guitar solofades into "The Greeks Don't Want NoFreaks," with the Eagles — those formerKings of Mellow — rocking out on their ownfrat-rat anthem. A bizarre finish to a bizarreseries of songs.The Eagles end the album by revealingthe reason for all this tongue in-cheek mad¬ness with "The Sad Cafe," the only trulyserious song of the lot. A melancholy medi¬tation on death and success, the Eagles ex¬plore the musical question "Why do somepeople make it in the rock biz while othersdon't?" and reveal their awareness of justhow lucky they have been. The Eagles knowthat they have ridden to the top of the chartsby exploiting AM grist, and they know thatthey lucked in when their own parody ofthemselves proved more popular than anything else they had done up until that point.After the success of Hotel California, however, the Eagles also don't seem to know where they are now going. They know whothey are supposed to be — they're theEagles, "America's most popular band" —but they're not even sure what that means,or what they are supposed to do with it. Hen¬ley and Frey don't seem to be able, or towant, for the matter, to carry the weight ofbeing the Rock Icons that Hotel's successplaced on their shoulders, and are suddenlylooking back to see what happened to the oldcountry schlock put on band they oncewere.What they see is a band whose importanceis based upon all the wrong reasons, a popularity based on put ons that have been takenseriously. The Eagles, mystified and morethan a bit warjy of their stardom, end upstaying sane by laughing at themsleves, attheir work, at their importance. For thosewho can't get the joke, this may be the bestput on of all — that behind the cold, coldEagles facade there really lurks a true humanism. People who make rationalizationsfor the latent fascism and blatant sexism ofbands like the Ramones or the Sex Pistolsand who criticize the Eagles for the samethings are either deaf or evil. The Eagles'stay sane through laughter, and this may bethe most truly "punk" thing to do in this ageI of pampered nihilism. The Eagles parodyj the Eagles parodying the Eagles, and it'sJ great.For now, the Eagles are America's bestpunk bano, and ultimately are most subver-! sive. By playing around with their audi-j ence's expectations as they do with the bi-: zarrreness of The Long Run, the Eagles arefreeing themselves from those expectations,! while maintaining their connection to the■ mass market through humor. If the fanswill buy this album, as they seem to be doingi by the millions, then they may just buy any¬thing the Eagles will do. Whether the Eaglescan live up to this chance is another question, but one worth watching.In tact, for sheer conceptual greatnessand outrageous humor, the Eagles are fastbecoming the American Beatles, and longi may they run. Not as good as the Beatles,mind you, but in this age of diminishing exj pectations one must get it where one can.i Miss them at your own risk.Folk festThe twentieth annual anniversary Univer¬sity of Chicago Folk Festival will be heldnext weekend with concerts on Friday, Saturday, and Sunday nights and Saturday af¬ternoon, and afternoon workshops on Saturday and Sunday.This year's concerts will again be held inMandel hall, and not in Bartlet gym, as pre¬viously publicized. The renovation of Mandel, which was to have interfered with theFestival, has been delayed until February 4.Workshops will still be held in Ida Noyes.Concert schedules and tickets are now onsale at the Reynolds Club Box Office. A concert preview will be published in next Fri¬day's grey city.The Folklore Society needs workers; interested folks should cail the Folklore officeat 753 3567 during business hours, or 955 9112or 955 5770 during evenings.ROC K S A N DSTARSby Danny SchulmanThe only things that don't speak to one another in the Eagle arethe women in the two murals. In the main room, flattened to thenorth wall is a painting that illustrates the Chicago skyline of theearly twentieth century. I.C. trains steam along the waterfronttracks. The scene is dutifully rendered in a naive urge.The necessary twin of the Chicago mural rests on the south wall.It is a painting of Lower Manhattan seen from the water. The muraldepicting New York City isn't much different than the Chicagopainting. Both are rendered in the same charming and adequatestyle. Apart from two women that rise above the horizon line, thetwo paintings are basically the same. It would take a person familiar with both New York and Chicago to distinguish between the twoclumsy skylines. But almost anyone could sense the particularly bitter aspect of one.Last Saturday night I sat at the Eagle with a friend from NewYork, Nick. We discussed the mgrals that flanked us. On the southwall the Statue of Liberty's torch gloriously breaks the upper boundary of the frame. Her expression is cast in the green oxidation ofsteel and salt water. Opposing Miss Liberty on the north wall is thepersonification of Chicago. "Her breasts are maternal, not erotic at all," Nick notes. I'm disgusted, but Nick is right. She is motherlylooking: built sturdy for bearing babies, yet there exist certain revealing signs of wear, diminution.She wears a gold tunic and red cape. She carries three attributes.The first two are conventional, a sword and a dove. The third hastragic content: the words that are the motto of Chicago, "I WILL."These words are drably painted in black on the woman's tunic nearthe bottom frame. The presence of these words is ripe with meaning.The woman is a passive and unclear symbol. It is the words thatare pernicious. The addition of the words is a complex gesture. It isan attempt by the artist to strengthen the weak and merely charming image. The result of the artist's choice to write, to do somethingmore, reveals, first, dissatisfaction and ultimately resignation. Thespirit of the words are negated by their own existence. Nick and Iacknowledge the fact more than silently, but less than conversationally.After a pause Nick cries, "Danny, the Statue of Liberty is a building!" It's not a symbol, it's not a woman. I feverishly make notesattempting to recall my thoughts. Nick sketches me. His gesture isspontaneous, sure; his gaze over me is intent.the grey city journal, Friday, January 25, 1980 — 9Wrestlers drop Kurucz checks out; applications takenhome openerBy Cy OgginsBacking up the sparkling performances ofMark Farwell (126) and Bob Michel (134)proved to be a problem again Wednesdaynight, as the University of Chicago wres¬tling team fell at home to a strong DePauwteam, 9-35, despite jumping out to an early9-0 lead.“Sometimes it’s very difficult to say any¬thing positive after a loss like tonight,”mused head coach Leo Kocher, “But I knowwe re on the right track with the techniquewe re using. Right now, we’re very close towinning more than the two out of eightmatches we seem only to be able to come outwith; we’ll be as ready as we can be for theconference championships.”The evening began on an extremely promising note as Farwell totally dominated DePauw's Bob Haynes. Going into the secondperiod with a slight 2-0 lead, Farwellpromptly escaped, took down his opponentand almost pinned him twice, until Haynesescaped in the waning seconds. In the thirdperiod. Farwell built the lead to 14-1 withtwo more near falls before finally gettingthe pin and giving Chicago a 6-0 team lead.Michel increased Chicago’s point total tonine in the second match, although he wait¬ed until the final period to get ahead. After a2-2 first period and a scoreless second. Mi¬chel-reversed his opponent with a beautifulmove in the last three minutes and then con¬trolled him to the end — winning 4-2.Although the Maroons lost the next sevenbouts, which included a forfeit in the 190-lbclass left vacant by the shoulder injury tojunior Rich Meade early last week, twostrong showings by Bob Tuel (158) and MacGillespie (177) could have gone the otherway. “Bob and Mac are just a week of hardwork away from beating the people they lostto,” commented coach Kocher. “Both ofthem had leads early on in their matcheswhich they let slip away. We’ve got the tal¬ent; we’ve just got to bring it along.”Michel, one of only three seniors on theteam — the others, the injured Jim Leonardand 150-lb Steve Rubin — echoed Kocher’swords. “In spite of the effort tonight, we canonly improve, especially under Leo. We de¬finitely have a lot of talent on the team. Wemay not be able to gel completely this year,but with freshmen like Bob, Mark, Mac, and_Turn to Page 17 By Andy RothmanThe New Mexico Lobos insignia on his at¬tache case looked slightly out of place in theBartlett football office as Tom Kurucz ex¬plained why he had decided to accept an as¬sistant football coaching position at NewMexico earlier this week.The former Maroon head coach reiteratedwhat he had told Chicago Athletic Director,Jeff Metcalf, earlier, “I did not go lookingfor a job, I was asked.”New Mexico’s offer was not the first thatKurucz had received since Chicago accepted"It's just another stepalong-the way. Along theway to what? I guess Iwould like to be a majorcollege head coach."his application for the head coaching jobless than a year ago. In these days whencoaching techniques are undergoing closescrutiny on all levels of athletic competitionand the pressure to win in the college rankshas grown to new proportions, Kurucz con¬siders himself, “very lucky,” to have had achoice to make between an assistant’s posi¬tion at Florida State University and the onehe eventually chose here.Kurucz was offered another assistant’s job last August, two weeks before he was toopen training camp at Chicago, by IowaState University. Kurucz turned the offerdown “with the welfare of the (Maroon)players in mind. More recently, on De¬cember 14, 1979, Kurucz was reached by thesame man that offered him the Iowa Stateposition and was now working at the Univer¬sity of Richmond in Virginia. Kurucz woundup saying no to a third assistant coachingoffer.Kurucz’s former boss at the University ofTennessee-Chattanooga, Joe Morrison, firstcontacted him on New Year’s Day about thepossibility of Kurucz’s going to the Universi¬ty of New Mexico as an assistant under Mor¬rison who had only recently taken the headcoaching position there.Kurucz had another difficult decision to•make, “When the opportunities come youaccept them or reject them. I was not look¬ing to go anywhere. I have nothing derogato¬ry to say about the University of Chicagostaff or, especially, the players.” Kurucz’srationalization for making the move is straightforward, “I said you’re 32 years old.What do you want to do with your life? Thedecision was made from a professionalstandpoint of advancement. It may appearcold, like a flea jumping on a dog, but it’s amove I believe in. I think the decision didn’tcome from my heart, or 1 would havestayed. It came from my head. Sometimesthat can be a very cold thing to do. It was avery difficult decision for me to leave theplayers.”Apparently Kurucz has even higher aspi¬rations, “It’s just another step along theway. Along the way to what? I guess I wouldlike to be a major college head coach.”The situation Kurucz is heading into atNew Mexico is somewhat unique, though itmay not be for long after findings this weekat Purdue University, in that the entire Loboathletic department is being rebuilt follow¬ing the discovery that athletes at that schoolwere admitted with false transcripts. As BillMorray, the executive director of the NCAAtold Kurucz, “I don’t know whether to offerTurn to Page 17Shin splints : no simple diagnosisBy Dr. David S. StulbergI am happy to accept The Maroon’s invita¬tion to provide information on sports medi¬cine and physical fitness to the Universitycommunity. Before starting, however, Ithink that it would be wise if we understoodwhat a column such as this cannot hope todo.The purpose of this column is to help all ofus increase our appreciation and under¬standing of physical fitness. I hope that, as aresult, each of our athletic efforts will besafer, more skillful and more fun. I hope,morever, to stimulate an awareness of thebenefits and limitations of physical fitnessand would like to challenge everyone to tryand determine the role participation insports should play in his or her own life.The information in this column must notbe considered a substitute for a visit to aphysician or trainer. If a question exists concerning the proper approach to a specif¬ic ailment, the answer must be obtainedfrom a physician who has listened to andpersonally examined you. If a specific fit¬ness goal is desired, the advice of an appro¬priate physician and/or trainer should besought.Finally, I must make everyone aware thatAsk Dr. StulbergI am an orthopedic surgeon and a physicianinterested in sports medicine and that manyquestions addressed to this column mightbest be answered by others in the communi¬ty. I will not be bashful in seeking the assis¬tance of others nor will I be insulted if somefeel it necessary and appropriate to dis¬agree publicly with the information that Ipresent. I am sure the Maroon will provideanyone who desires with such an opportuni¬ty.Hay don believes Olympics will go onBy Howard SulsOne of the latest national furors con¬cerns President Carter’s proposed boycottof the 1980 Olympic Games in Moscow. Ev¬eryone has an opinion on a proper courseof action, but the people to whom it mat¬ters the most are the athletes. In a syndi¬cated column in the Tribune on WednesdayJanuary 23, entitled “Patriotism Shouldn’tbe such a Hurdle,” Colman McCarthy con¬demns our athletes for their lack of patrio¬tism, and twists their words into an ex¬pression of commercial self-interest.McCarthy goes on to complain of the do¬uble standard that politics and sports istaboo, but sports and commerce is fine anddandy.Ted Haydon, University of Chicagotrack coach, and head coach of the Univer¬sity of Chicago Track Club, which has pro¬duced such notable runners as Rick Wohl-hutter and Stan Vinson, was assistantcoach at Mexico City in 1968 and Montrealin 1972, as well as manager of last year’sUnited States team in the Pan-Am Games,and in that respect is more eminently qual¬ified in this situation than the average lay¬man;“The Olympics are an opportunity forathletes to contribute to the benefit of bet¬ter world understanding by meeting ath¬letes of another country. They are not sup¬posed to be political. I think it is unfair thatthe Games were introduced as a weaponand a political hassle between the United States and Russia. It is sort of like ‘I’ll takemy ball and go home.’ Of course it’s im¬possible to separate the Games from poli¬tics. If it was a real world crisis the Gamescould be cancelled.“As far as an alternate Olympics goes, itwould be very tough to do. Every siteneeds adequate housing, ideally a justcompleted, still empty site. The housing atMontreal, Mexico City, and San Juan (siteof the recent Pan-Am Games) is now filledwith permanent residents. Unless we canget world-wide support, which isn’t evi¬dent, the Russians would hold the Olym¬pics with 80% of the participants. It wouldmake it that much easier for them. We area strong competitor, but not so strong thatour withdrawal would ruin the Games.”It would be a shame for all those menand women who have trained for so long tolose this opportunity. “For every spot onthe team, there are probably 200 con¬tenders,” continued Haydon, “Rank andscoring are dreamt up by governments.The actual competition is man againstman, woman against woman. It would bedisappointing if people on the teamcouldn’t go. Without the trials thousandswill be disappointed. The possibility existsthat if the United States Olympic team wasnot to go, some athletes might try to com¬pete anyway. It would be ironic with therepression in Russia if we restrained ourathletes from going. I think it’s unfair thatthe athletes have become pawns in theGames.” Pawns? Yes, of President Carter, Con¬gress, and organizations like the UnitedStates Olympic Committee and NBC. AsHaydon put it, “1 wouldn’t underestimatethe power of the USOC, NBC, and otherpeople with a lot at stake in this thing.They have enough power to add some in¬fluence. NBC could recover what it laid outby insurance, but not what they could prof¬it.“To some extent the Games are beingused as a device in the domestic politicalarena. I don’t think Carter realizes the fullimplications of what he does. The USOCwill tread cautiously, especially in thewake of the recent hearings in Congress onamateur sports. Since it exists by an act ofCongress, I don’t think they’ll take a hard-nosed stand against government action,and risk having the government take oversports. I would anticipate that if Carter in¬sists and gets congressional action, theUSOC would not oppose it. If the 1980Olympics are cancelled, it doesn’t holdmuch future for the 1984 Games. I wouldpredict that the Games will go on and wewill probably participate.“The Olympics are a nice thing, to seeathletes meeting and socializing, it contri¬butes to understanding and should be en¬couraged. It would be too bad to go back tothe Cold War situation.” In light of ac¬tions taken this week by the House ForeignAffairs Committee, unanimously recom¬mending that Congress pass a resolutionTurn to Page 17 Today’s question:“What are shin splints? How can they beprevented or treated? Would decreasing thedistance I run have any effect or should Istop running altogether?”The term “shin splints” refers to a varietyof ailments all of which are characterizedby pain in the leg between the knee andankle. The condition is quite common in run¬ners and often lasts for such a short periodof time that it may be incorrectly presumedto be a “pulled muscle” or something notvery serious. In fact, some of the causes of“shin splints” can be quite serious whileothers are not. The pain from “shin splints”usually occurs along the front of the leg onthe tibia about Vh to Vfe of the way from theknee to the ankle. This is an area of the tibiato which a number of muscles used in run¬ning and jumping attach. The attachmentsof these muscles can be disrupted. Whenthis occurs quite sharp pain results. This isperhaps the most common cause of “shinsplints.” Somewhat less common (thoughnot at all rare) but more serious causes of“shin splints” are stress fractures of thetibia or fibula and conditions in which theblood supply to the leg is decreased (com¬partment syndromes). Thus, when runningproduces pain along the front of the leg be¬tween the knee and ankle, a diagnosis of“shin splints” should be suspected and aninvestigation by a physician as to the specif¬ic cause of the pain should be carried out.Shin splints tend to occur in runners whohave altered their training routine by; (l)increasing the distance they run; (2) chang¬ing the type of shoe they wear; (3) runningon different surfaces than usual; (4) run¬ning in a different style or running differentsequences than usual. Thus, one can reducethe likelihood of shin splints by changing arunning routine gradually.The treatment of shin splints dependsupon the specific cause of the pain and canbe prescribed once the source of the painhas been identified. If the source of pain iscompression of the blood supply to the leg (acompartment syndrome), emergency medi¬cal or surgical care may be required. If astress fracture of the tibia has occurred, acast may be necessary. Fortunately, mostcases of shin splints can be very effectivelytreated with the appropriate combination ofrest, strengthening exercises, heat or ice,and mild analgesics. In quite a few cases ofshin splints, at least some running may bepermitted. As with most injuries to individu¬als who wish to return to athletic activity,rest, alone, is rarely adequate treatment for“shin splints.” A program of rehabilitationmust be started soon after the injury to pre¬vent a recurrence of the injury once runningis resumed.16—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, January 25, 1980Glamour andBy Vladimir GastevichOseo, Wisconsin. A lovely little Midwes¬tern town. No, that’s not a good way tobegin this article. How about I’ve-got-the-midnight-on-the-side-of-a-snow-lined-Wis-consin-highway-with-a-flat-tire-on-the-bus-blues. No, that doesn’t even mentionthe minus forty degree wind-chill factor,so that won’t do. Hmm. How about, “Goodevening, gentlemen. This is your busdriverspeaking. You might be wondering why Ipulled over to the side of this desolatesnow-lined Wisconsin highway with thewind blowing to the tune of a minus fortydegree windchill outside. Well, we willhave a layover in beautiful Oseo, Wiscon¬sin, while we wait briefly for a qualifiedcrew of professionals to change our fronttire, which just happened to go flat. Sitback and relax, gentlemen, and for thoseof you who have never ridden on a GrayLine tours bus to Northfield, Minnesota, toplay Carleton College, welcome to the Mid¬west Conference.’Now, you may be readying yourself forKuruczyou congratulations or condolences,” be¬cause of the circumstances.Kurucz said, “You can look at it in a coup¬le of way^. The last regime there did not pro¬vide a combination of athletics, academics,social life and spiritual life for everyone in¬volved. It was a prime example of extremepressure to win, which is just as bad as noemphasis on athletics at all. here you arebuying grades and forging transcripts . . .that emphasis on winning is too strong. Theemphasis on athletics here (at Chicago) isblotted out.” On his new job Kurucz said,“We have a helluva challenge looking usdead in the eye.” Kurucz said, “They’re try¬ing to go ahead and build a well-rounded sit¬uation. They’ve swept the house clean andthey’re starting from scratch. What we’retrying to do is give the student-athlete a situ¬ation where he may go to the pros or to grad¬uate school.”Kurucz admitted that there would be some"It was a prime exampleof extreme pressure towin, which is just as bad asno emphasis on athletics atall. Here you are buyinggrades and forging tran¬scripts . . . that emphasison winning is too strong.The emphasis on athleticshere (at Chicago) is blot¬ted out."toning down of the athletic program at NewMexico. He had been working at New Mexi¬co sinc^pJanuary 16 before returning to Chi¬cago this week and reported with somepride that the devastated Lobo basketballteam won its last two games and had 15,000people in their 18,000 seat arena for both ofthem, “After everything calmed down theybegan to turn things around immediately.That response to adversity reveals the cut ofthe man sometimes.”The man Kurucz meant in that statementwas New Mexico’s new Athletic Director,John Bridgers. Bridgers served in similarcapacities at Baylor University and FloridaState, successfully turning both programsaround. Baylor has become one of the mostcompetitive football schools in the South¬west Conference and Florida State played inthe Orange Bowl earlier this month.Bridgers has also coached at Johns Hop¬kins, so he appears to be familiar with boththe high powered athletic program and theacademically oriented institution.While Kurucz’ departure may help cementthe new athletic department at New Mexico,it leaves the football program at Chicago in luxury: the Midwest Conf.my account of how miserable it is to bestranded for three-and-a-half hours on theside of a highway outside Oseo, Wisconsin,of how tough it is to awaken, after a drearyevening on a bus, at 10 am, with a total ofonly five hours sleep, and gallantly pre¬pare to play a game that is only 3'2 hoursway. That is not what I am going to do. Idecided at the time we pulled over, not tobe upset, to make the best of the situation:to observe and learn how to change a flattire on a bus.First of all, if you are a bus tire repair¬man, you are cool and mellow. Showing upan hour after your initial call on the CB isno problem. When you finally arrive anddiscover that your jack is too feeble to liftthe bus and that you will need a strongerjack, that is also cool and you are mellow.You return to your workshop, thinking thatthe Maroon’s basketball team membersare safe and comfortable in the warm bus,and if they need to sleep, since it is almostmidnight, a few contortions and they’ll becounting sheep. If they are stiff duringtheir game the next day from attempting to sleep in contorted positions, that is noproblem, because they are cool and youare mellow. You find a better jack and re¬turn to the bus, ready to repair the flat, yetyou discover that the lug nuts on the wheelare not cool. They are frozen. You are how¬ever mellow and since you have alreadymade a trip to your workshop to find an¬other jack, the second trip to the workshopto find a blowtorch comes easily. ThoseMaroons are good kids, you think, and rea¬son that they'll understand, because they,too, must be cool and mellow, like you. So,you return one final time after stopping forcoffee because it is so darn cold, and thetire takes only thirty minutes to change.You send the team on their way, at 1:30a m. having guaranteed that they will getat best five hours of sleep on their motelbeds.Who ever said that road trips are dulland boring? I learned a great deal on theway to Minnesota about some of the essen¬tial matters of life. The next time we get aflat tire, I will be ready, cool and mellow. OlympicsContinued from Page 16that the Games be moveo oui of Moscowand. failing that, that the United Statesboycott the Moscow Games, it appearssome definite moves will be made soon.The resolution supported Carter’s state¬ment last week that the United States willfollow these steps if the Soviets do not pullout of Afghanistan by mid-February.— Next week: more reactions from theUniversity community.wrestlingContinued from Page 1 6Ed <Millea - heavyweight), and with Leo’scoaching, the material is there to build a re¬ally strong program.”The desire of the team to improve wasclearly evident, after the meet as they wentback on the mat to work out some more.“We’re looking better every week — notlooking at the score,” added Farwell. “Guysare just barely missing moves that couldturn a match around. They just don’t havethe move down yet. That’s why we’re goingback up now — to work on moves.”Chicago’s next tourney is tomorrow morn-'ing at North Central College. Meet time is at9:30 a m.a disorganized state. “I know it appears oneway to the players, but then, I may haveupset some people at the University of Rich¬mond too. I tried to benefit myself at the ex¬pense of no one else. I have ties with coachMorrison. It sort of surprised me when theoffer came because there were othercoaches he had worked with for a longerperiod of time whom he hadn’t invited.”The Chicago situation does not appear tobe as grim as it did one week ago when thestaff was left with no coach and no playerprospects for next year. Kurucz claims tohave had a couple of prospective playersfrom St. Patrick’s in addition to “five orsix” others visit the campus betweenThanksgiving and the holiday break. He hadalso scheduled a number of appointmentsfor this month with other student athletes. Itis not known if those appointments will bekept. Sophomore linebacker Mark Kosmin-sakas was given a folder with lists of namesof possible prospects but preliminary re¬sponse from the athletic department is thatthe lists hold little value. In addition, firstyear student Greg Christmas, a member ofthe Student Schools Committee, has comeup with a significant number of possible fu¬ ture players and has been working with theathletic department.Kurucz left with a few suggestions on im¬proving the athletic program at Chicago, “Ithink a commitment is needed from the topall the way down to the bottom at this schoolBill Murray, executivedirector of the NCAA. "Idon't know whether tooffer you congratulationsor condolences."to excellence in academics, which theyhave, but only to a certain degree Theyneed to jump into it full blast. They need tosit down and say we want to do .500 or .750and set out objectives, A. B. C, D and E.They need to sit down and say this is whatwe want to do and this is how we will do it.”Kurucz added that the school should “goahead and admit guys with 1200 SAT thatwrestle and play football or basketball. Themost well-rounded people on this campusare the athletes. Those are the ones that will be running our businesses in five or tenyears. They’re well rounded becausethey’re into athletics, studying, social lifeand* even work in some cases. The athleteshere are giving so much that, it might not berecognized now, but do you really knowwhat the pressures of athletics and academ¬ics in addition to their other interests are?The basis of athletics are structure and or¬ganization — important lessons.”His experience at Chicago has left Kuruczgratified. “I’ve learned more about peoplein this one year than I have in the otherseven (in coaching). I would like to thankMr. Metcalf. Mr. O’Connell and Hanna Grayfor giving me the opportunity to go aheadand develop as a professional. If there isanything I can do for other people here allthey have to do is give me a call.”The search for Kurucz’ successor has al¬ready begun. According to Metcalf about 20applications for the position have alreadybeen received, some of which are, “quitepromising.” The athletic department will beaccepting applications until February 18. soa new coach cannot officially be hired untilFebruary 19.IM reportRefugees, Bill Show Uranus top pollBy J.A. NetosThe picture in the Graduate White Leagueis clearer this week. Uranus and the SevenMoons continues to lead in first place with arecord of 5 and 0, after defeating Laughlin48:27. In second position, however, there areonly three teams this week. Last week’s sec¬ond-place Frottage dropped an importantgame to second-place Med II. 40:34. JimmyCohn excelled in a close game that saw Frot¬tage mounting a first minute effort in theclosing moments of the game, to no avail.The loss pushed Frottage to third place,which it shares with Dead Popes and Plato’sExemplars, each with a record of 3 and 2.Dead Popes recouped from their loss toUranus last week, easily winning theirgame against Estoppel-Assumpsit. 37:25.Tied with Med II in second place, also witha record of 4 and 1. are Willis Reed, whichdefeated Scruffulo Botems 27:25 in a tensegame. Reckless substitutions by Reed’scoach during the closing minutes of the firsthalf caused his team to lose a comfortablesix-point lead, and end the half with only aone point advantage.Reed never regained a substantial lead inthe second half, and the game was tied at 25with thirty seconds to play. Jeff Bondbrought the ball up court while Reed’s for¬wards Heilker. Sheppard, and Stucker weretrying to get Botem’s tight zone defense offbalance. With 3 seconds to play Bond passedthe ball to Gleason, who shot a fifteen footerto win the game for Reed, 27:25. Dartos alsoshares second place following its victoryover Eat My Torts, 48:29.In the Graduate Red League. Albanian Refugees and Mr. Bill Show continue toshare first place, each with a record of 7 and0. Mr. Bill Show’s latest victory was overNever Too Late, 52:25.In the Undergraduate White League, Dud¬ley defeated Chamberlin for the secondtime, securing its first place position Thegame was much closer than the first one.one by Dudley 34:30. During most of the firsthalf, Chamberlin seemed to be in control.Excellent shooting by Don Pasulka (whoscored a total of 20 out of Chamberlin’s 36points) kept Chamberlin ahead by two tofour points throughout most of the half,which ended with Chamberlin leading16:14.The opening minutes of the second halfsaw Dudley at its best. Jim Moskal, who didnot make a single attempt from the fieldduring the first half (although he did con¬nect on two free throws), tied the game at 16points, and the two teams continued to makebaskets for six minutes. Four free throws,by Moskal and Kim. gave Dudley its firstlead in the game. 32:28, and it was ten sec¬onds later that ref. Nick Choporis made thiscontroversial call: Dudley's Chris Kowalskifouled Chamberlin’s Pasulka. and the ballwas awarded to Chamberlin, under Dudley’s goal During the time taken on the in¬bounds. Choporis began counting three sec¬onds on a Chamberlin player in the foul laneand whistled a turnover immediately follow¬ing the inbounds. Chamberlin, outraged atChoporis' call (the three seconds apply onlywhen the ball is alive, in play), protested thegame. The protest is now being consi¬dered.Two free throws by Kim and a field shot increased Dudley’s advantage to 36:32. Afree throw by Moskal, answered by twogoals of Chamberlin, and the game wasover, at 37:36. Chamberlin missed a chanceto tie the game with two seconds remainingwhen a free throw would not go in.In the Red League. Tufts and Hitchcockeach added a victory to their records, withTufts defeating Fishbein 29:26 and Hitch¬cock defeating Dodd/Mead 36:25.In the Maroon League. Vincent and Hen¬derson are still tied in first place, the formerdefeating Bradbury 25:14. the latter defeat¬ing Thompson 35:12.In the Independent White League, theCoho's continue in first place, adding a 22:18victory over The Return of Zero the Hero totheir 5 and 0 record Dred Scott's Revengeare still tied in first place in the IndependentRed League with the Champs, defeatingSemi-Tufts 46:16. Craig Garber's Gang ofFive managed to outscore Joint Effort 13:12in a close game.Basketball Top Ten(First place votes in parenthesis)1. Albanian Refugees GO) 1002 Mr Bill Show * 863. Uranus and the 7 Moons 804 Dred Scott's Revenge 685. Champs 676. Hitchcock 507. Dudley -158. Snow Bears 329. Chamberlin 1610. Med II 6Votes: Commuters Magic, Coho’s, Tufts,Willis Reed, Dartos Rises AgainThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, January 25, 1980—17CalendarFRIDAYPerspectives: Topic - "The Care and Feeding of LongPoems" guests James Miller and Robert Streeter,6:09 am, channel 7.Crossroads: English classes for foreign women,10:00 am.Graduate Comm, on the Study of Women: "Seclud¬ed Wives: Women in India's Princely States" speak¬er Joan Erdman, noon, Ida Noyes 2nd floor.Italian Table: Meets 12:00 noon in the Blue Gar¬goyle to speak Italian.Islamic Society: Friday prayer will be held at 12:30pm in the home room of the International House.Workshop in Labor: "The Effect of Final Offer Arbi¬tration on the Salaries of Municipal Police Officersin New Jersey" speaker David Bloom, 1:30 pm, Ro405.Geophysical Sciences Colloquium: "Quasi-PeriodicPolar Wandering on Earth and Mars” speakerDavid Van Alstine, 1:30 pm. Hinds Lab Auditori¬um.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Arabic Circle -"The Humanistic Quest in the Sufism Iban al-Arabi"speaker Michael Sells. Pick 218, 3:30 pmWorkshop in Economic History: “Cheap Labor andSouthern Textiles. 1880-1930" speaker Gavin Wright, 3:30 pm. SS 106.Computation Center Demo: Introduction to SCSS3:30-5:00 pm. Pick 124.Hillel: Liberal-Progressive Shabbat Services, 5:00pm, Hillel.Women's Union: Meets 5:00 pm Ida Noyes abovethe 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: "Hair" 6:30, 8:45, and 11:00 pm, Cobb.UC Karate Club: Meets 7:00 pm in the Dance roomof Ida Noyes.Hillel: Lecture - "The Peace Process and Israeli Do¬mestic Politics” speaker Leonard Binder, 8:30 pm,Hillel.Pub: Live music, 9:30-12:30 pm "The SchmaltzieFingers of Peter Golemme on Piano”.SATURDAYCreative Dance and Movement Group: Meets 12:30pm in Ida Noyes Dance room.UC Gymnastics Club. Instructions available2:00-5:00 pm, Bartlett gym, free.Crossroads: Saturday night dinner, 6:00 pm, no res¬ervations needed. $2.Law School Films: "The Big Sleep" 7:00 and 9:30 pm.Law School Auditorium.International House: From Bolivia - "Los Payas” Andean Music, 8:00 pm, I-House.Colla Voce: Presents modern madrigals, Brahms,and Psalms, 8:00 pm, Augustana Lutheran Church.Hillel: Israeli Coffee House, Folk Singers, Israeliand Jewish Music, 8:30 pm, Hillel.Pub: Second Annual Pub "Stroh’s Party” 9:30pm-l:00 am. Live music by th Peter Baron Jazztet.Prizes, Giveaways. And plenty of Stroh’s beer. Pubmembership required.SUNDAYRockefeller Chapel: Ecumenical Services of HolyCommunion, 9:00 am.Rockefeller Chapel: Discussion class: "Christianityand Contemporary Literature" leader Michael Kin-namon, 10:00 am.Hillel: Lox and Bagel Brunch, 11:00 am, Hillel.Rockefeller Chapel: University Religious service -“A Question of Vision", 11:00 am.Crossroads: Bridge, 3:00 pm, beginners and expertswelcome.Hyde Park Youth Chamber Orch and Hyde ParkStrings: give a recital at 3:00 pm, InternationalHouse homeroom. Free and open to the public.DOC Films: “A Women’s Decision” 7:15 and 9:15 pm,Cobb.Tai Chi Ch uan: Meets 7:30 pm, 4945 S. Dorchester(enter on 50th St.).Folkdancers: Meet at 8:00 pm-ll:30 pm, IdaNoyes.Young Composers Concert: Works by Beaubien, Austin, Carl, and Horst. 8:00 pm, I-House.MONDAYCrossroads: English classes for foreign women,10:00 am.Dept of Biochemistry Seminar: "The Characteriza¬tion of the Human Erythrocyte Glucose Tran¬sporter” speaker David Sogin 12:00 noon, Cum¬mings room 1117.Economics Dept Discussions: "The Source of Com¬parative Advantage” speaker Ed Learner, 1:30 pm,SS 402.Dept of Chemistry: "Acyclic Stereo Control in Natu¬ral Product Synthesis and Some Phosphorus-Con¬taining Transition State Analogs” speaker PaulBartlett, 4:00 pm, Kent 103.Kundalini Yoga Society: "Stress-Away” yogacourse meets 5:00 -6:30 pm in Ida Noyes.UC Gymnastics Club: Instruction available 5:30-8:00pm, Bartlett gym, free.UC Judo Club: Meets 6:00-8:30 pm. Bartlett gym. Be¬ginner welcome.UC Karate Club: Meets 7:00 pm in the dance roomof Ida Noyes.Ski Club: Meeting 7:00 pm, Ida Noyes Hall.Chess Club: Winter round robin tournament, starts7:30 pm, Ida Noyes Memorial Room.DOC Films: "The Toast of New York” 8:00 pm,Cobb.Folkdancers: Meet 8:00-11:00 pm, Ida Noyes Hall.First Chair Series: Lecture-demonstration bv DaleClevenger CSO horn, 8:00 pm. Greenwood Hall,free.ofAtop the Del Prado Hotel53rd & Hyde Park Blvd.324-6200Serving the finestCantonese cuisineto discriminatingdiners for over30 years.Lunch • Pinner • Cocktails t A WITH kLc THISOUPOl NJ YALUABILO R 'l’l )N—Ci:;1 Free KODAK Color4 for the price of 3.No negative needed.Bring in this coupon with your favoriteconventional or instant color prints, and we llhave Kodak make 4 same size color prints orcolor slides for the price of 3. 1 is free. NONHGATIVES NEEDED! Sliare the good times inpictures with friends and family. I furry.offer ends March 12. 1980MODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55th • 493-6700VALUABLE COUPON-*k ^ UJ H / /r Af l—=^: COLORPROCESSING /s,a KodakISRAELICOFFEEHOUSE((.o-s|MHisoml h\ Jl k (.iiinpiB < ani|uii<;iiand Hillel)FOLK SINGERS - ISRAELIAND JEWISH MUSICw ith: R<»h rinher" andHelen Man le»»REFRESHMENTSFeaturing Felafel andDrinks For PurehaseHillel Foundation - 5715 WoodlawnSATURDAYEVEJAN.268:30 p.m.18—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, January 25, 1980 "Uniformly excellent musicians who performoften intriguing compositions, intelligently pro¬grammed, at low prices. And you can't ask formore than that."Art Lange, The Reader March 16, 19791980 Chamber Music SeriesAll Concerts 8:00 P M1. MUSIC OF THE CLASSICAL PERIODIncludes Mozart’s Piano Quartet in G Minor2. MUSIC OF 20TH CENTURY MASTERSIncludes Bartbk’s Violin and Piano Sonata No. 23. MUSIC OF FRENCH COMPOSERSIncludes Faur6’s Piano Quartet in C Minor4. MUSIC OF AMERICAN COMPOSERSIncludes recent works by Chicago-area composers5. MUSIC OF SCHUBERT AND BEETHOVENSPECIAL 2 FOR 1 OFFER! For the first concert, present this ad andStudent ID and you get a second ticket free.HYDE PARK: International House—Jan 30, Mar 5, Apr 9, Apr 30, Jun 4For Information: 271-3810Series Subscription: $18 Student Series: $12, Student Single: $3Please mall check to 1416 W. Winnemac, Chicago 60640,C 55-AD RATESMaroon classifieds are effective andcheap Place them in person at theMaroon business office in Ida NoyesHail 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.Roommate needed to share spaciouseast Hyde Pk apt. $lS0/mo. 288-0327keep trying anytime.FOR RENT: E Hyde Pk large deluxe 1br 325 493-3822, 493 2179.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.Grad student needs roomate for apart¬ment on 56 and Kimbark starting inFeb or ASAP Call Chris G. H: 241-5374,W: 947 6095.For Rent, Studio apt. 4800 S.Lakeshore. 19th fl. lake view-poolparking. Avail. Mar 1-548-0570 7-8:30am or aft 8pm.Kenwood. 955-2221 p.m.FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED toshare spacious apartment at 52 andKimbark with 3 other women.Available bedroom is huge, partiallyfuriiished, w/adjacent bath. Large liv¬ing, dining-rooms, sunporch, cheaprent. 643-1268Luxury apt Newport 2 br. bath viewlake downtown children pets ok.700/mo. Call 241 6548 after 6.SUMMER SUBLET 3 br 2 ba apt dateand price negot. full equipped ONCAMPUS modern 947-9579eve.5124-32 S. KIMBARK, Desirable studioand 1 bedroom apts., newly decorated,near shopping, transportation, and Uof C. Inquire premises engineer FredSallman. 752-8066 or Sat. and Sun. 1-4pm. Call 643-4489. HARRY A.ZISOOK AND SONS, 786 9200.Roommate wanted Feb 1 neargrocery, hardware stores and minibusroute $100 heat incl. Call 493-3109.Large furnished studio $216/month in¬cl. utilities 51st and Kenwood.Available Feb 1st (negotiable).324-5592 anytime.2 vacancies available in spacious apt.57th and Kenwood. Male grad studentpreferred. 324-4559, starting Feb 1 orASAP.2 bdrms in 3 bdrm apt w/lake vucarpet, central H/AC, dishwasher.This is a great PAD. Call Allan at324-4462 and leave msg.Basement studio apartment.$ll/month. Call Rhonda at643-1268.Share house with 3 grad, own room,yard, washer/dryer, dishwasher,roomy on bus route. $125/mo. Non-smoker. Female pref. 643-7258.HYDE PARK - female roommate toshare 2 bedrm, 2 bath apt in high rise,carpet, air cond., dishwasher, securebldg. Your share $280.643-8975.PEOPLE WANTEDThe Department of BehavioralSciences needs people who want toparticipate as paid subjects inpsycholinguistic and cognitivepsychology experiments. For furtherinformation call 753-4718.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-MAKE $40 (NO TAX DEDUCTED) INONE DAY-Interviewers needed forstation WLS, Channel 7 primary elec¬tion day poll in Chicago on March 18.Limited openings. Pick up applica¬tions immediately from Ms. Johnson,Career Counseling and Placement.Subjects wanted for study of low flowoxygen thereapy. 3 hrs. remuneration.Call Dr. Rattenborg. 947 5933.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.).WANTED for network television program: Couple in their 20's who are liv¬ing together and are getting marriedbefore March 30 Call Ms Drury colIect202 664 4707.Need ride home from Chgo SymphonyThurs B series. Will share gas753 2074/288 6125 Someone to stay with 3 boys (11,13 and15) whi-e parents qo on vacation. Mustave references, cook mooest mealsBoys in :chool 8-4. Near Univ. sharejob with friend 221-5737/493-7472.Wanted, a translator for a Germandocument dated 1607 Fee is negotiablePaul 3-2249 Rm 2205.Reliable person wanted weekly orfortnightly housecleaning for 1 br apt.laundry, j-onlng. Working couple withno children Call 955-0594 after 6 pm.FOR SALEVW Red 1968 Bug, Excellent radio, Extra heater. $500. 493-5774.19" Zenith hospital TVs. ChicagoOsteopathic Hospital .5200 S. Ellis. Ex¬cellent condition, as low as $49.95 andup. See Herb Eastman 947-3000. After 6call 676-222671 Toyota Corona. AC, AT New Batt,brakes. Win tires. Runs v. well $650 orbest. 667-5487.71 Plymouth Duster. New Tires, bat¬tery. Reliable. $650 or best offer. Call667-7529,Carpet - 12 x 18 nylon plush It. beige -nearly new top quality - $200 (foampad incl.) 548-0570 7-8:3o a.m. or aft. 8p.m.CTA passes are on sale at the BillingsHospital Cashier Mon-Fri 8:00-4:30.Passes for each ridership month willgo on sale from the 23rd until the lastworking day of the preceding month.For more info, call 7-5217.Sherwood S-712S Receiver, B1C 960Turntable, Grado FTE + 1 Catridge,pair of Quadraflex ST-17 3 wayspeakers $350. Call Pat, 753-8425 or955 8125HOUSE SALEHousehold items, cloth, decoration ob¬jects, Brazilian crafts. Most itemscheap 12-6 Sat, only. Call 667-7529.PEOPLE FOR SALEExcellent, accurate typist w/legal ex¬perience will type papers and disserta¬tions or IBM. Reasonable rated.684-7414.ARTWORK- posters, illustration,calligraphy, invitations etc. NoelYovovich 5441 S. Kenwood 493-2399.Thesus, Disert, Manuscripts, LatestIBM Corrective Sel IItypewriter,Rates based on Vol andCondition of draft. Best EminenceBond turn. Mrs. Ross. 239-5982.FRENCH native teacher offerstutorials-all levels. 268-9262.Experienced painter available for in¬terior work. Call Cliff after 6 p.m.324-0733.SCENESWOMEN! Self-defense classes byChimera women. Learn preventionphysical techniques. 6 wks. Mon 7-9p.m., 5655 University Begins 2/4. $25.Call 332-5540 more info.Once again, the Chicago LiteraryReview is changing the time of itsweekly meeting. Bear with us, and at¬tend on Thursday afternoons at 5,Maroon office, Ida Noyes room 303.LOST AND FOUNDFOUND: 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.FOUNDS BeforeChristmas—eyeglasses with black(German-made) frames, near 57thand Blackstone. Call 493-2944.LOST: a little book on campus. C(Shoreland) bus, hotel, or Regenstein.Simone Weil-Waiting on God.REWARD $25 call Jaqueline Lois595 4626 days, 955-0735 nights.FOUND: bracelet at Dorchester andS7th Dec. 31 call and identify 955 2287.REWARD for returning TI - 58calculator lost in or near UniversityBookstore, 1/18. Call 753 8342 (ext.605).LOST: Beige, white and tan scarf lostaround Jan 14 possibly at Ida Noyeslibrary. Leave message for Steve 2415x 753 2249LOST: Chrome Cross pen. Left in»-copying room 3rd floor Regensentimental Value. Call 493-4532SERVICESPregnancy tests Saturdays 10-1Augustana Church. 5500 S. Woodlawn.$1.50 donation. Southside Women'sHealth Service. 667 5505.We keypunch your data Precise, fast,cheap. Call Mike 753-2517BLUES HARMONICAExperienced teacher/performer oncampus. All styles; all skill levels;Serious inquiries only. Call Dan667 7677. VISUALIZATIONANDHOLISTIC HEALTHEnjoy high levels of health and well¬being Learn about holistic health anddesign and implement your own pro¬gram through use of the life style diaryand visualization in a supportivegroup. Thurs. at the Gargoyle,5:30-7 30 beginning Jan. 31. Call Dobbi288-3706, or 337-8100.SELF-HYPNOSISSEMINAROn campus beginning Jan 29 from, :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 deepen¬ing relationships and clarifying andhelping you attain future goals" 7 sessions, $70. Taught by a clinical hypnotherapy program graduate CallDobbi 288-3706 or 337-8100.ENJOYComplete a day of study by giving andreceiving a deeply relaxing massagebefore a warm crackling fire. Ambienfenvironment, friendly people, ex¬cellent instructor, center of campus.Thurs. Jan 31, 7:30-9:30 pm, 5655University. 7 sessions $70 Reservetions call Dobbi 288 3706or 337-8100. PERSONALSGENEROUS REWARD offered to anyone who can identify the author of anofe left in Reg on 4th fl. on 1/20 bet¬ween 5:30-7:30 p m MUST be able toidentify contents of note 241 5246This is my SECOND and FINAL personal ad Fight with your enemies but,don't fight with meHey Jay—We should find a rockingchair big enough for two-no, not twocatsDear note writerbothNote recei verOh, Unicorn of the musical horn let medance for free Play your best and I'lldo the rest, just leave it up to me DarkLady.WRITER'S2 8377. WORKSHOP PLazaYOGAReenergize and harmonize body,mind, and spirit Begin Yoga Jan 29 atthe Gargoyle S:30-7:00 pm. Hathapostures, breathing, energization,meditation and deep relaxation. 7 sessions $40. Call Oobbi 288-3706 or337 8100. Liz, I always what you see in thatsquimy guy. I can only speculate onthe size of virtues he has but doesn'tshow in public. Anyway you have anadmirer who is ready to lithely, blithe¬ly make you happy. Hyde Dark.THE GOOD NEWS is that with somuch unused detente around, somehas shown up in the library. Studentsgather at the pit for communal breaks,others smoke dope right in their car¬rels, or disappear in groups into thestacks to reappear wide-eyed and grin¬ning. Some were even breathinglaughing gas in a conference room!The bad news is the library monitorsare giving tickets out for loiter¬ing. RegSTUDENT CO-OPAll new stock in both books andrecords. Special Folk Albums for theFolk Festival. Come look at our greatJazz collection. Lowest prices in town.Basement of the Reynolds Club.ROSE/PUTTTIX STUDENTDie. movie theatre tickets at Reynolds ASSISTANTClub Box Office.SAVE ON MOVIESRose and Plitt theatre discount ticket WANTFDat Reynolds Club Box Office. i t-Part time help needed for library 10-20hours a week, ask for Diane Carson at955-4545 between hours 9-1 EEO/MFCRAFTY PEOPLEA Singular Group, a creative artscooperative is lookinq for newmembers to round out its gallery ofarts and crafts. Come visit us at 57thand Woodlawn in the Unitarian Churchor call Chris at 493-3290.LCBWe need people to be responsible byhelping create this years LasciviousCostume Ball. You'll have completecreative freedom. Call Steve Silver753-2240.UC HOTLINE 753-1777Got the Winter Quarter blues? If youwant to talk, have a question or need areferral, try the UC Hotline. ? p.m.-7am.POETRY READERSWANTEDWould you like to read your own work,or other poets, in public during sixthweek Or even over the radio Fic¬tion is also ad- missible. Help us planthese heart-warming events. Call752-8368 evenings, or 3-3265 during theday. Ask for Molly. Do caricatures of writers, editors,publishers, heroes, literary folk. Andothers, will you? The Chicago LiteraryReview needs your help Call 3-3265days, or 752-8368 nights, and ask forMolly.SECRETARYComputer research project teamneeds secretary to act as "glue" forhighly dynamic professionals. Dutiesinclude handling schedules, inputtingto a word processing system, technicaldocumentation and some graphicwork. Typing (60 wpm) requiredSalary commensurate with ex¬perience. Campus location. Call753 2929MAGICIANExperienced Magician will providemystical entertainment for partiesand gatherings. Perfect for children'sparties. Call Marc 753-2240ext. 1610.GAY DISCUSSIONThe Gay and Lesbian Alliance holds aregular Monday night office meetingat 8 p.m. which is followed by a discus¬sion group from 8 45fo9:30p m Comeand help organize our activities as wellas discuss gay issues in an Informalgathering.PIZZA PLATTER1460 E. 53rdM13-2800 No delivery VEHICLESVOLVO PERSONS: I buy them dead ▼or alive Also have complete inventory Aof us ed parts to keep yours alive SaveAd 924-4103.JOINCONCERT BANDKeep your embouchure in shape AStudents Fac Alums needed who play ▼cl tpt tbn etc Rehearsals are Sat 1:00 Ap m Cloister Club Ida Noyes—doing ^Brahms, Mussorg. aTAICHICH'UAN AANDFUNG-FU jMaster George Hu's of c Tai Chi Club ainvites you to participate in a free in-Atroductory class of Tai Chi Ch'uan and JNorthern Shaolin Kung-Fu on Sunday AJanuary 27, i960 at 6:30, 4945 S. Dor ▼Chester (Enter on 50th St). The Club isin its sixth year at this location Tai^FChi is soft, flowing, balletic and a ra- ational’ means of self-defense It has®therapeutic, medicinal, physical and Ymental aspects as well. "The Shaolin Aboxing art promotes mental and ▼physical health, cultivates long life Aand provides an efficient means of^yself-defense. The arts emphasis on Agraceful movement and actions^facilitates the ideal." We are an open Tsystem All are welcomed Kung-FuAevery Sunday at 6:30. Tai Chi Ch'uan ▼every Sunday at 7:30. A ,0?*•V* FPARTY VBenefit for Cambodia Relief Friday.^kJan. 25, 9.00 5210 S Dorchester, on ▼"B" mini bus route $1 donation.HOMEWORKERSMillions to be made in mailorder Pro¬ven techniques Report $3 00 TELCO,P Q Box 7785, Chicago, III 60680 <SPACEMY ROOMMATE IS DESERTING TO <NY WANTED: female roommate toshare large, sunny, furnished 2 br apt AWasher/dryer, mini bus and CTA,near grocery $150/mo ASAP 241-6128 y*1:,V><UUUk szC’mon,spring Paulxxxxxxxxxx VVERSAILLES5254 S. DorchesterWELL MAINTAINEDBUILDINGAttractive ! V2 and2V? Room StudiosFurnished or Unfurnished$1921. $291Based on AvailabilityAt Campus Bus Stop324-0200 Mrs. Groak ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦we BuyUsed Records1701 E. 55th684-3375Court Studio |trr«.rni« GOLD CITY INNB«tUh\ T* < 1 IDH (.IIS F< HI TIIK. \TUK andCurtin \ TIIK COI.DKN KI CK F given * * * *by the MAROONOpen DoilyFri. - Sttii.. Jan. 1 d - 27 From 11:30 a.m.7:.‘iOSttndas to feOO p.m.5228 Harper 493-2559•S1 ..»0 otndrnl* / senior cili/rn* (ifmr Hmrpmr Court}Eat more for less.A Gold Mine Ot Good Food$2.30 **rnrral /\l'."»70(»S. 1 ni\rr>dl\7.>:i-:j.»« 1 * ^ Student Discount:10% for table service5% for take homeHyde Pork's Rest Cantonese FoodThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, January 25, 1980—19□THE CENTER FOR LATI.l AiiEIUCAi'l STUDIESAilDIHTERHATIONAL HOUSEARE PLEASED TO PRESENT"LOS PAYAS" on tour fromLa Paz, BOLIVIAPERFORrllHG INDIAN MUSIC FROii THE ANDES MOUNTAINSand Indian music from Mexico^ Nicaragua and other partsof South AmericaRene Vizcarro - Vocals, guitar, bombo (drums), huanckaraAdolpho Albino - Vocals, choquela, charango, tarka (flute),zampona (bamboo pipes)Freddy Aguilar - Vocals, kena (flute), zampona, choquela, tarkaFranklin Palomecue - Kena, tarka, accordion, zamponaProgram includes uolivian Folk dances by the 13QLIV.1MJLQLKLQR1.CGkuUP of Chicago, and dancing after the performancesJANUARY 26, Sat. 8 pm Assembly HallInternational House1414 East 59th Street / ChicagoAdmission Free *************************£**********_ _ ** ^n, ^ ** ■ *£ Jan. 29 Waxing Skis - first of the cross- *^country ski seminars. 7:30 pm Ida Noyes Hal|#Feb. 3 Birdwatching. Meet 7 amU of CUTING CLUBCALENDARRegenstein9 Day trip to Indiana Dunes12 Film: Journey to the Outer LimitsA climbing film. 7:30 pm Ido Noyes Holl23 Day trip to Polos Forest Preserve* Mar. 22 Spring break. Where do YOUwont to go?************** *********************** April Conoe trip in Indiana% May 10 Bike trip.*TBA Cross-country skiing. Where is the snow?* Membership $2 - for information coll******** Peg Dordol 753-4912John Hordis 363-5269Equipment rentals available to members **********•#vvvvvvvv v v v v vCONCERTS: FRI. 8:1 5 pm $4.50SAT. 3:00 pm 4.00SAT. 8:15 pm 5.50 d,s“"m)SUN. 7:30 pm 4.50Tickets on Sole at Reynolds ClubBox OfficeFREE WORKSHOPS: Sot. & Sun.IDA NOYES HALL