Vol. 89, NO. 34 The University of Chicago Copyright 1980 The Chicago Maroon Tuesday, February 12, 1980Elton to meet with CarterBy Dave GlocknerStudent government presidentJeff Elton has accepted an invita¬tion to be among 300 student bodypresidents from around thecountry to meet this Friday withPresident Carter, White Housestaff members, and members ofthe National Security Council.“The draft is going to be oneissue” at the discussions, Eltonsaid, but the meeting will alsocover other foreign policy and do¬mestic issues.White House aide Heather Parssaid the meeting is “an attempt onour part to solicit the advice andconcerns” of students, since manyof the administration’s policieshave a direct effect on them.The students will gather in theOld Executive Office Building at9:30 Friday morning, where theywill be briefed by national securityadvisor Zbigniew Brzezinski anddomestic policy advisor Stuart Ei-senstadt. Brzezinski and Eisen-stadt will also answer questionsabout administration policies,Pars said.In the afternoon session, stu¬dents will meet in groups of 30 withWhite House staff members to dis¬cuss foreign policy, energy, anddomestic issues.President Carter is scheduled toaddress the students and answerquestions later in the day. The con¬ference will end with a reception inthe state dining room of the WhiteHouse, where Selective Service of¬ficials will be present to answer questions about draft registration,Pars said.Elton will attend the conferenceas a representative of the Universi¬ty and will be expected to repre¬sent student views, according toPars.“I will be taking a position main¬ly against the draft,” Elton said.Dan BreslauSG president Jeff EltonHe believes graduate students aresplit almost evenly on the issue ofdraft registration, while under¬graduates oppose it. However,Elton plans to “sit down and talk toa lot of people before I go,” to con¬firm these impressions.Elton’s own views on the draftcorrespond closely to what he per¬ ceives as student opinion. He isagainst resumption of the draft,but believes that the government“should know where people are incase of an emergency.”Elton said he was uncertain whythe meeting is being held at thistime.“I know in some ways it’s a polit¬ical move, but I hope that it hasother motivations. “I’d like to seehow much they pay attention” tocomments from students, headded.“The meeting is not political,”Pars said. She denied that themeeting was an attempt by the ad¬ministration to defuse student op¬position to Carter’s draft registra¬tion proposal or to rally support forhis reelection bid.“We have been planning thissince October or November,” wellbefore the draft became an impor¬tant issue, she noted. However,Pars did not know whether theWhite House or the DemocraticNational Committee would pay forthe conference.Elton said he has not yet decidedwhich candidate he will support inthe 1980 presidential election, andthat he doubts his trip to Washing¬ton will sway him one way or theother.“Just because I’ve been invitedto the White House doesn't meanI’ll vote for him.”Elton learned of the meeting lastFriday when a Chicago Tribune re¬porter called to ask him for infor-continued to page six Dan BreslauPlacid Midway skatersThough the Olympics are 800 miles away, many Hyde Park resi¬dents are capturing the spirit of the winter games on the Midway. Bud¬ding Eric Heidens and Linda Fratiannes can be seen enjoying thespeed and grace of ice skating from early in the morning to late in theevening.U of C students who are sans ice skates may borrow a pair from thedesk in Ida Noyes from lOam-lOpm Monday through Saturday andfrom 4pm-7pm on Sundays.750 march downtown against draft; teach-in is Friday• Dan BreslauProtesters march down Michigan Ave.Intercollegiate group formsUniversity of Chicago studentsare too isolated from students atother colleges, according to thefounders of the Student Govern¬ment Intercollegiate RelationsCommittee (IRC).The IRC is the newest studentgovernment committee, foundedthis Quarter to “expand our rela¬tionships with other schools,” com¬mittee chairman Jennifer Gurahinsaid.At first, the committee will concentrate on helping student groups on this campus get in touch withsimilar organizations at other col¬leges to exchange information andplan joint activities, Gurahin saidBut eventually, committeemembers hope to sponsor inter¬scholastic events of their own, in¬cluding a meeting of student gov¬ernment representatives from Chi¬cago area colleges and interschoolsocial activities.Eastern schools have a long tra-continued to page six By Andrew PatnerMore than 750 people participat¬ed in a march and rally last Satur¬day protesting President Carter’scall for renewed draft registration.After meeting in the Daley Plaza,the protestors marched to North¬western University’s Thorne Hallon the Near North Side where theyheard speakers and joined in songsagainst registration and the draftStarting off a week of anti-draftactivites on campus, the Progres¬sive Union will sponsor a teach-inon Friday, February 15th.The downtown protest Saturdaywas sponsored by the Chicago Co¬alition Against Registration andthe Draft (C-CARD).Sidney Lens, a longtime peaceactivist and contributor to TheProgressive magazine deliveredthe opening speech and called forwidespread resistance to registra¬tion.“If there is going to be a draft,"Lens said, “then let’s draft thepresidents of the oil companies. If Idie, 1 don’t want to die for oil prof¬its. 1 want to die for social justicehere at home.“President Carter says he wantsto have registration, but no draft.He just wants all the young peopleto fill out little cards, to test theirwriting skills. He says they justwant to get your names. Well thegovernment already has yournames.“Government sneaks up on youslowly. In Vietnam they saidwe’re just sending some advisors. a couple of professors from Michi¬gan State University.” Then theybrought guns with them, those pro¬fessors. to train Diem’s secret po¬lice. They were all liars — Eisen¬hower with his ‘advisors’. Kennedywith his advisors’ and Johnson,the biggest liar of them all Theseliars unfortunately caused thedeaths of 55.000 Americans and amillion Vietnamese.“Now Carter is a liar too. Regis¬tration is the beginning of aprocess that will see thousands andmillions die and be maimed.”Several other speakers echoedLens’s remarks on the oil compa¬nies and the ability of the gover-ment to gather names without in-person registration.600 registerMore than 350 persons registeredto vote on Friday, the second andfinal day of the student govern¬ment-sponsored voter registrationdrive in the Reynolds Club bring¬ing the total number registered toover 600.The registration drive was origi¬nally scheduled only for Tuesdayof last week, but the Friday sessionw'as added when registrationforms ran out after only 247 peopleregistered Tuesday“We expected originally aboutthe same number as last time,maybe a slight drop.” student gov¬ernment spokesman Jeff Laskvsaid Friday. The size of Friday’s Ruth Deere, a representative ofthe Gray Panthers and the War Re¬sisters League, announced thatboth of these groups had con¬demned the President’s proposaland criticized the proposal to regis¬ter and draft women.“The President says he wants toregister women because of equalrights that we do not have. Weshould have equal rights, but equalrights to peace. We should not sayI want to fight too.”’During the rally a memorial ser¬vice was held for those killed inVietnam. A Southwest Side minis¬ter recalled the efforts to end thewar and the military developmentsin Vietnam. Several veterans whocontinued to page sixto vote herecrowd was unexpected, he said.Most of those registering on bothdays were students, many of w hornwere registering to vote for thefirst time. Lasky said. A muchsmaller number transferred theirvoter registration from their homedistricts.The enthusiastic response to thevoter registration drive mav leadstudent government to hold moreregistration drives in the future,according to Lasky. Persons whohave not yet registered, but stillwant to vote in the March 18 Illi¬nois primary must register onTuesday, February 19 at precinctpolling places. The Maroon willprint a list of those places.We’d like to discuss the careeropportunities Merrill Lynch canoffer you in We’II be on your campusWednesday, MARCH 5• sales Visit your Placement Office at5706 S. University Ave.• finance to pick up an application and signup for an interview.• operations management• electronic dataprocessing A breed apart.Merrill Lynch is an Equal Em¬ployment Opportunity employerand encourages applications fromfemales, minorities and all otherpersons.TUESDAY • FEBRUARY 12 • 8:00 P.M.()r«ian RecitalKENNETH DORSC.H. OrganistTrinitx Episcopal Church of ^ healon. Illinois^ ork> of Jan Pietcrsznon Swcclinck andJohann Sebastian Bach.Admission is without ticket and without charge. COMMITTEE OF ITBEIC FOEICY STUDIESErctim* SeriesAlderman Edward Burkecandidate for Suite's Attorney's offieew ill speak on“The Rolr thr Stair'sitlnrnry in ('nnU ( eninlvTuesday. February ID. I DBO1 :.T0 p.m.Wieboldl Hall. Room BOBGUADALAJARASUMMERSCHOOLUniversity of Arizona offersmore than 40 courses: anthro¬pology, art, bilingual educa¬tion, folk music and folkdance, history, political sci¬ence, sociology, Spanish lan¬guage and literature and in¬tensive Spanish. Six-week ses¬sion. June 30-August 8,1980. Fully accredited grad¬uate and undergraduate pro¬gram. Tuition $295. Roomand board in Mexican home,$315 EEO/AAWriteGuadalajaraSummer SchoolRobert L. Nugent 209University of ArizonaTucson 85721(602)626-4729oTCNINOr PAY|S ftwAC/ TAlSAmYOM VERSAILLES5254 S. DorchesterWELL MAINTAINEDCHINESE-AMERICAN BUILDINGRESTAURANT Attractive 1 x/t andSpecializiriQ in 272 Room StudiosCANTONESE AND , Furnished or UnfurnishedAMERICAN DISHES $192 to $291Open Daily11 AM to 8:30 PMClosed Monday131ft EAST 63rd Rased on AvailabilityAt Campus Bus Stop324-0200 Mrs. GroakMU 4-1062SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS ATTHE MEDICAL CENTER, CHICAGOInvites Applications for Degree ProgramsMASTER OF PUBLIC HEALTH (M P H )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 Eduration. Population Sciences and International HealthFinancial assistance is available through Public Health Traineeships and Re¬search Positions. Deadline to apply tor M P H Program is February 15 1980Deadline for MS. Dr P H and Ph D Programs is six weeks prior to the quarter in which the applicant wishes to enterFor further information, write or telephone:James W WagnerAssistant Dean for Student AffairsUniversity of Illinois at the Medical CenterP 0 Box 6998Chicago Illinois 60680(312) 996-6625The School encourages applications from qualified minority studentsCOME CELERR 4 TE THE EXt tl i \(,E OE 4MR4SS4DORSRETWEEN ISR 4EE 4 XI) EGYPTRfilK iit Hulrli C ourt Euest speaker: Dun Sliisfan. Dept. of |\>l Sri. HuifnEridav. February 15. 12 noon Students for Israel2 The Chicago Maroo.i, Tuesday, February 12, 1980The Mummified StudentTracking Down the Disease of AcquiescenceBy Richard Kaye“In case anybody under twenty-five stillwants advice from a man over fifty (and ac¬tually I know many that do) here is mine: bemore opportunistic, at least in this respect:Grab the education that you and yourparents are paying for. Understand that thiseducation will have the limitations which,given the history of Western civilization upto this point, it must have. But seek out theexceptions and the freaks. Seek out fine menof learning, fine critics of life: they exist.Explode into revolt when you have to, butnot when you don't have to ... by all meansexploit the university for your own pur¬poses, but in the way in which it can success¬fully be exploited and your interests dulyserved. Concede that the unliberated uni¬versity can still be of use; discover exactlywhat use it can be to you, then use it. ”Eric Bentley,“The Unliberated University” (1968)What is one to call the general spirit onthis campus these days — a weariness, adownright bored feeling, a communal capit¬ulation to academic drudgery, a winter’s de¬spair? Let’s first admit that it’s nearly im¬possible to generalize about the campussituation here as a whole (Regenstein isfilled with as many happy people as are thelocal parties) and instead look at what issupposed to be the central part of any col¬lege or university — the classroom, theplace of discussion, the arena where we aresupposed to argue over books, hear andmake arguments, listen to the professorsand other students, and maybe finally makeup our own minds.“Discussion” has always been this Uni¬versity’s great boast, and if one goes bysome of the now dusty memoirs of thisschool, there were indeed some intoxicatingarguments, wicked and heady classroombattles over Aristotle, Marcuse, and Hut¬chins. Allow for the usual romanticizing thatcreeps into some of these remembrances(... there was a rage to talk, to discuss, toarticulate, that surged through bars anddrugstores and love-affairs” goes onecheery recollection) and you still have a pic¬ture of the University as an intellectuallyexciting place to be. And although I’m notabout to mourn the loss of some period Inever lived through, I am going to startmaking noise about what I am noticingagain and again in the classrooms of thisuniversity. How new it is I do not know, butthere is enough rampant acquiescence andtoadying-up to professorial opinion in theclassroom these days to give the phrase“horse-whipped U. of C. student” a sad, pa¬thetic truth.Evidence? Let’s start with the now-epi¬demic phenomenon which most people canobserve in their own classrooms and which IBy Chris Isidoreand Dave GlocknerIt only happened twice last semester,but that was enough for Columbia Univer¬sity security officials, w'ho are determinedto put an end to flashing in the stacks of theschool library.The university has hired plainclothesguards to wander around the stacks andhas begun issuing whistles to wmen whoenter the stacks. Women are instructed toblow- their whistles loudly whenever some¬one bothers them of if they catch a glimpseof a flasher.******Stanford University faculty membersvoted unanimously last month to toughenundergraduate distribution requirementsat that school.Under the new' guidelines, students willhave to take a year long sequence of west¬ern civilization courses, and a one-semester course in each of seven fields:literature and fine arts; philosophical, so¬cial and religious thought; human develop¬ment, behavior, and language; social pro¬cesses and institutions; mathematics;natural sciences; and technology and ap-plied sciences. independently surveyed by peering in atseveral dozen classes. It’s called notetak¬ing, a creepy nervous twitch (“I’d just fallasleep otherwise!” one woman told me)which turns the classroom as give-and-takeexperience into the classroom as observableperformance, where obedient students duti¬fully record a professor’s remarks and hisrecitation of “facts”.It’s not, of course, the student’s faultalone. Any professor who is satisfied towatch a classroom of students busily recordhis or her words is a professor who has notlearned how to engage students in discus¬sion, a professor w'ho has np notion of how toprovoke people into an argument in aclassroom. It is usually a professor who isnot a terribly good teacher, unless our ideaof a teacher is someone who pleasantlywalks into a class, unloads his erudition onto the class, and then departs from the scenea not-uncommon situation in some of thelower-level, lecture-room size scienceclasses or civilization courses. (One needn’tbe a jock to be bored mindless, as most of usare, by the “Rocks for Jocks’ sciencecourse, where it helps to bring opera glassesto locate the professor at the lecture room’sStanford’s efforts to strengthen under¬graduate liberal education are similar tochanges in Harvard’s distribution require¬ments made last year.Northwestern’s "Big Ten Student Confer¬ence” last month like characters in anAgatha Christie novel.All Big Ten schools were originally invit-ed to the weekend conference to discuss front). Some of this University’s greatestclasses were said to be those of Harold Ro¬senberg, who banned notetaking from hisclasses because he wanted and enjoyed agood conversation.Bernard Shaw once maintained that thebest way to get at the truth of a matter is notto try to be impartial but have it debatedwith reckless partiality from both sides.What’s especially upsetting about studentswho take an ingratiatingly innocuousclassroom position is that it is not simply thestudents who are not “bright” or “aggres¬sive” who choose the path of least resis¬tance. When even the sharp people bow be¬fore professorial authority, what is one todo? Several quarters ago I sat in a philoso¬phy class of fourteen or so students (stu¬dents whose names the professor couldbarely-even at the quarter’s end-recall). Ihad always been rather intimidated by theprofessor’s obvious knowledge and bril¬liance, and so never said very much. Once Ispoke to a bright fellow next to me-someoneI always considered rather a professor’spet-and said something like, “This profes¬sor’s pretty well-versed in his subject, isn’tcommon student problems and arrange co¬operation between the schools. Wisconsinand Minnesota declined the invitationfrom the start, before it was late. Thenthere were eight.The Thursday before the conference.Ohio State called to cancel because of lackof airfare prevented their flight to North¬western. Then there were seven.One hour before the conference was tobegin, Iowa called to say that because of a“powership struggle”, between rival stu¬dent governments, they did not knowwhich delegates to pick Then there weresix.Indiana called at 2 pm on Friday to saythat a basketball game against Purduethat Saturday meant they were not to ar¬rive. Then there were five.Illinois was also missing from the con¬ference. A call to that school establishedthat the delegation had left, and their ab¬sence made organizers at both schoolssore. Then there were four.Purdue and Michigan left early on Sun¬day. before the end of the conference, leav¬ing only Michigan State and N.U. Alas,only twoBecause of the resounding success ofthis conference, another Big Ten confer¬ence has been planned at Michigan for thisOctober or November. How many schoolswill go to this one? Perhaps there’ll benone “No, he isn’t particularly,” the guy said.“He makes a lot of mistakes in class.”There was one of those dramatic pausesthat too rarely happens in life, and the guypiped up with: “But I don’t correct him.”This is an individual who is not shy, whowill not hesitate to argue with other stu¬dents, but who ever-so-kindly kept our classin blissful ignorance for a quarter becauseof respect for the professor?There are other examples, exampleswhich mean more since they involve wholegroups of people, entire classes. Not longago I attended a lecture by a professor visit¬ing from another university. The professortalked for an hour before a room of someforty people about some literary theory hehad been laboring over for several years. Ifound the entire lecture to be chock-full ofthe worst sort of literary jargon, but stupid¬ly kept quiet because I was among graduatestudents, who I figured knew better. Whenthe gentleman finished his “talk” he askedfor questions, and there was exactly onequery. Everyone else sipped sherry.One series of incidents stands out monu¬mentally in my mind as another example ofstudent fear in the face of academic judg¬ment. A new book was recently releasedwhich included the works of various Univer¬sity professors. I tried to find someone to re¬view it for the Literary Review. I spoke tofour graduate students, all of whom saidthey could not risk offending their profes¬sors by giving the book a less-than-favor-able evaluation. Finally I found someonewho agreed to review the book under apseudonym. Apparently a pseudonymwasn’t a secure enough cover, for the personnever turned in a review, or for that matter,his review copy of the book. “Incidents” likethese speak of the real death of intellectualactivity. Student acquiescence to authoritybecomes agreeable to nearly everybody in¬volved, and right now it’s the most subtleand pervasive anti-intellectualism oncampus.Powerlessness has traditionally been theposition which students have all-too anx¬iously allowed themselves to fall into. RalphNader pointed out last month in an articleentitled “Student Power 101” in Changemagazine that except for a brief period inthe sixties, it has been unusual for studentsto seriously question the bottom-line as¬sumptions about w’hat they are taught in theuniversity. “Most students accept the para¬meters of education as defined by their edu¬cators,” wrote Nader “simple because theyhave not been encouraged to look critically-during a time when critical thinking is trum¬peted as an institutional virtue-at this cor¬nerstone of their experience.” But whatstudent will bother to look critically at his orher education’s “bottom-line assumptions”so long as the ruling game is one in whichobsequiousness in the classroom is en¬couraged, or at best, not discouraged? Andjust how “critically” can certain studentslook at their professors when they believetheir professional or academic careers maybe influenced by professorial opinion? Thesituation of a good number of graduate stu¬dents on this campus is one in which theywork closely with their professors. That’sjust too close for critical discussion, particu¬larly considering the dreary job prospectsthese days.My friend Molly McQuade once expressedher frustration with some fellow students(whose lives seemed so easily dictated bythe University, whose egos were foreverbeing hurt by their professors’ estimations)by saying the following: it’s as if studentsleft behind their benevolent parents backhome to take on new. overly-concernedparents in the form of the University. The U.of C. becomes the new mom and pop (who,however, are conveniently absent on Satur¬day nights and Sunday mornings). We cometo value the University to the detriment ofour character, of our adult selves. It is thisreason, she said, that so many studentsseem to lack individuality Take some peo¬ple aw ay from the University and they abso¬lutely evaporate. This is the best explana¬tion I’ve heard for the classroomacquiescence and self-chosen vulnerabilityof a number of students here. Student acqui¬escence in class obliterates real intellectualdiscussion, putting the lie to our “official,”loud and preening talk of the great educa¬tion here.he?”Ktfo& yenThe Chicago Maroon, Tuesday, February 12, 1980 3U.S. GRADE "A' WHOLECHICKENU.S.D.A.SIRLOINSTEAKCELLOCARROTS12-02. CANSPEPSICOLA 8/209FRESH GRADE’ A" LARGEEC6S 53 do;SARA LEE 1 3 OZ.CAKES I2559*69*BAY’S ENGLISHMUFFINSBRAWNY PAPERBIGROLLTOWELSSALE DATES FEB. 13- 16thtot.CFINER FOODSSERVING53rd PRAIRIE SHORESKiMBARK PLAZA 2911 VERNONWhere You Are A Stranger But Once! FIEt NOCNTIMECCNCEF1JAZZ OF THE PAST THREE DECADES12:00 NOON WEDNESDAYREYNOLDS CLUB LOUNGESTANLEY H. 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'til nooni-LARRY CORYELL Feb. 15Cloister Club - 8:30Ida Noyes Hall$2.50 MAS Fee Payers$4.50 Others (Please note price correction)at the Reynolds Club Box Office Major Activities Board4 The Chicago Maroon, Tuesday, February 12, 1980 iiiiiiiiHiimiiiiiiiiimHiiiiimiiiuinimmimiHiiiumiiiMaroons “milk” Lawrence for first conference win600 on hand for “keg day”By Andy RothmanThe University of Chicago used theirsemi-slowdown offense to near perfection inthe second half on Saturday at the fieldhouse and came away with their first Mid¬west Conference victory of the season, 82-70.over the Vikings of Lawrence University.“We've been falling behind in our gamesso we haven't really had a chance to use it,”explained Chicago’s Vlad Gastevich, wholed all scorers with 23 points. Before the sea¬son started. Maroon Coach John Angelussaid his strategy in most games would be totry and build a small lead late in the gameand spread out his offense to “milk" timeoff the clock and try to take advantage of histeam's ability to drive inside. Saturday’sgame could not have fitted Angelus’ plansbetter.Chicago started its tallest lineup possibleto counter the height advantage Lawrencehad with 6’6” junior Jim Piotrowski and6’5” senior Rob Cohen in the game. Thoughboth teams switched their defenses on sev¬eral occasions during the first half, neitherteam led by more than five points(Lawrence, 34-29, w'ith 1:40 to go in the half)as the game was tied six times and the leadchanged to a different team 10 times. The Maroons came back from that five pointdeficit in the last 30 seconds of the half onbaskets by Pete Leinroth .< who wound upwith 19 points) and Ken Jacobs (16 points),w'ho scored on a breakaway after intercept¬ing a pass while Lawrence attempted tohold the ball for a 1st shot. Chicago trailed34-33 at the half.The second half continued with more ofthe same until Cohen committed his fourthfoul with 14:30 remaining in the game andwas removed. Gastevich then scored tobring Chicago back to within one. 44-43 with13:53 remaining in the game, starting astring of nine unanswered Maroon points.Eric Kuby’s shot from the top of the key with13:12 to go put the Maroons on top to stay.Cohen came back in the game almostthree minutes after sitting down and startedLawrence on a six point burst which cut theMaroon lead to two, 54-52 with 7:33 left. TheVikings managed to get within two oncemore, 58-56 with 6:08 to go, but Chicagoscored eight of the game’s next ten pointsand controlled play the rest of the way.The Maroons went into their slow-downgame with approximately 12 minutes re¬maining. Numerous drives by Kuby, who played a strong game, Jacobs and Gaste¬vich resulted in Chicago baskets. TheMaroons never really attempted to freezethe ball because, as Angelus explained,“Once you stop your offense, it’s often hardto get it started again.”The Maroons had some foul problems oftheir own as Mitch Price picked up hisfourth almost at the start of the second halfand had to spend some time on the bench be¬fore fouling out with 4:41 to go. Rich Martin(10 points), Jacobs and Leinroth all pickedup their fourth fouls with more than threeminutes left and Jacobs fouled jout with4:50 remaining. Kuby also fouled out, aftercommitting two fouls in 54 seconds, with 38seconds left in the game. No member of theMaroons starting team had less than threefouls left in the second half. Combine thefoul trouble with the fact that freshmanWade Lewis had to sit out the game with astrep throat and one can see that Angelushad some nervous moments in the closingminutes.W’ith Leinroth scoring eight straightpoints inside the last two mintues off of theslowdown offense, Lawrence was never re¬ ally able to challenge near the end, to thedelight of a huge “keg day” crowd at thefield house.The win ends Chicago’s six game losingstreak, which started at Lawrence on Jan¬uary 19. The Maroons are now 1-7 in the con¬ference and 5-9 overall. Lawrence is 4-5 and8-10. Chicago will try to crawl out of the con¬ference’s Eastern Division cellar on Thurs¬day night at the field house when they meetsuburban rival Lake Forest. The Forestersare a half-game ahead of the Maroons in thedivision and defeated Chicago on February1 at Lake Forest. You can also hear Thurs¬day’s game on WHPK, 88.3 FM, beginning at7:20 p.m.Everybody got into the act Saturday. BobMcCarthy of Tufts won the halftime freethrow contest. Dodd House took the kegKlemundt pushes women over GWBy Darrell WuDunnMary Kelmundt banked home a shot withfive seconds remaining on Saturday at thefield house to give the University of Chicagowomen’s basketball team an emotional onepoint win over George Williams College andextend the Maroons’ winning streak tothree. Earlier last week Chicago trashed St.Xavier in a district game, 85-39.When Chicago met George Williams lastyear. Chicago won by the same one pointmargin. Maroon coach Marcia Hurt felt thatwith the mementum generated by two deci¬sive victories earlier this week, her teamcould beat George Williams with a goodshowing.In the first half, Chicago played excellentdefense, holding the opponent below7 25points for the half. Unfortunately Chicagowas unable to produce an offense. “We took45 shots, but they just would not go in,” de¬scribed Hurt afterwards. Chicago’s superbdefensive play however, kept them close.During halftime. Coach Hurt told herteam that they played their best half of theseason despite being behind in the game.The second half, however, was just as good,if not better. The Maroons trailed by aboutfive points through the first eight minutes ofthe second half but with 10:34 left, George Williams had increased the lead to ten. Chi¬cago never let up. as they fought their wayback to tie the game at 48 with 4:07 left. Withjust 1:42 left, Chicago found themselves be¬hind again. 53-48. At that Doint. Klemundtsank two straight field goals to bring Chica¬go withone one with :45 on the clock. AfterGeorge W’illiams missed a shot, Chicago gotthe ball back with just 23 seconds left. AsChicago worked for the last shot, GeorgeWilliams fouled Klemundt with seven sec¬onds left. Neither of Kelmundts foul shotswent in and George Williams grabbed therebound and called for time. Chicago inter¬cepted the inbounds pass and then a very de¬termined Klemundt hit from the right side ofthe lane with just :05 remaining to give cni-cago the victory 54-53.Coach Hurt felt the Maroons played theirbest game of the year. In addition to Kle¬mundt, who scored 13 points, Nadya Shma-vonian had an excellent game leading thescoring with 25. Cheryl Flynn also had a su¬perb showing collecting 10 points despite re¬ceiving much abuse from the opposingplayers.ed the playing time among all ten players.Several times, she substituted all five posi¬tions at once. Her Maroons continued to dominate play as they did in the first half,forcing turnovers, controlling the rebounds,and running fast breaks. When the game fin¬ished, Chicago was ahead by 46 points,85-39.The scoring for the Maroons’ most prod¬uctive game this year was well distributedamongst the whole team. Five players fin¬ished in double figures including reserveguard Lee Badgett with 12 points. NadyaShmavonian topped the scoring with 17points in just over fourteen minutes. CenterOn Thursday, Chicago hosted districtteam, St. Xavier, easily their weakest oppo¬nent thus far. Chicago ran all over St. Xa¬vier throughout the entire game. Scoringleader Nadya Shmavonian was tagged withthree personal fouls in the opening threeminutes and was forced to sit out most of thefirst half Her talents, however, were notmissed as the rest of the team built up ahuge 25-2 advantage w'ith just ten minutesgone. At that point Hurt brought in severalof her backup players. Chicago coastedalong the rest of the half and led 39-15 aftertwenty minutes of play.During the second half. Coach Hurt divid-Ellen Markovitz, who had 10 in the first half,finished with 13. while Kim Hammond had 12Track-women run away with opening meetBy Sarah BurkeIt had been a long time since November 7.the day the University of Chicago women’strack team organized its squad for the 1980season, but the Maroons were ready. OnFebruary 2 the team traveled to IllinoisBenedictine for its first intercollegiatemeet, after competing in two intersquadmeets w ith numerous school records as w'ellas personal records being broken, and cameaway an easy winner over their hosts. Tri¬ton College and the College of DuPage by awinning margin of 27 points.The meet was the first true competitionfor the Maroons and they were especiallypleased because they displayed great depthby consistently scoring high in every event,while garnering only three first-place fin¬ishes. There were five personal records setat the meet, but it would be hard to desig¬nate one or two stars of the meet. It was atotal team effort which carried the Maroonsto victory.The meet started strong for Chicago andKaren Jensen ran an 8.49 second-60 yarddash, qualifying for the finals in a very fastfield. She improved her performance withan 8.46 in the finals, which was good forsixth place Hope Sirull blazed to a personalrecord of 8.12 in her qualifying heat but un¬fortunately was placed in the fastest heatand did not make the finals.Next up was the 60 yard hurdle with VickiPower and Beckv Redman finishing third and fourth, respectively. Redman, new tothe team this year, also provided somedepth in the field events, a weak area for theMaroons last year. She took second place inthe long jump with a mark of 15’2”.Redman’ performance in the field wascomplemented by the rest of the squad. Inthe long jump, all three Chicago entriesplaced. After Redman, Sara Wolper jumpeda personal best 13’74” to add three points tothe Chicago total. Barb Wery, with a jumpof 13’la4”, finished right behind in sixthplace. Also jumping, although in exhibition,was Nancy Flores, whose jump of 12/114”placed her seventh among the competitors.In the mile run, there was some concernas many of the members of the distancesquad were ill or injured. Yet, this factseemed to fire up Chicago as Cindy Sand-born and Vicki Powers placed first andthird, respectively. Sandborn held off a laterally from Syzczak of Triton, to win in5:39.4.Just a short time later she came back todouble in a Maroon sweep of the 880 yardrun. She outpaced a field of Chicago run¬ners, winning in a rather slow time of 2:39.6Kathleen Restifo pulled in second place,though she was well off her school recordtime of 2:30.5, set earlier this year. Finish¬ing up the scoring in the event were Sue Cor-neliu and Wery.The Maroons added to their lead withstrong showings in both the shot-put and thehigh jump Julie Chill finished fourth with a throw of 26’4” in the shot-put. while team¬mate Flores set a personal record of 23'5”,coming in fifth. Although placing seventh,Maureen Breen bettered her personal markconsiderably, throwing 20’2”.Redman and Karen Jensen turned in goodperformances in the high jump. Redman, infinishing second, just missed on her last at¬tempt to clear five feet and thus placed sev¬enth with a mark of 4’10”. Jensen’s highestmark was 4’7” which was good enough toearn third place in the event.Back on the track, the Maroons salvagedone point in the 220 yard dash when KarenJensen came in sixth with a 30.6 clocking.Carole Petersen and Allison O’Neill tookthird and fourth, respectively, in the 440 andtwo Chicago mile relay squads easily de¬feated their only challengers, Benedictine,to clinch the meet.Chicago Coach Marianne Crawford saidthat "it was a meet where everyone's per¬formances counted,” and the balanced scor¬ing truely reflects that statement.Next, the team wdll prime for its dualmeet w ith North Central, a school perennial¬ly known for its distance strength, whichwill be held this Saturday, February 16. inthe Henry Crown Field House at 12:00 p.mThe team is eagerly aw aiting this meet asthe two week break between meets hasgiven time for Chicago’s injuries and ill-neses to recover; the Maroons expect to beat full strength come Saturday, and NorthCentral. and Mary Klemundt had 11.The two victories last week raises theMaroons season record to 3-10, Thursday’swin over St. Xavier also lifts their districtrecord to 2-1.Yesterday the Maroons faced a toughteam from Concordia Teachers College (toolate for presstime >. Tomorrow the teamplays district rival Lake Forest in a gamewhich may determine whether Chicago goesto the state tournament. The game is sche¬duled for 7:30 pm in the field house and canbe heard on WHPK. 88 3 FM.Axinn runs hisbest two mileBy Allen SowizralThe men's varsity track team opened itsindoor season on a successful note by defeat¬ing both Valparaiso and North Park in adual meet at the Field House on Fridaynight.Valparaiso gave the Maroons a very toughfight, with the outcome undecided until thefinal relay. Coming into the 1600 meterrelay, the Maroons held a lead of 64-62 withfive points available to the winner of therace, which was won by Jim Read, EdDerse. Marshall Schmitt, and Dave Greenof Chicago. The Maroons defeated NorthPark much more handily, 77-50.The highlight of the meet w as the two milerun in which Mike Axinn broke his ownschool record in the event for the secondtime this season His time of 8:58.4 is morethan two seconds faster than his previous re¬cord of 9:01.0 which he set in the field houselast month. Axinn's teammate Art Knightwas second in the race with a time of 9:28,while Dave Taylor, another Maroon runner,was third.Coach Ted Haydon's Maroons thoroughlydominated the running events, capturing 66of 86 available points in those events TheMaroons also swept the mile run with ArtKnight posting a winning time of 4:28 fol¬lowed by Dan Welsh and Dave Taylor. Mar¬shall Schmitt, Tom Matiski and Dave Green .led another Maroon sweep in the 800. ChipPfaller and Frank Tamura pulled a surpriseby coming in first and second respectivelyin the fifty yard dash. Jim Read won thefifty meter high hurdles and Dave Greenwon the 600 meter run to help the Marooncause The Maroon’s best finish in the fieldevents was a win in the pole vault by JerryStevenson who cleared 11 ft.The Maroons have their next meet on Fri¬day in the fieldhouse at 7:00 p.m against astrong Wheaton squad and Wabash College.Dan Henderson of Wheaton is one of the pre¬mier milers in the area and figures to pushMike Axinn very hard in his first mile of theseason, quite possibly to another school re¬cord.The Chicago Maroon, Tuesday, February 12, 1980 5N.B"Jackie's playing hookey/Judy's playingpool/They both got caught for cutting/Got togo to summer school/Oh yeah, Oh yeah, Ohyeah." — verse from "The Return of Jackieand Judy," a song on the Ramones' newestalbum, End of the Century. The song is a se¬quel to "Jackie is a Punk" on the Ramones'first album, and is also, apparently, aboutRiff (Jackie) and Kate (Judy) in Rock 'n'Roll High School.Who's P.J.?Didja see Carrie? Remember the blond girlwith the red baseball cap? Okay, how aboutHalloween? The cheerleader type who wastotally flaky? If she registers, that's P.J.She's also the star of Doc's movie this Fri¬day night, Rock 'n' Roll High School.Anyway, Doc and the grey city are sponsoring a "P.J. Soles Be Alike Contest" on Fri¬day before the first show. That's right, "BeAlike," not look alike, act alike, or smellalike. Contestants will be judged accordingto how well they evoke the spirit of Riff,P.J.'s character in High School. Since thisquality isn't unique to P.J., anyone canenter: men, brunettes, or hamsters. Justevoke that spirit.And that's easy. We'll inform you in advance of what P.J.'s like in High School soyou can work out what you want. Prizes in¬clude Spring Doc passes, records, and anautographed glossy of P.J. for the winter.We hope everyone'll have a great time.Now, if you'd like to try, call Gary at684 0383, Jeff at 493-1184, or leave your nameand number at the grey city office, 753-3265.Or, if you're still unsure, the following interview may give you a better idea of that mys¬terious P.J. spirt.GC: What advice do you have for contes¬tants?P.J.: The main thing I tried to emphasize inthe age of riff was pure energy, you know,total franticness all the time. If she wasstanding still, her leg was shaking; or ifshe was sitting down, her arm was shak¬ing or her fingers were drumming on herknee or somthing. And the hair of course:wild and frizzy. I cut bangs for that char¬acter just because I thought the thickbang look looked very punk, althoughlater the director told me that when hewas in New York a lot of the girls came upand said "how come she didn't have reallyshort hair?" But I don't know, I've nevercut my hair so I didn't even think about itfor a second — I just thought wild andfrizzy hair would do. A lot of peoplethought I wasn't punk enough, but l wasn'treally trying to be punk so much as a com¬bination of cheerleader and punk. I wastrying to make her a sympathetic and avery realistic girl in High School, morethan just a freaky kind of chick. She had alot of niceness in her, and walked a reallyfine line so that everyone would really likeher.G.C: What in the movie best charaterizesRiff?P.J.: Well, ahhh ... as far as lines in themovie, the one that first comes to mind is"UP YOURS, TOGAR!!!"MoviesDaughter Rite (Michelle Citron, 1979): Thisstudy of relationships between mothers,daughters, and sisters has already been widely acclaimed. The director will speakabout her work after the showing. Shown inconjunction with English 297, TwentiethCentury Women Writers tonight at 7 inStuart Hall (Business East). There is nocharge and the public, including men, iswelcome.The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse (Vincente Minnelli; 1962): The silent version ofthis saga about an Argentine family em¬broiled in WWl made Valentino a star. Thisupdated version makes an actor of GlennFord, an arduous task by any standard. Thescript, however, is too long, convoluted andgarish; and most of the performances by aninternational cast are one dimensional.Minnelli seems more interested in convey¬ing the meaning of the story through visualelements — color symbolism, cinemascopecomposition, and setting. As usual, his flairfor the visual comes through, not mention¬ing his bizarre taste for garish melodramatomorrow at 8 in Quantrell. $1. Doc. —TSThe Lost Patrol (John Ford, 1934): A bunchof guys fighting in the desert get trapped atan oasis and try to stay alive. Pretty simple,but out of this starkness Ford constructs afascinating, almost Nietzchesque, study ofisolation. They have no reason for beingthere and nowhere to go. The group is alone,but so are the members within it. No onecares about another's past; history is likepoetry. All that counts is survival, but noone has a good reason for it. Less activethan most Ford films, it is still tense and en¬grossing, not an austere, Italian, existentialessay. Nor is it a sell-out Hollywood film.Rather than give us the classic group of reg¬ular guys, Ford gives us real regular guys.Most of the archetypal roles are understat¬ed and those that stand out have unusualtwists. Wednesday at 7:15 in Quantrell. Doc.$1. — G.B.Gunga Din (George Stevens, 1939): Rollick¬in' fun in heathen India. Three soldiers inHer Majesty's Service — Cary Grant, Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., and Victor McLaglen)foil (suppress?) a native uprising. The film,based on a Kilping's poem, chronicles thevalor and camaraderie of the three withgreat finesse and pay lip service to Kipling'simperialist message. Various people —Hecht and MacArthur, and WilliamFaulkner — had a hand on the script. Butthe movie is, deep down inside, a Westernwith a different cast of Indians. Stevens'sstudied directorial style surprisingly en¬hances the comic bits, but predictably re¬tards the action scenes. Tomorrow at 8:45 inQuantrell. DOC; $1 double feature. — TSOrpheus (Jean Cocteau, 1949): GeanMarais, Francois Perier, Maria Casares,Marie Dea. The Orpheus myth transposed toa modern French setting. Cocteau's fascina¬tion with the power of the real world and itsconflict with the imagined world. Classic ofFrench cinema. Replaces Black Moon —distributor's print problems. Black Moonshown next quarter. Orpheus Thursday at 8in Quantrell. Doc; $1.50.Organist Kenneth Dorsch will performworks by Bach and Jan Pieterszoon Swee-linck tonight at 8 in Rockefeller Chapel.There is no charge for admission. Draftcontinued from page onespoke made reference to Agent Orange, achemical defoliant used by the Army duringthe war that has been linked to illness inVietnam veterans and birth defects in theirchildren.Folksinger Fred Holstein sang ‘‘Down bythe Riverside” and the satirical ‘‘Gentle¬men of Distinction in the Army.” Oh, oh, Ihate to see them go/ The bankers and thediplomats are marching off to war.”The crowd was made up largely of youngpeople, but the vast majority of these weretoo old to figure in the President’s draftplan. There was, however, a contingentfrom Evanston Township High School.There were also groups from various politi¬cal organizations, Northwestern University,and about 25 students from the University ofChicago.Friday’s campus teach-in will feature ageneral session from 12 pm till 2 pm featur¬ing speeches by Sidney Lens, a contributorto the Progressive; A1 Sampson, formerdirector of the Chicago chapter of the South¬ern Christian Leadership Council.After the general session, four workshopswill be held in Cobb Hall from 1:30 to 4 pm.The workshops will deal with ‘‘The Philoso¬phy of Non-Violent Resistance”, “Womenand the Draft”, ‘‘The History of Foreign In¬volvement” and ‘‘The Question of a Nation¬al Threat — Is the U.S. Really ThreatenedAbroad?”After the workshops, another general ses¬sion is planned to hear reports from each ofthe workshops and to formulate resolu¬tions.IRCcontinued from page onedition of joint activities, but ‘‘we really aresort of isolated here,” said David Appel,who worked with Gurahin to found the com¬mittee. Organizations at other schools are“a tremendous resource,” because theyhave ideas which student groups here coulduse, Appel said.Appel and Gurahin said administratorsand students have encouraged the commit¬tee’s efforts, but financial support has beendifficult to obtain. This year’s committeebudget is ‘‘about zero,” Appel said, becauseneither the University nor SG has muchmoney available for new student organiza¬tions.Members of the IRC hope to be able to at-TUESDAYPerspectives: Topic-”The Religious Significance ofthe Iranian Conflict” guests Heshmat Moayyad,Fazlur Rahman, and John Woods, 6:09 am, channel7.Women’s Exercise Class: Meets 10:00 am, IdaNoyes.UC Gymnastics Club: Instruction available 5:30-8:00pm, Bartlett gym, free.Physical Education: Free swimming class for adults,7:30 pm, Ida Noyes.Outing Club: Film-“Journey to the Outer Limits”7:30 pm, Ifia Noyes.Lutheran School of Theology: Lecture ‘Why WeShould Divest; How We Can Live With It” speakerDr. Theo Kotze, 7:30 pm, LSTC Auditorium.Hillel: Israeli Folk dancing, 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes, 3rdfloor theatre.Organ Recital: Kenneth Dorsch playing a programof music by Jan Pieterszoon Sweelinck and JohannSebastian Bach, 8:00 pm, Rockefeller Chapel, free.WEDNESDAYPerspectives: Topic-“Contemporary Islamic Reviv¬alism” guests Heshmat Moayyad, Fazlur Rahman,and John E. Woods, 6:09 am, channel 7.Italian Table: Meets 12 noon in the Blue Gargoyleto speak Italian.Jazz at Noon:Percussion, Piano, and saxophoneconcert at 12 noon. North Lounge of ReynoldsClub.Commuter Co-op: Get together in Commuterlounge, 12:30 pm, G.B.l.Dept, of Biochemistry: Seminar-”Manipulations onthe Genome of Simian Virus 40” speaker KiranurSubramanian, 4:00 pm, Cummings room 101.PERL Lecture Series: “The Formation of LanguageAbout Class in Early Industrialization” speaker IraKatznelson, 4:00 pm, Swift Lecture Hall 3rd floor.Cog Com Colloquium Series: "Mechanisms for See¬ing Yellow” speaker Steven Shevall, 4:00 pm,B-102.Women’s Softball Varsity: Organizational meeting tend an intercollegiate conference at Har¬vard University this spring, but financialand scheduling problems may make thatdifficult. The Harvard conference is a fol¬low-up to last year’s ‘‘Little Eleven” confer¬ence, in which students from the eight IvyLeague schools, MIT, Stanford, and the Uni¬versity of Chicago met to discuss studentconcerns.Eltoncontinued from page onemation about it. ‘‘They knew about it beforeI did,” he said. The following day Elton re¬ceived a mailgram from White House assis¬tant Anne Wexler officially inviting him tothe conference.Although the White House will provideparticipants with lunch and a reception, itwill not pay their air fares. Elton said hehopes the University will come up with the$200 to $300 needed for his plane ticket.‘‘I would ask student government, butthey don’t have enough money,” he said.NewsbriefsProfessor wins medalJoseph V. Smith, Louis Block Professor ofthe Geophysical Sciences, has been award¬ed the Murchison Medal of the GeologicalSociety of London ‘‘in recognition for...dis¬tinguished contributions to crystallography,mineralogy, and petrology.” The MurchsionMedal is ‘‘probably the most prestigiousaward given” by the society according toPeter J. Wylie, chairman of the departmentof geophysical sciences. The award will bepresented on May 28.Republicans gatherCampus representatives from all studentorganizations supporting Republican presi¬dential candidates will be present tonight inthe Reynolds Club Lounge, across from theC-shop, to distribute buttons, pamphlets,and bumper stickers to interested students.From 7 until 9 p.m. members of the Ander¬son, Baker, Bush, and Connally committeeswill be available to discuss specific issues,to sign up volunteers, and to distrubutethese materials. Materials for Crane andReagan may also be available, although nei¬ther candidate has a campus committee.at 6:30 pm, Ida Noyes Library.Tai Chi Ch’uan: Meets 7:30 pm, Blue Gargoyle.Badminton Club: Meets 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes gymna¬siumWomen's Rap Group: Meets 7:30 pm. Blue Gargoyle3rd floor women’s center.Science Fiction Club: Meets 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes* Ev¬eryone welcome.Country Dancers: Traditional dances of England,Scotland, and New England taught. Ida NoyesCloister Club, 8:00 pm.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Illustrated Lec¬ture ‘The Arts of Islam” speaker Esin Atil, 8:00 pm,Oriental Institute, Breasted Hall.THURSDAYPerspectives: Topic-”The Role and Influence of Stu¬dents in Iran” guests John Woods. Karim Pakravan,Fariborz Maissami, and Paul Sprachman, 6:09 am,channel 7.Women’s Exercise Class: Meets 10:00 am, IdaNoyes.Graduate Library School: Lecture-’ What is Infor¬mation?” speaker Victor Yngre, 12 noon, StudentLounge, Graduate Library, School, Regenstein.Hillel: Faculty Lunch-” Judaism and the Rise of Soci¬ology” speaker Prof. Donald Levine, 12 noon, Hil¬lel.Lunchtime Concerts: American love songs concert,12:15 pm, Reynolds Club North Lounge.Kundalini Yoga: Class meets 5:30-6:30 pm, IdaNoyes East Lounge.Christian Science Organization: Meets 5:30-6:30pm, Gates-Blake 117.UC Judo Club: Meets 6:00-8:30 pm, Bartlett gym.Ski Club: Meets 7:00 pm, Ida Noyes.NOMOR: Committee meeting. 7:00 pm, Ida Noyesfirst floor lounge.Organization of Black Students: Film-“Lady Singsthe Blues” 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes.Table Tennis Club: Practices 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes 3rdfloor.Women Organized for Locker Room Facilities:Meeting. 8:30 pm, Reynolds Club North Lounge.Calendar6-The Chicago Maroon, Tuesday, February 12, 1980Maroon C4lassif/£dAD RATESMaroon classifieds are effective andcheap. Place them in person at theMaroon business office in Ida NoyesHall by mail to the Maroon, Ida NoyesHall room 304, 1212 E. 59th St.,Chicago, 60637. All ads must be paid inadvance. Rates: 60' per line (30spaces) for U of C people, 75' per lineotherwise. $1 for special headline.Deadlines: For Tuesday paper, 12noon Friday; for Friday, 12 noonWednesday.Display advertising rates areavailable upon request. 753-3263.SPACEFashionable north London tlat, fullyturn; available mid-Sept; min. let 6mos. 2-3 adults. Nr. shops, transprt.Olkin, 950 Lathrop PI, Stanford CA94305, 415-328-3153.SUBLET: Feb. 18 May 15. 2 bdrm.Furnished, in highrise near lake.$320/mo or less for one person.667 0638 evenings.Newly redone condo, Kenwood, on busroute, one bedroom, spacious decfireplace, bookshelves, new appl Bill947 6696/536-5790.Furnished room w/bath in large 3-brapartment available for Spr Qtr. Near55th on Cornell on C-bus and E W busroutes. Prefer female. $125/mo.684-6566Unfurn. garden apt. avail Feb. 1 forlease. Call PQ3-4508.FOR RENT 4 room apt. Excellentlocation 51st H P. Blvd. and Park.Available immed. Call Eloise 263-3600(am) or 752-3748.Furnished 4-room Apartment (onebedroom) available mid-Feb to midApr. Longer stay possible. Moderaterent is negotiable. Near Co-op.288-8643ROOMMATE NEEDED Near minibusgrocery laundromat $100 heat incl Call493-3109.For rent: 2 bdrm in 3 bdrm apt. March1. Large apt 54th and Woodlawn. Call753-4730 or 748-4521. $150/mo and $100deposit.SPACE WANTEDJANITOR and HANDYMAN servicesprovided in exchange for furnishedroom or apartment, preferablyprivate and close to campus.Experienced-references available.Please call John at 752-1287.Campus area, need 2 bdr. apt startlease late May-early June. Call 753-8342x1117. Leave message.PEOPLE WANTEDThe Department of BehavioralSciences needs people who want toparticipate as paid subjects inpsycholinguists and cognitivepsychology experiments. For furtherinformation call 753-4718.MAKE $40 (NO TAX DEDUCTED) INONE DAY-interviewers needed forstation WLS, Channel 7 primary election day poll in Chicago on march 18.Limited openings. Pick up applica¬tions immediately from Ms. Johnson,Career Counseling and Placement.OVERSEAS JOBS-Summer/yearround. Europe. S. America, Australia,Asia, etc. All fields. $500-$1200 mon¬thly. Expenses paid. Sightseeing. Freeinfo. Write: IJC, Box 52-11, Corona DelMar, Ca. 92625.SUBJECTS NEEDED: Third gradechildren needed for U of C study in¬volving simple perceptual tasks. Pays$5 for single 20 min. session. Call753-4731 for appointment Tu, Wed, ThI-5 pm, Sat. 9-5.PART TIME POSITIONS-S6.19/hr.any 15 hrs. Access to car. Call betweenII-7 pm 681 2660.Babysitter for two girls l and 3 yearsold faculty home Hyde Park for Satur¬days or Sundays all day 753-2702.WANTED Vietnamese-speaking interviewers to conduct personal inter¬views for research project. Call collectProf. R. Simon at (217) 333-1549 orevenings (217) 344-0037.Full time pre school teacher neededHarper Square Child Care Center. 3year old class, exp, pref. 538 4041Addressors wanted IMMEDIATELY!Work at home--no experiencenecessary- excellent pay. WriteAmerican Service, 8350 park Lane,# Suite 127, Dallas. TX 75231.Reliable and punctual secretary with excellent typing skills and com¬munication skills needed to answerphone, greet and direct visitors, anddo general secretarial work. Call753 4442 Leslie Evans. AA/EOE.Exceptional person wanted to cookclean and care for baby in South Shorehome. Top wages and benefits. 40 hrs.375 6353.We seek mothers of 14-16 month oldchildren to participate in a Dept, ofEducation study of mother and childlanguage. For further information call753 3808 days or 752 5932 evenings.We need your head! The twohemispheres of the brain process in¬formation in different ways. Men andwomen needed for interestingresearch in this area Subjects will bepaid. Call 753-4735 (9-5).PEOPLE FOR SALEExcellent, accurate typist w/legal ex¬perience will type papers and disserta¬tions or IBM. Reasonable rates.684-7414.ARTWORK posters, illustration,calligraphy, invitations etc. NoelYovovich 5441 S. Kenwood 493-2399.Typing done on IBM by college grad;pica type. Term papers, theses, lawbriefs, letters, resumes, manuscripts.New Town Lakeview area. Fast, ac¬curate, reliable, reasonable. 248-1478.TYPIST Dissertation quality, helpwith grammar, language, as needed.Fee depending on manuscript condi¬tion and your requirements. IBMSelectric. Judith 955 4417.Computerized word processing tomeet all of your typing needs. Perfectfor . manuscripts that will need revi¬sion/dictation/repetitive typing/f or m s/tables/statistical work.Reasonable rates! Nancy Cohen378-5774.SCENESAward Winning drama "A Man ForAll Seasons”: by Robert Bolt, starringKenneth Northcott, will be presentedsix times at Rockefeller Chapel onTwo weekends-February 22 andFebruary 29. Tickets are $2 andavailable at the Chapel Office.Gilbert and Sullivan's RUDDYGOREpresented in Kenwood AcademyAuditorium, 5015 S. Blackstone, Feb.29, March 1, March 8 at 8 pm March 2at 2 pm. Tickets at Mandel Hall BoxOffice.Women's softball varsity organizetional meeting will be held on Wednes¬day, February 13 at 6:30 pm in IdaNoyes Hall Library.LOST AND FOUNDLOST: one gold chain in mens lockerroom at the field house. Monday 11:30am 1-21-80. Reward. Leave message.Paul 3414, 753-2249.LOST: A gold and blue Michigan Ski-cap. Very important to me. If foundcall 684 1808INFORMATIONWANTEDWould anyone who saw a woman fallon the sidewalk outside Reynolds Clubon 57th near University on January 8please call 667-0425. This is not a legalmatter.SERVICESPsychotherapy and counseling.Students, faculty, staff welcome. Feeson a sliding scale; insurance accepted.Joan Rothchild Hardin, PhD.Registered Psychologist in HydePark 493 8766 days and eves, forappt.PERSONALSWRITER'S WORKSHOP PLaza2-8377.EUROPE this summer. Low Cost tour.Academic credit can be arranged. Callevenings. 752-8426.Unicorn, you will not elude me. I shallpersue your cloven hoofprints to theends of the earth.Dark LadyQ: What's the most provocative newradio show around?A: The Avant-Garde Hour, 88.3 fmThurs. 6-7 pm WHPK.Jesus Christ where did you get thatCadilaaac! HOWARD I'd do ANYTHING if you'dbe my Valentine!!! Hugs andkissesMJM: The Reader screwed up! Itwould have said-1 had hoped that wewould "get together". However, itseems as though you're not at all in¬terested. I'm confused, I feel abusedand I'd like an explanation. Rick.Hang in there Jo-don't take no shitfrom nobody-Mother Martin. PS Hap-py Birthday.Jill S. Want to get together and get ex¬cited listening to the Avant-GardeHour on WHPK this Thurs. at 6 pm?Philip Glass.BEAR, After August everyday will beValentine's Day. Have a happy V-Day.Love, Babe.SNOOKIES, truckloads of love fromyour sleepy sheepy. I'm yours till theend of time-Shoo Shop Shop.DULAC many happy VD's your notsecret admirer Jessi.BIRD LOVE belly to belly. Legs ent¬wined won't you be my lover. That'syou Daynala My Vegetarian Lambchop.LRB you lovely big brave woman-yougot a cute ass! Happy VD Yr RmmtWe are destined, when will you realizethis? I think only of the future whenwe'll have everyday together! Marryme, marry me - you know, together weare swell! I love you - love, Occupant.DAB ten hundred million xsweet andxjuicy kisses for you I'd give youkisses until my lips fell off! XOXXXHappy Valentine's Day to a!l of mylisteners, from America's favoriteearly morning DJ.To Loren my precious moment. LoveSuzieHappy Valentine's Day, Teri from theguy who taught you everything youknow about ice hockey.OH PATTY E., with the big roundglasses, and dark playful curls won'tyou be my valentine? Nerdy graduateadmirer.Expert from "Working on theLevine"—-"....the pie crust came offin his hot little hands, as the oven doorslammed against his wrists. A tearcame into his eye..." I'll work on theLevine a little bit longer, Happy Valen¬tine's Day.Tanti Bad and many happy returns ofthe day AvR and DC and Willie andMP.Happy Valentine's Day, Jumet. Youmay not know "This Little Piggy,” butwe love you anyway-Brian and Jay.SisyphusHappy V-Day-I'd still like to meet yousometime. K.To the Compton House Males: We'dlike to tip your cows! Happy Valen¬tine's Day frorrvyour female faction.Scott-I still love you-CraigAMAN FORALL SEASONSRobert Bolt's award winning drama"A Man For All Seasons” directed byRonald Falzone, will be presented sixtimes at Rockefeller Chapel on twoweekends-February 22 and February29. Tickets are $2 and available at theChapel Office.ROSE/PL ITT TIXDie. movie fheatre tickets at ReynoldsClub Box OfficeSAVE ON MOVIESRose and Plitt theatre discount ticketat Reynolds Club Box Office.UC HOTLINE 753-1777Got the Winter Quarter blues? If youwanf to talk, have a question or need areferral, try the UC Hotline-7 p.m.-7a.m.CRAFTY PEOPLEA 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 3290POLY SCI CONCENTRATORSANDINTERESTEDUNDERGRADSMeeting Feb. 12, 4 pm Pick Lounge"How to Study Political Science”Profs Mansbridge, Schmitter and Niewill discuss Pol. Theory, Com¬parative, and American Politicsrefreshments servedKISS KISSA singular Group is having a specialopen house for Valentine's Day.Creative gifts for you or your sweetie.Stop in at 57th and Woodlawn (in theUnitarian Church) Sat. Feb. 9. 11-4Refreshments.SKI RENTALSOuting Club now has x-country skisw/pin bindings and boots for rent tomembers. $5 during week, $8weekends. For membership call Peg753 4912 Mark 955-3290 or 753 8122.LEARN NORDICSKIINGClasses in cross country skiing duringFeb., Sat 10 am and 1 pm; Sun 1:30 pm$7 covers skis, lunch, lessons Spacelimited. Call Peg 753-4912 to registerGILBERT ANDSULLIVANRUDDYGORE at Kenwood AcademyAuditorium, 5015 S. Blackstone, Fri¬day, Feb 29, Saturday, March 1,Saturday March 8 at 8 pm, $4.50 and$6; Sunday March 2 at 2 pm, $3Tickets at Mandel Hall Box Office.WHO'S SORRY EDIENEW 2 drawer fNEW 6-ft. foldin Edie Loper, We d like to make a publicapology for the accident at the party.We couldn't help it...we were allwasted!PENNYHappy day, Valentine I love you.VOLUNTEERSWANTEDMarried students for consumer discussion group. Pay $10. Call 753-3633.FOTAMeeting Tuesday at 7:30 pm INH 218for all members new memberswelcome We still need people in¬terested in dance, drama, classicalmusic and a few other amazing thingsCall Moko at 241-5338 for further brightideas.CODERSNORC needs people for two types ofjobs demanding high accuracy, con¬centration, and attention to detailsOne job requires some typing skillsFamiliarity with computer terminalshelpful. The second job involvescoding complex materials for a national survey. Both jobs are full timeand begin immediately through June.Call 753-1121. AA/EOEANDREWANDREWANDREWHappy Valentine's Day, you littleM8.M!!! Love, Wilma, Betty,Natasha, Wendy, Nancy, Sweet PollyPurebred, Beany & Cecil, BroomhildaGarfield and the ChatterboxesHOHOSATB-SCHLHo-ho T Shirts will be on sale in theiles $59,00q tables S49.00- EQUIPMENT& SUPPLY CO.8600 COMMERCIAL AVENUEOPEN MON.-FRI.8:30-5:00SATURDAYSRE 4-2111 9:00-3:00 Cox Lounge iu:ju-i:30 Wednesday.3-2249 Rm 3402x.PERL LECTURESERIESTHE FORMATION OF LANGUAGEABOUT CLASS IN EARLY INDUSTRIALIZATION by Ira Katz-nelson Wed , Feb 13, 4:00 Swift Leeture Hall, 3rd floorAVANT-GARDE HR.This week a special 90 minute showfeaturing Lutoslawski's 3 poems ofHenri Michaux, Steve Reich's musicfor a Large Ensemble, Penderecki'sErr.manafionen, and I of IV by PaulineOlivero S. Thurs. 6-7 pm WHPK-FM88.3.CLERKTYPISTSClerk typists needed to assist centraloffice supervisors in a variety ofclerical tasks associated with the datacollection portion of a iarge scalesurvey. Duties include extensiverecordkeeping and typing cor¬respondence Accuracy and attentionto detail essential. Typing (45 wpm)required Previous office clerical ex¬perience helpful Begins immediatelythrough May $4 00 $4 25 An Equal Opport u n i t y / A f f i r m a t i ve ActionEmployerSCOTTYTo my windy city love from your color-ful’Colorado fiance Like the daffodilsin bloom, birds chirping in trees, snownewts in winter and rock newts in Spring, dancing in fairylands minute byminute, Mum's in Brown Country andMateus at the beach A dreamerlives ..much as my love for yougrows Forever Happy Valentine’sDay Sunshine Love Poogieftitj/e J7/ 7/^flower —)kop1308 E. 53rd St[b 643-4020FTDFloristflowersforalloccasionsl HouseTHEFRIDAY cilrr»s presentsSECRETFEB.15 LIFE OF WALTER MI TTYwith DANNY KAYE7:30 8. 10:00 PM. Adm.Sl.50The Chicago Maroon, Tuesday, February 12, 1980 7ONE YEARMASTER’S DEGREEPROGRAM INPUBLIC POLICY STUDIES-Applications for study during 1980-81 arenow being accepted by the Committee onPublic Policy Studies in Wieboldt 301.For further information, call 753-1896Eligibility:Before enrolling, students must havecompleted at least one year of graduatestudy at the University.Seniors in The College should inquireabout the Two Year Program. tial special special special spece pa —toMatoSJtoa.toSJtoa.to to"OtootoDtoftSJtoCLto Hi-backWalnutRopeRockerreg. $89.95nowWhile quantities lastSale ends Feb. 2020% off most itemsMon-Sat 10 am to 6 pmSun 12 noon to 5:30 pm to"Otoncooley'sIn Harper Court5211 S. Harper Avenue363-4477 toT>toftto■mm 10Jeds special special special popStill the ChampOver nine million Americansstill prefer to do their• situps where theirfathers did theirs— at the local YMCAForbes MagazineThe Gtness professionals:e highly trained professional staff• racquetball, handball and squashcourts• full size gymnasiumse indoor swimming pool• private locker facilitiese fully equipped exercise and weightrooms• whirlpool, sauna and steambath• risk factor and exercise consultationREGISTER NOW for a one-year introductorymembership in the YMCA Men’s or Women’sFitness Center and receive a• $31.50 discount• Free racquetball racquet• Free individual fitness evaluationIntroductory Offer$31.50 Offon a Men’s or Women’s Fitness CenterMembership. This discount for newmembers only. Also receive FREE• Omega Racquetball Racquet• Fitness EvaluationPresent this coupon at the Hyde ParkYMCA through February 231400 E. 53rd Street 324-5300 announcesNEWHOURS:9 A.M.-9 P.Mfor your convenienceStop in for coffee anda pastry on your wayto the office or to class.In Ida NoyesWE NOW HAVEHaagen- Dazs Ice CreamThe Very Best45c Single Scoop