The Chicago Maroon“Solitary, singing in the West, I strike up for a new world.” —Walt WhitmanVol. 89, No. 35 The University of Chicago Copyright 1980 The Chicago Maroon Friday, February 15, 1980By Jeff CaneNine faculty members attainedacademic security, when theywere awarded tenure in the annualDecember 15 decisions.The decisions represent two-thirds of tenure decisions made inthe past year. Several of the ninefaculty members promoted to as¬ sociate professor were:John Hertz in the department ofphysics and the College.Douglas Laycock in the LawSchoolWendy Olmstead in the New Col¬legiate Division, committee onideas and methods, and programchairman of Politics, Economics,Rhetoric and Law (PERL).Neal CohenFirefighters strikeFirefighters in the City of Chicago went out on strike yesterday de¬manding a contract. Firefighters had offered to answer calls duringthe strike but the city administration refused. The strike has been 96percent successful.University administrators have been meeting during the past weekto prepare contingency plans for the strike.According to Jonathan Kleinbard, vice-president for community af¬fairs, administrators have held meetings with housing, hospital, andInternational House officials.In the event of a fire during the firemen’s strike, Kleinbard said theUniversity advises students to take the following steps:1. Pull the fire alarm.2. Dial 911, the city emergency number.3.Call campus security to inform them of the fire.4. “Get the hell out of the building.”Kleinbard said that in recent weeks University officials have beenchecking fire extinguishers and other fire equipment. The securitysystem will serve as the central dispatch area for information con¬cerning campus fires.Kleinbard said that in case of any type of fire during the strike stu¬dents should use common sense in determining a course of action.He suggested immediate evacuation of buildings if a fire breaks out.It would be unwise to remain inside, because firefighting equipmentwould not arrive, he said. John Perry, in Near EasternLanguages.Lucia Rothman-Denes in the bio¬physics and theoretical biology de¬partments and the College.Richard Shweder, in the depart¬ment of behaviorial sciences(human development) and the Col¬lege.Hugh Wilson, in biophysics andtheoretical biology departmentsand in the College.The other two decisions wereclinical appointments in the Medi¬cal School. Both were men.In other appointment decisions,70 assistant professors, including17 women, were reappointed toone, two, three, or four year terms.Six professors were fired and four¬teen professors have resigned.Four of the terminations were inthe Humanities Division. Tenuredecisions involved 103 assistantprofessors this year. The first ten¬ure review for a faculty member isusually held in the last year of theperson’s six or seven year term ap¬pointment, which is the academicversion of a contract. Tenuremeans a salary increase of about 5percent and permanent promotionto associate professor, and be¬comes effective at the beginning ofthe department’s academic year,either July 1 or October 1.The process of tenure decisionsinvolve the tenured members ofeach department, the dean of thedivision, the provost, and the presi¬dent of the University'. Recommen¬dations from departments pass tothe dean or the provost. These rec¬ommendations are generally ap¬proved by the provost.“Although we are reducing thesize of the overall faculty, thenumber of recommendations isnever a fixed number,” said Pro-continued on page three Wendy Olmstead Neal CohenHugh Wilson Neal conenCampus anti-draft activities setA week of planned activityagainst registration and the draftbegins on campus today, as theProgressive Union (PU) is holdinga day of workshops and discussion.The University of Chicago Coali¬tion Against Registration and theDraft (UC-CARD) will be sponsor¬ing a series of teach-ins nextThursday, and will hold a demon¬stration the following day, Friday,February 22. Both groups will bemanning tables around campusnext week. A calendar of thePERL lifts moratorium on applicationsBy Neal CohenThe PERL (Politics EconomicsRhetoric and Law) program willonce again accept applications foradmission according to WendyOlmstead, the program’s director.The decision to lift the moratori¬um was finalized in a noontimemeeting Thursday between Deanof the College Jonathan Z. Smith,Olmstead and other departmentalheads.According to Olmstead, after ayear’s reevaluation the program will immediately be able to accom¬modate students.The announcement dispels thepossibility of any merger betweenthe Public Affairs program and thePERL programs as previously re¬ported in The Maroon.Because the one year moratori¬um did not allow last year's firstyear students to apply to PERL,Olmstead announced that she willbe accepting applications immedi¬ately. Second—year students havebeen encouraged to apply as soonas is possible to Olmstead in orderto align their remaining courses this year with the PERL require¬ments. In the past, the PERL pro¬gram has only accepted first yearstudents.Olmstead said that first studentsinterested in the program shouldapply no later than April 1 for nextyear’s program.Olmstead expressed a willing¬ness to work with second year stu¬dents inconvenienced by the mora¬torium.Those interested can make ap¬pointments with Olmstead’s secre¬tary from 9 am- 2 pm 753-4121 events follows:Today, February 15 PU Work¬shops• Opening session. 12-2 Ida NoyesCloister ClubThis will be an indoor rally, withentertainment and speeches byA1 Samson of the Southern Chris¬tian Leadership Conference(SCLC), Ron Freund of theClergy and Laity Concern, andrepresentatives from Veteransfor Peace, Women for Peace andthe Progressive Union. Studentsshould bring lunch.• Workshops/Discussion Sessions2-3:15 pm1) Nonviolent Resistance. Room116, Cobb2) Past U.S. Interventions: Viet¬nam and before, Room 319,Cobb3:15-4:40 pm*1) Women and War, Room 116,Cobb2) The Current Crisis in the Mi¬deast, Room 319, Cobb• Closing Session, 4:30, QuantrellAuditoriumThis will include a wrap up of theworkshop/discussion sessions,and speeches by Ruth Deere ofthe Gray Panthers, and Progres¬sive Union representative Primi¬ tive RodriguezThursday, February 21 - UC-CARDTeach-ins12-4 pm, Quantrell AuditoriumThis will be a series of five paneldiscussions dealing with .1) The Economics of the Draft2) The Social Impact of theDraft3) Conscience Objector Statusand Personal Alternatives to theDraft4) History of the Draft, and USForeign Policy5) International Political Af¬fairsPanelists presently lined-up forthe teach-ins are University pro¬fessors John Coatsworth. DonaldMcCloskey, Harry Harootunian.Ira Katznelson, and PhilippeSchmitter, activist Sid Lens, Vet¬erans for Peace representativeMike Woloshin, Former SDSmember, and Spartist Leaguemember Steve Green, and repre¬sentatives from various churches.Friday, February 22 - UC-CARDDemonstrationNoon - 1 pm. Hutchinson CourtA complete set of speakers is notyet lined up, but Studs Turkel is li¬kely to speak— Chris IsidoreUniversity gives tenure to 9Dixon and Scott leading inU.S. Senate primary racesBy Greg MizeraSecretary of State Alan J. Dixon and At¬torney General William J. Scott appear tobe front-runners in the March 18 primariesto decide who will run for the Senate seatbeing vacated by Adlai Stevenson III.In a recent Chicago Sun-Times/WMAQ-TV statewide poll, 46 percent of those sur¬veyed said they would vote for Dixon in theDemocratic primary. On the Republicanside, 43 percent said they would vote forScott. The second-place candidates in bothparties received 18 percent support.Another Sun-Times/WMAQ-TV pollshowed Dixon leading Scott in a nonpartisanelection by 57 percent to 28 percent, with 15percent undecided.Dixon, the Secretary of State since 1977,points to the decrease in the state payrollover the last two years as evidence of hisability to cut waste in government spend¬ing.Part of the decrease, according to Dixon’ssupporters, is attributable to his support ofsunset laws, which provide for the abolitionof government agencies every few years ifthey cannot prove to a review committeethat they are socially necessary or desir¬able. Dixon has said that he will proposesunset laws at the national level if elected.Dixon has supported a wide range of pro¬gressive legislation in he past, including theEqual Rights Amendment and what Dixoncalls “realistic affirmative action.” Cam¬paign aide Wade Nelson said this meant “aphilosophical commitment” to opening op¬portunities to minorities, but said that Dixondoes not favor specific guidelines or quotasto help achieve this goal.On the other hand, Dixon is opposed toabortion on principle, except in cases ofrape or incest, or when the mother’s life isendangered.He has criticized efforts to create a na¬tional health plan, saying that resulting bur-reaucracy would be too expensive and toodifficult to manage.Dixon supports “voluntary co-operation”as the best way to keep down health carecosts, according to Nelson.Dixon has backed up President Carter’sforeign policy in general but disagrees withthe president on the need for registration fora draft. He has said he is “unconditionallyopposed” to drafting women.One very important factor in Dixon’sfavor is his relatively large campaign fund.Dixon had raised $514,455 by December 31 and plans to spend about $750,000 in the pri¬mary. By the same date his opponents AlexSeith and Robert Ash Wallace had raisedonly $71,200 between them.Attorney General Scott is currently beingtried in Chicago for alleged tax fraud. He isaccused of understating his income by$50,000 on his federal tax returns from 1972to 1975.During the trial Scott has avoided activelycampaigning in any way, saying the trialand his duties as attorney general leave him'no time for political activity. His opponentshave accused him of using the trial as ameans of escaping debate and thus protect¬ing his lead in the polls.Some Republicans have also said thatScott should drop out of the Senate race.They claim that even if found innocent hehas attracted too much adverse publicity todefeat a Democratic opponent. Scott, how¬ever, has said that he does not intend to dropout “either on political or legal grounds.”Although Scott has spoken in favor ofsome kind of tax reform, his position onmost issues remains unclear or unknown.His campaign staff declined to discussScott’s views but one aide said that theywould be made public “probably within twoweeks.”Alex Seith, a Hinsdale lawyer, finishedsecond to Dixon in the Sun-Times/WMAQpoll.This is Seith’s second bid for the Senate,having lost to Charles percy in 1978. Duringthat campaign, widely regarded as one ofthe dirtiest in recent state history, he alien¬ated some voters with his personal attackson Percy. He also ran up a debt of $1.2 mil¬lion which has not yet been repaid.Seith’s support seems likely to come fromconservative Democrats who seek a realis¬tic alternative to Scott. He has called for abalanced federal budget, saying that a “keypart” of his domestic policy would be to stopthe “chronic deficit spending of the Federalgovernment.”He has also proposed a Take Home Payprotector plan which would adjust the rateof federal taxation to the cost-of-living. Theidea, according to Seith, is to insure that anindividual’s income keeps pace with infla¬tion.Seith is an author of many tratises on in¬ternational relations. He promises that ifelected he will try to establish “a new inter¬nationalism” in American foreign policywhich would be more considerate of theneeds of Third World nations.Playgirl’s Man of the 80s?The University has produced many NobelPrize winners, but our first beefcake pin-upwinner is Jerry Stephenson. The fourth-yearphysics undergrad, one of 15 finalists inPlaygirl magazines’s “Man of the Eighties”contest, entered the competition for a lark.And for the $25,000 in prizes.“I’m not a very inhibited person,” Ste¬phenson told The Maroon. He was inter¬viewed and photographed last November byPlaygirl staff members, who asked him“some good, and some superficial ques¬tions.” His answers were condensed into aseven-line profile that accompanies his nudephoto in the current issue of Playgirl. Ste¬phenson thinks that the magazine wanted tomake sure that he conveyed a Playgirl Per¬sonality.“A Playgirl Personality is not just a sexobject. He is neither a big brute, supermacho, nor a sexual machine. He is an ‘all-around man.’“They played up my sensitivity — my in¬terest in philosophy courses. And I thinkthat coming from U of C, I was the intellec¬tual of the contest.”Although all of the contestants were ques¬tioned about their hobbies or extra-curricu¬lar activities, Playgirl didn’t mention thatStephenson is a pole-vaulter for the UCTrack Team. Coach Ted Haydon thinks thatit’s “great” that Stephenson became a final¬ist though, as do all of his friends, and mostof his family.“My mother thinks it’s cute, and the restof my family thinks it’s great. But hopefullymy father will never know,” says the native of Versailles, Missouri.Anyone wishing to vote for Jerry for “Manof the Eighties” (and he needs those votes towin) should send a postcard with his nameon it to Playgirl, 3420 Ocean Park Blvd.,Santa Monica, CA 90405.— Rebecca Lillian2-The Chicago Maroon, Friday, February 15, 1980 Alan Dixon William ScottAt the same time Seith favors a three-to-five percent increase in defense spendingand says that even before the Soviet invas-tion of Afgahnistan he had serious reserva¬tions about the SALT II treaty. Among thesereservations he lists the need for a guaran¬tee that no Soviet nuclear misles will be sent to Cuba and a limit on the use of SovietBackfire bombers.Profiles of the other candidates for U.S. Sen¬ate will appear in the Maroon on Tuesday.NewsbriefsHearing on CondosThe second in a series of public hearingsstatewide on condominium legislation willbe held Monday, Feb. 18 from 7 pm to 10 pmat the Center for Continuing Education, 1307E. 60th St.Among those expected to testify at thehearings are condominium owners, officersof condominium associations, communityleaders, and real estate and financial pro¬fessionals. The hearings are sponsored bythe Joint Legislative Condominium StudyCommission.Coffee for AndersonThe Anderson for President Committee issponsoring a coffee house Monday nightwith Jean Bradner, Illinois Coordinator ofthe Anderson for President campaign.The coffee house will be held at 7:30 pm inthe Resident Master’s lodge of PierceTower.Internship deadlinesThe Office of Career Counseling andPlacement wants you to know about two in¬ternship programs with imminent applica¬tion deadlines:The 1980 Federal Summer Intern Pro¬gram employs students with practical expe¬rience in a Federal activity related to ca¬reer interest. Two thirds of the positions arein Washington D. C., with the other third lo¬cated throughout the country. Undergradu¬ates must have two years of credit towardtheir degree by June, and must rank in theupper third of their class. Graduate studentsmust rank in the upper half of their class.All applicants must show evidence of lead¬ership ability, and must be returning toschool in the fall. Applications are due in theoffice by March 1.The Environmental Intern Programplaces students with professional environ¬mentalists. Applicants are recruited nation¬wide, and apply to specific programs in Ca¬lifornia, the Midwest, and upper NewEngland. Applicants are selected with equalconsideration to academic qualificationsand demonstrated interest in environmentalconcerns. Applications due by March 3.For more information about these andother internships, contact the Career Coun¬seling Office on the third floor of the Reyn¬olds Club.Israel-EgyptcelebrationLooking for something to celebrate?For the first time since Israel’s birth in'1948, an Arab nation has recognized Israel’s right to exist. Egypt and Israel are sche¬duled to exchange ambassadors today, andthe Students for Israel plan to mark the oc¬casion with a rally in Hutchinson Courttoday at noon.Dan Shiston a professor at Haifa Universi¬ty in Israel, will speak at the rally. The Stu¬dents for Israel have invited all Arab stu¬dents on campus to attend the rally.Turner on Malcolm XDr. James Turner, Director of the Afri-cana Studies and Research Center at Cor¬nell University will speak on “Malcolm X’’this Tuesday, Feb. 19 at 7 pm in Ida NoyesHall. Admission is free.The lecture is sponsored by the Organiza¬tion of Black Students as part of Black His¬tory Month.Lithuanian occupationDo you know who Algis Rekasius is?We don’t either, but he (or is it she?) willspeak tonight at 7 pm in Ida Noyes Hall on“A Contemporary Outlook on the Occupa¬tion of Lithuania.”How many Russians are in Lithuania’’What do they do when there are no rebels tofight? Does the Lithuanian situation pose aserious threat to world peace? Where isLithuania, anyhow? Answers to these ques¬tions and more tonight at 7.Woodward Court lectureSmith explores secular view of religionLORD CRAM Nine faculty receive tenurecontinued from page onevost Gale Johnson. The administrations has“no power of iniative” in regards to the ten¬ure process he said. Letters announcing thefaculty member's promotion originate inthe office of the president.Most tenure decisions are made on De¬cember 15. The appointment statistics werejust released by the provost’s office lastweek, after an uunusual delay. Universitypolicy since the early 1960s has been not to disclose the names of those faculty-members considered for tenure nor thosewho receive it.The size of the faculty has gradually di¬minished by one to two percent each year,since the early 1970s. More professors retireor are fired each year than are hired Thishas been a trend common to most universi¬ties. Johnson noted that there has been a“modest increase in the number of women”on the faculty. Women faculty members re¬presented one fourth of the cases consideredthis past year.Afghanistan.“So, too, the anti-war movement, whichbegan with religious pacifist groups like theCatholic Worker Movement, the Quakers,and the Fellowship of Reconciliation, andthen expanded rapidly. I’m convinced thatRichard Nixon would have served out histerm had not Billy Graham been shockedpublicly by (Nixon’s) failure to tithe himselfproperly and by all those “godddamns,”“fucks,” and “shits” in his tapes. That of¬fended the voting breadbasket of thiscountry, which remains a wee bit left ofFundamentalism.”About that almost “Fundamentalist” vot¬ing public, Smith says, “We don’t necessari¬ly get a large representation of that kind ofstudent on the campus, but we have morethan you would think — and they tend toshow up in mv classes.”Smith, who was born in New York city,graduated from Haverford College in 1960and attended Yale’s Divinity School and de¬partment of religious studies, where he re¬ceived his doctorate in 1969. He taught Yale,Dartmouth, and the University of Californiaat Santa Barbara before coming to Chicagoin 1968.Turning again to the topic of his lecture,Mr. Smith describes religion as “a very low-profile pair of glasses through which you seethe world. It’s very hard, sometimes, to con¬vince somebody that he has the glasses on.In the university, you have the privilege oflooking at somebody else’s religion; youcannot begin with the assumption thatevents are unintelligible. In the lecture. I’llsuggest some ways in which we can makeJonestown intelligible, ways which areprobably familiar to most people.”Smith's talk w'hich is the 149th WoodwardCourt lecture, will take place at WoodwardCourt, 5825 S. Woodlawn. at 8:30 pm on Sun¬day. A reception and discussion will follow .College Republicans sponsored an open house from 7pm-9pm last Tuesday in theReynolds club lounge. Pictured above is the Connally for president committee, solicit¬ing voters and passing out literature. Other committees represented at the open housewere the Anderson, Bush and Reagan group.Republicans party uan BresiauBy Peter Chapman“The Devil in Mr. Jones — Religion in theContext of Human Sciences” is the title ofthis Sunday’s Woodward Court lecture, to bepresented by Dean of the College JohnathanZ. Smith.“The title is a play on my professorship,”says Smith, “which is professor of religionand human sciences.” Smith is also a pro¬fessor in the Divinity School departments ofthe New Testament and Early Christian Lit¬erature, program coordinator for religionand the humanities, and acting master ofthe New Collegiate Division.Religion in the context of human sciences,Smith says, “means studying religion not intheology, not in the Divinity School, but reli¬gion as studied in the university. This is onlya very recent possibility — 100 years ago inEurope and only 15 or 20 years ago in thiscountry.-The purpose is to move the study ofreligion out of a religious context and into asecular context.”In his lecture on Sunday, Smith will exam¬ine the case of Jim Jones and Jonestown asan example of this method of study.“It’s a tough case,” he says. “I’ll say thatit is the major religious event in the lastthousand years, and has not been interpret¬ed (as such) by anyone in the religious field.In fact, it is only because I am within an uni¬versity context — rather than a seminarycontext — that I am able to do so.” Smithsays that seminarians have dismissed Jon-estow-n as the work of the devil, or the deal¬ings of a minor cult, and therefore none oftheir business.”Smith stresses the importance of religionin news matters, such as the recent eventsin Iran, Afghanistan, and Ireland. “Ourpresident has all but declared a Holy War onIran, and in Afghanistan we see that Com¬munist country taking over the deeply reli¬gious nation. People think that because theBible says they had a piece of land, they stillhave it — that is a very powerful force.“In this country . . . Judaism tries to find Neal CohenWoodward Court lecturer Jonathan Smithsome sense of ritual, a sense of ethnicity.Catholicism tries to come to grips with so¬cial issues in very difficult ways. Protes¬tants experience conservative revivals.Islam, too, for the first time in its historyfaces modernism. Then we have all thesethings w'hich we glibly call “cults.” Whatwe’re seeing is the ‘not nice’ side of religion.Certainly, Jonestown shows it at its most ex¬treme.”The role of religion in social issues hasbeen underappreciated, according to Smith.“The civil rights movement certainly beganas a religious movement,” he says. “For some, it stopped being a religious move¬ment, and others never saw it as one. Butcertainly what started out as a religiousmovement became the major social revolu¬tion w’e’ve gone through in this country sinceWorld W’ar II. We got into the Vietnam W arlargely as a religious issue: we wanted tosave the nice Catholics of the South frombeing beaten up by the atheists of the North.That kind of thinking makes me a bit jumpywhen I hear Mr. Carter worrying aboutOn Saturn 3, ,/ r> /the ultimate /£&// /man-made robot rpossesseseverything... mat? IViolence, Evil, Lust CJv, V l 'M & 4.iATURNA STANLEY D0NEN Film SATURN 5FARRAH FAWCETT KIRK DOUGLAS HARVEY KEITELEiecutrve Producer MARTIN STARGER Produced and Directed Dy STANLEY D0NEN story Dv JOHN BARRYScreenplay Oy MARTIN AMIS Music Oy ELMER BERNSTEIN Director of Pnotograpfiy BILLY WILLIAMS B SCRPEI§@ t W" ' ZTOrmcm * carrurTAiNMCMT ~WILL ROGERS BARRINGTON SQUARE CINEMA 1Chicago— NW 237 8340 Hoffman Batatas $43 7606 Mt. Prospact 392 7070DUNES PLAZA GRIFFITH PARK HARLEM-CERMAK LINCOLN MALLGary 219/93$ 0700 Griffith 219/923 4300 North Ritarsida 442 7373 Mattason 4$1 4770OGDEN 6*1 ORLAND SQUARE VARSITYNaparvilla 357 5050 Ortand Park 349 6000 Eranston $64 $900The Chicago Maroon, Friday, February 15, 1980 3Letters to the EditorHarberger defendedTo the Editor:Nonsense, unless dangerous, had perhapsbest be ignored; but I reluctantly write thisfor fear that the innocent reader may makea judgement based only on a diatribe in yourletters page.What a topsy-turvy world it is when thosewho actually help people are termed “peo¬ple-killers.” To damn the “Chicago boys”for any tyranny in Chile is like blaming a di¬saster on the Red Cross just because theyhappen to be around!Uninformed criticisms, like those of theTheologian of Ixtlan, are based on innuen¬does, not reason. Their virulent vocabularyis far more formidable than their logic. Ofcourse, one may question many of the ideasthat have emanated from the University, asindeed many have done in scholarly jour¬nals and elsewhere, but these disagree¬ments are on subtle issues and are not thearguments that the more strident criticsmake. Their attacks on the free enterprisesystem are laughably naive. And the per¬sonal remarks about Friedman and Har¬berger are unwarranted and show very poortaste.Economists trained at Chicago, labels likethe “mafia” notwithstanding, are no moreevil than the rest of society and generallyhave both their heads and hearts in the rightplace — which is perhaps more than one cansay about rabid demagogues. And whileChile may not be a very pleasant place tolive, the “Chicago boys” seem to have donequite well in straightening out the economicmess. To insist that one supports the juntaby helping steer the economy is analogous tosaying that helping the Cambodian relief ef¬fort is tantamount to propping up the op¬pressive regime there. All of us who havecontributed to the relief of Cambodia wouldthen be guilty! Readers interested in Chilemay find the survey in the current issue ofthe Economist worth reading.Friedman and Harberger need not feelapologetic about what they have done. Theircontributions to knowledge and genuine con¬cern for people will not be diminished by theinvective of the ignorant.S. Ramachandrangraduate studentin economicsAhmis OKTo the Editor:We are compelled to respond to the per¬sonal attacks made against the characterand reputation of Arnold Harberger in a let¬ter in the February 8 Maroon. It is difficultto respond to the ferociously vindictive at¬tacks that characterized Primitivo Rodri¬guez’s testament of ill-will. We can only ex¬press our highest regard for Mr. Harbergeras a social scientist and wish to emphasizethat much of his professional career hasbeen devoted to the scientific study ofhuman welfare. Mr. Rodriguez’s letter is ut¬terly devoid of identifiable content otherthan unfounded personal contempt and en¬mity. It is our opinion that the editors havedone a disservice to their readers and to Mr.Harberger by printing such petty demago¬guery.Michael Duffyand 59 othergraduate studentsin economicsERA and the draftTo the Editor :In light of the recent concern about draftregistration, we would like to clarify the rel¬evance of the Equal Rights Amendment(ERA) to this issue. Phyllis Schlafly andothers have taken up the banner against theERA on the grounds that its passage wouldencourage the drafting of women. This ar¬gument does not reflect the present situa¬tion. President Carter is already consider¬ing drafting women, even though ERA hasnot been ratified. Congress is presently con¬sidering similar action.The legal authority to draft women al¬ready exists. Every person, male or female,is subject to be called for military duty ifsuch measures are needed to protect thepublic safety. It is for Congress to say when,4-The Chicago Maroon, Friday, February 15, who, and how they shall be selected. (War¬ren v. U.S. 177.2d 596 1949.) In addition, theSupreme Court has held that it will not evenreview the manner in which Congress exer¬cises this pwoer. (Lichter v. U.S. 334 U.S.742 1948.)The ERA would not affect the Congressio¬nal authority to draft women. It would, how¬ever, give women the right to volunteer foractive service and the extra benefits, suchas educational assistance and job prefer¬ences now awarded for this service. Withoutratification of ERA, women could be draftedand yet be excluded from the benefits of vol¬unteering their service to our nation’s mili¬tary. ERA would ensure the advantages ofequality. We already face its responsibili¬ties.Becky DaoBeth DorrisStudents in th CollegeLocker wolvesTo the Editor:Since Mr. WuDunn did not reach anymembers of the Women Organized forLocker-room Facilities for comment,WOLF would like to respond to his article ofFriday, Feb. 8. Our organization includesundergraduates, graduates, staff, alumni,and student wives. Membership is not res¬tricted to women, and there are 2 malemembers.The goal of the organization is to improvethe women’s locker-room facilities in Bart¬lett Gym. The inadequacy of the facilities isvery real, as any woman who uses them re¬gularly can attest. Currently women haveonly 3 percent of the lockers, none of thempermanent. Women are alloted only 2 of the41 shower-heads in Bartlett, and are allocat¬ed only 5 percent of the total floor spaceused for locker-rooms. The allotment of fa¬cilities reflects neither the enrollment ofwomen in the University (33 percent), northe proportion of Bartlett Gym users whoare female. WOLF estimates approximately 25 per¬cent of the users of the locker-rooms in Bart¬lett are women. WOLF has counted peopleentering the gym, noting how many womenand how many men then descended to thelocker-rooms. In a given hour women com¬prised 17-40 percent of the people enteringthe locker-rooms. In the course of a day thisaverages to 25 percent of the total number oflocker-room users.WOLF met with Mary Jean Mulvaney,Harold Metcalf, and Rosalie Resch onThursday, Feb. 7 to discuss the problem.Contrary to the Maroon’s report, WOLFmade no specific proposal as to method ofreallotment of facilities in the letter to Mr.Metcalf and Ms. Mulvaney, but simply re¬quested annexation of some of them. Sever¬al proposals from the dept, of physical plan¬ning were discussed during Thursday’smeeting. None of the estimates were brokendown into costs of materials and labor, norwere costs of building maintenance separat¬ed from those of reallocation itself. It hasbeen suggested that current plumbing prob¬lems in the northwest section of the men’slocker-room might preclude obtaining abuilding permit. These problems, however,are relevant only to building maintenanceand in no way affect the obtaining of a build¬ing permit.Women involved in sports such as judo(which can not move into the Field House asthe concrete floor there is inadequate to ab¬sorb the shocks to the body naturally in¬curred in the practice of this sport), ki-ai-kido, gymnastics, swimming, and crew willcontinue to use Bartlett even when the FieldHouse is open, as Bartlett is the only build¬ing suitably equipped for these sports. In ad¬dition, the Field House will be closed to allbut varsity teams during peak hours ofBartlett use. Thus, during those hours peo¬ple wanting to practice those sports whichcan be done in the Field House will be un¬able to and the crowded conditions in Bart¬lett will persist. Indeed, as Mr. Metcalfsays, “There are very real needs for notonly showers but also more lockers.”We thank the 573 people who have signedour petition and encourage women who find the facilities inadequate to voice their com¬plaints, especailly women who avoid thelocker-room in Bartlett because it is inade¬quate. Everyone is welcome to attend ourmeetings, which are listed in the Maroon’sweekly calendar.Amy Metzger andother Members of WOLFTalk and actionWe are concerned that Kat Griffith’s letterof last Friday (8 Feb.) may have given thefalse impression that Progressive Unionmembers are political ideologues who areunwilling to work with other groups in op¬posing the draft. In reality we represent avery broad range of political opinion, andwe gladly work with other groups or individ¬uals on specific issues we feel are impor¬tant. In fact the lead Maroon article last Fri¬day described how we revised our plans fortoday’s anti-draft activities in order to avoidconflicting with next Friday’s demonstra¬tion, which we fully support.What we do not accept is that the anti¬draft movement should exclude discussionof the political issues which underly thequestions of conscription and of militarismin general. How are we to know whether tosupport registration if we don’t know whyCarter wants a beefed up army and whatthat army will probably be used for? Histor¬ically the Progressive Union is an outgrowthof the May 22 Committee, which organizedthe teach-in and rally opposing McNa¬mara’s Pick Award last spring, and thatkind of combination of analysis with unitedaction represents our ideal of a politicalmovement.In conclusion we urge everybody to par¬ticipate in today’s activities and those ofnext week. Our next general meeting isMonday 25 February, 7:30 at Ida Noyes, andeveryone — student, staff, faculty — is wel¬come to attend.Rafael SorkinM. David SamsonMembers ofthe Progressive UnionSome “Hyde Park Heraldry”The following is printed in lieu of the Editor’scolumn.To the Editor:While perusing the February 8, 1980 issue ofThe Maroon it came to our attention that youused a personal insignia over your lucid andconcise prose. We agree that someone of yourobvious intellectual and moral stature should have a distinctive emblem so that all lesserbeings can recognize your pearls of wisdom.We also observed the poor quality of the afore¬mentioned insignia and wish to call your atten¬tion to the service which we provide, for an ap¬propriate fee. We have taken the liberty ofhaving our scribes create several potential al¬ternative emblems which we offer for your in¬ spection. Should one of them be to your liking,we have the means of emblazoning it upon let¬terheads, envelopes, notepads, cups andsaucers, silverware, underwear, footmen’s liv¬ery, the foreheads of the aforementioned foot¬men, and on various banners and placards tobe waved by the masses in appropriate scenesof personal adulation.The emblem to the left ap¬proaches a balance be¬tween the austere and mod¬ern. Its simplicity ofexecution is contrastedwith the profundity of itssymbolism (see crown ontop). We feel certain thatthis emblem captures partof your aspirations. Aformer customer, RichardNixon, was very pleasedwith this design.These three emblems rep¬resents a completely dif¬ferent style. On the left is amore ornate and flowingemblem. It is very appro¬priate to use on Mother’sDay cards and cheap valen¬tines. For added effect, wesuggest tinting the rosespink.This example to the rightwas drawn from Old En¬glish Text. The virility ofthe boldlines which com¬pose this emblem are anapt symbol for aspiringTudor and Stuart despots.The last of this group is rec¬ommended for your inevita¬ble reign over the Universi¬ty. It will insure thepeasants on the quadran¬gles will become easily ac¬customed to your yoke. If Above is an excellent exam¬ple of the sense of individu¬alism which our emblemsare able to convey. This in¬signia is both tasteful andunique — sure to catch theeye of people in search of an“Ubermensch”. The flow¬ing and intwining curvesare representative of yourbeneficent wisdom filteringdown and among all ple-bians. If you should choosethis item, we are prepared,at a small additional fee, tocreate signet rings and agreat seal for use whenholding court on the thirdfloor of Ida Noyes.this insignia is placed at thebottom of orders and man¬dates it will blend in withthe Gothic architecturalsurroundings and makeyour rule appear a part ofthe natural order. To the right is a bold, con¬temporary insignia. It com¬bines a touch of informalitywith the feeling of boldness.We feel it is very appro¬priate for aspiring politi¬cians and demagogues.We feel the emblem to theleft would be appropriatefor your later years. It hasa certain staidness about it,while still maintaining thequintessence of modernity.A very suitable symbol foran aging student activist.We hope that one of the preceding sampleswill meet with your approval. If so, please con¬tact us and we will put 30 monks in our bestscriptorium to work on your order immediate¬ly. Fees are negotiable.Offer expires midnight tonight. Special ratesif the ashes of 3 (three) Maroon editorials areenclosed.Your most humble and sincere servants,Robert DietleAbbotMichael G. BeyerEngraver Extraordinaire1980\ He’s the Man of Their HouseMake Him the Man of Your HOUSEElect John H. Stroger, Jr. to the House of Representatives in the 1stCongressional District of Illinois. A county commissioner, a lawyer,an accountant, a businessman, he has the experience to be a goodcongressman. He speaks out now for you—he will in Washington.You can trust him!The John H. Stroger family: Mrs. Yonnie Stroger (front), Hans, Yonnie Lynn and Toddwith their candidate.ChairmanHoward C Medley SrCo-ChairparsonsAlvin BoutteThe Honorable Marian HumesHonorary Co-Chalrparaon«Kham BeardJohnny BrownDr James Buckner. DOSAugustus CageLillian Calhoun Charles CurryJames DigbyR l DukesBetty B EdwardsDr Lonnie Edwards MDDr Frank GardnerDr Herbert Harris, DDSWilliam F HarrisDr E Hasbrock MDAtty Arnette HubbardDr Edsel K Hudson MD Cynthia HumesOrlando G JonesMrs Thomas P LewisDr Thomas Lighttoot. DDSDr Mariorie S JoynerGeorge LeonardAtty Carl McCormickCirilo McSweenBeatrice S MemttRoscoe E MitchellV Marjorie Moore Dr Rudolph Moragne MDAnderson SchwiechHonorable Niles ShermanArthur J SmithMrs John H Stroger, JrCecil TroyLurse WattersonAtty James WilliamsOliver WoodsPaid for by Stroger for Congress Committee. Alvin Rider. Treasurer Monday* February 18thw.Ray Slid* Oh<wCHICAGO SYMPtlONY ORCHESTR \■ m *FIRST/ aIn a lecture-demonstrationynra[iHurt tut-Judsoif8pmAdmission free!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 ParkT elephone 363-1454(Good with this ad.)'We’ro swinging Steakburqers 7 days a week Sffea/ (jj/a/& (^a.1688 East 88th Street 498-0666IN BEAUT1FI L RESIDENTIAL KENWOOD AREA - Victorian -race withmodern efficiency. Tlti- house has Keen well maintained. It offer- 10 room- - roormroom- - for votir familv on kimbark near 19th Street. SI 72.500.NEAR UNIVERSITY OF ( HR AGO . . . .Expensive hut worth it! Haml-omere>idenee on 58th Street, aero— from I .ah School. Third floor ha- panelled eotnmonroom, beamed eeilin--. fireplaee-approvimately 800 -q. feet in this room alone. Nowin an estate, needs lovin- eare. Statelv lihrarv on fir-t floor with fireplaee. In fact,there are five fireplaces in all. $315.000.NEAR UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO. . . .Kenwood Avenue near 37th Street. 3-torv hriek with attached -ara-c. You're the only one who eonld have a roof -ardenon top deck. F.vervthin- in excellent, mint condition. Offer- are eomin- in. Wavin'von re the one. 10 rooms in all. $265,000.NEAR UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO. . . 57ih & Blaekstone. Condo, ap¬proximately 2100 sq. ft. Sunroom i- heated and completely enelosahle with frenchdoors for privaev — seven room-. 2 hath-. Rri-ht. cheery and in excellent condition.$ 11 5.000.NEAR UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO . . .Across from Repenstein Library on 36thStreet. Small Co-op third floor apt. Lar-e livin- room has woodhurtiin- fireplaee.\vailahle for immediate occupancy. $30,000.NOT TOO F AR FROM CAMPUS ... on 39th Street between Harper and Stonv.Third floor co-op apt has “square*' floor plan. Onlv one in the Imildin- with wood-huruiti- fireplaee. Sunnv view of park. Beaiitifnllv kept includin': recent re-wirinjr.$68,300.EIGHT ROOMS. FOUR B ATHS on the Eakefront $35,000. in the 7321 Buildingon South-Shore Drive. (Co-operative apt.)ACROSS FROM MUSEUM OF SCIENCE \t the |>cnthoiise leyel. 8 «i.r?eonsrooms - 1 baths - panoramic views in all directions. Condo - His & Hers studv.$163,500.WE HAVE OTHER APARTMENTS IN EAST HYDE PARKCALL FOR COMPLETE DIRECTORY OF PROPERTY FOR SALEFive moms in new Hi-Rise. Two full baths. . electric cookin*. air conditioned.Not $80,000 - not $70,000 hut onlv $65,000. 1 think this i- a -ood buy.The Chicago Maroon, Friday, February 15, 1980 5I FPTIIDF-PEOPLE AND POLITICS INTHE MIDDLE EASTReflections on 6 years of livingin Iran and extensive travels inIsrael and all the Arab countries.PROFESSOR JAMES E. BOWMANDepts. Pathology and Medicine,Committee Genetics and The College,Director, Blood Bank andComprehensive Sickle Cell CenterFRIDAY - FEBRUARY 158:30 P.M.Hillel Foundation - 5715 Woodlawn REPAIRSPECIALISTSon IBM, SCM.Olympia, etc,FREE repairestimates; repairsby factory-trainedtechnician.RENTALSavailable withU. of C. I D New endRebuiltTypewriters,Calculators,Dictators,AddersU of ChicagoBookstore5750 S. Ellis Ave753*3303 • Eye Examinations• Contact Lenses• (Soft and Hard)• Fashion Eye Wear• Contact Lens SuppliesDR. M.R. MASLOVOPTOMETRISTSHyde PeckShopping Center1510 5. 55th363-6363NEW 2-drawer fifes $59.00NEW 6-ft. folding tables $49.00Auclien? n9*rLORIMAR PRESENTS A JERRY WEINTRAUB PRODUCTIONAL PACINOWILLIAM FRIEDKIN S CRUISINGPAUL SORVINO jJ<AREN ALLEN PRODUCED BY JERRY WEINTRAUBWRITTEN FOR THE SCREEN AND DIRECTED BY WILLIAM FRIEDKINBASED UPON THE NOVEL BY GERALD WALKER MUSIC-JACK NITZSCHE TECHNICOLOR'n'r"MtTNICTCB &■ c 198G10RIMAP DISTRIBUTOR iNtfRMtlOKAi All RIGHTS WSERVfDSC".-. OBlGiNAl SOUNDTRACK AlBUMOMOBiMAB HfCOWDS HflltPli AlllStSSEEHMIMChicago: CHICAGO CARNEGIE GATEWAYSuburban: GOLF MILL OAKBROOK BARRINGTON SQUARE 6Ndes Oak brook • Hoffman EstatesBOLINGBROOK EVERGREEN PARAMOUNTBokngbrook Evergreen Park Hammond, ,N theCOfunny papers5238 S. Blackstone955-09741 EQUIPMENT& SUPPLY CO.8600 COMMERCIAL AVENUERE 4-2111 OPEN MON.-FRI.8:30-5:00SATURDAYS9:00-3:00There is a gold mine in your closet.©OHiwoomiWe will give you $25 00 for anySuit in your closet or $15.00 forany Sport Coat if you takeadvantage of ourPRESIDENT’STRADE-IN SALETrade your old Suit or SportCoat for any new suit or sportcoat and we will rebate the aboveamount and donate your oldgarment to a local charitableorganization.Clothing must be Dry-Cleaned inorder to be accepted for trade.Offer good through February29th.ADDITIONAL BONUSFive dollars off any pair of shoespurchased with a Suit or SportCoat.Trade-In Sale at Hyde ParkStore Only. (WWteM6 The Chicago Maroon, Friday, February 15, 1980Midway Studios is continuing its practice of offering awinter series of performance artworks. On Tuesday, LeslieWolfe (right) opened the 1980 series with "Chickenfeed,Mirafiore, Chickenfeed," a work involving hand puppetsmade of balloons and artificial flowers, toys that walked andsquawked, and whistles — all of an intensely avian charac ter. Wolfe said she progressed to birds after having workedwith "sea creatures" and animals that walk on land. GeorgeHorner (left), who last night performed "AlchemicalDrums," has a background in music as well as visual art.He played piano chords in progression to spell words (suchas "E", then "G," then "G" again). Next, he hurled the sig nified (such as, a physical egg) into the air so that it mightstrike drums suspended from the ceiling. The noise thus produced, Horner feels, represents the signified in yet anotherform. Performances continue through March 8. For moreinformation, call 753 4821.★★Drug Stabbing Time**by Ken WissokerI would like to put forth what is still, unfortunately, a radical notion: that the Carterdoctrine, the return to cold war vision andaction, is not the adequate reaction to gravechanges in the world situation it purports tobe, but a dangerous deception. I call thisradical because the country and much of thepress have fallen into line behind Carter,with Congress, belligerently waving theflag. One would hope that after the manipu¬lation of public opinion was so amply de¬monstrated in the Pentagon Papers, and indifferent ways by our support for the Shah(who, we were told, was bringing the modernism and prosperity his country wel¬comed), to say nothing of Watergate, therewould be a more suspicious audience for theplay which is now being enacted.I think there is ample evidence that nothing which has happened in Afghanistan orelsewhere justifies the resumption of regis¬tration, the boycott of the Olympics, or thewarning of military incursion in the PersianGulf, now backed up by the transfer of aMarine battalion of assault troops to theArabian Sea. These actions, and the otherswhich have come with them, presuppose athreat to our national security of a highorder, while in fact there is no evidence theSoviets have further incursions in mind. Ourreaction has been so out of balance, as evi¬denced by the difficulty we have had in foreing our allies in line behind us, that it maywell propel us into a more dangerous situa¬tion than any which would have occurredhad we done absolutely nothing. I do notthink it is an exaggeration to say that we arepushing the world to the brink of war for tworeasons, neither of which warrant the consequences: to ensure Carter's reelection,and secondarily, to ensure the oil companies' ability to obtain oil through the mostprofitable methods.What is the story of Afghanistan? Accord¬ing to Cockburn and Ridgeway (VillageVoice, 1/28/80; and to whom, both for the ar¬ticle cited and others, I would like to ac¬knowledge a large debt), Afghanistan ap¬pealed to us in 1956 for military aid againstPakistan and the Soviet Union. Especially inregard to the latter, we turned them down.They then approached the Soviet Union whobecame their "main economic and militarypartner." Again, in 1961 when Afghanistanwas blockaded by Pakistan, we denied a request for money to construct a road throughIran which would have given Afghanistangreater independence from both the USSR and Pakistan. Finally, the coup which originally placed a pro Soviet leader in powertook place two years ago, at which time littie was said by Carter or anyone else. As re¬grettable as the present action is, it is a consolidation — more than an extension ofpower. It is not atypical of our own postwaractions, or of the Soviet's.To protect our interests, we intervenedmilitarily in foreign countries at least an es¬timated average of once every eighteenmonths between 1947 and 1965 (R ichard Barnet cited by Andrew Kopkind, Village Voice2/4/80). How different is the present situa¬tion from our sending the Marines into theDominican Republic to "restore order" in1962? Certainly it seems an insufficient excuse for plunging ourselves, women andchildren first, back into Cold War.This is a cold war which Carter seemed tobe promoting, even before the events inAfghanistan, when he reacted to the Soviettroops in Cuba as if they had not alreadybeen there for years. The apparent scuttlingof SALT II (or at least sending it out for anERA like fight without real support), the atready significantly increased Defense budget, the introduction of new missile systemsin Europe, the development of the MX sys¬tem: all these contain a message whichcould not have gone unnoticed by the hawksin the Kremlin, who seem to have gainedsome edge over Brehznev in this action.What is worse, however, is the manner inwhich, since Afghanistan, Carter hasdropped even the pretense of a policy basedon human rights and self determinancy, andhas returned to pursuing the most bankruptcold war strategy of all: the willingness toally with (or prop up) any excuse for a government which will claim to oppose theUSSR.From its debacle in Iran one would haveexpected this country to have learned thatgiving a dictator the most modern aircraft,making him one of the world's richest men,training his secret police in sophisticatedmeans of torture doesn't mean you can stillhope to prop him up indefinitely against thewishes of his country's people. Vet we haveset about doing this again in Pakistan withZia ulHaq, from whom we had previouslycut off aid for unrestrainedly attempting todevelop nuclear capacity, allowing our em bassy to burn down, and reintroducing publie floggings (among other literal readingsof the Islamic criminal code). He has littlepopular support, and retains rule by force,yet we are pressing him with large offers ofaid (which he has refused, asking for evenmore). It is a dangerous and one dimensional foreign policy which makes opposition tothe Soviet Union of such prime importancethat we are willing to support in its name re¬gimes such as Pinochet, Zia's, and theShah's. Throughout the Islamic world weare supporting dictatorships of one sort oranother that even the CIA does not think willlast ten years. As should also be clear fromIran, when the people replace governmentswhich we have kept in power against theirwill, it is not surprising that they then see usas imperialists and turn elsewhere for help.Thus our long term interests are not helpedby seeing the world through these polarizedglasses, as if commitment to us in the pres¬ent were all that mattered. This is wartimebehavior, and it is not wartime yet.Andrew Kopkind (Village Voice 2/4/80)lists over twenty situations since WW IIwhere Russia to some degree supportedstruggles against colonialism, or for socialliberation. He concludes that though Sovietsupport was definitely a mixed blessing, andcame from their own self-interest, withoutthem most of these struggles could neverhave occurred. Furthermore, in the samesituations and others, we have supportedruling classes, colonial powers; in short,moneyed interests. And still we are prepared to increase the chances of war forMobil and Exxon's interest, to ensure theirprofits. Our interests are not the corporateinterests.Of the present situation, George Kennan,foreign policy expert and former ambassador to Moscow, writes: "Never since WorldWar 11 has there been so far reaching a mili¬tarization of thought and discourse in thecapital. An unsuspecting stranger, plungedinto its midst, could only conclude that thelast hope of peaceful, nonmilitary solutionshad been exhausted — that from now on onlyweapons, however used, could count." (NewYork Times 2/1/80) We have, he says, usedup all our non military options at once, thustaking us to the brink of military ones, andout of a situation which called for much less. There is no evidence that the Soviets wish todrive into the Persian Gulf. They alreadyhave a warm water port (Aden). They pro¬duce more oil a day than any other country(12.4 million gallons). A prudent analysis,and in a nuclear world we cannot live withanything less, would not push us immediately to the worst possible scenario.What all these belabored considerationscome down to is the fact that foreign policyis now serving one central concern, the reelection of Carter. A few months ago Carterseemed in real trouble; ironically, by making the worst of foreign policy failures, henow looks like a strong leader. The successof these maneuvers in strengtheningCarter's campaign has been appalling. AsCockburn and Ridgeway note, it has sweptthe rug out from under all Republican opposition, (Village Voice 1/28/80) which reliedon the need for a more assertive (read mili-tarisitic; read masculine) leader. Now theonly action left for them and for Congress isto try and outdo Carter at sabre rattling.More importantly, however, by constructing the appearance of wartime, Carter hassucceeded in making himself appear likewartime leadership. If you are patriotic youmust back the president through the crisis.Even Kennedy, with Anderson, one of fewopposing voices, is painted successfully as apolitical opportunist, with only scatteredmembers of the press noting the irony.The issue that is arousing any oppositionat all is the draft registration. But becauseof the atmosphere in Congress, all thosemen standing around comparing the swordsthey wield, all the debate will be on whetherwomen should register as well as menrather than whether there is any need forregistration at all. Reliable Phyllis Schlaflyhas already called this "a stab in the back ofAmerican womenhood," and most of theCongressmen think it will not pass. Mostwomen's groups from NOW to the more radical have no desire for a draft at all, and it'shard to see them working very wholehear¬tedly for the inclusion of wmen. So regres¬sion spreads. It's ironic that at the times theUS is most belligerent about making thewhole world safe for freedom and democracy, the same values seem most tenuous hereat home. It is imperative that those who seethrough the rhetoric speak out now.You Go To WarHEAR AGAIN STEREOSTORE-WIDE CLEARANCE SALE |ALL PRICES SLASHEDAIWA 6600 * 265.00M AR ANTZ 2325 125.00PIONEER SA6&00 1 10.00GARR ARD 1)1)75 NEW 1 19.00JENSEN 24 Ei. . 75.00MICRO ACOUSTIC SMZ Ea . 75.00MARANTZ4220PHILIPS-CALLERO 1251 125.00TURNTABLE 39.95ALTEC 701 RECEIVER 95.00DYNACO SCA80Q 85.00CLOSED SUNDAYSComplete systems from $75 to $750. 60-dav trade-1 aek privilege.Name brand components for limited budgets.PLUS MUCH, MUCH MOREHEAR AGAIN STEREO1 7002 N. CALIFORNIA 338-7737SPECIAL DISCOUNT PRICESfor all STUDENTS andFACULTY MEMBERSJust present your University of Chicago IdentificationCard As Students or Faculty Members you are entitledto special money-saving DISCOUNTS on ChevroletParts, Accessories and any new or used Chevrolet youbuy from Ruby Chevrolet.GM QUALITYshv)C€ PAfrrsGENERAL MOTORS BAHTS DTVTSJON"Keep That Great GM Feeling K ith GENL l.\t GM Parts72nd & Stony IslandOpen Evenings and Sunday 684-0400Parts Open Sat. 'til nocnllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllSPECIAL DISCOUNT PRICESfor all STUDENTS andFACULTY MEMBERSJust present your University of Chicago IdentificationCard. As Students or Faculty Members you are entitledto special money-saving DISCOUNTS on VolkswagenParts, Accessories and any new or used Volkswagenyou buy from Ruby Volkswagen= 72nd & Stony Island 684-0400EE - Op*n Evenings and Sundays Parts Open Sat. 'til noon STUDYABROADWITHSYRACUSEUNIVERSITYSpring 1980/Summer 1980SEMESTER PROGRAMS:■ Florence ■ Madrid■ Strasbourg ■ Amsterdam■ LondoneVariety of courses offered e Nolanguage background requiredeFinancial Aid available. eSummerprograms available in England, Italy &Austria. eApply now for Summer1980 & Fall 1980.PROGRAM OF INTEREST.for mwi information and application raturn toDivision of Intarnational Program* Abroad 336 Comwocfc A»a, Room N, Syracuta. NY 13210 KIMBARK HALLCondominiums80% MORTGAGE LOANS AVAILABLEThe developers are offering model units forinspection every Sat. and Sun. between 1and 5 p.m.36 opts:24 - 1 bedroom, 1 bath from 30,350-37,0006 - 2 bedrooms, 1 bath from 37,000-38,8506 - 2 bedrooms, 2 bath from 46,000-46,900All apartments include new kitchens and appliances,new bathrooms, carpeting and decorating (colors ofyour choice), triple-track storm windows and kitchenstorm doors, modern laundry facilities and individuallocker space.Your inspection is invited,51 26 S. Kimbark Ave. - Phone 643-4489Harry A. Zisook & Sons, Agts.786-9200Seagram.were seriousabout successLocal Campus interviews will be held February 21,1980Our people and products are our most importantassets. But. we never lose sight of our profits.we re honest about it. And you should be too. Becausethat means a bigger future for you. A bigger career. And abigger paycheck. That's what our whole managementprogram is about. Success. Yours and ours.we've structured our management program aroundambitious dynamic men and women. And we re offeringhigh visibility careers that will move you ahead fast.You'll get the credit you deserve and all the responsibilityyou can handle.if you're an M.B.A. and you're interested in gettingahead, and staving ahead, talk to the leaders. We re theworld's largest distillers and marketers of fine spirits.Take advantage of our domestic and international careersin finance or marketing. Visit your college placementoffice for details. See our Seagram Campus Representa¬tives or forward your resume in confidence to: Managerof Human Resource Development, Joseph E. Seagram &Sons, inc., 800 Third Avenue, New York, New York 10022.Seagram is an equal opportunity/affirmative actionemployer m/f.d) John Griffin, Budget Director (2) Carol Harris, Manager—Domestic MarketingOperations (3) Irene Baxter, Supervisor—Rates & Exports (4) David James, Manager-Marketing & Distributor Systems■ ^ .%•mi- Joseph E.Seaqram&SonsJnc. yl-House Films presentsTHE SECRET LIFE OF WALTER MITTYwith DANNY KAYEFRIDAY, FEB. I 5 7:30 & 10:00 P.M. Adm. $1.502—the grey city journal—Friday, February 15, 1980Mo viesStrangers on a Train (Alfred Hitchcock, 1951): This superb thriller,based on a Patricia Highsmith novel,revived Hitchcock's sagging reputa¬tion and marked the beginning of a remarkable series of masterpieces. Thefilm's two protagonists — a tennis starrunning for the Senate (FarleyGranger) and a charming wastrel withan Oedipal complex (Robert Walker)— meet on a train by chance and begintheir entanglement. The Master ofSuspense, with the help of RaymondChandler, invests the story with the familiar Hitchcockian themes of guilttransference, evil abnormality lurkingunderneth normal surface, etc. Thestory is further served by Hitchcock'sbrilliant visual tricks — a murderfilmed through the reflection of a pairs. of glasses, a carousal going amok.This afternoon at 1; Law School Audi¬torium. LSF; $1.50. Film critic An¬drew Sarris will speak after the showing; there is no additional charge. Seearticle on p. 8. — TSRock 'n' Roll High School (Alan Arkush, 1979): ''Well she got her daddy'scar and she cruised to the hamburgerstand now/She forgot all about the li¬brary like she told her old mannow/With the radio blasting goes cru-sin' just as fast as she can now/Andshe'll have fun, fun, fun 'till her daddytakes the T-bird away." Gabba GabbaHey! Tonight at 7:15 and 9:15; Quan-trell. Doc; $1.50. Doc/grey city "P.J.Soles Be Alike Contest" at first show.The Secret Life of Walter Mitty (Norman Z. McLeod 1947): Danny Kayeshines as a disgruntled commuterwho, while daydreaming on boringtrain rides, becomes a RAF WingCommander, a riverboat gambler,and other zany, daring adventurers.Some sharp witticisms, quick slap¬stick scenes, and amazing song anddance numbers add to this hilariousadaptation of James Thurber's story.Fri at International House at 7:30 and10 pm $1.50 — R.L.Witness for the Proscution (BillyWilder; 1957): Dietrich and Laughtonham it up in this effective adaptationof an Agatha Christie courtroom mys¬tery. Wilder's cynical outlook is toneddown considerably in the service ofChristie's wry wit. The real mysteryhere however is why sultry and insolent Dietrich ever fell for bland prettyboy Tyrone Power. Tonight at 8:30 inthe Law School Auditorium. LSF,$1.50 - TSDespair (Rainer Werner Fassbinder,1978): Doppelganger, dissociation,and deja vu are themes one might ex¬pect from a German artfilm. But play¬wright Tom Stoppard turns in a bril¬liant translation of VladimirNabokov's novel, with superb actingby the entire cast under Fassbinder'stight and skillful direction. Chocolatemogul Hermann Hermann (Dirk Bogarde) struggles to maintain while hismarriage and business deteriorate inthe wake of world wide Depressionand the rise of fascism in pre-NaziGermany. The Russian exile's worldchanges, however, when he meetsFelix (Klaus Lowitsch), a man Hermann thinks bears a striking resemblence to himself. Fassbinder's use ofpaintings, dreams, and muddled dialogue produce an eerie effect, lendingcredibility to otherwise supernaturalscenes. Top notch entertainment, inEnglish. Tomorrow at 7:15 and 9:30 inQuantrell. Doc; $1.50 — MMThe Middle of the World (Alain Tanner, 1974): Tanner beautifully portrays the union and dissolution of twolovers as he simultaneously attacksthe "bourgeois" messages of Hoilywood melodramas. Using standardseasonal imagery, he symbolizes thedevelopment and decay of their relationship. Even his story is classic:Paul is an engineer, caught up in an industrial/political machine out of hiscontrol. Adriana is a foreign waitress;she's an outsider who men appreciateonly for her beauty. The two meet, fallin love, suffer hardships, and ine/itthe grey city journal ably separate. Tanner sympathetical¬ly and elegantly points out that theyare responsible for the isolation whichleads to their sorrow. They justifiablyseparate themselves from society, butdespite the romantic idealism whichunites them, each barely understandsthe other. Thus they are also separated from one another. Tanner's coldcamera style and simplistic narrationoften hold the audience at a distance,thereby criticizing the Hollywood tradition of vicarious entertainment. Fascinating, moving. French with subtit¬les. Sunday at 7:15 and 9:30 inQuantrell. Doc. $1.50 — GBSing and Like It (William Seiter, 1934):A (musical?) comedy, and a good one.Gangster T. Fenimore Sylvester overhears plain-jane Annie Snodgrass reherse a stupid, sappy song called"Your Mother" with her amateur theater group. He's so touched by it, hecries for the second time in his life.(The first was during a tear-gas raid inthe pen.) Snodgrass aspires to greatness, so she happily ditches her nerdyboyfriend Oswald and allows Sylvesterto put her on Broadway. These andother stereotypic characterizationsare enhanced by a good script andgood acting so Sylvester's impossibleplan becomes possible. Flawed mainlybecause it ends too soon. Monday at7:15 in Quantrell. Doc; $1 for doublefeature. — DMThe African Queen (John Huston, 1952)and Notorious (Alfred Hitchcock,1946): The African Queen posesKatharine Hepburn, as a spinster missionary, against Humphrey Bogart, ascrusty river boatman, against therivers of Africa, as themselves. Notorious poses Ingrid Bergman, as a nubile refugee, against Cary Grant, as anAnglo American agent who enlists herGary Beberman, Curtis Black, Bennett Jacks, Rebecca Lillian, Philip Maher, JeffMakos, Rory McGahan, Mike Moore, Jeanne Nowaczewski, Andrew Patner,Martha Rosett, Renee Saracki, Lisa von Drehle, Ken Wissoker.Edited by David Miller. Associate editors: Laura Cottingham, Karen Hornick,Mary Mankowski. Contributing editor: Ted Shen. Friday, February 15, 1980. to his cause, against Claude Rains, asa mother-dominated, cultured (hencesympathetic) leader of a post 1945Nazi South American cabal (hence heis evil and pernicious). Place two suchtriangles, each a gem in its own right,side by side and you get a diamond.Both directors vent their surprisinglyromantic undersides in these films;auteurists will enjoy the opportunity tocompare and contrast these film¬makers who are often discussed in thesame paragraph of film guidebooks byauthors like the one who will be oncampus today. Tonight, tomorrow,and Sunday, Sandburg Theater, 1204N. Dearborn. 951-0627. — K.H.DanceBayanihan Dance Company: Thesedancers and musicians received ravereviews in the fifties for their worksbased on Philippine folklore. Established after Philippine independence,the group has toured both here andabroad. They perform once in Chicagothis Sunday, Feb 17, at 3 pm at the Auditorium Theatre, 70 E Congress.922 2110. $3.50 $12.50. — MMcQStreet Music: A variety of Chicago arfists — from dancers to harmonicaplayers to lighting designers — interpret the theme of The City. The artists'reaction to the city make Street Musica collage of intriguing images. 8 30 tonight, Sat, and next weekend at MoMing, 1034 W. Barry. 822 0574 $4 5.MusicLarry Coryell: He used to play with aband called the Eleventh House, and isrecognized as one of the "more talent¬ed" guitar players. MAB. Tonight inthe Cloister Club, Ida Noyes at 8 30$2.50 MAB fee payers, $3.50 others.Chemical Release. The combustibleThird Music Ensemble is presenting a program of decidedly untraditionalmusic, mostly pieces by the group'sdirector, Phillip A. Gonzales. Thegroup, composed of eight instruments,is not grounded in any tradition; in¬stead it seeks to pursue new sensibili¬ties through experimentation with established forms of jazz, rock, andclassical. Find out for yourself whatall this means, tomorrow night at 8 inthe Cloister Club, Ida Noyes. $3.753 4821.Andrew Willis, pianist: Willis, a graduate of the Curtis Institute of Music, willpresent a program of Chopin, Beetho¬ven, and the contemporary composerHenri Dutilleux Sun, Feb 17 at the International House Auditorium at 7:30pm. Free.Lunchtime Concert. Beethoven trioopus I no. 1 and Hayden trio no. 28 willbe performed by Steven Kessler, violin; David Zelinsky, cello, and Michael Edgerton, piano. Thurs, Feb 21in Reynolds North Lounge at 12:15 pm.Sponsored by the Department ofMusic.Chicago Soundings: The GratovichFlynn duo will perform a concert of20 century music for violin andpiano. The program will feature musicof Ives (Second Sonata), Crumb (nocfumes), Penderecki, Lutoslawski,Flynn, Turok and Feldman. Sun, Feb17 at Church of St. Thomas the Apostle, 5472 S Kimbark, at 2 pm. $3 generaladmission, student discounts available.Duelin' Sax Greats: Von Freeman willbattle with former Woody Herman saxstar Joe Daley when the two tenorsjoin regulars Ken Prince on piano, Milton Suggs on bass, and vocalist FriedaLee and drummer Robert Shy for theweekly "Live Jazz Party" at Chances'R' Restaurant, 5225 S. Harper(Harper Court). Sun, Feb 17, 8 30 pm1 am. 363 1550. $5.Kahil El-Zabar: El Zabar's Composttions for a Quintet will feature DouglasEwart on reeds, Adegoke Steve Colsonon piano, Afi Fi on percussion, bassistM'Chaka Uba, and El Zabar himselfdoing percussion and vocals. An AACM production, Sat, Feb 16 atN.A.M.E. Gallery, 9 W Hubbard, at 8pm. $4.No Nukes Rock & Roll: Painter Band,Thunder Road, and The Wonderfulswill keep Gasper's (radio?) active allnight. Sponsored by Citzens AgainstNuclear Power and The MushroomClouds. Thurs, Feb 21 at 3159 N. Southport, beginning at 9 pm. 472 2492. $3 donation, plus cash bar.The Museum of Contemporary Art's Options series continues with an untitled installation sculpture by MartinPuryear. The sculpture, composed of ash and maple saplings, rawhide, a long ash trunk, and a massive earthenmound, fills the second floor Bergman Gallery. Through March 11. 237 E. Ontario; Tue Sat, 10-5; Sun, noon-5.280-2660. $2; students, $1. Objects and Logotypes: Relationshipsbetween Minimalist art and corporatedesign are displayed here. Art is notbusines. Or is it? Renaissance Society,4 floor Cobb Hall, through Feb 23.Daily 114.Jerry Uelsmann: 75 fantastic prints byb&w photography's number one surrealist should be seen in conjunctionwith the Art Institute's Cartier Bresson exhibit: Uelsmann's practice andphilosophy of "post-visualization"(playing with the image after the negative is made) is the opposite of Cartier-Bresson's. Chicago Center forContemporary Photography at Columbia College, 600 S Michigan. ThroughMar 7; Mon Fri, 10-5; Sat, noon-5.663 1600, ex, 600. Free.Henri Cartier-Bresson: Photographer: 155 prints selected by the artistcould be seen in conjunction with theChicago Center's Jerry Uelsmann exhibit: Cartier Bresson's practice andphilosophy of "pre-visualization" or"the decisive moment" (visualizingthe image either before or as the negative is made) is the opposite of Uelsmann's. Art Institute, Michigan atAdams. Through Mar 23; Mon-Wed,Fri, 10:30 4:30; Th, 10:30 8, Sat, 10 5;Sun, noon-5. 443 3600. Admission discretionary; Th free. — DMTheaterEquus: This major Court Studio production runs through March 2. ThursSat, 8:30 pm, Sun at 7:30. 753 3581.$3.50 general, $2.50 students. See review on p. 5.Pogora the Witch: A play by and forcnildren, presented by the LilliputTheatre of the H P. Jewish Communi¬ty Center under the direction of SonnyBurris. This Sunday at 2.30 and 6 pmand Monday at 10:30 am and 1:30 pm.At the Center for Continuing Education, 1307 E 60th. 363 2770. Donations:S2, children and students; $3, adults.Play Reading: Members of the AdultMobile Theater group will read nineteenth and twentieth century Jewishplays this Sunday at 3 pm. Congregation Rodfei Zedek, 5200 Hyde Park.Free.Eubie! A musical revue of the music ofEubie Blake, father of ragtime. Blake,97, is the sole surviving pioneer of theprecursor to jazz. Through March 2 atthe Studebaker, 418 S. Michigan. TuesSun at varying times, prices.435 0700.Poetry Reading by John Frederick Nimsand Michael Anania: Nims, editor ofPoetry and teacher at U of I at Circle,has won awards and grants from prestigious institutions. Anania s most recent book is Riversongs. Tonight at 8in Burrill Hall at the Episcopal ChurchCenter, 65 E Huron. 787 6410. $3, $2 forstudents and MCA members. —MMcQNational Radio Theatre of Chica¬go. This week, NRT brings us theHarold Pinter production of JamesJoyce's Exiles, with John Wood andVivian Merchant Mon, Feb 18 at 8 pmover WFMT, 98.7 FM.57th Street Art Fair: Applications to exhibit painting, sculpture, crafts, orphotographs at the 33rd annual fairare due by March 1. They are available from Sue Goldhammer, 5555 S.Everett. The fair will be held the weekend of June 7 and 8 Think summer!Calendar compiled by RebeccaLillianthe grey city journal —Friday, February 15, 1980—3Hangin' on the telephoneby David Miller and Ted ShenWith Rock 'n' Roll High School and a P.J. Soles contestcoming up, we decided to telephone the star of the film. Atfirst she wasn't home, and a recorded message told us,"Dennis (P.J.'s husband Dennis Quade who, in BreakingAway never did smdke that Marlboro) and I are in the hottub; please leave your number, so we can call you back."We did. We wanted to tell her how much we enjoyed herperformances in Halloween and Rock 'n' Roll High; wewanted to ask her about the Ramones; and we wanted toknow what P.J. stands for.P.J.'s real voice is very Californian: enthusiastic andlaid back. She dotted her answers with giggles and infec¬tious laughs. She also sounded very solicitous, concernedby the occasional lulls in our talk ("The interview was soboring, the interviewers couldn't even listen"). But weweren't bored; intrigued by her, we never got around toasking her what P.J. stands for.How did you get your start?I was a languages major at Georgetown University. Aftergraduation, I went to New York ... I started hanging outwith different people, and it turned out a lot of them wereactors and I needed some extra money. They got me a jobat Actor's Studio and what I did was run the spotlightsduring all their productions. I was glad to observe theclasses and everything. In high school and before that Iwas in school plays, but never thought of it as a way tomake money. But once I was in New York City and introduced to that and saw that you could make money, IP.J.decided I'd try to pursue it — having dropped my fantasyof becoming some diplomat in the Foreign Service or be¬coming the Russian ambassador. So I got into doing commercials and then into doing modelling. I got a job on Loveis a Many Splendored Thing, which is a soap opera in NewYork, and I did a movie in Jamaica by this guy Perry Hen-sel, who did The Harder They Come. But after a couple ofyears trying commercials and doing that, once in a whilea few film people would try to cast me. But back five or sixyears ago they didn't come to New York a lot, so I decidedthat I had to come to Los Angeles. I was here only twoweeks and I auditioned for Carrie and I got that role sothat made me feel pretty confident. After that I just keptgetting parts, so I've been doing it ever since then.Because I was in Carrie, John Carpenter cast me in Halloween. But it wasn't right after, it was like two yearslater. Or three. I did Rock 'n' RollHigh School after that. Itwas the first time I played a lead, which was really nice. Iwasn't too enthusiastic about doing a movie for RogerCorman because he is notoriously — you know — nasty toactors and doesn't like to pay. I really like the director,Alan Arkush, a lot. He says I was the only one he wanted toplay R iff. We had a lot of meetings together and we talkedwith writers and finally I thought, "Oh well, it would be areal good chance to have the whole movie to myself," yaknow.Had the Ramones already been selected as the band?They were thinking of the Ramones and Cheap Trick.They hadn't decided and I hadn't heard of either one ofthem. They gave me tapes of both of them and I put themon and I couldn't believe it, y'know, because I was supposed to be madly in love with the music and these guys. Ihave never really been much into punk rock, and I hadn'treally heard much of it. I started playing it and I didn'tknow if I was going to be able to do it because it was some¬thing so foreign to me. But after a while and after meeting4—the grey city journal—Friday, February 15, 1980 the Ramones, I kind of got into the music, although now Idon't really listen to it anymore, either.Are the Ramones easy to work with?Oh, yeah, they're real easy. They were real scared andnervous, ya know, to them a Roger Corman movie — theylike all those big spider movies, action movies. Roger Corman, especially to Johnny Ramone, you know, he kind ofidolized those movies — he's a total movie freak. Theywere really happy to be involved in a film and, you know,to get a little more exposure on their band. But they werejust real nervous. They kept asking me, "What should Ido, how should I say this line?" We really kinda had towork very hard to get them to relax since they were to¬tally out of their element.Are they good actors when they do relax?Well, as long as they are natural, you know, can keep theflow of the scene going. At work a couple of times we hadto rewrite right on the set. We had to change certain thingsto make the scenes a little shorter than they were reallyintended, just because they didn't really grasp the feel ofacting right away. They were just so shy, you know. Butas soon as you put them on the stage they go crazy. I wouldsay they are shy as actors and ferocious as singers.Do they keep to themselves pretty much or do they openup to others easily?Ah, well, while we were making the film — to only tookfour eeks to shoot — they talked to me a lot because theyhad scenes with me and stuff. They pretty much stayed intheir rooms by themselves. They had a couple of peoplewith them, their girlfriends and their wives. I had themover to my house a couple of times for dinner, and they arejust real shy and quiet. Except when you talk to Johnnyabout movies; then he becomes very energetic. I have acouple of tapes — like of Carrie and Halloween and every¬thing — and they wanted to watch them over and over. Imean, they're really into movies! Joey — Joey is hysteri¬cal. Once you get to know Joey he relaxes around you. Hetalks in a kind of prose. He's just really intelligent; hesays things that are truly humorous, and very witty. But,to get past the physical presence of Joey Ramone and toget into his head is pretty hard, but once he does let down Ithink he's a kind of a fascinating person.As you say, the Ramones are wild onstage and shy off¬stage. How do you think they accomplish this transformation?I know a lot of actors, and they wouldn't talk to you if theirlife depended on it. But put them in front of a camera andthis whole beautiful personality emerges. It's somethingabout the creative act, having it recorded or having some¬body see it. They save it all for the performance. I really P.J. and the Ramones take over Vince Lombardi High.except that it's the artists' . . .Did the Ramones seem to enjoy California?Oh, yeah . . . when they first were here, I don't think theyliked it very much, they didn't know where to go or what todo. But once they got into the city they enjoyed it, and thesecond time they came back after doing the movie to givea concert, they stayed at the same hotel and they actuallywere going jogging and getting tanned by the pool. Exceptfor Joey, everyone else was swimming in the pool, havingpoolside drinks and food. It was a very California scene.They said they were getting into it at last. I expected themto go to the beach and surf. Or at least roller skate orsomething. But they always have those ripped jeans andblack jackets, you know. It's funny because those aretheir stage clothes. Well, then they change . . . but theychange into the same thing. Their streetwear is stillripped jeans, but it's like they're different jeans. Not thesame jeans.Was Rock 'n' Roll High written with you in mind?Originally there were two scripts, one was called "Girls inthe Gym" about girls in gym clss and all that whole thing,and the other was this idea for a rock 'n' roll or discomovie. And they put it together, the two ideas. It's very rare to have tv\which was an<couldn't believ<girls as oppose'Did the movie 5in the bedroomUm, no. i megot to have sorrthey are . . . th<that are attracYou can't justebecause you thifilm.How was it to wWorking with Bto get introducactors to improideas. Most of tlsation — he'd tu"Okay, this is wyour own wordsdo two weeks, bsaw certain peoon their own, hCarrie. So, to nreally had in rrmade love or soiperience.John Carpentliked me so mucas soon as I w<always like peadirector that cative feelings forAlan Arkush alshave worked oraren't interesteidiscussing howOr allow you tojust very confinis why a lot ofTV.Weren't you setNo. I would lov*I'm sure I will.Jamie Lee Curlmother was indecided to use bwas another paiHe seems to PRamones not better, justEnd of the CenturyRamonesSireby David MillerThe Ramones' newest studio album,their fifth, is out. End of the Century isn'tthe most outrageous (Ramones is, theirfirst); humorous (Rocket to Russia,third); worst (Leave Home, second); orbest (Road to Ruin, fourth). But Century isout, and it is different.Phil Spector produced Century, but hedidn't distinguish it. The music is fine, butit's not new: the Ramones have onlymoved further in the direction started withRoad to Ruin's varied and full sound. Thestrings on Spector's own contribution,"Baby, I Love You," recall Johnny's vio¬lin like guitar on Ruin's "You Don't ComeClose"; the hollow bass and drum patternon "I'm Affected" recalls that of Ruin's"Needles and Pins." Spector hasn't al¬tered the Ramones; he's just added hismusical tricks to theirs.Century's chief difference is a shift inemphasis. From the almost complete lackof songs about mental disease, one gathersthe Ramones no longer find their ownminds as foreign as they once did. Withoutthis staple, the album is necessarily a lotless funny; only one song, "The Return ofJackie and Judy," is humorous, and thenit's in the manner of "I Don't Wanna WalkAround With You," or "Judy is a Punk,"and not in that of "I Wanna Be Sedated,"or "Gimme Gimme Shock Treatment."The humor here is at the expense of others,and not at the expense of oneself.The album is a hodgepodge of variouskinds of songs. Side one opens with a teenanthem in the tradition of "BlitzkriegBop" and "Sheena is a Punk Rocker"; Johnny and Markyside two is anchored with "Rock 'n' RollHigh School," a fun but lighthearted tunelike "Rockaway Beach." Every other songon Century, with the possible exception of"Baby, I Love You," seems serious.That the seriousness has changed is obvious, too. The Ramones were once mostserious when they were most dangerous;but none of Century's songs are "dangerous" in the manner of their earliestwork:Then I took out my razor* bladeThen I did what God forbadeNow the Cops are after meBut I proved I'm no sissy.—553rd & 3rd/RamonesThe only obviously dangerous senti¬ments on Century are in the militaristicnumber "Let's Go" ("Want more action, haven't had my fill/Mercenary, fight for 1anyone/Fight for money/Fight for fun"), tand even here it's undercut with doubt: i"Gee it's kinda scary out here (on the bat ctlefield)/Mosquitos are happy tonight/Mommy, daddy, can I please comehome/Even if just for one night."The Ramones have given up pretendingthey're teenagers. The teen anthem isaimed as much at older fans as younger("Do you remember Hullaballoo/Upbeat,Shindig and Ed Sullivan too?/...Murraythe K,/Alan Freed, and high energy")."I'm Affected" is the clearest statementyet that the Ramones aren't what they'vepretended to be. (Joey is now either 28 or a29). The Ramones have grown up on this aalbum; their concerns here are substan atially different from those on any previous aalbum. rThe simple desire to work with Spectoris one such indication of maturity; if Ruin pproved anything, it proved the Ramones rcould make a fantastic album, and it still Fwouldn't get airplay or sell well. It seems nthis verdict has been accepted; if the Ra Jmones wanted to manufacture AM hits, ethey could do it (especially with Spector's 0help), and they haven't tried too hard here, fiInstead, "Do You Remember Rock 'n' Roll sRadio" presents its message in a straight t(forward way unusual for the Ramones; it sisn't really intended as a catchy tune. ti"I'm Affected," "Danny Says," "I Can't cMake it on Time," "This Ain't Havana," dand "High Risk Insurance" are the main t<original works on Century, and each dealsseriously with real problems — love, thesense of personal worth, the importance ofaction in today's world, drugs.The Ramones display more self contidence in these songs than ever before.feel that the Ramones are like that. When I first saw themperform, I think at the Whiskey on Sunset, I couldn't be*lieve that they were the same people. Their whole act, tome, is total energy. They're not necessarily the greatestmusicians, or the greatest singers. I think their songlyrics are pretty interesting, from a really different pointof view, considering where they grew up and everything. Icouldn't believe how much energy they were putting outthere, so I guess they just all save it up. I don't know why,? two leads being female in a movie like this,another reason I really wanted to do it. Iieve someone was making a movie about twoosed to two guys.'ie seem at all sexist to you, because of scenes>om and in the gym?mean, "sexist” — what is "sexist"? You'vesome ... I mean, ah, women are women, andthey have beautiful bodies. There are thingsractive about women that should be shown,st cancel out all intimations of sexual activity,i think it's sexist; and there's no nudity in theto work with De Palma and Carpenter?h Brian De Palma was probably the best wayduced to making movies because he lovesprovise and he loves actors to come up withof the little scenes I had were total improvisa-d turn the camera on for two minutes and sayis what I kinda want, and so do it and make up>rds." Originally I had been signed on just tos, but after he saw the dailies and, you know,people couldn't improvise and do little thingsi, he kept me through the whole shooting ofto me that was the best.experience that I'ven movie making. It was like the first time Ir something, it was just really a whole new ex¬tenter, I think, is brilliant. The fact that henuch in Carrie and the fact that he wanted meI walked into his office helped, because youpeople who like you so much, but he also is at cares a lot about actors. He has real sensi-> for them and allows you to give ideas. Andi also did that with Rock 'n' Roll High School. Id on several things where the directors just;sted in talking to you about your character oriow you're going to do it or your motivations,u to even change one word in the script. It'snfining. That's more like in television, whicht of actors say they'd rather do films than1 scheduled to be in The Fog?love to work with John Carpenter again, andwill. I think he became really friendly withCurtis. See, he really liked the fact that herin Psycho and after meeting her mother hese both of them in The Fog. I don't think there■ part for a younger girl.yo be using the same people over and overt older| They not only refrain from laughing atthemselves, but also laugh at others. Thisisn't really new, but it is new in a seriouscontext:« You better offer some resistancei You better give up on my in-i sistenceThings happen overnightYou don't give up without a’ fight—"This Ain't Havana"iIIIif Unfortunately, these more serious songsare divided from one another by the twoanthems, and by "All the Way" (a throw¬away "loud noise/let's go nuts" number)and "The Return of Jackie and Judy,” themost likable song on the album.The Ramones are changing. It'll be im¬portant to see how the new tricks and thenew concerns translate to the stage; theRamones live have always proved the Ra¬mones on record, and not vice versa. WillJoey seem as angry singing "I'm Affect¬ed" as he did singing "Glad to See YouGo" or "I'm Against It?" Will Johnny perform guitar solos in concert, or is that non¬sense (joke) just for the studio? Only atour will tell. In the meantime, Centurystands as a testimony to a band in transition. Let's hope a strengthened maturitycomes of this pause, and let's hope wedon't have to wait another year and a halfto hear it.We need change, we need itfastBefore rock's just part of thepast'Cause lately it all sounds thesame to me. again.'Yeah, directors like to do that I guess Brian's going to usea lot of Nancy Allen now that they're married.Are you shooting a movie now?I just finished Private Beniamin on Friday; it's a comedywith Goldie Hawn and it takes place in the Army. I playEileen Brennan's aide de camp. Actually I look really dif¬ferent because I wear a very short black wig, because myhair is kinda similar to Goldie Hawn's and they wanted toreally make me look different. I play a very straight kindof graduate of ROTC in high school and I go on to theArmy to make it my career. Goldie Hawn is like a total=fuck up; she can't do anything right. It's my job to follow^her around and keep her in line all the time. It also takes-ome a little bit out of the teenage range; because there's no >age on this it doesn't imply that I'm a teeny bopper. It'SQsuch a different kind of role.What's coming up in your schedule?Well ... I have a couple of movies that I'm, you know,thinking about, but most of the things at this moment thatpeople call up about are horror movies and chillerthrillers, and I'd really rather not do another one of those .. . So I'm hoping . . .'you know ... I need, like, a very ... Ineed a lead again, you know, like Rock 'n' Roll HighSchool except something along a more serious tone. Youknow, a realistic and a serious kind of a film. More dramatic.Do you have any suggestions for people who try to imitateRiff?Well, you got a Fiorucci's over there? That's where I gotall my clothes, (much laughter) The wardrobe budget wasso limited — I think it was like two hundred dollars orsomething — which I spent on one shirt. I put a lot of myown money into the wardrobe . . . because I think that wasa big part of it — the splashiness and the color of Riff. Themain thing that I tried also to emphasize in the age of Riffwas just pure energy, you know, total franticness all thetime ... If she was standing still, her leg was shaking; orif she was sitting down her arms were moving or herfingers were drumming on her knee or something. And thehair of course: wild and frizzy. I cut bangs for that charac¬ter just 'cause I thought the thick bang look looked verypunk, although later the director told me that when he wasin New York, a lot of girls came up to him and said: "Howcome she didn't have really, really short hair?" Which Idon't know — I've just never cut my hair so I didn't eventhink about it for a second — I just thought wild and crazy,frizzy hair would do. A lot of people thought that I wasn'tpunk enough, but I wasn't really trying to be punk so muchas a combination of cheerleader and punk. I was trying tomake her a kind of a sympathetic and ah, a very realisticgirl in high school, you know, more than just a freaky kindof a chick. She had a lot of niceness in her, you know, Ireally wanted a fine line so that everyone would really likeher and so that nobody was turned off.Who's the other girl?Dey Young. That was her first movie. We tried hard on thecontrast with our clothes. She was wearing very kindadull, light, pastel colors, and she had those big glasses andvery straight kind of oily hair. I thought it was a reallygood contrast and it was real possible that we would befriends, you know, her being so smart and helping me outwith homework and me trying just to show her a little ofthe flash of the bright side of life — trying to get her to goout with some guys. I really like her, our relationship.Ah, umm, as far as lines in the movies go, the one thatMiss Togarfirst comes to mind is "UP YOURS, TOGAR!!!" (muchlaughter) "We made it to the concert without you!"Can you send us an autographed glossy of yourself so wecan give it to the winner of the contest?Uh huh, sure ... I'd love to know who wins and what shelooks like . . .We're hoping that we'll get men to try this too; we want toget the spirit of the thing acted out and not the character,perfectly. We just want to let people get up on the stageand make fools of themselves, and with this great, funmovie, we think people'll probably be willing to try it.That's neat. I think that's real good I feel real happy thatyou guys are doing it. Call back if you've forgotten anythipg and send me the results and I'll send you a pic¬ture. Martin Dysart (Patrick Billingsley) offers Alan Strang (Brian Finn) a truth pill inCourts Equus.Court's Equus an originalEquusby Peter Schafferdirected by Michael Hildebrandat Reynolds Club Theatre throughMarach 2by Jeanne NowaczewskiYou're not excused from attendingCourt Theatre's Equus just becauseyou've seen some other production.Court's presentation of this contem¬porary psychological drama fulfillsthe possibilities of Peter Schaffer'sscript more precisely than did theChicago production of several yearsago. The intimacy of the ReynoldsClub Theater merely enhances apower that would be obvious from adistance: director Michael Hildebrand and his superb cast havecreated a superior show.Equus is a precarious tight rope walkof a play, for it must juggle the long re¬flective monologues of its central character, the psychiatrist Martin Dysart, withthe spectacular, erotic scenes of theyoung Alan Strang (Dysart's patient)and his horses. Pushed too far Dysart'sway, the show would resemble a coffee-shop conversation, thick with the clichesof pop psychology; pushed too fartowards Alan and his neurosis, the per¬formance would degenerate into kinkysadism, and leave the serious problemsunexplored. Court's version is a high-wire success; drawn into the perfor¬mance by the cast's pre-show exercisesin unity, the audience is never allowed toslip away, and its attention remains focused on monologues and spectaclesalike.Strang is committed to a psychiatrichospital for Dysart's care after blindingsix horses in the stable where he worked.The boy's violent act is the twisted flowering of an ardent childhood worship ofhorses, in which he awards them theplaces of God and Woman, OmnipotentBeing and Sexual Mate. In the fields atmidnight, he paid his homage and tookhis pleasure, riding bareback, naked except for his fervor, chanting: "Two shallbe one! Equus! Equus!"It is left for Dysart to envy Alan’s passion, contrasting it to his own academicand asexual life. He struggles to explainthat Alan's pure worship of a sublimebeing created by himself may be thehighest human achievement possible.His pragmatic colleague Hester Salomon(who prevailed upon Dysart to acceptAlan as a patient initially) reminds himof his professional responsibility to remove the boy's obvious and immediatepain, regardless of the worth of itssource. Dysart does what he is skilled indoing, but his success gives him no satisfaction. His life remains empty and passionless and he fears the boy's will be¬come equally bourgeois, now that he hasdrained Alan's unique faith and sexualityfrom htm and left him open to only common desires. Dysart's sense of his restrained, mean¬ingless life is masterfully rendered byPatrick Billingsley. He can convey theshock of a moment's revelation with justone twitch of his cheek. He infuses Dysart's character with a subtext ofwarmth and understanding which bothcounteracts his continual self-criticism,and forces the audience to accept the sin¬cerity and intensity of his questioning.The scenes between Billingsley andBrenda Wilde, as Hester, successfullyconvey Dysart's sensitivity.Billingsley, however, is only one in asystem of binary stars. He and BrianFipn, as Alan, move in opposite direc¬tions before their paths converge in thehospital, Alan driven by passion, Dysartcoasting in normalcy with only the begin¬nings of personal and professional doubtto trouble his path. But once broughtnear, they are greatly attracted to oneanother by a sense of the other's power.Impelled by the intuition that their ownrenewal lies in the other's problem, theyorbit each other relentlessly — until eachis forced to reveal the power perceivedby the other. Finn starts the play woundtightly and makes us witness the irrevo¬cable turnings that cause the wires tospring and the mechanism to collapse.Finn's energy is amazing: every tor¬tured moment of Alan's existence playson Finn's anguished face, convincing usthat Finn's whole self is Alan. I left thetheater gratified that an actor would giveso much to his audience.Mick Weber plays Alan's special horse,Nugget. He must convey much with littleand he succeeds elegantly -. every twist ofhis head, every odd, guarded glance ofhis eyes makes us share Alan's wonderand awe. Patty Rust as Jill, the girl Alanattempts to love, is also praiseworthy.Rust's laugh alone, a warm throated, inviting, girlish laugh, is enough to makeher right for the part, and her wawnhearted and guiltless characterizationgives a special poignancy to the nudescene, protecting it from sensationalism.In theater, one good communicativemoment is worth more than a series ofsecond rate scenes, and the lighting forEquus lives up to this credo. Jim Lichtenstein gives us two inspired visions; one ofblue horses, the other of a golden Dysart,with a cured Alan at his feet; these areburnt into the viewer's memory, symbolsof the play's themes.There is one moment in the play whenDysart, arguing to prove the worth ofAlan's abnormality, equates it with theGreek custom of worshipping manygods: "Life is only comprehensiblethrough a thousand local gods. And notjust the old dead ones with names likeZeus — no, but living Geniuses of Placeand Person! Spirits of certain trees, certain curves of brick walls, certain frownsin people and slouches. Worship as manyas you can see — and more will appear."Let this be your reason for seeing Court'sEquus. it is a local god, a neighborhoodbeauty, worthy «f our attention and re¬spect.the grey city journal —Friday, February 15, 1980—5D€CFIFU§ Friday February 16P.J. Soles Be-Alike-Contest at First Show 7:15Allan Arkush'sROCK 'N' ROLLHIGH SCHOOL2nd show at 9:15Saturday February 1 7 7:15 and 9:30Vladimir Nabokov'sSunday DESPAIRAdapted by Tom StoppardDirected by Rainer Werner FassbinderFebruary 18 7:15 and 9:30Alain Tanner'sTHE MIDDLEOF THE WORLDAll films SI.50 Cobb Hall Williams Chops PricesDRASTICREDUCTIONSON 300MEN’S SUITSvalues to $195.00GEORGE WASHINGTONSPECIALSNOWs2900to 6900Choose amongH. Freeman, Chaps,Donald Brooks andothersWILLIAM’S TRADITIONALCLOTHING19-S. LaSalle St. - 782-9885(Entrance on Arcade Place)ANNOUNCEMENTPolice will ticket and tow allvehicles parked on the MidwayPlaisance from Cottage Grove toDorchester Ave. between3:00 a.m. and 7:00 a.m.This policy will be pursued as a result of the re¬designation of the Midway Plaisance from a two-inch snow emergency route. The overnight no¬parking ban is in effect from December 1st toApril 1st.6—the grey city journal—Friday, February 15, 1980Rexroth Reads Like a Flock of Birdsby Morgan RussellA LATE SUMMER EVENING, 1979 ATTHE SAN FRANCISCO ARTINSTITUTEThe room is crowded — banks of seatsto the ceiling and aisles and floor spacesfilled with people with bated breath.Some are sitting cross legged, drawnnear to hear. The only place to sit isamid a tangle of snaking cords, feet fromthe feet of a rummaging Rexroth behinda lecturn. There is a Japanese woman intraditional garb sitting on her heels, astringed Japanese instrument waiting tobe plucked in front of her, and akimonoed Japanese man with a flute-likeinstrument beside her, both on the otherside of the lecturn. I have the distinctuncomfortable sensation that the room iswaiting for the Buddha to speak. Theman behind the lecturn is white-haired,heavy, and calm in a poplin suit with beltriding high around his widecircumference, looking like a retiredEnglish major who has just stepped offhis veranda in "Inja" to address thisgathering. He is looking through bookstucked into a recess of the lecturn forsomething in particular which he ishaving difficulty finding."This is the problem when you writetoo many books."Titters in the room. My uncomfortablelinoleum position and the devotion of thegathering make me smirk — there arespotlights blindingly shining — and saysilently to Rexroth, "This better begood." He finds what he is looking forand says something to the musicians who Ithen begin to play. The flute dodgesabout abstract plunking, twangs, andstrums, and Rexroth begins keening andintoning a Japanese which sounds as if itis being produced outside his body by aflock of small birds riding the breeze ofthe music, wheeling and circling about.My crust begins to soften a bit, and Idon't worry about the bird droppingswhich are invisibly accumulating on myhead and shoulders. He then renders theavian tongue in English. He reads poemsmainly from The Morning Star.The book, The Morning Star, (NewDirections), is composed of three parts —"The Silver Swan," "On Flower WreathHill," and "The Love Poems ofMarichiko" — each published originallyas a separate book. "The Silver Swan"consists of his own poems andtranslations of Gunnar Ekelof (a Swedishpoet), Fujiwara no Teika, and YosanoAkiko, all written in Kyoto 1974-1978. In1974 and 1975, Rexroth and his wife, CarolTinker, lived in a seven hundred year old jfarmhouse in Kyoto in an embayment ofHigashiyama, or the Eastern Hills. On aplateau on a shoulder of the range, whichrises abruptly across the street from thehouse, is the tumulus of a long deadprincess which is now "only an irregularheap of low mounds covered with trees."This site inspired the second section ofthe book, "On Flower Wreath Hill,"Flower Wreath Hill being both aJapanese and a Chinese euphemism for"cemetery." "The Love Poems ofMarichiko" are translations of poems bya contemporary young woman who livesnear the temple of Marishi ben in Kyotoand whose poems have appeared in "100More Poems From The Japanese" byRexroth.An immediately noticeable quality in"The Silver Swan" that continuesthroughout the entire collection isstillness. The very arrangement of a littlepoem sitting in the upper left hand cornerof a blank white page like a squirrel on apatch of snow emphasizes the quietcrystalline detail of his poems. They dealwith Nature, but a Nature widelyencompassing, holding the human faunaand flora — the wildlife of our mind andour ephemerally sprouting emotions,juxtaposed with a rare natural world.The people in his poems are as natural to I the landscapes as animals.IVAsagumoriOn the forest pathThe leaves fall. In the witheredGrass the crickets singTheir last songs. Through dew andduskI walk the paths you once walked,My sleeves wet with memory.XAfter Akiko—"Yoru no cho ni"for YasuyoIn your frost white kimonoEmbroidered with bare branchesI walk you home New Year's Eve.As we pass a street lampA few tiny bright feathersFloat in the air. Stars form onYour wind blown hair and you cry,"The first snow!"Rexroth's poems may be about Nature,but they are not "cute," nor is his bookjust a hip Boy Scout manual. Like Haiku,his poems are trimmed of all shaggyverbiage. Their simple suggestivenessand selective exclusion create broaderand more intricate scenery than anexhaustive cataloguing could. Heforsakes general descriptions and lets adetail, recorded with startling clarity,stand for all. By this one pointedconcentration he captures a moment likean expert butterfly collector. His deftmagical use of language to conjure anentire scene and evoke feeling with fewwords can be seen in poem XVI11. (Fewof the poems are titled and they all arenumbered as on a wine list.)XVIIIMidnight, the waning moonOf midsummer glowsFrom the raindrops onThe first flowers of Autumn.If a theme runs through the book, itwould be transience. The moon and itsphase is often mentioned and it appearslike a luminescent clock dial in thebackdrop of many of the poems behindbranches whose state of foliation givesthe season. The joy of one poem soonfalls away like the leaves of the barrenbranches of the next. The evanescence ofour very lives plays strongly in "FlowerWreath Hill" and is summarized in thelast two lines of poem VII of that section:Change rules the world forever.And man but a little while."Flower Wreath Hill," however, is notso strongly distinguished in character asto be separated from the "Silver Swan"in which the theme of transitoriness alsoplays.Rexroth's voice modulates fromsonorous undulence to crisp whisperingexhalation and across other strata whichmay or may not have names. Heproduces a set of wooden rice boxes, openon one side, which he claps together in adistant echoing staccato or draws acrossone another in a spine shivering call ofdead ancestors which melds with hisvoice and the instruments in thisJapanese jam session. After each poemthere is a collective release of breathfrom the audience like the quietaspirated approbation after aparticularly good firework. I may be anIrish lyre, but he played the heartstringsof the audience with such penetrationthat, when I joined the crowd leaving forintermission, I felt years older andeveryone looked as if they had just givenblood.I go outside to revive with some SanFrancisco summer air (usually mistyenough to eat) and buy a can of V 8, thathigh horsepower tomato juice. I help ayoung woman extract some orange juicefrom a hulk of stainless steel technologythat is thwarting her (her significance inthe story will become clear shortly) andgo to sit on the tiled edge of a pool offloating lotuses in the courtyard of thecomplex to consider the reading. — It is not any informational content ofRexroth's poetry that makes the chiefimpression but its capacity for honing; perception. After reading or hearing it,I sensations are painfully acute and it: takes some time before drear! generalities and vague concepts oncej again flood observations."The Love Poems of Marichiko"comprise an erotic hymnal inspired byMarishi ben who is "an Indian,pre Aryan, goddess of the dawn who is abodhisattva in Buddhism and patron ofgeisha, prostitutes, women in childbirth,and lovers, and, in another aspect, once! of samurai." They are sixty poems which; tell the story of a woman and her lover(whose sex is ambiguous), theirsurreptitious nightly lovemaking, the! woman's daily throes of loneliness, theirseparation, and the woman's attendant; grief, despair, advancing age, andj memories. The pulse builds from' tenderness .... ,xYou wake me,Part my thighs, and kiss me.I give you the dewOf the first morning of the world,through the turgid incandescence ofI orgasm . . . XXIVI scream as you biteMy nipples, and orgasmDrains my body, as if IHad been cut in two.XXVYour tongue thrums and movesInto me, and I becomeHollow and blaze withWhirling light, like the insideOf a vast expanding pearl.XXXIVEvery morning, IWake alone, dreaming myArm is your sweet fleshPressing my lips.This collection of poems carries withits tittNations of youth the inexorablecreep of death. Within few pages abeautiful woman ages in front of our1 eyes. The keenness of her torment is felt as cuttingly as the thrashing of her love.LVIThis flesh you have lovedIs fragile, unstable by natureAs a boat adrift.The fires of the cormorant fishersFlare in the night.My heart flares with this agony.Do you understand?My life is going out.Do you understand?My life.Vanishing like the stakesThat hold the nets against the currentIn Uji River, the current and themistAre taking me.Several lifetimes later, after thereading, I quietly leave. I hear from oneof the cognoscente about a reception andwalk the blocks there. It wasn'tannounced or advertised and there are nothrongs to fight for the wine. Everyone isbeing friendly and polite with everyoneelse just in case they're a famous poet. Isee the young woman who has by nowforsaken orange juice for wine. I talkwith her and another young woman, herfriend, who is visiting San Francisco. Theformer drifts off leaving me with thefriend who has arresting breasts whichhold me in their sway. I divide my gazebetween her and Rexroth, sitting in acorner, who I mean to speak with. Thereis someone talking with him now and heonly reminds me of Marichiko, and thiswoman, even more. Hell, what significantthing am I going to say to him — Howmuch do you weigh?" Instead, I offer myservices to the woman as a guide throughthe dives of North Beach. Later, on agrassy plot under Coit Tower, with mycampanion, I do not regret my devotionto Marishi-ben:Murmuring and rustlingUnder the eucalyptus tree.(M. Russell)l think Rexroth and Marichiko wouldapprove.Unassigned Readings and Other Guilty Pleasures Compiled by Richard Kaye, Molly McQuade, and the Chicago Literary Review. <the grey city lournal—Friday, February 15, 1980—7Skips a beatHeart Beat. Written and directed by JohnByrum. With Nick Nolte, Sissy Spacek, andJohn Heard.Down in DenverDown in DenverAll I did was die— Jack Kerouac, On the Roadby Andrew PatnerThe life and fiction of Jack Kerouac seemto be fruits ripe for a film director to picktFather of the Beat Generation, scattershotpilot on the stream of consciousness,Kerouac was the chronicler of a wild era heloved at the time and later grew to hate.From the end of World War II till 1957,Jack Kerouac and Company bopped andblew across straight America. Kerouacwrote about the Desolation Angels — him¬self, Neal Cassady, Allen Ginsberg, GregoryCorso, William S. Burroughs, and others —as they hooted and howled at 110 mph, withKerouac always lagging a couple of stepsbehind, trying to put their meanderings intosome kind of focus, get them down on paper.Writing his instant prose on teletype rollsfor days and weeks without a break, hecaught the "sweetness" and "sadness" of agang of Peter Pans who refused to grow up,who laughed at America and dug eachother.On the Road was Kerouac's testament,completed in 1947 but kicked around for 10years by publishers until Malcolm Cowleydusted it off, cut it in half, and madeKerouac a star. By then Kerouac, havinggrown tired of the Beats and their recklessabandon, entered a ten year love affair withboredom and bourbon that took him throughWilliam F. Buckley and anti semitism, flan¬nel shirts and Oedipal fulfillment, and lefthim dead and bloated at 47.To try to capture his story, or tabring Onthe Road to the screen, would be tough challenges, but inviting ones. Writer directorJohn Byrum has elected to do neither whilemaking a Kerouac film nonetheless, concerntrating instead on an almost incidental men¬age a trois. Seizing on the coldest of literaryproperties, Byrum has tried to bring the"memoirs" of Carolyn Cassady, Neal's sec ond wife, to the screen. Unfortunately, Carolyn's only claim to fame or shame was herturbulent marriage to Cassady. Her limitedviewpoint shows us nothing but empty characters whose sole desire is to bed with her.One wonders why Byrum even attemptedthis film. His previous endeavors — thescript of the Diana Ross vehicle Mahogany,the direction of the ill-fated semi-pornogra¬phic Inserts, and some backstage work forThe Muppets — hardly seem to qualify himfor it. He has assembled a cast with equalunsuitablity. Nick Nolte presents Neal as alumbering oaf, without his personal magnetism, peculiar intellect, or raw sexuality. Hebarely seems to understand why KerouacJack Kerouac in 1953; photo by AllenGinsberg. writes or even what writing is. Nolte's portrayal lacks the energy or spirit of a manwho read Kant when he was 13, quoted Baudelaire and Celine, and participated in bisexual escapades with a frequency thatmost of us reserve only for breathing.John Heard's Kerouac is hopelessly forgettable, alternating lines like "I'm going toplay this typewriter like Charlie Parker"with deep stares into space. Ray Sharkey reduces Allen Ginsberg to a character out of"Dobie Gill is." In a press release for thefilm, Mr. Sharkey assures us that he is notreally playing Ginsburg: "I made up thename Ira Strieker, I invented his personality, and I even wrote the original poetry hereads in the picture." Said poetry has something to do with "black jism" and despiteMr. Sharkey's protestations, Ginsberg isjustifiably fuming.Perhaps the only succesfful realization isSissy Spacek's Carolyn. Spacek seems as ignorant of Jack and Neal as Carolyn was.Even after reading the script, Spacek said"I didn't even know they were real people."Byrum accepts this interpretation and inone scene in which Kerouac appears on atelevision talk show, a Jack Paar surrogatesays to him, "You sure hang out with abunch of kooky characters." The studio au¬dience laughs heartily and, we gather, sodid Byrum.The film has some successes. LaszloKovacs has photographed it in subtle colorsthat effectively evoke the black and whiteFifties, and Byrum detects something of thetragedy of the decline and hard times ofboth Jack and Neal. But the film nevermakes it, it never sings. Art Pepper's saxophone is, surprisingly, as pale and mechanical as the rest of the the film. On the Road,for all of its adolescent acrobatics, remainsone of the most lyrical of modern Americanfictions. Kerouac recreated a "sweet, sweetsadness" of fast lives and disjointed camaraderie that Heart Beat never transfers tothe screen. Byrum has distorted both factand fiction to no end. The Beats remain ripefruit for a more sensitive eye.On the whole I'd rather have been inDenver.The Village auteuristby Rory McGahanToday at 1 pm. Law School Films willshow Alfred Hitchcock's Strangers on aTrain, one of the master's most interestingand impressive works. But the main interestof the event is that this screening is to be followed by a talk on the film by AndrewSarris, probably one of the two or three mostimportant and influential film criticstoday.It was with the publication of Sarris' TheAmerican Cinema in 1968 that film criticismin America emerged from its primitiveperiod. In 1968 things still weren't terriblydifferent from what they were in 1942 whenthe critic Otis Ferguson presented the problem:I have been on this pitch for quite along time, and now I should like +o inquire why we as the nation that pro¬duces the movies should never havedeveloped any sound school of moviecriticism. That we haven't is obvious;read your papers. Why we haven't isprobably owing to the ineradicable ig¬norance in theatricals of the ordinarywriting hack, and to the fact that theordinary reviewer on a newspaper ormagazine is traditionally an amiablechump who has been kicked upstairs.In the deep-water magazines he maybe a promising fellow who is workingup to be a paid critic of the Drama orLiterature, but if he has the slighjestconception of how movies were madeand why, he will probably be given ajob doing something else.As a result, between the trade critics, whosejob it was to determine if a film would makemoney or not, and the artsy types who wereconvinced that the only films made were Ei-senstein's or later, social documentaries orneo-Realists or (Ingmar) Bergman's —whichever corresponded to the current po¬litical or literary tendencies. At any rate, inthe hands of either of the two critics, thechances are that a film like Strangers on aTrain would not be taken seriously — judged have existed without Sarris and the auteurtheory. Every frame of their films showstheir study of Ford and Hawks; and their efforts have been devoted to achieving, asconsciously as possible, the same effects,the same visual grace, rhythm, and thematic resonance that a Ford, Hawks, Hitchcock or Mann could get without thinkingtwice.The auteur theory has it limits, though.The chief problem is that it isn't quite atheory, as Andrew Sarris realized when hefirst presented it — it's more of an attitude.It tells you what to look for, but little abouthow to go about it. That's the difference between Sarris and any other auteurist. It isalso the reason why auteurism is not dead.Today it is not possible to take film seriouslywithout at least starting from auteurist presuppositions. There is no other place tostart.But Sarris is more than a champion of atheory. Sarris' criticism, even without au¬teurism, falls in the tradition of greatAmerican film criticism: with that of OtisFerguson, James Agee, Robert Warshow,Manny Farber, and possibly Pauline Kael.The American Cinema is quite an achievement. It is the first serious full-scale studyof American films and directors; and it iscarefully written and filled with much clearperception. Often he is wrong about a direc¬tor, but then, no one else back then wascloser. The style of the book also deservespraise. Sarris's clarity, his ability to see afilm from all sides, has rarely beenmatched, and the whole thing is written inan alliterative, rhythmically shifting fash¬ion which makes the book readable and actsas a mnemonic device, aiding a generationof young film students to memorize his pro¬nouncements on everyone from Edgar G.Ulmer to Jean Renoir. Nor is The AmericanCinema Sarris' only work of consequence.He has written works on Joseph von Stern¬berg, Howard Hawks, and John Ford, andhad his articles collected in several books(Confession of a Cultist, Politics and Cine- on its own merits rather than as a "kepresentative Hollywood Product."Hanging around academia and GreenwichVillage, in the mid-fifties Sarris got involvedwith a new film magazine, Film Culture;with the help of its editor, experimentalfilmmaker Jonas Mekas, he got his presentjob reviewing films for the Village Voice. Inhis early years he began picking up ideasfrom the pages of the French Cahiers duCinema, edited by Andre Bazin and writtenby Francois Truffaut, Claude Chabrol, EricRohmer, and Jean-luc Godard, amongothers. From among them emerged the socalled politique des auteurs, which Sarristurned into his "auteur theory" and intro¬duced to the world in The American Cinema.Bazin used to say that "all films wereborn equal." That was the foundation of theauteur theory. What Sarris also held wasthat personal expression was to be found atall levels of cinematic production, and thatthe chief auteur who did the expressing wasnot the writer or producer or star, but thedirector, who served as a sort of "masterbuilder." ¥The auteur theory, right from its first presentation in Film Culture back in 1963,through the shock waves produced by TheAmerican Cinema, caused more than onevoice to be raised in anger. Back then every¬one from Pauline Kael on down turned fromit in outrage; today it is generally accordedto be "dead" and the faddish young criticshave moved on to Structuralism, MarxistStructuralism, and Feminist Marxist Structuralism. But the auteur theory has had itseffects. In even the most "daily" of the dailies occasional obeisances are made in thedirection of at least a few directors. Else¬where, talk of Hawks, Ford, Hitchcock, Nicholas Ray and Anthony Mann — and oftheir films — is accepted in the pages of re¬spectable film journals. The most recentgeneration of Hollywood filmmakers, theScorseses, the Bogdanoviches, the Carpen¬ters, the Lucases and Schraders, would not8—the grey city journal—Friday, February 15, 1980 LETTERSrTo the editorAs former directors of ContemporaryEuropean Films, we feel obligated to offera revised account to balance Mr. Shen'shistory of cinema at UC. CEF began andprospered as an alternative to the DOCtrinaire approach to film on campus, i.e., Ca¬hiers du Cinema a Chicago. That policylargely excluded many fine films, espe¬cially current European releases. CEF's'intuition in this matter proved genuine and jyielded popular and financial success. Bit'by bit, in order to compete, DOC was*forced to book more new releases both domestic and imported. No longer could theyexpect to support nine weeks of Borzage'sgreatest hits by one showing of a motheaten print of Casablanca.What eventually defeated CEF was notany miscalculation regarding Bergman(not Ingrid), but CEF's anarchic organizational structure. Our beginning and heyday were as a group of friends with cinematic interests, held together by socialrather than ideological ties. As the membership changed, those ties weakened. Toofew finally remained who were willing todevote their nearly full time to the burden.Uninterested in reforming along Doc's Soviet style model, CEF finally ran out ofsteam.Doc's present booking policy remains astestimony to CEF's success in expandingthe boundaries of campus film. This is notsurprising; Rome, having conqueredAthens, learned to speak Greek.Tom WeidenbachDorthea JuulHoward M. IsaacsTo the editor:What we did not tell Ted Shen is that thefilm that we plan to make with this year'sprofit will be a two part documentary en¬titled "The Case History and Anatomy ofThe Chicago Maroon." Part I will dealwith the history of world journalism fromthe invention of the printing press to theauspicious appearance of The Maroon onthe journalistic scene. Part II will thencenter on The Maroon from its conceptionto its status today as "a self satisfied commercial mammoth." The narrator will beJohn T. ("Have you been sharpening yourpencils or your knives?") Wilson.Eric ("I've got my eye onthe bottom line.") DiBernardoand the entire DOC Films"pecking order"Ted Shen replies:In these times of economic uncertainty,any mention of a person's business acumen is praise enough. The entire peckingorder at the grey city journal is delightedto learn that Doc plans to use its wellearned profit on such a worthwhile and un¬doubtedly big budgeted production. We, ofcourse, will be more than glad to cooper¬ate.ma). His book on Ford alone would placehim among the great critics.Sarris has his failings as a critic — i re¬member an article on Eric Rohmer's Perceval where, in the space of a few para¬graphs, he managed to misunderstandRohmer, the middle ages, Christianity,Bresson, medieval romances, and Brecht aswell as the film. But, here and elsewhere,the real value of Sarris' achievement is inhis devotion to, and success in following, thepath he describes in The American Cinema:This survey is obviously a labor oflove beyond boundaries of art. Themovies have been their own justifica¬tion. Piece by piece, scene by scene,moment by moment, they have paral¬leled my own life. (. . .) Film historyconstitutes a very significant portionof my emotional autobiography. For¬tunately, the resources of archives,televisions, museums, and revivalhouses make it possible to reappraisenostalgic memories in the clear, coldlight of introspection. Old moviescome out of their historical contexts,but they must be judged ultimately inthe realm of now.HOUSE WOMEN’S UNION SPEAKER SERIESJERRE LEVYAssoc. Prof. Dept, of Behavioral Sciences“FEMALE/MALE DIFFERENCESIN BRAIN ASYMMETRY”TUESDAY, FEB. 194:30 P.M.EAST LOUNGE IDA NOYES.informal discussion to followOP EMCAtop the Del Prado Hotel53rd & Hyde Park Blvd.324-6200Serving the finestCantonese cuisineto discriminatingdiners for over30 yearsJoin us forChinese New Year CelebrationSaturday, February 16Lunch • Pinner • Cocktails />An Evening of Israel Food, Film and Folk Dancing6:00 P.M. - Felafel Supper - $ 1.00 per sandwich7:00 P.M. - Feature film KAZABLAN - $ l .00 Donation8:30 P.M. - Israel Folk Dancing - 50 centsDFILM folk dancing. ~ TUESDAY, FEB. 19Sponsored by Students forIsrael-Hillel1212 E. 59th St.IDA NOYES HALL • 3rd Floor TheatreUMO SERVICEto O’HARE$eoo^ fare— Hourly service toand from O’Hare Airport— Buses leave every hour from thefollowing Hyde Park locations:• Center for Continuing Education• Del Prado Hotel• Windemere Hoteld Hyde Park HiltonEffective February 1 5. 1980:Last bus leaves from O’Hare Airport at 10:30 P MLast bus to O'Hare leaves Hyde Park at 9:00 P.M.Charter service availablefor vans and coachesFOR EXACT SCHEDULINGCALL 493-2700or 493-27011ARRV 44 I>■ ■ ■The Cloister Club, Friday, 8:30 II < Best—i —||Improvisational Jazzm Watch him$2.50 MAB fee payers / 4.50 others (Remember all |j^ r f undergraduates areMajor Activities automatic MAB fee payersTourney hopes dimmed by Lake ForestWomen cagers downed by Teachers and ForestersBy Darrell WuDunnand Andy RothmanThe University of Chicago women’s bas¬ketball team saw its chances of qualifyingfor the 1980 state tournament reduced toslim on Wednesday at the field house as theylost to the first place team in their district,Lake Forest, 65-60. The Maroons’ threegame winning streak came to an end onMonday at the field house as they were de¬feated by Concordia Teachers’ College ofRiver Forest, Ill., 66-52.Chicago, now 3-12 overall and 2-2 in thedistrict can now make a formal bid to playin the state tournament. Six teams will auto¬matically enter the tourney by finishingfirst or second in their districts and threeother teams will be invited on wildcard bids.Maroon Coach Marcia Hurt said the teamwill wait and see how the rest of the seasongoes before deciding whether or not to enterthe bidding. The team has two regular sea¬son games remaining.In Lake Forest, now 10-3. the Maroons metan opponent they matched up with fairlywell in height but the Foresters were veryquick and aggressive. The game was veryclose throughout as neither team could builda lead of more than six points. Chicago ledfor most of the first half. Paced by ten open¬ing stanza points from Cheryl Flynn andeight from Kim Hammond, the Maroonsbuilt their biggest lead, 20-14 with 6:24 left inthe half.Chicago’s man-to-man defense did notprevent Lake Forest from outscoring theMaroons 8-4 in the last 2:05 of the half to cutChicago’s halftime lead to 30-28.After Lake Forest used a 14-6 spurt earlyin the second half to take a 44-38 lead with13:51 to go in the game, Chicago’s NadyaShmavonian bore down. The Maroons’ scor¬ing leader tossed in 15 of her game high 22points in a span of just under 13 minutes in Scott RaulandNadya Shmavonian (22) led theMaroons’ comback effort Wednesdaybut 15 second half points were notenough.the second half. She gave the Maroons thesecond of two one point leads they had in themiddle of the half, 47-46 with 11:24 left butthat was their last lead as Lake Forest cameright back to take the lead only 23 secondslater.The Maroons were able to tie the gameSportsmmrnmmmi Tepke thinks field housewill end cries of W.O.L.F.By Howard SulsThe latest push for equal rights in thelocker room has spread to the newspa¬per. In response to the Women Organizedfor Locker room Facilities, Director ofFacilities Dan Tepke was willing andkind enough to release these figures:Current locker spaceon campusHenry Crown Field Househalf fullWomen lockers lockersRecreational 92 14Permanent 286 32MenRecreational 174 20Permanent 540 86Bartlett GymnasiumWomenTemporary 20Permanent 36Men5 ft.,6 ft., 9ft. 570sold3 foot 395Box lockers 908 unsoldWaiting list for lockersin HCFH:Women 249Men 557 Tepke recognizes the need ior renova¬tion of Bartlett Gym. “I would like to ren¬ovate Bartlett, but there is no money.Among things that need replacing aredoors, the pool water treatment system,the skylight, the gym floor, the roof,lockers, the ventilation system, the base¬ment floor and the basement control sys¬tem, the offices, the trophy room, and thesquash court floors, in addition to the re¬distribution of the locker rooms and toiletand shower facilities."W'hen the field house is ready we willhave more lockers for women thanwomen who want them.” According tothe figures, there will be an extra 37lockers available in the field house fromthe present waiting list. While there willbe a 17 locker deficit for men. This is ac¬cording to present demand, not figuringon people who will want lockers once theField House is open.Federal regulations require that thetotal facilities be in proportion to theratio of the sexes. The field house willhave 35% of the lockers available forwomen. Dan Tepke again: ‘‘This is as¬suming the school is 70-30, Counting staff,faculty and whatever, it’s probablycloser to 80-20.”What about Ida Noyes? “It doesn’tseem to ever be brought up to me. That’sPat Kirby’s realm. I would like to reno¬vate that too.”At present, lockers are still being in¬stalled, and the women’s shower stallsare still missing. When ready, lockersales will be announced in the Maroon.This should alleviate most, if not all, ofthe problems over locker conditions. Scott RaulandKim Hammond (4): The frustration isevident.three times during the last 8:37, the lastcoming on a Shmavonian basket with 4:57left, making the score 55-55. Lake Forestthen scored five straight points to go backup. The Maroons did not give up as Shma¬vonian hit from the field and the foul line tomake the score 60-59 with 1:37 left. Lake Forest then scored four straight beforeHammond made a free throw to close outChicago’s scoring with eight seconds left.Two jump balls in the last seven seconds didnot result in Maroons scores. Flynn woundup with 13 points and Hammond had nine.Nancy Horgan led Lake Forest with 20.On Monday, the Maroons suffered a frus¬trating loss to Concordia Teachers College.After an incredible, come-from-behind vic¬tory over George Williams on Saturday, theConcordia game was quite a let down. Chi¬cago had problems throughout the gameagainst a team that was not very stsrong.The game was lost during the first 15:00when the Maroons fell behind by 12. Al¬though the team’s defense was solid, Chica¬go could not generate the offense. With 14:47gone into the game, Chicago had only 8points to Concordia’s 20. The teams playedeven through the remainder of the halfwhich ended with the score 33-21 in favor ofConcordia.During the second half, Chicago’s troublesremained. The Maroons committed manyturnovers especially against Concordia’sfull court press. Concordia also had the edgein rebounds. Despite the problems, howev¬er, Chicago was able to match baskets withthe opponent. Several times, Concordia’slead increased to 19 points but each timeChicago managed to come back. Chicagowas outscored by only tw>o points during theentire second half and the game ended66-52.It was an off game for the Chicago squad.Nadya Shmavonian did manage to score herusual 20 points, though, and Mary Klemundtadded 12. Ellen Markovitz, who fouled outlate in the game, also scored 10.The Maroons are off to Mundelein Collegeon the North side Monday night before fin¬ishing their regular season next Fridayagainst Knox College at the field house.Sailors will take on Big 10schools among othersBy B. MelgesThe University of Chicago Sailors left theannual midwinter meeting of the MidwestCollegiate Sailing Association with a sched¬ule unmatched by any past schedule interms of the competition they will face in theupcoming season. Team Captains EdwardRaha and John Podmajersky looked for¬ward to the annual meeting with optimism,and they left Northern Illinois University(the host school) with big grins.Smiles emerged when the announcementwas read that Chicago would represent theMidwest at the annual Baldwin-W'ood CupRegatta, prestigious regatta hosted by Tu-lane. The smiles widened when it was alsoannounced that Chicago sailors were select¬ed as alternates to the Anderson Trophy Re¬gatta at Yale. The sailors will be backing upMichigan if Michigan is unable to attend.When Chicago left the scheduling meet¬ing, the ear-to-ear smiles were indicative ofthe scheduling masterpiece the two wereable to pull off. The smiles grew even largerat the organizational meeting held later. Byunanimous vote of the Midwest CollegiateSailing Association, Chicago was grantedfull rights and privileges as Regular-Provi¬sional members. With this status, Chicagosailors will now be able to sail in Regionaland District eliminations as well as the Na¬tional Championships. The club hopes to•take advantage of that last privilege, butagainst schools like Michigan, MichiganState, Notre Dame, Ohio State, Purdue, Illi¬nois, Iowa State and Northwestern, it won’tbe easy.If anyone is smiling wider than Raha orPodmajersky, it is the women on the Chica¬go sailing team. Besides being able to racein regular regattas with men, the team wasfortunate to be able to schedule regattas forwomen. Among the regattas which thewomen on the Chicago team will be able tocompete in are the Women’s IntersectionalRegatta at Tufts and a women’s individual regatta at Wisconsin. In preparation forwhat appears to be a sensational season,there will be a Race-Team OrganizationMeeting on Wednesday February 20 in Eck-hert 133 at 6:30. The long awaited sail¬ing/racing clinic will follow. All are invitedto attend, several sailing movies will beshown and refreshments will be served.ScheduleDate Hosted byMarch 15 Notre Dame22 Southern Illinois29 Tufts (Women’sIntersectional)April 5 KenyonPurdue12 Northwestern19 Wisconsin (women’sindividual championship)26 Iowa (DistrictEliminations)May 3 Wisconsin (Team MidwestChampionships10 Wisconsin (IndividualMidwest Championships)17 Northwestern (Women’sMidwest Championships)Sept. 6 Yale (alternate forMichigan)20 Iowa27 Detroit Yacht Club(Midwest Sloop championships)Oct. 4 Michigan25 Tulane (Baldwin-Wood Regatta)Nov. 1 Cleveland Yacht Club (NorthAmerican Sloop Championships)8 District Eliminations forAngsten Regatta28 Chicago Yacht Club (AngstenRegatta: Fall National Championship)16-The Chicago Maroon, Friday, February 15, 1980Great Scott! Foul shot shocks DudleyBy Ben AdamIn the major upset of the week, Dudleywas defeated by Phi Gam, 29:28, Tuesday atBartlett on a free throw by Cassius Scottwith no time remaining.Phi Gam was able to dominate the gamewith superior rebounding strength and tookan eleven point lead, 19 to 8 at half time.Dudley came out in the second half with itsfull-court press and outscored Phi Gam 14 to2, to take a one point lead with about fiveminutes remaining. The teams played eventhe rest of the way. Dudley lodged a protestthe following day, claiming that Phi Gamused two graduate students in the game. Nodecision has been reached yet.The loss ends a nineteen game regularseason winning streak for Dudley, includingits undefeated season last year. The team’sonly other loss in the last season and a halfcame in last year’s Undergraduate Resi¬dence Championship game, to Psi U. PhiGam will meet Dudley again in a rematchnext Tuesday. The loss would drop Dudleyinto a tie with Chamberlin for first place inthe White League, pending Chamberlin’sprotest of their second game with Dudley.In the Undergraduate Independent WhiteLeague, the undefeated Cohos added onemore victory to their impressive record, de¬feating Grand Illusions 34-6. The Coho’s dominated the game from the very nrst mo¬ments, not allowing Grand Illusion a singlepoint until six minutes into the second half.Excelling on the Coho’s was the agileguard John Janetos. Always tenacious onthe defense, Janetos emerged as the highestscorer for the Coho’s. Making 2 of 3 attemptsfrom the field and 1 of 2 free throws in thefirst half, and 5 of ten attempts from thefield in the second half, Janetos scored 15 ofthe Coho’s 34 points.In the Graduate White League, WillisReed had an easy victory over Eat MyIM reportTorts. Excellent shooting by Ed Danforthand aggressive rebounding by AaronStucker, helped Reed dominate the gameand win easily, 45-19. Mark DiNardi keptTorts in the picture with his jump shots, butone player does not a team make, and theTorts had to suffer their eighth loss this sea¬son. Reed did not have an easy time againstlast place, 0 and 9 Estoppel-Assumpsit.Reed missed three of its starters in a gamethat resembled, at times, a demolitionderby, with Estoppel players pushing andshoving their way on the court. One of thoseencounters erupted into a fist fight on thecourt, and two players, one from each team, were ejected from the game by referee MattReuter, who kept the game under control.Reed seemed unable to organize its of¬fense. The two teams managed to remaintied with 1:30 to play. Estoppel’s Flanagangave his team a two point lead then, and thegame was almost over. Charlie Heilker tiedit with a jump shot and twenty seconds laterBob Sheppard gave Reed a two point lead,and Heilker, scoring one of two free throws,sealed the game’s score, 19-16.In another game in the Undergraduate In¬dependent White League, the Losers con¬vincingly defeated Return of Zero the Hero,36-33. Strong performances by Sean Flynnand Micki Iamaio, and muscling up underthe boards by Jim Reed, kept the Losersahead by 6 to 8 points through most of thegame. The Return of Zero managed to get asclose as 2 points with :24 remaining in thegame, but two free throws by Flynn pushedthe game beyond their reach. With Flybnn,Iamaio, and Reed having a good day, theLosers emerge as a challenge to the Coho’s,despite their previous loss. The game wasprotested by the officials, since Loser’sMark Day was found to have played onegame with the Filbey team. The protest isnow being considered.In another game in the Graduate WhiteLeague, Frottage beat Laughlin, 40-31; In the Graduate Red League, the tough SnowBears defeated the God Squad, 34-18, whileAlbanian Refugees defeated Naussau Se¬nior, 53-29.Vincent had two straight victories: It de¬feated Thompson 34-11, and beat Michelson,48-28. (A correction: Last week in this col¬umn we had Vincent forfeiting a game toCompton. Actually, it was Compton that for¬feited the game. Vincent is tied with Hen¬derson on top of the league at 8-1. In othergames in the Undergraduate MaroonLeague, Bradbury defeated Filbey 18-15,while Henderson got by Compton, 29-24.Basketball Top Ten(First place votes in parentheses)Albanian Refugees (10) 100Uranus and the 7 Moons 82Mr. Bill Show 74Dred Scott’s Revenge 68Snow Bears 67Hitchcock 56The Champs 42Willis Reed 39Chamberlin 17Dudley 15Votes: Dartos Rises Again; CommuterMagic, Coho’s, Losers, Vincent.-Midwest Conference Basketball-!East DivisionConf. West DivisionAll Games Conf. All GamesRipon W7 L1 W.14 L4 Monmouth W8 L1 W12 L2Beloit 7 2 15 3 Knox 7 4 9 7Lawrence 4 5 8 10 Carleton 6 5 8 10Lake Forest 2 6 3 12 Cornell 6 5 9 10Chicago 1 7 5 9 Coe 5 7 7 13Results Last Week•Ripon 84, Beloit 74 Grinnell•Lake Forest atBeloit at Milton 0Chicago 10 0 17•Ripon 116, Grinnell 76•Chicago 82, Lawrence 70•Monmouth 88, Coe 73•Monmouth 90, Cornell 82•Knox 83, Cornell 82•Knox 99, Coe 77•Lake Forest 71, Grinnell 70••Carleton 57, Lake Forest 54•Beloit 97, Chicago 68•Lawrence 59, Lake Forest 55Cornell 97, Iowa Wesleyan 75Ripon 82, U. Wis. (Oshkosh) 73Macalester 64, Carleton 51William Penn 80, Grinnell 55Games Thursday, Feb. 14 Games Friday, Feb. 15•Carleton at Monmouth•Grinnell at Knox*Coe at Cornell•Ripon at Lake ForestGames Saturday, Feb. 16•Ripon at Chicago, 1.30 p.m.•Grinnell at Monmouth, 3 p.m.•Carleton at Knox, 3 p.m.•Lawrence at Beloit•Conference games••Conference games for Carleton, but not for LakeForest. Women hold landmarkcrew meeting at IdaBy Lina GoodeThe W'omen’s Crew hosted an historicalmeeting of Midwest rowing organizations atIda Noyes Hall on Saturday, February 9th.The mini-convention was attended by morethan 60 representatives of 25 college andclub programs from as far away as Kansas,Nebraska. Ohio and Minnesota. Also pres¬ent was William Hollenback. President ofthe National Association of Amateur Oars¬men, the official governing body for U.S.rowing.The Chicago meeting was the first of sixsuch mini-conventions to take placethroughout the country in 1980, as part of amajor administrative reorganization of thesport of rowing into a system of regional re¬presentation.Last year UCWC coach Susan Urbas wasone of.three women appointed to the nation¬al committee charged with proposing a newsystem of government for the N.A.A.O. The Regionalization Plan emanating from thatcommittee was formally adopted by theN.A.A.O. at its Annual Convention in Seattlein December, and is now in the implementa¬tion stage.At the meeting Saturday, Urbas was elect¬ed chairman of the 7 person committee thatwill design a Regional Council to administerrowing throughout the Midwest. Urbas isthe only woman on the committee.According to Urbas, “Rowing is growingat a phenomenal rate in the Midwest, espe¬cially among women. It will no longer bepossible for the East and West coasts todominate the sport as completely as theyhave in the past. In that sense this meetingsignaled the end of an era, and marked thebeginning of another in which the Midwestwill increasingly play a leadership role inthe rowing world.’’She added that “It has done marvelousthings for the UC image to have all of thatstart here.”rsrnnnnnrrrrTrrrrinnnr^^KUMSITZSAT. NIGHT FEB. 168:30 P.M.COME SIT 4ROVm THEIIIU.EE FIREPLACEBRING YOUR GUITARAND STORIESSTORYTELLING -PROF. TED GOHENDR. ZANUEL KLEINON THE GUITAR - Marion NrmlolIt irk DinilzHillel House - 5715 Wood lawnHOT CIDER. HOT COCO4.POPCORS FOR PVRCH4SELfl-C.fl FRENCH READING EX AM -INTENSIVE PREPAR ATIONCourse or individual sessionsoffered hv professor of French(U. of Chicago Ph.D.). experiencedin language and reading proficiencycourses. Beginning and advanced levels.Scheduling of sessions mav he arranged.327-6964Eye ExaminationsFashion Eye WearContact LensesDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist(53 Kimbark Plaza)1200 E. 53rd St.493-8372Intelligent people know the differ¬ence between advertised cheapglasses or contact lenses and com¬petent professional service.Our reputation is your guaranteeof satisfaction. MERIONIntroductory and advanced courses, workshops, and seminarsm the arts, earth sciences, education, engineering,the humanities, social sciences, sciences and mathematicsSummer session runs June 23 to August 16All students in good standing are invited to attendFor a course bulletin and application form, mail the couponbelow to Stanford Summer Session, Building \, StanfordUniversity Stanford, California 94 305.Please send me the Stanford 1980 Summer Session Bulletin40SCHOLAELUD1QUEAEST1VISimfonknixsMCMLXXX NAMEADDRESSCITYSTATEZIPThe Chicago Maroon, Friday, February 15, 1980 17CalendarPeach.FRIDAYPerspectives: Topic-’Tranian Students in the U.S."guests John Woods, Fariborz Maissami, and PaulSprachman, 6:09 am, channel 7.Crossroads: English classes for foreign women,10:00 am.Hillel: Rally at Hutch Court at 12 noon. Specialspeaker Dan Shistan, Prof, of Pol. Sci. Haifa Univer¬sity.The Progressive Union: A day of Anti-draft events.12-2, opening session with speakers and entertain¬ment, Cloister Club, Ida Noyes. 2-3:15, •‘NonviolentResistance" Cobb 116, and "Previous U.S. Interven¬tions, Vietnam, etc." Cobb 319. 3:15-4:30 pm,"Women and War" Cobb 116, and "Current Crisis inthe Mideast” Cobb 319. 4:30 pm, Closing session,Quantrell Auditorium, Cobb.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: 9'zden Size- Tur¬kish Folk-Dance taught by Selcuk Cihangir, 12:30pm, Kelly Lounge 413.Islamic Society: Friday prayer will be held at 12:30pm in the home room of the International House.Geophysical Sciences Colloquium: “Siderophile Ele¬ments on the Earth and Moon” speaker EdwardAnders, 1:30 pm, Hinds Lab. Auditorium.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Arabic Circle-"Between Ibn Abdul Wahhab and his Opponents. Astudy of Wahhabi Theology” speaker AbdullahZayd. 3:30 pm, Pick 218.Women’s Union: Meets 5:00 pm, Ida Noyes hall inthe Women’s Union office above the Frog and Hillel: Liberal-Progressive Shabbat Services, 5:30pm, Hillel.Hillel: Yavneh Shabbat Services, sundown, Hillel.UC Gymnastics Club: Instruction available, 5:30-8:00 pm, Bartlett, free.Hillel: Adat Shalom Sabbat Dinner, 5:45 pm. Hil¬lel.UC Karate Club: Meets 7:00 pm in the dance roomof Ida Noyes.DOC Films: “Rock ’N’ Roll High School” 7:15 and9:15 pm, Cobb.Spartacus Youth League Forum: “Lessons of theCivil Rights Movement" 7:30 pm, Reynolds ClubLounge. Info call 427-0003.Organization of Black Students: African Perform¬ing Artists Program, 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes CloisterClub.Law School Films: “Witness for the Prosecution”8:30 pm, Law School Auditorium.Hillel: Lecture-’ People and Politics in The MiddleEast” speaker Prof. James Bowman, 8:30 pm, Hil¬lel.Students for a Libertarian Society: Invite all towatch Milton Freidman's PBS TV show “Free toChoose” 9:00 pm, Shoreland 2nd floor TV room.SATURDAYHillel: Yavneh (Orthodox) Shabbat Services, 9:15am, Hillel.Organization of Black Students: Art Show, featur¬ing the works of professional and non-professionalChicago Artists, 9:30-2:00 pm, Ida Noyes. Hillel: The Upstairs Minyan (Conservative-Egali¬tarian) Shabbat Services, 9:30 am, Hillel.Creative Dance and Movement Group: Meets 12:30pm, in the dance room of Ida Noyes.UC Gymnastics Club: Instruction available 2:00-5:00pm, Bartlett, free.Greek Student Association: Lecture-"The Sociologyof the Greek Armed Forces in the 19th Centurywith Emphasis on the Greek Revolution of 1821speaker George Kourvetaris, 4:00 pm, I-House.Crossroads: Saturday night dinner, 6:00 pm, no res¬ervations needed, $2.DOC Films: "Despair" 7:15 and 9:30 pm, Cobb.Midway Studios: Concert-“The Third Music Ensem¬ble" 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes Cloister Club.OLAS: Music, Latin food and skits, 8:30 pm.Crossroads, 5621 Blackstone.Hillel: A Kumsitz (Bring your own guitar)-singing,story telling, refreshments, 8:30 pm, Hillel.SUNDAYRockefeller Chapel: Ecumenical Service of HolyCommunion, 9:00 am.Congregation Rodfei Zedek: Lecture-’‘The Chal¬lenge of the 80’s-The Jewish World” 10:00 am, 5200Hyde Park Blvd.Hillel: Lox and Bagel Church Brunch Group, 11:00am, Hillel.Rockefeller Chapel: University Religious Service,11:00 am.Crossroads: Bridge, 3:00 pm, beginners and expertswelcome.Doc Films: “The Middle of the World" 7:15 and 9:30am, Cobb.Tai Chi Ch’uan: Meets 7:30 pm, 4945 S. Dorchester(enter on 50th).Concert Pianist: Andrew Willie playing a program of Chopin, Beethoven, Dutilleux, 7:30 pm. I-House.Organization of Black Students: Play-‘T am a BlackWoman” 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes. $2 admission.Folkdancers: Meet 8:00-11:30 pm, Ida Noyes.Hunger Concern Group: 8:30 pm, Ida Noyes memo¬rial room.MONDAYPerspectives: Topic-“The Decline in the Quality ofStudent Writing” guests, Gregory Colomb, rankKinahan, and Joseph Williams, 6:09 am, channel7.Crossroads: English classes for foreign women,10:00 am.Dept, of Chemistry: "The Reaction H + N02-OH +NO: A Case Study in Techniques for Studying Reac¬tion Dynamics” speaker Prof. James Kinsey, 4:00pm, Kent 103.Kundalini Yoga: Class meets from 5:00-6:30 pm, IdaNoyes East Lounge.UC Gymnastics Club: Instruction available 5:30-800pm, Bartlett, free.UC Judo Club: Meets 6:00-8:30 pm, Bartlett gym. Be¬ginners welcome. *UC Karate Club: Meets 7:00 pm in the dance roomof Ida Noyes.Ski Club: Meets 7:00 pm, Ida Noyes.Chess Club: Meets 7:00 pm, Ida Noyes.Doc Films: “Sing and Like it” 7:15 pm, “The Ex-MrsBradford" 8:45 pm, Cobb.Progressive Union: Steering Committee meeting7:30 pm, Reynolds Club Lounge. Open to all.Medieval and Renaissance Recreation Society:Meeting 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes. All welcome.Folkdancers: Meet 8:00-11:00 pm in Ida Noyes.PIZZA PLATTER1460 E. 53rdM13-2800 No deliveryHilftr^ark^ipr^an& Sulutrai ^luiy1552 E. 53rd - Under IC tracksPipes - Pipe Tobaccos -Imported Cigarettes - CiqarsMon.-Sat 9-8. Sun 12-5Students under 30 get 10% off.ask for “Big Jim” Major Court Studio ProductionPeter Shaffer’sEQUUSDirected by Michael HildebrandThurs. - Sun. &Feb. 7 - March 2 ft ’,*>8:30 pm, 7:30 Sundays1 Reynolds Club Theatre r/?5706 S. University ty$3.50 gen. admission,$2.50 students & seniors753-3581TITJr flcirESS A’ttaTtin catsd Gxcoln cntU lUtur | —-Special Woodwar d Court LectureThe Visiting Fellows CommitteeSponsorsA Question-And-Answer SessionwithJ. WILLIAM FULBRIGHTFormer Senator from A rkansas and Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations CommitteeWednesday, February 20, 1980 • 8:30 P.M.Woodward Court—5825 Woodlawn AvenueAll students and faculty in the College, and in the Divisions and the Professional Schools,are invited to attend and to participate.18 The Chicago Maroon, Friday, February 15, 1980ciAstiipiep adsAD RATESMaroon classifieds are effective andcheap. Place fhem in person at theMaroon business office in Ida NoyesHall by mail to the Maroon, Ida NoyesHall room 304, 1212 E. 59th St.,Chicago, <0637. 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.SPACEROOMMATE NEEDED nearmini-bus, grocery, laundromat $100heat inc.Call 493-3109.5123-32 S'. KIMBARK, Desirable studioand 1 bedroom apts., newly decoratednear shopping, transportation and U ofC. Inquire premises engineer FredSallman. 752-8066 or Sat. and Sun. 1-4pm. Call 643-4489. HARRY A.ZISOOK AND SONS, 786 9200.FOR RENT 4 room apt. Excellentlocation. 51st H P. Blvd. and Park.Available immed. Call Eloise 263-3600(am) or >52-3748.Furnisned 4 room apartment (onebedroom) Available Mid Feb to midApr. Longer stay possible. Moderaterent is negotiable. Near Co-op.288-8643.2 roommates wanted for 3 bdrm, largeapt. at 54th & Woodlawn. Avail. March1. $150/mos. Call Terri at 753-4730 or748-4521. •Room available immediately in large4 bdrm apartment, 52nd and Green¬wood. $ 100/mo. 955-0481.SUMMER SUBLET - 3 br. 2 ba aptdate and price negot. fully equippedON CAMPUS modern 947-9597eves.Male straight roommate needed toshare spacious furnished 2 bedrm con-d oon 56th and Dorchester. Call between8pm and 10pm. $160 per mo. + Vi elec,bill. 947-9262.SUBLET avail, immed. til Jul. 1. 1bdrm in Ig. 3 bdrm. apt. 57th andBlackstone. $175/mo. Call 684-4075.Room available in 2 bedrm apt.$100/month. After 6. Karen. 268-1053.Seeking woman roommate to shareapartment. Expenses about $80 mon-thly. Call 955-7452.Sublet big deluxe hi-rise sunny studioat 5020 S. Lake Shore Drive, w-wcarpet, modern kitchen, 24 hr. door¬man very safe. Campus bus, garageavail. Only $314/mo. but positivelynegotiable. 363-2567.Room wanted Spring Qtr. adv. grad.student Ive message Gd 752-2752.Large secure 1 bdrm basement apt insmall blgd. Near 73rd and lake. $175.567-3115 days, 375-7435 weekends and7-10 pm.UC Grad student looking for springand summer housesitting or sublet.Call Clara. 432-7274.PEOPLE WANTEDThe Department of BehavioralSciences needs people who want toparticipate as paid subjects inpsycholinguistic and cognitivepsychology experiments. For furtherintormation call 753-4718.MAKE $40 (NO TAX DEDUCTED) INONE DAY-Interviewers needed forstation WLS, Channel 7 primary elec¬tion day poll in Chicago on March 18Limited openings. Pick up appiications 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. 92625Babysitter for two girls 1 and 3 yearsold faculty home Hyde Park for Satur¬days or Sundays call day 753-2702.Addressers wanted IMMEDIATELY!Work at home--no experiencenecessary-excellent pay. WriteAmerican Service, 8350 Park Lane,Suite 127, Dallas, TX 75231.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 eveningsSECRETARY/RECEPTIONISTGraduate School of Business, Centerfor Health Administration Studies.Reliable and punctual secretary withexcellent typing skills and com¬munication skills needed to answerphone, greet and direct visitors, anddo general secretarial work. Call:753 4442, Leslie Evans, AA/EOEWANTED: Participants in new pro-ducts discussion groups to meet inUniv. of Chicago/Hyde Park Campus.$10 payment for lVa hr. services. CallDave Echols, 9 5. 753 49205th person wanted to join 4 others in cooperative living situation. Beautifulhouse on residential block near cam¬pus and ali transportation. $155 permo. incls. utilities. Call 955-2193.BAKER FOR PRESIDENTInterested in working on histeam? Call 947-8678SECRETARY/RECEPTIQNIST-Professional School Computing Ser¬vices department seeks reliable andpunctual Secretary with excellent typ¬ing and communication skills. Dutiesinclude answering phones, greetingand directing visitors, typing lettersand reports, and performing generalsecretarial tasks. Call 753-4442 LeslieEvans, The University of Chicago.AA/EOE.FOR SALEChagall lith,. unsigned, 4 colors, BibleSeries $450. 955-6589.Double bed: mattress and box springs,good condition. $35. 752-4736 eves.1971 Plymouth Duster reliable, in goodrunning condition. New tires and bat-tery. Price negotiable. Call 667-7529,For Sale. Blue Velvet hide-abedsofa-$250. 6' oak book case, $150.Chairs $35, $40, $20. Call 363-5181 soon.PEOPLE FOR SALEExcellent, accurate typist w/legal ex¬perience will type papers and dissertations or IBM. Reasonable rated.684-7414.ARTWORK- posters, illustration,calligraphy, invitations etc. NoelYovovich 5441 S. Kenwood 493-2399.Typing done on IBM by college grad;pica type. Term papers, theses, lawbriefs, letters, resumes, manuscripts.New Town l.akeview 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 typ¬ing/for ms/tables/statistlcal work.Reasonable rates! Nancy Cohen378-5774.Needed experienced person to bartendfor parties, special occasions, clubparties, etc? For excellent service,contact B. Davies after 6 p.m. 978-6938.TYPING Term papers, thesis# etc.Convenient to U or C campus. Ar¬rangements for pick up and deliveryon campus. Reasonable rates. Pleasecall 684-6882.SCENESGilbert 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.COME CELEBRATE THE EX-CHANGE OF AMBASSADORS BET¬WEEN ISREAL AND EGYPT. A Ral¬ly will be held at Hutch Court FridayFeb. 15th at 12 noon. Special guestspeaker will be Dan Shistan Prof, ofPol. Sci Haifa U.Students for a Libertarian Society in¬vite all to see Milton Freidman's PBS-TV show "Free to Choose” at 9:00 PMTONIGHT in the Shoreland's 2nd floorTV room. Take 8:30 C bus from Reg.ROSE/PUTTTIXDie. movie theatre tickets at ReynoldsClub Box Office.SAVE ON MOVIESRose and Plift theatre discount ticketat Reynolds Club Box Office.UC HOTLINE 753-1777Got the Winter Quarter blues? If youwant to talk, have a question or need areferral, try the UC Hotline.-7 p.m.-7 a.m.PERSONALSWRITER'S WORKSHOP PLaza2-8377.EUROPE this summer. Low Cost tourAcademic credit can be arranged. Callevenings. 752-8426.Valentine Beastie: What happened toflowers for pretty girls on Valentine'sDay? H-m-m-m? Nanna.BAKER FOR PRESIDENTA Man for the80's947 8678Hey Waffle King What are you doingafter the syrup? Sorry I missed V-Daybut there's always Sunday. Kiss Kiss.t have not "gone nutzo." I've alwaysbeen that way. The real Captain.Snugglepops-Happy Valentine's Day. Ilove you deeply. RWK.Darling Sax-belated but belovedValentine wishes! Your C. Happy day after Valentines Day toMarlene Fabian Bagel and Johathan.Love Jenny.Dark Lady-All you personals seem toinvolve sex symbolsim, like theunicorn in the garden tearing a redrose, etc. Is this true or just a pigmentof my imagination? Wait-one morequestion-what does your mysteriosname mean? Franco Fone.Welcome to Chicago, Bubs, Why don'tyou stay a while?Stop and smell the roses you wonderfulgirl -- from the kitchen drudge,drunken antelope, boat people shoesSki Club is greatSki Club is greaterSki Club is the greatest—JanC, Will be you my valentine? I hopemany hugs, kisses, and "good morn¬ing's" are still to come my Honeypie.I'm with you all the way. XO D.Unicorn,Help me hang in there. Winter willsoon be over.Dark LadyCATHYI love you!!!You'll always be my ValentineLoveHOWARDTROUBLE BOYSATPS1UP.J says that after the movie Fridayshe's going to 5639 Univ. to hear herfavorite band. 9:30 ?JANOWITZ,QUAKERSANDTHE DRAFTQuaker Forum on Registration, theDraft and National Service with guestMorris Janowitz, UC prof andspecialist in military sociology, Sun¬day Feb. 17 soon after Meeting forWorship (10:30-11:30). Refreshments,everyone welcome. Quaker House.5615 Woodlawn.LIBERTARIANSAll are invited to watch Milton Freid¬man's TV show "Free to ChooseTONIGHT at9p.m. B-School kicked usout so come to Shoreland's 2nd floorTV rm. 8:30 C bus from Reg.Refreshments!DRIVER WANTEDTo form car pool going to and fromloop with person who doesn't drive.Will provide car, gas, parking.955-9673.CORYELLCORYELLCORYELLLARRY CORYELL -- ImprovisationalJazz Guitar. The best in his field. Atthe Cloister Club this Friday. Ticketsat the Box Office 2.50 MAB fee payers;4.50 others. All undergraduates areMAB fee payers.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 493-3290GILBERT 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, $3.Tickets at Mandel Hall Box Office. 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 register.HI-FI EQUIPMENTCHEAPOn campus really low prices all new,top quality, name brand components.Scott, Dual, Phillips, Akai, Pioneer,Technics, Altec and others. CallF B.N. Stereo at 947-8748 or 753-2261ex. 244.QUAKERS,JANOWITZANDTHE DRAFTQuaker Forum on Registration, theDraft and National Service with guestMorris Janowitz, UC prof andspecialist in military sociology, Sun¬day Feb. 17 soon after Meeting forWorship (10:30-11:30). Refreshments,everyone welcome, Quaker House,5615 Woodlawn.FLAMES AND RAYSOne bedroom available in 4 bedroomapt. Fireplace, sunporch. Washerdryer in bldg. $150. Near many storeson Univ. bus route. 55th and Cornell.Cal! 288-4411.PIANISTSNeeded for rehearsals and per¬formances of Court Studio's SIDE BYSIDE BY SONDHEIM spring qt. Nopay, but good times. Call 753-3581 forinfo.CAMPUS CAMPAIGNMANAGERNeeded to help stuff and mount the in¬cipient POGO FOR PRESIDENTCAMPAIGN. Applicants for thesehigh-playing spunk-filled positionsmust possess verve and inaeniousityand have a tenuous and humorousrelationship with some All AmericanCollege Campus. All fleas paid byEmployer. Interested or innocentbystanders should contact AlbertAlligator (Campaign Manager) at theNational Fedquarters.WEEKENDSPEC1ALFORTUNE-You will have a good timeat the Chinese New Year's partySaturday February 16, 9 pm to 1 am atInternational House. Come, bringfriends, and enjoy.INTENSIVEGERMANHigh pass the German Exam! Studywith Karin Cramer, native German,Ph.D., using the comparative struc¬tural translation method. 15 weekcourse, 60 sessions, start April 1 Mon-Thurs. 5-6. Call 493-8127 or 753-0516JANUARYAn affectionate welcome to the citywith the big shoulders but no heart.You make a grey life in the grey citybright for the Manhattan Misanthrope.Love, Andrew.POSTCARDSWish you were here! The only librarydown here in the Caribbean (besidesme) is in the basement of a coffeeshopin Nassau. Stay warm! RegLAMISAENESPANOLMiercoles De Cenizas El Primero DiaDe Cuaresma, 1980 7:00 pm Feb 20,1980 International House, 1414 E 59th FOUNDAssorted hats, scarves, gloves, boots,etc. from Freshman Winter Camp atGreen Lake Wl, 1/25-V27. Please in-quire in Harper 241, 3-3250.PIANO LESSONSProfessional pianist seeks eagerstudents-beginning to advanced In¬troductory offer. ONE FREELESSON (no obligation). Alsoavailable for accompanying andcoaching. For more information call955-9337.THE DRAFT,JANOWITZ,ANDQUAKERSQuaker Forum on Registration, theDraft and National Service with guestMorris Janowitz, UC prof andspecialist in military sociology, Sun¬day Feb 17 soon after Meeting for Wor¬ship (10:30-11:30). Refreshments,everyone welcome, Quaker House,5615 Woodlawn.EDITORIALASSISTANT$11,000-813,700--The University ofChicago Cancer Research Center is of¬fering a challenging and creative posi¬tion for a dynamic individual with aB A or B.S. degree Must havethorough knowledge of scien¬tific/medical terminology, composi¬tion and grammar. Previous ex¬perience in editing and organizingreports highly desired. Excellentbenefits package, pleasant at¬mosphere and congenial co-workers.Call: Marla Rivers, 753-4476.JEWISH ROOTSConnect to your Old World Roots. Meetsomeone from your family's town-city-country of Origin, at the Hillel Bruncn,Sun. Feb. 17, 11:00 am. In Cooperationwith Hyde Park Council for JewishElderly. Sign up at Hillel and be mat¬ched with a Landsmann, 5715Woodlawn, 752-1127.SECRETARYUniversity faculty office seekscapable typist. We will train on wordprocessor. Responsibilities formanuscripts, correspondence,maintenance of files, typing of grantapplications, capability to handletelephone calls, personal contact withfaculty, staff and students. Pleasantenvironment with excellent universitybenefits. High school graduate withsome colleqe preferred. If interested,cal! Sharon at 947-1867.BARTENDERSExperienced Bartenders AvailableFor Parties Up To 300. Contact JohnBetween 8 00 and 11.00 am at 288-8722 or Sam or Doug Detween 5:30 and 7:00pm at 667-8748—LIVE INFACULTY CONDOPrivate room w/bath in North Ken¬wood condo. Use of kitchen, livingroom, dining room; on campus busroutes. Asking $175 mo. but negotiable.753 3912, 373 1305CODERSNORC needs people for two types ofjobs demanding nigh accuracy, con¬centration, ana attention to details.One job requires some typing skills.Familiarity with computer terminalshelpful. The secona job involvescooing complex materials for a na¬tional survey. Both jobs are full timeand begin immediately through June.Call 753-1121. AA/EOESKI 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 8122CLERKTYPISTSClerk typists needed to assit central of¬fice supervisors in a variety of clericaltasks associated with the data collec¬tion portion of a large scale survey.Duties include extensive recordkeeping and typing correspondence. Ac¬curacy and attention to detail essential. Typing (45 wpm) requiredPrevious office clerical experiencehelpful Begins immediately throughMay. $4,00-$4 25. An Equal Opportuni¬ty /Affirmative Action Employer753-1121.SERVICESPsychotherapy and counseling.Students, faculty, staff welcome Feeson a sliding scale, insurance acceptedJoan Rothchild Hardin, PhD.Registered Psychologist in HydePark 493-8766 days ana eves for appt.Pregnancy tests. Saturdays 10-1.Augustana Church. 5500 S. Woodlawn.$1.50 donation. Southside Women'sHealth Service. 667-5505.We keypunch your data Precise, fast,cheap. Call Mike. 753-2517.CONVERSATIONAL RUSSIAN of¬fered by native Russian family ADpt.arranged to your convenience. $5 perhour Call Svetlana at 973-7384funny papers5238 S. Blackstone955-0974ANDRES SEGOVIAONE PERFORMANCE ONLY!•Tickets at Box Office and All Sears Stores$7.50, $10.00, $12.00. $15.00For information, call 435-8111Allied Arts AssociationORCHESTRA HALL220 S. Michigan Ave.Monday, February 18 at 8:00 p.m.The Chicago Maroon, Friday, February 15, 1980 19MIERCOLES de CENIZASEl primer dia decuaresma, 1980MISA en ESPANOL7:00 p.m. Feb. 20, 1980Todos InvitadosInternational House1414 E. 59th St. -ammml lavj schoolf,0H(IT* *g)0M&6 ‘v?© ‘v’COS fcjfflgo® ®(?FREE ADMISSIONDANCE CONTESTSAT NITE, FEB. 14LAW SCHOOL-GKEfM LOUNGEUNDER 71 NOT ADMITTED TheFLAMINGOand CABANA CLUB5500 S. Shore Drive• Studio and 1 Brdr<M»n»• Furnished ami Unfurnished• II. of C. hus stop• Outdoor Pool and Gardens• Carpeting and Dra|>es Inrl.• Seeuritv• University Subsidy forStudents and Staff• Delieatessen• Barlier Shop• Beauty Shop• J.B.D. Restaurant• Dentist• ValetFREE PARKINGM. SnyderPL 2-3800 Rockefeller Memorial Chapel5850 South Vioodlawn 4venueSundav • Fehniarv 1 79 A.M. ECUMENICAL SERVICE OF HOLY COMMUNIONPreac her: BERN ARD O. BROWN. Dean of the Chapel11 A.M. UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICEPreacher: DEAN LUEKTNG. Pastor. Grace Evangelical LutheranChurch. River Eorest. Illinois, and Divinity School Alumnus of the Year.“A MOMENT OF BRIGHTNESS”8 A.M. February 20. Ash WednesdayImposition of the Ashes and Holy Communion5 P.M. February 21. ThursdayEVENING PRAYERVERSAILLES5254 S. DorchesterWELL MAINTAINEDAttractive IV2 and2V2 Room StudiosFurnished or Unfurnished$192 to $291Rased on AvailabilitvAt Campus Bus Stop324-0200 Mrs. Groak COMMITTEE OF PUBLIC POLICY STUDIESLecture SeriesAlderman Edward Burkecandidate for State’s Attorney’s officew ill speak on“77/e Roh* of I hr Stair'sAttornry in Cook County”Tuesday. February 19. 19804:30 p.m.Wieboldt Hall. Boom 303Rockefeller JlJemorial Chapel9 presents 1cl Than for tillbyRobert Bolt Produced, t DirectedQomUd. falzone17V Ik Qwvcel of7^-Ockjellcr TAjctcvkstVoI. ChapelJib. 22,23,2% }7r\&r 1,2All performances at 8=30^. aan\!?22S’ TICKETSAVAILABLE AT: RadtffHkr RtamHai fliapdTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO5650 South Woodlawn AvenueChicago. Illinois 60637Vol. 89. No. 36 The University of Chicago Copyright 1980 The Chicago Maroon Tuesday, February 19, 1980Tuition jumps 13% for most studentsBy Jaan EliasTuition will increase more than13 percent for most students at theUniversity of Chicago for the aca¬demic year beginning in Sep¬tember 1980, according to figuresreleased yesterday.Students in the medical schoolwill face a 16 percent increase.Room and board charges willrise on the average of 10.9 percentfor most students in double rooms.Those students who live in singlerooms will see an 11.3 percent in¬crease.Charles O’Connell, Dean of Stu¬dents in the University, estimatedthat the typical budget for a singlegraduate student will increase 11.5percent, from $8,640 to $9,635 andthe undergraduate budget will in¬crease on the average from $7,925 to $8,910 for first year students andfrom $8,167 to $9,200 for upper¬classmen.The students budget is the deanof students’ estimation of tuitionand room and board charges, withallowances for hospitalization in¬surance, books, and personal ex¬penses.The tuition increases were ap¬proved by the Board of Trusteeslast Thursday after being dis¬cussed by the deans of the variousdivisions.The announced increases willmaintain “the cost gap” betweenthis University and other compara¬ble private universities.Other universities which haveannounced price increases for nextyear have recorded increases inthe 11.5 percent to 15 percentrange.“For some years,” O’Connellsaid, “our percentage of increaseand the actual dollar increase havelagged behind those of other insti¬tutions. This year the percentage isabout the same as others, but theactual dollar ‘gap’ between Chica¬go’s tuition and that of other majorprivate universities will actuallywiden.”O’Connell explained the pricegap as being the result of being lo¬cated in the midst of various “Cir¬cles of interests.”“We compete with the easternuniversities and the fine midwes-tern liberal arts colleges as well aswith the high quality states schoolsin the midwest,” O’Connell said.O’Connell said that the increasein tuition will be coupled withCarter meets studentsBy Dave GlocknerPresident Carter emphasized hiscommitment to the volunteer mili¬tary at a meeting Friday with 300college student government lead¬ers, including Student GovernmentPresident Jeff Elton.Elton and the other student lead¬ers had accepted an invitationfrom the White House to partici¬pate in a day-long series of meet¬ings with Carter, National SecurityAdvisor Zbigniew' Brzezinski, Do¬mestic Policy Advisor Stuart Ei-senstadt, and other Administrationofficials.Administration officials saidthey organized the conference toget a sense of student opinion onmajor issues.Carter and his aides said theywill try to improve the status of thevolunteer army by intesifying re¬cruiting efforts and increasing en¬listment incentives.They also repeated the Adminis¬tration’s previous arguments forrenewed draft registration, claim¬ing that registration will improvethe military’s combat readinessand will serve as a symbol ofAmerica’s willingness to defend itsinterests.Elton estimated that 80 percentof the students opposed conscrip¬tion, but a majority, 60 percent,supported the administration’s callfor renewed draft registration.Discussion of registration andthe draft did not entirely dominate the meeting, Elton said. Studentsalso raised questions about Admin¬istration policies concerning en¬ergy, education funding, and otherdomestic issues. When Brzezinskianswered foreign policy questionsfrom the group, nearly twenty min¬utes passed before anyone askedhim about the draft, Elton said.Elton said he was impressed byCarter and most of his aides whoappeared at the meeting. Carter“seemed very under control, veryassured” when he appeared beforethe students.“His speech wasn’t specific onanything,” but was a general de¬scription of “how he formulates hispolicies,” according to Elton.Brzezinski, Eisenstadt and theiraides all seemed knowledgeable,Elton said, but the representativesfrom the Department of Energy(DOE) “struck me as being in¬credibly inept and stupid.” TheDOE staff members appearedpoorly informed and answeredmost questions by telling studentsthat they were working on theproblem, Elton said.Following the day-long series ofmeetings with administration offi¬cials the students attended a recep¬tion in the White House, whereElton spoke with Carter for severalminutes about the Administra¬tion’s nuclear energy policy.Carter told Elton that existing nu¬clear power plants shoud operatewith more safeguards and bettertrained workers. Room and Board will jump 10.9 percent for doubles,11.3 percent for singles. Total student budget up12.5 percent for undergrads, 11.5 percent for grads.TUITION RATES AT THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOCurrent Rate Tuition, 1980-81 IncreaseCollegeDivisions, exclusive of $4,500 $5,100 13.3%of Medical SchoolPritzker School of $4,740Medicine $5,355 13.0%Divinity, Library, SSA, $4,965 $5,760 16.0%Public Policy $4,665 $5,280 13.2%Law School $5,460 $6,192 13.4%Grad. School of Business $5,555 $6,300 13.4%major increases in student aid.O’Connell said that the Universi¬ty’s student aid allocation to theCollege will be increased by 21 per¬cent over the next vear.O’Connell said that graduate stu¬dent aid would increase nearly 18percent. The increase representsan increase in gift assistance bythe University.O’Connell said that there will bespecial aid increases to graduatestudents in the humanities, socialsciences, and basic biologicalsciences.“By allocating this additionalaid to graduate w'e are affirmingthis University’s long-standingcommitment to quality graduateeducation,” O’Connell said.“We recognize that the burden ofhigher tuition rates on students isstill great. Indeed, we must ask them to contribute a somewhatgreater proportion toward theirown education in the form of sum¬mer and school-year work.”The annual tuition increasesrange in dollar amounts from $600for undergraduate students in theCollege ($4,500 to $5,100) to $795 formedical students ($4,965 to $5,760).Tuition for graduate students inthe arts and sciences will increaseleast from $4,740 to $5,355.The substantially high cost in¬creases in the medical school werenecessitated by what Gray called“the spiraling cost of a medical ed¬ucation.”“It is not fair to compare thecosts of going to the medical schoolwith other components of the Uni¬versity,” she said.President Gray said that thesmaller increases for the graduate divisions was part of the Universi¬ty’s committment to graduate edu¬cation.“At most schools the differentbetween graduate divisions andthe college is not as large as it ishere.” she said, “and we did notwant the different to get anylarger.”Tuition for students at the LawSchool and Graduate School ofBusiness will increase from $5,460to $6,192 and from $5,555 to $6,300,respectively. Students enrolled inthe other professional schools—Divinity, Library Science, SocialService Administration—and inthe Committee on Public PolicyStudies will pay a yearly tuition of$5,280, up from $4,665.In announcing the increase,O’Connell noted that the Univer-continued on page fiveGrads vote on $16 fee in MarchBy Jaan EliasGraduate students will vote dur¬ing the first week in March onwhether to accept a five dollarquarterly student activities fee.A major campaign is beingmounted by Student Government(SG) to gain graduate support forthe measure.Speakers will be sent to all themajor graduate student councils towin endorsements, according toSG Finance Committee chairmanJeff Lea veil.The proposed activities fee hasbeen already endorsed by theMajor Activities Board (MAB),Student Government (SG), and theFaculty Student Advisory Commit¬tee on Campus Student Life(FSACCSL).In addition, all graduate stu¬dents will receive an informationalFulbrighton campusFormer U.S. Senator J. WilliamFulbright will be the second Visit-ing Fellow on campus. Fulbrightwill stay in Woodward Court andmake a number of appearances oncampus. A profile appears on Page5. letter about the fee.Fee proponents are schedulingtalks in the graduate dorms aswell.“We want to show graduate stu¬dents that this fee will benefit themtoo,” Leavell said. Presently grad¬uate students do not pay any fee.Previously it had been reportedthat the fee would be $16 dollars ayear; the fee was changed after itwas learned that it would simplifybilling procedures to charge it on aquarterly basis, n passed, tne leewill be assessed during all fourquarters of the year.The money garnered by the feewill be divided by the FinanceCommittee of SG and MAB. Pre¬sently MAB is funded by an under¬graduate fee. The Finance Com¬mittee receives Universitysupport.The fee would bring in about$120,000 to be divided 60-40 betweenthe Finance Committee and MABso that SG would receive about$72,000 and MAB about $48,000.Both amounts represent increasesto the operating budgets of both or¬ganizations.MAB funds campus concerts,cabarets and nightclubs.The Finance Committee sup¬ports various recognized studentorganizations. During the pastyear they have received over $80,000 in requests for a budget of$34,927.“Most organizations have beencut to the bare bones,” FinanceCommittee chairman Jeff Leavellsaid, “and we find that we cannothope to support any type of majoractivity by any group on the pres¬ent budget.”32 campus organizations havereceived support from the FinanceCommittee during the past year.“We see the number of campusgroups increasing every yearwhile the amount of money re¬mains constant,” SG president JeffElton said.RegisterToday will be the last chancethat students have to register tovote in the March 18 Illinois pri¬mary. Registration will be held atprecinct polling places. To find outwhich precinct you live in call269-7977. Registration will be helduntil 9 pm.Besides being able to vote in thePresidential primary, voters willalso be voting in the races for U.S.Senate, Congress, Cook CountyState’s Attorney, State Senate,State Representative, and WardCommitteeman.