The Chicago Maroon“Solitary, singing in the West, 1 strike up for a new world.” —Walt WhitmanVol. 89, No. 37 The University of ChicagoBrooks leaving University Copyright 1980 The Chicago Maroon Fr-iday, February 22, 1980By Jeff DavitzFred Brooks, Director of CollegeAdmissions and Aid, told theMaroon yesterday that he will beleaving the University sometimeafter the end of spring quarter.Brooks has been at the Universityfor 12 years.Charles O’Connell, dean of stu¬dents in the University, confirmedthat the administration has re¬ceived Brooks's letter of resigna¬tion. O’Connell said the Universityhas no one in mind right now to re¬place Brooks. O’Connell said the University is“very satisfied” with Brooks’s ten¬ure as Admissions director. "Weare very sorry to see him go,” hesaid.According to Brooks, the officialsearch for his successor began “afew’ days ago.”In an interview on Thursday,Brooks said he is leaving in partbecause of some of the pressures ofthe job. “Being an admissionsdirector is like being a gladiator ina coliseum,” he said.Brooks emphasized he is leavingthe University with an “enormousStudents polled hereoppose draft by 7 to 2 respect for the faculty and studentbody.” He also restated his beliefthat the University is one of the“finest colleges in the country.”Brooks also mentioned that a fac¬tor in his decision was the “optionswhich are beginning to open for mearound the country.”Brooks was appointed assistantdirector of admissions in 1968 andbecame associate director of ad¬missions in 1971. He held that postuntil he was appointed director offinancial aid in 1972. In 1975. he as¬sumed the additional responsibili¬ty of director of admissions in theCollege.At the time of Brook’s appoint¬ment to the top College admissionsposition, then dean of the CollegeCharles Oxnard said that themajor problem facing the admis¬sions program was a declining ap¬plicant pool. Oxnard also cited the Fred Brooksamong prospective students as a number of female applicationshindrance to recruitment. during this time rose only 19.8 per-Since 1977, the number of appli- cent and thus lost some ground inBy Sherrie NegreaStudents at the University of Chi¬cago strongly oppose the draft butare almost evenly divided on regis¬tration and the threat posed by theSoviet invasion of Afghanistan, ac¬cording to a Maroon poll complet¬ed last Tuesday.The poll of 202 students showedthat 73 percent of the student bodyoppose a peacetime draft, 20 per¬cent favor it, and 7 percent are un¬decided. Registration was opposed by 43 percent of those surveyed, fa¬vored by 49 percent, and 7 percentare undecided.The Maroon poll was conductedon February 18 and 19 by a tele¬phone survey. The sample includ¬ed undergraduates and graduatestudents in the divisions and in theprofessional schools. The students’ages ranged from 18 to 58.Nearly half of the students sur¬veyed think that the Soviet inva¬sion of Afghanistan constitutes a• continued on page three poor image of the neighborhood cants has risen by 21 percent. The continued on page threeFulbright calls for understandingStudents and the draft1) Do you favor or oppose regis- you favor or oppose the registratration? tion of women?Favor 49% Favor 70%Oppose 43% Oppose 25%Undecided 8% Undecided 5%2) Do you favor or oppose a 4) Do you think the Soviet invapeacetime draft? sion of Afghanistan constitutes athreat to the vital interests of thisFavor 20% country?Oppose 73%Undecided 7% Yes 47%no 42%3) If men should be drafted, do undecided 11% By Chris IsidoreJ. William Fulbright, former U.S. Senator and long time foreignpolicy critic, urged students duringhis three-day visit here earlierthis week to question and re-exam¬ine our relations with Russia, andother traditional adver^-ies.Fulbright. who was here on therecently established Visiting Fel¬lows program, spoke to many dif¬ferent groups of students as he satin on classes, gave lectures, andanswered questions about hisviews of U S. foreign policy and hisrecord in the Senate. The largestgroup he addressed, which filledWoodw ard Court, attended an openlecture and question and answerperiod. (An extensive excerpt fromthat speech appears in the Editori¬al pages of this issue).Fulbright had to answer muchcriticism that his position, whichurges greater understanding of our“enemies’” motives and actions,was too “pro—communist,” or v ...J. William Fulbright Audrey UgnfUniversity hires star astronomerBy Dave GlocknerThe University has strengthenedits bid to operate the researchcenter associated with NASA’splanned space telescope by nam¬ing a prominent astronomer to bethe center’s acting director.Joseph Wampler, a facultymember at the University of Cali¬fornia at Santa Cruz has been ap¬pointed acting director of theSpace Telescope Science Institute,the ground research station for a94-inch optical telescope scheduledfor launch in 1983. Wampler willserve as acting director of the In¬stitute if NASA officials decide toaward it to the University of Chi¬cago.The University of Chicago, Prin¬ceton University, and Johns Hop¬kins University are competing toprovide the site for the Institute, which will be one of the most im¬portant centers of optical astron¬omy during the coming decades.Wampler “is considered theleading instrument developer inastronomy today,” and his hiringshould be “a tremendous aid” inbringing the Institute to the Uni¬versity, said David Schramm,chairman of the department of as¬tronomy and astrophysics.Both Johns Hopkins and Prince¬ton have also hired men to directthe Institute if it is located at theirschools. But Schramm believes theUniversity has outdone its compet-itors by hiring Wampler.Wampler’s impressive credentialsand the fact that he is not associat¬ed with the University of Chicagoshould add to the strength of theUniversity’s proposal to receivethe center, Schramm said.By hiring an outsider, the Uni¬versity of Chicago has demonstrat¬ed to NASA that its faculty members will not dominate the In¬stitute. Schramm said.Princeton has named LymanSpitzer, a Princeton astronomer,as its director, and Johns Hopkinshas appointed Art Code, a Univer¬sity of Wisconsin astronomer whohelped plan Hopkins’s bid for theInstitute.Schramm said he expects NASAofficials to make the final decisionon the Institute’s location in earlyNovember. “If it’s a nonpoliticaldecision,” made on the merits ofthe competitors, the Universitywill receive the center, Schrammsaid.If the Institute is awarded to theUniversity of Chicago, it w ill be lo¬cated southwest of Chicago nearFermilab, the national acceleratorlaboratory the University operatesfor the federal governmentSchramm said a site on the Univer¬sity campus has definitely beenruled out. “pro—Arab.” Fulbright. who hadserved as Chairman of the SenateForeign Relations Committee formore than 15 years, argued that hisposition was neither of these.“It’s very irritating to read thatI’m pro-Arab, or pro-Communist.What I am is pro-U.S.. What I try todo is evaluate how this affects theinterest of the United States. Andbecause I happen to think that theinterest of the United States isbringing about peace in the MiddleEast, I’m labeled pro-Arab. Nowwith Russia, I don’t have reserva¬tions about the wheat because I’msympathetic with the Russians. Ihave reservations because I thinkit is very much against the inter¬ ests of the United States.”Fulbright feels that we make somany mistakes dealing withforeign countries because of a mis¬conception that we have abouttheir motives. He agrees with Rus¬sian scholar George Kennan thatthe Russian move into Afghanistanwas a defensive one to ensure theirown borders, and that they did nothave designs to move into the Per¬sian Gulf. He was therefore reluc¬tant to speculate on what he feltwas a very unlikely course ofevents. When asked what weshould do if the Russians do moveto seize the Gulf, he responded “Itis extremely difficult to speculatecontinued on page threeReminder, ClarificationA rally against registration and the draft will be held today atnoon in Hutchinson Court. Tom Palmer, national director of the Co¬alition Against the Registration and the Draft (CARD), will be afeatured speaker.-• • •The headline for last Tuesday article on the activities fee was inerror. The proposed activities fee is five dollars a quarter, not 16dollars a year as w as stated in the headline The article pointed outthe change in the amount of the fee had been made to simplify bill¬ing procedures.Newsbriefs ')/Burke speaksEd Burke again accused Richard Daley,his opponent in the State’s Attorney’s race,of being unqualified to hold the office.Speaking recently to an audience of twodozen before the committee on public policystudies, he reiterated his positions as statedin an earlier interview with The Maroon.Burke pointed out that Daley has avoideda debate at least seventeen times. Whenasked by, Burke responded, “He spoke be¬fore you. didn’t he?’’Bill Daley, the manager of his brother’scampaign, commented to The Maroon thatBurke wants to debate only because “hecannot draw the crowds he needs on hisown.”Burke said that his three and a half years onthe police force will give him insights una¬vailable to his predecessors.When asked what effect Byrne’s endorse¬ment and Daley’s name will have on hiselection, he said that he had confidence inwhat he considers a “sophisticated elector¬ate.” — John Seramis Aarne EliasEdward Burke Peace Vigil plannedA peace vigil will be held at the Federalbuilding (Dearborn and Adams) from 11 am• 1 pm this Saturday.The vigil is sponsored by the Chicago Se¬minaries Disarmament Coalition and theAlliance for Survival and is an out growth oflast weekend’s disarmament conference atthe McCormick Theologial Seminary. Forfurther information call 324-7873.Candidiate forumBesides voting for President, voters in theMarch 18 primary will be deciding upon anumber of races of which there has been lit¬tle coverage. To help correct this generallack of information, the Student Govern¬ment (SG) is sponsoring a Candidates’Meeting, today from noon to 1:30 pm, in theNorth Lounge of Reynolds Club. Democratic candidates, both independent and regularorganization candidates, will be present.Those candidates who had confirmed thatthey would be there at press time were: Forthe 1st Congressional district race. StateSenator Harold Washington, who has re¬ceived the IVI-IPO endorsement, RalphMetcalfe Jr., another independent, and sonof the late Congressman, and John Stroger,a powerful, regular Democratic committee¬man. For the 24th district State SenatorRace, Richard Newhouse, who is runningunopposed. For the 24th district State Rep¬resentative race, Barbara Flynn Currie andCarol Mosely Braun, the two incumbent IVI-IPO candidates, and independent regularcandidate George Cole. For Fifth WardCommitteeman, Alan Dobry, the only inde¬pendent committeeman in the city, andJames Williams, the machine Democratwho is challenging him. And for the 22nd dis¬trict State Representative race, TimuelBlack, who is the IVI-IPO challenger.Other candidates in these races may alsobe able to attend, as will candidates for dele¬gate to Democratic National Conventionfrom all camps.Sponsorsa Roundtable Discussionon the future of the small press andthe Little review in the eighties.“The LittlePushcart thatCould’lPanel members will includeChicago authors, publishers andrepresentatives of Chicagosmall presses and little reviews.The Public is Welcome to AttendSloe-films Friday, Feb. 22 7:00, 9.00 & 11:00Warren Beatty's/—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, February 22, 1980 Sunday, Feb. 24 7:15 & 9:00Jiri Mengel'sCLOSELY WATCHEDTRAINSALL FILMS SI .50 COBB HALLSpirit of Malcom X praised by TurnerBy Jeff CaneIn the words of James E. Turner MalcolmX was a “phenomena whose complexity isjust now being understood.” Turner’s re¬marks came in Tuesday night’s Black Histo¬ry Month lecture given before an overflowcrowd in Judd Hall.Turner is associate professor of Afro-American Studies and Director of the Afri¬can Studies and Research Center at CornellUniversity in New York.Several hundred people gathered in JuddHall to hear Turner and to see an hour-longfilm documentary on the life of MalcolmX.“Malcolm X was the most significant de¬velopment in the Afro-American strugglefor liberation,” said Turner.Turner noted the 40 percent rate of unem¬ployment among black youth today, and thenearly 60 percent black prison populationand asked, “who is their voice? Malcolmcave expression to that alternative voicethat we don’t hear today. There is no force¬ful voice of the grass-roots today,” he said.“What major leader speaks on the streetslike Malcolm did? Who talks to those peo¬ple? Who represents those people?’ heaskedTurner derided the common view of Mal¬ colm X as a “deviate” from the “humanist”civil rights movement of the Sixties. Mal¬colm X, he said, “represented a furtherstage of black development — those wholived in northern, industrial cities” as op¬posed to the Southern civil rights leaders.The common “simple-minded” view ofMalcolm X, he said, has been due to an “ille¬gitimacy” in seeing social events relationsin terms of “consenual accommodation”rather than “conflict” as Malcolm did.“Malcolm challenged the very basis of le¬gitimacy on how we define race relations.”he said, “Malcolm said that in a situation ofoppression, you have to decide what sideyou are on.”“Malcolm was not on the side of the estab¬lishment. Malcolm said that he was not anAmerican, but a victim of America,” saidTurner.Turner said that Malcolm was the firstblack intellectual to see any connection be¬tween foreign policy and domestic policy.This connection, said Turner, is “most sig¬nificant now for blacks” due to “the centra¬lity of Africa to new political arrange¬ments.”Turner questioned whether the boycott ofthe Olympic games was “in our best inter¬est.” He noted that the symbolic protest ofFulbright on campuscontinued from page onespeculate on hypotheticals which are notvery likely, or certainly not in progress. It isdifficult enough to comment on those(events) that have already happened. Ithink this is a kind of futile procedure. Whatwould we do if the Russians were to moveinto London?”Fulbright feels that there is not sufficientdebate going on in the country about thecourse of the U.S. foreign policy. When heserved as Chairman of the Senate ForeignRelations Committee, he w as well known forholding open hearings on such undiscussedquestions as our role in the Vietnam War.He indicated that if he were still in the Sen¬ate, that he would like to hold hearings onthe questions involved in the Afghanistancrisis, such as what are the problems withmanaging that country, and what were theRussian’s intentions when they moved inthere. He admits that he does not have allthe information about the situation.“It’s possible civilians don’t know some¬thing that the President does, but my expe¬rience while I was in the Senate was thatwhatever the President knew, (that the pub¬lic did not know), was never very rele-vent.”Some of the harshest questions Fulbrightanswered were about his Civil Rights re¬cord. As Senator from Arkansas, he votedagainst all the various Civil Rights bills dur¬ing his 30 year term He said that his consti¬tuents views demanded that he vote the wayhe did, and that while he was able to voteagainst their feelings when voted againstVietnam, his constituent’s views on theissues of integration were too strong tocross.“Vietnam was very far away. Less thanone percent had any direct knowledge of thewar. But civil rights was something thatthey all knew first hand, that they all hadstrong opinions about, and was not some¬thing which politicians could change theiropinions about.”He was also challenged on his position onthe Middle—East, where he advocates hav¬ing Israel withdraw to its 1967 borders, thecreation of an independent Palestinianstate, and the participation of the PLO in thepeace talks.“It is within the interests of Israel to settlethe wars,” he said “I have, along with otherpeople, advocated guarantees of every con¬ceivable kind, such as the Security Council,ourselves and the Russians. It all comesdown to a judgement of whether or not suchguarantees, together with acceptance of the’67 borders, will bring about peace. The PLOis simply one element of arriving at a gener¬al settlement.”Fulbright did not endorse any of the can¬didates for President, but he did praise Illi¬nois Congressman John Anderson as beingthe most candid, and “impressive” and the only candidate who is not playing the polls.He criticised the one-issue-campaignswhich have been used recently to defeat“good candidates”. But he was reluctant tomake any official endorsement, saying thatit was no longer any of his business to tellpeople who to elect.Besides attending classes, and receptionsin different dorms, Fulbright also met withthe large number of Fulbright Scholars as¬sociated with the University who have ben¬efited from the program he initiated as afreshman Senator.Pollcontinued from page onethreat to the vital interests of thiscountry. Less than 42 percent disagreed and11 percent were undecided.The poll also revealed that an overwhelm¬ing majority of the students favor the regis¬tration and drafting of women if men aredrafted. Seventy percent said that womenshould be drafted as well as men, 25 percentdisagreed and 5 percent were undecided.Approximately equal percentages of menand women said that women should be in¬cluded in the draft. It was favored by 69 per¬cent of the men and 64 percent of thewomen. Women, however, opposed thedrafting.of men by 9 percentage points morethan the men.While the majority of students in all threedivisions of the university said they opposedthe draft, the poll indicated significant dif¬ferences in several of their responses.Undergraduates most strongly opposedthe draft (87 percent to 12 percent), whilegraduate students in the professionalschools showed the least opposition (63 per¬cent to 29 percent). Professional school stu¬dents also gave the highest approval per¬centage for the drafting of men.Another difference in the responses of thestudents was the approval of registration bythe professional school students who fa¬vored it by more than 2 to 1. Approximatelyhalf of the undergraduates and graduatestudents in the divisions opposed registra¬tion.Brookscontinued from page onein the overall ratio.Earlier this year, The Maroon reportedthat the number of women who have sent inpart one of their applications had droppedslightly as compared with the same timelast year. Brooks said a corresponding in¬crease in the number of male applicantswould offset any drop in the total number ofapplications. In an interview earlier thisyear, Brooks said the image of the neighbor¬hood was still hampering recruitment.Brooks said that the neighborhood had re¬ceived some undeserved bad publicity. Tommie Smith and John Carlos in the 1968Olympic games showed to the world the“reality” of American race relations. Healso noted the gains certain black athleteswere able to make as a result of the 1976Olympic games.Draft issueTurner said that it would be a “tragedy tohave black people swooped up in draft andpossibly face kin in Southern Africa.” Turner also spoke on the FBI’s COINTEL-PRO program in the Sixties, which sur-veiled and harassed activist groups andleaders.Turner spoke of Malcolm X’s “integrationof religion and politics ... by giving a spiri¬tual base to politics.” He argued that Mal¬colm was “a significant progeniter of rasingconsciousness” and noted his influence onAfrican leaders, such as the late Steve Biko,and various artists and musicians._ _ _ - udviuIman Mohammad speaksImam W’allace Deen Muhammad, leader of one of the most influential Muslim commu¬nities in America, spoke Wednesday night before a large crowd in the Cloister Club of IdaNoyes.Imam Muhammid’s appearance was sponsored by the Organization of Black Studentsin celebration of Black History Month.8 pm ’til 1 amTo Be Held at Ida Noyes£5 for the Entire EveningTen Bonus Chips for Advance TicketsOver $1000 Worth of PrizesRaffled for Chips All NightHundreds of Free Gifts to beGiven Away by Playboy BunniesProfessional Croupiers and DealersWill Man Full-Size Gambling Tables InfinityProductionFaculty-Run Poker Pan * Live Rock & RollDisco Dance Contest - Jackets Required for Gentlemenmarch 1 Ticketsare onSale atthe ReynoldsClub BoxOfficeThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, February 22, 1980—3Letters to the EditorRodriguez defended ITo the Editor:Please allow me to say a few words in re¬sponse to the attacks on my friend and col¬league, Primitivo Rodriguez, in lettersprinted in the February 15 Maroon. He iscalled “ignorant,” a “rabid demagogue”and worse. I will not respond to such charac¬terizations, However, the gist of the attacksis the accusation that he unfairly criticizesProf. Harberger and the “Chicago Boys”for supporting fascist and repressive gov¬ernments.The claim is made by those seeking to de¬fend the Chicago School of Economics andthe aid given to repressive states that theeconomic processes and political organiza¬tion of a given society are wholly separate. Ibelieve this is theoretically wrong and, re¬garding the concrete case of Chile, factuallyinaccurate. The belief in the possibility ofsuch a dichotomy contradicts my profes¬sional training and better judgement.But I am tired of these abstract discus¬sions. The purported separation of econom¬ics and politics is only relevent if these peo¬ple do in fact reject the undemocraticpractices of these repressive governments.This is clearly the impression, sometimesarticulated, but generally implied, in all oftheir public defenses.I challenge this. After having been at thisUniversity for three years, I have yet tohear a single supporter of the ChicagoSchool of Economics seriously criticize thefascist regimes in Chile, South Korea, orother countries which benefit from their ad¬vice. Instead we find them, again and again,defending these repressive governments,denying and covering up for their crimes,and even openly justifying the use of repres¬sion as necessary for the implementation ofcertain unpopular economic measures.Their public arguments are motivated bythe need to posture before a student bodyand faculty overwhelmingly committed todemocracy and human rights. Such maneu¬vering is facilitated by the ignorance whichthey encourage. Chile, we are led to believe,is finally “getting better” (in part, to besure, due to the misunderstood but well-mo¬tivated help given by the “Chicago Boys”).Is it? Why were 70 faculty members, in auniversity system already cleansed of alldissent, fired in the past month for voicingonly the most restrained criticisms of thegovernment? Why is Josef Mengele (the“angel of death” from Auschwitz, and one ofthe most wanted criminals in the world)now employed at an “interrogation center”in Chile according to reliable sources in Aus¬tria?I challenge Harberger or his defenders toexplain and denounce these facts. I chal¬lenge them if they tell us the truth, to pro¬vide examples ot their contributions to theworld-wide movement opposed to Chileanfascism and working in support of Chileandemocracy. Above all, I challenge any of themany pro-junta Chileans studying at thisuniversity (including military personnel) tovoice their criticism of the political policiesof the junta in these pages.Is there fascism in Chile? Do forces at thisUniversity support it? Enough of your impli¬cations. Your silence is the most eloquenttestimony of your complicity.Michael H. Hoffheimergraduate student- in historyRodriguez defended IITo the Editor:I do not see anything unfortunate in yourpublication of the letter of Mr. Rodriquez.Perhaps the only unfortunate thing is the sit¬uation which provoked his writing it. Mr.Rodriguez’s letter expressed the feelings ofcountless Chileans and those concerned withthe collaboration of Harberger and his stu¬dents with the Chilean Junta.As a student of literature, I did not findanything in the style of Rodriguez’s letterwhich could justify calling its author a“rabid demogogue”. Rather it is a passion¬ate reflection of what our microcosmic intel¬lectual environment is doing in the econom¬ically dependent countries. The applicationof “Chicago School” economic programs is provoking anger not only in Mr. Rodriguez,but, more to the point among those directlysuffering its consequences, namely the so¬cially, politically and economically re¬pressed Chileans — whether suffering itsimpact directly in Chile or forced intoexile.The blindness of those who attack Mr. Ro¬driguez prevents them also from seeingwhat history repeatedly demonstrates: thatrepression eventually and inevitably pro¬duces an explosion of popular frustrationand discontent, which, unfortunately, is fre¬quently expressed in violent reactions orterrorism, e.g., 40 years of Franco producedthe E.T.A in Spain; 40 years of the Shah,brought an Ayatollah with American hos¬tages; who gets kidnapped in Latin Americabut the American businessmen? And so on. . .Has either Mr. Ramachandran or Mr.Duffy ever asked any of the Chilean econ¬omists on campus whether they could find ajob in a democratic Chile? The answerwould be a nervous “NO”. What if a tribunalwere to be set in a free Chile to judge thecrimes of the Junta, wouldn’t U of C alum¬nus Sergio de Castro (Minister of the Trea¬sury) and his colleagues be called to ac¬count for signing (to take only a recentexample) the decree cancelling the con¬tracts of almost 80 University professorsunder the pretext of budgetary cutbacks?(See the New York Times of February 5,1980).It is certainly no miracle that the Chileaninflation has been curtailed, but how is thisto be balanced against th^Jiuman price ofthat “success”? And what were the real ori¬gins of Chile’s economic crisis?As for Messrs. Duffy, Ramachandran etal characterization of Friedman and Har¬berger as ‘’social scientists” with “genuineconcern of people”, they might also add totheir list of names that of Mengele, as a“genuinely concerned, investigative and de¬dicated physician.”Primitivo Rodriguez, from the bottom ofmy heart: MUCHAS GRACIAS.A Chilean graduate studentHarbergerprotestedTo the Editor:As members of the University of Chicagowe oppose the advice that Professor ArnoldHarberger, chairman of the department ofeconomics, gives to Pinochet’s Chilean dic¬tatorship, whose political and economic po¬licies have been condemned by a wide rangeof organizations and institutions, includingthe United Nations, the Organization ofAmerican States, Amnesty International,the World Council of Churches, the Interna¬tional Labor Organization, the AFL-CIO, theCatholic Church, the State Department, aswell as by religious, academic, labor, andpolitical representatives of the Chilean Peo¬ple.We believe that social scientists shouldcontribute to the well-being of humanity,mainly to that of the most deprived and op¬pressed of our sisters and brothers, ratherthan to transform their instruments of anal¬ysis into tools that make legitimate the polit¬ical repression of the people, and the eco¬nomic privileges of the oligarchies, as is thecase in Chile.Kathleen Alaimograduate student in historyBen Davisstudent in the CollegeJohn Coatsworthassociate professor of historyAdam Przeworskiprofessor of political scienceTerence Turnerassociate professor of anthropologyand 112 others4 The Chicago Maroon—Friday, February 22, 1980 Fulbright speaks onThe following is the text of the specialWoodward Court Lecture (omitting someopening remarks) given by former SenatorJ. William Fulbright last Wednesday night.It seems appropriate to me to direct ourattention this evening primarily to our rela¬tion with Russia, with the hope that possiblywe may direct our rivalry along a courseless ominous than it seems to be developingat the present time.Some years ago, in 1966 and 1969, as chair¬man of the Senate Committee on ForeignRelations, I held a series of hearings on thepsychological aspects of international rela¬tions. I still think those were perhaps themost interesting hearings that I ever held. Itwas my thought in holding these hearingsthat psychology and anthropology mighthave arrived at a stage of development atwhich they could provide those who have aresponsibility for practical policy makingwith valuable insight into our own behavior,as well as that of other countries with whomwe have crossed.Among these other countries, Russia isobviously the most important, the most puz¬zling and the most difficult to understand.We seem to be unable to accept each otheras legitimate members of the community ofnations, or to implement the concept ofpeaceful co-existence so widely heralded inthe Sixties.Some years ago, the noted philosopherand psychologist, Erich Fromm, put thematter in these words, “The lack of objec¬tivity, as far as foreign nations is concerned,is notorious. From one day to another, an¬other nation is made out to be utterly de¬praved and fiendish, while one’s own nationstands for everything that is good and noble.Every action of the enemy is judged by onestandard, every action of oneself by an¬other. Even good deeds by the enemy areconsidered designs of a particular devilish¬ness, meant to deceive us, and the world,while our bad deeds are necessary and jus¬tified by our noble goals which theyserve.”Fromm said that about 20 years ago. A re¬cent example of this particular devilishnessof the Russians was Brezhnev’s offer lastfall to withdraw troops and tanks from cen¬tral Europe. President Carter denouncedthis proposal as a devious trick, intended tofool the NATO countries and ourselves. Thatincident, together with the demise of SALTII, the troops in Cuba affair of last Sep¬tember, the ongoing human rights criticism,playing of the China card by Dr. Brzezinski,the new missies in Europe, and our pre¬occupation with the hostages in Iran, allcontributed, I believe, to the decision by theRussians to occupy Afghanistan.This overt display of force against a smalland weak neighbor touched a sensitivenerve in the American psyche. All the labo¬rious efforts of the last 10 or more years, topromote a more co-operative attitude of thesuper-powers towards each other has ap¬parently been in vain.I, of course, am not privy to all the con¬siderations that lead the Russians to invadeAfghanistan and just as obviously, I disap¬prove of it. And I also believe it was a mis¬take, not only from our point of view, but Ithink in time it may well prove to be a mis¬take from the Russian point of view. Howev¬er, now that it is done, we must do our bestto understand what it is likely to lead to andhow we may restrain any further incursionin that area, and any further deteriorationof relations generally with the Russians.There is a tendency in this country tooscillate too rapidly between the extremesof hope and despair. We find it difficult, inforeign affairs, to agree upon a policy, andpursue it consistently and with persistenceover a long period. The problem with our re¬lations with the Russians, like so manyproblems in life, is not subject to a neat,clear cut conclusion. It is a problem wemust learn to live with, to deal with dayafter day and year after year. Like theweather, we can complain about Russia, butwe must accept the Russians the way theyare, and find appropriate measures if wepossibly can to deal with them. And that re¬quires a much better understanding of theircharacter and their motives, of their fearsand their aspirations, than we have yetachieved.We must not forget that the Russian peo¬ple have been invaded from the East and from the West, by the Mongols, the Ger¬mans, and the Japanese — traumatic expe¬riences, which have left in their conscious¬ness an obsession about their security. Incontrast, the Americans, have never hadtheir country occupied by a hostile army.We are about the only important countrywhich has not had that experience. The Rus¬sians were brutally subdued by the Mongolsin the 13th and 14th centuries, and only 40years ago, the Germans devastated their ho¬meland and killed an estimated 20 millionpeople. I recall this not to create sympathyfor them, or to excuse their present actions,but only to try to understand their motives,and to be able to derive the appropriatemeasures to deal with them.Americans, on the other hand, do not liketo be reminded of our actions regarding theIndians, or Mexico, or more recently, our in¬tervention in Cuba, Central America, thePhillipines or Vietnam. Powerful nations,like the tribes of our ancestors, like to useforce to enhance their territory, theirwealth, or their self-esteem, whenever therisk of loss and gain was considered favor¬able. During the last 200 years, the Russianshave absorbed a large part of Asia, just aswe have absorbed the large and best part ofthis continent.Our recent actions regarding the Russiansremoved any stake, any benefit they mighthave expected from restraint, or from whatwe refer to as detente. On the other hand,the invasion of Afghanistan did not appearto entail serious risk to them, and no doubtthey thought it important to their security inthat area. Of course, it is possible that theyhave a policy of expanding their domain toinclude Pakistan and Iran, or as some wouldThere is in this countrya tendency to oscillatebetween the extremesof hope and despair.have us believe, the entire world. We shouldunderstand that our actions, however, willhave a powerful influence upon the policythe Soviets ultimately decide to pursue. Inview of the serious developments of recentmonths, it is more urgent than ever for us tolook more clearly and objectively, and Ihope, deeply, at our own and Russia’s poli¬cies and motives so that we may correct anymisconceptions that we have about them.In the hearings which I referred to earlier,the noted psychiatrist Dr. Carl Meneger, setforth eloquently the justification for psychi¬atry’s role in political analysis. “The useful¬ness of the psychiatrist,” he said, “may beless a matter of technology than of philoso¬phy. The philosophy is simple. It assumes acentral identity of all human beings, and anessential similarity of deeds, motives, fears,and techniques of communication and self-deception. The essence of the philosophy isthe high value placed on mutuality, and un¬derstanding, on helpfulness, on cooperationand on conservation, rather than on destruc¬tiveness for any purpose.”Consistent with those views of Dr. Men¬eger, another witness, the anthropologistEdward Hall had this to say, and I think it isrelevent to our own situation. He said “Cul¬ture is more than mere custom that can beshed like a suit of clothes. It controls man’sperceptions of the world around him. It alsocontrols his behavior, in deep and persistentways, many of which are outside his con¬scious awareness, and therefore beyond hiscontrol. Like an iceberg, culture hides muchmore than it reveals, and strangely enough,what it hides, it hides most effectively fromits own participants.”The main thrust of my thesis, in view ofthose comments, is that our culture presentsserious obstacles for our capacity to deal ef¬fectively with the Russians. Our history, ourreligion, our political systems, our materialsuccess, all the elements of our culture,have created in our own minds the convic¬tion that we’re good people, almost, if notentirely, the only really morally good peo¬ple. We have always been proud of beingstrong, but we believe that our power cameto us through some kind of innate goodness,and that we have never been intentionallyaggressive.At the White House Christmas tree cere-new Russian policymony in 1969, the President of the UnitedStates expressed this belief in these words,“America did not seek this role of worldleadership, we are the first power to be themajor power in the world that did not ask forit.” This attitude of moral superiority doesnot endear us to other people, especially theRussians. The most serious consequence ofit is that we are likely to take action that in¬vites retaliation without recognizing that wehave been provocative, that we like to re¬gard the retaliation as an unprovoked act ofaggression, as in the Mexican War, the Ton¬kin Gulf, or the U-2 affair, or the Bay ofPigs. I may add that we.are not the onlyones who have this characteristic, but it isextremely significant because we are agreat power coupled with that attitude.People generally, but especially Ameri¬can public officials, are reluctant to under¬take self-scrutiny, to look below the ratio¬nalization of their motives and how theyproject upon others their own less admira¬ble motives. It is too much to expect publicofficials, who run for office, to run the risk ofoffending their constituents by examiningour motives in focus. If it is to be accom¬plished, it must be by thoughtful and con¬cerned private citizens such as you who areassembled here tonight.This is true especially with regard to ourattitude towards Russia. It is extremelydangerous to talk frankly about the Rus¬sians if you are running for office. RecentlyProfessor Stephen Corwin of Princeton ob¬served, “Soviet Russia has been, on ourmind, virtual obsession for 60 years. Duringthese 60 years, far more has changed in theSoviet Union, and in the world, than in ourperception, and our ideas. This obsessionwith the Russians has caused us to oscillatebetween regarding them as uncouth, back¬wards savages, unable to produce a modernand productive economy, to believing themto be sophisticated and effective in manag¬ing their economy and foreign relations, andof course their military power.” As some¬one, in the language of the street, said, oneday we regard them as ten feet tall, and thenext day as pygmies. In dealing with theRussians, we have shown respect and con¬cern for their military power, but with re-Americans do not liketo be reminded of ouractions regarding theIndians, or Mexico, orCuba, Central Ameri¬ca, the Philippines, orVietnam.gards to their political and social systemsand values, we are usually contemptuous,and kind of patronizing. I do not suggest thatthey are not likewise critical of our system,but if our objective is to make progresstowards achieving a relationship of peacefulco-existence, or to live and to let live in ourown interest, I think we should take a posi¬tive initiative in fighting (these misconcep¬tions).We have done so, at least for a briefperiod. But the most persistent theme of ourpolice has been to question the legitimacy oftheir government, giving them the impres¬sion that we do not accept them as worthymembers of the community of nations. Theyin turn vehemently criticize our politicalsystem. These differences about how- best toorganize a society are always beneath thesurface at every provocation. It is this basicanimosity and rivalry which accounts to alarge extent for the extraordinary violenceof our reaction to the Soviet invasion ofAfghanistan.Of course, as I said, we and most of theother countries of the world do not approveof the invasion. But to dismantle all thesmall, ongoing joint programs with the Rus¬sians, is in my own opinion, self-defeatingand in many respects appears spiteful andpetty. I refer in particular to the project wehad with them for the revision of our text¬books, particularly our history textbooks, inwhich we, as has been customary in manycases, gave a very distorted view of the Rus¬sian’s role in World War II, as they do ofours. That is one of the examples. We had avery small, academic, cultural exchange, Chris IsidoreJ. William Fulbrightthat too is being cancelled. Even the exhib¬ition of the art work from the Hermitagewhich was to be exhibited beginning thisspring in Washington, has been cancelled.Of course, as for the cancellation of thegrain shipment, it will probably do us moreharm than the Russians. However, it givesus a sense of satisfaction over the shortterm. The trouble with that sort of deal isthe long term consequences. When we had atemporary ban on soybeans to Japan a fewyears ago, it caused the Japanese to go toBrazil and to start a long-term developmentwhich proved to be very disadvantageous toour farmers. It’s the long term and overallconsequences that I’m worried about. Andin balancing this to the effect that this kindof action surely we shouldn’t do more harmto ourselves than we do to the Russians.I do not minimize the complexities and thedifficulty in dealing with the Russians. Butthe danger of the traditional approach inthis case of nuclear weapons is quite clear.After the atomic bombs were dropped on theJapanese cities by the Americans in 1945,Albert Einstein, who had contributed somuch to the development of those weapons,made, I think, a very wise comment.“Now”, He said, “Everything has changedexcept our manner of thinking. Thus we aredrifting towards a catastrophe beyond com¬parison. We shall require a substantiallynew manner of thinking if mankind is to sur¬vive.”Some years before that, in a reply to aninquiry addressed to him by Einstein aboutthe possibility of avoiding war, SigmundFreud suggested a possible, though notprobable, answer. “Obstacles to a change inthe manner of thinking,” he said, “are not inour environment; they are in the workingsof the human mind. Since war, in the mostglaring way. conflicts with man’s psycholo¬gical attitude, which results from the cultur¬al process, we must rebel against it. We sim¬ply cannot take it any more. In themeantime, we can assure ourselves that ev¬erything that serves to promote cultural de¬ velopment works against war.“I believe Freud is quite correct in his es¬timate and although the experience of man¬kind through the ages is not reassuring w'ithregards to preventing a third World Warwith nuclear weapons, nevertheless there ishope that through cultural development anda well-instituted fear of the consequences ofa nuclear war, we may do so. There is someevidence, that through the strengthening ofman’s intellect, the instinct for aggressionhas been slightly restrained. The United Na¬tions charter has at least been adopted, eventhough it remains to be implemented. Fur¬ther modern warfare offers little opportuni¬ties for the fulfillment of man’s traditionalaspiration for personal heroism, and it alsoprobably means the irradication of both ad¬versaries. If we have not taken leave of oursenses completely, the progress of culturaldevelopment should eventually enable mento recognize the advantages to them ofavoiding mutual destruction by atomicpowers.I do not subscribe to the notion that isOur attitude of moralsuperiority does not en¬dear ourselves to otherpeople, especially theRussians.sometimes advanced that some foreigners,especially the Chinese and the Russians donot value life as we Americans do. Granted,there are cultural differences between us.But upon close acquaintance, the signifi¬cance of the difference recedes and is oftenfound not to be intolerable. An encouragingexample to me is that our opinion of the Ger¬mans and the Japanese has radicallychanged during the past 30 years. I do notsuggest also that we neglect our militarypower and rely on the goodwill of the Rus¬sians. I do suggest that while we are strong,we should in our treatment of the Russiansapproach them in a different manner fromthat which we have followed in the past Forexample, I do not think that we should haveavoided the trade agreement with the Jack-son amendment. We should have acceptedtheir participation in the Middle-East settle¬ment. We should have approached the prob¬lem of Jewish immigration separately as adistinct issue from the trade bill. We shouldnot single out Russia and make it appear tobe the worst offender of human rights in theworld. We have not been appointed supervi¬sor of the morals of other nations, and espe¬cially to Russians with such a patroniz¬ing attitude. It is quite evident, of coursethat our cultural development has laggedbehind our technical and scientific develop¬ments. Nevertheless, if we can bring our¬selves to focus our minds and our effortsupon our motives and our actions as they re¬ late to the Russians, we may achieve the im¬probable, we may in the words of Einsteinachieve a new manner of thinking aboutthe Russians. While we maintain the capac-ty for mutual destruction through nuclearweapons which we refer to as deterrence,we should consider much more seriouslythan we have in the past the concept of col¬lective security embodied in the United Na¬tions. Contrary to what many people think,the charter does not contemplate the aboli¬tion of force in the settlement of differences.It specifically provides for the creation of acollective force to be directed by the com¬munity of nations, acting through the Secu¬rity Council. This is, of course, the sameprinciple which mankind has through theages created nations under law.It may appear whimsical to you, and I’msure it does to most of my former col¬leagues, to mention law and the United Na¬tions under the present conditions. But inthe long run, what is the alternative to mutu¬al destruction by nuclear weapons?In any case, it is a new manner of thinkingabout a problem if we should take the UnitedNations seriously. The dilemma that con¬fronts us is so crucial that, as improbable asit may be to achieve detente, it is worth therisk to treat the Russians with respect andconsideration rather than accept the trial bybattle with nuclear weapons. To have to dealwith the Russians and the Iranians duringthe ongoing and apparently endless electionprocedure of our country makes this chal¬lenge doubly difficult and requires all of ouringenuity and imagination.The Chicago MaroonEditor-in-Chief: Andrew PatnerEditor: Jaan EliasGrey City Journal Editor; David MillerFeatures Editor: Mark WallachSports Editor: Andy RothmanPhoto Editors: Neal Cohen and Dan Bres¬lauAssistant Editors: Chris Isidore and DavidGlocknerAssistant Editor: Jeff DavitzAd Manager: Steven KaszynskiOffice Manager: Leslie WickBusiness Manager: Joel GreenThe Chicago Maroon is the student news¬paper of the University of Chicago, pub¬lished on Tuesdays and Fridays. Editorialand business offices are located on the thirdfloor of Ida Noyes, 1212 E. 59th Street, Chi¬cago, Illinois 60637. Telephone 753-3263.We welcome all letters and corresponden¬ce. We ask that writers limit their letters to500 words. We reserve the right to edit let¬ters for reasons of length or clarity. All let¬ters must be signed by an individual andshould be typed and triple-spaced. Nameswill be withheld upon request. All letters be¬come the property of The MaroonLast Chance!To Buy Winter Quarter Textbooks.Starting tomorrow books will be returned totheir publishers. The shelves must be cleared forSpring Quarter.The Textbook Department will be open aftertoday. Late arrivals for Winter Quarter will bestocked as soon as they arrive. - ask for them atthe desk.The Textbook DepartmentThe University of Chicago Bookstore5750 S. Ellis AvenueThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, February 22, 1980—5TUESDAYFEBRUARY 26th8 P.M.IDA NOYESEAST LOUNGE Features 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 8:00Executive Committee at 7:30 in Office 5225 S. Harperin Hyde ParkTelephone 363-1454(Good with this ad.)We're swinging Steakburqers 7 days a weekpresent will be1st U.S. Congressional District Representative24th District State Senator24th District State Legislator22nd District State Legislator5th Ward Democratic Committeemanand othersFRIDAY, FEB. 22nd 12:00-1:30Sponsored by Student Government6—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, February 22, 1980I.Decadence in the fifth columnBy Andrew PatnerI consider myself a magazine junkie andmy main fix has always been The NewYorker, a magazine which, when it cameon the scene a little over fifty years, wasconsidered new and, in its own stiff-neckedway, avant garde. But despite what thereaders and writers of that magazinemight think, The New Yorker is no longerchic. It is "establishment” and rarely surprising. For the chi-chi, the "new wave"does not extend only to rock music, but tomagazines as well. Interview, WET, Span¬ner/NYC, and praxis are but a few of thesepublications that seem less to be maga¬zines than what I would call "image journals."In their basic style, image journals arelargely indistinguishable, purposefullyconfusing advertisement with article, em¬phasizing striking photographs of thestrikingly photographable, and filling upthe rest of their pages with insipid conversation masquerading as interview andtrendy typesetting and layout pretendingto be art.The original image journal seems to beAndy Warhol's Interview which has beenaround for about ten years. The issue Iperused contained "articles" that usuallytook the form of a full page photograph(and the pages are large: about 11 x 17inches) of a rock or movie personage withthe subject's name in large letters and acaption like "CHRIS AMBROSE, 18, playsbass guitar and writes songs in arock'n'roll band called THE EIGHTIES. . ."I also paint". . . Photograph by, etc. etc.In turning the pages of Interview one alsopasses advertisements for Studio 54; cloth¬ing, jewelry, and hair salons; and discoand new wave record albums. The men inboth the "articles" and the ads are dis¬armingly handsome and clothed in GiorgioArmani. The women are eerily beautifuland clothed in little more than nothing atall. The interviews alluded to in the title in¬clude one with the Dalai Lama, whose ac¬companying Polaroid portrait would indicate that he either cannot afford GiorgioArmani or, for some reason, simplychooses not to wear his wares. There isalso a lenghthy chat with Priscilla Presley(formerly Mrs. Elvis), Lord Snowdon (for¬merly Mr. Princess Margaret), the everhonest Senator Larry Pressler, Herb Al-pert, a hockey goalie, and Stanley Marcus,chairman emeritus of the Neiman Marcusdepartment stores.Although Ms. Presley is interviewed byWarhol himself along with a companionnamed "Quo Vadis," the real masterpieceis the Marcus interview. Typical passagesshow the various jet set "guests" ignoringboth the subject and the writer and enter¬ing into brilliant conversation on theirown. One such passage:(Jet setter I): I think the world hasbecome so difficult to lead.(Jet setter II): I just came backfrom Europe yesterday and thiscountry doesn't have any leader¬ship. The Europeans tell me that wecannot afford this luxury becausethey consider the President of theUnited States the leader of the freeworld.(Js I): I think the difficulties we facetoday are so incredibly complex.There are so many things that have changed in the last ten years.(Js II): I think things have intensi¬fied with Carter.(Js I): Maybe the times were easier.Things have gotten very complicated.(Js 11): I don't know, history doesn'tchange so rapidly.(Jsl): I think the United States hasbecome a very hard country tolead.Maybe nobody wants to be led an¬ymore in this country. So who is themost perfect person in the world?(Interviewer I): The Pope,(interviewer II, presumably toMarcus): I want to know if you cangive us a preview of what is going tobe in the Christmas Neiman-MarcusCatalog? Other features include Truman Capote'sumpteenth sequel to In Cold Blood; a column called "Beat" whose author writes"America needs a funkatollah, " and a col¬umn about how people who don't like otherpeople smoking should "shut their eyes."My main question in "reading" Inter¬view is just who is this thing aimed at. Theadvertising stores that I had even heard ofare so expensive that I don't even knowanyone who has been to one. One ad forfancy briefcases shows us that the ownerof the pictured case uses a pocket calculator, has an Italian bank account, and readsthe only publication I know of that has aneven more vacuous text than Interview:The Congressional Record. There is alsoan ad for Steve Martin's The Jerk.Well, I do know that at least other magazine entrepreneurs read Interview be¬cause it has spawned so many offspring. I think it can safely be said that someday everyone will be Andy Warhol for fifteenminutes. The best titled of the imitators isWET, "the magazine of gourmet bathingand beyond." To those who might like toget in on some of the action suggested inthe title, I would caution you that theowners of this publication have registered"gourmet bathing" as their trademark.Junior Interviews have popped up inCleveland and Pittsburgh among otherplaces. Of the "local" image journals,though, Chicago's own praxis is certainlythe most handsome. The current issue in¬cludes a see-through red plastic record ofsome rock singer doing "Silent Night" aswell as a packet of somebody's blue dyedhair. In keeping with the inverse relation¬ship between the quality of copy and visualstyle that these journals seem to maintain,praxis easily has the worst writing whichrarely rises above the obscene.Overall, though, the worst of the lot iscertainly Spanner/NYC. I don't know howlong this one has been going at it. Themakers have given notice that "It is our in¬tention to issue 10 Spanners. They will notbe numbered, being discernible by the con¬tent and the color of the 'wrench' on thecover." The content of this issue is hardlydiscernible and the "wrench" is green.But Spanner/NYC has one redeemingfacet not shared by the other publications.It'sfrontispiecegives its readers a philosophy of the new wave image journals thatthe others are not so upfront about:There are no artists anymore;there cannot be. There is no suchthing as art. History as such must beseen as a blanket; endless repetitionof Punchinello sold We should lookat the past and marvel, yet choose tosee ourselves as victims. I cannot bewhat once I thought I should be butrather scream I am. This is 1979 andNew York. There are many sick peopie here. The dream, or rather, itshould be getting better, but pragmatic sophism becomes genre; thecliche is sophomoric in this culturethat puts couture before true pas¬sion. This is a chronicle in which theessence may be seen. Art does notexist, only the compulsion to own.Even rhetoric has its price; we shallbe totally without value or values. Ithas ceased to be relevant suchthings as original, new, innovative,large, small, female, male, banal, orintrepid. It is as such as will be andis received form finale. The livingshall live on, the dead are. This is artin New York in 1979. This is art inNew York in 1979.These magazines are to my mind a fail¬ure. Although they seem daring at first,the visual assaults and massages becomerepetitive after more than a few glances.They misread "is" for "follows" in Sulli¬van's dictum on form and function. Onedoes not need to be John Gardner to seethat writing or whatever it is we call thatwhich is between covers these days has tohave some kind of moral, to say something. It "this is art in 1979" I imaginethere is little hope for 1980. I am remindedof Churchill's story about Clement Atlee asI see an empty taxi cab drive up and Interview et al step out.****»**»*»»»*»*»»»»» TO CARTER WITH LOVES-M-L-XL $700eachjA*add 50 centsfor mailing ,I - colors-☆ LL Blue☆ Yellow☆ Tan☆ Black*Send to: M.O.B. Enterprises 1634 10th St. Santa Monica. CA*jName^Addressjc«ty»Zip 904 04State. QUANT SIZE COLORTOTAL ENCLOSED $ CM************ a****************************** APPLICATIONS FORUNDERGRADUATEFINANCIAL AIDSUMMER QUARTER 1980, ANDTHE 1980-81 ACADEMIC YEARWILL BE AVAILABLEIN HARPER 252.MONDAY, FEBRUARY 25,1980NOW PLAYINGWATER TOWER835 N. Michigan FORD CITY7501 S. CiceroGOLF MILLNilesSOUTHLAKE MALLMerrillville, Ind. RIVEROAKSCalumet CityWOODFIELD • YORKTOWNSchaumburg Lombard<V0'Xr v.^ ALL STUDENTS WHO WISH TO BECONSIDERED FOB FINANCIAL III)MUST APPLY NOW.DEADLINE - APRIL 18th/{o/uw/xj/le l l/lA/msmZftea/ Sxla/e ^occ.1630 East 55th Street 493-0666LOOK AT THIS! JUST RIGHT!Approximately 1021 Square FeetCondo — 5401 Hvde Park 865,000FAMILY UMNO ON A FRIENDLY FAMILY BLOCK - Victorian -race withmodern efficiency. I hi- hou>e lia- l»een well maintained. It olfer^ 10 room' - room\room- - for vonr family on Kimhark near HJtli Street. $ I 72.500.NEAR UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO. . . 57th K Black*ione. Comlo. ap¬proximately 2100 »ij. ft. Snnroom is heated and completely encloi-ahle yyilh freneltdoor* for priyaev — >eyen rooms. 2 hath*. Bright, cheery and in excellent condition.$ 115.000.VISTAS l\ THREE DIRECTIONS! 50th X Ka-t End - 0 room condo on l.i-hfloor. Super Shape. *85.000. BARCLAY BUM,.EICHT ROOMS. FOUR BATHS on the Lakefront $35,000. in the 7321 Buildingon Sooth-Shore I)rive. j( io-operatiye apt.)2 — the grey city journal — Friday, February 22, 1980N.BMovies quently loquacious drama aboutThomas More's defiance of HenryVIII. Kenneth Northcott portraysMore; Ronald Falzone directs theproduction. This presentation will runfrom February 22 through March 2. Allperformances begin at 8:30, and only100 tickets will be sold for each. (February 29 performance is sold out.)Tickets are $2 each. 753-3381. —J.D.R.Equus: You're still not excused fromseeing this moving production of PeterShaffer's psychological drama. AtCourt Theatre, Thu-Sat at 8:30, Sun at7:30. 753 3581. $2.50 students, $3.50 general.Among All This You Stand Like a FineBrownstone: Among most of ourlearnings about poetry stand Illinoispoet laureate Gwendolyn Brooks' finewritings. The title poem, "A Street inBronzeville/' and others are adaptedand staged by Vantile Whitfield, withJaye Stewart. Through April 6 at theKuumba Workshop, 2222 S. Michigan.Thurs Sat at 8, Sun at 3 pm. 842 2500.$5 7.Winds will play excerpts from TheMagic Flute and Divertimento #8 in F,K. 213. Friday at 8. Tickets will go onsale before the concert; special arrangements have been made to pipethe concert into Reynolds NorthLounge for those unable to get intoHutchinson. $4.50 (student) - $6.50.753-2612. - Q.B.7Music to Drink By: Supernova (withAndy Tecson, Peter Golemme, Bill''Coach'' Simms and Bill Lanphier)will present high energy jazz from alleras. Music will include tunes by DukeEllington, Miles Davis and ChickCorea. The group, which has won critical and popular acclaim at the Jazz atNoon concerts, will play at the Pub to¬night from 9:30 12:30. No cover, butPub membership required.More Drinking Music: ''The schmaltziefingers of Peter Golemme” will be featured. Does the rest of him disappearwith Supernova? Sat at the Pub from9:30 12:30. You must be a member.New Music Ensemble: Their program of20th century chamber works includesStravinsky's Concerto for Piano andWind Instruments, with soloist LouiseMangos. Music by Berio, Ives, andTippett is also featued. Sun, Feb 24,Lexington Hall, 5835 University at 8pm. Free.Music to Eat By: The Tensor Tympaniwill perform madrigals of the lateRenaissance at the Music Department's weekly lunchtime concert.Thurs, Feb 21 in Reynolds NorthLounge at 12:15 pm. Free.Happy Birthday, George (Washington):The Old Town School of Folk Musicpulls this all nighter every year. Thistime, singer songwriter performer JoMapes (the voice behind the old Kel'The meaty air of sleep;” etching and collage by Ed Allerdicelogg's Raisin Bran commercials) willbe the special guest, joined by RayTate, Jim Hirsch, Chris Farrell — andscores of other performers. The partybegins Sat, Feb 23 at 8.30 pm and continues through dawn Sun. The nonprofit school, for which this is a fund¬raiser, is at 909 W Armitage. 525 7793.$2.50; refreshments available.Happy Birthday, George (Frederic Han¬del): Dieter Kober will conduct theChicago Chamber Orchestra in a concert celebrating Handel's 295th birthday anniversary. Works by Handel tobe performed include Water MusicSuite, Concerto for Oboe No. 3 in GMinor (featuring soloist Peter Cooper), and Concerto Grosso in BbMajor. Three works by Handel'sfriends and foes will be performed forthe first time at the concert: JohannMattheson's Fughetta, Reinhard Keisar's Theater Music, and G Bononcini's Divertimento. Sun, Feb 24 in theauditorium of the Museum of Scienceand Industry, 57th St. at LSD, 3:30 pm.F ree!Tribute to Cannonball Adderley & NickyHill: Alto sax master Jimmy Ellis, altoist Bill Perry and trumpeter BillyBrimfiled will join the regulars for thistribute at the weekly live jazz party.Sun, Feb 24 at Chances 'R Restaurantin Harper Court from 8:30 pm 1 am.363 1550. $5 cover.Tom Paxton and Fred Holstein: Tomhas a new album out, but that doesn'tmean he won't sing many of his oldsongs, which have become classics.Fred doesn't have a new album, butthat doesn't mean his mostly traditional repertoire won’t be spiced withsomething new. Tonight through Sunat the Earl of Old Town, 1615 N Wells,at 9 and 11. 642 5206 $3 5.Music, Inc.: Music of great black musicians, past and present, will be presented in celebration of Black HistoryMonth. Vocalist Rita Warford; pianistCorky McClerkin, bassist DonaldJackson and drummer George Hughescomprise the group. Thurs, Feb 28 at12:15 pm in the theater of the CulturalCenter, 78 E. Washington. 269 2890Free Variety is the main ingredient at the Artisans 21 cooperative gallery. Membersof the group — and new ones are being sought — are unrestricted as to medium.Currently, the membership ranges from potters and painters to a weaver, a patchwork quilter, and a papier mache artist.Variety is also the spice of the gallery's clever displays. A whimsical papiermache pelican eats from a lovely ceramic bowl; intricate lace works are placedamong classical, simple pottery; photographs and abstract batiks hang side byside. As browsing through the crowded room can become overwhelming, it is niceto peer down in on these arrangements before entering the basement gallery.Artisans 21 is not among the majority of small businesses that go under aftertheir first six months. And if that is pleasantly surprising to those of us who haveseen many such ventures come and go, it is even more of a surprise to cooperativemembers. Opening the Harper Court space last fall, they hoped only to staythrough the first of the year But sales have been so good that negotions for them toremain another year are underway.Artisans 21, at 52nd and Harper, is open Mondays through Fridaysthe grey city journal — Friday, February 22, 1980 — 3Heaven Can Wait (Warren Beatty andBuck Henry, 1978): But this time itdidn't: the film's blessings are not inevidence. A shallow, nothing comedydealing too loosely with simplistic no¬tions of innocence and corruption.Warren Beatty gets killed, gets re¬born, and gets killed again, but hisacting never quite comes alive. Overpraised, when released, in the typical70's fashion: schlock was mistaken forart. Tonight at 7, 9, and 11 in Quantrell.Doc; $1.50 —K.H.Chuquiago (Antonio Eguino): In fourseparate but overlapping stories, thisquietly thought provoking film examines the lives of people from varyingsocial settings in Bolivia. Chuquiago isthe Indian name for Bolivia's capitalcity, La Paz. Chuquiago is photo¬graphed there, amidst the spectacularscenery of the Andes Mountains. Already a minor classic of the New LatinAmerican Cinema, this film has become Bolivia's greatest all-time hit-last year it even outgrossed Jaws. Tonight at the International HouseAssembly Hall, 8 and 10 pm. $1.50.Modern Times (Charles Chaplin, 1936):Chaplin at his best has very few peers.This masterpiece marked his first at¬tempt at injecting social commentaryinto comedy and his last stand againstthe onslaught of sound. The result is amarvel: a brilliant blend of the seriousand the comic and a lasting testimonyto the eloquence of silence. The film isstudded with memorable moments:the Tramp doing battle with the symbols of Machine Age; Chariot rollerskating dangerously in a departmentstore; Charlie, the gentle lover, rescuing his beloved from the drudgeries ofa night club. Paulette Goddard playsthe gamine he loves. Tomorrow nightat 7:30 8. 9:30 in Law School Auditorium. LSF; $1.50. -TSClosely Watched Trains (Jiri Menzel,1966) Milos Hrma's mother dresseshim up for his first day of work as shemust have done for his first day ofschool. Bright eyed Milos becomes atrainee at the tiny Czech railroad station of Kostomlaty, oblivious to theadult world of sex, war, and monotonyaround him. With co-worker Hubickaand girlfriend Masa urging him on,Milos sets out to become a man,clutching his railroad cap all thewhile. Against a World War Two back¬drop, Menzel masterfully captures thetragicomic trials of male adolescence,with the inhibiting barriers of traditioncrumbling amid occupation and resis¬tance. A little trouble with subtitles inthis amusing black and white film, butdefinitely worth Czeching out. Sundayat 7:15 and 9:00 in Quantrell. DOC;$1.50. —MMNone But the Lonely Heart (CliffordOdets, 1944): The playwright (GoldenBoy, Waiting for Lefty) turned filmmaker on one occasion. Odets's ownadaptation of a Richard Lewellennovel. Cary Grant plays Ernie Mott, aCockney searching for freedom andlove between two wars. Grant stayswith his mother (Ethel Barrymore)when he learns she's terminally ill.The movie reaches its highpoint whenErnie's Ma says to him, "I'm oldenough to be your mother!" You'rebetter off staying at home and readingTalcott Parsons. Monday, Feb. 25, 8pm. Quantrell, $1.50. —DMMusicindsfrom the CSO: Well, here they areagain, blowing into Hutchinson Commons with yet another all Mozart program. They will hoot that composer'sgraceful Serenade #10 in B flat, K. 361.To round off the evening and their survey of all Mozart's wind music, thethe grey city journalGary 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. Karen Hornick and Mary Mankowski.Contributing editor: Ted Shen.This issue edited by Karen Hornick. Friday, February 22, 1980 Arts and CraftsTheaterA Man for All Seasons. RockefellerChapel is presenting Robert Bolt's elo Clogging Workshop: Tom Terrell, formerly of the reknowned Apple ChillCioggers, will teach this unique kerplunky style of dance to the strains oflive bluegress music. Tonight at IdaNoyes at 8. 324 4469. $1.'A' Strike: All we know about Phil Berk-man's intriguing sounding perfor¬mance art is that the "meeting place"will be Midway Studios, 6016 S. Ingle-side at 11 am this Sat. 753-4821. $1.50.Food Fiesta: Feast on the spicy cuisineof many Latin American countries atthis complete five-course dinner sponsored by the Hispanic Cultural Societyand international House. Sun, Feb 24in the l House Assembly Hall from 5-7pm. Tickets, available at i-House, areonly $2.75 in advance; $3.50 at thedoor. — F.BThe Midnight Mocker: A bitter, cynicalDJ battles a moralistic former MissAmerica DJ until the inevitable onthe air confrontation. This radio playwithin a play is worth listening to, butmore for its form than its function.Mon, Feb. 25 over WFMT, 98.7 FM, at8 pm.Calendar compiled by Rebecca Lillian•rrtartisans 21fPeter Sellers as Chance Television SowsInnocenceBeing There. Directed by Hal Ashby, writ¬ten by Jerzy Kosinski, photographed byCaleb Deschanel. With Peter Sellers, Shir¬ley MacLaine, Melvyn Douglas, and JackWarden.By Ted ShenThe path from literature to film has asmany pitfalls as a pothole-ridden Chicagostreet. Most literary vehicles arrive at theirdestinations virtually unrecognizable.Some, at the hands of filmmakers likeHitchcock, transcend the limitations of ad¬aptation into works of pure cinema. Others,like the American Film Theater prod¬uctions, are cinematic jackasses—sterileand moribund. It seems that either a filmmaker molds a literary property into a ereation entirely of his own, or he treats a workof literature too reverentially without pay¬ing attention to the differences between thetwo media. This is probably why film direc¬tors generally try to avoid tackling literaryworks of established reputation and meritand look to minor works of minor writers assources of inspiration. History has proventhem right. There has never been a satisfac¬tory adaptation of War and Peace, TheBrothers Karamazov, or Moby Dick. On theother hand, films like The Birds, Birth of aNation, and The Man Who Shot Liberty Va¬lance, all based on pulp novels, have be¬come masterpieces of cinema.There is, however, a third category, albeita very small one. It is reserved for works ofliterature that reach the screen relativelyunscathed. Works in this category are invariably products of close cooperation between the writer and a filmmaker of sympathetic vision. The examples that comereadily to mind are the two GrahamGreene Carol Reed efforts— The Third Manand Odd Man Out. Each bears the imprintsof both artists; yet little is left out in translation. Now, there is another addition to thisgroup—Hal Ashby's adaptation of Jerzy Kosinski's novella, Being There.Both the story and the screen version of ittake the form of a fable. Chance (Peter Sell¬ers) has lived most of his life in seclusionand tends the garden of the Old Man, theowner of the house. Chance's only exposureto the outside world is through televisionswhich the house has plenty of. His life iscompletely dominated by TV. One day, theOld Man dies. Chance is cast out of thehouse and into the real world by lawyerswho know nothing of his past. His name tes¬tifies to his existence. The outside worldproves too harsh and inhospitable for him.The behavior learned from TV offers no so¬lution. But rescue comes in the form of afairy godmother, Mrs. Rand, the wife of afabulously wealthy financier (ShirleyMacLaine). She takes Chance home, thinking that he might have been injured whenher car hit him. There, he meets the dyingBenjamin Rand (Melvyn Douglas). Rand ischarmed by Chance's naivete and takes hisgardening tips as words of wisdom. Soonenough, he introduces Chance to President"Bobby" (Jack Warden) as his closest confidante. The President, impressed byChance's remarks, uses them in his tele¬vised speech. Overnight, Chance becomes amedia celebrity—the mysterious advisor tothe most powerful and wealthiest men in thecountry. He is built as a sage and sex symbol (because of his access to power andmoney). Every word he utters assumes sig¬nificance. In the meantime, the Presidentand others try to probe Chance's past. Buttheir attempts yield no information. Chancegets a clean bill of health. Finally, Randdies, leaving his fortune and wife to Chance.At his funeral, power brokers conspire to re¬place the President with Chance. And thenation faces the prospect of being governedby Chance.Kosinski's fable is perhaps his least bizarre and most gentle work. It takes jabs atthe media, mocks the contemporary mores,and makes fun of the system of power andmanipulation. It contains little of the famil¬iar dark Kosinski vision; and it has none ofthe perverse sexuality prevalent in his otherworks. Instead, it's an unassuming little tale about the possibility of an utterly simp¬le and untainted man to gain power and in¬fluence in spite of himself.That this satirical vision of the worldshould meet the eyes of Hal Ashby comes asno surprise. Most of Ashby's previous filmsare, in one way or another, about social odd¬balls triumphing over social structures inspite of themselves. The tenants in TheLandlord, Harold and Maude, the AWOL inThe Last Detail, Woody Guthrie (Bound forGlory), the menagerie in Shampoo, thearmy wife and her paraplegic lover in Coming Home all buck the system, flaunt social•conventions and still manage to profit fromtheir seeming maladjustment. ThroughThe compatible visions merge into one inthe film. Ashby's usually understated andunaffected directorial style serves well thedetached stance of Kosinski's •novella. Thefilm is not a loud comedy, it's a wry com¬mentary. None of the scenes evokes uproar¬ious laughters; the funniest moments coaxonly gentle chuckles. The story hardly has aclimax. It has the flow of a smooth stream.In a way, the flaws of both the novella andthe film can be attributed to this detachedattitude. Kosinski's fable, unlike Aesop's,has no discernible moral. We do not andcannot identify with Chance. He is notEveryman: he is at once above and belowus. We understand and sympathize with theRands and President "Bobby" better thanwe do Chance. Yet, we have little feelingtowards any of them and their predicaments. Being There, with its blurred moralvision, must be a fable for our times.Much of the success of the adaptation depends on the actor who has to give physicalpresence to the shadowy Chance in Kosinski's novella, in the book, Kosinski offersvery few clues of Chance's appearance. Onecharacter describes him as "manly; wellgroomed; beautiful voice; sort of a cross between Cary Grant and Ted Kennedy. He isnot one of those phony idealists, or IBM¬sized technocrats." This is indeed very littlematerial for an actor to work on. He has toinvent a cinematic Chance without alteringthe literary one. He has to come up withnuances and subtle gestures to preserve theintegrity of the character ascribed by thebook. It's a wonder that Peter Sellers makes■ his Chance so vividly convincing that he be¬comes Chance.The familiar Sellers is almost an antithe¬sis of Chance. In his previous films, Sellershas perfected physical comedy so well thathe is the fumbling Inspector Clouseau, thefumbling and scheming Dr. Strangelove.None of his previous roles prepared him forthe role of the subdued and passive Chance.Yet, for this role, Sellers has developed aspeech with no traceable accent, a facedrained of emotions, and a body devoid ofaggressive movements. He is, as he shouldbe, a robot like cipher whose behavior ismolded entirely by TV.The other actors, in supporting roles, areall very fine. Melvyn Douglas, in particular,plays the irascible old Rand with finesse.His performance serves as counterpoint toSellers's. He has to bring out the melancholygentleness underneath the gruff, manipulafive surface. He has to show that, despitetheir differences, Rand and Chance havemuch in common. Douglas succeeds marvelously* As the president, Jack Warden, mustsimilarly show that he is, despite his power¬ful position, another Chance, manipulatedby men and events alike. He is also a con¬vincing portrayal. And, Shirley MacLaine,as the wife in a December May marriage,gives a touching interpretation of a womanfrustrated by her marriage and her love fora dying husband. Her attempt at seducingChance, to look for stirrings under his im¬perturbable surface, shows her brilliantcomedy timing.The successful transformation of BeingThere from novel to film demonstrates thatthe path between the two media need not bea haphazardous one. All that's needed areintellligent and sympathetic helmsmen. InBeing There, the task is made all that easierby the sterling performance of Peter Sell¬ers.4 — the grey city journal — Friday, February 22, 1980 ■vVC' •c, x* ^(XNl^60" TAPEheavy duty v1 ■ • • i i . i |MO||egs aq o; Ii|-ra IPasA trip to on a dollar a dayR. eGuw^'0**''e>OBBL-fc e .TWis brand. P\nK Or¬issa \d*°BUBBLE GUM CIGARETTES: When these amazing ciga- ® irettes are "smoked," puffs of smoke-like sugar float into £: ^^ ■-■aiBBaprs\PE MEASURE: Big, bold numerals printed onuty vinyl denote both inches and centimeters.1 N 1111Pssoddns s i|' d MADE IN vycc°V_ ‘b0^,e-.N 0 c*>^ v^Cx^V^TMWAMthe grey city journal — Friday, February 22, 1980 — 5ENGINEERING &BUSINESS GRADUATESTHREE STRAIGHTANSWERSTO THREE TOUGHQUESTIONS.1.Is DIGITAL a well-managed company?Progressive management is a Digital trademark. In fact, in the December1979 issue of Duns Review, we were cited as one of the five best-managedcompanies in America.2#Is DIGITAL competitive in the marketplaceand what are the company's long-range prospects?Digital is the world leader in the fastest-growing segment of the computerindustry: minicomputers.Today, our products are used in just about everyindustrv you can name. Our potential as a company is virtually unlimited.3.Will I be a real contributor or just a trainee?First, we'll want to discuss your background, your career goals.Then, if ourinterests match, we'll look for the entry-level assignment that suits youbest—and give you the freedom to make visible, distinctive contributionsfrom day one.Digital/Phoenix is responsible for manufacturingan advanced line of dot matrix printers and videoterminals. We re looking for people with undergraduatedegrees in E.E., M.E., I. E., Technology, or Business. Wealso have openings for M.B.A.'s.Make plans to meet with our representative oncampus. See your placement office for details or sendyour resume to: College Relations Manager, DigitalEquipment Corporation, 2500 W. Union Hills Drive,Phoenix, Arizona 85027.Equal opportunity'employer, m/f/h. MEET WITHOUR REPRESENTATIVEON CAMPUS, TODAY,FEBRUARY 22,1980digi ta6 t- the grey city journal — Friday, February 22, 1980"Games in a refugee camp, Kurukshetra, Punjab, India, 1948"Event photography: what's happening, clearlyFinally, the girl ran through the frame.The finished prints looks like the record ofan event, but actually it is the representation of an action in which formal beautytakes precedence over the action itself.Pleasing, but vacuous.Many of Cartier Bresson's "events"may be exercises in style; but because heis so good at what he does, it is hard to say.Cartier Bresson's knack for capturing activity, his strong composition, full-frameobsession, and the "natural" look of hisprints — sometimes grainy, out of focu^, orslightly tilted in relation to the horizon —make his actions seem important. They donot need words or supplementary photographs; all by themselves, they shout out,"Look! This is what's happening; this isimportant; this is real!"• • •Photo lovers who are a little less surewhat's real should see Jerry Uelsmann's75 prints at the Chicago Center for Contemporary Photography at Columbia College,600 S. Michigan. Uelsmann is a contemporary American photographer and educator whose ideas have influenced a greatnumber of photographers to take a new interest in darkroom work and the alteredimages that can be produced there. In hisown photography, Uelsmann uses severalnegatives to produce one print; he special¬izes in presenting impossible situationsand unusual juxtapositions. Since he usesseveral images again and again in his personal symbology, his photographs becometiresome, and some seem downright stupid But his surrealistic work is a refreshing change from the clever naturalism ofCartier Bresson and his kind; and the exhibit has the virtue of having been organized by a small, private institution. It is notfinanced by American Express, as is theHenri Cartier Bresson. Photographermammoth There is no charge for admission to the Columbia College gallery.I 663-1600.journal — Friday, February 22, 1980 — 7Henri Cartier Bresson: PhotographerArt Institute, through March 23by David MillerHenri Cartier Bresson likes to look out atthe world, find something exciting, andthen preserve on film what his eyes see.His photography is preoccupied withevents; something literally happens inmost of the 156 photographs in the currentretrospective. Since Cartier Bresson has aknack for presenting action plainly, hisphotography is generally successful.Cartier Bresson photographed manyhistoric events, but the bulk of his work isnot journalistic. Instead, he focuses uponthe small but important dramas of every¬day life. Two schoolboys in a museum areshown from behind as they peer at a classical nude. One leans slightly forward and tothe side, his hands on his chest, his elbowsand head thrust outward; the other standswith one arm on his stomach, the otherraised to his mouth. Oblivious to his ownappearance, each is amazed by the statue.The event is an encounter with the unfamiliar; the male takes interest, in the fe¬male; the twentieth century meets classical Rome.Cartier Bresson is no more a documen¬tary photographer than a journalist; thereis nothing particularly Italian about thetwo schoolboys in "Museum, Naples,1963." In making it, Cartier Bresson wanted not only to show an everyday event inprogress, but also to show it beautifully.He does, the boys do not see a second,larger and brighter statue behind them. Itseems to turn and watch their gazing; itcomments upon their action; it is a part ofthe larger event.Cartier Bresson captures events by centering upon agents. In one of his mostwidely known photographs, one womanaccuses another of being a Gestapo informer. The accusing woman stands stifflyerect, grits her teeth, holds her former vietimizer with one arm, and prepares to "Museum, Naples, 1963"punch her with the other. The accused pre¬pares for the blow in reciprocal fashion;she hangs her head in shame and clenchesher fists. These two in dark clothing fill thecenter of the frame; spectators in lighterclothing, extend to the frame's edges."Gestapo Informer" exemplifies Cartier Bresson at his best; he manages bothto capture one moment infused with history (10 years of Nazi injustice) and to re¬cord and represent this dramatic momentplainly. Vet although he arrests the actionat what he calls "the decisive moment,"Cartier Bresson recognizes that he is notalways so successful:Sometimes there is one unique picture whose composition possessessuch vigor and richness and whosecontent so radiates outward from itthat this single picture is a story initself. But this rarely happens. (Introduction to The Decisive Moment,1952)The desire for formal beauty often conf licts with the concern to tell a story in Cartier Bresson's work, and formal beautyusually wins. This was not so much of a problem in Cartier Bresson's original context — picture magazines — where severalphotographs could be used to tell a story.Since the current retrospective presentsCartier Bresson's works individually withcaption-like titles, there is an increasedburden on each photograph to tell its ownstory. The shift in context also enhancesthe importance of Cartier Bresson'sstyle.Cartier Bresson bases his photographyas much upon composition as on the action-catching, decisive moment. Lines converge, tones separate, or his selectivefocus leads the viewer's eye to the action.One photograph shows a girl running between large stucco buildings. Her figureoccupies only a small part of the frame,but it is at the exact center; a line formedbetween light and shade points directly ather head; and her figure is in relief againsta lighter background. She alone moveswithin the frame; her activity is what matters.In a 15 minute tape and slide show accompanying this exhibit, Cartier Bressontells how he found the scene portrayed in"Siphnos, Greece, 1961," and how he wait¬ed for two hours for something to happen."Siphnos, Greece, 1961"the grey cityJLydon,notRottenAna blind aceptance is just a sign,Of stupid foals who stand in linesSex Pistols, "EMI”by Renee SarackiOne fateful day in January 1978, the grouponce known as The Sex Pistols literally ex¬ploded into rock 'n' roll oblivion. What re¬mains of that once great group are a gui¬tarist, Steve Jones, and a drummer, PaulCook, who seem to wander about Londonand New York aimlessly looking for some¬one to hire them, and a lead singer known bythe name of Johnny Rotten. Johnny Rottenhad one of the greatest rock 'n' roll voicesever and it is his voice (more even than thethen revolutionary three-chord punk thatthe Pistols played) that made the group sogreat. Rotten's evil laugh at the beginning of -"Anarchy in the U. K." to this day sendschills down my back. The bitterness andhorror contained in that high-pitchedscream has never been matched.The group's legendary vilification of any¬thing held in respect by your average Britonsoon got them more notoriety than theycould handle. It finally all fell apart duringthe group's first tour of America. Since thattime, the group's bassist, John Ritchie(more popularly known as Sid Vicious),ditched his girlfriend, Nancy Spungen, andthen himself. Johnny Rotten assumed hisreal name John Lydon and formed PublicImage Ltd. (PiL).If the Sex Pistols' notorious public imageand all that it entailed were largely respons¬ible for the destruction of the group, thenJohn Lydon has taken great steps this timeto avoid falling into the same trap twice.Lydon is painfully aware of the dangers ofbeing an image consicious rock 'n' roll star(unlike his good friend Sid Vicious) and hasdecided to manipulate the public's image ofhim for his own benefit.By avoiding the image conscious trap thatCriticizeand reflect. Proselytize and prop¬agate. Talk and cry, scream andwhisper. Write for the grey cityjournal, take photos, make art, beart. Call David or Karen at753 3265 atthe grey city journal | most great rock 'n' rollers fall into, Lydonj has helped to pave a new path for rock 'n'roll to follow. This truly revolutionary stepof having a group interested in making onlyj music while avoiding the typical rock 'n' rollI lifestyle,'certainly commands respect forLydon's intelligence and integrity.PiL was formed by Lydon shortly afterthe Pistols broke up. It's members includewhite dub enthusiast Jah Wobble on bassand ex Clash guitarist Keith Levine. Theirfirst single was released at the end of '78 and! was titled "Public Image Ltd." Musically; and lyrically it differed little from the SexPistols, which is to say it was great. Theirdebut album was due out shortly and moreof the same was expected. PiL is a group,however, that likes to play with its audi-before: Johnny Rotten, ca. 1977 ences' expectations. When the album wasreleased it was nothing if not different.The music is atonal, dissonant, highlyrepetitious. Johnny's voice is a sick moanthroughout the album (except on the spoken"Religion I" where Johnny spews forth abiting attack on organized religion). Manypeople who expect more Sex Pistols-likesongs were bitterly disappointed with PiL.The members of the group aren't outwardlyoutrageous like the Pistols and they shunpublicity like the plague. The music PiLplayed was dismissed by these people asself-indulgent, pretentious trash. JohnLydon was just an arrogant little twit whoseego had gotten too big. Still others took theopposite view and hailed John Lydon asbeing some sort of punk genius. These peoafter: John Lydon, ca. 1980* pie view Lydon's time with the Pistols as hisearly raw years and consider PiL to repre¬sent his maturation. Neither view is totallytrue and PiL's true significance lies somewhere in between. Whichever way you lookat it, PiL is certainly one of the more inter¬esting groups around today.Several months ago, PiL released theirsecond (available only as an import at WaxTrax on Lincoln) titled "Metal Box." Thepackaging of "Metal Box” is rather intriguing and is totally in keeping with PiL's anti¬image consciousness. The album, packagedas three twelve-inch forty-fives packed intoa tin film cannister, retails for about S23.00.A pretty expensive endeavor. Only fiftythousand of these were pressed and thealbum will later be released as a doublealbum. If you're interested in buying thisalbum I suggest you wait and buy the doublealbum to save time and money."Metal Box" is a much better album thanthe first PiL album. It has the consistencythat the first album lacks. Most of the songshave a heavy dub sound which is backedwith a steady rhythm section.Dub is a term which had previously beenapplied to characterize (and often triv¬ialize) much of reggae music. To achievethe dub effect, the producer and the artistwould combine to create a song with a con¬sistent bass rhythm. Only recently, whitepunk groups have adopted this raggae technique and incorporated it into their music.Groups like The Slits, The Ruts, The Gang ofFour, and even The Clash have utilized thedub technique. Needless to say, John Lydonand PiL have been at the forefront of thismovement.The utter atonality of the first album hasbeen toned down and Johnny's voice carrieswith it some meaning this time. The songsare mainly diatribes (albeit a bit vague)against respected traditions and organizations in the modern world. Johnny haslearned to be both acceptable (he is nolonger an outrageous, offensive punk) andsubversive. With the Pistols the two ambi¬tions were incompatible while with PiL theycoexist; the one feeds the other. John Lydonis caught between wanting to outrage andhaving the opportunity to do so. His naturalintelligence prevents him from forming an¬other Sex Pistols as he saw what that led to.Therefore PiL acts as a nice vehicle forJohnny to get his ideas across while at thesame time operating under the norms andconventions of society. It's still white, English kids copying their Jamaican heroes.But, while doing so, they have managed tocreate something interesting and original oftheir own.Notes from a new wave conformistby Jacob AllerdiceArticle H1: "Exercises in Alienation"As you walk home from the library forthe next month or so think about why it isthat you're shuffling like that. Is it theweight of books on your back or is it some¬thing more, is it because you, like the stu¬dent shuffling ten feet behind you and likethe student ten steps in front of you, aresuffering from a general adolescent ma¬laise known as loneliness?Think of the cheery greetings you ex-cnange with the many acquaintancesyou've got on campus. Sure, everything'sgoing great, just fine, right? Do you suffer,though, just for a moment perhaps, in a re¬alization of the work that's waiting for yousomewhere, or of the cosmetic problemssuddenly hitting you, or of the troubleyou've had lately with your bowel move¬ments? Of course you do, or if it's not theseproblems it's something else. No need togo into detail, they're the foundation ofeach of our lives. Sit up straight. Get your¬self a cigaret. If you don't smoke, that'sbad. Image is important for you, or at leastit will be from now on. You've got to forgetabout your own problems for a little whileif you're ever going to straighten anythingout. Look around you, as they say. Stand¬ing tall, with smoke from your Viceroycurling from your mouth, step off the patha moment and watch those fellows carrying books past you. Bunch of Geeks, right?Tomorrow, quit saying hello to those acquaintances; try to find somewhere new toeat lunch. With the time you save from theavoidance of pitiful socializing get your ho !mework done on time. Take pride in the i fact that you're alone most of the timenow. Don't smoke in bed.Article ^2: "Being Sick"The New Wave Conformist is sick asoften as he or she can be. The state of illhealth provides a possibility for an ever-greater emulation of the standard NewWave Conformist heroes, what with thespitting of great yellow globs, and thecoughing, and the slouch, and the watery,half-blind eyes. The processes of alienation, pointed at in article #1, are augmented, too, by the dampening of sensory inputsuch as sight and hearing. A situation onthe quads for example, has Peter beinghailed by his old friend Dick as Pete hurries along. Peter has to stop and chat. Ifonly he'd had a temperature of 105, thingswould have been different. Dick wouldhave had to knock this New Wave Conformist Peter over to get his attention, atwhich Peter would have fainted andchoked on his Old Gold cigarette. If onlyPeter'd had crud drying his eyes closed,then Dick would have had to use a makeshift bullhorn to get him to wait, and Peterwould have dropped his Viceroy and smoldered holes in his clothing, plus gone into atrance. If only Peter's sick body had filledhis ears with extra wax, then Dick wouldhave had to rent a marching band to perform in the path, and our New Wave Conformist Peter would have went in his pantsand barked at the moon.To get sick, stand as close as you can tothe various successful New Wave Conformists you may know. If you don't knowany, or if they don't seem to be sick, actu ally, it is possible to fake the common fluusing white glue and toilet paper.Article #3 "The Standard"The Police and The Specials are bothNew Wave bands who were scheduled toperform this past Tuesday. The Para¬mount Theatre was to be packed witheager young college students, many ofthem aspiring New Wave Conformists,braying at their heroes. Your author hadespecially anticipated the rocksteadybeat of the Specials, and had intended to beamong the above throng. His plan was tocreate for this column a non partisan understanding of the New Wave Conformistgone public: the groups, that is to say, andthe groupies, and the exiles.However, as Epictetus said, "There arethings which are within our power, andthings which are beyond our power." Thefact of the matter is, the entire concert wascancelled when "Sting," the lead vocalistfor the Police, contracted a sore throat.Plans are ruined.Such a thing, your author angrily notes,could only happen in an out of the-wayplace like Portland or St. John's, Newfoundland. However, he sardonically adds,"Sting," in becoming ill, and in avoidinghis public, is a Standard for you all to emu¬late, as per article #2 of The New WaveConformist.Jacob Allerdice returned to Reid Collegelast fall after having spent a year at UC.He is an editor of The Quest, Reid's newspaper, wherein The New Wave Conformistis a regular feature.8 — the grey city journal — Friday, February 22, 1980 ssau snopsuoD jiasMonmouth here tomorrow2nd half run spurs Beloit over MaroonsBy Andy RothmanFor one half of Tuesday’s Maroon men’sbasketball game against Beloit at the fieldhouse Chicago played outstanding defense,kept their poise on offense and appeared tobe very capable of upsetting the 13th rankedBuccaneers. Chicago tired in the secondhalf, however, and Beloit went on to post a70-56 over the Maroons and keep their hopesfor an at-large bid to the NCAA Division IIIplayoffs alive.Chicago efficiently posted their forwardsat the wing positions to clear out the middleand allowed the wings, Ken Jacobs and VladGastevich, to get free on screens under¬neath in the first half. Jacobs led Chicago inthe half with eight of his ten points on theevening, while forward Mitch Price addedall six of his points.The Maroons displayed an excellent man-to-man defense throughout the first half, butthe effort took its toll, as Coach John Ange-lus explained, “We fought through theirscreens in the first half and we boardedpretty good in the man-to-man but the en¬ergy drained out of us...There was a fatiguefactor — against their height and weight —it comes out in the games.Neither team led in the first half by morethan Beloit’s 12-7 margin with 13:39 left. Thehalf ended iri a tie at 27.In the second half Beloit Coach Bill Knap-ton elected to pull out of his man-to-man infavor of a zone-trap. He also told his club torun more, “We always try to run, thoughyou wouldn’t know it because we aren’t real¬ly big enough to control the boards the wayTendonitisanyone?By Dr. S. David Stulberg we’d like to.”Beloit wound up holding Chicago scorelessfor almost the first six and one-half minutesof the second half. Chicago scored only eightpoints through the first ten minutes of thehalf while Beloit had 21 to break the gameopen.Angelus knew exactly what to expect,“We worked on the zone-trap the day beforewith our little guys but their big guys closedall the openings and we wound up staying onone side with it so they trapped us. If wecould have kept our discipline, recognizetheir defenses and keep reversing the ball(moving it to the weak side of the zone), wecould have driven off their momentum.”The Maroons were unable to keep up withBeloit once the Buccaneers started running.“We couldn’t play the transition game (forc¬ing the ball up the floor as many times aspossible to get off a maximum of shots). Weonly push it when we have the numbers, such as a two-on-one or a three-on-two. If Itried to run with these teams in the leaguethpv’H kill us all thp timp ”Angelus had hoped to take an early lead inthe second half and rest some of his for¬wards in the spread offense, “In that situa¬tion we’ll score over 50 percent of the timeand we only have to stop them one out ofevery two times down the floor and we llwin. We eliminate all the hulk elements ofthe game that way,” offsetting the Maroons’lack of height.Beloit, now 8-2 in the Midwest Conferenceand 16-4 overall, lost its chance to gain anautomatic bid the Division III playoffs whenRipon clinched the Eastern Division titlehere last Saturday, ending the Bucs’ confer¬ence championship hopes. Knapton said theseason had been somewhat of a disappoint¬ment for his club because they did not playwell in their loss to Ripon and they gaveaway, “a game we should have won,” re¬cently at Milton in the final miniute. Knap¬ton did not seem to have a good idea of whathis team’s chances for an at-large bid to thenationals would be, “I haven’t really lookedat the kind of records we’re going upagainst.”Angelus spoke otherwise. "I think he'll geta bid, but it may not be in this regional. Ifanyone calls here asking about them I wouldgive them a positive recommendation.”The Maroons now 1-10 and 5-12. close outtheir season and their string of gamesagainstt the three teams with the best re¬cords in the conference tomorrow afternoonin the field house at 3:00 p.m. against theFightine Scots of Monmouth, this year’s scorr KauiandBeloit’s Mark Smith (M) led all scorerswith 18 points. Here he is shooting overMaroon forward Mitch Price as EricKuby (10) and Beloit’s Alonza Jackson(14) look on.Western Division titlists. The game can beheard on WHPK, 88.3 FM, beginning at 3:50p.m.Swishers — Knapton claimed that he hiredofficials off the Chicago list for the previousgame between the two teams at Beloit andwas annoyed that some people here ap¬peared to be upset with the officiating in thegame. Angelus later said he had an old listand those officials had since been taken offit . . Knapton was impressed with the offi¬cials hired for Tuesday’s game, who werefrom the Big 10 . . . knapton also said itwould be too expensive for the league to im¬plement a system of assigning officials fromthe league office for the four states involved.Scott RaulandKen Jacobs (20) shook loose underneathfor this basket in the first half Tues¬day. SportsNoble, Neff pace aquamen at state meetThis week's question: What is tendonitis?What is the best treatment?Tendons are structures which connectmuscles to bone. They are composed ondense fibrous, avascular tissue whichstretches very little. Tendons are surround¬ed by a thin, relatively vascular tendon syn¬ovium. If tendons are injured, either by adirect blow, by stretching or by a diseaseAsk Dr. Stulbergprocess, this synovium becomes swollen.This swollen synovium is very sensitive tomovement and touch. This condition, a swol¬len. inflamed synovium around an irritatedtendon, is referred to as tendonitis. If thesynovium remains swollen for an extendedperiod of time (weeks), the tendon, itself,can be damaged. If the damage is extensive,the tendon may rupture.Thus, the objective of treatment of ten¬donitis is to reduce the swelling of the sheatharound the tendon. This will eliminate thepain associated with tendonitis and will pre¬vent damage and/or rupture of the underly¬ing tendon. The swelling of the tendon syn¬ovium can be reduced most effectively by:(1) preventing the tendon from movingwithin the synovium, e.g. by immobilizingthe tendon with a splint or cast; (2) by tak¬ing anti-inflammatory agents, e.g. aspirin;(3) by elevating the swollen area; and (4) byapplying ice to the swollen area for periodsof 15 to 30 minutes, 3 or 4 times a day.Acute tendonitis resulting from participa¬tion in athletics can occur in one of manyareas of the body. Achilles tendonitis nearthe ankle and biceps tendos of the shoulderare two common examples of this inflam¬matory process. However, tendonitis is alsoa common cause of pain about the wrist andelbow in racquet sport players.The diagnosis is made by recognizing thatthe pain and swelling being experienced arelocated in the area of a tendon. It is particu¬larly important to distinguish tendonitisfrom other causes of exercise related inju¬ries recognized by swelling and pain (espe¬cially strains and sprains) for two reasons.(1) The initial treatment of an acute tendon-continued on page seventeen By John CondasAlthough the Illinois Private College meetheld last Friday and Saturday at BradleyUniversity was considered only a tune-upmeet, or as necessary as preparation for theupcoming Midwest Conference meet, theUniversity of Chicago men’s swimmingteam still captured an impressive thirdplace finish among six Division III schools.Overall, the Maroons finished sixth out ofthirteen schools, being defeated by severalpowerful Division I and II schools.Coach Pete Anderson felt this was themeet to experiment, trying to determinewhat kind of performances he will receivefrom his team in “off” events, events whichhave been weak ones so far this year. For¬tunately, the team met the challenge, com¬pelling Anderson to predict an outstandingeffort from the team in the Conference meetto be held next week. Freshman Mike Noblewas one swimmer for the team who justifiedAnderson’s optimistic forecast by swim¬ ming excellently at Bradley last weekend.In the 500 yard freestyle. Noble missed theschool record by one tenth of a second, cap¬turing an eighth place overall finish. In the200 yard freestyle. Noble swam his best timeof the year, good enough for a 12th place fin¬ish In the 1650 freestyle, he swam an excel¬lent time of 16:06.4, followed closely by twoother Maroons, freshman Phil Hofmann,who clocked an 18:24.3, and sophomore DonDowling, who finished with a 19:56.9, hisbest time ever in the event. Noble also con¬tributed much in the team’s relay events.In those relay events, the team accom-Dlished several fine times. In the medlevrelay led by Tim lida. Andy Neff, andagain, Mike Noble, who swam his fastestsplit of the year. 51.8, the team finished witha time of 3:58.3. In the 800 yard freestyle.Andy Neff, Tim lida. Mike Noble, and juniorcaptain Steve Frederick swam their besttime of the year, compelling Coach Ander¬son to believe that these four have a fighting chance to qualify for the National Tourna¬ment in the event.In the 200 yard backstroke, another jun¬ior. Andy Neff, stroked to an eighth placefinish overall. Sophomore Tim lida excelledat his specialty, the breaststroke, in twoevents. In the 200 yard breast, he captured afifth place finish among Division III con¬tenders. and in the 100 yard breast, he cap¬tured another fifth place finish overall.The Maroons are not only looking forwardto the Midwest Conference Tournament,which will be hosted by Carleton College onFebruary 28th and 29th. and the 1st ofMarch, but are also anticipating an excitingdual meet with Beloit College tomorrow af¬ternoon at Bartlett Pool. The meet willbegin at 1:30. and should end in under twohours. Coach Anderson and the team wouldappreciate some support at the meet, be¬lieving that fan support can sometimesprove to be the difference between victoryand defeat.Nautilus the newest hit at field houseScott KdUldllUNautilus’ Double Chest Machine. By Howard SulsStartling. Awesome. Impressive. Confus¬ing. These are all accurate first impressionsof the weight training room in the HenryCrown Field House. Just one week ago therewere two Universal machines tucked alongthe west wall. Then the weight club equip¬ment appeared on Saturday.Most impressive, however, are the twelvenew shiny blue machines, known as Nauti¬lus. An array of cams, shafts, pulleys andgears, comprise each machine. $22,000worth of equipment. A product of ArthurJones and Nautilus Sports/Medical Indus¬tries of DeLand. Florida, the Nautilus equip¬ment claims to be an almost perfect form ofexercise, which comprises “rotary move¬ment, direct resistance, variable resis¬tance. balanced resistance, resistance atthe point of full muscular contraction,stretching, pre-stretching, positive work. negative work, and unrestricted speed ofmovement.” mThe principles are similar to those of anyweight training routine — eight to twelverepetitions, three times a week with twodays rest in between The machines are de¬signed to isolate specific muscle groups.The key feature is a kidney shaped cam thatincreases resistance as the exercise is beingperformed. The body should be alignedstraight, with the joint to be rotated directlyparallel with the cam. Lifts should be doneduring a two-count, with lowering done witha 4-count for negative workThe machines are set up to work thelarger muscle groups first, and then pro¬ceed to the smaller groups. Before describ¬ing the machines in detail, it is important toremember that everyone should receiveproper instruction before undertaking use ofthe Nautilus A clinic will be held today at 12continued on page seventeenEye 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 satisfactionI!I•IIIIIIII• KIMBARK HALLCondominiums80% MORTGAGE LOANS AVAILABLEThe developers are offering model units torinspection every Sat. and Sun. between 1and 5 p.m.36 apts:24 - 1 bedroom, 1 bath from 30,350-37,0006 - 2 bedrooms, 1 bath from 37.000-38 8506 - 2 bedrooms, 2 bath from 46,000-46,900Ail 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. 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CALIFORNIA 338-7737CLOSED SEND AYS • Please snip along dotted line and mail today' ■YOU’RE INVITED TOLONDON1980-81^PsLEARN#^ l®.• Business in the British University System• Drama with the Staff ofthe Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts• Fashion Design and Merchandisingand many other—Traditional Programs at University of London Colleges(e.g. London School of Economics, Queen Mary, Kings)in fully-furnished, centrally-heated accommodationsReservations available for one semester or for a full year.v^RSVPi^to the long-established, fully-accredited, coed programSTUDY ABROAD, MARYMOUNT COLLEGE,TARRYTOWN, N.Y. 10591 (914-631-3200)GOLD CITY INNgiven * * * *by the MAROONOpen DoilyFrom 11:30 a.m.to 9KM) p.m.522S Harper 493-2559(ffmr Hmrpr Court)Eat more for less.”A Gold Mine Ot Good Food”Student Discount:10% for table service5% for take homeHyde ParlCi Best Cantonese FoodREPAIRSPECIALISTSon IBM, SCM,Olympia, etcFREE repairestimates; repairsby factory-trainedtechnician.RENTALSavailable withU of C. 1.0 New aridRebuiltTypewriters,Calculators,Dictators,AddersU of ChicagoBookstore5750 S. Ellis Ave753-3303Mastercharge and Visa AcceptedNEW 2-drawer files $59.00NEW 6-ft. folding tables $49.00EQUIPMENT& SUPPLY CO.8600 COMMERCIAL AVENUEOPEN MON.-FRI.8:30-5:00SATURDAYSRE 4-21 11 9:00-3:00IM reportAlbanaians fall to Mr. Bill, Hitchcock bumped by Tuftsexcellent ball control in the process. TheRefugees, on the other hand, failed to takethe ball to Bill Show’s basket, and almostcompletely lost their rebounding (it shouldbe mentioned that in this department, ToddLewis’ absence hurt the Refugees most). Itbecame apparent that Bill Show was scor¬ing, and scoring big, while the Refugeeswere not. As the gap between Bill Show andRefugees increased, the game got rougher,with Refugees fouling more and more intheir attempt to wrestle the ball away fromBill Show, but succeeding merely in allow¬ing Bill Show many free throws.Half way through the second half, Refu¬gees’ Greg Retzlinger, on his way off thecourt with 5 fouls, hit Bill Show’s RichFriedman with an open hand; Friedmanswung back, and the two were ejected byreferee Matt Reuter. Good shooting by Ell-quist and a disciplined defensive game,helped Bill Show seal the game’s score,44-33. The Refugees are still in first place in theGraduate Red League, barely, with a 10-1mark, while Mr. Bill Show and the SnowBears are 8-1.In this week’s other surprise, Tufts camefrom behind to surprise Hitchcock, by fivepoints, and force a tie in the Residence Redas both teams are now tied with marks of8-1. Hitchcock led through most of the gameuntil the inside moves of Tufts’ forward BobMcCarthey became too much to handle andTufts’ took the lead with less than five min¬utes to play. McCarthey played most of thesecond half with four fouls and got somemuch needed help from Josh Newman andChris Woodruff on the boards. Tufts also gotsome steady play from guards Tom Dunnand Bill van der Clute, who scored impor¬tant baskets near the end.In the White League, Dudley’s protestagainst Phi Gam was upheld as the frat usedan illegal player in their earlier game. Dud¬ ley came back to beat Phi Gam, 36-18, hold¬ing fiji to three points in the second half.Dudley is now 10-0 and leads Chamberlin(10-1) by a half game in the division. Thetwo will meet next Thursday to decide theleague title because Chamberlin’s protest ofthe second game between the two wentthrough. Basketball Top Ten(First place votes in parentheses)1. Uranus and the 7 Moons (5) 912. Mr. Bill Show (3) 853. Albanian Refugees (2) 834. Dred Scott’s Revenge 725. Snow Bears 676 The Champs 377. Willis Reed 208. Dudley 189. Chamberlin 1610. Hitchcock 10Votes: Dartos Rises Again, CommuterMagic, ControlledTufts, Vincent Substance,Letters: IM coverage criticized“Aha!! At last!!”, I thought. At lastsomeone else besides J. A. Netos was writ¬ing up the results of I.M. Basketball(Maroon Feb. 15). No longer would I haveto be subjected to excruciatingly detailedaccounts of every shot, free throw, leadchange, dribble, move, twitch and gasp ofa Willis Reed and Chamberlin House (andsometimes Dudley) game. I thought. Sus¬picion began to creep in when 1 realizedthe first three paragraphs of the I.M. Bas¬ketball article concerned a Phi Gam v.Dudley game capped by the details of aprotest between the above two teams andbetween Dudley and . . . (you guessed it)Chamberlin. (And let us not forget thatDudley had an “Undefeated season lastyear” and was undefeated until this head¬lined loss). Three paragraphs later was adetailed rendering of a game between EatMy Torts and . . . WILLIS REED(!!!) andbetween Estoppel-Assumpsit and . . .WILLIS REEDf!!!) fully taking up V4 ofthe entire article. We learn of “excellentshooting” by so-and-so, “aggressive re¬bounding” by so-and-so (both on WillisReed) and how poor Willis Reed endured“Estoppel player pushing and shovingtheir way on the court.” I’ve been in andhave seen games with much more pushing,shoving and all-around violence than thatone. The question is: WHAT THE HELLHAPPENED TO OBJECTIVE JOURNAL¬ISM?! ! ? It’s obvious this “Ben Adam” guyis so slanted in his writing that he probablyuses an architect’s or cartoonist’s desk towrite these “sports articles” on so thatthey don’t slip off. Maroon editors, put thisstuff on the Editorial Page, not in theSports Section! Speaking of slippery andslimy, the attempt by “Ben Adam” to hideboth his true identity and his true alle¬giances did not fool this reader.As to the first point, it would seem atfirst glance that the 4th and 5th para¬graphs of his article describing the Cohosv. Grand Illusions game present an inno¬cent, informative blurb. But notice who“scored 15 of the Cohos’ 34 points” and was “the agile guard” who was “always tena¬cious on defense” — John Janetos — orJohn J-A-NETOS. Even if this personexists — WHO CARES? Many teams havegames in which players have scored halfor more of their team’s points. Do we hearabout them? No-o-o-o-o-o-o!! (Who keepsindividual players’ scores in I.M.’sanway?)As to the second point, later paragraphsostensibly describe a Losers v. Return ofZero the Hero game. (Losing 36-33 is not a“convincing defeat” to begin with.) Whowas muscling up under the boards? As ifwe hadn’t heard this name too many timesbefore — Jim Reed <as in Willis?). Coinci¬dence? Perhaps, but this “Ben Adam" hasbut few things on his . . . mind. Almost ev¬eryone I’ve talked to in I.M.’s knows J. A.Netos is best of friends with the WillisReed team and knows the men of Cham¬berlin House well (if indeed he’s not one ofthem). Public, if you didn't know before,you know now. J. A. Netos, you have beenrevealed, flushed out. your cover is blown.No longer can you pass off your friends’exploits as objective journalism. GIVE USA BREAK: Your friends on Willis Reedbeat a team with a 0 and 9 record by 19-16and you use up about l/s of your article tell¬ing us about it, while the rest of I.M. Bas¬ketball action (there are 60 other teams)gets three sentences or goes unmentioned9GET SERIOUS MAN!! I’ve had it withyour self-serving, self-centered, preten¬tious narratives about your friends on thebasketball court. I’m sure many othershave had it, too. O.K., Willis Reed is a goodteam, but there are many good teams (I’veseen them and I’ve seen many betterteams this year). How can you put WillisReed, Chamberlin and Dudley above Com¬muter Magic in the Top Ten? Have youever even seen them play? I doubt it. Howcan Mr. Bill Show be No. 3 when the teamthat beat them by 10 points is No. 5 (SnowBears)?? Who is Hitchcock’? Why don’tyou tell us about them9If you want prestige through association. don't use the I.M. Report in the Maroon.Write a book Perhaps a novel. You couldcall it “Willis Reed vs. (Wilt) Chamberlin:The Greatest Basketball Game EverPlayed.”Discuss StedP.S. The writer of this article is on none ofthe teams mentioned here, has re¬fereed and watched many games inalmost all the leagues, has played inI.M. Basketball for several years andis on a team going into the playoffs.Editor's note: Sice to hear from you butyou have not done all your homework. J.A.is, not a member of the Cohos — promise. Ifyou have seen so many games you shouldhave noticed the Maroon reporter keepingscore. Many others have noted the oddsight. Also, when a Top 10 team barelybeats a winless team because it playedwithout three of it starters (as you conven¬iently fail to mention) it seems important.Believe it or not. we have seen CommuterMagic play and trail Dudley B by threemid-way through the first half of theirgame two nights ago. Want more? The Mr.Bill Show managed to defeat the formerlytop-ranked Refugees (see today's IM re¬port) while your beloved Snow Bears werebeaten 42-24 by the Refugees in an earliergame. By the way. Wilt does not spell hisname like the house that is not named af-terhim and Jim Read of the Losers is not inany way related to Willis Reed (it was atypographical error).If you. or anyone else, would like to helpcover IM basketball to get some more peo¬ple mentioned, you are more than wel¬come. only so many games can be coveredin one week Teams are urged to submitshort reports of their games to The Maroonif they so wish. We do feel the fact thatsomebody actually went to the trouble toget some names mentioned this yearshould be appreciated. Some people wouldargue that IM sports have no place on thesports page at all.“Somewhere, somehow, somebody musthave kicked you around some... You don’thave to live like a Refugee. ” Tom Petty (asquoted by Abe Gorelick, Mr. Bill Show)It had to happen. Last Monday, the domi¬nant team of the Albanian Refugees, lost itsfirst game this season. It was only appro¬priate that the team that put an end to whatwas perceived to be an inevitable marchtoward the IM championship would be thestrong and disciplined Mr. Bill Show.The game was closely fought. During thefirst half it looked as if the Refugees enjoyeda slight edge. They managed to beat thetight Bill Show’s zone defense with shotsfrom the outside by Kevin Tetsworth andSteve Shapiro, and occasional quick pene¬tration on the inside by Ed Foley and GaryDowney. Bill Show were not at all intimidat¬ed by the man-to-man, full court press de¬fense alternatively employed by the Refu¬gees. Their players handled the ball withpatience and discipline, waiting for goodshooting positions and utilizing most ofthem. Particularly impressive were RichFriedman, Cory Levens and Mark Mitter(who missed Bill Show’s loss to the SnowBears). The first half ended with the Refu¬gees leading by two points.The picture changed in the second half.Bill Show moved the ball to the basket more,aggressively moving to isolate Refugees’players, making many lay-ups and, mostimportantly, not losing their patience andStulbergcontinued from page fifteenitis should be aggressive and consist ofrest/immobilization, elevation, ice and anti¬inflammatory agents. Vigorous treatmentof an acute tendonitis can often result in arapid resolution of the pain and swelling anda quick return to athletic activities, since nomajor anatomic structure used in sports hasbeen injured. (2) If treatment is delayed andthe tendonitis is allowed to persist, the integ¬rity of important tendons, e.g. the achillestendon, may be jeopardized. It is not uncom¬mon when examining an athlete who hasruptured an achilles tendon to learn that heor she has had pain suggesting a tendonitisover the achilles tendon for weeks prior tothe ultimate tendon rupture. A ruptured ten¬don is a serious injury frequently requiringsurgical repair. Many tendon ruptureswhich occur in athletes could be avoided ifthe signs and symptoms of a pre-existingtendonitis were recognized.Finally, a word of caution should be addedwith regard to steroid (e.g. cortisone) injec¬tions as a treatment for tendonitis. These in¬jections can reduce the swelling and tender¬ness associated with a tendonitis. Steroidinjections, however, can weaken tendons,especially if repeated relatively frequently.Thus, steroid injections may predispose totendon rupture.Most importantly, tendonitis, unlike someother types of injuries with similar symp¬toms, cannot and should not be treated by“running through” the pain. Acute tendoni¬tis usually responds quickly to rest, immobi¬lization and anti-inflammatory agents.After the acute symptoms have been treat¬ed, exercise may be safely resumed.Nautiluscontinued from page fifteennoon in the field house, and another possiblysometime next week. Maximum benefit canonly be obtained if the exercise is performedproperly.The first group of machines are designedto work the hips, back, and legs, the DUOsymmetric/poly contractile hip and backmachine works the hips, lower back, andbuttocks. The Compound Leg Machine con¬sists of a leg extension part to work quadri¬ceps, and a leg press for quadriceps, ham¬strings, and buttocks. The last machine in this group is a Leg Curl Machine for ham¬strings.The next machine is the Super PulloverMachine, designed to exercise the latissi-mus dorsi and other torso muscles. TheCombination Behind Neck/Torso Arm Ma¬chine is also for the latissimus dorsi muscleof the back, and should be followed by thebehind neck pulldowns. This is followed bythe Rowing Machine for the deltoids and tra¬pezius, before moving to the Double ChestMachine. This machine, which resemblesthe rack of old, consists of an arm cross forthe pectoralis major and deltoid muscles,and a decline press for the chest, shouldersand triceps.The Double Shoulder Machine works thedeltoids in a lateral raise, and the deltoidsand triceps in the overhead press. Anotherfunny looking contraption is the Biceps/Tri¬ceps Machine, which uses dead weightplates for resistance to work the biceps and triceps.The Neck and Shoulder Machine, de¬signed to work the trapezius and the back ofthe neck, can take the place of shouldershrug exercises. This is a simple lookingmachine, where one sits down and lifts byraising the shoulders. A little note, however,is in order, because no man alive has everdone all the plates (700 pounds). The 4-wayNeck Machine can adjust to perform an¬terior flexion, posterior extension, and lat¬eral contraction of the neck. Last but notleast, is the multi-exercise machine, for calfraises, tricep extensions, parallel dips, chin-ups, and wrist curls.The Nautilus machines have a ten-yearguarantee, but please take care of them.The weight training room, now one of thefinest in the collegiate ranks, can serve theUniversity community well, if we take careof and respect the equipment. Happy lift¬ing. The new leg press is one of the piecesthat makes Chicago’s weight room atop facility.The Chicago Maroon—Friday, February 22, 1980—17CALENDAR.FRIDAYPerspectives: Topic - “Indochinese Refugees in Chi¬cago” guests Ngoan Le, Duong Van Tran, JosephTobin, and Steven Voss, 6:09 am, channel 7.Crossroads: English classes for foreign women,10:00 am.Islamic Society: Friday prayer will be held at 12:30pm in the home room of I-House.Geophysical Sciences Colloquium: “RelationshipsBetween Large-Scale Circulations and ConvectivePrecipitation in Gate” speaker Yoshi Ogura. 1:30pm, Hinds Lab Auditorium.Dept of Economics: Workshop in Economic History -“Population Growth in Eighteenth-Century Ire¬land" speaker Cormac O'Grada. 3:30 pm, SS 106.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Arabic Circle -“The False Prophet Musaylima” speaker RobertAnderson, 3:30 pm, Pick 218.Women's Union: Meets 5:00 pm, Ida Noyes Women'sUnion office above the Frog and Peach.Hillel: Liberal-Progressive Shabbat Services, 5:30pm, Hillel.Hillel: Yavneh (Orthodox) Shabbat Services, sun¬down, Hillel.UC Gymnastics Club: Instruction available 5.30-8:00 pm, Bartlett, free.Hillel: Liberal-Progressive Shabbat Dinner. 5:45pm, HillelUC Karate Club: Meets 7:00 pm in the dance roomof Ida Noyes.Doc Films: “Heaven Can Wait” 7:00, 9:00, and 11:00pm, Cobb.UC Christian Fellowship: Evangelical Christianity in1980? Talk - “The Atonement of Jesus" 7:30 pm, IdaNoyes East Lounge. 2nd floor.Crossroads: Games Night. 7:30 pm, Crossroads, 5621S. Blackstone.Columbia College: Film - “Bush Mama" 8:00 pm, 72E. list St. Free.International House: Film - "Chuquiago (La Paz)"8:00 and 10:00 pm, I-House.Folklore Society: Clogging Workshop. 8:00 pm. IdaNoyes. $1 admission, live music.Rockefeller Chapel: “A Man for all Seasons” soldout - 8:30 pm.Live Jazz at the Pub: Featuring Supernova withAndy Tecson, Bill Simms, Peter Golemme, and BillLanphier, 9:30-12:30 pm.SATURDAYCreative Dance and Movement Group: Meets 12:30pm, Ida Noyes dance room.UC Gymnastics Club: Instruction available between2:00-5:00 pm, Bartlett, free.Crossroads: Buffet Dinner, 6:00 pm, no reservationnecessary.Law School Films: “Modern Times” 7:30 and 9:30 pm Law School Auditorium.Crossroads: Crossroads Forum: “Islam and theWorld" 7:30 pm.Rockefeller Chapel: “A Man for all Seasons" soldout - 8:30 pm.Live Music at the Pub: Featuring “The SchmaltzieFingers of Peter Golemme" 9:30-12:30 pm.SUNDAYRockefeller Chapel: Ecumenical Service of HolyCommunion, 9:00 am.Hillel: Lox and Bagel Brunch, 11:00 am.Rockefeller Chapel: University Religious Services,11:00 am.Hillel: Bus leaves on Tour of Jewish Chicago at 12:30pm.Crossroads: Bridge at 3:00 pm. Beginners and ex¬perts welcome.International House: Latin American Food Festival,5:00-8:00 pm, $2.75 in advance, $3.50 at dr.Doc Films: "Closely Watched Trains” 7:15 and 9:00pm, Cobb.Tai Chi Ch'uan Club: Meets 7:30 pm, 4945 S. Dorches¬ter (enter on 50th).Folkdancers: Meet 8:00-11:30 pm at Ida Noyes. In-termed-Advanced.Rockefeller Chapel: “A Man for all Seasons” 8:30pm. Tickets $2.Hunger Concern Group: Meets 8:30 pm, Ida NoyesMemorial Room.MONDAYPerspectives: Topic - “The Electric Car” guests Jo¬seph Asbury, Paul Nelson, and Mike Yao, 6:09 am.channel 7.Crossroads: English classes for foreign women 10:00am.Dept of Chemistry: “Random Coupling Models forIntramolecular Dynamics” speaker Dr. AbrahamNitzan 4:00 pm, Kent 103.Kundalini Yoga Society: Yoga Class meets 5:00-6:30pm, Ida Noyes East LoungeUC Gymnastics Club: Instruction available 5:30-8:00pm, Bartlett, free.UC Judo Club: Meets 6:00-8:30 pm. Bartlett gym. Be¬ginners welcome.Ski Club: Meets 7:00 pm, Ida Noyes.UC Karate Club: Meets 7:00 pm in the Dance roomof Ida Noyes.Chess Club: Speed chess championship, 7:30 pm, IdaNoyes Memorial Room.Action ERA: Meets 7:30 pm, 1st Unitarian Church,5650 S. Woodlawn. Women and men welcome.Progressive Union: Meets 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes Li¬brary. Everyone welcome.Folkdancers: Meet 8:00-11:00 pm, Ida Noyes. Begin¬ners.Doc Films: “None but the Lonely Heart” 8:00 pm,Cobb. the PubIDA NOYES HALLFriday SUPERNOVA: Coach Simms, PeterFeb. 22 Golemme, Andy Tecson and BillLanphier. 9:30-12:30Saturday’THE SCHMALTZIE FINGERS OFFeb. 23 PETER GOLEMME" on Piano,9.30-12:30Pub membership required, 21 years ageBocktfdler Memorial Chapel5850 South Woodlawn AvenueSunday • February 249 A.M. Ecumenical Service of Holy CommunionPreacher: Bernard 0. Brown, Dean of the Chapel11 A.M. University Religious ServicePreacher. BERNARD 0. BROWNSermon: “A MAN FOR ALL SEASONS”Wednesday, February 278 A.M. HOLY COMMUNIONThursday, February 285 P.M. EVENING PRAYER1 PIZZA PLATTERI 1460 E. 53rd|M 13-2800 No delivery Take a study break Chicago's smash musical will haveyou dancing in the aisles!"Guaranteed to chase your blues away, it's that exciting."Kup/Sun-Times"Clap your hands, tap your toes A good-time show."Syse Sun-TimesJon Hendricks'EVOLUTION OF THE BLUESGreat EntertainmentSEASONEDStudent Rush, half price on all available •'Xseats, 15 minutes before curtain • TuesWed , Thurs. & Sun eveStudent group rates for 25 or moreFIREWOOD221-0918 , A * bM \MPert Sched: Tues . Wed . Thurs 8 pmSI 2 & SI 0. Fri. 8:30pm. S13 & S11.Sat 7 & 10 pm, $15 & $13. Sun 2:30 PMjgWjBPm$11 &S9.Sun 7pm,S12&S10 mTickets at box office and ticketron ZLZAhBu-.vLPhone reserv. with Visa and Mastercharge 266-0500mm LAKE THEATRE WAJER.TOWEBJIIACEHLHEDMimNC • Eye Examinations• Contact Lenses• (Soft and Hard)• Fashion Eye Wear• Contact Lens SuppliesDR. M.R. MASLOVOPTOMETRISTSflfiSoT&LOMOISORfNSTfpummmon<<ja~s.'es£)Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 B. 55th383-6363COVo3</>o—t<DCLcrzr<oO-+■>n’O^ the Dean of Students in the College. The Do s and Don ts of applying to MedicalSchool will be discussed. All students whoplan to apply this summer for entrance inFALL, 1981, are urged to attend! !II 141 4>. III . >411i ii11» no18 The Chicago Maroon Friday, February 22, 1980SPACEUC Grad, student looking for springand summer housesitting or sublet.Call Clara. 432-7274.FREE now till March 1 large rm in 4B.R. apt. After March 1 S108/month in-ct heat 54th and Woodlawn. Womenpreferred. Call 684-3363 anytime.Charming old house in private park onthe lake in Hyde Park. 3 bedrooms,library, 2 baths, island kitchen, 2500sq. feet. Fully renovated, new floors,new walls, new plumbing, new kit¬chen. $1150/mo. Includes heat, janitor.Phone evenings 667-6215.SUMMER SUBLET - 3 br. 2 ba. apt.date and price negot. fully equippedON CAMPUS modern 947-9597 eves.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. 1-4p.m. Call 643-4489, HARRY A.ZISOOK AND SONS, 786-9200.SUBLET AVAIL. IMM. til Jul 1, l bdr.in Ig 3 bdr. apt. 57th and Blackstone175/mo. Call 684-4075.Apt. for rent: 2 BR, 3rd floor. Locatedon 55th St., near lake. $275. Call486-4557 until 1 pm.Room available in 4 bdrm apt. $87.50mo. rent. Non-smoker. 955-4958.Large light room available in 3 bdrmapt. Lake view. $114/mo. Call 288-1831.2 roommates needed for large 3 bdrmapt at 54th and Woodlawn. Occupancy9March 1st. 3rd bdrm. avail July 1.$117/mo. 752-4794.ROOMMATE WANTED for bedroom r A _in 3 bedroom apartment. Fine view of POR SALElake. Your share of rent: $143. 4850Lake Park. 548-4911.Prof, on Sabbat will sublet 8 rm turnapt responsible tenants April 1 to Aug31, 5 blocks east of campus $650 month.955-2659.FOR RENT NOW-Unfurn 1 br apt nearcoop. $165/mnth plus elec, plus sectydep. Call 288-4500 9-5.Lg. secure 1 bedrm basement apt.near 73rd and lake. $175. 567-3115 days,375-7435 eve.Mature female grad student lookingfor clean, quiet, warm, reasonablerent apt to rent, sublet or share. Willconsider room or quarters in exchangefor housekeeping or childcare.667 6323.PEOPLE WANTED ~The Department of BehavioralSciences needs people who want toparticipate as paid subjects inpsycholinguistic and cognitivepsychology experiments. For furtherinformation call 753-4718.OVERSEAS JOBS-Summer/yearround. Europe. S. America, Australia,Asia, etc. Alt fields. $500-$1200 mon¬thly. Expenses paid. Sightseeing. Freeinfo. Write: IJCT Box 52-11, Corona DelMar. Ca. 92625.SECRETARY/RECEPTIONIST Professional School Computing Servicesdepartment seeks reliable and punc¬tual Secretary with excellent typingand communication skills. Duties in¬clude answering phones, greeting anddirecting visitors, typing letters andreports, and performing generalsecretarial tasks. Call 753-4442 LeslieEvans, The University of Chicago.AA/EOE. Ipdependent book store, flexible hours,pleasant folks, call Geoff at the CircleBook Store. 1049 Taylor St. 733-4495.CLERICAL HELP WANTED Tem¬porary, 2 afternoons per week, filing,some typing. Must be near and respon-sible. $4,50 per hr. Call 667-4220.Going to or through new York stateduring Spring Break? Will share expenses, driving whatever. Call Marcusat 753-8342 room 421 please.We seek mothers of 14-16 month oldchildren to participate in a Dept, ofEducation study of mother and childlanguage. For further information call753-3808 1 -4pm or 752-5932 evenings.Part time clerical; flex. hrs. Preferwork study eliq., graduate student.Will consider all. Ask for Ms. Meyer,753-4281, B-School, 'South Suburban JCC has opening forhalf time staff person to work todevelop adult program services andJewish community relations. Seekingapplicants with good Judaicbackground, Jewish organizational ex¬perience and work experience in adulteducation or group work. Send resumeto Sam Doona, Jewish CommunityCenters, 1 S. Franklin St., Chicago, III.60606,Counseling and psychological agencyin Hyde Park needs someone who isboth meticulous with detail and em-pathic in dealing with people. Lightbookkeeping and record keeping, lighttyping, general office. 15 hrs/week at$5/hr. Comfortable atmosphere, nodress code, supportive co-workers, in-teresting and varied work. 684-1800.We need your head! The twohemispheres of the brain process in¬formation in different ways. Men andwomen needed for intererstingresearch in this area. Subjects will bepaid. Call 753-4735 (9-5).Artisans 21 Gallery, a co-op for artistand craftpeople has a few openings fornew members interested in sharingour gallery in Harper Court Call 2887450 or come to 5225 S. Harper.Private pary has the following forsale: Carpeting-all carpeting is 100%wool, high-pile, like new padding incl.70 yds. gold, 12 yds green, 12 yds blackand white high shag. 3 oval gold¬framed mirrors, 48" high, 21" wide. 2red velvet barrel chairs. One marblepedestal, matching drapes and king-sized spread. Call 677-7207. If you'relooking for something good, this isworthwhile.Bargains for families needinghousehold goods, furniture andseasonal clothing at Hyde ParkNeighborhood Club Rummage SaleMarch 1 only, 9am-3pm, 5480 S. Ken¬wood.ELECTRIC PIANO, Fender Rhodeslike new $800. 288-4896.Apt. sale two sofa beds, center tables,book shelves, air cond, electric heater,food processor, assorted tools. Call288-0994.PEOPLE FOR SALEExcellent, accurate typist w/legal ex¬perience will type papers and dissertations or IBM Reasonable rated7414. ARTWORK • posters, illustration,calligraphy, invitations etc. NoelYovovich 5441 S. Kenwood 493 2399 by .behavior.- RogerHelp! I'm in kemmer!Typing done on IBM by college grad;pica type. Term papers, theses, lawbriefs, letters, resumes, manuscripts.New Town lakeview area. Fast, ac¬curate, reliable, reasonable. 248-1478. Secret admirer-Tell me your guardedsecret and find out if 1 tel! lovely lies.JB.Revisher: Better late than never?Here is a personal. Share it with MalkaMouse, or else! See ya, NOT in the C-Shop!--Ravished.TUNE UPS and other work. Cheap.Call 753-8342 X2607, keep trying.FRENCH native teacher offers tutor¬ing all levels. Ph. 268-9262. Dear Mary Bunny, Nothing to say butRA-RA, 1 love you. WJSCENES LOST AND FOUNDGilbert 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. LOST: Gold pinky ring w/shamrockcharm. Sentimental value. Reward.Call 3-3777, ask for Joann Baney 502.Leave message.DRIVERWANTEDTo form car pool going to and fromloop with person who doesn't drive.Will provide car, gas, parking.955-9673.Hear music of Tippet, Ives, Childs andStravinsky on Sunday Feb. 24, at thenew Music Ensemble's Winter Con¬cert. 8:00 pm, Lexington hall. Admis¬sion Free.SERVICESPsychotherapy and counseling.Students, faculty, staff welcome. Feeson a sliding scale, insurance accepted.Joan Rothchild Hardin, PhD.Registered Psychologist in HydePark. 493-8766 days and eves, for appt. DREAMMERCHANTSLOVAN UNLIMITEDCall for appointment 493-4553ROSE/PLITTTIXDie. movie theatre tickets at ReynoldsClub Box Office.Pregnancy tests. Saturdays 10-1.Augustana Church. 5500 S. Woodlawn.$1.50 donation. Southside Women'sHealth Service. 667-5505. SAVE ON MOVIESRose and Plitt theatre discount ticketWe keypunch your data. Precise, fast,cheap. Call Mike. 753-2517.CONVERSATIONAL RUSSIAN of¬fered by native Russian family. Appt.arranged to your convenience. $5 perhour. Call Svetlana at 973-7384. at 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 pm - 7am.POTTERY CLASSES. Learn to makebeautiful pottery on the wheel. Smallclasses begin first week of March. Alsoafternoon ciass for children. NanFreund 624-7568. GILBERT ANDSULLIVANRUDDYGORE at Kenwood AcademyAuditorium, 5015 S. Blackstone, Fri¬day, Feb. 29, Saturday, March 1,Saturday March 8 at 8 pm, $4.50 and$6; Sunday March 2 at 2 pm, $3Tickets at Mandel Hall Box Office.Ongoing classes for women/couplesplanning a home birth. Nutrition,breathing and relaxation, preparingthe home, etc. 7 wk. series begins Mar.9. Call Ruth 324-4375.PERSONALSWRITER'S WORKSHOP PLaza 2-8377. FOUNDEUROPE thissummer. LowCosttour.Academic credit can be arranged. Call,evenings. 752-8426. Assorted hats, scarves, gloves, boots,etc. from Freshman Winter Camp atFREE to good home: cocker spaniel,full-grown, well-trained. Great apart¬ment dog. 363-2599. Green Lake Wi, 1/25-1/27 Please in¬quire in Harper 241, 3-3250MONEY ANDFAME1 1 1 hate, hate, hate you, you, you!These things always happen in threes.Dumb, dumb, dumb of me not to be Are yours if you win the 1980 FOTACalendar Design Contest. Prize is $50plus your name on the calendar.Deadline is Mar. 14. Details at FOTAoffice. INH 218 or Call Marlene, 4937681.INTENSIVEGERMANigh pawith Karin Cramer, native German,Ph D., using the comparative struc¬tural translation method. 15 weekcourse, 60 sessions, start April 7 Mon.Thurs. 5-6. Call 493 8127 or 753-0516.PIANISTSNeeded for rehearsals, and performances of Court Studio's SIDE BYSIDE BY SONDHEIM spring qt. Nopay, but good times. Call 753-3581 forinfo.J.V.D.L. you. CAC.CODERS chives, and manuscripts. Apply JRL180 or call 753 2929SPACE WANTEDWANTED 3 bedrm apt Campus areaRent or sublet with option to renewJune occupancy 955-5984LATINAMERICAN FILMSBolivian film-CHUQUIAGO (La Paz)showing 1-House Friday 8 and 10 pm.Four overlapping stories examine con¬temporary Bolivian society. SpectularAndean Scenery with native musicalscore In color. Directed by AntonioEquino.$1,50.STUDENT CO-OPDownstairs in the Reynolds Club. Thebest in used books and new records.bookshelf!!-5.Check out our new cheapy booksOpen9:30-6:00 weekdays, bat. 12-:NORC needs people for jobs deman¬ding high accuracy, concentration,and attention to details. Jobs involvecoding complex materials for a na¬tional survey. Full positions only.Begin immediately. Call 753-1221AA/EOE. NEW MUSICENSEMBLETUTORTutors needed to conduct MATHGAMES for 12-14 yr olds at KozminskiElementary School. Training provid¬ed. Contact Bob or Anne at the studentVolunteer Bureau, 955-4108.PROGRAMMERFOR HIREProgrammer service available.Fluent in COBOL, FORTRAN, SPSS,etc. Call 288-1676. In concert: Sunday, Feb 24, 8:00pm inLexington Hall (5835 S. University),Tippett's Sonata tor 4 horns, Ive’s Con¬cord Sonata, and Stravinsky's Concer¬to for Piano and Winds with LouiseMangos as soloist. Admission is freeFor more information call the Dept, ofMusic, 753-2613.SCENESCLOGGINGop taugiformerly or the Apple Chill CloggersTry your hand at some Southern Appalachian style flat food dancing, Fri.,neb. 22, 8 pm in Ida Noyes $1 Livemusic,DEPT. OFSPECIALCOLLECTIONSREGENSTEIN LIBRARYposition availableSECRETARY/RECEPTIONISTThe Dept, of Special Collectionshouses tne library's rare books, ar- Taped-from Harper Library, it's"Free to Choose" starring UC s own-Milton Freidman! See it tonight at 9Shoreland 2nd tloor TV rm. Munchies,bevs. SLS.EARLYPREGNANCYWORKSHOPSFor women/couples in the first monthsof pregnancy. Suggested readings, ex¬ercise, nutrition, and more Call Ruth324-4375.MILTON FREIDMANUncle Milty wants YOU to see his TVshow, "Free to Choose" TONITE at 9Shoreland 2nd floor TV room. Mun-chies and bevs. Sponsor/SLS.684-S»,w thefunny papers5238 S Blackstonei955-09741 MOST USEDALBUMS25c '3001701 E. 55th684-3375 STATE UNIVERSITYOF NEW YORKin cooperation withThe Department of Education8 Culture W ZOannounces its1980FOURTEENTH SUMMERACADEMIC PROGRAMinISRAELEarn up to 9 Undergraduateor Graduate CreditsFor information write or call:Office of InternationalEducationState University CollegeOneonta. New York 1 3820(607)431-3369 Major Court Studio ProductionPeter Shaffer'sEQUUSDirected by Michael HildebrandThurs.-Sun. 4*Feb. 7- March 2 i -8:30 pm, 7:30 SundaysReynolds Club Theatre5706 S. University$3.50 gen. admission.$2.50 students & seniors753-3581l-HOUSE PRESENTSAntonio Equino sCHUQUIACOFilmed in the Andes. Color. (La Paz) Feb. 22, Friday8:00 & 10:00 p.m.Admission Si .501 41 4 E. 59th StreetDancing in the Dragon’sJawsBruce Cockburn 3 names toremember in the 80 s!latn a m sBXL1-7747Manufactured and Distributed by RCA Recordsam aOOtfESDO®!Itc/lfr m Spin-lt now,Spin-lt later,but Spin-lt!Spin-lt now,Spin-lt later,but Spin-lt!nc/iAFL1-3523Sale ends March 2. 1980 1444 E. 57th684-1505 ->The Chicago Maroon—Friday, February 22, 1980—19'THE FROG & PEACH-;™’DINNER HOURSNOW INCLUDESUNDAY 3:00-7:00 pmBUY BUFFET FOOD WEEKDAYS AND EAT IT IN THE PUBTHE PUBIDA NOYES HALLHas a grill serviceMonday thru Friday4 pm-11 pmNow with LeinenkugeTson tap for one week only.Nine tap beers, over thirtybottle beers in stock.Week Nights you may buyBuffet Food from The Frog & Peach and eat it at The Pub ONE YEARMASTER’S DEGREEPROGRAM INPUBLIC POLICY STUDIESApplications for study during 1980-81 arenow being accepted by the Committee onPublic Policy Studies in Wieboldt 301.For further information, call 753-1896Eligibility:Before enrolling, students must havecompleted at least one year of graduatestudy at the University.Seniors in The College should inquireabout the Two Year Program.STEP UP TO EXCELLENCESTEP UP TO SERIES E.Why settle for anything less thanexcellence Especially now that it'savailable at a very affordable pricein Series E from Hewlett-Packard— five precision calculators fotscience, engineering and businessstarting at just $60.A SERIES E FOREVERY NEED.No matter what your problems —from basic science to advanced finance — you’re likely to find aseries E to solve them:HP-3 IE. Scientific. $60HP-32E Advanced Scientificwith statistics. $80HP-33E. ProgrammableScientific. $100HP-37E. Business Management$75.HP-38E Advanced Financialwith Programmability.$120. HEWLETTPACKARDSALE - SALE - SALE - SALE7% to 12.5% OFFList SaleHP31E $50.00 $46.50HP32E $70.00 $63.50HP33E $90.00 $78.75HP37E $75.00 $66.75HP38E $120.00 $105.00HP33C $120.00 $105.00UNIVERSITY of CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5750 S. ELLIS AVENUECALCULATOR DEPT. - SECOND FLOOR753-3303 master charge1l THE INTERBANK CARO i20—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, February 22, 1980