Haberger turns down Harvard, stays hereBy Jeff CaneArnold Harberger, chairman ofthe economics department at theUniversity, has turned down a con¬troversial offer to head the Har¬vard Institute for International De¬velopment. The job offer had beenthe focus of criticism by severalHarvard faculty members and stu¬dent groups who objected to Har-berger’s connections with the re¬pressive Chilean military regime.The president of Harvard Uni¬versity, Derek Bok, who made theoriginal offer, announced Tuesdaythat he had received a letter fromHarberger formally declining theproferred appointment. According to the Harvard Crimson, Bok saidthat Harberger’s letter “did not gointo detail’’ as to his reasons for de¬clining the offer. However, Boksaid that Harberger cited thegreater number of Latin Americangraduate economics students atChicago as an “incentive”. Boksaid that he ‘could not assure Har¬berger a quota” of Latin Americaneconomics students. There are pre¬sently ten Chilean graduate eco¬nomics students at the University,according to Haberger.Another factor that made it “suf¬ficiently attractive” for Harbergerto stay at Chicago, Bok said, wasthat Chicago offered Harberger ahigher salary than Harvard. It is uncertain at this point, whethersuch a salary increase would meana promotion for Harberger, since,as chairman of the economics de¬partment and Distinguished Ser¬vice Professor, there are virtuallyno higher positions he could be ap¬pointed to. University administra¬tion officials were unavailable tocomment.The Harvard student group. Stu¬dents Opposed to Harberger,which had sponsored demonstra¬tions of over a hundred studentsprotesting Harberger’s appoint¬ment, told the Crimson that theybelieved their protest “contributedsubstantially to Harberger’s deci¬sion.” D. Gale Johnson, provost of theUniversity, told the Crimson thatthe protest may have had an effectbut that in his talks with Har¬berger, harberger had mentionedthe protest very little.Bok may hold a new search fordirector of the Harvard Institute.The institute coordinates researchconsulting with developing nationsand is closely connected with theHarvard economics department.Although the Harvard departmentvoted overwhelmingly in favor ofHarberger’s appointment, otherHarvard professors criticized Har¬berger’s appointment to a postthey believe should be multi-disci-Tum to page 5 Arnold Harberger(c) Copyright 1980 The Chicago Maroon Friday April 4, 1980Califano is next Visiting FellowVol. 89 NO. 42 The University of ChicagoCarol KlammerThousands hold anti¬draft march in D.C.By Richard KayeWashington: In the first nation¬ally-organized action against Pres¬ident Carter’s draft proposal, anestimated 30,000 people including acontingent from the Universitymarched down Pennsylvania Ave¬nue here on March 22, shouting“Hell No, We won t go, We won’tfight for Texaco” and applauding agroup of anti-draft speakers whichincluded Bella Abzug, singer PeterYarrow, Michael Harrington. Sto-kely Carmichael, poet Denise Le-vertov, and David Dellinger.Despite chilling weather whichmany organizers feared wouldkeep the rally to a small 15,000, de¬monstrators gathered at the El¬lipse, moved around the WhiteHouse, and then walked downPennsylvania Avenue to the Capi¬tol building. Arriving in busloadsfrom as far as Georgia, Michigan,and Illinois, the protestors wereprimarily of high school or collegeage and white, but they came torepresent a number of other issuesother than the draft. Placards pro¬tested nuclear power and big busi¬ness, chants demanding passage ofthe Equal Rights Amendmentcould be heard, and many speak¬ers talked of the need to includeother issues and broader consti¬tuencies. “When we take care of the draft,are you going to go home and for¬get about the other issues we haveto deal with?” Michael Harringtonshouted at the crowd, which shout¬ed back a loud “No!” Harringtontold the demonstrators that al¬though they would all be accused ofbeing unpatriotic, the real lovers ofAmerica “in the tradition of Thom¬as Paine, Frederick Douglas, andSusan B. Anthony” were here inWashington, in order “not to burnthe flag, but to cleanse it.” Har¬rington told the crowd of studentsthat they must reach out to includeworking people in the ranks ofthose against the draft.“If registration is right for the1980s, then what is left for there tobe wrong?” Rev. W’illiam SloanCoffin, the former Yale chaplainand anti-war activist, told thecrowd.“So we sadly march against thetwice-born cold warrior, and glad¬ly we march here to the Capitolwhere the power of humanity isenough to stop registration.”David Landau, a spokesman forthe American Civil LibertiesUnion, told the protestors that theACLU plans to challenge Carter’sdrive to pass a draft registrationresolution through Congress.Carter has said that he would reg-Tum to page 5 By Chris IsidoreJoseph Califano, the controver¬sial former Secretary of the De¬partment of Health. Education andWelfare (HEW), will be visitingcampus Monday and Tuesday ofnext week, April 7 and 8 and theUniversity begins this quarterwith the fourth Visiting Fellow ofthe year.Of the visiting fellows so far thisyear, Califano is probably the leastwell known by students, but theone who served in a post whichmost affected the students here.His experience has given him in-depth knowledge of such studentconcerns as federally funded stu¬dent loans, quotas and admissionspolicies for colleges and profes¬sional schools, prograins nowbeing considered and debatedabout socialized medicine, and theHEW suit against Chicago publicschools, which touched off thelocal school crises.He will be attending threeclasses in his two days here, one ofthem a public affairs class, .and hewill be holding a public questionand answer period on Monday.April 7. from 4-5:30 pm in SocialSciences 122. Unlike the previousthree visiting fellows, he will notbe spending the night in any of theBy Jon ShamisStudent Government electionswill be taking place this year onMonday and Tuesday of fourthweek. Two slates have unofficiallybeen formed; one headed by SGpresident Jeff Elton, who is run¬ning for an unprecedented secondterm, and a slate headed by chal¬lenger Bradley Bittan, second yearstudent in the college. This year’sballot will also contain a referen¬dum calling for the reorganizationof student government.Elton’s slate consists of JennyGurahin. vice-presidential candi¬date; Clark Campbell, for FinanceCommittee chairman; and ChrisScott for secretary.Commenting on his try for a sec¬ond term. Elton said, “it takestime to gain the administration’srespect. My administration has agood working relationship with student dorms, but he will be hav¬ing his meals at Burton Judson.When Califano “resigned” fromthe Carter cabinet last summer, itsurprised few people. Althoughwidely acclaimed as competent,and thoughtful. Califano neverquite fit in with the rest of theCarter administration He was theformer architect of Lyndon John¬son’s Great Society, the Washing¬ton insider among insiders, thechampion of the poor and down¬trodden who lived a first class li¬festyle. None of these characteris¬tics fit well in the down-home,outsider, fiscally conservativeCarter White House. And whenCarter's chief-of-staff, HamiltonJordon, started his purge of disloy¬al staffers, Ted Kennedy’s friendJoe Califano was one of the first togo.In the past decade the depart¬ment of HEW has grown so largethat even after the creation of theDepartment of Education reducedits scope, it still reigns as the larg¬est department. It employs overone million bureaucrats, and it dis¬tributes billions of funds for almostall aspects of life in America. Withthis funding go guidelines, regula¬tions and advice on everythingfrom birth to death, from mar¬riage to divorce. It is one of thethem. W’e want to continue workingon our long range goals such asgetting a student on the Board ofTrustees and creating a 24 hourstudent center in Lexington Halluntil the addition is built onto IdaNoyes Hall.“A newcomer can’t deal with theadministration with the same ef¬fectiveness at this point in negotia¬tions. They would not be familiarwith the details,” Elton said.Elton complained that many ofSG’s projects were prevented be¬cause of budgetary reasons. Withthe student activities fee, whichhas a “better than fifty percentchance of being passed,” accord¬ing to Elton, “we will be able to fi¬nance many more services such asthe Gripeline, and a daily newslet¬ter and daily activities calendar.”“The New Breed Candidacy”,headed by Bittan, is a coalitionformed by politically active stu- Joseph Califanomost benevolent departments everformed, trying to help almost any¬one in the country who needs help.And it has increasingly becomeone of the most inefficient andmost criticized, as it has come tostand for the prime example of abureaucratic agency gone wild.Califano came to the job as oneof the few with the credentials totake on the bureaucracy. He is anTurn to page 5dents who have been running thecampus chapters of the nationalPresidential campaigns, interest¬ed in creating a “more effective”student government. Among thebackers are Tom Powers of the An¬derson campaign. Alan Drimmerof the Carter campaign. Aggie Zar-kadas of the Kennedy campaign.David McFadden of the Bakercampaign, and Mark Robinson ofTurn to page 5Maroon ElectionElections for Maroon Editorfor 1980-1981 will be held thisTuesday, April 8. in TheMaroon office at 7:30 pm. Allstaff members are required toattend if they plan to vote in thisall-important election. Appro¬priate festivities will follow.Elton running for second termAncona SchoolANCONA LITERATURE FAIRSaturday, April 12,1980 1:00 - 4:00 p.m.Talks for grown-ups:1:30 Zena Sutherland, editor, Bulletin of the Centerfor Children's Books: "Controversial Children'sBooks"2:30 Jamie Gilson, author of children's books, in¬cluding Harvey, the Beer Can King,: WritingChildren's Books.Ongoing Pamela Whatley, Ancona teacher and readingspecialist: "How Children Learn to ReadFor children, all afternoon:Films, plays, singing, literary treasure hunt, story-telling raffle..For everyone:Silent Auction of autographed books, including threeDungeons and Dragons Handbooks.Books, new and used, for saleBake SaleAdmission: Adults 50C Children under 14 25CAncona School4770 South Dorchester924-2356 Friday April 4 6:45, 9:00 and 11:1 5National Lampoon'sANIMAL HOUSESaturday April 5 7:1 5 and 9:30Diane Kurys'PEPPERMINT SODASunday April 6 7:15and9:00Federico Fellini'sORCHESTRA REHEARSALMonday April 7 8:00Ousmane Sembene sBLACK GIRL $1All films in Cobb Hall Weekend Films $ 1.502—The Chicago Maroon Friday, April 4, 1980Intercollegiate Conference setBy David GlocknerThe Intercollegiate Relations Committee(IRC) of Student Government has selectedten students as delegates to a conference onstudent concerns to be held at Harvard Uni¬versity April 11, 12, and 13.Student Government and Dean of the Col¬lege Jonathan Z. Smith will together spend$450 to send the delegates to Cambridge, de¬spite the fact that the conference will ignorethe topic the IRC considers most importantto the University — the problem of how toimprove student life and activities.Each conference participant will serve ona committee discussing tenure, educationalpolicy, university-provided student ser¬vices, minorities, or women’s concerns. IRCchairman Jenny Gurahin said her commit¬tee urged the conference organizers to in¬clude a committee on student life, but theyrefused, creating instead the committee on university-sponsored student services. Thatcommittee will confer on a university’s obli¬gations to provide its students with housing,dining, and health services. It also seemsunlikely that there will be an opportunity fordelegates to discuss national student issuessuch as the draft and federal financial aid.While Gurahin expressed disappointmentthat student life would not be on the confer¬ence agenda, she still believes the meetingwill be worth the cost and 700-mile trip. Lastyear’s conference, which had a similaragenda, led to the creation of the Dean’s Stu¬dent Task Force on Education in the Col¬lege, and improvements in the operation ofthe student gynecology clinic, Gurahinsaid.Partly because of the financial straits ofstudent government this year, the IRC hastried to cut the costs of the University’s par¬ticipation in the conference from last year’s$800. Members of the IRC felt that the Uni¬ versity didn’t “get our money’s worth lastyear,’’ according to Gurahin, and persuadedthe conference organizers to cut the Univer¬sity’s registration fee from $579 to $200. TheUniversity’s delegate also hope to save ontransportation costs by using driveawaycars rather than rental cars.This spring’s Harvard conference is thesecond in a planned series of annual inter¬collegiate conferences to discuss studentconcerns. Last year’s conference was or¬ganized by a group of Ivy League schoolsand was held at the University of Pennsyl¬vania. The eight Ivy League schools, DukeUniversity, and the University of Chicagowill participate in the conference this year.The IRC selected the delegates — includ¬ing two of its own members — from morethan 30 applicants. Gurahin said that thedelegate were chosen on the basis of theirextracurricular activities, their applicationessays, and their acquaintance with the members of the IRC.The delegates selected are: Chris Scott, amember of Phi Delta Theta fraternity, TonyKnight, the vice-president of the Organiza¬tion of Black Students, Richard Kaye, co-edi¬tor of the Chicago Literary Revew, LarryMcNally, co-founder of the Dean’s StudentTask Force on Education in the College,Bart Lazar, member of the Major ActivitiesBoard. Beth Stahle, also a member of MAB.Brian David, coordinator of the StudentSchools Committee, and Leslie Perlemanand Jenny Gurahin, both members of theIRC.The costs of the conference will be sharedby the Committee on Recognized StudentOrganizations (CORSO) and Dean Smith’soffaice. Smith’s office will provide $250 forgas, while CORSO will pay the $200 registra¬tion fee. An anonymous donor has also con¬tributed an undisclosed amount of money tosupport the trip. Gurahin said.Martin Marty: True GritNewsbriefsIBM gives a millionIBM has made a grant of $1 million to theUniversity.In making the grant, IBM stipulated that$750,000 be used to establish an IBM Fundfor the Physical Sciences and $250,000 beused to endow a faculty research fund in theGraduate School of Business.The IBM Fund for the Physical Scienceswill be administered by the dean of the phys¬ical sciences division along with the presi¬dent and the provost. It will support facultyresearch, visits by leading scientists, andfellowships for young scientists. The fellow¬ships will be offered through national com¬petitions.The Faculty Research Fund in the Busi¬ness School is part of an effort to substan¬tially increase the school’s endowment forbasic research. Awards from the new fundwill be made through the Business School’sresearch committee, with preference givento proposals for research in applied mathe¬matics.IBM’s grant is to be paid over a five-yearperiod. The first payment was made in Jan¬uary.Eudora Weltywill visitEudora Welty, the noted Southern nove¬list and writer of shorter fiction, will visitthe campus April 15, 16 and 17 as the EmilyTalbot Lecturer and a guest of the EnglishDepartment. She will live in WoodwardCourt during her stay and meet with stu¬dents in classes, seminars, and other infor¬mal gatherings.The highlight of her visit will be a specialWoodward Court Lecture entitled “Read¬ings from her Fiction’’ at 8:30 p.m., April 16in the Resident Master’s apartment atWoodward Court. The lecture will be fol¬lowed by a reception hosted by Izaak andPera Wirszup.Welty is the author of many pieces ofshorter fiction which have been published inthe Atlantic Monthly, Harper’s Bazaar, andthe New Yorker. She has written more thana dozen novels and received the 1973 Puli-tizer Prize in Letters for her work The Op¬timist’s Daughter (1972). Among her otheroutstanding works are Delta Wedding(1946); The Golden Apples (1949); The Pon¬der Heart (1954), and Losing Battles(1970).Jeffrey bus beginsSaturday serviceThe Chicago Transit Authority (CTA)began Saturday service on the Jeffrey Ex¬press bus line last month. The Jeffrey Ex¬press, which shuttles Hyde Park and SouthShore residents to and from downtown foronly 60<, previously operated only on week¬days.The CTA finally agreed to begin Saturday Jeffrey Express service after several yearsof pressure from South Side residents andpolitical figures. Alderman Larry Bloomand State Representative Carol MoseleyBraun led the latest — and successful —fight for Saturday service.But the beginning of Saturday Jeffrey Ex¬press service won’t end the quest for bettertransportation services to the South Side.According to Bloom aide Luther Snow,Bloom and other community leaders areprodding the CTA to allow transferring be¬tween the Illinois Central commuter rail¬way line and CTA buses, separate JeffreyExpress buses for Hyde Park and SouthShore residents to ease overcrowding prob¬lems during rush hours, and an extension ofSunday night service on the North-Southlifeline bus line.CARD plans events forKent State anniversaryThe University of Chicago branch of theCoalition Against Registration and the Draft(CARD) has announced that it is planning aprogram of “appropriate” events on May 4to mark the tenth anniversary of the killingsof Kent State and Jackson State students byNational Guardsmen. Persons interested inhelping to plan the commemoration shouldcall Kat Griffith (288-8989) or Fred Duca(753-8342, room 827).CARD rejected a request from the Sparta-cus Youth League (SYL) for a debate be¬tween the tw'o groups on the question of howto stop the draft. According to CARD, “sucha debate would be needlessly divisive for op¬ponents of registration and the draft.” TheSYL had criticized CARD for its antidraft“program of pacifism and social-patrioticclaptrap.”O’Flaherty awardedGuggenheim FellowshipWendy O’Flaherty, professor in the Divin¬ity School, the College, and the Committeeon Social Thought, was awarded a Guggen¬heim Fellowship for 1980, the John SimonGuggenheim Memorial Foundation an¬nounced today.O’Flaherty was one of 276 fellows selectedfrom among 3066 applicants in the Founda¬tion’s 56th annual competition. She will useher award to study folklore and psychologyin the Jaiminiya Brahmana, a Sanskrit textfrom the seventh century B.C.E. O’Flahertysays the text is “about a ritual and is full ofvery strange symbolism; it seems unique inmany ways. We don’t know anything aboutthe authors of the ancient Sanskrit texts, so Iwould like to look at the psychology of thisauthor and compare his personal symbol¬ism with that symbolism more generallyused.”O’Flaherty was the only Guggenheim Fel¬low selected from Chicago. Columbia andHarvard had 13 winners each, Cornell had11, and locally, Northwestern had four. Prof reveals nitty-grittyThe ever-informative University Bulle¬tins reveal that Martin Marty, ever-busvprofessor in the Divinity School, has recent¬ly penned perhaps the first University ofChicago offering to appear in Grit maga¬zine. Marty told Grit’s select readershipthat the 1980s will see more opposition to re¬ligion in America. Some coming from “pre-Reiner is Ryerson lecturesErica Reiner will present the 1980 Ryer¬son Lecture on Wednesday, April 23.The lecture entitled “Thirty Pieces ofSilver” will draw together her years of re¬search in the languages and literatures ofBabylonia and Assyria, and her work onwriting and editing the Assyrian Dictionary.New pediatrics chairmanDr. Lawrence Gartner has been namedchairman of the department of pediatrics,effective July 1, 1980.Gartner will have administrative respon¬sibility for the pediatrics department andWyler Children’s Hospital. He is a distin¬guished neonatologist whose research inter¬est and special expertise in the care of new¬born infants will also contribute to theprograms of the regional Perinatal Centerheadquartered at the University, accordingto Robert Uretz, vice-president for the Med¬ical Center.Gartner comes to the University after 21years at Albert Einstein College of Medicinein New York where he is director of neona¬tology and professor of pediatrics.He succeeds Dr. Marc O. Beem who hasbeen acting as chairman. Beem will resumehis clinical and research work on a full-timebasis. A professor of pediatrics, he special¬izes in infectious diseases. viously genial and apathetic citizens whobecome hard-line challengers.”At least one genail. but hardly apathetic.Grit reader must have taken notice ofMarty’s treatiseCountry boy Jimrny Carterhas appointed the publish or perish profes¬sor to his Commission for a National Agen¬da for the Eighties.In the lecture Reiner will discuss the role ofthe Dictionary in understanding the Meso¬potamian civilization. She will also interpretsome ancient Babylonian poetry in the lightof discoveries made while preparing the dic¬tionary.The Ryerson lectures were established in1973 by the Board of Trustees as a forum forfaculty members to present a major state¬ment about their research to the Universitycommunity.Reiner is editor-in-charge of the AssyrianDictionary which, when complete, will havetreated more than 20,000 Akkadian wordsused by ancient Babylonians and Assyrians.Their civilizatioin flourished from 2500B.C.E. to 100 C.E. in the area which is nowIraq.Of an expected 26 volumes. 12 have beenpublished and 2 more are now in press. Thedictionary, which was started at Chicago in1921, serves as a research tool for linguists,historians, anthropologists, and archeolo¬gists.In addition to the dictionary project.Reiner’s work includes A Linguistic Analy¬sis of Akkadian (1966), and nine other vol¬umes she has written or edited. She has alsopublished an Elamite grammar and otherstudies on Elamite texts.Reiner is the John A. Wilson Professor inthe Oriental Institute and of linguistics andnear eastern languages and civilizations.The Chicago Maroon Friday, April 4, 1980—3EditorialThe Visiting FellasA steady stream of speakers has begun torelieve the campus from a drought of extra¬curricular discussion it has suffered over thelast few years. During the present academicyear, the University has played host to abroader range of lectures discussing issues po¬litical, social, and cultural than perhaps in anyyear in the past decade.Jorge Luis Borges shared his thoughts andpoetry with a packed house at Quantrell Audi¬torium earlier this week and Julian Bond andWalace Muhammud appeared at similarlysuccessful programs that also attracted anumber of off-campus participants. RobertColes and Clifford Geertz offered more anthro¬pological analyses of society, while John Aner-son and Michael Harrington made enthusias¬tic entreaties for political change. In a fewweeks, Eudora Welty will visit campus to re¬view a successful literary career, and lastquarter, Roger Straus spoke on the possibili¬ties of such a career in the future of corporatepublishing.The Human Being and Citizen course haspresented an excellent series of lectures eachquarter with both University and visiting fac¬ulty members discussing problems raised bythe Common Core courses. And, of course, theWirszups continue to offer a forum at Wood¬ward Court for distinguished campus profes¬sors to share their research with an audienceof students, faculty, alumni and that morenebulous group we call “friends of the Univer¬sity.”The most recent series to appear on the lec¬ture/discussion scene is the Visiting FellowsProgram established by the Women’s Boardof the University last year. According to theWomen’s Board, the program aims “to bring to campus people who have been involved invarious ways in the shaping of public policy(and) to give them an opportunity to liveamong the students for a few days.” The pro¬gram has, thus far, been a qualified success.The most attractive and successful aspect ofthe series is the close interaction among stu¬dents and speakers. Students have been ableto meet, talk with, question, and even arguewith visitors over a period of days. Fellows inturn have a chance to see the University atwork through meetings with classes, semi¬nars, and dormitory students. And the publicquestion-and-answer sessions allow studentsto have their specific concerns and curiositiesanswered.The program however has provided a ratherhomogenous group of speakers. The visits ofJohn Paul Stevens and J. William Fulbrightwere unique events because of the fascinatingposition of the first speaker and the controver¬sial career of the second. But the recent visitof Adlai Stevenson and the forthcoming visitsof Joseph Califano and Michael Dukakis strikeus as less interesting and more limited affairs.For although the program is a University¬wide effort, it now seems to be aiming at asmall group of students, namely those in thepublic affairs programs.Without disparaging these programs, we be¬lieve that “public affairs” are influenced by awider group than just government officials.Business executives, lobbyists, writers, ar¬tists, academics, and even journalists contri¬bute to and examine public policy on a dailybasis and their participation would bringgreater diversity and breadth to the program.In addition, by reaching into these groups, theVisiting Fellows Committee might find more women, blacks, and Hispanics who would helpto present a more well-rounded picture of thesociety we live in.An eclectic group we might suggest wouldinclude George F. Will, Midge Decter, MikeRoyko, Ellen Goodman, Robert Penn Warren,Cesar Chavez, the chairmen of Mobil Oil orIBM, Roger Mudd, Sam Shepard, BenjaminHooks, Jesse Jackson, and Adrienne Rich.*The ChicagoMaroonEditor: Andrew PatnerGrey City Journal Editor: David MillerAssociate Editors: David Glockner and Chris IsidoreFeatures Editor: Mark WallachSports Editor: Mark ErwinPhoto Editor: Dan BreslauLiterary Review Editors: Richard Kaye and MollyMcQuadeAd Manager: Wanda JonesOffice Manager: Leslie WickBusiness Manager: Joel GreenStaff: Dan Adam. Curtis Black. Sarah Burke, Jeff Cane,Peter Chapman. John Condas. Jeff Davitz, Victor Gold¬berg, Jake Levine, Rebecca Lillian, Audrey Light, PhilipMaher, Greg Mizera. Sherrie Negrea, Cy Oggins, ChrisPersans, Scott Rauland, John Shamis, Allen Sowizral, Ce¬cily Stewart, Howard Suls. Darrell WuDunn. Phoebe Zer-wickThe Chicago Maroon is the student newspaper of theUniversity of Chicago, published Tuesdays and Fridays.Editorial and business offices are located on the thirdfloor of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th Street, Chicago, Illi¬nois, 60637. Telephone 753-3263.Letters to the EditorThoughts on AH’s returnTo the Editor:After discussing for7 some weeks ArnoldHarberger’s (AH.) links with Pinochet’sdictatorship, the defenders (including thesame A.H.) followed this line of argument:A.H.’s role in Chile is one of a mere techni¬cian; A.H. is a humanitarian social scientistcommitted to the well-being of the people;A.H. is an impartial scholar since he advisesnot one, but several dictatorships; A.H. issort of a Red Cross for the Chileans suffer¬ing Pinochet’s regime; A.H. goes to Chile toadvise not the dictator himself, but the dic¬tators ideoogists, who once started as A.H.’sstudents, so that friendship, and not politicalor economic interests explains his links withthe military government; A.H. has been advising the Chilean junta for years, becausehe worked in Chile and got to love thecountry long before the sanguinary coupd’etat.Thus, contradictions and lack of logiccharacterized A.H.’s defenders (includingthe same A.H.). The reason might be thatA.H.’s professional integrity cannot be de¬fended within the framework of his partner¬ship with Pinochet’s regime.A.H. and his defenders failed to argue thebasic issues brought in by A.H.’s objectors,for instance: 1. - A.H.’s old links with theChilean dictatorship never intended to helpthe poor masses, but rather special sectorsof the native oligarchy and foreign corpora¬tions, as all kind of studies show, the bestproof being that if tomorrow the Chileanpeople recover democracy, the first to flee4--The Chicago Maroon Friday, April 4, 1980 to Miami would be Pinochet and his ChicagoBoys. 2. - A.H.’s economic theories haven’tworked to restore democracy, but rather tolegitimize Pinochet’s dictatorship, as Time,the Economist, the Wall Street Journal, andother sources have reported. 3. - Chile andno other country constitutes the “lab test’’for Milton Friedman’s and A.H.’s mone¬tarism, Pinochet’s past and present repres¬sive policies being the sine qua non for thiseconomic theory to be applied in a “pure”form, as the Chicago Boys have admitted. 4.- Today’s monetarism represents for capi¬talist ripoff what yesterday’s HerbertSpencer’s “scientific” social darwinismmeant for the justification of the white em¬pires, as it came out from Friedman’s T.V.series “Free to Choose”. 5. - In conse¬quence, there is more ideology and class in¬terest than economic formulas in A.H.’s andFriedman’s heads.It is fair to recognize that if not all, at leastsome of the A.H.’s defenders had thecourage to denounce and condemn Pino¬chet’s crimes. Congratulations.Finally, if A.H.’s defenders (including thesame A.H.) seriously believe what they saidor wrote for The Maroon, I cordially inviteall of them to debate in an open forum orsymposium the issues involved in the con¬troversy. I’m sure that quite a few' peoplewould like to participate in a debate that canbring to light the ideological assumptions,myths and sophisms surrounding Fried¬man’s theories, and A.H.’s practices. (P.D.Viva the Salvadoran People!).Primitivo Rodriguez OsegueraGraduate student in history. Equality and the draftTo the Editor,The debate over the drafting of womenand the attendant issues of feminism andthe Equal Rights Amendment brings intofocus a sphere which is not often an acknow¬ledged target of feminism, namely that ofmyth and imagery. More subtle than overteconomic, legal, or academic discrimina¬tion yet more pernicious because of thissubtlety, myths and images constantly im¬pede the progress of feminism and pro-choice. The issue of the draft calls to mindthe image of female passivity and malepuissance, the protected and the protector.Women are not generally raised to believethat they are capable of asserting their rightof self-determination and protection. Thereticence of women in cases of familial andsexual assault is a disheartening commen¬tary on the kinds of images that manywomen have of themselves — as depen¬dents, as the acted upon rather than theactor. The drafting of women would be animportant step towards dispelling the con¬straining myth of female powerlessness anddependency, it is, of course, essential thatequal rights and equal responsibility existconterminously. It would be farcical forwomen to share the onus of martial activitywithout sharing in fundamental quality. TheEqual Rights Amendment provides parityunder constitutional aegis; a redefinition ofsex roles could achieve the same, only on anideological level. As Susan Brownmillerstates in the prescientf concluding chapterof Against Our Will, “. . . if we are to contin¬ ue to have armies, they, too, must be fullyintegrated. . . if women are to cease beingthe colonized protectorate of men.”Robin PerryGraduate studentin anthropologySGContinued from page 1of the Connally campaign.Bittan said “student government is the ob¬ject of much ridicule on this campus. Theyhave taken virtually no initiautive in re¬forming University policy. We cannot ex¬pect the administration to take SG seriouslyuntil the student body respects SG.”His campaign is divided into four majorareas: stimulating communications be¬tween the students and SG, giving the stu¬dents a greater voice in the affairs and poli¬cies of the University, entertainment, andoff-campus activities. Bittan also hopes tomake student government a forum for stu¬dent opinion on a wide spectrum of issues.Both Elton and Bittan are attempting toput referenda on the ballot for reforming thestructure of student government. Bittanconsiders his proposal to be indicative of thedirections of his platform. The plan calls forsubstantive communication with the stu¬dents through a Gripeline and question¬naires distributed on a regular basis. The in-formation obtained by this will be relayed toan “Action Committee' which will consist ofthe executive officers, representativeselected from the student assembly and per¬sons appointed from outside student govern¬ments. These people will make recommen¬dations on items and when appropriate refermatters to liasOns between the various ad¬ministrative bodies. This will provide forgreater communication and greater effi¬ciency, according to Bittan. Recommenda¬tions will be passed on to the Student Asse¬mbly for a final decision. Under this plan, acommittee would be established to cutthrough red tape for students interested inpursuing an interest or project for the ben¬efit of the University. Finally, all actionsand activities connected with SG would beregularly published in a newsletter.Elton’s proposal is expected to be re¬leased in the next few’ days.Anyone interested in running for an SG po-siton may obtain a petition from the Sg of¬fice. They will be available starting some¬time next week.Califano first Cabinet Secretary to complete his reor¬ganization plan early in the Carter Adminis¬tration, and advised Carter in 1978 not to in¬troduce his National Health Insurance plan(which Califano had favored) until Cartercould get inflation under control.Califano was also well known for stirringup trouble and enemies in his various pro¬grams. His anti-smoking campaign out¬raged the tobacco lobby and the voters in to¬bacco growing states, as well as anti-smok¬ing activists who claimed that the programwas all smoke and no fire. His pro-quotastands stirred up anger from both sides ofthe sexual and racial discrimination battles,and his opposition to federal funding forabortions lost him much support from other¬wise friendly liberals.After Califano left the Carter cabinet thissummer there were rumors that he was con¬sidering a race for the US Senate in NewYork. He declined to take up that race, buthe has become active in Ted Kennedy’s cam¬paign. It had been these ties to Kennedy inthe first place, and Califano’s hiring of Udallsupporters to fill important posts at HEWwhich had brought his loyalty into question,and precipitated his removal.Continued from page 1He is an unfailing advocate of manyof the departments most unpopular pro¬grams. He had devised many of these pro¬grams, and guided them through Congresswhen he served as Lyndon Johnson’s chiefdomestic advisor, yet he was also a percep¬tive enough politician to know that HEWwas reaching or had reached its limit of pub¬lic confidence. He worked hard to cut out thereported $6 billion w’aste in the department,setting up a w’atch dog bureau similar to theOffice of Management and Budget, was the HarbergerContinued from page 1should be multi-disciplinary, instead ofdominated by the economics department.Most of the Harvard campus oppositioncentered on harberger’s relations with hisformer students who have become major fi¬nancial officials in the Chilean government.Harberger is apparently travelling out ofthe country and could not be reached forcomment.Continued from page lister both men and women, asking Congressfor the authority to include women. Legisla¬tion to finance such a registration is current¬ly stalled before both the House and Senateappropriation committees.“The ACLU will use every legal meansavailable to stop draft registration which in¬fringes on the individual rights of Americancitizens.”Alan Canfora, who was one of the nine stu¬dents injured during the National Guardshooting at Kent State in 1970. told the crowdthat “the legacy of our anti-war actionsfrom the Sixties is clearly with us today inthe Eighties.”“Just as were opposing the bloody Nixonin Southeast Asia when the Kent State shoot¬ing occurred, w’e will oppose the bloodyCarter aggressions.”The demonstration, part of three days ofanti-draft activities ending with lobbying onMonday the 24th, was organized by a coali¬tion of national groups including the U.S.Student Association, Students for a Liber¬tarian Society, Americans for DemocraticAction, W’omen Strike for Peace, and theDemocratic Socialist Organizing Commit¬tee. Also present at the rally were a numberof far-left groups, including the Revolution¬ary Communist Party and the SpartacusYouth League. The only disturbance at therally came from a group of some twentypro-draft protestors, many of themmembers of Rev. Moon’s UnificationChurch and known as “Moonies”, whosepushing-matches with anti-draft protestorsled police to force them to leave.Sen. Mark Hatfield (R. - Oregon) and Rep.Ted. Weiss (D. - N.Y.) were twro of the fewWashington political figures to speak to thedemonstrators. Hatfield promised to lead afilibuster against the appropriations bill if itreaches the Senate floor. Also present wasformer representative of New York BellaAbzug, who after her anti-draft speech told the gathering that a vote for Kennedy in thepresidential election wras a vote for the anti¬draft interests. Drawing some boos, Abzug’splea was one of the two noticeably smallpresidential endorsements of the protest, al¬though speakers repeatedly castigatedCarter and one Republican presidentialhopeful, Ronald Reagan.“Let Jimmy Carter hear us,” shouted RoyChilds, a San Francisco gay activist, “andlet the warmongers like Reagan know thatthey can t have our bodies.”“We are not as gullible as we were in theFifties. This time we are not going to letthem start a draft. This time we are notgoing to let them start a war.”Maggie Kuhn, of the National Organiza¬tion of Women (NOW), told the rally thatNOW fully supported the anti-draft move¬ment, that women had no business register¬ing just as men didn’t, and that she had con¬fidence that the anti-draft movement of theEighties would not repeat the mistakes ofSixties activists who excluded women fromkey organizational positions.“This time, let the men as well as thew’omen be in charge of making the coffee.”Prior to the speeches the marchers wereentertained by Peter Yarrow’, formermember of the folk group Peter, Paul andMary and a familiar voice from Sixties de¬monstrations, who sang Bob Dylan’sBlowin’ in the Wind.Duane Shank, spokesman for the CoalitionAgainst Registration and the Draft(CARD), said that “it is more and more ob¬vious to more and more members of Con¬gress that the move to registration is a pure¬ly a political move. There is no militaryjustification for it.”“This is to let Jimmy Carter know that ifhe pushes the draft it will cost him the pre¬sidency.” said Dr. Abraham Levey, a NewYork physician who walked at the very frontof the demonstration march with his fami¬ly- .“And this is just the beginning. It’ll takeus a few’ more rallies, but we’ll get this up to500,000.” JAPANkjt<nkif xi<er iulHOohjI mua;EHsewoe NipnwiuNow *2.75 Disc5 for$12CLAUDE, DEP/JSSqImages ttyLs tamperImagesSeries I OilI>\UL IV'OPjSpi<iivNONESUCHRECORDS*4.95 ListS'Music From All Over The World—■ Complete Explorer Series —JAVANESE COURT GAMELANVolume IIIRecorded in the Kraton Yogyakartaby Robert E Brown55+udentCo-op BookstoreHOURS 9:30-6 WKDAYS10-5 SAT.[DOWNSTAIRS AT REYNOLDS CLUB JAPANKabuki&Other Traditional MusicEnsemble NippomaSpecial CustomerOrders at reducedprices whilesale lasts.The Chicago Maroon Friday, April 4, 1980—5irW®.ROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPELl^olg QJcck Bernices@ood Friday ecumenical ServiceAPRIL 4, 12:00-12:50 P.M.Preacher: LARRY L. GREENFIELD, Interim Minister, Hyde Park Union ChurchVesper Service 5=00 p.m.STATIONS OF THE CROSS" by Marcel DupreThomas Weisflog, Organist, Kenneth Northcoti, NarratorBernard O. Brown, Minister©aster ©tie VigilAPRIL 5, 8:00 P.M.Preacher: DAVID L. BARTLETT, Associate Professor, Divinity SchoolSERMON: "WAITING"©aster april 69 A.M. ECUMENICAL SERVICE OF HOLY COMMUNIONPreacher: BERNARD O. BROWNGuest Choir: The University High School Chamber Choir11 A.M. UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICEPreacher: BERNARD O. BROWN The Joel SeidmanPrizefor Distinguished Scholarshipin Industrial RelationsThe Joel Seidman Prize for Distinguished Scholarshipin Industrial Relations will be awarded to a studentenrolled at the University of Chicago. The prizewill honor Joel Seidman, a distinguished scholar,teacher, and industrial relations practitioner, whowas a faculty member at the University of Chicagofrom 1947-1977. At the time of his death, Joel Seidmanwas emeritus Professor of Industrial Relations inthe Graduate School of Business and Division ofSocial Sciences.All students at the University are eligible to submitmanuscripts pertaining to industrial relations,including labor history, labor law, and arbitration,fields of particular interest to Professor Seidman.Papers submitted for courses may also be consideredfor the prize.Manuscripts should not exceed 50 typed double-spacedpages. Brevity of exposition is to be encouraged.Entries should be submitted to Chairman, SeidmanPrize Committee, Rosenwald 118, by June 10. Theprize of $300 will be awarded annually but only ifan outstanding manuscript is received. Selectionof the prize manuscript will be made by a committeeof faculty members appointed by the Dean of theGraduate School of Business.A General Critiqueof theWestern Civ. CoursebyStudents and FacultyTuesday, April 8th4:00 p.m. Harper 130Sponsored by the Student Advisory Committee in Social Sciences^ Jimmy ellis6 CP°Friday, April 11at the Blue Gargoyle %45655 S. University Workshop8:00 p.m.^^^^^^^^^(THi^oncer^ponsore^iHJarH|^^it^i1^ranHronHh^hicag^ouncilonFineArU06—The Chicago Maroon Friday/April 4, 1980DavidMillerJorge Luis Borges and Professor Ricardo GullonChicago Review Brings Borges to Campusby Richard KayeTelling a full and receptive Quantrell Au¬ditorium crowd that he felt happy in Chicago "because I am ringed in by friends," ablind, eighty year old Jorge Luis Borges answered questions for more than an hour onan array of topics ranging from his lowopinion of his own early work ("I want toburn Ficciones, I hope all of my early worksdisappear"), to his passion for Emily Dickinson, to his twenty-five years of living inblindness."I don't like being 'Borges' at all," he toldthe crowd. And I'm sick and tired of ques¬tions of fame. My fame was of course a mistake, a very generous mistake. In BuenosAires we used to write simply to please ourselves, perhaps our friends, to get rid ofsome ideas."Sponsored by the Chicago Review and theWilliam Vaughn Moody Lecture Committee, the Argentinian author's talk cameafter his recent trips to Iceland, Crete, andJapan. Borges was questioned in Quantrellby poet and critic Willis Barnstone, who hastranslated Borges as well as interviewed him in the latest issue of Chicago Review.Also with Borges was his long-time friend,professor of Romance Languages, RicardoGullon."I feel I have written far too much," saidBorges. "If before I die, one stanza of mineis remembered, that should be enough."Asked by Barnstone as to his earliestreadings, Borges said his first book wasGrimm's Fairy Tales."After that came Alice in Wonderland,and then since 1906 or 1905 I rememberreading science fiction — The Time Machine, Food of the Gods, War of the Worlds— and then came that endless book, verylong, The Arabian Nights. Also Just SoStories, The Jungle Book, Poe, Jules Verne,and, of course, Cervantes' Don Quixote."Interviewer Barnstone was hissed whenhe followed this up with the question, "Andwhen did you start reading Milton, ParadiseLost?" It was only one of many hissesdirected at Barnstone by members of theaudience, who found a number of his questions — "What do you see when you look into yourself, Borges?", "Are you a Gnostic?""From the primodial slime on the beach tothe present moment . . — more than alittle heavy-handed and not just a tiny bitpretentious. The conversation was interrupted a few times bv the audience's aud¬ible displeasure at Barnstone's inquiries,but the talk continued and the audience wassoon enjoying Borges's self effacing witti¬cisms, his almost incredible modesty abouthis work, and his unostentatious literarytastes. When Barnstone asked, "Wherewould you place Emily Dickinson?" Borgesanswered this tiresome and bossy academicquestion directly (if kindly to Barnstone),by saying in his usual gentle tone:"One should never use words like 'first' or'best.' Such words do not mean convictionbut argument. People are always gradingbeauty. Emily Dickinson is the most passionate of all the women who attempt writing, and I have a very personal love ofEmily Dickinson."Borges was asked about his blindness andits effect on his writing."To be blind is to to be made lonely, but loneliness is also good. My duty is to dreamand to write, and for this loneliness is help¬ful. And I'm not totally blind, I can see twocolors. People think that the blind only seedarkness, but this isn't true."Did the fact that he dictated his writingthe last twenty years change his work?"Yes, for the better. My works are nowmuch shorter." Borges was asked about hisbelief in God, if he had any."As Bernard Shaw said, 'God is in themaking.' We are creating God. We are all ina sense devout. I am an ethical man, I think,I believe in a personal God. My forefathers,I'm sorry to say, were Methodistpreachers.""All experience should be poetry,"Borges said early in his talk. "Every moment in life is beautiful, or all things shouldbe made beautiful. That is our task."This spring, Borges will travel to Spain toreceive the Cervantes Prize, and to readfrom his most recent publications, La RosaProfunda (1975), La AAoneda de hierro(1976), and Historia de la Noche (1977).-i'ifKM *1m|./4ifl titIIat# 'ftA#4rv!-afaj’4vl8 ’• ' 5 j t 'T“i'gTyvrywyrrrrnr8TTTyrrrnnnr»~» ‘rBTmnnrd BTnt^TnrrrrrrvinnnrAll Aboard( a. A V*' ',., , .» . C /% j; ,.- ( ■> 'Hr tv? p(>. •» > . •‘ A.\VO »V- CU. V {/. <" ■ tI AMJULMJULOJJUUUUl^JUtMJUULMJUUUUyLfl-fiJLfl tUUUU PUBLIC LECTURE SERIESSponsored by the ENRICO FERMI INSTITUTEof theUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOTHE ARTHUR H. COMPTON LECTURESEleventh Series byMichael S. TurnerThe Enrico Fermi instituteSaturdays April 5 through iune 7, 1980t T BANG COSMOLOGY: FROM PRIMORDIALTO THE EXPANDING UNIVERSE”First Lecture: The History of CosmologyEmuna Elish to the Big BangSaturday, April 5, 1980, at IT A M.Eckhart Hall-Room 133-1118 E. 58th St.For further Information, phone 753-8611../ ■iThe Visiting Fellows CommitteepresentsJOSEPH A. CALIFANO, JR.Former Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfarein aLECTURE and DISCUSSIONMONDAY, APRIL 7, 1980, 4:00 P.SOCIAL SCIENCES 122All students and faculty in the College, and the Divisions and Professional Schools,’a--; .i y. • it. ’• • •2 the grey city journal, Fnday, April 4, 1980<■ • -*jybj ||| arejnvjtedj^attend^ndjopartkipate. r■"Checking It All Out," 1972 by William Wiley is one of 75 prints in Master Prints from the Landfall Press at theSmart Gallery, 5550 Greenwood. Tue Sat, 10-4; Sun, noon 4. 753-2121. Free.MoviesNational Lampoon's Animal House(John Landis, 1978): Let's face it, theU of C will never revel in Dartmouth-style social life. But, it's Spring, sosoon we'll get as close as possible, andthis film's characters provide greatexamples to follow. Seeing it is amostan obligation; it's basic training. Thestory simply involves a bunch of funloving guys who merely want to enjoytheir youthful vitality. They do soby,... oh, say, making love with thedean's wife, or maybe the mayor'sthirteen year old daughter; they leavehorses to die in the administrationbuilding and spit food all over their fel¬low students. Amazingly enough, thefilm contrasts them with the forces ofperversion (people who seduce horsesinto kisses). Good guys have rarelybeen so affectionately decadent. Gosee it. Tonight at 6:54, 9, and 11:15 inQuantrell. Doc; SI.50 — GBTo Kill a Mockingbird (Robert Mulligan,1963). Based on Harper Lee's semi-au¬tobiographical novel about tomboy lifein a Southern town in the 1930s. Gre¬gory Peck plays her father AtticusFinch, an attorney obliged by his prin¬ciples and court order to defend ablack man accused of raping a whitewoman. The enlightened white liberalstance of the film dates it, but Peck'saustere performance, Robert Duvall'sas the spooky neighbor Boo Radiy, andMary Badham's as Scout, the Leecharacter, make the film a classic ofensemble acting, Hollywood style. Tomorrow at 7 and 9:30 pm in the LawSchool auditorium. LSF, $1.50. — KHPeppermint Soda (Diane Kurys, 1979)Where were you in '63? Most likely notin a private Parisian girls' school, butthat's where Kurys was and that'swhere this nostalgic, semi autobiographical film is set. Maybe its innocuous, but many of the episodes in thisepisodic film don't miss in their at¬tempt to appeal to anyone who evergot an "F" just because teacher is"nuts," or to anyone who's ever beenjealous of a sibling, or, in short, to any¬one who's ever been thirteen. Tomor¬row at 7:15 and 9.30 in Quantrell. Doc;SI.50 — KHOrchestra Rehearsal (Federico Fellini,1979); Fellini's political allegory, asshould be expected, strikes a sournote. The equation between a muti¬nous orchestra and disintegrating civiIization may sound good on paper, but,at Fellini's hand, it's tenuous and unpalatable. The film covers a documen¬tary crew's filming of an orchestra re¬hearsal as both degenerate into chaos.During the whole proceeding, the camera takes on the guise of Grand Inquis- tor coaxing fatuous posturings fromorchestra members. Fellini's visualstrategy, cribbed from practitioners ofcinema verite, looks crude and inappropriate. It exacerbates the film's unsteady pace and muddled conception.The motley musicians, grotesquebeyond comprehension, are refugeesfrom past Fellini films. And the conductor, a nasty parody of Herbert vonKarajan, supposedly stands for Fellinihimself. There must be a point somewhere, but don't strain your mind looking for it. Sunday at 7:15 and 9:30 inQuantrell. Doc; SI.50 — TSBlack Girl (Ousmane Sembene, 1965): ASenegalese maid accompanies herFrench employers to the Riviera anddiscovers what it means to be African.Unseen by these reviewers. Monday at8 in Quantrell. Doc; SI.Film and Human Rights: Though thecinematic equivalent of Uncle Tom'sCabin has yet to be made, the potentialpolitical impact of film cannot be underestimated. Facets Multimedia, incooperation with Amnesty Interna tional, is exploring what has and couldbe done in this area of filmmaking in atwo month program of lectures, workshops, and films — many celebratedand famous, many special and seldomseen. This weekend, Ethiopian born,now American based, director HaileGerima will conduct a workshop semi¬nar following the screening of his filmBush Mama (7 pm). Bush Mama is thefictional story of a black woman inWatts who is converted to social activism as she struggles, on welfare, toraise the daughter she had with a manwho's been falsely imprisoned. Formore information on this and other activities scheduled, 281-4114. FacetsMultimedia, 1517 West Fullerton; admission is S2.50. — KHMusicOklahoma! The Chicago Historical Society presents this early Rodgers and Hammerstein gem as part of its filmtribute to Richard Rodgers, who diedlast December. Oklahoma! was thefirst musical comedy to have an actualplot, but it is probably best known forits terrific R&H numbers. "Oh, Whata Beautiful Morning," "Surrey Witha Fringe on Top," and the title song,in which the wind comes sweepingdown the plains, are but a few of them.At the Society, Clark at North Avenue,on Sun, April 6 at 2 pm. Free with mu¬seum admission.The Chicago Ensemble: It's FrenchCulture Night, with accent on La beileepoque. The main fare, possibly theonly "serious" work on the program,is Faure’s First Piano Quartet. Otherwise, the bill is sprinkled liberally withsongs about amour, tristesse, extaseby Faure, Debussy, Poulenc, and Mil¬ haud. Two virtually unheard of piecesfor the flute — Dutilleaux's Sonatinefor Flute and Piano, and Benjamin Go¬dard's Suite (Op. 116) for Flute andPiano — will surely provide a chancefor flutist Susan Levitin to demonstrate her virtuousity. The sleeper ofthe evening, however, could be Chausson's Piece for Cello and Piano, a workcomposed at the end of this career.The busy pianist (his service is required for the entire concert) is Gerald'Rizzer, Julie Zumsteg is the cellist;and new members — Alan Heatherington and Rami Solomonow — will playthe violin and the viola. The chanteuseis soprano Teresa Orantes. Wed at 8 inI House Assembly Hall. $4.50; $3.00 forseniors and students. — T SLunchtime Concert: The Departmentof Music presents Stravinsky's L'Histoire du Soldat performed by an ensemble of musicians under the direction of University Symphony directorBarbara Schubert. Thurs, April 10 inReynolds North Lounge at 12:15 p.m.Free.Etc.Exit the King: Ionesco's drama continues at Court Theatre through April 20See review on p. 11.Chicago Radio Theatre Dublin actordirector teacher Edward Golden, anauthority on William Butler Yeats,will star in a trio of Yeats plays. Purgatory is a folk play in the style of Japanese Noh drama; The Dreaming ofthe Bones draws its material fromIrish mythology; The Words Upon theWindow-Pane involves a seance inwhich the ghost of Jonathan Swiftspeaks. Mon, April 7 at 8 pm overWFMT, 98.7 FM.Classical Indian Dance. Padmini Durrwill demonstrate and perform variousmovements of two styles of classicalSouth Indian dance traditions, Bharata Natyam and Kuchupudi. Sat, April 5at Crossroads, 5621 S. Blackstone, at7:30 pm. Free.For Early Birds: Scott Brennan, anavid ano knowlegeable naturalist,leads bird watching walks throughWooded Island every Saturday thisquarter. The group assembles at 7 amin front of Pierce Tower, on UniversityAve at 55th St.Calendar compiled by RebeccaLillian.Survival of the BleariestWhat do Ronald Reagan, theIncredible Shrinking Man, trans¬vestites, beatnik sculptors, highschool dopers, psychotics, midg¬ets, and porno star MarilynChambers have in common? Forone, they are all denizens of Bmovies. For another, the entireentourage will grace the Sand¬burg's screen Saturday and Sun¬day in that theater's First Annual24-Hour B Movie Marathon.It's high time. By now, most ofus have developed a keen appreciation, if not craving, for thesemovies which invariably and surreptitiously pop up on the tubeafter midnight. But few of ushave ever seen them in a theater.(It takes time for the word to getaround.) So to be able to see 16fine representatives of this genrecontinuously on a big screen ismore than one dares ask for. Thechief virtues of the B's, and one Kiss kiss, bang bang: Lee Marvinaims low in the B classic TheKillers.that seems more precious nowa¬days, is their utter lackof pretension. Made by people short onbudget but long on imagination,the B's often surpass the socalled A pictures in inventivenessand sophistication. It's a shamethat, with the film industry's current emphasis on churning out pre planned formula winners, theB's are becoming an extinct species. Thus, the Sandburg Marathon, appealing to our fondnessfor the B movies, has taken onthe air of a Wildlife fundraiser.The complete Marathon schedule can be obtained by calling theSandburg (951-0627). The following is our highly subjective evaluaion of the offerings.Must-see: Gun Crazy; A Bucketof Blood; The Killers; FasterPussycat; Kill, Kill.Recommended: Deranged; HighSchool Confidential; The Incredible Shrinking Man; Murder is MyBeat.Worth a Look: Day of the Trif-fids; Malibu High; They CameFrom Within (Rabid); DeathRace 2000; Shack Out on 101.Sleepers: Glen or Glenda: IChanged My Sex. Transvestitesage. Terror of a Tiny Town. Theextras from The Wizard of Ozstar in this first and only midgetWestern. Unholy Rollers. Directed by the U of C's own VernonZimmerman and featuring Chi¬cago's own Claudia Jennings, thelate Queen of the B's.See you there. And keep inmind that delicious brunch willbe served to the survivors — TSthe grey city journalGary Beberman, Curtis Black, Nancy Cleveland, Neal Cohen, Jaan Elias, NelsErickson, Sandy Harris, Richard Kaye, John Kim, Jaxe Levine, Bob Lewis, Rebecca Lillian, Philip Maher, Jeff Makos, Rory McGahan, Robin Mitchell, MarkNeustadt, Steve Nitzberg, Jeanne Nowaczewski, Elizabeth Oldfather, AndrewPatner, Martha Rosett, Renee Saracki, Danny Schulman, Helena Szepe, Lisa vonDrehle, Ken Wissoker, Ellen Zimmerman.Edited by David Miller Associate editors: Laura Cottingham, Karen Hormck,and Mary Mankowski. Contributing editor: Ted Shen. Friday, April 4, 1980 Ungeheures BugUniversity alumnus Werner Krieglstein will direct The Whole Art The¬ater's "dramatic realization" of Franz Kafka's surrealistic novella,The Metamorphosis on campus tonight and tomorrow night. Usingacoustic and visual methods, the theater troupe from Lawrence Michigan offers a new interpretation of Kafka's timeless message: alienatedpeople will turn into bugs, and lie at the mercy of a janitor's broom. Aquestion and answer period will follow the performances, which beginat 8.30 both nights in the Reynolds Club Theatre. 753 8351. 52.50; $1.50students. — RL . . - * « -the grey city journal, Friday, April 4, 1980 — 3Werner KrieglsteinYou’re wastingyowtimereading thisnewspaper.Not because it’s not worth reading.You’re wasting your time because youcould be reading it three to ten times fasterhan you are right now.That’s right — three to ten times faster.With better concentration, understanding, andrecall.The problem is, most of us haven't learnedanything new about reading since we were 10years old. So we're still stumbling along at afraction of our real capacity. In fact, mostpeople read so slowly that their brain actuallygets bored and distracted between words (nowonder you have trouble concentrating whenyou read!)The new Evelyn Wood RD2 reading program.Over 20 years ago, Evelyn Wood's re¬search with natural speed readers discoveredreading techniques that could be learned andused by vitually any¬one. Since that pioneer¬ing work, over a millionpeople — from studentsto presidents — have Attend a free 1-hourEvelyn Wood ReadingDynamics demonstration:put the Evelyn Woodmethod to work forthem.RD2 is EvelynWood’s latest, updated CHICAGO THEOLOGICALSEMINARY5757 University Avenuereading improvement system —designed to bemore effective and flexible than ever. With it,you should easily be able to cut your readingand study time by at least two thirds. Thatmeans if you’re now studying 20 hours a week,you’ll save roughly 400 hours —or almost 17full 24 hour days — in this school year alone!Spend an hour and check us out.We know you may have trouble believingwhat you’ve just read. That’s why our peopleare on campus now giving free 1 hour demon¬strations of RD2. If you can spare an hour,we’ll answer any questions you may haveabout RD2, and prove that you can unlearnyour bad reading habits and start saving twothirds of your study time. We’ll even demon¬strate some new reading techniques designedto increase your speed immediately, withgood comprehension.This short demon¬stration could start youon your way to bettergrades, more free time,and a whole new outlookon studying.It only takes anhour, and it’s free. Don’tmiss it.Tuesday April 8 4:00 & 6:30Wednesday April 9 4:00 & 6:30C 'V>*f .► *•«»I1EvelvnWood (MI- the grey city journal, Friday, April 4, 1980 will open your eyes.KlammerU IAn unambiguous message in Washington."Nodraft''toCarter;AdemonstrationtoOurselvesby Curtis Blackand Ken WissokerWe slipped into wakefulness as the"O'Hare Wisconsin” airport van left theturnpike for breakfast and gas at Breeze-town, Pa., an amazing town consisting ofnothing but numberless motels, restaurantsand gas stations. Imagine being mayor.Cruising the diners, looking for a suitableone, we noticed the patrons, staid Middle IAmericans, staring at us as if we were a cu- jriosity. Once inside we got more stares as jwe trooped to the bathrooms. But even be- |tore entering we ran into two people also jdriving to Washington for the protest jagainst the draft.We changed tables to sit with a group offour from Chicago who also shared our des¬tination, and began to feel a boldness in ournewfound numbers. And wonderfullyenough, when these four left, they were soonreplaced by three longhairs who were alsoon the pilgrimage.It was peaceful coexistence with the regulars, who sat turned around in their booths !*o stare without blinking. Everthing looked !like it had been set up for a TV show, j"Leave it to Beaver." Everything, even thepay phone, was old in a timeless, brand-newway. There was a feeling of prosperity and |stability, and the concerns of the worldseemed less real.Back in the microbus, now buzzing fromfive cups of coffee each, sitting on the mat- \tresses strewn on the floor, one of the North¬western students we had found through the-ideboard sef the experience in its properperspective by reading Allen Ginsberg's j"America" to us. Ginsberg attacking ;America, out from an utterly underensive"tance. A Freudian Marxist ooe of hate andove, in the language of political meetings mixed with the language of therapy sessions.I can't stand my own mind.America when will we end the humanwar?Go fuck yourself with your atombomb.I don't feel good don't bother me.I won't write my poem until I'm of theright mind."America, when will you be angelic, takeoff your clothes, look at yourself through thegrave, be worthy of your million Trotskyites, send your eggs to India"I'm sick of your insane demands.Are you going to let your emotionallife be run by Time Magazine?Ginsberg talking about himself as much asabout America, of his rejection of and refusal to cooperate with a system he is a part of,which is also part of him.America you don't really want to go towarAmerica it's them bad Russians.Them Russians them Russians andthem Chinamen, and them Russians.The Russia wants to eat us alive. TheRussia's power mad.She wants to take our cars from ourgarages.America this is guite serious.America this is the impression I getfrom looking in the television set.America is this correct?I'd better get ngnt down to the iob.It's true I don't want to join the Armyor turn lathes in precision parts tac*ories, I'm nearsighted and psycho¬pathic anyway. America I'm putting my queershoulder to the wheel.Arriving at the demonstration just as themarch was kicking off, we got real eager tojoin it, real up for it — and started shoutingin the van. We got out, blinked andstretched, and I found a friend from Chica¬go (with the amazement of finding a hometowner in a foreign country) and jumpedinto the flow. We decided to catch up withthe Chicago contingent, so we cut along theside, up the sidewalk, and past masses ofpeople.It felt good to be with all these people whobelieve in good things. I began to get thefeeling that many understood what it wasthey believed.The chants were better than those at anydemonstration I'd been to in a while. Manyof them linked issues, foreshadowing thebroadened scope of the protest beyond specific opposition to the draft. "No draft, noway, ratify the E.R.A." showed that JimmyCarter's ploy to divide the women's movement from the peace movement had backfired and brought them together. "Hell no.we won't go, we won t fight for Texeco" exoanoed the tranditional anti draft slogan toexpress a view of the roots of war in our society, and to make individual refusal intopolitical resistance to a government run bycorporations. Some women led themarchers in a litany of where money shouldbe spent instead of on the military — jobs,schools, hospitals, child care, housing. Agroup ot Hispanics chanted "NicaraguaNow, El Salvador Tomorrow!" Marchingoast the National Archives the crowd erupt¬ed into "Listen nere Uncie Sam, we rememcer Vietnam!" And tne favcrec chantof the seventies, 'The Peopie united ShallNever Be De4eated," was still strong goingntc the eighties.the grey My Chicago friend surprised me — I don'tknow why I don't learn to expect it from him— by shouting "2-4-6 8 Smash the family,smash the state!" Once I caught on, we sueceeded in getting a few to join this far-sight¬ed (or ultra-left) slogan, which was nice.Past the White House, empty, past thebuildings dedicated to the branches of thefederal bureaucracy, empty and stonyfaced. If this was a game of poker, we werebluffing and these buildings all had patj hands. But this is not poker. The force of| reason is the basis for our power to stand upand be counted, and bring our message tothe people, while Carter's game of deception forces him to Camp David for prayerbreakfasts, prayer lunches and prayer din¬ners, and daily crises which prove he is intotal command of a falling empire.Arriving at the rally was somewhat disorienting. Just a mass ot people, it was hardto see any focal point like a speaker stand. Acold drizzly oay cooled my anticipation of aoeautiful afternoon in the sun (like May 22last year). Some people got cold and leftearly on. The general enthusiasm of thosewho remained was dampened.By the time Stokely Carrmchaei spoxe, atthe eno ot the day, he was praising "thosewho go the distance" — not only those wholast out a cold, ugly afternoon but especiallythose who maintain commitment throughthe ups ano downs of popular movements.He listed David Dellinger, wno had spokenearlier, as one wno went the distance — Deilinger, once the quiet angry young pacifistanarchists organizer, has oeccme the grancoid man ot peace.Carmichael cion f pi a me tne failure ot thepoouiar movements ot the Sixties to carryon into the seventies on government repres¬sion or media manipulation. Speaxing inContinued on p. 3city journal. Friday, April 4, 1980 — 5thegreycityjournal,Friday,April4,1980o> ''">' V"ThepublicmythofJoseph Beuys'lifeandwork(hasnow) achievedproportionsthatmakeany attempttoquestionitortoputitinto historicperspectiveanalmostim¬ possiblecriticaltask...Nootherar tist(withthepossibleexceptionof AndyWarhol,whocertainlygen eratedatotallydifferentkindofmyth)managed—andprobably neverintended—topuzzleandscan dalizehisprimarilybourgeoisart audiencetotheextentthathewould becomeafigureofworship." "JosephBeuys: TwilightoftheIdol" BenjaminH.DBuchloh inArtforum,Jan.,1980.byDanielSchulmanVitoAcconcicametoChicagolastmonthtodirecttheinstallationofhisfirstretrospectivewhichisnowcompletedandonviewattheMuseumofContemporaryArt. Acconci'sworksareseldompermanent—hisfirstpieceswere performanceandbodyart,andmorerecentlyvideoworksandin stallationsthatareconstructedforaspecificlocationorspace.AndbecauseonlythreepieceshavetakenplaceinChicago,wereceive mostofourinformationonhisartworkthrough(whenwecanget ourgrubby,provincialpawsonthem)slickandstylizedNewYork andEuropeanpublicationsfilledwithgratuitous(chic)illustration anddesign,andsupportedlargelybyelegantadvertisementsfromtheleadingartgalleries.Thisdistancebetweentheartistandthe generalpublicleadtothesamesortofnervousanticipationthat awaitedthearrivaloftheGermanartist,JosephBeuys,inNewYorkforhisfirstAmericanretrospectiveattheGuggenheimlast fall.ButthesimilaritybetweenthetwoartistsendshereReuys' "myth"isselfconsciouslyanduncharminglyperpetuatedbythe artisthimself.ThemythofAcconciseemstohavegrownindepen dentlyfromhiswill. ItisironicthatmuchofAcconci'sreputationandartisnurturedbythesystemthatheandhisgenerationofPostMinimalistartists (Acconciemphaticallyreferstoartistsworkingintheseventiesthat sharedhisinterestsas"Mygeneration")hadhopedtodiscard:thetheworkisAcconci’sown.ThefollowingistakenfromnotesjotteddowndunngalecturegivenbytheartistattheMuseumlast week. Acconciisfortyyearsoldandsomewhattatteredaroundthe edges,buthardlycrusty.Hispuffyfeaturesanddeepseteyesare reminiscentoftheGermanactorKlausKinski.Hegrewupin Brooklynandhismannermorethanhisaccentgivesitaway.Ac¬ concispeakswithsuchurgencythattheverbalflowdoesn'tstop untilhe'ssatisfied.Insteadofpausingmomentarilybetween clauses,thelaststringofwordsisrepeatedrapidfire,threeorfour times,beforehecontinuesorconcludesasentence. Notsurprisingly,Acconcihasaliterarybackground,no*onein paintingandsculpture.Afterdoinggraduateworkintheearlysix¬ tieshewrotesnortstories,partsofanovel,andconcentratedon poetry.HesaysthatheconsideredthepageasagroundforpoetryIinspecialterms,usingwordsthatrefertomovement,travel.In1969 hebegantodoperformancepieces:"Movingbeyondthepage,justi¬ fyingmyselfintoanexternalsystem.""FollowingPiece"and"Ser¬ viceArea"aretwoexamplesofthisearlyworkdocumentedinthe show.Atimidentranceintotheexternalworld,theobjectof"Fol¬ lowingPiece,"wassimplytofollow(discreetly)apersonchosenat randomwhileathisorherdailyactivities.Thepieceisterminated whentheleaderreachesaprivateplacesuchashomeoroffice.Ac¬ concihasnocontrol,limitsoftimeandspaceareoutofhishands. Heisliterally"dragged"bytheunassumingleader. in"ServiceArea"AcconcihashadthePostOfficeforwardhis mailtotheMuseumofModernArtinNewYork.Inordertogethis mail,Acconcimusttakethesubwayuptowntothemuseumwhereitisprotectedbyasecurityguard. InthefirstyearsoftheseventiesAcconci'sworktakesadifferent tackHetakeshisbodytoanextremeasaselfcontainedartsystem. Toexplainthepiecescalled"Rubbings,"andtheseventyminutefilm"Conversions,"Acconciraisestheanalogyofartworktotar-ThisissomethingaboutwhichBeuys'worksnevervaries.Acconcidecidedthathemustremovehimself,oratleasthisvisualpre¬ sence,fromhispieces. Theproblemwasresolvedeffectivelyinapiececalled"Seedbed."Concealedbeneathawall-to-wallrampslopingupto abouttwoandahalffeet,Acconcicarriesoutsexualfantasiessti¬ mulatedbythefootstepsabove.Ashemasterbatesthesoundofhis voice—"I'mdoingthiswithyounow...I'mtouchingyourhair... I'mrunningmyhanddownyourback...I'mtouchingyourass..—becomestheaudiblelinktothepeopleabove. Since1972,realizingthathisactualpresenceisnotatallneces sary,Acconcihasworkedmainlywithinstallationpieces,comple¬ mentingthemwithvideoandaudiotapes.Althoughhesaysthathe usesthetapesmostlyasafterthoughts,theyarebrilliantlymade useof.Themanicbeatandoppressivelanguageoftheaudiopartsis ofteninspiredbypunkmusic.(HelikestheRamonesalot.) OneofthecentralelementsofthePostMinimalartofAcconcithegreycityjournal,Friday,April4,1980artgallery.Byproducingworksinwhichtheartist'sbodyistheart objectorbycreatingsculpturethatisbothtemporaryand"sitespe cific"theyhopedtoreleasetheartobjectfromitscommercialbur den.Eventhoughtheartgalleryprovedabletoabsorbthisattack, eventogainfromitAcconcisaysthatit"bulged" —-theshapeof artintheseventieswasrevolutionized.Acconciseemstotakeitin stridethattheworldwideartdistributionsystemisn'tmuchdif ferentnowthanitwastenyearsago. Fromabodyofnearly200photoworks,performances,installa¬ tions,films,andvideoworks,theMCAhaschosenabouttwentyto documentandreconstructworksrepresentingvariousstagesinAc conci'sprogressoverthelastelevenyears.Thebestsummaryofloexplainthepiecescalled"Rubbmys,"andtheseventyminutefilm"Conversions,"Acconciraisestheanalogyofartworktotar¬ get.Asoneentersagalleryspace,theartworkiszeroedinonasifit wereatargel.InthesepiecesAcconciwithdrawsfromtheoutside worldasartagent(liketheroleoftheleaderin"Following Piece").Usinghisbodyastheartobject,Acconcizeroesinonhim¬ self. "P.ubbings"wasperformedatMax'sKansasCityrestau¬ rant/nightclubinNewYork.Acconcirubbedhisleftforearmgently butconstantlywithhisrighthandforonehour.Ttiesizeofthewelt thatresulted,saysAcconci,wassurprising Inttieworksthatfollowin'71and'72anotherpersonisincludedin Acconci'spieces.In"ProjectforPier17"theartiststandsalonea1 thebackofaderelictpier.Aninvitationisextendedtoanybodyto meethimtherelateatnighttolistentoadeeplypersona!confes¬ sion.Asaresulttheviewerofthepiecewillcomeawaywithinfor mationpotentiallydamagingtoAcconci. In"Claim,"apiecefromthesametimeperiod,thecharacterofthepersonalinteractionbetweenartistandviewerisreversed.Ac¬ conciisseated,blindfolded,andarmedwithtwoleadpipesanda crowbar,inthebasementlevelofastudiospace.Atthetopofthe stairsalivevideotapemachinemonitorshismovementandvoice: "I'malonehereinthebasement..Idon'twantanybodytobewith mehereinthebasement...I'llstopanybodyfromcomingdown hereinthebasementwithme..I'malone.."Nobodyintrud ed. Acconci'sworksareintriguingbecauseonedoesn'tcompletely understandtheimplicationsofapieceuntiltheactionisover.Vitois constantlycorrecting,tryingtosolveproblemswithpieces.After "Claim"Acconcifearedthat,inhisfocusonhimselfastarget,uhe wasfallingintothepositionofan"artstar" —■acultheroofsorts.andhis"generation"isautobiography.Therevealingoftheperson¬ allifeoftheartist,confession,wasaprimaryreactiontotherigid formalismofMinimalistartthatdominatedtheearlyandmidsix¬ ties.Confessionimposesabondontheartist/viewerrelationship especiallywellillustratedin"ProjectforPier17."Acconcicalls autobiographyhis"callingcard;asastrategytowardmeeting."Itisawayofmakinganintroduction.Acconcireadaloudtheaudio partofaninstallationcalled"ReceptionRoom"from1973.The pieceisabouttheartist'sviewofhimselfinwhichheparticipates but,asin"Seedbed,"ispartiallyhidden. OneoftheseveralpiecesdoneinEuropecalled"TheAmerican Gift"revealshowlocationbroadenedthesphereofAcconci'sinter¬ estandart.TheflexibilityandingenuityofAcconciisalsorevealed. HefeltthattheimplicationsofbeinganAmericanartistinvitedto EuropewerebasedontheoverglorificationofAmericanartdueto itstestedeconomicsuccess.Thus,"makinguseofthepracticalfact oftranslation,"outofalargeblackbox(thegift)escapestheAmer¬ icanvoicespeakingclumsy,"American"French.Asanintroduc¬ tiontotheproclamationsthatspewforthfromtheboxareleader andresponsevoiceparts: Leader:youaretheEuropeans... Response(inFrench):WearetheEuropeans... L:Youwaitandsee... R:Wewaitandsee... L:Youdon'thavetospeakforyourselves... R:Wedon't... L:YouhaveAmericainthebackofyourminds... R:Wehave...TheboxinterruptswithanannouncementinclumsyFrenchthatfor thenextminutetherewillbeanofferingofAmericansounds— suchasAaronCoplandmusic,gunfire,awomanscreaming,etc. "TheAmericanGift"opensupanewworldforAcconciandthe worksthatfollowdealingwithawiderangeofsocial,cultural,and politicaltopics."TonightWeEscapefromNewYork,""WhereWe AreNow(Whereareweanyway?),""ThePeopleMachine,"and "ThePeopleMobile"areallworksreconstructedattheMCAthat demonstrateAcconci'swiderconcerns. Acconciadmitsthathe'snotsurethataretrospectiveofhistypeofworkiseffective.Afterall,thepiecesweredesignedforspecific timesandplacesOftenartworksinaretrospectivecomplement oneanother,butAcconci'spiecesarecrampedinspacethatisfar toosmall.Theworksstruggleforpredominance.Theluridsounds andvoicestendtogetconfusedandthevieweriswoundedinthe crossfire. ItisagainironicthatTheDecorativeImpulse,anexhibitionof workssoanathematoAcconci's,wasgivenmorespace.IfBeuys wastreatedtotheentireGuggenheim,whynotAcconciwiththe entireMCA?Ifthepiecesaretooclumsy,wearefortunatethatAc¬ conci'smajorvideowork,"TheRedTapes,"isincludedinthe show.ItisamarvelousworkthatseemsamixtureofWaltWhitman andWilliamS.Burroughs.Itplaysat2:30onTuesday,Thursday, andSunday.Makeaspecialtriptoseeit. Alliscertainlynotlost.Acconciisfinallyhereinourtowninhisroleasguerillafighter.TheexplosivesplantedattheMCAwillcon¬ tinuetosendoutshrapnelthroughMay18.PaVlC)!iJ,,,er,-K_DavidMillerDanielSchulman Construction” by Sol LeWitt. (1977)a>>TO"Timber Ring” by Loren Madsen—after. Q(1979)'Timber Ring" by Loren Madsen—before.1979) A Sphere for SpringThis spring's Renaisssance Society out¬door sculpture—Jene Highstein's "BlackSphere”—was installed one nippy day twoweeks ago. The large, concrete-covered ironball now sits in front of the University'snewest neo gothic, the Brain ResearchCenter.Highstein arrived with his sculpture in aU-Haul truck and it took the artist, threehelpers, and a huge crane to place the 3000pound work firmly in the ground. Halfwaythrough the installation process, Highsteinran out of acetylene. More had to be found inorder to complete the burning of a hole inwhich to fasten a pipe that would secure thesphere to the ground as a protection fromvandalism.But where do you find a tank of acetylene, at 10 o'clock on a Saturday morning, in HydePark? One member of the party, Rona Hoff¬man (of the Young Hoffman Galery, whichrepresents Highstein in Chicago) had al¬ready made a frustrating venture in searchof coffee, and had encountered problemsenough: driving, she said, "practically tothe northside,” she ended up buying MellowYellow coffee at a $1 a cup.The search for acetylene was even moredistressing. The rented crane was eating upRenaissance Society funds at the rate of $50per chilly hour. Gallery Director SuzanneGhez and agent Hoffman huddled inside theU-Haul slipping what was by now cold cof¬fee, hoping for a speedy return from what,this time, was really the northside. After ashort but anxious wait, the acetylene ar¬"Black Sphere" by Jene Highstein. (1980) p "Cactus Flower” by James Surls. (1978)rived, and the necessary hole was created.The sculpture is now partly insured from theart misunderstanders who might be tempt¬ed to roll it around.Works of previous years—like the famous"pine-cone" which graced the center of thequads two years ago, and the Sol Lewittstructure outside Goodspeed Hall in 1977-have been largely appreciated, but not immune from disruption. "Black Sphere,”Ghez said, "is there for the display and examination of ideas which this university isabout.”Since its installation, however, Highstein's work has raised a few puzzled eye¬brows. It is a sculpture that demands understanding, open observation, and does notlend itself to immediate comprehension.it is big (about six feet), round (almost,but not quite, a perfect sphere), and hard.About—as far as minimalist sculpture is"about” anything—a particular form, thesphere, and its interaction with other, adjacent forms, "Black Sphere” cnanges ever soI slightly in contour as one circles around if.I Viewed up close, viewed at a distance, its| scale and that of the hospital walls behind itI seem to shift.If, as Calvin TomKins recently declared in; The New Yorker, Minimalism is dead, the"Black Sphere” stands as a reminder that, the movement made contributions as substantial as any other movement. The"Sphere”bears what was best in the Mini¬malist era: austere monumentality, elegantsimplicity, and challenging unconventionality. - KH & DM"No draft, no way, ratify the E.R.A."Continued from p. 5rapid, powerful sentences with traces of aTrinidadian accent, he said the peace andcivil rights movements hadmobilizedpeoplebut not organized them. When people aremobilized on an issue, and the issue dies, themovement falls apart. But when people areorganized, they see that the problem isbeyond issues or individuals and in the sys- jtern itself, and therefore think in terms of alonger struggle. "We have got to OR-GAN-IZE! Repeat after me: OR GAN-IZE!”Explicitly or implicitly, many of thespeakers repeated this theme of learningfrom the failures of the sixties to build abroad and powerful movement for socialchange.In a spirited, wide-ranging speech whichincluded attacks of stinging sarcasm onJimmy Carter and an endorsement of Ed- |ward Kennedy which was widely booed, !Bella Abzug recalled the way women wereexcluded from positions of leadership in thecampaign to end the war in Vietnam, andwarned the assembly not to repeat this pat- ‘tern. Dellinger reiterated this point, andlisted valuable ideas developed by thewomen's movement during the male politi¬cal vacuum which followed Vietnam andWatergate.New York City labor leader Victor Got- »baum urged unity with the trade unionmovements (notably lacking in the sixties— remember the hardhats) and Michael jHarrington urged the anti draft movementto make the logical extension of its demandsto reach out to other constituencies by call¬ing for full employment. Harrington and jCarmichael were joined by a Puerto RicanVietnam veteran and a Washington, D C.city councilwoman (an oid black womanserving her first elected position) in namingcapitalism, as the enemy of the anti-draftand anti-war movement."The problem isn't Carter, the problemisn't Anderson, the problem isn't Kennedy,the problem isn't Reagan, the problem isthe capitalist system,” Carmichael said.Rev Ben Chavis, one of 10 charged with8 - the grey city journal. Friday, April 4, rioting in Wilmington, North Carolina, justreleased after three years in prison, (yesVirginia, America has political prisoners),spoke directly from the lineage of MartinLuther King. With dark glasses and a dashi-ki over his clerical collar, he looked morelike the Stokely Carmichael of 15 years ago.Chavis spoke with a righteous militance of aresurgence in the black liberation move¬ment, to win back the small gains of the sixties which have been slipping, and to forgeahead. He too pointed to a broad movement,emphasizing that King was assassinatedjust as he was beginning to bring togetherthe civil rights, peace, and trade unionmovements.The Vice President of NOW announcedthat organization's formal opposition to thedraft, for women or men. While reservingwomen's issues as the particular concern ofNOW, she described these concerns as partof an overall struggle for political and eco¬nomic justice, held up today by a growingmilitarism's domination of the nation'spriorities.Denise Levertov is a poet with a long his¬tory of fighting for social justice. Her reading of what she called a still unfinishedpoem proved to be one of the more movingparts of the afternoon. She had recentlybeen in Oklahoma and Iowa and had seenand talked with young people yeiliing"Nuke Iran" and similar slogans. Rearingwith more concern, and >ess distance, to thispart of America than Ginsburg had in nispoem, she told how she was worried aboutthe American people, the values they had,and what kind of future would come of it all.But by naming the way they acted, by explaining it, she made it seem possible toovercome.In another way, the most effectivespeeches came from representatives of stu¬dent associations. A young midwesternwoman quietly read a selection fromAdrienne Rich's "Women and Honor: SomeNotes on Lying" which delineates a com¬plex web around male honor and killing. Another young woman, from the VWCA, gave1980 an impassioned exhortation for compas¬sion, peace, and justice and against oppres¬sion and militarism. It was gratifying tohear speakers our age, talking across andnot down to us, with the excitement and insecurities we felt, clearly voicing our pointof view.The people, the people were beautiful. Ialways want to hug the old people at demonstrations and tell them thank you and I loveyou. Although the main body of the protes¬tors were white college students — who obviously play an important leading role inthis movement — but obviously can't getanywhere along — black and Hispanicswere well represented (Including smallgroups of black nationalists of various persuasions carrying on their long standingdiscussions to the side of the rally). Theyoung people, it appeared from buttons andsuch indications, to be largely veterans ofthe anti-nuclear power movement. Thesepeople have been fully exposed to the corporate structure of America's political andeconomic life. A women's march againstthe draft earlier in the day had brought fe¬minists out in force, and many of thesemarched together as a contingent in themain parade. These women are most acute¬ly aware that the movement itself must internally reflect the vision of society itupholds.When Peter Yarrow sang "Blowin' in theWind” near the beginning I had been into it— a simple and powerful statement of basichuman values, as well as a vague reminderof our roots. "The Great Mandala,” however was harder to swallow. But when the castof Hair got up at the end I was a little dis¬mayed. I sang and danced to keep warmband because I felt good from the speeches,but knowing full well this is not the age ofAauarius — this was simplistic, commer¬cial, and probably had been arrangedThrough their public relations agent.In contrast to these golden folkies, ayoung black woman from Washington gavebeautiful a cappel'a renditions of a Caribbean folk tune, a Latin American protest song, and Leadbelly's song about Washington,D.C., "Bourgeois Blues.” Instead of appealing to a mandala to save us from the draft,she gave direct politcal statements, songsabout realities, from rich traditions, and theaudience responded.Later, someone in the van called "TheGreat Mandala” one of the "songs youthought you'd never have to hear again”and asked "Where was the Clash?" WasRock Against Racism all for nought?Even later down the road a sociologicaltrend with political implications was remarked on. Acid is coming back as a popular drug, but people aren't doing acid thesame way they used to Not in an asshole,Nirvana change the world with love andflowers way but in a more social way,towards a more creative and useful understanding of daily life.Driving back through the night we discussed per onal reactions to the day, ancgradually i.eveloped a collective evaluationwhi n was more positive than any of thepersonal ores. Soon we were discussing po¬litical visions, personal problems, and strafegies for the coming days and far into thefuture.We missed the TV news that night, andthe papers we saw carried very little aboutthe protest Added to the lack of noticeableeffect on the vacant White House or Capitol,the "effect" of the demonstration, as mediaevent or redress of grievances, was perhapsminimal. But what was accomplished was40,000 people from across the country, allages and colors, who came together to be together, to greet each other and say to eachother we are together, we know what's hap¬pening and we are prepared to accept ourresponsibility for it. We may not swayCarter or Congress or the military or thecorporations from their disastrous foolishness, but we can reassure each other thatwe are not alone. Ano far more than Cartercan depend on his friends, with their mer¬cantile alliances and self serving bonds ofloyalty, we can count on each other. We canbelieve in ourselves.MORTON - MURPHY AWARDSThe deadline for application for Spring QuarterMorton-Murphy awards is Monday, April 14th,1980. The awards for a maximum of $150 aregiven “to show7 recognition to students who havemade some significant contribution above andbeyond the call of duty or personal fulfillment tocampus life.”An undergraduate or graduate student mayapply directly for an award or be nominated byany member of the University community student,faculty or staff.WINTER QUARTER 79 RECIPIENTSWEREZbignew BanasVictoria DorganCharles Knight Charles SchilkeDarin SharpeMORTON-MURPHY APPLICATIONSARE AVAILABLE IN HARPER 252T$ea/ (SjJ/tte (1650 East 55th Street 405-0666MAkK SENSE OUT OF YOl R DOLLAR ...Mortgage mmiev no [imldem - low in¬terest rate. Available June 15. 55th near Dorchester - Spacious immaculate onebedroom condo on high. light floor. Priced to sell. $49,500. You ma\ see I odav!SKKkING TWO BK1)R(HIM I*LI S STl I)Y t Near campus at 57th and kimhark -Stunning designer kitchen, freshlv decorated throughout - natural oak floors. Con¬tract sale possible at decent interest rate. $68,500.INDOOR l\4RklNC...Campus Inis and citv bn- <il vour front door - 5101 HvdePark. Vie have a one bedroom with new "eountrv kitchen" effect for $ 18.000. - Alsoa nice 2 bedroom, 2 bath for $65,000 in the same building. Ask about these.KAMILA LIVING CLOSK TO CAMPLTS...Spacious 3 bedroom. 2 bath with Wood-burning fireplace overlooks the midwav. Nice "square floor plan, Co-op priced at$68,500. partial financing available..57tb A RLACKSTONK.. .(iontract -ale would be possible at sensible rates. Over2.000 square feet of living space - 7 rooms. Sunnv and bright. Kxeellent immaculatecondo home - would also consider rent w ith option to I mi v w ith adequate deposit.ON HIGH FLOOR - RLACkSTONK & 55th...Leaving June - 2 bedroom inUniversity Park condo - South Lower. Priced to sell at $62,500. I his is lovinglyeared for. Master R.R. over 20 ft. Ion*' - 2 full baths - See anytime - phones answereduntil 9:00 bv real humans.HOUSE ON A PARK ...Live on the sunnv side'. Across from park. \ ictorian duplexrestored woodwork - siqier kitchen has island cooking and bedrooms up-tairs - Largeopen full basement. Landscaped garden - $128,000 - available July 1. ^ ill considercontract sale.Vi e don’t usuallv rent but here’s a coach house in Kenwood. 2 bedrooms - $125 plu-utilities. Prefer older -ingle or voting married couple. No dogs. Available now. r University of ChicagoBRASS SOCIETYrCVVVj\PvyA* Monday, April 7th7:00Ida Noyes LibraryNew Members Welcome3QC- : x>r - *w- ooc DtK ", , izx>cREPAIRSPECIALISTSon IBM. SCM.Olympia, etcFREE repairestimates; repairsby factory-trainedtechnician.RENTALSavailable withU.of C I D New anuRebuiltTypewriters,Calculators,Dictators,AddersU of ChicagoBookstore5750 S. Ellis Ave753-3303Mastercharge and Visa AcceptedPOWELL'S BOOKSTORES * POWELL'SPowell’sCASH FORBOOKSPowell’s Bookstore Powell’s Book1501 E. 57th St.955-7780*9 am-11 pmEveryday Warehouse1020 S. Wabash8th fl.. 341-07480:30-5:00 Th.-Sat I• Eye Examinations• Contact Lenses• (Soft and Hard)• Fashion Eye Wear• Contact Lens SuppliesDR. M.R. MASLOVOPTOMETRISTS1mj3ch|soreS££■Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th363-6363 C\3^ ’thefunny papers5238 S Blackstone955-0974VERSAILLES5254 S. DorchesterWELL M AINTAINEDBUILDINGAttractive 1V2 and2V/2 Room StudiosFurnished or l nfurnished$218.o $320Based on AvailabilityAt Campus Bus Stop324-0200 Mrs. Groak1701 E. 55th684-3375PIZZAPLATTER1460 E. 53rdM13-2800No deliverythe grey city journal, Friday, April 4, 1980 - 9SPECIAL DISCOUNT PRICESfor all STUDENTS andFACULTY MEMBERSJust present your University of Chicago IdentificationCard. As Students or Faculty Members you are entitledto special money-saving DISCOUNTS on ChevroletParts, Accessories and any new or used Chevrolet youbuy from Ruby Chevrolet. &GM QUALITYS£J7V)Ct MITTSGENERAL MOTORS PARTS DIVISION"Keep l hat Great GM Feeling If ith GL.XUlh E GM Parts"72nd & Stony Island 684-0400Open Evenings and Sundays Parts Open Sat. 'til noon72nd & Stony Island 684-0400 =Open Evenings and Sunday Parts Open Sat. 'til noon ~2 Miles - 5 Minutes AwayFrom The UNIVERSITYSPECIAL DISCOUNT PRICESfor all STUDENTS andFACULTY MEMBERSJust present your University of Chicago IdentificationCard. As Students or Faculty Members you are entitledto special money-saving DISCOUNTS on VolkswagenParts, Accessories and any new or used Volkswagenyou buy from Ruby Volkswagenmarianrealty, inc.mREALTORStudio and 1 BedroomApartments Available- Students Welcome -On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-5400anb Uuhami ^luip1552 E. 53rd - Under IC tracksPipes - Pipe Tobaccos -Imported Cigarettes - CigarsMon.-Sat. 9-8, Sun. 12-5Students under 30 get 10% off.ask for “Big Jim’’ :oom^fYYY-nmrTALENT AUDITIONSOn Saturday, April 12, 1980,WALT DISNEY WORLD CO. willhold talent auditions for profes¬sional performers who sing anddance to fill permanent and part-time positions (opening in May)at our WALT DISNEY WORLDVacation Resort, near Orlando,Florida.To participate, you must be at least18 years of age, have some singingand dancing experience and bewilling to relocate to Florida. Theauditions will be held at:APRIL 12Chicago, IllinoisDe Paul University804 W. Beldon AvenueStone Building, Room 11010:00 A.M. and 2:00 P.M.Ulalt dpsney WorldAn equal opportunity employer.:jUUUUUUUOJUUUUOT7.HEAR AGAIN STEREOPRESENTSIncomparable Stereo ValuesGarrard DD75/WShure cart. NowSI 10.0:1Grafyx Model SPGSpeakers 220.00 pr. 73.00 paSony PST 1Turntable 12.000 83.00Hotel RX402 2X0 jM|Receiver ' 1:50.03Garrard GT-55YY/Cart. 2!HMm 100.03AND LARGE SELECTION OF USED AND DEMOCOMPONENTS AT EVEN GREATER SAVINGS!HEAR AGAIN STEREO7002 N. California NEW 2-drawer files $59.00NEW 6-ft. folding tables $49.00EQUIPMENT& SUPPLY CO.8600 COMMERCIAL AVENUERE 4-21 1 1 OPEN MON.-FRI.8:30-5:00SATURDAYS9:00-3:00COLUMBIA UNIVERSITYSummer instituteon Planets and ClimateSUMMER GRANTSFor Juniors and SeniorsMajonng in the Physical Sciences338-7737£****************************£He************* ******* *******? In cooperation with the NASA Goddard Institute for SpaceStudies. Columbia University announces a Summer Instituteon Planets and Climate. The program will meet from Juneto August 15, 1980.Grants cover full tuition and fees, accommodations, a liv'ngallowance, and round-trip travel expenses to New York.The program includes four weeks of lectures on planetarsatmospheres and climate change and a six-week researchsession A total of 6 credits may be earned.Applications in the form of a letter should be submitted byApril 18 to: Summer Institute on Planets and Climate, 102Low Library, Columbia University’. New York. N Y. 10027.The letter mast include: home and school addresses,telephone number, social security number; a one-pagetyped statement of the applicant s goals and interests; astudent copy transcript. Three professors familiar with theapplicant's work mast provide letters of reference.10 — the grey city journal, Friday, April 4, 1980Ionesco at Court: Spring Turns to WinterExit The Kingby Eugene Ionescodirected by Joe Guastaferroproduced by Court Theatrethrough April 20 in the New Theatre. Th-Satat 8:30; Sun at 7:30. 753-3581. Th and Sun,$4.50, $2.50 students; Fri and Sat, $5.50, $3students. A discussion will follow the Thurs¬day, April 10 performance.by Elizabeth OldfatherThe premise of Ionesco's Exit the King isthat men must acknowledge their own mor- 'tality. A man can either keep it in the backof his mind or live so passionately that heavoids all thoughts and evidence of his end— only to have it thrust upon him from theoutside.King Berenger the First belongs to the latter class of men. Aided and abetted by hissecond Queen (Marie) he has danced andplayed heedless of his own end. At the outsetof the play, his first Queen (Marguerite)tells Berenger that he is to die at the end ofthe show. The doctor supports her with"scientific" evidence of the king's fatal con¬dition. He also keeps an exactinalv unsym¬pathetic eye on death's timetable; con¬stantly reminding both the audience and theplayer that the king is to die at the end of theplay.Queens Marie and Marguerite demon¬strate these two approaches to the problemof how we are to deal with mortality. QueenMarguerite would have each of us preparefor death, even if only for five minutes aday. She is the stern and dour faced task¬master of the King's only lesson in mortali¬ty. Soft and fleshy Marie urges him to com¬bat his mortality with romantic love and aT3misguided conviction that, because he is >king, his command is limitless. But the ac-,5tion of the play shows that Marie's alterna¬tive is a sham; it is only a circuitous path to-^man's singular end. When the king answers Chis death sentence with denial, Marie goads ^him on, but death's progressive weakeningof the body won't let the rheumatoid kingstand unassisted or mount his throne with asure step. Instead he staggers and falls,flailing about with decreasing vigor until Juliette deposits him in the wheelchair he re¬cently scorned. Marie, as a representativeof the life of the body, loses her influenceover the king as age diminishes his appetitefor pleasures of the flesh. Senility and ab¬sorption in trying to keep hold of his self fi¬nally crowd remembrance of Marie out ofthe King's mind and eliminate her role.It is Marguerite who, with steady realism,guides the King through a wide range of re¬actions to death, rage and self-pity, utterselfishness and wonder at the commonplacethings not noticed when life seemed end¬less.Immortality is given little scope in thisplay. The doctor speaks of immortality as asingle page in a large volume "until the daycomes when the paper's turned to dust . . .unless it's destroyed by fire." The guardseemingly grants the King immortality in alist of glorious accomplishments. He creditsthe King with all manner of artistic, scientif¬ic, and techinical greatnesses. But immor¬tality won by the creations of a man is not atrue substitute for the immortality of theman himself. Even though Juliette creditsthe king with organizing nature into fourseasons, this organization collapses as hesickens towards death — for winter weatherhas appeared in spring.True to the form of stories about the deathof Kings, Ionesco has natural disastersplague the realm even as its politicalfortunes decline. But the extent and bizarrenature of these portents suggests a parodyof man whose pride is so great that he thinksnature would deign to echo even a King'sdeath.Although external nature may be un¬moved by any man's death, Julie Noble'scharacterization of Queen Marguerite per¬suades us to respect and admire a consciousacceptance of death. Her performance is sostrong and steady in dignity and grace thatshe eclipses the weak claims of the love she (brands as sentimental. Her make-up andcostuming by Judith Fink enhance the icyand forbidding aspect of her character whileher patience with the King's whims and selfindulgence teach a compassion informed bya clear vision of how man should meet his |end. Malcolm Rothman and Curtis Pettijohn: Divine health under inspectionThe role of King Berenger the Firstranges over the entire emotional scale andMalcolm Rothman is well in command ofthis range. One regrets that the vitality andwell acted passions of his performance arebounded by so small a stage and theatre.Rothman's delight in the details of Juliette'sround of chores was entrancing and in thereflective and private nature of his musingsmore fitted to the small stage than the wildravings, which were well acted but seemedtoo large for the cramped quarters.Meagan Fay as Queen Marie has a moredifficult time in winning sympathy despite Jthe evidence of affection for her character i exhibited by the guard, Juliette, and the |King. In order to build tension between iMarie and Marguerite, Fay must matchMarguerite in intensity of purpose. Her lustfor life ought to at least equal the King's.Ms. Fays's portrayal of Marie lists to the| simpering side of romantic love. One doubts| if Marguerite's characterization of her as! sentimental should be so accurate or ifI Marie ought to struggle to hold her love withj vital energy rather than ineffectual frenzy.Of the Minor characters the Guard,played by Alex Kerr, is the most impressive. He gives us a guard a little simple andbefuddled by the downward turn of his king's fortune who would willing serve aKing who can no longer command.Margo Wickesser's rendering of Juliettelacks clarity. Her ministering to the king istoo perfunctory and her asides too flat forblack humor. Perhaps her complaints andsarcasm would be more effective if sheseemed more mature and worldly wise.Curtis Pettijohn's Doctor was an aptly dis¬tasteful display of a clinical style most of ushave encountered in men "of science."Mr. Guastaferro has done a good job. Inreading, the play seems thin, but his prod¬uction is well paced and coheres because ofhis thoughtful interpretation.ColorcopyNow!The University is keeping its Xerox 6500Color Copier through June 30, according toRudolph A. Banovich, Research Institutedirector of graphic arts. The color copy ma¬chine, located in room 106 of the ResearchInstitute on the northwest corner of 57th andEllis, was to be returned to the Xerox Cor¬poration, from which it is leased, on April1.According to Banovich, the machine hasnot received enough use to cover the month¬ly rental fee. Five hundred copies must bemade each month at the current price of onedollar per 8’/2"x 14" copy in order for the umachine to pay for itself. 195 copies were^made in March. £The copier remains despite Banovich's^original cancellation notice to Xerox be- 32cause of a misunderstanding about the >terms of the lease. Banovich now plans topoperate the machine at a financial lossthrough June 30 rather than return it andpay a cancellation penalty.Although it exaggerates reds and greens,the machine reproduces color originals witha fair degree of accuracy, and is also capable of producing a variety of other moreunusual copies by using only one or a combi¬nation of two of the copier's three colorscreens — magenta, yellow, and cyan. Themachine can also reproduce black andwhite originals in color, as well as repro¬ duce color slides as prints or 8V2 x 14" colortransparencies.According to Banovich, this particularmachine is the university's last; anotheridentical machine located in the hospitalswas returned to Xerox in 1979. The Research Institute machine's heaviest use isstill from people in the University hospitals,although it was also popular with art stu¬dents from the Midway Studios until the price per copy was increased six monthsago.Banovich stated that a number of usershave expressed concern about the machine's return to Xerox, and that he hopesusage will increase so that the machine canstay past June 30. There is also the possibili¬ty that, if usage increases significantly, theprice per copy could be lowered. — DavidMillerEd Pool and director Banovich pose with the neglected 6500the grey city journal, Friday, April 4, 1980 — 11 l*Brightest and the DimmestKramer vs. KramerYou thought you'd be spared of yet another Oscarforecast. Well, tough luck. This year's contest looks so easyto predict, we decided to give it a try ourselves rather thanconsulting with Uncle Teiresias. (We would have sent ourpredictions to The Trib, but we get preview invitationsanyway. And, to the betting pool at the Ad Building: don'tbother plunging in, you might take a dive.) Oscarnominees, we all know, are seldom chosen on basis ofmerit alone; and this year, the Academy again slightedsome of our favorites. But, we won't quibble. Byoverlooking several fine pictures and performers, thecompetition and the ceremony will generate as muchsuspense and excitement as Mamie Eisenhower's life.Besides, the annua! parade of "stars" will be deprived ofthe presence of the glorious Hanna Schygulla (TheMarriage of Maria Braun). Better try, next year. While our colleagues at Harvard get their kicks everyyear by snickering at Hollywood, we have been quitesatisfied with other modes of entertainment. But this year,astounded by the sheer inepititude of the film industry, andthe gross ware it peddles, we decided to join in the chorus.Thus, the First Annual Occasional Grey City StickerPrizes. They are bestowed mostly on movies andperformers whose misdeeds demand to be forgotten andforgiven. But we also poke fun at those who are lessoffensive, because we want to be funny as well. (If youthink you can do better, drop us a note.) Now sit back andlet us tickle your funnybone!Best Picture: Kramer vs. KramerIt's not Kramer vs. any of the others,it's Kramer vs. Kramer. All That Jazzand Apocalypse Now reek of self-indul¬gence, a posturing out of favor thisyear. Breaking Away is cute, but toosmall-scaled to get the big prize. Luckgot Norma Rae its nomination, but it'srunning out. Kramer, by focusing onthe plights of divorced people, has thesympathy and admiration of everyonein Hollywood.Best Direction: Robert Benton,Kramer vs. KramerEdouardo Molinaro (La Cage auxfolles) is the token of the bunch; BobFosse (All That Jazz) will get sympa¬thy votes for having lived to tell of hisopen-heart surgery; Peter Yates's(Breaking Away) time has yet tocome; and Francis Ford Coppola's(Apocalypse Now) time has alreadypassed. Benton will get the nod for hav¬ing made a well-crafted film.Best Actor: Dustin HoffmanAl Pacino, the perennial nominee, isdefinitely out of the picture; the samecan be said of Roy Scheider. Lemmon'sfine performance in The China Syn¬drome is a supporting one; besides, hehas won once already. So it boils downto a two-man race between Hoffmanand Peter Sellers. Again, the Academycrowd's sympathy with a divorced fa¬ther will definitely tip the scale in favorof Hoffman.Best Actress: Sally FieldMrs. Neil Simon (aka Marsha Mason)got her nomination because Mr. Simonwants her to retire. Jane Fonda haswon twice previously, and her politicsare getting on people's nerves again.Jill Clayburgh's performance in Start¬ing Over is too light to get this hea¬vyweight prize. Here, as in Best Actorcategory, it's a race of two. Midlergave a virtuoso performance in TheRose, but she's only a singer and it washer first picture. So Field's leap fromThe Flying Nun to labor organizer12 — the grey city journal, Friday, April 4 looks more and more impressive.Best Supporting Actress: MerylStreepNo doubt about it, this is the Year ofMeryl Streep.Best Supporting Actor: Melvyn DouglasJustin Henry and Mickey Rooney gottheir berths by being cuddly and cute.Both Frederic Forrest and Robert Du¬vall gave solid supporting perfor¬mances in Apocalypse Now, althoughForrest is nominated for The Rose. Butneither can best Melvyn Douglas whois not only superb in Being There, but isalso the sentimental favorite.Best Cinematography: VittorioStoraro, Apocalypse NowThe finest cinematographer aroundwill finally get his due.Best Original Screenplay: Steve Te-sich, Breaking AwayWoody Allen & Marshall Brickmanmight get it for Manhattan, had theynot already been tapped once. MikeGray, T.S. Cook & James Bridge couldwin if Academy people still rememberThree Mile Island. But Tesich, whowrote a charming script all by himself,looks like the sureshot.Best Adaptation: Robert Benton,Kramer vs. KramerBenton, who shaped a highly originalscript out of a second-rate short story,deserves this one. All the other nomin¬ees are jokes, anyway.Best Song:All the nominees are eminently forgett¬able and unhummable. The Academycrowd should have listened to the Ra-mones's immortal "Teenage Lobo-tomy." Ten Worst Pictures(The list has been expanded to ac¬commodate this year's bumper crop ofduds)The Amityville HorrorOliver's StoryPlayersAirport '79—The ConcordeAlienThe Runner StumblethAvalanche ExpressHero At LargeRunningRoller BoogieProphecyScavenger HuntHurricaneSkatetown, USAFedoraRyan O'Neal Award for Worst Actor:Ryan O'Neal, for Oliver's Story andfor keeping Tatum and dumping Bian¬ca, Ursula, Anouk, Farrah ...Ali McGraw Award for Worst Ac¬tress:Ali McGraw, for Players and forleaving Steve McQueenThe George Over-the-Hill Award:(to the director who concocted theyear's least palatable confection)George Roy Hill, A Little RomanceThe Vidal Sassoon Award:(to the actor who makes Sassooningobsolete)(tied) Marlon Brando, Klaus Kinski,and Persis Khambatta, of Star TrekThe Rocky Horror Showcase:Sylvester Stallone, the sequelitis vic¬tim whose current project is a remakeof the life of Nelson RockefellerThe Title-that-should-have-been:Star Trek meets The Black HoleThe Joker-is-Wilder Award:(to the director whose bad tasteknows no bounds)Billy Wilder, Fedora The Gentleman Quarterly Ribbon:(to the film that kept untalented malemodels fed and clothed)(tied The Warriors and Butch andSundance: the Early DaysThe Mommie Dearest Valentine:(to the film that shows motherhood ismore than apple pie)LunaThe Mandingo Medal:(given only to films which prove thatthe Southern plantations can be trans¬planted to anywhere on this goodearth)HurricaneThe Unsafe-at-any-speed citation:Disco Roller, Roller Boogie, Skate-town, USA, Running, etc.The Treasure Island Search Warrant:Scavenger HuntThe Night the Lights Went Out Memori¬al Prize:(to the film that strives to be artisticby being photographed in b&w andcomplete darkness)ManhattanLina Wertmuller's Sun Glasses:(to the female director whose visionneeds be darkened)Diane Kurys, Peppermint SodaThe Meyer Oscar:(to the year's hammiest actor)Miss PiggyThe Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test Certif¬icate:(to the film that shows why Haight-Ashbury is now just a neighborhood)HairA Village People T-Shirt:(to the film that further enhances ste¬reotypes)La Cage aux follesThe Finders-Keepers Award:In Search of Historic JesusThe Hardy Laurel:(to the most unintentionally funnyduo)Roger Ebert & Gene SiskelThe Rin Tin Tin:(to the animal star who shows moreintelligence than its human costars)Spot, "Sneak Preview"GAY COFFEEHOUSEFriday, at 8:00 p.m. in the Ida Noyes Library., 1980 -TS, with GBVTUDGNTgovonmgntMG€TiriG TU£9D/4Y, APRIL 88=00 P.M.Ida Noges East LoungeCOURT ThCATRC5706 S University Avenue / Chicago, Illinois 60637 / 753-3581LAST 3 WEEKSIonesco's EXIT THE KINGDirected by Joe GuostaferroNominated for 4 Jeff CitationsNew Theatre57th & UniversityTickets at Mandei Box Office Angus tanaICnthpran Church* » )Lutheran Campus Ministry5500 S. Woodlawn Ave.Chicago, IL 60637April 4, Good Friday, 7:30 p.m.,Liturgy (Aug.)April 5, Easter Eve, 8:00 p.m., EasterVigil at Rockefeller ChapelApril 6, Easter, 8:30 a.m. & 10:45 a.m.Sermon & Eucharist, Augustan aSt. Gregory of \vssa10:30 a.m. Sermon and EucharistGraham Tavlor ChapelC.T.S.V J G0ETTLER PRIZETHE HAROLD E. GOETTLERPOLITICAL INSTITUTIONS PRIZEFIRST PRIZE $500SECOND PRIZE $300THIRD PRIZE $100ESSAYS ARE INVITEDFROM UNDERGRADUA TESTHAT CLEARLY AND SIGNIFICANTLY RELATETO THE ORIGIN. DEVELOPMENT, STRUCTURE,OR FUNCTIONING OF POLITICAL IN¬STITUTIONS. ESSAYS WILL BE JUDGED ONTHE BASIS OF THE EVIDENCE WHICH THEYGIVE OR THE WRITER’S ABILITY TOa) formulate and distinguish the elementsof the problem;b) assess relevant evidence;c) relate such elements and evidence to relevanttheoretical literature;d) organize and present data and conclusionsclearly and cogently.DEADLINE FOR SUBMISSION:MONDAY 14 APRIL 1980Further information available in Gates-Biake 7 32GOETTLER PRIZEeven) JdursJm 1215QUo £ounae-5pon5or«C 6u tke Department of .MusicC&ecd tde- 'weekGj JAoroon jor proaram HOLY WEEK AT CALVERT HOUSE57.33 S. IMVERSITY288-231 1GOOD FRIDAYHOLY SATURDAYEASTER SUNDAY 2:30 pm - Stations of the Cross5:00 pm - Celebration of the Lord s PassionILiond ( Impel i4-5 pin - Individual Sacrament of Reconciliation8:00 pm - Ea ster I ifzil Service (liond Chapel).5:1 5 am - Easter sunrtse Seri it e at the Point8:30 am. 3:00 pm - Mass at (ltdcert HouseI 1:00 am - Mass at liond Chapel6:00 pm - Supper at Calvert HouseEye ExaminationsFashion Eye WearContact LensesDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist(53 Kimbark Plaza)1200 E. 53rd St.493-8372Intelligent people know the differ¬ence befween advertised cheapglasses or contact lenses and com¬petent professional service.Our reputation is your guaranteeof satisfaction SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH - UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS ATTHE MEDICAL CENTER, CHICAGOInvites Applications for Degree ProgramsMASTER OF PUBLIC HEALTH (M P H )MASTER OF SCIENCE IN PUBLIC HEALTH (M S.)DOCTOR OF PUBLIC HEALTH (Dr PH)DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY IN PUBLIC HEALTH (Ph D )Concentrations are offered in Biometry. Epidemiology Environmental andOccupational Health Sciences Industrial Hygiene and Safety Health Sciencesand Community Health Sciences Administration and Health Law Health Edu¬cation Population Sciences and International HealthFinancial assistance is available through Public Health Traineeships and Research Positions. Deadline to apply for M P H Program is February 15. 1980Deadline for M S Dr P H and Ph D Programs is six weeks prior to the quarter in which the applicant wishes to enterFor further information, write or telephoneJames W WagnerAssistant Dean for Student AffairsUniversity of Illinois at the Medical CenterP 0 Box 6998Chicago. Illinois 60680(312) 996 6625The School encourages applications from qualified minority students UNIVERSITY CHORUSAuditions for singers will beheld Monday and Tuesday,April 7-8.Call 753-2613 for appointmentSpring program:Faur'e RequiemGabrieli In ecclesiisThe Chicago Maroon Friday, April 4, 1980—19Owens believed that athletes should go to 1980Games;funeral services are today at Rockefeller ChapelThis appeared in the Rocky MountainNews — Sunday March 2, 1980 Denver,Co.Copyright 1980, Independent News Alli¬anceJesse Owens died of cancer on March 31,1980. His funeral will be held this morning atRockefeller Chapel. He will be rememberedmost for his triumphs in the 1936 BerlinOlympics, as well as his many contributionsto the world in which he lived.By Jesse OwensI can never adequately repay this countryfor what it has given me and I would neverdo anything that would be against the bestinterests of the United States.Having competed in the 1936 Olympics, soheavily laden with politics. I understandwhy President Carter urges us to boycottthe summer games in Moscow. I know whathe is trying to do.But I also understand the Olympics andknow what it can mean both to the UnitedStates and even more important, to what theUnited States is all about. A way must befound. I feel, to have our ‘boycott’ and ourOlympics too.To find that way we must first know whatthe games were truly meant to be and whatSwimmers 3rdin conferenceBy John CondasDespite relatively dismal performancesin dual meets this season, the men’s swim¬ming team performed when it had to, cap¬turing third place in the Midwestern Confer¬ence Championships held at CarletonCollege. March 6-8. Powerful Grinnell Col¬lege won the meet scoring 441 points, fol¬lowed distantly by Lake Forest (348 points),and the Maroons, who finished with 294points. Carleton. swimming beyond expec¬tations, tallied 267 points to take fourth,while Ripon College finished fifth with 215points. Several Maroons shattered existingschool records and swam to their full poten¬tial in this oustanding performance.Junior Andy Neff was the “star of themeet,” according to coach Pete Anderson.He swam to two national qualifying times,enabling him to participate in the nationalmeet held later this year. Neff’s first nation¬al qualifying time was in the 400 individualmedley, where he also captured first placein the event. His second place finishing timein the 200 freestyle also was a national quali¬fying time. Neff also took 2nd prace in the200 yard backstroke and was a participantin two of the team’s record-shatteringrelays.Junior captain Steve Frederick was an¬other Maroon to score points in three events.In the 1650 freestyle, Frederick capturedsecond place, breaking the school record inthe event. He also broke the existing schoolrecord in the 500 freestyle, good enough for asixth place finish. Frederick’s final individ¬ual contribution to the team was in the 200yard freestyle, where he finished in eighthplace. Freshman Mike Noble also per¬formed well in the meet, capturing fourthplace in the 500 freestyle, fifth in the 200freestyle, and 6th place in the 1650 freestyle.Another freshman, Phil Hofmann, scoredin three individual events. He shattered theschool record in the 200 yard butterfly, cap¬turing second place. Hofmann also finishedfourth in the 400 individual medley and 6thin the 100 butterfly. Sophomore Tim Iidawas the last Maroon who scored at least 6thplace or better in three events. Iida took sec¬ond place in the 100 yard breaststroke, fifthin the 50 freestyle, and broke the school re¬cord in the 200 yard breaststroke, finishingin 3rd place.The relay teams produced two recordbreaking times and scored in all three of therelay events which also helped the Maroonsto their fine finish. The 800 yard freestyleTurn to page 2120—The Chicago Maroon Friday, April 4, 1980 they should be, again.The Olympics never were meant to becontests between nations, only between indi¬viduals. Winning was never intended as theultimate goal. That goal, as Pierre de Cou-bertin, the founder of the modern games,put it is “achieving one’s full potential.” Thesweetest victory, in other werds, is doingone’s best.Except for a small minority of misguidedathletes who attempted to use the games aspolitical platforms, the Olympics to the par¬ticipants have been just what they weremeant to be.Because of this, the games are more thana great athletic spectacle. They are a spec¬tacle of peace. Barriers of distance and lan¬guage are broken in a few moments, a fewhours at most. Lifelong friendships aremade. Fierce rivalries are transformed intoa beautiful brotherhoodThe Soviet Union is wrong, dangerouslyso, in doing what it is doing in Afghanistan.So is Iran wrong in taking and keeping hos¬tages, and South Africa for its policy ofapartheid.Such aggressive, bigoted behavior shouldnot be allowed to slide by unnoticed. Ourathletes should boycott the perpetrators ofsuch acts. Not by staying away, but by beingthere with the individuals from other coun¬tries, thereby proving that they are not big¬oted. that there is such a thing as peacefulcompetition.In other words, the United States shouldpublicly disavow any official role for itselfin the Olympics while allowing its athletesto particcipate in the games as the free indi¬viduals they are.In any event, it is not the U.S. governmentthat sends our athletes to the Olympics. It isyou and I who send them through our con¬tributions. Therefore, if the U.S. govern¬ment cannot sanction the Olympic games,so be it.That, however, should not stop our ath¬letes, performing as individuals, from com¬peting in the games.What's more, our government’s objec¬tions to Soviet activities certainly do notstop our businessmen from travelling to Mo¬scow, nor do they curtail our diplomatic re¬lations with the Kremlin. W’hy then punishthe least political individuals of all. runners,swimmers, and gymnasts?These aren’t new beliefs of mine. Theyhave been ingrained in me since 1936 whenAdolph Hitler hosted the games in Berlin.Hitler had hoped to use the games to dem¬onstrate the validity of his racial theories.“Jews and Negroes are inferior to myAryan athletes,” he bragged. “We are supe¬rior and should rule the world. And we shallprove it in these Olympic games.” (In asomewhat similar vein, the Soviet Unionboasts that the holding of the Olympics inMoscow shows that the world now approvesof communism.)What the Berlin games proved however, was that Hitler’s ‘supermen’ could be bea¬ten. Ironically, it was one of his blond, blueeyed Aryan athletes who helped do the beat¬ing.I held the world record in the broad jump.Even more than the sprints it was ‘myevent’. Yet I was one jump from not evenmaking the finals. I had fouled on my firsttry and playing it safe the second time, hadnot gone far enough.The broad jump preliminaries came be¬fore the finals of my other three events andeverything, it seemed then, depended onthis jump. Fear sw'ept over me, and then We did, too. In the finals Luz w'ould jumpand break an Olympic record. Then I wouldjump just a bit farther and break Luz’s newrecord. We each had three leaps in all. Onhis final jump, Luz went almost 26.5 ft., amark that seemed impossible to beat. I wentjust a bit over that and set an Olympic re¬cord that was to last for almost a quarter ofa century.I won that day, but I’m being straightwhen I say that, even before I made that lastjump, I knew I had won a victory of a fargreater kind - over something inside myself,thanks to Luz.Sportspanic.I walked off alone, trying to gather my¬self. I dropped to one knee, closed my eyesand prayed.I felt a hand on my shoulder. 1 opened myeyes and there stood my “archenemy”, LuzLong, the prize athlete Hitler had kept underwraps for years while he trained for one pur¬pose only; to beat me. Long had broken theOlympic mark in his very first try in the pre¬liminaries.“I know about you,” he said. “You arelike me. You must do it all the way, or youcannot do it. The same thing happened to melast year in Cologne. I will tell you what 1 didthen.”Luz told me to remeasure my step, placemy towel six inches in back of the takeoffboard and jump from there. That way, Icould give it all I had and be certain not tofoul.As soon as I had qualified, Luz, smilingbroadly, came to me and said: “Now we canmake each other do our best in the finals.”Jacobs honoredBy Mark ErwinThe All-Midwest Conference basketballteams have been named and congratula¬tions go out to Maroon senior Ken Jacobswho made honorable mention. Conferencechampion Ripon placed two players on thefirst team, while Beloit had two players se¬lected to the second squad. Tim Barnes, aRipon senior, was a unanimous choice in avote of the coaches, while teammate TerryCramer, a junior, was a near unanimous se¬lection. Former University of Chicagoplayer Jim Tolf was selected to the firstteam. Tolf played his freshman year at Chi¬cago before transferring to Carleton Col¬lege. He was the only sophomore to makeeither first or second team.Dr. Charles Skov, member of the physics The instant my record breaking win wasannounced, Luz was there, throwing his armaround me and raising my other arm to thesky. “Jazze Owenz!” he yelled as loud as hecould. “Jazze Owenz!”More than 100.000 Germans in the stadiumjoined in. “Jazze Owenz! Jazze Owenz!Jazze Owenz!”Hitler was there too but he was not chant¬ing. He had lost that day.Luz Long was killed in World War II andalthough I don’t cry often I wept when I re¬ceived his last letter — and knew it was hislast. In it, he asked me to someday find hisson Karl, and to tell him “of how we foughtwell together, and the good times, and thatany two men can become brothers.”That is what the Olympics are all about.The road to the Olympics doesn’t lead toMoscow. It leads to no city, no country. Itgoes far beyond Lake Placid or Moscow, An¬cient Greece or Nazi Germany.The road to the Olympics leads, in the end,to the best within us.department faculty at Monmouth College,has been named President of the MidwestConference for 1980-81. Dr. Skov succeedsDr. Robert Ashley, chairman of the EnglishDepartment at Ripon College.The University of Chicago’s Midwest Con¬ference baseball regular season will takeplace in a home and home series of double-headers against Lake Forest College onApril 19 and 26th. The Maroons will hostLake Forest on the 19th in a twin bill, andwill then play at Lake Forest on the 26th. Ifthe two teams split the four games, a tie¬breaker will be played on April 26th as well.Lawrence and Ripon meet in the other pair¬ing, with the two winning teams meeting onMay 3 for the division championship. Theconference title will be decided on May 10 atthe site of the Western Division champion.From the PressboxBaseball: Why Strike May 23?By Howard SulsTake me out to the ballgame.Take me out to the crowd,Buy me some peanuts and cracker jacks,I don’t care if I never come back,For its root, root, root, for the hometeam,If they don’t win it’s a shame,For its one, two, three, strikes you’re out,At the old ball game.Another baseball season opens nextThursday. The biggest excitement con¬cerning this season is not who will wintheir respective divisions, but if there willbe enough baseball played to even haveplayoffs. The players decided almostunanimously, 967-1, to go on strike for theremainder of the exhibition season. In anew twist, however, they voted to be backopening day and play until May 23, at which point, they will strike again if theyfeel little progress has been made in talkswith the owners.Why May 23? Let’s look at the situationthis way. First off, hockey and basketballare just beginning their second seasonsand a great deal of attention will be fo¬cused on those two sports by the Americanpublic. Secondly, excluding opening day,weather permitting, no one gets very enth¬used over the first six or so weeks of theseason. The hitters are still regaining theirtiming, the pitchers are searching for agroove to settle into, and it’s still too coldto head out to the park and quaff somebrews while bagging some rays in centerfield. So where does that leave us?May 23, for the more perceptive of you,is the beginning of Memorial Day Week¬end, traditionally the beginning of sum¬mer. With the high price of gasoline, peo¬ple may be more inclined to head out to the park than dowrn to the beach. A good fourgame series, Friday night, Saturday, anda Sunday doubleheader, could draw any¬where from 50,000 — 100,000 people, at anaverage of four dollars per ticket, comingto a total of $200,000 to $400,000 and that isonly for two teams. Multiply that by 13 andyou’re talking about a lot of money. Theplayers realize this too. If they wait untilthen to strike, the fans will be interested inbaseball and will voice public disapprovalagainst the owners. If they were to strikenow, no one would care. Attendance isusually low this time of year, so the ownerswould not have as much to lose as theywould at the end of May. So chalk one upfor Marvin and the gang.Whatever the outcome, the Americanpasttime will start again this week. My ad¬vice to you is, go early, get a good seat, andpay attention, because it may not bearound too long.IM reportBasketball finals approachIn basketball playoff action at the end oflast quarter Chamberlin advanced to theUndergraduate Residence League finalswith a 41-23 win over Tufts. Chamberlin willmeet the winner of last night’s Dudley-Hitchcock game in the Residence final. Atpresstime, there was still some question asto when the final would be played becauseseveral players have commitments to thevarsity baseball team.In graduate action, the Albanian Refugeestook a ten point win over Uranus and the 7Moons this past Wednesday at the FieldHouse to move into the Graduate finals. TheRefugees will take on the winner of lastnight's Mr. Bill Show - Snow Bears game to¬morrow afternoon in the Field House,12:30. "SocimSocim started yesterday. The IM Reportwill have results starting next week and anew feature this year, the Socim Top Ten.SoftballThe softball season will be much differentthis year. Teams can enter in one or bothkinds of the new setup. Option one is a lad¬der tournament.Teams will be placed in a ladder tourna¬ment composed of 5-7 teams. Teams maychallenge any team on the two rungs imme¬diately above. See example:1. Red2. White3. Blue4. Green5. Orange6. Yellow-Team Green may challenge team Whiteor Blue. When a challenger defeats a de¬fender, the two teams switch places. A chal¬lenger will be required to offer two differentdates to a defender. A defender must ac¬cept. negotiate an agreeable time, or lose bydefault. A master sheet of available fieldswill be posted and equipment will be distri¬buted from Ida Noyes Hall. No officials willbe used. Ladder tournament winners willSports BriefsMaroonCalendarThe University of Chicago baseballteam’s scheduled opening game vs. Concor¬dia Teachers College was rained out thispast Wednesday. The Maroons will playtheir home home opener tomorrow7, as theytake on Chicago State University in a doub¬leheader at Stagg Field. The first gamebegins at noon.In other University sports activities thisweekend, the Women’s Softball team meetsNortheastern University today at 4:00 onNorth Field (located between the HenryCrow'n Field House and Pierce Hall). OnSaturday, both the Men’s and Women’s Out¬door Track teams have meets. The Men’steam will be at Illinois-Chicago Circle, whilethe Women’s team travels to Wheaton fortheir meet with Wheaton College.Staffersreceive awardsCongratulations are in order for threeMaroon Sports Staffers who receivedawards in the International Paper- Sports Il¬lustrated Sportswriting Contest. Mark YVal-lach won a second-place award, while How¬ard Suls took a third place award. AndyRothman received second and third placeawards for editing the two stories. Roth¬man, who served as the Maroon’s SDorts ed¬itor since last September has become theUniversity’s new Sports Information Spe¬cialist, taking over for Jim Condon, whograduated from the business school thiswinter. Replacing Rothman will be MarkErwin, a sophomore in the College. meet in a single elimination tournament.Option two consists of mini-tournaments.Four team mini-tournaments will be con¬ducted on Saturdays and Sundays. The win¬ners of these tournaments will meet in a sin¬gle elimination tournament. Officials will beprovided for these mini-tournaments.These options will be available in men’s,women’s and coed tournaments on the un¬dergraduate and graduate level and also inopen recreation competition. The winners ofoption 1 and 2 in each division will partici¬pate in a playoff for the title of All-Universi¬ty Champion.SwimmingContinued from page 20relay team of Phil Hofmann, Mike Noble,Steve Frederick, and Andy Neff capturedsecond place and broke another universityrecord. Andy Neff, Adrian Trevino, MikeNoble, and Tim Iida also broke the schoolrecord in the Meldy relay w'hich led to a finethird place finish. Also, Andy Neff set a newschool record in the 100 yard backstroke legof the relay. Finally, the 400 freestyle relayteam captured 4th place in the meet.Members of this relay included Scott Cory,Phil Hofmann, Tim Iida, and Steve Fre¬derick.Other fine individual performances wereturned in by Adrian Trevino, Scott Cory, andTad McGwire. Junior captain Adrian Tre¬vino scored in three events, capturing fourthThe University of Chicago Sailing Teamopened its spring season with a regatta atSouthern Illinois University in Carbondale.Schools represented at the regatta besidesChicago were Southern Illinois, the Univer¬sity of Illinois, Purdue, Marquette, Chicago-Circle, the University of Kansas, and Wa¬bash College. Representing Chicago wereTeam Captain Edward Raha, Roger Lyon.John Podmajersky and Marc Golberg. Theteam was anticipating warm weather andw as surprised w hen the temperature barelybroke the fifty degree mark.For the first few races, the Chicago teamdid not sail up to their potential, indicativeof the fact that they hadn’t sailed all winterand that this regatta was the first time somemembers sailed together. After the lunchbreak, the sailors returned to the w ater as anew team. Before lunch, the team's bestperformance was a fourth place finish.After lunch, the Chicago team pulled consis¬tent seconds and thirds and missed firsts bya hair. The outstanding performance ofskippers Podmajersky and Lyon enabled Scott Rat'andIM Basketball nightlife at the field houseplace in the 100 yard butterfly, 9th place inthe 200 yard butterfly, and 10th in the 200yard individual medley. Scott Cory, a fresh¬man, won seventh place in the 50 yard freestyle, 8th place in the 100 yard freestyle, and8th in the 100 yard backstroke. SophomoreTad McGwire dived to two 9th place fin¬ishes, in the one meter required and the oneChicago to move up in the standings tofourth place behind SIU, Prudue and Illi¬nois. At one time in the regatta, it appearedthat Chicago might overtake Illinois, but anuntimely collision put an end to these hopes.The collision occurred w hen Chicago was insecond place behind SIU. For no apparentreason, the SIU boat went out of control,turned completely around, and collided withthe Chicago boat head on and with fullsteam. When the shredded fiberglass set¬tled, there was a hole in the side of the Chi¬cago boat which lost all forward momen¬tum. The team decided to continue,how ever they had been passed by four otherboats. Nonetheless, Chicago finished therace fourth, establishing a fourth placestanding in the regatta.The sailors now head for Purdue thisweekend, with the women going to Wiscon¬sin two weekends from now for a womensregatta. The club would like to invite all in¬terested persons to attend the sailing/rac¬ing clinic held in Eckhert 133, Wednesdaynights at 6:30.John Podmajersky guides Chicago boat (#2)Sailors cruise to third Crew squadtakes to waterBy Lina GoodeThe Women’s Crew team has whet its ap¬petite for rowing and competing after a fullweek of training on-the-water at the Univer¬sity of Tennessee in Knoxville over springbreak, March 22-29. Team members spenteight days in the southern city rowing dailyto get an edge on fellow7 Midwestern compet¬itors who are still not on the water athome.“A week of on-the-water spring training isextremely beneficial for a team like ours,”Coach Susan Urbas said. “In one week oftwice-daily workouts, we can accomplish atremendous amount, as is evidenced by theprogress made by our novices during ourtrip. The intense training is essential for usto be competitive with other area crews whotrain in Florida, Alabama, and Texas overspring break, and who, like us. do not get ontheir home water until mid- or late April.”The oarswomen will open their spring rac¬ing season April 19 at the Iowa City SprintsRegatta, but between now and then, theyare planning another carwash to help payfor their week in Knoxville and the upcomingtravel season.meter optional diving events. McGwire wasalso in the water long enough to capture asurprising ninth place finish in the 50 yardfreestyle.Although performances by Andy Neff andTim Iida were outstanding, their contribu¬tions alone were not strong enough to winthird place in the meet. Several other swim¬mers provided strong, almost unnoticedsupport. Senior Mike Kundmann. swimmingin his last collegiate meet, scored pointswith two 12th place finishes in the 400 indi¬vidual medley and 200 breast. Alan Buckler,a sophomore, and junior Mark Zoellerscored in both the 200 yard backstroke andin the individual medley. Sophomores BillLandschulz and Don Dowling, although notscoring, had fantastic drops over theirformer best times in the 500 yard freestyleAlso, sprinters Mike Gatch and John Erraz-ti, both freshmen, cut much time off theirprevious best times in the 100 yard freestyle,inspiring the Maroons to fine finishes inlater events. Coach Anderson felt the 100yard freestyle was the turning point of themeet, when Gatch and Errazti's outstandingtime drops in the event motivated the teamto their fine overall finish.Finally, after months of two-a-days anddual meets, the men's swimming season hasdrawn to a close. Now Coach Anderson willstart to prepare for next season; hopingprospects choose Chicago, and trying togain financial support for a new facility. An¬derson believes the team's outstanding per¬formance in Conference this year justifiestheir desire for a new pool.The Maroonwill publish sportseach Fridayduringthequarter.The Chicago Maroon Friday, April 4, 1980—21CalendarFRIDAYRockefeller Chapel: Good Friday Ecumenical Ser¬vice, 12:00-12:50 pm.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Joint Persian-Turkish Circle - “Expressive Language in Persianand Turkish” speaker Fusun Leventoglu and RachelLehr, 12:30 pm, Pick 218.Geophysical Sciences Colloquium: “Arctic PhysicalProcesses and Global Climate" speaker G. F. Her¬man, 1:30 pm. Hinds Lab Auditorium.Calvert House: Stations of the Cross, 2:30 pm.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Arabic Circle -"The Scientific Spirit in Jahiz ’Kit ab al-Hayawan”3:30 pm. Pick 218.Women's Union: Meets at 5:00 pm in the Women’sUnion office above the Frog and Peach, Ida NoyesCalvert House: Celebration of the Lord's Passion,5:00 pm, Bond Chapel.Rockefeller Chapel: Vespers Service, 5:00 pm.UC Gymnastics Club: Instruction available 5:30-8:00pm, Bartlett gym, free.Hillel: Yavneh (Orthodox) Passover Services, 6:00pm, Hillel.Doc Films: “Animal House” 6:45. 9:00 and 11:15 pm,Cobb.UC Karate Club: Meets 7:00 pm in the dance roomof Ida Noyes.Crossroads: Games night and Social evening, 7:30pm.Students for a Libertarian Society: film — “TheFountainhead" 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes East LoungeFree. All invitedSATURDAYKundalini Yoga: Yoga Intensive, 8:30 am. ReynoldsClub Lounge.Hillel: Yavneh (Orthodox) Passover Services, 9:15am. Hillel.Compton Lecture Series: "The History of Cosmolo-gy-Emuna Elish to the Big Bang" 11:00 am, Eckhartroom 133.UC Gymnastics Club: Instruction available 2:00-5:00pm, Bartlett gym, tree.Calvert House: Individual Sacrament of Reconcilia¬tion, 4-5 pm.International House: Asian Food Festival-foodfrom 5 countries. 5:30-7:30 serving tickets atdoor.Crossroads: Buffet Style Dinner-6:00 pm. No reser¬vations necessary.Doc Films: "Peppermint Soda" 7:15 and 9:30 pm,Cobb. Crossroads: An evening of classical Indian dance,7:30 pm, admission free.Rockefeller Chapel: Easter Eve Vigil, 8:00 pm.Calvert House: Easter Eve Vigil, 8:00 pm. BondChapel.SUNDAYCalvert House: Easter Sunrise Service at the Point,5:15 am.Calvert House: Easter Mass, 8:30 am.Rockefeller Chapel: Ecumenical Service of HolyCommunion, 9:00 am.Calvert House: Mass, 11:00 am, Bond Chapel.Rockefeller Chapel: University Religious Service11:00 am.Oriental Institute: Film-’Traq-Stairway to theGods” 2:00 pm, Oriental Institute.Crossroads: Bridge. 3:00 pm. Beginners and expertswelcome.Calvert House: Mass, 5:00 pm.Hillel: Yavneh (Orthodox) Services, 6:00 pm, Hil¬lel.Calvert House: Easter Supper, 6:00 pm.Doc Films: “Orchestra Rehearsal" 7:15 and 9:00 pm,Cobb.Tai Chi Ch’uan: Meets 7:30 pm, 4945 S. Dorchester(enter on 50th).MONDAYHillel: Yavneh (Orthodox) Passover Services, 9:15am, Hillel.Hillel: Upstairs Minyan (Conservative) PassoverServices, 10:00 am, Hillel.Dept of Microbiology: “Approaches to a GeneticDisorder: Ataxia Telangiectasia" speaker Dr. Ye-chiel Backer, 2:30 pm, Cummings 11th floor seminarroom.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Lecture-“IslamicManuscript Resources in the USSR" speaker JohnWoods, 4:00 pm. Pick 022.Dept of Chemistry: Lecture-“How do EnzymesWork?" speaker William Lipscomb, 4:00 pm, Kent107.UC Gymnastics Club: Instruction available 5:30-8:00pm, Bartlett gym, free.Chess Club Meeting: 7:00 pm, Ida Noyes MemorialRoom.UC Karate Club; Meets 7:00 pm in the dance roomof Ida Noyes.Hillel: Yavneh (Orthodox) Passover Service, 7:00pm, Hillel.Amnesty International: Meeting at 7:30 pm,Crossroads Student Center 5621 S. Blackstone.Progressive Union: General meeting 7:30 pm, IdaNoyes. All welcome.Doc Films: “Black Girl” 8:00 pm, Cobb. 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 46,000-46,900All apartments include new kitchens and appliances,new bathrooms, carpeting and decorating (colors ofyour choice), triple-track storm windows and kitchenstorm doors, modern laundry facilities and individuallocker space.Your inspection is invited,51 26 S. Kimbark Ave. - Phone 643-4489Harry A. Zisook & Sons, Agts.786-9200BEGINNING CHINESESUMMFJt CO!1 USES< tffVtvrl bv:( . Y. BorrhrrtSenior l.ertntvr in < hinrsf*al flu* l niversilv of ( hiranoINTENSIVE ( Ol USE June 16-Augn.t K - 6:00-1 1:50 A 2:00-3:20 Mon. through Fri. Introduction to speaking, reading. i\writing in Modern Mandarin. Cover- the material pre-enled inmost I «t v r. college level courses. Fee $6.">0.EVENING COI USE June l6-\ngust 22 Tue». N Thur-. Intro¬duction to basic spoken Mandarin Chinese. Cour-e will he con¬tinued in the fall for those interested in further stink. Fee $250.Both courses limit 12 students. For further informationcall 103-6120- 2:30-6:00. TheFLAMINGOand CABANA CLUB5500 S. Shore Drive• Studio and 1 Bedroom• Furnished and Unfurnished• U. of (]. hits slop• ( hitdoor Pool and Gardens• Carpeting anil Drapes Inch• Security• University Subsidy forStudents and Staff• Delicatessen• Barber Shop• Beauty Shop• J.B.l). Restaurant• Dentist• ValetFREE PARKINGM.SnyderPis 2-3800f thefunny papers5238 S. Blackstone955-0974Student Volunteer BureauApril 7 at 7:30 p.m.Ida Noyes 1st Floor LoungeCome and talk about: Why Volunteer? Where?Court Theatre presentsMETAMORPHOSISBy Fran/ Kafka Directed By WernerKrieglsteinFriday, April 4 and Saturday, April 58:30 P.M.Reynolds Club Theatre753-3581$2.50 general admission; $1.50 discountThere will be a discussion of the play after each performance Court Studio Theatreannounces Auditions forUNCOMMON WOMENAND OTHERSby Wendy Wassersteindirected by Ronald FalzoneApril 12 & 13, 1:00-5:00Reynolds Club TheatreCall 667-1241 after 6 pm for appointment.Older Women particularly needed.GOLD CITY INN Ngiven * * * *by the MAROONOpen DoilyFrom 11:30a.m.to feOOp.m.5228 Harper 493-2559|mw Hiryir Covrt)Fat more for less.A Gold Mine Ot Good Food”Student Discount;10% for table service5% for take home ^Hyde Park's Bast CantoneseIN? SATURDAYAPRIL 58:30-1 P.M.Reynolds Club Lounge.^e University of Chicago Kundalini YogaSociety offers a four hour introductory Yoga in¬tensive. If you are interested in creating a bodythat feels just right, tuning your mind to greaterclarity, learning how to cope with stress andstudy more effectively, or if you just want tospend a really enjoyable Saturday morning,come and join us at the Reynolds Club Lounge(5706 University Ave.). Please come with afairly empty stomach, some loose fittingclothes, a blanket and ten dollars.MAY THE FORCE BE WITH YOU! Paramount Pictures Presents A HARRY SAITZMAN Production A HER8LRT ROSS fireStalling ALAN BATES LESLIE BROWNE and GEORGE OE LA PENA "NUINSKY"Alsu Stalling ALAN BALE COLIN BLAKELY CARLA ERACDEmt Prato HARRY SALIZMAN Screenplay Ay HOGR WHEELERProduced by NORA KAYE and SIANLEY (TTOOLE Directed by HERBERT ROSSCaoyngM 4 MCMUJU try Hcfurea CoT*yhor ** ft—ruCR A Paramount PictureFriday: 6:20, 8:40 6 11:00Saturday: 1:40, 4:00, 6:20, 8:40 6 11:00Sunday: 2:50, 4:SO, 7:10 8 9:50Mon. — Thurv: 7:00 6 9:15NOW SHOWINGEXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENTReduced parking at 2 East Oak Street 944-2966Chicago Maroon Friday, April 4, 1980CLASSIFIED ADSAD RATESMaroon classifieds are effective andcheap. Place them in person at theMaroon business office in Ida NoyesHall by mail to the Maroon, Ida NoyesHall room 304, 1212 E. 59th St.,Chicago, 60637. All ads must be paid inadvance. Rates: 60' per line (30spaces) for U of C people, 75' per lineotherwise. $1 for special headline.Deadlines: For Tuesday paper, 12noon Friday; for Friday, 12 noonWednesday.Display advertising rates areavailable upon request. 753 3263.SPACESUMMER SUBLET • 3 br. 2 ba. apt.date and price negot. fully equippedON CAMPUS modern 947-9597 eves.WANTED: Male roommate to shareone bedroom apt 5480 Cornell. $165.Phone 643-1482 after 6 p.m.Female roommate wanted. Newlydecorated apt. 2 baths. Along a mini¬bus route. 57th and Drexel. CallCarole. 753-3776.Male roommate wanted to share 2 br.condo on 56th and Dorchester. $165month -t- '/2 electricity. Call 947-9262.TWO ROOMS avail, in apt. close tocampus. $102/mo. 288-8508.F wtd. to share 3-bdrm ap1. 52nd +Dorchester. May - Aug 31 w/poss. Falloption. 493-2767.2 br. Coop w/den, 2nd fl wb fpl, tilebath, near park. S. Shore. Low mo.assess., $20,000. 221-6817 eves.,wkends.1 bdrm in 3 bdrm apt. Lake view, a/c,on minibus routes. 24 hr. security.Parking. Start June. Call Jane, 7-6897or 538-6159.ROOMMATE WANTED One bdrmavailable in 4 bdrm apt at 58th andKenwood $123.75/mo. Avail, im¬mediately. 955-2220. Keep trying.Hy. Pk. Nr. UC 4 rm apt. tile bath.,adults, avaul now reas. BU8-0718.Sublet w. fall option; 3 rms, 1 bdrm.Woodiawn Ave. Near campus. Univer¬sity bldg. $258/mo. U.C. faculty, staffonly. Call Tom. 753-3342daysFemale roommate wanted. $150 1 bd.in 2 bd. apt. Nonsmoker on C bus route.Kay 947-6363.Studio apt avail May 1. Pref grad stu¬dent. $225/mo. 238-7941.25 dollars that's peanuts. $’00 rewardfor a lease for a 4 bedroom apt. Star¬ting approx. June 1, Call 684-0928 or753-4109 afterip.m,Roommate needed-nice 2 story car¬riage house on UC bus route 7352 S.Shore Dr. $140/mo Call Albert.363-4061 days. 734-7449 evenings Keeptrying.Looking for tenant or an apt? Come toStudent Govt. Housing service. Listupdated weekly.Large room, priv. oath, near campus.493-5271.Roommate wanted to share beautiful,spacious carriage house in SouthShore. Good location. Conveninenftransportation Mature male or stu¬dent preferred. Rent from $100 to$137.50 per month including utilities.Call 721-6510.Graduate Families with kids. Saveover $100 per month on Rent.Moderate income. 667-4038.Furnished 2 bdrm apt. good location.Harper Ave. For two people only av.June 15/80. Call 955-7083.Male mature roommate wanted toshare 2 br furnished condo in 56th andDorchester, $165.00 month + V2 electricity. Call 947-9262.Nicely furnished room in a 2 bedroomapt. Av. July 1/80 Call 955-7083.FOR RENT E. Hyde Pk. 1 bdrm large493-3822.CONDO FOR SALE, E Hyde Pk 2bdrm new condition. 40's 493-3822 or493-2179.Rental avail. June 15-Oct 1.Remarkable Hyde Park hse and Irgdog (food prepaid); furn, 3 bdrms, CA,$450 mo + ufil. Faculty or seriouscouple call 955-9549.PEOPLE WANTEDEASY EXTRA INCOME! $500/1000Stuffing envelopes-Guaranteed. Sendself addressed stamped envelope to:DEXTER ENTERPRISES 3039 ShrinePI. LA, CA 90007,Babysitter needed for 4-year old girlMonday afternoons for 3 hours. Pleasecall 684-0381 Harper and 55th. Provideown transportation.JOIN Women's Crew. Call Susan.955-0932 or Virginia, 3-2233 4315.COUNSELORS: Adirondack boyscamp Lake Placid NY area. 7Vj weeks.$500-600; sailing, riflery, trip leaders,sports, driver. *9 Mill Valley Rd. Pitt-sford NY 14534. Interview on campus.Volunteer to monitor/record tapes forblind students. Stop by Hinds 59B orphone 268-7077,Address and stuff envelopes at home.$800 possible per month Any age orlocation. See ad under Business Opportunities. Triple "S". Library on campus seeks partimestudent assistant to shelve books.Call Personnel, 955-4545, between9:30am and 1:00pm to arrange inter¬view.Typist needed for 35 page paper.Thesis quality German quotes. Foot¬notes, biblography. Call Linda.753-2249 rm 1311.IM ONE, a Lesbian intermural soft-ball team is now open to newmembers. Skill discouraged. All U.C.affiliated Lesbians welcome. Call753-3274 Th. eves.INTERESTED in playing FIELDHOCKEY? Call Veronica 3-2249 rm1416 for information.WANTED: Volunteers to be taught"focusing," a technique developed byE.T. Gendlin, PH.D Contact: DoraleeGrindler at 753-2085 or come toBeecher 407.DEDICATED LEAD SINGER &GUITAR PLAYER wanted for ver¬satile, innovated, drives ROCK BAND.783 4896 Days, 363-9038 Nites.MANUSCRIPT TYPIST (3) Part time(12/15 hours/week), schoolyear, fulltime summer if desired. Will be train¬ed to type camera-ready copy on IBMcomposers Must type 55 wpm. Abilitytype Spanish or French copydesirable. Top student rates. ContactGeorge Rumsy, Community andFamily Study Center, 753-2518.RECEPTIONIST/SECRETARY TheGraduate School of Business seeksreliable and punctual secretary withexcellent typing and communicationskills. Duties include answeringphones, greeting and directingvisitors, typing, and performinggeneral secretarial tasks. C VIII. CallAlison Fairly 753-4442 in the personneloffice. AA/EOE.ACCOUNTING ASSISTANT, TheGraduate School of Business seeks fastand accurate Accounting Assistant tohandle payroll of over 200 members,and perform some tasks associatedwith the keeping of accounts. Natureof the position requires discretion. CIX. Call Marla Rivers. 753-4443 in thePersonnel Office. AA/EOE.Part time temporary help wanted on$3.50 per hour. Call April 4, 236-1996,ask for Miss Sawyer.Jr., Sr., or Grad School Women. EarnSubstantial Extra income working 3 or4 hrs. weekly from dorm or apt667-4339 evenings.College students. Earn $50 weekly ormore selling food bars in dorms andfrats. Call Jim 667-4038.The Chicago Counseling andPsychotherapy Center, 5711 SouthWoodiawn, Chicago, IL 60637 aRegistered Psychological Agency#71 42, has openings for women (2-3)and men (1-2) in an established ongo¬ing Long Term Therapy Group. Thegroup meeTs weekly on Thursdayevenings 8-10 pm. May 1, 1980 will bethe first meeting with the newmembers Fee is $45/month, first twomonths payable in advance. Groupleaders: Margaret S Warner Ph.D,and William Bradley MTS. Call684-1800 and leave message tor bill toset up preliminary service.Teachers, Real Estate or Manage¬ment, married, 25 to 40, degree.Substantial Sideline Income 667-4339for appt. No information given ontelephone.PEOPLE FOR SALEARTWORK - posters, illustration,calligraphy, invitations, etc. NoelYovovich 5441 S. Kenwood 493 2399.Typist-dissertation quality, help withgrammar, language, as needed. Feedepending on manuscript. IBM Selectrie. Judith. 955-4417.GRAPHS, figures for all kinds of mss.Perfection guaranteed. Lin 3 4887.624-6218 evenings.Will do typing (IBM) 821-0940.SERVICESPsychotherapy and counseling Feeson a sliding scale; insurance acceptedJoan Rothchild Hardin, PhD,registered psychologist. In Hyde Park.493-8766 days and eves, for appt.IBM Typewriter serv. 10 yrs. exp stu¬dent and faculty discounts. Call LeRoy787-8220 anytime.Tennis lessons B. Lyttle. 324 0654We load or haul almost anythingalmost anywhere. Both labor andtruck provided. Call W P Bear241-7052LOST AND FOUNDFOUND Man's watch, early March, at57th and Woodiawn. Call 955-1880 amsor eves to claim.FOUND: Very small black and brownfemale dog, needs a home. Sweetdisposition Found but cannot keep.Call 7S3-1813.LOST: MIT class ring 1977. Left inBrain Research washroom 4/2. Call J.Warren 667-1794 after 9 p.m.FOR SALECollectors, U of C dinner w/9 bldgscenes of campus. Eichner 914 AOakcrest Charleston, IL 61920.Fender Rhodes 88 electr. piano $800753-4896day; 288-7688 ni.10 Family Yard Sale!Rain or Shine! Saturday April 5 9 am-2 pm4846 S. KimbarkHousehold Items, antiques etc.Royal Typewriter-Long Carriage (14inch) call 288-8237.1974 Honda Civic with front enddamage for sale $350 or best offer. 25mpg/city. 35 hwy when working.Sidney 752-1591. ,2 pull up chairs, bridge chairs, luggagecarry on* 2 single bedspreads, a stan¬ding lamp, lawn furnituyre, veryreasonable. Call 667-6222.FOR RENTStarboat available. Racing condition.Need partner/will rent to experiencedsailor for summer. Call 955-9549.SCENESMonday morning Hatha Yoga classesin Hyde Park. Beginning April 14. Forbeginners or those with some ex¬perience. Certified instruction. For in¬fo call 324-5300 x 51 or 52.FREE SWIMMING INSTRUCTION:Ida Noyes Hall, 7:30-8:30 pm Tuesdaybeginning April, 1980. M. Benson.PERSONALSWRITER'S WORKSHOP (Plaza2-8377)L.F.U. in'82!We just had twins and can't keep ourtwo young cats. They're free, friendly,house trained, neutered, and haveshots. Cat lovers help us! Call 684-6584before 10 pmWell, there go Dave and Phil out thewindow. Meanwhile, through the doorcomes yours truly. GIZMO.QWERTY: You're more than welcomefor the welcome! But what are you do¬ing in such diety-forsaken territory?Barefoot Dreamer.Woman who have been sexuallyharassed at UC: I am attending a con¬ference and would be interested inyour story. Susan, 753-2249 rm 3418 xleave message.MADMAN-Your madness is con¬tagious. The Assassination is on-arewe going to Rio? I have the keys.Play.it Again Sam??? 2 used churchpianos yours for the taking. Good forparts, and tuning practice. Restora¬tion possible. Call 363-0505 . 8 00am-4:00 pm.FAN, shine on you crazy diamond,.Maybe we'll see things as they are bythe light. IzakClean Gene-Got Brass in Pocket?MimiWell me and Haprer we hung out atJimmy's, bought a gram, got stonedevery nigh; a» the point, compareo theMed (great people bad oizza) to Ed's(stiff crowd but choice pizza) and iustplain hao a great break in wonderfulHyde Park.RegInterested in mime? Come to EFClown's mime worksnop this Saturoayat 1:00 in Ida Noyes Cloister Club!Summer racing crew for 33-ft. Tarten10. Serious sailors cal! Dick Fiedler871-2043.Fish Lips: Can I kiss you?Barefoot Dreamer: What a misty, spr¬ing heralding pseudonym! Send mesome images of yourself. (Nocturnalvisions optional) Franco Fone.Malka Mouse: Chag Sameach!!!Erbecky, I'm sure I'm a Prisoner, butwhich side am I against? no. 6QWERTY: Glad to see you haven'tpawned your typewriter and let all usReader personalities down! Lookingfor labia with ten holes that play theblues.EUROPEEUROPE this summer. Low cost tourAcademic credit available. Call753-4865 (day); 752-8426 (evening).TAICHIThe Tai Chi Club meets every Sundayat 7:30 pm at 4945 S. Dorchester (enteron 50th). Everyone welcome to an in¬troductory class.MOVE NOWHOTLINEVOLUNTEERSFinal sign-ups for people interested incommitting their time and skills to theUC Hotline. Call today 493 3111 5-6:30pm, 752-5860 Saturday, Sunday10-11:30 am Graduates andundergraduates welcome.CO-OPSDELIGHTFUL 2 BDRM. Wbfpic.Beamed ceiling oak firs and mod kitand bath in charming co-op nr. campus. $52,000 for equity. Call EleanorCoe KENNEDY, RYAN, MONIGAL &ASSOCIATES, INC. 5508 S. Lake Park667-6666 HOUSESSOUTH SHORE 4 bdrm in primeresidential area lovely yard 2 car gar.Family rm. leaded glass. Call EleanorCoe. KENNEDY, RYAN, MONIGAL &ASSOCIATES, INC. 5508 S. Lake Park,667 66661920's RANCH Unique showpiece ongrounds 125 x 135 , 30 ft. solarium,music room, library, tiffany glassthroughout, plus coach house. $159,000Call Eleanor Coe. KENNEDY, RYAN,MONIGAL & ASSOCIATES, INC. 5508S. Lake Park, 667-6666.CLASSIC BRICK 4 spacious bedrms,modern bath, airy eat-in kitchen,family room, woodburning frplc. 2 cargarage. Move in condition. Call Jan orEleanor. KENNEDY, RYAN,MONIGAL & ASSOCIATES INC 5508S. Lake Park 667 6666NEW FORLEFTHANDERSScissors, school supplies, kitchen aids,etc. Send stamped envelope for freebrochure. Lefty's Unlimited, P.0 Box302, Jamaica, NY 11426.JCLCLASSConfused by JCL error messages?Want to use tapes and disks? Solvethese and other JCL problems by tak¬ing the COMP-CENTER'S JCL courseSix sessions beginning April 14. cost$20. Come to Computation Centerbefore April 11 to register-call 753-8400for more information.MOVE NOWINQUIRYThe quarterly undergraduate journalINQUIRY is now accepting essays onall subjects for its Spring issue Thedeadline for submissions is Friday of5th week. Send via fac-x to INQUIRY,Ida Noyes checkroom.MIME WORKSHOP!E F Clown and Co will be conducting amime workshop to be led by Jim Pre-sant on Sat, April 5 at 1:00 in Ida NoyesCloister Club. No Charge All welcometo attend.SPSS CLASSLearn to use SPSS Statistical Packagefor analyzing data. 6 sessions: $25.Computer time provided. Come toComputation Center before April 11 toregister-call 753-8400 for information.Class starts April 15.MARX ANDGOETHE?Slavic porum presents a lecture byProf Adrian Montoro on "Tamerlaneand the Revolutionary Proletariat."Wed Apr. 9, 7:30 pm Ida Noyes EastLounge.PROFESSIONALRECORDING24 tracks, computer automated mix¬ing, various outboard equipment.Demo rates extremely reasonablecall: Experienced Engineering after6:00 pm 493-3810. Food from 5 Asian countries at I-House's FOOD FESTIVAL Sat. April 5at 5:30 pm. Assembly Hall. Chinese,Japanese, Korean, Malaysian, Thai.Coupons sold for .75 so you can sampleall fhe varieties Including dessert andrefreshments. 1414 E. 59th Street.5:50-7:30 pm serving.CAMBODIAFORUM ON CAMBODIA Janet KullerAmerican Friends Service Comm, onher recent trip to Cambodia, slides,Film: "Cambodia Year Zero"Wednesday, April 9 at 7:30. ReynoldsClub East Lounge Sponsored by Cam¬bodia Relief Now. Organizationalmeeting to follow.WOMEN NEEDEDNormally menstruating women whohave children needed as medicalresearch volunteers reimbursement is$275.00 Call Dr. Hatch at 7-1739 or7-5365.HOP HOPA Singular Group is having extendedhours this Saturday from 11 to 4 forEaster. Stop in and browse at the cor¬ner of 57th and Woodiawn in theUnitarian Church.WOMEN'SSELF-DEFENSEChimera Women's self-defense beginsMon Apr 7, 7-9 pm, at the BlueGargoyle. Call 332-5540LUNCHTIMECONCERTSEvery Thursday at 12:15 in ReynoldsNorth Lounge. This week, April 10, is aspecial performance of L'Histoire duSoldat concert suite of Igor Stravin¬sky, performed by an ensemble ofmusicians conducted by BarbaraSchubert. Sponsored by the Depart¬ment of Music.YOGARevitalize and harmonize body mindand spirit with yoga postures,breathing and meditation Springclasses begin Tues. April 15 5:30-7:00at the Gargoyle-15 sessions $35 callDobbi 288-3706, 664-6650.SELF-HYPNOSISSEMINARSelf-hypnosis can help you create yourlife the way you want it. Learn to useself-hyonosis to improve concentretion s*udy skills and exam preparationmore effectively, ioentity ana actualize goals, increase creativity,aevelop physical skills, improvehealth, self-esteem and change nabitsBegins on campus Tues. April 15 at theGargoyle 7 00-9:00 pm, 5 sessions $65taught by Dobbi Kerman MAS U of Cgraduate clinical hypnotherapy pro¬gram call 288-3706, 664-6650HOLISTICHEALTHLearn what creates the optimallyhealthy life and re-create yours! En¬joy high levels of health and well beingthrough designing and implementing your own holistic program through useof inventories, life style diary,visualization and behavorial visualizetion self-management. Includes nutri¬tion, aerobics, stress-management,life-satisfaction, self-healing. Taughtby Dobbi Kerman MS holistic healthconsultant 5 sessions $55 begins onCampus Tues. April 15 9:00-10:30 atthe Gargoyle call 288-3706,664-6650EDUCATIONSPECIALIST/PROGRAMMERGraduate school of Business needsProgrammer in its Computing Ser¬vices division to provide programmingadvice, to program in FORTRAN, toact as document librarian, and tosupervise student advisers. Program¬ming experience, statistical ex¬perience, and excellent communica¬tion skills required. Experience withDEC helpful Salary: 14-20 K, depen¬ding on experience. Contact ScottTeissier, 753-4291. EOE/AATIREDOFDORMLIFE?DELTA UPSILON, a co-ed fraternity,is taking applications for summer and'80-'81 residents. We feature low rent,no meal contract, on campus location,and a relaxed atmosphere Call753 3444 for more info, or drop by andpick up an application. Undergrads on¬ly. Apply by April 19.COMP-CENTERCLASSESThe spring quarter class list is cur¬rently available. Seminars are in¬troduction to: DEC-20, Superwylbur,Superwylbur Macro, DEC-20 Batch,1022, and SCRIPT Courses in SPSS,JCL and BASIC. For more informa¬tion, come to main ComputationCenter, Ri C-B27, or Business Office,5737 S. University, or call 753-8400WOMENSEXERCISEex class 9:30-10:30 T + Th, 10a Noyesdance room, 752-3651 for info.CODERSNational Opinion Research Centerneeds individuals to perform a varietyof clerical tasks associated with thedata collection Dortion or a survey Accuracy essential. 3712 hours per week$4.25 per hour plus benefits. Appiy inoerson at 6030 Soutn Ellis Ave An Af¬firmative Action/Equal OpportunityEmployerBASIC CLASSLearn to program in BASIC on meDEC-20 computer Register at Conputation Center before April u for tsession course beginning April 15. Cos*$25 Computer time provided. CaH753-8400 for more informationKUNDALINIYOGACome to our introductory yoga internsive! See display ad!PYSANKYUkranian Easter eggs $3 to $6 Supplyis limited. Call Rich at 753-2249 room3308 or leave message in box 3308Woodward Court.TEN-TWENTY-TWOMaintain a bibliography? Index arecord collection? Keep a name andaddress file? System 1022, which runson the Comp-Center's DEC-20 com¬puter, will help you in these tasks andmany more involving entering andretrieving data. A two sessions in¬troductory seminar to 1022 will be heldTuesday and Thursday. April 15 and17, 3:30-5:00 pm, RI 180. All welcome.No charge.RUGBYRubgy practice Tue and Thur 4:00 pmStagg Field all interested welcomeMOVE NOWBUSINESSOPPORTUNITIESAddress and stuff envelopes at home$800 per month, possible. Offer-details,send $1.00 (refundable) to: Triple "S",869-Til Juniper, Pinon Hills, CA 92372ASIAN FOODFESTIVALSATURDAY SURFSIDERetreat (full-time) with yourfamily to Lake Michigan sshore on high bluff of DuneAcres. Panoramic windowseven in kitchen. Only 45minutes from Hyde Park(also on South Shore Trainline). Excellent schools lowtaxes great neighbors. Fourbedrooms - high cathedralliving room has cozyfireplace Designed by Keck(Hyde Park s favoritearchitect) - to settle estateappraised price lowS200 000 s. Call Chicago No.493-6153. or (219) 926-2176ChestertonCall Chicago No.493-6153, or(219)926 2176ChestertonHudson Co. COUNTRYLIFENear Michigan City, Ind. (exiton Tollway 1 hr.) Horses O K.Swimming O.K. (on your ownprivate lake). Newly finishedbrick 4 bedroom, 2 bath brickradiant heat - solar floor - toceiling windows. Total 3acres available if desired.Woodburning fireplace -white oak planked ceiling.Everything under warranty.Low faxes. - Coolspringschools - Price for House &2 acre $85,000 - assumable13.5% mortgage no points.Call Chicago493-6153 or(219)926-2176Hudson Co.IThe Chicago AAaroon Friday, April 4, 1980—234 The SAO Mini Courses for SpringCloggingBaker’s ClayLeaded GlassFor additional info, callStudent Activities753-3598 Self DefenseAmerican Sign LanguageAdv. Ballroom DancingRegistration: Wed. April 9For Students: 10a.m.-4p.m(Bring UC ID) Thur. April 1010 a.m. - 4 p.mFri. April 1110 a.m. - 4 p.m HarmonicaWine tasting(21 years & Older)Vegetarian CookingIda Noyes 210, SAOIda Noyes 210, SAOIda Noyes 210, SAO: For Faculty, Staff, Alums Fri. April 11•(and late students registration): !0 a.m. - 4 p.m. Ida Noyes 210 SAOSTUDENT CO-OP BOOK STOREBasement Reynolds ClubHours M-F 9:30-6:00Sat. 12:00 - 4:30-Used Textbooks for Spring courses-Broad selection of general stock-New Records - Classical, Folk, Jazz, Blues, Popular-we can special order at customer’s request-Latest in Games, including Dungeons and Dragons, etc.