The Chicago MaroonSolitary, singing in the West, I strike up for a new world —Walt Whitmanvol. 89 No. 54 The University of Chicago : Copyright 1980 The Chicago Maroon Friday, May 16, 1980University reinstates victimBy Rebecca LillianAlumsfetedSaturdayFederal judge Abner Mikva,novelist Kurt Vonnegut, Jr.,economist Herbert Simon, andeducator Clifton Wharton, Jr. areamong the 20 University alumniwho will be honored at the AlumniAssociation’s annual awards lun¬cheon this Saturday.Wharton will receive the AlumniMedal, which is presented to analumnus each year “for extraor¬dinary distinction in one’s field ofspecialization and extraordinaryservice to society.’’ The AlumniMedal is the highest honor theUniversity awards to its alumni.Now the Chancellor of the 64-campus State University of NewYork, Wharton has also compiled adistinguished record as aneconomist, foreign policy authori¬ty, and a fighter of world hunger.He is a member of the President’sCommission on World Hunger andhas been involved in aiding theagricultural development ofunderdeveloped nations. Whartonwas previously President ofMichigan State University.Seven alumni w ill receive PublicService Citations, which honor“those who have fulfilled theobligations of their educationthrough creative citizenship andexemplary leadership in voluntaryservice which has benefited socie¬ty and reflected credit on the Abner MikvaUniversity.”Receiving Public Service Cita¬tions will be G. Franklin F,dwards,a sociologist at Howard Universitywho has worked on urban andtransporation problems; KateHirschberg Kohn, for her work toimprove medical care for thedisabled; Jewel Stradford Lafon-tant, a Chicago civil rights lawyer;Claud L. Shaw, Executive Directorof the Council of Hyde Park Chur¬ches and Synagogues and a leaderin relief and urban revitalizationprojects; Theodore Snyder, Presi¬dent of the Sierra Club and an en¬vironmental lawyer; Mary ReedWendel, for her community andcultural work in the town of PortAngeles; and Arnold L. Tanis. forhis efforts to improve medicalcare for children in Florida.The remaining 12 alumni willreceive the Professional Achieve¬ment Award, which “recognizesthose alumni whose attainments inTurn to Page 4 The University consented Tues¬day to reinstate a clerical workerwho was dismissed while sufferingthe after-effects of a rape. In anagreement reached between theemployee, Teamsters Union local743, and the University, the em¬ployee retains her seniority andwill receive compensation for thetime she was absent.The worker’s problems began onMarch 8, when she was raped androbbed in her Woodlawn home. OnMonday, March 10, she reported toher newly transfered position withthe social sciences collegiate divi¬sion. During the following week,the victim was unable to sleep anddeveloped a “growing sense of dis¬organization.” By March 19, shefelt “totally helpless,” and walkedout of her office. In response to aco-worker’s query, she said “Iquit ”Three days after leaving her job,the worker realized the signifi¬cance of what she had done. Sheimmediately contacted the person¬nel office and her supervisor, ex¬plaining that she would like to re¬turn to work. She was informedthat this would be impossible.“I just don’t want her back,”(Katherine Karvunis) assistantDean of the College Jonathan Z.Smith told the union steward whoaided the employee.Following pressure exerted bythe union, the dean’s office in¬formed the employee that shecould resume her job on April 21. She would be considered a “newhire”, however, meaning that shewould lose her seniority and face a90 day probationary period, duringwhich time she would work withoutunion protection.As instructed, the employee re¬ported for work on April 21. Shewas then expected to sign a state¬ment verifying that, although shesuffered an unfortunate experi¬ence, the University was in no wayresponsible and therefore owed hernothing. The union steward de¬clared this statement an “insultingtravesty,” and filed notice of intentto pursue the grievance to the nextstep.On May 5, the worker, her unionsteward, and the union businessagent met with Karvunis andSmith. According to the steward.Smith persisted in discussing thetechnicalities of how a grievance isorganized and tiled. Smith repea¬tedly said that the issues involvedwere not part of the union con¬tract.“When the contract is silent,basic human dignity prevails,”said the steward.“Our humanitarian feelings onlyextend as far as giving her her jobback as a new hire,” answeredSmith, according to the stew ard.Smith then issued a written re¬sponse to the grievance, statingthat becuase the worker “voluntar¬ily resigned” from her position,she was not entitled to union ben¬efits. The statement also men¬tioned that she was reinstated as anew hire for “humanitarian rea¬sons.” After that statement was issued,the union arranged Tuesday’smeetings. The employee, the unionsteward, the union business agent,Karvunis, Director of PersonnelEdward Coleman, and UniversityMedical Center chaplain internSherry Fischer attended.According to Fischer, whoworked with the rape victim andexplained her case to the Universi¬ty, the employee's behavior was“certainly understandable, and al¬most predictable.”“There is a definite rape traumasyndrome, involving a period ofdisorganization that lasts abouttwo or three days. This is followedby a longer period of reorganiza¬tion,” Fischer said.“The victim is displaying theusual attempt at reorganizing herlife after a crisis. A rape is a majorcrisis, in which the victim can feelgrief, just as though she has lost aloved one.” said FischerThe Maroon was informed thatpublication of this story beforeTuesday's meeting could damagethe employee's bargaining power“The union wants the story madepublic," said the steward, “be¬cause we want the University com¬munity to see how a distinguishedfaculty member and administra¬tor, who repesents an institutiondevoted to humanitarian causesand liberal ideals, put his theoriesinto practice.”Smith was unavailable for com¬ment.Karvunis said “we dealt with thegrievance and the matter was set¬tled on Tuesday.”Neoconservative Podhoretz views worldNorman Podhoretz, editor ofCommentary magazine and authorof the autobiographies Making Itand Breaking Ranks, was oncampus Wednesday to deliver atalk on “The Present Danger: Dowe have the will to resist Soviet ex¬pansionism?” Andrew Patnerspoke with him about the neocon¬servative difference, quotas, thestate of Israel, his view of Sovietintentions, women’s rights, andsome reflections on his career ascritic, essayist, and memoirist.The following is an edited tran¬script of that conversation.Patner; One of the things thatyou have pointed out that sepa¬rates so-called neoconservativesfrom the traditional conservatives— people like William F. Buckley— is that for you there is still some¬thing to be said for the welfarestate and for some government in¬tervention in the economy. Giventhe new and revived critiques ofthe welfare state from the right,left, and center, do you still hold bythat view or would you revise youropinion of how much we can expectthe government to accomplish insocial policy?Podhoretz; I still believe thatgovernment has an important ruleto play in maintaining certain ofthe ground rules by which the econ¬omy operates and by which the so¬ciety lives In that sense I certainly still support the concept of govern¬ment intervention both into theeconomy and the society. I alsocontinue to support in principle theidea of the welfare state. Where Iw'ould continue to differ with crit¬ics of both the left and the right ispartly on the issue of degree andpartly and more fundamentally onthe issue of what the guiding prin¬ciple of government action oughtproperly to be in the American con¬stitutional order. It is perfectlyconsistent with the American con¬stitutional structure and with thetraditional American ethos and, bythe way, with the views of the vastmajority of people in this country,for the government to make surethat as far as humanly possible allindividuals have an equal chanceto compete for the goods of thisworld. Obviously it is impossible toestablish absolute equality of op¬portunity because people are bornwith different capacities, differenttalents, different energies, evendifferent ambitions, and luck playsa part in life no matter what voudo. The government in this sv-ternhas a right, and in fact has a uuty.to remove artificial obstacles tocompetition among individuals.This is not only the justification foranti-discrimination laws, but foranti trust legislation and the laborlegislation of the 1930s. But at someDoint the competition has to go for¬ ward, at some point the govern¬ment gets out of the picture, bothfor constitutional reasons and toencourage productivity, creati¬vity, and initiative, and to satisfymoral considerations — it is fairer,more moral, more just. But thegovernment can and should stepback in to see that the penalty forfailure is not starvation or death.The state undertakes a responsibil¬ity to put a safety net below thefree competition so that no matterwhat you do you will be assured acertain minimum of food andshelter as a matter of right ratherthan a matter of charity.The people who got to be calledconservatives were opposed to thisconsensus from the right, theywanted to unto it. They should real¬ly have been called radicals, be¬cause after the Eisenhower Repub¬lican Administration decided not toscrap the New Deal, what the so-called conservatives wanted towas very radical. The split be¬tween the so-called liberals of theSixties, the New Politics liberals as1 like to call them, and the neocon¬servatives was over how far gov¬ernment intervention legitimatelycould go. This started out as a mat¬ter of degree rather than kind andthen turned into a split over prin¬ciple. The liberals of that periodshould have in my mind beencalled socialists. In Europe they Dan NewmanNorman Podhoretzwouldhave been.but in this countrythere's a lot of fighting over a termlike liberal, because liberal is anhonorific. The people who more orless succeeded in stealing thename liberal, the socialists, took aposition that equality of opportuni¬ty was inadequate and indeed akind of fake and gradually becamecommitted to a new idea of equali¬ty of results totally different fromthe American conception of equali¬ty. Certain elites, bureaucrats,judges, not elected, not represent¬ ing majority sentiment, wouldhave the right to use the power ofgovernment to enforce their idea ofwhat is right and proper.I have changed my mind aboutwhat particular controls politicalsituations call for. The danger nowis that there will be too much gov¬ernment intervention. We alreadysee too much of it which will lead tous undermining the productive en¬ergies of the economy which wouldnot be good for anybody, least of allthe poor. I worry much more aboutthat whole complex of questionsthan I used to.Patner: Given this concern forimproving the lot of the poor,aren't you fighting against straw-men on a lot of economic issues.I’m thinking about the quota sys¬tem. . .Podhoretz: Quota systems arefar from being straw men. Theyare strengthened every day beforeour eyes.Patner: What I'm getting at isthat by directing your attackagainst the quota systems, whereare the programs coming fromthat are not mandatory quota sys¬tems, but that are going to in¬crease the numbers of minoritiesand women in positions of respon¬sibility and in education?Podhoretz: A voluntary system 1would not call a quota although ITurn to Page 3Friday May 16 8:00 p.iLaw School AuditoriumTickets are still on sale, but they’re 301113 fast$4 Students$5 All othersAvailable at the Reynolds Club Box Office2—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, May 16, 1980 "7\ A:'/r '‘ 7rrv/''70 % or/7**R/XMONDAY-THUR5WK/ f :30AM- 6:30PM \$ FRIDAY 9. 30AM- f. QOPMW S^TURQAV /IIOOM-‘/:oopm%$ 752-*OftTinlandizationContinued from Page ] of the U.S. could start tomorrow’worry about itThere are regulations nrome gated bythe hundreds oi vanous agencies of the fed¬eral government which mandate quota sys¬tems in hiring and promotion in jobs,schools, college admissions. Some of theseso-called voluntary systems are not reallyvoluntary. They are systems that are adopt¬ed in advance of the coercion that could beexpected, sort of a preemptive surrender.The courts have pretty consistently sus¬tained these systems where racial, and nowsexual, minorities are concerned. Whatyou’ve got here is a very powerful and verypowerfully established social policy, thathardly dares to admit to call itself by its truename. This is gradually reshaping Ameri¬can society in a way that I consider both un¬just and dangerous.The provision of opportunity says nothingabout the results that will follow. The objec¬tive, if you accept my premises and the pre¬mises that I believe are written in to theAmerican constitutional system, is thatequality of opportunity is a right. You cantake action, if you like affirmative action, tosearch out and encourage previously ex¬cluded groups. Once you’ve done that you’resupposed to step out of the way. In principle,ideally, once the fair competition begins youcannot predetermine the result. The bestqualified are supposed to win and if it turnsout that there is an unequal distribution,well that’s the way it is. There is nothing un¬fair about that or undesirable in my opin¬ion.Not everybody has the same mix of tal¬ents, and some groups may, for reasons thatwe don't even understand, have a certaintalent in one direction, statistically that is,more than others. But what we’re talkingabout in this country, or what we’re sup¬posed to be talking about, is individuals. Thetradition always has been to treat individu¬als according to their individual merits andnot according to their positions as membersof a group.Do you know why the American revolutionwas a revolution0 Well, it was not really arevolution, it was a civil war, what we wouldcall today a war of national liberation. Butwhat was so revolutionary about it and whatstill makes it a revolution and why thiswhole idea of quotas is so counter-revolu¬tionary and highly reactionary is that theAmerican revolution brought into being forthe first time in history a social systemwhich said that people were going to betreated according to what they were like asindividuals and not according to who theirfathers were or where they came from. Andthat's what made this country a beacon tothe world. There is a kind of aifirmative ac¬tion that says that all individuals who havenot had a fair chance have the right to bebrought up to competitive scratch, but no¬body has a claim on society for preferentialtreatment on the grounds of reparations topast ancestors on the basis of race or sex orany other ascriptive characteristic.These are two competing views of life andthe world and I’m on the side of one of themand against the other.Patner: I’m trying to find a view that isnot one side or the other, but is an honestway to bring minorities and women into thesystem. Where does this “bringing up tocompetitive scratch" occur?Podhoretz: Remedial programs in school¬ing, I’m in favor of them. Any kind of pro¬gram as long as it works that might helpsome to catch up. Of course a lot of pro¬grams we have tried don’t work and thereare people with vested interests in keepingthem going and pretending they do work. Atsome point they have to start competing.Patner: Is it right when you say that liber¬als and Jews are moving away from Israeland are turning towards for support forgroups like the PLO? Is the real threat toIsrael now’ coming from liberals, or Jews, orliberal Jews moving away from Israel or isit coming from other sources?Podhoretz: The liberal community whichfor 20 years was overwhelmingly sympa¬thetic to Israel has been cooler and cooler inits support. In a certain sense that repre¬sents a threat. Liberals in this country wereIsrael s best friend and that's certainly lesstrue than it was.Patner: Is that because of a change in theliberal perspective or is that because of achange in the nature of the state of Israel inregards to its borders and occupied terri¬ tories?Podhoretz: It’s a change in the liberal per¬spective and has very little to do with any¬thing Israel has done or not done.Patner: What do you base that on?Podhoretz: I base that on my observationsof the way the prevailing winds of opinionhave been blowing since 1967.Patner: How do you measure the prevail¬ing winds of opinion? Do you have a barome-*°r or what?Podhoretz: That’s a good question. I don’tdo it systematically by poll data, althoughsometimes I might consult survey data, Ithink it’s a useful tool. But mostly by the im¬pressions you get from reading a lot of news¬papers and magazines, and having conver¬sations and interviews such as this one andthe kind of questions that you yourself areasking me which are very different from thekinds of questions a young man like youwould have asked me or someone like me 20years ago.It would have been assumed 20 years ago,and I think this is still true, that Israel is sur¬rounded by 19 or 20 hostile Arab states, all ofthem sworn to her destruction and thatIsrael is the underdog, vastly outnumbered.If these states were walling to make peacewith Israel, Israel would be overjoyed tohave peace. All of the evidence overwhelm¬ingly supports such an interpretation of theconflict, that it was not Israel’s fault thatwas responsible for the state of siege inwhich that country lives.Patner : But many reports coming out ofIsrael, including reports from an Americanpress which has been sympathetic to Israeland reports from the Reform movement, in¬dicate that there has been a profoundchange in the Israeli soldier and in manyIsraeli citizens; that there is even more of astate of siege, and with the rise of the Belgingovernment even a belligerency. These re¬ports cite Israeli military movements inSouthern Lebanon as an example of this. Do that direction. Nicaragua is a hair’s breadthaway from being a Soviet satellite. Theproblem with Nicaragua, with a lot of thesecountries ruled by anti-C’ommunist right-wing regimes, is that if they reform theytend to weaken their rules and make them¬selves vulnerable to being overthrown. TheShah was overthrown not because he wastoo repressive but because he was too liber¬al.On the one hand while we have tried to en¬courage domestic reform in those counties,anyone who is honest has had to face the factthat domestic reform, while desirable, isoften suicidal for those regimes and whatcomes afterwards is much worse. I don’tthink anybody now believes that South Viet¬nam under the Thieu regime was worsethan it is now, or that Iran is better off now.leaving aside the question of whether we’rebetter off or not.My own point of view is very staunchlyanti-Communist. I consider Communism tobe the greatest of all political evils and Iconsider any other system a lesser evil thanCommunism and if it were up to me tochoose I’d choose the other evil.Patner: You have said that any Commu¬nist country is more repressive than anyother country. Is that true when one com¬pares, say, Yugoslavia and Chile?Podhoretz: Yugoslavia is much more re¬pressive, much more. It’s the softest of theCommunist countries but it’s much more re¬pressive than Chile.You see. more importantly than what weshould have done in any particular countryis that we should have maintaned our mili¬tary power. There is a lot of talk, some of itignorant, some of it propagandistic and de¬ceptive. about an arms race between our¬selves and the Soviet Union. There is noarms race at all. What we've been engagedin with the Soviet Union is a race by the So¬viet Union for military superiority as fastand as far as they possibly can and we have“We should have spent whatever money was nec¬essary and taken whatever steps were necessaryto make sure that the Soviet Union did not achievemilitary superiority. That would be the singlemost dangerous event since the rise of Hitler. Evenmore dangerous than the rise of Hitler.’’you think that this is just coincidental toAmerican liberals pulling away from Israelor do you think. . .Podhoretz: The coolness towards Israel isone element of a general change in perspec¬tive on world affairs that has occurred in thelast 20 years and really since the late Six¬ties. There is a new attitude towards so-called Third World radical forces, a muchmore sympathetic attitude. A tendency tosympathize with any political movementthat calls itself liberationist and is thoughtto be dark-skinned whether it is or it isn’t. Agrowing and quite ignorant identification ofIsrael as a kind of white settler colonialstate and therefore not unnecessarily a le¬gitimate state at all. Israel has been a vic¬tim of these changed perspectives almost allof w hich I consider to be wrong.Patner: In considering American posturetowards the Third World, what did the Unit¬ed States do or not do in Nicaragua and Rho¬desia that you would have done?Podhoretz: In the case of Rhodesia. Iwould have supported Muzarewa and 1 ad¬vocated that. I would be delighted to beproved wrong by Mugabe, but I doubt I will.If I am, it will be the first time in the twen¬tieth century (that a Marxist leader has de¬veloped a liberal regime).Patner: Do you consider the present ef¬forts of the Zimbabwe government to estab¬lish good relations with the United States tobe what is called a peace offensive?Podhoretz: Oh sure. I don’t know how longit will last, but Mugabe knows that if hefrightens everybody he will have an eco¬nomic calamity on his hands on the order ofwhat’s going on in Mozambique or AngolaMy prediction is that he will drive the whitesout and all the dissidents and what willemerge will be a tight totalitarian Commu¬nist regime that will be in line with the Sovi¬et Union.In Nicaragua you already have, even fas¬ter than I woul have predicted, moves in been standing stock stili in some areas andmoving backwards in others. Many of ushave been warning for ten years about therelationship between the Soviet Union andthe United States and our warnings are be¬ginning to come true. The other stuff is sec¬ondary. We should have spent whatevermoney was necessary and taken whateversteps were necessary to make sure that theSoviet Union did not achieve military supe¬riority. That would be the single most dan¬gerous event since the rise of Hitler. Evenmore dangerous than the rise of Hitler.So these other questions of Nicaragua andRhodesia and Iran are secondary. Now onIran if you ask should we have tried to keepthe Shah in power the answer is emphatica¬lly yes. Could we have succeeded in helpinghim? I really don’t know. We would havehad to give him a green light in using mili¬tary force against his own rebellious sub¬jects. Which we not only did not do. we didthe opposite.Patner: How long would something likethat have gone on?Podhoretz: I have no idea. For all 1 know,firing eight shots into the crowd would havebeen the end of the revolution, or maybe hewould have had to slaughter 100.000 people. Ijust don’t know.We in a profound sense helped to topplethe Shah. We forced him to liberalize his re¬gime. He expropriated land from the mul¬lahs for redistribution and then w hen he wasin deep trouble and could only save himselfby being ruthless we told him not to be. Notonly did the Shah get kicked out. but a re¬gime absolutely disastrous for American in¬terests, and probably very bad for the Iran¬ian people, came into power withconsequences that have still not been fullyplayed out. That was a key strategic countryfor the United States.Anybody but a willfully blind personwould have to see that the Soviet Union hasa strategy which is aimed at denying us access to crucial raw materials, above all,oil in the Middle East and secondly mineralsof Southern Africa. Everything they havedone since 1975 has contributed to this strat¬egy.The countries like Nicaragua and Rhode¬sia are just a part of this general strategy.It’s not that they are important in them¬selves. If not for the Soviet activity I wouldbe tempted to be an isolationist as far asthese countries are concerned. I mean whatdo I care, really, what do you care, whyshould anybody care what happens in dis¬tant places over which we have no controland that can do us no harm0 The fact is thatthey are elements in an international strate¬gy that is being pursued by our majorenemy in the world with the ultimate desireof controlling and determining our own po¬litical lives and those of our friends.Now the odds are that given the cautious¬ness of the Soviet Union they would havebeen deterred by American strength andAmerican resolve. Instead, they were en¬couraged by American withdrawal and re¬treat. After the Cuban missile confrontationthey resolved never to have to back downagain and they began the largest militarybuildup in the history of the universe. Mostsignificantly in their navy. They are a land¬locked power and they have never had muchof a navy, so they need a navy to projectforce abroad. Now they have done all thiswith terrific economic burdens on their peo¬ple.Just as Hitler was not interested in peaceand stability, they are not interested inpeace. They want to radically make over theworld into their own image. They are a revo¬lutionary state. We have to accept this. If w eput ourselves in the position where the onlyalternatives are surrender or nuclear war.we re finished.Patner: What are the alternatives now tothose two possibilities0Podhoretz: Nobody really knows. Thetruth is at this very moment, today, if theSoviet Union decided on the basis of a simi¬lar analysis to the one that I’m offering, thatnow is the best moment for them to moveforward into the Persian Gulf the chancesare that there would be nothing we could orwould do except to scream, and what I callthe Finlanaization of the United Stateswould begin tomorrow.What restrains them is the fear that therewill be a nuclear war which of course theydon’t want, and very likely in the next coup¬le of years if they go slowly it will fall intotheir lap free of charge. What we need nowis an enormous increase in military spend¬ing and probably a draft Even if we dothose things it may be a case of too little toolate. This is the most dangerous time in thehistory of the country in the twentieth centu¬ry.Patner: Where would we get the moneyfor that kind of defense spending0Podhoretz: We re spending like l percentot our GNP on defense spending When it’s aquestion of your freedom w hat choice do youhave0Patner: Do you raise taxes’1Podhoretz: SurePatner: Across the board’1Podhoretz: I don’t have a ten-point pro¬gram. If experts say we have to spend X bil¬lions of dollars, we have to raise it. I don’tknow how you do it. there may be 18 thingsyou do. That’s not really my field. What ismy field is the general analysis.Patner: What form of a draft would youpropose’?Podhoretz. Universal military conscrip¬tion.Patner: What ages’1Podhoretz: 18 to 22. 25 I'm not surePatner: Men and women?Podhoretz: I would not draft women. Wedon't need 'em. I don’t think it's particularlyhealthy for the relationship between thesexes which are poisonous enough already. Idon’t think that the military defense of thecountry and the need to prevent Soviet hege¬mony is the occasion for engaging in a socialexperiment of a relatively trivial characterI don’t see any reason in law why womenwould have to be drafted Of course if wehad the ERA they would have to be includ¬edPatner: So you’re against the ERA.Podhoretz: I'm against the ERA becauseI think that it’s another device for mcreas-Turn to Page 16The Chicago Maroon—Friday, May 16, 1980—3Rat haterTo the Editor:I am writing this letter to correct threeerrors which appeared in your article ofMay 6 concerning the University of Chica¬go’s own computer crime. I am not the stu¬dent-perpetrator. but I am someone who has“inside information'1 about the caper.The first two errors are comparativelyminor ones. First, the student-perpetratorwas not able to use his stolen key to the tran¬script room, so he used one of the other com¬puter terminals in the Registrar's office.Second, the student's appeal has not yetbeen ruled upon — at least, the student liasreceived no notification of any ruling.The third error is more important. In yourarticle you state that “The student ap¬parently confided what he had done to hisroommate, for the next day the roommatewent to Ausick ...” This is simply untrue.This roommate was in on the plan from thevery beginning. He offered the student-per¬petrator batteries for the walkie-talkies.When asked if he would be tempted to tell onthe perpetrator, he said no never. He ac¬tually gave his word that he wouldn't evertell, and when pressed further he said hewould even lie if necessary. When the stu¬dent-perpetrator returned home after hisescapade, this roommate celebrated withhim. Never once did this paragon of virtuesay anything like, “if you do this, 1 will turnyou in;” he went along with the enterprisefrom square one.Now this roommate is the Administra¬tion’s Golden Bov — because he betrayed atrust, violated a confidence, and stabbed afriend in the back What the student-perpe¬trator did was wrong, and his punishment isjust. But his slithering roommate is beingrewarded (the housing office is not allowingany other student to move into the expelledstudent's space for fear that his roommatewill be harassed > for his unthinkable behav¬ior. And that is not justice. That’s a crimeStudent in the CollegeName withheldby requestShhh! als gathered together. Nowhere else aredesks and carrels so concentrated.Given this concentration, conversationswhich start up can disturb a large number ofstudents. For the sake of that large number,we feel that concerned students should beable to ask politely for silence when conver¬sations begin — and they should be able toget it.The canteen, seminar rooms, and stair¬wells can be used for conversations. Let’suse the study areas for study.numerous studentsin the UniversityIt’s the one to have whenyou’re having morethan oneHis Most Gracious Editor:We wish to laud The Maroon for the bril¬liantly composed editorial on Hanna Gray(May 2, 1980). It is fortunate for all the pie-bians on the quadrangles that the editorcould share his intellectual insights con¬cerning President Gray’s administration.The editor employed blank spaces to rep¬resent Gray’s "evasiveness” on crucialissues. Many believe this was a ploy used bythe editor to avoid offering more substan¬tive criticism; we, however, are cognizantof the erudition incorporated into Mr.Patner's previous editorials, and are confi¬dent that “The Gray Matter” is a true liter¬ary as well as graphic achievement.We thought that we had read about Gray’spositions on these crucial issues in variousUniversity publications, including the Chi¬cago Record. Mr. Patner's outstandingpiece of critical journalism, however, con¬vinced us that our conceptions were actuallybased on a naive understanding of the facts.This is another occasion where Mr Patnerhas let his pearls of wisdom filter downamong all lesser beings.In reviewing Patner’s past editorials wecould not help but notice his consistent effortto address the major issues of the campusopenly and directly. For those of you whomay have missed some of these triumphs injournalism when they first appeared in TheMaroon, we herewith reprint some of thefiner examples:Patner’s suggestions on how to improvethe University that he loathes:To The Editor:Recently a number of students, ourselvesincluded, have been concerned by the levelof noise in Regenstein. Many library users,in the course of a day or an evening’s study,spend part of the time chatting with friendswho pass. Sometimes whole tables are filledby friends who alternate periods of studywith full-voiced conversationsWe recognize that the University does nothave pleasant facilities where we can bothstudy and talk — Ida Noyes is dark and dis¬tant; the canteen is too hectic. Still, we thinkthe library should be reserved for quietstudy. Nowhere else are reference materi- Patner on the innumerable positiveaspects of the University:Patner on method of revitalizing HydePark:Patner’s efforts to represent the ide<held by the majority of the campus comminity:Maroon Examples of Patner’s erudite and pesua-sive prose to influence the masses:Editor: Andrew PatnerGrey City Journal Editor: David MillerAssociate Editors: David Glockner andChris IsidoreFeatures Editor: Mark WallachSports Editor: Mark ErwinPhoto Editor: Dan BreslauLiterary Review Editors: Richard Kaye andMolly McQuadeAd Manager: Wanda JonesOffice Manager: Leslie WickBusiness Manager: Joel GreenStaff: Dan Adam. Curtis Black, SarahBurke, Jeff Cane. Peter Chapman, JohnCondas. Jeff Davitz. Victor Goldberg, JakeLevine. Rebecca Lillian. Audrey Light. Phi¬lip Maher, Greg Mizera, Sherrie Negrea, CyOggins. Chris Persans, Scott Rauland, JohnShamis, Allen Sowizrgl, Cecily Stewart,Howard Suls, Darrell WuDunn. Phoebe Zer-wiekThe Chicago Maroon is the student news¬paper of the University of Chicago, pub¬lished Tuesdays and Fridays. Editorial andbusiness offices are located on the thirdfloor m til mm Hall. 1212 K .'rith Street,Chicago. Illinois, 60637. Telephone 753-32634^The Chicago Maroon-Friday, May 16, 1980 Patner on why he drink Schaefer beer atsemi-formal dinner parties:Your admiring and faithful readers,Timothy D, MartinMichael G. BeyerStudents in the CollegeCollege alarmThe Maroon has received the following openletter to President Gray:The current question of w hether to expandthe size of the College is a critical issue forundergraduate students. On the recent Stu¬dent Government election ballot, an esti¬mated 78 percent of the voters indicatedtheir disfavor in enlarging the college size.Throughout the SG election campaign. I feltit would be improper for me to voice my per¬sonal opinion on this sensitive issue, i pre¬sently feel the same way, I write this letterto you representing the views of the 78 per¬cent who oppose your enlargement propos¬al.In the November 27th issue of The Maroon, you stated that “we certainly haveto worry whether growth would mean an ad¬ditional heavy pressure” on our courses.Your 10 percent growth plan is viewed by asignificant number of College students aspotentially damaging to the “essential edu¬cational values” that you mention as “dis¬tinctive in the College”. In a letter publishedin The Maroon on April 18th, two undergrad¬uate students pointed out that they chose toattend the University of Chicago because itoffered “more consistent, challenging, andcoherent aims in the education it offers".Moreover, they state that “should Chicagolose these highly distinctive qualities in amistaken imitation of other universities’management policies, it will lose much of itsappeal".Your decision to increase the enrollmentof the College was made with a minimalamount of student consultation. In the fu¬ture. it is to be hoped that more public dis¬cussion will be available on matters of suchconsequence. The need for open communi¬cation between administrators and studentscannot be overemphasized. You are a strongpresident: you see a problem and you are at¬tempting to deal with it in the most effectiveway possible. As students, we hav£ faith inyour intentions and abilities in providing uswith the best College life possible. We askyou to have faith in our intentions and abili¬ties as well. These kinds of issues have animmediate effect on us, and we have a legiti¬mate right to voice our opinions as“average” students attending the Universi¬ty of Chicago. As I have thought to myselfand stated publicly, this University has suchgreat potential and we can construct thefoundations for building that potential if ourhearts and minds are wholly committedtoward a candid working relationship. Pres¬ident Gray, what must be remembered isthat we are on your side. Let us become re¬sponsible participants in crucial campusissues for the sake of maintaining the quali¬ties that have long characterized our excep¬tional University.Brad BittanStudent in the CollegeGuatemala murdersTo the Editor:The recent exchange of letters concerningthe moral character, political views, musi¬cal tastes, and psychological health ofMessrs. Harberger, Rodriguez, and Lands-burg proves that our community is blessedwith many indefatigable correspondents ofa wide range of political views on LatinAmerica. AH of them, however, seem to beas one in their claim to support humanrights, On behalf of Amnesty International,may I suggest how these scholars might re¬direct their considerable energies towardthe actual defense of these rights?Over the past two months at least 25 facul¬ty and students of Guatemalan universitieshave been murdered by, or with the com¬plicity of, the police and military of Guate¬mala. These people were not killed in thecourse of demonstrations, riots, or acts ofcivil war; they were chosen for extra-legalexecution, which was carried out accordingto plan. (1 can furnish to anyone interestdthe names of these 25 people and the circum¬stances of their deaths.)Amnesty asks members of the world aca¬demic community, and the University ofChicago chapter of Amnesty asks membersof our community, to act immediately toexert pressure upon those officials respons¬ible. Please send politely worded telegrams,letters, or postcards asking for an end tothese murders to:Ex mo. General Fernando RomeoLucas GarciaPresidente de la Republica deGuatemalaPalacio PresidencialGuatemala, GuatemalaI will be glad to provide further informa¬tion or to answer questions in the evening at667-5228.Barnett R Rubingraduate studentin political scienceLatin American forumTo the Editor: *In recent weeks these pages have provid¬ed a forum for discussion and debate revolv¬ing around the current Chilean situationThe upcoming colloquium on Latin AmericaIt) the 1980s focusing on Chile, will providean opportunity to consider this issue more closely in a scholarly and open way.The colloquium, sponsored by the Centerfor Latin American Studies, will includepapers by scholars of differing views fromthe U.S. and Latin America, and shouldbring to the floor many of the issues recentlyconsidered in these pages.OLAS encourages the University of Chica¬go community to take advantage of this op¬portunity to learn about the Chilean prob¬lem.In coordination with the colloquium,OLAS is sponsoring the showing of “Battleof Chile: Part 111”, and will moderate apanel discussion following the film. Thetime schedules of the colloquium are postedin this issue of The Maroon and in variouscampus locations. We invite everyone to at¬tend the events this weekend.Kris JonesUlysses BeltranCo-chairpersonsOrganization of Latin American StudentsCheckmateTo the Editor:I was glad to see The Maroon report thechess triumph of UC women but why has thechess success of UC men been totally ig¬nored? The Chess Team won 2nd place atthe Pan American Intercollegiate ChessChampionships in Los Angeles in a field of42 teams and 187 players. How many UCteams currently rank 2nd in the nation?Chicago not only placed 2nd hut was theonly team to beat top ranked Yale Universi¬ty, the top rated defending champions. UC’sdramatic last round victory over Yateknocked Yale out of first and allowed Flori¬da to win the tournament Chicago was theonly team in 2 years to defeat Yale at thePan Am!This was a true team victory; every teammember contributed. Ove Kroli (Mathema¬tics) was the mainstay of the team, scoring6',irl14 on top board. He did not lose anygames. Veteran team captain Ed Friedman(Biophysics) scored 3%but made sever¬al crucial decisions that helped UC win keymatches. Ken Larsen ’83 had a fine 5-3 re¬sult, upsetting many higher rated players.And Todd Barre (Business) won the lastround game that clinched 2nd place whilescoring 4M>-31»>. Up to now none of these stu¬dents has been given credit in the Maroonfor their accomplishments.The Chess Team's magnificent showinggot page one coverage in the Illinois ChessBulletin, “UC Wins Pan Am Silver” but hasbeen kept secret by The Maroon. Also unre¬ported were Chicago's chess match winsagainst Northwestern (5-4) and ChicagoState (11-3).UC’s Chess Team has won more nationalchampionships than any other school in thecountry and I hope in the future The Maroonwill give the team the coverage it de¬serves.Harold Winston. MA 1967(Historian. IntercollegiateChess League of America)Continued from Page 1tainments in their vocational fields havebrought distinction to themselves, credit tothe University, and a real benefit to theirfellow citizens.”Recipients of the Professional Achieve¬ment Award include Paul R. Cannon,former chairman of the department ofpathology at the University’s MedicalSchool; television producer RogerEnglander; former President of AtlantaUniversity Thomas Jarrett; anthropologistand archeologist Donald C. Johnson; HenrvKaplan, who helped develop the use of newmethods of radiotherapy for cancer treat¬ment ; sculptor Caroline Lee: Tsung-DaoLee, who was a co-recipient of the NobelPrize in Physics with Chen King Yang in1958; Abner Mikva, who served five termsas a member of the House of Represen¬tatives before President Carter appointedhim a member of the U.S. Court of Appeals;Jaroslav Pellkan, a historian of Christiani¬ty; Herbert A. Simon, an economist who isgiven credit for founding the discipline oforganizational theory; Kurt Vonnegut. Jr.,the author of several novels, plays, andmovie adaptations; and Chen Ning Yang,who along with Tsung-Dao Lee was a co¬recipient of the 1958 Nobel Prize for physics.The Alumni Association will also an¬nounce the winners of the Howell MurrayAwards at the luncheon. The Howell MurrayAwards are presented to students inrecognition of their extracurricularachievementsWHAT CANII/DC TDK >< I AMost people complain about the quality of studentlife on campus. Complaining doesn't do much good,however. There is currently a referendum on campusto increase the undergraduate MAB fee $1 and changeit into a more inclusive student activities fee. Thiswould mean that every undergraduate and graduatewould pay $5 per quarter. For undergraduates this isan insignificant increase but what it means to studentlife is not insignificant. The Major Activities Board(MAB) faces rising artists' fees and production costs.The proposed increase would greatly enhance thequality and variety of concerts and shows. If MAB is tocontinue producing exceptional events such as TheRamones and especially smaller more intimate eventswhich lose a lot of money in general, the fee referen¬dum must be passed. The fee referendum would in¬crease MAB's budget by about 30%.The student government finance committee has ex¬perienced a dramatic rise in organizations requestingmoney to sponsor campus activities and in the amountof money requested by all student organizations. Over$80,000 in requests were received this year and lastyear. The committee only receives $30,000 annually todistribute. As a result campus activities suffer, as dostudents who could have enjoyed such activities. Thefee would provide approximately $75,000 for all studentorganizations, allowing campus activities to expandand securing money for future demand.Stop complaining about student life! Here is a wayyou can help improve it! $1 will help make the U. of C. amore exciting place to be.Vote Yes!Ballots are in allregistration packetstake them to your advisorStudent Government and LATIN AMERICA IN THE I980SCHILE: EXCEPTIONOR EXAMPLE?A Colloquium atThe University of Chicago Demist of authoritarian rule? Decline of dejK.*ndcnt v "Renew a) of culture? To e\ aluate the prospec ts lorchange in Latin America over the next decade, theCenter for Latin American Studies at the University ofChicago has arranged an intensive series of guests| leakers and sjiecial events for the p< ni*d Mas IS- ISThe program is organized so us to proved from tins|K*cific to the general, examining the case of Chile andits implications for the rest of Latin America There u illbe ample opportunity tor discussion betweenparticipants and publicFollow mg is the schedule of activ ities. Please notedifferent locations for different eventsThursday. Mav 15,3:00 p.m.OVERVIEW "Economic Expansion and Class Conflict Implications for Chile and Latin \merit aJames Petras. Professor of Misters SI NY Binghamton)Moderator: Professor Friedrich Katz. University of Chicago Discussants: Professor JohnCoatsworth. Ulises Beltran (Graduate Student), University of ChicagoPick 016 (Pick Hall for International Studies. 5828 South University Ave.)Fridav.Mav 16. 8:00 p.m. Rattle of Chile Part IIIFILM Final part of Patricio Guzman's documentors trilogy on the fall of the Popular Units government ofChile Sponsored bv OLAS (Organization of Latin American Students)Panel discussion (following film) Moderator Kris Jones {Graduate Student}. University ofChicago Discussants: Professor William Parish. Primitive Rodriguez (Graduate Student .University of Chicago, and Klaus FriedrichSS 122 (Social Sciences Research Building, 1126 East 59th St.)Saturday. May 17, 8:00 p.mLITERATURE Writing under Duress At Home and in ExileOscar Hahn. Poet and Professor of Spanish. University of low uModerator-. Professor Rene de Costa University of Chicago Discussants Jorge Guzman. Universityof Illinois (Chicago Circle . Soma Csaszar ,Graduate Student . University of ChicagoHome Room (International House. 1414 East 59th StSunday. Mav 18 All events on this date will take place at the Center for Continuing Education, 1307 East 6(Hh St10:00 a mTHE POLITYll.30a mTHE SOCIETYl 00 pm Contradictions of Militant Rule and the Prospei ts for ChangeManuel Antonio GarretAn, Research Professor, Woodrow Wilson ('enter. W ashington. D CModerator Professor John Coatsworth. University of Chicago Discussants Professor Phihpjx-Schnutter. Ben Davis Student . University of Chicago"Setback.* and Achievements in the Arts and Setrneis Ref on and afh r LCVEdmundo Fuenzahda. Professor of Education. Stanford UniversityModerator Professor Terence Turner. University of Chicago Discussants Nerv Barrientos.Assistant Dean. YMCA Community College. Julie Skurski (Graduate Student). University ofChicagoLunch Break2:30p.m Market bones and heotwmicStrategies Chile ninn I'iT 1THE ECONOMY Kkardo Kfcench Davtsand Alejandro Fo«le>. Research Professors. ClFPI AN Santiago dr ChileModerator Professor Jose 8cheinkman. University of ( hie ago Discussants Professor ArnoldHarberger. Professor Adam Przeworski. Fernando Coronil (Graduate Student). I niversitv ofChicagof TYPISTS ^With school nearly over, your upcoming vacation time canbe wisely spent in interesting temporary typing assign¬ments from Kelly Services As the leader in temporaryemployment, we have 15 different descriptions for typingpositions alone One is sure to match your skill level, from45wpm on up. And you’re always able to tailor your work¬ing hours to fit your summer scheduleKelly is the highest paying temporary service in Chicago-land; your earnings will reflect your abilities. Put a conven¬ient Kelly Career in your summer vacation plans. Call:Hyde Park 955-4777Loop 786-1250LaSalle St. 332-2133An Equal Opportunity Employer M FEye Examinations• Contact Lenses• (Soft and Hard)• Fashion Eye Wear• Contact Lens SuppliesDR. M.R. MASLOVOPTOMETRISTS Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th363-6363 /*marianrealty,inc.mREALTORStudio and l BedroomApartments Available- Students Welcome -On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-5400 HYDE PARK YMCA DAY CAMPJune 16 to August 22 1980AGES 6-13REGULAR CAMP$ 65.00 — Y Members$ 70.00 — Non Members 1 st Session(2 week session) PIXIE CAMPAGES 4 and 5$55.00—Y Members$60.00—Non Members$ 95.00 — Y Members$ 105.00 — Non Members 2nd Session(3 week session) $80.00—Y Members$90.00—Non Members$ 95.00 — Y Members$ 105.00 — Non Members 3rd Session(3 week session) $80.00—Y Members$90.00—Non Members$ 65 00 — Y Members$ 70.00 — Non Members 4th Session(2 week session) $55.00—Y Members$60.00—Non Membersties are conducted in the Palos Park Forest Preserve and the YMCAand include Crafts, Nature Lore, Campcraft, Games, Cookouts, Group Singing,and four days of Swimming Instruction each week.Bus service at established stops through the area.Hyde Park YMCA1400 E. 53rd StreetChicago, Illinois 60615(312)-324- 5300 ACCREDITEDCAMPToday, Friday 16 Mayis your last chance to buyall Spring Quarter texts.Starting tomorrow we will begin clear¬ing the shelves. The book you need-7 may be the first to go.Late arriving titles and reordersof sold out titles will be heldthrough the end of the quarter. The Textbook DepartmentUniversity of ChicagoBookstore5750 S. Ellis Avenue753-3313 753-3305Don’t Be Caught Short!!!6—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, May 16, 1980CourtesyofSpecialCollections,RecjensteinThe Spirit of Worship, Knowledge, and The City from "The Masque of Youth," a mural in the Ida Noyes Theatre.No Room for Women"Women's" Hallby Katherine Borlandand Lisa RobertsIn September 1900, William R.Harper responded to the request for alocation in Reynolds Club for women'sorganizations by asserting the neces¬sity for separate men's and women's jclubhouses. . . it has been decidednot to arrange for women in the pro¬posed club house. It is believed that, onthe whole, better results will be gained !by having a separate club house forwomen, which, perhaps, shall be con¬nected with a gymnasium. How long, of (course, we must wait until such a club ihouse can be built, will be determined :by the generosity of our friends." Unfortunately, this meant that for 13 |years women at the University of Chi¬cago had no space for their activities jand organizations. Although the schoolwas committed to the idea of equal coeducation, the question of equal facili¬ties did not enter into its conception ofequal educational opportunity.A generous benefactor did finally ;materialize when La Verne Noyes con¬tributed $490,000 for the construction of !Ida Noyes Hall, "a building to be usedas a social center, and gymnasium forthe women of the University" (La jVerne Noyes). The building was to be a memorial to his deceased wife "that(would) stand for decades and for cen¬turies for the continued use of succeed¬ing generations of Universitywomen."Ida Noyes Hall was opened in 1916.The building serviced 47 organizationsand 91,252 women and their guests inthe first two years. An advisory boardof Student, Faculty and Administrativewomen was created to oversee the useof the building and it was establishedthat the clubhouse would be open without fee to all women of the University.Marion Talbot, Dean of Women, sug¬gested that "the end view is to haveevery woman connected with the Uni¬versity share in the social life in such away a-s to give expression to her indi¬vidual qualities . . . and to give hertraining in forms of social expressionwhich will make her academic trainingmore effective as she mingles amongpeople." (Apparently, in the earlyyears of the University women students suffered from acute shyness;even when expressly invited to facultyhouses or other social events, theyrarely attended.)Over the years, however, the space inIda Noyes was gradually usurped byvarious University wide student organizations and faculty and administrative functions. The advisory committee of students simultaneously fell into disuse. In recent years the physical education departments have merged theiruse of facilities at Bartlett and IdaNoyes; the result has been a disproportionate allotment of resources aswomen were denied their legitimateshare. Women's Union, a campus cul¬tural and political group for women, isthe only woman's organization that haspermanent space in Ida Noyes Hall.The Union shares with the debate society a tiny office above the Frog andPeach. Attendance at the weekly meet¬ing sometimes runs as high as 25, yielding very cramped conditions.In fact, ten women's organizationsexist on campus (WU, UFO, IWD Coali¬tion, Primavera, GCSW, WOLF, ActionERA, GAYLA, and Women's LawSchool Caucus), testifying to the continuing historical need for a separatelydelegated and sufficiently accommodating space. This university desperately needs a women's social centerwhere organizations can meet andcommunicate with one another, whereinformation pertinent to women, suchas locating abortion clinics or rapecounselors, can be centralized, andwhere women faculty, alumni, students, and administrators can mingle.Consequently, the problem of awomen's facility still exists, although the need for a women's social spacemight be conceived differently fromthe earlier need expressed by MarionTalbot and La Verne Noyes. A memberof Women's Union brought this need tothe attention of Paul Ausick last spring(1979). Although Ausick agreed that theclaim for adequate space was valid, hepointed out that many groups oncampus are in need of offices. If therewere a space available, if a new ben¬efactor arose, the women's organiza¬tions at the University would certainlybe put on the list for space. He venturedtwo possibilities for which we mightsomeday bid: the old Music Building (ifit isn't first torn down for parkingspace), and the second floor of Reyn¬olds Club, when the Career Counselingmoves to Goodspeed. Another studentgroup had recently talked with himabout the possibility of a StudentCenter, also necessary but impracticalat the moment. Notably, their planmade no reference to the need forwomen's space.The Blue Gargoyle, originally a stu¬dent run center, arose in the sixties andnow serves community needs.Meanwhile, the women at the University must be patient and contain theiractivities in that last bastion at IdaNoyes Hall above the Frog andPeach.DavidMiller Major MiroAs if to prove once again that some of themore truly interesting exhibits do notalways take place at the sure but staid ArtInstitute of Chicago, the David and AlbertSmart Gallery opened a major exhibitWednesday of some forty-five paintings,drawings, watercolors, and sculptures ofthe Spanish artist Joan Miro.Entitled Joan Miro: The Development of aMiro, Miro, On the Wall Sign Language (the title being an awful in¬heritance from Washington Universitywhere the exhibition first appeared), the ex¬hibit includes work dating from 1924 to 1956,a rich period for Miro. Assembled from pri¬vate and public collections in Chicago andSt, Louis, many of the works included are onpublic display for the first time. Not a fewconsider the Smart exhibit superior to thehighly touted Miro exhibition now at the National Gallery In Wasington, DC,Miro, born in Barcelona in 1893, receivedhis first drawing instruction from ModestoUrged in Spain. Influenced by the non re¬presentational abstract artists of the earlytwentieth century, Miro, according to SidraStich, a Washington University professorwho selected the exhibit's works, was alsostrongly influenced by the archaeologicaldiscoveries of that period, as well as by theprehistoric drawings on the walls of caves insoutheast France and northeast Spain, inher catalogue essay for the show, Stichclaims that the bold black outlines and someof the cave paintings can be readily seen inmuch of Miro's work.The Smart Gallery has planned severalprograms in conjunction with this specialexhibition. On May 21 a symposium on "Pri¬mitivism and 20th Centrury Art" will beheld at 10 a.m. in Breasted Hall at the Oriental Institute. A series of gallery talks will beheld on four Wednesdays at 12 :15 in The gal¬lery, May 21 and 28, and June 4 and 11. TheSmart Gallery is open Tuesdays throughSaturdays from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., and onSundays from noon until 4 p.m. The JoanMiro exhibit runs until June 8th. More information on the show from 753 2123. — Richard KayeBlasts of the BaroqueDon Smithers, the world renownedtrumpet player, and Edward Monde!Io,Rockefeller Chapel organist, will performmusic by Bach, Purcell, Clarke, Buxtehunde, Stanley, Krebs, and others onTuesday, May 20, at 8 pm in RockefellerChapel.Edward Mondetlo, a distinguished andfrequent performer in and around HydePark, is well known to the University community. Smithers, who last performed inChicago three years ago, may require someintroduction.Don Smithers has combined the careers ofscholar and performing musician. Theholder of a doctorate in music history fromOxford University and the author of thestandard work on the baroque trumpet, hehas also recorded nine solo trumpet albums,performed the solo trumpet parts in six ofthe Bach cantatas recorded in theTelefunken series, and contributed his playmg to various ensembles on 17 other recordings.Smithers has established himself as theleading exponent of and performer on thevalveless "natural," or baroque trumpet.This instrument was twice the length of itscomparably pitched modern counterpart,and since it did not have valves or otherdevices to alter its sounding length, if re¬quired that its player change notes ex j clusivefy through the action of the tips,f tongue, and throat. Unlikejall other modern*' day players of the natural trumpet, j? Smithers has abandoned the use of correc j| ting finger holes bored info the side of the; tubing, modern mouthpieces, and, above jj all, modern conceptions of volume and tim-{ bre. Instead, by dispensing with technicaland artistic anachronisms and following the jf precepts of what little remains of the 17fhj and 18th century trumpet pedagogical If literature, he has developed a technique and {i style appropriate to the trumpet and music jj of the baroque era, The sound is perhaps jj less brilliant and penetrating than that of jj the modern valved trumpet, but much i; richer in over tones and varieties of timbre.1 it was this aural experience that Dryden :j had in mind when he wrote, "The Trumpetj shall be heard on high/The dead shall live,! the living die,/And Music shall untune thej sky." jj Tuesday's concert is jointly sponsored by jj the University of Chicago Brass Society and jj Rockefeller Chapel. Admission is $2 for \i students and S3 for others. Smithers will jalso lead a public seminar in brass playing jtechniques tomorrow, May 17, 9:30*11:30 am 5at Alumni House at 58 th and Wood I awn and |lecture on music history to the Department jof History on Monday, May 19, at 4 pm in the }Pick Lounge. — Jon Sum id a j73 c The University of Chicago Tp 0# Perfo* *h#<| 5t*ndmgif* Ffdftt '©I A BdMdtibS'bardt.Awgi*.New Music Ensemble"Spring Concerts*r i Sunday, May 18 - 8pmKuplermcmDebussy, et oiJ Lexington Studio • ■ , y• $ $ 3 f S. Unwers * ty Av e,X.2—the grey city journal -Friday, May 16, 1980& *. ■V ' - ' ' ' ' -. * ' ' ' ‘ » Friday May 16 6:00/8:0010:00Was your TV broken last week?If so, now’s your chance to seeBREAKIHG AWAYand at midnight...see Orson Wellesas Clarence Darrow and Hyde Park asitself in Richard Fleischer’sCOMPULSIONSundayMonday May 18 7:15 and 9:00Marta Meszaros’sWOMEN8:00May 19George Cukor’sLES GIRLS(Rhymes with “Play Girls”!)A musical version ofRASHOMON with Gene Kelly as ToshiroMifune? could be. Kelly, along with Kay Kendall and MitziGaynor, all ponder, “What is Truth?” to the beat of an originalCole Porter score in this Cinemascope comedy. Their balletparody of Brando and THE WILD ONE is tres bizarre as theFrench would say, and you know they would.All films in Cobb Fri. & Sun. $1.50 Mon. $1ikf University of Chicle, Department ofMu$uVmwrsity ChorusThe Wemer, direrhrFAUREGABRIELIIN ECCLES1ISwith the L)C flmss Quintet dc>Jane Oreen, sopranoJamesluckerMntmeThomas l Vetsfloa, onjanTnday i6May 1980 at8:soRockefeller ChapelTire and open to the puhluThe Creative Movement Ensemble's concert "Kinetic En¬ergy" will be held tomorrow at 3 pm in the Ida Noyes DanceRoom. Barbara Bochnovic, Caren Gotlieb, Bob Rueter, LoreRuttan, Michelle White, and Marjorie Williams will presentsix original pieces. The ideas for this dance concert came from the Ensemble's weekly classes which stress creativeexpression and improvisation rather than technique. Admis¬sion is free and refreshments will be served after the performane.MoviesBreaking Away (Peter Yates, 1979): Awarm, humorous, an I entertainingfilm; like Rocky, It's another 70's remake of hard core thirties optimism.Dave, taking time off before college,races bicycles and practices being Italian. He and his friends clash withtheir families and preppie college kidsin order to preserve some integrity.While the film grapples with somevery real issues, its resolutions are de¬valued by its caricatures. Dave's cutecraziness is like Fred Astaire's boyishbounciness; his mom is a standardmonotoned stoic, sort of like EugenePaltette; and try to imagine a BudAbbot/Lou Costello cross as his father.Even the end reeks of the Wizard ofOz's "look in your own back yard."Fun and exciting, but slickly Hoilywood. Tonight at 6, 8, and 10 in Quantrell. Doc; $1.50. - GBThe Battle of Chile: Part III, The Powerof the People (Patricio Guzman,1980): The long awaited finale of Guzman's award winning documentary onthe last year of democratic government in Chile before the September1973 military coup. This section dealswith the creation of thousands of organisms of "popular power" to distributefood, run factories and farms, and oppose black market profiteering in theface of lock outs and strikes by factoryowners, tradesmen, and professionals.Discussion followsfilm. Tonight at 8 inSocial Science 122. OLAS; donation.Compulsion (Richard Fleischer, 1959):As a special treat for alumni weekend,Doc is bringing us the tale of our twofavorite, infamous alums, Leopold andLoeb. This fictionalized account concentrates on the latent sado-masochism (with words, not whips) of theirrelationship, their obsession withproving themselves supermen, theirextreme passion, and their lack ofcompassion. Since most of the story'shighpoints were dropped (the murderof Bobby Franks occurs offscreen inthe first ten minutes), not much holdsthe film together. However, during thefinal fifteen minutes, Orson Wells, asthe Clarence Darrow character, delivers an extremely powerful speechon capital punishment which salvagesthe bland build up; but it's not worthwaiting until 2 a.m. to see. The filmcontains two references to Hyde Parkand none to the U of C; you can't eventhrow bananas at Cobb since it wasshot in L.A. Tonight at midnight inQuantrell. Doc; $1.50. - GBOn the Waterfront (Elia Kazan, 1954):No hesitation in hailing this film as amasterpiece. Longshoremen believethey'll live longer if they play deaf anddumb to the mob's corruption in theirunion but a priest (Karl Malden) urgesthem to speak out. Although Malden'spleading sometimes borders on sermonizing, his hot temper and weakness for cigarettes and beer save hisreligious zeal from making him too unlike those he wants to help. Brando,mixing brutishness and innocence,gives a remarkable performance(possibly his best) when he strugglesfirst within himself and then againstthe mob. Violence, religion, crime,and love all play a part in Kazan'shard hitting political statement whereeven the slightest details are chargedwith intense emotion. A twitching lipor a puzzled gaze, alone, can leave usbreathless. Saturday at 7 and 9:30 inthe Law School Auditorium. LSF;$1.50 - MWThe Blue Angel (Josef von Sternberg,1930): This legendary masterpiecemarked the beginning of the most remarkable director/star collaborationin cinema history. The star is, ofcourse, that eternal enchantress, Marlene Dietrich. As Lola, Marlene is stilla plump and naive girl, not at all thestreamlined, sophisticated woman ofthe later Sternbergs. And the film, despitet its reputation, doesn't hold up allthat well either. Nevertheless Dietrichat this early stage already shows herinsolent and seemingly indifferent at titude towards sex. Emil Janningsplays Professor Unrath, a bourgeoisconsumed and finally destroyed by hislove for the capricious Lola. Janningswas touted as a great actor in his days,but he looks hopelessly hammy in contrast to Dietrich. Another proof that infilm, personality counts more than anyamount of stage acting. Tomorrow at7:30 and 10 in the I House AssemblyHal. IHF; $1.50. - TSWomen (The Two of Them) (Marta Meszaros, 1978): A modern day story oftwo Hungarian couples, their dissolutions, and the effect on a young daughter, Zsuzsi. The action revolves aroundMari, a beautiful, middle aged, humanistic director of a live-in factoryfor women. Mari's mother dies at theoutset; subsequently, she is harried byher hard hearted assistant, theworker/residents, her superiors, andher husband of 20 years. Mari is lonely, so she pities and assists Juli, a freespirited worker who both loves andavoids her drunk husband. The twowomen's friendship, born of need andloneliness, is assisted by the gradualdisappearances of both husbands. Thefilm presents unexceptional butserious human problems in straightforward manner designed less to excite the audience than to elicit its sympathy. A film worth seeing, even if oneis not among the "Smash the Family,Smash the State" crowd or disagreeswith young Zsuzsi's first assertion,which happens also to be the film'slast . "Not true! Nothing's tru! You alltell lies!" Sunday at 7:15 and 9 inQuantrell. Doc. $1.50 — DMLes Girls (George Cukor, 1957): This, asAndrew Sarris has pointed out, isCukor's R ashomon; but whileKurowawa's is very, very slow andserious, Cukor's is a musical; whileKurosawa argues that everyone lies,Cukor's point is that everyone tells thetruth — in their own way. Kay Kendall, Mitzi Gaynor, and Taina Elgeachtell how the others fell in love withGene Kelly. Fell in love, that is, between the musical numbers they perform with Kelly. Bringing the pointhome, of course, is Cukor's mastery —not only of the discrete cutting, butalso of the expressive possibilities ofcolor and cinemascope. Monday at 8 inQuantrell. Doc; SI. — RMcGOthello (Orson Welles, 1955): After a 10year absence, Welle's Othello returnsto Chicago's screens. While Welles andShakespeare normally do not mix well, this film takes a unique and enticing perspective. Rather than playup the story's fantasy side (a beautifuland all encompassing love is demolished by pure evil), Wells constructs ahard, gritty world in which such gentlebeauty is fated to destruction. Hisworld is a simple, but engrossing metaphor for our own defenses againstsuch love. Stone castle walls and armour, designed to protect the people,grow in importance until they oppressand grate the relatively fragile characters. Those not properly prepared toface that world are abused just because of their presence. Moments oftenderness are never fully private;people are unable to share their vulnerability and still repel enemies. Apretty paranoid vision, but it's excellent for tragedy. The soundtrackstinks, so if you're unfamiliar with thestory, skip the film. For the rest ofyou, Welles's powerful imagery ampli¬fies the impact of each event. Tonightthrough Tuesday at the SandburgTheatre, 1204 N Dearborn. —GBThe Filming of Othello (Orson Welles,1978): Twenty three years afterdirecting Othello, Welles put togetherthis documentary and creative analysis of the making of that movie. But despite all of the relevant jokes and anecdotes, it's not really about that. In fact,it's about things being about what theydon't appear to be about. Huh? Yousee, beneath all of his humility and cute (and superb) story telling is amass of self consciousness. Wellescontinually calls attention to the factthat film is manipulation. It manipulates its audience and it can easily bemanipulated to reveal hidden aspectsof life, art, and itself or to create completely new impressions. But the bestpart is that he keeps the tone of his intellectualizing warm and friendly.This is a much more fun version of Ffor Fake. Tonight through Tuesday atthe Sandburg theatre. 1204 N. Dearborn. 951 0627. S3 for double feature. —GBMusicU of C Chorus: Gabrieli, "In Ecclesiis"and "Faure, Requiem." Eric Weimer,director; Thomas Weisflog, organ;with soloists and members of the U ofC Brass Society. Tonight at 8:30 inRockefeller Chapel. Free.Public Image Ltd.. Tomorrow at 12:30pm on American Bandstand (Channel7).Young Musicians: The Hyde Park YouthChamber Orchestra and the HydePark Junior Strings present a concertincluding works by Bach, Handel, Nelhybel, and Vaughan Williams. PeterFitch will conduct. Sunday at KAMIsiah Israel, E. Hyde Park at Green wood, at 3 pm. Free.Edward Mondello and Don Smithers:Music of the baroque era Tuesday,May 20, at 8 pm in Rockefeller Chapel.$2 students, $3 others. See article on p2.Lunchtime music: Recorder quartets,composed from the Renaissance to the20th century. Thursday May 22 inReynolds Club Lounge at 12.15 pm.Free.Etc.Joan Miro: The Development of a SignLanguage: Through June 18 at theSmart Gallery, 5550 Greenwood. TueSat, 10 4; Sun, noon 4. 753 2121. Free.See article, p.2.Art Auction: Oils, drawings, etchings,lithographs, and serigraphs by Braque, Calder, Chagall, Dali, Escher, Picasso, Renoir, and others. Sunday at 2pm at Congregation Rodfei Zedek, 5200S. Hyde Park. 752 2770. Free. Champagne preview at 1 pm, $1.Hyde Park House Tour: 10-house toursponsored by the Ancona MontessoriSchool. Sunday, 15 pm, beginning atthe Neighborhood Club, 5480 Kenwood.924 2356. $10, $5 students.Vito Acconci: A Retrospective,1969 1980; Ends Sunday. Museum ofContemporary Art, 237 E. Ontario.Fri., Sat., 10 5, Sun., noon 5. 280 2660.Students, $1.Second City: This comedy troupe is likea river flowing endlessly through theuniverse, and you cannot step in thesame river twice, Helen. In otherwords, they are always superb, so takeadvantage of their proximity even ifyou've seen them before Tonight atthe Law School Auditorium at 8 $4 students, $5 others.Dock Briefs: An unidentified performance by the Steppenwolf TheaterCompany Sat., May 17 at the University High School at 1 pm. FOTA, Students $2, others $3.Kinetic Energy: The Creative Movement Ensemble in concert, sponsoredby FOT A. Sat., May 17 in the IdaNoyes Dance Room at 3 pm Free.Lithuanian Folkdance: Tomorrow at IHouse at 3.30 pm. Free.FOTAnic: BYO to the annual FOTA picnic on the Main Quad. They and theFolklore Society provide the music.Sunday. In case of rain it's IdaNoyes.Spirit Out of Spirit: A tai chi poetrymusic performance piece by BillHayashi integrating various art modesof poetry, photography, and musicwith tai-chi movement. It attempts totranslate and mirror the essentialspirit of one creative work into anotherand includes Beethoven's "Tempest"Sonata and readings from Shakespeare's The Tempest. Hayashi received his PhD from the CST in Shakespearian studies in 1976, has studiedmeditation with Swami Rama andKonga Roshi, tai-chi with Herbert Lui,and presently teaches at ColumbiaCollege. Sunday at 8 pm in ReynoldsClub Lounge. FOTA; free."Ritual Series 10/30/79" by Michael SingerShow at Renaissance Opens SundayNew Work by Michael Singer, an exhibit of eight abstractcharcoal, chalk, and collage prints and one sculptural piece,opens Sunday at the Renaissance Society Gallery Singer'stwodimentional work is characterized by dark, swirling linesand lighter gray patches. Movement, change, and flux seemat issue, but we are not ashamed to admit we haven't figuredit out However, we are sure Singer's sculpture will attract a lot of attention . "First Gate Ritual Series 2/80" is composedof long, flat, criss crossing wood pieces supported by rocksand has to be with space and structure. The exhibit beginswith a reception for the public Sunday from 5 to 7 p,m„ andcontinues through June 21 on the 4th floor of Cobb 753 1886Free.the grey city journalGary Beberman, Curtis Black, Abbe Fletman, Richard Kaye, Jake Levine, Rebecca Lillian, Jeff Makos, Rory McGahan, Molly McQuade, Jeanne Nowaczewski,Elizabeth Oldfather, Mark Neustadt, Martha Rosett, Renee Saracki, Marjie Williams, Ken Wissoker.Edited by David Miller. Associate editors: Laura Cottingham and Karen Hornick. Contributing editor: Ted Shen. Friday, May 16, 1980the grey city journal — Friday, May 16, 1980—3YourJostensCollege Ring...These Deluxe Features at No Extra Charge:m Yellow 10K Gold or White 10K Gold■ Synthetic Birthstones or Sunburst Stones■ All Birthstone Colors Available■ Full Name Engraved orFacsimile Signature <$Xpz~■ Stone Encrusting /'★ Available in ^ ***oa%**a&^14KGold, Argentus& Lustrium W® ®...a timeless symbol of your achievements. Josten’sPersonalizedSignet RingYour College Ring designedwith a personal touch...Order from your Josten's College Ring SpecialistDATE: MAY 21 & 22 TIME: 9:30 AM to 4:30 PMPLACE: U of Chicago Bookstore, 2nd FloorTHE JOSTEN RING REPRESENTATIVE WILL BE IN THE BOOKSTOREON THE ABOVE DATES, PLEASE PLACE YOUR RING ORDERS AT THIS TIME.MEMBERSHIP son• Quiet/ restful Country Club atmosphere|A| • Private cabanas available.jjpj • Olympic-size heated Swimming PoolPhone Mrs. Snyder PLaza 2-3800£ lartvift SO5500 South Shore DrivePLaza 2-3800 RESIST THE BARBARIAN ADVANCES.MAKE A STAND FOR CIVILIZATION.THE END (OF THE QUARTER) IS NEAR.JOINTHESOCIETYFORTHE PRESERVATIONOF QUIET IN REGENSTEIN.ASSOCIATE NOW.GET YOUR SPQR BUTTON TODAY.HAVE YOUR CAKE AND EAT IT TOO 1SEN/OR WEEK. m0 * GET YOUR JUST DESSERT JUNE 6 - JUNE /34—the grey city journal —Friday, May 16, 1980The Chernoff Turn-offUtopia TV Storeby Maxine ChernoffYellow PressThe Time Of Plague. . . Those somehow immune tothe plague carried a burden ofguilt. Why had they, rather thansaintly children survived? Theliving came to identify with flies,flourishing amid the shambles ofgenerations. They hid theirachievements so the plague alonewould typify the era.Historians, noting the lack of invention, called the time of theplague The Dark Ages. Yettoday, unearthing villages In re¬mote parts of Europe, it is not unusual to find handlebars, tires,and spokes buried like ancientreptiles. which failed.! Can metaphor be so monstrous? Is it any! wonder a poem never saved anyone fromj a concentration camp, when all along itI was the metaphor that put him there?i The end of this metaphoric reign of| terror came whenOne day in a schoolroom a slowchild with glasses forgot to drawthe vertical line of the plus signand so subtraction was bornMinus, minus we chanted allday . . .; This is Chernoff's answer to the! unrelenting "plus" of metaphor, to thechallenge of its immense power ofassociation. It is revealing that her poeticstrategy originates not as precocity butI as inadvertent error. Chernoff is farj closer to the truth than she imagineswhen she characterizes her "minus" asan act of forgetfulness. Like some other poets of hergeneration, Chernoff views her poeticinheritance as an embarrassing,pretentious architecture of toweringemotion and inspired ideals. RebeNiouslyj she decides she will not build on these| foundations. She will not "tower"; shej will not be inspired. Chernoff tries to| sidestep the vertically of metaphor; she! attempts to work with only thej horizontal. Her poetry and its meaningwill become two dimensional and flat;j her voice will be monotonous and! unemotional, and will affect a certain! weariness. This "minus" is not entirely| without its power;Words line up like racehorses ata starting gate. Nose to nosethey edge toward the climacticperiod. All want to be part ofthat last line where the reader'sgaze will stop, blink, and refocuslike a dutiful traffic light. Wheredo they come from? But the weaknesses, too, are apparent,i Articles, artifices, whole poemsevaporate, with scrutiny Chernoff's is apoetry indifferent to interpretation, deafto the concerns of the reader, wnoliypreoccupied with its own minimalistj evasivenessChernoff is correct in thinking thatj vacuity and insignificance are not thedemons high art makes them out to be.But having found nothing inherentlywrong in these notions of "minus," she! makes the fatal error of deciding they| are right. She seizes upon shallowness. and uses it in place of depth; vacuity (notsubstance or the substantial) becomesI the object of her search. Her aim is tochampion the insignificant through itsI exclusive use, but in doing so she makesthe insignificant significant. Since evendwelling on a subject invites significance,Chernoff is forced to leap from thought tothought almost before one is there. Herpoems become fleeting concatenations oftrivalized fragments.by Ron GagnonThere is a first stanza to this poem,and I have left it out with good reason; itis even worse than the two I've justquoted. The poem is by Maxine Chernoff.To my mind, her Utopia TV Store is adisappointing collection of silly andunaccomplished prose poems. This isharsh criticism, but Chernoff's work is upto it.Two features mark Chernoff's poetry:prolific imagination and pervasiveinsignificance. Both, I think, wereintended, tnough that does not alter thefact that they work to cross purposes.Unfortunately this, too, seems intended.It is part of Chernoff's strategy to doaway with that all too common trope, themetaphor, replacing it with somethingnew and formless — as eminentlyfashionable and contemporary ashigh impact plastic.Consider the cited stanzas. Whatconnection exists between peopleflourishing amid the shambles ofgenerations, and flies? Does Chernoffreally give any reason for why thesurvivors of the plague should identifywith flies, or does she simply allow theconnection to suggest itself? Or; supposea medieval bicycle were unearthed,would it necessarily resemble an ancientreptile? Even a rusted ancient reptile?Obviously, these comparisons are notwhat we expect. Chernoff intends herimages to be shifting and blurred, tooperate exclusively at the level ofsuggestion. She avoids a precisedescriptive focus to a degreeexasperating for her reader. It is aneffect akin to looking at the worldthrough a shower curtain.Chernoff's aversion to metaphor arisesfrom the complaint, detailed in .he poem"Subtraction," that metaphor throws themeanings of words together in a waysomehow unnatural, or too demanding ofthe poet or the reader. It is, she writes,incestuous and pretentious.Coupling jackals with jackals,summing sunsets and field mice.Soon the world was packed as athird class railway car.A flurry of nonsequiturs, Chernoff'sattack is inaccurate, and rather unfair tothe poor metaphor. How can centuries ofprodigious literary accomplishment bederided as "third class?" Yet Chernoff isconvinced that under the weighty burdenof metaphorWe tired of objects desiring us .. . Scholars developed protectivephilosophies . . . hope was in theinventions of madmen —evaporation chambers,metphysical vacuums, all of A Not ■ so Modest ProposalPrisoners of SilenceJonathan KozolContinuumby Richard KayeEric Bentley once remarked that theliterature of all education is for burning,but if the five "education" books byJonathan Kozol prove anything, it is thatthere are at least a few books oneducation which are worth saving fromthe flames. Jonathan Kozol first entered jnational prominence with the publication |of Death At an Early Age in 1968, a .2mortifying personal account of a white o>teacher in the antiquated ghetto schools 2of Boston. The book had a smouldering —effect then, as Kozol's account of racist Qschool board and teacher policies became oa hotly debated issue in the Boston Globe. ~\Kozol's horror stories — whippings o*black students in school basements, theart teacher who displayed the work ofher white students from another school in Iorder for the ghetto kids to have"models" for their art work, the firing ofj Kozol for his assignment of a poem by! Langston Hughes — was the impetus forseveral reforms as well as the start ofthe Free School movement in Boston.Free Schools, Kozol's second book, wasthe logical outcome of his struggle in thepublic school system. In it he recountedthe creation of one of the nation's firstfree schools. Although Kozol has sinceacknowledged the value of workingwithin the school system, Free Schoolswas his best, most eloquent, mostreasonable and passionate book — rageturned into an innovative alternative,without the rhetorical self-indulgence sotypical from other sixties radicals.Tirelessly working with parents to createa neighborhood free school, Kozol wasnever a figure with enough theatricalityto garner the media attention whichmade an Abbe Hoffman emblematic ofthe period.i The epigraph of Kozol's recent book,j Prisoners of Silence: Breaking the Bondsj of Adult Illiteracy in the United Statesj (Continuum Books), is a quote fromi Bertc't Brecht: "Hungry man, reach for| the book...," a phrase which sets the! entire spirit of a book which is short on| theory and long on what Kozol hopes will: be a practical campaign for establishingi an effective, national literacy network.I The figures on United States illiteracyare appalling, running from a Vewi.week) magazine article which estimates thereare twenty three million illiterates to a Jonathan Kozolgovernment analyst from the Office ofEducation who puts the figure atfifty seven million. Kozol doesn't allow usto simply savor the gruesome statistics,but instead demonstrates his familiarknack tor recounting a particular storywhich tells of the despair of a singleindividual — in this case a man namedi Peter, who tells Kozol how fearful he is; that his "secret" will be discovered.| Almost pathologically worried that his; boss or friends will discover he can'tj read, Peter lies, avoids tests and forms,! and when dining out with acquaintancesI insists on eating at Howard Johnson'sj because its menus have photographs ofi all the entrees. The percentile drops in; S.A.T. scores among the whiteupper middle class look somewhat lessthan earth-shattering when compared tothe (mostly poor) illiterates described by :| Kozol.Prisoners of Silence is the "blueprint"; for a literacy corps of young people! which Kozol models after the campaigns; in Cuba, Israel, China, and for a time, inBrazil. The plan is to have students takei time off from college for the summer and'fall in order to work and live side by side jwith the illiterate. Kozol is wonderfulI when he attempts to dispel the essentially ii cynical attitude that only "expert"; teachers can instruct students in readingand writing. The Cuban and Israeli! campaign did indeed prove that it waspossible for the uncredentialed to teachreading. What's astonishing is that Kozolstill has the conviction that there arehordes of young people who are ready to do the following.Young people who choose to liveat the same economic level asthose men and women who aresoon to be co workers in a sharedendeavor will be obliged to learn —if they do not already know — thetaste of inexpensive food, the senseof weariness of those who worklong hours for little pay or else(more frequently) of those whohave no work at all but whoexhaust their energies day afterday in fruitless efforts to obtain aworthwhile job. Volunteers wiillearn also to keep up with theupending pressures of hour to hourstruggle for struggle in an urbantenement or in a rural shack..What eviaence is there that young peoplewill make this commitment?(Furthermore, what is this domg in achapter entitled "Practical Details"?)The reference to the Cuban ana Israeliliteracy campaigns in which thousands ofpeople taught the illiterate to read wouldappear to be encouraging, but we'reasked to forget that the Cubanenthusiasm was, to a large extent,legislated entnusiasm. And there does notseem to be evidence that Zionistenthusaism is taking hold here in theUnited States (which was largelyresponsible for Israel's success ateliminating illiteracy) One is left towonder if Kozol is suggesting some typeof national service or whether he issimply being deliberately naive about theprospects of a renewed student interest insocial issues. On this rather crucial pointPrisoners of Silence is maddeninglyunclear.There may be more than a littlecoincidence in this talk of a youth corpsto fight illiteracy now that the discussionon registration and the draft has reachedsuch a peak. Students and other youngpeople are now under more pressure toprove their social value, to eitherembrace the draft; fight its return; orfight its return and welcome some formof national service. Whatever theoutcome of that particular struggle, itseems unlikely that the hard nosedromanticism of Prisoners of Silence willprove contagious at the moment. ButKozol's book — complete with appendicesof national organizations presentlyfighting illiteracy - may very wellbecome crucial if there is an advent ofold time student concern for the moreurgent social issues ot the dayUnassigned Readings and Other Guilty Pleasures Compiled by Richard Kaye, Molly McQuaae, and the Chicago Literacy Reviewthe grey city journal —Friday, May 16, 1980—5The Way They WereThe Long Riders. Directed by Walter Hill;written by Bill Bryden, Steven PhillipSmith, and Stacy and James Keach; photo¬graphed by Ric Waite; music by Ry Cooder.With David, Keith, and Robert Carradine,James and Stacy Keach, Dennis and RandyQuaid, and Christopher and NicholasGuest.by Ted ShenWalter Hill's retelling of the legend of theJames Younger brothers is so amorphousthat it intrigues in spite of itself. Part of thefascination lies in how thematic possibilitiesare touched upon but never quite fully devel¬oped; and part lies in how visual setups con¬stantly overshadow the thrust of the narrafive. The film threatens to go in manydirections but is forced by its fidelity to thelegend to settle for a bogus steady course.Yet Hill's staging of the scenes persistentlyundermines the importance of the narra¬tive. He seems more interested in the cosmetics of the character's actions ratherthan their motivations. This version pres¬ents the legend as it must have looked butnot as it was lived, it shows the legendaryheroes as figures in landscape, not as actorsin a drama.The James legend needs little introduc¬tion. It begins with the alliance of three setsof brothers — The Jameses, the Youngers,and the Millers. They rob to make a living,and they share their wealth with the poor.Their exploits start gaining attention whenthe Pinkertons go after them and the newspapers glorify them. As they skillfully eludethe Pinkerton pursuit, their success fuelstheir legends. But the web of detectives fi¬nally catches up with them in Northfieldwhere their careful plan to rob a bank goesawry. The Younger brothers and one Millerare captured. Jesse goes home only to be betrayed by another set of brothers — theFords. Frank turns himself in. The gang isdispersed, but the legend lives on.Hill's treatment of the narrative alternates between the business side of thegang's life and the private side. To them,robbing is just a business enterprise — away of making a decent living. It has its occupational hazards, and it has its rewards.Above all else, the profession demands adherence to its ethics: you don't rat on yourpartners, and you don't kill innocent bys¬tanders. There is a private side to their exisfence as well: the need for female companionship, the pressure to settle down. Thebrothers regard this facet as sanctified:they don't mingle business with family. Butthe two sides start to emerge when the Pin¬kertons intrude upon their domestic preserve. Each Pinkerton attempt at smokingthem out becomes an invasion of their privacy. But each try fails because the Pinkerton men can't overcome the cooperationamong the clannish families in their part ofthe country. Only when the brothers ventureinto an alien territory (Minnesota) can thedetectives lay trap successfully. When thebrothers finally succumb, their professionallife disintegrates, and their carefully shielded personal lives crumble. The final merging of the two sides lead to nowhere.The script dallies with many themes natural to the genre and the legend. For a while,it flirts with the conflict between domesticity and adventure, and the film begins tolook like a remake of Seven Brides for SevenBrothers. The theme of male bonding, a requisite for the genre, recurs but is never quitesquarely dealt with. Then there is the threatof encroaching civilization, but it only surfaces in passing. The parallel between thetwo sides of law is sketched, but only that.The discrepancy between the romance of legend and the reality behind it — anotherprotean Western theme — is hinted at, butnever gathers in force. This constant shifting in thematic allegiance, in the end, turnsthe film into a pastiche of Themes. Thebreadth is encyclopedic, but there is hardlyany depth.The wonder is that with such an aimlessthematic design the film still holds interest.But then this is a Walter Hill movie. As inany Hill film, the visual gymnastics dazzle Brotherly Outlaws: Carradines, Guests, Quaids, and Keaches as Youngers, Fords, Millers,and Jameses.even while the dramatic structure falters.Hill has never been prone to sacrifice visuallogic to dramatic coherence. His filmsalways make more sense visually. Quiteoften, the images rivet attention when noth¬ing else seems to be working. (No one ques¬tions during the film why the Warriors donot bother taking a cab back to Coney Is¬land.) To Hill, a character's motion explainshis motives, and his action justifies his exis¬tence. There is no need to probe further. Agesture speaks volumes, and an image isworth a thousand words. As the choreo¬graphed movements among characters de¬fine their relationships, so the orchestratedsequences of their actions delineate theiruniverse (and a Hill movie). This aestheticsof " visual existentialism" works well whenthe drama is pared to the bones, the ense¬mble of characters kept small, and the needfor emotional moping around unnecessary.In The Driver, all these pre-requisites aremet. The film remains the quintessential IHill: visually stylish and strangely moving.The Warriors succeeds to a certain extent, Ipartly because of the impressive balletomic ]fight sequences, and mostly because of thenovelty of recasting a classical myth in amodern urban milieu.The Long Riders, however, is a differentstory. By including all these sets ofbrothers, Hill is no longer dealing with purearchetypes. The legend itself offers toomany complications; it lacks the simplicityof a monolithic tale. And the interactionsamong the brothers and their women cry forsympathetic observation. Hill tries hard tobrush away these considerations and to re¬main true to his aesthetics. When the inadequacies of the script threaten to surface,Hill covers them up with brilliantly stagedscenes. So each attempt at thematic concreteness dissolves into a set piece. Some of theindividual scenes are impressive to behold.There is the brawl in a Texas honky tonk;the brothers trapped in a barn making theirescape; the family dance; and the finalNorthfield raid. Each scene is a tableau dis¬jointed from the others. They don't hold together dramatically. They seem to bepieced together according to the dictates ofhistorical truth. (Yet there is a certain con¬sistency to the visual strategy.The film pays close attention to authenticity. The people look unkempt, the settingsappear appropriately grundgy. Thebrothers are hillybillies turned rebels. Thepervasive tone is that of realism. But visually the style is expressionistic. Hill uses closeups obsessively. Each character is oftenisolated in his own frame. Two shots are al¬lowed only during the privileged move¬ments when a man and a woman get to¬gether. The expressionism is heightened bythe dynamic editing. The only scenes inwhich the camera surveys the action are those of violence. The mayhems acquirecertain lyricism, but the ordinary ex¬changes among characters are disrupted bythe cutting. (The raid, filmed in slow motion, has the same orgiastic quality of theambush scene in Bonnie and Clyde. Eachpenetration of a bullet has the cathartic re lease of sex.) The visual design has a logicthat the dramatic structure lacks.The gimmick of using real-life brothers toplay the legendary outlaw brothers pays offin a way. They are exploited for their familyresemblance and natural comeraderie. (Or,as Hill points out: "It's a perfect case ofform following function.") They are used asicons, even though most of them aren't ofmythic quality. (The Carradine Brothersare the only ones who are.) But they do fallinto the visual schemes of the film quitenicely. Ry Cooder's score, relying on melodies from the period, is both sparing andevocative. And Ric Waites's sharp andharsh cinematography creates an atmosphere devoid of romanticism.The film plays on other versions of the legend and, in a broader sense, the genre it¬self. The frantic montage and the lyricismof violence are reminiscent of Peckinpah.(Hill wrote the script to Peckinpah's TheGetaway.) There is an explicit homage toSam Fuller, when Charlie Ford crows: "IShot Jesse James," just as he is about to killJesse. But the debt to Fuller goes deeper.The insistent closeups, and the attempt todrain drama from legend, pay tribute tothat director's version of the legend. Otherinfluences, from Kurosawa to Sergio Leone,undoubtedly also filter the look of the film.Yet the film stays Hill's own. From theopening image of the brothers riding on therange to the last shot of handcuffed FrankJames leaving on a train as the color imagefreezes into a tintype photograph, the filmlooks every inch a Walter Hill movie. It's another way of telling the legend, and surely adifferent one.A 24 hour nightmare of terror.NOW SHOWING!STATE LAKEDowntownWOODFIELDSchaumburg OLD ORCHARDSkokieYORKTOWNLombardCROSSROADSMerrillville Ind NORRIDGENorridgeBREMENTinley ParkRIVER OAKSCalumet City GOLF MILLNilesEVERGREENEvergreen ParkDrive-ins: BEL-AIRCiceroSKY-HIAddison CICEROMoneeTWINWheeling DOUBLEChicago41Hammond IndHALSTED TWINRiverdale53Palatine6—the grey city journal—Friday, May 16, 1980fiNM i!MIRockefeller Chapel and The U.C. Brass Society §presentBAROQUE MUSIC FORNATURAL TRUMPET,CORNETTO AND ORGANbyDONSMITHERS and ED MONDELLOBach ( larkc KrebsMusic of Vivian iBuxtehude Freseobaldi PurcellTuesday, May 20, 8:00 $3 Gen. Admission; $2 Students ?Tickets are now on sale at Reynolds Club NEW 2-drawer files $59.00NEW 6-ft. folding tables $49.00BRAND EQUIPMENT& SUPPLY CO.8600 COMMERCIAL AVENUEOPEN MON.-FRI.8:30-5:00SATURDAYS„ 9:00-3:00RE 4-21 1 1itilftf^arkPipr^anil iliibarru 5’luip1552 E. 53rd - Under IC tracksPipes - Pipe Tobaccos -Imported Ciqarettes - CiaarsMon-Sat 9-8 Sun 12-5Students under 30 oet 10% offask for “Biq Jim"•TirifHB" It1 '81 II HP INTERNATIONAL HOUSE FILMS PRESENTSat. May 177:30/10:00 Joseph Von Sternberg'sTHE BLUE ANGELWITH; Marlene Dietrich Assembly Hall, l-House1414 E. 59th-$1.50\.STUDENT OMBUDSMAN, 1980-81The University is now seeking applicants for the post of Student Ombudsman.The Ombudsman's term of office will not begin until Autumn 1980. He or shewill be expected to work with the 1979-80 Student Ombudsman through theremainder of the academic year.Applications from individual students are welcome, as are recommendationsfrom individual students or other student groups. They should be in letterform and must be submitted to the Office of the Dean of Students in the Uni¬versity by Friday, May 23rd. They should indicate the candidate's academicarea and level, number of years at the University, and relevant experienceand other special qualifications for the position of Ombudsman. Letters ofrecommendation from other students or members of the faculty or staff willbe helpful.Applicants will be interviewed by a student-faculty committee; the appoint¬ment will be made by the President.The Student Ombudsman is a part-time salaried official of the University whois also a registered degree candidate. He is appointed by the President toserve in addition to the regular organization of the University in cases ofwhich there are allegations of specific unfairness or inefficiency. The Om¬budsman writes a quarterly report, published in the University Record, inwhich he gives a general account of his activities and makes such recommen¬dations as he may deem appropriate.DEADLINE EXTENDED TO MAY 23, 1980The UndertonesGirls Do Like ItHypnotizedThe UndertonesSireIt's not that urgent wanting some attentionOur teenage dreams they're surelyworth a mentionThis is more songs about chocolateand girlsIt's not so easy knowing you'll beheardA lot less time but a lot more careSo here's more songs about chocolateand girls"More Songs About Chocolateand Girls"by Renee SarackiLast summer when nothing really newand exciting was happening in the popmusic world, five young men from Derrybroke out with an incredible pop album. TheUndertones' debut was neither terribly original nor particularly witty. But what itlacked in urbane sophistication and preten¬tious artistic ambitions, it more than madeup for in true rock 'n' roll spirit. Every songon that debut (American release) from"Jimmy Jimmy" through to "TeenageKicks" is filled with raw, untouched adoles¬cent feelings and emotions. These desireshave been repressed for so long that whenlead vocalist Feargal Sharkey (my favorite"pop-star name") finally lets out all hisfrustrations, you can just feel his pain. Justone listen to "Teenage Kicks" and you'llknow what I'm talking about.Critics of The Undertones have always at¬tacked the group's obsession with teenagelust and frustrations; a.k.a., girls. But TheUndertones are first and foremost a greatpop group, and like all great pop groupstheir themes are banal, repetitious, andhave an uncanny ability to make you cry.They also serve to make you feel a little lessgoofy and a little less alienated, 'cos geez,you're just a kid and who cares if you're alittle goofy-looking, she should still like you.Just think of all the broken hearted streetpunks listening to "You've Really Got aHold on Me" and crying like babies andyou've got a good idea of the level on whichThe Undertones operate.The Undertones don't just act out the livesof their imaginary heroes, they live theirlives. They are the genuine article. Feargal,the quavering tenor, is tall, skinny, wearsplan brown shoes with air soles, and a parkawith a polyester turtle neck on underneath.Not exactly your typical, trendy punk. WhenFeargal sings about not being able to getgirls, you can really believe him. The othermembers all have dorky looking hair-cutsand goofy smiles. In addition, all wear pantsabout two inches too high, in other words,"floods." Any girl would think of them asnerds. What's so great about The Under¬tones though, is that this is the way they've j always dressed. The dressed that way whenthey were just poor, Irish Catholic kids inDerry, and they'll continue to dress thatway as pop stars.When The Undertones first arrived lastyear, critics were quick to compare them toThe Buzzcocks and especially The Ramones(two good recognizable pop groups). Whilethe similarities are there, I prefer to think ofj them in terms of the old, pop tradition ori! ginated by Chuck Berry and carried on byDion, Smokey Robinson, and of course, TheBeatles. "No Reply" from Beatles '65 wouldbe a perfect Undertone song.Hailing from Northern Ireland, it wouldseem reasonable to expect some sort ofI mention about life in a war-torn country, butI The Undertones are just an unassuming, huj mble pop band who would feel unnaturali writing heavy political songs. And whilewhat The Clash have to say about workingclass life in England is often brilliant, its appeal will always be rather limited in Ameri-ca. The Undertones, fortunately, will neverhave that problem.The new Undertones LP, Hypnotized, isdescribed in one of the album's song titlesas, "More Songs About Chocolate andGirls," and that's exactly what it is. Thecover is in perfect, Undertone style. It is asnapshot; blurry and over-developed, takenby an Undertone of fellow Undertones,Mickey Bradley, bassist and Billy Doherty,drummer. Both 'Tones are sitting at a restaurant table, greedily clutching their forks,each with a lobster bib on, and a dopey grinon their faces, ready to dig in."More Songs About Chocolate and Girls"is one of the best songs on the album. In addition to being another great pop song withan irresistable guitar riff, it is also thegroup's reply to their critics. In one of thelines Feargal sings, "It's never too late fordumb entertainment."My favorite song on the album, however,is a cover of The Drifter's classic song,"Under the Boardwalk." The irony of agoofy looking Irish lad singing a black soulsong and talking about living on a blanketwith his baby while tasting hot dogs andfrench fries almost matches that of JohnLennon's imitation of Smokey Robinson's"You've Really Got a Hold on Me." I don'tknow what it is that makes these brash,young kids think they can imitate blacksoul singers, but they sound great nonetheless. What is especially neat is the pathosinvolved in trying to do something you knowyou can do — but you really want to do itanyway, so you do.It is that idea of finally achieving whatyou always thought was impossible and thegenuine thrill one gets from the novelty ofthe experience that goes into making up TheUndertones. They're just five friends fromthe same neighborhood who wanted to starta band for fun and a little escape and nowthey have two records and an Americantour. I'll bet even their "perfect cousin" is abit jealous of them now.8—the grey city journal —Friday, May 16, 1980 Not T ogether VeryI'm Getting My Act Together and TakingItOn the Roadbook and lyrics by Gretchen Cryer; musicby Nancy Forddirected by Word Bakerat the Drury Lane Water Tower Theatre,266 0500by Rebecca LillianContrary to what theater critic David El¬liot may think, feminism can be easily entertaining. Unfortunately, I'm Getting MyAct Together and Taking It On the Road isneither feminist nor entertaining. With theexception of a few catchy moments, Gretchen Gryer's show is a musical, theatrical,and political cliche.Cryer plays Heather Jones, a nightclubsinger and former soap opera star with a re¬cently raised consciousness. Heather gotsick of her old cabaret act, which she dismisses as "Jello" and "oatmeal." (And sheshould; the one number she performs fromthat act is bland and mushy.) In the absenceof her pseudo macho manager Joe (MarkHotter), Heather has devised a new act witha new group — The Liberated Man's BandPlus Two. The "Two" are backup vocalistsCheryl (Kathryn Jaeck) and Alice (NancyLinari).The production consists of a hyperactive,man hating Heather strutting her "aware"stuff, while Joe fumes and squirms abouther show and his identity. The sexist manager finds his equally sexist client's songs andskits "offensive to your blacks, your men,your entire audience, to me." Perhaps ifHeather's (and Cryer's) act were togetherenough, it would properly offend the politically unaware. As it stands, however slickly, the act is predictable and boring.Even the few moving numbers and linesare ruined by redundancy. In 1980, it is difficult to tolerate a great many jokes about"power," "me ness", and, especially, Gretchen Cryer, Kathryn Jaeck and NancyLinari, as Heather, Cheryl and Alice, dotheir "Strong Woman Number" in I'm Get¬ting My Act Together and Taking It On theRoad."space.” "Strong Woman Number" is theplay's one excellent song. Heather, Cheryl,and Alice poke fun at themselves and at theart of being independent. What a pity thatHeather/Cryer doesn't take that message toheart. Instead, she bounces right back to theselfish battle cries of the so called HumanPotential movement.Those cries are essentially what I'm Getting My Act Together is about. Cryer doesnot, through her story, her lyrics, or her acting, provide a feminist — or humanist —perspective as to why a performer would analyze the political and personal implicationsof her act and her success. That would makean interesting show. Then, perhaps, wewould learn more about the backup singers,the band, and the frazzled, obviously upsetmanager. We might even understand whyJake (Richard Dunne), a shy and sensitivemusician, is madly in love with Heather.It certainly is not feminist for Heather totreat her associates as cartoonlike props;one dimensional tools for the star to manipulate. Neither are repetitious, contrivedsongs used as vehicles for would be starsvery entertaining. Top 40 music and I'mGetting My Act Together prove that.DON SMITHERSthe world-renowned Baroque trumpet performer, scholar,and author will he giving a seminar on all facets of brassplaying. The seminar is open to all interested and is free.DATE: Saturday, May 17TIME: 9:30 am to 11:30 amPLACE: Robie House at the University ofChicago — NW comer of 58th Street andWoodlawn Avenue.Mr. Siti it tier's seminar. as well as his concert in Rockefeller(Impel on May 20. are sponsored by the I ('. Brass Society.BRASS SEMINAR(zzt=3 SPECIAL 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£RV1C€ PARTS mGENERAL MOTORS PARTS DIVISIONKeep That Great G \l Feeling If ith GF.\ I l.\T GM Tarts72nd & Stony Island 684-0400Open Evenings and Sunday Parts Open Sat. til noon2 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 Volkswagen72nd & Stony Island 684-0400Open Evenings and Sundays Parts Open Sat. 'til noon TheFLAMINGOand CABANA CU B.”>300 S. Shore Drive• Studio and I Itt droom• Kurniidu'd and l nfnrni-ht-il• I .oft.. ltl|- -Ion• < Mildoor Pool and (»ard<n»• < airpoliiifr and I trap*-. I m l.• Security• l ni\er-i(\ Sul>»itl\ lorStudent* and Staff• Oclic;itr—cm• Ba rlxT Shuii• IVautv Shop• I.B.D. Restaurant• I nt i ~t• VahtKRFLPARKINGM.ShyderFL 2-3800Young Designs byELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERS, 1620 E. 53rd St.288 2900 1638 East Street i()3-0666BARGAIN CORNER.. .4 room apartment just listed. Near 55th & Woorllawn.S22.000 (Co-op, hut owner will finanee.)RED BRICK ENI) UNIT SPACIOUS TOWNHOUSE. Has its own walk-in garage!Everything approx, two years old. Eight rooms, double greenhouse. PossessionSummer. 54th Blackstone. $145,000.NEAR HARPER AVE. & Park PI., Tri-level (“E” plan) Townhouse.8 rooms. $112,000. apwner must -ell by June, a hriekStifHT kitchen - island cooking -/Tr deek oversee- landscaped garden.PRICE DRASTICALLY REDUCED., hseven room Victorian house in e-microwave - laundry upstairs.^ ill accept $119.500. Near 55 < V-A.wood.PRICE REDUCED.. .onlv $42,500 for two hedroom. formal dining room - nice"cat-in” kitchen. Pretty oak floor-. ^Xalk to campus! 59th near Harjier. This is aco-op, but owner will partiailv finance.Ul XI RY SET-l P in five room, 2 hath. Lakefront Barclav Apt. High Floor.Superb view. $72,500.ACROSS FROM REGENSTEIN LIBRARY...we have a 5 room apt., woodhumingfireplace, sunny light. Adjacent garden on l niversitv Ave. i- vours to enjov. $39,000cash (Co-op).AVAILABLE JUNE 15. two liedroom in South Tower of University Park lookingdown Blackstone Avenue - the campus and eitv. NER Ml ST SELL. Being trans¬ferred. PRICE REDUCED $57,000.OVER 2800 Sq. Ft. (That's bigger than a lot of houses) Eight room condo. Sunshineand spaciousness - master Itedroom (huge) has double closets - study is Teakwood -three baths - Excellent modem kitchen AND AIR CONDITIONED. Over 2800 sq.ft. Hyde Park Blvd. $93,500.57 KIMBARK - ^e have a first floor at $57,000 and a third floor (with superkitchen for $68,500. You ought to see both.Note: Re are “Co-ope rating" broker*, i n v registered broker i* welcome tosell these listings, ('.nil your favorite broker (Re hope that's l s).There’s aNew Hilton in yourNeighborhood.The Hyde Park Hilton.Your new neighbor, the Hyde ParkHilton, is ideally.located on the lake at 50thStreet; for business or pleasure; meetingsor banquets; out of town guests or a week¬end on the town for you.Spacious, comfortable rooms, finecuisine in the Chartwell House, and casualdining in the Laurel Cate, large pool andpatio, free parking... everything you'd ex¬pect from a Hilton, right in your backyardFor information and reservationscall: 288-5800... it s a very local call.X HYDE PARK HILTON4900 South Lake Shore Drive Chicago IL60616 AT LAST A SUMMER JOBTHAT DOESN'T INTERFERE WITHYOUR SUMMER VACATION.Whichever days, whichever weeks you prefer towork. Norrell Temporary Services will do the bestwe can to accommodate your summer scheduleWe've got temporary positions :n many fieldsAnd they're all good jobs, with good pay andgood places to work.What's more, you're never obligated to NorrellThere's no contract to sign No tee to paySo, this summer, it you'd like to spend some timeaway from work—and still have some money tospend-contact Norrell at the location belowWe ll work you into your schedule, not ours(312) 782-4181(312) 654-2797CHICAGOOAK BROOKROLLINGMEADOWS (312)255-4282OAK LAWNSKOKIE (312)636-0401(312) 673-4024 [NorrellTEMPORARY SERVICES HEPAlRSPECIALISTSon IBM. SCMOlympia etcFREE repairestimates, repairsby factory-trainedtechnician.RENTALSavailable withU of C I D New anuRebuiltTypewriters,Calculators,Dictators,AddersU of ChicagoBookstore5750 S. Ellis Ave753-3303SCHOOL 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 0 )Concentrations are offered in Biometry. Epidemiology Environmental andOccupational Health Sciences Industrial Hygiene and Safety Health Sciencesand Community Health Sciences Administration and Health Law Health Eduration Population Sciences and International HealthFinancial assistance is available through Public Health Traineeships and Research Positions Deadline to apply for M P H Program is February 15 1980Deadline for M S Or P H and Ph 0 Programs is six weeks prior to the quarter in which the applicant wishes to enterFor further information write or telephonelames W WagnerAssistant Dean for Student AffairsUniversity of Illinois at the Medical CenterP 0 Box 6998Chicago Illinois 60680(312) 996 66251 he School encourages applications from qualified minority students Eye ExaminationsFashion Eye WearContact LensesDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist(53 Kimbark Plaza)1200 E 53rd St.493-8372Intelligent people know the differ¬ence between advertised cheapglasses or contact lenses and com¬petent professional serviceOur reputation is your guaranteeof satisfaction V.rThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, May 16, 1980—15FRIDAYWorkshop in Economics and Econometrics: “An Ex¬amination of Agricultural Price Supports” speak¬er Bill Pelletier, 10:30-12:00, Stuart 216.Grad- Comm on the Study of Women: “Women inChina" speaker Mag Mallory, 12 noon. Regen-stein group study room 523.Geophysical Sciences Colloquium: "SevereWeather Forecasting” speaker Gregory Forbes.1:30 pm. Hinds Lab Auditorium.Smart Gallery: Exhibit — "Joan Miro: The Develop¬ment of a Sign Language" May 15-June 18.Center For Middle Eastern Studies- Arabic Circle —"Saint, Scholar and Soldier: Varieties of LocalImams” speaker Patrick Gaffney, 3:30 pm. Pick218.Hiliel; Reform-Progressive Shabbat Minyan. 5:00pm, Hiliel.Women's Union: Meets 5:00 pm in the Women’sUnion office Ida Noyes above the Frog andPeach.UC Gymnastics Club: Instruction available5:30-8:00 pm. Bartlett, free.Doc Films: “Breaking Away” 6:00, 8:00 and 10:00pm, “Compulsion" midnight, Cobb.UC Karate Club’; Meets 7:00 pm in the dance roomof Ida Noyes.Hiliel; Adat Shalom Shabbat Dinner, 7:30 pm, Hil- lel.UC Christian Fellowship: Meets 7:30 pm. Interna¬tional House, All are welcome,Center for Latin American Studies; Film * “Battleof Chile: Part III". 8:00 pm, SS 122.Jesuit House; Party for alumni of Jesuit HighSchools, Colleges and Universities, 8:30 pm, 5554S. Woodlawn.SATURDAYUC Ki-Aikido Club; Meets at 10:30 am-ll:30 am, inthe fieldhouse wrestling room.Compton Lecture Series; “The First Three Min¬utes—Brewing the Light Elements" 11:00 am, Eck-hart room 133.UC Gymnastics Club: Instruction available2:00-5:00 pm, Bartlett, free.Crossroads: Saturday dinner, 6:00 pm. No reser¬vation necessary.Law School Films: “On the Waterfront” 7:00 and0:30 pm. Law- School Auditorium.Center for Latin American Studies: “Writingunder Duress: At Home and in Exile” speakerOscar Hahn, 8:00 pm, International House homeroom.Crossroads: Coffeehouse with live music, 0:00pm* 1:00 am. SUNDAYCenter for Latin American Studies: “Contradic¬tions of Military Rule and the Prospects forChange” 10:00 am. Center for Continuing Educa¬tion, 1307 E 60th St. 11:30 am: "Setbacks andAchievements in the Arts and Sciences: Beforeand after 1073,” 2:30 pm: "Market Forces and Eco¬nomic Strategies: Chile since 1973” at the Centerfor Continuing Education.Crossroads: Bridge, 3:00 pm. Beginners and ex¬perts welcome.Badminton Club: Meets from 6:00-7:30 pm, IdaNoyes gymnasium. New players welcome.Doc Films: "Women” 7:15 and 9:00 pm, Cobb.Tai Chi Ch'uan: Meets 7:30 pm. 4945 S. Dorchester(enter on 50th).Dept of Music; New Music Ensemble - free pro¬gram of 20th century chamber works, 8:00 pm,Lexington Hall.MONDAYPerspectives; Topic - "Iranian Politics and the On¬going Crisis in Iran" guests Marvin Zonis, Dr.Lawrence Freedman and James Yuenger. 6:09 am,channel 7.Dept of Microbiology: "Production and Analysisof Mutations in the Major Histo CompatabililyComplex of Cultured Human Cells" speaker Dr. Robert DeMars, 11:30 am, Surgery Brain ResearchInstitute rm J-135.Committee on Social Thought: Nef Lecture -"Physics and Tragedy: On Plato’s Cratylusspeaker Seth Benardete, 4:00 pm, SS 302.Dept of Chemistry: "Pedagogical Overview of theVarious Applications of Group Theory to an In¬verting and Internally Rotating N2H4 Moleculespeaker Dr, Jon Hougen, 4:00 pm, Kent 103.Committee on Public Policy: Michael Canes,Director of Policy Analysis at the American Pe¬troleum Institute will be speaking, 4:80 pm.Harper 130.UC Judo Club: Meets 6:00-8:00 pm, Bartlett gym.UC Karate Club: Meets 7:00 pm in the dance roomof Ida Noyes.Chess Club: Meets 7:00 pm in the Memorial room,Ida Noyes.Citizen’s Committee: Meeting, 7:30 pm, IdaNoyes.Doc Films: “Les Girls” 8:00 pm, Cobb.Moody Lecture Fund and Dept of Romance Lan¬guages; Lecture and film-Speaker Eugene Ione¬sco, 8:00 pm, International House Assembly Hall,w/ticket.Continued from Page 3ing the power of the state at a time when thepower of the state is becoming more of adanger. ERA is also gratuitous in thatwomen do enjoy equal rights in this countryunder law and increasingly in practice. Idon’t see why it has to be written into theConstitution.The battle over ERA has far less to dowith women’s rights than with the power ofa particular faction claiming to speak in thename of women but having no such man¬date. This is one of the reasons so manywomen are against ERA. And that particu¬lar faction, the movement known asWomen’s Lib, is a movement I regard as ex¬tremely unhealthy and injurious to this soci¬ety and to the interests of women and menalike. My wife (Midge Deeter) is fond ofusing a very telling statistic. NOW. the Na¬tional Organization of Women which is sup¬posed to represent the 100 some millionwomen in this country has 110,000 membersand Hadassah. a Jewish women’s organiza¬tion representing two and a half millionwomen has 350,000 members. The women’smovement is a very, very tiny movementand there is something signficant that that movement has only acquired 110.000members.(Editor's note: A call to the national head¬quarters of Hadassah found that "Hadassahhas been on record supporting the ERA foryears. We support it strongly,” according toa spokesman >.A lot of studies show that women tend tobe against ERA and they know that it willonly serve to legitimate the power of a groupof women who stand for things they don'tlike; the attack on the family, the pressureon them to make work or a career theirmain activity, and the sexual morality of thewomen’s movement.Patner: Do you miss being a literary crit¬ic? Do you still keep up with literature’’Podhoretz: I very much miss literary so¬ciety. I still often miss writing about it. 1keep up, I read a lot.Patner: What are you reading now?Podhoretz: Well the last novel I read is notreally a novel. It’s called The Spike. I readmost of the important works of contem¬porary fiction. Mailer, Bellow, Roth, Mala-mud, Cheever. I read Ann Beattie’s new'book. I read some older works, Dostoevskiand Trollope. I even read poetry once in awhile. Bicycle Shop8301 Hyde Park Blvd.Selling Quality ImportedBikes.Raiiegh, Peugeot, Fuii,Motobecane, WindsorAnd a foil Inventoryof MOPEDSOpen 10-7 M-F, 10-5 Sat.11-4 Sun Rollerskates for684-3737 Sale or Rent.SIND AY • May 189 A.M. Ecumenical Service of Holy Communion10 A.M. Discussion Class - Leader. ROBIN LO VT.N,Assistant Professor of Ethics and Society, Divinity SchoolTopic: “Trajectories in Faith”11 A.M. University Religious ServicePreacher JOHN B. COBB, Jr.Professor of Theology at Claremont School of Religion, Claremont,California and V isiting Professor of Theology in the Divinity SchoolSermon:“THE P<iUTICAL POWER OF PRAYER” J GOLD CITY INN %given * * * *by the MAROONOpen DollyFrom 11:30 o.m.to feOO p.m.5228 Harper 493-2559(n*«r Hmrpf Court)Eat more for less.A Gold Mine Ot Good Food"Student Discount:10% for table service^ 5% for take home^^Hl^deParV^ei^antones^ood r- \KIMBARK HALLCondominiums80% MORTGAGE LOANS AVAILABLEThe developers are offering model units torinspection every Sat. and Sun. between 1and 5 p.m.36 opts:24- 1 bedroom. I 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 ond individuallocker space.SAVE — SAVE — SAVERabbits * Diesels - JettasDashers - Sciroccos - ConvertiblesCa m pe rs - V a n a go nVW Pickup TruckNew and Used Cars, Paris and ServiceHolden Aust, U, of C. Alumnus 69,Sales RepresentativeEVERGREEN VOLKSWAGEN8920 South Cicero Avenue233-096616—The Chicago Maroon —Friday, May 16, 1980 The Maroon is seeking aBusiness Manager and anAdvertising Manager for thesummer and next year. In¬terested students should con¬tact The Maroon. 753-3265.Third Floor, Ida Noyes Hall. Your inspection is invited,51 26 S. Kimbark Ave. - Phone 643-4489Harry A. Zisook & Sons, Agts.786-9200v >Wed. May 21, 1pm to 4pm: A Foster Care SystemSimulation led by Dr. Ronald Rooney of theUniv. of Wisconsin will be held in Room Elat the School of Social Service Administration(SSA). All faculty, students, and any interestedparties cordially invited to participate. CallTim Roberts, 753-4610 for more info.Sports Women’s track takes 5thsets marks in state meetMaroons take two fromConcordia; season overBy Darrell WuDunnLast Friday, coach Schacht’s baseballteam returned to winning form as theMaroons swept passed Concordia TeachersCollege in a doubleheader at Stagg Field, 3-2and 9-3.Chicago’s other two games scheduled forthis past week against Northeastern IllinoisUniversity and North Park College werecancelled due to poor weather conditions.Just one week before last Friday’s game,the Maroons had travelled to Concordiawhere they lost 9-1. Like that game, last Fri¬day’s doubleheader was a rescheduling of agame that had rained out last month. Thistime, however, the Maroons claimed victo¬ry.The first game was a fine pitching exhibit¬ion between opposing hurlers Joe Kinczel ofChicago and Scott Lovekamp of Concordia.Both teams were held scoreless through thefirst three innings with no baserunnerreaching second base for either side. Con¬cordia finally opened the scoring in the topof the fourth inning when the lead off batterwalked, advanced to second on an infieldgrounder, and then scored on a single.Concordia’s 1-0 lead did not last long asthe Maroons picked up three runs in the bot¬tom of the fourth inning. Paul Harris led offwith a triple and Scott Jansen followed witha walk Byron Trott then singled Harrishome and moved Jansen over to third. Trottand Jansen then completed a double steal.Trott stole second base and Jansen racedhome on the catcher’s throw to second. Trottthen stole third but came home after thecatcher’s peg to third sailed past the thirdbaseman.Trailing 3-1, Concordia closed the gapwith a run in the sixth inning but that wasnot enough as Chicago went on to win 3-2.Both Kinczel and Lovekamp turned in su¬perb performances. In six innings, Kinczelallowed only four hits, and two earned runswhile striking out five, registering his fourthwin against two losses this season. Love¬kamp, who had defeated the Maroons 9-1 theprevious week, allowed only three hits andthree runs, of which only one was earned.He also fanned 11 Maroon batters includingfive in a row.In the second game, Chicago was able tobarrage Concordia’s starting pitcher Ga-brielson with nine runs in the first three in¬nings. A home run by Jansen, his first of theseason, with Dean Carpenter on secondgave the Maroons a 2-0 lead.Chicago added four runs in the second in¬ning. Tad McGwire ignited the rally with adouble and scored when the shortstop mi¬shandled a ball hit by Brian Weber. Weberthen stole second base and scored on a do¬uble by Dave Callans. Carpenter’s firsthomer of the year brought Chicago’s lead toMore spring¬time injuriesBy Dr. S. David StulbergQuestion: What is a “mallet finger" and isit a serious condition9Answer: Springtime in Chicago is accom¬panied by the appearance of a group of inju¬ries that are, at least in number, unique tothis city. These inquiries result from theChicagoan’s enthusiasm for the game of 16inch softball. The use of the 16 inch ball re¬sults in a number of hand injuries, includingthe “mallet finger deformity.’’ Some ofthese injuries can result in permanent de¬formity and disability. Fortunately, most ofthese inquiries are quite easily treated andpermanent deformity can be prevented ifTurn to Page 18 6-0.Three more runs in the third inningbrought Chicago’s total to nine. Don Ciciorareached third on a walk and two steals.McGwire also walked and both men camehome on a double by Weber. After Weberstole third, Callans bunted him home.Concordia finally got a run in the fourthinning on a single, a stolen base, and an¬other single. They added two more runs inthe next inning. Concordia’s lead off batterswung at a wild pitch for the third strike buthe reached first base before Maroon catcherCallans could retrieve the ball and throw tofirst. A stolen base and a single scored onerun, and another single and a sacrifice flyscored the second run.Meanwhile the Maroons were heldscoreless through the rest of the game byLovekamp who was brought in to relieveGabrielson in the fourth inning. But thedamage had already been done and theMaroons coasted to victory.Pitcher Jim Maranto picked up his secondwin for the Maroons, allowing seven hits andthree runs, two earned, in seven innings ofwork. At the bat. Carpenter and Jansen bothhad fine games. Carpenter went 3 for 4 withtwo RBI's, two runs scored, and a homerunwhile Jansen batted 2 for 3 with two RBI’s,one run scored, and a homerun. Weber alsoknocked in three runs and Callans batted intwo.The two wins last Friday ups Chicago’s re¬cord to 8-10. Yesterday, the Maroons com¬pleted their 1980 season against ChicagoState University (too late for presstime).The Maroons won both ends of a double-header against Chicago State on their open¬ing day of the season. The team would cer¬tainly have liked to end their year as theyhad began it. By Anne MidlerAfter three intense days of competition atthe Illinois Association of IntercollegiateAthletics for Women’s Track and FieldState Championships at North Central Col¬lege, the University of Chicago Women’sTrack team blazed to a fifth place finish outof field of fifteen other tough schools. Mak¬ing every performance their best, the UofCwomen smashed one State record, twelveschool records, and broke all of their ownpersonal records.In the first exciting day of competition,freshman standout Becky Redman finishedsecond in the pentathalon, just three pointsbehind the seasoned state winner, SandySoeha of Eureka College. The competition inthe pentathalon, which consists of the 100m.hurdles, shot put, high jump, long jump, and800m., all came down to the 800m racewhere Socha finished just two secondsahead of Redman’s new school record of2:27.6.In addition to her excellent performancein the pentathalon, Redman added two moreschool records in the long jump and the100m. hurdles to her already long list, andplaced sixth overall in the long jump andsevnth in the 400m. hurdles.Another set of outstanding performanceswas turned in by senior Vicki Powers. In ad¬dition to setting a new school record andplacing 4th in the 400m. dash with an amaz¬ing time of 61.27sec. Powers took first placein the 400m. hurdles. Again the stiff compe¬tition came from Socha of Eureka butPowers managed to pull ahead of Socha andkeep the lead in the last stretch by just12seconds. Powers' winning time of65.62sec set a new Division III state recordby four seconds.Performances like these and the manyothers which Powers has turned in in herthree year track career, make her gradua¬tion a big loss to next year’s team.In the distance events the UofC womencontinued to prove their strength as CindiSanborn took second in the 300Qm. and 5000m. and fourth in the 1500m, breakingtwo of her own school records. Trish Briscoealso made a strong showing in the 10,000m.by taking sixth place overall.Each of Chicago’s relay teams brokeschool records and chalked up invaluablepoints for the team overall. Although theseason’s hot mile relay combination of VickiPowers. Allison O’Neil, Carole Petersen,and Hope Sirull was broken up due toSirull’s foot injury, the combination of Kath¬leen Restifo. Powers, Petersen, and O’Nelplaced a strong fourth, cutting three sec¬onds off the previous school record.The combination of Jacie Carrera.Powers, Petersen, and Restifo also provedto be a good one as they cruised to a fourthplace fnih in the 400m. relay and fifthoverall in the 800m. medley relay.Slicing a whopping 17 seconds off of theirprevious school record. Casey Kerrigan,Sanborn. Restifo. and Redman proved to betoo much for all but Augustana College asthey blazed to second place in the two-milerelay with a time of 10:13.8.The overall fifth place finish at state, theteam’s undefeated indoor season, and itscurrent 4-2 outdoor season are all a fin re¬flection upon the coaching of MarianneCrawford and the dedication and hard workof the entire team.SportsWeekFriday. May 16Midwest Conference Track and FieldChampionships. Stagg FieldWomen’s Outdoor Track and FieldMeets. North Park College. Oakton Col¬lege 3:30 p m. Stagg FieldSaturday. May 17Midwest Conference Track and FieldChampionships. Stagg FieldWomen's Tennis Alumnae Meet 10:00a m Ingleside CourtsFrom the PresshoxAthletes honored at “C” banquetBy Howard SulsThe 75th Order of the “C“ banquet washeld Wednesday night to honor the new-varsity lettermen. New officers were in¬stalled for the upcoming year. Byron Trottwill remain President of the Undergradu¬ate Order, Vladimar Gastovich will re¬place Steve Frederick as Vice-President;Cy Oggins takes over as Treasurer fromAdrian Trevino; and Robert McKay is thenew Secretary, as James Leonard's suc¬cessor. Jon Winkelreid was appointedChairman of Fund Raising. Fifty-nine newlettermen were initiated into the Order ofthe “C” this year, bringing the total mem¬bership to 135 lettermen.Special awards were presented in base¬ball (J. Kyle Anderson award); track andcross-country (William B. Bond award);basketball (Joseph M. Stampf award);wrestling (the Wrobel award), and theStagg award, presented to the secnior ath¬lete with the best all-around record for ath¬letics. scholarship, and character. The An¬derson award given to the outstandingsenior baseball player went to Scott Jan¬sen, in what Coach Chuck Schacht saidwas a tough decision to make, betweenJansen. Paul Harris, and graduating jun¬ior Joe Kinczel. Ted Haydon presented theWilliam B. Bond Medal for the varsitytrack athlete scoring the greatest nujmberof points during the season to sophomoreMike Axinn, who has set new Universityrecords in the one-mile, two-mile, andthree-mile distances, and who will beheaded for Buffalo next week to compete in the Olympic Trials for the marathon.The Joseph M. Stampf Award was pre¬sented to senior Ken Jacobs by Head CoachJohn Angelus, for excellence, commit¬ment. and integrity for varsity basketball.The Wrobel award for the wrestler whoscores the most team points in a seasonwas given for the first time this year. Spon¬sored by the Wrobel family, which in¬cludes father Frank J., ‘41, and sonsFrank, ‘71, Stand. ‘72, John. ‘73, and Greg,‘76. for over 20 years of varsity wrestlingparticipation, the award was given by LeoKocher to senior Robert Michell. The AmosAlonzo Stagg Medal was presented by JeffMetcalf to senior Paul Harris. “C” pinswere ceremonially presented to the newlettermen. and “C" blankets to the four-year lttermen.The evening's guest speaker was TimWeigel, Channel 7 sportscaster A Yalegraduate who played in the backfirld therewere Calvin Hill. Weigel said he was “tiredof Calvin riding on my coattails.” Weigeltouched on the issues of high salaries forlayers, recruitment, and athletic philoso¬phy. On the subject of salaries, he notedthat even in the time of the Roman empire.Diocletian was making over 40 times morea day as a chariot racer than a camel-driver made in a year, indicating that thisis not a current phenomena. Weigelblamed exploitation of the media for this,explaining how controversial figures suchas Hollywood Henderson and Ilie Nastasebecame household names through their at¬tention-getting behavior Weigel w as verymuch upset bv the current recruiting scan¬ dals in college sports, aing that thingshave gotten out of hand in today's colle¬giate ranks, and calling for a retdurn to amuch more low-key atmosphere. In thisrespect he congratulated the Chicago tra¬dition. for keeping athletics in its properplace, with an emphasis on participation,as part of an all-around educational expe¬rience.John Grayhack. Jim Leonard, and BillSimms presented a slide show, reviewingthe year in Maroon sports. Also gamefilms were shown from the 1930's featuringthe “Greatest Run in Football’’ by formerMaroon and first Heisman trophy winner.Jay Berwanger. The oldest "C man in at¬tendance was Percy Wagner, T6. who let¬tered in trackLast week it was noted on these pagesthat a Dudley scholarship was given toHelen Straus, daughter of Dr and MrsFrancis Straus. Some question has arisenabout the presentation of this award, be¬cause as the offspring of a tenured facultymember. Helen would be entitled to freetuition here anyway. Mary Jean Mulvan-ey, member of the selection committeeand Chairman of the Women's Athletic De¬partment said that this year a third Dudleywas given to Helen, as an honorarium tohonor her achievements since no real mon¬etary award was involved This announcment comes despite the fact that there wasno Stagg Scholarship awarded this yearand it had been thought that a third Dudleywould be awarded anyway.The Chicago Maroon—Friday, May 16, 1980—17IM reportSoftball tournaments now in progress:socim playoffs underwayMen’s track coach Ted Haydon leads strongMaroon team in quest for conference title By Chris WoodruffAs the Socim season winds down, IM ac¬tion increasingly turns to softball. Lastweekend was the third week of mini-tourna¬ments, which are four team single elimina¬tion tournaments. Winners included Cham¬berlin. a 16-14 victor over Tufts, and P & Dwhich defeated Harper, 4-2. Henderson andthe Diamondheads each won their respec¬tive tournaments.Ladder tournament action continues dur¬ing the week, with some results includingBreckinridge’s climb to the top of Under¬graduate Resident ^1 by knocking off Ps. U.Chamberlin gained the top spot in ladder #2by virtue of a 7-6 citory over Lower Rickert.In the Graduate ladder, P & D stands first,with Bo's Hose second.In women’s softball action, only four un¬dergraduate teams entered competition,with IM One capturing the title in a mini¬tournament. Socim playoff action continues this weekand will conclude next Friday, weather per¬mitting. Playoff results will be given in nextweek’s IM Report.Socim Playoff ScheduleUndergrad Res.Wed. 5/21 5:00Undergrad. Ind.Fri. 5/23 5:00Undergraduate Residence LeagueChamberlin vs Henderson Fishbein vs BradburyDodd/Mead vs. Lower RickertLower Flint vs. Upper RickertUndergraduate IndependentLeagueLong John Silver vs. Get SmartK.U.U.C. vs. Nearest Foreign BorderGraduate LeagueLiberal Tradition vs. Thunder Bay — VanderWaals Force winnerJeff vs. Hellas — Behavioral Science winnerIM softball scoreboardMen’s track stalks outdoor titleBy Mark ErwinThe University of Chicago’s strongMen's Track and Field team will attemptto complete a sweep of both the indoorand outdoor track championships thisweekend in the 57th annual Midwest Con¬ference Track and Field Championshipsto be held on Stagg Field today and to¬morrow.A poll of conference coaches has thehost Maroons ranked as co-favorites along with Coe. which has won the titlethe last eight years in a row, and Carle-ton. winner of the 1978 and 1979 indoormeets and runner-up to Coe in the out¬door meet the last five years.Chicago has two record-setters fromthe indoor championship team. They areMike Axinn in the mile run and DaveGreen in the 1.000 yard run. Jim Bierywon the indoor 600, while Green also an¬chored the winning 1600 medley relayunit which included Jim Read. Eld Derse,and Marshall Schmitt.More springtime injuriesContinued from Page 17they are recognized.If one plays 16 inch softball without aglove (and the use of a glove is not permit¬ted in the Chicago softball leagues and. ap¬parently. is discouraged in intramural andsandlot games), he or she is reasonably like¬ly to have the tip of a finger forcefully bentforward or backward at some time. This islikely to occur since it is difficult to openone s hand enough to completely encirclethe large ball. Thus, the ball hits the tip ofthe finger, forcefully bending it backward orforward. This can produce either a fractureof one of the joints or an avulsion of a tendonaway from the bone on which it inserts. A“mallet finger’’ is an avulsion or pullingaway of a tendon which straightens the tip ofAsk Dr. Stulbergthe finger from its bony insertion. If this in¬jury is not treated properly, the tip of thefinger may remain in an abnormally bentposition. This position is not only unsightly,but is also occasionally uncomfortable. Asimilar injury can occur at the middle jointof the finger, producing a correspondingbent deformity of that joint. Sometimes asmall fragment of bone is attached to thetendon as it is pulled away from the bone. Inthis case, the injury is not a tendon rupturebut an avulsion fracture. This fracture canextend into the joint and, if not treated, canlead to an irregular and perhaps ultimatelypainful joint.Because finger injuries are so common in16 inch softball, many people accept them aspart of the price for playing the game anddelay medical evaluation for what are per¬ceived as inevitable injuries. Bumps andbruises to the tips of fingers are, in fact, re¬latively minor injuries and, if no tendon rup¬tures or fractures are involved, the swellingand discomfort associated with these minorinjuries often subside within a few days.Thus, it is not unreasonable to treat what ap¬pear to be minor bumps symptomatically. This symptomatic treatment should includethe splinting of the finger from the finger tipto the knuckle. The finger should be heldstraight and should be splinted until it iscomfortable. If, however, the injury wassustained by a substantial blow to thefinger, if the swelling and discomfort did notsubside within a few days, or if the tip of thefinger or the middle joint of the finger can¬not be straightened by tightening the tendonon the back of the hand, then medical evalu¬ation should be sought. Treatment of theseinjuries is usually quite simple once the na¬ture of the injury is established and canoften be effective even if instituted two orthree weeks after the original injury. Amedical examination of the injury should in¬clude a careful physical examination and x-rays. In most cases, the injury can be treat¬ed with a properly applied splint, w-hich willbe kept in place for perhaps six to eightweeks. Occasionally, however, these fingerinjuries require surgical treatment. Theneed for this type of treatment can only bedetermined by careful medical and x-rayevaluation. Treatment will be most suc¬cessful if it is applied within a week to tendays of the original injury. Thus, if symp¬toms from a finger tip injury incurred dur¬ing a 16 inch softball game do not subsidewithin a few days, medical attention shouldbe sought.If a 16 inch softball player is prone tofinger tip injuries, it might be wise for he orshe to wear a glove while playing. If an inju¬ry has occurred and the player insists oncontinuing to participate while the finger ishealing, a splint should be Worn during thegame. Proper treatment of these injuries al¬most always results eventually in full resto¬ration of function and elimination of defor¬mity. The recovery phase can often be slowand swelling can persist, but ultimate re¬turn of full function is the rule If properlytreated, these finger tip injuries need not be¬come the badge of the Chicago softballplayer.18—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, May 16, 1980 Softball Scoreboard (COED)Organization of Black 12StudentsHank’s Swanks 8Spam 19Genghis & Sylvia Khan 11B.S. Hitters 13Coulter 7Compton 17Breckinridge 4Commuters 15Dodd/Mead 6 Upper Flint 18Salisbury 15Hitchcock/Snell over Bishop buff3OPEN EEC COEDDead Popes 8Double Hemispheres 5Penguins 18Wacks & Waekettes 3A.B.A. 3BI/Nutrition 116” softball — a problem for your fingersSPACESummer sublet $75/mo. on 52nd F ndn-smoker pref. 241-61821330 E 56th 2 bdrm 1 bath condo.Large sunny elegant rooms, fireplace,casement windows, cork floors, $82,000947-0032FOR RENT: Spacious 2 bedroomapartment with tormal dining room,hardwood floors, new kitchen andbath Excellent Hyde Park location.$450. Call 363-1332.HYDE PARK CONDO ATYESTERYEAR PRICES: 4 bedroomcondominium homes at 50th & Dor¬chester for $47,500-$49,500. Commonelements and exteriors extensivelyrehabbed. Apartments that will besold as is have hardwood floors, for¬mal dining rooms, loads of closetspace and more. Quiet residentialblock close to transportation. 363-1332or 288 2175.Co op apt 4 rms near U of C sun porchkit pantry microw, freezer, low asses522,000 or best 947-9599,Large Kenwood home for rent. 9bedrooms, 5Vi baths, fam. rm. partial¬ly furnished. Available Aug 1 1980 toSept 1981. 4901 S. Greenwood. Contact536-1643 after 5 pm.Cooperative Household-5 bdrm houseon Dorchester. 2 rms. open. June 1.Shared cooking. 493-5419.ROOMMATE WANTED Male gradstudent seeks same to share 1 br u-owned apt fall or before. Must like myfriendly dog. $148 mo. incl util;Richard 684-8697.SPACIOUS SUNNY STUDIO for SUM-MER SUBLET-Available June 1-FURNISHED-Near Campus, 1C at5480 S. Cornell-$225 Month (Neg) in-clds utilities-Call 753-3751 Rm 105Day-955-6329 Evening.Lincoln Park responsible female toshare privately furnished apt. for Jun,Jul, Aug. 2 bdrm, 2 bath ac sunny,crptd, secure mod. bdg. Pkg available2 blocks to lake, park $250/mo. util in¬cl. Call Sandy or Robin 248-8435Sum. Sublt. 2-3 bedrm turn apt.6/1-10/1 $295 mo 947-0966FOR RENT: 1 room in a spacious airconditioned 3-bdrm apt. $108 per mo.Call night 924-2744 or day 856-5605.LONDON. 2 bedrm furnished flatavailable September for academicyear. $375. Royston, 4074 Grove,Western Springs, IL 60558. 246-17622 turn bdrs, 1 ba on campus Jun 15-Sept 15 $200.00 neg. Grad or med stud.Tel 955-9673VERY LARGE STUDIO for summersublet. Phil 493-2594 try hard.Summer sublet 3 br 2 bath East ViewPark. 753-3764 eve 643-0629Available June 1-one bdr apt at UnivPk condo 55th and Blackstone. Newlydec ac sec sauna pool one blk fr shopand 1C $390 month heat incl call955-03961 bdrm furnished apt on lake, 15thfloor, near campus. Laundry, store,rest./bar, pool. For rent June-Sept684-739761st Dorchester: Modern 2 & 3 bd apts.rental from $350.00 to $425.00 a month.Sec. dep. req. 425-7300SUPER SUMMER-SUBLET: 2-3bedrooms, sunporch, remodeled, oakfloors, furnished. $300. No smokers.Call Neil 363 7067OLD WORLD ELEGANCEOne of S. Shore Dr. classic smallbldgs, huge palatial 3000 sq. ft. 8 rm2’/2 bath apt ornate sculptured andbeamed ceilings, w/b fplc, near beach,1C, CTA. Idry, good security.Available June no pets (allowancepossible for talented decorator) pro¬fessional adults $625 mo call 221-6606.alsoSimilar 6 room 1'/2 bath avail June 1$495 mo. Call 221-6606.also3Va rm in same bldg ideal for singleavail. July 1 $235 mo. Call 221 6606.Bedroom available in Regents Park inlarge furnished carpeted apartment.29th floor view of lake; modern appliances; on bus route. Rentnegotiable. Call John at 324-4462.2 ROOMMATES WANTED: 57th andDorchester 3 bdrms 6 rms a/c I havemost furniture you'll need $200/mo. in¬cl. all util. Call anytime 324 5078 askfor Dave, leave a messageUniversity Park studio. 55th and DorChester. Drapes, w.w. carpet $30,750435 or 955-7399FEMALE GRAD STUDENT seeksroom or studio apt for summer andfall qtr. Call collect evenings413 549-6164 (Amherst MA).Student in college interested inhousesitting over summer. Likesanimals. Leave message for Nick at753-8342 rm iMM.SUMMER SUBLET 1 bdrm apt.$275/mo. Completely furnished heartof campus near 1C stat beauliful viewof Midway Available mid June lateSept. 667-4309 or 876 2148Looking for an apartment or tenant?Come to the Student GovernmentHousing Service. Weekly list availablefrom 3 6 Mon Friday at the SC officeroom 306 Ida Noyes Hall or call753 3273. WANTED: Male roommate to shareone bedroom apt. 5480 Cornell. $165.Phone 643-1482 after 6p.m.NEEDED Housing starting Sept 1,1980 or sooner. 2 persons and afghan.Call collect Geoff (608) 256 3294 orNina (608) 249-2354 thanks.One bedroom condo for rent June 4Sept. 15. Modern safe good location.Call 6 10pm. 493-9040INVESTMENTOPPORTUNITY. Twocondos for sale. University Park. 1451E. 55th. 1 br $39,000, studio and park-ing 530,900 Buy both $67,125 929 9143Attractive room w/private bath.Modern building. Easy access to Loop.Kitchen. Pool. Male. 225-7872eve.RESPONSIBLE ROOMMATESOUGHT. Male grad student in his 30'soffers furnished bdrm/study in 2 bdrmapt. Laundry fac in bldg. $135/month+ util. Prefer male non-smoker. CallJohn morn 753-2923 or early eve493-6291. Avail June for summerand/or Fall option.Furnished 2 bedroom condo, 56th St.and Dorchester. Years lease or sum¬mer sublet. Available 7/1. $630/month.Call 955-6567,9am-6pm ONLY.$25 reward for one or two bedroomHyde Park apt with lease beginningJune or July thru next year. Willing topay up to $380 call Claudia 667-1925 or955-4022Summer sublet fall option good location share with one other, womanpreferred $150 plus half utilities. Carol955-5019, or 493-2047SUMMER SUBLET S400/mo for alarge 3 br July 1 to Sept. 15 CallMichael Axinn 324-3515REGENTS PARK, South tower, 21stfloor, facing lake. Looking for personto share 3 br. apt. Avail. June$170/mo. 324-2853SUBLET W OPTION : Large Studio wOld World Charm Overlooking Parkand Lake. Close to transp, shops, ten¬nis courts. Pets OK. Utilities included.955-5365$50 FINDERS FEE. 1-2 BR APT MIDJUNE N. SHAPIRO 2501 Q ST #106 NWWASH DC 20007 202-225-2301 OR202-965-2287Rmmate sought for 2 bdrm apt nrlake, 1C, bus 12th fir prefer femalegrad Mary 752-3277Sublet for Summer. Large 2 BdrmApt. 5 Min. Walk to Campus Low rentnegotiable 684-6073Sublet finely furn apt-avail June-Sept 2br-4Vj ro or 1 br and formal din-ro 55thSt-the point bus route-util, inc $350 ph324 0252PEOPLE WANTEDEarn extra money at home. Good pay.Easy work. No experience necessary.Send for application. Home Money,Box 2432B, Iowa City, Iowa, 52240.Camp Staff-Nurse, canoe tripper, ar¬chery, arts crafts, baton, riflery. Girlscamp Wis. 761-1838 eve.$70 per month for each weekend of Na¬tional Guard training. Call Al Novotneat 288-5036 or contact your PlacementOffice.Responsible, reliable woman neededto care for my one year old. 8:30-5:00.Begin July. Call evenings 743-6454HELP! Two (2) Chem 116 flunkiesneed tutor desperately. Call 753-2249rm 1125 or 1426 or leave message.Individual with access to private vehi¬cle wanted for summer delivery job inHyde Park. 753-8342 X1015. If noanswer leave message for JohnBoorom.University Student needed 2 hoursday/5 days a week between 3 pm and 5pm to run errands on campus, takecare of receiving and shipping ofresearch supplies and materialswithin research buildings Physicalstrength would be beneficial, Call 947-1867-Sharon,Secretary needed for virologylaboratory. Approx. 15 hrs./wk typing,purchase supplies and equip., etc. In¬quire 753-2702.Admin Asst./Exec. Sec. to operatesmall office on campus dealing withstudent services Must haveknowledge of basic bookkeeping andfamiliarity with University studentpolicies and procedures. Call 753-8318WHPK needs electronic wizards to beengineers for this summer and/or80 81 year. Negligible pay. Excellentexperience for an ambitious student.Call WHPK at 3-2356 or Brette at288 4639Someone to stay with 3 boys (12, 14,and 16) while mother goes on vacation.Ref. cook modest meals. Boys Iv 8 00ret 4:00 Near Univ 493 7472 May 28June 13. Share with a friend or take jobfrom 6/6-6/13FRENCH MANUSCRIPT TYPISTStudent part-time. Prepare copy formonographs and journals 55 wpm.Knowledge of French grammar essential. Accuracy more important thanspeed Excellent pay. Call GeorgeRumsey Community and FamilyStudy Center 753 2518.OFFSET PRESS TRAINEE Studentpart time during school. Full time insummer available Learn multi-colorprinting Experience in photography or printing desirable. Prefer personwho will be on campus three years ormore Excellent pay. Call MatthewWoodruff Community and FamilyStudy Center 753-2974.FOR SALEUnusuai buy in beautiful brick bldg. 4bdrms 3 bath condo. Windows on 4sides. Sunny, completely renovated inlate 77, interior and exterior. Mod. kit¬chen, storage, laundry area, grass. 25min. walk to UC, campus bus at corner. Kenwood $82,000. 13% mort.538 3407,Apt. Sale-Furniture, good and not sogood, including sofa bed and exquisitecouch, and kitchen gear. 493 2040, evesand wknds.Apt. sale: Furniture, books, clothes,collectibles, Sat. May 17, 10:00-4:00,5443 KenwoodLE ITZ SM LUX binocularmicroscope, 4 objectives, like new,w/case. $1900 667-3629 M thru F.SMITH-CORONA 220 electrictypewriter. $175/best offer. 667-3629 Mthru F.2 portable refrigerators on sale. $75each. Like brand new. Call 538 6848 or753 0236.7" Tape reel $1 piece 1970 Good condi¬tion Chevrolet Impala $400 or best of¬fer. Call 268 9262 eves.PEOFLE FOR SALEAccurate, Fast Typing with CollegeDegree and Legal Exp. will type termpapers, theses, letters dissertationswhat ever your typing needs. In HydePark, but will pick up and deliver onCampus. REASONABLE Call 684-7414Eves.Typing done in IBM by college grad,pica type. Term papers, theses, lawbriefs, resumes, letters, manuscripts.Fast accurate, reliable, reasonable.New Town area. Call 248-1478.Summer child care. Organizing smallgroup, ages 5 to 8. All day, all summer.Call evenings 363-7265.TYPIST Dissertation quality, helpwith grammar, language as needed.Free depending on manuscript. IBMSelectric. Judith. 955 4417,Excellent care for 6 mon-2 yr. childavail July 1, fulltime Stim. environment, warm expernd teacher. JudyZurbrig, 684-2820.Exp switchboard operator needs pttime position hours flex. Serious in¬quiries only 493-9638SERVICESCarpentry, drywall, painting, wiring.Competent and imaginative work.Free estimates. 684 2286.WANTEDCar wanted for summer. Let me rentyour car 6/16 9/1. I will care for it, in¬sure it and maintain it. Call Bob,955-6022WANTED: Ticket to Graduationceremonies. Name a price. Call Tome,Lv. message 493-1931 Call NowPERSONALSWRITER'S WORKSHOP (Plaza2-8377)Enjoy a performance of LithuanianFolkdancing Sat. May 17 3:30 pm I-House Free.A lifetime ago you asked me to dance.I smiled and eventually said yesWe've been dancing faster and slower,ever since. We stepped on each otherstoes sometimes but many times wedanced as one. Hey Hank thanks forthe dance Love, Missy.Lady studying blind kids Truce Let'sbe friends, have lunch, and fun conver¬sations. Schwartz.MADMAN-1 have a funny feeling thatit doesn't help the common (or uncom-mon) cold Smile like Monday. I lovedit.9th Law of Gizmatics-Love is a concept often shared, but rarelyunderstood GIZMOHAPPY BELATED BIRTHDAY MSDELORENZO May luck and love beyour life-long friends. Love Par M(the carnation eater).Hey Ricky and Beth, if we're passingout just deserts, they had better allshow up. Why is it so hard to get peopleto do something that is FUN andFREE’PerplexedNick Filippo (and guitar) live onWHPK 88 3 FM Tuesday May 20, 6 00pm.If there were no Dogberry, then howcould Joel be held responsible for hisactions?No 6 is de~frd Long live no 2.Dogberry is coming Out of Dejesus'sreach, Under Barry Foote's tag OverVail's head and of course-Off Ontiveros's chest!Beber Gin PunchYou know where, You know when, But Dogberry writing next fall Application forms inHarper 209.SCENESRUMMAGE/BAKE SALE, SAT MAY24, 10 4, St. Paul &. Redeemr Epis.Church, 50th and Dorchester.FREE PARTY Beer and chips. For allalumni/ae of Jesuit high schools, col¬leges, or universities. Friday May 16,8:30 pm at Jesuit House 5554 S.Woodlawn. Meet some old friendsHyde Park Garden Fair, May 16,9 to 6,May 17, 9 to 4 at 55th and Lake ParkShopping Mail.UC HOTLINE753-1777Are you partied out? Studied out?Tired out? Down and out? Call us andtalk it out. The UC Hotline-questions,referrals, and someone to talk to. 7pm-7am.RUMOVINGEAST?Nice Jewish boy w/truck going fromChgo. 2 Boston last 2 weeks in JuneWill make stops en route - No size orquantity 2 large or small. Inexpensiverates-experienced movers, 667-7498SUMMER BC/BSOff-Quarter BC/BS Coverage for Sum¬mer Quarter-Friday, May 30 Is ab¬solute deadline for enrollment. Pick upoff-quarter applications in Adm 103$2470 FORSUMMER JOBUntil June 30 the National Guard willpay a $1500 enlistment bonus and $970for eight weeks summer training Call288-5036 and ask for Al Novotne or con¬tact your Placement Office.ACHTUNG!ENJOY LEARNING GERMAN THISSUMMER! Take APRIL WILSONScourse and highpass the German ex¬am. Starts June 23. 3 sections, M-F.10:30-12, 1-2:30. 6:30-8 To register,call : 667-3038.TO ACTORNOT TO ACT1 actor, 1 actress needed for short 16mm film. No pay (or minimal pay);screen credit, scr exp. etc. Call Angelo772-0831, leave name and phone no.MARRIOTT'SGREAT AMERICAGo spinning, soaring, screaming andsplashing-and save! Buy treatAmerica discount tickets at theReynolds Club Box Office and save upto $1.95 per person. Tickets good from5-3 to 7-27 and 8-25 to 9-13.ATTENTIONMUSICIANS ‘The Department of Music is nowscheduling a series of informal lun¬chtime concerts for next year(1980-81). If interested in performingany type of music, please come to Lex¬ington Hall to apply, or contact Barbara Schubert.ANTI-WARPOETSAre you a pacifist or a poet? Join us fora reading of anti war poetry, eitheryour own or others' For informationcall Adam, 241-6740 or Molly 753-3265(days). The reading is planned for 8thweek.INTENSIVEGERMANHighpass the German Exam this summer, study with Karin Cramer nativeGerman PhD using the comparativestructural translation method Coursestarting June 23 M-F 9 11, 68 Call493-8127.DISCOUNT TICKETSFOR GREATAMERICAYou've read about Rose! You've beenpleased with Plitt! Now marvel at ourdeal on Marriott's Great Americatickets! Check it our at your nearestReynolds Club Box OfficeWRITING TUTORSThe University needs graduate NEED ATYPIST?Excellent work done in my homeReasonable rates Tel 536-7167 or548 0663NEW MUSICENSEMBLE2 Big Spring Concerts: Sunday May 18and Sunday May 25. 20th centurychamber works by Kupferman, Brit¬ten, Debussy (May 18) and Wuorinen,Hindemith, and others (May 25). Bothconcerts at 8 pm in Lexington Hall(5835 S. University”). FREE !RESUMESWould you like a professional-lookingindividualized resume? We offer typesetting and offset printing serviceswith choice of typeface, format, paperstock. Call 753-2074 or drop by theHuman Resources Center, 1225 E. 60thStFOSTER CARESYSTEMSIMULATIONWed., May 21, 1 om to 4 pm: A FosterCare System Simulation led by Dr.Ronald Rooney of the Univ. of Wiscon¬sin will be held in Room El at theSchool of Social Service Administration (SSA) All faculty, students, andany interested parties cordially in¬vited to participate Call Tim Roberts,753-4610 for more info.NORIGERTIAfter watching the LithuanianFolkdancers Sat. 17th I House 3 30BASS PLAYERBass player wanted for RR band Callevenings, Larry. 752-4620LOST ANDFOUND$75 REWARD for return of brief caseand contents missing from CTSbookstore Tues. May 13, 1980 phone324-1974 eveningsLIBERTARIANSAnd other interested people are in¬vited to a discussion of HerbertSpencer's The Right To Ignore theState Ida Noyes East Lounge, 2ndfloor. Copies available from Jan Patel241-5753$50 REWARDIf I sign for your l bdrm apt. in HarperSq Co-op call 493-4377COFFEEHOUSELive music by Christie and Dave,samradh Music and others Sat May 17from 9 pm to 1 am at Crossroads Stu¬dent Center 5621 S. Blackstone684-6060SHOW AT MIDWAYWorks by Manjula Haksar will be exhibited at Midway Gallery from May16 to May 21 The exhibit will open onFriday, May 16, with a reception from5 to 7 pm.VERSAILLES52r»4 S. DorchesterWF.I.I. MAINTAINEDBUI DINf.Attractive 1 V2 and2,/2 Room StudiosFurnished or l nfurnished$218,o $320Rased on \vailabilit\At Campus Bus Stop324 0200 Mrs. Croak WANTEDMODELSInteresting Profitable $20-$50 hr. Portrait, figure photography. Buxompreferred Inexperienced OK. Chicagonr north. Signature Associates337-8100IGNORETHE STATEDiscussion of Spencer's The Right toIgnore the State Mon, May 19 IdaNoyes East Lounge Copies availableJan Patel 241-5753BOOKSBOOKSBOOKSOur stock changes every week, so stopby and look through our shelves Gooddeals this week in Literary Criticism,Philosophy, American History, BritishHistory and Psychology Student Co¬op, basement of Reynolds Club9:30,6 00 M F, 12:00-4 30 Sat.JEWISH FOLKARTS FESTIVALAt Centennial Park, Evanston, Sun¬day, May 18. Leave by bus from UCHillel, 5715 Woodlawn and return by4:00 pm. Cost $2.50 for bus Sign upsin advance at Hillel Deadline May9th.DOGBERRY WA,Paati ga aru kara, oishii masui yakuga tahnsan arimasu. ashitaENVIRONMENTALACTIVISTSNEEDEDSummer canvassing (public educationand fund-raising) positions areavailable now at Citizens for a BetterEnvironment, Illinois' largest andmost active environmental organizetion. All training will be provided, theonly prerequisites are a concern forthe issues and basic verbal skills. Thecanvass positions are salaried andthere are opportunities for advancement. To interview call: C B E 59 EVan Buren, Chicago 312/939-1984EDWARDO'SHyde Park's best pizza Salads andsoda, too BYOB, 5CX corkage. Mon ,Tues., Wed., Thurs., Sun., 4:00 to1130 Fri.. Sat., 4 00 to 12 30 ClosedMon 1321 E 57th St Delivery Service241-7960 $1 chargeVOX RECORDSALEBIG SAVINGS on all Moss RecordProducts: Vox, Turnabout, and Can-dide Now only $3.35 per disc and $8 85per box set. Come and see our broadselection at the Student Co-op base¬ment of Reynolds Club 9 30-6:00 M-F,12 00-4 30 SatSUMMERSOFTBALLSummer softball application formsare now available in Bartlett 101 Theseason starts June 30th$10 REWARDLOST on Monday: Green SierraDesigns Pack Metal Zipper, eyeglasses Call Mike 363-6132We Buy and SellUsed Album’s,45’s and Tapes1701 E. 55th684-3375The Chicago Maroon —Friday, May 16, 1980 — 19ALUMNI REUNION ’80The Office of University Alumni Affairs/University AlumniAssociation invites students, faculty, and staffto special reunion activitiesFaculty/Alumni DiscussionsEra IFoundation and a New Era1892-1928Moderator Jerald BrauerPanelists Maynard KruegerChauncv HarrisJean F. BlockFriday • May 16 • 3:30 • Ida Xovcs Ilall • LoungeEra IIReorganization and InnovationHutchins, 1929-1951Moderator Edward RosenheimPanelists Norman NaehtriebKenneth NortheottChampion WardFriday • May 16 • 3:30 • Ida Xovcs Ball • Lounge Era IIIUrban Renewal1951-mid 60sModerator Richard TaubPanelists Ira BachYaletta PressSaturday • May 17 • 3:00 • Ida Xovcs Hall • East LoungeEra IVThe New University: Change and ItsImpact in die Late 60s and 70sModerators Ian MuellerJancl MuellerPanelists Bruce LewensteinLoma StrausNorman BradbumSaturday • May 17 • 3:00 • Ida Xovcs Ball • East DmngcI nterfratem i ty SingSaturday, May 17, at 9:00 p.m. in Hutchinson Court