THE CHICAGO MAROONVol. 9 No. 4 The University of Chicago Copyright © The Chicago Maroon Friday, July 25, 1980Two Injured In AttacksOff-Duty Officer ShotAn off-duty Chicago policeman wasshot and seriously injured at the cornerof 55th St. and Kimbark Ave. shortly be¬fore 1:30 Thursday morning.Forty-nine year old Lamorne Threetwas shot three times in the abdomen. Hewas rushed by a fire department ambu¬lance to Billings Hospital, where he un¬derwent more than eight hours of sur¬gery. He was listed in serious conditionlate Thursday afternoon.Shortly after the shooting, Chicago po¬lice and campus security officers arrest¬ed 22 year old Charles Carter in the rearyard of a building at 1305 E. 55th St.Carter, who was carrying a gun at thetime of his arrest, was charged with at¬tempted murder. Police said that Carterwas free on bond on an armed robberycharge at the time of the shooting.Police have not been able to determinea motive for the shooting, nor have theybeen able to speak with Threet about theattack.According to police, Threet was driv¬ing home at the time of the shooting. Of¬ficers arriving on the scene found himlying on the ground near his car. City po¬lice were summoned to the scene by a re-sidentof a nearby building, who reportedhearing five or six shots. Campus securi¬ty officers also responded to the call.Police searched the area and discov¬ered Carter within an hour of the shoot¬ ing, approximately one block from thesite of the attack. Both campus and citypolice were present at the arrest.A preliminary hearing in the case isscheduled for this morning in Chicagomunicipal court.Student Robbedat GunpointA University student was robbed atgunpoint in her apartment on the 5400block of South Ellis at approximately4:45 Wednesday afternoon. She escapeda rape attempt by leaping from her sec¬ond-floor window.The woman suffered a broken hip inthe fall and was admitted to Billings Hos¬pital.According to a University official, aneighbor called campus security afterseeing the woman jump. Both Universityand city police responded to the call andofficers arrested William Taylor shortlyafterwards in the gangway of a nearbybuilding. Police said a resident of thatbuilding trapped Taylor in the gangwayand called police.Taylor was arraigned yesterday after¬noon on charges of armed robbery andhome invasion. A police spokesman saidthat although the assailant probably in¬tended to rape the victim, no sexual as¬sault charges could be filed because thewoman escaped before any sexual of¬fense occurred.—Jeff Davitz and David GlocknerPCB Spills inKimbark AlleyBy Jaan EliasCommonwealth Edison electric com¬pany failed to clean up a PCB spill at 5436South Kimbark Ave. for 72 hours after a ca-picator bank either exploded or rupturedFriday, July 18 at 3 p.m. PCB, polychlorin¬ated biphenyl, is a toxic chemical used as adielectric insulator in capacitors.A report on the extent of the area con¬taminated by the PCB is expected some¬time next week from the Illinois Environ¬mental Protection Agency (IEPA). TheIEPA took samples from the scene of thespill on Tuesday, July 22.Fifth Ward Alderman Larry Bloom sentan angry letter to Commonwealth EdisonChairman of the Board James O’Conner inwhich he said “I find your company’s atti¬tude of indifference appalling.”According to Bloom, besides failing torespond promptly to the explosion, Com¬monwealth Edison also did not inform resi¬dents of the area of precautionary mea¬sures, post signs which were visible fromstreet level, notify the Coast Guard’s Na¬tional Response Center for chemical spills,or ask the IEPA to take samples from thesurrounding area.According to Bloom, the spill resultedfrom an explosion which splattered PCBon a wide area which included cars, astorm sewer, and many vegetable gar¬dens. A number of passersby may havealso come in contact with the toxic chemi¬cal.Luther Snow, an assistant to Bloom, said that without the “heads-up” response ofarea residents the spill may have been leftundetected for a long period of time.Lester Dugas, a divisional vice-presi¬dent for Commonwealth Edison, deniedBloom’s claims that the company was apa¬thetic about the dangers of PCB. “We donot take the dangers of PCB lightly atall.”Dugas said that all PCB containers aremarked with bright yellow and blacklabels as required by federal law. He saidthat the slow response to what he termed a“rupture rather than an explosion” wasdue to the fact that the incident occurredContinued on page 6 ABA Considers Move FromHyde Park to Loop AreaBy David GlocknerThe American Bar Association (ABA)Board of Governors is expected to act nextweek on a recommendation to move the or¬ganization’s headquarters from their pres¬ent location at 1155 E. 60th St.A seven-member ABA task forcecharged with studying ways to increasethe amount of office space available forthe ABA recommended this spring that theheadquarters be moved downtown or tothe North Side. The task force, which wasled by Chicago attorney and former ABApresident Justin Stanley, sent its report tothe ABA’s operations committee, which at¬tached its own recommendation and thenpassed the report on to the Board of Gover¬nors. The Board of Governors will discussthe report at its meeting in Honolulu nextweek.A shortage of space in the present Amer¬ican Bar Center precipitated the task forcestudy of the group's facilities needs, ac¬cording to ABA spokesman Richard Col¬lins. The Bar Center is “bursting at theseams,” he said. Some of the ABA’s 350employees already work in rented officeson South Wacker Dr. downtown becausethere is no room for them in the BarCenter.The task force was asked to considerwhether the ABA should expand its facili¬ties in Hyde Park, either by enlarging theBar Center or finding space in other localbuildings, relocate elsewhere in Chicago,or leave the city entirely, Collins said. Thefinal decision on the location of the head¬quarters will be based on “where we canhave th best environment for the smallestamount of money.” he said.“Access to public transportation” willbe a principle factor in the decision, Col¬lins said. Transportation for employeesand visiting lawyers between the BarCenter and the Loop and between the BarCenter and O'Hare airport is not conven¬ient, he said. “Many of our people spend alot of their time on a yellow school bus”which ferries ABA employees and visitorsbetween Hyde Park and downtown, Collinssaid. Collins did not say that concerns aboutsafety of the Hyde Park neighborhoodwere likely to be a major factor in the deci¬sion. Discussions about relocating theheadquarters are “no denigration of theHyde Park area,” he said. He added thatthe ABA has always had “very amicablerelations” with the Univesity.The ABA does not have any formal tieswith either the University or the LawSchool, although a number of Law Schoolfaculty members participate in ABA re¬search projects. Since the American BarFoundation, the research branch of theABA, will remain in Hyde Park even if theABA moves, faculty participation in theseprojects is not likely to be effected.This is not the first time that the ABABoard of Governors has been faced withthe question of moving the organization’sheadquarters, which have been in HydePark sine 1956. Collins said that the associ¬ation previously considered and rejectedsuggestions to relocate the headquarters,but that the discussion is “a little bit moreserious” this time.University officials expressed hope thatthe ABA would remain in the area. “I stillthink there’s a fair chance that they mayremain,” Gerhard Casper. Dean of theLaw School said. Casper said that facultymembers of the Law School have been in¬volved in attempts to persuade the ABA tostay. Casper also noted that the Law-School has always had a closer relation¬ship with the American Bar Foundationthan with the .ABA itself because many ofits faculity members are involved inAmerican Bar Foundation research proj¬ects.Jonathan Kleinbard. University Vice-President for community affairs, declinedto comment on reports that the ABA plansto move, saying that University and ABAofficials have not yet met to discuss theissue. “We think they're good neighborsand we’d like them to stay,” he said.Kleinbard told a Sun-Times reporterTuesday that Hyde Park is “ a very strong,stable and integrated area, and we’reproud of that fact.” DavidGlocknerEDITORIAL LETTERSRegistration FlawedWe believe it is both unnecessary and unfair to ask youngmen to register for the draft at this time.Draft registration is the preliminary step in mobilizing acountry for war. Were there a genuine threat to internationalstability, we would be willing to support registration. But nei¬ther the recent events in Iran nor those in Afghanistan con¬vince us of the existence of such a threat.Congress’s refusal to include women in the order for regis¬tration of all nineteen and twenty year-olds confirms ourdoubts about the seriousness of the threat to peace. If indeedour country were in jeopardy, all citizens would be expectedto share the burden. In this era, when cultural values againstwomen’s participation in the country’s affairs are eroding,no reason exists to exclude them from the country’s defenseshould war be imminent.Furthermore, the decision to register only men encouragesthe attitudes that young men are more expendable thanyoung women and that women are not fit to serve theircountry.The current draft registration, we feel, is unnecessary inthat it rests on an exaggeration of the world situation. It isunfair in that it lays the burden of defense on men and ex¬cludes women.While we oppose mandatory draft registration, we also be¬lieve that the decision of whether or not to register is a per¬sonal and serious one that should not be made casually. Ei¬ther action carries with it unavoidable consequences whichwill affect the individual’s status should a draft be called. Not Beyond ReproachTo the Editor:Lest people infer from Ramsey Clark’stalk that Iran is beyond reproach, I wish topoint out incidences of its violation of humanrights.For example: In September of 1979, theHuman Rights Commission of the Federa¬tion of Protestant Churches in Switzerlandfiled a special report on the situation ofBaha’is, an independent religious minority,in Iran. They documented gross violationsof human rights: Baha’i properties wereconfiscated, their children not allowed toregister in school and thirty-seven nationalBaha’i figures were not allowed to leave thecountry. Hundreds of them have lost theirjobs and homes. The Commission warnedthat unless steps were taken, the minorityfaith in Iran would be eliminated. Lastweek, the New York Times front page re¬ported the execution of two Baha’is. One ofthe charges was that they “were runningBaha’i centers in Tabriz.”I sympathize greatly with the Iranian peo¬ple who want to rebuild their country, butwhy does the construction involve the whole¬sale repression of a group of people whohave no political aspirations?Sharon ButlerAndreas RememberedTo the Editor:It is ironic that Andreas Papastavridisshould have died in a senseless accident, forhe possessed an extraordinary strength ofwill. As a leader in the student revoltagainst the facism of Papandreovin Greece,he was imprisoned for six months. Military prisons are rather good at staining minds:Andreas’ belief that freedom could beachieved became more fierce yet his humorand enjoyment of the world remained.He was a medical doctor with little train¬ing in hard science, but having read originalpapers in physics he wished to do physics.That brought him here. Here, he found thathe had to catch up in physics on his own. Hewas apart from his wife and new child(whom he saw once in his life). He was awayfrom political struggle in Greece. He sup¬ported himself by cooking hotdogs down¬town. The emotional returns were often lowbut he did not give up. His world was elec¬trified, nearly ecstatic. Sometimes his ex¬citement would seem to conceal a deafnessbut he would always listen, for he knew hisown faults and ignorances. He was unsup¬ported by the habits, money and property,and patterns of domination that many of ususe to conceal vulnerability. One might saythat he had the strengths to live a tremen¬dous care for others and himself. He hadmore friends from more kinds of peoplethan anyone else I know. Often he said thatwe must live like children and like men.Perhaps it is true that the best die young.Daniel HerwitzFriends of Andreas Papastavridis willgather at Crossroads student center, 5621 S.Blackstone. For further information, callCrossroads at 684-6060.THE CHICAGO MAROONStaff: Sharon Butler, Jeff Cane, Jeff Da-vitz, Aarne Elias, Alan Granger, JohnKim, Philip Maher, Dierdre Nurre, HenryOtto, Chris Persans, Jon Shamis, JoanSommers, Judy Weissman312 - 493-0666RENT WITH OPTION TO BUY...57th Kimbark. Option fee (security) $2,000, price $68,000. Sixsmall rooms, super equipped kitkchen. Nice bright condo, rent $600 until closing.FOR SALE NOW, but prefer closing after April, 1981...56th Kimbark “Do it yourself conver¬sion”. Nice floor plan, pretty hardwood floors, front location two bedrooms... $58,000.CALIFORNIA IN KENWOOD...follow the high yellow brick wall, it’s the garden wall. Unusualbright patio with container gardening. Cathedral windows entire two story height. Sunken liv¬ing room...parquet floors, seven rooms, two baths...much more. $122,000.SPACE! SPACE Would ten rooms be enough, especially if the living room and dining room,side-by-side, are about 35 feet& Most unusual low price for over 3,200 sq feet. 51st Woodlawn.$75,000SEE THE TOWN - SEE THE LAKE from 50th . Chicago Beach Drive. Beautiful, prestige ad¬dress of THE NARRAGANSETT on the 20th floor has woodburning fireplace, parquet floors,five rooms 2 baths. $69,500.HIGH ON THE NORTH SIDE OF NEWPORT at 4800 Chicago Beach, you have a spectaculararmchair view of downtown, the western sky, and sailing regattas. Generous five room, twobath, immaculate condition. Includes a garage $89,500.CLOSER TO THE GROUND BUT STILL TREE TOP LEVEL...4800 Chicago Beach. You cansee both North and West from North Tower. Owner is determined to sell and declares war onprices. Two bedroom, Two Bath for only $76,000. Garage may be guaranteed if so desired,separate deal.FEATURE OF THE WEEKTUDOR STYLE BRICK HOME in heart of Hydge Park has its own coach house rented (offsetsmost maintenance costs of main house). Eleven spacious, gracious sun-filled rooms. Wood-burning fireplace. Prominent University faculty owner listed this for $195,000.SLIDING DOORS, HIGH CEILINGS, HARDWOOD AND SOLIDITY OF YESTERYEAR. OnFarmer’s Field, near 50th Dorchester. 12 rooms. Kitchen - family room only 3 years old. Lotsof windows - three story house. $149,000.CONTROL YOUR OWN MONTHLY COSTS all electric (bulk rate of course) condo unit near55th Cornell. Central air, individual heat. Large country kitchen laundry hook-up. Six rooms,two full baths. Super grenery back yard. $75,000. Reduced 73,500.LUXURY VIEWS at the promntory but not luxury prices. 55th and the Lake, high floor. 2bedroom, 2 baths, 57,000 Co-operative.RED BRICK TOWNHOUSE near 55th Street across from tennis and track. Excellent contion.Three bedrooms, 2Ak baths. Full basement Guaranteed parking. - $120,000GRADE AND TRADITION abound in 5000 East End Heritage-type apartment. Gorgeousdecorative ceilings. Large formal dining room-high floor cooperative. $55,000, this is for you.FAMILY RESIDENCE Stone Victorian, 8 rooms near 54th Greenwood. Oversize living room,dining room and kitchen..latter rather old-fashioned. Nice big back yard. $125,000.WRAPAROUND CORNER APT. at 55th and Dorchester. University Park Condo 69,500. Ninethfloor. Includes garage.2 — The Chicago Maroon, Friday, July 25, 1980NEWS BRIEFSSeveral hundred opponents of selective service registration gathered downtown Mondayto mark the start of the two-week registration period.Some University students have complained that the registration sites nearest to campusare in unsafe neighborhoods.The two nearest post offices with registration facilities are at 700 E. 61st St. and 4601 S.Cottage Grove Ave. Other large post office in the Chicago area, including the main postoffice at 433 W. Van Buren St., also have registration forms available.Kadanoff Wins Physics PrizeHansMorgenthauDies at 76By Judy WeissmanServices were held Tuesday for Hans Joa¬chim Morgenthau, professor emeritus of po¬litical science, who died in Manhattan Satur¬day after a short illness. He was 76 yearsold.Morgenthau was one of the most promi¬nent political scientists in the country, andhe became nationally known for his earlyand reasoned opposition to the Vietnamwar. Morgenthau taught at the Universitybetween 1943 and the mid-1970s.As a scholar, Morgenthau was best knownfor his work in the field of international rela¬tions. He was one of the first scholars tobase the study of international relations onrealistic as well as moral considerations.Before the work of Morgenthau and severalof his contemporaries, the study of interna¬tional relations was dominated by moralis¬tic rhetoric rather than considerations ofworld realities. Morgenthau’s work helpedto synthesize the moral and the practicalaspects of the field, said a colleague.“Hans Morgenthau was a political scien¬tist in the grand ‘Chicago School’ tradition,”said Morris Janowitz, Lawrence A. KimptonDistinguished Service Professor of sociolo¬gy. “He was a realist in his analysis and ascholar concerned with moral values andpersonal obligation.” Janowitz was a long¬time collegue of Morgenthau.“Professor Morgenthau was a stimulatingand popular teacher. He will be long re¬membered for his reasoned critique of U.S.involvement in the Vietnam war,” Janowitz Hans Joachim Morgenthausaid.Some of Morgenthau’s most widely publi¬cized statements against the Vietnam warwere made in a debate with his colleagueMorton Kaplan, held here after the KentState killings in 1970. The debates were heldin the midst of student strikes and protestson this campus and around the country.The issue of American withdrawl from thewar “is not a question of preventing ourbeing humiliated; we are being humiliatedevery day in our eyes because we betray ourmoral principles.” Morgenthau believedcontinued American involvement in the warcould only worsen the situation. “The ques¬tion is not failure or victory, but how do weminimize our losses?”Morgenthau also decried the use of nu¬clear arms. In a speech at Stanford Univer¬sity in 1967, he said that “nuclear weaponsand all means of mass destruction cannotserve as instruments of national policy.” Leo P. Kadanoff, professor in the Depart¬ment of Physics, has been chosen as one ofthree recipients of the $100,000 1980 WolfPrize in Physics.Kadanoff came to the University in 1978from Brown University. His work in statisti¬cal mechanics involves general mathemati¬cal formulations of phase transitions. ' The Wolf Foundation was founded in 1976.It awards prizes in five areas — agriculture,mathematics, chemistry, physics and medi¬cine — for “outstanding contributions on be¬half of mankind.” This is the third time theprize has been given in physics. Presenta¬tions will take place in Israel in Sep¬tember.Spokesman Bicycle Shop5301 Hyde Park Blvd.684-3737 Selling Quality ImportedBikesRaleigh, Peugot, Fuji,Motobecane, WindsorRollerskates for Saleor RentOpen 10-7 M-F, 10-5 Sat.11-4 Sun.ROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPELSunday, July 27,19809:00 A.M. Ecumenical Service ofHoly Communion11:00 A.M. University Service of WorshipJOSEPH SITTLERProfessor Emeritus of ChristianTheology at the Divinity School“Blessed are the Meek"Wednesday, July 238:00 A.M. Service of Holy Communionin the Chancel, followed bybreakfast in the Chapel BasementCarillon Recitals are given Sundays at 4:00and Thursdays at 7:30. marianrealty,inc.mI liRtAllOGStudio and 1 BedroomApartments Available- Students Welcome -On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-5400 model camera1342 East 55th St. 493-6700The Chicago Maroon, Friday, July 25, 1980 — 3CarolKlammers M T W T F S27 28 29 30 31 25 26ArtEuropean and American Cubism : Paintings, drawings and sculpture of thirtyfive Cubists. Focusing on works from1909-1945, the exhibition includes Ita¬lian Gino Severni, Americans ArthurDove and Stanton MacDonald Wright;as well as Paris groupies Braque andPicasso. The David-Alfred Smart Gal¬lery, 5550 Greenwood. Tuesday Satur¬day, 10-4; Sunday, noon 4. Through Oc¬tober 15. Free.Piet Mondrian: Eighteen significantpaintings — most of which are on loanfrom New York's Museum of ModernArt while they dedicate their space toPicasso. A great chance to view one ofthe most immitatable of Modern Ar¬tists — if not the most boring. The ArtInstitute, Michigan at Adams.Through September 15. Open daily.Discretionary fee. Thursdays free.Scientific Illustration: An exhibition ofdrawings in the fields of anthropology,zoology, geology and botany by Art In¬stitute students. According to theSchool of the Art Institute press re¬lease, "the human eye is more obser¬vant of surface detail than the cam¬era." The show occupies the displaycases on the main and second floors ofthe School of the Art Institute, Colum¬bus at Jackson. July 28-August 13.443-3710 for more information. Free.Peter Max: An exhibition of psychedelic60's artist, Peter Max. While this showonly covers his works from the last de¬cade, the paintings still reflect thatcolor-cosmic fascination Max madepopular during his days of Day-Glo.The Magit Gallery, 115 East OakStreet. Through August. 30. Free.-LJCFilmBush Ma;na (Haile Gernma): Thismuch acclaimed film (featured in the1979 New York Film Festival), depictsthe daily struggle of a black woman inWatts for basic human rights. It showshow her consciousness is transformedas she faces daily attacks on herselfand her family when her husband isunfairly imprisoned. She develops areadiness in the tradition of blackwomen worldwide to confront the gen¬ocide and white supremacy attackingher people. When she takes on the welfare office and kills the policeman whoraped her daughter, she representscenturies of black women whose strug¬gles fundamentally challenge allwomen in this country to take a standagainst genocide. Sponsored by theMay 19th Communist Organization,the film is a benefit for the PontiacBrothers, the 31 Black and Latin menindicted for the rebellion in 1978 at thePontiac Prison. Tonight at 7:30. TheBlue Gargoyle, 5655 S. University.$3.00 donation.Singin' in the Rain (Stanley Donen andGene Kelly, 1952): Complete, unadul¬terated pleasure. If you must know, ordon't already, Singin' in the Rain isabout Hollywood during the transitionfrom silents to talkies, and it's also tfiemost exhiliarating minutes of filmever produced. You can't watch GeneKelly perform the title number without wanting to dance along with him,and when the camera pulls up andaway as he slips off into the rainynight, you get the feeling that it is reluctant to leave him as you are. Whatmakes this movie as great as it is, isthat is is all done with affection —after all, it's movie people expressingtheir sheer joy in making movies.Even the most unsympathetic charac¬terization, i.e. Jean Hagen as a bitchyQueen of the Silents with a voice likesquealing breaks, is played out affectionately. Singin' in the Rain is ajoyous love letter from the dreammakers to themselves and to their audiences, and it confirms that, after allis said and done about theory, production values and technique, the finaldetermination of a movie's successlies in the heart. Saturday at 7:15 and9.30 in Quantrell. SOQ, $1.50. —MAthe grey city journalMike Alper, Gary Beberman,Carol Klammer, Jeff Makos,David Miller, Molly McQuade,Andrew Patner, Margaret Sav¬age, Ken Wisoker.Edited by Laura Cottingham. The Bridge on the River Kwai (DavidLean, 1957): David Lean's static,heavy-handed direction almost drainsthis film of any interest — almost, butnot quite. It remains a fascinating ac¬count of a supremely ironic clash ofwills, thanks mainly to Pierre Boulle'sintelligent, though sometimes obvious,screenplay. The story concerns agroup of British POW's in Burma dur¬ing WWII who are forced to build thestrategic bridge of the title. Their com¬manding officer (Alec Guinness,whose performance is one of the un¬deniably brilliant things in this movie)refuses to allow his men to do manuallabor, and he achieves a Pyrrhic victo¬ry by having them act as technical ad¬visors instead. Meanwhile a comman¬do group led by Jack Hawkins (andincluding a reluctant William Holden)makes its way through the jungle toblow up what has by this time becomeGuinness' pet project. Every possibleimplication of such a situation hasbeen worked into the script, and eachhas been treated with equal solemnityby the director, making it all a bitschematic. But it's an intriguing situa¬tion nevertheless, and much of it is ex¬tremely well-played. Lean, Guiness,and the film all captured the 1957 Aca¬demy Awards for their work. Tonightat 7:15 and 9:30 in Quantrell. SOQ;Twentieth Century (Howard Hawks,1934): It's hard to watch any CaroleLombard movie without thinking whata loss her untimely death meant: herbeauty, intelligence, and impeccablesense of timing were second only toKatherine Hepburn among the greatcomediennes of the'30's. In TwentiethCentury she is teamed with John Bar¬rymore, and her offhand manner contrasts wonderfully with his flamboy¬ant theatrics. He plays a big time,dyspeptic Broadway producer, andshe plays his latest discovery. He fallsin love with her, of course, and whenshe walks out, success goes with her;while she makes it big in Hollywood,he hits the skids. When they are bychance thrown together aboard thetrain of the title, he conceives of ascheme to get her back under hisaegis, and into his arms. What ensuesis the kind of breathless, frenetichorseplay that only Howard Hawkscould manage to keep under control.Wednesday at 8:00 in Quantrell. SOQ;$1.50. —MAHerman Hesse Film Classics: Two filmsbased on novels by the existentialistwriter Herman Hesse will be featuredat Facets Multimedia. Steppenwolf,starring Max Von Sydow, DominiqueSanda and Piere Clementi will be presented along with Siddhartha, directedby Conrad Rooks and filmed on loca¬tion in India. Monday July 28 Thurs¬day July 31, Facets Multimedia, 1517West Fullerton. $2.50 admission. Call281 4114 for more specific informa¬tion. The Southerner (Renoir, 1945): A starkly realistic chronicle of the lives ofpoor white farmers in the south. Kachary Scott gives a sensitive perfor¬mance as a former farm hand struggling to make it on his own. GeorgeSadoul described Southerner as "ren-oirs best American film." The Schoolof the Art Institute Film Center, Columbus and Jackson. Wednesday, July30 at 5:30 and 7:30. $2.00 admission.443 3737 for more information.Les Orgueeilleux (The Proud and theBeautiful) Yves Alegret, 1956: Basedon Satre's play, the story concerns aFrench doctor, now a drunk in a Mexi¬can town, who becomes involved witha woman whose husband is dying. TheSchool of the Art Institute FilmCenter, Columbus and Jackson. Thurs¬day, July 31 at 5:30 and 7:30. $2.00 ad¬mission. 443-3737 for more informa¬tion.Science Fiction Classics: Facets Multi-media presents three interplanetaryadventures. Zardoz, directed by JohnBoorman, stars Sean Connery, and isset in the year 2293. The Barbarians,future society's mongrel majority, areprey to the Exterminators, who gettheir marching orders from Zardoz, astone head floating in the air. But Zar¬doz is really only a front for the Eternals, a race of super-intellectuals whowhile away, their immortality bykeeping the lower orders under control. Connery, as Exterminator, upsetsthe Eternal's private utopia by importing passion and death. ForbiddenPlanet, based on Shakespeare's play.The Tempest, is often considered thebest science fiction film ever made.The story concers a crew of earthlingswho land on planet Altair 4, and findthat a mysterious force has destroyedall the members of a previous expedi¬tion. Eventually all that remain are father, daughter and robot. FantasticPlanet, a full length animation, con¬cerns the planet Ygam, where human¬like pets, the Ohms, revolt againsttheir masters, the Draags. FacetsMultimedia, Inc. 1517 West FullertonAve. Friday, July 25-Sunday July 27.$2.50 admission. Call 281 9075 for morespecific time information about eachshow.MusicBaroque Chamber Music: As part of the1980 Performing Arts Festival,L'Estro Harmonica will perform twoconcerts in the Stock Exchange Trading Room of the Art Institute. Sunday,July 27 at 1:00 and 3:00 pm. The ArtInstitute, Michigan at Adams. Free.Tuesday Concerts: SOQ presents ThreeStory Brownstone, offering originaland traditional folk music on thebanjo, guitar, harmonica and flute.Tuesday, July 29. Noon. Hutch Court.Free. The Chicago Brass Ensemble: Sponsored by SOQ and Court Theatre, theprogram includes works by Dukas,Prokofiev, Mauer, and Susato. Tonight, at Hutch Court, if rain, Rockefeller Chapel. 8:30 pm. $4.50 admis¬sion, $3.00 for students and seniorcitizens. For more information,753 3592.Judy Collins: The former folksingersings Muppet music at Ravinia inHighland Park. Tonight at 8 pm. Lawnadmission $5, Pavillion tickets $10 &$12. -APThe Cramps: America's best voodoorockabilly-all American punk 'n' rollcomes to Chicago. No one can help butappreciate their graveyard gusto. AtTuts, 959 W. Belmont. $5.00. Call477 3365 for more information. —LJCTheatreAll's Well That Ends Well: An admittedly problematic Shakespearean come-die, one grey city reviewer found thelead character insufficent but some ofthe minor characters delightful. Theplot centers on Bertram, the youngCount of Rosillion, who flees the Ita¬lian wars in order to escape the attentions of Helena, the daughter of afamous physician. Through a series ofconvoluted designs, Helena gets herman. Saturday, July 26, at 8:30 pm. InHutch Court. 753 3583 for further information.The Servant of Two Masters: An eighteenth century Italian comedie aboutthe antics and situations surrounding aservant who, yes, tries to serve twomasters. Last week's grey city reviewer appreciated Court's production,especially the acting. Sunday, July 27at 3:00 pm., Wednesday, July 30 at 8:30pm. In Hutch Court. 753 3583 for fur¬ther information.Love's Labor's Lost: One of Shake¬speare's most lyric and satiric comedies, the play is also an appropriatechoice for the stuffy intellectual community that we are. The plot revolvesaround a commitment to forsake ordi¬nary pleasures for the sake of scholarship, and the failure of four men toconsciously keep this commitment. Afull review will appear in next week'sgrey city. Sunday, July 27 and Thurs¬day, July 31 at 8:30 pm. In Hutchcourt, 753 3583 for further information.As You Like It: Oak Park Theatre presents a modern adaptation of this Sha¬kespearean classic. Set in the beautiful Austin Gardens, a walk around theFrank Lloyd Wright houses is a poss¬ible pre show experience. Oak ParkTheatre (Accessible via DanRyan/Lake El. go to the Harlem/Marion stop in Oak Park (the endof the line), walk two blocks north, andtwo blocks west.) Friday, July 25 Sunday, July 27, at 8:30 pm. $3.50$1.50. —MASir Nathaniel (Leonard J. Kraft) and Holofernes (Ray Lonergan) in a scene fromCourt Theatre's production of Love's Labor's Lost Final Mom<SeducedDirected by James RoachRemains TheaterUntil August 31by Jeff Makos"Try to see the space it's consuming. . . .Now try to see the space it's not consumi. . . See? That's where it goes wrong."Henry Hackamore in SedtSam Shepard's Seduced is a play aboutspaces - literal spaces, historical spaces,psychic spaces. It is the story of HenryHackamore, a thinly veiled Howard Hug!figure who is living out his final days in tconfines of a tropical hotel room. Shut ofifrom sun and moonlight, aided only by hibodyguard Raul, Hackamore is anexceedingly rich and increasingly ill marwith an acute sense of his own impendingdoom. The play presents his last hours, ahe surrounds himself with two women frchis past, using them and their connectionthe outside world as a means of bringingown conflicts with life to some sort ofresolution. Shepard gives us Hackamoreultimate American Dream made flesh, tfdefinitive American "isolato" whosere-entry into society will mean death yetthat death will ultimately be the vehicle 1a true re-entry into society, into the verydefinition of that society, as flesh becomeAmerican Myth.Shepard skillfully manipulates the kno\mythology surrounding Howard Hughes ;he investigates/dissects the myth of theself-made man. Hackamore is thin to thepoint of starvation, paranoid to the pointlunacy, and obsessed with cleanliness anbodily functions to the point of physicalsterility. Yet the old man we are to seebefore us has been the ultimate kingmak"They comb the cities for me. . . Presidefear me. . . Mobsters, Gang Loards,Dictators. . . none of them can touch me.His energy has been spent in the creatiora vast wealth, yet he has used this wealtlprotect himself from that energy, to enathim to escape the very thing that he wasThis is the paradox of Henry Hackamorethe man who has attained everything anchas used that attainment to escape fromfurther attainment. Shepard's figure ofHackamore is really meant to be beyondlife, a figure who has not only added to timyths of the country, but who has actualbeen guided by it, in ways out of his owncontrol.This is the whole point of the play, to sHackamore as the inevitable result of dedark tendencies in the very country itselLynne Sharon SRough Strifeby Lynne Sharon SchwartzHarper & Rowby Molly McQuLynn Sharon Schwartz has written meiappearing in prize amnthologies, "little'Marked by imagination (not mere inven'have dodgecf classients of an American Mythming.educed>ut?s,rjghesn theoffhislaning>, asfromion tong his He comes to realize that at the very momenthe thought he was in control of his destiny,he was merely playing out a part - the roleof the greatest industrialist ever a partthat he didn't create so much as fill. Thewhole play, with Hackamore's vain attemptsto recall the past through the two women;leads to the moment when he realizes thisfact, when he realizes who and what hereally has been, and what he became whenhe "settled had to "settle down and sign.""I'm the demon they invented! Everythingthey ever aspired to. The nightmare of thenation! It's me, Raul! Only me!"Hackamore doesn't die at the end so muchas he becomes part of the air, the land, ofAmerica - the only possible graveyard bigenough for his spirit. "I'm high over thedesert. . . A ghost in the land. . . A phantomthey'll never get rid of." Seduced presentsan American myth discovering himself. more than just an awareness of age but areal tiredness that is a result of that age.The whole pacing of the play depends on thistension between Hackamore's weakness andhis life-consuming rages against hissituation. Cole gives us Hackamore'ts furywithout a sense of his very real physicaldecrepitude - all those blood transfusionssuggest that Hackamore is far more weakthan Cole allows his to be.Cole, however, attacks the part with anenergy that is suited to at least those partsof the character that are manic, that are inrage against life and his position in it. Hetruly understands that Hackamore is still amighty force. This is especially suited to thefast-paced second act, in which Luna andMiami, the two women from Hackamore'spast, attempt to describe their lives in theoutside world. Amy Norton as Luna is just abit too distant, too cold, almost tooShepard skillfully manipulates the known mythology sur¬rounding Howard Hughes as he investigates/dissects themyth of the self-made man.re as, the^etle for?ry>mesnownes asletheint ofand31elaker:lidentsme."tion ofa Ith tonabtevas.ore,andDm anyofondfo theduallyiwnlo showdeep,self. The play manages to do all this, however,while at the same time being bitterly funny.It's black comedy all the way, but evenmore black because it's so true - Shepardhas a good ear for the way language isspoken, and while what the characters sayis not only intensely funny, but intenselyreal. Those characters are outrageous intheir dimensions, but we can imagine themsaying the things they say. There is littlefalsehood in the dialogue. And this is thereal "seduction" of the play - that just likethe myth of Howard Hughes, a man soincredibly impossible that it is all the morepossible to believe that America spawnedhim, we can actually believe that if a manlike Henry Hackamore existed, he wouldprobably talk like this - like your averageAmerican.The figure of Henry Hackamore and thenatural language of the play are the twostrengths, as well as possible weaknesses, inany production. The Remains Theater givesus a Seduced that is obviously aware ofthese problems, yet is not quite totallysuccessful in overcoming them. Gary Coleas Hackamore grabs onto the manic energythat is a true part of Hackamore'scharacter. He understands thatHackamore's energy comes from his battlewith life, his struggle to understand hisimpending death, his ability to see beyondhimself. Yet this energy must be tempered,or at least countered, by a certain frailty, mannered in her presentation. But LindsayMcGee is perfect as Miami, the dim-wittedchorus girl from the past. McGee'sperformance really gets to the heart ofShepards use of language. She doesn'tpresent the character so much as fling it atyou; chewing gum, slurring words, McGeedoesn't try to enunciate Shepard's languageas much as she becomes it, letting the toneof natural speech determine her delivery,and not vice versa as in the case of Cole andMorton. Alan Novak as Raul is less of aGordon Liddy type as he is a Mafia hood, sohis sudden turning on Henry seems lesscalculated then the dialogue would suggest,and his performance stands somewherebetween a coy manipulator and a comicbook thug his motives don't seem fullyresolved.But overall, this is a performance whosewhole is greater than the sum of its parts.Shepard is a hard author to present, but theRemains group dives into the play, andwhile individual interpretations of thecharacters are not as precise as they mightbe, overall the play comes off extremelywell, surprisingly well in fact. Partially thisis due to the material, but the ensembleplaying is spirited. Aware of each otherslimitations, the actors nevertheless get tothe spirit of the play itself, evoking theMythic American Wierdness inherent inShepard's work. The opening of Act two, asthe women dance to Randy Newman's "You Lindsay McGee as Miami in Sam Shepard's SeducedCan Leave Your Hat On," is hilarious, and aclear capturing of the author's intentions.This is a production with merit, andespecially worth seeing if you need anintroduction to the art of Sam Shepard.The Remains Theater is located at 3744North Clark. Performances are Thursdaythrough Sunday at 8 p.m., except Saturdaywhen shows are at 7 and 10. Tickets are S5.00 with a dollr discount for students andsenior citizens. The play has been extendedto August 31, so go see it. The only realproblem is the placement of the airconditioner, which is far too close to theperformers and is an incredible distraction.Remains should either move it, or get rid ofit entirely, for it does their actors and theperformance a tremendous disservice.Schwartzemorable short fiction," and slick magazines,ntiveness), her stories Oughts and Ought Nots in a First Novelfication even though their content has often been con¬spicuously feminist. Ideology didn't disarm Schwartzof visionary powers, didn't make her enter a drearycampaign of conscience. The political netherlands ofstories like "Counting Sheep" floated at the edges ofan intense spirituality. Schwartz's emotional sinceri¬ty and verbal deftness have, in the past, transformedand resuscitated the approved "messages" and occasional social truisms she unearthed.But Rough Strife, her first novel, wavers whereSchwartz's other work has done its best — at thebasic level of fictionalization. Originating as acharacteristically accomplished short story, whichwon several awards after its publication, the novelseems to be Schwartz's attempt to expand and enrichthe story by means of additional documentation.Though never exactly clumsy, her extra prose sealsoff the germ of the book (and a very vigorous germ itis) in orderly, surrounding layers, as if that werewhat a novel ought to do — cleanse, comb andstraighten itself out.Caroline meets Ivan in Rome while she is vacation¬ing and he is doing research under a Fulbright. Theyfall in love, return to the states, and marry. With thehelp of two daughters, they endure twenty years ofeach other’s company. Caroline's views of Ivan, ofher work (topology), her children and herself giveRough Strife its paradoxically cool, finished quality— interspersed with eruptive moments.The conflicts seem as mysteriously arbitrary asthey do characteristic and necessary, revealingCaroline and Ivan in ways neither of them expect..Their fears and jealousies don't really take shape ex¬cept during outbursts, surprising the protagonists butalso forcing them to appreciate their differences. Forthem, love includes hostility, though suppressing it most of the time.The novel begins late in the marriage, to show howvulnerable Caroline and Ivan remain to each other'simagined inconstancies. Having woken, Ivan leavesCaroline to go jogging. When he doesn't return withinthe customary half-hour, she surmises that he has de¬cided to abandon her. After all, there. . . was nothing spectacular about her.Though there had been moments, withhim, when she felt spectacular, so illu¬mined she might glow in the dark. But intruth even the warm glow of youth hadleft her. Wasn't it true despite all the ex¬ercising, hadn't she seen but pretendednot to, that in certain bends and twiststhe skin on the outside of her upper thighscrinkled like parchment?In this case, Caroline's conclusions are incorrect,but there is nothing out of line with the irrationalemotionalism of her reasoning. Reasoning like thishas guided her (guided careful, cerebral Caroline)throughout her acquaintance with Ivan. A few timesthey substitute deliberation for impulse flop — especially when husband and wife decide to become father and mother.Caroline would not take her temperaturefor five minutes every morning and enterit on a chart, seizing the hottest occasionsfor sex and graphing the event. Carpediem, Ivan called the chart. She called itFrequency of Fucking. Yet the vulgartruth was that she needn't graph the frequency of desire, merely of performance. . . They desired without performing,performed without desiring. When they do conceive a child, it is by "roughstrife," and not according to anyone's plan.The best section of the book is undoubtedly the kernel it came from, the sixteen-page story of Caroline'sfirst pregnancy. In it Schwartz does not feel duty-bound to validate her characters by unnecessary, unilluminating dialogue or routine identifying marks.They become meaningful through meaningful acts,not through bland exposition. Ivan, for instance,shows a novel side of himself when he tells the newlypregnant Caroline that... he was going to pay the baby a visitand asked if she had any messages shewanted delivered. He unlocked from herembrace, moved down her body and saidhe was going to have a look for himself.Clowning, he put his ear between her legsto listen. Finally he stopped his antics . .Ordinarily rather distant and anonymous (although,we assume, powerful an sexy), with Schwartz's helpIvan briefly becomes more.The hardships of the pregnancy, Ivan's bizarre resentment of it, his occasional cruelty, and finally thebirth itself, are very vivid and well controlled.They're also humorous; Caroline is no dull martyr.During labor she reflects, coherently enough, thatshe "... was not having too terrible a time, she wouldsurely survive, she told herself, captivated by the hellish wolf like sounds going from her mouth to her ear. . ." And she is cheered up by an obstetrician whourges her on like the exemplary athlete she is.On second reading, Rough Strife seems a discreetand streamlined novel, but first impressions are alsotruthful; Lynne Sharon Schwartz is at her best out ona limb, and in this book, she stays indoors.^?§|8§§:?flltliBill i?|SC ■Ills’SISl:yy j':y;yi§*yi§;: 'V «, ^ — %V 4 > r ^ *■ , - j *- f ^ 'C Cs •>■ 4- ^ e ,*Grad Students to Pay to See Profs|§pi||y|fy §y1'ilfeNii By Sharon Butlerjigipwftili y:;y ;yyy;j j ■'; Dod tee onHum a Dev « y ^hi4tf§qrjif0e^Mr cmmuIU on^ffi. j.ri^is n ^- i ■ esultoi ■ dad tile iaeui". h< n m tt< •Committee agreed to enforce a rule requir-rat leasttj j- j a, ; s -.".v. : ■ ;.faculty advisors*" any time (fading the academic year.: ■ he So-.y-jv;;.';- ? 'j y.; rj ■ ■ j-.y. j y; y; ■ -■;. not corn-p - - rk and thosewho have finished their courses but are stillwoi studentsIn UM • g tre tht sd Jects of thene^-dfor^ii^ $ImmiRM^-ispHi c<*mpleted the required number of courses, theyusually do not register for a research coursealthough the\ do meet with facultyme: theses Ph D. pro¬grams in the Physical Sciences and the Bio¬logical Sciences Divisions are structureddifferently, so students in those divisions donot face this problem.A University policy states that any stu¬dent us me must he registeredin a course, but this policy is apparently notany department or committeeother than the 1 '<■ remittee on Human Devel-opment.The large number of unregistered gradu¬ate students and a shortage of facultymembers in the Committee prompted thedecision to enforce the rule, according to Mi-haly Csikszentmihalyi, chairman of theCommittee.For example, the department of NearEastern languages and civilization has aseven year time limit for completion ofthesis u- ~k eliminating abackklg of Ph.D. candidates part¬ite aj: ’ j d- ?"■; o : : r ' . . d■'shipu ith his,|<tyi|l>r, so that faculty d<> :d yy. y. d d' v : v vd ' - d d : j " S ■ ■■ urse aftercompleting all »i lents is at the discre-■ j - ' / : :<d d.. ' * a> lirrii' .d: 'd; V" = d' V"V V" d:'V d^dd ... d;.., ' Xdepends on the individual circumstances,”a spokesman for that department said.>st three or four faculty who: and so theloadof students for each faculty member has in¬creased . . . We have H" udentswho are using faculty time but are not regis¬tered, 42 registered students, and only 30faculty . . . the student load on faculty is agreat burden; it is difficult to operate,”Csikszentmihalyi said.The Committee reasoned that if studentsmust pay to meet their advisors, they willnot claim faculty time indiscriminately.Csikszentmihalyi said that another reasonfor enforcing the registration rule was tobring the high student-faculty ratio in theCommittee to the attention of University ad¬ministrators, in the hope that additional fac¬ulty will be hired.Many students in Human Developmentare bitter about the new policy. Said one stu¬dent, “they’re trying to squeeze blood out ofa turnip. You have to pay for twenty-sevencourses and then you have to keep on pay¬ing.” The first to be discouraged are thosewith limited incomes: “I’m unemployed; Ican’t afford $700 just for a couple of conver¬sations,” a student said.Students in the committee also point to thefact that other departments have denied al¬ternate ways to avoid an excess of unregis¬tered graduate students.PCB Effects UnclearContinued from page 1before a weekend when only emergencycrews ere available.The initial report, Dugas said, led thecompany to believe that the incident in¬volved only a minor leakage of oil from atransformer. Commonwealth Edison did notmake a full evaluation of the situation untilMonday when crews were at normalstrength.Dugas said, “If this thing had happenedon a Thursday there would not have been theappearance of delay.”.Ail^4tlMH4p€fl0rts uere made by Com-mm . . A'ing^ an -1• Bdgatori El arvtyed the in#i and (oaksamples from a number of oily patches thatma> havebeen PCB.The IEPA was contacted by Bloom’s of¬fice:PCB EffectsBarnett said that.PCB was a “persistent.r>m . ai much Sid nod break down intoy y- .vvj.-v j j . y • vy ' .y v yment or the body.Dr. Daniel Hryhorczuk, of the Cookhyy y'y i: ■yyj. v y y - j y " ythat exp< ml PCB comm; inhalation or ingeatioii of;; e ntutance, D ougbynnaU <in otnls'' 1 ■ **i#*,y *' . ihrjx | Sjr tt ■ rp; igh tbeak hi. ‘okc symptoms o:rmarilyfron - . | ■does npt appear instantly lethral• ®■■■ .'. ■ -v v..y#‘' '• y' . ■ ■ ' v 'y yy y;ky ,ry yy y y; ■;thopirii ’ g yn■re a -.km. nah calk I r-acnidamage armtry. Other symptoms include weakness,j headaches, eye secretions, swelling, of ex tremities and nose and throat irritations.Hryhorczuk said that the chemical also ap¬pears to be embryo-toxic resulting in stillbirths and a condition called “Coca-colababies.” These babies are distinguished bya brown-gray skin color and eye secre¬tions.More acute symptoms of PCB poisoningmay be caused by chemical by-products ofPCB which are created by its manufactureor are synthesized under great amounts ofheat (such as those temperatures found in acapacitor bank). Not much is known aboutthe effects of these by-products on humans,Hryhorczuk said.Further actionBloom said that he will introduce a CityCouncil resolution to investigate PCB instal¬lations when the council reconvenes on Sep¬tember 10th.In his letter to O’Conner, Bloom called onCommonwealth Edison to observe some“minimum” safety precautions includingposting PCB warning signs in visible areas,quick clean-up of anv type of kMfegge, andnotlfication-ofpeople *$M> may baie come incontact with PCB.Bloom has also sent a letter to residents inthe area a®pund the -;*e Of the explosionwarning of the danger and u:, ■ t mem toget a medi< il ekaminitibn the} believed•he;, r. thtbesu - '. ha al"' ^ j t' V b..' ' ’ j ’ j ;• ;to lea. ■ 1 m ition >f PCB in-stall tkm \\ thefifth va itj. ■micateCkHnnumweall h i di km m y ; 'yyilely of PCB ar . ew thattook pi if< ■ j;Anumhi I i ortedthat an unidentified resident was consider¬ing a lawsuit against Commonwealth Edis¬on. At presstime/no suit had been filed FRIDAYPerspectives I • <pw. • V-.fhet.xs ftnd Vietnam; i. ..-x ' f;Strier, 6:09 am channel 7.Crossroads: English classes for foreign women,10:00 am-12 noon.May 19 Communist Organization: Film-“BushMama" 7:30 pm, blue Gargoyle-.Student Activities Film: “Bridge on the RiverKwai” 8:00 pm, Cobb.ddeag • 8:80 pm, Hutchi¬son Court. Tickets at Reynolds Club Box Office.SATURDAYCrossroads: Buffet style dinner, 6:00 pm.Student Activities Film: “Singing in the Rain” 7:15and 9:30 pm, Cobb.Mi’s Well that Ends Well” 8:30pm. Hutch Court.SUNDAYRockefeller Chapel: Ecumenical Service of HolyCommunion 9:00 am.Rockefeller Chapel: University Service of Wor¬ship, 11:00 am, Joseph Sittler.Court Theatre: “The Servant of Two Masters” 3:00pm, Hutch Court. *Rockefeller Chapel: Carillon Recital, 4:00 pm.India Association: Film-“Bhumika“ (the Roie) byShyam Benetal, 6:30 pm, I-House.Court Theatre: "Love’s Labor's Lost” 8:30 pm.Hutch Court.MONDAYPerspectives: Topic-' Swords From Plowshares”Guests Albert Wohlstetter and Mrs. Albert Wohl-stetter, 6:09 am, channel 7.Smart Gallery: Selections from the John L. Strauss Loan Collection on exhibit thru Aug. 31.TUESDAY iPerspectives: Topic-“Pakistan, India, and NuclearEnxr.Ky gUM t'-i -n><! Mrs Mbert Wohlstetter, 6:09 am channel 7.Student Activities: Noontime Concert: 3-StoryBrownstone; Original Folk Music, noon. HutchCourt, yyWomen’s Rap Group: Meets 7:30 pm in theWomen’s Center, Blue Gargoyle 3rd floor.WEDNESDAYPerspectives: Topic-“Security of Energy SuppliesNow and in the Future” guests Albert Wohlstet¬ter and Mrs. Albert Wohlstetter, 6:09 am. channelt.Rockefeller Chapel: Service of Holy Communion.8:00 am.Crossroads: English classes for foreign women,2:00 pm.Department of Biochemistry: Seminar-“Extracel¬lular Metabolites of Phototrophic Bacteria asPossible Intermediates in the Biosynthesis of Vi¬tamin Bit” speaker Volker Koppenhagen, 4:00pm, Cummings room 101.Student Activities Film: “Twentieth Century" 8:00pm, Cobb.Court Theatre: “The Servant of Two Masters” 8:30pm. Hutch Court.THURSDAYPerspectives: Topic**‘Freedom and Authority inEducation" guests Allan Bloom, Mrs. Leon Kassand Nathan Tarcov, 6:09 am, channel 7.Rockefeller Chapel: Carillon recital, 7:30 pm.Court Theatre: "All’s Well That Ends Well" 8:30pm. Hutch Court.VERSAILLES5254 S. DorchesterWELL MAINTAINEDBUILDINGAttractive iy« and2V« Room StudiosFurnished or Unfurnished$218 «o $320Based on AvailabilityAt Campus Bus Stop100 Mr*, r324-02C . CroakCHINESE-AMfRICAMRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOpen Daily11 AM to 8:30 PMClosed Monday1318 EAST 63rdMU 4-1062TheFLAMINGOand CABANA CLUB5500 S. Shore Drive•Studio and 1 Bedroom•Furnished and Unfurnished•U . of C . bus stop•Outdoor Pool and Gardens•Carpeting and Drapes Incl.• i *#ykjbafcfyforStudents and Staff•Delicatessen•Barbershop•Beauty Shop•J.B.O. Restaurant•Dentist•ValetFREE PARKINGM. SnyderPL 2-3800 ^GuMitaStMe5,aic.“MU SHOW YOU HOW” $AM$!IS AT IT AGAIN!FOR EQUIPMENT:FOR PROCESSINGAFFORDABLE?AND HOW!WE’LL SHOW YOUMGuMta$fMe4,utc.. for All YourPho'ogropbKNeeds1Gil* CertiltcoiesAvailableTfNLEY PARKBrementowne Mall159th I Oak Park429 6464 HYDf PARK1519 E. 53rd St..Chicago752-3030MT. GREENWOOD3205 .. h STChicago238 6464 HICKORY HILLSHill Creek Center> ‘i & With Av.599-92006—The ChicasCLASSIFIED ADSSPACEStudio apt available August 2. Flam¬ingo residence, 5500 S. Shore Dr.,near Univ. bus route. University dis¬count available. $276 unfurnished;$298 furnished (without 10% dis¬count). Call Robert, H-684-0326 or0-576-4985.University Park studio. (55th andDorchester). $28,600. 435-7674 or955-7399.QUIET GRAD stud, wanted for nice3- person apt near Co-op and I.C.$136.50 available Aug 1.667-2273Room for rent In 3-bedroom apt. 5300block of Harper. Convenient togroceries, 1C, minibus. 241-7390 eves.For rent to student large 1 rm bsmtapt in private home has own entrancegarden available immediately$ 160/month. 493-2981.Do you need a place for August only?Clean studio apt. $210. Excellent loca¬tion. 241-7196 after 2:00.Wanted: considerate person to sharelarge sunny two-bedroom apartmentin vicinity of 57th and Kenwood, yourshare approximately $200/month.Available Sept. 1st. Graduate studentor working person preferred. Call Vicat 753-3940.Large 2 bdrm $325 ph 536-5790.LARGE STUDIO 55th and S ShoreLake view Pool $292 mo 922-1595 days947-0032 eves. Avail, now.Take over our lease Aug 1 of nice 3bdrm apt on 54th Univ. Fac/stafffamilies only $385/mo 667-7250.3 br, 2 bath luxury condo with goodview of lake from the 9th floor of theBarclay in Hyde Park. Condo com¬pletely renovated and beautifullydecorated. Owner will sell fur¬nishings if desired. Asking 92,500.00by owner. Call 624-4222.Roommate wanted, male, grad pref.$U5, move in Aug. 1. Call 924-2744.Available immediately One room inenormous 3-bedroom apartment.Working fireplace, front and backporches, other niceties. $160 plus elec¬tricity and gas 643-5273.1 bdrm to sublet Aug and Sept. 57 andMaryland. $150/mo 235-2144 ask forBeth.1 BDRM APT-Available Sept only.Excellent Location. Sunny, PrimeCondition. Rent Negotiable for Catand Plant care. Call 752-0621 eves,after 7/28.PEOPLE WANTEDFaculty family seeks part time helpwith housework. Very near campus.Flexible hours, good rates. Studentpreferred, please call 241-6766 or753-4258Math tutor for student who needsreview of 6th grade math. 4 hours perweek. 752-4369.Political student needed for privatetutor. Please contact. P.O. Box 86,Palos Heights, III. 60463, Leave name,address-phone, will contact. The Department of BehavioralSciences needs people who want toparticipate as paid subjects inpsycholinguistic and cognitivepsychology experiments. For furtherInformation call 753-4718.Kindergarten teacher for child carecenter in Hyde park. Must havedegree and experience with youngchildren. Full day small class, op¬portunity to be innovative. For infocall 538-8325.Work in the historic Frank LloydWright Robie House! The Office ofUniversity Alumni Affairs is lookingfor a secretary for its National Pro¬gram Director and Chicago-area Pro¬gram Director. The pay is good, thebenefits are generous, and the work¬ing conditions are superb. CallAllison Fairly, 753-4442, for more in¬formation.Teachers and grad students. Earnsubstantial money part time. Call667-4339 evenings for appt. only.Private room w/bath plus fringeprivileges, offered to student willingto babysit 15 hrs per week with fun 3yr boy 752-6968. Begin immediately orSept.FOR SALEDesk w/adj typing chair, $30; twinmattress and springs, $15, or best of¬fer 241-6714, eve.Victorian Couch $200 Zenith 19" color$125 and more 947-0032.Bike Wheel 27 x 1 3/8 gd. cond.241-7362Old A.B.Dyke Mimeograph 530, withsuplies, available to any StudentOrganization. If interested, see Guntain the Student Activities Office.74 SAAB 99LE, 4 door, 4 speed, frontdrive, new tires, new battery. $1750;753-8283(d), 998-9013(n).3 bdrm 2 bath condo nrl lake. Wood-burning fireplace, built-in shelves inIr; oak panelling and built-in buffet indr; newly finished oak floors;dishwasher new appliances in kit¬chen; solarium; Strass crystalchandelier. $79,000.667-3871,876-8192Air conditioner: 10,000 BTU's exct.cond., uses 220v-$125 call Pete,weekdays 856-7455 evenings 643-7513.1972 VW Bug. New shocks and tires.25,000 miles on rebuilt engine, $1200call 955-7869PERSONALSWriters' Workshop (PLaza 2-8377)Barefoot Dreamer-He's Purple andI'm the Gang. Thursday lunchtime atStreeters, perusing the Reader. R8,Cwith lime, R4C without.DOC: You leave me speechless.There's a drunken quality about youthat makes my head spin. Rabbit.QWERTY: I'd love to crew for thedemon, but live too far to do it. Still, ifyou want to give me his #, I'll take it.Barefoot Dreamer.STANLEY H. KAPLANFor Over 4 l Vfears The Standard ofExcetence In Test PreparationMCAT* DAT* LSATME • HE PSYCH • ME 1)0 • MATPCAT • OCAT • VAT • MAT • SATNATIONAL MCDICAL BOAROt • VQC • ECFMttFLO • NATL DENTAL NOAMS 'TOEFLP0MXFIV BOMBS • KURSK BOMBSVint AeitMtM 1*4 S«f«Ttwwfl My «• Mtto Tin IMman iU«n « a«* itCMi Nvm *«•IMM Cm* A i* f-1SPRING, SUMMERFALL INTENStVESCOURSES StARtfNG ■THIS MONTHt mSUiUIEn GFE SUR4EI! ■CHAT SUMMER LSAT. NMCAT.... |NEXT MONTH: ftDAT.... MCAT.... 4W:./ ■SCAT... LSAT... CUE.. . ■CHICAGO CfNTf*• 211 N. CLARKCHICAGO, ILLINOIS I(31*1 7646161S I* SLWORRAN1«S. LAGRANGE ROADSUITE 301LAGRANGE. ILLINOIS 00624(3121 *266*0 iiur..L Courta* Constantly UpdataoLlcanslng Eiama In Cantar Sail-Study■MM* *•«* 0*M CWm «■ 1*1 10 HW U« C MM 4 «*MMOUTMDC M.Y. ST ATI CALL TOUL FAM: 100-m-ITMJ Mike P: This Is why you should readthe Maroon.D-I'm so glad, I'm so glad, I'm glad,I'm glad, I'm glad. CSERVICESBABYSITTING, CARWASH,PAINTING-We can help. We have aready supply of neighborhood teens,pre-screened and trained to handleyour temporary job. CALL: The BlueGargoyle's Youth Employment Ser¬vice, 955-4108, Mon-Thurs 10-5.The Chicago Counseling andPsychotherapy Center. Client-centered psychotherapy. 5711 S.Woodlawn and 6354 N. Broadway,Chicago. A Registered PsychologicalAgency. (312) 684-1800.Typing term papers et al pickup anddelivery on campus reasonable call684-6882Tennis Lessons. Low Rates ForBeginners and Doubles. InstructionCall: Trudy 955-9321 eves.TYPIST Exp. Turablan PhD Masterstheses, term papers, rough drafts924-1152Mother of 11 mo child offers highquality care to one other child in herhome near campus 955-9782PROFESSIONAL TYPISTAVAILABLE 1 day service (in mostcases) Reas, rates-Academic, Legaland Medical typing. 924-6917 LOST AND FOUNDFOUND . On 7/17/80,35 pages of classnotes for Hume. Found on car at 57and Univ. Call 268-5765.WOMEN'S RAPGROUPA Women's Rap Group meets everyTuesday at 7:30 pm at 5655 S. Univer¬sity Ave. For Info-752-5655.TRAVELING?Youth Hostel Cards (Inexpensivehousing throughout the U.S. and 50other countries) and Int'l Student IDCards are available at the StudentActivities Office, Ida Noyes Hall, Rm210CLOSING FOR THESUMMER SALEA SINGULAR GROUP, crafts co-opwill be closing for the summer Aug. 1-Sepf 15. Special Sale with manyreductions on Sat. July 26, 11-4. Weare located at 57th and Woodlawn inthe Unitarian Church. Stop in beforeit's too late.WISC. VAC. CABINAvail. Sept 6-20. On lake. Call947-0557.GOLD CITY INN9 ala ala *!*given * * * *by the MAROONOpen DailyFrom 11:30 a.m.to 9:00 p.m.5228 Harper 493-2559Eat more for lessA Gold Mine Of Good FoodStudent Discount:10% for table service5% for take homeHyde Park's Best Cantonese FoodWe Buy and SellUsed Records1701 E. 55th684-3375Eye 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 andcompetent professional serviceOur reputation is your guaranteeof satisfaction. DANCING INTHE STREETS?Well, not quite, but there is beginnersfolkdancing Monday nights in the IdaNoyes parking lot. We have teachingfrom 8 to 10 and requests from 10 until11:30.LITERARYMAGAZINEPrimavera, a women's literarymagazine, needs more women to jointhe staff. Call 752-5655 for info. Onsale in most Chicago bookstores.BACKPACKING!Join one of our end-of-the-summertrips to the Rockies or Smokies! Alsoclimbing in the Bighorns, canoeing inCanada Call Outing Club, Peg, 3-4912or 947-0148.PARTYDelta Upsiton 5714 S. Woodlawn.Saturday July 26, 9 PM-? Refresh¬ment on a summer night.COURTYARD SALESunday, July 27, noon-4. Desks, lamp¬shades, wicker turn., beds, beanbagchr, rugs, shelves, depression glass,air cond., lots misc., 5460-70Woodlawn, if rain basement. DISCOUNTBOOKSALEAll sorts of boks at low, LOW pricesTuesdays and Fridays from11:30-2.30 main hall Reynolds Club.Come and buy your summer readingat the best deal around. The StudentCo-op bookstore.FOLKDANCING!Always wondered, but never gone?Beginners folkdancing is a yeararound event. Even the heat can'tstop us! Join us as we dance beneaththe stars from 8 till 11:30 withteaching from 8 till 10.HOTLINE STAFFI have lost your phone numbers.Please call Becky at 752-5860 andleave your name and phone number.Thanks.WAITRESSESExperienced, day or night shift. SeeMr. Gabriel from 10-4. Hyde ParkHilton, 4900 S. Lake Shore Dr,INDIA'SBEST MOVIE"Bhumika" ("The Role") will beshown on Sunday, July 27 at 6:30 at I-House Free refreshments. Don'tmiss It!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 &&ifIt GM QUALITYIf SERVICE MUTTSSDfZBJU. MOTORS MUTTS DIVISIONkrvp I hat Grrut GM Frfling Huh Gt.\t l.\t. GM Farts '72nd A Stony Island 684-0400Open Evenings and Sunday Ports Open Sat. 'til noon2 MiU's - 5 M:notes A*, ayFrom The UNIVERSITYSPECIAL DISCOUNT PRICESfor all STUDENTS andFACULTY MEMBERSJust present your University of Chicago IdentificationCord As Students or Foculty Members you ore entrtfedto special money-saving DISCOUNTS on VolkswagenParts, Accessories and any new or used Volkswagenyou buy from Ruby Volkswogen72nd & Stony Island 684-9400Open Evenings end Sundoyi Ports Open Sot. 'hi noonThe Chicago Maroon, Friday, July 25, 1980 — 7films FRIDAY, JULY 25, 8:00 p.m.’ BfidtJC Oil tll6 RiVGT KWOiSATURDAY, JULY 25, 7:15 & 9:30 p.m. * SWgm ^ RfllllWEDNESDAY, JULY 30, 8:00 p.m. - Twentieth Centuryall films in air-conditioned quantrell auditorium,cobb hall, 5811 ellis avenuegr' Vensemble*friday, july 25in cooperation withcourt theatre8:30 p.m.hutch courttickets at reynolds club box office $4.50 gen. admission - $3.00 UC students/sr. citizensthe coffee shopsare open this summerWEISS COFFEE SHOP mSS,8:30 a.m.-2:00 p.m. monday-fridayCOBB COFFEE SHOP SI8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m., monday-friday8 — The Chicago Maroon, Friday, July 25, 1980