THE CHICAGO MAROONVolume 90, No. 12 The University of Chicago Copyright 1980 The Chicago Maroon Friday, October 17, 1980Physics Nobelto CroninBy Chris IsidoreNative Hyde Parker James Cronin be¬came the University’s 48th Nobel Laureateon Tuesday when he and Princeton col¬league Val Fitch were awarded the 1980Nobel Prize for Physics.Cronin and Fitch won the award for workthey did together at Brookhaven NationalLaboratory in 1964, when they were both onthe faculty at Princeton University. Theirexperimental work revealed an unexpectedasymmetry in the decay of a particular sub¬atomic particle — the K meson.At his press conference on Tuesday morn¬ing, Cronin referred to the effect which heand Fitch discovered as “a fossil of the be¬ginning of the universe.” Their findingsshowed that the K meson had an unexpectedtendency to decay into slightly greateramounts of matter than anti-matter.This is significant because when matterand anti-matter come into contact with eachother, they annihilate each other, releasingenergy. If sub-atomic particles did not tendto decay into matter, and instead decayedinto equal amounts of matter and anti-mat¬ter, then the two would exist in equal propor¬tions in today’s universe, and the cancella¬tion would be continually taking place.Instead, in our present universe, scientiststhink anti-matter is only created in the labo¬ratory, existing only in small amounts andfor fractions of a milli-second.Before the Cronin-Fitch experiment, thetheory of charge conjugation-parity inver¬sion symmetry (known as CP) has led scien¬tists to believe that sub-atomic particles didindeed decay symmetrically into balancedamounts of matter and anti-matter. Thistheory was fairly simply to explain, but ithad trouble answering the question of wherethe matter had come from to begin with.The Cronin-Fitch experiment, by demon¬strating this violation of CP, has helped toanswer the question about how matter wascreated. But at the same time it has left un¬answered questions about the causes of theCP violation.Cronin and Fitch’s experiment took sixmonths to perform, and they took an addi¬tional six months to carefully check theirfindings before they were ready to believe itthemselves. ‘‘We were aware in the earlydays of the experiment of the extreme im¬portance of what we were doing. We wereawfully careful about our results, because one has such a strong feeling that the sym¬metry did exist.” When they finally pub¬lished their work its importance was recog¬nized immediately, but the fullerimplications of what it meant about thebirth of the universe and the early creationof matter were not understood until ad¬vances in atomic theory could be made. Thisis one of the reasons that it has been 16 yearsbetween the experiment itself and the pre¬sentation of the award. That amount of timeis not an unusual lag for the presentation ofa Nobel prize for physics, and it has takenthe attention to cosmic and sub-atomictheory of the past decade to bring attentionback to the experiment.Continually throughout his press confer¬ence on Tuesday, Cronin emphasized that hewas an experimenter, not a theorist. Whilehe said he did not believe there was any ri¬valry between these two branches of phys¬ics, he was clearly proud that experimental¬ists had been able to contribute so much tothe formulation of atomic and cosmictheories. ‘‘There is really a symbiotic rela¬tion betwen the theorist and the experimen¬talist,” he said. ‘‘Sometimes the theoristsare way ahead, and then an experiment likethis catches up with them. At the currenttime, the theorists’ progress has been noth¬ing short of astonishing.”Cronin emphasized the need for govern¬ment support for experimental physics. ‘‘Iwant to stress this was an experimental dis¬covery, not a theorical one,” he said. ‘‘Ifthere is any lesson to this award today, it isthat support for this type of experimentationmust not stop.’Cronin’s co-winner was even more bluntabout his feelings. Fitch was quoted in theChicago Sun Times as saying that the re¬search could not be done in 1980 because ofreduced U.S. commitment to science. ‘‘Thesituation is not the same today. The countryhas not seen fit to invest in research ... Iguess its part of the anti-technology move¬ment and the greening of America.”Sweden’s Royal Academy of Science,which makes the awards in chemistry andphysics, has certainly not cut back on itssupport of science. A record cash award of$212,000 will be given with each award in for¬mal ceremonies in Stockholm on December10. The award was established in the will ofindustrialist Alfred Nobel, the inventor ofdynamite. Music Department toMove by NovemberBy Jeane KrinsleyThe music department, currently housedin Lexington Hall, will move to a new loca¬tion in the recently renovated Thomas Good-speed Hall by November 1, Philip Gossett,chairman of the department announced thisweek.Lexington’s deteriorating condition andits poor acoustical quality were the majorreasons for the move.The new facilities, located between Good-speed Hall and the Classics building, wereconstructed at a cost of $1.9 million, and con¬tain four stories of offices, classrooms, andpractice rooms. In conjunction with themove, the music department has also ac¬quired new electronic equipment, two pi¬anos, and additional furniture.‘‘We have been ill-housed for some time,and we’ve tried to do what we could withvery unfortunate facilities,” said Gosset, re¬ferring to Lexington Hall. The building has along history of structural problems, includ¬ing an incident in which a piano fell througha rotted floor several years ago.In addition to roof leaks, rat infestation,and windows which do not open, the buildinghas limited office space, leaving severalmembers of the department only enoughroom for desks in small cubicles in the cen¬tral office.A spokesman from the University’s plan¬ning department said that Lexington Hallwill be torn down when the music depart¬ment moves.Compared to six cramped practice roomsin Lexington, Goodspeed will have thirteeninsulated practice rooms. Music studentswill be given keys to these rooms, although other students can use them. Gosset said,“We want to encourage non-departmentalstudents to use these rooms.”The new rehearsal hall, formerly a read¬ing room, will be large enough to seat 150 to200 people. “The room has been remo¬deled,” said Gosset, “but we have tried topreserve its qualities.” The hall will havewood parquet floors, wooden beams, andtwo carved balconies for singers.Despite the increase in size from Lexing¬ton’s rehearsal room, the new hall in Good-speed will not be able to accommodate thesymphony orchestra. “The rehearsrl hall islarge enough for any group except the sym¬phony orchestra,” Gosset said. The orches¬tra will rehearse instead in Mandel Hallwhen the renovations there are completed.The music department plans to holdlunchtime concerts in the rehearsal hallevery Thursday. Informal recitals will alsobe held more often. “We would like to haveas many student groups as possible use thisroom,” Gosset said.Although Gosset hopes that the new facili¬ty will attract more potential undergradu¬ate music majors to the University, no fun¬damental changes in the stucture of thedepartment are.planned. Two new courses,however, have been added to the curriculumfor non-majors — music theory and musichistory.Besides being pleased with the new,higher quality facility, Gosset said he wasglad that the department is moving to amore central location. “We’ve felt a littleisolated from other departments,” he said.Gosset added that he had no regrets aboutleaving Lexington Hall. “Everyone is veryexcited about moving to the new' milding,”he said.Co-Op Turmoil mBy David HolmesThe general manager of the Hyde ParkCo-op grocery store resigned last Friday ata special meeting of the Co-op Society’sboard of directors. Pete Pederson, who be¬came general manager one year ago after acareer with Co-op rival Jewel food stores,felt, in the words of board-president AlanDobry, that his continued presence would be“a source of division within the society.”The resignation seems to have resolvedserious disagreements among boardmembers and Co-op employees over Peder¬son's competence. One former employeesaid that the remodeling program initiatedby Pederson and now nearing completionhad put the Co-op deeply in debt and hurtbusiness.The Co-op lost $75,000 in July, and another$85,000 in August, but the auditor for thestore insisted that this was due to year-endadjustments and an error in making out thepayroll.Business has also dropped off as a resultof the remodeling, and many Co-op custom¬ers express annoyance at having to dodgeconstruction equipment, as well has havingto put up with the dust and dirt caused by theconstruction.But board-president Alan Dobry defendedthe remodeling. “I hope people will see thatwe have a better store,” he said. Citing ex¬tremely high utility bills and a general de¬sire to improve the store as reasons for re¬modeling, he also stated that the improvementscompleted todate are not ap¬preciably moreexpensive than projected. Taking into account inflation, Dobryestimates the expenditures on remodeling todate at 5%-10% above the projected amount.He qualified this estimate by saying that ex¬penditures for improvements not yet mademight push the costs higher.The board’s decision to pay overtimewages in order to have the floor tiles re¬placed at night, and thus avoid further in¬convenience to customers was also cited asan example of work remaining to be per¬formed. Dobry said that further improve¬ments might be considered at the upcomingannual meeting of the Co-op Society, such asrevamping the heating-cooling system, orremodeling the entrance to conserve en¬ergy. “These things will pay for them¬selves,” said Dobry.Dobry claimed that he knew of no man¬agement-level employees who had quit as aresult of Pederson’s behavior. The only res¬ignations within the last year were becauseof personal reasons, according to Dobry.The one exception, noted Dobry. was TomJordan, an aide of Pederson’s in charge ofthe remodeling; Jordan, also a formerJewel employee, resigned along with Peder¬son. Another Pederson aide and ex-Jewelemployee, Tom Behnke, is currently run¬ning the grocery operation, and will do soContinued on page 4Abowk0The Varsity Sport of the Mind THINK YOU'RE SMART?Later this month the 2nd annual University of Chicago CollegeBowl Tournament will be held to determine both the UniversityChampions and the Varsity Squad for intercollegiate competition.If you think you are good at general knowledge and quick recall,or always wanted to be on a quiz show, come to the organizationalmeeting Tuesday at 7 PM in Ida Noyes Library. Come by yourself,or organize teams of up to 4 people.V.The FirstOne’s Free!□Evelyn WoodReadingDynamicsEvelyn Wood Reading Dynamics invites you to a free Lesson. It’s the first lesson in ourremarkable 8 week course.. .and you’re invited FREE of charge. You’ll not only learnabout reading faster and better, but you’ll also learn:HOW TO TAKE BETTER NOTESHOW TO IMPROVE YOUR STUDY TECHNIQUESHOW TO TAKE TESTSHOW TO COMPREHEND AND REMEMBERMORE OF WHAT YOU READHOW TO REDUCE STUDY TIMECut class work in half with Evelyn Wood. Come to a Free Reading Lesson atChicago Theological Seminary5757 UniversityTuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, FridayOctober 21, 22, 23, 244:00,6:30 P.M. G3ISWoodDynamics COLLEGESTUDENTSImprove yourgrades!Send $1.00 for your306-page, research papercatalog. All academicsubjects.Collegiate ResearchP.O. Box 25097HLos Angeles, Ca. 90025Enclosed is $1.00.Please rush the catalog.NameAddress.CityState _ -Zip-UNIVERSITYLOCK & KEY SERVICE1609 E. 55th ST.AUTOMOTIVE LOCKS•DURGUR GATES•DOORCLOSBS•KEYS•LOCKS•MBfcoawunSECURITY SYSTEMS A KEYS•OAWTESARsaviaira/w • SAFES•METAL DOOR LOCKS•PAMC EXIT DEVICES• MASTER KEY SYSTEMS• BKTROWC DOORBUZZBtS• SCISSORS A SMEARS SHARPENEDCtiCAQOCcdtvuf /KNIFE FOR EVERY NEEDFROM CHEF TO SPORTSMANELEQANT OAK BLOCK SETS“A CHICAGO CUTLERYTRADITION FOR 50 YEARS"WISS SCISSORS A PINKINQ SHEARSBONDED LOCKSMITHS324-79602 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, October 17, 1980NEWS BRIEFSNo Grads Runningin SG ElectionStudent Government elections are only aweek away, and so far there are no graduatestudents running for any of the 13 emptyseats reserved for graduate students.The majority of the seats open are for stu¬dents in the Social Sciences Division (four)and in the Business School (four). In the Col¬lege, nine seats are available; five for fresh¬men and the rest for four dormitory repre¬sentatives.Students can register for the races as lateas Monday, October 20. Candidates needonly pick up petitions in the Student Govern¬ment Office on the third floor of Ida Noyesand collect ten signatures from students intheir constituency.Elected representatives will serve in theStudent Government starting immediatelyafter next Friday’s election and through thespring quarter.For students who do not make Monday’sdeadline, seats still open after the electioncan be filled for one quarter by candidatesdirectly petitioning the Student GovernmentAssembly.Casper Gets ChairGerhard Casper, Dean of the Law Schoolhas been appointed the first William B. Gra¬ham Professor of Law at the University.Casper, born in Hamburg, Germany,studied law at the Universities of Freiburgand Hamburg and the Yale Law School be¬fore joining the Law School faculty in 1966. He was served as Dean of the Law Schoolsince 1979. Casper specializes in constitu¬tional law, constitutional history, and thelaw of the European Community. He also co¬edits the Supreme Court Review.The newly-endowed chair was establishedby William Graham, a University alumnusand trustee. Currently the chairman ofBaxter Travenol Laboratories, Inc., Gra¬ham received his B.S. degree from the Col¬lege in 1932 and his J.D. from the LawSchool in 1936. Energy Future DebateSpeakers from the University’s Center forUrban and Commonwealth Edison arguedthe need for the United States to decentra¬lize its energy supply system, in a debateheld last Tuesday in Ida Noyes Hall.The debate, sponsored by the Chicago Po¬litical Union, focused on the role which en¬ergy from renewable resources should playin the nation’s future energy planning.Steve Marley argued that America should“decentralize” its sources of energy by rely¬ing more on energy obtained in smallamounts from a variety of renewablesources, particularly solar power. Such en¬ergy, Marley said, would be cheaper andcleaner, and would require less governmentregulation.Marley said that two of the most impor¬tant obstacles to the widespread use of ren¬ewable energy are the lack of technical in¬formation about how to develop them, andthe unwillingness of lawmakers to recognizethe importance of renewable energy.Speaking against the proposal to decen¬tralize energy production was David Rosin,director of research for CommonwealthEdison. Rosin told the audience of about 15students that “soft” energy sources are in¬capable of supplying large amounts of elec¬tricity, and that many small-scale energy-producing plants require impracticablylarge sums of start-up capital.Rosin attacked supporters of decentra¬lized energy, accusing them of sensationa¬lism, and of attempting to tear down thepresent energy supply system without sug¬gesting any viable alternative. The Chicago Political Union, which spon¬sored the debate, is a branch of the Univer¬sity’s Debating Society and sponsors dis¬cussions of current issues several times ayear. — Daria SteigmanMuskie, Warnketo Speak DowntownWith foreign affairs a major issue in thisyear’s Presidential election, the ChicagoCouncil on Foreign Relations is providingtwo excellent opportunities next week forvoters to learn more about government poli¬cies.Secretary of State Edmund Muskie willdeliver a foreign policy address to the Coun¬cil at 12:15 pm on Monday, and on the follow¬ing day Paul Warnke, the chief Americannegotiator for the SALT II treaty, will sharethe podium with Richard Pipes, a HarvardUniversity historian and a foreign policy ad¬visor to Ronald Reagan. Warnke and Pipeswill offer differing views on the future ofAmerican-Soviet relations in a program en¬titled “What’s Ahead for the Odd Couple9”Both events will be held in the auditoriumof the Prudential Building at Michigan Ave¬nue and Randolph St. There is a $5 admis¬sion fee for each program. The Warnke-Pipes presentation begins a series ofmonthly foreign policy speeches sponsoredby the Council. Future speakers include Ar-naud de Borchgrave, senior foreign corre¬spondent for Newsweek, and RepublicanCongressman Jack Kemp. For more infor¬mation, call Sharon Danhoff or Irene Hill at726-3860.JSWM55with uve music by STAGEWESTOCT. 17 5747 S.UNIVERSITY AVE. 9-30 PMSPONSORED BY STUDENT GOVERNMENT ACTIVITIESCOMMITTEE & ALPHA DELTA PHIFREE!m The Textbook DepartmentThe University of ChicagoBookstore5750 S. Ellis Ave.ann1InvitesFaculty members to stop by for acomplimentary copy of a 1980-81pocket Faculty Planner.The Chicago Maroon — Friday, October 17, 1980 — 3EDITORIALTHE WORLD’S FIRSTFUTURISTIC VISUAL THEATREWORLD PREMIERELaserworld is more than a movie, more than aconcert, more than any laser show-Inside a specially designed theatre complex,you, the passenger, will be taken upon animaginary deep space voyage created by someof the top visual effects experts in America.Laserworld was created in the spirit of “StarWars” and Walt Disney’s “Fantasia” and“Mission to Mars.” The voyage featuresrealistically created countdown and blastoffsequences, spectacular laser illusions, originalsound effects and music faithfully reproducedon a specially designed BOSE SurroundSoundSpeaker System. Musical selections includeMussorgsky’s “Pictures at an Exhibition,”“Battle in the Snow” from “Star Wars,” andPink Floyd’s “Blue Sky.”Every performance is created and improvised live.No two performances will ever be the same.Laserworld flight schedules:Friday: 8:00, 9:30 & 11:00Saturday: 1:30, 8:00, 9:30 & 11:00Sunday: 7:30 & 9:00Tuesday thru Thursday: 8:00 & 9:30HILLSIDE THEATRE449-6611 Hillside Shopping CenterLaserworld is conveniently located within an hour'sdrive from anywhere in the Chicagoland area Take theEisenhower Expressway, exit at Mannheim Road South, turn riqhtand follow the signs ’ ? mile>to LaserworldTHE MOST SPECTACULARVISUAL EFFECTS. EVER!! Vote No on AmendmentLike a good many voters, we arewary when a politician begins todescribe simply ways to solve acomplex political problem. Suchwas the case when Patrick Quinn,chairman of the Coalition for Politi¬cal Honesty, announced a citizens’drive to place an amendment to thestate constitution on the Novemberballot. This amendment, Quinn ex¬plained, will make the state Houseof Representatives more economi¬cal, more efficient, and more re¬sponsive, all in one sweep.How would Quinn do it? His an¬swer was simple — cut the size ofthe House and change the way itsmembers are elected. Put briefly,the amendment would reduce thesize of the state House by one third.Along with the reduction wouldcome a change in the method ofelecting legislators. Each legisla¬tive district now has three repre¬sentatives, but the amendmentwould replace these with smallerdistricts represented by only onelegislator. This would eliminate thepresent system of cumulative vot¬ing, in which each voter may castthree votes in the state representa¬tive race, distributing them amongone, two, or three candidates as hesees fit.We think that the supporters ofthe amendment have, in their ea¬gerness for “reform”, overlookedthe strengths of the present systemand the difficulties which might ac¬company a “reformed” legisla¬ ture.The virtue of the present systemis that it allows for a single districtto have representation from morethan one political party. Becauseeach party nominates only two can¬didates for the three representa¬tive’s seats, the third seat is vir¬tually guaranteed to go to anindependent or a member of theminority political party in the dis¬trict. Thus independent Democratsand Republicans have been able tosurvive in the Chicago area, whileDemocrats have continued to holdoffice in heavily Republican down-state Illinois.The preservation of such diver¬sity in our legislative districts is aworthwhile goal. It makes it diffi¬cult for a single party, region, or in¬terest group to control the legisla¬ture, and provides for therepresentation of those in a districtwhose views have popular supportshort of a majority.Adoption of the amendmentwould risk all this. And at the sametime, the benefits predicted by itssupporters are far from certain. Itdoes not necessarily follow that asmaller legislature would becheaper, more efficient, or moreresponsible, as the experiences ofstates with diverse forms of legisla¬tures have shown. Given theamendment’s threat to minority re¬presentation and its uncertain ben¬efits, we believe the best vote is“no.”LETTERS TO THE EDITORControl is IssueTo the Editor:What is at issue in the case of Mr. Lam-berty is the University’s control over thepersonal lives of the students who pay to livein the housing system. The University is notsupposed to police the lives of the students;it is supposed to administer housing. This isnot a case, like last fall’s, where a studentphysically assaulted other students. It is thestudent’s freedom of expression that is atstake. A person is being evicted becausethey aided someone else in saying some¬thing. Perhaps the stiff reaction is a resultof the act directly contesting the power andcontrol of the administrative structure; as ifTurkington, like a parent punishing an inso¬lent child, had to prove who was in charge.The incident belies one of the central illu¬ sions the administration believes and propa¬gates about student life: Put students in dor¬mitories, give them small outlets of highculture, and they will be happy (it won’tmatter that there is nothing for them to do inHyde Park). The idea that students couldactually start to express (misguidedly ornot) a strong level of dissatisfaction must befrightening. That is why it is necessary to‘maintain order’ in the face of someoneabetting speech. It is worth noting that thedifference of acceptable style that Turking¬ton sites, is very similar to the imposed dif¬ference of what is acceptable behavior thatstudents complain about in the Lach’s. Per¬haps instead of punishing the method thatthose who criticize choose, Turkingtonought to take a long look at how these condi¬tions, these dissatisfactions, came about.Kenneth A. WissokerCo-opContinued from page /until Gilbert Spencer, who was generalmanager before Pederson, returns to the po¬sition.“The whole thing has been traumatic andunfortunate,” said Dobry concerning Peder¬son’s resignation, “I hope the divisions re¬ferred to by Mr. Pederson will die down.”Board-member Alice Schlessinger, whohad resigned from the board on October 4 when her motion to request Pederson’s res¬ignation was ruled out of order at a boardmeeting, expressed similar sentiments. Sheclaimed that the quotes attributed to her in astory in the Hyde Park Herald, which re¬ported that she said Pederson instituted “areign of terror” among Co-op employees,were misleading.Schlessinger said that she regards thecontroversy as finished now that Pedersonhas left, and that she has returned as amember of the board. “1 asked for his resig¬nation, she said, “and it was tendered andexcepted . . . I am back on the boardnow.”4 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, October 17, 1980SG MembersFace Expulsion TuesdayBy Chris IsidoreAlmost two-thirds of the Student Govern¬ment’s (SG) 28 Assembly representativesface expulsion next Tuesday due to poor at¬tendance, even as elections are being held tofill 24 seats which are unfilled at this time.Attendance at the two scheduled SG meet¬ings this year has been so poor that neithermeeting obtained a quorum. A quorum re¬quires only one half of the sitting 28members to attend, but the first meeting onOctober 1 drew only seven Assemblymembers, while this past Wednesday’smeeting was attended by only four of the28.Any member with three unexeused ab¬sences in one quarter automatically loseshis seat under Article II of the SG constitu¬tion. Of the present 28 members of the Asse¬mbly only three have made both meetings,five have made one of the two meetings, andthree have had excused absences. Thatleaves an overwhelming majority of 17 As¬sembly members who will lose their seats ifthey are not present at roll-call for nextTuesday’s 7:30 meeting.Monday is the deadline for students to re¬turn petitions to run for one of 24 seats al¬ready open in the Assembly. Five of thoseseats are freshmen seats which are alwaysopen at this time of year. Seven are under¬graduate seats which were held by peoplewho moved out of the dormitories whichthey were elected to represent last spring,and 12 of the seats are graduate divisionseats which were not filled in elections lastspring. As of Wednesday, no graduate stu¬dent had handed in petitions to run for any ofthese seats.Even if all 17 of the endangered Assemblymembers fail to attend next Tuesday’smeeting, their seats will not be filled in nextweek’s elections. Since their seats will notbe open until after the deadline for petitionshas passed, the remaining members of theAssembly will have to vote to fill these va¬cancies.The poor attendance has prevented the SGfrom performing any official business so farthis year, and has greatly worried two-termPresident Jeff Elton.“I’m up for public ridicule because ofthis,” said Elton. “I'm working, all the ex¬ecutive officers are working, and all com¬mittees are doing their jobs. But if the Asse¬mbly doesn’t live up to their responsibility,nothing can get done.“The Finance Committee (SGFC) has aperfect attendance record. They’ve goneover close to $15,000 in requests, and they’ve voted on grants of close to $5,700 dollars. Butif the Assembly can’t reach quorum, noth¬ing can be done. This is not only stopping us,its stopping the groups that depend on us forfunding.”Elton, who has been involved in SG for thelast three years, says he is at a loss to ex¬plain the poor attendance. “I’ve never seenanything like this, especially at the begin¬ning of the Fall quarter,” he said. “Clarke(Campbell, SGFC chairman) thinks it’s justapathy, but I don’t know if that’s all of it.One of the things that we thought wouldheighten interest was the large increase inmoney available to us this year.”The Student Government has been givenpast years’ three quarter allocation of$30,000 for Fall quarter alone, and will befunded by a new Student Fee in Winter andSpring.“We figured that people would want to bethere to see how the money is spent,” saidElton. “It’s just that the Assembly is not ful¬filling their purpose. They’re the essentiallink to the students, and they’re just notdoing their jobs. If they want to empowerthe Executive Council to make all the deci¬sions about money allocations, then fine,they should do that. But that’s not whatwe’re asking for, that’s just not supposed tobe what we’re meant to do.“The Assembly has to accept its responsi¬bility. They have to take a dominant role inthe SG. Sometimes some of them think thatthey are just an addition to the ExecutiveCouncil, and that’s just not true. They haveto start accepting the role that the constitu¬tion laid out to them and understandingtheir role and function in the government.That’s the important thing; it’s not just thatthey start attending that is important.”Under the constitution, the ExecutiveCouncil, which is made up of the President,Vice-President, Finance Comm. Chair, Sec¬retary and Treasurer, has mostly only ad¬ministrative duties and no powers to distrib¬ute money. They coordinate and scheduleSG activities and execute SG policy, but allpolicy decisions and all appropriations mustbe approved by the SG Assembly as awhole.The student groups which have gone be¬fore the SGFC to apply for funds cannot offi¬cially receive any money until the Assemblyreaches quorum and votes on the FinanceCommittee recommendations. Until then,those with immediate needs may be able toget some money because of actions of theExecutive Council. There was a majority ofthe council at the meeting, and they tenta¬tively approved the allocations. But any of Student Government president Jeff Eltongraduates,” he said. “Actually, they’ve hadalmost as many members attend as the un¬dergraduates. (Three graduates comparedto five undergraduates.) The problem isthat we have to attract interested people torun for office. If any of the 17 members whohave two strikes on them don’t plan to be ac¬tive, I’d prefer to hear from them beforeMonday, so that their seats can be filled inthe upcoming election. Those who want tostay active had better be present when wecall role next Tuesday night, or else theywill be out right then.”Despite the serious problems which SGfaces right now, Elton feels that alot of goodthings have been done this year. “I don’tthink this is a sign of SG ineptness,” he said.“We haven’t just gone to the dogs. The Ex¬ecutive Council is working hard, and all ofthe committees are doing their work, espe¬cially the Finance Committee.”The SGFC met last Tuesday to consider$13,430 in requests. They approved grants toonly $2,615 out of that. The Medieval andRenissance Recreation Society asked for $75and received $50. The SG activities askedfor $50 for the Country and Western Dancetonight, and received the full amount, as didthe Elections and Rules Committee whichrequested $190 to hold next week’s election.The Festival of the Arts (FOTA) asked for$5,000 but received only $800. and the Chica¬go Front for Jazz asked for $5,785 but re¬ceived only $380. Both groups are likely toreceive additional money later in the yearThe Organization of Black Students askedfor $1,475 and received $1,145.The only group to go away empty-handedwas the U of C Concert Band which askedfor $855 and received nothing. SGFC ChairCampbell explained that Dean of StudentsO’Connell had been funding this group, andthe SGFC did not want to start picking uptheir tab.those decisions can be overturned by the As¬sembly.The Executive Council members are verysensitive right now to criticisms that the SGis not responsive to the students. “Peoplewrite letters complaining that SG is gettingits hands on money,” said Clarke Campbell,the Finance Committee Chair. “But it’s notlike SG is unapproachable by the averagestudent, like O’Connell’s office is. SG is runby average students.”Some of the criticism of SG has come fromgraduate students upset at the new five dol¬lar activities fee they will begin to pay nextquarter, and who argue that SG doesn’t rep¬resent graduate students. But it is the grad¬uate student Assembly members who havethe worst attendance record. Of the 22 un¬dergraduate Assembly seats, seven areopen due to the representative moving out ofthe dorm, five are open to freshmen whohave not been elected yet, five are held bymembers who have attended at least onemeeting and two are held by members withexcused absences. Only three representa¬tives, Lauri Silvestri from Woodward, Mi¬chelle Atwood from Breckinridge/Green-wood/Blackstone and Unmi Song who is oneof the “Other College” representatives,have missed both meetings, and are indanger of losing their seats.The record for the Graduate student asse¬mbly seats is much worse. Of the 30 gradu¬ate seats, 12 were never filled last year, and14 of the 18 sitting members have missedboth meetings and are in danger of losingtheir seats. The only Graduate representa¬tives not in danger of losing their seats nextTuesday are from the Law School, from theBusiness School, from Physical Sciences,and from the Humanities Division.Despite this record, Elton refuses toblame the troubles on the graduate studentrepresentatives. “You can’t hang it on theMORRY’Swishes to thankthe University community(or our tremendousOpening Celebrationand for their wonderful patiencewhile we smooth out our rough edges.Campus Location58th and EllisHours: 8 to 4 Mon.-Fri.9 to 4 Sat. Original Morry’s1603 E. 55thHours, 9 to 6,30 Mon.-Fri.The Chicago Maroon — Friday, October 17, 1980 — 5thegre y c i t y j o urnal13th Year / / /10th Issue 17 October 1980The Glorification of the Holy Trinity with Saints, 1799-1800.NEW EXHIBITOF OLD DRAWINGSAT SMART GALLERYDrawings By Johann Michael RottmayrThe David and Alfred Smart GalleryUniversity of Chicago 5550 S. GreenwoodAvenueOctober 23 through December 14, 1980BY MICHAEL WORLEYThe exhibition opening Thursday, Oc¬tober 23 at the Smart Gallery features 81drawings by one of the most important ar¬tists of the Late Baroque in Austria. Jo¬hann Michael Rottmayr (1654-1730) ranksequally with his contemporaries who in¬clude the architect of inexhaustible genius,J.B. Fischer von Erlach; the dashing Neo-politan painters, Luca Giordano and Fran¬cesco Solimena; the Roman Baciccio; andCharles Lebrun, the court painter of LouisXIV who dictated taste in the French Aca-demie. The Smart Gallery show followsthe one held in Salzburg (Barockmuseum)earlier this year to commemorate the250th anniversary of the painter's death.Professor Edward A. Maser of the Univer¬sity of Chicago, Departments of Art andGermanic Languages, researched andpublished the drawings at the suggestionof Professor Carlo Ragghianti, who earlieridentified the works as those of Rottmayr.Professor Maser, an eminent authority onGerman and Austrian Baroque and Roco¬co, prepared the impressively completecatalogue and will present lectures to ac¬company the Smart Gallery exhibition.Rottmayr was born in Laufen near Salz¬burg in 1654. He first studied under JohannKarl Loth (1632-98), a Bavarian who be¬came one of the most famous painters inVenice. From Loth, Rottmayr assimilatedthe bold and dynamic figurai composi¬tions, the realism and harsh chiaroscuro ofCaravaggio, and the delightful qualities ofa Baroque virtuoso. After 13 years Rott¬mayr returned to Salzburg to work underthe newly elected Prince Bishop. In the1690's, Rottmayr carried out importantdecoration, collaborating with Fischer vonErlach—Schloss Frain, the Dreifaltig-keitskirche and other great churches inSalzburg, as well as Schloss Schonbrunnnear Vienna. Rottmayr soon establishedhimself in Vienna, at that time the prop-sperous Habsburg capital and super¬power of Europe. By 1704 Rottmayr wasennobled and had earned the title of courtpainter. From then until his death in 1730,the painter produced what might be calledhis masterpieces—the many monumentalfrescoes whose mythologies and grandioseallegories decorate the magnificent pal¬aces throughout central Europe.The drawings exhibited here are from aprivate Italian collection. Most are relatedto Rottmayr's many commissions, andthus can be dated through documentationand stylistic comparisons. Although mostof the drawings are sketches in the finalstage of a larger project, they are consi¬dered to be complete works in themselves.Since the drawings have been well pre¬served, hidden from the damaging effectsof light, they are presented to us in theiroriginal freshness of color and brilliance ofexecution.One of the earliest drawings in the exhib¬ition is a first study for an altarpiece in the church of Palling, near Laufen, signed anddated 1694 (cat. no. 20). It represents theMadonna and Child in Glory with Saints,and is composed in the traditional late Ba¬roque format with the seated Virgin aboveand flanking saints below. Already oneshould notice the use of color in the design,the equal repetition of yellow-gold areasalternating with red and blue. Rottmayr.achieved effects of composition primarilythrough color, not by line, a practice whichsets him apart from the more classicalRoman and Bolognese schools, which em¬phasized carefully delineated forms. Rott¬mayr belongs to the painterly tradition as¬sociated with the Venetian masters. Thecircular drawing illustrated here is an¬other early work, and represents the Glori¬fication of the Trinity (cat. no. 13). No oneknows which final work this drawing re¬lates to, but since the popular Bavariansaint John Nepomuk receives a prominent space in the lower right-hand corner, onecritic has postulated that it may have beenintended to decorate a chapel dedicated tothat saint.Included in the exhibition are two draw¬ings of classical subjects: The Sacrifice ofIphigenia, and one identified as The Deathof Germanicus, measuring about the samesize (cat. nos. 14 and 15). The first, proba¬bly a sketch for the painting in the Oster-reichische Galerie in Viena, illustrates asubject common in the Baroque age, butthe so-called Death of Germanicus mustdeserve further study. Other than Pous¬sin's famous version of 1627, there wereonly five done in the 17th century, and thesubject was not revived until 1762. Frie¬drich Heinrich Fuguer was the only Ger¬man known to paint the story from Taci¬tus' Annals in 1789. The Rottmayr drawingindeed illustrates a classical subject (noteRoman Helmets), but the person expiring appears to be an older man, not the youth¬ful, heroic Germanicus. Most charming isthe Perseus rescuing Andromeda (cat. no.16) which is thought to be a design for awall panel in the Schonbrunn Palace. Thearchitectural enframement has been verycarefully and beautifully rendered.During the mature period after 1700,such grandiose drawings as the Apotheosisof a Youth (cat. no. 22) juxtaposed withThe Gods of Olympus and Venus and Marsamong Nymphs and Putti (nos. 21 & 23)make their scene. These are apparentlysketches for the Hall of Mirrors, the dininghall of Schonbrunn. Maria Theresia con¬verted this room into a staircase and theceiling fresco was actually executed by Se-bastiano Ricci, who won the commissionover Rottmayr (1701-02). All three worksexhibit that easy, fluid drawing style ofRottmayr. Equally impressive is the studyfor the Jesuit church in Breslau, The Glori¬fication of the Holy Name by the FourCorners of the Globe (cat. nos. 25 & 25. Thepainted vault in the nave of the church wasexecuted from 1704-06. Rottmayr wouldhave known the famous Adoration of theHoly Name by Baciccio in II Gesu in Rome(1676-79) which also illustrated the spread¬ing of the name of Jesus throughout theworld by the Jesuits. In fact, the workrivals the Italian's for its complex icono-graphical scheme and its monumental illu-sionism.One popular allegory of the Baroque isshown in The Triumph of Apollo orTriumph of Light over Darkness, (cat. no.41). Rottmayr himself wrote a poetic de¬scription au verso, and indicated thiswould have been part of a bedchamberdecoration. The message is clear: reasontriumphs over ignorance, good over eviland civilization over chaos. The figure ofApollo was probably meant to personnifyKing Frederick of Prussia, for whom thedrawing was done. The layout of purpleand gold washes over the sepia pen draw¬ing is quite remarkable. The lovely Venusand Mars surprised by Vulcan (cat. no. 55)exhibits a similar color scheme. Thelovers have been intruded upon by Venus'sjealous husband Vulcan, who is about tothrow a net over their luxurious bed.Above, Mercury reveals the scene to Apol¬lo, and Cupid invites us to witness the epi¬sode as well.One of Rottmayr's latest works is St. Se¬bastian attended by Holy Women (cat. no.70). The painting in the parish church ofProttes is signed and dated 1728. One istempted to compare it with the earlier ver¬sion (cat. no. 7). The position of the saint issimilar in both drawings, creating a kindof zig-zag composition. The earlier saintoccupies a large portion of the picturespace in the manner of Loth. The HolyWomen receive greater importance in thelate work, in which the aging master usedhis improved technique and complete mas¬tery of the pen to define the figures sculp¬turally. The viewer is thus invited to com¬pare the early and late styles inRottmayr's Oeuvre.The exhibition of this splendid array ofBaroque drawings may be seen until De¬cember 14. Hours are Tuesday throughSaturday—10 a.m. to 4 p.m., and Sunday—noon to 4 p.m.ASHUM-AMSASeminar Series 1980-81Program in the Arts and Sciences Basic to HumanBiology and MedicineandAmerican Medical Students’ AssociationPresentALAN BLUM, M.D.Pounder of DOC, "Doctors Ought to Cart”speaking on the topicMedicine vs. theMediaMONDAY, OCTOBER 20, 19807:30 P.M.SOCIAL SCIENCES 122'Portrait'TWELVE MILLION PEOPLE KNOWTNE SOUND OF TNIS GUITAR.WE'D UKE TO INTRODUCEYOU TO ITS OWNER.Boston guitarist, BarryGoudreau, In his firstsolo effort.Featuring the single,uDr earns”uBarry Goudreau'.'^ On Epic'•Portrait’'V Recordsand Tapes.t pit:Produced by John Boylon and Barry Goudr.au.Direction: Loft Lone Monogemenl.Available at SPIN-IT1444 E 5 7th StreetChicago ILL P S3 99 ore trod.morh, of CIS inc“An extraordinary and delightful book...All of it sings with life and careand passion” —NANCY MILFORD, author of Zelda“Bedells biography of the Alcotts—the real-life family who inspired theMarches of Louisa May Alcotts LittleWomen—is at once an immenselyreadable story about an unusualAmerican family and an insightfulportrait of life and thought in 19th-century hew England." —PublishersWeekly. "A first-rate narrative analy¬sis...Bedell is the first writer to recre¬ate and place fully those two genius¬es, Bronson Alcott and Louisa MayAlcott in the milieu of Transcenden¬tal Concord..An important book."—ANN DOUGLAS, author of TheFeminization of American Culture.“An intimate and moving portrait of afamily that we never knew enoughabout...Each member is larger thanlife —LUCINDA FRANKS,Pulitzer-prize-winning reporter for theNew York Times.Illustrated 400 pages *15 95. now at your bookstore, orsend check or money order to Crown Publishers OnePark Ave., N.Y.. N Y. 10016 Please add *1 50 postage andhandling charge N Y and N J residents, add sales tax THEALCOTTSBiographyof a Familyby MADELON BEDELLClarkson N. Potter, Inc.17 OCTOBER 1980 2 THE GREY CITY JOURNALFriday 17 Saturday 18 Sunday 19Monday 20 Tuesday 21 Wednesday 22 Thursday 23ARTMiyoko Ito: A Review: Miyoko Ito is thepossessor of a very private imagina¬tion, queen of her own personal uni¬verse. A universe carved out of thepower of pure insight, it is for the mostpart a friendly place. Her colors flowinto one another like a life flowing intothe desolate places, breathing, giving,and most of all, living. Miyoko Ito in¬corporates geometric planes with or¬ganic planes in a lot of her work; sheorganizes space to create ambiance.Her most conventional work is "Easeland Table", 1948. Just your obligatorystill life, but a new kind of clarity hastaken hold of her later works like,"Sea Changes", and, "Mandarin, orthe Red Empress", both 1977. This is agreat show. Until November 9th, at theRenaissance Society at the BergmanGallery, Cobb Hall, fourth floor, 11a.m. to 4 p.m. daily. Admission is free.FILMHearts and Minds and The War atHome: The Gulf of Tonkin? RESIST?The flood of Viet Nam art in the pastfew years has been accompanied by acollective amnesia about what reallyhappened, a blissful state only occa¬sionally intruded upon by such annoy¬ances as angry Agent Orange victims,starving Cambodians, and the Univer¬sity of Chicago’s peace prize to RobertMcNamara. If as the drums are rolledout again you are stricken with an un¬fortunate urge to remember or to findout for the first time, two films coin¬cidentally being shown on campus thisweekend are worth consideration.Hearts and Minds is a searing study ofthe war and the escalation of Ameri¬can involvement. Many of the imagesare among the most upsetting on film,and the interviews — with, amongothers, Gen. William Westmorland,Daniel Ellsberg, and Vietnamese vil¬lagers — are an effective counter¬point. It is a fiercely emotional study,but in the face of the violence of thesubject, detachment and dispassionwould be distortion. This is probablythe best American film on the war;highly recommended.The War at Home examines the rise ofthe anti-war movement in Madison,Wisconsin. It has been hyped as the de¬finitive film on the Movement; it isn't,and any expectations along those linesare likely to be disappointed. Thedirectors are very selective in focusand superficial in their analysis of theMovement's roots and growth. But thedocumentary footage, culled from thearchives of Madison television sta¬tions, is fascinating and powerful. Avaluable film, particularly if you areunfamiliar with this chapter of our re¬cent past.Both f ilms are being shown on campustonight (Friday). The War at Home isa benefit for the Coalition Against Reg¬istration and the Draft (CARD), at theBlue Gargoyle, 7 & 9 pm.; the Citizen'sparty is sponsoring the screening ofHearts and Minds, 7 pm in Kent 107.— BSTime After Time (Nicholas Meyer,1979): Meyer makes his directingdebut with Malcolm McDowell as H.G.Wells hot on the trail of a sick doctor(David Warner). Tonight at 7:15 and9:30 in Quantrell. Doc; $1.50. Vivre Sa Vie: "If one takes away the out¬side, there is the inside . . . and whenone takes away the inside, there is thesoul." A young woman leaves her hus¬band and child, drifts into prostitution,falls in love, and is killed when herpimp tries to trade her in a shady deal.The structure of the fragmentedchronicle was inspired by Flaubert'sNana, with the prostitute (AnnaKarina), sharing the same name asthe book's title. Perhaps Godard's firsttotally successful attempt at combin¬ing Brechtian theatricality with hisfluid cinema verite style of filmmak¬ing. Probably Anna Karina's strongestperformance. Sponsored by the Ren¬aissance Society at the University ofChicago. Tomorrow, Saturday, Oc¬tober 18. Cobb Hall, 4th floor, 7 and 9pm. Admission is free to RS members,$1 for nonmembers. — LJCIf . . .(Lindsay Anderson, 1969): Ander¬son's film is something of a rehash ofVigo's Zero tor Conduct, which wasone of the most original, idiosyncraticfilms ever made. Luckily, Andersonpicked up on that originality of effectas well as on the plot, so that If...,while not as daring, is very nearly asquirky and surprising as that earlierfilm. It’s about a revolt at a strictboarding school. The schoolyard Spar-tacus is played by MalcolmMcDowell, who gets to play his cus¬tomary angel/devil bit to the hilt. To¬night at midnight, in Quantrell. Doc.;$1.50 separate admission. —MAIn a Year Of 13 Moons: 13 Moons standsin sharp contrast to Fassbinder's pro¬ceeding film Despair, which manyconsidered Fassbinder's entree intothe international art film arena. Thelook and feel of 13 Moons, virtually aone man production (Fassbinderwrote, directed, edited, and photo¬graphed the film), is evidence of Fass¬binder's profound concern with thehorror of modern existence. He callsthe audience as witness to the story ofmisguided passion in a world of frag¬mented, solipsistic individuals. Love isonly the next desire, sought throughthe severance of another part of one¬self. Showing with Fassbinder's TheMarriage of Maria Baun. Tonight, Fri¬day, October 17. The SandburgTheatre, 1204 North Dearborn,951-0627. Moons at 8:05. $3.00 admis¬sion. —RH The African Queen (John Huston, 1957):Set in Africa (where else?) during thewar, Huston's film features KatherineHepburn as the wife of a missionary,and Humphrey Bogart as a trader onthe river. They meet, fall in love andfight for control of his boat, The Afri¬can Queen. Saturday at 7:15 and 9:30in the Law School Auditorium. LSF;$1.50.Being There (Hal Ashby, 1979): Themost interesting thing about HalAshby's film of Jerzy Kosinski's novelis his strategy for making his satireseem to rise above its subject: wheretelevision is frenetic to the point ofbeing numbing, Being There is lan¬guorous, meditative and underplayed,or as a friend of mine says, the cine¬matic equivalent of a double dose ofValium. With Peter Sellers as the dim-witted gardener who is catapulted intothe national limelight because he's in¬visible, Melvyn Douglas, Shirley Ma-cLaine, and Jack Warden. Tomorrowat 6:15, 8:45, and 11, in Quantrell. Doc;$1.50. - MAHis Girl Friday (Howard Hawks, 1944):The best American sound comedy, andalso the fastest. Hawks puts CitizenKane's technique of overlapping dia¬logue to comic effect, but the comedyis darkened by the deviousness towhich the characters are forced inorder to carry out their good inten¬tions. The film is based on Hecht andMacArthur's The Front Page, but bychanging the central relationship frommale camaraderie to cynical ro¬mance, Hawks opened by a whole newterritory for the madly paced story toexplore. Sunday, Oct. 19, at 2:30, 6:15,and 10: Monday and Tuesday, Oct. 20and 21, at 6:15 and 10. Hyde ParkTheatre; $1.50 til first show, $2.50thereafter. — MABroken Blossoms (D.W. Griffith, 1919):Richard Barthelmess as a Chineseman who comes to England to impartthe lessons of the Buddha to the bar¬baric Britains. But, confronted withpoverty and harshness at every turn,he begins to lose himself in the brutali¬ty of the West — until he discovers ayoung girl (Lillian Gish) lying, hurtand confused, on his doorstep. Hetakes her in and, in caring for her, re¬captures the sense of beauty and peacehe sought to bring to the West, but hadhimself forgotten. Monday at 8:00 inQuantrell. Doc; $1.50.In a Lonely Place Monday and Tues¬day, Oct. 20 and 21, at 6:20 and 9:40, atthe Sandburg Theatre, 1204 N. Dear¬born; $3.00. - MAMUSICSt^ge West: With material rangingfrom Bob Wills to Jimmy Buffet, StageWest will make its first appearance oncampus at 9 :30 tonight, October 17, atthe Aipha Delta Phi fraternity house.The four piece band, led by U of C Di¬vinity School graduate Jeff Lindgren,has performed in numerous settingsaround the Chicago area and is highlyrecommended by the Old Town Schoolof Folk Music. The concert-dance isco-sponsored by Student Activities andAlpha Delta Phi. Admission is freewith U of C ID. Free beer. — JG Lunchtime Concert: Come hear an all-Boismortier concert performed onoriginal Baroque instruments. Spon¬sored by the Dept, of Music, this ensemble includes Elizabeth Baltas,Thoms MacCracken and Julie Jeffrey.Thursday at 12:15, October 23rd at12:15 in the North Lounge of the Reyn¬olds Club. Free. Bring your lunch.Luciano Pavarotti: Hear a fat, famousforeign tenor sing fat, famous, foreigntunes. Some say he's the world's grea¬test tenor. Others say he sold out forthe big bucks. October 19, 2 p.m. GreatHall, Krannert Center, 500 S. Goodwin,Urbana; $12-24; 217-222 6280. — JSClarence "Gatemouth" Brown: Bluesguitarist great. October 16-19 at 9:30 atBiddy Mulligan's, 7644 N. Sheridan;$2-3 cover. — JSBurning Spear: Other than Bob Marleythere is no more important figure inReggae music than Burning Spear(a.k.a. Winston Rodney). At this showhe will be backed by the Soul Syndi¬cate Band, an eleven piece congrega¬tion of some of Jamaica's finest musi¬cians. Spear has been touring Americapretty often in the past year, but catchhim while you can: his last appear¬ances were more than five years ago.Mash it up, trash it up, Babylon mustfall. Tuts, 959 Belmont, Friday Oc¬tober 17, shows at 9 and 12, 477 3365.—JMBlues Extravaganza II: The Wise FoolsPub is presenting its second benefit forthe FHA Tenants United organization,and if you are new to Chicago this is agood opportunity to see a wide range oflocal Blues talent. Guest appearanceswill feature Son Seals, Koko Taylor,Fenton Robinson, Jimmy Johnson,Carey Bell, Detroit Junior and more.The music lasts from 5 p.m. until 2a.m. so you may have to call ahead tosee who performs when, but with a $4admission charge this is the best bluesdeal in a long time. The Wise FoolsPub, 2270 North Lincoln Avenue, Sun¬day October 19, 929 1510. -JMTHEATREThe Blacks, by Jean Genet, is a playwritten by a white man for blackactors to perform before a white audi¬ence really comprised of black actorswearing masks. It is a play about loveand hate, about the boundaries between blacks and whites, audiencesand actors, and finally, about the hu¬miliation of an oppression that turnsboth sides into clowns. But it is tooCOFFEEHOUSEBack after a five year hiatus, theBlue Gargoyle Coffeehouse opensThursday night, October 23, withHanah Jon Taylor on jazz flute and soprano sax, and Soji Adebayo on piano.A 50 cents cover will get everyone abasket of popcorn, and after that,you're on your own to sample from thehome baked fruit and nut breads,cookies, coffees, teas, hot chocolate,ciders, and juices that will be forsale.For those of you who want a quietplace to sit and talk, the adjoining fireplace room will be opened too, and liveflames will dance and crackle in the long. Running October 3-5, 10-12 and7-19 at Court Studio Theatre on thethird floor of the Reynold's Club. Fri¬days and Saturdays at 8:30, Sundaysat 7:30. Call 753-3581 for reservations.-MSComing Attractions, a new play at TheBody Politic, is about four youngwomen who all live together up in NewTown and all want to be rich, famousand married. They wisecrack a lot("Here comes our friend thebeaver"), steal each other's boy¬friends and argue about who's going todo the dishes.The acting is for the most part justpassable, with the exception of Bar¬bara Howard (who played Carter inCourt Theatre's production of Wasser-stein's Uncommmon Women & Otherslast spring). She is the beautiful butself centered brat who ends up captur¬ing our sympathies and turning a ste¬reotype into a fairly complicated char¬acter. Written as a 'fun' play for youngactresses, it is perhaps a trifle toocute. If you can't wait until you gradu¬ate so you can move to the North Side,this is the play for you.Running October 2 - November 9, 1980,at The Body Politic Theatre, StudioStage. - MSETCPoetry Reading: The UC Students forAnderson are holding a benefit performance by UC poets. Most of thereaders studied under John Matthias(Turns, Crossings, Bucyrus) lastspring and have continued to work to¬gether as one of the last Undergroundliterary crowds at the University. Toreveal their names may spoil half theanticipation. Their motto may or maynot be: "There is no guilt in poetry."Not exactly Edgar Guest. Proceedswill go to Students for Anderson. Mon¬day at 7 pm in Ida Noyes Library. $.50for students, $1.00 public.More Poetry: Two Illinois authors whosepoetry focuses on life in the Midwestwill read from their work next week.Dave Etter's poems look at life insmall prairie towns, while John Dickson's work views life in the big city.Both have received honors for theirwork. Friday, October 24th at 8:00p.m. at the Museum of ContemporaryArt, 237 E. Ontario. General admissionis $3.00; students, MCA members andseniors pay $2.00. For further info, call280 2660.AT GARGOYLEhearth."We expect to have jazz, bluegrass,folk and classical music, as well asdancers and mimes, poets and magicians during the musicians' breaks,"says Carol Jones, a 3rd year Div.School student who is organizing thecoffeehouse.So for any of you who want a breakfrom the Reg, or just some good coffeeand live music, check out the BlueGargoyle coffeehouse this Thursdayfrom 9 p.m. to midnight at the University Church on the corner of 57th St.and University Ave.thegreycityjournal13th Year 10th Issue 17 October 1980Lester Afflick, Mike Alper, Brad Bittan, Lee Chait, Peter Daniels, John Egan,Ingrid Gartner, Jim Gunther, Nancy Harward, Jack Helblg, Jeff Makos, JudyMcCarthy, David Miller, Adam O'Connor, Mark Pohl, Rene Saracki, MargaretSavage, Bruce Shapiro, John Svatek, Courtney Turlington, Michele White, BrentWiden, Ken Wissoker.Special contributions this week by Nancy Cleveland, Manjula Haksar, RussellH. Hvolkek, David McFadden and Michael Worley.Molly McQuade, Unclassibiable Page editor.Lucy Conniff, book editor.Lisa Bloch, copy editor.Edited by Laura Cottingham.The grey city journal is published weekly by the Chicago Maroon, Ida NoyesHall, 1212 East 59th Street, Chicago, Illinois. For editorial and/or advertisinginformation, call 753-3265. Anna Karina in Godard's My Life to Live.Hanah-Jon Taylor17 OCTOBER 1980 THE GREY CITY JOURNAL 3Marvelous Low Prices!EverythingA Bargaincoolcv’s cornerIn U, ™ KA^n C^itIn Harper Court5211 S. Harper363-4477 Mon.-Sat.lOam to 6 pmSunday12 noon to 5.30 pmIf?AUGUSTANA LUTHERAN CHURCH OF HYDE PARKLUTHERAN CAMPUS MINISTRY5500 South Woodlawn Ave.493-6451Larry Hofer, PastorConrad Swanson, Vicar for Campus MinistrySUNDAYS8:30 ond 10:45 o.m. Sarmon and Eucharist9:30 o.m. Church School ond Adult Study6 .00 p.m. SupporTUESDAYS5:30 p.m. Eucharist6:00 p.m. Pizza Supper and DiscussionOctober 21 - The Paradox of Church/State RelationsInstitutional Separation vs. Interactionin Personal ConvictionsJames Bresnohan, Ethics, JSTCTHURSDAYS7:30 a.m. Eucharist and BreakfastFRIDAYS12:15 p.m. Eucharist and Lunch+ + +Saint Gregory of Nyua Lutheran ChurchGraham Taylor Chapel at CTS5757 South University Ave.Boyd Faust and Dave Meier, PastorsSUNDAYS10:30 a m. Sermon and Eucharist+ + + NEW CLASSICAL RELEASESC. P. E. Bach, Flute Concertoin d minor; Franz Hoffmeis-ter, Flute Concerto in DMajor.Cl Ingrid Dingfelder,flute; English Chamber Or¬chestra, conducted by SirCharles Mackerras. None¬such H 71388.Gustav Holst, Suites Nos. 1and 2, Opp. 28/1 and 28/2;Hammersmith-Prelude andScherzo, Op. 52. RalphVaughan Williams, EnglishFolk Song Suite; ToccataMarziale for Military Band.London Wind Orchestra,conducted by Denis Wick.Nonesuch N-78002.The Play of Daniel (LudusDaniels). The Clerkes of Ox-enford, conducted by DavidWulstan. Nonesuch N-78003.BY PETER T DANIELSThe classical recording world wasrocked last year when the founder anddirector of Nonesuch Records, TheresaSterne, was fired by its parent conglomer¬ate, Warner Communications. Manage¬ment insisted that her policies would con¬tinue, and an initial set of releases hasarrived to support their claim.Nonesuch started out with the Baroqueboom, and its first many releases were ofsometimes obscure, sometimes familiarmusic from the pro-Classical eras. Manyof its recordings were licensed from Euro¬pean countries. More recently, it had en¬gaged in some ambitious, though stillsmall-scale, projects of its own: remark¬able series of new American music (usual¬ly with copious annotations by the compos¬ers), Haydn's piano compositions, and,most adventurously, older Americanmusic of the popular genres: JoanMorris's early albums, the memorable setof Joshua Rifkin playing Scott Joplin rags,songs of Stephen Foster and Henry ClayWork, several discs of the Smithsonian'sold instrument collection, and still others.Are they running with the flame? in thethree records now available, not really. Analbum of Holst's and Vaughan Williams'band music, a pair of flute concertos, andthe Play of Daniel are all reprints of Euro¬pean recordings from the mid-seventies.Now, I have no objection to older record¬ings, with or without the latest in sonics(my stereo is far from the best), as will be¬come clear; but they could have triedsomething a little special right at the be¬ginning.The English band music just isn't veryinteresting. Holst's Suites 1 and 2 are stap¬les of the concert band repertoire, andthere are doubtless many more involvedrecordings than these, by a pickup group("many of the players were renewing ac¬quaintance with wind band repertoireafter many years; for some it was a newexperience"). Vaughan Williams' EnglishFolk Song Suite here lasts about 15%longer than on the orchestral arrangementas played by Sir Adrian Boult on AngelS-36799!Ingrid Dingfelder is a very fine flautistindeed, and the d minor Concerto is amongC. P. E. Bach's best works, but it certainlyisn't much of a recommendation for hisoutput in general. The Hoffmeister DMajor on the flip side — for the first time lreally understand why you have to changekeys during a composition — is relentlessly cheerful.Much the most interesting of these threediscs is David Wulstan's edition of the 12thnr 13th century Play of Daniel. Wulstan, amusicologist at Oxford, leads his "Clerkesof Oxenford" ensemble (they have donemuch other fine work) in a performancecommissioned for the 1974 Annee gothiquede Picardie at Beauvais Cathedral, wherethe play was written and originally per¬formed. The surviving manuscript con¬tains the text (depicting the handwriting on the wall at Belshazzar's feast and Dan-eil in the lion's den), stage directions, anda single line of music, and making theopera — for that is what it is — perform-able takes great learning, skill, and artist¬ry. Wulstan's version is eminently per-formable, and doubtless was a highlight ofthe Beauvais festival. It is based on thefirst transcribing of the piece, done by thelate W. L. Smoldon and revised for the oc¬casion by Wulstan.Wulstan's choir sings with great enthusi¬asm and real communication of the Latintext. The soloists sing accurately; the in¬strumentalists are almost all a delight tohear (but it has often been demonstrated— not least by our own Collegium Musi-cum — that cornetts — wooden trumpets— can be played in tune); sound effectsare added to explain the action: a hubbubwhen the handwriting appears, clinkingwhen Daniel receives the chain of honor,Belshazzar's cry of agony when he is de¬posed by Darius. But then one comparesthe two previous recordings of the Play ofDaniel.A landmark in both musicology and re¬cording was the first modern performanceof the Play, given by the New York ProMusics in the Cloisters (the medievalbranch of the Metropolitan Museum ofArt) in 1958. The edition and direction wereby the late Noah Greenberg. This was thefinest achievement of the group that morethan any other demonstrated that very oldmusic was both accessible and enjoy¬able to the general public. Fortunately,that recording, Decca DCM 3200, is stilllisted in the catalog, as MCA 2504.Brand new — it came out last spring — isa version featuring the Pro Cantione An-tiqua and the Landini Consort, of London,edited and conducted by Mark Brown(Argo ZRG 900).Interestingly, there is not a great deal ofdifference between the Greenberg and theSmoldon-Wulstan versions. Both admitwomen as principals and chorus; the PCAis a male group that invites women guestswhen appropriate — and not in this case(countertenors sing the roles of the Queenand others). The two earlier versions havesimilar solutions to the problems of how toadd and orchestrate the accompaniments(Nonesuch seems not to have listed all theintruments heard: perhaps the player ofthe aforementioned cornett wisely re¬quested anonymity). Brown has gone fur¬ther in the direction of recording a perfor-mance of the opera: he addscontemporary music from other (unspeci¬fied) sources to cover time lapses (aswhen messengers go off to fetch Daniel)where otherwise numbers awkwardlysegue or actions are inadequately account¬ed for by the instrumental introductions tothe successive pieces.The greatest difference in the Brown edi¬tion, however, is his free addition of organ-urn (parallel fourths and fifths) and de¬scants to the unadorned vocal line of themanuscript. (He justifies this by saying itwas the familiar practice of the age andtime.) The result is a much more variedand effective score; it catches and holdsthe interest throughout.I mentioned the adequacy of Wulstan'ssoloists. That is, they sing the notes (mostof them) in the right places. But they donot act with their voices. Daniel's plea notto be thrown to the lions sounds just thesame as his Alleluia a few speeches laterwhen he is miraculously fed in their den.There are no vocal difficulties — farfrom them — in the Pro Musica. This prod¬uction boasted tenor Charles Bressler(Daniel) and countertenor Russell Oberlinwhen they were young and fresh-voiced.The Pro Cantione Antiqua has perfectedensemble singing, yet when the membertake solo parts they retain character. It'seither of these versions — the former moretraditional, the latter more adventurous —that I recommend.4 THE GREY CITY JOURNAL 17 OCTOBER 1980Claudia Weill is a member of one of Hol¬lywood's most exclusive clubs: she is asuccessful female director. Her club duesare a willingness to work and a dauntlessfaith in her own abilities. After apprentic¬ing in television and experimental films,Weill won international acclaim (and anAcademy Award nomination) with TheOther Half of the Sky: A China Memoir,her documentary of the first women's dele¬gation to China with Shirley MacLaine.later, when a New York newspaper strikethreatened to obscure the opening ofWeill's first feature, Girlfriends, Weill her¬self secured, printed, and distributed favorable reviews from the papers' critics,thus assuring the film's popular success.Claudia Weill has just completed hersecond major picture, It's My Turn, whichopens in Chicago next Friday. While intown last week, Ms. Weill invited The GreyCity Journal to her suite at the Drake Hotelto discuss the film and her work as a direc¬tor. The following review includes ex¬cerpts from that conversation.It's My TurnDirected by Claudia WeillWritten by Eleanor BergsteinWith Jill Clayburgh, Michael Douglas,and Charles GrodinBY NANCY HARWARDThe innocuous title tells little about thefilm. The fact that Jill Clayburgh appearsin nearly every frame tells more: it's an¬other movie with Clayburgh playing yetanother unmarried woman. This year, theunmarried woman has succeeded in ac¬quiring her own "space,” only to discoverthat space is empty.Director Claudia Weill describes KateGunzinger (Clayburgh) as "a girl whogrew up really being bred for marriageand who ... made a choice to pursue a ca¬reer excluding marriage, and lands up tenyears later thinking she might wantsomething closer to what Mommy andDaddy had than she had thought.""I think," says Weill, "my goal in thisfilm was in some degree for people to con¬sider the notion that careerism or self-re¬alization or self-fulfillment and all thatstuff—work—can be a kind of poverty inyour emotional life, if you land up negotiat¬ing all your personal relationships just toaccommodate your career—so that themain factor is space as opposed to inti¬macy. That might be necessary for aperiod of time in order to get your work to¬gether, but after a certain point it's goingto be impoverishing to your life as a whole.You have to make some real effort at it, orsome real connection with another personor a group of people in order to have alife."The connection Kate tries to make in It'sMy Turn is with Ben Lewin (MichaelDouglas), a professional baseball playerwhose career has crumbled because of aninjury. The two meet at the wedding ofKate's father and Ben's mother; over¬night, their relationship moves from indif¬ference through sibling rivalry to sexualattraction. Kate senses in her feelings forBen a potential for the intimate involve¬ment she sees in their parents' relation¬ship—the kind of involvement she does nothave with her roommate, Homer (CharlesGrodin). Moreover, she realizes that sheneeds that kind of intimacy to color in herconveniently outlined life."You can get on 'automatic' so easily,"Weill explains. Kate is drawn to Ben be¬cause his responses to her are not auto-17 OCTOBER 1980 dy, they were willing to back it as a "mes¬sage film." Her own assessment of the pic¬ture is that "it's kind of fluffy for amessage film"; nevertheless, she hopesthat it will give audiences something tothink about."I'd like to make some films . . . whereyou end up really rooting for people, orconsidering things about your life or otherpeople's lives that you might not have con¬sidered before."I guess I do believe that films canchange people, you know, in ways that arereal subtle . . ."It's MY Turn is unlikely to effect manyearthshaking changes in people in spite ofthe timeliness of its "message," becauseWeill is right: it's too "fluffy." Kate Gun-zinger's desire to seek a strong emotionalattachment with another person whilemaintaining the attachment she has to herjob presents a genuine dilemma thatshould be addressed; but this moviespends too much energy whipping up froththat can only float on top of the issue. Werecognize that Kate's problem is a lack ofdepth: she wants to immerse herself in an¬other, and to have another immersed inher; yet the solutions supplied are shallow.Is it fair to make us believe that Kate andBen will develop a beautiful, profound, ful¬filling relationship just because they ex¬change a few throughts while they are un¬dressing each other? How much moresignificant and sincere their growing af¬fection would seem if they were to go outfor Chinese food and intimate conversationafter the baseball game, instead of goingstraight to bed. Unfortunately, sex sceneshave become a cinematic convention thatfew filmmakers are willing to forego.Another, older convention is equallytroublesome. Why must we endure an un¬comfortable "competition" sequence inthe hotel games room, where Ben and Katecontrive stock hostilities prior to makingstock love? Weill justifies this scene by as¬serting that "it's not very dramatic if twopeople just meet and kind of fall into eachother's arms. The only that that's dramat¬ic in a film—in a love story—is keepingpeople apart," she continues. "It's hard tokeep people apart sexually in terms of con¬temporary morality." That's probablytrue—in terms of contemporary morality.But isn't it a shame that the only way wecan keep a couple from coupling in the firstreel is to manufacture a conflict betweenthem? Imagine the dramatic tension thatmight result if Kate and Ben were to spendseveral hours simply talking: exposingtheir inner conflicts, their doubts, their de¬sires, beginning that intimacy they bothneed—the modern audience would be onthe edge of its seat wondering who wouldmake the first physical move.Too many details dart in and out of thisfilm, stirring up the sediment at the bot¬tom and making the water murky. Whoare all those people at the wedding dinner?If they are so important to Kate, why don'twe know them better? Who is that girl whoseems to know everything about Homer?Why is the family Jewish? Why is Kate soclumsy? Is there something symbolicabout her drawing blood every fifteen min¬utes? Why is Ben's wife Dutch? Why doesRoger Maris still have a crew cut?It's My Turn is not a bad film. It justisn't a great film. It's not as good as itcould have been—as it should have been—given its potentially great combination ofcapable actors, important subject, and ex¬citing director.THE GREY CITY JOURNAL 5IT’S HER TURNCLAUDIA WEILL AND HER NEW FILMClaudia Weill at a recent gcj interview.matic. "He picks up on everything shedoes ... her clothes ... what she's worriedabout or thinking about . . . and he'll con¬front her on it." Homer, on the other hand,is much more distant, wrapped up in his own work, and reluctant to listen whenKate begins to reveal her feelings.Weill claims that although the producersthought that the script "was much toodeep" for a high-grossing romantic come¬ 1•o>CBQ■$50 $47.50NEW AND USEDDesks • Chairs • File CabinetsSorters • Much MoreDelivery AvailableBRAND EQUIPMENT8560 S. south ChicagoPhono: RE 4-2111Open Doily >:30 AM-5:00 PM, Sot. 9:00 AM-3:00 PMSPEND A LITTLE -SAVE A LOTWith Reconditioned StereoComponents Like TheseOne of a Kind Specials...List NowBi 0 3002 $500.00 $260.00Kenwood 9340 700.00 175.00Marantz 120 500 00 235.00Oynoco ST 120 209.00 95.00Pioneer HPM 40 EA. 180.00 EA. 75.00Sherwood 7300 389.00 159.00BSR 310 89.00 20.00Matrecs 82 EA. 89.00 PR.! 85.00Sony 6015 240.00 95.00Gorrord 2000B 270.00 99.00Plus much, much more!Complete systems from $75 to $75060-Day Trade-BackHEAR AGAIN STEREO7002 California, 338-7737Open M-Sat, 11 AM 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_____ Qf-GM QUALITYsave* PARTSGXMCBAX MOTOBS MUTTS DTVISONkeep I hat Great G\l Feeling It'Uh ttM/.Yt tJlf Farts72nd & Stony IslandOpen Evenings and Sunday 684-0400Parts Open Sat, 'til noon2 Milt'S - S Minutes AwayFrom The UNIVERSITYSPECIAL DISC0UN1 PRICESfor oil STUDEN1S andFACULTY MEMBERSJust present your University of Chicago IdentificationCard As Students or Faculty Members you are entitledto special money-saving DISCOUNTS on VolkswagenPorts, Accessories and any new or used Volkswagenyou buy from Ruby Volkswagen72nd & Stony Island 684-0400Open Evenings and Sundays Parts Open Sot. 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JerusalemFRIDAY, OCTOBER 17th, 8:30 P.M.HILLEL FOUNDATION5715 WOODLAWN AVENUEVERSAILLES5254 S. DorchesterWELL MAINTAINEDBUILDINGAttractive I Vt and2 Vs Room StudiosFurnished er Unfurnished$218 to $320Based an AvailabilityAt Campus Bns Stop324 0200 Mrs. Croak CHINESE-AMERICAtfRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOpen Daily11 AM to 8:30 PMClosed Monday1318 EAST 63rdMU 4-10626 THE GREY CITY JOURNAL STUDYMEDICINEin W.H.O. ListedFOREIGN MEDICALSCHOOLAPPLICATIONS BEINGACCEPTED FORJANUARY SEMESTERDO NOT DELAY!CALL/WRITE I.S.P.S.INTERNATIONAL STUDENTPLACEMENT SERVICE572 Dundas StreetLondon, OntarioN6B 1W8(519) 433-1973 The {FLAMINGOand CABANA CLUB5.>00 S. Shore I)ri\ei• SiihIim anti I Krai room• Fitriii'lwd jml l nfiirni'lwd• I .off.. I Ml* »lo|»• I Initiator Pool dinl < .aralen*• < .iqn liiig ami l)ru|»‘* Inal.• Sfiirilt• l nit«*r*il\ Swlo*ial\ fa*rSlitalenl* ami Staff• Biirlier• Ha dim Shop• J.H.U. Ka-*uur.n»t• lh-nti*i• ValetFREE PARKINGM. SnvrlerPL 2-3800■■■■!■■ a17 OCTOBER 1980JIF YOU HAVEN'T HEARD ENOUGH ALREADY: SPRINGSTEENBY BRAD BRITTANAND DAVID MCFADDENOn October 6th and 7th, Bruce Spring¬steen played to two completely sold outshows at Cleveland's Richfield Coliseum.The shows were the 2nd and 3rd of a tourthat will take Bruce around the country,including another show in Chicago on No¬vember 20th at the Rosemont Horizon. Though Springsteen prefers to play insmall clubs, even in a large sports arena(like the Richfield Coliseum), he is able tocommunicate a strong sense of "personal¬ness" that allows each member of the au¬dience to feel that Bruce is singing directlyto him. From the moment Bruce hit thestage with a rousing version of "Prove itall Night," until his last encore, the explo¬sive "Detroit-Medley" three and one halfhours later, it was clear that his reputationas "the greatest rock 'n' roll performer ofhis time" is no exaggeration.Through the first half of the concert,Bruce relied heavily on his "Darkness onthe Edge of Town" material. With onlyseveral mentions to songs off his upcomingdouble-album, The River due in recordstores next week, Bruce appeared deter¬mined to establish some common ground¬work with his audience. As expected, thecrowd reacted riotously to his guitar"licks," and enthusiastic strutting with saxophonist, Clarence Clemons, on songslike "Badlands" and "Tenth Avenue Free-zeout."The songs on the new album demon¬strate Bruce's somber reflections on theimpulsiveness and promise of youth whichfade into the cruel realities of adult life. In"Point-Blank," he describes re-encounter¬ing a girlfriend from his past, and ob¬serves with pathos what became of themas they grew older. At this point in his life,Springsteen emphasizes life's more per¬manent values. In "4th of July, AsburyPark (Sandy)," released in 1973, Spring¬steen sang, "Love me tonight for I maynever see you again," while in his newsong, "The Ties that Bind," he urges alasting commitment of love:"You're so afraid of being some¬body's fool,Not walkin' tough, baby, not walkingcool,You walk cool, but baby can youwalk the line? and face the ties that bindNo man can break the ties thatbind."This changed outlook in no way detractsfrom the dynamism that has always char¬acterized his performances. His devotionto his art and his fans remains unaltered.Bruce once stated that "If I leave the stagefeeling, well if I'd played just one moresong, maybe somebody out there wouldhave been won over, if I had given more,it's hard for me to sleep that night."Anybody who was fortunate enough tohave seen that performance can appreci¬ate what Dave Marsh of "Rolling Stone"meant when he wrote in reference toSpringsteen: "Rock and roll has given methe best moments of my life, and my bestmoments in rock and roll have come fromhim. ... The real inspiration is watchinghim make dreams come true every night.To Bruce, from all of us, thanks for thelift."60's and long stories that blended into andbecame part of the songs he performed.These old concerts were unique because ofthe audience participation: the audienceactually contributed to the proceedingsrather than sitting idly by, letting Bruce dohis stuff.With the tours for Darkness At The EdgeOf Town in 1978, however, his concertschanged from being physical proof thatBruce was indeed "the future of rock 'nroll." They changed into something big¬ger, more grandiose. In the '78 shows,Bruce attempted to unify all the themesrunning through his work and fuse theminto a whole. In regards to this, the '78shows were much more uniform in con¬tent: they relied less on oldies (leavingJM Ml IIHEISEMcutr(MCE SM INSSltl.tt ‘ IITI4N (IEMIEIIMIHIT IT tlKIEI•if rn ict itBY JOHN SVATEKThe Bruce Springsteen at Friday night'sshow at the Uptown was not the BruceSpringsteen of concerts past. In the daysbefore Born to Run, Bruce put on mam¬moth three-hour shows drawing not onlyon his own material, but on different ver¬sions of his songs, tunes from the 50's and them for the encores) and less on mono¬logues. He let the music speak for itself.Springsteen seemed to have everythingworked out on these concerts: they werespontaneous without being boring, smoothwithout seeming cold. Bruce would buildup momentum, keep it hot until it reachedcrescendo, then would gradually ease off.Everyone left drained, but feeling great.In the twc years since the end of theDarkness tour, Bruce seems to have gonethrough a lot of changes. Last Friday'sshow was more spontaneous, but Spring¬steen seemed confused — not quite sure ofhis next move. More than once he walkedup to the mike prepared to start, then,changing his mind, ran back to the band,giving them the new song and then begin¬ ning. He also seemed not to care for mo¬mentum or dynamics in the show: often hewould get things moving with a couple offast numbers, then cut it off with a slowtune like "Independence Day."The tone of the show also seemed to bedarker, more desperate. The humorousmoments were not fun for its own sake, butfun desperately trying to lighten the mood."Darkness On The Edge Of Town" (thefourth song of the set) set the tone for therest of show. Abandoning his guitar, Brucestood alone at the mike, one white spot sin¬gling him out. His voice was not the power¬ful one of the album, but rather higher-pitched and shakier. Jerking almostinvoluntarily, he has never seemed so vul¬nerable on stage before.v.John MacquarrieLady Margaret Professor of Divinity at Oxford and Cannon ofChrist Church, Oxford.will speak on* “77ie Concept of Human Nature:A Modem View of Humanity and the Christian Tradition "A series of four lectures held on successive Wed¬nesdays at Rockefeller Memorial Chapel at 4:30 p.m.The series is sponsored by St. Stephen’s House, theCatholic Theological Union, Disciples Divinity House,the Jesuit School of Theology, and RockefellerMemorial Chapel.October 22: “Freedom”October 29: “Alienation”November 5: “Conscience”November 12: “Commitment”Rockefeller Memorial Chapel, 59th & Wood lawn17 OCTOBER 1980 THE GREY CITY JOURNAL 7ETCHING BY MANJULA HAKSAR8 THE GREY CITY JOURNAL 17 OCTOBER 1980‘You People Just Aren’t Normal,Are You?’-Reporter to Cronin“Whenever I come down here, Dr. Cronin,I’m always so amazed by all of you, andwhat you do down here,” gushed one report¬er at Tuesday’s press conference. “I mean,you people aren’t just normal, are you?”The room broke out into laughter, with thenew Nobel Laureate laughing the hardest.“1 don’t think I’m so different,” Jim Croninreplied. “When I go home from work, I havedinner. I have a family, I have a nice life.Today is unusual, though.”Cronin’s accurate self-description reallyexplained what was so unusual about the Co¬winner of this year’s Nobel prize for phys¬ics. In the high pressure elite of NobelLaureates, a “normal” man like Cronin isvery different.“Some people win Nobel prizes by sheerforce of will,” explained collegue DavidSchram to his Introduction to Astrophysicsclass the next day. “They do it by destroyingeveryone around them. Jim is just a verynice guy, he’s just not like that.”Cronin’s day began with a 5 am phone callfrom a wire service reporter. “She told me Ihad won the Nobel prize for physics, andasked me for my reaction, or for a descrip¬tion of the experiment. I don’t rememberwhat I told her. I guess I’m still a bit dis¬oriented.”Before breakfast could get on the table,the phone was already ringing off the hook.When Cronin tried to go for his morning jog,he found a reporter from WIND waiting out¬side his house. But before he could maketime for the press, he had to attend a classon the theory of general relativity, not as ateacher, but as a student of professor S.Chandrasekhar. “I always wanted to betterunderstand relativity,” he later explained.“It’s really not all that difficult.”— As easy as he might find the work, itwould be unlikely that Cronin would everteach a class in the theory of general reali-vity. He emphasized numerous times fromthe beginning of the press conference thathe was an experimentalist, not a theorist.His collegues and the Nobel committee bothemphasized what a superb experimentalistCronin is.“There was a bit of luck in it, but it’s morethan that,” Schram explained. “Jim reallywon the award by carefully checking, andworrying about anything that seemed theleast bit important.”Another collegue, physicist Robert Sachs,described Cronin’s and Fitch’s work to theChicago Sun Times as “one of the mostbeautiful pieces of work” in the field.Cronin’s praise was reserved for peoplewho had helped him who hadn’t been men¬tioned. The first thing he spoke about at thepress conference was the work of two colle¬gues, James Christenson, now of New YorkUniversity, and Rene Turlay, who is onleave from the Center for Nuclear Studies inSaclay, France, who had worked on the ex¬periment in 1964, but who had not been men¬tioned in the prize.He also mentioned the person who he feltsparked his interest in physics. “I know thissound corny, but I had a superb physicsteacher in high school, Mr. Marshall,” Cron¬in said with a smile. “He was very inspira¬tion, not to going into modern physics, butjust to solving the problems of nature. Hewas the one who really inspired me with theimportance and excitement of exploring na¬ture.”Cronin was born in Hyde Park in 1931while his father was a graduate student ofclassical languages at the University. They left Chicago when his father got ateaching position in Texas. Cronin did hisundergraduate work at Southern MethodistUniversity, were he got his BS in 1951. Hethen returned to Hyde Park to get his Mas¬ters and his PhD from the University. Aftergetting his PhD in 1955 he was offered a jobas an assistant physicist at the BrookhavenNational Laboratory. “That was then themost exciting machine in the world,” hesaid. There Cronin met and worked with ValVitch, who is eight years his elder.Cronin joined the Princeton faculty in1958, and continued his work at Brookhaven.In 1964, the year of his award-winning ex¬periment, he was made a full professor atPrinceton.He returned to the University and HydePark in 1971 as a full professor. “The mean¬ing of this University for the intellectualpursuit of knowledge, whether it is particlephysics, or classical languages, is just out¬standing,” he said Tuesday.He is now busy working with collegue Bruce Winstein to experiment on the weakinteractions betwen sub-atomic particles,which may hold the answer to what was thecause of the now famous Cronin Fitch effectwhich won him the award. As useful as theexperiment was, it opened up a whole newseries of complicated questions which havenot yet been solved.He now lives with his wife, Anette, who isdirector of special events here at the Uni¬versity, and with his 10 year old son Dan. Hehas two older daughters who live away fromhome, Emily, 21, a student at the Universityof Minnesota, and Kathryne, 21, a marketanalyst in New York. But Cronin was able tosee both of them on Tuesday night. “As youknow, there are certain financial benefitswhich come with the award,” he told report¬ers, referring to the record $212,000 cashaward that he will split with Fitch. “So wecalled both of them this morning, and theyare flying in this evening, and we are goingto have a nice family dinner.”Chris IsidoreStudent Government Nominating Petition— Deadline Extension —Now Due Monday October 20thAvailable in Ida Noyes 306rEye ExaminationsFashion Eye WearContact LensesDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist(53 Kimbark Plaza)1200 E. 53rd St.493-8372Intelligent people know the differencebetween advertised cheap glasses orcontact lenses and competent pro¬fessional service.Our reputation is your guarantee ofsatisfaction.r SECRETARIES/TYPISTSTOP RATES+ LOTS OF HOURS- Highest EarningsIf you hove top skills, we need you now! 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Pick up an application immediately in theCareer Counseling Placement Office.«****##**#*#+**+»»*»4»*»»»»#4»»—»*—I——14 The Chicago Maroon - Friday, October 17, 1980How He Did ItAn Explanation of Cronin’s WorkBy Bob BernsteinSymmetries and conservation laws havelong played an important role in physics. Aloose definition of a “symmetry” is some¬thing you can do to a system and not changeit; a “conservation law” states that somequantity associated with the system doesn’tchange in time.Macroscopic examples of symmetries weare familiar with include space translationand time translation symmetry; that is, thatthe laws of physics don’t depend on where orwhen they are applied. If you let go of a ball,it drops; it doesn’t matter where or whenyou drop it. An example of a macroscopicconservation law is conservation of matterand energy; if you eat too much, you don’tget lighter. It turns out that time translationsymmetry implies conservation of energy;the symmetry and the conservation law areexpressions of the same thing. Violations ofconservation laws have always been usefulin physics; they point toward new laws, newphenomena, and new questions. JamesCronin and Val Fitch’s discovery of a viola¬tion of what was thought to be a fundamen¬tal symmetry of nature resulted in all ofthese.In addition to macroscopic symmetries,there are microscopic ones in the realm ofquantum phenomena. Three that are of in¬terest are charge conjugation symmetry,parity conservation, and time reversal sym¬metry. Charge conjugation (‘C’) turns par¬ticles into antiparticles; that C is a goodsymmetry means that a scientist made ofantimatter gets the same answers as hismatter counterpart. Parity conservation(‘P’) in particle physics means that left andright, and up and down are indistinguish¬able. This doesn’t mean that left and righthand gloves are the same, or that balls flyup; it does mean that a nucleus whichdecays throws off decay products up asoften as down, and left as often as right.Time invariance CT’) is more subtle. It saysthat there is no unique direction to time. Ma-croscopically we know that this is false; wearen’t getting any younger. But microscop¬ically these interactions look time-revers¬ible. An anology is to imagine a film of twoping-pong balls colliding and flying apart.Running the film backwards won’t lookstrange; you see the same thing with thefilm in forward or reverse, a perfectly rea¬sonable film of two things moving together,bouncing off each other, and moving apart.Historically, it was long assumed that C,P, and T were separately conserved in allelementary processes. However, in 1957 itwas discovered in three simultaneous ex¬periments by Telegdi here at Chicago andby Wu and Lederman at Columbia that 504<m*<5l4 10PrV-'k494 < m*< 504 r 30zcj:?0 *ao•n10 m<.rjWI rJHj'1’lys m2:-4C/10484 < m* < 494 •10:00.9996 0.9996 1.00000.9997 0 9999Angular distribution in three mass rangesfor events with cos$ exceeding .9995.parity was violated in weak interactions(Weak interactions are responsible for thedecay of nuclei. Lee and Yang, two formerChicago students, were awarded NobelPrizes for suggesting the search for parityviolation). Now there is a theorem, calledthe CPT theorem, that says even if one ormore of C, P or T is violated, the combinedsymmetry (CPT) is good. CPT is derivedfrom some very simple assumptions aboutspace and time, and giving it up wouldcreate enormous problems; right now thereis no evidence for its violation. To violateCP, it turns out you have to violate T inorder to get CPT conserved. No one wantedto have time violation, so CP was proposedas a symmetry of nature.In 1955, Gell-Mann and Pais had predicted that there should be two types of neutral K-mesons, Ksubl and Ksub2, and in 1957 Lee,Oehme (who was here at Chicago) and Yangpointed out that they should be distinguishedby their CP properties. The requirement ofCP conservation demands that Ksub2 neverdecay into two Pi-mesons. This makes theKsub2 longer lived than its counterpartKsubl; the ratio of half-lives is 600.The discovery of the charged two — Pi-meson decay was made by a Princetongroup consisting of J. Christenson, J. Cron¬in, V Fitch and R. Turlay in 1964 at Brookha-ven National Laboratory in Upton, NewYork. The Ksub2 mesons were made by firststriking a target with an incoming beam ofprotons, making an outgoing beam of(among other things) Ksubl and Ksub2mesons. If we simply go far enough awayfrom the target, the shorter-lived Ksublmesons have all decayed (along with a sub¬stantially smaller number of Ksub2’s). Wethen have a beam of pure Ksub2. The Ksub2mesons then enter the apparatus shown inFig. 1. The apparatus has two arms’; a two-Pi-meson decay would yield on pion enter¬ing each arm. The momentum and directionof the pions would then be measured withthe magnets and the spark chambers. Aspark chamber produces a spark as a par¬ticle passes throughit; a picture was takeneach time there was a spark, and a physicisthad to make measurements on the pictureby hand in order to understand the event.Particles of a given momentum are bent into a new direction by the magnet, andmeasuring the locations of the particle inthe spark chambers before and after themagnet tell how big the bend is, thus mea¬suring the momentum.The product of the analysis is twonumbers. One is the mass of the particlewhich decayed, and the other is its directionwith respect to the beam. If the two-piondecay had occurred, incident particles at 0degrees (cosQ-1) and at the mass of theKsub2 (498 Mev/c , about half the protonmass) should be found.The experimental results, from th originalpaper, are shown in Fig. 2. Three massranges are indicated; one just below, one at,and one just above the Ksub2 mass. Allranges have a small amount of backgrounddue to measurement errors and otherdecays. The clear excess of events in theKsub2 mass range is the signature of the for¬bidden decay. The size of the effect was twoparts in a thousand, but CP was clearly vio¬lated.The importance of the discovery was indi¬cated by the number of explanations offeredto avoid violating CP. One physicist suggest¬ed that a fly buzzing around in the apparatuscould fake the effect; the explanation waasdropped when it was determined that the flywould have to have the density of tungsten.Eventually it was apparent only CP viola¬tion could explain the experiment.CP violation has persisted as a challengefor physics. It has not been explained in anysatisfying way. It forces any theory of fun¬damental forces to explain it, which placesmany constraints on possible theories. CPviolation gives us a new view of the uni¬verse; it provides an absolute distinction be¬tween matter and antimatter, and throughthe CPT theorem, violates T-reversal andprovides an absolute direction to time on themicroscopic level. Finally, the matter-anti¬matter distinction may play a role in cos¬mology; it may be that the apparent excessof matter over antimatter in the universecan be understood by CP violation favoringthe creation of matter. The tiny CP effect,working early in the universe, may havecreated the enormous excess of matter wesee today.Bob Bernstein is a graduate student atthe University and is presently workingwith Cronin.ATTENTIONWant to go home for Thanksgiving?We have super saver space blocked to...New YorkBostonWashingtonLos AngelesSan FranciscoBut you must make reservationand pay by Oct. 24.SO DON’T WAIT — DO IT NOW!MIDWAY TRAVELAdministration Building753-2300WOULD YOU BELIEVE 9V2% FINANCINGYes, it’s true. Ask for details onthis spacious (12 room), gracioushistoric Kenwood home. Kitchenand many other features only 3years old. $142,500. CallCharlotte.Roomy eat-in kitchen (with GE appliances) in this neat-as-a-pin 2bedroom condo with formal dining room. Airy, bright & quiet. 56thStreet. $68,900. Call Charlotte.FOR RENTGrand new country-style kitchen .. formal dining room in this 3bedroom unit where you control your own temperatures (heat &air conditioning). (This is a condo and you certainly will have 1stoption to purchase when it is back on the market in spring.) Im¬mediate occupancy. Board approval required. 55th & Cornell.$575 per month, “academic lease’’ till mid-June or with 60 daycancellation.$55,000 on 57th. 5 rooms plus study. Beamed dining room; refinishedoak floors, modern cabinet kitchen. Call Ken.57th STREET: 6 rm condo available quickly, 4 year old kitchen withmaple floors; dining room with natural wood hutch with leadeddoors. Workshop on premises. A charming bright residence. DECI¬SION NEEDED BEFORE OCT. 31. $59,500. Call Charlotte.493-0666Ken Wester, Sales Associate, 947-0557 (eves)Cleveland McCowan, Sales Associate, 799-1419 (eves)Charlotte Vikstrom, Broker, Sales 493-0666 (eves) NOWOBEAS COMP D<C T HAVE>R TO LIVEILYAS one:.IOget those great, green,Comfortable, cotton doctor'sshirts or pants, you don’t have to spend a fortune onmedical school and your whole life as a doctor anymore.Now just S10 buys the shirt, S12 the pants. They may notbring you a doctor’s life of comfort. Hut they’re sure tobring you some comfortable living.The original comfortable cotton doctor shirtShirt $10. Pants SI 2. S, M, L, XL.SI .50 postage per order.number of shirts sizenumber of pants sizeMail to: Surgical Wear2120 Ocean AvenueBrooklyn, New York 11229.NameAddress.CityState ZIPThe Maroon is looking for a features editor to help plan, edit, and assign featurestories. Previous writing experience necessary. Apply to David GlocknerinTheMaroon office or call 3-3265 for an appointment.In 1971...ANOTHER ROADSIDE ATTRACTIONIn 1976...EUEN COWGIRLS GET THE BLUESNow-gtlLL L/frs3 with^°0ppcc*e marianrealty,inc.REALTORStudio and 1 BedroomApartments Available- Students Welcome -On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-5400ECONOMICS and BEHAVIORAL SCIENCE MAJORSThe PhD Program at the Stanford Business School offers specializations inECONOMICS AND PUBLIC POLICYORGANIZATIONAL AND CONSUMER BEHAVIOROther fields offered includeDecision Sciences, Accounting, Finance, and MarketingExcellent opportunities for academic careers in research and teachingCall or write for admission and financial aid information.Office of fhe Doctoral ProgramGraduate School of Business — Room 223Stanford UniversityStanford, California 94305(415) 497 283116 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, October 17, 1980 PONTIAC2720 S. MICHIGAN Ave.Open Doily & Sunday/225-4300Wabuno BayEscapesBovver BoysBy David GruenbaumThere were quite a few near upsets in thisweek’s intramural action, the most notice¬able being Wabuno Bay’s narrow escapefrom defeat at the hands of the Bovver Boys,13-12.Upper Flint almost upset Dudley beforesuccumbing 9-7. After Dudley had taken a2-0 lead when the Upper Flint centersnapped the hike over the quarterback’shead into the end zone, Upper Flint complet¬ed a fifty-yard pass play to take the lead. Astunned Dudley managed to compose them¬selves enough to come back and score atouchdown to win the game, but not withoutquite a scare. In perhaps intramural’s big¬gest rivalry, Lower Rickert defeated UpperRickert, 12-7, in an extremely well playedfootball game marred by disputed officiat¬ing calls.Games to WatchPSI UPSILON vs. ED’S BAR AND GRILLSat M-4 11:15Spread: Ed’s Bar and Grill by 7. .. In a pre¬season matchup against Wabuno Bay, Ed’sBar and Grill star quarterback Brian Holm¬gren broke a finger and did not play in thefirst game, yet the team, with Chris Lom¬bardi quarter-backing, still managed to put35 points on the board. Holmgren is avail¬able to play against Psi U if needed. Psi U,on the other hand, will have to get playerslike Dave Shaffer out on the field, if theyhope to challenge. This should be quite a testgame for both 2-0 teams.MICHELSON vs. BRECKINRIDGE Sat M-l11:15Spread: Breckinridge by 12.... Breckinridgepulled a little bit of an upset in beating pre¬season favorite Lower Rickert in theiropener 6-0. Michelson will have to stick closeto receiver Jeremy Fein, who burned LowerRickert repeatedly, both short and long, ifthey hope to beat Breckinridge. As far asMichelson, no one is really sure how goodthey will be, as they have lost their two bestplayers, Chris Lombardi and Doug Barge toEd’s Bar and Grill. \FISHBEIN-CHAMBERLIN Sat M-3 10:00Spread: Chamberlin by 10 ... Chamberlinlooked really strong against Alpha Delta,blowing them out by 32 points. Fishbein is as SPORTSAxinn Leads HarriersThrough Early MeetsBy Carl StockingAutumn has returned and the Universityof Chicago cross country team is once moreblazing across the parks and golf courses ofthe Midwestern United States.Coach Ten Haydon has watched with sat¬isfaction during the past two weekends ashis team raced to third place against fiveother tough teams at the Spring Arbor Invi¬tational and second place at the Beloit Invi¬tational.The Beloit meet was particularly pleasingfor the Maroons as they nosed out tradition¬al rival Beloit College and many other Mid¬west Conference opponents. So for this fall,the Maroons have been paced by third-yearstudent Mike Axinn, the overall winner ofeach meet.Axinn is the defending champion of theMidwest Conference and has set his sightson victory again this year.As good as Axinn is, however, he is notsolely responsible for the Maroons success.Cross-country is a team game; standing iscomputed by summing the place of finish ofthe top five runners of each team. The win¬ner is the team with the lowest point total.The Maroons are well-endowed with an extremely competitive "top seven" and ex¬cellent depth. In addition to Axinn are re¬turning runners Art Knight, Dave Green,Tom Matiski, Rich Heinle and Phil McGoff.The squad also added freshman standoutBobby Fisher. Furthermore, several othersare gunning for a spot in the lop seven : JimBiery, attempting this fall to match the suc¬cess he had during track season; veteranChris Brown, Rich Keen, who was the sev¬enth man at the Beloit meet; and freshmanAaron Rourke, who is quietly developinginto an excellent runner. Not to be over¬looked is Dave Pang, who almost unnoticed-ly blossomed as a distance runner.The harriers now await the Midwest con¬ference championships to be held in Wash¬ington Park on November 1. The Maroons,who finished second last year, figures toagain be successful but will meet stiff oppo¬sition from Carleton College. Should theMaroons finish among the top five teams inthe subsequent Regional Championships onNovember 15. they will move to the NationalChampionships on November 22. In addi¬tion, the top six runners from teams notqualifying will be allowed to run in Nation¬als, so .Axinn may still get his title shot evenif the Maroons as a team do not qualify.Field HockeyWins in OTBy Michael OcchioliniIn a dramatic overtime victory, theMaroon field hockey team defeated St.Mary’s College Wednesday at Stagg Field.The Maroons, coming off a scoreless tieMonday against Northern Illinois Universi¬ty, appeared a little disorganized early inthe first half. St. Mary’s scored first, on ashot by forward Beth Welsh off a shortcorner. St. Mary’s maintained the pressurethroughout the first half, but the Maroon de¬fense proved solid within their own end.In the second half, the Maroons startedbeating St. Mary’s to the ball, and their of¬fense came alive. The Maroons missed anexcellent opportunity midway thru the sec¬ond half, as a Helen Straus to Trish Briscoeto Alice Zino pass play failed to score. Theshot by Zino was accurate, but the St.Mary’s goalie responded with a good save.Chicago evened the score at 1-1, on a beauti¬ful long cross by Briscoe. Zino shot wasstopped, but the rebound was hammered inby Straus. St. Mary’s was unable to converta penalty shot opportunity, and the score wastied at the end of regulation play.The overtime period consisted of two 7V2minute periods. Chicago looked much betterconditioned, as they outhustled St. Mary’sthroughout the overtime period. TheMaroons missed a couple of good opportuni¬ties to win in the overtime period, yet theyfailed to convert.After the overtime period, the game wasdecided by penalty flicks. Each team selectsfive players, and every player gets a turn toshoot at the goalie from the penalty dis¬tance. The player is only allowed one step,and the ball must be "flicked” at the goal.St. Mary’s missed their first opportunity,but Chicago converted on a shot by VeronicaWisniewski. The next two rounds werescoreless, but in the fourth round St. Mary’sevened the score at 1-1. Chicago thenclinched the penalty flick series on the nextturn, as Zino’s low shot beat St. Mary’s goa¬lie. The final score of the game was 2-1.Wednesday’s victory raises the Maroons’record 5-2-1. Their next game is away atWheaton College this Saturday.Soccer LosesAfter Penaltyusual a question-mark; it will take a lot tobeat Chamberlin.CAPITALISTS vs. CHICAGO SEVEN Sat.M-l 1:00Spread: Capitalists by 15 ... The Capitalistswere mighty impressive in their first victo¬ry over the Big Med Machine. A lot of peoplebelieve that by the end of the season, theCapitalists might be the best intramuralfootball team. IM ScoreboardPsi Upsilon 20 Vagrants 0Fallers 7 Thompson 6Wabuno Bay 13 Bovver Boys 12Dudley 9 Upper Flint 7Salisbury by forfeit over ShoreyEd's Bar and Grill 35 Team Chump 24Commuters 13 Sons of Mofo 6Lower Rickert 12 Upper Rickert 7Dews Brothers 26 Michelson 10Fishbein 48 Dodd/Mead 6Henderson forfeit over alpha Delta Phi By Michael OcchioliniThe Maroon soccer team traveled to Be¬loit, Wisconsin Wednesday, where despiteplaying well, lost 2-1 to Beloit College.The first 25 minutes of the first half weredominated by the Maroons, as they con¬trolled the ball within Beloit’s end of thefield They were unable to score, however,and the first half ended in a scoreless tieBeloit opened the scoring in the secondhalf, on a play designed off a cornerkickThe kick was directed to a Beloit defender2 outside the eighteen yard line, and he£ chipped the ball into the upper right hands corner of the net.I The Maroons evened the score at 1-1, on anice play by right wing Dean CarpentarCarpentar eluded three Beloit defenders,and easily beat the Beloit goalie.Beloit went ahead to stay on a penalty shotfollowing an infraction by Lou Segall. Segalltripped a Beloit forward from behind toavoid a breakaway on John Condas. theMaroon goalie.The Maroons’ record drops to 2-3-1, and onSunday they will face Washington Universi¬ty, the top-ranked division III school in thecountry.The Chicago Maroon — Friday, October 17, 1980 — 17CALENDARFridayLutheran Campus Ministry: Lunch. 12:15 pm. 5500S. Woodlawn.Physics Undergraduate Journal Club: “Tide-Related Shelf Seiches" speaker Benjamin Giese.12:30 pm. Eckhart 209.Geophysical Sciences Colloquium: “How Do Sun¬spots Work?” speaker Eugene Parker, 1:30 pm.Hinds Lab Auditorium.Dept, of Sociology: Lecture-“Ideas and Interests— The Structuring of Class Consciousness"speaker S.N. Eisenstadt, 2:00 pm, SS 305.Dept, of Economics: Workshop in Economics andEconometrics-"Success of Cooperatives in theFertilizer Industry" speaker Mustafa Mohatarem,Ro 301, 2:00-3:20 pm.Computation Center Seminar: Introduction toSCSS 3:30-5:00 pm, Pick 124.Mineralogy/Petrology Seminar: "Pseudopoten¬tials in Electronic and Crystal Structures” speak¬er Dr. Alex Zunger, 3:30 pm, HGS 101.Hillel: Reform-Progressive Sabbath Services, 5:30pm, Hillel.Gymnastics Club: Informal practice, 5:30 pm,Bartlett gym. Beginners welcome.Hillel: Adat Shalom Shabbat Dinner, 6:30 pm, Hil¬lel. Fine Arts Research and Holographic Center: Lee-ture-"The New Light” speaker Dr. Tung Jeong,7:00 pm, 1134 W. Washington Blvd.Crossroads: “Christians and Human Rights inSouth Korea" speaker Faye Moon, 7:30 pm.Crossroads 5621 S. Blackstone.History Dept.: Film-“The Heritage of Ireland"Parts V and VI 8:00 pm, SS Auditorium.Greek Student Association: Party for new Greekstudents and all prospective members, 8:00 pm, I-House home room.Hillel: Lecture-“The Heritage of Liberalism in theState of Israel” speaker Prof. Yehoshua Cohen,8:30 pm, Hillel. ,SaturdayHillel: Yavneh Sabbath Services, 9:15 am, Hillel.Hillel: Upstairs Minyan Sabbath Services, 9:30am, Hillel.American Comm, for Irish Studies: Confer-ence-9:00-10:00 am, registration, 10:00 morning ses-sion-“Politics: Irish-American Style" 12:00, lun¬cheon, 1:45 Irish Traditional Music, 2:30 pm.Afternoon Session — “The Irish-American Novel”all taking place at the Quadrangle Club.Aikido: Meets 10:30 am, Bartlett gym.Kinetic Energy Creative Dance and MovementGroup: Meets 11:00 am Ida Noyes Dance room. Compton Lectures: "The Spectrum-Coping with 18Decades of Wavelength” 11:00 am, Eckhart 133.Crossroads: Buffet Dinner, no reservation neces¬sary, 6:00 pm.Law School Films: “African Queen” 7:15 and 9:30pm. Law School Auditorium.SundayAugustana Lutheran Church: Sermon and Eu¬charist, 8:30 am, 5500 S. Woodlawn.Rockefeller Chapel: Ecumenical Service of HolyCommunion 9:00 am.Augustana Lutheran Church: Sunday School andAdult Education, 5500 S. Woodlawn.Rockefeller Chapel: Discussion class, 10:00 am.Augustana Lutheran Church: Sermon and Eu¬charist. 10:45 am, 5500 S. Woodlawn.Hillel: Lox and Bagel Brunch, 11:00 am.Rockefeller Chapel: University Religious Service,11:00 am.Crossroads: Bridge at 3:00 pm. Beginners and ex¬perts welcome.MondayPerspectives: Topic-“Politics 1980: Can AnybodyWin?” guests Joan Fee, Benjamin Page and J.David Greenstone, 6:09 am, channel 7. Crossroads: English classes for foreign women,10:00 am.Geophysical Sciences Special Seminar: AncientEpicontinental Seas” speaker Anthony Hallman,12:30 pm, HGS.Christian Science Organization: Meets 2:30-3:30Gates-Blake 428.Computation Center Seminar: Introduction toDISSPLA. 3:30-5:00 pm. RI 180.Dept, of Chemistry: "Stereochemistry of Enzyma¬tic Nucleotidyl and Phosphoryl Transfer as Stud¬ied with Nucleotide Phosphorothioates”, speakerProf. Fritz Eckstein. 4:00 pm, Kent 103.Gymnastics Club: Informal practice 5:30 pm, Bart¬lett gym. Beginners welcome.WHPK: Opera Night-this week “Vanessa" byBarber, 6:00-9:00 pm, 88.3 FM.Students for Commoner/Harris: Meeting 7:00 pm,Ida Noyes East Lounge.UC Chess Club: Starts rated tournament at 7:00pm. Registration costs 60c + USCF and club dues($3) Ida Noyes 2nd floor.ASHUM-AMSA: “Medicine vs. the Media”speaker Alan Blum, 7:30 pm, SS 122.TuesdayPerspectives: Topic-“Political Symbols in theMedia” guests Joan Fee,the first THE HISPANIC CULTURAL SOCIETY presentsQA^ERJIA cHIScR^N^ICA of a seriesRefreshments Free with the poetry and music of PeruReynolds Club Lounge Sunday, Oct. 19 1:30 P.M.Rockefeller Memorial ChapelSunday, October 199:00 a.m. Ecumenical Service of HolyCommunion10:00 a.m Discussion Class, "Wholly Art- A Survey of thePlace of Religion in Modern Art," led by ScottStapleton,11:00 a.m University Religious Service,The Preacher is john Macquarrie, Lady MargaretProfessor of Divinity at Oxford University andCanon of Christ Church, Oxford1:00 p.m. St Stephen's House Luncheon and discussionwith Canon Macquarrie Call 753-3381 forinformationS835South University AvenueRefreshments will be servedALL ARE WELCOME' BOGART 6HEPBURNm TH€AFRICAflQUEERS A T.,OCT. 18 * T 7:15 I 9 : ) • !).$•LAV SCN00L AUDI 10* I HA t.F S CS TODAYON&GUDEL eds.ACTIONS & EVENTSDAVIDSONSEMINM-TH 9 OOKSTORES. UNIVERSITY0 1F 9 :3 0 ~ 5 Sll-4IRISH MUSIC ON TOURPRESENTSFRANKIE GAVINFIDDLE ALEC FINNBOUZOUKI CHARLIE PIGGOT “RINGO" McDONAGHBANJO BODHRAN AND BONESCHRISTIE LEARYTIN WHISTLE AND VOCALS JACKIE DALYACCORDIONDe DanannDONATION $600TICKETS ARE AVAILABLE IN CONCERT CALL AND SIGN UPFOR FREE TRADITIONALATERINISLE, IRISH MUSIC EVENTS1959 N. HALSTED (900 WEST) NEWSLETTERCHICAGO SATURDAY, OCTOBER 25 INFO: 864-7617,564-13388:00 P.M.UNCOLN PARK HIGH SCHOOL2039 NORTH ORCHARD (700 WEST)CHICAGO18 - The Chicago Maroon - Friday, October 17, 1980CLASSIFIED ADSCLASSIFIEDClassified advertising in the ChicagoMaroon is 75 cents per 30 characterline. Ads are not accepted over thephone, and they must be paid in ad¬vance. Submit all ads in person or bymail to The Chigago Maroon, 1212 E.59th St., Chicago, IL 50637. Our officeis in Ida Noyes, room 304. Deadlines:Wed. noon for the Fri. paper, Fri.noon for the Tues. papers.SPACENOV. 1st Occupancy for 2 femalegrads in a Co-ed Grad Student Co-op.Rents average 70/mo. 5621 S Univer¬sity. 955-2653.Large four room apt. refurbished oneor two bedrms new kitchen for rentcall 947-8834 keep trying.3 rooms furnished apt. 5405Woodlawn. Mrs. Green 643-2760.667-5746.ROOMMATE WANTED 58th andKenwood $143/month plus util.955-2200 eves.One room available in spacious tenroom apartment. Heat already paid,rent $112.50 a month, call 288-8722Hugh, Paul or John.ROOM FOR RENT Best campuslocation, students only. 753-3257.1 or 2 bdrms in 3 bdrm apt. Lakeview, A/C, parking, 24-hr security,parking. Semi-furnished. Non-smoker, grad or prof student prefer¬red. 102 plus elec. Call Jane, 538-6159,or 947-6897. For Nov-Dec.For rent: Studio apt in Universitypark condo Walk-in kitchen,carpeting, drapes. $325. 393-1034,955-7399.UNIV. PK 2 bdrm 2 bath 9th floorsouth view, gym and swim pool, nearU.C./I.C., shopping. $500. 643-8858Seeking RESPONSIBLE ROOMMATE. Male grad student in his 30'soffers furnished bdrm/study in 2 brmapt. Laundry fac in bldg. $165/mo.plus util. Prefer male non-smoker.Call John 753-2923 day or 493-6291 early eve. Avail, immediately.Condo for sale-2-3 brm-modern conveniences wall to wall carpeting,easy access to U of C and Hosp call667-4038.FOR SALEU of C pictorial dinner plates of 1931Wedge wood and Spode 17 scenes acollectors find. Goodman 753-83421975 VW RABBIT orange 4-dr, 4-spdno rust, great shape for 84 K mile 30mpg, am-fm ster, $1650 643-1288.Kids toys books mysteries antiquesink snake cages hi fi xmas stuff gifts4857 Kimbark Sun Oct 1911-1.2.1972 Impala very good operating con¬dition just tuned $625. 241-5968.1972 Plymouth Duster. Excellentmechanical condition. Good body.Five good tires. AM radio. 22 mpg.Just $900. Will negotiate. 241-6039.PEOPLE WANTEDPaid subjects needed for experimentson memory, perception and languageprocessing. Research conducted bystudents and faculty in The Commit¬tee on Cognition and Communication,Department of Behavioral Sciences.Phone 753-4718.Person FRIDAY to keep businessrecords, run errands, and do oddjobs. 25-40 hours per week. Scheduleflexible. Minimum pay $6 per hour.Apply only if avail for a least 2 years.Box 201 Hyde Park Herald.EDITOR/ADMINISTRATOR. Pro¬fessional Social Science Associationseeks editor for journal and ad¬ministrative aid. Experience re¬quired: familiarity with copy andsubstantive editing; knowledge of of¬fice procedures; ability to work in-dependtly, to organize details. Goodsalary and Fringe benefits. Locatedon University of Chicago Campus.Send Resume to M. Janowitz. Box 46,1125 E. 59th St., Chicago, IL 60637.Photographers wanted for B-Schoolnewspaper We pay. Darkroom skillsneeded. Call Bob955-4733.Part-time help wanted apply in per¬son 9:30 2:00 at the Pinocchio 1517 E.53rd St. 241 5512.Subjects needed for interestingresearch in brain asymmetry. Pays2.50 hr call 753-4735 M F 9-5.VOLUNTEERS WANTED-Overweight women wanted for hor¬mone study. Required ages 18-35, 200-300 lbs. For more info, call 947-1825. College students: show of your erudi¬tion! Share the profound truthsyou've discovered! Make your momproud! Inquiry, a quarterly journal ofessays written by students in the col¬lege, is looking for brilliant essays.The deadline for consideration for theAutumn issue is Friday of 5th week.Please submit essays at the IdaNoyes cloakroom or mail to Inquiry,Faculty Exchange Mailbox, IdaNoyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St., Chicago60637.Author requires part-time secretary,flexible hours, typing ms. plusgeneral office assistance. Begin im¬mediately. 643 8295. Call evenings.Earn $5-20 erp hr part-time fromhome call eve 667-4339.The Chicago Counseling andPsychotherapy Center, 5711 SouthWoodlawn and 6354 North Broadway,needs people who are willing to talkabout their personal problems andfeelings for 10 sessions with apsychotherapist-in-t raining. Par¬ticipation should not be seen aspsychotherapy or as a substitute forpsychotherapy, although participantsmay find it a useful experience. Par¬ticipants will neither be paid norcharged for their sessions. Call Pat at684-1800.Secretary/Receptionist tor CalvertHouse, 5735 s. University 288-2311.Full-time, permanent position. Typing, filing, light bookkeeping,telephone, etc.SERVICESBABYSITTING, 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.TYPIST-Dissertation quality Helpwith grammar, language 6s needed.Fee depending on manuscript. IBMSelectric. Judith 955-4417.FLUTE LESSONS by experiencedteacher who also composes, per¬forms. Reasonable rates. Adultbeginners and woodwind doublers aspecialty. 536-4181.TYPIST exp. Turabian PhD MastersThesis Term Papers Rough Drafts.924-1152.VIOLIN REPAIR IN HYDE PARK:Professional repairs and rehairing.William Whedbee 684-0565 eves andweekends.We move almost anything almostanywhere. Call W.P. Bear MovingCo. at 947-8035 before midnight.TYPIST: Competitively priced, highquality work by freelance writer.Prompt; minor editing withoutcharge. Call after 6 pm 472-2415 or472-0860.WHO ELSE WANTS "10" FIGURE?Info: 2 stamps Box 10113-M ChicagoIL 60610.Prenatal Hatha Yoga Class. Learnpostures, breathing, and relaxationtechniques for a special time in yourlife. Discuss pregnacy, child birth,breastfeeding, breathing fordelivery. Certified Teacher 8 wks$3600. Call Teresa 288-6140 first classfree.SPORTS CLUBSRegistration packet for 1980-1981 isavailable In INH 203. This must bepicked up by 10/15/80 to be eligible forfunding this year. Sport Club councilmeets 10/20/80, 7:30 pm, EastLounge, INH.SCENESBAZAAR, Dorchester at 50th Sat. 25Oct. 10am-3pm Luncheon available11-1 Sun. 26 Oct. 11:15 am-1 pm Dur¬ing after church coffee hour Hand¬crafted items, plants, books, recycledtreasures Church of St. Paul and theRedeemer Episcopal Churchwomen.COURT STUDIODeadline for submitting proposals forwinter quarter studio shows is Nov. 1.For more info call 753-3582.Young Designs byELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERS1620 E. 53rd St.288-2900 PERSONALSWriters' Workshop (PLaza 2-8377)Improve YOUR GRADES! Researchcatalog-306 pages 10,278 descriptivelistings-Rush $1.00 (refundable). Box25097C, Los Angeles, 90025. (213) 477-8226.M-Don't let your babies grow up to becowboys-W.N.BOULDER-Please ignore the sur¬face, it's just a lot of jello. Wadethrough.If you ain't a cowboy,....Hey, where are all my personals?Don't tell me that getting cut once ortwice has scared your off. Persevere!For me. LAWPain is a bore. D.F.EHines kal Fiiellines prosaklountai sto"Elliniko Trapezi" kathe Triti12:00-1:00 sto Blou Gkargkoil. Krasidorean.CRITICAL MINDSJoin the Chicago Review nonfictionstaff. We are looking for attentivereaders to help select and. editliterary articles and book reviews forour journal. Manuscripts are edify¬ing, meetings are wildly entertaining.Call 753-3571.YOGAHYPNOSIS, NLPYou can still register for workshopsin Yoga, Self-Hypnosis and NLP t.m.Communication, change andPsychotherapy Mon and Thur atGargoyle, Call Dobbi Kerman 288-3706. 664-6650.LOST AND FOUND SECRETARY20 hrs a week, good typing skills, towork with students and faculty,salary 5.54/hr for qualified person.Call: 753-4476, Marla Rivers, TheUniversity of Chicago. An Af¬firmative Action/Equal OpportunityEmployer.PIANO LESSONSBeginners-advanced. Experiencedteacher and accompanist, doctoraldegree trom Juilliard School. NewYork. Tel: 536-7167 or 548-0063.FREE BOOKSAll you have to do is reviw a book forthe book page of the Grey City Jour¬nal. If interested, contact Lucy Con-niff at 752-5165.THE FUNNYPAPERSNew X-Men and Avengers at the tun¬ny papers, Hyde Park 5238 S.Blackstone 955-0974.FREE NLP SESSIONFree private session of NeuroLinguistic Programming t.m. Exp.how NLP can assist you in makingchanges, achieving goals, improvingquality of life. Dobbi Kerman MA Uc288-3706, 664-6650 offer good throughNov. 1980VIOLINSASSOC POR WOMEN IN SCIENCEpresents Dr. M Camras on: ToneQuality of Old Violins-Science Ex¬amines a cost Art "Tues. 10/21 7:30pm Res. Inst 480 for info: Marilyn 3-8670. TREATISEUse the computer to format disserta¬tions in accordance with Universityrequirements. Comp-Center seminarwill illustrate the use of theTREATISE program. Friday, Oc¬tober 24, 3:30-5:00 pm. Pick +016. AllWelcome. No charge. No computerexperience.THE FUNNYPAPERSFor pocket and purse Popeye, MightyMouse, Heckle and Jeckle, Pink Pan¬ther at the funny papers, Hyde Park5238 S Blackstone 955-0974THE FUNNYPAPERSDonna Louise cartoon soap operacards 12 episodes from paper moon atthe funny papersSOUTH KOREAPresentation and discussion led byFaye Moon entitled "Christians andHuman Rights in South Korea"Tonight Fri. Oct. 17 7:30 pm atCrossroads 5621 Blacks jne.HOUSE FORSALELarge family house 3 blocks N. of labschool good condition by owner241-5999CAT NEEDS HOMESmall gray female cat, about IV2 yrsold, spayed, shots Needs home rightaway. 752-5734 or 684-0690 YOUNGDEMOCRATSU of C Young Democrats Meegin Oct.21 8pm Ida Noyes Second Floor.WOMAN'S RAPGROUPA Women's Rap Group meets everyTuesday at 7:30 pm at 5655 S. Univer¬sity Ave. For info-752-5655LITERARYMAGAZINEPrimavera, a women's literarymagazine, needs more women to jointhe staff. Call 752-5655 for info Onsale in most Chicago bookstores.GOMIDIEVALMARRS meets Monday Ida Noyes at7:30 pm. Recorder and Madrigalgroups 8:30 pm. NewcomersWelcome!MONDAY NIGHTFOOTBALLWatch Monday night football at thePub in Ida Noyes Hall. Now withamplified sound.PIZZA DELIVEREDThe Medici delivers pizza as well ashamburgers, salads and desserts at 5pm and Sat. Beginning at 4 p.m.CITIZEN'S PARTYSTUDENTS FOR COM¬MONER/HARRIS will meet Mon.,Oct. 20, 7:00 pm in Ida Noyes EastLoungeLOST: Black vinyl briefcase contain-ing books on marxist theory of historyand file folder with label "K. Hart" Iffound please contact Terry TurnerX3-3725 Haskell 301.ELECTIDANOYESSpend election night (Nov 4) in IdaNoyes at the Student Activities Elec¬tion Night Extravaganza "Indecision'80." Three color TVs, lots of food anddon't forget the Pub! Starting at 7pm-till a president is elected. Don't missit! •©MUSICIANS 04 J04 *Interested in playing chambermusic? Organizational meeting, Fri- c 2>day, October 17, 4:00 pm, LexingtonStudio, 5835 University Ave. All par¬ticipants are welcome.<» SX) ©LC HOTLINE 753-1777Say 'g: He who has no problems isnot 1 jman. Not too profound, buttrue l your humanity gets the best ofyou, ce ! us 753-1777 For info too. 7pmto 7am t !ay/wk.04 ^ SDIRECTORSPeople interested in directing a CourtStudio play during the winter quarter -fi-fishould submit a proposal by Nov. 1.For more info call 753-3582. ® toGERANIUMSThe Geraniums will be removed at8:30 am on Monday, Oct. 17,1980 ©D S3uS gWOMEN!Self-defense classes beg Oct 20 6 wks7-9pm $25 Blue Gargoyle (57th-University) info 332-5540.* §£! ZEROX COPIES 1 w 31 3C Each * Q.J Copies, Duplicating, Reduc- J1 tion, Spiral- Binding, Hole-1\Punching and 8ld by 11"|l^ranspaze/jcjes for letter,I\legal, accounting anafj* computer-sized paper 0414 04fi -cfi odc-> ai ECONO COPY INC.!I 612 N. Michigan jSuite No. 3061 (Michigan-Ohio Bldg.) 1Phone: 280-89991 Hours: 8AM 6PM M F 112 Noon-4 S.* With this couponand valid U C ID H »(Expires 10/25/80 CJDHD<4-1GO<X>CC *r—'tOu*CL©L.■©1414£o14o•wEua#fiSC•• T314c S3£2 Cl1mm 14U14 Cl14esu 14.©S3 *-*-e04 3© EUrn14 -oQ.14ITtr- <The Chicago Maroon — Friday, October 17, 1980 — 19Milo M 1111;11HUTCHINSON COMMONSOCTOBER 31 $400 MAB Fee Payers$700 everyone elseTWO SHOWS8:30 and 10:30for MAB fee payers onlyAll seats general admission.2 tickets/ID * 2ID’s/person limit. . 'MAB fee cards will go on sole today at the R.C. Box Office. The $4.00 fee cardentitles graduates and professional students to MAB discounts for AutumnQuarter. NOTE: ALL UNDERGRADUATES ARE AUTOMATIC FEE PA YERS.^Friday. October 17;. T9804^-0^ VT.,-’ ,20 — The Chicaqo Maroon'4g $1® •§*v. .j,• ‘ ^ ft ^