THE CHICAGO MAROONVolume 90, No. 17 The University of Chicago (^Copyright 1980 The Chicago Maroon Tuesday, November 4, 1930SG to Charge OfficerWith Balloting ImproprietyElwood V. Jensen and Geoffrey GreeneResearchers Develop Cancer TestBy Andrea HollidayTwo University professors have publishedthe results of research leading toward animproved clinicai test to help doctors selectthe best follow-up treatment for breastcancer patients who have undergone mas¬tectomies.The report by Elwood Jensen, the CharlesHuggins Professor and Director of the BenMay Laboratory for Cancer Research, andGeoffrey Greene, assistant professor in theBen May lab, appears in the September vol¬ume of Proceedings of the National Aca¬demy of Sciences.The test, developed by Jensen with Eu¬gene DeSombre about ten years ago, tellsdoctors how likely it is that a mastectomypatient’s cancer will recur, and whethersuch recurrent cancers are likely to respondto endocrine therapy.An alternative to grueling cytotoxic che¬motherapy, endocrine therapy is suitablefor about one quarter of 90,000 new breastcancers detected each year. Breast cancerkills 35,000 women annually, more than anyother type of cancer.After the surgical removal of one or bothbreasts, a breast cancer patient’s chancesof survival depend, among other factors, onwhether or not the cancer is stimulated byestrogen. About one-fourth of all breastcancers are “estrogen-dependent.” Womenwith estrogen-dependent cancers are less li¬kely to suffer recurrences of the disease,and they tend to respond to therapy that de¬prives the cancer of estrogen either throughPolling PlacesBelow is a list of polling places for thevarious University dormitories. Thepolls are open today between 6 am and 7pm. If you do not live in a dormitory, call269-7977 for the location of your pollingplace.Pierce Tower, Woodward Court, Snell-Hitchcock: (5th ward, 27th precinct) RaySchool, 5631 S. Kimbark.Shoreland: (5th ward, 13th precinct)5479 S. Everett.Burton-Judson: (20th ward, 34th pre¬cinct) Fiske School, 6145 S. Ingleside.Greenwood: (5th ward, 6th precinct)5401 S. Ellis.International House, Breckinridge,Blackstone: (5th ward, 41st precinct)5805 S. Dorchester.Staff MeetingThere will be a Maroon staff meetingtonight at 7 pm in our office on the thirdfloor of Ida Noyes Hall to discuss plansfor the remainder of fall quarter. Bothnew and old staff members are invited toattend. the surgical removal of the source of the es¬trogen hormone, or by treatment with drugssuppressing the action of the hormone.Jensen developed a way to test for estro¬gen-dependence more than ten years ago,Continued on page 4 By Anna FeldmanStudent Government (SG) treasurer GregWendt will face impeachment proceedingstonight after being charged with putting un¬authorized ballots in a ballot box during theSG election on October 24. If convicted,Wendt, a member of the SG Executive Com¬mittee, may be removed from office.According to Wendt, on the day of the elec¬tions, he received in his mailbox fourmarked ballots from fraternity memberswith votes for David Stammler for the posi¬tion of fraternity representative to StudentGovernment. Wendt, who was serving asStammler’s campaign manager, broughtthe ballots to the International House pollingplace and deposited them in the ballot box.The SG election by-laws state that theproper procedure for voting is that a votercome to the polling place, present his stu¬dent identification card to an authorizedpoll-watcher, fill out a ballot, and then de¬posit it immediately, according to SarahBurke, vice president of SG and chairman ofits election committee. The ballots Wendtdelivered were unauthorized because thevoters were not present, they did not presentidentification, they did not fill out the ballotsin the presence of a poll watcher, and be¬ cause Wendt did not show identificationupon depositing the ballots.Wendt now denies any wrongdoing. “Fourmarked ballots were put into my custody toput into a ballot box, and that’s what I did,”he told The Maroon when asked about thedelivery of the ballots.Wendt states that when he reached I-House, “I said ‘here are four ballots fromAlpha Del.’ Shouldn’t she have demandedmy I D.?” The pollwatcher at the Interna¬tional House polling place later mentionedto Burke that Wendt had come to the ballotbox and deposited four ballots folded to¬gether. W'hen SG members counted the bal¬lots Friday night, according to PresidentJeff Elton, the ballots were found still foldedtogether, and were immediately impound¬ed.Elton said he then investigated the matteruntil the following Wednesday, when “all ofour facts were straight.”Sunday morning, at a meeting of the SGexecutive council, the Election and RulesCommittee, headed by Burke, alleged thatWendt had placed unauthorized ballots intoa ballot box, and that he had solicited votesfrom ineligible voters — in this case frater-Continued on page 4Economic Plans ‘Rhetoric’By Sherrie NegreaOf all the campaign rhetoric typicallyheard before a presidential election, no sin¬gle issue is perhaps more difficult to under¬stand than the economy. To help clear upsome of the confusion surrounding thisissue, Staff Writer Sherrie Negrea spoke tofour economists at the University for theirassessments of the candidates’ economicstrategies.Tax cuts, reduced federal spending, andless government regulation are among thecornerstones of the economic programs ofthe three major presidential candidates thisfall.But, according to four economists at theUniversity, many of the candidates’ cam¬paign statements are merely rhetoric. Thecandidates’ vague and sometimes shiftingpositions have made it difficult to preciselyevaluate their programs, the economistsagreed.Perhaps the most dramatic shift in anycandidates’ economic policy came lastmonth, when Reagan dropped his publicsupport of the Kemp-Roth tax bill, a billwhich would have cut taxes by 30 percentover three years. Reagan’s earlier supportof the bill had been based on the premisethat economic activity stimulated by the taxcut would create more than enough revenueto offset the cost of the reductions.But last month Reagan backed away fromthe Kemp-Roth tax bill, and said insteadthat he favors a $531 billion tax cut over thenext five years. He has also promised to bal¬ance the budget by 1983.By contrast, Carter has proposed oniy$188 billion in tax cuts and has said he doesnot believe the budget can be balanced by1983. Apart from the difference in theamounts, Carter’s tax program would con¬centrate on cutting business taxes whileReagan’s would trim personal incometaxes.Several economists at the University viewthe changes in Reagan’s tax program as amajor shift in his economic policy. Accord¬ing to Arnold Harberger, the Gustavus F.and Ann Swift Distinguished Service profes¬sor of economics, “Reagan was makingsome verv brave claims until a month or so Arnold Harberger Frederick Mishkinago when his experts actually developed adocument which made specific explicit proj¬ections. That document looked very mild, bycomparison with his rhetoric.”Another economist at the University, Fre¬derick Mishkin, agrees that Reagan’s strat¬egy has changed considerably. AlthoughReagan originally talked “about these verylarge tax cuts, he’s now backed off on them.He threw out all his original advisers, peo¬ple like Kemp and others, and the people hehas now are more traditional economistslike George Schultz and Alan Greenspan.”In view of this change in Reagan's plat¬form, Mishkin does not see much differencebetween the economic policies of Reaganand President Carter. “My view is that thedifference in the economics of the two can¬didates is probably very small,” he said. “Ithink Carter is fairly conservative on theseeconomic issues and not entirely differentfrom Reagan.”Although tax cuts constitute a major partof both Carter’s and Reagan’s economicprograms, only one of the economists inter¬viewed by The Maroon presently supportstax cuts.Robert Lucas, who teaches macroecono¬mics at the University, strongly opposes anyking of tax cut, on the grounds that it wouldbe inflationary. “The tax cuts are a bad ideabecause I don’t think they’re consistent with a budget balance. Now Reagan started thisoff by supporting this Kemp-Roth tax cut,which is just a disaster if it ever camethrough. It would just move us miles awayfrom a balanced budget — we’re not very-close as it is but that scheme would certain¬ly move us in the wrong direction.”Harberger, who served as chairman of theeconomics department here last year, isalso against a tax cut for the very reasonsCarter and Reagan are supporting it, name¬ly as a means to stimulate economic growth.“We don't need a tax cut to stimulate theeconomy,” he said. “You hardly ever need atax cut to stimulate the economy. In particu¬lar in our case, I believe that the federal re¬serve has all the power it needs to stimulatethe economy.”Harberger said the economy could be sti¬mulated by relaxing monetary policy andallowing the creation of more money, but headmitted that such a move would probablyincrease the rate of inflation.One economist who does favor a tax cut isSam Peltzman, a former member of theCouncil of Economic Advisers during theNixon administration, and currently a pro¬fessor in the Business School. He supports atax cut not only for its effect in stimulatingthe economy but because he thinks thattaxes are too highContinued on page 5HARRY S. TRUMANSCHOLARSHIP PROGRAMto encourage careersin public service$5000 Annual AwardSophomores with a strong academicrecord and some experience ingovernment and/or politicsCONTACT NANCY O’CONNOR,HARPER 254, 753-2726BY NOVEMBER 10\ / The Hedwig Loeb ScholarshipFOR UNDERGRADUATERESEARCH IN THE COLLEGE 'Research Proposals Now Being Accepted for the Winterand Spring Quarters of 1981Submit Proposals to: Dean of the CollegeHarper 209Deadline: November 28,1980Proposals must contain a description of the project andresearch method, an estimated budget indicating the quarterit is to be used, and a letter evaluating the proposal from amember of the Faculty.For research that requires use of a University facility (e.g.,laboratory) a letter agreeing to this use must be submittedby an appropriate member of the Faculty.Awards may range up to $600.00< JLutheran Campus Ministry Supper and Discussion Series:RELIGION, FAITH, ANDPOLITICAL LIFE1 j1.Nov. 4:• Surrogate Faith: Religious Values in Economicand Political TheoryRobin Lovin, Ethics, Divinity SchoolNov. 11 A Holy Cause: The Christian Right WingMartin Marty, Church History, Divinity SchoolNov. 18 Religious ‘Ideals’ in American Political LifeFranklin 1. Gamwell, Dean Divinity SchoolNov. 25 Faith and Political Life: Theological ReflectionsRobert Benne, Ethics, LSTCAUGUST ANA LUTHERAN CHURCH5500 South Woodlawn Ave.TIT+1+ Eucharist at 5:30Supper & Discussion at 6:00Tuesday evenings FtVi N\te Hqn.I-^-ooInternational House.<Q) (<§pSponsors By The School2—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, November 4,1980NEWS BRIEFSThe Ronnieand Jimmy ShowThe major networks are spending millionsof dollars on tonight’s coverage of the Presi¬dential Elections. You can see all their ex¬pensive wizardy, their colorful graphics,and their expert commentary on three colorTV’s at this evening’s Election Night Ex¬travaganza in Ida Noyes Hall. Runningfrom 7 pm until 8 am (or whenever the Pres¬idential winner is certain), the Student Ac-tivities-sponsored festivities are open to alland will feature food, concessions and freecoffee. The Pub will also be open to itsmembers.In conjunction with the Extravaganza,Chamberlin House will show the movie Des¬perate Journey, starring Ronald Reagan, inthe Ida Noyes Cloister Club. Shows will startat 7, 9 and 11 pm with admission $1.50. In aneffort to avoid political bias, ChamberlinHouse will also serve free peanuts.Gays Coming OutOne of the most agonizing questions homo¬sexuals face is “Coming Out’’, whether toparents, co-workers, friends, or administra¬tors. This Thursday, November 6, the Gayand Lesbian Alliance (GALA) is holding arap group on Coming Out in the second-floortrophy room of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 East59th Street, at 9:00 pm.As with all of their functions, they are wel¬coming both hetrosexuals and homosexuals,and those who are both in and out of the clos¬et. Not only for gays who are consideringcoming out, the rap group is also for thosewho have come out and for straight peoplewho are unsure about what to do if someonecomes out to them. “People whose room¬mate or best friend suddenly comes out to them have just as much adjustment to doand just as much trouble dealing with it asthe person who did the coming out does,’’said one member of the group.SG Election ResultsStudent Government has announced re¬sults from campus elections held October24. The following students will serve as rep¬resentatives in the assembly along with stu¬dents elected last spring:Freshman: Joe Walsh, Robin Patrowicz,Dave Eichenthal, Brad Hudson, Steve Barn¬hart.Pierce Tower: Brad Brittan.Woodward Court: Kittie Wyne.Shoreland: Rich Ehrlich, Jim Eccleston.Burton-Judson: Rick Szesny.Breckinridge/Blackstone/Greenwood:Charle Coffey, Bruce Eckert.Graduate School of Business: ChrisManos, John Binder, Mustafa Mohatarem,Phil McGuire.Biological Sciences Division: Mikul Garg,Ira Rubin.Social Sciences Division: Jamise Hopper,Loril Brown-Rezanka, John Martin, GeorgeKampstra.In addition, two students will appear be¬fore the Student Government Assembly to¬night to petition for the Physical SciencesDivision and Humanities Division seats.Robie Repair SetThe City of Chicago has allocated $30,000to the University for repair work on RobieHouse, the Frank Lloyd Wright building at58th St. and Woodlawn Ave.The money will probably be used to cor¬rect and reseal the drains on the terrace atthe west end of the house, according to PeterKountz, Director of Alumni Affairs. The Alumni Affairs office currently uses thebuilding as its headquarters. The leaks inthe drains have led to extensive leakage intothe building’s wine cellar, Kountz said.Neither Kountz nor Calvert Audrain,director of Physical Planning and Construc¬tion for the University, said they had re¬ceived official confirmation for the city’sapproval of the request for funds, which wasvoted on at the City Council’s September24th meeting. They said that they wouldawait this confirmation before committingthe money. The terms of the City Councilresolution specified that the work funded bythe grant be completed in slightly less thanyear from the date that the resolution wasapproved.Robie House has been owned by the Uni¬versity since 1963, and has served as the of¬fices of a variety of University organiza¬tions. Currently, the building is only open tothe public only for tours at 12 noon daily.Even at those times, only the two mainrooms, the living room and the dining room,may be entered. The remainder of the build- —Newsbriefs compiled by Henry OttoRobie Housemg is used for offices.Minor repairs and corrections of alter¬ations made by previous owners of the build¬ing have been taking place under the super¬vision of architect John Vinci, as moneybecomes available. Among these correc¬tions is work on the tuckpointing, restoringthe original raked horizontal joints in thebrickwork.The University eventually intends to total¬ly restore the dining room of the house, be¬cause that is the only room for which theUniversity still owns the original furnish¬ings. However, because the building is beingused to house the Alumni Office, a total res¬toration will not be feasible. Kountz saidthat the planned restoration will take amany as five years, and will include restor¬ing the original woodwork, windows, andgrills of the house. The final cost of the ren¬ovation has not been determined, but it is es¬timated to be several hundred thousand dol¬lars. —Margo HablutzelTHE VISITING FELLOWS COMMITTEEPresentsMAYOR COLEMAN YOUNGof Detroitin anADDRESS AND QUESTION-AND-ANSWER SESSIONMONDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 3:30 P.M.SOCIAL SCIENCES 122/The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, November 4, 1980—3CancerContinued from page 1when with DeSombre he identified the “es¬trogen-receptor” enzyme that bonds withthe estrogen molecule and enables it to acton the cancer cell. Working with GeorgeBlock, Jensen and DeSombre analyzed can¬cerous tissue obtained from mastectomiesin an effort to determine whether or not theestrogen receptors were present. Theylearned that “receptor-positive” cancerswould respond to endocrine therapy.In 1980, Jensen was awarded the $100,000Kettering Prize for this “most outstandingrecent contribution to the diagnosis or treat¬ment of cancer.” Jensen and Greene have now devised a .procedure for mass-producing the estrogenreceptor antibody in pure form. Armed withthis antibody, scientists should soon developa new, simpler, more accurate, and less ex¬pensive test for the receptor.The test used now marks the receptorswith radioactive estrogen, and has been per¬formed routinely in major medical centersfor several years. Although this test hasbeen recommended for all breast cancersby the National Cancer Institute, it costs be¬tween $150 and $200 and cannot be per¬formed in small hospitals because it re¬quires the use of an ultracentrifuge, adevice priced beyond the reach of small hos¬pitals. Smaller hospitals now send tissuesamples out for analysis, but some samples spoil during transport. An additional prob¬lem with the present test is that inaccura¬cies may result when the radioactive mole¬cules fail to bond with the receptormolecules, thus leaving the receptors unla¬beled.The new test replaces the radioactive es¬trogen with radioactive antibodies that linkto the receptor. Because the antibodies linkto the estrogen receptors and no other mole¬cules, they serve to measure the receptorsvery accurately. The procedures for classi¬fying cancers as “receptor-rich” or “recep¬tor-poor” may now become standarized.This new test will employ radioimmunoas¬say procedures already common in commu¬nity laboratories, thus reducing the cost ofthe procedure and eliminating the need totransport specimens.Jensen and Greene are working withAbbot Laboratories and expect to perfect acommercial version of the new test in as lit¬tle as six months.Jensen stressed the importance of the testin determining a patient’s prognosis and indeveloping a strategy for treatment follow¬ing a mastectomy. “All other factors beingequal,” Jensen said, “receptor-negativecancers recur more often and earlier.Knowing that a patient is receptor-negative,the clinician may want to apply aggressiveadjuvant treatment (preventative chemoth¬erapy) immediately after mastectomy.” Areceptor-positive patient has a better prog¬nosis, and further therapy may not be neces-ImpeachmentContinued from page 1nity members who did not reside in the fra¬ternity houses. In elections for the fraternityseat on SG, only students presently living inthe fraternities — including boarders — areeligible to vote or run for the seat. Frater¬nity members who reside outside the housesare not eligible.In an interview Sunday night, Wendt ad¬mitted soliciting votes from persons who didnot live in the house, but defended his ac¬tions by saying that the rules concerning thematter are unclear. “What is the legal defi¬nition of living in a house?” He maintainedthat, because memberswhose votes he soli¬cited use the fraternity address as theirmailing address, they should be consideredin-house members.The SG constitution specifies that the fra¬ternities’ representatives be “undergradu¬ate residents of fraternities.” Burke pointedto this as proof that out-of-house members,are forbidden to vote in the election of fra¬ternity representatives, though she refusedto comment on whether the issue of out-of¬house voters will be included in formalcharges against Wendt. If the out-of-housemembers issue is raised, it is likely thatWendt’s support of David Stammler, who isan out-of-house member himself, will be anissue. All candidates must be eligible to votefor the position they run for.At the executive council meeting Sundaymorning, Wendt did not try to deny his ac¬tions. According to the official minutes ofthe meeting, Wendt said that he would bewilling to give a signed statement admittinghis wrongdoings, that he would guaranteethat the incident would not recur, that he ex¬pected to be a model officer, and that hewould not run for a higher office.Also, according to Elton and ClarkeCampbell, chairman of the SG FinanceCommittee, Wendt said at the meeting thathe had not only turned in the ballots forStammler, but had also filled them out. “Hetold us that people came up to him anddidn’t know who to vote for,” said Campbell,“so he filled the ballots out for them andturned them in.”Wendt now denies he filled out the ballots.“I was not forging, faking or stuffing bal¬lots,” he said. He suggests that if he hadwanted to change the election, he could haveJohn MacquarrieLady Margaret Professor of Divinity at Oxford andCanon of Christ Church, Oxfordwill speak on“The Concept of Human Nature:A Modem View of Humanity and theCh ris tian TraditionA series of lectures held on successive Wednesdays at 4:30 p.m.Sponsored by St. Stephen’s House, the Catholic Theological Union,Disciples Divinity House, the Jesuit School of Theology, and RockefellerMemorial Chapel.November 5 - “Conscience”12 - “Commitment”ATTENTION GRADUATE STUDENTSREADING FRENCHPreparatory Course forThe Foreign Language Reading ExaminationGraduate students who wish to prepare for the Foreign Language Reading Exam:scheduled in Spring, 1981, can now register for a course especially designed to meettheir need.The University Extension, in cooperation with the Department of Romance Languagesand Literatures is offering on campus a NON-CREDIT course, equivalent to a two-quarter sequence, spanning a 15 week period:FH 106 Reading French for Graduate Students — MWF 8:30-10:00 amJan. 5 - April 24*Location to be announcedThe fee is $175 for the 15 week course. NO REFUNDS AUER FIRST WEEK. There will be a oneweek break during interim (week of March 23).N.B. University of Chicago student aid funds cannot be used for non-credit courseCourses must have a minimum enrollment of 15 students. Pre-registration is, therefore, essentialAbsolutely no auditors. If you wish to register, please complete your registration as soon aspossible at:CCE 1307 East 60th St., Room 121 M-F between 9 am and 5 pm. (753-3137)Deadline for registration is December 15,19S0.‘The reading examination in French will be given by the Test Administration on Monday, April 27,19H1 Classes have been arranged to avoid conflict with regularly scheduled classes, and to endimmediately prior to the Reading Exam for optimal results. For further information concerningReading Examinations, consult Spring Quarter Time Schedules, or call Test Administration,RC 201,3-3283.4—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, November 4, 1980 sary.Should the patient’s cancer recur, it maybe treated by removing the estrogen-secret¬ing glands (ovaries in younger women;adrenals or the pituitary in older women),or by administering massive doses of eitherestrogen (which works, paradoxically, tosuppress the action of the estrogen on thecancer), or doses of tamoxifen, a drug thatchemically opposes estrogen. Endocrinetherapy brings about remissions in approxi¬mately two-thirds of receptor-positivecancers.Jensen’s refined test may lead to futureresearch into preventative endocrine thera¬py. Some experiments along this line havebeen done in Norway, where researchers ob¬tained a slightly reduced rate of recurrenceby removing patients’ ovaries immediatelyafter mastectomies. This work was done be¬fore the receptor research, and cliniciansworking today can now limit such therapy tocancers that are estrogen-dependent.Greene and Jensen used rat-mouse hybridcells called hybridomas to synthesize theantibody used in the new test. These hybridcells were developed five years ago by ateam in England, in a process which beginswhen rats are immunized with a purified re¬ceptor obtained from mastectomy tissue.Antibody-producing cells from the spleensof the rats are then fused with cancerouswhite blood cells obtained from mice, and fi¬nally, the hybridomas are cloned to mass-produce the antibody.done so while working as a poll watcherhimself. He also now disclaims anything hesaid at the Sunday morning meeting. “I wasblown away. I was not prepared. Some¬where along the line the facts got messed upand I felt like I was being railroaded.”Wendt feels that the accusations againsthim are politically motivated. “Sarah and Iare both contenders for next year’s StudentGovernment presidency.” Burke deniedthis, however, and told The Maroon that “Iam presently vice-president, and that is theonly position I have in mind at this point.”“I feel that Sarah Burke and others havedecided to forward their own careers by try¬ing to turn me into the University of Chica¬go’s version of Richard Nixon,” Wendtsaid.Student Government secretary Mark Daycompared the dispute to a “streetfight,”saying “personalities and animosities havemade it a far more volatile issue than itneeds to be.” Elton defended Burke againstWendt’s charges that her actions were polit¬ically motivated, and said that “She did notlook upon the happenings as an opportunityto exercise a vendetta against GregWendt.”“We have an important function, and it’snot to kick members out,” Burke stated.“We’re doing a lot of important things;that’s what I want to focus on.”At the meeting tonight, SG members willbe asked to judge the facts of the matter andto determine what punishment, if any,Wendt should receive. If SG decides to con¬vict Wendt on any of the charges which maybe brought against him, they will have achoice between public censure and explu-sion as possible punishments.At tonight’s SG meeting, scheduled tobegin at 7 pm on the third floor of Ida NoyesHall, discussion of the charges againstWendt will be first on the agenda, followingroll call. The timing of the discussion of thematter, like so many of the facts of the case,is also a matter of dispute. Under normalparliamentary procedure, according toWendt, discussion of the accusations wouldbe “new business” and thus would comenear the end of the meeting. However, in itsmeeting Sunday, the Executive Committeevoted to call the matter “special business,”thus putting it first on the agenda. “Callingit ‘special’ inflates the issue and gives it afalse sense of urgency.”Economy Continued from page 1“It’s mainly an excuse to say a tax cut isgoing to have a desirable effect on the econ¬omy although it will in other ways,” Peltz-man said. “It’s desirable because I person¬ally would like to see lower taxes whether itdid that or not.”Peltzman emphasized that the major im¬pact on the economy will come from reduc¬tions in government spending, not from taxcuts. “Really what matters is how much thegovernment spends, and what fraction of in¬come the government spends,” he said.“The ultimate tax is what the governmentspends, not what it collects in revenues.”Peltzman, who has been asked to join ananti-inflation tax force for Reagan should hebe elected, said that the problem of balanc¬ing tax cuts with deductions in governmentspending is a major drawback of Reagan’seconomic policy. “One of the problems thathas come up with the Reagan proposal is hisproposal not to cut substantially spendingwhile he cuts taxes in the hope that by sti¬mulating the economy the total tax take willmake up for the deficit. That’s a very riskystrategy,” he said.Although many Reagan supporters be¬lieve that his economic policy is his chiefasset, few economists who spoke to TheMaroon highly commend Reagan on thisissue.Even Peltzman does not support Reagan’soverall economic program. “I do not thinkthat the general stance Reagan is takingright now conveys realistically the alterna¬tives,” he said. “There will have to be moresubstantial reductions in federal expendi¬tures to make his tax program balance thebudget, more substantial than he’s lettingon.”Peltzman added that it is “demogoguery”to think that taxes could be cut without re¬ducing government spending. He stressedthat Congress is a major obstacle to imple¬ menting any type of cut in federal spending“Realistically presidents can do very littleeven if someone came into office and saidthis program and that program is going tobe slashed, he’s got to get Congress to do it,”he said.None of the economists interviewed be¬lieve that Reagan will be able to cut taxes,balance the budget, and increase militaryspending all at the same time.“There’s no way that all those goals aregoing to be met,” said Mishkin, referring toReagan’s proposals. “My suspicion is thatReagan is not going to cut taxes to the extentthat he’s talking about.”Lucas also doubts the validity of Reagan’sproposals. “Reagan seems to have come along ways off (Kemp-Roth) and he isn’t talk¬ing about large tax cuts anymore. It’s hardto say what his position is,” he said.Carter’s economic record did not draw assharp criticism from these economists.Most agreed that the recession this year wasnot severe and questioned whether it hadhad a negative impact ori the economy.“The overall tone of Carter’s economicpolicy has been pretty reasonable,” saidMishkin. “The inflation which seems to besubsiding were not of his doing. We’ve had asituation was oil prices, in particular thisIran affair, just shot up There’s nothingCarter could have done about that,” hesaid.Lucas gave a similar view of Carter’s eco¬nomic record. “It seems to me that Carteris a little more sensible on fiscal policy(than Reagan). Even though he finally wentalong with a tax cut too, it’s a small one andit’s my guess he’ll try to minimize it.”Lucas, however, disagreed with Mishkinon the cause of the curent double-digit infla¬tion. Said Lucas: “Our inflation is a homemade product, not something you pin on theArabs or people overseas.” Lucas said that Sam Peltzman Robert Lucasprinting money is the major cause of infla¬tion.Peltzman criticized Carter for the sharpdecline in monetary' supply last year duringthe recession, and the recent^ upturn inmoney growth. He called this type of strate¬gy “the worst type of monetary policy.”None of the four economists interviewedpinned the cause of the recession directly onCarter, as the Republicans did in their partyplatform. “It’s not clear to me what theCarter administration did or didn’t do wasthe key factor in this recession,” Mishkinsaid. He conceded that economists still donot know what economic factors cause a re¬cession.The economists most harshly criticizedCarter for his recent proposals to curb un¬employment. Carter has called for an im¬mediate $12 billion anti-recession programwhich, he claims, will create at least 800,000jobs.Harberger said of this proposal: “Creat¬ing jobs has been sort of the perennial politi¬cian’s answer to the problem of unemploy¬ment. And if you carry that through to itslogical conclusions, since there’s alwayssome degree of unemployment with us, thegovernment would just grow and grow andgrow, constantly creating jobs in order to absorb up the unemployed.”Harberger said the problem should besolved instead by trying to find out what theflaws are in the labor market. He advocatesthe creation of a lower minimum wage forteenagers than for adults, an idea whichReagan has supportedThe four economists did not discuss any ofAnderson’s economic proposals in detail,except for his 50-50 plan which calls for a 50cent gasoline tax along with a 50 percent re¬duction in social security taxesBoth Mishkin and Harberger support theax on gasoline, but each for different rea¬sons. Harberger said the tax would reducecongestion on highways and lower world oilprices, while Mishkin favored it for conser¬vation and national security purposes.Peltzman said the tax proposed by Ander¬son would not have a material impact on im¬ported oil prices unless the whole industrial¬ized world raised a similar tax.Lucas, when asked about Anderson’s pro¬posal, mockingly replied, “I’m tempted tosay why don’t we talk about the socialist orlabor candidate rather than talk about An¬derson.” He added that although the taxwould reduce demand for gasoline, he didnot see why the tax was connected with so¬cial security.Jeer or Cheer — —Ronald Reagan inDESPERATE JOURNEYIt’s only a movie! Tonight -7,9,11 Ida NoyesHARVARD l r "THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOKENNEDY SCHOOL OF GOVERNMENT The University of Chicago THE DIVISION OF THE HUMANITIESDepartment of Music andIS LOOKING FOR FUTURE LEADERS Chinese Music Society THE DEPARTMENT OF ROMANCEIN PUBLIC AFFAIRS LANGUAGES AND LITERATURESLEARN ABOUT HARVARD'S MASTERS presentPROGRAMS IN- PUBLIC POLICY ERHU a lecture by- PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION• CITY & REGIONAL PLANNING RECITAL His ExcellencyTHE DUKE OF ALBAMEET: DOROTHY BAMBACH, DIRECTOR OFGRADUATE PROGRAMS Sin-Yan Shen. erhuYuan-Yuan Lee, piano Los intelectuales espanolesDATE: FRIDAY/ NOVEMBER 7,1980 yafWl GorgeA Nortf server Bated en el exilioFOR: CAREER SEMINAR ON GRADUATE Gams New PostureGomg to m# FarMANAGEMENT TRAINING FOR PUBLIC Audtorium E,wSECTOR CAREERS Nema tonal House >-*>r b*9*University of Chicago ha<muai ««m r«c* Friday, November 7,1980,4 P.M.1414 E 59 St, Chicago *ZHANG XlECHEN & Swift Lecture HallCONTACT: OFFICE OF CAREER COUNSELING November 8, 1980 wang guotong Emanap«norat 8.00 pun SH£ t£M6NG & U BiNGUJAN& PLACEMENT 753-1234 x<ang *iang leSwift Hall, Third FloorAll Students, All Majors, All Years Invited ticket*: * 00 (*.00 ililHU)•ea 31l-r*a-S*«« (TO* u«n»*fklt, CMeaoo H. The lecture is open to the publicThe Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, November a, 1980 —5ChicagoChamberBraSS Concert Season’80-81Roger MetkaThomas Parrfoft, trumpetsDiana Nielsen, hornSteven Gamble, tromboneRichard Frazier, tuba"The CHICAGO CHAMBER BRASS was establishedin 1977 to bring exciting performances of the finestbrass music to people of all ages. This dynamicbrass quintet has distinguished Itself in the Chicagoarea through formal recitals, pops’ concerts andinnovative educational programs,'FALL SERIES - Music by Adler, Bach, Beethoven, Byrd. Gershwin,Persichetti and ScheldtMonday. November 1 1900 &00 pmGrace Lutheran Church7300 W. DivisionRiver Forest. IllinoisFriday, November 7, I960 WO pmRockefeller Chapel5860 S, WoodlawnChicago, IllinoisSaturday, November a, 1980 WC pmSt. Luke's Church939 HlnmanEvanston, IllinoisSunday. November 9. 1900 730 pmSt. James Cathedral66 £ HuronChicago, IllinoisAdmtsaion$5.00 General$2.50 Senior citizens 4 studentsFor ticket Information call 327-2909 Md -n pert byAm Couno-aaSPECIAL 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 &r® GM QUALITYSBMCt PARTSGXHXBAJL MOTOftS PASTS DTYT5J0NKeep t hat Crrul CM hurling If ilh CL.\ L I.\ t. CM Haris72nd & Stony Island 684-0400Open Evenings and Sunday Ports Open Sot. 'til noon2 M11»■*s - 5 Mmutes AwayFrom The UNIVERSITYSPECIAL DISCOUNT PRICESfor all STUDENTS andFACULTY MEMBERSJust present your University of Chicago IdentificationCord. As Students or Faculty Members you ore entitledto special money-saving DISCOUNTS on VolkswagenParts, Accessories and any new or used Volkswagenyou buy from Ruby Volkswogen72nd & Stony Island 684-0400Open Evenings and Sundays Parts Open Sat. 'til noon— ■ I. II . I J6—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, November 4, 1980 A WEEK OF G.A.L.A.EVENTS:Nov. 6Thursday - RAP GROUP: “Coming Out”9 PM Trophy Room IdaNoyesNov. 7Friday - G.A.L.A. Disco Dance 9 PMIda Noyes Theatre, 3rdFloor, $1Nov. 9Sunday - Movie “Sunday Bloodv Sun¬day” Kent 107 8 P.M. $1.50* Sale Dates: 7 7/5 thru 7 1/8/801 FRESH CENTER CUTI PORK CHOPS $F,T1 $139| FIRST CUT 1 Lb. |1 FRESH BONELESS1 PORK roast SH j1 HYGRADE1BRAUNSCHWEIGER 7T pkg. 1FROZEN TREASURE ISLEPEELED & DEVEINEDSHRIMPS $099W Pkg.12 oz.NEWLYWEDSENGLISHMUFFINS 5^^ 6 PackCOUNTRY DELIGHTSOUR CREAM 79%DAWN DISHWASHINGDETERGENT $|29King Size fCELLOTOMATOES 49%2o,GOLDEN RIPEBANANAS 29%b)1U.CFINER FOODSSERVING53rd PRAIRIE SHORESKIMBARK PLAZA 2911 VERNONWhere You Are A Stranger But Once!« ' it"l f PREVIEW PERFORMANCESAT 8:30 onTUESDAY,NOV.4 and WED. N0V.5PREVIEW PRICES: s3.50 and s2.00 discountOn Sale at Mandel Box Office753-3581Subscription Series tickets still available.YOO'U DO MORE THAN CHEERFOR THIS X DALLAS CHEERLEADER!THf HIM THAT'S AS H{W AS TODAYS HCADUHCS!STARRING BAMBI WOODS AS DEBBIEMISTY WINTJR • PAT AUUBC • ROBYN BY BO - ARCADIA LAKE • GEORGETTE SANDERS RIKA I 0 NEAL • PAULA HEADThursday, November 67:00, 9:00, J 1:00Kent 107SECOND FEATURE:Bedtime Worries'A Chamberlin House Productionn\ J!LETTERS TO THE EDITORFac Ex Labor?To the Editor:Mr. Arthur’s suggestion that Fac Ex suf¬fers from a “labor shortage” is either mis¬leading or simply not true. If he means by a“labor shortage” that there aren’t enoughpeople working he is, as far as my experi¬ence there goes, wrong. If, on the otherhand, he means by a “labor shortage” thatpeople aren’t working enough, he’s deadright, but a little misleading. In short, theUniversity is getting ripped off. While Iworked at Fac Ex none of the full time em¬ployees worked for more than a couple ofhours each day. Much of the time theytalked, read, slept, or watched television.Their lunch breaks often lasted severalhours. Many times they left before 4:30.It is true that Fac Ex handles a great dealof mail. The work was not easy, but it wasclearly not too much.From what I could understand, the FacEx office has never been much different.One of the employees there told me abouttimes when she had seen other employees(not still there) throw away mail becausethey didn’t feel like sorting it. The fact isthat Fac Ex is not understaffed or under¬funded, but rather inefficient and slow. FacEx did not take so long to deliver the mail (ifit all) because there was so much mail or sofew employees, but because they took solong. I doubt that much of that haschanged.Name withheld upon request.Labor Party FrontTo the Editor:Where have all the Platonic Humanistsgone? You might be interested to know thatthe Platonic Humanists is a front organiza¬tion for a group of psuedo-marxists calledthe Labor Party. They are very strange and fascinating people, with some very weirdideas.They believe that “Plato was right” (as in“Hitler was right”): some people are gold¬en souls, some brass, and some, yes, lead.The golden souls, of course, are the groupthey identify with and they believe that theyare engaged in a struggle with a massiveconspiracy of evil, a battle that has beengoing on since the time of Alantis. Through¬out the ages this holy war has pitted suchgood guys as Plato and Beethoven againstsuch bad buys as Aristotle and Wagner.Things have gotten rather less titanic now-a-days, however, and its them against Kiss.Ho-hum, back to my comic books.Alan MickFour Protest PornTo the Editor:In a Chamberlin House meeting on Thurs¬day, October 9, the proposal for the presen¬tation of pornographic motion pictures as afund raising project was approved by a ma¬jority vote. We, the undersigned, are dis¬senting members of Chamberlin House whodo not approve of pornographic motion pic¬tures as an acceptable means for raisinghouse funds. We wish to disassociate our¬selves from this presentation, and from allactivities sponsored by funds earned fromthis presentation.Paul ThomasPaul FiedlerThomas HeitjanDumb BikersTo the Editor:It is not a new observation but I will makeit once again for the record. It is both dan¬gerous and illegal to ride in the wrong direc¬tion on a one-way street. It would be hard totell in Hyde Park or Kenwood The majorityof the cyclists in this area, even those ofmoderate intelligence, insist on risking theirINTERNATIONAL HOUSE CAFETERIA, WEL COMES YO U TOAUTHENTIC JAPANESE DINNERWITH SAKE AND FRESH SUSHI-BARAND TEA CEREMONY«Wednesday, November 5Tea Ceremony at 6:00 p.m.Dinner 4:45 ■ 7:00p.m. Decision ’80 By Jim Reedylives in this absurd practice.I have heard this practice defended in twoways, both assinine. The first defense is pre¬dicated upon the belief that riding againstthe traffic makes one more visible to oncom¬ing traffic. This is incorrect. Drivers seeonly what they expect to see. Thus, sincethey do not expect to see a clown riding inthe wrong direction on a one-way street,they tend not to see him/her. Even moredangerous, traffic at intersections is blind tothe cyclist going in the wrong direction. Thedriver who hits the cyclist broadside willnever have seen him/her.The second defense is even more assinine,and it is a bit arrogant as well. The peoplewho use this defense claim that their time istoo valuable to bother paying attention towhich way the traffic is supposed to flow.They certainly cannot go one block out oftheir ways. (A variation on this theme is toclaim that going the w rong way allow’s themto avoid unsavory areas — the logic hereabslutely escapes me.) Even parents with achild in the back have been seen riding weston 56th St., or north on Kimbark between theMidway and 55th St. I would rephrase theirprobable argument to read as follows: Mytime is too valuable to protect my life andthat of my child. Interesting.Ronald F SearsLast Letter on FeeTo the Editor:As a student of economics and a politicalnon-extremist, I am stung by the charges inthese columns that the opponents of the Stu¬dent Activities Fee have overlooked themore important matter of tuition increases,or are motivated by a political ideologywhich is deficient in its sense of community.First, tuition, on average and real terms. has remaind constant since 1970. There are.simply, no tuition increases to make anissue of. Second, as one who came here as astudent in the College more than 20 yearsago, I feel a great loyalty to the communitythat is the University of Chicago, and haveno difficulty acknowledging that extra-cur¬ricular activites contribute to this communi¬ty. However, inasmuch as community com¬prises both obligation and voluntary-participation, it would seem that extra-cur¬ricular activities — in what has usually beenthought of as a community of scholars —ought to be the quintessence of voluntarismThat the administration of President Greyhas held otherwise makes me wonder whattype of community they may wish to presideover.It is surely not overly ideological to em¬phasize that the notion of community mustbe used with care in justifying collectivemeasures. Certainly that would be the feel¬ing of the ideologically diverse groups thatoppose, to name a few, taxation, or censor¬ship. or the military draft.John MartinLetters PolicyThe Maroon welcomes letters to the edi-jtor. We request that writers limit their let- jters to 500 words, and demand that all let-iters be typewritten and triple-spaced. All jletters must be signed by an individual, and,should include that person’s telephone'number if the author wishes to be consultedif his letter must be edited. We reserve theright to edit all letters, although we rarelybother to do so. Send letters to The ChicagoMaroon, Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St.,Chicago, IL 60637Considering an MBA?Visit with a representative from theSMU MBAMBA FORUM LAKE SHORE CENTERNOV. 7 & 8NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITYEspecially suited to humanities,science and engineering undergradsIf you can’t come call toll free 1—800/527-6817Edwin L Cox School of BusinessSouthern Methodist UniversityDallas, Texas 75275The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, November 4, 1980—7SPORTSStiffs, Ed’s Hope for Hanna BowlBy David GruenbaumThe Hanna Bowl....Twenty four teamswant to go, only one undergraduate teamand one grad team will make it...Who willthey be? Favorites at this point have to bethe Stiffs and Ed’s Bar and Grill. Bothteams finished with strong undefeated sea¬sons. The Stiffs defeated last year’s champi¬on. the Junkyard Dogs, without using quar¬terback Mark Meier, and blew away a goodteam, Res Ipsa Loqutar, 17-0 in a gameslowed by penalties.Ed’s Bar and Grill capped off their regu¬lar season by mauling the Commuters. Inquite conceivably one of the best perfor¬mances of the year. Brian Holmgren threw 3touchdown passes, ran for 3 more touch¬downs, and made 3 key interceptions. Holm¬gren threw passes to everyone on Ed’s, hit¬ting receivers Peter Janicki and DougBarge several times for key passes. Per¬haps the best play of the game came at theconclusion of the half when Holmgren,knowing there was only time for one play,took the snap, rolled left eluding all threeCommuter rushers as he moved back to thecenter of the field, and threw a 30-yard pass off-balance into the endzone for a touch¬down.Other teams to watch are the No. 2 rankedWabuno Bay Buccaneers, who destroyed thehighly regarded Chicago Seven I 48-20 intheir final game. Allan Burns enjoyed a fineday at quarterback, throwing importantpasses to his big receivers Kevin Tetsworthand Brett Schaffer. The No. 3 ranked Capi¬talists have developed a high powered of¬fense behind quarterback Tim Dove andcould explode to beat anyone.The odds-on favorite to win the under¬graduate is Chamberlin, the only undergradteam to look good throughout the entire sea¬son. The comeback grad team of the yearhas to be the Big Med Machine, who over¬came an 0-2 start and a 34-0 thrashing at thehands of the Capitalists to win their lastthree games, upsetting Epstein’s Animalsand Points and Co. along the way, therebymaking it into the playoffs. In undergradu¬ate competition, the Dews Brothers per¬formed a similar feat. After losing their firstgame to Upper Rickert 8-0, the DewsBrothers recruited players from their houseand won their last three games, upsettingthe favored Breckinridge in the finale to be¬come league champions. In other sports, last year’s champion, theCommuters, upset the favorite, Henderson,in men’s volleyball Henderson should stillbe able to hang on to win the red league, asthey have already beaten Hitchcock, theteam they are tied with. Tufts leads theWhite League with a 6-0 mark. Suffer NoGuilt and Broadview are both 3-0 and leadthe graduate league. In women's playLower Wallace and Snell lead the whiteleague with 3-0 marks, while in the redleague, Law School is 4-0 and Salis¬bury/Dodd is 3-0.In ultimate frisbee, Chamberlin, LowerRickert and Flying Circus lead their lad¬ders. The early rounds of handball actionhave been pre-tournament favorites, ElliotLax of Lower Rickert and Eli Seaman ofUpper Rickert move through the earlyrounds with ease.In women’s tennis Vesha Martick of Snellmeets Beth Zimmerman of Halex in thefinals. Finally, in men’s tennis, FernandoCavero has advanced to the finals, beatingUpper Rickert’s John Rutkauskas, while hisexpected opponent, Peter Kang, was upsetby John Kotz of Compton. Kotz must nowplay Hitchcock’s Tom Jilly in the semifi¬nals.Undergraduate1. Hale (15)2. Bye3. Breckinridge4. Fishbein5. Dews Brothers (15)6. Bye7. Dudley8. Upper Rickert-Lower Rickert winner9. Filbey (14)10. Bye11. Lower Flint12. Hitchcock13. Chamberlin (6)14. Bye15. Tufts (12)16. Bye ResidenceChampionIndependent1. Ed's Bar and Grill (4)2. Vagrants3. Commuters (7)4. Psi Upsilon (11) UndergraduateChampionindependentChampionGraduate1. Smegma Breath II (8)2. Bye3. Chicago Seven I (9)4. Res Ipsa Loqutar5. The Stiffs (1)6. Bye7. Big Med Machine (10)8. Bovver Boys9. Capitalists (3)10 Bye11. Junkyard Dogs (5)12. Flying Cockroaches13. Wabuno Bay Buccaneers (2)14. Bye15. Manifest Destiny (13)16. Bye All-University ChampionGraduateChampion Football LeagueUndergraduateRed•Hale* Lower FlintSalisburyVincentShoreyWhite‘Dews Brothers‘Breckinridge‘Lower Rickert‘Upper RickertMicheisonBlue‘Filbey‘DudleyUpper FlintFallersThompsonGreen•Chamberlin‘FishbeinHendersonDodd/MeadAlpha DeltaBlue‘Capitalists‘Big Med MachinePoints & Co.Epstein’s AnimalsChicago Seven IIDead PopesGreen‘Wabuna Bay Buccaneers‘Chicago Seven I‘Bovver BoysNuclear WarheadsGenuine RiskYellow•Tufts•HitchcockComptonBradburyIndependent‘Ed's Bar and Grill‘The Commuters*Psi Upsilon‘The VagrantsTeam ChumpSons of MofoGraduateRed‘Smegma Breath ll•Manifest DestinySick DogsS.R.S.‘Flying CockroachesSamuraisBlue‘Capitalists‘Big Med MachinePoints & Co.Epstein's AnimalsChicago Seven 11Dead PopesGreen‘Wabuno Bay Buccaneers‘Chicago Seven I‘Bovver BoysNuclear WarheadsGenuine RiskWhite‘The Stiffs‘Junkyard Dogs‘Res Ipsa LoqutarI.B.M. W43200W33220W L4 03 12 21 30 4W L4 03 12 2I 30 4W533211W L4 03 12 21 30 4W L3 02 11 20 3W543210W LW L5 03 23 22 3141 4W L4 03 12 21 30 4Pre-Play PlayoffIntramural Top Tenl..The Stiffs2. Wabuno Bay Buccaneers3. The Capitalists4. Ed's Bar and Grill5. Junkyard Dogs Deja-Vus6. Chamberlin7. The Commuters8. Smegma Breath 119. Chicago Seven I10 Big Med MachineTeams to Watch : Psi U, Tufts, Manifest Destiny,Filbey, Dews Brothers, Hale mHI§p;■4:m*m8—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, November 4, T980SPORTSNetters Win Own Tournamentto End Season on Strong Note Knox Rallies in SecondHalf to Beat GriddersBy Kittie WyneThe Maroons beat Aurora and LakeForest Saturday to win the University ofChicago Invitational Volleyball Tournamentin the Field House.Despite their sporadic performance, theMaroons were able to defeat Aurora in thetournament’s opening match in five games.In the first game the score was tied at 4-4until first-year student Randi Wagnerserved 10 straight points to give theMaroons the lead at 14-4. Although Aurorarallied to win several of these points back,the Maroons hung on to win the game by ascore of 15-12.The Maroons became more consistent inthe second game of the match, demolishingAurora 15-5. However, Aurora rebounded tobet the Maroons in the third game 15-7, andagain in the fourth game, this time by ascore of 15-13, after the Maroons lost a leadof 13-5.The seesaw battle continued into the finalgame, when Aurora came back from an 11-2deficit only to lose at 15-13.Aurora went right on to meet Lake Forestwhile the Maroons rested. Lake Forest fin¬ished off Aurora in winning in three straightgames, with scores of 15-8, 15-9, and 15-12.The Foresters exhibited strong, confidentplaying as they walked through their first match of the day.The Maroons returned to the court to takeon Lake Forest, who had beaten them in amatch earlier this fall. The Maroons startedthe game slowly, until Janet Torrey took theserve at 7-10 to serve five straight points.When the Maroons regained the serve, BevDavid came off the bence to serve threestraight points, leading the Maroons to a15-10 win.Lake Forest came back to win the secondgame 15-6, but the Maroons resumed the of¬fensive in the third game, with help fromblocking by Celeste Tracie and Karin VanSteenlandt.The fourth and final game of the matchsaw the Maroons take a quick lead, allow atie, and then pull ahead for good after sever¬al hard-fought rallies.Coach Rosie Resch said she was verypleased with her team’s performance.“They’re starting to play as a team, whichtakes time to develop, especially this yearwith so many freshmen.’’ Resch singled outthe team’s attack and blocking as the re¬sults of improved teamwork. She also notedthat the tournament Saturday was the lasthome game for the team’s two seniors,Mary Klemundt and Janet Torrey. TheMaroons will play one more game this sea¬son, at Wheaton College on November 10. By Michael OcchioliniKnox College held the Maroon footballteam scoreless in the second half, over¬coming a 17-10 halftime deficit to defeatChicago by a score of 31-17.Saturday’s game was strange in thateach half was dominated by one team. Inthe first half, the Chicago offense ran atwill against Knox’s defense, while at thesame time shutting down the Knox offense.The second half, however, was dominatedby Knox, when their reorganized defenseshut down the Maroons’ running game.The first half was highlighted by the run¬ning of the Maroons’ Nick Filippo, whogained the majority of his 120 yards in theearly going. Chicago scored with 11:38 leftin the first quarter, on a seven yard run byFilippo. Chicago made the score 10-0 on a29 yard field goal by Dean Carpenter,towards the end of the first quarter.Knox opened the scoring in the secondquarter, when Craig Behm had a sixtyyard punt return for a touchdown. Behm'sreturn came on a shanked punt by JeffForeman. The ball bounced in front of aMaroon defender, and Behm unexpectlvfielded the ball, beating the only contain¬ment man on that side of the field. Knoxset up a wall of blockers, and Foreman, thelone defender, had no chance of stoppingBehm. Chicago came right back on atwenty yard run by Filippo, as theMaroons took a 17-7 lead. Knox pulled towithin four at the half with a 32 yard fieldgoal.The Maroons dominated Knox in thefirst half, shutting down both their runningand passing game. The two Knox’ scorescame on special teams’ play, not on anylong, sustained drives. Maroon blockersknocked Knox linemen around almost atwill, creating large holes for the Maroonbackfield, especially Filippo. The Maroonshad one touchdown called back on a hold¬ing penalty, negating a potential thirdscoring run by Filippo. Despite their al¬most total control of the first half action,Chicago was unable to build a command¬ing lead.The halftime discussion in the Knoxlocker room must have been worthwhile;the restructured defense stopped theMaroon running game cold. Chicago was unable to score in the second half, whiletheir strong first half defense was sudden¬ly riddled by the passing and running ofquarterback Jim Wise. Wise had a 43 yardrun in the third quarter, and threw a six¬teen yard touchdown pass in the fourth.Knox scored twenty-one unansweredpoints in the second half, rallying to win bya score of 31-17.It was a disappointing loss for theMaroon football team, coming off a winlast weekend against Ripon, a team consi¬derably better than Knox.Chicago faces Carleton College in theirlast game of the season, this Saturday atStagg Field. Starting time for the game is1:30.Rugby Losesto Great LakesBy Tim BlackmanThe Rugby Club lost its Homecominggame on Saturday to Great Lakes NavalStation by a score of 7-4.Great Lakes arrived with only fourteen ofthe fifteen required players, and asked Chi¬cago to supply the extra man.At the ten minute mark in the first half,Chicago scored a field goal due to a penaltyon Great Lakes for illegal procedure. GreatLakes evened the score at 3-3, after Chicagomade a crucial mistake on its own twentyyard line. The Maroons missed an excellentopportunity to go ahead before halftime, butwere unable to put the ball to the groundafter a strong forward rush.The second half was marred by numerouspenalties against Chicago, many beingquestionable calls by the referee. Tempersflared on both sides when a late tackle onChicago's Kin Watkins resulted in some badfeelings. Great Lakes scored a try withtwenty minutes to go, as the referee missedwhat the Maroons claimed was an obviousoffsides call against Great Lakes. Thesmaller and less experienced Chicago clubmaintained the pressure throughout the sec¬ond half, but could not get the equalizer de¬spite some fine rushes. Great Lakes won bya score of 7-3.The Rugby Club’s next game is Saturdayat Lincoln Park.Axinn Leads Harriers to Second in ConferenceBy Michael OcchioliniMike Axinn won the race and Chicagocame in second out of nine teams in the Mid¬western Conference Championship at Wash¬ington Park last Saturday.Axinn, a third-year College student, camein first in a field of 59 runners, winning in atime of 25:18.2. It was the second year in arow that Axinn has won the championship,and he won it easily, beating the closestcompetitor by nineteen seconds.Carleton won the overall championship,registering a team total of 21 points. Therewas a difference of 53 points between Carle¬ton and second-place Chicago. Carleton con¬tinues to dominate the Midwestern crosscountry competition, winning the meethandily for second consecutive year.The first five men for each team count inthe scoring, and Carleton runners finished2,3,4,5, and 7 for a total of 21 points. Carle-ton’s tenth man did not even score, yet hewould have been a first-place runner for fiveother teams.Chicago did well in taking second place,beating third-place Beloit by 32 points. Thetop five runners for Chicago were Axinn, Rich Heinle, Tom Matiski, Dave Green, andArt Knight. They placed 1,13,16,19, and 24respectively.Axinn took the lead early, maintaining iteasily throughout the race. Carleton had apack of five runners following Axinnthroughout the race, a fact which decidedthe team competition fairly early. Chicago’sHeinle ran a strong race, placing 13th with atime of 27:06.7. Chicago fell in the 13-24place range, and was unable to challengethe strong group of Carleton runners. Matis¬ki and Green both ran a good race, andKnight finished well, considering the stressfracture in his foot which has kept him fromparticipating at full strength.Axinn was pleased with his time, althoughit was not his fastest of the season. He saidhe was slightly disappointed that no onewent out with him, for he had little competi¬tion throughout the race.Coach Ted Haydon was pleased with histeam’s performance, being that it was the“best we could hope to do under the circum¬stances, considering the strength of Carle¬ton.” Haydon thought that Axinn “ran agood race,” and was obviously pleased that K£he retained his title.Chicago competes in the NCAA DivisionIII Regional Championships on Saturday,November 8.Mike Axinn105Team ScoresCarletonChicagoBeloitGrinne!CoeCornellMonmouthLawrenceKnoxUniversity of ChicagoRunners— Top FiveMike Axinn 1 25:18.2Rich Heinle 13 27:06.7Tom Matlskf 16 27:21.519 .27:25.6“ 27:41.7 mThe Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, November 4, 1980—9CALENDARTuesdayWomen’s Exercise Class: Meets 9:30 am. Ida Noyesdance room.Modern Greek Table: Meets at the Blue Gargoyleat 12 noon to speak Greek.Rockefeller Chapel: Organ recital 12:15 pm by Ed¬ward Mondello.WHPK: Avant-Garde hour Maximum-Minimalismfestival-interview with Steve Reich. 3-6 pm.Dept of Microbiology: “Regulation of DN A RepairFunction in E. Coli” speaker Dr. David Mount.4:00 pm. Cummings 11th fl seminar room.Aikido: Meets 4:30 pm, Bartlett gym.Kundalini Yoga: Meets 5:00 pm. Ida Noyes EastLoungeAugustana Lutheran Church: Celebration of Eu¬charist at 5:30. pizza supper and discussion 6-7-“Surrogate Faith: Religious Values in Economicand Political Theory" speaker Robin Lovin.Gymnastics Club: Informal Practice. 5:30 pm,Bartlett gym.Hillel: Israeli folkdancing, 7:00 pm, Ida Noyes 3rdfloor.WednesdayPerspectives: Topic — "The Gasohol Contro¬versy” guests Terry Alston, Joseph Asbury andJohn Block. 6:09 am. channel 7.Rockefeller Chapel: Holy Communion 8:00 am.CARD: Anti-registration on the Quad 10-2. Draftcounseling offered.Middle East Center: Persian Circle — meeting atnoon in Kelly 413.Rockefeller Chapel: Carillon concert, 12:15 pm,Robert Lodine.Commuter Co-op: Get-together12:30 pm Basement of Gates-Blake.Crossroads: English classes for foreign women.2:00 pm.Dept of Chemistry: "Purification and Propertiesof the Guanine Nucleotide —Binding RegulatoryComponent of Adenylate Cyclase" speaker AlfredGilman. 4:00 pm, Cummings room 101.Center for Cognitive Sciences: “Adaptation.Learning and Inference” speaker John Holland,4:00 pm, SS 122.Gymnastics Club: Informal practices 5:30 pm,Bartlett gym.Women’s Track and Field: Organizational meeting7:00 pm, H. C. Fieldhouse classroom.Badminton Club: Meets 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes gym¬nasium.University Feminist Organization: Women’s RapGroup. 7:30 pm, in the Women's Center, 3rd floor Blue Gargoyle.Hyde Park A1 Anon: Meets 8:00 pm. First Uni¬tarian Church, 57th and Woodlawn. Info471-0225.Science Fiction: Meeting 8:00 pm in Ida Noyes, Ev¬eryone welcome.Hunger Concern Group: Meets 8:30 pm. Ida Noyesrm 217.ThursdayPerspectives: Topic “Biomas in this Decade”guests Joseph Katz. John Harkness, and MartyBernard, 6:09 am. channel 7.Women’s Exercise Class: meets 9:30 am, Ida NoyesCampusFilmBy Mike AlperYou Only Live Once (Fritz Lang, 1937):For his second American feature, Langonce again took a potentially sordid andsensational story and turned it intosomething much more. Henry Fondaand Sylvia Sydney star as a pair of inno¬cent outlaws, who must struggle tomaintain a sense of their own innocenceagainst the onslaught of an indifferentworld. One of Lang’s most visually ar¬resting films, thanks to the superlativecinematography of the lengendary LeonShamroy. Tuesday, Nov. 4, at 8 in Quan-trell. Doc: $1.00.4Desperate Journey 1942 Ronald Reagan,Errol Flynn Reagan plays the bomb¬dropping member of an air force crew dance room.Augustana Lutheran Church: Eucharist andbreakfast, 7:30 am. 5500 S. Woodlawn.Eastern Orthodox Divine Liturgy: 8:00 am, Rock¬efeller Chapel.La Table Francaise: meets at 12 noon in the BlueGargoyle to speak French.Episcopal Church Council: Noon Eucharist atBond Chapel.Italian Table: Meets 12 noon at the Blue Gargoyleto speak Italian.Aikido: Meets 4:00 pm, Bartlett gym.Physics Colloquium: "Studying the Structure ofthe Nucleon” speaker James Pilcher, 4:30 pm,Eckhart 133.shot down in Germany. After the heroesmake a clever attempt to escape theenemy, they are captured and taken to aprison camp. Once there, the boys teasethe commandant unmercifully, who de¬cides they should be kept until the war isover. But these cocky Americans knowthe enemy will be defeated soon, so theydon’t panic. Instead they enjoy the luxu¬ry of having a few evil and fat Germansaround. Since heroes must live a heroiclife, that heroic escape is always justaround the corner. Watch Ronnie and hiscompanions fight the bad guys andstrike a victory for the American way oflife. 7,9,11 tonight, Ida Noyes Hall; $1.50Chamberlin House —Ben JacksMagnificent Obsession (Douglas Sirk,1953): Sirk was the leading director ofHollywood melodramas in the ’50’s; hisreputation is on the rise today, due ingreat part to his strong influence on thework of Fassbinder and others of theNew German Cinema. In comparison toStahl, Sirk’s Magnificent Obsessionseems to be sent on another planet. In¬stead of letting the story speak for itself,Sirk milks every perverse implication hePOST LIBRISCOFFEE HOUSENOV. 7, 15, 21, 28 DEC. 59:30 P.M.-l :30 A.M. FROG & PEACHIda NoyesFood, Free Coffee Kundalini Yoga: Meets 5:00 pm. Ida Noyes EastLounge.Zen Meditation: Meets 6 30 pm. Ida Noyes.Chicago Debating Society: Practice at 7:00 pm.Meeting at 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes East Lounge.Film: "Debbie Does Dallas" and “Bedtime Wor¬ries” 7, 9 and 11 pm, Kent 107.Organization of Black Students: Meeting at 7:30pm, Reynolds Club Lounge. Please note change oflocation.Orthodox Christian Fellowship: meeting 7:30 pm,Ida Noyes Library.Law School Films: “Duck Soup” 8:30 put. LawSchool Auditorium.can out of it, using exaggerated angleshots, overstated color, and flamboyantacting to elaborate on the simplistic plot.Out of such a superabundance of “treat¬ment,” Sirk created some of the mostpersonal films every made in Hol¬lywood. Wednesday, Nov. 5, at 9 in Quan-trell. Doc; $1.00.Blaise Pascal (Roberto Rossellini, 1972):Part of a series Rossellini made for Ita¬lian television tracing the developmentof modern European civilization throughits leading thinkers. Unseen. Thursday,Nov. 6, at 8 in Quantrell. Doc; $1.50.Duck Soup (Leo McCarey, 1937): The ri¬diculous and the sublime are usuallycited as opposite extremes. Duck Soupreconciles them, as the Marx Brothersdemolish the Kingdom of Freedonia inwhat is their most sustained effort in an¬archic comedy. Groucho plays Rufus T.Firefly (what’s the T. for?), newly ap¬pointed President of Freedonia, Chicoand Harpo play spies, and the ubiquitousMargaret Dumont plays, well, MargaretDumont. Thursday, Nov. 6, at 8:30. Law328-5999Direct from DeKolbAS LOW AS $35 INTERNATIONALCAREER?A representativewill be on the campusWEDNESDAYNOVEMBER 12, 1980to discuss qualifications foradvanced study atAMERICANGRADUATE SCHOOLand job opportunitiesin the field ofINTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENTInterviews may be scheduled atDIRECTOR OF PLACEMENTAMERICAN GRADUATE SCHOOLOF INTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENTThunderbird CampusGlendale, Arizona 85306 VERSAILLES5254 S. DorchesterWELL MAINTAINEDBUILDINGAttractive 1 Vj andV/r Room StudiosFurnished or Unfurnished$2181. $320Based on AvailabilityAt Campus Bus Stop324-0200 Mrs. CroakBLUE GARGOYLECOFFEE HOUSEThursday, Nov. 69:00- 12:00 p.m.JAZZRandall Murray, TrumpetTeny Llorens, Piano andJulie Less, PoetCoffee, Teas,Baked Goods, Etc.TEST PREPARATION FORUaScawi Aokmssioi TestGubmii Mmmokit Aom TtttInti tew IhmwmtwiMewcm Crllgk Am Tut g||mmni mmmmm tlPCtW«£*22, W marion realty,inc.mWAUORStudio and 1 BedroomApartments Available- Students Welcome -On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-5400Representatives FromThe Graduate School ofBusiness Administrationat theUniversity of Southern Californiawill be at the MBA Forum at theLake Shore Center,November 7,8 atNorthwestern University10--The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, November 4, 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 al! ads in person or bymail to The Chigago Maroon, 1212 E.59th St., Chicago, IL 60637. Our officeis in Ida Noyes, room 304. Deadlines:Wed. noon for the Fri. paper, Fri. noonfor the Tues. papers.SPACE1 rm. in 3-bdrm Kosher apt availableimmediately 55th and Ellis S150 call643-1190 Dave or BobbiSTUDIO 4 UC student thru sprg qtr$185/mo. 55 and Blacksfone 975-7751eveLarge 3 rm. apt. now available inEast View Park. 643-464C 8.30-4:30 or667-4875 evenings.Live on the Lake new kitchen onebdrm condo $375/mo Cal! Yvonne728-1000FOR RENT: bdrm in 4-bdrm aptAvailable immediately. 55th and Cor¬nell. $150 + Util. Call 363-6283.Nonsmoker wtd to share 3 bdrm coopw/owner. Near campus neg. rent Incheat 995-7522947-3611 (w) AnaSublet spacious 2Vi rm unfurn 7th floversize liv rm bdrm dining area kitfull bath ampie closets ph PL2 5800 or955-7945 aft 6:00 pm.FOR SALEChest and Dresser w mirror YOURSfor moving 643-0563Beautiful souvenir U of C plate bluechina w/9 campus bldgs and scenes$75.00 Goodman 753-8342.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 753-4718University student needed 2 hoursday, 5 days a week between 3 pm and5 pm. to run errands on campus, takecare of receiving and shipping ofresearch supplies and materialwithin research building. Physicalstrength would be beneficial,reliability essential. Cal! 947-1867Sharon.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 as needed.Fee depending on manuscript. IBMSelectric. Judith 955-4417.TYPIST exp. Turablan PhD MastersThesis Term Papers Rough Drafts.924-1152.TYPIST: Competitively priced, highquality work py freelance writer.Prompt; minor editing withoutcharge. Call after 6 pm 472-2415 or472-0860.FIREWOOD, We Deliver. 221-0918.Will do typing 821-0940!Typing term papers etc. pick up anddelivery in the campus area Pleasecall 684 6882. ARTWORK-Posters, illustration, let¬tering, etc. Noel Yovovich 493-2399.The Chicago Counseling andPsychotherapy Center. Client-centered psychotherapy. 5711 S.Woodlawn, 6354 N. Broadway, 111 NWabash, Chicago. A RegisteredPsychological Agency. (312) 684 1800.PERSONALSWriters' Workshop (PLaza 2-8377)The O-squad will not endorse a can¬didate for president.ELECT 1DANOYESCome to the Election Night Ex¬travaganza at Ida Noyes Nov. 4 7pmto 8am. Watch your vote on our threecolor TVs, stuff your face and drinkat fhe Pub. Free coffee to keep youawake. Brought to you by SAO.UC HOTLINE753-1777Saying: He who has no problems isnot human. Not too profound, buttrue If your humanity gets the best ofyou, call us 753-1777 For info too. 7pmto 7am today/wk.PIANO LESSONSBeginners-advanced. Experiencedteacher and accompanist, doctoraldegree from Juilliard School, NewYork Tel: 536-7167 or 548-0063PIZZA DELIVEREDThe Medici delivers pizza as well ashamburgers, salads and desserts at 5pm and Sat. Beginning at 4 p.m.MAROONSUBSCRIPTIONSSubscribe now and send a Maroon tosomeone far away. $4/quarter$12/year. Special rate after Nov. 1 $10for the rest of the year. Send checksto CHICAGO MAROON/SUBSCRIP¬TIONS 1212 E. 59th St. Chicago, II60637. Act now and get the most foryour money.ARTSY-CRAFTSY?Sell your wares at the SAO CraftsFair, Dec 2 and 3. Pick up applications Monday in RM. 210 Ida NoyesOpen to everyone.INDECISION '80Ida Noyes, Nov. 4, 7pm-8am.DISCOUNTStudent Activities can offer discountson student memberships to the Art In¬stitute if at least 150 sign up. Get dis¬counts at the museum store and theGoodman, and free admission. Price:$9. (Regular price $15). If you're in¬terested, sign up by Nov. 7 in IdaNoyes rm 210. GAY PEOPLEThe U of C Gay and Lesbian Allianceis open Sunday Thru Thursday 7:30pm to 10 pm for talk, counseling andinfo about our many upcomingevents. Thurs nights there arebusiness meetings. Third floor IdaNoyes, or 753-3274.ROOTSS.G. Ethnic fair. Organizers neededCall Irene Stadnyk, 3-2233, or leave amessage with the SG office 3-3273.DIABETESPlain Talk About Diabetes ChicagoCollege of Osteopathic Medicine, 1000East 53rd Street. November 6 at 7:30pm. Free blood sugar testing Freeparking available.BRUCE IS BACKMiss out on Springsteen tkts? ThePhoenix has all of Bruce's best-including his new double album, theRiver lowest prices and browse, inthe basement of Reynolds Club.GOT THEPHYSCI BLUES?First they make you take phy.sci.—then they make you buy a $20book!—then youhave to do labs! Wellthe Phoenix bookstore could be yoursalvation-not only could we have soldyou the text for Vi price-it might havehad old notes and tests in it. Don'tdespair...you can still buy your labsupplies cheap graph paper for 60' apad. We re open Sats.COFFEEHOUSEThurs Nov 6 at Blue Gargoyle, 5655Univ. 9:00-12:00 pm Jazz duet. Ran¬dall Murray, trumpet, Tony Llorens,piano; Julie Less, orig poetry. 50‘cover Coffees, teas, fresh bakedgoods.DISCREETMUSICTurn on and tune in, every Thursdaynight at Midnight, for music which isas ignorable as it is listenable onWHPK-FM 88.3 in stereo.REAGAN'SDESPERATEJOURNEYNo, not his campaign. This is yourlast chance to see him perform on thesilver screen; tonight at 7, 9 and 11.Ida Noyes.PHOENIXHAS JAZZAll that jazz and more—see PatMetheny live at Hutch-hear him instereo. The Phoenix carries all hisalbums, along with a large selectionof jazz. Come in and browse open Sat.12:00-5:30 in the basement of theReynolds Club.Classifiedsget things done!See something you like?You can order copies of any photo in the Maroon.8" x 10" $3.505" x 7” $2.50Other sizes and quantity discounts available.Allow 1 to 2 weeks for delivery. RIDESNeeded a ride from North Shorearea Highland Park Lake Forest orDeerfieid to University of Chicago.Please call 433 4046SEXChamberlin House will be showing"Debbie Does Dallas" and "BedtimeWorries" on Thurs. Nov. 6 in Kent 107at 7.00, 9:00and 11:00.SECONDCHANCESG Coffeehouse Auditions-Nov. 11th8:00, Reynolds Club N. Lounge Call3-3273 for more info.ADMIN. ASSISTANTMidwestern consortium of majoracademic libraries requiressecretarial (no dictation), bookkeep¬ing, and office management skills.Newsletter editorial experience aplus. Office moving to U. of C. affordsopportunity for creative organiza¬tional effort. Excellent fringebenefits. Salary $12,000-413.000 depending on experience. Call Dr. JamesSkipper 753-2009 or 493-1193KUNG-FUAND TAI CHIWORKSHOPMaster George Hu will be giving aspecial one-day workshop on Fri.Nov. 7 1980 at 4945 S. Dorchester(enter on 50th). The workshops areBasic Kung Fu Exercises, from6:30-8:00 pm, and Fundamental exer¬ cises in Tal Chi Ch'uan from 8.15 to9:45 pm. Each workshop session Is $4or $7 for both. All are welcome to dropby and say hello to Master Hu.ANTI¬REGISTRATIONRALLY!Come one, come all! Come out andshow your solidarity against registration and the draft. On the Quad from10 to 2. Nov. 5.LUNCHTIMECONCERTSEvery Thursday at 12:15 pm inReynolds North Lounge This week'sprogram is "Shelton Salley and EddieWade in Concert" a program ofpopular and original rhythm andblues, 11/6.TAtSvONCHINESE-AMERICAtfRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE AND ,AMERICAN DISHESOpen Daily11 AMloB 30 PMClosed Monday1318 EAST 63rdMU 4-1062 HAM IT UP!SG Coffeehouse Auditions-Nov 11th8:00, Reynolds Club N Lounge. Call3-3273 for more info.BANK ^TELLERSTired of stayingat home7Want to workcloser to home 7Why not be a...BANK TELLER!Permanent Part Time PositionsYou can work closer to homeand earn a nice salary as aBank Teller at the Hyde ParkBank and Trust Company.Cash handling or tellerexperience preferredWe are conveniently lodatedin the heart of Hyde Parknear IC, CTA, ShoppingCenters and the Lake. Foryour personal interview andmore information call per¬sonnel at 752-4600Hyde Park Bank& Trust Company1525 E. 53rd St./Chgo.Successful CareersDon't Just HappenAt the Institute for Paralegal Training we have preparedover 4.000 college graduates for careers in law, business andfinance. After just three months of intensive training, we willplace you in a stimulating and challenging position that offersprofessional growth and expanding career opportunities. Asa Legal Assistant you will do work traditionally performed byattorneys and other professionals in law firms, corporations,banks, government agencies and insurance companies.Furthermore, you will earn graduate credit towards a Masterof Arts in Legal Studies through Antioch School of Law for allcourse work completed at The Institute.We are regarded as the nation’s finest and most prestig¬ious program for training legal specialists for law firms,business and finance. But, as important as our academicquality is our placement result. The Institute's placementservice will find you a job in the city of your choice If not, you willbe eligible for a substantial tuition refund.If you are a senior in high academic standing and lookingfor the most practical way to begin your career, contact yourPlacement Office for an interview with our representative.We will visit your campus on: Monday, November 10TheInstituteforParalegalTraining \ 235 South 17th StreetPhiladelphia, Pennsylvania 19103(215) 732-6600(Operated by Para-Legal Inc )Approved by The American Bar AssociationPrograms Earn Full Credit Toward M.A. in Legal Studiesthrough AntiOCh School Of Law. Approved by the IllinoisOffice of EducationThe Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, November 4, 1980—11CU€TI«NNlttlVmiUYKWHPK-FM88.3Tuesday, November 4, 1980beginning at 7 P.M.with commentary bySAM PELTZMAN& other facultyLIVE REPORTS FROMPARTY HEADQUARTERSin conjunction with WLURfWashington and Lee UniversityVirginia £**^¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥**44-4¥¥¥¥¥¥¥THE EECTION NIGHT EXTRAVAGANZAPARTY PLATFORM4444444444Anti-Inflation: Cheeses, bagels, fruit andsandwiches will be on sale for a low cost. Also,the Ida Noyes Bakery will be open til midnight.Cheap soda, too.4**4* Welfare: Free Coffee.4*4- Standard of Living: Three color TVs for optimum4" returns-watching.4444 Vigilance: We'll keep going until a PresidentH is elected.44 44444444444444444444444444444Grain Sales: The Pub will be open until 2 a.m. Over 444444444444*44444444444444444444444 25 kinds of beer.JOIN US!Tonight beginning at 7 p.m.in Ida Noyes Hall 44444444444444444444444444444444444—12—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, November 4, 1980