THE CHICAGO MAROONVolume 90, No. 34 The University of Chicago Copyright 1981 The Chicago Maroon Tuesday, February 17, 1981Tuition up More than 17 PercentBy Sherrie NegreaTuition will increase more than 17 percentfor most students at the University nextyear, but will be accompanied by a largeboost in the financial aid budget for both un¬dergraduates and graduate students, Presi¬dent Hanna Gray announced last Friday.The announced increases will raise thecost of undergraduate tuition at the Univer¬sity from $5,100 to $6,000 for the comingyear. Graduate students will pay higher tu¬ition ranging from $6,300 in the Divisions to$7,405 in the Graduate School of Business.Students at the University will also faceincreases of 13 percent and higher for roomand board next year. The cost of a doubleroom and full board contract will jump 13percent, while a single room with a fullboard contract will increase by 13.4 per¬cent.The combined increases in tuition androom and board will raise the total annualbudget for undergraduates at the Universityby 16 percent, from $7,910 to $9,180. Gradu¬ate students who live in the residence hallsDrug Suspect Dies ThursdayAfter Struggle With PoliceBy Aame EliasNarcotics suspect Geno Davis, 34, diedThursday night as a result of strangulationduring a violent struggle on the street near5343 S. Cornell with four police officers whowere trying to arrest him, according to amedical examiners report.According to police, Davis, also known asNethery Jefferson, was under investigationfor drug trafficking. Deputy Police Supt.Thomas J. Lyons, in charge of investigativeservices, said the four officers, a sergeantand three detectives, went to Davis’ apart¬ment as part of this investigation.Lyons said the officers found four foilpackets containing a substance believed tobe cocaine, several bags of marijuana, anda 9-mm postol after searching the apart¬ment.Davis was then placed under arrest andhandcuffed by the officers but since he wasdressed in his pajamas, said Lyons, the of¬ficers took off the handcuffs to allow Davisto change into street clothes.Police left off the handcuffs when theyescorted Davis to their squad car parkednear 5343 S. Cornell because, according toLyons “He was very calm in the apart¬ment.”When they reached the squad car, saidLyons, the 5 foot 11 inch and 235 pound Davisbegan flailing his hands and wrestling withpolicemen. Davis tried to grab the sergeantand the three detectives tried to subduehim, one of whom put Davis in a headlock.During the struggle all five fell to the streetand Davis went limp.According to Lyons, Davis was cuffed anda police backup was called. Davis, howeverregained consciousness before more policearrived and began to struggle again. Heripped the shirt of one police officer andkicked another.Davis was again placed into a headlock byone of the detectives and again he wentlimp. He was pronounced dead after beingtaken to Billings Hospital.A witness to the incident, Tanyo Lasso,said that she saw the policemen hold the sus¬pect down and punch him several times in the groin, and then throw him into the squa¬dron. A second person also reportedly wit¬nessed the events.The four police officers involved were re¬moved from active duty and were assigneddesk jobs pending the outcome of investiga¬tions by the Office of Professional Stan¬dards and the states attorney’s office. and have full board contracts will pay 13.1percent more for total expenses, an increasefrom $8,760 to $9,910.Gray said in an interview Friday that theUniversity will allocate an additional 37 per¬cent in financial aid to undergraduates nextyear as part of “a combined package” withthe tutition and other increases.Dean of Students Charles O’Connell saidthat financial aid to graduate students willrise by at least as much as this year’s 23percent.The increase in financial aid to under¬graduates represents an effort by the Uni¬versity to both compensate for expectedcutbacks in federal grants and loans to stu¬dents, and improve the availability of finan¬cial aid at the University.^ “Under the federal budget as it nowstands there has been a levelling off of stu¬dent financial aid,” Gray said. “So we’retrying to make up for federal funds that willnot be available to students as well as tocreate an improvement in financial aid.”Gray said the increases in tuition and fi¬nancial aid had “an interdependent rela¬tionship,” because a large percentage of fi¬nancial aid funds are allocated from theUniversity’s unrestricted budget, whichconsists of revenues from tuition, short¬term investments and endowment funds.Tuition income comprises about 49 percentof the unrestricted budget for the currentacademic year. That proportion will irse theslightly more than 50 percent next year.“The tuition increase is not only neces¬sary in terms of the cost of education it¬self,” Gray said, “but also is essential to theprovision of financial aid. To some degree,therefore, improvements in financial aiddepend on increases in tuition and that’swhy these things are put together in thisway because it’s two parts of a single poli¬cy.”TUITION RATES AT THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGODollar 1980-81 1981-82 PercentIncrease Tuition Tuition IncreaseCollege $900 $5,100 $6,000 17.6Graduate Divisions $945 $5,355 $6,300 17.6Law School $1,083 $6,192 $7,275 17.5Pritzker School of $1,014 $5,760 $6,774 17.6MedicineGraduate School of $1,105 $6,300 $7,405 17.5BusinessDivinity School, $900 $5,280 $6,180 17.0Graduate Library School,School of Social ServiceAdministration,Committee on Public PolicyStudies• * -idilliV».. Another objective in the financial aid in¬crease to undergraduates, according toGray, is to maintain the present level of ex¬pected student earnings during the schoolyear. “We want to level (student earnings)out so that it doesn’t become an increasingobligation for students in the course of theirfour years,” Gray said. She added that theamount of expected summer earnings willnot be altered.Gray pointed to several reasons for thesize of this year’s tuition increase, includingthe jump in students aid expenditures, inflation in utility and library costs, and anaverage 10 percent increase in faculty sa¬laries. An additional factor, she said, wasthe administration’s recognition that the tu¬ition here in recent years has been too low.“The education that I hope to provide iscertainly every bit as expensive here (as atother private universities),” Gray said. “Soif you just measure whether or not we arecharging more or less what we ought to be, Iwould say we’re probably undercharging alittle bit.”Compared to tuition levels at other pri¬vate universities, the dollar amounts of theannounced tuition increases here areamong the lowest nationwide, according toCharles O’Connell, University Vice-Presi¬dent and Dean of Students. “The actual dol¬lar ‘gap’ between Chicago’s tuition and thatof other national private institutions willwiden in some cases,” O’Connell said, “de¬spite our having been forced to raise tuitionthis year and last at roughly the same per¬centage rate as these other universities.”The University’s 17 percent tuition in¬crease for next year, however, is higher interms of percentages than those announcedat other leading private universities. Mostincreases announced by other privatechools so far this winter range from 11 to 15percent.Gray said that tuition at the Universityhas remained lower than at other major pri¬vate universities because administratorshave believed that lower fees would attractmore students and allow the University toreduce its expenditures on financial aid.However, Gray said the University mustnow make a more substantial commitmentto financial aid which requires charinghigher tuition rates.“I think the structure of financial aid forstudents,” Gray said, “the real issue in away is not the total amount of the term billbut what it will cost. And that means beingable to make financial aid available.”Gray admitted that there is a limit to thepercentage of the University’s total unres¬tricted income that tuition can provide.Continued on page 5Palmer: Blacks Must Assert IndependenceBy David KirschnerThe greatest problem facing blacks istheir “dependence on white peopel,” saidLou Palmer, black journalist and activist ina speech last Wednesday. This dependence,and the challenging it poses for the blackstudent was the subject of his lecture spon¬sored by the Organization of Black studentsas part of Black History Month.Palmer began by saying that “the grea¬test problem facing blacks is not crime, badeducation, or poor housing” but the fact that“we have lost control of our minds, whichhas resulted in these problems.” He sug¬gested that “we as a people are going tohave to tear ourselves away from depen¬dence on other people.” Blacks, he said,“we’re becoming comfortable with thesedependencies...and as long as we do this,we’ll remain enslaved.” Palmer cited some of the ways blacks de¬pend on whites. His first example was theproduction and distribution of food. He saidonly “2.2% of blacks are engaged in farm¬ing,” and noted that “if A&P and Jewelwere to leave...where would we eat?”Blacks not only depend on whites forclothes, he said, but whites even tell us whatwe’re going to wear, especially our sisterswho rush to get the latest fashions. (We) de¬pend on someone else, even to get high.”Blacks also depend on whites, Palmersaid, as the media provides both entertain¬ment and information. “T.V. shows,” hesaid, “imprint views on people, evenblacks.” He especially criticized “Roots”for sending implicit messages which “makepeople think we are free.” Palmer also feltthat “Roots” urged blacks not to hate, but tolove whites. Palmer criticized Mayor Bvme’s “lettinggo” of two black Board of Educationmembers, and her replacement of themwith two white women. He was upset be¬cause the city’s eleven man school boardwill not reflect the makeup of the studentbody, which is 60% black, 20% Latino, andonly 8% white. The new board will includefive whites, three Latinos, and only threeblacks.Palmer said that most black college stu-dets want “a good job to make more moneyand (earn) more status.” Too many blacksare absorbed by society, he said, noting thata journalist once told him, “I’m not a blackjournalist, I’m a journalist who happens tobe black.”Palmer also charged that the Universityof Chicago is “one of the most oppresiveContinued on page 10Eye 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. FarSasftCitcfjenThis week's special 1654 E. 53rd955-2200Cocktails ^and TropicalDrinksChicken and Onionwith Fried Rice . ..served until 2:30 p.m. Tues.-Sat $209eat in orcarry outOpen daily and Sunday 11 a.m. to 1 a.m.Closed Mondays. 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Hi Infidelity is in the great tradition of REO Speedwagon.A well-earned name in the best game there is. f nTr —O I I I < K I « O K II %* Produced by Kevin Cronin Gory Richrofh Kevin Beamish Co produced by Alon Grot zer YOPLAIT Alt,YOGURT 3/*lHIGH LINER FROZENOCEANPERCH 1 IB.CHICKEN OF THE SEATUNAVIVATOWELS 6'/2 oz.Big Roll 89*79*FRESHPORKSTEAKSFRESHGREENCABBAGE 15*U.S.D.A. CHOICEPOTROAST irSale Dates Feb. 18 - 21sttot.CFINER FOODSSERVING53rd / PRAIRIE SHORESKIMBARK PLAZA 2911 VERNONWhere You Are A Stranger But Once!2 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, February 17, 1981ABA Heads NorthThe American Bar Association (ABA)gave final approval last week to a proposalto move the group’s headquarters from itspresent Hyde Park location to a building tobe constructed on Northwestern Universi¬ty’s Law School campus. The ABA expectsfo move when construction is completed in1984.The decision was made Tuesday at ameeting of the ABA’s House of Delegates inHouston. At their meeting last fall, the Dele¬gates approved a proposal to relocate theheadquarters and asked a committee to rec¬ommend a specific location. At last week’smeeting, the Delegates approved the com¬mittee’s recommendation to move to thebuilding to be constructed on Northwes¬tern’s Law School campus, just north of theLoop.The ABA has occupied its present head¬quarters at 1155 E. 60th St. for the past 25years. However, lack of space at the presentbuilding and the inconvenience of transpor¬tation to the Loop and O’Hare airportprompted the decision to move.The fate of the building is still under dis¬cussion; no decision on its disposition will bemade until the American Bar Foundation,the ABA’s research arm, decides nextmonth whether it will move or remain inHyde Park. , ,— Margo HablutzelCrisesand CancellationsThe University of Chicago Hotline willbegin training volunteers for next year thiscoming Spring quarter. The Hotline is thelistening, reierral/mformation and crisisline on campus. If you are interested ingoing through training, attend one of the twoinformation meetings held Tuesday Feb. 17,7:00 pm in Ida Noyes, East Lounge orWednesday, Feb. 25, 7:00 pm in Ida Noyes,second floor. If you can not make one ofthese two meetings, call 752-5860 or 248-5311for information.The Rockefeller Memorial Chapel Choir’sperformance of the Mozart Mass, scheduledfor February 22, has been postponed be¬cause of the illness of Rodney Wynkoop, thechoir’s director. The concert has been res¬cheduled for Sunday, March 8, at 4 pm.Student Government (SG) will not meettonight. An advertisment in Friday’sMaroon announcing the meeting was inerror. SG will next week a week from to¬night, to discuss something other than GregWendt. EWS BRIEFSDorothy NelsonLaw and the LaymanJudge Dorothy W. nelson of the UnitedStates Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit, willspeak at the Law School on Thursday, Feb¬ruary 19. Her talk will explore the increas¬ingly important role of the layperson in thesystem of administering justice in America.Ms. Nelson’s appearance is sponsored bythe U. of C. Baha’i Association.Judge Nelson is one of the leading womenin the legal profession. Before being ap¬pointed Judge, she was Dean of the Univer¬sity of Southern California Law Center anda professor of law there. She serves asChairman of the Committee on Education inJudicial Administration of the AmericanBar Association, and Chairman of theBoard of the American Judicature Society.In 1974, she was a Delegate to the Interna¬tional Women’s Conference in Mexico City,and in 1975 she received the Pax Orbis exJure Medallion award of the World PeaceThrough Law Center.Judge Nelson’s talk, entitled “Justice-Just Around the Corner”, will be given at 8pm on Thursday, February 19, in the UpperBurton Lounge of the Burton-Judson Courts.An informal reception will follow at 9 p.m.Law and the Cannibal“Cannibals at Common Law” is the sub¬ject of a lecture to be given at the LawSchool Thursday by A. W. Brian Simpson,professor of law at the University of Kent atCanterbury.Simpson’s lecture is the William Croskeylecture at the Law School, and will begin at 8pm in the Law School auditoriumSimpson, a noted authority on commonlaw, graduated from Oxford University andtaught there from 1955 to 1973. During this time, he took a leave of absence to serve asDean of the faculty of law at Ghana Univer¬sity in Africa. Since 1973 he has been profes¬sor of law at the University of Kent at Cant¬erbury. He was a visiting fellow at the LawSchool last year.— Pat O'ConnellRe-Reading King Lear“King Lear: A Re-Reading” is the title ofDavid Grene’s lecture Thursday evening, inthe Collegiate Lecture Series in the LiberalArts. Grene, Professor in the Committee onSocial Thought, will speak in Swift LectureHall at 8 pm. A discussion will follow.Geologist Wins MedalStuart McKerrow, a Visiting Professor inthe Department of Geophysical Sciences,has been awarded the 1981 Lyell Medal inrecognition of his international reputationfor work on Lower Paleozoic stratigraphyand tectonics in countries on both sides ofthe North Atlantic.The Lyell Medal, made of solid gold, isawarded by the Geological Society of Lon¬don and is among the highest honors givento a geologist in Britain.McKerrow, who holds a regular appoint¬ment at Oxford University in England, hasvisited the University of Chicago repeatedlyover the last nine years, and is currentlyworking with Alfred Ziegler, a professor inthe department of geophysical sciences, ona project which involves tracking the distri¬bution of the continents through the last500,000,000 years in order to determine cli¬mactic and other changes in global environ¬ments which have led to the formation ol pe¬troleum and phospahte deposits.McKerrow will receive the medal on May27 at the Society’s Annual General Meeting.— Joel GinsbergBlack BusinesswomanSpeaksBarbara Proctor, founder of Proctor andGardner Advertising, Inc., will speak onbusiness through the black female’s per¬spective tonight at 7:30 in the CloisterClub.The lecture is part of the series of eventssponsored by the Organization of Black Stu¬dents during Black History M^nth.Rice New PhySci DeanStuart Rice has been appointed Dean ofthe University’s Physical Sciences Division,effective July 1. Rice, who is the Frank P. Hixon Distin¬guished Service Professor in the depart¬ments of chemistry and biophysics and theo¬retical biology, the James Frank Institute,and the College, will succeed physicist Al¬bert Crewe, who will return to teaching andresearch. Crewe has served as Dean since1971.Rice’s research interests presently lie intwo areas, the photo chemistry and photo¬physics of isolated molecules, and the pro¬perties of condensed phases. His researchhas earned him numerous awards, includ¬ing the American Chemical Society Awardin Pure Chemistry and the Medal of theFree University of Brussels. Rice also re¬ceived the Quantrell Award for excellencein undergraduate teaching in 1970.Stuart RiceAssassins Obituarycodenamename (assassin)Ken Schlesinger ElectionHugh Musick BeatnikRachel Freudenburg PlungerJeanne Krinsley BoothLee Hutchins FriedmanCharlie Coffey Krypton (Sonar)Rob Londin Odd job (SonanAlex Cobitz Creux iPopeve)Cindy Zehner Rubdown tPopeye)Jim Coy ValkyrieThe Textbook DepartmentThe University of Chicago Bookstore970 East 58th StreetBUY THE BOOKS YOU’LL NEED 10TH WEEKNOW. THEY WON’T BE HERE 10TH WEEK.In order to make way for spring quarter texts we will hereturning all unsold winter quarter books beginning Mondayof next week, February 23.The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, February 17, 1981 — 3ADVERTISEMENT -ASHUM-AMSASeminar Series 1980-81Program in the Arts and Sciences Basic to HumanBiology and MedicineandAmerican Medical Students’ AssociationPresentRobert J. RichardsAssistant Professor Departments History and Behavioral SciencesThe University of Chicagospeaking on the topicDarwin s Theory of theEvolution of Morality:It’s Development andContemporary Justification As Reprinted from theCHICAGO MAROON —Enrico’s Tacky but TastyFrom the thirty-foot long, gaudily framed oil painting of a plump and pink reclining nude to thefringed, candy-striped canopy hanging over the bar, the decor at Cafe Enrico is decidely EarlyBrothel. Our little dinner party of four didn’t mind; by the time we left the joint we were all so fullwe could hardly bend. And the food was even good.Featuring Italian food, from fettucine with shrimps to lasagne, but beloved by starving studentsfor its all-you-can-eat daintily fried chicken and three-alarm barb-q ribs, Enrico s is somethingof a cultural conundrum The clientele last Saturday night consisted mostly of nattily attired neigh¬borhood dudes hanging out at the bar, a few scattered Che Guevera look-alikes mumbling tothemselves over tattered mimeographed tracts on revolution, and a handful of Joe-student types.While Enrico’s has the feel and atmosphere of a down-home style club, anyone who is looking fora great food buy is welcome Hardly anything on the menu costs more than six dollars.Do you want a burger? The King Tut burger lived up to its reputation as “a pyramid of delights”.Some fettucine, perhaps? The night we were there, the cook probably had a bad hangover, andcouldn’t tell the fennel seed from oregano, but that is a minor complaint. The greatest praise mustbe reserved for the plates and plates of chicken and ribs that the sweet-tempered, grandmotherlywaitress agreed to keep bringing for as long as we could keep eating. While not quite up to thefiery standards set by the neighboring Ribs’n’ Bibs, Enrico s rib-tips come to your table en masse,and can satisfy even the most rapacious of appetites.The pace of a meal at Enrico's is somewhat more leisurely than it is at, say, McDonald’s or theUniversity’s own cafeterias. But the waitress was more than glad to place an order in the kitchenfor thirds while we were still working our way through our second plates, which helped to keepup the flow.The ribs and chicken specials, including french fries, a salad, and plenty of bread to mop upthe sauce come out to less than five dollars, including tax. We were so pleased with our meal, weleft our waitress a five-dollar tip.WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 19817:30 P.M. Cafe Enrico: 1411 E. 53rd Street, just down the street from Harold’sChicken Shack. Open 11:30 a.m. - 2:00 a.m. All-you-can-eat: 4:00 p.m. - midnight. Pitchers of beer can be had for$2.00.HARPER 130 ADVERTISEMENT.Stretch your mind and your horizons.ELECTRONICEducation/experience in digital, analog electronics, microprocessor,logic, semiconductor development, read/write, servo technology.BS. MS. PhD-EE. When you join STC. you won t be given work that's dull, meaningless orrepetitious. You'll be given assignments that are challenging, interesting andmeaningful. STC is on the leading edge of high-density, high-performancedata recording, so your career will be state-of-the-art. If you're looking for anopportunity to go as far as our abilities will take you. and you're not afraid ofresponsibility, STC could be the answer. Just as important, we re located inColorado, one of America's most beautiful areas, with mountain vistas thatstretch your horizons and help stretch your mind. Check the following careeropportunities with STC. If you qualify, we'd like to hear from youlMANUFACTURINGEducation/experience in tool/fixture design, work station set-up.manufacturing process control, development, equipment main¬tenance. evaluation. BS. MS-ME. EE.INDUSTRIALEducation/experience in facilities design & layout, work sampling.MTM. materials control, mgt. reporting systems, project cost analysis,reduction. BS. MS. PhD-IE.QUALITYEducation/experience in PCB design, test calibration of testequipment, electro/mechanical testing & evaluation, statistical &failure analysis. BS. MS-EE. ME. Math. Physics.MECHANICALEducation/experience in vibration analysis, materials development,servo mechanisms, thermo analysis, package design, tool &fixture design. BS. MS. PhD-ME. COMPUTER SCIENCEEducation/experience in engineering or business applicationsprogramming. Knowledge of PL1-PDP11-FORTRAN. Basic. COBOL.Knowledge of IBM systems, computer graphics design. BS. MS.PhD-CS. Math. Physics.STC offers an excellent compensation package including health andinsurance benefits, stock purchase plan and more. For an interviewappointment please sign up at the Career Placement office. If youare unable to meet with us at thisj:ime. please send your detailedresume in complete confidence to STORAGE TECHNOLOGY CORPORA¬TION. Attn: College Relations. MD-31. 2270 South B8th St..Louisville. CO 80027. We are an equal opportunity employer m/1.STORAGETECHNOLOGYCORPORATIONentitling the promise ot technology4 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, Feburary 17, 1981 GUADALAJARASUMMERSCHOOLUniversity of Arizona offersmore than 40 courses: anthro¬pology, art, bilingual educa¬tion, folk music and folkdance, history, political sci¬ence, sociology, Spanish lan¬guage and literature and in¬tensive Spanish. Six-week ses-sion. June 29-August 7,1981. Fully accredited grad¬uate and undergraduate pro¬gram. Tuition $330. Roomand board in Mexican home,$340. EEO/AAWriteGuadalajaraSummer SchoolRobert L. Nugent Bldg. 205University of ArizonaTucson 85721(602) 626*4729-TTT^FCH 1 C A G oTHE UNlVE lNTSlNTHECOHBOtDBAN OP stud »0»J> There's More to an Education than Collegeifsx 1activate your »PPlic* ln which youweeks before the ln the su-e-C1 >*'ss^-arsu-sfisi 3and you Hope thatfthi^ year. I d|^fplwned and that you willHave a pleasant spring- Taking Time OffBy Robert DeckerA rustic Swiss village. A farm in Vermont.A desk at a finance company. These are afew of the places where students in the Col¬lege have spent one or more quarters by tak¬ing temporary leaves of absence in the mid¬st of their academic careers. The practice ofleaving school to work or travel has becomea common one in the College, for both finan¬cial and personal reasons.According to Lorna Straus, Dean of Stu¬dents in the College, 520 students took leavesof absence from the College in 1978-79, and250 resumed studies that same academicyear. In the past five years, Straus said,“finances” have been the major reason be¬hind requests for leaves of absence, but shenotes that the practice may have increasedover the past decade because parents arefinding “stopping-out”, as some call it, to bemore acceptable.Over the past ten years, Straus said, typi¬cally 50 percent of those who take leaves ofabsence eventually return to the College.What leads students to leave the Universi¬ty and then come back? While each stu¬dent’s story is different, a few examplesshow that a major factor is the desire to gain Loma Strausa clearer perspective on one’s academicwork.Stuart Ryder, a fourth year student in theCollege, entered the University in 1974.“After two years,” Ryder said, “I needed achange of scene to find out just what I want¬ed out of College.” The next nine monthswere spent in Boston, where Ryder operateda forklift. Upon returning to Chicago, hecontinued to work while a part-time studentat the University, resuming full-time studythis past September.Ryder said he can now think of college asone of many things he occupies himselfwith, and by continuing to work part-time,he said he no longer feels “cut off from theoutside world.” Before his hiatus, Rydersaid his opinion of himself “revolved aroundgrades and how many hours (I) spent in Re-genstein.” Now, however, Ryder said hefinds it possible to separate social aspects oflife from the University as a whole.A similar comment was made by JoanSommers, a third-year student, who saidthat having a group of friends outside theUniversity allows her to appreciate morefully the academic aspects of college life.Although Sommers left the University for anentire year following her first quarter in theTuition College, she remained in Hyde Park, whereshe and Alan Mallory established Mallory’sRestaurant.Sommers described herself as “a moreconservative person,” as a result of her ex¬periences in hiring people to work in the res¬taurant, and no longer “apt to give peoplethe beneift of the doubt.” Although she origi¬nally intended to study economics, Som¬mers now intends to enter the Ideas andMethods program of the New Collegiate Di¬vision. Of her academic plans, Sommerssaid “I now have less definite ideas — be¬cause now I realize howr much there is ‘outthere.’ ” Nevertheless, Sommers said thatshe feels much more confident in herselfand in her ability to succeed.Susan Seldman, a third-year student inthe College, spent a quarter working invarious jobs on a Vermont farm. She sadthat she later returned to Hyde Park with aless “anti-city” attitude, and a less idealis¬tic view of the country life. She has re¬mained a part-time student, however, andkept a job, which she says has increased her“curiosity level” about her studies at theUniversity.Another student who chose to spend timetravelling is Fred Duca, a fourth-year stu¬dent in the College, who toured U.S. parksfor four months. In addition to widening hisconception of “the expanse of the country,”Duca said his time away from school al¬lowed him to realize that he can “be a stu¬dent and still have other interests, like trav¬elling and camping.” Now, despite hiswide-ranging interests, Duca said he is bet¬ter “’directed,” and better able to focus on asingle long-range goal — which for him is acareer in medicine.Leanne Banaszak, another fourth-yearstudent, left *he College for one quarter toaccompany her father, a professor, when hewent on sabbatical to Europe. A politicalscience concentrator, Banaszak said she re¬turned from Europe much more aware ofthe differences in American and Europeanways of thinking about politics. She is now considering continuing her education withgraduate work in political science, ratherthan pursuing her initial goal of a career inlaw.Terri Ruder, a second-year student, didn’twithdraw from the University, but spentfive years in a variety of jobs — “from beinga computer programmer to a cocktail wai¬tress in a disco” — before entering the Col-ege. As a result of her previous 60-hourwork week, Ruder said she has a “certainsense of self-discipline,” and the “schedul¬ing requirements” of College life seemmuch less demanding. The drudgery ofsome of her jobs, Ruder said, has made col¬lege “much more interesting” by compari¬son. and she said she is now determined tohave a good measure of “autonomy” in anyfuture jobs.Many of the students who talked to theMaroon said they had been encouraged intheir exit-interviews with the Office of theDean of Students in the College to pursuetheir plans to leave, while at the same timethey were encouraged to come back.Leaves-of-absence are “absolutely en¬couraged,” said Katie Nash, Assistant Deanof Students in the College, as affording stu¬dents an opportunity “to explore somethingnew, to try something different.” By thetime students are in their second year of col¬lege, after so many years of schoolwork,“they just don’t want to be in the ‘fourteenthgrade,’” Nash said. Students may indeed“want to try something else.”Nash praised the College Venture Pro¬gram as providing “a wonderful opportuni¬ty for students to go off and do somethingconstructive.” Since last July, ten studentsfrom the College enrolled in the Program,which places students in a variety of sala¬ried jobs ranging from internships in en¬vironmental agencies to tour guides.Administered by Brown University, theVenture Program is funded by a nine-uni¬versity cobsortium The University of Chi¬cago became a member of the consortiumin July of 1980.Continued from page 1However, she said, tuition income will haveto grow as a percentage of the unrestrictedbudget until the University’s long-term in¬vestments generate higher returns. In 1972,the University adopted an investment poli¬cy aimed at increasing the long-term valueof its endowments at the expense of short¬term returns.“Over the long term we clearly need toraise new endowment and expendable giv¬ing in order to keep the amount borne by tu¬ition somewhere in the range that we havenow.” Gray said she hopes that tuition willnot make up a percentage of the Universi¬ty’s income greater than the “high 40’s andlow 50’s”.“The income available from endowment is not rising at a rate commensurate withinflation,” Gray said, “and that has put apressure on tuitions everywhere. There is agap (from the endowment decrease) thatneeds to be filled not just by tuition in¬creases but also by the pursuit of gifts.”Tuition in dollar amounts increased in theGraduate Divisions from $5355 to $6,300;from $6,192 to $7,275 in the Law School;from $5,760 to $6,774 in the Pirtzker Schoolof Medicine; and from $6,300 to $7,405 in theGraduate School of Business.Tuition jumped 17 percent in the othergraduate schools ($5,280 to $6,180) includingthe Divinity School, Graduate LibrarySchool, School of Social Service Administra¬tions and the Committee on Public PolicyStudies. UNDERGRADUATE TUITION RATESUniversity 1980-91Tuition 1981-82Tuition PercentIncreaseMassachusetts Institute $6,200 7,400 191 ITechnologyPrinceton University $6,300 $7,250 15.0Yale University $6,210 $7,150 15.1 JStanford University $6,285 $7,140 13.6 jBrown University $6,140 $7,130 15 9 tHarvard Universityf $6,000 $6,930 15.5 [University of Pennsylvania $6,000 $6,900 15.0 |Rice University $5,800 $6,400 10.3 IUniversity of Chicago $5,100 f$6,000 17.6g BOOKSTOREPOWE^SBOOKSTORE ^I■ IJilJm20% OFFALL LITERARY CRITICISMFeb 1 7 - March 3Wl Powell's Bookstore1501 E. 57th St. • 955-77809 am-11 pm EverydayBOOKSTORE POWELL’S BOOKSTOREThe Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, February 17, 1981 — 5LETTERS TO THE EDITORBlock that FeeThe Maroon has received a copy of the fol¬lowing open letter to President Gray:Dear President Gray:We, the undersigned students of thePritzker School of Medicine and the Divisionof Biological Sciences, would like to expressour concerns over the recent vote to insti¬tute a five dollar mandatory student activi¬ties fee for graduate students. It is our un¬derstanding that the proposal was rejectedby a significant majority of graduate stu¬dents. Yet, starting next quarter, we mustpay the fee. The explanation which we havebeen given is that the undergraduate votewas included with the graduate vote, andthat based on this total vote the proposalpassed.We question the validity of grouping thegraduate and undergraduate vote in thismanner. In all pre-election advertising, the proposal was divided into two separate vot¬ing issues. The undergraduates were to voteon whether or not to increase their fee byone dollar, and the graduates were to decidewhether or not to institute a mandatory fivedollar fee. If it was never the intention ofstudent government to treat these as sepa¬rate issues, then we feel that the StudentGovernment portrayal of the situation wasintentionally misleading. If the decision tocombine the votes was made after the elec¬tion, we can see no possible justification forthat decision.In either case we strongly object to theStudent Government’s notion that under¬graduates should be allowed to participatein the decision to institute a mandatorygraduate student fee. The fifteen or twentydollars that each of us must pay is minor.We are most concerned that Student Gov¬ernment will receive more than 70,000 dol¬lars as a result of actions which were at verybest deceptive.THE CHICAGO MAROONEditor: David GlocknerManaging Editor: Chris IsidoreNews Editor: Sherrie NegreaViewpoints Editor: Jay McKenzieProduction Manager: Joan SommersFeatures Editor: Laurie KalmansonAssociate Editors: Robert Decker, AnnaFeldman, Darrell W'uDunn Sports Editor: Michael OcchioliniPhoto Editor : Dan BresiauCopy Editors: Alice Erbacher, Kate Fultz,Don Laackman, Steve ShandorLiterary Review Editors: Richard Kayeand Candlin DobbsBusiness Manager: Lorin BurteAdvertising Manager: Wanda JonesOffice Manager: Leslie WickStaff: Andy Black, Sharon Butler, Aarne Elias, Joel Ginsberg, David Gruenbaum,Margo Hablutzel, Andrea Holliday, Gabrielle Jonas, Robin Kirk, David Kirschner, LindaLee, Audrey Light, Nina Lubell, Pat O'Connell, Henry Otto, Carole Petersen, Trace Poll,Nina Robin, Joe Thorn, Nick Varsam, David Vlcek, Peter Zale.* LUTHERAN CAMPUS MINISTRYSupper and Discussion SeriesFebruary 17Responsiveness to Present Needsand Responsibility forFuture Generations:The Science' Dimension ofClinical MedicineJames BresnahanEthics. JSTCAugustana Lutheran Church5500 South Woodlawn Ave.Eucharist at 5:30 Supper and Discussion at 6:00NOTICEStudent Activities is now selling advertising space on the backof its Activities Calendar. SAO distributes 3000 copies of thecalendar on campus twice a quarter.The ad size is one-quarter page, approximately 5” wide and 3-3/4” tall.The cost for an ad in either Part I or Part II is $10 for student groups and $20for other University organizations and departments.The ad space must be booked in advance Reservation deadline for the Spring Part I is Feb 20All copy must be camera-ready, and must be in by Feb. 27 For more information, call Libby at753-3592 Chicago StyleY'SEE, I IVANNA FIND ME ASPREAD OH ThE OUTSKIRTSOF THIS HERE CITT o'CMlCASC,and then get me a wife/ oh, wow.. "SuburbanCOWBOY"A WOMAN who'll takeCARE O' M’DREAM HOUSE}CM M' SEE (T.BOY? By Peter ZaleCopyright 1981 by Peter ZaleWe feel that by condoning Student Gover-nement’s actions, the administration wouldbe setting a dangerous precedent. The Stu¬dent Government will have been allowed toblantantly manipulate an election toachieve its own goals and ignore the opinionof the students it represents.We ask that the entire election be recon¬sidered. The graduate and undergraduateissues should be clearly separated. We hopethat the decision of the graduates against in¬stitution of the fee will be honored.Signed by 206 students in the MedicalSchool.Security Would PayTo the Editor:How incredibly dumb can anyone be!!!An investment in a security system to dra¬matically reduce the theft of books and peri¬odicals from the library would PAY FORITSELF in about a year!!!Theft means: costs of materials, costs ofseeing if materials are somewhere else inthe library or truly stolen, costs of deciding whether the material should be reordered,costs of procedures to carry out the processof replacing the lost material. In short, thematerial costs plus the manpower costs arebecoming enormous!A security system has been discussed foryears. Now is the time to act, before the bestof the collection is ripped off. Wake up some¬one !!!A Library Staff MemberNo WhitesBlack History Month is here. Now is thetime for Blacks and nonblacks to enrichtheir knowledge of Black culture, heritageand though. By the time you read this theOrganization of Black Students will haveheld six Black History Month events, threelectures, two dances and a gospel/spiritualconcert. At two lectures no whites at allshowed up and at the third there were only ahandful. I want to urge all members of theUniversity community to attend and sup¬port as many of our events as they can.Charles A. (Tony) KnightPEACECORPSMEANSBUSINESS.Teach bookkeeping in Belize. Help manage a handicraftshop in Tonga. Work with Filipino lending guidelines. Inover 60 countries Peace Corps can use your businessskills. Knowledge in areas like accounting, budgeting,personnel management, and marketing can help pro¬vide jobs and economic growth.Register now at the Placementfor interviews: Wed. & Thurs.19 Office,Feb. 18,6 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, February 17, 1981VIEWPOINTThe Neoconservative Threat to a Liberal FutureBy Judith Colp and John Adams»A relatively new political movement, neoconserva¬tism, is rapidly gaining prominence on the Americanpolitical scene. The neoconservatives are one-time lib¬eral Democrats, now disillusioned with many liberalpolicies, who are attempting to forge a new moderateconsensus. The growing strength of neoconservatismcan be seen in the Senate where respected liberals suchas Paul Tsongas of Mass, and Gary Hart of Coloradoare calling for a re-evaluation of traditional liberal pro¬grams.Although the neoconservatives do not challengebasic liberal accomplishments, such as the CivilRights Act of 1964, they contend that the kind of across-the-board liberalism espoused by Senator Kennedy inhis recent presidential campaign is neither politicallyviablen or theoretically sound. They advocate the ren¬unciation of programs such as busing, affirmative ac¬tion, and comprehensive national health insurance. Anexamination of American history, however, demon¬strates that a trimming of the liberal agenda could welllead to the total abandonment of progressive goals.The failure of Reconstruction in the 1970’s and 1880 sprovides the clearest example of the consequences ofcompromising progressive principles. After the Civilwar, despite passage of the thirteenth amendment, thefreedman’s plight was little improved. The notorious“black codes” hampered the way for black equality. Itthus became evident that radical measures would benecessary to achieve the Republican Party’s goal ofequality for blacks. The liberals pushed for, and wereeventually successful in implementing, passage of thefourteenth and fifteenth amendments. After thesemeasures, however, the party balked at further re¬forms. The liberal Republicans — an important and in¬creasingly powerful faction in the party — began tourge abandonment of radical Reconstruction in favorof compromise with southern Democrats. These sameRepublicans, like the neoconservatives of today, ar¬gued that it was politically impossible to implementthe kinds of measures necessary for the achievementof racial equality.By the mid-1880’s, after the disenchanted liberalshad grown dominant, the Republican party whollyabandoned any attempt at vigorous enforcement of thenew civil rights laws in the South. The almost immedi¬ate result of this abandonment was, as the Radicalshad warned, that southern blacks were once again re¬duced to the status of second-class citizens by the local,unreconstructed, Democrats.Having forsaken their commitment to racial equali¬ ty, the Republicans found themselves unable, and increasinglyunwilling, to prevent this subjagation of blacks.Finally, by the turn of the century, the Republican party gave up allpretext of desiring racial equality by discarding its platform commit¬ment to the enforcement of the fourteenth amendment. It was not beuntil the 1948 Democratic platform that a major party would onceagain take a strong stand for racial equality.A similar crisis in the history of American progressivism occurredin the late 1940’s. As demonstrated by the sweeping Republican vic¬tories in the 1946 Congressional elections, much of the American elec¬torate was becoming disillusioned with the social reforms of the New-Deal, specifically attempts to achieve equality for blacks.Under Harry Truman, the Democrats, like the Reconstruction-eraRepublicans, had to choose between progressive ideals and the lesserADig ThroughA Desk... commitments neces¬sary to meet the new conservative trend. In renominat¬ing Truman on a liberal platform, the Democraticparty demonstrated its resolve to remain the party ofthe New Deal. This resolve, which the Democrats re¬tained throughout the Eisenhower years, guaranteedthat those ideals would remain viable, and that theywould, upon the return of the Democrats to power in1960, be resolutely pursued.The Democratic party of today is at a crossroadsvery similar to that faced by the post-Civil War Repub¬licans and the post-World War II Democrats. The neo¬conservatives, like the old liberal Republicans, areurging the Democrats to make a sharp turn to the rightin order to accomodate what appears to be an invinc¬ible conservative trend in the nation. The neoconserva¬tives are also urging the renunciation of those policiesadopted by the Democratic party during the 1960’s asthe necessary means of achieving the progressivegoals of that era.Post-Reconstruction history, however, teaches usthat if these policies are renounced, it is unlikely thatthey will be pursued again for quite some time. TheDemocratic party of the 1980’s would, like the Republi¬cans of the 1880’s, become unable (and inevitably, un¬willing) to prevent a wholesale retreat from our na¬tion's already precarious commitment to social justiceand economic equality. Ultimately, the two major po¬litical parties would become carbon copies of eachother, with neither having any commitment to progres¬sive ideals.Instead of following such a path, the Democraticparty could, as it did after World War II, stand firm inits beliefs and its commitments. Then, when the con¬servative tide which now appears so permanent ebbs,as it eventually will, the Democratic party can onceagain make an earnest effort to achieve its progressivegoals.Neoconservatives believe that their moderate solu¬tion is the perfect tonic for America’s apparent disillu¬sionment with traditional liberalism. Their tonic, how¬ever, is far worse than the disease. No amount ofReaganism could do as much damage to liberal idealsin America as the ascendancy of the neoconservativesin the Democratic Party. As John Adams put it duringthe struggle for American independence. “In politicsthe middle way is none at all. If we finally fail in thisgreat and glorious contest, it will be by bewilderingourselves in groping after the middle wav."Judith Colp is a first-year student in the College,and Vice-President of theU.C. Young DemocratsJohn Adams is a recent graduate of the ColumbiaUniversity Law School.By Chris IsidoreBeing a life-long slob, cleaning my roomhas always been an adventurous, if rare, ex¬pedition. Treasures not seen for months aresure to be unearthed; levels of clothes,books, and papers are removed as carefullyas artifacts in an archaeological dig. Lastweekend, I finally undertook a chore which Ihad been putting off for nearly nine months— cleaning away the five generations of ac¬cumulated mess known as the ManagingEditor’s desk at The Maroon.The position of second banana here hasnot been a particularly stable one in recenthistory. Four Managing Editors have wan¬dered in — and back out of — the door in thelast two years. When I took over the job lastspring (and what was then visible of thedesk), my small corner of the office was al¬ready in such a mess that cleaning it was atask easily put off. Besides, one of the desk’sseven acient drawers was permanentlylocked, as if to signal that a real clean-upwould not be an easy task.But the realization that I could no longer find the top of the desk, coupled with the factthat my mother and aunt were soon to maketheir first visit to Chicago, finally promptedme to take on the Herculean task of layingbare the previously unseen desktop.For some reason, I hadn’t rememberedthe desk as being particularly messy when Imoved in, so 1 expected the mess to be allmine. For the first two or three levels ofpapers — and the first hour of cleaning —this was the case. But then I slowly startedthe descent into my predecessors’ messes —and into recent University history. Well, re¬latively recent.The person who held this position beforeme Jaan Elias, is a good friend and abrother in mess. Because his time on thepaper coincided with my own, the notes andrough drafts in his strata of mess were oftenfamiliar. I recognized some stories andnotes as being mine.One phone message for Jaan (which Iswear I don't remember), read “Jaan,Chris called to say that he does love you, buthe won’t go see Fred Brooks for you again.”I also found some of Jaan’s papers at thislevel, complete with grades and comments.This was a particularly valuable find: thenumber of papers that Jaan actually turnedin while serving his term were as limited asmy own negligible output since taking of¬fice.Artifacts dating to the Jake Levine erabegan to appear next. Jake only served asmanaging editor during the summer before last, but his traces were clearly visible. Themost easily datable find was a biology bookwith his name written inside. Many of thephotographs in various drawers alsoseemed to be his. One photo — of my boy¬hood idol, Thurman Munson — was taken atComiskey Park during Munson's last sum¬mer. His death fell during Jake's term in of¬fice.One of the final layers of paper concernedthe controversial Pick Award, given May of1979. The prize, for “outstanding contribu¬tions to world understanding,” was given toformer Defense Secretary Robert S. McNa¬mara. (Known since his involvement inVietnam as head of the World Bank.) Theprize included a cash award of $25,000.Hundreds of faculty members and studentsprotested the award, culminating in a day¬long demonstration in which twenty-fivestudents were arrested. News of the award,and the accompanying furor, dominated ourpages at the end of my first year — beforeI'd had much to do with The Maroon.The last of the papers pre-dated me, refer¬ring to events that happened before mytime, and which I'd only heard of from otherstudents or in the pages of back issues ofThe Maroon: “Hanna Gray Elected 10thPresident.”At the bottom of the draw er, I found an un¬opened letter addressed to Andrew Patner,last year's editor. It proved to be a tip froman anonymous source, which began, “Pre¬viously, Abbe Fletman (Patner’s predecs- sor) received a memo concerning irregular¬ities in the Bursar's Office. I do not knowwhat use was made of that information, butthere are new developments.”The letter ended. “Please protect me. Andget to work.” The postmark on the lettertold me that the “developments” dated backto 1979, and the unbroken seal told me thatthe story was never checked. Anonymoussource, if you are still out there, please con¬tact us again. I promise to open the letterthis time.Chris Isidore is a third-year student inthe CollegeThe Viewpoint page is a relatively newfeature here at The Maroon The pageappears each Tuesday and will includeworks of opinion covering a broad rangeof topics. Contributions from readers arewelcome, even expected. Potential sub¬jects include politics, social commen¬tary, the arts, travel, humor, campus af¬fairs, sacred quests, and the usualdogmas.Articles should be signed, typed, andtriple spaced; the author's telephonenumber should also be included. Thedeadline for contributions is 7 pm Thurs¬day. Articles may be delivered to the edi¬tor in person, or left in the Viewpointmailbox in The Maroon office, on thethird floor of Ida Noyes Hall.The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, February 17, 1981 — 7SPORTSMaroons NetBy Audrey LightThe women’s basketball team extendedits winning streak to eight by coasting to a65-29 victory over Washington University onSaturday. After dropping the first twogames of the season, the Maroons have sur¬prised even themselves by winning eleven oftheir last twelve games, including five con¬secutive road games. “Back in November, Inever dreamed we would be doing so well,”said Karin Van Steenlandt, who had an out¬standing twelve-point, nine-rebound gameagainst Washington. “But once our defensestarted clicking I realized we could beat justabout anyone.”Chicago’s prized defense was at its bestagainst Washington, allowing only sevenbaskets in each half. Washington was repea¬tedly forced into turnovers and rarely got asecond shot off as the Maroons completelydominated the boards. Chicago wound upwith a 63-32 rebounding advantage, withHelen Straus pulling down a phenomenal 26rebounds to go with her game-high 20points.The Maroons relied on their strong de¬fense and rebounding to make up for extre¬mely cold shooting. The team hit only 30 per¬cent from the floor and 56 percent from thefreethrow line. Four minutes elapsed beforeStraus put Chicago on the scoreboard on afeed from Janet Torrey. Midway throughthe half, the score stood at 10-6, with Chica¬go on top.After a timeout, Chicago’s offense finallycame to life. Torrey and Kim Hammondeach hit outside shots and Bev Davis poured in five points in a one minute span. By half¬time, the Maroons had built a more respect¬able 31-15 lead.The slow offensive start did not worryCoach Diann Nestel. “The only thing thatdidn’t happen is that our shots wouldn’t goin,” Nestel said. “All you can do in that situ¬ation is play toughter defense. And we didthat — we pressured them out of theirgame.”Both teams were playing without key of¬fensive players. Washington’s 6'2” centerwas sidelined with an injury, while illnesskept Chicago’s Nadya Shmavonian out ofthe game. In addition, Hammond and Chris¬tie Nordhielm were playing at less than fullstrength and Carol Weesner was still side¬lined with the knee injury she suffered onJanuary 17th.Nestel was pleased by her team’s abilityto pick up the slack. “It’s good to get overthe fear of playing without a particularplayer.” she said. “Now we’ll have.the con¬fidence of knowing we’ll be that muchtougher when everyone is healthy.”1 Although Weesner’s status remains indoubt, Nestel expects to have everyone elseready for Thursday’s game against Whea¬ton. Last night’s game at Mundelein was ex¬pected to be another rout, but the team isgearing up for a tough battle with Wheaton.Although the Wheaton contest is a non-con¬ference game, a good showing could earnthe Maroons a bye in the first round of theupcoming state tournament. The game willbegin at 7:30 in the fieldhouse and is the lasthome game of the season. Wade Lewis (14) and Mike Shakelton (40) shoot from inside during action against Riponlast weekend. Their efforts were in vain, however, as the Maroons lost 81-59.Scorecard1) Basketball - Ripon 81, Chicago 592) Men’s Track - North Central 67, Chicago60, and DePaul 72, Chicago 54Mike Axinn placed second in the 3000®meter run in 8:15.8 at a UCTC vs. South¬ern Illinois, Wisconsin, and Western Mi-|chigan track meet.3) WrestlersRecord to up6-1By Nick VarsamWomen Trot to Opening TriumphBy Carole PetersenThe women’s varsity track team usedstrategy and teamwork to win its first homemeet last Wednesday, defeating teams fromChicago State University, Concordia, NorthCentral, and Oakton Community Colleges.Aware that the Chicago State Cou-garettes, the Maroons’ most formidable foe,would probably dominate the sprintingevents, Maroon coach Linda Whitehead con¬ centrated the team’s strength in the longerevents, converting regular sprinters intomiddle and long-distance runners. The teamrose to the challenge and beat the Cou-garettes by a 20-point margin.Although Cindi Sandbom, who won the3000 meter run, was the Maroons’ only first-place finisher, Chicago captured an abun¬dance of second and third place finishes.Some of these points were hard-fought;Casey Kerrigan stole third place away fromOakton Community College in the closingmoments of the 800 meter run, and Rita Kos-tecke did the same inihe 3000.The next home meet for the Chicago women will be Saturday at 10 am in theFieldhouse. The track team would also liketo remind all hardy women (and even thosewho would just like to be hardy) that itcovets new members. Practice is on week¬days between 4 and 5:30 pm in the Field-house.An article in Friday’s Maroon mistakenlyomitted the name of the winner of the Mid¬west Collegiate and Regional Karate-Dotournament. Doug Dobson, a member of theUniversity’s club, won first place in themen’s intermediate individual sparringevent.Chamberlin Rips DudleyBy David GruenbaumThe bad boys from BJ have done it again.In football Chamberlin pulled a stunningupset by beating Ed’s Bar and Grill, andthen went on to take a 6-0 lead against Wa-buno Bay before succumbing 13-6 in the All-University Final.In basketball Thursday night Chamberlindefeated previously unbeaten Dudley, 40-37in a shocking upset. Could it be deja-vus?Last year Chamberlin lost its first game toDudley but then came back to win the sec¬ond game and then the third game to win theresidence championship. In another game,Lower Rickert defeated Commuters 42-22.Rickert jumped out to a fifteen point leadand then coasted home for the win.The best team in open rec basketball, theBookstore, is looking to play some of thebest intramural teams. If any teams are in¬terested, they should give Sylvester Allen acall at 753-3339. Bookstore, certainly intra¬mural’s finest passing team, beat the Grad¬uate School of Business hardily over theweekend. GSB’s colorful guard, ProfessorSammy Peltzman, was in rare form, mak¬ing several key baskets, and becoming the victim of the first “rape” foul called thisyear.Games to WatchDE¬DIVINITY SCHOOL-ABNORMALVIATES Tues 6:30 HCF1Spread: Divinity by 8... Unless it is the Dayof Reckoning, the second ranked teamshould be able to whip the fear of God intothese deviates by Golly.LOWLIFES-AVERAGE WHITE BASKET¬BALL TEAM Thu 8:30 BGSpread: Lowlifes by 10 . . . Last time thesetwo teams met, Lowlife won by over thirtypoints. However this is AWB’s last chancefor a real win (they do have a win by forfeit)and they will be gunning, if that is possi¬ble.UPPPER FLINT-CHAMBERLIN Tues 6:30HCF3Spread: Chamberlin by 12 . . . Chamberlinshould have no trouble with Flint after beat¬ing highly-touted Dudley. However, Flint’steam play is commendable and if Flintplays to its maximum ability they couldupset. If the Maroon wrestling team keeps up atits present pace, look for some nice sur¬prises at their conference meet this week.Chicago improved its dual meet record to6-1 last Saturday by defeating Elmhurst44-12 and Illinois Wesleyan 23-21. TheMaroons edged Illinois Wesleyan on a clutchpin by Mac Gillespie at 177 pounds. Chicagowas down 21-17 when Gillespie struck his op¬ponent in 45 seconds, giving the Maroons sixteam points and the victory.It was a fine overall team performancefor the Maroons in last Saturday’s meet.Tim Bachenburg and Mark Farwell bothwon a decision and a forfeit, while GeorgeDupper lost his first match but rebounded towin the second. Ken Barr had a fine day,winning both of his matches by major deci¬sion. Bob Tuel pinned his only opponent.Steve Rubin and Joe Pierri each won on aforfeit, but lost to their only opponents, withPierri’s loss coming in the final seconds ofthe contest. Mac Gillespie had an impres¬sive showing with wins by decision and by apin. Finally, Greg Prince, taking injuredBill Blaise’s spot, lost in the 190 pound divi¬sion.This weekend the Maroons will reach theclimax of their season, as they head for Cor¬nell of Iowa and the Midwest Collegiate Ath¬letic Conference tournament. The majorityof the team members will take winning re¬cords into the meets, and Chicago has agood chance of placing very high in the tour¬nament. Any Maroon winner at the MCACtournament will be headed for the DivisionIII Nationals in Cleveland, Ohio. That wouldbe the icing on the cake for a good seasonturned in by Coach Leo Kocher's men.Quote of the Day“What is this, rape?” Sam Peltzmarguard for GSB faculty, commenting onhacking foul committed against him in Saurday’s GSB-Bookstore game.UPPER WALLACE-TUFTS Tues 8:30 BGSpread: Wallace by 8 ... Upper Wallace ha:been on a tear lately, and should be able t(outrebound Tufts with their tall and might}team.Eight Straight8 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, February 17, 1981 MaryBartholomewSPORTSKosher Killer Takes to RingLes Firestein, aka “The Kosher Killer”,opens his boxing career this Tuesday nightin the Chicago Golden Gloves Tournament.Firestein is a second year undergraduate,ScoreboardMen'sCommuters 53 Dodd/Mead 29Michelson 31 Bradbury 13EFU Stew 62 Lowlifes 30Champs 58 Basketball Team 37NUTS 106 Average White Basketball 29Manic Defensives 38 Frottage 34Henderson 37 Hitchock B 28Chamberlin 40 Dudley 37Women'sBomberetts by forfeit over SnellMisfits by forfeit over TuftsMed School 26 Thumpers 10Mystery Basketball Team 34 .. Lower Wallace 20m'T$8 wmM and his record going into Tuesday’s bout is0-0. Although Firestein has no previous box¬ing experience, he has prepared intenselyfor the fight, planning to read a book on box¬ing before his match on Tuesday night.Firestein is 6’2”, and weighs in at 165, whichshould give him an advantage in reach overj§ his opposition in that weight class, and hislithe frame will make it difficult for oppo¬nents to get a clear shot.The bout will be at St. Andrews Gym, Pau¬lina and Addison St„ with the TournamentM beginning at 6:45.Firestein’s vital statistics:Height: 6’2”J Weight: 165j|f Address: 1012 ShorelandJ§ Education: The Collegiate School, NY.lH NY., BA candidate 1983 in PERLyiO presentsHARPER LIBRARYAFTERNOONCONCERTS Hobbies: Depression and boredomPrevious expeience: High school wres¬tlingTraining: Weightlifting and readingBooks consulted on boxing: Winning Box¬ing by Muhammed Ali, and Inside BoxingInspiration: The film, “Raging Bull”Strategy: Staying close so I don’t get hurt,and playing deadAmbition: Coming out of this alive andgraduatingManagers: Ray Luce and and DavidBrooksWater Boy: Andy SzpurRecord: 0-0Uniform: UC gym shorts, Mid City gymtank top, and a terry cloth bathrobeLocation of fight: St. Andrews Gym, Pau¬lina and Addison St., after 6:45IHEEiEU (@ BE X ny 5, no. 2Sonata for rrllo & pianoM(m AM K.498(Trio, rlarmrt uiola & pianoWednesday, Feb. 184:15 PMGOODSPEED HALLDeportment dt Music Cathy Gtirsky violaPhilip Helzer celloMark Vandersall clarinetDavid Cates pianof The University of Chicagor\ DEPARTMENT OF MUSICGOODSPEED HALL EVENTS THIS WEEKWednesday18Thursday19Sunday22 CHAMBER ENSEMBLE. 4:15pmBeethoven • MozartCOLLEGIUM MUSICUM VIOL CONSORT.12:15p.m. Byrd*ScheimNEW MUSIC ENSEMBLE. 8:00 p mDrattell • Kolb • Stravinsky • and othersAll concerts are freeThe public is cordially invited to attendJOHN MILTON.“I found paradisewith a Student Activities’Theatre Discount”Room 210, Ida Noyes Hall EVITA March 25 and 26first balcony front$14.75 (regular $20)On sale Wed., Feb. 18 at 10 a.m.Free discount coupons to:Tm Getting My Act Together And Taking It On The RoadOne Mo’ TimeChicago Magazine Two-For-One Coupons for:Steppenwolf TheatreThe Performance CommunityThe Puppet PlaceWisdom BridgeOrganic TheatreVictory GardensRemains TheatreSt. Nicholas ApolloTheatre CenterPheasant Run TheatreN A M E. Gallery PerformancesMoMing Dance and Arts CenterMill Run Children’s TheatreMarriott's Lincolnshire TheatreKuumba WorkshopIllinois Theatre Center Goodman/DePaul Children’s TheatreFacets Performances EnsembleCommons TheatreChicago City TheatreBlackstreet USA Puppet TheatreBarat College TheatreChateau Louise Resort Hotel TheatreCoupons are two cents each. Limit five per personThe Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, February 17, 1981 — 9CampusFilmOne Arabian Night (Sumurun) (Ernst Lu-bitsch, 1920): Another of Scheherazade'stales, but quite unlike other film versionsof the Arabian Nights, this one forsakesmagic and mysticism for sexual realism.The plot involves a dancing girl (PolaNegri) and everybody who happens to bein love with her, which seems to be all ofBaghdad. Lubitsch himself plays a hunch¬back clown, chief among the admirersuntil he is shunted aside by a juggler, theSheik, the Sheik’s son, a merchant, andevery other healthy male in sight. Lu-bitsch’s emphasis on sexual humiliationand inequities gives One Arabian Night ahard ironic edge that those versions madefor children don’t have, incidentallybringing it closer in spirit to its source. Vi¬sually, it is one of Lubitsch’s most strikingfilms, looking like some sort of cross be¬tween his usual elegant functionalism andthe kind of expressionism that Lang andPabst were working out at the time. Tues¬day, Feb. 17, at 8 in Quantrell. Doc; $1.00- MA.The Man I Killed (Broken Lullaby) (ErnstLubitsch, 1932): A Frenchman (PhillipHolmes) kills a German, and then visitsthe dead man’s family to make amends.Ostensibly the only tearjerker by the mas¬ter of unsentimental romanticism. Alsostarring Lionel Barrymore and NancyCarroll. Unseen by this reviewer. Wednes¬day, Feb. 18, at 8 in Quantrell. Doc; $1.00Hail the Conquering Hero (Preston Sturges,1944): Eddie Bracken is discharged fromthe army during World War II because of his chronic hay fever. He meets someMarines in a bar who convince him to callhis mother and say he is a war hero. Be¬fore long, his entire home town thinks heis a hero, and gives him a tumultuous wel¬come when he returns home. The laughsare there in abundance, with the usualSturges rapid-fire dialogue and the kickerof a strange marine with a mother com¬plex. The film suffers somewhat from thewimpiness of the Bracken character,causing a lack of audience identificationwith the protagonist. This lack of identifi¬cation is what keeps the film a notchbelow Sturges’ best films. Of course anotch below Sturges best films adds up topretty darn funny. Wednesday, Feb. 18, at8:30 in the Law School Auditorium. Phoen-TuesdayWomen’s Exercise Class: Meets 9:30 am, Ida Noyesdance room.Rockefeller Chapel: Organ Recital. 12:15 pm.Hillel: Students for Israel lunch. 12:15 pm —“TheArab World and Israel. Current Attitudes’’ speak¬er Elliot Chudusf.Comm, on Developmental Biology: “Fiber Typesand Muscle Development’’ speaker Dr. Sperry,1:30 pm. Anatomy 104.Research Seminar in Resource Analysis: “Produc¬tivity in American Industry” speaker Dr. KeithMcKee. 1:30 pm, SCL 161.South Asia Film Festival: “Rituals in India” 4:00pm, Foster Hall room 103.Salisbury Geography Circle: “The Core-PeripheryModel in Historical, Geographical and Philosophi¬cal Perspective” speaker Jim Biaut, 4:00 pm, Pick319.Dept of Microbiology: “Analysis of MembraneFunction by Gene Fusion Methods: The MatloseTransport System of E. Coli” speaker Dr. HowardShuman, 4:00 pm, Cummings lith floor seminarNOTICE TO GILBERT & SULLIVAN'SIOLANTHE TICKET HOLDERSAs in previous years, Mandel Hall seating for this year'sG & S performances will be BY SECTION ONLY, not by seatnumber. On Friday, February 20th and Saturday, February21st, the main floor of Mandel Hall will seat those holdingreserved and patrons tickets; the balcony section will seatthose holding general admission tickets. On Sunday, Feb¬ruary 22nd, all seats will be available to General Admissionticket holders.COURTXUDIO —WORMS Amoto-von HwiwrtPHOTOANALYSISlighting by Marty HaitzFeb 20-21 8;30pmFeb 22 730pmReynolds Club Theatre 753-358157th & University $3/$2students&srs BigJim’sPipe &Tobacco Shop1552 E. 53rd St.(Under the I.C. tracks}9 a.m.-7 p.m. weekday^12-4 p.m. SundaysHYDE PARKHw Versailles324*0200Large StudiosoWalk-in KitchenoUtilities Incl.oFurn.-Unfurn.oCampus Bus at DoorBased on Availability5254 S. Dorchester ix films; $1.50 — NMMy Love Has Been Burning (Kenji Mizogu-chi, 1949): Mizoguchi speaks out onceagain for the Japanese woman, this timeby following the involvement of theheroine with the rise of the Liberal Party(1884-1889) and her ultimate realizationthat rights for all human beings did not in¬clude those for women. The director’sstyle of intimate discretion forces us notonly to observe but to participate. The lastshot of two women, silently crying, bothdisillusioned with the male world but re¬solved that women are, indeed, humanbeings reveals the ideal essence that Mi-zoguchi’s post-war woman embodies.Thursday, Feb. 19, at 8 in Quantrell. Doc;$1.00 — YS Mutiny on the Bounty (Frank Lloyd 1935): Agrand adventure film with two great per¬formances, but rather trite when it at¬tempts to confront the issue of whethermutiny can be justified. Though the filmmay not be as sophisticated about the sub¬ject matter as the later Caine Mutiny, Mu¬tiny on the Bounty is more fun. CharlesLaughton’s performance as Captain Blighprovided mimics with material for yearsto come. Clark Gable is appropriatelyrugged and witty. Franchot Tone’s prat¬tling is the only weak performance amongthe leads. Thursday, Feb. 19, at 8:30 in theLaw School Auditorium. Law SchoolFilms; $1.50 — NMCompiled by Mike Alper, Neil Miller,and Yoon Son.CALENDARroom.Aikido: Meets 4:30 pm, Bartlett gym. •Gymnastics Club: Meets 5:30 pm, Bartlett gym.Oriental Institute: Two Exhibits —“Remem¬brances of the Near East” and “Near Eastern Cos¬tume” opening 6:00-8:00 pm. 1155 East 58th St.UC Hotline: Introductory meeting for people inter¬ested in working with the Hotline, 7:00 pm, IdaNoyes.Physical Education: Free swimming, 7:30 pm, IdaNoyes Hall.Racquethall Club: Meets 7:30 pm. Field Housecourts 1 and 2.Comm, on Conceptual Found, of Science: “Evolu¬tion as a Random Process” speaker Prof. DavidRaup, 8:00 pm, Eckhart 209.Doc Films: "Sumrum” 8:00 pm, Cobb.University Feminist Organization: Women’s RapGroup, meets in the Women’s Center 3rd floor ofthe Blue Gargoyle, 8:00 pm.Hillel: Israeli folkdancing, 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes 3rdfloor.WednesdayRockefeller Chapel: Holy Communion, 8:00 am.Kundalini Yoga: Meets 12 noon, Ida Noyes.Rockefeller Chapel: Carillon Recital by Robert Lo-dine. University Carillonneur, 12:15 pm.Commuter Co-op: Get-together in the commuterlounge, basement of Gates-Blake, 12:30 pm.Crossroads: English classes for foreign women,2:00 pm, 5621 S. Blackstone.Computation Center Seminar: Introduction toMM, an electronic mail system, 3:30-5:00 pm, Cobb107.Dept of Biochemistry: “Nucleotide Sequence andFunction of Bovine Parathyroid Hormone” 4:00pm, Cummings room 101.Gymnastics Club: Meets 5:30 pm, Bartlett gym.Table Tennis: Meets 7:00-10:00 pm, Field Housefirst floor.Computer Club: Meets 7:30 pm in Ryerson 251(enter through Eckhart).Badminton Club: Meets 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes gym.GALA: Discussion Group on “Feminism and GayMen” with guest speakers. Meets at 9:00 pm in theIda Noyes Library (everyone welcome).Hyde Park Citizens Comm: Meeting at 7:30 pm, inthe meeting room of the Hyde Park Coop Super¬market.Country Dancers: Meet at 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes.Free, beginners welcome.Science Fiction Club: Meets 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes.Everyone welcome.Doc Films: “The Man I Killed” 8:00 pm, Cobb.Hyde Park Al-Anon Group: Meets 8:00 pm, 1st Un¬itarian Church, 57th and Woodlawn.Phoenix Films: “Hail the Conquering Hero” 8:30pm. Law School Auditorium.PalmerContinued from page 1schools.” He continued, telling his audienceof U.C. students that, “your mission has gotto be to use your skill and knowledge in thisliberation.”“This is not your school,” Palmer told thelargely black audience, “it is theirs.”Palmer suggested that the black commu¬nity needed to establish an economic base,and institutions of its own. The consumableincome of blacks in 1976, he said, was $125billion. Most of this money was spent inwhite society, rather than black, he addedPalmer read a list of the subsidiaries ofCBS, Inc., saying that the black communityneeds institutions of comparable size andwealth.He also warned the students in the audi- Hunger Concern Group: Meets 8:30 pm, Ida Noyesroom 217.ThursdayPerspectives: Topic —“Export Marketing in Agri¬culture” guests D. Gale Johnson, Thomas Hieron-umus and Gilbert Frickes, 6:09 am, channel 7.Eastern Orthodox: Divine Liturgy, 8:00 am. Rock¬efeller chapel.Women’s Exercise Class: Meets 9:30 am, Ida Noyesdance room.Italian Table: Meets 12 noon in the Blue Gargoyleto speak Italian.La Table Francaise: Meets in the Blue Gargoyle at12 noon to speak French.Episcopal Church Council: Noon Eucharist atBond Chapel.Prayer Meeting: North room of Rockefeller Chap¬el. 12 noon.The Dept of Music: Collegium Musicum Consort,12:15 pm, Goodspeek Hall.Aikido: Meets 4:00 pm, Bartlett gymComm on Virology: “Adenovirus Gene FunctionsRevealed by Missense Mutations” speaker HaroldGinsberg, 4:00 pm, Cummings room 1117.Comm on Social Thought: “Piety and the Conspi¬cuous Tomb Michelangelo and Bernini at St.Peter’s” speaker Prof Philipp Fehl, 4:30 pm, SS122.Dept of Physics: “Genesis” speaker Savas Dumo-poulos, 4:30 pm, Eckhart 133.Anthropology: Lecture/Slides/Discussion —RickParmentier will speak on his fieldwork experi¬ences in Palau, Micronesia, 5:00 pm, Harper 103.Gymnastics Club: Meets 5:30 pm, Bartlett gym.Sex Anarchy Party: 3rd annual purple’s congress,7:00 pm, Ida Noyes Sun Parlor.Ill Central Hospital: Ala-Teen group meets 7:00pm. 5800 S. Stony Island. Info call 471-0225Chicago Debating Society: Practice at 7:00 pm.Meeting at 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes.SYL Class: “A Workers Poland Yes! The Pope'sPoland No!” 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes Library.Doc Films: "My Love Has Been Burning” 8:00pm, Cobb.Collegiate Lectures in the Liberal Arts: “KingLear: A Re-Reading” speaker David Grene, 8:00pm, Swift Lecture Hall.Law School Films: “Mutiny on the Bounty” 8:30pm. Law School Auditorium.Comm Assembled in Solidarity with El Salvador:Meets at noon in Reynolds Club Lounge.FridayPerspectives: Topic—“Embargoes and Our Bilat¬eral Agreements” guests Dr. Gale Johnson, Thom¬as Hieronymous and Richard Davidson, 6:09 am.channel 7.ence to be skeptical of the educational sys¬tem, saying “keep in mind it was deemedyou would be miseducated, or undereducat¬ed...and that you have been processedthrough the educational system...that keepsour brothers and sisters oppressed.”At the end of his lecture, Palmer fieldedquestions from the crowd. He was not opti¬mistic about the future of blacks, he said,“unless young blacks get their heads to¬gether and stop submitting.”“Whites are the implacable foe,” he said.“Blacks must realize the central fact thatthe white man is a bitter enemy.”In his answer to the final question,Palmer said he disagrees with Dr. MartinLuther King’s approach of nonviolence anddesegragation. “When blacks coalesce withwhites,” he said, “the whites dominate thecoalition.”10 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, February 17, 1981Ifiiti&Miiisai /CLASSIFIED ADSCLASSIFIEDClassified advertising in the ChicagoMaroon is 75 cents per 30 characterline Ads are not accepted over thephone, and they must be paid in advance Submit all ads in person or bymail to The Chigago Maroon, 1212 E.S9th St., Chicago, IL 60637 Our officeis in Ida Noyes, room 304 DeadlinesWed noon for the Fri paper, Fri noontor the Tues papers.SPACE1 bdrm apt available in 4 bdrm apt at57th and Drexel now until summer$160 rent incl. utilities Call 241 6740Coop apt on lake: 2 br; 1 bath; eat inkit, Ig wbfpl; 28.500 374 0219Studio Sl85/mo, free util. Desk, bed,dresser, sm. fridge, tstr oven 55 &Blackstone 975 7751 eves ScottAttractive 1' 2 rm apt available March1. Good location Call 493 1878 after6:003 br condo Prime U.C area Assess4- price low Must sell 667 4038 pm1 bdrm w bath, turn, 57 & Blkstn inexch for babysitting Board neg 2415201 eveFor rent Lg 5 rm 2 bdrm Eng bsmtapt, Area 53 & Maryland-nearOsteopathic Med Ctr $275 mo •+- sec.643 4640, 667 4875.Fern non smoker to share twobedroom apt at 54th Ellis Cat ownerwelcome Rozalyn 363 8610Spacious apartment for sublet AvailMarch 1. 3 bdrms, 2 baths. 3 blocksfrom Co op. $435 mo Call 684 6233.WALK TO CAMPUS rent 2 br 2 bamodrn prof decor apt nr trains shopsparking drapes rugs pool 947 9597.REWARD be safe, warm and richerTake over my Univ housing contractCall 955 2742 anytime SSSSSSSSSSSSROMMATE WANTED to share largesunny apt w'2 others (females).$118 mo (incl heat) 643-3395.Room in 7 room apt Near qampus.SI 15 mo Mar 1 grads only Ask for Jimor Anne 241 5410.PEOPLE WANTEDOVERSEAS JOBS Summer/yearround Europe, S America, Australia,Asia All fields $500 51200 monthlySightseeing Free info Write IJC Box52 IL5 Corona Del Mar, CA 92625. Full time administrative secretaryposition available immediately atLutheran School of Theology: clericaland admin responsibilities Salary$10,000 SI 1,500 667 3500, ext 214 8 304 30 pmPaid subjects needed for experimentson memory, perception and languageprocessing Research conducted bystudents and faculty in the Committeeon Cognition and Communication,Department of Behavioral SciencesPhone 753 4718WANTED: Experienced offset printerto work 10 15 hours every week Experience with color work preferredEmployment to last at least two years,summers available. Call Matt at 7532518, Tu and Th You must be qualifiedand reliableQuadrangle Club needs waiters andwaitresses for the noon hours call MrFulop 493 6801Part time sitter needed spring quarterfor 8 month boy in your home 493 9548ref Required.Babysitting in my home for 2 smallchildren Approx 68 hrs per wkdaytimes Will negotiate times andpay Call Vicki 285 0229SERVICESTYPIST Disseration quality. Helpwith grammar, language as neededFee depending on manuscript IBMSelectric Judith 955 4417ARTWORK Posters, illustration, lettering, etc Noel Yovovich 493 2399Excellent, Accurate TYPIST will typeterm papers, theses, dissertations,reasonably priced Pick up anddelivery on campus CallWanda 684 7414 after 5 pmSHIPPING PACKING World wide 8.USA Packing & Shipping services CallAir Sea Pac, Inc, Tel. 312 766 8226 forinformationTYP.IST: High quality work byfreelance writer Competitively priced, prompt; minor editing with outcharge IBM Correcting Selectric.After 6pm 338 3800 or 472 2415Professional Typing of resumes,thesis, reports, forms reasonablerates call Midwest Secretarial Service235 5417Will do typing IBM Selectric 821 0940WOMEN! Self defense classes begMon Mar 2 7 9 pm. Blue Gargoyle 56555 Univ. 6 wks $25 Register call 3325540 (Chimera Inc) today. PERSONALSWRITER'S WORKSHOP (PLaza2 8377)GW Belated Valentine Checkers'pups are available Much empathy.Moving’ Empty boxes 3 3622COMPUTERGRAPHICSLearn to use DISSPLA on the Amdahlcomputer Two session seminar will beheld Monday and Wednesday.February 23 and 25 3:30 5:00 pm. Rl180FREE COFFEEInflatio hasn't hit us yet cgme to PostL i br is, this Fri. INHNOONTIMECONCERTSEvery Thursday at 12:15 pm inGoodspeed Recital Hall This week,2 19, a special performance by the ViolConsort of the University CollegiumMusicum, under the direction ofHoward BrownUC HOTLINE 753-1777Feeling snowed under? Call Hotline753 1777 open seven days a week from7 00 pm to 7:00 am.DISCREET MUSICTurn on and Tune in every Wednesdaymte at 10 30 pm for the best in the Progressive music experience Foreignand Domestic, on WHPK FM 88 3 inStereo Music which is as ignorable asit is interestingPASSPORT PHOTOSPASSPORT PHOTOS WHILE UWAIT Model Camera, 1342 E 55th St493 6700GUITARGuild D 25 Acoustic guitar Beautifultone and action $300 with soft shellcase 643 6246, leave name andnumberRESEARCHERAVAILABLESeeking full or part time work asresearch assistant to professor orother with similar need Hours andpay negotiable Call Peter at 643 6246 COMING OUTIsn't easy, but it's worth it. If you'regay and want out of the closet, we canhelp you make the transition We'restudents just like yourself, and ourhelp is understanding and confidential. the U of C Gay Alliance drop bySunday through Thurs 7:30 10pm orcall us at 753 3274 Ida Noyes 3rd floorSCENESGilbert and Sullivan's IOLANTHE,presented in Mandel Hali, 57th andUniversity, Feb 20 and 21 at 8 pm,Feb 22 at 2 pm Tickets at Mandel HallBox OfficeGILBERT ANDSULLIVANIOLANTHE at Mandel Hall, 57th andUniversity, Friday, Feb 20 8. 21 at 8pm, Feb 22 at 2 pm Tickets at MandelHall Box OfficeFOR SALEHEWLETT PACKARD HP 38E Handheld Financial Calculator Programmable Used 3 month $85 00 Warranty Call Glenn Gungel, 667 3500 days1978 Plymouth Horizon 4 door hatchback Rusty Jones warranty Maxtguard and protectionsystem Excellent condition $4150 Call 684 6233RIDE WANTEDTo WHTFD. Conn end of finals weekwill pay gas, tolls and drive Will payextra if you're driving back. Call 6848567 before 10am or after 9pmMOVINGI have a truck and can move thingsFAST and CHEAP No job too smallCall Peter at 955 1824FEMINISM ANDGAY MENCome to GALA (Gay and LesbianAlliance) discussion group on the subject of " Feminism and Gay Men" thisWednesday at 9 pm in the Ida NoyesLibrary. Hannah Frisch of the NewAmerican Movement will be amongthe speakers and everyone iswelcome IMPROVE GRADESStudy better and improve your gradeswith a pair of SILENCIO SOUNDMUFFLERS. They will eliminatedistracting noises that disturb concerntration Only $8 pr. Call 955 0115 from7 10 pm for delivery within 24 hrsDOES YOURMINDMATTER?It does to us People are needed forongoing experiments in handednessand psychology Interesting and profitable Call 753 473S (Lefties pleasecall)RAYMONDFEDERAAANFiction Collective writer RaymondFeberman will read from The TwofoldVibration, his new work on Wed Feb18 at Ida Noyes Library, 4 00 FreeFederman plays a vital role in currentinnovative fictionPASSPORT PHOTOSWhiite you wait passport photos AbleCamera 1519 E 53rd 752 3030CAMPUS BANDSAll campus bands interested in beingincluded in a Grey City Journal article. please contact Brad Bnttan at 7532240 ext 1619SUN &SAILINGSpring break in the Virgin Islands?Students to share cost of charteringsailboat in superb cruising watersBoat 200 at air 400 rt Space limitedcall Hank soon 684 6054or 3 3257MAGAZINESClean out your house and bring current issues to Billings Hospital, 950E59. Main entrance info deskEspecially popular women's magsNewsweek and Time, Essence EbonySports IllustratedNEEDATYPIST?Excellent work done in my homeReasonable rats Tel 536 7167 or 548 ASTRONOMY CLUBAll interested persons are invited to ameeting of the Astronomy Club ThursFeb 19 at 8 pm in Ry 251SYLCLASS"A Workers Poland Yes! The Pope'sPoland No!" Thursday Feb 19, 7 30pm. Ida Noyes Library.DOES FEMINISMhave the same goals and sameenemies as Gay Liberation? Find outat a GALA rap group on “Feminismand Gay Men" Wednesday at 9 pm inthe Ida Noyes Library All are invitedPOLITICALECONOMYIs the UC economy competitive?Discussion sponsored by Union forRadical Political Economics Wed Reb18 1 30 pm. Harper 102PLAN AHEAD!SGAC Memorial Day weekend Committee meets Thurs Feb 19th, 5:30 inthe Pub Call Charlie (3 3751) for moreinfoCOFFEEHOUSEThurs Feb 19 at Blue Gargoyle, 56555. Univ Ave . 9 pm 12 9 00 and 10:30Thom David, folk guitar 9 45 and11:15 David Kay and Tom Gaily, folkcomedy, variety guitar Fresh bakedgoods beverages fireplace 50 coverPERSONALPROTECTIONSHRIEK ALARM Send S3 90 (incudespostage) to William Everett, 5811 WNational Ave West Allis WISC 53214A SINGULAR GROUPWe are a co 00 of artists and craftspeopie sharing selling space at 57th andWoodlawn We are open Wed Sat 112stop in. New artists are invited to joinPOST LI BR tSDave Sulcer & Hugh Blumenfelo FriFeb 20. IHN 9 30 1 30CHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOpen Daily11 AM to 8 30 PMClosed Monday1318 EAST 63rdMU 4-1062 Have you th ought aCoutJung MIND, DEATH IMMORTALITY?’Do you want to read and talk about it? Wm JamesAn interdisciplinary seminar discussion on the survival of thehuman personality as seen by philosophers (Plato. Aristotle)theologians (Aquinas. Tillich), psychologists (Freud James,1,sociologists (Mittord Anes), clinicians (Kubler-Ross Feitel)novelist and playwright (Tolstoi Shakespeare)Participants read works of these authors and share views witheach other and the seminar leaderAnstotle Ten weekly sessions Non-credit AquinasSeminar LeaderJournet Kahn. Ph DFurther information on seminar and enrollment238-6825 STANLEY H. KAPLANfor Over *2 rears The Standard otExcellence in Test PreparationCPA . GMAT . LSAT . GRESAT . MCATFLE* • NATIONAL MEDICAL BOARDS • ECFMGNURSING BOARDS • TOEFL • VQEGRE PSYCH • GRE BiC • DAT • PCAT * 0CAT • vatMA’ • SAT ACHVS • NATIONAL DENTAL BOARDSPOOlATPv BOARDSFlexible Programs ana Hoursv«ft Any Ane S*e Fo'V(Xrrm* ATNy M4«AOWBUBCiT£S* PREPARATIONSPECIALISES SINCE* map' U S Caps*ccT<yontC C4*904 A 2u*C*■muEducation G(Ai i3i w SB* SiNEW YORK 10019CHICAGO CENTCBwe h c*<%Omcaqo m<no«a 6066COUI 794-51 HS * suburban19 S La Gr»ngt RgaOSuM* 201LA Gr*nQ* Uvn<y* 90525(312) 392 5940•NORTH 4 N W SUBURBAN474 C#ntfA> Ay#. UPO*' Ma<i LAvAIHtgniAod ParK W.no*« 60035(31 2) 433 7410■NOT «U. COUWI ».4lk4 SPRING SUMMERFALL INTENSIVESCOURSES Startingthis monthMCAT...GRE...SAT...OATnext monthk wk/HCAT...SATCOwT*#* Con*U«*y UpdAMCi C*** S^> study• iAota V 1C Mad> jS a aonac. TOLL FREE 900-223 i rt2 marian realty,Inc.Studio and 1 BedroomApartments Available- Students Welcome -On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-5400Maroon ClassifiedsHeading: Date(s) to run:1.—30-character line. Return this form to the Maroon office in Ida Noyes Hall, All ads must be prepaid.The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, February 17, 1981 — 11\in STUART HALLNOW HASSOUP(lg.50C sm. 40C)TomatoChicken NoodleClam ChowderMinestroneBeef BarleySPECIAL HEROMon. Italian Sausage ($1.80)Tues. Meatballs ($1.95)Wed. Barbecued Ham ($1.75)Thur. Italian Sausage ($1.80)Fri. Meatballs ($1.95)OTHER HOT ITEMS(Available Every Day)Reuben Sandwiches, Hotdogs, Spiced Cider,and of course, strong coffee and assorted teasYogurt, Cookies, Pickles, Cheesecake, Donuts, Apples, Oranges,Potato Chips and our full selection of made-to-order sandwichesat low cost but with exceptional quality.fwiches available from 7 7:30 - 7:30Lounge Open from 7:30 - 3:30753-2140The University of Chicago Law Schoolpresentswears as good as gold, costs about half as much.SPECIAL INTRODUCTORY OFFER: Save $10 A. W. Brian SimpsonProfessor of LawUniversity of Kent at CanterburyONLY.)at your bookstoreThursday, February 19, 1981Univ. of Chicago Bookstore5750 S. Ellis AvenueChicago, 1L 60637ATT: John RuleGlen Lloyd Auditorium 1111 East <50th Streetmm