THECHICAGOMAROONVolume 90, No. 46Greenfield:The Powerand the PostBy Sherrie Negrea andLaurie KalmansonAs editorial page editor of 'The Washing¬ton Post, Meg Greenfield, a self-described“moderate-centrist-liberal”, controls one ofjournalism’s most influential forums of na¬tional opinion. When she attained that posi¬tion in 1979, Greenfield became the nation’shighest ranking woman in print journal¬ism.On campus this week as a Visiting Fellow,Greenfield is also known nationally for heropinion in Newsweek magazine. Rangingfrom social commentary to political analy¬ses of presidents and events in Washington,her columns focus on what she calls “a com¬pany town where government is the com¬pany”. After meeting informally with stu¬dents and attending classes, Greenfield willlead a question and answer session open tothe University community today in Breast¬ed Hall at 3 p.m.A graduate of Smith College, Greenfieldcame to The Washington Post in 1968 afteran 11 year stint at the now-defunct Reportermagazine. In 1969 she was promoted to Dep¬uty Editor of the Post’s editorial page. Aftersuccessful teamwork throughout the Water¬gate trials with then Editorial Editor PhilipGeyelip, Greenfield, who won a PulitizerPrize for her commentary in 1978, took overthe page herself in 1979.As the power behind the unsigned editori¬als at the Post, Greenfield’s anonymitybrings her less mass-recognition than is ac¬corded to other journalists of similar stat¬ure. An editorial writer, Greenfield hassaid, “is part of an instutional personality”,whose members are known only by the at¬tribution “The Washington Post said yester¬day that...”Editorial writing, according to Green¬field, requires above all sound explanationsto convince readers, but must also includevitality and a personal quality. Her obliga¬tions as Editorial Editor at The Post, whichhas been described as a small-town dailywith an emphasis on local views, are tomany types of readers. As Greenfield ex¬plained it to a small group of University stu¬dents yesterday, The Post’s readershipranges from “middle-class blacks and gov¬ernment civil service employees to some ofthe nation’s wealthiest white suburbanites”.While the Post retains its local bias, Green¬field feels that the paper must always re¬member that it is the leading daily in asmall town that happens to be the nation’sCapitol.In her columns. Greenfield speaks as aWashington insider trying to explain the po¬litical bureaucracy to those outside of it.Her think-pieces for Newsweek are distin¬guished from standard mainstream com¬mentary by her willingness to avoid puttingglasses on issues already over-debated byher colleagues. Her readiness to rangesomewhat far afield of typical concerns hasbrought her to the top of a fiercely competi¬ The U f Chicago Copyright 1981 The Chicago Maroon Friday, April 17, 1981State May Deepen Cuts inISSC Scholarship BudgetBy Steve ShandorMeg Greenfieldtive profession.Greenfield’s experience and professional¬ism allow her to cut through the politicalrhetoric that often overwhelms the Capitol.In an eleventh-hour overview of last year’sCarter-Reagan race, Greenfield chose not toaddress the campaign’s tiresome host ofnon-issues, but instead discussed what it islike to be in Washington in late October of apresidential season. Her column revealedthe “deranging, destructive...pathology ofthe place” by citing the range of partisanalignments and last minute ship-jumping socharacteristic of national elections.Continued on page 3 Students and University officials alike areanxiously awaiting the outcome of the Il¬linois State Senate hearings April 21 on theproposed budget for the Illinois StateScholarship Commission for fiscal year1982. The Commission’s budget has alreadybeen slashed $23.1 million and any furthercutbacks could be devastating to those Il¬linois residents who depend on such aid eachyear to attend college.The $23.1 million in cuts included in thebudget recommended earlier this year byGovernor Thompson are seen as virtuallyassured of passage; however, some legisla¬tors are now proposing cuts which go farbeyond those supported by ThompsonThe proposed cuts are coming at a timewhen the Illinois State Scholarship Commis¬sion received a record 83,000 applications by-March 18 with thousands more expected bythe April 17 deadline The cuts are especial¬ly significant to the University of Chicago asalmost one-third of undergraduates comefrom the state of Illinois.Most of the cuts in aid have taken the formof stricter guidelines for deciding whodeserves aid. The expected student's con¬tribution has been raised from the present$950 annually to $1200 per year. In addition,the expected parental contribution has beenincreased by twenty-five per cent. The max¬imum award granted to the most needystudents has been increased onlv $50. from $1900 to $1950. This proposed 2.5% increasecomes at a time when college tuitions arerising at a double-digit rate.These proposals have caused an outcryfrom the Federation of Independent IllinoisColleges and Universities to at least preventany further 'cutbacks. Brian David, theUniversity of Chicago’s representative tothe Student Advisory Board of FIICU, statesthat students “have a direct interest in this(fight for funding). . . Chicago and North¬western get more money than any otherschools in Illinois.” Commenting on the pro¬posed $50 increase in the maximum award,David said, “Fifty dollars won’t even buythree books anymore.”Dan Hall, Dean of Admissions and Finan¬cial Aid. said that these cuts “will not affectour students as much as those attending lesscostly institutions,” because educational ex¬penses are taken into consideration whencalculating need. Hall foresees problemsmainly for those students who now onlymarginally qualify for state aid. In examin¬ing the stricter guidelines proposed. Hallpointed out that between loans and summerand term-time employment, a Universityof Chicago student’s contribution is alreadywell in excess of $1200. Hall also said. “TheUniversity does not propose to increaseparental contribution by 25 percent.” Hallbelieve^ that the majority of Illinoisstudents at the University who qualify foraid will qualify for the proposed $1950 max-Continued on page 5SG Candidates Dispute Fee, FundingBy Anna Feldman andDarrell Wu DunnThe Student Government elections will beheld on Monday and Tuesday next week. Be¬sides the five executive council officeswhich are being contested, there are 44 rep¬resentative seats open. Voters will also bevoting on a series of constitutional amend¬ments. Two of them are non-controversalchanges which were passed by the SG asse¬mbly; one would fix the number of SG asse¬mbly members to 50, the other wouldchange the term of office of the executivecommittee to coincide with the University’sfiscal year, (Which begins on July 1).There is also a move to get a more con-troversal amendment on the ballot whichwould abolish the SG Finance Committee,which is chosen by the SG assembly, and re¬place it with a directly-elected Student Fi¬nance Board, which would be totally auton¬omous from SG.Presently, the decisions on funding aremade by the SGFC Its decisions can beoverturned by a two-thirds vote of the SGAssembly. The committee is made up of theSGFC chair, the SG treasurer, and sixmembers elected by the assembly. Thepresident of SG makes six nominations tothe assembly for those positions, and thosenominations are usually confirmedThe fair funding coalition’s amendmentwould call for the elimination of the SGFC.and its replacement with a Student FinanceBoard (SFB). The board would consist of seven members, each elected for a one-yearterm Each student voter would get twovotes, which could be split between two can¬didates, or given together to one individualcandidate. The seven candidates receivingthe most votes would be elected to theboard, with the one receiving the highesttotal becoming SFB chair.There would be no way to appeal a SFBdecision, except for a group to re-submit itsproposal to SFB The only control that theSG assembly would have would be at theirfirst meeting of winter quarter, when theywould be able, by a 3/4 “no confidence”vote, to disband the sitting SFB and call newelections.The Fair-funding Coalition is circulatingpetitions to get the amendment on nextweek's SG ballot. They have until noon Sat¬urday to get five percent of the students tosign the petition, with their student IDnumber. Coalition Co-President Mark Ro¬binson, a second-year student in the College,said that so far, they have between 200-300signatures Their goal is 500 signatures.Robinson believes that approval of theamendment would allow greater graduatestudent involvement in funding decisionsHe also believes that the different studentorganizations which receive funding fromthe current SGFC may work to have sym-pethetic parties elected, in order to makesure that their own funding continuesThe control over the SFB’s by-laws wouldalso rest totally with the SFB SGFC’s by¬laws must be approved by the SG Assembly, and are already established.“This would give them a chance to startwith a clean slate,” said Robinson. “It willallow them to consider what activities andwhat groups are truly viable.”In the executive council elections, six par¬ties and two independent candidates haveproduced 26 candidates for the positions ofpresident, vice president, SG finance chair,treasurer and secretary The Maroon hascompiled the following brief descriptions ofeach party and each candidate's positionsand experience.Enlightened Despotism at Chicago“SG has become an unimagina¬tive bureaucracy,” said VP. candidateDavid Brooks “It’s filled with ambitioustechnocrats. We aren’t running a candidate jfor President because we don’t think we,should be running the whole thing. You needan administrator for President, I suppose ;What we want to add are some imaginative;philosophers.”David BrooksBrooks is a second year undergraduate,]who has not participated in SG before this.;He is running for VP because he feels heneeds the “position and power,” of the officeto work to achieve the things he wants to;change here, like equalizing the male >female ratio in the collegeRobin KirkKirk is the Enlightened Despots candidate iContinued on page 5 iStudent Government ElectionsMonday and TuesdayApril 20th and 21 stPolls at:Cobb (10-2:30)Reynolds Club (11:30-2:30)Medical School (11-1)Law School (11-1)Business School (11-1)International House (5-7) Pick Hall (11-1)Burton-Judson (5-7)Woodward Court (5-7)Pierce (5-7)Shoreland (Mon. only,7-9)rumTHE VISITING FELLOWS COMMITTEEpresentsMEG GREENFIELDNewsweek Columnist and Editorial PageEditor of The Washington PosttRSMARKS. QUESTIONS, AND ANSWERSFRIDAY, APRIL 17, 3:00 P.M.Oriental Institute, Breasted Hall 1155 East 58th Street2 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, April 17, J98iNEWSWBfcfcBRIEFSHarold WashingtonLeads SymposiumFirst District Congressman Harold Wash¬ington heads the list of speakers at a Sympo¬sium on Human Rights and Social Justice tobe held tomorrow evening in Ida NoyesHall.Washington, whose district includes theUniversity, will speak along with DennisBrutus, an exiled South African poet, schol¬ar, and educator now teaching at Northwes¬tern University; Sister Rosalinda Ramirez,a missionary to Central America; and Se-cundino Ramirez, a member of the HumanRights Commission of El Salvador. Theseminar begins at 7:30 in the Ida Noyes HallCloister Club.The program is sponsored by the Organi¬zation of Black Students, the Organization ofLatin American Students, and the Commit¬tee Assembled to Unite in Solidarity with ElSalvador.SG Candidates to SparWHPK and The Maroon will be sponsoringa debate among the SG presidential candi¬dates this Saturday, at 2 p.m. The presi¬dential debate will last until 3, with the last15-20 minutes of the show being given over toquestons phoned in by the audience.Then from 3-3:30, the proposed fair-fund¬ing amendment will be debated. The amend¬ment may not be placed on next week’s bal¬lot. but amendment sponsors have promisedto continue efforts to hold a vote on theamendment, even if they miss the scheduledelection. To be placed on Monday and Tues- Harold Washingtonday’s ballot, supporters have until noon onSaturday to hand in petitions signed by fivepercent of the student body.Both debates will be broadcast overWHPK, 88.3 FM. Listeners can call in ques¬tions to 753-3588.Isidore Elected EditorThird-year student Chris Isidore waselected editor of the 1981-82 Chicago Maroonat a meeting Tuesday night attended by ap¬proximately 40 Maroon staff members Isi¬dore. currently managing editor of theMaroon, will succeed the present editor, David Glockner, at the end of the spring jquarterIsidore defeated Joan Sommers, product- !ion manager of the Maroon and also a third-year student, to win the post. Sommers jstruck sharply differing positions, Isidoreemphasizing his three years of experienceon the Maroon, and Sommers the need forchanges in the management and philosophy !of the paper.Before his appointment as managing edi¬tor last spring, Isidore served as an asso¬ciate editor and reporter and has also jworked for the past two summers as an as¬sistant to syndicated columnist Richard ,Reeves. Isidore told the staff members thatihe hoped to improve the paper's coverage ofnews, to improve the unity of the staff, andto have decisions about the paper’s layout jand headlines made in the Maroon’s office,rather than by those who paste up thepaper.Sommers, who has served as productionmanager for the paper since last spring,called for more professional management ofthe paper. In particular, she urged that deci- !sions be made on a more decentralized jbasis, that the paper’s business staff bereorganized, and that issues be planned fur¬ther in advance. She said that the Maroonshould more actively report on the researchof faculty members at the University, andshould develop closer links with sources ofcampus news.Isidore praised the quality of the Grey jCity Journal and the Chicago Literary Re¬view this year, and promised that they iwould be granted continued editorial auton¬omy Thus far, Isidore has named only onemember of his staff for the coming year, ap¬pointing Robert Decker as managing editorDecker is presently an associate editor. GreenfieldContinued from page 1A few’ weeks after the election, when Rea¬gan’s budget cuts had already begun to bogdown in Congressional channels, Greenfieldwas quick to condemn “the-little-mud-hut-building bureaucratic instinct at work” asWashington's special interest group settledback down to business as usual.Thus far Greenfield has been hesitant tojudge Reagan’s performance in black-and-white terms. An important measure of hispresidency’s success, she stated in a recentcolumn, will be his ability to empathize withthe groups of people whom his economiccuts will directly affect. A further test, shesays, will be whether Reagan can maintainhis popular image as a compassionate manthrough the lengthy process of guiding hisprogram through Congress.After twenty years of living in Washing¬ton, Greenfield still finds life on Capitol Hillunsettling. ‘ You become so consumed withpolitics and with secrets behind the officialbusiness that you stop seeing or respondingto anything else,” she told a Vogue reporterin 1974. “People become less than peopleand it is terribly destructive to one’s self.”Having come through the Post’s Water¬gate coverage with the paper’s credibilityintact, Greenfield is naturally sensitive tocharges of inaccuracies and distortions inthe Press. Thus, as she told Thursday’s in¬formal discussion group, this week's revela¬tion that Post reporter Janet Cooke fakedher 1981 Pulitizer-Prize winning coverage ofa juvenile heroin addict came “as quite ashock.” To veteran journalist Greenfield “anewspaper has only its credibility. Every¬thing else comes after that.”We haven’t forgotten faculty & staff...IT'S THE SAME DEAL FOR YOU ON WEDNESDAY! KIMBARK LIQUORS& WINE SHOPPE1214 E. 53rd (Kimbark Plaza)Phone: 493-3355i LIQUOR750 ml. SMIRNOFF '80 S 4.39Ltr. APPLETON RUM 7.49750 ml. SEAGRAM'S CROWN ROYAL 10.29750 ml. SEAGRAM'S 7 CROWN 4.59750 ml. SEAGRAM'S GIN 4.59Ltr. CHRISTIAN BROTHER'S BRANDY 6.89750 ml. JIM BEAM 4.49750 ml. J & B SCOTCH 8.29750 ml. GRAND MARNIER 14.29750 ml. JOSE CUERVO TEQUILA 6.19BEER/COLA8 pk. PEPSI, DIET PEPSI, MOUNT AIN DEW 1.996-12 oi. STROH'S (Worm Only) 1.996-12 oi. OLYMPIA BEER (Worm only) 1.89WINES750 ml. BLACK TOWER LIEBFRAMILCH . . 2.99750 ml. HARVEY'S BRISTOL CREAM 6.79750 ml. MOUTON CADET Red/White 4.29750 ml. CARMEL VIN BLANC ANDVIN ROUGE 3.49750 ml. MANISCHWITZ CONCORD WINES 1.891.5 I. INGLE NOOK NAVALLE WINES(Rhine, Chablis, Burgundy, Rose) .... 3.99750 ml. ANDRE CHAMPAGNES. . (3 for $6.00)SALE DATES 4/15-4/20The Chicago Maroon — Friday, April 17, 1981 — 3EDITORIALOur Choices for StudentGovernmentest in Student Government affairs, andhave not acquired the familiarity with Uni¬versity necessary to organize a complexactivity. George KampstraGeorge Kampstra is the clear choice forFinance Committee chairman. A graduatestudent, Kampstra has worked hard on theFinance Committee this year, acquiringan important knowledge of its proceduresand of the nature of the groups which cometo Student Government for funding. Healso has taken what seems to be the mostreasonable position of any candidate onthe issue of the controversial student activ¬ities fee: hold a referendum to find out if alarge number of students are opposed to it,and, if so, make the fee refundable.David BlazkowskyThe most qualified candidate for trea¬surer is David Blazkowsky, who hasworked this year to improve the quality offood services served in the dormitories,and has been active in Student Govern¬ment committees, although not an electedrepresentative. We also believe that AmyChristianson, although lacking Blaz-kowsky’s familiarity with Student Govern¬ment, is qualified to dependably performthe bookkeeping functions of Student Gov¬ernment.Donna MillerFinally, we enthusiastically supportDonna Miller for the position of secretary.Her enthusiasm, her experience with pub¬lic relations work, and her knowledge ofthe campus will make her a welcome assetto the Student Government executive com¬mittee.We must expectmany things from thestudent governmentleaders. Thev mustbe both creativeand practical. Theymust have good ideas, and must have theknowledge and experience with thevarious University bureaucracies toachieve these plans. The positive thingsthat SG has been able to achieve in the past— from Ex Libris canteen in RegensteinLibrary, to the recently inaugurated week¬end shuttle service to the North Side, andthe numerous campus parties and dances— have all been accomplished because thestudents working on them possessed thesequalities and the enthusiasm needed to dothe work.They must also be knowledgable and re¬sponsible enough to serve as spokesmenfor student interests within the University,particularly at a time when students arebeing asked to shoulder an increasing pro¬portion of the University budget. SG mustuse its unique position as the one body rep¬resenting the entire student body to speakout on University matters which have animportant effect on students, such as tu¬ition levels, University policies affectingstudent life, and, as it did during the pastyear, the need for the library to invest in asecurity system to reduce the rate of bookloss. It is this function in which there ismost room for growth in Student Govern¬ment’s role.Clarke CampbellWe believe that Clarke Campbell is thecandidate for Student Government presi¬dent best qualified to provide students withthe services they should expect from theirstudent government. During his threeyears of service on Student Government,Campbell has repeatedly demonstratedhis initiative, his fairness, and his abilityto accomplish what he sets out to do Thisyear. Campbell has chaired the FinanceCommittee fairly, and with close scrutinyof the expenses of student groups He hasalso been involved in the planning of vir¬tually every major Student Governmentproject, ranging from the North Side shut¬tle service, to plans for the day care centerbeing considered for next year. Unlikeother candidates, Campbell’s plans for anexpansion of Student Government’s ser¬vices are concrete. He has proposed open¬ing a small stationery store on campuswhich would provide students with sup¬plies at prices below the bookstore’s rates,and at more convenient hours. He has alsoproposed including a 24-hour study centerin Ida Noyes Hall, and changing the routesof the campus minibuses to meet those ofthe airport shuttles, saving students longtreks across Hyde Park with heavy suit¬cases. Campbell not only has definite plansfor student government, but he has the ex¬perience to accomplish them, as he hasshown time and again. His election is in thebest interest of all students, graduates aswell as undergraduates, who stand to ben¬efit from the services which an effectivestudent government can provide.Sufia KhanOf the candidates for vice-president,Sufia Khan deserves your vote. In herwork as vice-president this year, Khanwas responsible for extending the hours ofthe library canteen service, for helping toorganize the Post Libris coffeehouses, andfor planning the campus-wide MemorialDay party to be held this spring. Bv con¬trast, her opponents have demonstrated nocommitment to serving the studentsthrough Student Government, little inter¬ And a Loud Noto Fair FundingIt is also likely that students will get achance to vote on the so-called “fair-fund¬ing amendment.” The Maroon stronglyrecommends that students vote againstthe amendment for several reasons.The amendment would abolish the exist¬ing Student Government Finance Commit¬tee <SGFC), which is elected by the SG as¬sembly, and replace it with a directlyelected Student Finance Board (SFB).Whatever the dubious advantages of hav¬ing a directly elected SFB, they are ob¬scured by the many serious disadvantagesof the rest of the amendment, which wouldgive students much less, not more, controlover how their fee money is spent.Presently, every decision of the SGFC issubject to the approval of the SG asse¬mbly. Students who feel that their grouphas not been given enough money, or whofeel that some other group has received toomuch money, can appeal their cases to theassembly. This has happened at least ahalf dozen times this year; students will belosing a crucial check on how their moneyis spent if this appeal is abolished.Perhaps even more disturbing is the factthat control over the SFB by-laws wouldalso be eliminated. The existing FinanceCommittee works under a set of equitableby-laws which are controlled by the SG as¬sembly. These by-laws ensure that politi¬cal and religious activities are not funded,and that SG cannot randomly close downexisting and viable student groups becausethey dislike the groups’ members. Theseimportant safeguards would also disap¬pear if the amendment were to pass. LETTERS TO THE EDITORC-Shop ClosingWas^AnAffront^To the Editor:I hope you will allow a slightly biased ob¬server to air a complaint. I wish to protestthe University’s decision to close the C-Shopon the evening of Thursday, April 9, so thatits operation would not interfere with aTrustees’ dinner being held next door inHutchinson Hall. I believe that this decisionwas probably unnecessary. I am certainthat it was an insensitive act on the part ofthe University administration, whichcaused a great inconvenience to a largenumber of students, faculty and staff.I am an assistant supervisor at the C-Shop, and can attest to the fact that a signifi¬cant number of the students on campusafter 5 p.m. come to the C-Shop for dinner ora snack. Along with these students come anumber of night staffers from Regenstein li¬brary, the hospitals, and research labs. TheC-Shop is the only conveniently locatedplace where these people can get an inex¬pensive meal.Now you may assume that my bias is eco¬nomic, but it is not; the University is free tomake financially poor (non-) use of its facili¬ties if it so desires. I am concerned, though,about my customers, especially that sub¬stantial group that I can be sure of seeingevery weeknight, and who would like to besure of seeing an open door for them whenthey expect it.I am not naive. I understand that the Uni¬versity depends on the Trustees and their in¬fluence to provide financial support. I alsounderstand, and can almost say with astraight face, that the visiting Trustees areentitled to certain niceties that are not a nor¬mal part of University life. (For example, itwas fascinating to see the Reynolds Clublobby being swept on the afternoon of thedinner, which is something one doesn’t oftenget to see.) However, I also understand thatso long as our institution continues to be aUniversity, then its primary reason for exis¬tence is its student body. If the Trusteeswish to turn “their” university into a re¬search institute or think tank, then theyshould let us know so we can all leave. In themeantime, they should not allow the Univer¬sity administration to send out such clearsignals about the dispensibility of students,and the insignificance of their needs.Jeff HarligAsst. Supervisor, C-ShopGraduate student inLinguisticsCampbell & KhanTo the Editor:As a fourth year student in the College andchairman of the Student Government Activ¬ities Committee, I feel 1 am in a position tospeak from knowledge and experience whenI endorse Clarke Campbell and Sufia Khanfor the positions of President and Vice-Pres¬ident in the upcoming Student Governmentelections. Both have consistently demon¬strated the kind of dedication, insight, pa¬tience, and energy necessary to get thingsdone. Clarke put in amazingly long hourscarefully co-ordinating the fair distributionof the Finance Committee funds during atough period of adjustment to the increasedmonies from the fee Sufia not only chairedthe Ex Libris Canteen Committee—whichthis year turned back a profit for the firsttime—but she was secretary for the studentschools committee, and active in other S.G.and dormitory activities as well. BothClarke and Sufia are used to budgeting theirtime, aware of the long hours any StudentGovernment position requires to do a good job, and are seasoned veterans in dealingwith the administration as well.Although I find endearing the bubblingenthusiasum of students new to S.G., I ques¬tion their wisdom in shooting straight for atop position. Nor do I particularly admirethose who are running on the basis of unusedtitles that after collecting dust all year, arebeing brushed off to make a good showing inthe campaign. Particularly dear to myheart though are all the people “too busy” tohelp out during the year who suddenly findtime to run for the glory around electiontime.Student Government should be, and is, alot of fun, if it is run by competent people.Competent means more than a pretty face,persuasive voice or good ideas. Competentmeans having the experience to followthrough. Clarke and Sufia have that experi¬ence. They have demonstrated their compe¬tency again and again. I strongly urge ev¬eryone to vote for Clarke Campbell, SufiaKhan, and the rest of the Student’s Party inthe elections this Monday and Tuesday.Jennifer GurahianStudent in the CollegeElton Picks TrioTo the Editor:In the current Student Government Elec¬tions there is a very large field of candidatestrying to get elected to a very small numberof executive positions. In this field there arethree persons that are of exceptional qualityand extremely capable of carrying out theduties of their office. These persons areClarke Campbell, Sufia Khan and GeorgeKampstra. I have worked closely and spentlong hours with all three and feel that at thistime they should receive the credit they aredue.Clarke Campbell has been involved in Stu¬dent Government for the past two years andhas served as Finance Chair for the latter ofthose two. Aside from performing what onlycould be described as a superlative job inthe position of Finance Chair he has showninterest and enthusiasm in all phases of Stu¬dent Govenment operations. His input andideas were always valued and sought in anymajor decisions that were made. I feel thathis work with the Finance Comittee hasgiven him a better sense of what is neededon this campus and better insight into poss¬ible solutions to any problems than anyother candidate for any office. In a sense theFinance Committee and all the groups thatcome before it has given him 150 advisors allover campus. I think that for all these rea¬sons and for the leadership qualities that healways exemplifies Clarke Campbell is thebest candidate for president.Before this year Sufia Khan had not beenvery active in Student Government affairs.In the short period during which I haveworked with her, she has changed the posi¬tion of Ex Libris Governing Board Chairper¬son from a passive monitoring role to that ofactively trying to maximize Canteen profitswhile improving the social atmosphere andfood quality at the same time. She has madegreat inroads in her dealings with the Uni¬versity Administration and has shown amastery of the organizational skills that willbe so important in the role of Vice-Presi¬dent. I think that Sufia Khan has the poten¬tial for being one of the finest Vice-Presi¬dents in recent years and has certainlydemonstrated the enthusiasm and abilitythat warrent giving her this chance.George Kampstra is one of the outstand¬ing graduate students in Student Govern¬ment. Aside from myself he is the only grad¬uate student to serve as an executive officerin the last four years. George is currentlythe treasurer and has done more in that po-Continued on page 54 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, April 17, 1981VIEWPOINTReflections on a Walk Past Jimmy’sBy Vince KenyonAs I approach the time of my gradua¬tion, I find-myself more and more givenover to reflection on the events that oc¬curred during my years at the university.It is an altogether natural, and yet curious,reaction to the end of an era. When a manquits his job. he cannot help but considerthe day when he was hired. When he dies,his mind is full with the images of child¬hood. During that penultimate second, theyears compress themselves into the dura¬tion of a single moment. The continuoussuccession of events gives way to a neworder, where the past and the present findthemselves super-imposed, as the imagesof a double-exposure.As I walked by Jimmy’s last night, I sawmyself reflected in the window of thesomber tavern. Hanging there in the glass,my face became the face of anotherdrinker gazing at the passers-by. She hadbegun to say something. I turned my eyesfrom the window toward my glass. Isipped. I smiled.I did not smoke then. My hair was longerand thicker, but we already knew eachother very well. I hope to meet her here to¬morrow. With another smile, I answeredanother comment that she made. It con¬cerned one of those many nameless, yet fa¬miliar, faces that we encounter atJimmy’s. I still see it from time to time,hanging above the bar or over a table,swallowing beer with some of its regulardrinking partners.We did not much need to talk that night.My eyes strayed again toward the w indow,toward the passers-by. But my vision wasblocked. A small crowd of drinkers hadgathered in front of the glass. I soon no¬ ticed that their gaiety, their occasionalshouts of approval, were more than mightbe explained even by the happy combina¬tion of a cold beer and a warm spring eve¬ning. We decided to join them.When we looked out the window, we sawa most interesting event taking place. Itwas one of those anomalies of human be¬havior which, although not rare in general,always command our interest in their par¬ticular manifestations. A young man,short but powerfully built, had dragged aChicago Tribune vending machine into themiddle of 55th street. He had also seizedseveral large stones; and there, in theplain view of all who cared to look, heraised one of the stones above his head,then hurled it down onto the vending ma¬chine.The young man performed his task witha peculiar malice, as if the machine were an enemy of his. I could see in the violenceof his assault no practical motive — nosearch for money, much less any desire toread the paper. One by one the blow-s con¬tinued, and the machine became de¬formed, wounded. One of the blows bentthe little window through which we are ac¬customed to seeing the day’s headline.Now when I looked through that windowthe headline too was deformed, the imageof the newspaper having been distorted bythe bent plastic. He had even wounded thenewspaper — the paper in which he mightread, on the following day, his own story,tucked away in some corner of the backpages.With each new crash of rock againstmetal, the cheers grew louder — the mer¬riment of the growing crowd had reached ahigh pitch. Then suddenly, the young manstopped. He donned his jacket and left us. He crossed the street, heading south onWoodlawn. He was gone, out of view. Thenuniversity security arrived.Four cars with flashing lights convergedon the scene of this most violent assault;and as the assailant had vanished, all con¬cern centered on the victim. One particu¬larly concerned officer tried to return themachine to its former position. But no. Theassailant would not see his wort* so soonforgotten. He darted out from behind thehedge of the opposite corner, crossed thestreet, shoved the concerned officer,seized the battered machine, and returnedit to the westbound lane of 55th street. Forthis bravado, he was promptly handcuffedto a lamp-post. Then locked inside apaddv-wagon, from whose barred windowhe was forced to watch the permanent ef-facement of his work.After the night's entertainment hadended, we returned to our table and ourglasses of beer. We exchanged somelaughs and some smiles and even a fewwords on the events that we had watchedtogether But soon the conversationstopped. An occasional glance sufficed.My eyes wandered across the familiarfaces, toward the window, toward thepassers-by.I could no longer see my reflection in thewindow. I had focused my eyes on the inte¬rior of the room. Familiar faces, but noone I know. I decided to go straight homelast night. I crossed Woodlawn at thecorner where the vending machine hadbeen.Vince Kenyon is a fourth-year studentin the College.sition in the last three months than any trea¬surer has done in the prior three years. He isthe only candidate for Finance Chair to haveserved on the Finance committee or to haveeven attended a full meeting. He has workedwith the Finance Committee for threemonths and I think that he has acquired asense of that which is best for the graduateand undergraduate student of this campus,not to mention how to detect those areas ofi budgets that are padded. George is conser-i vative, but open to innovative ideas, both! important for those on the Finance Commit¬tee. George Kampstra is a very impressivecandidate and would make an even moreimpressive Finance Chair.I think that all of these people are amongthe best that the campus has to offer andshould be allowed to give their time and en¬ergies to the entire student body. I wouldalso like to ask all those that do vote to sup¬port two Constitutional amendments. Onechanges the term of office for executive of¬ficers to be one that is in line with the fiscalyear (July 1 to June 30). This will bringabout much smoother transitions betweenadministrations and programs. The secondamendment seals the Assembly size to 50persons and more equitably distributes theseats than the present system. It is impor¬tant that both of these amendments pass. Ithank all those that have helped me in thepast years and wish all future Student Gov¬ernment Officers and Representatives thebest of luck.Jeffrey J. EltonStudent Government PresidentFair Funding, SiTo the Editor:Since the institution of the Student Ac¬tivities Fee last year. Student Government has spent many long hours debating alloca¬tions for student organizations. This is dueto the present status of the Finance Commit¬tee — a committee composed largely of ap¬pointees of the SG president.The proposed “Fair Funding Amend¬ment’’ would remedy both of these pro¬blems. By establishing the Student FinanceBoard, seven directly-elected studentswould control fee disbursement, freeing SGto attack more important issues. As wasstated by a proponent of the measure inTuesday’s Maroon, ’’Student Government’semphasis should become more to plan ac-*tivities and speak out on student issues.Right now SG just revolves around theFinance Committee.’’Paul C. BeversdorfStudent in the CollegeStateScholarshipContinued from page 1imum. The problem, in Hall’s view, is that“there may be even further cuts.”Both David and Hall stressed the need forstudents to write their legislators and urgethem to pass the entire appropriation for theIllinois State Scholarship Commission(Senate Bill 237). “Students have to contactlegislators,” Hall emphasized. “This is themost effective means of getting thingschanged.”Brian David said that student represen¬tatives from the FIICU plan to attend andtestify at the Senate Hearings on April 21.Students are asked to write their legislatorsbefore this date to let their voices be heardHyde Park Senator Richard Newhouse is onthe Appropriations Subcommittee dealingwith the measure. Election from page 1for secretary She is an undergraduatetransfer student, majoring in English andChemistry. She says that she is not seriousabout the Student Government. “No one is,”she claimed. “There is a great potentialthere that is not being utilizedIndependent CandidatesAmy ChristiansonChristianson is an independent candidatefor SG treasurer. She has served as the trea¬surer of the Woodward Court Council thisyear, and as the co-manager of the LowerWallace Soda Service.She is in favor of the student fee. and op¬posed to the fair-funding amendment Shebelieves the assembly should still have finalsay on spending. “Everyone should have asay in spending," she said, “not just thoseseven people ”John GleasonGleason is an independent candidate forsecretary. He is a first year undergraduatewho has not been active in SG thus far.He wants to have move support for the dif¬ferent organizations on campus, and feelsthat his job would include meeting with therepresentatives of all of those organiza¬tionsStudents Against BullshitMark DayThe Students Against Bullshit (SAB) isheaded by incumbent SG Secretary MarkDay. They want to form a co-operative exec¬utive council, and end the politics that theysay surrounds the council now. “At the exec¬utive council meetings now, there is a lot oftalking out in the hall, a lot of talking behindpeople’s back,” said Day. “That’s absolutebullshit, and that has got to stop.”He admits that he often failed to produceSG minutes this year, but he claims that theminutes were usually available in the office, and that the actual content of the minuteswas not important.He said that he hopes to run a more activeand more co-operative executive council,with expanded and more equal roles foreach office.He said that he is in favor of the studentfee. but that he would like to see more stu¬dent input, and more student awarenessabout how the money is spent. He wouldhope to use questionnaires to do that.Larry7 MendelsonLarry Mendelson is the SAB candidate forVice President The Maroon was not able tocontact him personally. He was describedby fellow SAB candidates, as “essentially anon-SG person.” He is on the baseball teamand a member of Phi Gamma Delta.Rich EhrlichEhrlich is the SAB candidate for Treasur¬er. He is a Shoreland Representative to SG,and a member of the activities committee.He is also on the Faculty, Student, Adminis¬tration Committee Concerning Student Life,(FSACCSL). he was asked to run on twoother tickets, the Students Party, and theStudents Opposed to Boredom, but he feelsthat SAB can do the most to have an effec¬tive committee. He supports the activitiesfee. and also supports the fair fundingamendment because he feels that the stu¬dent funding board it would create would beable to work very well with MAB.Ira GreenburgGreenburg is the SAB candidate for Secre¬tary. He has been on the Shoreland Council,and is a second-year undergraduate. Hefeels that the position of Secretary is not abig job right now, and he believes that itshould be more important. “It shouldn't beequal to the rest of the executive commit¬tee.” he said, “but it should be more impor¬tant. I should be relating to the people out¬side of SG.”Continued on page 19The Chicago Maroon — Friday, April 17, 1981 — 5«ASHUM-AMSASeminar Series 1980*81Program in the Arts and Sciences Basic to HumanBiology and MedicineandAmerican Medical Students’ AssociationPresentAlvin R. Tarlov, M.D.Professor, Department of MediantThe University of Chicagospeaking on the topicThe Evolution of theMedical Profession: APublic Policy PerspectiveMONDAY, APRIL 20, 19817:30 P.M.HARPER 130 THE REUBEN GILBERT GUSTAVSON LECTURESProfessor and Chairman,Division of Humanities and Social SciencesCalifornia Institute of TechnologyRESOURCES SEMINAR:"IMPLEMENTING TRADEABLE EMISSIONS PERMITS'Tuesday, April 21 - 1:30 P.M. - Searle 161ECONOMICS WORKSHOP:"THE EFFECTS OF RAILROAD REGULATION:WELFARE CALCULATIONS REVISITED'Wednesday, April 22 - 1:30 P.M. - Social Sciences 402LECTURE:"MAJORITY RULE PROCESSES FORSPECTRUM ALLOCATION IN THEFEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION'Thursday, April 23 - 4:00 P.M. - Kent 103Open to the PublicStudent Ombudsman 1981-1982The University is now seeking applicants for the post of Student Ombudsman. The om¬budsman’s term of office will not begin until Autumn 1981. He or she will be expectedto work with the 1980-81 Student Ombudsman through the remainder of the academicyear.Applications from individual students, graduate or undergraduate, are welcome, asare recommendations from individual students or other student groups. They should bein letter form and must be submitted to the Office of the Dean of Students in theUniversity by Monday, April 20th. They should indicate the candidate’s academicarea and level, number of years at the University, and relevant experience and otherspecial qualifications for the position of Ombudsman. Letters of recommendation fromother students or members of the faculty or staff will be helpful.Applicants will be interviewed by a student-faculty committee; the appointment willbe made by the President.The Student Ombudsman is a part-time salaried official of the University who is alsoa registered degree candidate. He is appointed by the President to serve in additionto the regular organization of the University in cases of which there are allegations ;of specific unfairness or inefficiency. The Ombudsman writes a quarterly report,published in the University Record, in which he gives a general account of his activitiesand makes such recommendations as he may deem appropriate.DEADLINE: April 20,1981o6 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, April 17, 198113th YearW *27th I?sue* 17 April 1981DOO-DADS: FEMININE OR FEMINIST?Ree MortenRetrospective 1971-1977Renaissance SocietyBergman Gallery, 4th Floor Cobbby LAURA COTTINGHAMIf the art world were more like ournatural world, Ree Morten's work wouldrequire no explanation. Her paintings,like products of nature, would encouragedescription and analysis, but not requirejustification. But the art world is morelike a Russian novel than like nature:you have to keep conscious theassociations between all the awkwardnames to make any sense of it.It's not the intricacies of the artstructure that are themselves unpleasant(Excepting Oblomov, I'd choose aRussian novel over nature any day), butrather the banality of today's plot. Arttalks to art talks to art talks to art.Ree Morten entered art's monologuedialogue late in life. Trained as a nursebut more trained as a woman, shemarried a Navy Officer before finishingschool or starting a career. According tocatalogue author Allan Schartzman andKathleen Thomas, Morten's firstinspiration came from a radiocommercial announcing free art lessons,which interrupted her ironing. Out of thekitchen, into the studio.After receiving a BFA from the RhodeIsland School of Design in 1968, and herMFA from Tyler School of Art in 1970,Morten joined the teaching circuit andthe professional art world. As she movedfrom teaching post to teaching post, herwork moved from gallery to gallery, allaround the country. While a visitingartist at The School of the Art Institute in1977, she died of injuries sustained in an automobile accident in Chicago. Theretrospective of her work currently at theRenaissance Society Bergman Gallerywas organized by the New Museum, NewYork; the show has already beenexhibited in Houston, Boulder, andBuffalo.According to critics, Morten's workstands in contradiction to the dominantvisual art styles of the early seventies.Artists Sol Lewitt, Robert Morris, DonaldJudd, Robert Smithson and otherscharacterized the Minimalist movement,and Richard Estes, Duane Hanson,Chuck Close participated in SuperRealism; Ree Morten did neither. WhileMinimal and Super Realist art are selfconsciously uncluttered and slick,Morten's work is (for what everreasons), gaudy. The response to herwork ten years ago often includedanother distinction between Morten andher colleagues: she's a woman, they aremen. Thus Morten's clunky, colorful styleis often viewed as a woman's response tothe male dominated art world, as well asone artist's response to too much slick onthe scene.Often the "feminist" epithet is appliedto Morten's work. Is it feminist becausea woman did it? Is it feminist becauseit's decorative? Is it feminist because it'sso "personal"?Morten's work encompasses a widerange of artistic investigation, but it isnot feminist work. Labeling Morten'swork feminist and appreciating it for that reason indicates submission to thebiology-as destiny form of feminismpreached by separtists like Mary Daly orAdrienne Rich. Under this theoreticalmodel of feminism, women are superiorto men due to our "spiritual link withnature." Last year at Jane AdamsBookstore Mary Daly told me thatwomen have seldom/never fought inwars. I agreed with the observation, butdisagreed as to the reason. She attributedit to something like "nature", I tosomething like "culture." This littleanecdote represents the two factions intheoretical radical feminism, althoughthe French feminists who edit QuestionsFeministes are the more appropriatecounterpart to Mary Daly than am I.Separtists seem to believe thatpersonal/historical distinctions betweenthe sexes are inherent/natural. Suchbullshit, and even more upsettingbecause it's a throwback to patriarchyitself: ideological committment to"natural" sex differences is so clearlyresponsible for woman'shistorical/contemporary oppression.Morten's work fits into a Separtistsworld view because it offers the"female" of the sex yin/yang: personalas opposed to public, warm as opposed tocold. All of Morten's work has an interiorquality, a sense of private space. Her useof words, especially proper nouns, oftenprovide this sense of familiarity. InSomething in the Wind, 1975, Mortenhoisted one hundred flags with the names of friends and family atop a nineteenthcentury fishing schooner. In Bozeman,Montana, 1974, names of friends emblazeindividual clay hangings. Even in lessdecorative, more formal pieces likeSee Saw, 1974, and To Each ConcreteMan, 1974 Morten plays with the notion ofthe personal as she toys with ideas ofboundaries, distance, and symbolicspace.Perhaps it seems unfair to discussMorten's work in association withfeminist concerns, because her work isdefinitely not overly feminist: she doesn'tdepict vaginal images, smear menstralblood on canvases, her verbal imagesare selected from a stage hand's bag,rather than a feminist rhetoric manuel.But reasoning how critics have construedMorten as a feminist (Christopher Lyon'sreview in the Reader last week grantedMorten feminist concerns) is moreinteresting than attempting to appreciateMorten's work. Her work is a grab bag ofcliches. Any ideas she offers are the mostsimple minded. The Bergman gallerylooks like someone came in with a velvetbag from their attic and sprinkled thecontents on the walls, although I hear ittook over 300 man hours to put the showup.The show is disappointing because, yes,there are few woman artists so why doessomeone like Morten receive suchattention? Perhaps if I were ten yearsolder I could appreciate the significanceof her escape from a Navy Officerhusband. But women of my generationhave come to expect more from our sex,and from our artists: we want to seemore than knick knacks and doo dads onthe wall, because there are so manymore important things to think about,write about, and make art about.Is it feminist because a woman did it ? Is it feminist becauseit's decorative? Is it feminist because it's so "personal"?THE HYDE PARKVIDEOMOVIECEHTER1605 E. 55th (next to Worry's Deli}288-3600The one stopstore for all yourvideo needs: Sales,service, movie rentals, trades,blank tapes, film to tape transfers and ...Ask about our we deliverMOVIE CLUBS288-3600 DOC FILMSTonight: 7/9:30Academy Award winner for Best Musical Scoreand Best Song:Alan Parker’sFAMETomorrow: 7:15/9:00Woody Allen'sLOVE AND DEATHSunday: 7:30We can think of no better way to spendan Easter Sunday than with Marcel Came sCHILDREN OF PARADISEAll Films in Cobb HallDrought, Famine, DiseaseSend Your Help Now Through CAREHERE IS OUR HELP $NAMEADDRESSCITYMAKE CHECKS PAYABLE TOCARE.EAST AFRICA APPEAL .STATE ZIP208 S. LaSalle St., Rm. 673Chicago, IL 60604 E.F. CLOWN ACTIVITIES:MARIA RAMERA German mime trained at theMarceau school in Paris will give aMIME PERFORMANCEFriday, April 17 8 p.m.Cloister Club. Ida Noyes' ^ ' MIME WORKSHOPSaturday, April 18 2-4 p.m.Dance Room, Ida NoyesRICHARD PEARLMANfounder of Gestalt Clowning Movement will lead aMASK WORKSHOPThursday, April 23 7 p.m. Cloister ClubCLOWNING MOVEMENT WORKSHOPThursday, April 30 7 p.m. Cloister ClubAdmission to all four events is free!!! ACOFFEE HOUSEFood. Free Coffee Friday, April 179:30 - 1:30Ida Noyes Library The Rhythm Sheik sA Special Concert in Celebration ofThe Sixtieth Birthday of RALPH SHAPEYprogramTRIOLOGY • Ralph ShapeySong of SongsI Shularrfite's love for SolomonII Solomon's love for Shulamite (premiere performance)III Solomon and Shulamite together (premiere performance) The University of ChicagoDepartment of Musicand theFromm Music Foundation at Harvardpresent theCONTEMPORARYCHAMBER PLAYERSof The University of ChicagoRALPH SHAPEY, Music DirectorFRIDAY, APRIL 248:00 P.M.MANDEL HALLAdmission is free with ticketSend ticket request and a self-addressed stamped envelope to Department of Music Concert Office, 5845 ElllisAvenueiChicogo^g637, CHICAGOCHILDRENSrCHOIf?AUCTION CD-Saturday, April 25 7 p.m.First Unitarian Church5650 S. WoodlawnFree Admission 6:30 p.m.Wine & Cheese Preview &White Elephant Sale 5-6:30$3 in advance $3.50 at doorProfessional AuctioneerOver 200 Items,Old & New 643-1881for info.2 GREY CITY JOURNAL FRIDAY 17 APRIL 1981Escape Hyde Park...Student Government’s 7-11 Expresstakes you downtown to Water Tower Placeand Fullerton & Clark.FRIDAY & SATURDAYLeaving Hyde Park at 7:00 P.M.Returning from Downtown at11:00 P.M. and 2:00 A.M.Only $1 Each Way: /17 "© .0 19J© .© -o ■© 23ARTRee Morten: Morten's life/death seemto be as interesting (more interesti¬ng?) to critics as her work. Nurse,wife, mother first, artist only later;her career as an artist was shortenedeven further by her auto-accidentdeath in 1977. Morten's clunky use ofobjects and personal messages is anevident contradiction to the slick, min¬imal work that dominated the seventies. Most of her work intermixesvarious artistic motives: entertain¬ment, education, enlightenment, deco¬ration; and different static media.Lucy Lippard notes, that Morten isoften "balancing the line between Dar¬ing and Dumb" which means sheoffers us interesting experiences thatare sometimes more interesting thanother times. At the Renaissance Soci¬ety, 4th floor Cobb. Daily 10-4. Free.-LJCPaintings by Brent Widen: Colorful, fan¬tastic paintings by Brent Widen, an un¬dergraduate in the College, will be ondisplay at Midway Studios, April 13through 17FILMDaughter Rite (Michelle Citron, 1979):The Renaissance Society's Fascism toFeminism series continues with a filmthat uses home movie footage, con¬temporary documentary material, and voice over narration to explorethe conventions of representation andprocesses of solialization. The director, Michelle Citron, will be present todiscuss the film after the screening.Monday, April 20 at 7:30 in the Bergman Gallery. Renaissance Society;SI 00 for members, SI.50 for Docmembers, and $2.00 for othersFame (Alan Parker 1980): An interest¬ing and energetic failure. This film is amusical drama concerning the for¬tunes of a group of students in NewYork's High School for the PerformingArts. The actors and actresses are allno names. The opening is very promtsing: a long "audition" sequence,where the different applicants for theschool try to make it. While the dancesequences are bursting with raw energy, no coherent form is provided.While this might mirror the real-lifeabilities of the students, it makes foran unsatisfying movie musical. Con¬trast Fame with the film version ofHair, where the Twyla Tharp choreo¬graphy was able to harness youths'frenetic activity without ruining itsbeauty. The last half of Fame is apoorly acted, cliche filled, overlongaccount of the problems of trying tostart out in the entertainment busi¬ness. Friday, April 17th, at 7:00 & 9:30in Quantrell. Doc: $2.00 — NMLove and Death (Woody Allen,1975): Woody Allen satirizes Tol¬stoy's War and Peace, Bergman's Seventh Seal, and the entire Eisensteincanon to less inspired results thanusual for Allen. This is not to deny thatmuch of Love and Death is hilarious.When Allen sticks to his standard rou¬tines, the.humor is excellent, such aswhen he undergoes basic training inthe Russian Army of the early 1800s (a scene with strong analogues in Ban¬anas and Sleeper). But it was a bigmistake to set his comedy in War andPeace Russia; Allen is funniest whenhe comments on the absurdities ofmodern life. Love and Death is too in¬tent on following its own plots with thecharacters being too strictly confinedto jokes about the plot they're involvedin. With this film, Allen starts to condescend to his audience, and with thearguable exception of Annie Hall, hehas not stopped since. Saturday, April18th, at 7:15 & 9:00 in Quantrell. Doc:S2.00 — NMThe Third Man (Carol Reed, 1949): Anaive writer of pulp Westerns (JosephCotten) travels to post war Vienna tovisit his best friend, one Harry Lime(Orson Welles), who, it seems, hasbeen killed in a car accident; he findshis unofficial investigation into Lime'sdeath stymied by the authorities, whotry to convince him of what a heelLime was and that he's better off dead.An elegant, compelling thriller mas¬terfully adaDfed from GrahamGreene's "entertainment," it's also arehash of all the tricks Wells used inCitizen Kane put to less weighty use.The film is so visually baroque that,the story has it, William Wyler pre¬sented him with a spirit level so hisnext film wouldn't look as if the cam¬eraman was drunk. A real classic. Saturday, April 18, at 7 and 9:30 in LawSchool Auditorium. LSF; $1.50. - MAThe Children of Paradise (Marcel Carneand Jacques Prevert, 1945): Onecouldn't hope for a better Easter present. Perhaps the most telling thingthat can be said about it is that itsthree-hour-plus running time seems tobe over too soon. In nineteenth centuryParis the great mime Baptiste (JeanLouis Barrault) loves and is rejectedby the courtesan Garance (Arletty),only to have her realize too late whatthey have missed. One of the most pro¬found — and enjoyable — contemplations of life and art, it is in one sense atriumph of art over life; it was filmedfor the most part during the Nazi occupation of Paris, when most of theextras were starving and most of thefilming required was in violation ofNazi propaganda ordinances. Sunday,April 19, at 7:30 in Quantrell. Doc:S2.00. — MAThe Balloonatic (Buster Keaton, 1923)and The Gold Rush (Charlie Chaplin,1925: Two classic silent comedies; TheBalloonatic is a two reeler starringKeaton as a ballonist undone, as usual,by the exigencies of life in the MachineAge; The Gold Rush, one of Chaplin'smost popular films, and Chaplin's personal favorite, now looks pretty thin incomparison to his later masterpieces— it plays like an overlong two reelerfor the most part — but it has its shareof priceless sequences, including atouching New Year's Eve dreamsequence, a literal cliff hanger takento unreal lengths, and of course Charlie eating his shoe for Thanksgivingdinner. Monday, April 23, at 8 in Quantrell. Sponsored by the Citizens Party;50c - MA Science Fiction Film Festival: a continuing series being presented by the Museum of Science and Industry in conjunction with Facets Multimedia, Inc.Remaining featues are "Silent Runnmg" on Apr. 22, the 1956 release ofSeigel's "Invasion of the BodySnatchers" on Apr. 29, Lester's "TheBed Sitting Room" on May 6, and"The Maze," in 3 D, on May 13. Leeture/discussions by film authoritieswill conclude the program. 7 pm.Wednesdays, Museum Auditorium S3for members, $3.50 for non members.MUSICWoody Shaw Quintet: The premiertrumpet player in jazz brings his ense¬mble to the Jazz Showcase this Fridayand Saturday night at 9 and 11. Alsofeatured these nights will be altomanBunky Green's quartet. The Showcaseis inside the Blackstone Hotel, 636 S.Michigan Ave. Seats are S6 and S8 —JGBrahms: Requiem sing along. Bringyour voice; soloists, piano, organ, andscores will be provided for this thirdquarterly sing along (in English) ofmajor choral works, conducted byRodney Wynkoop 8:00 Tonight, Rockefeller Chapel, free.Mozart: chamber orchestra concert.Ray Still conducts the CSO winds andfriends in the Marriage of FigaroOverture, Divertimento No. 11, andPiano Concerto in C, K.503, JohnPerry, solist. 8:00, Monday, April 20,Mendel. Students, 3-5; Faculty/Staff,S4.50-S7.50; others, S6 9. Tickets atReynolds Club.Shakespeare: a concert by the BonTempo Singers, for his birthday (a Imost). 12:15, Thursday, April 23,Goodspeed, freeShapey: Triology (two thirds of it inWorld Premiere) presented in honor ofhis sixtieth birthday by the Contem¬porary Chamber Players; co-spon¬sored by the Fromm Music Foundation at Harvard University. 8:00,Friday, April 24, Mandel. Admissionfree by ticket available from Goodspeed 310; over three quarters of thetickets have already been distributed,so hurry!Folk/Folk rock: A series of five concertsfeaturing some of the finest performers in folk, folk rock, and blues will bepresented next Tuesday, Wednesday,and Thursday at Stage's Music Hall,3730 N. Clark St These concerts will betaped for a television series. The MusicMakers.The shows are each booked arounda particular theme, with singer/songwriter Bob Gibson as hostand performer throughout the series.On Tuesday night, RogerMcGuinn, Maria Maldaur, and DavidBromberg, all familiar figures, willpresent "Old Friends, New Tunes."McGuinn, noted for his 12-string electrie guitar work, was the leader of theByrds, the archetypical fold-rock bandof the '60's. Both Muldaur and Brom¬berg are perennial folkies that arealways open to eclectisism. The con¬cert will begin at 8 pm.Two shows will be presentedWednesday night, "the Storytellers"and "blues". Featured on the 7:00 billare Tom Paxton, Jim Post, and Gam¬ble Rodgers, each a distinctive andlasting folk musician and songwriter.At 10:00, there wili be blues with WillieDixon ana The Chicago Blues Allstars,Spanky McFarlane, and The CorxySiegal Band. Also scheduled to make aspecial appearance is harp masterpau* Butterfield."Bluegrass" and "UptownCountry" are on Thursday the 30th at 7and 10 pm. The first show will featureJohn Hartford, Jim and Jesse, and TheBushwackers, while Michael Mur-phey, Sheila Andrews, and HamiltonCamp will play at 10.Proceeds of the concerts will go tothe Old Town School of Folk Music.Tickets are $4.50 each. — JGOTHERJuno and the Paycock: Court Theatrecontinues an exceptional season with apro-production of Sean O'Casey's 1924classic. Directed by James O'Reilly,who also plays Jack Boyle, the peacock of the title. The play also starsPauline Braiisford as Juno, NicholasRudall as Joxer, and Lucy Childs andJames McCance as Juno's children.Performances are Tuesday throughSaturday at 8:30 p.m. and Sundays at2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in the ReynoldsClub New Theatre For ticket information call 753 3581 or stop by the Reyn¬olds Club Box Office.Business School Musical Comedy: "TheCapitalist Pyg Malion."What is BSchool REALLY like? Will John DeereEVER make it thru9 See this originalshow written, produced, and performed by Business students (andtheir profs!).Take a Stand to Free the PontiacBrothers: program sponsored by theJohn Brown Anti Klan CommitteeSpeakers Chokwe Lumumba, PontiacDefense Team, Midwest Vice president — Republic of New Atrika, andthe Anti Klan Committee 7 p.m Sunday, April 26 at Crosscurrents, 3206 N.Wilton (e bl. west of Belmont el) Further info. . 935 5252.]OucY?OfGary Beberman, Brad Brittan, Leland Chait, Peter T. Daniels, Stu Feldstein,Richard Flink, Susan Franusiak, Jim Guenther, Jack Helbig, Richard Kaye,Carol Klammer, Jeff Makos, David Miller, Neil Miller, Danila Oder, MarkPohl, Renee Saracki, Margaret Savage, Bruce Shapiro, Andre Staskowski-Hvolbek, Andrea Thompson, Michele White, Brent Widen, K. G. Wilkins,David Waldman, Ken Wissoker.Mike Alper, film editorRichard Pettengill, music editorAndrea Thompson, book editorEdited by Laura CottinghamProduction this week by Laura Cottingham and Susan Franusiak.Ithe grey city journal is published weekly by The Chicago Maroon, Ida NoyesHall 1212 E 59th Street, Chicago, Illinois 60637. For advertising information,call Wanda at 752-FAME.FRIDAY 17 APRIL 1981 GREY CITY JOURNAL 3Attention Graduate StudentsREADING FRENCHPreparatory Course for theForeign Language Reading ExaminationGraduate students who wish to prepare for the Foreign LanguageReading Exam scheduled in Summer 1981, can now register for acourse especially designed to meet their need.The University Extension, in cooperation with the Department ofRomance Languages and Literatures, is offering on campus a NON¬CREDIT course equivalent to a two quarter sequence, spanning a6 week period.FR 106 Reading French for Graduate StudentsM-F 9:30 am -12:00 noonJune 22 - July 31*Location to be announcedThe fee is $175 for the 6 week course.NO REFUNDS AFTER THE FIRST WEEK.N.B. University of Chicago student aid funds cannot be used for non¬credit courses.Courses must have a minimum enrollment of 15 students. Pre¬registration is, therefore, essential. Absolutely no auditors. If .youwish to register, please complete your registration as soon as possibleat:CUE 1307 E. 60th Deadline forRoom 121 253-3137 Registration:M-F 9 a.m.r5 p.m. June 15,1981*The Reading Examination in French will be given by Test Administration on Monday,August 3. 1981. Classes have been arranged to avoid conflict with regularly scheduledclasses, and to end immediately prior to the Reading Exam for optimal results. Forfurther information concerning Reading Examinations, consult Summer Quarter TimeSchedules, or call test Administration, RC 201, 753-3283. r The Hedwig Loeb Scholarshipfor UndergraduateResearch in the CollegeResearch Proposals Now Being Accepted for the Summerand Autumn Quarters of 1981.Submit Proposals to: Dean of the CollegeHarper 209Deadline: May 18,1981Proposals must contain a description of the project andresearch method, an estimated budget indicating thequarter it is to be used, and a letter evaluating the pro¬posal from. a member of the Faculty.For research that requires use of a University facility(e.g., laboratory}, a letter agreeing to this use must besubmitted by an appropriate member of the Faculty.Awards may range up to $600.00FACULTY-STUDENT ADVISORY COMMITTEE ON CAMPUSSTUDENT LIFE (FSACCSL) — ELECTIONS 1981-82Elections for the student members of the Faculty-Student Advisory Committee on CampusStudent Life (FSACCSL) have been set for May. Students interested in serving as members ofFSACCSL are invited to make themselves available for election. FSACCSL advises the Dean ofStudents in the University on the range of non-academic functions performed by his office.Eight student members of FSACCSL are to be elected this quarter, to serve for one year: 3 fromthe College; 1 from the Professional Schools, excluding Medicine and the Graduate School ofBusiness; 1 from the Graduate School of Business; 1 from the Division of the Humanities; 1 from theDivision of the Social Sciences; 1 from the combined Divisions of the Biological and PhysicalSciences, including the School of Medicine.To qualify for candidacy, one must be a registered degree candidate in good standing who willalso be registered in the University during the 1981-82 academic year. A student must file forcandidacy from the academic constituency in which he will be a student in 1981 -82.Nominating forms are available in Administration 219 (the Office of the Dean of Students). Acandidate should have his nomination petition endorsed by the signatures of at least 30 studentsin the electoral constituency from which he will be a student in 1981-82.Nominating petitions should be returned to the Office of the Dean of Students no later than4:00 p.m. on Friday/ May 1st.4 G*EY CITY JOURNAL FRIDAY 17 APRIL 1981DISCOVER COODERBorderlineRy CooderWarner Bros.Live at Park WestFeb. 20, 1981by JEFF MAKOSBring up the name of Ry Cooder in anydiscussion of pop music luminaries andyou're sure to get the reaction, "Ry Who?"For the last ten years, guitarist-singer-allaround R&B fanatic/interpreter Ryland B.Cooder (yes, that's his real name) hasbeen one of rock's best kept secrets.Throughout a series of amazing albums,Cooder has defined his own style of rock-tinged rhythm and blues through obscureand half-forgotten songs that he trans¬forms with tongue-in-cheek wit. His latestalbum, "Borderline" (Warner Bros. BSK3498), may win him the larger audience hedeserves.Cooder's records have been appearingsince 1971, but his musical experiencedates from well before that. In the late six¬ties, just barely out of his teens, Cooderworked on sessions for the Rolling Stones'"Let It Bleed' album. Before this he hadworked with diverse artists such as TajMahal and Captain Beefheart. After workwith the Stones, Cooder became widelyknown primarily for his mandolin playingand slide guitar work; this type of playingwas featured on sessions with Little Featand Randy Newman, among others. ButCooder's guitar playing can't really be de¬fined by any traditional descriptions. Hisplaying relies more upon chords than onsolos, and has a strong rhythmic base thatcan be heard on songs like "Honky TonkWomen" — a song that Ry has alwaysclaimed was stolen from one of his riffsduring his less-than-friendly work withKeith Richards. After this session, Ry tookmatters into his own hanos with the re¬lease of his first solo album, "RyCooder."This work, and the albums that immedi¬ately followed it — "Into The Purple Val-FRIDAY 17 APRIL 1981 ley" and "Boomer's Story" — defined thebasic Ry style. Choosing traditional folkand country songs like Guthrie's "Do ReMi" or Johnny Cash's "Hey Porter,"Cooder would set them to a more standardrock tempo, with a heavy overlay of man¬dolin and slide work, and with his rhyth¬mic craziness and bounce the songs wouldbe transformed into something special tohear, gaining a freshness and wit that car¬ried no trace of condescension. Cooder isobviously a R&B historian, consistentlyfinding ever more obscure tunes /o workwith, but there is never a deadly academicor archival feel to his music. It may be ob¬scure, and the musicianship remainsamazing, but it's never less than fun.In '74, Cooder released "Paradise andLunch," one of his best and one whichshowed his sounds clearly evolving into astyle. Working with his basic "house"band in the studio featuring well knownsession men such as Milt Holland and JimKeltner on drums, Chris Etheridge onbass, and Jim Dickerson or Ronnie Barronon keyboards — Cooder began using moregospel-influenced back-up vocals to sup¬port his own distinctive neo Leo Kottkes-que bluesman wheeze. The center of this:ncreased vocal work was Bobby King,renowned LA session singer and gos-pel/R&B vocalist extrordinaire. At thesame time that King and Cooder were ad¬ding this funkier sound to the basic Cooderbeat, the guitarist was also experimentingwith other musicians, most notably jazz¬man Earl Hines on "Paradise." He alsobegan working with Hawaiian musiciansAtta Issacs and Gabby Pahinui, and Tex-Mexican accordian hero Flaco Jimenez.This experimentation led to a tour with theJimenez band, chronicled on the live"Show Time," as well as a full scale work¬out on various jazz tunes called, appropriately, "Jazz." Throughout all this, thedistinctive Cooder playing was present,and in many ways this work was a rest before the all out aural onslaught of Cooder'smasterpiece,"Bop Til You Drop ""Bop," one of the best rock records to bereleased in 1979, still featured the basicCooder session sound with a strong vocal backup, and showcased a basic band con¬sisting of Keltner, Barron, ex-JamesBrown and Neil Young bassist Tim Drummond, long-time Jackson Browne-asso¬ciate David Lindley, and the magnificenceof Bobby King. But on this album, the stylebegan to change into a vision, what a goodfriend of mine calls the "basic Cooderiantheme." What this means is that all the in¬herent humor in all these classic R&Bchestnuts was made more obvious, thestrangeness of the characters and their sit¬uations made more pronounced. While theplaying was better than ever, the songsalso were more hilarious to listen to.Basically, all of Cooder's songs deal withlosers: losers of the heart, of the cardtable, of the law, of liquor, and varioussorts of extremism of one kind or another.Cooder himself has said in interviews thatwhile he is serious about the music, thesongs themselves are meant to be fun andnot merely the presentation of a serious ar¬chivist. But Cooder is enough of a brilliantarchivist to choose songs that are prettyconsistent — people who are for the mostpart (hilariously) out of control. From theold Elvis tune "Little Sister" through theclassic "Down In Hollywood" — the sadtale of bad craziness out in Burbank —"Bop Til You Drop" presented the wildestsongs with the most professional and con¬sistent Ry-music since"Paradise andLunch." This sound and vision is evenmore consistent — and enjoyable — on"Borderline."Here the title gives the theme away —we are not only on the extreme limits of theR&B Rock-Gospel sound of the Cooderband, but we are also on the furthest limitsof the Cooderian theme. In other words,the music is at its most dancable while thecharacters in the songs are completely outof control. The old Wilson Pickett tune"634-5789" done at a break neck tempostarts the album, and the bopping doesn'tstop as the basic "Bop" band tearsthrough versions of "Johnny Porter," theoldie "Down In The Boondocks," and theclassic tale of "Speedo," always "fakin'other folks girls."The main theme on this album is loveand lust and the conflicts individuals whoare concerned with these matters havewhen their desires clash with the law.Turning the Nietzchian maxim on its head,Ry's basic vision of interpersonal relationsbecomes "Out of Order comes Chaos, " thecharacters in songs like "Why Don't YouTry Me" and "Crazy 'Bout An Automo¬bile" just keep messing up their lives andthe lives of everyone else around them.The album heads to its logical conclusionand confrontation between the forces oflaw and anarchy on the wonderful "TheGirls From Texas,” which has a plot line so good that I can't give it away, a storywhich sums up the unending Id energy thatunderscores the entire album. Ry can onlyfollow it with an instrumental, the titlesong of the album, which sounds like theR&B background music for complete emo¬tional mania.To be honest, all this sturm und drang isnot really presented overtly as a "majortheme," but it is going on. Ry and friendsare always playing for their lives on thesesongs, and the musicianship (especiallythe singing) shows that the group is fullyaware of the humorous possibilities in themusic. This kind of playing, backed by therhythmic twists and turns of Keltner andHolland, has become so distinctive that itcan only be called the "Ry Cooder Sound."The melodic and rhythmic distinctivenessof his music, was presented beautifullylast Feb. 20th as Cooder and band ap¬peared live at the Park West. Actually,Cooder was not backed by his regular sup¬porting studio group, but by the John HiattBand, led by the guitarist/songwriter whoappears prominently on "Borderline." Itwas at first strange seeing Cooder sur¬rounded by the Hiatt quartet, which is apunk-rock aggregation at heart and whofavored bright pinks as opposed toCooder's favorite Hawaiian print shirts.But fashion was about the only differencethese gentlemen had among them, for oncethe music started it was into the PurpleValley for the rest of the evening. Featur¬ing songs mostly from "Bop" and "Bor¬derline," the Hiatt bano was incrediblytight as they gave more than-faithful per¬formances of many Cooder classics. Hiatthad a solo vocal spot on the oldie "Jury ofLove." and Cooder seemed to enjoy beingin the background for a while. But he wasnever out of the spotlight for too long, play¬ing some amazing slide guitar and generally keeping the band in line.Cooder has not toured for some time,and the success of this round of shows(both shows at the Park West were soldout) may mean that he will be back in thenear future. If he does, this master is not tobe missed, in the meantime, the best thingyou can possibly do for yourself in whatseems to be turning out to be a bleak yearin music is to go out and buy "Bop Til YouDrop" and "Borderline." Any fan of rockand R&B should not be without these records, as well as anyone else who wants tohear good music played by real people . . .even though the songs themselves may beabout folks on the edge of things. RyCooder no longer deserves to be a well-kept secret; the next time someone says"Ry Who," spread the word and tell him-tobop until he drops. He deserves it, and sodo youJazz. John Hicks Hells Bells (Strata East)Miles Davis Directions (Columbia)Daunik Lazro The Entrance Gates ofTshee Park (Hat Hut)Freddy Hubbard Live at the NorthseaJazz Festival (Pablo)Bob Moses Quintet Family (Sutra)Max Roach M'Boom (Columbia)Leslie Drayton Orchestra Our Music isYour Music EsotericDexter Gordon Gotham city iColumbia)Mingus Dynasty Live at Montreaux(Atlantic) r in 'n# oas#'T’*nf ot Reynolds C’uO 57th Street ana umver$tty10. Keno Duke Crest of the Wave (Tri¬dent)Rock1. Robert Fripp & the League of Gentle¬men (Polydor)2. John Cale Honi Soit (A&M)3. U2 Boy (Sire)4. Pretender Extenoed Play (Sire)5. Brian Eno & David Byrne My Life inthe Bush of Ghosts (Sire)6. Greg Kihn Rockihnroll (Beserkley)7. Who Face Dances (Warners)8. Plimsouls (Planet)9. The Dregs Unsung Heroes (Arista)10. The Jam Sound Affects (Polydor)icv riTY lOtlRNAlAt -IThe need exists for anthropology students,students interested in film, and students in¬terested in general problems of the philosophy of science to be exposed to the positiveand negative features associated withanthropological films. Filming has beenavailable for anthropological research sincethe 1890's; in an easily-usable form since theearly 1960's. However, it still has not beenaccepted by anthropology departments as atool. Why is it that the anthropologist, in¬truding among a people as an outsider withodd habits anyway, will not assist his infor¬mation-gathering with a movie camera for avisual record? What are the handicaps tothe process of filming, and to the presentation of the film in its final form?The Anthropology Film Group is made upof graduate students in Anthropology, inter¬ested in showing films for discussion andevaluation both of ther ethnographic con¬tent, as well as of these issues. The films tobe presented during the Spring Quarterwere selected for a range of techniques, in¬tent, and subject matter, and arranged intoregional categories.Greg Finnegan is the American Anthropologist's editor of Audio-visual AnthropologyPresently working on his doctorate in Library Science at the University of Chicagohe has made himself available to the Anthropology Department as a source of information and suggestions concerning film. Heprovided the material for the Film Group toorganize the film series that they are pres¬enting this quarter.by JANE HENRICI £MMJH In Principles of Visual Anthropology(1975), Margaret Mead outlined severalreasons why the discipline of anthropol¬ogy still has not accepted the use of film¬ing. First of all, why does she refer to itas "filming" and not "film-making"?GF: Because there is a difference betweenfilming and film-making. Filming is the GREG FINNEGAN JHGF act of shooting film; film making ismaking films as discrete entities."Filming" means to be able to use thecamera to record behavior, and there is,in principle, a whole area to researchwhere you simply use film as the rawmaterial, as a form of note-taking.Standard note-taking in the field contin¬ues with most anthropologists. Thethree basic reasons Mead gave for thereluctance on the part of anthropolo¬gists to use film describe, first of all, thetendency to cling to verbal descriptions;secondly, that specialized skill is neededsomewhat (although she states that todemand great art forms is ridiculous);and thirdly, the cost of film. What do youthink of these reasons? Do they still holdin 1981? Or are these really the answersto why anthropologists don't use film?; l think so, and certainly the film costhas gotten worse and not better in thelast couple of years. I think it's partly aself-fulfilling prophecy as with so manythings in disciplines: the way you'vedone it defines what you do next.Boas has some ofthe most boring film you'll ever see ofKwakiutl doing all sorts of things,dances, screen figures, wood-carving,whatever, all just strung together likepages of a notebook, where I just thinkthat he felt it was easier to record howthe Kwakiutl did it with a camera ratherthan a notebook. Twenty or so years be¬fore, Curtis, the "amateur" ethno¬grapher photographer, did a very strik¬ing semi-fictional film of the Kwakiutl,which is much more of a film than it wasnote-taking.JH: Do you think that interest is growing?While the non-interest remains amonganthropologists? GFANTHROPOLOGY/FILM in the sense that l thinka growing area or has bthe last decade or so. inwere artistically pretentpoetry, in the 1920's youand worked on a novel,1960's and 70's if you wpretentious you made filJH: In dealing with specific |either the ethnographicthe anthropologist's pointabout editing in film?GF: As with any kind of enquyou get depends on the quThere's no cookbookanthropological film. Thetant problems. This is bebe so many different thinrecord, in which ideallying at all, you simply rualthough you make a decto turn it on or off, wheEven the act of filming jtion, just as the act of ovolves selection. But whawith editing the film depyou want to do with it. AncI think one problem hasmakers, who have their oand aesthetics, are oriemaking The Film. And | itive article in two sensethey are trying to say, the,say with the film, and notway; also, historically,make only one film of a simeans, then, that the film¬ing to convey everything heto get across in that one filring accordingly.The anthropologist is morelia medium where you writetides and monographs 1— ferent aspects of what yoisay. You're not bound tos«you possibly could—youpossibilities. I think there cto this: one, because so miA nother Great Classical Salefrom35% OFF sug. LIST PRICE9.98 List 6.4910.98 List 7.14Save on the Entire CatalogSale ends April 29,19811444 E. 57th684-1505 SfiUt %SfUK *)t jZ/AtCJl,Stf SfUHrMGREY CITY JOURNAL FRIDAY 17 Am• think film making is' has been at least, inso. In the 1890's if youpretentious you wrote0's you went to Parisnovel, | think in theyou were artistically'ade films.>ecific problems, fromraphic film-maker orf's point of view, whatIm?of enquiry, the answer"i the question you ask.book model for anIm. There are impor¬ts is because film canent things: it can be adeally there is no edit-nply run the camera,e a decision as to when>ff, where to point it.ilming involves selec-act of observation in-But what you then do:ilm depends on what'h it. And this is whereem has arisen. Film-e their own traditionsare oriented towards. And | use the defini-jo senses: one, whatsay, they are trying to- and not in any other>rically, film-makersm of a subject. Whichthe film-maker is try-ything he or she wantsat one film, and is edit-s more likely to preferyou write different ar-graphs to cover d if-what you're trying tolund to say everythingId—you have greaterlk there are two facetsjse so much of our ex¬ perience is with entertainment films weare always conscious of the degree towhich films can fake us out. On the otherhand, Americans are culturally predis¬posed to take a visual record, a photo¬graph, as somehow more real than awritten statement. In both facets of thiswe're forgetting that the act of observing is no less selective or interpretive.This works both ways. Yes we edit film,but yes, we edit a monograph. The one isnot more real than the other. In fact, interms of the philosophy of science, Ithink there is no real difference betweenthe two kinds of information.JH: Granted, editing exists in written notetaking, also. However, in the case of aritual event, shouldn't the entire thingbe shown? For example, Jean Rouch'sfilm, Les maitres fous (1953) removedsome of the stages of the West AfricanHauka cult ritual.GF: That ritual takes, after all, an entireSunday, and Andy Warhol is the onlyperson who has tried to tempt us towatch 24 hours of the Empire StateBuilding. With the exception of a veryshort event, we obviously can't do thathere.JH: Then you're thinking of the audience.GF: Yes, I'm thinking of the audience, butI'm also thinking about the purpose ofmaking the film. Assuming that Rouchdid indeed film the whole thing, thensomebody who needs to know exactlyeach stage of the ritual can watch it andtake notes. That's not why Rouch madethe film. He actually made it for the cultmembers themselves, to have a film tobe used in the ritual, which brings up an¬other issue of the relationship of thefilm-maker to the participants.JH: Like Trobriand Cricket (shown lastTuesday night).GH: This again comes back to the wholeprocess of abstraction in data collecting. of any sort. A model, by definition, is anabstraction of some features and not others, from any kind of reality. A com¬plete absence of abstraction means acomplete repetition of the whole experi¬ence.JH: So, you think the audience should be re¬sponsible for, and have available, written data.GH: Yes, which is a radical presumptiongiven the notion in Western culture ofwhat movies are and on what kind of oc¬casions you see them. When I taught Vi¬sual Anthropology (at Lake Forest Col¬lege) my syllabus was incrediblyDraconian...trying to remind people totake these things seriously, so theydidn't just sit there in the dark and letfilms wash over them. Even so, manynever learned the material because theyhad this American idea that film-watching is a passive experience, and didn'tseriously accept the idea that you haveto somehow "read" a film, and re¬member it. We think nothing of assum¬ing that by the end of one quarter you'restill reading assignments in the light ofthings you read at the first.JH: How much should anthropological filmsrely on subtitles and narration as opposed to showing the event straight?GF: The issue is not, to start with, whetheryou use subtitles or show events"straight." Films that rely on subtitlesare the closest you get to seeing the filmstraight; omniscent narration is some¬times called "The Voice of God": "He ispicking up a rock, he is walking with therock, he is putting the rock down." Inthe worst instance it's completely re¬dundant.One of the reasons for this is that it's relatively late in the game that you have theoptions, in the 1960's. It was difficult totake sound under field conditions andeven more difficult to take sound syn¬chronous with the film. You were stuckalmost always with silent film, to whichyou later added narration. We have had,in the 1960's, a number of film-makers going over to the idea that the filmshould in some way force the viewer tothink, should in some way replicate theexperience of being in a situation whenyou're trying to understand what'sgoing on from your sensory perceptions.Accordingly, such film-makers try tohold to a minimum the kind of packingthe film with information that the for¬mal narrator would have done. Again,this was done in part by exiling that in¬formation to written guides to go withthe film.Or, you can do what Asch has done, in theYanomamo Ax Fight, and John Marshall in The Hunters where you splityour film into sections. You run throughthe film briefly, then you show the bulkof the film and intrude as little as possible.JH: What about the involvement of the film¬maker with the situation? Observation¬al Film versus Participatory Film, theMacDougall's Wedding Camels being anexample of Participatory Film wherethe camera and film makers becomepart of the scene.GF: There's a sort of paradox here: on theone hand you're minimizing your impo¬sition on the audience, while you're nolonger attempting to pretend that whatis being seen on the screen is as it wouldhave been if there were no film-makerthere.This gets related to much larger issuesthat cropped up during the 1960's,whether or not there could be a value-free social science, whether there couldbe objectivity in observation.Traditionally, not much of a context isgiven; rarely is the exact location given,! you are even less told the year and thetime. One of the features of Asch's filmsis that there is an attempt to give astatement about the context, stressingthe particularity of the event. Theaverager film maker was trained to re¬gard any film that included any refer ence to the filming process as spoiledfilm.In the Ax Fight, which will be seen in thisseries, there is footage in the film of thesound man sticking the microphone intothe corner of the picture. There is alsodialogue between the anthropologist,the film-maker, and the soundman as tojust what it is they are seeing. A tradi¬tionally-trained film person would haveheaved all that out.JH: Like a thumb in a print.GF: Yes. Now, instead, there's an emphasison this whole thing, for example in thefilm of the MacDougall's, WeddingCamels, also to be shown this Spring.JH: So, it still basically depends on the audi¬ence or intent?GF: Sure. In Ax Fight, the subject is, as thetitle suggests, a spontaneous eruption ofviolence within a Venezuelan Indian so¬ciety well known for its violence. Someof the same footage is used for a com¬pletely different purpose, narrated, in afilm about Chagnon doing ethnography,A Man Called Bee.It's a problem of influence over the man¬ner in which the film was used. Tradi¬tionally films are rented, not owned,seen once and not twice, once withoutthe opportunity to discuss them, studythem, and then come back and see themagain. Consequently, the anthropologistwho makes a film without a program isrunning the risk of having that film beused by teachers who are not sensitiveto how and why the film was supposed tobe used, who perhaps did not get theirlecture prepared, and so throw a film onthe wall instead.This takes us back to what was said earli¬er. Very few of us are trained to takefilms seriously or to put them into anykind of critical contest, so that theaverage anthropology grad student willget no training in film.The Board of University Publications and the University of Chicago Pressare pleased to announcethe Winner of the 1980 GORDON J. LAING PRIZEMORRIS JANOWITZThe Last Half-CenturySocietal Change and Politics in AmericaTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESS5801 South Ellis Avenue Chicago, Illinois 60637GREY CITY JOURNALY 17 APRIL 1981 7Vi Penc/tcuieBATH TOWELjumbo size 27"x52"• famous brand• thick ‘n thirstyterry cloth• fashion -colors$599 irregularsco-ordinatedwashcloths 89*955-0100 Qfl Feb. 19 . .10 apartments soldC March 15 . .22 apartments soldo April 10 . .31 apartments soldEa Only 11 apartments now availableS3rs Studios, convertible one bedrooms, one bedroomswr \ $23,500 to $40,400*U * price increase May 1, 1981C/5pDu model open Sat. 12-5, Sun. 12-4, Wed. 7pm-9pmB 5841 South Blackstone Avenuerfl 241-5737u another residential development by Metropolitan Resources Group, Inc.GREYCITYITES: MAROON/GREY CITY CONSTITUTIONAT 7pm, MAROON OFFICE OFFICECornell Law SchoolUndergraduate Prelaw ProgramJune 8 to July 21, 1981A demanding six-week programfor college students who wantto learn what law school is like.For further information write toAnne Lukingbeal, PLP, Cornell Law SchoolMyron Taylor Hall, Ithaca, NY 14853 FOR A CLEAN, COMPETENT GOV’T.VOTE for the party representins theWHOLE UNIVERSITYW.U.P. 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This offer is onlygood for cameras in good working order subject to approval of Model Cameraupon inspection.model camera1342 E. 55th 493-6700k This Summer,CornellWhat better place to be than far aboveCayuga's waters as you improve your writingskills, work with computers, participate in alinguistics institute, or take a course inconceptual drawing? Nowhere else can youlearn in the company of so diverse a groupof faculty and students in such a uniquelyattractive setting of hills, lakes, gorges, andwaterfalls.At Cornell, you can fulfill requirements, ac¬celerate your degree program, or simply takeadvantage of the opportunity to study thoseintriguing subjects that you've always put off.Request an Announcementand see for yourself all thereasons why Cornell is theplace you should be thissummer. Tuition is SI25per credit or less.Cornell University SummerSession, Bl 3 Ives Hall,Ithaca, New York 14850 The CrampsSTRANDED IN THE JUNGLEPsychedelic JungleThe CrampsIRSWhen the sun goes downAnd the moon comes upI turn into a teenage goo goo muck.Yeah I cruise through the cityAnd I roam the streetsLooking for somethingThat is nice to eat „Goo Gqq Muck„by RENEE SARACKITHEY'RE BACK! "Rockin Bones/'"Voodoo Idol," et. al. — Americas grea¬test achievement. From the primordialsludge, The Cramps have again crawled tonew lows. I never thought it possible aftertheir weak, substandard summer tour butThe Cramps like the true bacterial sludgethey are cannot be killed. An indifferentpublic, the loss of rock's original voodooidol, Bryan Gregory and a weak female re¬placement couldn't stop these primitive pi¬oneers. The Cramps have returned fromthe lost world of Los Angeles with a newguitarist, Congo Powers and a new albumPsychedelic Jungie.Just when my articles were starting toshow some thoughful insights and criti¬cisms, The Cramps release a new album.I'm truly sorry but this girl can't help it.The Cramps release all my puerile instincts. The Cramps as always put it best,when Lux croons, "When the sun goesdown/And the moon comes up/I turn into ateenage goo goo muck."The new album Psychedelic Jungle isevery bit as good as last year's, Songs theLord Taught Us. True to their "garbageband" roots, The Cramps have chosenRandy Alvey's "Green Fuzz" to cover.The original "Green Fuzz" was without adoubt recording history's lowest moment.A truly obnoxious recording obscuresevery virtue the song may have and yet ithas a powerful impact on everyone whohears it. And once you've heard it, it's notlikely you'll forget it. While The Crampshave cleaned up the sound a bit (I neverthought I'd write that line in connectionwith a Cramps song), the song remainstrue to it's forgotten psychedelic roots.Unlike the dull, pretentious psychedelicmainstream emanating from the SanFrancisco of the 60's, the true psychedelicgroups wrote songs that were short, sub¬ versive and rock 'n' roil. Those one-hitwonders of yesterday have not fallen intorock 'n' roll obscurity for ought though.Not at least while The Cramps are aroundto carry on in their own phlegm-like style,the somewhat abused memory of theserock 'n' roll greats. I can think of no bettera tribute to these pathetic pioneers thanPsychedelic Jungle.Psychedelic Jungle is a sonic feast inwhat seems to be a famine for rock 'n' rolllately. Every song is a delight with thealbum having a much cleaner more dy¬namic sound than the somewhat reverbed out, Alex Chilton produced Songs theLord Taught Us. The Cramps producedthis album themselves and the practicallyfuzzfree sound has created a spookier,more creepily subversive Cramps. This isespecially true on "Rockin Bones" and another great cover Jim Lowes, "GreenDoor." And while the wild and raunchy ar¬chetypical Cramps songs are not entirelymissing on this album ("The Crusher,"The Natives are Restless"), these songsare no longer dominate The Cramps songselection.Always the weakest link Lux's oncebland and whiny voice has been transformed on this album. Lux can finally befavorably compared with his rock 'n' roliidols. The slower, more melodic Cramptunes on this album give Lux all the roomhe needs to be a great crooner Somethingwe only got indications of on last year's"Fever" from Songs the Lord Taught Us.The squeaks, cries and moans worthy onlyof Johnny Ray's facial expressions are putto superb use on "Goo Goo Muck," "TheCaveman," and "Junglehop." What morecan I say, almost every song has something wild or unique going for it. If notLux's warbling, then Poison Ivy's dement¬ed guitar lines will grab you.Unlike such clever, stylish fadists as therecent slew of rockabilly groups, TheStray Cats, The Polecats, et. al, TheCramps are real. While taking nothingaway from Brian Setzer and his magnifi¬cent quiff, hair grease isn't all you need tomake a great record. Often energetic andenthusiastic, these cats are caught in anasty predicament, namely how long canthe novelty last? Well The Cramps are nonovelty, no passing fad but rather an institution. The Cramps offer all society's loonies asylum in their music. A place to be¬long. Geez, I hope those rockin bones neverstop.uMFRIDAY 17 APRIL 19*1 GREY CITY JOURNAL 9JUNO’S PROBLEMATIC PLOTJuno and the Pay cockby Sean O’Caseydirected by Jack BoyleCourt Theatreby MILBURN SMITH Court Theatre's production of SeanO'Casey's Juno and the Paycock has beenso widely and so favorably reviewed that Ihardly need add my plaudits to the list.Given the comparatively late date of thisreview in terms of the play's run, ratherthan commenting upon the production Iwould like to take this opportunity to raisesome questions about the play itself.Anyone who has seen (or read) Junoknows that it is a disturbing piece ofmaterial; in the course of the play a familyundergoes betrayal, bankruptcy, un¬wanted pregnancy and murder — all thisagainst the background of the Irish CivilWar, circa 1922. The substance of the plot,however, revolves around a promised in¬heritance which turns out to be falsely bas¬ed upon misinformation only after Capt.Boyle (the paycock) has squandered themoney on credit. Why has O'Caseychosen such a contrivance as the en¬gine for his play? In and of itself it is thesubject for comedy, and indeed elicitsmuch laughter in Juno, yet he calls this aTragedy in Three Acts. Can the clash bejustified?The theme of the plot is vanity, as ex¬pressed first and foremost in the title ofJuno and the Paycock (in Greekmythology Juno, the wife of Jupiter,transforms the thousand eyes of Argus on¬to the tail of the prideful bird). Under theillusion of gain, Jack Boyle strutters aboutvainly, showing off his wealth by con¬ spicuous consumption, purchasing suits,furniture, liquor and a gramophone. Heattempts to lord it over his friends andreluctantly accepts his daughter's suit to aTheosophist young dandy. As reward forhis actions, his friends avenge themselvesupon him in his downfall, robbing him ofhis debtor's goods and deceiving him. Heremains unaware of his son's murder bythe I.R.A. in his own home, and insensitiveto his daugher, whom he spurns for herpregnancy. In him, illusion is thenecessary complement to vanity, for hisvanity is itself based upon an illusion ofwealth in the face of poverty.Taken from another perspective,however, the comic has become tragedy;this is the perspective of Juno. She sym¬bolizes, through her name, the patronessof marriage and the well-being of women.Here she is the pillar of her family, whichis otherwise broken. Her condition is thatof seeing, knowing, and, ultimately, feel¬ing, for she is the only one to identify thedead son, "carryin' you out o' the world tobring you to your grave!" Her oppositionto her husband never really comes out intothe open, rather they grow more and moreapart until the last scene in which theystand in radical separation by virtue oftheir contrasting states of knowledge.Clearly we are implicated in her favor, in¬asmuch as we share her knowledge. Herson chides her for allowing her husband tolive profligately, but she is blameless — practically a saint. It is odd that she playsa secondary role to the Captain in terms ofthe plot.The clash of these two is intensified withrespect to the war, where the stupididealism of the die-hards led to so manydeaths. "A principle's a principle;' wasthe motto of the nationalists who led theuprising of Easter week, 1916, of whichJack Boyle played a part. It was in thisbattle that he saw his friend die in hisarms, and earned the dubious title of"Captain." This is the very experience hisson Johnny relived, and it is the ex¬perience that destroyed them both. Johnnyis a haunted cripple who re-enacts the bat¬tle imaginatively with increasing frequen¬cy up to the moment of his death; Jack is adrunkard who re-enacts it only at the lastmoment of the play. Between them theyrepresent a universal male figure offoolishness and impotence who pales incomparison to the female deity, Juno. Heis part prankster, trickster, poet, butpredominantly he is a fool. His warlike in¬stincts are not courageous, but foolhardy,a species of (im)moral vanity.O'Casey's blend of comic and tragictherefore reflects the opposition of queenand buffoon, and we must protest that thebalance weighs too heavily on one side.Boyle is a cartoon character, out of placein a world populated by heros andheroines. What is disturbing in this play isthe absence of a three-dimensional malefigure who is capable, either of Juno'smoral greatness, or depravity. Bydenigrating the male principle, O'Caseyhas denied the possibility and the reality ofevil.Symposium on Human Rightsand Social JusticeCongressmanHAROLDWASHINGTONRepresentative,1st CongressionalDistrictAtlanta. El Salvador, Chicago,The Body of Christ Cries Out ”- Easter epigraph from a Black ChurchPROFESSOR DENNIS BRUTUSof Northwestern University, Black SouthAfrican Exile, Scholar, Educator, PoetSISTER ROSALINDA RAMIREZMissionary to Central America, Sister ofthe Sacred Heart of JesusMR. SECUNDO RAMIREZMember, Human Rights Commission of El SalvadorSaturday, April 18Ida NoyesCloister Club 7:30 p.m.* Everyone Welcome -Sponsored by. The Organization of Black Students; The Organization of Latin Americanstudents; and The Committee Assembled to Unite in Solidary withEl Salvador, of the University of Chicago• to brad hi Han poesiaeNcpcul robins on vice preside*?dovid blaszkowskyt&eASuaeagory kilberq FlNANce CDAiemAwdonna miller secuetAovI M/ANT YOUTO JOINTHE SO B.’SiGREY CITY JOURNAL FRIDAY 17 APRIL 1981MBAsPRODUCT MANAGEMENT/ENGINEERINGAmerican Digital Systems is one of the fastest growinginstrumentation and data acquisition electronics firms in the U SIn five years we have established an unparalleled record ofsuccess in the environmental technology field, increasing salesbetter than 80 ;jer year Our entry into the industrialinstrumentation market has created four immediate openings forentrepreneural MBA graduates to work in new PRODUCTDEVELOPMENT PRODUCT MANAGEMENT andENGINEERING MANAGEMENT These assignments willlead to Director or Vice President level position in less thaneighteen monthsCurrent positions require managers who possess undergraduatedegrees in electrical engineering and business and who have twofive years industry experience, preferably in a high tech businessYou must be a dedicated and fast track performer with a provenrecord of success.We offer a demanding small company work environmentcoupled with excellent benefits and integr.il. highly visibleparticipation in a small and rapidly growing management team.Beginning salaries S35K - S45K range.For more information write to Tom ThrailkillAmerican DigitalSystems. Inc.2227 Drake AvenueHuntsville. AL 35805An Equal Opportunity Employer M FgSELLINGER CORPORATIONGeneral Agency forNORTHWESTERN MUTUAL LIFEWe will be interviewing on campusTuesday, April 21A unique opportunity -Unlimited income potentialAll majors invited.Call Placement Officefor InformationMr. Snyder 753-3286^amingoCABANA CLUB IQuiet, restful Country Club atmosphere• Private cabanas available• Olympic-size heated Swimming PoolPhone Mrs. Snyder PLaza 2 38005300 South Shore DrivePLaza 2-3800 Is voup future worth MO?It you’re graduating from college this is oneseminar you can’t afford to miss! Discover thebest job hunting techniques at the WOMEN’SCAREER CONVENTION. From resume writingand interviewing skills to evaluating your ca¬reer potential, the WOMEN’S CAREER CON¬VENTION offers you everything you need toknow to plan your future.Plan to attend the third annual Chicago Meet companies from A to Z— Abbott Labs to ZayreAttend career-planning workshopsFree resume counselingBeauty makeoversTHE WOMEN S YELLOW PAGES— free career planner($5.00 value)HYATT REGENCY CHICAGO151 E. Wacker Drive, ChicagoFRI., SAT., SUN., APRIL 24, 25, 269:00-5:30 each dayDoors Open at 8:00 A.M.Only $10!II Daily admission to the WOMEN’S CA¬REER CONVENTION, which includes allworkshops and the Exhibit Area, is only$10 with this ad. ( coiwTi^iBations)sponsorsSuite 1800 676 St Clair Chicago IL 60611For more Information cab 312/951-7600BRING A RESUME AND BRING A FRIENDAL SAX TIREThe Front End Brake SpecialistsFRONT DISCBRAKE SPECIAL$3795Mos. 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COueSf S AVAIL ASL ELicensing Exams inFor ntornesor Acoj Caraen «< MOUTSIDE N Y STATE CALL SPRING, SUMMERFALL INTENSIVESCOURSES STARTINGTHIS MONTHLSAT...GRE...SAT...ACTNEXT MONTH4 wk/LSAT...GMATCourses Constantly updatedCenter Se* Studytxa Than 80 Maxx jS Cats & AoroecTOLL FREE 800-223-1782New and RebuiltTypewriters,Calculators,Dictators, AddersCasioHewlett PackardTexas InstrumentCanonSharpElectronic WatchesU. of ChicagoBookstoreTypewriter & Calculator Dept. 970 E. 58th2nd Floor753-3303 REPAIRSPECIALISTSon IBM, SCM,Olympia, etc.FREE repairestimates; repairsby factory-trainedtechnician.RENTALSavailable withU. of C. I D.FRIDAY 17 APRIL 1981 GREY CITY JOURNALPassion, New Poems, 1977-1980by June Jordan, Beacon Press, Boston100 pp., $4.95Midnight Birds, Stories of ContemporaryBlack Women WritersEdited by Mary Helen WashingtonAnchor Press, NY274 pp., $4.50The Salt Eaters, A Novelby Toni Cade BambaraRandom House, NY295 pp., $9.95by LARRY DUNNJune Jordan etches out prime roses. Shebasks them under an urban tree, an Amer¬ican plain carefully holds her thorns. Wereit not for the pain's incision we would callher an American landscape poet:I walk across the roots of treesenormous elm tree shelters from thefarawayfiring starselm trees scribbling a confusion ofdark branchesthat must mystify the simplesky stretched into cloudy startfssues torn by snow and sleet inter¬ruptionsof a wan and waningmoan , . .As landscape her poetry is that to whichsuch forces as Castro make themselveshostage; it is a feeling where Black people,Black women nurture their beings; a har¬bor which an American spirit weathers,autumn-like> in seize.In Passion, Ms. Jordan takes up the poeta^isionary. The preface-essay attests tothe vision of Walt Whitman, poet of theNew World. Poetry is to reflect the 'egali¬tarian sensibility'. Its vision is as "person¬al, as public, as irresistible, as quick, asnecessary, as unprecedented, as represen¬tative, as exalted, as speakably common¬place, and as musical..."But the vision the lines retain today, ifany at all, is measured and steadfast. Wepoint to the earlier poet Phyllis Wheatley,primordial in 1773, and then with Kenny'Klook' Clark on bass drum, we under¬score the sumptuous flourishes of CharlieParker's epochal lines, 1941 at Minton's,New York City from the avenues. To thiscontinuum Ms. Jordan brings her images:Puerto Rico, South Africa, Arizona, to ". ..the legends of Geronimo/ of Pocahantas/now become a squat/ pedestrian inside thetomb/ of my heart." (4) Today it is the ho¬rizon of that even preceding Black Ter¬rance (c. 170 B.C.): "I am human andhence there is nothing human that is notmy concern." Externalizing the internalcontinuum, Ms. Jordan produces the(Yard ) Bird-like surge, the melodic flow,drawn by softly rupturing contrasts:The morning on the mountainswhere the mistdiffusesdown into the depths of the leavesof the ash and oak treestrickling toward the complexion ofthe whole lakecoldeven though the overlooking skyso solemnly vermilionsub-divides/ theseething stripes as softas sweet as the openingof your mouth(The Morning on the Mountains. W)It is well we do not forget the conjunct ofthe Black female consciousness upon thisAmerican plain, a stratum to which thearcs of Gwendolyn Brooks (the modernharbinger), Sonia Sanchez, Alice Walker,Carolyn Rodgers, others, edge their hori¬zons. It is a dialectic which props Westernconsciousness with a human response. It iswhat (U.S. Prof.) George Kent remarkedof Claude McKay's sources: ". . .basedupon deep and persistent responses to the rhythms of . . .(the) universe."* In Pas¬sion, Ms. Jordan's phrases are carved tothe woman and to the passions of societalviolence-forgetfulness. They are carved tothe misplaced passions of being deter¬mined by that extraneous to the voice. Lis¬tening, we find we are unable to leave in¬violate the Western definitions coveringthe avenues:. . .1 am veryfamiliar with the problems becausethe problemsturn out to bemeI am the history of rapeI am the history of the rejection ofwho I amI am the history of the terrorized in¬carceration ofmy selfI am the history of battery assaultand limitlessarmies against whatever I want todo with my mind . . .(Poem about my Rights, 88)As with Bird and the others at Minton's,we are pulled from the marketable exter¬nality to the resource, the response of thatwhich is living and is invioble. And like theEgyptian goddess Isis, whom Diodorusroots as 'ancient', this coterie of moonflowers, our Black Women voices, lash outin search of the fallen, the ruptured eyes ofOsiris. But we are not quite certain thatthey find Osiris; some powerful piece asksto remain unrapturous.The street is lit in Midnight Birds. Againand again the stories address us to the dis¬placed element, the invioble urgency of thepeople. French Hodges, in "Requiem forWillie Lee," sketches a character who isan outlaw and yet is son and brother to,even a husband, a warrior to the informedBlack woman school teacher. Somethinggrasps in this story. That death does notdie is not fashionable, yet it is found here,via the continuum, in an unrelenting reali¬ty. Gayl Jones, gifted novelist of Corregi-dora and Eva's Man, is perhaps the j^rimepotential danger/honesty. A young earth¬quake, she draws the womb into place inthe story "Asylum"; and in "Jevata,"earth rumbles define the comfort, the needof the woman, the story's namesake. Butas one attempts to ascertain the need ofFreedy, Jevata's young lover, then that ofFloyd, the old ftame now impassionate observer, surely must remain 'unrapturous'.But does it?Floyd reminds us of Jim Kelly in ErnestGaines' Of Love and Dust. Both men, asnarrators, personalize themselves into thefeatures of the people. Theirs becomes"the basic attitudes and forms of responseto existence evolved by the folk." (Kent,162) We find this mode of narration in Toni Cade Bambara's story, "Medley".With delight does one come to Bambara,Toni Cade. Here is the bouncy fashion ofBlack Life. "Medley", reproduced in theanthology from her colorful volume, TheSeabirds Are Still Alive, invokes the wetpacing of a basso continuum. The indepen¬dence of the narrator (mentioned as "MissLady,") does not so much arise from con¬trast with Larry, the bass lover, or Mr.Moody, the gambler, as it does from thetotal interweave, the Isis song persona¬lized through the bass line. For those of uswho are stll searching for the logic ofHegel's evolving stages of consciousness— their necessity — I believe it as the in¬terweave 'be like this,' in the shower:Then I was off again and lostLarry somewhere down there doingscales, sound like. And he went backto that first supporting line that haddrove me up into the Andes. And hestayed there waiting for me to re¬turn and do some more Swahili wail¬ing. But I was elsewhere and liked itout there and ignored the fact that hewas aiming for a windup of . ..(274)The people permeate Ms. Bambara'sfirst novel The Salt Eaters. But inside theyare reacting to the gorging venomous tra¬dition of Transchemical. They evolvearound "the Southwest Community Infir¬mary, Established 1871 by the Free Col¬oreds of Claybourne," and the Seven ArtsAcademy, "where the performing arts, themartial arts, the medical arts, the scientif¬ic arts and the arts and humanities weretaught without credit. . . (to) workers,dropouts, students, housewives, ex-cons,vets, church folk, professionals, an alarm¬ing number of change agents." (120)Velma Henry, Ruby, Minnie Ranson,Sophie Heywood, Jan and the women, theyare the workers, they tide the waves. Andwhat Velma could not get back from the ci¬ty, from her man Obie, and what she latertakes from Transchemical, turns out to bethat which perhaps could never be had. Atthe beginnings we see her mind as an ex¬pression, sifting and pulling away from us,from the infirmary observers, and fromMinnie Ranson, spectacle, healer woman.Velma is the vast depth through which thenovel pulls (viz., soul). It struggles to dothis carefully at first, as the positing ofVelma's despair must obtain from and notoppose the vibrantly laid expression of herpeople. Hence the bus driver, Fred Holt,and the other 'vignettes' are not to bedrawn apart from her. Fred's appearancebecomes the freeing choice of a man'sestrangement and essentially evolvesfrom a lost friend and a lost wife. One things of him observing Velma's son, thenewspaper boy, tying his shoe. He amazeshimself with the kid's feet: the kid hasenormous feet; the kid has incredible feet.The comic relief is risen to be rooted in thebas relief of Fred's lost partner. Porter:.Our natures are unknowable, un¬seeable to them. They haven't gotthe eyes .for us. Course, when welook at us with their eyes, we disap¬pear, ya know? (158-9)The novel's breath is the neo-populistsurge of the recent seventies, updated,brought closer to the ledge from where weare hanging today. It is a necklace ofcowrie shells, each one a vignette of alarger buoyant prophecy. The fervencymoves most effortlessly toward the end asBambara rids herself of counterpoint andenters the cadenza:But then, clear and bold, stoppingher in mid-act, her arms in an arc,clear and bold as if recorded freshthat minute, as if incarnate and not awave, not a spirit captured by anelectric tongue come back to speak,blasting new and not from her long-ago little-girl days hanging out inPalma's growing-up-girl days,came an alto sax loud and insistenttaking over the air, jarring her out ofher fear of splintering, blaringthrough her head. Not the huckle-buck as in do-the-hucklebuck, do-the-hucklebuck in some five wattblue stomp down street alley dancehall place and she with too muchmake-up getting maueuvered into adark corner thigh on thigh and noth¬ing romantic and nice about it. ButCharlie Parker doing "Now is theTime," coaxing from her somethingmuscular and daring. . .borrowedtill she earned it for herself on thatfirst piano in the church and learnedto listen to linears and verticals atthe same time, new time, rhythmbam. (262-3)One is reminded of the leavened richnessof Jone's/Baraka's The System of Dante'sHell and the earth womb from whichVelma kneads, asserting the miner's questin bosom blows.There is a lost. It extends (at least) tothe boy-men leaning on the coins of thewomen, the supermarket caboose. Thereis no apocalyse where losts are gained. Al¬though at the thunderous rain burst, theexplosion, Fred, breaking from the nurses,does think he sees Porter, who is dead. ButObie, Velma's estranged and head of theAcademy, we find him dazed. And Velma,well Velma, the miner's daughter: "aburst cacoon."In the story "Medley" we were able toease a Hegelian transition for that spacewhere the other is about to be sublated.But one is not quite so certain her in TheSalt Eaters, or was it, did the people,themselves, draw that bulbous space in theend?In her first novel, erecting fine struc¬tures of the people, Ms. Bambari has givenus a fawn song, she has gained the coast.We see her coming in for the spread ofgood cheer, the heightened relay. We re¬move our spectacles to let her continue.Ours is the urgency where the writers re¬vitalized a poorly determined language toevoke the resource, that which is living.Says Hegel, ". . . the individual either letsthe stream of reality flowing upon it haveits way or it breakes off and diverts thecurrent of its influence."* And thenthrough unclouded spectacles, the contin¬uum, something formerly lost on the ave¬nues, remains inviolately savored:Y'Bird, and here, the ladies.‘George Kent, Blackness and The Adventure ofWestern Culture, Chicago: Third World Press,1972, 36‘Hegel, G.W.F. (trans. Baillie, J.B.) The Phenomenology of Mind (sic), NY; Harper, 1967,12 GREY CITY JOURNAL FRIDAY 17 APRIL 1981HOUSESCOZY COTTAGE in Hyde Park. This 2 bedroom-plushome has a lovely sunny southern exposure. Upper$60's. Ray School District.Beautifully refurbished turn-of-the-century homeoverlooking park. Quiet fenced backyard with park¬ing. Wood-burning fireplace. Walk to campus.$133,000. Some owner financing.VICTORIAN OPPORTUNITY! This lovely old Ken¬wood Queen Anne has spectacular east, west andsouth sun, a completely redone coach house, fencedyard, and more. $175,000.ROCHDALE PLACE CO-OP TOWNHOUSE - familyliving at its best. 4 bedrooms plus study, plus rec.room and much more. $110,000.WALK TO SHOPPING (only a few steps away) andlive in this efficiently designed 3 bedroom, 2-Vi bathtownhouse. Private backyard, central air and more.$105,000.CONDOMINIUMS -INSTAN1PASSPORTPHOTOSMGuNrtaSMuc.1519 EAST 53rd STREETPHONE. 752-3030.UNIVERSITY PARK 1 bedroom. Southern exposure.High floor. Feels very private. Low $50's. Pipe &ON CAMPUS/OWNER FINANCING - 2 L droomswith 2 enclosed sunporches. Upper $70's.SPECTACULAR SUNSHINE. This cozy 2 edroomhome is walking distance to U of C cai us. Im¬maculate! Charming! Mid $50's.THE RIGHT LOCATION, south of 55th 2 bedroomhome with family room, modern kitchen, garage. Mid$80's.SUN OR CANDLELIGHT - this home shines in both. 5-Vi rooms with lots of charm and natural woodwork.A super buy at 57th and Kenwood. Upper $60's.ENOUGH LIVING ROOM for large gatherings. Fourbedrooms, lots of extras include beamed ceilings,large butler pantry, dining room breakfront. A mustsee at $84,500.56TH AND BLACKSTONE. Turn of the centurycharm with appropriate modernization and the con¬venience of your own laundry facilities in the apart¬ment. 2 bedrooms plus study, bath and a half. Upper$60’s.LOW ASSESSMENT. Charming 1 bedroom withnatural woodwork. French doors open to cozy livingroom. 56th and Blackstone. Mid $60's.‘ A TREE AT MY WINDOW. Window tree . .a dining room from which to enjoy it. The backyardfeels like a park. This 3-bedroom condo at 56th andDorchester is a fine buy! Mid $70's.IF YOUR CAR NEEDS A GARAGE and you need a 2bedroom home, this might be the place you've beenlooking for. Featured also is a balcony overlooking apark and a large backyard. Upper $40's.NEWPORT. 2 bedroom with garage space. Upper$70’s.NEWPORT. Large 1 bedroom. North view. Mid $50's.59TH AND BLACKSTONE. 4 bedroom, 2 bath, over2.000 sq. ft. Super location. Large enough for afamily. Walk to Lab School. $117,000.EAST HYDE PARK. Stunning 3 bedroom, upper $80'swith very low assessments.FRESHLY DECORATED. East Hyde Park 2 bedroomhome, 1st floor. Lots of east and west sun. Ownermay finance. Upper $60's.THE MUSE. Lovely, lovely building. This 1 bedroomplus study has natural woodwork, beamed ceilings,and a woodburning fireplace. A super buy! Mid$60's.NEAR FARMERS FIELD. Large 7 room apartment,big back porch and lovely yard. Sunny andmoderately priced in the upper $60’s.5401 HYDE PARK BLVD. Inside parking. 2 bedrooms,2 baths. Upper $60’s.COOPERATIVESLISTEN TO THE WAVES from this cozy retreat witha fully eastern exposure. 1 bedroom co-op is only$15,000. Low monthly assessment.56TH AND DORCHESTER., 3 bedroom. 2 bath, wood-burning fireplace. Upper $60’s. Ask about ownerfinancing.BUILDINGSEast Hyde Park Blvd.. 18 units, $325,000.61st and Drexel. 24 units. $165,000.Commercial space and 26 studio apartments in cen¬tral Hyde Park. $400,000.Three story walk-up on Dorchester, 31 units for$850,000. TobaccoShop1552 E. 53rd(Under the I.C. Tracks)9 a.m.-7 p.m. weekdays^ 1 2-4 p.m. SundaysYoung Designs byELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERS1620 E. 53rd st.288-2900We Buy and SelfUsed Records1701 E. 55th St.684-3375TEST PREPARATION FORLi* School Admiuioh TestGhuuitc HIUuflEMEr Aom TestGiuouite Record EiimhutioiCHINESE-AMERICAtfRESTAURANTSpecializing mCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOpen Daily11 AMto8 30PMClosed Monday1318 EAST 63rdMU 4-1062 Election from page 5Whole University PartvAlthough the head of the ticket for theWhole University Party, Chris Mapos, saidlast night that he would no longer activelyseek the post of SG president, the tvfeo othermembers of his party are still in the race.The main objective of the Whole UniversityParty is to represent the University as awhole, especially by bringing graduate stu¬dents into offices on Student Government.Jim BeattyJim Beatty, third-year student in the Col¬lege, is WUP’s candidate for vice president.Although he has little experience in Stu¬dent Government, Beatty does “keep trackof what’s going on.” He feels that, as VP, hecould bring “new blood” and “fresh ideas”to the organization.Beatty’s view on the Activities Fee is suchthat, personally, he would not mind paying.However, he feels that if a particular schoolvoted against the fee, it should not be man¬datory for that segment of the University.Mark HolmesThe Whole University Party’s candidatefor SG Finance Chairman is Mark Holmesof the Law School. Holmes has no previousexperience working with Student Govern¬ment, but is very interested in changing theorganization’s operation next year.Holmes strongly supports a referendum tomeasure student opposition to the ActivitiesFee, followed by a repeal of the Fee. He seesthe recently proposed student endowmentfund as “confiscation” of students’ moneyfor purposes which will never benefit thesestudents.Students’ PartyClarke CampbellStudents’ Party presidential candidateClarke Campbell, present SG Finance Com¬mittee chairman, has been active in StudentGovernment for over 2'z years.Campbell’s aim is to make SG “morerepresentative, more responsive to theneeds of students.”Campbell sees SG’s dual role at theUniversity as concerning both serviceoriented matters, such as sponsored eventsfor students and funding of studentorganizations; and concerning an advocacyrole.Ideas for new programs next year whichCampbell is now considering include theopening of a store to suit student needs withlonger hours than the University BookStore's. Also, he would like to begin a hous¬ing service for students, with an apartmentfurnishing listing.Campbell favors an effort to re-guage stu¬dent opinion of the Activities Fee. “The Feedoes a lot of good,” he said, “but we shouldestimate the real student opinion.”Campbell is completely opposed to theFair Funding Amendment, which he sayswould politicize the SG Finance Committee.“It would make an admittedly imperfect butf^ir system much worse.” he says. “It is notin the students' best interest.”Sufia KahnSufia Khan, the Students’ Party’s can¬didate for vice president, has been active inStudent Government on several levels. Shechairs the Ex Libris Governing Committee,and is an executive officer of SG. She hasbeen a manager of the Post Libris cof¬feehouses. and has worked on the SG Ac¬tivities Committee.Khan sees the position of vice president ashaving responsibilities of chairing the Elec¬tion and Rules Committee; organizing elec¬tions to be run efficiently; establishing com¬munication with students in the University;and seeing that committees work togethersmoothly. She is in favor of the ActivitiesFee, since it allows funding of needyorganizations and the expansion of campusactivity.Rob McKayWanting to have input in campus ac¬tivities, Rob McKay is running tor treasureron the Students’ Party slate. His experienceon campus includes his seat on the board ofBlackfriars, and his service as secretary of the Undergraduate Order of the C and of PhiGamma Delta.George KampstraCandidate for SG Finance Committeechair George Kampstra of the Students’Party is a Business School student here. InSG, he has served twice as chairman of anad hoc committee on ethics and also on theAcademic Affairs Committee.Seeing the Activities Fee as the onlysource of funding for many groups on cam¬pus, Kampstra belies that the propercourse would be to collect the Fee, but to of¬fer refunds for thosfl^fto oppose it.Kampstra says that the endowment fundis a “nice idea,’’’ but that it “deprives pre¬sent students of funds they’ll never see. It’snot fair to students who are here now.” He isalso opposed to the Fair Funding Amend¬ment because it would politicize the dispens¬ing of funds.Robin PatrowiczRobin Patrowicz, Student’s Party can¬didate tor secretary,~was unavailable for in¬terview. Patrowicz, a first-year student inthe College, has served this year as afreshman representative to the Assembly.Students Opposed to BoredomThe Students Opposed to Boredom (SOB)party hopes to increase and improve studentactivities through more efficienthandling ofstudent funds.Brad BittanBittan, the present chair of the UniversityServices committee and runner-up in lastyear’s SG presidential election, believesthat with his involvement in many aspectsof SG he is familiar with students and whatthey expect from SG.Bittan advocates increasing the numberof campus-wide activities and large scaleevents as a more equitable way of spendingstudent money.He supports the student Activities fee.Concerning the proposed student endow¬ment fund, he says “It’s a good idea. Wehave to look at the long-range interests ofSG.” However, Bittan maintains that thestudents themselves should make that deci¬sion in a University-wide referendum.Bittan does not support the Fair Fundingamendment because it would remove one ofthe most important responsibilities of SG.Paul RobinsonSOB vice-presidential candidate, PaulRobinson, president of the Woodward Courtcouncil, would like to expand the role of VP.He views the role of vice-president as “coor¬dinator of the various chairmen of SG.” Hisjob would be to “make sure things are beingdone in all the committees. He would alsolike to meet regularly with various othergoverning bodies such as the Inter-HouseCouncil “to get more of an opinion of whatstudents w ant.”David BlaszkowskyWhile he agrees that his primaryresponsibility would be financial, hestresses that the treasurer is also an activemember of the executive committee, an ex-officio member of the Finance Committee,and a member of SG. “The treasurer mustwear all four hats,” he says.Blaszkowsky believes that somestreamlining is needed in the financialbooks. “The books are in a mess,” he says.Gary' KilbergGary Kilberg. the SOB finance committeechair candidate, is the present Burton-Judson Council president. He sees as hisprimary objective to make sure the fee isdistributed equitably. “Every group shouldbe allowed to express themselves, but eventhe average person must benefit from thefee. too,” he explains.Donna MillerSOB candidate for Secretary, DonnaMiller, is the current secretary of the Inter¬national Relations Committee. She believesthe secretary should play a public relationsrole for SG.She would like to put out a newsletter tograduate students, step up alumni relations,and work the The Maroon to publicize SG ac¬tivities As secretary’, she would head thegraduate student liason committee that herslate is proposing.The Chicago Maroon — Friday, April 17, 1981 — 19SPORTSFencers Skewer FourBy Michael StewartThe University of Chicago fencing team,in its final meet of the 1981 season, present-I ed their best performance of the year anddefeated all four of the visiting teams at the| Henry Crown Field House. The first victoryof the day was against Purdue University.Foil and epee captains Rob Condon andBrian Holmgren fenced strongly resulting ina final victory of 15-12.Next, the University of Wisconsin Park-side. the host school of this year’s GreatLakes Championships and the NCAA Na-tionall Championships, was soundly defeat¬ed 16-11. Milwaukee Area Technical College,in the second meeting of the season with theMaroons, proved to be a tough competitor.However, a strong performance by thesabre squad (9-0), with an inspired HenryEm and Matt Lee. turned the meet in favorof Chicago. Clyde Robertson of the foilsquad won the deciding bout to make thefinal score 14-13.The last meet of the day was against theUniversity of Michigan — Dearborn who de¬feated the Maroon team in competition last year. But this year the sabre squad pickedup six bouts, epee won two, and the foilsquad carried the meet with five wins.Again, the deciding bout was fenced by Rob-four wins from the final meet brings theMaroon’s record to 11-10.The women’s fencing club, which prac¬tices and competes with the men’s varsityteam put on a fine performance with Tatsu-mi Ozawa going 2-1 against Purdue Univer¬sity and 1-2 against M.A.T.C. Mary Olimskiwent 2-1 against M.A.T.C. and 1-2 againstPurdue University.The Great Lakes Championships whichwere held March 15 at the University of Wis-consin-Parkside determined eligibility forparticipation in the NCAA National Champi¬onships on March 23-25 which were alsohosted by the University of Wisconsin. BrianHolmgren, elected 1981 Fencer of the Year,and Richard Linsk of epee. Rob Condon andClyde Robertson of foil, and Michael Stew¬art and Henry Em of the sabre squad repre¬sented the University of Chicago. Rob Con¬don placed tenth in foil, Richard Linsk. fifthin epee, and Michael Stewart seventh insabre, as all qualified for the national cham¬pionships. Women Secondin Siwash ClassicBy H.L. SirullAt the NCAAs. although Condon and Stew¬art were eliminated in the early rounds,Ricky Linsk qualified to the final twenty-four and finished 21st in the country. Linsk'sfine performance raised the University ofChicago’s national team standing from 38thin 1980 to 31st this year.Four Are Dudley-Wilson WinnersBy Andy RothmanThe University of Chicago has announced! the winners of four academic-athletic schol¬arship awards for 1981. in recognition of su¬perior academic and athletic accomplish-j ments.Recipients of three Gertrude Dudley andthe Ann Wilson scholarship were chosen bythe Women's Athletic Association scholar¬ships in conjunction with the admissions of¬fice. Each award pays the recipient’s full tu¬ition and is renewable for three additionalyears. The recipients do not have to partici¬pate in the University’s varsity athletic pro¬grams.The Dudley scholars are: Alexandra L.Coulter of Apopka, Florida; Nancy S. Mar-kovitz of Chicago; and Dana L. Pryde ofElgin, Illinois. The Ann Wilson scholar isKaren E. Walsh of Northbrook, Illinois.The WAA-Gertrude Dudley Scholarshipprogram, which started in 1973, was the na¬tion’s first academic-athletic scholarshipfor women. Dudley, the first chairman ofthe Department of Women’s Physical Edu¬cation at Chicago, came to the University in1898 and served as department chairmanuntil her retirement in 1935. She founded theWAA in 1904.The Ann Wilson Scholarship was estab¬lished in 1978 by the University of ChicagoBoard of Trustees to honor Wilson’s specialinterest in and contribution to the quality oflife of women undergraduates and, especial¬ly, the life of women scholar-athletes at theUniversity of Chicago. Mrs. Wilson is thewife of John T. Wilson, former president ofthe University.Alexandra L. Coulter, daughter of Mr. andMrs. Ransom H. Coulter of 905 Sheila Place,Apopka, Florida, will graduate from LakeBrantley High School in Altamonte Springs,Florida. She has played varsity softball forfour years and was an honorable mentionall-conference selection in her junior year.She has also played interscholastic basket¬ball for four years, two as a junior varsitycompetitor, and two with the varsity. In ad¬dition, she has been president of her school’sNational Honor Society for two years andthe sports editor of her school’s yearbook for two years. She is contemplating a collegemajor in economics with a career interest inmedicine on hospital administration.Nancy S. Markovitz, daughter of Mr. andMrs. Alvin Markovitz of 5646 South HarperAvenue. Chicago, will graduate this yearfrom the University of Chicago LaboratorySchool. She played four years of field hockeyand was on the 1979 team that finished sec¬ond in Illinois. In 1980, she was named to theall-conference second team in her senioryear. She also played four years of basket¬ball, several years as captain. In her senioryear she was selected to the all-conferencesecond team. Markovitz also played threeyears each of softball and volleyball. Shehas also served fof four years in a GermanClub. She is likely to major in either the bio¬logical, physical or behavioral sciences andis interested in education as a possible ca¬reer.Dana L. Pryde, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.Jerry A. Pryde of 1278 Dakota Drive, Elgin,Illinois attends Elgin High School where sheplayed four years of volleyball and was cap¬ tain of her team and a unanimous all-confer¬ence selection in her senior year. She alsoplayed four years of softball and was an all¬conference selection in her junior year. Sheis serving as team captain in her senioryear. Her other interests include travel andsnow-skiing. Pryde intends to major withinthe social sciences and has a career interestin law7.Karen E. Walsh, the d3""hter of Dr. andMrs. William M. Wa.o»» ui 1301 BrooksideLane, Northbrook, Illinois, is one of two va¬ledictorians in this year’s senior class atGlenbrook North High School. She hasplayed four years of basketball and hascompeted in softball during her junior andsenior years. She also participated in trackin her freshman and sophomore years. Shehas served as the vice-president of herschool’s National Honor Society for fiveyears, secretary of the varsity club in hersenior year and has been a member of themath team for the past three years. She islikely to major in biology or chemistry inpreparation for medical school.Tennis Squad LoomsStrongest in YearsThe 1981 edition of the University of Chicago’s men’s varsity tennis team mayprove to be the strongest squad fielded in many years. With close to forty playerstrying out for this year’s team, depth seems assured. Sixteen players were retain¬ed, including four lettermen and a conference champion. “Icing on the cake”,came in the form of Dirk Davis, a transfer from Indiana State. Davis could be oneof the best players ever competing at U of C.The Maroons have only one loss, coming at the hands of a Division I team, Mar¬quette, in the first match. The Maroons went on to beat George Williams 7-2,Wheaton 6-3, Lake Forest 5-4 and Beloit by default. Besides Davis, newcomersJames Dix and Fernando Carero complement veterans Mike Vail, Dave Seropian,Zenon Kraus, and Steve Hallin.Coach Bill Simms is working with the men’s squad for the first time this year inaddition to continuing with the women’s squad. Simms thinks his team is a verystrong contender for conference honors this spring. If their early showing (4-1) isanything to judge by, they may be well on their way. However, he still thinks theteam needs work on fundamentals and doubles strategy.The Maroons hosted University of Illinois Chicago Circle Wednesday and willtake on Roosevelt University this Saturday at 10 am. — Kittie Wyne Fourteen members of the women’s var¬sity track team travelled to the Siwash Clas¬sic Invitational at Knox College in Gales¬burg this past weekend, and under theguidance of Coach Linda Whitehead, re¬turned home with a second place trophy, nu¬merous ribbons, and several plants (the lastof which were given to the first place win¬ners). The other schools competing in theClassic included Knox, Augustana, andfirst-place winner Millikin. Despite the rainthat delayed the meet’s beginning and per¬sisted almost through its end. the Chicagowomen showed their strength, as everymember present placed in a least oneevent.The meet began with the 400m relay,where the team of Carole Petersen. AlisonO’Neill. Sue Campbell, and Karen Van-Steenlandt smoked to a second place time of54.6 seconds, only .1 second behind Milli-kin’s winning time. The next sprintingevent, the 100m hurdles, also was a successfor Chicago, as freshwoman wonder HelenStraus captured second place, while NancyFlores took fourth. The Maroons picked upthe most points in the 100m dash, whereVanSteenlandt, who shows a very promisingseason ahead, took first place and Campbelltook second. These two sprinters also racedto first and fourth, respectively, in the 200mdash, with VanSteenlandt setting a teamseason record of 27.9 seconds. The 400mdash saw Petersen pick up fourth place,while sprinter Hope Sirull took fifth. Thoughnew to the 400m hurdle event, and racing itfor the first time, O’Neill managed to takefourth place, showing definite promise inthis event. The 800m run proved to be an ex¬citing race as Chicago’s Kathleen Restifosprinted away from the pack to an impres¬sive first place time of 2.33. Casey Kerrigan,showing her strong kick, shaved past run¬ners from Millikin and Knox on the finalstraightaway to capture fourth place.In the distance events, Chicago showed itsunusal strength and depth. In an exciting1500m run, Cindi Sanborn was just barelyedged out of first place by a Millikin runner,while Kerrigan took another fourth in thatevent. Sanborn also placed second in the3000m run, with first-year student JenniferMaude closing out the scoring in sixth. Inthe longest running event, the 5000m, LuMadge demonstrated the toughness that hascharacterized her season by holding therace’s lead right through to the finish line,crossing in a time of 20:04.0. Despite ham¬string injuries that have plagued her all sea¬son Becky Redman took a fifth in thatevent.The last running event, the 800m sprintmedley, was perhaps the closest and mostexciting race of the meet. Straus, runningthe third leg, went from fourth to secondplace, handing off to Petersen. Comingaround the first turn, runners from Chicago,Knox, and Millikin were almost abreast,until Petersen pulled away to race to a tri¬umphant first place.In the field, the Maroons scored in three ofthe five events. Straus, who participated inall field events, took third in the javelin,fifth in the shotput, and first in the highjump, setting a school record of 5’1”. TheMaroons captured two more fifth places,one by Maureen Breen in the javelin and theother by VanSteenlandt in the high jump,bringing the final score to Millikin—168, Chi¬cago—141, Augustana—101, Knox—78.For those interested in watching, cheer¬ing, and seeing more hot performances, theMaroons have a meet this Saturday, April18th, beginning at noononStagg Field.20 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, April 17, 1981SPORTSFeet Over Behavioral SciencesBy David GruenbaumThis certainly has to be one of the mostconfusing seasons in intramural history. Ihave a scorecard in front of me which readsLearned Feet 2, Behavorial Science 1. Thissame scorecard also lists BehavorialScience members Tim Weithers and MauriDiane as having attended the game. If allthese events occurred it has to be one of themost shocking upsets in recent intramuralhistory. I will have more on this story onTuesday.Games were mostly rained out this weekas the Midway attempted to become thesixth Great Lake. Frondizi ‘N’ the Specs hada bit of a problem with F.C. Benelux in thefirst half but held on for a 4-2 victory. Star“Spec” forward Pablo Buchanon was side¬lined as he has been all season but was onthe field in the spirit, yelling at one of hisfavorite referees. Benelux showed a surpris¬ingly weak defense and goalie and will haveto improve if they intend to contend withteams that have good offenses.I want to apologize for stating that UpperWallace won last year’s women’s all-univer¬sity soccer championship. Rather it was theundefeated Tufts champions who were lastyear’s winners.Games to WatchLIBERAL TRADITION - ORIENTEXPRESS Sat 2:00 M-WSpread: Liberal Tradition by 1 ... . Thisshould be a really close game. Apparentlythe Orient Express, otherwise referred to inthe graduate league as the “Greeks”, hascleaned up its act and gained some fine indi¬vidual players. This game will also be thefirst test for the Liberal Tradition and willshow how well the former undergraduatevarsity soccer players will fare in the gradu¬ate leagues. K.U.U.C. - COMMUTERS Sat 2:00 M-ESpread: Koreans by 2 ... . The saga ofDavid Weiss continues ... Who will the manplay for? If Mr. Weiss does show and if hedoes play for the Commuters, his principalopponent will be one Mr. Jason Cha (pro¬nounced as in tobacco chaw). One of the keyquestions of this game is whether Koreangoalie, Brain Holmgren will get any work.Mr. Holmgren has strained himself farmore in his refereeing duties than he has asa goalie thus far this season.FALLERS-HALE Sun 3:15 M-ESpread: Fallers by 1 ... . Don’t underesti¬mate Hale just because ithas a 1-2 recordand got smeared by Hitchcock in its opener,5-0. Hale came back in a hurry last week toupset Phi Game in a 4-3 thriller. But Bob La-Belle, Hale’s goalie, will have his hands fullin trying to contend with Faller’s residencehead Andy Chung and the fine Fallers of¬fense. If Fallers is to be beaten, it will be be¬cause of their definitely weaker defense.FISHBEIN - HENDERSON Sat 10:00 M-ESpread : Henderson by 1 ... . Henderson ison an upsurge. After an opening loss toLower Rickert, they have beaten Comptonand Michaelson. The key to a Hendersonvictory will be a healthy Karl Keiser. Fish-bein has been struggling, losing in theiropener to Compton and then barely winninga game in a shootout against Michelson. Thebest example of how impotent Fishbein’s of¬fense has been this year is the fact that oneof their fullbacks, John Thomas, is leadingthe team in scoring.INSANE UNKNOWNS - SHOREY Sun3:15 M-WSpread: Unknowns by 1 .... The Unknownshad a little bit of trouble with Compton in thefirst half of their matchup, but exploded inthe second half for four goals, and rompedon to a one-sided victory. This is by far thebest girl’s passing team and Shorey willhave to play really well if they hope to beatthis well-rounded team.Leading ScorersResidenceGoals GamesKuby Psi Upsilon 6 3DaReita Lower Rickert 6 3Sagalovsky Bradbury 5 3Kim Dudley 4 3Brown Lower Rickert 4 3IndependentsShancer Bomber’s Bovs 3 1Yoon K.U.U.C. 3 2Ahn K.U.U.C. 2 2Leading GoalkeepersResidenceGoals AgainstAverage GamesEkstrect Greenwood 0 2Trinklein Lower Rickert 0.33 3Augustinsky Chamberlin 0.5 2Paterson Dodd/Mead 0.5 2(Minimum of two games) Sports BriefsThe University of Chicago volleyball club jwill host the first University of Chicago Invi- itational Volleyball Tournament at the FieldHouse on Saturday, April 18. Twelve men’s!teams from all over Illinois will compete, in- ieluding two teams from the University.Games begin at 9 am, with the finals sche¬duled for 5:30 pm. Admission is free to any- jone with a University ID.Phi Gamma Delta is sponsoring a 10,000meter <6.2 mile) run through Hyde Park onMay 10. All profits from the run will go tomuscular dystrophy. A $5 registration feefor contestants will include a T-shirt, anumber of the race, official running time,and information on muscular dystrophy.Ted Hayden, Chicago’s legendary trackcoach, will act as official timer and honor¬ary chairman for the race. For more infor¬mation, contact the Muscular Dystrophy As¬sociation at 986-8540, or Christopher Gibsonat 753-4070. The race will begin at 9 am atStagg FieldHolmgren K.U.U.C.Barclay Bomber’s BoysShin K.U.U.C.Tannenbaum Flint United Independent0.000.001.002.00 Goals AgainstAverage Games1111 FeatureoftHeWeek1125 E. 53rd Street (Corner University)<*’*$**? - v- 7mm,-.yard . ... vVV- TRI-LEVELTOWNSHOUSE2,000 sq. feet ofquality construction4 bedrooms2 bathsTop LineAppliancesWoodburningFireplacePatio andTwo Sundecks$235,000For Floor plansand completeinformation call:Charlotte VikstromReal Estate493-0666NEAR CAMPUS55th & Lngleside: Two 2 bedroom apartments with modern kitchens andbaths, upper 40‘s.56th & University: Co-op, 5 room apartment fronting garden. Wood-burning fireplace. $47,50056th & Blackstone: 4 room condo, fireplace, beautiful condition. $59,500.56th & Harper: 5 sunny rooms, eat-in kitchen. $67,500.56th & Dorchester: 8 rooms, 2 baths, formal D.R. Modern Kitchen.$125,000UNIVERSITY PARKCall us about our studio and 1 bedrooms in this convenient location.($31,500 to $44,000)EAST HYDE PARK56th & Cornell: 6 plus rooms, 2 baths, lovely woodwork. Lovely condition.Bright, spaciousness for $85,000.Watergate: 3 bedroom 3 baths. Needs Decorating. Garage space in¬cluded. $85,500Hedgerow: Duplex penthouse with extra features: quarry tile, fireplace.Parking Included. $125,000Jackson Towers: 7 room duplex in excellent condition. One of Hyde Park’sspecial ‘‘homes”. $165,00055th & Cornell: 6 room, 2 bath. Spacious rooms, stunning formal diningroom, great kitchen cabinets. $79,900Reduced: Stunning 1 bedroom ‘‘model” apartment. 54th & Hyde Park.$51,500.HOUSES HOUSESTwo near 54th & University for rehabers. restorers. Both brick, both withgarage. $78,000 & 80.000See our “Feature of the Week” for NEW tri-level townhouse.Our beauty, your beauty: Gracious 12 room house on large lot. beautifullyrestored. Modern kitchen leads to deck. Stately paneled entry. Near 48th& Kimbark. $225,000Kenwood Georgian, near 48th & Kenw’ood, 15 rooms. Mahogany livingroom, call for brochure. $195,000NEWPORTWe have several one and two bedrooms in this facility-laden lakefrontbuilding. Call us for information. Some with special financing.&ea/ SxtaA 493-0666The Chicago Maroon — Friday, April 17, 1981 — 21CALENDARFridayComm, on Human Nutrition: “InternationalPerspectives on Public Health Nutrition" speakerJose Bengoa. 10:30 am. 5801 S. Ellis Room J-137.Rockefeller Chapel: Community Good Friday Ser¬vice. 12 noon.Geophysical Sciences Colloquium: “AllendeMeteorite: Baeceker to the Solar System” speakerLawrence Grossman. 1:30 pm. HGS.Rockefeller Chapel: Marcel Dupres “Stations ofthe Cross” Thomas Weisflog Organist. 5:00 pm.Women’s Union: Meets 5:15 pm. Ida Noyes.Hillel: Reform-Progressive Services. 6:00 pm.Hillel: Yavneh (Orthodox) Services. 7:10 pm.Lutheran Campus Ministry: Good Friday Liturgy7:30 pm. 5500 S. Woodlawn.Business School: Musical Comedy — “TheCapitalist Pyg-Malion” 8:00 pm. Mandel Hall. Tix$3.50.Rockefeller Chapel: Brahms "Requiem” Com¬munity Sing. 8:00 pm. All are welcome. SaturdayCrossroads: Buffet dinner, 6:00 pm. No reserva¬tions necessary. 5621 S. Blackstone.Hillel: Yavneh (Orthodox) Services. 7:10 pm.Chinese Christian Fellowship: Multi-mediapresentation of “Metamorphosis II” 7:30 pm. IdaNoyes.Symposium on Human Rights and Social Justice:Presents Congressman Harold Washington andothers. 7:30 pm. Ida Noyes Cloister Club.Lutheran Campus Ministry: Holy SaturdayEaster Vigil. 8:00 pm. 5500 S. Woodlawn.Business School: Musical Comedy — “TheCapitalist Pyg-Malion” 8:00 pm, Mandel Hall $3.50Rockefeller Chapel: Easter Eve Vigil and Serviceof Holy Communion, 11:00 pm.SundayLutheran Campus Ministry: Sermon andEucharist. 6:30 am. 8:30 am and 10:45 am, 5500 S.Woodlawn.The Canon AE-1 is the world’s most popu¬lar SLR camera. Shutter priority automa¬tion makes it simple to get clear, sharp,professional-quality pictures everytime.You set the speed to stop action and pre¬vent blur- the AE-1 does the rest. Justfocus and shoot for really great pictures-indoors, too, when you add the CanonSpeedlite 177A! tAAAQttShown with optionalCanon Speedlite 177Aand Power Winder AAdd the Power Winder A and take mo¬torized single frames or shoot action atup to two frames per second'You can use over forty interchangeableCanon FD lenses plus close-up attach¬ments and other accessories with theAE-1'Shutrer-prrority automation - you setthe speed to stop action and preventblur-the AE-1 does the rest! • |Automatic flash-add the CanonSpeedlite 177A and the AE-1 gives yougreat shots indoors automatically, too1519 East 53rd 752-3030159th & Oak Park Avenue (Brementowne Mall) 429-6464Mt. Greenwood 3205 W. 111 th St. 238-6464H+mAugustana LutheranChurch5500 South WoodlawnApril 17 Good Friday7:30p.m. LiturgyApril 18 Holy Saturday8:00p.m. Easter VigilApril 19 Easter SundayThe Resurrection of Our Lord8:30 a.m. Sermon & Eucharist10:1+5 a.m. Sermon & EucharistAugustana Lutheran ChurchThe Lutheran Campus MinistryLarry Hofer, PastorConrad Swanson, Vicar Rockefeller Chapel: University Religious Service,11:00 am, Bernard O. Brown preaching.Oriental Institute: Film — “Egypt. Gift of theNile" 2:00 pm, 1155 E. 58th St. Free.MondayPerspectives' “The Conflict in El Salvador” JohnCoatsworth, Harold Washington and Mark Zim¬merman, 6:09 am, channel 7.Crossroads: English classes for foreign women,10:00 am, 5621 S. Blackstone.German Table: Meets 12 noon in the Blue GargoyleDept, of Microbiology: “Early Steps in Process¬ing/Degradation of lac Z Nonsense Fragments inE. Coli” speaker Dr. Bictor Fried, 2:30 pm, Cumm¬ings room 1117.Computation Center Seminar: Introduction toTELL-A-GRAF 3:00-5:00 pm. RI180. Center for Middle Eastern Studies: HodgsonMemorial Lecture — “Islamic Civilization and theLegend of Political Failure” speaker Dr. AndrewHess, 4:00 pm. Oriental Inst.Center for Urban Studies: "Current Research inUrban Ecology: Segregation. NeighborhoodMigration, and Community Delimitation” speakerMichael White and Donald Bogue. 4:30 pm, PickHall grnd fl.Chess Club: Meets 7:00 pm, Ida Noyes.Collegiate Lectures in the Liberal Arts: “Lincoln’sDivision of Our House” speaker John Gibbons,8::00 pm. Swift Lecture Hall.Citizens Party Film: “Balloonatics” and “TheGold Rush” 8:00 pm, Cobb.Chicago Symphony Winds and Friends: All-Mozart conceert. 8:00 pm. Mandel Hall prices $3-$9.stud and fac/staff dis.Join the Episcopal Church Council April 19 forEASTER DINNERBISHOP BRENT HOUSE5549 South Woodlawn Avenue(call 607-7548 or 752-4226 lor reservations)ISRAEL ISSUES-LUNCHEON DISCUSSIONPASSOVER LUNCHReservations NecessaryTuesday, April 2172:00- 7:30 P.M.HILLEL FOUNDATION, 5715 WOODLAWN G.W. OPTICIANS1519 E. 55thTel. 947-9335Eyes examined and ContactLenses fitted by registeredOptometrists.Specialists in Quality Eyewearat Reasonable PricesLab on premises for fastservice frames replacedlenses duplicated andprescriptions filled.Rockefeller MemorialCbapelHoly Saturday, April 1811p.m. Easter Eve Vigil andService of Eioly Com¬munion, followed bybreakfastEaster Sunday, April 1911a.m. University ReligiousService, Bernard O. Brown,Dean of the Chapel, preaching HYDE PAR*The Versailles324-0200Large StudiosWalk-in KitchenUtilities Incl.Furn.-Unfurn.•Campus Bus at DoorBased on Availability5254 S. DorchesterGRAFF & CHECKReal Estate1617 E. 55th St.11/2-21/2-4 RoomApartmentsBased onAvailabilityBU8-5566Available toall comers22 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, April 17, 1981CLASSIFIED ADSSPACEFurnished sublet for one or twoavailable now, Woodlawn and 54th,S230/month (utilities included) Leaserenewable in June Call Laura at955 7446.3 Br tri level on large wooded lot onquiet dead end road in Beverly Shores,Ind. 2 blocks from beach. 1! ?B, largefamily room cent air, basement 45min to U of C by car or train $70,000Call Renard at Callahan Realty219 926 42982 Bedroom condo spacious, airy, invery good condition, with brightsunroom $63,000 Phone 324 3263 before12 after 4 anytime on weekend.UC students, rent an apt in Universityhousing for remainder of qtr 1 br$!85/mo. 2 br avail, too. Call Scott eves975 7751 & get $50 off.Coach house for rent hardwood fir 2firepl, laundry tac, 5 rms + workspdarkrm avail 1/2 adults-no dogs catok 550 t- util Mike 929 1446 eve.HOUSE FOR RENT 3 bedroom furnished house plus garden Threeblocks from campus. Available May 1to Sep 30. $350 per month plus utilities.No children over five. Call MI3 3866 or753 2492Person to share Univ apt through 30June possibly Sept 1. Available now160 month Call days 753 4349 nights324 8434Roommate wanted to share 3 bdrm apton 57th and Drexel, avail. 6/15.Female grad preferred. $200 mo CallPena 955 0321Room in big sunny coed lakefront aptw/porch. 8138/mo 241 7589 p mSAVE $5000' Condo by owner 2 bedstudy, sun room, form, din., mid. bath5 rm, l bath Condo 3rd fir Curvedglass bay wind Exposed oak wdwrk,oak doors and firs Huge mod kitchNew tiled bath Near Prk 2 AC inc$56,000 268 7186p mFor Sale: Hyde Park co op on Lake, 2bdrms elegant 8. fully renovated. Allappliances, low assesmt. $29,500.Owner financing possible Near Univof Chicago, Call 363 2529.Bright, sunny co op on Lake, 2 br , 2ba, den Irg, Ir, natl frpl, eat in kit, lowassmts. carpeting, appliances parking $29 500 731 4922Need housing and don't know where tostart? Student Government offers ahousing list of off campus housing!Three month subscription availablefor only $3 and it works Call 753 3273for more informationCompletely remodeled coop apt nr Uof C Ig study, low assesmt $19,500Call 363 2529Eleventh floor one bedroom on theLake Available June 1st $355/moRogers Park area Don 989 5972HYDE PARK EFF BSMT APT A/C,utl pd furnished; $140month subletnow Option in Sept 94 7 9120 EvesOne room open in sunny 4 person aptnow thru June rent $90 + util nonsmoker pret 493 9497Responsible studious non-smoker tosublet 1 bdrm in 2 bdrm apt turn salebuilding, great view $125 -4- utilities.Available Mid May to mid Sept CallRachel 538 9183 nights.56th 8. University seeking non smoking female for own room in 3 bdrm apt$l50/mo No pets. One year lease CallAnne 643 2454Apt Avail May 1 mature fern share bigsunny 2 bdrm turn $175 + util Niceplants on bus rt Kathleen 324 56692 br. 3 br or 4 br apartment formedical students. Reward upon signing of lease Call 564 1229SPACE WANTEDLooking for sublet nic un/semifurnished one bdrm apt for summer term calleves at 642 8932Responsible grad student wishes tohousesit approx mid June to Oct Willdo house and yard work. Call Tucker753 35S0 (eve).PEOPLE WANTEDOVERSEAS JOBS Summer/yearround Europe. S. America, Australia.Asia All fields $500 $1200 monthlySightseeing Free info. Write IJC Box52 IL5 Corona Del Mar, CA 92625.Paid subjects needed for experimentson memory, perception and languageprocessing Research conducted bystudents and faculty in the Committeeon Cognition and Communication,Department of Behavioral SciencesPhone 753 4718.CHILDREN'S NARRATIVES ANDGESTURES. U of C faculty researchneeds children. 4 through 12 years ofage, to participate in a study ofchildren's narratives and gestures The procedure is enjoyable to childrenand takes about 1 hour on campus. Ifinterested, please call 3 4714 for an appointmentSmall newsletter publishing companylocated in Hyde Park needs intelligenthard working secretary Good typingskillsessential. Full time. 493 4318Childcare my home, on campusSchoolage kids All afternons Goodpay Call 241 7545 aft 6:30Are you overweight, or have dieted butcan't keep the weight off7 Do yousmoke too much, and would like toquit? Do you find that if you quit smoking you eat more? Is smoking more ofa problem when you cut down oneating? If you answered YES to any ofthese questions, you may be interestedin our programs for nutrition and forsmoking at the Behavior AnalysisResearch Laboratory (B.A.R.L.), TheUniversity of Chicago These programs have been developed and refined at B A R L. over the past twelveyears We are now interested in the in¬terrelation of these behaviors, as wellas their separate change. For this purpose, we are setting up nutritiongroups and smoking groups, as before,and groups of people with both problems. If you are concerned with anyof these, please call the BehaviorAnalysis Research Laboratory. TheUniversity of Chicago at 947-6537.There will be a small fee to covermaterials and related program costs.Responsible person to babysit thissummer 25 hrs/wk pleasant extrasKeelin Kroe 643 2297.SERVICESSelectric Judith 955 4417,ARTWORK Posters, illustration, lettering, etc Noel Yovovich 493 2399TYPIST: High quality work byfreelance writer Competitively priced, prompt; minor editing with outcharge IBM Correcting Selectric.After 6pm 338 3800 or 472 2415Low fee Psychoanalytic Clinic Needhelp7 Serious professional help? TheAdult Clinic of The Institute forpsychoanalytic treatment Call726 6300, and ask for the Clinic.Term papers Reasonable rates Alsohelp with spelling, bibliographies,dissertation form Call 684 6882Babysitting on campus 12:30pm5:30pm. Pay negotiable Huang 2416545TRANSLATION: French to Englishexperienced reasonable rates 643 7291.Experienced women's therapist, nowhas openings in two womens' groupsfor screening interview Leavemessage on machine 947-0154 slidingscale.The Chicago Counseling andPsychotherapy Center Client-centered psychotherapy, 5711 S.Woodlawn 6354 N Broadway and 111N Wabash. Chicago A ReisteredPsychological Agency (312) 684 1800.FOR RENT Overhead film strip projectors U of C Bookstore, Photo Dept2nd fl. 753 3317Fine wood stripping/refinishing.European style craftsmanship871 1565, 472 1654Auto and cycle mechanic: foreign anddomestic; tune ups, repairs;reasonable rates, 363 4341.KODAK, FUJI, POLAROID FILM INSTOCK U of C Bookstore, Photo Dept2nd fir 753 3317.YEARBOOKSThe 1981 yearbooks are here Price is$12 50 until April 20, after $14 Stillavailable are '80 books $5. Also be sureto see our photo show in Ex Libris. Alevel coffeeshop RegensteinSCENESALBANIAN TRADE UNIONSSOCIALIST TRADE UNIONS Hear atalk by Matt Fusco on his visit withleaders of the Albanian Trade Unions7 30 pm, Sat April 18, Center for Continuing Education, 1307 E 60th For into call Committee to Form a U SAlbania Friendship Association731 5790.BETTY FRIEDAN April 21 atLutheran School of Theology 'TheFuture of the American Family." 7 30pm, 1100 E 55th St $5 admission667 3500 contact Roger DennisUC HOTLINE753-1777Need some information? A referral?Call Hotline, open seven nights a weekfrom 7 00 pm to 7 00 amDONNAMILLERDonna Miller is one sweet SOB TUTORJoin STEP Tutors Volunteer 2 hrs aweek and help a kid feel intelligent. Weneed people to tutor elementary andh.s. kids in all subjects. Call Claire643 3543 or Dave 493 3925PERSONALSSINGLE? Meet attractive, honest peopie like you! Send ad for 20% discount.Low fee Romance Co 350 N LakeShore Drive #1017 Dept 195 Chicago,IL 60611.Herme: You have a debt to repay andyour delay breeds intoleranceChamberlin House forming co ed softball team. All interested girls callDon 753 2261 #342.Michelle We are after the chumpSpring when a young man's fancyturns to., baseball. Hits, errors,scores. PJ.Don't forget to vote STUDENTS PARTY April 20, 21.FOR SALEBooksale at Pullman Library 11001 SIndiana starting 3/13/81VIDEO TAPES VHS. BETA, UCA INSTOCK U of C Bookstore Photo Dept2nd fl. 753 3317,Sailboat share. 1970 Coronado 25 v.good condition, Burnham mooring 1/3share $4,000 call 955 1248 or 9TDK, MAXELL, SONY CASSETTETAPES IN STOCK U of C Bookstore,Photo Dept 753 3317,ARMSTRONG Heritage flute, Frenchhandmade model, low B foot joint, inexcellent condition, 5 years old.Moroccan leather case. Call 538 8732(eves)AUDI '74 Fox Front Wheel drive reardefog, 53.000 mi. Auto. Needs somework SISOO/best offer. 955 3946,947 2624BINOCULARS-Leitz, Bushnell, TascoIN STOCK U of C Bookstore, PhotoDept 2nd fr 753 3317SUMMER CLOTHING FROM THEORIENT, Cool, comfortable, colorfulall cotton skirts, blouses, and dresses(long and short). Prices from $12 $35These clothes sell in the stores for atleast twice as much Call Louise at643 8613or 241 7163BATTERIESFor watches, camerameters IN STOCK U of C BookstorePhoto Dept 2nd fl. 753 3317.1970 VW Bug. 57,000 miles, body fair,engine excellent runs great, good forcampus/downtown 955 6462STOP WATCHES, DARKROOMTIMERS IN STOCK U of C Bookstore,Photo Dept 2nd fl 753 3317Celestron #5 telescope lens call955 9739 With interchange for 35mmTR IPODS Davis and Sanford INSTOCK U of C Bookstore Photo Dept,2nd fir 753 3317.FRANZUS 110/220V converters INSTOCK U of C Bookstore. Photo Dept2ndt|r 753 3317WOMEN'SRAP GROUPA Women's Rap Group meets everyTuesday at 7:30 pm at 5655 S. University Ave For infor 752 5655.NEEDATYPIST?Excellent work done in my home-.Reasonable rates Tel: 536 7167 or548 0663LITERARYMAGAZINEPrimavera, a women's literarymagazine needs more women to jointhe staff. Call 752 5655 or 548 6240 Onsale in most bookstores.S.O.B.We re looking for more than just a fewSOB'S -F WE NEED YOU! THEMANY, THE PROUD, THE SOBs!DAY CAMPCOUNSELORSCollege students needed for summeremployment Lincoln Park, RogersPark. Henry Hart, Mayer Kaplan.North Suburban. South Suburban. Bernard Morwich Jewish CommunityCenters Send Inquiries to NSJCC 601Skokie Blvd . Northbrook. Illinois60062MAKE THEFEE FAIRDirectly elect the Finance BoardVote YES Fair Funding Amendment TREATISEUse the Computer to format dissertalions in accordance with University requirements Comp Center seminarwill illustrate use of the TREATISEprogram Tuesday, April 21, 4 00 5:30pm Classics 10 Advanced featureswill be discussed Thursday, April 23,same lime and place. All welcome Nocharge No previous computer experience necessarySPOTLIGHTGet in the spotlight Open mike at PostLibris, Fri 4/17, INH.9 30 1 30SENIORS57 DAYS TILL GRADUATION1FILM PROCSSINGSAME DAY PR OCES S I NGEKTACHROME ONLY IN BY 9BACK BY 2, U of C Bookstore PhotoDept 753 3317.LOTS OF FOODSat Apr 25 INH 6 30 PM fix $5 Stud$8 other Resv req 667 6946 evesBrought to you by MA R R SHAVE PATIENCESing Along with the Gilbert andSullivan Opera Company April 23, IdaNoyes Hall. $1VOTE FAIRFUNDINGVote for fair funding Amendment0-AIDES1981-82To 1st. 2nd 3rd year students in the College: Applications for volunteer positions as General Orientation Aides canbe picked up now in Harper 269. Thejob involves assisting the Office of theDean of Students in the College withthe various Orientation Week activities and with other Orientationevents throughout the academic.yearFormer O Aides should sign up inHarper 269 to indicate a willingness toparticipate again. APPLICATIONSARE DUE MAY 18 Questions? CallSonia Jacobson at 3 2826BRADBITTANBrad Bittan is the biggest SOB I knowPARTY-PARTYStop by Delta Upsilon tomorrow for anight of dancing and drinking 9pm 7?? 5714 S WoodlawnFREE BIKE?Nope but if you can tell me who stolemy white ten speed Raleigh from outside the Reynold's Club last Wednesday (4 15 81) I will give you 50 bucksCall 288 6682WINDENSEMBLERehearsal at 10 am in Mande! Hall. Afew positions still available for mostinstruments. For further informationplease call E Cooper or John Harris at753 2105, 493 1915. or 643 1735PASSPORT PHOTOSPassport Photos while you wait atModel Camera. 1342 E 55th StRIDE WANTEDBoston Moving late May early JuneNeed adequate transportation to accomodate belongings (life, no furniture). Share driving and expensesCall Florrie 332 1006 or 493 2047 eveningsLOST ANDFOUNDReward: For the return of a 2 mantent Orange in Blue bag Lost on campus on 4/13 Fred 955 4178A plaid (Beatrice Dress Tartan) scarfhas gotten lost Phone Tom at 324 0868RewardCAT LOST Vic S7th and Blackstone.large very friendly black gray tabbyBlack spot on white rear paw call752 0945WANTEDWanted Someone to sew a simplebridesmaid's gown Call 753 0077 after10 00 p mSTEREOEQUIPMENT^SONY PAN ASOCICONKYO EQUIPMENT IN STOCK U of C BookstorePhoto Dept 753 3317 SPRINGSAILING NEWSThe U of C Sailing Club will sponsor aSpring Lecture Series, April 14, 21 and28. given by three internationallyrenown yachtsmen—for professionals,novices and fans alike For more infocall Mrs Resch 753 4693MIME WITHMARIAMaria Ramer performs Mime tonightat 8 pm in the Cloister Club She willlead a Mime Workshop Saturday 2 4pm in the INH Dance Room Admission if Free1! E.F. ClownPHILOSOPHERKINGSAdd something new to Student Government: Intelligence Vote forEnlightened Despotism (EDAC).GREGO'NEALGreg O'Neal wants to change thingsLet's give him a chancePAUL ROBINSONPaul Robinson, you're a cute SOBS.G. EFFICIENT?It can be Vote YES Fair FundingGO MEDIEVALAT the St George's Day celebrationApr 25 Ida Noyes Hall. Free w7UClDCostume requested Info 373-3258 or667 6946eves MARRS EventKITTENSBlack kittens free Cute! 643 3395PHOTO PAPERKODAK, AGFA. ILFORD PHOTOPAPER IN STOCK U of C Bookstore,Photo Dept 2nd fl 753 3317.ORIENTAL CARPETSi have just received another shipmentof choice handknotted carpeted consisting of sizes 3 x 5 to 9 x 12 in warmearth tones (deep red, rust, beige,brown, etc.) Designs are well-balanced and piles are rich and well-cut Prices are very reasonable for theexcellent quality Call David Bradley241 7163 or 643 8613JDORMBA?Great opportunity for students thinking about a JD and/or MBA Guestspeakers are Dennis Metcalfe fromthe Business School and RichardBagder from the Law School Wednesday, April 22. noon in the NorthLounge Reynold's Club. Bring yourlunch Sponsored by Career Counselinq and Placement 753 3281NO VOICE IN SG?Vote YES Fair Funding AmendmentCAMERA/TAPE RECORDERREPAIRSU of C Bookstore Photo Dept 2nd firrm STUDENTS PARTYVote For An Improved StudentGovernment April 20 and 21stSUMMER JOBSStill looking? Come to a special pro¬gram Using Contacts The InsideTrack to a Summer Job Guestspeaker Coleman Tuggle. BankingOfficer. Continental Bank Wed April22, 4 pm in Room 201, Reynolds ClubSponsored by Career Counseling andPlacement 753 3281COMPUTERGRAPHICSLearn to use TELL A GRAF on theComp Center's Dec 20 computerSeminar will be held Monday. April 20,3:00 5:00, Rl 18CVOTE FAIRFUNDINGVOTE FOR Fair Funding AmendmentDAVIDBLASZKOWSKYDave Blaszkowsky is noe mean SOBHEARSUSAN GRIFFONLesbian feminist author of "Womanand Nature" speak on "Learning andthe Culture of Pornography" Friday,April 24th at 1 pm in Ida Noyes HallSponsored by Gay and LesbianAlliance and University FeministOrganizationRHYTHM SHEIKSPlay at Post Libris tonight! Ida NoyesHall. 9 30 1:30SUMMER JOBSLocal and overseas write for information to A P Company 1516 ETropanica Dept 7a 110 Las VegasNEVADA 89109 include a self addressed stamped envelopeATTN:INQUIRYInquiry, the undergraduate journal ofessays by students in the college isnow accepting papers Papers arewelcome at all time for future issuesThe Spring deadline is April 24 Youare encouraged to submit papers writ¬ten in all subjects to the INH boxGARY KILBERGGary Kilberg, you are a true SOBSCRIPT YOURPAPERLearn how to format your paper or artide by using SCRIPT, a programwhich runs on the Amdahl computerA two session seminar will be heldTuesday and Thursday April 28 and30 4 00 5 30, Classics 18 All welcomeno chargeCAMERAS FOR SALECAMERAS CANNON, NIK IN. LOYMPUS. ROLLEI MINON IN STOCK Uof C Bookstore Photo Dept 2nd fl.753 3317BAUSCH& LOMBSOFLENS(polymacon)Contoc' lensesDR. M.R. MASLOVOPTOMETRIST•Eye Examinations•Contact Lenses(Soft & Hard)* Ask about our annual service agreement•Fashion Eye WearHYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th 363-6100VIEW THE SUNRISEover the lake and enjoy those glorious sunsetsfrom the 14th floor of the Watergate East Con¬dominium at 5471 Hyde Park Blvd. 2 Bedroomsand library; 2 full baths; modern kitchen andbreakfast nook; drapes carpeting and parquetfloors; 8 spacious closets; indoor parking.Attractively priced at $78,500.00. For appoint¬ment, call owner Mr. Rubin, 368-5333 (9 to 5).The Chicago Maroon — Friday, April 17, 1981 — 23and kit WD/DW. Large bkyard. Greatlocation Call 955 9194 TYPIST Disseration quality. Helpwith grammar, language as neededFee depending on manuscript IBMy(fDivertimento? N? 11 in D ConcertOverttire tb theMarriage ofr * >rigp.ro Crfw ducaqo Symvdonu TVindsandfriends, direcled dij Raij Stilt'n>itfl John 'Terry, pianoConcertb inCK; 503CTickets available at the Reynolds Club‘"Box Office beginning -Ayril 6Students:45, 44, & 43Faculty/Staff: $ 7 ’’P, 46,&'44s-°(general: 49,47s.0, 6^ 46 'Monday,^ApriC20,19815.*00 P-M*LeonJAandeCAssemBCu HanSf^Sriln i versify