THE CHICAGO MAROONVolume 90, No. 51 5Z The University of Chicago Copyright 1981 < The Chicago Maroon Tuesday, May 5, 1981^4. Slow Congressional Action on BudgetMay Delay Federal Loan Cuts for YearUniversityCuts Radio-TV Office,BroadcastsBy Robert Decker Slow Congressional action on PresidentReagan’s proposed budget cuts may givestudents a reprieve from cuts in federallyinsured student loan programs which havebeen called for by the Reagan administra¬tion, according to Congressional staffmembers.It is unlikely that final Congressional ac¬tion on the student loan program will becompleted before August or September,David Morse, an aide to the Senate Subcom¬mittee on Education, the Arts, and Humani¬ties, said yesterday. This will make it vir¬tually impossible for the cuts to take effectin time to affect loans for the 1981-82 schoolyear, he said.Reagan proposed earlier this year to re¬strict eligibility for the Federally InsuredStudent Loans (FISL) to students who dem¬onstrate a need remaining after other re¬sources are exhausted, and to raise the in¬terest rate on those loans from the currentPerspectives, a daily television program level of nine percent to the prevailing T-billproduced by the University which has ap- rate plus three and a half percentage pointspeared mornings on WLS-TV (Channel 7) — total of approximately 17 percent atsince 1969, is likely to be discontinued by the today’s rates. Presently there is no needsUniversity this year, according to James test for the FISL program. At least 3500 Un-Yuenger, director of news and informa- ivesity students borrowed funds under thebon. program during the 1979-80 school year.The cancellation of Perspectives follows Reagan’s cuts would also eliminate newthe University’s decision to dissolve the federal capital funding for the NationalRadio and Television Office (RTVO), which Direct Student Loan (NDSL) program,also produces the syndicated radio pro- which provides loans at four percent inter-j grams Conversations at Chicago and From est to students who meet a needs test. Thei the Midway. The decision to close RTVO elimination of the $100 million in annual fed-was based, said Yuenger, on the report of a eral contributions will mean that the pro¬committee headed by Philip E. Kurland, gram will only be able to make loans from aprofessor in the law school. revolving account replentished by repaidBoth Robert Heitsch, director of radio loans. 2029 University of Chicago studentsprograms and production, and Kurland re- received loans under this program in thefused to comment on the report, which has 1979-80 school year; some of these studentsbeen submitted to University President also received loans under the FISL pro-Hanna Gray. gram, as well, however.When it is dissolved, the functions of the According to Morse, the Reagan adminis-RTVO are to be brought under direct control tration has urged that the new spendingof Jonathan Kleinbard, Vice-President for levels and eligibility requirements for theCommunity Affairs and Assistant to the loan programs taken effect on July 1, whichPresident, Yuenger said. Heitsch will join would make the cuts effective for the com-Continued on page 4 ing school year. However, Morse said, many members of Congress believe that the cutsshould not take effect until October 1 — afterloans for the 1981-82 school year have beenprocessed and distributed“There’s no real way that there can bechanges effective July 1,” Morse said. FinalCongressional action on spending levels willalmost certainly not be completed beforeAugust or September, according to Morse,which would make it virtually impossiblefor Reagan’s cuts to take effect before theOctober 1 date. “We’re counseling businessas usual,” he said, referring to the calls hiscommittee has had from college financialaid officials and students.Morse said that it is virtually impossiblethat the cust in the loan program would bemade retroactive if they are approved laterthan July 1, because banks and state loanboards, which process applications for fe¬derally insured loans, will have alreadymade commitments for fedrall insuredloans, will have already made commit¬ments for fall loans by mid to late summer.The Senate will not accept any legislationthat would negate agreements, Morse said,and this will likely force the House into ac¬cepting the October 1 date. He added thatthe Reagan administration has already con¬sidered and rejected the possibility of re¬questing that banks not agree to make loansfor the coming year until final student loanlegislation is approved.Not everyone shares Morse's confidenceabout the future of the student loan programfor next year. Dan Hall, Director of Admis¬sions and Aid for the University, cautionedthat “everything is still up in the air." Hallsaid the fate of student loan programs maydepend on the outcome of the House vote ex¬pected tomorrow on the so-called “Graham-Latta amendment,” a budget resolution set¬ting spending levels for the entire federalgovernment. ’Graham-Latta amendment isa slightly altered version of President Rea¬gan’s original budget request, which hasnow won the administration’s official bless¬ing.The amendment’s spending ceilings for student loan programs, take into considera¬tion cuts which go into effect July I. If theHouse approves the Graham-Latta amend¬ment by a large margin, “they can do whatthey want to” with federal loan programs,Hall said.Morse, however, disagreed with Hall, say¬ing that regardless of the spending ceilingsincluded in the amendment, it will be impos¬sible for Congress to act quickly enough toput them into effect for the coming yearA spokesman for the House Subcommitteeon Postsecondary Education, which has ju¬risdiction over the loan programs in theHouse, said that although the current statusof loans for the fall is confusing, the chancesare improving that loans will be availablefor the coming year, barring a majorchange in the time table for Congressionalaction on the budget.Kenwood Tenants, Landlords Back to Court ThursdayBy Chris IsidoreRepresentatives of tenants and landlordsat 5143 South Kenwood are due back in courton Thursday morning to settle their disputeover the renovation and conversion of thebuilding into condominium units.The battle has been going on since last No¬vember, when condominium developersPhilip Gross and his son Michael bought thebuilding and notified tenants of their intentto covert the building to condominiums.Tenants did not organize then to fight theconversion, but became upset when basicservices in the building began to deterioratein December, according to Gordon Knox,leader of the tenant group in the building.Knox said that the lights in the hall andstairways were torn out, that garbage col¬lection stopped, that repairs in plumbingw'ere not attended to, and that the front doorlock was broken. In addition. Knox said thatthere were random 24 hour periods whenelectricity and water was shut off.In January construction and renovationon the building began. Knox said that he andother residents didn’t start to have seriousdifficulties with the construction until mid-February, w hen dust from the work and ren¬ovation forced Knox and others to see a doc¬tor. On March 7th, tenant leaders and MichaelGross met with 5th Ward Alderman LarryBloom to work out a compromise. Knpxcalled the outcome of that meeting a “verypositive agreement,” as Gross agreed to fixthe problems that had begun in December.Gross also agreed to make some sort ofmodification on the noise and dust problem,and to work to resettle tenants. Gross fol¬lowed through on the improvements withgarbage collection, lighting and security.“They made a very good effort,” said Knox.“It was a sign of very good faith.”Soon after that meeting, and the changesthat followed, however, Knox said that thegood will started to disappear. “PhillipGross called up,” said Knox, “and said quiteclearly that the changes that had takenplace since the Bloom meeting were not inany way the result of the meeting. He told usnot to think that we would be able to strong-arm him into doing anything. That was thefirst introduction of what I would call badfaith into the negotiations.”Gross said that he has been trying to workout solutions to the satisfaction of the ten¬ants in the building, and claims that Knox isthe true source of the trouble. “He’s the onlyone in the building who has been complain¬ing,” said Gross. “He’s a young college kid,and he’s been an activist and all.. One 01 thewomen in the building who has asked me to help her to relocate says that they are ha¬rassing her.”The Maroon was not able to confirmGross’s charge about Knox’s allegedharassment, but a number of other tenantswho live in the building did talk about theircomplaints with the dust and the construc¬tion.Julia Seigle, who lives in the building withher two children, sais that she has had badheadaches every night since constructionbegan, and that she also has had nose-bleedsthat she had not had before the constructionstarted. She added that at one point her chil¬dren were vomiting, which she believed thatit may be related tothe dust, and that hersix-year old son will soon be entering thehospital to check for lead poisoning on theadvice of doctors.“It’s been very frustrating and very emo¬tional,” she said. “I’ve just been holdingback talking to Gross, letting the lawyer andGordon handle it. But if they wanted me to.I’d be willing to really let go about the prob¬lems. It’s just ridiculous the way that theyare treating human beings.”“The tenants are all united behind Gor¬don,” said Vicky Hyneman, who unlike Sei¬gle does not hold a lease to her apartment,but had been living on a month to month con¬tract.” People contact him, and he contactsdifferent people because we elected him the chairperson of the tenants group. Hymanalso has two children, one who has sufferedfrom such serious asthema attacks since therenovations started that she had to be takento the hospital on one occasionThe tenants took the case to court lastweek and got a city judge to issue a tempo¬rary restraining order on constructionwork. That order would have prevented allhamering, sawing, nailing, or the use ofpower tools, or anything else that wouldcause dust or noise. That order was relaxedlater in the week to allow some activity tocontinue. Knox and Gross are still in dis¬agreement over just what is allowableunder the court order The two sides wereback in court three times last week to try todefine what was acceptable activity.“It is not the intent of the court to stop usfrom working," said Gross. “We have no in¬tention to go against the court's ruling Whatwe are trying to ensure is that there is a livable environment for them to live in. Butthey (the tenants) don't understand the difference between wrecking, cleaning, and]building partitions, which is allowed, andmajor renovations.”Knox disagreed, calling the work takingplace since the initial injunction “verydusty, noisy and dangerous.” He said he ishopeful that the judge will rule in their favoron Thursday.€ht Hnmtrsiru of ChicagoTHE SCHOOL OF SOCIAL SERVICE ADMINISTRATIONPRESENTSThe Fifth SOCIAL SERVICE REVIEW LectureThe World's Poor: Can TheyHope for a Better Future?BYD. GALE JOHNSONEliakim Hastings Moore Distinguished Service Professor and Chairman,Department of Economics and the CollegeTUESDAY, MAY 5, 19814:00 P.M.SCHOOL OF SOCIAL SERVICE ADMINISTRATION969 East Sixtieth Street, Room W1amipdateofornewsstand, aficionadosWell Hyde Parkers, so far I've tried Scientific American books...hard cover bestsellers...Jewish history...Black history...child/parentcommunication...discount cigarettes...free T-shirts with a purchase...art and architecture books; to no avail.l&uarehard.toplease After a Careful Analysisof the intellectual, radical, working class, senior citizen, student,white collar, immigrant, bla^k, white, tan, purple, Christian, lewish,Atheist, Other, liberal, conservative, crazy, straight, gay, transexual,bohemian population that comprises the kaleidoscopic world ofHyde Park.out what vou'want!don't blame me and delicious imported candy, hot pop posters,1000 American and foreign magazines, the very latest paperbackbooks, clever greeting cards, penguin Classics, imported cigarettes...friendly service...local employees...newspapers!51st & Lake ParkSurviving, evolving, enduring. Trying to figure you out.Much love, Bob KatzmanFREE 50c COMIC BOOK with a $2MAGAZINE PURCHASE TO ANYONE WITHA U.C. I.D. AND THIS AD.L2 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, May 5 1981 University of ChicagoSLAVIC FORUMLiterary ConferenceMay 8 Classics 10I.TWENTIETH CENTURY RUSSIAN POETRY 9:00 -10:20Chair: Professor Milton Ehrelean Layes Hellie; Dona/d Cillis; Georgette H. DemesII.TOWARDS MODERNITY 10:30-11:50Chair: Professor Samuel SandlerLouise Martin Wedrychowska; George Sumnik; Joanna KotIII. PETROV-VODKIN 1:15-2:00Chair: Professor Reinhold HellerSuzan Kay BurksIV. MODERN RUSSIAN PROSE 2:10 -3:30Chair: Diane IgnashevJesse Zeldin; Helena Goscilo-Kostin; Zinaida Breschinsky~*KEYNOTE LECTURE4:00 - 5:00 Social Sciences 122VASILY AKSYONOVUniversity of Southern Californio“Recent Soviet Literature -1953 -1981“A reception to which the public is cordially invitedwill be held immediately following ProfessorAksyonov's lecture in Ida Noyes Hall.Co-sponsored by The Department of Slavic Languagesand LiteraturesMOVING?RYDIK RENTS TRUCKSLOCAL AND ONE-WAY LOW RATES• Move with a triend.• Minimum age requirement to drive -18 years old.• Fast, Easy and dependable.VISA’ 'EH •*110%O OFFwith thiscoupon One-Way & Local Movesexpires 6/30/81Good at Either LocationRyder Truck Rental, Inc.1050 W. Pershing RoadChicago523-5555 Lake Park Rentals6633 S. Cottage GroveChicago684-7457NEWS BRIEFSCosta Rican PresidentThe Center for Latin American Studieswill host Jose Figueres, twice President ofCosta Rica (1953-58; 1970-74), at 3 pm Mav 6in SS 122.Figueres (or “Don Pepe’’ as he is affec¬tionately called in Costa Rica) was born in1906, the son of a country doctor, and rose toprominence in 1942 as an outspoken critic ofPresident Calderon. Exiled to Mexico from1942-44, he returned to Costa Rica in 1948 tolead a revolution ensuring the election ofcompatriot Otilio Ulate. It was in Mexicothat Figueres shaped his political philoso¬phy, meeting there many of the politicalexiles from the rest of Central America.His return as leader of the provisionaljunta (1948-49) marked the foundation of oneof Central America’s only true social demo¬cracies. As provisional president for 18months, Figueres abolished the army andnationalized financial and communicationservices before turning the governmentover to Ulate. He was overwhelmingly elect¬ed president in 1953 and instituted sweepingprograms of educational reform, welfarelegislation and public works until 1958. Hisre-election as president in 1970 furtheredthese reforms, solidly grounding Costa Ricain the social democratic tradition.Figueres stands as one of the most re¬spected politicians in Central Americatoday. The founder of Costa Rica’s NationalLiberation Party, he has been attackedfrom all sides of the political spectrum(smear campaigns in the early 1940s ac¬cused him of Nazi leanings; subsequentcampaigns in the 1960s accused Figueres anhis NLP of being a Communist front). Fi¬gueres’ democratic vision has saved CostaRica from much of the turmoil and political| terrorism which envelopes Central America today. On campus he will address the prob¬lem of democracy in Central America, andpresent his views on the current situation.Figueres is a prolific writer, turning outmore than 100 works on Central Americanpolitics in the past 40 years. He has servedas a visiting professor at Harvard andSUNY, and as a United Nations consultantin the areas of human rights and world de¬velopment and trade.Tocqueville on Women“Tocqueville on Women” is the title ofThursday evening’s Collegiate Lecture inthe Liberal Arts, to be given by WilliamKristol, assistant professor of politicalscience at the University of Pennsylvania.The lecture will be held in the Swift Lectureroom at 8 pm, with discussion to follow.Life After Graduation?Is there “Life After Graduation” for you?If you’re not sure, a series of seminars onthis topic allows you to explore career op¬portunities in fields ranging from businessand medicine to journalism.Two or three times each quarter, the Of¬fice of Alumni Affairs, together with the Of¬fice of Career Counseling and Placement,schedules informal noontime discussionswith professionals in various fields. Held inRobie House, where the Alumni Office is lo¬cated, the disccussions last about an hourand a half, with beverages and cookies pro¬vided to round out the bag lunches studentsare asked to bring.Two talks have thus far been scheduledfor this quarter, and they differ from pre¬vious ones in that they are aimed at pre¬professional students rather than those withmore eclectic interests. On Tuesday, May12, “The MBA Explosion . . . Why?” will be the topic of a discussion by a panel of alumniincluding the executive vice president of theChicago Mercantile Exchange and a self-employed woman who holds an LLB fromHarvard and an MBA from the University ofChicago, while on the following Tuesday,May 19, four prominent physicians in dif¬ferent fields and affiliated with differenthospitals will tackle the question of “ThePractice of Medicine . . . Public, Private, or?”— Margo HablutzelAsbestos Ceiling ForcesPierce Masters OutThe recent discovery of asbestos in theceiling of the resident masters’ apartmentin Pierce Tower is likely to leave that dormi¬tory with a resident master-in-exile for theremainder of the quarter.Workers discovered approximately twoweeks ago that the ceiling in the residentmasters’ apartment contains asbestos, ac¬cording to Edward Turkington, director ofstudent housing. Asbestos fibers are knownto cause cancer in large doses but the effectsof lesser concentrations are unknown.Because of the uncertainty over thedanger posed by the asbestos, resident mas¬ters Charles and Sandra Cohen have decid¬ed to move out of the dormitory as soon asthey can find altenative housing, and havesaid that they will stay away until the ceil¬ing is repaired. “They want to be cautiousand I don’t blame them,” Turkington said.The asbestos in the ceiling was discov¬ered, according to Charles Cohen, “aftersome clever person had a suspicion that ithad a quality to it that it had asbestos.” TheUniversity sent a sample of the ceiling awayfor analysis, and was told that it contained Pierce Tower resident masters’ apart¬ment.roughly 13 percent asbestos. The asbestoswas contained in an acoustic materialsprayed on the ceiling when the residentmasters’ apartment was built in 1970. Noneof the other rooms in Pierce nor in the othercampus dormitories is believed to containasbestos, Turkington said.Neither Turkington nor the Cohens aresure what will be done to the ceiling or whenthe apartment will be occupied again. "Thewhole thing is really up in the air,” Turking¬ton said. "We have a lot of talking to do” tofind out the extend of the problems and thesteps which must be taken to correct it.Cohen said he doubts that he and his wifewill move back into Pierce before the end ofthe quarter, because of the difficulties in eli¬minating asbestos in the ceiling. The University is assisting the Cohens in finding al¬ternative housing.• A*41? \3^ v 0- # aoV.A* LcA ;, 0 j UO*TO <0•C,& a VVv ve^<,*&<y ,0 6^ v&0v”_ CV ssvo' o>'K v \S,clfrnccsperforming“spinningaround”a new work set to the musicof the Beatles,and other worksFota ’ the dancng is tne choreogr3Pf'\is nveihve. ana ’he songs oh those songsare marvelousChicago Tribunea hip flip fling of a danceSun T'mes8 pmmay 9mandel hall$2.50/student, $4/othersThe Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, May 5, 1981 — 3 DanBreslauThe Art of theToothpastePressTwo practicioners of the oldest form ofprinting will be on campus today to discusstheir art and, later in the day, read their po¬etry.When Allan and Cinda Kornblum foundedThe Toothpaste Press in Iowa City, Iowa tenyears ago, they joined the slim ranks of pub¬lishers using letterpress printing, a processwhose basic techniques date back to Guten¬berg. It involves setting lead type, carefulpreparation of the printing surface, andcraftsmanlike skill. Though the types usedare classic Rennaissance faces, and theirpapers fine and often handmade, their booksare designed to be read, and not simply col¬lected, as is the fate of many books now pro¬duced by similar presses.In the decade since they moved their 1874Challenge platen press into their home, theyhave published a series of finely-printed vol¬umes of work by American poets, includingRobert Creely, Robert Bly, Alive Notely,Carl Rakowski, and Anselm Hollo. Thebooks of the Toothpaste Press have receivedfavorable and growing attention for both thequality of their printing and the selection ofworks which they have printed. They havereceived grants from the National Endow¬ment for the Arts, and have expanded, pur¬chasing new types and equipment and em¬ploying assistants to help with thetypesetting, printing, binding, and folding.The press recently produced two broadsidesfor Walker Museum in Minneapolis, and hasbegun to take on jobs from other publish¬ers,Allan Kornblum will present a slide showand lecture on “The Iowa Printing Tradition Kornblum and his 1874 ChallengePress.and the Toothpaste Press’’ at noon today inthe North Lounge of Reynolds Club. As ex¬hibit of books published by the press willcontinue at Regenstein Library throughMay 31.In addition, both Allan and Cinda Kornblum will read from their poetry tonight at 8pm in the Reynolds Club North LouneeAllan Kornblum’s books include The SaladBushes, from Seamaker Press and Awk¬ward Song, published by the ToothpastePress. Cinda Kornblum’s poems first ap¬peared in a small volume called Bandwagonfrom the Toothpaste Press; a selection ofnew works is forthcoming from GnomonPress of Kentucky.Bom events are sponsored by the Festivalof the Arts and the William Vaughn MoodyLecture Committee. Washington in Suit?Local congressman Harold Washington isconsidering joining the law suit filed by 11US Representatives last week seeking toban all military assistance to the govern¬ment of El Salvador.The suit, which was filed last Friday,names President Reagan, Secretary of De¬fense Casper Weinberger, and Secretary ofState Alexander Haig as defendants, andcites the War Powers Act as the main basisfor the suit.Washington was not in the capital lastweek, and was not notified on the initial in¬troduction of the suit. He told communitymembers at a press conference in ChicagoSaturday, that he agreed v th the basis ofthe suit, and that he would examine it whenhe returned to Washington.Washington has voiced strong oppositionto the administration’s policy on El Salva¬dor before this. He is the co-sponsor of tworesolutions in the House which would forcethe US to withdraw military support from Harold Washingtonthe current government. He also wrote anangry letter to Haig last week w hen Chicagoclergyman Roy Bourgeoise disappeared inEl Salvador. Friends of Bourgeoise fear thatgovernment “death squads” may have beenresponsible for his disappearance. Bour¬geoise was in El Salvador acting as a trans¬lator for WBBM-TV news.RadioContinued from page 1that office as Broadcasting Manager andwill be charged with arranging interviewswith faculty members and “keeping a closeeye on developments” in electronic media,Yuenger said.Kleinbard said he had “not discussed thefuture of Perspectives with channel 7,” butsaid the RTVO’s dissolution was to allow theUniversity to do “a better job” of broadcast¬ing programs and “a lot more of it.”“Broadcasting is expensive,” Kleinbardsaid, “and if you are going to spend moneyon it you must do the best job possible.”Kleinbard started Perspectives and Conver¬sations at Chicago when he was RTVOdirector in 1969 and said, “It is a marvelousthing that they have continued for so long,but we are not sure if the places (Conversa¬tions) is broadcast are the best. We mustlook at the entire business and see if we areusing the technology in the best way.”C. Ranlet Lincoln, dean of University Ex¬tension, who has been moderator of Per¬spectives for the entire history of the pro¬ gram, said his “impression is that on thewhole the University faculty has been gen¬erous in contributing to the program,” a fac¬tor which “has led to its success over thepast 12 years.” Lincoln said WLS-TV hasfound the program “acceptable” in helpingit “fill its public relations responsibility,”and that “everyone has felt the programwas worth doing so we kept doing it.” Lin¬coln said it was unusual in the “off and on,up and down” world of public affairs pro¬gramming for Perspectives to have lastedas long as it did.Airing daily at 6:09 a.m., Perspectivesdrew a one percent Nielsen rating and a 15percent share of the viewing audience atthat hour in February, according to the Re¬search Department of WLS-TV.Support theMarch of Dimes■■■■■BIRTH DEFECTS FOUNDATION ■■■■■ J The University of Chicago% DEPARTMENT OF MUSICThursdayMay 7FridayMay 8SundayMay 10 NOONTIME CONCERTMary Cormier and triendGoodspeed Hall 12 15 pmA program of flute duets.PAULA ROBISON, fluteRUTH LAREDO, pianoMandel Hall 8:30 p.m.$7 50- U C. Student, $4Poulenc, Sonata; The Bird Tancyers Delight" for soloflute (1717); Rachmaninoff, Tour Preludes from Op. 12;Berio, Sequenza, Franck, Sonatatickets at Goodspeed Hall 110PERFORMERS' WORKSHOP ENSEMBLEGoodspeed Hall 3:00 p.mFrom the University of Illinois at Urbana, tightcomposing performers in music and language . . .taking position that no composition is old hat ornew fashioned."free admissionChamber Music Seriesin contunction with TOT AVERMEER STRING QUA RTETwith Larry Combs, c larinetSaturday, May 1b Admission Charge—The Hispanic Cultural Society invites you to ...OUR 2nd ANNUALHISPANIC FOOD AND DANCE FIESTASaturday, May 9$3.50 Advance$4.00 at Door 5 Course Meal & Live Salsa Music BandTickets A variable at RC tins Office 6:30 p.m.Ida Noyes Gym4 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, May 5, 1981LETTERS TO THE EDITORSober UpTo the Editor:Having on several recent occasions beenpresent as thoughtful parents and public of¬ficials discussed their concern about thedangers to health and safety from varioustypes of substance abuse, I was bothered bythe implication of the Geoff Porter article“The Cocaine Connection,” in your April 28issue, that use of cocaine is essentially har¬mless. I would be sorry if reading there thatcocaine is not physically addictive, doing noreal harm except to the nose, misled anyoneinto trying it.Dr. Charles Schuster, Director of theDrug Abuse Research Center at this Univer¬sity, in the March 15, 1981 Chicago Tribunecalled it “an extremely seductive drug.”“Don’t be deceived that cocaine is a safedrug,” he warned, explaining that it cancause a psychological dependency asserious as physical dependency and asking,“What different does it make...if once youstart you can’t stop?” He has worked withyoung clients forced into stealing, dealing, and prostitution to obtain their supply, andreports it not unusual for them to haveperiods in which they spend $2,000 to $12,000per week for their drug. The effects he notesare “to become irritable, suspicious, para¬noid, have hallucinations, become totallypreoccupied with obtaining and using thedrug, and eventually, to suffer a mentalbreakdown.”I would urge the Maroon to solicit an ar¬ticle from or conduct an interview with Dr.Schuster to give readers a more sober as¬sessment of the risks incurred by cocaineuse.Sabron R. Newton(faculty wife)Health Aidis AvailableTo the Editor:In reference to a letter published in theMaroon on April 28, I want to clarify foryour readers the medical advisory servicethat is available to students, and underscoresome of the basic principles under which the Hospitals and Clinics operates.The adult emergency room in BillingsHospital does not offer an advisory service,since its primary purpose is to provide med¬ical care in emergency situations, and thisemergency room is one of the busiest in thecity. However, students do have access to amedical advisory service through the Uni¬versity Health Services.A Physician-on-Call service does exist toextend medical attention to students beyondthe normal operation hours of the Universi¬ty Health Services. A-Health Service physi¬cian is available during the evening andweekend hours to provide consultationand/or to facilitate any necessary visits tothe emergency room. The Physician-on-Calllist is distributed to University security, te¬lepage, all divisional deans of students, alldormitory resident heads and advisors, andto the University Hotline (753-1777). Addi¬tionally, the listings are provided throughthe Billings Emergency Room to studentswho identify themselves, and the list is post¬ed on the door to the University Health Ser¬vices. The University Health Services en¬courages students to take advantage of thePhysician-on-Call serviceIt was unfortunate that the student who wrote to you had an unsatisfactory experi¬ence, and we hope that a better understand¬ing of how to use the Health Services andthe Physician-on-Call system will eliminatesuch problems in the future.The accusations made in the letter arecontrary to the Hospitals and Clinics tradi¬tion and policy of providing an optimumlevel of patient care and service. More than300,000 inpatient, outpatient and emergencyroom visits are recorded here each year andthe vast majority of patients have a positiveexperience, both in terms of the resolutionof their medical problem, and in their feel¬ings concerning the non-medical aspects oftheir visit.Richard A. HenaultAssistant Vice President for the MedicalCenter, Director of Operations for theHospitals and ClinicsThe Maroon welcomes letters to the ed¬itor. We request that writers limit them¬selves to 500 words, and demand that allletters be typed, triple-spaced, andsigned. Unfortunately, space limitationsprevent us from publishing some lettersimmediately upon receipt.The University of ChicagoCenter for Latin American Studiespresents:JOSE FIGUERESTwice President of Costa Rica (1953-58; 1970-74) 0Lecturing on: i10i®]L_rUra]mi“The Crisis in Central America”Wednesday, May 6 Social Sciences 1223:00 P.M.Harmonicist Don Marson presents an evening of Musical entertainment tracing O QM 9 ^ I /"NIOTEID I I IDthe history of the harmonica in American Music O ■ Iwl vLvIv I tn vLUDMAY 9thillustrating the progression of styles in folk, jazz and blues will be the Jimmy Ellis Band workshop & the Ted Mark Trio -|- 1The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, May 5, 1981 — 5VIEWPOINTIrelandand the Deathof Bobby SandsBy Jay McKenzieIRA hunger striker Bobby Sands died at7:13 pm last night. Despite pleas from hisfamily for a three-day moratorium on pro¬tests, sporadic incidents of violence havealready broken out in northern Ireland.Police report that since Sands’ death,Catholics have taken to the streets by thethousands. A mob of 500 reportedly at¬tacked a police station in Northern Ire¬land, and a paper mill in Belfast has beenset ablazeYesterday was the 65th day of BobbySands’ hunger strike. Sands, a member ofthe Irish Republican Army, is currentlyserving a fourteen-year sentence in North¬ern Ireland’s Maze Prison for illegal pos¬session of firearms.Sands was recently elected a member ofthe British Parliament. He has indicatedthat he will not take the seat, however, andmany observers feel that Parliamentwould refuse to seat him, although he de¬feated his Unionist Party opponent bymore than a thousand votes.Sands and three other prisoners begantheir fast March 1, in an effort to persuadethe British government to grant IRAmembers behind bars the status of politi¬cal prisoners. It is considered unlikely thatBritain's Prime Minister, MargaretThatcher, will agree.Sands has been visited in prison bymembers of the European Commission onHuman Rights, as well as by Pope JohnPaul II’s personal envoy. The twenty-seven year old Sands has ignored all re¬quests that he cease his hunger strike.During the fast, his weight has dropped for155 pounds to 90 pounds. He lies on a waterbed to ease his pain, and drifts into and outof consciousness.Last week. The Maroon interviewed Wil¬liam J. Leahy, a professor of English atLoop College, and a journalist who hascovered Ireland for the last twelve years.Mr. Leahy writes for The Irish Times ofDublin and the Irish National PublicRadio. His work has also appeared in theParis International Herald Tribune andthe Chicago Sun-Times.JM: I think we should probably start offwith something about the organization thatBobby Sands represents — the ProvisionalIrish Republican Army, or provos.WL: The provos separated from the so-called Official IRA in 1972, at the time ofthe imposition of direct rule on NorthernIreland. The provos favored violent means to attain their two goals — national reunifi¬cation and the ouster of the British — whilethe officials did not.The provisionals are not a popular groupin Ireland. I don’t know how well that’srealized. They are a definitely unpopulargroup in Ireland now. When studies aredone, no large segment of the Irish popula¬tion supports the provos, apart from theprovos themselves. I think they can putfour or five thousand people out on themarch, and these people are very, very de¬dicated. But their support is rather smallin numbers; they are not a popular libera¬tion group.JM: The objection, I imagine, is to themethods of violence the IRA uses. Is theresupport for the goals themselves?WL: Oh, absolutely. In fact, the countryis overwhelmingly Republican in thatsense. The unification of Ireland is in theIrish constitution as an aim of the Repub¬lic. Furthermore, everyone in Ireland, allpolitical parties, are Republican, with theexception of one small communist group,which isn’t important. But all the othersare Republican. It’s deeply ingrained inthe people.Now, what happened is that the provosbegan ten years ago out of the civil rightsmovement in the late 60’s. The movementcalled for the establishment of civil rightsin the North for everyone. Now, that hadvery, very wide support. However, it wasbeaten down by the loyalist police force.That’s when the provos took advantage ofthe situation. Instead of letting a non-vio¬lent reaction develop against that, theybegan a bombing campaign.The provos have all this Republican tra¬dition to draw on, but their actions havecaused their support to erode. They havebeen condemned by almost every organi¬zation you can think of in Ireland. Theprovos aren’t seen as fighting for the Irishpeople, or on behalf of the Irish people. It’snot that kind of thing. They are fighting awar of national liberation, not as an insu¬lar political group, I would say, but moreor less apart from any great need for popu¬larity in Ireland. In fact, they know they’renot liked, and they don’t care.The provos and their supporters aregoing around now, telling people that theProtestants are going to attack them. Andit was the provos that started the Catholicsin the north squirreling away food for thisupcoming battle. However, at this mo¬ment, there is no great indication that thebattle is going to come off. Of course, I’mnot predicting that it won’t, I’m just sayingthat there is no great indication that thereChicago Style' Peter Zale By Brian CloseIn 1172, the first and only English Pope,Adrian IV, gave Ireland to his good friendHenry II of England. But it was not untilthe mid-seventeenth century that the En¬glish, under Cromwell, were able to effec¬tively subdue the countryside and estab¬lish a Protestant colony, the UlsterPlantation, on the Northeastern corner ofthe island.In 1801, the Irish parliament was dis¬solved and Irish M.P.s were admitted toWestminster, effecting the Union of theGreat Britain and Ireland. During thenineteenth and early twentieth centuriesthese Protestant MPs often found them¬selves holding the balance of power be¬tween the Liberal and Conservative par¬ties and thus were able to produce landreform, religious toleration, and votingrights for their Catholic countrymen. Theywere not able, however, to gain a home-rule bill — fervently wanted by Protes¬tants and Catholics — until 1914. At thattime, Catholic and Protestant solidaritywas broken when the Ulster counties de¬manded a separate status and threatenedrebellion if the home-rule bill were imple¬mented.World War I made the issue moot until1916, when it became apparent to Catholicsthat the British government had no inten¬ tion of granting home-rule when the warended. This sparked five years of bloodyguerrilla warfare, led by the Irish Republi¬can Army <IRA), until the country waspartitioned in 1921.The Catholic south, four-fifths of the is¬land, was granted dominion status withinthe empire as the Irish Free State. The sixUlster counties were granted home rulebut were still a formal colony of Britain. In1949 the Free State withdrew from thecommonwealth, declared its independece,and became the Republic of Ireland.The current trouble began in the late1960s when Catholics living in Ulster beganprotesting against discrimination in hous¬ing, education, and voting laws by the Pro¬testant-controlled government. Riots andsectarian violence ensued and Britishtroops were introduced in 1969. That sameyear military radicals in the IRA split withthe increasingly political “Official” orga¬nization and formed the “Provisional”wing of the IRA.Violence soon paralyzed constitutionalgovernment and home-rule for Ulster wassuspended in 1972. Since then, as before thepartition, Ulster has been represented inthe British Parliament. Two attempts toreestablish constitutional government, in1973 and 1977, failed completely.Brian Close is a fourth-yearstudent in the college.c Cop/right 1981 by Peter Zale is going to be a huge upheaval there. Infact, it’s relatively quiet, but people areclearly frightened. So it remains to seewhat happens.One question I’d like to ask is how ottencan the provos play this hunger card oftheirs? When does it become ineffective?For example, 1 don’t remember the namesof the people who went on a hunger strikeat Christmas, and I doubt that many peo¬ple do.JM: Why the hunger strike as a weap¬on?WL: First, I greatly regret this man’s suf¬fering. The famine of the last century wasthe only great natural tragedy in Ireland'shistory. It has obviously left the wholequestion of hunger on people’s minds. It’sdeeply ingrained in the Irish. That does fitin with the kind of reaction that I think isgoing on in Ireland. I think a lot of it ishuman, instead of necessarily political.The atmosphere is very highly chargedthere; the emotive power of all this is enor¬mous. Also, when I criticize the provos andBobby Sands, I also want to say that theyare drawing upon Irish historical fearsabout hunger, and drawing upon Republi¬can traditions that may seem obvious toyou. But they’re draawing upon these tra¬ditions to carry out a terrorist campaignwhich owes very little to traditional Re¬publicanism, but a great deal to modern,continental terrorism.In other words, what the provos aredoing seems to me to be all in a patternwith what’s been going on in Europe thepast ten years or so. I suppose the provosstarted before the Red Brigade, but that’sthe style of things we re seeing in themtoday.Now, having said all that about theprovos. I should also say that I believe theoverall historical blame lies with the Brit¬ish — with British imperialism, periodJM: Except for publicity, what willSand’s death accomplish? It doesn’t lookas if he’s going to receive political stauts.WL: Violence. That’s my interpretation,not the provos. In fact, his mother calledfor peace after his death.JM:1 I saw that. . .WL: I’m sure that’s what the lady wants.But the gesture of the hunger strike be¬ comes more and more empty, in a way.Supposed he lasted for another 190 days —which is impossible, of course. He’d benearly forgotten as our hostages becamein the last couple of months of their stay inTehran. How long can you keep that heatup? I don’t see it, as a repeated tactic, |being very effective.Incidentally, Sands is not a leader of theprovos. He is the leader of the prisoners inthe H Blocks. That’s his status at the pres¬ent. He was not prominent before Howev¬er, a man named Hughes, w ho is one of theothers on the strike, was for a time one ofthe most dreaded provos in Ireland. ButHughes was not one of the big leaders, as 1remember. Great leaders are older men,and most of them are not in prison.Incidentally, the provos had to purgethemselves a couple of years ago becausethey did have so many informers amongthemselves. That’s a separate considera¬tion. So they set up these new cells, inde¬pendent of one another, to overcome this.All of this means that you had peoplecome in and out of the provos a lot, but youhad very many of them in prison. Whenthat happens, you have to begin to carryout your campaign from inside the prison,because that’s where your forces are. Thisusually eludes the papers here, but that’swhat I think is happening. In other words,to gain political status inside the prisongives them strength inside, and allowsthem to generate more interest outsidethan they’ve been able to otherwise.I would just like to ask paranthetically ifpeople think the provos are doing wellwhen they have so many men in prison.I m not being cruel. I know the British putthem there.But what I mean is their strategy is over¬whelmingly military, and their dedicationto the gun is so overwhelming that theyhaven’t been able to get the kind of balancethat would keep most of their members outof prison.So the whole thing is military if youwant, and that’s why I do see the hungerstrikes as really being essentially militaryin their effects. The provos want the Catho¬lic s to get up in arms and then they knowthat the Protestants will attack — or coun-Continuedon page 76 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, May 5, 1981VIEWPOINTContinued from page 6terattack, depending upon one’s politicalviewpoint.The provos know that the Catholics arebadly outgunned up there. They know thatthe police force is still strongly pro¬loyalist, even infiltrated by loyalists, andworking with Protestant paramilitaries.The provos want to put the Catholics onthe line up there to generate interest with¬in the Irish Republic. That’s the big thing.And to cause the south to rush troops to theborder. The Irish government was pres¬sured to do that in 1969 during the civilrights movement. It looked like there wasgoing to be a pogrom up there. Incidental¬ly, there have been a number of pogromsin the North over the centuries, so this isnot being made up by anyone, includingthe provos. The fear is really there.I do not see the Irish army going intoNorthern Ireland. But that’s pretty farahead, anyway. But it’s this kind of thingthat the provos are dealing with — massagitation, these massive kinds of forcescoming into play.JM: What about their overall plan? Canit be taken literally, as Devlin said, thatthe Northern Irish are “going to drive theBrits to the boats“?WL: Actually, yes. If you tried to lookinto what their plans are for the future ofIreland you wouldn’t find anything verycomprehensive. In any case, they do havea political wing and though they do printsuch policies, those policies are not reallyput forward very frequently or very stron¬gly. If you took the guns away from theprovos, you wouldn’t have very much left.And I think most provos would admit this.They want two things: the national reunifi¬cation of Ireland, and they want the Britishout. In fact, the united Ireland thing hastaken a kind of back seat to the Britsoutpolicy. They have downplayed the unitedIreland thing so much that it’s really justdrive the Brits out and then we’ll settle ourown affairs’. Of course, you can imaginehow you'd feel if you were a Protestant liv¬ing in the North.JM: Is Sands controlling his own partic¬ipation in the fast, or are outside membersof the provos suggesting things?WL: Well, no one forces anyone to go ona hunger strike. How could you forcesomeone to fast? You’d give it up, anyway,wouldn’t you? So what really happens isthat the men inside are agitating on theirown behalf for their own rights. And thenthey select among themselves some lead¬ers, and then obviously some kind of moralpressure develops within this group. It’sfair to say that Sands is free to choose.However, the orchestration of everythingelse is clearly done by the leaders out¬side.I think it’s important to note that the last hunger strike failed. It’s dreadful, butwhen people don’t die, the hunger strikefails essentially. Those men didn’t die.JM: What were the circumstances —did they give up?WL: No. The news came over in totallycontradictory ways. At first they said theBritish capitulated. They did not capitu¬late — if they had, Bobby Sands wouldn’tbe on a hunger strike, right? So there is nopolitical status. There were a couple of re¬forms made at the time of a miniscule sort,but there was no political status. Therewas a degree of something like politicalstatus granted in a similar hunger strike.A later English government removedthose. In the meantime, a provo riot hadjust occured in the concentration camps upthere.Bobby Sands, or the provos if you like,welcome hunger strikes. If they succeed,you get political status. If you get politicalstatus, it means more visits from peopleoutside, and more packages. It meansgreater visibility on the outside; it meansfreedom of association inside. You rebuildyour organization, and the minute you do,you begin a riot in the prison. Those areconcentration camps, not prisons. Actual¬ly, you have a lot of strength with politicalstatus. The Russians were all in and out ofprison camps, where they were allowed tocarry on political activities. They werefreed and they carried out a revolution.JM: What are the conditions like in theprisons?WL: The conditions have varied overthe years. And through the efforts of anenormous number of people, conditionshave in all probability improved. Thatchersaid the other day that the British prisonsystems are humane. Of course, you getpeople who don’t agree. It would be prettystark, and would look more like a militaryencampment, than a prison, with highbarbed wire, and with a minimum of visi¬tation rights. But you see the Republicanshave used this visitations in the past to tryto take weapons inside.The whole question comes down towhether or not Northern Ireland is at war.Are these prisoners of war. or are they ci¬vilian prisoners? I think the provos arequite correct in saying that there are manymen up there who were arrested for noth¬ing. They were arrested without even theability to see their accusers. The Britishclaim that if the accuser is put forward,he’ll be killed. And this has happened, ofcourse, but then what you get is that youonly need a police official, and not even asenior police official, to state that you’re amember of one of those organizationsJM: And that puts you in prison?WL: It puts you in the so-called “Di-plock Courts.” Internment is no longerpracticed. In that case, they just picked upThe Department of Sociology andThe Community and Family Study Centerannounce a lecture byNATHAN KEYFITZOffice of Population Research,Harvani UniversityDemography Center,Ohio State UniversityI Former Chair, Sociology, University of Chicago)on“The Uses of Social Forecasting”Thursday, May 74:45 p.m.Room 122, Social SciencesAll Faculty and Students are Invited whatever male was home. But now they'vedeveloped a court system, which wouldn’tstand up anywhere else. Anyway, the par¬liament was dissolved when direct ruletook effect. The north is directed fromWhitehall; it’s a function of the foreight of¬fice in London.In fact, the destruction of the Stormont,as that local government was called, is theonly real achievement that the provoshave to show for all their violence. Andthat’s a very questionable victory — it sim¬ply removes the government that manymore hundreds of miles.JM: Are there any worthwhile politicalsolutions being pursued now? Or is it justthe violence of the provos?WL: In the first place, provo violence isway down. Belfast, apart from the Sandsthing right now, is altogether a morepeaceful place than it was some years ago.However the threat of provo violence is anenormous veto upon other acts. All theprovos have to do to squelch any kind ofpolitical iniative is to take up armsagain.JM: Do the Protestant paramilitary or¬ganizations function in the same way?WL: No. They want to maintain thestatus quo. Therefore, if the status quo isbeing maintained, I assume you put yourgun in the basement until something hap¬pens.But about the political part of it, there isvery little significant political activity pos¬sible. For the past couple of years, you’vehad more of a vacuum there then you’veever had. You have good work being doneon local levels — housing has improved,non-discriminatory employment has im¬proved. But these are intensely local. Butwhen you get to the bigger issues, theprovos hold a kind of veto. The British also have severe economicproblems of their own.And no one really know what their inten¬tion are. Haughey, the prime minister ofthe Republic, met with Britain’s PrimeMinister Thatcher some months ago, andthey didn’t publicize the contents of theirtalk. This drove the Unionists nuts upnorth. That’s when Paisley (a hard-lineProtestant leader) started to come out.JM: Because he thought he was going to besold out?WL: Oh, yes Those talks are even more onhis mind than the H-Block thing. (H-Blockis the name given to British prisons in thenorth of Ireland.)The man who told you that it just seemsto be more of the same — in other words,an escalation in shootings and bombings,and not armies fighting in the streets — isprobably right.The Catholic unemployed in the Northare terribly brutalized. They go back homeand lick their wounds, and go back onto thestreets. The provos take advantage of that.In the meantime, what I really regret isthat you have a Catholic working classfighting a Protestant working class.When the provos and the Protestantparamilitaries carry out their killings,both drive across the middle class areas,which are integrated, and as peaceful asany in Chicago. They drive right throughthese areas with their automatic weaponsin the back seat. Then they go to a poverty-stricken Catholic or Protestant area, andshoot up the poor. Then they drive rightback across the middle class areas to theirhomes.So what you really have is sectarianmadness. You have a working-class eatingitself up, and you have the middle classesstanding aloof and aghast.We haven’t forgotten faculty & staff...IT'S THE SAME DEAL FOR YOU ON WEDNESDA Y!The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, May 5, 1981 — 7SPORTSFrondizi Still the OneBy David GruenbaumAfter five weeks of play, Frondizi ‘N’ theSpecs remains the team to beat in intramu¬ral socim. Frondizi will be going for its sev¬enth straight intramural title. However, thisyear the rest of the field seems strongerthan ever. Frondizi should be severely chal¬lenged by Ting and the Liberal Tradition,led by Kim Hong, and the Orient Express. The undergraduate playoffs should be adog fight as well. K.U.U.C., the Koreans, isthe independent champion and will take onthe residence champion in the undergradu¬ate final. Lower Rickert appears to be thefavorite so far for residence, but is likely toreceive stiff competition from Psy Upsilon,Chamberlin, Upper Rickert, and Green¬wood.Women's Soccer Playoff Chartt. Shorey (4-1).2. Lower Flint (4 1)_Residence3. Dudley (4-1).4. Upper Wallace (4 1)5. Snell (1-3)Independent6. Insane Unknowns (4 1) All-UChampions ODDS FORALL-UNIVERSITY SOCIM Sports JtSi letsCHAMPIONSHIPFrondizi ‘N’ the Specs 3-1Ting & The Liberal Tradition 4-1 Members of the University of ChicagoOrient Express 5-1 Karate Club competed in a field of fifteenK.U.U.C. 9-1 clubs from four states at the Indiana Re-Lower Rickert 10-1 giorial Karate Tournament held in LakeBehavioral Science 11-1 Point, Indiana on Saturday.Psi Upsilon 14-1 Winners from the club were: Judith Max-Upper Rickert 25-1 well, first place women’s brown belt freeGreenwood 26-1 sparring; Kristina Marcy, second placeFallers 29-1 women’s brown belt free sparring; LauraPhi Gam 40 1 Wheeler, Kristina Marcy, and Judith Max-Henderson 60-1 well, third place women’s team kata; Stan-Vincent 80-1 ley Bienasz, second place men’s brown beltCompton 95-1 free sparring; Allen Labrecque, forth piceDews Brothers 110-1 men’s brown belt free sparring; Doug Dob-Dodd/Mead 150-1 son, Stanley Bienasz, and Paul Zorn, thirdFRONDIZI ‘N’ THE SPECS-ORIENT EX¬PRESS Tues 6:00Spread: Frondizi by 1.. .This should be anextremely close game. The big questionfor Frondizi is how well star forward PabloBuchanan will be able to play after a longlayoff. The Greeks will have to muster upsome offense as Frondizi is a high scoringteam.FALLERS-COMPTON Tues 5:00Spread: Fallers by 2.. Compton will haveto get a better defense together than theone they showed in their last few regularseason games if goalie Stavros Lambrin-idis is to stay in one piece.DEWS BROTHERS-PHI GAM Tues 4:00Spread: Phi Gam by 1. . Phi Gam is amuch stronger team than the DewsBrothers and should be able to shut offwhatever offense the Dews Brothers mus¬ter.Men's Soccim Playoff ChartGraduate Residencefing and me Littera< Tradition (?) 4 0.Bye %Behavior)*! Science Club (4) 3 ?.Europeans 03) 3 >Eronditi **T me Specs (V)Bye 1Orient Express 13) 4 LF.C. Benelux (») 3? Graduate Championk.u u.c. <4) 4-0 rResidenceLower Ricker 1 (3) 5-0-Bye independent C damp ionDews Bremers 4 r_Hitchcock 2-3Upsilon (?) ygBye—Fatter* fl?) 4-»_Compton 3 ? —Chamberlin (9) 4 t.Byeupper Rickert O0) a-t.Oodd/Mead 3 ?“ ~Vincent 4-iBye'Henderson 4 1 _Jijif1f1j Ail-U ChampionUndergraduateChampionResidenceChampionGreenwood (tT) 4 1“8 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, May 5, 1981 The University ot Chicago hosted the Illi¬nois Collegiate Open Freestyle WrestlingTournament on Saturday, as wrestlers fromall over Illinois competed. Wrestling CoachLeo Kocher, who supervised the meet, notedthat it was one of the two most competitivewrestling tournaments for Illinois colleges.“The Phillies have the Phanatic, the Car¬dinals have Fredbird, Pittsburgh has PirateParrot, and now the White Sox are seeking acandidate to become the official team ma¬scot. The form of the mascot is being de¬signed and not even Sox management knowswhat the final product will look like, but theyare opening the search for the person whowill fit the personality of the mascot. Any¬one who is young, energetic, possesses someacrobatic skill, is inventive, and a free spiritis urged to apply.” If interested, contact theWhite Sox.BASEBALLBOX SCOREChicago State (1)PlayerShannonMcClellan, K.MaddoxEvansMurphyCookBurnsBranchMcClellan, Ki.JacksonCallawayTotalsPlayerLewisCarpenterForemanTrottWinkelreidJankovichCicioraWeberCallansBedellMendelsohnTotals U. of Chicago (2)AB R H Rl2 0 0 03 0 114 0 0 04 0 0 04 0 104 0 103 0 102 0 0 00 0 0 02 10 010 0 029 1 4 1AB R H Rt2 0 0 0000423344221027E-Shannon, K. McClellan, Maddox, Ki.McClellan, Callans. LOB-LSU 5, U. of Chicago 10. SB Murphy, Shannon, Burns,Lewis, Jankovich, Mendelsohn. S Branch123 456 789 R H ECSU 001 000 000 1 4 iChicago 020 000 OOx 2 4 1PitcherLSUShannon (L)ChicagoMaranto (W, 3 2) 9 4IP H R ER BB SO8 4 2 1 9 5112 5Compiled by Bob TwillmanCampusFilm—_The Tin Star (Anthony Mann, 1957): HenryFonda plays an aging ex-lawman who in¬structs fledgling sheriff Anthony Perkinsin the art of keeping law and order. Script¬ed by Dudley Nichols, perhaps the grea¬test screenwriter of Westerns ever. To¬night, Tuesday, May 5 at 7:15 in Quantrell.Doc; $1.00.Border Incident (Anthony Mann,1949): Two federal agents investigate thesmuggling of illegal aliens across theMexican border, in this variation on! Mann’s own T-Men transposed to a milieuthat was to prove to be Mann’s true me¬tier. Starring Ricardo Montalban, GeorgeMurphy and Howard da Silva. Tonight,Tuesday, May 5, at 9 in Quantrell. Doc;$1.00.We Are Arab Jews in Israel (Yigal Niddam,1977): Niddam’s documentary examinessocial and economic differences betweenIsraeli Jews of European and Arab origin.Through interviews in cinema veritestyle, the film show how the Western As-kenazic culture dominates that of themore numerous Sephardim. But Niddamfails to carry his central theme; that Jewsfrom Arab countries are better suited tomake peace with Israel’s neighbors be¬cause of their familiarity with Moslemculture. In French, Hebrew, and Arabicwith English subtitles. Tonight, TuesdayMay 5 at 7:30 in Law School Auditorium.Hille; $1.50 — Jonathan MishkinThe Far Shore (Joyce Wieland, 1976): Forher first narrative feature, experimentalfilmmaker Wieland has made a tragicom¬ic love story about an artist (CelineLomez) who seeks to affirm herself aftera marriage of desperation. Romanticallyset in Canada's North W’oods in 1919, this is a contemplative work with an emphasison the artist’s role as visionary. Tonight,Tuesday, May 5 at 8 in the Bergman Gal¬lery. Renaissance Society; $1.00 formembers, $1.50 for Doc members, and$2.00 for evervone else.High Plains Drifter (Clint Eastwood,1973): A metaphysical Western aboutidentity and commitment in the Old West.Also, the quintessential Clint Eastwoodmovie. Take your pick. The Man with NoName enters an anarchic village, wherehe assumes the role of avenging angeLWednesday, May 6, at 8 in Quantrell. Doc;$1.00.The Ladykillers (Alexander MacKenarick,1955): A delicious black comedy that hasAlec Guinness heading a gang of bum¬bling crooks including a baby-faced PeterSellers) who operate out of the home of a70 year old spinster (Katie Johnson,whose consummate underacting stealsthe show). This is the kind of comedy ofescalating improbabilities that is onlyfunny when it’s performed by a Britishcast; despite the utter absurdity of it all,they carry on as if they expected every¬thing to be wound up in time for teaWednesday, May 6, at 8:30 in Law SchoolAuditorium. LSF; $2.00. — MAIt’s Always Fair Weather (Gene Kelly &Stanley Donen, 1955): A different and al¬together winning musical. Gene Kelly,Dan Dailey, and Michael Kidd (Thechoreographer’s only film role untilSmile) are three World war II army bud¬dies who, just before their discharge, voweternal friendship and agree to meet tenyears later. When they reunite, they findthey cannot stand one another. A televi¬sion hostess (Dolores Gray) and her assis¬tant (Cyd Charisse) decide to exploit themens’ reunion for their TV show. BettyComden and Adolph Green wrote thescreenplay, which is a superb satire oftheir own On the Town and of television ingeneral. Kelly does his famous tap danceon roller skates, the three male leads do aCALENDARCommuter Co-op: Get-together, 12:30 pm, Gates-Blake basement.TuesdayWomen's Exercise Class: Meets 10:30 am, IdaNoyes dance roomFOTA: Allan Kornblum, lectureon fine printing at the Toothpaste Press, on con¬junction with the William Vaughn Moody Commit¬tee, Noon, Reynolds Club Lounge. Also, exhibit offine letter press printed books at Regenstein li¬brary, thru May 31.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Lunch inHutch Commons from 12 noon to 2:00 pm.Dept of Biochemistry: “Molecular Aspects of theGastrin-Cholecystokinin Systems” speaker ProfJ.F. Rehfield, 2:30 pm, Cummings room 101.Studies: “Kenya without Kenyatta: Recent Politi¬cal Developments”Dept of Microbiology: "Using Cloned Genes toGenerate Novel Recombinational Events inYeast” speaker S. Carl Falco, 4:00 pm, Cummings11th fl seminar room.Aikido Club: Meets 4:30 pm. Field House wres¬tling room.Lutheran Campus Ministry: Celebration of Eu¬charist, 5:30 pm, Pizza supper and discussion 6-7pm — “Tragedy and Ethics” speaker John Bar¬bour, 5500 S. Woodlawn.Hispanic Cultural Society: Meets 7:00 pm, IdaNoyes.Racquetball Club: Meets 7:30-9:30 pm, Field Housecourts 1 and 2.Phys. Ed.: Free swimming instruction 7:30 pm. IdaNoyes.Chicago Ensemble: Performs Faure and Mozart,8:00 pm, International House. Info call 271-3810.University Feminist Org.: Women's Rap Group.8:00 pm, in the Women’s Center, 3rd fl of the BlueGargoyle.Hillel: Israeli Folkdancing, 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes 3rdfl.FOTA: Cinda and Allan Kornblum, reading fromtheir poetry, 8:00 pm. Reynolds ClubWednesdayPerspectives: "Bureaucratization, Professionali¬zation, and the Poor” guests Kirsten Gronbjergand Gerald Suttles. 6:09 am, channel 7.Comm, on Genetics: "Genetic Information: How itChanges” speaker James Shapiro, 12:30 pm. Cum¬mings room 101. Comm, on African Studies: "Kenya without Ken¬yatta: Recent Political Development” speakerKarim Janmohamed, 3:30 pm. Pick 205.Chemical Physics Seminar: “Mode Specificity inthe Reaction 03 + N0--02 + N02” speaker SallyChapman, 4:00 pm, Ryerson 251.Dept of Biochemistry: “Effects of an Ionofore(Nonesin) Upon Secretion and Structure of Con¬nective Tissue Molecules” speaker MarvinTanzer, 4:00 pm, Cummings room 101.Hunger Concern Group: Meets 7:00 pm, Ida Noyesroom 217.Table Tennis: Meets 7:00 pm, Field House 1st flgym.Badminton Club: Meets 7:30 pm. Ida Noyes gym.Science Fiction Club: Meets 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes.Country Dancers: Meets 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes. Be¬ginners welcome.Hyde Park Al-Anon Group: Meets 8:00 pm, 1st Un¬itarian Church, 57th And Univ. Info 471-0225.Thursdayeastern Orthodox: Divine Liturgy at KocketellerChapel, 8:00 am.Women’s Exercise Classes: Meets 10:30 am, IdaNoyes dance room.Episcopal Church Council: Noon Euchaist atBond Chapel.Italian Table: Meets 12 noon at the Blue Gargoyleto speak Italian.La Table Francaise: Meets at 12 noon in the BlueGargoyle.Advanced Genetics: “Transvection and Other Al¬lelic Interactions: Clues to Gene Regulation inDrosophila” speaker Burke Judd, 2:30 pm, Cum¬mings.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Lecture-“Christian Pilgrims Under Muslim Rule” speakerJohn Wilkinson. 4:00 pm. Oriental Inst.Aikido Club: Meets 4:00 pm. Field House wres¬tling room.Christian Science Org.: Meets 4:15 pm. Gates-Blake 428Hillel: Yom Ha'Atzmaut. 6:00 pm. Hillel.Zen Meditation: Meets 6:30 pm. Ida NoyesIll Central Hospital Ala-Teen Group: Meets 7:30pm. 5800 Stony Island. Info call 471-0225.Debating Society: Practice at 7:00 pm. Meeting at8:00 pm, Ida Noyes.Org. of Black Students: General meeting at 7:30pm. Ida Noyes. . marvelous opening number (the best partof which involves their use of garbage canlids), and Cyd Charisse has a big numberin a gym. One fatal flaw: how can youhave a musical with Kelly and Charisseand not have them dance together? Thurs¬day, May 7, at 8:30 in the Law School Au¬ditorium. Law School Films: $2.00 — NMLes Carabiners (Jean-Luc Godard, 1963):An anti-war film unlike any other. Whilemost war films — even those with paci¬fist intention — glorify war, or at leastinspire excitement in the audience,Carabiners successfully re-creates theboredom, futility, and absolute stipididyof humankind’s oldest game. Thursday,May 7, 7:15. Playing w'ith Two or ThreeThings in Quantrell. Doc; $2. — LJCTwo or Three Things I Know About Her(Jean-Luc Godard, 1966): Based on twoarticles in La Nouvel observateur aboutmarried women forced into prostitutionto support their middle class lifestyles in the suburbs, Two or Three Things self¬consciously walks the line between docu¬mentary and fiction. Godard offers theac tions of an individual (Juliette) as toexpose the repressions of society: capi¬talism/advertising creates the constanthunger that forces all of us into prostitu¬tion. While reminding us that we alwaysremain unsatisfied, still hungry, Godardreminds us of the limitations of lan¬guage, thought, and action. Only alter¬ations in structure offer hope.The visual denisity and intellectual com¬plexity in Two or Three Things, signify♦ihe possibility of an intellectual cinemacapable of the thoughtful expression pre¬viously confined to the book form. Thismovie is smart stuff. Thursday, May 7,8:15. Playing with Les Carabiners inQuantrell. Doc; $2. — LJCCompiled by Mike Alper, Neil Miller,and Laura CottinghamSUNDAYBUFFETChicago s finestfrom 11:30 a m to 8 p.mchampagne served until 5 p mgarden fresh salads*cheeses from around the world •fresh vegetables •fresh seafoods •‘ salmon delights •crepes, ribs, fowl •roast round of beef •chilled melons •a variety of pastries •served in a greenhouse atmospheredisplayed like a marketplacean experience you must share...at theHyde Park Hiltonl theChartwell; . Houser 4900 S. Lake Shore Drive{ 288-5800:/ make your Mother s Day reservations now* special menu &4rO ^TUCSDdY,MdY 57:30 P.M.m dovesSUM PARLORv.The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, May 5, 1981 — 9V CLASSIFIED ADSCLASSIFIEDClassified advertising in the ChicagoMaroon is 75 cents per 30 charactertine. Ads are not accepted over thephone, and they must be paid in advance Submit all ads in person or bymail to The Chicago Maroon, 1212 E.59th St., Chicago, IL 60637 Our officeis in Ida Noyes, room 304 Deadlines:Wed noon for the Fri. paper. Fri. noonfor the T ues pa per s.SPACE2 bedroom condo spacious, airy, invery good condition, with brightsunroom 159,500 Phone 324 3263 before12 after 4 anytime on weekend Need 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 information.Fern roommate wanted to share w/2others S137/mo. 53rd & HarperNonsmoking. 241 6380 evesSummer sublet: roommates wanted toshare sunny spacious apt near campusand transportation. Secure recentlyrenovated bldg. Call Kathy, 493 1083,Sherry, 752 2014, Karen. 947 8496Own bdrm and bath, 3rd fl. of tarnhome and kitch priv. S150/mo immed.5729 Kenwood 684 7747. Bright sunny co op on lake, 2 br, 2 ba,den, Irg Ir, natl frpl, eat in kit, lowassmts, carpeting, appliances,dishwasher, parking $29,500 731 4922.Summer sublet Large, sunny 2Vj roomstudio apt Furnished, all utilitiespaid Near co op & 1C. $230. Call 3247282.Summer sublet, furnished studio, 59thand Blackstone, rent negotiableavailable June-Oct 1, 955-4115.Sommer sublet w/fall option. 1 br innewly renovated 3 br apt. Call DavidSlain at 3-8194 or 684-4782 afternoonsand evenings. Also bedroom furniturefor sale. SUB LEASE May 30 Aug 4. 4 rmgarden apt, completely furn, 54th PI.and Dorchester, $800 Sec. Dep. 6672888 after 1 pm.1 bdrm in 3 bdrm apt. $140/mo. near 56and Cornell. Call Glenn days 753 8131.evenings 288 3626ENGLAND, LONDON Victorian terrace, house in Hampstead Heath areaSleeps 6, 4 bdrms; IV2 baths; TV den;all modern appls. Near buses and sub¬way, 20 min. to British Museum. July25 thru Sept. 5. 4 week minimum, $375week 869-9978.Summer sublet Univ Park turn ACclub. Near campus, trans, coop Verynice for 1 or 2. $415 neg 241-5788. Furn room in 5 room apt 1 block fromcampus close to 1C. references call324 7104 before 8:00 or after 5pm.Totally renov bright all modern 2bdrm, 5 rm, 1 ba, 1200 sq. ft condow/dw, alarm, parking. 440 6038 dy,955 2052 ev1 bdrm apt for sale in the Newport inHyde Park; scenic lake view and newcarpet, new indoor pool; call 373-7529after 4pm.SUMMER SUBLET large airy studioapt Newly renovated. 5728 S.Blackstone Ave. $235 tel. 241 7163/6438613. SPACE WANTEDVisiting Prof seeks 3 4 bedroom apt formid June Aug 1. Call 753-4774 or 607256 6211.Needed 1 or 2 bdrm apt for Jan 1,1982 Call Alexander 753 2261 Ext 331.Graduate students want 4 5 bdrm hseapt in Hyde Park from Sept 81 on. Call753 0382 or 753 0357.For July or August: House to rent Indiana/Michigan Shore, LakeMichigan Also occasional weekendJune September call 753-2108 day 9559572 eveing ask for Marc.2 or 3 bedroom apt. close to campus.Will pay finder's fee if I sign lease fornext school year Call and/or leavemessage for Hilary at 753-2249 43221.2 bdrm apt for 1 yr lease in June call753 2249 rm 1328 leave message.Visiting Prof and spouse, on sabbatical from Case Western ReserveUniv Cleveland. Ohio would like torent/lease one bdrm, FURNISHEDapt close to campus for one year, begJuly l, 1981 Contact H Griffith at 7533998 for info and details.Housesitting for all or part of the summer. Mature UC student with excellent references. Call Sfeven Silver753 2240 rm 1105Professional couple seeks longtermlease tor 2 br apt in HP Please callSarah 248 1176 or Peter Bell 890 6358 orClaire/Ran Lincoln (parents) 241-7715.Furnished home wanted for rental inHyde Pk , by near North familyPrefer 3 4 bdrm. From June thru Aug.944 269).PEOPLE WANTEDPaid 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, 1o participate in a study ofchildren's narratives and gesturesThe procedure is enjoyable to childrenand takes about 1 hour on campus Ifinterested, please call 3 47)4 for an appointmentDomestic help wanted cooking andshopping both gourmet and plebian. 1or 2 days per week. Call 753 2134 andleave name and phone numberPART TIME OFFICE HELP, typingetc. Some work in campus office, someat home Hours variable, about 15/wkAbout $5/hr 842 5169 evenings.Overweight women wanted for hormone study age 18-35 years, mustweigh 225 300 lbs$175 00 Call 947 1825.CHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSoeciahzmg inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOp«n Daily11 AM to 8:30 PMClosed Monday1318 EAST 63rdMU 4-1062HYDE PARKThe Versailles324-0200Large StudiosWalk-in Kitchen«Utilities Incl.Furn.-Unfurn.•Campus Bus at DoorBased on Availability5254 S. DorchesterThe quickest way to getemergency money.An emergency stop for repairs canwipe out even the best-heeled traveler.Luckily, all you need is the price of aphone call to get you the money beforeyour car gets off the lift. Here’s what todo when you need money in a hurry. VISAt card. A Western Union ChargeCard Money Order, up to $1,000, will beflashed to the Western Union office oragent nearest your emergency.i 3Call home. Report the situation, andtell the folks they can get emergencycash to you fast by phone.2 Ask them to call Western Union’stoll-free number, 800-325-6000 (inMissouri, 800-342-6700), anytime, day ornight. They charge the money and theservice fee to their MasterCard* or Pick up your money—-usually withintwo hours—at the local Western Unionoffice or agent. There are 8,500nationally, except in Alaska.Conveniently, about 900 locations areopen 24 hours. It’s that easy.Be sure to remind your parents aboutour toll-free number. It’s all they need tocall Western Union to the rescue.•The MasterCard name is owned by Interbank Card Assoeiation’The VISA name is ow ned by VISA Internationa)Western Union Charge Card Money Order.'- The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, May 5, 1981 MMCLASSIFIED ADSPROGRAMMER must know SPSS,SAS or FILEBOL, and WYLBUR orSUPERWYLBUR 20 hrs/wk. Min$5.94/hr Begin by S/15. Call RalphBell 753 4188 or Bernard Hecker 7534194.Band willing lo perform at the SpringDOC party. May 16. Pay: your fill offood and drink Call Mike 947 6897days.Responsible, good humored studentfor occasional babysitting evenings.667 4220.SERVICESTYPIST Disseration quality. Helpwith grammar, language as neededFee depending on manuscript. IBMSelectric. Judith 955 4417.ARTWORK Posters, illustration, lettering, etc. Noel Yovovich 493 2399.TYPIST: High quality work byfreelance writer. Competitively priced, prompt, minor editing with outcharge IBM Correcting Selectric.After 6pm 338 3800 or 472 2415.Term papers. Reasonable rates, Alsohelp with spelling, bibliographies,dissertation form. Call 684 6882 MAJOR ACTIVITIESBOARD POSITIONS:1981-1982.Pick up applications in SAO in Ida.Everyone welcome to apply. Due May8 5.00 pm, same place.GETTINGSENTIMENTAL?Tickets on sale now for the big springdance featuring the Tommy DorseyOrchestra May IS, Ida Noyes Hall. 56students, $12,50 others. Tickets atReynolds Club Box Office.UC HOTLINE 753-1777Need information on movies, legal aid,pregnancy testing, etc? Give us a call.Hotline, open seven days a week from7 00 pm to 7 00 am.BASEBALLShoesmith Park is again organizing itsPee Wee & Little League teams. If youare interested in playing please call624 6262 or 241-9219 We need volunteercoaches tooTyping done on IBM by college grad,pica type. Term papers, theses, lawbriets, manuscripts, letters, resumes,etc. Fast, accurate, reliable,reasonable New town area. Call to¬day. 248 1478PERSONALSATTENTION GRADUATESTUDENTS IN HUMANITIES ANDBIOLOGICAL SCIENCES! The Commission on Graduate Education in¬vites you to an open meeting to discussyour interests and concerns. Mon.May 11 (Hum.), Tues May 12 (Bio.).4:00 PM. Quantrell AuditoriumGround FI. Harper.FOR SALE6 rm condo 56 and Blackstone 2n flFi: 11% by owner3 bdrms 2 baths; cheerful, modernsep dining rm w coved ceilingsun parlor priv balcony539 7739 early am and eves962 3348 wkdaysAPARTMENT SALE Sat May 9 10 45730 S. Drexel Apt 2 Sofa Desk Old Ornate Dining Rm Table. Skis more.PEER PRESSURERADIOTell Tchaikovsky the news All thehas beens, could have beens. and yetlobe's in progressive pop Fridays2 30 5:00 pm on WHPK 88 3 fm Information for the ear Now sponsoredby Wax TraxNEED A TYPIST?Excellent work done in my homeReasonable rates Tel: 536 7167 or548 0663MOVINGStudent with Pickup Truck can moveyour stuff FAST and CHEAP No |obloo small! Call Peter at: 955 1824 10am 10 pm.PASSPORT PHOTOSPassport Photos while you wait atModel Camera. 1342 E. 55th St PETS2 puppies for tender loving home 1male, 1 female, about 5Vi months.Puppies were born and reared in anabandoned building and are still veryshy. Call Carol Taylor 285 6490ORIENTALCARPETSI have just received another shipmentof choice handknotted carpets con¬sisting 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 the excellent quality. Call David Bradley241-7163 or 643 8613.IFPSLearn to use the Interactive FinancialPlanning System on the CompCenter's DEC 20 Computer. Introduc¬tory seminar is Monday, May 11 3:305 00, Cobb 107. All welcome, nochargeTEE-SHIRTS JDoes your group sell tee shirts? Ex¬pand your market sell to Alumni onMay 16th. Contact Erica Peresman.248 9148 eves.X SUFISMDr. JavaoNurbakhshMaster of the NimatullahiSufi Order, is presently inChicago Anyone wishingto contact him may call561-1616HYDE PARK FOREIGN & DOMESTICTRANSMISSIONS4820 S Cottage Grove624-4024+ FLUIDTRANSMISSIONTUNE-UPSPECIAL! TOO MANYTRAFFIC TICKETS?Have a lawyer respresent youeverytime you appear a traffic courtat not cost to you, and best yet makemoney by going to traffic court! NoHoax, written by ex cop. for completeinformation send $5.00 cash or M O. toJesse Hill Box 169(B), 237 East 115thSt.. Chicago IL 60628VIDEO EQUIPMENTRCA 6 hr tapes Sony 5 hr tapesQuasar, RCA, Pansonic VCR's instock. Hyde Park Video Movie Center,1605 E . 55th St. 288 3600CAREER SEMINAR"The Expanding World of Data Processing: For Humanists and Technicians " Jeff Baker and James Cooleyfrom Baker/Cooley Inc. will discussdifferent career opportunities in thefield of data processing. Tuesday, Ma>5, 4 pm North Lounge, Reynolds ClubTONIGHT AT 8Allan Kornblum, author ofAWKWARD SONG, and Cinda Kornblum. author of BANDWAGON, readtheir poems at 8 pm in Reynolds ClubFreeCOFFEEHOUSEThurs May 7 at Blue Gargoyle 5655 S.Univ Ave: Leslie Chapman and HughBlumenfeld—folk singers. Food andBev. 50* cover.SUMMER BAZAARSummer Bazaar sponsored by thePakistan Society on Friday, May 15. atReynolds Club from 9 to 5.WRITERS READINGCinda and Allan Kornblum, who co¬publish The Toothpaste Press's finelyprinted editions of contemporaryAmerican poets, will read their poemsat 8 pm Tuesday in Reynolds Club.Free! LOSTAND FOUNDA set of car keys was found on MonApril 13 in Stuart 101. Describe toclaim, Rosenwald, 105, 3 3621.LOOKING FOREMPLOYMENT?Come to a Career Seminar May 9 atthe Center for Continuing Education.Discover the latest techniques in skillassessment, resume writing, networking, and interview preparationLimited enrollment call to register today. Call Ruth Backstrom 643 3037 orNancy Bernhardt 955 8864CAREhelp andhopesince1946Send your help toCARE208 S. LaSalle StreetRoom 673Chicago, IL 60604Ugh) Duckling$13.50 per day 200 Free MilesBetween IC Tracks A AT. 2800and Cornell ww*Our lowest price ever!Minolta XG-IAUTOMATIC PERFORMANCE.AUTOMATIC SAVINGS.It's the most economi¬cal 35mm automaticMinolta SLR Easyenough tor beginners 7f ,but packed withsophisticated .features 2.0 ten,.$18995model camera1342 E. 55th 493-6700 Far BastKitchen 1654 E. 53rd955-2200Cocktails "Nand TropicalDrinksThis week’s specialChicken & Chinese Greenswith Fried Rice $2^9served until 2:30 p.m. Tues.-Sat. eat in orcarry outV. Open daily and Sunday 11 a.m. to 1 a.m.Closed Mondays. Lunch served Tuesdaythru Saturday 11 a.m. to 2:30p.m.SALE DATES 5-6 Thru 5-9-8 1BAYSENGLISHMUFFINS 6 pak 59*COUNTRY DELIGHTWHOLEMILK Vi gal.DEL MONTESLICED, CRUSHED OR CHUNKPINEAPPLE ism.U.S.D.A. CHOICEBEEF LIVERLARA LYNNVANILLA WAFERS16 oz.U.S.D.A. CHOICEBEEFCHUCK STEAKSU.S.D.A.BONELESSBEEF STEW 89*59<98V69*29tb.89lb.FRESH CELLOTOMATOES 12 oz.FRESH CRISPGREEN PEPPERS 1139*39VlUtCFINER FOODSSERVING53rd PRAIRIE SHORESKIMBARK PLAZA 2911 VERNONWhere You Are A Stranger But Once!The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, May 5, 1981 — 11The NewCHARTWELLHOUSEat the Hyde ParkHILTON XThe New Management and especiallyOur New Executive Chef, Robbin Haas from New YorkPresent... An All New Lunch and Dinner MenuSatisfaction for Every AppetiteA New Style of Service.Luncheon Delights Include:•Baked Onion Soup Gratinee•Crabmeat Ravigote•Bird of Paradise•Filet of Sole•Spinach and Crabmeat Quiche• Welsh Rarebit•Beef Tenderloin, Bordelaise•A Sandwich Board Next to None•A Variety of Omelettes•Selection of Irresistable PastriesDinner Specialties Include:•Nova Scotia Lox•Artichoke & Baked Brie•Shrimp St. Charles• Veal Scallopini Francaise•Tender Beef Wellington•Steak Au Poivre•Prime Ribs•Tournedos Henry IV•Garden Fresh Salads•Famous Haagen Dazs ),\\T/r 1/ V4.Wines FromAround The World a<r. o . is*iQ*o 6. ■ °k C? - O vs' /fTry the New Chartwell Housefor a true experience in dining4900 S. Lake Shore Drive • 288-5800Open 11:30 a.m. -10:00 p.m. •10% OFF LUNCH with thisCOUPONExpires June 6, 1981 Valid Monday-Friday11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m.One coupon per customer i WeNeed:Concert PeopleMusic PeopleTechnical PeoplePublicity PeopleHospitality PeopleWe need...Your Skill1981-1982 Major Activities BoardNeeds You!Get your application at the Student Activities OfficeDeadline - May 8ijom Ha'JjtzmauK~CelzbraFiop of 35r^ fyrfhbd'TU ur Fclefcl Qiv>nchMay 6 PM Israeli4, Israeli Polk Dancu^Ida Not^ac, -HatI. V<J -floor12M E59* 9f>mcUttij Xsrac-lt film* SaMafi ci96$)Eitor^-. <£ an i Illiterate Oriental 'Serfarrive.^ X$rael ivx 19*^ a Iflnxe3n£ no vnone^j. An in<£i v«<£uab'<tjt>e refused ^ nta^e a in ami oTh^rwau X&an Gtj piiatjSkcskbespL8acRiT[\e foxu Sai(an wanes a Warn J ueffect! vy war ao^iVisb ektrtnc(\e6 bureaucracC0$T: *>olrh.'ca) CorrujTllonj 2jO^ CCrforu cit/Dinner & Movff; 00Pndlaij, Ma^8 QwadranglcjVdrscif^Q &\Z- >0 No©* zaucraojivi(