THE MAROONVolume 2U& 53 The University of Chicago Copyright 1981 The C^jj^o Maroon Tuesday, May 12. 1981Security Union RejectsSecond Contract BidBy Darrell WuDunn ficers a nine percent increase tms year andan 8V4 percent increase next year.Other members objected to issues thatwere not included in the contract, such as in-Members of the University’s securityunion again decisively rejected a proposedtwo year contract for the approximately 70 surance.full-time officers in the campus security de- On Friday, all four union negotiators,partment. In last Thursday’s vote, union Brosnan, Faith Edens, Tim Atkins, andmembers decided by a 30-15 margin to re- Wayne Reynolds, resigned as representa-turn the contract to negotiations for the sec- tives to the negotiating committee. Brosnanond time in two weeks. said that “irreconcilable differences in theOn the following morning, all four union objectives of the union members’’ made itrepresentatives on the negotiating commit- impossible for the representatives to negoti-tee resigned from the committee because of ate a reasonable contract. He added that it’’irreconcilable differences in the objectives was difficult enough for the negotiators toof the union members.” have to deal with the University without ad-The proposed contract was a revised ver- ditional problems caused by complaints andsion of the earlier contract rejected just two differences in opinion within the union mem-weeks ago. The principle objection to the bership.first contract was a requirement that an of- Edward Coleman, the University’s direc-ficer report to duty for roll call fifteen min- tor of personnel and chief negotiator, com¬utes before his watch begins. mented that one “could not rely on thisThat requirement was dropped in the re- group of employees themselves to make anyvised contract. Instead, an officer would kind of agreement.” He said that apparentlyhave been required to report a half hour union members did not adequately expressearly for a watch meeting held no more than their views to their representatives,once every two weeks. Despite the revision, Of the approximately 70 members ofthe proposed contract was voted down. Local 200 of the Illinois Confederation of Po-According to Michael Brosnan, a union lice, which represents the security officers,representative on the negotiating commit- only 45 members voted last Thursday. Bros-tee before his resignation, there was no sin- nan, however, did not think that a highergle reason for the rejection. Rather, about 8 turnout would have affected the outcome ofor 9 minor objections were cited by the the vote. He suspects that those 25 membersmembers opposing ratification. who did not vote Thursday are the sameSome members were dissatisfied with the ones who did not vote on the first contractsalary proposals which would have given of- proposed. No further plans have been made yet byeither side. The security union membershipmust first elect new representatives to thenegotiating committee before negotiationscan resume.The University negotiators will assesstheir situation when they receive official no¬tice of the exact nature of the objections tothe contract.Other UnionsThe University is still negotiating a newcontract for the approximately 500 food ser¬vice and maintenance workers. Colemansaid that while agreements have beenreached on most non-economic issues, wageincreases are still being debated. He said he believed that a settlement was near.However, Robert Simpson, a negotiatorfrom the Teamsters local 743 which repre¬sents the workers, did not share Coleman’soptimism. He agreed that “economics is thebig issue” but that a settlement is still sev¬eral weeks away.Both sides agreed to extend the presentcontract, which was to expire April 1. Thenew contract, when ratified, will take effectretroactive to that date.The University will also be meeting thisweek with the licensed practical nurses tonegotiate salary increases for this year.When a contract was approved last year, theUniversity agreed to reopen wage negotia¬tions for the second year of the contract.Orly’s WinsFirst MajorCourt Test| By ChrisTsTdore) Orly’s restaurant won an important legalbattle yesterday in its right to retain its li¬quor license, when Judge Anthony Scotillodenied the City of Chicago’s request to dis¬miss the case and extended a temporary re¬straining order which allows the restaurantto serve alcohol to customers until the issuecan be decided in a trial this summer.Orly’s owner David Shopiro brought thecase to court when he discovered that hisnew restaurant was in a precinct which hadbeen voted “dry” by its residents in 1956.When Shopiro had made inquiries last sum¬mer at the City’s department of revenueabout obtaining a liquor license, he was toldon three separate occasions that therewould be no problem with obtaining the li¬cense.He signed a lease and a mortgage for thebuilding last November and invested$300,000. Then in January, Eugene Forester,the publisher and editor of The ChicagoJournal, and a friend and backer of Shopiro,told him that the precinct was dry. “1thought I was going to have a heart attack,”Shopiro said.Shopiro and his lawyer decided to applyfor a liquor license in any case. The city’scorporation counsel, Michael Riech, said inyesterday’s hearing that this move was asign of bad faith by Shopiro. “He admits inbrief that he had knowledge of the ordi¬nance, prior to applying for the license,”said Riech. “This does not show good faithor justifiable reliance.”Shopiro and his lawyer claim that themove to file for a license was not an attemptto get around the law, but rather a “strate¬ gic” move to make their case simpler. “Iwanted to confine myself to the letter of thelaw,” said Shopiro. “I was the one whobrought the dry precinct out into the open. IfI hadn’t revealed it was a dry precinct, Icould conceivably have used (the license;for years.”Orly’s filed the suit seeking equitable es¬toppel, which would stop the city from tak¬ing away the license that it had granted onDavid Shopiro March 30, a week before Orly’s opened. Thesuit was based on the representations madeby city officials to Shopiro last year.The city had made a motion to dismissShopiro’s suit. At yesterday’s hearing JudgeScotillo dismissed the city’s motion, and seta date in June for a hearing to establish howthe case will finally be resolved. “He deniedtheir motion based on the facts we alleged,”said Rosenblum. “Now we have to provethose facts.”In the hearing on the motion to dismiss,Riech argued that the city could not bebound by the actions or errors of one of itsagents. He said that the law allowed for re¬lief based on misrepresentation by the city,Tenants in the apartment building at 5143S. Kenwood Friday lost the latest round of acourt fight to slow construction and renova¬tion work in their building.Judge Joseph Wosik eased the conditionsof a temporary restraining order, thus per¬mitting a near-normal schedule of work onthe building to resume. The order now in ef¬fect prohibits building owner Philip Grossfrom having workmen engage in demolitionor removal of debris more than once a week,in order to reduce the amount of dust in thebuilding, but leaves few limits on the otherconstruction activity which may take placein the apartment building.“In my opinion, all we have is ‘back tosquare zero,' ” tenants’ lawyer JeanetteForeman said. She said that the tenants willreturn to court when the present order ex¬pires on May 18 to seek stricter limits on theconstruction work.Six of the building’s eight tenants havecharged that the dust and noise raised bythe construction work have damaged theirhealth and made living conditions intolera¬ble. They sought and were granted a tempo¬rary restraining order on April 27, prohib¬iting virtually all construction work on the but added that, “this must be an action of acity itself, such as an act of a city council,not merely an act of an agent. If that wasallowed, it would be making the acts of anauthority or agent legislation all by itself.”He said that the residents who lived in thedistrict had had many opportunities to re¬verse the dry precincts ruling in the dozengeneral elections since 1956, and that if theywanted Orly’s to have a liquor license, theycould wait until the general election of 1982to repeal the law. “We have done nothingelse to hinder Orly's,” he said “We havegranted a license to operate a restaurant Italways has the opportunity to operate aContinued on page 4building until the order expired Thursday. Itwas extended until Friday's meeting between Wosik and representatives of bothsides, when the order was eased.According to Gross, the relaxation of thetemporary restraining order reflected thejudge’s opinion that the tenants had not sub¬stantiated their claims that the constructionwork was unusually hazardous or disturb¬ing. Gross and his attorney argued that acontinued delay in the construction of theunits, some of which have been sold for oc¬cupancy at the end of the month, would havesharply escalated the costs of the workWithout proof of the tenants’ charges. Grossargued, he should be permitted to proceedwith the work.Foreman attributed the change in theorder partly to the fact that there have beenno formal court arguments thus far in thecase, and that all action so far has takenplace in pre-trial proceedings, when no evi¬dence is required to be introduced. The ten¬ants’ next step, she indicated, will be topresent a formal case against the construc¬tion work when the current restrainingorder expires on May 18Kenw ood Order EasedJHITHER AND YONBy Vincent HilleryA Co-Ed Columbia?The faculty of the College at ColumbiaUniversity has voted overwhelmingly to en¬dorse a plan that would admit women to theCollege beginning in the fall of 1982, accord¬ing to a report in the Columbia Spec¬tator. Fewer than six of the 80 voting profes¬sors voted against the measure and only twofaculty members voiced their opposition tothe plan in the meeting. Those opposed weremost concerned about the debilitating effectsuch a move would have on Barnard Col¬lege.The faculty vote is non-binding and servesonly as a recommendation to President So-vern and the Board of Trustees. The en¬dorsed plan urges the College to admitwomen to increase the potential pool of ap¬plicants so that the student body can retainits high Quality. President Sovern is expect¬ed to approve the plan. However, the senti¬ment of the Trustees is unclear. A 1975 facul¬ty resolution calling for similar action wentunheeded.Minnesota Sells LandThe University of Minnesota is beingforced into the real estate business in re¬sponse to a $14.1 million budget cut imposedby Governor A1 Quie. Over the years severalproperties, mostly unimproved, have beendonated or willed to the University. Nowthese lands are seen as a ready source ofcash. Fifty acres along Lake Superior, 60acres and 25 houses in Rosemount, severalresidential lots in Duluth, and a half-dozencommercial lots in Minneapolis and St. Paulare up for sale. The university hopes to ob¬tain $3.5 million from the sales. Additionalproperties may be sold at a later date.ATTENTIONJUNEGRADS TAs Threaten StrikeTeaching and research assistants atWashington State University in Pullman arethreatening to strike if their demands forpay raises are not met. As a result of Wash¬ington state legislative funding cutbacks,the university is only offering a 14 percentpay increase to the TA’s and RA’s over thenext two years. Meanwhile graduate stu¬dent tuition is being increased 58 percent forstate residents and 31 percent for non-resi¬dents. The RA’s and TA’s are demanding in¬creases at least commensurate with the in¬flation rate.The E.R. Moore Companyrepresentatives will be on thesecond floor of the Bookstore onWednesday, May 13,Thursday, May 14 andFriday, May 15from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.to take your ordersfor caps and gownsfor June convocation. Burning Ignites FuryA blue jeans burning on ‘ Blue Jeans Day”is raising quite a furor at Swarthmore Col¬lege. In a front page story in the Swarth¬more Phoenix, the Dean of Students atSwarthmore declared the incident ‘‘pres¬ents a prima facie violation of communitystandards...not far from cross burning orthe torching of synagogues. The act is onceinfantile and demagogic.”The controversy is centered on whetherthe burning was meant to be a ‘‘burning ofhomosexuals in effigy.” One of the studentsinvolved maintained the act was a protestagainst the coercive and unethnical natureof Blue Jeans Day, and not an anti-gaystatement. Blue Jeans Day was sponsoredby the Men’s Cooperative and the Gay andLesbian Union as an attempt at conscious¬ness raising by demonstrating that some¬thing as mundane as jeans can become apowerful political symbol.ORDERS MUST BE PLACEDDURING THESE SPECIFIEDTIMES Grades Still on RiseA three year crackdown on grade inflationat the University of North Carolina is havingmixed results according to a recently re¬leased study in the April 23 Daily Tar Heel.! In 1978 ten departments were singled out byy the Dean of having inordinately high grade point averages. Since then three depart¬ments have deflated their grades, two havekept their average GPA essentially con¬stant, and five have suffered from continuedgrade inflation. In all cases, however, thegrades remain disproportionately high. Forthe 1980 Spring semester the percentage ofA and B grades in each department rangedfrom 58.2 percent in the sociology depart¬ment to 92.9 percent in the physical educa¬tion department. In six of the departments,over 73 percent of the grades issued wereA’s or B’s.Pitt to Start Universityfor the PeoplePitt University has begun negotiationswith the Warner Cable Corporation to*“bring the university to the people” on anunprecedenteu scale. “Bringing the univer¬sity to the people” is not a new' concept,since university programming is seen onlocal television stations throughout thecountry. What makes the Pitt-Warner effortunusual is the possibility of two-way com¬munication on a regional or even nationalscale. Warner Cable is%best known for the“Qube” two-way cable system it initiated inColumbus, Ohio several years ago andwhich has since been extended to othercities.A Pitt official notes that Warner is the“single most advanced \yire communicationmeans in the country, and the universitycan’t afford to ignore such a major opportu¬nity.” Pitt is gearing for limited cable pro¬gramming in 18 months.Real Dishes for NUSome Northwestern students will get toeat off of “real” plates and bowls for thefirst time in their collegiate careers begin¬ning next fall. It seems that several hundredstudents living in the Foster-Walker housingcomplex have been using styrofoam dinner-ware for years. When the dormitory com¬plex and cafeteria were completed in 1972,funding was exhausted before a dishwasherand conveyor could be purchased. However,after eight years, $200,000 has finally be¬come available to buy the necessary equip¬ment.No Sidewalks, PleaseStudents devoted to walking on the grass iat the University of Wisconsin—StevensPoint have organized themselves into agroup called PATHS — People’s AlternativeTo Hard Sidwalks. One of the founders ex¬plains the group exists to oppose thoseforces that "are trying to curb a natural in¬clination to walk on the earth,” according toa report in the Loyola of New OrleansMaroon. The PATHS members point to thehigh costs of sidewalk construction andmaintenance in defending their cause, andmaintain that in the long run more grasswould be saved by eliminating sidewalks.The students are facing an uphill battle how¬ever, since university personnel continue toplant bushes and deposit large mounds ofdirt at strategic locations in this never end¬ing battle.14 Arrested at MITFourteen persons, mostly students, werearrested at a protest demonstration nearM.I.T. against the use of a research lab fordefense department projects. Following apeace rally on campus, some 50 personswalked to the Draper labs, joined hands,and sat down by the entrance to the labora¬tory. The group chanted peace slogans andspilled human blood on themselves and thebuilding. After two warnings from Cam¬bridge police, 14 were arrested.I he Draper labs are involved with the de- ivelopment of the MX missile system, the;1 rident submarine, and the Cruise, Posei-don, and Polaris missiles.2 — The Chicago AAaroor — Tuesday, May 12, 1981NEWS BRIEFSEcuadorean LeaderSpeaks WednesdayThe Center for Latin American Studieswill host Dr. Francisco Huerta Montalvo,former mayor of Guayaquil and presentlyan Ecuadorean presidential candidate, at 3pm tomorrow in the Social Science Loungefor an informal talk and reception. Huerta,the fourth guest in the Center’s series of pre¬sentations by distinguished Latin Americanpolitical figures, is President of Ecuador’sChristian Democratic Party and the leadingpolitician in the country at this time. Huertawas trained as a medical doctor at Guaya¬quil University , and elected mayor ofGuayaquil in 1970. He declined a recent re¬quest by the Ecuadorean military to assumea dictatorship, preferring to stand as candi¬date in the forthcoming presidential elec¬tions in 1983.Ecuador has a long tradition of politicalinstability, the average regime remainingin power only 1.7 years. The country has un¬dergone a series of political transformationsin the past 15 years, gradually becomingstabilized. Democratization of the countryhas been an unsteady process, but Heurta’sparty hopes to bring to power a coalition offorces more representative of the Ecua¬dorean population than former regimes.Huerta will address several of Ecuador’surgent problems, among them the perva--sive underdevelopment of the Andean andAmzonian regions of the country, the tradi¬tional struggle for power between the coast¬al and mountain regions, control of the re¬cently discovered oil resources, and theborder dispute with Peru. The dispute withPeru recently erupted into a war betweenthe two countries over possession of a largeportion of territory in the Amazonian re¬gion. Francis CrickCrick on Information“The explosion of Biological Information”is the topic of a lecture by Nobel laureateFrancis H. Crick tomorrow afternoon at 5pm in Quantrell auditorium of Cobb Hall.Crick won international fame in the 1950swhen he and James Watson discovered thedouble helix structure of DNA, an accom¬plishment which made possible much ofmodern biology. Since that time, Crick hasbeen associated with the Salk Institute inSan Diego, where his current interests in¬clude molecular biology and the develop¬ment of the brain.Crick’s lecture is sponsored in part by theMedical Alumni Association, as part of theirReunion Week activities. Work in WashingtonIf you’re interested in working in Wash¬ington, you may be interested in attendingtomorrow’s career seminar on that topic,sponsored by the Office of Career Counsel¬ing and Placement.Brad Patterson, a senior member of theBrookings Institution, who has worked inthe last two Republican administrations, isthe guest speaker for the seminar. The sem¬inar begins at 7 pm in the Hitchcock Halllounge.Portugal, Anyone?If you'd like to spend five weeks in Por¬tugal this summer studying Portugese lan¬guage and culture, you may be eligible for ascholarship which will pay all your tuitionand give you a stipend to cover living ex¬penses.The University’s department of RomanceLanguages and Literature has just been in¬formed of the availability of scholarships atthree Portugese universities this summer.The course of study will last five weeks andwill run from July to August. The only hitchis that students must apply for the awardsno later than tomorrow. For further infor¬mation, see Leland Guyer in Cobb 126 or callhim at 753-3176 or 684-6073.Ensemble Sets FinaleThe University of Chicago Chamber Ense¬mble will perform this Wednesday in Good-speed Hall at 4:15 pm. The program will in¬clude Mozart’s Piano Quartet in E-flat andBrahm’s Trio for Piano, Cello, and Clari¬net.This is the Chamber Ensemble’s last per¬formance of the year. Easley Blackwood, aprofessor in the Department of Music and a well-known composer, will be among theplayers. Other musicians in Wednesday’sperformance will include David Cates,piano; Mark Vandersall, clarinet; MarkHohnstreiter, violin; David Budil, viola;and Josh Rosett, cello.Admission is free. The performance issponsored by the Deparment of Music.Course Really ExistsAlthough the College course booklet re¬leased this week says otherwise, SocialSciences 243-244-245, taught by Roger Mi-chener, will indeed by offered next year, ac¬cording to Lorna Straus, Dean of Students inthe College.A mistake caused the course to be listedas one not to be offered in the coming yearThe courses concern “Concepts of LegalSystems,” the “Empiricization of the Law,”and “Law and Public Opinion.”Volkswagen DonatesThe University’s law library has receiveda $200,000 gift from the Volkswagen Founda¬tion to improve its foreign law collection.The gift will be used over the next three orfour years to increase the size of the law li¬brary’s foreign law collection, according toLaw Librarian Judith Wright.The gift will permit a significant enlarge¬ment of the present collection of approxi¬mately 80,000 books on foreign law, she said.Although a shortage of space in the law li¬brary has forced almost 20 percent of thepresent foreign law collection into storagealong with other materials, Wright is stillpleased by the thought of enlarging the col¬lection. She said she hopes most of the addi¬tional books purchased from the gift will beplaced in the stacks in the law library,rather than in storage.FESTIVAL OF THE ARTS • MAJOR ACTIVITIES BOARDSTUDENT GOVERNMENT ACTIVITIES COMMITTEEpresentA MEMORIAL AFFAIRA Day-Long Celebrationbeginning with brunch in Hutch and ending witha party in Hutch Courtl-M PlaydayArt FairBoothsPie FightsCollege Bowl Tourneyand much, much more...HOUSES WISHING TO SPONSOR BOOTHSPLEASE CONTACT S.G. IMMEDIATELY Featuring: HUTCHFESTwithJump in the Saddle BandChicago DiamondsBo DiddleyNew Era Reggae BandMusic & Dancing1 PM-12 PMHutch CourtThe Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, May 12, 1981 — 3Gary Lenhart and Steve LevinePoets Lenhart,I Levine onCampus to ReadTwo young poets from New York City, onea recent University of Chicago graduate,will read their poems at 8 pm tonight in theReynolds Club North Lounge. Sponsored bythe Festival of the Arts, the reading is freeand open to the public. They will also teach apoetry workshop at noon today at the samelocation.The poets, Gary- Lenhart and Steve Le¬vine, have both published widely. Levine was the first graduate in University’s under¬graduate creative writing program, anddirected the University of Chicago PoetrySpeakers Series. Since moving to New York,he has published several short volumes ofpoetry.Lenhart is the author of two books ofpoems, Drunkard’s Dream and Bulb in theSocket. For the past several year, he hasedited a poetry magazine called Mag City.SG, FOTA,MAB PlanMammoth FestMemorial Day weekend on the Quadspromises to be more festive than usual thisspring, thanks to the efforts of the StudentGovernment Activities Committee, themajor Activities Board (MAB), and the Fes¬tival of the Arts (FOTA). The three organi¬ zations are sponsoring a day-long festival onthe Quads Sunday, May 24, including con¬certs, a brunch, an art fair, and sports con¬tests. Tickets for the brunch are on sale thisweek.The day’s events will begin at 9:30 am,when a tennis tournament begins on theQuads as the start of an intramural playday.Other IM activities scheduled for later in theday will include a tug of way over BotanyPond, dart throwing, a frisbee throw, three-legged race, arm wrestling, a gunnysackrace, and volleyball.For those on dormitory board contractsand those who purchase tickets this week,the University food service will serve abrunch in Hutchinson Commons from 10 amto 2 pm. The dormitory cafeterias will beclosed for the morning and noon meals, andstudents will be offered instead the brunchmenu, which is planned to include friedchicken, quiche Lorrainne and vegetarianquiche, watermelon fruit baskets, blintzes,sausage, breakfast breads and rolls, salad,Continued on page 10 Orly’sContinued from page 1growing, thriving restaurant business. Theliquor restriction is only temporary.”Rosenblum argued that Orly’s would havetrouble surviving until 1982 without a liquorlicense. ‘‘The argument ‘let him wait until’81,’ would be condemning (Shopiro) to fi¬nancial death.” Shopiro later said that morethan Vh of all customers who eat at Orly’sorder something to drink, and that close to30 percent of his profits come from the saleof alcohol. He did say, though, that he wouldtry to stay in business until 1982 if he did losethe license. ‘‘We’ve been very very fortu¬nate since we opened, with hour waits everynight,” he said. ‘‘(Losing the license) wouldbe certain death to some more marginal en¬terprises, but I’m hoping we could sur¬vive.”Rosenblum argued in court that this casewas unique in the amount of loss that Sho¬piro would incur if he went out of business,and by the fact that ‘‘nobody would behurt,” if the judge ruled in their favor. ‘‘Ihave not found a case that even comes closeto the substantial loss involved in this case,”he told the court. ‘‘And this is unique interms of a request for equity in that in allother cases, there has been a constituencywhich a silent right in another protective in¬terest involved. Nobody is going to beharmed by this if the relief is granted. Morethan a majority of the residents have al¬ready signed petitions asking that the pre¬cinct be made wet.”Scotillo set June 15 as the date that thestatus of the case will be decided. Both sidessaid that it is likely that the case will go totrial sometime early in the summer.Chicago Style By Peter Zale$lu-g, (1©Copyright 1981 by Peter Zale.REUNION ’81Back by popular demand!Saturday, May 168:30 p.m.Cloister Club, Ida Noyes Hall$3 students and senior citizens — $4 faculty and staffReynolds Club Box OfficeFurther Information — 753-2195, Pat SchulmanSeats are limited so act now!Sponsored by the Alumni Association and Reunion HI Committee THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOBRASS SOCIETYInvites everyone who plays a brass instrumentto ROCKEFELLER CHAPEL5850 Woodlawn Avenue, Chicago, IL (On the south side, a fewblocks west of the E.59thSt. IC station.)to play « Feierlicher Einzug » (A Sonic Spectacular)by Richard Strauss, which calls for12Trompeten, 3Solotrompeten, 4Horner, 4Posaunen,2Tuben, und Pauken, fella. Trumpet players, bring yourEb trumpets, if you have them, although Bb and Ctrumpets will work just as well.EVERYBODY WELCOME.1:00 SUNDAY, MAY 174 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, May 12, 1981‘Long Range’By Mary Katherine LarsonJose Figueres, twice President of CostaRica during 1953-1958 and 1970-1974, ad¬dressed a large audience in the SocialScience building Wednesday in a visit spon¬sored by the Center For Latin AmericanStudies. During his speech, which focusedon the crisis in Central America, Figueressaid that “the best thing (for the UnitedStates) to do is to stop being firemen andputting out all the brush fires and to estab¬lish a long-range policy (in Central Ameri¬ca).”Figueres explained to his audience the dif¬ficulty he feels in trying to speak about Cen¬tral America. “Everybody has their mindsmade up on this subject or practically ev¬erybody. . . Each one thinks his own preju¬dices are the best ones... But I find very fewpeople thinking of the cuases of the prob¬lems and of possible solutions. And especial¬ly we have most people thinking of short-range solutions when their ain’t no suchanimal. There are no short-range solutions.There are no simplified answers.”Throughout the speech Figueres focusedhis attention more on Nicaragua than on ElSalvador because of his emotional attach¬ment to Nicaragua, his neighboringcountry. “I am emotionally attached to theSandinistas,” explained the seventy-fiveyear oid former president. “I feel as one ofthem. . .1 have done as much as I couldthrough the war. Actually they joined mywar (for social democracy in Costa Rica)for seventy-five years, and if it hadn’t beenfor them we would never have won.“I don’t agree to their trying to developNicaragua by fighting the United States.Even for the most practical reasons, be¬cause the only two countries in the w'orldthat can give them the outside help that they Policy Neededbadly need are the United States and the So¬viet Union — and the Soviet Union is notwilling or able to give them much help. TheSoviets realize realize that they made a mis¬take in financing Cuba the way they did —they wish they had never gone into it. Butthey are not going to finance the govern¬ment of Nicaragua. . .Any large help fromthe outside which they badly need, as we allneed, will come from the United States if itcomes at all. And I keep (telling the Nicara-puans not to) kick the United States for(US) mistakes — the United States couldhardly have made more mistakes in acountry than it has made in Nicaragua for awhole century and a half. . .(Yet) whateverTuesdayWomen's Exercise Class: Meets 10:30 am. IdaNoyes dance room.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Lecture-”TheLaw of Sales and the Political History of Baby¬lon’s Neighbors’’ speaker Prof Claus Wilcke, 2:00pm. Oriental Inst.Salisbury Geography Circle: Lecture-“Urban Ge¬ography and the Development of Chicago Neigh¬borhoods” speaker Dominic Pacyga, 4:00 pm, Pick319.Kundalini Yoga: Meets 5:00-7:00 pm, Ida NoyesEast Lounge.Lutheran Campus Ministry: Celebration of Eu¬charist, 5:30, Pizza supper and discussion-“NewPuzzles on an Old Text: Literary Criticism of theGospels” speaker David Bartlett, 6:00-7:00 pm,5500 S. Woodlawn.Hispanic Cultural Society: Meets 7:00 pm, IdaNoyes. __Outing Club: Program Meeting 7:30 pm, IdaNoyes.Phys. Ed.: Free swimming instructions, 7:30-8:30pm, Ida Noyes.Univ. Feminist Org.: Women's Rap Group meets8:00 pm. Blue Gargoyle 3rd floor.Comm, on the Conceptual Foundations of Science:“The Language User's Manual: The Relevance of the United States has done in the past to Ni¬caragua has no meaning on the present situ¬ation. I am recommending that (the Nicara¬guans) become friends with the UnitedStates.”In reference to El Salvador, the formerCosta Rican president said that the crisis inthat country is due to present currents notonly in the Third World, but also in the restof the world. “I don’t think there is anythinghappening in Costa Rica, Nicaragua or Gua¬temala because of El Salvador. . .What ishappening in El Salvador is just the result ofcurrents in effect throughout the world. .People ask me if there is a dange of (CostaRica) going marxist with Nicaragua and ElSalvador. I don’t think so.”Concerning the role of the United States inEl Salvador, Figueres called on the Ameri-cans to establish a long-range policy forCALENDARGesture to a Theory of Language Activity” speak¬er Prof. David McNeill, 8:00 pm, Eckhart 209.UC Students for Citizen’s Party: Documentaryfilm - “The Intelligence Network” and discussionpanel, 8:00 pm. Ida Noyes. $1 admission.WednesdayCommuter Co-op: Get-together in the CommuterLounge, Gates-Blake basement, 12:30 pm.Com. Center Seminar: Introduction to Superwyl-bur MACRO 3:30-5:30 pm, RI 180.Comm, on African Studies: “The Role of Womenin the Development Process: Mozambique” speak¬er Stephanie Urdang, 4:00 pm. Pick 218.Cog Com Colloquium: “Feature and Context,Evaluation and Integration in Language Compre¬hension” speaker Gregg Oden, 4:00 pm. Beecher102.Chemical Physics Seminar: “Third Order Quasi-Degenerate Many Body Perturbation Theory Cal¬culations for Correlation Energies of F. CH, andTi” speaker Marucie Sheppard, 4:00 pm, Ryerson251.Christian Science Org.: Meets at 4:15 pm in Garte-Blake 428.Hunger Concern Group: Meets 7:00 pm. Ida Noyesroom 217.Computer Club: Meeting at 7:30 pm, discussion ofsmall talk, enter via Eckhart. Latin America. “And by long-range I meantwenty-five years, fifty years, one hundredyears. The first thing is to try to guess whichway the world is going . .and not to opposesocial progress. . Probably, and I only sayprobably, if we could stop the shipment ofarms from Cuba to Central America the Sal¬vadorans would pull out themselves. I envis¬age a time which is not very difficult to en¬visage, in which Salvadoran SocialDemocrats and Christian Democrats willget together again. They can pull (them¬selves) out, they are intelligent people. Butnot, or it will take much longer at least, ifthere is a flow of arms from Cuba. . .1 be¬lieve that by stopping the shipment of armsto everybody and by allowing the democrat¬ic forces that are at work in El Salvador (totake effect), the Salvadorans themselveswill find a way out.”Comm, on General Studies in the Humanities:“Representing Repression: On the Central Groupin Courbet’s ‘Studio’ ” speaker Michael Fried,7:30 pm, Harper 130.ThursdayWomen’s Exercise Class: Meets 10:30 am, IdaNoyes dance room.La Table Francaise: Meets at 12 noon in the BlueGargoyle.Italian Table: Meets at 12 noon in the Blue Gar-Hillel: Faculty Luncheon - “Fakes and Forgeriesof Jewish Ceremonial Art” speaker Mrs. GraceGrossman, 12 noon, Hillel.Advanced Genetics: "A Movable Gene in Droso¬phila” speaker William Engles. 2:30 pm. Cum¬mings room 101.Comm, on Virology: “Effect of lnterleron onMouse Retroviruses” speaker Dr. Paula Pitha,4:00 pm, Cummings room 1117.Kundalini Yoga: Meets 5:00-7:00 pm, Ida NoyesEast Lounge.Zen Meditation: Meets 6.30-8:00 pm, Ida NoyesIll. Central Hospital Ala-Teen Group: Meets 7:00pm. 5800 S. Stony. Info call 471-0225.A Program of Art Songs: With concert artistsDebra Sostrin and Mariorie Becker, 7:30 pm, I-House auditorium.The University of ChicagoALUMNI ASSOCIATIONpresentsLIFE AFTER GRADUATION“THE MBA EXPLOSION: WHY?” “THE PRACTICE OF MEDICINE:PRIVATE, PUBLIC. OR?”Clifford Gurney, M.D.John T. Cullinan Master Biol. Sci. Coll. Div.Associate Director, Center for Professor. Dept, of MedicineManagement of Public and NonProfit Enterprise Pritzker SchoolPatrick L. Mayers Beverly Ketel, M.D.Dean of Students,Keller Graduate School Surgeon, U. ofC. Hospitalof Management David Ostrow, M.D.Psychiatrist. Lakeside V.A.Beverly J. Splane Medical CenterExecutive Vice-PresidentChicago Mercantile Exchange Medical ResearchLauren Pachman, M.D.Judy Davis Thornber Head. Division of ImmunologySelf-Employed Childrens Memorial HospitalProfessor of Pediatrics at° Northwestern UniversityMay 12 12 Noon May 19 12 NoonRobie House Robie HouseThe Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, May 12, 1981 — 5VWITH MONEY-SAVING COUPONS brought to you bymembers of therA-ACTIVE BUSINESS M *MACHINES Service1438 E. 57th St.752-0541 expires 6/15/811 per customer■t (\C7 OTS1!}1 on any tyPewi*herJlU /C KJF F service w/coupon Expires6/1/81«■ w/coupon JUST IN TIME iFOR FATHER’S DAY J$2.50 OFF necktie J1502 E. 55th St. J 10% OFFSGKEftlGOHVDCMRk1613 E. 53rd St.on all annualsw/couponexpires5/20/81667-092020%OFFExpires 5/20/81 on all garden suppliesexcept power toolsw/coupon-supplies limitedANDERSON’S ACErn=, HARDWAREACE/1304 E. 53rd St.M 493-3338-39 % ••s s•A2 wV TEAKETTLE SALE! !$Enameled, 1.8 literyellowsiennasandred reg $20.95363-4477 w/coupon5211 s. harper avenue \i expires 5/26/81 15%OFFON ALL CERAMICLAMPSw/coupon • expires 5/31/815210 S. Harper • 667-6228READY-MADEFRAME SALE10% - 40% OFF MPLUS: PRESENT COUPON FOR AN EXTRA10% OFF • valid thru May 23, 1981 at5211 S. HarperHarper CourtART DIRECTIONS THIS COUPON WORTHon anv Hallmarkwriting instrument 1 per customerexpires 5/30/81 5;J Km *aLL««»vfe, 288-55001538 E. 55th St. I I \125% OFFon nil juico bardrinks1 per customerw/couponexpires 5/20/811457 E. 53rd St. 643-1100288-2343 Expires 5/26/81BIG JIM’SPIPE & TOBACCO SHOP1552 E. 53rd St.BIRTHDAY • FATHER'S DAY • l.ltAIM ATIOXon tobaccos1 purchase per customer10% OFF\1 limit 1 per customer'expires 5/19/81 II A SMART SHOP FOR WOMENI in her new location| in the FlamingoI 5500 South Shore Dr. . 0,1 an,y on<; II 684-7200 ltem Purchased |25% iOFF: The bank that worksin the neighborhoodthat works...HYDE PARKBANK and TRUST CO.1525 E. 53rd St. MEMBER FDICJ1M25% discounton any meal w/couponChances R5225 s. harper limit one per customerexpires 5/31/SI363-1550 \1fashions for herRED ☆ SPECIAL20% OFF on many selecteditems throughout the storein the Hyde Park Shopping Center ccsfop HYDE PARK CO-OP1526 E. 55th St.667-14446” pottedCYCLAMEN PLANTSreg $7.49w/coupon1 plant per customerexpires 5/20/81 $1.50 OFF \11 — — — — —— — — -1v ’ Open 7 days a week 365 days a yearFLOWERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS1536 E. 55th Street288-1665 !4 OFF \l(0-. iany Joyce acoordinates r~w/coupon §expires 5/16/81 -1 ■ul00RSfi[te0Qlp1428 E. 53rd St. • 752-2020SPRUCE UP YOUR WALLS FORspring20% OFF ££5S(except Younger Gallery exhibit)w/couponexpires 5/24/81\i- 10% OFFON ALL PLANTSw/coupon1 per customer643-4020 "Pfooter SAo/t1308 E. 53rd St.6 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, May 12, 1981HYDE PARK BUSINESS & PROFESSIONAL ASSOCIATIONM X2 for 1 HYDE PARK HILTON4900 S. Lake Shore Dr.288-5800TWO DRAFT BEERSFOR THE PRICE OF ONEIN THE BRISTOL LOUNGEONLY One per customer • w/coupon • expires 5/26/81 \] ■» r20%OFFhairdressingfor men and women1515 E Hyde Park Blvd955-5555 on any onethese services:permanenthair color, relaxer NEW FACES5226 S. Harper 493-290320% OFF Cl^/WwdryPLUS a complimentary springmakoovor with Mils coupon\j 1 per per customer • expires 5/26/81Challenger Xerographic Paperreg $6.08/reamw/couponlimit 10 reams /customerwhile supply lastsexpires 5/31/81 $450JL ream MHYDE PARK OFFICE PRODUCTS1456 E. 53rd St. 955-25W An additionals 4 OFFw/couponexpires 5/30/81955-1716 MAny Bon Jour orSasson jeanslimit 2 per customermaes place1507 E. 53rd Street N1 (excludinggym shoes)w/couponexpires 5/19/81 *4.0# OFFOn any pair of men’sor women’s shoes667-94711534 E. 55th St.in the Hyde Park Shopping Ctr.\f JESSELSON’SFISH AND SEAFOODHOUSE1310 E. 53rd StreetFIESN FISH752-287010% DISCOUNT on freshshrimpw/coupon • limit 5 lbs per customer • expires 5/16/81 1508 E. 53rd Street667-2000 FREEglass of winewith anycrepe dinnerw/coupon • 1 per customer • expires 5/26/81 ^ 1 AIR UP YOUR TIRESFOR SPRINGAIR BIKE PUMPS10% OFFw/coupon • expires 5/23/811 per customerthe SpokesmenBicycle Shop 53ci s HydeHyde Park BlvdKATSAROSPharmacy, Inc.1521 E. 53rd St. • 288-8700SAVE 25% on any first aid suppliesw/coupon • expires 5/20/81INSECT BITES • STINGS • SUNBURNGET SET FOR SUMMER - NOW! V 20* OFF onregular $75Care free curl1 per customer • w/coupon • expires 5/26/81MILDRED'S BEAUTY SALON5100 Cornell 324-5565 w/coupon expires 5/26/8110% Off Sff—xv/V Vil all gold watchesSUPREME JEWELERS1452 E 53rd Street 324-1460 \t10% OFF ANYATTACHECASEw/coupon • 1 per customer • expires 5/26/81KIMBERLY and LEE1529 E. 53rd Street HY3-1480 \1nitCFINER FOODSSERVING53rd PRAIRIE SHORESKIMBARK PIAZA 7911 VERNONWhere You Are A Sir anger But Once'1226 E. 53rd St. • 363-2175 50' OFFregular priceWHOLEMILK$-J471 per customerw/couponexpires 5/19/81 10% OFFany oneitem in stockw/coupon • expires 5/20/81324-60395206 S. Harper\1 half gallon Bresler'sICE CREAM$-1 19I VILLAwith any purchase of1527 E. Hvde Park Bled is 0° or,mcr® "/coupon955-0220 ' Color Film Processing Special1 per customerwith coupon 30% OFF expires 5/27/81your next roll of color print proceeding PLUS\! • FREE 8 x \0 ENLARGEMENT from your favorite coior negativemodel camera1342 E. 55th St. 493-6700 1608 E. 53rd St.RENT-A-CAR ] 667-280015% OFF DAILY RATEon $13.50 to $22.50Maximum of three days.w/coupon expires 5/30/81The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, May 12, 1981 —SPORTSmen’s Men’s10K or 14K Gold and LustriumFrom $9200Representatives of the JostenRing Company will be in theBookstore, Second Floor, onWednesday, May 13Thursday, May 14and Friday, May 15to help you in yourselection of a class ring.Be sure and drop by andsee them at these times:10:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.\8 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, May 12, 1981 I Rickert Beats KUUC 1-0Rickert v. LiberalBy David GruenbaumIn the residence soccim final on Saturday,Lower Rickert beat Greenwood 4-2. LowerRickert dominated most of the game, keep¬ing the ball on Greenwood’s side by applyingoffensive pressure. Greenwood jumped offto a 1-0 lead as Rickert defenseman VinceMichaels fooled his own goalie with a deflec¬tion that would have made Phil Espositohappy. Meanwhile on the offensive side,Lower Rickert’s Iyam DaReita blew two bigopportunities to score in front of the Green¬wood net. In the second half, the Rickert of¬fense got untracked and Mark Peeblesscored two goals, one on a nicely angled shotfrom the corner, and the other on a quicklytaken direct kick from in front of the net.After Jay Aragones scored a goal on a brea¬kaway, Rickert led 3-1. Greenwood’s ownbest offensive threat, Oren Starn, scored ona direct kick, with a vicious shot to the righttop corner of the Rickert goal, to pull Green¬wood to within one goal, 3-2. But just sec¬onds later, on another quick play, Peeblesfound DaReita alone in front of the Green¬wood goal on a throw-in to make the finalscore 4-2.Lower Rickert and the Koreans(K.U.U.C.) met yesterday in the undergrad¬uate final, but the results were not availableat presstime. However, Games to Watchlists who Ting and the Liberal Tradition willbe playing in the AU-Univesity Finals to¬morrow at 5:00. In residents semifinals,Lower Rickert nipped Fallers 2-1. It was atotally even game, as Fallers jumped off toa 1-0 lead when resident head Andy Cheungscored a direct kick on a nice chip that beatRickert goalie, Trinklein.With four minutes left in the game. Mark "peebtes^corec^n^enaff^ick^oMtiickert"to tie the game at 1. Peebles then had a nicecorner kick to Jay Aragones and variousFallers players, as they combined to headthe ball into the goal, for a 2-1 Lower Rickertwin. Greenwood knocked off Chamberlin 2-0in the other semifinal.In quarterfinal games played on Tuesday,Chamberlin beat Upper Rickert on a pen¬alty kick, 1-0. The most interesting thingabout the game was the fact that Rickertgoalie Monty Mullig spent the afternoon in¬carcerated, as they say in the Reader, formissing a court date for a traffic ticket. As aresult, Bo Iravedra was forced to play goaland his offensive presence was severelymissed for Rickert. In the other quarterfinalGreenwood knocked off Vincent 2-1.Upper Wallace and Dudley, Shorey andLower Flint, were scheduled to meet yester¬day in girl’s soccer but results were notavailable at presstime. The winners of thesegames will meet Wednesday at 6:00 in theundergraduate residence finals. The winnerof that game will meet the Insane Unk¬nowns, Thursday at 5:00 for the All-Univer¬sity championship.Game to WatchTING & THE LIBERAL TRADITION -LOWER RICKERT Wed 5:00 All-U Champi¬onshipSpread: Liberal Tradition by 2 . . . Comingoff their upset win over the Koreans, LowerRickert will be really up for this game. How¬ever, . . . Lower Rickert’s high powered of¬fense which scored 24 goals in six games willface a severe test against Liberal Tradi¬tion’s fine defense. Furthermore LowerRickert’s goalie Jeff Trinklein who has notseen many shots during regular seasonshould see plenty against Ting. Rickert willalso have to deal with Ting’s Kim Hong whohas been deadly on both offense and defense ithis year.IGOING HOME SPECIALJimMI. . . . on any Hunt’s U-Drive "njckor trailer to students, facultyand staff who present an ID.Make your deposi* early foguarantee reservations andspecial pricecan 643-4370OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 8 AM to 8 PMLOWEST RATESBEST EQUIPMENT HUNT’S U-DRIVETRUCK RENTALU-HAUL ONE-WAYANYWHERE from car-topto 24-foot truckHUNTS U-DRIVETRUCK & TRAILER RENTAL7358 S. Stony Island Avenue(jampusFilmBy Mike AlperThe Last Frontier (Anthony Mann,1955): Victor Mature plays an Indianscout, forced to choose between the wil¬derness existence of the tribe and theorder of white civilization, in this furtherexamination by Mann into the myth of theconquest of the West. Also starring AnneBancroft, James Whitmore, and RobertPreston. Tuesday, May 12 at 8 in Quan-trelL Doc; $1.00.Isadora Duncan: The Biggest Dancer in theWorld (Ken Russell, 1966): As part of hisongoing effort to reduce the pantheon ofmodem artists to rubble, Russell take onthe founder of modern dance. As usual,Russell focuses more on her failings thanon her achievements, but this acclaimedBBC-TV production was made before hisstyle devolved into grotesque mockery, sothat there’s still some chance for a littlereal characterization to come through.Starring Vivien Pickles in the title role.Wednesday, May 13 at 7:15 in Quantrell.FOTA/Doc; $1.00.Song of Summer (Ken Russell, 1968): Rus¬sell’s biography of composer FrederickDelius (Max Adrian is probably his mostrestrained film. Rather than coveringDelius’ entire professional life, the filmdeals primarily with the relationship be¬tween him and his amanuensis Fenbv (Christopher Gable) during the last yearsof the composer’s; life — an approachwhich allows Russell to point up the unsa¬vory aspects of Delius’ character withoutdiscrediting his accomplishments.Wednesday, May 13 at 8:45 in Quantrell.FOTA/Doc; $1.00.The Intelligence Network (Chris Bed¬ford): A documentary produced by theCampaign for Political Rights, combiningpersonal accounts and analysis to providea dramatic presentation of governmentmisconduct. The film documents the ex¬tent of political surveillance by more than100 government agencies in the U.S. andabroad, and includes background on theFBI’s attempts to discredit Martin LutherKing, the CIA’s role in Chile, and currentsurveillance of nuclear power opponents.Following the film there will be a paneldiscussion, made up of John Coatsworth(Latin American Studies), Ira Kipnis (Po¬litical Science), and Rachel Rosen deGolia (director of the Chicago Committeeto Defend the Bill of Rights). Tonight,Tuesday May 12 at 8 in the Cloister Club ofIda Noyes. Presented by the U.S. Studentsfor the Citizens Party; $1.00 for students,$2.00 for others.Anthropology Films: The AnthropologyFilm Series continues with a showing offilms from India. The Ajuba Dance andDrama Company (R. Hess) concerns atroupe of popular entertainers. Perform¬ing in mango groves and on the streetcorners of North India’s villages andtowns, they stage a type of theater knownas Nautanki, an amalgam of music,dance, comedy routines and drama.Jhaoo Chaudhari: A Tongawallah fromDelhi recounts the daily routine of theowner of a horse-drawn hansom cab, who flourishes in the old city of Delhi amidthree wives, five children, and twelvehorses. The film shows the Muslim Festi¬val of Id, the Jamma Masjid mosque, aSikh pageant, and the shrine of Nazamud-din for the ceremony of Urs. Tonight,Tuesday, May 12 at 7:30 in Ida Noyes Li¬brary. Anthropology Film Group: admis¬sion is free.Seven Chances (Buster Keaton, 1925): Themaster of mechanical comedy presentswhat might be called a formula film witha vengeance. A young man stands to in¬herit 7 million dollars if he can marry by 7o’clock that evening. He is rejected by hisfirst 7 choices, places a want ad, to which7 women respond, then 7 times 7, et ce¬tera, et cetera. The quintessential comedyfrom the film comic who knew more thananyone about man’s place in a mechanis¬tic world, until Tati came along. Wednes¬day, May 13, at 8:30 in Law School Audito¬rium. LSF; $2.00.The Three Penny Opera (G. W. Pabst,1931): There’s not much Brecht, andthere’s probably even less Weill left in thisversion of their most successful collabora¬tion, but it’s good anyway. Pabst imbuesthe whole sordid scene with a furtive,quirky good humor that is probably moresuited to the intimate confines of thescreen than Brecht’s broad-stroked didac¬ticism would have been. It’s about Mackthe Knife (or MacHeath Messer forpurists), a Victorian highwayman whoends up as a banker -- which, the film tellsus, is only a difference of degree, not ofkind. Also starring the incomparableLotte Lenya as Pirate Jenny, the role shecreated on stage. Thursday, Ma> 14 at 8 inQuantrell. FOTA/Doc; $2.00. N.B: TheThree Penny Opera is being shown in place of Joseph Losey’s Don Giovanni,which was originally scheduled but whichwas unavailable for screening. — MAJeanne Dielman, 23 Quai du commerce, 1080Bruxelles (Chantal Aker man; 1975): Del-phine Seyrig plays a widow who turns toprostitution and murder in her effort tosupport herself and her son, in what isconsidered by many to be the most signifi¬cant experiment in narrative form by a fe¬minist filmmaker. Tuesday, May 12 at 8 inthe Bergman Gallery. Renaissance Soci¬ety; $1.00 for members, $1.50 for Docmembers, and $2.00 for everyone else.The Lady From Shanghai (Orson Welles,1948): So you want to learn all about de¬cadence and moral depravity? Forgetabout Apocalypse Now — this is the filmthat says more about decadence than any¬thing made in the past twenty years.Orson Welles plays a naif who gets e Wan¬gled in the bizarre marital relationship ofRita Hayworth and Everett Sloan: natu¬rally, murder, blackmail, and betrayal jensue in short order. It doesn’t really;make much sense — the story goes that jWelles was in an airport, making a phonecall to a producer to get money for a stage jproduction, and as collateral offered hisservices to direct a hot new property hehad just discovered, The Lady FromShanghai — which turned out to be thetitle of one of the pulp novels he had cho¬sen at random from the rack next to thephone. From there on, it just getscuriouser and curiouser. Welles’ Irish ac¬cent comes and goes, as does the compre¬hensibility of the plot, but it’s such great |dirty fun that you won’t care. This is the jone with the renowned shoot-out in the !Hall of Mirrors. Thursday, May 14 at 8:30 iin Law School Auditorium. LSF; $2.00 jJ 0 l»J* A’ FRESHMEN AND SOPHOMORES THINKING OF A CAREERIN MEDICINE ARE INVITED TO MEET WITH THE ADVISERIN THE HEALTH PROFESSIONS. TOGETHER WITHCOLLEGE SENIORS AND ALUMS NOW IN MEDICALSCHOOLThursday, May 14thHarper 130 4:00 P.M.TOPICS WILL INCLUDE CHOICE OF MEDICINE AS ACAREER. MEDICAL SCHOOL REQUIREMENTS. ANDPREPARATION FOR MCAT;~>J VSOHtJ (3 / O-r-'iCr: 0~ THn On -Wl S i\h >rf V f ■>'/ V /'rlc v'lL.v -> j1- BLUE CROSS/BLUE SHIELDSUMMER 1981O^F-QUARTER COVERAGEJune 12th is lhn Ofc ADLINt tor enrollment1Applications are available in Administra'ion 103Off-quarter coverage is available to degree students whoare registered and participate in the University Blue Cross/Blue Shield Plan the quarter prior to the off-quarter and whoexpect to be registered and participate the quarter followingoff-quarter. Off-quarter coverage is available to degreestudents for one quarter of non-registration in a 12-monthperiod Application for off-quarter coverage must be madein the Registrar’s Office and the fee must be paid uponapplyingThe Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, May 12, 1981 — 9Memorial DayFairContinued from page 4ice cream, and cakes. A wind quartet winprovide music to eat by from the balconyabove the commons. Tickets for the brunchare $4.50 and are on sale this week only atthe Reynolds Club box office from 11-2, andat the Student Government office on thethird floor of Ida Noyes Hall.From 11-5, an art fair sponsored by FOTAwill be the main event on the Quads, but Injaddition various domitory houses have planned to set up booths hawking everythingfrom ethnic foods to baked goods to t-shirts.A carnival ride, a concert by the Wind Ense¬mble, a debate by the College Bowl team,and pie fights between administrators, fac¬ulty, and students are also scheduled for theafternoon.The highlight of the day’s events, howev¬er, will be “Hutchfest,” a nine-hour series offree concerts in Hutch Court sponsored byMAB. Among the bands already confirmedfor the event are Jump-in-the-Saddle, NewEra Reggae Band, and Bo Diddly and theChicago Diamonds. The concerts will beginat 1 pm and continue until midnight, with abreak for dinner from 5 to 6:30. HYDE PARKThe Versailles324-0200Large StudiosoWalk-in KitchenoUtilities Incl.oFurn.-Unfurn.oCampus Bus at DoorBased on Availability5254 S. Dorchester—■ The University of ChicagoMedical AlumniAlpha Omega Alpha LectureNobel LaureateDr. Francis H.C. CrickKieckheter Distinguished Research ProfessorThe Salk Institute“The Explosion ofBiological Information"Wednesday, May 13 5:00 P.M.Quantrell Auditorium —Cobb Hall Room 2095811 Ellis AvenueOpen to the PublicMay 13NoonHutch CourtWednesdayMay 13 The University of ChicagoDEPARTMENT OF MUSICCHAMBER MUSIC ENSEMBLEGoodspeed Hall 4:15 p.mMozart, Piano Quartet in E-flat, K 49J(Mark Hohnstreiter, violin; Daniel Budil, viola; Josh Rosett, cello,Easley Blackwood, piano)Brahms, Trio in A min , for clarinet, cello and piano, op 114(Mark Vandersall, clarinet, Josh Rosett, cello; David Cates, piano)Thursday NOONTIME CONCERTMay 14 James Bone, Baritone: Patrick Gallagher at the pianoGoodspeed Hall ' 1215 p mFaure, Clair de Lune, Mozart, Sarastro s arias from De Zauberflote:Brahms. Vier erneste Gesange, op. 121These concerts are free and open to the publicC' V • VERMEER STRING QUARTET1 • with Larry Combs, clarinetSaturday, May 1b Mandel Hall 8:30 p m Piano Quartet in E. K. 493PiAUfHg-Trio for Piano, Cello, Clarinet op. 114Goodspeed HallWed. May 13 445 Easley BlackwoodDavid Cates pianopianoFree Mark Vandersall clarinetMark Hohnstreiter violinDepaitment of Music David Budil violaJosh Rosett celloQOUKUSrUDK) 5PRESENTS(^AiigustQ§trindbeig^0ssju&cDirectcdcBy'cHcywaniQ.P^plaiiA MEMORIAL AFFAIR BRUNCHSunday, May 24th 10a.m. - 2 p.m.Hutchinson CommonsMENU:fried chickenquiche lorraine & vegetarianvariety of blintzessausagebagels & cream cheesebreakfast breads, rolls & coffeecakesyogurtfresh watermelon basketice cream and toppingscakesassorted beverages^M" A or # I t ^Tickets available at Reynolds ClubMay 12,13 & 14 11a.m.-2p.m.Cost: $4.50 all you can eat In Honor ofSt aver AlumnusMarc CoganWe are giving10% discount onThe The Speechesand PrincinlesHumanof Thucydides’ThingHistorySTAVER BOOKSELLERS1301 E. 57th St.667-322710 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, May 12, 1981CLASSIFIED ADSSPACENeed housing and don’t know where tostart? Student Government offers ahousing list of off campus housing!Three month subscription availablefor only S3 and it works. Call 753-3273for more information.Summer sublet-Large. sunny 2'/j roomstudio apt. Furnished, all utilitiespaid. Near co-op & I.C. S230. Call324-7282.Summer sublet w/fall option. 1 br innewly renovated 3 br apt. Call DavidBlain at 3-8194 or 684 4782 afternoonsand evenings. Also bedroom furniturefor sale.Totally renov bright all modern 2bdrm, 5 rm, 1 ba, 1200 sq ft condow/dw, alarm, parking. 440-6038 dy,955 2052 ev.Gay male, graduate prof, school inJune, seeks compatible responsibleperson with whom to locate and sharetwo bedroom Hyde Park apt. Beginning late June or late July. Call Paul752-6228. If calls unanswered afterseveral attempts, leave message at363 1845.3rd floor suite in Prof's Kenwoodhome. SISO/mo. or less with exchangefor babysitting or painting 624-5978.Summer sublet. Regents Pk 3 rm aptconsisting of bdrm, kitch, Ig living rmwhich can be used as second bdrm,carpeting, a/c, and excellent view ofthe lake. Can also renew lease afterthe summer. 288-3580.3 ROOMMATES NEEDED for largeapt. 57 & Dorchester, part, turn., AC$183/mo students only. 752-26656 rm condo 56th & Blackstone 2nd firFi: 11% by owner3 bdrms 2 baths; cheerful, modernkitchen all appliancesSep. dining rm w/coved ceilinghardwood floors, fireplacesun parlor priv balcony539 7739 early am and eves962 3348 wkdaysSUBLET June 15 Sept. 15 2 br. 2 bthapt 54th & Kimbark bale a/c $350753 2249 rm 3422 leave messageSummer sublet: turn bdrm w/bath inIg 3 bdrm apt. 157 + util nonsmkgPossible option to join lease in Sept.947-1856 day 684 1388 night.For rent University Park studio w/walk-in kitchen top floor NE view ACpool sauna exercise room avail July 1$350/mo Please call 393 1034.Bright sunny 1 br avail June 1. 5th firfront apt. in married student hsgRecently painted, most drapes and cptcan stay. 256°mo. incl util. 752-3414evenings.QUIET GRAD stud, wanted for nice 3person apt. near Co-op and I.C. AvailJune 15S153 util 667 73083 Bedroom apt, furnished, tor rentJune 15 at Lake. 667 7308.SUMMER SUBLET Ige. 2 bdrm aptPet OK w/porch reas rent. 324-5260.Sublet June Sept 1 bdrm apt $290 unfurnished good bldg 3 mins to campuscall eves 363 6280 days 753-4329 Ivmessage w/sec.SUMMER SUBLET: Bright 1 bedrmnear U of C on Blackstone June-Sept753 2691/667 5494.Huge, sunny 4 bedroom apt.. June 1-Sept. 1. Across midway from Billings.Near Law School and SSA. $361.50/mo288 5171 eves.1 bdrm on Lake, near 1C and mini-rtfor July, Aug, (June if needed). RentNegotiable, call Mike arm's 241-6060.SPACE WANTED1 BR apt w/kitchen for 1981-82 schoolyear. Also sublet for summer. Call493 9547 late pmEXPERIENCED HOUSESITTER canprovide excel, care-home, pets, plants,yard and mail this summer. Respnsbl.grad stud. 493 0686 after 7 p.m.WNTD: APT. RM w/bath, no kitch;furn or unfurn; Betw. 53rd/59th; sizeno object Price is; 753 3769 x202, JonResponsible graduate student wishesto housesit from mid May to mid Sept(dates flexible). Will do allmaintenance work. Referencesavailable. Call Doug 753-2773 or 2416073 (after 5)Visiting Prof seeks furnished studio or1 bedroom apt for August. Call 4935715.Are you finished Fall quarter? I wantto take over your lease on Jan 1 thruspring quarter. I need 1 or 2 br nearUC Edie643 6438PEOPLE WANTEDPaid subiects needed tor experimentson memory, perception and languageprocessing Research conducted bystudents and (acuity in the Committee on Cognition and Communication,Department of Behavioral Sciences.Phone 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 appointment.Domestic help wanted cooking andshopping both gourmet and plebian. 1or 2 days per week. Call 753-2134 andleave name and phone number.PART TIME OFFICE HELP, typingetc. Some work in campus office, someat home. Hours variable, about 15/wk.About $5/hr. 842-5169 evenings.Overweight women wanted for hormone study age 18-35 years, mustweigh 225 300 lbs $175.00. Call 947-1825.Summer work in northern Wisconsinresort area. Companion for elderlyman. Cooking, light-housekeeping anddriving call 268-3847.Undergraduate research assistantwanted. Duties will include libraryresearch and some computer editing.No experience needed. Call George643 3072 eve.Male desk attendant beginning JuneMon-Thurs evenings at LehnhotfSchool of Music and Dance 1438 E. 57thSt. 288 3500Organic Chem tutor 2 hrs/wk will pay.Call Dwayne 488 6523 after 5.FOR SALEGuild D-35NT w/hard case. YamahaG-231 classical w/softcase. 753-3424 (9-5) Steve.Sofa and love seat, 1 yr. old. COST$900 Ask $300 753 1596Annual DSA Book sale, Thursday, May14 and Friday, May 15, 9:00-3:30 inSwift Hall Commons. Thousands ofnew and used books, most 50-75% off!Subjects include Theology, Literature,History, Near Eastern Studies,Philosophy, Anthropology, Sociology,and more.SERVICESTYPIST-Disseration quality. Helpwith grammar, language as needed.Fee depending on manuscript. IBMSelectric. Judith 955-4417.ARTWORK Posters, illustration, lettering, etc. Noel Yovovich 493-2399.TYPIST. High quality work byfreelance writer. Competitively pric¬ed, 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.Typing done on IBM by college grad;pica type. Term papers, theses, lawbriefs, manuscripts, letters, resumes,etc. Fast, accurate, reliable,reasonable. New town area. Call to¬day 248 1478.IVORY TOWER HOME SERVICESHire a student to clean your apt.,paint, plaster or whatever. 493-9108after 4.TYPIST Exp Turabian PhD Masters,Term Papers. Rough drafts. 924-1152.W P Bear Trucking Co. is back! Wemove almost anything almostanywhere! Call 947-8035 8am-12 midnight.Full time babysitter Exp. loveschildren Stimul env 667 S750Will do typing 821 0940WANTED18 Yr. old French girl seeks position asmother's help for Aug Sept. Call Dr.Brunie 753 8374d, 363 0566 after 7 p mRIDESNeed my car driven to Boston JuneCan you drive? Call Rick 753 3745.NEEDATYPIST?Excellent work done in my home.Reasonable rates. Tel: 536 7167 or548 0663MOVINGStudent with Pickup Truck can moveyour stuff FAST and CHEAP No |Obtoo small! Call Peter at: 955 1824 10am 10pmPOETS WANTEDTo attend a poetry workshop withGary Lenhart and Steve Levine ofNY's tames St. Mark's Poetry Project.All poets welcome At 12 noor, inReynolds Club. Free! WELCOME BACK,STEVE LEVINEEx-U of C student Steve Levine authorof A BLUE TONGUE and PURENOTATIONS will give a poetry workshop at noon & read his poems at 8 pmBoth with NY poet Gary Lenhart. Bothat Reynolds Club. Both free.WANTED: PIANOGood playing condition. Gift or cheapfor Spirituality Center Hyde ParkArea call S.R. Sheila 324-5230.COLLEGE VENTUREA slide presentation on Venture, a jobopportunities program for collegestudents taking a leave of absence,will be given Thursday, May 14 at 4:00pm, in Room 201, Reynolds Club.WRITERS READINGNew York Poets Gary Lenhart andSteve Levine read their works at 8 pmtonight in Reynolds Club. Admission isfree and open to all.TRANSCENDENTALMEDITATIONPROGRAMFinal Introductory Lecture for theschool year. May 13 Weds. 3:30 or 8p.m. Ida Noyes. Learn to increaseyour smiling ability. Info 955-8864.BE AVANT GARDEHear Steve Levine, author of A BLUETONGUE and Gary Lenhart, author ofBULB IN SOCIETY, read their poemsat 8 pm in Reynolds Club. Be there!Admission free!DOGBERRYHe's coming for the fourth time. Howmany of you can say the same?COMMEMORATIVEPICNICThere will be a picnic commemoratingthe founding of the organization ofblack students (OBS) and the May.1968 takeover of the administrationbuilding—Friday 5/15 noon-3 pm onthe main quad.COFFEEHOUSEThurs , May 14 at Blue Gargoyle, 5655S. Univ. Ave. 9 and 11:00-Ted Mac Trio+ 1, Blue Grass 10:00 Andy Carter,folk singer, story-teller. Food and bev50“ cover.SYRACUSERIDERS WANTED I'm going toSYRACUSE, NY at the end of thequarter Date and route flexible. CallIra Joffmanat955 5280COOPERATIVEHOUSEHOLD2 men and 2 women grad students looking for fifth to share spacious housenear 58th and Harper starting June l.$l85/month includes utilities. 955-2193.GRAD. TICKETSDesperately need one graduationticket. Willing to pay great quantitiesof money. Call 241-6126.BOOKSALEAnnual DSA Booksale, Thursday, May14 and Friday, May 15, 9 00-3:30, inSwift Hall Commons. Thousands ofnew and used books, most 50-75% off!Subjects include Theology, Literature,History, Near Eastern Studies,Philosophy, Anthropology, Sociologyand more.HUMBERTHUMBERTWon't be there, but you can come hearthe University Happy Hour ChamberPlayers perform Mozart and Brahms,Wednesday, at 4:14 pm, GoodspeedHall0-AIDEAPPLICATIONREMINDERTo 1st, 2nd, 3rd year students in theCollege Applications for volunteerpositions as General Orientation Aidescan be picked up now in Harper 269,The tob involves assisting the Oftice otthe Dean ot Students in the Collegewith the 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 APP! (CATIONSARE DUE MAY 18 CAREER SEMINAR"Working in Washington." OnWednesday, May 13, 7:00 p.m. at Hit¬chcock Lounge, 1009 East 57th St.. MrBrad Patterson, Senior Member of theBrookings Institute will speak. He hasworked under the past two RepbulicanAdministrations.ORIENTALCARPETSI 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 ex¬cellent quality. Call David Bradley241-7163 or 643 8613.2 ROOMSAVAILABLEJUNE 15-SEPT 15 $112/per CALLGATO 753 8342 #702 or 643 4314.SALES-ADVERTISINGSales 8, Sales Management. Brilliantcareer opportunity with growing co.Internal promotions. Excellent train¬ing program. Guaranteed income 4-high Comm Offices in IL, IN, Wl & AZ.A. Burke Call collect 312-864-4100.PASSPORT PHOTOSPassport Photos while you wait atModel Camera, 1342 E. 55th St.FULLTIME/SUMMER POSITION100—140 people needed Chicago-Looparea.Position consists of selecting informa¬tion from a blue print and transferringsame to a CRT terminal Abackground in Math, Engineering orArchchitecture is an added +, but aliberal arts curriculum is acceptableStarting dates for position run fromMid May to Early June. Length ofassignment is 3-5 months. AM & PMshifts are available.CALL NOW FOR AN INTERVIEWVictory Temporary Service100 West MonroeSuite 501Chicago, Illinois, 60603(312) 782 6244YARD SALEWEWANT YOUTO RACEWITH US!rhe Drivers Club announces three 13)COLLEGE WEEKENDS at the races'MAY 16 17 BLACKHAWK FARMSJULY 25 26 BLACKHAWK FARMSAUG 8 9 ROAD AMERICAGet acquainted with Amateur RoadRacing & learn about our SHOWROOMSTOCK and other classes tor sportscars & small sedansYou don t need a race car to participateFind out about the track side excitementot being a CORNER WORKER'ADMISSION BY INVITATION ONLYBob Heitsch 1619 N Hoyne Chicago60647 or HOTLINE 312 3215454An Afliliatc ol theMidwestern Councilol Sports Car Clubs Far EastKitchen 1654 E. 53rd955-2200CocktailsAand TropicalDrinksThis week’s specialEgg Fu Yung, .Egg Roll & Fried Rice ^2d "eat in orcarry outserved until 2:30 p.m. Tues.-Sat.MULTI FAMILY YARD/BAKESALE, May 16 12-5 914 61st. Plants,Clothes, Bks, Toys, Kit. Items, MoreSUMMER BAZAARSummer Bazaar sponsored by thePakistan Society on Friday, May 15, atReynolds Club from 9 to 5. Open daily and Sunday 11 a.m. to 1 a.m.Closed Mondays. Lunch served Tuesdaythro Saturday 11 a.m. to 2:39p.m.SALE DATES 5-13 thru 5-16-8 1U.S.D.A. CHOICESIRLOINSTEAKU.S.D.A. CHOICEPORTERHOUSESTEAKTENNESSEE PRIDEPORKSAUSAGEKLEENEXJUMBOTOWELS 2 39lb.2 Lb.1 Lb. 098Mm lb.2^8159REG. 1.8969SOFT 'N PRETTYBATHROOMTISSUEBUMBLE BEELIGHT TUNAFROZEN VITA-GOLDORANGEJUICECOUNTRY DELIGHTCOTTAGECHEESE 4:99REG. 1.89*<rREG. 1.3769*19REG. 1.691TUt.GFINER FOODSSERVING53rd PRAIRIE SHORESKIMBARK PLAZA 2911 VERNONWhere You Are A Stranger But Once!The Chicago Maroon — Tuesdav, May 12. 1981 — 11rp *i i14;- il .!iji >i DZSlGMLR JjySBELGllTLAYfAYQjUlMlVflL%e QWfeaturing the music ofOURAYandTHE U. of C. IAZZ BANDPlus Food/Refreshments • BoothsClowns • Games • BalloonsPalm Readersand Author AutographsSATURDAYMAY 162 -5p HUTCH COURT don’t miss theINTER-FRATERNITY SING94)0 pm atHITCHCOCK COURTSpsored by the University of Chicago Alumni Assoc, as part of Reunion ’81