' 11 ■ ' 1 "■ 1ITHE CHICAGO MAROONVolume 90, No. 55 The University of Chicago Copyright 1981 The Chicago Maroon Tuesday, May 19, 1981Deficit May Force Gargoyleto Close Food ServiceBy Curtis BlackThe Blue Gargoyle Vegetarian FoodService may be closed next year, accordingto a committee of students formed last weekto find ways of keeping the facility open. “Itwould be too bad if it closed before anyoneknew about it,’’ said Ellen Hamingson, oneof the committee members. “If people ex¬press support it might be kept open.”Bob Reuter, another committee memberand a volunteer at the food service, said thecommittee is planning to hold a “Blue Gar¬goyle Day” on Tuesday, June 2. “The ideabehind the day is to let people show supportand get information about how they’d like tohelp.”The Blue Gargoyle offers vegetariansoups, sandwiches and snacks every dayfrom noon to 2 pm at the University Churchat 57th Street and University. The food ser¬vice is one part of the Blue Gargoyle YouthService, which also operates youth employ¬ment programs, a youth bakery, and com¬munity outreach programs.The recent federal budget cuts have“forced us to reexamine our priorities,” ac¬cording to Rosemary Ervin, a member ofthe Blue Gargoyle Board of Directors whochairs the board’s Food Service Commit¬tee.Much of the funding for the youth ser¬vice’s programs has come from federal pro¬grams which are being cut back or eliminat¬ed. “It comes down to a choice betweenprograms for the young people of the com¬munity, who come from homes with realeconomic need, and programs for stu¬dents,” said Harvey Lord, pastor of Univer¬sity Church and another Gargoyle boardmember. “With the closing of the YMCA,there just aren’t many places in Hyde Park serving as a youth center,” he added.The food service “has always been a kindof break-even proposition usually operatingwith a small deficit,” Ervin said. “The issueis, if it can’t break even, should the rest ofthe program support it?”The food service has run a deficit of abouttwo percent this year, according to CharlieHaven, who has been manager since lastfall. “It’s not that bad, but it becomes aproblem when the money isn’t there.”Since becoming manager. Haven has im¬proved the operations bookkeeping and costaccounting, and stopped using a food buyingservice. Haven now does much of the shop¬ping himself. “We’ve raised the prices ashigh as we can reasonably,” Haven said.Haven said the food service’s problem isthat, while most restauants are open all day.the Blue Gargoyle can serve for only twohours a day. The same room is used for theyouth bakery, a food co-op, and coffee¬houses. With seating for 80, the Gargoyleserves 200 on a normal day.One customer said that many Universitypeople “don’t know where the Gargoyle is,”and if they do, “have preconceptions aboutthe place, or about vegetarian food.” Ha¬mingson, who used to do volunteer work forthe youth service, thinks the food service isimportant to make the Gargoyle visible andto attract student volunteers for its otherprograms. “The Gargoyle has a problem ofvisibility and image, and the food service isone of its most visible programs.”The food service was started as a coffee¬house by divinity students in 1968, accordingto Harvey Lord, and featured meatloafsandwiches and political discussion duringthe era of student protest. In 1972 a collec¬tive of ten divinity students began running itas a food service and changed its focus to The end for Blue Gargoyle food?good nutritional food. In the late seventiesthe service began employing a manager andsmall staff, in addition to its volunteers, andusing the food service as “training for youngpeople from the neighborhood who needbusiness experience and are interested infood service,” Lord said.The Blue Gargoyle depends on volunteers.About fifteen students help with food serv¬ing or preparation in exchange for a freemeal. Two of the students, Bruce Goodmanand Teresa Shulz, work every day.“It’s different from regular employ¬ment,” Goodman says, “more like sharingcooking in an apartment. It’s a really niceatmosphere to work in.” Schulz agrees that“the people are really nice, they’re warmand friendly, and the food is good, and goodfor you.” Goodman said he appreciates theContinued on page 5Protests Don’t Halt Nuclear PlantBy Andy BlackIn 1972 construction began on the eighthnuclear power plant located within what isdefined as a potentially hazardous nuclearzone of Chicago’s city limits.Situated 70 miles from Chicago’s Loop, in the Indiana Dunes, the Bailly NuclearPower Plant has since become a center ofcontroversy among Chicago and Indiariaresidents because of the plant’s failure tomeet siting criteria recommended by theNuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC).When construction on Bailly was resumedResidents of 5143 S. Kenwood picket in front of their building on Saturday afternoon.The tenants are upset over living conditions in the building, which are being affectedby construction and renovation being done by condominium developer/owner PhilipGross. The tenants claim that the work makes living in the building dangerous. JudgeJoseph Wosick declined to place stricter restrictions on the renovation work at a courthearing yesterday morning. Tenants said afterwards that the plan to go back to courtagain next week. last April after a four year hiatus, groups oiconcerned citizens, began protesting againwhat they consider an unsafe and economic¬ally unfeasable form of energy.On April 25, nearly 1200 protesters gath¬ered at the site of Bailly to attend a rally,sponsored by the Bailly Alliance, based inIndiana, and the Citizens Against NuclearPower. Besides this show of protesters, op¬position to Bailly includes such high-pow¬ered groups as the Chicago Attorney Gener¬al’s office, locals of the United SteelWorkers union (a large force in Gary), andthe Chicago Regional Director of the NRC.The main point of opposition to the Baillysite appears to be its proximity to areas ofhigh population densities. The Bailly plant isonly 10 miles from downtown Gary and 70miles from downtown Chicago. In an NRCSiting Policy Task Force report published inmid-1980, Bailly failed to meet eight of eightrecommendations dealing with populationdensity near sites, in addition to failing tomeet two of the seven recommendations forproximity to hazardous areas, such as air¬ports or gas refineries. The NRC Task Forcewas established in 1978 by the five-memberfederal commission of the NRC to recom¬mend possible changes in present NKr*reg¬ulations. Task Force recommendations arenot binding on any future policy changes thecommission might make, but they do repre¬sent expert opinion within the field.The Task Force report said that the Baillyplant failed to meet major regulations con¬cerning siting and population criteria. Thereport recommended that the utility operat¬ing a nuclear plant should own one-half mileof the surrounding area. Owners of the Bail-Continued on page 7 Ex- GovernorDixy Lee Rayon CampusBy Chris IsidoreDixy Lee Ray, the outspoken and oftencontroversial former governor of Washing¬ton state, will be on campus at the fourth Vi¬siting Fellow of the year this Thursday andFriday.Ray will be staying in Pierce Tower dur¬ing her stay here She will be giving a publiclecture on “Energy and the World Econ¬omy,” on Friday at 2:30, in Harper 130, andwill also be attending various classes andteaching a common core class in Oceano¬graphy.Ray’s career began as a college professorof zoology at the University of Washington.In the mid-1950s she took part in federalocean study programs and later ran the Pa¬cific Science Center.She began to gain notarity when PresidentNixon appointed her to the Atomic EnergyCommission in 1972. Her background in thearea was slim compared to many of her newcolleagues, and Time Magazine quoted heras joking, “If you have to start learning anew field, it sure helps to start at the top.”She was a strong advocate of nuclearpower during her time at the AEC, a posi¬tion that was to cause her considerable polit¬ical problems during her term as governorof environmentally minded Washingtonstate. On many occasions, she was quoted as |saying. “We are going to have atomic power Ias fossil fuels dwindle, so we may as well getused to it.”Ray was appointed “chairman,” (she re-1fused to be called chairperson or chairwo-!mam in 1973. upon the strong recommenda¬tions of outgoing chairman James!Schlesinger. She moved to make the com¬mission more public, and angered some {AEC veterans with reorganization plans anda new emphasis on reactor safety. But shemade few allies or friends among anti¬nuclear activists, and was dubbed Ms. Plu¬tonium by Ralph Nader.She left AEC for the State Department in1975 to become Assistant Secretary to Statefor the Department of Oceans, InternationalEnvironment and Scientific Affairs, but shesoon became disgusted with the lack ofaccess to Secretary of State Henry Kis¬singer, and left Washington D C. in 1975.driving the motor home that she had lived inwith her two dogs during her years in thecapital.She arrived in Washington state, interest¬ed in running for governor, but with no expe¬rience in politics. She had never been de-1dared her political party, and most of thestate politicians laughed when she made herlate entrance into the 1976 governor's raceon the Democratic side. But her charismaand her maverick campaigning style ap¬parently made up for her lack of experiencewith Washington state voters, and she nar¬rowly won a three-way primary race w ith 39percent of the vote, and a 6.896 vote marginover Seattle mayor Wes Uhlman. In the gen¬eral election, she defeated one of the state'sleading republicans. King's County (Seat¬tle) chief executive John Spellman, w ho suc¬ceeded her this year.But Ray never faced Spellman in the re¬match. In 1980 she was defeated herself inthe Democratic primary by another unorth¬odox candidate. State Senator/psychiatristJames McDermott. McDermott had the sup¬port of many groups in the Democraticparty, including the environmentalists, whowere upset not only with Ray’s nuclear en-Continued on page 5Thank you!Pat SchulmanPeter KountzRuth Halloranand all the Alumni Associationstaff for making Reunion ’81 a♦ very special event. *The Reunion ’81 Committee2 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, May 19, 1981NEWS BRIEFSSinaiko on Tolstoy‘’History, Poetry and Philosophy in Warand Peace” is the title of Wednesday even¬ing’s Collegiate Lecture in the Liberal Arts,to be given by Herman Sinaiko, AssociateProfessor in the Division of the Humanitiesand in the College. The lecture will be heldin the Swift Lecture Room at 8 PM, withdiscussion to follow.Trained Management?If you are interested in learning about themanagement training program available tocollege graduates, the Office of CareerCounseling and Placement will be holding aseminar on that topic tomorrow at noon inthe Reynolds Club.Representatives of the managementtraining program of Leo Burnett, ElectronicData Systems, Arthur Anderson, and theHarris Bank will be present to discuss theirprograms.Sander Wins AwardFourth year public affairs student AllisonSander has been named as one of severalstudents from local universities to receiveawards from the American Society for Pub¬lic Administration, in recognition of theiracademic excellence and leadership poten¬tial. Sander will receive her awards, whichconsists of a plaque and a one-year member¬ship in the ASPA, at a luncheon on Thurs¬day. In addition to her academic work,Sander has served as a summer interm inthe office of the Massachusetts welfare de¬partment, worked in a YMCA summer pro¬gram for children on Chicago’s West Side,and studied Gandian systems of educationin India. Stephen DixonDixon to Read PoemsStephen Dixon will read from his fictionon Tuesday, May 19, at 4 pm in the BergmanGallery on the fourth floor of Cobb Hall.Dixon’s reading is the last of four presentedthis year in the Chicago Review SpeakersSeries, and is supported by funds from theIllinois Arts Council and the W'illiamVaughn Moody Lecture Committee.End of Era: Vincent,Thompson to go CoedTwo bastions of all-male dissatisfaction,Thompson House in Pierce Tower, and Vin¬cent House in Burton Judson, will both be¬come coed for the first time next year, andsurprisingly it seems to be causing some un¬happiness in both houses.Edward Turkington, director of Universi¬ty housing, is planning on taking advantage of the increase in women in next year’sfreshman class to make the two housescoed. Both houses will be close to 50-50, andwill be coed by floor. ‘‘We usually make ahouse coed by floor when we first change itover,” said Turkington. ‘‘I expect that al¬most all of the women in both houses will beincoming freshman, and since there is onlyone bathroom on each floor, it seemed bet¬ter that way. Any change in the future willbe up to the residents.”The unhappiness from this year’s resi¬dents comes not because there will bewomen in their house —* most of themcouldn’t be happier about that. But resi¬dents of the floors which will be coed nextyear are upset because they are losingrights to their rooms. In Vincent, it is quitelikely that some of the more juniormembers of the house may actually have toleave.‘‘If there are more requests than there aremale rooms, then some will have to leave,based on a senority system,” said Turking¬ton. ‘‘The process is different in Thompson,where there are both double and singlerooms, than in Vincent, where there areonly singles. The priority system for themale rooms within the house is not yet es¬tablished in Thompson. In Vincent, thosepeople forced out of their rooms by coeduca¬tion will have priority for the remaining freerooms in the house.”Psychiatrist on LawPsychiatrist Seymour Halleck will speakWednesday and Thursday at the Law Schoolon the relationship between psychiatry andthe law in the Isaac Ray Award Lectures,given by the American Psychological Asso¬ciation to honor outstanding research in psy-chiatrv. He will discuss ‘‘The Mentally DisorderedOffender and the Criminal Process: The In¬sanity Defense” tomorrow from 4-5:30 pmin the Law School Auditorium, and ‘‘ThePsychistrists’ Role in the SentencingProcess” at the same time and place on thefollowing day.Halleck is a professor in the departmentof psychiatry at the University of NorthCarolina at Chapek Hill, and a leading re¬searcher in the field of forensic psychiatry.Pulsed Neutrons HereArgonne National Laboratory, operatedby the University for the Department of En¬ergy, has begun operation of a $50 millionresearch tool called the Intense Pulsed Neu¬tron Source (IPNS-1) which will be used toprobe the structure of matter and in chemi¬cal and biological studies at the molecularlevel.According to Dr. Walter E. Massey,Director of the Argonne Lab, the new neu¬tron source will ‘‘help the US close the scien¬tific gap with Germany, Japan, and othercountries of the world in the area of neutronscattering research.”In the past, studies requiring neutronbeams have used neutrons generated by nu¬clear reactors. IPNS-1 makes the use of areactor unnecessary. The newly-developedsource creates intense neutrons by bom¬barding a uranium or other heavy-metaltarget with a beam of protons from a 500million electron-volt accelerator.IPNS-1 is expected to provide the basisfrom which neutron sources surpassingeven the largest research reactors will bebuilt in the future. The new neutron sourcewill enable scientists to delve into the fun¬damental composition of matter with farmore accuracv than ever before.performingTale of a Winter's NightFugues, Art of the FugueMonday Night at theWrong Branch Saloon Rock out on WHPK 88.3 FMWednesday and Friday nights.Call 753-3588 to win!— Ad sponsored by U.C Bookstore Photo Dept — rfu-o+u&nt Um. iriiQuit KocJim.The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, May 19, 1981 — 3ASHUM-AMSASeminar Series 1980-81Program in the Arts and Sciences Basic to HumanBiology and MedicineandAmerican Medical Students’ AssociationPresentJarl E. Dyrud, M.D.Professor, Department of Psychiatry and the CollegeThe University of Chicagospeaking on the topicCan Wholistic MedicineBe Scientific?WEDNESDAY, MAY 27, 19817:30 P.M.HARPER 130 atjuintiiwALL COLLEGE FINANCIAL AIDRECIPIENTSAll National Direct Student Loan (NDSL) ChecksandAll Federally Insured Student Loan (FISL) ChecksThat Have Not Been Picked Up ByMAY 29,1981will be CANCELLEDand will not be reinstatedLoans are disbursed at the Student Loan Center on thefourth floor of the Bookstore. You MUST have a validatedU of C I.D. and a Record of Course Registration card to re¬ceive your check.FINAL NOTICETHE VISITING FELLOWS COMMITTEEpresentsDIXY LEE RAYFormer Chairman, Atomic Energy CommissionFormer Governor, State of Washingtonspeaking onENERGY IN THE WORLD ECONOMYFriday, May 22, 2:30 P.M. Harper Memorial 1304 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, May 19, 1981experience.... Pf| ■■TOTAMandingoGriotSocietyA blend of West African nativemusic, dance and American jazz.In conjunction with Chicago Front for JazzMay 22,8pmHUTCH COURTRain Location: Cloister Club$2.50/students $3/othersAlso....May 21, 8 p.m. Ida Noyes Cloister Club...Come to the workshop and jam session Meeting to Ponder Lot FateOne of the neighborhood’s most importantchunks of vacant land may go on the auctionblock in the coming months if the citv an-proves a request by the Chicago Board ofEducation to sell a lot on 53rd St. adjacent toMurray School. The site, which lies betweenKenwood and Kimbark Avenues, may beused for commercial, residential, or otherdevelopment, depending in part on thewishes of community residents.A public hearing will be held Wednesday,by the Hyde Park-Kenwood ConservationCommunity Council at 7:30 pm at the Lu¬theran School of Theology to hear sugges¬tions from community residents and organi¬zations on the future of the land.The lot is currently owned by the ChicagoBoard of Education, which purchased itfrom the city during the 1960s to serve as apossible site for the expansion of MurraySchool or the construction of a new' highschool. The school board has abandonedthese expansion plans, and in the face of itspresent financial crisis has asked the cityfor permission to sell the land.The Conservation Community Council ad¬vises the city’s department of urban ren¬ewal on development projects in the HydePark and Kenwood neighborhoods. Afterconsidering the Council’s recommenda¬tions, the department of urban renewalmakes its own recommendations to themayor on whether to approve proposed proj¬ects.Wednesday night’s meeting is intended togather suggestions from communitymembers for the development of the site.Community sentiments will be taken intoconsideration by the city as it decideswhether and under what conditions to per¬mit the sale of the land.Alumni WeekendFuture Assured“We just had a glorious time,” alumni af-'airs director Peter Kountz said of thisweekend's alumni reunion. “We had wellover 600 people,” a figure short of the hoped-for 1000 but which still “tripled last year'sattendance.”The success of the weekend has apparent¬ly laid to rest the possibility that the alumniweekend will be eliminated because of alack of support from alumni. “That was anold rumor.” Kountz said. “Looking at theweekend, there's no question that reunionsare here to stay.”Although reunions may be here to stay,the level of their funding is uncertain.Kountz said that this year's budget of ap¬proximately $20,000, which included fundsraised during the weekend, was “not a lot,but it’s good enough to do what we needed todo.” However, “to make it a success againwe ll have to have a bit more money. I don'tthink we can depend on income” raisedfrom alumni during the weekend to supportthe program, he said.Although Jonathan Fanton, Vice Presi¬dent for academic resources and institution¬al planning, said that he shares Kountz’s en¬thusiasm over the weekend's success, headded yesterday that any increased costsfor the weekend will have to be borne byparticipants inthe reunion. The Universitysubsidy for the annual event should be con¬sidered a stable figure, he said.Kountz views the reunions as long-terminvestments in alumni goodw ill, rather thanmoney-making ventures, and hopes to per¬suade University administrators to sharehis enthusiasm for increasing this invest¬ment in future years. “I don’t think I’m inthe fundraising business. I’m in the servicebusiness,” he said. The weekends providethe University an opportunity to show thealumni that it cares about them, he said. So far, no definite plans have been madefor the site, according to Tom Marshall ofthe department of urban renewal. The city’sdecision will depend in part on the results ofa study it has commissioned to determinethe best uses of the lot. That study will prob¬ably be completed in two to three weeks, hesaid.Although Michael Murphy, director of theSouth East Chicago Commission (SECC)echoed Marshall’s statement that no firmplans have been made for the site, he urgedthat plans for its development be made witha view to the next 50 to 100 years, and thatthe future of nearby property be taken intoconsideration. Murphy noted that the fate ofthe abandoned Hyde Park YMCA building,across the street from the lot, remains unde¬termined, as does the future of a boarded-upbuilding at 5325 S. Kimbark.Last month five owners of property adja¬cent to the YMCA building sued the YMCA’sBoard of Directors in an effort to force ren¬ovation or demolition of the large, boarded-up building. The suit was brought with theaid of the SECC. Murphy said that no actionhas yet occurred in the case. “Right nowthere’s absolutely no cooperation” betweenthe SECC and the YMCA board, he said. Thenext step in the proceedings will be for theproperty owners to subpoena the membersof the YMCA board to give depositions in thecase.GargoyleContinued from page 1initiative and creativity volunteers are al¬lowed. When he suggested ‘rounded prices’— lower prices for whole meals — Haventried the idea and it worked out.“I maintain the right to set prices,”Haven said, “but I do have a cashier whohaggles with me.”Ervin said the board will be deciding thefate of the food service in the next tw-omonths. In the meantime, the committeehopes to publicize the food service's prob¬lems and build support. They are kickingaround several ideas, including some kindof meal plan or cooperative membership, bywhich people could help the service stayopen. Hamingson says they are also inter¬ested in using the room as a gallery for localartists. An important part of the Blue Gar-!goyle Day they are planning will be a ques- itionnaire for customers to fill out. The com- jmittee. which has met twice so far, willmeet again next Thursday at 12:15 the theBlue Gargoyle.Continued from page 1ergy stand, but also her position on allowingoil tankers in Puget Sound. McDermott was2lso supported by the powerful and popularsenior Senator, Warren Magnuson. Magnu-son w as angry for many reasons, but partic¬ularly because Ray had offered Magnuson’sseat to an influential state democrat in casethe 76 year old senator died “I want to tellthe Governor there ain’t gonna be no va¬cancy." he shouted at reporters. Magnusonand McDermott both went dow n to defeat inthe Republican landslide last fall.Since her defeat. Ray has not been muchin the public eye. Her position as governor ofa small, northwestern state had never beenthe center of national attention, but her styleand outspokenness had gained her muchmore publicity than either her predecessoror successor Time magazine ran a verycomplimentary coverstory on her a yearinto her term, and even before she ran forgovernor, her position on AEC had gainedher some notice in the national press.The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, May 19, 1981 — 5_The Textbook Department———The University of Chicago Bookstore970 E. 58th StreetThis Friday 22 May will be the last daySpring Quarter books will be on the shelves.Next week we will begin returning all unsold texts.New Hours ServiceEffective — Monday, May 18HUTCHISON COMMONSMonday - FridayBreakfast - Lunch(Hamburgers now available. 7 AM- 1:30PMMonday - Friday11:30 am - 10 pmIce Cream, Snacks,Fresh Fruit, Beverages1:30 pm - 10 pmGrill Open(Hamburgers, Fries)4:45 pm - 7 pmDinner ServiceSaturday 11 am -10 pmFull Service57th & UniversityMedical SchoolApplicantsWe have placed hundreds of students into the best English andSpanish foreign medical schools... including St. George'sUniversity in Grenada, world's highest ECFMG averagespeaking school. Personal, professional, effective since 1975Pay only on acceptance.Call or write for our 1981 Bulletin describing how we can helpyou obtain a quality medical education.MedicalEducationalCorporationFlorida office 2119 Embassy Drive, West Palm Beach El 33401New York office 117-01 Park Lane South, Kew Gardens NY 11418(305)683-6222 (212)441-7074 " AT LAST, SOMEONEHAS A CURE."$1795 Free mileage.M PER DAY Rate applies in Chevrolet Chevette or similar-si*Make rhe most of your break — in atop-conditioned rental car fromNational. We make it easy, with anumber ot wavs ro meet our creditrequirements. One way is with studentI.D., valid driverslicense and acash deposit. You must be 1H or older You pay lorgas and return car ro renting location.Rate is non-discountable. availableonly at the location listed below and issubject to change without notice.Specific tars are subject to availability.Available from noon Thursday tosame time Monday.VCe feature GM cars like this ( he\ rolet C hevette.National Car RentalYou deserve National attention.Available at:191 North Dearborn ' 236-2581640 South Wabash 922-2604Midway Airport 471-34507600 W. 95th(Hickory Hill's Car Clinic) 598-1410evil remommq assassinsGrand finale 0Wed., Hay 20. 700pmcall 753-2261ft I6 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, May 19, 1981•M TT^ ' WmiLYBailly PlantContinued from page 1ly plant, the Northern Indiana Public Ser¬vice Company (NIPSCO), however, hasonly .11 mile of the area surrounding Bailly.Another siting requirement which Baillyfailed to meet was that a fixed minimum ofemergency planning distances of 10 miles beestablished around the plant. But Bailly hastwo large steel mills near it which would re¬quire two days in order to be fully preparedfor evacuation, without ruin of the mill ma¬chinery.Bailly also failed to meet any of the Task Force’s recommendations concerning popu¬lation criteria in terms of numbers of resi¬dents living at certain distances from theplant.Yet these are not the only regulationswhich Bailly did not meet. Mr. Keppler, theregional director of the NHC, said in amemo written in January that the licensingboard should review two other guidelines ofthe plant’s design and employees beforegranting a license. Keppler said specificallythat the design model of Bailly is an oldermodel which might have to be remodeled in-service; and that the operating utility has asmall number of employees with previousnuclear experience.Bailly was first brought to court in 1974after a group of Chicago civil and govern¬ment agencies filed an appeal in the Chicago Court of Appeals to stop construction. Con¬struction was halted for several monthswhile litigation ensued, rising all the way tothe US Supreme Court. According to a NIP-SCO official, the Bailly site is “in the bestpossible position for transmission of powerto a load center, in other words it’s in prox¬imity to a large number of industrial sites.”In 1975, The Supreme Court ruled in NIP-SCO's favor, and upheld its right to buiid onthe Bailly site.The controversy did not die, though, afterthe Supreme Court ruling. Construction wasagain halted in 1977, after the NRC chargedthat the system for placing the plant pilesinto bedrock, called “jetting”, was “not con¬ducive to the environment.” NIPSCO thentried to use the traditional hammeringmethod, yet the piles showed a tendency to bend after penetrating the bedrock. Hear¬ings were conducted, and NIPSCO was onceagain allowed to continue on March 6 of thisyear after arguing that the piles were em¬bedded far enough for safety purposes.NIPSCO hopes that construction will con¬tinue without interruption so that it cancomplete the plant by 1989 at the presentlyestimated cost of $1.1 billion.Given President Reagan’s support of nu¬clear power, the NIPSCO officials probablyhave little cause to worry. Under the pres¬ent administration nuclear power has beengiven a high priority than President Carterever gave it. Presently the NRC has beencharged with the task of reviewing its find¬ings in the 1980 Task Force report whichfailed Bailly on so many recommenda¬tions./I1■i *895PRIME RIB SPECIALIncludes baked potato, vegetable of the day,house salad. Beverage extra. Coupon mustbe presented; one coupon per person.Monday thru Saturday 5:30 till 10 p.m.CHARTWELL HOUSEatthe HYDE PARK HILTON4900 South Lake Shore Drive IIIIIllPodrtcJ(Xnd<SwectUEnglish and Italian Madrigalsand Sundry Ensemblesand Schut/ Sieren Letzte VVortewith Viol ConsortMay 24Blue Gargoyle 8:00 P.M.5655 University$200 Admission FOTA presents...THREE INDEPENDENTFILMMAKERSAngelo RestivoBROKEN TANGOU. of I. CircleAdele FriedmanTHOUGHTS OF CHRISTINEArt InstituteBill StamwitzDINOSAURU.ofC.Tuesday, 9:30 p.m. May 19Ida Noyes East LoungeThis is rescheduled from Sunday, May 17All are short films and each filmmaker will give a short talk about his film.The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, May 19, 1981 — 7VIEWPOINTIreland ReconsideredIreland: A Prisoner of Britain?By Catherine V. Grandfield LoveThis is an edited version of an inteviewconducted last week. It represents theIrish Republican, or Nationalist, view ofthe situation in the North. Richard Lucy isa trial lawyer and an unofficial spokesmanfor Irish Northern Aid. The declared pur¬pose of Northern Aid is to collect funds forthe support of the families of those consi¬dered political prisioners, and to presentthe Nationalist case here in the States Al¬though they have been accused of fundingthe 1 provisional) IRA, no evidence to sub¬stantiate this charge has been produced.CL: It has been said that, unlike theCatholic Nationalists and the IRA. theLoyalist paramilitaries basically “keeptheir guns in the basement’’ until ag¬gressed against. Is this in fact the waythey operate?RL: These organizations are by nomeans defensive, but are offensive in na¬ture: their prime purpose is to threaten theBritish Army with civil war should Eng¬land decide to withdraw from Ireland.Once the British troops had withdrawn itwould be the purpose of the Loyalist para¬military groups to prevent Ulster frombeing integrated into the Republic, andalso to commit mayhem on the Nationalistpopulation. These organizations eventhough they are illegal are armed to theteeth.The Ulster Defense Association, theUDA, has admitted to murdering 492 peo¬ple between 1972 and 1977. This can bechecked out very easily by calling AndyTyrie, the head of the UDA.CL: In reference to precisely what cri¬teria are men and women of the IRAdeemed terrorists and what is the reason¬ing behind their campaign?RL: Terrorism of course is in the eye ofthe beholder. Terrorism is defined underBritish law in Northern Ireland as “the useof violence for political ends"; under thatdefinition George Washington and theAmerican patriots of 1776 were terroristsThese people obviously can not come outinto the open and defy the might of theBritish Army. The tactics which are usedare traditionally the tactics of the op¬pressed. The shoot and bomb campaign, asthe British have labelled it, is nothingmore than fighting with the only weaponsthat are available.British propaganda has failed to educatethe American public to the fact that theIRA bombing campaign never was. is notnow, and never will be directed against ci¬vilian personnel. Under British law inNorthern Ireland anyone who suffers prop¬erty damage as a result of the “troubles”must be compensated by the British Gov¬ernment. Therefore this was a economicwar waged by the IRA against brick andmortar. The IRA campaign was tremen¬dously successful in this regard in that theremuneration paid to the citizens of North¬ern Ireland by the British Governmentnumbers in the billions of pounds. Britaincan ill afford this strain on its economy.There have been several unfortunate in¬stances; in each of those instances warn¬ing was given to the Samaritans, a pacifis¬ts group in Belfast, which relays thewarning that a bomb has been planted tothe police. In almost all instances the po¬lice then clear the area. However, with theemergence of the aforementioed FrankKitson and his realization of the impor¬tance of the media in counter-insurgency itwas decided that no warnings would be re¬corded. The result, in at least two in¬stances, was a significant number of civil¬ian casualties. The fact that the warningshad been relayed to the police was not brought to the public’s attention until twoyears later when a London paper, I believethe Times, conducted an expose on the factthat the British Army indeed was givenwarning of those bombs and indeed ig¬nored those bombs.Again there have been instanceswherein the British SAS has by its elec¬tronic methods prematurely detonatedbombs before the area could be cleared.This too was part of Kitson’s counter-ln-surgencv campaign to win the support ofr" IRELANDTROOPS OUTNOW!!iSHKSTI Self Determination for theI Irish People as a Whole.I No British Support for a■■ Loyalist State!non-Irish people by the use of the media todescribe the IRA as mindless bombers.Finally there have been in all honestyseveral instances in whih IRA bombs havegone off prematurely, sometimes resultingin the death of the person planting it, some¬times in the death of others. The IRA hasexpressed its regret in all such incidents,which unfortunately happen in all wars.CL; Does the Nationalist community ofthe North see the IRA as fighting on theirbehalf and does their strategy have popu¬lar support?RL: The IRA obviously has the supportof the Nationalist people. Obviously not ofall of them. I would venture to say that allof the Nationalists support their aims,while not all of them support their meth¬ods. However the IRA could not and cannot exist as a force which has tied down attimes as many as 30,000 British troops, if itwere not supported by the people. The IRAmust be sheltered, clothed, and fed, whichit is by the Nationalist population which byand large sees the IRA as its proptectorand its defender against the British Armyand against the Orange mobs which fromtime to time seek to invade the Nationalistdistricts committing arson and mayhem.This fact has never been brought beforethe American people, who have been toldthat this is a silly sectarian squabble whennothing could be further from the truth.John J. McGirl Chairman of the CountyCouncil of Leitrim twelve miles across the border in the Republic of Ireland told usthe other night that 80% of the Nationalistpopulation of Northern Ireland supports,and is in sympathy with, the IRA.CL: What procedures do the British au¬thorities follow to interrogate and try su¬spected IRA members?RL: When the civil rights movementbroke out the British Government in 1971instituted internment without trial whichwas simply an exercise of the SpecialPowers Act to pick up suspected trouble¬makers and imprisonthem until such timeas the crisis hadpassed. In 1975 theBritish Governmentrealized that intern¬ment without trialbegan to be counter¬productive in that theworld was becomingoutraged that in thisquarter of the 20thCentury people couldsimply disapear offthe streets and beheld in British jailsat the pleasure of theBritish Government.The British were ex¬tremely uncomfort¬able in this situationbecause of the sign¬ing of the HelsinkiAccords and becauseof their own condem¬nation of the SovietGulag system and ofdictatorial impris¬oning practiced inother countries.Therefore in orderto clean up their actthe British decided in1976, on a policy of“Ulsterization, nor¬malization, and cri¬minalization”, thathenceforth personsinterned would not begiven political statusbut would be considered as criminals. Andthis is even though Irish men and womenhave since 1976 been imprisoned underspecial laws for alleged political offenses,in special courts, under special rules of ev¬idence, and before special judges. Even inview of all this speciality the British Gov¬ernment now refuses to grant specialstatus to men and women sent to prison bythese methods.What the British have done with thesespecial laws is in effect to continue intern¬ment without trial since the suspect is ei¬ther dragged from his home at five o’clockin the morning or dragged off the streets.He is then taken to Castlereigh Interroga¬tion Center where he is tortured physicallyand psychologically. This again is part ofFrank Kitson’s counter-insurgency meth¬ od wherein modern science is used tobreak down the resistence of a person byusing psychological warfare, The BritishGovernment has pleaded guilty to this be¬fore the European Commission on HumanRights to which they admitted the use ofthe white noise torture, the sensory depri¬vation technique, the solitary confinementtechnique, and the hut and cold techniquesand of beating these persons.Once the person is taken to the interro¬gation center, that person can be held for72 hours without a charge being placedagainst him or her. Or, he ean be held forseveral days — incommunicado — withoutaccess to his family or to an attorney. Thisis the time at which the confessions are ex¬tracted under duress; the British havehere a 90% conviction rate by confessionswhich for anybody who knows anythingabout criminal law is absolutely mind-boggling. This conviction rate by virtue ofsuspect confession has been condemnedBy Cardinal O’Fiaich, Cardinal Primateand spiritual leader of AH Ireland, hasbeen condemned twice by Amnesty Inter¬national, and has been condemned even byvarious pro-British reports; the BennettReport and the Lord Gardiner Report.Once the tortured confession is extract¬ed the prisoner can be held on what isknown as remand for a period of years,many of them have been held for up to twoyears awaiting trial, and this again is aform of internment without trial, once theyare given their trial, under the specialBritish laws, the Prevention of TerrorismAct or the Emergency Provisions Act, theburden of proof is on the accused to provehis innocence. The accused is denied theright to cross-examine his accuser, deniedthe right to even see his accuser ; the ac¬cused can be convicted on the basis of anaffadavit supplied by a person not presentin court.The trials are held before three Loyalistjudges, members of the Loyalist politicalcommunity. No jury trials are allowed.Once convicted by this Diplock court sys¬tem the average sentence is around 14years; the men are sent to Long Kesh, thewomen by and large to Armagh Prison. Sothis is the system of justice by which theBritish so piously crow that these men andwomen are criminals.The hunger strike is a traditional Irishmethod of protesting injustice; it goesback to pre-British times under the Brehonlaws whereby an agrieved person would sitoutside the house of the wrongdoer andstarve himself in order to point out the in¬justice and to shame the perpetrator intodoing the right thing. Terence MacSwiney,the Lord Mayor of Cork City, died in 192after 76 days on hunger strike protestingBritish occupation during the Black andTan war. The lives of Bobby Sands andFrancis Hughes were given because thesemen have been denied what we take forgranted: freedom.Catherine V. Grandfield Love is astudent in the College and a spoke¬sperson for the University of ChicagoNorthern Ireniand Action Commit¬tee.Chicago Style ■y Peter Zale—- jc'nm jgmrms Smm roar f&ue \HCfiOOT YOURS Am -m WH0TSQNVMV PiATE.. /vno rrmm at a 1lump cf mmnKIEV?SCopy right 1981 by Peter Zale8. -- The c.r. iago Maroon — Tuesday* Miy ft# fttlVIEWPOINTRhetoric of a MandateBy Neal CohenNow that the general election is sixmonths passed, the Presidential honey¬moon is swiftly coming to an end, as bothsides of Congress are digging in and pre¬paring for the varied political battles of thenext three and a half years. The definitionof human life, the economic policies of thecountry, the national defense, the generalfuture of the welfare state: all these issueswill be subjected to a heightened rhetoricof politics in an effort to determine on whatside of the fence our allegiances lie. So be¬fore we are put through another round of“either you’re for us or against us,” per¬haps we should examine how the rhetoricof politics affects our conception of ourown political activity. It begins the day wevote.On the first Tuesday of last November, Ifound myself wrestling with a decision that48 percent of all eligible Americans neverBritish MustSolve TheirIreland CrisisBy Kevin GleasonI read with interest “Ireland and theDeath of Bobby Sands” and commend theMaroon for providing coverage of this andother vital international questons. A fewissues regarding Northern Ireland, howev¬er, warrant clarification.First, it is important to note that BobbySands, a member of the Irish RepublicanArmy — which Mr. Leahy regards as an“unpopular liberation group” — was elect¬ed by the people of Northern Ireland torepresent them in the British Parliament.Moreover, tens of thousands of Irish Cath¬olics attended Sands’ funeral. This evi¬dence suggests that the IRA enjoys sub¬stantial support among the Irish.Second, while the IRA’s violent tacticsare sufficient cause for concern, they be¬come understandable and perhaps accept¬able when viewed within the historical con¬text of the struggle in Ireland. Beginningin the 12th century A.D. and continuinginto the 20th, the British sought to subju¬gate the Irish nation. English militaryforces conquered Ireland despite Irish re¬sistance, and English and Scottish Protes¬tants migrated to and settled within Ire¬land, which was predominantly Catholic.The British settlers forced the Irish Catho¬lics off the land and took it for themselves,reducing the native Irish to the role ofsharecroppers and menial industrial la¬borers. Rent was high and wages werelow.Moreover, the Protestant settlers passeddiscriminatory legislation — e.g., thePenal Laws of the 17th and 18th centuries— which prohibited Protestant-Catholicmarriages, and provided for residentialsegregation. The legislation also prevent¬ed Catholics from voting, serving in Par¬liament or holding any public office, teach¬ing, operating schools, and practicing law.In addition, the Protestants operated to un¬dermine the role of the Catholic church inIrish society and initiated a campaign toconvert the Irish to Protestantism.Thus, via a variety of military, econom¬ic, political and ideological measures, theEnglish Protestants established them¬selves as the dominant elite in Ireland andrelegated the Irish Catholics to secondclass citizenship in their ‘own’ country. bothered to make. Until the moment I re¬luctantly pulled one of the small levers inthe column labeled President of the UnitedStates, I kept earnestly asking myself whoI should vote for.With the wisdom of hindsight, I can nowattribute my indecisiveness to a generalanxiety over what my vote meant. I knewthat I would go home at 5:30 and watchpolitical commentators on television ex¬plain my vote — in triplicate, nonetheless,I would never hear the end of these peopletelling me what I inteded my vote to mean:a vote for Anderson was a rejection of thetwo-party system, some said, or a vote forCarter was a refutation of the politics ofboth the new right and the moral majority,and thus an affirmation of traditionalDemocratic values. Finally, some said, avote for Reagan was a righteous condem¬nation of twenty-five years of DemocarticParty extravagance and the country’sIrish migration to the United States wasprompted in part by a desire to flee Britishinjustice in Ireland.The IRA emerged during the 1850’s to re¬sist British exploitation and promote Irishnationalism. During the 1920’s, owinglargely to international pressure and agi¬tation on the part of the IRA and otherIrish organizations and individuals, mostof Ireland became free from British con¬trol. However, the Protestant community,composed of remnants of the British andScottish settlers, refused to relinquish sixcounties in the northern part of Ireland.This region thus remained a British colonyand was dubbed ‘Northern Ireland.' Tothis day the Protestants of Northern Ire¬land retain their allegiance to Britain, andduring the annual Orange parade cele¬brate the British subjugation of Ireland.The IRA refuses to accept the partitionof Ireland and persists in its quest for aunited and independent Ireland. It is in¬deed tragic that Britain’s refusal to negoti¬ate a just settlement of ‘the Irish question’encourages the IRA to seek redressthrough violence.Clearly, the issue in Northern Ireland isnot the IRA but British imperialism. Oneneed nottoe a member of the IRA to under¬stand that Northern Ireland is an artificialentity, a creation of British colonialism,which should not be allowed to continueapart from Ireland. Regardless of thepassing of 60 years and the views of theProtestants, the existence of Northern Ire¬land is unjust and an insult to the Irish andall free people.On the other hand, even one who is sym¬pathetic to the cause of the IRA can seethat the indiscriminate killing of Catholicsand Protestants in Northern Ireland doesnot provide a solution to the problem butfunctions only to exacerbate it. The Britishare ultimately responsible for the crisisand it is they who must resolve it. Mrs.Thatcher should convene immediately ameeting which includes representatives ofEngland, Ireland, and the Catholic andProtestant communities in Northern Ire¬land. A negotiated settlement should consi-tutionally safeguard the civil rights of allpeople, including Protestants, and providefor the reunification of Ireland.One would think that by the 1980's colo¬nialism would be thoroughly discreditedFor example, quite some time ago all ofIndia was returned to the Indians. Isn't ittime all of Ireland was returned to theIrish?Kevin Gleason is a graduate studentin the department of politicalscience. languid moral fortitude.A large number of votes for Reagan, itwas said, would constitute a mandate.Mandate? You can see why I was so anx¬ious over the flip of a switch. With it, ac¬cording to the rhetoric of politics, went mypolitical genre for the next four years. AsWordsworth was a Romantic and Arnoldwas a Victorian, I would be considered tobe a liberal or a conservative.What this all seems to represent is a ty¬rannical use of labels. People no longer arewilling to understand a vote, for example,as an individual act, an act which demon¬strates a faith in the percept that individu¬al expression lies at the root of political ac¬tivity. Rather, people are only concernedwith the big picture. The question “whatare your politics?” would be an aberrationto the ear. Nowadays, the question is: Areyou a Liberal or Conservative, Democrator Republican? Frankly, at this point, lcould not answer the latter question. Noone seems willing to ask me the former.Someone might respond to this point byasking what harm this labelling produces.As thev might see it, a label is a necessarytool or convenience by which we may gen¬eralize and locate the voter in reference tothe trends in politics. If more people arebeginning to vote a certain way, then weshould be able to know this.In a country of two hundred and fortymillion people, I must agree that it wouldbe a herculean task to ask everyone whathis politics were. However, if we are to re¬cognize a need for political labels, we mustalso recognize their proper use.Consider, then, what it means todaywhen someone, using the rhetoric of poli¬tics, calls you a conservative. As a conser¬vative you, by nature, favor a constitution¬al amendment agasint abortion, increaseddefense spending, right-wing leaders inCentral America, fiscal restraint on thepart of the federal government, and a re- turn to state’s rights. In essence, the termconservative or liberal imports a certainhomogeneous way of thinking. As a liberalSenator you are expected to champion therights of the poor, desire to increase gov¬ernment spending, and favor proposedlaws such as gun control.There is an inherent danger that comesfrom thinking in this manner. Rightfully, alabel, like conservative, is an inductiveconcept. We know what constitutes conser-vativism by the parts collected under thetitle of the whole. As the average conserva¬tive or liberal, we expect someone to prob¬ably, not definitely, believe in a group ofaverage values that can have a conserva¬tive or liberal label affixed to them. As theaverage conservative, I might believe insay eight out of every ten things PresidentReagan does, and this would probably bemy reason for voting for him rather thananother candidate. I daresay this is mostlikely how the prudent man approachesvoting. He makes individual decisions onthe issues, and then he votes for the can¬didate that best represents those decisionson the whole.However, when our labels become en¬trenched, they begin to lose their ability toinform, and they start to make decisionsfor us Does a liberal Senator support guncontrol because he believes in it, or be-Continued on page i3Speeding TowardDoomBy Geoff PotterI'm all for the pro¬posal to push backthe present highwayspeed limit to 65miles per hour. All itmeans is greaterwaste of gas, highercost of goods, greaterloss of lives, and anincrease in air pollu¬tion. I'm also for pub¬lic execution of shop¬lifters.An Illinois state congressman is support¬ing a bll to change the current speed limitof 55 miles per hour. He puts forth manyarguments for the idea and seems sincerein his beliefs. The only problem is that hisso-called facts are what are politely knownas fiction.He says the present speed limit is a prin¬cipal factor of inflation. Forcing truckdrives to transport their wares at a mere55 mph, he says, results in more drivinghours between engine-starting and desti¬nation. and thus resulting in higher wagesfor truckers paid by the hour. I alwaysthought truck drivers were paid accordingto number of miles traveled, to preventthem from wasting time on the road Thiswould seem to contradict the theory thatmoney is lost in the form of higher wagesAs a matter of fact, it does more thanseem to contradict’ the argument — itblows it all to hell.A defense is thrown out to the inevitableremark that higher speeds cause greaterloss of life. What do you know0 It turns outthat reducing the earlier 70 ?nph limit to 55did not save lives alter all. Did not, that is. according to the proponents of a bill pro¬posing that the earlier limit be restorer.Everyone else seems to believe the statis¬tics that say reducing the maximum speeddid save lives This is especially astound¬ing considering they ave to admit thatRichard Nixon actually issued a beneficialdecree (Besides the one allowing broad¬casts of home football games, tThe advocates of the new speed limitcompletely ignore the problems of highergas consumption and increased air pollu¬tion from the strained car and truck en¬gines. But presumably if all us drivers jtravel faster, although that will meangreater gas w aste and pollutant output, wewill be off the road quicker, and ... then ..maybe it’ll all even out, or something Ormaybe the prblem will go away, quietly.Or something.The bill’s proponents say that the Auto¬bahn highway in Germany exercises nospeed limits, and “that doesn’t work outtoo bad. . . I don’t think . . . does it?” Wegive as refuting evidence the fact that thatfolly is committed in a foreign country',and one obviously cannot trust foreigners.Who says Germany is above repressingfacts that question their actions? Not me.And if w e are tr act as other countries do, Isuppose the bil.’s supporters w ill also wantus to start driving on the left side of theroad like the British. Well, I want to statehere that I have quite enough trouble driv¬ing on the right side of the road as it is. (Itis the right side, isn’t it?) And I don’t needany unnecessary changes to complicatematters. Just explain how the gear shiftworks again and I’ll be fine.Geoff Potter is on leave from the Col¬lege.The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, May 19, 1981 — 9HITHER AND YONOberlin Nabs ThiefOberlin. Ohio police and FBI agents reco¬vered nearly $30,000 worth of stolen librarybooks after searching the motel room of aman suspected of stealing books from the li¬brary of Oberlin College.Library officials became suspicious of theman when they noticed him placing books inhis suitcase and passing an object over thepages of books, in an apparent effort to de¬tect the small metal strips hidden in booksand which trigger electronic security de¬vices used in the Oberlin library.Police stopped the man, identified asJames Shinn, as he left the library. Al¬though he had apparently discovered that hewas being watched and had discarded hisbooks, police found in his possession a de¬vice used to detect the metal strips in books.They then obtained a warrant to search hismotel room, where they found 63 books, sto¬len from the libraries of Oberlin College, theUniversity of Pennsylvania, and the Luther¬an Theological Seminary in Philadelphia.Although the suspect’s methods of obtain¬ing entry to libraries and stealing books arestill under investigation, police believe thathe studied auction reports to learn the valueof rare books in library collections, and thensought them out in library card catalogs. Heremoved the books either by checking themout under an alias or by avoiding theft-de¬tection mechanisms, they believe.Indict Yale Prof, WifeA former Yale University professor andhis wife have been indicted by a grand juryfor embezzling $15,000 from a federal grantused to study federal employees’ health ben¬efit programs.i The 12-count indictment charged thatDonald C. Riegel gave his wife a $15,000 sal¬ary from the grant although she did noti work on the project. The project was con-! ducted under the auspices of the Yale Uni-I versity medical school. Riegel now teachesat the University of Washington.Brandeis, SwarthmoreDivest Over AfricaBrandeis and Swarthmore have joined theranks of colleges and universities whichhave chosen to divest themselves of stock incompanies doing business in South Africa.Both schools gave as their reason for divest¬ment the fact that the companies involvedhad failed to comply with a set of guidelines,known as the Sullivan Principles, which at¬tempt to regulate business behavior in theracially segregated state. ..Adailyil IHHHflUHBKIWWfHUIIIiminTI-According to The Justice, an independentstudent newspaper at Brandeis, the chair¬man of the board of trustees has directed theuniversity to sell its stock, valued at$350,000, in United Staes Steel Corporation.The decision to divest, which follows the rec¬ommendation to that effect from the univer¬sity’s Advisory Committee on ShareholderResponsibility, was made for three reasons,according to Brandeis President MarverBernstein.In addition to U.S. Steel’s failure to signthe Sullivan Principles. Bernstein noted thatthe company’s employment of workers inracially segregated homelands was done"to maintain segregation and not to givepeople jobs.’’ Bernstein added that the uni¬versity had delayed its divestiture in USSteel because the company had stated that itwould "dispose of its operations in SouthAfrica, but it has failed to do so.”Swarthmore College is selling its stock inCiticorp, the Timkin Company, and New-mont Mining Corporation, the SwarthmorePhoenix said. The Board of Managers au¬thorized the sale earlier this month. CharlesPrice, chairman of the board of managers,said that the decision to divest was made be¬cause the companies in question have "de¬fiantly” refused to comply with the SullivanPrinciples. Stock holder resolutions callingfor observance of the Principles wereamong the techniques adopted by the Col¬lege before it chose to divest. Swarthmorestill holds stock in other companies thatcomply with the Principles, the Phoenixnoted.No Speak EnglishNorthwestern University’s teaching assis¬tants may not have to speak English nextyear after all. Earlier this year, Northwes¬J0 The University of Chicago/L _ _IrTi DEPARTMENT OF MUSICWednesdayMay 20 COLLEGIUM MUSICUM:Mute Band and Viol Consort with vocal soloistsI Maria howler, tllen Harris, Deborah MalamucliGoodspeed Hall Free 8:00 p.m.Works by Ciconid, de Cividale, and de WertThursdayMay 21 NOONTIME CONCERTRichard Carnes, pianoGoodspeed Hall Free 12:15 p.m.Mozart, Sonata in C K i ID; llrabams. Rhapsody,op 79 no 1 and Intermezzo, op 1 no 1SaturdayMay 23 UNIVERSITYCHAMBER ORCHESTRAjeanne Schaeffer, condur lorDeborah Dratted, guest ( ondur torBond Chapel Free 8:10 p.m.Mendelssohn, String Symphony No 9. Mozart.Symphony No. 40 in ( min.liach. Ich habenenunts WV ii2 Hetlrey Horvath. bass/ tern officials announced plans to require anEnglish proficiency test of all teaching as¬sistants, in order to reduce the number ofTAs who are not fluent in English. This wasin addition to plans to draw’ up a manual forTAs and establish a TA evaluation programfor each department.However, the plans were quietlv shpiv^nthis spring, when the University administra¬tors who w’ere to put the plan into effect be¬came too busy with other duties.Northwestern now hopes to put thechanges into effect beginning in the 1982-83school year.Students Ignoranton Foreign AffairsIf you don't know the names of the currentleaders of South Africa or Zimbabwe, or therecent history of the Labor Party in Eng¬land, you’re not alone. According to a sur¬vey by the Minnesota Daily, the Universityof Minnesota’s student newspaper, onlythree of 50 students surveyed were able toanswer these three simple foreign policyquestions.The survey was prompted by the inabilityof William Clark, President Reagan’s no¬minee for the post of deputy secretary ofstate, to answer these questions posed bymembers of the Senate Foreign RelationsCommittee during confirmation hearingsthis spring. Some committee memberstermed Clark’s ignorance of these apparent¬ly basic foreign affairs issues "embarrass¬ing.”A study completed under former presi¬dent Jimmy Carter found that ignorance offoreign events is widespread, and called for"a national campaign to sensitize the Amer¬ican public to the importance of creating aninternational awareness among the citizen¬ry.” Students at Minnesota and elsewhereacross the nation needn’t worry too much,though — Clark still got the job despite hislack of knowledge.Cheerleader Sues UCLACan a cheerleader who hurts her knee sueher school for workman’s compensation? Aformer UCLA cheerleader and her lawyerthink so, and have asked the California Su¬preme Court to award compensation to helpcover medical expenses for four knee opera¬tions which resulted from her injury in1976.The woman. Karyn Rust, and her lawyerhave contended that although her servicesas a cheerleader were voluntary, the rela¬tionship between her and the university wasone between an employer and an employee,in every way except payment. The universi¬ty disagrees, however, claiming thatbecause she was a volunteer she is ineligiblefor compensation.Rust lost her case in a lower court, but hasappealed to the state's Supreme Court.Students Seek VoiceUniversity of Pennsylvania students haveprotested the low representation of studentson a proposed academic and budgetaryplanning committee. The committee, to becomposed of 11 faculty members and twostudents, and chaired by the university’sprovost, would advise the president and thefaculty council on long-range academic andbudgetary planning issues.Students argue that the committee, whichcombines the functions of two powerful ex¬isting committees, should have more thantoken student representation, while Pennpresident Sheldon Hackney has refused toappoint more than that number, saying thatthe committee members should not think ofthemselves as representing any particularconstituency.Under Hackney’s proposal, the committeewould have one undergraduate representa¬tive and one graduate representative.Research Limits EasedSwarthmore College faculty voted lastmonth to ease restrictions on research limited by federal intelligence regulations.In 1979, Swarthmore’s faculty approvedstrict code of ethics that prohibited Collegfunding of research projects in which federal law would prohibit or delay the dispersaof the results of the research.In last month’s decision, they altered tn<requirements so that the College may fun(research whenever it appears likely that th<results of the research will eventually b<made public.por adultsL°0k 'tke a dancer and'earn to move like oneDance Exercise ClassModem, Ballet and Jaa byThe t*-** ^Juoe 18-AuO^ a8a.3S00 ^10 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, May 19, 1981Robin Lane &the Chart busters Friday, June 5 9 p.m.$2 UCID $5 OtherTix on Sale: Friday, May 22plus... Special Guest plus... USA Band^amiCABANA CLUB|fACCEPTI\G MEMBERSHIP NOWS!Quiet, restful Country Club atmosphere• Private cabanas available• Olympic-size heated Swimming PoolPLaza 2-3800Phone Mrs. Snyder5500 South Shore DrivePLaza 2-3800 Man and the EnvironmentSummer Seminars inBRITAIN ANDIRELANDField ecology, the British and Irish landscapes,ideas about the natural world and man's placeIn it. Supervised field study.BRITAIN, July 1-31. At Emmanuel College,Cambridge University with field classes inthe dramatic landscapes of East Anglia andSouthwest EnglandIRELAND, Aug. 3-29. At Trinity College,Dublin. 3-weeks field study in the beautifulcountryside of Galway, Clare and KerryDISTINGUISHED FACULTY from the Univer¬sity of California, Berkeley; CambridgeUniversity; Trinity College, Dublin; Univer¬sity College London. (Credit available.)Open to all interested persons For detailswrite or telephone: School of Arts & SciencesP.O. Box 5545 Berkeley, California 94705(415) 549-1482. STANLEY H. 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Make your deposit early to guarantee reser¬vations and special price.LOWEST RATESBEST EQUIPMENTU-HAUL ONE-WAYANYWHERE from car-topto 24-foot truckHUNT’SU-DRIVETRUCK & TRAILER RENTAL 7358 S. STONY ISLAND AVENUEThe Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, May 19, 1981 — 11SPORTSWomen's Season Crosses the Finish LineW omen F ourth in StateBy Hope L. SirullA season of hard training on Stagg Fieldunder the guidance of Coach Linda White-head and Assistant Coach Martha Lutz paidoff for the women’s track team as it tookfourth place at the Division III State Trackand Field Championships, held May 7-9 atWheaton College. The meet was blessedwith warm, sunny weather, a definite psy¬chological uplift — not to mention an aid tobetter performances — for the Maroons,who have run every meet in wind, cold, rain,or some combination of the above.For team members Helen Straus andNancy Flores, the meet began on Thursdaythe 7th with the heptathalon. This day-longactivity consisted of seven events: the 100mhurdles, shot put, high jump, 200m dash,long jump, javelin, and 800m run. Its out¬come bolted Chicago into an instant lead asFlores took sixth place, and Straus won witha total of 4153 points, only 47 points short ofqualifying for Division III Nationals. For¬tunately for Straus — and the team — shehas three more years in which to strive forthis goal.Friday’s events opened with the 10,000mrun. Chicago’s Lu Madge, despite a knee in¬jury, was cheered on by her team to a sec¬ond place finish in a time of 43:15.21, settinga new school record by more than two min-Men are Fifthin MCAC;Green, Axinnto NationalsBy Neal RappaportThe men’s track team traveled to Gales¬burg, Illinois, this past weekend for the Mid¬west Conference’s Outdoor Championshipsand came home with a disappointing fifthplace finish as a team, but had some strongindividual achievements. The team champi¬on was once again Coe College, which wonfor the 10th straight time. Carleton and Mon¬mouth took second and third places respec¬tively.For Chicago, Senior Dave Green qualifiedfor Division III Nationals in grand style bywinning the 800 meter run in a new confer¬ence record time of 1:52.6. Mike Axinn, Chi¬cago’s All-American performer, won the10,000 meter race in 30:46 and picked up athird in the 1500 meter run with a time of3:57.Ed Derse, another Senior, copped a sec¬ond in the 400 meter hurdles in 55.6, endinghis career with a strong performance. ArtKnight produced another Chicago highlightby taking second in the 500 meter run in15:16.It was the failure of the Maroons to pickup points in the field events, sprints, andrelays that led to the somewhat disappoint¬ing conclusion of the men’s track season.Nevertheless, Chicago’s future in theseevents looks strong, based on the perfor¬mances of Paul Robinson and John Garberin the throws, and of Jeff Kaiser, Tim Shinn,and Justin Johnson, all of whom jumped andran to personal bests.While the leading teams were far aboveChicago’s 50 point total, the Maroons wereonly 10 points out of fourth place.Although the team’s season is now ended,Green and Axinn will compete in the DivisonIII National Championships in Cleveland,Ohio beginning on May 28. utes. During the rest of the day trials wereheld for the sprinting and field events. Al¬though the women put in strong perfor¬mances, Chicago just didn’t have a prayerin the 200m, 400m, or 800m events and wasunable to place anyone in the finals. Howev¬er, the team's spirits rose as Karin VanSteenlandt in the 100m dash, Straus in the100m hurdles, Alison O’Neill in the 400mhurdles, and the 400m relay team all quali¬fied for finals. Out in the field, Straus madeit to Saturday’s competition in the highjump and javelin. Also qualifying for finalswere Becky Redman in high jump and VanSteenlandt in long jump. At the end of thetrials, the 3000m run was held. Senior CindiSanborn, who has run well throughout hercollege career and whose talents will besorely missed by the team next year, racedto sixth place with a time of 11:39.45. Thelast event of the day was the 800m sprintmedley relay, where Chicago’s team of VanSteenlandt, O’Neill, Sue Campbell, andCarole Petersen captured sixth place. Onceoff the track, the women were treated to a.barbecue and some inspirational entertain¬ment by Wheaton.After a memorable opening ceremony onSaturday morning, the finals of the 400mrelay kicked off. The team of Van Steen¬landt, Campbell, Kathleen Restifo, and Pe¬tersen blazed to third place in a time of 53.24Track coach Ted HaydonSports BriefsThe Midwest Conference named its All-Conference baseball team last week. ByronTrott was named first baseman on the sec¬ond team, and Dean Carpenter was namedthe designated hitter on the second team.Conference baseball champion Monmouthplaced eight men on the first two teamswhile runner-up Ripon placed five men.The WAA held its annual banquet Thurs¬day at the Quadrangle Club and announcedits 1981-82 slate of officers: President, Ali¬son O’Neill; Vice President, Becky Red¬man; Corresponding Secretary, Diana Ka-spic; Recording Secretary, Anne Libby;and Publicity Chairman, Karin VanSteen-landt. Also, sport MVP’s were announced:Field Hockey: Emily Bloomfield; Tennis:Lisa Doane; Volleyball: Janet Torrey; Bas¬ketball: Nadya Shavonian; Swimming:Martha Kinney; Softball: Mary Klemundt;Track and Field: Carole Petersen. The Dud¬ley Medal, the female equivalent of theStagg Medal, was won bv Mary Klemundt. seconds. In the hurdle events, O’Neill cap¬tured sixth in the 400m, while Straus tookseventh in the 100m. The sprints proved notto be totally lost, as Van Steenlandt came insixth in the 100m dash. In the 1500m, run asfinal! only, Redman captured sixth place.The longest running event of the day was the5000m, where Sanborn again showed herstrength by racing to fourth place. Tworelays were also run; in the 3200m. Redman,Casey Kerrigan, Restifo, and Petersen tookthird, while the 1600m team of Van Steen¬landt, Hope Sirull, O’Neill, and Petersen fin¬ished a somewhat disappointing seventh,but in a season’s best time. On the field,Straus took third in javelin and fifth in highjump, while Van Steenlandt had a fifth placelong jump, and Redman finished seventh inhigh jump.At the end of the meet, awards and rib¬bons were presented. Wheaton, which hasan incredibly strong team composed of de¬ vout runners, took first place with 159 pointsand had a number of runners qualify for Na¬tionals. They were followed by Augustana,Millikin, Chicago, Concordia, and Eureka,as the top six. Straus was given an award forbest heptathlete. a prize decided upon by allthe coaches. Petersen and Sirull were alsoblessed with the G.T. Award, which is givenperiodically during the season by the team.The season official ended for the track teamand all other women athletes with the WAAbanquet held this past Thursday night at theQuadrangle Club. Though it didn’t includeChicken Kiev, Johnny Morris, letterwomenfrom 1917, or any outrageously tastelessbloopers, it did have some rousing enter¬tainment and was lots of fun.For those tracksters who firmly believethat there is life after States and are not yetrunning on empty, Coach Ted Haydon willhold the annual Stagg Relays this comingweekend.Softball Playoffs Begin Thursdayas Ping-Pong Winds UpBv David GruenbaumSoftball playoffs start next Tuesday if theweather holds up. All ladder games must beplayed by Tuesday morning and the lastmini-tournaments will probably be held thisweekend.in other sports, Martich and Gallagher,Yuson and Nan, all of whom are in Snell willmeet in the women’s tennis finals.Banas and Desaulniers, the residencechampions, now face independnet champi¬ons Markson and Saldana in co-ed ping-pong. Haas of Lower Rickert, and Cavero ofHitchcock meet in men’s ping-pong resi¬dence finals, while Yoon meets Banas in theindependent championships. Softball Top Ten1. Mean Old Squirrels2. Med school ■3. Who Needs Sweaty4. See Your Food5. Chamberlain6. Feel Your Disease7. N.U.T.S.8. Ice Nine9. Greenwood10.Behavorial ScienceTeams to watch: Lower Rickert, We BeBad, Compton, Henderson.UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOSUPER SUMMER SPORTS COREArchery, basketball, floor hockey, gymnastics, racquetball,soccer, softball, swimming, table tennis, tennis, track for 8-13year olds.1 wo three-week sessionsJune23-July9 $150.00July 1 3-July 30 $160.00Sessions four times a week.Mon. thru Thurs. 9.00 a m to l 00 p.mSUPER SUMMER BASKETBALL CAMPFeaturing conditioning, individual skills, team play for12-16 year olds.one session onlyJune 22-July 9 $80.00Sessions four times a week:Mon. thru Thurs. 1:30 p m. to 3:00 p mFor reservation form:Write: Bartlett GymnasiumSuper Summer Sports Programs5640 S. University Ave.Chicago, IL 60637Or call: 753-4693Open to University of Chicago and Hyde Park Residents12 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, May 19, 1981By Mike AlperDevil’s Doorway (Anthony Mann,1950): One of Mann’s first Westerns, andone of the first to deal realistically withthe plight of the American Indian. RobertTaylor plays an Indian Civil War veterancaught in a clash of cultures. Tonight,Tuesday May 19 at 7:15 in Quantrell. Doc;$1.00.God’s Little Acre (Anthony Mann,1958): Erskine Caldwell’s novel of lustand money in the backwoods, turned intoan actor’s movie with an unusual mix ofactors: Robert Ryan. Aldo Ray, TinaLouise, Buddy Hackett, Jack Lord andRex Ingram. Tonight, Tuesday May 19 at8:45 in Quantrell. Doc; $1.00.The Palm Beach Story (Preston Sturges,1942): A perfect gem from the unrivalledmaster of Hollywood satire. Park Aventiebelle Claudette Colbert leaves her strug¬gling architect husband Joel McCrea insearch of good times. She thinks she’sfound them in the person of Rudy Vallee,who does a deft and incredibly funny paro¬dy of himself as a multimillionaire who wants to take care of her for ever andever. McCrea tails her down to Florida,but he’s soon entangled in the designs ofVallee’s nymphomaniacal sister MaryAstor. One of Sturges’ most light-heartedand endearing comedies. Tomorrow,Wednesday May 20 at 7 and 9:30 in LawSchool Auditorium. LSF; $2.00.Dante’s Inferno (Ken Russell, 1967,1967): Not that Dante, but Dante GabrielRossetti, whose life (which never struckme as particularly infernal) Russell de¬picts as a living hell. Again the emphasisis on the artist’s moral turpitude, setagainst the incongruous beauty of hiswork. Starring Oliver Reed. Tomorrow,Wednesday May 20 at 8 in Quantrell.FOTA/Doc; $1.00.The Red Shoes (Michael Powell andEmeric Pressburger, 1948): Half the pro¬fessional dancers in the world today willtell you that they entered the field ofdance because of this film. Despite thesyrupy excesses of its plot, it remains themost effective film about ballet (or anyother art) ever made. Moira Shearerplays a young dancer torn between the de¬mands of a career, as represented by im-pressario Anton Walbrook, and her desirefor a real life, as personified by her com¬poser fiancee Mariu Goring. The cinema¬tography by Jack Cardiff is ravishing.Thursday, May 21 at 7:15 in Quantrell.FOTA/Doc; $2.00.The Tales of Hoffman (Michael Powell andEmeric Pressburger, 1951): Offenbach’sopera of fantasy and sexual obsession,turned into an elegant if sometimes staticfilm. It could have used a somewhatlighter touch, but the film is still consis¬tently inventive and, at times, hypnotical¬ly beautifully. Starring Robert Rounse-ville and Moira Shearer. Thursday, May21 at 9:30 in Quantrell. FOTA/Doc; $2.00. RhetoricContinued from pagr 'cause he is a liberal Senator9 The closerwe move to the latter, the more our labelsbecome deductive rather than inductive.When this change occurs, voters begin toexperience the same type of anxiety that Ifelt. The minute you can be classified as aLiberal or Conservative, your individualpolitical decision-making ability is im¬paired. I felt that if I voted for Reagan, Iwould never be able to escape the controll¬ing affectations of being a “conservative.”I would be viewed in the light of the conser¬vative philosophy for the next four years.This seems to be the basic dilemma ofour political system and the rhetoric of pol¬itics. One’s vote, as well as all politicalactivity, is very much an expression ofindividual decisions on the issues. But,unfortunately, those decisions must be ex¬pressed in a rigid categorical way that isnot amenable to, and in fact discourages,individual thought. The participant isalways under pressure, either by the politi¬cians or the news media, to declare his af¬filiations and come under the auspice of aparticular political philosophy. I believethat the new, deductive nature of ourlabels — which makes them resemble un¬desirable, unremoveable tags — iscausing the anxiety over modern politicalactivity and making political expressionanything but an individual statement.Of course, some might reply that theproblem is not as bad as I make it out to be.and that one can always be a moderateDemocrat or a liberal Republican. 1 dis¬agree. Breaking down our large labels intosmaller ones does not necessarily facili¬tate individual expression. Much the oppo¬site: it encourages us to join groups thatmay be more akin to our beliefs, but these new groups are much less protean. Theyeach have their own philosophy, their ownrigid definition of what it means to be amoderate Democrat or a liberal Republi¬can, and these definitions confine individu¬al expression even further.Therefore, if American politics is evergoing to remove itself from its present dol¬drums, it will have to find a way to resolvethe conflict between individual expressionand the confining nature of the present-dayrhetoric of politics. When this day eventu¬ally comes, you will no longer have toworry about being a conservative in liber¬al garb or a liberal in conservative garb.Neal Cohen is a third-year student inthe College.Show us your campus identification for 20% savingson prescription eyewear for you and your immediatefamily. (Offer may not be combined with any other.)Come to the Eyewear Experts for quality, service andvalue!|SeiviceOptical|The Eyewear ExpertsOffices Located Throughout ChicagoConsult Your Yellow Pages ForOffices Open Nearest You.The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, May 19, 1981 — 13CALENDARTuesdayWomen’s Exercise Class: Meets 10:30 am, IdaNoyes dance room.Hillel: Students for Israel lunch and speaker, 12:00noon.Aikido Club: Meets 4:30 pm, Field House wrestl¬ing room.Kundalim Yoga: Meets 5-7 pm, Ida Noyes EastLounge.Lutheran Campus Ministry: Celebration of Eu¬charist at 5:30 pm, Pizza supper and discussion —“Gerard” Manley Hopkins and the Scope ofGrace” speaker Joseph Sittler. 6:00-7:00 pm, 5500S. Woodlawn.Hispanic cultural Society: Meets 7:00 pm. IdaNoyes.Slavic Forum: Prof. Gordon Todorovic — “TheProse of Dragoslav Mihailovic” 7:30 pm, IdaNoyes Library.Phys. Ed.: Free swimming instruction. 7:30 pm,Ida Noyes.University Feminist Org.: Women's Rap Group meets 8:00 pm, 3rd fllor of the Blue Gargoyle.Hillel: Israeli folkdancing, 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes 3rdfloor theatre.WednesdayCenter for Middle Eastern Studies: Lecture - “Ar¬cheology and Islam" 11:00 am, Oriental Institute.Commuter Co-op: Get-together in the CommuterLounge, 12:30 pm, Gates-Blake basement.Comm, on Genetics: "Chromosome Structure ofRibosomal RNA Genes in Yeast” speaker TimothyZamb, 12:30 pm, Cummings room 101.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: “The IslamicArchitectural Survey and Mamluk Jerusalem”speaker Dr. Michael Burgoyne, 3:00 pm, OrientalInst.Cog Com Colloquium: “What do visual Hallucina¬tions tell Us About the Brain?” speaker JackCowan, 4:00 pm, Beecher 102.Classics/Social Thought: “Classical Scholarshipand Biblical Scholarship in F.A. Wolf” speakerAnthony Grafton, 4:00 pm, Harper 130.Christian Science Org.: Meets 4:15 pm, Gates- Blake 428.Table Tennis: Meets 7:00-10:00 pm. Field House1st fl gym.Hunger Concern Group: Meets 7:00 pm, Ida Noyesroom 217.Badminton Club: Meets 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes gym¬nasium.Chicago Sounding ensemble: Directed by compos¬er-pianist George Flynn 7:30 pm. InternationalHouse auditorium.Hyde Park Al-Anon Group: Meets 8:00 pm, 1st Un¬itarian Church, 57th and Woodlawn, info call47110225.Science Fiction Club: Meets 8:00 pm. Ida Noyes.Country Dancers: Meets 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes. Be¬ginners welcome.ThursdayPerspectives: “Amniocentesis: Who is it For andWhat Can it Do?” guests Dr. Eugene Pergament,Anthony Amarose, Dr. Atef Moawad, and Dr.Allan Horwitz, 6:09 am, channel 7.Eastern Orthodox: Divine Liturgy at 8:00 am,Rockefeller Chapel. Women’s Exercise Class: Meets 10:30 am, IdaNoyes dance room.Episcopal Church Council: Noon Eucharist atBond Chapel.Italian Table: Meets at 12 noon in the Blue Gar¬goyle to speak Italian.La Table Francaise: Meets at 12 noon in the BlueGargoyle.Spartacus Youth League: Forum and discussion,12 noon, Mandel Hall.Advanced Genetics: "Gene Amplification DuringDevelopment of Drosophila Follicle Cells" speak¬er Allan Spradling, 2:30 pm. Cummings 101.Comm, on Virology: "Effect of Interferon onMouse Retroviruses” speaker Dr. Paula Pitha,4:00 pm, Cummings 1117.Aikido Club: Meets 4:00 pm. Field House wres¬tling room.Kundalini Yoga: Meets 5-7 pm, Ida Noyes EastLounge.Zen Meditation: Meets 6:30 pm, Ida Noyes.Ill. Central Hospital Ala-Teen Group: Meets 7:00pm, 5800 S. Stony, info call 471- 0225.Debating Society: Meets for practice at 7:00 pm.Meeting at 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes.marian realty,inc.mWAUORStudio and 1 BedroomApartments Available— Students Welcome —On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-5400OFFICE POSITION— OPEN —Requires excellent English, typing, andorganizational skills.Work for former professor at downtownlocation.Phone: 782-8967 SUNDAYBUFFETChicago's finestfrom 11:30 a.m. to 4 p.m.champagne served until 4 p.m.garden 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 HiltonfltheChartwellHouse4900 S. Lake Shore Drive288-5800 JLThe University of ChicagoSAILING CLUBcordially invites its current andprospective members to itsClub MeetingandAnnual ElectionsThursday, the twenty-first of Mayhalf-past sevento be held at theAlpha Delta Phi5747 S. University— refreshments to followthe meeting —TarSastkitchenThis week’s specialEgg Fu Yung,Egg Roll & Fried Rice 1654 E. 53rd955-2200CocktailsNand TropicalDrinks'served until 2:30 p.m. Tues.-Sat. eat in orcarry outOpen daily and Sunday 11 a m. to 1 a m.Closed Mondays. Lunch served Tuesdaythru Saturday 11 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.Ugly Duckling$13.50 per day 200 Free MilesBetween IC Tracks * * wm aoaaand Cornell 667-2800t4 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, May 19, 1981CLASSIFIED ADSCLASSIFIEDClassified advertising in the ChicagoMaroon is 75 cents per 30 characterline. Ads are not accepted over thephone, and they must be paid in advance. Submit all ads in person or bymail to The 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 Tues. papers.SPACENeed housing and don't know where tostart? Student Government offers ahousing list of off-campus housing!Three month subscription availabletor only $3 and it works. Call 753-3273for more information.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 3580.2 BR unfurn apt Nr Campus NewlyRemodeled Kitchen Bath $500 mo Calleves 241 7425.3 BR unfurn apt Nr Campus NewlyRemodeled Kitchen Bath $550 mo Calleves 241 74252 rooms avail in 6 bedroom house ofstudents. 2 blocks from Reg Summerand Fall Call 241 6171Top floor lovely Kenwood house 3rooms and bath kitchen privileges Occasional evening sitting with two olderboys. $250/mo. Available after June 15536 5776 evenings and weekends.2 BR unfurn apt avail Sept 1 55th andWoodlawn $400 mo call eves 241 7425Non smoking female grad student forown room in 4-br coed apt at55th/Cornell. Available June 15$110/mo + util 684-6533 eveningsSummer sublet June-Sept 3Vz rms kich& bath laundry in bldg Perfect for cpleor 1 prsn $232/mo incl util John 2888263SUMMER SUBLET 2 bdrm/liv rmbath $325/mo incl util fully turn nicebuilding 54 & Ellis Avail June 16-Sept30 Mike or Josh 363 6371QUIET GRAD stud, wanted for nice 3person apt near Co op and I.C. AvailJune 15 $153 util 667 2273.ANOTHER SUMMER SUBLET Greatlocation. 56th & University. Bdrmw/private bath in 3 bdrm apt$150/mo. Call Anne 643-2454SUBLET w/fall opt 5535 S Kenwoodstarting mid June 1 br and study large5 br apt 133/mo -f util 667 6673Summer sublet. 2 bedrooms 1 blockwest of Regenstein. 56th & Drexel $275mo. Call Mike or Ed about 6 pm947 0292FOR RENT House Beverly Shores Indon Lake 3 bedrooms pool table etc forJune July Aug reasonable 753-2740 or871 2392Hyde Pk nr UC Ige 4 rm apt tile sh bathfront & back porch adults also 2\i rmapt ?88 0718SUBLET Mid June to early Sept; 1 brIr, dr, porch, nr coop & campus, turn;rent neg Call 363 4534SUMMER SUBLET 1 bdrm apt at 54thand Woodlawn June 1 to Sept 15190/mo Call 288 2002 or 321 72651 bdrm apt. 4 rent 56th & Kenwood. 10min walk to U of C. turn, all util.,avail July 1, $300 493 036 1 7 9 pmSUMMER SUBLET large rm in 4bedroom apt furnished Close to campus and hospitals. Reasonable rent.Call Trace 684 09281 bdrm on Lake, near 1C and mini-rtfor July, Aug. (June if needed) RentNegotiable Call Mike am's 241 6060Summer sublet: Large furnished 2bdrm w/balcony; Harper and 54th$355/mo. Call 752 1194SUMMER SUBLET Furn. 1 BR in 3BR apt. $!75/mo. June 1 to Sept 30Call Alison 363 5734 or 288 IS3SSublet June 30 Sept 10 2 bedrm aptKenwood Ave. Nr. Hyde Park Blvd$311/mo. Call 667 1319Female roommate wanted to sharesunny 2 bdrm hi-rise apt. Begin 7-1 81.Near Lake, 1C buses Prefer gradMary 752 3277UNIV PK STUDIO Sublet from June15 to Aug. 31. $300/ Option to renew 9thfloor 324 0658. 779 1548Bright sunny one br in married stdhsg High front apt Beautiful shagcpts and drapes can stay! Pets OKAvail June $ 256/mo incl util 753 3414eveningsSummer sublet completely furnished(incl kitchen utensils and dishes) 2 br.Reasonable rent and elec avail June19 Sept 2 Cal) Janet 753 8374 (days)752 8653 (eves) SUBLET BARGAIN 2 bdrms in Ighouse. 56th & Kenwood. 1 masterbdrm; $130 ea. June thru Sept.955 4967, 955 1542.SPACE WANTED1 BR apt w/kitchen for 1981-82 schoolyear. Also sublet for summer. Call493-9547 late pm.EXPERIENCED HOUSESITTER canprovide excel, care-home, pets, plants,yard and mail this summer, Respnsb!grad stud 493 0686 after 7 p.m.WNTD: APT. RM w/bath, no kitch;furn or unfurn, Betw 53rd/59th. sizenoobject. Price is; 753 3769 x202, Jon.For July or August; House to rent Indiana/Michigan Share LakeMichigan. Also occasional weekendJune September call 753 2108 day955 9572 evening ask for Marc.WANTED 1 br sum sublet furn begJune. Mike 643-0135 + leave message.Parent 8, Child looking for inexpensivequarters: Cooperative and othercreative arrangements considers. Experienced housesitter. Highly recommended. 667 8235 P.M.PEOPLE WANTEDPaid subjects needed for experimentson memory, perception and languageprocessing. Research conducted bystudents and faculty in the Committeeon Cognition and Communication,Department of Behavioral Sciences.Phone 753 4718CHILDREN'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.PART TIME OFFICE HELP, typingetc. Some work in campus office, someat home. Hours variable, about 15/wk.About S5/hr. 842-5169 evenings.STUDENTS work part time at cleaning, painting, carpentry, etc. 493-9108Earn $30 My affectionate cat needs agood home for 10 days. 6/10-6/19 nochildren please. Call 7 1849 day or288 7260 at ter 9 pmSummer work in northern Wisconsinresort area. Companion for elderlyman Cooking, light-housekeeping,and driving. Call 268 3847.Applications are now being acceptedfor Hyde Park Preschool's SummerSession. June 15th through Aug. 21.Events include weekly dance, instructional gym and swim, fieldtrips, picnics, crafts, outdoor play andmore Children 2'/j thru 7. For info,call 667 7269Need person for life cleaning and laundry twice a week Good pay for about 7hrs. work per week. Call Andrea288 5248FOR SALEBIG RUMMAGE AND BAKE SALESt. Paul 8. Redeemer Church 50th &Dorchester Sat May 23rd 10-4.Clavichord, 5 octave. $750 Also 1966Encyclopedia Brittanica, complete(with bookcase) $75. 241 6373Viola for sale $850 Call 684 0565APARTMENT SALE Sat May 23.10 3 1 322 E Hyde Park Blvd *3 Desk,mattress, dining rm table moreSERVICESTYPIST Disseration quality. Helpwith grammar,, language as needed.Fee depending,on manuscript. IBMSelectric. Judith 955 4417.ARTWORK Posters, illustration, lettering, etc Noel Yovovich 493 2399TYPIST High quality work byfreelance writer Competitively priced, prompt; minor editing with outcharge IBM Correcting Selectric.After 6pm 338 3800 or 472 2415.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 today 248 1478IVORY TOWER HOME SERVICESHire a student to clean your apt.,paint, plaster or whatever 493-9108after 4TYPIST Exp Turabtan PhD Masters,Term Papers. Rough drafts 924 1152.Full time babysitter. Exp. loveschildren Stimul env 667 5750.Will do typing 821 0940Childcare at my home all week daysoccas weekends Please call 493 8290 Full time infant care available in myhome near UC Call Judy 684 2820Typist: High quality work byfreelance writer. Competitively priced Prompt minor editing withoutcharge IBM Correcting Selectric.472 2415 or 338 3800EXPERIENCED HOUSESITTERSprovide excel. 24 hr. care home yardpets plants mail. 2 responsible gradstudents 493 0686 after 7 pm.TYPING Legal secretary will typepapers on correctable IBM Selectric.Good rates Call Linda 955-1824 from5:00 pm 10:00 pm.ENGLISH AS A SECONDLANGUAGE Professional tutoring,editing. SlO/hour. Call Warren 752 9815PERSONALS GRAD TICKETSDesperatly need 2 extra tickets WillPay 829 3808BLACKFRIARSElections for 81 82 board will be heldThurs May 21 8 30 Ida NoyesMemorial Lounge. Be there aloha PSalso Pippin results Maybe CSCAREER SEMINAR"Management Training Program"The training programs of Leo Burnett,Arthur Anderson and Harris Bank willbe represented on Wednesday May 20,12:00 North Lounge, Reynolds ClubGRAD. TIX WRITERS READING ARE YOU HYPER?Babe, smile, someone cares. TwirpAthletic, religious Jewish guy wouldlove to meet athletic religious Jewishgirl who hates fat likes sun tans andlistens to Jim Morrison Call 493 0407ask for Dale. Maybe we could workout?126, And then some. 027. HELP! Tix needed tor UC ceremony.Offering CASH Call 241 6171 between5 7 pm Ask for JeremyWERSPIELTTENNIS?Tennis playing friends for young Ger¬man guest Our guest is 15 yr old girlspending 2 wks in Chicago June 8 20Parents call 955 7087 7 9 am or 7 10 pmLOST AND FOUND LISTEN OR DIE!FOUND. Male black on Quads 5/10Call 493 7621 or 241 6596.WANTEDWanted 2 grad, tickets 2nd sessionJune 12 Friday 753 3896 or 753 3800RIDESI am driving to Washington DC on May20 or 21 and can take up to 3 riders toshare driving and gas Call 493T554leave message.NEEDATYPIST?Excellent work done in my home.Reasonable rates Tel: 536-7167 or548 0663MOVINGStudent with Pickup Truck can moveyour stuff FAST and CHEAP No jobtoo small! Call Peter at. 955-1824 10am 10 pm.SYRACUSERIDERS WANTED-I'm going toSYRACUSE, NY at the end of thequarter. Date and route flexible. CallIra Joffman at 955 5280.BIRD BOOKThe University of Chicago Birdwatching Society has placed a birdwatching Notebook in the ReynoldsClub Box Office. This book may be used to record any sightings. (Nopigeons except passengers).SALES-ADVERTISINGSales & Sales Management. Brilliantcareer opportunity with growing coInternal promotions. Excellent training program Guaranteed income 4-high Comm Offices in IL, IN, Wl & AZA Burke Call collect 312 864 4100PASSPORT PHOTOSPassport Photos while you wait atModel Camera. 1342 E. 55th stTINKERBELLEWill be at Peter Pan will you? Ticketson sale Rm 210 Ida Noyes Hall for May20 opening night. 753-3591PEER PRESSURE *RADIO Tune in this Wednesday night at 11:00pm for the Ralph Records RadioSpecial on WHPK FM 88.3 the best inthe new muzik. Discreet, of courseMOVE TO BOSTON?Want to share a Rental Truck, midJune Call LAH 548-0244 evesDRIVER WANTEDDriver wanted to drive car to SanDiego AS SOON AS POSSIBLE Contact Jean at 752 1203 9am 4pmORIENTALCARPETSI have just received another shipmentof choice handknotted carpets consistmg 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 wel cut.Prices are very reasonable for the ex¬cellent quality. Call David Bradley241 7163 or 643 86)3.GRAD. TICKETSNeed 2 tickets. Will pay more Callevenings 363 726510SPEED BICYCLEWANTEDII Tchaikovsky the news All thes beens, could have beens, and yetbe s in progressive pop Fridays10 5:00 pm on WHPK 88 3 fm Inmation for the ear Now sponsoredWax Trax. SUMMER JOBSFULL TIMEPLENTY OF WORK'MvVJt(3121 346-1792THE MAROONis seeking applicants tor Business Manager.Advertising Manager and ProductionManager tor the 1UH1-B2 school year.Interested parties please call 753-2262 andask for Chris or Wanda. Chicago poets Art Lange andElizabeth Eddy read their poems at 8PM Tonight in Reynolds Club. FREEUC HOTLINE 753-1777Think life in Hyde Park is dull? Wantto know what is going on? Call Hotline,open 7 days a week from 7 00 pm to7 00am.COFFEEHOUSEThurs May 21 at Blue Gargoyle. 5655S. Univ. Ave 9:00 and 10:30 DavidKay, rock'n roll singer 9:45 and 11:15,Samhradh Music and Anita Salzman,Irish music Food and Bev 50* coverBEVERLY HILLSBYOWNER We need subjects who are nervous oranxious to participate in a drugpreference study We pay up to $195Only commonly prescribed, nonexperimental drugs are used. For further information please call 947-6248between 10 am and Non weekdays except Wednesday.ARE YOU BETWEEN40AND55YR.OF AGE?Move right in to this charming 4 bdrmhome in Beverly Hills Historic DistricFrpl. fm dining rm enclosed porchfenced yard newly decorated new gasfurnace and roof low 50's Call 779-3354. We need subjects in this category toparticipate in a drug preference studyWe pay up to $195 Only commonlyprescribed non experimental drugsare used For further informationplease call 947 6248. between 10 andNoon weekdays except Wednesday.POSTLIBRiSDavid Gruenbaum and FriendsOriginals Friday 9 30 pm Ida NoyesFree CoffeeJ need a used 10 speed bicycle in good-nodition Call Dan 667 7677ART HISTORY GRADSTUDENTNEWARTEXAMINER WRITERIf you have Foucault Books you borrowed via MB, could you call me ordrop them off at the Maroon Office?Soon’ LJC 643 6246PETER PANTickets on sale at SAO, rm 210 IdaNoyes Hall 753 3591 SALE DATES 5/20 thru 5/23U.S.D.A.SHORT RIBSOF BEEF 49lb.1U.O.U'./A. 4^4%SPARE RIBS 1 ,U.S.D.A.CERTIFIED RED LABELPOTATOCHIPS 8 oz. BoxHUNTSKETCHUP 32 .z JarKRAFTBAR B QUESAUCEKRAFTMIRACLEWHIP 898969cc1 49FRESHSTRAW¬BERRIES PintNABISCOCHIPS AHOYCOOKIES i6 .z 49491FINER FOODSSERVING53rd PRAIRIE SHORESKIMBARK PLAZA 2911 VERNONWhere You Are A Stranger But Once!The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, May 19, 1981 — 15Festival of the ArtsMajor Activities BoardStudent Government Activities Committeepresents4 HIU( 1141111 illHAY 24 a day-lcrt^ cclebraticr...beginning with brunch and ending withA PARIT?IM PLAYDAYTENNIS TOURNAMENT3-LEG RACETUG-OF-WARVOLLEYBALLAND MORE...CARNIVALRIDE FeaturingHlJICHfEilwiththe JUMP in the SADDLE BANDCHICAGO DIAMONDSBO DIDDLEYNEW ERA REGGAE BANDBLUEGRASS BAND (TBA)NEW YORK NEW WA VE BAND(TBA)44t§IC & DANCINCAll-you-can-eatBRUNCHARTS &CRAFTSFAIRMIMEMAGIC1 pm to MidnightHutch CourtRainPlans:IM Events as weather permitsHUTCHFEST in Mandel HallARTS & CRAFTS in Reynolds Club Lounge BOOTHS•Posters•T-shirts•Ethnic Foods