The Chicago MaroonVolume 91, No. 3 The University of Chicago ©Copyright 1981 The Chicago Maroon Friday July 17, 1981Newhouse firm on 51st St. border for 24thBy Chris IsidoreState Senator Richard Newhouse (D-24)said yesterday that he has “philosophical”objections to having his district extendedabove 51st Street.His statement was in response to other Hyde Park independents’ proposals of a 24thdistrict that would include sections of WestHyde Park and Kenwood which are now in¬cluded in the 22nd district. If Newhousestands by his position, it is likely to be theend of those proposals.Independent Alan Dobry, the DemocraticConstruction of the New Court Theatre has been completed, all except forsome minor painting, lighting and furniture installation. The opening isplanned for this fall. See story on page 2Push for homes on 53rd St.By Robert DeckerThe city’s housing department has recom¬mended that a vacant lot at 53rd St. andKimbark Ave., being offered for sale by theBoard of Education, be re-zoned to allow theconstruction of townhouses.The recommendation was given to theHyde Park Kenwood Community Conserva¬tion Council (CCC) at the group’s Wednes¬day night meeting. The CCC makes recom¬mendations to the city’s Department ofUrban Renewal and the City Council on re¬zoning actions.The CCC also approved Wednesday a planto construct a national headquarters build¬ing for the Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority onthe vacant northwest corner of 57th St. andStony Island Ave. An alternative proposalby a Mount Prospect firm to build a medicaloffice building on the site was rejected.Bob Foster, of the housing department,told the CCC Wednesday night that there“was not the market” for a commercial de¬velopment on the 53rd St. site, according tothe results of a survey of the area which hesaid was “not detailed.”The 1.62 acre site proposed for sale isabout one-sixth of the block, half of which isoccupied by the grounds of the Murray Ele¬mentary School. The lot would be sold to thecity by the Board of Education following anappraisal. The Board wants to sell the prop¬erty to raise money for the financially trou¬bled school system.If the city’s recommendations are fol¬lowed, the property will be zoned “low-den¬sity residential,” which, provides for 20dwelling units per acre. The city also recom¬mended that an abandoned building on theeast side of Kimbark adjacent to the proper¬ty be rehabilitated.Foster said “market-rate housing” wasrecommended and suggested that the de¬sign might be in a courtyard “rather thanhaving (the apartments) facing McDon¬alds.” Foster said school officials did notfavor re-zoning the area for “strictly com¬mercial use.”Michael Murphy, director of the SouthEast Chicago Commission (SECC), was notpresent Wednesday night but said the CCCshould not make a decision before it hasmore facts. Murphy said the Chicago ParkDistrict had informed SECC that it does nothave the funds to construct a field house onthe site but that “there were other possibili¬ties” for the land’s use. At the CCC’s Maymeeting Murphy had suggested that the sitebe considered for construction of a recrea¬ tional facility to replace the now defunctHyde Park branch of the YMCA.“No one’s going to buy that land if its of¬fered for sale,” said Murphy, and althoughthe SECC was asked by the CCC to investi¬gate the site’s development, no one hascome forward with any specific proposal.The 57th St. and Stony Island Ave. site wasrecommended for the Alpha Kappa Alphabuilding after the CCC heard testimonyfrom Associated Hospital Management,Inc., a Mt. Prospect firm which managesthe Illinois Central Community Hospital andTabernacle Hospital. Officers of the firmwere reluctant to disclose details of thefirm’s assets and names of clients to theCCC meeting, but said the firm’s assetswere in excess of $250,000. committeeman for the fifth ward, drew upthe latest proposal, saying that incumbentstate representative Barbara Flynn Currie(D-24) needed the areas north of 51st streetin order to win future races. Newhouse saidhe favors a 24th district that extends farthersouth than the present district goes.The West Hyde Park and Kenwood pre¬cincts sought by Dobry and Currie have ahistory of voting for independent candi¬dates, and a much higher concentration ofwhite voters than the area to the south of thecurrent district. Currie, a white legislator,has always run behind black independentcandidates in the south side precincts out¬side of the predominately white HydePark.Newhouse said he objected to the plan be¬cause he firmly believes that independentsneed to extend their districts into the areasof the south side where they had not tried towin yet. “Any plan for redistricting shouldhave a philosophy and a goal,” he said. “Myphilosophy is that independents and liberalsneed to be aggressive and need to expandthe area over which they have influence. Iam opposed to the liberal independent re¬treat. We need to assert ourselves, ratherthan rolling back and saying how weak weare in other areas. I'm distressed by that.“Personally, I would be quite happy tohave my district extend up to Kenwood. I re¬presented that area before the last redis¬tricting (10 years ago>, and I have consider¬able support there. But this is not a personalmatter; it is a philosophical matter,” New¬house said. “The evidence is clear that thereis a receptive audience (for independents)all over the south side.”Newhouse believes that Currie could winin a district that includes Woodlawn andother areas south of Hyde Park. “The fact isthat people in this district will vote for peo¬ple who do the job,” he said.Dobry does not think that Currie could winin the district proposed by Newhouse. “It’spossible,” he said, “but exceedingly unlike¬ly.”The redistricting is required by law afterthe decennial census in order to adjust forshifts in populations. This year’s redistrict¬ing is further complicated by the fact that avoter referendum last year required that each legislative district, which had pre¬viously elected three at-large state repre¬sentatives, be divided in half, and that onlyone representative be elected from eachnew district.Carol Mosely Braun, a black independentwho is the other Democratic representativefrom the present 24th District, has alwaysrun better than Currie in both the primariesand the general elections. Braun has stoodby Newhouse’s position that the new districtmust not extend north past 51st street.Under Braun’s proposal, the districtwould go north to 51st street, west to CottageGrove, south to 87th street, and east to thelake. It would be divided down the middleroughly along Stony Island ave., with theeastern half including area in Hyde Parkand South Shore already included in the 24thdistrict. The western half of the new districtwould include much of the neighborhood ofWoodlawn, which is predominately blackand has never had an independent state rep¬resentative.The Dobry plan would extend the westernhalf north to include more of Hyde Park andKenwood, and leave out a good portion of thesouthern half of Braun’s western district,where independent candidates are more un¬tried. Part of the problem for the indepen¬dents is that Currie will likely have to run inthe western district because she lives westof Braun. Braun has offered to run in thewestern district though, if Currie is willingto accept the 51st street boundary on thenorth.Dobry’s proposal to extend the districtpast 51st street has brought a recent attackfrom Larry Bullock, the black state repre¬sentative in the 22nd district. Bullock wasangered because he felt he should have beenconsulted on any plan to extend the 24th dis¬trict into what is now his district. He alsosaid that the Dobry plan is an example of“racial gerrymandering,” and was an at¬tempt to give white voters the greatest poss¬ible strength. He denied that he had calledthe plan “racist,” as he was quoted in alocal newspaper last week.Dobry said that his plan was only trying toinsure greatest representation for indepen-Continued on page sixHyde Park escapes: skates to Lear jetsBy Gene ScaliaHyde Park is a sheltered neighborhoodany time of the year* and in the summer itcan prove downright imprisoning. But justbeyond Cobb, Reg and Medici lie Chicagoand Lake Michigan, and a multitude of ex¬citing summertime escapes. During thenext few weeks we’ll offer suggestions forall sorts of escapes, all over the city, allwithin reach of Hyde Park. This week we’llsuggest several ways, some simple, othersextravagent, to break out of Hyde Park.If you’re feeling nostalgic (for the 50s or.70s) you might try eight wheeling it out ofHyde Park, on roller skates from theSpokesman, at 53rd and Hyde Park Blvd.You can rent leather high-top roller skateswith urethane wheels for $4 for the firsttwo hors, $1.25 each hour thereafter; $8.50from 10 a.m.-7 p.m.; and $13.50 for 24hours. Or you can head out on two wheelsby renting a 3 speed from the Spokesman,$2.75 an hour, $17.50 daily, and $23.50 for 24hours. Skates and bikes require a depositof $25 and a valuable ID.To put greater distance between your¬self and the Quads, why not rent a car fromBudget-Rent-a-Car at 55th and Lake Park,phone 493-7900. $19.95 will get you a smallcar for a day, and 100 free miles; each milethereafter costs 20 cents.Or, if you’d like somene else to do thedriving, there’s always the CTA. On Sun¬days the nallorfs most expensive and ex¬ pansive urban transit line will take you allover the city and back again on a $1.40 Sun¬day Supertransfer. For the same fee youcan hop onto the Culture Bus. The Bus,which may be caught at the Museum ofScience and Industry every 20 minutes be-,tween 11:35 and 5:35p.m. Sundays and Hol¬idays, stops at the Oriental Institute, theDuSable Museum of African Art, SheddAquarium, Adler Planetarium, the SmartGallery, and the Art Institute.But maybe crowded, cramped CTAbuses and trains irritate you. Well, you canalways rent a train. Given several weeksadvance notice, the CTA will rent trains onthe weekend, or after rush hours duringthe week. The cost depends upon thenumber of cars on the train and thenumber of hours you want for it; averagecosts run about $700. For more informationand reservations, call the CTA at664-7200.Maybe you’d like to go out in style. For$15 a half hour, you can surreptitiouslyglide along the streets of downtown Chica¬go in an elegant horse-drawn carriage.The carriages, which run from 6:30 p.m. to1 a m. seven days a week, may be hailed infront of the Hancock building on Chestnut.Or, you may make reservations by callingCoach-House Livery at 951-9520.Still feel inert? Then make that greatescape by air or sea. Midwest Yachts, at10502 S. Longwood, rents 43-57 foot yachts for $100-$200 an hour. You may cruise aslong as you’d like, to “anywhere in theworld”. Call Midwest Yachts at 239-7235.Or, you can charter a seven-seat Lear 24jet from Direct Airways, Inc. Direct Air¬ways, a national outfit that primarilyserves businessmen and entertainers, willfly you from anywhere to anywhere —“anything you want as long as you can payfor it.” You can fly from Palwaukee Air¬port in Palatine to Miami, catch ninehours’ sunshine, and return to Palwaukee;all for as low as $7320.20. Champagne andcaviar are extra. You may call Direct Air¬ways (toll free, of course) at 800-257-9424.NewsbriefsTheater finishedahead of scheduleThe New Court Theatre, located at the5500 block of Ellis Ave., has been completedahead of schedule and has remained withinbudget, Harold Heilman, director of univer¬sity architecture said Monday.Heilman said that except for moving somefurniture and attending to minor paintingand lighting the New Theater is ready forthe rehearsals that will begin in September.He also reported on the financial status ofthe theater, stating that its $1.65 million costwas “within budget.”Heilman said progress with constructionhas been good, and there have been no sub¬stantive modifications or problems since thegroundbreaking over a year ago.The 250-seat auditorium, to be called “TheNew Court Theatre,” also has a lobby, aAt Budgetyou’re^ANNOUNCINGTHE RE-OPENINGOf Our Office At5508 S. Lake Park493-7900Great Cars, Great Trucks,Great Rates andGreat Service forHyde Park & theUniv. of ChicagoCompactsV.W. Rabbits *19.95IntermediatesFairmonts-ZephyrsConcords *24.95Full SizeMarquis *29.95100 FREE MILES493-7900Budget!rentacarA Budget Svstem licensee Sears Renta CarSEARS ROE8UCK AND CO©1979 Budget Rent a Car Corporation, Chicago, ILUse your Sears credit card at authorized distributioncenters in most Budget offices Check local office forrental requirements Call 493-1774 scene shop, and dressing rooms. The admin¬istrative offices however, will remain attheir present location in the ReynoldsClub.Judy Fink, theater manager, said October28 will be the grand opening and will featureThe Seagull by Anton Chekov. While it isstill being planned, she said that the firstweek will consist of several special show¬ings including a benefit performance on Sat¬urday, October 31.The subscription season will begin No¬vember 5 and brochures are to be sent outnext month. Further information about thefall season is available on the back of theCourt Theatre’s summer program.—Jeffrey FriedmanMen’s Crew winssummer upsetThe University of Chicago Men’s Crewposted important upset victories as theytraveled to Evansville, Indiana last Satur¬day and Sunday for the Welborn/Coca-ColaRowing Regatta. The first day of competi¬tion belonged to the Maroon eight who start¬ed the day by beating two boats from the De¬troit Boat Club in the 1000 meter event andthen went on to top the Purdue crew as wellas the Detroit boats in winning the 1500meter race in the afternoon. Chicago’sshowing against the Detroit eight was sur¬prising since three Chicago oarsmen, underthe auspices of the Lincoln Park Boat Clubhad rowed in an eight man shell the previousweekend at Detroit and had been soundlydefeated by this same Detroit team. TheMaroon victory over Purdue was no lessthan sensational since this was the crewwhich won the prestigious Midwest Sprintsin Madison Wisconsin this spring.Travel, lack of sleep and temperaturesYoung Designs byELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERS1620 E. 53rd 288-2900marian realty,inc.mREALTORStudio and 1 BedroomApartments Available— Students Welcome —On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornel!684-5400STANLEY H. KAPLANFor Over 42 Years The Standard otExcellence in Test PreparationCPA • GMAT • LSAT • GRESAT • MCAT • ACTFLEX . NATIONAL MEOlCAL BOARDS . ECFMGNURSING BOARDS . TOEFL . VQEGB€ PSVCH . GBf ElO • OAT . PCAT • OCAt . VATMAT ■ SAT ACMVS • NATIONAL OENTAL BOARDSFOOlATRT BOARDSFlexible Programs and HoursVisit Any Gsrtsi Anfl Sm Fo»'HTty Man* Tr*OmmmmTEST PREPARATIONSPECIALISTS SINCEU SPu**o R*coToronto Ctn#<J4 A ZurichSwiUVlsm)CHICAGO CENTER6216 N Cl•mO«*go 00000(3121 704-0101S w SuburbanUS Li Gfny RotUSwf 201L* Gr«nQ« HlincxS 00024(312) 302 0040•north i n * suburban474 Central A*a/uPO«' M«ll L4w«lH^Niand Paffc 00035(312)43*4440•*Of *U COU*»#S NHUlUixantmg Exftm* mFor AfcjU Ot* r MOUTS*0€ N V STATE CALL SPRING. SUMMERFALL INTENSIVESCOURSES STARTINGTHIS monthSummertime LSAT, GMAT, GRENEXT MONTHMCAT...LSAT, GMAT...GRE,..SAT,..OAT. ACTCoufM« Consumiy UpdAMdC«nM> $•* StuO,m TTiar K> May? US Om « N»cj«jtoll FREE *00 223 I m approaching 100° took their toll on the U.C.crew in the second day of rowing. The morn¬ing event was a 1500 meter race in which thedistance at the finish between the first andthird place shells was less than one length.Chicago fell to second behind Purdue andahead of the Detroit crews. Two equallyclose races in the afternoon, back to back1000 meter and 500 meter events, each foundChicago in third at the flag behind Purdueand Detroit “A”.In addition to having a morale bolsteringeffect, the crew benefited from the weekendby gaining valuable racing experience.Four members of this team, all novices, willbe returning to U. of C. for the fall season:bowman Bruce Lifka and starboard oars¬man Clay Belcher of GSB, port oarsman JonPritchett, PhD candidate in Economics, andcoxswain Myer Blank of the College.Upcoming events for the Maroon crew in¬clude the Canadian Henley in early Augustand the Head of the Charles in Boston inearly October. All interested U. of C. men(regardless of rowing experience) areurged to contact a club officer: ClayBelcher, 493-7132; Bruce Lifka, 324-1406.Walk for DuSableThe DuSable Museum of African Ameri¬can History will be conducting a walk-a-thonbeginning this Sunday at 8 a.m. from Pio¬neer Ct. at the corner of Michigan Ave. andWacker Dr. The walk will feature stops atlandmarks of significance for local blackhistory such as the Paul L. Dunbar HighSchool and the Metropolitan CommunityChurch and will terminate at the museum.Located in Washington Park off of CottageGrove Ave. at 740 E. 56th St., the DuSableMuseum has collections of African art aswell as exhibits on blqck history in the Unit¬ed States. It is now featuring a retrospectiveof the paintings and watercolors of CharlesC. Dawson, the first such exhibit in Chicagoin 40 years.The museum is open daily from 9 a.m. to 5EAT CHEAP!!For $10 the Reynolds Club is offering over$200 in savings at South Side Restaurants -CHANCES R one free dinner with one paidTHE ORIGINAL PANCAKE HOUSE one free dinner with one paidTHE MEDICI free milkshake with $3 purchaseMALLORY'S one free entree with one paidMORRY'S DELI three free orders of fries with three sandwichesKENTUCKY FRIED CHICKEN free 2-pc snack with one paidPLUS discounts at: Popeyes, Sauer’s,Governor’s Table, Nicky’s Pizza, SeaFruit, Mellow Yellow, Court Houseand many, many more...ALSO (will it never stop) discountsat these stores - A&P, Co-op, Mr.G,Jesselson’s Fish and Sea FoodHouse and more.at the REYNOLDS CLUB BOX OFFICE -open 10:30 to 8«30 weekdays12:00 to 4:30 Sat & SunMost offers expire Dec. 31.1981 some prior to that date.p.m. and on weekends from noon to 5 p.m.Further information about the walk-a-thoncan be obtained from the museum at947-0600.The first annual DuSable Walk-a-thon,held two years agoServices forFlorence GoldwasserFlorence Goldwasser, a long-time resi¬dent of Hyde Park, died July 11 in BillingsHospital. Mrs. Goldwasser, who was gra¬duated from The University of Chicago, wasthe Administrator of the ComprehensiveSickle Cell Center, at Billings Hospital. Shewas a member of the Board of the Renais¬sance Society, a former member of theBoard of the Hyde Park Coop, and was ac¬tive in amateur faculty productions at theUniversity. Mrs. Goldwasser is survived byher husband, Professor Eugene Gold¬wasser, three sons, Thomas, Matthew, andJames, four grandchildren, and a brother,Steven Cohen. Memorial services will beheld in Bond Chapel, Thursday, July 23 at3:00 o’clock.CorrectionIn the last issue of the Maroon, an article onfinancial aid stated that loan recipientswould be able to receive their first quarterdisbursement if the loan note was signedafter October 1. Loan recipients must actu¬ally have their notes signed before October1. The Maroon regrets the error.2—The Chicago Maroon—Friday July 17, 1981LetterStop deportationTo the Editor,The Reagan administration, in order to in¬augurate an open rapprochement with theinternationally denounced regime in SouthAfrica, is apparently attempting to silencecriticism of its unpopular foreign policy in¬itiatives by the deportation of articulatepolitical opponents.In particular, the US government,through the Immigration and Naturaliza¬tion Service, is trying to deport DennisBrutus, tenured Professor of English atNorthwestern University, a published poetand lifelong activist against the white dicta¬torship in the largely black nation of SouthAfrica.Prof. Brutus is well known abroad andthroughout the United States: he has spokencoast to coast, from Berkeley to Columbia.He’s known on a first name basis by peopleas varied as Hanna Gray, CongressmanHarold Washington and Studs Terkel. When¬ever he speaks, he commands admirationand respect.Prof. Brutus has been a direct victim ofthe South African regime: he has borne wit¬ness for his beliefs in his own flesh, havingbeen imprisoned on Robbin Island, TheSouth African penal colony, and tortured bythe South African secret police. In one of hisseveral escape attempts, he was even shot.Although he speaks and writes movingly ofhis experiences in prison and exile, he doesnot play up his victimization or*disclose anymorbidity. His poems in Letters to Marthaand Other Poems describe the human expe¬rience of his prison stay prior this finalescape, and afterward, his flight and exile.His poetry and activism have earned himinternational recognition. Prof. Brutus hasentries in a variety of reference works:Who’s Who In America; International Who’sWho; American Dictionary of Scholars;Dictionary of International Biography;Funk and Wagnall’s Encyclopedia, Vol. I,“African Literature”; and the Encyclope¬dia Britannica.Dennis is one of the most unassumingly brilliant men I’ve ever met. His diction isexquisite, the man is a delight to hear. Andhis speaking always appeals to both theouter and the inner ear, the eye of the mindin the heart. More than offering a negativecritique of apartheid and other forms of so¬cial injustice and public danger like Ameri¬can military intervention in El Salvador ornuclear power, Dennis insinuates a hope formankind and a committment, notwithstand¬ing any personal consequences, to the wel¬fare of humanity and the particular well¬being of the down-trodden and oppressed,the wretched of the earth.Dennis has spoken repeatedly at the Uni¬versity of Chicago, one especially memora¬ble occasion was February 25, 1978 when hedebated the South African consul at Interna¬tional House before a packed audience of atleast 175 people (75 or more were turnedaway at the door). Dennis patiently exposedthe lies and misrepresentations of theyoung, suave, handsome representative ofthe white regime. His presentation, givenbefore an overwhelmingly white audience ofUniversity people, was devastating. He wonthe debate unequivocally, walking out to astanding ovation sustained for several min¬utes. Applause thundered in what was other¬wise stony silence. When the consul, whodroned on effortlessly and uselessly, wasdone he received only isolated perfunctoryapplause.The attempt to deport Prof. Brutus, an ob¬viously productive scholar, a man of unim¬peachable character and undeniable hu¬manity, is a grave offense against hishuman rights and Our political liberties.Dennis joins the long list of the victims ofgovernment harassment: Mexicans, Hai¬tians, Iranians, Salvadoreans. . . His prose¬cution on grounds of specious legal techni¬calities after ten years of residence amountsto a politically inspired persecution. Inorder to surreptitiously initiate an over¬whelmingly unpopular policy vis a vis South.Africa, the Reagan administration is takingmeasures to suppress dissent. Any honestopponent of this policy is a potential targetfor harassment.Anyone concerned is encouraged to send letters oi protest, petitions, or mailgrams toMr. Lloyd G. Bishop, Acting Director, De¬partment of Justice, Immigration and Natu¬ralization Section, 219 S. Dearborn, Chicago,II 60604 (312-353-7300). Copies might be sentto the Dennis Brutus Defense Committee,2730 Hampton Parkway, Apartment B-2,Evanston, II 60201 (312-328-5935). Any assis¬tance, even a phone call, would be appre¬ciated.In closing, I would like to quote an excerptfrom the assessment of Professor Brutusfrom the last edition of the Encyclopedia Britannica, prepared under the auspices ofthe University of Chicago:BRUTUS, DENNIS . . . poet, manyof whose works centre on his suffer¬ings and those of his fellow blacks inSouth Africa; his chief concern, how¬ever, is to preserve human sensitivityin a world of brutality.Hugh WilsonNew and RebuiltTypewriters,Calculators,Dictators, AddersCasioHewlett PackardTexas InstrumentCanonSharpElectronic Watches REPAIRSPECIALISTSon IBM, SCM,Olympia, etc.FREE repairestimates; repairsby factory-trainedtechnician.RENTALSavailable withU.ofC.I.D.U. of Chicago BookstoreTypewriter & Calculator Department970 E. 58th 2nd Floor753-3303lwhat havewe gotthat theyhaven’t got? Buddy Guy ★Magazine Stone CrazyMurder, Magic & the WeatherVan Halen *4- Fair Warning ^Echo & the Bunnymen Heaven Up HereDavid Johansen 4 Here Comes the NightMiles Davis 4 * The Man with the HornChick Corea 4Igo Pagorelich 4Beethoven(Karajan) Three QuartetsChopin RecitalNine Symphonies J $6.75*** $7.75* $23.75MWIX.%stoneBasement • Reynolds ClubMon—Fri: 10 A.M.-6 P.M. Sat: 10 A.M.-5 P.M. +4<The Chicago Maroon--Friday July 17, 1981—3Endless Lovedirected by Franco Zeffirellistarring Brooke Shields and Martin Hewittby Richard MartinChicago is this country's most provincialcity. At least that appears to be the opinionof Hollywood film distributors. While NewYork, Los Angeles, and Seattle are consi¬dered ideal testing grounds for new releasesand movies-in-the-making, Chicago film-goers apparently aren't film connoisseurs.Indeed, movies such as My Bodyguard andThe Blues Brothers which were filmed herewere top grossers in the Windy City. Chica¬goans flocked to the cinemas to catch a cou¬ple of minutes of Michigan Ave., the El, ortheir favorite alley, scattered among anhour and a half of movie mediocrity.Endless Love, a new film by directorFranco Zeffirelli and starring BrookeShields, presents Hyde Parkers with a rareopportunity to vicariously wallow in theirown brand of provincialism. Filmed partlyin Hyde Park late last summer, EndlessLove was recently screened by many HydeParkers, courtesy of Universal Studios. Butthe tree admission plus a personal appear¬ance of the film's leading man, MartinHewitt, did little to raise this film above thecategory of forgetful films for which it isdestined.Adapted from Scott Spencer's bestsellingnovel, Endless Love is the saga of a sexuallyprecocious teenage couple, a contemporaryRomeo and Juliet, whose love outlasts theircataclysmic fates. Director Zeffirelli has Brooke Shields and Martin Hewitt in Endless Love.ENDLESS SCHLOCKchosen to convey the couple's eternal lovethrough an incessant collection of pop,disco, and classical tunes. In fact, the firstthird of the movie is an abundance ofchoreographed embraces, starry-eyedgazes and love-making scenes. Although these scenes are intended to convince theaudience of the couple's once-in-a-life-timelove, at best they're good for a couple oflaughs. Aggrandizing Zeffirelli's schlockmovie music pathology are the putrid per¬formances of Brooke Shields and Martin Hewitt, as Jade and Dave the eternal coup¬le. Miss Shields, the model mannequin of thesilver screen, who has a stand-in for all hernude scenes, should be more concernedabout subjecting her audiences to her pooracting, than about exposing her skin. AndMr. Hewitt with his Ken-doll looks and hisforced method acting, rouses about as muchpathos as a model on the cover of the latestGQ-magazine.Although Zeffirelli probably didn't selecthis cast, he certainly had control over theirperformances. And the performances areuninspired, soporific, and emetic. Equallyoffensive as the film's lack of direction, isEndless Love's narrative incohesiveness.The role of Jade's mother, for example, ad¬mirably portrayed by Shirley Knight, is in¬excusably ambiguous. Early in the film,Jade's mother demonstrates a healthy at¬traction for her daughter's boyfriend. Butnear the end, when she tries to seduce Dave,the motivation is unclear and its signifi¬cance to the film superfluous. The directorprovides no lucid reason for the character'saction, and so, what was intended to be apoignant moment is gratuitous and down¬right silly.At times, Zeffirelli seems unsure of him¬self; and at other times he's too dependenton the original material. Zefferelli has yet tolearn the basic rule of translating the novelinto film: the director must first digest andthen recreate the material, not merely re¬gurgitate it.Despite its offenses and offensiveness,Endless Love may be worth the four dollaradmission price for Hyde Parkers. Therejre several shots of the Field Museum, theLab School, and the Midway. A film worthseeing, that is, if you're feeling particularlyprovincial.iiiifinimi IiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiimiiHiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiumiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiminiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiihiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii third issueimmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||f|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||!||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilium fourteenthniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiThe Singing Bone and Other StoriesA Story Theater ProductionPiper's Alley, Behind Second City1608 N. Wells StreetFridays, Saturdays, Sundays at 8 p.m.Open-end run. Information at 787-8220. before explaining his notion of what a playmade up of story tales was."We just tell stories, fairy stories," saidSills. Then he fell silent, whereupon Brus-tein became a little uneasy."Now wait a minute," Brustein demand¬ed. "You mean to tell me that you just tell afairy story on the stage?" Sills elaboratedon his idea, but Brustein was still uncon¬vinced. He nevertheless agreed to do the Adapted and directed by Sills from theBrothers Grimm and various other sources,the stories take the audience from the MagicKingdom to Bowling Green, from thecountry of India to the kiddee playroom inHeaven (where Jeannette Schwaba plays aspoiled brat of a child who refuses to tell thetruth, and Maria Turner plays a scolding,rather prissy, but somehow kind VirginMary). Nearly every story is a memorable In one of the show's best sequences, all theactors take parts as forest animals andbuild a big tar baby. Farrell's imitation of asquirrel in this scene is wierdly and uncan¬nily accurate: it may make you look on inawe at this actor's astonishing gifts, but it'sbound to make you somewhat uneasy aswell. Guitarist Rick Mann adds delicate ac¬companiment to each skit, while DonnaMarr's costumes are models of clever andSILLS RETURNS WITH TALES TO TELLThere's a terrific passage in critic andformer Yale Repertory Theater directorRobert Brustein's new book of memoirs,Making Scenes (Random House), in whichBrustein recalls how Paul Sills, who earnedhis reputation as one of the founders of Sec¬ond City, attempted to bring his idea ofStory Theater from its birthplace in Chicagoto the East Coast. Story theater is a theatri¬cal style revolving around fairy tales, astyle originated by Sills and, according toBrustein, one which got its name "StoryTheater" from Brustein himself. Sillswalked into Brustein's office at Yale afterone of the shows for the Rep's season hadclosed, paced around for several minutes,and then sat by a window and gazed outside show (he rather desperately needed a standin show and so was not in a position to domuch arguing).It may not have seemed like a great ideathen, but Story Theater turned out to be oneof the most successful productions of theYale Rep, and subsequently it became aTony-winning Broadway show as well. NowStory Theater is back in Chicago where itfirst began, and Paul Sills — something of awandering national treasure of the theater— is back in Chicago for good after havinggone on tour for several years."The Singing Bone and Other Stories" isan evening of first rate song, mime, acting,and dance by a group of seven performerswho all take part in a series of ten tales. little adventure, and the cast works as a fineensemble, never treating the fairy storiestoo sardonically or too sweetly. Vince Wal¬dron gives us a terrific fool of a traveler whobungles the possibilities of a magic knap¬sack, and Perry Anzilotti as a stupefiedPoor Man in Heaven is something of a gemtoo. Best of all is Frank Farrell, who plays,among other parts, Old Hildebrand, an un¬fortunate soul who sets off for BowlingGreen (Kentucky, Ohio..?) while his suppo¬sedly sickly but actually quite lively wifeconsorts with the local priest. Larry Covan,in a number of roles, all of which he splen¬didly masters, is a first-class performerwho (like so many of Paul Sills' actors) issomeone to watch for. attractive understatement. It's a winningproduction all around.Most of us have been trained to forget howgood it feels to hear a simple fairy tale, andPaul Sills has helped to breathe new life intothe storytelling form. Not <jnly does thisbrand of theater connect with audiences in away more sophisticated plays do not, but itprovides actors with the rare opportunity toplay a number of wildly different parts in asingle evening. The crowds may be lining upto watch the ingratiatingly sugary SandyDuncan in Peter Pan, but The Singing Boneand Other Stories is where the real magic isin Chicago these days.— Richard Kaye4—The Chicago Maroon—Friday July 17, 198117 friday 23 thursday18 SaturdayfilmAnd Now For Something Completely Dif¬ferent (Ian Me Naughton, 1972) An amala-gam of denigrating cartoons and skitscompiled from the British TV series"Monty Python's Flying Circus", andstarring the original cast. Among suchcomedy classic as "The World's FunniestJoke" and "The Seductive Milkman Mis¬tress", is a skit about the roving gangs ofLondon. Not the topical hoodlums present¬ly plaguing the empire, but gangs of gran¬nies, babies that snatch grown-ups, andvicious turn-left signs that attack vicars.Starring John Cleese, Eric Idle, Mrs. B.J.Smegma, and Adolf Hitler. Friday, July17, 7 and 9 p.m. at Quantrell. $2. Summeron the Quads. RMPROVIDENCE (Alain Resnais, 1977, UK).Yikes. Do we really need this? Resnais ex¬plores such Big Themes as illusion versusreality in this tiresome cinematic equiva¬lent of an academic novel. Sir John Giel¬gud plays a novelist who writes his lastwork which demonstrates why the novel isdead while he himself dies. Get the iron¬ies? Throughout most of the film, the audi¬ence is subjected to watching him workand rework the plottings of his novel(which are dramatized while Gielgud nar¬rates and talks to himself), and the lasttwenty or so minutes of the film tie to¬gether rather too neatly all that has pre-ceeded. While the film is visually beauti¬ful, with some genuinely stunningcompositions, it relies much too heavilyupon dialogue to make its point. WithEllen Burstyn, Dirk Bogarde, and ElaineStrich. Saturday, July 18 at 7 p.m. and 9p.m. in Quantrell. Summer on the QuadsFilms.—GSMurmur of the Heart (Louis Malle, 1971)Probably the healthiest and funniest filmever to deal overtly with a son's desire tosack his mother. Set in France in 1954,Malle's film sensitively documents the ad¬ventures of a precocious 15 year old son ofRockefellerMerportalChapelSunday, July 129 a.m. Ecumenical Serviceof Holy Communion11 a.m. University ReligiousServiceWalter Michel,Associate Professor of OldTestament, the LutheranSchool of Theology atChicago4 p.m. CARILLON RECITALHelen Fan, former Assis¬tant Carillonneur,University of Michigan atAnn Arbor, performingThursday, July 167:30 p.m. CARILLON RECITALWylie Crawford, AssistantCarillonneur at U. of C.,performing photographers as Peter Frahm, Phillip Cot¬ton, Nina Berman, David Miller, and NancyCleveland. The fun goes on fr4m 9 p.m. to 1a.m., and admission is one dollar. —RKPsychedelic Furs: While the material onTalk Talk Talk, these '77 British newwavers' second, both develops and de¬parts from that of their 1980 debut, leadcomplainer Richard Butler's droning vo¬calisms remain. During the Furs' firstvisit to these shores Butler's throatyweepings and strained, spastic manner¬isms seemed articulate and visual expres¬sions of the band's dissonant hubbub.Whether Butler has changed his play to fitnew tunes is unknown. Unanswered alsoare questions of whether tickets remainand whether you'd entertain the sound ofresistance at one of the more fashionablyfascist spots in town. Tonight at 8 and11:30 at the Park West, 322 W. Armitage.929-5959. S9.50. —DMtheatrean upper middle class family, who is ob¬sessed with Camus and American Jazz.Although Malle satirizes the bourgeoislife-style, he wisely avoids the subjectmatter's potential themes of fetishizedfacts and reification. Stunning perfor¬mances by Lea Massari and Benoit Fer-reux as the Oedipal couple. A must-see.Sunday, July 19, 8 p.m. at Quantrell. $2.DOC. —RMThe Postman Always Rings Twice (TonyGarnett, 1946) A turgid, guilt-ridden,whinning saga of extra marital of crimeand punishment. Garnett's vaudville styleis out of place for this adaption of JamesCain's plot of passion. Read the book. WithJohn Garfield, Lana Turner, and CecilKellaway ridicuously cast as the greasyhusband. Tuesday, July 21, 8 p.m. atQuantrell. $2. DOC.—RMThe Importance of Being Earnest (AnthonyAsquith, 1952) Jack falls in love with Al¬gernon's cousin Gwendolyn, and Algyfalls in love with Jack's adopted cousinCecily. But both these Bunburyists makethe mistake of claiming to be the fictiousCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing in Cantoneseand American dishes.Open Daily 11 A.-8:30 P.M.Closed Monday1318 E. 63rd MU 4-1062ISRAELIFOLHIJuly 7-August 258 p.m. TuesdaysIda Noyes Theatre 3rd Floor1212 E.Cost: 75 C perSponsored byHILLEL FOU Earnest, whose reputation both womenfall in love with. But, of course, everyonegets his/her mate in the end in this filmadaptation of the play which, along withBozey, made Oscar Wilde such a celeb, inBritish society at the turn of the century.Wednesday, July 22, 8 p.m. Quantrell. $2.DOC—RMSwingtime (George Stevens, 1936) AndrewSarris calls this the best Astaire-Rogerscollaboration, not that his criticism isworth much. But it's an entertaining mu¬sical romance nonetheless. With EricBlore. July 23, 8:30 at Law School Audito¬rium. $2.—LSF.musicValhalla: Jazz this Friday night at 9:00 withMark Durham, Saturday afternoon at 2:00pm with the Dozier Quintet, and Saturdaynight with Hannah Jon Taylor. S3.00 covercharge for the evening shows, afternoonperformance free. 1515 E. 53rd St241 -5948. Checkerboard Lounge: BuddyGuy and Junior Wells, tonight throughSunday. 423 E. 43rd St., 373-5948.Chances R: Saxophonists Jimmy Ellis andAhmed Salaheldeen will perform this Sat¬urday night at 9:30. S3 cover. 5225 S.Harper Ct„ 363-1550.Haymarket Coffeehouse Hyde Park's pro¬gressive magazine will hold a fund-raisercoffee-house tonight, July 17 at CrossroadsInternational Student Center, 5621 S. Black-stone. Features are Samhradh Music andChristie Nordhielm, as well as poetry read¬ings and photo exhibits by such Hyde Park Court Theater This year's collection of threeclassic plays performed in the Great Out¬doors is now already underway with Mo-liere's The Miser playing Thursday, July16th and Saturday, July 18th, and Shake¬speare's comedy of Errors on all other per¬formance nights this week and next week(Fashion. Anna Cora Mowatt's 1845 comedyof social manners, opens on July 23rd.) Seereview of the The Miser in this issue, and formore information on show times, call Courtat 753-3568.Holding Patterns Described by directorTom Mula as a "musical entertainmentabout sexual and romantic politics", this isChicago playwright Jeffrey Sweet's latestplay, which is now running at the Body Poli¬tic. Sweet is known to local audiencesthrough his two previous successes. Porchand Ties, and here Sweet has worked in col¬laboration with Sandra Hastie, StephenJohnson, and Christina Kellogg for a seriesof wry, witty songs and short scenes. Whatshould not be missed is Audrie Neenan, wholast appeared as the wonderul campyhooker in Wisdom Bridge Theater's prod¬uction of Mother Courage last spring. Play¬ing until August 23rd at the Body PoliticTheatre. For more information on perfor¬mances and times, call 871-2032.the grey city j-ournalEdited by Richard KayeSusan Franusiak, art editorJim Guenther, music editorRichard Martin, Film editorSEMINARY COOPBOOKSTOREThe Chicago Maroon—Friday July 17, 1981—5News {RedistrictingContinued from page onedents, not just for whites. “I think that Mr.Bullock and Mr. Bullock’s associates wantto make sure that independent votes are sodispersed that there is a reduced indepen¬dent representation,” said Dobry.But Bullock, who has stronger ties withThe regular Democratic party than the HydePark independents do, said that he is notanti-independent. ‘‘I have supported Bar¬bara Currie and Carol Mosely Braun on allimportant pieces of legislation,” he said. Headded that it was “absurd,” for Dobry to as¬sert that he did not want independent repre¬sentatives elected.“When Dobry says independents, it is abuzzword for white voters,” Bullock said,“and when he says (regular) Democrat, it isa buzzword for black voters.”Newhouse would not comment on that Bullock’s statement. But he expressed con¬cern of what he said was Hyde Park’s inde¬pendents’ reluctance to seek independentsupport in predominately black neighbor¬hoods. “We need to face up to some ques¬tions,” he said. “Do we have a communityor don’t we? Are we divided into black andwhite voters or aren’t we?”Braun, Currie and Dobry are due to meetsometime over the week-end to seek a com¬promise. Newhouse said that he had notbeen invited to any meeting. He would notcomment on what he thought of the chancesfor Dobry’s plan. “I don’t think any plan isdead until the final map comes out,” hesaid. But since regular Democrats, like Bul¬lock, favor a 24th district that stops at 51ststreet, Braun and Newhouse would have tochange their positions for the Dobry plan tohave a chance. The Chicago Maroon' The Chicago Maroon is the student newspaper of the University of Chicago. During thesummer it is published Fridays, second week through seventh week. Editorial and busi¬ness offices are located on the third floor of Ida Noyes, 1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, 60637.Telephone 753-3263.Chris IsidoreEditorRobert DeckerManaging EditorDarrell WuDunnSenior News EditorAudrey LightNews EditorWilliam MudgePhotography Editor Richard KayeGrey City Journal EditorJay McKenzieChicago Literary Review EditorBecky WoloshinChicago Literary Review EditorAarne EliasEditor, The Public Domain LOrin BurteBusiness ManagerWanda JonesAdvertising ManagerLeslie WickOffice ManagerAarne EliasProduction ManagerErin CassidyLibrarianStaff: Shelia Black, Bob Daily, Nancy Dray, Jeffrey Friedman, Kate Fultz,Sally Holland, Robin Kirk, Henry Otto, William Pleasant, Gene Scalia, AnnaYamadaaleortVNotaP?'-oo'NCLOUR PROMISEIf you aren’t fullypleased with yourlenses after 60days, the cost of thelenses will be refunded *0Ft*aual'°°2566 N. ClarkPh. # 975-1616 \enses1724 Sherman Ave.Evanston, IL 60201All contact lens fitting done by Above County Seatour Contact Lens Specialist. ", UV *Dr. S.C. Fostiak, Optometrist. Ph. # 864-4441Used Desks (From $20-up)Chairs (From $20-up)Drawing Tables(6 foot, with tool drawers)BRANDEQUIPMENT6—The Chicago Maroon—Friday July 17, 1981 8560 S. ChicagoRE 4-2111Open Daily 8 3C-5Sat 9:00-3 C(zaz(otte HJikitzomsat £itats do.493-0666 Call AnytimeYOU CAN’T GET ANY CLOSER to campus than UNIVERSITY AVENUEbetween 56th & 55th. Super private wing overlooking small garden. Wood-burning fireplace, beamed ceiling large living room-dining room combo.Two small bedrooms plus study with outside door leading to yard. Co¬operative. $47,500. Available Sept. 1.LOVELY LIVING AT LOW PRICE $34,500. On top floor with spectacularview of city downtown. 55th & Dorchester. Charming, neat two room withspecial financing.MAKE OFFER! Six room doll house condo atKimbark & 57th. Designer kitchen. Professionaldecorator touches throughout. Incredibly lowtaxes and assessments. Call for figures. Asking$65,000. Close by September.VICTORIAN ROW HOUSE - Six bedrooms Pricereduced from $149,600 dramatically sacrificed to$139,000. Woodburning fireplace, nice yard. Near54th & Cornell.LAKEFRONT CO-OP MIES VAN DER ROHE BUILDING. Twobedrooms. 56th & South Shore Drive. $45,000.ON THE MIDWAY (north frontage road - 59th Street near Harper). Allnatural woodwork. Spacious formal four room, top floor. Custom kitchen.$36,000.CORNER BRICK RESIDENCE ON WOODLAWN AVENUE IN HYDEPARK Just listed - stunning glimpse into earlier era. Many beautiful an¬tique touches, but modern kitchen. Woodburning fireplace, handsome man¬tle. Formal reception hall...double length floor-to-ceiling study. Must beseen. Priced right...$180,000.ANNOUNCING 10% INTEREST RATE (3 year balloon; by owner...Mostelegant lakefront condo, spacious rooms, parquet floors, views in all direc¬tions, woodburning fireplace, the works. High floor low price - $69,500.OWNER SERIOUS TO SELL. Near 50th East End in Hyde Park.VIEW OF MUSEUM & PARK...airy, spacious. Two master bedrooms. Con¬trol your own heat (radiant heating). Beautifully landscaped entry. Near57th & Stony. Cooperative. $31,500.HELP, OWNER ANXIOUS. Spacious 6,000 square foot Georgian brick inKenwood. Listed at $195,000.12% FINANCING. MAKE OFFER.RENT WITH OPTION NEAR CAMPUS...2 bedrooms, Rent $475. Non-refundable $1,200 option fee. Available 8/1/81.f ClassifiedsHHOUSESTWO BEDROOM HOUSE with flexible spacefor $69,900 in Ray school district! The rosesare blooming and the house is sunny. Calltoday!MOVE-IN CONDITION. This lovely af¬fordable 2 bedroom townhouse is near toU.C. campus, park and shopping. Central air,modern kitchen, finished basement andmore. Upper $80's. Call today!WALK TO SHOPPING (only a few stepsaway) and live in this efficiently designea 3bedroom, 2Vi bath townhouse. Privatebackyard, central air and more. $105,000.COZY FIREPLACE, garage, fencedbackyard, 3 bedrooms, 2Vi baths. 2 densmake this townhouse a super buy at$139,500.CONDOMINIUMSOWNER FINANCING is available on this 4bedroom, 2 bath condo in an ideal East HydePark location. Over 2000 sq. ft. and a bigback yard. Mid $80's.PANORAMA CONDOMINIUM. Hyde Park’smost complete renovation of a charming oldsix unit building - over 2000 sq. feet - and awine cellar. $114,000. Call today! Or rentwith optio to buy. $850per month.PERFECT LOCATION - NEWPORT. Spec¬tacular view from the north side of the northtower. This two bedroom is priced to sell inthe upper $70’s. FNMA financing.UNIVERSITY PARK. Two bedroom, highfloor, freshly painted, decorator kitchen.Mid $60’s.FRESHLY PAINTED WALLS, newly sandedfloors. Move in and hang up your clothes -it’s that clean! And it has a fenced backyard,off-street parking. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, withover 1900sq. ft. All for $69,900!BEAUTIFUL...Sun, space (huge living roomwith balcony), new kitkchen and bath. Superbig backyard and...PARKING! Call today forthis 5 room condo. A great buy in the upper$60's.PRICE REDUCTION! 56th and Dorchester 3-bedroom condo with a large backyard. Finebuv - upper $60’s.V.A. FINANCINGOPEN HOUSE at Parkside condo¬miniums. Enjoy a spacious,sunny country kitchen; diningroom made for a family, ceramictile baths and a large masterbedroom. Priced in the $70’s.Ask about special discounts.Come to 5125 S. Greenwood ave.,Sat/Sun l-4p.m.THE BARCLAY. Elegant living reasonablyriced in the low $50’s. This one bedroomas spectacular lake view, 24 hour doormanand low monthly assessments! Call today:ELLIS ESTATES. Only 4 left! 4 & 5 bedrooms.From $76,900. Call today! Possible ownerfinancing.A MUST SEE! Spotless cozy one bedroomcondo, 54th and Dorchester. Priced to sell.Upper $40’s.55TH AND EVERETT. 3 bedroom, 2 bath, lotsof natural wood trim. Upper $80’s.GREENWOOD COURT convertible 3bedrooms. New kitchen and baths. Somestripped wood. Enclosed front porch andlarge open back porch for entertaining.$71,500.SPECTACULAR SUNSHINE. This cozy 2bedroom home is walking distance to U of Ccampus Immaculate! Charming! Lower$50’s. Ask about 10V«0/o owner financing.THE RIGHT LOCATION, south of 55th 2bedroom home with family room, modern kit¬chen, garage. Mid $80's.SUN OR CANDLELIGHT - this home shinesin both. 4l/j rooms plus sunporch of flexiblespace with lots of cnarm and natural wood¬work. A super buy at 57th and Kenwood. Up¬per $60’s._NEWPORT.2 bedroom with garagespace. Upper $70’s.58TH AND BLACKSTONE. 4 bedroom, 2bath, over 2,000 sq. ft. Super location. Largeenough for a family. Walk to Lab School.$145,000 and financing.EAST HYDE PARK. Stunning 3 Bedroom.Mid $80’s, very low assessments.COOPERATIVESLAKEFRONT CO-OP at a very affordableprice. Lovely 1 bedroom with view ofpark and lake from all windows. Only$13,000 and super owner financing.WALK TO CAMPUS from this one bedroomco-op. Eat-in kitchen, large living room andlow assessments. Mid $20’s.BUILDINGS•Commercial space and 26 studio apart¬ments in central Hyde Park. Zoned B2-4.$425,000.HILO REALTY GROUP1365 E. 53rd St.955-TSOO SPACEGrad students cooperative society otfifteen has space for one man and onewoman. One block from quadrangleLow rent For information call 9552653.Studio apts, 955 1200Hild Realty Group.Hyde Park condo for sale, 2 bdrm, 1bath, large living room, modern kitchen & bathroom, 2 porches, parking,backyard, 14% mortgage Days 4406038, eve 955 2052.For rent furnished house Mich City 1hr away 3 bdrm live In woods nearbeach 200 mo theat 493-4387.995 39842 bdrm apt Woodlawn 8, 54th; 1 bravail. 8/1 other 9/1 w/optlon Call Robor Sue 684 5349BEAUTIFUL LAKE VIEW: 16th floor1 br apt 55th & S. Shore, partially fur¬nished. For sublet Sept 81 til June 82(negotiable) S464/mo (gas 8. hotwater incl) call 643-3396.LAKEFRONT COOP For Sate 2 Brden, Lvng/dng w/wbfp, w/w crpt. Til¬ed bath, prklng, low mnthly. 15 min.from UC in S. Shore Price to sell—Lo$20's. Financing. 978-3170.Hyde Park Studio—large, modern,quiet, and secure Convenient to U of C(55th 8, Blackstone— UC). 5345/month,includes heat. Laundry facilities,health club and more on premisesCall 493-9751 or 251 4009 (Bothnumbers after 6 pm).Sublet for Aut qtr, longer If desired 2br, 2 bath, very large Ir, fabulous viewof city and lake, a/c, dishwasher, tennis cs, pkng in bldg, minibus stops atdoor. Call Steve 3 4521 or 241 5092RESPONSIBLE ROOMMATE sought.Male grad student in his 30's offers furnished bdrm/study in 2 bdrm apt Indryfac in blgd $170/mo -t-utll. Prefer malenonsmoker call John evenings 4936291. Avail 9/1.SPACE WANTEDWould like rm or apt within your homein exchange for childcare. Call 955-9577.Graduate couple wish to house or apt.sit Fall 8. Winter quarters. Carepets/plants. Refs. 493 8589. PEOPLE WANTEDBABYSITTERS Names being compiled to sit 2 children In facultyhome On campus, days or evenings.Call 241 6766 or 753 4258 Also for occasional light houseworkPaid subjects needed for experimentson memory, perception and languageprocessing Research conducted bystudents and faculty In the Committeeon Cognition and Communication,Department of Behavioral SciencesPhone 753-4718Secretary wanted. Interesting job involves varied responsibilities Goodtyping ability required Collegebackground and secretarial ex¬perience helpful. Call 753 2632 or 753-2636If you are familiar with Treatisewould like to earn $ typing dissertationcall D Seigel, 753 4625 (eves 752 8426).Harp and French horn needed forchamber orch. concert Aug 15. Call752-0433 (eves) for info.Patient tutor. 8th grade math, 3 timesweekly. East Hyde Park 752 4369evenings.Childcare needed for 5 8, 8 yr old in myhome on campus. Full time Aug 24 tilschool opens pt time after. Call 241 -7545 after 6.Hyde Park Preschool Ctr. acceptingapplications for head teacher In afterschool program for 1981-82. 25 hrs/wk;kids 5-8 yrs. Requires experience inchild dev/education with expertise infine arts. Ideal for part-time student orparent desiring part-time job Call S.Block for interview 667 7269FOR SALEKenmore gas dryer. 6 mo. old. $200must sell. Call 955-4657.For Sale: Chrysler Air Conditioner forcasement window 5500 B.T.U Goodcondition. 643 5076Couch $75; Reclining Chair $100,Table. Dresser, Shelves; Rob 684 5349Elec, guitars. Fenders and GibsonsAlso a bass, a MM amp and a PAsystem. Like new Cheap. 241 6377.Westinghouse refrigerator 8 yrs oldgood working condition frost free $65Karen 753 4808, 643 5525. SERVICESJOB MARKETS, salaries, housing,schools, climate, much more. Comparative city analysis of Colorado byprofessional planner Send $6.50 to Col¬orado Sourcebook Box 132 C,Loveland. Colorado 80537.ARTWORK Posters. Illustration, lettering, etc Noel Yovovich 493-2399.Chicago Counseling andPsychotherapy Center Client-centered psychotherapy 5711 S.Woodlawn, 6354 N Broadway, and 111N Wabash. Chicago. A RegisteredPsychological Agency. (312 ) 684 1800Experienced piano teacher for beginner, intermediate, advanced. Now ac¬cepting new students call 643-3168 forinterview.Efficient typing of student papersavailable IBM Selectrlc. Call 684 6882Announcing the moving of my privatepractice in psychotherapy 8. counsel¬ing to a location closer to campus.Sliding scale, insurance acceptedJoan Rothchild Hardin. PhD,registered psychologist. 493 8766Massage can be a nonsexual physical¬ly and mentally rewarding ex¬perience W Coast grad Combinationof Swedish. Esalen, and deep tissuetechniques References available 9551973.PERSONALSBALLISTIC MODULATION Best newmusic emphasizing Imports Sponsored by Wax Trax on WHPK 88.3Wed 8-10.30 pm.RIDESI'm going to Boston end am looking forsomeone to rent a small van with meand/or to share driving to Boston-plusexpenses Leaving frist week inAugust 288 2740 call before 8 am, after10 pmMOVINGStudent with Pickup truck can moveyour stuff FAST and CHEAP No jobtoo small! Call Peter at: 955-1824l Oam 10 pm. MORE GARDENS!Responsible student gardener needspart-time work this summer.Weeding, planting and maintenanceare some of my talents Hyde Parkarea only. Call Molly at 643 3898 eveningsLEFT, RIGHTLEFT, RIGHTLeft and right handed people neededto participate In interesting ex¬periments on handedness andpsychology Variable pay. For moreinformation call M-F 9 to 5 753-4735.STUDENT GOV.FOODCOOPSummer quarter tood ordering andpickup has started New members be¬ing taken Contact stud Gov Officefor more info. 753-3273,CONDO BY OWNERCharm and character, bright 5 rm.condo. 54th near Dorchester, Totallyrenovated Nat oak fir., china cab.,f r p I., bale., PLUS. $64,500.Eve/wkends. 947-0859UNIVERSITYPARK CONDOLovely modern one bdrm apt. Bright,Overlooking leafy court. Avail Aug. 1445 9243PHYSICIANS FORSOCIALRESPONSIBILITYAll students and faculty (medical andnon-medical) are invited to attend aPSR meeting tonight at 6 pm at RushMedical Center's Jelkie South Center.1750 West Harrison, room 1245. Therewill also be an informal meeting Sun¬day, 9 pm, at the coveJAZZ CONCERTCHACHEA at Ida Noyes Friday, July17 at 7 00 pm, in the Cloister Club.PROPOSAL WRITERRequires excellent writingskills and experience.Work for former professorat downtown location.Phone: 782-8967GRAFF & CHECKReal Estate1617 E. 55th St.1 Y2-2 Y2-4 RoomApartmentsBased on AvailabilityBU8-5566Available to all comersHYDE PARKTHE VERSAILLES324-0200Large Studios • Walk-inKitchen • Utilities Incl. •Furn. - Unfurn. • CampusBus at doorBased on Availability5254 S. DorchesterINSTANTPASSPORT PHOTOSAftGuMtaSfoRfr'ilft1519 EAST 53rd STREETPHONE: 752-3030 INSTANT PASSPORT PHOTOS• Automatic meter withfull manual control• Focus preview• Automatic strobesystem• Many more featuresand benefitswith 50 mm f/1 8Series E lens THEAUTOMATICNIKON FEmodel camera1342 E. 55th St. 493-6700COMPUTER OPERATORThe Computing Services Department of the GraduateSchool of Business has an opening for a full-timeComputer Operator to service requests for tape andprinter operations, perform system backups and fileretrievals, and to supply and maintain the ComputingServices facility. A qualified candidate will have “handson” experience with computing equipment, experienceusing computer programs, ability to communicateeffectively with staff, users, and repair personnel, will¬ingness to perform manual labor, especially heavy lifting.Applicants must possess a work history of depend¬ability and produce strong references. Salary range is$5.95 - $6.85/hr. with excellent benefits package,including partial tuition remission. If interested andqualified, contact Scott Teissier, 753-4290. The Universityof Chicago is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative ActionEmployer.The Chicago Maroon—Friday July 17, 1981—74 z1 NoontimeConcertTHE SWEET BETSY FROM PIKEMEMORIAL AUTOHARP BANDWednesday, Hutch Court(if rain: Reynolds Club Lounge)GazeboFilmsTonightMonty Python Madness!AND NOW FOR SOMETHINGCOMPLETELY DIFFERENT...with Graham Chapman,Michael Pallin, JohnCleese, Terry Gilliamand Terry Jones7&9p.m. $2SaturdayAlain Resnais’tale ofmemory and mysteryPROVIDENCEwith Ellen Burstyn,John Gielgud, DavidWarner7&9p.m. $2Coming July 25 ... John Huston’s WISE BLOODDance under the summer stars withAIRFLOW DELUXETickets now on sale atReynolds Club Box OfficeJuly 28 8 p.m.$3 Students/$5 OthersWednesdayOscar Wilde’s hilarious classicTHE IMPORTANCE OF BEING EARNESTWITH Michael Redgrave,Edith Evans, Joan Greenwood,Margaret Rutherford8 p.m. $1.50All shown in Cobb Hall J_yH®ro750 ml.750 ml.750 ml.Liter750 ml.750 ml.750 ml.750 ml.750 ml.750 ml. »«*«••••••♦ ••••****♦LIQUORCORBY'S BLENDCUTTY SARKTEN HIGHE&J BRANDYARIELLE WINE CORDIAL *(Blackberry, Green Mint, Almond Royale,Apricot Royale, Peppermint Royale)DIMITRI VODKA f. ....SEAGRAMS GINEL-CHRO TEQUILA ,.TJERO COCKTAIL MIXERS(Daquiri, Pina Colada, W. Soar, Mai Tai)RON CRUZADA RUM (fight Gold)■MifBEER & POP ...... ................... 4.699.594.396.893.993.194.594.1999*3.796-12 oz. Cans (warm only) OLYMPIA 1-996-12 oz. Cans (warm only) GOEBEL 1-696-12 oz. Botts. DORTMLINDER KRONEN (German) 3.89(warm only)6-12 oz. Botts. 7-UP BEVERAGE 189WINE1.5 Liter FRANZIA TABLE WINES 2.99(Rhine, Chablis, Vin Rose, Burgundy)750 ml. PIERRE PATRIARCHS (Red & White) 3.89(Free Tasting Saturday, 7/19/81)750 ml. COOKS CHAMPAGNE 3.69750 ml. CABERNET D'ANJOU ROSE 2.99COUPONHE ' COUPON |I2 I' e I"V Ii iWITH UCID & COUPON *couponIWINE SPECIAL20% OFF ON ANY WINE(Does not include sale items) « cnSs I■ " / _| good thru 7/20/81 |i _________ jMMMMMMMMM»MBMBBBBMMaMiaMI«*BMMMMM»M«MM«MMMM»MBI«M«MBBBMBiMMaMiMrO IIISale Dates * 7/17 through 7/20■ iSTOREHOURS: 1214 E. 53rd (Kimbark Plaza)Phone: 493-3355Sunday - Noon - 10 P.M.Mon. - Wed. - 8 A.M. - MidnightThurs. - Sat. 8 A.M. - 2 A.M.SPOKESMENBICYCLESHOP5301 Hyde Park Blvd.Open 10-7 M-F,10-5 Sat.11-4 Sun. Selling QualityImported BicyclesRaleigh, Peugot, FujiMotobecane, Windsor,Caravela, TrekRollerskates forSale or Rentwm