The Chicago MaroonVolume 91, No. 4 The University of Chicago © Copyright 1981 The Chicago Maroon Friday, July 24, 1981UC hospitals face $15million Medicaid slashBy Audrey LightThe University of Chicago Hospitals andClinics (UCHC) has initiated a cost-cuttingplan to fight a $150 million cut in the state’s1982 Medicaid budget. The magnitude of theMedicaid cut was in doubt until Gov. JamesThompson enacted a third round of budgetcuts on Monday, virtually assuring theUCHC of a $15.5 million loss in Medicaid re¬imbursements.A hiring freeze was put into effect byUCHC in late May and will continue at leastuntil September 1. All capital expenditureshave also been curtailed. UCHC ExecutiveDirector David Bray said the following mea¬sures will soon go into effect:• approximately 350 employees — almost10 percent of the UCHC staff — will be laidoff ington (D-lst District) blamed the federalMedicaid cut on the rapidity of this spring’sbudget proceedings. “The congressmen re¬sponsible for creating this budget really donot know what they’ve done,” he said. “Be¬cause it was voted on as a package, the Re¬publicans were not forced to go on recordsaying, ‘I’m crippling the Medicaid pro¬gram.’ ”“I think the federal approach is not asdrastic a cut at this stage as what the stateis doing,” Bray said. “We’ve been support¬ing a cost-containment program all along,but this is not a program — it’s just a slash.”Bray said that the UCHC will not cut pro¬grams that would jeopardize patients, butthe budget cuts will compel it to treat fewerpatients. " The Chicago Sting Soccer team is just one of a number of professional and amateurteams in the city who are keeping sports fans busy, despite the baseball strike. Seestory on page two.• emergency room operations will be con¬solidated, resulting in an estimated 10,000fewer patients being seen each year• at least 40 beds will be closed• hours of operation will be reduced for avariety of UCHC servicesConnie Tasker, program analyst for theDepartment of Public Aid for the state, said“the General Assembly concurred with theGovernor’s recommendation on Medicaidcuts,” so it is unlikely that the $150 millionreduction will be altered. The Departmentof Public Aid is currently devising a pro¬gram for carrying out the Medicaid cuts,said Tasker.Among the measures which the Depart¬ment of Public Aid might impose are a $400daily limit on reimbursements for in-patientcare, a cut of reimbursements for out-pa¬tient care, a $3 per visit fee for all Medicaidpatients, and cuts on such routine proce¬dures as appendectomies and tonsillecto¬mies.Bray called the budget cut “a totally arbi¬trary, capricious, short-term thing.” Heclaimed that it is “unrealistic” to put a $400limit on the daily reimbursement rate, cit¬ing the UCHC burn unit and perinatal centeras facilities that might cost $1000 per day.“(Medicaid) patients aren’t just coming inwith bad colds,” said Bray. “The bulk arecoming (here) to a specialty clinic.” Brayalso predicted that the $3 visitation feewould cause a hardship for many patients.Bray also objected to “the inequitable na¬ture” of the cuts, and said that eight teach¬ing hospitals in the Chicago area will sufferthe greatest financial losses. Besides UCHC,Michael Reese, Cook County, and ChicagoOsteopathic are among the eight hospitalsthat face large cutbacks in their operatingbudgets, because they treat a large numberof Medicaid patients. “Gov. Thompsoncould have achieved most of the savings heis looking for through an approach thatwould spread the loss throughout the state,”said Bray. Bray estimated that such a pro¬portional Medicaid cut would cost UCHConly $5 million.Nancy Silvers, Thompson’s assistant forhealth and human services, said that “theone thing we didn’t want to do was eliminateservices . . . But the Governor is committedto a balanced budget.” Silvers said eachstate department was asked to assume afour percent budget cut, and “this is theplan the director of public aid came up with .. (The plan) is palatable, though notideal.”The state budget cut, said Silvers, was inpart motivated by an anticipated federalMedicaid cut. The House of Representativeshas adoDted President Reagan’s proposalwhich would reduce Medicaid payments tostates by three percent in 1982. A parallelproposal was adopted by the Senate, and thetwo bodies are currently in reconciliation.Illinois stands to lose $26 to $40 million as aresult of federal cuts, said Silvers.A press secretary for Rep. Harold Wash¬ State program to fill federal aid voidBy Sheila BlackIllinois students who may not qualify forthe federally-funded Guaranteed StudentLoan (GSL) program, may find financial re¬lief in a state-level legislative proposalwhich would establish a privately financedstudent-parent loan program.H.B. 1438, the Illinois Higher EducationStudent Loan Authority Act, passed bothhouses of the legislature “nearly unani¬mously,” according to a memo sent toCharles O’Connell, vice president and deanof students, by the Federation of Illinois In¬dependent Colleges and Universities(FIICU).H.B. 1438 would establish the StudentLoan Authority, (SLA) a committee consist¬ing of seven members appointed by the Gov¬ernor, and serving for seven year terms.The SLA could issue up to $200 million in tax-exempt revenue bonds which would enablequalified private colleges and universities toprovide educational loans to students at¬tending the institutions, or to the families ofsuch students.Once established, the authority wouldissue regulations applying to institutionsseeking receipt of the bonds.The bill has not yet been signed by Gover-. nor James Thompson. The FIICU memostated that Thompson intends to sign thebill. However, Forbes Shepherd, adminis¬trative assistant to Hyde Park’s State Rep¬resentative Barbara Flynn Currie (D. 24)who is principal sponsor of H.B. 1438. saidthat Thompson has given no indication ofhow he feels about the bill. Thompson has 30days to sign the bill after it has beenenrolled and engrossed, a process which canbe delayed according to Shepherd, beforethe bill goes into effect.“I would expect that the Governor wouldtake some action by the first of September,”Shepherd said.When introduced by Mary “Dollie” Hall-strom (R-l), whose district includes North¬western University, H.B. 1438 applied toboth public and private institutions. Onepossible reason for changing that portion ofthe bill in the Senate, said Shepherd, is be¬cause costs at private institutions are sohigh that only the “wealthy” can afford toattend them.The new program would supplement theaid available to students who have been par¬tially or completely cut off from federal fi¬nancial aid programs.According to a recent issue of the Chron¬ icle of Higher Education, proposed change^in the GSL program would disqualify stu¬dents from families with income over$25,000, requiring financial need tests, andcreating a lower ceiling on the amount bor¬rowed. The interest paid by parents holdingGSL loans would be raised from 9 to 15 per¬cent.The interest rate on Illinois loans would be12 percent or a little higher than the GSLrate, said O’Connell.Interest subsidies and other special ben¬efits available to recipients of GSL loanswill not be available to students or parentsreceiving loans through SLA. There wouldbe no six month “grace” period, after grad¬uation, before repayment begins. Interestpayments for Illinois loans would begin im¬mediately, while the student is in school.“This would be a much tighter loan pro¬gram than the federal program,” O’Connellsaid, since “the institution would be respon¬sible for defaulted loans.”The FIICU, of which UC is a member, hasbeen aware of H.B. 1438 since its introduc¬tion.“I’m very anxious to have the mechanismin place,” O’Connell said.‘Patent or perish’ new research concernBy Gabrielle Jonas, Although such matters as patents and pro¬fitability have formerly remained in theshadows of university research, a number offactors have recently conspired to pushthese factors into the limelight. A SupremeCourt ruling on the patentability of lifeforms is expected to affect at least 60 re¬searchers at UC’s cancer research centerFirst of a two-part seriesalone, and in the most recent controversy,the Office of Management and Budget hasdrafted a new rule which would require alluniversities receiving federal funds to re¬port patentable discoveries at least threemonths before researchers publish articlesabout their inventions.Since 1977 the University has been undercontractual agreement with University Pat¬ents Inc., an outside patent managementfirm that represents 10 universities in pat¬ent and industry negotiations. And with therecent Supreme Court ruling on the paten¬tability of life forms, the potential of the University to market discoveries made herewill be greatly enhanced.Researchers interviewed by the Maroonsaid they hope primarily to get useful andbeneficial drugs and other products into themarketplace where they ultimately maycontribute to the public good. Most said thatthe possible profits that could arise from asuccessfully-marketed patent would be ahappy by-product.Because the priority of researchers hastraditionally been on sharing their new de¬velopments with their academic peers bypublishing them, said Dr. Leon Goldberg,professor of pharmacology, their new dis¬covery lost its patentability. With a patent, anew discovery is protected for 17 years.Without a monopoly that comes from a pat¬ent, said Goldberg, drug companies, for in¬stance, won’t bother to develop a new drugdiscovery, no matter how' promising, if theyknow that their competitors are free to de¬velop the same drug. Since it may take up to10 years and “anywhere from S10-S12 mil¬lion to develop a new drug, if (there is) nopatent protection,” he said, “no one will de¬velop (it).” Subsequently, said Goldberg,“many developments of universities (were >not being developed.”Goldberg said that “most professors are not yet aware (of) the need to patentthings,” especially in the area of new drugdevelopment.Since the cost involved in applying for apatent can be prohibitive he sa; * which isanywhere from $1200 to *6u0u in the US,most researchers here cannot afford to app¬ly for their own patentsThis is where University Patents. Inc.(UP), a Connecticut based firm of attor¬neys, comes in.in exchange for a 40 percent share of pat¬ent royalties, UP bears the cost of the patentapplications and of the prior process of eva¬luating, through consultation with industry-,whether the invention meets the require¬ments of being “new, useful and non-obvi-ous,” as UP’s Robert Siegel put it. “Theworld is full of people who are reinventingthe wheel all the time,” he said.Finding out whether there is a “reason¬able expectation of commercial success ofexploiting the patent,” Siegel said, is an¬other pre-patenting service provided by UP.As Siegel put it, “a patent as merely the ex¬pression of the ingenuity of industriousnessof the inventor is merely a pretty piece ofwallpaper.”To be concluded next weekFeature /Soccer, football, golf, summer sports alternativesBy Gene ScaliaChicago’s Cubs and Sox may have struckout for the season, but that doesn’t meanChicago’s sports fans have. There arehundreds of professional and amateurteams in this city, and some of them arevying for 1981 titles on the field, rather thanfree-agent status in the bargaining room. Soif spectator sports has been your mainescape from Hyde Park in summers past,this year need not be different.You can catch Chicago’s hottest profes¬sional team in years for the coolest prices inpro sports. The Sting stands at the top of theNorth American Soccer League’s CentralDivision with a 17-7 record, 32 points aheadof second place Minnesota. The Sting hasAt Budgetyou*rett|ANNOUNCING ITHE RE-OPENING IOf Our Office At I5508 S. Lake Park I493-7900Great Cars, Great Trucks,Great Rates andGreat Service forHyde Park & theUniv. of ChicagoCompacts Sift QCV.W. Rabbits I #• #3IntermediatesFairmonts-ZephyrsConcords *24.95Full SizeMarquis *29.95100 FREE MILES493-7900Budget!rentacari Budget System LicenseeSEARS ROEBUCK 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 four remaining home games; they’ll faceToronto, 1:30 p.m. Sunday at Wrigley Field;kick off against Dallas Aug. 12; take on Min¬nesota Aug. 15; and wind up against TulsaAug. 19. The last three games will be playedat 7:30 p.m. at Comiskey Park. Tickets maybe obtained through Ticketron, by callingthe Sting at 558-5425, or by mailing a checkto the Sting at 333 N. Michigan. General Ad¬mission tickets are $5, box seats $7.The Chicago Fire, formerly of the now-defunct World Football League, has been re¬kindled, and raced to a 4-3 second place inthe American Football Association. TheFire will play three more home games thissummer; they’ll face San Antonio Saturday,kick off against Austin Aug. 3, and bring ithome against Jacksonville Aug. 10. Allgames begin at 8:00 p.m. at Soldier Field.Tickets, which run $7.50 for adults, $2.50 forchildren, may be obtained through Ticketr¬on, by calling the Fire at 988-8400, by send¬ing a check to the Fire at 950 Pine Ave.,Glenview, 60025, or at the gate before thegame.If it’s top notch women’s athletics youseek, you might swing into the Women’s USOpen. The tournament, which began yester¬day and runs through Sunday, is being heldat the La Grange Country Club, at 620 S.Brainard Ave. in La Grange. Star NancyLopez Melton is shooting for her first USOpen victory, and Kathy Whitworth seeks tobecome the first woman golfer to pull in $1Dr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist(53 Kimbark Plaza)1200 E. 53rd St.493-8372Intelligent people know thedifference between adver¬tised cheap glasses or con¬tact lenses and competentprofessional service withquality material. Beware ofbait advertising.Eye ExaminationsFashion Eye WearContact Lensesmarian realty,inc.REALTORStudio and 1 BedroomApartments Available— Students Welcome —On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-54002 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, July 24, 1981 million on the circuit. Tickets, which cost$11, may be bought at the main entrance onBrainard.Even without a strike, this town isn’t ex¬actly baseball heaven. But Chicago is, un¬deniably, 16-inch softball capitai of theworld. More than 200 softball teams from 16leagues have been at it this summer inGrant Park, and wind up the season nextweek. From Aug. 3 to 7 the Chicago Park District will sponsor a Tournament ofChampions, featuring 24 of the top teams.Games are played Monday through Friday,5 p.m. to dark. Admission: free.Or how about a day at the races? Posttime at Arlington Race Track, at Euclid andRohling Rds is 2 p.m., Monday through Sat¬urday. Grandstand seats are $2, box seats$3.25, and restaurant seats $5.75.wI Celebrate The Weddingat fda Noyes!*Wednesday, July 29$ Watch live TV coverage and highlights in colour 8:30 to 11 a.m.Royal Wedding Cake on sale in The Bakery (65* per piece)fw Congratulations to Charles and Diana v31 (S ay l\t\STANLEY H. KAPLANFor Over 42 Years The Standard o 1Excellence in Test PreparationCPA • GMAT • LSAT • GRESAT • MCAT • ACTFLEX • NATIONAL MEDICAL BOARDS • ECFMGNURSING BOARDS • TOEFL • VOEGRi PSYCH • GRE B»0 • OAT • PCAT • OCAT • VATMAT • SAT ACMVS • NATIONAL DENTAL 0OAROSPODIATRY BOARDSFlexible Programs and HoursVt*i» Any Arvj S«e f orVourj#h Why W* Matt Th«0<HTEST PREPARATION-SPECIALISTS SINCE 19'J6If) Map* U S Crt*sPu^fio R»coToronto CAAAdi & ZoftChCHICAGO CENTER6216 N Cl**Chicago Hit not 60660012) 764 5191s w Suburban*9 S LA GrAng« RoAd/Su<t« 201la Gran®# ui*no«i 60525<312) 252 5640’NORTH AN* SUBURBAN474 C#nfr»i A*#/Up04r Ma<! LavalM<ghlan<j Para iii.nott 60035(212) 422 7410•**oi au cou*u* t.tHta,)Uc«ntrnQ Eiamt mfor -rtcrrmor AfioU (Mm Contm ft MOUTSIOE N Y STATE CALL SPRING. SUMMERFALL INTENSIV6SCOURSES STARTINGthis monthSummertime ISAT, GMAT, GRENEXT MONTHMCAT...LSAT...GMAT...GRE. . SAT...DAT.,.ACTCounM ConuanIt, Updal«aGanta, Sa* Siud,on Tnv< 60 ww» US Caat t AfroacTOU. FREE 600-221 1782 ISRAELIFOLKDANCINGJuly 7-August 258 p.m., TuesdaysIda Noyes Theatre, 3rd Floor1212 E. 59th St.Cost; 75C per eveningSponsored by theHILLEL FOUNDATION BillSmithPhotographyDobry draws the lineFifth Ward Democratic committeemanAlan Dobry submitted his proposal for the24th District to the Illinois Legislative Re¬districting Commission yesterday, with fewchanges from the district he has been pro¬posing for the last month.Dobry’s 24th District runs up to OakwoodBlvd. on the North, Cottage Grove on theWest, Lake Michigan on the East and has ajagged southern boundary. The district,which must be divided into western andeastern halves due to a referendum passedby voters last fall, is divided along Stony Is¬land Ave. The western district has a south¬ern boundary along 80th and 81st streets,and the eastern district extends down to 87that some points.The plan is meant to give independentstate legislator Barbara Flynn Currie thebest chance of winning, Dobry said, by in¬cluding the neighborhoods of Kenwood andWest Hyde Park in her western district. Butsome independent legislators, notably StateSen. Richard Newhouse (D-24), oppose any24th District which extends above 51st St.Strike at UC hospitalhalts constructionA strike by the union of operating engi¬neers, local 150 of the AFL-CIO, has haltedwork on the construction site of the new Uni¬versity hospital at 58th St. and Drexel Ave.Since Monday the strike has stopped workat construction sites throughout the Chicagoarea. Machine operators are demandingbetter working condition and a wage scale instep with other skilled construction trades.The operators are also asking for a four-year contract. While they negotiate the con¬Young Designs byELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERS1620 E. 53rd 288-2900RockefellerMerporialChapelSunday, July 269 a.m. Ecumenical Serviceof Holy CommunionScott O Stapleton,Asst, to the Dean,Preaching11 a.m. University ReligiousServiceH Grady Hardin,Professor Emeritus ofWorship and PreachingSouthern MethodistUniversity4 p.m. CARILLON RECITALHelen Fan, former Assis¬tant Carillonneur,University of Michigan atAnn Arbor, performing tract with local 150 officials, representativesof S.N. Neilsen Construction Company, thecontractor for the construction of the newhospital, have refused to comment on theunion’s demands.Picketers at the hospital site said theunion’s demands were justified in the lightof higher prices and massive unemploymentin the seasonal construction trade. One pick-eter blamed the Reagan administration’spolicies for the unemployment, claimingthat billions of dollars intended for road andpublic works construction has been held upor eliminated. One black picketer com¬plained that the supervisors were insensi¬tive towards the workers and that the for-men were particularly abusive to minorityworkers.Local 150 has not made a definitive deci¬sion on strike relief for its members. So far,other trade unions have recognized the pick¬et lines of the operating engineers. One pick¬eter here said that, with little savings and nosource of income, many of the strikers willprobably not hold out for long.— William PleasantPizza restaurant toopen next monthThe newest link in the Giordano’s pizzarestaurant chain is scheduled to open Aug.15 at 5311 S. Blackstone Ave. The restaurant Newsbriefswill seat 110 and will serve liquor, althougha bar is not planned.The pizzeria will be located at the site ofthe former Eagle Pub, which was closeddown last September after the building’slandlord refused to renew the tavern’slease.Former UC GeneralCounsel Leen diesAfter a brief illness, Walter V. Leen,former Secretary of the Board of Trusteesand General Counsel of the University, diedlast Sunday at Billings Hospital. He was70.Leen was a native of Chicago and had along career with the UC, serving importantduties under four presidents. After earninga Ph.B. degree (1933) and a J.D. degree(1934) from UC, Leen practiced law in Chi¬cago until 1941. Then during the late 1940s,he served as attorney for the construction ofthe UC’s Argonne National Laboratory atLemont, Illinois. In 1953, PresidentLawrence Kimpton appointed Leen Asso¬ciate Legal Counsel. He became LegalCounsel in 1962 and finally General Counselin 1969. After serving as Secretary to theBoard of Trustees from 1962 to 1976, Leen re¬tired but continued for several years as spe¬cial assistant to the President of the Univer¬sity.Let ’em eat cakeFor those of you who never received yourinvitations to next Wednesday’s royal wed¬ding. the Ida Noyes bakery is offering you achance at your just desserts. Wedding cakecommemorating the marriage of theworld’s leading welfare case and his teen¬age bride will be on sale that day for 60cents, suitable for eating or saving. All Films in Cobb HallTonight: Campus Debut!"They establish themselves here as a latter-day Tracy-Hepburn team, with that charisma ofadulthood so lacking on the contemporaryscreen."-Saturday ReviewHOPSCOTCHwith Walter Matthau andGlenda Jackson7 & 9 P.M. $2.00Saturday: Campus Debut!The University of Chicago Presents the 21th Season ofSUMMER 1981Tickets at Mandel Hall Box OfficeFor information call 753-3581anna Cora Mowatt sFashion “I'm a member and preacher to that churchwhere the blind don't see and the lame don'twalk and what’s dead stays buried.''WISE BLOODfrom the novel by Flannery O'Connor;directed by John Huston7 & 9:30 P.M. $2.00WednesdayJohn LeCarre’sthriller ofdouble deceptionTHE SPYWHOCAME INFROM THECOLDwith Richard Burton8 p.m. »’■ 50NoontimeConcertBagpipe Musicwith tne Chicago HighlandersHutch Court(If rain, Reynolds Club Lounge)The Chicago Maroon — Friday, July 24, 1981 — 3iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii fOil rth iSSU© iihhhii;iiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiifiiiMiiMiiiiiiimnHiiiiiiiiHHiiiiniiimmiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiHmiiiiiiiiiiiiiieg oulllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilliMliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliMiiliiilliiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiillltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHIIIIIIlllllllllllllKlllIfKIbum fourteenthTiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimf mCourt: Comic MisunderstandingsPeter Syvertsen watches twin Jonathan Gillard (right) as he converses with his wifeAdriana (Megan McTavish) in a scene from Shakespeare's COMEDY OF ERRORS.Triple Action From BritainComedy of Errorsdirected by Richard HugesA Court Theatre ProductionHutch Court, 8:30 pm.Runs in repertory as one of three plays of¬fered during the summer season.by Cheryl SwierzcekCourt Theatre's production of Shake¬speare's “Comedy of Errors" opened onJuly 9th and will run in repertory as one ofthree offerings this summer season. Direc¬tor Richard Hughes, a newcomer to CourtTheatre, gives us an innovative, though attimes awkward, rendition of one of Shake¬speare's most entertaining comedies.Although “Comedy of Errors" requirescareful handling of the intricacies broughtabout by a confusing plot, it is basically un¬assuming. The plot of this play revolvesaround two pairs of identical twins, one pairof brothers named Antipholus and theirbondmen, both, of course, named Dromio.Triple Action Theater Company of Eng¬landUlysses and Curriculum Vitae by StevenRumbelowPresented through the Remains Theater atthe Steppenwolf Theater, 3212 N. Broadway.For more information 726-2802.by Alice JamesWatching the Trip¬le Action Theatre'sadaptation of JamesJoyce's Ulyssesquickly brought tomind two pieces ofcorrespondence fromthe collection ofJoyce's letters. Oneis a fan letter Joycewrote to HenrikIbsen, master of Re¬alism, when Joycewas eighteen. It is aheartening paean tothe Artist and his holy purpose to “wrest thesecret from life." The other is a love letterto Nora, where Joyce writes with equallyarresting eloquence on the erotic thrill of hisdirty knickers and flatulence. Reconcilingthe two has always been a bit difficult. It'sdiscomfiting to be reminded that the handthat wrote Ulysses (to quote Joyce himself)“did a lot of other things, too."Yet, that is the essence of Joyce and of hismasterpiece, Ulysses. The Triple ActionTheatre sees no unsetting paradox inJoyce's seeming duality or the work it creat¬ed. For this company, on tour from England, it is natural and a cause for celebration that a work can be both a literarymasterpiece and a meta-catalog of scatolo¬gical and sexual proelivites. The bond is noteasily forged; watching Leopold Bloommasturbate while Gertie reveals herknickers certainly differs from readingabout it. But as adaptor/di rector StevenRumbelow writes in his notes, "The shock¬ing nature of the book, which astounded theAmerican law courts, is so easily glossedover and diminished in an attempt to make the 'classic' more acceptable." Rumbelow'sproduction reinforces Ulysses as a "clas¬sic," never letting us forget that the workcaptures our awe because of its amazingportraits of humans simply being human —urinating, giving birth, getting drunk, andthinking about sex with exhausting fre¬quency.Distilling Joyce's language into rigorousphysical action, Triple Action's Ulysses be¬comes a marvelous, continual brawl.Actors/characters literally battle one an¬other for the right to exist. They tease us,elude us, and send us down streets with deadends. It's a fight where everyone — actorsand audience — is left sweaty, panting, a lit¬tle sore, whirling and exhilarated.Even when the actors are at rest, the com¬pany nicely renders the novel's texture.During Molly Bloom's soliloquy, CarolePluckrose (a Joycean name itself) remainsstill, her hands clasped behind her head forthe entire speech. She stands rather than re¬clines, and an ingenious quilt fits around herlife an envelope. At first, it's hard to shakethe impression that Molly Bloom is hangingfrom a clothesline. But gradually, the stag¬ing beguiles us into the world of half-sleep,where our bearings have quite naturallybeen tilted ninety degrees. Pluckrose's deli¬very only flirts with what we would recog¬nize as “realistic" intonation. The harsh-soft cadences of the language service afresh emphasis with a diction that oscillatesbetween leering lullaby and Gallic incanta¬tion. For a short time, nothing moves onstage except the motion of Joyce's words. Itis totally mesmerizing.I found only one aspect of Rumbelow'sstaging ineffective. An actor plays "JamesJoyce," who is depicted as blind, tapping hisway with a cane through the action. Thissmacked a bit of "I told you so," as if Rum¬below wanted to show that while Joycecreated a magnificent vision, he was as fe¬eble as the rest of us — perhaps even moreso. It is an unfair and undermining state¬ment, given the vibrant production ofUlysses the Triple Action presents.Triple Action's style is not new, of course.The company serves as an excellent illus¬tration of Jerzy Grotowski's Poor Theatretechniques, developed in the slxies. But Ulysses quickly dispels a reflex-like reac¬tion that anything from that period is imme¬diately trite and dated.Unfortunately, Triple Action's companionpiece, Curriculum Vitae (inspired by a workby Stanislaw Lem and also written anddirected by Rumbelow) quickly earns thelabel "sixties relic" and does little to shakeit all evening. The company's physical vir¬tuosity receives little support from thework's weak ideas — a hodgepodge ofstands against totalitarianism, nuclearpower, was educational brainwashing, etc.In fact, so many of the causes are so liberal¬ly "correct," that we simply don't respondto them anymore. In Ulysses, we can still beshocked, started, caught unaware, and fi¬nally, rejoice. In Curriculum Vitae, we'releft feeling numbly smug. Sadly, this is safeadvant-garde.It is odd that a company which repays itsdebt to Grotowski so well, falls short of itsother mentor, Samuel Beckett. This pieceshares Beckett's vision of a world after a ho¬locaust, but Rumbelow keeps trying to tiethe holocaust to specific issues or well-wornexplanations. All the homages to Beckett —the melancholy vaudeville schtick, baggycostumes, bare stage, language that disinte¬grates before it leaves the actors' mouths —cannot make up for the fact the Rumbelow,at least in this work, lacks Beckett's subt¬lety and horrifying irony. "It's like an ab¬stract painting, only we're here to help,”says one of the characters in CurriculumVitae. But a middle man — an explainer —is really unnecessary, and perhaps a bit con¬descending. "Do you think they understandus?" says one character to another, and theimplication is, "No, poor souls, you don't,but pity us anyway."The production is much more successfulwhen it discards Heavy Topics and exploresthe theatre itself: theatre as ritual, as holyculture, as pap. Rumbelow plays with theat¬rical conventions ingeniously, wrestingthem from familiar moorings and mixingthem in a crazy salad. Confronting us withour acceptance of conventions, with ques¬tions about what is the nature of theatre andthe role of the audience, is much more star¬tling and sobering than confronting us withthe design faults in a nuclear power plant. After a long separation the brothers are fi¬nally thrown all together on the same stage.The result can only be an amusing, confus¬ing series of misunderstandings. One Anti¬pholus is an established member of the townof Ephesus, while the other Antipholus hasjust arrived from the rivalling town of Syra¬cuse. Antipholus of Syracuse, mistaken forhis brother, finds Ephesus a friendly, invit¬ing place, while Antipholus of Ephesus en¬counters hostility and rejection, even fromhis own wife. And not only are their roles re¬versed, but those of their servants as well.The involvement of the two Dromios addsfurther confusion when even Master andServant are at odds.Since the play has no true protagonist, andlacks the dramatic intensity of some of Shakespeare's later works, "Comedy ofErrors" is relatively straightforward. Thedramatic action of the play depends on theflexibility of the actors and their ability toadjust to their ever-changing roles. PeterSyvertsen as Antipholus of Syracuse dis¬plays an energy in keeping with the fast-paced mood. Megan Mctavish likewise con¬tributes a hammy vitality needed to keepthe play from growing tedious. Largely theplay is made up of a series of simple andamusing sketches. One that the audienceseemed to enjoy the most was Dromio'sbewilderment at the advances of Nell, theKitchen Maid. Good performances by moreminor characters, such as Pauline Brails-ford as the Abbess, Paula Scrofano as Lu-ciana, and Lucy Childs as the Courtesan,also add the diversions that are the main¬stay of the production.Despite the efforts of these characters,however, the play often grows tiresome. Inan effort to convey the more serious aspectsof the play, Hughes uses awkward stagingdevices which serve only to detract from theperformers. The most annoying of thesegimmicks are the hooded black figures whowander around the stage distracting the au¬dience. Hoping to create a foreboding and il¬lusory mood, Hughes instead underplays thepredominantly farcical nature of this play.Hughes's main problem is in striking theproper balance between farce and illusion.The characters suffer from real problems,such as adultery, felony, and imprisonment,and yet their comic portrayal removes theseproblems from reality. Because our percep¬tions are distorted we have to look at thepredicaments in an absurd light.His staging devices are more effectivewhen they emphaize the absurdity of the sit¬uation rather than its black, more sinisterside. One successful device is the revolvingdoors which swing open to admit one char¬acter and whirl the next into unresolve.These doors are used in the opening scene,where Antipholus and Dromio, in the midstof strange, and effective, carnival music,flashing lights, and spinning mirrors, cometogether on stage to set the mood for the en¬suing comedy. The costume design of Gor¬don Ross and the lighting effects of RobertShook provide the suitable warm and light¬hearted atmosphere that Shakespeare's"Comedy of Errors" demands. Hughes triesto make this more complicated and pro¬found than the play really warrants. Hewould have done well to keep with a morecomic, traditional interpretation, ratherthan using amateurish gimmicks to conveythe latent universal themes.It is not significant that "Comedy ofErrors" is one of Shakespeare's earliestworks. Although it contains the seeds of theideas he further developed in some of hislater plays, "Comedy of Errors" is best ap¬preciated for its uncomplicated fun. CourtTheatre's production occasionally capturesthat lively spirit, with the help of a professional cast and appropriately fast movingaction.4 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, July 24, 198124 friday 27 monday25 saturddy • 29 Wednesday] 30 thursday28 tuesday #theatreCourt Theater Court continues its summerseason this week with Fashion, the little-known play by Anna Cora Mowatt. Star¬ring Pauline Brailsford, Peter Syversten,Megan McTavish, and Ray Lonergan,Fashion plays until Friday (with the ex¬ception of Monday and Tuesday) with an8:30 p.m. curtain. For more informationcall 753-3581.musicAirflow Deluxe Chicago's Big Band groupwill perform the hits from three decadesof American music, as well as some of themisses. Included in their performancewill be versions of such foot-stompin'numbers as "Happy Feet" and "Goofus"to such well-known laments as "The ManThat Got Away" and "Stormy Weather."Tuesday, July 28th at 8 p.m. outdoors atthe Court Theater summer stage, 5706 S.University Ave. Tickets are $5 ($3 for stu¬dents of the University of Chicago). Tick¬ets are available at the Reynolds Club boxoffice, 753 3568. Or call Student Activitiesat 753-3591. Irish Music: Samrahd AAusic, a Hyde Parkensemble that preserves and extends thetraditions of the Emerald Isle, will appearthis Saturday and Sunday afternoon atKelly's, 4333 Western Ave. Also, check forSunday afternoon jams at Jimmy's. (Youknow where that is all too well.)Faculty Homophobia The University of Chi¬cago Gay and Lesbian Alliance sponsors alecture by nationally-known gay scholarLouie Crew on the problem of the anti-gayfaculty member. Crew is Associate Pro¬fessor of English at the University of Wis¬consin at Steven's Point. He was founderof Integrity, the national organization ofgay episcopalians, a member of the boardof directors of the National Gay Taskforce from 1976 to 1978, and editor of theground-breaking work, The Gay Academ¬ic, one of the very first books to deal withissues of gay scholarship. Crew's talk isbased on his study of anti-gay sentimentamong professors at the University ofWisconsin, as well as elsewhere. Accord¬ing to Crew, faculty homophobia is farmore prevalent than is usually thought,surfacing in every situation from the pro¬fessor who frowns on legitimate gay schol¬arship to the department head who looksdown upon the presence of gay facultymembers and gay students. There will bea discussion, as well as refreshments,after Mr. Crew's presentation. Tonight at8 p.m. in the Ida Noyes East Lounge. filmHopscotch (Ronald Neame, 1980) Imagine aman who has worked as a CIA field agentfor thirty years (and loving every minuteof it) suddenly placed behind a desk. Thenyou can understand Miles Kennedy(Walter Matthau) who resigns, and for re¬venge and fun writes his memoirs. Theyare sent to various foreign governmentand finally published in a book entitledHopscotch. Matthau gives a hillariousperformance, showing off his talent viavarious disguises. Glenda Jackson is su¬perb as Israel. With Ned Beatty and SamWaterson. Friday, July 24 at 7 and 9 p.m.Cobb Hall. $2. SAO. C.L.C.Wise Blood (John Huston, 1980) This adap¬tion of Flannery O'Connor's novel is trueto the text and the fanatical spirit of HazelNotes. Notes (Brad Drouif) is a WorldWar 11 veteran who winds up in backwardSouthern city and meets a "blind"preacher (Harry Dean Stanton), who triesto convert him to Christ, and his battydaughter, who tries to convert him to herbody. Hazel rejects both these invitationsand establishes his own church, TheChurch without Jesus Christ: "I'mmember and preacher to that churchwhere the blind don't see and the lame don't walk and what's dead stays dead"cries Hazel. Recommended. With NedBeatty. Saturday, July 25 at 7 and 9:30.Cobb Hall. $2. SAO. CLC.Seven Brides for Seven Brothers (StanleyDonen, 1954) What could be more Ameri¬can than an actor as our president? Howabout a Western musical. This MGM prod¬uction, retelling the rape of the Sabrinesisters, is marred by an obviously lowbudget. But once the juvenile brothers fol¬low Howard Keel's example and try to gethitched one quickly forgets about thetacky sets. Sit back, enjoy, and thinkabout your favorite gal or favorite presi¬dent. With Russ Tamblyn and JanePowell. Tuesday, July 28 at 8 p.m. CobbHall. $2. DOC.The Spy Who Came in from the Cold (MartinRitt, 1965) A realistic look at the spygame. And a welcome relief from theJames Bond gimmick-esthetics. WithRichard Burton, Claire Bloom, and OscarWerner. Wednesday, July 29 at 8 p.m. $2.DOC.Charade (Stanley Donen, 1963) A spy spoofwith Cary Grant, Audrey Hepburn, andWalter Matthau, and plenty of camp.Grant plays a handsome stranger whohelps Hepburn recover a fortune secretedby her husband, while the C l A and a trio ofgangsters match witts. Not bad despitethis director's influence. Thursday, July30 at 8:30 at Law School Auditorium. $2.LSF,Tanner’s Messidor:Dialectic DuoMessidordirected by Alain Tannerstarring Clementine Amouroux and Cath¬erine RetoreFilm Center of the Art Institute of Chicagoby Richard MartinHalfway through Alain Tanner's Messi¬dor, one of the film's protagonists grandlyexplains that the reckless journey that sheand her companion are making through theSwiss countryside is a "game in time andempty space." If this enigmatic statementexemplifies the couple's wanton and unmo¬tivated wandering, it also succinctly articu¬lates Tanner's structuralist ideas aboutfilm.Messidor is probably the most successfulabsorption of structuralist theory into main¬stream narrative film since Jeanne Diel-man, a 1979 film by Tanner's fellow Swissfilmmaker Chantel Akerman. At the core ofboth films lies the theme of the individual'sinternalization of social structures. Whereas Jeanne Dielman explores the ma¬terialistic environment that forces thefilm's housewife-protagonist to become aprostitute, Messidor a goraphobically zerosin on a deceptively free and open Swiss soci¬ety, revealing a country as closed and claus¬trophobic as a housewife's kitchen.Messidor is a film in which "nothing happens" to its two heros. And the stifling Euro¬pean social structure and apathetic inhabi¬tants are only partly the cause of theprotagonist's aimless wandering and unfo¬cused malaise. From the start, when the twoteenage women, Jeanne (ClementineAmouroux) and Marie (Catherine Retore),leave their homes as innocent hitchhikers,until the end when they degenerate intocommitting acts of random violence, theyhave no conscious aim — they only want toforget their homes and former responsibili¬ties.But in Tanner's world such consciousennui is unforgivable. In Jonah Will Be 25 InThe Year 2000 (1976), Tanner examined theconsequences of a generation's acceptanceof social responsibility. But with Messidordirector takes the opposite perspective andGrey CiTy JournaII. =: Planning Brunch , Sunday, 11 A.M.' *«...** | jjjfF THE MEDICI. fife:, .jjPC- *Newcomers Welcome! explores the potential tragic effects of indi¬vidual irresponsibility and personal an¬archy.When the playful anarchists meet whilehitchhiking they decide to join forces ontheir aimless sojourn. Their friendship isconsummated when two men try to rapeJeanne and Marie saves her by applying arock to an assailant's head. Later, whenJeanne playfully lifts-a gun from a Swiss sol¬dier, the women's fates are sealed. Althoughthey intend to keep it to "scare off" poten¬tial assailants, the gun becomes a more ac¬tive drop when they run out of money. Theyhold up a grocery store, threaten a farmer,and even fire at a commercial jet flyingoverhead. When these acts are re-created ona television crime-prevention program, thewomen are in constant danger of being iden¬tified and find it harder to obtain food. Theyare now considered wanted criminals andsubversives by the authorities and the para¬noid bourgeoisie.Although not as blatantly political as thepleasantly didactic Jonah..., Messidor is notwithout its political symbolism. The word"Messidor" is the name of the harvestmonth of the French revolutionary calen¬dar. And early in the film when the twohitchhikers are stopped by an inquisitivecop, Jeanne tells him that she and Marie aresisters, the Messidor sisters. She dubsSEMINARY COOP5757 S UNIVERSITY MON-THU 930-530FRI 930-500 SAT 1100-400Marie Clio, Mess/dor, after the muse of his¬tory, and herself Thalia Messidor, after themuse of comedy. In fact, it is Jeanne, theurban intellectual, who thinks up theschemes to get free food and lodging, andMarie, the rural worker, who executesthem.But this dialectic duo, practicing theirpersonal anarchy across the countryside,have no moral or political justification fortheir actions. At the end of the film, thehungry and paranoid pair, eating at a road¬side restaurant, wrongly suspect that a manin a suit recognize them when he goes to thetelephone. However, the restaurant manag¬er does recognize them and he phones thepolice — insuring their capture.Messidor is one of the most inspired andrewarding films of a new wave of structuralist narratives of the European cinema, afilm Tanner says is best suited for "a newkind of audience." Whether or not Messidordemands a new generation of filmgoers,Tanner has successfully translated usuallyesoteric structuralist theories into a dra¬matic context. And the result is an enigma¬tic, entertaining, and intelligent film.Messidor plays at the Film Center of theArt Institute July 25th, 26th, and 28th. Formore information call the Film Center at443-3737.The Chicago Maroon — Friday, July 24, 1981 — 5Staff MeetingThere will be a meeting of new and re¬turning Maroon staff members who are in¬terested in working on the Orientationweek issue, this Wednesday at 8:30 in theMaroon office, third floor of Ida Noyes.Stories for the issue will be assigned. Writ¬ers who wish to work on the issue, but whowill not be able to attend the meetingshould call the Maroon before hand. Maroon and Grey City Journal staffmembers are also urged to attend two soft-ball games scheduled during the nextweek. The Maroon is scheduled to beat theStudent Activities Office today at 5:30 pm,on the Midway infront of Ida Noyes. Then arematch against WHPK, who the Maroondevastated earlier this spring, is set for6:00 Monday, at the same location.Used Desks (From $20-up)Chairs (From $20-up)Drawing Tables(6 foot, with tool drawers)BRANDEQUIPMENT 8560 S. ChicagoRE 4-2111Open Daily 8:30-5Sat. 9:00-3SPOKESMENBICYCLESHOP5301 Hyde Park Blvd.Open 10-7 M-F,10-5 Sat.11-4 Sun.684-3737 Selling QualityImported BicyclesRaleigh, Peugot, FujiMotobecane, Windsor,Car a vela, TrekRollerskates forSale or RentBu * Trie 1724 Sherman Ave.Ph. # 975-1616 Evanston, IL 60201Above County SeatDr. S.C. Fostiak, Optometrist. Ph. ff 864-4441 M vmCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing in Cantoneseand American dishes.Open Daily 11 A.-8:30 P.M.Closed Monday1318 E. 63rd MU 4-1062HYDE PARKTHE VERSAILLES324-0200Large Studios • Walk-inKitchen • Utilities Incl. •Furn. - Unfurn. • CampusBus at doorBased on Availability5254 S. Dorchester The Flamingoand Cabana Club5500 S. Shore Drive• Studio and 1 Bedrcxmi•Furnished and Unfurnished•U. of C. Bus Stop•Outdoor Pool and (hardens•Carpeting & Drapes Incl•Security •University Subsidyfor Students & Staff•Delicatessen •Barber Shop•Beauty Shop • I J s Restaurant•Dentist •ValetFREE PARKINGM.SnyderPL 2-3800INSTANTPASSPORT PHOTOS1519 EAST 53rd STREETPHONE: 752-3030Charlotte cVihstzomcR zal Citats do.493-0666 Call AnytimeNew on the MarketBetween Harper and Stony on 59th - Four spacious roomsoverlooking garden. Co-op $32,000Top floor condo - studio - excellent financing $34,500 UniversityPark - 55th and Dorchester“GOOD BUY” CORNER10% FinancingMake Lakefront condo -1900 sq.Offer ft- of beauty. Wood-burning fireplace.Parquet Floors - qualitybuilding - 50th StreetEconomical to Maintain57th and Kimbark 6 roomMake “doll house” apt.Offer designer kitchen - com¬pletely decorated - GreatFinancing - Price in 60’s.MakeOffer 12%Brick Three Story Ken¬wood Home. Owner willfinance. 11%Lakefront Two - Story. MakeLuxury Prominent OfferPhysician Transfered. -Must sell- Seven rooms -views - oposite Museum.$149,500.T * j ~ i wo r iai nriciand Ada (Rush-Pres. Hosp.) $12,500 - To settle estate -Just Listed - to settle estate....6 rooms - 3 baths view of lake -Nat 1 Registry of Historic Buildings - South Shore at 73rd $21,000. in6 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, July 24, 1981HOUSESTWO 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 designed 3bedroom, 2'/j bath townhouse. Privatebackyard, central air and more. $105,000.COZY FIREPLACE, garage, fencedbackyard, 3 bedrooms, 2‘/z 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. $850 per month.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 1900 sq. 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 reasonablySriced 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.GREENWOCD 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 Immaculate1 Charming! Lower$50’s. Ask about \0Vi°/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. 4‘/2 rooms plus sunporch of flexiblespace with lots of charm and natural wood¬work. A super buy at 57th and Kenwood. Up¬per $60’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.NEWPORT.2 bedroom with garagespace. Upper $70’s.COOPERATIVESl.AKEFRONT 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.HILD REALTY GROUP1365 E. 53rd St.S55-12QO ClassifiedsSPACEGrad students: cooperative society offifteen has space for one man and onewoman One block from quadrangle.Low rent. For information call 9552653Studio apts. 955 1200Hild Realty Group.Hyde Park condo for sale. 2 bdrm, lbath, large living room, modern kit¬chen & bathroom, 2 porches, parking,backyard, 14% mortgage Days 4406038, eve 955 2052.BEAUTIFUL LAKE VIEW: I6th floor1 br apt 55th 8< S. Shore, partially fur¬nished For sublet Sept 81 til June 82(negotiable). $464/mo (gas & hotwater Incl) call 643 3396.Hyde Park Studio—large, modern,quiet, and secure Convenient to U of C(55th 8. Blackstone—UC). $345/monfh,includes heat. Laundry facilities,health club and more on premises.Call 493 9751 or 251 4009 (Bothnumbers after 6 pm).RESPONSIBLE ROOMMATE sought.Male grad student in his 30's offers furnished bdrm/study in 2 bdrm apt Indryfac in blgd $l70/mo +utll. Prefer malenonsmoker call John evenings 4936291. Avail 9/1.ROOM AVAIL. IMMED 363 4524125/mo.For Rent 2 bedroom condo In HydePark's golden rectangle Oak floors,new modernized eat-in kitchen, largeformal dining room with built-in oakbuffet. Washer-dryer, dishwasher. Offstreet parking. Large enclosed backyard. Available late Aug. 5575/mo 955-6567.ROOM FOR RENT IN LRG APT 3634524.5-room apt for rent at low price. 3blocks from U of C. Available Aug 1thru Sept at reduced rate, with OPTION for lease renewal in Sept. Call955 8378 or 667 2056 after 6 pm. Ask forJack.W female, 30, + cat, own ig unfurnbdrm in 2 bdrm, IV2 bath, 6 rm apt$2l0/mo + 1 mo sec. Margaret 294-2270(days), 667 5219 (eves)ROOMMATE WANTED to share aptwith male grad student. E Hyde PK,two blocks from lake. $140 (neg.) Call493-4921 between 5 and 7.Available Aug 1.1 BR in Ige 4 BR apt$l50/mo Female preferred. Greatlocation 5462 S. Cornell Phone 3636283Male nonsmoker wanted to sharelarge 4 bedroom apt with l male and 2females 55th 8, Cornell Rent131/month Call eve. 684-6533.SPACE WANTEDWould like rm or apt within your homein exchange for childcare. Call 955-9577Graduate couple wish to house or apt.sit Fall 81 Winter quarters. Carepets/plants Refs 493 8589Need 2 bdrm sub 9/1-3/26. 876 7292. PEOPLE WANTEDBABYSITTERS. Names being compiled to sit 2 children in facultyhome. On campus, days or eveningsCall 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 Sciences.Phone 753 4718.If 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 infoPatient 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 2417545 after 6Child Care for five year old from Aug27 to Sept 15. Mon thru Thurs. 8 am to1:00 324 5761.FOR SALEWestinghouse refrigerator 8 yrs oldgood working condition frost free S65Karen 753 4808, 643-5525.2 bedroom condo In Hyde Park'sgolden recfangle. Modern kitchen withnew appliances. Formal dining room.Oak floors. 14% financing available ifyou act soon $70,000. Call 955-6567.IBM Executive typewriter in mintcond $150 neg. 753 2898 or 288 1676Doub bd box spr/mattress 324-7623.Fiat 128 Sedan 1978 low mileage norust ex. cond. $2500 or best offer CallDr Myers PL2-5757 ext 65.SERVICESJOB MARKETS, salaries, housing,schools, climate, much more. Comparative city analysis of Colorado byprofessional planner. Send $6.50 to Coi-orado Sourcebook Box 132-C.Loveland, Colorado 80537ARTWORK-Posters. Illustration, lettering, etc. Noel Yovovlch 493 2399Chicago Counseling andPsychotherapy Center. Client-centered psychotherapy. 5711 S.Wood lawn, 6354 N Broadway, and 111N. Wabash. Chicago A RegisteredPsychological Agency. (312) 684-1800Experienced piano teacher for begin¬ner. intermediate, advanced. Now accepting new students call 643-3168 forinterview.Efficient typing of student papersavailable. IBM Selectric. Call 684-6682RIDESRider wanted to Pittsburgh, PA Iv.Aug 1 or 2, share driving and gas 7532538 days, 498 9841 eves PUBLICRELATIONSFulltime temporary PR person neededin hospital public relations/development office to handle various seasonalprojects during the next 2-3 months.Resonsibilitltes Include writing andproducing hospital publications, coordinating professional seminars. Posi¬tion requires a dynamic, self-directedperson with excellent oral and writtencommunications skills and ability towork against deadlines. Must havejournalism or English degree, with 2years' related experience Could leadto permanent position. Please sendresume, your best writing sample, andsalary requirement to: PersonnelCoordinator. La Rabida Children'sHospital and Research Center, East65th St at Lake Michigan, Chicago IL60649 Equal Opportunity EmployerM/F/H.CONDO BY OWNERCharm and character. Bright 5 rm.condo, 2 BR. Totally renovated. Oak fl.and buffet, frpl., bale., PLUS! CallKaren days 974 5456, eves./wkends947 0859WOMEN'SMAGAZINEPrimavera Vol 617 is out! Available Inmost Hyde Park bookstores. Womenwho want to join the staff should call752 5655 for info.SUMMER BAZAARSALELast sale in Hyde Park everythingreduced see us at neighborhood clubflea market Sunday July 26th.FACULTYHOMOPHOBIAAre university professors as prone fobe anti gay as anyone else? Less so?More so? Hear nationally-known gayscholar Louis Crew speak about hisstudy of anti-gay sentiment amongacademics. At a Gay Coffeehousetonight at 8 pm In the Ida Noyes EastLounge.ARE YOU HYPER?We need subjects who are nervous oranxious to partlcpate In a drugpreference study. We pay up to $195.Only commonly prescribed, nonexperimental drugs are used For fur¬ther information please call 947 6348 or947-5871 between 10 am and noonweekdays except WednesdayARE YOU BETWEEN40 AND55 YEARSOF AGE?We need subjects In this category toparticipate In a drug preference studyWe pay up to $195. Only commonlyprescribed non-experlmental drugsare used For further Informationplease call 947 6348 or 947 5871 between10 and noon weekdays except Wednesday YARD SALESat July 25 10-4 1036 E. 48th St. ToysCarpets TV Dryer cabinetsLawnmower Furniture Hshold goodsMOVINGStudent with Pickup truck can moveyour stuff FAST and CHEAP No jobtoo small! Call Peter at. 955-1824lOam-10 pm.LEFT, RIGHTLEFT, RIGHTLeft and right-handed people neededto participate In interesting experiments on handedness andpsychology Variable pay. For moreInformation call M F 9 to 5 753 4735STUDENT GOV.FOOD COOPSummer quarter food ordering andpickup has started. New members be¬ing taken Contact stud. Gov Officefor more info 753-3273.EDITORNational Opinion Research Center Islooking for an Editor to assist theirEditorial Supervisor in providing thefull range of editorial services to alldivisions within the organization.The successful candidate will have aminimum of a B .A degree in Engllsh/-Journalism and 2 years editorial ex¬perience. It's preferred that the experience is in academic publishing inthe social sciences, and/or In writingbrochures, newsletters, or other publicmaterials Production experience isan added plusIf you qualify and are interested in fin¬ding out more about the position cal!Nancy Bernhardt at 753-1122An Affirmative Action Equal Op¬portunity EmployerW P BEARMOVING CO.We Move Almost Anything AlmostAnywhere Within the City and Coast toCoast W.P Bear 947 8035.WANTEDGRADUATION TICKETS for Augwanted; WILL PAY; call 753 4581afternoons or 324-3484 eveningsHelp write letters opposing antiabortion legislation Women's Union OfficeIHN Weds July 29 4 :30GRAFF & CHECKReal Estate1617 E. 55th St.1 Y2-2Y2-4 RoomApartmentsBased on AvailabilityBU8-5566Available to all comersFUNDRAISERPROPOSAL WRITERExperience needed. Workat downtown location.Phone: 782-8967Character and Conveniencein Flossmoor -This large two bedroom home featuresone and one half baths, first floor familyroom, pretty lot with mature trees, andbeamed ceiling and built-ins in livingroom. One block to train, shopping andparks. Walk to elementary, junior high,and high school. $98,000.00Call Barbara Steele for housingin the southern suburbs - Home-wood, Flossmoor, OlympiaFields.798-3256799-8800Klipc-McpckcRoalEstatc New 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 Floor753-3303The Chicago Maroon — Friday, July 24, 1981 — 7AIRFLOWDELUXEDance and listen tothe hits (and a fewmisses) of the Twenties,Thirties and FortiesTuesday, July 28Hutch Court8 p.m.(if rain:Ida Noyes Hall)An evening with...Tickets on sale nowReynolds Club Box Office$3 UC Students$5 OthersReservations at753-3591 1214 E. 53rd (Kimbork Plaza)Phone: 493-3355UQUOR750 ml. POPOV VODKA750 ml. SALIGNAC COGNACLiter OLD FITZGERALD 100#Liter KENTUCKY TAVERN BOURBON750 ml. TANGUERAY GIN750 ml. RONRICO RUM750 ml. RIUNITE LAMBRUSCOLiter KL05TERGARTEN UEBFRAUMILCH750 ml. MOUTON CADET WHITE.GIANT BEER SPECIAif1#|](All sole beer items ore worm only.)1212 oz. cons BUDWEISER6-12 oz. cons RHINELANDER BEERMOOSEHEAD (Canadian 6-12 ex. btls.)ASAHI (Japan) 6-12 oz. bits.)BOHEMIA (Mexico 612 oz. btls.).CARLSBERG DARK (Denmark 612 oz. btls.)CARLSBERG DARK (Denmark 612 oz. btls.)PORETTI (My 4-12 oz. btls.)DORTMUNDER KRONEN (German 612 oz. btls.)GUINNESS STOUT (Ireland 612 oz. btls.)ST. PAULI GIRL (German 6-12 ox. btls.)OKEEFE (Canada 6-12 oz. btls.) $3.69.9.09.8.99. 5.59.8.89.4.69.2.89.3.49.4.99.3.99. 1.69%f. 89.3.99.4.09. 4.09.4.39v 3.19.3.99. 3.39. 3.99.3.29Sale Dates 7/24/ -7/27SPECIAL DISCOUNT PRICESfor all STUDENTS, STAFF,and FACULTY MEMBERSJust present your University ofChicago Identification Cord. Asstudents, Faculty Members or Ad¬ministrative Staff you are entitledto special money-saving DIS¬COUNTS on Chevrolet Parts. Ac¬cessories and any new or usedChevrolet you buy from RubyChevrolet. 72nd & Stony IslandOpen Evenings andSunday684-0400GMOMunrflMQMITISPECIAL DISCOUNT PRICESfor all STUDENTS, STAFF,and FACULTY MEMBERSJust Present your University ofChicago Identification Card. Asstudents, Faculty Members orAdministrative Staff you are en¬titled to special money-savingDISCOUNTS on Volkswagen Parts.Accessories and any new or usedVolkswagen you buy from RubyVolkswagen. Frrp Hal Ural C W FrrUagBut l,kJS L IMt UB ParuParts OpenSat.'til noon2 Miles-5 MinutesAway FromThe UNIVERSITY