IFor the asking....the column with the answerspage seven Maroons splithomecoming gamesIn Sports, page eightThe Chicago MaroonVolume 91, No. 13 The University of Chicago ^Copyright 1981 The Chicago Maroon Tuesday, October 20, 1981Fear and silence widespreadinCatholicChurch,says KungBy Robert Decker andJohn HerrickIn his speech “Where I Stand”given Friday at Rockefeller Chap¬el. Hans Kung issued a theologicalmanifesto in a lecture highly criti¬cal of the Roman Catholic-Church.Kung said there is now a strugglein the Catholic Church between ac¬ademic theologians and Rome, aswell as between Rome and the ecu¬menical movement among certainCatholics. The conflict, said Kung,results from the conservatism ofthe Catholic hierarchy, contrastedwith the demand of theologians foracademic freedom.Stagnation in the Vatican, Kungsaid, has had “a paralyzing effect”on the ecumenical movement. Hedid not say that a break betweenecumenical and traditional Catho¬lics was necessary, and said thatan ecumenical element must re¬main in the Roman Catholic hier¬archy. He called for a relaxation ofRome’s “grip on the theologians”so that “the impasse may be re¬solved.” This type of reform, Kung said,involves a threat to the theory ofinfallibility of the Pope and theChurch, and for this reason he saidhe was deprived of his license toteach theology in December 1979as an agent of the Church.Kung’s denial of the infallibilityof the Church is just one of the con¬flicts which Kung said exists be¬tween himself and Rome. Kungsaid fear and silence is widespreadin the Church at this time. He saidhe has attempted to meet with thePope, but that the requests for anaudience were refused.“I am ready to meet him,” saidKung. “but he does not respond.”This lack of dialogue, Kung said,epitomizes the relationship be¬tween the theologians and theChurch hierarchy.Kung also said he was concernedabout the relationship between theChurch and Church-members.“Many people are ready to ap¬plaud a great man,” said Kung ofPope John Paul IPs popularity,“but they are not ready to accept his message.” The result, Kungsaid, is a credibility gap. Citing asurvey conducted in West Ger¬many. Kung said 57 percent of that.country's Catholics favor ordina¬tion of women, 63 percent deny theinfallibility of the Pope, 72 percentfavor marriage of Catholic clergy,76 favor legalized abortion, and 81percent favor the use of contracep¬tion.“This (survey shows) why I donot feel completely alone in myown Church,” said Kung. “In theChurch of Christ the majority isprobably right.” The world haschanged, he said, and so has itsneeds.Kung said it was the Church’s re¬sponsibility to change its views sothat it can meet the world’s pres¬ent needs. He said a modernizationof the Church would be necessarybefore it could become more acti¬vely involved in society.“I want to make my stand as clo¬sely as possible to the point atwhich Jesus Himself would stand.It is not sufficient if only the will ofThree may seek treasurer postBy Anna FeldmanFormer Student Government(SG) President Jeff Elton, formerSG Treasurer Greg Wendt andDavid Blaszkowsky, who lost therace for treasurer last year by 14votes, are all considering runningfor the recently vacated position ofSG treasurer.The office became vacant lastweek when Robert McKay re¬signed in protest after SG deniedfunding to this year’s homecomingactivities. The election will be heldnext Monday.Elton, who was the first SG pres¬ident to serve twice, is now a firstyear student in the business school.He is the only one of the three to de¬finitely announce that he is run¬ning. The filing deadline for peti¬tions is this Thursday. As of noonyesterday, no completed petitionsfor the office had been turned in.Elton said that he was partlyprompted to run by the actions ofthe SG Finance Committee(SGFC) earlier this month. SGFCvoted to deny funding to Home¬coming in an effort to change Uni¬versity policy on serving alcohol atall-University parties. At lastTuesday’s meeting Elton offered amotion which condemned theSGFC for setting its own policy onwhat type of event should be fund¬ed. The motion said that the powerto set such policy is held by SG as¬semblyElton said he has several ideasfor the office of Treasurer, includ¬ing upgrading accounting proce¬dures and having a regular outsideaudit of the books. “That has neverbeen done,” Elton said.Elton said he had planned to re¬main active in SG, but that he was Jeff Eltonuncertain at election time last yearwhether he would be returning tothe University. He said that he“wanted a position with a strongpolicy-making role, but one thatdidn’t require the time or commit¬ment of president or financechair.” The treasurer also sits onthe SGFC.David Blaszkowsky, who servedas chairman of a SG sub-commit¬tee last year, and has been offeredthe position of chair on the StudentServices committee this year, isalso considering running. He saidthat he wanted to confirm who wasin the field of candidates before fi¬nally deciding to run. “After thehomecoming fiasco, I feel it is im¬portant not to retreat saying thatSG is a floundering whale,” saidBlaszkowsky. The phrase flounder¬ing whale was included in McKay’sletter of resignation.“I’m running because I feel I’mqualified to serve, as I felt I wasqualified last year,” Blaszkowskysaid. “I have a commitment to SG,and I’d like to follow that up. I haveexperience with finance and book¬keeping. Jeff (Elton) would bequalified, lout it doesn’t take aformer president or a businessschool student to be treasurer.”Blaszkowsky said that he saw, “a potential for conflict with twopresidents in one cabinet.” He didnot have any comment on Wendt’spossible candidacy. He said that hedisagreed with the SGFC decisionto cut off funding to Homecoming,but that he didn’t think it was rightto ask the University to break thelaw. Blaszkowsky is a third yearundergraduate.Wendt resigned the position oftreasurer last year under chargesthat he had stuffed the ballot box in Hans Kungecclesiastical authorities is consi¬dered and not the will of Christ. Icannot think that He would adoptthe same attitude as the Church.”Kung does not call contraceptiona mortal sin. and said he favorsmarriage of the Catholic clergy, in¬asmuch as many New Testamentapostles had wives. He also saidthat he would not prohibit mixedmarriages and the ordination ofwomen.“If we want to be Chris¬tians,’’Kung said, "we cannot denyfreedom and human rights exter¬nally (to the people) as we do inter¬nally (to the Church).” Kung saidhe sees his task as a theologian tostand with Jesus Christ in seekingthe truth and then to quietly seizethe initiative for ecumenical devel¬opment, despite widespread passi¬vity and fearfulness. While theolo¬ gians may err. he said, it is only byfree will and investigation that thedilemmas facing the Church willbe resolved. An attempt to force asolution to these dilemmas, hesaid, “causes irreparable damageto the community and is harmful inthe development of theology in theChurch.”Kung said he wants the freedomto speak unhindered by Church ad¬ministration, although he does notwant to be separated from theChurch"Theology can only work withsupport from the Church at alllevels.” Kung said. Kung said theChurch’s theologian must also in¬vestigate the results of scientificand philosophical investigationswhile c nsidering these resultswith the critit is n of religion21st-year studenttaking 95th courseGreg Wendtanother election, and had thenfound people to lie for him when hewas caught. He said that he wouldconsider running, “if there ap¬peared to be a significant amountof support, and if there were no al¬ternative other than candidateshand-picked by (SG presidentClarke) Campbell, or (SGFC chairGeorge) Kampstra.”Wendt said that he strongly disa¬greed with the decision of SGFC onfunding off-campus parties. “It'snot that I want to be treasurer,” hesaid, “but I think somebody whowould provide a foil to Kampstra’santi-undergraduate views shouldbe elected.”Wendt would not say whether hebelieved that either of his possibleopponents fit this category. He didsay that “I think Elton would befrustrated as SG treasurer.” In the fall of 1960 LawrenceKimpton was the President of theUniversity. Hanna Gray was stilltrying to land a teaching positionhere. Dwight Eisenhower wasPresident. Most students in the col¬lege today weren't even bornAnd Mel Brooks and Carl Reinerhad just come out with a recordabout the interview with a 2,000year old man.Recently a student who enteredUC that fall approached us aboutdoing an interview with him. Heclaimed he was still a student, andthat he w as 2,000 years old himself.A closer examination revealed thatw hile he was not 2.000 years old. hewas still a student, enrolled in his95th University course. We arepleased to present our own 2,000year old man. 21st year studentJohn Martin, who prefers to beknown by his student ID number,100228.100228: I came here to the Col¬lege in 1960, at age 15. I’ve been inschool here in 1960-62, 1964, 1966-67, and 1974 to present. I’ve taken al¬most 100 courses; I’m working onmy third and fourth degrees.Maroon: What was the Collegelike in the early 60 s?continued on page sevenJohn Martin as an entering stu¬dentThe Student Activities OfficeWill Have Discount Tickets To:JAMES EARL CHRISTOPHERJONES PLUMMER Regular Price$2050You Pay:$1500First Balcony Front Seats for Thursday, Nov. 19 Performanceat the Schubert TheatreTickets on sale beginning of NovemberWatch the Maroon for detailsSlow to take* (lip pluiujowithout takiiMj a hath.Most people, when they decide to yet engaged, feel like they're inover their heads! Especially when it comes time to pick out a diamond.If that's how you feel, S.A. Peck frCo. is the perfect lifesaver! First,S.A. Peck sells only the finest diamond rings, using diamonds that havemet rigid standards for quality and appearance. So you can he sure, fromthe start, you are getting a quality diamond ring.Secondly, we offer a guarantee. Should you want to return yourring, within fifteen days, for any reason at all, you'll receive a completerefund, no questions asked.Finally, the S.A. Peck system eliminates the middleman, meaning youbuy you: diamond ring for approximately 50% of w hat you would pay forthe same ring at competitive jewelry stores. And at a time like this, thatkind of value is a comforting thought!Send for our free 44 page color catalogtoday. It has full color pictures of over 300wedding and engagement rings all avail¬able to you at savings up to 50%!Or, visit our diamond showrooms at 55 EastWashington Street, Chicago. It'll makeyou feel a lotless jumpyabouttakingtheplunge!SAPeck&Co.Please send free <.aiding.NameAddressCity SlateSchool Z.pS.A. Peck fcr Co., 55 E. Washington St.Chicaeo. II. 60602 312/977-0300 SIMCHAT TORAHSERVICES - HAKAFOT - SINGING - DANCING, REFRESHMENTSTUESDAY. October 20 - Yavneh Orthodox) 5;45 p.m.Upstairs Minyan 7:30 p.m.(Conservative-Egalitarian)WEDNESDAY. October 21 - Yavneh (Orthodox) 9:15 a.m. and5:45 p.m. Upstairs Minyan 9:30a.m.HILLEL FOUNDATION - 5715 Woodlawn Avenueattractive Brown Walnut FinishIThe Politics of InterpretationA SYMPOSIUM SPONSORED BY CRITICAL INQUIRYSpeakers and PanelistsWayne C. BoothUniversity of ChicagoStanley CavellHarvard UniversityT.J. ClarkHarvard UniversityDonald DavieVanderbilt UniversityRonald DworkinUniversity of OxfordStanley E. FishJohns Hopkins UniversityMichael FriedJohns Hopkins University Julia KristevaUniversity of Paris VIIWalter Benn MichaelsUniversity of California, BerkeleyEdward W. SaidColumbia UniversityGayatri SpivakUniversity of Texas at AustinStephen ToulminUniversity of ChicagoHayden WhiteUniversity of California at Santa CruzGarry WillsNorthwestern UniversityE. D. HirschUniversity of VirginiaTo be held at the University of Chicago,Center of Continuing Education,1307 East 60th StreetOCTOBER 30,31, and NOVEMBER 1,1981Registration Fee: $15.00 Student Rate; $50.00 Regular RateRegistration forms available at Wieboldt 202 Center for ContinuingEducation, and Mandel Hall ticket office.2—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, October 20, 1981NewsbriefsUC grad Nobelwinner in medicineFor the first time in three years, no cur¬rent member of the University faculty wasawarded the Nobel Prize. However, with theUniversity’s extensive method of countingNobel laureates associated with the Univer¬sity, the number of Nobel winners were fac¬ulty members sometime in their careers orwho were once students here is now up to50.Roger W. Sperry, who shared this year’sprize for medicine and physiology, receivedhis PhD. from the University in 1941 andwas a member of the faculty rom 1946 to1953 before going to the California Instituteof Technology, where he presently is teach¬ing.I-M entries dueIM entries for women’s badminton andcoed volleyball are due on Wednesday, Oc¬tober 21. On Thursday, October 22, open recentries for coed volleyball must lie turnedin.Poet to read worksAward-winning poet Lucien Stryk willread from his work on Thursday, October 22at 4:30. The reading will take place in theIda Noyes Library, and is sponsored by theChicago Review Speakers Series.Stryk is noted not only for his own poetrybut also for his extensive translations of Zenpoems. Both original work and translationshave been published widely in such maga¬zines as Poetry, The Nation, Satuday Re¬view and Chicago Review. Among Stryk’s books are The Penguin Book of Zen Poetryand Encounter With Zen : Writings on Poet¬ry and Zen. Stryk has also been the recipientof numerous honors, including a NationalEndowment for the Arts Poetry Fellowship,a Ford Foundation Fellowship, and two Ful-bright grants.The reading is funded by the Illinois ArtsCouncil and by the William Vaughn MoodyLecture Committee. It is open to the pub¬lic.Speakers arrestedTwo revolutionaries from El Salvadorwho were scheduled to speak at the BlueGargoyle this Friday night were arrestedlast week as illegal aliens by the immigra¬tion border control police in Oklahoma.David Mendez and Mauricio Henriquezwere making a tour of the United States torelate their experiences as revolutionariesin El Salvador. The tour is sponsored by thenational organization of the RevolutionaryCommunist Youth Brigade (RCYBi.According to a spokesman from the localRCYB, the two men are being held in Tulsa,Okla. The bail, w-hich the RCYB said hasbeen increased twice, now stands at $25,000for one and $10,000 for the other. Bail moneyis currently being raised.The two men who now face deportationproceedings back to El Salvador had ap¬plied for political asylum before they werearrested. Both men were active fightingagainst the Duarte regime, the spokesmansaid. One had actually organized his ownguerilla force in his village.The appearance of the two men at theBlue Gargoyle this Friday was to be spon¬sored by the local RCYB organization.Bomb documentaryIn conjunction with Peace Week Chicago,the Nuclear Overkill Moratorium(NOMOR) Committee of Hyde Park-Ken- wood will sponsor the award-winning film,“The Day After Trinity: J. Robert Oppen-heimer and the Atomic Bomb.”The film tells the story of the work be-hiinnd the invention of the atomic bomb, andof the reaction of scientists to the destruc¬tion of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Included inthe film is recently released governmentfootage documenting the invention of thebomb.NOMOR will show the film Wednesday at7:30 p.m. at the Augustana LutheranChurch, 5500 S. Woodlaw'n Avenue. A dona¬tion of $2 is requested.Kurland, Redfieldto speakPhilip Kurland will give the second Wood¬ward Court lecture of the quarter this eve¬ning at 8:30 in the Woodward commons. Thelecture, entitled “The Chief Justice De¬clares War On Crime — Again,” will dealwith remarks made by Chief Justice WarrenBurger about the need for stricter treatmentof criminals by the courts today.Kurland, the William Kenan Jr. Professorin the College and a professor in the Law-School. is one of the leading constitutionalscholars today. His name has been widelymentioned as a possible future SupremeCourt Justice. He spoke to a full-house at aWoodward Court lecture two years ago.James Redfield will also be speaking thisweek when he begins the fourth annual Col¬legiate Lecture Series with a talk on “Godsand men in the Iliad”.The lecture series, sponsored by the Deanof the College and the faculty of the humanbeing and citizen common core course,deals with questions and issues raised in thesocial science and humanities core courses.Redfield’s lecture will be given at 8:00. thisWednesday, in the Swift lecture hall. Bothlectures are opfen to the University commu¬nity. Service for NassA memorial service for Michael J. Nasswill be held this Thursday, Oct. 22, at 8:00p.m. at the Hillel, 5715 Woodlawn. Nass, whorecently received his Ph D. in physics here,died in a car crash in Oklahoma late Sundaynight, Oct. 11. All those who knew him arewelcome to attend. The attendance recordwill be forwarded to his parents as an ex¬pression of condolences.Michael NassSale for hospitalThe Bobs Roberts Service Committee isseeking donations for its annual rummagesale, which will take place in the Wyler Chil¬dren's Hospital playroom November 9 from8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m.. and November 10 from8:30 a.m. to 2 p.m.Donations of clothing, furniture and toysare tax deductible and may be brought tothe Wyler playroom, the Medical CenterVolunteer Office (BH S-7), or the BillingsHospital information desk.BE AMONG THE FIRSTto see Chekhov’s THE SEAGULLin the NEW Court Theatre!Enjoy Outstanding Professional Theatre at Super Low Prices!PREVIEW PERFORMANCES THIS WEEK ONLYThurs., Oct. 22 Thru Sat. Oct. 24,8 P.M.Sun., Oct. 25,7:30 P.M.STUDENT TICKETS AS LOW AS $3ON SALE NOWAT REYNOLDS CLUB BOX OFFICE5535 S. ELLIS AVENUEThe Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, October 20 1981—3COURTSTHEATREHither and YonDePaulia reinstatedThe DePaul student newspaper, The De¬Paulia, has resumed publication after theUniversity decided to retract the Dean ofStudents' suspension of the paper. Theweekly newspaper was suspended when ittried to print a story about a rape that oc¬curred in a downtown campus building de¬spite warnings from the administration notto publish the story.The administration said that it did notwant the rape victim, a DePaul graduatestudent, to suffer any further emotionalduress by seeing the story in the studentnewspaper. DePaulia editor Vince Kellem,however, said that the students had the rightto know the dangers that are present in theschool.Despite warnings from the Dean, fatherThomas Croak, not to print the story, thestory went to press.The woman’s identity was not revealed in the story. Approximately 700 issues of thepaper were distributed before the Dean hadthe newspapers confiscated. The DePauliareceived notice that publication was sus¬pended.After several meetings between the ad¬ministration and the student editors, theUniversity agreed to allow publication of thestory with the condition that the police casenumber not be revealed. The Friday issuethat included the story reprinted by the Uni¬versity and redistributed with the change onthe following Wednesday.Kellem said that he and the other studenteditors were pleased with the outcome of thedecision.Cocaine sold at Psi UThe University of Pennsylvania adminis¬tration has warned the Psi Upsilon frater¬nity on its campus that its members mustavoid being arrested on drug charges or elsethe frat will be put on probation. Two frater¬SADAT'S DEATH:THE FUTURE OF THE MIDDLE EAST ANDTHE CAMP DAVID ACCORDSLecture By: Professor Marvin ZonisMONDAY, OCTOBER 26, 7:30 P.M.HILLEL FOUNDATION. 5715 WOODLAWN AVENUESponsored By Students For Israel[ify§3m THE HISPANIC CULTURAL SOCIETYINVITES YOU TO A UNIVERSITY-WIDESALSA DANCE PARTY4—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, October 20, 1981 nity members w-ere arrested last April whenpolice raided the frat house, discovering co¬caine and instruments used in preparing thedrug for sale.Rick Rasansky, president of the UPchapter, claimed that many house memberswere shocked at the arrest of their brothers,and that it was with difficulty that they wereexpelled from the organization.“It has to be a unanimous vote to expel abrother,” said Rasansky. “It’s dang hard todo to someone you live with.”Police slip in gymTwo policemen were injured in the Whea¬ton College gym last month as they climbeddown from bleachers after taking a publici¬ty photograph. As the bleachers were notlocked into place, they began to retract asthe men climbed down, bruising both men’sankles and breaking one man’s eyeglasses.“We’ve had a good working relationship(with the College) in the past,” Police ChiefCarl Dobbs was quick to remark, “and wewouldn’t want this to affect our involvementwith each other in the future.”Columbia dean failsto oust organizerThe College Student Council at ColumbiaUniversity defeated a motion that wouldhave prevented elections commissionerMiles Hansen from completing his two-yearterm, according to the Columbia Specta¬tor. By Robert DeckerThe motion to “exlude Hansen from rec¬ommendation to the dean,” was defeatedtwo votes to four with three abstentions.Election commissioners have to be recom¬mended to the dean of the College beforethey can be seated for the second year oftheir term.The two College senators who raised themotion said Hansen overstepped his author¬ity in organizing the upcoming freshmanclass elections and in publicizing them.They said he rewrote campaign regulationsand bought $200 in advertisements in theSpectator without council approval.In Hansen’s defense during the debateover the motion, the council chairman saidthat Hansen alone was responsible for or¬ganizing freshmen class president electionsbecause the other four seats on the commis¬sion were empty.Toilet graffiti big atChapel HillGraffiti in the toilet is a new fad at theUniversity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill,according to the Daily Tar Heel. Among theclever scraw lings which the paper reportedwere: “Reagan in 80, Bush in 81, Haig in 82,Kennedy in 84,” “If you can’t accomplish,theorize, if you can’t theorize, plagiarize,”and “I’d rather have a bottle in front of methan a frontal lobotomy.”One wit answered the question, “WHEREARE YOU GOING TO SPEND YOURETERNITY?” as follows: “AT MYMOTHER-IN-LAW’S THIS WEEKEND.”The Chicago MaroonThe Chicago Maroon is the official student newspaper of the University of Chicago It ispublished twice a week, on Tuesdays and Fridays Editorial and business offices arelocated on the third floor of Ida Noyes, 1212 E 59th St Chicago. 60637 Telephone753-3263Chris IsidoreEditorRobert DeckerManaging EditorDarrell WuDunnSenior News EditorAnna FeldmanNews EditorWilliam MudgePhotography Editor Sherrie NegreaFeatures EditorAudrey LightSports EditorRichard KayeGrey City Journal EditorBecky WoloshinChicago Literary Review EditorErin CassidyLibrarianStaff: Susan Aaron, Lee Badgett, Mary Bartholomew, Sheila Black. David Blaszkowsky,Phillip Burdick, Kahane Corn, David Candela. Jeff Davitz, Sue Fortunato, Kate Fultz,Margo Hablutzel, Sally Holland. Sho-ann Hung. Robin Kirk. Stephen Kritchevsky, BobLaBelle, Katherine Larson, Linda Lee. Carol Quillen. William Rauch.Melody Salkuci,Donna Shrout. Kate Sparks. Jeff Wolf, Anna Yamada. Henry OttoBusiness ManagerJay McKenzieAdvertising ManagerLeslie WickOffice ManagerCharlie MencerProduction ManagerAarne EliasDesign DirectorInstitute of Policy Sciencesand Public AffairsA representative of the Institute of Policy Scienceswill be on campus Tuesday, October 20,1981, to discussthe Duke master’s program in Public Policy Studies.Interested students may obtain further informationby contacting the Placement Office.Feature21st-yearcontinued from page one100228: Very different. For one thing, thefaculty was great.Nobody ever complained about getting abad instructor. Also, the students were a lotdumber than students are now. Today’s un¬dergraduates think that you should study alot, earn good grades, drink, be a good ath¬lete, have a fantastic sex life, prepare for aprofession, take interesting summer vaca¬tions, and still manage to graduate in fouryears. If you don't, they think you’re stupidor unmotivated. In my day, all you had to doto appear intelligent and well-rounded wasnot learn to play bridge.Maroon: Were you politically active duringthe 60's?100228: The closest I came to activism wasto attend a Timothy Leary lecture in Mandelin 1967. He told us to go home and take acid;a lot of us did. I always thought student ac¬tivism was a tempest in a teapot; I’m glad 1let most of it blow past me. One thing 1 re¬gret; Malcolm X came to dinner at NewDorms (Woodward Court) when I was livingthere in 1962 and I didn't go to have dinnerwith him.Maroon: Why not?100228: 1 was scared of him.Maroon: How many times have you beenmugged in Hyde Park?100228: I’ve never been mugged, or evenmenaced, and I walk most places, usuallyalone, at all hours. Hyde Park is a lot saferthan it used to be. In fact, it’s almost safe.This neighborhood got a terrible reputationa long time ago. and the reputation stuck.There’s no denying that Hyde Park was apretty scary place in the 1960’s and before,when the University was a lot smaller,Woodlawn was much more populous, andwhen there were no university cops, mini¬buses, white phones, or whistles. Mainly,however, 1 think it’s the police that changedthings. A few years ago the Maroon ran astory by a woman who had been muggedand assaulted while walking home fromJimmy^s, alone, late at night. Her screamssummoned six police cars; the police caughtand arrested her attackers. Twenty yearsago, or even today if she had been north of47th Street or south of 63rd, she could havebeen robbed, raped, killed, cooked, andeaten on a street corner without six squadsinr^limiNinnRENT-A-CAR *1608 E. 53rd Street$13.50 per day 200 Free MilesBetween 1C Tracks - - _ _ _and Cornell 667-2800HYDE PARK UNION CHURCHChurch School (all ages) 9:45 a.m.Worship 11:00 amNursery ProvidedW. Kenneth Williams. MinisterCome, Worship, Study, ServeSTANLEY H. KAPLANfor Over 42 Years The Standard otExcellence m Test PreparationCPA • GMAT • LSAT • GRESAT • MCAT • ACTFLEX • NATIONAL MEDICAL BOARDS • ECFMGNURSING BOAROS • TOEFL • VQEG«E PSvCm • GA£ 8*0 • OAT . pcaT • OCAT • yaTMAT • SAT ACHVS • NATIONAL DENTAL BOARDSPQOIATRV BOARDSFlexible Programs and HoursViiC Ary On** An*J S*A ForYOur*M *A M»*a Tr*test preparationspecialists Since 1936G+n»r* .o Map* j S C*6*Pvj#*o R»coToronto C«**J4 A ZCHICAGO CENTCR62'6 N C*rfcOogo iII-aomi 60660S * SUBURBAN>9S LI Gr»«9# Roa4/Sw<a ?01Li Gro^QA H»*AO« 60525f*1t) M2 6BAO•north an* Suburban474 CAntrai A*A/Up©A» Ma# LAvAM^jMAryi Parti 'lllACMi 60035<J1*>4»*T410 SPRING. SUMMERFALL INTENSIVESGRCVAT SAT. ACT...LSAT.N£XT monthSAT.. GHAT.. Awk/ISAT, CoVM Con«!T*y mOMOUMn v> Cora* S«x SiuOy^ w OM e T*«r * uS Cam t Hvoatrturnoi n> state cau tqu toott; 1Z—£ coming to her aid. There are so many copshere that you just have to be crazy to pickHyde Park as the place to commit a crime.Fortunately, most criminals aren’t crazy.Maroon; Incidentally, what do you thinkof the food in Hyde Park?100228; Hyde Park used to have a fairlygood delicatessen and the best Chinese res¬taurant in the city. Now there is no good Ori¬ental food — even Japanese would do — andpeople’s idea of deli is what is dished out atthat unspeakably low-quality sandwich fac¬tory in the bookstore. It’s a great loss. Otempura! O Morry’s!Maroon: Did you always plan to spend somuch of your life as a student?100228: Of course not. I planned to gothrough college in 3 years, just as I had inhigh school. But you cut a few classes, dropout for a while, work, change majors, gradu¬ate, work, try grad school, have secondthoughts, work, try grad school again, andbefore you know it, you’ve had your ID vali¬dated 36 times. It’s not the worst thing thatcan happen to a person.Maroon: But why did it all take so long?100228: In a way, it was Robert M. Hut¬chins’ and Mortimer Adler’s fault. Theytalked about education continuing for yourwhole life. I always thought I had plenty oftime to pick up the stuff they teach aroundhere. So I missed a lot the first few timesaround.Maroon: What happened to your friendsfrom college? Are any of them still stu¬dents?100228: Two of my friends did time in men¬tal institutions. One of those now has twoPh.D.'s and practices psychology; the otherbecame a dean at a well-known businessschool. Wagner was doing a dissertation atColumbia in mathematical logic when hedied of a heroin overdose. Entin gave up hisplace in the law school, entering class of1968. and went to California where he did athesis on beatniks. Then there was DickClaus — the class genius of 1960. He was anearly entrant, placed out of 26 courses, andSHARP46 scientificfunctions at yourfingertips$29.95 Regular*27.95 SaleMODEL EL-506SExtra Full-Featured Scientific Calculator withBuilt-In Statistics FunctionsA Some of tne 46 scientific functions performedat the touch of a key are hyperbolic isinhcosh tanhi and their inverses trigonometric(sin. cos. tan) and their inverses rectangularpolar coordinate conversions exponentialtbase 10 and base et and their inverses(logarithms), power (y') and its inverse i x rootot y"). factorial (n1) mean sum and standarddeviation■ 3 levels ot parentheses with up to 4 pendingoperations■ Scientific notation (8-digit mantissa 2-digitexponent)• Comes in its own attractive walletThe University of ChicagoBookstoreT ypewriter Department(2nd Floor) »970 East 58th Street753-3303 never in my hearing uttered a remarkweightier than “Of course.” Claus was awonderous strange fellow; he flunked outafter one year and went to Beloit. I have afeeling, somehow, that he too might still be astudent somewhere.Maroon: What advice would you give tostudents in the College?100228 : Regardless of your interests or ca¬reer plans, take four years of math and sta¬tistics < three will do if you are in the human¬ities), two years ot classical Greek (enoughto read Homer fluently), and at least oneyear of economics, of philosophy, of physics,and of psychology. Ditch History of Western Civ., ii possible, in favor of more concen¬trated history courses. Postpone fulfillingyour longing, if you have one. to concentrateon any of the soft sciences till you get out; afortiori, avoid courses whose rationale isMarxism, feminism, libertarianism, orcomputer programming. If you do this, theodds are good that when you get through youwon’t wind up hanging around here wishingyou had an education.Maroon: How much longer do you plan tostay at U. of C.?100228: I plan to stay until I have just onegood year here. I hope it will be this one.Wu For your dental needs...POETRY Dr. George L. Walker,D.D.S., P.C.run MODERN ROE TRY ASSOCIATIONE RESENTS General DentistryThe Twenty-seventh Annual Poetry DayDAVID WAGONER 1623 East 55th StreetReading from his poems 752-3832SATURDAY. OCTOBER 24. 19*1K:<X) P.M. Office Hours1 he Law School Auditorium By Appointmentrite University of Chicagoini Last both Street ■ ChicagoTICKETS S' OO; STUDENTS S2.00 Courtesy discountAvailable in advance from Poetry Magazine extended to studentsP.O. Box 434H • Chicago, Illinois 606X0Phone: 996-"K01The University ot ChicagoDEPARTMENT OF MUSICTHE DEPARTMENT OF MUSICpresents:Thursday, October 22 - Noon-Time Concert12:15 p.m., Goodspeed Recital HallMembers of the University Symphony Orchestra performingAntonin Dvorak's Serenade in D Minor, Op. 44Michael Jinbo, guest conductoradmission freeSunday, October 25 - Flute Recital3:00 p.m., Goodspeed Recital HallElizabeth BaltasMusic of Mozart, Doppler, Beethovenadmission freeUpcoming EventsSunday, November 1 - University Chorus &. OrchestraRockefeller Chapel, 4:00 p.m., freeSunday, November 1 ■ Juilliard String QuartetMandel Hall, 8:00 p.m. tickets availableFriday, November 6 - Sequentia-Earlv Music SeriesMandel Hall, 8:00 p.m., tickets availableSaturday, November 7 - University Chamber OrchestraGoodspeed Recital Hall, 8:00 p.m., freefor more information call *753-2613mThe Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, October 20, 1981—5The Oriental Institute: some uncovered secretsBy James E. ThompsonThe Oriental Institute is shadowed by acontradiction: while it is known inacademic circles as one of the world'sgreatest research centers concerned withNear Eastern studies, very few people oncampus and in the Chicago area are awareot its existence. As James Carswell, theCurator of the Museum says, “The Orien¬tal Institute is probably the best-keptsecret in Chicago.”The Institute's reputation started in 1919when James Henry Breasted, an eminentEgyptologist, committed himself todeveloping the first comprehensive pro¬gram in the world for the study of the an¬cient Near East. With financial supportfrom John I). Rockefeller II and theUniversity. Breasted started “a unique in¬stitution dedicated to research with a basisin the humanities rather than thesciences,” according to the Director of theInstitute. Robert McCormick Adams.The Institute has initiated and been in¬volved in many significant excavationssince its inception. Most of the ar¬chaeologists spend some of each year do¬ing field work.Many of them go to Chicago House inLuxor. Ktypt. which is run bv the Instituteas a place for detailed analysis ofmaterials that cannot be removed fromEgypt. The documentation of the Nubianruins expedition from 1959 to 1961 thatrecorded much ot the antiquities notcovered by the damming of the Nile atAswan was done there and many of thepriceless inscriptions on now-submergedtemple walls would have been lost withoutthe rescue work of the Chicago Houseresearchers. Chicago House also serves asa host for other researchers from countriesthat have no permanent base in Egypt,such as Denmark and Israel.Many of the Oriental Institute's resear¬chers are working on long-termphilological projects that interpret the datacollected by the field archaeologists. Forthe last fifty years lexicographers havebeen writing from scratch a dictionary inAssyrian, a language used in the NearEast for over 2500 years. The Chicago dic¬tionary will be the first of its kind inAssyrian and will be an invaluable asset ininterpreting tablets discovered from thisextensive period of human history.“It is possibly the most important thingthe University will do in the twentieth cen¬tury,” said Adams.The researchers in the basement of theInstitute have one of the most gratifyingtasks — restoring the thousands of potteryshards, burial artifacts and sculptures toalmost-new condition. Many of thefascinating water jugs and statues ex¬hibited in the Museum arrived in the base¬ment as unrecognizable basket cases.Through painstaking work by the restorersthat involved researching such esotericsubjects as Egyptian glazing techniquesand soil compositions, such objects as the Upper right: Tut-ankh-amun, partially recon¬structed, of the 14th centure B.C. Egyptianpharoah. Center: Egyptian mummy case.Upper left: Stately entrance to the OrientalInstitute Museum at 1155 E. 58th St., openTuesday through Sunda.ten-ton bull's head in the exhibit hall canshow early Near Eastern culture almostprefectly to its original state.The Museum is an integral part of theOriental Institute, which contains one ofthe finest collections of artifacts outside ofthe Cairo Museum in Egypt. Most of theobjects were either brought back from In¬stitute excavations or donated to theMuseum by archaeologists and private col-their tours to enable them to orient thestudents, thereby saving time at theMuseum and enhancing the students' ap¬preciation of what they are viewing.Despite the large numbers of schoolbuses that arrive every day, the Museumis seldom visited during the year. Many ofthe current students and alumni cannotremember hearing of the Oriental In¬stitute, except for a few who visited itregularly only because it offered much-needed seclusion with their girlfriends.The staff is eager to change this image.“The material here in Chicago should beexposed to the public,” says Carswell. “Itwas removed from its historical restingplaces by the expeditions in the 1920's and1930’s. The only way we can justify it beinghere in Chicago is by exhlbitin it to thepeople.”To encourage visitation, the Museum hasseveral quality special exhibitions everyyear. The current one. “Islamic Bookbin¬ding and Bookmaking," has been well-received by the newspaper critics, and has attracted more people than usual as aresult of its good reviews. The Museumhad an exhibit called “Magic ot EgyptianArt” at the same time as the Tutankamenexhibit visited the Field Museum. Becauseof the timing, at least six times the normalvisitors came.To continue their tradition of high-quality exhibitions, the Museum plans toproduce several shows over the next year.Commemorating both Chicago House’s andthe Museum Building's fiftieth anniver¬saries in December, there will be an ex¬hibition of the achievements at ChicagoHouse and a showing of the publicationsproduced by the Institute over the last fif-thy years. There is also an exhibit ofTurkish antiquities under negotiation forthe spring of 1982. No one who studies at the Universityshould miss their opportunity to visit oneof the world's greatest museums. It is im¬possible to visit the Oriental Institutewithout being fascinated by the collectionand the importance of the work that hap¬pens there.Additionally, the traditional sources ofobjects in Egypt. Iraq and Iran havebecome limited due to government opposi¬tion of the removal of the people’s heritageto remote locations like London. Berlin andChicago. Consequently, returning ar¬chaeologists have brought back few signifi¬cant objects in the last twenty years.Many of the schools in the Chicago areago on yearly field trips to the Institute’sMuseum, “The Museum appeals to bothteachers and students because it is smallenough to not intimidate anyone,” saysCarswell.The Museum supplies free Teacher’sKits to the teachers before they arrive forlectors. The collection exhibited in theMuseum is unique because it contains onlyseven copies, such as the Rossetta stonefacsimile, ot significant archaeologicalfinds. Many well-known museums, such asthe Field Museum, are not as authentic asthe Institute’s museum, according to theInstitute's coordinators.The Museum owns more objects than ithas room to exhibit them. Only 30 percentof the collection is shown at one time,while the rest is stored in the basement orloaned to other museums. With its currentwealth of objects not yet documented andresearched, the Museum does not an¬ticipate any more large acquisitions in thefuture. There is at least seven years' worthof work to be done to complete the publica¬tion of all the information in the basement.Looking for a UC scholarship?Better to be a fireman’s son than a scholar athleteBy Dan StaleyAs you hurry to your work-study job,write the Reagan Administration to lendyou just a little bit more, or try tojaw-bone the folks back home into payingfor one more year, consider this: there arestudents in the College who are onfour-year, full-tuition scholarships. Andthey’re not necessarily poor people, either.They’ve either been judged to beexceptionally talented or they werefortunate enough to come from one of anumber of esoteric backgrounds.The University awards a number ofmerit-based, non-need scholarships eachyear Most, however, are not full-tuition.The scholarships involve differentprograms, different eligibilityrequirements, and different amounts ofmoney.6—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, October The grand total for ail scholarships,according to Jerry Reiser, of the Office ofCollege Aid, is “somewhere in theneighborhood of $400,000 is disbursed eachyear.” The funds to cover these come froma variety of endowments, some with veryspecific guidelines, and from Universitymonies.If you are the son or daughter of aChicago policeman or firefighter, theyyou’re at the right place, since theUniversity has a scholarship for you. Ifyou graduated from a public high-school inVisalia, Illinois, or some othermid-western city, then chances are youwere eligible for the Smith. There arescholarships for Catholic high-schoolgraduates, Lab School graduates, sons ordaughters of the employees of ArgonneNational Laboratory (one of the largestprograms) and others.D, 1981 There are also scholarships that depnedmore on pure merit than on background.The University-sponsored National MeritScholarships are one example; thisprogram is open only to those NationalMerit Finalists who designated Chicago astheir first choice.Sixty-four students received National'Merit checks last year in amounts rangingfrom $250 to $2000 according to need.Another example are the College HonorScholarships, awar ded to the applicantswho display some outstanding skill ortalent or who have exhibited someexceptional quality of leadership. TheEssay Scholarships go to students whohave submitted outstanding originalessays; application is limited to those highschool seniors identified by the NationalCouncil of Teachers of English as the topstudent writers in the nation. The only awards that remotely resembleathletic scholarships to the University ofChicago are the Gertrude Dudley and AnnWilson prizes, both aimed at womenscholar-athletes. Candidates for these twoawards must exhibit exceptional academicability as well as athletic skill. The malecounterpart to these awards was theAlonzo Stagg, since discontinued, althoughthere are upper-classmen still receiving it.The Dudley, the Wilson, some of theEssay, some of the Honor, and a few of theother scholarships are for full tuition,regardless of need. Unfortunately, none ofthese scholarships are open to enrolledstudents, but are a part of the admissionsprocess. There is one cash award,however, open to College students: theHarris prize, details about which can behad from the office of the Dean ofStudents.OAWflyWeby George KocanSomewhere along the line, Doug Maplehad the urge to build a harpsichord. No, itseems more like he had the nerve to builda harpsichord.What he did was write to a company thatmakes harpsichord kits. He got back a setof instructions, looked them over anddecided that he could do just as wellwithout the kit. So he read some books,and then just went ahead and built one.Maple, now a Ph.D. student at UC’smusic department, drew up his own plansfor a Flemish style harpsichord andlearned how to build it as he went along.Apparently, that was the only way to buildone — just plunge right in and do it.One must have a try.Maple developed a touch forwx>odworking as a boy, using his father’stools. By the time he was anundergraduate, he was ready to take onprojects having more lasting value thanmodel airplanes (which helped develop hisknack for meticulously carving andassembling pieces of wood). Combining hispassions for music — he started piano atage seven — and craftsmanship. Maplebuilt his first instrument some six yearsago and has built one per year, more orless, since then.In a sense it was easy for Maple just toforget the rules and build one. Thetradition of craftsmanship for makingharpsichords died out during the 18thcentury.According to Tom MacCracken, anotherPh.D. student in the music department,who also builds harpsichords, theinstrument predominated in 17th and 18thcentury orchestral music and then wasreplaced by the piano in the 19th century.The piano, having a much heavierconstruction and an entirely different wayof producing sound (with hammers insteadof quills), became so popular that the artof building harpsichords stopped. Modernharpsichord builders had to rediscover andcreate their own rules for its construction.Maple’s most recent recreation is anelegant and dazzling 18th century Frenchharpsichord with a double keyboard. It ispayable, but not quite finished in finedetails. In fact, Tom MacCrackenperformed some Bach on this instrument afew weeks ago for a Noontime Concert atGoodspeed Hall.The 200-pound instrument is white,approximately 3 by 8 feet and has anatural keyboard of carved ebony and thechromatic of white bone.The faact that these instruments wereput together from scratch would amazeanyone who saw their intricate designs.It does not appear, however, that this isa case of someone just being clever for thesake of being clever, or for the sake ofshowing off. Doug Maple and TomMacCracken convey the impression ofbeing basically modest people. Although,many undoubtedly would admit that a bitof ostentation is a serious temptation.MacCracken’s harpsichord is a nearlyexact copy of an 18th century Flemishinstrument, roughly 3 by 7 feet with asingle keyboard and dark green in color.MacCracken, who does not considerhimself primarily a harpsichord maker,built his harpsichord from a kit marketedby the Zuckerman Company, which offersa wide variety of copies of keyboardinstruments in various traditions of mUworkmanship,people assemble the case, and he had helpon those parts critical to sound productionfrom a professional, a musicologist and thecurator of Yale’s museum of ancientmusical instruments, when he wasstudying music at Yale.MacCracken wanted to build his owninstrument because of his participation, asan harpsichordist, in a group specializingin the performance of Renaissance andBaroque music — on authenticinstruments. Having his own instrumentsolved the problem of playing in halls thatdid not have one and having to borrow one.He says that with a kit a beginner couldbe successful without any prior training inwoodworking. “It does take patience,” hesaid. He estimates that his kit took close to200 hours to complete — and he is stillworking on decorating it.Both harpsichordists expressedenthusiasm for playing Baroque music and; had the ZuckermanA Flemish style harpsichord built by a PhD.student Tom MacCracken.appreciation for the artistic importance ofusing authentic instruments for suchmusic.MacCracken cautions that Baroquemusic, a style of music popular in the 17thand 18th centuries, should not beconsidered “stuffy.” When people firsthear it as background music in a movie orin a television commercial they usuallylike it, without knowing that it is from theBaroque period. The Baroque style has astrong esthetic appeal for MacCracken; hedescribes it as “cheerful, lively, infectious,with great rhythmic vitality.”Both MacCracken and Maple encouragepeople to hear Baroque music played onauthentic instruments. They point out thatmodern instruments and moderninterpretations should not be superimposedon Baroque music (although suchperformances still have validity), becausethe style of music and the expressive Doug Maple examines his product — a copyof an 18th century French harpsichord.characteristics of the instrument interact.To illustrate this point. Maple gave as anexample the difference between styles ofharpsichords. Referring to the Italianharpsichord that he built standing in hisliving room, a handsome i ^trument madeof brilliant mahogeny, he noted that thestrings are plucked in such a way thatthere is a sharp attack followed by rapidattenuation.On such an instrument, music writtenby, for example the Baroque composerDomenico Scarltti, has a chace of yieldingits fullest artistic potential. Scarlatti'scompositions have fast technical passagesand embellishments which would be lost orconfused on, for instance, a Frenchharpsichord.The French method of tone productionfeatures a sustained sound, which is mosteffectively exploited by such Baroquecomposers as the FrenchmanJean-Phillippe Rameau, whose music ismore coloristic.By the same reasoning, playing thismusic on the modern piano would notbring out the fullest artistic potential —which is what the composer had in mind inwriting a particular style for a particularkind of instrument.Both MacCracken and Maple now play ina Baroque group — but not primarily onharpsichord. MacCracken plays theBaroque flute, the alto recorder and theviola da gamba for the “L’estro armonico”and the “Concertus Musicus of Chicago”(both part of the Chicago Academy ofEarly Music). Maple plays the baroquebasoon as a backup in the abovementioned group, as well as in the UC’s,“Collegium Recorder Consort.”The Staff meeting, tonight, 8:30 p.m.Chicago New and returningstaff members invitedMaroon Stories will be assigned FortheaskingDEAR F.T.A.: I like to study inRegenstein but sometimes it gets a littletoo noisy. Is it fair to ask someone to bequiet or should I just move?Reg ratDear Reg rat: Use your discretion Firstglance at them. If this doesn't work, tryasking them to talk softer. The finalsolution might be moving, but next time,try and find a quieter section.Regenstein LibraryDEAR F T.A.: I’ve noticed a certain guyfor a long time. We seem to like each otheryet have never met. What should I do?Hopeful heartDear hopeful heart; If a conversationdoesn’t start naturally, try finding amutual friend who can introduce you. Bestof luck.DEAR F.T.A.: I’m married to agraduate student and do not attend theUniversity. I feel isolated at times andwant more contact with University peopleand events. Do you have any suggestions?SpouseDear Spouse: There is a new spousegroup on campus that meets once a monthon a weekday night. For more information,contact the Student Activities Office. Alsotry getting involved in other campusactivities, such as Court Theater.Crossroads or International HouseDEAR F.T.A.: I have lived in a dormand want to move into an apartment. Howdo I go about finding a compatibleroomate?College studentDear college student: Generally yourclosest friends won’t be the bestroommates (but there are exceptions).Find someone you can talk to openly andhonestly and discuss personal preferencesbefore you move in. Issues commonlyconsidered are neatness, cooking habits,tolerance of noise, and sleeping habits(when you get up and who you have over).DEAR F.T.A.; Sometimes I find myselfattracted to my professors or teachingassistants. I don’t want to have a personalrelationship with them, but I need theirprofessional help and would like to be onfriendly terms. What should I do?unsignedDear unsigned: This dilemna often putsa strain on the student/teacherrelationship. Favoritism will evokejealousy in your classmates and willseldom give you better grades Tryavoiding conversation with your professorunless it is strictly about the courseworkand don't give the impression that you areinterested in a relationship(Have a question or need advice? WriteFor the Asking, The Chicago Maroon, 1212E. 59th St., 60637 or place inquiries in theF.T.A. box in the Maroon office in IdaNoyes, 3rd floor.)The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, October 20, 1981—7Maroons split homecoming matchesMaroons kick Tech in teethJ Chicago's Do Kim (31), Joe Mullen (65, and Joe Pierri (63) converge on a Cornell player inSaturday’s game.Football sloppy in lossBy Bob LaBelleHomecoming was marred Saturday bysloppy weather and even sloppier football asChicago's offense was barely perceptible inthe mud, Despite scoring opportunities inthe second half, the Maroons were unable tocapitalize on Cornell errors, dropping a 25*6decision to the Rams before one thousandfans at Stagg Field.Playing conditions at game time wereawful as an earlier rain had reduced thefield to mud. Rain also continued to fallthroughout the game, forcing both teams toalter game plans, Chicago coach Rob Lar¬sen had commented prior to the game that the Maroons would pass to their wide re¬ceivers more often against Cornell, but theweather forced Chicago back to its tradi¬tional ground game. Cornell, one of the bestpassing teams in the conference, also wasconfined to the ground in the first half.Consequently, neither team played consis¬tently, but Cornell came up with the big of¬fensive plays. In the first half, Cornell run¬ning back Zimmerman broke through andsloshed 25 yards for the first score. Thepoint after touchdown failed. Cornell addeda field goal nine minutes later just beforethe end of the half. Chicago, meanwhile,tried mixing up passing and rushing playsVolleyball team flat in lossBy Lee BadgettThe volleyball team was trounced in ahome match against powerful St. Xavierlast Thursday, 15-7, 15-4, 15-2, in what CoachRosie Resch described as “a flat game.” St.Xavier, a Divison II team, frustrated theMaroons with excellent serving and block¬ing as well as an aggressive offense. Thisleft little for Chicago to work with in its ownoffensive efforts.The Maroons seemed to be rising to thechallenge when they jumped to a 3-0 lead be¬hind the serving of Audrey Light and thesmart playing of Karen Kitchen and VesnaMartich. However, strong serving and theMaroons’ illegal hits enabled St. Xavier toscore the next eight points. Chicago cameback with the strong service of RandiWagner and some aggressive play at the netby Karin Van Steenlandt to pull within twopoints at 6-8. The Chicago players respondedto St. Xavier s deadly hitting with spikesand blocks of their own. Unfortunately, theMaroons could not command these skills ontheir own serve and eventually lost 7-15.Chicago stayed with St. Xavier in theearly part of the second game. The visitorscould not return two of Sue Fortunato'sserves which gave Chicago a brief lead at4-3. But then St. Xavier scored ten straightpoints until one of its players finally missedon a hit. The Maroons had fwo more chancesto score but were unable to take advantageof them, and St. Xavier quickly wrapped upthe second game. 4-15. Mental mistakes as well as poor executionmarked the third game as the frustratedMaroons could do little to stop St. Xavier’sattack. Chicago’s only points came early inthe game when Martich put away DanaPryde’s set and on a St. Xavier net violation.The Maroons watched helplessly as their op¬ponents drilled the ball from the far sides ofthe net into the holes between the Chicagoplayers.Resch pointed to St. Xavier’s level of com¬petition as the Maroons’ major problem.Their aggressiveness was impossible tosimulate in practice, so the Chicago defensehad little experience i.andling the constantpounding in the middle of the court. Diffi¬culty with serve reception, normally one ofChicago’s strengths, prevented the develop¬ment of a solid Maroon attack. According toResch, “We were trying too hard. Theirserve scared us.” When Chicago managedto overcome St, Xavier’s serve, the hittershad to contend with a line of viciousblockers. The Maroons had little success insetting the ball outside, which worked wellfor St. Xavier’s offense and which wouldhave forced the blockers to move. Attemptsto hit the side of the blockers’ hand or to dinkthe ball over them also failed to work forChicago.The Maroons face another tough test to¬night in a home match against ElmhurstCollege. Resch believes that this will be anexciting game since Elmhurst has a strongteam this year and prefers a fast tempo. but had trouble in the air as quarterback Vu-kovieh was intercepted three times. Chicagoleft at half time trailing 9-0.The weather cooperated more in the sec¬ond half allowing Cornell to return to itspassing game. Ram quarterback Schrammconnected with Ward for a 46-vard touch¬down. With the point after touchdown, Chi¬cago trailed 16-0. Another long SchrammE pass took Cornell to the Chicago 16. Two| plays later, running back Ramsey scored5 from four yards out, with the kick makingthe score 23-0.Starting late in the third quarter and ex¬tending into the fourth, the Rams developeda case of the fumbles, turning over the ballthree times — twice within the 20-yard line.Yet Chicago could capitalize only on the lastturnover when Durham ran for two yardsand the score. The point after touchdownfailed and Cornell led 23-6 with less than tenminutes left in the game.Cornell stopped handing the ball over andits defense added a safety when Vukovichwas sacked in the endzone to end the scoringfor the day. The final score read Cornell 25,Chicago 6.For the day, the Maroons completed six of21 passes with four interceptions for 48yards, Cornell gained 189 yards in the aireven though quarterback Schramm com¬pleted only ten of 29 passes. On the ground,Chicago was led by Bill Jankovich with 107yards, but the Maroons only netted 80 yardsthanks to negative yardage. Cornell gained187 yards rushing for the afternoon.The loss left the Maroons with a 1-4-1 re¬cord. Chicago is aw ay this Saturday againstRipon. two of Chicago's four goals the last time theteams met, played in goal.The style of game the Maroons playedworked well. When IIT pressed too far for¬ward, the Maroons would counter-attack,slipping the wings behind the IIT defense.When IIT stayed back, the Chicago defenseheld fast.IIT only took five shots on goal the entiregame. Its only goal came on a free kick justoutside the penalty area. An IIT midfieldersprinted past the right side of the Maroondefensive wall. He was fed perfectly by histeammate taking the penalty kick, and putthe ball in the left side of the net under a di-vind Todd Silber.The Maroons dominated almost the wholegame, particularly at mid-field. The firsthalf was highlighted by several near scores,inspired by the mid-field play of Soo HyunChin and John Messersmith. In three in¬stances IIT, players had to foul Chicagoplayers in order to prevent break-aways.In the second half the Maroons finallypenetrated the spotty IIT defense. The firstgoal came when freshman mid-fielderMessersmith gained a step on the defender,marking him about 30 yards out from goalon the right side. His shot was a hard, lowroller. The IIT goalie misjudged the pace onthe ball, dove late, and it squirted under¬neath him into the goal.The second goal was the result of a wellexecuted series of passes. Sweeper-back CyOggins dribbled the hall out from UC’s endto mid-field and passed off to Soo Hyun Chin,who then led left winger Todd Talashek upthe left sideline. He beat the charging IITgoalie on a roller into the left hand corner ofthe goal.Chicago’s Tool Talashek (S). who scored the winning goal against IIT.by Stephen KritchevskyThe Maroon soccer team bettered lastyear’s 1-8-2 record in just six games by scor¬ing a convincing 2-1 homecoming victoryover Illinois Institute of Technology (IIT) onSaturday. Chicago is now 2-5 for the season,Chicago had already faced IIT earlier thisseason and won. Yet, while the Maroonswere confident of another victory, therewere some nagging doubts before the game.Since all of the spectators easily fit into thepress box at Staff Field when it began torain in the second half, the Maroons couldn’texpect to be sparked by roaring crowds. Inaddition, goalie John Condas was still in¬jured. Todd Silber, responsible for scoring John Assadi prepares to tackle an IITplayer.„ i8—The Chicago Maroon-—Tuesday, October 20, 1981SportsbriefsTennis makes goodshowing at tourneyBy Sue FortunatoThe women’s tennis team ended its fallseason this weekend by making its best ap¬pearance ever at a state tournament. CoachBill Simms was very happy with his players’performances, saying “they all playedgreat tennis. I’m really proud and pleased.”Simms pointed out that five of Chicago’snine entries advanced to the semifinals,whereas no more than one entry had evermade it that far in the past. Chicago cap¬tured fourth place in the meet.With only two of the eight players whomade it to the state tournament graduatingthis year, Simms is optimistic about theteam’s future. To prepare the team for nextyear, Simms has planned a very competi-' tive spring season. The team will play in at least six meets, including Chicago Circle,North Central and Augustana. Simms hopesto add meets against some of the schools themen’s team will be competing against thisspring.IAIAW STATE CHAMPIONSHIPTENNIS MEETAt Augustana CollegeFirst RoundYvonne Grassie (UC), bye; Michelle Mewissen(UC), bye; Beth Fama (UC), bye; Diana Kaspic(UC), bye; Caren Gauvreau (UC), bye; KatieSparks (UC), bye.Fama-Kaspic (UC), bye; Hahn-Mewissen (UCd. Durante-Koschalke (Elmhurst) 6-1, 6-‘Gauvreau-Magnobasco (UC), bye.Second Round (Quarterfinals)Leslie Sallett (North Central) d. Yvonne Grassie(UC) 6-0, 6-1; Michelle Mewissen (UC) d. LauraMockus (Elmhurst) 6-2, 6-4; Jenny Jimenez (Au¬gustana) d. Beth Fama (UC) 6-4, 6-3; Jeanne Par¬tridge (North Central) d. Diana Kaspic (UC) 5-7,7-5, 6-3; Caren Gauvreau (UC) d. Denise Lauar (Il¬linois Wesleyan) 6-3, 7-5; Katie Sparks (UC) d. Jeannie Maxwell (Eureka) 6-2, 7-5.Bridgess-Meck (Illinois Wesleyan) d Fama-Kaspic (UC) 6-3, 6-2; Hahn-Mewissen (UC) d. Prit-chett-Gadancke (Illinois Wesleyan) 6-2, 6-3;Gauvreau-Magnobasco (UC) d. Gattner-Dias-Pons (Milliken) 6-4, 6-4.SemifinalsSusie Verheal (Principia) d. Michelle Mewissen(UC) 6-2, 6-1; Trish Suppes (Principia) d. CarenGauvreau (UC) 6-4, 6-3; Jundy Conlon (Principia)d. Katie Sparks (UC) 6-1, 6-1.Verheal-Rhodes (Principia) d. Hahn-Mewissen(UC) 6-2, 6-2; Suppes-Conlon (Principia) d.Gauvreau-Magnobasco (UC) 6-3, 6-3.Sports CalendarVOLLEYBALLOct. 20 — Elmhurst, 7:30 p.m.. FieldHouseFIELD HOCKEYOct. 22 — Valparaiso, 4 p.m., Stagg FieldFROMMOL SO \GOLDENI can’t believe it. I trusted you... and you drank the last Molson Safe Oates Oct. 21st - 24thU.S.D.A. CHOICESIRLOINSTEAK $198.JONATHAN _ ^APPLES ,«89cU.S.D.A. CHOICEPORTER¬HOUSE „STEAK T.6-12 OZ. CANSPEPSI .149COLA TFRESHGROUNDROUND %V*.R.A.APPLE _JUICE 79°..,IMPERIALMAR- MGARINE 59c.HAWAIIAN^PUNCH 69°..COUNTRY DELIGHTV2&V2 39c,SWEETCALIFORNIAORANGES 39c.TtU.CFINER FOODSSERVING53rd PRAIRIE SHORESKIMBARK PLAZA 2911 VERNONWhere You Are A Stranger But Once!BREWED AND BOTTLED IN CANADA, imported by Martlet Importing Co . Inc . Great Neck. N YThe Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, October 20, 1981—9— —Campus FilmPhantom Lady (Robert Siodmak, 1944)A tense, engrossing story of a girl trying to||; track down witnesses to verify the alibi ofI the man she loves, after the trial which sen-[r tenced him to death. The witnesses keep get¬ting knocked off, though, and eventually theI murderer is about to make her next on hisi list. Despite a soundtrack that makes itp seem the actors are all wearing tap-dancingI shoes, the director manages to shape nail-I filing material into a nail-biting experience.1 Tuesday, October 20, at 7:30 PM in Quan-I trell. DOC Films. G.P.| Gun Crazy (Joseph H. Lewis, 1950).| They're young. They're beautiful. And? they're in love . . . with guns. In this per¬verse little film noir, man-with-gun-fetish| John Dali meets up with pistol-packing-l femme-fatale Peggy Cummins, and the| sparks fly. Their ricochet romance soon de-■- velops into a crime spree, as the two beginI robbing banks ("just so we won’t have towork”), killing anyone who might get in thet way of their bullets. Often very (uninten¬tionally) funny. Gun Crazy is not without itsmoments. Its contrasts between the fast,easy life and the joys of middle-Ameriran domesticity, as well as its portrait of a manbrought to ruin by a woman because of hisstrange passion, make it one of the quintes¬sential noir thrillers. Tuesday, October 20 at8:45 pm in Qunatrell. DOC. GSFilms by Luis Bunuel: Doc continues itsLuis Bunuel retrospective with a showing ofhis first three films. Un Chien Andalou (LuisBunuel and Salvador Dali, 1928): Bunuel’sfirst and still most well-known film is one ofthe keystones of the Surrealist movement,and the most consistently inventive and sur¬prising collection of visual puns, paradoxes,and non sequiturs you are ever likely to see.It defies summarization, as might be ex¬pected of a film whose aim seems to be theconstruction of a logic system based on illo¬gic. The notorious opening shot — of a man(Bunuel himself) slicing open a woman’seyeball with a straight razor — should havewarned the rest of the world what it was infor when it first let Bunuel lay hands on amovie camera; his subsequent career hasbeen the most unmitigated assault on con¬ventional ways of seeing ever waged. L’AgeD’Or (Luis Bunuel, 1930): Half a century oldand still a scandal — the more to our dis¬ credit. Slightly more ‘‘rational’ formallythan Un Chien Andalou (it could almost besaid to have a plot), but its points of contactwith conventional existence only make itsdepartures all the more shocking, its sub¬ject is nothing less than the oppression of hu¬manity by civilization. If my descriptions ofthese, probably the most revolutionaryworks on film, make them sound senten¬tious, bear in mind that Bunuel’s inventive¬ness is unparalleled, hts compassion is in¬fectious, and his sense of humor is a job tobehold. Los Hurdes (Luis Bunuel, 1932): Incase anyone should question the validity ofBunuel’s bleak vision of the human condi¬tion, this, his only documentary, should putall doubts to rest. The Hurdanos live in al->most unbelievable squalor in a remotecorner of the Pyrenees; for Bunuel, howev¬er. their miserable condition is just the mostextreme case — an attitude that makes thefilm doubly disturbing. Wednesday, October21. in Quantrell. Program starts at 7:30.Doc: $2.00. —To Catch A Thief (Alfred Hitchcock, 1955)Don’t let the name of the director and starsll»eN^Bw>fesaaoiMd^nidtfkart<Mi,fest. Register by October 31st 1981.■■V ':• ' •• •, : -V ' ■. TV - ' T' . '' •• •••••••.■• ■ •: • - V. ■ :Yes. Only four more hours is all that stands betweervyou andyour most t ireer opportunity. That's the amount of time ittakes to complete the NSA Professional Qualification Test (PQT), anopportunity that comes along only once a year.ow’s the time to act. —Because the PQT will be given on campuses throughout the'tuber 14th.sfully competing on this test qualifies you for consider¬ation by the National Security Agency. NSA is currently seeking topgraduating students to meet the challenges of its important communi¬cations .security and foreign intelligence production missions.. ilify on the PQT you will be contacted regarding aninterview with an NSA representative He or she will discuss the specificrole you can play within such fields as data systems, languages,inform, itions and management..our college placement office. Filloutthi t by October 31st, in order to takethe test on November Nth There is no registration feeGraduates with a Bachelors or Masters Degree in ElectronicEngineering, Computer Science or a Slavic. Near Eastern or Far Eastern, 4’ • ■ /;//* Ul\!i V,\ j:. i!; - : ■ j I.r* U.S citizenship, a thoroughbackground investigation, and a medical examination.The National Security AgencyMore than just a career (Cary Grant, Grace Kelly) deceive you intoexpecting an evening of great entertain¬ment. Grant, a one time celebrated cat bur¬glar, atempts to prove his innocence in a re¬cent string of capers; in the process hemeets the beautifully boring Kelly and her"ill-bred” mother. But before the actiongets started, Grant and Kelly nearly killeach other and the audience with the stiff,static styles. Although the “type” runningthe conspiracy to frame Grant is easilypegged, the actual thief comes as a slightshock. And what's even more shocking isone of Hitchcock’s favorite suspense sub¬jects — the dangling woman. Filmed on thestunningly beautiful Cote d’Azur, Hitchcocktakes full advantage of the then recently in¬vented technicolor, including a magnificientflower market, fireworks.Wed., Oct. 21 at 8:30 p.m. in LSF Auditori¬um. $2, LSF Films. J B.Only Angels Have Wings (Howard Hawks,1939) For the most part, Hawks’ films areset in separate, isolated worlds. Whetherthese settings suggest the possibility for al¬ternative societies, or simply reflect theparanoia of the director pretty much de¬pends on the particular film. But with OnlyAngels this question becomes more com¬plex. The story is that of a Hawksian groupof men who are continually risking theirlives for planes and the mail. Cary Grant, asthe groups leader, portrays one of his mostdestructive and misoginistic characters,thus making this one of Hawks’ most vehe¬ment "men only” films. Throughout, thewomen (Jean Arthur and Rita Hayworth >never quite have what it takes to becomeone of the boys. Yet, Only Angels remainsone of this director's most entertaining andtragic/ironic films. Recommended. WithThomas Mitchell and Richard Bartheimess.After the film of U of C film scholar GeraldMast will discuss this film and Hawks’work. Thurs.. Oct. 22 at 7:30 p.m. in Quan¬trell. $2. DOC. J.B.Saboteur (Law School Films, Tuesday, 8:30p.m.) Unseen by this reviewer.CalendarTUESDAYTM Club: Group meditation, 12 pm Ida Noyes.Calvert House: Mass, 12 noon and 5 pm. 5735 S.University.Commuter Co-op: Meets at 12:30 pm, in the Com¬muter Lounge, Gates-Blake 1.Comp Center Seminar: Introduction to System1022, 3:30-5:00 pm, RI 180.National Organization for Women: Holding worksessions every Tuesday, 5:30-7:00 pm, on healthand safety, 53 W, Jackson, rm 924, Info 922-0025.Hillel: Simchat Torah Yavneh Orthodox Services.5:45 pm, Hillel.Lutheran Campus Ministry: Pizza supper anddiscussion — "Possibilities and Limits of Educa¬tion in Belief," speaker Don Browning, 6,00-7:00pm, 5500 S. Woodlawn.Morris Dancers: Learn ritual English dance, prac¬tice 7:00-9:00 pm, Ida Noyes Dance Studio. Newdancers accepted,Calvert House: "Investigation into Catholicism"7:00 pm, Catholics and non-Catholica are wel¬come.Doc Films: "Phantom Lady" 7:15 pm, ‘.'GunCrazy" 8:45 pm, Cobb.Hillel: Simchat Torah Upstairs Minyan-Conserva-tive services, 7:30 pm, Hillel.Libertarians: Meeting, 8:00 pm. Ida Noyes Li¬brary.Hunger Concern Group: Education Committee.8:00 pm. Ida Noyes 3rd floor.Comm, on Conceptual Fouridations of Science:"Sources of Conventionalism in Nineteenth-Cen¬tury Geometry” speaker Alberto Coffa, 8:00 pm,Cobb 107.Woodward Court Lecture: "The Chief JusticeDeclares War Against Violence-Again" speakerPhilip Kurland, 8:30 pm. Woodward CourtWEDNESDAYHillel: Simchat Torah Yavneh (Orthodox) Ser¬vices, 9:15 am, Simchat Torah Upstairs Minyan(Conservative-Egalitarian) Services, 9:30 am, Hil¬lel.Italian Table: Meets 12 noon in the Blue Gargoyleto speak Italian.El Salvador Solidarity Group: The CAUSE willmeet at 12 noon in the Reynolds Club Lounge.Crossroads: English classes for foreign women2:00 pm. 5621 S. BlaekstoneSalisbury Geography Circle: "Le Quebec etL Amierique Francaise: The Continental Visionand Experience of an Ethnic Group" speaker EricWaddell, 4:30 pm, Pick Hall Lounge.Hillel: Simchat Torah Yavneh (Orthodox) Ser¬vices. 5:45 pm, Hillel.Films: 3 films by Ebrahim Golestan — “A Fire.""The Crown Jewels," and "Marlik." 7:00-9:00 pm,Ida Noyes 2nd floor, free.Badminton Club: Meets 7:30-10:00 pm. Ida Noyesgym.Crossroads: Beginning Mandarin Chinese. 7:30dm, 5621 S. Blaekstone.Classified AdsSPACE2 bedrm. apt for sale ($24,900) or rent ($395)w/extras. Near 61st & Kimbark tel. 239 8224.1 BR CONDO v. near campus, 56th & Dimbark.Light, S facing, $42500. Call Bobbie 363 6200 orJudy 3 8165 days.Graduate student cooperative seeks responsi¬ble woman for Nov. 1 occupancy. Near campus. Low rent. Call 955 2653.NEWPORT 4800 S.L.S.D. 1 BR lux dec. w/wcarpet lake view indoor pool all amenities Nov1 dec. $475/mo 624 2537.Large bedroom in spacious apt east of 1C kit¬chen privileges 200 a month 643-9843 eves.Large STUDIO apt-53rd St-Unfurnished$240/month (utilities included) 753-3763:9am to4pm.PEOPLE WANTEDPaid subjects needed for experiments onmemory, perception and language processing.Research conducted by students and faculty inthe Committee on Cognition and Communica¬tion. Department of Behavioral Sciences.Phone 753-4718.CHILDREN'S NARRATIVES ANDGESTURES. U of C faculty research needschildren, 4 through 12 years of age, to par¬ticipate in a study of children's narratives andgestures. The procedure is enjoyable tochildren and takes about 1 hour on campus.Refreshments and payment provided. If interested, please call 3-4714 for an appointment.STUDENT POSITION: Wanted: experiencedoffset printer to work 15 hours/week. Ex¬perience with color work preferred. Ex¬perience making negatives. You must bequalified and reliable. Call Dr. Donald Bogue753 2974. Community and Family StudyCenter.CalendarDoc Films: ‘‘An Chien Andalou,” “L’Age D’Or,”and “Las Hurdes” 7:30 pm, Cobb.Hunger Concern Group: Outreach Committee, 8:00pm, Ida Noyes.Science Fiction Club: Meets 8:00 pm, Ida NoyesHall. Everyone welcome.Al-Anon Group: Meets 8:00 pm, Hyde Park Uni¬tarian Church, 57th & University.Country Dancers: Folk dances of England andAmerica taught, beginners are welcome, 8:30 pm,Ida Noyes.Law School Films: “To Catch a Thief" 8:30 pm,1121 E. 60th St.THURSDAYBishop Brent House: Noon Eucharist at BondChapel.Hillel: Faculty Luncheon - “Social Policy in theReagan Administration” speaker Prof. Ira Katz-nelson, 12 noon, Hillel.Music Dept: Noontime Concert, University Sym¬phony Orchestra, 12:15 pm, Goodspeed.Public Policy Lecture Series: “Symposium onPneumococcal Immunization: Strategy for Imple¬mentation Period”, 1:30 pm through 5:15 pm.Center for Continuing Education, 1307 E. 60thSt.Comp Center Seminar: Introduction to System1022, 3:30-5:00 pm, RI 180.U of C Judo Club: Meets 6:00 pm, Bartlett gym,beginners welcome.Calvert House: Divinity students’ bible studygroup, 7:00 pm, 5735 S. University.MARRS: Meets 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes. All interestedpersons welcome.International Socialist Organization: “El Salva¬dor and the Revolution in Central America"speaker Mike Gonzalez, 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes 3rdfloor.Doc Films: “Only Angels Have Wings” 7:30 pm,Cobb.Law School Films: "Saboteur” 8:30 pm, 1121 E.60th St.Hunger Concern Group: Fundraising Committee,9:00 pm, Ida Noyes room 217. MANUSCRIPT TYPISTS (Spanish or French,some English). Part-time (12/15 hours week)School year. Will be trained on IBM Composersfor camera-ready copy in publicafions unit.Must type app. 55 wpm. $4.50/hour. ContactGeorge Rumsey, Community and FamilyStudy Center, 753 2518.Wanted: Players of Killer by Steve Jacksoncall Q 10:00am 5:30pm 643 4777.Full or part time leasing consultants neededfor rent-up of newly renovated apt bldg in HP.Must be knowledgeable of HP area, personable, & have pleasanf appearance. Priorleasing/sales exp. preferred. Musf be willingto work some weekends. Call Diane Pedersen298 9590 for interview. Sabina Realty Corp.E.O.E.Pollwatchers needed for Student Governmentelections Monday October 26. Contact SufiaKhan 753 3273.FOR SALEPASSPORT PHOTOS WHILE YOU WAIT!Model Camera 1342 E. 55th St. 493-6700.Rug-Chocolate brown 18 x 12 150/ott Jon 7528486.Antique Piano. Good sound needs some work.$200.241 5196.SERVICESJUDITH TYPES—and now has a memory.Phone 955 4417. Plan your typing needs for thequarter. Bibliographic and revision services.Dissertations, resumes.Chicago Counseling and PsychotherapyCenter. Client-centered psychotherapy. 5711 S.Woodlawn, 6354 N. Broadway, and 111 N.Wabash, Chicago. A Registered PsychologicalAgency. (312) 684 1800.Female therapist, MSW, ACSW, Women'sgroups, couples, individual therapy, childrenand adults, sliding scale, 947-0154.WORD PROCESSING SERVICE/TYPING/HEADLINES —Dissertations, Tapetranscription, Tables, Form letters, Reports,Statistical Typing, List maintenance,Resumes, Newsletters. NANCY COHEN PROFESSIONAL TYPING—378 5774.DRAFT COUNSELING Info aboutREGISTRATION and the DRAFT. Discuss options for avoiding conscription. Leave messageNick Sauter 753-2240.WANTEDIMMEDIATELY: Weekly child care, 8 10hours, Monday Friday, for one year oldPrefer one or two playmates, but no more Require intelligent loving care, pleasant setting,excellent references, Hyde Park location,close to campus if possible. Will pay to matchexperience. 684 5812.PERSONALSIMPROVE YOUR GRADES! Researchcatalog—306 pages—10,278 topics—Rush $1.00.Box 25197C Los Angeles, 90025. (213) 447 8226Writer's Workshop (PLaza2-8377).Writers Composers & Lyricists: Blackfriars islooking for original works for spring show.Teretulemast Kaarel ja teised kaasmaalased!And God said: Who is this Nietzsche, and whyis he saying all those terrible things about me?Find out in INQUIRY.W B H M A D.S.D.T R W.H G (Polka formyasthenia gravis).Dearest Smita and Rita, Yallo, stop doing theKerry dance. I can't stand it anymore. EdgarHullo, Wanda, welcome back to the grind. Howis it over there? Over Here Women's Breakfast Club. Don't forgetWednesday morning at 8 am Hutch! See youthere!RIDESWanted occas'l ride bet. UC & TerreHaute/Bloomington, In. Either direction.Karen 643 4619.MOVINGStudent with Pickup Truck can move your stuffFAST AND CHEAP. No job too small! CallPeter at: 955-1824 lOam-lOpm.SPECIALSTUDENTOFFERStudents—Encyclopedia Britannica and GreatBooks of the Western world on display now atthe University Bookstore. Stop by and askabout our new special student test-marketingoffer.THE PHOENIXWe have the best prices on books, records,games. Check us first. In basement ofReynolds Club.FALLCOLOR HIKINGOuting Club trip to Brown Cty./Hoosier Natl.Forest, Oct. 23-25. Call Nina Savar at 9559373(H) 633 9365(W) for details.CALENDAR DEADLINEDeadline for the FALL, PART 2 ActivitiesCalendar is Oct 23. Bring all copy to Libby,Rm. 210, Ida Noyes Hall. 753 3592.UNFURNISHED APTS.FOR RENTStudio Apartments, HILD REALTY GROUP955 1200.6 room condo for rent, HILD REALTY GROUP955 1200THE PHOENIXCheck the Phoenix first for books, records, andgames in the basement of the Reynolds Club.UC HOTLINENeed information, referrals, help in anemergency, or just someone to talk to? Call theUC Hotline at 753-1777, 7 pm to 7 am.WOMEN!New night! Join the new Women's Union.Undergraduate & graduate women welcomeSample project: a women's center at UCWednesday 7:30, Ida Noyes.OBNOXIOUSThe English are so obnoxious. Remember?947 8437 if you dare.STUDENTS FORTHE ERAAn organizer from the National Organizationfor Women will be on campus tonight to help usplan our campaign strategy We need yourhelp! Join us at 7:30 p.m. in the Cloister Roomin Ida Noyes, 1st floor. HERMANN HESSE READSHERMAN HESSEIn German Oct. 26 7pm-7:30pm WHPK 88.3 FMspecial presentation by the German radio program.GOTTHE BLUES?Feeling trustrated, lonely or confused? Needsomeone to talk to? Give us a call. UC Hotline-Listening through the night. 753 1777.GLENOR GLENDA?A friendly reminder from Doc Films that Edward D. Wood's camp masterpiece, a k a "IChanged My Sex,” will be screened this Saturday (10/24) at midnight in Cobb Hall followingATLANTIC CITY. Don't come late or you'llmiss the world premiere of Jack Helbig's ''TooSentimental Jean” (shot in Hyde Park)!INTENSIVE GERMANCOURSEThrough CCTSatLSTC FEe$150Beginning Mo, Oct 26Class will meet M Th from 12-1 in Rm 309Learn to read and translate scholarly textsFor info, and reg call:G.F. Miller, PhD (nativespeaker) 386 1384orCluster Office 667-3500 ext. 266LIBERTARIANSMeeting every Tuesday 8 pm in Ida NoyesTonight informal conversation and discussionLUCiEN STRYKLucien Stryk will read from his poetry andfrom his translations of Zen poems ThursdayOctober 22 at 4.30, Ida Noyes Libarary. Freeand open to the public.FOLK DANCELast Chance to join MORRIS DANCERS thisterm—weekly sessions to learn vigorousEnglish ritual dance for performance Privateworkshop with expert Tony Barrand in NovHave fun, keeo fit-DANCE MORR IS! Info 241 -6738 or come to Ida Noyes Dance Studio Tues at7 pm.KUNDALINI YOGAKundalini Yoga classes are starting againTonight will be our FREE introductory ses¬sion. Everyone welcome Tune up your bodyand mind to withstand the challenge of University life Regular meeting times Tu, Th 5-7 pmIda Noyes East Lounge, 2 fir More info call338 6066!LUTHERAN CAMPUSMINISTRYCome tonight Celebration of eucharist at 5 30;pizza supper and discussion at 6 00. Tonight"Possibilities and Limits of Education inBelief" with Don Browning, Professor in theDivinity School. 5500 S. WoodlawnFOLK DANCETake a break and meet new people with Coun¬try Dancers. Folkdances of England andAmerica taught every week beginnerswelcomed. Live music by Hit and Miss bandmusicians welcome. Dancing 8 pm.Refreshments 10:30. Ida Noyes, WednesdayFree For details: 241-6738VALUABLE COUPONPay for three, thefourth is tree.KODAK Color Prints_made from slidesQ ■ Bring in this coupon with yourCL favorite color slides. ,13 ■ We’ll have Kodak make 4 colorQ prints from slides for the price(J of 3^ ■ Hurry, offer ends November11,1981.MODEL CAMERA1344 East 55th Street493-6700 COLORPROCESSING< KodakCLIP AND SAVE1THE VERSAILLES TAlSStiYOCtIDCAL FOR STUDENTS324-0200 CHINESE-AMERICANLarge Studios • Walk-in RESTAURANTKitchen • Utilities Inch • Specializing in CantoneseFurn. - Unfurn. • Campus and American dishes.Bus at door Open Daily 1 1 A.-8:30 P.M.Based on Availability Closed Monday5254 S. Dorchester 1318 E. 63rd MU 4-1062TRINITY WAS THE NAME GIVEN TO THE SITE OF THE FIRSTBOMB TEST THAT LED TO HIROSHIMA AND NAGASAKI.“WHY DIDN’T WE GET TOGETHER TO BAN THE THING?"SCIENTISTS ASKED. "THA T SHOULD HA VE HAPPENED."THE DAYAFTER TRINITYJ. Robert Oppenheimer and The A-BombA MOVING DRAMA OF MORAL, HISTORICAL, AND PERSONALFORCES A T WORK DURING THE INVENTION OF THE A-BOMB☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ Gene SiskelChicago Tribune“A Minor Miracle”San FranciscoExaminer ‘‘Extraordinary...Genuinely terrifying impact-.”Vincent CanbyNew York Times☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ Roger EbertChicagoSun-TimesWEDNESDAYOctober 21 7:30 p.m.$2.00 DonationAugustana Lutheran Church5500 South WoodlawnSponsored by Hyde Park-Kenwood NOMOR Committee I 1/2 Price*ON ALLDOMESTIC ANDIMPORTED BEERSl/l/e haven’t forgotten faculty & staff...IT’S THE SAME DEAL FOR YOU ON WEDNESDAY!mem£0CK*2£C0flDSDK At the Phoenix in the basement ofReynolds Club...►All 5.98 list LP’s are now only 3.99►All 9.98 list LP’s are now only 6.25►All 12.98 list LP’s (Digital) are now only 8.50►One dollar off all other Angel products in stock All Angel andSeraphim LP’s and Box SetsAre On Sale!>6*S-37756Chamber music demonstrates a moreintimate aspect ot ITZHAK PERLMAN smusicianship With RAY STILL. PIN-CHAS ZUKERMAN and LYNN HAR¬RELL. he plays oboe quartets byMozart. Karl Stamitz J. c Bach andWanhalnow only 8.50 Tjr SIBELIUSV SYMPHONY NO 2KARAJANBERLIN PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA SERAPHIMThe New Standard Of ExcellenceDS-37846The ewer-popular TROUT QUINTETof SCHUBERT is played by pianistSVIATOSLAV RICHTER and membersof the Borodin String Quartet, in thisstartlingly life-like digital recording.now only 8.50 OS-37816SIBELIUS SECOND SYMPHONY-with all its thunder and sunlight — isheard with new realism in this digitallyrecorded performance by HERBEPTVON KARAJAN and the Berlin Phil¬harmonicnow only 8.50 1^-jV PERLMANUr BEETHOVENV VIOLIN CONCERTOGIULIN1Philf\*rrr>orw* OrchestraSTRAUSS: DON QUIXOTEDRESDEN STATE ORCHESTRAKEMPE TORTELIER ALBINONIOBOE CONCERTOSHAN DC VRIESl/.J4'PERLMAN PREVIN\r ITS A BREEZEV MANNE HS-60363SZ 37802 S-37844Belgian-born guitarist GUY LUKOW-SKI makes an auspicious Angel debutplaying music by the legendary Para¬guayan guitarist-composer AGUSTINBARRIOSnow only 6.25 DS-37471ITZHAK PERLMAN % long- andeagerly-awaited performance of BEE¬THOVEN’S VIOLIN CONCERTO hasbeen captured in a stunning digital re¬cording CARLO MARIA GIULINl con¬ducts the Philharmonia Orchestra.now only 8.50To mttt overwhelming demend.ITZHAK PERLMAN and ANDRE PRE¬VIN collaborate lor • second digitalalbum ol jazz composed by the multi¬talented pianist-composer-conductor“IT’S A BREEZE’’ lollows their chart-butting A Different Kind ot Bluetagain with SHELLEY MANNE JIMHALL and RED MITCHELL.now only 8.50 the virtuoso performances of RUDOLFKEMPE and the Dresden State Or¬chestra continue to appear on Sera¬phim: here DON QUIXOTE with cellosoloist PAUL. TORTELIERnow only 3.99Check us first...We’re the Phoenix(basement of Reynolds Club) Dutch oboe virtuoso HAN DE VRIESplays lour concertos by the Baroquemaster ALBINONI, accompanied bythe strings and harpsichord ol AlmaMusica Amsterdamnow only 6.25 KARAJAN CONDUCTSOPERA OVERTURESAND INTERMEZZI(Sale Ends 10/27/81) DS-37810HERBERT VON KARAJAN conductsths Bsrlin Philharmonic in OPERAOVERTURES AND INTERMEZZI Thsssnsationtl young violinist Anne-Sophie Mutter is soloist in the Medilalion’ (tom Thais A digital recordingnow only 8.50