Inside the MaroonBeyond Western CivViewpoints, page five Inside Grey CityInterview with Jacob HoldtGCJ center-spread —The Chicago MaroonVolume 91, No. 25 The University of Chicago ©Copyright 1982 The Chicago Maroon Friday, January 8, 1982Independent rift grows••MOTO BY WILLI AW MUOGEStudents may have to start feeding their coins into a slot,instead of to a pleasant cashier, if Ex Libris is forced outof business.ExLibris:ex-canteen?By Robert DeckerIndependent politics saw astormy end of the year in HydePark, with State Rep. Carol Mose¬ley Braun vowing not to supportfellow Independent Barbara FlynnCurried candidacy in an adjacentlegislative district, and with theresignation of the head of Indepen¬dent Voters of Illinois/IndependentPrecinct Organization (IYI-IPO),Arlene Rubin, over a dispute with¬in the organization.In a letter sent to a campaignsupporter, Braun stated her objec¬tions to the reapportionment planapproved last October, particular¬ly since “the black and Hispaniccommunities are deprived of theirfair share of political representa¬tion.” She said that while shewould not run against Currie in thenew 26th district, neither would shesupport Currie’s campaign.“I simply do not have and havenot had a working relationshipwith her,” Braun wrote, “and donot believe that her politics havedone the best job for the communi¬ty.” Braun went on to charge Cur¬rie with voting “lor the dumping ofnuclear wastes, for tax increaseswithout referendum, for higher gasrates, and for escalating interestcharges.”Currie has denied having sup¬ported the aims suggested byBraun’s letter, stating in a replypublished in the Hyde Park Heraldthat her supposed support of nuce-lar waste dumping was actuallysupport of a gubernatorial veto ofan unconstitutional provision in abill.Currie also argued that “to sub¬mit every tax question to referen¬dum contradicts the point of repre¬sentative government,” and saidthat Braun had likewise expressedsupport for tax increases for the Regional Transportation Authoritywithout referendum.Contacted by the MaroonWednesday, Currie said “It is un¬fortunate not to have (Braun’s)support, but it is not a crushingblow to my campaign.” Currie saidshe would continue to supportBraun for election in the 25th dis¬trict, and added tht Braun “de¬serves the support.of voters for re-election.” When asked about themotives for Braun’s withdrawal ofsupport, Currie said “1 wish I knewthe answer.”Braun said that she did not meanto have her letter become a majorissue in the campaign, and that shewas not planning to endorse anyopposition to Currie. But she con¬firmed that she would not endorseCurrie.“I don’t see my reason why Ishould support a candidate whohas a different political orientationthan I do,” said Braun. “If Bar¬bara Currie were black, I wouldn’tendorse her. I don’t see it as myparticular duty to be in the van¬guard of protecting Barbara Cur¬rie.”Currie, like Braun, has alwaysreceived the endorsement ofIVI/IPO, and both have had simi¬lar voting records on the issueswhich the independent organiza¬tion examines. But Braun chargedthat on many other votes, Curriehas not followed the independent orliberal line.“On issues where independentshave not taken a stand, and wherethe organization has an interest,she (Currie) has voted with theregular organization every time,’said Braun.But Braun said that it is not justbecause of disagreements onissues which has led her to with¬draw her endorsement of Currie. She also cited their strained work¬ing relationship, and disagreementover redistricting and campaignstrategy.“Barbara and the people aroundher are embracing a white strate¬gy for her election — hyping upsupport for Barbara with whitevotes,” said Braun. “It is not just'vote for Barbara because she iswonderful.’ That is messagenumber tw'o. The main message is‘vote for Barbara because she isthis poor white woman against allthese marauding black candi¬dates.’ ” vAnother factor in the next elec¬tion could be the current infightingwithin the IVI-IPO leadership,which culminated just beforeChristmas w-ith a letter of resigna¬tion from Rubin. She said that thepresent structure of the partymade effective leadership difficultto achieve because she had “the re¬sponsibility for the day-to-day de¬tails of the organization withoutthe authority to get the job done.”Rubin wrote in her letter of res¬ignation that, “It was one thing for(IVI—IPO) to exist with the splitpersonality of being a reform orga¬nization and a liberal organizationat the same time. It is quite an¬other, and probably a terminal ill¬ness, to add to that schizophrenia anew layer of split: total democracyversus representative governme-mt.“I hope it will have no effect,”said Currie of the strife within IVI-IPO. She said she hopes to receiveIVI-IPO’s endorsement, but untillawsuits concerning the reappor¬tionment are settled, no endorse¬ments can be made. Despite thepresent infighting, Currie said shethinks IVI-IPO “will be organizedenough to carry out that campaignwork.” By Margo HablutzelThe Ex Libris canteen in Regen-stein Library may be forced out ofbusiness, because the University istaking almost $5000 per year fromits profits to pay for hall moni¬tors.The canteen is run by studentgovernment, and was started onthe understanding that studentgovernment would assume respon¬sibility for the salaries of the moni¬tors who sit at the elevators whileEx Libris is open.The monitors, said Nancy Hill,chair of SG’s Ex Libris committee,are paid an average of $4.52 perhour and are employes of Regen-stein, not work study students. Hillsaid that Ex Libris could be madeprofitable if the library would as¬sume the cost of the monitors,whom, she said, would have to beon duty even if the canteen werenot operating. Food is always available from the ARA vendingmachines, from which Regensteincollects the profits. Profits fromEx Libris would be used to fundother student groups, she said.“It’s in danger of closing.” saidClarke Campbell, student govern¬ment president. “There is aserious question in my mind, andin other peoples' minds, whetherwe should use Student Fee moneyto subsidize people's snacks. ”Ex Libris is projected to lose be¬tween $2000 and $6000 this year.Campbell said.According to Howard Dillon, as¬sociate director of Regenstein'spublic relations office, the monitorjobs cannot be converted to lowercost work study positions becauseof federal regulations. He said themonitors had been hired in 1975after library users complainedabout food in the reading rooms.Continued on page 3A true winner fightsYoung J. Chang, 1958*1981 “What makes a doctor neces¬sary and great is not the amountof medical knowledge crammedin his head — a computer coulddo much better — but his abilityto understand and care for thesuffering patient.”These words, which appearedin the Encyclopedia Britannica’s1982 Medical and Health Annual,were written by a courageousyoung man who well understoodthe pain and grief of the patient.Young J. Chang, a third yearmedical student at Pritzker, hadsuffered from a severe kidneydisease since he was 12. In andout of hospitals over the past 10years, Chang entered the hospitalone last time last November.Chang died of cancer Dec. 7,1981 at the age of 23.In his article entitled “A Pa¬tient Becomes a Doctor,” Changdescribed the physical and emo¬tional suffering brought about bymembranoproliferative glomeru¬lonephritis, a kidney disease he a losing battle with diseasecontracted when he was justabout to enter the eighth grade.Chang entered the College inSeptember 1975, when he was 16.He graduated in three years andwas admitted to Pritzker. Hewrote the article last year duringhis third year of medical schoolWhen he first contracted thedisease, Chang's abdomen beganto sw-ell severely because of hiskidney’s inability to excrete ex¬cess fluid. He wrote that “itwasn’t yet time for me to worryabout dying" but he was con¬cerned that he would be unable toenter the Air Force. He also hadto avoid “heavily spiced and salt¬ed dishes of the Korean tradi¬tion.”His grades in eighth grade de¬clined, but he found “satisfactionand accomplishment” in playingthe French horn and singing inchoir groups. In high school, hebecame involved in clubs and ac¬tivities in order to “deny anyemotions 1 was having about my disease.” He couldn't deny someof his feelings, though. “Onething was clear,” he wrote.” myillness made me feel differentfrom my peers — weaker andsomehow less.”In high school, Chang did espe¬cially well in biology. He wrotethat “my interest ...shiftedtoward...biology and chemistry— perhaps the beginning of myinterest in medicine as a ca¬reer.”At the beginning of his junioryear Chang re-experienced theswelling. Because he “ ‘forgot’ ”to go to his check-ups, by Christ¬mas he had severe headachesand cramps. He was taken to thehospital and put on a kidney ma¬chine.“The idea of living on dialysisfor the rest of my life was un¬thinkable,” he wrote. Not only isdialysis “inconvenient and time-consuming,” but it brings “psy¬chological trauma of being de¬pendent on a machine to sustain life,” he wrote.Tests showed Chang could re¬ceive a kidney from his mother.The transplant was successful,but drugs that he took to preventhis body from rejecting the newkidney made him look like“porky pig with severe acne.” hesaid. Of this effect, he wrote, “toa 16 year old who w as insecure tostart with, the change in physicalappearance had tremendous im¬pact.”Though he was having troublekeeping up in school, in Sep¬tember 1975 he was admitted tothe College He considered at¬tending a community college, buthe was urged by one of his doc¬tors “to get the best possible edu¬cation and not to be afraid of atough university.”In his first quarter, he contract¬ed hepatitis. In the winter he de¬veloped a nerve respiratory in¬fection. He learned in thesummer of his second year thatContinued on page sevenWATERSThe MAJOR ACTIVITIES BOARD PresentsThe LegendaryMUDDY8 PM • SATURDAY • JANUARY 23MANDEL HALLTickets On Sale Tuesday, January 12at 9 am. Reynolds Club Box Office.$4 UC Students / $7 Others(2 tickets per UCID / 2 UCID per person)?mstKBOOK+KCORDstvee At the Phoenix in the basement ofthe Reynolds Club, the entire CBS,MCA and Capitol, midline series areon sale now! (Through 1/18)ALL SALE L.P.’s IN STOCK ARE NOW ONLY *3.75 (Reg. 575)CaroIe KiNqTapestryincluding:I Feel The Earth MoveSo Far Away/ It's Too Late/You ve Got A FriendWhere You Lead/ Will You Love Me Tomorrow ?■ Smack water Jack(Basement of Reynolds Ciub)PE 34946 Perfection! Carole King’sclassic album features the #1 singles"I Feel the Earth Move" and “It’sToo Late." Voted the single mostpopular album of the 70’s and re¬mains among the three biggest-sell-ing albums of all time. now only 3.75now only 3.75Check Us First... We’re the Phoenixnow only 3.75 Check out the Throbbers’single Only 2.50Come in for a listen2—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, January 8, 1982Coffee shop still aliveThe battle between the Hyde Park CoffeeShop and Baird & Warner Beal Estate Co.,which manages the Del Prado Apartmentsin which the coffee shop is located, has en¬tered the federal courts. On Dec. 14, restau¬rant proprietors Harry and Barbara Verroswere granted an automatic stay preventingeviction by the Cook County sheriff's of¬fice.The Verroses had appealed to the federalcourt after the Illinois Supreme Court re¬fused to hear their appeal of a lower statecourt’s ruling upholding the eviction.The Verroses have been fighting the evic¬tion notice since last May when Baird &Warner told them to vacate their location at53rd and Hyde Park Boulevard. The reasonfor the eviction was non-payment of rent:While the eviction suit is based on thetechnicalities of rent payment, Baird saidthe real estate company decided to sue afterthe Verroses refused to remodel the restau¬rant to keep pace with the rest of the build¬ing. The Del Prodo has been renovated andconverted from a residential hotel to anapartment building.The Varroses bought the Hyde Park Cof¬fee Shop four years ago and signed a 15 yearlease with the previous owners of the DelPrado Hotel. A group including John Bairdand Angelo Geocaris purchased the buildingthe following year and management wasshifted to Baird and Warner.Barbara Verros said that she does notknow how much longer her coffee shop willremain open but that right now it is “stilldoing business as usual."Exile to lectureThe Committee on African Studies is spon¬soring a lecture by Dennis Brutus, notedSouth African writer, lecturer and freedomfighter on Tuesday, January 12 at 4 p.m. inReynolds Club Lounge. The topic will be: Washington and Pretoria: The South Afri¬can Connection.- Mr. Brutus, born in South Africa has beenin self-imposed exile from South Africa. Hehad been imprisoned at Bobbin Island, theSouth African Penal colony, was torturedDennis Brutusharassed and shot in an attempt to escape.Since moving to this country, where he haspublished several books of poetry, includingLetters to Martha and Other Poems He iscurrently an English professor at Northwes¬tern University. He has had a running battlewith The U.S. Immigration and Naturaliza¬tion Service to stay in this country withoutgiving up his South African citizenship.HORRY’SHAPPY HOURIS BA CK!(FROM 3 PM TO 4 PM DAILY)CASH IN ON THE SA VINOSHOT DOGS 758 onlyJUMBO, HOTPASTRAMI 35m ea,Keg.1.80 oniBBQHAM Keg. ^1.75 onlvreaMORRYSDELCOCA TED INTHE UNIVERSITY BOOKSTOREHOIiRS: 7:30 AM-1:30 I’MMOX-FRI.9AM-4PMS4T. NewsbriefsGray reveals planfor world peaceHow can there be peace on earth? Thisquestion w as asked of the nation’s leaders ina feature article appearing last month in theChicago Tribune. As a service to ourreaders, we have reproduced here the dar¬ing and controversial reply given by UCPresident Hanna H. Gray, which is likely tobe debated over cocktails at the Quad Clubfor years to come.Question: How can there be peace onearth?Mrs. Gray replies: “In the search forpeace, the task of universities is thethoughtful and committed effort to examineand debate the difficult and urgent prob¬lems before us. We must acknowledge ourcommitment to discussion that is rigorousand disinterested while simultaneously in¬formed by a larger public purpose. We can¬not evade the responsibility of relating thatpursuit to the imperatives of a social andmoral order in which the issues of war andpeace, of the character and survival of civi¬lization itself, have taken on forever a newmeaning.”7-11 low on gasThe 7-11 express. Student Government’sexpress bus to the North .Side, has raised itsfare from $1 to $2 and added a stop at the ArtInstitute and a 9 p.m. run downtown in aneffort to cut losses which may force its elim¬ination later this quarter.According to SG president Clarke Camp¬bell, SG has only agreed to a five week con¬tract for the service this quarter. Unless thefare hike and the increase in services pro¬ duce the revenue needed to cut deficits, theservice will be discontinued at that point.The bus was started last spring, and randeficits several thousand dollars above eventhe expected losses. This year the servicehad a much higher ridership, averaging 60percent capacity throughout the quarter,according to Joe Walsh, SG Student Ser¬vices Committee chair. But Walsh esti¬mates the bus still lost $2,000 last quarter.Tickets from last quarter will be honored,but only until February 6. To increase rider-ship, SG hopes to work out group discountsto dormitory houses, and put together dis¬count arrangements with restaurants, andbars downtown.Both Walsh and Campbell say they wantthe service to continue. “In one quarter, thisservice has helped to improve the social lifeof more than 1500 people,” said W’alsh.Ex LibrisContinued from page one“Regenstein is first a library,” Dilloncommented. “It would be very easy to makeit a student union, but it comes to the pointthat you ask its primary objective and this isa source of graduate research and librarywork.”He added that any money paid to the mon¬itors means less money for other areas, andthat the library has already cut back its bud¬get for purchasing, cut hours, and is em¬ploying fewer people than last year.Campbell said he had talked with Dillonmany times and had done “virtually every¬thing we can to let them know that theguards are posing a serious financial hard¬ship. Guards are the single greatest cost ofEx Libris“If things continue the way they arenow,” Campbell said, “we will carry out aserious financial review after this quarter tosee where we stand."REFORM RABBIS ARE NOT- PSYCHOLOGISTS- CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGISTS- LEGAL ADVISORS- SOCIAL WORKERS- MARRIAGE COUNSELORS- TEACHERS- RELIGIOUS LEADERSTHEY ARE MOREThey are RabbisGary P Zola, Assistant to the National Director of Admissions,The Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion,will be on campus January 14, 1981 at Hillel House.Call 752-1127 for an appointmentThe College-Institute also offers degree programs in Jewish Education,Jewish Communal Service, Cantorial Studies, and Graduate StudiesCOPIES COPIES COPIES (COPIES COPIES COPIES (COPIES COPIES COPIES (Copies The Way You Want Them!• Same Size or Reduced • Colored Papers• 1 or 2 Sided • Card Stocks• Collated or Sorted • Fine Stationary• Plastic Spiral Binding • 8’T x 11 or Legal SizeFast, sharp, economical copies ... from anything hand¬written. typed, or printed . . . size-for-size, or in anyreduction ratio ... on your choice of colored or whitebond paper!XEROX® COPYING0 per copy8Vi” x 11”20# White BondHARPER COURT COPY5210 S. HARPER288-2233 CENTER Plus COMPLETECOMMERCIALOFFSETPRINTINGSERVICEThe Chicago Maroon —Friday, January 8 1982—3At Sanders, our future depends on our abilityto see it. Clearly. As one of the world's leadingproducers of advanced electronic systems andproducts for government and industrial applications.Sanders views the world with long-range vision.Because Sanders has to.If you have creative vision maybe you belong inNashua with Sanders. We welcome candidateswith BS or MS degrees in Electrical Engineering,Computer Science, Physics, Math, IndustrialEngineering, or Mechanical Engineering.SOFTWARE DEVELOPMENTGraphic displays; information processing; signalanalysis; minicomputers and realtime applications;data base; simulations.CIRCUIT & SYSTEMS DESIGNAutomatic test equipment receiver and R.F. systemstechnology; electronic countermeasures; signalprocessing systems for real-time control;microprocessors and bit slice computers; graphicdisplays systems; antenna design; radar systems.See the years ahead with Sanders.On-Campus InterviewsFriday, January 15See your Placement Office or send your resumeand transcript directly to:College Recruiting CoordinatorSanders Associates, Inc.95 Canal StreetNashua. NH 03061SANDERSAn Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action EmployerSALE SALE SALE SALE SALECHILDREN’S SHEETSDan River’s Paddington Bearand Shirt TailsMarimekko’s Bo Boo and RullaBurlington’s Sesame StreetUtica’s Snoopy Goes Westand Snoopy KitesWamsutta’s Raggedy Annand Mickey's Hornpipeselection of children stowels andbath mitts52nd & Harper in Harper Ct • 955-0100SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE Editorials LettersBiting the hand . . .The threatened closing of the student-run Ex Libris canteen in Regensteinhas once again raised the question of what the University is putting first: thequality of student life on this campus, or its insatiable desire to make money otfof students at every conceivable opportunity.It almost goes without saying that to force F^x Libris to pay for a hall monitorwho would have to be on duty even if the canteen were not operating is unfair,and an action typical of an insensitive bureaucracy. The arguments of Regen-stein's Howard Dillon that Ex Libris should pay for the monitors since Regen¬stein is primarily a library and not a restaurant just dodges the point.What Dillon did not mention is that Ex Libris happens to compete with thevery lucrative vending machines located on a level, which sources say returnupwards of $15,000 in profits to Regenstein every year. And although most stu¬dents have never seen them, there is within Regenstein a host of unprofitableARA machines which are available for the exclusive use of the library staff.It seems the height of hypocrisy for the Administration to object to the pre¬sence of food in Regenstein only when it's food that they are not turning a profiton. Yes, Regenstein is first and foremost a library, hut the University’s efforts,in Dean of Students Charles D. O’Connell’s words, “to make the University ofChicago a livelier and more comfortable place,’’ should not stop at Regen-stein's revolving door. It is time for UC to give more attention to pleasant ame¬nities like Ex Libris rather than contemplating everlastingly its grandioseschemes for student centers which have yet to materialize.Alumnus sees redTo the Editor:As an alumnus and neighbor of the Uni¬versity, I enjoy watching its activities.Especially interesting to me as an architec¬tural buff is construction of new buildings. Iwas glad to see that the new parking garageat the west end of the Midway harmonizedso well with adjacent buildings — until a redbrick tower was built on it at the corner of59th and Drexel.This red brick stands out like a sorethumb, because the entire Midway facade ofhospitals, quadrangles, and other Universi¬ty buildings from Drexel to Blackstone Ave¬nue is of light gray stone.This red brick tower did not have to be onthe Midway front of the garage. Its opposite number, another red tower near the 58thStreet end of the building, is set back a fewfeet along Drexel so that the 58th Streetfront is uniform light gray concrete. Thesame should have been done at the Midwayend of the building. The easiest way now torestore harmony to the Midway facade ofUniversity buildings is to paint light graythe 59th Street brick wall of the tower.This is not the first time that I have mar¬velled at obvious blunders made by archi¬tects for the University and elsewhere. TheUniversity should create an architecturalreview board of faculty and alumni to catchsuch errors before it is too late.Sincerely yours,Wallace P. RusterholtzA M. '56The Chicago MaroonThe Chicago Maroon is the official student newspaper of the University of Chicago. Itis published twice a week, on Tuesdays and Fridays. Editorial and business officesare located on the third floor of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St. Chicago, 60637. Tele¬phone 753-3263. Business office hours are 9:30 to 4:30, Monday through Friday.Chris IsidoreEditorRobert DeckerManaging EditorDarrell WuDunn Sherrie NegreaFeatures EditorAudrey LightSports EditorWilliam Mudge Richard KayeGrey City Journal EditorBecky WoloshinLiterary Review EditorErin Cassidy Henry OttoBusiness ManagerJay McKenzieAdvertising ManagerLeslie WickSenior News Editor Photography Editor LibrarianAnna Feldman David Brooks Aarne Elias Office ManagerCharlie MencerNews Editor Viewpoints Editor Design Director Production ManagerAssociate Editors: Robin Kirk, News; William Rauch, Copy editing.Staff: Lee Badgett, Mary Bartholomew, Sheila Black, David Blaszkowsky, KahaneCorn, David Candela, Wally Dabrowski, Jeff Davitz, Cliff Grammich, Margo Hablut-zel, John Herrick, Keith Horvath, Sho-ann Hung, Wavne Klein, Bob LaBelle, Kath¬erine Larson, Linda Lee, Chris Lesieutre, Jennifer Maude, Marlene Mussell, BobNawrocki, Melody Salkuci, Donna Shrout, Daniel Staley, Elizabeth Steiner JamesThompson. Elaine Tite, Bob Travis, Aili Tripp, Nick Varsam, Jeff Wolf Anna Yama-da,4—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, January 8. 1982ViewpointsA national service system: looking at some optionsBy Morris JanowitzAmong members of the U.S. Congress, interest in andsupport for some form of national service has grown duringthe last two years. But the level of legislative support at thistime is hardly sufficient for enactment of a voluntary na¬tional service program, although legislation for nationalservice has been introduced and new bills are being draft¬ed. The attitude of President Reagan and his Secretary ofDefense remain negative, postponing any progress. In anycase, the next steps are experimental programs, since thefederal government at this point does not know how to ad¬minister a comprehensive system of national service.Clearly, educational benefit will be a central element in anational service program.The relevant proposals for national service includechoice of military or civilian assignment. The problems ofdesigning and administering the military option to relate tothe regular volunteer force are difficult. On this front someimportant progress can be reported. The professional of¬ficer corps is strongly in support of national service. Theybelieve, in general, that all able bodied youth should havethe opportunity to “serve the nation.’’ They realize that thechoice of military versus civilian options should and willhave to be an individual one.But the professional military has deep concerns about thefeasibility of such procedures. Would enough young peoplechoose the military option to meet strategic manpower re¬quirements? Would those who selected the military optionhave the necessary educational level and aptitudes? In es¬sence, the problem is complicated by the fact that the mili¬tary was organized with three years as the minimum tourof duty. Three years was believed to be cost effective andrequired to train and make effective use of a new' soldier.Who w'ould select the military option if the civilian optionwas for two years, eighteen months, or even one year?Until recently, military professionals did little planningand experimentation which could contribute to a solutionfor the recruitment problems of the military option of na¬tional service. Fortunately, in recent months, the U.S.army leadership has launched a number of experimentalprograms designed to meet current manpower needs. Ifthey succeed, they can serve as models for national ser¬vice.The Army is hard pressed to recruit sufficient qualifiedpersonnel for the combat arms — that is, in plain language,for the fighting part of the ground forces. The new pro¬grams look like prototypes for the military option of nation¬al service. They conform to recommendations over the lastten years by university based scholars of civil-military re¬lations.Three elements are involved. First, and very importantfor national service, the ground forces are accepting twoyear enlistments on an experimental basis. This policycloses the gap between civilian and military optidhs. Itmeans that the armed forces recognize that, despite thecomplexity of modern ground warfare, two years can be afeasible period for military service for a sizeable element ofyouth. This option is not designed to substitute for, but tosupplement, longer term regular enlistments.Second, the new ground force policy of two-year enlist¬ment is designed to recruit a more representative cross-section of youth. It is designed to recruit youth interested incollege education after military service. The two year op¬tion emphasizes recruitment and selection of persons withhigher aptitude and better educational achievement. Theresult will be to make the armed forces look more like it did under the draft. In addition, better educated recruits aremore rapidly trained, increasing their effectiveness duringa two year period of service.Third, the basic motivation for recruitment into the ex¬perimental program is not a narrow marketplace conceptof manpower. It is not mainly directed toward immediatecompensation. Instead, it offers access to educational ben¬efits at the end of one’s tour of duty. Military service isthought of as a form of citizen obligation, and the education¬al benefits represent citizen rights generated by fulfillingone’s civic obligation. Under the experimental program,two years of successful military service generates twelvethousand dollars worth of post high school benefits.The program has already been highly successful. If themilitary option of national service follow's the outlines ofthis experiment, it will succeed as well. In short, we havemoved closer to a realistic solution to the organization ofnational service, especially in terms of the difficult prob¬lems connected with a military option.More debate and problem solving are required if we areto have experimental programs w’hich work, particularlyas interest in a full scale national service becomes morewidespread.Morris Janowitz is the Lawrence A. Kimpton distinguishedservice Professor Dept. Sociology and the college.By David BrooksIt’s testimony to the sorry status of history today that theUniversity of Chicago does not require that its students takea history course, even its social science and humanities stu¬dents. True, there is a Western Civilization requirement —a course labeled History 131-133, taught by history profes¬sors using books available in the history section of the book¬store — but Western Civ. is no more a history course thanany course on Milton or Shakespeare is.Instead, Western Civ. is a hybrid between the old GreatBooks program of the Hutchins era and our modern concep¬tion of history as it is taught in the department’s othercourses, with emphasis placed on the Great Books. That isto say, the sequence takes the traditional list of great books,arranges them chronologically, and then throws in a fewhistory texts, like William McNeill’s survey textbook andR.W. Southern’s Making of the Middle Ages as occasionalanchors. A student beings the year reading Aristotle andPlato, moves up through the Bible to John of Salisbury andThomas Aquinas, on to Machiavelli and Luther, and finallyends up with Freud, Weber and Marx. These are all greatthinkers, and nobody should be permitted to graduate with¬out having read them, but to pass this reading list off ashistory is sham. If 1 can remind you what the study of greatbooks entails, and what the study of history is, then it shouldbe obvious that the emphasis of our Western Civilization se¬quence should be on good historical analysis, not on aparade of great thinkers.In the noble words of the Hutchins era, the Great Booksprogram is designed to help its students make humanisti¬cally sound decisions. The program gives its students ex¬amples of brilliant men who have formed opinions on fun¬damental issues of social and philosophical disputes. While Morris Janowitzthese thinkers may not have faced the exact same problemswe do — say, draft evasion — they have voiced their beliefson the general principles which influence our decisions —for example, on how much of ourselves we owe to our gov¬ernment. These principles are useful, the Great Books ad¬vocate maintains, because the dilemmas we face now areessentially the same dilemmas men have always faced.The wars and enemies are different, but the responsibilityto one’s nation in times of danger is still the same.In other words, the person who would teach us the greatbooks believes there is always the same basic order andthat the order is always based on reason. If I belive inHobbes’ premises, then when Uncle Sam calls me up tofight in Afghanistan I can logically deduce from Hobbes’argument whether it is right to skip off to Canada. No phi¬losopher would study an ancient colleague unless he be¬lieved that the problems people face have remained reason¬ably constant.This is philosophy. A Great Books program taught underthe guise of history makes an additional claim; that an erais understood by how it answers these eternal dilemmas.When a Western Civ. professor tells his class that they willstudy the Enlightment and then assigns Condorcet, Diderotand Rousseau, he is assuming that the era is defined by thenew philosophies these men introduced. This doesn't meanthat an era’s major figure needs to have lived during thatperiod. The Middle Ages, for example, could be labeled“The Aristotelian Epic.’’ Time takes a backseat in thisform of historical analysis. Brilliant and innovative think¬ing is what moves history along, not natural, time relatedforces. History by this account is not the actual events ofthe past, but the appraisal of those events to find better an¬swers to age old problems.Continued on page sevenNot enough history in Western CivChicago MaroonStaff MeetingThe first Chicago Maroon staffmeeting of the quarter will be heldin the Maroon office Wednesday at9 p.m. All new and returning staffmembers are invited to attend. COPIES COPIES COPIES (COPIES COPIES COPIES (COPIES COPIES COPIES (Copies The Way You Want Them!• Same Size or Reduced • Colored Papers• 1 or 2 Sided • Card Stocks• Collated or Sorted • Fine Stationary• Plastic Spiral Binding • 81'? x 11 or Legal SizeFast, sharp, economical copies .. . from anything hand¬written. typed or printed,. . . size-for-size. or in anyreduction ratio ... on your choice of colored or whitebond paper!XEROX® COPYINGBondHARPER COURT COPY CENTER5210 S. HARPER288-2233 Plus COMPLETECOMMERCIALOFFSETPRINTINGSERVICE4*/2 * per co8 Vt" x20# WhiteThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, January 8, 1982—5Finding the extra money for aRetirement Account may be tough today.But, consider tomorrow’s alternative.The purpose of this advertisement is simple Toconvince you that starting an Individual Retire¬ment Account at Hyde Park Bank is an importantstep in your lifeOther ads for IRAs may talk of tax savings andsun-drenched retirement vacations in Hawaii.Nice things to think about But, there are otherways to save on taxes And, each of us likes tothink we'll be successful enough to afford retire¬ment vacations.The reality of life is that planning for retirementisn't something most people want to think about.But, consider the alternative.A Hyde Park Bank Individual Retirement Ac¬count is your assurance of a comfortable, secure life after you leave the job by choice or chance.It is the only retirement plan you can count on toprovide the money you need to do the things youwant Social Security simply won't be enough!The new tax laws make it possible for everyworking person under age 70Vz to start an IRAAnd, Hyde Park Bank makes it easy. We havebeen managing IRAs for your friends andneighbors since they were first introduced in 1975Under the new law, beginning January 2, 1982,you will be able to set aside 100% of gross earn¬ings, up to $2,000 per year, in a Hyde Park BankIndividual Retirement Account If you have anon-working spouse, you may set aside $2,250.Part-time workers (including children) may alsohave an IRA and contribute 100% of salary, up to$2,000.All IRA contributions are fully deductible fromyour federal iricome t^x for the year in which theyare made. In a sense, you are funding your ownretirement with money which would otherwise bepaid in taxesIf you have even the slightest doubt about how much an IRA can bring at retirement, considerthese figures:Here’s how your IRA grows at Hyde Park BankBased on annual deposits of $2,000 • Interest compounded daily.Years Tromstart date 10°/o 12% 14%5 $ 13.694 08 S 14.61831 S 15.6174510 36,427 53 41 474 79 47.370 0015 74.167.20 90 814 97 111.927 5720 136.818 58 181 461 79 243 182 5225 240 825 75 347 996 35 510 042 9730 413.487 38 653.950 35 1.052 609 1935 700.121 88 1 216 043 03 2 155.725 4140 1.175.962 00 2.248 708 66 4 398 521 5645 $1,965,901 20 $4 145 901 62 $8 958 453 15Rates shown for demonstration purposes only Interest computed on 360 365day basis Deposits made on Jan 1 of each yearThese days it’s tough to save any money. What’sleft after bill-paying is easily spent elsewhere. Butweigh the wisdom of buying today's pleasures atthe expense of tomorrow's security and comfort.Consider the alternative.Hyde Park Bank welcomes the opportunity tohelp you start your IRA You may sign-up today atour main bank Or, call 752-4600 to receive ourinformative brochure and a helpful IRA checklist.ill M,— HYDE PARK BANK and trust company1525 EAST 53rd STREET, CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60615"(312)752-4600 Member FDIC6—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, January 8, 1982/ ObituariesPHOTO BY WILLIAM MUDGEAn origami crane mobile on display nowin Rockefeller Chapel.HistoryContinued from page fiveBut that’s not the way we think of historyanymore. And with the exception of menlike Thomas Carlyle and Ralph WaldoEmerson, our conception of history has notbeen so homocentric for some time. In thefirst place, history, actual events, have ac¬celerated to the point that thinkers are hav¬ing a harder and harder time keeping up.The most influential event of modern timesis the industrial revolution. Yet the industri¬al revolution in America did not arise fromthe philosophies developed by greatthinkers of the age, from the Jeffersons andThoreaus. On the contrary, it contradictedprevalent philosophical beliefs.In England, where the industrial revolu¬tion really started, industrial progress was not accompanied by intellectual advance.While mechanical developments accelerat¬ed in the 1780s it wasn’t until the 1840s thatphilosophers began to grapple with the so¬cial affects of the revolution (this, accordingto E.J. Hobsbawm). The British, in fact,lagged behind the rest of Europe in the stu¬dies of mathematics, physics, technology,education and even economics. Since the in¬dustrial revolution, we have looked on all so¬cial revolutions more as the products of con-ditions rather than philosophies.Accordingly, historians no longer look athistory as one school of thought conqueringthe last, but as a set of depersonalized condi¬tions of which w-e should be conscious.One of the historical thinkers who put thepre-modern conception of histofv out offavor is Marx. He believed, and most havesince to some extent agreed that historycannot be explained by the progress of thehuman mind but by the material conditionsof life. The key is not to discover truth but tobe conscious of forces which determine oursocial relations. One doesn’t have to be aMarxist, or a strict material determinist tobelieve that to a very large degree we areproducts of our environment and that menwill change profoundly as their materialconditions develop.So historians these days look for historicalprocesses, whether it is Marx’s theory of adialectic movement toward communism orde Toqueville’s belief in a tendency towarddemocracy or the contemporary belief intendencies toward nationalism or world fed¬eralism, or the rises and falls of economiesand empires, etc. When one takes a historycourse, (exluding intellectual history) youare likely to study economic conditions, thesocial conditions of the “silent majority,”the structures of social relationships, andthe political structures; then, after the prob¬lems created by the conditions have beenstudied, the intellectual responses are ex¬amined. We no longer see history as stag¬nant, nor as dominated by rational systems.Let’s take those “Selected Readings” textsand study them in philosophy classes. In his¬tory, let’s study history."\rv> BISHOP BRENT HOUSE5540 S. Woodlawn AvenueWeekly: Sunday Evening Eucharist& Supper, at Bishop Brent HouseEucharist 5:30 p.m.Supper 6:00 p.m.Beginning this Sunday, 10 JanuaryWeekly: Noon Eucharist, Thursdaysin Bond ChapelSponsored by the Episcopal Church Council at the U. of C. A winner’slosing battlewith deathContinued from page onehe had bilateral cataracts. An operation onthe right eye to correct that was successf¬ul.He took five courses the quarter after theoperation as part of a plan to prove that hecould “survive the rigors of medical train¬ing.” He was certain that he wanted to be adoctor, but he was afraid “the issue of myhealth could prevent me from getting intomedical school.”During a second eye operation to correcthis cataracts, complications arose andChang lost the vision in the left eye com¬pletely. Even with this setback, he was ableto graduate from the College in three years,though the summer after his commence¬ment was extremely difficult for him. “Thatsummer was my moment of deepest depres¬sion,” he wrote. After “struggling with se¬vere depression and a general sense of hope¬lessness,” he “finally mustered thedetermination...to go to medical school.”At the time he wrote the article, Changsaid his kidney “probably will not reject.”Nonetheless, he was taking a number of pillsto prevent rejection and control his bloodpressure.Chang believed that his experience fight¬ing his illness would make .him a better doc¬tor.Chang wrote, “I see now the many waysmy illness has heavily determined who andwhat I am today. More than anything else,kidney disease and its consequences havemade me feel different from others — some¬how' weaker and less lovable.” But duringhis life, Chang was able to overcome thesefears and despair. “I still have my momentsof sadness and doubts,” he wrote. “Howeverthe pnce prevalent thoughts of despair havebeen displaced by my desire to do some¬thing worthwhile with my life, to be a com¬petent and caring doctor.”Catherine Ham, 66Catherine Ham, recently retired dean ofstudents in the Humanities Division, diedDec. 3 after a long illness. She was 66.Ham had been associated with the Univer¬sity since 1949, when she received her M.A. She was an associate lecturer in the EnglishDepartment for many years before becom¬ing Dean in 1973. Before coming to Chicagoshe studied at Howard University in Wash¬ington, D.C., where she received her B.A. in1937. Ham served as a W AVE in W’orld WarII and worked at Valparaiso University inIndiana. Ham was an avid bird-watcher andan aficionado of almost all varieties ofmusic.As Dean of Students for Humanities, Hamhelped and guided students from the mo¬ment they wrote asking for catalogues untilgraduation. According to colleagues, shehad an excellent rapport with students.“They liked her very much,” said PatriciaSuhrcke, who served as Ham’s administra¬tive assistant. “She could be brusque on oc¬casion, that was part of her style, but stu¬dents felt that she had their interests atheart. Hers was one of the few offices oncampus that students didn't mind comingto, because they always knew that she woulddo something.”A memorial service for Ham will be heldat four o'clock on January 19, in Bond Chap¬el.UC biologist diesHenry Burr Steinbach. Professor Emeri¬tus in Biology and former Chairman of theBiology Department died on December 21 athis home in Woods Hole, Massachusetts. liewas 76 years old.Mr. Steinbach, whose research interestsincluded the generation of electricity by an¬imal cells and the distribution of chemicalsalts in cells and body fluids, was Presidentand Director of the Marine Biological Labo¬ratory in Massachusetts from 1966 to 1970.He also served on many advisarv panels in¬cluding the board of directors of the Ameri¬can Association for the Advancement ofscience.He is survived by his wife. Eleanor, andfour children.Lindsay; ear pioneerDr. John Lindsay, the Thomas D. JonesProfessor Emeritus in Surgery and founderof the Section of Otolaryngology within theDepartment of Surgery, died December 20in his home in Evanston. He was 82.Lindsay, who specialized in treating dis¬eases of the middle andvinner ear, was apast president of the American Academy ofOtolaryngology and the American OtologicSociety. Taken as a whole, his more than 100articles on the treatment of ear. nose andthroat diseases represent a pioneering con¬tribution to the field.Lindsay is survived by his wife, Libby andthree daughters.COPIES COPIES COPIES (COPIES COPIES COPIES (COPIES COPIES COPIES (Copies The Way You Want Them!• Same Size or Reduced • Colored Papers• 1 or 2 Sided • Card Stocks• Collated or Sorted • Fine Stationary, • Plastic Spiral Binding • 8vi x 11 or Legal SizeFast, sharp, economical copies ... from anything hand¬written, typed, or printed . . . size-for-size. or in anyreduction ratio ... on your choice of colored or whitebond paper!XEROX® COPYINGI M — O per copyxM MSm 20# White BondHARPER COURT COPY CENTER5210 S. HARPER288-2233 Plus COMPLETECOMMERCIALOFFSETPRINTINGSERVICEVThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, January 8, 1982—7/ G.W. OPTICIANS1519 E. 55thTel. 947-9335Ey« exanM md Contact Looses fitted byregistered Optometrists.Specwlifts m teafty Eyeereor et ReesonebieWees.Lob on premises for fost service - framesreplaced, lenses duplicated and pre¬scriptions filled. HYDE PARKTHE VERSAILLESIDEAL FOR STUDENTS324-0200Large Studios • Walk-in 'Kitchen • Utilities Incl. •Furn. - Unfurn. • CampusBus at doorBased on Availability5254 S. DorchesterPROFESSIONAL OPTIONAdmissions MeetingBUSINESS LAWFor all students in the College interested in the GraduateSchool of Business or the Law School, or admission to theJoint Program leading to degrees in both Schools.Wednesday, January 134:00 P.M.Harper 284 SPECIAL DISCOUNT PRICESfor all STUDENTS, STAFF,and FACULTY MEMBERS 72nd l Stony IttandOp«n Mon.-Thurs.until 7:30 pm684-0400Just presenl your University ofChicago Identification Card Asstudents Faculty Members or Ad¬ministrative Staff you are entitledto special mon^y saving DIS¬COUNTS on Chevrolet r'arts Accessones and any new or usedChevrolet you buy I.om Ruby"hevrcJetSPECIAL DISCOUNT PRICESfor all STUDENTS, STAFF,and FACULTY MEMBERS krrp Ikal (/Yab/ C 1/ frrliAg*tiMs,l.\L l \t CM Pen*Parts OpenSat.’til noonAs*72nd & Sti®0pen MonHZ1 Just Present your UniversityChicago Identification Cardstudents, Faculty Members orAdministrative Staff you are en¬titled to special money-sovingDISCOUNTS on Volkswagen PartsAccessories and any new or usedVolkswagen you buy from RubyVolkswagen72nd & Stony IslandOpen Mon.-Thurs.Luntil 7:30 p.m.684-0400. 2 Miles-5 MinutesAway FromThe UNIVERSITYYOU HAVE A LOT TO GIVECOME AND LEND YOUR TALENTSTOCALVERT HOUSE5735 UNIVERSITY288-2311BY PARTICIPATING IN ANY OR ALL OF THE FOLLOWING:MASS Daily:Weekends: SaturdaySunday Noon and 5:005:00 (Rev. David Tracy)8:30 am11:00 am (Bond Chapel)5:00 pmWEEKLY PROGRAMS Sunday SupperBrown Bag LunchInvestigation into CatholicismCatholic Worker Soup KitchenPrayer Group 6:00 pm12:30 Daily7:00 Tuesdays3:00 Fridays7:00 pm SundaysSPECIAL Discussion Group at ShorelandBible Study at Shoreland Begins Jan. 13th at 8pmBegins Jan. 14th at 7pmPROFESSIONAL LawMedicineBusiness Thur. Jan. 14th, 5:30pmFri. Jan. 15th, 5:30pmSun. Jan. 17th, 12:30pmSPECIAL EVENTS TobogganingDavid Tracy LectureRetreat Weekend in WisconsinProgram on Sexuality Fri. Jan. 15thSun. Jan. 17th, 7:00pmJan. 22 to 24thSun. Jan. 31st, 7:00pm8 The Chicago Maroon—Friday, January 8, 1982r_Joseph Salek as "Zeezee" from “Captain Kidd, Jr.“, a 1931 Blackfriar's production.REGENSTEIN RICHESThe next time you're in the Regenstein Library contemplating astudy break, you might mosey on down to the current exhibit in Spe¬cial Collections. The exhibit of rare books, manuscripts, playbills,and posters from the University's drama collection is slowly vanish¬ing to make room for newer exhibits, but there's still time to catch alook at some rare pieces of national theater folklore (an aopcryphalplaybill of a performance of "Our American Cousin" at the FordTheater the night Lincoln was shot, for example) as well as somehighly interesting memorabilia from past University of Chicago the¬ater groups. Photographs and mementos from the early days of Uni¬versity Blackfriars, the women's theatrical group "The Mirror,"and a host of other dramatic troupes are all on display for a fewmore weeks. Some of the best pieces of University theater materialV have already been put away, but one can catch some of the betterpieces. Going by the evidence of the exhibit, University theater wasonce an extremely popular and vibrant part of student life, withgrades handed out for a few of the student productions and variousindependent student troupes popping up all over campus. Most sur¬prising of all are the astonishing number of productions where malestudents donned female attire, with startlingly realistic results (seeJoseph Salek as "Zeezee" in Captain Kidd, Jr.", a 1931 Blackfriarsproduction). And you thought those were the days of Chicago'striumph as a member of the Big Ten football arena. The Grey CityPlaybill Exhibit, and the accompanying show of national theaterbooks and playbills, will run for a short while longer on the mainfloor of the Regenstein Library in Special Collections.DR. M.R. MASLOVOPTOMETRIST•Eye Examinations•Contact Lenses(Soft & Hard)* Ask about our annualservice agreement,•Fashion &LOMBSOFLENS!(polymocon)EyewearContact LensesLOCATED IN THEHYDE PARKSHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th 363-6100 STANLEY H. KAPLANFor Over 43 Years The Standard otExcellence in Test Preparation I Ml I I I I I I I 1 1 mCPA • GMAT • LSAT • GRESAT • MCAT • ACTFLEX • NATIONAL MEDICAL BOARDS • ECFMGNURSING BOARDS • TOEFL • VOEGRE PSYCH • GRE BIO • DAT . PCAT • OCAT • VATMAT • SAT ACHVS • PSAT • SSATPODIATRY BOARDS • NATIONAL DENTAL BOARDSFlexible Programs and HoursVis* Any C*nt#r And Sm fo>vou~* Th*TEST PREPARATIONKflPlJlIC SPECIALISTS since 1936cm ir stytaia i in S C*h#5"CENTERCHICAGO CENTER6216 N CLARACHICAGO ILLINOIS 6066C(313) 764-5151$ w sueunsAN16 S LA GRANGE flOAO SUITE 20!LA GRANGE. ILLINOIS 60525(313) 363-5640NORTH 6 N IN SUBURBAN474 CENTRAL AVENM«>ND PARK 6J.POS 60035(313) 433-7410 SPRING. SUMMERFALL INTENSIVESCOURSES STARTINGTHIS MONTHSAT . . GMATNEXT MONTHHCAT...ACT...GRE...SAT.. .DAT. ..Courses Contuntty Updatad\ Tomorrow (1/9)at 7:00, 9:,30in Mandel Hall:A special DoeFilms/Law SchoolFilms presentation. GENE RICHARDWILDER’ PRYORTogetherAgain in...STIRCRAZYI I[Rj®- £3DOC FILMS$2.001 T 1 T 1 I • */;\« . * ;t ; J •^v/vyv-tm ^ (r ).'Or1.. !.... 1 17COURT STUDIO PRESENTSTHE LOVERauthor HAROLD PINTER FUn TtlE REU mAIDIRECTOR JOHN HIWUUI AUTHOR MMX MEDOFF DMECTORJN SHAMSREYNOLDS CLUB THEATRE57TH & UNIVERSITY 3RD FLOORJANUARY 8,910 15,16,17 8PM s!Ki!^emzws2.M znunmUD rrrrrv\ Tonight at 7:15, 9:30:John Carpenter’s ESCAPE FROM NEW YORK plus the world premiereof Doc Films’ own ESCAPE FROM HYDE PARKTomorrow: a busy day!at 2:30: Walt Disnev's animated versions of “The Legend of SleepyHollow” and "The Wind in the W illows”: ICHABOI) AND MR. TOADat 6:30. Audrey Hepburn and Rex Harrison in George Cukor’s film of9:30: Lerner and Loewe’s MY FAIR LADYSunday at 7:15. 9:1 5:Isabelle llufipert and Gerard Depardieu in Maurice Pialat's highlyacclaimed L()IJL<)IJDOC FILMSAll films in Cobh Hall.I I I 1 I I 7 / V » •*Cr 17YOUR TICKETTO CHICAGO NIGHT LIFE!i^neWfXMSS)Get away from the gray walls andexperience the glitter and glamourof Chicago’s near North Side. Sponsored by the University ofChicago Student Government- SCHEDULE -• Leaving Hyde ParkFriday & Saturday-at 7 and 9 pmPick-up points: Burton JudsonIda NoyesReynolds ClubShoreland53rd & Dorchester• Leaving the North Side11 pm and 2 amPick-up points: Michigan & AdamsClark & FullertonWater Tower PlaceTICKETSFARE IS $2.00 ONE WAYTickets available at Main Desk ofBurton JudsonInternational HouseIda Noyes. Pierce TowerWoodward CourtShorelandAnd the Reynolds Club Box Office2—THE GREY CITY JOU R N AL-J AN UAR Y 8, 1982A drawing of a photograph of a paintingARTThe Transfiguartion' (1520), the last greatmasterpiece executed by the Italian Renais¬sance painter Raphael Sanzio, will be thesubject ot a unique exhibition at the Univer¬sity ot Chicago's David and Alfred SmartGallery. Through documentary photo¬graphs of The Transfiguration, the exhib¬ition demonstrates how Polaroid's newlydeveloped large-tor mat photographicprocess can be used for both study and ap¬preciation of the visual arts. ''A Master¬piece Close-Up: The Transfiguration by Ra¬phael" will be on display from January 14through February 28. A preview receptionwill be held for fhe public on Wednesday,January 13 from 5 to 7 p.m. at the SmartGallery.The Transfiguration is presently housedin the Vatican Picture Gallery where it hasbeen since the 18th century. Because of thepainting's fragile condition and large size(13'/2 feet high by 9 feet wide), it is unlikelythat it will ever leave Rome. At the requestof fhe Vatican, the Polaroid Corporationused recent technological advancements toreproduce The Transfiguration at 95 percentof its original size. This photographic repro¬duction, created without negatives or imagedegrading enlargements, contains an un¬precedented resolution of form and fidelityof color. The photograph makes the aesthet¬ic, historic, and spiritual values of the paint¬ing accessible to a far wider public than waspreviously possible.Included in the exhibition is the 95 percentreplica photograph, 16 actual-size detailphotographs, and 13 direct magnificationdetail photographs. A small scale model ofthe three-story camera built in the Vaticanand used to make these reproductions willbe on exhibit as well.The detail photographs, all 20 x 24 inchesin size, enable scholars, students, and thegeneral public to scrutinize sections of thepainting at close range for the first time. Acontroversy has existed for centuries as towhether Raphael or his assistants complet¬ed the painting. After a recent cleaning, andwith the aid of detail photographs, Vaticanscholars have established that Raphaelalone is responsible for the entire work. ThePolaroid details make it possible for thegeneral public to examine the evidencethemselves.Three lectures will be given in conjunctionwith the exhibition on the following Wednes¬day evenings at 8 p.m. at the Smart Gallery:January 20 — "Polaroid's Room-Size Cam¬era and the Photography of Great Master¬pieces" by Victoria Lyon Ruzdig, photogra¬pher and project coordinator forlarge-format museum photography in thePolaroid Research Division; January 27 —"The Conservation of Paintings, As Well AsRecent Historical Discoveries" by BarryBauman, Private Conservator and Assis¬tant Conservator at the Art Institute of Chi¬cago; February 3 — "Raphael and HisPainting of The Transfiguration" by Mary Quinlain, Department of Art, graduate stu¬dent, the University of Chicago.The David and Alfred Smart Gallery is lo¬cated at 5550 S. Greenwood Ave. The galleryis open Tuesday through Saturday from 10a.m. to 4 p.m. and Sunday trom noon to 4p.m. The gallery is closed on Monday. Ad¬mission is free.FILMDrunken Angel Set in post war Japan this1952 Akira Kurosawa film concerns theplight of two characters, a doctor and ahoodlum, in their seedy world of bars andgangsters. Fri., Jan. 8 at 5:30 pm. at theUniversity Club of Chicago. $3 and S5. Fol¬lowed by a talk by film scholar AudieBock.Escape From New York John Carpenter's1981 futuristic ghettoized fairy-tale neverquite delivers the "punch" that the film'sfirst reel promises. After setting up a provocative situation — Kurt Russel (soundingvery much like the rough Clint Eastwood) isa convict who can gain freedom if he re¬scues the president after his plane crashe s into the US's largest prison, New York City— the film simply slides into mediocrity,bad acting, and dull action scenes. A filmworth seeing if only for its initial premiss.Escape From Hyde Park, DOC'S latest filmventure, starring Hyde Park's own versionof "rough and ready", Jeff Makos, will bescreened beforehand. Friday, Jan. 8 at 7:15pm. in Quantrell. S2.Ichabod and Mr. Toad Walt Disney Studio'sanimated version of The Legend of SleepyHollow. Sat., Jan. 9 at 2:30 pm. DOC. SI.50.My Fair Lady (George Cukor, 1964) RexHarrison and Audrey Hepburn star in thisLerner and Loewe musical adaption ofShaw's Pyggmalion. Harrison plays Prof.Higgins, the elitist Britainer who trans¬forms low-life Hepburn into a regal lady towin a bet. Sat., Jan. 9 at6:30and9:30pm. inQuantrell. DOC. S2.Stir Crazy (Sidney Portier, 1980) RichardPryor and Gene Wilder play two frustratedNew Yorkers who decide to travel acrossthe country. But order and discipline befallthe pair somewhere in the Mid West whenthey end up in prison. Saturday, Jan. 9 at 7and 9:30 pm. in Mandell Hall. DOC/LSF.Loulou (Sidney Pialat, 1980) Perhaps thebest, and certainly the most passionate, oflast year's foreign releases, Loulou starsIssabel Huppert as a frustrated andbored middle class housewife who leavesher conservative husband for the passionateGerrard Durpardeau. A fine reworking ofthe stereotypical "French" narrative. Rec¬ommended. Sunday, Jan. 10 at 7:15 and 9:30pm. DOC.THEATERThe Entertainer Court Theater's winterproduction is a British play by John ("LookBack in Anger," "Luther") Osborne. Set in1957, the play concentrates on the life of afalling music hall entertainer (Nicholas Rudall) and the sad shape of England in 1957.Written when Osborne was 27 years old, theplay has been made famous through the filmversion starring Lawrence Olivier. PaulineBrailsford also stars, with direction byDiane and Nicholas Rudall and the set de¬sign by Linda Buchanan. The show runsWednesdays through Sundays until Febru¬ary 14. The curtain is set at 8 p.m. except forSunday matinees, which are at 2:30 p.m.,and Sunday night shows at 7:30 p.m. The Lover and Doing a Good One for the RedMan Courth Studio begins its season of playswith a Harold Pinter play about a couple'sstrange extra marital games (they playclandestine lovers by day and happily married by night) and a Mark Medoff workabout an unctuous American couple's ef¬forts to market a native American Indian.Performances are this week-end and nextwith all Friday, Saturday, and Sundayshows at 8 p.m. (Court Studio has eliminated its traditional Sunday matinees). Theactors are non-students, but both shows arestudent-directed.4MUSICBlues Bash: C.O.D.'s, a northside clubnoted for bringing in top new wave acts, willfeature three of Alligator Record's hottestperformers this Saturday, January 9. Lon¬nie Brooks, whose slick, yet energetic stylehas made him one of the most popular blues-men in the city, will appear along withearth-shaking female vocalist Koko Taylorand firey guitarist Son Seals, C.O.D.'s is at1201 W. Devon.Hyde Park Jazz: Chances R will featureon Saturday night guitarist RolandFaulkner's group with reedman GradyJohnson. At the Valhalla Jazz Pub, MikeFinnerty will play on Friday night and OnStage with Byron Woods will perform onSaturday night. Chances R is located inHarper Court, and the Valhalla is at 1515 E.53rd St.The major South African poet, DennisBrutus is in danger of deportation. In an ef¬fort to gain support Professor Brutus will begiving a poetry reading and informal discus¬sion at the Lutheran School of Theology inthe 2nd floor main lounge on Saturday, Jan¬uary 9 at 7:00 P.M. This event is being spon¬sored by the LSTC Core Committee andSouth Africa Task Force. UC and ChicagoCluster of Theological Schools students areall invited to come and participate. Alsocoming up in the near future there will be adeportation hearing for Prof. Brutus at 219S. Dearborn St., Room 484, on January 14. Arally sponsored by the Dennis Brutus Detense Committee will be held beginning at8.00 A.M. (an hour before the actual hear¬ing) in front of the building. Your presencein support of Prof. Brutus at any of theseevents will be greatly appreciated.mmmmEditor: Richard KayeJazz Editor: Jim GuentherClassical Music Editor: Robin MitchellBook Editor: John EganFilm Editor: Richard MartinFiction and Poetry Editor: Paul O'DonnellArt and Production: Nadine McGann, David Miller.Staff: Mike Alper, Denice Boneau, David Brooks, Charles Cole¬man, Sabrina Farber, Keith Fleming, Kira Foster, Susan Fran-usiak, Nancy Goldstucker, Kei Hanafusa, Jack Helbig, SarahHerndon, Sally Holland, Alice James, A.A. Kambouris, NikolaiKatz, Alex Mihailovic, Pat O'Donnell, Arturo Perez Reyes,Glen Sheffer, Dan Stitzel, Lonnie Stonitsch, Jennifer Tompkins,Michelle White, Ken Wissoker, Sandy Young.THE GREY CITY JOURNAL—JANUARY 8, 1982—3wAmerican Pictures, a multi-media presentation by Danish vaga¬bond Jacob Holdt, premiered in Chicago at the Blue Gargoyle andCourt Studio last quarter. In Europe over half a million people haveseen and applauded the show. A book version has been translatedinto six languages and was a bestseller in Germany for six months.Hyde Park's reception of American Pictures was dismal in com¬parison. Attendance was low, averaging about twenty people pernight and not exceeding sixty on the weekends. This is horriblyironic, but perhaps predictable, in view of the fact that much of thematerial of American Pictures addresses the realities and prob¬lems of South Side Chicago and Hyde Park: racial tensions, urbanproblems, and the profound contrast between the affluent whiteand poor black communities.Walk eight blocks from Rockefeller Chapel to the south, west, ornorth and you will begin to encounter some of what Holdt experi¬enced for five years. And the very fact that such a calm, etherealbuilding bearing the name Rockefeller serves as your startingpoint is symbolic of the essence of Holdt's criticism. From the ruralSouth to the home of the Rockefellers, Pabsts, and Kennedy's to theurban ghettoes of the North, Holdt draws a critique of modern capi¬talism which is Marxist in tone and anthropological in method.Jacob Holdt is presently in Zimbabwe visiting the schools whichhave been built with the proceeds from American Pictures inEurope. Before he left Chicago, Holdt was interviewed by the"Grey City Journal." American Pictures, locally presented byDavid Rogers (PACO and Valley Morrison (Landing Corp.), willreturn to Chicago in late March at the Art Institute of Chicago.By Kira Foster and Richard MartinGCJ: In your multi-media presenta¬tion, American Pictures, you place a lotof emphasis on understanding allclasses of the modern American sys¬tem. Do you see any specific class orgroup as the enemy?JH: I feel that people in every class inAmerica are very much molded bytheir environment, and therefore are,to some extent, free of guilt or whatever. But this is one of the things I want toput up for debate. Personally, I cannothate Rockefeller, the individual, and Isay this in the presentation. This issomething, especially in Germany, thatmakes some people walk out in protest,or shout and scream in the theatres.They just violently disagree. But I thinkit is important to create discussionabout how much a person is a product ofthe environment and how much he iscreating it. For me, you see, it is an unending question. You cannot come toany one conclusion. I have two conclu¬sions in the show: On the one hand Imake man guilty for his actions, or re¬sponsible for his actions. On the otherhand I take responsibility away fromhim. I think that modern society is toocomplex and difficult for anybody to understand every aspect of it. So I takethe freedom of having two opposite conelusions because one conclusion wouldbe too simplistic. In a "banana repub' lie" like Nicaragua or El Salvador it iseasy to identify the enemy, but youcan't do that in a modern capitalist so¬ciety, in my opinion. But I do want toprovoke debate, and therefore I empha¬size the idea that every class is victi¬mized.GCJ: Your presentation is certainlyprovocative and critical of the system.But you also point out American cul¬ture's tremendous ability to absorbcriticism. How effective do you thinkyour critique will be in light of thisAmerican phenomenon?JH: I wouldn’t say that it is just anAmerican thing: really much of what lam sayinc is a general critique of capi¬ talism — the type of capitalism inwhich we have political freedom. Forinstance, it is much easier for people inNicaragua to just walk out and startshooting at the enemy, because theycan see the enemy. The enemy does notmake compromises there and it justwon't accept criticism at all.GCJ: So you see a system's ability toabsorb criticism as a sign of itsstrength and stability?JH: Yes, it is a strength of the system tohave that capacity. We who want to tryto change certain aspects of the systemjust have to realize how frustrating it is.The Russian system stifles criticismtoo, but not totally. There is just asmuch criticism in Russian newspapersas here — within the framework of thesystem. To some extent you can say theAmerican political freedom is not somuch greater than the Russian because99% of the criticism we get here is alsowithin the framework of the system.GCJ: What would you mean by criti¬cism that comes from outside the sys¬tem?JH: Well, I talk a lot about the liberalsin the show. I try to show their hypocri¬sy. Mainly, I like liberals. I have to confess that. (Laughter). They supportedme throughout my trip. But I know it isthe liberals who will go in and see theshow and I do not want them to just sitthere and blame the conservatives forall these evils. I think it is importantthat we understand how we are all partof the system. Constantly, in our dailyactions, whether we are liberals, con¬servatives, or radicals, or blacks, orwhites, we're carrying on the system. Itis easy to make a show where you justmake people hate the conservatives butit wouldn't be a good show. It wouldn’tbe good because it would not demon¬strate how the enemy is inside, youhave to realize that. It is too easy tocreate scapegoats all the time. That iswhat people do. They build society onhatred. I just refuse to be a part of sucha hatred. So the first step toward a solu¬tion of the problem must be to understand how all the groups in society are functioning and whyway they do — why cway, why the capitaliand so on. If you don'tdon't think it is possiother type of system.GCJ : It seems to me tof your presentation isly toward the white miJH: Maybe that's beca'you belong to that greThat is what I hearwho sees this show. Thiway or the other Andis a bad feeling it idirected to the black upstance, for having in s(the ghetto behind I reis directed toward everit to farmer's orgasewives, rotary clubs, .is there we have the bi<But I know that Iiberaflock to see this show mvatives, and thereforedirect it at that a’udicourse, a leftist presenone of the few leftist pEurope that has just aon the right as on the leffact, the people who rEurope usually preferrightist groups becausebetter receptions thanfor the left. The left jusing to find something thwith. (Laughter). Th<shocked because theyseeing productions likenot used to seeing socfrom the position of theno compromises, realhbalance it by showing 1wealthy — I try to undenot to support them. Itthe underclass all the t★ *GCJ: What do you seeshowing of American FJH: Well, it is kind of hacess. For me success dcomes out of it; wheth<and do something ab<iems. That is kind of hajust see the immediate iit has on people and howmoney to bur foundaticthe presentation. Thisthing, because with th<ceive we are trying toAfrica. I have seen exvative American businto our theater in Deprobably racist and toterything in the show. 1pressed hundred dollahand afterwards andsomething for your worthat much of the righsame kind of catch worthe analysis in the sheMajority talks aboutpro life, etc. I ask in 1does the black familyand "Why is life so cca?"GCJ: Do you agree witljority’s faith in the nucJH: I was attacked torago when I started thmark. At that time thewas not really "in." Evto live in communeswas talking about the fsaying that the familybetter than the commutype of living situation,tant to realize that ever4—THE GREY CITY JOURNAL—JANUARY 8, 1982why they operate thewhy criminals act thisapitalists act that way,i don't understand this Ipossible to create anstem.o me that the narrativestion is directeed main-lite middle-class liberal's because you feel thathat group. (Laughter),hear from everybodyow. They feel guilty oneAnd I don't think thatg. It is just as muchlack upper class, for in-ag in so many ways leftid, l really think that itrd everyone — we show; organizations, hou-clubs, and so on, and it: the biggest successes,t liberals are going toshow more than conser-erefore, I do want toat audience. It is, ofpresentation, but it isleftist presentations in; just as much successi the left. As a matter of■ who run the show inprefer to run it forDecause they get muchis than when they runleft just sits there try-thing they can disagreer). The right is juste they are not used toDns like this. They areing society constantlyn of the underdog, with>, really. I don't try toowing the views of theto understand them buthem. It is a defense ofill the time.★ ★'ou see as a successfulrican Pictures?nd of hard to define suc-ccess depends on whatwhether people go outing about these prob-id of hard to measure. Iediate emotional effectrnd how they contributeundation as a result ofn. This means some-with the money we re¬ding to build schools in,een extremely conser-m businessmen walkin Denmark who areand totally against evshow. They have often1 dollar bills into mys and said, "Here'slur work." I might adde right today use thech-words as you find inhe show — the Moralabout pro-family andsk in the show, "Whyamily disintegrate?"e so cheap in Ameri-ee with the Moral Ma¬te nuclear family?:ed for this five yearsted the show in Den-ne the nuclear familyt." Everybody wantedunes together. And It the family. I am notfamily is necessarilyommune or any otheration. But it is impori everybody in Ameri¬ ca, and throughout the world, is beingbrainwashed that the nuclear family isthe ideal. So, when the black family realizes it can not live up to those whiteideals (those ideals conceived of as theright ones) then the result is self hatredand self disgust. Most blacks havenever heard about this romantacizedcommune living. They don't see alternatives to the nuclear family, an idealwhich they cannot live up to. They startinternalizing or directing their angeragainst themselves. This is the basis ofmy analysis. I don't try to put one fami¬ly situation over another. I think peoplehave the power to choose what is bestfor them. I live in a collective, a commune with ten people living together,including six American blacks who runthe show in Europe. I should also mention that for many of the conservativetype people who have come to see theshow — we live in the same building asthe theatre so they can walk all throughthe house — many of them write us af¬terwards and say that seeing us livingthere together, multi-racially and withbabies running all over, was for themas great as the show itself.* *GCJ: You make the statement in yourshow that change cannot come fromwithin the system because each class ishopelessly isolated within its particularfalse consciousness. If this is true thenwhere would you see change comingfrom, or are you a complete pessi¬mist?JH: Well, that is a good question. I firstuse the concept of a closed systemabout the ghetto, and then I extend it toshow how the whole society becomesghettosized; acquires all the violentaspects of the ghetto, and finally losesthe freedom to choose its own directionout of the problem (iust as the people inthe ghetto don't have any way out). Iwould say it is in there as a challenge tothe audience. I am not that pessimistic myself. I feel that this country hasgreat potential; there are possibilitiesif people start working on it. But I don'twant to say, as many leftists do, thatthe solution is simply to go out and fightthe enemy and everything will be allright. It is very important that peoplerealize the immense power the systemhas. The fact that I am working hereshows that I don’t have the pessimism Ipresent in the show. The pessimism inthe show is partly a result of the factthat l made it just a month after I camehome to Denmark, after I left all of this,and after Popeye Jackson (a Californiaprison reformer) was killed. I just gaveup and fled the country. Anyway, Iknow the audience gets depressed whenthey see the show, but I hope it is thesort of powerful depression that willmake them do something about it.GCJ: You are spending the proceedsfrom American Pictures in Zimbabwe.Do you see changes in our system com¬ing through changes in the ThirdWorld?JH: I partly see that. But that is not themain reason we spend the money inAfrica. The reason is that the money, sofar, has only come from Europe. Wethink it is very important to make Euro¬peans realize that this is an internation¬al problem, not only an American prob¬lem. So, we give the money to Africapartly to make them aware that Europehas perpetuated the same kind of prob¬lems in Africa that America has done inits own country. It would be ridiculousto send money from one rich country toanother rich country when we knowthat America could solve its own problems if it wanted to. I do think that amassive transfer of capital to the ThirdWorld is absolutely necessary today.The big problems in the world are not inthe United States, but in the increasinggap between the rich and the poorworld. Something certainly has to bedone about this. GCJ: A lot of your analysis has Marxistelements. What is your relationship toMarxism?JH: Well, probably one day I will endup in prison, and then I will have time toread some Marx. (Laughter). I havenever read anything by Marx. I havenot read a book for the last ten years,which is really my problem. I have readone book and that was Roots, becauseAlex Haley came to visit me and Ithought l should read it. Anyway, what¬ever you see of Marxism in my show iswhat I have picked up in America, liv¬ing with leftists or simply looking atcapitalism, a system that does notwork. Marxists have told me that thereare many similarities. For instance,what I say about Rockefeller is exactlywhat Marx said 100 years ago: that theruling class is just as victimized, in thelong run, by its actions and environ¬ment. But many leftists today argueagainst that. ,GCJ: Were you a leftist before youcame to the United States?JH: When I first came over here I was amember of the conservative party.(Laughter). I came over to work on afarm in Canada, and then I ended uptravelling in America. One of the firsthomes I stayed in was Angela Davis'home in San Francisco, and her politi¬cal group did turn me on to a lot of radi¬cal things. But all of us leftists growconstantly, or feel we do. So I probablydid grow politically during the fiveyears of travel. For instance, in the beginning I think I went through the samething that most leftists do: feeling hate,hate toward the enemy, or whateveryou call the enemy. But it takes a littlewhile to get over that. It is just likeBlack Nationalism. You have to havethe whites before you start loving your¬self. I went through such periods ofpure outrage against class society. It isshocking for a European to come hereand see Lake Forest up there and South Chicago down here. It is just unbelievable. I have become more accustomedto it now. But I keep my outrage in anintellectual way. And as it becomesmore intellectualized you can call thatgrowth.GCJ: In the presentation you occasion¬ally talk about your own self-doubt,about being a "disposable friend," andabout your vagabonding as a kind ofescapism. How do you see that now?JH: When I was vagabonding I neverturned down a ride, even if the people inthe car were wearing dark sunglassesand carrying guns. (Laughter). Thisapproach is what led me to all my experiences. It brought me to Rockefellerand to Ted Kennedy. It brought me toDetroit where a little boy came up tome and told me I should come to hishouse. There I found little children whohad been bitten by rats. This approachis also a hassle because when you sayyes all the time you are also being ex¬ploited all the time. Still, it is importantto allow this to happen. You learn somuch about people. You learn whysome of them exploit you and how theyhate themselves for exploiting you.This kind of understanding must become a tool for change. If my show isonly entertainment then I have betrayed the poor. Then, I am just an¬other white man ripping off the poor ina sophisticated way. The poor wouldoften tell me this. They could not havefaith in what I was doing. Well, neitherdid I. I never thought anything wouldcome of it. So, I think it is important totransfer this self-doubt to the audiencebecause then they have to challengethemselves too. Why are they sittingand watching this presentation? Is itbecause we are living in a time of depression, in a system where it is nice forus to console ourselves with someonewho is worse off? We are all sufferingtoday. It is important that we ask our¬selves these questions.THE GREY CITY JOURNAL—JANUARY 8, 1982—5SCHIZOIDBy Sarah Herndon"A young poet's struggle to overcomeschizophrenia and reconcile her creativitywith her illness is the subject of this remark¬ably sensitive and moving love story."So Robert Falls, Artistic Director of"Standing on my Knees," the current run atWisdom Bridge, explains the production. Iconfess surprise at these words, found in thesubscriber newsletter. At first blush perfectly at ease with the summary, I drewback — did I see a different play? "Lovestory"? "Sensitive and moving"? SurelyMr. Falls is joking... but I fear he isn't. Ifear he gushes with a forked tongue. JohnOlive's new play is full of emotions, but loveis not among them, and where this is sensi¬tivity, it is purely professional. The play infact cries out in frustration, as love teases itand disappears, leaving the hungry charac¬ters emptier than ever, and more consciousof what they miss.Written by John Olive, "Standing on myKnees" is the story of not one, but severaldisappointments, and the audience suffersas much as anyone. Although briefly en¬couraged to see light on the horizon, thespectator is not once given the real mouthfulof bliss he needs to assure him that such athing exists and that happiness is indeedmore than a mirage. We are tantalized, butnever allowed to taste, and so when the endcomes we are disappointed only because ahopeless beginning is finsihed just as ourself-congratulatory skepticism predicted.This is a pity, because Olive himself doesnot seem insensitive to the problems of hischaracters. His script is charming, witty,and if his authorial touch sometimes lackssubtlety, it never misses its mark. His treat¬ment of schizophrenia seems, though I'm far from expert, knowledgeable and sympa¬thetic. Unfortunately his characters are notso sympathetic. Even Catherine, the sickpoet, shows a bad side when she's not suffer¬ing, and though we feel for her when "thevoices" come, I at least would not want to beremembered best for my poor mentalhealth. Catherin, Alice her friend, and herlover, Robert, all call out for understandingbut are unwilling to give it themselves. Theygo nowhere, accomplish nothing, and the fogthey flouder about in never momentarilylifts. One wonders if these people ever payattendtion to one another. One wonders ifOlive decided that real interaction betweenthem would only confuse "The issue." Butwhat is the issue if it can't be discussedamong friends? And what kind of friendsare these? Perhaps the point is that Cath¬erine has no friends, but then why is it calleda love story? Now we're back where westarted, and the issue has not been named.Olive seems to say it is Thorazine, but Ithink he raises a greater one than heknows.Let me formally introduce you to the char¬acters. First we have Joanne, the shrink,played by Susan Dafoe. She alone is willingto listen unselfishly to Catherine, but as Isaid, her sensitivity is purely professional,available only so many hours a week. Look¬ing businesslike in a silk scarf, untailoreddress and sensible shoes, she prescribesThorazine and vitamins and otherwiseseems peripherafl, though not disinterested.It is her job to try to wean the patient awayfrom the couch and back into the world, andwe sense that although any truly substantialdialogue we might hear would be in her of¬fice, that door is closing, both on Catherine,and on us, the crowd looking in.Then follow Catherine into the world.Meet Alice, sometime publisher of Cath¬erine's poetry. Alice, the best friend, apologizes, she only saw Catherin at the hospitaltwice. But it was so horrible, she couldn't Alice (Jodeancharacter or a very confused one. Bright,unhappy, slinky, she is clearly as selfish asthey come. Without a second thought she de¬livers lines like, "I really loved your work,it's the only decent thing I've got going."But she's always honest with her friend, andshe gives her a job, and seems to understandthat Catherine may not write again. Onceshe directly asks about the schizophrenia,but only out of a morbid curiousity. Perhapsif Catherine were not sick they would begreat, drunken companions, laughing brutally at pain. But when Catherine is in toomuch pain to laugh, Alice can't watch any¬more.And here's Robert, played by RobertNeches. He's really selfish and insensitive.Robert's life bores him and so he pounces ona poet. He falls in love quickly, at least hefalls into something similarly starry. Starryhe is, too, with his puppy dog eyes. Togetherthey drink a lot of wine (Zinfandel, FesterVineyards, California) and make love. Hereads her poetry and loves it, although weare repeatedly reminded that he couldn'tpossibly understand it. He loves her garrettapartment too. He loves the fact that she's atortured artist. But he doesn't understand it.She excites him and tells him she's poison(an automatic if overused turn-on) until shestarts getting crazy. Not being particularilyhappy himself, Rovert doesn't bother toweigh the difference in their miseries, andhe snubs her.Catherine (Kit Flanagan) is the star if notthe heroine of this story. She, like her friendAlice, is bright and witty, and she writes poetry. We never get to hear any of the poetrythat is actually supposed to be good ofcourse, but we are led to believe that itexists. She is occassionally mean and conde¬scending (to Robert, to whom everyone condescends), but in general she puts on acheery show. Sometimes she reveals a vul¬nerability or sentimentality bordering onschoolgirlishness, in lines like, "Fly safely," and "I'm poison," also in her weaknessfor puppydogs. But the playwright encourages us to concentrate on her reaction toThorazine, and to its absence. The centralissue (at last!) is that she can't write poetryon the drug and she climbs the walls withoutit. There are some memorable lines aboutThorazine (You try 800mg. of Thorazine aday — see how effectively you work!") andmany that are not so memorable. The pointis made, repeatedly, that Catherine has atough problem.Unfortunately it's not the kind of problemthat makes a fulfilled play (and it's too racyfor a TV movie.) As soon as the Thorazineissue is defined we are expecting the lastact. So we go for relief to the human relationships, and there we find no solace. Thepeople are cold, troubled, unwilling or unequipped to help themselves or each other.This play speaks through them: it informsus, not without some screaming and crawl¬ing about on the floor, that we can barelyeven converse with one another, much lesshelp a schizophrenic. "Standing on myKnees" is a Thorazine play, too depressed tobreak out of its circle and demand justice,mercy, explantion — drams. Catherine, theonly one with nerve enough and imagination, is required by the law of self preservation not to. The others, with nothing to losebut their security, apparently think it tooprecious a possession."Standing on my Knees" is at WisdomBridge Theatre, 1559 West Howard Street,until January 31. The acting is very good, asis the set design by Joan Murbach. But, theplay is unpleasant, predictable, and notvery subtle.6—THE GREY CITY JOURNAL—JANUARY 8, 1982rh)lU_£-L_ •_ 5?IS S. COOO'bUXLOO ■ C^ICA^O= h)ILl£l LCC'CUtZCS =pVLAShAS: "Cb€ LOSC J£0>So)r. o>RrtO tacarC>)ICAC}0 R£PR£S£OCATlve of TTV)£ 2aCY)£RiCAO£*ssociAC\or> foR er^iopi^o jeoosFUi5xY S=3o p.0>xt>e sovioo jeo^isp t^paseniKS =X p£CSOOAL 05YSS€Ya>R5. Berrry kaDocK)icAqo Ac-ciop) Cococv)i-rr€€ foR Scv\ec J£C0RYS&CUC£».Y JAO. 9 1:30 p.CD.££fas£r)iAS: 'Tpcitz ^xccs at>& ^xce.5u6es of A O)ARd0 1^80 VlSlTT CCHT*) 6oyM€T J£PDS-CAK€0 AT)S DARRACe^ BY OORS. BSCTCY VCAh>0SUt>*>AY JXn. 'jO 11:5o A.O). The Blue Gargoyle Food Service5655 S. Universityin University ChurchMonday thru Friday11:00 a.m.til 2:30 p.m.Serving Healthful Foodfor mind, body and soulTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOTHE UNIVERSITY HOUSE SYSTEMApplications for the positions of Resident Head and Assistant Resident Head on thestaff of the University House System for the 1982-83 academic year are now beingInvited from faculty, administrative staff, and advanced graduate students workingtoward the Ph.D. or a professional degree.Candidates for Resident Head should be at least 25 years of age. Applications arewelcomed from both married couples and single people. Assistant Resident Headpositions are open to graduate and undergraduate students who are single andat least 20 years of age.Members of the Housing Staff live in the University Houses. They provide informalguidance to residents and work with students to promote a variety of cultural, social,and athletic programs to enhance the Houses as communities supportive of the educa¬tional process.Persons interested in applying for staff positions may obtain further information from theAssociate Dean of University Students and Director of Student Housing, Adminis¬tration 232. The selection process will include a series of personal interviews in theWinter and Spring Quarters. Applications must be submitted before the deadline ofMarch 1. Early applications are encouraged.THE GREY CITY JOURNAL-JANUARY 8, 1982-7k^v^xS^x-x-x-x-ww - • •Sly N DN I UTHE FLAMINGO APARTMENTS5500 South Shore DriveSTUDIOS & ONE-BEDROOMS• Unfurnished and furnished• U.of C. Bus Stop• Free Pool Membership• Carpeting and Drapes Included• Secure Building• University Subsidy for Students & Staff• Delicatessen • Beauty Shop• Barber Shop • T .J.’s Restaurant• Dentist • Valet ShopFREE PARKINGMR. MORRIS 752-1800 Sunday,January 10,1982MAROONlunch9300 E. 54th PI.Bring Swimsuits,Story Ideas\Noon — be prompt.———8—THE GREY CITY JOURNAL—JANUARY 8, 1982I' T-Tmarian realty,inc.mREALTORStudio and 1 BedroomApartments Available— Students Welcome —On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-5400 Dr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist(53 Kimbark Plaza)1200 E.53rd St.493-8372Intelligent people know thedifference between advertisedcheap glasses or contact lensesand competent professionalservice with quality material.Beware of bait advertising.Eye ExaminationsFashion Eye WearContact LensesUSED OFFICEFURNITUREUsed wood desks from $135Used metal desks from $25Used 6 ft. drafting tables4 drawer files from $50BRANDEQUIPMENT 8560 S. ChicagoRE 4-2111Open Daily 8:30-5Sat. 9:00-3 Under New Local Management!We’re Spending over $200,000 to bring you an all newHyde Park / Kenwood Racquet ClubJOIN NOW • OPENING SPECIAL • OFFER EXPIRESFEB.15,1982for Studentsfor Faculty & Administratorsfor FamilyMEMBERSHIP Through Sept. 1, 1982HYDE PARKRacquet ClubOne low Membership today offers you.• Tennis• Racquetball• Handball• Running Track• Whirlpools • Aerobic Exercises A nd Comjng Jgn >82Custom built Saunas . UFESTYLE Fitness ProgramsLounge with TV & Fireplace • Mautilus Center• ?2mpiet? ?Cker r00ms * Complete Pro Shop• Attended Nursery • And muc^ muCh more...1301 E. 47th ST. • CHICAGOcall 548-1300 or Stop in TodayHere's your opportunity tohave the ChicagoTribune deliveredto your door. If you presently don't subscribe tothe Chicago Tribune, why not?Now, for a limited time, you're eli¬gible to have the Tribune deliveredto your door daily and Sunday foronly $2.00 per week—that's 30%off the average delivered price. Toenjoy the complete newspaper,the Tribune, just mail in thecoupon below.(Chicago (TribuneThe Complete NewspaperYes. I would like the Tribune delivered.My payment of $ is enclosed. □ $38.00 Daily/Sunday□ $26.60 Daily only□ $21.85 Sunday onlyOn Campus (19 wks.) □ $44.00□ $30.80□ $25.30Off Campus (22 wks.!Method of payment: Charge:□ Check □ Money Order □ Mastercharge □ Visa □ Acct. # Exp. DateNameAddress _CitySignature Cardholder NameRm. or Apt. #Zip PhoneSchool ucMail to: Chicago Tribune , C/O Beverley Phone Office, 2419 W. 103rd St., Chicago, IL 60655 or call for service: 881-8206The Chicago Maroon—Friday, January 8, 1982—17tDoes Your Mind Wander?Would you like to readsomething once andknow what you’ve read?TheReading InstituteSince 1939for people who want todevelop their reading skills.410 S. Michigan Ave.Suite 911Chicago. Illinois 60605312-431-0640Entirely individual instructionCall for a brochureA Non-Discriminatory,Non-Profit Educational Service HILLEL STUDIESALL CLASSES BEGIN THE WEEK OF JANUARY 4th AND TAKE PLACE ATHILLEL FOUNDATION. 5715 WOODLAWN AVENUEMONDAYS YIDDISH - All LevelsPAR ASHAT HASHAVUAH - Mrs. Pearl Kahan 6:00 P.M.TUESDAYS W eekly Torah PortionTALMl D-KETl VOT - Mr. Avi Weiss 7:30 P.M.For Advanced StudentsMIDRASH-PESIKTA D RAY KAHANA Rabbi Milton W aksehlag 5:00 P.M.Hebrew Text Rabbi Daniel I. Leifer 7:30 P.M.WEDNESDAYS ZIONIST IDEOLOGY AND HISTORYJEWISH HISTORY - Mr. Elliot Chodoff 5:00 P.M.THE FOUR CORNERS OF THE EARTH Rabbi Norman Lewison 8:00 P.M.THURSDAY TALMUD-ARVEY PESAHIMNEW CLASSTHE HISTORY OF MODERN Mr. David Neumark 8:00 P.M.JANUARY 14 ANTISEMTISM^ ill trace the origins of antisemitism from a religiousphenomenon rooted in Christian theology to a social-political phenomenon of the 19th and 20th eenturv:prelude to the Holocaust and anti-Israel propaganda Mr. Michael Gross 7:30 P.M.A HILLEL MEMBERSHIP/CONTRIBUTION IS REQUIRED TO PARTICIPATEIN ALL CLASSES.These successful bankers invite youto join their company.They came to us from graduate schools all over the country. Here atMellon Bank they met other like-minded, ambitious people. Liked thecamaraderie, the more relaxed environment indigenous to headquartersoutside the giant urban areas.They liked, too, our concept of an intensive, short ManagementDevelopment Program and their early assignment to decision-makingresponsibilities.We re the country’s 16th largest bank holding company, 14thin earnings, 10th in commercial loan portfolios, 5th in trustdepartment assets, and a national leader in bankingautomation and computer technology.Schedule an interview through your placement office or writeto Mellon Bank, Manager, College Relations and Recruiting,Mellon Square, Pittsburgh, PA 15230.Mellon Bank is looking for doers. For innovators. We want peoplewrho are generalists. Or specialists. There’s a place here for peoplewho will feel at home in aerospace, in steel, or oil. Or mining,transportation, electronics. Or name any business of the future.It's thinking like this that has made success come on a fasttrack here. For our people, and for the Bank.Mellon Bank will be interviewing on campus January 21 for careeropportunities in six departments:Community Banking LeasingCorporate Consulting NationalFinance TrustInternationalYou are invited to sign up at the Placement Office for an interview.An equal opportunity employer, M/F@ Mellon Bank Left to right: Martin Pfinsgraff, MBA Harvard Business School ’81, Portfolio andFunds Management: Anthony J. Herrera, MBA Notre Dame 7.9. CommunityBanking Department; John Heywood, MBA Amos Hick 78. National DepartmentCarol Awkard Neyland. MBA University of Pittsburgh 77, National Department; ’Genien Carlson, MBA Duke 79, Operating Services Department.18—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, January 8, 1982SportsPHOTO BY WAYNE KLEINHead swim coach Alan PellNew swimmers help teamincreased to about 25.By Cliff GrammichThe UC men’s swimming team will com¬pete in its third meet of the season on Satur¬day at Rockford College. The team has al¬ready competed in two meets, losing toWheaton College and placing third out ofsixteen teams at the Hawk Relays at the Illi¬nois Institute of Technology.According to coach Alan Pell, the pro3gram at UC is just getting started after aperiod marked by a lack of participation inswimming. In previous years, only aboutten men participated on the swimmingteams. However, this year that figure has The increase in participation should pro¬duce an improvement in the team’s perfor¬mance. Coach Pell believes that the team'schief assets are its relay teams and itsdepth. These assets could propel the teampast perennial powerhouse Grinnell Collegeand other teams in the Midwest College Con¬ference to the conference title. Another goalfor the team would be the qualification of itsrelay teams for the Division III nationalfinals next March. A combination of a co-ference team title and the qualification ofthe relay teams in the national finals wouldbe a marked improvement for a team whichlacked swimmers in the past.Carthage thrashes womenBv Audrey LightThe women’s basketball team suffered a71-37 loss to Carthage College on Wednes¬day, dropping its season record to 0-4. Divi¬sion II Carthage dominated every phase ofthe game, scoring at will against theMaroon defense and keeping the Maroonsoutside with a well-played 2-3 zone.The Maroons committed four turnoversearly in the game and found themselvesdown by 11-2 with less than five minuteselapsed. Carthage never looked back as itled 3814 at halftime and opened up a 40 pointlead midway through the second half. It wasonly after the Carthage coach cleared herbench late in the game that Chicago wasable to outscore its opponents.Inside IMsBy Bob LaBelleThe IM office announced that it willsponsor a photography contest. The officewill award t-shirts each quarter to winnersin the following six categories: black andwhite in a men’s activity, black and whitein a women’s activity, black and white in acoed activity, color in a men’s activity,color in a women’ activity, and color in acoed activity.The entries will be judged for eachquarter’s activities at the first IM Councilmeeting of the next quarter. Because ofthe lateness of the announcement, howev¬er, entries may be submitted for autumnquarter activities until February 4. Winterquarter entries will be due on March 4. En¬tries should be turned in at the IM office(Ida Noyes Hall 203).Any person is eligible to enter and anynumber of entries may be submitted.There is also no limit on the number of t-shirts an individual may win. Note, howev¬er, that any photo of a coed event must pic¬ture both a male and a female participant.All photos become the property of the IMoffice after entry. Chicago coach Diann Nestel singled outdefense as her team’s major weakness. “Wedidn't do a good job with our interior de¬fense,’’ she stated after the game. “It’s beenwhat we’ve been working on all week. . .I’m baffled why we didn't do a betterjob.’’Nestel also criticized the players for theirhesitation on offense, saying that “therewas a lot of waiting around for someone elseto do something ” The post players in par¬ticular were not aggressive with the ball —Nestel noted that Chicago made no shots in¬side the key during the first half. A largepart of the Maroons’ offensive difficultieswas due to Carthage’s intimidating frontline, which blocked several shots put up byChicago’s “big people.’’However, there were bright spots for theMaroons. Second year guard Carol Weesnermade her first appearance since injuringher knee last winter. Although hampered bythe knee brace she must wear, Weesnermade her presence felt as she confidentlyresumed her quarterbacking role. Nestelacknowledged that Weesner’s return helpedthe team. She also singled out freshmanNancy Markovitz for doing “a helluva jobdefensively,” and Sue Fortunato, who tal¬lied six points in the most aggressive perfor¬mance of her career.Helen Straus led the team in scoring witheleven points — all in the second half —while Weesner scored ten. Freshmen KarenWalsh and Wendy Pietrzak combined for theteam’s remaining ten points.Despite Chicago’s poor start this season.Nestel anticipates immediate improve¬ment. The line-up often features four fresh¬men, so experience is clearly a problem.Nestel believes the players have learnedwhat she wants them to do, but stated that“there’s a lag between understanding whatto do and doing it in a game.”The Maroons expect to gain their first winof the season tonight at Aurora College, ateam Nestel terms “average.” They thenface a string of formidable opponents, be¬ginning with Monday’s home game againstConcordia. Men’s team to 4-3By Mary BartholomewThe men’s basketball team began winterquarter with a 4-2 record, having lost to apowerful Iowa Wesleyan team in a non-con¬ference match over break. The team’s finestperformance came in a December 19th 67-63win against Upper Iowa, a team which hasbeat three conference opponents Chicagohas yet to play. *Last night, however, the Maroon squadsustained its third loss of the season, fallingfor the second time to conference rivalLawrence 81-70. Chicago outscoredLawrence from the field, but the Vikings gotto the free throw line 21 more times than theMaroons.Coach John Angelus started freshmenKeith Libert and Nick Meriggiolli, juniorsTim Horkan and Wade Lewis, and seniorEric Kuby. Chicago scored first and led forthe opening nine minutes of the game. TheVikings capitalized on a letup in the Maroondefense to tie the game, and went ahead tolead 41-32 at the half.The Maroons came back strong in the sec¬ond half, outscoring Lawrence 21-10 in thefirst eleven minutes. Lewis (18 points), Li¬bert (15), and Meriggiolli (14) led the Chi¬cago scoring drive. Despite this valiant ef¬fort, the aggressive Chicago squad wasplagued with fouls, amassing 30 toLawrence’s 18. Sophomore Mike Shackle-ton, playing for the first time this season,had five personal fouls, as did Meriggiolli,and Mitch Price and Eric Kuby had fourapiece.Rebounding was also a major factor in theoutcome. Meriggiolli led the Maroons withseven rebounds, followed by Libert withfive, but the Vikings were stronger on theboards both offensively and defensively.Consistency has been lacking for Chicago this season. “If we can get our act to¬gether,” said Coach Angelus after thegame, “we can win some big games. Wedon’t need any mental breakdowns.” Hemaintains that to be a contender in thisleague, you have to win on the road. Chicagohas not won on the road since January 21,1981 when the team beat Lake Forest. Chi¬cago now has a string of five losses awayfrom home.Now 0-2 in the conference, the Maroonshave until tomorrow “to get their act to¬gether,” when they travel to Northfield,Minnesota to face Carleton (2-1 in confer¬ence, 4-3 overall). Chicago opens winterquarter at home next weekend against LakeForest on Friday and Monmouth College onSaturday.Sports CalendarWOMEN’S BASKETBALLJan. 11 — Concordia, 7:30 p.m., FieldHouse* * *—TAl smvxi—t-* I i-T rCHINESE-AMERICAN RESTAURANTSpecializing in Cantoneseand American dishesOpen Daily 1 1 A.-8.30 P.MClosed Monday1318 E. 63rd MU 4-1062The Chicago Maroon—Friday, January 8, 1982—19Sportsmism for this season. He sees a nucleus ofyoung wrestlers progressing since last year.“We’re in a situation now where, for thefirst time, freshmen wrestlers are not do¬minating the team,’’ Kocher said.There are plenty of proven lettermen re¬turning with yet another year of experienceto their credit. At 118 pounds, sophomoreTim Bachenberg returns after a 12-9 yearand a third place finish in the conference.Sophomores George Dupper at 134 lbs. (9-7)and Mark Nootens at 142 lbs (4-5) will pro¬vide a solid middle weight group along withsophomore Ken Barr at 150 lbs., who led theteam with 15 wins last year and a fourthplace finish in the conference. Senior EricRobinson returns after a year’s layoff at 167COURT tfUDIOANNOUNCESOPENAUDITIONSFORTENNESSEE WILLIAMS'SUDDENLY LAST SUMMERNew Theatre (first floor Reynolds Club) 5 women, 2 menSaturday, January 9 No preparation necessary1:00 - 5:00p.m. Directed by Steve Schroer753-3581 STUDENTS ARE ENCOURAGED TO APPLYUniversity of California, San DiegoTHE RESEARCH PLACEMajor Research University• UC San Diego is third in the nation in total amount of federallyfinanced research and development at colleges anduniversities.• UC San Diego has a close association with leading researchinstitutions including Salk Institute for Biological Studies andScripps Clinic and Research Foundation• World Renowned Faculty• Fifth in the nation in number of National Academy of Sciencesmembers, UC San Diego follows Harvard, Berkeley, MIT, andStanford• UC San Diego faculty includes five Nobel laureatesHigh Level of Financial Aid• Over 90 percent of graduate students at UC San Diego receivefinancial supportStrong Ph.D. and Masters Programs• Degrees are offered in biological, physical and social sciences,humanities and artsSuperb Location• Located in La Jolla, California, one of the world's finest swimmingand surfing beach areas, UC San Diego enjoys the benefits ofa metropolitan community surrounded by mountains, deserts,and the Pacific OceanFor an application for Graduate Study and more information call(800) SM-'IPSO (8:00 a.m.-430 pm. PST) or write Office ofGraduate Studies and Research, Mail Code Q-003, University ofCalifornia, San Diego. La Jolla, CA 92093UC San Diego adheres to an Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity policyWrestlersoptimistic■ By Nick VarsamWith the arrival of winter quarter, 1982,comes the daily sweat, strain, and mentalstruggle of the University of Chicago wres¬tling team. This is what Coach Leo Kocher’steam has prepared itself for since last fall.The Maroons are loaded with talent in bothexperienced lettermen and new faces.After a respectable fourth place finish inlast year's Midwest Athletic Conferencemeet! Kocher entertains a cautious opti¬ lbs., and Junior Mac Gillespie, last year’shighest point scorer with a 14-6 record andthird in the conference, will anchor the teamat the 190 lbs./heavyweight class and will beone of many who have an eye on a showingat the NCAA Division III Nationals.Coach Kocher has scheduled more compe¬tition with conference teams this year,which includes some tough meets with pe¬rennial powers Coe and Cornell, and withRipon, Lawrence, Monmouth, and Knox.Kocher believes that a tougher schedule willproduce “a team of seasoned competitorsby the conference meet.’’ Saturday’s actionwill be at the Illinois Wesleyan College tour¬nament, which features Olivet Nazarene,North Central, Knox, the host team, andChicago. The Maroons’ first home meet isTuesday, January 19, against Olivet Na¬zarene.The returning wrestlers are not guaran¬teed their positions without some competi¬tion from the rest of the team. NewcomersJohn Mariano and Mike Perz at 142 pounds,Don Elsenheimer and George Houck at 150,Karl Lietzan at 158, sophomore transferDave Rispler at 177, and freshman RickCooper at 190 are a group that a coach hopesfor — one that provides daily competitionand its own share of starters. Mariano, Liet¬zan, Rispler, and Cooper are all makingtheir Chicago debuts Saturday.With a young team behind the coaching ofLeo Kocher, Chicago fans are insured ofquality wrestling and a team that will chal¬lenge the previously unchallenged Coe andCornell. Sights have not only been set onwinning conference, but also on reachingthe nationals in Division III.We Buy and SellUsed Records1701 E. 55th684-3375262-1593Announcing theOpening of theSpecialty PracticeofROBERT L. EPSTEIN, M.D.Wilmette & Chicago, Ill.in theSURGICAL CORRECTIONOF NEARSIGHTEDNESSTel: (312)738-2020 Runnersprep forseasonBy Elaine TiteThe men’s varsity indoor track team,under the supervision of Coach Ted Haydon,will start its official 1982 season with a dualmeet against Valparaiso University andNorth Park College on February 3. Untilthen, the track team members will be par¬ticipating in non-scoring invitationals, roadraces and intrasquad meets. These eventsare an important part of early season train¬ing as well as being chances for the coach tomeasure the strengths and weaknesses ofthe team.In the first of these invitationals, held Jan¬uary 2, Bob Fisher ran an impressive 3:56.2in the 1500 meter event. Tomorrow, theteam will be involved in more invitationalpractice relays against Northwestern Uni¬versity and other visiting schools.The returning members who Coach Hay¬don will be counting on this year are MikeAxinn, a two-time cross country All-Ameri¬can and the winner of three Midwest Confer¬ence Championships in cross country, andArt Knight, who placed fifth in the confer¬ence championships in cross country. Thesevery fine runners will be joined by JimBiery, Bob Fisher, Dave Glockner, PeterJuhn, Phil McGoff, Aarron Rourke, MarkWilliams, and an outstanding freshman,Reggie Mills. Another gifted freshman tpjoin the team this year is Curt Schafer, whoCoach Haydon feels is, “the best highjumper Chicago's had in ten years.’’Schafer will work with long and triplejumper Jeff Kaiser, hurdler Justin Johnsonand pole vaulter Gary Peter.With the wealth of talent on this year’steam. Coach Haydon hopes “to be a con¬tender,” in this season's conference cham¬pionships. Last year, Chicago lost in a closecontest to Coe College, but this year’s teamof nearly 60 members seems destined forsuccess.AstrologerClasses starting February 1982Consultations by appointment onlyMarlene Tomasello664-1103■3B3BTOAST at the Mellow Yellow?Yes, we nowr have toast!TRY IT,OUR EARLY BIRD BREAKFAST2 eggs2 strips of bacon or sausageand... choice of TOAST! $200available 8 to 10:30a.m. Monday thru Friday1508 E. 53rd StreetBreakfast Meeting Facilities AvailableOPENAUDITIONSIfor Gilbert and Sullivan’s THE GONDOLIERSPlease prepare a song from G & S, if possible.Presented by the Gilbert and Sullivan Opera Co. Directed by David Currie and Libby Morse. This Sat. and Sun.2 to 5p.m. Mandel HallThurs.Jan.14 7:30-10p.m.7:30 to 10p.m. Mandel Hall20—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, January 8, 1962IM ScoreboardHitchcock “A” MEN’S VOLLEYBALL(from autumn quarter)Hitchcock “A”Hale (11-8, 11-4). Hitchcock “A”Michelson <11-0, 11-9)Michelson Undergrad ResidentHenderson (6-11, 11-9, 12-10) ChampsHitchcock “A”Thompson (15-12, 15-8)Compton “A” Undergrad ChampsCompton “A” (11-13. 11-7, 11-0) Hitchcock “A”Compton “A” Undererad Indenendenf (11-15, 15-12. 15-13)UpperRickert (6-11, 11-2, 11-1) ChampsFallers Why’d Ya Do ItFallers (11-8, 11-3)Spike for SpikeInternational HouseInternational House (11-1, 11-8) Grad ChampsBroadviewBroadview (15-13. 15-91BroadviewManifest Destiny <11-3. 11-2) All-University ChampsBroadview(15-2, 15-7) STUDENT REP NEEDEDto promote our annual spring break tripsto Florida FREE TRIP TO FLORIDA pluscommission. Call or write: Coastal Tours5461 N. East River Rd., Chicago, III. 60656(312)693-4759HYDE PARK UNION CHURCH5600 S. Woodlawn Ave.Church School (all ages) 9:45 a.m.Worship *11:00 a.m.Nursery ProvidedW. Kenneth Williams. MinisterCome, Worship, Study, ServeTuftsUpper Wallace WOMEN’S VOLLEYBALLFrom autumn quarter 1552 E. 53rd St.(Under the I.C. tracks)9 a.m.-7 p.m. weekdays12-4 p.m. SundaysUpper WallaceLower WallaceShorey (8-11, 11-0, 11-9)Shorev Upper Wallace(11-3, 11-6)(12-10, 5-11, 11-7)Delta SigmaBe Your Food Under grad ChampUpper Wallace(forfeit)double forfeitMed School Grad ChampLaw School Med School All-UniversityChampMed School(11-15, 15-11, 17-5) AUGUST ANA LUTHERAN CHURCHSundays:8:30am Sermon & Eucharist9:30 am Sunday School &Adult Education10:45 am Sermon & Eucharist6:00 pm Supper5500 South Woodlawn(15-2, 15-13)MEN’S BASKETBALLBreckenridge 29 Phi Delta Phi 26Fishbein "A” 36 Thompson 14Fiji "A” 53 Chamberlin Abortion 30Basket Case 53 Sine Qua Non 30Upper Rickert by forfeit over BlackstoneRude Boys 35 Psi Upsilon 27Henderson 38 Dodd-Mead 21Upper Rickert 57 Hale 20White Punks on Dope 98 Sid’s Kids 18Rough Riders 53 Black Doors 28Steidl 65 Tribe 31! Lower Flint 26 Fiji “B” 22! Michelson 40 Bradbury 25i Greenwood 33 ...M Chamberlin “B” 23j Fallers 53 Filbey 34| Fiji “A” 39 Phi Delta Phi 26| Thompson 42 Chamberlin Abortion 20I Fishbein 41 Breckenridge 31Upper Flint 56 Breckinridge 31Dudley 60 Fishbein 'B” 15Chamberlin “A” by forfeit over TuftsCompton 36 Dewey 20Shorey 37 Vincent/Salisbury 19Back Doors 36 Sid's Kids 19White Punks 53 Rude Boys 36Five Particles in a Box 65 Stiffs 18Not Too Swift 45 No BS 43Diana Ross/Supremes 27 Broadview 10Basket Case 42 Malice Aforethought 23Sine Qua Non 30 I-House 26Stiff Ones 38 Five Play 29 WOMEN’S BASKETBALLMedflies Efficient Mockettes 9SPAM 30 Misfits 23Dodd/Salisbury 39 Hale 17Breckenridge 44 Nuss No Nos 10Shorey 10 Upper Wallace 12Snell 29 Dudley 20TABLE TENNIS (SINGLES)Men’sUndergrad Residence-John Yoon; UndergradIndependent-Mike Slater; Graduate-Phnang'inh Women’sUndergrad Residence-Theresa Soldana; Un¬dergrad independent-Hahn; Graduate-DianaSchaubULTIMATE FRISBEEMen’sUndergrad Residence-Dudley; Undergrad In¬dependent-Earthen Intern; Graduate-AbelianCurvesBADMINTON (SINGLES)Men’sUndergrad Residence-TombillyWomen’sUndergrad Residence-Phyllis Perkins; Under¬grad Independent-Jennifer Javars. HANDBALLMen’sUndergrad Residence-Arnold Ostrotsky; Undergrad Independent-Eli Seamen; Graduate-Fred Lindberg New and RebuiltTypewriters,Calculators,Dictators, AddersCasioHewlett PackardTexas InstrumentCanonSharpElectronic Watches REPAIRSPECIALISTSon IBM,SCM,Olympia, etc.FREE repairestimates; repairsby factory-trainedtechnician.RENTALSavailable withU. of C. I D.The University of Chicago BookstoreTypewriter & Calculator Department970 East 58th Street 2nd Floor753-3303Student Government MeetingWednesday, Jan. 13, 7:30 pmStuart 102 Attendance required for representativesAll interested are welcomeThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, January 8, 1982—21HHOUSESSUPER NEW LISTING 3 plus bedrooms, Rayschool district co-op townhouse. Upper $90’s. Fi¬nancing.TUSCAN MANSION has apartments for income,large yard, offstreet parking, garden and lots ofsunshine! $145,000.RAY SCHOOL DISTRICT, 3 bedroom town-house. Cozy fireplace, garage, fenced backyard,2'2 baths, 2 dens make this a super buy at$139,500.WALK TO SHOPPING (only a few steps away)and live in this efficiently designed 3 bedroom,2>2 bath townhouse. Private backyard, centralair and more. $105,000.THIS LOVELY Queen Anne family home boasts3 fireplaces, tiled kitchen and bathrooms. Lots ofstorage space, fenced back yard. 2 car garage.Asking $125,000.CONDOMINIUMSCOMPLETELY REDONE Financing possible.Beautifully refinished wood. Call about this 2bedroom plus study in the Ray District.SENSATIONAL PRICE - 3 bedroom condo nearshopping and park, walk to U of C, Ray Schooldistrict, needs work, “do-it-yourself” or inves¬tors dream, as is $36,000RENT WITH OPTION - excellent financingavailable 9-‘2% and a low down payment pur¬chases this 27th floor studio in the Newport.$30’s.NARRAGANSETT! Magnificent five room con¬dominium home. Beautifully decorated. Must beseen. $100,000.THIS SUNNY CORNER - 2 bedroom condo inRay district has a great kitchen and manyextra’s. Sparkling condition with great financ¬ing. Mid $60’s.58TH AND BLACKSTONE - 4 bedroom, 2 bath,over 2.000 sq. ft. Super location Large enoughfor a family. Walk to Lab School. $145,000 and fi¬nancing.PRICED TO SELL affordable, campus loca¬tion, one bedroom condor hardwood floorsthroughout, lots of southern sun and light. Low$40'sSUNNY, LIGHT, one bedroom. Close to campus,lovely oak floors and french doors, lots of closets.$50’s.SPACIOUS 3 bedroom, 2 bath. East Hyde Parkcondo with good building amenities security andservices $90’s.CHARMING EAST HYDE PARK CONDO Thiswarm 3 bedroom apartment is a lovely blendingof the old and the new Attractively priced under$70,000. Super financing possibleTHE RIGHT LOCATION, south of 55th 2 bed¬room home with family room, modern kitchen,garage. Mid $80's.COOPERATIVESPRICED TO SELL one bedroom, lake view co¬op Perfect for single or couple, near to park,lake and transportation. $11,000.LUXURY LIVING in an elegant 2 bedroom, 2bath co-op building Owner financing. $50,000.NEW CAMPUS, one bedroom co-op, lots of beau¬tiful wood, built-ins, modern appliances, lovelycourtyard building, affordable living, unit mo¬derately priced low $30’s.SPACIOUS , hi-rise co-op with great east-westviews. 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, foyer and formal din¬ing room 24 hour security, near U. of C. bus. Mid$50’s.BUILDINGS•East Hyde Park Blvd , lS-umts $325,000•61st and Drexel, 24 units, $$165,000•6,000sq. ft zoned B2-4 plus 26apts $390,000HILD REALTY GROUP1365 E. 53rd St.955-180022—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, January 8, Classified AdsSPACELg. 2' 2 room apt. 58th & Blackstone S375 mo +sec. 667 4875.One br avail now in large beautiful 3 br apt onCornell near 56th; $l85/mo; no smokers, petscall Glenn 288 3626 eves; 753 8745 days.Room in 2 brdm turn apt safe, well maintainedbldg on bus route. Non-smoking Fern grad orworking person pref. Rent $2l2/month 3637841.Room in two bdrm apt available for immediate occupancy 56 & Kimbark, 3rd fl. leaseexpires 4-31, renewal possible 324 4296.Furnished room with full access to living areaand kitchen Near university $150 Call 947 0966Rooms available, board contract required,campus location—for details call at 753 3257.Available in 3 bdrm apt finely furnished. Sharing with male grad student or couple located inMadison Park Mar. Stu. Hous. call 624 3039eve.Roommate Wanted Non smoker to share Lovely Spacious 3 Bedroom apt with 2 others andcat 1 * 2 blocks from Campus Rent: S137/monthplus utilities Peter or Lisa at 955 1824Lge sunny studio 57 & Dorch. immac. Availnow New Dec. stv., cptg. 947 0787, 643 1350Large clean 2' 2 rm studio on Everett St avail.1 /20 $245 call 3 3804/363 5734 inquire Judd 9.Still looking for housing? Live at InternationalHouse, a graduate residence center. Graduatestudents encouraged to apply. Call 753 2280,2270.4 large rooms plus balcony at 5600 S. CornellAve $430 00 Call 288 7373.Furn rm/apt nonsmok from $225 363 3458/9557083.PEOPLE WANTEDOVERSEAS JOBS-Summer/year roundEurope, S. Amer., Australia, Asia All Fields$500 $1200 monthly. Sightseeing Free into.Write IJC Box 52-1L5 Corona Del Mar, CA92625.University family needs a babysitter in the lateafternoon for a 5'2 year old boy. Call 493 6818evenings. 3 4538 or 3-3747 daysHOW DO THE TWO SIDES OF YOUR BRAINWORK? Left and right handers needed forperceptual and reaction time studies. $3/hr753 4735 or 3732 M FTYPIST WANTED: Part time, home or office$5 6 hr. Phone 363 0447 PM.FOR SALEPASSPORT PHOTOS WHILE YOU WAIT!Model Camera 1342 E. 55th St. 493 6700STEREO. Desperate for music but low oncash? Quality Pioneer Centrax compact: AMFM, beltdrive turn., cass. w/dolby 002, 10inch 3 way speakers Purchased 2/81, warr. to2/83 List $600, SELL $300. 753-8342 Rm 320CalendarFRIDAYCrossroads: English classes for foreign women,10:00 am. 5621 S. Blackstone.Calvert House: Mass: noon and 5 pm. 5735 Univer¬sity. Brown bag lunch. 12:30 pm. Catholic Workersoup kitchen. 3:00 pm.Hillel: Yaveneh (Orthodox) Shabbat Services, 5:45pm. Reform-Progressive Shabbat Services. 5:45pm. 5715 S. Woodlawn.Doc Films: Escape From New York" 7:15 and 9:30pm. plus Doc Films' ow’n “Escape From HydePark", Cobb Hall.Court Theatre: "The Entertainer"<8:00 pm. 5535 S.Ellis.Hillel: Lecture by Mr. Martin Tatar —"The Fala-shas: The Lost Jews" 8:30 pm. 5715 S. Wood-lawn.SATURDAYHillel: Yavneh lOrthodoxI Sabbat Services 9:15am. The Upstairs Minyan (Conservative-Egali¬tarian) Shabbat Services, 9:,‘JO am, 5715 S. Wood-lawn.Calvert House: Mass: noon and 5 pm, 5735 S. Uni¬versity. Brown bag lunch, 12:30 pm.Hillel: Lecture by Mrs. Betty Kahn —"The SovietJewish Refuseniks: A Personal Odyssey" 1:30 pm.5715 S. Woodlawn.1982 12 K Gold/St Silver Jewelry from ItalyWholesale to the public. Call for an apptmt 6845739.'68 Volvo sedan 144 Runs well. Needs minorwork 27 MPG-Great battery (DIE HARD) withguarantee. Like new Michelin quality radialtires. Want to sell FAST. $900 or best offer. Call538 2777. Keep trying. See it Sat a m.Large oak desk, small kitchen table, livingroom shelves and cabinets set. Call Jeanette,752 6603 or 943 9090 ext. 203.SERVICESJUDITH TYPES—and now has a memory.Phone 955 4417.Excellent, accurate TYPIST with B.A willtype term papers, theses, resumes,manuscripts—whatever your typing needsQuick, pick up and delivery on campus.Reasonable—call Wanda 955 8375after 5 p mChicago Counseling and PsychotherapyCenter, client-centered psychotherapy 5711 S.Woodlawn, 6345 N. Broadway and 111 NWabash, Chicago. A Registered PsychologicalAgency.(312)684 1800WORD PROCESSING SERVICE/TYPIST/HEADLINES—Dissertations,Tape transcription, Tables, Form letters,Reports, Statistical typing, List maintenance.Resumes, Newsletters. NANCY COHEN PROFESSIONAL TYPING—378 5774.BAGELS and cream cheese NEW, along withfruit, granola, sandwiches, pastries, etc InCOBB Basement CoffeeshopLetter Perfect Typing Service. Very experienced, very accurate. Dissertations,papers, math. Call Lisa Plotkin, 493 1218FRENCH TUTOR ING by grad student in HydePark, BA French, just back from France, experienced language teacher and tutor Phone324 3136.Psychotherapy and counselling individuals,couples, family and group Laurie Kabb,ACSW Lincoln Park Office. 242 3846Typing: Experienced secretary types allmaterial dissertations, tables, etc. IBM Sel.,grammar corrected, Pickup & Deliver 6678657.TYPING. Dial 791-1674 for accurate typingPsychotherapy and Counseling. Fees on asliding scale; insurance accepted JoanRothchild Hardin, PhD, registeredpsychologist in Hyde Park. 493 8766.Typing term papers: Papers prepared for furning in help with spelling, bibliographies, etc.Turabian form, or other professional papersVery reasonable. To make arrangements call684 6882.Registered psychologist in Hyde ParkMedical insurance accepted; sliding fee scaleRosalind Charney, Ph D 538 7022SCENESHOT SOUP vegetarian soup of fhe day Now at NONESUCH Coffeeshop 4th floor Wieboldt.Take the Classics elevator.Hunger in Cambodia will be the topic nextTuesday at Hunger Concern Group discussion,Jan 12, Ida Noyes Hall, 7:30 pm.BAGELS and cream cheese now in COBBBasement coffeeshop.PERSONALSLAW, Garp and everybody: Welcome back!Hope your vacations were great. BarefootDreamerWe should mourn the demise of Tom Baker,the only Doctor I've ever known. IzakSpeechies! U of C's 1st Speech Team. Interested? Come to the meeting Tues. Jan 12 at8 in INHGreg Parker: They can't prove we're us. CarlySimon, Carly Simon. Sorry if you got mad.MONA (I NEED YOU BABY) LET IT LOOSESHE SAID YEAH STUPID GIRL WE LOVEYOU-TUMBLING DICE.WANTEDUC student needs daily ride to/from campusfrom Chatham Manor area; esp needed atnight to/from library; will share gas costs;Call Myra, 753 2950 12 5.GARAGE SPACE 55th/D'chstr area. Turnyour empty garage into extra $$$ 947 0707 callearly a mACHTUNGTAKE APRIL WILSON'S GERMAN COURSE& HIGH PASS THE SPRING LANGUAGE EXAM! Two sections: MWF 11-12 & 6 7 pm, Jan11 -April 30. For more information and toregister, call: 667-3038MOVINGStudent with Pickup Truck can move your stuffFAST AND CHEAP No job too small! CallPeter at: 955-5180 10am 10pmNEEDATYPIST?Excellent work done in my home. Reasonablerates. Tel 536 7167NEEDEXTRACASH?People are needed for a questionnaire type experiment in the Graduate School of Business.Payment is $5 00 an hour and will be paid incash. The experiment will last approximately 2to 3 hours. For more information please callHain at 753 4209.ANNOU NCEAAENTThe Court House Restaurant is now closedUnder the same management a newrestaurant will open sometime in late Januarycalled Casa Segunda It will feature Mexicanand Latin American fare, sandwiches and alarge selection of domestic and importedbeers. Come to our rummage sale this Sat andSun (Jan 9 & 10) from noon until 6 pm whereyou will find plates, coffee cups, salad bowls.Doc Films: "Ichabod and Mr. Toad" 2:30 pm,Cobb.Crossroads: Buffet dinner. 6:00 pm, no reserva¬tions needed. 7:15 pm Father Edgar Sanguinsinwill speak on "Labor Organization & SugarWorkers in the Philippines" 5621 S. Blackstone.Doc Films: “My Fair Lady" 6:30 and 9:30 pm,Cobb. "Stir Crazy" 7:00 and 9:30 pm. MandelHall.Court Theatre: "The Entertainer" 8:00 pm. 5535 S.Ellis.Hillel: The Bill Bozin Band. 9:00 pm-1:00 am. Inter¬national House.SUNDAYCalvert House: Mass; 8:30 am and 5 pm at CalvertHouse. 11 am at Bond Chapel.Hillel: F irst Lox and Bagel Brunch of the quarter,11:00 am-l:00 pm, 5715 Woodlawn.Hillel: Slides and narration by Mrs. Betty Kahn onRefuseniks: Their Faces and Fate" 11:30 am, 5715Woodlawn.Renaissance Society: Exhibit— \rchitecture: Se¬quences" through Feb. 21 Fourth floor Cobb.Court Theatre: "The Entertainer" 2:30 and 7.30pm, 5535 S. Ellis.Crossroads: Bridge game every Sunday at 3 pm,anyone can play, call ahead 684-6060. MARRS: Fighting practice, 3:00 pm, Ida Noyes.Calvert House: Home cooked supper, 6:00 pm. 5735S. University.Doc Films: "Loulou" 7:15 and 9:15 pm, Cobb.Rockefeller Chapel: Texas Christian Universitychoir concert 7:30 pm.Folkdancing: Advanced level folkdancing at 8:00pm, Ida Noyes Theatre.MONDAYCrossroads: English classes for foreign women,10:00 am. 5621 S. Blackstone.Calvert House: Mass; noon and 5:00 pm, 5735 S.University. Brown Bag lunch. 12:30 pm.Biophysics Seminar: "Genetic Analysis of ProteinFolding ’ 3:00 pm, Cummings room 101.Hillel: Class in Yiddish. 6:00 pm, 5715 Wood¬lawn.U of C Judo Club: Meets 6:00 pm. Bartlett gym.Beginners welcome.Hillel: Cl ass in Parashat llashavuah. 7:30 pm.5715 S. Woodlawn.Doc Films: "Kings Row" 7:15 pm. "FlamingoRoad" 9:30 pm. Cobb HallAnthropology Film Group: Pilgrimage films"Peyote Hunt" and "Journey to Mecca" 8:00 pm,I-House home room. Free.Folkdancing: Beginning and Intermediate levelJolkdancing, 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes.glasses, bread baskets and bread boards andmuch more all at giveaway prices. 5211 S.Harper Court.COMPUTER COURSESAND SEMINARSThe Computation Center's class schedule forWinter Quarter is now available. Courses areBasic and SAS. Seminars are introductions to:Computer Concepts, SuperWylbur, the DEC20, EDIT, TELLAGRAF, DISSPLA, theCalcomp plotter, TREATISE and SCRIPT.Pick up your schedule at the ComputationCenter Business Office, 5737 S. University, orcall 753 8420. Seminars begin Friday January15th.FOLK FESTIVALEarn free tickets by answering phones, usher¬ing, etc. Call 643-4756or 493-6850.GERMAN COURSESthrough CCTS at LSTC1) Daytime class (3x per wk, 15 weeks)Fee:$160class meets MWF 12:00-1:00 rm 3092) Evening class (2Quarters) Fee. $80per qtrIstQtr class: Mo6:30 8:30rm 2032nd Qtr class: Tu 6:30-8:30 rm 3093) Advanced Reading (Theology) Fee: $80class meets Th 6:30 8.30,Classes start in the first week of January.Please register at CCTS 667-3500 ext 266 or callinstructor G.F Miller, PhD 363-1384COMPUTER GRAPHICSThe Computation Center is offering the following computer graphics seminars: TELL AGRAF, Tuesday, January 19, 3:00 5 00 pm,Classics 10; DISSPLA, Tuesday and Thursday,January 26 and 28, 4:00 5:30 pm, Harper 103;Calcomp Plotter, Thursday, January 21, 4:005:30 pm. Harper 103. All welcome no charge.For more info, pick up a class schedule at theCenter's Business Office.COME HELPwith 7-11 and other projectsstudent services meetingMonday Jan 11Lounge first floor Ida Noyes.******* ***************iMaroon t: classifieds jl work! |* ** $1 per line ** *£ 45 spaces per line ** ***********************Young Designs byELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERS1620 E. 53rd 288-2900ROCKEFELLERMEMORIALCHAPEL %SundayEcumenical Serviceof Holy Communion 9 a.m.UniversityReligiousService 11 a.m.Jan., 10 fames GustafsonProfessor in the Divinity school andthe Comm on Social ThoughtJan. 17 & 25 Bernard O. BrownDean of Rockefeller Chapel INTRODUCTION TOCOMPUTERSThe Computation Center is’ offering twoseminars for noncomputer users. Introductionto Computer Concepts, Friday, January 15,3:30 5:00 pm, Cobb 102, and Introduction to theDEC 20 Computer, Wednesday, January 20,4:00-5:30 pm, Cobb 102. All welcome, nocharge.TRANSCENDENTALMEDITATIONIntroductory Lecture Weds., Jan. 14, 4 or 7:30pm, Ida Noyes library Deep rest, releasestress.SWAHILIAmerican language major just returned fromtwo years of Swahili study in Tanzania andKenya offers tutoring. Telephone 324-3136.SPEAKERSinterested in speaking? Come to Ida Tues at 8.BASIC CLASSLearn to program in BASIC on the DEC-20computer. Register at Computation CenterBusiness Office before January 21 for 8 sessioncourse beginning January 25. Cost $40computer time provided. For more information, call 753 8400ASTRONOMY CLUBAstronomy Club meeting Wed 13 Jan 8 pm Rm251.ADULT GYMNASTICSCLUBBeginning and intermed. classes offered 2x wkfor 8 wks starting 1/14/82. Gym pass and $20 required For more info call Dennis, 947 6475days/955 8627 eves.BLACKFR1ARSMeeting at 7 pm on Wed, Jan 13 in Ida-ps this isa biggie, be there. Classified AdsSASCLASSLearn to use SAS (Statistical AnalysisSystem). A six session course introducing thispackage starts January 26. Come to Computetion Center Business Office before January 22to register. Call 753 8400 for information. Computer time provided. Cost: $30.PILGRIMAGE FILMSJan. 11 "Peyote Hunt" and "Journey to Mec¬ca" (1942). 8:00 International Househomeroom. FreeCONDO FOR SALELovely sunny 5 rm condo, 2 BR. Totallyrenovated. Oak fl & buffet, frpl., bale., PLUS!Fin. 12%. Call Karen d. 947-5456, e. 947 0859FREETICKETSTo the Folk Festival in return for your time.We need people to cook, answer phones, etc.Call 643 4756 or 493 6850.KUNDALINI YOGAActivate, Recreate, Meditate, Be Healthy,Happy and Holy. Tu-F 5 6:30 pm Ida Noyes"Library" begins Jan 12 $50. First class free388 6066.PHOTOGRAPHYSEMINAROlympus Camera Corp. and Model Camerapresent a Close Up, Macro, and MicroPhotography Seminar on the Evening ofJanuary 14, 1982 at the Center for ContinuingEducation 1307 East 60th Street, 7 to 10 pm Aunique evening of information for beginners aswell as advaned photographers $5 00 reservation fee. Refreshments will be ServedHAPPY BIRTHDAYTOM OWENSCfiaz(otte CVi(zitzom<zRea( Cit ate Co.“GOOD BUY”CORNERTO SETTLE ESTATE; 2 Bed-room - 2 Bath - 4800 Chicago Beach -Condo with garage. Spectacular view.Panorama North in North Tower.$75,000 or offer - 5% to 20% down.F.N.M.A. mortgage available 934% to13M>%.LAKEFRONT CO-OP: Lakefrontview at 55th South Shore. $50,000.Retiree leaving state, will finance.TRANSFERRED TO EAST:Small 7 room Victorian house on Green¬wood. Excellent condition. Wood-burning fireplace. Unusually largegarage. $97,500. CALL ANY TIME12% OWNER FINANCING:Already moved. High floor - 50th EastEnd. Real fireplace. In $60 s.MAKE OFFER: 12% owner finan¬cing. Large brick 3 story house. Ken¬wood & 48th.FACING FORECLOSURE :Make bail-out offer. 54th & East EndCondo facing Lake. 3 Bedroom.ACROSS FROM REGEN-STEIN : Woodburning fireplace -2 Bedroom Co-op. 56 University - Tip¬top condition throughout. Sunny,bright, lovely. $52,500.Charlotte VikstromReal EstateCALL ANY TIME493-0666 Olympus CameraCorp. &Model Camera.present a......Close-Up, Macro, and MicroPhotography Seminar on theEvening of January 14, 1982 atthe Center for ContinuingEducation, 1307 East 60thStreet, 7 to 10 p.m.A unique evening of in¬formation for beginners as wellas advanced photographers.$5.00 reservation fee. Refresh¬ments will be served.NEW!OLYMPUSThe little 35mmpocket camera withbig camera features.• Weighs just 7.9 ounces,measures about the size ofa cigarette package.• Aperture-priorityautomatic exposure - youjust select the aperture andthe camera sets the shutterspeed.• Easy, rangefinderfocusing.• Special leverautomatically compensatesfor backlighting situations.• Self-timer beeps andsuper-bright LED blinks.• Sliding Dust Barriereliminates need for aprotective case;automatically switchescamera on and off andunlocks shutter release.*13995•Any 35 mm. camera pur¬chased at Model Cameraduring January includes afree roll of film andprocessing.model camera1342 E. 55th 493-6700The Chicago Maroon—Friday, January 8, 1982—23MINI-COURSESEclectic Ed. opens its winter quarter sessionwith courses in Jazz Dancing, Magic, NorthAfrican Cooking, Wine-Tasting, AerobicDance, Ballroom Dance, Knitting andLeaded Glass. All classes are budget-priced... $1 5 to $25.Registration:For students and their spouses, Monday andTuesday 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. For staff, faculty andtheir spouses Wednesday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.Special evening registration Wednesday,5 to 7 p.m.Room 210 Ida Noyes HallDISCOUNTSSAO has half-priced tickets to Jan. 21 Piratesof Penzance (rear balcony - $8.75) and theAmerican Ballet Theatre's Chicago appear¬ances in February (rear Orchestra, $11).Tickets are available to students only onMonday. (Two per UCID, one ID per person.)Also, get a special discount on Art Institutememberships — you pay $9 instead of $1 5.ART-TO-LIVE-WITHOn display next week, with distribution Friday,Jan. 15. Check Tuesday s Maroon for moredetails. ICE SKATESThey are old skates, but there are those wholove them. Rent a pair for 50<t per day. Youmust bring a valid UC ID (spouses must providesome kind of ID). Available at the Ida NoyesCheckroom.NOONTIMERSJan. 20: Jan Hobson and Her Bad Review(singing their hit single, "Throw YourCat Away").Feb. 3 : Irish folk music with Samhradh.Feb. 17: Music of the Renaissnce, with theBon Tempo singers.Student Activities Room 210, IdaNoyes Hall 753-3591PHILIP GLASSENSEMBLEThe Philip Glass Ensemble will be appearingin Mandel Hall Feb. 19. Glass, a graduate ofthe U of C, is composer of Einstein On TheBeach Satygraha, Music In 12 Parts andother works. Mr. Class's music is based onthe incessant repetition of brief, elegantmelodic fragments that weave in and out ofthe sonic texture like glistening strands in atapestry," writes the Wall Street Journal.Tickets are on sale now at the Reynolds ClubBox Office; $4 for UC students, $7 allothers.753-2150 • 24-Hour Activities Lines 753-2150 • 24-Hour Activities Line 753-2150