—Inside Null and VoidFrats on the Midway— page six A dubious conversation: page fiveThe Chicago MaroonVolume 91, No. 30 The University of Chicago ©Copyright 1982 The Chicago Maroon Tuesday, January 26, 1982Plans for grad teachers, NCD,admissions prospects revealedBy Robert DeckerA clearer policy for the use ofgraduate students as instructors,the demise of the New CollegiateDivision (NCD) as a degree-grant¬ing body, and a grim situation foradmissions will be among the de¬velopments in the College duringthe 1980s, according to a recentconfidential report.Released to College faculty lastquarter, the State of the College re¬port was given by Jonathan Z.Smith, dean of the College, at ameeting attended by 17 facultymembers.“What is important to emphasizehere is that we are on the verge of anew rhetoric,” Smith said. “Notthe grudging use of graduate stu¬dents to make up for deficiencies instaffing, but rather an educational mission to train future teachers,the recognition that the Ph.D. isboth a research and a teaching de¬gree.”“In the development of this newcorporate rhetoric,” Smith goes onto say, “which will affect so manyaspects of this University, the Col¬lege, as is appropriate, must play aleading role. I consider the devel¬opment of such a rhetoric — alongwith achieving clarity on the ad¬ministrative issues — to be an ur¬gent agenda item for this year.”Smith told the Maroon yesterdaythat there were no plans for in¬creased usage of graduate stu¬dents as instructors in the College,and that the number of such in¬structors will actually decrease.Smith said he would like to seemore graduate students involvedStudent complaints heardPHOTO BY WILLIAM MUDGEJane RedfernBy William Rauchand Anna FeldmanOf complaints brought to the Of¬fice of the Student Ombudsman,which “varied considerably in typeand complexity,” OmbudsmanJane Redfern said in her report onthe fall quarter for 1981 that “twothirds . . . were resolved to the sat¬isfaction of the student involved.”The Office reports handling 76grievances, 13 related to academicaffairs, 36 to student affairs, and 24to administrative affairs. The re¬port says that “Many cases wereresolved with simple phone callswhile others required extensive in¬vestigation over the period of sev¬eral weeks.The report says that “Financialgrievances were unusually com¬mon this quarter.” The increase incomplaints was attributed to therise in tuition and in federal inter¬est rates on student loans. Redfernsaid that she could not help fourstudents who should have but didnot receive their NDSL loan checks before October 1 (the date onwhich increased interest rateswent into effect). These studentsmust repay their loans at thehigher rate. Though she “recog¬nizes the the immense utask in¬volved in processing hundreds ofFISL and NDSL loans,” Redfernsaid, those students “should havebeen compensated by the Universi¬ty.”The report said that in othercases, the Office of Financial Aidmade “a genuine effort” to assiststudents with financial problems.For instance, the Office found“extra loan sources for studentswho had incurred unexpected hos¬pital bills and the like over thesummer months.”According to the report, “vir¬tually all problems with the Uni¬versity Health Service” were re¬solved to student satisfaction. Inone case, a student received incor¬rect information from an insur¬ance booklet put out by the HealthService, and owed an additional$180 in fees as a result of the error.Some financial compensation (anunstated amount in the report) wasawarded the student, at the sug¬gestion of th Ombudsman.Another grievance involving theHealth Service was of a studentwhose emergency room fee of $70would not be paid by BlueCross/Blue Shield. The director ofStudent Health certified that thestudent’s problem had been anemergency. It is unclear from thereport whether the fee was everpaid by BC/BS or not, and Redfernrefused to comment.Housing matters are among themost common grievances handledby the Ombudsman, according tothe report. Staff members of bothmarried student housing and grad¬uate student housing “were anx¬ious to find fair solutions to prob-continued on page 4 in teaching internshps in whichthey would observe the work of fac¬ulty members in the classroom andthen discuss teaching methodswith the professor. In no case,Smith said, would graduate stu¬dent instructors take the place ofregular faculty members.Smith also announced the cre¬ation of “a new instrument in theCollege” called “The Forum forLiberal Education,” to be chairedby Wendy Olmsted, master ofNCD. The “Forum” has beencharged with facilitating “curricu¬lar initiatives which originate any¬where in the College, and to under¬take initiatives in support of liberallearning in the College.”The unveiling of the “Forum” ispreceded in the report with the an¬nouncement that the New Colle¬giate Division may become a test¬ing place for new courses and“cease being primarily a degree¬granting unit.”The gloomiest statements inSmith’s report had to do with ad¬missions to the College in the com¬ing years. Although the currentgoal is for College enrollment togrow to 3000, it was a struggle to in¬crease the size of the class of 1985:119 more students had to be admit¬ted this year to yield an increase inthe class size of only 15 students.“Thus,” reports Smith, “al¬though the pool of applicants hasincreased (as of last week, thistrend is continuing, there are twiceas many completed applications asthis time last year), and our capac¬ity to be selective has improved(we accept 77 percent of the appli¬cants to the Class of 1985 in con¬trast to 80-83 percent of applicantsin recent years — still a far cryfrom our hope to reduce the accep¬tance to 55 percent within fiveyears), our yield rate has not im- PHOTO BY ANNA YAMADAThree Chinese exchange students who celebrated the ChineseNew Year last Friday in Ida Noyes Hall. The ‘Year of the Dog’began yesterday.proved. Indeed, it has slightly de¬creased.” iA similarly grim picture is paint¬ed by College Board figures, quot¬ed by Smith, which indicate that ofthe nearly million students whotake the SAT every year, onlyabout 10,490of these can fulfill “theprofile that we traditionally seek”:verbal SAT above 600. top 10 per¬cent of high school class, andparents that can produce $5,000 peryear for the student’s education. Ofthese 10,490 students, 2025 live inthe Midwest and only 535 live in Il¬linois.“The figures are chilling,”Smith reports.Part of the problem in gettingstudents to come to UC was re¬vealed this year by a survey madeof accepted applicants who reject¬ed UC’s offer of admission.“More than half the studentswho declined our offer of admis¬sion rated ‘social environment’ asa negative factor; more trou¬bling,” said Smith, “ a third of thestudents accepting admissionranked ‘social environment’ equal¬ly poor. Three-quarters of the stu¬ dents who declined our offer of ad¬mission rated the neighborhood’as a negative factor; more thanhalf the students who accepted didthe same.”“I cannot help but believe thatour rhetoric is at fault. We have theresources, we do not know how tospeak of them in a graceful andpositive manner,” Smith said. Hegoes on to suggest that a new publi¬cation about the housing system be“the occasion to begin some rhe¬torical reflections.”Smith also criticized the CollegeOrientation Week as supplying“too little by way of orientation towhat is distinctive about the Col¬lege, too little sense of history, toolittle faculty presence, too littleorientation to Hyde Park and theCity of Chicago.”Getting faculty members toteach in the Common Core is still aproblem. “It has been my experi¬ence,” remarks Srpith, “that we doa better job at recruiting new stu¬dents to the idea of Core' than wedo our own colleagues ...Continued on page threeBad weather spoils weekendBy Anna FeldmanBad weather, which led to Fri¬day’s cancellation of the WinterWeekend trip to Green Lake. Wis¬consin, scheduled for this pastweekend, left over 500 people dis¬appointed and administrators un¬certain about rescheduling thetrip.Those planning to go, including440 students and orientation aides,and faculty and staff, were notifiedat 4:45 p.m. that buses scheduledto leave at 6:15 p.m. were can¬celled.Lorna Straus, dean of students inthe College, said that she receiveda call from Green Lake on Fridayat noon asking whether or not thetrip was still on. Straus said thatshe learned from them that someroads were already closed at thattime and that others would be closed soon after. The Wisconsinstate police told her that althoughsome local roads were closed, driv¬ing into Wisconsin was not so bad.At 4 pm, when roads here had al¬ready become icy, the Wisconsinstate police reported that mainnorth-south highways would beclosed, including the interstate andUS 41, the two roads the Universitybuses would be travelling on toGreen Lake, said Straus. Straussaid that police reported that therewas only one lane of traffic in ei¬ther direction on these roads andthat travellers should stay home,except for “urgent reason.”The University then spoke to aresident of Fond du Lac, Wiscon¬sin, which is near Green Lake, whosaid that there had been one icestorm and that another was on theway. “It was awful,” said Straus,”and driving was dreadful.” By 4:30 pm, an advance carwhich had left UC at 1:30 was 10miles south of Milwaukee, only 50miles from Hyde Park. “We wereafraid that instead of arriving at 9or 9:30, buses wouldn't get toGreen Lake until 1 or 1:30 in themorning,” Straus said. So, imme¬diately after calling to cancel thebuses, staff called dorms to notifystudents that the trip had been can¬celled.It has not yet been determinedhow much money the Universitylost in deposits to the bus companyor to Green Lake, but Straus hopesthat the trip can be rescheduledwithout much of a loss.Winter Weekend is held annuallyfor students entering the Collegeand orientation aides for fallquarter. Part of each entering stu¬dent’s orientation fee is used forsubsidizing the trip.p PRESCRIPTION FOR WINTER MADNESS-iSteamboatMARCH 20 - 277 Nights Condos + 5 Days Lifts• Deluxe 2 Bdrm. Condos In Ski Times Square,200 Feet from the Lifts• 5 Days Lifts; 3600’ Vertical; 16 Lifts4 Square Miles of Slopes*295°° (Members) Deadline Feb. 19 fTransportation Optional / Not includedSome Discounts on Air/Raii Available <LaCrosse Ski WeekendFEB. 19 - 21; 2 NIGHTS + 2 DAYS$53 Quad $70 DoubleReservations due by Feb. 3MEETINGS CLUB/TEAM MONDAYS 7:30 PM INH01^1 m I ID CONTACT DAVE MURDYUU OM ULUb FOR INFO 955-9646 .- 5309 S. Blackstone • 947-0200OUR FAMOUS STUFFED PIZZA IN THE PANIS NOW AVAILABLE IN HYDE PARKOPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK *11 AM TO 12 MIDNIGHTCocktails • Pleasant DiningPick-Up“Chicago's best pizza!" — Chicago Magazine. March 1977"The ultimate in pizza!” — !Seic York Times. January 1980wornb00^mo9Dstoee At the Phoenix in the Basementof Reynolds ClubTHE ENTIRE DOORSCATALOGIS ON SALE!8.98 list LP#s are now only 5.995.98 list Doors LP's are now only 3.99(One dollar off the other Doors LP's in stock) Anow only 5.99 now only 5.99 now only 5.99 now only 5.99Check Us First...We're the Phoenix(Basement of Reynolds Club)2_The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, January 26, 1982The CampusLiquor reinstated forIda Noyes gatheringsNew guidelines which would allow theserving of alcohol at all-University partiesin Ida Noyes Hall has been formally ap¬proved by the Faculty-Student-Administra¬tion Committee Concerning Student Life(FSACCSL).The guidelines outline an experiment inwhich either Student Government (SG) orthe Major Activities Board (MAB) couldhold a party in Ida Noyes Hall where alcoholwould be served to any UC student over 21years of age. Under existing Universityrules, only groups in which the overwhelm¬ing majority of members are of legal drink¬ing age were allowed to serve alcohol at par¬ties in UC buildings.This policy has closed Ida Noyes and otherUniversity buildings to all-Universityevents where alcohol would be served.Under the new guidelines, SG or MABmust meet with the Director of Student Ac¬ tivities to reserve a date in Ida Noyes andsecure the director’s cooperation, at leastfive weeks before the proposal date of theevent. The guidelines makes clear that per¬mission is given on a one-time basis onlyand that the event will be evaluated after¬wards. Permission for future events is con¬tingent upon this evaluation.Admission to such an event shall be byvalid UC ID only, the guidelines state.The rules outline a procedure for ensuringthat no one under 21 years old be servedbeer or wine. At the time of admission, ID’swill be checked for age; those who are over21 will have their hand stamped. Alcoholwill be served only to those whose hands arestamped and no more than two drinks willbe served a the same time.No one obviously intoxicated will beserved, the guidelines state. The serversand the Student Activities Office staff willCollege reportContinued from page one“It has been one of the ironies, in the pastyear, to serve on the Graduate Review Com¬mission, to hear the complaints of many fac¬ulty that they feel entrapped within Depart¬mental or narrow disciplinary contexts,complaints from the same faculty who havenot explored the ‘Core’ as one possible modeof overcoming this.”A “facade” was Smith’s term to describethe existing rationale for the so-called “sec¬ond quartet,” required courses like foreignlanguage and extra-divisional sequenceswhich students often take in their secondyear in the College.Rather than taking courses which merely “happen to be an available sequence with noprerequisites,” Smith recommended that ineach Collegiate Division there be createdcourses to allow “self-reflection, a placebeyond the Core where all students who in¬habit a particular Collegiate Division mightbe exposed to that most general question:what is it to be a biologist? a humanist? aphysical scientist? a social scientist?”Smith concluded with the observation that“The College is an accurate microcosm ofthe University. It has no problems which arqnot problems in the graduate programs aswell (indeed, in some areas it has made pro¬gress which might well serve as a model forthe Division). This is as it should be.” be the final arbiters of this judgement.Procedures for pre-event advertisingstaffing, and post-event clean up are alsooutlined.Within a week following the event, repre¬sentatives of the sponsoring organizationwill meet with the director of ?Student Activities to review the event and“the degree to which it met its purpose.”The evaluation will then be reviewed byFSACCSL.The guidelines approved by FSACCSLwere based on a proposal firt submitted toDean of Students Charles O’Connell be SG President Clarke Campbell.In the preamble to the guidelines,FSACCSL recognizes the need for such all-University parties.“The purposes of such events are to breakdown the social barriers caused by academ¬ic specialization and the wide age differen¬tial among students,” the preamble states.“The serving of refreshments is an inte¬gral part of any successful party, but it is anadjunct to the entertainment and social in¬tercourse which are the real purposes forholding these parties.”COPIES COPIES COPIES (COPIES COPIES COPIES (COPIES COPIES COPIES (Copies The Way You Want Them!• Same Size or Redubed • Colored Papers• 1 or 2 Sided • Card Stocks• Collated or Sorted • Fine Stationary• Plastic Spiral Binding • 8% 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® COPYINGf- O per copyxM mSm 20# White BondIHARPER COURT COPY CENTER5210 S. HARPER288-2233 [Plus COMPLETECOMMERCIALOFFSETPRINTINGSERVICECAMPUSRIPS!Some of the companies listed below currently advertise in The Maroon.Others have indicated an interest in doing so. In either case, if you representone of the firms, we’ve got something to talk about. Call or write today. JayMcKenzie, Advertising Manager, The Chicago Maroon. 1212 E. 59th St.,Chicago, IL 60637, (312) 753-3263.Beer All Brands, but especially:• Miller *Budweiser•Miller Light *Erlanger• Pabst •Schlitz•Augsburger •LowenbrauAudio/Video Equipment All BrandsCalculators/Computers All Brandsbut especially Hewlett-PackardPublications All major magazines and newspapersCommunications Companies•AMP Marketing/Alan Weston • 13/30 Corp.•Larry Tucker PosteringAnd All Other Producers of Goods & ServicesThe Chicago MaroonRepresented Nationally By Major College Newspapers, Inc.,A Subsidiary of Branham Newspaper Sales Religious Faith & the Academic TaskThe first in a series of informal talkssponsored by the University Campus Ministersin which faculty discuss their work in light of their faith.Thurs. Jan. 28th, 7:30 p.m.Ida Noyes Memorial Room (2 p.m.)Michael MurrinProfessor in the Department of English“The Invisible Church”The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, January 26 1982 3m*.cSALE DATES:JAN 26TH - 30TH$149*GAL.COUNTRY'SDELIGHT2%MILKCERTIFIEDRED LABELBACON6-12 OZ. CANSDIET OR REGULAR £ 47-UP $1$1 39LB.49U.S.D.A.BEEFRIBSTEAKS $059FEATURING THESENEW ITEMS!UNSALTED, SHELLEDROASTEDPEANUTS 09$1APPLE-BLUEBERRY ^ 4 J QGRANOLA T lb.RAWCASHEWPIECES $19916 OZ. LOAFBOUDINSOURDOUGHFRENCH or 0ftcRYE BREAD 89FRESHMANDARINORANGESl1993 lb. bagFINER FOODSSERVING53rd PRAIRIE SHORESKiMBARK PLAZA 2911 VERNONWhere You Are A Stranger But Once! News in briefRegistration protestLast fall, Scott Aaseng, a CarletonCollege student, announced publicly thathe would not register for the draft. Sincethen, after facing the possibility of afive-year jail sentence and a $10,000 fine,Aaseng is reconsidering registrating forthe draft.Originally, Aaseng was scheduled to gobefore the grand jury on Dec. 10, 1981. Atthe time, he was prepared to tell the courtthat his Christian beliefs were that “war,killing, and violence are wrong,” and thatregistering would be taking a first steptoward violating his beliefs.However, on Dec. 11, 1981, Aaseng’s trialwas suspended until President Reaganwould decide whether to continuecompulsary registration. Early this year,Reagan decided to continue to prosecutethose who had not registered.Aaseng’s trial was rescheduled for lateFebruary of this year. He said that earlierdecision not to register is not definite anymore and that he never realized thatdifficult legal questions would arise. He isnow even questioning the justification ofregistration, he said.“At first 1 believed it was wrong tocooperate with the Selective Service. NowI’ve started to think that whether the lawis a just law or an unjust one is what’simportant. War, killing and violence arewrong, but I’m sure about registrationitself,” Aaseng said.Aaseng is expected to make a decisionwhile preparing a speech he delivered onJanuary 25 at Carleton.* * *Pitt profswant more cloutIn a move to encourage bettercommunication between faculty andadministration, the University ofPittsburgh faculty has requested a biggerrole in the decision making policies of theadministration.Professor Richard Thorn, head of theAmerican Association Of UniversityProfessors says that although theUniversity has a capable administrativestaff, decisions made without facultyrepresentation make the systeminefficient. The AAUP statement said thatfaculty members are ill-informed aboutUniversity policies, priorities andobjectives.Chancellor Wesley Posvar maintainsthat the faculty and the administration“...are a collection of colleagues” onmatters of academic concerns.One possible solution presented by PhilipWion, president of the Pitt ProfessionalUnion (PPU) which recently merged withthe AAUP to form the United Faculty, isAnnouncing theOpening of theSpecialty PracticeofROBERT L. EPSTEIN, N.D.Wilmette & Chicago, Ill.in theSURGICAL CORRECTIONOF NEARSIGHTEDNESSTel: (312)738-20204—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, January 26, 1982 collective bargaining. The PPU hopes tointroduce a mediator in disagreementswhere the administration previously hadthe last word. Under collective bargaining,faculty rights would be cemented bycontract.Reforms that the faculty seeks includemandatory meetings between chairmenand their faculties and “a rotation offaculty members in and out ofadministrative posts...”The formation of a University Senatewould oversee the implementation of theseproposals.NU needs arenaNorthwestern basketball and volleyballteams will be playing all their homegames away from campus next year,because of the $6.2 million renovation ofMcGaw Memorial Hall beginning thisJune. Northwestern officials told theathletic department to look for new gamesites last December after the board oftrustees approved an $11 millionrecreational facilities plan, according tothe Daily Northwestern.The Rosemont Horizon and gymnasiumsat DePaul and Loyola universities and theUniversity of Illinois-Chicago Circle arebeing considered as sites for men’sbasketball games. Non-Big Ten conferencegames may be played at nearby highschools such as New Trier East inWinnetka or Evanston Township, said TedLeland of the athletic department.Big Ten regulations require each schoolto play all its home conference games atone site.The basketball team will probablypractice at the Angel Guardian Center innorth Chicago, the practice site of theChicago Bulls.The women’s volleyball and basketballteams probably will play and practice atlocal high schools.In a related story student fans atWashington State University (WSU) willalso have more trouble watching theirteam. The WSU athletic departmentproposed a decrease in student seating atits football games in its Martin Stadium inorder to increase gate funds, according tothe Daily Evergreen. Currently, 14,537seats are reserved for students. This wouldbe reduced by 2000 seats if the proposal isapproved.According to the article, the associateathletic director said that schools such asUCLA and Arizona State University (ASU)believe it’s “ridiculous to have to comehere to play” when the gate is so muchlarger in their stadiums.Next year, all Pac-10 schools such asWSU, UCLA, and ASU, must guarantee$75,000 to the visiting school. That amountwill increase to $100,000 the following year.This past year, WSU received more gatefunds from guarantees from other schoolsfor away games than it received at itshome gate.Even with the proposed seating changes,the athletic department anticipates a$239,000 deficit.Apparently, it is difficult to sell reservetickets at the top 10 rows of the stadiumbecause of crowd control problems withthe students.* * *Where the boys areColumbia College, the last all-malecollege in the Ivy League, announced lastSaturday that it would accept women asfreshmen in the fall of 1983, according to astory in The New York Times.Columbia had been negotiating withBarnard College, its sister school, toincrease cooperation between the schools.Columbia had wanted to remain anall-male school, at the outset of thenegotiations. Barnard will remain anall-female undergraduate college.In an interview with the Times, Ellen V.Futter, president of Barnard, said, “Weview it as a tremendous triumph forBarnard. It is the first time in the historyof Barnard that we have entered into a new relationship with Columbia and notgiven up any new autonomy.”Also speaking to the Times, ColumbiaPresident Michael I. Sovern said,“Columbia College can now double itsapplicant pool at one stroke. (Dean of theCollege) Arnold Collery is eight feet off thefloor.”An agreement signed by the two schoolsin 1973 which makes possible the sharingof courses, faculty, libraries and otherresources was also revised. Under theterms of that agreement, Barnard’s tenureappointments were approved by an “adhoc committee” consisting of threerepresentatives from Columbia and twofrom Barnard. In return, Columbia did notaccept women as undergraduates.The revised agreement provides fortenure appointments to be made by tworepresentatives from each school and onefrom an “outside institution.”The Times article says that “Freshmenand sophomores at Columbia havefrequently complained that despitecross-registration and the integration ofsome dormitories, they rarely see womenin classes. This is mainly because most oftheir time is spent fulfilling generaleducation courses required only forColumbia students.”The Times said that “reaction atColumbia college was almost universallyenthusiastic.” Dean of Students RogerLehecka said, “If it weren’t forregistration, I would jump up and down foryou. I couldn’t be happier.”♦ * *Classes on SaturdayWhile UC students had to brave the coldand snowy weather to attend their classesduring the past few weeks, students atWashington State University had tostagger to classes on Saturday to make upcourses they missed when the universityofficials cancelled classes earlier thismonth because of adverse snow conditions.According to the Daily Evergreen, 75percent of the teachers conductedscheduled classes on Saturday. Individualdepartments made arrangements for theremaining 25 percent while specialarrangements were made for labs andphysical education classes.* * *StudentcomplaintsContinued from page onelems brought to their attention.”Discipline and employment grievancesabout student housing, reports the ombuds¬man, “were among the most difficult to re¬solve.” The report outlined the role of theombudsman in such cases, and said thatwhile the ombudsman normally seeks “toassist progress through proper channels’by gathering facts, mediating and ensuringthat there is clear communication betweenall parties involved,” in cases last quarter,“ ‘proper channels’ seemed to exclude me¬diation or intervention by our (the ombuds¬man’s) office.” Redfern said that this partof the report referred to the case of LonnieStonitsch, the student fired from her job atPierce hall because of her appearance.According to the report, one concernwhich brought many students to the om¬budsman was the security hazard resultingfrom overcrowding on the mini-buses.Drivers attempted to reduce the number ofriders by checking UCID, leaving many stu¬dents without a ride. “At the request of ourOffice,” says the report, “the Plant Depart¬ment also told drivers to notify Universitysecurity if a particular mini-bus reached itscapacity load, allowing security to relay thisinformation to incalling students.”Other grievances brought to the attentionof the ombudsman included complaints re¬garding the ambiguity of athletic facilityregulations and questions concerninggrades, although there were fewer and lessserious complaints about academic mat¬ters.All information here is quoted from theombudsman’s report, since Redfern wouldnot give further comment.Null and VoidThe plot sickensat Chesterville Collegeby David BrooksThe scandal which rocked ChestervilleCollege, a small liberal arts college in up¬state New York, is now two years old. Thom¬as John, the dean of the College who wasforced to resign has since written a book onthe crisis. One of the most fascinating sec¬tions from Dean John’s book is an excerptfrom a conversation he had with the Presi¬dent of the college at the height of thecrisis:The Dean: I think that there is no doubtabout the seriousness of the problem we’vegot. We have a cancer within, close to thepresidency, that is growing daily. It’s com¬pounded, growing geometrically now, be¬cause it compounds itself. That will be clearif I tell you why it is. Basically it is because(1) we are being blackmailed; (2) Peopleare beginning to look over our shoulder atevery move we make.The President: Yes, every decision isunder the glass —D: People say that we mishandled theharassment case and now they’re uneasyabout everything we do.P: They have no faith in their school.D: Yes, they have no trust.P: They have no school spirit.D: Right. Correct. So now they are sayingthat part of the faculty senate meetingsshould be open to the public.P: That’s absurd. What goes on in thosemeetings is important.D: Apparently sir, that’s part of their ar¬gument.P: There are snipers and jackals outthere. Make no mistake, every administra¬tion needs privileges and secrecy. Those outthere who seek to pull us down don’t recog¬nize that. But if they were sitting in thischair you can bet those (characterizationomitted) wouldn’t tell us a (expletive delet¬ed) thing. I suggest you read the report Imade after my first six years in office, SixClasses, where I recall that as a dean I waskept in the dark about everything. But I’mnot like that, Thomas. You’ve always beentold. This has been an open administration.D: Yes sir, there is no doubt about it. Butthey —P: Who?D: The intellectuals.P: The snobs?D: Yes. They want you to make the Uni¬versity Senate minutes public.P: (inaudible)D: And they want the minutes of the trust¬ees meetings and the College Council to bereleased.P: We’ve got to put our foot down and sayno, this university could not operate withthose things in the open. We've always hadprivileges.D: There are those amongst the facultythat agree with them. They are makingleaks.P: Then we have to see what the line is.Whether the line is one of continuing to run akind of stone wall, and take some heat from that, having in mind that there are vulnera¬ble points there, the disloyal people.D: Sometimes it is well to give themsomething, then they don’t want the biggerpush.P: We cut somebody off?D: Yes, we cut off Professor Hunt.P: We give him sabbatical?D: Exactly.P: But it would be wrong.D: His wife is already blasting about anacademic prisoner.P: It would cost money, but we could raiseit. It wouldn’t be easy but it could be done.What I want you to do, Tom, is to find outwho these enemies of the university are, andI want you to make a list. And tell me howthey are vulnerable. I want to know who ourfriends are and who our enemies are. Andwhen this whole thing blows over, wemustn’t forget the people who were loyal tous and those who were not.D: Exactly sir, I’ll get right on it.* * * * * *At least one administration in history haslet secrecy and privilege lead to mutual an¬tagonism and paranoia. There is no reasonwhy that should happen at this university.Save for thesilver lining;1 here's an old songthat advises you to look for thesil\ er lining. ( Yrtainh a good piece of ad\ ice.But here's some better ad\ ice! Suit for thesilver lining.Save enough to line those dark clouds.Its easy. Bu> l .S. Savings Bonds through thePayroll Savings Plan. On the Plan, you setaside a little each payda\ for Bonds. And that'llchase some gloom aw ay right off.But if dark skies should appear, remem¬ber. Bonds can help you find thesunm side of life. SriTake f. stock Vs 8^ c^Departmmtofy{usk\presents /Thursday, January 28,1982: NOONTIME CONCERT12:15 p.m., Goodspeed Recital HallMembers of the University Symphony OrchestraRami Levin, guest conductorMozart, Adagio for Winds, K. 411 /Serenade No 11in E-flat, K. 375admission is freewlmy^merica. I uThe 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.Richard Kaye Henry OttoGrey City Journal Editor Business ManagerBecky Woloshin Jay McKenzieLiterary Review EditorErin CassidyLibrarianAarne EliasDesign DirectorChris IsidoreEditorRobert DeckerManaging EditorDarrell WuDunnSenior News EditorAnna FeldmanNews Editor Sherrie NegreaFeatures EditorAudrey LightSports EditorWilliam MudgePhotography EditorDavid BrooksViewpoints Editor Advertising ManagerLeslie WickOffice ManagerCharlie MencerProduction ManagerAssociate Editors: Robin Kirk, News; William Rauch, Copy editing.Staff: Edgar Asebey, Lee Badgett, Mary Bartholomew, Sheila Black, David Blasz-kowsky, Kahane Corn, Wally Dabrowski, Jeff Davitz, Cliff Grammich, Margo Hab-lutzel, John Herrick, Vicki Ho, Keith Horvath, Sho-ann Hung, Wayne Klein, Bob La-Belle, Katherine Larson. Linda Lee, Chris Lesieutre, Jennifer Maude, MarleneMussell, Bob Nawrocki, Kathleen Rindenberger, Melody Salkuci, Koyin Shin, DonnaShrout, Daniel Staley, Jeff Terrell, James Thompson, Elaine Tite, Bob Travis, AiliTripp, Nick Varsam, Sheila Westmoreland, Jeff Wolf, Anna Yamada. Fridays, January 29 & February 5,1982:Sundays, January 31 & February 7,1982THE ROMANCE OF GULLAUME DE DOLEby Jean Renart8:00 p.m. Rockefeller ChapelA thirteenth-century story with action and musicPresented by members of the University ofChicago Collegium MuscicumDirected by Annette Fern and Howard M BrownAdmission; $2.50 Students; $2.00tickets available at 310 Goodspeed Hall and at the doorSaturday, January 30,1982:UNIVERSITY CHAMBER ORCHESTRA8:00 p.m., Goodspeed Recital HallRameau: Overture to Zais; Purcell: Chacony in G minorMendelssohn: Sinfonia XII (Michael Jinbo, guestconductor)Ravel: Introduction and Allegro for Harp(Barbara Fackler, soloist)Directed by Peter Jaffeadmission is freeMonday, February 1,1982:ARS MUSICA, Lyndon Lawless, director8:00 p.m., Mandel HallAll-Bach program: OrchestralSuite No. 1 in C Cantata No. 82“Ich Habe Genug”, selected arias.Brandenburg Concerto No. 4Max van Egmond. baritoneAdmission: $8.00 UC Students: $4.50tickets available at the Reynolds Club Ticket CenternApcortunq "EventsTuesday, February 2,1982: BERNARD JACOBSON(Music Critic) will lecture on “Michael Tippettand Contemporary Music in England”. RegensteinLibrary 264, 8:00 p.m.. free.Thursday, February 4,1982: NOONTIME CONCERT, Lizbeth Bistrow.baroque violin and Thomas MacCracken. harpsichord. 12:15 p.m.Goodspeed Recital Hall, freeSaturday, February 6,1982: UNIVERSITY CHORUS withUNIVERSITY SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA;Mandel Hall, 8:30 p.m., free.Sunday, March 7.1982: THE MUSICIANS OF SWANNE ALLEY,Mandel Hall. 8 :00 p.m. A rescheduled concert date,tickets for January 16 will ber honoredjvr more infvmutfum,coil 753*2613 \,\The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, January 26, 1982 5InsideThe turbulent history of UC fraternitiesPhi Delta ThetaBy Katherine Baker andJames Thompson"On the credit side. it may be said thatno fraternity never made a bum out of aman. ”—Robert M. Hutchins, Chancellor ofthe University of ChicagoIn the fall of 1945, the University Boardof Trustees voted to abolish fraternities atthe undergraduate level at the Universityof Chicago. This decision had followed atwo-year investigation by a facultycommittee and a Universityadministrative ruling board, both of whichhad recommended the termination.The history of fraternities at UC beforethe 1945 decision provides a contrast totheir current ambiguous position. Psi :Upsilon received its local charter in 1870 atthe old University of Chicago, UC’spredecessor. Provisions for itscontinuation at UC were discussed atWilliam Rainey Harper’s first faculty ,meeting on Oct. 1, 1892.The succeeding decades in UC’s earlyhistory saw the fraternities as the subjectof continual debate. Their place in studentlife was always in question, and they wereoften accused of being too socially orientedand therefore deserving of no place in theUC community.Unfortunately, no one at the time coulddeny that they did provide at least one ortwo valuable services. Lack of studenthousing for men had become a problem,and fraternities seemed to provide the solution. They also provided an activealumni network bonded socially as well asintellectually. For these reasons, therewere 33 fraternities on campus by 1928,most of them located in the stately homesalong Woodlawn Avenue between 56th and58th streets.With so many fraternities on campus, itis no surprise that the 1930s would prove tobe the heyday of Greek life at UC. Therewere inter-fraternity balls in downtownChicago hotels, fraternity queens,“smokers,” and talent shows. Thefraternities were generally run by thescions of Chicago society, and werebecoming increasingly socially oriented.The 1930s also brought Robert M.Hutchins with his new four-year collegeplan, which was designed to bring studentsinto college during what would normallybe their junior year of high school andgraduate them in four years at the end ofwhat would normally be their sophomoreyear in college. For the fraternities,Hutchins' plan presented a majorproblem: most of their national chartersbarred pledges under the age of enteringcollege students — two years older thanHutchins’ entering students.Nevertheless, the fraternities, inconjunction with the University, solvedthis problem by only allowing the pledgingof third and fourth year students. Themembership drain from this was not toosubstantial, but, combined with the largenumber of students who left to serve inWorld War II, it affected pledging considerably. By 1941 there were onlyfifteen active chapters on campus, and bythe end of the war the number dwindled to10.Hutchins felt that a reorganization of theacademic program should necessarily befollowed by an overhaul of the residenceplan and extracurricular programs. TheHouse Plan was instituted in the fall of1945 and was to “explicitly recognize theunity of the four years of college as adistinct segment of the total University.”All extracurricular activities were to becentered around the Houses.The third and fourth-year students wereto provide the essential leadership of thenew system, according to Hutchins’ plan.However, some administrators felt that themajority of them would leave the housesystem for fraternities when they reachedadmission age, leaving the Houses withoutstudent leadership.In addition, Hutchins recognized that thenew four-year plan was making it difficultfor fraternities to develop leadership aswell. This was because of the fact that astudent could only be connected with afraternity for two years before leaving theCollege.The focus of Hutchins’ plan was todevelop two distinct units: the College andthe Divisions, which would become “asinherently different” as the College andhigh school. The Divisions were to have nosuch comprehensive plan for student life,and it was here that the University felt thefraternities might have a role, if indeedthey did anywhere. Some administratorsthought that the chapters would becomeassociated with particular Divisions,forming professional groups bringingtogether students from variousundergraduate backgrounds “for thebroadening effect that they might have oneach other.”The Board of Trustees’ final opinonstated that “not only will there be nosignificant opportunity such as existed inthe past for the fraternities to supplementthe college program, but there is alsoreason to believe that their activitiesmight actually conflict with it.”This was disheartening news to thefraternities that were struggling to reclaimtheir membership and their homes afterWorld War II. They saw little wisdom inthis decision, as the new system had notyet proven to be superior to the fraternitysystem as a source of friendship andloyalty that would extend beyond collegedays. Though the University did exprsssits appreciation for the fraternities’contributions in this area, the fraternitiesfelt that these contributions could continueas a vital supplement to the House plan.The Maroon expressed what wasprobably more in character with thegeneral atutitude of the students. Whydidn’t UC do away with fraternities alltogether, it suggested in a 1945 editorial.They would inherit the spirit ofanti-intellectualism, discrimination andsnobbishness as direct descendants of thefraternity system, the Maroon said. Theeditorial, which even went so far as tosuggest that the fraternities “liquidateimmediately,” began in the following way :“End of an era: II”“The Univerity’s decision to abolishfraternities in the College is as mo¬mentous as it is inevitable. That it isof striking significance in the saga ofAmerican education cannot be doubt¬ed for it marks the end of a chapter,the era of the “roaring ’20s” in higherlearning. The two great symbols oftriviality in American education —football and the fraternities — havejoined each other in the academicgraveyard at Chicago!”Phi Gamma Delta Nothing quite as drastic as the Maroonpredicted occurred, though fraternitiesspent the next 20 years trying to overcometheir image as exclusive clubs. They didconform with the Board of Trustees’decision, however, as crippling as it was. Hutchins' four year plan was eventuallymodified, and undergraduates were againallowed to pledge. And finally, economictroubles in the early 1960s reduced thenumber of fraternities to the five currentlyon campus.The Status of UC Fraternities TodayAfter suffering from both a decline inpledging and a negative image since the1940s, fraternities at UC later evolved intoan attractive alternative to dormitory lifeunder a policy resembling the originalconcept of fraternities. Since their earlyturbulent history, they have dispelled their54 YEARS OF SERVICEFRATEDBANC01‘Big Four’ of Atom Bomb ... TrustPled<Th* Ubivjintercol.eqiotdiicloiinq theMarch, »M7Fw" of (he *lom-bomb, ivrrMr of ( hirjfa unrr.uuWt to right, homucl Kro-rftreeur of Ihe I-oo Nobel pru* winner who Aloeover-*4 the chain reaction Cyril Smith,director of MrtaJIvrgy. and Mts-Id C V r*y. Nobel or we »U.ia«chemist, i See stefjr below >A 'Bomb InstitutesHere Wait Truman,Congress Verdicts Six ye«t* afterthe Board of Truftstruck down a sectution by votingsocial fraternities aIts decision, anColwell, followed tmittec and a Univ>both recommendedto conflict” with thThe verdict wa«Interfratermty Altiand the Imetfnternines of over 250 rWoman’s ClufThe action doet•n The Divisions.College by the rutinUnder the boarEstablishment of three new institutes and subsequent peacetime scientific enquiry into atomic energy remained stymied u, rtpr^Lnunt the Itoday m_A men can scientists, led by the University of Chicago ally of (hu-aga mttover the provision# of the May-Jobnson bill j •*»** 1battled Congn«nd called on Prewten. Truman for'» e«d ia Urn ^'11■*_»»■‘■7*“*;,*;indecision . *TW lr*T7<t!_lnv. .w i . _ : LiHversltr hulln frsThe three institutes — NuclearPhysics. Metallurgy, and Radio*\ b*4ocy and Biophysics — which.will establish Chicago u the world J • ■ arenter of atomic studies, pend on III L0XlftCjYQItOpen Center_ The Counseling CenterThe administration ! '»»>h»h*0 on Oct. 1. 1*45, to offer j ^mtland the overwhelming majority of ‘individuals aid in developingscientists who first splitfability to salve personal problems( *=s=**=^=**=nstionwuie : independently and to piovide pro- , permitted to i>ledg<aiaing and conduct re- I tbo fh<_ tont,|' The Un.rers.ty«reorganisation of tla reorganization oi_ [ must follow the aj lers ssd to University students sad > this Autumn, has b.veterans, as well as any Chicago j segment of the Umresidents.educational campaign urging that! fessional Ithe secret be disclosed, that its o^rch in the field of adjustment |disclosed,control be vetted in an inter¬nal tonal agency, and that free.tmmelied scientific mvesUga-vpc.i.onal. and family re-!- permitted if world chaos < iauonaiup problems, the Center of-vertedHere on the QuadrangleslContinued on Page «jimage as “exclusive clubs” and becomemore oriented towards the goal offriendship through social acticity andcooperative living.The students — both male and female —who have decided to live in the fraternitiesare evidence of the growing popularity offraternities in the last three decades.“At a school where people tend to be lesssocial, like the University, it’s reallyimportant to live with people you careabout, who are about you,” says DaveMcFadden, secretary of Phi Delta Theta.“Otherwise your social life will belimited.”This re-emphasization on people, asopposed to a policy of exclusiveness, hascaused a substantial growth in popularityfor the fraternities on campus. All of theremaining five fraternities are flourishing,and space in the houses, for the first timein decades, is at a premium.One reason for this is an attraction to the6—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, January 26, 1982Iway the fraternity system is organized.Each house sets its own rules, manages itsfood and utilities, and maintains thebuilding, with many of the fraternitymembers doing the work themselves. Withthe alumni, the students make all themajor decisions concerning capitalimprovements.The alumni of each house areparticularly helpful in several ways. “Thebrothers that are now in the house canrelate to many of the problems that olderalumni experienced — people who werehere during the thirties and forties,” saidone member from Alpha Delta Phi, who isnow a fourth-year undergraduate. “Theyalso will be able to help us after we leave;if we need a lawyer, we can go to anIU6© .€AI(f)®N'ERVICE and leadership11 *<*0. KRIUAV, NUVKMUtnUNITIESMNEDILLEGE!rustees to Outlawledging After 1947(fltlinm to THf CHICAGO MAROONtfh? University of Chicago, first major American University te c=s;rcotiegiate football, yesterday climaxed a two-year probe inlosing that social fraternities will be barrel in the College after•ch. 1M7.* years after it had outlawed the varsity gridiron sport,oard of Trustees, highest ruling body of the Universities.'c down a second celebrated American University insti-i by voting to terminate the 54-year existence of thefraternities at the undergraduate level in the U. of Ci decision, announced yesterday by President Ernest C.tU. followed a two-year investigation by a faculty com-t and a University administrative ruling board who hadrecommended fraternities be ousted because they "tendedtflict" with the success of the new four-year college,le verdict was delivered by deans of the University to the'ratermty Alumni Council of the University of Chicagohe Interfraternitv Council representing ten active frater-of over 250 menroers.ncn'i Clubs Not Affected Enroll 650GI s at UCUS Veterans CouncilSeeks Chapter HereUr Btn *,«*>•More lhAU 650 returned veterans,including ihite Canadians, are »Wie action does not affect the continuance of fraternities jle Divisions, nor are women's clubs suppressed in the;« by the ruling, Colwell pointed out.ider the Board's pronouncement, fraternities will not beBULLETIN ,dernitws. "with the f«tt tppravtl »f the University will continuerate ** trret*|<,re aed will cneperate fully with the University.**iivmni later-fraternity Council said in a specially prepared«d( released ta THE CHICAGO MAROON last nd«M.t stale km ni follows m fullalermt**-* at the University of ( hints will not he abolishedher m.mths of study of the fraternity situation a special commit- ;treaentins tht Board of Trustees and the faculty of the Lnlver-1 (hiraro ml with (he Alumni In ter-Fraternity Council laaiand It was agreed that U was not the purpoac of the I nirer- !ahohsb the fraternity systemIf Iniverslif in a prepared statement of IU policy said. 'Theslty Invites IraternHtes U exptore the ponatbUtUea •< devetoptngleant program in the divisions.'sdet the new plan row in effect at the University, the divisionsit the rod of the conventional sophomore year and cooUnne forrears.ie fraternities with full approval of the University will continuetalc a* heretofore and wili cooperate fully with the University,uses Hilversou. president of the Undergraduate Inter FraternityI at the l nivorsity said. "We arc pieaaed that the University of• has announced a definite policy ea the fraternity system.'* |tted to pledge students efter the winter quarter of 1947. jey may continue activities until that ti»V-ie University report satd that the move waa necessitated byiruxation of the University's academic structure and that'ganixauon of the extra-curricular activities necessarilyfollow the same’lines. The new house plan, initiatedutumn. ha* been devised to unify the college as a distinctnt of the Uiuvcruty, the report said, and ail student ac-• (Continued oa Page 6) tending tne University at Chicagothis Fall.Five hundred twenty-seven ereenrolled under the GI Bill ofRights and 31 more sre takingadvantage of the VocationalRehabilitation Act. The balanceare either going on their own orare students under the work-studyplan of some prominent downtownfirms.The center of ail veterans ac¬tivities on campus is the Officeof Veterans, headed by Zens LaSmith, Advisor to Veterans, whostate* that ha office will be gladto cooperate with veterans whowould like its ass-stance Meeungrooms and aid in planning socialev.nts may be Trained throughthis office. Hour* vc., no compul¬sion to veterans in these plans aThe Inter-Praierruiy Council leplanning pn affair for all veteranswho were fraternity men, the in-ter-Fratemrty Bali, anoftlr proj¬ect is a smoker, sponsored by UseUniversity. Housu for Veteransit high an the (Ut fo- aid te ttmex-ClIn their first regular meetingon campus, the A me iun VeteransCommittee will a»scinoie al Roaen-* aid Hall at 8 00 p. m. Monday,November 19. Ail veterana andservicemen are argc-ii to attend.alumni.”Former members of the houses are alsohelpful when it comes to financing as someplay an active role in the day-to-dayrunning of the house.The fraternities have also gained moremembers due to the natural advantage oftheir locations. Four of the houses arelocated on South University Avenu€, inclose proximity to all of the majorbuildings on campus. Compared to most ofthe dorms, and particularly the Shoreland,the fraternity members consider theirshort walk to classes a blessing during thewinter months.Yet probably the most cited reason forjoining a fraternity is the social activities“College is something to enjoy, not just apain to get through so you can get yourdegree,” says McFadden. With thisphilosophy in mind, the fraternities arededicated to enhancing the social life at the University. As a member of PhiGamma Delta said, “If it weren’t for thefraternities, there would be few goodparties.”• Inside the house, parties are not the onlyraison d’etre. There is a more seriousside; realizing that Greek letterfraternities were originally literarysocieties, many of the houses sponsorintellectual symposiums and activities. PhiDelta Theta has a cocktail hour everyFriday from 5:30 - 6:30 p.m. where amember of the faculty or administration isinvited for discussion. All of thefraternities initiate trips to concerts andother functions as a way of encouragingthe diverse interests of their members.Membership drives, or “rushing”, ismuch more casual at UC than most otherinstitutions. There is no Rush Week at UCbecause of the limited number offraternities on compus. Instead,prospective pledges are encouraged toattend open fraternity parties, studybreaks and open houses similar to the onehosted by Delta Upsilon on SuperbowlSunday. Through these activities,members hope to expose more students tothe benefits of fraternal living. Most of thestudents that do join, however, are broughtin on a one-to-one basis through meetinghouse members in classes and activities.In the last two decades, fraternities havechanged in another important way — twohave become coed, causing their imagesas all-male fortresses to crumble.Delta Upsilon and Alpha Delta Phi,admitted their first female members in the1970s. Since then, most of the nationalfraternal organizations, of which eachcampus fraternity is a member, frown onthis practice, but the innovative houseshave remained coed.Another option for women traditionallyhas been the sorority, yet have neverexisted at UC. 4As an alternative to this, a women’s clubwas started last quarter. W'omen’s clubsdiffer from sororities in that they are notaffiliated with any national organization,and have no secret rites.“Our activities are centered on whatwomen want done on this campus. At thispoint, we’re just starting out, so we’reexperimenting,” says Elizabeth Cassanos,president of Delta Sigma. Despite itsname, Delta Sigma has none of theclassical accoutrements of a sorority; asthe members will declare emphatically, itis not a sorority. There are openadmissions and any woman is encouragedto join. The club holds sherry hours anddiscussions similar to the fraternities andis also making an effort to encourageprospective female students to come toUC.Many members agree that thefraternities and women's club on campusplan an important role in UC’s social life.“A fraternity is more than a dorm orapartment. It’s a place to live and workwith people you respect, and a chance torun your own life with the support of yourbrothers,” said one fraternity member.“It’s something you can’t get anywhereelse around here.”After a prolonged and serious illness, theF.T.A. died last week in the Maroon office.It was only four months old.University officials say the death wascaused by a serious case of student apathyand embarrassment to seek advice in theMaroon column. Officials said they hopethat the F.T.A. will be revived at somefuture date when students are lessinhibited.The F.T.A.’s survivors include MaryRojek, Jacquie Harris, Judy Zartman andSherrie Negrea. - • - — ^ ^ * ...l-a —■ ■■ A ,Alpha Delta Phi all photos by edgar aseleyCampus cut-ups land in clinkWhile the cold weather has preventedmost UC students from venturing too farout of Hyde Park, the sub-zerotemperatures did not stop some fraternitymembers from having a little traditional“fun” last week.The evening of Greek fun, however,resulted in the group of 17 fraternitymembers being detained in the Evanstonpolice station for four hours.Last Thursday evening betweenmidnight and 5 a.rn., the group offraternity brothers and pledges from UC’sAlpha Delta Phi chapter went to Evanstonto play a prank on their rival Alpha DeltaPhi fraternity at Northwestern. The groupintended to steal a pinball machine fromthe fraternity as part of a pledgingceremony to sign up new members,according to an Alpha Delta Phi officer.“The important thing is that if you’regoing on a trip with pledges, it’s their firstfraternity trip and you want to show thema good time and solidify the pledgegroup, ” said a UC fraternity officer.“Northwestern is the closest chapter wehave and we have a lot of rivalry withthem, but it’s not a tooth and nail thing.”After the group arrived at the fraternity,a few “brothers” went inside the house toget the pinball machine, while the others waited iri a rented van parked outside. Thevan was then spotted by Northwesternsecurity who approached the group, butthen dismissed them after checking withsome of the Northeastern fraternitymembers.Just as the group was leaving Evanstontheir luck ran out, as they were stopped byEvanston police on suspicion ofmisconduct. After the police realized therewere 17 people in the van, numerous beerbottles and the pinball machine, theybrought the fraternity brothers to thepolice station and detained them there forfour hours.Though the police did not press charges. ;they were able to detain the group because!they found an expired sticker on the rented!van. The UC fraternity members,however, say they were held for anotherreason.“The reason we were in the policestation so long is that the Northwesternfraternity decided to have some fun withus,” said a UC fraternity officer.The officer said he expects theNorthwestern chapter to retaliate bystirring up some trouble at the UCfraternity. “We’re anticipating somecontact from the Northwestern chapter.”he said.The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, January 26, 1982—7IAUGUST ANA LUTHERAN CHURCHTuesday, Jan. 265:30 pm Celebration of Eucharist6:00 pm Pizza Supper & Discussion:“Mark As An Ethical Teacher,”N. Leroy Norquist - Pastor,Augustana Lutheran Church5500 South WoodlawnILLINOIS’ ONLYSCHOOL ofPUBLIC HEALTHATTACKINGsuch problems asair and water pollution, dangerous wastes, diseaseprevention, hazards in the work place, health promotion,radiation...OFFERING DEGREES AT THEMASTER AND DOCTORAL LEVELSAND NON-DEGREEand CONTINUING EDUCATION CREDITSCONTACT: Dean of Student Affairs, Box DSchool of Public HealthUniversity of Illinois at theMedical CenterP.O. Box 6998. Chicago, IL 60680(312)996-6625The School encourages applications from qualified minority individuals“...when from a long distant past nothing subsists...still, alone, more fragile, but with more vitality, moreunsubstantial, more persistent, more faithful,the smell and taste of things remain poised for a longtime, like souls, ready to remind us, waiting and'hoping for their moment, amid the ruins of all the rest...’’Ida Noyes Bakerya memorable experience9 a.m. to 9 p.m.Monday through Saturday1212 E. 59th St. 753-3587 THE INTERNATIONAL HOUSE SPEAKER SERIESPRESENTSARNOLD HARBiRGERProfessor and DirectorGraduate ProgramDepartment of EconomicsINFLATION AROUND THE WORLD:THE INFLATION SYNDROMETHURSDAY, JAN. 28, 8 PMHOMEROOMINTERNATIONAL HOUSE1414 EAST 59th ST.0jw72nd & Stony IslandOpen Mon.-Thurs.until 7:30 pm684-0400Just present your University ofChicago Identification Card. Asstudents, Faculty Members or Ad¬ministrative Staff you are entitledto special money-saving DIS¬COUNTS on Chevrolet Parts. Ac¬cessories and any new or usedChevrolet you buy from RubyChevrolet.SPECIAL DISCOUNT PRICESfor all STUDENTS, STAFF,and FACULTY MEMBERS Krrp I hoi Lf/mt G W f rrlugHuh GAAl/.Vfc GW HaruParts OpenSat.'til noon72nd & SU®0pen Mon72nd & Stony IslandOpen Mon.-Thars.until 7:30 p.m.684040a Just Present your University ofChicago Identification Card. Asstudents. Faculty Members orAdministrative Staff you are en¬titled to special money-savingDISCOUNTS on Volkswagen Parts.Accessories and any new or usedVolkswagen you buy from RubyVolkswagen.2 Miles-5 MinutesAway FromThe UNIVERSITY8—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, January 26, 1982Sports / —Loss for women’s b-ballBy Lee Badgett After their double-overtime loss at NorthThe women’s basketball team lost to astrong North Central College team lastThursday, 72-46. According to Chicagocoach Diaryi Nestel, North Central is “barfar the toughest team in the state.” The Car¬dinals’ performance Thursday certainly-helped to confirm this opinion and to justifytheir national ranking as eleventh in theAIAYV in Division III.North Central used a devastating fullcourt press against the Maroons for much ofthe first half. Principle ball-handlers KarenWalsh and Carol Weesner had trouble drib¬bling around on or between Cardinal defend¬ers and often could not see maroon playerswho were open for a pass downcourt. TheCardinals’ press accountd for most of Chi¬cago’s 23 first half turnovers.When Chicago did get the ball downcourt,North Central's 2-1-2 zone defense shut offits inside game and forced the Maroons tomove the ball around the perimeter. ManyMaroon shots were made in desperation asthe last few seconds on the thirty-secondshot clock ticked away.North Central’s offense moved wellagainst Chicago’s player-to-plaver defense.Cardinal forward Bonnie Hansen demon¬strated a deadly short jump shot from thebaseline as she scored ten points in the firsthalf. Her six rebounds also helped to estab¬lish North Central’s dominance on theboards.The Cardinals broke the game open mid¬way through the first half, scoring 16 unans¬wered points. Maroon turnovers off thepress became Cardinal fast breaks andquick scoring opportunities. North Central,with a 57 percent first half fieldgoal percent¬age, was as hot as the Maroons were cold.Chicago’s fouls put the visitors in the bonusafter less than six minutes had been played,thus adding to North Central’s scoringchances. North Central displayed tremen¬dous depth as its substitutes finished out thehalf with the Cardinals up 38-17.The second half brought more frustrationfor the Maroons. The aggressive Cardinaldefense kept Chicago from scoring for thefirst three minutes. Center Helen Straus andforward Wendy Pietrzak were unable to getinside for passes and rebounds, and theteam’s outside shots were too few to com¬pensate for the lack of inside scoring.The aggressive pace of the game took itstoll on the Chicago players as the game pro¬gressed. Walsh left the game early in thesecond half after being hit in the eye. Strauswas a casualty of a rebounding battle andhad to be helped off the court. Neitherplayer was seriously injured, but bothwatched the rest of the game from thebench.Despite the rather lopsided score, Nestel scomments on the game were positive. Shenoted that the player improved in someareas that she had stressed in practice. Park, the Maroons practiced free throwsand shot 80 percent from the line Thursday-night. The program with concentrating onspecific skills, said Nestel, is that “the otherthings slide.”This might account for the inconsistencyof the team — a problem which will, play animportant role for the rest of the season. TheMaroons must curtail their ebbs in order todefeat the many good teams remaining onthe schedule.The team’s next battle is against powerfulValparaiso University, a team “Which lastyear crushed Chicago, 71-47.SportsbriefsFencers lose twoThe fencing team travelled to Michigan onSaturday only to lose both its contests. Theteam los:t a 22-5 decision to the University ofIllinois at Champaign, and was defeated by-Michigan State University, 15-12.Weather cancellationsThe men’s indoor track team was unableto compete in the University of MichiganRelays because of bad weather condi¬tions...The wrestling team made a six-hourjourney to Cornell College before learningthat the invitational had been cancelled. Cagers whip RosaryBy Mary BartholomewThe men’s basketball team overwhelmedRosary College, 80-54, Saturday night at theField House. Leading 26-16 at the half, theMaroons kicked off the second half by out-scoring Rosary 15-2 in the first six minutesof play.The last fourteen minutes of the gamewere a showcase of Chicago’s benchstrength. All of coach John Angelus’s fifteenplayers saw time on the court. SophomoreMike Shackleton had a good night, scoring17 points and grabbing a couple of key re¬bounds. Sidelined during the first half of theseason because of a back injury, Shackletonplayed his first game of the year with the Maroons only three weeks ago at LawrenceCollege. The stronger he gets, the more hebecomes a positive factor in Chicago’s in¬side game.The Maroons’ other big men on reserve,sophomore Mike Murden and freshmanDean Pontikes, both 6’5”, also had a goodnight. Angelus notes considerable improve¬ment in their play since the beginning of theseason.Chicago’s victory Saturday raises its re¬cord to 6-6 overall. The team is now prepar¬ing for a weekend home stand against for¬midable Washington University-St. Louis onFriday night and conference rival Coe Col¬lege on Saturday.IM ScoreboardBASKETBALLMen’sDogs Eating Bicycles by forfeit over TribeRaw Meat 35 Bottom Lines 27White Punkson Dope 97 Five Guys Named Moe 20Rough Riders, Psi Upsilon double forfeitDebonairs 50 I-House 38Raw Meat 35 Malice Aforethought 28Curia 75 Sine Qua Non 29Bottom Lines 46 Five Play 28Dogs Eating Bicycles 46 Back Doors 39Albanian Refugees 67 Stiffs 24Rude Boys 40 Tribe 15Bovver Boys 62 Diana Ross 23"Not Too Swift 70 Chicago Seven 32No BS 60 There's the Rub 46Chicago Crew by forfeit over N.U.T.S.Chamberlin 62 Five Particles in a Box 32No BS 62 N.U.T.S. 46Lawyers, Economists &Others 52 McCormick 36marian realty,inc.mREALTORStudio and 1 BedroomApartments Available— Students Welcome —On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-5400 Women’sHale by forfeit over Upper FlintDodd/Salisbury 48 Thompson 8Tufts 16 Shorey 4Nuss No-No’s by forfeit over Upper WallaceBreckinridge 27 Dudley 7Spam 39 Medflies 9Misfits 64 The Efficient Mockettes 8Full Court Press by forfeit over Mumford’sMidgetsMisfits by forfeit over Mumford’s MidgetsMedflies 40 The Efficient Mockettes 28Sports CalendarWOMEN’S BASKETBALLJan. 26 — Valparaiso. 7:30 p.m., FieldHouseWOMEN’S SWIMMINGJan. 27 — North Park. 4 p.m., BartlettGvmMEN’S TRACKJan. 27 — Frosh-Sophs & Junior CollegeRelays, 6 p.m., Field HouseSTANLEY H. KAPLANfor Over 43 Years The Stenoarc o<Excellence m Test PreparationCPA • GMAT • LSAT • GRESAT • MCAT • ACTFLEX • NATIONAL MEDICAL BOARDS • ECFMGNURSING BOARDS . TOEFL • VQEGRE PSYCH • GRE BIO • DAT • PCAT • OCAT • VATMAT . SAT ACHVS • PSAT • SSATPODIATRY BOARDS • NATIONAL DENTAL BOARDSFlexible Programs and Hours. ** Ai> Cwa* *« Seth, <m mw r>»TEST preparationSPECIALISTS SlHCfOrtwi « MUX l S ComPuphc RccCMCAGO CENTER SPRING. SUMMERCMCAGC 4_l*OS tOMC FALL INTENSIVES(312) 73A-S1S1 COURSES STARTINGS W SUBURBAN THIS MONTH.» s l> GRANGE WOAC sum »'LA ORAMO£ «»»(312) 1U-SM0 SAT. .,SN*ThOflTM is* SUBURBAN NEXT MONTH4’4 CEWTOAL AVE•AHAK, PARR UK* (OCX XCAT...ACT . ..GRE . ..1311) 43J-7A10 SAT. ..OAT...GounM Conmnay i.lpO—aHr ■Ma-UUr miOwCPWruwNraRpACMl tncOUTS#* K» STATE CAU. TOU. TREE WO-ZEHTtlv BISHOP BRENT HOUSE5540 S. WOODLAWN AVE.Noon Luncheon/DiscussionWednesday, 27 JanuaryMelany Baehr“Profiles of male and female applicantsto postulancy over the last decade"Students, faculty and staff are invited. Soup andcoffee will be available. Bring a sandwichif you wish.The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, January 26, 1982—9*» V Letters Campus FilmHer GraynessdefendedTo the Editor:The Maroon editorial. “End gray state¬ments,’’ provides a welcome reminder thatpresidents of major universities are judgedby standards of performance that go beyondgood governance and financial health.Granted that Hanna Gray has been on occa¬sion less than light footed or clear and thatshe has been too cautious about addressingpublic questions, what should students andfaculty expect of a university president?The Maroon editorial fails to distinguishstyle of expression from the responsibility ofoffice. Being appointed president of a majoruniversity did not license Hanna Gray tospeak publicly on “a number of issues justby articulating her own opinion.” The “truepurpose” of a university may be to provide“answers and enlightenment to the worldaround it” but is it the president’s purposeto say what the answers are? There aregood reasons for Hanna Gray to draw atten¬tion to the importance of issues rather thanto tell us how to solve them, much less to en¬lighten us. By participating in the nuclearteach-in she legitimized the notion that thenuclear arms race and the possibility of nu¬clear war were matters of serious concernfor the university but she wisely, in myview, left the “solutions” to the distin¬guished participants.A university president's credibility is noteasily maintained. Hanna Gray, as the pres¬ident of a major university, has acted to ar¬ticulate and protect the broadly defined val¬ues and interests of higher education. Shehas articulated them to Congressional rep¬resentatives and in national commissions.Some might wish she had done so more vis¬ibly. To range farther afield would be to rep¬resent students, professors and staff on sub¬jects and in ways that a few might approvebut most would not. All could ask. who au¬thorized her to speak for me — on abortion,taxes, genetic engineering, etc? What areher warrants in knowledge or authority todo so? A president is neither a U.S. senator nor jack-of-all-trades.“Were Hutchins able to observe the Uni¬versity today,” the Maroon informs us, “itis doubtful the present UC administrationwould stand out as an exception" to the pub¬lic relations man being either “the presidentor the man who tells the president what todo.” I wouldn't think that Hanna Gray, in ei¬ther her style or in the public visibility of herremarks, qualifies as a public relations per¬son. In some ways, even good ways, Hut¬chins did. Hutchins used the university pre¬sidency as a “bully pulpit” to teach thenation and reform the university. The witand wisdom of Robert Maynard Hutchinsstood the University in good stead when itwas under attack. He made Chicago a nameto conjure with in the world of education.But did he do right by his office when, in theface of Hitler’s threat to world peace andcivilization, he became a leading spokes¬man for the America First Committee?Lloyd I. RudolphProfessor of Political ScienceSummer jobsworkshopOn Wednesday, January 27th from 12 noonuntil 1 pm in the North Lounge of ReynoldsClub, the Office of Career Counseling andPlacement will sponsor its Winter Quarterworkshop on summer employment. Threealumni of the University will offer tips onhow students should go about obtainingsummer jobs in their respective fields. Thealumni are Mary Lynn Derwinski, a SalesRepresentative with KM1 Medical, Inc.,Christine Malcolm, Manager and HealthCare Consultant with Coopers & Lybrand,and Allan McCutcheon. a Programmer/An¬alyst for the University of Chicago. Studentscan also learn about resources available inReynolds Club, Room 200, and in the CareerLibrary which can aid them in the jobsearch. A question and answer session willfollow the speakers' presentations. The Front Woody Allen’s 1976 film aboutcharacter assassination during theMcCarthy era. With Allen, Zero Mostel andHerschel Bernardi. Wednesday, Jan. 27 at 8pm. International House, 1414 E. 59th St.$2.Kiss Me Deadly Coming at the end of thefilm noir era and in the middle of the bomb¬shelter vogue, Robert Aldrich's 1955 master¬piece brilliantly captures both the spirit ofthe genre and the paranoia of the times. Al¬drich handles his material with the grace ofa diesel, pounding away at his audience withhorrific and titillating results, RalphMeeker is perfect as the cynical and ruth¬less Mike Hammer. Maxine Cooper playshis slutty mistress; Cloris Leachman the“crazy” who starts the ball rolling; andGabby Rogers the two-faced broad whomeets the ultimate femme fatale death.Adapted from the Mickey Spillane novel ofthe same title. Recommended. Thursday,Jan. 28 at 8:30 pm. LSF. $2. —RMPublic Enemy (William Welman, 1931) Oneof the original gangster films in whichJimmy Cagney smacks Mae Clark in theface with a cut grapefruit. Perhaps thisscene remains fixed in the viewer’s memorynot only because it succinctly captures Cag¬ney's cynical and mvsoginistic film per¬sona, but also because it expresses the se¬ductive aura of the American gangster, ahero which Hollywood films have reserved¬ly glorified. Ostensibly Public Enemy pres¬ents the gangster lifestyle as decadent andsocially destructive, yet there is somethingfiendishly seductive about Cagney’s gleefulsmartness and ambitious drive — some¬thing quintessential^ American about hisrags-to-riches success. The film presents in¬dividuals as public enemies, not institutionsor ways of governance; and the only hopefor the social deviant are the ministrationsof a sickly mother and wholesome brother.Public Enemy both enlists the viewers thirstfor violence and satisfies the need for socialjustice when, at the film's conclusion, thebad seed is eliminated. Thursday, Jan. 28 at7:15 pm. DOC. SI.50. —RMThe Wedding Night (King Vidor, 1935) De¬picting the mystery, frustrations, and cul¬tural differences of the romance of a Polishimmigrant (Anna Sten) and an Americannovelist (Gary Cooper) this film reaches itsclimax, as the title suggests, when the coup¬le consummate their love. As with most ofhis romances, Vidor was aiming for highmelodrama and erotic tension. But Vidor’sattempts to titillate the libbido are signifi¬cantly undermined by miscasting. Sten s de¬GRAFF & CHECKReal Estate1617 E. 55th St.1 V2- 2V2 - 4 Room ApartmentsBased on A vailabilityBU 8-5566A vailable to all comersHYDE 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, ServeHYDE PARKTHE VERSAILLESIDEAL FOR STUDENTS324-0200Large Studios • Walk-inKitchen • Utilities Incl. •Furn. - Unfurn. • CampusBus at doorBased on Availability5254 S. Dorchester liberate and measured speech, and Cooper’slaconic delivery (his character was suppo¬sedly based on the wordy Scott Fitzgerald)make for a film that lulls when it should bedramatic. Tuesday, Jan. 26 at 7:15 pm.DOC. $1.50. —RMBullets or Ballots A 1936 gangster filmdirected by William Keighly and starringEdward G. Robinson as a police detectivewho joins the mob to collect evidence. WithJoan Blondell and Humphrey Bogart. Un¬seen by this reviewer. Thursday, Jan. 28 at8:45 pm. DOC. $1.50 pm. —RMSullivan’s Travels (Preston Sturges, 1941) Asuccessful Hollywood comedy director(sounding suspiciously like Sturges himself)decides to make a Serious Film, and he goeson the road, dressed as a bum, to researchhis next movie. Brother, Where Art Thou?Although it is not the best Sturges movie, itis still a Sturges movie, and Sullivan’s Trav¬els even has Veronica Lake in it, so it isworth seeing. Kind-of-highly-but-not-too-much recommended. Wednesday, January27, at 8:30. LSF. $2. -GPStella Dallas (King Vidor 1937) This is one ofthe most entertaining of DOC’s King Vidorofferings this quarter. The film is actually aremake of a 1925 version by Henry King, andboth are based on a popular 1920s novel byOlive Higgins Proutv. The plot may seem abit melodramatic to some, but actually thestory should be quite plausible in the era ofDallas and Flamingo Road: Stella, an une¬ducated lower-class girl, marries StephenDallas, who has just broken off his engage¬ment with Helen, but even the birth of adaughter cannot save the marriage. .. Mostof the action centers around Stella and herdaughter. It’s a real tear-jerker — the defin¬itive soap opera. There is polished photo¬graphy by Rudolph Mate, and BarbaraStanwyck's non-holds-barred performancein the title role won her an Oscar nomina¬tion. With Anne Shirley, Tim Holt, and JohnBoles. DOC. Tuesday, January 26, at 8:45p.m. -SWStray Dog (Akira Kurosawa, 1949) Whileriding on a subway train, a young detective(Toshiro Mifune) notices that his pistol hasbeen lifted. Ashamed of the loss of this sym¬bol of his identity and professionalism, hesets out on an obsessive search for the pis¬tol. Along the way, he encounters assorteddenizens of postwar Tokyo’s seedy under¬world. Winner of the Japanese Cultural Fes¬tival Grand Prize. Wednesday, Jan. 27 at 8p.m. DOC. $2.For your dental needs.,.Dr. George L. Walker,D.D.S., P.C.General Dentistry1623 East 55th Street752-3832Otfice HoursBy AppointmentCourtesy discountextended to students10—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, January 26, 1982Classified AdsCLASSIFIED ADSClassified advertising in the Maroon costs SI 00per 45 character line. Special headings costSI.50 per 25 characters. All classified advertising must be paid in advance. Advertisingdeadlines: 12 noon Wednesday for the Fridaypaper; 12 noon Friday for the Tuesday paperSubmit ads to Ida Noyes Hall, room 304, ormail them in (with payment) to The ChicagoMaroon, 1212 E. 59th St., Chicago IL 60637. Forinformation about display advertising, call753 3263. The Maroon is not responsible forgoods or services purchased through theclassified advertising section.SPACEFeb 1 sublet: studio w/Sept opt., 57th &Blackstone, $235/mo (util inct.) Call Steve,MI3 5139 or Sue, 753 3688 (9-5) M F.Studio Apartment, Hi Id Realty Group 955 1200Female roommate wanted friendly apartmenton 54th and EIIis Sl38/month call 947 8437.Looking for University housing? Pick up ahousing contract now, and get $75.00 call947 8216 anytime, ask for Pete.SPACE WANTEDNon smoking Female grad relocating to HydePark Immediate need for room in apartmentor house. Call 241 6692.PEOPLE WANTEDFRENCH TRANSLATOR Student part time(15 hours/week) school year. Translate training materials from English into FrenchFrench as first language desirable Completeknowledge of French grammar, vocabularyand idiom. Contact Dr. Donald Bogue, Community and Family Study Center, 753 2974.Babysitter wanted to care for 2 toddlers and infant in South Shore/Jackson Highlands. Live inor out. Hours, arrangements flexible. Call241 6236 or 684 6991.Part time help M or F. trainers for Hyde PkNautilus P.E., med. or sports backgroundpreferred. Apply Hyde Park Nautilus Center548 1303/see TimArts and crafts teachers are needed by localschools volunteers once a week to help Contact the Student Volunteer Bureau at 955 4108FOR SALEPASSPORT PHOTOS WHILE YOU WAIT!Model Camera 1342 E. 55th St. 493 6700.Dbl bed w/frame $75. Free delivery 955 2220RIDESRide wanted from Hyde Park to Loop or WaterTower weekdays leave 7:30 8:00 am returnaround 5 30 pm will share expenses 324 5364 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 needs.Quick, pick up and delivery on campus.Reasonable—call Wanda 955 8375 after 5pmPsychotherapist, Women's Groups, Individual,and Couple Therapy Sliding Scale, MaryHallowitz, MSW, ACSW947 0154James Bone, editor typist. 363 0522Registered psychologist, Hyde Park Medicalinsurance accepted; sliding fee scale RosalindCharney, Ph D. 538 7022EXPERIENCED editor from University ofChicago Press offers prompt, professionaleditorial services. Reasonable rates 667 0109Typing term papers reas. rates call 684 6882Present Your Image with Prestige Call Professional Resume Service 947 0300Letter Perfect Typing Service. Very experienced, very accurate Dissertations,papers, math. Call Lise Plotkin, 493 1218Typing Experienced secretary types allmaterial dissertations, tables, etc. IBM Sel.,grammar corrected, pickup & deliver 667 8657Typing: Experienced secretary types allmaterial dissertations, tables, etc. IBM Sel.,grammar corrected, pickup & deliver 667 8657.SCENESWomen’s Union meets every Wed at 7 00 inIda Noyes Meet with other women to talk andactPERSONALSWriters' Workshop PLaza 2 8377.Bear, I can not believe how much I love you.It's more each day The Surprise GirlBarefoot Dreamer, I've got a letter for youLAWC JM Happy 20th Love LidyChris Isidore: we need our broom back! Wehaven't been able to sweep our floor for sixmonths. 3302DICE, PELTS SCUFFLE"A LIVING HELL" Billiard dispute leads toFracas SEVE RAL SHOTS Beam suspectedMANY DRUNK NOW FEARED SOBER Allnight vigil continues.\Heart Healthy RecipeSUBSTITUTIONSTo modify or reduce the fat content and reduce the cholesterol content ofyour own recipes try these substitutions.Milk — Use 1 cup of skim or nonfat dry milk plus 2 teaspoons of poly¬unsaturated oil for 1 cup whole milk.Chocolate — Cocoa blended with polyunsaturated oil or margarine (1.1 -oz square of chocolate = 3 tablespoons of cocoa + 1 table¬spoon polyunsaturated oil or margarine).Salt — Use other seasonings instead of salt to flavor foods and reducetheir sodium content. Beef: bay leaf, mustard, sage, onion, pep¬per, thyme. Chicken: paprika, parsley, thyme, sage. Lamb: curry,garlic, mint, rosemary. Pork: apples, garlic, onion, sage. Fish:bay leaf, curry, dill, lemon juice, paprika.Heart Healthy Recipes are from the Third Edition of the American HeartAssociation Cookbook. Copyright c 1973, 1975,1979 by the American HeartAssociation. Inc. #“ American HeartAssociation BICYCLE CLUB!!The Bicycle club will hold an organizationalmeeting on Wed Jan 27 at 7:30 in the Memorialroom of Ida Noyes. All are welcome to helpplan our 1982 racing and touring activitiesSTEPTUTORINGHelp a kid feel bright and intelligent. Volunteerto tutor an elementary or high school studentfor two hours a week. Contact Peter at 643 1733for more information.MOVINGStudent with Pickup Truck can move your stuffFAST AND CHEAP No job too small! CallPeter at 955 5180 10am 10pmPHOTOGRAPHERSFor Sale: Pentax K 1000, 50 mm lens & 80 150macro micro zoom lens, tripod, cable, Leicacase S200.324 3384BE IN PRINTSubmit your creative work to the ChicagoLiterary Review first deadline: January 27 orcall Becky at 753 3263.CONDO FOR SALELovely sunny 5 rm -condo, 2 BR Totallyrenovated. Oak fl & buffet, frpl., bale., PLUS!Fin 12%. Call Karen d. 947 7456, 3 974 0859ART INSTITUTEGet a discounted membership for the Art Institute—you pay $9 instead of $15. SAO, room210, Ida Noyes.WORK DOWNTOWN?Are you an undergraduate or graduate studentwho works downtown? If so, I would like to interview you for an arficle about students whowork downtown. If interested, please callMargo at 753 2249, Rm. 1101.THE BESTIn Bluegrass, Gospel, Blues, Old Time Nortenaand more at the 22nd Annual U of C FOLKFESTIVAL, Jan 29-31. Tickets at ReynoldsClub Box Office For more info call 753 3567. INFLATION SYNDROMEARNOLD HARBERGER speaks on INFLATION AROUND THE WORLD THE INFLATION SYNDROME Thursday, January 28, 8 00pm, at International House, 1414 S. 59th St.Homeroom. F ree and open to the public.EINSTE IN ONTHE BEACH....and otfier works of Philip Glass will be in performance when he appears at Mandel HallFeb. 19 Get tickets at Reynolds Club Box Office.RELOCATIONENGINEERSW P Bear Moving Co : We Move AlmostAnything Almost Anywhere Call 24 hrs a dayat 241 5264 ♦BALLETTICKETSDiscount tickets to the American BalletTheatre are still available for Student Activities, Rm 210, Ida Noyes Hall Tickets arefor the Feb 6 and Feb. 13 mantinees You pay$11 instead of $12.75 for main floor seats!NOT GETTINGENOUGH SEX?Come to the 22nd Annual Folk Festival for thevery best in folk music! Fri Sun Concerts inMandel Hall, FREE workshops in Ida Noy^sHall. Tickets at Reynolds Club. For more information call 753-3567 The festival may notrelieve your problem, but what the hell.DANCINGShake a leg and join the Morris Dancers Learnceremonial English dance to perform in pubsand parks. Weekly practice Tuesdays in IdaNoyes Hall. Info: 241 6738 or 285 2283Join us for a sociable evening of dancing Folkdances of the British Isles English 8 10 pm,Scottish 10-10:30 pm All dances are taught,beginners are welcome. Join now in time forour Annual Playford Ball on Feb 6COLOR PRINTINGEASIER THAN YOU THINK!Join us for an evening withBeselerCibachromeand Ektaflex.Let us show you how easy color printingat home can be.There will be a thorough presentation ofprinting from slides andprinting from negatives.Refreshments will be served.There is a $5.00 reservation fee.Date: Wednesday, January 27,1982Time: 7:00 — 10:00 p.m.Place: Center for Continuing Education1307 East 60th StreetChicago, Illinoismodel camera1342 E. 55th 493-6700The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, January 26, 1982—11JOAN ARMATRADING’s artistry has been described as ‘brilliantunorthodoxy’. Her use of guitar, of her voice, and even of melodicand lyrical content defies most musical conventions.“Walk Under Ladders” is Joan Armatrading’s seventh album forA&M Records. Joan has sold over 3 million records worldwide andthis album is not only expected to be her most commerciallysuccessful to date, but also marks a new creative peak.WednesdayFebruary 10 • 8 pmMandel HallOn Sale at theReynolds ClubBox OfficeFriday, January 299 a.m. s6 UCStudents9 Others2 UCID/Person2 tix/UCIDMa|ar Activities Beard