In Grey City —-In ViewpointsIt’s a Dog’s Life—page five : REINTINTINE Ij0¥1page twelve—The Chicago MaroonVolume 91, No. 35 The University of Chicago ©Copyright 1982 The Chicago Maroon Friday, February 12, 1982Tuition jump,aid cutsdarken UC’s futureBy Robert DeckerThe cost of a UC education willbecome closer to the cost of a Har¬vard, Stanford, or Yale educationin the future, if the University is tosucceed in providing aid to itspoorer students and continue toprovide high faculty salaries.This is only one facet of a grimfinancial picture painted in Presi¬dent Gray’s State of the Universityspeech given Tuesday.“We have . . . embarked on a tu¬ition policy which will lead to someclosing of the distance which sepa¬rates our tuition levels for under¬graduates and graduate studentsin the arts and sciences from thoseof other major private universi¬ties,” Gray said.Tuition increases for next yearat UC have not been announcedyet, but examples of tuition atother major universities contactedby the Maroon, for 1982-83, includeYale at $8190, Stanford at $8220,and Cornell at $7000.President Gray Examples of tuition last year, allof which are about 15 percenthigher than UC, include Brown at$7120, Pennsylvania at $6900, Co¬lumbia at $6700, and Harvard at$6930.“Tuition will have to increase,”said Gray, “and we will have towork still harder to find increasedprivate sources and gifts.“But even higher tuition will notcover the difference, and fund rais¬ing campaigns cannot fully com¬pensate, certainly not at once, forthe potential gap between incomeamd expenditures,” she said.A major problem for the comingyear will be student loan pro¬grams, if the expected cuts in gov¬ernment funding come through.Gray said UC students had takenout $20 million in loans, more thandouble the amount borrowed fouryears ago.“Federal student loans comprisealmost as large a source of finan¬cial assistance for our students asdo all forms of direct or gift assis¬tance combined,” said Gray. Thisincludes all grants from the Uni¬versity itself as well as the stateand national governments.Only 41 percent of the aid for stu¬dents at UC comes from outsidesources, Gray said, with the Uni¬versity now providing 54 percent ofundergraduate aid and 61 percentof graduate aid.“We could not hope to make upfrom University and other privatesources for all these losses,” if gov¬ernment loan programs for gradu¬ate students were cut, Gray said.“The composition and character ofthe University itself would be af¬fected, together with the scope ofeducational opportunity and itsrole in our society.”Cuts in direct federal funds forresearch and scholarship were not PHOTO BY WILLIAM MUDGEDespite the warming temperatures, Hyde Park remained blanketed with snow this week. (Phototaken from the 33rd floor of Regent’s Park.)as severe as expected, Gray’s re¬port indicated, but she said “thereis deep cause for concern overwhat has already happened andwhat may be on the horizon.”So far, National Science Founda¬tion funding for behavioral and so¬cial sciences has been cut 26 per¬cent; National Endowment for theHumanities funding has been cutby 14 percent.Although student loans have dou¬bled over the past four years,unrestricted gift aid to undergrad¬uates ih University has increasedfour-fold since 1977-78, to $4 millionfor next year. For graduate stu¬dents the increase has been from$3.7 million in 1977-78 to $8.8 millionprojected for 1982-83.The gift aid figures for next year.Gray said, are “some 60 percenthigher” than anticipated.“There has to be both a substan¬tial reallocation of University funds to these important purposesand a significant increase in tuitionto help support their costs,” saidGray.“The University can scarcelythrive or justify its role if we evade unpleasant realities and hardchoices, if we appeal simply to pastachievement and present conven¬ience, and wait in the absurd ex¬pectation that the difficult winds ofchange will pass.” Gray said.School bus hits studentA six-year-old Lab School stu¬dent was struck and killed by acampus bus in Hyde Park lateWednesday afternoon. CatherineLocker, 6,'of 1364 E. 48th St., waspronounced dead at Chicago Osteo¬pathic Hospital at 4:40 p.m.According to unofficial reports,the accident occurred after thechild had exited the bus on thecorner of 48th St. and Kenwood.After she stepped off, she was ei¬ther hit directly or slipped underthe wheels out of the driver’sview.A spokesman for Robinson Bus Co. said that the driver said that hedid not hit the child. The spokes¬man said that the driver has beenput on suspension until a completeinvestigation has been made.According to officials at the Labschool, this was the first trafficdeath in recent memory. Most LabSchool students ride the bus to andfrom campus.Catherine is survived by herparents, Dr. and Mrs. Joseph D.Locker. Dr Locker is assistantprofessor of pathology and bio¬chemistry at the University. Fu¬neral sendees have not yet beenarranged.Primavera,Primavera, the literary maga¬zine of the University’s feminist or¬ganization, was denied funding atan SG Assembly meeting Wednes¬day night, despite the support ofthe SG Finance Committee, be¬cause members of the Assemblyfelt that the magazine’s editorialpolicy discriminated against men.Also denied funds at the meetingWednesday was the Chicago Lam¬poon, which was unsuccessful in anappeal of the Finance Committee’sdecision to cut all of its funding.The Assembly voted 12-8 in favor ofthe Lampoon, but they failed to getthe .. majority needed to overturna Finance Committee decision.The Finance Committee had rec¬ommended that Primavera, a na¬tionally distributed literary maga¬zine, receive $500 in grants, and a$2500 loan. Debate in the Assemblybrought up the fact that Primaverahad never had a man on its editori¬al board and had never run an ar- Chicagotide written by a man. There wereno representatives of Primaverapresent at the Assembly meeting,and it was suggested by Assemblymembers on both sides of the de¬bate that the issue be discussedand decided again at the SG asse¬mbly meeting next week.Janet Heller, a Co-editor of Pri¬mavera, and one of the originalfounders of the eight-year-old pub¬lication, expressed surprise at theAssembly’s actions.“They have always funded us inthe past,” said Heller. “This repre¬sents a switch in policy. No malehas ever applied to be on the edito¬rial board, so the issue has nevercome up. I think we are being usedas a scapegoat.”Heller said that the magazinedoes not explictly discriminateagainst articles written by males.“We treat (articles by males) thesame as any other articles,” saidHeller, “but we are a publicationconcerned with the experience of Lampoon lose SG fundingwomen.” Heller said that she hadclose to 1000 submissions to themagazine over a year, and thatroughly 50 of these pieces werewritten by men.Heller said she was upset withthe concept of using male partici¬pation as a criteria for eligibility.“Any student organization has toserve the needs of one particulargroup of students,” said Heller. “Ifstudent groups tried to meet theneed of everv student, it wouldfail.”George Kampstra, the FinanceCommittee Chair, said that he wasnot sure himself whether or notPrimavera discriminated againstmen. He said that the issues hadbeen raised when Primavera ap¬peared before the finance commit¬tee, and that Heller had assuredthem that men were allowed tocontribute and to serve on theboard. The finance committee’srecommendation was overturned by the Assembly by a 15-5 vote.The Lampoon had much moresupport in the Assembly itself, butthey were unable to reach the ^3majority needed to overturn thedecision. Kampstra spoke at themeeting against the Lampoon’s ap¬peal. “I didn’t see any attempt tomake it something that will last,”he said yesterday. “I would like tosee us have a humor magazinehere. We probably have some verysharp wits. But I got the sense itwas being published purely for thesake of the editors.”Greg Walters, a first year under¬graduate and Editor of the Lam¬poon said that they would try topublish despite the funding cut¬off.“1 think we can publish.” saidWalters.“I can’t see this stopping us deadin our tracks. W’e just feel an injus¬tice has been done. But we willcarry on the fight for this.”Walters brought a petition to the meeting with 150 signatures of peo¬ple who said they had read theLampoon and wanted it continued.Walters said the signatures hadbeen collected over just two orthree days. But Kampstra dis¬counted this petition, saying thathe had heard of people signing itwho had never read the publica¬tion.Another student publication re¬cently denied funding by the SG,Inquiry, has received funding fromJonathan Z. Smith, dean of the Col¬lege.Karen Kapner, Editor of Inqui¬ry, said that Smith had agreed toprovide the $650 needed to publishthe journal for Winter quarter, butno plans for Spring quarter hadbeen assured.Kapner said that Inquiry is stilltaking submissions for the Winterissue. She said that submissionshad not fallen off after SG’s fund¬ing cut-off.arik, mmEXHIBITION ANP SALE Of 42. ORIGINAL GRAPHIC WORKS BY AUSTRIAN -BORN ARIK BRAWER. INTERNATIONALLY RENOWNEP, BRAVER HAS HAP ONE MANSHOWS ON EVERY CONTINENT. ALL DISPLAYED WORKS ARE FOR SALF.EXHIBIT COURTESY OF THE BAUMGARTN ER GALLERIES OF WASHINGTON. D.C.FEBRUARY 10 —££AT THE B'NAI B'RITH HILLEL TOUNOATlON • 5TIS S. WOOTX>U>N • CHICAGODon't Let ThisHappen to Yen!Come To A Stress WorkshopMonday • February 22 •7:30 - 9:30 pmIda Noyes Hall - Third Floor Theatre FREELearn More AboutStress and How You CanDeal With ItSpeakers: Suzanne KabasaSalvatore MaddiDept, of Behavioral Sciences WE REQUEST THAT PARTICIPANTS COMPLETE A SPECIALQUESTIONNAIRE AND BRING IT TO THE WORKSHOP. YOUPICK UP A QUESTIONNAIRE AT THE FOLLOWING LOCATIONSBEGINNING MONDAY, FEB. 15th• Dining Hall Dinner Lines 2/16t 2/18, 2/22• Reynolds Club 2/17 ll-2p.m.• Shoreland Lobby• Harper 280 (Dean of Students Office)Stress Need Not Get You DownPresented by Dean of Students Office, Hotline, StudentMental Health, and the Housing Office.2—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, February 12, 1982IHospital program a I lowsparents to stay with kidsBy Vicki HoWyler Children’s Hospital recently un¬veiled a new facility called the Care-by-Parent Unit. The program allows parents tostay with and care for their child during thechild’s hospital stay.Developed by Dr. Morris Greene in 1971for Riley Hospital (Indiana), the Care-by-Parent concept is designed to alleviate thestress of hospitalization on both parent andchild. The unit creates a confortable envi¬ronment with its “home-style” decor. Thepresence of the parent provides an addedsupport for the child.Consisting of five patient-rooms, the Unitdiffers from the conventional hospital set¬ting. Each room can accommodate up totwo adults and one child. Patients are alsoprovided with amenities that enhances thecasual atmosphere of the Unit.Families are encouraged to we&r streetclothes to make the child feel more at home.Hospital gowns are only worn for medicalexaminations. To promote a relaxed atmo¬sphere, parents are also requested to bringsome of the child’s personal belongings.Many of the children participating in theprogram are admitted for diagnostic tests.Since these and other children admitted tothe Care-by-Parent Unit don’t require close.monitoring by the nursing staff, parentsoversee the general care. Parents involvedin Care-by-Parent agree to assume the re¬sponsibility of feeding, bathing, administer¬ing treatmeonts, and dispensing medica¬tions.Medical assistance is available from 6:30a.m. to 11:30 p.m. from a nurse assigned tothe Unit. Physicians tending the Care-by-Parent patients also make the roundsthrough the Unit twice a day to answer anyquestions parents may have about the careof their child. Services are provided by thenursing staff from neighboring stationsfrom 11:30 p.m. to 6:30 a.m. The Care-by-Parent program also edu¬cates parents on their child’s immediatemedical needs. The child’s physician andnurses, assigned to the Unit, train parentson the procedures of administering medica¬tion and treatment.“This unit also allows parents to learnfrom health professionals and by practicalexperience what will be required of them tocare for their child at home. Because theirchild may have a chronic illness, such asdiabetes, it is necessary for parents to feelcomfortable taking an active role in thedaily maintenance of their child’s health,”said Dr. Alma Chandler, an Assistant Pro¬fessor in the Department of Pediatrics andthe Medical Director of the Unit.According to Paula Longellier, the Clini¬cal Nurse for Care-by-Parent, direct nurs¬ing supervision is not necessary in caseswhere parents are already familiar withtheir child’s medical treatment. Longellieremphasizes the function of Care-by-Parentas not strictly that of an educational pro¬gram.Rather, the family-oriented Care-by-Parent Unit also helps new parents adjust totheir newborns in the secure environment ofa hospital.“An infant who has been in the IntensiveCare or Intermediate Care Nursery may beadmitted to the Care-by-Parent Unit beforebeing discharged so that the mother may as¬sume responsibility for the child’s carewhile she still has ready access to the hospi¬tal staff. This opportunity helps to relieveany anxiety the mother may have about car¬ing for her new baby,” Longellier said.Children admitted to the Care-by-ParentUnit range in age from newborns to eighteenyear olds, with medical problems spanningfrom birth defects, developmental prob¬lems, blood disorders to gastroenterologicdisorders, diabetes and diagnostic prob¬lems. Since it began operation on Jan. 1, theCare-by-Parent participants have been res¬tricted to patients specifically referred tothe Unit by physicians involved with the pro¬gram. The parents are then interviewed bythe Head Nurse for the unit, Relda Pius.Although parents are provided with threemeals a day and housing, Care-by-Parentpatients pay no more than regular inpatientrates. By providing for their child’s care,parents in the Care-by-Parent Unit savehospital staffers two to three times the nurs¬ing labor which would have been required tosupervise the patients.The Care-by-Parent Unit will be in all like¬lihood become a permanent fixture at WylerChildren’s Hospital. The facility was intro¬duced as the first of its kind in Illinois byLawrence Gartner, Chairman and Profes¬sor of the Department of Pediatrics andEleanor DeLucia, Director of PediatricNursing.“It is something that the doctors believein very strongly,” said Longellier.Due to limited resources and as a new pro¬gram, hospital spokesperson Betsy Fowlersays she doesn’t see any plans for expandingthe five room unit in the foreseeable future.Moreover, patients of the Care-by-ParentUnit stay an average of only three to fivedays.Patient selection procedures will remainrelatively the same until the hospital can es¬tablish a regular clientele of patients andphysicians. This will allow administratorsto chart out some long range observations.Parental feeback on the new facility is en¬couraging. Joy Zachary participated in theproject with her 3 month old infant Lucas.Lucas was born with a heart ailment andplaced in the Intensive Care Unit at Kanka¬kee Hospital. Both mother and child weretransferred to Wyler after nurses at Kanka¬kee informed Mrs. Zachary about the facili¬ty.“It was a very big comfort to me,” shesaid. “I was scared to death with his heartailment. I didn’t know how he’d react to themedication. But if something went wrong,we were in a hospital. Giving him medica¬tion was a real thrill. His feeding is really News in briefcomplicated too.”Mrs. Zachary learned to administer heartmedication to Lucas under nurse’s supervi¬sion. “The rooms were more than adequateand the facility is very well equipped,” shesaid. “All my questions were answered bythe nurses, so I didn’t have to worry aboutgiving him medication. The nurses taughtme the procedures but gave me the freedomto nurse him myself. It made me feel com¬fortable to bring him back home,” said Mrs.Zachary.Last sign-up dayThere is one day left to register to vote inChicago’s precincts: Tuesday, Feb. 16. Any¬one who wishes to vote in the March 16 pri¬mary should register at local polling places,the addresses of which can be obtained fromthe office of 5th Ward Democratic Commit¬teeman Alan Dobry, at 752-8415.Ex-Yale prexyvisiting fellowKingman Brewster, president of Yale Uni¬versity from 1963-77 and US Ambassador tothe Court of St. James’s during JimmyCarter’s presidency, will be a visiting fellow-on campus next week.Brewster will speak in Harper 130 on“How Do We Keep Society Voluntary” at3:30 p.m. Tuesday.Brewster’s controversial policies on stu¬dent dissent and demonstrations set manyprecedents for dealing with campus vio¬lence in the 1960s and won for him both widerespect and wide criticism. Former Vice-President Spiro T. Agnew was among hisloudest detractors.At Yale, Brewster brought about anumber of innovations, including the admis¬sion of women and the introduction of aca¬demic programs like those of UC’s New Col¬legiate Division. President Gray served asProvost of Yale under Brewster, and suc¬ceeded him as Acting President of Yalewhen he was appointed Ambassador.THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOpresentsA SPECIAL LECTUREsponsored byTHE EMILY TALBOT FUNDALICE WALKERREADINGS FROM HER WORKSTHURSDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1982 . 8:00 P.M. SWIFT HALL LECTURE ROOMReception Follows in Swift CommonsCosponsored by The William Vaughn Moody Fund, Committee on African and Black American Humanities,Department of English, and Organization of Black Students.ALL STUDENTS, FACULTY, STAFF, AND ALUMNI ARE INVITEDThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, February 12 1982—3LettersPersonnel norosebedTo the Editor:• In a recent letter in this column (Febru¬ary 5, 1982), one Charles B. Wordell ex¬presses his concern over what he perceivesas indifferent treatment by the UniversityPersonnel Office. This office is a traditionaldumping ground for gripes and complaints,but this time Mr. Wordell seems confused.How is the personnel staff supposed tohelp the applicants,’ when applicants suchas the Wordells refuse such a basic requestas to fill out an application form? Perhapsthe staff should be expected to rememberyour pretty face when an opening doesoccur? Or are you merely embarrassed thatit took a ‘tedious forty minutes’ to fill out asimple form?As for the receptionists’ ‘curt’ or ‘in¬censed’ responses imagine yourself havingto deal with hoards of degree-toting spouseswho feel qualified for nothing less than su¬pervisory/administrative positions. Sincethe University tends to promote into thesepositions from within (and rightly so!),openings are generally at the clericallevels. This revelation is often sufficient toawaken dormant arrogance, so my sympa¬thy goes to the receptionist who bears thebrunt of egos bruised when 60 wpm is valuedmore than B.A. The remarkable thing isthat so many relatively unskilled spousesare placed into University positions, largelythrough the efforts of the Personnel Office.It would be silly to argue with Mr. Wordellthat more individualized serve would not bedesirable, but an office of fewer than twentypeople responsible for nearly 10,000 jobsmust limit its approach to a reasonablelevel.So, come on Charles, give ’em a break.Bill BunnelleTypos intolerableTo the Editor:Doesn’t anyone among the twenty-fivepeople listed as belonging to the staff of TheMaroon actually read the copy before it getsinto print? I am moved to ask by the pre¬sence in the February 5th issue (page 6) of aparagraph that managed to misspell thenames of four of the best-known movie starsin history (“Marlien” Dietrich, “Gretta”Garbo, “Humphry” Bogart, and “Merryl”Streep — maybe some confusion here withMerril Lynch) and referred (twice) to Man¬hattan as “Manhatten.” The article laterbriefly raised its incompetence to the levelof real clownishness by talking about an“ethnic” capturing the public mind, butthen fell back into mere illiteracy in the nextsentence with the question. . .whose to saythey are wrong?” Come on, Maroon — getcracking with the blue pencil!Brian Barry,Distinguished Service Professor,Departments of Political Scienceand PhilosophyTo each her ownTo the Editor:While Mr. Brooks is certainly entitled tohis opinions about women and our lack of“proper” role models (The Maroon, Feb. 5,1982), I have to take exception to his deni¬gration of one of our actual role models —Emma Goldman. Taking as historical back¬ ground the movie “Reds” (in whichMaureen Stapleton, not Jean Stapleton,played Goldman, by the way), Mr. Brookshas portrayed Goldman as a possibly bril¬liant but certainly sterile human being wholed “a single and lonely life.” This is a gravemisjustice to a woman who managed tocombine a devotion to idealism (she was ananarchist, not a socialist), an interest in cre¬ative individualism and feminism, and avery lively personal existence. Goldmanwas no grim, crusading ideologue who wasunattractive to either sex, and she obviouslycared deeply about her friends and lovers.Goldman’s life and struggles are not, per¬haps, as well known to Mr. Brooks and thegeneral public as they should be. Besidesher anarchist beliefs, Goldman also activelypromoted free speech and birth control. Sheonce went to jail for fifteen days because, asMargaret Anderson of The Little Reviewpointed out, she advocated “that womenneed not always keep their mouths shut andtheir wombs open.” (Quoted by Alix Shul-man in her essay “The Most DangerousWoman in the World”.) No stranger to pris¬on, Goldman had already served time forher beliefs and was finally stripped of hercitizenship (in a most underhanded way)and deported. While she continued to be anactivist — first in Russia, then, after disillu¬sionment with the Soviet government, inwestern Europe — she was not allowed to re¬turn to the United States. In fact, she re¬turned only in her casket and- was buriedhere in Chicago in the Waldheim Cemeteryclose to the victims of the Haymarket riotsof 1886 whose fate had inspired her to makeanarchy her cause.As to Goldman being a poor choice for arole model, I think that it is Mr. Brooks whohas erred. Louise Bryant, although attrac¬tive and independent — even, at times,heroic — cannot match such a positivemodel as that given women by Emma Gold¬man. Although she was aggressive, sharp-tongued, and very capable of looking afterherself (attributes Mr. Brooks does notseem to admire in women), she was also in¬telligent, loving, and a concerned humanbeing. For women her message was and ispositive and very modern:Since woman’s greatest misfortune hasbeen that she was looked upon either angelor devil, her true salvation lies in beingplaced on earth; namely, in being consi¬dered human, and therefore subject to allhuman follies and mistakes. . .(Woman’s)development, her freedom, her indepen¬dence, must come from and through herself.First, by asserting herself as a person andnot as a sex commodity. Second, by refusingto bear children, unless she wants them; byrefusing to be a servant to God, the State,society, the husband, the family, etc., bymaking her life simpler, but deeper andricher. That is, by trying to learn the mean¬ing and substance of life in all its complexi¬ties, by freeing herself from the fear of pub¬lic opinion and public condemnation.—from “Woman Sufferage”Misty L. Bastian* Student in the CollegeThe 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 WuDunnSenior News EditorAnna FeldmanNews Editor Sherrie NegreaFeatures EditorAudrey LightSports EditorWilliam MudgePhotography EditorDavid BrooksViewpoints Editor Richard KayeGrey City Journal EditorBecky WoloshinLiterary Review EditorErin CassidyLibrarianAame EliasDesign Director Henry OttoBusiness ManagerJay McKenzieAdvertising 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, Robert Kahng, WayneKlein, Bob LaBelle, Katherine Larson, Linda Lee, Chris Lesieutre, Kathleen Linden-berger, Jennifer Maude, Marlene Mussell, Bob Nawrocki, Melody Salkuci, KoyinShih, Donna Shrout, Daniel Staley, Jeff Terrell, James Thompson, Elaine Tite, BobTravis, Aili Tripp, Nick Varsam, Sheila Westmoreland, Jeff Wolf, Anna Yamada.4—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, February 12, 1982 EditorialThe administration’s recent announcement that it will revise the University’ssexual harassment procedure is undeniably a step toward establishing a moreeffective and responsible policy. Dean Smith’s suggestions that complainants beinformed of the results of any investigations, and that public report on the subjectregularly be prepared are both crucial procedures to having a policy that is fair tothe accused individuals and to those making the complaints. Yet these twochanges will not suffice in anyway to make the current policy into one that willhelp prevent incidents of sexual harassment in the University from occurring andthat will provide an adequate grievance procedure for students to file com¬plaints.Smith apparently has failed to recognize that the more serious flaws with thecurrent policy are the unclear procedure for filing a complaint and the severelylimited options a student has available in making a formal complaint.Where a student can file a complaint and how he or she makes the complaintformal are essential factors in a valid grievance procedure concerning any typeof harassment. However, that the administration apparently believes that thepresent policy — whereby the academic dean of the College or of the appropriateDivision is the sole individual responsible for investigating the complaint — is a“correct” and “solid” policy is reprehensible, to say the least. What guaranteesdoes a complainant have that a dean will expose a harassment incident involvinga faculty member under that dean’s supervision and suggest appropriate punish¬ment for the accused professor? What guarantee does a complainant have thatthe only person in charge of investigating a complaint will conduct the investiga¬tion in a responsible and open-minded manner?Clearly, if only one administrator has the sole authority to investigate a sexualharassment incident, there are no guarantees that the investigation will be fair,or even that it will be conducted at all. Moreover, a student who feels intimidatedto report a sexual harassment incident for fear of damaging a professor’s reputa¬tion or from sheer embarassment, might not feel comfortable speaking aboutsuch a personal matter to the Dean in his or her Division or school.A sexual harassment policy that is supportive to students who want to file acomplaint should have more than one administrator with whom to file. If a stu¬dent feels that one Dean has not conducted a proper investigation of a complainthe or she should be able to turn to another administrator to handle the case untilappropriate action is taken. These options should include the Dean of students ineach school or division, a faculty committee appointed for the purpose of inves¬tigating harassment changes, as well as the Dean of each school or division.Another serious fault with the current policy is the lack of any description ofprocedures students should follow to make a formal complaint. One student, whograduated from the College last year, assumed she had filed a formal complaintabout her incident with Smith while he apparently thought no formal complainthad been made. Such a serious misunderstanding shows the ambiguity of the cur¬rent policy and how it can cause much frustration to a student who wants to file acomplaint.To solve this problem, the administration should formulate a more detailedgrievance procedure, specifying the exact requirements for filing a formal com¬plaint. They have repeatedly praised the current policy listed in the Student Man¬ual, which consist of our meager paragraphs; as a substantial and comprehen¬sive policy statement. However, if they take the time to read the sexualharassment policies at other universities, they would find UC’s policy pale incomparison to MIT’s policy on sexual harassment, for example, is three pageslong (including 14 paragraphs) and charges at least five administrators and uni¬versity officials with the authority to investigate sexual harassment com¬plaints.We are pleased with some of the talk we’ve heard from the administration sincewe last wrote on this subject. But so far, these specific issue have not been ad¬dressed. If the administration is really as serious about the issue of sexual harass¬ment as it claims to be, it will not ignore these basic — yet major — faults with thecurrent policy. We hope that, unlike other administrative changes at the Universi¬ty, the problem of sexual harassment at UC will be handled in a prompt and com¬prehensive manner.To the Editor:“They still want their man more than any¬thing else.” How unfortunate that such anattitude toward women should persistamong certain U of C men. In last Friday’s“Viewpoints,” David Brooks expresses thisattitude in considering the opposition be¬tween a woman’s career and her relation¬ship with a man. His assertion “that womenstill place men before jobs” is particularlyoffensive. Mr. Brooks assumes that awoman may find success only in the work¬ing world and happiness only in a relation¬ship with a man. Such a polarization doesnot exist.Using broad generalizations derived fromthe media, Mr. Brooks asserts that men andwomen need role models in order to define their potential. This is particularly impor¬tant in his view of feminism. He assumesthat women must change and that this canonly occur with “proper role models.”Women do not need to have their behaviordictated by a female Ernest Hemingway.His implication that women need to changeindicates his basic misunderstanding of theproblems women face. Women do not needto change nor should they have to change.Women are different. But this does notmean that they are inferior. It is men’s atti¬tudes toward women which must change ifthe weakening effect of these misconcep¬tions is to be halted.Sincerely,Susan GallagherCaroline Morrison»ViewpointsLive and let dieMed students to practice their skills on live pupsBy Dee DunheimForty stray dogs and/or former pet dogs will be guests ofthe Physiology Department’s Medical Biology Class #303this month.The dogs are being brought into the first year med stu¬dent’s laboratory (room 437 of Abbott Hall) already an¬aesthetized by the University’s Carlson Animal ResearchDepartment.Although the students are not yet capable of anaesthetiz¬ing the animals themselves, they will be able to use scis¬sors, forceps, scalpels, electrodes, clamps and other gad¬gets to manipulate the dog’s internal organs. The procedurecalled vivisection, involves the cutting of, or operating on,live animals.If, however, the dogs are too lightly anaesthetized, Page 2of the Introduction to the Mammalian Experiments Manualexplains how to recognize the problem which is “evidencedby its (the dogs) moving about, crying out or by other signsof semi-conscious behavior.” When this happens the stu¬dents are instructed to call a teaching assistant.The person who wrote “Introduction to the MammalianExperiments (as part of the Medical Biology #303 laborato¬ry manual) was obviously prepared in advance for criti¬cism. Ready for battle on the very first page of the manualit says: . .anti-vivisectionists, whose motives are some¬times obscure, have continuously and vigorously tried toput a stop to all animal experimentation.” It continues:“Students and investigators at this and other universitieswhere dogs are available for teaching and research shouldrealize that this privilege was hard-earned by their prede¬cessors but will be threatened again and must be fought foragain in each generation.”One particular statement in this introduction is curious:“Until the passage of laws permitting dogs to be madeavailable from city pounds, medical schools in certainparts of the country were able to use dogs to only a limitedextent in teaching, and less extensively in research thanthey would have desired.” Does this intimate that doctors,surgeons and professors graduating during those years are inept or lacking in the skill and aptitude of their succes¬sors?We doubt it, particularly since more enlightened coun¬tries do not permit dogs to be used for practicing medicalskills. Practice surgery on live animals by medical stu¬dents or surgeons has been illegal in Great Britain since1876. This hasn’t prevented the training of execellent pro¬fessionals.Dr. Frank Fitch, Associate Dean of Academic Affairssays that *’we (animal advocates and animal experi¬menters) must agree to disagree”. Although not particular¬ly interested in getting into a discussion on physiology, theDoctor explained simply that “the educational objective isto provide students with a better understanding of physiolo¬gical controls and organ functioning.” And that in using liveanimals as laboratory tools the “faculty is handling thingsin a legally, morally and ethically sound manner.”But the questions still surface: Does the end justify themeans? If the experiments are not particularly cruel arethey at least a needless waste? Does the amount of knowl¬edge or instructional value gained outweigh the rights andlife of another? Some students even believe that the phy¬siological principles are relayed adequately by audio visualpresentations, books and lectures.The loss of a beloved pet can be a devastating experience.To those who call the National Anti-Vivisection Society(NAVS) or other animal welfare organizations in the City ofChicago inquiring as to whether their dog can possibly windup in an experimental laboratory, the answer we must giveis YES.Despite the fact that New York, Florida, Maine, Hawaii,Connecticut, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island andMontana have made it illegal to give or sell stray and aban¬doned dogs from pounds and shelters to experimental facili¬ties, the law is still on the books in Illinois.The 98th Chapter of the City’s Municipal Code mandatesthat live animals be released to research and experimentalfacilities if not claimed within ten days. There is no doubt that at most research centers and medi¬cal schools the cheap (or free; supply of animals availablefrom pounds and shelters encourages promiscuous use, of¬tentimes in indiscriminant manners (similar perhaps to abuffet in which we all seem to overload our plates).In any event, when and if, the supply of inexpensive orfree animals is cut off, facilities using them will pay moremoney by purchasing live dogs from breeders.From animal welfare/animal rights/animal liberationpoints of view, this is clearly nothing more than a short¬term trade-off. But, if the monetary considerations reducethe total number of animals used, as well as contribute tothe much needed development and use of sophisticated non¬animal alternatives, the long-range hopes of those con¬cerned with how human animals treat non-human animalswill have been met.Henry Spira, leading animal rights activist wrote inMarch of 1979: “People who are aware of pound seizure willabandon animals rather than risk having them bodys-natched into labs. And this places additional tax burdensfor rounding up abandoned strays. The cost of stray ani¬mals is already $400 million a year in the United States.Several months later New York’s Governor Hugh Careyrepealed the state’s 27-year old Pound Seizure law and saidthat “Repeal will assure that public confidence in the hu¬mane shelter system is restored.”The number of animals used at U. of C. should be reducedto the absolute minimum. Students and faculty can helpmake this happen. Rather than being taught to fight animalrights advocates, the students should learn instead to com¬municate with them. The dogs are without a right in thematter. We must speak for them.Is there hope for reducing the number of live dogs to bebrought into Room 437 this month? According to Lab Super¬visor Dr. Dario Domizi the answer is no. . .“The dogs havebeen ordered and the schedule is set.” Are there hopes ofreducing the number of live dogs next session? Dr. Dominisays, “We’ll think about it.”Hetero-bourgeois patriarch capitalist denouncedBy Richard Martin and Ken WissokerDavid Brooks’ article ‘Women stumble...’, which ap¬peared in last Friday’s Maroon Viewpoints section, reflectsnot only Mr. Brooks’ penchant for addressing complex po¬litical and cultural issues in the most pejorative and super¬ficial manner, but also The Maroon’s generally confusedand unfocused aims and ideology. A student newspaperwhich confronts contemporary issues in a consciously ob¬jective fashion is perhaps the way The Maroon might char¬acterize iteslf. A better description might read: A studentnewspaper which consistently offers its readers myopicand misinformed views of today’s most profound problemswhile operating under the erroneous guise of “objective”journalism.Often, Maroon writers think they are being objective, butfail to see how their positions support and reinforce posi¬tions which are not objective, but ideological. Certainly,Mr. Brooks’ article is the most obvious example of this kindof journalism to appear in some time.Mr. Brooks’ ‘Women stumble...’ is grossly misinformedand suspiciously reactionary and misogynic. His own fearof women — specifically female intellectualism — is mostin his statement:Instead of providing answers, feminist organizationshave become obsessed with issues like lesbianism,pornography, sexual violence and language, whichare important but outside the mainstream of femi¬nine concerns.Apparently Mr. Brooks does not believe that womenshould concern themselves with intellectual matters. Theabove quote is to the point: Brooks succinctly reveals hisignorance. Apparently he does not understand that anygroup or individual devoted to analyzing, exploring, or of¬fering alternatives to what they perceive as the dominantproblems and insufficiencies of a specific society will natu¬rally be concerned with the roots, or what they view as theroots of these societal problems.He has neither an acquaintance with feminism or patri¬arch as they actually exist. His idea of feminism seems tobe derived from some Time Magazine from 1970. He ap¬parently has never ready any Feminist Theory — or even,say, seen the latest Critical Inquiry, on writing and SexualDifference. To hear this subject addressed by someone withso little knowledge is like being lectured to by someonewhose idea of history is gained from a third grade textbook.We offer here a general response, from a male perspec¬tive, to Mr. Brooks’ complaints against Feminism. Wespeak not for Feminism, but as men who believe that under¬standing feminist theory is as necessary as understandingother critical theories of society.Feminists are concerned with “lesbianism” because they are also concerned with the issue of psychosexuality, howsociety designs and designates, albeit unselfconsciously,strict definitions of ‘male’ and ‘female’; with “porno¬graphy” because they are concerned with how the mediarepresents women, how it influences and/or reflects thedominant conception of women as sex objects; with “lan¬guage” because they are concerned with linguistic con¬structs, how language reflects and perpetuates the subjuga¬tion of women; and with “sexual violence” (Does Mr.Brooks really want to state that Feminists should not beconcerned with rape and other acts of violence againstwomen?) simply because like most men and women Fe¬minists do not enjoy being beaten, bloodied, and forced toperform sexual acts.What does Mr. Brooks think is the most important issuesof “mainstream ... feminine concerns?” And how does hedefine “feminism”? (He consistently interchanges termssuch as “feminism,” “feminists,” “the women’s move¬ment” and “feminine”.) First, he thinks that the biggestissues facing contemporary women are those which havegrown out of the conflict between the recent influx of a largeproportion of women into the work force and traditionalstructures such as the family and heterosexual monogamy.Or as he puts it: women “want careers and they want ro¬mance.” Second, he claims that there are two “rival philo¬sophies alive in the feminist movement today:” The “bra-burning,” radical types, and those who represent “anorientation toward social interaction, particularly withmen.”Since he obviously believes that Feminists do not knowwhat women want and need, and since he obviously hasn’tbothered to consult Feminist Theory to find out whatthey’re saying, where, then, does he get his evidence? Be¬sides his own personal prejudices and presumptions, Mr.Brooks has gathered most of his evidence from the massmedia, especially women’s magazines and movies.The best example of these misconceptions is his claimthat a recent commercial Hollywood movie, Reds, “illus¬trate the personification of” the two rival Feminist “philo¬sophies.” Mr. Brooks sees the Emma Goldman character(Jean Stapleton) as the personification of the radical femin¬ists: she’s “sharp, tough...half-way between Bella Abzugand Gertrude Stein. She is aggressive, successful and no¬teworthy. But she leads a solitary life.” He sees the LouisBryant character (Diane Keaton) as personifying the otherFeminist faction: she’s “reasonably intelligent” and“...espouses free love and open relationships, but deepdown she needs a very traditional relationship with Reed”(her husband). Although these descriptions accurately por¬tray what actually appeared on screen, Mr. Brooks iswrong when he says that the Emma Goldman character“leads a single and solitary life.” In Reds Emma Goldmanwas presented as a revolutionist whose energy and person¬ality attracted admirers and comrades. Although the movie did show her alone — while in prison and during the RussianRevolution — she was presented as the center of social situ¬ations, a woman with as many friends as ideas.He continues this naive approach in his analysis of themass media's role and influence. He claims that “If youlook at the new women’s magazines which are sprouting uplike crazy these days, you get a pretty good idea that”women “want careers and...romance.” And what does Mr.Brooks have to say about corporate . It is this naive belief inface value, rather than an understanding of the forceswhich motivate the media and the resulting ideological ef¬fects, that allows Mr. Brooks to draw his erroneous conclu¬sions.To assume that Feminism can easily be characterized asconsisting of two “rival philosophies” and that these fac¬tions (if they indeed exist) are personified in commercialHollywood cinema is pure nonsense. To assume thatwomen's magazines and corporate advertising directly re¬flect how women are. and can be used as evidence to discov¬er what women want, is pure conjecture. These media arein the business of producing wants' in women, of makingwomen feel that they need their products: for example, va¬ginal deoderants, the magazine, and the perfect man. Mr.Brooks does not stop to consider the complexity of the issue.He has misconceptions about both the image and the reali¬ty: About the reality he clearly know nothing, and about themyth’ he has no idea of how the images come about — inwhat sense they are the product of a reality he obviouslycannot perceive.Mr. Brooks begins his article with a quotation (from aman) about what women are for men, and then takes this tobe what women are. He than applies this male perspectivein order to discover women s concerns. What he shows us inthe rest of the article is how the supposed women’s con¬cerns concern men — how they fit, or rather, don't fit, intothe capitalist patriachal system. He assumes that womenwant what they are supposed to want, and notes that femin¬ists theory is something other But he fails to see that femin¬ist theory has not ignored these supposed needs of a careerand romance, but is in fact a critique of them.For someone who was incoherently arguing severalweeks ago for some sort of Marxist cultural history, Mr.Brooks fails to bring any of this perspective to this problem.There is no evidence that any real conditions exist. He be¬lieves that somehow, perhaps via magic, and wishful, he¬terosexist thinking and without Feminist input, contem¬porary women can become happy, just like us men. Whathe claims to want is for women to find “new ways to be¬have.” A better way of wording that rhetoric is: that MrBrooks wants women to be monogamous heterosexualbourgeois patriarchal capitalists like himself.* * *Richard Martin is the Film Editor of the Grey City Jour¬nal Ken Wissoker is a staff member of Grey City.The Chicago Maroon—Friday, February 12, 1982—5AUGUST ANA LUTHERAN CHURCHSundays:8:30 am Sermon & Eucharist9:30 am Sunday School &Adult Education10:45 am Sermon & Eucharist6:00 pm Supper5500 South Woo diawn^ic Ky>s1208 E. 53rd* 324-5340 *EXPRt^Valentine’s Day Is For PizzaLovers, Too.SEND YOUR SWEETHEARTAHEART SHAPEDVALENTINE PIZZAORDER NOW!Cooked or Frozen Pick-Up or Delivery KUMS,TH/Msf AROUND TUfc H»LL6C flRCPLACt»NCi-UD6S HASl&tC' A>lt> MtO^CVAL.STORH^LUdC, *•"DR. 'ZAkIVEL KUEld - cmtD ps^CMtAT*^AndTroE ‘PertR. t>fc*sowsKi - ROKAANC6REFRRSW^^rrS INCU)De :COCOA • ^(tShAAltOl43 * CID6A.and cn-HCR nvjng^u-SSAT. FEBRUARY I3S-30 P./A.FREE APMISSlOl'JAT HIULEL * 5^-15 S- LOoOPLAUivlX- CHICAGOHyde Park Managementand the tenants of the 5337 South Hyde Park Building extendtheir heartfelt thanks and appreciation to theChicago Fire Department16th Battalionfor their quick and efficient handling of the fireChicago Police Department21st District.and theU of C Police Departmentfor their immediate concern for our safety and security andaround the clock vigilanceand theSouth East Chicago Commissionfor making their entire staff available to assist us in overcomingall obstacles and/or red tape that we might encounterand toall of our friends and neighbors who offered us their hearts andtheir homes....we love you all.Chicago is truly a city that works and Chicago can be proud thatthe very vital community of Hyde Park is a part of that city.6—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, February 12, 1982GREY CITY JOURNAL2/12/82 14th YEARWould treafon liaue pronounced,For ifthc gods thcrmcliics had fccnc her then,When (he faw Pirrm with malicious ftrokes,Mincing her husbandc* limb,Ir would haue made milch iAnd paflioninthegods. _ _Cor. Looks mv lord if he hath not efiangde his colour,And hath tea *' —Ha™. T’iWill you fee iI tell you they are the ChroniclesAnd briefe abftra&s of the time,After your death I can tell you,Yon w£rc better haue a had Ep; teethThen their ill report while you Iiuc.Cor* My lord,! will vfc them according to their defects.Ham, -Ofarre better man,vfe cuery man after his defer ts,T hen who (hould (cape whipping?Vfe them after your ownc honor and dignitie,The Idle they deforce , the greater credits yours.Ccr. Welcome my good fellowes. * txit. For Hecuba, why wWhat would lie do 5His father mu’rdrcd,wPuld turne all hiStand uilhandlet upWhopluckes me byAn Off-Loop TrdupeSure I fnould takeit,Rediscovers the BardWith thisflaucscflciT reachcrousjaawdy,Why this is brauc, ?hShould like a fealion.Thus Italic iu wordes,-I haue heard that guilBy S jrah -HerndanLast week the New York critics pannedyet one more misdirected director's attemptto interpret "Macbeth." Though the dread¬ful Scot is tried and twisted in Broadway'simagination season after season it begins toseem apparent that he will elude us always,that on opening night the man on stage willnever again be quite the Macbeth we havesometimes dreamt. And Macbeth is notalone in his struggle with the critics, direc¬tors, and audiences. Who has not seen aknock-kneed Hamlet, a ridiculous Lear, apeevish Richard III? The recent productionof "Othello", with James Earl Jones andChristopher Plummer, both fine actors,seemed to me neither good nor bad but non¬descript, pitifully so; it was a bit of deadweight, a corpse one looks at ar.d thinks,"Ah, she was beautiful once."To those of us who have seen Shakespearedone right, that 'once' comes as a stingingdart. No more? Must we forget the lovers,schemers, clowns and spirits, the kings,queens, and magicians? And before we for¬get, must we watch them die on stage, goingthrough the motions, joylessly determinedto arrive at a correct 'interpretation'? No,we insist, not yet, we needn't forget; we stillhave faith that Shakespeare will not go theway of Homer, Virgil, and Chaucer; intocore courses, dim memories, and the dustyheads of old academicians. It is still possibleto rediscover some of that naive joy and en¬thusiasm for theatre that Elizabethan audi¬ences must have found commonplace, andthat is most likely to be found today in frontof a home video game.But how? There are few basic tricks towatching Shakespeare, but two are essen¬tial: you should be at least familiar with thetext, and you must be close to the stage.Anyone who has ever watched a mediocreproduction of "Julius Caesar" from a sec¬ond balcony seat will tell you why. We allknow that first row seats are expensive; goon an off night, though, and you will often beable to find one during the intermission.There, very close to the stage, crane yourneck and follow the movements of some supporting actor whose part is small but, some¬how, special. (The smaller parts are likelyto be less streamlined than the leads nowa¬days, and therefore much fresher.) If youknow some of the words, mouth them alongwith the actors. Go alone so that you won'tbe self-conscious; lean far back in your seatduring the tender moments of the drama tolet the natural rhythm that exists in Shakespearean dialogue roll right over you. Thensit up on the edge of your chair for the fightscenes. You may want to run up onto thestage once or twice; don't, but also don'thesitate to laugh out loud if something espe dally pleases you, or to scream if you'reatraid.This is what it is to be an active audience;it works and it's fun. It may sound crazy butyou do see, occasionally, in flashes or inspasms of pleasure, exactly why Shake¬speare has been so popular for so long. Youtake real joy in seeing the plays, as if theywere old friends come to tell you wonderfulnews. Unfortunately, in a typical large-scale production, the sort of dedicated atten¬tion that is demanded here, attention to theplay as a whole, to the voices, gestures, andweathers of it, is very difficult to maintain.Sixty percent of the time there will be somedrip, or worse, a blow-hard, center stage, in¬sisting you watch only him — and I do meaninsisting, with the wattage of several spot¬lights and the knowledge that he has no com¬petition. Wouldn't it be better if our herosactually earned our attention? Not that theactors playing the big Shakespearean rolesare bad; rather they seem tired, suffering,perhaps from long runs and too many re¬hearsals. All the freshness has gone out oftheir performances, and even front rowseats won t supply a life that is simply lack¬ing, or else horribly stunted by the influenceof a manic director, forever interpreting.Do you begin to fear that even the mosteager of audiences is doomed to frustration?Well lay aside your complaining, there's lifein the old man yet! And in the young men,and women, who have formed a new Chica¬go reperetory company, the Free Shake¬speare Theatre, dedicated to the idea ofbringing Shakespearean performancesback to freedom and fun, spontaneity, wit,and all the wonderful things Elizabethan au¬diences took for granted. Foui*ded by FrankFarrell, the Free Shakespeare was a work¬shop that met weekly, whose members wereto "explore Shakespeare's works throughmovement, voice and improvisation. Actorswould perform monologues and scenes,always stressing the purity and beauty ofthe text, in an attempt to break through thewalls holding modern American actors froma true performance of Shakespeare." Theybegan performances in public last June, at11:00 pm weekends, and eventually whatwas first an ad in the Reader honed itselfinto the tight knit company that continues toperform weekly. Two weeks ago theybrought two of their regular late-nightshows and a new production to the stage at8:00 pm, prime time for the first time, atStory Theatre. The Free Shakespeare ense¬mble pattern their work after the theories ofJohn Russell Brown, author of "Free Shakespeare" and other books on the theatre,and professor of English at the University ofSussex, who argues for a new, uninhibitedway of approaching Shakespeare: Cleopatra and her eunuch crash Hostess Quickly's tea party in Shakespeare on the Spot"I would like to see performances of anactors' company that dispensed with theways of working and thinking that lead to a'production.' I would like them to forget theword and, with it, 'designer,' 'director,' andall those elements of theatre work that areinvolved with long-running, permanent suc¬cesses. They would work for the sake of per¬formances, each modified by its occasionand audience, and by their own developingimagination, understanding and skill. . .Theoriginality did not spring from some newmode of staging or some new dominanttheme, but was the result of an explorationof Shakespeare's plays by actors who livedwith his roles and modified their perfor¬mances from night to night, and acted withgiant imagination and resource for a freeaudience." Their shows are not rehearsed;although certain acting styles are apparent¬ly practiced in workshops and each actorknows his or her part, they actually en¬counter one another as characters only inthe performance of the play. This accountsof course for both the spontaneity and thehonesty of their achievement; nothing hereis done by dull rote. The theatre, both as it isenvisioned by Brown and embodied by themembers of the Free Shakespeare, freelyadmits that it is actor-oriented, that is, it isan ongoing experiment much like a rehears¬al which has as its primary end the discov¬ery of the text by the actor. It is not amoney-making venture, nor does the company hope to take their shows to Broadway;instead it is, if you can imagine, the still-pure realization of a few individuals' shareddream.The actors use the audience as a gauge bywhich to measure the merits and demeritsof a performance and they modify it accord ingly; for the actor, the audience is whatkeeps the play in a constant state of growth.What this means to the members of the audi¬ences themselves is that the play, like a liv¬ing being, is actually responding to them!And, once they realize, even unconsciously,that a performance is not fixed, that theirparticipation is encouraged, they do re¬spond, eagerly and happily. Because, afterall, the plays are entertaining.Currently running at 8:00 pm, Fridaysand Saturdays, 7:00 pm. Sundays, are threepieces, one-half hour each in length. Thefirst is an edited version of "Macbeth", ap¬propriately titled "Macbeth in the Dark":the actors move furtively about in darkclothes on a stage lit only by hand-heldflashlights. The second, "Hamlet on theRun", is an outrageous comedy, and, unbelievably, true to the text. Their humor iscompletely unmerciful, wreaking havoc onthe fragile purity of tragedy, yet one is notoffended.The third is a sketch of what might happenif eight Shakespearean ladies were to get to¬gether for tea. Each character is only ableto speak the lines the Bard gave her, and thewomen are at first embarrassed and uncer¬tain what to say at all, but Cleopatra isfearless and Lady Macbeth keeps thingsrolling along pretty well: in all the party is atriumph. You can stay for improvisations,or go have coffee and come back later forthe 11:00 show (they'll tell you what it is thatnight at the office.) Free ShakespeareTheatre performs at the Story theatre.Piper's Alley, 1608 North Wells. For reser¬vations call 787 5259, further info: 271-6191.All tix $5, except at 11:00 pm, which areS3.The University of ChicagoAlumni AssociationPresentsLIFE AFTER GRADUATION“Working With Languages”an informal discussion of career opportunitiesin foreign languages for interested studentsGuestsRobert MorrisseyInstructor, Department of Romance Languages andLiterature, University of ChicagoPeter NellesOwner, Nelles TranslationsFelix StungeviciusPresident; International Language and Communications CenterPaula WissingChicago Area Program DirectorFormer Instructor of Romance Language, Rosary CollegeBRAND USED OFFICEFURNITUREUsed wood desks from $135Used metal desks from $25Used 6 ft. drafting tables4 drawer files from $508560 S. ChicagoRE 4-2111EQUIPMENT Open Daily 8:30-5Sat. 9:00-3 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 soulWritten and Staged byCharles H. GoodFebrury 5,6,7 & 12,13,148:00 P.M.Reynolds Club Theatre57th & University All tickets: $3(general admission)and $2 (studentsand senior citizens)Call 753-3581 for reservations and infoCourt Studio presentsSanmu^epvsA One-Man Show ^Performed byWilliam KarlblomA m rrrrrni 11111 n\Tonight at 7:15 and 9:30:Donald Sutherland in EYE OF THE NEEDLEThftn at Midnight: Jane Fonda as an intergalactic spare bunny inRoger Vadim’s BARBARELLA (separate admission)Tomorrow at 7:00 and 9:30:Is it a bird? Is it a plane? No, it’s Christopher Reeve inSUPERMAN II (Doc/LSF, in Mandel Hall)Sunday at 7:15:Francois Truffaut’s THE BRIDE WORE BLACKThen at 9:15: Another Truffaut classic MISSISSIPPI MERMAIDAll films in Cobb HallexceptSUPERMAN II IN MANDEL HALL ATT ' I I I I A 9r-*-*/ y T-rmDOC FILMS1 ' » - •' - f •, > ,• - ‘ • ,'Y , r|• * *-* " *•• W 3.M 4W LigT72—FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1982—THE GREY CITY JOURNALFILMEye of the Needle (Richard Mar-quand, 1981) Perhaps the mostimpressive aspect of this espio¬nage film set during WW 11 is thesmooth narrative transition itmakes from a war thriller to anextramarital romance. DonaldSutherland plays a German bornsuper-spy who, after working hisway up the English intelligencenetwork, tries to escape to the fa¬therland with top secret informa¬tion, only to be shipwrecked on anisland off the coast of England.There he finds a seductive andsex starved housewife (the hus¬band's legs were cut off after anautomobile accident), and thewar between the Huns and theAnglo-Saxons is quickly reducedto a war between the sexes. Al¬though the premiss is a rather un¬original, the narrative pace andcinematography make this filminteresting to watch, if not partic¬ularly captivating. With KateNelligan and Ian Bannen. Friday,Feb. 12 at 7:15 and 9:30 pm. DOC.$2. — RMBarbarella (Roger Vadim, 1968)Not quite the cinematic achievement 2001: A Space Odyssey was,Barbarella is full of 1960s music,love and psychedelia, along withcheap science fiction film techniques left over from the '50s. It isnot an X-rated Jane Fonda film(it's more like 'PG'), but it doesfeature Fonda changing minis¬kirts every other minute, andspouting such mind-blowing linesas "Hello'' and "Thank you verymuch." After someone tells herthat he is "the Great Tyrant,"Jane responds with "Well, that'snice." Fonda is given a couple ofgood lines, though, to be fair toher: ones like "Why would any¬one want to invem a weapon?"and, later, "Decrucify the angelor I'll melt your face." DOCshows this every once in a whileto put down Jane Fonda, and Ihave to admit it is a pretty stupidmovie. But with a producer likeDino De Laurentiis, what can youexpect? Recommended for thosewho have nothing else to do onFriday, February 12, at mid¬night. DOC. $2. G.P.Superman II (Richard Lester, 1981)or the return of the Anglo Saxonhero Part 11. Sat., Feb. 13 at 7 and9:30 pm. in Mandell Hall.DOC/LSF. $2. -RMThe Shop Around the Corner (ErnstLubitsch, 1940) Two employees ofa Budapest department store fallin love with each other throughthe mail, anonymously, through anewspaper dating service. At thestore, however, they don't getalong so well. Although the filmhas dark spots as well as funny Moreau in The Bride Wore Blackparts, it turns out in the end to bea warm romantic comedy.Jimmy Stewart's performancehighlights the film — if you likehim, this is your movie. (But benice, now — let other peoplewatch, too.) Saturday, February13, at 8:00 PM. $2. LSF. G.P.To Be or Not To Be (Ernst Lu¬bitsch, 1942) Jack Benny andCarole Lombard turn in quintes¬sential Jack Benny and CaroleLombard performances, butthere are few clever "Lubitschtouches" here. The great Ger¬man director must have concen¬trated more on the script, whichis about a Polish acting troupeworking for the Undergroundduring World War II. The filmmight have too many anti-Nazijokes to be as effective now as itwas in '42, and some people actu¬ally considered one line to be 'inbad taste.' The line is a Gestapoagent's comparing Benny's por¬trayal of Hamlet to the Naziblitzkrieg invasion of Poland. (Hewas right, though — they are bothterrible.) Saturday, February 13at 9:45 PM. $2. LSF. G.P.The Bride Wore Black (FrancoisTruffaut, 1968) Before makingthis film Truffaut had just fin¬ished his book on Hitchcock, andthe influence that that Englishmaster made on this impression¬able director is fairly obvious inthis revenge thriller. JeanneMoreau, looking a little older, yetstill possessing that ambience ofmystique and immoral inno¬cence, was a perfect choice forthe widow who systematically as¬sassinates the five men who acci¬dentally murdered her husbandon their wedding day. Unfortuna¬tely, both the script and the direc¬tion fail to give Moreau the need¬ed support to raise her characterabove the realm of femme fatale.Although Truffaut tries to justifyhertcoldness and add complexityto her character via a few flash¬backs which reveal Moreau'samour fou, the director seemsmore interested in suspense thantragedy, the element that made Hitchcock's penchant for bloodaesthetically justifable. As ahomage film, The Bride WoreBlack is an interesting explora¬tion of Hitchcockian motifs andobsessions. But viewed as an in¬dependent work, the film is tooeasily satisfied with pure sus¬pense, teasing the viewer when itshould be exploring its charac¬ters. Sun., Feb. 14 at 7:15 pm.DOC. $2. —RMMississippi Mermaid (FrancoisTruffaut, 1970) Whereas with hisearlier film The Bride WoreBlack — where this director em¬ployed Hitchcockian motifs withall the grace of a sledgehammer— with Mississippi MermaidTruffaut actually masters Hitch¬cockian themes and translatesthem into his personal cinema ofamour fou. Catherine Deneuveplays a hustler who cons Jean-Paul Belmondo out of both hisfortune and his free will, buteventually revealing herself as acatalyst for the couple's painful,yet blissful, romantic solitude.This is one of the new Truffautfilms which is actually a "star ve¬hicle", and both Denueve's andBelmondo's film personae aremanipulated perfectly by thedirector to accentuate the film'sability to capture the full range ofhuman experience. One need onlyremember Belmondo's Bogart-esque character in Godard's ABout de Souffle ('60) to realizehow perfectly Bogart would havefelt as the lead in MississippiMermaid. In no other film hasTruffaut so brilliantly and grace¬fully combined his fascinationwith American film noirs andHitchcock thriller^ with his per¬sonal obsessions and optimism inromantic love. Highly Recom¬mended. Sun., Feb. 14 at 9:15 pm.DOC. $1.50. -RMObjective Burma! (Raoul Walsh,1945) Errol Flynn is the leader ofa platoon of American paratroop¬ers grimly marching and fightingtheir way through the Burmesejungle in the second world war. Agraphic account of the hardshipsmen face in battle. Monday, Feb.15 at 7:15 p.m. DOC. $1.50. -POThey Died With Their Boots On(Raoul Walsh, 1941) Errol Flynnand Olivia de Havilland are Gen¬eral and Mrs. Custer in thisWarner's biopic in which, withsome creative screenwriting Cus¬ter emerges the hero while sym¬pathy lies with tjie Sioux. Mon¬day, Feb. 15 at 9:45 pm. DOC.$1.50. -POARTArchitecture Sequences Five younyarchitects are represented in"Architecture Sequences," thelatest show at the RenaissanceSociety. Bernard Tschumi, or¬ganizer of the show and professorof architecture at Cooper Union,has selected the architects, notbecause of a common ideology,but because of a common interestin the ide* of "sequence"."T ransformational," "spatial,"and "programmatic" associa¬tions in their works explore thepossibilities of a sequential archi¬tectural narrative. Because theirdrawings, etchings, and modelsare independent of the practicaldemands of architecture, theyare free to pursue a theoreticaldiscourse. Jenney Lowe createsspaces around herself which aremeant to be extensions of her own body. Peter Wilson designs im¬possible fictional spaces in whichthe old interpenetrates the new.In Lorna Mcneur's "Central ParkProject" existing elements aremanipulated to show associationsbetween Central Park andgreater Manhattan Island. Tscu-mi believes that both the modern¬ists and the post-modernists dealexcessively with the formal prob¬lems while they ignore the no¬tions of function and use, and that"sequence" is a way of address¬ing these questions. The show isinteresting because of its theoryrather than its content. The briefglimpse we get of the work ofeach of the architects is disap¬pointing and incomplete. Thefocus of the show is Tscumi's ideaof sequence in architecturerather than the architects them¬selves. Worth seeing, noneth¬eless.—Nik KatzMUSICLisa Waitches, a former Chica¬goan, was a prize winner in theInternational Harpsichord Com¬petition at Bruges, Belgium in1980. On February 13th at 8:00p.m. in the Goodspeed RecitalHall she will give a harpsichordrecital of the following works:Byrd, Pavana and Galiarda in dminor; J.S. Bach, English SuiteNo. 3 in g minor, BWV 808: L.Couperin, Pieces de Clavecin enE majeur; and D. Scarlatti, FourSonatas. She will be performingher Goodspeed Hall program atthe Julliard School where shestudies with Albert Fuller.Ray Still and Adolph Herseth whowill be soloists with the ChicagoSymphony Orchestra programare no strangers to this campus.They have both been heard inthe First Chair Series, and Stillintroduced his Wind Ensemble tothe city in a Mandel Hall Series.Their performance will be onSunday the 14th at 8:00 p.m. inMandel Hall. Ticket informationis available at the Ticket Centerin Reynolds Club.Dancing Barefoot Do you wannadance but are tired of dealingwith noisy, crowded partyscene0 Well, you can dance bare¬foot, twist, turn, and swing thisSaturday night to diverse music.More space than you’ve everhad to open up and let go! IdaNoyes Dance Room, Saturday,February 13 at 9:00 PM. Spon¬ sored by U of C Dance Club.$1.00 MWPhillip Glass Ensemble: Glass, aUC alum and perhaps the mostwidely followed avant garde composer and performer, will be ap¬pearing with his ensempie nextFriday at Mandel Hall. Glass'sprogram includes seleciions fromhis most famous work, EinsteinOn The Beach ("Dance 1" and"Spaceship"), excerpts fromMusic In 12 Parts and selectionsfrom his new album, "Glass¬works," to be released soon onthe CBS label. Other members ofthe ensemble are Jon Gibson,Dora Ohrenstein, Jack Kripl,Kurt Munkacsi, Richard Peckand Michael Riesman. (The con¬cert begins at 8 p.m.) Glass willalso be giving a free lecture inGoodspeed Hall at 4 p.m. nextFriday on his most recent work,Satyagraha, an opera in Sanskrit.Tickets for the concert are stillavailable at University Box Of¬fice, but they're going quickly.THEATERSamuel Pepys: A One-Man ShowCharles H. Good directed thisCourt Studio production of the lifeand thoughts of 17th-centurylecher and author, SamuelPepys, noted commentator onShakespeare. The show runs allweekend with performances at 8p.m. For more information call753-3581.MISCOriental Butterfly pork chops willbe prepared and distributed in afreaky whirlwind of nonchalance,necrophilia and lassitude.Foreign clothing designs will bemodeled and top country singerswill perform their latest torchhits: "half of your love is notwhat I'm after." The next sixhours will be taken up in a lectureby Nikolai Katz on the appropria¬teness of design fulfillment inmodern teaching programs at thekindergarten level. His talk willbe supported by several films,and a large basset hound, Fifi.Keith Fleming and Paul O'Don¬nell will demonstrate safetymethods in case of fire or otheremergency. A Catholic girls'continued on page 4Editor: Richard KayeFilm Editor: Richard MartinBook Editor: John EganTheatre Editor: Keith FlemingJazz Editor: Jim GuentherClassical Music Editor: Robin MitchellFiction and Poetry Editor: Paul O'DonnellProduction: Nadine McGann, David Miller, Max SandersStaff: Mike Alper, Chris Berenyi, Pat Cannon, Sabrina Farber,Pat Finegan, Kira Foster, Susan Franusiak, Nancy Goldstucker,Sarah Herndon, Michael Honigsberg, Alice James, A.A. Kam-bouris, Nikolai Katz, Vincent Michaels, Pat O'Connell, ArturoPerez Reyes, Sharon Peshkin, Geof Potter, Glen Sheffer, DanStetzel, Lonnie Stonitsch, Jeffery Taylor, Jennifer Tompkins, Mi¬chele White, Jacob Wirtschafter, Ken Wissoker, Scott Wolley,Sandy Young.THE GREY CITY JOU R N AL-F R I DAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1982—3p^ D&ulsxh* t\fhammwnvnpresentsA sale on the entireDeutsche Grammophon catalogthru February 28th Saveoff manufacturers suggested list priceThe Cambridge BuskersA LITTLE STREET MUSICBeethoven SymponiesnowNOW AVAILABLE SINGLY! Bishop Brent House5540 S. Woodlawn AvenueThursdays: Holy Eucharist, 12:00noon, at Bond ChapelSundays: Holy Eucharist, 5:30 pmSupper, 6:00 pm-at Bishop Brent HouseSponsored by the Episcopal Church Council at the U. of C.THE 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 752-38004—FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1982-THE GREY CITY JOURNAL 5309 S. Blackstone • 947-0200“Chicago’s best pizza!” — Chicago Magazine, March 1977“The ultimate in pizza!” — New York Times, January 1980OUR FAMOUS STUFFED PIZZA IN THE PANIS NOW AVAILABLE IN HYDE PARKOPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK • 11 AM T012 MIDNIGHTCocktails • Pleasant DiningPick-UpBruckner I mUTHE SYMPHONIESCHICAGO SYMPHONYORCHESTRABARENBOIM —~pr—=i = z.BEETHOVEN SYMPHONIES i|| Bernstein‘Vienna Philharmonh j[ •No. 1 & 4 DG 2 531-308No. 2 DG 2 531-309uW No. 3 DG 2 531-310Jf No. 5 DG 2 531-311continued from page 3choir will perform “Gloria” and“Battle Hymn to the Republic".Mark David will then lead a ques-tion-and-answer session on quan¬tum mechanics. John Assadi willintroduce everyone to his latestfling, Tracy, and sing his latestpoems. Finally, everyone will beable to relax to the groovy soundsof Hyde Park's newest pubescentrock n roll band. O, I almost for¬got! Superdude will be rappingabout his man, Ralph Sampson,as well as treating the audienceto his latest bongo compositions,including “What's Happening?"It's all happening at the 2nd An¬nual Pocket Poetics Happening,this Saturday, the 13th at 8 pm inthe 3rd floor theater of Ida NoyesHall. Please come!Alice Walker One of the country'smost prominent Black Americanpoets and novelists, AliceWalker, will appear on campuson Feb. 16, 17, and 18 as part ofthe Emily Talbot lecture series.Walker will visit with classes anda number of student groups whilehere, and her stay will culminatein a lecture open to the public onFeb. 18, in Swift Hall at 8 p.m.Primarily known as a novelistand short story writer, Walkerhas written three novels (TheThird Life of Grange Copeland,Meridian, and, in the spring, TheColor Purple), two collections ofshort stories (In Love and Trou¬ble, You Can't Keep a GoodWoman Down), and three collec¬tions of poetry (Once, Revolution¬ary Petunias, and Good Night,Willie Lee, I'll See You in theMorning). Walker has edited anumber of volumes, including therecently released anthology ofthe works of Zora Neale Hurston,/ Love Myself When I Am Laugh¬ Alice Walkering...And then Again, When I AmLooking Mean and Impressive,and her stories have been includ¬ed in a number of literary antho¬logies. Walker has also just pub¬lished a collection of feministessays, In Search of Our Mother's Gardens. A native of Eatonton,Georgia, Walker studied at U.Mass, Jackson State, Wellesley,Tougalou, Berkeley, and Yale.Her work has appeared in Ms.,Mother Jones, Black Scholar, andHarper's. —RK GOOD FOODIf you are planning an eveningon the North Side, you mightconsider dinner at the newArnie’s Cafe, 1030 N. State. Thecombination of generally goodfood at reasonable prices andthe proximity to night life (in¬cluding the Carnegie, Esquire,and Sandburg theatres) makesArnie’s Cafe a reasonably gooddeal for students. Though fromthe outside the Cafe looks like aglass jewlry box, inside thehanging plants, white ceilingfans, and bent-wood furniturecreate a comfortably fresh at¬mosphere in which to dine andfrom which to watch passers-by.The major drawback to the Cafeis the limited menu, but it is,after all, not an elagant restau¬rant. There are no appetizersper se, but two could split abowl of chili or hungarian gou¬lash and still have room for din¬ner. The chili ($1.75) is fair,about what you would get atJimmy’s, and the goulash soup($2.95), though reminiscent ofcanned stew, is meaty, with anice caraway flavor. We likedthe goulash and recommend it asa light meal in itself; as anopener it is a bit expensive.Other light meals include spin¬ach and chef salads and a chick¬en salad sandwich (each about$4.00). What we call the maincourses are also the best deals;portions are generous and theyinclude the buffet3/* salad bar.The four offerings are AmiesHamburger ($4.75). BarBQ Ribs($5.25), BarBQ Chicken ($4.50),and Prime Steak Sandwich($6.95). The hamburger, cookedto taste, is served without gar¬nish on an onion bun. The ribs are tender but the sauce issweetish, without a strong bar-beque flavor.The salad bar, included withthese dinners, is fairly stan¬dard, including iceberg lettuce,tomatoes, zucchini, sprouts,olives and pickles, with a choiceof three dressings. However,the best part of the deal is thebuffet which includes hot dishesand garnishes. The onion ringsare lightly fried and delicate,the creamed spinach is inter¬esting and the cheese sauce goeswill with hamburgers. Chili isalso on the buffet; it would be agood idea not to order the moreexpensive “appetizer” whenordering a dinner. The main ad¬vantage of the salad bar3/tbuf-fet, of course, is that servingsare unlimited. The combinationof the large portions of meatand the variety found on thesalad barV4buffet make for afilling satisfying meal. Dessertsat Arnie’s are disappointinglystandard; the coffees and fro¬zen drinks are, however, unusu¬al and subtle. Desserts includesherbet and cheesecake ($1.50each). The coffee is smooth, endeven better in combination withkahlua or amaretto. Althoughthese run a bit high ($2.00 to$2.75), they are served in largebeer steins with lots of whippedcream. The “cafe specialities” *such drinks as a frozen margari-ta or banana daiquiri * are$3.50.A dinner including the salad barand buffet, followed by a cof¬fee. makes a pleasant, satis¬fying meal. If the fare at Arnie’sCafe lacks subtle flavors and avaried menu, it neverthelessoffers good food and prices in agood location.Ann Keniston and James BieryCongratulationsto winners of. v. :/. ‘ft' ,1- ... * ‘*j Fall QuarterJANE MORTON -..••: ' . ' r' •• HENRY MURPHYAWARDS• Scott Dennis■y. v • .% (GALA)* Karen Kapner(Inquiry and other••campus activities); * Bart Lazar. • - (MAB)• Jane Marcus(Shoreland Council, MAB)Applications are available from StudentActivities, Rm. 210 Ida NoyesDeadline for Winter Applications:♦ March 8THE GREY CITY JOU R N AL—F R I DAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1982—5OES nniNU TE ODD JOBA MISC. ERRAND SERVICESprained ankle & the dog should be walked?Last minute baby sitting? House sitting? Plantwatering? Painting or other household handi¬work? Shopping? Downtown errands? Chefservice for a week? You name it.CALL ELLEN 241-6918753-2632 (9-5)Keep Number For Future Reference HYDE PARK UNION CHURCH5600 S. Wood lawn Ave.Church School (all ages) 9:45 a m.Worship 11:00 a.m.Nursery ProvidedW. Kenneth Williams, MinisterCome, Worship, Study, ServeROfifRT SIlVfRflfRGauthor of LORD VALENTINE'S CASTLEBeyond Lord Vilentlnes Castle lie the wonders of Majipoor...MajipooRQTCONICLfSMajipoor,..a world of Shape Shifters and Ghayrogs, Hjortsand. sometimes, humans. Robert Silverberg's wondrousworld of the imagination spans over 8,000 years of thecosmic adventure that is Majipoor. From the days of thefirst human settlers to the rise of the King of Dreams tothe crowning of Lord Valentine ...be prepared to visit"a big planet chockablockpaperback • S12.95 cloth ARBOR HOUSE ^'Washington Post Book World 300 East 44th St.. NY 10017coopHyde Park Coop Your member owned supermarket55th at Lake Park • 667-1444Hours: Mon. - Wed. 9-7:30, Thurs. - Fri. 9-8, Sat. 9-7, Sun. 9-3Our home economist suggests, for aquick and easy breakfast, an orangebanana milkshake. Mix fourtablespoons of frozen orange juice con¬centrate into a mashed banana, beat ina cup of milk.Or get other easy nutritious recipesfrom her at the supermarket. At theCo-op, we care.short co-opopen monday thru Saturday 7 a.m t>> 11 p.m.Sunday and holidays 8 a.m. to 9 p mfloridavine ripetomatoesreg. 1.29 convenience store1514 e. 53rd st.79 Clb. country’s delight thornapple valleysour slicedcreampint bacon1 lb. pkg.reg. 1.8979* l59L dean’s 16 oz.frenchoniondipreg. 99c79*sale prices effective Wednesday 2/10 thru tuesday 1/16/82 Contacts for Sale!What Is A Bargain?The 4 questions most frequently asked about contact lenses are:1. How Much Are Your Lenses72. How Much Are Your Lenses73. How Much Are Your Lenses74. How Much Are Your Lenses7What is really more important, the lowest price, or the best fit¬ting lenses? We think the 4 questions should be:1. Is the doctor really a contact lense specialist7(or is he an eyeglass salesman 9)2. Can I expect professional service and care?(or will I be handled by inept non-professional salespeople9)3. Are the quality of lenses the best available7(or are they off-brands and seconds9)4. The question is, not how much are your lenses, butwill I receive the best care, the best quality and thebest price.We at CONTACT LENSES UNLIMITED meet all the above crite¬ria of CARE, SERVICE, QUALITY AND PRICE.TRY TO BEAT THESE VALUES!SUPER-WET BAUSCH & LOMBFLEXIBLE SOFLENSONLY $29.00 B,N,F,J SERIESSuper-thin highly wet- o.va $33.75^ table lens specifically Basic series of lensesdesigned to correct that Bausch & Lombthose patients who built their reputationwere previous hard on.contact lens failures.• NEW SUPER SOFT HIGH OXYGEN TRANSFER ULTRATHIN - $43.75New super-soft highly oxygen transferrable lenses used to correctthose patients who were previous soft lens failures• SUPER-WET TORIC CORRECTING FOR ASTIGMATISM - $100.00.The same remarkable material as the super-wet flexible lenses but spe¬cifically designed to our exact specifications to correct for difficult as-'tigmatism• SOFT LENSES CORRECTING FOB ASTIGMATISM (TORIC) - *160.00It you have ever been told that you couldn't wear soft lens due to astig¬matism now you probably can.• EXTENDED WEAR LENSES - $ 160.00The ones you sleep with, no more cleaning, sterilizing nightly, no moredaily Insertation and Removal, wake up in the morning and seeLimit 1 pair per patient.Professional Fee: $30.00(includes - Eye Examination, Training, Wearing Instructions and Carrying Case)OUR PROMISE TO YOU:If you aren't pleased with your lenses after 60 days, cost of the lenses will be re¬funded All contact lens fitting done by our Contact Lens Specialists,Dr S C. Fostiak, Optometrist & Assoc.We can replace your lost or broken lenses in 4 hours or less!IF YOU WANT THE BEST COME TO THE BEST1CONTACT LENSES UNLIMITED1724 Sherman Ave., Evanston, IL 60201 2566 N. Clark St„ Chicago, IL 61*614(above County Seat)864-4441 880-5400— —6—FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1982—THE GREY CITY JOURNALI AsSymbolThis Great Symbol: Pierre de Coubertin andthe Origins of the Modern Olympic Gamesby John MacaloonUniversity of Chicago PressBy Vincent MichaelThere is something about a college educa¬tion at the University of Chicago —some¬thing located amidst Great Books, CommonCores, Gothic anachronisms and the perardua road to knowledge — that causes oneto relish books which employ and encom¬pass a variety of academic "disciplines.” Itis a feeling of being "in the discourse" withminds that have been intellectually warpedthe same way as your own. I experiencedthis curious delight reading John Maca-loon's This Great Symbol• Pierre de Cou¬bertin and the Origins of the Modern Olym¬pic Games.Macaloon is on the taculty in the Divisionof the Social Sciences and on the Committeeon Social Thought, so his approach, anamalgam of social science perspectives,comes as no surprise. Macaloon deftly com¬bines psvchobiography, social history, cul¬tural anthropology, and ultimately culturalhermeneutics in his investigation of Couber-tin's character development and his legacy,the Olympic Games which have become inMacaloon's words "the dramatic celebra¬tion of world-historical process." Macaloonleaves the analysis of the modern spectaclefor a subsequent volume. The task of thisbook is historical.Macaloon is self conscious about the po¬verty of the history found in many anthropological and sociological tracts. But there isno deficiency here; it is a very scholarlywork from a historian's standpoint. Hetraces Coubertin's genealogy back to the14th century, setting the Baron within theFrench aristocratic traditions of prouesse("deeds which bring honneur and demon¬strate vertu") and patronage ("organizedacts of prouesse in which the lower ordersserve as direct objects"), all of which is afancy way of saying glory and charity. Hint¬ing that the Olympic Games are a uniquehistorical realization of these ideals, Maca¬loon goes on to explore Coubertin's child¬hood development, relying largely on an au¬tobiographical novel that Coubertin wrote in1899.Reading the "autobiographic a clef" lib¬erally, Macaloon isolates several importantpsychodynamic factors. A series of conflictswith Coubertin's parents concerning "one oranother of the domestic, social, political,and religious buttresses" of their worldgives young Pierre the spirit of a raffle, arepublican nobleman. Staying largely with¬in the aristocratic tradition, this mild rebel¬liousness allowed Coubertin to connect theold with the new; to unite the classical vi-sions of a dying class with the burgeoningmodernisms of industrial capitalism.Returning to history after his excursioninto psychobiography (which is utilized tofill in the gaps in the historical sources),Macaloon describes the Baron's intellectualwanderings in the field of education. In¬spired by a vision in the chapel of Rugby John MacaloonSchool in England, Coubertin seeks to reform education in his homeland in line withthe ideals of Thomas Arnold, whose beliefsare, Malcaloon shows, rather selectively in¬terpreted by the Frenchman. The basicidea! which Coubertin derived from Arnoldis that of moral education, as opposed to ac¬ademic instruction.Most important to Coubertin is the role ofathletic education, which becomes his mis¬sion in France as he becomes involved withvarious aristocratic reformers of the latenineteenth century. In Coubertin's view,athletics are important for building charac¬ter. Macaloon quotes Coubertin:"Character is not formed by the mind, butprimarily by the body. The men of antiquityknew this..." What made the Baron's per¬ception unique was his perception of nation¬al character, born of his childhood love forhis country and tempered by France's polit¬ical instability. His resultant patriotism wasthus distinct from militant nationalism. Heunited the ideas of physical prowess and pa¬triotism without adding a hatred for thingsforeign and it is this, Macaloon insists, thatformed the foundation of the Olympic Idea.All that remained was for Coubertin toadd the late nineteenth century love ofthings classical, especially Hellenic, to hisdream of moral education (the realization ofwhich was thwarted by circumstances).Travels to the United States to see the Co¬lumbian Exposition in Chicago and then tothe Paris Exposition gave Coubertin an insight into expositions which together "af¬forded mass opportunities for generatingstereotypes, images, and stories about rivalpeoples." At this stage, Macaloon points outthat the Olympic idea itself was not original. What is unique is this particular socio-his-torical individual.It is around this point in the book that Ma¬caloon's primary interest, symbolic anthro¬pology (cultural hermeneutics) begins tosurface more and more. What made Coubertin's vision unique, in addition to his pre¬formed beliefs, was "a taste for symbols(that) appears in dislocated men." Whatmade the Olympics an appropriate ritual fortwo societies separated by 1500 years of his¬tory was (and is) that "Competitioi# is thelaw and root paradigm of modern, iiyustri-al, class-stratified society (as well as 5thcentury urban Greek life), and it Is hardlysurprising, in this added respect, that com¬petitive sport should should emerge andprosper in such a sociocultural context."Macaloon then describes the "Indescribable Spectacle" of the first Games at Athensin 1896. He finds the Games a spectacle ofcontrast; a menagerie of languages, customs, and sports bedecked ancient formsand modern competition. The Games werealso a site for a "spate of popular ethno¬graphy and national character reckoning"which continues to characterized them evennow. As the nature of the great symbol becomes more clear, the history of the periodand the life of Coubertin fade.Pushed out of the limelight by the Greekorganizers, Coubertin only later gains fameas "le Renovateur" as the Games become agoing cultural concern in the twentieth century. It bothered me somewhat that Macaloon had set up an elaborate and scholarlyhistorical background to the Games andCoubertin only to leave their post-1896 histo¬ry in outline. My historical leanings wereperhaps lulled by his narrative abilities.Then again, Macaloon's express purpose isbasically anthropological, and once thesymbol was born, history had expended itsutility. Still, I would have enjoyed learningmore about the failure of the 1900 and 1904Games which Macaloon only alludes to.It is hard, however, to feel slighted by abook that offers such a variety of insightsand interpretations. Macaloon's narrativecarefully and artfully sets up the social, his¬torical, and ideological foundations of theGames. The book is eminently readable,and his style as well as his history mightwell be imitated by many historians. It isneither deterministic nor too loosely inter¬pretive. Individuals do not make history, asthe subject might suggest, nor does historycreate persons. It is a dialectical process, adialogue between humankind and history,between structure and event, whose mean¬ing emerges in the ritual and symbol of theOlympic Games"Our world seems to be shrinking and ex¬panding simultaneously. This is the trueworld historical process, a doubly dialectical process, and the Olympic Games haveemerged as its privileged celebration. Con¬sequently, it is not surprising that the an¬swer to the question of whether the OlympicGames unite men, as Coubertin thought, ordivide them, as Maurras insisted, has beenfrom the very first that they do both."For Macaloon, the Olympics are an arena of myth, a spectacle which affords one and ahalf billion people the opportunity to createmeaning, to dramatize conflict. It is a wayfor the world to tell itself stories about it¬self.But these issues, while treated in thisbook, are being saved for full exploration ina subsequent work, according to Macaloon.It is these ideas, however, that motivatedMacaloon's interest in the subject and ledhim to investigate the origins of the Olympics. And so you probably shouldn't readthis book if you're interested in Macaloon'sinterpretation of the Olympics as a modernspectacle. What makes the book unique andinteresting is the way it creatively and in¬telligently casts this awesome cultural arti¬fact in a pivotal historical period.What makes* the historical period interesting in turn, is that it is the transitionalepoch between the traditional and the mod¬ern, between the rural and urban, theagrarian and industrial, the kingdom andthe modern nation state. Morever, it is theperiod in which the moqern social scienceswere founded. Coubertin is a contemporaryof Durkheim. The ideologies which formaround Coubertin inform many of the concepts which we currently use to interpretour experience and society."The fundamental question of modern so¬cial science, and of anthropology in particular, may be stated quite succinctly: is theresuch s thing as Man or are there only men?One and a half billion men and women nowpose themselves the very same questionduring the Olympic Games. The modern so¬cial sciences and the Olympic Games wereborn of the same historical era; it is hardlysurprising that their root problematics areidentical. In this volume I have used socialscientific concepts to illuminate the originsof the Olympic Games. Perhaps now it is evident that Olympic history illuminates theorigins of modern social science."So we come full circle. Macaloon's concepts and methods are utilized to explore anevent which has grown with those conceptsand methods. The Games are an arena ofcultural performance and interpretation; sotoo is Macaloon's book, and indeed, the discourse he writes within. I would add yet an¬other artifact. Macaloon describes how Cou¬bertin tried to institute pedagogical idealslike those in England and the United States.It is hardly surprising that our fair institution, founded in 1892 amidst a cultural exposition (employing ideals of education not unlike the Europeans) should grow into theartifact it has, fostering various movementsin social scienqe (including the Committeeon Social Thoudht).Perhaps the (curious delight which ani¬mated me while reading this book is akin tothe problem of the Olympics; the simultaneous feeling of being "in" a privileged discourse, and that this discourse encompassesvast sums of human experience. It is notunique to the U of C, yet the U of C sharesthe history. Art does not imitate life, nordoes life imitate art. Rather, they are engaged in a dialogue, and the realm of theirdisclosure is an arena of meaning.THE GREY CITY JOU R N AL—F R I DAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1982—7on 55thCLEARANCE SALEV3 to V2 and more(many items below cost){o&a/k - - 4/s/w44^4- '£$oce44&M€4^^€^€4 <Z 7Z</ K^€WtPM4 .not all styles in alt sizesall sales finalthe Hyde Park Shopping Center \PRE-LAW MEETING“LIFE AS A LAW STUDENT”Panel discussion by U. of C.graduates now in Law SchoolWednesday, February 173:30 pmSocial Science 122Sponsored by Office of Dean of Students in the CollegeRockefellerChapel9 am.Ecumenical Serviceof Holy Communion10 a.m.Discussion Class"Religion and AmericanPublic Life"11 a.m.Paul Ricoeurlohn Nuveeo Professor in the Divinity School"The Last Cry of jesus" Planning a spring break fling inFlorida? Then make plans to live it upinside the Walt Disney World MagicKingdom! There, you’ll find more than 40exciting attractions ... and, we’re ineasy reach of the surf and sand of yourfavorite Florida beaches!This spring is an especially good timeto “break down" to Disney, duringTencennial-the Walt Disney World 10thbirthday celebration ... highlighted bythe sensational Tencennial Parade, andall-new musical extravaganzas.So, give yourself a break ... a springbreak to remember - inside the MagicKingdom of Walt Disney World!$13 — ADMISSION AND UNLIMITED USE OF ALLATTRACTIONS (Except Shootin Gallery)SPECIAL EXTENDED SPRING HOURSMarch 7-12: 9 a.m.-9 p.m.March 13 - April 1: 9 a m -10 p.m.Walt ^isney World.JACKSONVtlUDocuments on El SalvadorBy John ConlonEl Salvador: Central America in the NewCold WarEdited by Marvin E. Gettleman,Patric Lacefield, Louis Menashe,iDavid Mermelstein, and Ronald RadoshGrove PressA few weeks ago, President Reagan, asrequired by law, certified that the junta inEl Salvador was making a "concerted ef¬fort" to control human rights violations inEl Salvador (NYT 1/29/82). At the sametime, however, we've read about massacresby the army in Morazan Province and else¬where (NYT 1/28/82, 2/1/82), and seen thevictims of the Salvadoran army on T.V.What should we believe?In El Salvador: Central America in theNew Cold War, the editors warn us that,having put the book together for a specificpurpose, "to prevent U.S. power from beingenlisted on the side of an oppressive antipo-pular force in El Salvador," they can't pre¬tend to be impartial. Nevertheless, theirbook is more than just empty rhetoric. It's athoughtful, well constructed documentaryhistory of the crisis in El Salvador — per¬haps the best single source of information onEl Salvador in print today.Moving systematically from the ReaganAdministration's view of communism andthe Third World, through the historicalbackground of the crisis, the crisis today,and U.S. involvement, to the larger CentralAmerican context, this book provides an un¬usually broad and in-depth perspective. Thedocuments included range from the StateDepartment's White Paper on El Salvadorand Jeane Kirkpatrick's "Dictatorships andDouble Standards," to#an interview withformer ambassador Robert E. White andthe Platform of the Democratic Revolution¬ary Front.In a book like this, the documents tend tospeak for themselves. A report to congress,for example, describes the attitude of cur¬rent junta member Antonio Morales Ehrlichtowards the military in El Salvador."He (Erlich) says that the military is apartner in the reform process, despite its oc¬casional mistakes from a human rightspoint of view. He says that changes havebeen made in an effort to exert greater con¬trol over the military, but that those couldnot be made public for these reasons: (1)any military official publicly denounced forcommitting atrocities would be killed by theleft; (2) it is not proper for one partner ingovernment to condemn the actions of an¬other partner; and (3) anything which pub¬licly embarrasses the military provides abenefit to the Marxists.Therefore, instead of putting the militaryoutlaws on trial, the worst of them havebeen assigned to desk jobs or given scholar¬ships to study abroad."As we work our way through this book, apicture starts to emerge of an El Salvadorvastly different from the one described bythis or the preceding administration. Webegin to see an indigenous opposition move¬ment which has grown up through years ofpolitical work with the masses of peasants,and one which the people have learned totrust and respect. We also see a brutal andrepressive army, which works in coopera¬tion with the paramilitary death squads to protect the interests of a small wealthy oli¬garchy, and a junta which is unwilling toadmit that it has no control over what goeson in the countryside. Finally, we see an ad-Three Guerilleros from Guazapa Ridgecombat zone, October, 1980Col. Eugenio Vides Casanova, Director Gen¬eral of the National Guard, and Col. AdolfoCastillo minisTration (ours) which is not ashamed tohard sell shaky evidence of Cuban intervention in an attempt to confuse the public for afew months, while more arms are shippeddown to kill people in El Salvador.In situations like this one, the burden of proof always seems to lie with the critics ofintervention. It is therefore fortunate that abook like this, which brings together suchvaried sources, is available to people wish¬ing to know more about the crisis which isnow unfolding in El Salvador.Katherine Hepburn and Jane Fonda in On Golden PondWalden Pond It's NotYoung Women fighting with guerrilleros,October, 1980 By Pat O'Connell)On Golden Pond, Mark Rydell's screenadaptation of Ernest Thompson's play, hasbeen frosted with more than just a littlehype. Katherine Hepburn and Henry Fonda,two of America's best actors, meet and acttogether for the first time. Henry Fonda anddaughter Jane are together for the firsttime. The three together have been actingfor over a hundred years and have receivedfive academy awards between them. Truly,a publicist's dream.More than anything else, On Golden Pondis about growing up and growing old. Itcenters around Norman Thayer Jr. (HenryFonda), his wife Ethel (Katherine Hepburn)and their estranged daughter Chelsea (JaneFonda). Norman and Ethel are old, andnearly everything about them (save forEthel's youthful spirit and kinetic personali¬ty) is old; their summer cottage, theircracked and yellowed Parchisi board, theirweathered clothing, even their names (haveyou ever known an "Ethel" in her twen¬ties?) are old. Norman reaches his eightiethbirthday and is obsessed with the idea ofdying. He won't start reading a new book,fearing that he'll be dead before he has achance to finish it. All around him he seesuncomfortable reminders of aging anddeath; the house falling apart, a dead loonfished from the water, and the death of an¬other summer resident of Golden pond (anold lesbian who "expired").The realization that he, too, will die soonhas turned Norman into a crotchety, impa¬tient, "old poop." His bitterness is humor¬ ous though. Telling his wife that they are notmiddle-aged he says "middle age means themiddle, Ethel...people don't live to be 150."Ethel is Norman's opposite. Full of energyand cheer, always in control, it is she whointervenes between Norman and Chelsea.There is a formality between Norman andhis daughter, and their relationship is not atall as it should be. Chelsea addresses her fa¬ther as "Norman" and Norman doesn't ad¬dress her at all (he's never quite forgivenher for not being born a boy).When Chelsea returns to Golden pond tocelebrate Norman's eightieth birthday, shebrings with her her smug new boyfriendBill, (Dabney Coleman), looking remark¬ably like a G.l. Joe doll, and his obstinate,pubescent son Billy (Doug McKeon). WhenChelsea and Bill leave on a trip to Europe,Billy and quite a few generation gaps areleft behind with Norman and Ethel.Predictably, Billy becomes the son to Nor¬man that Chelsea never could have been,and Chelsea and Norman resolve their dif¬ferences. While the plot and the relation¬ships of the charactures in Golden Pond arepredictable, Rydell never backslides intoTV-movie-type melodramatic syrup. Thecharacter conflicts are believable, andthere's been no effort made to wrench yourguts or tear your eyes.Ernest Thompson should be credited withsuccessfully adapting his play to the screen.He's changed very little, restricting himselfto moving some of the action outdoors. Hisdialogue retains its humor, fresh qualityand simplicity.EVERYTHING INPRINTINGThe Southside's largest and mostgomplete print shop letterpressand offset plus art departmentfor design and layout assistancePHOTO COMPOSITIONOVER 100 TYPESTYLESFOR BROCHURES, BOOKSALL YOUR PRINTING NEEDS!“Calling Card to Catalog . . .We Print Them All"HOT STAMPING • EMBOSSINGSaddle and Perfect BindingThe Bankers Print, Inc.5832 So. Green • HU 7-3142m % marian realty,inc.mREALTORStudio and 1 BedroomApartments Available— Students Welcome —On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-5400 DR. M.R. MASLOV 3000 MAGAZINESGREETING CARDSOptometrist CIGARETTES/CANDY• Eye Examinations• FashionEyewear• All Types ofContact Lenses HOT VIDEO GAMESPOSTERS/BUTTONS*Ask oboutour annualservice agreement. the best magazine storesLOCATED IN THE since 196551st & LAKE PARK main officeRANDOLPH & MICHIGANCLARK & DIVERSEYBROADWAY & DEVONHYDE PARKSHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th 363-6100 most open to 12 pmROBERT M. KATZMANmm imbbshbimumm g nn m % 684-5100 Droprteto:THE GREY CITY JOURNAL—FR IDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1982—9The Avant-GardeJohn Zorn: Pool; Hockey (Parachute Re¬cords 011/12) — This album best expressesthe mood and tenor of nth week at the U. ofC. The music is pure cacophony, but it isalso good improvisation. It even makes useof duck calls and other esoteric instruments,and is very likely to give a headache to allbut a lucky few (who happen to be deaf).What it has to do with the sports of pool andhockey is beyond me. Still, these two compo¬sitions by John Zorn and his Theater of Mu¬sical Optics have their merits as music, andanyone who enjoys strange improvisationswill be very satisfied with these two works. By David Blair ToubJohn Adams: Shaker Loops; PhrygianGates (1750 Arch Records #1784) — This isthe most noteworthy new music release ofthe past year, mainly because it signals apossible new direction for minimalistmusic, that being a fusion of minimalismwith older classical forms, much in the wayPhilip Glass has blended old operatic trade¬marks with repetitive structures in his re¬cent Satyagraha. Shaker Loops, for stringedinstruments, is a fine example of how beau¬tiful contemporary music can be if it's notclouded by too much academic nonsense.Yet, I feel it is a bit overrated, since thereare similar works by composers like Rich¬ard Munson that affect me even more. Non¬etheless, Shaker Loops, and Adams' pianowork Phrygian Gates are welcome exten¬sions of the significant contributions ofSteve Reich, Phil Glass, La Monte Young,/»ai rtf KoireRobert Ashley: Perfect Lives (PrivateParts) — Episode Three, The Lessons(Lovely Records) — This latest install¬ment on Lovely Music of Ashley's opera in7 episodes (3 others have already been re¬leased), is by far the best. If anything, itcombines the best attributes of the earliersections of Private Parts, since it is veryrhythmic, melodious, surreal, and hypnotic.Robert Ashley's vocals are evenly blendedand mixed with the chanting of Jill Kroesenand David Van Tiegbem (of Steve Reich andMusicians), over a rhythmic nucleus that in¬cludes electronics and a prepared piano.What l like best about this episode is thatthere is more going on in the piece than justAshley's monotone reading of his own eclec¬tic texts. The video component of PrivateParts should be incorporated with the re¬cordings and sold as a video disc; after all,it is supposed to be an opera for television.Toshi Tsuchitori: Breath (DYM Records#002) — Speaking of Meredith Monk, thiscomposter-vocalist seems intent on outdo¬ing her strange vocalizing. What he doeswith his voice is amazing; it is something ofa hybrid between the works of Monk, JoanLa Barbara, and the Inuit Tribe of NorthernCanada. It even led one irate listener to callup WHPK-FM and ask "What is this, somekind of -&%$ Buddhist temple?" A very hyp¬notic album — full of sustained harmonicsand other weird (though pleasant) vocal ef¬fects.Alvin Lucier: / am sitting in a room...(Lovely Music #VR 1013) — This is a new ex¬panded recording of Lucier's superlativecomposition which is totally based on al¬most inaudible room resonances. A triumphof minimalism, this is a really fine piece ofmusic, not unlike my favorite piece by thesame composer, Music on a Long Thin Wire.The earlier recording (from the defunctSource Magazine) was not long enough forthe listener to fully appreciate the evolutionof the repetitive room resonances in thispiece. One of the best releases of 1981 forsure.omner rpChartwell House& all condimentsTossed Saladwith dressing Saturdays5:30 - 10pm6 oz Butt SteakLobster TailTossed Saladwith dressing$79510—FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1982-THE GREY CITY JOURNALHour's Top TenMeredith Monk: Dolmen Music (ECM1-1197) — One side of this new release is de¬voted to selections from Monk's opera Edu¬cation of the Girlchild, and these selectionsvary in quality. The best thing on this albumis her Dolmen Music. Like her earlier workTablet, Dolmen Music is written for severalsingers trained in Meredith Monk's eclecticvocal style. Unlike much of her earlierwork, this piece dispenses with the howlipgand screaming (beautiful though it is) thatshe does so well, and instead the vocal styleis less disruptive, with several longish vocallines. There are moments of great beautyand emotion, particularly in the sectionscored for women's voices and cello, whichconsists of a repetitive melody over the cellist's cycle of fifths. All in all, a delightfulavant-garde album — I can't wait to hearmore. Laurie Anderson: 0 Superman; Walk theDog (One Ten Records #OT-005) — Walk theDog is only fair; what impresses most isLaurie's O Superman, which is an excerptfrom her mammoth composition The UnitedStates. Currently a top item over in Britain,this record displays Laurie Anderson on vo¬coder and violin in a pleasant and rhythmicvocal work. I do not think it deserves all theglowing praise it's been getting, for two rea¬sons: first, without the video performancethat accompanies O Superman it has lessmeaning and just comes across as a pleas¬ant tune; second, O Superman should not beheard by itself, but rather as a small part ofthe entire The United States. I wish One TenRecords would produce a commercial re¬cording of The United States since it is a sig¬nificant 20th-century masterpiece. The 45-rpm record of O Superman is fine, but it onlyleaves one wanting more.Philip Glass: Modern Love Waltz (None¬such D 79011) — On this digital album ofmodern waltzes, the only avant-garde workis the Glass piece (the other waltzes by com¬posers such as Milton Babbitt and his ilk areterribly academic), and it is perhaps thebest composition on this interesting record,the brainchild of musician Robert Moran.Glass' Waltz is a short work for piano, mar¬velously performed by Alan Feinberg, thatmakes use of the repetitive structures thatare typical of his recent works. What distin¬guishes this piece from Glass' other master¬pieces is its charm; it is a very clever waltzwith a few sarcastic touches thrown in. I amanxious to hear the chamber version of thiswork, soon to be recorded by the Da CapoChamber Players on CRI. George Lewis: Chicago Slow Dance (LovelyMusic #LML 1101) — George Lewis hasagain proven that his music cannot be clas¬sified, perhaps following the advice ofChuang-Tzu. However, with the lone excep¬tion of an extended jazzy sax solo, this isavant-garde classical through and through.It is even repetitive, owing something toTerry Riley in its beginning moments. I'mimpressed — Lewis, who has been associat¬ed with everything and everyone from theAACM to the Kitchen Center in NYC, hasbrought together a fine ensemble of classi¬cal and jazz musicians like Douglas Ewartand David Rosenbloom to perform an in¬spired work of new music.David Moss: Terrain (Cornpride Records#007) — Moss plays everything from Bertoiasound sculptures to rocks to a koriko (what¬ever that is). The best thing about this work,from an avant-garde standpoint, is the re¬petitive vocals that are electronically mani¬pulated by Moss. Some of it sounds just likea toilet flushing. Besides being interesting,it can be quite meditative.The Textbook DepartmentThe University of Chicago Bookstore970 East 58th StreetTHE £ aidDon’t delay!Buy the books you stillneed for WinterQuarter now.Friday 19 February is thelast day all winter textswill be available. Second-YearCollege Students,Transfer Students, andGraduate Students-At-Largewishing to enter theASHUM Program in 1982-83should file applicationsby March 1.The Program in The Liberal Arts and Sciences Basic to HumanBiology and Medicine. (ASHUM) is a four-year program leading toan M.S. in Human Biology. In cooperation with the Committee onPublic Policy Studies and the School of Social Service Administra¬tion, ASHUM also offers a major in Human Biology to studentspursuing an M.A. in Public Policy Studies or Social Service Admin¬istrationFor information, please call 3-4953,or drop by the ASHUM Office in theHarper East Tower, Room 587.THE GREY CITY JOU R N AL—F R I DAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1982—11V .-'V.gigj.,a,*Old lady; * *Lb::a|feb;^at;ap|r^ -from ^ (and often even~h^pos^$hee;cti;l^|%^^7#eit^nal -acknowlecigethat traditional mar,r-omantio"failure Jokes about 'the*■ 3 gif m v. | •*"t inyta:verns, she is.a:,nag, an■?._• «.-. ■■ .5 -W.;.afV.vV T.}«■>."• ■' '•■.'■•. {^: '■ Jmost of these" men woula readilyit ^TSii rt frnhh cov rdnH! mtfih o\/£»r)'y3£a*v2 ^PgSSft'rnfv* ■this is lackluster or nonexistent) they have| nothing in common with their ''better[ halves". It scarcely seems necessary toI fully aissect this diseased institution, but lI do think the tragically limiting roles as■'. :'. apfe1 Traditional Marriage. Many of the gay peoL pie I've knowhtiave learned it's,not, only\ possible, but muc-h more satisfying to vary'ode's role in a relationship Of course, on"t both partners'be absot exactly alike? But 1 Come toBy Keith Flemingall ex-■written a.bo.ut how pr . ding for a womann simply to introduce money at all into romancecove, like art, flowers only m the most com• -■ 'r'^si wMointment'v K mms:StudenAll members and observers arecordially in vited to attend.-S'-v ‘ .-vV'HTVf?- *> &, *W%t1tuart 10T*’-"-; :nJf ‘K“"!12—FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 12,(1982—THE GREY CITY JOURNALS‘I shouldn't Tike Bob Dylan — this vvas myfirst experience with feminist thinking Iwas M agony I'd iust turnea 13 and mywhole future stooc condemned I'd spent ayear-perfecting m, a~d was .no.w waiting to be 1.8 so 1 -could hitch toGreenwich Village and (just as Dylan haddone) walk the streets in a coat that was toosmall for me anda.^M^ttH ■i&gi*el-,vocptT.But now the older M&M Summed in school— people who had already ntox cated mewith their exot me Maoism —h;ad denounced Dylan, my idol, because hesometimes referred .to women in Its songsb&%\r « .' - {_.\ V -r? ,'And of course Dylan is a horrible sexistpig, but the point is, then at 13, in my innocence, Dylan embodied for me a model ofBohemian freedom and'dedication td art. Ifit could have been explained to me thatIan, while possibly a talented-artist andseeing women as inferior, almost childish,■'vm-v-m;; mu3'- mms3-3;;': 3c-: Mre sbeings, I woAuld have accepted the ide.a-.. 3:0—,iable'' yet powerful .prbhjbitioh. ItfM loH rv^c \A/ith tho iino'ac inocc nl e ’1 *■3m My experience might be a peculiar exampie, but it is this-same.aura of uneasiness —a'njf- above all — urmaturainess, Jsense, still haunts the idea of equality between the sexe.s in many people's minds.Sexual equality needs a new image. Thebest thing.it has going for it is it's more funWhat couici be better than a relationship inwhich, in addition to love, you share the confessiona ods, the wise¬cracking (but always* respectful) shoptalkof colleagues, the playfulness of children —and most of all — the drama and adventuredf finally do ng what Rimbaud dreamed ofin Une Saison En Enter: reinventing love?it seems clear Jhat love needs to be rein¬vented, for nothing could, be less romanticthan the traditional relationship. The wholething - from iust ' taking a girl out" to setfling down with her — is like a bad play inwhich the characters are never fully developed.. However harmless and just plain nicea guy might thin* * s to regularly pay forhis girlfriend's dinner and'theatre, he is infact e- r,?ie threads of would .vvver • • oiut:oo is much too5fat | Human t*| nos seem *o have a deep-"aryntr ams, -jffjj f^"-#W|$e^Ion is whv nottake-turns? * *. .' - a is. ■ ■ ■come-s possible: the man can act silly whileI no, Jr the womancan comfort the man when a gunshot DoomsOf fVBtC&fi act su'kyfu cur or ; jm into a bar andcrouu m all around. The poss or rather, double^-wt *i is fc imiiHiiwifir of-Ami 'opposite sex , -A steady cn || ■ {I Tess on^.aWtoitipn to"laLh toftor hos cone wonders for ai, in fact, has ft¥#r:Aft Hil creat romances ofP • pallrir ffmftto cri ate the swirl-■, ch height-tyv@?T;S" ;-i ■■■•-.. i . ■ •in Aida). Or he would'have to be physicallyseparated from his loved one by the law orhis father £ilfc£ &$s Grteux m Manon Le1-$ca.ut). A woman needed tragically badhealth. Only then could she (like Mimi in LaBoheme) ms4 Ij ‘hat wld appresfiatlon©fll#**in her lover. Of course a couldalways resort to the (ultimately demeaning) practice of feminine wiles and intrigue*the slave's art of engendering jealousy anddesire in her maMer. More practically, inreal life marriage has often spelled the end .of romance. It's very difficult-to be an excit¬ing housewife.-Stripped of her mobility, thezest that comes from mixing out in theworld, the housp-wiff- can't hope to be a veryalluring figure. It is only during courtship —when she lives apart from her lover andhasn't consented to "give" herself to him —that she has about her the illusion of inde¬pendence.But now sexual equality has brought ro¬mance into the home. A woman's divided al¬legiance to love and work now creates all 'S i.VC-Ai -vyCij* *1 ‘vt >♦ f r ^ r \ Vi•I » •* i \ /• : | .provided b,y adultery and consumption. Andit's much more noble. What could be morecaptivating than a woman who tells you:"I'd love to go with you tomorrow, but,I'mafraid I'm off to 'Frisco for a two week business trip"? Or what could be more innocent¬ly tragic than: "Darling, you know I loveyou, but Houston has such great engineeringprospects"? \y v''*If all this sounds too feverish and melo¬dramatic, there's still the dignity of carry¬ing on an unfettered relationship. As a linemy favorite sonq has it (written by an anon-monk) : "Pleased withf,rs ttie 3ther; Thus "I f V, v,■ 7 O *x ’*f \ * •'■-r ' x ^VI I -J , „ IX j.--*•-* t .T*. z\ . J^ is/\-v v7,'fx c- f- ;/' f ^4? (:i sj v v. , N /'/ j *1bjTV t t <5537own art, Neither h.nders the other;live ever Without tedium and envyIhWMimotel idt mPoor need not applyThe board of trustees of WesleyanUniversity voted unanimously lastweekend to reject some students who couldnot afford to pay full tuition.The decision which came in response toproposed cuts in federal student aidprograms ends an aid-blind policy now inuse at most other private colleges anduniversities.Wesleyan’s president Colin G. Campbellsaid that the move was “a workableaccommodation to an unfortunatesituation,” according to an article in theFeb. 8 New York Times. The new systemwill go into effect with the 1982-83 schoolyear. Wesleyan announced that it will firstselect student applicants of sufficientacademic standards; then if the studentshave financial needs totaling more than 10percent of the University’s educational and general expenditure budget, students whoare on the waiting list who did not need aidwill be picked instead of students who willrequire assistance. Tuition, room, andboard at Wesleyan this year totalled$10,900.Harvard shuns SATsHarvard College announced last weekthat it would rely upon students’ scores onstandard achievement tests more thanupon their success on the ScholasticAptitude Test (SAT), according to anarticle in the Feb. 8 New York Times.Officials attributed the decision to aninternal study which revealed that successon achievement tests was a more accuratepredictor of performance by students atHarvard College.Officials said that the study did notexplain reasons behind the suddenincrease of the predictability of the tests. Some university officials told the Timesthat they believed the change was relatedto the introduction oaa“ ‘Core’curriculum,” which Harvard introducedthree years ago. The Times explained thatthis program mandates that students takesome courses in history, mathematics, andsciences.The overall academic strength of theHarvard class may also affect theachievement tests’ reliability. Studentswho scored in the bottom 10th of theHarvard class had scored in the 92ndpercentile of their high school classes.“The sample of students applying atHarvard are at the top end of the SATscale,” said Richard Noeth, of theEducational Testing Service, whichadministers both sets of tests. “The onlyway to discriminate between them is tolook at the test that spreads that out. Theachievements look at a pretty refinedscale.” ‘Cow-ed’ at Penn St.Pennsylvania State University has a newstudent, one w-ho is a bit younger than theaverage university student. But this is nochild prodigy; it is Penn State Dells, aBrown Swiss cow who is the mainattraction at the Penn State Dairy ScienceClub’s “Dairy Days.” Skits and anice-cream eating contest were on theagenda along with a milking contest inwhich the new student would be an activeparticipant.A sobering pillFor everyone whose weekend revelrymakes their Monday morning classesunwelcome and often-missed occasions,Carlton Erikson of the University of TexasCollege of Pharmacy has been searchingfor an amethysic agent. Not somethingwhich will turn pink elephants purple, thisis a drug which reverses the effects ofalcohol on the brain. However, frat ratsand dorm drunks should not cheer justyet; Erickson has already spent 16 yearsin research and thinks that it will be atleast 20 more before the necessarybreakthroughs to find a reliable drug willbe made.Sue for trademarksSeveral universities have gone to courtover the rights of sporting-goodsmanufacturers to use their logos. TheUniversity of Pittsburgh recently lost afederal court suit against ChampionProducts Company, while the Texas A&MUniversity is being sued by several localstores who want it to lose the registrationof seven trademarks and to be prohibitedfrom demanding licenses to sell theproducts through the stores. TheUniversity of Texas System, which hasjust registered its trademark, has beguninforming manufacturers who producetheir items that licenses will be needed tomanufacture the items in the future.* * *The Daily Texan reported the crackingof an international crime ring in SanFrancisco. The illegal substances involvedwere not drugs or unregistered aliens, butEnglish language tests and graduateschool admission tests. These were sold toTaiwanese students “to open channels forstudents who might otherwise have beendenied visas to study in the United States.”A deaf ear?When The Daily Collegian asked forresponses to the question of whether thestudents at Pennsylvania State Universityhad any chance of being heard in theadministration, it printed three responseswith the notation: “Somewhat indicative ofUniversity response to this question, thearticles on this page are the only ones TheDaily Collegian received.”Planning aheadAt the University of Chicago, about 30percent of entering students have notdecided their majors. By the end of fallquarter sophomore year, only about onepercent are still undecided as to thedivision in which they’ll concentrate.The counseling center at NortheasternIllinois University, in response to students’indecision there, is sponsoring CareerExploration for Undecided Majors, a12-session workshop to help undecidedstudents recognize their own strengths anddetermine what their career options are.According to the Northeastern IllinoisPrint, the workshop will help participantsidentify their own interests, values andskills, and will integrate this information“with updated career developmentmaterials.”“In this manner,” reads the Print,“participants w ill be able to translate theirindividual interests, preferences, andcharacteristics into personally releventcareer options.”“9 to 5 I sell stocks.Weekends, I bust loose with mv buddies & CuervoBUSTCUERVO & Rc UERVO ESPECIAL * TEQUILA 80 PROOF IMPORTED AND BOTTLED BY O 1981 HEUBLEIN INC . HARTFORD. CONNl _ /~u : AA C tr » .Hither and YonSportsNo new pools in sightBy Eve PodetAlthough students and administratorsagree that new swim facilities are desper¬ately needed, there are no plans for con¬struction in the near future. “As a prospecti¬ve student,” men's swim team co-captainBill Landschultz recalls, “I rememberwalking from Bartlett to the new FieldHouse and being told that in a couple ofyears, there would be a new pool in the lotbetween them.” Regrettably, there is nomoney to build the pool, and funds are notbeing actively solicited.The shortcomings of Bartlett pool are par¬ticularly evident to the members of theswim teams. They cite the pool’s problem asbeing two dimensional: it is too short andtoo narrow. Women’s captain Martha Kin¬ney said that UC team is the only one in itsleague with a 20-yard pool rather than astandard 25-yard pool. As a result, the teamcan hold only three of its 15 meets at itshome pool. Kinney referred to these as“throw-away meets” because the times arenot competitive with those made in a 25-yard pool.Frank Bozich, co-captain of the men'sswim team, explained that as a sprinter, hisraces depend upon “counting strokes andthen flipping, and it’s different at awaypools.” He did, however, point out that thereis one advantage to the shortness of thepool: “You get to work on turns more. It’sharder work to swim a long distance in ashort pool,” he said.In addition to the non-regulation length,the width of the pools is inadequate. Thelanes are both too narrow and too few. Ac¬cording to Landschultz, it is not possible toget the entire men’s team into the pool forworkouts. While the solution of separatemorning and evening workouts is not ideal,it does alleviate the problem of teammembers coming out of practice “black and blue from swimming into each other,” hesaid.The problem of length is not as importantfor recreational swimmers but, the size af¬fects them nonetheless. Dan Tepke, assisttant chairman of Physical Education andAthletics, said that the pools are prettycrowded for scheduled recreational swims.The number of swimmers at recreationalswims, however, is reduced by the swimclubs. Women’s swim club president KateGriffith explained that she formed the clubso women who swim seriously could avoidthe crowds. Griffith asserts tht the club hassolved the crowding problem for the clubmembers and has also improved the crowd¬ing situation for the other recreationalswimmers. Many recreational swimmerswho are not in the club, however, are stillnot satisfied with the swimming space avail¬able to them.Some additional problems with the swimfacilities include filtering and draining.Griffith reports that the drainage at IdaNoyes pool is faulty, although Tepke claimsit meets with Board of Health standards.Landschulz complained of the “atrocious fil¬tering system” at Bartlett. His complaintwas countered by Mary Jean Mulvaney,chairman of Physical Education and Athlet¬ics, who stated that the Plant Departmenthas made changes in the filtering systemand with “all due respect to the age of ourpools, they are in the best condition possi¬ble.”A final complaint about Bartlett pool isthat, according to Landschultz, its tempera¬ture is exeedingly cold. Tepke said that theDepartment of University Safety and En¬ergy regulates the temperature of the pool,and has set it at 72e-74° F. The NCAA recom¬mends a temperature of 82°-84° F. Whilepool temperature is not under the jurisdic¬tion of the Physical Education Department,The Chicago MaroonBUSINESSMANAGERWANTEDfor 1982-83Training and work will begin this quarterHours FlexibleDuties include bookkeeping,budget preparation, andcollections.Contact Chris Isidore, Editor.PRODUCTION ASSISTANTSWANTED•No experience necessary - will train•Contact Charlie Mencer, Production Manager1212 E. 59th St. Ida Noyes HallRoom 303 - 304 753-3263 PHOTO BY SALLY KOXBartlett PoolMulvaney said that the issue of pool temper¬ature is “being looked into right now.”While the problems of filtering, drainage,and temperature are being improved withinthe confines of the existing facilities, neitherpool is positioned in a way that would allowfor its enlargement. The only way to get alarger pool is to build one but a “viabledonor” is needed first, according to Mulvan¬ey. it is difficult to estimate the cost of a pro¬posed pool since it depends on what will beincluded in the facilities. Based on figures ofsix years ago, Tepke estimated that a newswim facility could cost between four and 12million dollars.Although the Physical Education Depart¬ment is ‘’aware of the need for a new pooland would love to see one,” said Mulvaney,there is no committee to generate funds spe¬cifically for a pool. There is a committee togenerate general athletic funds, which wasformed at the onset of the project to reno¬vate the Field House.But according to the special assistant tothe vice president for development, MorrisRossin, the committee to generate athleticfunds is hardly operative at present. Duringthe last facility development campaign in1975, committees were formed around thecountry to raise money for athletic facili¬ ties. These committees raised most of themoney for the renovation of the Field House,but failed to fund the proposed natatoriumto be constructed on the lot between BartlettGym and the Field House. Rossin explainedthat the Field House was renovated beforebeginning a swim facility because majordonors directed their gifts specifically to theField House. In addition, it was consideredthe highest priority of the administration.The campaign terminated shortly afterHannah Gray’s administration began.This neglect of the proposed natatorium,Rossin said, is attributable to the change inadministration and to a changed perceptionof the needs of the University community.The natatorium simply does not have thesame priority it had during the campaign,Rossin stated. “If someone came in wantingto make a substantial donation, he wouldprobably not be directed towards the nata¬torium, although the natatorium might beincluded in the list of options,” he said.Rossin does not recall receiving a contri¬bution since the campaign in the dimensionsrequired to get a natatorium started. “Themarket is just not flooded with potentialdonors at the two million plus level,”'hesaid. Thus, the outlook for a new swim facili¬ty remains murky.B-ball season winds downBy A1 NovotnieThe Independent Division is proving thatthey are the class act of the undergraduates.Last Feb. 4, The Rough Riders and DogsEating Bicycles showed some moves whichraised the possibility of an undergrad all-Uchampion. The game was what A1 McGuirewould call a “white knuckler,” with a leadthat shifted hands no less than 9 times. Untilthe last 30 seconds of the game neither teamheld more than a 3 point lead. The Dogs die-Inside IMstated the tempo of the game but in the endthey simply ran out of steam, losing 47-42.Everyone is looking to see whether WhitePunks can unhorse the Riders in their up¬coming game.Earlier the same night, the Misfits turnedin a disappointing performance against theMedflies. The Misfits had been declaredloser by forfeit when their last player ar¬rived. Medflies agreed to play a shortenedgame and abide by the results. Misfitspassed poorly and regularly turned the ballover. Their play was unintentionally physi¬cal due to sloppy execution. But the Medfliesseemed in awe of the Misfits and failed tocapitalize on opportunities.The following Sunday Shorey’s womenupset Thompson in an overtime game wonwith a last-second shot. In another interesti¬ng women’s game Bradbury was beaten byUpper Wallace 25-18. Bradbury’s top 3players failed to show, indicating some lack of depth on their bench, especially consider¬ing that Wallace had been humiliated earli¬er in the week 47-2. On another courtChamblerlain clinched a title topping Mi-chelson 45-20. Handicappers have pickedChamberlain as the solid favorite, but noone expected the runaway victory.Look for the best basketball of the seasonnext Monday at the field house. In thewarm-up game, Curia meets the Stiff Onesfor the division title at 7:30. At 8:30 No BScollides with The Albanian Refugees. Thisgame promises to make the court burn if theRefugees bring all of their people. Also,don’t overlook the women’s Residence titlegame next Wednesday, 8:30 at Bartlett be¬tween Breckenridge and Dudley/Salisbury.Snell/Hitchcock was an overwhelmingpresence in co-ed badmitton having 3 of 4semifinalists and a residence champion.The team of July and Martich defeated Per¬kins and Shaw from Thompson 15-5 and 15-6.The independent team of Lichter and Javorswon the all-U title 15-11 and 15-12. They haveben all but unstoppable the last 4 years.Sports CalendarMEN’S AND WOMEN’SSWIMMINGFeb. 12 — Beloit, 4 p.m., Bartlett GymWRESTLINGFeb. 13 — Elmhurst, Illinois Wesleyan,1 p.m., Field House V20—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, February 12, 198211 ' SportsTrack team places sixthThe women’s indoor track team placedsixth in a field of 13 teams — and firstamong the Division III entrants — in its firstmeet of the season last Friday. The majori¬ty of UC’s runners set personal records orhad their best performances of the season.In addition, three school records were set.Freshman Natalie Williams ran the 60-meter dash and the 300-yard dash in recordtime. Her 38.6 finish in the 300-yard eventearned her a second-place finish in a fieldthat included many top Division I athletes.Rebecca Redman, Ann Reed, Casey Kerri¬gan and captain Kathleen Restifo each setpersonal records as they combined for a sec¬ond-place finish in the 4x800 meter relaf. Their time of 10:13.5 also set a new schoolrecord.Team Scores1. Northern Illinois2. Eastern Illinois3. Bradley4. Chicago State5. Lake Michigan6. UC7. Illinois Benedictine8. Loyola9. Concordia10. Lawrence11. North Central12. Monmouth13. U. of Illinois - Circle 1019175262118127.5621.510Cagers take big road winThe women’s basketball team was out-scored in the second half against St. XavierTuesday, but held on for a crucial 71-66 dis¬trict win. The victory raised the Maroons’season record to 6-10 and, more important¬ly, guaranteed them a second place finish inthe district. By virtue of that ranking, theteam earns the right to a February 27 statechampionship play-off game.At St. Xavier, the Maroons relied on torridshooting to compensate for a less-than-inspired defensive effort. Helen Straus ledall scorers with 23 points on 11 of 16 shootingfrom the field; Straus also had a team-high 14 rebounds. Karen Walsh added 15 pointsfor the Maroons, while Carol Weesnerscored 14 points.St. Xavier used a full-court press for mostof the game, a tactic that has tripped up theMaroons in previous outings. However, ball-handlers Walsh and Weesner handled thepress with ease. Guard Sheila Dugan helpedfuel the team’s high-powered offense withan impressive 10 assists.This weekend, the team makes the longtrip to St. Louis to play Washington Univer¬sity and McKendree College.IM ScoreboardBASKETBALLUndergrad Top Ten1. Rough Riders2. White Punks3. Chamberlain4. Fishbien5. Hitchcock A6. Dudley7. Upper Rickert8. Steidl9. Dogs Eating10. ShoreyGrad Top Ten1. Not Too Swift2. Curia3. No BS4. Refugees5. Stiff Ones6. There’s The Rub7. Debonairs8. Raw Meat9. Bovver Boys10. Bottom Lines Women’s Top Ten1. SPAM2. Dodd/Salisbury3. Misfits4. Breckenridge5. Medflies6. Snell7. Full Court Press8. Bradbury9. Tufts10. ThompsonRefugees 58Fishbien 70Rough Riders 48Not Too Swift 76Bovver Boys 42Basket Cases 25Curia 52Upper Rickert 51Hale 44Malice 43Chicago Seven 28 Five Particles 40Phi Delt 17Tribe 16Stiffs 17There’s The Rub 49Five Play 32Raw Meat 34Dodd/Mead 15Blackstone 10Debonairs 73Diana Ross 20Young Designs byELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERS162p E. 53rd 288-2900 Ugly DucklingRENT-A-CAR *1608 E. 53rd StreetSI3.S0 per day 200 Free MilesBetween IC Tracks *10AAand Cornell OOWmABWHYDE PARKTHE VERSAILLESIDEAL FOR STUDENTS324-0200Large Studios • Walk-inKitchen • Utilities Incl. •Furn. - Unfurn. • CampusBus at doorBased on Availability5254 S. Dorchester G.W. OPTICIANS1519 E. 55thTel. 947-9335Eyii ii CMtact Lmhi fitted byregistered OptMMfrata.Specietirfs in QmSfy tywriwr at Imwi^ltLob on premises for fast service • framesreplaced, lenses duplicated and pre¬scriptions filled. PHOTO BY GEORGE CHAMPA tense moment in Wednesday’s UC-Carroll College wrestling match.Wrestlers crush CarrollBy Nick VarsamThe wrestling team won its Wednesday-night meet in high style, beating Carroll Col¬lege of Wisconsin 30-18. Carroll arrived atthe Field House sporting a 15-4 record indual meets, but struggled throughout themeet. The Maroons gave the Carroll wres¬tlers all they could handle in reboundingfrom Saturday’s unimpressive showing atLoyola University.Sophomore - Tim Bachenberg, comingback after a bout with mononucleosis,stayed with his opponent through twoperiods, but lost 20-11 in the 118-lb. class.Mark Farwell, at 126 lbs., won by forfeit butdid meet a 142 lb. contender in an exhibitionmatch, destroying him 17-4. Don Elsen-heimer, at 158 lbs., and Rick Cooper, at 190lbs., also wrestled exhibitions.At 134 lbs., sophomore George Dupperwas in command throughout his match, win¬ning impressively 20-7. Dupper, however,suffered a late third period knee injury.In an exciting match, freshman Mike Perzcame back with a slick two-point move todefeat his 142 lb. opponent 6-5. SophomoreKen Barr continued UC’s dominance of themeet by resoundingly beating his 150 lb.challenger 12-2 only to be upstaged by Karl Lietzau who pinned his man at 1:21 of thesecond period.Eric Robinson (167 lbs.) and Dave Rispler(177 lbs.) both lost, but Mac Gillespie put theicing on the cake by pinning heavy-weightMike Betz at 1:14 of the second period. Gille¬spie also took first place at Loyola afterbeing unseeded there in the 190 lb. class.UC coach Leo Kocher pointed out thatmost of the wrestlers are now coming intotheir own. “We got a little more intensityfrom Dupper and Perz, who's done a goodjob as a freshman,” Kocher said. He addedthat “Lietzau and Barr are looking reallygood, and Gillespie is doing a great job.”Kocher and his team are looking forwardto Saturday’s meet with Elmhurst Collegeand Illinois W’esleyan University. A goodshowing Saturday will give the Maroonssome momentum going into next week’sconference meet at Lawrence College inWisconsin.apt PASS(SAtltSUCHINESE-AMERICAN RESTAURANTSpecializing in Cantoneseand American dishesOpen Daily 11 A.-8:30 P.M.Closed Monday1318 E. 63rd MU 4-1062 57ththe wn inburchDAYUSEHours: Fri. 12-%$p. 12-4. Sun. 10-1BEAUTIFUL GIFTS AT SENSIBLE PRICESCOLO DRAUGHT BEER, NO SPOILAGEALWAYS READY TO SERVE.PORTABLE SELFCONTAINE0REFRIGERATED UNIT.DIFFERENT MODELS AND SIZESAVAILABLE.312-991-1010The VersaillesUnique, high-traffic commercialspace available in prime Hyde Parklocation.Ideal for: bookstore, beauty salon,dress shop, etc.324-0200 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 advertisingEye ExaminationsFashion Eye WearContact LensesThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, February 12, 1982—21t§8ClassifiedHOUSESK \KU | !n;i\(, | pu,s |uniionms Ra>School district co-op townhouse I pper $90's Fi¬nancing.MODERN construction and conveniences, in¬cluding central: air and humidifier s\ stem makethis a unique bu> Two bedrooms, full basement,near to campus and -napping ai e iust some of itsattracti;ve teatures Hiifkingt.iiVHfld ..$»>%.Miuud. m>TRICT. 3 bedroom town-house Cozy fireplace, garage, fenced back yard2>:2 baths. 2 dens make this a super buv at$139 500 ,,TUSCAN MANSION has apartments for income,large. am. off street parking, garden-and lots ofsunshine' $145,000LARGE F TOWNHOUSE . . You’ve got to seethis one' Three bedrooms. Lots of light. Two as¬signed parking spaces Walk to everything! Mid$90's. Call todayCONDOMINIUMS58th 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,RENT WITH OPTION Excellent financingavailable 9'2% and a low down payment pur¬chases this 27th floor studio in the Newport.$30’sSPACIOUS TWO BEDROOM, 2 bath lake viewcondo ready for move-in; doorman building -UC. bus at door, buy. rent or rent with option.Low $70’s (or $650 rent)SPACIOUS .... beautiful back yard, two porchesand spacious rooms make this 3 bedroom home areal value. East Hyde Park, Close to lake andtransportation Low $80's.SUPER SUNNY ONE BEDROOM condo in se¬cure. modern high rise Close to all transporta¬tion UC bus at door Mid $50'$.WALK TO CAMPUS, shopping and transporta¬tion from this one bedroom condo on quiet tree-lined street Space to study and entertain. Pricedright - $40'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 possibleSUNNY, LIGHT, one bedroom Close to campus,lovely oak floors and french doors, lots of closets$50’s.THIS SUNNY CORNER. 2 bedroom condo inRay district has a great kitchen and many-extra s Sparkling condition with great financ¬ing Mid $60%.NATURAL WOOD THROUGHOUT This large. 4bedroom 24 bath condo, full of old style ameni¬ties including hardwood floors, built-in book¬shelves. sun porch. French doors and butlers'pantry with copper sink Priced right - $70 s andowner financing availableNARRAGANSKTT' Magnificent five room con¬dominium home Beautifully decorated. Must beseen $100,000.GARAGE. BALCONY and a large back yard area few of the amenities of this 2 bedroom homepriced in the upper $40's.COOPERATIVESSPACIOUS. . . hi-rise co-op with great east-westviews, 2 bedroom. 2 baths, foyer and formal din¬ing room 24 hour security near UC bus MidM’s,NEAR CAMPUS, one bedroom co-op lots ofbeautiful wood, built-ins, modem appliances,lovely courtyard building, affordable living, unitmoderately priced. Low $30'sLOW PRICE - low maintenance, this one bed¬room coop with sunporch facing a lovely court is< t for single or couple Near to campus andtransportation Mid $20’sWe have an excellent selection ofprime listings.Call today for your personal copy.BUILDINGSb 000 sq ft zoned Bz 4 plus 20 apt $405,000• r fmancing a> ailar-ie $425 00061st and DrexeJ. 24 units Investor’s invited$165,000.HILD REALTY GROUP%°“-iaoo CLASSIFIED ADS FOR SALEClassitied advertising in the Mai non c osts SLOGper 45 character line Special headings costSI.50 per 25 characters All classified advertismg most be paid in advance. Advertisingdeadlines; 12 noon Wednesday tor the Fridaypaper; 12 noon Friday for the Tuesday paper.Submit ads to Ida Noyes Hall, room 304, ormail them in (with payment) to The ChicaqoMaroon, 1212 E 59th St . Chicago I L 60637. Forinformation about display advertising, call 7533263, The Maroon is not responsible for goodsor services purchased through the classifiedadvertising, sect ion.SPACEChicago Maroon-Friday, February 12, 1982Studio Apartment, Hild Realty Group 955 1200l'5 acres with charming meandering creeknear Chesterton, IN. Partly wooded. Septicand well in. 45 min. from U of C by car or train.$50,000 Contract; 10% down, balance 12% mtCall Renard at Callahan Realty 219-926-4298,Studio apt for March l. grad student pref. $220Near U of C 238-7941, iFEMALE GRAD wanted to share 2 bdrm hirise apt sec bldg lake view own room and bathavail 3/l possible option to renew 752-3277.Looking for housing? Check InternationalHouse, for grad, students and for scholarsvisiting Chicago. 753 2270, 2280.Woman to share apt wanted, 2 bedrm, hi-rise,near trans., 24 hr. security, view lake skyline.Ig spaces, quiet, laundromat. Must be nonsmoker, no pets. Prefer grad student and l-1* 2yr. stay. $205 plus '2 utilities. Call David 3-32I5or 924-7619 eves, available now.FOR SUBLET Faculty apt., 2 bdrms, furnished, Ig & sunny. 6019 S. Ingleside 7/82 thru 6/83to either grad studs, or fac. $630 util incl. 4932748 (mornings) or leave message 753 3879Liberal roommate wanted Spacious 2 bdrmcampus apt w/great view avail immed 3244476.GRAD STUDENTOR SINGLEYou can own a condo for the cost ofrenting an apartment, U. of C. nearby;south of 55th on Kimbark Pat Abrams(493 8647)..CENTURY 21KENNEDY, RYAN, MONIGAL667 6666Huge Apt near 51st & Ellis: 5 bdr 3' 7 bth frpletc $650 incl ht. Avail Mar 1 268 4805Non smoker wanted to share spacious 2 bdrmapt On bus rte 185/mo Avail 3/1 643 7528 11pmlamMarried couple to sublet 3 bdrm apt from Mar1, take over lease Jun 1. Call Tanya, 752 6653,12 4 pm.M or F to share spacious 2 bedroom apt on47th/Lake Park Ave, with male UC grad student. Lovely lake view, 13th floor Near trains,buses and campus bus. $180 per month,available now. Call 624 2885 evenings onlyFor rent beautiful 2 bdrm 2 ba 24 hr securitynear campus 1C bus health club sauna poo!heat inc. Indoor parking option $695 call 9550322.PEOPLE WANTEDOVE RSE AS JOBS-Summer/year roundEurope. S. Amer., Australia, Asia. All fields$500 $1200 monthly. Sightseeing. Free info.Write IJC Box 52-IL 5 Corona Del Mar CA92625.The Blue Gargoyle Coffee House needs help!Contact the Student Volunteer Bureau at 9554108.Nice student to babysit for 6 month old about 8hours a week, morning, noon or night. Flexiblehours. Cute baby. East Hyde Park 324-5171.Research subjects needed for an experimentalstudy of decision making in a computerizedmarket Good pay for a 3/4 to 1 hour sessionCall the consumer behavior lab at 398 8498, or271-2426 eves after 6:30.Paid subjects needed for experiments onmemory, perception and language processingResearch conducted by students and faculty inthe Committee on Cognition and Communication. Department of Behavioral Sciences.Phone 753 4 1 78HOTUNE TRAIN INGThe University of Chicago Hotline will be accepting 20 students into its 1982 spring trainingprogram We are looking tor compassionateAnd dedicated graduate and undergraduatestudents, who are willing to take on thechallenge of working on the Hotline next year.All those interested in applying for a place inthe training program should come to one of twoinformation meetings at 7 30 pm in Ida Noyeson Tuesday February 23 or Wednesday.February 24WANTED__Indian and Greek Donors for artificial Insemination Needed call 947 1775 PASSPORT PHOTOS WHILE YOU WAIT!Model Camera 1342 E. 55th St. 493 6700Stereo 8 channel mixer, reverb Tapco 8201REB at wholesale price due to liquidation 7319062APT SALE carpet, mirror, chair, bkcase, iron,vaporizer, worn, cloth. 9-14, sheets, mattress,sp heater and much more. 5128 S Hyde ParkBlvd., »2. Sat. 9 1.226 3692. On Sat 643 03101973 GREEN BUICK CENTURY $400 Perfectfor the south side! Call Rick, 363 6623Give her a Heart 14K Gold or Cloisonee 6845739.Gold/Silver Jewelry at LESS THAN HALFretail cost. Why pay more when the same highquality is available from a direct source? 6845739.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 campusReasonable—call Wanda 955-8375after 5 p m.Psychotherapist, Women's Groups, Individual,and Couple Therapy. Sliding Scale, MaryHallowitz, MSW, ACSW 947 0154James Bone, editor-typist. 363 0522.Letter Perfect Typing Service. Very experienced, very accurate. Dissertations,papers, math. Call Lise Plotkin, 493 1218Typing term papers reas. rates call 684 6882TYPING. Dial 791-1674 for accurate typingRegistered psychologist, Hyde Park. Medicalinsurance accepted; sliding fee scale RosalindCharney, Ph D. 538 7022.Excellent child care available, my homeRefs., low-rates, tutoring call: 363 5877WE DDINGS photographed call Leslie 536 1626Term papers typed, reasonable rates, pickupand delivery. 783-1345.HYPNOSIS Stop smoking, lose weight, increase memory, study habits, stress relief,headache relief, self-hypnosis, lectures 2467610.Drawings by Marya Veeck currently on exhibitat Mallory's 1525 E. 53rd. Chicago IL atop theHyde Park Bank Building, 312 241 5600CHARTS, GRAPHS & ILLUSTRATIONS forpublication done at a competitive rate Formore information call NAN ROCHE 955 7869Chicago counseling and PsychotherapyCenter. Client centered psychotherapy. 5711 SWoodlawn, 6354 N. Broadway, and 111 NWabash, Chicago. A Registered PsychologicalAgency. (312) 684 1800.Experienced editor corrects papers, dissertations. All subjects. $l0/hr call Pat 363 7567,Childbirth Education Classes offered forparents & parents to be. Classes start Feb 24For more info call 667-3429, 10am 2pmSCENESWOMEN'S UNION meets Wed. 7:00 Office hrsM-Th, 12 3, 7-10 pm Phone 3 2481. LIBRARYREFERRALS.HYDE PARK ARTISANSGALLERYis havinga VALENTINE DAY open house Fri. Feb. 12.Give something handmade to your sweetheart!Located at 57th & Woodlawn in the UnitarianChurch. Many beautiful gifts at wonderfulprices! Thru-Fri 2-3, Sat 12 4, Sun 10 1 DROPON BY refreshments.Where are you going to live next year? Checkout Delta Upsilon Sun. afternoon 5714 SWoodlawn. ,'OLDERUNDERGRADUATESAre you an undergraduate who is 30 years orolder? If so, I would like to interview you for anarticle on older college students. If interested,please call Sherrie at 3 3265 or 947 8437 (even•ngs) If I am not here, please leave a messageRESEARCHSUBJECTS WANTEDWe pay $195.00 for your participation in a nineweek drug preference study, involving onlycommonly prescribed, non experimentaldrugs If you are between 21 and 35 and in goodhealth, call 947 6348 between 10 am and noonweekdays for more information.CLOSE ENCOUNTERSCountry dancers invite you to 10m us for a funevening of folk dances from the British IslesAll dances are taught, beginners are welcomeEnglish dancing 8 10 pm. Scottish at 10.Refreshments Ida Noyes Cloister Club s ORIENTAL CARPETSRECENT price checks at two major dep*store "Sales" confirmed that our carpets sellfor less than 17 the price and are a MUCHFINER quality. Prayer rugs to room sizecarpets Geometric & floral styles D. Bradley288 0524. %THANKS THANKSThe Major Activities Board would like to thankall the people who worked for so many hours tomake the Joan Armatrading concert a successWe couldn't have done it without you!!!STAGEHANDS WANTED...for Philip Glass concert, Feb 19 in MandelHall. See the concert for free! For information,call Libby at SAO 753 3591.CONDO FOR SALELovely sunny 5 rm condo, 2 BR. Totallyrenovated, oak fl & buffet, frpl., bale.. PLUS!Fin 12%. Call Karend. 947 5456, e. 947 0859RELOCATIONENGINEERSW P, Bear Moving Co.: We Move AlmostAnything Almost Anywhere Call 24 hrs a dayat 241 5264.MOVINGStudent with Pickup Truck can move your stuffFAST AND CHEAP No job too small! CallPeter at: 955 5180 10am 10pmWOMEN'S RAP GROUPWomen's Rap group meets every Monday at7 30 pm at the Blue Gargoyle, 5655 S Universety Ave. Sponsors are Women's Union & Univer¬sity Feminist Organization For info call 752-5655UNBALANCED MUSICThe Peer Pressure Radio Show specializing inforeign and domestic independents, along withFrank Sinatra and Judy Garland. Wed nights11 pm 2 am on WHPK 88.3 FM. Sponsored byWax Trax Records.STEP TUTORINGHelp 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.DOES YOURMIND MATTER?It does to us. Right and left handers needed toparticipate in fascinating and profitablestudies on brain asymmetry. Please call 7534735 for info.VALENTINESSend a Valentine or flower to anyone in thedorm system. Order during dinner 2/10 13 indining halls and at Shoreland. Delivery 2/14UC HOTLINEFor information and referrals, help in a crisis,or just someone to talk to—call UC Hotline 7531777, 7 pm to 7 am every night.THE PHOENIXThe Phoenix now has a large selection ofbudget records for between $2.00 and S3 00Check us first...we're the Phoenix.OVERWORKED?Feeling down, tired, or snowed under? Give usa call—UC Hotline; 753-1777, 7 pm to 7 am;every night.AUDITIONS FORSHAKESPEARE'S"TITUS"Rockefeller Chancel Players announces auditions for Titus Andronicus Feb. 22, 23, 25. 20male, 3 female roles. Alumni Please! For infoand appt call Ron 667 1241.FOLK MUSICIANSHIT AND MISS Country Dance Band needsyou! Learn traditional and Baroque dancetunes; play for enthusiastic dancers. Musicprovided. Guitar, fiddle, mandolin, flute, pianoall needed. Call 241-6738 or join us for dancingWed. at 8 pm in Ida Noyes.NUCLEAR WARASSOC. FOR WOMEN IN SCIENCE presentsLincoln Hess of Physicians for Social Responsibility on Tues Feb 26 FERMI INST 480 on"CONSEQUENCES AND PREVENTION (?)OF NUCLE AR WAR " rail 7STR/S70DOOWAH DANCEAn open dance to Mod music this Sat 8 pm IdNoyes bsmt SI adm Sponsored by UC DaneClub .... * ' xSFACOURTThe Student Faculty Administration Court willhave a Full Court Hearing Monday February15. 1982 at 7 30 pm in Stuart 105PARTY WITHTHE STONESSat. nite at Delta Upsilon 5714 S WoodlawnFree.PARTY, PARTY,PARTY!Eating, drinking, dancing in Shoreland 307,tonight Friday. Bar, free admission, beer,food, much more. Ten until . A Red Light Production.CASSETTE COPYINGSERVICECassettes copied fast, bulk rates 731 9062 90min cassettes for lectures, 10's 731-9062USHERSWANTED...for Philip Glass concert, Feb. 19 in MandelHall. See the concert for free! For information,call Libby at SAO, 753 3591.STRESS GOTYOU DOWN?A workshop on STRESS will be presentedMONDAY February 22nd, 7:30 Ida Noyes 3rdfloor theatre. Free For more information, contact Laura Meyers 753 4535 chair, Stress TaskForceGAY? LESBIAN?GALA sponsors a weekly coffeehouse on Tuesday nights at 9,00 pm in the Reynolds ClubNorth Lounge. Refreshments and camaraderieare served free of charge All are welcomeFollowing the coffeehouse, the GALA discussion group meets to discuss issues, problemsand concerns of the gay and lesbian community in a warm, supportive setting. Everyone isinvited.P E RSONALSWriters' Workshop PLaza 2 8377.Share your time and skills! Find out aboutvolunteering from the Student VolunteerBureau.NOW French cosmetic firms are using fetal remains in their "beauty" products Where willthis abortion madness ail end? Join the U of CPro Life Coalition Call Georqe 486 6356Share your dreams, experiences, creativework Analyt. Psych. Group meets alternatingFridays. Call 363 0447 after 12 00 noonMarcia, now that we've found loveWhat do we do ...with it? Los, Ark Q( a DiverAlso ice creamCALENDARFRIDAYCrossroads: English classes for foreign women,10:00 am, 5621 S. Blackstone.Calvert House: Mass; 12 noon and 5 pm; brownbag lunch, 12:30 pm, 5735 University.Behavioral Sciences Colloquium: "BehavioralMedicine: A New Paradigm for Research” speakerProf. W. Doyle Gentry, 1:00-2:30 pm, SS 108.Geophysical Sciences Colloquium: "Evolution,Geology, and the Arkansas Creationism Trial”speaker Joel Cracraft, 1:30 pm, HGS.Dept of Microbiology: "Molecular Basis of CopyNumber Control of the ColEl Plasmid" speakerDr. Barry Polisky, 2:30 pm. Cummings 11th fl sem¬inar room.Mineralogy-Petrology Seminar: "Lherzolites fromthe Ivrea Zone, Italian Alps; Mantle Heterogene¬ity?” speaker Richard Exley, 3:00 pm, Hinds 101.Calvert House: Catholic worker soup kitchen;leave Calvert House at 3:00 pm.Biochemistry/Biophysics Seminar: "The T4 Rep¬lication Complex” speaker W. Lands, 4:00 pm,Cummings 101.Dept of Philosophy. "The Problem of Divine Free¬dom” speaker Thomas Flint, 4:00 pm, Harper103.Hillel: Exhibition and sale of 42 Original Works ofArik Brauerat Hillel, Yavneh (Orthodox) ShabbatServices, 5:45 pm, Reform-Progressive Pot LuckDinner and Shabbat Services, 5:45 pm, Adat Sha¬lom Cooperative Dinner, 6:30 pm, 5715 Wood-lawn.Doc Films: "Eye of the Needle 7:15 and 9:30 pm,“Barbarella” midnight, Cobb.The Chamber Ensemble: Mozart, Schubert, andBrahms, 8:00 pm, Goodspeed, Free.SATURDAYHillel: Yavneh (Orthodox) Shabbat Services, 9:15am, The Upstairs Minyan (Conservative-Egali¬tarian) Services, 9:30 am. Exhibition and sale of 42original graphics by Arik Brauer, till 1:00 pm, 5715Woodlawn.Auditions: for performances of Noah’s Flood byBenjamin Britten, from 2-5 pm. Rockefeller Chap¬el.Calvert House: Sacrament of Reconciliation, 4:30pm, 5735 University.Crossroads: Buffet dinner, 6:00 pm. no reserva¬tions needed, 5621 S. Blackstone.Doc Films: “Superman 11” 7:00 and 9:30 pm, Man-del Hall.Music Dept: Lisa Waitches, Harpsichord; 8:00 pm.Goodspeed Hall. Free. LAMBYKINS, Beauty will spawn between us ifonly you would let it. I'm still in love with you.and have such dreams for us. Open your eyesand look in your heart; reach out and I’ll bethere. Happy Valentines Day! SupermanElton and David I’d meet if I could, but there'snone I'd love better than Lauriejill WoodDONNY, GREG. JEFF, MICHAEL, PAUL,PETER We've Got You On Our Mind I' D F CI'm going to the loo, how about yoo? Won't youcome too? I'm going to do a pooWishing my good friends at Fallers (and Alt) ahappy case of V.D. Phil (esp. to my D.B s)Une vignette pour mon valentine: Un vepre duVivaldi. II ya la volupte du l air. Voila enhaute, les estoiles valsent sur le velours, velumdu ciel. Les vagues vivent Vertigeuse nourvogueons, nous volons. O voleur mon coeur!Minu Karu-I know I love you because you'rethe only person I've ever given my last piece ofpizza to. Haopy Valentines Day. JankuWHCJR & PC-Doggone it Valentinesomethimes I want to bite your leg CDPB &TBDDB: I'd go to every Winchels' in Illinois ifyou'd be my Valentine. E ALD.J.B. I'm glad we're back P M WBieni will you be my valentine and act out thewestern civ fantasies? Love boo booMy dear, kind KEN COTTONI don't think you're rotten.But gentle and sweet(And so nice to eat??),so I'll let you be mine,or, awhile, my valentineand together we'll stay.At least for one dayTo MSSBB Gnin, Happy Valentine's Day!i love you, YCL GninCDA aka CAR Be on the lookout for 6 red starsin a sky of innocence. XOXOXOXOX "SillyBoy"To my favorite Jamesian: If you're EugeneO'Neil, can I be Louise Bryant? Happy VD!Big B Happy two years! I love you bearymuch XXX, Grizzle T.T. BearBEAR esquire LAW SCHOOL Here you comeCongratulations You are the best Your wifeBruss—my love for you grows like anamaryllis which blooms and blooms Ta petitecnatte.Bennett Happy Birthday! Love, MSBlue Eyes. Happy V Day. I love yoo more thisyear than I did in all the past ones. CARBagels in bed. -Law School Films: "The Shop Around theCorner”'8:00 pm, "To Be Or Not To Be” 9:45 pm,1121 E. 60th St.Hillel: Kumsitz, a Saturday night gathering at Hil¬lel House for a program of storytelling, singing,hot cocoa and cider, 8:30 pm, 5715 Woodlawn.SUNDAYCalvert House; Mass; 8:30 am and 5 pm in CalvertHouse, 11 am at Bond Chapel.Hillel: Lox and bagel brunch, 11:00 am, and 11:00am til 1:00 pm. Exhibition and sale of 42 originalgraphic works by Arik Brauer, 5715 Woodlawn.Calvert House: Business students brunch, 12:30pm, 5735 University.Auditions: for performances of Noah’s Flood byBenjamin Britten will be held 2-5 pm in RockefellerChapel.Music Dept: Julie Beth Andrews and RobertShroll, 3:00 pm, Goodspeed Hall. Free.MARRS: Fighting practice, 3:00 pm, Ida Noyes.Episcopal Church CounciL- Holy Eucharist 5:30pm and Sunday supper 6:00 pm, 5540 Woodlawn.Calvert House: Home-cooked supper, 6:00 pm,5735 University.Doc Films; "The Bride Wore Black” 7:15 pm,"Mississippi Mermaid” 9:15 pm, Cobb.Folkdancing: Advanced level folkdancing 8:00 pm.Ida Noyes.MONDAYHillel: Exhibition and sale of 42 original graphicworks by Arik Brauer, 5715 Woodlawn.Crossroads: English classes for foreign women,10:00 am, 5621 S. Blackstone.Calvert House: Mass, 12 noon and 5 pm; brownbag lunch. 12:30 pm. 5735 University.Social Thought: "Getting Started: The EarlyYears and Writings of Frost, Williams and Ste¬vens” speaker Frederick Marchant, 3:00 pm, Clas¬sics 19.Dept of Chemistry: "The Activation and Reduc¬tion of Carbori Monoxide" speaker Pcof. DuwardShriver, 4:00 pm, Kent 103.Hillel: Class in Yiddish, 6:00 pm. Class in Para-shat Hashavuah, 7:30 pm, 5715 Woodlawn.U of C Judo Club: Meets 6:00 pm. Bartlett gym.Doc Films: "Objective, Burma!” 7:15 pm, “TheyDied with Their Boots On” 9:45 pm. Cobb.Ski Club/Ski Team: Meets 7:30 pm. Ida Noyes.Women's Rap Group: Meets 7:30 pm. 3rd floorBlue Gargoyle women's center.Folkdancing: Beginning and intermediate levelfolkdancing 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes.Delta Sigma: Meetings at 9:30 pm, Ida Noyes li¬brary. Classified AdsHome Grown Corn: Paul is witty talentedhandsome My fav subject for intense romancinILYCJane Marcus sorry I forgot your birthday. Seeyou Wed. at 7:30 Be there. Aloha.Happy Birthday Teuta!!! Love JSend your sweetheart a Valentine! Flowers,cards, & candy for $1.50. Order at dinner.Hypocrites and liars beware! As you have doneunto others, so shall we do unto you GR WMon songe, mon coeur, mon amie sois maValentinecetteanneeaussi. Ta BeteYou're impossible, incorrigible, exasperatingAnd I love you. Happy Valentine's Day ONE Tis LTK dead?Poet, All of this is very silly Please find someone you can really love. I'm just a fantasyI still recall when days were blueBefore "White Rabbit" times with you' So Crazy J., to you—this rhyme:You'll always be my Valentine!TO OUR ROOMMATES Happy V Day to youboth. Friends like you make winter quartermore! P. Let's look for the three V's in the B's!B. II n'y a que moi qui peut te chatouiller!YOUR DELTSLet's get personal, personalTootsie I "ur" to you with jungle love!! HappyValentine's Day! K.Hey Hank, Bip, Pol, and Terri Mulfay; thanksfor being such great roommates! HAPPYVALENTINES DAY! Valerie WanodonAa Let's get the beast some tiny friends She'sbeen very good (well...)D , Lots 'o love from your one n only! Let's gettogether and try out the new Smooch o Mafic(as seen on TV) LDear Jonathan: Thanks for being such a nutHappy Valentines Day. K ENEEDEXTRACASH?People are needed for a questionnaire type experiment in the Graduate School of BusinessPayment is S5 00 an hour and will be paid incash The experiment will last approximately 1to 2 hours. For more information please callAnn at 753 4209.BLACKFRIARSGENERAL MEETING Spring show stuff Feb17, Wed 7 00 pm, Ida Trophy Rm We need lotsof people, so be there aloha! PS no commentson Winter!Cficn(otte nJi&stzomczReal Estate Co.493-0666AVAILABLE RIGHT NOW: onebedroom on sunny high floor,55th Dorchester, $42,500.Seller will “buy down” rates, Nice‘passthrough’’ bright kitchen. CallKen.DOWN THE STREET FROM THELAB SCHOOL...mint condition,six small rooms (one bedroom &two studies). Ideal for single ormingle. Near 57th Kenwood.$87,500.YOUR OWN ,iPERSONALPRIVATE BRICK GARAGE and 5room condo. Tudor brick design.$63,000 and $3,000. Near 58th& Cornell. MINOLTAONTHE LAKEat 55th. Glass& brick - 2bedroom co¬op beauty.$50,000 (fle¬xible)AVAILABLE IN JUNE - LOOKAHEAD. 56th Kimbark, onebedroom, $49,500; 56th Dor¬chester, studio, $32,000; 58thCornell, six rooms. $72,000.JUST LISTED - THIS MAKESDOLLARS & SENSE Assumablemortgage...two bedroom/condowith garage. Faces south onBlackstone & 55th. $65,000.We are co-operating brokers493-0666 It’s the most economical 35mmautomatic Minolta SLR. Easyenough for beginners but packed]with sophisticated features;• Continuous automatic exposure]system• Full manual control• Over exposure protection• 2-year camera warranty• 5-year lens warranty‘ w/45mm/f.20$189.95IT GOBS WHERE NOOTHER 35mm CAN-AUTOMATICAUYTHE NEWNIKONOS iV-AAUTOMATICUNDERWATER/ALL-WEATHER ‘35’J It's the only automatic 35mm!that shoots 160 feet under¬water without a housing, alsoin rain and snow—that even)Idefies sand and mud!with 35mm/2.5s32900limited to stock on handSUCH A DEAL!| With all 35mm camera pur-|chases in February, Model[Camera customers receive1 roll of film and processingfree!WHY BUYSOMEWHEREELSE?If any Chicago area store adver-jtises a lower price than you paid atljModel Camera, bring it in within 141[days of your camera purchase and]Iwe will credit or refund the dif-Iference, or at our option, we ll]repurchase the equipment at fullIpurchase price. Proof of purchaseIplus a copy of the advertisement is■all that is needed. (The program is|in addition to our BONUS BOOKIbenefits and other customer ser-|Ivices.)camera1342 E. 55th St.392-6700The Chicago Maroon—Friday, February 12, 1982—23■ '. ■-:Z ’ \7/ '’ 'On FridayFebruary 19,-- -f~ , >fi -/I-'- AifEVERYTHING IN THESTORE WILL BE ON SALE& GAMES AT INCREDIBLYLOW PRICES14*i*v$V.:-~V n^rh\>y. . Che<i :lc Ulose sFm< irst...W?rst o f f e're the Pfeynolds C fioenixlub) . ©f --,:v - ■’ yiV ■ * ■ •iT# #*.<. .• 'u T r . , : ■ ■■■?■ • 'f■ - ]■)\. ■' - ..... . v,:. - ebrnary 19 • 8 p jn.Mandel HallAll seats reserved$4 for DC students; $7 generalFor ticket information call 753-3568Available at University Box Officepresented by theStudent Activities Officeis conjunction withthe Department of MusicGlass wiD give a free lecture at 4 pan. Feb. 19in Goodspeed Recital HallV\. £M' - j. 'v‘ Mft "U. * ■. [t ir - ,,l I |■ -S The Visiting Fellows CommitteepresentsKINGMAN BREWSTER, JRomFormer President of Yale University