Viewpoints Grey CityFearing crimepage five Rock-and-Roll politicsGCJ coverThe Chicago MaroonVolume 91, No. 46 The University of Chicago ©Copyright 1982 The Chicago Maroon Friday, April 9, 1982Two day autumnreading period setPHOTO BY WILLIAM MUDoE63rd Street is now being serviced by a bus, as the Jackson Park El awaits a final decision. Thedecision will likely have a large impact on the entire community of Woodlawn.Jackson Park El’s future in doubtBy Robert DeckerThe rehabilitation of the JacksonPark elevated line along 63rd St.,closed because of a structurallyweak bridge, may cost up to $40million, according to Fifth WardAlderman Larry Bloom, but thefigures are just rumors at thispoint, he said.Among the alternatives beingconsidered at this point is replac¬ing the 63rd St. shopping area,"Bloom said. ‘‘But tearing it downwithout something to replace itwon’t help either."About three to four weeks ago.The Woodlawn Organization held aspecial delegates meeting on thisissue. It voted to ask the CTA to ei¬ther tear the El down and build amodern, efficient, safe surfacetransport with permanent unity be-By Jeff WolfStudent Government Wednesdayapproved a resolution opposing theReagan administration cuts in fi¬nancial aid.Sponsored by Jeff Elton, SGtreasurer, the resolution was ap¬proved 20 to 1 by the SG assembly.It calls for the student assembly toask congress to ‘‘maintain federalaid at a level sufficient to assist anequal number, as in the reconcilia¬tion act passed by Congress in July1981.”The resolution is part of a coor¬dinated effort by the American As¬sociation of University Students(AAUS), a consortium of studentsfrom 50 public and private univer¬sities, to prevent further budgetcuts in higher education. To ac¬complish this task, the AAUS asksmember schools to ‘‘mobilize theirrespective universities to securesupport from their United Statescongressional delegations."Student Government PresidentClarke Campbell, who recently re¬turned from an AAUS conventionin Philadelphia, said the primaryfocus of that convention was stu¬dent aid cuts. Said Campbell,‘‘How Congress decides to package tween it and the 1C, or to give thecommunity a new El."We took a dim view to the piece¬meal patchwork approach to keepit (the El) up in its present condi¬tion," said Leon Finney, head ofThe Woodlawn Organization. "Itsa hazard to health.”The central issue at this point, ifthe structure is found to be unsafe,is whether the city can pay for a re¬placement. Bloom said a combina¬tion of city, state, and federalfunds would be used if a rehabilita¬tion project is initiated. He saidthat the engineers who are examin¬ing the structure now for structur¬al defects should make a reportwithin six months.Jackson Park elevated servicenow terminates at the Garfieldits chance of approval."The proposal to reduce studentaid will have a good chance of ap¬proval if Congress decides to at¬tach it as a rider to a proposed billto increase the debt ceiling. If Congress considers the bill separately,it will have a decreased chance ofpassage. According to Campbell,"If there is enough outcry, Con¬gress will be forced to retreat it asa separate proposal, and it willprobably be defeated."Campbell said that "the pro¬posed cuts are going to haveserious ramifications on thecampus and country." Secondary-Education Opportunity Grants willbe completely eliminated, affect¬ing 615,000 students. Pell grantswill be reduced 46 percent, with themaximum grant being reduced to$1600, affecting 12 million students.Work-study programs will be re¬duced 28.5 percent to $397.5 mil¬lion, eliminating 280,000 jobs. Na¬tional Director Student Loans willbe completely eliminated, affect¬ing 266,000 students. GuaranteedStudent lx>ans will be eliminatedfor all graduate and professionalstudents, and interest rates will be stop just west of WashingtonPark.Jackson Park line riders areforced to scramble for alternative— and interior or more expensivetransportation, while CTA planscostly conveniences for otherareas of the city,” said Rep. Bar¬bara Flynn Currie (D-24) in a let¬ter to CTA Chair Michael A. Car-dilli. "My immediate concern isthe lack of discussion among re¬sponsible agencies — CTA fore¬most — of replacement for thisservice."CTA’s plans to spend $130 to con¬nect the Dan Ryan and Howardroutes and to connect the JacksonPark-Englewood and the Lake St.lines will be the subject of publichearings on Apr. 12 and 13.doubled to 10 percent for under¬graduates. According to Campbell,if the Reagan proposals are ap¬proved, 2.6 million students willnot be able to attend classes nextfall.Jeff Elton, sponsor of the resolu¬tion, said that "in order to preventcuts, we w ill have to have a co-or¬dinated effort between the admin¬istration and the students. The ad-ministration has a goodappreciation of the effects of thecuts. 1 think that it's up to StudentGovernment to begin the educationprocess on how the cuts will effectUC students."Student Government is alsosponsoring a letter writing cam¬paign to put pressure on Congressto reject the budget cuts. "This willbe an effective campaign withoutform letters," said Campbell. SGwill set up booths late next weekwhich will provide students withpens, pencils, paper, envelopesand facts about the aid cuts andtheir ramifications."This will enable people to w ritetheir own letters,” Campbell said."This is much more effective, thanjust sending form letters."Booths will be placed in each of By William RauchA two-day reading period will beinserted between the end of tenthweek and the beginning of finalsfor the fall quarter of 1982, Dean ofStudents Charles O’Connell an¬nounced at a Faculty-Student Ad¬visory Committee on Campus Stu¬dent Life meeting Tuesday.Last fall, tenth week classesended on Wednesday. Dec 9 andfinals for some students began thenext day. "The thinking of the Uni¬versity is to avoid the problems oflast (fall) quarter," O’Connell toldthe Maroon.The fall quarter for 1982 is sche¬duled to begin on Thursday, Sept.30 and to end on Wednesday, Dec.8. Finals were to start on the nextday. Under the new plan, classeswill begin and end as scheduled butthe start of finals will be postponeduntil Monday, Dec. 13. The quarterwill end and convocation will beheld on Friday, Dec. 17.Students will then have Dec. 9 -12 free to prepare for finals.The winter quarter of 1983 willbegin as originally scheduled onMonday, Jan. 3.O’Connell added that "TheThursday and Friday of that week(tenth) are left to the discretion ofeach area of the University to beused as it sees fit.”There is no assurance that thiswill continue, O’Connell said,"since the quarters will revert tobeginning on Mondays. It is appar¬ent that this accommodation isbeing made for this autumn only,"he said.Assistant Dean of Students in theCollege Katie Nash said that thereading period "came out of thefact that students and faculty werevery unhappy with the examschedule last fall.”She said that students were com¬ing in to the Dean of Students Of¬fice complaining that they hadthe professional schools, where theeffects of the aid cuts are most se¬vere, as well as in Reynolds Cluband in Cobb HallCampbell hopes to have 1,000 let¬ters written to Congress.In addition, SG is planning aseminar/rally on the budget cuts.New York Congressman PeterPeyser, the leader of the anti-bud-get cuts force on the House floor,has been invited to speak. Camp¬bell expects a reply from Peyser'soffice today.SG will also invite Rep HaroldWashington t D-l) who has stronglydenounced the budget cuts.Officials from the UC adminis¬tration will also attend to discussthe ramifications of the aid cuts forstudents.Campbell hopes to schedule theseminar/rally for sometime dur¬ing the congressional Easterrecess."This is something we reallyhave to do because of a seriouslack of knowledge of the ramifica¬tions of the cuts," Campbell said.“The cuts will be taking away aca¬demic freed choice for the middleclass." three exams on the same day. Shealso said that some students toldher that their instructors had re¬scheduled exams for earlier datesso that they could go out of town.The academic calendar in thefall is organized to avoid classes onthe Jewish holiday Yom Kippur.This year, Yom kippur falls onSeptember 27.She said that one problem withadding the reading period was theexpense of keeping dormitoriesopen longer.Nash said she would "like tosee" reading periods in the future."This is a demanding school," shesaid. "It would be nice for studentsif it (a reading period) were feas¬ible."Student Government PresidentClarke Campbell said that hespoke to O'Connell about the prob¬lem. "I expressed to Dean O’Con¬nell concerns voiced to me abouthow difficult it was to have aWednesday class and a Thursdayfinal," he said."The problem (of exams begin¬ning the day after classes end) wasbrought up at the President's Advi¬sory Affairs meeting, and Mrs.Gray said it would never happenagain," Campbell said, "but noth¬ing came out of the meeting.”He said that there is "strong sup¬port among students" for the read¬ing period. Opposition comes fromfaculty in biology and physicalscience, he said.Professor Nien-Chu C. Yang,professor of chemistry and the un¬dergraduate advisor for the de¬partment. voiced objections to theplan. “I’m just curious whyshouldn't classes begin on October4 . . . and have them extend untilDecember 10, ” he said "Thatwould save the University a lot ofmoney, and ultimately save thestudents money." Yang said thathe did not see any need for an extratwo days between 10th week andexam week.Alan Granger, chair of the Aca¬demic Affairs Committee of SGand a member of FSACCSL, be¬lieves “the chances are nil" that areading period could continuebeyond the fall quarter However,he said that he would certainlypush for it for the future. "It couldsave alot of people some prob¬lems," he said."The largest impetus for thereading period aside from studentconcerns was the fact that last fallthe Student Mental Health Clinichas a large amount of business.”Campbell said Statistics concern¬ing the number of students visitingthe clinic are sent to the deansReading periods are common atother Universities. Northwestern,w hich is on the quarter system, hasa one-week reading period. Howev¬er, the length of the quarter isvaried in order to accommodatethe periodStanford, also on the quarter sys¬tem. has no reading period, but in¬structors there do not assignpapers, tests or homework duringtenth week, though they still holdclasses.Harvard and Princeton bothhave 15 week* semesters, and bothschedule reading periods of 10 daysand finals periods of two weeksSG Assembly condemns aid cut-backthe bill wiii iicivti u ^ltut \jiicci oil■■■■■MWMinaMMHMMHIWNWMMM M <Hnni|ian»*MWi nftwiii mgi! 4 . . 9|ypapMMBHBHI9KWwiWe, members of the faculty of the University of Chicago, strongly en¬dorse the message of the April 10 Peace Walk: END THE ARMSRACE/SAVE THE HUMAN RACE. We join with our colleagues acrossthe U.S. and in Europe and the Soviet Union to demand an end to thebuild-up of nuclear arsenals. This build-up brings us ever closer tonuclear war, in which there can be few survivors and no winners.As members of the academic community, we recognize a specialresponsibility to speak out on this issue. American universities active¬ly participate in the arms race. Since World War II the U.S. governmenthas funnelled billions of dollars through universities to developweapons technologies and to perform other kinds of military research.We therefore urge the faculty, students, and staff of this university toturn out in force on April 10.Elizabeth Abel—EnglishElizabeth Asmis— ClassicsRalph Austen—HistoryAndrew J. Baker— MathematicsBrian Barry—Political ScienceMary Biggs—Library ScienceWayne C. Booth—EnglishEdward J. Buckbee— Romance LanguagesDavid Cahan— The CollegeJames Chandler— EnglishKun-Ji Chen—PhysicsJohn Coatsworth—HistoryBernard S. Cohn—AnthropologyGregory Colomb— EnglishDr. Wolfgang Epstein— BiochemistryKatherine Ewing—The CollegeUgo Fano—PhysicsRaymond Fogelson—AnthropologyJosef Fried—ChemistryPaul Friedrich—AnthropologyHellmut Fritzsche— Physics Franklin I. Gamwell—Divinity SchoolDr. Pierce Gardner— MedicineEdwin Gerow—South Asian Lang. & Civ.Dr. Godfrey S. Getz—PathologyRaymond Geuss—PhilosophyDr. Seymour Glagov— PathologyDaxing Han— PhysicsNancy P. Helmbold—ClassicsFriedrich Katz—HistoryIra Katznelson—Political ScienceWard Keeler—CollegeRichard K. Lashof—MathematicsDr. Bernard Levin—MedicineDonald N. Levine—SociologyDavid Malament—PhilosophyMarvin Mirsky—HumanitiesPaul Moore—Geophysical SciencesIan Mueller— PhilosophyJanel Mueller— EnglishSidney R. Nagel—PhysicsManning Nash—Anthropology Robert C. Newton—Geophysical ScienceRalph W. Nicholas—AnthropologyPeter Novick—HistoryJohn Padgett-Political ScienceShao-qi Peng—PhysicsAdam Przeworski— Political ScienceDr. Irwin H. Rosenberg—MedicineMelvin G. Rothenberg—MathematicsPhilippe C. Schmitter— Political ScienceDavid M. Schneider— AnthropologyStephen H. Shenker —PhysicsMichael Silverstein—AnthropologyBernece K. Simon—Sch. ofSoc. Sci. Admin.Sol Tax—AnthropologyDr. Otto G. Thilenius— PediatricsDavid Tracy— Divinity SchoolTerence Turner—AnthropologyValerio Valeri—AnthropologyBruce Winstein—PhysicsAnthony C. Yu—Divinity SchoolEND THE ARMSRACE/SAVE THEHUMAN RACE* c2—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 9, 1982 Time and Place: Saturday, April 10, 12 Noonat Lake Shore Park, Corner of Chicago Avenueand Lake Shore Drive. Buses available to themarch leaving Ida Noyes Hall 11:15 am. $1 perperson.Destination & Rally: 2 pm in plaza ofFederal Building (Dearborn & Adams)News in briefCompton lecturesHave you ever wondered what it might belike to look at the heavens with X-ray eyesor to listen to them with radio ears?Space scientist Simon Swordy will tellwhat it’s like to do just that in the 15th seriesof Arthur Compton Public Lectures whichbegan this past Saturday.“There is much more to modern astron¬omy than looking through a telescope,”Swordy said. “Recent technological ad¬vances have opened new windows on thesky, and each one has shown us sur¬prises.”Swordy has advanced so much in this cen¬tury that eight of the ten lectures will dis¬cuss what has happened in the last 80years,” Swordy said.Swordy will present his lectures at 11 a.m.on the next nine Saturdays, through June 5,in Room 133 of Eckhart Hall. Admission isfree.The lectures are named for Arthur HollyCompton, a professor of physics at the Uni¬versity of Chicago from 1923 to 1945, whowas awarded a Nobel Prize in 1927 for hisdiscovery of the Compton effect — the fre¬quency shift in X-rays after their collisionswith electrons.Election deadlineAll students who are planning to run for aposition in Student Government must turn intheir nominating petition by 5 p.m. April 12.The elections will be held on Monday, April19 and Tuesday, April 20. All positions areopen and information and nominating peti¬tions may be picked up in the StudentGovernment Office or by calling SG VicePresident Sufia Khan, Chair of the Electionand Rules Committee, at 753-3273.Robber convictedThe arrest of Juan Moore, 22, of 4825 Drex-el Ave., as a suspect in the January robberyof the Hyde Park Savings and Loan has re¬sulted in his conviction. Moore, along with a juvenile companion,stole over $6000 using a note which stated,“This is a stickup, don’t make it murder.”Both Moore and the juvenile were unarmed.They were caught later in a nearby alley,still holding the loot.Judge John A. McElligott sentencedMoore to four years in the Illinois Dept, ofCorrections.ERA lobbyingThe Equal Rights Amendment is stillalive in Illinois and students are needed forthe rest of the quarter to help get it passed.On Wednesday, April 21, a Student LobbyingDay for the ERA will be held in Springfieldat the Capitol building. Students from allover the state are invited to lobby their le¬gislators and participate in the day of ralliesand speeches sponsored by the National Or¬ganization of Women.Students or faculty who would like to at¬tend from UC can buy bus tickets in the SAOOffice (Rm. 210, Ida Noyes) or at one of theAction ERA tables in Reynold’s Club (April9 & 16) and in Cobb (April 12). Tickets cost$14, but will be reduced by reimbursementsfrom Action ERA. For more information,call Sherrie at 947-8437.Japanese ManagementA conference on “Management, JapaneseStyle” will be held on campus next Friday.The conference, sponsored by the student-run Asian Business Group of the BusinessSchool, will deal the recently popular con¬cept of Japanese management, and will lookat the differences, causes and the adap¬tability of this management style.The conference will feature a panel ofAsian business executives involved withtrade with the West. The conference is opento professionals in the community as well asstudents and faculty. The deadline forregistration is Wednesday, April 14. Call753-0398 or 753-0023 for more details. L\ST€fO To TH>5 FamED A€.STH€TiCiAn)ATT THE HILL6L UhODAT tOisiNAONDAY APR^IU - 1--15 \p.AAHlLLSU • S^iS S. iOoodlalO*The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 9, 1982—3Editorials*25 ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER.CASH REBATEFROM MANUFACTURER.SMITH-CORONABuy one of these durable, versatile Smith-Corona electricsand get an inflation beating rebate. Offer applies to pur¬chases from March 1, 1982 through May 31, 1982.Come to our store for an official rebate form.Get your best deal from us, then get your rebate fromSmith-Corona.^Coronamatic™ 2500cartridge electrictypewriter for youroffice-at-home —Smith-Corona Intrepidsingle-element portablelets you change typefacesto match your messageREBATECoronamatic™ 2200cartridge portable forstudents and travellers.Qfig*co< vo**nvxje’ 300, <*. COV**^<* «rw>P"'9 cortorte<io( rajr'®*'itvoog",, i«U OW- US* WK>” 6L,m« 2 Plus-• Bookstore - reduced prices on all models, and• Our ONE YEAR parts and labor GUARANTEE.(Manufacturer’s guarantee is only 90 days.)• With purchase of the Model 2200 and 2500,recieve 5 DUAL PACKS of Black Film Ribbons,valued at $23.00, FREE. (Ribbon offer good ’tilMay 31, 1982.)• Plus the manufacturer’s rebateThe University of Chicago BookstoreTypewriter Department (2nd Floor)970 East 58th Street753-33034—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 9, 1982 Don’t limit reading periodAs most students realize when they matriculate here, the University of Chicagohas a reputation for being a difficult place to go to college. A number of factors notnecessarily related to the rigors of classroom teaching conspire to make it thisway. One factor is the quarter system, which compresses more work on a subject-by-subject basis into a shorter amount of time. Another factor is that fourcourses, which translates into 20 quarter hours of credit, is a typical course loadhere, whereas at most universities, 15 quarter hours is a common average.With sufficient foresight and planning, it is, of course, possible to manage thework here. And our faculty members seem on the whole generous when it comesto extensions and the like. But it seems self-defeating if our revered reputation inthe academic world must come at the price of a perpetually high-strung studentbody, which emerges from each finals week exhausted not only from work butalso from the sheer stress which pervades campus at the end of every quarter.Now, if one has finals and papers distributed evenly through the last days of thequarter, the situation need not degenerate into utter despair. But it is asking toomuch of the majority of the student body when the University proposes to beginthe quarter on a Thursday in order to accommodate various religious groups,thus making “finals week” begin less than 24 hours after most students have at¬tended their last class of the quarter.In light of the experience of the 1981 autumn quarter, we wholeheartedly sup¬port the decision of the College to allow a two-day reading period in fall 1982, whenthe quarter will again begin on a Thursday. In practice, this reading period willallow four days, Thursday through Sunday, for exam preparation. But we wouldalso urge the University to go beyond this first step. Given the nature of thequarter system, and the amount of detailed knowledge one is supposed to digestwithin 10 weeks, there is no reason why a reading period of at least two days oughtnot to be appended to every 10th week. Two days, of course, are not sufficient inwhich to cram a whole quarter’s work. But that extra 48 hours might be enough tolower everyone’s blood pressure a bit, and generally make a quarter at UC amore humane and civilized experience.LettersShoreland fire herosTo the Editor:In last Friday’s story about the Shorelandfire you reported that according to EdwardTrukington, Director of Student Housing,“several students as well as Joe Vasquez,the head of Shoreland security, KevinMcKettrich, the engineer, and Michael Wil¬liams, sixth floor resident head, all tried andfailed to rescue DeCamp (the elderlywoman in whose apartment the fire origina¬ted).”It would be misleading of me, however, tolet the impression created by that accountgo uncorrected. Although I was presentwhile students from the sixth floor kicked inthe door of Ms. DeCamp’s burning apart¬ment and, from the fire escape, smashed inher windows in what proved to be a futile at¬tempt to reach her, I felt obligated, as theresident head, to prevent those same stu¬dents from needlessly endangering them¬selves once it seemed evident to me that re¬scue was impossible.The praise belongs to the students of thesixth floor, whose intense concern for awoman they had never seen impelled themto do everything they could to attempt herrescue, and to Joe and Kevin, who joined theunsuccessful rescue effort and whose laborsthroughout the entire evening merit thanksfrom every Shoreland resident.What is additionally gratifying to me isthe way in which the resident of the sixthfloor, without instruction, immediately fanned out to adjoining floors to advise theirneighbors to evacuate.If my name deserves inclusion in your ac¬count, it is only as the witness who can au¬thenticate the good done by others and whois proud to be associated with them.Sincerely,Michael WilliamsResident Head, Michelson House(the sixth floor of the Shoreland)Church defendedTo the Editor:In the April 6 issue of the Maroon it wasincorrectly stated that University Church isthe owner of the building at 6103 SouthWoodlawn Avenue. As a member of Univer¬sity Church, I wish to emphasize that the Co-venantal Community of University Church,and not University Church itself, is theowner of this property.The Covenantal Community was createdby a group of members of UniversityChurch with a dream of creating an econom¬ically and racially diverse community ofpeople living together in a supportive andcooperative environment. I know severalmembers of the Covenantal Community andI can attest to the sincerity of their goals andbeliefs.The Covenantal Community has beenfaced with financial difficulties ever sincethe collapse last year of a long worked-forFederal financing package. The CommunityContinued on page sixThe 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 Feldman Sherrie NegreaFeatures EditorAudrey LightSports EditorWilliam MudgePhotography EditorDavid Brooks Richard KayeGrey City Journal EditorBecky WoloshinLiterary Review EditorErin CassidyLibrarianAarne Elias Henry OttoBusiness ManagerJay McKenzieAdvertising ManagerLeslie WickOffice ManagerCharlie MencerNews Editor Viewpoints Editor Design Director Production ManagerAssociate Editors: Robin Kirk, News; William Rauch, Copy editing; Margo Hablut-zel, Features; Anna Yamada, Photography.Staff: Edgar Asebey, Lee Badgett, Mary Bartholomew, Sheila Black, David Blasz-kowsky, Kahane Corn, Wally Dabrowski, Jeff Davitz, Teri Drager, Bill Fitzgerald,Sue Fortunate, Cliff Grammich, John Herrick, Vicki Ho, Keith Horvath, RobertKahng, Wayne Klein, Bob LaBelle, Linda Lee, Chris Lesieutre, Kathleen Linden-berger, A1 Novotne, Bob Nawrocki, Koyin Shih, Donna Shrout, Daniel Staley, JeffreyTaylor, Jeff Terrell, James Thompson, Bob Travis, Aili Tripp, Nick Varsam, SheilaWestmoreland, Jeff Wolf.War on crime should utilize forgottenBy David BrooksFor people living around the 5400 block of Greenwood Av¬enue, UC security Officer Morris Hodges provides the mostvaluable of services; he makes people feel safe. It’s Morris’job to patrol an area which was once one of Hvde Park’smost dangerous and to protect the students living in Green¬wood Hall. Like the old fashioned cop on the corner, Morrisknows most of the people who live along his beat. When theysee him walking the street or slowly driving by, they stopfor a chat about sports or politics or the weather in Califor¬nia or whatever. More than likely he'll rib them about theway they staggered home from Jimmy’s two weeks before.And when he heard that the television in Greenwood Hallhad broken down, it was Morris who brought in one of hisown for the students to use. If somebody were to write an“Our Town” type drama about that little community,Morris would be the narrator.More importantly, Morris has affected the way people inthe neighborhood react to the possibility of crime. They no¬tice when Morris is, and is not on duty, and adjust theirplans accordingly. They know that Morris is familiarenough with the neighborhood to detect a strange face orcircumstance. He’s not just a faceless police car drivingby; he’s a friend responsible for the security of the area.The circumstances under which I got to know Morris arememorable. I was walking down Greenwood Avenue in Oc¬tober 1980 when a girl screamed in the parking lot behindthe Lutheran Seminary. As I ran over, she got out of a carthat was parked there and stood on the curb by the building.Morris ran over to the car and ordered the man in thedriver’s seat to get out. Instead, he backed up and then spedforward up onto the curb, hitting the girl and just missingMorris. Blowing his whistle and drawing his revolver,Morris once again commanded the driver to stop and getout. When the driver pulled back again and tried to driveaway, Morris fired, through the car door, hitting the man inthe leg. His stop at Michael Reese Hospital a few hourslater led to his arrest. (Both participants, by the way, hadnothing to do with the University. The girl was not seriouslyhurt. And the incident proved the effectiveness of WhistleS-top: within thirty seconds after Morris blew his whislte,twenty people were on the scene).Throughout the incident, Morris behaved coolly and pro¬fessionally. It was an interesting transition he had madefrom the jovial cop on the beat to the staunch fighter ofcrime, and thinking back, the two Morrises typify the tworoles of the law enforcement community. They also repre¬sent the two schools of thought which are now doing battlewithin police departments across the country.The two approaches to law' enforcement are these: the traditional one whereby a policeman protects by preserv¬ing order, just as preventive medicine preserves health,and the relatively modern approach, whereby the policeare primarily fighters of crime, like a surgeon reacting to acancer. ViewpointsstrategyPHOTO BY ANNA YAMADAMorris Hodges, a familiar face along South Green¬wood Ave.According to James Q. Wilson and George Kelling in arecent eassay in Atlantic, it is tne latter approach which isemphasized in today’s urban police departments. Police¬men are valued not because they are ultimately familiarwith a neighborhood and are able to smell trouble brewing,but for their mobility and ability to handle crisis situations.For citizens of American’s cities, the result is that the po¬lice are no longer friends, like Morris, but are anonymousautomobiles which speed by, their sirens wailing. The ex¬tensive use of the police car, Wilson and Kelling point out,has radically changed the way citizens think of the police.What it also does, it seems to me, is to change the way citi¬zens think about crime.Nowadays, we think of crime in increasingly martialterms. How many times have you heard the phrase, “waron crime?” and we are constantly seeking "more effectiveweapons” against this urban “menace.” It’s as if the streets have become a battleground with the police on oneside and the unseen criminal element on the other. If such asituation really does exist, then the only rational response isto stay out of the war, to stay inside. The lact is, however,that there is no war being fought on the street, and the mili¬tant mentality causes us to overreact to what danger doesexist.A few years ago in New Jersey, the state government con¬ducted a study whereby police officers who had previouslydriven around in automobiles would now patrol on foot. Justas the experts predicted, crime rates did not drop. But, peo¬ple living in the patrolled areas thought that they did. Theyfelt safer walking around their neighborhoods and they hada more favorable opinion of their police officers. Even thepolice officers themselves reported higher job satisfaction.These results seem to indicate that when viewing streetsafety these people had once again realized that order is therule, and crime is the exception, not the other wayaround.Hyde Park could use such an experiment. The areaaround campus after 10 p.m. looks like a set for a film onthe effects of the neutron bomb. Even when the weather isbeautiful, the sidewalks are deserted soon after nightfall.At the University of Pennsylvania or at Columbia — cam¬puses which are surrounded by neighborhoods as bad orworse than the neighborhoods which surround UC — thestreets are lively and filled with people on into the night.Whether it’s because a large part of the UC population isunaccustomed to urban living, or because of the old distor¬tions passed down through time. Hyde Parkers have over¬reacted to crime on their streets.After all, Hyde Park is a neighborhood where order iswell preserved: there is remarkably little graffiti, there areno derelicts lying around on the streets, and except for theoccasional band of math students, there are no streetgangs.Of course there is crime — four people died as a result ofviolent crime in Hyde Park last year — but there is no wargoing on out there. If you look at the police blotter in theHyde Park Herald for about a year you begin to recognize afew facts: In the Chicago Police Department's 21st district,which covers the area between 47th and 60th streets, fromCottage Grove to the Lake, and which houses about 46.000people, there are usually six or seven muggings reportedeach week. Of these muggings, the great majority occurduring rush hour periods. Very few take place after 9:00 atnight. Also, most of the robberies and assaults take place onthe outer edges of the district, around 50th Street in particu¬lar, not along the streets University people normally useThe question is not if it is perfectly safe to go outside — itnever will be — but whether or not it is better to go out withthe slight chance that something will happen rather thanliving with this claustrophobic fortress mentality. Contraryto the paranoic line of thinking, reclusiveness is not tanta¬mount to safety. It goes without saying, that the morecrowded the streets are. the less likely it is that a successfulcrime will be perpetrated.Furthermore, this self-imposed curfew has worked toalienate Hyde Parkers from each other and from theirneighborhood It has eliminated the possibility that any bu¬sinesses w ill develop which could improve the quality of lifearound the university. And it has reinforced the generalview that Hyde Park is a dull and unexciting neighborhood,especially among prospective students and authors of uni¬versity guides.Crime's biggest harm, it seems to me. is to the peoplew ho let fear of crime dominate their lives Instead of enjoy¬ing the beauty of the neighborhoods while taking the properprecautions, they become exiles in their own communities.This spring, for example, when the weather gets w armerThe Point will begin to get crowded with couples and smallgroups enjoying one of Hyde Park's nicest spots. But afterdark many of these won’t be Hyde Parkers, they'll be fromKenwood and Woodlawn. Hyde Parkers will be cowering intheir bedrooms and clutching their whistles.The Western Civilization Staffand theSocial Sciences Collegiate Divisionannounce that the intensive three-quarter Western Civ course (History131-32-33) will again be offered thissummer. Students may ertroll for allthree quarters and fulfill their westerncivilization requirement in one sum¬mer’s work.For details please contact your academic advisoror John Boyer, Chairman, Western Civ Staff(3-2771+1 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• Deiicatessen • Beauty Shop• Barber Shop • T.J.’s Restaurant• Dentist • Valet ShopFREE PARKINGMR. MORRIS 752-3800The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 9, 1982—5ALLFACULTYMEMBERSGATHER AT THEHYDE PARK x HILTONAny day or night with presentationof your faculty I.D. card the bearerreceives:• V2 Price Drinksin our Bristol Lounge andour Restaurants• 10% Offyour meal price in theLaurel Cafe• 20% Offyour meal price in theChartwell HouseGood for lunch and dinner only not applicable on Chef’s DailySpecials or Holiday Buffets such as Easter, Mother’s Dav etc.*Present your I.D. card to thewaitperson when seated*Also....Think SummerIf you are interested in our 1982 U. ofChicago Faculty Pool Club send in thecoupon to: Carol May, Hyde Park Hilton4900 S. Lakeshore Dr. Chicago 60615Name:. .I.D. No.Address.No. of Adults No. of Children.Days most likely to use facility.Clip and mail for Pool Club Info. LettersContinued from page fouris now engaged in negotiations with Univer¬sity Church and other organizations in thehope of securing loans to finance rehabilita¬tion of their building.It was probably a mistake to rent outunrenovated apartments to nonmember ten¬ants, even if rents were correspondinglylow. I only hope that the Covenantal Com¬munity can overcome the current furor, ob¬tain its financing, and carry out its ideals.James F. MeisnerBlacks miscountedTo the Editor:On page 7 of the issue of Tuesday, Febru¬ary 12, 1982, the Chicago Maroon carried anarticle of black faculty at the University ofChicago. Accompanying the article was alist of percentages of black professors at theUniversity of Chicago and five other institu¬tions. The figure given for the Univerity ofChicago (4.4%) is considerably in error, andI am caused to wonder what the source ofthat figure might have been.I am informed by the President’s officethat there were 1049 full-time teaching fac¬ulty at the University of Chicago as of June1981. This number does not include facultyon leave. The black faculty members have alist of their black colleagues here thatnumbers 18. Not all of these are full-timeteaching faculty (e.g., the Director of Ar-gonne National Laboratory).But let us not put too fine a point on thematter and take the proportion of 18 to 1049.This results in a percentage of 1.7, which isconsiderably less than 4.4James C. BruceAssociate Professor of GermanThe 4.4 percent figure reported in theMaroon was incorrectly attributed to thepercentage of black professors at the Uni¬versity. This figure represents the percent¬age of minority professors here. TheMaroon regrets the error. SYL attacks CAUSETo the Editor:On March 27, some 35,000 people marchedin Washington, D.C., to protest Reagan’s po¬licies on El Salvador. There were two clear¬ly counterposed programs raised in that de¬monstration. Our side, the Anti-ImperialistContingent (AIC), which we organized alongwith the Spartacist League, called for theleftist insurgents to win the war in El Sal¬vador; the rad-lib “doves” (like CISPESand CAUSE) want to call off the war — par¬ticularly now that the leftists are winning.We made repeated efforts to contactCISPES before the demonstration to workout arrangements to minimize confusion orcollisions, but they refused to meet. And so aday-long political confrontation took placein the streets of Washington. In order to pre¬vent the 500 Anti-Imperialist marchers fromparticipating in the demonstration, and tostop anyone from joining us, they called thecops: cossacks, motorcycle cops, SWATteams. The police blocked us from enteringMalcolm X Park, then sealed us off once wegot in, turning the assembly point, and laterour rally, effectively into temporary deten¬tion centers. W'hen the most frenzied of theanti-Spartacists in the CISPF]S-organizedMarch 27 Coalition tried to cordon off theAnti-Imperialist Contingent with a chain of“marshall’s with linked arms, we quicklytook down that line. You couldn’t miss it:the Spartacists were the ones fighting forleftist military victory in Ell Salvador; thereformists called on and hid behind thecops.Why? Are they just bad people? No,they’re in a political bind. CISPES / CAUSEcall for a “political solution” — for negotia¬tions with the blood-soaked colonels whoslaughtered more than 30,000 over the last2‘2 years, and stand for the “peace of200,000 dead.” Every day it becomes moreurgent to smash the junta simply to survive.Yet now, when the Salvadoran rebels have6—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 9, 1982Lettersthe junta on the run, CISPES/CAUSE wantthe leftists to lay down their arms. This posi¬tion has nothing to do with the political reali¬ty in El Salvador, but it speaks volumesabout the reformists’ appetites in the U.S.They’re after an “anti-Reagan” alliancewith “all progressives” — that is, liberalDemocrats like Teddy Kennedy. But the“liberals” don't w;ant to see the U.S. takeanother defeat like Vietnam, and they suredon’t want any more Cubas. In fact, theyargue for negotiations as the only way tostop the leftists from winning.The reformists contend that the strugglein Central America has nothing to do withcommunism. Reagan/Haig say they aredrawing the line against Communism inCentral America; CISPES & Co. cover theirears and denounce the SL/SYL for tellingthe truth about imperialism’s global de¬signs. Everyone knows Reagan's target isthe USSR, but the reformists pretend not tonow in order to court the Democrats, whoshare the target but differ somewhat aboutthe means. To keep the movement “Readyfor Teddy,” CISPES resorts to using thecops to keep out the reds.So what does CAUSE stand for9 CAUSEhas not participated in any of the recent pro¬tests on campus against Reagan/Haig’s wardrive. They boycotted a picket-line of Econprof Arnold Harberger’s (a “former” advi¬sor to the Chilean junta) first public talk oncampus in two years. They scoffed at an in¬vitation to rally against Marine recruiterson campus, announcing with consummatesectarianism that they “would never parti¬cipate in anything with the Sparts.” Theywere no-shows at an emergency demonstra¬tion against Haig’s threats against Nicara¬gua. Well, CAUSE finally got active — asgoons working hand-in-hand with the D.C.Park Police to keep thhe AIC out of the de¬monstration! To justify this alliance withthe cops, CAUSE is now spreading theslander around campus that we “attackeddemonstrators.” We did not attack "demon¬strators.” They set up a line of goons in yel¬low arm bands who tried to physically iso¬late us and prevent people from joining the AIC. This attempt to segregate the reds, aclear violation of any kind of democracy,could not be tolerated. And it wasn’t. Weformed a flying wedge, broke through theline, and withdrew. They scattered. CAUSEis also saying that the SYL is a bunch of “ul¬traleftists” and “provocateurs” — that is,that we’re cop agents. Pretty funny accusa¬tion coming from people who happily unitedwith the cops to keep out the left.In Washington, it was crystal clear thatonly the SYL stood for the victory of the Sal¬vadoran workers over the Salvadoran bour¬geoisie, which, in the words of FarabundoMarti (Communist leader of the 1932 upris¬ing), is “unconditionally allied to Yankeeimperialism.” If Marti had been in D.C. onMarch 27, the only platform he could havespoken from would have been the SYL’s. Weare the only ones with the real tradition, be¬cause u'e know' the only possible solution:the only realistic solution for the Salvadoranmasses is the road of the Bolshevik revolu¬tion of October, 1917. There is nothing to ne¬gotiate with the butchers and their imperi¬alist partners! The only solution for theSalvadoran civil war is a workers resolu¬tion! That’s why we say: Workers and Pea¬sants of El Salvador, Take San Salvadjr!Down with the Junta, Workers to Power!Mark DavidSpartacus Youth LeagueLetters to the Editors should be submitted byTuesday night to be published on Friday. So let¬ters will be published on Tuesday. All letters mustbe typed and signed While the Maroon makesevery effort to print letters in full, we reserve theright to edit for length any submission over 400words. When more than one letter is submittedthat expresses a similar opinion, a representativeletter will be printed.msM'mCHINESE-AMERICAN RESTAURANTSpecializing in Cantoneseand American dishes.Open Daily 1 1 A.-8:30 P.M.Closed Monday1318 E. 63rd MU 4-1062The Center for Continuing EducationWelcomesMallory's RestaurantAs its new caterer,ProvidingLunch and Dinner11:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m.Cocktails11:30 a.m. to 11:30 p.m.The Center Cafeteria7:30 a.m. to 3:00p.m.and full service catering to the.University and the Hyde Park Community. Distribution:TODAY4 P.M.Bring UC ID A^50SADThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 9, 1982—7TheGreat Vigil of EasterSaturday, April 10th, 10:30 p.m.Rockefeller Memorial Chapel PHILIP M. CRANEREPUBLICAN MEMBER OF CONGRESSFROM ILLINOIS HOUSE WAYS & MEANS COMMITTEE1980 PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATESPEAKS ON:ROLE OF GOVERNMENT: THE VISIBLEHAND IN THE ECONOMYSWIFT LECTURE HALL14 APRIL 19827:00 P.M.ADMISSION FREERECEPTION TO FOLLOWSponsored by Young Americas FoundationTHE PUBThe Finest Selection of Beersin Hyde ParkNEW SATURDAY HOURSThe Pub will now open at 7 P.M. on SaturdaysAnnual Membership Fee:$2.00.Monday - Friday4:00 P.M. -1:30 A.M.Saturday7:00 P.M.-1:30 A.M.Ida Noyes BasementMemberships available from SAO Rm. 210, Ida Noyes Hall(You must be 21 or over) At the Phoenix in theBasement of Reynolds ClubRock and PopLP’s and SinglesAre on Sale35% OFFthe regular Phoenix priceSafe Extends through April 138—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 9, 1982a GREY CITY JOURNAL Fri.April9,1982THE POLITICS OF POPSound Effects: Youth, Leisure, and the Poli¬tics of Rock 'n' Rollby Simon FrithPantheon Books, S8.95, 294 p.By Jeffrey MakosThe last time I was most impressed by thetruly international nature of Pop music wasduring the Hostage Crisis in Iran, when theNew York Times published a fascinating ar¬ticle on life in the streets around the U.S.Embassy. As rabid demonstrators den¬ounced the Western Devil Imperialists forAmerican TV cameras, merchants nearbycontinued to sell various American and European goods, the most notable example ofwhich happened to be cassette tapes by theBritish rock group Jethro Tull. Whether ornot the Ayatollah grooves to "LocomotiveBreath" during his spare time is not important, nor is the possible use of "disinformation" on the part of the Times; what is vitalis the ability of a pop group to serve as a signfor the power and problematics of Westernculture itself. We in the West have becomeso inured to pop's pervasive cultural pre¬sence that it becomes a joke when the RedBrigades attempt to use "hard rock" to deprogram General Dozier, instead of seeingthe intended threat, or that the threat in¬volved can only be seen as humorous in thelight of current American pop's overwhelmingly non political status as an entertainment industry.But while the mainstream Anglo-Ameri¬can pop businesses developed to the pointthat they were raking in over 4 Billion dol¬lars annually by the mid 1970's, smaller in¬dependent labels were trying to break evenas they distributed records made by coun¬tless English groups from the punk explo¬sion during the late 70's. And while B.B.King was able to tour Russia as an officiallysanctioned representative of Western"pop," the Czechoslovakian governmentwas brutally harrassing and finally incar¬cerating members of the Czech rock groupThe Plastic People, an anti-Soviet avant-garde troupe heavily influenced by smug¬gled tapes of Frank Zappa and The VelvetUnderground. What for many Americanshas become a jaded leisure time commoditycan have a completely different importanceelsewhere, an understatement at least, yetone which cannot be either accepted or dis¬missed too easily, given the continuing dom¬ination of pop music as — next to film — themost powerful international cultural lan¬guage.It is to the importance, as well as the com¬plexities, of pop as cultural arbiter and so¬ciological document that Simon Frith turnsin his book Sound Effects. Originally pub¬lished in England as a shorter and far moreacademically written version as The Sociol¬ogy of Rock, Frith is interested in problemsof meaning and manipulation as found inwhat he sees as the most important masscommunications system next to film. Whatfascinates him most is the disjunction be¬tween the intended use of pop artifacts asprogrammed by the major arbiters of popmusic such as corporations like CBS andEMI, and the actual use of these artifacts asindependent entities to define and furtherdevelop youth culture. Regardless of pop'suse as entertainment for the new middle-aged (seen in Elvis and pop muzak andAdult Contemporary radio), Frith is con¬cerned with how pop and rock as Mass cul¬ture are finally inseparable from pop androck as Youth culture. And so he sees the so¬ciology of rock as ultimately inseparablefrom the sociology of youth. Sound Effects isFrith's detailed look at the various interre¬lated components of the industry and theconsumer, his attempt at examining whathe finds to be the tensions between the lei¬sure use and the political use of popularmusic.Frith divides his work into three sections,"Rock Meanings," "Rock Production," and"Rock Consumption." The first section is awhirlwind tour through both the historical development of popular music from jazzand blues through country and folk to rock'n' roll and later rock divisions. He just asquickly surveys the major theoretical statements on mass culture, from the Leavisites,through Adorno and the Frankfurt School, toWalter Benjamin and the Marxists, as wellas viewing how these theoreticians influenced the major rock critics such as JonLandau and Greil Marcus. Frith wants todevelop a matrix of historical informationthrough which both the average rock fanand the skilled academic scholar can seerock as true cultural artifact, and fromthere apply the theories to the next two sections. Here he begins by demonstrating theinterrelated parts of the music industry interms of its creation of rock artifact, andthen he goes on to examine the complexitiesof the consumption of that artifact by theyouth market.It is in this first section that one finds, un¬fortunately, the major problems with thebook. Unfortunately, because Sound Effectsis an important contribution to the seriousstudy of pop music as a cultural artifact.The problem is that Frith tries to present toomuch information in too short a time, so that the knowledgeable pop critic will haveheard much of this early history before, inmany more detailed works, while the uncon¬vinced members of the academy will initially find nothing more than a brief survey ofmaterial needing far more explication thanFrith gives here. Again, this is too bad, forwhile the first historical section will be ofservice mostly to those wanting directiontowards those important primary sourcesthat Frith mentions, the second two sectionstruly break new ground of interest to criticand academic alike. The section on "RockProduction" is one of the clearest detailingsto be found on the intricacies of performingpop music, of the signing and recording ofgroups by major record companies, of thefinancial connections between companiesand agents and producers and managersand the press, and finally of the specific nature of the rock press as information broker,as well as business tool, in the creation ofrock meaning. Frith manages to pack anenormous amount of detail about the industry into this section, as well as using thisinformation to suggest how the industry attempts to both mold the youth audience aswell as satisfy existing needs and trends inSprinsteen with Mass/ Youth Culture the dominant teenage market.Frith moves quickly through this wealthof material, and while he manages to touchon almost every major facet of the rock industry, he never focuses for too long on anyone subject. This makes Sound Effects seemin places like nothing more than a "Notes onPop." Frith raises interest in matters ofmanager domination of groups, industrymanipulation of product, financial limitations on the product messages themselves,as well as media determination of how thosemessages are relayed to the potential audi¬ence. That he never concentrates on any onetopic with any great depth is not to suggest alack of interest in detail on Frith's part.Rather, he is so concerned with presentingsuch a great amount of material to both ageneral and academic audience that hecreates almost a shorthand version of rocksociology. This will be a book that will beused as the basis for more extended looks atthe sociological elements and problems ofpopular music, and it is to Frith's credit thathe manages to outline the ways in which future writers must explore the field.The most important and vital section ofthis extremely vital book is the third part on"Rock Consumption." Frith, as a Britishrock critic, is far more attuned to the com¬plexities of the past and present punk andpost punk forms of pop, and it is here thathis assertion that rock is primarily a youthculture has its most impact. Frith investigates how cop as a leisure commodity istranslated into a semiological system usedby youth to develop and articulate commonexperiences, and how this use goes beyondthe intentions and control of the industrythat creates the pop artifacts (including records and performances and magazines). Itis also here that Frith investigates the roleof rock as an articulator of youth politicsand youth sexuality, by viewing how variousaudiences use the music to define themselves and express their view of the world.What is most important about Frith's workis his sense of the traditional bias in rockagainst women, and how much of what hasbeen seen as "revolutionary" music hascontinued to stress and reinforce traditionalroles for men and women — men as therocking studs and women as the passiveagent of domesticity to be either used oravoided by the male. While this is an important and too often overlooked characteristicof almost all pop music, and while the fastpace of Frith's survey does not allow him tosuggest more than the general outlines ofthe problem, this is possibly the most cruciai section of Sound Effects. For in dealingwith pop music's traditional sexism, Frithraises the fact of probably the most important political subtext in popular culture.While Frith goes on to other general conclusions about the interrelationship of leisureand politics at the end of his work, whatstays most in the mind after reading SoundEffects is Frith's point on just how relentlessly most pop has reinforced sexual stereotypes, even while seemingly proclaimingalternative cultural and political messages.The benefits of Sound Effects, then, aremixed. Frith is clearly an articulate and intelligent observer of cultural and sociologycal phenomenon, yet he has attempted topresent too much information in too littlespace. While the book is a plethora of wonderful insights into makeup of the pop industry, one is left wanting more depth, moreanalysis of the problems inherent in the systern, more investigation of the problemsseen so clearly by Frith. But Sound Effectsis possibly the most important book aboutPop written in the last ten years, and everypage itself seems to demand that even morework be done in the area of popular music'ssociology, work which Frith is able to clearly outline here. Frith's achievement is trulyimpressive; this outline and analysis is essential reading for anyone who has everbought a pop record. Your ears will never bethe same.♦ ♦ ♦T he University of ChicagoStudent Activities Officepresentsdlk n Dots/ x \\ r\/ //lOONBEAMSAn Evening of Dancing with Panama Frangis and his Savoy SultansFriday, May 7, 19829pm to lamIda Noyes HallTickets On Sale Nowat theUniversity Box Office• Students: $7,50/person• Faculty, Alumni, Staff:$15/personFor More Information,753-3591♦ ♦ 1 1 i I il I 1 1 1 1 1 1 i i i i \i—\ Tonight - Micheal Cimino spent an estimated $35 million for thismovie starring Kris Kristofferson, Christopher Walker,John Hurt and Isabelle Huppert; HEAVEN S GATE at:7:00 and 9:45 (sep. adm.)Tomorrow - The first in this quarter’s showings of Disney classicsDARBY O’GILL AND THE LITTLE PEOPLE at 2:30Then the surprise movie smash, with music by GeorgeHarrison TIME BANDITS at: 7:15, 9:45 and midnight (sep.adm.)Sunday - Otto Preminger’s epic EXODUS starring PaulNewman, Eva Marie Saint, Sal Mineo and others at: 2:00Then Gillo Pontecorvo’s stirring revolutionary epic BATTLEOF ALGIERS at 8:00 (sep. adm.)AH films in Cobb Hall. •"* .. •. W* ——_—_—/^DOC FILMStTi i i i I r Mi7nryn a“The GreatestFlamenco Guitaristof Our Day! 99San Francisco ChronicleMaster Guitarist Juan Serrano brings hisenormous talent and international reputationto the performance of Flamenco and selectionsfrom other Spanish traditions. Bom in Cor¬doba, Spain, Home of Flamenco, Mr. Serranohas recorded his artistry for RCA Victor andElektra and has delighted presidents andkings with his performances. He is the onlyFlamenco Guitarist to have been awardedthe Gold Medallion by the Spanish Academyof Fine Arts.JUAN SERRANOin concert8:00 P.M.MONDAY, APRIL 12,1982in the auditorium of theINTERNATIONAL HOUSEof theUniversity of Chicago1414 East 59th StreetChicago, IllinoisTickets: $5.00 (Students: $4.00)COSPONSORED BY INTERNATIONAL HOUSE AND METROGNOME PRODUCTIONS5309 S. Blackstone • 947-0200OUR FAMOUS STUFFED PIZZA IN THE PAN IS NOWAVAILABLE IN HYDE PARKOPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK • 11 AM TO 12 MIDNIGHTCocktails • Pleasant Dining • Pick-Up“Chicago’s best pizza!” — Chicago Magazine, March 1977“The ultimate in pizza!” — New York Times, January 19802—FRIDAY, APRIL 9, 1982—THE GREY CITY JOURNAL9 to- artdweamvt vvt»*»out the natiP.W (E.S.T^ 10yesterday atJ3 Wndy $7 Oto»tt32 PtcWt-47 Cloudy m . sc=iPl i3,*12* wrt'KJ* -wuutrtoCKv,to*m>m«i*au « rj hii*Pair96 Haw|'«« ti Fair14MISC.Art Extravaganza: Readings byStudent Writers. This choice selection of talent culled fromNorth Side Literary salons, loftparties, and over-heard tele¬phone conversations features.Ann Keniston and Paul O'Donnell(1st and 2nd place, respectivelyin last year's poetry contest) con¬tinuing to prove U. of C. doesn'tproduce only stodgy intellectualmachines. Paul will also performin a play by Keith Fleming (Paulwill read the woman's part — oris it Keith who's doing that?) Ju¬dith Silverstein and Sarah Hern¬don will make their literary debut(Judith is a rare combination ofrobust masculine humor, lyri¬cism, and unflinching honesty;Sarah is a startling bundle ofmorbidity, precision, strangebeauty, and schitzophrenic in¬sight). Vince Katz may show up ifhis band isn't playing. LarryCohen will read if he's soberenough to make it all the way toIda Noyes. Other writers, toobrilliant to accurately describe,will read as well. Friday, April 9,at 8 p.m., in the Third FloorTheatre of Ida Noyes.MUSICNorth Indian Music The premierartist of the "hundred stringlute" (santoor) Shiv KumarSharma, and tabla wizard, ZakirHussain combine performancesin an evening of classical NorthIndian melodies and rhythms,sponsored by Asian Arts of theUniversity of Chicago and theAmeer Khusro Society of America. Friday, April 9th at 7:30 pm.Tickets ($8, students S6) at thedoor. Law School Auditorium,1111 East 60th Street on the Mid-‘way.Ivan Waldbauer, Professor ofMusic at Brown University willspeak on Bela Bartok's "Mikro-kosmos" on Friday, April 9th at3:00 p.m. in Regenstein 264. ThePublic is invited and admission isfree.The Balkanske Igre Folk Orchestraperforms a wide variety of authentic folk music from EasternEurope and the Balkans. Hearthem on Thursday, April 15th at12:15 p.m. at the Goodspeed Reci¬tal Hall. Free.FILMHeaven's Gate (Michael Cimino,1980) Perhaps more than anyother recent American film thisportrayal of warring immigrantsand capitalists in fronter Wyoming has received unjustified criti¬cism from the commercial press.Yet, Cimino (Thunderbolt andLightfoot, The Deerhunter) hassuccessfully created a daring andextraordinary film which resem¬ bles in structure and theme theworks of such classic directors asFord and Hawks. While Cimino'sconcern for the basic Americanideals of community, freedom,and the lone hero differ littlefrom his predecessors, the endsto which he feels these traditionalvalues should be directed varysignificantly. Kris Kristoffersonplays a Harvard graduate whoseadventurous spirit leads him westward where he defends therights and lives of immigrants inthe face of burgeoning industrialinterests.Kristofferson's character becomes the crux of the moralstance of the film: despite hisbackground of wealth and educa¬tion the hero's ostensibly hypoHeaven's Gatecritical defense of the poor remains the most virtuousalternative to the given existentdilemmas. Although Cimino's attitude toward the true Americanideals and social change are predictably tragic, the alternativestrategies which suggests and theinherent traditional corruptionswhich he earnestly depicts makesHeaven's Gate a film as relevantto contemporary America as it ishonest about our historical andcultural origins. Highly recom¬mended. Fri., April 9 at 7 and 9:45pm. Doc. $2. — RMDarby O'Gill And the Little People(Robert Stevenson, 1959) CaptureKing Brian of Knocknasheega(Jimmy O'Dea) and he'll grantye three wishes. But careful be,for "5000 years old he is, andevery year he's learned a newtrick." Just ask Darby O'Gill (Al¬bert Sharpe). He caught the mis¬chievous little leprechaun twice.And all he's had to show for itwere a vanishing pot of gold and a handsome young suitor (SeanConnery) for his daughter (JanetMunro). Disney's romantic, liveaction fantasy is as charming,whimsical, and painless as you'dexpect, and it will doubtless playwell to tykes. Best scene: Janetgets chased by a banshee. Sat.,Apr. 10 at 2:30 pm. S2.00. Doc. PFCasablanca (1943) Michael Curtiz'melodrama of romance and intrigue in the back alley stink ofvichy Morocco is the characteractor's dream. Accompanyingthe near perfect ensemble of international stars — HumphreyBogart, Ingrid Bergman, PaulHenreid, Claude Rains, ConradVeidt, Sidney Greenstreet, PeterLorre, and Dooley Wilson — is anas great parade of unforgettableone or two line contributors. Whocould forget S.Z. Sakall, whoavows that Rick's cafe is "as honest as the day is long," or croupier Marcel Dalio, who "proves it"by rigging the roulette wheel?And how about Frank Puglia, theArab carpet peddler who tries tointerest Bergman in a rug bywhittling down the price — chunkby chunk, or bartender LeonidKinskey, flirting with MadeleineLeBeau? Cut away the nostalgia,or even the Bogey idolatry, andCabablanca still outshines themall. Sat. Apr. 10 at 7:15 & 9:30 pm.LSF. $2.00 — PFTime Bandits (Terry Giliam, 1981)This adventure film about aseven year old Britainer whoteams up with a group of midgetsto travel to magical lands and by¬gone epics may be a little too fan¬tastic for an adult audience. Yet,its socialistic undertones maysatisfy even the most erudite "Advise and Consent") featuringan all-star Jewish cast led byPaul Newman as the macho resistance leader spouting off vi¬triolic lines from the Old Testament. He is paired with EvaMarie Saint as the plastic Ameri¬can nurse whose consciousness isaltered by a saccharine blondhaired, blue-eyed Jewish girlnamed Karen. Thefilm iscrudelymessianic with its epic format,straw man jokes about smellyJews, a triumphant theme scoreand stereotyped depiction of allbut a few Arabs as white hoodedmarauders. The Jewish settlersare labelled "Palestinians," thusfurther legitimating the ideologi¬cal conquest of the region. Recommended for those who enjoyedHolocaust, Skokie and Voyage ofthe Damned. Sun. April 11th at2:00. DOC—JMC.Battle of Algiers (1966, d. Gillo Pontecorvo): In 1962, Algeria was fi¬nally liberated from France, whothus lost one of her most important colonies. Pontecorvo usesthe capital city of Algiers as thefocal point of that struggle between the Arabs and the Frenchin his fictional re-creation ofthose events. We thereby get afilm that looks like a documentary, but Pontecorvo's mise en-scene has the sense of the imme¬diate. The revolution seems to behappening right before your eyes,with its failures, miscalculationsand the desparate attempt by theFrench to suppress it by the useof Armed Forces. The aim of therebels was not for their successbut for the people to know whatthey were doing, and to supporttheir quest for freedom. It is justFoHowiand w?ign citifl yes^rda'ocal time Indicate'Editor: Richard KayeFilm Editor: Jim CrottyBook Editor: John EganTheatre Editor: Keith FlemingClassical Music Editor: Robin Mitchell 1Fiction and Poetry Editor: Paul O'Donnell 2rM 48Production: Nadine McGann, David Miller, Max SandersStaff: Mike Alper, Chris Berenyi, Pat Cannon, Sabrina Farber,Pat Finegan, Kira Foster, Susan Franusiak, Nancy Goldstucker,Jim Goodkind, Sarah Herndon, Michael Honigsoerg, AliceJames, A.A. Kambouris, Nikolai Katz, Vincent Michael, DavidMiller, Pat O'Connell, Arturo Perez Reyes,Sharon Peshkin, GeofPotter, Glen Sheffer, Dan Stetzel, Lonnie Stonitsch, Jeffery Taylor, Jennifer Tompkins, Michele White, Jacob Wirtschafter, KenWissoker, Scott Wolley, Sandy Young. viewer. The infantile hero leaveshis superficial and grossly materialistic parents, travels thefourth dimension, and returns tosuburban England to find hisparents the victims of a toastermelt down. Although entertain¬ing at times, overall Time Bandits is a meandering and generally confused attempt at a familyfilm with a political message.Perhaps more appropriate wouldhave been Time Waster. WithThe Monty Python gang in cameoroles. Sat., April 10 at 7:15, 9:45and midnight. Doc. $2. — RMExodus (Otto Preminger, 1960).Based on the Uris blockbuster,this is another lengthy Preminger "civilization film" (theothers being "The Cardinal" and when you think that they havebeen defeated that they havetheir greatest success. Pontecorvo's sympathy lies with the liberationists and his personal styleconveys this as well. That he wasable to make this film so soonafter the revolution is remarkable in itself. And so is the film.April 11, at 8:00. $2. Doc. — C. CChina Gate (Samuel Fuller, 1957)Although this film about pre Vietnam War IndoChina containsabout as much anti-communistdogma as is daily spewed bytoday's commercial press, Fullerattributes this film's overallparanoia to the psychological defects of his desperate characters.Gene Barry plays an Americandynamighter fighting for theFrench Foreign Legion who accompanies his estranged wifeLucky Legs (Angie Dickinson) ona sabotage mission in enemy territory. But their adventure merely serves as a backdrop for theiremotional conflicts, conflictswhich stem from Barry's previous rejection of their son's ori¬ental features which he inheritedfrom his half-breed mother. Aswith all his films Fuller's mainconcern lies with the problemsposed by America's heterogen-ious social character. With Nat"King" Cole as the singing mercenary. Recommended. Mon.,April 12 at 8 pm. Doc. SI.50 —RMARTEd Paschke The Renaissance Society continues this exhibit of Chi¬cago "Imagist" Ed Paschke's selected works from 1967 to 1981,and it's unquestionably one of themost interesting art shows toemerge in Hyde Park in anumber of years. The showevokes a vivid sense of Paschke'sgrowth into an artist of some di¬versity and originality. From thePop-influenced early paintings ofa tatooed Claudette Colbert andsultry drag queens to the videoimages of his recent work,Paschke evolves into a more subtie, more mysteriously suggestive painter, much less dependenton cheap camp jabs at middleAmerican grotesquerie andsham. A revealing look at a pivotal Chicago artist, the show runsuntil April 18th, Tuesdaysthrough Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 4p.m., and Sundays noon until 4p.m., on the fourth floor of CobbHall — R.K.Alumni Who Collect I Drawingsfrom the 16th Century to the Present Ntot nearly as self serving oras bland in content as its lackluster title would suggest, thisSmart Gallery exhibit of drawings by University alumni (all ofwhom are in some way connectedwith the art world), actually in¬cludes some fine pieces, nicelyarranged, and highly revealing ofeach collector's tastes. Includedare nearly one hundred drawingsrepresenting eleven collectors(Dennis Adrian, Victor Carlson,Mary L. Gray, Julius Lewis, Edward Maser, Seymour Slive,Ruth Philbrick, Frederick Cummings, Dwight Miller), many ofwhich have never been exhibitedbefore. Running until May 16, theshow covers works of Ingres, Delacroix, Degas, Seurat, Klee, deKooning, and numerous others.On April 25th, Edward Maser willgive a lecture on collecting. TheSmart Gallery is located at 5550S. Greenwood Avenue, and isopen Tuesday through Saturday10 a.m. to 4 p.m., and Sundaynoon to 4 p.m. Admission is free.THE GREY CITY JOU R N AL—F R I DAY, APRIL 9, 1982—3American DreamCourt Studio Dreams Up AlbeeBy Vincent MichaelWhen Edward Albee's American Dreampremiered in New York City twenty-oneyears ago, he wroteThe play is an examination of theAmerican Scene, an attack on the sub¬stitution of artificial for real values inour society, a condemnation of com¬placency, cruelty, emasculation andvacuity; it is a stand against the fic¬tion that everything in this slippingland of ours is peachy-keen...The American Dream is a picture ofour time.Jon Shamis, who directs Court Studio's cur¬rent production of the comic nightmare satire, feels that Albee's picture is still appro¬ priate to 1982. I think he is right, forAmerica is again slipping into the mire ofcommercialized complacency and artificialvalues. Albee's characters complain thatthey can't get satisfaction because "that'sthe way things are today.” "Things" arethat way today as well, and despite theshrinking dollar, our "American" valuesmay well be, as Albee suggests, more de¬pendent upon things than people.The setting, an attractively decoratedapartment, symbolizes the superficiality ofAmerican values. The characters are comi¬cally artificial, their actions absurd anddreamlike. Albee keeps the fantastic alwaysin step with the familiar, however, and it isfrom this juxtaposition that they playderives its humor and significance. Absur¬dism is more pronounced in this earlier play than Albee's later more famous Who'sAfraid of Virginia Woolf. The AmericanDream uses its absurd, dreamlike quality toheighten the tension between drama and reality and to sharpen the cutting edge of itssocial satire and criticism.The play leads you into the insipid lives ofa stereo typical husband and wife, she talk¬ing incessantly about buying a hat, he whim¬pering about the broken toilet. Grandmawho is Mommy's mother, discourses atlength about being old, and is engaged in aconstant struggle with Mommy. Slowlydarker elements emerge: hatred and self¬ishness, emasculation and destruction; allencased in Albee's witty dialogue, full of punand cliche. As the dark elements beneaththe absurdly proper and obfuscatory mid¬dle-class rhetoric emerge, the humor of their juxtaposition becomes darker. WhenGrandma relates how Mommy and Daddytried to get satisfaction once, she refers to"a bumble" which is her misnomer for a"bundle of joy," in turn an euphemism for achild. That a child is translated into a mistake is more than clever pun — it reinforcesAlbee's criticism of societal values thatforce human form and life to become shallow and empty — to reflect the more perfectconsumer world of things, material goodsthat serve and satisfy the individual.To do this, Albee is saying, is to tear theheart and soul from a person, to emascu¬late, to create shells of people. Indeed, themetaphor becomes physical as Albee implies that such mores are the mutilation andmurder of humanness. The unattractiveshells of Mommy and Daddy, the strippedbut still superficial shell of Mrs. Barker, andthe stunningly attractive shell of the youngman all contain the same thing: a vacuumwhere humanity should be. That the charac¬ters so confuse themselves by their adher¬ence to formal politeness and cliche, thatthey sound proper but are so totally absurdis symbolic of this internal emptiness. OnlyGrandma remains a possible exception tothis rule, but most of her humanity is amemory fading fast. Still, she is the onlyperson who can act, who can actually doanything. In the end she manipulates the action of the other characters, and thenwatches with the audience.The Studio production is a student endeavor which, while lacking polish and confidence, is nonetheless more than adequateand definitely worth seeing. The stage isvery impressive for a Studio play, and en¬hances the tacky superficiality of Albee's"Mommy and Daddy." Aggie Zarkadas isvery good as Mommy, the over made-up,back-stabbing wife, while Jeff Boulden isfine as the emasculated, whimperingDaddy. Caroline Kera is entertaining asMrs. Barker, the "professional woman"who assists the couple in their quest for satisfaction. Steve Ganser's Young Man was abit shaky in parts, but good in others. DawnBrennan was outstanding as Grandma, perhaps the only character with any depth,bridging the gap between drama and audience; fantasy and reality. For the mostpart, this is not an actor's play, since part ofthe point is that the characters are shallow,stupid, and basically inhuman. While badacting might have loused the play up, goodacting couldn't really enhance it verymuch.What such a play does call for is directing,which Jon Shamis handled well. I also applaud the song played before the show — I isten to the words closely. It is certainly worththe trouble to see this campus production ofan entertaining, unusual, and even topicalplay.By Shawn MageeGertrude Stein, Gertrude Stein, GertrudeStein, written by Marty Martin and directedby Milton Moss is the third in a series of onewoman shows being presented this season atthe Goodman Studio Theatre. The touringcompany of Gertrude Stein, which stars PatCarroll, set up shop in Chicago recently for alimited engagement which ended lastweek.The play is set on a rainy night sometimein the 1930's at the infamous 27 Rue deFleures, the Paris apartment Stein andAlice B. Toklas shared for over twenty fiveyears; an apartment which also served asboth sanctuary and showcase for some ofthe most creative minds of the early twentieth century. As is the nature of most single person plays, there is no plot, but rathera series of anecdotes and ruminations on thepast. In Gertrude Stein, the great majorityof those appear to have been culled from Stein's best known work, The Autobio¬graphy of Alice B. Toklas. Indeed, the mostwitty and entertaining of them are lifted al¬most verbatim from this work, thus castingMartin more in the role of an editor than aplaywright. His task is then to select andsplice these slices of life into a coherent andcontinuous whole that is also appropriate forthe stage. For the most part, this editing andadapting is done with skill and grace; eitherthe transitions are so smooth that they gounnoticed or they are intentionally disjoint¬ed and tangential, a trademark of Stein'sown style of writing.As for content, the play is skewed (forsome inexplicable reason) toward a depic¬tion of Stein's relationship with her brother,Leo. The first third of Gertrude Stein dealsalmost exlusively with this relationship;references to Leo continue to pepper theplay throughout, and the final scene showsStein writing him a letter. This overempha¬sis is totally incommensurate with theamount of space accorded him in Autbbio-graphy of Alice B. Toklas. Perhaps thisoveremphasis is meant to supplant the ten¬sion which would potentially have beencreated by an equally generous portrayal ofthe relationship between Stein and Toklas.in addition, the seemingly endless preoccu¬pation with Leo threatens more than once tothrow the play out of balance. The anecdotesconcerning Picasso, Matisse, and Apollon-aire are humorous, sometimes insightful,and infinitely more interesting. One also wonders why more was not included onHemmingway, who Lere merits scant atten¬tion. Martin also includes in his play somerather nebulous speculation as to the originsof Stein's homosexuality. He comes to theconclusion that it was because she was fatThis rather bizarre theory demonstratesthat Martin should concentrate on writingPat Carroll in Gertrude Stein plays, where he perhaps has some talentand leave such misguided musings to theFreudians.The performance given by Pat Carrollwas, for the most part, convincing, althoughher gregariousness was at times too overwhelming, especially in light of Stein's subtle aridity. The overall quality of her performance was fine, however, and I must admit,a pleasant surprise. I would not originallyhave expected this Hollywood game showalum to create such a convincing GertrudeStein, any more than I would have expecteda convincing Hamlet by Paul Lynde.The set, designed by Anne Gibson, subtlyrecalls the milieu of Paris in the late 30's,and the "Picassos" and "Matisses," whichwere painted, directly onto the set ratherthan created separately and then hung, addsto the intimacy of this famous "apartment."Carroll's costume, selected by Garland Riddie, consists simply of a huge, brown caftanrather than one of the ubiquitous suits inwhich Stein was most frequently photo¬graphed and which, to me, is inseparablefrom her persona.Those with extensive knowledge of Steinand her oevre, or those with a specificallyscholarly interest may find Gertrude Steinsomewhat disappointing. In general, howev¬er, the production creates the opportunityfor an entertaining evening while simultaneously providing a peek into the life andwork of one of America's least understoodliterary legends.4—FRIDAY, APRIL 9, 1982—THE GREY CITY JOURNALClassical Music: Two One-Night Hits at MandelBy Elaine GuregianAustrian pianist Jorg Demus gave a highly personal account of Fantasies by Bach,Mozart, Beethoven, Schubert, and Schumann in a recital at Mandel Hall Tuesdayevening. His program was an intriguing digres'sion from the rutted chronological pathtraversed in most recitals. Bach, Mozart,and Beethoven appeared on the first half ofthe program, Schumann and Schubert onthe second, to be sure. But in this case, theirmusic was presented in a manner invitingspecific comparison. What differentiatesBeethoven's conception of a Fantasy fromSchumann's? And what common thread, ifany, links their compositions? Answeringsuch questions is a large undertaking,whether one attempts it in prose or in per¬formance.Long, intricate, continuously developinglines characterize Fantasies. This programsuited Demus's taste for ferreting out thequirky chromaticism common to this kind ofpiece and these works in particular. In theSchumann he chiseled fundamental struc¬tures as well as shading melodic and har¬monic nuances. Elsewhere, he oftenoveremphasized surface detail, favoringmelodic felicity over formal outline. Histechnical skill made the results beautifulbut not always structurally coherent.Demus studied with renowned Debussy in¬terpreter Walter Gieseking, and the influence is audible in his supple touch. Fourpieces from Schumann's eight piece collec¬tion of Fantasiestucke (Fantasy Pieces) Op.12 provided the best showcase for Demus'scraftsmanship. These demanding works re¬quire a pianist with technical speed, flexibil¬ity, and the ability to sort out lines thatweave elusively between voices, sometimesin mixed meters. In the piece "In derNacht" ("In the Night") Demus coaxedinner lines out and hinted at dark regions ofharmonic ambiguity while maintaining aflowing continuity.Such a careful balance between small andlarge considerations was lacking in the Mo¬zart Fantasy in D minor K.397. Demus la¬vished so much atlention on some phrasesthat one had the sense of hearing a tenderdissection, not a construction, of the work.Polished sections were not integrated intolarger, coherent units.Still, Demus's touch, light and clear, wasappropriate for the Mozart. Here and in theBach Chromatic Fantasy and Fugue BWV903 his playing sounded more like a clavi¬chord than a modern piano. The clavichord has a softer, more covered sound, a nar¬rower dynamic range and quicker decay(diffusion of sound) than its offspring. Thosecharacteristics, transferred to piano, sof¬tened the craggy edges of the Bach.Demus's performance was warmer than thebrittle harpsichord versions sometimes rendered.As the title suggests, Bach's compositionis highly chromatic. Lines are developed byall sorts of contrapuntal devices, and theperformer must make a case for a formalplan governing the phrases as they windtheir way around the minor mode. Demusused rubato generously to map out the struc¬ture, and this temporal flexibility lent itselfwell to the nature of the piece.In the fugue, Demus separated voicesmasterfully. The fugal subject for this workis exceptionally long and eccentricallyshaped, and Demus charted its permutations expertly.Demus's performance of Schubert's Fan¬tasy in C Major Op. 15, D. 760, set to a themefrom Schubert's song "Der Wanderer"proved that he had a broad dynamic rangeat his disposal. One wished that his interpre¬tation had gone further to demonstrateSchubert's individuality in this style. As itwas, the performance sounded more forcedthan forceful, with a hurried, anxious under¬tone.Elly Ameling holds an unusual positionamong singers performing today. Fewothers have made a career by giving songrecitals rather than taking operatic roles.And few singers of any style have distin¬ guished themselves vocally as she has doneand continued to do with her performancesthis week at Mandel Hall. Monday andWednesday evenings, Ameling's performancesof German Lieder, French Melodiesand Spanish songs demonstrated her broadexpressive range.Monday evening, the Dutch soprano'svoice was slightly covered and not totallyflexible in the uppermost limit of her range.But Wednesday evening she was in radiantvoice, with an utterly limber technique.Ameling produced a pure, ringing, legatotone. Her phrasing was knowledgeable andher flowing lines were unfailingly well-sup-ported.In Wednesday's recital Ameling per¬formed a riveting Liederkreis cycle andthen changed the mood with the mostlylighthearted La Courte Paille, Poulenc'ssong cycle for children. In the Liederkreis,comprising twelve poems of Joseph von Ei-chendorff, she altered the tone color of hervoice a multitude of ways in order to reflectthe textual content. A heavy chest voice,nearly devoid of vibrato, told the hauntingstory of an old knight and a castle; a forbid¬dingly dark tone characterized the Sor¬ceress Loreli as she told a victim that "ne¬vermore shall you leave this wood"; and alight, clear quality floated over the text of"Mondnacht" ("Moonlight"), telling how"my soul spread wide its wings, flew overthe silent land, as if it were flying home."The German Lieder sung on the two reci¬tals were from the Romantic period inwhich the art song (Lied), set to the poetryof writers such as Goethe, Schiller, and Ludwig Tieck, flourished. Text for these songscomposed by Hugo Wolf, Schubert, Schu¬mann, and others describe the turmoils un¬dergone by nature and the soul, and themusic mirrors the sentiments with pictorialsurges and sighs. Ameling carried out to fullexpression those musical devices intendedto highlight specific words and phrases. Forthe phrase "Die Uhr geht hin und her" ("thependulum swings to and fro") for example,she clipped the words short, giving them astaccato nuance to reflect their prose meaning.Ameling's accurate pronunciation andclear diction were assets to her performance. The texts that were thoughtfullyprovided (in both the original language andEnglish translation) were useful for reference, but the words were understandable as Jorg Demusthey were sung. Ameling proved to be a su¬perb storyteller. Besides communicatingvocally, she made subtle physical gesturesfor added stress. Some singers turn intomimes with this sort of effort, but Amelingwas unforced. In some of the whimsicalFrench Melodies (such as the ones by Satieand Poulenc) gestures enhanced her vocaltechnique. Ameling gained additional rap¬port with the audience by giving anecdotalintroductions, usually humorous, to severalsongs on each recital.Accompanist Dalton Baldwin was an in¬valuable contributor to the recitals. LikeAmeling, he was more at ease with the Ger¬man than with the French songs, but hisplaying set a high standard throughout. Inhis sensitivity to Ameling's nuances and hisability to recede and then take the lead whenthe vocal line dropped out, he was a modelaccompanist.LANGUAGES ATMIDDLEBURYSUMMER 1982GRADUATE PROGRAMS28 June - 14 AugustFRENCH. GERMAN. ITALIAN. RUSSIAN. SPANISHADVANCED, INTERMEDIATE & BEGINNING PROGRAMS18 June * 21 AugustARABIC, CHINESE, JAPANESE. RUSSIAN25 June - 14 AugustFRENCH. GERMAN. ITALIAN. SPANISHTWO & THREE WEEK WORKSHOPS(Dates to be announced)FRENCH. GERMAN. ITALIAN. SPANISHSPECIAL SEMINAR: “DOING BUSINESS IN GERMANY"SCHOOLS ABROAD ACADEMIC YEAR 1982-83JUNIOR YEAR and GRADUATE PROGRAMS4=3= For catalogue and application material1, writeADMISSIONS OF F U FI AMit AI.F SCHOOI V 504SI N DER LAND LANfil \l.F CENTERMIIH)I FBI KF < Ol I EOFMIDI)! FBI RF . 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Moving from one country andone political situation to another with whatlooks like great ease, Costa Gavras is an ex¬tremely sophisticated director with leftistleanings but no suffocating political com¬mittments (his 1970 film, "The Confession,"an expose of the 1952 Prague trials, wasbanned in most communist countries). With"Z" (1969), he appeared to have mastered anumber of detective-movie techniques witha good deal of elan and fast paced style, sothat what might have been of obscure inter¬est to American viewers — the mock acci¬dent murder of a professor by a Greek mili¬tary junta — became a terrific incendiarythriller. His subsequent movies, such as"State of Siege" (1973), were handled sothat stories which were potentially of min¬imal interest have their specifics so playeddown, and their action so played up, that thefilms became altogether successful. Notmany people seemed to mind that the actualfacts were muted, mainly because the mov¬ies were so much fun to watch.Costa-Gavras' first American film,"Missing," is now getting flack from allkinds of people for playing with the politicalfacts of the case on which the film is based.The story of the disappearance of a youngAmerican in Chile, drawn from attorneyThomas Hauser's 1978 book, The Executionof Charles Horman: An American Sacrifice,and starring Sissy Spacek as the missingAmerican's (John Shea) wife and JackLemmon as his father, recently earned thewrath of conservative writers like columnistGeorge F. Will. Will, as predictable thesedays as any Marxist ideologue, accused"Missing" of being slanted and "anti-Amer¬ican" (as if either of these pot shots couldautomatically denigrate a movie). The trou¬ble with "Missing," say its critics, is that itimplies that the United States was not onlyinvolved in the 1973 Chilean coup (in whichfreely elected socialist Salvatore Allende was deposed and martial law established),but that certain U.S. officials also approvedof the execution of Charles Horman, thenliving in Santiago with his wife. Whether ornot the United States did help to organize theChilean coup or approve of Horman’smurder — and there's a significant amountof evidence that both are true — CostaGavras' brand of political thrilling invitescriticism, and not only from viewers who sitto the right of the movie screen. "Missing"is an emotionally gripping movie, designedto convince the most die-hard John Birchiteof the perfidiousness of American interventionism and diplomatic bureaucracy. WithSissy Spacek looking beautifully distraught while she searches body-strewn Santiago forher husband, and Jack Lemmon as the shell¬shocked, soon-to be-radicalized father, andCosta Gavras using every cinematic trickup his sleeve to wrench the audience into astate of justified hysteria, there's no wayone can leave this extremely well-made andwell-acted picture without feeling angry atthe American role in Latin America. Orwithout catching the pointed implicationsfor the United States and El Salvador."Missing's" true problem is not that it isdishonest about the factual aspects of theHorman case (the movie is remarkablyfaithful to the spirit and the details of theHauser book), but that Costa-Gavras never allows his audience to have any clear graspof the circumstances of the Chilean coup.It's not simply that neither "Chile" nor"Santiago" is ever referred to by name(although some movie goers will probablytake this as Costa Gavras's clever way ofgiving his film what is usually called "uni¬versal" application. More annoying is thatone is never allowed to understand that itwas a socialist government elected in Chile,or that it was precisely because of the amaz¬ingly charismatic character of Allende thatofficials in the United States were so furiousat Allende’s political victory. Costa Gavrasleaves nearly all of the historical and politi¬cal details of the actual Horman story outside of his movie, and so there's no way torespond to "Missing" but as an emotionaltour-de-force which happens to concern aLatin American coup. And once one realizedthat the only way to react to this daylighthorror story of a desperate American fatherin search of his son, "Missing" comesacross as an exciting sell-out. Brush asidethe obvious references to El Salvador andone finds a romance at the heart of Costa-Gavras' movie. And when "Missing" isn'tthe story of the pointless execution of a gent¬le, rather apolitical American, it's a tale ofAmerican betrayal abroad at the hands ofother Americans — Arthur Miller's WillyLoman Goes to Latin America.When Costa Gavras eliminated the specif¬ics of the political coups and murders allud¬ed to in his other movies, no one seemed tocare, and perhaps this was not only becausethe movies were exciting simply on theterms of a thriller, but because the actualiti¬es of the cases were distant (at least forAmericans). It's precisely because Costa-Gavras wants "Missing" to be a blisteringcautionary tale of U.S. interventionism thatit was a mistake for him to gloss over thedetails of Allende's fall. "Missing" is what anumber of admiring critics are saying it is— a wrenching thriller, a terrific suspenseshow — but Costa-Gavras has reached thepoint where he doesn't trust an audience toreact with anything but a hard, gut reactionto his political fright shows.mCat People: A Feline FlopBy James CrottySiskel called "Cat People" a "striking,adult entertainment." My butcher called ita "voyeuristic, sado-masochistic hunk ofjunk." I side with the butcher.Paul Scharder's remake of Tourneur's1942 original centers around young Ireni(Natassia Kinski) who travels to New Or¬leans to meet a long-lost sibling turnedblood-thirsty clergyman (MalcolmMcDowell). From the start he attempts toseduce her. He finally pleads for her love, ifonly to stop his murderous feast on ladiesand low-lifes.Ireni adroitly rebuffs his purring solicita¬tions and rejects the idea of their primordialpast (though her subconscious tells her dif¬ferently). And while sketching a favorite feline after hours at the zoo, she falls in lovewith a 34-year-old caretaker (John Heard),who has been busy tracking down the where¬abouts of an escaped leopard. He is quicklyenticed and yearns to make love. The zoo¬keeper refuses to believe in any connectionbetween beautiful Ireni and the human-leopard stalking the city. But Ireni secretlyknows (as the caretaker eventually learns)that sex will only unleash the leopard lurk¬ing within.The aim of this film is not only to visuallyassault the viewer, which it does in a fewgraphic episodes borrowed from the horrorgenre; from "Carrie" we get the living arm,and from "Invasion of the Body Snatchers"the transmogrification of human flesh. "CatPeople" also seeks to psychologically disorient the viewer. Here the transmutationsoccur not by drugs and isolation chambers("Altered States") or by propinquity (Her¬zog's "Kasper Hauser"), but by design.But the themes of predestination, beastialincest and elitist animalism are fairly hol¬low here, stretching facile Freudianism andpeurile Protestantism to absurd lengths. Intellectually, the film is a backward step forShrader, who was the screenwriter on Scorcese's "Taxi Driver." Yet for most of the Cat Peoplefilm (until we meet the cat mother perchedon a tree) it seems postpone judgment,mainly because of the captivating perfor¬mance of Kinski and the snarling menace ofMcDowell. Kinski's charm is in her eyes. They give her an erotic coolness, whichlures her brother and his zookeeper to hervirginal persona. These eyes are truly cat¬like — darting, probing and finally conquering.Ireni is partially a composite of her otherroles. A juggling routine and the circus girlcoyness reminded me of Kinski's performance in "One from the Heart." And her fa¬cial expressions often resemble the win¬some innocent of "Tess." McDowell, bycontrast, is thoroughly devilish. He has backthat "Clockwork Orange" smirk and evendoes a shattering death dive through a window, except this time in cat's clothing. JohnBailey's brooding photography is also su¬perb. There is one striking shot of a theatre which Ireni searches for her brother whichcompares with Coppola's ethereal vision ofVegas. And Georgio Moroder's pulsatingsoundscapes help sustain the suspense, al¬though Bowie's concluding score, whichbears little relation to the story, was probably just a bait for "The Man Who Fell toEarth" crowd. Overall, from the hype to thehorror to the hokum, "Cat People” is anovercalculated, underdeveloped supernatu¬ral film.THE GREY CITY JOU R N AL—F R I DAY, APRIL 9, 1982—7Clarifying The Modern ManBy Keith FlemingA new book reminding us all what a "realman" is was discussed in the Tribune lastweek. The author's name is unimportant, asit could have been written by millions ofmen whom feminism and the modern worldhave left unaffected. (You know the kind ofthing: "A real man doesn't wear bikini un¬derwear," "A real man never says fabu¬lous," etc.) But we have nothing against thebook. We concede there's a whole crowd ofmen in the world who find sensitivity awk¬ward, who've never really felt comfortablewith mascara. We wish them well. They'vefinally got this book exhorting them to re¬turn to the comfy narrow limits of their nat¬ural selves.But we feel kind of worried about the menin the middle — men who could go eitherway depending on which role model shoutsloudest in their ears. For this reason we'vedecided to lay out for handy reference a fewcharacteristics of the modern man:— The modern man thinks he understandseverything about women except thosebreathing attacks they sometimes have.— The modern man never says he "nailed" a girl, "finalized" an agreement,or was "hassled" by a police officer.— The modern man secretly reads thesports pages.— The modern man is often mistaken for awoman when first answering the tele¬phone.— The modern man buys Penthouse to re¬assure himself he's not gay.— The modern man finds lesbians to bethe last remaining source of genuine mascu¬line companionship.— The modern man is in love with a girltravelling in Europe.— The modern man finds men to be bettersexual machines, but can only feel trulytender towards women.— The modern man just wants to behugged.— The modern man wishes woman shared his wicked sense of humor.— The modern man thinks women havebetter dreams — and nicer apartments.— The modern man brags about going toField's and spraying Proust's favorite perfume; — Gichy — on his wrist.— The modern man can't talk to othermodern men.— The modern man is frightened by howstrongly he identifies with Blanche Dubois.— The modern man is so effusive in res¬taurants he often tips over backwards in hischair.— The modern man takes bubble bathsperfumed with Kiki.— The modern man is ashamed of hissound sense of direction.— The modern man tries (unsuccessfully)1o regard jealousy as an outmoded emotion.— The modern man never gives in untilthe third date.— The modern man thinks the kitchengossip is where the action is at parties.— The modern man never goes anywherewithout his potted palm.Steve Jones of the Sex PistolsGhosts; Akron, Ohio Of them, supplicants who waited achingOn his path, enter his body,He is a believer in the occult (Two he knew, three he didn't) for pity.And this seems at odds withHis crystal brihiance, From sidewise the exposed Stars of hisHowever flawed. Irises, liquid cornea domed, fash ringed,Twitch on the faces of his eyeballs;in the tangles of my narrow bed Seeing machines, lens and diaphragm, theirHe remembers a distant park to the Bmpty glint informing nothing of whatSilk and smudge of my body in the dark They discern—ghosts playing on the far wail?— You read too much. Stop thinking of the dead.Ghosts in Akron, indeed— 1 try to feel that cold relief,But i am filled with dread, To flood credulous fear with milk of disbelief,But mere contempt cannot cool my entrails.On the blood-black screen of my closed eyelids My feet are naked to the grasping night;He pelts into the blind dusk of the i can cover them for warmth at least andNarrow wooded path, black blades of shadow slicing Turn them from his face, too plastic in the soft darkness.His eyes, mutilating his vision,Pell-MeU into some splintering schism. And i am one who has always feared the darkAnd l find no comfort in his pale flesh(What is he talking about? t touch his sternum.) Nor do 1 know which is worse tonightWhat breathes now in my bed orWell, at thirteen he thought more than most What moves always in my nights.Of the dead, many of whom he loved.Afl that happened was that he left some —Judith Silversteiny . ’ •• • •• • £•:£• ;•: . * •• :*•.•*** * *’.* •*‘*:*:: * *. .t|||§1liiiJIlll lillilill . .. 1111118—FRIDAY, APRIL 9, 1982—THE GREY CITY JOURNALaccessories * books * candy * cleaners * drugseyewear • fashions for women • food • giftshosiery • medicines • men's clothing • moneyrestaurant • shoes • ties • toys • watches •everythings right here in the heart of Hyde Fbrk.THEEVERYTHING YOU NEEDFOR THE ULTIMATEIENCESummer School in theColorado Rockies — A unique adventureat die Universityof Colorado - BoulderWhere else can you raft down the Colorado River, study Shakespeare under thestars, and take classes with world-famous lecturers7 We offer hundreds ofacademic and recreational courses, a wide array of professional performing artsactivities, and a distinguished guest and resident faculty.Use the coupon below or call us for information (303) 492-7424Early application is encouraged.Come to the Colorado Rockies — a great climate for learning.ACADEMIC CALENDAR JUNE 'TOAUGUST 13 1982Please send me information on thefollowingPERFORMING ARTSCOIjORADO DANCE. FESTIVALJune 4 20COLORADO MUSIC FESTIVALJune 24 July 30COLOPAuO SHAKESPEAREFESTIVALJuly 16 August 20MUSIC THEATRE FESTIVALJuly 9-24 ,.TEACHER RECERTIFICATION ’PROGRAM AddressINSTITUTE OF ARCTIC ANDALPINE RESEARCH Field Ecology.Field Techniques in Environmental■ Science Mountain Geomorphology)RECREATION PROGRAM ANDFACILITIESSCHEDULE OF COURSES ANDAPPLICATIONHOUSING GUEST LECTURERSROSS LEE FINNEY Amemat: composerCompositionJEAN GOTTMAN N Urban Geography tMegalopolis 'Oxford Uraversir, Ei gland)ERNEST R HOUSE Education Issues iii University of Illinois at Urbaua Champa:,P V JONES - Science & Intelligence Ope■England (University of Abet ieeri. ScotianAMORY IjOVJNS Energy A Resource PoTechnologyUniversity of ColoracCampus Box 284Bouider. CO 8U3 19(3031492 '424Line open 24 hours md Prid Wa |YDf PARK=ShoppingCenter=Lake Park befween 54th and 55th St.The Unrversity ■Employer i Equal Oppc City Girl • Cohn & Stern, Inc. • Doralee, Ltd.Fannie Mae Candy • FlairCleaners • Fritz on55thHemingways * Hyde Pork Associates in Medi¬cine- Hyde Park Bank and Trust Co. * Hyde Parko-op Supermarket * _ake Park Currencyi . _ r / —.. ( —Dr M. Maslov* Pork lone HosieryHosiery* ShoeD ., -Susan Galelorral* Walgreen VWoolworth'AugustanaLutheranChurchHoly W eek and EasterApril c) Good Friday7:30 pin LiturgyApril 10 Holy Saturday8:00 pm Easter \ i«rilApril 11 E aster Sunday8:30 am Sermon & Eucharist10:45 am Sermon & Eucharist5500 South WoodlawnThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 9, 1982—17Hither and YonTripe big at CSUAn article in Chicago State University’sTempo says that the most popular readingof choice on college and universitycampuses are books about Garfield the Catand the Rubik’s cube, followed by the typeof mindless romance story printed byHarlequin and Sihouette.Students say that they like these types ofbooks because they can be picked up andput down, and don't require the sameamount of concentration as do textbooks.When they want to relax and read,students want total release. Bookstorebuyers say that the shift during the pastdecade from serious to lighter literature asrecreational reading shows that today’sstudents have a better sense of humor thanRockefellerChapelEASTER SUNDAY SERVICEUniversity Religious Service11:00 A.M.BERNARD O. BROWNDean of the ChapelpreachingSpecial choral music andbrass accompaniment did their predecessors, and are more ableto laugh at society.Semesters decriedPennsylvania State University studentsmarched last month to protest theUniversity’s change to a semester systembeginning with the 1983 school year. Thestudents protested that some people wouldhave to take at least an extra semester togain enough credits to graduate, andclaimed that the University was notproperly prepared to undertake theconversion.According to members of the CalendarConversion Council, a system is beingdeveloped whereby some credits may bewaived so that students will not have totake an added semester, and thatadditional courses will be offered over thesummer. One, who said that the studentsdidn't realize how much time had beenspent on the conversion, was glad “to seestudents at least aware and concerned.’’The Weekly Collegian reported in a related story that a faculty report wasissued which also urged that the calendarnot be changed, however. The report wasconcerned with the manner in which theconversion was taking place and chargedthat the President of the University haa noright to make the decision to change thesystem.Some of the problems cited were theincreased pressure on students, reductionof the number of courses available,reduction in student-professor contactbecause of inflated class size, and morecomplex schedules which would leave lesstime for research, studying, facultymeetings, and part-time studentemployment. Also, some course will beoffered less frequently, others will bedropped, and some prerequisties will bedropped.Pill use downHeeding almost a decade of healthwarnings about the dangers of oralcontraceptives, students at BarnardCollege today are far more likely to chooseHYDE PARKTHE VERSAILLESIDEAL FOR STUDENTS324-0200Large Studios • Walk-inKitchen • Utilities Incl. •Furn. - Unfurn. • CampusBus at doorBased on Availability5254 S. Dorchester Bli Tiyde Park Tues. thru FriTiait ‘zbeiignezi /ltd. gto^lo1620 E. 53rd St. • 288-2900(formerly Elizabeth Gordon)PRESENT THIS AD FORon a/1 services7 f] 0/n fjpp every Tuesday &/u 1 Wednesday of AprilManicurist available Tues. thru Sat.We sell Redken & other fine products3000 MAGAZINESGREETING CARDSCIGARETTES/CANDYHOT VIDEO GAMESPOSTERS/BUTTONSL the best magazine storessince 196551st & LAKE PARK MAIN OFFICERANDOLPH & MICHIGANCLARK A DIVERSEYBROADWAY & DEVONmost open to 12pmPOBERT M KATZMAN684-S100 proprietor PUBLIC LECTURE SERIESSponsored by the ENRICO FERMI INSTITUTEof theUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOTHE ARTHUR H. COMPTON LECTURESFifteenth Series bySimon SwordyThe Enrico Fermi InstituteSaturdays April 3 through June 5, 1 982“EYES OF THE UNIVERSE”2nd Lecture: Astronomical Spectra & PolarizationSaturday, April 10,1982, at 11 A.M.Eckhart Hall - Room 133 -1118 E. 58th St. the diaphragm instead of the pill than theywere twelve years ago. In 1981, 29% of thestudents who visited the Health Clinic atBarnard for contraceptives asked for thepill, as compared to 90% who used the pillin 1969. Conversely, 69% percent of thestudents who came to the clinic asked for adiaphragm in 1981, as compared to 10%during the years of radicalism atColumbia. Scientists were not sure if a sideeffect of the pill is a penchant for left-wingextremism. They did say, however, thatthe current shift' in contraceptivepreferences is an overreaction: “Studentsread a lot and they’ve read about thesereports and decided not to use the pill,which really for most of them is the bestmethod.” Said Enavat Elahi, director ofPlanned Parenthood in New York City.UP to drop P/FStudents and faculty at the University ofPennsylvania have been clashing this yearover the pass/fail grading option whichhas become more popular as of late. 100faculty members have banded together inan effort to eliminate the option, sayingthat it has been abused in recent years.Meanwhile the Undergraduate Assemblyunanimously passed a resolutionsupporting the option, the rationale beingthat: the procedure allows students toexplore fields not in their major, it reducesstudent stress, and that other universitiesallow it so Penn's academic reputationwould be tarnished if it eliminated theoption. Both sides agree that the lack ofconsultation between faculty and studentshas caused a polarization between the twogroups.G.W. OPTICIANS1519 E. 55thTel. 947-9335Eyes exommod ood Contact Lenses fitted byregistered OptometristsSpecialists in Oeeity Eyewear at ReasonablePrices.Lab on premises for fast service framesreplaced, lenses duplicated and prescriptions filled.marian realty,inc.REALTORStudio and 1 BedroomApartments Available— Students Welcome —On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-5400MEDICAL SCHOOL OPENINGSImmediate Openings Available in Foreign Medical SchoolFully AccreditedALSO AVAILABLE FOR DENTAL SCHOOLS• LOANS AVAILABLE • INTERVIEWS BEGINNING IMMEDIATELYFor further details and/or appoint lent callDr. Manley (716) 882-280318—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 9, 1982By Frank Scaduto DOWN1. Units of currentACROSS 2. Confederate Gen.and family3. Loose woman1. Modify 4. Whitney6. Defunct Fed. 5. City near Thejob program Hague10. Hairstyle 6. U.S. financeer14. Mottled 7 S.O.P. in horror15. Work animals flicks16. Release 8. Adolescent17. Optical 9. Response to ques.instrument 10. First English Pope19. Lease 11. Members of20. Type of plane secret order21. Rouse 12. Thorn, in Paris22. Relative 13. Chose23. Scrooge 18. Use a rod24. Lined 22. Tidy25. Effect 23. Thick, full hair28. Lizard 24. Certain30. Empty 25. Footnote abbr.31. Suffer acutely 26. Title of courtesy32. Compass pt. for French girls35. That one: Latin 27. Refer, e.g.36. Blockade 29. Nuts37. Female Student 31. Express contentment38. The Gods: Latin 33. Bristle: comb, form39. Carta 34. Paradise40. Adventure story 36. Spice41. Nothing 37. Cowlike43. Relative 39. Beast of burden44. Conundrum 40. Resigned to46. Alda and Arkin circumstances48. Multitude 42. Confuses49. False or head 43. Box and cable50. Sixth sense 44. Horned animal53. Object of worship 45. Crystalline54. Colorful plant compound56. Alaskan city 47. Runs aground57. Klutz 49. Unaccompanied58. Approaches 50. Latin abbr.59. Spanish cheers 51. Beget60. Periods of time 52. Elapse61. Stories 54. Section: abbr.55. Beverage PuzzleHyde Park Coop Your member owned supermarket55th at Cake Park • 667-1444Hours: Mon. - V\ ed. 9-7:30. Thurs. - Fri. 9-8, Sat. 9-7, Sun. 9-3Here are some more suggestions from our home econo¬mist for people too busy to enjoy a traditional leisurelybreakfast:—Sliced banana topped with yogurt or cottage cheese—A fresh apple and a wedge of cheese—Sliced cold cuts and whole wheat crackers—A peanut butter sandwich on raisin breadOf course, the ingredients are available at the Short StopAnd so are dozens of bargains at our supermarket.If you haven’t shopped the Co-op, you ought to. At the Co¬op, we care.co-opconvenience store1514 e. 53rd st.country’s delightwhippingcream59 floridavine-ripenedtomatoesreg. 1.09 lb.69 clb. jonessausagerolls1 lb. pkg.1 89 dean’soniondip8 oz.49 Cprices effective Wednesday 4/7 thru tuesday 4/13/82 GRADUA TE SCHOOL OF BUSINESSproudly presents“THE JAPAN CONFERENCE”Theme: Management Japanese StyleDate: April 16,1982 (Friday) 9 a.m.Venue: Goodspeed Hall (1050 E. 59th St.)Speakers: Mr. Tomiyuki Kudo, Ex. Director, JapanExternal Trade Orgn. (JETRO)Mr. Steve Levy, Sr. Vice-President,Japanese Operations Motorola Inc.Mr. Hoken S. Seki, Attorney, Seki, Jarvis& LynchMr. Mutsubu Vchida, Vice-President andGen. Mgr., Mitsui & Co. (USA), Inc.Mr. John F. Wallace, Sr. Vice-President,Nomura Securities Inti., Inc.Registration: Please send cheque of appropriate amount, togetherwith registration slip below, to: THE ASIAN BUSINESS GROUP.GSB, 1414 East 59th Street, Chicago, III. 60637REGISTRATION DEADLINE: APRIL 13 (TUESDAY)I would like to register for the Japan Conferencewith lunch $10.00 ( )without lunch $5.00 ( )Name PhoneAddressDepartment (School)The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 9, 1982—19SportsTennis forecast brightD,r Pn*»on Cl omrroQll , .. .. . .By Caren GauvreauAlthough the Chicago weather is gloomyand cold, the forecast for the 1982 men'stennis team is bright. Coach Bill Simms isvery optimistic about the Maroon’s playingpotential and experience, despite the loss ofthree of last year’s top six singles players.The three did not return to school thisquarter but will be eligible to play nextyear.Providing the confidence for this year’steam are four rookies in the starting six sin¬gles positions, two of whom will be compet¬ing in the number one and number two slots.Phil Mowery, an all-state player from Bloo¬mington, Illinois, is “the hardest workingand most diligent tennis player to ever com¬pete for the University of Chicago,” accord¬ing to Simms. All winter, Phil improved hishard-hitting game by practicing daily. Pri¬marily a doubles player in high school, heleads the team playing in the number onesingles spot. Playing second singles for theMaroons is also another rookie, Peter Kang,an all-state player from Indiana.Fernando Cavero, a returning teammember will be starting at the third singlesposition after playing number four lastyear. This year’s number four player is se¬nior Zenon Kraus. Rounding out the presentsingles draw are two more experiencedrookies. Bill Wild and John Kotz, who will beplaying at the number five and six positionsrespectively. Also bound to see much actionin the future is James Dix, who was namedlast year’s Most Valuable Player. Due to alate start, Dix has not had enough practiceto break into this year’s highly competitiveline-up of experienced players.In addition to this year’s superior singlesline-up, the Maroon’s doubles teams alsopromise future victories. Simms does not foresee his first doubles team of Moweryand Kang losing many matches. He believesthat this is the team to watch and undoubt¬edly “has the potential to receive a bid to thenational tournament.” Returning veteransKraus and Cavero, form the number two do¬ubles team. Another pair of rookie starters,Wild and Robert Londin, who are experi¬enced in doubles strategy and play, will becompeting as the third doubles team.Overall, the doubles team have greatly im¬proved from last season.The main objective for this year’s team isto get a bid to the Division III NCAA Cham¬pionship. For this reason, Simms has includ¬ed four Division I schools and two DivisionII schools in this season’s schedule. By play¬ing top quality teams, the Maroons will in¬crease their chances for an NCAA bid. De¬spite Chicago’s opening loss to Marquette ina match that was closer than the scoremight indicate, Simms was encouraged bythe majority of the squad's play. It was Mar¬quette's fifteenth meet and Chicago’s first,which accounts for many of the unforcederrors and lost points. Yet the team is con¬fident that with additional competition andexperienced players, it will achieve its goalof being one of the top Division III teams inthe nation.University of Chicago 0 - Marquette 2Singles— 1-Tadd Maltby (M) d. Phil Mowery(UC) 6-3, 7-6 (10-8). 2-Greg Boyer (M) d. PeterKang (UC) 6-4. 6-3. 3-Arni Novick (M) d. FernandoCavero (UC) 6-0, 6-3. 4-Pat O’Connor (M) d. ZenonKraus (UC) 6-2. 6-1. 5-Hector Leyva (M) d. BillWild (UC) 6-2, 6-3. 6-Nick Booras (M) d. John Kotz(UC) 6-1. 6-3.Doubles— 1-O’Connor/Leyva (M) d.Mowery/Kang (UC) 6-1, 7-6 (7-4). 2-Uultby/Novick(M) d. Cavero/Kraus (UC) 6-3, 6-1. 3-Boyer/Booras (M) d. Wild/Londin (UC) 6-1, 6-1.By Scott LucasThe rugby club opens its spring season to¬morrow with a battle for the NCAA sectionalchampionship against Northwestern. Thegame will kick off at 1 p.m. at Stagg Field,and fans who brave the weather will berewarded with refreshments.This year’s rugby squad is led by Don De-vine and Jeroen Fikke and captains MikeRantz, Steve Hutt, and Pat Weresk. Theteam’s scoring punch relies heavily on thespeed of its two wing forwards, Tom Powelland Stan Watovich, as well as the kicking ofFikke and Scott Lucas. The pack is bol¬stered by Pete Layton, Barry Peterson,John Boochever, and Larry Epstein. A sup¬porting cast of many other talented playersgives the Maroons one of their better teamsin recent years.The team practices at Stagg Field and hasbeen working all winter in preparation forthe spring season. Following a 6-4 fall sea¬ son, Hutt sees nothing but good thingsahead. “We’ve got a rough schedule thisspring,” he stated, “but we’re hoping thatthe added experience from the fall will pullus through. If we can just keep the injuriesaway I feel that we can play some goodrugby and beat up on some people.”Sports CalendarRUGBY CLUBApril 10 — Northwestern, 1 p.m., StaggFieldBASEBALLApril 12 — Concordia, 1 p.m., Stagg FieldSOFTBALLApril 12 - St. Xavier, 3 p.m., North FieldFree Illinois State Taxeswith yourFederal Income Tax Prepared(with this coupon)CALMLY, QUIETLY, CORRECTLY... that’s how we prepare returns...BUTLER & ASSOCIA TES, l!SC.1645 K. 53rd Street 2nd floor. Phone |3121 643-2405. Enrolled to Praetiee itefore the IKS.Open vear round. Call for an appointment, expires May 1 982 / MRugby club opens second season PHOTO BY WILLIAM SIMMSJames Dix, last year’s MVP.Award WinnersKarin Van Steenlandt, a second-yearmember of the women’s basketball team,was awarded the winter quarter Edith Ball-webber Prize. The Women’s AdvisoryBoard for Athletics selected Van Steenlandton the basis of her outstanding contributionsto the basketball team and to the Women’sAthletic Association executive board.The recently established Ballwebberprizes are awarded quarterly to partici¬pants in the women’s varsity athletic pro¬gram. Participants in spring quarter sportsmay submit applications in INH 201 beforeMay 12, 1982.Freshman Keith Libert was honored bythe Midwest Athletic Conference by beingnamed to its all-conference second team inbasketball. Libert played center for theMaroons this season and led the team inscoring with a 19 points per game average.His 8.5 rebounding average and .545 shoot¬ing percentage were also tops for theteam. im snowedBy Bob LaBelleWhen I began last Tuesday’s “InsideIMs” article, I mentioned rain and sleet. Iforgot snow ... Mother Nature didn’t. Thesuperabundance of the slushy white stuffon the midway fields has interrupted thebarely one week old socim season.Despite the brevity of the season, someinteresting new teams have emerged. Atthe top of the list is Dudley, which polishedoff Chamberlin “A” in its first match 2-0.Both teams looked sloppy — especiallyChamberlin, whose defensive lapses gaveDudley an easier time. Oddly enough, thegame matched two similar teams sinceboth play very physical soccer. But whenthe supposedly stronger Chamberlin triedto muscle its way through, it was out-muscled by Dudley. Worse yet, Dudley’sbetter ball control often left Chamberlin’sdefense too far from the goal. Yet thegame reflected Chamberlin's lack of pre¬paration more than Dudley's ability.Chamberlin will probably bounce backwhile Dudley will find it more difficultagainst teams like Greenwood that playfinesse.Out of the women's assorted leaguesoars the Crown Rats who beat DeltaSigma 7-0 on Sunday. The Crown Rats iscomposed of female varsity jocks, most ofwhom have not played soccer before — butthey learned fast. In the women’s soccerdivisions, where consistent athletic abilityas opposed to luck is scarce, the CrownRats are sure to be contenders.Though I promised that the “LatestLine” would appear this week it seemsrather futile to predict games which prob¬ably won’t be played until the IM Officefurnishes skis. So until Chicago’s secondIce Age decides to recede, games at theMidway and this column are on hold. Prayfor sunshine.NOTE: All socim games have been can¬celled through the weekend.SOCIMCrown Rats 7 Delta Sigma 0Thompson (forfeit) Tufts (forfeit)Lower Rickert 2 Upper Rickert 0Nine Inches Easy 5 Saudi Union Movement 2COPIES COPIES COPIES (COPIES COPIES COPIES (COPIES COPIES COPIES (Copies The Way You Want Them!• Same Size or Reduced • Colored Papers• 1 or 2 Sided • Card Stocks• Collated or Sorted • Fine Stationary• Plastic Spiral Binding • 8’/* x 11 or Legal SizeFast, sharp, economical copies ... from anything hand¬written, typed, or printed . . . size-for-size. or in anyreduction ratio ... on your choice of colored or whitebond paper!XEROX® COPYING1 O per copy , ,4V2» * per copy8Vi” x 11”20# White BondHARPER COURT COPY CENTER5210 S. HARPER288-2233 Plus COMPLETECOMMERCIALOFFSETPRINTINGSERVICE *Space available in many classes.Register TODAY & NEXT WEEK inRoom 210, Ida Noyes HallFor info, call 753-3591 MINI-COURSEREGISTRATION20—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 9, 1982Classified AdsSPACEStudio Apartment, Hild Realty Group 955 1200Looking for housing? Check InternationalHouse, for grad, students and for scholarsvisiting Chicago. 753 2270, 2280.5527-37 South EverettWe have the following apartments availablefor immediate occupancy heat and hotwater stove and refrigerator furnished3' 2 room 1 bedroom $3604 room 1 bedroom $4005 room 2 bedroom $500To inspect call Sack Realty Co 684 8900Ask for Carl Collina3 BR tri level on large wooded lot in BeverlyShores, Ind. 2 blocks from Lake. 1' 2 baths. CALarge family room. Basement. 45 min to U of Cby car or train. $70,000. 13'/* financing CallRenard at Callahan Realty. 219 926 4298.5210 18 DrexelOne Bedroom Apts$305 per monthCall Porter 324 4956Nr UC large 4 rm apt tile bath shower britesunny front and rear porch avail now 288 0718CONDO FOR SALE '2 blk. from UCFieldhouse, 2 BR Ig. bkyd. sun rm. sewing rmmod kit Ray School 493 2869. Student Government publishes a list ofavailable housing. Call 753 3273 or stop by theSG office, 3rd floor Ida Noyes.2000' sq house, Beverly area, 15 min from U ofC. Must rent, $550, long lease possible, extras 3bedrooms, exc neighborhood 779 2680Doral South Condos7854 South Shore DriveRentalsStudios 300One Bedroom 400Immediate OccupancyMr Ingram 221 85881 or 2 bdrms in sunny 3 bdrm apt w/lake viewA/C, parking, laundry, security, on campusbus routes. Nonsmokers only. $130 +■ util. CallJane 538 6159 evenings before 11 or wkends.ONE AND TWO BEDROOMS WITH AVIEW-AT THE NEWPORT, 4800 Lake ShoreDrive: Move this spring to a newly decoratedvery spacious one to two bedroom (two bath)apartment with great lake views in an elegantHyde Park building with every amenity: Alarge indoor swimming pool and health club (arunning track, too), a full service grocerystore, parking, 24 hour security. One bedroomapartments are $588 a month; two bedroomsare $790.00. They are available for immediateoccupancy. To see the apartments, come to theUrban Search office at 4800 Lake Shore fromMonday through Friday from 10 until 4 pm, and on Sunday from 11 to 3.00. Or call us for anappointment.URBAN SEARCH337 2400SUNNY spacious quiet & secure 1 bdrm in twobdrm flat 54th Pl/Harper sublet May or Junew/fall option $200/mo & sm util 288 2478TWO BEDROOMCAMPUS APARTMENT:two bedrooms in a charming vintage buildingon 56th and Kimbark Available May 1 $616 00Call URBAN SEARCH337 2400FOR RENT:A HOUSE!At Hedgerow (a new townhouse at 5400 HydePark Blvd ), a wonderful 2 bedroom plus denTwo story living room, woodburning fireplace,hardwood floors, wonderful kitchen, and yourown enclosed garden patio. Available immediately $800a month.Call URBAN SEARCH337 2400Spaces in Ig 3 bdrm apt nr 56th & KimbarkGood bldg, porch, yard Avail 4/4 April sublet &lease thru 4/83 $218 (heat included) 324 4296SUMMER SUBLET Lg2bdrm turn apt 54 th &Dorchester Nr 1C & UC. Avail June 15 thruSept 15 S500/mo 241 5840 eveCO OP HOUSEHOLD Room available June 1in a 5 bedroom house at 54th and DorchesterShared cooking and cleaning responsibilitiesGraduateor non student preferred 493 5419FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted for own roomin 3 bdrm apt, 56th & University. S160/mo +util. Non smoking grad student preferred 1 yrlease Call 643 2454Room available in 4 bdrm apt. 54th & Kimbark. Unfurnished Immed occupancy $137.50324 2998For rent-3 bdrm 2 bath apt Hyde Park Area643 4253.FOR RENT Lg condo 1 bdrm Newport apts4800 S. Lake Shore Dr swimpoolT906 N E.view day ph 726 0085 eve 871 5224 Al BoothAll yr vacation home 90 minutes from campusLarge wooded lot, 126 ft front on Singer Lake 2story brick and cedar contemp oak fir,cathedral l.r., stone f.p., all wood interiorS66,175. Owner financed. Call Milt Priger 616429 4663 Am. Homes Century 21, 1816 W JohnBeers Rd , Stevensville, Mich. 49137Female roommate to share Irg apt w/2 othersNo smoking/pets, own Irg rm, light, on campusbus rt nr 52nd Kimbark. $125/mo Kit 955 8627SPACE WANTEDFemale (UC graduate) working downtownseeks room to rent in Hyde Park house orapartment. June 82 to Sept 83. No smokers orpets 493 6160, 241 6692 eveningsRent or sublet 2 bdrm apt from May 1 (orsooner) until Oct 31. Call 753 3934 weekdays,684 8477 eves & weekends.PEOPLE WANTEDPaid subjects needed for experiments onBarbara Steele 481-1855For all your housing needsin the southern suburbs.Baird & WarnerSince 1855The Trusted Name in Real EstateDR. M.R. MASLOVOptometrist• Eye Examinations• FashionEyewear• All Types ofContact Lenses*Ask about our annualservice agreementLOCATED IN THEHYDE PARKSHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th 363-6100 memory, perception and language processingResearch conducted by students and faculty inthe Committee on Cognition and Communication. Department of Behavioral SciencesPhone 753 4718Research subjects needed for a study of decision making in a computerized market Goodpay for a 3/4 to 1 hour session. Call Mark at 7534209 or 271 2426 eves.Donors needed for University of Chicago Artificial Insemination Program MonetaryReimbursement. Call 947 1775.EARN BIG PART TIME MONEYFinancial planningMultimillion dollar company 984 1295Hyde park Cooperative School seeks teacher,3 year old class Begin Sept Mornings BA, experience required Submit resume to G Stern,5650 S Woodlawn 60637.OVERSEAS JOBS Summer/year roundEurope, S. Amer., Australia, Asia All Fields$500 S1200 monthly. Sightseeing Free infoWrite IJC Box 52 IL5 Corona Del Mar, CA92625Lifeguard wanted, day & eve shifts availableStart first of May. Must be certified Apply inperson to the Hyde Park Hilton, 4900 S LakeShore Dr.FOR SALEPASSPORT PHOTOS WHILE YOU WAIT!Model Camera 1342 E 55th St 493 6700126 Scenic acres in S W Wisconsin. 57 tillableBrick House, Barn, Creek hard Maple 412hours from Chicago $650/acre call eves 7527205Brick House, Barn, Creek hard Maple 412hours from Chicago $650/acre call eves 7527205Condo on Cornell 3 br 3 bath 11% financingavailable large modern kitchen formal diningroom low 70's 248 8179Moving Sale 4 red upholstered chairsw/wrought iron look; 2 red upholstered ebonyarm chairs; 2 lamps; 1 3 cushion beige sofa, 2sets custom drapes & valences, 1 mahoganybookcase, dimensions 36 "x!2"x34", 1secretary swivel posture chair; 1 deluxevapor all humidifier; 1 Widdicomb consolechest w/6 drawers, dimensions 68"x20"x31"; 1king size headboard w/mattress and box springs; assorted pictures & wall hangings,French chests. Call 324 0854GENESIS SPEAKERS 1 year old, lifetimeguarantee $125. 955 9646Large WOOD DESK $100, Delivery IncludedMen's 27” Ten Speed BICYCLE $125 ph: 9552220Stereo console, contemporary Scandinaviandesign Garrard turn table call after 5 pm 3634079Alto saxophone Conn 5 years old with case excellent condition $375 call after 5 pm 363 4079SERVICESJUDITH TYPES—and now has a memoryPhone 955 4417.Continued on next pageCoart Studio presentsEdward AlbeeTHE AMERICANDREAMApri1 9,10,11 8:00 New Theatre(Reynolds Club) 57tb ond University$3 general admission ($2 students & senior citizens)Coll 753-3581 for informationICELANDAIR INTRODUCESNEW BARGAIN FARES TOMORE OF EUROPE■lukemboum^^^^H499ROUNDTRIPFROM CHICAGO $ I PARIS—681ROUNDTRIPFROM CHICAGO$ I ZURICH699ROUNDTRIPFROM CHICAGO r-f RANKFURT—il 55 7ROUNDTRIPFROM CHICAGOAll Apex Fares: April 1 - May 14, 1982, 7-90 day stay (7-60 days Luxem¬bourg). Stopovers permitted in both directions. 14 day advance purchaserequired. Seats limited. Ask about our low cost Normal, Same Day, andGroup fares, too.ALSO LOW COST CONNECTING SERVICE TO NICE AND AMSTERDAM.Icelandair to Luxembourg. Luxair or Crossair connecting serviceto other destinations.■ Confirmed reservation. ■ Free wine with dinner, cognac after.* Bargain Stopover Tours of Iceland and Luxembourg. ■ Bargain carrentals. ■ Purchase tickets in U. S. ■ All fares subject to change andgovernment approval.See your travel agent or call 800/555-1212 for the toll free Icelandair number in your area.ICELANDAIRNOW MORE THAN EVER YOUR BEST VALUE TO EUROPEBRANDEQUIPMENT SPRING SPECIALONUSED OFFICEFURNITUREBuy any used desk over $65and purchase a swivel arm desk chairfor $20Swivel chair without arms $15Misc. guest and occasionalchairs $7.508560 S. ChicagoRE 4-2111Open Daily 9:30-5Sat. 9:00-3The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 9, 1982—21Classified AdsContinued from page 21Excellent, accurate TYPIST with B.A. willtype term papers, theses, resumes,manuscripts—whatever your typing needs.Quick, pick-up and delivery on campus.Reasonable—call Wanda 955 8375 after 5p.m.Psychotherapist, Women's Groups, Individual,and Couple Therapy. Sliding Scale, MaryHallowitz, MSW, ACSW 947-0154.James Bone, editor-typist. 363-0522 ITALIAN LESSONS-Native speaker will tutorin exchange for pay. Call 643-1118.PERSONALSTHE GREAT AMERICAN RIP OFF Beat thesoaring cost of jet airfares with low cost flightsto Europe, Israel, Africa and the Far East. Ifinterested write or call Adventures in Travel,3602 New Utrecht Avenue, Brooklyn, N Y.11219 (212) 633 3800.Letter Perfect Typing Service. Very ex¬perienced, very accurate. Dissertations,papers, math. Call Lise Plotkin, 493-1218TYPING. Term papers, theses, etc, 791 1674.FLOYD S DECORATING SERVICE. Interior& Exterior. Very neat. Best reference. Veryreasonable. 20 years in neighborhood CallFloyd 221 5661. For a good time on April 16th call 684 6060.The Delta Sigma Society invites allundergraduate women to join during itsmembership drive; beginning Mon, April 12 at9:30 pm, Ida Noyes Library until Friday, April16.Let's read literary classics in common anddiscuss in letters. Ronald Richardson, 4003 50thAvenue S.W., Seattle WA, 98116.Psychotherapy and Counseling Fees on asliding scale: insurance accepted JoanRothchild Hardin, PhD, registeredpsychologist in Hyde Park. 493-8766RESUMES for quality service, veryreasonable rates and fast delivery call JordanResume Service 734-5715 weekdays after 5 00pm.Chicago Counseling & Psychotherapy CenterClient-centered psychotherapy. 5711 S.Woodlawn, 6354 N Broadway, and 111 N.Wabash, Chicago. A Registered PsychologicalAgency.(312)684 1800.Typing term papers reas. rates call 684 6882Professional typing and editing. 324 8719 Give that special someone an Easter kitten.Adorable and FREE. 684 0383What costs $1.50 & lasts tor two days? Call 6846060.To the Amazing JOCKS who save Upper Flinton the playing field, Nick, Drew, Howdy! DaGuysFat City The End Is Near El Comadaeja AndHN ACan you sing? Campus band needs vocalist.See ad in classified, or call 753-2233 rm 127.Congratulations on your wedding! Ryozo &Akiko May you always be happy.DIT DAH The pen and fish made my day.You're the best.Cfiaz(otte ^ihtzomcReal Sitate Co. We are co-operating brokersMember National Association of Realtors, ChicagoReal Estate Boards, Illinois Association of Realtors493-0666 • CALL ANYTIMEANNOUNCING 12% FINANCING THROUGH BANKFour sun-shine filled rooms - 56th — Kimbark Ready July 1Reduced $45,000WELCOME TO ELEGANCE! LakefrontBuilding Narragansett*Four super big bedrooms - views in alldirections. Two-story condo - specialpaneling on Top level. First time this Spring$164,500.*Three bedroom - three baths - Lovelyinterior - many built-ins. Stunning kitchenincludes laundry. $98,500*Two bedroom - Two baths, one of therare woodburning fireplaces in this highfloor unit.12% Financing $69,500BUILT FOR THIS OWNERAND NOW YOUModern Tri-level near 55th & Kenwood$127,500 Ready July I8 Rooms - 2% BathsEAST VIEW PARK-JUST LISTEDStunning kitchen 493-06666 large rooms $94,500View of Lake MADMAN-we missed the movie, so let's makeone of our own. Reddy.Hope you like your new apartment HENRYFONDA. Please give me a call. YSCENESDREAM EXPLORERS NETWORK. Discoverthe Magic Power of your Dream World Bringback Treasures of Confidence, Friendship,Joy! FRE E training Sunday eves. Call Bernie,643 2826.HYDE PARK ARTISANS Gallery is featuringfabric sculpture by Jill Cleary & watercolorsby Ruth Michael during April. We will have anEASTER OPEN HOUSE on April 3rd, 12 4 pm57th & Woodlawn in the Unitarian Church.Please drop by, hours Thur Fri 12-3, Sat 12 4,Sun 10-1.The Hunger Concern Group will sponsor apresentation by Chicago INFACT on the NestleBoycott-Infant Formula a controversy on Monday April 12 in Ida Noyes Library at 7:30 pmWANTEDCarpeting (not shag) needed by campus groupCall Sally 241-5583evenings or Margo 753 2249RIDESRide needed to New York around April 20-21.Call 962 7229 or 752 8863 ask for Mike.MOVINGStudent with Pickup Truck can move your stuffFAST AND CHEAP. No job too small! CallPeter at: 955-5180 lOam-lOpm.GALLERY OFLIVE ARTAFGA SALON features poet Angela Jackson,and vocalist Sowole Adesanya. Ze Inner UrgeJazz Society premiers Ode to Thelonius Monk(Larry Dunn, Curtis Black, Jamie Gaff, Sabtu,Tyler Mitchell). Also poet KG Wilkins. Friday(4/9) 8:30, Crossroads5621 S. BlackstoneNESTLE BOYCOTTIN FACT will give a presentation on the NestleBoycott Infant Formula controversy on Monday April 12 in Ida Noyes Library at 7:30 pmCalendarFRIDAYCrossroads: 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.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Anjuman-iSukhan- “Iran: The Revolutionary Vanguard andthe Crisis of Ideology" 12:30 pm, Pick 218.Calvert House: Stations of the Cross, 2:30 pm; Cel¬ebration of the Lord’s Passion, 5:00 pm; 5735 Uni¬versity.Model United Nations/International RelationsOrg.: Meeting 2:30 pm, Pick Lounge.Music Dept.: Ivan Waldbauer speaking on “Intel¬lectual Construction versus Tonality in the Mikro-kosmos by Bela Battok” 3:00 pm, Regenstein Li¬brary 264. .Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Arabic Circle -“Two Experiments at Harraniya" speaker Thom¬as Homerin, 3:30 pm, Pick 218.Dept, of Biophysics: “t-RNA Structure and Dy¬namics by NMR” speaker Alfred Redfield, 4:00pm, Cummings room 101.Dept, of Philosophy: “The Idea of Liberty: Classi¬cal and Contemporary Perspectives" speakerQuentin Skinner, 4:00 pm, Harper 130.Doc Films: “Heaven’s Gate” 7:00 and 9:45 pm,Cobb.Asian Arts: An evening of classical North Indianmelodies by Shiv Kumar Sharma (santoor) andZakir Hussain (tabla) at 7:30 pm, Law School Au¬ditorium. Tickets at the door. ....Sing-Along: Mozart, Requiem; 8:00 pm. Rocke¬feller Chapel. Free.SATURDAYDoc Films: “Darby O’Gill and the Little People”2:30 pm. Cobb.Calvert House: Individual Sacrament of Reconcili¬ation, 3:00-5:00 pm, 5735 University.Crossroads: Buffet dinner, 6:00 pm in celebrationof Passover; 7:15 pm volunteer meeting for theSpring committee. 5621 Blackstone.Doc Films: “Time Bandits” 7:15, 9:45 and mid¬night, Cobb.Law School Films: “Casablanca" 7:15 and 9:30 pm,Law School Aud.Calvert House: Easter Vigil Service, 8:00 pm.Bond Chapel. LITERARYMAGAZINEPrimavera, a literary magazine devoted to theexperiences & perspectives of women, seekspoefry, short stories & graphics. We also needvolunteers to work on the staff. Mailmanuscripts to Primavera at 1212 E. 59th St.For info, call 752-5655.PYSANKYUkranian Easter eggs $4 to $6 Call soon forbest selection. Rich 955 9142.STEPTUTORINGHelp a kid feel bright and intelligent. Volunteerto tutor an elementary or high school studentfor two hours a week. Contact Peter at 643-1733(evenings) tor more informationCONDO FOR SALELovely sunny 5 rm condo, 2 BR. Totallyrenovated, oak fl & buffet, frpI., bale., PLUS!Fin. 12%. Call Karen d. 947-5456, e 947 0859.INTRODUCTION TOCOMPUTERSThe Computation Center is offering twoseminars for non computer users: Introduction to Computer Concepts, Monday, April 12,3:30-5:00 pm. Harper 103; and Introduction tothe DECSYSTEM 20, Tuesday, April 13, 4 005:30 pm, Harper 103. All are welcome—nocharge.GYMNASTICSCLASSADULT BEGINNING GYMNASTICS CLASS:Mon, Thur for 8 wks. $20 Dennis, 947 6475 or955 8627IMPORTANTG.A.L.A. MEETINGThere will be an important organizationalmeeting of the Gay and Lesbian Alliance(GALA) on April 13, Tuesday at 8 pm (sharp)in the GALA office, INH 301 Discussion groupmembers are encouraged to attend, as are allpeople concerned with G.A.L.A.'s future. Thisyear and next.SUNDAYCalvert House: Easter Sunrise Mass at the Point,5:00 am; other Masses, 8:30 am, 11:00 am (BondChapel) and 5:00 pm.H.P.J.C.C./Doc: “Exodus" 2:00 pm, Cobb Hall.MARRS: Fighting practice, 3:00 pm, Ida Noyes.Doc Films: “Battle of Algiers” 8:00 pm, Cobb.Folkdancers: Advanced level folkdancing, 8:00pm, Ida Noyes Hall.I-House Concert: Soloist Mara Goodman singssongs from Mozart to Mariachi, 8:00 pm, free.MONDAYCrossroads: English classes for foreign women,10:00 am, 5621 Blackstone.Calvert House: Mass 12 noon and 5 pm; brown baglunch, 12:30 pm, 5735 University.Asian Business Group: Japan Conference “Man¬agement Japanese Style” registration by 4/14,Grad. School of Bus,Comp. Center Seminar: Introduction to ComputerConcepts 3:30-5:00 pm, Harper 103.Dept, of Chemistry: “Preparation and Propertiesof Reactive Intermediates at Low Temperatures”4:00 pm, Kent 103.Dept, of Microbiology: "The OMPA Protein of E.Coli: Incorporation into the Outer Membrane androle as a Phage Receptor” speaker Dr. Ulf Hen¬ning, 4:00 pm, Cummings 850.Dept, of Biophysics: “The T4 Replication Com¬plex” speaker P.H. von Hippel, 4:00 pm, Cum¬mings 101.Romance Lang Dept.: “The Disease of Love”speaker Paolo Cherchi, 4:30 pm, Soc. Sci.Lounge.Hillel: Class in Yiddish, 6:00 pm, 5715 Wood¬lawn.U of C Judo Club: Meets 6:00 pm, Bartlett gym.SCUBA Diving Class: Meets 7:00 pm. Bartlettgym trophy room.Hillel: An evening of Jewish jokes, 7:15 pm, 5715Woodlawn.Women s Rap Group: Meets 7:30 pm in theWomen s Center, 3rd floor Blue Gargoyle. Spon¬sored by University Feminist Org. & Women’sUnion.Doc Films: "China Gate” 8:00 pm. Cobb.Folkdancers: Beginning and Intermediate levelfolkdancing 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes,delta Sigma: Meeting 9:30 pm, Ida Noyes Li¬brary.22—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 9, 1982COMUPTER GRAPHICSYou need to generate a pie chart, bar chart, orline chart, but don't know how or where? Cometo the Computation Center's free computergraphics seminars: Introduction to TELL AGRAF, Friday, April 16, 3:30-5:30 pm.,Classics 18, Introduction to Charts and Graphson the CALCOMP Plotter, Tuesday, April 20,4.00-5:30 pm, Harper 103; and Introduction toDISSPLA, Wednesday, April 21 and Friday,April 23, 4:00-5:00 pm. Harper 103 For furtherinformation, pick up a class schedule at theCenter’s Business Office (962 7158).HAIRCUTSBY AAERRIEProfessional haircufting in my home. Flexiblehours. Only S10! Call today 324 4105FRENCH CAFEAt Crossroads Spring festival Fri April 16 8 pm1 am live entertainment, light French dinnerslate night dancing call 684 6060WHAT AN AFFAIRCrossroads Spring Festival 5621 S BlackstoneLive Entertainment, International Buffet, GiftShop, Cafe, Casino, Dancing, Auction, Games,Clowns, on Fri April 16 & Sat April 17 Call 6846060 For infoAEROBIC DANCINGGET IN SHAPE FORR SUMMER!! Classesbegin April 14, every Wed. $15/quarter CloisterRoom, Ida Noyes.CAN YOU SING?Black Tie, an established campus band, seeksvocalist. Pop, rock standards, and New WaveCall 753 2233 Rm 127 ASAP Leave message.FOTAMeeting: the biggest, most exciting of theyear. Final planning session. Tue. 4/13, 7:30pm, rm 218 Ida Noyes.CHANGE OF STATUSPrague, April 4, (UPS)-A change of status was noted at 4 45 A M Exclaimed the Infant: Plans were completed suecessfully and according to schedule All partieswere pleased with the beautiful end to thetwenty one year old regime, (five oh)!THE UC HOTLINEWANTS YOU....To pick up fhe phone and give us a call whenyou're feeling down and out, confused, hurried,harried, hassled, or generally jusf under theweather (re: snow in April). We want to hearfrom you! 7pm 7am, seven nights a week.LOSE WEIGHTand increase your bust. Peer Pressure Radiohas the solutions. Weekly shipments from WaxDr. 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 LensesIP i — <Iglg .DucklingCi RENT-A-CAR ,1608 E. 53rd Street$13.50 per day 200 Free MilesBetween IC Tracks m.and Cornell "ZoWW Classified AdsTrax make their debut on WHPK 88 3 FM,Weds., evenings, 11 pm 2amBAD POETRY?Didn't like the last CLR? Come join the staffLeave name, phone, and interests at MaroonOffice 753 3263 We need work for spring issuetoo!CALENDAR DEADLINEDeadline tor SAO's Spring Part 2 is April 16Bring info to Libby, Rm 210, Ida Noyes Hall.HOUSESITTERAVAILABLEDC Div. school student and spouse returningfrom research travel are interested in housesitting position for Summer. Excellenthousekeepers; good with plants and pets.Would consider partial Summer; also care ofchildren 752 7877.SHALOM, SHALOMThe U of C United Jewish Appeal Phoneathonis expanding. If you are interested in helpingthe Jewish communities of Chicago and aroundthe world, call Hilary, at 667 4599 to help outthis quarter.TITUS ANDRONICUSRockefeller Chancel Players presentsShakespeare's "TITUS ANDRONICUS''directed by Ronald Falzone, Friday, Saturday,Sunday April 23 through May 2 at 8:30 pm Call753 3381 for ticket information.PASCAL PROGRAMMINGLearn to program on the Computation Center'sDECSYSTEM 20 using PASCAL This eightsession course includes computer time and willbe held Mondays and Wednesdays, April 19May 12, in Cobb 103, 4:00 5:30 pm. Registrationis required by Thursday, April 15 in theCenter's Business Office (962 7158). Further information is available in a class schedule alsoavailable at the Business Office Computertime is provided. The cost is $40.00.INTRODUCTION TOSUPERWYLBURCollect, edit and format text. Submit batchjobs to the Amdahl 470. You can do all this andmore with SUPERWYLBUR The Computation Center is offering an introductory seminarfor SUPERWYLBUR which is open to all withno charge on Thursday, April 15, 4:00 5:30 pm,in Harper 103. SUMMER RENTALLarge home best campus location pianogarden all amenities tel 324 7858GAY AND LESBIANCOFFEEHOUSEGALA sponsors a weekly coffeehouse on Tuesday nights at 9:00 pm now in Cobb Coffeeshop,basement of Cobb Hall. Refreshments andcamaraderie are served free of charge All arewelcome Following the coffeehouse the GALAdiscussion group meets to discuss issues, problems and concerns of the gay and lesbiancommunity in a warm, supportive setting.Everyone is invited.MIMES-CLOWNS-ACROBATS FOR SOCIALRESPONSIBILITYJoin in the April 10th Peace Walk tomorrow atnoon! Meet in Hyde Park, go downtowntogether, in character. Contact Mary at 6676040, anytime, up to 10 am Sat. morning AMarmalade Production.INTRODUCTIONTO EDITLearn how to use the DEC 20's native lineeditor, EDIT, to create and modify text andprograms. This computation Center seminar isopen to all with no charge, on Wednesday,April 14, 3.30 5.00 pm, in Classics 18.EVERYTHING INPRINTINGThe Southsides largest and mostcomplete print shop letterpressand offset plus art departmentfor design and layout assistancePHOTO COMPOSITIONOVER 100 TYPESTYLESFOR BROCHURES. BOOKSALL YOUR PRINTING NEEDS!‘ Calling Card to CatalogWe Print Them All"HOT STAMPING • EMBOSSINGSaddle and Perfect BindingThe Bankers Print, Inc.5832 So. Green • HU 7-3142((ViudemiereHouseKm2 Fast 56th StreetEqual Housing OpportunityTHE CWINDERMERE ?is half u ay ’ there —COME SEE FOR YOl RSELFA limited number of newlyrenovated spacious Studio.1 Bednxim. and 2 Bedriximapartments are now available.Call (m3 006 ■ Chicago’s Best 1■ Camera Deals Here■ in Hyde Park! ■Why Buy Somewhere■ Else? ■MINOLTAXG-1IT GOES WHERE NOOTHER 35mm CAN-AUTOMATICALLYTHE NEWNIKONOSIV-AAUTOMATICUNDERWATER/ALL-WEATHER 35’It's the only automatic 35mm|that shoots 160 feet under-jwater without a housing, also]in rain and snow—that even!(defies sand and mud!with 35mm/2.5SUCH A DEAL!With all 35mm camera]purchases in April, ModelCamera customers re-1ceive 1 roll of film and|processing free!WHY BUY _SOMEWHERE "ELSE? ■Ilf any Chicago area store adver-|tises a lower price than you paid at,Model Camera, bring it in within 14days of your camera purchase andwe will credit or refund the dif¬ference. or at our option, we'llrepurchase the equipment at fullpurchase price. Proof of purchaseplus a copy of the advertisement is Iall that is needed. (The program islm addition to our BONUS BOOKbenefits and other customer ser-jvices.)modelcamera1342 E. 55th St.493-6700The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 9, 1982—23The ParkshoreEveryone talks about creatingaffordable housing in Hyde Park, butwe’ve done it!One, two, three and four-bednxmiapartments with location, location,location . . .Financing provided by the NationalConsumer Cooperative-Bank . . . Over81.3 million in rehabilitation . . .The Parkshore is a tenant-sponsoredhousing cooperative offering tlie besthousing value in Ilyde Park. We’vedone the work putting the packagetogether over the last twelvemonths . . . Now you can enjoy thebenefits.Come live with us at the Parkshore!Office hours Mon. Wed. Thurs. 2-9 p.m.Tuesday 7-9 p.m.Saturday & Sunday 12-4 p.m.For sales information, call 684-01 11.Sponsor: The Parkshore, an Illinoisnot-for-profit corporation,1755-65 East 55th St reet,Chicago, Illinois 60615.Development and Marketing Agent:Metropolitan Resources Group, Inc.24—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 9, 1982