1UIUIW1 HHRPK • •% £jgGood neighborspage nine- FOTA photospage 13The Chicago MaroonVolume 91, No. 57 The University of Chicago ©Copyright 1982 The Chicago Maroon Tuesday, May 18 1982Women at 40% inclass ’86 figures■Members of EF Clown enjoy the first day of FOTA’s outdoor activities yesterday. See page nine formore photos and information. photo by anna yamadaMath Institute plans underwayBy Robert DeckerAnticipating a recommendationmade by the Baker Report (Com¬mission on Graduate Education),the mathematics department haddrawn up a set of specific propos¬als for an Institute of Mathemati¬cal Sciences which would bring vi¬siting mathematicians to campusin larger numbers than ever be¬fore.The math institute was recom¬mended by the Baker Report as aco-facility to help maintain “state-of-the-art research’’ in mathema¬tics at UC, and would have a rela¬tionship similar to that of thephysics department with Fermilabin Batavia.“The lack of other scientific co¬facilities on this campus now pres¬ents serious difficulties for themaintenance of state-of-the-art re¬search in a number of fields,” theBaker Report states.The proposed math institute,which has been approved by thefaculty of the mathematics depart¬ment and the physical sciences di¬vision Executive Committee,would be modeled after similar in¬stitutes at the University of Cali¬fornia (Berkeley) and the Univer¬sity of MinnesotfBoth the Berkeley and Minneso¬ta math institutes are funded bythe National Science Foundation.Although UC was a “serious com¬petitor as a home for an NSF-fund-ed Mathematics Research insti¬tute” according to the Bakerreport, it was eliminated in the“final stages of selection.”“We have to meet the challengethat has been posed” by other un¬iversities, said Felix Browder,chairman of the mathematics de¬partment. “We need to competemore actively,” he said.“The central point is that we want to encourage more math-related activity,” said Browder,but added that one “presumptionof trying to organize such an insti¬tute” would be to attract moregrant money from such organiza¬tions as the National Science Foun¬dation.In the words of the Baker Re¬port, UC “is now the only oneamong the four or five leading de¬partments which must compete forscholars and conduct research ac¬tivity without the advantages con¬ferred by the presence of a comple¬mentary concentration of first-ratemathematicians.” Chicago was ranked fifth in the nation for mathby the 1980 “Gourman Report,” anindependent survey which is quot¬ed “with some trepidation”throughout the Baker Report.Browder said that the Depart¬ment of Statistics and the Com¬puter Science department, if estab¬lished, would participate in theinstitute, but he said that sincethere are five times as many mathfaculty as statistics faculty, that“most activity will be generatedfrom within the mathematics de¬partment.”Continued on page six By Chris Isidore andJeffrey TaylorWomen may make up more than40 percent of next year’s enteringCollege class according to figuresreleased yesterday by Dan Hall,dean of college admissions.Approximately 40.1 percent ofthe 759 deposits received by the ad¬missions office through the end oflast week were submitted bywomen. At a comparable time lastyear. 36 percent of those who hadaccepted admissions werewomen.Also released yesterday wereprojections on minority student en¬rollment. So far, 24 black students(3.2 percent), and 20 hispanic stu¬dents, (2.6 percent), have sent indeposits to reserve places in theclass. Comparable figures for thistime last year are not available forminority students, but last Oc¬tober, 24 black students and 14 his¬panic students enrolled in the classof 1985.Hall said that the number of ap¬plicants and the number of stu¬dents accepted to this class wereup this year, but that the yield rate,(the percentage of students whoaccept offers of admissions) wasdown one or two percent.Hall could not explain the in¬crease in the percentage of womenin next year’s class. “I don’t knowanything except that I’ll be reallyhappy if we can hold at that 40 per¬cent mark,” he said yesterday.If the 40 percent figure does hold,it would be the first time since thefall of 1970 that more than 40 per¬cent of the entering class werewomen. Approximately 41 percent of that fall’s class was female.There are no figures yet ^n howmany students in next’s year’sclass have applied for financialaid. but Hall said that it was his im¬pression that there was an in¬crease. “It (financial aid) was asubject which we heard a lot ofquestions about,” Hall said. Headded that financial considera¬tions may have added to thenumber of applicants which theschool received this year. “Whatwe heard from high school counsel¬ors and from the ETS < EducationalTesting Service) was that with fi¬nancial conditions uncertain, stu¬dents were applying to a greaternumber of schools.”Hall said that another factor inthe increase in all acceptances wasa rise in the number of studentswho visited campus during the ad¬missions process. “We havealways felt that having studentsvisit campus was an important fac¬tor in their decision to come here,”said Hall.The number of women in lastyear’s entering class was an in¬crease over recent years, and it ledto expansion of co-ed housing totwo more of the undergraduatehouses this past fall. Director ofUniversity Housing Edward Tur-kington said that he did not believethat any new co-ed houses would beadded to the system next yearthough. Instead, he said thathouses in the Shoreland which pre¬sently have only one or two femalerooms would see an increase in thenumber of woman residents.Continued on page sixCommittee outlines profile of new deanBy Anna FeldmanThe new Dean of the College willbe a “respected member of the fac¬ulty” probably with administra¬tive experience at the University,according to members of the dean-ship search committee. The com¬mittee’s report, recently submit¬ted to President Gray, will likelyplay a major role in defining the di¬rection the College is going to takein the next few years.The committee, including fivemembers elected from each of theDivisions of the College, plus oneelected by the College faculty atlarge, solicited responses from fac¬ulty and students recommendingcandidates for the committee’s re¬port.Charles Wegener, chairman ofthe committee, and the Howard L.Willett, professor in the College,discussed some of the qualifica¬tions the committee sought in can¬didates for the deanship.“Publications and research arenot so important,” Wegener said,“except in that the dean must be arespected member of the faculty. The person chosen must enjoy acertain stature in the University.You don’t get that stature,” hesaid, without some accomplish¬ments.Wegener said that administra¬tive experience at the University isimportant, although not necessary.“It’s helpful to know any place youwork in,” he said. “Any deanshipis a complicated administrativejob,” he continued, “but none ismore so than the deanship of theCollege.” Wegener attributed thisto the fact that the College is sepa¬rated into divisions and that it isnot as “continuous” a body asother areas with deans.Interviews were held with someof the candidates considered by thecommittee, but not necessarily all.If a candidate with whommembers of the committee wereunfamiliar received high recom¬mendations from a respected fac¬ulty member, an interview wouldbe arranged. “It depends upon whothe person is,” Wegener said.Having seen six or seven deans of the College since he startedhere, Wegener said that it is an“easy conclusion” that it makes nodifference who becomes dean."But it does make a difference.It makes a big difference,” saidWegener, adding that a dean un¬able to do the job could slow theCollege down. “Fortunately, wehaven’t had a lot of that kind ofproblem,” he said.After advertising the position,the committee received responsesfor the job, including many re¬quests for a job description to besent.“The only description we’vegot,” said Wegener, “is the one inthe statutes that says it’s a big re¬sponsibility and you make of itwhat you can. It would be foolishfor us to tick off items” considerednecessary or desirable for the posi¬tion.Eugene Goldwasser, a memberof the committee, said, “I don’tthink we could consider anyonewho couldn’t hold a faculty posi¬tion.” He also said that adminis¬ trative experience “would be use¬ful.”Goldwasser agreed with We¬gener on many of the points he con¬sidered important in the decisionof the committee. A primary con¬sideration of the search commit¬tee. he said, was that the candidateshould subscribe to the Universi¬ty’s adherence to liberal educa¬tion.Goldwasser also agreed that thechoice of dean can make a tremen¬dous difference to the College. "Adean will have different opinions, adifferent style, and different ap¬proaches,” and these he said, willhave an effect on the College“The committee takes this re¬sponsibility very seriously,” saidGoldwasser. “It’s not a trivial mat¬ter in the University.”The members of the committeeare: Wegener, Robert Clayton(Physical Sciences Division), Eu¬gene Goldwasser (BiologicalSciences), Philip Kurland (Hu¬manities), John MacAloon (SocialSciences), and Kenneth Northcott(Humanities).CHARTWELL HOUSESPECIALSbring you the finest in diningat veryaffordable prices.Featuring Coastal Valley winesBusinessperson’s LuncheonMonday thru Friday, 11:30 am to 2 pmChoose from the Chef’s dailyselection of specialty sandwiches 9menu includes:Soup du jour, sandwich,homemade potato chips, plusone complimentary cocktailall for only$095 plustax and tipTuesday Night from 5:30 to 10 p.m.STEAK & LOBSTER6 oz. butt steak and lobster tailwith potato and saladon,y *15.95 Friday Night from 5:30 to 10 p.mBARBECUED RIBSand salad with dressingo"ly S7J5Saturday Night from 5 to 10 p.m.ALASKAN KING CRABSalad and vegetable of the day$12.95The Chartwell HouseXin theHYDE PARK HILTON4900 South Lake Shore Drive 288-58002—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, May 18, 1982News in briefDebate soughtThe Debate Society and The CAUSE areplanning to sponsor a debate over whetheror not the American Government shouldprovide continuing military aid and supportfor the government of El Salvador. Eachspeaker will be given equal time by a neu¬tral moderator. The tentative format wouldallow for an initial argument by both speak¬ers, a rebuttal for each, a question and an¬swer period, and a summary for each speak¬er. Details are negotiable.A University of Chicago professor hasagreed to argue against the provision of mil¬itary support for the Salvadoran govern¬ment. Any professor or responsible spokes¬person willing to argue for continued mili¬tary support for the government of El Sal¬vador is cordially invited to participate.The debate is tentatively scheduled forMay 25 to 27. The deadline for notification ofinterest is 5 PM, Thursday, May 20. For fur¬ ther information of details, call 288-8722,363-4961, or 667-6512.Bust stolenA bust of Franklin W. Fisk was stolenfrom the entrance of the Chicago Theologi¬cal Seminary last Monday, May 10. Mr. Fiskwas a former president of the CTS.The white marble bust, sculpted in 1906 byLorado Taff, was approximately 20 incheshigh and weighed from 150 to 200 pounds. Itdisappeared sometime between 3:15 and5:15 pm on Monday.Lawrence Burch of the CTS said that thetheft must have involved at least two people,because of the sculpture’s bulk.A reward of $300 is being offered by theCTS for information leading to its return.Persons with such information should call752-5757.Collegiate lecture“From Marx to Stalin” is the title ofThursday evening’s Collegiate Lecture inthe Liberal Arts, to be given by Leszek Kola-kowski, Professor in the Committee on So¬cial Thought and author of a recent threevolume history of Marxism. The lecture, thelast of this year’s Collegiate Lectures, willbe held in the Swift Lecture Hall at 8 PM,with discussion to follow.Housing sign-upReservations for places in University un¬dergraduate housing need to be made withinthe next week. Tomorrow night, the dormi¬tories of Shoreland, Greenwood, Black-stone, Hitchcock Snell and Breckenridgewill hold room reservations for studentswishing to stay in their own houses.Students who wish to move into one ofthese dorms must enter the housing lottery’by noon on Wednesday at the housing office.The reservation for rooms in those houseswill be held on Thursday, at 7:30 pm, in theBJ commons. Wednesday night reserva¬tions for students wishing to move from onehouse to another in the Shoreland will beheld.55th & Hyde Park Blvd.643-5500 TO RESERVE YOUR SPACE CALL OR STOP INSTUDENT ACTIVITIES OFFICE • IDA NOYES753-3591 LIMITED SPACE IS AVAILABLE -RESERVE SPOT EARLY WE WILL PROVIDEPEGBOARD HOOKS BUT YOU MUST HANG YOUROWN WORK - YOU CAN PRICE YOUR WORKFOTA CANNOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANYFOR ANY WORKSHOW ENDS TUES. MAY 25RNorWay fondcd by svtICE CREAMSANDWICHESEverybodys getting rabbit ears about Orly snew ice cream creation.Stuffed inside our own double chocolate chipfudge cookies, you can choose from a varietyof ice cream flavors.Perfect for a hot day — pick one up on yourway to the Point.Get a FREE SAMPLE at noon Wednesday,May 1 9, outside in the Quad.American Express, Visa, & Mastercard taken. Limited reservations accepted.The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, May 18, 1982—3ASHUM-AMSASeminar Series 1981-82Program in the Arts and Sciences Basic to HumanBiology and MedicineandAmerican Medical Students’ Associationpresent a lecture onHOW MEDICINE SAVEDTHE LIFE OF ETHICSbStephen ToulminProfessor in th« Committee on Social Thought,The Department of Philosophy and the Divinity School,University of ChicagoTHURSDAY, MAY 20, 19827:30 P.M. /HARPER 130All interested persons are invited to attend.There will be a reception with the speaker in Harper 284 following the lecture. Festival of \\ y\the Arts presents ^THEWINDYCITYGAYXHORUSait'/*?\Sunday, May 23 • 8 pm • Mandel HallTickets at Reynolds Club Ticket Center$2.50 students • $4 otherserttie j— ——*TelefunkenNull and VoidA?*'*??** * , WJ**^.. Co"eeJ/*\7 ti,,* «W “'"* />•<,/lJn,^fr°acf. “"Ao ’%y4 c/ be u,*e ,***(/ „ et)tera/S»SffiA‘y&19s'» V°iaas»o?t,io»Z0'$£!N«4< $ <*<>$§a?*V^5£v«*v, 4ftvs^jS?^5s, **4^,The Mighty Maroonadmits tragic mistakeBy Chris IsidoreThis is the kind of confession which everyeditor dreads having to write. It is bound todetract from the reputation of his paper andhis staff, even on a paper as well respectedas the giant of journalistic achievementwhich you now hold in your hands. But thisis something which I now know needs to besaid.The 21st year student whom we profiledearlier this year was a creation of theMaroon.Many of you undoubtedly remember thestory which we ran in late October. It toldthe story of John Martin, Student #100228who had been here since 1960, and who hadtaken nearly 100 courses. It was a light,hopefully humorous article. We got a lot ofgood feedback to the story, comments thatpeople had really enjoyed the article. Webasked in this praise, never pausing to thinkwhat we had done.Many readers, though, did realize whatwe had done. We had created this person outof one part flesh, one part newsprint. EvenDean of Students Charles O’Connell ques¬tioned me as to the existence of this 21styear student.I had accepted the story because I hadmet John Martin. I had seen him, talked tohim, and occasionally even listened to him. Iknew that he had registered for close to 100courses here. I believed, albeit naively, thatthe 21st year student whom we wrote aboutdid indeed exist.But unfortunately for the school, for HydePark, and for the reputation of the MightyChicago~MwoivMaroon, I was wrong. Forthe 21st year student whom we wrote aboutwas a sage, a wise man, an oracle of truths,verities and other redundancies about lifeon the quads. The story, though, was so con¬vincing that it even convinced John Martinthat such a person existed, and that he wasindeed thiswise and wonderful fountain oftruth.Soon after the story appeared, John start¬ed to play this role more and more. Soon nobar in Hyde Park, no level of Regenstein li¬brary, no Student Government meeting wassafe from the “wisdom” of the 21st year stu¬dent. Every time I looked up, there wasJohn, with some new-found truth about lifeat UC, the geeks who go here, the articles in the Maroon, the administration, or worst ofall, student government meetings.You see, John had gravitated to the onearea of campus — other than the Maroonthat is — where students find it easiest toforce their opinions upon innocent by¬standers. The SG meetings, and all the SGpolitics, provided a perfect forum for this 38year old man. Since no one else from hisarea of the University had shown the leastinterest in having anything to do with SG,John had easily become an SG rep. And allthe members of the SG Assembly soon knewhis opinion on all the weighty, importantconstitutional issues which make SG almostas well respected as the Mighty Maroon.Once I realized that I had created a mon¬ster, I did my best to contain the damage. Itried my best to spare the campus the fullextent of John’s “wisdom”, by not reportingall of the great, weighty debates which tookplace in SG. I felt it was the least I could dofor our readers.But John kept popping up, trying to getback into the pages of the Maroon. Whenthat didn’t work, he tried circulating hand¬bills with his views on them. During SG elec¬tions last month circulated a letter claimingthat he did exist, and listing his own set ofSG endorsements. (As if anyone other thanthe Mighty Maroon has any right to makeSG endorsements!)Sadly, there was little to do for those of usat the Maroon who had been responsible forcreating John. We just sat back passively,while John roved the Pub and Jimmy’s atnight, telling all who would listen to him,(and some who wouldn’t) the great truthswhich he had learned by taking five scorecourses here in Hyde Park.John will be leaving us soon. He has final¬ly gotten a job teaching, as all good 21st yearstudents must. I tell this story now not onlyas a confession, but as a warning, to ailthose 6th, 9th or 11th year students out there,who have followed this saga, who have runinto John since we created him, and whomight be tempted to follow in his path. Don’tdo it. Oracles of wisdom are soon forgottenor ignored on the quads, unless they aregiven a regular infusion of newsprint andlimelight. And hopefully, the MightyMaroon will never again make this same di¬sastrous mistake. GRADUATES OFSPRING OR SUMMER 1982If you have not received your mailing about:— Pub night June 4th—Free Brunch June 5th: Bubblingrefreshment will be available for purchase.—Dance on S/S Clipper at Navy Pier June 9thPick up information in theStudent Activities Office■—senior week committee—a%Departmmt^^{ustc,J^$ents *Thursday, May 20,1982 - NOONTIME CONCERT12:15 p.m., Goodspeed Recital HallMembers of the New Music Ensemble joined by singersand actors perform Igor Stravinsky’s Renard, a burlesquestory staged by Mary Struthers.admission is free.Thursday, May 20,1982 - BAT STRING QUARTET8:00 p.m., Goodspeed Recital HallStravinsky, Concertino; Puccini, Crisantemi; Haydn,f minor Quartet op. 20, no. 5; and Beethoven, last quartet,op. 135. admission is free, reception followsFriday, May 21,1982 - ORCHESTRA OF THE CHINESEMUSIC SOCIETY OF NORTH AMERICA8:00 p.m., Assembly Hall, International HouseThe performance includes music from many periods andfrom the various regions of China,admission. $3 student, $6 generaltickets available at the Reynolds Club Box OfficenAjKominfj TvwtsThursday, May 27,1982 - Noontime Concert. Jonathan Schwartz, guitar12:15 p.m., Goodspeed Recital Hall freeFriday, May 28,1982 &Saturday, May 29,1982 • University Symphony Orchestra. A StravinskyCentennial Concert including: Mavra, presented in conjunction withThe Lyric Opera Center for American Artists. 8:30 p.m., Mandel Hall,free.FOR MORE INFORMATION PLEASE CALLOUR NEW TELEPHONE NUMBER:, 962-8484 [<A\The University of Chicago# Department of MusicSYMPHONIC WIND ENSEMBLEFarobag Cooper, DirectorAn Evening of American & German MusicSaturday • May 22 • 8 pmFree AdmissionInternational House Assembly Hall • 1414 E. 59th St.Made possible by an SGFC grantThe Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, May 18, 1982—5NewsSALE DATES:MAY 19-22U.S.D.A. CHOICESHORT RIBS $159OF BEEF IU.S.D.A. CHOICECHUCKSTEAKCHUCKSTEAKMOTT'SAPPLESAUCEHIGH LINERPERCHFILLETS 69c$rHELLMAN'SMAYONNAISE $149FRESH IQCGREEN BEANS 49 .BONELESSBEEF32 OZ.REALEMONJUICE2 LBS. ORE IDAFRENCHFRIES16 0Z BOX 90PRINCE MiSPAGHETTI 49KRAFT PHILADELPHIAFINER FOODSSERVING53rd PRAIRIE SHORESKIMBARK PLAZA 2911 VERNONWhere Tou Are A Stranger But Once’ Math instituteContinued from page oneAlthough the Berkeley and Minnesota in¬stitutes haye between 10 and 15 visitingmathematicians at a time, Browder said,UC’s math institute would be somewhatsmaller. Visitors, two would come from In¬dustry and government organizations,would not teach but would take part in semi¬nars and workshops, Browder said.If the math institute is founded, it wouldbe located in the second through fourthfloors of Ryerson Physical Laboratory,which would be renovated for the purposeafter the new Physical Sciences Teachingbuilding is constructed west of the Quadran¬gles.An internal departmental memo obtainedby the Maroon states that “the level of out¬side resources necessary to keep the Insti¬tute running on the desired level has beenestimated by the Dean as about $500,000 ayear. Though the present situation in termsof Federal research funds is not very prom¬ising, we cannot take an attitude of hope¬lessness or passivity with respect to tryingto raise additional resources for this kind ofactivity.’’The math institute would be staffed by adirector and a six-person directorial com¬mittee, appointed by President Gray, and 30faculty members “on a rotating basis ofthree year terms.”Browder said that Stuart Rice, dean of thePhysical Sciences Division, had called ameeting for May 26 to discuss the proposalfor a math institute. Browder said that itwould be several years before the institute PHOTO BY ANNA YAMADASociologist Morris Janowitz (second from left) was honored at a conference lastweek, sponsored at department of sociology. Janowitz has taught at UC since 1948.would actually be operating, since renova¬tion of Ryerson and construction of thePhysical Sciences Teaching building mustbe completed first. He added, however, thatthe actual establishment of the institutemay be reached by the middle of nextyear. AdmissionsPut the pastin yourfuture!Thoroughly’ renovated apartments offer the convenienceof contemporary’ living space combined with all the best elementsof vintage design. Park and lakefront provide a natural setting foraffordable elegance with dramatic view’s.—All new’ kitchens and appliances — Community room— Wall - to - wall carpeting — Resident manager—Air conditioning — Round-the-clock security— Optional indoor or outdoor — Laundry’ facilities onparking each floorStudios, One and Two Bedroom - two bath apartments now available.One bedroom from $445 — Two Bedroom from $610Rent includes heat, cooking gas, and master TV antenna.Call for information and appointment—643 1406 Continued from page oneNumbers of applicants to the professionalschools fluctuated from last year’s totals.3010 students applied to the Law School, anincrease of 7.5 percent; 3135 applied to theMedical School, a decrease of 2.4 percent;and 3200 applied to the Business School, adecrease of nearly 10 percent.These high figures make for traditionallyintense competition for admission. Figuresfor enrollment are incomplete, but will re¬main fairly consistent with last year’stotals. The Law School will have an enteringclass of approximately 170 students, theMedical School 104, and the Business School440. Enrollments in the other three profes¬sional schools (Divinity, Library Science,and Social Service Administration) will risevery slightly.Applications increased overall in the fourgraduate divisions from last year’s 2921 toabout 3250. This is only the second straightincrease after five successive years of de¬creases.Humanities and Social Sciences remainthe largest graduate divisions. Each ofthese has received more applications andwill enroll more students than the Physicaland Biological Sciences divisions com¬bined.Final Spring projections for divisional en¬rollment will be released next week.SuccessfulLiving^CWewiejie/foHse1642 East 56th Street^In Hyde Park, across the park fromThe Museum of Science and IndustryEqual Housing Opportunity Managed by Metroplex, Inc by Reverend Gordon K. SpeagleSin. It called “mittthe mar*.” When wenot follow tht good liof God, thlt It tin. 1Scripture declares tall have tinned. If Ituniversal condition iinfluences every pertlife.Or. Karl Menntger.notad psychiatrist,alata H la footleh to Iproblems of man without aver mentionsin. He It convinced the only way to raise the mitone of society It to revive an undarstanding ofsubject.Sin affects people In two basic ways. Firstbars ua from fellowship with God A holy God canreceive those who are not holy. Secondly, It dettrirelationships between people. The breakdownfamilies, marriages, and friendships can be tra<to the failure of following God s laws.However, we can be free from a Ini JesusMessiah cams specifically fo daal with this probl(read Isaiah 53). It It through faith In Hit nawharaby we receive forgiveness for all am andrestored to fsHowahip with God and man. tt lawho empowers Hit followers fo llvt holy How w<derful H Is to bt free from the bondage of tin!HYDE PARKALLIANCE CHURCHMeeting at the Hvde Park Hiltondownstairs in the Cambridge RoomSunday service 10 a.m.Evening fellowship (Potluck supper) 5:00 p.m.Thursday Prayer Hour 7 p.in.phone 752-04696—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, May 18, 1982LettersPlaying fairTo the editor:The U of C intramural guys — the onesthat run the soccer — aie O.K. The NHLmay have uncontrolled violence which de¬tracts from what otherwise would be a beau¬tiful sport and no rules to curb it. But theguys running the intramurals have institut¬ed a set of rules designed not only to stop theinherent violence, but also to make realgentlemen out of the players.They have “Sportsmanship” ratings,given to each team after each game by therefs. If a team has below a “3” average, itdoesn't make the playoffs. (Unless a bunchof teams have below a 3; then they have aprovisional playoff tourney, where theyhave a chance to redeem themselves, al¬though they must play while wearing tagswhich read “I have been a bad boy”.)Sure, there are a few bugs in the system.Two players from the “Ilia” team (4-0)were the refs for all the “Jamaican” team'sgames, (also 4-0). But the Jamaican’s arenot the sportsmen they should be, even inwinning. Thank goodness the Ilia playersdidn’t overreact to the obvious conflict of in¬terest. They put the Jamaicans right wherethey should be — in the provisionalplayoffs.All in all it’s a good system, an effectiveway of reminding teams that the real pointof intramural soccer is learning to be a gen¬tlemen not just kicking the ball around.Jim KaminHYDE PARK UNION CHURCH5600 S. Woodlawn Ave.Church School (all ages) 9:45 a.m.Worship Nursery Provided 11:00 a.m.W. Kenneth Williams, MinisterSusan Johnson, Baptist Campus MinisterCome, Worship, Study, Serve Music program strongTo the Editor:I cannot presume to speak for my col¬leagues in literature or art, but the notionthat the University of Chicago lacks a pro¬gram that encourages the creation of musi¬cal compositions (I refer to your editorial ofMay 14) shows a remarkable ignorance ofCHINESESUMMER COURSESIntensive beginning course and eveningcourses at the beginning and intermediatelevels will be offered this summer by ChengYang Borchert, Senior Lecturer in ChineseCourses run 10 weeks — June 21 throughAugust 27. Limit 12 students each class.For more information call493-6420 the programs in the Department of Music.At the undergraduate level we offer a for¬mal composition sequence and independentstudy with the composers on the faculty. Aithe graduate level we offer and M.A. andPh.D. in composition.Many of our students have gone on to pur¬sue active careers as composers and teach¬ers, both in America and abroad. Not topress the matter too far, I can cite a newpiece by Robert Carl, who is currently com¬pleting a degree, performed this year at theParisian center for new music, IRCAM.Gerald Levinson (Ph.D. 1977) has just beenawarded a Guggenheim Fellowship for com¬position next year. Deborah Drattell (Ph.D.1982) was a composition fellow at Tan-glewood recently Whether U. of C. compos¬ers will ultimately produce “masterpieces” is not a matter for me to say, but the Univer¬sity clearly has a program where they canwork and develop their talents.Perhaps the Maroon could play a moreconstructive role in fostering these activi¬ties. On the May 16 concert by the NewMusic Ensemble pieces were performed byPhilip Maki, a current student, MelindaWagner and Rami Levin, two composerswho were in our program last year, not tomention a piece by Robert Morgan, amember of the faculty. Some continuing andthorough coverage of events of this kindmight help spread knowledge and intereston this campus about the activities of Uni¬versity of Chicago composers.Philip GossettChairman, Department of MusicThe Chicago Maroon is the official student newspaper of the University of Chicago. Itis published twice a week, on Tuesdays and Fridays. Editorial and business officesare located on the third floor of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St. Chicago, 60637. Tele¬phone 753-3263. Business office hours are 9:30 to 4:30, Monday through Friday.Richard KayeGrey City Journal EditorBecky WoloshinLiterary Review EditorErin CassidyLibrarianAame EliasDesign Director’opy editing; Margo HablutHenry OttoBusiness ManagerJay McKenzieAdvertising ManagerLeslie WickOtfice ManagerCharlie MencerProduction ManagerChris Isidore Sherrie NegreaEditor Features EditorDarrell WuDunn Audrey LightEditor-elect Sports EditorRobert Decker William MudgeManaging Editor Photography EditorAnna Feldman David BrooksNews Editor Viewpoints EditorAssociate Editors: Robin Kirk, News; William Rauch,zel, Features; Anna Yamada, Photography.Staff : Edgar Asebey, Lee Badgett, Sheila Black, David Blaszkowsky, George Champ.Kahane Corn, Wally Dabrowski, Jeff Davitz. Teri Drager, Bill Fitzgerald, Sue For-tunato, Caren Gauvreau, Cliff Grammich, John Herrick. Vicki Ho, Keith Horvath,Robert Kahng, Jae-ha Kim, Wayne Klein, Bob LaBelle. Linda Lee, Chris Lesieutre,Kathleen Lindenberger, Bob Nawrocki, Koyin Shih, Donna Shrout, Daniel Staley,Carl Stocking, Jeffrey Taylor, Jeff Terrell, James Thompson, Bob Travis, Aili Tripp.Sheila Westmoreland, Jeff Wolf, George Woodbury.NEWS FROM THESTUDENT ACTIVITIESRoom 210 • Ida Noyes Hall • 753-3591FLEA MARKETSign up to sell before Friday—$2 sellingfee. Pick up knickknacks, thingamabobsand other etc. May 22, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. IdaNoyes Parking Lot.ART INSTITUTE DISCOUNTThe Art Institute will no longer be of-fering specially discountedmemberships through the StudentActivities Office after May 30. SAOstill has a limited number of cardsavailable (you pay $9 instead of $15)but when these run out, there won’tbe any more. Last chance!INTERNATIONAL STUDENTand YOUTH HOSTEL CARDSAvailable from SAO for a small fee. Bringpassport size photo, proof of registration andapplication blank (also at SAO) and get eitherID while-you-wait. Get valuable discounts forcultural attractions and lodging.The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, May 18, 1982—7ATTENTIONJUNEGRADSRepresentatives of the E. R. MooreCompany will be in the bookstore,second floor, gift dept., from 8:00a.m. to 4:30 p.m. on Wednesday,Thursday and Friday, May 19, 20, 21to take graduating students cap andgown orders.ORDERING MUST BE DONEAT TfflS TIME ONLY IJMSfli SPONSORED BYTHE NEW TONGUE JAZZFRIDAY, MAY 21,1982HUTCHINSON COMMONS REAR COURT57th & UNIVERSITY12:00-1:00 PMFunded by SGFCFor theGraduate(OF™*,Y*n«onp JLIUNTVggnfO.and 0» rPR iLLiKOisboard ofEXAMICHAEL S-^SSgSSySlVERASfjssss-^-"Taccoonta^certified EL'81- „ ,J mu*0 TH,vtKTT-T**,‘', tM,i kuho**0 “vK«I,,0 t th0US*m0 „.1>«A handsome, engraved replica of your hard earneddiploma is sure to be an elegant addition to any officeor home. Your diploma is engraved in jewelers brassto match your original, then mounted on a handfinished 9"x11" walnut plaque To order, send us aclear photocopy of your diploma with your check ormoney order for $49 95 (Illinois residents please add6% sales tax). Your money will be refunded if you arenot completely satisfied$10 Discount Coupon $10Send this coupon with your order for anengraved diploma plaque and receive adiscount of $10 for each plaque. Thiscoupon offer is good until July 1, 1982Benedeck & Fey Engravers7005 Ogden Ave.Berwyn, Illinois 60402AUGUST ANA LUTHERAN CHURCHTuesday“Religion & theArtistic Imagination”5:30 pm Pizza Supper6:00pm Discussion:“Spirituality and the Martial Arts”Jay AbramsShotokan Karate Instructor5500 South Woodlawn8—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, May 18, 1982• f • t •. rElderly and students makegood Shoreland neighbors InsidePHOTO BY ANNA YAMADAThe lake at dawn, just off Jackson Park, a perfect spot for catching the earlybird.By John HildrethAs far as college dormitories go, theShoreland is unique and interesting in thatolder, permanent residents live in thebuilding along with UC students. Theseresidents not only contribute to theShoreland’s atmosphere, but are also greatstory-tellers and interesting people toknow.Several of the permanent residents —which include a group of 24 — were aroundbefore the University purchased theShoreland for the purpose of studenthousing nearly eight years ago. Naturallythey remember the way things used to be.Mrs. William Finn, a ten-and-a-half yearresident of the sixth floor (MichelsonHouse), says the change was not for thebetter! “It was lovely here,” she recalls.“Of course you know this was built as ashowplace. There were potted plants allaround, and lights in the pillars down inthe lobby. There was nice furniture in thebalcony and so forth. And along comes theUniversity and pulls all of those out.”PHOTO BY WILLIAM MUDGEMrs. William Finn, a resident of the 6thfloor of Shoreland for the last 10years.Ursula Fisher, another ten-year residentof the sixth floor adds: “Very long ago inthe thirties and forties, next to the DrakeHotel, this was the best hotel in Chicago.The North side had the Drake, and theSouth side had the Shoreland. It was avery glamorous place that you could safelyrecommend to a world traveller. . .and theGrand Ballroom was really a grandballroom.”Even though the occupants and thereputation of the Shoreland have changed,most permanent residents agree that thefront desk, security, and repair servicesare well-run.“Of course back then we had hotelservice,” says Mrs. Fisher. “There weredoor openers and everything else. But eventhough we have none of the extras, theservice remaining is still good.”Perhaps the permanent residents’ majorcomplaint about the current servicesNull and VoidNext Tuesday’s Null and Void willcontain a list of dubious achievementawards for the 1981-82 school year.Student, faculty members and othervagabonds are invited to contributesuggestions for awards and winners. Thearbitrary decisions of the judges will ofcourse be final. Please address yoursuggestions to the Dubious achievements,care of The Chicago Maroon, 1212 E. 59thSt., Chicago 60637. All entries must bereceived by midnight, May 23. offered is the lack of a “real” restaurant,which is now substituted by the coffee shop“Fred” in the lobby.“I would like to see a regular restaurantin here,” says Ethel Bishop, a ten-yearresident and a UC alumni of the class of1918. “I don’t think the students reallyknow enough about it to do any better.They’re only doing the best they can. Theydidn’t come here to learn to run arestaurant, and you can’t expect it ofthem.”Miss Bishop currently plans to enter arest home so that she can be assured ofconsistent food service and “a roof overher head.”When the University originally boughtthe Shoreland in 1974, all the residents atthat time were given the option to remainor move elsewhere. When asked why shestayed, Barbara Birthwright, nine-yearresident of eighth floor (Compton House)said, “I liked my apartment, it’s so niceand sunny. And I work rather close to hereand that’s sort of nice. Besides, there wasnowhere else at the time to go.”Other residents stayed for similarreasons — they liked Hyde Park and wereused to their familiar surroundings andlocation.Another factor in their decision to staywas a regulation that the University wasnot allowed to evict residents as long asthey paid their rent.Naturally, when the students arrived,the atmosphere of the Shoreland changed.According to Mrs. Finn it once was “aplace for weddings, proms, fascinatingpeople and elegant parties.” Now it’s adormitory “full of kids doing the thingsthat kids like to do,” she says.Despite the obvious age differencesbetween the students and the permanentresidents, the relationship between thesetwo groups is quite friendly. In fact, manypermanent residents enjoy having thestudents around. Says Bishop: “Of courseI like the students. I was a student once!”“We’re good neighbors,” Mrs. Finn saysof the students. “You see, noise doesn’tbother me, and my husband can’t hear.They can do as they please, and it doesn’tbother me. So far as I’m concerned,they’re all right.”Apparently, being able to cope with noiseis a prerequisite to getting along withcollege students. Sterios, parties, hallfrisbees, and late hours are all part ofShoreland student life.As Mrs. Birthwright says: “It used todrive me crazy. But this year I’ve justgotten over all of that and learned to sleepright through it. You absolutely have to getused to it.”None of the permanent residentsinterviewed has ever had a problem with astudent, either disciplinary or otherwise.However, they do complain about loungevandalism and the condition of theelevators and the bulletin boards. Thestudents, on the whole, are aware of thepermanent residents and that theirapartments are their homes, and respecttheir rights as home owners.“I have enjoyed my stay at Shorelandsurrounded by the students,” says MissBishop. “They make the place moreexciting as long as they behave, and I’llmiss them when I leave.”Most permanent residents know severalof the other permanent residents. Thisrelationship, however, seldom goes beyondthe level of “friendly acquaintances.” Therecent Shoreland fire, which unfortunatelyresulted in the death of a permanentresident, Helen DeCamp, seemed to havean effect on the other permanent residents.They now seem drawn closer somehow,due to their combined grief.On the whole, the permanent residentshave enjoyed living at the Shoreland, eventhrough the transition in which theUniversity purchased it. And as moststudents agree, their presence adds to theShoreland appeal, and they’re wonderfulpeople to know. Club catchesby Margo HablutzelProbably the only contact most studentshave with birds is ducking pigeons on thequads, feeding sparrows in Hutch Court, oreating chicken. Few would considerwaking at four a.m. to watch birds flyingalong the lakefront at dawn. There is agroup which does just that, however —counting birds and observing theirbehaviour.Founded just two years ago by ScottBrennan — an undergraduate whoconfesses to walking around observingbirds “until I exhaust myself” — theUniversity of Chicago Birdwatching Clubnow has eight “hard core” members plusabout a dozen occasional watchers.Brennan began the club in the summerand fall of 1980 when he realized that therewere many birdwatchers around thecampus and Hyde Park, but no club orclearing house for information.The Birdwatchers Club has recorded 236species sighted in Jackson Park during itstwo-year existance, of the nearly 300 whichhave been seen in the Chicago area overthe years. So far this year they have seen206 species, including some that mostpeople would be surprised to learn hadbeen spotted in Chicago.“We’ve seen bald eagles, several typesof owls, sandpipers, hawks, sandhillcranes, hummingbirds, great blue heron,and even more obscure species,” saidcommunity resident Paul Clyne, who keepstrack of the club’s records. “Most people(in Hyde Park) would be surprised to findthese birds showing up at their back door,but they do.”Clyne prefers to go out with one or twoother people “with good eyes" to help himcount and so that they can keep each othercompany. A larger group tends to flushbirds away, he says, but can be helpfulwhen looking for a particular species, ormaking a big count. One such countoccurred two Saturdays ago, May 8, whenalmost forty people'filled Jackson Park toparticipate in the Illinois State Count ofwild birds for the Department ofConservation.“It doesn’t take that long,” Clyne says.“You get ninety percent of the birds in acouple of hours, then doublecheck, flushingsome birds out of the grass. This year wecounted 3,293 individuals, representing 109species.”Clyne also said that the club’s regularcounting helps keep track of variations inthe local bird population. Starlings, forexample, live in Hyde park most of theyear, but their numbers vary greatly withthe seasons — as many as 2,200 in the falldrop to a mere 120 in the winter.All of the club members agree that the the earlybirdbest seasons to watch are spring and fall,when birds pause in the area on theirmigrations north and south. During thesetimes, the birdwatchers meet on thelakefront before dawn to count water birdsas they awaken and begin to fly down thelakefront, then move inland to count thesingers, who awaken an hour or so afterdawn. By lunchtime, most birds haveflown off.Ron Gertz, a fourth-year undergraduate,got interested in birdwatching by agrammar school teacher who woulddiscuss a “Bird of the Week”. Later hebegan to notice the different species whichtravelled through his backyard andbecame a regular birdwatcher.“This time of year I’d see warblers,” hesaid. “They’re small and very colorful, inyellows and oranges. I saw almost thirtyspecies in my backyard.”Now Gertz goes through Jackson Park atregular intervals, sometimes walkingaround and looking at the birds and othertimes sitting and watching them flyoverhead. He says that Jackson Park is anideal place to look for birds because whilethey may be hard to locate and shy in theirnatural habitat, particularly woodlandbirds, most are fairly tame and quite -visible in the park.“They may look somewhat confused,” headded, “but you can get a good look atthem.”Unlike what Brennan calls “birders”,the UC birdwatchers do not try to recordthe most number of different species, butstudy the difference between species andthe ways that the birds act. Since spring isthe mating season, he says that birds areacting more spectacularly now than at anyother time of year as they court oneanother and the males fight and display.To learn more about the differentmarkings, that distinguish one speciesfrom another, and about ornithology, thebirdwatchers make trips to the FieldMuseum to study the collections. They alsoprint articles about bird biology andmarkings in their weekly newsletter(w’hich is fortnightly during the winter).These articles give more detaileddescriptions of the birds than can be foundin most field guides.The newsletter also gives the week’scounts of individual birds and speciescounted and notes any unusual sightings,and tells members about the club’supcoming events.If anyone would like to join the group orreceive the newsletter, call Paul Clyne at363-1831 or Tim McLarnan at 962-7253 — orthey should just be at the lakefront atdawn.The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, May 18, 1982—9r20% off on all watcheswith coupon • expires 6/1/82|j SUPREME JEWELERS g|1452 E. 53rd Street • 324-1460 m LLLi1428 E. 53rd St. • 752-202020% OFF ON YOURFIRSTDO-IT-YOURSELF FRAMEone per customer • w/coupon • expires 5/31/82 M( )i iPON roi IRON co11 pon COUPON COUPON COUPONSPRING ALONG WITH US!25% discounton any meal w/couponwith thesebonuscoupons... Chances R5225 8. harper limit one per customerexpires5/31/82363-1550 M 20% discounton purchases over $20plants, supplies, tools2GRGG1INGOfHVDCMRk'1613 E. 53rd St. w/couponexpires 5/28/82667-0920 MCOUPON COUPON COUPON COUPON COUPON COUPON493-3338ACE ANDERSONACE HARDWARE1304 E. 53rd St.GENERAL ELECTRIC 40 wattFLUORESCENT TUBEF40CW $1 49 limit 2 per customerw/coupon M (W*t $5 OFFon membersVLt 'fSSBM\ ONLY ZipperOvum WBmM jackets" TemKm1 per customerw/coupon1502 E. 55th expires 6/5/82752-6100 • in the Hyde Park Shopping Center m rea. $18.95with coupon*14“in brass,chrome,brown,blackor tan-V/SWIVEL LAMP^P/5210 S. Harper • 667-6228 mronpon COUPON COUPON ■ COUPON COUPON COUPON ■ COUPON COUPON COUPON i■o<a. 493-3338ACE/ ANDERSONACE HARDWARE1304 E. 53rd St.DAP “Kwik-Seal” 6 oz. tubeTUB CAULK $J19 M A ON ANY PAIR OFROCKPORTSHOES w/couponexpires 5/30/82752-81001502 E. 55th St. INCM ZenithIntegrated Stereo reg $249Special Zenith price $199HAVILL’S SPECIAL PRICE $ioqwith coupon JL OHAVILL’SJ I 1368 E. 53rd Street • 752-7800 MI < U ICON COI I PON cni ipon COUPON COUPON COUPON COUPON COUPON COUPON iEOo.DOO 493-3338ACE/ ANDERSONACE HARDWARE1304 E. 53rd St. yAMES chrome-plated c#o/AHANDTOOLS qq *each M PUZZLESPLAQUES10% OFFexpires 5/31/82 PUZZLESPLAQUES10% OFF PUZZLESPLAQUES10% OFFwith coupon1 per customerLTD.M 1538 E. 55th St. • 288-5500in the Hyde Park Shopping Center 20%offon anyone item5210 S. Harper • 643-4777 w/couponexpires 5/31/82M( III IPON ( Ol IPON COUPON COUPON COUPON COUPON COUPON COUPON COUPONH3o BARNEY’S MARKET1648 E. 55th St. • 752-0146 R20% OFF Limit $30per customerno advanceordersANY FRESH POULTRY ITEMoffer good thru 5/26/82 M MEAT MARKET1461 E. 53rd Street • 288-0672ONE DOZENFREE EGGS w/$25 or morePURCHASEI per customerw/coupon • expires 5/26/82 M 25% OFFon all juic4** bardrinksone per customerw/coupon • expires 5/23/821457 E. 53rd St. 643-1100( « )i IPON COUPON COUPON COUPON COUPON COUPON COUPON COUPON COUPONmiDa BIRTHDAYFATHER'S DAYGRADUATION10% OFF TO!. _ TOBACCOSBIG JIM’S I purchase per customer w/couponPIPE & TOBACCO SHOP expires1552 E 53rd St. 288-2343 5/31/82 M 1 rON 55thfashions for 20%offon any summerbagwith coupon • expires 5/28/821500 E. 55th Street • Hyde Park Shopping Center M hyde parkcocp667-1444 A.1526 E. 55th Street 50*off« m jptin ( OUPON r niipon cm ipon COUPON COUPON on 46.1 oz.minute maidlemonade crystalsunth coupon • l per customer • expires S/31/82 MCOUPON COUPON COUPON itor~10—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, May 18, 1982O rucj_5 i rwith this couponexpires 5/31/82 53rd & KimbarkPlaza • 363-85001204 E. 53rd St.SX-70 FILMregularly $6.99SC99 per packw of 10 N' 20% offon anyone itemw/coupon • expires S/31/82324-60395206 S. HarperCOUPON COUPON COUPON ■ COUPON COUPON ( (>1 I PON .brought to youby members ofthe Hyde ParkBusiness andProfessionalAssociation shop IA Llive ■ hydein J|[parkFREE! FREE! FREE!CAR WASH with anyMECHANICAL SERVICEI per customer • with couponexpires 6/30/82HYDE PARK GARAGE5508 Lake Park • 241-6220 M BUENO HANDBAG SPECIAL!oeo/ off °n anvV Vft Bueno unth coupon■■H 1 per customer • expires 6/14/82KIMBERLY & LEE1529 E. 53rd Street • 493-1480M 46AI VILLA fflIJ!M:Q.mi1527 E. Hvde Park Blvd955-0220 ' w/coupon • l per customerexpires 5/22/82COUPON COUPON COUPON | COUPON COUPON COUPON ■ COUPON COUPON COUPONTiyde ParkHalt ^De6ignezA /ltd.1620 E. 53rd St. • 288-290015% off on haircutswith free conditioner • I per customerwith this coupon • expires 5/24/82 M tcith couponexpires 5/26/8220% off on all blouses M 10% OFF ANY PURCHASEMexpires 5/31/82w/coupon1 per customer643-4020 0?lo€V€X1308 E. 53rd St.COUPON COUPON COUPON ■ COUPON COUPON COUPON ■ COUPON COUPON COUPON10% off any entreewith dinner in the Chartwell House5 to 10 p.m. • Sunday brunch not included1 per customer • offer expires 6/15/82X HYDE PARK HILTON4900 S. Lake Shore Dr. MI i Restaurant and Wine Bar1525 E. 53rd Street • 241-5600HAPPY HOUR AT MALLORY’S2 drinks for the price of 1 4:30 to 5:30 p.m.20% discount on food items only fromour bar menu • w/coupon • 1 per customer • expires S/30/82 - N\ i model cameraI 1342 e. 55th street • 493-6700I color processing specialI 30% off on 1 rolli plus 1 FREE 8x101 enlargement| / per customer| with couponI ICOUPON COUPON COUPON ■ COUPON • COUPON COUPON ■ COUPON COUPON COUPONBIC PENSblack & blue onlymedium point f 4 Qgreg $4 20 doz I dozfine pointreg $5 40 doz *2 20doz MQUICK SILVERSall colors • reg, 984 ea49‘«»while quantitieslast1508 E. 53rd Street667-2000 FREEglass of winewith anycrepe dinner PRINTINGHyde park office products q1456 E. 53rd St. • 955-2510 VCOUPON COUPON COUPON ■ COUPON COUPON COUPON ■ COUPON COUPON COUPONwith coupon • 1 per customer • expires 5/31/82 M 10% OFF ONALL WORKorders of 100copies or lessuvcoupon • j orderper customerexpires 5/31/821525 E. 53rd St. • 684-7070 Mms* FISH JESSELSON’SFISH AND SEAFOOD363-9186 HOUSE1310 E. 53rd StreetFRESH reg. $7.99 lb.SEA SCALLOPSw/coupon • 1 purchase per custome 10%OFFLIMIT 3 LBS.w/coupon • 1 purchase per customer • expires 5/31/82 M MILDRED’S BEAUTY SALON5100 Cornell Avenue • 324-5565haircutwith any permwith coupon • I per customer • expires 5/26/82MCOUPON COUPON COUPON ■ COUPON COUPON COUPONI rKATSAROS.Pharmacy, Inc.1521 E. 53rd St. • 288-8700ON ANY SUNTANOAO/ Arr ON ANY SUNIAr£\J /O Urr PREPARATION1 per customer • unth coupon • expires 5/31/82 M T»u.GFINER FOODSSERVING53rd PRAIRIE SHORESKIMBARK P1424 2911 VtRHOhWhtrt You 41* 4 Sl'attRtr But One*'1226 E. 53rd St. • 363-2175 30* OFFgallonMILK2% or wholeI per customerwith couponexpires 5/25/82MCOUPON COUPON COUPON ■COUPON COUPON COUPON your own homeice cream SCOOP with purchaseof 1 quart handpackHaagen Dazs orPetersen'sICE CREAM M1 per customerwith couponwhile quantitieslast • expires 5/26/82 l UNBOWS END11/ Ydl1458 E. 53rd Street OcHOocVoCOUPON COUPON COUPON50% OFFon windsor/carabetaBICYCLE plusFREE TOOL SET1 per customer • w/coupon • expires 5/23/82the SpokesmenBicycle Shop 684-37375301 S. Hyde Park Blvd. MCOUPON COUPON COUPON T)>0The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, May 18, 1982—11■ruesday. May 18, 1982 The University of ChicagoAlumni Associationr ' presentsLIFE AFTER GRADUATION:Service Jobs: How Not to Make a Buck—An Impractical Ideal in 1982?-an informal discussion of careeropportunities for the service-oriented studentGuests:Eugene Forrester••Publisher, Chicago journalJulian HenriquesAttorney, Legal Assistance FoundationMarion Sirefman r ! v;.~w,v~> J Social Worker "El Hogar Del Nino- (The Home of The Child)v-'/v-. , ■ . ■ ' .\ vk:,;- ..r.-:.-: *■ !-C. ' ' ' i*i■: '"■■■. : VA" .y r1yirvi;'''vL.. '■12 noon, Tuesday, May 18, 1982Robie House, 5757 Woodlawn AvenutBring your own lunch. (Beverages provided)NOAH’S FLOODAn Opera by Benjamin BrittenSaturday, May 22, 8 p.m.Sunday, May 23, 4 p.m.Rockefeller Memorial Chapel5850 S. Woodlawn Ave.Admission by ticket, free of chargeFor information, call 753-3383: -V . ■■■ -10 a.m. -4 p.mMay 19,20,21Gift DepartmentBookstore970 East 58th StreetFeatureFOTA BeginsDancers, balloons, clowns andcandy-apples filled the quads yes¬terday as the Festival of the Arts(FOTA) got underv'ay. UC’s an¬nual celebration of spring in thewindy city got better weather forits opening then it has in recentyears (last year’s maypole dancewas canceled when high windsblew down the maypole). Festivi¬ties continue the rest of thismonth, with music, poetry andgy mnastics being held outside atnoon most days the rest of thismonth. Today at noon, SamhradhMusic will perform traditionalIrish tunes in Hutch court. Manyof the events are scheduled for in¬doors, though. This Wednesdayevening, the US Mime and Story¬telling Troupe will perform inReynolds Club Theatre at 8 p.m.More details are available fromthe Student Activities Office,753-3591.ALL PHOTOS BY JOEL GEFFINSportsRuggers upset IndianaBy John BoocheverThe University of Chicago rugby club puton an impressive display of teamwork andcame from six points behind in the secondhalf to pull out a 13-10 win over the North¬west Indiana rugby club.It was a scoreless battle on North Fielduntil wing forward Mike Rantz scooped up aloose ball and literally ran over three North¬west defenders into the endzone to give theMaroons a 4-0 lead. Moments later, fly halfDon Devine blocked a Northwest punt,picked up the ball, and raced into the end-zone to give Chicago an apparent 8-0 lead.However, the play was called back on a pen¬alty. The first half ended with the score4-0.Northwest knotted the game at 4-4 in thesecond half on a controversial penalty playwhich caught the Maroon defense by sur¬prise. Northwest then made it 10-4 on astrong surge by its pack members, scoring atry and converting the two-point kick.Moments later, Rantz, UC’s star, wentdown while making a tackle. Rantz separat¬ed two tendons from his right ankle and willbe lost for the year. It was at this point that the Maroons regrouped and took control ofthe game. Scott Lucas converted a 35 yardfieldgoal to cut the deficit to 10-7.After repeated surges, the Maroons final¬ly broke through for the game winner.Freshman Sandy Cartwright danced hisway through a line of Northwest tacklersand then dragged the last one the final threeyards to put the Maroons up 11-10. Lucasthen converted the kick to put the score atthe final 13-10.A jubilant but weary captain Steve Huttsaid, “I never have been more proud of anygroup of guys as I am of these guys. AfterMike went down, we could have easily givenup, but we didn’t and we came back to beat afine rugby team.” Northwest Indiana haddefeated the Maroons 26-6 in the autumn.The second side of the Maroon teamplayed a brutally physical game againstNorthwest’s second side. Although theMaroons lost 16-4 to their more experiencedopponents, they made some bone crunchingtackles that left Indiana players dazed. Asthis group gains experience it will continuethe winning tradition that the rugby club hasworked hard to achieve.Scientific with StatisticsThe University of Chicago BookstoreCalculator Department970 E. 58th St. (2nd floor)753-3303 Runners dryBy Carl StockingIowa was created for farming and, assuch, possesses county after county of someof the most fertile sod on the globe. To main¬tain fertility, generous doses of water areoccasionally added. Last weekend was suchan occasion. It was great for the crops, butnot so good for a track meet — it kind ofdampens one’s enthusiasm for the great out¬doors. Unfortunately, last weekend was alsothe occasion of the Midwest Conference Out¬door Track and Field Championships, heldat Grinnell College.Friday was the first day of competitionand, well, it got a little soggy. However, themeet would not be postponed — not when tenteams had assembled and some had drivenover 300 miles for the privilege. Besides,folks in Iowa like the rain: people who buyhigh octane pig chow don’t get all bent out ofshape by a little water. Nope, everybodyjust got wet. Unfortunately, the city boysdidn’t much like the rain. They’d have feltmuch more civilized facing wind.Anyway, Chicago failed to qualify anyonefor the Saturday finals of the 100, 200, 400,110 meter high hurdles and 400 meter inter¬mediate hurdles. But a few silver linings didemerge. Art Knight’s 31:27 in the 10,000meter run was good for second place andGary Peter skyed to 11’ 6” and third place inthe pole vault.Saturday the sun shone, as did a few ofChicago’s stars. Art Knight came back im¬pressively and won the 5000 in 15:15 by sim¬ply setting a pace that forced all challengersto wither and left him alone at the front. BobFisher overcame an incapacitating lung ail¬ment and raced to second in the 3000 metersteeple chase in a time of 9:48.2. Mike Axinnhandily won the 1500 in record time, 3:54.2.Dave Raskin placed sixth in that event witha strategic 4:09.6. “Rabbit” Raskin, as histeammates call him, is noted for setting ablistering early pace, but on Saturday decid¬ed to “run smart for once.” Aaron Rourkeplaced sixth in the very talented 800 meterfield, with a time of 1:57.8. In this race, JimFrancis of Coe vanquished Carleton’s legen¬dary Gene DiMagno, sliding by him in thelast ten yards and outleaning DiMagno tothe tape.Finally, another bright spot emerged overthe fields of Iowa, compliments of Chicago’sHYDE PARKTHE VERSAILLESIDEAL FOR STUDENTS324-0200• lorge studios• Walk-in Kitchen• Utilities included• Furn. or unfurn.• Campus bus at doorBASED ON AVAILABILITY5254 S. DorchesferSTANLEY H. KAPLANFor Over 43 Years The Standard olExcellence m Test Preparation<?paTgma^TSat7gr?™SAT • MCAT • ACTFLEX • NATIONAL MEDICAL BOARDS • ECFMGNURSING BOARDS • TOEFL • VQEGRE PSYCH • GRE BIO • DAT • PCAT • OCAT • VATMAT • SAT ACHVS • PSAT • SSATPODIATRY BOARDS • NATIONAL DENTAL BOAROSFlexible Programs and HoursCMICAOO COTTER<2t a n cusmChicago >xmo«<o«o(III) 7*4-5151• „ c. 4, mAAHIf s LA GRANGE ROAD SUITE »>LA ORANGE IUMX <0*25(312) 352-6340 7«* Any Ca"N< And Saa faYourwf W*y A. IAU ThaTEST PREPARATIONSPECIALISTS SINCE 1934C*mpN in Map U S CAN*Pubao ReoToronto CanadaSPRING. SUMMERFALL INTENSIVESCOURSES STARTINGTHIS MONTHGHAT... 4WK/GMA./LSATNORTH IK* SUBURBAN474 CENTRAL AVEMOAA4C PAUK XLMCXS BOOM(312) 433-7410 NEXT MONTHSUMMER MCAT/ACT/SATto ngmaon AeoU 0tor Ijair Mor* 1»i« Ma*y (25 CAM I NrcaeOUTSIOE NY S ATE CALL TQU FREE <00223ITS? out, take 4thjumpers. Curt Schafer won the high jumpwith a 6’ 4” leap, placed fifth in the longjump at 21’ 6” and third in the triple jumpwith a personal best of 45’ 7.” Jeff Kaisersnared fourth in the triple jump with a per¬sonal best 44’ IOV4” and wowed the crowdwith some nifty forward rolls after landingin the pit.Altogether, Chicago scored 64 points, goodfor fourth overall, behind Coe’s 195, Carle-ton’s 104 and Monmouth’s 95. For the re¬cord, Cornell scored 37, Lawrence 33, Grin¬nell 24, Beloit 21, Knox 9 and Ripon 0. TedHaydon expressed satisfaction with hisMaroons’ results, citing no major disap¬pointments and a few pleasant surprises.“Everyone pretty much lived up to expecta¬tions,” said Haydon. “In fact, the only thingthey could be disappointed about is that theother teams didn’t do worse.” Well, therewas that rain.Athletes honoredThe Quadrangle Club was the site of theannual Order of the “C” and Women’s Ath¬letic Association banquets, held on succes¬sive nights last week. The UndergraduateOrder of the “C” presented a number of spe¬cial awards to outstanding varsity athletes.The J. Kyle Anderson Award for the out¬standing senior baseball player was pre¬sented to Jeff Foreman. Freshman CurtSchafer received the William B. Bond Medalfor scoring the most points for the varsitytrack team this season. Mac Gillespie, whoscored the most points for the wrestlingteam, received the W’robel Trophy. EricKuby was awarded the Joseph M. StampfAward for his contributions to the basket¬ball team.The evening was capped with Mike Axinnbeing awarded the Amos Alonzo StaggMedal, which is presented to the senior withthe best record for athletics, academics,and character. Axinn was a standout dis¬tance runner for the cross country and trackteams.The Undergraduate Order of the “C” pre¬sented the John T. Wilson Award to EdwardStackler. This award is given annually to anespecially loyal supporter of men’s athlet¬ics.The Women’s Athletic Association ban¬quet was highlighted by the presentation ofmost valuable player awards. The Class of1984 was well represented among theMVPs: Karen Kitchen was named the MVPof both the volleyball and softball teams;Helen Straus was the basketball team’sMVP; and Martha Kinney was named themost valuable swimmer. Junior Casey Ker¬rigan was given the award by the trackteam and Alice Zino, an autumn quartergraduate of the College, returned to receivethe field hockey award.In addition, the Women’s Advisory Boardfor Athletics named this quarter’s winnersof the Edith Ballwebber Prizes. Kitchen andKerrigan were both awarded prizes alongwith junior Alison O’Neill of the track teamand sophomore softball player BeverlyDavis. These four women were honored fordisplaying character and leadership whileparticipating on a spring quarter sport.Savea life.AmericanRed CrossjTTogether,we canchange things.A S«rviC«of Th<« H+*tomo*r M14—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, May 18, 1982Inside IMsHale wins coed softballBy Bob LaBelleHale won the coed undergraduate cham¬pionship in softball on Sunday, but notwithout scaring its teammates. In the coedrrsidence championship, Hale spottedHitchcock/Snell an eight-run lead beforeroaring back in the fifth and sixth inningsto win 13-12. In the following game for theundergraduate title against independentchamps Victims of Circumstance, Haleput on a brilliant display of defense, hold¬ing VOC to three runs while scoring four ofits own.Hitchcock/Snell and Hale play remark¬ably similar games of softball, so the scorewas expected to be close. Despite the finalscore, the game was anything but close bythe middle innings. Trailing 4-2 after twoinnings, Hitchcock/Snell crossed the plateten times in the third and fourth innings foran eight-run lead. Hitchcock/Snell’s runswere aided by numerous Hale mishapswhich turned singles into doubles and do¬ubles into homers.'But Hale refused to play dead for Hitch¬cock. Instead, Hale captain Rob Bolandmade a defensive change at third base inthe fifth and suddenly Hale’s fortunesseemed to change. Hale blanked Hitch¬cock/Snell in the fifth, sixth and seventh,finally displaying the defense that got it tothe coed residence finals in the first place.More importantly for Hale, though, wasthat its hitting came alive. In the fifth,Hale pulled within four runs and in thesixth tallied five more. Trailing 12-11 withtwo on and two outs, Neli Montaque rippeda double which scored third baseman BobLaBelle and pitcher Janis Pittman andcompleted Hale’s amazing nine-run come¬back. A perfect fielding inning in Hitch-cock/Snell’s half of the seventh iced theundergraduate residence title for Hale.Hale, riding high from its come-from-behind victory, earned its late-inning de¬fensive strength against Hitchcock/Snellinto the game against Victims of Circum¬stances (VOC) for the undergrad title. VOC, however, was unwilling to give up asit, too, played impressive defense.After a scoreless first inning, Hale got toVOC pitcher Burke for four runs capped byJim Pathos’s 2-run single. Hale could nottouch Burke thereafter, however. So in¬stead Hale shut down VOC’s offense. In thebottom of the second, VOC got two runs ona home run to left and added a run in thesixth on a RBI single. Save these threeruns, VOC could hardly get the ball out ofinfield.The pitchers’ duel was somewhat unex¬pected but both pitchers were practicallyuntouchable for a softball game. In partic¬ular, Janis Pittman, Hale’s pitcher andresident head, pitched a tremendous gamewalking no batters and seldom getting be¬hind on the count. In addition, Ms. Pitt¬man’s fielding was extremely valuable inthe victory over Victims of Circum¬stance.In other IM action, the incredibly con¬fused socim playoffs have gotten worse. Inthe independent league, three teams — in¬cluding champion Psi Upsilon — were re¬moved from the league playoffs becausethey failed to attend a mandatory meeting.The latest word is that these teams will beallowed to participate if their intended op¬ponents agree to meet them.Meanwhile, in the graduate league, fourteams — including #2 Jamaican BCFC —were ousted from the playoffs for poorsportsmanship ratings. However, when itwas discovered that some officials award¬ed low ratings without understanding thecriteria for a low rating, the IM Office de¬cided to allow all four teams back into theplayoffs. The four teams, however, wereallowed back provided that they receive norating lower than a three in the playoffs.Moreover, these four teams will play eachother for the right to meet Van Der Waal’sForce, which will in turn determine whowill meet Ilia Y La Lastima in the firstround of the actual playoffs. Confused?Don’t worry, so is everybody else.UNDERGRADUATE PLAYOFFS SOCIMGRADUATE PLAYOFFS PHOTO «Y JOEL GEFFtNHale House, the undergraduate IM coed softball champs, against the Victims ofCircumstance, the independent champs.COED SOFTBALLJimmy’sWho CaresArtful DodgersV.Jones GRADUATEWho Cares (9-5)BS HittersV.JonesBrickbats BS Hitters (9-6)Brickbats (21-10)L. Rick /U. WallaceByeHitch / SnellByeHaleDeweyBye UNDERGRADUATESL.Rick / U.WallaceHitch / Snell (10-9)Hitch / SnellHale (13- 4)BreckinridgeBreckinridge Hale (13-3) Hale (13-12)Victims of CircumstanceIndep. Champs Hale (4-3)UndergradchampsFaltersByeHendersonDudleyHitchcockChamberlin “A’MichelsonByeDodd / MeadByeFijiL. RickertShoreyComptonL. FlintBye FallersDudley (2-1)(Score Not available)MichelsonDodd /.MeadL. Rickert (5-3)Shorey (Forfeit)L. Flint marian realty,inc.REALTORStudio and 1 BedroomApartments Available— Students Welcome —On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-5400Jamaican BCFC Achilles-HeelsEctopic Detritus Blue Star Vor.Monetary ApproachOrient Express V.der Waal’s Ilia Y La Last.University of ChicagoSailing Clubpresents itsSpring Calendar of EventsMay 19*8 pm Saiimaker Perry Lewisof North Sails,Ida Noyes HallMembers — free • All others — $2.00The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, May 18, 1982—15CalendarTUESDAYJazzercise: Dance fitness program, 9:30 am, HydePark Union Church, 5600 Woodlawn. For info callJanet Ruddy, 735-5137.Calvert House: Sacrament of Reconciliation, 11:30am, mass, 12 noon and 5 pm; brown bag lunch,12:30 pm, 5735 University.Alumni Association: “Life After Graduation-Ser¬vice Jobs: How Not to Make a Buck — An Imprac¬tical Ideal in 1982?” guests Eugene Forrester, Ju¬lian Henriques and Marion Sirefman, 12 noon,Robie House.Commuter Co-op: Meets 12:30 pm, Gates-Blake 1.Humanities Collegiate Division: On Language-“What’s in a Word?” speaker Jerrold Sadock, 4:00pm. Swift Lecture Hall 3rd floor.Episcopal Church Council: Evensong at BondChapel, 5:15 pm.Aikido Club: Meets 5:30-7:30 pm, Field House.Lutheran Campus Ministry: Eucharist and sup¬per, 5:30 and 6:00 pm; discussion-“Spirituality andthe Martial Arts” speaker Jay Abrams, 5500 S.Woodlawn.Racquetball Club: Meets 6:30-closing in the FieldHouse.Speech Team: Meets 7-8:00 pm, Ida Noyes.Morris Dancers: Learn ritual English dance 7-9:00pm, Ida Noyes.Stamp Club: Meets 8:00 pm Ida Noyes.WEDNESDAYCalvert House: Mass, noon and 5 pm, CalvertHouse; 7 pm at I-House; 10:30 pm at the Shore-land.TM Club: Group meditation, 12:00 pm, IdaNoyes.Italian Table: Meets 12 noon at the Blue Gargoyleto speak Italian.Career Counseling and Placement: Career Semi-nar-”Creativity in Business” 12 noon, ReynoldsClub North Lounge.French Table: Meets 12:30 pm in the Blue Gar¬goyle.Crossroads: English classes for foreign women,2:00 pm 5621 S. Blackstone.Dept of Biochemistry: “Lambda Integrative Re¬combination: The Role of INT Topoisomerase”speaker Nancy Craig, 4:00 pm, Cummings room101.U of C NOMOR: Meets 6:30 pm, Cobb 104.Women's Union: Meets 7:00 pm, Ida Noyes.U of C Table Tennis: Meets 7:00-10:00 pm, FieldHouse.Badminton Club: Meets 7:30-10:00 pm, Ida Noyesgym. Anthropology Films: “Qeros: The Shape of Sur¬vival" and "The Spirit-Possession of AlexanderMamane” 8:00 pm, International House.Oriental Institute: Lecture-“Assyrians at Nippur”speaker McGuire Gibson, 8:00 pm, OI Auditori¬um.Science Fiction Club: Meets 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes.Al-Anon Group: Meets 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes.Libertarians: Meeting at 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes.Country Dancers: Folk dances of England andAmerica taught, 8:30 pm, Ida Noyes.THURSDAYJazzercise: Dance-fitness program, 9:30 am, HydePark Union Church, 5600 Woodlawn. Info callJanet Ruddy, 735-5137.Comm, on Genetics: “Genes Controlling Meioticand Mitotic Recombination in Haploid Yeast”speaker Joe Wagstaff, noon, Erman BiologyCenter room 106.Calvert House: Feast of the Ascension-Masses:noon at Chicago Theological Seminary, 5 and 10pm at Calvert House.Hither and YonFraternity censuredSeven Columbia students were placed onprobation and three others were censuredfor their parts in the harrassment of aBarnard freshman at a Columbiafraternity party early in April. Thefreshman charged that over a dozen nakedmen barricaded her in a bedroom of thefraternity and proceded to verbally andphysically abuse her. The fraternity wasalso placed on probation after thetwo-week investigation; all of the censuredstudents and five of the students onprobation are members of the fraternitv.Drugs no excuseIntoxication was not a successful defensefor Eastern Illinois student Paul Rathgeb,who has been convicted on five counts ofbattery by a Charleston Illinois Jury. Aftersplitting 5 pitchers of beer, drinking Episcopal Church Council: Holy Eucharist 12noon in Bond Chapel.Noontime Concert: Members of the New Music En¬semble joined by the singers and actors presentStravinsky’s Renard, 12:15 pm, Goodspeed RecitalHall. Free.Advanced Genetics: “The Population Genetic^ ofthe Rhesus Macaque of Cayo Santiago” speakerChristine Duggleby, 2:30 pm, Cummings room101.Public Policy Lecture: “Representing Universitiesin the Nation’s Capitol” speaker Deborah Hyatt,3:30 pm, Wieboldt 303.Comm, on Virology: “Repeat Elements in GenomeStructure” speaker Roy Britten, 4:00 pm, Cum¬mings room 101.Dept of Physics: “Reminiscences of the EarlyDays of Fission” speaker H.H. Barschall, 4:30 pm,Eckhart 133.Howard Taylor Ricketts Lecture: A New Ap¬proach the Vertebrate Developmental Genetics:Experiments with Zebrafish” speaker GeorgeStreisinger, 5:00 pm, Dora DeLee Hall CLI-168.El Salvador Solidarity Group: Meets 5:00 pm, Idaanother 12 bottles on his own, and smoking20 marijuana cigarettes, Rathgebburglarized the home of Ruby Down, 80,and beat her, according to The DailyEastern News. His attorney claimed thatthe drugs he had taken that night madeRathgeb unaware of what he was doingand thus not responsible. But a taperecording made of Rathgeb’s officialstatement, taken just after his arrest,convinced the jury that he was indeedacting knowingly. This was Rathgeb’s firstweekend at college.Ratings rated lowBrandeis Univerity President MarverBernstein has protested Brandeis’ rating inThe New York Times Selective Guide toColleges and Universities, claiming thatthe report is biased towards the Jews oncampus and “is plainly wrong in itsassessment of academic quality.” Astudent petition has also been organized to U of C Judo Club: Meets 6:00 pm, Bartlett gym.Beginners welcome.Aikido Club: Meets 6:30-8:30 pm, Field House.Chicago Lampoon: Meets 7:00 pm, Ida Noyes.Women’* Rap Group: Co-sponsored by theWomen's Union and GALA, 7:30 pm, Ida Noyesroom 301.Hillel: An Evening of Readings of the Yiddish Po¬etry of Moyshe-Leyb Halpern (1886-1932) with Mrs.Pearl Kahan and Prof Kathryn Hellerstein, 7:30pm, 5715 Woodlawn.MAARS: Meeting 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes.ASHUM Lecture: "How Medicine Saved the Lifeof Ethics” speaker Stephen Toulmin, 7:30 pm.Harper 130.Akiba Schechter School: Science and Art Fair7:30-9:30 pm, 5200 S. Hyde Park Blvd.FOTA and Pocket Poetics: A reading by SteveKatz, 8:00 pm. Bond Chapel. Free.Collegiate Lecture in the Liberal Arts: “FromMarx to Stalin” speaker Leszek Kolakowski, 8:00pm, Swift Lecture Hall.protest the rating, with students beingespecially offended at the one-star sociallife rating and the two-star quality of liferating. The petition claims that the reviewhas “caused considerable pain and angeramong undergraduates, faculty members,alumni, and trustees of the University.”Prof soughtfor bad checksFormer Northwestern Professor PatBurnett, who is in the middle of a sexualdiscrimination suit against the university,may find herself in court on anothermatter. It seems that Burnett, ageography professor is wanted in at leastone state for passing bad checks. Burnettwas arrested Feb. 4 in Ames, Iowa, forfailing to pay a S480 bill at the Iowa Hotel.She remained in the county jail from Feb.4 to Feb. 15 when her bond was posted.After her release, she skipped bail andIowa has since drawn up a warrant for herarrest.The WHPK Request Linewas incorrectedly listed inthe Spring Program Guide. Thecorrect number is:WHPKREQUEST‘LINE—962-8424—CALL IN YOUR REQUESTSWHPK would like to thank the Hyde Park Hiltonand Wax Trax Records for their sponsorship of WHPK programs.16—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, May 18, 1982CLASSIFIED ADSClassified advertising in the Maroon costs SI.00per 45- character line. Special headings costSI.50 per 25 characters. All classified advertis¬ing must be paid in advance. Advertisingdeadlines: 12 noon Wednesday for the Fridaypaper; 12 noon Friday for the Tuesday paper.Submit ads to Ida Noyes Hall* room 304, ormail them in (with payment) to The ChicagoMaroon, 1212 E. 59th St., Chicago IL 60637. Forinformation about display advertising, call 753-3263. The Maroon is not responsible for goodsor services purchased through the classifiedadvertising section.SPACEStudio Apartment, Hild Realty Group 955-1200Looking for housing? Check InternationalHouse, for grad, students and for scholarsvisiting Chicago. 753-2270, 2280.Student Government publishes a list ofavailable housing. Call 753-3273 or stop by theSG office, 3rd floor Ida Noyes.CONDO FOR SALE '.2 blk. from UCFieldhouse, 2 BR. Ig. bkyd. sun rm. sewing rm.mod kit Ray School 493-2869.1Roommate wanted-June-lyr, communal din¬ners, coed 4 bdrm 57&Dorchester. Call 6-7pm752 2665.SUMMER SUBLET Large 1 BR Apt 55th 8,Hyde Pk. Blvd Avail mid June-Sept 1 RentNegotiable. Call 324-6066 Evenings.Lake view bedroom w/AC in sunny 3 bdrm apt.Security, parking, laundry, campus bus routesS130/mo + elec. Call Jane 538-6159, NonsmokersNr. UC large 4 room apt tile bath shower britesunny front and rear porch avail now 288-0718.Share 4 bedroom townhouse with single fatherand 5-yr-old daughter. 57th and Drexel. Com¬fortable house has sm backyard, basement,garage. Quiet, cooperative, progressive home.Call Mike, 684-3790, early morn, 6-8am.Summer sublet 2 bdrm 54th & Dorchester avail6/15 400/mo negotiable 241-5840 eve.1 bdrm avail in cozy, fully turn 2 bdrm apt June6-Aug 7; $160/mo; female only 54th 8i Harper;call Joan, 241-5688.Studio apt avail June 1, near U of C. $220 util in-cl. Grad student neat 8, responsible pref.serious inquiry need call 238-7941.Summer Sub June 1-Aug 31 Lrg 1-bdrm 55th &Lake Shore Dr-Pool-Sec Rent neg call 667-1084.SUMMER LEASE-2 br. apt. w/WATERBEDS,52 and Kenwood. Available mid-June thruSeptember, rent negotiable. Call Dave at 3635244.SUMMER SUBLET Lge 1 BR Apt 2 Sunnyfront rms Avail June-late Sept (flexible) Rsnble rent 54 & Harper Close to Coop, bus and 1Clines, Giordano. Call 363-4564SUMMER SUBLET, 2bdrm, 2bath, nicely fur¬nished, view of lake&loop, spacious, $390/moutil incl. 324-2273Wisconsin.Furn Country House, 13 Acres,Creek. 2 Mi Lake Geneva 90 minutes Chicago$425/mo June-Sept 492-9598 or 996-4687.955-3520 1 br in 3 br apt 54 & KIMBARK$150/mo partially furnished Grad studentpref.SUMMER SUBLET with fall option-Twobedroom apt one block from Lake, Available6/12/82 Summer Rent Negotiable 1713 E. 55th955 6650Room for nonsmoker, grad in 2-BDRM aptavail July 1 $170/mo624-554l or 947 66442 bedrooms, furnished, clean, close to campusInexpensive, sunporch call Phil at 753-3751room 103. Leave a message anytime of day.4 room apt near Univ. $285 Call weekdays 9 to 5SKYLINE MANAGEMENT 674 1590.Luxury 1 bdr apt Univ Park Cond, north view,carpeted, avail June 12, $450. John 947-0107.Roommate wanted. Bdrm w/bath avail in sun¬ny 3 bdrm cmplte w/plants & cat. Mid Junew/fall option $190/mo heat included, nonsmk.684 1388 or 947 1856, 10-5 Amy.Co op apt 5617 So Dorchester 6 rms porch twobaths a/c wbfp darkroom quiet, secureelevator bldg $72000 643 8097. Summer Sublet Ig studio in bldg w/laundry,sun roof, guard. On minibus rt 53 & Dorchester$265 mo w/utils or best offer 241-5919 eves.Summer Sublet 1,2 or 3 spots avail in 3 bdrmapt completely furnished newly remodeled54th & E Mis. For more info call 947-9714.Summer Sublef-Madison Pk apts-furn 1 bdrm-avail 6/13 to 8-7-S276 mo-2nd fir-overlooks park-nonsmokers-must be assoc with UC. 624 4702Bob or Debbie.For rent or sale Huge 3 br 2 bath condo newlyrenovated 54th-Cornell formal dining roommodern kitchen $575 per mo 248 8179,3Ig bdrms and 1 sm bdrm avail for summersublet at 54th and Ellis. Rent is $138 for thelarge rooms, and $111 for the small room. Allrooms sunny, includes living room and kit¬chen. Located on D-minibus route. For moreinfo, call Sherrie at 947-8437 between 5-7 pm.Summer Sublet w/fall option. 1 br apt 55 &Everett. Sunny spacious. $165/mo start June 1.493-5287. Best time early in evening.Room avail Jun 1-in 4-bedroom apt w/sun-porch fireplace. Nice location near 55th andshops. Grad students and Nonsmokers prefer¬red. $156.25/month til Oct. Call 363 628357 & BLACKSTNE. 2, pos 3 spaces in 3 bdrmapt For Summer; pos Fall Option for 1.S240/pers Furn large sunny, SAFE. Non-smok,females pref. Call 752-0797, Rochelle or Karen.3 bedroom townhouse l'i baths’ remodeled,hardwood floors, private prkg, central ac 8*.financing, call Ted 947-6099,667-5994, eves.Roommate wanted for summer, furnishedapartment. Female preferred. 5Sth and DrexelSl45/mo. Call eves. 955-5253.SUMMER SUBLET June-Sept 51st/S HydePark Blvd. Overlooks Lake, near IC/Bus $180Peter 324-2558.Sub bdrm in 3bdrm apt 56th & Blackstone,S175/month. June 15-Sept 15. Dates Neg. Non¬smoking woman pref. 288-7433.Two-bedroom apt at 57th and KenwoodS480/month. For more info, call 493-6154Sublet 1 or 2 br in furn 2 br 20th fir Lakeviewbus route cheap rent and dates negotiable call324-3939,643-8913. 624-1011.Summer Sublet-fully furn studio superlocation-57th and Blackstone. Newly renovatedkitchen. Asking $235/mo. 324-3463.7.9% Fin UNIV PK Lrg 1-bdrm exc cond top-firpool, sauna, conv loc, day 558-3784 ev 241-6027.SUMMER SUBLET 57 & Dorchester 1-2 fur¬nished BR avail June-Sept Reasonable rent in¬cl AC & utilities 684 0930.Faculty only-renting 3 bdrm 2 baths-fully furn-all elec appliances Hilltop Hse-BridgmanMich-70 miles from Chgo-5 mins from LakeJune thru Aug. Call 324-3285.SUMMER SUBLET: Large, nicely furnishedone BR apt. Good view. Swimming pool. 55th &Lake. Rent negotiable. Call 955-0611 befor 9amor after 10pm.Beautiful 1 bedroom top floor remodeledUniversity Park condominium largest modelmarvelous north view plush white wall/to/wallcarpeting air conditioning summer/1 year $465garage avail could simply furnish Kerman 2883706 664 6650.For Rent Furn 1-bdrm. condo apt. 56th & Kimbark Approx, end June-mid Sept. 241 6461 eveCoach House for rent two roommates seekthird immediate occupancy. $225 per monthIncludes washer dryer heat electric. 47th &Kimbark. Call 338-9610.Apartment for rent mid-June-Oct. 1. 2bdrooms, elegantly furnished (includingpiano), excellent security, 1 block from Reg$375 per month. Please call 753 2496 days, 7521922 eves.Large, bright room in gorgeous 4 bdrm 2 bathapt. Great roommates. Nr 54 8i Greenwood.Yard, porch. Avail summer sublet and/or star¬ting in fall. $140. Call Lorill 288-0546, Ivmessage.Lovely Studio Condo 55th nr UC Univ Park poolAC quiet 24 hr security avail June 393 1034.SUMMER SUBLET lovely 2 bdrm apt largeliving rm large kitchen lots of sun top flporWill rent to one $212/mo or two $425/mo 55thCornell Call Al weekday evenings 324 4461. Cool and breezy 1-bedroom apt to sublet. Allutilities incl. right on U.C. bus route. June 25 toSept. 25. $200 mo. 947-8036.CONDOTOSUBLETIdeal location, 56th 81 Kimbark, near campusand trans sunny 1-bedroom, fully furnished6/1-8/30. Leave phone number for Judy on 924-5057 machine.SPACE WANTEDRESPONSIBLE graduate student looking forsummer house sitting position. Will take careof pets, plants, do house repairs. Excellentreference. Call Dan 753-0272.PEOPLE WANTEDPaid subjects needed for experiments onmemory, perception and language processing.Research conducted by students and faculty inthe Committee on Cognition and Communication. Department of Behavioral Sciences.Phone 962-8859.Law stud needs loving babysitter for lovingbright 3 yr old girl. Chance to participate in ac¬celerated edu program with child. Preferfluent speaker in Hebrew, Russian, or ChineseEves May 21-29. Weekend eves and some amhrs starting early June thru '83. Must have owntrans to Lake Shore Drive area. Good pay. Callcollect 217-384-3040.RELIABLE PERSON(S) needed to care for 6yr. old girl various time slots during summer.Call 667-6988, evenings only.Chicago's largest computer magazine.Computer Resource Exchange Monthly, needsa bright person to become part of a small, in¬formal mgmt. team. 1001 tasks to do. Goodcommunication skills & unflappable atfitudeneeded. Nonsmoker. Send resume to L.Banaszak, Rm 600, 520 N. Michigan, ChicagoIL 60611.Part-time FILEBOL programmer wanted. .Near campus. Start immediately. Call PatSumner at 667-2200.FOR SALEPASSPORT PHOTOS .WHILE YOU WAIT!Model Camera 1342 E. 55th St. 493-6700.Women's 3-speed bike Good Cond $60 493 1066.Refrig & frzr, 15 cu. ft., frostless, 4 yrs old,$150. 752-2957.REFRIGERATOR Sears Coldspot 26x30x58Great Shape Must Sell Best Offer 624 5605.Flute Bundi w/case$l00324-0695 RichardQuality vacation slides at great price.KODACHROME 64 (36 exp) w/process S6/roll288 6455.Must sell in good condition: full-size bed $30, 3speed men's bike $25; reading-lamps $5 each.Negotiable prices. Call 493-5419 anytime3 speed Ross bike almost new $90 call 363 0429The Rootie Exchange Sun. May 23 10-6, Ex¬cellent seconds, infant & toddlers wear 4800 S.Lake Park Apt 1504 373-1275. Classified AdsDesk, Chair, Rug & Dresser $10-20 241-5762BIKE, 26" tandem. TABLE, solid oak drop-leaf. Call Deb Goodloe. 962-7560 or 955 5987.FULL SIZE BED King Koil Posure Bond mattress springs & frame $120-perf cond Retailsfor over $300. Call 643 5823.10 SPD Schwinn Continental $89 call 643-5823.SERVICESJUDITH TYPES—and now has a memory.Phone 955-4417.Psychotherapist, Women's Groups, Individual,and Couple Therapy. Sliding Scale, MaryHallowitz, MSW, ACSW 947-0154James Bone, editor-typist. 363-0522.Typing term papers reas. rates call 684 6882.WEDDINGS photographed. Call Leslie, 5361626.RAAB DECORATING SERVICE. Interior &Exterior. Very neat. Best reference. Veryreasonable. 20 years in neighborhood. CallRaab, 221-5661.Professional typing and editing. 324-8719.Need A Typist? Excellent work. Reasonablerates Tel: 536 7167.MUSIC LESSONS-Piano, voice, folk guitar forbeginning to intermediate levels. All ageswelcome. Call 684-2259.Math tutor-Calculus. Trig, Algebra. Geometry.Call Joe, day 458 2000, x3538. nite 271 2934.MOVING SOMETHING? Man with a van canhelp. Save money. Exact price quote. LARRY667 8327.TYPIST Exp. Turabian PhD Masters thesesTerm papers Rough Drafts. 924-1152.LAYER TRIMMING HAIRSTYLING—Georgia's "Job Search Special," for theProfessional Look in layered hairstyling. Nowonly $10 with valid UC student ID. GiGi's, 327South LaSalle Street, 427-5007. CampusReferences on request.TYPING. Term papers, theses, etc. IBM Cor¬recting Selectric. All projects welcome. -791-1674.SCENESSENIOR BREAKFAST...Don't miss the 11thannual salute to our graduating seniors...Fri¬day, May 21st, 8:30 am...All Day Long ADP.PERSONALSHappy B-day Vicky Sroczynski. What awoman!Love, L."Fat Freddy's Cat" will lick your nose, nibbleyour ears and wish you good morning. Thurs¬day mornings, 6am-9am, on WHPK 88 3 fm.It's lost of fun.Continued on next pageLooking forUnique Part-TimeEmployment?IMMEDIATE OPENINGSThe American Bar Association is looking for people with excellentoral communication skills for a membership information/recruit¬ment program.Individuals hired for this effort will contact attorneys nationwideto discuss the work of the Association.If you possess good speaking abilities and can make a positiveimpression over the phone, you may qualify for an immediate posi¬tion in the ABA’a telephone solicitation program. The salary willbe $4.50 per hour. The hours will be 6 pm to 9 pm, Monday throughThursday evenings. Applicants should be willing to work twosessions each week.Interested? if so, please contact us for a preliminary interview,phone: 947-3802Direct Response Marketing UnitAmerican Bar Association1155 E. 60th StreetChicago, Illinois 60637affirmative action/equal opportunity employer m/f/hThe Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, May 18, 1982—17Classified AdsGreg Wendt will be at Senior Breakfast...Comesee his pants...Friday 5/21 8:30 am ADP 5747 S.University Ave.Senior week meeting tonight at 7pm. IdaNoyes.Y-until you two right the wrong you've inflictedon me there "NEVER” can be any communication, dense! Avalon.Free food by Nicky's of Hyde Park...Free beerADP's Senior Breakfast...8:30am 5/21.Dear W.L.E.J.L.J.-The Bumpus hounds havelet the cat woman out of the crawl space, andshe's hunqry...expect more bones in the pond.Repent Sinners. DOGBERRY DAY is upon us.Now is time to cleanse your soul and Joel'ssocks.Dear Reggie-Meet me by the paddleboats at5.30 on Tuesday. I have recent photos of yourmom.Camille (George Cukor, 1936): Greta Garbois at her most radiant as Dumas’s tubercu¬lar courtesan, despite the treacly sentimen¬tality of the material. It may simply be thatthe congenital exuberance of the supportingcast sets off her sensitivity and restraint bycontrast; but Cukor manages to keep evensuch a ham as Lionel Barrymore in check(though there seems to be nothing to be donewith Robert Taylor as Armand or LauraHope Crews). Still, Cukor’s direction onlybarely lives up to Garbo’s performance.Garbo’s professional relationships with herdirectors seem to be uncannily analogous toher fictional relationships with her leadingmen. Tuesday, May 18th at 8:00. Doc; $2.00- MAFata Morgana (Werner Herzog, 1970): Apost-surrealist creation myth from the mostdaring iconoclastic, if least accessible, ofthe new German directors. Herzog trainshis incessantly panning camera on the land¬scape of the Gobi Desert, and accompaniesthe images with a similarly meanderingnarration replete with such profundities as‘‘In Paradise, man is born dead.” Herzog’suse of images of real desolation and squalorfor mythic effect are sometimes disturbing,more often impenetrable. Wednesday, May19, at 8 in Quantrell. Doc and Renaissance;$2.00. — MAShall We Dance (Mark Sandrich, 1937) Mu¬sical-comedy star Linda Keen throws in hertaps to get married “to a Park Avenue cluckwith the longest yacht and the shortest chinever christened,” but not before enraptur¬ing Peter P. Peters, better known amongballet aficionados as “the great Petrov.”Together, the unlikely duo provoke head¬lines, a forced “marriage,” and a madcapflurry of confusion. This savory little As-taire-Rogers trifle features an all-Gershwinscore, comic support by Eric Blore and Ed¬ward Everett Horton, and a wonderfully po¬lished roller-skating romp — “Let’s Call theWhole Thing Off.” As always, the bestnumber is not the vibrant title-tune finale,but Fred’s magnificent, boiler-room solo,“Slap that Bass.” Wed., May 19 at 8:30 pm.LSF. $2 — PFNorth By Northwest (Alfred Hitchcock1959) This tongue-in-cheek thriller is withoutquestion one of Hitchcock’s most entertain¬ing films. Cary Grant plays an advertisingexecutive who accidentally gets caught upin an international espionage caper. Leo G.Carroll is the domestic spy, James Masonand Martin Landau are the foreign spies,and Eva Marie Saint is the woman withwhom Grant becomes involved along theway. The title (from Hamlet’s “I am butmad north-northwest: when the wind issoutherly, I know a hawk from a handsaw”)suggests some of the confusing twists andturns of geography and plot that occur in THE DOCTOR DOES HOUSE CALLS adangerous remedy however.WANTEDTop dollar for 1 commencement ticket call 752-4687 nights.I need several tickets for 6-12 graduation!! Willpay leave message 3-8342 John C. Rm. 1108.6/12 COMMENCEMENT-Several TicketsNeeded Will Pay TOP DOLLAR. 363 8539Evenings.RIDESRider wanted to D.C. Leaving June 12 room forfurniture, etc. 324-5364.DRIVER(S) NEEDED to drive car to LA 3242273.this chase across America. Hitchcock musthave had a great deal of fun making thisfilm: it’s an adroit combination of laughterand excitement, with none of the seriousovertones of Vertigo, which immediatelyproceeded it, or of Psycho and The Birds,which followed. The director’s technicalmastery is everywhere in evidence, andGrant’s performance is nearly perfect. Andat least two of the scenes, the encounter withthe cropduster in Indiana and the chaseacross the Presidential faces at Mt. Rush-more, have rightly become classics. LSFThurs. May 20th 8:30 p.m. — SWJohnny Guitar (Nicholas Ray, 1954): Awestern, but like none you’ve ever seen be¬fore. Joan Crawford (unbelieveably res¬trained) plays a saloon-keeper, and Mer¬cedes McCambridge plays hervengeance-seeking nemesis; they go attheir parts like a pair of Valkyries. Mean¬while, Sterling Hayden (as the titular hero)and the rest of the male contingent (ErnestBorgnine, Ward Bond, et al.) shy away inthe background and fondle their guns ner¬vously. Ray even manages to make a virtueof the garish Trucolor photography. No onecould ever accuse him of misplaced subtlety. Thursday, May 20th, at 7:15 in Quantroll. Doc; $1.50 — MABitter Victory (Nicholas Ray, 1958). Ateam of British soldiers, led by Richard Bur¬ton and Curt Jurgens, is sent from Cairo tosteal war plans from Rommel’s head¬quarters in Bengazi. Burton plays Welshcaptain Jimmy Leith like a T.E. Lawrencewith “An Angry Young Man” demeanor. AsEnglish Major David Brand, Jurgens isstiff, incompetent and supposedly insecure.Leith has had a previous relationship withBrand’s wife (Ruth Roman), and he usesthis to drive the Major mad with envy andhatred. Ray has Brand spend the film tryingto prove to British and German alike that heis a courageous trooper. Ray has Leith statethat both of them are cowards — Brand be¬cause he orders subordinates to do his dirtywork and Leith because he baits Brand intodoing what he cannot do, which is take hisown life. But the film’s sympathy is clearlywith Leith. While Ray’s direction is razorsharp, the story is patchy in parts. Leith’smotivations are confused and underdevel¬oped. His diatribes about war and heroismring true at first but by film’s end becomepreachy dogma. More could have been donewith the Ruth Roman character, who wasthe source of this tragic rivalry. While Raydisplays an acute sense of the dramatic mo¬ment, his conception of war as a battle ofegos and world views is strikingly shallowand one-sided. Perhaps this is why he ishailed as a “stylist” first and a story-tellersecond. Thurs., May 20th at 9:15. $1.50 DOC- JMC. LOST & FOUNDREWARD for citizen brand womans digitalwatch lost in front of harper or by WhitmanLab. Call Linden 3-2711 or 324 6140.PIANO LESSONSEDWARDMONDELLOBeginners and advanced 752 4485GAY AND LESBIANCOFFEEHOUSEGALA sponsors a weekly coffeehouse on Tues¬day 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, pro¬blems and concerns of the gay and lesbiancommunity in a warm, supportive setting.Everyone is invited.CHILDREN NEEDEDChildren needed for University of Chicagoreading study. Earn money. It's fun and educational. Does this describe you? 5 or 6th gradeleft-handed boy or girl? 7 or 8th grade right-handed boy or girl? Please call 753-4735 fordetails.PETE'S MOVINGStudent with Pickup Truck can move your stuffFAST and CHEAP. No job too small! Call Peteat 955-5180MOVERSOFSTUDENTSNICER students with BIGGER truck can moveanything, anywhere, anytime-RAIN ORSHINE call John or Joe or Jim 752 7081 24hr/-dayW.P. BEAR MOVINGWe move almost anything almost anywhere!Call anytime 241-5264.MODEL CAMERAPRICE REDUCTIONSMinolta SG-1 was 189.95, now 169.95 MinoltaXG-M was 229.95, now 199.95 Canon AE 1 was239.95, now 189 95 Canon A 1 was 399 95, now369.95 Olympus OM-2 was 389.95, now 279 95Olympus OM-10 was 218.00, now 189 95 All ofthe above come with normal lenses and fullfactory guarantee. All purchases include a freeroll of color film and processing! You won'tfind a better deal in Chicago! Model camera,1342 E . 55th St. 493 6700.FREE PHOTOWORKSHOPHOW TO USE YOUR CAMERA: Sun May 16 23pm DEVELOP NEGATIVES: Tues May 18 7-9 pm PRINT PHOTOGRAPHS: Mon May 24 7-9pm RESERVATIONS req for each class SAO753-3591 or stop in office all meet in Ida Noyes218EXTRATICKETS?I need one or two graduation tickets. Will paygenerously. Leave message with Mary at 3690731.CALLING ARTISTSSTUDENT ARTWORK WANTED FOR ARTSHOW 5/20 5/25 any 2 D art ok. Call SAO 7533591 to reserve your space. Space is limited.Call early. STEPTUTORINGHelp a kid feel brighf and intelligent. Volunteerto tutor elementary or high school students fortwo hours a week. Contact Peter at 643-1733(evenings) for more information.ACHTUNG!LEARN GERMAN!TAKE APRIL WILSON'S GERMAN COURSETO HIGHPASS THE SUMMER LANGUAGEEXAM AND/OR LEARN GERMAN FORFUN. Reading selections include Kafka,Freud, Mann & fhought provoking Proverbs.Classes will meef June 21-July 22, M-F, thereare 3 sections: 10-12, 1-3 & 6 8 pm. For more in¬formation & to register, call: 667-3038.NUCLEAR HOTLINEThe Chicago Council of Scientists provides information on disarmament issues and whatyou can do to help. Call 752-6028.SPANISH CLASSAt all levels, native teacher 667 6195.TICKETSWanted . Tickets to June 12 convocation. Willpay well. Call Katie 947-0990.USED BOOK SALEDisposing of 4000 volume private library-hardcover and paperback, art, philosophy,religion, poetry, drama, literature, modern fic¬tion, medical, physical, and political science,history, biography, etc., etc., including foreignlanguage books-10' to S2.00 call for appoint¬ment 363-4230.SAILINGMEETINGCome hear sailmaker Perry Lewis of NorthSails May 19, 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes.CALLUS...Academic problems, relationship problems,big problems, little problems, dorm problems,friend problems-YOUR problems. Pick up thephone between 7PM and 7AM and let's talkabout it the UC Hotline 753 1777. P S We alsogive university infor.MODERN WESTERNARMENIANBEGINNING WESTERN ARMENIANLINGUISTICS 251-252 2 Quarters CreditReading writing oral aural comprehensionScholarship available Contact Mr GHonigsblum at 753 4106 or Mrs. S. Tokatlian at275 6798.FOTA GOESUNDERGROUNDLive Music in The Pub Folksingers DaliaGoldstein and Joe Jones Thursday May 21 10pm.BICYCLE CLUBAttention Bikers: A trip to Kettle MoraineState Park is scheduled for May 27. Meet in thecircle in the Quads at 6:00 AM (Be Prompt) for50 60 mile ride. For more info call: Chris Jor¬dan 753-8342 rm 809 Leave MessageMEMORIAL DAYImportant meeting!! May 19th, 5:30 IdaNoyes. Everyone who wants to help must at¬tend!FOTA JUMPSGymnastics Club Demonstration Friday May21 Hutch Court NOONMUSIC IN THE SUNCome picnic on the Quads Sun May 23 and hearBluegrass, Irish, Cajun music and more!FREE admission. Grills & condiments provid¬ed. Open Mike, too, so bring your instruments!FS & FOTACHEAP FUNLearn to SAIL w/UC Sailing Club lessons begin5/22. Register/info Thurs May 20, Ida Noyes at8pm Bring a swimsuit. Call 667-6338PAINTERS/DECORATORSInterior/Exterior Redecorating Painting,Light construction & plastering, wallpapering,woodwork. Exp. w/ref. For free est. call 2416481.MEDICAL SCHOOL OPENINGSImmediate Openings Available in Foreign Medical SchoolFully AccreditedALSO AVAILABLE FOR DENTAL SCHOOLS• LOANS AVAILABLE • INTERVIEWS BEGINNING IMMEDIATELYFor further details and/or appointment callDr. Manley (716) 882-2803Campus Films18—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, May 18, 1982ATTENTIONJUNE GRADS:If your Mom, Dad, Aunt Phoebe or Uncle Maxare alumni, and will be on hand for Commencement, please contact The University ofChicago Magazine so we can plan to take yourpicture together. Drop by Robie House andregister, please, or phone Mike Alper at 753-2323.SAILING CLUBUC Sailing club's Weeklong Lessons start 5/22info/register 8pm, Ida Noyes, Thurs May 20 orcall 667-6338 (David) Bring a swimsuit Thurs.FOTAART OPENINGAND RECEPTIONUC Student ArtworkThursday May 206:30 8 pmIda Noyes LibraryGRADUATE STUDIES INENVIRONMENTAL ANDOCCUPATIONALHEALTH SCIENCESThe Environmental and Occupational HealthSciences Program within the School of PublicHealth, University of Illinois at the MedicalCenter, Chicago, offers masters and doctoralprograms for careers in environmentalsciences; industrial hygiene; health effectsassessment and toxicology; human factors andsafety. Applicants must hold an undergraduatedegree, including sound backgrounds inseveral of the relevant disciplines (chemistry,biology, mathematics, physics, engineering,health sciences, law, economics, geography,architecture). For further information con¬tact: Vera Donlan, School of Public Health,University of Illinois, Box 6998, Chicago IL60680. The University of Illinois is an Af¬firmative Action/Equal Opportunity institu¬tion. FOTAOFFERSUC students the chance to read their poetryWednesday May 19 QUADS AT NOONLACROSSE CLUBPractice TODAY at 5:00 on Midway acrossfrom Harper. We will scrimage if enough peopie show, so bring your equip Let's have agood showing.COFFEEHOUSEThe Blue Gargoyle presents David Kay andFriends playing acoustic rock n roll, and jazztrio Just Friends, on May 20. Admission 50Great baked goods and food available. Admission free for volunteers; set up at 7.30 clean upat midnight. The Blue Gargoyle is located at 57and University. Call Karen 955 4108 for info.FOTA GOESUNDERGROUNDLive Music in The Pub. TEA FOR THREE anorth side jazz group featuring vocalistFELICE PARKER Friday May 21 10pm.BLACKFRIARSGeneral meeting May 20, Ida Noyes, 8:30 pm!We are electing a new board so be there Congrat everyone who made ALL'S FAIR a hit-Love ya to death-be at the meeting your Abbess(goodbye)"ZANYUNPREDICTABLE...SPECTACULAR"That's what critics call Steve Katz, author of"Creamy and Delicious," "The Exaggerationsof Peter Prince" and other books. Hear thisimportant experimenter, Thurs May 20th at 8pm. In Bond ChapelFOTA AMUSESMime and Storytelling Performance withUN IT E D ST AGE Wednesday May 19 ReynoldsClub 3rd floor theatre 8 pm admission FREEChevroletSPECIAL DISCOUNT PRICESfor all STUDENTS, STAFF,and FACULTY MEMBERSJust present your University ofChicago Identification Card. Asstudents, Faculty Members or Ad¬ministrative Staff you are entitledto special money-saving DIS¬COUNTS on Chevrolet Parts. Ac¬cessories and any new or usedChevrolet you buy from RubyChevrolet.faJWSPECIAL DISCOUNT PRICESfor all STUDENTS, STAFF,and FACULTY MEMBERS krrp I hoi (strut C V/ FrrLogHah CLMIMCM HornParts OpenSat.'til noonI72nd & St<®0pen Mountil 7=684-1 Just Present your UniversityChicago Identification Card Asstudents, Faculty Members orAdministrative Staff you are en¬titled to special money-savingDISCOUNTS on Volkswagen Parts.Accessories and any new or usedVolkswagen you buy from RubyVolkswagen.'2nd & Stony Islar..Open Mon.-fliurs.until 7:30 p.m.684-0400 2 Miles-5 MinutesAway FromThe UNIVERSITY Classified AdsHISPANICCULTURAL SOCIETYElections for 1982 83 officers, Wednesday May19, 7:00 pm. Ida Noyes. VERY IMPORTANTAll members should attend.FLEAMARKETFlea Market to be held on Sat. May 22, 10 4 atLutheran School of Theology, 1100 E. 55th St.Clothing, books, household items, furniture,etc.SAILING CLUBImportant meeting Wed. 5/26 8 pm Ida Noyesprospective members welcome-lessonsavailable.PHYSICAL THERAPISTWe are now accepting applications for afull°part time Physical Therapist, licensed inIllinois or eligible. We offer an excellent salaryand generous range of fringe benefits. To arrange for an interview, call:B. Seyferlich at 312/643 9200, Ext 385ILLINOIS CENTRALCOMMUNITY HOSPITAL5800 South Stony Island AvenueChicago, Illinois60637An Equal Opportunity Fmployer M/FFOTA TEACHESUNITED STAGE workshop, FREE Mime andStorytelling techniques Reynolds Club NorthLounge 3:30 5pm Wednesday May 19FOTA RIDESUnicycle Demonstration And Workshop withMARG STRUTHERS Friday May 21 12:30 2pm on the Quads.FILMS FROMTHE ANDESAnthro Film Group presents "Qeros: TheShape of Survival" and "The Spirit Possessionof Alexandro Mamane" on Wed., May 19 at8.00 pm at I House. Admission FreePROSPECTIVEGRADUATESPurchasingFinanceCustomer Service Inventory ManagementData ProcessingMerchandisingIf you are about to graduate and are looking for a startingpoint for your career, consider our MANAGEMENT DE¬VELOPMENT PROGRAM. At McMaster-Carr, you willgain experience in some or all of the above areas.We’re a dynamic, growth-oriented industrial firm that putsa lot of energy into developing human resources. Becauseof our impressive record of growth, we need additionalcandidates to take part in our Management DevelopmentProgram. We think we’ve got something special to offerindividuals with ambition and initiative ... a long-term, re¬warding future in management.If you'd like to be considered, please send a resume to:M. MORROWMcMASTER-CARRsupply company600 County Line RoadElmhurst, IL 60126An Equal Opportunity Employer M FThe Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, May 18, 1982—19THE THIRTEENTH HODGSON LECTURE“MECCA AND THEJERUSALEMS:TYPOLOGYOF THE HOLY CITY”PROF. FRANCIS E. PETERSCHAIRMAN, DEPT. OF NEAR EASTERNLANG UA GES & LITER A TURENEW YORK UNIVERSITY5rrn3 03teenFRIDAY, MAY 21,1982 at 4:00 PMBREASTED HALLTHE ORIENTAL INSTITUTESPONSORED BY THE STUDENTS'ASSOCIA TIONOF THE CENTER FOR MIDDLE EASTERN STUDIES nvn TO’iyi- uiyj pk ’iv? U’ik vrp no ire 'i iv? rvn M’-wikd □’ * pd irvr’w n iyp -iyv'«um * - m on* m* .1*1 ns in pk wp iw « r« l">* T» we urn 11 ’ll*aE. „l ■£ ,y,* uv- 05Kr-JV2 p w ri« .P vbn nr.K u uvn lyr.’VJU'r “ | 5a "* Dr da kE i* r nyoSjun s^-mra w 2o X3- j3 ^u J5C^ 5? P2 Ir S>~ X Ar> e\?er>\r)C{ of a. O“ 3i CX «13 -*S ^£ £r n* ^ Yibbisl) poeu^y X3SJ t„ K^ Ja Snf r ReiCbiDqs pRpor> -c*)6 poecRY op ,J cC »£j 3Clr! § a>o\si>e-LeiB bA.t-peRo c«w4-w32.> ' cvj-3 ^S "r rr- 3r Yibbish) - COR£. P6XRJL KA))**) a v:-iRU§ 3-r x? I tyu£us y»b6»st> *C€A>d()eRv » a° eS a<e -J *s tnr xr- r €Qqusl) coo>o)€0t:a^y - vJx -w XJaX r-r ^ prof. beujeRsceir) I 15xj *p bt 'A cx>€<xesc€Y couceqe c; ns 2- iq §^ X- “CRAOSLXCoR^ op pORt()COC0ir>^ 1? 3»" o* £ vomooe op V)*ap€Rr>s po€*CRY w "l"J 4s .*^ rX rrr ^f * Trf%lt^sbAY <T>AY J L#S |X ^. Jx ? 7:30 p.O). 5 Xv:§ jjX2 3~ £Lj V)icl£l l^oase • 59-is s. cooobcAxor} C -15 5*3 xX Xr auv^/t l. xi t>xl xiq xia/tcv uxa uxa xuU x cx^uicrfa .t.Ou.i xa u„rn gxl kl. x„cxa Jg3 xut. x cxccv x axr x.L nuxc.i gU u- xu cXu x.u cu.ua gu l>l — g.i uil au ul li cc^ao J20—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, May 18, 1982