The Chicago MaroonVolume 92, No. 1 The University of Chicago ©Copyright 1982 The Chicago Maroon Friday, July 2, 1982PHOTO BY MARC KRAMERNo, these lovely plastic cartons which can be seen hangingon trees throughout the campus are not for decoration.Campus trees are being injected with a fungicide to aid in thecontrol of dutch elm disease.No replacement selected yetas Straus vacates deanshipChurch mortgaged to aid co-opBy Lynn TraversMembers of the UniversityChurch have voted to mortgage thechurch building at 5655 S. Universi¬ty Ave. as security for a loan of upto $175,000 needed to alleviate thedebt and disrepair of a housing co¬operative the church backs.The University Church, whichhouses the Hyde Park Coalition onHousing and Tenant's Rights andthe Blue Gargoyle, purchased abuilding at 61st and Woodlawnthree years ago and established anexperimental community housingthere. However, the building,which had been abandoned for fiveyears, was in such poor conditionthat much money and labor hasbeen invested in repairing it.Under the new plan, individualchurch members and friends of thecooperative, the Covenantal Com¬munity, will purchase securitiesfrom the Board of Church Exten¬sion of the Christian Church (Dis¬ciples of Christ), the parent organi¬zation of the University Church.These individuals will receive 11percent interests on their depositsfor the five year mortgage. TheBoard will lend the Universitychurch the amount deposited at 13and one half percent interest. Thisloan cannot exceed $175,000.The University Church will then,according to its minister Rev. Har¬vey Lord, “turn right around andlend the money to the CovenantalCommunity,” a separate organiza¬tion which owns the housing, at noadditional interest.The first $80,000 of the loan mustgo towards consolidating some ofthe current $180,000 debt of thehousing cooperative. Patricia Wil-coxen, president of the CovenantalCommunity Housing Board, saidthat “every dollar beyond that willgo towards improvements” on thestructure of the building at6101-6107 S. Woodlawn Ave.Residents of the building haverecently complained of extremelypoor living conditions. Further¬more, residents who are not coop¬erative members have also com¬plained of a rule that requiresthem to perform maintenancework on the building without com¬pensation. Cooperative board members said, however, that thesetenants knew of these conditionsbefore they moved into the units,which rent for a price well belowmarket levels.Wilcoxen said that first treat¬ment will be given to structural re¬pairs for windows, tuck painting,plumbing, and electrical wiring.“The more basic things are ourpriorities,” she said.Lord sees “no great risk of losingthe church building” as a result ofthe financial arrangement. At theend of five years, when the loanmust either be retired or renego¬tiated, commercial interest ratesshould be lower than the current18-20 percent rate, he said. Thus,Lord hopes that the CovenantalCommunity, after five years of re¬pairs that should “continually in¬crease the housing’s commercialvalue,” may be able to negotiateBy Robert KahngGeorge Pratt Shultz, who was no¬minated by President Reagon tosucceed Alexander Haig who re¬signed last Friday as Secretary ofState, was described as a “quietand effective infighter” due to hispolitical education on the Universi¬ty of Chicago campus.Shultz’s nomination has raisedhopes for a reorganised and coher¬ent foreign policy for the ReaganAdministration. Shultz has beendescribed as a man of integrity andprinciple who in the past has da’-edto disagree with Nixon while hewas Nixon’s Secretary of the Trea¬sury. Shultz has also been de¬scribed in the Chicago Tribune as acautious and deferential teamplayer “who tries to hew- politicalreality to fit his conservativeviews” whereas Haig has been ac¬cused of being overly aggressiveand inflexible.“He (Shultz) learned his politicson the campus of the University ofChicago,” said Joseph Latin, hispress secretary at the Office ofManagement and Budget, in a Tri¬bune article. “That makes him aquiet and effective infighter,” hesaid.While Haig was considered an its own loan, repay the UniversityChurch, and “get the church out ofthe middle” of the loan arrange¬ment.Lord also pointed out that theBoard has foreclosed on a mort¬gage only once in its 99 year histo¬ry, and that no property was takeneven then.If the cooperative is unable tomake its scheduled payments tothe church, the church will havethe right to sell the Woodlawnbuilding in order to repay theBoard of Extension. Lord said thatthe building has recently been ap¬praised at a value of over$200,000.Lord cited high interest ratesand the cutoff of federal aid whichnecessitated this method of financ¬ing. A commercial loan now, hesaid, “would price this project outof existence.”outsider at the White House, Shultzhas been active in several past ad¬ministrations, both Democraticand Republican. Among other posi¬tions, Shultz has served as seniorstaff economist on President Ei¬senhower’s Council of EconomicAdvisors (1955-6) and as a consul¬tant to the Kennedy Administra¬tion (1959-62). Shultz has alsoserved as Secretary of Labor andSecretary of the Treasury in theNixon Administration. Shultz hasgained widespread admiration andrespect from world leaders famil¬iar with his work in previous ad¬ministrations.Shultz’s experience in govern¬ment has show n him to be a provenbureaucrat whose specialization inboth domestic and foreign econom¬ic affairs will undoubtedly aid inthe implementation of policy inareas where Reagan Administa-tion was previously ineffective.Shultz’s extensive domestic con¬tacts in the academic, businessand bureaucratic circles is to becontrasted sharply to that ofHaig's relatively limited domesticcontacts and will tend to makeShultz more receptive to their in¬terests and concerns.Continued on page threeShultz: UC-bred in fighterPHOTO BY MARC KRAMERLorna Straus, the departing Dean of Students in the College,shown here working through her last afternoon in office onWednesday. Her old office will remain vacant until a new deanis selected sometime during the next few weeks. By Jesse HalvorenNo new Dean of Students in theCollege has been appointed yet toreplace Lorna Straus whose termended this past Wednesday. Don¬ald Levine, who succeeds JonathanZ. Smith as Dean of the College thisSeptember, will probably not namea new permanent Dean of Studentsuntil after a thorough review of thefunctions of the Dean of Studentsoffice is completed.The decision not to reappointStraus as Dean of Students was re¬vealed three weeks ago in a thankyou letter to her from departingDean Smith. Straus and severalother administrators expresses running the Dean of Students officewithout replacements for Straus orGarber. However, both said theydid not anticipate any snags andthey were expecting a calm and or¬ganized summer.An acting Dean of Students in theCollege will probably be pickedwithin the next few weeks. Incom¬ing Dean of the College Donald Le¬vine will conduct a review of thefunctions of the Dean of Studentsoffice before a permanent dean ischosen. He has said that he is inter¬ested in the role of the Dean of Stu¬dents in both the student’s academ¬ic and social life.Straus said that she has had preliminary talks with Levine aboutthe tasks required of the Dean ofStudents. MacAloon said Straus'expertise would certainly be calledon in the evaluation process.This process is the beginning of arethinking of the role of the officeof the Dean of Students and of thecollege advising system in general.“You're probably going to see achange in the conception of theDean of Students office,” Smithsaid recently.MacAloon, answering why LornaStraus’s term had not been extend¬ed until a new7 Dean had been cho¬sen, said that it was his under¬standing that her term would endJune 30. He did not comment fur¬ther.Because of previous commit¬ments Levine will not be able totake over the position of Dean ofthe College until the fall. WhileDavid Epstein of President Gray'soffice said there is “no definitetimetable,” other facultymembers think that when DonaldLevine takes office he will have al¬ready picked the permanent Deanof Students in the College.surprise at the decision, however,Smith, President Gray and Levineall agreed that there had been aclear understanding that Strauswould leave when her term was upJune 30.Straus said that two years agowhen she was reappointed she hadunderstood that her term would co¬incide with Smith’s.Though no one spoke to her aboutanother reappointment before shereceived Smith’s letter, she saidthat coinciding terms was, “a prin¬ciple which I agree with 100 per¬cent.” Straus’s 11 year term hassurvived the exits of two Deans ofthe College, Roger Hildebrand andCharles Oxnard.John MacAloon, assistant pro¬fessor in the Social Sciences Colle¬giate Division, was appointedTransition Assistant to Levine. Be¬sides acting as a “troubleshooter”during the transition betweenSmith’s and Levine’s terms, Ma¬cAloon will also coordinate the Au¬tumn College Orientation, a func¬tion traditionally performed by theDean of Students.MacAloon, responding to ques¬tions about the Dean of Students of¬fice, said, “The important thing isthat the Dean of Students office isgoing ahead full steam under thedirection of (Assistant Deans)Katie Nash and Nancy O’Conner.Students should know that it’s busi¬ness as usual.”All members of the administra¬tion involved in this transition em¬phasized that there is no disruptionof the services which the Dean ofStudents office provides.No one has been named to re¬place Professor Edward Garber asassistant dean in charge of aca¬demic affairs. Garber’s one-vearappointment ended last month.Thus Nash and O’Conner will beIt’s FREE and it'sEASYLEARN TOSPEEDSPEEDSPEEDSPEEDSPEEDSPEEDSPEEDSPEEDSPEEDSPEED READJoyce Wagman, a wellknown speed readingexpert, who is a formerteacher and school boardpresident, and waspreviously a programdirector for a nationallyknown speed readingcompany will show yousome techniques that willhelp you ALL year.You’ve got nothing to loseand everything to gain.It’s FREE and it’s EASY!SPEND ONE HOURNOW — it just mightsave you hundreds ofhours later.WOULD YOU LIKE TO:cut your study time in less than V2raise your grade point average effortlesslyhave more free timeread 3 to 10 times faster with better comprehensionAll free sessions will be held on the U. of C campus at theChicago Theological Seminary, 5757 So. 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Plus COMPLETECOMMERCIALOFFSETPRINTINGSERVICE2—The Chicago Maroon— Friday, July 2, 1982V .■r^ffIfSG Assembly seatsto be appointedThe only three members of Student Gov¬ernment (SG) will make this summer’s as¬sembly appointments at a meeting, to beheld at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday, July 6, in IdaNoyes Sun Parlor.President Alan Granger, Secretary Keungsuk Kim, and Finance Chair Elizabeth Cas-sanos assumed office yesterday. The onlyother SG members officially selected thisspring, Vice-president Joe Walsh and Trea¬surer Jeff Wolf, are not on campus.Formally, the three officers present willvote themselves the power to appoint asse¬mbly members, and pick from those presentat the meeting. Finance Committeemembers and student representatives to theStudent-Faculty-Administration Court willthen be elected by the new assembly. All po¬sitions are temporary, due to terminate atthe end of the Summer quarter.PREPARE FORUCAT • SAT • LSAT • GMAT • GRtGRE PSYCHE*GRE BXUOCATVAT-MAT-SSATPSATDAT* ACHEVEMENTSACTTOEFL* MSXP-NMBI.il.IECFM6*FLEX*VQE*RN BDSNDBIJNPHCPA-SPEED READINGFldiblt Program* tVIsh Any Center And Soo For VouroohWhy Wo Make Tho DittorenceSpeed Reeding Course FeaturesFree Demo Lesson — Cell. lCMC AGO CENTER6216 N CLARKCMC AGO ILLINOIS 60660(312) 764-5151s * suburbanit S LA GRANGE ROAD SUITE 2C'LAGRANGE ILLINOIS 60625(312) 352 5840north an* suburban474 CENTRAL AVEHIGHLAND PARK ILLINOIS 60036(312)433*7410 SPRING. SUMMERFALL INTENSIVESCOURSES STARTINGTHIS MONTHSUMMER LSAT/GMAT/GRE..MCATNEXT MONTH4we/MCAT...GRE...ACT..DAT...GMAT...SAT...Cour.es Constantly UpdatedOutside N * State Only CALL TOU FREE 900-223 178?Centers m Major US Cities,Puerto Rico and Taranto. Canada News in briefWalsh and Wolf will be kept advised of allproceedings.Duties of SG this summer include organi¬zation of Autumn Quarter Activities Nightand appropriation of funds by the FinanceCommittee. “There are a few studentgroups that need funds,” Cassanos said,“but not until the middle of the quarter.”There will be new elections for the 1982-83SG Assembly during the fifth week of Au¬tumn quarter.New TrusteesThe University of Chicago’s Board ofTrustees elected three new members attheir annual meeting June 11.They are Katharine P. Darrow, generalcounsel of the New York Times Company;Kenneth Nebenzahl, a rare book and mapdealer in Chicago; and William D. Sanders,chairman and chief executive officer of La¬Salle Partners (Holding) Inc., of Chicago.Darrow graduated with honors from UC in1965 with a B.A. in history, and was electedto Phi Beta Kappa. She graduated from Co¬lumbia University Lawr School in 1969. andjoined the Times Company in 1970.Nebenzahl has operated the rare book andmap dealership bearing his name since 1957.He has also sponsored lectures in the historyof cartography at the Newberry Library ofChicago since 1965, and is a member of UC’sLibrary Society and its visiting committeeto the Library.Sanders’ firm, LaSalle Partners (Hold¬ing) Inc., provides corporate real estate ser¬vices, leasing development, property man¬agement and asset management. He is alsoa director of Santa Fe Exploration Co., TheLaSalle Street Fund, and Sanders Land &Cattle, Inc., and a governing member of theChicago Symphony Orchestra. He graduat¬ed from Cornell University in 1964.wmmmmmmmmmmmmimtfr ■■■■■ mm 9 & LetterStraus a friendJune 7, 1982To the editor:I would like to support the editorial standtaken by the Maroon regarding the effectivedismissal of Lorna Straus. Furthermore, Icommend the Maroon staff for the work re¬quired to bring this news to students in theUniversity during a difficult part of thequarter.Some administrators are not “popular,”however in my dealings I have found each tobe committed, in his or her way, to the bestinterests of students in the College. Howev¬er, Dean Straus has proven herself to be atrue friend to both the College and students in the College. She is a familiar face at a va¬riety of student and alumni activities and arespected teacher. She is also a willingfriend to any student that has ever foundthemselves on the edge of an academicabyss. Whatever the reasoning surroundingthe end of Dean Straus' term, I cannot un¬derstand the abrupt manner in which shewas dismissed. This is no way to treat some¬one that has served both academic and ad¬ministrative interests so long and well. Iurge all concerned students in the College tocall on the office of the Dean of the Collegeto reappoint Lorna Straus to her position asDean of Students in the College as her periodof tenure draws to an end next month.Anne LibbyThird year student in the CollegeNewsShultzContinued from page oneHowever, officials believe that Shultz willbe preoccupied with learning the office dur¬ing his first six months, making any majorpolicy shift unlikely in the immediate fu¬ture. Furthermore, officials cite Reagan'semphasis upon domestic affairs as a factorthat would impede any such action byShultz. While Shultz has been portrayed asthe antithesis of Haig, little is known abouthis views on foreign policy. While somelabel him as being pro-Arab due to his busi¬ness interests in Saudi Arabia, his recentcriticism of Arab oil policies leaves his posi¬tion unclear. However, Shultz's Universityof Chicago background and past record ineconomic affairs reveals a conservativemonetarist and a firm believer in the “freetrade ethic” so characteristic of the “Chica¬go School” of Economics and its more prom¬inent disciples.Shultz came to the University of Chicagoin 1957 after serving for nine years on thefaculty of the Massachusetts Institute ofTechnology as a professor of industrial rela¬ tions. He received his B.A. cum iaude fromPrinceton University and his Ph.D. in Indus¬trial Economics from M.I.T. Shultz was aprofessor of Industrial Relations and formerdean of the UC Graduate School of Businessduring the 1960s. In that time Shultz revita¬lized the doctoral program at the Businessschool while attracting a number of promi¬nent scholars in the field of industrial rela¬tions to the University of Chicago. Shultzhas held numerous positions in both the pub¬lic and private sector and has published nu¬merous hooks and articles in the area of in¬dustrial relations.-TAJSSvmn—wm»ij j_rr ?Za V- ,:CHINESE-AMERICAN RESTAURANTSpecializing in Cantoneseand American dishesOpen Daily 11 A.-8:30 P.M.Closed Mondcy1318 E. 63rd MU 4-10*2Introducing Croissant Sandwiches!KuamzanxCall For Delivery or Pick-UpPIZZASmall Medium LargeDelicious Mixtureof Mozzarella Cheeses 3.25 4.95 6.05Additional Ingredients:Sausage, Pepperoni, j 50 j 80 2.25Canadian BaconFresh Mushrooms, GreenPeppers, Onions, Garlic,Black Olives, Anchovies .60 .80 1.30Spinach or BroccoliPesto Pizza 4.755.95 6.75 8.308.95 10.95WHOLE WHEAT CRUST: For a changetry our delicious whole wheat dough. It’shigh in fiber and made fresh daily with aspecial blend of spices. It is available onall pizzas. 50STUFFED PIZZARegular DeluxeBlend of Mozzarella Cheeses 5.70 7.50Additional Ingredients:Sausage, Pepperoni,Canadian Bacon 1.50 1.80Fresh Mushrooms, GreenPeppers, Onions, Garlic,Black Olives, Anchovies .60 .80Edwardo’s Famous Spinach Souffle orFresh Broccoli Pizza 7.75 9.95Pesto Pizza 8.45 11.55 Three Locations For Chicago’sFinest Stuffed Pizza WE DELIVEREdwardos North: Mon. Thor*. 5-11:30PM/Fri. 1 Sot 4PM 12:30AM/Sun.4PM-11:30PMEdwardo s South: Mon.-Thors. A Sun. 11 AM-11:30PM/fri. t Snt. till 12:30AMEdwordo s Deorborn: Mon.-Thun. 4PM-IAM/FH. t Sot. 1 lAM-2AM/Soo. 12AM-12PMAPPETIZERSHomemade Ravioli with our zestytomato sauce. Cheese 1.95Spinach 2.25Garlic Bread .75DELICIOUS SALADSEdwardo’s Salad Bowl: Fresh and crispwith enough tasty ingredients to round outany pizza meal. 1.35Antipasto Salad Bowl: Deliciouscombination of genoa salami, cheeses andpeppers spread over a combination oficeberg and rumaine lettuce and drenchedin our own vinegar and oil dressingregular 2.85deluxe 4.50Fresh Basil Salad: A real treat for basillovers. Crisp romaine lettuce covered withsliced mozzarella cheese and tomatoes andtopped with red onions, fresh basil and ourhouse dressing. 1.50Try our house dressing. It’s good enough tobe called Mansion Dressing.mdumum LUNCH SPECIAL(Served daily 11AM-3PM)Special Stuffed Mini Pizza Cheese Sausage Spinach2 50 2 85 2 95Ravioli, Salad & Garlic Bread 2.95Beverages:Soft Drink 50-75Pitcher of Soft Drink 2.25Coffee 40Milk 40Corkage Fee50' per personBecause your fresh pizza contains suchan abundance of ingredients, it takes alittle longer to cook than normal pizza.May we suggest a salad or appetizer inthe meantime?Edwardos Dearborn: 1212-14 North Dearborn. Chicago, Ilk, Call 337-4490Edwardos North: 1937 West Howard SL, Chicago, III., Call 761-7040Edwardo s South: 1321 East 57th St . Chicago, HI., Call 241-7960 For Parties of 10 Or More A 15*Gratuity Will Be Added. Take Home One or More PartiallyBaked Pizzas For Your FreezerThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, July 2, 1982—37a^-0/uJi£4&&~Two Friday eveningconcerts by theCIVIC ORCHESTRA,Training Orchestra ofthe Chicago SymphonyGordon Peters,Conductor iH Co-o4.‘.nteuaL.j^ourr^rv^a/u 7??%4IfuFRIDAY, JULY 9, 8:00 PMSchuman Circus OvertureMozart Symphony No. 41, K.551, “Jupiter"Rachmaninoff Symphonic DancesFRIDAY, JULY 30, 8:00 PMStrauss Festival Prelude, Op. 61Griffes The White PeacockTippett Suite for the Birthday of Pnnce CharlesSaint-Saens Symphony No. 3, “Organ"Preferred locationCost per ticket Total enclosedName Telephone daytime/eveningAddressCity State Z'PTickets will be available at the Orchestra Hall Box Office on the day of the concert only.For details, call 435-8t59—Mallory’sat the Center for Continuing Education1307 East 60th St. • 288-2500Catch the free bus in front ofRegenstein for LunchJoin Us For Lunch & Dinner in the Dining Room, 11:30 am - 8 pmSOUPSSpinach Cheddar Soup 1.25SALADSBoston & Romaine Salad with sliced fresh musnroomsDijon mustard vinaigrette 1.50 ' 2.50Steak Salad, sauteed Sirloin on Romaine LettuceSpecial sauce of basil & mustard 4.25SANDWICHESVegetarian Sandwich served on whole wheat toast, with avocadoes,tomatoes, alfalfa sprouts, swiss cheese, lettuce, scallions & sour cream 3.95Charbroiled Hamburger on homemade bread with sauteed onions,cheese on request 4.25ENTREESPan Fried Three Egg Omelette with cheese & mushrooms 3.75Crabmeat Casserole with rice 5.75Seafood Pasta Primavera with Scallopsand fresh vegetables in a light cream sauce 5.75ALSO AVAILABLE Cafeteria Servicefrom 7:30 am to 3 pm Summer OnThe QuadsTickets are available by mail order only| Box Seats $8 Mail your check payable to theMain Floor, Rows A-0 $6 Civic Orchestra of ChicagoMain Floor, Rows P-W $5Lower Balcony $6 TicketsUpper Balcony $5 Civic Orchestra of ChicagoGallery $4 220 South Michigan AvenueStudents, seniorcitizens, handicapped $2 Chicago. IL 60604Please send me seats for July 9 concert; seats for July 30 concert FilmsTonight at 7 & 10pm:TESSNatassia Kinski in RomanPolanski's breathtakingadaptation of Thomas Hardy'sTESS OF THE D'URBERVILLES**********************Tomorrow at 7:15 & 9:45pm:ALL ABOUT EVEBette Davis in her greatestrole in Joseph L. Mankiewicz'shugely entertaining, multi-Oscar winning look at love &larceny on the Broadwayscene.**********************Wednesday (7/7) at 8pm:LITTLE BIG MANDustin Hoffman in ArthurPenn's Sprawling study of howthe West was snatched.**********************All Films in Cobb Hall $2 OtherNOONTIMECONCERTJoin us for a very specialsession with folk singer/storytellerART THIEMEWednesday,July 7Hutch Court(If rain, Reynolds Club Lounge)MINI-COURSESThere's still time to registerfor our Summer 1982 EclecticEd. mini-courses. We havecourses in:* Modern Dance* IntermediateBallet* Jazz Dancing• Rhythmic-Aerobic DanceTheStudentActivitiesOfficeIda Noyes 210753-3592(No registration onMonday, 7/5, a holiday)24 hour Activities Line: 753-215024 hour Film Line: 962-8575. Sponsored byThe Student Activities Office4—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, July 2, 1982GREY CITY JOURNALEntrenchment (A woman's place in business?)by Abby ScherFor the past few weeks, I've been workingfor the passage of the Equal Rights Amend¬ment at the Loop office of the National Orga¬nization of Women. The activists there weretackling three problems, changing the bor¬derline legislators' anti ERA vote to a pro-ERA vote, changing the three-fifths majori¬ty required to pass the amendment inIllinois to a simple majority, and creatingthe base for a November campaign to oustanti-ERA politicians from office.Part of NOW's strategy for the ratifica¬tion of the ERA was to put enormous pres¬sure on Governor Thompson and convincehim that he should change Republican votesin the legislature because his political futureand the political future of the Illinois Repub¬lican party rests on the ERA'S passage.Thompson claimed to support the ERAbut he did not support the rule change neces¬sary for its passage in Illinois. All but Illi¬nois and three other states require a simplemajority to ratify an amendment in thestate legislature, as stipulated in the U.S.Constitution. Many officials, includingThompson, claimed to support the ERA butnot "majority rule." By doing this, theyboth please their anti ERA constituents andfool their pro-ERA constituents.Some pro-ERA citizens authorized NOWto send individually signed telegrams andletters indicating their support to these antiERA politicians. Volunteers from across thecountry worked the loop office sendingout these public r lion messages to Spring-field. They alsc ;ned supporters askingfor a donation of time or money. Otherworkers typed lis* >f ERA supporters to becontacted in the all political campaignagainst opponents of the ERA now seated inSpringfield. Volunteers trailed GovernorThompson at all public engagements to re¬mind him of the dedicated support for theERA.NOW sent busloads of volunteers to thecapitol when they were running a "high visi¬bility" campaign. They stopped when legis¬lators objected to the radical methods of thewomen who participated in the sit in on theHouse floor. NOW then decided to concern Entrenchedtrate their forces on door to door lobbying inthe Republican suburbs, and soliciting peopie on the street to send postcards to Gover¬nor Thompson.I did just about everything except go doorto door, and everywhere 1 went, I bumpedinto Stop ERA supporters.One day, I was postcarding outside ofWater Tower Place, and getting quite a fewpeople to fill out the cards. I saw a harriedlooking woman with five children surrounding her and thought "Maybe I shouldn'tbother asking her to send a postcard but sheprobably doesn't have time on her own toshow her support." Well, I asked her to signand then this guy with greased black hairpulled her arm and said to me "Women belong in the home." I couldn't believe it! Iknew people like him existed but where Igrew up, no one would have the courage tosay such a thing in public.Another time, I was down in Springfield toshow off my green and white ERA button tothe legislators. On one side of the big, roundhall in the capital building was the pro ERAtable and the tasters, and on the other sidewas the Stop ERA table. While ihe man outside Water Tower Place fit the stereotype ofan anti-ERA person, the women sitting atthe Stop ERA table sporting red and whitedid not fulfill my narrow expectation. Theywere young and old and female. Some worethe frilly blouses that are in style now andsome wore the stretch pants typical of housewives. They were very nice when a pro-ERA man picked up some of their litera¬ture. He offered to pay them, and theynicely refused.I looked at the pamphlets, wondering justhow convincing the arguments were that defeated the ERA. To tell the truth, some wereso ridiculous that I don't remember them.Others were repeated at a debate I attendedthe next day.This debate concerning the ERA was organized by a broadcaster's organizationthat sponsors public interest programsevery once in a while. It was between SusanCatania, the sponsor of ERA in the IllinoisHouse, and Kathleen Sullivan, head of StopERA in Northern Illinois.Catania's plane from Springfield was de In the Trencheslayed an hour or so, so the sponsors decidedto let the audience get on stage, in front ofcable TV cameras and give their views ofthe ERA.Virtually all of the Stop ERA argumentswere rhetoric that fell apart upon analysis.Some of the anti ERA women said thingslike "women are different — physicallyweaker — so we must have different laws"and "God gave certain roles to each sex andthe ERA opposes this distinction."One articulate woman informed the audi¬ence of the positions of prominent ERA ac¬tivists on issues besides the ERA. She ab¬horred their sympathy to the "socialhumanist" doctrine and especially theirsympathy to gay rights. She said the ERAwas just a disguised way to give homosex¬uals equality. It would legalize same sexmarriages besides. She pointed out that itmust be in the gay's interest to have theERA passed because virtually all gay organizations support it.Of course, the ERA has nothing to do withsexual preference but only with sexualequality under the law, but her argumentwould surely frighten homophobic people. Apro ERA woman criticized this woman forconfusing the Amendment with the person¬alities and other opinions of its supporters.The anti-ERA forces also charged thatstates rights were threatened by the secondclause of the Amendment which gives Con¬gress the authority to enact the Amendmentby appropriate legislation. As a NOWmember said, however, this same enablingclause is also in the thirteenth, fourteenth,fifteenth and nineteenth amendments. Andas Catania mentioned later, it does not ex¬clude the states from acting on the amendment.But the bread baking women clad in redand white still cried "The Federal government will legislative what goes on in ourfamilies." Yes! State divorce laws would beequalized, like the ones which allow men butnot women to divorce their spouse if theyfool around.The Stop ERA people's strongest argu¬ment was that women would be draftedunder the ERA (Who wants to be drafted?)However, a recent Supreme Court case im¬ plied that it would be up to Congress to de¬cide whether women would be drafted evenif the ERA were in the Constitution. Cataniamade a good point when she said that as it isnow, women can be drafted to deferd acountry in which they do not enjoy the fullrights of citizenship.With arguments like those, how did *elose? Our strategy was not very sophisticat¬ed. We did not look beyond the most visibleopponents of the ERA like Phyllis Schalyjust as I did not at first look beyond the stereotype of the ERA opporent as a man whodominates his wife, to see tte deep seatedsexism in the thinking of the ant; ERAwomen themselves. Beyond Schafiy aremore powerful and influential backers.ERA supporters were battling the en¬trenched sexism of male dominated legisla¬tures and of people spouting Stop ERA rhetoric, but most of all they were battling thegiant corporations willing to protect theirprofits at the expense of human rights underthe law.It was only in the last month of the campaign that NOW publicized their findingsthat insurance companies were a strong lob¬bying force against the Amendment Insurance agencies are discriminatory institu¬tions that are regulated by the state. If theERA were passed, state governments wouldbe obliged to legislate less profitable insur¬ance rates that would no* use sex as a criterion.ERA supporters were constituents begging their legislators to represent them. Onthe other hand, corporations lobbied in theback room out of the public eye. Womenmust have access to *he back room — if thatback room must exist at all — and must populate the legislatures to be at the receivingend of corporate lobbying. The first is unlikely to happen, bu* NOW is working on thesecond. Women will still demonstrate andlobby as outsiders to the capitol for feministcauses, but NOW's tremendous resourceswill be directed toward ousting sexist legislators and putting in their stead a newerbreed of political activists, some of whoseinitial training ground was working for theEqual Rights Amendment.HAVEWE GOTHAAGENDAZS!And Texas Hats • Macaroons • Linzer Slices • MozartTories • Blueberry Muffins • Apple Schnecken • AlmondBear Claws • Dannon Yogurt • Stewart Tea • GermanChocolate Cake • Ham and Cheese Croissants •Elephant Ears • Black Forest Tories • Kolochkies •Milk • Custard Napoleons • Rum Balls • Coffee • AlmondCroissants • Marzipan Slices • Strawberry CustardTories • and Haagen-Dazs at 75* a scoop. Beat thatChicago!Summer Hours:Monday - Friday9 am to 8 pmClosed Saturday(Closed Monday, July 5th)THE BAKERYIN IDA NOYESOUR FAMOUS STUFFED PIZZA IN THE PAN IS NOWAVAILABLE IN HYDE PARKOPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK • 11 AM TO 12 MIDNIGHTCocktails • Pleasant Dining • Pick-Up“Chicago’s best pizza!” — Chicago Magazine, March 1977“The ultimate in pizza!” — New York Times, January 1980 MUSICRavinia Festival Ravinia Park is vibrat¬ing with music. This week's concertsinclude: Friday, July 6, Arlo Guthrieand Pete Seeger will appear togetherin the Pavilion, at 8 pm. Saturday July3, pianist Cecile Licad will performChopin, Haydn, and Rinsky-Korsakovat 8:30 pm., with Charles Dutoit con¬ducting the Chicago Symphony Or¬chestra. A Fourth of July Pops con-cernt will feature Aaron Copland, andbegins at 5 pm. July 6 is a chambermusic evening, including the worldpremiere of Willard Elliot's Five Im¬pressions for Wind Octet, beginning at8 pm. in the Murray Theatre. July 7 isthis weeks jazz/pop/folk night, bring¬ing Benny Goodman and his Sextet tothe Pavilion at 8 pm. July 8 is a Beeth¬oven/Brahms evening, beginning at 7pm. in the Murray Theatre, and mov¬ing out to the Pavilion at 8:30 pm. Ra¬vinia Park can be reached on theNorthwestern El. Tickets are avail¬able from the Box Office at 22 WestMonroe St., or call 782-9696 for furtherinformation.THEATERCourt Theatre An Italian Straw Hat,written by Eugene Labiche and directed by Richard Cordas, will be performed outdoors in the HutchinsonCourtyard Thursdays through Sun¬days at 8:30 pm., with Sunday mati¬nees at 2:30 pm., through August 1.For tickets and further informationcall 962-7325. The Courtyard is locatedat 57th and University, behind theReynolds Club building. Michael SlaskiARTMichael Slaski, winner of the Universityof Chicago Midway Studios Prize, hassculpture, paintings, and drawings ina Master of Fine Arts Exhibition at theRenaissance Sociey's Bergman Gal¬lery, through Friday, July 9. OpenTuesday through Saturday, 12 pm. to 4pm., at 5811 Ellis Ave. (fourth floor ofCobb Hall.) Admission free.Smart Gallery An exhibit of 75 paintingsand drawings by Thomas Hart Bentoncontinues through July 4. Open Tues¬day through Saturday, 10 am. to 4 pm.and Sunday, 12 pm. to 4 pm. at 5550 S.Greenwood Ave. Admission free.Museum of Contemporary Art In con¬junction with the New Music America'82 festival, the museum presents Selected Works by John Cage and OtherComposers, an exhibition of scoresand visual artworks by various con¬temporary composers. Included in the exhibition are scoitists' books, lithogments by artists inMusic festival, astheir colleagues, aartists influential orcle. The show runs fAugust 29. Also ontion with the festivtain, by David Behrmarinis, the firinteractive musicJuly 6 through Julyopen Tuesday thrcam. to 5 pm., and Spm., and is locatedSt. General Admis:and Senior Citizens,HLTess (Roman Polansktion of Thomas Harthe d'Urbervilles,Kinski as Tess, LiPeter Firth. Fri., Jupm. SAO., Cobb HaAll About Eve (1950 ) 5ed by Joseph ManlEve is Hollywood'sanswer to Once inskin peeling dramabition and bitchery,cle Bette Davis,George Sanders everecording their pyrIt is indeed difficuldette Colbert or Ingimovie's aging, dis(they both declinecoffer), because Depart almost flawlestrasting its captive’"A SHOWER OF MENew Music America '82It is simply hard to believe. Next weekChicago will become temporary capitol ofthe New Music world and Mayor Byrne willbe greatly responsible for it. New MusicAmerica '82, a wonderfully adventurous fes¬tival of alternative music sponsored by theMayor's Office of Special Events and TheChicago Tribune, will take place throughoutthe city from Monday, July 5th to Sunday,July 11.The festival will feature the pieces of ap¬proximately 50 composers from around thecountry, composers working in the variousfields of experimental music, New Wave,electronic music, augmented world musics,and avant garde jazz. Most of the pieces tobe performed at the festival have beencreated in the last two years, while manyhave been written for festival premiere.(For a complete detailed list of all of theworks to be performed and a schedule of themany other festival events, go to The Muse- <uum of Contemporary Art — the organizer of 2the event — or look through the dailies,*;especially the Trib.). cThe wide range of compositions to be per 3formed throughout the week prohibits a cap- usule description of the kind of music to beheard at the festival. However, a word tothose whose listening habits stay within thebounds of commercial radio offerings, andwho may read a week of experimental, al¬ternative music and events to be a festivalof cacophony. New Music America '82 is de¬dicated to the pioneering composer JohnCage, in honor of his 70th birthday. Cage,whose work will be featured in the festivalas well, once said "I would like to think thatthe sounds people hear in a concert couldmake them more aware of the sounds theyhear in the street, or out in the country, oranywhere they may be. . .(that the soundscould) make people aware in a way theywould not have been otherwise." It seemsthat the festival will offer numerous oppor¬tunities to hear the cacophonous and the eu¬phonious, the mathematical and the lyrical,the random and the ordered; and, in light ofthe dedication to Cage, it seems the festivalwill be trying to provide the listener withsome surprisingly new ways to listen in gen¬eral.The majority of the concerts will takeplace at the Navy Pier, Tuesday throughSaturday nights and Sunday afternoon.(Highlights of the Pier concert series arelisted below.) Each Navy Pier concert will John Cagefeature four or five composers' works andcan be attended with a $3 ticket or with a $10Pier Pass which is good for all 6 days (a 44%savings). The entire Navy Pier concertseries will be broadcast live by WFMT-FM(98.7). There will also be several events occurring around The Pier in addition to theconcerts: Robert Ashley's 7 part videoopera can be seen on board the S.S. Clipperdocked at The Pier from Tuesday throughTuesday after the concerts; an audience-interactive sound installation by SalvatoreMartirano will be on the Pier preceeding allof the evening concerts; and on the.Lake itself will be three performances on Wednesday and Thursday nights, Charlie Morrow's"Toot 'N Blink" for lights and horns on pleasure crafts and speed boats, Alvin Curran's"Maritime Rites" for 50 singers and tape recorders on rowboats, and Cage's "A Dip inthe Lake" on the S.S. Clipper.The opening night concert runs a bit moreexpensive ($6, $8 and $10 tickets) than a Pierconcert, but it too is very reasonably pricedin that it is a rare night in Orchestra Hallwhen contemporary orchestral music is performed by members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. Five composers' works2—FRIDAY, JULY 2, 1982—THE GREY CITY JOURNAL; scores, drawings, ar-ithographs, and instrusts included in the NewI, as well as works byes, and musicians andtial on Cage or in his cir-'uns from July 6 througho on exhibit in conjunc-festival is Sound Foun-Behrman and Paul De-5 first multi-playerusic and video game.July 11. The museum isthrough Saturday, 10and Sunday, 12 pm. to 5cated at 237 E. Ontariodmission. $2; Studentsizens, $1.FILMilanski, 1981) An adapta-s Hardy's novel Tess of'Hies, with Nastassia>s, Leigh Lawson, andri., July 2 at 7 pm. and 10>b Hall, $2.950) Scripted and direct-Mankiewicz, All Aboutood's brilliantly craftedce in a Lifetime. It's arama of Broadway am-hery, and the best vehi-ivis, Anne Baxter, or■s ever chanced upon forir pyrotechnic abilities,fficult to imagine Clau-r Ingrid Bergman as theI, displaced stage idoldined Darryl Zanuck's>e Davis performs theawlessly — subtly c.on-ptivating, queenly exte¬ rior with the vain, vulnerable, insecure woman bottled inside. As Davislater wrote, "It was a great script, hada great director, and a cast of professionals all with parts they liked. It wasa charmed production from the wordgo." Sat., July3at7:158.9:45 pm. SAO(Cobb) %2—PFHoliday (George Cukor, 1938) When Phi¬lip Barry's Holiday was produced onBroadway in 1928, Hope Williams tookthe comedy's outstanding role, that ofLinda Seton. Her understudy was anunknown, inexperienced actressnamed Kather7?T% Hepburn. When Columbia revived the script ten yearslater, Hepburn bought out her contractwith RKO to play the role. The result— thanks to masterfully understatedperformances by Cary Grant, LewAyres, Edward Everett Horton, andHenry Kolker — was an intelligent,penetrating comedy of manners.Grant plays the rebellious young cen¬tral figure ("It's Case, not Chase")forced to choose between marrying anheiress (Doris Nolan), who is ambi¬tious to have him take a profitable jobin her father's bank, and his own de¬sire to take time out for personal reas¬sessment. Nolan's sister (Hepburn)completes the triangle — a kindredspirit in Grant's battle against theforces of stuffed-shirt respectability.Unlike Philadelphia Story or BringingUp Baby, Holiday makes no pretenseof being anything but a stage play. Assuch it succeeds quite handsomely.Tues., July 6 at 8 pm. Doc. $2.—PFLittle Big Man (Arthur Penn, 1971)"Sprawling, superb filmization ofThomas Berger's novel." — JM."Long and dull." — DM. Unseen bythis reviewer. Wed., July 7 at 8 pm.SAO, Cobb Hall, S2. What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?(Robert Aldrich, 1962) Poor Blanche isreally emaciated. But she's also acripple, so she depends on sister Janeto nourish her — unplucked parakeettoday, pot-roast rat tomorrow. Jane,alas, is imbalanced. Yet not entirelywithout reason. Although she has du¬tifully tended her sister since her car"accident" in 1935, she now facesplacement — at Blanche's behest — ina nursing home. Jane not unnaturallyseeks revenge. The result is outland¬ish, macabre entertainment. DirectorAldrich's timing, for once, is superb;he knows just when to shock forshock's sake, and just when to play hisgargoyles for giggles. And of courseBette Davis plays the grotesquelyfrumpy harridan-cuckoo; Joan Crawford, the comparatively well-groomedcripple. Although neither ascends towhat I'd call "great acting" (they es¬sentially parody themselves), they de¬liver exactly what Aldrich packagesbest — outrageously engaging gothichorrpor. Thurs., July 8 at 8:30 pm.LSF. %2—PFGrey City Journal7/2/82Staff: Pat Cannon, John Egan,Pat Finegan, Keith Fleming,Kira Foster, James Goodkind,Sarah Herndon, Shawn Magee,Jeff Makos, David Miller,Robin Mitchell, Sharon Pesh-kin, Abby Scher, and Ken Wis-soker.Editing and Production by Na¬dine McGann.IETE0RS OF SOUND"nd will be performed that evening including>10 "Tehiliim" by Steve Reich, based on Afri-1% can rhythms and Hebrew chants (whichart subsequently will open the fall season of the:M N.Y. Philharmonic), "Score (40 Drawingsx from Thoreau) with 23 Parts" by Cage, andhe "Variations for Flute/Saxophone andeo Chamber Orctestra" by AAC.AA pioneer>er Muhal Richard Abrams,gh The festival wi.l hold several free,daytimein concerts throughout the week including one»re at Rockefeller Chapel Wednesday at noonall (Charlemagne Palestine's Carillon Con¬it cert), with the others occurring at The Chi-?s- cago Public Library Cultural Center, thei/'s Lincoln Park Zoo, the Federal Center Plaza;a and the Adler Planetarium. In addition.Vs there will be outdoor weather-influenced'e sculptures and installations designed to pro¬in duce music, which can be attended for freeat the Point in the Promontory Park of Hydeire Park, at the Water Tower landmark and iner Lincoln Park.ed A symposium on all of this, "New Musicall and Our Changing Culture" will take place;r in the Preston Bradley Hall at the Chicagom- Public Library Cultural Center. The panelks will be made up of John Cage and several of -Henry Cowelon John Cage's Musicthe artists performing during the week. Ad¬mission to the symposium is free.One final note: though New Music Ameri¬ca has been produced in other cities over thelast three years, this year's festival marksthe first time the festival is being sponsoredb/ a city's municipality itself. MayorByrne's office is providing half of the esti¬mated $300,000 needed to put on the events.Hopefully, a good turnout to the ticketedconcerts will indicate to the city that thiskind of alternative festival should be repeat¬ed in the years to come. — James Goodkind.For box office information on New MusicAmerica '82: 280-2696Special Note:Music (Mostly) at MidnightA new music concert series that will takeplace as an adjunct to the N.M.A. '82 on July5 to July 8 at midnight, and July 10 at 4 pm,produced by Kapture, a Chicago experimen¬tal oral arts performing group. The serieswill feature works by Kapture as well asother composers from Illinois, Indiana, Ca¬lifornia, Missouri, and N.Y.Tickets for the series run $3 per concert or$12 for the series. The concerts take place atCrosscurrents 3206 N. Wilton, V2 block eastof the Belmont El. For info call 472 7884.Highlights of the Navy Pier Series: composer/choreographer Meredith Monk's "Turtle/Dreams," a synthesis of Balkan and operaticsinging with two electric organs, and the theatresurrealists (THE) on Tuesday night; Ruth Ander¬son's music createa by galvanic skin sensorsplaced on the bodies of dancer Judith Ragir andfour musicians, and New Wave artist Glen Branca's electric-guitar symphony on Wednesdaynight; the premiere of University of Illinois exper¬imental composer Ben Johnston's "String QuartetNo. 5" by the San Francisco Kronos Quartet, andthe jazz/experimental vocalist Jay Clayton onThursday night; AACM's Roscoe M tchell's musicfor tenor voice, contrabass sarrusaphone and 13foot long triple contrabass, and pianist HaroldBudd, a Brian Eno collaborator on Friday night; anew piano piece by Dartmouth Classic's professorand Cage associate Christian Wolff, and excerptsfrom Peter Gordon's new opera "Birth of thePoet," performed by the N Y. New Wave groupLove of Life Orchestra with Laurie Anderson'sdrummer David Van Tieghem on Saturday night;and the Philip Glass Ensemble's reed man JohnGibson in solo saxophone performance, and onetime Cecil Taylor and Ornette Coleman drummerRonald Shannon Jackson and his New Wave jazzgroup the Decoding Society on Sunday afternoon. marian realty,inc.mREALTORStudio and 1 BedroomApartments Available— Students Welcome —On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-5400RockefellerChapel9 amEcumenical Serviceof Holy Communion11 amUniversity ReligiousServiceRobin LovinAssoc. Prof., Ethics & Society,the Divinity School,Univ. of ChicagoFinancing provided for elegantliving at The Parkshore.One. two. three and four bedroomapartments with good location.Down payments start a' >13971.Monthly charges (includingmortgage payments, property taxes,and assessments) from 9430.The Parkshore is a tenant-sponsored housing cooperativeoffering the best housing value inIlyde ParkOffice hours:Mon., Wed.. Thurs.2 p.m. to 9 p.m.Tues. 7 to 9 p.m.Sat. Sun. 1 2 to 4 p.m.or hv appointment.For sales information, call684-0111.060S|*.nx.r The Park«h ore. an Illinois not-for-profit corjtoratioii. 1755-56 East 55th Street,('hieugo. Illinois 60615.I >evelopment and Marketing Agent: Metro|>o!itanKesourees Group. Ine 5T-ThePhoenix...L TO RN ED AO SN URY? 1982 Polygram Oasstcs. IncDistributed by PolygramIsOnSale!$2.75 eachor2 for s5.00We’re the Phoenix(Basement of Reynolds Club)THE GREY CITY JOU R N AL-F R I DAY, JULY 2, 1982-3The Mismeasure ofby Stephen Jay Gould^ NW. W. Norton and Co.Jn.Y. 1981 MINDSby LilianPeople seem to haseek order and to sication the complexical, natural and sopie also have the uraccording to theirtain qualities. Huhave long been favorite subjecakahashia strong tendency toplify through clas^fi-ganizatidjb of our ph^sial environments. Pfeo-e to rank ttie categoriesssession djr lack of c^ran groups themselyesfor rankjpgforth fby a smfollStephen J£yfoduses on tt^ism&smbasec^pn^^eria| putnumber dt/iqdjyidv|als.The&twwfc&Spfe of Man,Gould's rko&t cedent Jaqgkidea, and mor© «sjcious notion tfillt-d^rwihnfined by sex, ract^xT^Sfretc.) are superioror inferior according to their "objectively”measured levels of "innate mental ability."This book, therefore, is about biological de¬terminism and its use to justify, under theguise of scientific objectivity, the mislabel¬ing and mistreatment of less privilegedgroups.Gould, professor of geology, biology andhistory of science Umver^jt^has published two other popular sciencebooks, Ever Since DarwTft ah(3 The Panda'MThumb, and also a more technical volume,Ontogeny ^and Phytogeny. As an evolution¬ary biologist with a talent for clearly andpersuasively Communicating ideas, he iscurrency the best known and leading criticof "scieptjjprc" creationism.Gould approaches the subject of biologicaldeterminism historically by presenting spe¬cific case studies from the 19th and early20th centuries. The book can roughly be di¬vided into two parts: the first is about theuse of craniometry (measurement of skulls)and the second is about the use of psycholog¬ical (intelligence) tests. Both methods wereemployed to support the belief that under-,privileged groups (i.e. non Europeans^women, needy individuals, uneducated indi.-^viduals) were innately of low mental abilityand therefore deserved to be treated as infe- -rior. The author's confcise tr|atm^nt of this potentialiy vast topic result* f'onp his decisionto concentrate only on the most prominentresearchers who devoted yeafs of meticulous study to this matter, indeed, tbe namesthat appear here r|ad much like a Who'sWho of renowned 19ttfcprftury sci¬entists. Fdir ex a m J— Louis Agassiz, knowti 'for his researchon fossil fishes and glacj^rjfgiv^ewftS; be on restricting immigrants from Southernan<t central Europe wh| naturally scoredpoorly on tests designed for those familiarwi|h American culture |e.g. "Crfeco is a:patent rr|edicine, disinfectant, toothpaste,fo|)d product" p. 200).Throughout this work, jSould emphasizescrucial points. Firstly, hdi stresses that sci-"ic research is not exempt frqm culturali fsedifrl biases. Although traditionally,lieved Blacks andotljer races to be separateand inferior species relative to Caucasians.f- Paul Broca, a French physician and pioneer of modern neurosurgery, attemptedto "prove" ttjat brain size was directly re¬lated to intelligence and that European/nates (especially Frenchmen) had largerbrains than those of other races as well aswomen.— Robert Yerkes, a famed Yale psycholo¬gist noted for his study on the behavior ofapes, helped create and administer ^heArmy Mental Tests during World War 1.Their major influence, however, was not onrecruiting practices as Yerkes intended, but science is thought to be a purely objectivepursuit, it is, like any other human endeavor, a social phenomenon influenced by different cultural contexts. Pure (Objectivity isrealized only when one can examine evidence without preconceived conculsions.Secondly, the primary means by which in¬dividuals featured in this book have at¬tempted to "prove" the objectivity of theirstudies is quantification. Yet Gould demonstrates by reanalyzing many of the datasets, that numbers, like arguments, can betwisted and selectively presented such thatthe results concur rather conveniently witha priori convictions. Finally, Gould notes that the problem withall these studies involves more than manip-ulatiort^aff numbers; it involves two deepseated^Sllacies: Cf KSfficatt©^ of intelli¬gence,/ or the ide$f thqt intelligence is asingle/entity whos# levfl is easily measuredand cibn be represented by a sjpgle number(e.g./cranial vol/meJ.Q.), anjb b.) rankingof pfople, or tf|§ idei that complex humanbiol/gical varij|t:on|fcan be ordered according/to a simplistic unilinear s/ale.This book very well written with each ofthi studies j/xplalhed in a cldbr and merestinfo way. T^ie au/hor's approach of emphasizing the quantitative details is unique for aSubject conventionally discussed from a sociologiQdl perspective. In/fact, for somereaders the Section on fafotor analysis (aArpjflJiwariat^statistical method) may seem»;• y abstrySe, and detail/d perhaps to un: necessary depths. Nevertheless this sectionh* crucial, for withquT. it, fhe abuses of intel' thence testing cannbf be fully understood.:<?ould>elafes rrtany fascinating historicaldetails, most accompanied by quotationsand sortve4 with iflustcatians from originalsources. Indeed, of the ideas appearso blatantiyfraxTi^ theoriginal quotations not provided, it would be/ herd to believb that such respected scienv- fists were ever responsible for them (e g. ".. .blacks are 'indolent, playful, sensuous,Imitative, subservient, good natured, versatile, unsteady in their purpose. . .' " L. AgasSiz, 1863; JD. 48). IMy only objection (and it -is a minor one atthat) concerns whether the final section onhuman /ociobiology belongs in this book.Gould obviously included it; because sociobiologyfis the most recent attempt to find abiological basis tofiuman behavior. However, this topic is very complex and controversial, and his discussion includes only hisopinions while the rest of the book concernshis reevaluation of misinterpreted facts.Furthermore, one of the central themes ofthe book is how certain past researchersmisused scientific methods for the sole purpose of ranking people; this does not seem tobe the intention df the humarV sociobiolo¬gist.THE FLAMINGO APARTMENTS5500 South Shore DriveSTUDIOS & ONE-BEDROOMS• Unfurnished and furnished• U. of C. Bus Stop• Free Pool Membership• Carpeting and Drapes Included• Secure Building• University Subsidy for Students & Staff• Delicatessen • Beauty Shop• Barber Shop • T.J.’s Restaurant• Dentist • Valet ShopFREE PARKINGMR. MORRIS 752-3800 SUNDAYJULY 4thSPECIALS!iATADD V*UuRI5500 S.rs: Mon.-Sai. 7om to 8:Son. 7:30 om to 5 pmTWO OTHiR LOCATION!U $£*vt YOU*1603 B. 55th 5750$. BffMon.-Sot U. ofC Booksom to 6 30pm hours: Mon, ■7 am to 4::FUII Service ^Offset Print'"**s • F>VetS * ue\s • ResumespostefS # BooK^eiSSwV,0n_ZED TVPESETTING-IcoHO.^. ....“SiW...dDFR C0U»' .4-FRIDAY, JULY 2, 1982-THE GREY CITY JOURNALViewpointsAbu Nidal, Fatah, and IsraelBy John EganIn the immediate aftermath of the Israeli invasion of Le¬banon, amidst shifted goals and frantic pleas, when therhetoric and death fade from the memory of those not in¬volved, history requires that the approximate cause of theinvasion will have to be determined. This determinationwill have to focus on the Palestine Resistance Movement(PRM), of which the Palestine Liberation Organization(PLO) is a major part. “Terrorists” has been the favoriteword used to describe those who militarily or politically op¬pose Zionism; however, the use of such a monolithic termobscures important distinctions and complicates the under¬standing, and the possible resolution, of the conflict be¬tween Palestinian nationalism and Jewish nationalism.The PLO was formed in 1964 but became active militarilyonly after the defeat of the Arab armies in the 1967 war.There are presently eight factions in the PLO — of whichonly two generally receive any news coverage at all — andthese factions each represent slightly different viewpointsover precisely what the PLO is battling, what tactics itshould use, and similarly basic questions of purpose. I usethe more general term “Palestine Resistance Movement”above to indicate that there are political and militarygroups which operate outside the formal framework of thePLO; these groups are generally more militant than thegroups inside the PLO, and constitute what is called the“Rejection Front.” This front, led by the Greek OrthodoxChristian George Habash, objects to any peace plan or ne¬gotiation which takes the existence of the state of Israel as agiven precondition.It was one such rejectionist group which shot the Israeliambassador to Britain, Shlomo Argov, on June 3. Thisgroup is called the Abu Nidal group, and to date there hasbeen no exploration of the true responsibility for this act byeither the British or the American nwspapers. Perhaps thisis because the world’s attention is now fixed on the events inLebanon and the issue of precisely who shot the ambassa¬dor is relatively unimportant compared to what has hap¬pened after the shooting.Sabri al-Banna (Abu Nidal) had been the PLO represen¬tative in Baghdad and a member of Fatah, the fedayeen(self-sacrificer) group led by Yaisr Arafat. In the early1970s he became critical of the leadership of the PLO andhad his membership suspended. He remained in Iraq,shielded by the government there, and attracted followerswho were similarly opposed to Fatah. It is possible that hethen became involved with the Iraqi-sponsored Arab Liber¬ation Front (ALF), another militant fedayeen organization.Ahmad Abdel Ghaffur, another ex-Fatah member criticalof the reduced militancy of the PLO, joined Abu Nidal in1972; Ghaffur had organized several bloody raids in Europein the early 1970s and was shot in 1974 in Beirut. There hasalways been a strong mutual antipathy between the AbuNidal group and the rejectionists on the one hand and Fatahand other “mainstream” PLO groups on the other. Inter¬group rivalry, in a more general sense, has been a part ofthe history of the PRM and merits a brief explanation.The resistance, as it is called, unites many differentgroups: there are strictly nationalistic groups, that is, thosewho wish to liberate only Palestine. Historical Palestinetoday is Israel, the West Bank and the Gaza Strip. Thesegroups do not concern themselves with social or economicstratification throughout the rest of the Arab world — theirconcern is only for Palestine. Fatah is this type of group.On the other hand there are groups which concern them¬selves with the social and economic stratification of theArab world, and see the Palestine Resistence as a goodplace to start redressing the wrongs of imperialism, rac¬ism, monarchism and a host of other historical wrongs.These groups ultimately wish to unite the Arab world, pre¬sently scattered and artificially divided by national bound¬aries which were imposed by the Western powers, notablyBritain and France. Some of these groups have combined toform the rejectionist front. They are generally doctrinaireMarxists or Maoists and advocate unrelenting attacks onthose who wish to compromise. Some of these groups arethe Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP),the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine-GeneralCommand (PFLP-GC) and the Arab Liberation Front(ALF). Nearly every time there is an internal dispute with¬in the PLO another rejectionist group emerges and de¬clares its emnity to the PLO.The last time there was a significant rejectionist-PLOflare-up was after the PLO declared that it would accept theliberation of any part of Palestine as an interim steptowards the total liberation of Palestine. This decision,called the “ministate” solution, was reached in June 1974.The PLO, then, would accept the liberation of either theWest Bank or the Gaza Strip, set up a provisional govern¬ment there and continue the struggle against Israel. Therejectionists violently disagreed with the PLO’s decisionand a virtual civil war was fought in Lebanon throughoutthe rest of 1974. The rejectionists’ position hardened afterthe November 1974 address of Yasir Arafat to the UnitedNations. Indeed, many rejectionists felt that Arafat had“sold out” the resistance. However, it was part of Arafat's larger plan to gain international recognition and support, atleast verbally, for the PLO’s struggle against Zionism.Whatever one thinks about Arafat’s address, the U.N.’slater equation of Zionism with racism, or the PRM in gener¬al, it is important to understand the internal politics of thePRM in order to appreciate the distinction between the“moderates,” like Arafat, and the rejectionists, like Ha¬bash. This appreciation will then enable one to view the at¬tempted assassination of Ambassador Argov in context.After police apprehended Argov’s attackers, the namesof several PLO members were found on a “hit list” in thepossession of an accomplice, indicating to anyone whowould look that the attempted assassination was not a PLO-sanctioned move. Why should this matter, one may ask,when the end result — violence against Israelis — is still thesame? Because this was in all probability a move whichwas calculated to provoke the Israeli response which did infact follow, namely the bombing of some Palestinian refu¬gee camps in Lebanon. The PLO then had its options closeddown; it would be impossible for it to tolerate the Israelireprisal under normal conditions, much less as a retaliationfor an act which the PLO did not commit. As a PLO re¬sponse, then, hundreds of rockets were sent into NorthernIsrael, into an area called the Galilee panhandle. And sobegan “Operation Peace for Galilee,” the Israeli operationdesigned to move the PLO guerrillas to a point at least 25miles north of the northernmost part of Israel so that theirartillery, which had an effective range of 17 miles, wouldnot threaten Israeli citizens.Israeli F-16However, as the three-pronged attack scored a vast andrapid initial success the Syrians were drawn into the con¬flict: although it appears to be the case that neither sidereally wanted to engage the other, it was impossible forthem to avoid skirmishing. These skirmishes increased andthe Syrian air force suffered heavy losses while anti-air¬craft missile batteries which Syria had installed in theBekka Valley were knocked out by the Israeli air force.Safe from a full Syrian attack, Israel could then concen¬trate on closing in on the PLO. In the process, widespreadbombing and artillery shelling of civilian areas by theIsraelis focused international attention of the scale of theinvasion. What was originally seen as an unfortunate butprobably justifiable action in self defense had turned intoan unnecessarily wide and vindictive preemptive strikeagainst the Palestinians and the Lebanese living in south¬ern and western Lebanon. This widening of hostilities haskilled and injured thousands of persons, disrupted the eco¬nomic infrastructure of southern Lebanon and culminatedin Beirut being held hostage by the Israeli forces.There seems to be other reasons for Israel to extend thescope of its operation at that particular time than the desireto cripple, perhaps permanently, the PLO. Members of theLebanese Parliament must elect a new president within thenext seven weeks, and the candidates, under the existingLebanese political system, can only be Maronite Chris¬tians. One Maronite political party is the Kata’ib, whosemilitary wing, the Phalanges, are bitterly opposed to thefedayeen’s continued presence in Lebanon. The leader ofthe Phalanges, Beshir Gemayel, is receiving widely ack¬nowledged Israeli support. While Mr. Gemayel as Presi¬dent of Lebanon is unlikely under the present circum¬stances, Israel would very much welcome someone whoapproximates Mi. Gemavel’s hatred of the fedayeen andhis resolve in opposing them. Mr. Gemayel has also recent¬ly voiced his belief that the 600,000 Palestinian refugees inLebanon should be told to leave as soon as possible, thuseliminating Lebanon’s problems with the fedayeen at theroot, as this would deny them an audience and a pool ofable-bodied volunteers.It seems clear that the Israeli tanks which are, at thiswriting, poised outside the Presidential palace in Babda.five miles southwest of Beirut, were put there for a distinct¬ly political purpose; they are impressing upon the Leban¬ese Israel’s desire for a “get tough” policy towards the fe¬dayeen. Most of the Palestinian refugee camps are directlysouth of Beirut, so it is unlikely that the Israeli tanks, whileshelling those camps, are principally intended to intimidatethe Palestinians. However, there has been a breakdown ofthe Council of National Salvation with the resignation ofmembers who either favor or are sympathetic to the Pales¬tinians and the PLO: this would seem to end the strictlyinternal attempts by Lebanese politicians to solve thecrisis. The resignation of Secretary of State Haig may sig¬nal that the US is finally going to restrain Israel and de¬ mand that it withdraw from the outskirts of Beirut.What are the implications for the PRM and Israel oncethe military operations cease and the strictly political onesbegin? There have been assertions that Operation Peacefor Galilee will result in the crippling, perhaps killing, ofthe PLO and with it the terrorist threats against Israel.However, the historical record is more complex and points,albeit imperfectly, towards renewed hostility againstIsrael, her friends and the traitors to the PRM. The prece¬dent on which this prediction rests is the aftermath of theJordanian civil war of 1970-71, when King Hussein tried toannihilate the PLO. In a series of battles in September 1970and July 1971, Hussein managed to expel the PLO from Jor¬dan at the cost of approximately 10,000 dead and injuredfedayeen and an unknown amount of Jordanian casualties.Immediately thereafter the Black September Organizationwas formed as an alternate means of waging war againstIsrael and her collaborators; the organization took its namefrom the month in which Hussein began his blood operationagainst the PLO. In an eighteen month period, from Autum1971 to Spring 1973, two types of targets were chosen byBlack September; representatives, both official and unoffi¬cial, of Israel, of her friends and also of traitors to the PRM.were selected and taken action against.The Jordanian prime minister was assassinated, and anattempt on the former Jordanian prime minister’s life wasmade by Black September. Prominent Jordanians were ex¬ecuted, as were alleged Israeli intelligence agencies. Indus¬trial concerns which traded with Israel were sabotaged.Israeli property was attacked and, most dramatically, ele¬ven members of the Israeli Olympic team were taken hos¬tage and later killed in the Summer Olympics in Munich.Less spectacular was the capture of the Saudi Arabian em¬bassy in Khartoum, Sudan; when the Sudanese armedforces stormed the embassy the Black September comman¬does executed the American ambassador to Sudan and theAmerican and Belgian charges d'affaires. Most of BlackSeptember’s operations were carried out in Europe, and itis important to remember that the commandoes who per¬formed the operations were not afraid to die for theircause; also, the organizational structure of Black Sep¬tember was a closely guarded secret. Gradually the Israeliintelligence agencies pinpointed who they felt were theleaders of Black September and executed them in a Beiruthotel in April 1973.It seems that this precedent will be followed after Opera¬tion Peace for Galilee; however, the PRM's response maybe a wider one, with more ex-PLO men joining the new or¬ganization in the belief that the only way to combat Zionistviolence is by Palestinian revolutionary violence. A moreimportant turn may also be in the cards: while Black Sep¬tember was only a splinter movement, involving between100-500 militants, it was nonetheless able to inflict a con¬siderable loss of life and property on its victims. Thosecommandoes surviving the invasion of Lebanon will notonly be more militant but they will, in all probability, havethe increased support of the Palestinian refugee population— those who were victimized by the cluster bombs, the hu¬miliation of arrest and interrogation and the anguish ofhaving what little they still possessed destroyed by theIsraeli Defense Force.The estimation of those made homeless by the invasion isnot yet, and may never be, known for certain; the propertydamage to both Palestinians and Lebanese will also takemonths to compute and will be open to acrimonious debateon all sides. These figures, to be sure, cannot even comeclose to approximating the human loss which these two pop¬ulations now feel. Sloganeering about the resistance aside,it seems clear that what remains of the PRM will becomemore factionalized and militant, will play a deadly game ofone-upmanship on each other, and shall pose a new, moreelusive, threat in the future. This threat will almost certain¬ly not be directed solely against Israel this time; Americandiplomats may soon begin to appear in the cross-hairs offedayeen rifles.John Egan is a fourth year student in the CollegeHYDE PARKTHE VERSAILLESIDEAL FOR STUDENTS324-0200• Large studios• Walk-in Kitchen• Utilities included• Furn. or unfurn.• Campus bus at doorBASED ON AVAILABILITY5254 S. DorchesterThe Chicago Maroon —Friday, July 2, 1982—9The decision makers-oNew KODAK□ISC Cameras3 MODELS,STARTINGFROM$49.95Technology so advanced you pressthe button, the camera does the restfor great looking ptctures.l"TiJ AUKodakmodel camera1342 East 55th St. 493-6700mm HOUSE OF CHIN1607 E 55th St. • 752-3786Dining Room - Carry OutCANTONESE, MANDARIN, &, SZECHWANClosed MondaysDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist(53 Kimbark Plaza)1200 E. 53rd St.493-8372Intelligent people know thedifference between advertisedcheap glasses or contact lensesand competent professionalservice with quality material.Beware of bait advertising.Eye ExaminationsFashion Eye WearContact LensesCfiazlotte ^Vi&stzomczReal Estate Co. We are co-operating brokersMember National Association of Realtors, ChicagoReal Estate Boards. Illinois A ssociation of Realtors493-0666 • CALL ANYTIMEPARADE OF HISTORIC HYDE PARK AREAHOMES FOR SALE\ •mmmmm(Stm* ■«*1890 - 54th & Harper$190,000 1904 - 58th & WoodlawnPrice on request 1809 - 48th & Kenwood* ? ■1891 - 54th & BlackstoneS 119,800 New (1977) InsideOld Fashioned Outside58th & KenwoodAlso 58th & Blackstone - c. 1884 - $250,000Swanky or Sirople...dictates of the hea. t or pocketbook will lead youto our array of apartment selections.Near the Penthouse - While floor near 54th and Cornell is onegorgeous apartment. Eight rooms - city wide views. Si 32,000.Upstairs, Downstairs - This is a two story condo in a lakefrontbuilding near 50th and the lake. Beautiful monkeypod wood panellingin library. Eight rooms. $164,500.How about 3200 sq. ft.? bigger n a house, 9Vt rooms on theBoulevard near Del Prado. $100,000.OPPOSITE TYPES$28,000, - studio near campus$ 12,500. - four small rooms 78th and the Park (co-op)$29,500.- Hampton House jewel studio at 53rd South Shore$64,500. - 7 big rooms TO SETTLE ESTATE, low price reflectsdecorating allowance.$31,500. - includes a garage - one bedroom, (co-op) near 59th Harper.SACRIFICE - 8% financing - $55,000. - Lake Front and 50th.2 Bedroom, woodburning fireplace - ACT NOWl!WE LL FIND IT FOR YOU IF IT ISN'T LISTED. CALL FOR CONSULTATION Classified AdsSPACELooking for housing? Check InternationalHouse, for grad students and for scholarsvisiting Chicago. 753 2270, 2280Large Kenwood home available for rent nextacademic year; with or without housekeeper,cleaning lady and large dog. Call Mrs Refetoffat 373 0989 evenings after 7.Studio Apartments Hild Realty Group 955 1200ROOMMATE: Working woman or gradstudent/non-smoker/no pets. Sunny apt twoblks from campus. $140 mo Summer, fall option. 684 5498 late eve or weekends. Availableimmediately.One bedrm in beautiful condo bldg. Exc.security, pool and health club available. July1st occup. Donna, 440 4360 or Gary, 975 9032eve.Studio for July 1 - $220 near U of C. Neat andresponsible grad stud pref. Serious inquiry only please 238-7941.Share pleasant 2 br apt, 53rd and KenwoodS150/mo 4- util. Call Kathy, 752 8315, eves.Apt for sublet one bedrm fully furnished Cornell and 55th. Available mid July to end orSept. Rent $320. Tel 643 3991 after 5p.m.2 Bdrms for Sublet Now Thru Sept in HUGEFURN APT MOD KIT 54 & Cornell 288 0948DebbieFurn apts. Clean nonsmokers 363 3458/955 7083Efficiency & studio apartments available for82 82 school year $240 and $255/month, allutilities included Marian Realty, 5326 S. Cornell, 684 5400.1, 2 & 3 bdrm apis for rent. Lv mess. 643 4562Vegetarian roommate wanted Keith 643 4562.SPACE WANTEDQuiet non smoker returning for 3rd yr wantsrm in apt near campus beg. Sept—no pets!Write Dan Breslau, 64 Hodge Road, Arlington,Mass. 02174 or call collect 617 641 0951 eves. Wanted, somewhere for one person to live fromJuly 15 to Oct. 1. Prefer close by, 241 7461Apt Swap: My 1-Bedroom Condo in Cambridge, Ma. near Harvard & MIT for apt inHyde Park. Call Walter Car I ip 617 491 2224/617275 830029 year old physician (resident) looking forhousing situation on or near campus Must benice house or apt. Willing to share with otherresponsible people if situation is right. Formore info call Martin at 345 7854 no temporaryhousing, no dives please. Refs avail.PEOPLE WANTEDHousekeeper help 8 hrs/week $4/hr call Karenbetween 6 and 7 pm 288-6294Treatise typist call Jeff between 6 7 288 6294TRADE RM & BD for babysitting (girls 5 & 9)& kitchen chores. 2 rms & pvt bath 51st andDorchester. Warm, respohstble person, formin. 1 year 268 1356.LEFT 8. RIGHT HANDERS How Does YourBRAIN Compare To The Rest of the Population. Call Us & Find Out & Get Paid $3 per hour962 8846HELP NEEDED. 1 office work, typing, etc onurban politics. 2 sports car repair Flexiblehours 5 20/wk. Leave detailed message aboutyourself or resume. 322SS, 962 86865 7 & 10 yr old right handed boys wanted torstudy on Depth Perception and Brain Development. Pay is $3 per hour. Call 962 8846Paid subject needed for experiments onmemory, perception and language processingResearch conducted by students and faculty inthe Committee on Cognition and Communication. Department of Behavioral SciencesPhone 962 8859.5 7 & 10 yr olds wanted for a study on DepthPerception and Brain Development Pay is $3per hour. Call 962-8846.Student wanted to babysit in my home near55th and Blackstone. Some weekend eveningsthis summer. 324 9533.THREEMEALSA DAYEVERYDAY!at theair conditionedINTERNATIONAL HOUSEDINING ROOM1414 E. 59th StreetOpen Everyday Until August 29(Closed Monday, July 5 Only)- HOURS -Monday - Friday — Breakfast 7:00 a.m. - 9:30 p.m.Lunch 11:30a.m. - 1:30 p.m.Dinner 5:00 p.m. - 7:00 p.m.Saturday & Sunday — Continenlal Breakfast 8:00 a.m.- 10:00a.mBrunch 11:00 a.m. - 1:30 p.m.Dinner 5:00 p.m. - 7:00 p.m.- OPEN TO THE PUBLIC -SPECIAL ARRANGEMENTS CAN BE MADE FOR GROUPS 20 200.Call 753-2282 for Details10—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, July 2, 1982FOR SALEPASSPORT PHOTOS WHILE YOU WAIT!Model Camera 1342 E 55th 493 6700VW 75 Scirocco gd. condo must sell S2000 orbest otter.238 7486Bicylces tor sale & rent. Brad Lyttle 324 065473 HONDA CIVIC, $500 or best offer. Needswork but worth it! Call 493 2828 or 955 6787Loft bed w/built in desk, shelves. 241 5751, eveSERVICESWeddings and other events photographed CallLeslie at 536 1626.Tennis lessons 8. theory. Brad Lyttle 324 0654.JUDITH TYPES • and has a memory Phone955 4417.TYPING. Term papers, theses, etc. IBM Correefing Selectric. All projects welcome. 7911674.Tutoring: reading and writing skills All levelsTeacher, English Lang, specialist. Phone: 7310880.James Bone, editor-typist, 363 0522.German speaking psychoanalyst, counselingcall (evenings) 869-3626, for appointments.MATH TUTOR Calculus, Trig, Algebra,Geometry. Call Joe, day 458 2000 x3538, nites271 2934.Professional editing and proof reading forscholarly, technical or other papers Ph: 7310800LOST & FOUNDLOST: BLUE JACKET. 6/2 Judd Hall643 4619,2 7566. Classified AdsPETE'S MOVINGStudent with Pickup Truck can move your stuffFAST and CHEAP No job too small! Call Peteat: 955 5180.SUMMERCOFFEEThe best coffee on campus (cheap too!) is atthe Social Science building 2nd floor cotfeeshop, all summer long— including interims! Also high quality, low cost tea, juiceand munchies.ATTENTION STUDENTSAND MEMBERS OFTHE FACULTYDiane's Secretarial Service will provide youwith prompt convenient typing service for:Term papers. Resumes, Thesis, etc. Willdeliver to University campus upon request.PLEASE CALL 493 0271 Evenings after 6:00pm Monday thru Friday All day weekends.MOVERS HELPERSNice students with big truck can help you moveANYTHING, ANYWHERE, ANYTIME RAINOR SHINE call John David Joe Jim 752 7081.We have tarp & equip.STUDENT GOVERNMENTAll student assembly seats are vacant: anyoneinterested in filling a seat must attend the Student Government meeting Wed July 7 at 6:30pm, in the Sun Parlor, 3rd floor Ida Noyes Hall.STUDENT SPOUSESYOU ARE NOT A LON E . Come to our monthlyinformal meeting on Thurs., July 8, 7-9 pm inIda Noyes Hall Upper East Lounge Pleasecome—we are going to discuss ideas for nextyear. For more info, Call 753 3591HYDE PARK’S CLASSIC ART DECOAPARTMENT RESIDENCEA SHORT WALK FROM THE LAKE& HARPER CT. • Completely New On& THE I.C. ,he lnside& UNIVERSITY * WaM to Wa" CarpetingOF CHICAGO& RESTAURANTS . Master T V. AntennaC'V ask about risk , • Central Air— J no security deposit Conditioning^ 5200 BLACKSTONE1 block west of Harper SquareMon.-Fri. 9 to 6, Sat.-Sun. 12 to 5, 684-86661 Bedrooms from $4051 bedroom with den 4 2 bedroom apartments also availableASK ABOUT RISK .— | NO SECURITY DEPOSITTHE CLOSER CUT —AND SAVESUMMER ’82 AT HILLELSHABBAT DINNERS - ADAT SHALOM COOPERATIVESign Up and Pay in Advance - $3.00ILU><QZ<IDOt FRIDAYS-7:30 PMJuly 2, 9,16.23, 30August 6,13,20,27SHABBAT SERVICES - SATURDAYS - YAVNEH (Orthodox) 9 15 A MUPSTAIRS MINYAN (Conservative) 9:30 A MWOMEN'S MINYAN- JULY 24, 9:15 A MSOFTBALL — EVERY SUNDAY AT 10:00 A.M. ON THE MIDWAY ATWOODLAWN AVENUE. WEEKDAYS - Hillel Team Playsin U.C. Intermural Coed Softball LeagueSPECIAL EVENTS*SATURDAY - GATHER AT HILLEL AT 4:45 P.M. FOR A LIGHT MEALJULY 3 (Seudah Shlishit) and then walk to Grant Park for theFourth of July Concert and FireworksTHURSDAY - HILLEL GOES TO THE WHITE SOX BALL GAME.JULY 8 Gather at Hillel at 6:30 P M - Transportation ProvidedSATURDAY — MOVIE NIGHT AT HILLEL • 9:30 P.M.JULY 17 Special Videotape FeatureSATURDAY - HILLEL GOES BOWLINGJULY 31 Gather at Hillel at 9:30 P M - Transportation Provided.SUNDAY - HILLEL GOES TO THE INDIANA DUNES-PICNICAUGUST 8 Gather at Hillel at 11 00 A M - Transportation ProvidedSUNDAY — GAMES NIGHT AT HILLEL-7:30 P.M.AUGUST 15 Bridge and Other Card Games, Board Games* ALL SPECIAL EVENTS WILL HAVE MODEST CHARGES TO COVER COSTS.SPECIAL SERVICESTISHA B’AV - WORSHIP AND READING OF EICHA (Book of Lamentations) XocH>Zoo>><mWEDNESDAYJULY 28THURSDAYJULY 29 - UPSTAIRS MINYAN (Conservative)YAVNEH (Orthodox)— YAVNEH - 7:00 A M and 7:00 P M 8:15 P.M8:15PMFOR FURTHER INFORMATION CALL — 752-1127HILLEL HOUSE - 5715 WOODLA WN A VENUE°\“CUT - AND - SAVEBRANDEQUIPMENT SPRING SPECIALONUSED OFFICEFURNITUREBuy any used desk over $65and purchase a swivel arm desk chairfor $20Swivel chair without arms $15Misc. guest and occasionalchairs $7.508560 S. ChicagoRE 4-2111Open Daily 8:30-5Sat. 9:00-2a** COUPON COUPON COUPONFREE OIL CHANGE!WITH PURCHASE OF OIL FILTERPresent Coupon When Order Is WrittenOne per customer, one per transaction expires Aug 31 1982COUPON COUPON COUPONSERVICE COUPONS A VE UP TO $25YOU SPEND THIS:HERE'S $20.00 - $49.99HOW $50.00 - $99.99IT $100.00 - $199.99WORKS: $200.00 - or More! YOU SAVE THIS:SAVE $5.00SAVE $10.00SAVE $15.00SAVE $25.00Present this coupon to service coshier when order is written One to a customer one to a tionsoction Valid only at our Service Dept to apply on any service or repair AAay not be used to apply onprevious charges or specials listed here in Expires August 31 1982 SALESSERVICELEASING684-0400The Chicago Maroon—Friday, July 2, 1982—11r"Contacts for Sale!What Is A Bargain?The 4 questions most frequently asked about contact lenses are:1 How Much Are Your Lenses92. How Much Are Your Lenses93. How Much Are Your Lenses?4 How Much Are Your Lenses9What is really more important, the lowest price, or the best fit¬ting lenses? We think the 4 questions should be:1. Is the doctor really a contact lense specialist?(or is he an eyeglass salesman?)2. Can I expect professional service and care9(or will I be handled by inept, non-professional salespeople?)3. Are the quality of lenses the best available9(or are they off-brands and seconds?)4. The question is, not how much are your lenses, butwill I receive the best care, the best quality and thebest price.We at CONTACT LENSES UNLIMITED meet all the above crite¬ria of CARE, SERVICE, QUALITY AND PRICE.TRY TO BEAT THESE VALUES! \THE • FALCON • INN1603-05 East 53rd St. • Just East of the 1C tracks10:30 AM -2 AM•5 Draft Beers(Old Style, Miller Light,Stroh’s, AugsburgerDark& Michelob)•3 Draft Wines•On “B” busroute- 53rd &Cornell •A Full Rangeof MixedDrinks•Kitchen open(Fine hamburgers &assorted sandwiches•Juke Box &Video Games(Including Pac-Man, Ms.Pac-Man, Donkey Kong& Centipede)The Falcon Inn is proud to restore toHyde Park the magnificent antique barand fixtures from The Eagle. 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