Sports Grey City JournalSummer Softball— page 13 The FourthGCJ coverThe Chicago MaroonVolume 93, No. 2 The University of Chicago Copyright 1982 The Chicago Maroon Friday, July 9, 1982Beta Theta Pi fraternitymay return to UC campusPHOTO BY MARC KRAMcRTIED PIPERS. Hear the wind blow at the Promontory Point thisweekend. “Sound Shade in C Major,” a sound sculpture de¬signed by California artist, Douglas Hollins, was erected thisweek as part of the New Music America 82 festival. Sponsoredby the Renaissance Society at the University of Chicago, thetent-shaped sculpture consists of white polypropylene stripsdown taut across aeolian organ pipes. When the wind blows, thestrips ripple, giving off a low whistling sound. The artwork will beat the point, 55th and the lake, until Sunday.By Mark BauerBeta Theta Pi fraternity, whosechapter at the University of Chica¬go closed its doors in 1965. may bereactivated as early as next year,according toc Jonathan Brant, aspokesman for the fraternity’s na¬tional organization.During the past academic year,second year student John Gregg,president of the InterfraternityCouncil, sent letters to many na¬tional fraternity headquarters ask¬ing them to consider forming achapter at the University. BetaTheta Pi, whose national head¬quarters are located in Oxford.Ohio, responded positively and is"cautiously exploring” the possi¬bility of reactivating its chapterhere.Brant said that one of his frater¬nity's highest priorities is re-estab¬lishing deactivated chapters. MostChicago area alumni of the old UCchapter were contacted and askedif they would sponsor a new UCchapter. Ten alumni agreed tohelp.Formal discussion of reactivat¬ing chapters will be held at the fra¬ternity’s annual convention in Au-gust. Granting "col¬ony" status to a Beta Theta Pigroup at the University is on theconvention agenda. Col¬ony status is granted for a short time period after which a perma¬nent chapter may be established ifthere is sufficient interest.- As part of the recruitmentprocess, the area alumni would tryto contact College transfer stu¬dents and graduate students whowere Beta Theta Pi members attheir previous schools to ask for as¬sistance. Together the fraternityalumni would sponsor parties,open houses and similar activitiesto attract new members.According to Brant, only one"sparkplug member” is needed tomake a new chapter successfulBrant said, however, that theBeta Theta Pi organization, whichhas about 100 chapters, expands"conservatively.” No more thanfour colonies are usually allowedat one time but five currently exist.Three colonies are expected to be¬come full chapters at this year’sconvention, making room for aUniversity of Chicago group.The national headquarters hasbeen quite pleased thus far withthe encouragement of the Interfra-ternitv Council. Brant said. "TheUniversity of Chicago is one of thefinest institutions in the countryand we would be very happy to re¬activate our chapter there,” hesaid, "however, we would have toreceive some encouragement fromthe University administration.” Paul Ausick, assistant dean ofstudents in the University, told theMaroon that "we don’t advertisebut more fraternities are welcomehere.”"The Interfraternity Council hasthe final word in approving newfraternities,” Ausick said. "Theyjust must understand that the Uni¬versity cannot provide any finan¬cial assistance.”Beta Theta Pi was chartered atthe University in 1897. Its chapterhouse was located at 5737 SouthUniversity Avenue, the presenthome of the Computation Centerbusiness office, until 1965.Since the 1930s. the number ofactive fraternities at the Universi¬ty dropped from 37 to five. The cur¬rent fraternities are Psi Upsilon.Phi Gamma Delta. Phi DeltaTheta. Delta Upsilon. and AlphaDelta Phi.When the Beta Theta Pi sold itshouse to the University in 1965. themoney was put into a bank W hile1965 property values in Hyde Parkwere certainly not up to currentmarket levels, that money and theaccumulated interest would behelpful towards the purchase of anew house. Brant said. This Grandfather clock is one of the few reminders of the BetaTheta Pi fraternity that existed at the University. The clock, res¬tored to working order, stands in a room in the Computation Centerbusiness office which once housed the fraternity. A plaque at thebottom of the clock reads; “Lambda Rho of Beta Theta Pi, in Memo¬ry of Harold M. Skinner, October 20th 1921.”Financial aid update:Loan cuts may not materializeBy Kahane CornCongress recently passed a bud¬get resolution for the 1983 fiscalyear, resulting in a freeze at thisyear’s level for most education andscience programs, except for theGuaranteed Student Loan programand Pell Grants.The two-week old resolution "as¬sumed” that the Guaranteed Stu¬dent Loan program would be cutby about $59 million. This wouldnot only lower the maximum loanrate but also decrease the numberof students eligible for the loan. Innot requiring the CongressionalEducation committees to findways to trim the budget, however,the resolution’s "assumed” reduc¬tion will probably never material¬ize. despite estimated cost in¬creases of the Guaranteed StudentLoan program from $3.1 billion thisyear to $3.9 billion in fiscal 1983According to Associate Directorof College Aid. Eleanor Borus.Congress passed a resolution in Oc¬tober of 1981 stating that only thosefamilies of students whose adjust¬ed gross incomes were under$30,000. are eligible for the Guaran¬teed Student Loan, which allows amaximum of $2500 loan per year toeach student. Since no reductionsare probable, these requirementswill remain the same for fiscal1983.Another exception in the re¬solved freeze involves Pell Grantfunding. Beginning Oct 1. 1982. these "basis of need” appointedgrants are estimated to cost thegovernment about $2.38 billion, anactual increase of about $100 bil¬lion over last year’s fiscal costs.According to The Chronicle ofHigher Education (June 30. 1982).spokesmen for colleges and univer¬sities termed the impact of thebudget resolution "mixed ’ forhigher education Even if the $59million were cut from the Guaran¬teed Student Loan program, thiswould still be significantly lessthan originally proposed by manylawmakers.Thus while these cuts will bemuch lower than expected, if non¬existent. in fiscal 1983, spending onscience and biomedical researchprograms will not reach above theapproximate levels requested byPresident Reagan in his Februarybudget.Nationally, the resolution willallow $3.9 billion to be spent for bio¬medical research This is an in¬crease of about $94 million fromthis past year, but less than the$100 million rise requested by Rea¬gan.While most educational programfunding is frozen by the budget res¬olution. the University will never¬theless be financially affected bythe congressional decision In fact.Borus estimates a loss of $250,000more than the fiscal 1982 loss be¬tween Pell Grants and the Supple¬mental Educational Opportunity Grants alone."There has been a drop in appro¬priations to the University by theFederal Government, thereforethere are simply less funds to use. ”said Borus.The preliminary House ?esolution w hich suggested saving the $59million on the Guaranteed StudentLoan program in fiscal 1983. alsocalled for saving $574 million in1984 and $804 million in 1985 Thefate of these estimated reductionsdepend largely on the outcome ofthe fiscal 1983 freeze on Guaran¬teed Student Loans, however revi¬sions and deeper cutback are ex¬pected in projected spending forfiscal 1984 and 1985Student rapedNo suspects have been appre¬hended yet in the rape of a Univer¬sity undergraduate. The studentwas raped and robbed at gunpointtwo weeks ago in her 56th Streetapartment near the Regenstein li¬braryAccording to a Security spokes¬man. the student, thinking the as¬sailant to be a new resident, admit¬ted him into her apartment whenhe asked to use her phone. Therape occurred early afteroon onFriday. June 25. The woman wastreated and released from BillingsHospital Police are still investi¬gating the case.Put the pastin yourfuture!Thoroughly refloated apartments offer the convenienceof contemporary living space combined with all die best elementsof vintage design. Park and lakefront provide a natural setting foraffordable elegance with dramatic views.— All new kitchens and appliances—Wall-to-wall carpeting—Air conditioning— Optional indcxir or outdoorparking — Community room— Resident manager— Round-the-clock security'— Laundry facilities oneach fl(x>rStudios, One, Twro and Three Bedroom apartments.One bednx)m from $445 — Two Bedroom from $610Rent includes heat, cooking gas, and master TV antenna.C (Vindrn ime House1642 East 56th Street^In Hyde Park, across the park fromThe Museum of Science and Industry'Equal Housing Opportunity- Managed by Metroplex, Inc.—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 mushroomsDijon mustard vinaieretteSteak Salad, sauteed Sirloin on Romaine LettuceSpecial sauce of basil & mustardSANDWICHESVegetarian Sandwich served on whole wheat toast, with avocadoes,tomatoes, alfalfa sprouts, swiss cheese, lettuce, scallions & sour creamCharbroiled Hamburger on homemade bread with sauteed onions,cheese on requestENTREESPan Fried Three Egg Omelette with cheese & mushroomsCrabmeat Casserole with riceSeafood Pasta Primavera with Scallopsand fresh vegetables in a light cream sauce 1,50 / 2.504.253.954.253.755.755.75ALSO AVAILABLE Cafeteria Servicefrom 7:30 am to 3 pm — — vContacts for Sale!What Is A Bargain?The 4 questions most frequently asked about contact lenses are:1. 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Fostiak and Dr John S. SchusterWe can replace your lost or broken lenses in 4 hours or less!IF YOU WANT THE BEST COME TO THE BEST!CONTACT LENSES UNLIMITED1724 Sherman Ave., Evanston, IL 60201 2566 N. Clark St., Chicago, 1L 60614(above County Seat)864-4441 880-5400/2—The Chicago Maroon —Friday, July 9. 1982News in brief LetterSG appointmentsare postponedLast Wednesday’s scheduled meeting ofStudent Government (SG), at which new as¬sembly, finance committee, and Student-Faculty-Administration (SFA) court repre¬sentatives were to be appointed, waspostponed. Article VIII, section 3 of the Stu¬dent Association Constitution states that atleast one weeks notice be given for appoint¬ments to Assembly positions. Consequently,SG will meet at 6:30 p.m. Friday, July 16 inthe SG office to consider appointments.Summer SG Meetings have been sche¬duled by the Executive Council for July 21.Aug. 4. and Aug. 18 at 6:30 p.m. in the IdaNoyes Sun Parlor.Math seminarThe 14th annual summer seminar in ap¬plied mathematics held at the University ofChicago continues through next week. Thetopic of this year's symposium is Applica¬tions of Group Theory in Physics and Mathe¬matical Physics.Seminars and lectures will be held nextweek until Friday in Eckhart Hall. They willconcentrate on supersymmetry, strings andKac-Moody algebras, and representationsof noncompact groups and quantum theoryNotable mathematicians from throughoutthe world will be attending.The symposium is jointly sponsored bythe American Mathematical Society and theSociety for Industrial and Applied Mathe¬ matics. The event is chaired by ProfessorPaul Sally of the University’s department ofmathematics.Hanna H. GrayGray first womanARCO directorUniversity of Chicago President Hanna H.Gray can chalk up another item on her longlist of credentials. She was recently namedto the board of directors of Atlantic Rich¬field Company. She is the first woman to benamed so.With this appointment, Gray now sits onthe board of directors of three major cor¬porations. The other two are Morgan Guar¬anty Trust Company and J.P. Morgan andCompany, and Cummins Engine Company.marian realty,inc.IBREALTORStudio and 1 BedroomApartments Available— Students Welcome —On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-5400 Dr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist(53 Kimbark Plaza)1200 E.53rd St.493-8372Intelligent people know thedifference between advertisedcheap glasses or contact lenses 'and competent professionalservice with quality material.Beware of bait advertisingEye ExaminationsFashion Eye WearContact LensesOtts Full ServiCeet print»^15* ■ . Tir.kets. flyers • Brodies sposters • B0oktets • BesStationery p£SEttingcomputerize TYECONO-PB.NT CO >L . 37,..*,4S PULASKI AI - 371-303011634 S pulask' n°R°dR0P0FFT ropv CENTERCOURT C°P 2233 Deconstruct Israeli mythTo the editor:I was glad to read John Egan’s viewpointclearing up some common misconceptionsabout the PLO and the PRM Americansthemselves must deconstruct the myth ofIsrael's sanctified warfare, fostered to thisday by our own media under the tutelage ofAmerican Zionism.I lived in East Jerusalem for sevenmonths last year, on the Arab side of thecity. 1 also lived on a kibbutz and worked ona dig. I was there when Israel bombedBeirut, killing 300 in retaliation for the deathof three. I saw planes flying reconnaissancemissions to Lebanon every day and thankedGod 1 was on the right side of the border.The psychological terror of the waitinggame was alone bad enough, but now thismisery.Begin’s claim that “We do not want land"is false. The “invasion of Lebanon’’ is a fur¬ther consolidation of the invasion of Pales¬tine. A ‘smart’’ political move. A distrac¬tion from the real center of controversy.Fortunately it backfired. This time he wenttoo far.Think about it. Do we Americans reallywant our tax dollars going to finance moreland-grabs, more slaughter, more displace¬ment of refugees, when our ally will noteven make the barest effort at negotiations?would we countenance this behavior in anyother nation? What about Afghanistan*7 TheNative American population? Haven’t welearned anything from the Holocaust?The Israeli invasion of Lebanon is illegalaccording to our current agreements withIsrael. The US Arms Export Act, theForeign Assistance Act of 1961. and the 1952United States-lsrael Mutual Defense Agree¬ment all stipulate that US-supplied armsshall not be used by Israel except for defen¬sive purposes. Israel has clearly violatedthis trust. Furthermore, Israel refuses to recognizethe prisoner-of-war status of the thousandsof Palestinians and Lebanese rounded upand herded off to secret camps as “suspect¬ed guerrillas.” Israel will therefore refusethese POW’s their rights as outlined in theGeneva Convention Accords. Israel refusesto recognize international law. These POW’scurrently stand in danger of being tortured,illegally tried, incarcerated, summarily ex¬ecuted. or denied the right of repatriation.Withdrawal of all armed forces from Le¬banon is a blessng for the Lebanese people,who have been caught between the crossfirelong enough. Yet it is naive to hope that sucha step will bring peace to the region. The Pa¬lestinian “problem” will not go away. Notuntil the Palestinians have (part of) theirhomeland back ... or until the last Palestin¬ian has been annihilated. Every Israeli actof aggression makes more martyrs whoselives will be avenged by an increasingly rad¬icalized and militant Palestinian nation-in-exile.While Israel stands to lose nothing by “re¬cognizing” the PLO as the legitimate repre¬sentative of the Palestinians and beginningnegotiations with it, the opposite is not trueArafat’s recognition of Israel would meanautomatic forfeiture of all Palestinian refu¬gees’ rights either to return to theirhomes/iands or to receive adequate com¬pensation from the occupier state No exec¬utive leader has any business signing awaythese fundamental rights of his peopleI urge the members of the Universitycommunity to contact their legislators, de¬manding postponement of any further armsshipments to Israel until an investigation ismade into the use of US arms in this currentinvasion. There will be no peace in the Mid¬dle East without a recognition of Palestiniannational and human rights.Gail BolingFourth year student in the CollegeTHREEMEALSA DAYEVERYDAY!at theair conditionedINTERNATIONAL HOUSEDINING ROOM1414 E. 59th StreetOpen Everyday Until August 29(Closed Monday, July 5 Only)- HOURS -Monday - Friday — Breakfast 7:OOa.m. - 9:30 p.m.Lunch 11:30 a.m. - 1:30 p.m.Dinner 5:00 p.m. - 7:00 p.m.Saturday & Sunday — Continental Breakfast 8:00 a.m. - 10:00 a 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 DetailsThe Chicago Maroon —Friday. July 9, 1982—3,(8f ** 4i ■ Wm ■ ■.InsideMELlO , V-OtJtilt 7! W[ G/tyf VODGECtAE 6HUj.fi JJ£ wlttu. K/OfJbt g.iN'Cr,F vJfe Ccuufc mavg ScrhcOA/t Td&chJHhi£W> T>€ An) r* 6jTU’beN)T6"7 .,KH.6. ~P2~r^CjnADftWP ?*tt.KEITH HORVATH £’FI in/ cHAIUiEHCEf/cwi3°PHOTOS BY MARC KRAMER By Maurice WeaverOn a hot and breezy Wednesdaymorning, a cheerful group of young menand women walk to the 57th Street Beach.Wednesdays are reserved for swimming Itis the second day of the Blue Gargoyle'sseven week Summer Day Camp. Forty-fivechildren ranging from ages six to 12 areregistered in the program this year.Sandra Rick, a graduate SSA student, ismorning staff coordinator of recreationalactivities:"This program provides outdoorrecreation, tutoring in reading and writing,free lunch and arts and crafts to childrenin the community.” Sandra will supervisevarious sports including soccer,badminton, volleyball and softball."We ll play on the Midway. Stagg Field.Washington Park, whatever is availablethat morning.”Ten CETA volunteers underwent a weekof training to prepare for their jobs asyouth counselors in the Summer DayCamp "The training helped us to getready to work with the kids.” said MartinLuther King High School student ArnoldBibbs."We have 33 CETA volunteers workingat the Blue Gargoyle this summer.” saidAnn Kok. supervisor at the Gargoyle. TheComprehensive Educational Training Act(CETA) funding runs out in Septemberand this will significantly affect Blackyouth unemployment figures which arecurrently at 50.8 percent of the totalpopulation. "Committees will meet to discuss CETAand plan for the future. But CETA will notexist after September.” said Kok.There are five UC students volunteeringthis summer to help out in the camp. LoriHunsacker, a student in the College, has awork/studv job tutoring the campers in theafternoon. Reggie Brooks Robinson, agraduate student in the Political ScienceDept., is coordinating the tutoringprogram :"We have given the tutoring session astructure with a holistic approach Wew ant to take them as far as we can Wewill be working extensively on buildingvocabulary and mathematics up totrigonometry and algebra.” EveryMonday, the children will go to theBlackstone Library to check out a bookReggie's class will also perform aHispanic play. "We don't want to givethem just the theoretical.”Arts and Crafts classes round out theday's activities. On occasion, the childrenwill work on a cooking project.You are probably wondering about thekids.’ Well, the kids are alright. They arebeautiful. Full of energy, inquisitive,laughing, playing together, enjoying thesummer sun and fun.1 met 12 year old Theejuana Love in theBlue Gargoyle Theater while we waited forlate arrivals before going to the beach. 1asked her if she knew how to swim."No.” she snapped at me."You going swimming today ’”"Yeah.” she answered."It s a nice day for swimming.”"Yes.”When we arrived at the 57th StreetBeach, each camper was instructed to pan-up with his or her buddy before going inthe water The children play with thebeachball. splash and dunk each other inLake Michigan Others build castles in thesand."It s fun in there (the water). All you gotto do is get used to it.” said one pleasedswimmer."Man. that water is cold"’ shriekedKenny Boughton, one of the Summer Campleaders.T w ish we could stay here forever .""I'm going to tell my sister to bring usback here today!”Everyone agreed that it was a fun outingbut by no means will it be the last Fridayfield trips are planned to RockefellerChapel. DuSable Museum, Lincoln ParkZoo and a hayride at Pleasant ValleyFarm in Woodstock, Illinois. For furtherinformation telephone the Gargoyle at955-4108.Folk singer and storyteller Art Thiemebrought his music to Hutch Court onWednesday. The noontime concert waspart of Summer On The Quads spon¬sored by the Student Activities Office. Blue Gargoyle Day Camp:Fun and sun for the youngThe Chicago MaroonDarrell WuDunn Nadine McGannEditor Grey City Journal Editor Aarne EliasOperations ManagerJeffrey TaylorAssociate Editor Becky Woloshin Stephen BrittChicago Literary Review Editor Business ManagerMarc Kramer Wally DabrowskiPhotography Production Manager Jay McKenzieAdvertising ManagerLeslie WickOffice ManagerStaff: Mark Bauer, Kahane Corn. Teri Drager. Jesse Halvorsen. Keith Horvath.Robert Kahng. Linda Lee, Lynn Travers, Maurice WeaverPHOTO BY DARRELL WuDUNNQu’est-ce que c’est? The University's subtle hint to those who enjoy their sum¬mer lunches on the quads.4—The Chicago Maroon —Friday, July 9, 1982photosbyDavidMillerL__*__■-i_ISummer OnThe Quads. . IFilms(All in Cobb Hall; $2)Tonight at 7:15/9:15 p.m.:Richard Gere, Brooke Adams,Sam Shepard and some stunningTexas Panhandle vistas in Ter¬rence Mallick’s Acaemy Award¬winning:Tomorrow at 7:15/9 p.m.:The UC campus premiere of ErrolMorris’s highly acclaimed, veryvery funny, very moving look atpet cemeteries, their entrepre¬neurs and customers:Cates of HeavenWednesday (7/14) at 8 p.m.:Join Glenda Jackson, PatrickMagee and The Royal Shakes¬peare Company for a SpecialBastille Day treat:wmtawAxt>TSwmWWfitmstfnAs/urntramw#uHbU m t*m#t.xMmuexfyfeNoontime ConcertWednesday, July 14Hutch CourtJANHOBSONANDHER BAD REVIEW(If rain, Reynolds Club Lounge)A Program ofThe Student Activities Office THE • FALCON • INN1603-05 East 53rd St. • Just East of the 1C tracks10:30 AM-2 AM•5 Draft Beers »A Full Range(Old Style, Miller Light, of MixedStroh’s, Augsburger DrinksDark & Michelob) “•Kitchen open•3 Draft Wines (Fine hamburgers &assorted sandwiches•On “B” busroute - 53rd &Cornell •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. Come in tovisit these old friends, and sample HydePark’s newest tavern.PIANO RECITAL/ 4 p.m. \ELAINE B. SMITH / Sunday \/ July 11th x./ Goodspeed Recital ^/ Hall J5845 S. Ellis Ave. / [Sonata, Op. 109 Beethoven JJ / IFantasias, Op. 116 BrahmsEtudes-Tableaux RachmaninoffSong Transcriptions LisztPreludes Rachmaninoff RockefellerI9 amEcumenical Serviceof Holy Communion11 amUniversity ReligiousServiceKenneth HarveyMinister of McCracken MemorialPresbyterian Church, Belfast,Northern IrelandaOoa>mo'£ocCATFISH FRYEvery Sunday*3.95All You Can EatBEER GARDEN NOW OPEN7 Days A Week at 5 pm2-FRIDAY, JULY 9, 1982-THE GREY CITY JOURNAL//////////////,//////////////////////////9./////////////v////////////v//////////// /////////////k//////////////////////////////////. .. //////////V1KT ////////// /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////’/'/*//////////// ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// . ////////////////////////////////////////////////A//////////////////// V////////////&/ / //////////////Jw///A////////////A ////////////WA/J/ /MUSICJane Byrne's New Music America'82 continues through Sunday atthe Navy Pier auditorium. Theconcerts are very comfortableand well paced. Seating is attables, and coffee, beer, cheesecake etc. are available. Thepieces are of good, listenablelength, and the music is varied oneach evening to include severaldifferent types of entertainment.Many of the highlights of the festival are yet to occur. . .Fridaynight at 8:30 pm.: Harold Budd, asolo pianist who has collaboratedwith Eno; Rosco Mitchell, anAACM composer leading a quartet of low instruments in Preludeand Variations on Sketches fromBamboo; Jeffrey Lohn, a formermember of the seminal New Yorkno wave group Theoretical Girlswill conduct four guitars in PartsI and II of his Theoretical Music;Annea Lockwood, an actress, andPeter Gena, a new tonal composer, will also appear. Friday nightis also the last chance to see partof Robert Ashley's video operaPerfect Lives (Private Parts),showing at 11:30 pm. on the S.S.Clipper (separate admission, S3)....Saturday night, 8:30 pm.:Douglas Ewart, also of theAACM, will lead a clarinet quartet (Edward Wilkerson, V.D.Parra n, Mwata Bowden, andEwart); Christian Wolf, a JohnCage associate and DartmouthClassics professor, will performpreludes for piano; Phil Winsorwill lead an eleven person ensemble in S.T.O.C.; Dary John Mizelle will play the Japanese flute;finally, Peter Gordon, also a NewYork new music scene veterancomposer and saxaphonist, willlead the Love of Life Orchestra(13 pieces) in Birth of a Poet, anew wave opera, which should beparticularly good. . .Sunday, 2:00pm.: This should turn out to beone of the best programs. JohnGibson, saxaphonist with the Philip Glass Ensemble, will performhis own solo compositions; JillKroesen, a rock composer andlyricist, will play with Peter Gordon on saxaphone, Blue GeneTyranny on piano, and David VanTieghem on drums, amongothers; Ronald Shannon Jacksonwill finish up this concert, with anew compositional concept basedon the polyrythms of drummingJackson is a major figure innew wave jazz, and helped invent"harmoldic" jazz in a group withOrnette Coleman and JamesBlood Ulmer. Not to be missed. —KMRavinia Festival Saturday, July 10,Kurt Masur conducts the CSO in aconcert including Tchaikovsky'sViolin Concerto in D andDvorak's Symphony No. 9, ''fromthe New World.” Okay, I knowthat this stuff will make the programming at Orchestra Hall looklike Philip Glass, but the presence of Kurt Masur, a Germanconductor of the Klemperianmold, makes this concert worthhearing. The soloist in the Tchaikovsky, Nadja Salerno SonnenGrey City Journal7/9/82Staff: Pat Cannon, JohnEgan, Pat Finegan, KeithFleming, Kira Foster,James Goodkind, S.M.Herndon, Shawn Magee,Jeff Makos, David Miller,Robin Mitchell, SharonPeshkin, Abby Scher, andKen Wissoker.Editing and Productin byNadine McGann. berg, is unheard by this reviewer.On Friday, July 9 at 8:30 p.m.Erich Kunzel will conduct a popsconcert of works by Bizet,Strauss, et al. Sunday's pops concert at 7:30 features Patti Page,again with Mr. Kunzel conducting. Pretty meek stuff. — RMMostly Music, Inc. presents threeSundays of Oriental music in theJapanese Gardens on the WoodedIsland behind the Museum ofScience and Industry in JacksonPark, in conjunction with theHyde Park Kenwood CommunityConference. Dr. Sin Yan Shenwill be leading performers onsuch instruments as the banhu,erhu, di, xiao, pipa, and the koto,in music including, for example;Three Variations on the PlumBlossom, Songe of Quinghe, andmany other works. The concertsare free, and reserved seating arrangements may be made bycalling 924 2550 or 924 6112.THEATERCourt Theatre An Italian StrawHat, written by Eugene Labicheand directed by Richard Cordas,will be performed outdoors in theHutchinson Courtyard Thursdaysthrough Sundays at 8:30 pm.,with Sunday matinees at 2:30pm., through August 1. For tickets and further information call962 7325. The Courtyard is locatedat 57th and University, behind theReynolds Club building.Faustus The Remains Theatre issponsoring Triple ActionTheatre, an experimental theatrecompany from Britian, for athree week engagement of Faustus. This summer, the Triple Action Theatre has been conductingacting classes at Morning, andparticipating in a process ofworkshop/seminars throughwhich Remains and TAT will develop an adaptation of Melville'sMoby Dick, set to premiere inChicago in September SteveRumbelow, the Artistic Directorof TAT, has adapted and directedFaustus for its Chicago engagement. It is a story about an ambitious man and his inability to accept his own limitations, the hellof struggling for one's dreamsand the hell of failing to achievethem. The play opens Wednesday, July 7, and runs throughSunday, July 25, with performances Wednesdays throughSundays, at 8:00 pm. The Remains theatre is located at 1225W Belmont. Tickets are $7 and$9, with Student, Senior Citizen,and Group Rates available Forreservations and further information, call 327 5252.ARTSmart Gallery A selection of nearly40 paintings, drawings, printsand sculpture from the Mary andEarle Ludgin Collection will beon display beginning Wednesday,July 14. Many of the paintings arerepresentative of American Realism of the '30's, '40's, and '50's,while the prints and drawingsrepresent aspects of EuropeanExpressionism and Surrealism.The exhibit includes works bysuch artists as Ivan Albright, Milton Avery, Kathe Kollwitz, AliceNeel, Emil Nolde, Henry Moore,and Raphael Soyer, all of whichwere gifts or long term loans tothe Smart from the Mary andEarle Ludgin Collection. Theshow runs through Aug 31. TheDavid and Alfred Smart Galleryis open Tuesday through Saturday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., and Sunday, 12 to 4 pm., and is located at 5550 S. Greenwood. Admission isfree.Museum of Contemporary Art Inconjunction with the New MusicAmerica '82 festival, the museumpresents Selected Works by JohnCage and Other Composers, anexhibition of scores and visual artworks by various contemporarycomposers. Included in the exhibition are scores, drawings, artists' books, lithographs, and instruments by artists included inthe New Music festival, as well asworks by their colleagues, andmusicans and artists influentialon Cage or in his circle. The showruns from July 6 through August29. Also on exhibit in conjunctionwith the festival is Sound Fountain, by David Behrman and PaulDemarinis, the first multi playerinteractive music and videogame. July 6 through July 11. Themuseum is open Tuesday throughSaturday, 10 am. to 5 pm., andSunday, 12 pm. to 5 pm., and is tocated at 237 E Ontario St. General Admission. S2, Students andSenior Citizens, SI.FILMDays of Heaven (Terrence Malick,1979) Richard Gere, BrookeAdams, and Gere's sister set outfrom the city, move to the plainsof Texas, and become involvedwith a wealthy farmer, played bySam Shepard. Adams soon fallsfor Shepard as well as Gere, andthe resulting collision of personalforces soon takes place. Malick,the writer director of the earlierBadlands, here investigates theconnections and separations between town and country, workand love, ''man'' and nature, andfinally between illusion and reality, as he sets the troubled menage a trois against a starklybeautiful landscape, captured bycinematogrphers Nestor Almendros and Haskell Wexler. This ispossibly the most beautifully photographed movie that will beshown on campus this summer.Also of note is the performance ofplaywright Sam Shepard as thefarmer, who brings to the role astoic calm masking a passionateintensity, which fits perfectlywith Malick's vision of the powerful forces which worR behind theseeming serenity of nature. Highly recommended. July 9 at 7:15and 9:15 pm. SAO (Cobb) S2. —JM Gates of Heaven (Errol Morris,1978) "Find a need and fill it.”Floyd held the coveted Americanformula for success. And themost beautiful plot in Los Altosfor achieving it. Gates of Heavenfaithfully records Floyd's dream— its conception and its failure.For Gates is a documentaryabout pet cemeteries — the peopie who build them, the pets thatpopulate them, and the mastersand loved one left behind. It isalso a glimpse of the alternatives— the trash heaps and incinerators and glue factories. Deeper,perhaps, it is a dissection ofAmerican spirit — our ambitionsand idiosyncracies, and uitimately our obsessions. Yet notwithstanding Morris' clever sense ofhumor, l doubt whether Gatescomes close to accomplishing in90 minutes what Poltergeist doesbeautifully in two — with only achild, her mother, a cigar box,and a canary Off beat and midlyentertaining. Sat., July 10 at 7:15& 9 pm. SAO (Cobb) $2. - PFChildren of Paradise (MarcelCarne and Jaques Prevert,1943 45) This film recreates theromance between the mime Baptiste and the courtesan Garance.It is set in mid nineteenth centuryParis, but was made during theNazi occupation of the same city.Considered an art film classic.Sun., July 11 at 8 00 pm Doc.$2.The Jazz Singer (Alan Crosland,1927) The first feature film to utrlize synchronous sound. The JazzSinger stars Al Jolson as a cantor's son caught between love forhis family and for Jazz music,which his father finds sacreligious. Also starring May McAvoy, Warner Eugenie Besserer,and Otto Lederer Monday, July12, at 7:30 pm. I House, SI.A Shot In The Dark (Blake Edwards, 1964) Blake Edwards isbest known nowadyas for his pretientious brand of moralizingknee jerk comedies (70, Victor/Victoria), as well as is seriesof Pink Panther kilms with PeterSellers. While the later Pantherfilms degenerated into mindlessslapstick, Edwards did have hissalad days with them, and A ShotIn The Dark — while the leastseen of the series — is quite simply the best of the lot. Edwardspresents the story of InspectorClouseau's investigation of amurder at a French chateau, aswell as the mysterious attacks on Clouseau, with a minimum of cinematic overkill and a maximumof hilarious antics. Sellers, as theincredibly inept Clouseau, bringswith him a sense of comic timingwhich he never again equalled inan Edwards film, and proves whyhe was one of our greatst comedians. Herbert Lorn providesample support as Clouseau'sboss, and watch for the heroicBruce Lee in a bit role as the servant Kato. Recommended. Tues.,July 13 at 8:00 pm. Doc. SI. —JMMarat/Sade (peter Brook 1967) Avery compelling film, whichtakes place in an insane asymumat the time of the French Revolution when its direction was againuncertain. The Marquis de Sadeand Jean Paul Marat are bothprisoners in the asylum. It is aplay within a play within a film."Midnight Special” listeners willalready be familiar with JudyCollins' medley of some of themusic, which is excellent. A nonmusical musical completely acceptable to those who usuallyhate musicals — myself included.Intense, frightening, and highlyrecommedned. Wed., July 14 at8:00 pm. SAO (Cobb) $2. - KMBachelor Mother (Garson fcanin,1939) Pure, penniess Polly Parrish — dismissed from Merlin &Son's on Christmas Eve — discovers a swaddled infant at thedoorstep of an orphanage, and isimmedately mistaken as itsmother. To be sure, the orphanage has seen such cases before,and understands well the anguishthat prompts a destitute motherto disown her newborn child ButPolly's plight is society's sin andMerlin's son learns penitence -reemploying Polly and raisingher salary Polly, in turn, discovers love — maternal love — andultimately fights to protect itWha‘ trees Bachelor Motherfrom its weary formula is its sublime blend of benevolence andfrolicsome humor. For Kaninkeeps faith with his characters,making their troubles felt as troubles, never demeaning themwith cruelty or absurdity for alaugh. Yet the film truly sparkleswith laughter, maintaining a rarecolloidal balance between thecharm and tender sentiment ofits script, and the tough, polishedwit of its actors (Ginger Rogers,David Niven, Charles Coburn).Thurs., July 15 at 8:30 pm. LSF$2. - PFTHE GREY CITY JOU R N AL —F R I DAY, JULY 9, 1982—3V. Join the Episcopal Church Council atthe University of Chicago for:Holy Eucharist (5:30 p.m.) andSunday Evening Supper (6:00 p.m.)Each Sunday atBishop Brent House5540 S. Woodlawn Ave. AJThehair performers1621 EAST 55th St.241-7778©1982, The HAIR PERFORMERS,SPECIAL INTRODUCTORY OFFER50% OFF on PERMSHair Shaping and Styling NOT included— OR —$5.00 OFF on Complete Shaping and StylingOffers for first time clients only.. . . with a Designer Perm from the Hair Performers.We've invented the perfect warm-weather hair solution -the Designer Permanent Waves. They'll give you the soft,long-lasting texture your hair needs to stand up to summer. SPOKESMENBICYCLESHOP5301 Hyde Park Blvd.Open 10-7 M-F10-5 Sat.11-4 Sun.684-3737 Selling QualityImported BicyclesRaleigh, Peugot, FujiMotobecane, Windsor,Caravela, TrekRollerskates forSale or RentSUMMERSTUDENTGOVERNMENTAssembly Meetings have been scheduled for6:30 p.m. in the Ida Noyes Hall Sun Parlor for thefollowing dates:Friday, July 16Wednesday, July 21Wednesday, August 4Wednesday, August 18Appointments to Assembly, the Finance Com¬mittee, and the SFA Court and the Standing Com-mitties will be considered at each meeting. All arewelcome./COPIES COPIES COPIES (COPIES COPIES COPIES (COPIES COPIES COPIES (Copies The Way You Want Them!• Same Size or Reduced • Colored Papers• 1 or 2 Sided • Card Stocks• Collated or Sorted • Fine Stationary• Plastic Spiral Binding • 8x 11 or Legal SizeFast, sharp, economical copies . . from anything hand¬written. typed, or printed size for size, or in anyreduction ratio . . .. on your choice of colored or whitebond paper!XEROX® COPYINGv per copy8 Vj ” x 11"20# White BondHARPER COURT COPY CENTER5210 S. HARPER288 22334—F R I DAY, JULY 9, 1982-THE GREY CITY JOURNALPlus COMPLETECOMMERCIALOFFSETPRINTINGSERVICE I OPENS FRIDAY AT A THEATREOR DRIVE-IN NEAR YOUR world where man hasnever been before.It all happens insidea computer. .KiJTnnflnwR- technicoio**t* BUENP V15TB DISTRIBUTION CO INC © 1982 Ulan Oivwv Production*FIIMEO IN SUPER PWNPVI5I0N* 70Robert Ashley' Perfect lives (PrivateParts) is a seven part video opera which hasbeen running every night since Tuesday onthe S.S. Clipper at Navy Pier, as a part of"New Music America '82." The last twoparts will be performed tonight at 11:30pm.Ashley sings the story while Blue GeneTyrrany plays piano. A video camera filmsTyrrany's hands, which are reproduced onone T.V. Other screens show ambient, slowchanging detailts of landscape, or outdoorwriting on the ground. Two of the T.V.'s display the libretto as Ashley and the "chorus"sing. The story takes place more or less onthe level of everyday life gone awry, tellingof ordinary fantasies, feelings, and hopes,and is, on the whole, pretty Hilarious— KMThe Perfect Lives LoungeA small town in the MidwestThe present, Early summer.One day elapses, with scenesof before and after."R", a singer (the storyteller) — Robert AshleyBuddy, "The World' Greatest Piano Player" —"Blue" Gene TyrannyIsolde (Marie Isolde) — JillKroesen"D", Isolde's brother,known a "The Captain of theFootball Team" (his parentscall him Donnie.) — DavidVan TieghemAlso present: Mixing and sound production— Peter GordonVideo documentation("Buddy") — CarlottaSchoolmanSound installation — PaulShorrVideo installation — LarryBrickmanour de force — BarbaraMayfieldVideo score — Ned SubletteI."The Park": A visitor to town ordersbreakfast in his motel room. Problems of time and space, as usual.II."The Supermarket": Helen and John,folks from The Home, on their day intown. Witnesses at The Bank.III. "The Bank": Ed and Gwyn elopeIV. "The Bar": Rodney, The Bartender,meets Buddy and his friend.V. "The Living Room": Will and Ida discuss the trouble at The BankVI. "The Church": Ed and Gwyn arrive,Dwayne and "D" attending. Lucilleappears.VII. "The Backyard": A portrait ofIsolde.SYNOPSISRaoul de Noget (No zhay), a singer, and his friend, Buddy, "The World's GreatestPi^no Player", have come to this smalltown in the Midwest to entertain at The Perfeet Lives Lounge. For some reason, unexplained, they have fallen in with two peoplefrom the town, Isolde ("nearing 30 and notyet spoken for") and her brother, "D", justout of high school and known as "The Captain of The Football Team" (Ivs parents callhim Donnie) to commit the perfect crime, ametaphor for something philosophical, inthis case, to remove a sizable amount ofmoney from The Bank for one day (and oneday only) and let the "whole world knowthat it was missing.""D" is currently Assistant to the Managerat the Bank. He learns that Gwyn, one of thetellers, intends to elope with his friend, Ed."D" is asked to "come along" with Dwayne,another friend, who has a problem speaking(that is, he speaks, but has trouble being understood.) "D" knows the key to opening thesafe. The plan is, then: to take away themoney in Ed's car to Indiana (goal of theelopers), to keep it in circulation, as it wereThey leave at 5 AM.While the lovers are in passage, Raoul andBuddy, with Buddy's dogs, and, separately,Isolde enter The Bank at midday. The dogscreate a ruckus ("like a noise from Hades")that gives Isolde the excuse to get a bucketof water from next door to throw at the dogsand miss and soak the Bank Manager, whogoes into the safe for a change of clothes,only to discover that The Bank "has nomoney in The Bank." As part of the plan,Isolde has phoned the Sheriff's Office, disguising her voice (her father, Will, is TheSheriff, and his wife is Ida) to report an ac cident "out on the highway." There is no"accident", of course, and, recognizing themeaning of the decoy, Will puts it all together later under Ida's questioning. But it'stoo late.Among the tellers (Jennifer, Kate, Eleanor, Linda and Susie) who are witnesses tothe dogfight and the terrible discovery andwho understand what happened, from different points of view, so to speak, only Susienoticed that the dogs "went out together",and she's not telling. She fell in love at firstsight with Buddy, who because of his fancystyle of dress is often mistaken for a foreigner ("There's no doubt the Mexican is in it.The doubt is that he's Mexican.") That wasat 12.45 PM ("remember that!") And inThe Bank at that time are Helen and John,innocent by standers from The Home, doingbusiness "on a holiday." That is, they havefallen in love (in The Home), but they arenot allowed to marry, or "one will lose theprivileges.” So, every other weekend theytake adjoining rooms at the motel right offThe Park (where, by coincidence, Raouland Buddy live, and where we first metRaoul trying to order breakfast on thephone.) This is just the beginning of theirweekend, and at 3 PM we see them in TheSupermarket, shopping, a little jangled, setagainst each other by the excitement, butfar from down and out.Sometime later, probably Monday, in TheBar, Buddy and Raoul on their "day offfrom music" have come to celebrate, littleknowing that there they will meet Rodney,The Bartender, whose wife. Baby, aspiredto Boogie Woogie, ceaselessly and withoutmuch success ("happy she is the traveling salesman say, but Boogie Woogie she isnot") studying the video tapes ("The Lessons") that Buddy takes arouno (to musicstores.) Rodney is philosophical, especiallyabout Baby's talents, but sceptical aboutBoogie Woogie. And "row he's met his nemesis, ...face to face." They talk.Meanwhile, back in time. Will and Ida, inThe Living Room, solve the puzzle, perhapseven to the motive, but it's too late. Somewhere in Indiana, with the money hidden inthe car (unknown to Gwyn, of course:"Gwyn's not guilty") and certain of theirsuccess, Ed and Gwyn and Dwayne and "D"have found a Justice of The Peace who willoerform the ceremony ("I handle speedtraps, elopments, true signatures and thelike"), and who recognizes in Gwyn something so urgent ("and why is the Bride to beso — uh — what is the word?"), somethingso dramatic — ("She is a (p') money. Sir.")— that he is transported somewhere in thepast, to another ceremony, to another Brideto be ("Luciile", who speaks in tongues), toa confusion of tine and place where other(famous) marriages are enacted: "Snowdrift", abandoned at the altar, and so forthAnd while we paise to eat the wedding cake,his humble situation ("right off my bedroom is my office") is transformed beforeour very eyes, as it were, into The Church("the church of the great light.") And weare satisfied.Meanwhile, back in town, in The Backyard, a few friends and relatives have ^athered, as usual in summer, to picnic, to celebrate the changing of the light at sundownAnd watching from the doorway of hermother's house, Isolde counts the daysScene:Place:Time:Characters:COUPON COUPON COUPONFREE OIL CHANGE!WITH PURCHASE OF OIL FILTERPresent Coupon When Order Is WrittenOne per customer, one per tronsoction, expires Aug 31. 1982COUPON COUPON COUPONSERVICE COUPONSA VE UP TO $25YOU SPEND THIS: YOU SAVE THIS:HERE'S $20.00 - $49.99 SAVE $5.00HOW $50.00 - $99.99 SAVE $10.00IT $100.00 - $199.99 SAVE $15.00WORKS:■ $200.00 - or More! SAVE $25.00Present this coupon to service cashier when order is written One to a customer one to o tionsoclion Valid only at our Service Dept, to apply on any service or repair hAoy not be used to apply onprevious charges or specials listed here in Expires August 31 1982 SALESSERVICELEASING684-0400THE GREY CITY JOURNAL-F R IDAY, JULY 9, 1982-5photosbyJenniferGirard da, nor does it let the struggle of the blacksappear any less difficult than it is. Thetreatment of prisoners on Robben Island isvividly portrayed from the moment thestage lights go up and reveal John and Winston carting loads of gravel on the beach. Itis not just the work that is oppressive, butwhat the work does to the men: before oureyes, John and Winston change from tiredmen wearing rags to grunting, groaningsavages, cursing each other, themselves,and their task They are slave driven intoexactly the sub human shapes that whiteSouth Africa wants them to be by nature. Asthey are shackled and pushed back to thebarracks, as they are thrown, beaten andbloody into the cell they share, the audienceshudders, half in sympathy, half in disgust,at the monstrous degradation they suffernow for the self respect that led them intov-their original protest.Nor is it only their bodies that are transformed by the systematic slow torture ofprison life, a torture that is less than fatalonly because, Winston points out, the warden is human and therefore must sleep. Except for that respite, Robbens Island looksvery much like hell. In one gripping scene,John has just received word that his paroleis coming up. Winston, who is serving a lifesentence, is so consumed with envy that heliterally tortures both himself and his friendwith words, forcing John to live through inhis imagination all the days until his releaseand then the moments with his family, hisfriends, the bar, and finally the woman.Winston knows all too well what both ofthem will want first out of freedom, and hisvoice and his words turn crude and cruel,grinding into John as he describes her body.The effect is exciting, nauseating, frightening. Without a doubt this is a stunning example of the ugly power of speech, of wordstaking vengeance.it is scenes like this one that show best Fugard's theatrical genius, scenes like theopening of The Island, which is done withoutprops, in pantomime, and is a tribute to theabilities of the actors, who appear to be aspassionate about their work as they are capable of its execution. Throughout The Islandand Sizwe Bansi is Dead one is constantlyimpressed with the diversity of roles inwhat are, after all, two man shows. Especially in Sizwe Bansi this is true, whereJohn Cothran, Jr. not only takes on twoclearly defined parts, but also, in a lengthymonologue, brings to life a whole set of invisible characters through his vivid reactions to them. Stephen McKinley Henderson's talents are showcased as he goes fromSizwe sober to Sizwe drunk or, in The Island, momentarily left alone in his cell, ashe dons the Antigone costume again andtakes a turn about the room, hips swayingprovocatively, tossing his hair in seduction.After the performance, Mr. Henderson toldus that Fugard likes actors but is very hardon them. This may be true, but from thepoint of view of the audience, all is pleasure.This high regard for actors is obviouslyonly a part of Fugard's respect for thetheatre in general. For him, its highest purpose is clearly political, as he makes explicit when he recreates Antigone in the prisonsetting. The two works at the Theatre Building are statements, bald and uncompromising indictments of the gross injustices stillbeing perpetrated in South Africa. But onewonders what purpose political dramadirected at a South African audience canhave in Chicago. This is a question that Chicagoans have considered and apparentlyanswered to their satisfaction: none. Weasked the actors in their dressing roomshow long the show would be running and,with a tired, ironic smile Stephen McKinleyHenderson pointed to a notice on the wall,informing them the show would close July11. Further, in the two performances that Iattended, there were only two blacks in bothaudiences combined. Is the black South African experience so remote that we don'tneed to understand? Is it unintelligible, orunimportant, or unreal? Is it more realisticto stay at home and watch television, ormore pertinent to see Byrne, Baby,Byrne?Sizwe Bansi is Dead and The Island arebeing performed in a reperatory scheduleon alternate evenings at the Theatre Building, 1225 W. Belmont. There are matineeperformances on the weekend. This WisdomBridge production is closing Sunday,; call327 5252 or 743 6442 for reservations.talk and say hello; it also provides somehelpful background information to The Island, since the problems confronted in theone are history to the prisoners of the second play. And perhaps where Sizwe Bansiappears to fall short it does so only becausethe task that Fugard has there set for himself, though apparently simple, is in realityvery difficult. These characters are notprisoners in the literal way that they are onRobben Island, yet Fugard must make hisaudience see that they are in fact imprisoned by their society. Though given apparent freedom, they can not work, travel, orsettle down without it being recorded in thereference book they must carry. What ismore, depending on the information recorded in their reference book they may not beallowed to work, travel, or settle. This is asubtle process of dehumanization; it is asdifficult for Fugard to capture it on stage asit is for his creation Styles, the photographer, to capture on film the nobility andpride he sees in his fellow blacks.It is in The island, however, that the situation of apartheid and tyranny in South Africa is most stunningly revealed; it is in TheIsland that the dramatic vehicle is usedwith classic skill and discretion to achievethe power of true revelation. And it is in TheIsland that Fugard goes even beyond hismost brutal truths to reclaim the dignity ofthese oppressed men. For that is the conclusion reached in this extraordinary play, despite the desperate, impossible situation inwhich the characters strive. They strive,Fugard says, and the gigantic, heroic nob11ity of their efforts in the face of a government so unwilling even to grant them thefreedom to speak that at least Antigone,being of royal blood, had, is an inspiration.John and Winston's blood is dirt black as faras South Africa is concerned, but the pridethat refuses to accept the status of halfman, that refuses to become what Styles inSizwe Bansi calls a ghost of a man; thatpride is an affirmation: John and Winstonrepresent the very best of humanity. Theyhave no family names because they aresymbols. There is a scene in The Islandwhere Winston must put on his Antigonecostume for the first time, complete with itssand bag breasts. John laughs, we laugh.But, John finally convinces him, when itcomes time for the actual performance,that though the audience may laugh at first,they will listpn after. The importance ofwnat he represents will shine through eventhe most ridiculous disguise or, the implication is, the hardest oppression.Fugard never makes the mistake of allowing this message to look like propaganStephen McKinley Henderson and John Cothran, Jr. in The Islandby S. M. HerndonCurrently appearing on the TheatreBuilding stage in a Wisdom Bridge production are two plays by Athol Fugard, theSouth African dramatist best known thesedays for his recent critical and popular suecess Master Harold...And the Boys. Thepair of works now being performed in Chicago, Sizwe Bansi is Dead and The Island,won Tony awards for Fugard and his twoactor collaborators, John Kani and WinstonNtshona, in their first New York season;today they still give eloquent testimony indefense of all their praises. It is not merehype that has Fugard so often billed as oneof the greats among living dramatists: hehas something to say and he says it beautifully, with humor and passion and greatrespect for the nobility of the human race.Sizwe Bansi is Dead takes place in a photographer's studio in Port Elizabeth, SouthAfrica. Styles (John Cothran, Jr.), with thephotographer, who performs alone throughout about the first one half of the play, is agood natured, youngish man with mountains of faith in himself and a sea of love forhis people, as we see when he relates thestory of how he came to leave the Fordmotor factory where he had been employedand to open this studio. The second maincharacter is Sizwe Bansi (Stephen McKmley Henderson) who comes in to have his picture taken. Through an extended flashback we learn that Sizwe has falsified hisreference book in order to remain in PortElizabeth and work. Sizwe is a very simpleman, adorable like a friendly bear whendrunk, but he can not understand why it isagainst the law in South Africa for him towork to support his family. The time, as it isalso in The Island, is now.The Island is set on Robben Island, apenal colony for political prisoners off thecoast of South Africa. There, two prisoners,John (John Cothran, Jr.) and Winston (Stephen McKinley Henderson) perform hardlabor under the watchful eye of an unseenwarden, tell each other stories, fight, andrehearse their own adaptation of Antigonefor the prison's Talent Night. The crimesthat have sent John and Winston to RobbenIsland are crimes of protest against thestate; through the climactic performance ofAntigone they once again assert their determination to live by the codes of honor andjustice, even in opposition to lawOf the two. The Island is the more powerful play and probably the more important.Sizwe Bansi, though it has its share of moments, sometimes seems to lose track of itsinner coherence and become no more than aseries of interesting but inconclusive vignettes. Still, it is certainly a charmingplay, as the actors come into the audience toJohn Cothran, Jr. and Stephen McKinley Henderson in Sizwe Bansi is Dead6-FRIDAY, JULY 9, 1982-THE GREY CITY JOURNALHOUSE OF CHIN1607 E. 55th St. *752-3786Dining Room - Carry OutCANTONESE, MANDARIN, &SZECHWANClosed MondaysGRAFF & CHECKReal Estate1617 E. 55th St.1 Vz-216-4 room & 6 roomapartments. Immediate occupancy.Based on AvailabilityBU 8-5566Available to all comersOUR FAMOUS STUFFED PIZZA IN THE PAN IS NOWAVAILABLE IN HYDE PARKOPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK • 11 AM T012 MIDNIGHTCocktails * Pleasant Dining • Pick-Up“Chicago’s best pizza!” — Chicago Magazine, March 1977“The ultimate in pizza!” — New York Times, January 1980 EVERYTHING INPRINTINGThe Southside's largest and mostcomplete print shop . letterpressand offset plus art departmentfor design and layout assistancePHOTO COMPOSITIONOVER 100 TYPESTYLESFOR BROCHURES, BOOKSALL YOUR PRINTING NEEDS!“Calling Card to CatalogWe Print Them All''HOT STAMPING • EMBOSSINGSaddle and Perfect BindingThe Bankers Print, Inc.5832 So. Green • HU 7-3142THE 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*3800PETITION AGAINST ISRAEL’S INVASION OF LEBANONIsrael's invasion of Lebanon clearly violates the Arms Export Control Act (which stipulates thatAmerican weapons be used for defensive purposes only). The law must be implemented: theundersigned faculty , students, staff, and alumni of the University of Chicago demand a one-yearsuspension of all American military aid to Israel, and a redirection of funds presently appropriatedfor these weapons to Lebanese and Palestinian relief organizations.Michael P. Adams Hannah Frisch Michael McCarron William S. SaxHuma Ahmed E. Gaeno Karla Mac Bride Michele SchiraSamir ahmed M Galloway P. Macklin Philippe C. SchmitterTerrie Alafat John Gillroy Fariborz Maissami Steven SchwartzmanJ.T Allen Kevin Gleason A. Malik E Seamanw.J. Alspaugh Soumitra Ghosh Gary Manlin M. SellsJames Andrews Teresa Grady Imogene Manning Sarah ShieldsHamid Ansari Raymond J Gude Clay A Martin Tom ShieldsJane Averill B. Hadavi Hassan el-Masry Bernard S. SilbermanSanjib Baruam Bonnie Hahn Bruce Masters Ibrahim al-SinjilawiColleen Erin Beadling Ahmad A Haidar Kaveh Mirani Barbara B SmithJeffrey Berger J.D. HaJawa Marilyn Moors Sheldon SmithJane Bestor Farida Haqui Faiez Mossad Steven SmithBasima Bezirgan H. Harootunian Farouk Mustafa James SmrtherJulie Billingsley aliya Hashmi C M Naim - Stephen M SoifferCurtis Black Charles W Hayes S.R Naim Martha SuttonCahterine Bonser James H. Heard Lois J Newman Barbara StinchcombeA Bose Marcia Herman sen Wan Mohd Nor Philip StoltzfusJeffrey C Boulden James L. Hevia Anne Norton Maria SvolosCarolyn Bowles Th Emil Homerin Sarah L Olson Mohamad TavakoliDawn Brennan Polly Hoover Vishvajit Pandyn Robin TavakoliRichard Canally Andrew Howard Tom Panelas Jeri TaylorJohn Coatsworth Catherine Howard Manju Parikh Garth TaylorM.C.L. Coleman Steven Hubbard Michael J Pate Alexandra TcachukBruce Craig Victoria s. Hull Marcie Patton Mark TinghinoLouis Crane M Imran Michael J Pavtik Sanjay TiwariGeraldine Cunningham Khalil Jahshan Leslie Ann Peet Stephen TonsorEdward Dan forth R. Jankowski John R. Perry Rosalind TuckerKrishnan Dang Barbara Jones William Pleasant Terence TurnerGloria Davis Cheryl Jones Shelly Poole Thomas WalkerJosie Delmonico Fabienne Jones Francis E. Quinn Chandra WatersHarun Din Susan Kalisz-Tonsor Fazlur Rahman David P WattsMartha Dunston Howard Kaplan Vera Blinn Reber Pnscilla M WhiteJohn Echeverri-Gent Susane Karlin Osieola Rafetoff Leonard WhiteheadJohn Egan Atiya H. K'dwal Rafael Ricardobray M WillettJohn C. Eisele Carolyn Killean Yolanda Richmond Ursala WilkamsJody Emami-Yeganeh Deborah La then Sergio Rodriquez Hugh WilsonBrooke England Robert Lee Deepak Sainanee Margaret WinslowJane Fajans James Vernon Lill, Jr Aditi Nath Sarkar John E. WoodsJoel FinkelWilliam Fleming Olga LopezDemetria McCag Ikuya Sato A ZaidContributions, spelling corrections, and additional signatures should be addressed to the PalestineHuman Rights Committee, IdaNoyes Hall, 1212E. 59th Street, Chicago, Illinois 60637.THE GREY CITY JOU R N AL-F R I DAY, JULY 9, 1982-7by Shawn MageeThis year has already seen the release ofseveral movies dealing with homosexuality,including Hollywood productions such asPersonal Best, Making Love, Deathtrap,Partners and Victor/Victoria. In 1982, itwould seem, the gay film finally came out ofthe "celluloid closet" to which it has beenconfined for decades. Yet, the relative commercial success of films such as MakingLove and Personal Best does not necessarilysignal a change in the mainstream perceptions of gay life. The one dimensional flatness of characters such as Zack, the doctor,or Chris, the would be Olympian leaves anysophisticated viewer, gay or straight, wondering why he or she doesn't care about thecharacters, and why these protaganistsnever have the intellect to furnish themselves with insight into their own behavior.However, Taxi zum Klo, (Taxi to theJohn), a film by German director FrankRipploh, has garnered much critical acclaim for its unflinchingly candid portrayalof gay life — specifically, that of Ripploh'sown personal experience as a gay man living in Berlin. Taxi, which is unabashedly autobiographical, chronicles Ripploh's life asschoolteacher, lover, son, man on themake. Although the film is done in a cinemaverite style (Ripploh plays himself, as doeshis lover Bernd and several other characters), it is not a documentary such as TheWord is Out, (a documentary depictingmany different aspects of gay life.) It israther, like O'Neill's Long Day's JourneyInto Night, an autobiographical work whichtranscends the specificity of individuals asit treats themes of universal application.Taxi deals with the conflict between the professional and the private self and betweensexual fidelity and freedom, all within thelarger dilemna of being gay in a straightworld.As the story begins, Ripploh is a progres Photograph by Duane Michals, from Homage to Cavafysive teacher of pre adolescents by day andan adventurous lover by night, indulgingand delighting in casual, and sometimesanonymous, sex. Soon, he meets Bernd, ashy man who runs a film theater, and afterthe initial tentativeness a relationship develops and they fall in love. At the sametime, however, it becomes clear thatFrank's and Bernd's conceptions of their relationship are quite divergent. Bernddreams of living together monogamously inan idyllic, pastoral setting while Frank, nixing the idea, knows that he could never giveup the cruisy nightlife of urban Berlin.Frank .begins to feel smothered by Bernd'saffection, and increasingly bored with their relatively tame sex life, seeks new thrillswith other men. It is these scenes which arethe most graphic, depicting a melange ofsexual activity from S8.M to so called"water sports." The excitement and acutesexual tension of these scenes is juxtaposedagainst the poignant sensitivity of the lovemaking between Frank and Bernd, a visualdichotomy which Ripploh creates to underscore the nature of his dilemma.As a result of openly discussing his sexuality in an interview wittr a German nationalmagazine, Ripploh was fired from his teaching job; his severance pay helped in part tofinance the filming of Taxi. Thus he is alsoconcerned with the conflicts between the professional and private lives of a gay person. One sequence shows Frank in theclassroom, dutifully dismantling a life sizedplastic replica of the human body, explaining the functions of various organs, andpassing them around for the students to examine. The footage is continuously undercut, however, with snippets of Frank's sexual fantasies, shots which appear on thescreen almost subliminally. Through the sequence Ripploh maintains that being gayand being a good teacher are not mutuallyexclusive categories, an idea which hauntsthe primarily homophobic world in which hemust live and work.Although Taxi deals with several serioustopics, it is Ripploh's infectious sense ofhumor which permeates the film. As theopening credits are rolling, Frank is shownsitting on the john. He soon realizes, expostfacto, that only a shred of toilet paper remains on the roll, and that the situation nowcalls for extreme ingenuity. He surveys thesituation, then gingerly hops to the tub,rinses himself off, and dries himself with atowel, which he then cermoniously replaceson the hook marked "Guests." Another sequence, from which the film takes its title,shows Frank, who has been hospitalized,sneaking out one afternoon in order to endhis enforced celibacy. Hehailsa taxi and orchestrates a madcap city wide search forlove, stopping at this favorite publicwashrooms. Much to Frank's chagrin, however, the only result of this frenzied foray isa staggering taxi fare.Taxi zum Klo is Ripploh's first feature,and the subject matter is intensely personal.One might even suspect that it was so long ingestation that when it finally came intobeing, it did so almost fully formed Thechallenge to Ripploh now as a filmmaker isto go beyond his "story of my life" andprobe the deeper less accessible recesses ofhis creativity.) HYDE PARK UNION CHURCH5600 S. Wcodlawn Ave.Church School (all ages; 9:45 a mWorship Nursery Provided 10:00 a.m.W. Kenneth Williams, MinisterSusan Johnson Baptist Campus MinisterCome, Worship, Study, Serve-TAiSAMYWt-Bggji1 rrr fCHINESE AMERICAN RESTAURANTSpecializing in Cantoneseand American dishesOpen Doily 11 A.-8:30 P M.Closed Monday1318 E. 63rd MU 4-1062 BRANDEQUIPMENT SUMMER SPECIALONUSED OFFICE FURNITURE• Metal Desks from $2500• Wood Desks from $6500• Chairs from $750• Sofas from $50008560 S. ChicagoRE 4-2111Open Daily 8:30-5 HYDE PARKTHE VERSAILLESIDEAL FOR STUDENTS324-0200• Lorge studios• Walk-in Kitchen• Utilities included• Furn. or unfurn.• Campus bus at doorBASED ON AVAILABILITY5254 S. Dorchester8 —FRIDAY, JULY 9, 1982-THE GREY CITY JOURNALSportsPerennial powers dominate summer softballBy Jeffrey TaylorThe Summer Softball season is now in fullswing, with heavy competition betweentough returning teams and promising newones. Men’s and Coed play are separateThere are three coed and three men’s divi¬sions, each containing at least five teams.Each team will play all others in its divisiononce.Eight teams will go to the playoffs in bothmen’s and coed leagues, with the two topteams from each division being joined bvtwo wildcards.Inside IMThe bar teams are again uniformly strongthis season, and will play an unofficial kegtournament later in the summer. It will fea¬ture grudge matches from past seasons andfrom this season’s regular play.In the powerful Men’s White division theplayers of See Your Food remain the favor¬ites. They are undefeated after three toughgames, and were All-University champsthis Spring. Look for them in the Summerchampionships as well. Their biggest divi¬sional competition will come from Jimmy’s,also a strong team. Other hopefuls in theWhite are Bottone’s and the Medici.The Men’s Blue division should be ruledby the Hyde Away Saints, who held the Coveto two hits in a convincing 11-2 victoryThere are two teams in this division whohave yet to play, however, so the Saints mayget some unlooked-for competition.The Stats Rats look promising in theMen’s Red at 2-0, but could face a seriouschallenge from the Falcon Inn if they can get their players to the games. The Inn(minus four of their best players) lost in adisappointing 21-20 decision to the Execu¬tives. Other tough teams are Club Extremeand Danny’s Boys.In the Coed White division two goodteams, the Socratics and Spam, are battlingit out. Give the edge to Spam at this stageThe Coed Red is dominated by the HydeAway (formerly Jimmy’s, to all you who’vebeen beaten by them) and the BrickbatsThis is perhaps the strongest coed division,with excellent competition by most otherteams, including a new contender, theNaughty Sweeties.Finally, the Coed Blue should go to the BSHitters, who destroyed the Fetal Positions16-2. They will be challenged by the Min¬gling Oral Secretions, who are undefeatedafter two games.All games are played on North and StaggFields, not on the Midway.Next week the Sports section will featuretop ten rankings. (No assassination at¬tempts, please.)GAMES TO WATCHCoedMonday, July 12, 5:00 p.m., Stagg FieldSouth — Spam vs. SocraticsThis game should determine the leader ofthe Coed White division. Spam by 2 runs.MenWednesday, July 14, 6:15 p.m., North FieldWest — See Your Food vs. Jimmy’sIf Jimmy’s cannot pull of a victory here,its chances for divisional title are nil, butthere are always the playoffs See YourFood by 5 runs.Crew club takes secondsBy Jesse HalvorsenThe University of Chicago Crew Clubtravelled with the Lincoln Park Boat Club toEcorse, Michigan last weekend and rowedto four second place finishes. Actually someof the University of Chicago boats hadmixed crews of UC and Lincoln Park clubmembers.In a race that the UC club had been hopingto win, the men’s Light Heavyweight fourcame in second to the Ecorse team. Thewomen’s four placed fourth in a highly dis¬puted race in which two other boatssqueezed the UC boat and forced it to slowdown.In the men’s Junior Heavyweight eight di¬vision, a combined UC-Lincoln Park crewfinished second. In the mixed (male-female) eight, another UC-Lincoln Park ef¬fort ended with a second place. The UC Crew Club has been training hardthis summer. About 15 regulars drive northeach weekday morning at 5 a m. to the Lin¬coln Park Lagoon to train. The summer sea¬son will culminate at the Mayor Race atLincoln Park Lagoon on July 24.According to Dave Glaser, president ofthe UC Crew Club, more than 10 teams maycompete in the Mayor Race which is spon¬sored by the city of Chicago. While it is diffi¬cult to judge how tough the race will be,Glaser said that all the teams will be ' verycompetitive.”In addition to competing in meets, theCrew- Club will be starting a learn-to-rowprogram on Monday, July 19, aimed at thenovice with special attention to the basics ofgood rowing. Watch for ads in the Maroon orcall Dave at 447-5652. Summer softball in full swingIM ScoreboardMenExecutives 21See Your Food 10Stats Rats 20Medici 12See Your Food 20Club Extreme 18Bottone’s 10Hyde Away Saints 11Bottone’s 11See Your Food 24Hyde Away Saints 15Stats Rats 20Danny's Boys 19Cove 8Club Extreme 10Stats Rats 15 Falcon Inn 20Botton's 3Lean Mean Dean Machine 4Molecular Sieves 5Medici 12Lean Mean Dean Machine 7Step Aside Buddy 5Cove 1Molecular Sieves 6Step Aside Buddy 9Mega Byters 6Executives 7Lean Mean Dean Machine 9G-Men 6Penguins 9Penguins 6 CoedVelvet Jones 16 Complete Greek Tragedies 10Mingling Oral Secretions 9 Molecular Sieves 8B S. Hitters 16 Fetal Positions 2Hillel (forfeit) Sue the BastardsSpan 12 Aspo in Exile 7Socratics 6 Aspo in Exile 4Hillel 15 Admission 10Mingling 10 Complete Greek Tragedies 7Hyde Away 16 Penguins 1Socratics (forfeit) Sue the BastardsSpan 17 Hillel 1Naughty Sweeties 17 Sack Attack 2Hyde Away 15 Sack Attack 6Aspo in Exile (forfeit! AdmissionsHyde Away 10 Artful Dodgers 7Spam 18 Sue the Bastards 3Brickbats 12 Artful Dodgers 6B.S. Hitters 17 Velvet Jones 4IM ScoreboardThe Chicago Maroon — Friday. July V. 1982—13Classified AdsCLASSIFIEDADVERTISINGThe Chicago Maroom is publishing every Friday through August 6. Classified ads cost $1 00per 45-character line. All classified ads mustbe paid in advance. The ad deadline is 12 noonon Wednesday for the Friday paper. Submitads to Ida Noyes Hall, room 304 or mail them in(with payment) to The Chicago Maroon, 1212E. 59th St., Chicago IL 60637. For informationabout display advertising, call 753-3263. TheMaroon is not responsible for goods or servicespurchased through the classified advertisingsection.SPACELooking for housing? Check InternationalHouse, for grad, students and for scholarsvisiting Chicago. 753-2270, 2280.Large 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 1200Studio 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 .+ util. Call Kathy, 752 8315, evesEfficiency & studio apartments available for82 82 school year $240 and S255/month, allutilities included Marian Realty, 5326 S. Cornell, 684 5400.Sublet avail immed in 2-bdrm apt on Hyde PkBlvd btwn 55th & 54th. Fern grad stud, or wkgwmn pref S212/mo incl most util call 288 2622Vegetarian Roommate wanted Keith 643 4562.54th & Greenwood 2 bl from campus. 3 bdrm-S610/mo, 2 bdrm $475, 1 bdrm 330 Iv mess 6434562.Student Government publishes a list ofavailable housing. Come to Ida Noyes 306 orcall 753 3273 between 12:15-2:15pm weekdays Apt for sublet one bedrm fully furnished Cornell and 55th. Available immed. to end of SeptRent negot. Tel 643 3991 after 5 pm.Furnished room w/kitchen priv. Ph. 955 7083Write your paper or book during the comingacademic year atop a dune surrounded bytrees, overlooking Lake Michigan. Crosscountry skiing. For rent: 3-plus bedroomhouse, wbfp, screened porch. Sept JuneS285/mo. 75 min by car to Hyde Park. NearSouth Shore train. 624-5978 or 962-7329Furn apts Clean nonsmokers 363 3458/955 7083SPACE 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 evesApt Swap: My 1 Bedroom Condo in Cambridge, Ma. near Harvard & MIT for apt inHyde Park. Call Walter Carlip 617-491 2224/617275 8300A garage/space. Dave AWH, 373-2618/226 5933.Reliable scholar needs quiet reasonable roomnear UC in cent. HP. No cook./bath. 752-3210.PEOPLE WANTEDHELP NEEDED. 1 office work, typing, etc onurban politics. 2 sports car repair. Flexiblehours 5 20/wk. Leave detailed message aboutyourself or resume. 322SS, 962-8686.Paid 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.Secretary, full-time, July-November S6.56/hrGood job for grad student: learn computer textediting, work on grant files, assist w/govt,public and press contact. On campus. CallJoan Luft, 947-6907, 1-5 pm.GET OUT OF THAT APARTMENT ANDINTO AN AFFORDABLE HOUSENEW LISTING. NEW HOUSE. Only 3 yrs. old. Ray School District.2000 sq. ft. 3 BD, 2 full baths. Lovely parquet & tile floors. Central A/C.Enclosed back yard. Off-street parking.GREAT FINANCING. 2 BR townhouse w/ 1 !4 BA. Near 55th on Kirn-bark. Rec. room. Central A/C. Only $77,500.PRIZE-WINNING ATRIUM house in Madison Park. Wraps around interiorgarden. All glass & brick. Serene and private. Reduced to $112,000*.7.99% ASSUMABLE MORTGAGE. Mint, move-in condition F town-house. Don’t miss this one. Immediate availability.AFFORDABLE IN THE HIGHLANDS. 9 rms, 6 BR, 2% BA Side driveLg. mod. kit. Priced for quick sale. $115,000.END UNIT TOWNHOUSE. 4 BR w/full finished basement. Delightfulwalled patio & garden, parking. Ray School District. $116,000 asking.VICTORIAN ROWHOUSE. Lovingly updated. Beautiful woodwork. De¬signer kitchen & large sauna. In central Hyde Park and all for only$110,000.MODERN IN KENWOOD. Beautiful layout for a family. Two family roomsplus 4 BR, 2% BA make this 15 yr. old freestanding, brick home in his¬toric Kenwood truly a buy at $125,000.KENNEDT, RYAN, MONIGAL A ASSOC.5508 S. Lake Park Ave.667-6666Call our office to make an appointment to see these homes and askabout our other residential listings all along Chicago's southeast lake-front. Babysitter wanted: Mature responsible personto sit for 10 mos old at your place from 8:30amto 5 pm Mon Fri all round the year call 960 2264after 6 pm or weekends.Summer child care in your home, part time,especially Mon and Tues. 2-year old boy. 6245978 or 962 7329.5, 7 & 10 yr old right handed boys wanted forstudy on Depth Perception and Brain Development. Pay is $3 per hour. Call 962 8846.FOR SALEPASSPORT PHOTOS WHILE YOU WAIT!Model Camera 1342 E 55th 493-6700Loft bed w/built in desk, shelves. 241 5751, eveMOVING abroad: Sealy PosturpedicMonogram 300 queen size mattress & boxsprings, less than one year old, perfect $600 new,now $250; Four drawer wooden desk $40; call947 9050 or 962 7389.MOVING SALE: Furn., clothes, baby items,kitchen, rugs, AC. Sat., 7/10; 9-12, Ida NoyesPk Lot (59th & Woodlawn).APT SALE in Hyde Park; Bed, Desk, BBQGrill, Lamps, Plants, Kitchen items, othermisc.. Sat. July 10, 10-4, 5549 S. Ingleside.Queen Futon, like new-$50, leave mess. 6434562.Auto Cargo Top Carrier. Good Cond. $35 Call667 4908 evenings Sun-Thurs.HONDA 78 LX, 3 dr., 5 spd, a/c, am/fm stereocass, Ziebart, 1 owner, silver, $4100, call 9479050 or 962 7389.73 HONDA CIVIC, $500 or best offer. Needswork but worth it! Call 493-2828 or 955 6787.2 flat stable neighborhood must sell rental income 650/mo walking distance U of C get inhousing market now 45,000 call 955 5061 after 7.SERVICESWeddings and other events photographed. CallLeslie at 536-1626. Tennis lessons 8. theory. Brad Lyttle 324 0654JUDITH TYPES - and has a memory. Phone955 4417.TYPING. Term papers, theses, etc. IBM Correcting Selectric. All projects welcome. 7911674.James Bone, editor-typist, 363-0522.MATH TUTOR Calculus, Trig, Algebra,Geometry. Call Joe, day 458-2000 x3538, nites271 2934.Typing term papers reas. rates call 684 4882Psychoanalyst from Argentina does counselling individual or couple; parental guidance,Span, or English. Call (evening) 869-3626.WANTEDUnused 8. broken bicycles. Brad Lyttle 3240654PETE'S MOVINGGraduate Student with Pickup Truck can moveyour stuff FAST and CHEAP. Rates from$15/hour. No job too small! Call Pete at 9555180SUMMER COFFEEThe 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 requestPLEASE CALL 493-0271 Evenings after 6:00pm Monday thru Friday All day weekends.MOVERS HELPERSN ice students with big truck can help you moveANYTHING, ANYWHERE. ANYTIME RAINOR SHINE call John David Joe Jim 752 7081We have tarp & equip.A HISTORIC HOUSE with wonderfulyard, 2 full baths, 4 + bedrooms and aneat-in kitchen. A real buy in the low$70’s.INNS OF COURT. Turn of the centuryelegance. Large woodburning fireplace,3 bedrooms and more! Mid $70’s.HARPER AVENUE condominium.Main U of C campus, law school, 59thstreet IC station all just a short walk.Three bedrooms, central air, mid $90’s,ask about 10% down owner financing.TWO BEDROOMS IN THE $30’s! Closeto campus. Across from park. Tenantconversion. Let’s take a look!JUST LISTED . . . 56th and Kimbark.Four large rooms, nice kitchen, oakfloors, French doors, lots of light and15% financing. Upper $40’s.EAST VIEW PARK . . . This 2bedroom, 2 bath home is a private park¬like setting, reflects the graciouslifestyle Hyde Park is famous for. Theliving room has a lovely tree lined view.The dining room boasts genuine woodpaneling, and the closets are im¬pressive. The excellent arrangement ofspace makes it even more special. Low$70’s.THREE BEDROOMS FOR $28,500.Are you looking for old charm, naturalwoodwork, gas fireplace, no railroad,sun porch for your plants, and close tocampus? You will find it in this caredfor co-op apartment. Call today!We have an excellent selection of primelistings. Call today to be put on ourmailing list.HILD REALTY GROUP1365 E. 53rd St.ass-ieoo j HYDE PKCONDO LEASE3 bedrooms 3 bath luxury/condo with fireplacemany extras call 955-5061 after 7 850/monthHELP REVIVEMY BMWWith a garage or space for one auto DaveAWH 373 2618/226 5933The decision makersxoNew KODAKQISC Cameras3 MODELS,STARTINGFROM$49.95Technology so advanced you pressthe button, the camera does the restfor great looking pictures.Kodak!model camera1342 East 55th St. 493-670014—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, July 9, 1982Classified Ads CalendarCOUPLES...Couples needed for a study on campus valuesS10 per couple for $ hr/11 2 hrs Call 3-4393 103SUBJECTS NEEDEDWe pay S332. for your participation in a 12week drug preference study. Only commonlyprescribed, non-experimental drugs involvedIf you are between 21 and 35 and in good health,call 947 6348 for further information.ANIMAL WELFAREAnimal rights group forming at UC. If interested in any aspect of animal welfare, leavename & phone no. at 288 6304. Students, faculty, technicians, & others welcome.POLARITYMASSAGERevitalize yourself! Relax tensions with aPolarity Energy Massage. Deep and gentletouch that rekindles your healing energies.Bob Call 324 7530 afts & eves for info/apptARE YOU IN YOURRIGHT (OR LEFT) MIND?People needed for interesting and profitableexperiments on which half of the brain processes different kinds of information Men,women, right handed & left handed people allneeded. Call M-F, 9-5, 962-8846 or 753-4735.ENERGIZE WITHJAZZERCISEA wild and woolly workout to all types ofmusic! Jazzercise combines the best of bothworlds, jazz dance, technique and exercises.Everyone can do it! Classes held at 5:30pm onTuesday and Thursday in Dance Room of IdaNoyes Hall. An inexpensive way to fitness Formore information call 363 8395 after 5SIT ANDGOBACKWARDSLEARN TO ROW this summer! Novice classfor women and men begins July 19. Whetheryou're interested in inter collegiate competetion or fun recreation, this is the best time tobegin. Call for details: Dave, 477 5652; Jill, 3638417; or Marty, 363 4734 Sponsored by UC Coed Crew ClubHAIRCUTSBY MERRIEStill providing great, professional haircuts inmy home. Only $10. Call today—324 4)05 FRIDAYCrossroads: English classes. 10:00 am-12 noon,5621 S. Blackstone.Calvert House: Mass. 12 noon; Volleyball and bar¬becue. 5:30 pm, 5736 University.Crossroads: Pot luck dinner and discussion -"Issues of Justice: Domestic and International"dinner at 6 pm, discussion at 7:15 pm, 5621 SBlackstone.SAO: “Days of Heaven” 7:15 and 9:15 pm, CobbHillel: Adat Shalom Cooperative Shabbat Din¬ners. 7:30 pm. 5715 Woodlawn.Court Theatre: “Italian Straw Hatt" 8:30 pm.Hutch Court.SATURDAYHillel: Yavneh (Orthodox) Sabbath Services, 9:15am. Upstairs Minyan (Conservative) Sabbath Ser¬vices. 9:30 am. 5715 Woodlawn.Calvert House: Mass at noon and 5:00 pm; Sacrament of Reconciliation at 4:30 pm. 5735 Universi¬ty.Crossroads: Buffet dinner. 6:00 pm. no reserva¬tions necessary, 5621 S. Blackstone.SAO: "Gates of Heaven" 7:15 and 9:00 pm, CobbCourt Theatre: "Italian Straw Hat" 8:30 pm.Hutch Court.SUNDAYCalvert House: Mass. 8:30 and 11:00 am. 5735 University.Hillel: Hillel plays softball on the Midway atWoodlawn. 10:00 am.Court Theatre: "Italian Straw Hat" 2:30 pm and8:30 pm. Hutch Court.Doc Films: "Children in Paradise" 8:00 pm.Cobb.TUESDAYCalvert House: Mass at noon; Sacrament of Rec¬onciliation at 11:30 am, 5735 University.Doc Films: “A Shot in the Dark" 8:00 pm, CobbWEDNESDAYCalvert House: Mass, 12 noon, 5735 UniversityCrossroads: English classes. 2:00 pm. 5621 S.Blackstone.Noontime Concert: Jan Hobson and Her Bad Re¬view, Hutch Court.Smart Gallery: "Sculptors' Drawings and SmallScale Sculpture from the Permanent Collection"through Aug. 31.SAO: Marat/Sade” 8:00 pm. CobbTHURSDAYCalvert House: Mass. 12 noon. 5735 UniversityDept of Biochemistry: "Thiotrepton and theClockwork Ribosome" speaker Dr Eric Cundliffe.2:30 pm, Cummings.Law School Films: "Bachelor Mother" 8:30 pm.Law School Aud.Court Theatre: "Italian Straw Hat" 8:30 pm.Hutch Court.HYDE PARK’S CLASSIC ART DECOAPARTMENT RESIDENCEA SHORT WALK FROM THE LAKETHE CLOSER YOU GETrO THE LAKE THE BETTERWE LOOK!& HARPER CT.& THE I.C.& UNIVERSITYOF CHICAGO& RESTAURANTS • Completely New Onthe Inside• Wall to Wall Carpeting• New Appliances• New Ceramic Tile• Master T.V. AntennaASK ABOUT RISK— I NO SECURITY DEPOSIT • Central AirConditioning5200 BLACKSTONE1 block west of Harper Square* \Mon.-Fri. 9 to 6, Sat. Sun. 12 to 5, 6SJ4 86661 Bedrooms from $405 >SO bedroom with den * 2 bedroom apartments also available^ The Chicago MaroonProspective StaffersThe Maroon and The Grey City Journal are looking for writers andphotographers this summer. Become a part of your studentnewspaper - work for The Chicago Maroon.Interested persons should contact Darrell WuDunn, editor of theMaroon, or Nadine McGann, editor of the GCJ. Offices are in IdaNoyes Hall, room 303. Telephone: 753-3263.Notice to AdvertisersFour issues remain this quarter:Friday, July 16 Friday, July 23Friday, July 30 Friday, August 6Advertising deadlines are Wednesday, noon, prior to publication.THE APPLEVILLECONDOMINIUM RENTALS24th PLACE AT CANALTHE GREAT REBATE4TH MONTH FREEDURING THIS SPECIALLIMITEDOFFER—Spaciously designed 2 & 3 bedroomapartments—Only minutes from downtown—Individual laundry rooms—Carpeting thru-out—Walk-in closets—Private balconies—Indoor parking available.Model Apt. Open 9-5 DailyDRAPER & KRAMER, INC.842-2157Equal Housing Opportunity Financing provided for elegantliving at The Parkshore.One, two, three and four bedroomapartments with good location.Down payments start at #3971.Monthly charges (includingmortgage payments, property taxes,and assessments) from #430.The Parkshore is a tenant-sponsored housing cooperativeoffering the best housing value inHyde Park.Office hours:Mon.. Wed.. Thurs.2 p.m. to 9 p.m.l ues. 7 to 9 p.m.Sat. Sun. 1 2 to 4 p.m.or by appointment.For sales information, call684-0111.060Sfxmsor The Parkshore, ail Illinois not-for-profit conwiration. 1755-56 Hast 55th Street.Chicago. Illinois 60615.Development ami Marketing Agent MctrofmlitanResonrees Group. Inc.Cfiaz[otte ^Ui&itzomczReal £itate Co. kVe are co-operating brokersMember National Association o' Realtors. ChicagoReal Estate Boards. Illinois Association of Realtors493-0666 • CALL ANYTIMEAnnouncing...Drastic price reduction from $190,000 to $165 000.Large house, large garden, prime area. Near I.C.,shopping. Six bedrooms - extra room on first nowmusic room - Special 103/4% financing. Here s yourdream.Show and Sell Time...Open House Sunday July 11-2 p.m. - 4 p.m. 5430 S.Blackstone 4 bedrooms - central air but old fashioned.$1 19,800. Make Offer.Campus LocationsCondos59th - Harper - 4 rooms co-op with garage $31 50057th-Kenwood - 6 (small rooms lovely wood lovelygarden $64,000.57th-Kenwood - 5 rooms, sunny exc cond. $64 50056th-Kenwood - 5 rooms - real fireplace - 2 masterbedrooms gorgeous views. $68,000.55th-Kimbark - for investor move right excellenttenant under 2 year lease - 4 rooms. $45 000. GoodTerms.Houses (Ask for Price Quotes)58th-Woodlawn - 1 5 rooms58th-Kimbark - 7 rooms58th-(Blackstone - 10 rooms55th-Harper - 8 rooms.493-0666 • CALL ANYTIMEThe Chicago Maroon —Friday, July 9, 1982—15HYDE PARKHILTONbrings you thefinest in dining atvery affordable pricesCHARTWELLHOUSESPECIALSXKfb0.ft° '*?-t' ''XNX % *«.. 'XV^/a.% 5-.,>%4900 South Lake Shore Drive • 288-5800 xx'tkhN